Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN)

 - Class of 1910

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Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1910 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 406 of the 1910 volume:

M. L. INDIANA COLLECTION ) KEl ' RODUCKD FKOM AN OIL PAINTING BY MR. T. C. STEELE A BROWN COUNTY VALLEY THE NINETEEN TEN ARBUTUS ALMA MATER When the ceues of life make us falteiT, When we feel all the world is vain, Still memories dear of the days passed here Will come back to allay our pain. When the joys of life make us thzmkful, When our cup flows full to the brim, A prayer and a blessing for old I. U. We breathe as our eyes grow dim. Rupert Redic. THE NINETEEN TEN ARBUTUS Allen County PuWlc Ubf« 900 Webster Stfeet PC Box 2270 ,. Fort Wayne, IN 46801-2270 TO CHARLES JACOB S E M B O W E R , PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH THE CLASS OF NINETEEN TEN DEDICATES THIS BOOK THE ARBUTUS TABLE OF CONTENTS forewokd 7 The Arbutus Board of Editors g Board of Managers 9 Staff II Lest We Forget — In Menioriam George Frank Trim1 le 12 ' i HE Faculty and Administrative Officers Administrative Officers 15 Faculty at Blooniington 17 Faculty of the School of Medicine ( Indianapolis ) 25 Candidates for Degrees Baclielors of Arts 35 Masters of Arts 87 Bachelors of Laws 93 Doctors of Medicine 103 The Greeks Kappa Alpha Theta 117 Kappa Kappa Gamma iig Pi Beta Phi 121 Delta Gamma 123 Delta Zeta 125 Beta Theta Pi 127 Phi Delta Theta 129 Sigma Chi 131 Phi Kappa Psi 133 Phi Gamma Delta 135 1S9S179 147 149 151 Delta Tau Delta 137 Sigma Nu 139 Kappa Sigma 141 Sigma Alplia Epsilon 143 Fan-Hellenic Council v. ♦.1 144 Social Clubs W tf i ' J ' ' ' ' Ivi ' . ' ; Independent Literary Society , .« ■ tf - ' . ■ ■•• ' ■ • • F.raanon ' . . . .- . . mfe ._ . ' : ' ; ' ' . A ??. . The Wranglers ' . ' . (x. . . . Delphian Literary Society 153 Indiana Club 155 Married Students ' Club 157 Alpha Nu Omega 159 Women ' s League Board . 161 Indiana Union ' . ' . . . , . .. ' ' . Z 162 Professional and Inter-Fraternitifs Alpha Delta Sigma ( The Skulls ) ' ., .-.. ' .. .i, • 167 Zeta Delta Chi (Freshmen) 169 Phi Delta Phi (Law) 171 Alpha Chi Sigma ( Chemistry) 173 Xu Sigma Nu ( Medicine) 175 Phi Beta Pi (Medicine — Blooniington) 177 Delta Sigma Rho (Public Speaking) 179 Phi Rho Sigma (Medicine — Blooniington ) 181 Phi Delta Kappa (Education) 183 Phi Chi { Medicine) 185 Phi Rho Sigma ( Medicine — Indianapolis) 187 Phi Beta Pi (Medicine — Indianapolis) 189 Nu Sigma Phi ( Medicine) 191 THE ARBUTUS Departmental Clubs v ' .k Le Cercle Frangais iq5 Goethe Gesellscliaf 1 197 English Club ijg History CUib 2p i Economics Club 203 Philosophy Club 205 Euclidian Circle 207 Physics Club 209 Reinhard Club 211 In Memoriam 212 Religious Life Young Women ' s Christian Association 215 Young Men ' s Christian Association 217 The Press Journalism at Indiana 220 The Press Club 223 Publishing Association Board 225 Staff of the Daily Student 227 Music The University Band 231 The University Orchestra 233 Robin Hood 234 The Buchheim Recitals 2 5 Dramatics Strut and Fret 239 Survey of the Year 2-)0 Oratory and Debating pack The Year ' s Events 249 Douglas Dozen 253 Lincoln League 255 Jackson Club 257 Athletics Athletic Board 261 Foxy Jimmy 263 Football 264 The Big Game 269 Baseball 275 Basketball 281 Track 285, A Squint Into Next Season 286 Tennis 288 Literary For Better or for Worse 292 The Failure 295 The Streets About Town 297 Through the Wilds of South America 301 Our Blind Student 305 Our Lhiderstudies (Class Write-Up) 306 Smiles The Campus Pump 311 Cartoons 312 Fussers 353 The Daily Student 354 Knockers 356 Through the Year 357 AllVERTISEMENTS 365 % THE ♦ ARBUTUS NINETEEN - TEN t FOREWORD HIS Arbutus marks an epoch among the annuals of Indiana University, since it is the first to be pubHshed on what is known as the honor system, and also the first to be supervised by a board of five editors, instead of by one. In our work we have met with several d isappointments. Features we had planned proved impracticable or impossible ; on the other hand, we have had many advantages and helps, and long is the list of those whom we are clad to thank for their assistance or favors. For our art we are indebted to Mr. A. L. Yoder, ex ' 94, of Topeka, Indiana, whose draw- ings are a leading feature of this book ; to j Ir. T. C. Steele, the well-known Indiana artist, for permission to reproduce one of his paintings ; to Mr. George Brehm, ex ' 06, of New York, who contributed a drawing; to the Bobbs-] lerrill Company, of Indianapolis, to whom we owe the reproduction of the painting by Mr. Forsyth. Our thanks are also due Dr. Carl Eigenmann, who gave us the manuscript of the Hase- man Expedition ; to Dr. S. B. Harding, who has given us the benefit of his knowledge of the technical details of printing and bookbinding; and most of all to Mr. Thomas E. Steckel, secretarv to the board of business managers, who has spent many hours and infinite trouble in the preparation of the book, and who voluntarily donated the customary salary of his office to its improvement. We have tried to bring out the human interest side of our University, to show the every-day student life about us — in short, to make the book a commentary rather than a catalogue. „ t, Ihe Editor.s. % rf i THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN % THE ARBUTUS m NINETEEN THE ARBUTUS BOARDS BOARD OF EDITORS Editor-in-Chief Mary Baen Wright I.ester C. Gifford ASSOCIATE EDITOKS Elmer Raschig Mary Mitchell Clarence Bradford BOARD OF MANAGERS President Treasurer Facttlty Member Secretary to the Board Luman K. Babcock Edward Walters Dr. Samuel B. Harding Thomas E. Steckel INrHAXAPOIJS MEDICAL DEPARTMENT Manager Assistant Manager J. C. Irwin Earl Miller Shenck THE ' A R B U T U S ' . ■ N I N E T E E N - T E N % T HE A R B U T U S THE ARBUTUS STAFF Oscar Ewing Roy S. Bonsib Myra Arlen Kathryn Goodwin Forrest Ingram Anna McConncll Clara Rapp Christine Leblme Brough O ' Banion Herman Wylie Clarence Cartw right Lillian Franklin Anna Megee Edward Grisell Laurel Lingeman Arnett B. Cronk Verta Johnson Hallie Newton Jess McNamee Curtis G. Shake Walter S. Greenough Oren Wright Clyde Thompson Roy D. Buckley THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN LEST WE FORGET At the very beginning of the college year a heavy calamity fell upon the Arbutus -management, the class of igio, and, indeed, the entire University, when death took from among us our friend and classmate, George Frank Trimble, of Evansville. The prom- inence of the man, the love and esteem in which he was held, and the appalling sudden- ness of his death made his loss a shock from which it took days to recover. This was to have been his book. Last spring he was elected business manager of the 1910 Arbutus, a position for which his energy and high sense of responsibility and honor well fitted him. Already he had made plans for the work, and we have tried to carr r it out along the lines he suggested. Duke, as he was familiarly and affectionately called, was in his twenty-sixth year, liaving been born .April 22, 1883, in St. Lawrence, South Dakota. While yet a child, his parents removed to Evansville, Ind., where he graduated from High School in 1901. On Alay II, 1903, he matriculated at Indiana University, but the death of his father, the late William Trimble, obliged him to quit school and take charge of the farm for the ne.xt two years. He was an ail-around atlUete, playing in both football and basketball teams, and run- ning the mile for the track team. He was an enthusiastic Y. M. C. A. worker, a member of the Glee Club, and soloist at the Christian Church. On Saturday, September 25, he entered his last scrimmage with the ' varsity. A blister on his heel, caused by .the rubliing of his shoe, was giving him trouble, but with a strong man ' s contempt for pain, he disregarded it, and blood poison set in. On Wednesday he was hurried to the City Hospital, but it was too late. The skill of learned doctors, the heartfelt prayers of his innumerable friends, and the infinite love of the widowed mother for her only child, availed nothing, and on Saturday afternoon, October 22, Duke passed away. Never has . Mma Mater had a son more universally beloved. He was an energetic student, a faithful friend, a clean athlete, a loving son, and a noble Christian gentle- man. Truly may it be said of him that, Nature might stand up And say to all flic ZVOrld. ' This IVaS a man! ' Unke ' s Last Practice, taken Septeml.er 25. 1909 THE ARBUTUS ETEEN - TEN 13 THE ARBUTUS N I N ETEEN TEN 14 % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN ♦ TEN i6 % THE ARBUTUS f -NINETEEN ' T E N ♦ mm ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS William Lowe Bryan, President. A.B., Indiana University, 1S84; A.M., 1886; Ph.D., Clark University, 1892; LL.D., Illinois College, 1904; LL.D., Hanover College, 1908. Horace Audison Hoffman, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts, and Professor of Greek. A.B., Indiana University, 1S81; A.M., Ilarvard University, 1884. Enoch George Hogate, Professor of Law and Dean of the Sehool of Law. A.B., Allegheny College, 1872; A.M., 1875. Louise Ann Goodbody, A.B., Dean of Women. A.B., Indiana University, 1894. Carl H. Eigenmann, Dean of the Graduate Sehool, Professor of Zoology, and Director of the Biological Station. A.B., Indiana University, 1886; A.M., 1887; Ph.D., 1S89. William A. Rawles, Assistant Dean of the College of Liberal Arts, and Professor of Political Economy. A.B., Indiana University, 1S84; A.M., 1895; Ph.D., Columbia Univer- sity, 1903. John William Cravens, Registrar, and Secretary to the Board of Trustees. A.B., Indiana University, 1897. Ulysses Howe Smith, Bursar, and Instructor in .Accounting. A.B., Indiana University, 1893. John Ewing Edmondson, Clerk to Registrar. 15 THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN - TEN m FACULTY James Albert Wooddl ' kn, Professor of American History and Politics. A.B., Indiana University, 1S76; A.M., 18S5; Pli.D., Jolins Hopkins University, 1890; LL.D., Colgate University, 1909. Hakold Whetstone Johnston, Professor of Latin. A.B., Illinois College. 1879; A.M.. 18S2; Ph.D., 1891; L.H.D., Kenyon College, 1S98. RoLiHUT EiiWARii Lyons, Professor of Cliemistry. . .E.. Indiana University, 1889; A.M., 1890; Ph.D., University of Heidelberg, 1894. Arthur Lee Fclev, Professor of Pliysics. . .B., Indiana University, 1S90; A.M., 1891; Ph.D., Cornell Univer- sity, 1897. Davis Myers AIottier, Professor of Botany. A.B., Indiana University, 1891 ; A.M., 1892; Ph.D., University of Bonn, 1S97. rederic A.B., University of Cincinnati, 1888; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Univer- sity, 1904. Ulysses Gr. nt Weatherly, Professor of Economics and Social Science. A.B., Colgate University, 1890; Ph.D., Cornell University, 1894. Ernest Hiram Lindley, Professor of Pliilosophy and Psychology. A.B., Indiana University, 1893; A.M., 1894; Ph.D., Clark University, 1897. Burton Dorr Myers, Professor of Anatomy. Ph.B., Bnchtel College, 1893; A.M., Cornell University, 1900; M.D., University of Lcipsic, 1902. Samuel Bannister LIarding, Professor of European History, and Sec- retary of the Facult} ' . . ' .B.. Indiana University, 1890; A.jM., Harvard University, 1894; Ph.D., 1S98. Amos Shartle Hershey ' , Professor of Political Science and Literna- tional Law. A.B., Harvard University, 1S92; Ph.D., University of Heidelberg, 1894. Jesse J. M. LaFollette, Professor of Law. Bert John Vcs, Professor of German. A.B., University of Michigan, 188S; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Univer- sity, 1892. Carl Wilhelm Ferdinand Osthaus, Professor of German. Graduate of the Gymnasium of Ilildesheim, 1880; A.iM., Indiana Uni- versity, 1890. Schuy ' ler Colfax Davisson, Professor of Mathematics. . .B., Indiana University, 1890: A.M., 1S92; Sc.D., University of Tubingen, 1900. David Andrew Rothrock, Professor of Mathematics. ' A.B., Indiana University, 1892; A.M., 1893: Ph.D., University of Leip- sic, 1898. William J. Moenkhaus, Professor of Physiology. A.B., Indiana University, 1894: A.M., 1S95; Ph.D., University of Chi- cago, 1903. Louis Sherman Davis, Professor of Chemistry. A.B., Indiana University, 1S91; A.M., 1892; Ph.D., University of Mar- burg, 1896. 17 % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN - i8 % THE - ARBUTUS m E T E E N - TEN Alfred Mansfield Brooks, Professor of Fine Arts. A.B., Harvard University, 1894; A.M., 1899. Warner Fite, Professor of Philosoplij ' . A.B., Haverford College, 1S89; Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1S94. Wjll David Howe, Professor of Englisli. A.B., Butler College, 1S93; A.B., Harvard University. 1895; A.JI., 1897; Ph.D., 1899. Augustus Geote PoHLirAN, Professor of Anatomy. jM.D., University of Buffalo Medical School, 1900. Henry Rihl Alburger, Professor of Pathology. M.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1902. William Wesley Black, Professor of Elementary Edncation. Graduate, Indiana State Normal School, 1892; A.B., University of Illi- nois, 1S98; A.M., 1899. Elmer Ellsworth Jones, Professor of the History antl Philosophy of Education. B.S., Monmouth College, 1894; A.M.. ITniversity of Colorado, 1901; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1908. Charles Jacob Sembower, Professor of English. A.B., Indiana University. 1892; Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1909. Chester Garfield Verniers, Professor of Law. A.E., Butler College, 1903; Ph.TJ., University of Chicago, 1904; J.D., Edgar Roscoe Cumings, Professor of Geology. A.B., Union College, 1S97; Ph.D., Yale University, 1903. George Davis Morris, Associate Professor of French. A.B., Indiana University, 1S90; A.M., 1895. Frank William Tilden, Associate Professor of Greek. A.B., Hamilton College, 1892; A.M., Harvard University, 1897. GuiDO Hermann Stempel, Associate Professor of Comparative Phi- lology. . .B., State University of Iowa, 1889; A.M., University of Wisconsin. 1894. Charles Alfred Mosemiller, Associate Professor of Romance Lan- guages. A.B., Indiana University, 1890. Rolla Roy Ramsey, Associate Professor of Physics. A.B.. Indiana University, 1895; A.M., 1898; Ph.D., Cornell Univer- sity, 1901. Oliver W. Brown, Associate Professor of Chemistry. B.S., Earlham College, 1S95: A.M., Indiana University, 1896. Fr. nk Marion Andrews, Associate Professor of Botany. . .B., Indiana University, 1894; A.M.. 1895; B.A.M., and Ph.D., Uni- versity of Leipsic, 1902. Lillian Gay Berry. .Associate Professor of Latin. A.E., Indiana University, 1899; A.M., 1905. 19 THE ' ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN m % T H E A R B U T U S m N I N,E T E E N T EN Henky Thew Stephenson, Associate Professor of English. B.S., Oliio Stale University, 1894; A.B., Harvard University, 1898. Frank Aydelotte, Associate Professor of English. A.B., Indiana University, 190-1; A.M., Harvard University, 1903 ; B.Litt., Oxford University, igoS. Wilbur Adelman Cogshall. Associate Professor of Astronomy. B.S., Albion College, 1895; A.M., Indiana University, 1902. William Henry Beeler, Associate Professor of Law. LL.B., Indiana University, 1903; LL.M., Yale University, 1908. George Frederick Arps, Associate Professor of Educational Psy- chology. A.B., Leland Stanford University, 1904; A.M., Indiana University. 1905; Ph.D., University of Leipsic, 1908. Ulysses Sherman Hanna, Assistant Professor of Mathematics. A.B., Indiana University, 1895; A.M., 1S9S; Ph.D., University of Penn- sylvania, 1905. Joshua Willia i Beede, Associate Professor of Geology. A.B., Washburn College. 1S96; A.M., 1897; Ph.D., University of Kan- sas, 1899. Eugene Leser, Assistant Professor of German. Graduate of tlie Gymnasium of Sondershausen, 18S2 of Berlin, 1887. James M. Van Hook, Assistant Professor of Botany. A.B., Indiana University, 1899; A.M., 1900. Ph.D., University Frank Curry Mathers, .Assistant Professor of Chemistry. A.B., Indiana University. 1903 ; A.M.. 1904; Ph.D., Cornell Univer- sity, 1907. Clarence Earl May, Assistant Professor of Chemistry. A.B., Indiana University, 1904; A. I., 1905 ; Ph.D., Columbia Univer- sity, 1908. Charles Diven Campbell, Assistant Professor cf German. A.B., Indiana University, 1S98; Ph.D., University of Strasburg, 1905. Dennis Emerson Jackson, Assistant Professor of Physiology. A.B., Indiana University, 1905; A.M., igo6; Ph.D., 1908. Melvin Everett Haggerty, Assistant Professor of Psychology, and Director of the Psychological Laborator ' . A.B., Indiana University, 1902; Ph.D., Harvard University, 1910. Fernandus Payne, Assistant Professor of Zoology. .B., Indiana University, 1905 ; A.M., igo6; Ph.D., Columbia Univer- sity, 1909. John Benja.min Dutcher, Assistant Professor of Physics. A.E., Indiana University, 1906; A.M., 1907. Richard Ashley Rice, Acting Assistant Professor of English. A.B., Williams College, 1899; A.M.. Harvard University, 1903. William H. Scheifley. Instructor in German. A.B., Indiana University, 1901 ; A.M., 1903. Thomas LeGkand ITakris, Instructor in History. A.B., Indiana University, 1S9.2; A. I., 1895; A.M., Harvard, 1899. NINETEEN TEN NINETEEN TEN Ernest Henhv Bieemann, Instructor in German. A.B., Leland Stanford t ' niversity, 1897; A.M., Indiana University, 1907. JOTiLDA CoNKLiN, Instructor in French. A.B., Indiana University, 1897; A.M., 1904. Mary Ethelda Roddy, Instructor in Physical Training for Women. Graduate, Chautauqua School of Piiysical Education, 1905. Fred Bates Johnson, Instructor in Journalism. A.D., Indiana University, 1902. Robert E. Burke, Instructor in Fine Arts. Graduate of Pratt Institute, Urooklyn, New ' ork. loNE Kelsey Black, Instructor in French. Arthur Bjvins StonE.x, Instructor in English. A.B., Indiana University, 1906; A.M., 1907. Andrew Tennant Wylie, Instructor in English. A.B., Indiana University, 1906; A.M., 1907. Cecilia Barbara Hennel, Instructor in English. A.B., Indiana University, 1907; A.M., 1908. Anna Brockman Collins, Instructor in English. A.B., Indiana University, 1897; A.M., 1909. Alice Diven Goss, Instructor in German. A.B., Indiana University, 1908. Keith Preston, Instructor in Latin. PIi.B., University of Cliicago, 1905; A.M., Indiana University, 1907. Will Scott, Instructor in Zoology. . .B., Indiana University, 1908; A.Jt., 1908. Kenneth Powers Williams, Instructor in Mathematics. A.B., Indiana University, 1908; . .M., 1909. Clarence J. mi:? Foreman, Instructor in Economics and Social Science. B.S., Michigan .Vgricultural College. 1855; M.S.. 18)6: . ..M.. Michigan University, 1901. Cora Barbara Hennel, Instructor in Malliematics. A.B., Indiana University, T907: . .M.. 1909. David .Abbott Drew, Instructor in Mechanics and Astronomy. B.L., B.S., Lawrence College, 1887; . .B.. 1S88: A.M., 1890. John Clayton Barkley, Instructor in Law. A.B., Allegheny, 190J; A.M., Allegheny, 1907; LL.B., VN ' estern Reserve University, 1906. Augustus Clyde Shipp, Instructor in Pathology. A.B., Indiana University, 1910. c 23 % THE ' ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN 24 THE - ' A R B U T U S 1 NINE TEE N - T E N FACULTY OF SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Allison Maxwell, Professor of Medicine, and Dean. A.B., Indiana University, 1868; A.M., 1871; M.D., Miami Medical Col- lege, 1S76. ■ Edward Francis Hodges, Professor of Obstetrics. A.B., Harvard University, 1871; M.D., Georgetown University, 1874; M.D., Harvard University, 1S77; A.M., Georgetown University. 18S3. Burton Dorr Myers, Professor of Anatomy, and Chairman of the De- partment. Ph.B., Buchtel College, 1S93; . .M., Cornell University, 1900: M.D.. Uni- versity of Leipsic, 1902. Edmund Doucan Clark, Clinical Professor of Surgery. M.D., Bellevue Hospital Medical College, iSgi. John F. Barnhill, Professor of Otology, Laryngology, and Rhinology. M.D., Central College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1888. Horace Russel Allen, Professor of Orthopedic Surgery. - .E., Harvard University, 1892; M.D., Columbia University, 1895. Alemeert Winthrop Brayton, Professor of Dermatology and Syphil- ology. B.S., Butler College, 1878; M.S., 1882; M.S., Indiana University, 18S2; M.S., Purdue University; M.D., Medical College of Indiana, 1879. Albert Eugene Bulson, Jr., Professor of Ophtlialniology. B.S., Michigan . gricultural College, 1888; M.D., Rush Medical College, 1891. Lewis Curn Cline, Professor of Otology, Laryngology, and Rhinology. M.D., Jefferson ledical College, 1S79. Albert Maynakd Cole, Professor of Dermatology and Electro-Thera- peutics. B.S., DePauw University, 1892; M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1894; M.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1896. George J.vmeson Cook, Professor of Gastro-Intestinal Surgery. l.D., Kentucky School of Medicine, 1866. Lewis Park Drayer, Professor of Pediatrics. A. 13., Hanover College, 1892; A.M., 1894; M.D., Indiana Medical Col- lege, 1895. J.VMEs Henry Ford, Professor of Surgery. l.n., Indiana Medical College, 1S72. William H. Foreman, Professor of Therapeutics. A.B., Indiana University, 1895; M.D., Central College of Pllysicians and Surgeons, i9or. William Otto Gross, Professor of Toxicology. Ph.G., College of Pharmacy, New York City, 1886; M.D., Fort Wayne College of Medicine, 1893; A.M., Taylor University, 1895. Thomas Corwin Hood, Professor of Ophthalmology. B.S.. Wabash College, i88t; M.D.. Jefferson Medical College, 1884; A.B., Wabash College, 1SS5. John Newell Hurty, Professor of Hygiene and Sanitary Science. Phar.D., Purdue University, 18S8; M. D., Indiana Medical College, 1891. Frank Frazier Hutchins, Professor of Mental and Nervous Diseases. M. D., Indiana Medical College, 1892. 25 % THE- ARBUTUS i NINETEEN - TEN lliiiilillliliillli 1 26 t THE ARBUTUS Henry Jameson, Professor of Medicine. B.S., Butler College, iS6i ; M.D., Bellevue Hospital Medical College, 1S71; LL.D., Butler College, igo6. John Johnson Ivvle, Professor of Otology, Laryngology, and Rhinol- ogy. ]M.D., Miami Medical College, 1S90. E. Oscar Lindenmuth, Professor of Dermatology and Electro-Thera- peutics. M.E., Bloomsburg Literary Institute and State Normal School, 1S97; M.D., Medico-Chirurgical College of Philadelphia, 1906. George Washington McCaskey, Professor of Medicine. M.D., Jefferson Medical College, 1S77; B. S., DePauw University, 1881; A.i I., DePauw University, 1884. Frank Athon Morrison, Professor of Ophthalmology. A.B., Butler College, 1895; M.D., IN ' Iedical College of Indiana, 1880. John Holliday Oliver, Professor of Surgery, and Chairman of the Department. M.D., Medical College of Indiana, 1S81; A.M., Wabash College, 1907. GusT.Av Adolphus Petersdorf, Professor of Chemistry. Phar.C, Purdue University, 1894; JI.D., Medical College of Indiana, 1898. Orange Garrett Pfaff, Professor of Gynecology. JI.D., Indiana Medical College, 1882; A.M., Wabash College, 1907. Miles Fuller Porter, Professor of Surgery. M.D., Medical College of Ohio, 1878; A.M., (Hon.), Franklin College, 1882. Ernest Charles Reyer, Professor of Mental and Nervous Diseases. M.D., Medical College of Indiana, 18S5; M.D., Bellevue Hospital Med- ical College, 1889. Constantine Rich. rd Sch.vefer, Professor of Therapeutics, and Chairman of the Departinent. M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1890; AI.D.. Columbia University, 1892. SniON P. ScHERER, Professor of Gastro-Intestinal Diseases. M.D., Central College of Physicians and Surgeons, i8gi. John Chase Se.xton, Professor of Gastro-Intestinal Surgery. A.JI., Hanover College, 1S8:; M.D., Ohio Medical College, 1882. John William Sluss, Professor of Anatomy. B.S., DePauw University, 1890; A.M., 1894; M.D., Medical College of Indiana, 1S93. Albert Eugene Sterne, Professor of Mental and Nervous Diseases. A.B., Harvard University, 1887; A.M. (Hon.), University of Strassburg, 1S89; M.D., University of Berlin, 1891. John Asbury Sutcliffe, Professor of Genito-Urinary Surgery. B.S., Brookville College. 1869; M.D., Bellevue Hospital Medical College, 18-2; A.M., Jloores Hill College, 1875. James Henry Taylor, Professor of Pediatrics. . .B., DePauw University, 1878; M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1S78; A.M., DePauw University, 1881. Kent Kane Wheelock, Professor of Otology, Laryngology, and Rhi- nology. M.D., Bellevue Hospital Medical College, 1880. 27 THE ' ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN B THE A R B U T U S t NINETEEN - TEN t William Niles Wishard, Professor of Genito-l ' rinary Surgery. M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1874: M.D.. Miami Medical College, 1876; A.M., Wabash College, 1S90. Chaeles Samuel Woods, Professor of Chem ' -;ry. M.D., Rush Medical College. 1900. Fkank Bareoue Wynn, Professor of Medical Diagnosis, and Cliairman of the Department of Medicine. A.B., DePauw University, 18S3; M.D., Ohio Medical College. 1885; A.M., DePauvv University, 18S6. Louis Bueckharut, Clinical Professor of Medicine. M.D., University of Ziiiich, 1890. Frederick Rankin Charlton, Clinical Professor of Genito-Urinary Surgery. M.D., University of Pennsylvania, t8g6. Samuel Evingston Earp, Clinical Professor of Medicine. B.S., McKendi-ee College. 1S79; M.L., 1879; M.S., 1882; M.D., Central College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1882. Joseph Rilus Eastman, Clinical Professor of Surgery. B.S., Wabash College, 1891; M.D., University of Berlin. 1897; A.M. (Hon.), Wabash College, 1905. Thomas Barker Eastman, Clinical Professor of Gynecology. A.B., Wabash College, 1890; M.D., Central College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1893; A.M., Wabash College, 1906. Charles Eugene Ferguson, Clinical Professor of Obstetrics. M.D., Medical College of Indiana, 1892. Alois Bach man Graham, Clinical Professor of Gastro-Intestinal Surgery. A.B., Hanover College. 1891; M.D., Medical College of Indiana, 1894; A.M., Hanover College, 1895. Frederic Carroll Heath, Clinical Professor of Oplitlialmology. A.B.. Amherst College, 1878; M.D., Bowdoin College, 1884; A.M., Amherst College, 1886. . Gecrge DwiCHT Kahlo, Clinical Professor of Medicine. M.D., Bellevue Hospital Medical College, 1891. Thomas C. Kennedy, Clinical Professor of Gastro-Intestinal Surgery. M.D,. Kentucky School of ledicine, 18S3. Albert Carl Kimberljn, Clinical Professor of Medicine. M.D., Medical College of Indiana, 1S88. John A. Lambert, Clinical Professor of Pediatrics. M.D., Central College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1891. John Louis ALasters, Clinical Professor of Otology, Laryngology and Rhinology. M.D., Louisville Medical College, 18S3. Harvey Adams !Moore, Clinical Professor of Genito-Urinary Surgery. M.D., Central College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1898. Thomas Benjamin Noble, Clinical Professor of Gynecology. A.B., Wabash College, 1890; M.D., Miami Medical College, 1893; M.D., Medical College of Indiana, 1 S94. 29 % THE ARBUTUS LaFavettk Page, Clinical Professor of Otology, Laryngology, and Rln ' nology. A.l!., Columbia Christian College. 1882; A.M., 1885; M.D., Medical College of Indiana. 1888. Hugo Otto Pantzer, Clinical Professor of Gynecology. M.D., Medical College of Indiana, 1881; A.M., Wabash College. 1908. Hakky Caliiwell Parker, Clinical Professor of Ophthalmology. M.D., Harvard University, igoi. Theodore Potter, Clinical Professor of Medicine. A.B., Princeton University, 1882; A.M., 1885; M.D.. Ohio Medical Col- lege, 1887. Charles Robert Sowder, Clinical Professor of Medicine. M.D., Central College of Physicians and Surgeons, 189S. Ernest DeWolf Wales, Clinical Professor of Otology, Laryngology and Rhinology. B.S., Harvard University, 1896; M.D., 1899. George Milton Wells, Clinical Professor of Snrgery. M.D., Kentucky School of Medicine, 1884; M.D., Rush Medical Col- lege, 1886; M.D., Hospital College of Medicine, 1890; M.D., University of the City of New York, 1891. Maynard Alvermse Austin, Associate Professor of Surgery. M.D., Rush Medical College. 1897. Walter Wynn Barnett, Associate Professor of Anatomy. M.D., Fort Wayne College of Medicine, 18S6. Henry Frederick Beck man. Associate Professor of Obstetrics. M.D., Northwestern University, 1904. William T. S. Dodds, Associate Professor of Clinical Diagnosis. M.D., Medical College of Indiana, 1898. Francis Oswald Dorsey, Associate Professor of Medicine. A.B., Vale University, 1893; M.D., Columbia University, 1896. Norman Emmet Jobes, Associate Professor of Anatomy. M.D., Medical College of Indiana, 1897. Amelia R. Keller, Associate Professor of Pediatrics. M.D., Central College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1893. Beknays ICennedy ' , Associate Professor of Gynecology. M.D., The Medical College of Indiana, 1898. Robert O. Mc.Ale.xander, Associate Professor of Gynecology. M.D., The Medical College of Indiana. 1896. John Earhaet Morris, Associate Professor of Anatomy. M.D., Medical College of Indiana. Charles Frederick Neu, Associate Professor of Pathology. M.D., Western University, London (Canada), 1894. 30 % THE ARBUTUS ETEEN - TEN Samuel Code Norris, Associate Professor of Hygiene and Sanitary Science. i I.D., Miami Medical College. 1894. RoscoE H. RiTTER, Associate Professor of Medicine. Pli.B., DePauw University, 1895: M.D., Indiana Medical College, 1S97. WiLLi.wi BkiscoL RnniNSON, Associate Professor of Anatomy. M.D., Jledical College of Oliio, 1896. Davjd Ross, Associate Professor of Surgery. C.S., Central Normal College, 1S91; M.D., ] Iedical College of Indiana, 1S95. John Quixcv Davis, Assistant Professor of Gynecology. A.B., Butler College, 1896; M.D., Medical College of Indiana, 1S99. Thomas Warren De Hass, Assistant Professor of Therapeutics. M.D., Ohio Medical College. 1883; M.D., Bellevue iledical College, • 1888; M.D., Central College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1904. Walter S. Given, Assistant Professor of Gastro-Intestinal Surgery. M.D., Central College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1901. Sidney J. Hatfield, Assistant Professor of Gynecology. I.D., Hospital College of Medicine, Kentucky, 1902. Goethe Link, Assistant Professor of Gynecology. M.l)., Central College of Plusicians and Surgeons, 1902. John Alfred Pfaff, Assistant Professor of Gynecology. M.D., Medical College of Indiana, 1898. Robert Nathaniel Toun, Assistant Professor of Mental and Nervous Diseases. A.B., Wabash College, 1896; M.D., Central College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1899; A.M., Wabash College, 1903. Oscar Noel Torian, Assistant Professor of Pediatrics. A.lj., University of the South, 1896; M.D., University of Pennsyl- vania, 1900. Homer Henderson Wheeler, Assistant Professor of Gastro-Intestinal Surgery. M.D., Central College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1897. 31 NINETEEN - TEN 32 E= THE - ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN t l ff ' ' ' ' w yr ' ' ' mw - Zi THE ' ARBUTUS N I N E T E EN TEN Who? What? When? Who? What? When? Seniors! Seniors! Nineteen-Ten, 34 Taspf.r August Abell Harvey Allison Andrew William Angermeier Homer Ansley Arnold CANDIDATES FOR A.B. Jasper August Abell, Ireland. Education. Phi Delta Kappa; Substitute Guard, Basketball Team, 1910. Harvey Allison, Washington. Physics. Physics Club. Andrew William Angermeier, Armstrong. German. Indiana Club; Goethe Gesellschaft; Teaching Feljow in German, Spring Term, 1908. Homer Ansley Arnold, Macon, III. History. History Club. 129547S 35 Florence May Avery Myra Arlen Thomas H. Allen CcRTiiA Leone Carker Florence May Avery, Bloomington. Mathematics. Euclidian Circle; Woman ' s League Board, igog-io; Basketball Team, ' 08, ' 09, ' 10. Myra Arlen, Winona Lake. German. The Western College, 1905-06; Goethe Gesellschaft; Arbutus Stafif; Cast of Robin Hood; ' Cast of Die Karlschuler; Assistant in German. Spring term, 1910. Thomas H. Allen, Greentown. Chemistry. Alpha Chi Sigma; Douglas Dozen; Married Students ' Club. Bertha Leone Barker, Entiat, Wash. Physics. Physics Club. 36 THE ARBUTUS m t l -v ' ' - ' iTK.. : A Walter Homer Barnhart Gladstone Howard Barrett Ruth Allura Barsh Marguerite Alice Bartelle Walter Homer Barnhart, VVyatt. Economics. Wranglers; University Band; Economics Club: N ' esper Choir. Gladstone Howard Barrett, RnshviUc. Chemistry. Beta Theta Pi; Alpha Chi Sigma. Ruth Allura Barsh, Huntington. English. Marguerite Alice Bartelle, Toledo, O. English. Delta Gamma; Le Cercle Frangais; English Club. 37 I THE ' ARBUTUS m NINETEEN - TEN Anna Grace Bass Ruby Mildred Beeker Raymond Cole Beeler Karl Warfel Behr Anna Grace Bass, Mitchell. History. History Club. Ruby Mildred Beeker, Battle Ground. Mathematics. Independent ; Euclidian Circle. Raymond Cole Beeler, Charlcstown. Medicine. Phi Delta Theta; Phi Rho Sigma. Karl Warfel Behr, East Germantown. Mathematics. Independent; Euclidian Circle. 38 % THE ARBUTUS - NINETEEN TEN Norman Max Behr Clyde Clermont Bitler Ralph Fordyce Blatchley Mabel Blazier Norman Max Behr, Nohlesville. Economics. Delta Sigma Rho; Economics Club; Oratorical Association; Daily Student Staff, 190 8; Debating Team, 1908-og; Advisory Board Oratorical Association; Winner Sophomore and Junior Class Discussions; Tennis Association. Clyde Clermont Bitler, Delphi. Medicine. Phi Beta Pi; Delphian, Ralph Fordyce Blatchley, Indianapolis. English. Beta Theta Pi; English Club; Lincoln League Cabinet. Mabel Blazier, Mitncie, History. Indiana Club; History Club. 39 THE ARBUTUS t NINETEEN TEN Garl Grover Bonewitz Roy Samukl Ronsir Ray Myron Ronsib Nora Edith Bourn Garl Grover Bonewitz, Huntington. Law. Independent; Circulation Manager of The Student, igog-io. Roy Samuel Eonsib, Indianapolis. Chemistry. Butler College, igo6-o7; Strut and Fret (Business Manager and Treasurer, 1909-10); President of Prohibition Club, 1907-08; Daily Student Staff, 1907-10; Arbutus Staff; Y. M. C. A. Cabi- net, 191 0; Woman ' s League Play, igoS; Athletic Minstrel, 1908 and ' 09. Ray Myron Bonsib, hicfianapoHs. Chemistry. Delta Tau Delta; Butler College, 1906-07; Track Team, 1908-10 (Captain ' 10); In- door State record in quarter and half mile; Substitute half-back. Football Team, 1907. Nora Edith Bourn, Stilcsi ' illc. Botany. 40 THE ARBUTUS N I N E T E EN T E N v f rrvf t Kathrvn Estella Brenner Charley Bruner Bertha May Bunker Mary Edith Bushnell Kathrvn Estella Brenner, IVcst Lebanon. Mathematics. Charley Bruner, Claypool. Chemistry. Alpha Chi Sigma. Bertha May Bunker, Falmouth. History. Strut and Fret; History Club. Mary Edith Bushnell, Montpclicr. German. Delphian; Woman ' s League Board, 1909-10. c 41 ■ 1 - T H B ' ' A R B U T U S ' JV f — WP N I N E T E E N ' T E N CllRISTOPIIliiR COLUMRUS CaUBLE OsiE May Clark Charles Edward Conner Adam Joseph Cortner Christopher Columbus Cauele, SaJcm. Education. Phi Delta Kappa; Graduate State Normal. 1907. OsiE May Clark, Mcdaryville Junction. Botany. Charles Edward Conner, Tcrrc Haute. Medicine. Phi Beta Pi; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, igog-io. Adam Joseph Cortner, Bloomington. Medicine. Nu Sigma Nu; Assistant in Bacteriology and Pathology, 1906-10. 42 JULIET ' IRGINIA CrITTENBERGER Grace Cromer Charles Ross Dean Etta Hamilton DeLay Juliet Virginia Crittenbeeger, Anderson. English. Kappa Alplia Theta; Le Ccrcle Frangais. Grace Cromer, Anderson. German. Kappa Alpha Theta; Goethe Gesellschaft; Secretary of Woman ' s League, 1909-10. Charles Ross Dean, Rensselaer. History. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Etta Hamilton DeLay, Lima. English. English Club. 43 Ruth Claudia Duncan Joseph Bruce Dorsett Elizabeth Louise Davis Aaron Deich Ruth Claudia Duncan, Bedford. Mathematics. Pi Beta Phi; Euclidian Circle. Joseph Bruce Dorsett, Clovcrdale. Chemistry. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Alpha Clii Sigma; Lincoln League Sta-fF. Elizabeth Louise Davis, Jeffersonville. Latin. Aaron Deich, Wickliffe. Education. B.S., Central Normal College, 1903; A.B., 1904; PI Delta Kappa. 44 THE - ARBUTUS B NINETEEN Louise Deupree Ephriam C. Dilley Grace Evangeline Edmondson Flossie Eti-ielyn Edwards Louise Deupree, Shclbyville. English. English Club. Ephriam C. Dilley, Solshcrvy. Education. Phi Delta Kappa. Grace Evangeline Edmondson, Blooiitiiigton. Botany. Flossie Ethelvn Edwards, Oakland City. English. 45 % THE ' ARBUTUS i .. NINETEEN • TEN • Ceatrice Clementine Evans John Ellis Evans Oscar Ross Ewing Violet Martha Paris Beatrice Clementine Evans, Bloomington. English. John Ellis Evans, Brazil Education. Phi Delta Kappa. Oscar Ross Ewing, Grccnsburg. Philosophy. Beta Theta Pi; Pan-Hellenic Council; Strut and Fret; Boosters ' Club; Philosophy Club; Football Squad, ' 07; Executive Committee Jackson Club, 1907-08; Secretary Y. M. C. A., 190S, President, 1908-09; Board of Directors Indiana Union; President Junior Class 1908-09; President Senior Class 1909-10. Violet Martha Paris, Bloomivgton, English. 46 THE - ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN Ernest Clyde Fishbaugh Lillian Helen Franklin Bessie Wava French Frank Funkhouser Ernest Clyde Fjshbaugh, Markcl. Hediclne. Delphian; Phi Beta Pi. Lillian Helen Franklin, Himtingfoii. Staff. German. Le Cercle Fran ais; Assistant in German, Winter and Spring Terms, 1910; Arbutus Bessie Wava French, Anderson. Botany. Frank Funkhouser, Mauckport. Education. Phi Delta Kappa. 47 Lester Clark Gifford Otto Woodson Grisier Neva Lillian Galbreath Oma Glasburn Lester Clark Gifford, Riissiavillc. English. Delta Tau Delta; Press Club (President, ' 09); English Club; Associate Editor of Daily Student, ' oS; Junior Book Staff, ' 09; Arbutus Staff, ' 09; Associate Editor of Arbutus, ' 10; Executive Board of Jackson Club, ' 09; Assistant in English Department, University of Cincinnati, Spring term, ' 10. Otto Woodson Grisier, Columhia City. Medicine. Independent; Nu Sigma Nu; Assistant in Physiology, 1909-10. Neva Lillian Galbreath, Columhia City. English. Indiana Club; Woman ' s League Board, 1909-10. Oma Glasbuen, Bargersville. English. Strut and Fret; English Club. 48 THE ' ARBUTUS NINETEEN - TEN m .:liJi_iliI£jjJ2lXLl-X. Merl L. Gochen ' our Kathryn Goodwin Frank De ' ore Gorham Nellie Ward Graybill Merl L. Gochenoue, IVaisaw. History. President Jackson Club, 1908-09; History Club. Kathryn Goodwin, Sullivan. Latin. Delta Zeta; Arbutus Staff. Fk. nk De Vore Gokham, Cloverdale. Medicine. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Phi Beta Pi; Alpha Delta Sigma. Nellie Ward Graybill, Ladoga. English. Pi Beta Phi; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, 1908-09. 49 Carlin Hayes Griffey Harvey Francis Griffey Edward Rene Grisell Walter Sidney Greenough Carlin Hayes Griffey, Fortvillc. Mathematics. Phi Delta Kappa. Harvey Francis Griffey, MitchcU. Zoology. Phi Delta Kappa; in charge of University Farm. Edward Rene Grisell, Pennville. Economics. Wranglers; Secretary Publishing Board, 1906-07 ; University Land; Boosters ' Club; Economics Club; Arbutus Staff. Walter Sidney Greenough, Brazil. Economics. Phi Kappi Psi ; Press Club; English Club; Economics Club; Theta Nu Epsilon; Editor Daily Student, 1909-10; Arbutus Staff, 1910. so % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN Elizabeth May Han ilARY Gertrude Haseman MEs Herman PIawi HIN ItENJAMIN IIeINMILLER Elizabeth May Hanna, RoachdaJc. Latin. Delta Gamma. Mary Gertrude Haseman, Linton. lat hematics. Euclidian Circle; Basketball Team, 1907-09 (Captain, ' 09) ; Captain of Hockey Team, ' 08, ' 09. James Herman Hawk, Neiv Palestine. History. Delphian; History Clnb. John Benjamin Heinmiller, Kappa. JNTathematics. 51 % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN Mary Elizabeth Hicgins Albert Elmer Highley Clarence Edgar Hinshaw RoLLA Martin Hogue Mary Elizabeth Higgins, Logansport. English. Independent; English Club; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, 1909-10. Albert Elmer Hjghley, Tipton. Mathematics. Euclidian Circle; Phi Delta Kappa. Clarence Edgar Hinshaw, Hortonville. Education. Rolla Martin Hogue, Wheatland. Education. 52 THE ♦ ARBUTUS m NINETEEN -TEN g ' = fe .fc-i--.; -r- Fannie Evelyn Horrell Lawrence Hurst Grover Cleveland Hutcherson Georgia Theodora Hutton Fannie Evelyn Hoerell, Riclunond. English. Independent. Lawrence Hurst, Mart ' uisville. History. History Club. Grover Cleveland Hutcherson, Ehvood. Chemistry. Georgia Theodora Hutton, Commerce, Mo. English. Kappa Kappa Gamma; English Club. 53 THE • ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN Andrew Jasper Hypes Forrest Wayne Ingr Jerome Isenberger Louise Marie Iske Andrew Jasper Hypes, North Salciii. Mathematics. Forrest Wayne Ingram, Dana. Law. Arbutus Staff; Jackson Club; Euclidian Circle; Captain Senior Basketball Team; Tennis Association, ' 08, ' 09, ' 10. Jerome Isenberger. Lcbajioii. Physics. Married Students ' Club. Louise Marie Iske, hidiajiapolis. German. 54 % THE - ARBUTUS m NINETEEN Harry Hayden Johnson ' ' erta ' ' anessa Tounson Herman August Kasch Bessie Hazel Keeran Hakrv Hayhen Johnson, Sheridan. History. Delta Tau Delta; Tau Epsilon Pi; Zeta Delta Chi; Track Team, ' oS, ' 09. ' 10 (Captain ' 09); President of Sophomore Class; History Club. Verta Vanessa Johnson, Brazil. Latin. Arbutus Staff. Hf-rman August Kasch, Xorth Judsoii. Mathematics. Euclidian Circle: Jlusiness Manager Junior Rook. Bessie Hazel Keeran, Fort Wayne, German. Delta Gamma; Goethe Gesellschaft. 55 % THE ' A R B U T U S il N I N E T E EN TEN ToiiN WilSley Kendall Carl Clarence Kiess Eleanor May King Otto Claude Kinnick John Wesley Kendall, Middhtoivn. History. Phi Delta Kappa; History Club. Carl Clarence Kiess, Fort Wayne. Astronomy. Eleanor May King, Ossian. English. Pr esident of Y. W. C. A. 1906-07; Secretary of Senior Class; English Club; Chorus of Robin Ilood. Otto Claude Kinnick, Bloomington. English. Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; English Club. 56 % THE - ARBUTUS m NINETEEN - TEN t Julian Jacob Kiser Alonzo Knipe Samukl Alrert Laiir Ernest Lester Lambert Julian Jacob Kiser, hidiana oUs. Law. Delta Sigma Rho; Reinhard Club; Le Cercle Frangais; Tjoosters ' Club (President, igio); Tennis Association; Inter-Collegiate Debating Team, ' oS, ' og, ' lo; Director Indiana Union, 1910-11; Advisory Board of Oratorical Association, 1908-09. Alonzo Knipe, Mellott. Chemistry. Graduate Indiana State Normal, 1905. Samuel Albert Lahr, Huniingtou. Education. B.S., Valparaiso University, 1906. Ernest Lester Lambert, Hope. History. B.S., Central Normal College, 1905; Principal of Hope High School, ' 05, ' 07, ' 08, ' 09; History Club; Married Students ' Club. 57 « THE ' ARBUTUS m NINETEEN - TEN IIlCLEN MaRR LaNT Park Lant Fannie Fern Larmore Margaret Annette Laughlin Helen Makr Lant. Evausvillc. English. Delta Gamma; English Club. Park Lantz, Milton. History. History Club, Fanny Fern Larmore, Anderson. Mathematics. Delta Gamnia ; Euclidian Ciicle. Margaret Annette Laughlin, Columbus. English. Kappa Kappa Gamma; Englisli Club. S8 % THE ARBUTUS m N I N E T E E N T E N t ) ' - ' ,v«V . ♦ « « ' -f .! _ ' -■-- ' ■i f ' f:;:; !? ? « : ' . v- .-- .r ' .y ' ! - ' Wai ) w ' . actg tt- T wT ; c ' )ww Christine Lebline Gretta Surbaugh Lewis Laurel Edward Lingeman Edward Wesley Long Christine Lebline, Seymour. German. Le Cercle Fran ais; Goethe Gesellscliaft; Arbutus Staff; Assistant in German, Spring term, 1910. Gretta Sureaugh Lewis, Bhoiiiiiigton. Mathematics. Laurel Edward Lingeman, Brownsburg. Medicine. Delphian; Phi Beta Pi; Arbutus Staff. Edward Wesley Long, Cortland. Chemistry. Alpha Chi Sigma; Indiana Club. 59 Nora Lowder John Ellsworth Lung Pauline McCauley Anna Van Ness McConnell Nora Lowder, Whitestozvn-. Latin. John Ellsworth Lung, Blooniiugton. Mathematics. Pauline McCauley, Morgaiificld. Latin. Anna Van Ness McConnell, Rising Sun. English. English Club; Vice-President Senior Class; Arbutus Staff. 60 % THE ARBUTUS li NINETEEN -TEN Florence Jewett McCrea Edward David McDonald Jesse McNamee Emil Henry Mangel Florenci: Jewktt McCrea, Shclhyvillc. History. Delta Gaitiina; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, 1909-10; History Club. Edward David McDonald, Bloomington. English. Delphian; English Club (President, 1909-10); Student Publishing Board, 1907-0S; Cast of The Four P ' s; Cast of Pride and Prejudice; Arbutus Staff. Jesse McNamee, Nezv Castle. Latin. Kappa Kappa Gamma; Senior Girls ' Basketball Team. Emil Henry Mangel, Hnntiughurgh. Mathematics. Basketball Team. 1910; Graduate Indiana State Normal. 61 % THE ARBUTUS iW N I N E T E E N TEN Llovh Chi:sti;r Marshall ALRtA Marjorie Martin Nina D. Martindale Anna Sneed Megee Llovd Ciif.ster Marshall, BlountsviUc. Medicine. Phi Beta Pi. Alma Marjorie Martin, Oakland City. Education, Nina D. Marti nuale, Rensselaer. English. English Club. Anna Sneed Megee, Rnshvillc. Latin. Kappa Alpha Theta; Arbutus Staff. 62 THE ' ARBUTUS B NINETEEN TEN t Carl Alexander Mehaffey jMary Mehaffie Nellie Grace Meiser Norma Jane Milburn Carl Alexander i Iehaffev, JVcst Lebanon. Law. Lincoln League Cabinet; cacia. Mary Mehaffie, Logansport. ilatlicmatics. Independent; Woman ' s League Board; Euclidian Circle. Nellie Grace Meiser, Lcitcrs Ford. Geinian. Norma Jane Milburn, Jasper. English. English Club. 63 % THE - ARBUTUS m NINETEEN TEN Earle Crowder Miller WiLFORD Stanton Miller Mary Camilla Mitchell Ralph Reo Murphy Earle Crowder Miller, Bloomington. Law. President of Reinhard Club. WiLFORD Stanton Miller, Coliiuibia City. Philosophy. Phi Delta Kappa; Philosophy Club; Married Students ' Club; Assistant in Psy- chology, 1908-10. Mary Camilla Mitchell, Salem. English. English Club; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, 1908-09, 1909-10; Secretary of Sophomore Class; Associate Editor of The Arbutus; Assistant in Swimming. Spring, 1909. Ralph Reo Murphy, West Union, IV. Va. Latin. Indiana Club; University Band, 1906-10; Glee Club, 1907. Fren Zello jNIusselman Bavis Clay Nay Alpheus Russell Nees Sadie Avis Newlon Fken Zello Musselman, Camden. Philosophy. Emanon; Phi Delia Kappa; Piiilosuijhy I lub. Bavjs Clay Nay, Bloomington. Education. Phi Delta Kjti ' P J Married SUulents ' Club. Alpheus Russell Xees, Frankfort. Chemistry. Alpha Chi Sigma. Sadie Avis Newlon, Salem. Mathematics. Delphian; Euclidian Ciicle. 6s o % THE ARBUTUS li NINETEEN - TEN Hallie E ' Doyne Newton Alvin Null Charles Halbert Nussel Edna Brough O ' Banion Hallie E ' Doyne Newton, Dana. History. History Clnb; Junior Book Staff; Arbutus Staff. Alvin Null, Somerville. History. History Club. Charles Halbert Nussel. Brazil. Law. Phi Kappa Psi; Alpha Delta Sigma. Edna Brough O ' Banion, Tipton. English. Delta Zeta; Arbutus Staff. 66 E caa THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN - TEN m Oliver Ralph Overman Charles Elmer Owens Howard Paddock Levi Scott Paddock Oliver Ralph Overman, Windfall. Chemistry. Alpha Chi Sigma, Charles Elmer Owens, Tcrrc Haute. Botany. Howard Paddock, West Neivton. Economics. Economics Club; Director Indiana Union; Football Team. ' 07, ' oS, ' 09; Treasurer of Junior Class. Levi Scott Paddock, West Ncivton. Chemistry. Alpha Chi Sigma; Football Team, ' 06, ' 07, ' oS (Captain, ' 08); Coach of Freshman Team, ' 09. 67 rlrU wm NINETEEN TEN ' Orie Kldon Parker Daniel Wilson Pearce TuKonosiA i lfretta Peterson Clara Ridley Pfrimmer Okie Eldon Parkkr, South Bend. Law. Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 1909-10; President of Tennis vVssociation, 1909. Daniel Wilson Pearce, Bloomington, Education. Vice-President Married Students ' Club; Phi Delta Kappa; Philosophy Club. Theodosia Alfretta Peterson, Delphi. Mathematics. A.B., Marion Normal College. Clara Rtoley Pfrimmer, Bloomington. Latin. Kappa Ka])pa Gamma; President of Y. V. C. A., 1908-09. 68 Mrs. Lulu Estelle Pickard Fermen Layton Pickett Clara Ingleby Rapp Ernest Percy Railsback (Mrs.) Lulu Estelle Pickard, Marion. Latin. Fermen Lavton Pickett, Bloniningfoii. Botany. Critic in Botany, Blooniington Iligh School, igoS-io. Clara Ingleby Rapp, Seymour. English. Delphian; Arbutus Staff. P ' rnest Percy Railsback, KitchcU. Economics. Beta Theta Pi; Economics Club. 69 Frank Elmer Raschig Mayme Martha Reed Roy Norval Reed Robert Franklin Reeves Frank Elmer Raschig, Indianapolis. Chemistry. F manon; Alpha Chi Sigma: Press Club; Daily Student Staff, igo6-io; President Press Club, Spring, 1909; Treasurer Publishing Association, igog-io; Staff of Junior Book; Associate Editor of The Arbutus. Mayime Martha Reed, Blooiriiigtoii. Mathematics. Euclidian Circle; Captain Senior Hockey Team. 1909-10. Roy Norval Reed, Blooniingfon. Chemistry. Alpha Chi Sigma. Robert Franklin Reeves, Wilkinson. Law. Emanon; President Boosters Club, Spring term, 1910; Jaekson Club; Circulation Manager of The Daily Student, 1008-09; Business Manager of The Daily Student, 1909-10; Secx-etary of Co- operative Association Investigating Committee; Press Club. 70 DaRMON ArTELLE RlIINEHART Sarah Margaret Ritter Andrew Jackson Rogers Charles Roll Darmon Artelle Rhinehart, Plymoiifh. JNIedicine. Phi Beta Pi; Assistant in Anatomy, ifjocj-io. Sarah Margaret Ritter, Orleans. English. English Club. Andrew Jackson Rogers, Bloomington. Economics. Phi Kappa Psi; Alpha Delta Sigma; Theta Nit Epsilon; Press Club; Economics Club; Vice-President of Indiana Union; President Press Club, Spring. ' lo, Charles Roll, Pimento. History. History Club. 71- • THE ' ' ARBUTUS J Akthur Thicodore Rosberg Ju)NA C ' kcil Sanih-.ks Lkroy Scott Mrs. Naomi Crualbaugii Scott Arthur Ti-ieodorf. RosBERf;, Indianapolis. Law. Emanon ; Delta Sigma Rho; Strut and Fret; Rheinliard Club; Lincoln League; Advisory Board of Oratorical Association, 1909-10; Arbutus Staff; Winner Spring Term Oratorical Contest, 1909; Winner Junior Inter-Class Discussion, 1908; Debating Team. 1910 Edna Cecil Sanders, Hillsboro. Rotany. Lerov Scott, New llhany. Chemistry. Emanon. (Mrs.) Naomi Cru mp.augh Scott, Blooiniucjton. Zoology. 72 NINETEEN - TEN Louis Harold Segar ilARY Cecil Sims Pf.arlus Everett Smiley Mrs. Ruth Marshall Snider Louis Harold Sfxar, Indianapolis. Medicine. Nii Sigma Nn; Delta Sigma Rho; Inrliana-Tllinois Debate, 1907. Mary Cecil Sims, Frankfort. Mathematics. Delta Zeta; Euclidian Circle; Woman ' s League Board, 1908-10. Pearlus Everett Smiley, Lebanon. Law. (ATrs.) Ruth l rARSHAL L Snitiek, Norman, Okla. German. 73 AT - TH ' A R B 17 T U S - — t 1 f 1 . ■ it 1 l-t)f ' :,;lli| i f .-.ilsitJ ' Ralph ' ' ictor Sollit WiLMER Henry Souder Ida Ethel Stallings Thomas Emanuel Steckel Rali ' i-i Victor Sollit, Peru. Law. Independent; Delta Sigma Rho; Strut and Fret; Rheinhard Club; Winner Inter-Class Dis- cussion, 1906; Oiiio Debating Team, 1907; Illinois Debating Team, 1908; Winnerof Bryan Prize and Thompson Prize, 1908; Lecture Board, 1907-08; Instructor in Public Speaking since 1908. WiLMER Henry Souder, Salem. Physics. Physics Club; Assistant in Physics, 1909-10. Ida Ethel Stallings, New Harmony. Mathematics. Euclidian Circle. Thomas Emanuel Steckel, Mulberry. German. Delphian; Phi Delta Kappa; Le Cercle FranQais; Goethe Gesellschaft; University Band and Orchestra; Secretary to the Board of Arbutus Managers. 74 T H B A R B U .T U S N I N ET E EN T E N m Ruth Brvce Steele Gertrude Agnes Stewart Bess Ellen Stephenson Mary Maverette Stockwell Ruth Brvce Steele, Indianapolis. Latin. Kappa Kappa Gamma; .Mpha Gamma Beta; Arbutus Staff. Gertrude Agnes Stewart, Bloomington. Latin. Kappa Alpha Tlieta; Englisli Club. Bess Ellen Stephenson, Lebanon. Latin. Maky Maverette Stockwell, Clovcrdalc. English. Delphian. 75 % THE ARBUTUS t NINETEEN TEN Claude Earl Sutton John S. Taylor Mrs. Vergie Johnson Taylor William Ray Teeters Claude Earl Sutton, Bloomiiigton. Botany. John S. Taylor, Sullivan. Law. Emanon; Glee Club, 1906-07; Univeisity Band. igu6-og; University Oiclicstra, 1907-og; Tennis Association, 1907. (Mrs.) Vergie Johnson Taylor, Bloom field. English. Married Students ' Club. William Ray Teeters, Anderson. Chemistry. 76 William Adams Telfer Charles Henry Terrell Cressv Thomas Lela Carolton Todd William Adams Telfer, Blooiiiingfon. Law. Phi Kappa Psi; Theta Nu Epsilon; Arbutus Staff, 1909; ■noosters ' Club; Winner Ora- torical Contest, 1906. Charles Henry Terrell, Joncshoro. History; History Club; Jackson Club. Cressy Thomas, Kokomo. Mathematics. Delphian; Goethe Gesellschaft; Euclidian Club; Arbutus Staff. Lela Carolton Todd, Bloomington. English. Strut and Fret; History Club; President of Women ' s T eague, 190Q-10. 77 KAiiiiiRiNK AIatiieks Thompsun Howard Ross Tolley Hazel Lois Tracy George Waters Trainor Kathekine Mathers Thompson, Blooiningtoii. German. HowAED Ross Tolley, Marion. Mathematics. B.S., Marion Normal College, 1906; University Band; Euclidian Circle. Hazel Lois Tracy, Anderson. English. Kappa Kappa Gamma; English Club; Cast of Pride and Prejudice. George Waters Trainor, PoscyvUJc. Chemistry. Alpha Chi Sigma; Le Cercle Fran ais. 78 THE - ARBUTUS NINETEEN -TEN Thurmax William ' ax Metr Edward Eugene Walters Jesse Lynn ' ARD Marv Etta Ward Thurman William Van Metke, Franlcfoii. Economics. Economics Club. Second ' ice-President; Indiana Union ; M inner of Bryan Prize, igio. Edward Ecgene Walters, Carlisle. Economics. Independent; Economics Club; Secretary of Publishing Association, 1909-10; Treas- urer of Board of Arbutus Managers. Jesse Lynn Ward, Alamo. History. Emanon; History Club; Philosophy Club; Phi Delta Kappa; Oratorical Association, igog-io; ' ice-President of Junior Class; ' ' arsity Track Team, ' 07, ' 08, ' 09. Mary Etta Ward. Indianapolis. English. Independent; English Club. 79 EtH ELBERT WaRRICK Lewis Estel Weatherwax Daniel William Werremeyer James William Wilkinson Ethelbert Warrick, Goshen. English. Englisli Club; University Uarnl and Orcliestra. Lewjs Estel Weatherwax, Coal City. Education. Phi Delta Kappa. Daniel William Werremeyer, Tcrrc Haute. Mathematics. Euclidian Circle; Married Students ' Club. James William Wilkinson, Bloomington. Education. Married Students ' Club; Phi Delta Kappa; Teaching Fellow in Education. 80 % THE ARBUTUS m NINETEEN TEN Clara Blaine Williams Nina Jane Williams Rose Martha Williams Ernest E. Wilmore Clara Blaine Williams, Blooiin ' iigtoji. English. Nina Jank Williams, Bloomiiigtoii. English. KosE Maktha Williams, Bloomingtou. English. Ernest E. Wilmore. Charlotte, Mich. Philosophy. Pg.E., ' alparaiso Univeisity, 1908; Philosophy Club; Phi Delta Kappa. 81 THE ' ARBUTUS t Clark Woody Kred Talbott Woolverton Mary Baen Wright Oren Henry Wright Clakk Woudv, TJwnitown. Physics. Independent; Physics Club; ilasketball Squad, 190S-10. Frki) Talbott Woolvhrton, Grecusburg. Chemistry. Alpha Chi Sigma; Track Team, 1908-09. Makv Baen Wright, Grccnsbnrg. Latin. Le Cercle FrauQais; English Club; Daily Student Staff. 1906-09; 1909 Arbutus Staff; Editor of Tlie Junior Book; Editor-in-Chief of The Arbutus, igio. Oren Henry Wright, .Inrora. Medicine. Nu Sigma Nu; Arbutus Staff. 82 % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN - TEN JoirN Herman Wvlie Frank Robert Wilson Claude Leigh Clawson Sterling Peter Hoffmann John HKiurAN Wvlie, Bluoiiiiiifjtoii. Medicine. Dclpliian; V. M. C. A, Cnbinct, 1907-0S, igog-To; President of Y. M. C. A., Spring term, 1909. Frank Robert Wilson, Moores Hill. Education. Phi Delta Kappa. Claude Leigh Clawson, Gaston. Mathematics. Independent; Superintendent Gaston Schools, 190 7- 10. Sterling Peter Hoffmann. Liiiu Grove. Medicine. Delphian; Phi Eeta Pi; C S., Clarion Normal, 1905- 83 % THE ' ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN John Ora Ault, Bcnncfs Switch. Mathematics. ITarrv BenniiE, Argos. Economics. Ki.iir.RT Eldon Day, Galveston. Education. Oren Ernkst Frazkr. Pent. Zoology. Lola Etta GiioriMley, Paris, . Latin. Arthur jNI. Hadlev, Moorcsvillc, Economics. Don J. Henky, La ortc. Law. Bertha Elizabeth Hunter, ]ViUiamsl ort. English. Charles Emerson Jenkins, Mathcivs. Matliematics. Everett Edgar King. iViathematics. Orthfna E. AIeyer, Gary. Latin. Helen McFarland, Camden. English. (Mrs.) Densie Oliver Noyer, Blooininf ton. History. Nicholas Otto Pittenger, Bloontington. Chemistry. George Washington Reed, MitehcU. Mathematics. Mina E. Sedgwick, Ottnniii ' a, la. English. Augustus Clyde Shipp. Pathology. Lorenzo Ozro Slagle, Lebanon. Philosophy. Todd Grin Smith, Carrotlton, O. Chemistry. Orlow Chapin Snyder, Rockporl. Chemistry. Arden Hayes Thomas, FortviUc. English. Robert Milton Tirey, Mitchell. Latin. John Harney Trinkle, Paoli. History. Roy Parker Wisehart, Pendleton. Economics. Sarah Anne Whitehead, Inglefteld. English. 84 THE ♦ ARBUTUS N I N ET E EN TEN 8s % THE ARBUTUS ' I.U. HuhRoo I.U. HuhRoo Huh Roo I. U. 86 THE - ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN L. M. Camprrll Adams Alice Imla Booth John Alfred Hodge Claude Du ' all Holmes CANDIDATES FOR A.M. L. M. Campbell Adams, Danville. Economics. A.B., Indiana University. 190S: Phi ( ianima Helta; Assistant Clerk to Registrar, 1906-09; Treasurer Indiana Union, 1910; Teaching Fellow, 1909-10. Alice Imla B(joth, Bloouiington. Romance Languages. , .B. Englisli, Indiana University, ignR; Kapyta .Mpha Tliela ; Le Cercle Frangais; Arbutus Staff, 1908. JOHN Alfred Hodge, Nciv Albany. Physics. A.B., Indiana University, 1909; Teaching Fellow, 1909-10; Physics Club; University Band, 1903-05. Claude Du Vall Holmes, Lebanon. Physiology. A.B., Indiana University, 190S; Michigantown High School, 190S-09; Superintende nt High School, Arcadia, 1909-10; Assistant in Histology, 1907-08. 87 % THE A R B U T U S N I N E T E E N TEN George William Purcell Rainard Benton Robbins William Thomas Sanger Saburo N. Satoii George William Purcell, Viucennes. Mathematics. A. 15., Indiana University, igog; Phi Gamma Delta; Press Ckib; Phi Delta Kappa; Euclidian Circle; Teaching Fellow, 1909-10. Rainard Benton Robbins, Minicic. Mathematics. A.E., Indiana University, 1909. William Thomas Sanger, South Bend. Philosophy. A.B., Bridgewater, Va.. ignS; Philosophy Club (President, Fall and Winter Terms, 1909-10); Phi Delta Kappa; Graduate Club. Saburo N. Satoh, Shinkai . ' a-cho Airhi, Japan. Economics and Social Science. Economics Club; Graduate Meiji University of Tokio; Secretary Japanese Labor Union, Seattle, Wash.; Editor Oregon News; Correspondent Asaki News. Hannah Mary Stevens John VVelhoff Todd George Ellsworth Thompson Joseph Abraham Williams Hannai-i Mary Stevens, Mariinsville. Chemistry- A.B., Indiana University, 1907; Teaching Fellow, 1909-10. John Welhoff Todd, I ' craon. Philosophy. A.B., Indiana University, 1905; Phi Delta Kappa; President Philosoiihy Club, Spring Term, 1910; Teaching Fellow, 1909-10. George Ells vi: ' Rth Tho ipson, JVarrcn. Physics. Physics Club; Teaching Fellow, 1909-10. Joseph Abraham Williams, Bloomington. Philosophy. A.E., Indiana University, igo6; Phi Delta Kappa; Philosoi)hy Clulj. 89 % T H E ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN THE FOLLOWING PERSONS ARE ALSO CANDIDATES FOR THE A.M. DEGREE, THOUGH SOME MAY NOT COMPLETE THE WORK IN TIME TO BE GRADUATED IN 1910: Emanuel Anast.xssoff. Bulgaria. Education. Edgar Ernest Botts, Blooinington. History. William Conrad Brooks, Btooiiiiiigtou. Chemistry. Lotus Delta Coffman, Charleston, III. Education. .Archie Crawford, Martinsville. English. Harlem Eugene Densford, Carotlicrsvillc. English. Levi Jacob Driver, Fannlaiid. Education. RAy:i0ND Battman Duff, Gosport. Education. Mrs. Marion Durdin Ellis, Vincennes. Zoology. Ezra Thomas Franklin, ll ' ilinurc, Ky. Education. Albert Frederick Ottomae German, Peru. Chemistry. Alice Diven Goss, Blooinington. German. Mrs. Ella Bond Hart, Richmond. English. Aubrey Leslie Hawkins, Kokonio. English. Martha Eulala Hormell, JVingatc. English. Glenn James, Blooniington. Mathematics. Jesse Orval J. ' mes, Blooniington. Education. Edgar Julius Lewellyn, Sheridan. Philosophy. Horace Ward Marshall, Broad Ripple. Education. James Grover McDonald, Blooniington. History. Norman Eugene McIndoo, Lyons. Zoology. Ralph Waldo Noyek, Blooinington. Latin. Walter Truman Orr, Greenfield. Education. Everett Wheeler Owen, Ekvood. ] ' Iathematics. Mary Sauna Paxton, College Corner. Education. Earl E. Rampev, Blooniington. Education. Charles Myecn Reinoehl, Kendallvillc. Education. Elmer E. Rice, Decatur. Education. Carl Pa.xson Sherwin, Madison. Chemistry. Henry Noble Sherwood, Mitchell. History. Augustus Clyde Shipp, Blooinington. Pathology. Oscar William Silvey, West Lafayette. Physics. Brfnton Lorenzo Steele, Marion. Physics. Burton Austin Thompson, Frankfort. English. James William Wilkinson, Vcedersburg. Education. Julia Etta Willkie, Elzvood. Greek. 90 91 ■ 1 [ T H E; ARBUTUS ' V Indiana Law! Indiana Law! Hurrah! Hurrah! Indiana Law. 92 THE ' ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN LuMAN K. Cabcock John Lewis Baker Charles P. Bock Clarence Webster Bradford CANDIDATES FOR LL.B. LuMAN K. Babcock, Topeka. Phi Gamma Delta; Delta Sigma Rho; Phi Delta Phi; Reinhard Club; Publishing Board, 190S; President Publishing Board, 1909; Manager Cooperative Association, 1909; Winner Inter-Class Dis- cussion, 1907; Debating Team, 190S; Superintendent Topeka High School, 1903-05; Member Indiana Legislature, La Grange and Steuben Counties, 1907-09; Private Secretary to Governor, 190S; Secre- tary Mayor of Indianapolis, 1910; President Arbutus Board, 1910. John Lewis Baker, Oxford, O. A.B., Miami University, 1904; Beta Tlieta Pi; Phi Delta Phi; Rheinhard Club; Law Librarian, 190S-09. Chakles p. Bock, Elbcrfic ' ld. Douglas Dozen. Clakence Webster Bradford, Marion. Kappa Sigma; Phi Delta Phi; Goethe Gesellschaft; Associate Editor of The Arbutus; Treasurer Y. JNL C. A., 1909. 93 % THE ARBUTUS N I NET E E N - TEN $ A ON BURK CiiARiJiS Jav Carpentfr Austin JIernard Corbin Arnktt Bedford Cronk Avon I .ukk. Dccaiur. riii Kappa Psi; Phi Delta Phi. Charles Jay Carpenter, Bloomington. Married Students ' Club; Lincoln League Cabinet, ' oS. ' 09, ' 10; Secietary of Oiatorical Associa- tion, 190S-09; Secretary and Treasurer of Senior Law Class; Acacia, Austin Bernard Corein, Union City. A.B., 1909; Treasurer Y. j [. C. A., 1908; President of Randolph County Club, 1909 ; ' ice- President Senior Law Class. Arnett Bedford Cronk, Vccdcrsbnrg. Phi Delta Theta; Arbutus Staff. 94 % T H E A R B U T U S N I N E T E E N - T E N r- -iJ r U ' : f Ufi if. . £ Chester Lovd DuComb Oren WiLBERN Dickey Karl Andrew Frederick William Teff Goff CHiiSTKK LoYD DuCoMB, Lakcvlllc. ice-President of Douglas Dozen; Orator of Scnioi- Law Class. Oken Wilbern Djckev, Fainnounf. Reinhard Cluli; Law Librarian, 1910. Karl Andrew Frederick, Xcz ' castlc. Kappa Sigma: Phi Delta Plii; Alpha Delta Sigma; Joint Winner of Sophomore Discussion: President of Oratorical Association. 190S-09; Secretary of Student Publishing Association. 1909-10. VViLLLVM Jeff Goff, Russclh ' illc. Phi Delta Theta; Phi Delta Phi. 95 NINETEEN - TEN John Louis Gkaverson Harry F. Helwig Claud E. Gre Fred IIobson Jessup John Loujs Geaverson, Bremen. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Phi Delta Phi; Boosters ' Club; Douglas Dozen. PIarry F. Helwig, KcudallviUc. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Claud E. Gregg, Bloomficld. Married Students ' Club; President Jackson Club, igio. Fred Hobson Jessup, Grecntozvn. Treasurer Freshman Class, 1906-07; Secretary-Treasurer Jackson Club, 190S-09; Executive Com- mittee Jackson Club. 1909-10; Douglas Dozen; Acacia; Daily Student Staff, 1907-og; Junior Book Staff, igog; Arbutus Staff, igio. 96 % THE - ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN Fred Hates Johnson Frank Dawes Lawhead Jacob Erwin McCuruy Newman Thomas Miller Fred Bates Johnson, Indianapolis. Instructor in Journalism. Frank Dawes Lawhead, Auburn. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Phi Delta Phi. Jacob Erwin McCurdy, Blooniinytoji. Sigma Chi: Phi Delta Phi; Strut and Fret. Newman Thomas Miller, Soutli JJ ' hitlcy. Douglas Dozen ; Reinhard Club; ' ice-President Lincoln League, 1909; Treasurer Lincoln League, 1910. 97 I THE - ARBUTUS t NINETEEN  TEN t Michael Joseph Murphy, Jr. Glenn Allen Smiley Curtis Grover Shake Clyde Hendricks Thompson Michael Joseph Murphy, Jr., Terre Haute. Beta Theta Pi; Strut and Fret; Phi Delta Phi; Reinhard Club; Marquette Club. Glenn Allen Smiley, Blooviington. Curtis Grover Shake, Vmcennes. Kappa Sigma; Phi Delta Phi; Delta Sigma Rho; Reinhard Club; Winner Peace Contest, igo8; Y. M. C. A. Secretary, 190S-09 (President, 1909-10); Indiana-Illinois Debate, 1909; Vice-President of Junior Laws, 1908-09; President Oratorical Association, 1909-10; Indiana-Illinois Debate, 1910; Junior Peace Pipe Orator, 1909; Arbutus Staff. Clyde Hendricks Thompson, North Salem. A.B., 1909; Phi Delta Phi; Junior President of Class of 1909; President of Senior Law Class, 1910; Arbutus Staff, ' og, ' 10. 98 I THE -ARBUTUS N I N E T E E N - T E N Frank M. Thompson Charles Bonicum Waldron Charles Owen Weimfr Charles William Wortman Frank M. Thompson, Versailles. Sigma Chi; Tan Epsilon Pi; Baseball Team. ' 07, ' oS, ' 09 (Captain, ' og). Charles Bonicum Waldkon, Bloomington. Phi Kappa Psi; Phi Delta Phi; Marquette Club (President, rgog-io). Charles Owen Weimer, Union City. Reinhard Club. Charles William Wortman, Cecil, O. B.S., Ohio Northern University, 1906; A.B., X ' alparaiso University, 1907; Douglas Dozen. 99 THE ' ARBUTUS John Dean, Jr., Aurora. Howard Worth Fenton, Oxford, Ohio. George Goss Humphreys, Linton. Earle Clyde Miller, Blooinington. See candidates for A.B. Oscar Shields, Bloomington. Pearlus Everett Smiley, Lebanon. See candidates for A.B. Charles Kyran Walsh, Grass Creek. % THE A R B U T U S { [ T H E ARBUTUS ' V ■ Rah Hooray Rah Hooray Indiana! Hooray, Ira E. Bowman Wii-LiAM V. Boyle Edward A. Carlson Andrew Guffin Cooper CANDIDATES FOR M.D. Ira E. PjOwman, ll ' ashington. William V. Boyle, Patriot. Phi Beta Pi; Purdue University, 1905-06; Assistant Indianapolis Summer Mission for Sick Chil- dren, igog; Interne Methodist Hospital, Indianapolis, 1910-11. Edward A. Carlson, Aladison. Andrew Guffin Cooper, Scircleville. Phi Beta Pi. 103 % T H E A R B U T U S m NINETEEN TEN Harold R. Cox Earl Jerome Cripe Edwin Everett Dougherty Edward Tompkins Edwards Harold B. Cox, Sheridan, Phi Beta Pi. Earl Jeroml Cripe, Indianapolis. Phi Beta Pi; B.E., Manchester College. 1905, ' ice-President Class; Interne Deaconess Hos- pital, igio-ii. Edwin Everett Dougherty, Indianapolis. Eastern Illinois State Normal: Illinois University. Edward To rpKiNS Edwards, Indianapolis. C 104 % THE ARBUTUS B NINETEEN - TEN GuSTAV Herman Esch Syi-Via Pearl Carner Henry Harlow Gobbel Lawrence Glenn Griffis GusTAV Herman Esch, Suutli Bend. Phi Rlio Sigma; Assistant to Hi. M- Tlioruer, Police Surgeon. Indianapolis. SvLViA Pearl Gaener, Iiidiauapolis. Nu Sigma Plii; Alljion College, Albion. Michigan. Henry HafsLOW Gobeel, Indiaiiapi ' tis. Lawrence Glenn Griffis, Middlcton ' it. lOS % THE ' ARBUTUS N I N E T E E N T E N Alfrkp Wilbur Hadley Nellie Jane Hanaway LTER L. HaWORTH Fred Hershman Alfred Wilbur Hadley, MoovcsiiUe. Xellie Jane Hanaway, Delphi. Pi Beta Gamma; Nu Sigma Phi; A.B., 190S. Walter L. Haworth, Indianapolis. Phi Rho Sigma; President Junioi- Class. ' ' Fred Hershman, Sheridan. Externe three months, Bobbs and City Dispensary; Assistant six months, Harrell Hospital, Nobles- viUe, Ind. 106 THE - ARBUTUS m Arthur Mitchell Hetherington Blanche Horner Henry Oscar Hovelson George B. Hunt Arthur Mitchell Hetherington, Indianapolis. Bobbs and City Dispensary. 1909; Undergraduate Interne, Indianapolis City Hospital, 191 0; Indiana State Noimal; ' ice-Presidcnt Junior Class. Blanche Horner, FIoto. Nu Sigma Phi; Pi Beta Gamma; Externe Dr. W. B. Fletcher ' s Sanatorium; Secretary Senior Class. V Henry Oscar Hovelson, Osage, loiva. George B. Hunt. JJ ' hite Wafer. Nu Sigma Nu. 107 NINETEEN ' TEN ' H John Curtis Ikwin James ' ILLIAM Jackson RoswELL Lee Jones Grover a. Kempf John Cukt.is Ikwin, Frankfort. Phi Delta Theta; Phi Rho Sigma; Ik S. X ' alparaiso University, 1904; A.B., Indiana University, 1908; Business Manager Medical Department, igio Arbutus; Undergraduate Interne Indianapolis City Hospital, 1909-10, Interne, 1910-11. James Wjlijam Jackson, Nora. Indiana University, igo6. RoswELL Lee Jones, Brazil. Graduate American College of ilechano-Therapy. Grover A. Kempf, Jasper. Nu Sigma Nu; Appointed Interne to the Marine Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio. 108 THE ARBUTUS S NINETEEN - TEN John Tracy Kennedy Alvin R. Ke Mason B. Light Oscar Dennen Ludwig John Tracy Kennedy, hidiauapoJis. Sigma Nu; Phi Beta Pi; Assistant Anatomy, Indiana University. 1907-08: National Guard Hospital Corps; Externe City Dispensary. 1 09; Hospital Appointment. 1909 ; A.B.. Indiana University, 190S. Alvin R. Kerr, Indianapolis. Mason B. Light, Broad Ripple. Phi Chi; Externe Methodist Hospital; Interne since April r, 1910. Oscar Dennen Ludwig, Indianapolis. Plii Rho Sigma; Wabash College. 109 T H E ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN m Daniel Edgar Lybrook Virgil Gwinn McDonald Edgar Franklin Magenheimer Rocco Andrew Montani Daniel Edgar Lybeook, Young America. Nu Sigma Nu; Emanon; A.B., Indiana University. 1908. Virgil Gwinn McDonald, Nohhsvillc. Edgar Franklin Magenheimer, Chandler. Rocco Andrew Montani, Indianapolis. Phi Beta Pi. 110 Samuel C. Murphy Lucius R. Rivera Earl Miller Shenck Homer Burlington Shoup Samuel C. Mtjephy, Blooiuington. Phi Gamma Delta; Phi Beta Pi; Zeta Delta Chi; Theta Nu Epsilon; Alpha Delta Sigma; A.M.. Indiana University, 1908. Lucius R. Rivera. Indianapolis. Eakl ] I)ller Shenck. Kokomo. Phi Rho Sigma; Undergraduate Assistant to Dr. J. 11. Oliver. iqoS-io; Interne St. incent ' s Hospital, 1910-11; Assistant Business Manager, Medical Department, 1910 Arbutus; Purdue School of Pharmacy, 1905-06. Homer Burlington Shoup, Market. Interne St. Antliony ' s Hospital, Terre Haute, Indiana. I THE ARBUTUS N I N ETEEN TEN m Ignatius JouiN Stankus J.EE KvEkETT Strong John Eugene Xalbott Rov Albert Terry Ignatius John Stankus, Boston, l Iass. Lee Everett Strong, Iiidiuiiapolis. Phi Chi; Delta Epsiloii. John Eugene Taldott, Linton. Sigma Nii; Delta Sigma; Phi Beta Pi; Inteine Rockvvood Sanatorium; A.D., 1908. Roy Albert Terry, Dana- Phi Chi; Interne Deaconess Hospital. % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN Alpiiels Le Rov Thurston Henry Evans Washburn Elbert Shirk Waymire Joe Jones Wood Alpheus Le Roy Thurston. ludiajiapolis. Phi Chi; Interne St. ' incent ' s Hospital, igm-ii; . .D., Clieniistry, 1907. Hi:nrv Evans Washburn. Clinton. Plii RIio Sigma; Interne Josepli Eastman Hospital, 1909-11. Elbert Shirk Waymire, Dccdsvillc. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Nu Sigma Xu; Alpha Uelta Sigma; Interne Methodist Episcopal Hospital, Indianapolis, 1910-11; A.U., Indiana University, 190S. Joe Jones Wood, Franklin.. 113 THE ARBUTUS M. D. Batties, Inc!iaiiap :lis A. Bond, Caniicl O. A. Caldwell, Marion A. B. Cleage, Marion D. X. Conner, Aiidrrson C. R. Elfers, Rising Sun H. W. Gante, Anderson F. E. Jackson, Bedford T. H. Lewis, Indianapolis E. D. McQuillan, Delta. Ohio W. A. Millington, Indianapolis H. S. Murat, Madison G. C. Pritchett, Scotland C. C. Sutter, Indianapolis C. E. Woods, Indianapolis 114 NINETEEN - TEN S NINETEEN TEN m 116 % THE - ARBUTUS t N I N E T E EN TEN KAPPA ALPHA THETA Founded at DePauw University. Janiiarv 27, 1870 Colors: Blacl and Gold. FloK ' cr: Black and Gold Pansy Beta Chapter Established May 18, 1870 Mrs. Louise Boisen Mrs. Samuel Wylie Mrs. Lena Sentney Mrs. Harry Axtell Mrs. Martha Wiley Mrs. B. D. Myers Mrs. Frank Holland Mrs. W. P. Dill Mrs. L. S. Davis Mrs. E. H. Lindley Mrs. C. J. Sembower Mrs. G. 11. Stempel Mrs. H. T. Stephenson Mrs. A. L. Pittenger SISTERS IN THE CITY Mrs. L. E. Oaks Mrs. Zella Kinser Holland Mrs. Oscar Cravens . Mrs. R. W. Miers Mrs. Leonard Todd Mrs. Hubert Beck Airs. Harry Johnson Mrs. Charles Springer Miss Reba Wylie Miss Carrie Slocombe Miss Bess Van Valzah Miss Frances Murphy Miss Pearl Jones Miss Mary Lindley Miss Oneta Allen Miss Alice Booth Miss Wyrtis McCurdy Miss Jessie Hogate Miss Frances Bray Miss Helen Rvors Miss Juliet Maxwell SISTERS IN THE FACULTY Miss Louise Ma.xwell Miss Louise Goodbodv Miss Jotilda Conklin Grace Cromer SISTERS IN COLLEGE NINETEEN HUNDKED TEN Juliet Vir.yinia Crittenbcrgcr .Anna Snced i Iegcc Gertrude Stewart NINETEEN HUNDRED ELEVEN Katharine Foster Croan Jean Isley Grace Bray Bessie Stewart Nell Priscilla Reed May Kemp Roxana ILart Thayer Georgia Frank Sembower Elizabeth Lavina Barlow Louise Lee Alexander Gladys Rieman NINETEEN HUNIiRED TWELVE Eula McCurdy Margaret Latham Ida Chenoweth Edith Wilk Blanche Ott Bernice Kinser NINETEEN HLINDRED THIRTEEN Edith Trimble Lillian Trimble Catherine McMahon Florence Beeson King Mary Louise Craig Mabel Dunn Ella Osborne Rhea Bingham Belle Royer -Ardys Chenoweth Lucy Davisson Louise Keller Jeanne Crowder Cornelia Ogle Nell Keller 117 THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN FlfopBiiiiff ip rpsps fH s FiiilJWf ' I ' i, M) ' ih)j ifijiiiiw;iH ' fflii ii8 THE - A R B U T U S NINETEEN KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Founded at Monmouth College, October 13. 1870 Delta Chapter Established October 12, 1873 Colors: Light Blue and Dark Blue. Flozccr: Fleur-dc-Lis SISTERS IN THE CITY Mrs. B. F. Adams Mrs. James K. Beck Mrs. Fred Beck Mrs. Carroll Beck Mrs. P. K. Buskirk Mrs. L. V. Buskirk Mrs. Walter Bradfute Mrs. Winona Bell Mrs. James Bowles Mrs. A. V. Faris Mrs. Louise Currv Mrs. H. B. Gentry Mrs. Arthur Cravens Mrs. X. U. Hill Mrs. W. N. Culmer Mrs. W. S. Hanna Mrs, Noble Campbell Mrs. Dow Foster jNIrs. Clara Faris Mrs. Wm. Telfer Mrs. Robert Rogers Mrs. W. D. Howe Mrs. Otto Rogers Mrs. H. A. Hoffman Mrs. Charles Tourner Mrs. J. E. P. Holland Mrs. W. E. Hottel Mrs. Wm. Jenkins Mrs. E. .A. Lively ]Mrs. Theodore Louden Mrs. Wm. Moenkhaus Mrs. C3 ' rus Reed Mrs. S. F. Scott iNIrs. Arthur B. Stonex Mrs. Win. Louden Miss Helen Osthaus r Iiss Josephine Hunter i Iiss Kate Hight Miss Anna Tourner Miss Ida Manley Miss Lillie Howe Miss Sallie Duncan SISTERS IN COLLEGE NINETEEN HUNDRED TEN Post G rod Kate: Laura Benedict Clara Ridley Pfrimmer Georgia Theodora Hutton Hazel Lois Tracy Margaret Laughlin Jess McNamee Ruth Brvce Steele Nora Viola Corcoran NINETEEN HUNDRED ELEVEN Leafy Dell Davis Edith Edna Matthews Marguerite Frances Griffith Hazel Scott Merle Storen Mabel Banks Gant Elizabeth Deming Ruth Worral Edwards Edith Fitzpatrick NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE Daphne Marguerita Hoffman Carrie Ong Samuella McKnight Norman Ethel Mary Smith NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN Mary Crawford Wright Ruth Woolerv Lucy Rirrill Ruh Margie Bradfute Alabel Katherine Ham Alary Louise Craig Pauline Workman Hazel Lois Dillon Kathleen Stilwell 119 THE ' ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN m 120 % THE - ARBUTUS NINETEEN - TEN m PI BETA PHI P ' ounded at Monmouth College, April 28, 1867 Indiana Beta Chapter Established 1893 Colors: Wine and Silver Blue. Flower: Red Carnatic Mrs. William Karsell Mrs. J. H. Van Hook Mrs. Otto Rott Mrs. L. W. Hughes SISTERS IN THE CITY Mrs. C. E. Harris j Iiss Alda Crain Miss Pearl Neeld Miss Alice Cawley Miss Eva East Miss Alice Fruse SISTERS IN THE EACULTY Hazel Squires Mary Dunham Ruth Claudia Duncan SISTERS IN COLLEGE NINETEEN HUNnRED TEN Nell Ward Graybill Orthcna Meyer Elizabeth Rawles Mina Sedgwick NINETEEN IIUNIlREn ELEVEN Florence Maston Alice Reeve Winship Ruth Katherine White Edna Elder Hatfield Ruth Esther ; liller Misnion M. White Norma Kerr Brown NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE Alma Schlotzhauer Clara Hatfield Ruth Ikerd NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN Ionia Isabel Imcs Estella Jarrctl Walker Edna Laura Walker Edith Eleanor Young .Marv Kneale Millicent McDonald JNIentoria McDonald c % THE - ARBUTUS m NINETEEN TEN {t 1 I T H E ' ' ARBUTUS ■ Founded at Oxford, Mississippi, 187 DELTA GAMMA Colors: Bronze, Pink and Blue, floivcr: Cream Rose Theta Chapter Established December 10. iS Mrs. J. A. Woodburn Mrs. D. M. Mottier Mrs. F. M. Andrews SISTERS IN THE CITY Mrs. M. M. Ellis Miss Rosalie Borgnian Miss Eupha Foley Miss Edna J. King Mrs. D. A. Rothrock Elizabeth Mav Hanna SISTERS IN COLLEGE NINETEEN HUNDRED TEN Helen Marr Lant Bessie Keeran Fanny Fern Larmore Florence Jewett McCrae Marguerite .A.lice Bartelle Fanny Maud Frisinger Helen Isabelle McFarland NINETEEN HUNDKED ELEVEN Nellie Garretson Irnia Ruth Vaughn Louise Enibree Alice Vance Laning Blanche Bain Elizabeth Scott Jeanette Josephine Bartelle Marion Mardick Hoffman NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE Elisabeth Molony Mary Mcllvaine Louetta Cordier Fannie Williams Eleanor Banta Louella Cordier Nelle McCoy Frank Emma Carr NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN Hazel Van Buskirk Elise F. Krug Anna Humphreys Ruby Rutledge Gladys Lee Helen Burkett Neptune Mary Eugenia Bowman 123 THE ARBUTUS 124 c THE ' ARBUTUS DELTA ZETA Founded at Miami University, October 24, 1902 Epsilon Chapter Established May 22, igog Colors: Old Rcse and Xile Green. Fhnvcr: Pink Re HONORARY :MEMBERS Mrs. Fred H. Batman Mrs. Edgar R. Cimiings Kathrvn Goodwin SISTERS IN COLLEGE NINETEEN HUNDRED TEN Cecil Sims Brniigh O ' Banion Elisabeth Thompson NINETEEN HUNDRED ELEVEN Emma Brnnoer Vern Hardman Joy Shntt Flae Ballinger NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE Jess Cook Edith Lando Gladys Robinson Grace Alexander Gladys Marine Pearl King Josephine Miller Elmira Case NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN Caroline Hilderbrand Shirley Hawley Franchion Campbell Effie Nickless Nellie Easley Marv Easlev T2S THE ARBUTUS 126 I THE - ARBUTUS t NINETEEN - TEN BETA THET A PI Founded at Miami University, August 8, 1839 Colors: Pink and Blue. Flozccr: American Beauty Rose BROTHERS IN THE CITY Robert V. Miers Samuel W. Pfrinimer Harry Johnson Joseph Henley Walter Ffrimmer Dr. William A. Rawles BROTHERS IN THE FACULTY Dr. Charles Hepburn Dr. Charles A. Campbell BROTHERS IN COLLEGE NINETKEN HUNDRED TEN Gladstone Howard Barrett Ralph Fordyce Blatchley Oscar Ross Ewing Michael Joseph Murphy Ernest Percy Railsback James Albertus Diltz Paul Yakey Davis William Sefton Robbins NINETEEN HUNHRED ELEVEN Carl Freeland Eveleigh Willard Weer NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE Benjamin Dickson Hitz Frank ' rhonias McCoy NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN Scott Eli Buei: Paul Eli Fisher Pi Chapter Established August 27, 1845 Leonard C. Field Mr. Arthur B. Stonex Robert Charles Hill Joel Benjamin Williamson John Heritage lorris Hubert Plerschel Hanna Gordon Fravel Jacques Paul Vories IcXutt Henry Louis Mauzy Robert Van Thomas Pledged: Ronald Scott, Roxdon Cox 127 ■ 1 it ' T H E ' ARBUTUS I mm i N I N E T E EN -TEN E T E E N - T E N PHI DELTA THETA Founded at Miami University, December 26, 1S48 Colors: Argent and Azure. Flozvcr: Wiiite Carnation Indiana Alplia Chapter Established 1849 WilHam X. Hicks Samuel W. Bradfute Samuel C. Dodds William H. Sears BROTHERS IN THE CITY Robert G. Miller Alfred H. Belden Lewis Hughes Homer Woolery Leonidas D. Rogers John F. Foster Redick A. Wylie Harry D. Orchard William Karsell Dow B, Foster William J. Dodds Thomas Karsell Blaine Bradfute Clj de Cleveland Fred A. Seward J. C. Wells BROTHERS IN THE FACULTY Dr. Robert E. Lvons Mr. James M. Sheldon Air. Herman Lester Smith BROTHERS IN COLLEGE Post Graduate: Cecil O. Gamble NINETEEN HUNDRED TEN Ravmond Cole Beeler . rnott Bedford Cronk William J. GofT NINETEEN Hl ' NDKED ELEVEN Cecil Lewis Clark William Homer Hipskind Dane H. Hoover ?i[iller Crawford Kent Gerald Marshall Robert E. Neff Russell Alger Sharp NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE Erie F. Foland Floyd McGriff Merlin Bliss Motsenbocker Paul Ramsey Hawley Leon Barnhill Rogers Willard Crane Kent NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN Frederick William Beck Harrv C. Dibell Scott R. Edwards Haynes Jordan Freeland Ronald Wilson Kent Ray N. Parks ilerle Luther Scott Pledged: Ben Wilson, Walter Heazlitt 129 THE ARBUTUS NINE T E EN TEN 130 THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN SIGMA CHI Founded at Miami University, June 29, 1855 Lambda Chapter Established Sept. 10, li Colors: ' Blue and Gold. Floivcr: White Rose Henry L. Axtell Fred Henry Batman Ira Coleman Batman Lewis Bowles Thomas C. Clark Frank Clay Duncan Henrv Clay Duncan BROTHERS IN THE CITY George Frank Holland James Edwin Holland Henrv Anderson Lee John Henry Louden Joseph G. McPheeters Thomas Carter Perring Charles Rawles Earl Showers Charles Woolery BROTHERS IN THE FACULTY Charles Henry Eigenmann Lewis Sherman Davis Homer Addison Hoffman Ernest Otto Holland Ernest Hiram Lindley Fred Bates Johnson Cliarles J. Sembower BROTHERS IN COLLEGE Post Graduates: Frederick Miller Smith, Carl Paxson Sherwin NINETEEN HUNDRED TEN J. Erwin IMcCurdy Francis M. Thompson Stanley W. Schaeffer John W. Hebel Roger E. Lee NINETEEN HUNDRED ELEVEN John A. Posey Jackiel W. Joseph Harry E. Bertsch Cecil F. Whitehead Everet F. McCoy Byrel R. Kirklin Elmer D. Goss Ralph M. Cochran Will C. Moore John T. Day NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE Claude S. Hurst Thurman D. Hall INIauricc O. Birely Phillmer Day George S. Kahn NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN Gayland R. Canada Donald S. Dixon Henry J. Prevo Linville B. Ferguson Harry C. Mclntvre Ralph W. Woolery 131 % THE ' ARBUTUS 132 % THE A R B-U T U S NINETEEN TEN t PHI KAPPA PSI Founded at Washington and Jefiferson College, February ig, 1852 Indiana P.eta Chapter Established May 15, 1869 Colors: Pink and Lavender. Fkm ' cr: Sweet Pea W. H. Adams Joseph K, Barclay Alfred A. Beck Hubert L. Beck James K. Beck James W. Blair William J. Blair William T, Blair L. V. Buskirk R. H. Chamberlain BROTHERS IN THE CITY Thomas A. Cookson A. V. Faris Melville A. Faris Will I. Fee Xat U. Hill, Jr. Philip B. Flill Louis P. Howe Claude G. Malott Roy O. Pike Nicholas Otto Pittenger Edward Showers Charles Springer John C. Sutphin Sanford F. Teter BROTHERS IX THE FACULTY William E. Jenkins Charles A. Mosemiller Avon Burk BROTHERS IN COLLEGE NINETEEN HUNDKED TEN William Warner Carr Walter Sidney Greenough Charles Halbert Nussel Andrew Jackson Rogers William Adams Telfer Charles Bonicum Waldron NINETEEN HUNDRED ELEVEN Arthur Henry Berndt Charles Wharton Eichrodt Miller Hamilton Maynard Albert Loughry Allen George Messick George Moses Roberts Walter Allan Teter Merrill Stamper Davis Lawrence Ravmond Freel NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE RoLicrt Clark Hamilton Harry Milton Pell Russell Shepherd Racey Fred Lewis Brucker Albert Craycroft Frank C. Dana George W. Henley, Jr. NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN Jesse Beeson Hunt Hubert Hickam T ' rank Raymond Raub Oliver Lynn Scott Orlando Chester Thompson Fred Willette Trueblood 133 THE ARBUTUS .134 NINETEEN PHI GAMMA DELTA Founded at Washington and Jefferson College, 1848 Color: Royal Purple. Floiver: Heliotrope Zeta Chapter Estahlished ; fay J5, 1871 Arthur G. Allen George Bollenbacher Oscar H. Cravens F. Lyman Fulk Henry B. Gentry Oscar L. Horner Walter E. Hottel BROTHERS IN THE CITY John A. Hunter Morton T. Hunter Theodore J. Louden William M. Louden Lucian R. Oaks Thurston Smith R. L. Treadway Samuel Van Valzah Fred M. Wilson James B. Wilson BROTHERS IN THE FACULTY Dr. Henry R. Alburger Dr. George A. Arps Mr. J, C. Barkley Mr. John W. Cravens Prof. Enoch G. Hogate Prof. J. J. M. LaFoUette Dr. William J. Moenkhaus ] Ir. Lllysses H. Smith Dr. James Albert Woodburn BROTHERS IN COLLEGE Post Graduates: L. M. C. Adams, George W. Purcell, Ernest V. Shocldey NINETEEN HUNDRED TEN Luman K. Babcock Samuel B. Dill Donald G. Adams Clarence E. Cartwright NINETEEN HUNDRED ELEVEN Omer B. Farr Forrest E. Livengood Claude Whitney NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE Max C. Barrett Frank W. Elson Morrell M. Shoemaker Guy M. Lemmon James W. Van Valzah Richard L. Simpson Ora C. Badders Ray W. Clark G. Oscar DriscoU Bayard T. Lang NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN Frank T. Lindley Charles H. Longfield Roljert G. Patterson Robert S. Payton Francis S. Reed Paul L. White 135 T H E - A R B U T U S NINETEEN - TEN 136 DELTA TAU DELTA Founded at Bethany College, February 28, 1859 Beta Alpha Chapter Fstablished June 4, 1887 Colors: Royal Purple, Old Gold and While. Fknvcr: Pansy BROTHERS IX THE CITY Noble C. Campbell . Harold Kemp R. C. Rooers J. F. Luzadder O. F. Rogers Robert A. Spratt J. C. A ermilya BROTHER IN THE FACULTY Dr. Will D. Howe Rav S. Bonsib BROTHERS IN COLLEGE Post Graduates: Clarence F. Edmondson, Oscar Shields NINETEEN HUNDRED TEN Edgar Chambers Howard W. Fenton Lester C. Giffcrd Harry H. Johnson Park G. Lantz Elmer C. Williams NINETEEN HUNDRED ELEVEN Dean L. Barnhart Roy D. Buckley Paul Edmondson John M. Johnson - John ' Roberts Loren A. Sanford Ralph T. Shilling Philip JiL Graves NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE Benjamin F. Hatfield Harry B. Knowlton Hubert L. Parkison James M. Avery Charles Bayer Donald T_.. Bose NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN Charles Compton Charles Karr Thomas F. Fitzgibbons Ri)bert JMcClaskey Pledged: Wilbur Flobbs, Chester Tourner 137 Thomas Pocock Roscoe Rhodes vi ir -, ? ' ■-i.n-y T- % THE ' ARBUTUS N I N E T E E N - TEN 138 THE A R B U T U S m N I N ET E EN- T E N t SIGMA NU Founded at Virginia Military Institute, January i, 1869 Beta Eta Chapter Established April 14, 1892 Colors: Black, White and Gold. Flower: White Rose Frank Orniela Beck CHARTER :MEMBERS Herman Julius Gartner Frank Kepner Hiram Calvin Sampson Albert Hen ry Yode Charles Clevis Krauskoff BROTHERS IN THE FACULTY Frank Aydelotte Henry Thew Stephenson James Donald Douglass BROTHERS IN COLLEGE NINETEEN HUNDRED ELEVEN Clay Blaine Hays Clarence Joseph }ilcGiirly John Elmer Peak NINETEEN HUNDKED TWELVE Russell August Brown Virgil Chester Cutts George William Morris ' riiomas Andrew Gill Clavton Ellsworth Tanke Clinton Gi an Wayne Hamilton Harold Austin King NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN Dwight Clifford Park William Albert Steinhilber Ralph Waldo Woodward Pledged: Albert Guy Brenton, Dwight Cragun, Floyd Flemming, Harry Inman 139 % THE - A R B U T U S t NINETEEN TEN m ' J,40 3 KAPPA SIGMA Founded at University of Virginia, 1867 Beta Theta Chapter EstablisliedMay 14, 1887 BROTHERS IN THE CITY George W. Talbott Merrill Talbott liarry L. Yelch BROTHERS IN THE FACULTY Max M. Ellis Keith Preston BROTHERS IN COLLEGE NINETEEN HUNDRED TEN Clarence W. Bradford Karl A. Frederick Curtis G. Sliake NINETEEN HUNDRED ELEVEN Jas. Warner Spinlc lac. E. Meader NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE Fred F. DeVilbiss F. Howard Judd Henry F. ' N olting David Preston Jerry ] I. Ulen Clarence Wills Orren G. Yeaton NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN Rudolph W. Cuttshall Dan Hess Everett McCuUough Paul A, Nolting . Charles Savery Cecil L. Draper Fred A. Lampnian Edgar Mendenhall Melvin H. Rhorer Walter W. Williams. Pledged: Winfield W. Durbin. Harvey Failling, Cassius Lanipman, Walter McCarthy, Gerald Triplett, Frank Brant 141 % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN - TEN llliil1 tl ( ' ' ' ' lh ' ? ' - ' ' l, ' ily||llJliiMll ' ' lll, ' ' i;,iVl. 142 THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN SIGMA ALPHA EPSILOX Founded at Tuscaloosa College, March 9, 1856 Indiana Gamma Chapter Established January 18, 1907 Colors: Purple and Old Gold. Floi ' cr: Violet BROTHER IN THE CITY Rev. ' illiam Burrows BROTHERS IN THE FACULTY John R. Voris Dr. . ugustus Clyde Shipp Don J. .Xvcry J. Bruce Dorsctt BROTHERS IN COLLEGE NINETEEN HUNDRED TEN Frank DeVore Gorham John Lewis Graverson William H. Hackm.m Frank Lawhead Dewell Gann, Jr. Cecil R. Peterson NINETEEN HUNDRED ELEVEN Joseph p. Ormsby D. Delos Dca: Cloice W. Hatfield Walter T. Baltzell NINETEEN HITNDRED TWELVE Harry F. Helwig James Nyswander Chas. Newsom Bowman Lowell T. Boyd John Cliffe Duncan NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN Wilbur Vandorer Glover George Kelly Charles Rattman Fred A. Wiecking Pledged: Clifford R. Hay, George Franklin Stessel Clarence Williams Russell Zeh 143 THE ARBUTUS N I N E T E E N - T E N - PAX-HELLENIC COUNCIL BETA THETA PI PHI DELTA THETA SIGMA CHI PHI KAPPA PSI PHI GAMMA DELTA DELTA TAU DELTA SIGMA NU KAPPA SIGMA SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON 144 145 % THE ARBUTUS t NINETEEN - TEN • 146 I THE - ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN Color: Apple Green and White INDEPENDENT Flower: The Daisy Dr. Arthur L. Fole Dr. Robert J. . Iey MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY Dr. Schuyler C. Davisson Prof. Thomas LeGrand Harris Dr. Samuel B. Harding Dr. Rolla R. Ramsey Mrs. Alice D. Goss Prof. Georac D. Morris Ruliy M. Beeker Karl W. Behr _ Garl G. Bonewitz Hugh E. Brown Everett A. Davisson MEMBERS IN THE UNIVERSITY NINETEEN HUNDRED TEN Otto W. Grisier Mary E. Higgins Fannie E. Horrell J. Allen Jones Rollo E. Mosher Mary Mehaffie Ralph V. Sollitt Edward E. Walters NINETERN HUNDRED ELEVEN Daniel B. X ' e Rupert B. Redic Clark Woodv Mary E. Wa ' rd Herbert P. Welch James Elmer White NINETEEN HUNDKED TWELVE Sarah H. Brant Earl E. Gill Jessie G. Hall Opal C. Harrell Josepha Meinecke Genevieve F. Bowlus Clarence E. Brenner Alvin E. Stephan Harry M. Trumbull NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN Walter S. Danner Warren Holdcrman Nellie L. Walker Anton H. Wegener Bessie G. Eighty Norman R. Smeltzer 147 % THE ' ARBUTUS t NINETEEN TEN m 148 % T ME ' ARBUTUS m NINETEEN -TEN Colors: Royal Purple and Old Gold EMANON Organized January 22, igoi lUinvcr: Marechal Niel Ros ' .- MEMBER IN THE CITY Donald D. Goss MEMBERS IN THE UNIVERSITY Post Graduate: Paul Carroll Lybyer Fren Zello Musselnian NINETEEN HUNDRED TEN Leroy Scott Frank Elmer Raschig Robert F. Reeves Jclin S. Taylor Arthur T. Rosberg Jesse Lynn Ward Max Aley Ben H. Barr Howard Lukens Laurence Reeves NINETEEN HUNDRED ELEVEN Ernest Dale Sanders Paul H. Schmidt Roscoe O. Stotter Earl Reeves Birt Wilcox John Wilcox Harry Baldridge George Gill NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE John C. INIellett Lloyd O. Sholty Alva N. Taylor Virgil Bin ford Clarence Bock NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN D. Laurence Bock Maurice Judd John C. Lj ' brook Donald Mellett 149 % THE ' ARBUTUS m NINETEEN TEN ISO % THE - ARBUTUS - NINETEEN ' T E N l m Organized October 30, 7902 WRANGLERS NINETEEN HUNDRED TEN Walter H. Barnhart Edward R. Grisell Colors: Emerald Green and Brown Cliarles A. Balliiiger NINETEEN HUNPKED ELEVEN Walter O. Lewis John M. Wliittenberger Virgil Gordon NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE Tully Hays Emmett C. Troxel Edward E. Johnston Everett E. Lett E. Earl Lines NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN Colonel Gleason Mackey John J. O ' Neill Henry Myron Smith Monroe A. Starr Harlan S. Yenne I ' Vank A. Ambler 151 N I N E T E E N TEN 152 % THE ARBUTUS t N I N E T E E N V TEN Colors: Old Gold and Silver Grav DELPHIAN Organized January 14, 1905 Motto: Finis Coronat Opus Mrs. Allen Wvlie RESIDENT jMEMBERS Ruth Wvlie Grace Ogs Pearl Creuse HONORARY .AIEMBER Allen Wylie MEMBER L THE FACULTY Andrew Tennant Wvlie Clyde Clermont Bitler Mary Edith Bushnell Ernest Clvde Fishbaugh MEMBERS IN THE UNIVERSITY NINETEEN HUNDEED TEN James Herman Hawk Sterling Peter Hoffman Laurel Edward Lingen-an Sadie Avis Newlon Edward Davis McDonald Clara Ingleby Rapp Lorenzo Ozro Slagle Thomas Emanuel Steckel Maverette Stockwell Cressy Thomas John Herman Wylie Nellie Pearl Craven Ellen Viola Houtz Hattie Albina Lipkey Bessie Ahnira Lvnn NINETEEN HUNDRED ELEVEN Charles Owen McCorniick Shirley B. McCormick Floyd Dale Saxton Earl Ellis Spe ncer James D. Sturgis Walter Lee Summers NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE Emmett S. Brumbaugh Carl Blaine Newlon Harriet Irene Pauley Raymond Hugo Snyder Bertha Stover Tmogene VanDalen Jesse J. Warum NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN Floyd Demmon Cecile Howe Willafred Howe TelferMead William Moore Ethel Richardson Nina Webster 153 « THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN t IS4 % THE ARBUTUS t NINETEEN TEN Colors: Crimson and Gray INDIANA CLUB Organized 1905 Ploivcr: Chrvsanthennir President Hanson Anderson I ' icc-Prcsidciit I ' Iarie Ehle Treasurer Bertram Pickhardt Seeretary Edith Hennel MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY Cecilia Barbara Hennel Cora Barbara Hennel MEMBERS IN THE UNIVERSITY NINKTEEN HUNDRED TEN Neva Lillian Galbreath Edward Wesley Long Ralph Reo Murphy Meredith C. Aldred Hanson Hale Anderson Milton Howard Baldwin Moody L. Beanblossoni Homer William Dntter Carrie Anne Grant NINETEEN HUNDREIJ ELEVEN Edith Amelia Hennel Ruby Lillian Hull Merle James Vern James Ray F. Myers Bertram W. Pickhardt Charles Burton Rouse Mabelle Taylor Marie Catherine Ehlc Estella May Pence NINETEEN HUNDEEIi TWELVE Benjamin Franklin Pence Leonard L. Steimley Lena Blanche Summers Katherine Zimmerman NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN Cora Cruse Marie Galbreath Glossie Lavonne Goddard Delia Grant Guy D. Kyper Clara Meyer Joseph F. Alorrison Irma Shordon Addic G. Stipp Samuel Arthur Swayne Susie Thro Harold E. Wolfe Margaret C. Wright % THE ARBUTUS iS6 NINETEEN t President MARRIED STUDENTS ' CLUB Founded in 1895 James A. Wilkinson Secretary-Treasurer Mrs. Bavis Nay ACTIVE MEMBERS Mr. and Mrs. Abell I Ir. and Mrs. Isenberger Ir. and Mrs. Sackett Mr. and Mrs. Pittenger Mr. and Mrs. Allen Mr. and Mrs. Lambert Mr. and Mrs. Steele - Mr. and Mrs. Bergen Mr. and Mrs. Carpenter Mr. and Mrs. Lee Mr. and Mrs. Williams Mr. and Mrs. Kinnick Mr. and Mrs. Dilley Mr. and Mrs. Lung Mr. and Mrs. Wilkinson Mr. and Mrs. Dutcher Mr. and Mrs. Foreman Mr. and Mrs. Martin Mr. and Mrs. Werremever Mr. and Mrs. Shipp Mr. and Mrs. Good Mr. and Mrs. Nay M r. and Mrs. Jessup Mr. and Mrs. Jackson Mr. and Mrs. Highley Mr. and Mrs. Pickett Mr. and Mrs. Fisher Mrs. Coe Mr. and Mrs. Hogue Mr. and Mrs. Pearce Mr. and Mrs. Griffey Mrs. Williams Mr. and Mrs. Gregg IS7 •V -THE ' ARBUTUS ,V H 7- - NINETEEN ' TEN ' M IS8 % THE - ARBUTUS NINETEEN . TEN Colors: Canarj-, Blue and White ALPHA NU OMEGA Founded at Infliana University, Februar.v 20, 1910 Post Graduate: Myrtle Isabclle Kent KTNETtEN HUNURED TEN Etta Hamilton DeLay Osie May Clark Floivcr: Pink Carnation Mildred Carrista Kroft Lulu Graham NINETEEN HUNDRED ELEVEN Hazel Althea McDowell Martha Leona Marquis Mary Alice Williams Lillie Lucile Sanders Marie Antoinette Stephenson Jessie Margaret Drake Leafy Jane Deckard NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE Geneva Pearl Janney Sarali Cordia Brownin Rub ' Fincle Engle Letonia McDowell NINETEEN HUNDRED TH IRTEEN Gola A. Smith Rosa Alice Gates Bessie Isabella Steele Golda Maj ' Nicol Gladeys Anna Babcock Otta Green Florence Elizabeth IMeiser Hazel ]Magdalene Lybrook 159 I THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN i6o J - T H E ' ' ARBUTUS ' [ ■B d NINETEEN TEN WOMAN ' S LEAGUE BOARD FOR 1909-10 OFFICERS President Vice-President Lela Todd Ruth Edwards Treasurer Sccretarv Gretta Lewis Grace Cromer Theta — Miss Pearl Jones Grace Cromer, ' ro PATRONESSES AND REPRESENTATIVES OF ORGANIZATIONS Kappa — Mrs. H. A. Hoffman Ruth Edwards, ' 12 Pi Phi— Mrs. L. W. Hughes loma Imes, ' 13 Delta Gamma — Mrs. Rothrock Marguerite Bartelle, ' i i Independent — Mrs. R. R. Ramsey Mary Mehaffie, ' 10 Delphian — Mrs. W. R. Cogshall Mary Bushnell, ' lO Indiana Club — Mrs. H. W. Johnston Neva Galbreath, ' 10 PATRONESSES AND REPRESENTATIVES OF UNORGANIZED GIRLS Miss Lillian G. Berry Mrs. Frank Ayxlelotte Mrs. J. R. Woodburn Mrs. H. R. Alburger Mrs. Eugene Leser Eunice Burtt, ' 11 Lela Todd, ' 10 Anna McConnell, ' 10 Gretta Lewis, ' 10 Florence Avery, ' 10 161 THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN T EN t THE INDIANA UNION To further the interests of Indiana University and her students, is the purpose of the Indiana Union, an organization coming to hfe for tlie first time within the past school year and liaving now on its ]iiembership roll a large per cent of the men students in school and almost all of the male members of the faculty. For years such an organization has been the dream of many who were deeply interested in the welfare of the University, but no movement was begun until John M. Whittenberger, after being out of school for a year, returned last spring term and started an agitation for such an organization. At the open- ing of the present school year the matter was still in the air, but more persons became interested each day and in the latter part of October the work of organizing was started. After several ' mass meetings of the student body, the organization was completed, and at the first regular meeting held in Decem- ber over two hundred persons had their names on the rolls. The officers and directors elected for the first year were as fol- lows : John M. VMiittenberger, president; Andrew J. Rogers, first vice-president : Thurman W. Van Metre, second vice- president : John C. JMellett, secretary ; L. M. Campbell Adams, treasurer ; President William L. Bryan, faculty member of the board of directors; Uz McMurtrie, alumni member of the board of directors ; Dean L. Barnhart, Ralph V. Sollitt, Oscar R. Ewing, Homer W. Hipskind, George E. Gill, D. Lawrence Bock, Ashel Cunningham, Howard Paddock, student members of the board of directors. The temporary home of the Indiana Union is the east wing of the Student Building. Realizing that the proper use was not being secured from the rooms intended for the men, the direc- tors made plans immediately after organization to provide for games, to make the rooms more attractive and really have a place where the men could go and enjoy themselves at their leisure times. With the sjenerous aid of the University and 162 % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN under the direction of Prof. Alfred M. Brooks, of the Art De- partment, the rooms were redecorated and refurnished. The front room on the first floor is fitted up as a loafing room. A piano is furnished and large comfortable chairs and divans with rugs on the floor and appropriate pictures to adorn the walls, making the room ideal for those who have a few min- utes to spend in real comfort. The room to the north on the first floor is the billiard room and is equipped with pool and billiard tables of substantial design and workmanship and is in charge of a capable attendant. The billiard room is for Union mem- bers onl_y. The window comer in the first floor hall is fur- nished as a smoking den. A large window seat, comfortable window chairs and appropriate window hangings are included in the furnishings and are set off from the rest of the hall by a large screen of elaborate design. A trophy case is provided in the loafing room and along the stairway to the second floor hang the various banners which Indiana teams have won. On the second floor, the large room was given over to the L ' nion by the Y. M. C. A. This room is the reading room and is provided with reading tables and lights, and a large supply of newspapers and magazines have been placed there for the students ' convenience. Window boxes have been made for the reading and loafing rooms. The quarters in the student building are only temporary. The real Union quarters will be either a separate building or a wing to the east side of the Student Building. Funds for this structure will be raised among the students, alumni and friends and the building will contain a swimming pool, small gymnasium, billiard room, bowling court, reading room, loung- ing room and various other conveniences for men students. Students, alumni, ex-students, members of the faculty and members of the board of trustees are eligible to membership in rhe Union. After the opening of the new rooms the total mem- bership was about four hundred and fifty, but it is expected to have over five hundred members by the end of the term. Four meetings a year are provided for by the constitution and every one is expected to be made highly worth while. Either some big man will address each of these meetings or other amusement particularly adapted to man ' s fancy will hold the boards. Various other meetings of common interest have been held under the auspices of the Union. 163 T H E A R B U T U S NINETEEN TEN $ Officers are elected to hold for a 3rear, from one May until the next, and the following is the list which will direct the des- tinies of the organization for the coming term : John M. Whit- tenberger, president ; Dean L. Barnhart, first vice-president ; Ralph V. Sollitt, second vice-president ; J ohn C. Mellett, secre- tary ; Robert E. Neff, treasurer ; President William L. Bryan, faculty member of the board of directors ; Uz McMurtrie, alumni member of the board of directors ; Albert Guy Brenton, George W. Henley, jr., Earl Hudelson, Julian J. Kiser, Samuel A. Swayne, Cecil F. Whitehead, Claude Whitney, Olice Win- ters, student members of the board of directors. Before the Union became a part of the student life, there was no real center of interest for all of the men students of the University. There was no common organization where all could meet and work toward the same great aim of seeing to the betterment of all University institutions and look after the welfare of the student body in general. The Indiana L ' nion supplies a real need to the University. All large Universities have such organizations and in almost every case it is found that the institution and the student body are benefited by such an organization. The plans of the Indi- ana Union are to have every student a member of the Union and to enliven the interests of all the students in University affairs and to break down all clannishness which is liable to work to the detriment of the best interests. The new building is a reality, not a dream, say the officials of the Union and within a couple of years the Indiana Union building will be one of the real attractions on the campus. A. J. R. 164 % THE ' ARBUTUS NINE TEE N T E N ' 165 THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN m i66 THE ' ARBUTUS m NINETEEN TEN t ALPHA DELTA SIGMA -THE SKULLS Founded at Indiana University, Febrnar) ' 22, 1893 Colors: Black and White Flozvcr: Ninhtshade Edwin Pollock Hammond Harrv Allen Axtell CHARTER MEMBERS Harry Woodward McDowell Guy Harlan Fitzgerald Frank Darius Simons Charles Louis Gebauer Charles Emmet Compton BROTHERS IX COLLEGE Andrew Jackson Rogers Dean Leffel Barnhart L. M. Campbell Adams Charles Halbert Nussel Karl Andrew Frederick Cloice W. Hatiield Miller Kent Donald Griffith Adams John Maurice Johnson NEOPHYTES Jerry Ulen Russel Alger Shays 167 THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN $ mMmmmiimmmM mm ' m m ' mmMimmM i68 NINETEEN TEN ZETA DELTA CHI F. Howard Judd Donald G. Adams Paul Davis Benjamin D. Hit?. Bliss Motsenbocker SOPHOMORES Kappa Sigma Phi Gamma Delta Beta Theta Pi Beta Theta Pi Phi Delta Theta Benjamin T. Hatfield Dewell Gans, Jr. D. D. Dean J. D. Douglas Delta Tan Delta Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Xu FRESHMEN David Preston Everet McCullough Edgar Mendenhall Bavard T. Lang Scott E. Buell Haynes Freeland Kappa Sigma Kappa Sigma Kappa Sigma Phi Gamma Delta Beta Theta Pi Phi Delta Theta Ray Parks Philip M. Graves Roscoe Rhodes Frank Duncan Dwight Cragun Phi Delta Theta Delta Tan Delta Delta Tau Delta Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Nu 169 NINETEEN - T E N • 170 % THE A R B U T U S m NINETEEN TEN Colors: Claret and Pearl Blue PHI DELTA PHI Foster Chapter Established January 25, igoo Flower: Jacqueminot Rose Dean Enoch G. Hogatc Doctor Amos S. Hershey BROTHERS IN THE FACULTY Professor Chester G. Vernier Professor Jesse L LaFollette Professor William H. Beeler Professor John C. Barkley ( Ranney Chapter) Professor Charles M. Hepburn Professor James M. Sheldon ( Douglas Chapter) Claude Malott BROTHERS IN THE CITY L. V. Buskirk James Blair Morton Hunter Kark p ' rederick Avon Burk Curtis Shake P ' red B. Johnson Erwin McCurdy BROTHERS IN COLLEGE ACTIVE CHAPTER NINETEEN HUNDRED TEN Howard Penton John L. Baker Luman K. Babcock Oscar Shields Charles B. Waldron Michael Murphy Clarence W. Bradford Clyde Thompson Frank D. Lawhead John L. Graverson Jefferson Goff Theodore V. Harsh Robert Tracewell Charles B. Hayes Cecil Whitehead NINETEEN HUNDRED ELEVEN John Pose3 ' Jackiel W. Joseph Daniel B. Nye Ernest Wilkins Benjamin H. Henring Everett Davisson NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN Miller Kent Jerry Ulen 171 % THE ' ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN 172 THE ARBUTUS t NINETEEN - TEN Epsilon Chapter Established 1907 ALPHA CHI SIGMA Colors: Prussian Blue and Chrome Yellc Dr. R. E. Lyons BROTHERS IN THE FACULTY Dr. Louis S. Davis Prof. W, O. Brown Dr. F. C. Mathers Dr. C. E. May Dr. Lyons Dr. Davis CHARTER jMEMBERS Dr. Mathers W. C. Brooks W. B. Jadden Prof. Brown N. O. Pittenger James Curry C. O. Gamble Don Irions George Beavers A E. Slickels R. W. Bridges Scott Paddock Elmer Raschig BROTHERS IN COLLEGE Post Graduates: C. O. Gamble, W. C. Brooks R. W. Barrett G. W. Trainor NINETEEN HUNDRED TEN Charles Bruner O. R. Overman Walter Hoover Ray Reed Fred Woolverton Ed. W. Long Kenneth Jones E. K. Bunger NINETEEN HUNDRED ELEVEN C. F ' . Eveleigh A. R. Nees B. S. Davisson NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE S. G. Cook Arthur Teeter 173 % THE ' ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN 174 THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN NU SIGMA NU Founded in 1882 at University of lichigan, Ann Arbor Colors: Wine and White INDIANAPOLIS AND BLOOMINGTON Dr. H. R. Allen Dr. M. A. Austin Dr. L. S. Davis Dr. F. F. Hutchinson BROTHERS IN THE FACULTY Dr. G. B. Jackson Dr. D. L. Kahn Dr. E. O. Lindenniuth Dr. R E. Lyons Dr. E. C. Walker Dr. W. F. Hughes Dr. D. E. Jackson Dr. J. A. MacDonali Dr. J D. Miller Dr. W.J. Moenkhaus Dr. B. D. Mvers Dr. H.C. Parker Dr. J. C. Sexton Dr. E.D.Wales Dr. A. G. Pohlraan G. B. Hunt G. A. Kempt BROTHERS IN COLLEGE NINETEEN HUNDRED TEN F. E. Jackson D. E. Lybrook E. S. Wavmir L. P. Collins NINETEEN HUNDRED ELEVEN K. V. Hidy . G. F. Unhhs P. K. Telford A. G. Cortner J. W. Duckworth NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE O. H. Grisier P. C. Lvbver L. H. Segar O. H. Wright A. C. Badders C. E. Edmondson C. R. Hov J. G. Kidd NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN F. A. Lampman R. E. !Moore C. O. jNIcCormick E. D. Sanders J. F. Swavne H. C. Weer Pledged: C. L. Bock, J. C, Lybrook, E. L. Mertz, E. C. Tro.xel. 17s % THE ARBUTUS ' - NINETEEN TEN $ 176 THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN PHI BETA PI Founded at Western University of Pennsylvania, 1891 Alpha Zeta Chapter Established January 11, igo8 Dr. J. E. P. Holland m.OOMJNGTON BROTHERS IN THE CITY Dr. R. A. Akin Dr. C. E. May Dr. F. Pavnc A. C. Shipp BROTHERS IN COLLEGE NINETEEN HUNDRED TEN Clyde C. Bitler Charles E. Connor Ernest C. Fishbaugh Frank D. Gorham Sterling P. Hoffmann Laurel E. Lingeman Lloyd C.Marshall Darmon A. Rhinehart Clarence E. Cartwright Frank C. Mann NINETEEN HUNDRED ELEVEN Wade H. Fortner Fred A. Kimble Lloyd O. Sholty Dewell Gann, Jr. NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE Roy B. Storms Byron J. Peters Will W. Holmes Robert L. Nattkemper Alfred C. Williams Clyde T. Macer NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN Arthur J. Bicknell Frank H. Richey Walter M. Stout Chester A. Stayton Lindley H. Stout Esmond Hersberger Lewis P. Thorne 177 % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN • Hiiliiliiiiii 178 THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN t DELTA SIGMA RHO Founded at State University of Iowa, April 13, 1906 Indiana Chapter Established June I, 1908 :members Arthur B. Stonex Ralph Victor Sollitt Julian J. Kiser Louis H. Segar Arthur T. Rosberg J. Warner Spink Curtis G. Shake Paul Edmondson Omer B. Farr Xorman H. Behr Ralph E. Richman Lunian K. Babcock 179 % THE ' ARBUTUS t NINETEEN - TEN m i8o 3 THE - A R B U T U S Sf A it $ Colors: Cardinal and Old Gold PHI RHO SIGMA Founded at Norlliwestern in i8go Pi Beta Chapter Established May 27, igog Flozccr: American Beauty BLOOMINGTON John FI. Oliver, A. M., j I. D. James H- Taylor, A. M., M. D. Theodore Potter, A. M., M. D. J. Rilus Eastman, B. S., M. D. J. N. Hurty, Ph. D., M. D. J. J. Kyle, M. D. Louis Burckhardt, M. D. W. W. Wisliard. A. M, M. D. Frank B. •nn. A. M., M. D. BROTHERS IN THE FACULTY Francis Dorsey, A. B., M. D. Daniel Lavman, M. D. Paul Martin, M. D. John Cunningham, A. B.. M. D. Edward A. Brown, M. D. Bernavs Kennedy, J I. D. T. Victor Keenc, M. D. W. F ' . Wheeler, M. D. rrancis Abbot, M. D. Thos. B. Eastman, A. B., M. D. Charles E. Ferguson, M. D. A. C. Kimberlin, A. B., M. D. Lafayette Page, A. M., M. D. Thomas B. Noble, A. B., M. D. John W. Sluss, A. M., M. D. William Robinson. M. D. A. M. Cole, A. M.. M. D. W. T. S. Dodds, M. D. Harvey Moore, M. D. Goethe Link, M. D. Walter Given, M. D. Kenneth Jefferies, M. D. John H. Eberwine, M. D. John Carmack, M. D. C. H. McCaskey, M. D. Oscar Torian, M. D. William Shinier, A. B., M. D. Harry M. Pell BROTHERS IN COLLEGE NINETEEN HUNDRED TEN Raymond Cole Beeler NINETEEN HUNDRED ELEVEN f;erald Marshall Byrel R. Kirklin NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE Claude S. Hurst Benjamin F. Hatfield NINETEEN H UNDRED THIRTEEN Charles Bayer Paul Ramsey Hawlev ] lerril S. Davis Henry F. Nolting Charles Ba yer Charles Compton Fledged: Haynes Jordan Freeland, Ralph M. Lockrey, Scott R. Edwards. 181 THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN ■ ' ' ' ■ ' :iiii«if;rf ' . i M..ii; iywittiiiiW 182 % THE ARBUTUS PHI DELTA KAPPA Founded at Indiana University, igo6 Alpha Chapter Established iMarch 3, 1910 HONORARY MEMBERS Prof. G. A. Arps Prof. W. W. Black Prof. E. E. Jones ACTIVE MEMBERS J. A. Abell C. C. Cauble Aaron Deich Ephriam C. Dilley J. E. Evans Frank Fnnkhouser A. H. Highley J.W.Kendall Harrv C. JNIcKinsie W. S. Aliller Fren Zello Musselman Bavis C. Nay Daniel W. Pearce L. A. Pittenger N. O. Pittenger G. W. Piircell W. T. Sanger Thomas E. Stecke J. W. Todd Jesse Ward Lewis E. Wealher va James W. Wilkinson C. C. Whisenhunt J. A. Williams E. E. Wilmore F. R. Wilson 183 N I N ET E E N TEN t 184 % THE ARBUTUS N 1 N E T E E N m Colors: Olive Green and White Henry Jameson Frederick R. Charlton Charles E. Cottingham Gustav A. Petersdorf David Ross John E. Morris Orange G. Pfaff Albert E. Sterne G. W. H. Kemper PHI CHI Founded at University of Louisville. 1894 Official Organ: Phi Chi Quarterly Mu Chapter Estahlishcd February 28, 1903 BROTHERS IN THE FACULTY William P. Garshwiler Frank A. Morrison Edmund D. Clark Walter F. Kelly John L. Masters Charles B. Gutelius George D. Kahlo Hugo Pantzer C. Richard Schaeffer H. S. Thurston Ralph S. Chappell G. R. Green Norman E. Jobes Harry K. Langdon John R. Newcomb John Stewart INTERNES Homer G. Hamer Edgar p ' . Kiser Alfred Henry Homer R. iSIcKinstry F ' rank L. Truitt Dolpli Hun ' es Charles F. Neu Sidney Hatfield Deaconess Hospital: R. F. Weyerbacher John C. Davis St. I ' inceiit ' s ' Hospital : Carl Habich, Jr. A. G. Porter Flo ' L . ' er: Lily-of-the- Valley M. J. Barry James Henry Ford James Smith J. P. Simonds Lewis F. Cline Ross C. Ottinger T. C. Hood Albert Seatin Snhlirrs Home. Danville. III.: Charles F. Morris St. Vincoit ' s Hospital. Dayton, Ohio: C. .A. Leatherman C 7y Hospital. Youngstou ' n, Ohio: Walter B. Turner R. A. Terrv J. William Wright Max A. Armstrong Bvrum W. Harris George C. Graves Halstead S. Murat Georgs L. Schwegler George C. Carpenter Joseph E. Walthcrs FL W. Nimal BROTHERS IN COLLEGE NINETEEN HUNIiRED TEN M, B. Light NINETEEN HUNDRED ELEVEN Carl M. Sautter George D. Haworth NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE Carl B. Sputh NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN R PL Thomas Alpheus S. Thurston Jean S. Holloway Thvirman R. Beaver Archie V. Hincs Clifford L. Bartlclt Lee E. Strong Freeman R. Bannon William E. Tinney Walter F. Hickman F. Learning Pykc 185 % THE ARBUTUS t NINETEEN TEN i86 NINETEEN - TEN Colors: Cardinal and Old Gold PHI RHO SIGMA Fonnded at Northwestern University 1871 Official Organ: Journal of Phi Rho Sigma Pi Alpha Chapter Eslahlished Oetober 31, 1903 INDIANAPOLIS flower: American Beauty Rose BROTHERS IN THE CITY Frank Fitch, M. D. Fred Pettijohn, M. D. L. M. Dunning, M. U., B. S. J. P. Christie, AI. D. E. A. Willis, M. D. Fred B. Keertz, M. D. J. A. Leas, M. D. II. G. Morgan, M. D. Fred Overman, M. D. F. E. Crum, M. D. Robert Kemper, AL D. A. B. A. E. Guedel, M. D. M. S. Tilson, M. D., A. B. Robert Dwver, M. D. T. E. McCown, M. D. W. E. Stuckmever, M. D. II. K. Bonn, M. D. John H. Oliver, A, M., M. D. James H. Taylor. A. M., M. D. Theodore Potter, A. M., M. D. J. Rikis Eastman, B. S., M. D. J. N. Flurtv, Pilar. D., M. D. J J. Kyle, iM. D. Louis Burckhardt, M. D. VV. N. Wishard, A. M., M. D. F. B. Wynn, A. M., M. D. BROTHERS IN THE FACULTY Thos. B. Eastman, A. B., AI. D. Charles E. F erguson. AI. D. A. C. Kimberlin, A. B., A-I. D. Lafavette Page, A. AI., A ' l. D. Thomas B. Noble, A. B., M. D. John W. Sluss, A. M., AI. D. W. H. Robinson, A ' l. D. A. A ' l. Cole, A. A ' L, M. D. W. T. S. Dodds, U. D. Harvey Moore, A ' L D. Goethe Link, AI. D. Walter Given, M. D. Oscar Torian, AI. D. P ' rancis Dorsey, A. B., AI. D. Daniel Lavman, AI. D. Paul Alartin, AI. D. John Cunningham, A. B., AI. D. Edward A. Brown, M. D. Bernays Kennedy, A ' l. D. J. Victor Keene, AI. D. H. H. Wheeler, M. D. i ' ank Abbott, M. D. Kenneth Jefferies, M. D. John H. F.ljerwine, M. D. John Carmack, AI. D. C. H. AlcCaskey, AL D. Will Shinier, A. B., AL D. C. R. Strickland, A. B., M, Nelson D. Brayton, A. B., D. AL D. INTERNES City Hospital: J. C. Irwin, AI. D., A. B. City Dispensary: Harrv Paslev, 5 Vincent ' s Hospital: John Kingslniry, AI. D., A. B, y, AL D. Methodist Hospital: Indianapolis Police Station: G. H. Esch. AL D. St. Elizabeth Hospital: C. B. Davisson, M. D. E. AL Shenk, M. D. Joseph Eastman Hospital: C. R. Strickland. AI. D., A. B. Henrv Washburn, AL D. E. G. Kyte, AI. D. C. R. Alarshall, A. B. BROTHERS IN COLLEGE NINETEEN HUNDRED TEN W. L. Haworth E. AL Shenk J. C. Irwin O. D. Ludwig H. E. Washburn G. H. Esch NINETEEN HUNDRED ELEVEN George A ' IcCaskey D. R. Benninghoff C. R. Marshall H. FT. Hubbard 187 NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE C. Fl. Weaver Claude Greene G. W. Bowman L. C. Rentschler I ' . Bravton R. C. A ' lartin L. F. Robinson NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN Bruce Lung H. O. Williams Walter Gipe R. C. Dickerson E. B. Rinker C. S. Dryer I THE - ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN NINETEEN Colors: Emerald Green and White Ord Everman, M. D. Thomas J. Beasley, M. D. Joseph J. Gramling, !M. D. PHI BETA PI Fomided at Western University of Pennsylvania, Pittsburg, Pa., 1891 Omicnin Cha]iter, Established Octolier 31, 1905 INDTANAPOLIS BROTHERS IN THE CITY Herbert T. Wagner, M. D, Robert O. IVIcAlexander, M. D. E. Russell Bush, M. D. William S. Dow, M. D. Theodore A. Wagner, M. D. Fred W. Mayer, M. D. Charles Cabolzer, ] I. D. Judson D. Moschelle, 11. D. Flower: White Chrvsanthemum Samuel J. Copeland, M. D. Harrv A. VanOsdol, M. D. Mils F. Hart, M. D. William F. Clevenger, M. D. Samuel E. Earp, M, D. Charles S. Woods, M. D. BROTHERS IN THE FACULTY Jlomer H. Wheeler, M. D. Paul B. Coble, M. D. John R. Thrasher, M. D. William H. Foreman, M. Jewett V. Reed, M. D. Charles O. Lovvry, M. D. D. Thomas W. DeHass, jM. John W. Little, M. D. David W. Fosler, M. D. D. City Hospital: John 1. Rinne, M. D. ; FredE. Hickson, M. D. E. E. Holland, M. D. INTERNES Protestant Deueoitess Hospital: Charles M. Cain, M. D. ; John T. Kennedy, M. D. ; Hal B. Cox, M. b. ; E. J. Cripe, M. D. Methodist Hospital: William V. Bovle, M. D. Rockwood Tnbereulosis Sanitariiiiii : John E. Talbot, M. D. ; Arthur A. Rang William V. Boyle E. J. Cripe Arthur A. Rang Melville Ross BROTHERS IN COLLEGE NINETEEN HUNDRED TEN Samuel C. Murphy John E. Talbot Andrew G. Cooper John T. Kennedy John H. Green Cliristian A. Pavy NINETEEN HUNDREll ELEVEN Elgia H. Shock Martin A. McDowell John Emhardt Warren W. Hcwins Lawrence B. Rariden NINETEEN HUNDREll TWELVE John Robison .M. W. Miller Rocco A. Montani Hal B. Cox David L. Lutes Thomas A. Cartmell Paul E. Moushenrose 189 % THE ARBUTUS i NINETEEN - TEN - IMIlSJII ,HJil ' ,f ' ' vwrmwwi ' ' i ' ' f ' ' ' :t ' i 7 r ,, r ' , ' ;ii t: ' jv ' i ' 7 ' rf{ ! ' f n in ' frniiiii d ' fu4idiJililJiiiilWil:i,l i.ill, iilliy;;liy;i;i:;.(;,(ililiM igo % THE ARBUTUS Colors: Green and White NU SIGMA PHI Founded at College of Physicians and Surgeons. Chicago, 1900 Gamma Chapter Estahlished April 24, 1909 Flower: Lily-of-the- Valley Mary A. Spink, M. D. Urbana R. Spink, J I. D. Amelia R. Keller, M. D. SISTERS IN THE CITY Luella M. Schneck, M. D. Lillian C. Lowder, M. D. Marie Haslip, I I. D. Helena Knabe, M. D. Alice L. Hobbs, M. D. Eva Nebekcr Kennedy, M. D. Gertrude E. Morse, M. D. Lilian B. Mueller, M. D. Katherine C. Ford, M. D. S ivia Pearl Garner SISTERS IN COLLEGE NINETEEN HUNDRED TEN Nellie Jane Hanaway Blanche Horner NINETEEN HUNDRED ELEVEN Elizabeth Leontive Bacon NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE Lucie Forrer NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTEEN INIarie Kast 191 NINETEEN TEN the great stone face 192 THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN - TEN Departmental Clubs 193 C I THE ' ARBUTUS 194 THE - ARBUTUS NIN E T E E N - TEN Colors: White and Gold LE CERCLE FRANCAIS Reorganized in 1905 Flozocr: Fleur-de-Lis President Louise Embree Vice-President Tliomas Steckel Secretary Elisabeth Thompson Treasurer George Trainor Dr. William Lowe Bryan Mrs. William Lowe Bryan Miss Louise Goodbody Dr. Albert F. Kuersteiner HONORARY MEMBERS Mrs. Albert F. Kuersteiner Prof. George D. Morris Mrs. George D. Morris Prof. Charles A. Mosemillcr Miss Jotilda Conklin A ' liss Kelsey Black Mrs. Eugene Leser Prof. Alfred M. Brooks Prof. Charles D. Campbell Mrs. James M. Sheldon Mrs. Alice D. Goss Mrs. W. E. Jenkins Miss Helen Osthaus Mr. Keith Preston Prof. Frank Aydelotte Mrs. Frank Aydelotte Prof. Richard Rice Mr. William H. Scheifley Elisabeth Thompson Alice Booth Fernande Hachat Julian J. Kiser Nina Almond Marguerite Bartelle Louise Embree Elmer Goss George Trainor Russel Sharp Lillian Franklin Katherine Croan ACTIVE MEMBERS Christine Lcbline Thomas Steckel i Iar ' Baen Wright Helen Burton Frank Gerniann Paul Lybyer Charles H. Crennan Marguerite Griffith Grace Alexander Stacy Abshire Paul Clements Jeanne Crowder Louella Cordier Louetta Cordier Pauline Workman Nell Garretson Nell Frank Jean Anderson 19s NINETEEN TEN i 196 % THE ARBUTUS t NINETEEN t GOETHE GESELLSCHAFT Organized 1895. Reorganized 1902 Colors: Red, White and Black Flower: Korn Bliniie President Marguerite Griffith Vice-President Ehner Goss Secretary Irma Vaughn Treasurer Thomas Steckel Prof. Carl W. Osthaus Dr. B. J. Vos HONORARY MEJMBERS Dr. Charles Campbell Mrs. Alice Goss Prof. Giiido Stempel ] Ir. E. G. Biermann Dr. Eugene Leser Mr. W. H. Scheiiley Myra Aden Grace Cromer ACTIVE MEMBERS SENIORS Bess Keeran Christine Lebline Thomas Steckel Cressy Thomas Katharine Croan James Diltz JUNIORS Elmer Goss Florence Maston Loren Sanford Marguerite Griffith Bertrand Pickhardt Irma Vaughn Edith Lando SOPHOMORES Henry Nolting Alma Schlotzhauer Hubert Hanna FRESHMEN William Morris Paul Nolting Frederick Wiecking 197 % THE ♦ ARBUTUS t NINETEEN c 198 % THE ARBUTUS President Edward D. McDonak ENGLISH CLUB Organized 1906 Secretary Mary Higgins Treasurer Ethelbert Warrick Prof. Will D.Howe Prof. Frank Aydelotte INIiss Cecilia B. Hennel MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY Prof. H. T. Stephenson Mr. L. A. Pittinger Mrs. A. B. Stonex Miss Anna B. Collins Laura Benedict TEACHING FELLOWS Otto Kinnick Prof. C. J. Sembower Air. A. T. Wylie Aubrev L. Hawkins Blanche Baine Marguerite Bartelle Ralph Blatchley Louie Dupree Lester Gifford Onia Glasburn Donald Goss Walter Greenough Mary Higgins Georgia Hutton ACTIVE MEMBERS SEXIORS Eleanor King Helen Lant Margaret Laughlin Nina Martindale Marv Mitchell Anna McConnell Edward McDonald Sarah Ritter Merle Storen Gertrude Stewart Lois Tracy Mary Ward Ethelbert Warrick Mary Baen Wright Etta DeLay Max Aley Roy Buckley Edna Hatfield JUNIORS Edith Hennel Earl Hudelson Jackiel Joseph John Mellett O. R. Melton Carrie Ong Earl Reeves Joy Shutt Claude Whitney Guy Brenton SOPHOMORES Sam Bristol Benjamin Hitz Lillian Trimble 199 i T H E ' ARBUTUS ♦ ■ r - NINETEEN TEN ' H % THE ARBUTUS HISTORY CLUB Organized igo2 FALL TERM President Vice-Presidcitt Secretary-Treasurer Dr. J. A. Woodburn J. G. McDonald Florence McCrea WINTER TERM President J ' iee-Presidcnt Seeretarv-Treasiirer jMargaret Snodgrass James H. Hawk Pearl Woodfield SPRING TERM President J ' ice-President Secretary-Treasurer Dr. S. B. Harding John W. Kendall Lela Todd Dr. J. A. Woodburn MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY Dr. S. B. Harding Dr. A. S. Hershev Prof. T. L. Harris Margaret Snodgrass ACTIVE MEMBERS POST GRADUATES J. G. McDonald Chas. Kettleborough Jesse M. Hogate Plomer A. Arnold Anna G. Bass Merle L. Gechenour James H. Hawk Lawrence Hurst Harrv H. Johnson John W.Kendall SENIORS Ernest L. Lambert Park G. Lantz Florence McCrea Hallie E. Newton Densie O. Noyer Alvin Null Garrett E. Rickard Charles Roll H. Terrell Lela C. Todd Jesse L. Ward Dean L. Barnhart Bertha Bunker Homer W. Dutter JUNIORS Omer B. Farr Vera Noland Paul H. Schmidt Roscoe O. Stotter John ] I. Whittenberger Pearl Woodfield SOPHOMORE Lawrence Bennett 201 THE ARBUTUS m N I N E T E E N TEN NINETEEN TEN i ECONOMICS CLUB Organized 1904 Reorganized 1908 HONORARY ME:MBERS Prof. U. G. Weatherly Prof. W. A. Rawles Mr. C. J. Foreman L. M. Campbell Adams Walter plomer Barnhart Norman Max Behr Harry Benner Rollie James Bennett ACTIVE MEMBERS Walter Sidney Greenough Edward Rene Grisell Arthur M. Hadley Howard Paddock Ernest Perc} ' Railsback Andrew Jackson Rogers Saburo U. Satoh Thurman William Van Metre Edward E. Walters 203 THE ARBUTUS i$i NINETEEN TEN 204 % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN - TEN PHILOSOPHY CLUB President William T, Sanger Vice-President Wilford S. Miller Secretary Trcasnrer Ernest E. Wilmore John Wilcox Dr. Ernest H. Lindley John W. Todd Oscar R. Ewing MEMBERS IX THE FACULTY Dr. Warner Eite Prof. George E. .A.rps ACTIVE MEMBERS POST GRADUATES Joseph A. Williams -._. Wilford S. Miller SENIORS Eren Z. Musselman Daniel W. Pearce JUNIORS Moody L. Beanhlossom Walter O. Lewis Paul L. Edmondson Earl C. Reeves Prof. Charles J. Sembower William T. Sanger Ernest E. Wilmore John Wilcox 205 NINETEEN TEN c 206 I THE ARBUTUS t NINETEEN TEN EUCLIDIAN CIRCLE President Rainard B. Robbins Sccrctary-Trrastirer Cressy Thomas lEMBERS IN THE FACULTY Dr. David A. Rothrock Dr. Ulysses S. Hanna Dr. Schuyler C. Davisson Aliss Cora B. Henncl Mr. Kenneth Wil TEACHING FELLOWS Geor e W. Purcell Rainard D. Robbins John O. Aull Florence Avery Ruby M. Beeker KarlW. Bebr Kathryn E. Brunne Ruth C. Duncan ACTIVE IMEMBERS SEXTORS Gertrude Haseman John B. Heinmiller Albert E. Highley Herman A. Kasch Andrew J. Hypes Fannie F. Larmore Gretta . . Lewis John E. Lung Emil H. j l angel Mary Mehaffie Sadie A. Newlon Theodosia A. Petersen Maynic Reed Cecil Sims Ida E. Stallings Cressy Thomas Howard R. Tolley Daniel W. Wcrremeyer Hanson H. Anderson Mary A. Cogswell David K. Frush Vern James JUNIORS James A. Nvswander Earl A. Oakley Leonard L. Steimley Addis K. Summers Anton H. Wegner Columbus C. Wisenhundt Olice Winters Earl E. Spencer Ellen V. Houtz Walter C. Pittenger 207 Ti ■ i T H E - ' ARBUTUS ♦ V M NINETEEN TEN MjgHMI 208 % THE - ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN PHYSICS CLUB Organized 18S7 President W ' ilnier Snudor Vice-President Frank E. Gcrinann Secretary-Treasurer Grover M. Xie Press Repiirter George B. Horn Dr. Arthur L. Foley John A. Hodge MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY U -. R. R. Ramsay Mr. J. B. Dntcher Mr. Henrv C. Brandon GRADUATE AI EMBERS George E. Thompson Brenlon L. Steele Wilmer Senders Jerome Tsenberger SENIORS Clark Woodv Bertha L. Barker Harvey Allison JUNIORS Edward F. Johnson- Frank E. Germann Grover M. Nie Harry D. Hill Clayton Ulrey Hugh E. Brown Reece C. Bowton SOPHOMORE George B. Horn FRESHMAN Ghas. H. Skinner 209 NINETEEN TEN i % THE - ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN Motto: Industry, Honesty, Sobriety President Earle C. Miller REINHARD CLUB Organized 1904 Purhosc: The Cultivation of the Art of Extemporaneous Speaking Vice-President N. T. Miller Secy.-Treas. Curtis Shake Everett A. Davisscn John A. Posey Arthur T. Rosberg Ralph Sollit MEMBERS Julian J. Kiser Oren W. Dickey John L. Baker Michael J. Murphy John E. Peake Charles Weimer Robert W. McClaskey Charles J. Wood THE ' ARBUTUS NINETEEN - TEN t IN MEMORIAM Professor John Andrew Bergstrom, Professor of Education at Indiana University, 1904 to 1907. Bom at Blidsberry, Sv.eden, October 28, 1S67. Died at Palo Alto, Cal., February 28, 1910. John Phillips Touenee, ' 09. Born at Bloomington, June 25, 1S86. Died at Macon, Mo., September 28, 1909. Charles Eeasmus Lookabjll, ' 08. Born at Russellville, March i, iSSo. Died at Battle Creek, Mich., November 11, 1909. Ralph Earl Weybeicht, Law, ' 10. Born at Dayton, Ohio, June 3, 1S87. Died at Bloom- ington, January 5, 1910. Pearl Leannah Stovee, ' 09. Born at Hartford City, June 28. 1885. Died at Hartford City, February 3. 1910. Eugene Howard Halstead, Law, ' 10. Born at Hobart, September 13, 1888. Died at Austin, Te.xas, March 3, 1910. % THE - ARBUTUS 213 NINETEEN TEN 214 % THE - ARBUTUS t NINE T E EN -TEN ■i YOUNG WOMEN ' S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION CABINET President J ' icc-Pri-sidciit Secretary Treasurer Bible Study Mission Study Religious Meetings Socials Advisory Board E.rtensioii Intercollegiate General Secretary Blanche Estelle Bain Hattie Lipkey Florence Jewett McCrea Catherine Elizabeth McMahan Clara Ridley Pfrinimer Phila Helt Ida Alberta Chenoweth Clara Hatfield Mary Camilla Mitchell Helen Isabelle MacFarland Mary Elizabeth Higgins Elizabeth Wheeler M ♦ THE ' ' ARBUTUS V N I N E T E E N ♦ TEN 216 ■■ iK nH THE -ARBUTUS t N I N E T E E N TEN m YOUNG MEN ' S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION CABINET President Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Bible Study Missionary Membership Curtis Shake Homer Dutter Paul McNutt Charles Connor C. Blaine Hayes James Hawk Harry L. Foreman Lorenzo Stayle Dues Social Press Religious Meetings Reading Room Employnient Welfare General Secretary Raymond Snyder O. R. Ewing Cicero Clark Sterling Hoffman Orie Parker Franklin Judd Hanson Anderson J. Herman Wylie 217 } ♦ T H X ' ARBUTUS WORK OF Y. M. C. A. FOR 1910 During its history, the Class of 19 lo has witnessed many important advances along- different lines of student activity. But the year just past bids fair to go down in history as a year characterized bv the beginning of some of the most important movements ever inidertaken bv the students of the University. Not the least among these new steps has been the one for a larger Young Men ' s Christian Association, and a more demo- cratic Christian spirit. It had been a cherished hope that when school opened in the fall we would have a new and experienced general secretary to lead the work of the Association for the coming year, iiut although the woods had been searched far and wide, no man for the place could be found, and school opened in the fall with the Christian Association just where it had been the year before. However, the small number of men, who were interested, went to work with a will. The incoming students were welcomed, and as far as possible, were comfort- ably located, and for a great many employment was secured. The important feature of the fall term was the visit and the evangelistic meetings of Dad Elliott and E. C. Mercer. They were here for about three days and during that time they vis- ited in almost all of the club and fraternit) houses. This re- sulted in the creation of a much better spirit than had existed before. During the following weeks group classes in Bible Study were organized in several of the chapter houses. The number of classes was limited only by the supply of leaders. Toward the close of that term a rumor reached the Univer- sity of a man in Xew York City, who might be obtained to take charge of our work, and at Christmas time, when Doctors Woodburn and Weatherly went East, an interview was held which resulted, a few weeks later, in a call being issued jointly by the University and the Christian Association, to a man who should become the director of our Christian activities. The call was accepted, and the first of March found John Ralph Voris upon our campus. Mr. Voris soon became acquainted with the situation, and plans for the reorganization of the old Association upon a broader and more liberal basis rapidly took form. The men of the University and cit}- found him to be in earnest and sincere, and gradually they began to trust him and to take an interest in the work which he represented. The spring term brought increasing interest which finally culminated the second week in May, in a six days ' financial campaign by the students, faculty and citizens. A three thou- sand dollar budget was raised and over eight hundred mem- bers placed upon the roll. The campaign closed in a reception on Saturday night at which the guest of honor was Ex-Presi- dent Charles W. Fairbanks. The significant feature of the entire campaign was the true democratic spirit which was manifested, not only between dif- ferent factions of the student body, but also between the stu- dent body and the people of the town. The future of the org.-anization is extremely hopeful, and the old association bids the new and larger movement a sincere and hearty welcome. 218 % THE - ARBUTUS t NINETEEN TEN i fct-- 219 % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN JOURNALISM AT INDIANA The workings of the press at Indiana University center almost entirely about the School of Journalism. It has been so since the school was established as a sort of an experiment three years ago. The entire movement of journalistic primary training was an experiment three years ago. To-day the idea is almost as fully established throughout the larger universities and colleges of the country as any of the other branches of training. The aim of the Indiana school has been primarily to knock off the rough edges of the ordinary reporter, before he enters a newspaper office. The essential factor in the training so far has not been of a truly journalistic trend, but rather of a truly newspaper trend. Training in Modern Newspaper Methods is probably the better name for the entire idea of the school, as it has been expressed at Indiana. In 1907, Fred Bates Johnson, then with the Indianapolis News, was secured as instructor of journalism for the univer- sity. Practically the entire mass of details, which accrued with the initiation of the school and have accrued since in the work- ing out of the various phases of the newspaper training, have fallen to Johnson ' s lot to solve. This Mr. Johnson has done, graduating- also from the Indiana School of Law. The situation is to be changed next year. A professor, who will give his entire attention to the School of Journalism, will be secured, according to the present plans of the faculty com- mittee. Fred Bates Johnson may be the man selected, and no better assurance could be given of the ultimate success of the school than an announcement of his acceptance nf the offered chair. Broadening of the field of teaching in nearly every direction is on the program for next year. This broadening will be dis- cussed in detail later. The interest among the students, who have been enrolled in the school for the past three years, has been the principal upholding factor of the experiment. Added to this, Johnson ' s own personality and his superb mastery of unlooked-for obstacles have brought the school to its present stable state. But three classes of actual journalistic work have been at- tempted during the past years, although several of the English classes have been made corollary to the work, and most of the students in the school have taken this class work. Graduation from the School of Journalism has necessitated heretofore the procuring of an A. B. in some recognized department other than journalism. The graduating student has received, upon completion of the work, a diploma and likewise a certificate of graduation from the School of Journalism. It is hoped that a degree will hereafter be conferred upon the completion of the journalistic course. The three classes, which have been taught so far, included The Theory of Journalism, The Psychology of Advertising, and Practice Training in Modern Newspaper Methods. The enrollment in the school has been appro.ximately twenty-five students per year. The fact that the school is exceedingly worth while is evi- denced by the yearly quota of inquiries for graduates, or even for students with part of required training, for work in news- % THE ARBUTUS t paper offices throughout this state and others throughout the west. Man) ' students have already secured positions on the staffs of the larger dailies of the state and individual students have accepted positions on papers in New York, Toledo, De- troit, Cleveland, Minneapolis, St. Louis, Little Rock and other foreign state sheets. The work of the Press Club has been of no little service in the development of the school. In fact, the club has been the medium through which many of the plans of development were formulated and later brought into action. At the beginning of the present year, the Dail Student was affiliated with the School of Journalism, and throughout the year, the members of the class in Practical Training, have formed the staff of the Student. This plan was primarily an experiment, but has worked out to good advantage and has re- sulted in the attempt to make the Daily Student a part of the School of Journalism. It is probable that the news organ of the student body will hereafter come under the control of the uni- versity and that the output will be entirely a product of the journalism classes. This fact leads to far greater things in the development of newspaper work at Indiana. It will eventually necessitate a printing plant within the confines of the campus, to be run by university workmen and to be separated entirely from Bloom- ington printing shops. The necessity of this plan has been evi- dent for many years, and the successful accomplishment of it will benefit both the students ' dailv and the university ' s journal- ism department to a remarkable extent, according to those fa- NINETEEN TEN i miliar with the present methods of editing and printing the Student. In conclusion, the School of Journalism is at a crisis at present, a greater crisis than at the end of the first term of its existence. The whole idea of the institution has been thor- oughly tried out and has shown itself workable. The transition period, upon which the experiment enters with next fall term, will mark more or less of a revolution in state journalism at least. If successful, even in proportion to its success as an ex- periment, the Indiana LTniversity School of Journalism will herafter be the nucleus of an organization of state editors of a state press, which can not but have unlimited power over the feelings and beliefs of the people of the state. And with this influence necessarily comes a bigger and broader idea of In- diana University in the minds of the people of the state. When this fact is assured, the rest is comparatively easy for the state institution as a whole. The people will support Indiana Uni- versity, if the press of the state supports it. And the School of Journalism, after the transition point is passed, will eventually be the seed of the Indiana press. It is perhaps primarily toward this end that the university faculty has been working since the inception of the idea of a newspaper training school. The fruits of the efforts of the promoters are already beginning to be evident. The ratio of the increase of these fruits will jump amazingly next year, according to statements of those who know. The School of Journalism is passing from its experi- mental stage to a well-established factoring stage in the hel]) of all things pertaining to the good of Indiana. ■W. S. Greenough. % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN $ 222 % THE - ARBUTUS PRESS CLUB Organized 1903 The Best is None Too Good for Indiana President Andrew J. Rogers Vice-President George Purcell Secretary Treasurer Jacob Irmiter F. B. Johnson HONORARY MEMBERS Proi. Frank Aydelotte, ' 00. Bloomington Mr. George M. Cook, ' 97, Indianapolis Mr. John W. Cravens, ' 97, Bloomington Prof. Melvin E. Haggerty, ' 02, Bloomington Prof E. O. Holland, ' qs, Coiuinbia University, Prof. W. D. Howe, Harvard. Bloomington. . ' . Y. Mr. Charles L. Flenry, ' 7-. Indianapolis Prof. Charles J. Sembower, ' 92, Bloomington Mr. U. H. Smith, ' 93, Bloomington Prof. Guido H. Stempe!, IVisecnsin, Bloomington Mr. James Stuart, ' 01, Indianapolis Mr. Eli Zaring, ' 94, Indianapolis Dean L. Barnhart Guy Brenton Warner Carr Edgar Chambers Lester C. Gifford Walter S. Grecnouc Aubrey Hawkins ACTIVE MEMBERS Don Herold Jacob Irmiter Fred B. Johnson Jackiel W. Joseph Park Lantz Carl J. Lowden Philip Lutz John Mellett Roy Melton George Purcell F. E. Raschig Earl Reeves Robert Reeves Andrew J. Rogers 223 I THE ARBUTUS pii;iyfeTOmiififi Mf;iiiCTMiiiaii t NINETEEN TEN 9 224 NINETEEN TEN PUBLISHING ASSOCIATION BOARD President Luman K. Babcock Vice-President Earl Spencer Secretary Treasurer Carl Frederick Elmer Raschig Fred Willkie Miss Anna Selesky Dean Enoch G. Hogate Bursar U. H. Smith 225 - THE ARBUTUS N I N ET E E N - T E N t 226 NINETEEN TEN STAFF OF DAILY STUDENT Roy Bonsib Guy Brenton Dean Banihart Andrew Jackson Rogers George Henly Roy Buckley Earl Reeyes Robert Reeves Elmer Raschig Garl Bonewitz Walter Greenough Orlando Thompson Fred Johnson 227 THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN t 228 % THE ' ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN 229 THE ARBUTUS t, N I N ETEEN TEN $ 230 N I N E T E E N TEN THE UNIVERSITY BAND Director: L. M. Hiatt Cornets— John Taylor, R. A. Walker, H. Baldridge, E. R. Grisell, Clay Phillips, Grover Nie, L. E. Sellers. Clarinets — Jesse Warrum, S. A. Bristol, M. B. Motsenbocker, R. C. Beeler, Jacob Jordan, George Auble, H. R. Tolley, P. R. Hawley, R. V. Hughes, C. E. Benner, Gay Cox. Altos— ]. H. Keck, A. C. Burgiii, Floyd Saxton, Chas. P. Bock, F. M. McCullough, Walter Whitecotton, D. R. Harvey. Trombones — Thomas Steckel, W. H. Barnhart, A. K. Summers, W. S. Danner, O. D. Stoddard, W. R. Spencer, G. B. Ramsey. Baritones — John Marshall, J. W. Wilkinson, James B. Thorp. Saxophone — Clarence May. Tubas — Ralph Inrphy, L. S. Steimley. Pffco o— Earl E. Gill. Drums— Robert Hamilton, Ethelbert Warrick, H. ; I. Smith, C. O. IMcCorniick. 23 T • THE ' ' ARBUTUS ' J 232 NINETEEN t THE UNIVERSITY ORCHESTRA Director and Mana jer: L. I. Hiatt p,-o „ _Paul H. Clements, L. A. Sanford. H. l. Wolf, L. S. Steimlcy. L. B. Rogers, C. O. McCormick. I ' iola — Ethelbert Warrick. ViolonccUo—0. D. Stoddard. Bass rinl— V. P. Tiiisley. Flittc—E. E. Gill. Ciarincts — Jesse W ' arrum, S. A. Bristol. Cornets — John Taylor, Grover Xie. Horn—]. H. Keck. Tronibanc — Thomas Steckel. Drums — Robert Hamilton. Piano — Claude Whitney, Miss Phyllis Hostetter. 233 % THE ARBUTUS ifAte m NINETEEN TEN m ROBIN HOOD 1 ij|5« i • ' -J - c- ; «Sfi; ; ' --•■ ..« Thanks to the energy and ability of Dr. C. D. Campbell, of the German department, the students and townspeople enjoyed a treat this spring-, which was unquestionably the big musical event of the year. DeKoven ' s popular comic opera, Robin Hood, was presented by a cast and chorus which, with three exceptions, was made up of students. The performance was presented before a crowded house at the Harris Grand on the night of April 22. Good voices, a well-trained chorus, and elab- orate costumes made the affair a decided success, and the credit is due almost entirely to Dr. Campbell, who personally con- ducted and supervised the enterprise from first to last. The title role was well enacted by Mr. Scott. Prominent in the cast were Mrs. James Bowles, as Allan-a-Dale, and Mrs. Anna .Schram as Maid Marian. Both these ladies possess beau- tiful voices, and, with Dr. Alburger, of the medical faculty, were the only persons in the cast outside the student body. Dr. Alburger, as the Sheriff of Nottingham, had by far the hardest Si] 234 THE ' A R B U T U S N I N ET E E N TE N t role, but he sustained it very creditalily, and kept the audience in a gale of laughter. Mr. Barnhart, as the weak-kneed Sir Guy, contributed largelv to the comic element. Ample oppor- timity was offered Miss Arlen to display her charming voice as the hoyden Annabel. Mr. McCurdy as A ' ill Scarlet, and Mr. Bollenbacher as Little John, were both very nnich at home on the stage. The part of Dame Burden, .Annabel ' s mother, was acted by Miss Cromer, whose scenes with the Sheriff ' created much fun, while Omer Farr, as jolly Friar Tuck, made up what he lacked in bulk l)y very clever acting. Altogether, it was a performance long to be remembered, and Dr. Campbell deserves a vote of thanks from both students and townspeople for his interest and energv in carr -ing it throuarh successfully. REGRET If I had known in the morning How wearily all the day The words unkind Would trouble my mind I said when you went away, I had been more careful, darling, Xor given you needless pain ; P)Ut we vex our own With look and tone W ' e can never take back again. For though in the (|uiet evening You may give me the kiss of peace, Yet it might be That never for me The pain of the heart should cease. How many go forth in the morning That never come home at night : And hearts have broken For harsh words spoken That sorrow can ne ' er set right. We have careful thoughts for the stranger. And smiles for the sometime guest, But oft for our own The bitter tone. Though we love our own the best. Ah ! lips with the curve impatient. Ah ! how with that look of scorn — ' Twere a cruel fate Were the night too late To undo the work of morn. 23S J1 [ T H E ARBUTUS ,v BUCHHEIM RECITALS After a year of enforced silence Mr. Edward Ebert-Buch- heim resumed his fortnightly recitals this 3 ' ear. He himself told at the beginning- of the year the story of Schuch, of the Dresden Royal Opera, who, when he broke his arm conducting one of the first performances of Strauss ' s Electra, was in- formed by his physician that he would have to confine Iiimself for a while to Mozart and Haydn. The prescrip- tion is a curious comment on musical history, on the ber- serker rage into which mod- ern music ibas lashed itself. In Mr. Buchheim ' s case, as in that of Herr Schuch, a return to Haydn and Mo- zart became imperative for purely physical reasons. But the path was not to exile ; it was rather a pilgrimage for us all. It has led to a clarification of our musical tastes, as we shall at some later time better understand. The programs have all been of one type. A Mozart or .Haydn overture for four hands opened it, an overture by Mo- zart or Weber, also for four hands, closed it. Mr. Buchheim has played solo each time a Mozart or Haydn sonata and one repertory piece. Among the new pieces in his repertory were Reinecke ' s Ballade, A flat major, Tschaikowsky ' s Seasons, and Brahms ' Rhapsodic, B minor. Technically the recitals have shown progressive enfranchise- ment of Mr. Buchheim ' s right hand, which suffered most in his breakdown last year. By the end of the year it had recovered strength sufficiently tO ' hold a fairly even balance with the left. The good wishes of the student body are with the court pian- ist, and Mr. Buchheim recognized this recently in dedicating to the student body his brilliant new waltz, Campus Rustlings. Recognition is due Mrs. Ebert-Buchheim for making the programs possible. Without the training of a finished artist, she has risen energetically to the occasion and played a remark- able second twice each evening to her husband ' s piano, in the symphonies and overtures. Her occasional solo pieces were equally well received. 236 ■■■,i- v ;itM«HHi V. COURTESY THE DOBBS-MERKILL COMPANY FRMM A PAIXTTNT, IN Oil BY WILLIAM FOF HYTH CLOSE OF A summer ' s DAY COPYRIGHT, 1906, THE BOBBS-MERRILL COMPANY THE ARBUTUS 237 % THE ' ARBUTUS 238 % THE - ARBUTUS N IN ET E E N - TEN STRUT AND FRET Organized 1900 HONORARY j IE] IBERS Dr. and Mrs. W. D. Howe Dr. and Mrs. Alburger Prof, and Mrs. Frank Aydelotle Mr. Fred Smith Dr. C. D. Campbell Prof. A. M. Brooks Prcsidriil Erwin ilcCurdy ACTIVE :me: ibers Treasurer Rov S. Bonsib Secretary Katharine Cr(ian William Moore jNIichael Murphy Clarence McGnrty Oma Glasburn Lawrence Bennett ISerlha lUiiker Alary Craig Eleanor Bonta Mabel Dnnn Elmer Goss Freeman McCoy John Hvde Robert Hill Lela Todd Jeanne Crowder Jack Ewing Gladys Lee Margery Benckart Belle Royer Josephine Miller J. B. Peak Paul i lcXutt .Arthur Roseberg Gordon Jacques Ralph Sollitt 239 THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN SURVEY OF THE YEAR DRAMATICS AT INDIANA Old Bill, the Bard of Avon, was right when he said : All the world ' s a stage, and all the men and women merely players. Each man in his time plays many parts. But some men are better actors than others, and Indiana University has been exceptionally fortunate in being blessed with a goodly number of embryonic stars or would-be Irvings, Terrys and Booths. The spirit of Thespis has been unusually busy during the past season, inspiring, creating and bringing about the produc- tion of many amateur theatricals. The students have been given numerous glimpses into the mysterious and fascinating world of make-believe, from across the footlights of both the Harris Grand and the Men ' s Gymnasium. The healthy growth of dramatic interest is fully shown by the great number of plays presented during the school vear by the various departmental, social, and literary clubs of the Uni- versity, each of which has given at least one or two perform- ances. In addition to these, there was the annual Woman ' s League play, Schiller ' s birthday productions, and, as a climax, Robin Hood, the famous comic opera, was given by a cast of students and townspeople under the direction of Dr. Charles D. Campbell. The credit for the present increased interest in student pro- ductions is largely due to .Strut and Fret, the college dramatic organization. For over ten years it has presented from one to three plays annually, beginning with the simpler farces and comedies, and gradually educating the tastes of students and townspeople to the deeper and more classic plays. This organ- ization has spared neither time nor expense in striving to live up to its ideals, and has never hesitated to make any sacrifice that would raise the standard of the drama. As a result of this training, higher grade productions are now being presented at the local theater than those ordinarily seen in a place the size of Bloomington. Various social and literary organizations of the University, such as the English Club, Le Cercle Franqais, Inde- pendent Literary Society, Delphian Literary Society, and the Indiana Club have also been encouraged to take part in the re- vival of classic plays. Membership in Strut and Fret is limited to twenty-seven, and is determined by tryouts before members of the club during the fall term of each year. An effort is made to secure the best talent in the student body, and as membership in the organiza- tion is considered one of the highest honors offered in student life, there is always a sharp competition for places. Now, ladies and gentlemen, with these few preliminary re- marks, we will proceed with the exhibition of the most stupen- dous aggregation of histrionic successes ever assembled within Ihe narrow confines of an Arbutus. We will allow your profane eyes to rest upon the marvels of grease-paint and the make-up box — the epitome of amateurish effort, the quintessence of un- disguised art. We will now pass into the weird realm of Comus and Pro- teus. The curtain, please. 240 THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN - TEN- - l l mm FIRST GLIMPSE ZUR HUNDERTUNDFUENFZIGSTEN WIEDERKEHR VON SCHILLERS GEBURTSTAG DIE KARLSSCHUELER SCHAUSPIEL VON HEIKRICH LA USE AKT I, 11, V PERSONEN ITerzog Karl von VVuertemberg Herr Bennett (jraefin Franziska von Hohenheim Frl. Rapp Generalin Rieger Frl. Lebline Laura, deren Pliegetochtcr Frl. Arlen General Rieger, Kommandant des hohen Aspergs Herr Funkhouser Hauptmann von Silberkalb, Kammerherr. . Herr Wiecking Sergeant Bleistif t Herr Van Metre Friedrich Schiller, Reginients-Feldscber Herr Steckel Anton Koch, genannt Spiegelberg Herr Pickhardt von Scharpstein, gennant Schweitzer Herr Baldwin von Hover, gennant Ratzmann Herr Haller Pfeiffer, genannt Roller Herr ] Iartin Peters, genannt Schnfterle Herr Wegener Christoph Bleistilt, genannt Xette, Hnndejunge Herr Mourer Soldaten ORT UND ZEIT Schloss : u Stnttgart, vom i6. zum T7. September, 1782. MITTWOCH DEN 10. NOVEMBER. 1909 ANFANG ABENDS 7:30 UHR MEN ' S GYMNASIUM MARIA STUART I _ ' ' TEAUERSPIEL VON SCHILLER DRITTER AUFZUG ERSTEK r.IS FUENFTER AUFTRITT PERSONEN Elisabeth Frl Lando Maria Stuart Frl. Ehle Leicester Herr Werrenieyer Talbot, Graf von Shrewsbury Herr Morris Paulet -. Herr Brown Hanna Kennedy Frl. Thomas Gefolge MUSIK Sehnsucht, von Schiller Rcichardt Sola: Frl. Cromer Punscblied, von Schiller Schubert Duett: Frl. Arlen und Frl. Cromer Des IiLaedchens Klage, von Schiller Schubert Snio: Frl. Arlen Reiterlied, von Schiller Zahn Gemischter Chor 241 % THE ' ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN SECOND AND THIRD GLIMPSE SATURDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 13, 1909 IMDEPFNDENT HALL - INDEPENDENT LITERARY SOCIETY PRESENTS THAT BOX OF CIGARETTES A FARCE IN THKLE AITS BV ROSEMARY BAUM CHARACTEKS Aniericiis Vespucius Olcllicy, a representative American citizen Rupert Redic Christopher Columbi;s OUHioy, liis son and a backslider . Harry G. Tnrnbiill Tom Darling, a nineteenth century hero R. Eldridge Mosher Freddy Blake, a Soph and one of the Fellows Earl E. Gill Miss Anastacia Bluebloodchester, a woman of mind and principle Mary E. Higgins Mrs. Christopher Columbus Oldboy, her niece Mary Mehaffie Molly Blake, another niece not to be trampled on Ruby M. Beeker Phyllis Darling, not yet out and bound to be in it .Josepha Meinicka WEDNESDAY EVEXIX ' G, NOVEMBER 17, 1909 imen ' s gymnasium THE WOMAN ' S LEAGUE PRESENTS A FACUr.T - CAST IN BERNARD SHAVV ' s PLAY YOU NEVER CAN TELL PERSONAGES Valentine, a dentist Mr. Campbell Dolly ) Ti xj 1 T ■ S Miss Hatfield Philip ' Heavenly Twms | _ Gloria, their older sister Mrs. Alburger Mrs. J anfrey Clandon. their mother Miss Black Fergus Crampton, a yacht builder Mr. Stonex Finch M cComas, a solicitor Mr. Buck AVilliam, head waiter Mr. SoUitt Walter Bohun. Q. C, his son Mr. Alburger Parlor ] Iaid Miss Hennel Jo, a vouug waiter Mr. Stempel The Chef .T Mr. Burke Observe ' Owing to the timidity of our faculty actresses and actors, it is impossilile to present a photograph of them in action. 242 % THE ' ARBUTUS t NINETEEN FOURTH GLIMPSE MONDAY EVENING DECEMBER T3. 1909 men ' s gymnasium STRUT AND FRET PRESENTS A. W. PINERO ' S FUNNV THREE-ACT FARCE who ' s who - ' THE MAGISTRATE Mr. Posket ) Magistrates of the Mulberry Mr. Rosberg Charlotte (her sister) Miss Dunn Mr. Bullaniy ) Street Police Court j lr. Bennett Betty Tomlinson ( a young lady reduced to teaching music) . .Miss Croan Colonel Lukyn (from Bengal ; retired) Mr. McNutt Popham (a maid) Miss Benckart Captain Horace Vale ( Shropshire Fusiliers) Mr. IMurphy Cis Farrington (IMrs. Posket ' s son, by her lirst marriage) .. .Mr. Moore where anii when Achille Blond (proprietor of the Hotel des Princes) Mr. Ewing Isidore (a waiter) Mr. Hill Act I — The Family Skeleton at Mr. Posket ' s, Bloomsbury. Mr. Wormington ( Chief Clerk at Mulberry Street) Mr. McCoy T II — It leaves its cupboard room in the Hotel des Princes, Meek Inspector Messiter Metropolitan J Street. Sergean Lr,gg - pi; -, Mr Bons b y cT Ill-It crumbles. Constable Harris ) ( Mr. Goss t , , ■ . -.r ,1 c. Wyke (servant at Mr. Posket ' s) INIr. Jacques Scene I— The Magistrate s room, IMulberry Street. Agatha (late Farrington, nee Verrindcr) Miss Miller Scene II — At the Posket ' s again. 243 N I NETEEN - TEN m FIFTH GLIMPSE ANNUAL FOUNDATION DAY PLAY WEDNESDAY JANUARY HARRIS GRAND OPERA HOUSE THE ■ GOOD- NATURED MAN OLIVER goldsmith ' s FIVE-ACT COMEDY PRESENTED BY THE PEOPLE STRUT AND Mr. Honeywood Oscar Ewing Mr. Croaker J. Erwin !McCurdy Mr. Lofty , . Paul McNutt Sir William Honeywood .Arthur Rosberg Leontine Earl Peak Jarvis Gordon Jacques Butler Robert Hill Bailiff Michael Murphy Elannigan ( Baili ff ' s follower) Elmer Goss Dubardieu Roy S. Bonsib Postbo ' Lawrence Bennett Miss Richland. . . . Miss Eleanor Banta Olivia Miss Lela Todd Mrs. Croaker Miss Mary Craig Garnet Miss Jeanne Crowder Landlady Miss Bertha Bunker FRET THE TIME AND PLACE Prologue — Spoken by Mr. Ralph Sollitt. Act I — .A.n apartment in Young Honeywood ' s House. Act II — Croaker ' s House. Act III — Young Honeywood ' s House. Act IV — Croaker ' s House. Act V— An Inn. Action of play takes place in one day. Under stage direction of Mr. Frank Aydelotte. Stage manager, J. Erwin McCurdy. R. S. Bonsib, business manager. Costumes from Curtis Weld, Boston. 24.4 % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN SIXTH GLIMPSE TUESDAY EVENING MARCH ' 5, tgto HARRIS GRAND OPERA HOUSE MEMBERS OF ENGLISH CLUB IN TAXE Austen ' s ' •PRIDE AND PREJUDICE AS I)KA tATlZED CV MPS. STEELE ilACKAYE PERSONS OF THE PLAY Mr. Darcy Mv. Edward iMcDoiiald Mr. Bingley Mr. Jack Joseph Colonel Fitzwilliani Mr. Stonex Mr. Bennet Mr. Ralph SoUitt Mr. Collins Mr. Earl Hudelson Sir William Lucas Mr. iSIax Aley Colonel Forsttr ] Ir. Ethel1)ert Warrick Mr. Wickham Mr. Rov Buckley Mr. Denny Mr. Blatchley Harris, a butler Mr. Wittenberger An Oflker Mr. Bristol Mrs. Bennet Miss Lois Tracy Jane Bennet Miss Lillian Trimble Elizabeth Bennet Miss Marguerite Bartelle Li ' dia Bennet j Iiss Edna Hatfield Lady Lucas Miss Eleanor King Charlotte Lucas Miss Anna McConnell Miss Bingley Miss Carrie Ong Lady Catherine de Bourg Miss Benedict Hill, a housekeeper Miss Eleanor King Martha, a maid Miss Edith Hennel Footmen, guests and others. Act 1 — The Drawing-room at Longbourne. Act H — The Orangery at Netherfield, one month later. Act hi — Mr. Collins ' Parsonage at Hunsford. three months later. Act IV — The Shrubbery at Longbourne, one week later. Produced under the direction of the English Department of Indiana University. Dr. W. D. Howe and Mr. A. T. Wylie coaches. 245 1 ♦ THE ' ARBUTUS - V ■ SEVENTH GLIMPSE THE DELPHIAN rRIiSF.XTS THE ROSE OF EDEN A DKAMA IN FOCK ACTS EY F. CRIDLANI) EVANS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1910 men ' s gymnasium cast of characters James Gregory, President Stabilil Insurance Co Ernest Fish1)aiigh Clara liis daughters . Bessie Lvnn J ■) ins uaiigniers 1 tt i- t • i Imogene ( ° ( Hattie Lipkey Willie, his son Emmett Brumbaugh Mrs. Twells, a widow Sadie Xewlon Miss Crowninshield, her sister Clara Rapp David Crowninshield, her nepliL w Carl Newlon Eunice Dare, a society bud Shirley McCormick Jane Salmon, who is getting stoul, In ' .t nuist eat Cressy Thomas The Marquis of Limmington, in love with Imogene. . .Raymond Snyder Baron von Strelitz. Austrian Attache, poor and reckless. . . . Wm. Moore Paul Smetana, Strelitz ' s brother, in love with Clara Earl Spencer A Waiter A Policeman ' i . Charles McCormick THE ABBE CONSTANTINE ' BY tA ' DOVlC H.M.I-VV IJR.VNfATIZKIl FROM THE FRENCH IIV r. X . LEY ENGLISH CLUB WEDNESDAY, JUNE S, 1910 HARRIS GR.AND OPER.V HOUSE The Abbe Constantine la.K . ley Jean Renand Earl Hudelsoii Paul de Lavardcrs Jack Joseph M. de Larnac Don Goss Mrs. Scott M iss Lillian Trimble Bettina Percival Edna HatField Madame de Lavarders Oma Glaslnirn Pauline Lois Tracy STRUT AND FRET PRESENTS ON MAY 24th PINERO ' S SWEET LAVENDER WITH THE 1-0I,L0WING CAST Horace Bream, a young American ilike Murphy Gepffrey Wedderburn. of Wedderburn, Green Hoskett, bankers, Barchester Arthur Rosberg Clement Hale, his adopted son, studying for- the bar Paul McNutt Richard Phenyl, a barrister Ralph Sollitt Mr. Delaney, a fashionable physician Elmer Goss Mr. Bulger, hairdresser and wignaker Gordon Jacques Mr. Maw, a solicitor John Plyde Minnie Gilfillian, niece of Mr. Wedderburn Belle Royer Ruth Rolt, housekeeper and laundress at No. 3 Brain Court Temple Oma Glasburn Lavender, her dau.gbter Jean Crowder THE WOMAN ' S LEAGUE PRESENTS O.V MAY 13th THE KLEPTOMANIAC A ONE-ACT COMEDY EY ■ MARGARET CAMERON THE CAST John Burton Miss Lela Todd Valerie Chase . rmsby, a young widow Alice Lanning Carl Stover, a bride Miss Katharine Croan Treston Ashlyc Miss Sadie Newlon Freda Dixon Miss j lary Higgins • vebm Evans, a journalist Miss Eleanor Banta Miss Ruth Tkerd Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Miss Miss Katie, Mrs. Burton ' s maid. 246 % THE - ARBUTUS m NINE T E E N TEN ■i 247 % THE ARBUTUS N I N E T E E N - TEN t 248 THE ARBUTUS THE YEAR ' S EVENTS TRIANGULAR DEBATE Within recent years intercolletjiate debating rather than ora- tory has been emphasized at Indiana University. The triangu- lar debate with the University of IlHnois and Ohio State University is the most important event in the Indiana vear. Each institution is annually represented by two teams, an affirm- ative and a negative, which debate the same question the same evening. This year the contests occurred Alarch ii, and the question was, Resolved. That a Progressive Income Tax Would Be a Desirable Addition to the F ' ederal System of Tax- ation. The Indiana teams were selected by a series of class and interclass contests held earl - in the year. Approximately forty . students participated in the preliminary tryouts. Indiana ' s af- firmative team, which met Illinois at Bloomington, was com- posed of Curtis G. Shake, ' lo: Norman Behr, ' lo, and Omer B. Farr, ' ii. The negative team which debated Ohio State at Co- lumbus, consisted of Julian J. Riser, ' lo; Arthur Rosberg, ' lo, and Ralph E. Richman, ' 13. For the affirmative team the debate was opened by Air. Farr and closed by Air. Shake, while at Columbus, Mr. Rosberg opened for Indiana and Air. Riser concluded the rebuttal. It ■ vas generally conceded that both teams excelled their oppo- nents in smoothness and delivery, and Indiana lost both debates bv a narrow margin. A review of the debates for the past three years reveals an interesting fact. In 1908 Indiana won both debates ; in 1909 (Jhio won both, while this year both discussions went to Illinois. With four members of this year ' s teams returning and a wealth of new material, Indiana should easily retain her place as cham- pion of the league. 249 % THE ARBUTUS m UNIVERSITY ORATORICAL CONTEST The University Oratorical Contest was established by the Oratorical Association in 1905. The contest is held during the spring term, and a cash prize of fifteen dollars is awarded the winner. In 1909 the prize was won by Arthur T. Rosberg, ' 10, of Indianapolis. His subject was. Florence Nightingale and Her Work. Mr. Rosberg is a member of the Emanon Club, Strut and Fret, and Delta Sigma Rho. He was a member of this year ' s debating team. The second prize was awarded to Mr. Charles J. Wood, ' 10, of Ridgeville, Indiana. NINETEEN - TEN t BRYAN PRIZE CONTEST The Bryan Prize Contest is held annually on Foundation Day. Th e prize consists of the interest on two hundred and fifty dollars, which sum is loaned the -University by the Hon- orable William Jennings Rryan. The subject this year was, The Power of the Courts to Annul Legislative Acts on the Grounds of Their Unconstitutionality. The prize of 1910 was won b} ' Thurman William Van Metre, of Madison County. Mr. Van Metre is a senior in the economics department and holds offices in the Boosters ' Club and the Indiana Union. 250 % THE ARBUTUS THE INTER-CLASS DISCUSSION The Inter-Class Discussion Contest is unique in Indiana ora- torical circles in that no prize of any nature is awarded the win- ner. Notwithstanding this fact the contest is one of the most popular in the University. The subject for this year ' s contest was, The Inland Deep Waterways Question, and the contest was held December 3, 1909. The winner was Omer Bates Farr, ' 11, of Liberty, Indiana. Mr. Farr is a member of Phi Gamma Delta, Delta .Sigma Rho, and the History Club. He was also a member of this year ' s debatino- team. THE SENIOR DISCUSSION The Senior Discussion for 1909 was held during commence- ment week, and was won by Vermont Finley, law, ' 09, of Ken- (lallville, Indiana. The contest is extemporaneous, and in the nature of a debate rather than oratorical. The contestants num- ber five and are nominated by the heads of the departments. A prize of twenty-five dollars is given the winner. Mr. Finley, who won the Inter-Class Discussion in 1909, was a member of the debating team and of Delta Sigma Rho, the honorary oratorical fraternity. 251 NINETEEN TEN 252 NINETEEN - TEN I DOUGLAS DOZEN Purpose: The Cultivation of Debating Fovuided at Indiana University, IMaixh 14, 1907 Colors: Old Gold and Green OFFICERS President Everett A. Davisson Vice-President Chester L. DuComb Secrctarv and Treasurer Newman T. Miller MEMBERS James Elmer White Chester L. DviConib Newman T. Miller Omer L. Loop Charles W. Wortmau Elarry E. Chambers Carl N. Chambers J Louis Graverson Everett A. Davisson Fred H. Jessup Walter C. Billeg Charles P. Bock 253 THE - ARBUTUS t NINETEEN TEN iilif!i;i? }|ffliiiiSfii!;?fiif!ii ' iH 254 % THE ARBUTUS t NINETEEN TEN t THE LINCOLN LEAGUE The Lincoln League is a ])olitical organization to whicli all students of the university who adhere to the principles of the republican ])artv are eligible for membership. The enrollment of the organization for the year 1909-10 was about two hundred. This number includes practically all the Republican students of the university. Considering the fact that this was an off year the league lias been very active in a social way. The vear was opened with a sinoker, a dance was given in the winter term, which was fol- lowed later with a banquet at which many prominent repub- licans of the state were oresent. President J ' ice-Prcsidciit Sccrctarv-Trcastircr OFFICERS Newman T. Miller, South Whitley Everett Davisson, Xew Richmond Mac Meader, Goshen CABINET C. J. Carpenter, Eloomington Ralph Blatchley, Indianapolis Carl MehafFcy, West Lebanon Jesse Howard, Clermont M. T. Poling, Bloomington 255 % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN 2S6 NINETEEN TEN THE JACKSON CLUB The Jackson Club represents the democratic party at In- diana University. Its purpose is to keep in touch with the vital issues of the party as well as to be of any service it can to both the state and national organizations. Each year politicians well known to the state and nation are brought to Indiana by the club and in this way the members become personally ac- quainted with these men as well as with the principles of the part} ' . President Vice-President Secretarv-Trccisnrrr OFFICERS Claude E. Gregg, Bloomfield Walter Billeg. Catawissa, Pa. Cecil F. Whitehead. Elwood EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Warner Spink, Washington Fred H. Jessup, Kokomo Paul Y. Davis, Blnomfield J. L. Graverson, Bremen Tas. W. Duckworth, lartinsville. 257 i NINETEEN - TEN t ' ' Zickety Boom Rah ! Rah ! Zichety Boom Rah! Rah! Hurra! Hurra! Indiana Rah! Rah! 2S8 % THE - ' ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN — F ' ' Mi f - ' LX if -- -Athletics l ' ?; !.. : ' mm-y u 1 TTiTjTjjrrij m |]7TT,pTT|Tn m. 259 THE ARBUTUS 260 THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN ATHLETIC BOARD OF CONTROL James M. Sheldon Enoch George Hogate Harold Whetstone Johnston . Schnyler Colfax Davisson Ulysses Grant Weatherly Ulvsses Howe Smith 261 NINETEEN - TEN pHiiwvMiHnmiiii f 1 mfffflwraimiiimraiii fllfilllWiWHll ' I ' lliilil iiniminiiwi«M«minniia 262 % THE ARBUTUS t NINETEEN ♦ TEN FOXY JIMMY Foxy Jimmy, sometimes known as James H. Sheldon, has been turning out football teams since T905, and he has the happy faculty of turning out good ones while he is at it. Since coming here five years ago as director of athletics and coach of the football team, Mr. Sheldon has made a reputation as one of the best leaders in the west, and to him alone is due a large part of the credit for Indiana ' s mar- velous showing on the gridiron. In the first year he was here, Indiana held Pur- due to an ii-to-ii score in spite of tremendous odds favoring the latter team. On the resumption of ath- letic relations in IQ08 he pulled the team out of a dis- astrous slump following the Notre Dame game and developed the eleven that won the Purdue contest at t Lafayette, 10 to 4. The result of last year ' s work has already been told. Before coming here Foxy Jimmy was a star end and half-back on Stagg ' s Chicago eleven. He entered the Maroon institution in 1898 and during the following season played end on the team that won the Western championship. In 1900 he played end and cjuarter-back and for the next two seasons was chosen captain of the eleven. After graduation Sheldon assisted Coach Stagg for two seasons in coaching the Chicago eleven. After coaching the Crimson eleven next fall, Mr. Sheldon will resign his position here and devote his time to law practice, also to developing a crack foot- ball star out of one lames Sheldon, Ir. Foxy Jimmy 263 % THE ARBUTUS t NINETEEN TEN FOOTBALL The season of 1909 produced one of the best teams that has ever repre- sented Indiana on the gridiron. It brought forth a wealth of material which was molded by effective coaching into a machine that commanded the respect of the entire Big Eight. It also imcovered a streak of ill luck which earned for the pigskin chasers the name of Sheldon ' s Hard Luck Squad. Begin- ' Heze Cunningham, Captain, Quarter-back Howdy Paddock, Half-back Andy Gill, Half-back Cotton Berndl. End 264 NINETEEN T E N t ' Davy Davis, Half-back ning with the Chicago game, when costly fumbles in the first half gave the Maroons their only opportunity to score, down through the heart-breaking contests with Wisconsin and Illinois, it seemed as if the Crimson were doomed to certain defeat. The final battle of the season resulted in a sweeping victory over Purdue, but Conferencely speaking, Indiana ' s team was forced to take a lower rank than it really deserved. ■ II?.tty Hathcid, Tackle ' Alice Winters, Full-back Big Dutter, Tackle 265 c % r N I N E T E E N ' TEN ' m ' Mose Roberts, End At the opcniiiii ' of the season there was a merry race for positions due to the large number of available candidates. Almost every one of the eleven ]jlaces on the team had at least two men struggling to obtain a permanent berth, and since the different contenders showed almost equal ability, there was no fixed line-up even at the end of the season. Contributing in a large measure to the success of the team was the superb condition of the players. This was due largely to Coach Sheldon ' s famous wind sprint. After enforcing his hurry-up tactics all afternoon, he would compel the players to run the entire length of the held at top speed. Repeated doses of this tonic finally gave the men an endurance that enabled them to go through the most strenuous game. The team made its debut here on October 2, when it defeated the DePauw eleven, 28 to 5. The work of the Crimson players in this contest showed much promise and convinced followers of the team that Sheldon ' s pets of 1909 were above the average. . 11 the candidates were given a workout during the ' Babe Hoover, Center 266 THE A R B U T U S NINETEEN TEN t Fat Messick, Guard game, and all performed in a way that made the coach happier, but left him more puzzled than ever over a definite line-up. The second contest was played with Stagg ' s Maroons. Brimful of confi- dence and accompanied by an equally brimming crowd of rooters, Jimmy ' s iiopefuls had visions of changing current history by taking Chicago into camp. (It has been determined to use no ifs in this account, and since it is abso- lutely impossible to mention the game without that little word, let us stop right here.) The final score was: Chicago, 21 ; Indiana, o. All the scoring- was done in the first half, as the Alaroons could make no headway against the Crimson during the second session. Sandwiched in between this contest and the next Conference game with Wisconsin came a matinee performance liere on C)ctober 16, with Lake Forest playing the lighter roles opposite Indiana ' s work in the heavier parts. The count of the afternoon ' s work was 27 to 5 in favor of the Crimson. ' Bones Kimble, Guard 267 THE ARBUTUS mk NINETEEN TEN i ' lHpmHftBR.eRKirt6TtiRpu6nUMe 268 E T E E N TEN ' Sluefoot Leonard, Guard One week later the squad journeyed to Madison, Wisconsin, and in a stubbornly contested game on Randall Field, lost to the Badgers, 6 to 3. The game was particularly disappointing in that Wisconsin ' s lone score was made by an intercepted forward pass followed by a run of seventy yards. Indiana was slowly advancing the ball toward the Wisconsin goal when Captain Mlce grabbed one of Cunny ' s passes and romped down the field for a touchdown. On October 30, another minor game was played to lessen the strain of the Conference battles. Coach Sheldon took the squad for a little western jaunt on which it defeated the team of St. Louis Universitj ' by a score of 30 to o. The Illinois contest capped the series of Indiana ' s hard luck games. One little kick, too hard or too weak, deprived the Crimson of a goal following their touchdown and enabled the Illini to nose out a 6-to-5 victor)-. The game was a brilliant struggle between two human scientific machines. Either line was penetrated about as easily as that familiar old stone wall, and in the kick- ing duel that resulted, the honors were about even. THE BIG GAME Ix the most decisive victory ever registered against Purdue, Indiana wound up the season on Jordan Field, November 20, by swamping the Old Gold and Black warriors to the tune of 36 to 3. Playing swiftly, but with the greatest precision, the Crimson eleven swept its opponents ofif their feet, piling up thirty points in the first half. In the second session, Purdue braced and held Indiana to another touchdown and goal. Captain Cunningham won the toss and chose to kick to Purdue, who was defending the east goal. The Crimson line held and Sebald punted for the Boilermakers to Gill, who made a return of thirty yards. Then followed a succession of end runs and plays off tackle by Gill, Davis and Winters. In three minutes of play. Winters was pushed across the line for the first touch- down and Gill added a point by kicking a goal. Score : Indiana, 6 ; Purdue, o. ' Schultz Sholt.v, Guard 269 AT T H E ' ' ARBUTUS ' ■ N NINETEEN TEN Indiana Rooters at Purdue Game Indiana vs. DePauw Lake Forest at Indiana In the Hay 270 % ■hj NINETEEN - TEN Lhh Carty Cartw right Purdue decided to kick off and booted the pigskin over the goal line. From the twenty-five vard line, Gill raced thirty-five yards on a fake punt formation. Then came the same steadv advance marked by gains ranging from three to eight yards. The back field alternated in carrying the ball until Davis was given the honor of taking it over the line. Another goal and Indiana ' s count was raised to twelve points. The third touchdown of the game followed a sensational run of sixty-five yards by Cunningham, made possible bv the perfect interference of Berndt. Before this play the ball had see-sawed up and down the field vmtil finally Indiana took the offensive on her own thirty-five yartl line. Then it was that a fake punt and forward pass gave the oval to the Crimson captain, who suc- cessfully eluded the entire Purdue team. After the next kick-off, Indiana worked the Sheldon Special ' for a fort yard gain, and soon the ball was once more in the Boilermakers ' territory. .An attempted drop kick went wild and Purdue put the ball in play, . fter the first attempt at the line failed, she purited to the middle of the field. Winters plugged the center of the line for five yards and repeated for seven yards more. Dutter tore through the line for four yards and then Gill slipped past the entire backfield and planted the ball squarely between the goal posts. He kicked goal. Score : Indiana, 24 ; Purdue, o. The up-state team made several substitutions at this point, and the fresh material seemed to infuse new spirit into the team, for it made a sudden spurt. Getting the ball near the center of the field, Purdue made twenty-five yards on a well-executed forward pass and then added six more yards through the line. From the twenty yard line, Miles fell back for a drop kick and booted the oval squarelv between the posts. The supporters of the team cheered madly. Score: Indiana, 24; Purdue, 3. The final score of the half came after several attempts on the visitors ' goal. Finally Cunningham grabbed one of Gill ' s kicks which had been blocked and Cy Davis, End 271 NINETEEN TEN scampered across the goal line for the last marker of the first half, which ended a short time after with the score : Indiana, 30 ; Purdue, 3. In the last half, the Purdue players seemed to have lots of ginger, for they held the Crimson whenever their goal line was in danger. Several times the Crimson threatened to score, but could not advance the ball the required distance. At one time Purdue obtained the ball on her one yard line and again held on the four yard mark. The Gold and Black team fought des- perately, but could not puncture the Crimson defense. Both sides resorted to punting, but Indiana gained on each exchange of kicks. A punt by Purdue from under her own goal posts was blocked bv Sholty. and Cy Davis, grabbing the ball, raced fifteen yards for the final score of the game. THE SEASON ' S FIGURES Indiana 28 Indiana o Indiana 27 Indiana 3 Indiana 30 Indiana 5 Indiana 36 Total — Indiana 129 DePauw 5 Chicago 21 Lake Forest 5 Wisconsin 6 St. Louis o Illinois 6 Purdue 3 Opponents 46 272 THE DRUM CORPS Early last fall the Boosters ' Club authorized Rupert ' Bill} Redic to revive the drum corps, or ' ' Morgan ' s Raiders, as it was known during the tirst year of its existence. General sub- scription papers were circulated around the University, and with the help of the athletic management over seventy dollars were raised. The membership of the drum corps was limited to sixteen students, who discoursed sweet music from ten snare drums, two bass drums and four fifes. NINETEEN TEN THE SCRAP It all happened so quickly that the scrap was over before those on the back row knew the melee had begun. In fact, the shot from Registrar Craven ' s pistol, closing the fight, followed so soon upon the opening gun that it might have been taken for an elongated echo. The sophomores attacked in three divisions, and as they charged the larger squad of freshmen looked on in infantile astonishment. Over the heads of the thirteen class went the sophs. ' flying squadron, and the flag was torn from its fasten- ings. Bang! went the gun, and the scrap was over. 273 % THE ' ARBUTUS S M ' Mli ' J :)l ! mM!fllMiMl NINETEEN TEN ♦ immMwmiWAmMmMmmMimmmi 274 % THE A.RBUTUS NINETEEN T E N Skel Roach, Coach BASEBALL From the showing made by the baseball team before this book went to press, it appears that the ' varsity squad of 1910 has surpassed the record of former teams. The work of Skel ' ' Roach ' s pets in their first three Confer- ence games put them on a level with past Crimson ball tossers. Two victories over Northwestern and one over Chicago gave Indiana a standing among the top-notchers during the first part of the season. Besides these games, practice contests with the Linton and Danville teams were played. The team this year had the advantage of being more evenly balanced than usual. No pitching, batting or fielding phenoms. were discovered, but under the skillful coaching of Roach, a premium was put on team work. A strong defensive game was drilled into the players to offset any weakness with the stick. A fear at the opening of the season that the pitching staff might prove inadequate, turned out to be unfounded. The twirling of Winters and How- ard was at all times above par, the two men surprising their stanchest sup- porters. Winters had a world of speed while Howard mixed good control with his curves. In the minor games, Wild Bill ' Freel worked to good advantage. Lewis proved to be the right man behind the bat, with Nussel to use in a pinch. On the initial sack Soxie Burtt played his first season with the ' varsity and put up a consistent article of ball. Captain Berndt at the second sack and ■ ' Andy Gill at shortstop kept things hustling around the half-way station. Park Lantz on third was one of the old reliables, and the way he gobbled grounders was a delight to the bleachers. In the outfield, Cunningham, Danruther, Hurst, Howard and Taylor took care of all stray flies. The outer garden was Cunny ' s natural position and the stocky athlete more than made good. Nothing escaped him in the field and he contributed several timely bingles at bat. Berndt, Captain and Second Base 275 NINETEEN Cunningham, Outfield The Conference season opened here on April 30, when the Crimson team ci ' ossed bats with the Northwestern aggregation. The game was one of the kind that leaves a bunch of rooters about all in. With the score i to o against them, the Indiana players went into the last inning with a vengeance. The Purple players did more than their share of the work with a hit batsman and a wild heave to first. A three-bagger sandwiched in between these mis- Inlays gave Indiana the game, 2 to i. Nussel, Sub Catcher Lewis, Catcher Danruther, Outfield 276 I THE ARBUTUS Hurst, Outfield R. 11. E. o o 2 — 2 4 2 o o I o — I 3 2 The score : Indiana o Northwestern o Batteries: Winters and Lewis; Wilcox and Kaphn. On Alay 5, the team journeyed to Chicago and Evanston and in two days ' placing handed both the iMaroons and the Purple nine the short end of an Burtt. First Ease Taylor, Outtield Lantz, Third Base 277 NINETEEN TEN - winters, Pttcbev afternoon ' s workout. Chicago was beaten, 5 to 3 and Northwestern fell before Cotton ' s crew, 8 to 5. Howard pitched the contest with Stagg ' s hopefuls and let them down with six hits. Indiana made a like number of bingles, but chalked them up at more opportune times. The score : Indiana o Chicago I Batteries : I o Howard and Lewis ; Roberts and Paul. R. H. E. 2 I I 0—5 6 4 I 1—3 6 3 R. H. E. 2 I I 2 0—8 13 4 2 3 0—5 2 3 The return game with Northwestern was played on a muddy field which kept the Indiana scoring machine down. The Purple players could register only two hits, and on a dry diamond would never have seen home plate. The score : Indiana 2 Northwestern o Batteries : Winters, Howard and Lewis ; Jacobson, Schultz and Kaplan. INTER- FR AT LEAGUE According to their usual custom, the fraternities of the L ' niversity organ- ized their Inter-Fraternity baseball league this spring. At a meeting of repre- sentatives, held early in the term, the rules which have been in force during the preceding years were adopted, namely, that no ' varsity squad men should play on the teams and that no ex- ' varsity players who had held battery posi- tions should be permitted to occupy them in the fraternity series. Each of the eight teams in the league plays every other team one game. Standing is determined by the percentage system as in other leagues and the team stand- Freel, Pitcher ' 278 % THE - ARBUTUS t NINETEEN TEN t ing liighcst at the end of the series is to be given a beautiful silver cup, donated by L. H. Stradlc)-, a Bloomington merchant. At the beginning of the season, the three teams which showed up best were Phi Delta Theta, Phi Gamma Delta and Delta Tau Delta. Xo prophecy in regard to the finish can be made, but it is probable that the cup will go to one of the three teams mentioned above. April April April May May May May May May May Ma)- June BASEBALL SCHEDULE i6 — Illinois at Champaign. 27 — Rose Polv at Bloomington. 30 — Northwestern at Bloomington. 3 — Rose Poly at Terre Haute. 6 — Chicago at Chicago. 7 — Northwestern at Evanston. 14 — Purdue at Lafayette. 23 — Minnesota at Bloomington. 25 — DePauw at Bloomington. 27 — DePauw at Greencastle. 28 — Illinois at Bloomington. I — Purdue at Bloomington. Gill, Shortstop Howard, Pitcher 279 N I N E T E E N T EN 280 % THE ARBUTUS t BASKETBALL The basketball season of 1909-10 could not properly be called a howling success. There are several causes for the poor sliowing made by the Crimson quintet, one of which was lack Georgen, Coach of enough veteran material and another to the fact that numer- ous injuries kept several men out of the game for different periods. This handicapped them in the strenuous wind-up. The schedule last year was a departure from those usually NINETEEN TEN t adopted by Indiana basketball teams in that it included Big Eight games almost exclusiveh ' . Two contests with Rose Poly and one with DePauw comprised the list of non-Conference games. Chicago, Wisconsin, Purdue, Illinois and Northwestern were each played two games, Indiana defeating North- western twice and taking one game from Wisconsin. The remainder of the Conference battles had to be chalked up on the wrong side of the athletic ledger. At the beginning of the season there were three I men eligible for the team. Captain Barnhart, Berndt and Hipskind. Berndt was lost, however, by the ruling that no athlete could participate in more than two branches of athletics with- out special permission. Cotton ' s loss was a severe blow to the squad, as it was deprived of its only veteran guard. A hot scramble ensued between the candidates for the guard positions with Merril Davis, Graves and Stotter leading the field. Mangel, a lanky ex-Xormalite, made a strong bid for the pivotal position and under the stimulus of Georgen ' s coaching, landed a permanent place on the team. Barnhart and Hipskind took care of the forward jobs with Whitney in FJarnhart, Captain, Forward 281 $ THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN - TEN I the role of understudy. Abel, another senior, also showed good form and was used as a substitute forward. The season started with a boom, both Del ' auw and Rose Poly going down before the Crimson attack. In the third game, that same old Chicago atmosphere affected the players, and they permitted the Alaroons to bury them under a 50 to 12 score. The next night Northwestern was defeated, the score being 29 to 22. The best showing of the season was made in the Wisconsin contest when Indiana slipped away with an air-tight 13 to 11 victor} ' . Roth teams played championship ball on this occasion, and the game proved to be the finest exhibition of the indoor sport seen here for some time. Although all the men played desperately, the struggle was clean, and but few fouls were called. The speedy Illinois crew downed Georgen ' s five, 30 to 20, and Purdue added another defeat to the list by taking the long- end of a 23 to 18 count. The height of the Purdue men proved too much for Indiana and especially their captain, Charters, towered above the shorter Indiana squad. The lanky center made six field goals and five free throws, thus contributing all but six of the points registered by his team. Indiana did not play with her usual precision, but the size of her opponents hampered the team work. Once more Northwestern was defeated and then came the deluge. Chicago, Purdue, Illinois, Wisconsin and also Rose Poly took turns in downing the Crimson quintet. Injuries assisted the natural slump and in the last game of the season, the team was swamped by Wisconsin, which it had formerly defeated. 282 % THE ARBUTUS BASKETBALL SUMMARY Indiana 23 Indiana 36 Indiana 12 Indiana 29 Indiana 13 Indiana 20 Indiana 18 Indiana • 18 Indiana 9 Indiana 21 Indiana 15 Indiana 12 Indiana 8 Total — Indiana 234 DePanw 17 Rose Poly 21 Chicago 50 Northwestern 22 Wisconsin.. 11 Illinois 30 Purdue 23 Northwestern 10 Chicago 33 Rose Pol} ' 23 Purdue 52 Illinois 26 Wisconsin 33 Opponents 351 283 THE ARBUTUS t NINE TEEN TEN mMWimmmmMMmmm lllllIU MiiiffllimijBIMfflMililSliMiM 284 % THE ' ARBUTUS Earl Reeves m NINETEEN ♦ TEN TRACK Track Athletics were decidedly on the slump this year. The Big Four of the previous season had dwindled down until it was almost unrecognizable and finally only two sure point winners remained, Cy Bonsib and Harry Johnson. When Captain Bonsib withdrew from the team, the other man refused to bear the burden alone and went over to the baseball ranks. Earl Reeves, Stagg ' ' Johnston and Gu_v Humphries showed good form in their various events, but none of them was developed sufficientlv to win points in a big meet. Consequently to prevent the dual meets scheduled with Purdue and Northwestern from degenerating into a farce, they were cancelled at the request of the athletic authorities. The showing made during the indoor season was more encouraging, even though two defeats were registered against the Indiana team. On February 19, Purdue smothered the track squad at Lafayette by a score of 69 to 19. Bonsib and Johnson were the only point winners, the former taking first in the 440-yard dash and the 880-yard run. The latter captured first place in the high jump and two seconds in the high and low hurdles. The dual indoor meet with Northwestern was much closer, the Purple athletes nosing out the meager Crimson squad, 55 J to 40J . The meet was held at Evanston on March 12. Flarry Johnson carried ofif the honors of the day by winning 23 points. He took first in the high and low hurdles, pole vault and high jump and won second in the broad jump. The nervy athlete ' s performance was remarkable. The summary of the meet follows : Pole vault : Johnson. Height, 9 feet. Fifty-yard dash : Bradley ; Pettibone. Time, :5 3-5. Mile run : Beal ; Reeves. Time, 4 152. Guy Humphries 28s THE ARBUTUS Ray lioiisib, Captain Shot put : Fletcher ; Johnston. Distance, 37 feet 1 1 inches. Fifty-yard high hurdles : Johnson ; Wandrach. Time, : ' ]. 220-yard dash : Munn ; jManley. Time, :25 1-5. 440-yard dash: .Shafifer ; Bonsib. Time, :53 3-5. Two mile run: Beal ; Brown. Time, 10:23 3-5. ]Iigh jump: Johnson; Mullen; Curtis. Height, 5 feet 4 inches. Fifty-yard low hurdles : Johnson ; Pettibone. Time, ;5 3-5. Broad jump: Bradley; Johnson. Distance, 21 feet Yi inches. 880-yard run ; Bonsib ; Gilmore. Time, 2 ■.o ' j. A SQUINT INTO NEXT SEASON Chari.es p. Hutchins, formerly director of physical training at the Univer- sity of Wisconsin, will assume a similar position here next September, taking charge of athletics in all departments. Mr. Hutchins has an M. D. degree from Yale and was thoroughly trained there in the science of physical education under Professor Andrews. He has been at Wisconsin for several years and comes highly recommended by President ' an Hise and the Athletic Council of that university. The new director will have complete control of athletics and physical training. Special coaches will be employed during the various seasons, but they will all be responsible to him. Jimmy Sheldon will be on hand to coach the football squad next fall, but no other men will be . ' elected without the recommendation of Mr. Hutchins. The coming of the Wisconsin man to this University means a much broader field for exercise on the part of the men students. Heretofore only those trying for an athletic team have known the benefits of such exercise, bub in the future regular gymnasium classes will be organized. With the demand for this work. Harry Johnson 286 % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN m more space and better equipment will be needed, and in time a new gymnasium will be imperative. Such is the bright prospect for the year of 1910-11. In addition to the employment of a new physical director, other marked steps will be made in the management of athletics next year. Some new schemes have already been perfected and others will probably follow in a short time. In the latter part of this month, the board of trustees will be called upon to sanction a movement which will revolutionize athletics and mark a great step in a broader student life. A monster petition, signed by almost the entire student body, will be placed in the hands of the trustees and they will be asked to adopt it. This petition provides that all students shall be assessed a special fee of one and one-half dollars each term. This money is to be divided in such a way as to give each student in the Uni- versity a regular subscription to the daily paper and free admit- tance to all lectures and athletic contests. At a previous meet- ing, the trustees considered the petition unofficially and ex- pressed their approval of the scheme. It was deemed wise to take the matter under further advisement, however, and hence the final vote was deferre d until June. There is every reason to believe that the new plan will go into operation next September. In case this should hapj en, the sale of the regular season tickets will be discontinued. A five-dollar ticket, good for all contests throughout the vear, was first put on sale last fall. The response of the students was very satisfactory and the success of the movement was assured. The sale for the coming year would be much heavier on account of the number of students who neglected to purchase tickets in the fall. After the close of the football season, the tickets were withdrawn and then many late-comers vainlv asked for the reduced rates. 287 THE ARBUTUS t I im iinMin pr; NINETEEN TEN ;ssi Arlo Walker John Wilcox Holloway Crennan Altjiough Indiana has not been actively represented in the state intercollegiate tennis tournaments this year, tennis has been on the boom here and the courts of the University have been crowded ever since the weather permitted. Of the players who were eligible for membership on a Uiiiversitv team, Stot- Kemp have made the best TENNIS ter, I ' arkcr, Roberts, Wilcox and showing. The membership in the tennis association numbers about twenty-five. Prof. Davisson is president of the organization : Thurmann Van Metre, vice-president and John Wilcox, secre- tary-treasurer. THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN T E N GIRLS ' BASKETBALL Thf. 1910 basketball girls successfully defended their colors against the efforts of grasping under-classmen, and in a series of games made good their claim to the championship of the University. Three games were played to decide the merits of tlie contenders for the honor and the senior team won two of them. The final contest of the season was played with the sopho- mores, who were taken into camp by a score of 11 to 8. The game was the most hotly contested of the series, but the su- perior shooting of the seniors finally decided the fray in their favor. The senior line-up for the season was : Alisses Averv and NIcNamee, forwards ; C. Williams and Newlon. first and second centers, respectively ; Evans and X. Williams, guards. 289 NINETEEN TEN ,( ■ B 1 WH i i i 7I !J_PIMFii_i ' - ' ■ -.♦ 290 ESI THE ' ARBUTUS 291 % fCtY M ' ■ NINETEEN TEN FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE Well, I ' m late, Alum, spoke a voice from the kitchen doorway, but I couldn ' t help it. Jim he ' s been an ' went on a tear ag ' in. Mrs. Thompson glanced up. For pity ' s sake! she exclaimed, letting the potato she was peeling fall into the pan with a splash. What on earth ails you ? Certainly, even at her best, Mrs. Hensley was not pre- possessing. She was always slovenly and dejected, with her sandv hair hanging in wisps over her faded blue eyes, her dirty red calico wrapper flapping around her heelless shoes ; but now one eye was swollen aJtd discolored, a handful of hair had been torn from her tousled head, and the dirtv old apron was spotted with blood. Mrs. Thompson stared at her aghast. For answer Mrs. Hensley sank upon a chair and covered her face with her hands. Big tears trickled through the cal- loused fingers and her l ent shoulders shook with sobs. He tanked up at th ' Annex las ' night, she managed to say, and didn ' t git home till this mornin ' . He come reelin ' in when I wuz vashin ' th dishes an ' caught up th ' hatchet an ' said he ' d brain me ef I didn ' t git him somethin ' t ' eat. I couldn ' t git it ready fast enough t ' suit him an ' he blacked muh eye fer me, dragged me around by th ' hair, an ' knocked Tommy out nv his high chair an ' like t ' killed ' im. Th ' children they took t ' th ' woods an ' I don ' t know where they are. I yelled ' sloud as I could fer help an ' that only made ' im madder an ' he went after th ' chairs with th ' hatchet. Then I run out an ' hid in th ' woods too. When I sneaked back I found my bureau — you know that bureau, Mis ' Thompson, as I got at th ' second-hand store — I did eight washin ' s fer Mis ' Moore t ' pay fer it — she broke into a storm of sobs at the recollection. Finally recovering herself, she continued — He ' d smashed that plumb int ' kindlin ' wood an ' throwed my clothes in th ' fire. Then he ' d lit in an ' broke up ever ' thing I had. Ther ' aint a whole dish in the house, an ' that bedstid you gimme, he took an ' throwed it out o ' doors. He was still thar when I left, poundin ' away at th ' kitchen stove. I reckon he ' s set th ' house afire by this time an ' mebbe burnt hisself up — I think it would be the best thing he could do, said Mrs. Thompson, indignantly. Why you persist in living with that drvmken brute is more than I can see. You owe it to the children to leave him. They, as well as you, are constantly in danger of life and limb. And you say he never does an} ' thing to support you? ' ' Not a lick of work has he done sence December, Mum. He caught three or four mush-rats then an ' sold their hides t ' Dan Robbins, an ' got drunk on th ' money. That ' s all he ' s ever done, ril leave him this time fer good. I ' ve jus ' stood it long enough, she continued, with a feeble flash of the old-time spirit which years of abuse and misery had not beaten entirely out of her. He ' s just went too fur this time. When I think uv that bureau — ' ' but the thought was too much for her, and again she burst into sobs. There, there, said Mrs. Thompson, bending over her 292 % THE ARBUTUS m N I N ET E E N TEN soothingly. I ' ll tell you what we ' ll do. I ' ll have Mr. Thomp- son hitch up right away and we ' ll drive out and see if anything can be done. The sweeping can wait. And I ' ll stop at the Mayor ' s as I come back and tell him all about it. I ' ll see that you ' re freed from that beast if I never do another thing. I ' d hate to think I ' d let housecleaning stand in the way of helping a fellow creature. When she stopped on the threshold of the wretched shanty on the edge of town which the Hensleys called home, Mrs. Thompson fairly gasped at the destruction before her. The second-hand bureau of which i Irs. Hensley had been so proud was broken into splinters. Bedsprings and mattress lav in the doorway, the kitchen table was overturned, broken chairs and dishes and shabljv clothing lav strewn around the room. Even the cheap clock which had ticked awav on the mantlepiece lay silent on its face in the midst of the wreckage. As for Mr. Hensley himself, he was nowhere in sight. ] Irs. Hensley collapsed upon the mattress and began to cry again, while Mrs. Thompson plunged boldh- into the appalling task of tr -ing to straighten things up. As she drove home from the desolate scene she stopped at the Mayor ' s residence, and finding His Honor in, told him the whole story. All right. ] .rrs. Thompson, he said, I ' ll send an officer right out after him, and next Tuesday morning we ' ll see what can be done for this woman. The following Tuesday Mrs. Thompson was right in the midst of putting up cherries for her family to put down, when she remembered that the Hensley case was to be brought up that morning. There we re cherries to right of her, cherries to left of her, cherries in front of her, cherries behind her. But not a moment did she hesitate. Leaving the preserves in the care of a half-grown neighbor girl, she hastily put on a fresh shirt-waist and started for the Mayor ' s office. James Hensley had already been summoned before the desk. There he stood, with his eyes sullenly fixed upon his coarse cow-hide shoes. Now and then he raised his head to squirt tobacco juice at the nearest corner through two crooked yellow front teeth. His aim was remarkable and spoke of long prac- tice. Mrs. Thompson glanced around for the outraged wife, and discovered her sitting in a dim corner near by. At the clerk ' s bidding she slunk up to the desk. You say vour husband came home drunk and smashed your furniture? ' ' interrogated the Mayor. She did not even raise her head. Yes, Your Honor, broke in ] {rs. Thompson, vehemently. I never saw such destruction in my life. She must have a divorce from him. He ' s dangerous. She must have a divorce, or there ' ll be nuirder out there one of these days. All the furniture that this poor woman earned by hard labor over the wash-board he mashed into a thousand pieces, and made away with her clothing besides. Is this true? asked the Mayor, turning to Mrs. Hensley. It might ' a ' been a tramp that done it, she finally mum- Ijled. Th ' railroad runs right back o ' our place, an ' there ' s allers tramps loafin ' around. I never scat Jim do it. What ! exclaimed Mrs. Thompson. Didn ' t you tell me how he beat you over the head with a chair and then started in on your bureau with a hatchet? Didn ' t yon? She could get no answer. 293 NINETEEN TEN Has tlie prisoner ever offered personal violence to you? asked the Mayor. That is, did he ever abuse you? He ' s jest caught me by th ' wrist oncet or twicet when he ' d been drinkin ' a leetle too much, is all, she reluctantly ad- mitted. Look here! said Mrs. Thompson, with increasing indig- nation. Didn ' t you tell me yourself how he took you by the throat and threatened to kill you if you didn ' t give him your wash money? And didn ' t you show me the black and blue places he made on you, and where he knocked your front tooth out ? Answer me ! Here ! Come and show the Mayor — She took the woman by the arm, only to have her twist out of her grasp and slink away. Do you want a divorce from him ? incjuired His Honor. Mrs. Hensley made no answer, but sheepishly sidled up to her lord, who had not raised his head or uttered a word throughout the entire proceeding, and laid her bond hand on his arm. Mrs. Thompson looked at her with unspeakable disgust, and turning, swept from the room without another word. When she got home she found that Jennie had deserted the cherries to run after a Dago organ-grinder who had happened along with a monkey, and two kettlefuls of the preserves were scorched and worthless. On her way up town to buy some more sugar she met the Hensleys. Mrs. Hensley was energetically chewing the flavor out of a block of Kis-me, which five minutes before had reposed in the pocket of her husband ' s blue-jeans coat. She was hang- ing affectionately on his left arm, while under his right he was carrying a package wrapped in brown paper, with damp spots on it which suggested a nice thick flank steak. They were going home. IN DE WINTAH TIME De wind am blowin ' . It ' s done been snowin ' De sleet am hangin ' on de trees ; An ' ebery time Ah look out doahs Mall ole back nearly freeze. Ah wish Ah lib down souf agin Whah it nevah snows aw freezes ; Whah de wintah sunshine make you lazy ; Whah you feel de nice wahm breezes. De wind come blowin ' ' round de house ; Blowin ' straight from off de rivah, An ' when Ah heah dat whistlin ' noise, Law ! how it make ' me shivah. Den Ah ' d nevah wuk no moah Out in de col ' an ' snow. Ah ' d jis sit ' round an ' sun mahself An ' be happy evah moah. 294 % THE ARBUTUS THE FAILURE I had failed. I swept the manuscript from me as if to shake off the shroud of thought that had enwrapped me for I knew not how long. Drifting back to consciousness in that transient mood wherein the real and unreal mingle in a harmony of thought, I had analyzed and had seen clearly every detail of my failure. It was too big for me, that was all. No common lay- man could do justice to so powerful a theme. I realized with some bitterness that I was not an Andrea del Sorto. jMy reach had exceeded my grasp. My reach ! I tremble when I think of it now ! Thought and fantasy had rushed on recklessly, cosmic in their sweep, dynamic in their intensity until, finally, awed by the very forces I had been fostering, I paused, bewildered and helpless, in the face of the thing I had evolved. As my mind crept back from out the shadows of romance I became dimly conscious of the realities about me. The big house was very still — a depressing silence only accentuated by the laughter and song that were wont to ring through the halls. I stared restlessly about the room searching in vain for some- thing on which to center my attention — anything to dispell that despondency which only silence and a sense of failure are able to bring on. ] ' Iy eye wandered down the row of books, hesi- tated for a moment on the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, and then passed on to stop finally on a volume of Kipling ' s poems. The poet for every mood they called him and yet here was a mood that even Kipling had not touched upon. I turned the leaves quickly, passing by a host of old favorites that had seldom failed to appeal to my various moods — ballads of the sea and wild tales of the far east, barrack room songs, poems of love and war, of faith and skepticism, of the sublime and the supernatural. Irritated because they appealed so little to me now I rushed on — and then stopped, quite suddenly staring at the unfamiliar title : The Palace. I could have sworn that I had never seen it before. And vet I prided mvself on having read every poem in the book. It was one of those rare poems, alluring in expression, san- guine in sentiment, with just enough of a story to enhance the beauty of the philosophy with which it was so delicately inter- woven. Perhaps it appears more remarkable to me than it would to others. Naturally, for what combination of circum- stances had guided me to those lines at this hour ? This hour of all others ! Why it was as if the very essence of my mood had been copied and recorded in those soothing lines. It was a simple stor) ' , of a king who planned, and gloried in the planning of a wonderful palace of his dreams — a palace such as a king should build. And as Abt Vogler lost himself in his mansions of melody, so this king lost himself heart and soul in the magnificence of the work he was planning. Work was begun, but the dream-palace was never finished and the king realizing for the first time his powerlessness to carry out so stupendous a task abandoned the mocking ground-works of his cherished ideals to the faith of the faithless years. When I zvas a kins; and a mason. 295 % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN $ III the open noon of my pride, They sent me a voice from the darkness; They zvhispered; they called me aside. They said: Thy end is forbidden, They said: Thy use is fulfilled, Thy palace shall stand as the other ' s — The spoil of a king who shall bnild. I called my vien from my trenches, Afy quarries, my wharves, my sliecrs; All I had zvrojighl I abandoned. To the faith of the faithless years. Only I cut ill the timber — Only I carved in the stone: After me cotncth a Builder. Tell him I too have known. That was it — the essence of my mood ; the intense glory in the shaping of such ideals, the realization of incompetence, the reconciliation to the truth of the voice from the darkness and last the final appeal — almost pathetic in its plea for sympathy and recognition. Masonry, brute and mishandled, But carven on every stone: After me cometh a Builder. Tell him I too have knozvn. So ended the poem and so, too, ended my mood. And in those last lines is embodied the only apology I can offer for this, the chronicle of my failure. Benjamin Hitz, ' 12. A NIGHT SONG I dream of you, love. As the moonbeams above Settle down on the slumbering land ; And oh, for the sight Of your bright eyes tonight, And the touch of your gentle hand ! The sweet-scented breeze Whispers love to the trees, And the flowers are all fresh with dew ; Then, oh, for the light Of the star-covered night. And the soul-thrilling presence of you ! 296 % HE STREETS ABODT TOVTVT ROY DENIS BUCKUEY One of the most f;iscinating things to do in Blooniinoton is to take a walk about the streets and peruse tlie local celebrities with the aid of a camera. Spring cases, rare characters, etc., all are worth while, and the writer reccnth- made such a trip in compan - with a trusty Grallex. As the modern con cntional writer would say, I take my typewriter in hand, get a strangle hold on the shift ke -, lubricate mv carburetnr, turn on the fluid in my think tank, and buzz. In approaching a subject for a picture and interview, it is always best to have a stall of some sort. I thought one regarding spring poetry would be all right, especially as spring cases are about ripe. How is the crop of spring poeti-y? said I to one John Arthur McPheeters, the poet laureate of Bloomington, as he was vainly trying to sell some alleged rnaple sugar to a group of students. Well, it ' s about as slim as Professor Stempel, answered the bard, as he hummed a dittv about the jovs of nature, and twirled a Ijunch of shoe-strings on his finger. Look pleasant, John, said I, as I focused the camera to preserve the likeness of the sweetest singer of Monroe county. I never look otherwise, replied John, but there goes my old college chum, George Timberlake. Ask him about the supply of poetry. How ' s the supply of poetry this spring, Tim? said I. Say, old man, it ' s about done for, but you ought to see the new dice game I have just got in for the l)oys. 297 BBBBi 1 ■tl! 1- ■ N 1 N ET E E N ' TEN FWi AV6£l,QTTE 7g ER:y_7Vj 298 % T ME - ARBUTUS Good-bye, said I, as I hurriedl_y took a snap at the stu- dents ' friend. On looking about for subjects, I discovered McFerren. Knowing that this important personage was too bus) to talk to me, I just snapped his picture and passed on. And then Doc happened along. Of course you all know Doc. As I pressed the lever to take Mr. H. W. Johnston ' s picture, he remarked : That act will cost you a cigar if you didn ' t get a good one. As the material was getting scarce about the square, I de- termined to go out on the campus and see what I could find. On the way down Kirkwood I saw Professors Aydelotte and Sembower. As I trained my weapon toward the victims, both smiled their sweetest, little knowing for what purpose I was taking the picture. As I looked about, great was my surprise to see President William Lowe Bryan on horse-back. Dr. Bryan sat pleasantly while I snapped a picture of him and his trusty steed. Charley McPheeters was the next subject, and I had to take his likeness on the run. McPheeters has been carrying the University mail for a number of years, and is rapidly becoming known as an old residenter. The next victim was Fred Bates Johnson, he who teaches scribblers to scribble scribblings about people, places and things. As Johnson assum.ed his most cynical air, I asked : How are eggs selling in Nashville to-day? Not waiting for an answer I turned and fled. Hollo way Crennan did not care for a photo for The Ar- butus, but he entered his objections after the camera had done its work, so it was no use to object, and his long words were wasted on the desert air. And then I went down to Jordan Field, where the baseball candidates were working under the tutelage of Coach Roach, familiarly known as Lovey Dovey. Roach tried his best to look pleasant, but as you see, did not succeed very well. As to the others I won ' t say anything, except, of course, the likeness of Colonel Morgan. Rolla, at the time of taking the picture, was busily engaged in haranguing a man whose vote he hoped to get for the wing of the democratic party which is controlled by Morgan. That is almost another story, and one not connected with spring poetry, but anyway Til add that Morgan was licked in the skirmish. Just then I saw coming our old literary gun, Freddy Smith, sandwiched in between two tall Thetas. They put me in mind of a boot-jack. I immediately gave chase and they took refuge in the Book-Nook. After keeping them treed there for more than an hour, I gave up the fight and went home to develop my plates. 299 ' THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN T E N 300 THE ARBUTUS t E T E E N - T E N THROUGH THE WILDS OF SOUTH AMERICA AN ACCOUNT OF THE EXPEDITION MADE CY DR. JOHN HASEMAN FOR THE CARNEGIE MUSEUM AT BOSTON. During the Congress of Zoologists at Boston in August, 1907, arrangements were made by Dr. Holland, director of the Carnegie Museum, to send an expedition to South America, for the jHirpose of obtaining a more complete collection of the aquatic life of the almost unexplored regions of that continent. So it came about that on October 5 of that 3 ' ear, I sailed for Bahia, Brazil, and ventured alone into a country having lan- guages, customs, foods and modes of travel totally unknown to me. The expedition was made up of ten trips, because it was necessary from time to time to make shipments of collections from the coast. The last trip was made from Buenos Ayres to the head waters of the Paraguav by boat, followed by four hundred miles in an ox-cart, travelling at night because the ten oxen would not eat grass during night time, and could not travel under the blistering tropical sun. I used oxen because this region is infested with a disease which has almost extermi- nated horses and mules. The ox-cart trip was succeeded b} month after month in canoes going down the beautiful Guapore, Marmore and Madeira Rivers. At last I made my way by boat down to the moiith of the mighty Amazon, a voyage of more than ten thousand miles, broken by only five villages — a voyage through one of the wild- est, most desolate, and yet most interesting regions on earth, abounding with deadly fevers, hostile savages and dangerous K 1 j Hg _ ,_ ... - ■- - ' aas pe m 1 . ■ 5 I , .: 1 1 I ..kL w wild beasts. But the jungle traveler soon learns how to deal with the savages, as well as the monstrous snakes, alligators and jaguars, to say nothing of the innumerable rapids and perilous cataracts. 301 By permission of The liKliannpolis News 302 c % THE ' ARBUTUS ■ fe ATo JVIAP OF SOuTH H (E ? e ) ' , OWI G THE WAMifRl 6S OF MX HASCMAV Perhaps his greatest clanger is an unappeasable hunger which saps his vitality so that he easily falls a prey to noxious insects and diseases. The hook and line, with a good gun, usually furnished me with enough meat, which consisted mainly of the flesh of monkeys, alligators, armadillos, or anything else that I was lucky enough to kill. It must be borne in mind that no one can reach out at random and pick oranges or other tropical fruit, for though the vegetation is very dense, even the jungle Indians are in danger of starving if they are nomadic and plant no crops. Starchy foods are the most difficult to get. llread, of course, is out of the question, and must be supplanted by nuts, leaves and roots. To swim well is absolutely necessary, for many rivers must be crossed in places where no canoes can be had, and the most of the tropical forest wood will not float. A good hunting knife is your best friend. It cuts your wood, opens your path, assists you in gathering and preparing food, and is a trusty friend when ou feel the claws of some ferocious beast. The jungle traveler must go to bed early and try to get plenty of sleep. However, he must be able to spring up, wide awake and clear-headed, at the slightest rustling near him. Words fail me when I try to describe the wilderness of the Amazon shore?. From either side of that mighty river stretch vast plateaux, clothed with gigantic trees, and a bewilderingly intricate undergrowth of vines. Here may be found an incon- ceivable number of species of plants and animals of strange shapes and gorgeous colors. It offers a fine example of the survival of the fittest. The strong trees and vines choke out the weaker ones ; the strong, cunning animals devour the 30.3 THE ' ARBUTUS t weaker, incautious ones. So fierce is the battle of life that I consider myself very lucky indeed to have escaped the dreadful onslaughts of my enemies, from the micro-organisms to the jaguar. Yet so interesting also is this battle of life and the great arena in which it is fought out, that at the end of two and one-half years of wandering, I had scarcely touched my native shores again before I longed to be back in the midst of it once more. The results of this expedition can be formulated only after the collections I brought back have been carefully studied. NINETEEN - TEN m Many new snakes, lizards, bats and insects will be added to the Carnegie ] Iuseum. Among those of extraordinarv interest were many kinds of small parasitic cat-fishes, blind cat-fishes and crabs in varying stages of eye degeneration ; an ac|uatic toad which carried its eggs in pits on its back ; and an aciuatic low order of lizard which the papers reported to be a fish with legs. I sincerely believe that I have brought back the largest collection of fishes, crustaceans, insects and shell-fish ever made in the vast region which I traversed. 304 % THE ' ARBUTUS m NINETEEN TEN OUR BLIND STUDENT Fred McCartney, ' 12, is a living rebuke to the loafer aiul the man with the chronic grouch, for though totally blind, he is carrying full work and winning success in spite of his tremendous handicap. ]Mr. McCartney, who is now twenty-three, lost his sight through measles, at the age of seventeen months. At eight, he entered the Indianapolis School for the ]]lind, and last year matriculated at Indiana Cniversity. He makes his way about the streets and college halls with astonishing ease and con- fidence. In class he takes notes in the point system, afterwards typewrit- ing them neatly and accurately. His major is English, and he is at present carr}ing twenty hours of work. It is his ambition to become a teacher. He is much interested in the career of Helen Keller, and has received several let- ters from her. Mr. McCartney is a pianist of considerable ability, reading the music from raised characters. I can ' t imagine what you mean by light and color, he said. I haven ' t the least recollection of either. Now I know that there is a book lying over there on the table, for I have been over and felt of it ; but how you can tell il is there, wh.en there is no contact or connection between vou and it, is more than I can understand. ,1 _V liglit is spent Ere half my days, in this Hark world and xc-idc: Nor to my idle orbs doth sight appear Of sun, or moon, or star throughout the year. Or man or zcoman.. Yet I argue not ' Gainst Heaven ' s hand or zmll, nor hate a jot Of heart or hope, but still bear iip, and steer Rii!:ht onward. 305 NINETEEN TEN - THE FRESHMEN CLASS The volleys of rousing words that re-echoed through the auditorium of the student building during freshman meetings have testified that the class of IQ13 is lacking neither in spirit nor oratorical alDility. The members of our class arrived in Bloomington on September 20, and forth- with consecrated their hearts to the University — and the board walk. Since then we have been dili- gently learning to appreci- ate the wonders that the school and town afford — the campus, the well house, the grocery stores, the Chinese laundry, the post-office, the l)oarding clubs, the north pike and the cascades, besides a few educational advantages. The class assembled for its first meeting during the second week of school. At that meeting CUiTord Hoy was elected scrap captain for the battle with the sophomores, and Maurice Judd was chosen yell leader. During the next few days we acquired some practice in scrapping. We successfully captured and nice- ly shaved the heads of many sophomores. At last, on Saturday, October 2, the two classes were arrayed for the fight. Despite our efforts on that important day we were, alas, forced to yield the banner to our elders. The presidential plume was awarded Lawrence Bock, and the honor of vice-president was bestowed upon Miss Fern Faith. Miss Clyrol Foster was elected secretary, and Byron Smith was chosen treasurer. Later in the year, when both Miss Faith and Miss Foster withdrew from the University, Miss Nellie Dicker- son was made vice-president and Wilbur B. Glover secretary. In order that the freshmen might become better acquainted with each other we held a dance on October 29, which proved highly successful. The annual freshman dance was held April 23. The class of 1913 has set an example which, it is to be hoped, will serve as a precedent for future freshmen classes. We adopted distinctive green caps, which, toward the end of the year, are all to be thrown into a grand bonfire and amid festive whoops the last trace of freshmen green will disappear. In the way of oratory, Ralph Richman and Don Mellett es- pecially have distinguished themselves. In the way of athletics, we place high hopes in a number of classmen who will later be found on the different ' varsity teams. M. I. W. 306 THE ARBUTUS m NINETEEN TEN THE SOPHOMORE CLASS Those were days of in- spiration, when 19 1 2 first invaded Bloomington. The words of one of our best or- ators are still ringing in our cars : We are here from the waving cornfields of the sonth, and the gilded plains of the north, and again at the election of officers, We want men of honor, men of ability, men of talent. At the class meetings good-feeling ran high, barrels of apples were consumed, and boxes of clay pipes, being imfit for use, were carried away as souvenirs. In the doings before the scrap we more than held our own, especially in the big fight behind the Observatory. The scrap itself was called a draw, but at the end of twelve min- utes 1912 still held possession of the field, and we claimed the victory. The proof of this was in our overwhelming victory of this year, to which the class will forever point with pride. At the end of three minutes the freshmen were swept off their feet, and the flag was down. This was the quickest rec- ord ever made in a class scrap in the history of Indiana. In football the class has contributed its share of heroes, claiming eight of the famous squad of 1909. All graduated from the husky team of the ear before, which gave the varsity an effective workout and helped greatly in the devel- opment of that team. First comes Andy Gill, the clever half-back, who had not only the eyes of Indiana on him, but also those of the football world. Other ' 12 men were: Mer- rill Davis, Kimble, Mellett, Sholty, Messick, Paul Davis and Bennett. In basketball the names of Merrill Davis, Graves and Whitney are prominent. In baseball the class is repre- sented by Andy Gill, Mellett, Schlosser, Danruther and Freel, and track work by Merrill Davis, Shoemaker, Curtis, Knowlton, Mertz, Kent, Wylie and Graves. In oratory J. Warner Spink represented Indiana at Lafa3 ' ette in the Peace oratorical contest of 1909. The class this year chose George E. Gill, president ; Mae Dagger, vice-president ; Ethel Byrum, secretary ; James Duckworth, treasurer. Under the above officers the class has developed in a social wav, as two most successful dances testify. C. C. 307 THE ' ARBUTUS NINETEEN - TEN THE JUNIOR CLASS Once more old Father Time has inverted his glass ; once more the University is sending forth her quota of finished product ; once more she is call ing for a new company to receive its fin- ishing touches : to be made highbrows ; this is the class of 191 1. A class history is as a general thing interesting to but a few, and besides we have neither the time nor the space to give a detailed account of our adventures for the past three years. Therefore that which fol- lows is a mere epitome of the doings of the class of 191 1. Upon entering in the fall of 1907, we organized by electing Kenneth Jones president. Previous to this, however, we had taken time to let Cotton Bemdt lead us out on Jordan Field and successfully defend the flag against the flamboyant sophomores. Mention must be made of the freshman dance which we gave, and also of our record in athletics. Our teams lost but one contest throughout the entire year. On returning the next fall to take our places as sophomores, we selected Hez Cunningham to guide our destinies for that year, and Cunny proved to be a credit to his class. This was also the year that Phiz Ball, our valiant scrap captain, per- suaded Kimble to tear down the flag, an act which resulted in a hand-to-hand conflict between our genial registrar and a num- ber of ' 12 men. We still maintain that we won that fight, but we do not know where the flag is. Our social afifairs of that year were vei y successful, especially the cotillion. The present year opened propitiously with the election of Homer Hipskind as the president of the class, and the diminu- tive basket shooter proved to be a competent leader. A social during the fall term, followed by the prom, this spring were the two most prominent social events in this, our third year. The Junior Book, edited by Phillip Lutz and staiif, has held its own with all previous junior publications. Our peace confer- ence with the seniors concludes our history. And now, as we are getting ready to don the cap and gown and to leave the ranks of the lowbrows, we feel inspired that we can accomplish successfully our work as seniors. We trust that we have made footprints in which our successors may tread without fear of being led astray. D. L. B. 308 d . REPRODUCED BY PERMISSION OF SCRIENER ' S MAGAZINE flunked ' ' THE - ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN 309 THE ARBUTUS t If here you ' re hit, this salve you ' ll find the best, Don ' t take in earnest what was writ in jest 310 % T HE ARBUTUS THE CAMPUS PUMP The most important figure on the campus am I, And positively the only one who never gets dry. And popular ? Say ! You ought to see How all day long there ' s a crowd around me. I make no distinction, all admitted, good and bad. Freshman, sophomore, junior, post-grad, Even wise seniors come to hear me spout. Accepting all the wisdom that I give out, Without ever hinting that in all the nation There never was so great a product of creation As a Senior. Of me in admiration I heard one say The other day In a most decidedly complimentary way. That not another thing in this University Possessed a bigger crank — except the facvdty. And how they care for me ! Do you know That just to protect me from the rain and snow, I have a special building that is all my own. Electric lights, and colored glass, and pure white stone. I made them put it up. I was getting old. And exposure to the cold Made me ill. So I said. If they don ' t give me shelter, I ' ll pretend that I am dead; I did it, and when water began to fail, (Why, it made me laugh) they just began to sail Around and comply with my request. And as you can see, they did their very best. ■=?- Do you see that stone seat over there? It has been placed under my especial care. Another proof of confidence they have in me ; Before they put it there, it used to be In constant danger of a coat of paint From some freshman freak or sophomore saint. It ' s quite safe now. No one will be So foolish as to harm it when I can see. Because I can tell. Yet everyone knows I don ' t tell quite everything that goes On around here. My, if I should, What a lot of stories, bad and good, I could relate ; Sometimes I hate To keep still, But I will. Though it would be funny to disclose The lovey-dovey speeches of the ones I ' ve heard propose. And tell how Walter Greenough hugged — but say, I ' m getting too loquacious. So I ' ll quit. Good-day. E. V. R. 311 % T H E - A R B U T U S N I N E T E E N T E N • Curtis Gon Shake arrived in an unripened state from the bogs surrounding Vin- cennes, three years ago. Hurriedly casting aside rubber collar and galluses he entered the Law School. He is an ardent exponent of the hot-air method, and is the author of The Gift of Gab as a Factor in Making Credits, or How I Got My Start. Is a great joiner, having an abnormal desire for liadges. Made much good money during Senior year by selling hand-books to Freshmen, his office as Y. M. C. A. president being of great aid to him in this respect. Is now engaged in writing an Owed to Delta Zeta. Possesses a dig- nified carriage and a bell-like voice of remarkable penetrating power, one of his ordinary- pitched conversations being heard clear to Ellettsville. He is a very promising young man, but doesn ' t always do as he promises. One day the laundryman called at a house where several Phi Beta Pi boys roomed. The door was opened by a small boy. Students live here, don ' t they? inquired the laundryman. Naw, answered the boy, Phi Betes lives here. This reminds us of Andy ' s immortal utterance, Fellow students and — er — ladies of the University. Cy Bonsib had laboriously measured the gym track around from right to left, and got up on his feet very red in the face and short of breath. Just then it occurred to him that maybe sometime he might want to run around in the other direction, so he patiently measured the track again, this time from left to right. Mr. Abel had borrowed Prof. Jones ' Principles of Pedagogy, which he unsuspectingly opened in class. Instantly a shower of snap-shots fluttered round him. As Abel got down on his knees to collect them, he noticed that all but three were of Lela Todd. 312 % THE ARBUTUS i NINETEEN TEN t Practicall} ' everybody has spotted Miss Sei.esky by this time. She arrived here last year, straight from Hungary, Russia, or some other furren country, we don ' t remember which. ' Tis said she can talk six languages, which certainly looks discouraging to her matrimonial prospects. However, we understand that the well-known confidence man. Curt Shake, has decided to take upon himself the task of naturalizing and domesticating the fair foreigner. She is the idol of the Law School, where she is venerated as a goddess and an oracle. She is a star student, and realizes as well as any of them that where there ' s a will there ' s a law-suit. Slesk is very fond of wearing black, and in her native Hungary was reputed to be the original of Die Lustige Witwe. An indefatigable dancer, she almost jigged herself in two in front of the Dorm side-show at the County Fair. Has refused several flattering offers to go on the vaudeville stage as an impersonator ; can sometimes be prevailed upon to give a performance before a small and select audience at the Dorm, her impersonation of Don Adams being her masterpiece. The first question of the Zoology exam had just been written on the board: Tell where the following animals are found: sponge, starfish, medusa, Margaret Laughlin nudged a Kappa sister near by and whispered : Where on earth do you look for sponges, Mary? Mary Wright, impatiently : Aw, try a bath-room. Stagg Johnston irreverently refers to Mr. Preston of the Latin department as a darned cute little scamp. 313 THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN Sam once told a friend of liis that his highest ambition was to hold a life license and be a county superintendent, but we know better. It is to hold a marriage license and be a cottage superintendent. Sam is a Normalite and a Pythian Sister.  The following torrid epistle was received by Ed Walters in response to a jacking up about the Arbutus fee: Treasurer Arbutus — Dear Sir : Yours of the 1st inst. has been rec ' d. I am very sorry indeed that the officials of the class of 1910 found it necessary to question the credit and integrity of the man who led the fight for a clean non-graft Arbutus. You might have rested assured that I had deferred pay ' t of the photo fee for good and sufficient reasons best known to myself. In fact there is no certainty that I will get my degree this year. Yet since the treasurer has seen fit to stomach-ache about an insig- nificant fee before my return, and before the action of a faculty com- mittee, which I have been waiting for to send you this sum, I shall gladly enclose a draft for $5 with the request that in place of my picture the management insert in that space the fact that after paying all obligations to the class, I requested not to have my picture pub- lished, for reasons best known to myself. Hoping this clears up all your weak-kneed notions abovit my financial integrity, I am Very sincerely 3 ' ours, M. L. GOUCHENOUR. Note: Though the above-mentioned reasons for not wishing his picture published are, as Mr. G. says, best known to himself, they are apparent to any one who has ever seen him. 314 % THE ARBUTUS t NINETEEN TEN Oh Fluff ! Here is your Aunt Mary, children. Said to be the only specimen on the con- tinent, which is a blessing. The only girl in town last winter who met the confirmed misogyn- ist, Coach Georgen. Also the only girl last year in a Journalism class of twenty. It fussed her so (for she is very shy) that she wore a veil to class the first week or two. Her favorite stunt is punching holes in a piece of linen and sewing them up again. This she calls em- broidery. High priestess of the worship of the Deified Doc Johnston. It is her boast that she can spot a Normalite a block away, and has never 5 ' et missed one. Human phonograph, her most worn records being, Why I shall never pay taxes, My revolutionary ancestors, and The unique personality of Harold Whetstone Johnston. Aunt Mary was unfortunate in her choice of a nose, but realizes her error now. The only time in her life she ever looked swell was when she attended the Woman ' s League Dance as a West Point lieutenant. The typical old maid of the University — all she needs is a birdcage. The best we can say of her is that she means well. DISQUALIFIED Elba Fickel : Do tell me, who is this man Osthaus I hear about? Louie Deupree : ' Oh, he ' s a bachelor prof in the German Department. Elba, eagerly: Does he ever go with any girls? Louie, aghast : Mercy no, child, he ' s got a beard. Well, Lawhead, what ' s your prospects with Miss Trimble? asked one of the S. A. E ' s. Huh, growled Lawhead, They ' d be pretty good if Doc Smith of Lafayette would be accommodatine enough to die. I have looked over these papers, remarked Dr. Fite to his class, mildly, and am pleased to sav that several of them show signs of intelligence. 31S ■ 1 [ THE ' ARBUTUS V 1 t Here goes Clyde Thompson with his law school. The faculty begged him to leave it alone, but he haughtily ' refused. The law school and Mellie are rivals for Clyde ' s affections, and it ' s certainly nip and tuck between them. Clyde thinks he holds the entire political situation here in the hollow of his hand, and his dark schemes and intrigues are obliterating forever the fame of the Borgias and the de Medicis. He spent the first two years of his college career denouncing frats, and the last two getting into Phi Delta Phi. We will have to admit that Clvde is a good looker and a swell dresser. Speaking of little things, don ' t mention Pauline Workman or Gochenour ' s opinion of him- self, or you will be making a social blunder. Skel Roach to ' ' Soxie Burtt as the latter lets the ball go sailing by him : Aw, come on, Soxie, stop countin ' your money and get into the game. Bob Reeves : The ' Third Degree ' will be in town to-night. Freshman Judd : What! you ' re not going to give us the third degree to-night? I want to go to the sophomore dance. At Spencer boarding club : Mr. Buck, the history man, went to Harvard to take his doctor ' s degree. Bill Moore: Then why doesn ' t he begin doctoring a few people instead of teaching ' history? 316 % T HE A R B U T US NINETEEN TEN Behold PiTTENCEE, the evil genius of the Coop., alias the University Book Store. Pitt is a Fly-sigh and a Modern Woodman, but has no other faults. His greatest fad is having boils. He says it makes the girls kinder to him, and he is approaching the age when girlish kindness means a lot to him. Pitt is of a rather sober and serious nature, and not e.xactly what you ' d call a sport. He takes a melancholy sort of pleasure, however, in busting sacks of water on the Fly-sigh Freshmen as they sit around absorbed in Cotton ' s French-harp music. No matter what you ask him for, from a sack of peanuts to an aeroplane, Pitt will unblushingly tell you that we ' re just out, but are expecting some tomorrow, sure. He is probably the greatest living upholder of the theory that Anticipation is greater than Realization. Raridon, speaking of Gentry ' s show : but they saw me and made me get out. ' I tried to sneak in behind the elephant. « LOYALTY Oma Glasburn had heard so much about Halley ' s comet while at school that when she went home for spring vacation she tried to air her knowledge before her brother, who is much interested in Astronomy. Yes. we ' re awful proud of Halley over at college, she remarked. He ' s assistant professor of Astronomy, I guess. He and Doc Cogshall know more about stars and things than anybody else in the United States. 317 THE ARBUTUS tmmW k No wonder the Class .of 1910 is the greatest organization on earth, when it has had Jack Evving at the helm during its last two years. Besides being a politician, a Ladies ' Man, and a Pourer of Oil on Troubled Waters, Jack has made good before the foot- lights. Occasionally he can be coaxed into giving a side-splitting series of impersona- tions of the near-politicians in the Law School. Thinking that the statement would look good to his biographers in years to come. Jack got himself elected president of the Y. M. C. A. last year. He is a good boy, and never swears except at the Republican party, when he wants to enjoy a side-show out of that excitable and ardent upholder of the G. O. P., Victor Cook. One of Doc Johnston ' s conundrums : Why is the third conjugation like an old maid? Because it has no bo in the future. Lois Tracy in History class, anxiously : Prof. Buck, are you particular about your dates? The Professor, recognizing Lois, hastily assured her that he was. Just before the Panthygatric, some one called up Jess McNamee for a date. I ' m very sorry, said Jess, but Pm going to the Panthygatric that night. Oh, all right, came the reply, I ' ll see you there then. 3t8 «? % THE A R B U T U S N I N E T E E N TEN The Human Grasshopper from Sheridan is a very quiet, modest, pleasant sort of a chap, and we are all immensely proud of him. The bump of destructiveness on his yellow head is abnormally developed, for innumerable hopelessly smashed records lie in his path. When not down in the Co-op with his red I sweater on, Harry can always be located either at the Pi Phi House, or out on the cinder track in a costume which can be packed into a thimble. One day the Misses Clara Belle Bannon and Gertrude McDaniels at the Dorm, sought an interview with Mrs. Louden. It ' s Mrs. Hall, you know, began Clara Belle, hesitatingly. She has the room next ours and keeps us awake snoring. It ' s something fierce. Some- times she wakes us up at two or three in the morning. We potmd on the wall and wake her up, and then she quits. I wish you ' d try and do something about it. Half an hour later Mrs. Hall presented herself in Mrs. Louden ' s room. I don ' t like to complain, ma ' am, she said, but I can ' t stand those girls next me any more. I always thought they were nice, quiet, well-behaved young ladies, but they ' ve been acting real boisterous lately. They make the awfullest noises way in the dead of night and wake me up. I think one of ' em must have fits or something. I wish you ' d try and do something about it. 319 a % T H E A R B U T U S NINETEEN - TEN - Here is our eloquent, awkward, jolly, obliging and hard-working Sluefoot. Rip Van Winkle-like, he is always ready to do his neighbor ' s work before his own — particularly if that neighbor is a girl, and the work a history report. His only ornament is a handsome opal ring, which could serve as a bracelet for any one else. In class meetings his chirp has been known to drown out even Gochenour and Hutcherson. Has an abnormal passion for being photographed, and will sprint two miles at top speed to get in front of a kodak. After two years of faithful and unrewarded labor with the scrubs, Sluefoot made the team last year, and struts around with his I as big as any of them. The most dramatic moment of his life was when he turned loose the beribboned pigeon (or dove, as the Student called it) at Foundation Day exercises last year. A CHARACTERISTIC SENTIMENT Elba Fickel : Don ' t you know, I think it ' ud be so nice to be here in summer school and have a case and spoon ; that is, if you spooned at all, don ' t you know. Fite on another occasion : average is about F plus. I have graded these papers A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, etc. The A light joke — Aubrey Hawkins. 320 % THE - ARBUTUS This large square gentleman from the wilds of Posey County holds the distinction of having been scrap captain twice, and the founder of the notorious Sugar Club. An en- thusiastic collector of monogram sweaters, he had a complete line of them until the night of the fire. Is imdecided whether to become an M. D. or a professional ball-twirler. He is not much of a favorite with Dean Goodbod} ' , and is said to have done more than any one else to wear out the green carpet. He is the personification of deliberate impudence. Very fond of being in the company of girls, and still fonder of making them wish he was out of it. Most people like Carty pretty well, though. Kids swarm all over him, and he meets many friends in his leisurely amble down the side-walk of life. Dorm girl: I think Aydelotte runs that horse-laugh into the ground. ' Winnie Easton : He ' d better run it into a livery stable. First Delta Gamma: I think Fannie is awfully mercenary. ' Second ditto: What makes you think that? First ditto: She ' s so crazv over big checks. The Phi Gams boarding at the Dorm decided that they wanted some new dance music, so Morrell Shoemaker and Winnie Easton were sent down town to select it. About two hours later they wandered back with a ccpy of De Koven ' s song, Oh, Promise Me. 321 a j, M [ T H E ARBUTUS - V ■ t Preachers ' kids are proverbially reprobates, but Miss Aklen is the exception that proves the rule. She has a Voice. She herself calls it mezzo-soprano, but that isn ' t what the neighbors call it, by a long shot. Dear reader, can you pick out Jawn on the front row? The Little Bird is considerable of a crank on Hygiene, and almost freezes her room-mate to death in zero weather, by insisting on having all the windows up as high as they can go. She discourses most learnedly on Proteids and Carbohydrates and the Value of Froot as a Food-Product. Winona Lake, Ind., is accused of being her home-town. Two Armenian pedlars came to the Dorm last term with a large stock of genuine Persian rugs. ' For pity ' s sake, ' ' exclaimed one of the girls to her room-mate, Who ' s doing that awful swearing down-stairs ? Oh, I guess Mr. Louden ' s just tripped over one of those prayer-rugs, was the reply. Doc Johnston had certainly slicked up a lot to go to the Classical Association at Chicago. The evening before, he strode into the reading-room, wearing a foxy new gray suit and carrying a brand new gray hat. .A girl at one of the tables whispered to her companion, New clothes. Doc read the movement of her lips. A moment later he suddenly appeared behind her and growled, Yes, how do you like ' em? The girl has not yet gotten over her fright or Doc over his laugh. 322 % THE ARBUTUS t m This demure person goes sometimes by the undesirable name of Rash. But he is not listed as an undesirable citizen, one maiden at least expressing the hope that she might at some time catch the Rash. He is probably contagious. He is the typical strawberry blonde of the University, and hails from Indianapolis, Bloomington and Bedford. He strenuously denies that he is going to be married right away after grad- uation. His advice to young ladies desiring a peaches-and-cream complexion will be sent upon application and a postcard. Fred Bates Johnson is his idol and model. Stacey Abshirc: Say, is Hans Christian .Andersen a man or a woman: Martha Groves, loftily ' a ' been Hannah. A man, of course. If lie was a woman his name would One day Walter Greenough, in playful mood, turned the hose into young Merrill Davis ' s window up-stairs, calling forth a volley of protests and expostulations which we shall not print. Walter continued directing the stream into the window. A few minutes later Merrill rushed out of the front door, thinking to overpower and disarm the intrepid editor. Walter stood his ground manfully and gave Merrill the full benefit of the water. Too late he discovered that it was his own suit which !ilerrill had swiped as armor for the attack. .32.3 NINETEEN TEN This massive object is not a gladiator, or a Goliar; or even a bold bad man. It is only Whittenberger, the Indiana Onion fiend. For this idea he has fought, kicked and been kicked, and sworn, and at last succeeded in stinging every male student $i, all to the end that he might be able to play pool at 2 2 cents per cue. His persecuted friends have no recourse but to stand around and watch Whit play pool, and it is a sight for the gods. Aside from this, Whit is a good though homely lad. The little Freshman Dorni-angcl. glancing over the sporting page, noticed a cut labeled Winters, full. Isn ' t it awful, girls, that they print such things about people? she ex- claimed. Why, he looks perfectly sober to me. Cupid Ridley, ' 13, had been unmercifully teased by IMiss Brough O ' Banion, ' 10, during an entire laboratory period, and was just hovering on the verge of getting sore. At last he rose to leave. Goodbye, Freshman, called Miss Brough. It was the last straw. Huh! snorted the chubby underclassman, as with face crimson with indignation he strode out and slammed the door, Druther be a Freshman than a dog-oned Senior a thousand years old. 324 c THE A R B X7 T U S NINETEEN TEN An old time, old school Dimmicrat is Gawkenouk, He is the proud owner of a mellifluous, bellicose voice, said voice being voicing most all the time. He regards his chances for U. S. Senate as good. H he would only think said chances were no good, that would make it unanimous. He is of the earth, earth} ' , and farm, farmy, but Cin- cinatus-like, would leave his plow standing in the bean-patch any time to take his position at the political helium. H there is ever a Mrs. Gawkenour, — and we under- stand there are several applicants for the position — she will go down in history as the first woman in all creation who didn ' t get the last word. Bill JNIoore and a friend were watcliing a number of men practicing on the cinder path. The starter fired a revolver to give the men the usual signal for getting away. Bill, hearing the shot, concluded that some one had been shooting at an animal or bird of some sort. He looked in the air and then scanned the entire scope of Jordan field, but he found nothing at which any one would be shooting. He, at this time, however, noticed the revolver in the starter ' s hand, and also caught sight of the running athletes. Bill had solved the difficulty He turned to his friend with this exclamation: Why. he never touched ' em, did he? Xow his friend is wondering how far liack in the woods Owensville is located, and is also waiting for some one to convince him that Bill is not the worst among the wearers of the little green caps. .325 THE; ' ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN lr(DWNAPOJJi__JLLJii iW,EWT C. C. C. AND St. L. A ' I. Campbell Adams has been loafing around here for a number of years, and is as much part and parcel of the University as the Gargoyle or the Stone Seats. He has a graft of some kind up in the office and forges John W. Cravens ' name on the blue cards. He also takes up the slips after Hygiene lectures, and slippery indeed is the delinquent who can outwit him. C. C. C. etc., is considerable of a fusser. After supper at the Dorm, he loves to get a buncli of fair ones cornered out on the porch, while Brother Don ( for it runs in the family) does the same stunt at another end of the porch. Our artist has depicted Campbell in a very trying situation. While gathering sociology statistics in the slums of Indianapolis one day, he roused the ire of the lady of the house b3 ' some tactless inqviiries regard- ing roaches, bed-bugs, and other boarders, with the result that she gave him a good trouncing, accelerating his departure by means of that most ignoble and plebeian of weapons, a rolling-pin. • A TYPICAL STUDENT EDITORIAL If there is any one thing more than another that we feel it ' s up to us to take a whack at, it is the abominable habit of using slang. It ' s a bloomin ' outrage that even the highest of our high-brows can ' t tear orf a few pages of the English language without running in a bunch of slang on us. It ' s an awful punk habit. A few days ago some pin-headed two-spot skmg vis a spiel that we couldn ' t make head nor tail of. He got our deck so shuffled we didn ' t know what was trumps, till finally we got a hen on that he was trying to string us. It was a rotten trick, and we shall be leary of such gents in future. We want you all to stow it away under your lids that the gang that puts out this sheet, from, the Main Squeezer on down to the devil, positively will not stand for any such slush. This is straight goods. Choke it. 326 c % THE ARBUTUS t NINETEEN TEN IS MiSS fOLTZ i i 7 Pearlus (alias Peerless) E. Smilf.y hails from Lebanon, and is one of the shining lights of the Law School; also one of the wo rst fussers in college. The rustle of skirts always sounds good to him. Peerless has a stiddy, however, and when not playing pool some place, can generally be found hang- ing around 902 E. Third street. He gave this Jane a chafing dish for Christmas, and has been fed some delectable mess out of it every time he ' s called there since. (Wise girl. She ' ll land him sure.) Peerless says that chafing dish is the most profitable investment of his life. Has taught school several years. At the end of his last term he gave each of his pupils a photograph of himself as a keep-sake, thereby forcing a prominent rough-on- rats manufacturer in the neighborhood to make an assignment. It was a nawsty morning and the Bachelors ' Roost was cold and imcom- fortable. Dr. Campbell had risen early and gone down town to superintend the Robin Hood ticket sale. Prof. Brooks had just turned over for a lux- urious half-hour ' s nap, when the phone rang. There was nothing to do except to get up and answer it. Hastily draping around his shivering form an . ' Mice-blue eiderdown dressing gown, patterned with purple wisteria and scarlet orchids, he waltzed over to the phone, wdiere, with that courtesy which never fails him, he cheerfully answered half-a-dozen fool questions about the seat sale. Can you tell me, asked the unknown one irritably, what ' s the difference between the fifty-cent seats and the seventy-five cent ones? Certainly, chirped Alfred Mansfield, pleasantly; just twenty-five cents. Then he hopped briskly into bed again, leaving the inquirer to burn the wire out with cuss words. 327 THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN W This is a familiar scene, is it not, dear reader? Tt is Hutch moving the previous question, and preparing to be sat vipon by the chairman. It was a dull class-meeting indeed when this party did not pull off a skillful coup in Parliamentary Practice. Homely in visage though he is, he has a gentle disposition, and will not fight unless cornered. He wa.s allowed to carry a banner in the Foundation Day parade because that required no mental power. He has a prehistoric skull, and belongs probably to the Wooden Age. Is violently opposed to woman ' s suffrage, but is by no means averse to their company. Made his debut into society at tlie Junior Prom last spring. Mr. Scott, conducting Zoology quiz : What is the characteristic feature of the vertebrates, Mr. Savery? Savery, ' 13, after a moment ' s profound thought: Why, they have the spinal cord connected to the elementary canal by the aorta. Clarence McGurty, Sigma Nu, while traveling for the Motor and Cyclist Magazine, met the manager of the Indianapolis Automobile College and began enthusiastically talking college and fraternity life with him. You ' re a frat man, aren ' t you? asked Clarence. The manager blew a whiff from his ci.gar and replied, Oh, yes, I was spiked Sigma Nu, but I went Phi Gam. 328 % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN ♦ T E N Here you see the triangular Mr. WriiTNi-rv. Vc mean no shun on his ligger, hut are merely referring to the fact that he is scholar, athlete and pianist, all in one, and can deliver the goods in each role. He is an amazing high-brow, and knows Euripides and Plato by heart. And as a manipulator of the ivories — oh my ! Once he graciously granted Taderewski permission to play before him, and the flattered Padd r thought he would, too, till the time came, when he lost his nerve. On the night of the Phi Gam fire. Clawed was upstairs reading his Homer, and lost to the world. In vain did the brothers frantically urge him to save himself; in vain did they call his attention to the roaring flames around him. He remained like one unconscious of his own distress, or like a creature native and indued unto that element ; but long it could not be, till that the others took him by the neck and heels and dragged him out, which time he chanted in majestic Homeric hexameters the appalling story of the destruction of Troy. The boarders at Howe ' s were discussing the French language one day. Ray Teeters loftily announced, ' T think French is a joke. Yours is, retorted Lillian Franklin. Somebody at the Gassaway boarding house alluded to the great intimacy between Campbell and Brooks. Eleanor King remarked, Yes, I do wish Campbell would marry Brooks and have it over. 329 NINETEEN Oh look who iss here ! This is Jake, the Supreme Dictator over the Freshmen ; the president-in-law of the Cercle Frangais ;. the impassioned leader of Boosters ' Club. Some of the more conservative of the Delta G. sisters were formerly somewhat leary of Jakie, but Love always finds a way, and Jakie just kept on coming anyway till now they are all real proud of him. He is of Irish descent, and has a great penchant for Spearmint gum. His folks are said to be pretty well off. Jake is much troubled with insomnia, and puts himself to sleep every night by juggling three tennis balls about his head. ' Tis thy evil deeds, we fear, O Jacob, which do so cruelly beset thee, and rob thee of thy nightly rest. Thou art little, but so was Napoleon — Hoch der Iviser ! It was at Md ' erren ' s Assembly. Sam Lahr, with his finger-tips gingerly crooked around a girl at arm ' s length, floated past Bruz Bon- sib. For pity ' s sake, Sam, began tlie aggressive Dutchman, as soon as the dance ended, why don ' t you hold that girl up so she can tell where you ' re taking her? How can she know where you want her to go when j ' ou hold her off like she was poison? Sam ' s teeth chattered. ' T ' m afraid she wouldn ' t like it, he gasped. O shucks ! said the experienced Bruz, she won ' t care. They never do. They like it. At the end of the next dance, Sam, much elated, sought out Bruz and whispered confidentially, Say, I tried it on one, and she never said a word! , 30 NINETEEN TEN This is Cunny of library fame, wlio has had a graft there for the last live years. His brother before him the same thing. Are there any kid brothers at home to take it up when j ' ou get through with it, Cunny? Has probably handled more books and knows less about them than any other Librarian in the world. He wears a furtive, frightened, hang-dog expression and a lop-sided red sweater. Has never been as pop- ular as Bobby, ' ' however, since he has never cultivated that Merry Widow swing. Belongs to the D. T. D. college lodge. Dotes on red neckties and won an I by persistently practising catching base- balls. Said to be enamored of a Morgantown K. M., who frantically waves a dish-cloth at him every time he goes through that cheerful hamlet on the Southern. Cunny always goes to the rear platform on these occasions. O you Cunny ! say the female co-eds. Dr. Eigenmann, displaying specimens of pickled fish; Dis is a pike. Dey are very frequent in der Ohio river. And dis is a sucker — we have lots of dem in Indiana. During the winter term the History Seminary Class held afternoon meetings at which the members took turns speaking for not more than an hour and a half on some given subject. Merl Gochenour hunted up poor little Hallie Newton and insisted upon her petitioning Dr. Woodburn to have the meetings after supper, so that he might extend his speech until the campus lights were switched off. 331 NINETEEN TEN   Permit us to introduce tlie Czak of Strut and Fket. Any one desiring admittance into that aggregation must first bend the knee to this Joe Canncn of the House of His- trionics. Has a powerful frame, a beetling brow, and exerts an hypnotic influence over the Law School profs, all of whom regard him as a good student. He publicly announces his ambition to be of becoming a second Joe Jefferson, or Billie Burke, but Fred Bates says that Mac is taking correspondence lessons in the Science of. Running a Five-cent Theater, and also Easy Lessons on the Phonograph. He contemplates an early marriage with some one. Mac ' s weakest point (or shall we say points) is his somewhat elongated and attenuated lower limbs. In private life he has quite successfully concealed this defect by wearing pants generously pegged. But the colonial style of pantlets certainly reveals the distressing truth. The History Club convened at Spratt ' s and waited there for almost an hour. Finally Dr. Hershcy arrived in breathless haste, his collar and tie hanging unfastened and a splotch of egg yolk on his cheek. ' Tis said also that the aforementioned tie got twisted in the picture and displayed very prominently the Kahn ' s Annex label on the under side. The Senior mortar-boards had come at last. Vertie Johnson marched majestically into the Nay house with hers on. Little Harriet Nay, aged three, looked her over won- deringly and-then gravely remarked: Well, I ' ll be jiggered. Doc Gordon, ' t2, while preparing to go to the Soph Cotillion, himself all over with Omega Oil to make himself limber. We wonder if this is the kind vonng F.arl Reeves uses. vigorously rubbed Oma Glasburn, speaking of the Phi Rho Sig dance: No, Greenough didn ' t ask me for a dance. I tliink he might have, seeing he was wearing Bob ' s dress suit. 332 % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN H. Paddock of West Newton, half-back, misogynist, professional treasurer, disgusted camera fiend, brother to Scott, charter member of Cartwright ' s Sugar Club, and guardian of the plunks for the Indiana Onion. Sometimes when he is in a particularly gracious mood, Howard allows Freshman Peak to walk down street with him. The pair remind us of a large, tolerant mastiff followed by a timid and admiring terrier. Great excitement was caused recently by a i-eport that Howard had had a date at the Dorm. But no, he had merely taken a package from his mother over to Cousin Margaret. Howard is a con- firmed old bachelor, we fear, and after Brother Scott and Poll tie up, will settle down per- manently to a life of single blessedness and taking care of Ma. Young Dewell Gann had just put his S. A. E. pin on Lois Tracy, and Lois had worn it in public several times, when someone called Dewell to the phone. Hello, came over the wire. This is a representative of the Daily Student. Are you willing to confirm the news of your engagement to Miss Tracy, for publication ? Great Scott! gasped Dewell, and then bawled into the receiver, Go to thunder. Pelee Lybyer to Johnny Mellett, who was out planting mileposts along the roads: Say, John, if you ' ll cut off a few miles from here to Greencastle, I ' ll have money enough to go see my girl. Prof. Osthaus — The nearest English equivalent to that word. Miss Iske, iv r;-. T.i.. ....-ii, 2 puzzled air) — Spooning, spooning. Why, what Miss Iske (with professor? IS ' spoonmg. does that mean, Spring termer to Jack Rogers, worthy senior, theme of ours due? etc., etc., etc. — When is that English 7 333 AT T H E ' ARBUTUS S CoinC ■ - AaV This blonde nymph flitted here from Butler College, where she was widely known as one-half of the Heavenly Twins. (Do not confuse these with our own native Bonsibs.) Her pet name is Scrub, and she wears a halo of denaturalized blonde hair. The sweater- vest she wears belongs to the Kappas. She is the premiere danscuse of this social oasis. She revels in light conversation, a moment ' s lapse of the same being sufficient to scare her into a blue f ink, for fear that she is a dead one. During a practice game last term, some one stepped on Andy Gill ' s face, and inflicted a gash which would have ruined forever the looks of any gentleman less handsome than the black-browed son of Ireland. Doc Alburger, threading up the Singer preparatory to taking a tuck in Andy ' s cheek, remarked, Pretty bad gash. Gill. I ' m afraid gangrene has set in. Well, thank Hiven for th ' color, anyway, feebly replied the loyal Hibernian. Say, fellows, come let me out. Such was the telephone message that disturbed an Emanon supper this spring. It developed that John Wilcox, tennis fiend, had locked up all his clothes while taking a shower bath. Clad in a large frown, he made his way to a telephone and called for help. No one coitld leave a good supper, so, amply clad in his aforesaid frown, Wilcox waited for another half hour moralizing on what fools these mortals be. 334 % THE - ARBUTUS t N I N ET E EN - TEN t Arthur THEOnoRE Rosbeeg, imported. Rossj ' tried out for Strut and Fret a dozen times, but always forgot his lines. He finally did slip in and now is almost happy. Almost. He does not have a case and is extremely envious of those who are so blessed. He tried to form an offensive and defensive alliance with Sam Lahr, Paul Isobe and D. P. Bonsib, but the plan failed to work. His idea of heaven is goose and sauerkraut. He may be identified by a bald spot which he wears on the top of his head. One night as Josephine Thomas and Anna McConnell were groping along the board walk on their way home from the library, the front door of the Delta Gamma house opened, and there, silhouetted against the hall light, stood a lady and a gentleman. The gentleman was just preparing to depart, and it was evident that there was a deep affection between him and the lady. His arms were around her, and he seemed to be gazing into her eyes with unutterable love. Isn ' t that rich, kid? whispered Anna, grasping Josephine ' s arm. Let ' s tiptoe up and see who they are. Hurr ' , before he goes ! Breathless with interest, they hurried toward the pantomimists. Finally she threw her arms around his neck and drew his head down — for his figure was lofty and com- manding — and the watcliers fell back in an agony of disappointment, as they recognized j lrs. Crennan bestowing a maternal kiss upon the broad and noble brow of her HoUoway. Hollowav Crennan, entering the boarding house parlor, stumbled over a drugget and fell flat. Oh, I beg your pardon, he said politely, getting on his feet again. The drugget begged him not to mention it. A pretty Dorm girl at a track meet critically looked Andy Gill ' s bare legs over and exclaimed, Oh girls, wouldn ' t he make a dandy ballet dancer? 335 % THE -ARBUTUS NINETEEN - TEN $ Aggressiveness, spelled with a capital A, is the word ! The pride of Pern, the inventor of the Galling gun style of oratory! See those determined jaws, those bristling hairs, those steely eyes! Who has never heard of Sollitt and his Peruvian Bark? He can give more reasons why he shouldn ' t pay his laundry bill than any other orator extant. He is in love and the Public Speaking Deparfment. (Notice Bessie ' s picture on the bureau.) He is the tool of the University in stirring up enthusiasm before football games, his frantic Halle- lujah speech last fall being his supreme effort. Formerly wore his hair in a bristling pompadour, but is now making strenuous efforts to flatten it to his skull again. If his muscles were developed as much as are his vocal chords, he could hold Maxwell Hall at arm ' s length. Is at present busy writing a poem entitled Me and Beveridge. Edith Walker: Looks to me as if you were getting up quite a case with Mr. Steckel, Chris. I see you with him every time I turn around. Miss Lebline, blushing, glanced down at the third finger of her left hand and replied, Oh no, I wouldn ' t give a Rapp for him. Extract from an Indianapolis medic ' s letter to his sister down here; By the way, sis, there ' s a girl at my boarding-hou.se who told me she used to go with a Mr. Bonsib down there. .She didn ' t say which one, but as she ' s kinda crazy, I reckon it was Bruz. 336 - THE ' ARBUTUS t NINETEEN TEN t LuMAN Kent Babcock, of Topeka (wherever tluit is), taught school several 5 ' ears and then boldly tackled Indiana University, where he has been an important figure ever since. He has a brilliant mind, covered by a brilliant scalp : also has the distinction of having been mentioned in the Bible (see Matt, 10: 30). The Phi Gams, knowing a good thing when they saw it, immediately snapped him up. Formerly understudy to Governor Hanly, and now private secretary to jNIayor Shank, and director of that official ' s somewhat eccentric administration at Indianapolis. Made a great hit with his Sunday School class of law- breaking saloonists. Was recently snatched bald-headed while trying to subdue a blind tiger. As we go to press a report arrives that our luminous Luman has just stood up before the squire and promised to love, honor and obey a sweetheart of his youth. The Arbutus extends congratulations to the fortunate lady, and predicts that she will some day be Mistress of the White House. One day early in May, Alary Negley found her room-mate weeping most dismally. Why StaccA ' , honey, what ' s the matter? she anxiously inquired. The papers say Halley ' s comet ' s going to strike the earth on the twentieth, and that ' s the night of the Junior Prom! sobbed Stacey, blowing her nose violently, and reaching for another handkerchief. Freshman to liss Kent; A.re you taking English seven; Myrtle ; No, indeed. Freshie : How did vou ever get out of it? Myrtle ; Oh, I ' m a P. G. Freshie: What ' s that — a Phi Gam? Elizabeth Deming saw some guineas on a country road. Oh, she cried, are those things guinea hens or guinea pigs? tell the difference. You know I never can 337 % THE - A R B U T U S We have here a curious paradox; in his own estimation one of the biggest, and yet one of the littlest, men around the University. When it comes to colossal nerve he is hard to beat. He hung around here for several years taking a bit of English and economics and then bluffed the Sullivan County school board into turning him loose on G_erman, Latin, Zoology and other things Johnson didn ' t know about. He is a brave man, though. With the shells crashing through the trees and bursting all around him in the quiet Nashville streets, he boldly stood- his ground in the face of the Brown County roughnecks. If you don ' t know him very well, call him Fred and watch him bristle. Our athletic English prof, Aydelotte Of friends here has certainly maydelotte. In the fall, ' 99 On the team he played fine — He was right guard, and gee, but he wavdelotte ! No leisure has Editor Greenough From The Student and dear Kathereenough To sit down after lunch With the rest of the bunch For a few hands of bridge or caseenough. Little Miss Omy She sat on a sofy Eating a piece of brown bread ; She stuck in her thumb And pulled out a — cockroach, And Blankety-blank-blank ! she said. 338 THE ARBUTUS m NINETEEN - TEN This, gentle reader, is Mangel. You say you don ' t know any more than you did. Quite so, but what we have said is true, nevertheless. Hist ! Behind this idiotic grin there is a dark past which he is endeavor- ing to live down. Much as we could sympathize with him, we fear the task is hopeless ; the handicap is too great. He came from the State Normal. By the way, IMangel plays a little basketball. It would offend Walter Sidney ' s up-to-date journalistic instinct if anything were rehashed about that case of his. so we wish to go on rec- ord as saying nothing about it — but say ! did you ever notice that he raises more racket around the Phi Psi house than all the freshmen put together, and yet will stroll along with her by the hour and never open his mouth. Yes, it affects people queerly. 339 NINETEEN - TEN t It is too bad that there are no golf and spelling teams around the University, as Cotton has hogged the captaincy of about everything else. In two years he snagged tliree of them. This is probably due to the fact that he hails from Manual Training High School. That is aljout the only good thing that can be said about him. If Van Metre ' s opinion of himself could be converted into a salable commodity, he ' d be a rich man. Van is a versatile fellow, though ; he can speak English, German, French and through his nose. 340 % THE ARBUTUS m N I N ET E EN T E N His pet name is Toodles. His supposed purpose in coming here is to study law. He can ' t write and how he landed a job as one of the Arbutus editors is still a mystery. He had one college case, but cured it by consultation with Prof. Harris. Took a correspondence course in a cartilage school to increase his height, but was refused a diploma. Bradford ' s fear is that he will become obese, which Heaven forbid. His bump of humor is highly developed and something should be done for it. Mother Elizabeth has a hard time explaining to her Delta Zeta sisters that she may do things not permitted to ordinary mortals, for instance, breaking all the sorority rules and then calling others down for doing the same thing. She holds the record for smashing (he ten- thirty rule and on tliis account may suddenly decide to leave the Uni- versit3 ' . She has a vivid imagination and has no trouble convincing herself that all she says is true. During her college career she has moved often and at unusual times. We wonder why. She entertained Cecil Clark at her home during spring vacation and it is said that the family entirely approves of him. 341 NINETEEN TEN Dear little plump Duffy Jessup had before him a splendid career as a lawyer and politician until he fell in love. Now he can think of no Contracts except marriage ones ; no Property except a neat little cottage with a garden ; no Cases except his own. Ina lives at Kokomo, and Duffy writes to her three times a week. So affecting are her answers that the big greasy tears stand in Duffy ' s eyes as he reads the tenderest passages to the sympathetic Fortner. His friends make him a chronic nominee for the minor class offices whenever a girl is running, thus embarrassing him very much : for of course our chivalrous Duffy could not think of running against a fair one. OFT THAT vviO, Yoii CAK ' T Fool vjJ Me. Carpenter is a mild, pleasant gentleman, and an enthusiastic member of the Married Students ' Club, the Masons and the Lincoln League. He is also the proud father of a cute little tow-headed daugh- ter, aged three, named Martha, and dressed in rompers. When not busy yanking Martha out of her mud-pie bakery in the gutter, Charlie works down town at the Recorder ' s office. At the Married Students ' Animal Fair social, Charlie was unanimously chosen to represent the Bald Eagle. He is used to being joshed about his unthatched roof, so with patient resignation he acted out the part of the ferocious bird, but we understand Mrs. Charlie got pretty hot over it, as she no doubt will over the above cartoon. 342 % THE ' ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN  5 ATHLETIC r e c a R TO MY Suc- cessor Forrest has tackled every line of athletics the Universitj ' offers, and finally won his I last fall on the Girl ' s Hockey Team. In his Freshman year he fell in with Cartwright and his gang, and fell in pretty hard, too. He is young in years, but old in experience. Remember the Golden Rule, Forrest, and do others before they get a chance to do you. The fact that we have drawn friend Ashel in the guise of an Ori- ental iron pusher is no nature fake. Sam Lee, our distinguished Bloom- ington townsman, took Cunny for a fellow-countryman and almost swamped him with a mess of lingo. If he had a pig-tail, the immigration officers would get after him. Ashel is blessed with a sunnj ' disposition and butter fingers. 343 N 1 N E T E E N TEN $ Goo-goo, Ray ! Goo-goo, Ruthie ! Here they come, at the rate of a mile a day, positivel} ' the Worst Ever. Long ago these personages lost their identity and hecame known simply as The Case, and It. So well known is It that comment is practically unnecessary. You can no longer tease It. It has long since grown as callous as a rhinocerous. When the hoarders at Howe ' s attempt jocose remarks at Its expense. It jnerely smiles serenely and unblushingly and glances fondly out of the corner of Its eye at the other half of Itself. Bless- ings on you, my children ! This son of Ham is no drawer of water or hewer of wood; no indeed. He is a plutocrat, buying law books at junk prices and then selling them at a handsome profit. He certainly is a paradox, being a radical Democrat. Years ago he was desperately wounded by an Israel- ite from Louisville, and Saul has had trouble with his nerves ever since. But for a good, honest, square-dealing fellow, Samuel Saul is hard to beat, and the Law School swears by him and never at him. 344 % THE ARBUTUS m NINETEEN TEN t This lofty and upright young man is Mr. McDonald; formerly head sandwich-sHnger at Henry and Kerr ' s, but now Official Adviser and Pet of the globular Dr. Hershej ' . He is a celebrated History gun, and is never known to forget a date, particularly those he has with Florence. At a recent dance, the chaperon, Dr. Woodburn, was saying that more j-oung wives were needed in the faculty ' and you should have seen Lela blush. Lela is an honor to Strut and Fret and she does not cease acting a part after the footlights go out. She sits near the front row in recitations, gazing with soulful eyes at the professors, and they think she knows a heap. 345 % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN There is one good thing about Jack ' s laziness ; it keeps him from rolling cigarettes. Jack is snch a fair, rosy-cheeked little fellow that every one loves him in spite of his faults. They say the Book Nook wanted liim to advertise a certain famous cream. A great deal more could be said about him, but it would trouble him too much to read it. Beautiful scion of a mighty sire is this (He is Congressman Baen- haet ' s son, if you please, and don ' t you forget it). Knows small baseball and less basketball. Originator of the lamabadman face, and has used it so long he can ' t get rid of it. He is not really a bad man, for at least one Delta Gamma is not afraid to let him come right up to her and eat out of her hand, so to speak. 346 % THE ARBUTUS t N I NET E E N TEN Miss Bartelle is a daughter of the gods, divinely fair, and most divinely tall. Her chief claim to greatness is that she is a cousin of HoUoway Crennan. The idol of the Delta Gamma freshmen, and a master hand at bluffing profs. She possesses a dreamy, innocent, absent- minded nature and Ed McDonald. Address — English Seminary room, care Ed McDonald. This nut-brown maid is Miss j Tellette (accent last syllable, please) of Springport, the Dorm Jockey. She is very fond of taking ten-mile walks before breakfast, and goes in for middy blouses without dickeys, sleeves or belt. Florence possesses considerable literary ability and has all the ear-marks of a genius. 347 THE - A R B UTU S m NINETEEN TEN u- Behold the soul-mates. It is summer in Arcady. Giotto, Velasquez, Titian, Raphael and George Purcell are utterlj ' forgotten. Alfred ] ' Iansfield has deserted Aht for Natchah and has at last found Beowty personified. t 348 T H E -ARBUTUS NINETEEN - TEN Miss Poll Mitchell, of Salem, struck here in the fall of igo6. She has a decided weakness for athletes of the heavy-weight class. Part of last year Poll was a faculty member. She sat on a mat at the edge of the swimming pool, holding a long pole with a hook at the end. It was her proud office to reach it out to sinking, gurgling maidens, and yank them into the air again by the back of the neck. Poll cried bitterly when she was not allowed to march with the faculty in the Foundation Day parade. When Annette ICellerman came to Indianapolis to fill her engagement at the Grand, and had the nerve to advertise herself as The Diving Venus, Poll hurried to the capital city as fast as the Monon could take her, ran down the presumptuous English beauty, bo.xed her oars, tore her rat off, and dared her to do it again. Annette didn ' t, either. We do not wonder at the Salem Witchcraft Delusion when we look at our enchanting Poll. 349 % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN Behold our heavenly twins. Ray has the reputation of being a very fast young man. In fact, he holds the state record at it. It is a won- derful sight to see him tear around the track, his legs a white blur in the air. He is said to be a sufferer from chronic absent-mindedness. As Louie Lewis says, Cy needs a jockey to ride him. It is not a very good picture of BrL ' Z, the Chronic Candidate. The angelic expression makes his round, good-natured face almost unrecognizable. Like a potato sprout in a dark cellar, his very life depends upon getting out into the light where people can see him. ' Like the potato sprout again, he will go any length to get there. We feel quite sure that Bruz was born under the constellation of Capricornus, the Goat. He believes in Advertising. He is press agent for his brother, for whom his love and admiration is unbounded. Incidentally he is his own press agent, too. It is his ambition to make the name of Bonsib as much a household word as Castoria or Star Soap. When you see him plunging down the campus walk, you had better step aside, for it ' s a dead sure thing that he won ' t. 350 THE ' ARBUTUS m NIN E T E E N TEN I - , Alphonse Gaston Nimrod Holloway Crennan is a mighty nice boy. We can thoroughly recommend him. He belongs to the French Club and the Delta Gamma girls. Other sororities keep a bull-dog, or a Persian kitten ; the Delta Gams have Holloway. During tennis season he appears at the boarding-house clad in purest white from canal-boats to sky-piece, thus giving him an extremely angelic and heavenly appearance. One daj ' at dinner Holloway chanced to see someone leave a spoon in his coffee-cup. With a piercing shriek, our hero fell into a fit, from which he revived only after Doc Al- burger had worked over him an hour and a half. In the spring this young man ' s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of hunting, so with one or two timid and admiring Delta Gamma cousins-in-law trailing after him, he sets forth, Roosevelt-wise, and many a care-free English sparrow falls a victim to his unerring aim. We do not claim for one minute that the above is a good likeness of Hazel Squires, for it flatters her too much. However, it is fine of the dawg, and since through constant companionship they are beginning to resemble each other, you can gather from him a very good idea of what Hazel is like. It is strange that he thinks so much of Hazel, when y ou remember that she heartlessly held him while his tail was being cut off. Doc Alburger hires Hazel to take care of his pet germs, and after she has watered and curried them, and pitched them down some hay and half-a-dozen ears of corn apiece, she is free to run and play. 351 % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN t Miss Peakl King is probably the most promising of the Deha Zeta Freshmen. She lived down at the dorm during the fall and winter terms, but in the spring moved down to the HOUSE. On the night of her initiation into D. Z., Pearl was so enrapticated with the grip that she showed several Dorm girls just how it was as soon as she got home. She goes in for short sleeves and wears a small red hat on the back of her head. While flitting across the campus with it on one day last term, this fledgling was noticed by Carty, who short-sightedly remarked that at least one woodpecker had stayed over for the winter. Pearl belongs to a distinguished family, having a sister who is secretary to the Senior Class. She has brown eyes and an apple-blossom complexion, second only to Omer Farr ' s. This is the gospel truth. Me-Myself Hipskind consists of a wonderful little bunch of energy and speed, a dcafenin.g checked suit, a pair of large-bowed tan Oxfords and a cap with a big front verandah. Last fall he mistook the political arena for the Gym floor, and the whistle had hardly sounded before Hippy landed a field goal and was hailed as Junior president. The boys love to hear Hippy pound out Sadie Salomy ' on the Union piano after dinner. He is a youth of amazing percep- tive powers, for the Delta Gammas say he never yet has mistaken Louella for Louctta. Can dance all evening on a square foot of floor space. Hip, Hip, Hurrah ! 352 THE ARBUTUS N I N E T E E N TEN Supreme Seeker of Soulitidtrs Most Eminent Jane JolHer Alleged Bigamist Sam Lain L. M. Campbell Adams W. W. Georgen SKIRT WORSHIPERS C. E. Cartwright Grover Hutcherson Bvill Williamson Esmond Hershberger Jack Joseph Prof. A. M. Brooks Don Adams George W. Henley Peerless Smiley Sluefoot Leonard Fred Bates Johnson Honorarx ilenilwi ' : Skel Roach 353 THE - ARBUTUS JO 3 M S3 : X 2 ■ 1 15 _ e . 1 1 • I j ? E S ► • .-  r - ■ = _ 1 1 . K E 5 2 - 1 1 s 3 „ Si 3 I I o 5 . ' I 3 I I - : i - 1 ° ji 6, s s I I si -?g .1 = I -1 l-ll fS 1? ; (S - I a IflM: 9 ? i i ! : i •; 3 3 ■ ■? -S « ■ i ■= 1! E = £ -B 5 I E E I S t t I : I - -3 = s - -a ' j: = £ -2 u 3 £ 3 ■ If 8 1 1 I ■ .. I s « a.-c ;£j,i - « -■2-- ' -= ' - tc K ■? ■A S 5 ■; i £ ■: a S £ = 3 a I I E = ; I -- E t, .-its ' ? 1 Uiti ii ti J Si ' = ° - E ■■ S ; = = E : S c tr 2 -a « I •S 5 If 2 5 .E . = .£ c - o I ■ -B ST ■ £ c:r £ £ A = 3S4 % THE ARBUTUS 1 ; t 1 UU i t i MS li l s . i -1 , :i 5 .■ = : 1 - - 1 a 1 H ij l!lf Ii :i!n The Kappa Hotel FOREST PLACE Beautiful Local ioo Cuisine Unrivalled p a ■ ■ See Our Fine Assortment nf Fancy SPRING DATES 1 ,2 0= Ii i f si = c=. REX THEATRE Eh H 6 T and BEST FILMS Swimming Pool, Panthygatric. ig-tiine artist, will render the between films. night. It will be enoiiji h. 2000 FEET LATES 1. Scenes in the Girls ' 2. Harem Life at the 1 E. E. Buchcim, the popular r latest favorites Only cue perforuunce each mmmmmtm 1 1 t i 1 1 tulaelyniii, but later she vvuH found bus ily making out a list of niur.-,day night dates. During the time in wliich the earth was pusaing through tbc toil of tlio comet, the inhabitants of Forest Placid did not realise their danger. The op inion prevailed that Mury Wright waa niuking all the noiae and thua a panic waa averted as uo attention was given to the diHturtmnce. The real calamity to the University happened on Third atreet, Dr, Johnston was hurrying home from jury duty ivhon overtaken by the comet. With eruel perversity the Lxdealiul visitor left the professor unharmed but carried away hin f una Imt Ttiis old heud-piece waa one of the relics of the Oniveraily and can never tie r.-phiced. Cunaidenihk- inteiest was aroused tlii! nitirning by a curious find on the cam piia, supposed lo he a meteorite oast otT by the comet. It was lianded over to the Chemistry Dcpartaient where every efTort was made to Jcleimine its com- |«iHilion. Dr. Lyons wns completely mystified until Dr, Alburger happened along and identified the lump as a Dorm, biseiiii which his doga lind been worry ing for two weeks. It is rumored that next year the hy- giene lectures will include some things that 00 O ' lO of the student body does not already know. Ii has niao been re- ported that some of the convocjitions may be alighlly interesting. 5 1 lirif i- , i JifiSS 1 1 Miii ■ ' 1 Is Miiii ' 2 = = = - 1 1 ' S 5 2 ili 1 •- = i |l .f!:i 1 = 1 : 11 ?£ = - = i. = y =■0 i i 1 i s j S 1 ■:. ' J t 2 iHim ; § 1- = s 1 iiffm S 1 i 1 1 1 Here Mr. lionMh was Joined by Mlaa Winnie T.iston, the maid of honor. The Itev. Cecil Clark stepped forward und in iinpressivc ring ceicmony which made the happy couple one The bride never looked more lovelj Ibaw in her bridal gown of white Dueh em aatin, cut princess, with un over- skirt of point dc vcnisc. The groom who ia well linown in educational eir- ..t..,. .. 1..... .. 3 r J 1 i-i ° •= ° i si g li -S s , 5 1 = 2 ' 1 e which followed. Mr. and Mra, Lahr xlip| ed out of Ihe kitchen, climbed the ing buckboard, were conveyed to the Monon station. Among the out-oflown giieats wcru Sir. Keith Preston of Chicago; Missen Wignini Miile of (Ireensbnrg; Florence WiCiae of Shelbyville; Enn Long, of New Harinony, Lilian Franklin of Hunt. inglon; Clara Belle Rnnnon of .St. J.4 iifa, Mo. i 1 ill ■5 ■ ' ■ ' 1 E II i i 355 ' THE ARBUTUS Chief Sledge Sliugcr Determined Denouncer Lord High IVhaelcer Prof. Frank Mathers b. Clyde Thompson Dr. Harold W. Johnston ANVIL CHORUS Don Goss Fernande Hachat Merl Gochenour Mary Baen Wright Oma Glasburn e. Dr. S. B. Harding Dr. Eugene Leser d. Prof. H. T. Stephenson e. Cy Bonsib SPECI. ' LTIES a. Everything. b. Frats. c. Student enterprises that take time from History. d. Other Shakespearian cities. ( ' . Language courses. 3S6 % THE ARBUTUS N I N E T E EN TEN THROUGH THE YEAR September 21, Tuesday: We arrive. September 22: Enrollment r,200. We find the co-op in the new Library. The team begins boarding at the Dorm. September 23 : Fritz Tourner loses his hair. Dr. Bryan posts his no smoking requests. Dr. Pohlman calls the at- tention of the Medics to the rule, and immediately retires to his office. September 24 : Edith Young gets lost trying to find the new Pi Phi bungalow. Underclassmen scrap. Sam Trotsky runs in the dying mother excuse, but is nevertheless shorn. Danruther borne fainting ( ?) into Phi Psi house. September 25 : Dean Goodbody posts rules. Cupid weeps. September 26, Sunday- : Foxy Jimmy takes the team for a long walk. September 27 : Dean Goodbody makes some fire-escape rules. Curt Shake peddles Hand Books to freshmen. Hand- some profit realized and invested in apples. September 28 : Eckersall strikes town. Cy Bonsib runs the track team down Forest Place to show off before the girls. September 29 : Duke Trimble taken to the hospital dan- gerously sick. September 30 : Work started on new Science building. John Tourner, ' 09, is reported drowned at JMacon, Mo. October i : Tourner ' s body is brought home and laid to rest. October 2 : Sophs win a two-minute scrap. First game of season — we beat DePauw 28 to 5. Duke fights his last battle and loses. October 3 : We gather at the Christian Church to do the last honors to our friend. October 4 : Class elections held. Ewing elected by Seniors, Bock by Freshmen. Gochenour tries to set Judge Hogate right on a parliamentary ruling. After three attempts, the Judge pulverizes him. October 5 : Blue cards in. Boosters ' Club organized. October 6: Big pow-wow. Cravens ' annual speech. October 8 : Team leaves for Chicago in sleepers. Kept awake by admiring serenaders, much to Jimmie ' s disgust. October 9: Chicago 21, Indiana o. We take a brace in the last half and hold them to a standstill. Hippy elected Junior president. October 12: Gill elected b - Sophs. Steckel succeeds Duke as Business Manager of The Arbutus. October 15: Sharlev Benson becomes Mrs. DeMott and leaves for Kansas. Dr. Bryan buys a saddle horse. October 16 : The stork comes to Kuersteiner ' s. Lake For- est, 5 ; Indiana, 27. 357 1 [ . T H E ARBUTUS - V ■ October 17: Dorm girls wash their hair. October 18: Dorm girls declare in exasperation that they just can ' t do a thing with it. Elmer Raschig, 10, spent Sun- day in Bedford. — Daily Student. October 22 : Strut and Fret try-outs. Curfew shall not, etc. October 23 : Wisconsin, 6 ; Indiana, 3. Hatfield and Mer- rill Davis get stranded in Chicago. Hattie has 75 cents ; Mer- rill has a nickel and a Timberlake check. October 25: Co-op investigated. Elmer Raschig, ' 10, spent Sunday m Bedford. — Daily Student. October 28 : Mercer and Dad Elliott arrive and are lionized generally. Ed McDonald buys an asbestos-lined cap. October 29 : Steckel donates his salary to The Arbutus. October 30 : Freshmen dance. Dad Elliott scores a big hit. Hallowe ' en parties. November i : Elmer Raschig, etc. — Daily Student. November 2 : Jimmy Sheldon, Jr., made mascot of the Boosters ' Club. Six inch snake stampedes the Dorm girls. November 3: Candidates for Sharley ' s place out. It is thought that R. S. Bonsib will also enter the race. — Student. Naturally. November 4 : Bonfire ; Illinois burned in effigy. November 5 : Poll Mitchell elected associate editor of The Arbutus, at the Senior social. November 6: Illinois, 6; Indiana, 5. Carty has a streak of bad luck — charged with professionalism at Champaign, and nearly killed by the train on the way home. Bradfute, Wilcox and Gifford get left behind at Veedersburg. Elmer Raschig, etc. — Student. November g : Shade, of Purdue, also charged with profes- sionalism. Daily Student can ' t help crowing. Gilstrap ' s club team challenges Purdue. November 10 : Cartv and Shade both out for good. Schil- ler ' s birthday celebrated. Steckel in the German play, loses his nerve and fails to kiss Myra Arlen at the critical moment. The audience howls. November 11: Stempel in the Student: Mr. Steckel was a living and b reathing Schiller — yes, but not a kissing one. Purdue Seniors overrun the campus. We ) ' ell for them. November 12 : Herold starts the Puffestival contest. Savery, ' 13, encouraged by Shake, bites. November 13: Women ' s League Tea; 200 girls, three frightened profs and one man. November 15 : Puiifestival editor buried in pie-plates. Savery gets wise. Ex-Gov. Folk in the Gym denounces graft. Elmer Raschig, etc. — Daily Student. November 16: Webster Bloom, of Tulip, Ind., wins the gingham mittens. 358 % THE A R B U T U S TEN November 17: Faculty play, You Never Cau Tell. November 18 : Puffestival. November 20 : Our great big day. 3,500 visitors. Purdue, 3 ; Indiana, 36 ; Oh, you coon ! November 22 : Bevcridge at convocation. Spuds Alessick horrified to hear that Dr. Cook is a Phi Psi. He considers the Phi Psi ' s reputation for veracity ruined. By the way, Dr. Cook is not a Phi Psi. Elmer Raschig, etc. — Student. November 23 : We are delighted with Seumas McManus in convocation. Many a man ' s tongue has broken his nose. We all go home to eat turkey, except the Betas, who have a house party. November 30 : Dr. Aley at Evansville Teachers ' Meeting denounces puppy love among teachers. He should be shaken up in a sack with Skel Roach. Mrs. A. visits friends here. Max saves nearly a week ' s board by being invited out with her. December i : Chicago Tribune picks Andy for All-West- ern half. December 2: Big jollification over football season. Speeches. Alice and Andy are cruelly scared. Fellow-stu- dents — and — er — ladies of the University — Prolonged ap- plause. Cartwright, who has stayed up nights for the past week rehearsing his extemporaneous ' ' speech, does fairly re- spectably. Carpenter ' s head a target for apple-cores. December 3 : Walter Camp picks Ingram for All-Amer- ican team. December 4: Press Club ' s Pedexpedition to Nashville. Barnhart and Joseph go fussing. Sophs have a dance and serve mashed potatoes and gravy. December 6 : Sheldon and Clarence Edmondson go quail- ing. Elmer Raschig, etc. — Student. December 10: Daily Student spiels about a valuable pic- ture owned by Prof. Brooks. One of Ruth by Spratt, we sup- pose. December 11: Junior dance. Rain. Hershberger, a. Medic, tries to amputate girls ' arms by pulling them out by the roots. December 13: Strut and Fret presents Pinero ' s Magis- trate. Berndt elected captain for next year. December 14: Medics have a snow-ball fight. Elmer Raschig, etc. — Daily Student. December 15: Library crowded. December 17: Blue books much in evidence — then home! WINTER TERM January 5 : Back again. Another Willkie registers. January 8 : Strut and Fret danced last night. January 10: Senior girls begin to pester Pitt with in- (juiries about the mortar-boards. 359 « THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN - TEN Tanuary 12 r Oma Glasbnrn makes an astounding zoolog- ical discovery — bites into a roach in a piece of brown bread. Dr. Eigenmann much interested. Januar - 13: Euclidian Circle danced last night. January 14: Howard Paddock shyly refuses to come through witli his baby picture for The ARr.uTus. Dr. Bryan and Pat 3iiurpli - go to Indianapolis together. Januar - 13: ' e tie a weight on Pat to keep him down to the earth. January 17: Indiana Union has its first meeting. Prof. Jones and Sluefoot wrestle. Dr. Hilliard unjoints himself for the Medics. January 18: ISlue cards in. January 20: We celebrate i .lma Mater ' s ninetieth birth- day. Hutcherson allowed to carry a flag pole. Van Metre wins Bryan prize. January 24 : Lutz and Williamson start Junior Book. Daily Student proposes an aeroplane race with I ' urdue. McManus at the Student liuilding. January 23: Pre. y s brother lectures to us on The Foes of Democracy. Busy week for Rosberg. Babcock takes a whack at Indianapolis saloonists. January 26: Comet visible. English Club picture taken. Miss De Lay keeps her eyes modestly fixed on the floor. Ar- butus Board danced last night. January 27 : Don Goss strikes town. Carry Ong, Nora Corcoran and Ruth Steele mistake the town clock for the comet. January 28 : Howard Paddock rakes in plunks for The Indiana Onion. Town kids snowball Fred Bates Johnson. What sacrilege ! January 29: Jake Kiser orders Freshmen to get green caps. Freshmen order Jakey to get — out. Indiana Union agi- tates tro])hy room. First get your trophies. January 31 : Duffv Jessup assaulted and battered by Ray- mond Yost. Paste him one back, Duffy. We beat Wisconsin 13 to II. History Club danced last night. February I : Seven Skeptical Sages organized. English Club celebrates Burns ' birthday. Kinnick renders The Sands o ' Dee. Everybody in tears. February 3 : Law School danced last night. February 7 : $25,000 worth of Persian rugs exhibited at the Dorm. February 11: Woman ' s League masked ball a brilliant affair. Keyhole boarded up. Freshman Peak in the mile run wins over Ingram, Bonsib, Frew and Bloom. February 12: Peak wears Delta Zeta colors. Student Staff danced last night. February 13: Big petition circulated. Roosevelt, Carrie Nation, Pear)-, Gift ' ord Pinchot, Mrs. Gunness and other notables sign it. Socialist meeting snowed under. .360 % T H E A R B U Februar - i6: Eighteen Phi Gams turned out into the worst blizzard in cars, bv the worst fire in i ' doomington since [893. Payton hurt in the fading ruins. Hundreds of students watch the spectacular blaze. Practically everything lost. Februar}- 17: Phi (lams appear in motley wardrobes. Shoemaker saves his bath-robe. The boys have to board at the Dorm. Misfortunes never come singly. February 18: Pdizzard C(jntinues. Phi (lams invited otit wholesale. Track team danced last night. Daily Student cele- brates its forty-third birthday. February 20 : Telephone call at the office for the veterinar ■ department. Somebody must have been looking for a pony. Chicago, 33: Indiana, 8 — ( )h. Fluff! February 21 : Phi Psi annual banquet. Phi Gams learn of $2,200 e.xtra insurance. Jo)- ! February 22 : Washington ' s birthday — Memories of former scraps come to us. Y. M. C. A. danced last night. February 2 : N ' acationists straggle back. Daily Student uses the word obsolute. liig snowball fight on Kirkwood avenue. Students clean up on town kids. In the Gym, A ' arsity plays Roughnecks. The air is thick with Andy and Carty. February 24 : Phi Gams poke around in the ruins. Lem- mon recovers twenty cents ' worth of stamps. February 25: Strut and Fret at Indianapolis. Medics dance. Sholtv devotes himself to sorority srirls. February 26 : Senior Hop. Jack Joseph creates great ex- citement b - ajjpearing in a Tuxedo. l ' ' ebruary 2i : Scarlet fever at Pi Phi house. Dr. Hershey danced last night. March i : Purdue hands us a 62 to 15 lemon. ' ill we ever get over it ? March 3: Mole traps on campus. It ' s a poor mole that can ' t dig both ways. March 5 : Dorm dance. Robin Hood cast announced. March 6: lleta c onvention. ] rench Glub dance. Kiser gets Blanche Pain in a circle. March 7: Phi Kappa Mu becomes Phi Delta Kappa. Miss Cjoodbodv danced last night. March 9: liasket ball season ends in a slump. Girls have a game, too. Jess McXamee stars for the Seniors. Roy Samse visits Emanons. Alarch 10: Last call for Senior Arp.utu.s pictures. Some of the tenners slow about turning them in. ' e can ' t blame them, (jesangabend danced last night. i Iarch II : Freshman green ca])s chewed over again. Jun- ior picture taken. Onl)- ten girls are loyal. Boosters ' petition tabled by the trustees. Kiser faints. Miss Wheeler danced last nipfht. 361 NINETEEN - T E N March 12: County fair. Delta Gamma minstrels bawl out U. H. Smith. Alpha Hall has a dime museum full of freaks. Committee of Dorm girls ask Longfield if he won ' t please be a skeleton. Longfield refuses indignantly. Northwestern track meet results 55 to 40 against us. Harry Johnson makes 23 of our 40 points. March 16: English Club makes a hit with Pride and Prejudice. Performance ridiculed by McCurcl) ' , who didn ' t happen to be in it. March 17: St. Patrick ' s Day. Andy Gill appears in green socks. Phi Psis danced infernally this afternoon. Dorm girl refers to Barrett as the good-looking Phi Gam. March 18: Exams begin. Dr. Myers leaves for Europe. Senior class meeting. The Arbutus is dedicated to Prof. Semlx)wer. March 25 : Winter term ends. March 26: Kappa House made an inn by the Nerv) Nine. SPRING TERM April 6 : Campus overrun with Spring-termers and Nor- malites. Miss Benedict unspeakably indignant to find Cart- wright ' s initials on the wall at the Kappa House. He ' s out of reach now, however. A]3ril 8: Air. Edmondson makes his regular prediction of biggest term yet. Bull Williamson receives an offer from Gentry Bros. April 9 : Greeks announce pledges. April 10 : Cartwright comes from Madison, Wis., to attend the Panthygatric. Greenough, Nussel, Elmer Goss and twelve other reprobates treed in the Y. W. C. A. rooms by Dean Good- body, and obliged to descend as they came, via the ladder. April 12: Medics ' red caps appear. Everybody traipsing out to Arbutus Hill. Prof. George Parker speaks on Degrada- tion of Party. Four laborers narrowly escape death in a fall from the new building. April 13: Phi Psis report a fine crop of dandelions. The blue-eyed Dutchman from Indianapolis keeps in training by grubbing them out. April 14: Journalism class meets on campus. Miss Good- body posts comet rules, as follows : All comet parties shall be properly chaperoned, by chap- erons approved by the Dean. The comet shall be allowed ample time to dress after rising. Mixed parties shall not go cometing on single-seated fire escapes, and if double-seated ones are used, they must be hauled in by three a. m. Young women students shall under no circumstances gaze at the comet with the naked eye. April 15: Brucker shoots rats in Phi Psi cellar. Blanket Plop tickets for sale at 98 cents. Indiana Onion open meet- ing and stag dance. Hippy g ' ets enthusiastic. Russell Racey leads the grand march. ,362 % T H E A R B U T US @ April i6: Max Alev, ' it. is ill at his room on Washington Street. — Daily Student. It ' s a pity a fellow can ' t get his washing done without being bawled out about it. ] Ierl Goch- enour addressed a large and appreciative audience of comets last night. April 17: Winter returns. Green caps and cherries utterly destroyed. Russell Racey, Tubby Scott, Raridon and Bruz Bonsib are overheard enthusiasticall}- discussing the widening influence of collese life. April 20 : Emma Goldman Baldwin calls a meeting of the Socialist Club. Purdue engineering class gets the glad hand and cigars. Registrar Cravens spreads salve on the comet. April 22 : Buckley leaves school to work on the Sun. Robin Hood scores a great hit. Omer Farr makes a skinn} - looking friar. Ed alters and his check-book infest the Li- brar) ' lobby. April 23 : Gentry ' s show on Dunn Meadow. Ereshmen dance. Phi Beta Pi near-fraternity gives sorority girls a dance. Elolloway Crennan goes comet shooting. April 25 : Library crowded — midterms are on. Aliss De Lay springs a sorority on us. April 26 : Delta Zetas move to Seventh street. Curt Shake inconsolable. AlcEerren charges students 10 cents apiece for lookinsf at the comet. April 29 : Soph cotillion. j lax Aley turns dramatist. Registrar Cravens gets a postal, beginning: I have the honor to request that I be supplied with a catalogue. Van Aletre at the librarv desk inquires for .Alacaulay. Later finds her in the stacks. April 30: Arbutus editors hustle to get in copy. Ered Bates Johnson called up by Kuersteiner ' s hired girl. Alice and Andv star against Northwestern. Oh, don ' t you remember sweet Alice, Ben Bolt? May 2 : . rbutus editors get out a Student. Kiser orders the comet to wear a green ribbon bow on its tail. Doc Johnston appears in a new suit and hat. Daily Student uses the word hell. ' ' O tempora ! O mores ! Mav 3 : Shake elected class orator. Li celebration of the event, he takes a stroll out Third street with Selesky. Dr. I indlcv addresses the men in a mass meeting. May 4: Bull Williamson and Bess Deming walk their beat, from Librarv to A ' ell House. May 5 : }ilere woman allowed within the sacred precincts of the Indiana Onion rooms. Tea served. Cam Adams caught drinking the cream. May 6 : The editor of The Arbutlls pulls four white hairs out of her head ; no wonder. John Wilcox, on plea of nose- bleed, bolts class to have a snap-shot taken with }ilyra. 363 THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN T E N May 7: V. H. Smith bumps liis head on the comet. May 13 : Woman ' s League partv for men. May 14 : Big reception for ex-Vice-President Fairbanks. Ma} ' 20 : Jvmior Prom. May 23 : Buchheini recital. May 24: Strut and Fret presents Sweet Lavender. May 28 : Blanket Hop. May 30 : Memorial Day — a holiday. June 10: Swing out and peace-pipe ceremonies. Dr. Bryan ' s reception to the Seniors. June 14: Arbutus out. The editors take refuge in the wilds of Brown County. June 20 : Faculty-Senior baseball game. Ivy and tree planting. Senior play. June 22 : Commencement. Alles ist hin. 364 % THE - A R B U T U 36s THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN $ The Board of Manager ' s lakes this opportunity of recommending to the readers of the 1910 Arbutus the firms which have so Idndly assisted the pub- lication with their advertising. 366 THE PRINTING OF THE ARBUTUS FOR NINETEEN TEN EXECUTED BY THE HOLLENBECK PRESS INDIANAPOLIS USA % THE ARBUTUS t NINETEEN TEN t Kighteen Twenty Nineteen Ten Indiana University BLOOMINGTON The growth of Indiana University during the last lifteen years is shown by the following five-year table: 1894 1899 1904 1909 633 1050 1411 2470 Graduates of Commissioned High Schools enter the Freshman Class without examination. PUBLICATIONS: Catalogue, Register of Graduates, Bulletins of the Graduate School, the School of Law, the School of Medicine, the School of Education, the Spring and Summer Terms, the Course in Commerce and the Course in Journalism. Any of these will be sent on application to the Registrar, or to WILLIAM L. BRYAN, President. m THE ARBUTUS t NINETEEN TEN t For Photographs, See SPRATT Maker of Fine Portraits North Side Square Telephone Number 134 Arbutus Photographer for Sixteen Years Bloomington, Indiana % THB ARBUTU KAHN CLOTHING COMPANY n H E H Ll M E OF HART. S C H A 1- l- NEK AND M A K C Everything in Men s Wear Prices the Lowest Agents for L. E. Hayes and the Globe Tailoring Company The Best Tailors in the Central States Manhattan, Faultless and Emory Shirts Imperial and Stetson Hats Lord Taylor ' s Hosier} ' Clark, Fisk Flagg Gloves The Annex T 1 [ H S -l- O R E U I- N U B li -i- IJ K E S S H ] S Copyright Hart Schaifncr Sc Marx % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN The Up-to-Date College Man Wears fashionable but reasonable clothes. He shuns the fussy fad styles called college fashions. The distinctive, custom-made Kahn Tailored Clothes have individuality, grace and style tailored right into them. They are superbly fitted and finished so that they forcibly appeal to the most discriminating dressers. Over 500 smart new Spring Fabrics on display. To Order — $20 to $48 — To Order C. J. Tourner The Kind of Clothes Gentlemen Wear KEP RESENTING KAHN TAILORING COMPANY  INDIANAPOLIS The Kind of Clothes Gentlemen Wear ETEEN TEN u R N I S H E R Wear ' ?s? Whiriwind 2 m. M AdooS 254in. Ayen rV 2 fein. M .1 , The ' INDIANA OUTFITTER ' WHIRLWIND A comfortable Close Front style with patented Lock that Locks. Made with the original Easy Tie Slide space — features of all ion (olJars in America Oldest Brand 2 for 25c — Quarter Sizes United Shirt Collar Co., Troy, N. Y. Makers of Lion Shirts D I E T Z H A T T E R IF IT ' S NEW, IT ' S HERE 106 EAST SIDE OF SQUARE c % THE A R B U T U S 7 6 Students Home STRAD ' S BILLIARD ROOM L. H. Stradley Cigar Company Branches : Grand Hotel, Indianapolis, Ind. Grand Hotel, Vincennes, Ind. Wayne Hotel, Ft. Wayne, Ind. Willard Hotel, Louisville, Ky. Filbeck Hotel, Terre Haute, Ind. FORT SNELLING Four color process hcdftone by Stafford Engraving Company, Indianapolis, Ind. Made from photograph taken more than fifty years ago. « O 4J a ?--x: j: U ■ . an 0 0) U o c (0 (« c o 2 o ti-C u , ■fc! - ' J; i:; = l! (u-i; — o — o o 1) o 035 a8 1-1 d o -3. «! O U [8 •s i 8 1) CJ3 o « a-9 2 o ■!-■ o Cray) C iii t« C - •2 o T3 O (L) C_3 3-° o u C o o _0 C 0) . ( ] o o V d IJ - -n O 0-0 H 4J _Q 3 3 60 go 5: « cr aj3-t:_c o OS O a es 0) ii 2a 00 is e T3 J! .t: 2 .2 .2td a. 5 . 05 O WE Zp OH So En 0} o a ■M CO tJC -C u s a o S Q. O u 0) C3 O C3 ■2.2 a: CQ -J ' ID , J3 22 P O _ of C (11 0) y O V u (u 0, o. CQ a . j: D . «_Q - ,„ J o 3 2 i2 .1 ■ CO _ _Q u 0) (U ? O — ■ arS - 2 58 a O d • O IB  U a-S_Q 4) si to 3 C C .2 ■ m o ' -2 u M C ifl a 3 o « 3 o M _2 M)T3 U o JJ c 0) „ Q. « T3 0) ; . 75 U .3 O a Si 1 ) -a o = 5 Q o C3 2 -s o C 5 o (5 CO tf M ■M H ■n 3 ffl z % THE ARBUTUS lu Thirty-Five Thousand Dollars Spent on Improvements Th( New Grand Hotel Hot and Cold Water in All Rooms — Refurnished Throughout — Turkish Bath, Salivary Cafe and the Finest American Plan Table in Indiana Rates, J2.50 to 4.00 European, SI. 00 to S2. 50 The Arbutus Photographer for the Medical School The Pike Photo Studio Gold Medal Awarded at Genoa, Italy 539 North Meridian Street, Indianapolis, Indiana % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN TEN - Good Tennis Demands a Good Racket Perfection in Racket Making is Attained in the Horsman Model A-X (Improved for 1910) Don ' t Buy Until You See It If Your Dealer Can Not Show It, Write to Us Good Tennis Depends No Less on the Ball We are Sole U. S. Agents for the Celebrated F. H. Ayres Championship Ball Used tlic World Over by Players 117 0 Knoiv Selected for Important Open Tournaments in 1909, Held Under the Auspices of the U. S. N. L. T. A. Send for 1910 Catalogue E. I. Horsman Co. Nos. 365-367 Broadway, New York Renting of Caps Gowns to Graduating Classes a Specialty Number 336 Dearborn Street, Chicago E. H. Moore Maker of Collegiate Caps, Gowns and Hoods, Judicial and Clerical Gowns, Baptismal and Choir Gowns I Waited Upon All the Departments at Indiana University in 1910 the Business Being Handled by The Indiana University Book Store % THE ARBUTUS NEW MODEL Hammond Typewriter VISIBILITY SIMPLICITY DURABILITY thirty-fi t: LANGliAGES ON ON E MACHINE TYPE INSTANTLY INTERCHANGEABLE VARIOUS STYLES OF TYPE C Every character in sight all the time. C, This Instrument is full of labor-saving devices, right up to the minute, including the Poly- -chrome Ribbon Attachment, writing in colors. C, Double Line Lock and Billing Device. C. Perfect and P ermanent Alignment Guaranteed. CHICAGO BRANCH The Hammond Typewriter Co. 188 Madison Street, Chicago, Illinois SCENIC ROUTE Indianapolis Southern Railroad Short Line Between Bloomington i Indianapolis Aiul all Points East, West, North and Soutli For information regarjing Train Service apply to J. M. MORISEY, Dist. Pass. Agent, Indianapolis, Ind. I. S. DRAPER, Agent, Bloomington, Ind. THE - A R B U T U S m The Old Reliable Established 1871 First National Bank Officers and Directors L. V. Buskirk, President H. C. Duncan, Vice-President C. S. Small, Casliier C. L. Rawles. Assistant Casliier W. N. Showers I. C. Batman Capital, $120,000 Surplus, |7S,000 Headquarters for Student ' s Banking. Office of Treasurer of Indiana University. Every Facility for Your Accommodation. Give Us a Call. C or. College and Kirkwood Avenues N I N E T E E N - TEN Exclusive Styles in Men ' s and Women ' s Foot Wear Pryor Shoe Store Number 117 West Side Square, Bloomington, Indiana t Campbell Company The Store of Quality % THE - ARBUTUS STUDENTS ' CLOTHES CLEANED RESHAPED AND PRESSED AT Bell ' s Cleaning Works BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA m New from Cover to Cover WEBSTER ' S NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY JUST ISSUED. Ed. in Chitf, Dr. W. T. Harris, former U. S. Com. of Educa- tion. General Information Practically Doubled. £l Divided Page ; Important Words Above, Less Important Below. Contains More Information of Interest to More People Than Any Other Dictionary, v 2700 PAGES. 6000 ILLUSTRATIONS. 400,000 WORDS AND PHRASES. GET THE BEST in SCHOURSHIP, CONVENIENCE, AUTHORITY, UTILITY. Write for Specimen Pages to G. C.IVIERRIAIVICO.,PubUshen.Spriiiffield.Mua. YoQ will do ns a favor to mention this publication. STUDENT SUPPLIES TELEPHONE NUMBER 35 O ' Harrow The Home of Pure Drugs BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA We wish to thank the Classof 1910 for their patronage and assure them we appreciate the same. Wishing you success, we are, respectfully West Side of Square Q. SprlggS, PHOtOgrapHer Bloomington, Indiana % T H E ARBUTUS NO DOUBT OF IT We have by Far the Best and Newest Line of University Jewelry We Control Many Designs Which Can Not be Found Elsewhere Mail Orders Given Strict Attention EXPERT REPAIRING PAUL M. STRAIN, Jeweler, Bloomington, Indiana EVERYTHING IN MUSIC ' Kitson ' s The Established House Write to the Above Address or The Baldwin Company Indianapolis. Jnd. Bloomington, Indiana Telephone Number 425 Bloomington Coal Company Miners ' Agents and General Dealers, Dealers in Coal, Cement, Sand, Brick, Etc. Sole Agents for the Celebrated Black Diamond Coal, the Most Satisfactory Domestic Coal in Indiana. White Ash. No Clinkers. Retail and Wholesale All Kinds of Coal — Both Steam and Domestic. See Us Before Placing Your Order. Office and Yards, Opposite I. S. Freight Depot, Bloomington, Indiana % THE ARBUTUS t NINETEEN - TEN It Can Not Leak ' First in Swell Clothing The Field Manufacturing Company Bloomington, Indiana f irst in Gents Furnishings The Globe Clothing Company Merchant Tailoring a Specialty Bloomington, Indiana Our Motto is Satisfaction Telephone Number 171 Henry Kerr Bakers Manufacturers of Ice Creams and Water Ices Southeast Corner of Square Bloomington, Indiana High Grade Clothing High Grade Furnishings and Hats 44 The Eagle Clothing Store Sole Agents for STROUSE BROS. High Art Clothing The Eagle, C. H. Marxon West Side, Bloomington, Indiana THE ' ARBUTUS M NINETEEN TEN ■ I ' JK See Quinn Brothers For Plumbing, Heating, Gas Fitting and Sewerage Phone 178 George A. Benckart Baker and Confectioner. Everything Always Fresh 112 South College Avenue. Phone 325 Harvey Pryor Pianos and Sheet Music Hotel Bowles Block THE University Book Store (Successor to the Co-operative Association) Maintained by the University in the Interests of the Students Text Books and Supplies at Cost In Basement of Librarv ' BUY AN A. A. Waterman Co. NEW YORK MODERN Fountain Pen Automatic Self-Filling or Middle Joint Style Of Your Own Dealer THE A R B U T U S m NINETEEN i Si Typewriter Exchange Walter S. Pfrimmer, Manager. Telephone Numbers 208 and 366 Typewriters Sold, Rented, Repaired, Exchanged Bloomingion, Indiana J. C. Wentworth Job Printer and Stationer, West Side Square, Blooinington, Indiana College Fraternity Printing a Specialty, Office Phone 691 Residence Phone 1141 Urmey Kinser Shoes, Groceries and House Furnishings — Save Monev hv Trading at a Cash Store — Telephone Number 144 Northeast Corner Square, Bloomington, Indiana F. B.VanValzah Hardware and Cutlery : South Side of the Square Bloomington, Indiana W. O. Blakely Sons GrocerSj New Allen Building, Telephone Numbers 572 and 475 Bloomin on, Indiana Steinmetz Draper and Tailor — Makes All His Clothes in Our City Over Greek Candy Store, Bloomington, Indiana Rogers ' East Side Market Fresh Meats, Lard, Poultry, Fish, Etc., Ben. S. Rogers, Proprietor Telephone Number 408, Bloomington, Indiana For Up-to-Date Shoe Repairing Go to the Red Star Shoe Shop, Edward J. Porter, Proprietor All Work Guaranteed — Latest Improved Machinery Bloomington, Indiana % THE ARBUTUS N I N E TEEN TEN - Maple ' s Drug Store Drugs, Stationery, Toilet Articles, Perfumes, Combs and Brushes West Side Square, Bloomington, Indiana Skirvin Brothers cleaners and Pressers — Honesty, Good Work and Quick Service Have Made Our Business What It Is Today — Pressing Ticket, Four Suits One Dollar, 116 East Kirkwood, Phone 429 Try the Whitaker Grocery For Anything and Eveiything Good to Eat — We Also Sell and Rent Dishes Southeast Corner Square, Telephone Number 91 Bloomingion, Indiana Central Indiana Lighting Co. Gas and Electric Light, Heat and Power Bloom ington, Indiana Dr. Vermilya ' s Pharmacy Drugs, Toilet Articles, Students ' Supplies, Cigars and Tobaccos Waterman Fountain Pens — East Side Square Phone 112, Bloomington, Indiana W. A. Brissenden Pliunbing, Gas and Steam Fitting — Automobile Garage Number 221 Corner Sixth and Morton Streets, Bloomington, Indiana Call Telephone Number 60 J. H. Wyhe Picture Framing is An Art — We Are Artists in This Line and a Trial Will Convince You. Agents for Copley Prints East Side Square, Bloomington, Ind! Citizen ' s Loan and Trust Co. General Banking — Interest Paid on Time Deposits and Savings Accounts, Bloomington, Indiana % THE - ARBUTUS WILES Art Specialties : Kodaks DRUGS Typewriting : Correspondence Carrie V. Slocombe Office and Typewriter Supplies — Paper a Specialty Machines Rented and Sold — Agency for High Class Office Furniture Room Number 2, Gentry Block, Phone 441 Bloomington, Indiana Bloomington Garage Company Repair Work and Supplies a Specialty — Agents for Buick Cars Cor. Morton and Sixth Sts., Bloomington, Indiana Storage and Livery Dr. Homer E. Strain Dr. Joseph L. Strain Dentists, Allen Block, Bloomington, Indiana A. M. Snyder, Dentist Over Greek Candy Store — Telephones, Office 405, House 1137 Bloomington, Indiana % THE ARBUTUS NINETEEN -TEN DON ' T FAIL TO VISIT OUR STORE The Davis Hardware Company I Bin dart , AUG 1953


Suggestions in the Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) collection:

Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 1

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Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1908 Edition, Page 1

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Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 1

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Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

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Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1912 Edition, Page 1

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Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 1

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