Kalamazoo College - Boiling Pot Yearbook (Kalamazoo, MI)
- Class of 1902
Page 1 of 142
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 142 of the 1902 volume:
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909l9999D99939999999999999999999OI99999000DDDON 5' A coMPl.l-:Tl-: s'rocK or E 405 ' Fine Stationery Sporting Goods Ii Office Supplies Fine Pocket Books COMNXENCEMENT PRESENTS Q nooxs 722 Jouth Burdick dt. ifalamazaa, 'heeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee 1 New Art Store 1 SJ ' Picture Framing. Artists' Supplies and Art Goods ' POR rzmzrs FROM LIFE OR P110 Tas : IN ALL sryws OF PORTRAJTURE 4 ' b cl' A C ' La a ie rt o. B di k St. '36.?22'.?Na'i1ai. Kalamazoo, ,'.-Iliiii u x fl . .J OOD99999D999999DDD999999D999999B9D999DB9999D99 PICTURE FRA MES. Kalamazoo Wall Paper Co Wall Paper, Paint Oils and Varnishes ARTISTS ALWAYS ON HAND Telephone 912. , '1 SUPPLIES ' ef 136 South Burdick St. GGGGGGGCGGGGGGGGGGGGGCGGGGGGGCCCGGGGCGGGGGGGGGJ Dfllg SIGN Cdlk Nearly every person buys drugs. If they buy them at Royce Bros. they get the very best. Have you tried our Ice Cream Soda? If you could tell us how to make it any better we would be glad to do it. Come in and give us your opinion. ROYCE BROS. DRUGGISTS. Phono 1468. 151 S. BUHDICK 871 REAMS BROS. PIANOS and ORGANS HSHEE T MUSIC.. ' MUSICAL aw' INSTRUMENTS .sul 154 8. BURDIDK 871, kaumuzoo, mom Gilmore Bros. Department Store OVELTIES IN DRESS GOODS AND SILKS, FINE LACES AND TRIM- MINGS, HOSIERY, UNDERWEAR AND GLOVESAI' A LARGE STOCK OF TRUNKS, SUIT CASES AND HAND BAGS, AND THE LARGEST LINE OF LADIES' AND GENT'S FURNISHING GOODS IN THE CITY. One Price to All. GILMORE BROS. DAVID McDDlVALD, DRUGGIST WHOLESALE AND RETAIL at EVERYTHING IN FISHING TACKLE. JUJNUAND PRICES RIGHTHAUMU if II6 East Main Street, KALAMAZOO. MICH. 04. WILL YOU? TAKE HOME A SOUVENIR OF KALAMAZOO BY BUYING oNE OF Mv ROCHESTER COFFEE POTS OR A SERVING DISH on CHAFING DISH. MY STORE IS ALL FULL .AIOF GOOD THINGS! TQ TAKE Home AS souvznnzs JOHN VAN MALE, STOVE AND HARDWARE STORE. Phone 382. 224-226 W. Hllll S71 The Best Quality Only .... Sterling Silver Plated waree S UI TA BLE FOR WEDDING PRESENTS CHOICEST LINE OF WATCHES. CHAINS RINGS. JEWELRYK BROOCHES. ETC. 4. For Graduating Presen! 4. X, 73X!3 ff Kalamazoo College Souvenir Spoons AT LOWEST PRICES. gg . F. W. HINRICHS V. ,,,.........................,...... For Commencement Days... We are slzowing the Newest ana' Prettiest Dress Goods, T rimmings ana' Laces, French English ana' Swiss MzcZls,- Or- gandies, Lawns, Dz'mz'tz'es, Etc. India Mzcll, Silk Mull, Silk Sz'oz'Zz'ans. Our assortment zs immense. Beantztul assort- ment of Fans, Handkerchiefs and Ribbons .- .' J.R.Jones' Sons :SL Co. aQ4a-nQN009'QQ4oooo0vo00NMMnoQ0+w4490o4oovooMo0ooN9+onoo0ooonnQ N0 nooosoooi ALL SIZES e ALL KINDS ALL PRICES Make Photographs .... WE ARE NEVER SUITED A UNTIL YOU ARE. Special rates to college students. Satisfaction guaranteed. Special ,amateur department. Photo buttons and photo jewelry, largest assortment in the city. We solicit your patronage. ...lil The Chandler Studio Cor Main and Rose Sta. P. H. LOEFFLER PbZlI'mdCiSl 319 N. Burdick Street Kalamazoo. Michigan nl M - T'MrSfTrNvf7x'UE'1:TrTr' ' .I . Agn.: xl! 14- 'I' 'H ' W ' - . . If 'XJ EDI ' !I , 1, urdllnp fr' I M f If' 532' - , f W! I 1 xv, W, W I ' - 154 So. Burdick St. N2 Kalamazoo PHOTOGRAPHY IN ITS HIGHEST ART Genuzhe Carbon and Platzrzum WE MAKE Photos. WE PAY Speczlzl Attentzon to Work for College Studen ts. WE TAKE The Greatest of Pazhs wzth All. -,,l-,i, Athletzk Photos and Commence- 4 I ment Pzktures. I take this opportunityof thanking the faculty and 12-ev -' -12-ev -- A rw ' s 'de t3ofuxqlaqiiooafflliiifoI1vTQEIf1 vfuysyieli' 'T' I 1 I ' ' I patronage ul-Ingm regpectI,ully, G.iN. AUCSTTINI Q vowssfssfssasssfssfso We are Showing a, Complete Line of Spring and Summer FOOTWEAR, CONSISTING OF Shoes. Oxfords, Sandals and Slippers ln Patent Leather and Vici Kid. Our Prices are Right and Goods ....Guaranteed to be the Best.... WEBER. BROS. zxo E. Main sf. THE CITY DRUG STORE At the corner of Main and Edwards Streets Requests the pleasure of your patronage lor DRUGS. PERF UMES. TOILET ARTICLES. JJJJJJ A Refreshments:- Cool, Refreshing Soda. served in all the up-to-date wa.ys..... TIME? - ANY TIME. JUN' PATRICIAN-W' asoaaoassasssaassssaswsaaaaasaasswwaaaaasaaqv Everything in the Drug Line .... XJ 'E IS. G. QGIIIIGII 5: Zo o 3' ..DRUoo1sTs.. ji 165 l 123 west mam street KALAMAZ00, mcu. COCCGGCCGGCGGCCCCCGCGQGGCQGGICGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG JI P H O N E 1 55 The Highest Grade 2-----if0Li7I?i,7fiff DR- 0. C- HUWSUN ..,. Qing WW HUMANIC AND F LOR S H E I M I M E N ' S SH O E S l Room I. Upiohn Block + Opp. Fire Department J. F. Muffley -rg. p..,,1.'. sim, IZ? S. Burdick St., Kalamazoo, Mich From 0ur Handsome Soda Fountain We Serve The Choicest Crushed Fruits and Fruit Syrups that can be produced '2Served by an Expert Dispensenw Maas' New Drug Store V 'Opposite Kalamazoo House. . . RVIDSCN 134 South Burdick Street 9- Up-Stairs MERCHANT TAILCDR... WE keep a full line of Merchant Tailor goods on hand. Prices reasonable. Style and it up-to-date. Call and see us- before you buy. 5' 9- 5- 9- 9- 'J' 'af 9- Che junior Glass 1902 1000 xx QEBGQ 0.9 cn Xe' b 0 1 ee M N gf 1 'T ug . '29 7 T0 DR. A. GAYLORD SLOCUM. OUR REVERED PRESIDENT AND FRIEND WE DEDICATE THIS BOOK. 9 LMANAC BOARD. EDGAR R. Yotmc, Editor-in-Chief Associate Editors, BELLE HERMANN. Romana: A. MCMULLEN STEWART B. CRANDALL, Business Manager. Assistant Marzagcrs, FRED G. BURNETT. A. BERT HATCH EVELYN A. WILKINSON, Ariisi. Assislant Arfists, CHARLES Morcsn. HUBERT S. UP-IOI-IN.. MEN WHO HAVE BEEN PRESIDENTS OF KALAMAZOO COLLEGE. J. A. B. STONE, D. D. JOHN M. GREGORY, LL. D. KENDALL BROOKS, D. D. MONSON A. WILCOX, D. D. THEODORE NELSON, LL. D. ARTHUR GAYLORD SLOCUM, LL. D. 3 EDITCRIAL. ERI-IAPS there has never been a time in the history of Kalamazoo College when a work of this kind could be more thoroughly appreciated than at present. We Juniors were the first to realize this, but were reluctant to undertake a task which demanded so much skill and energv. Our efforts, we thought, would call forth unpleasant criticism. At last, however, we decided to undertake it, hoping that the charity and indulgence of our friends and the friends of the College would lead them to accept it in the spirit in which it is sent forth, the spirit of hearty good will. We know we have done many things which we should not have done, and left undone many things which we should have done. But we have put forth an honest and sincere effort. We shall feel compensated if this modest volume shall record something of the true college spirit as it exists in our belovedcollege today. We have omitted most of the tiresome grinds that are so prevalent in college annuals, thinking it better to devote the space to things more worthy. The lamp of experience has shed no guiding rays on our pathway. We have picked our path alone. It may be that we have set ,up a few landmarks to guide succeeding classes. If so we are truly thankful. Once more, gentle reader, we ask your indulgence. EDITOR. 14 COLLEGE YELL Hoo! Rah! I-Ii! Ka! Boom! Ah! I-Ioo! Zip! Rah! Hi! Boom! Kalamazoo! 15 OUR FACULTY. ARTHUR GAYLORD SLOCUM, LL. D. SAMUEL BROOKS, D. D. SETH J oNEs AXTELI., A. M. STILLMAN GEORGE JENKS, B. S. CLARKE BENEDICT WII.LIAMS, A. M HERBERT LEE S'rE'rsoN, D. D LL D VERNON PURIN'roN SQUIRES, A M DUANE STUDLEY, B. S LUCY HOWARD JOHNSON, A. M. CAROLINNE HARDER SwAR'roU'r, A. B. CLEMENT CHARLES LEMON, A. M. ELLA Lowsn FULTON, A. B. MARGARET RIC!-IIE WISEMAN. MURREY KERR MARTIN, B A. BLANCHE DELMA WEIMAR MRS. E. A. READ. ARTHUR G AVLORD SLOCUM, LI.. D SAMUEL BROOKS, D. D S'l'II.I.MAN GEORGE JENKQ, ll. S. CLARKE lllCNEDlC'I' XVll,I.lAMS, A. M RHERT LEE STETSON, D. ll.,l.I.. D. VERNON PURINTON SQUIRES, A. N. IJUANIC STUDLICY, 12. S. I, CY IIOXYARIJ JOIINFON, I XROLINNIC HARIJER SWARTOIVV, A. IL CI.FCMl'IN'I' CI-IARLICS LEMON, A M ILI X IUUISIC Fl'l.'l'0N, A. IH, MARGARICT RICIIIIC XVI S. IE. A. READ. MURRIEY KERR MARTIN STN XN Zin Zffemorg of professor S. 3. Gxtell who bieb march twentg-thirb 1902 7 KALAMAZQG COLLEGE. N the pioneer days of the early thirties,wheu the wolf and the stag were still familiar sights in our woods, when the smoke of a single log cabin coiled upward from the valley of the boiling pot, Thomas W. Merrill pushed westward from Ann Arbor, following the old Indian trail, in search of a favorable location for The Michigan and Huron Institute, for which he had obtained a charter. After a few transient settlements he transferred his school permanently to Kalamazoo, when in 1837, the name was changed to The Kalamazoo Literary Institute. A considerable piece of ground was purchased to the west of the village and a two story frame building erected as the school edifice. This early structure stood upon what is now known as Walnut Street. In the absence of other equivalent institutions in the state, provisions were made for an academic or preparatory department in connection with the Institute. The fact that there was at that time no other such school reveals the fact, now indisput- able that Kalamazoo was the first institution of classical instruction in our state, the university not excepted. The first period of marked prosperity enjoyed by the institute, began with the accession of Dr. J. A. B. Stone to the presidency. President Stone was accompanied by his wife, Mrs. L. H. Stone, who became principal of the Female Department. The classes of this department met in a small two storv frame structure, standing in a classic grove of burr-oaks upon Academy Square, now occupied by the Court House and the Jail. The accommodations 19 rapidly becoming too small, plans were laid for the erection of a four story building upon a commanding site which had been purchased in the western side of the village. The plans provided for the use of the irst floor for class rooms and chapel, leaving the remainder to be used as dormitories for the students, and such indeed was the first use to which the present dormitory was put. In 1854-55 we find matters looking bright for the Institute. The enrollment entire numbering some 250 students, additions to the curriculum being made, and such names among the faculty as those of the President, Dr. Stone, Edward Olney, later professor of Mathematics in the University of Michigan, Daniel Putnam and Mrs. L. H. Stone. In 1855 the corporate name was changed to its present title Kalamazoo College. It should not be forgotten that during these years the struggle for the admission of women to equal standing with men, in our institutions of higher learning, was at its height. The wornan's department of the earlier Institute bears testi- mony to the fact that Kalamazoo College stood even then with open doors to the women of our state. The Kalamazoo Theological Seminary started shortly after this time, and was more or less closely allied, unofiicially, to the College for many years. Kalamazoo Hall, originally intended for the woman's department was dedicated in 1859. The funds from which the hall was erected were donated by the citizens of Kalamazoo with the exception of one thousand dollars given by Caleb Van Husen and some few lesser subscriptions. In 1863 President and Mrs. Stone resigned the positions which they had held for twenty years at a considerable pecuniary sacrifice. Those who record the story of this period pay highest tribute to them for the work which they accomplished. Six years later Dr. Samuel Brooks became professor in Latin, and so today holds the oldest faculty relationship of any of our professors. It would be interesting to pursue in detail the trials and fortunes of the ensuing years. The College like all 90 stable enterprises has been made permanent only as a result of many long and weary struggles. The thirty years following the war was a continual battle against fate. Financial depression and bitter disappointments followed in rapid succession, yet the heroic efforts of its presidents and friends gave us the victory. President John M. Gregoryg Dr. Kendall Brooks, during whose term of oiiice the Ladies Hall was built, mainly through the efforts of the noble and devoted women of the stateg Dr. Monson A. Wilcox, the Rev. Theodore Nelson, D. D3 and in 1892 Dr. Arthur G. Slocum, succeeded in order to the presidency after the resignation of Dr. Stone. The facts of Dr. Slocum's administration are compar- atively familiar. The betterment of our Hnances, the increased endowment, the influx of students, the affilia- tion with Chicago, and the erection of Bowen Hall, stand as memorable evidences of his labor and devotion. It is, then, with a just pride that we own old Kalamazoo as our Alma-mater. The oldest of Michigan's colleges, one of the first institutions to open its doors to women in our country, bearing the proud lineage of long struggle and ultimate triumph she looks forward today from her present prosperity to a bright and promising future. ' H. S. U. '03, 5 21 'Glasses ,FZ 13 -E525-PQ. gi-'gg' 4. fi 'N L52 7 it I S3 Q if 3 fc-as-T - f'3f:ff fb fEf'EXf'fQf'55 5 off?-'R Q -i,LX,f, Ng, , ,I , v 'P-'eg'S5',,xw af e.. ,..,-vw ' +1 .--.,,.af2-Q Silo? l 'ffffx-Gia' 'if :Q ' ff visa , .J k-Y-f',33 iG:f33 '12,L 4l Q 4, ' 5 4 'Nfl-g7 'L:'- h3.'35 . Z ku, ,315 , v-P' 1 1 fzf., 4 , off-o 'suv 9, . - -. 5 . '. ' I I ' - f e f , ,W 1 r X 9 C w X' I K x65 3- 1 ti ,x -wwf-f' L ., ., -1 'X uri. V I x ,, fa R 1' ' W ' zap .I . AL D' '..1 U' -R l. I , 4 . M, .,, 'muy 9'4 .Tri 0 ly I ' ,X, X'u fl 0' N v g- nf ,, Ui 1 lk S I ' ,Xu .. ? N ' WP , ' FN - 2395? Sw ,M 'ly ,I J C' L . wx Y' U 1 Jap f . . 'QF .1 4 ' 1 ' ' 'v' F ' N - 1. I, , - 4 ,I 24 X .. . ya,-91.5 '..'f ,SEQQ-.-1-sgzf .af fx: f lf.. V if Q K. , , 5 1 Y f wr, i SENIOR CLASS. COLORS-Lemon and Myrtle. YELL. Wah! wah! hoo! Wah! wah! hoo! Chingalacka 2 chingalacka. ! Nineteen two! OFFICERS. PRESIDENT--Alauson W. Brown. VICE-PRESIDENT-Kate Chamberlain. SECRETARY--Priscilla Christman. TREASURER-Charles A. Simpson .5 CLASS MEMBERS. ELIZABETH AXTELL AMBROSE Moonv BAILEY CHRISTINA Lou1SE BURNS PRISCILLA CHRISTHAN ALICE MARION HALL FLOYD LEE HEWITT OSCAR PAUL LIENAU MONA IoNE MACE LAURA NIcnoLSoN EDWIN Gnrrrm PIERCE MAUD I-IARRIET STIIUBLE CLARENCE LEWIS AUSTIN ALANSON WATSON BROWN ELLA KATE CHAMBERLAIN CAROLYN FORD EDWARDS RUTH INMAN HAYNE MARTIN EDWARD KOSTER DAISY DEAN LUCAS WALTER THOMAS MEAD NAOMI SUSAN NonTH CHARLES ARTHUR SIMPSON ADONIEAM J UDSON WEEKS -5-X 1: M A wwrq-H? JUNIOR CLASS. COLORS-Purple and Gold. YELL. O3! Rah! Rah! 03! Rah! Rah! Ruh! Rah! Ruhl Rah! 03! 031 Rah! Rah! Rah! OFFICERS. Pnnsxnrcwr-Belle Hermann. ' VlCE'PRESIDENT-CIBTCDCC Preston. SECRETARY-Ruth Young. TREASUREH-Fred G. Burnet. '27 CLASS MEMBERS. MAUD EMILY BARRENBUS GRACE GLADYS CALRINS EDITH GRAY CowGII.L BYRON WILLIAM DUNHAM BURT ARLINGTON HATCH MABEL EDITH HIGMAN FRANCIS JEAN -LARNED CHARLES MORSE CLARENCE DELAVAN PRESTON LYDIA LITTLE SMITH HUBERT STANDARD UPJOHN FLORENCE WHITE EvELvN AI,oz1L WILKINSON 28 MARGARET JENNES BOYDEN JENNIE LOUISE CODY STEWART BATES CRANDELL ROBERT GORDON FLORA BELLE HERMANN AMELIA ELIZABETH KIRRLAND JOANNA LONGLEY ROBERT A. MCMULLEN NEWMAN BENNETT STEELE WASHINGTON IRVING TRAVIS LEROV BRANCH WHITE EDGAR ROMEYN YOUNG RUTH HAYES YOUNG .nv tl ' .1 DQ? f :E is SOPHOMORE CLASS COLORS--Green and White. YELL. Rah ! Rah I Rah! Zip! Rah! Roar! Kalamazoo College! Nineteen Four! Ching-alacka ! Chingalacka ! Chiugalacka! Chor ! Chingalackal Hi! Lo! Nineteen Four! OFFICERS. PRESIDENT-Torrance MacDonald. VICE-PRESIDENT--Beatrice Cochranej SECRETARY-Letitia Steelman. TREASURER-Harlan Rowe. 29 CLASS MEMBERS. RAY BUSHNELL GEORGE DASHER FRED STEVEN HALE PAUL J UDSON HEw1'r'r .Tons EMANUEL KALMBACH CARL FRANK MCDERBY TORRANCE MAc DONALD CUYLER STEVENS NORTH RAY ALBERT PALMER MAIZIE MAY SLGCUM ERNEST CHARLES S'roLL FLORA BEATRICE COCHRANE OREN Annorr FLEMING LAURA VIOLA HALE ADA MARY HOEBEKE MABEL WHITNEY KELLOGG KATHERINE ELIZABETH MCDONALD WALLACE WESLEY WRIGHT IRVING Joi-:N PALMER I-IARLAN PAGE Rows LETITIA MAY STEELMAN JOHN EDWARD TANNIS 30 FRESHMAN CLASS COLORS-Black and Crimson. YELL. Black and Crimson Longe Vive ! Kalamazoo College Nineteen Five! OFFICERS. PRESIDENT-Mark Sanborn. VICE-PRESXDENT--Mary Phillips. SECRETARY AND TREASURER- Jay R. Monroe. We think that if this class survive, This yell will change e'er nineteen five. -ED. 31 CLASS MEMBERS. J ESSIE HOYT AMES MARCUS PI-IELPS BAKER CLARENCE SPENCER BURNS ALICE MAUD CHESNEY CLEORA EMERY DAvIs RAY WESLEY EDWARDS SUSAN ELLISON EDITH M. HARVEY CLARENCE GEORGE HILL MILFORD LEELAND HULBURT CLARE AGNES JEFFREY XENIA BLANCH MASON MARY ALICE MOORE NELSON WILLIAM MUNGER FRANCES MAY NEWTON ARCHIBALD DEAN POLLEY CARY ADAMS ROWLAND FRANK EUGENE SANGER HIRAM HOWARD SMITH JOHN HOWARD STOUTEMYER FLORENCE WINSLOW SABRA LILLIAN YOUNG TI-IADDEUS HOYT AMES BBRTI-IA ALICE BLARELY HELEN ALEXENA CAMPBELL NELLIE CRONKHITE ARIE WILLIAM DEGROOT ANNA ELIZABETH ELLISON ALBIE NAOMI FLETCHER PAUL J UDSON HEWITT WILLARD ALBERT HOOENAGLE ZOE EOLENE Hurcums CAREY ARTHUR LULL JAY RANDOLPH MONROE MARGARET MORGAN ALMIRA GLEN MEYER MARY LEMMON PHILLIPS ABBIE GRACE REITHARD MARK FRANK SANEORN FRANK MILTON SHROYER DONALD ARGYLE STEWART SIDNEY DAVIS STRONG ROY HOWARD WITWER MINNIE ALINDA YOUNGRERN 32 Co whom It mav Zoncem. ND there dwelt in the land of Collegia many kindred and tribes. And it came to pass that in the year 1900, in the ninth month and on the seventeenth day of the month, that the J uniorines, a people from the land of the Highschoolities came in to possess the land. And when the people that inhabited the land saw that the Juniorines were fairer of countenance and fatter in Hesh than themselves, they were troubled. And they gathered together the chief priests and the scribes and demanded how they might cast out the invaders. Now Clearchus, King of the J uniorines, rose up C2-fly in the morning and all the people with him. And he put in every man's hands a badge. And he spake unto them and said, Behold, it shall be that as I do, so ye shall do. And King Clearchus and his forty men came into the outside of the camp, in the beginning of the first Watch. And they pinned their colors on, and gave their battle yell and cried '03, '03, rah, rah, rah. And no man WaS able to stand against them, and all the hosts of the enemy ran and cried and fled. And after conquering the neigh- boring tribes, the Juniorines settled in the neighbonng part of the realmg and they grew and waxed very mighty- And it came to pass that in the year 1901, King Clearchus was old and stricken in years. And he WHS succeeded by Edgar, Prince of the house of Romeyn, who being of extreme youth was called King Edgar YOUHH- N ow notwithstanding his youth, he was a mighty man Of valor. 33 And word was brought that a vast host were coming on all fours to possess the land. Now King Edgar was bold in strategy, and he stationed his troops beneath Faculty Hill to await the enemy. And what followed happened after this manner. As the multitude of the enemy came nearer, they heard their own battle yell borne on the winds of the morning from the camp of the Juniorines. And fear fell upon them all, their tongues clave to the roofs of their mouths, their voices stuck in their throats, and their knees smote one upon the other, And the whole army fell into confusion and fied. And the fame of King Edgar spread abroad through the land. And messengers of neighboring tribes came bringing presents and seeking treaties of friendship. And this was the most prosperous reign of all the Kings of the Juniorines. Now it came to pass that in the year 1902, there came to the throne a queen of such wondrous beauty that stars strove, one with another, for her smiles, and common men did not dare to approach her presence. And she was greatly loved by all her people. Now it came about that her hand was sought by the great of the land, for she was a belle as well as a queen. But to each and all she replied, No, ties that make the lowly maiden happy are denied to her sovereign Argue no more, I must be the mother of my people. Were I free to seek mine own happiness, then indeed--. Now during her reign, the Juniorines established a great code of literature, greater than any since the days of King Solomon. It contained a numbering and history of the tribes, and all the people that dwelt in the land. And great glory was added to the name of the Juniorines, and the good queen reigns even unto this day. L. B. WHITE. 34 THE BELLKEJS OF LADIES' HALL. Sing me the song' of many bells, What varied thoughts their music tells! With manly tread and jingling peal, What sounds on drowsy senses steal! 'Tis Mr. Burns with heavy heel, To rouse us for the morning meal. Sing me the song' of many bells, The bells of Ladies' Hall. The study bell that says, Be still, And plodding climb the weary hill, Of knowledge vast and wisdom deep, The hill so long, so rough, so steep. Sing me the song of many bells, The bells of Ladies' Hall. The joyous bell that calls us down, To church, to party or to town! The telephone bell we know so well, That thrills us with a nameless spell! Sing me the song of many bells, The bells of Ladies' Hall. And here's one more before I pass- The merry, winsome earnest lass, Queen of our hearts as of our class. But the dearest bell of any bell, Is Mrs. Belle Brownell. Sing me the song of many bells What varied thoughts their music tells, The Belliejs of Ladies' Hall. 7 E. A.W ORATIONS. The boy stood on the chapel stage, When every thought had Bed, And wrathful words he dared not speak, Rushed through his whirling head. He for this opportunity, The faculty did bless, Then said, Dear friends my thoughts you see, Lie too deep to express. PAT'S PASSION. I love her, yes I do. I'm very sure of that. And when she looks at me, My heart goes pity-pat. Pm going to tell her so, And when she lists to that, I wonder as she looks, If she will pity Pat. 30 ' , 6 ' if 5 I i-'fx 7 -F-sg-SM - a - '- ':7'ta-if, 5:57- '- .:: 1 f ' ,ar H- f . , , f F 51-21---H-J -1,4 T, si? 1 , N wawmwawdeworn oywaxifef THE editorial staff feels that this book would not adequately represent the in- stitution if it did not contain some recogni- tion of the celebrated Wah! Wah! Hoo! Quartet, the pride of the Senior Class. We believe the above cut will convey a fairly accurate idea of these distinguished entertainers. 3. If when cutting up the wood You find you cannot do it, Just take your little hatchet I And try your best to Hewitt. 87 zioeieties LM 5 E 5 5 5 Y 5 5 5 s ? P Q E S1-IERWOOD RI-IETORICAL SOCIETY. ORGANIZED 1853. OFFICERS. PRESIDENT-Oscar Paul Lienau. VICE-PREsxnEN'r-Fred G. Burnett. CORRESPONDING SECRETARY-Fred G. Hopkins. RECORDXNG SECRETARY--Sidney Strong. TREASURER-Harlan P. Rowe. 'CHAPLAIN--Wesley Des Jardines. dl AFRIEND. What in the world so precious as a friend! A heart that beats in sympathy with yours, And loves you with a love that still endures, When bitter sorrow doth your heart-strings rend, And like a broken empty reed you bend. Ah! then 'tis well to have one friend who cures The broken heart, and so to joy allures, One soul with whose all your emotions blend. Then let us wisely choose and cherish friends, And let us not ourselves unworthy prove, For sure of all the many gifts God sends, There's none that ought more gratitude to moveg For none of us can have one friend too many, Nor can we well afford the loss of any. E. A. W 42 P1-HLOLEXIAN LVCEUM ORGANIZED 1855. OFFICERS. PnEsmEN'r-Robert Gordon. VICE-PRESIDENT-Jo Alva Phillips. CORRBSPONDING SECXETARY-Paul Hewitt. RECORDING SECRETARY-William Grover. Tmusunnn-Andrew Lenderink. CHAPLIN-Harry C. Stevens. LIBRARIAN-Newman B. Steele. 43 THE PAST. In twilight hours, so sweet and sad, Like drift of perfume in the air, Come Hitting memories of the past, Come pictures dainty, rich and rare. We draw aside the veil of time, And gaze on faces once so dear, We see the friends of yesterday, The echo of their voices hear. These trooping shades of former days, Bring song of birds and sweet toned bells, Bring fragrant flowers and distant fields, With murmuring brooks and shady dells. Our vanished happiness returns, On memory's page all bright and fair, Our hearts shall be the case wherein 'Tin safely kept like jewel rare. We'l1 close the case now reverently, Bid gloom depart, make thought obey, Then take the joys within our reach, Today will soon be yesterday. GRACE CALKINS 44 Nl EURQDELPHIAN LITERARY Soc1ETv. ORGANIZBD 1856. 1-1. OFFICERS. PRESIDENT-A1iCe Marion Hall. VICE-PRESIDENT-FIOIH Belle Hermann. SECRETARY-Lydia Little Smith. TREASURER-Mabel Whitney Kellogg. CHAPLAIN-ADH3. Ellison. 45 EURODELPHIAN YELL. Euree! Euri ! Euro! We have no man, We want no beau I 46 I CENTURY FORUM. ORGANIZED 1900. OFFICERS. PRESIDENT-Adoniram Judson Weeks. VICE-P RESIDENT-Benjamin Edward Robison. CORRESPONDING SECRETARV-John Emanuel Kalmbach RECORDING SECRETARY--Jay Randolph Monroe. TREASURER-William Arthur Donaldson. CHAPLAIN-Jabez William Burns. 47 Once to every college student, Comes the moment to decide, Whether he will cheat the Prof., And on his trusty pony ride. Or with dates and facts and cause His poor head completely cram, And without his little pony, Flounder through a long exam. 48 ll' A FRIOID ALLIANCE. NE day Bella Snow was walking along Fort street on her way home from the Gutchess Business College of Detroit. She had graduated from the institution that same afternoon, and now she was hurrying home with a light heart. As she went up the steps of her home, humming a gay little tune, she stopped and picked the evening paper from the porch. Her eyes fell on the Want Ad. column, and sparkled with delight on beholding two advertisements for stenographers and type- writers. Bella felt sure in her own mind that she was a very good stenographer and could fill any position that offered. She had been told so a great many times. When Mrs. Snow returned from the dressmaker's shop, Bella and her mother had supper at the restaurant in honor of Bella's graduation. These two were all who were left to each other out of a large family, and Bella was determined, now that her education was finished, to support her mother in comfort. , On their return from the restaurant, Bella reclined luxuriously in ahammock, absorbed in delicious reveries of the future. The vision of delight had so increased by bed-time that when she at last closed her tired eyes, she floated off into dreamland with vague plans for a trip to Niagara Falls and perhaps a journey abroad, all to be accomplished out of her own earnings. The next morning found Bella on her way to answer the advertisements. She had dressed with her character- istic taste, and came down stairs looking like a tall, white - 49 ,,c......,n.anmh1 lily. Snatching up the paper she hastily took down what she supposed were the proper addresses and started on her way complacently. Eleven hundred and seventeen Cass Ave. was Bella's first destination. It proved to be a large, gloomy but elegant residence, surrounded by giant oaks and ever- green trees. An old housekeeper let Bella in at the front door, muttering indistinctly to herself the while, and ushered her into the library, where the master of the house was busying himself with his morning mail. Bella felt somewhat abashed at iirst but plucked up sufficient courage to say, I saw your advertisement in the paper, sir. The gentleman glanced up but said nothing. Bella waited a moment, then ventured, Are you not Mr. Frost? Yes, said the gentleman, Mr. Zero Frost. What is your name, your full name, please? . Bella Snow, she replied. At this Mr. Frost burst out laughing, and said as if to himself, Snow and Frost, a cool combination and Zero Frost at that. Bella Snow herself smiled at the thought of signing Zero Frost per Snow at the end of business letters. The gentleman glanced at the fair face and white dress of the young girl and thought, She is surely a white girl, I said no red, black, yellow nor purple ones need apply. Then aloud, Are you accomplished P Oh, sir, said Bella eagerly, I can work very fast under dictation, Wants to be dictated to, eh? thought Mr. Frost, must be a docile little thing. I can get down a hundred words a minute, contin- ued Bella. Spare us, was Mr. Frost's mental comment, I wish I had z'nsz3'lea' upon a moderale vocabulary in my list of requirements. Do you know, he remarked meditatively, you are the Hrst applicant I have had ? 50 Oh, then perhaps you will take me, urged Bella eagerly. A I should like to if you are willing, said Mr. Frost. I am satisfied. Bella was delighted. Shall I come tomorrow, or will you want me today? she asked. Well, she is in a hurry. thought Mr. Frost. I shall have to have time to see the minister, at least, he observed a trifle sarcastically. After a moment of silence, she inquired. When are my office hours to be ? You are not to have any office hours. I shall want you to stay at home. What, then, is to be the nature of my employment? she asked, looking perplexed. Well, I should say, he observed refiectively, you might begin with a wedding tour to the sea shore, after that your only duty will be to reign as queen of my home. Wedding tour! Queen of your home! I don't understand, there must be some dreadful mistake. I came here to apply for a position as stenographer. Plutarchs lives on Astronomy! ejaculated Mr. Frost. What do I want with a steographer? I adver- tised for a wife. Could I have taken down the wrong address? said Bella in dismay. Blushing from confusion, she was a vision of lovli- ness just then, and Mr. Frost, looking at her, began to feel very sorry that his illusion was destroyed. Very strange, he said, but since kind destiny has brought you here why not answer the advertisement as I published it? I should be satisiedf Oh, no, sir, responded Bella quickly, that cannot be, and turning abruptly, she left the room. It seemed as if Bella's fortune must have been cast under some strange star, for that afternoon, when she walked into a down-town oilice, Whom should she see 51 sitting at the desk but-Mr. Frost. Pardon me, Mr. Frost, she stammered in confusion, I didn't mean to trouble you again. I was simply answering another advertisement. I am at a loss to understand you, he answered. I cannot recall having met you before. Are you not Mr. Frost ? NI amy? Mr, Zero Frost, at whose house I called this morning? No, my name is Zerubbabel Frost. Then who is Mr. Zero Frost? He is my twin brother, and nobody can ever tell us apart. I should think not, was Bella's comment, but did you not advertise for a stenographer in the 'Evening News P' Nog I advertised for a servant girl. Well, I know I have the right address this time, declared Bella, because I took particular care in looking it up. She produced a clipping from the 'Evening News', and he read: WANTED-A stenographer, stout German girl preferred. Adfdress No. 416 Woodward Ave. A mistake of the printer, he commented briefly. At this they both laughed. Bella's beauty appealed to Mr. Zerubbabel Frost no less than it had to Mr. Zero, and he suddenly decided he would need a stenographer. It was nearly half past six that evening when Bella arrived at the little brick fiat where she lived, and opened the door to the dining room where her mother was keeping the soup warm. ' Mamma, said Bella, I have found a position, and she poured the whole story into her mother's sympathetic ear. Bella acquitted herseif excellently as a stenographer, and soon proved indispensable to Mr. Frostg so much so 52 indeed, that by the time the June roses had blossomed the next year, Bella Snow had become Mrs. Zerubbabel Frost. Mr. Zero Frost thinks now that he will advertise for a stenographer and trust to the mellowing influences of time to bring about that which his advertisement for a. wife failed to accomplish. FLORENCE E. WHITE. Blow, blow thou cruel wind, Thou art not more unkind Than this old rain- It gives me a pain. It might as well pour dogs and cats, For we can't wear our Easter hats. 53 SPRING. Come, thou Spring, in all thy beauty, Let thy gentle breezes blow: For thee long have we been waiting, Tired are we of winter's snow. Welcome, fairest of the seasons, Thou of all the seasons Queen 5 Let the grass that's long been withered Find again its cloak of green. Let the trees whose barren branches Long have borne the winter's frosty Find again their leafy costume They in Autumn breezes lost. ' Let the Butter-cups and Daisies, Who have long in slumber lain, Open to the world their faces, And make sweet the woods again. Thou art welcome, O thou Springtime, How we love thy sunny days, How we long to roam the woodlands, And along the water ways. Disappoint us not, O Springtime, Hear the prayer we offer thee, Come, and fill our hearts with gladness, And the world with jubilee. F. G. BURNETT 54 WE WONDER What makes the students of Kalamazoo College of such superior quality. If the President's chair used its legs in getting out of the chapel. , Why two Seniors have so suddenly taken an interest in the formula KiS2. What makes our Sophomore boys so bad. Why the Seniors like the Juniors so well. Whence came the nocturnal visions, which Mr. Upjohn described in Psychology. What one member .of the faculty would do if the word why were not in the English vocabulary. If the French papers passed in Chicago. Where Il Penserovso lost his tail. Where the Spirit of the Institution is buried. If all the Seniors are signed for the coming year. If you heard Bill Pierce '02 in his world-famed entertainment at Comstock. ' What makes every Professor think his class has nothing to do but prepare the lessons he assigns. If the Juniors of next year will get out an Annual, Why people don't pay for the window panes they break. How it happened that the Geology class procured such fine specimens of fossils. If Luther II has nailed 'his Thesis on the entrance of the new building. A Whose spirit is doomed to walk the earth in room 9. What was decided by the Biology class at its recent Diet of Worms. F5 THE HEROISM OE A PRIVATE LIFE A DRAMA IN ONE ACT. - DRAMATIS PERSONAE. Miss Blank. Several Very Naughly Girls. S CENE-Illiss Blanks room- Trunk room SCENE I. Miss Blank's room.-Enter several girls. Ersl gz'rZ+Kexcitedlyl Oh Miss Blank, there is a snake up in the trunk room, on the floor. Mzss Blank-A snake! Why, dear me, how do you sup- pose it got there? Well, wait a minute until I get a cloth to catch it, and I'll come and throw it out of the window for you. I guess I'll just take my paper knife along, too. SCENE II. Second girl holding lampg first girl holding her sides. Others stand just outside the door in terrrorf?J Miss Blank with cloth in one hand and paper knife in the other makes violent stabs at the snake. Ms: Blank-How do you suppose Cjabl it got in here? Gab! jabll Giggle in the hall. Mass Blank-CBreathlessly, stabbing with renewed energy.J Why, girls, do you suppose it's dormant with cold? It doesn't move. Very audible giggle in the hall. Second girl-Miss Blank, please don't be angry, but I'm afraid-the snake is rubber. An awkward pause: girls quietly leave the hall. Mzks Blank-I don't mind a little joke, but I do mind climbing all these stairs for nothing. It is time you all were studying. Exeunt all. l:Curtain. 57 MURPHY'S SOLILOQUY. To shave or not to shave, that is the question. Whether the cheek and chin and lips shall bear The growth of very unbecoming bristles, Or with a razor keen and expeditious, By one swift cutting end them? To shave, to scrape, No moreg and by a scrape to say we end ' The heart-ache and the small humiliations They make us heir to-'twere a good condition Hilariously enjoyed. To shave-to scrape- To scrape-perchance to cut-ay! there's the rub, For in that scrape of hair what cuts may come, While we are clipping off the stubby beard, Must give us pauseg there's the respect - That makes the Whisker of so long life, For who would bear the irony of friends, The smiles and smirks of hords of pretty girls, The jeers and jibes of whole conclaves, ' The supercilious glances of old men, Who better beards can boast because they're old, When he himself might free himself from scorn, With a. sharp razor? Who would hideous be, To look within the glass each morn and groan, But that the dread of those unpleasant cuts, Those ills which small but very grievous are, And quite unbearable-puzzles the will, And makes us rather bear those ills we have, Than ily to others that we know more of. Thus cowardice doth make hobos of us all. 58 f',f' 1. wil' 3 X. wAsHmm oH,s BIRTHDAY EAHQUET 2 iv- nffj -1 ff, I ' s - 1 u' ' X 1, yn 2 .'. ,:' - 5 i ' 1.54 5 ? 27b- Q 1- fn, ' '. I : ' YET. ': I ' 1 4 lffwfy i ' '12, xv , 1 ' WH . 'ta ' 1 L.. ' - ' 'f--.-1 .Q . .-.- , . , .':--- .X 1 --1 ' --.1 -1 MX H , .5 ' X 2 .- , w' . v. ,mi J- --:f , ,QL- 3?Bf.5Qqi- .Q- ?'.:'-LK A ' - 1 ' L..,fgfg' -j-,gi-r . .,. AW V. ,... . H: .. ,v,. 5. .,, , ,LQ Q - , i.. X.: V .W ,A ' ,eY1w.:-. -' ' ',-,:-' n. g THE CORNER STONE. We gathered last October About the new laid wall, About the firm foundation Prepared for Bowen Hall. We watched the skillful workmen Set firm the corner stone, And saw the keen precision With which the work was done. The mammoth stone was hoisted To its appointed place, That all might know its mission From the words upon its face: 'Twas but a block of granite, And wrought by mortal hand, For time-for time's short season Our earthly buildings stand. Then we in fancy pictured The living temples fair, That the sons of men are building About us everywhereg The daily, steady building, The stone that makes a wall More symetrical and stately Than thine, Oh Bowen Hall. Oh busy martial builders, Unerring should you beg Know you not your temple Lasts through eternity? That day by day and silently As the temple built of old, With ne'er a sound of hammer, These monuments unfold? O Juniors, in our choosing, Let naught but good suliice, In laying each foundation The Pearl of greatest price: That when the Master Builder Shall come to judge us all, Our work shall stand accepted Like the walls of Bowen Hall. CLARENCE D. PRESTON. 50 .4 1-ky f .Jhl RHYME OF THE ALMANAC BOARD. Early and late, early and late, We scratch and copy and plan, Poems and prose, That, goodness knows, We wish were otf in Japan. Three times a day, five days a week, In classes we're told that we're slack, Classes we skip, Three at a clip, And its all for the Almanac. We never joke, we never smile, We never have any fun, We haven't time, T'wou1d be a crime, We can't 'til the A1manac's done. Miss Kellogg, ftranslating Ovidl- Behold the branches of the trees, laden with potatoes. First J unior- Charles had a diet of worms in 1521. Second J unior- They must have been grub worms. Miss Chesney- I'd rather be tWJright than presi- dent. Mr. McCurdy is looking after his Wheat on the campus. Mr. Preston- I preached a sermon yesterday on the subject of punctuality. 60 THE DAWN HE dawn appears. It brings two messages. To one it brings hope, to another despair. To one man it comes after he has counted the long weary hours of the night, to another it comes only too quickly. Such was the experience of Romeo, when seeing the faint streaks of light in the eastern sky he cried: Night has burned her candles out, and jocund day Stands tiptoe on the misty mountain tops. But let us consider the subject because it brings a message of hope. The royal singer in a burst of spiritual ecstacy, after he had been long cast down, sings of his hope in God, and of his patience while wait- ing for His coming. And to express the full meaning of his eagerness, says that it is greater than the longings of the watches of the night. More I say than they which watch for the morning. One who has waited for the coming of the morning to start on some important mission, or because that hour will decide some important question, can well understand the figure. So in college amid the changing scenes we look forward to the dawn. Students and professors come and go, but whoever comes, or whoever goes, there is always the longing for the dawn. The student who studies, who thinks, who dreams, who plans for the future, looks forward to the coming of the dawn because that will mark the beginning of a new epoch in his life. The president, the faculty and 61 friends of the college, too, look forward to the dawn of a better dayg and from experience all can say: Dark, dark has been the midnight, But day spring is at hand, and seeing the blackness of the night slowly change to the greyish dullness of what the Frenchmen calls petit jour, weuhail with gladness and rejoicing the rosy prim- rose of the dawn. There were signs even in the night of this coming dawn and many of us can boast: I say the sun is a. glorious sight, I've seen him rise full oft, indeed of late I have sat up on purpose all the night. And while we sat up, while we waited, while we peered through the midnight darkness, we saw the realization of our hope: Among the crooked lanes on every hedge, The glow-worm lights his gem: and through the dark, A moving radiance twinkles. But this did not come by chance, there was a cause behind it. ' First of all the students believed in the school and its management. Every student went home in the summer full of enthusiasm, and told his friends that Kalamazoo College was the place. When he came back he brought another student with him. This student went home the next summer and did the same thing, until now we graduate classes of twenty-live and thirty instead of two and three as they did ten years ago. The men who graduated went away with a kindly feeling for their Alma Mater. They took with them tender memories of college friendshipsg they took with them sacred memories of the character of the noble men under whom they studied, and when they said good bye, and for the last time went down the stairs in the old dormitory, took a last fond look at the Campus, the surrounding hills, and other familiar scenes, and went out into the world, it was with a feeling of sadness. It was like leaving home, for they 62 CHARLES CLARK BOWEN HALL ' 1,47-vw ------ were leaving the place they loved. When on their differ- ent fields of labor success crowned them, they never forgot Kalamazoo. They told its story to their friends, and more students came, from the east and the west, and passed by many good schools before they reached oursg and we are proud of the fact, that no student who came to learn, ever went away disappointed. The College in the last ten years has become popular at home. Kalamazoo High School is well represented in every freshman class. We have students from all denom- inations in the city-Methodists, Presbyterians, Catholics and Jews. Our president and professors have gone over the stateg they have preached and lectured, and now they are welcome visitors in any pulpit or before any audience. Soon the Baptists of the state began to talk about their College at Kalamazoo with a feeling of pride. And when Dr. Slocum went out and told them we needed another building he was kindly received. These were the signs of the coming dawn. But in spite of all this there was the wait. The long, dismal, dreary, discouraging, disappointing waitg the hard work, the never ending struggle. But all things come to him who waits and works. Many times we students were discouraged, many times we feared our fond hopes would never be realized. But a man whose life is actuated by a great and noble purpose knows no failure. President Slocum never faltered in the struggle. If he was discouraged we never knew it. He stood higher up than we did. He had a broader view. Bowen Hall now stands on yonder hill because long ago its picture was in his heart. Like Edward Everett, who delivered his famous eulogy on Washington, time after time, and turned the money over to the Mt. Vernon Asso- ciation, he loved the cause, and neither sacriice nor hard work turned him from his purpose. As a result of this, the support of our friends and the generosity of such men as the late C. C. Bowen, the long A os night of Kalamazoo College is past. Now the aurora wafted through the air in her golden chanot drspels the mist and darkness and ushers in the dawn. The dewy morn With breath all incense, with cheek all bloom Laughing the clouds away with playful scorn And living as if earth contained no t And glowing into day. R. omb- A. MCMULLEN Toil on brave heart that sittest alone, To buru the midnight glimg The world keeps watch of the man who'l1 bone, 'Til the heavy eyes grow dim. 'Til the oil runs low in the battered l 'Til the clock stroke strikes one, twog 8.111 Old Fate has a prize with a golden stamp, Laid up on the shelf for you. , H' L . :bfi-.fi-Q: . ' f I 1 E E 1 A-ef 'I ' '. all A .JI vim Tr ? 1 -' fflf Jhl ' ff'l z'1llQw.ial7j,Q1i T:'2QimL .'Jl.1.lnu,s,l .ff--1 U' -3-.ufnw 64 THE LEGEND OF MIRROR LAKE. Far away upon a hillside, In a grove of ash and maple, Flows a. spring of pure cold water, Gushing forth as clear as crystal, Leaping onward down the hillside, Laughing, dancing o'er the pebbles, Murmuring, glistening in the sunlight, Flowing onward to the river. Now it glides along more gently As it winds among the willowsg Now it listens to the robin As he sings among the branches, Listens to the sighing zephyrs, To the whisper of the breezes. On it Hows until it lingers, Where the oak trees cast their shadow Far across the College Campus. Here the streamlet broadens, deepens, Mirror Lake the students call it. But you wonder why the streamlet Grew so broad and deep and quiet, Why it lingers in the shadows Of the tall and mighty oak trees. Listen! and I'1l tell the secret: Tell you why this little streamlet, Crossing o'er the College Campus, Grew to be the Lake of Mirrors. Long ago two lovers strolling, Through the groves of stately oak trees, Stopped to listen to the water As it rippled o'er the pebbles, Stopped to rest beside the streamlet, On a moonlight summer evening. 65 And the lover asked the maiden, Asked her if she truly loved himg And the streamlet stopped to listen, Stopped to hear the maiden's answer- All the crystal drops of water Stayed to hear the xnaiden's answer. Deeper, broader grew the streamlet, Till it overflowed the campus. But the maiden did not answer, Only smiled and kissed her lover. Years have passed, but still the water Lingers there beneath the oak trees, There reflecting all the shadows Of the tall and mighty oak trees, Ever glistening in the moonlight, Mirror Lake we always call it. CHARLES G. MORSE 53 66 A PICNIC. NCE a College class had a picnic. That is, a part of the class, for some had the measles and some had to write orations, so that only about half of the class were able to go. A married couple, named Mr. and Mrs. Jones, friends of one of the party, went along to see that no harm came to or from the picnickers. The chosen spot was in a beautiful wood near a crystal lake. When they arrived at this place, the .loneses remained to guard the well-filled lunch-baskets, lest some one should Steele them, while the others strolled away to gather flowers. In a short time all returned and declared they were as hungry as rabbits. So a large cloth was spread upon the ground, and soon the lunch was ready. What shall we do for water? asked one of the girlsg whereupon Mrs. Jones said that Her mann had found a spring close by with a Gofulrd on a stump near it, and immediately sent Mr. J ones after some water. One youth sat apart from the rest, his handkerchief bound around his head and his hat pulled over his eyes. What's the matter, old man? asked a boy named John. Got a terrible headache, answered the youth with a deep Cy, and I can't eat anything, Mor'se the pity. It's all my fault, for I broke his glasses, spoke up one of the girls hastily. We were sitting on a big stone and I was holding his glasses while he got some dirt out of his eye. All at once I heard a dog bark right behind me. I jumped of course, and away went the glasses, smashed to Smithereensf' 87 Why, I never heard of a dog's Barkin' busting anything before, said Mr. Jones. You haven't heard of it now, that I know of, answered the girl. ' Well, never mind about arguing the question, put in the afflicted youth, Just tell a fellow what's good for a headache. Does anyone know? I do, said his chum called Mac, mu1len leaves are just the thing, and I saw a whole acre of the stuff just the other side of this wood. Shall I get some? No, never mind, I'll be all right in a little while, I guess, but where on earth did you ever Hatch up that remedy? Just then a loud cry was heard in the direction of the lake. I saw a Young lad down there, with an old rickety boat. Maybe he's fallen overboard, said John. Again the cry was heard, and Up John sprang to his feet and was away like the wind. The rest followed after, the boy with the bound-up head bringing up the rear. In his excitement he forgot to take off the bandage and it kept slipping down over his eyes. He stumbled several times but Prest-on manfully, and reached the shore just in time to see John coming out of the water, carrying in his arms a little colored boy, whose head and limbs hung limp. The girls drew back with White faces as the boys worked over him. Presently he came to himself and looked around. Who are you, dear, and how did it happen? asked kind hearted Mrs. Jones. I'se Mr. Wilkins' son, ma'am, an' I live over yonder, pointing with a little black fingers toward a weather- beaten cottage a half a mile away. My boat begun to leak-guess the Caulkin's all come out-an' I didn't have nothin' to bail with. Poor child. what did you do? again asked Mrs. Jones. as Why, I jest hollered, said the Boy, den jest as I was goin' down, I seed you 'uns comin'. They carried the lad to his mother and then returned to their lunch, only to 'find it rapidly disappearing under the skillful maneuvers of three or four lean and hungry canines. After frightening them away with sticks and stones, the party gathered up their belongings and started for home, declaring that they had chosen an unpropitious day for their picnic. ' RUTH YOUNG. EVENING STAR. 0 crisp,iO thrilling skating time, O wistful memory-haunted time, When all the world lay sleeping. 'Twas winter twilight long ago, The sunset sky was all aglow, The skaters glided to and fro, The bare boughs cracked, above, below, Ah! how my heart was leaping. 'Twas winter twilight, long ago, fOnce time ran swift, now time goes slowj, Ah! how my heart is weeping. The Evening Star sent forth its ray, With trusting heart I heard him say, That star of Love will light our way, - It is the star of Hope today, When all my World lies sleeping. 69 'miss BIEN, MERCI, ET vous? When the day is long and dreary, When the lessons are hard and dry, When the whole grind makes you weary, And you feel as though you'd Hy, Oh! then it tries your mettle, When a fellow says, How do you do 7 Smilingly to answer, Tres bien, merci, et vous? When a Freshy cuts up some caper, When you know naught of the affair, When the Dr. thinks you did it, And you get the Freshy's share. Oh! then it tries your mettle, When that Freshy says, How do you do? Smilingly to answer, Tres bien, merci, et vous? When Madame says verbs for tomorrow, When your heart with anger is sore, When the vous' and the nous' mix to your sorrow And your mind will work no more, Oh! then it tries your mettle, When that lady says, How do you do? Smiling-ly to answer, Tres bien, merci, et vous? LYDIA SMXTH 'ro fouEAK1No faoef. HE human race is divided into two great classes: those who wear squeaky shoes and those who don't. It is with the first of these grand divisions that we are concerned. The man with the squeak in his boot always keeps step with the music. It is as though his sole were crying out against its very existence. He is an own brother to the man who charms us in the night season, with sonor- ous nasal detonations. But our friend is braver, in that he dares to perpetrate his fiendish practices in the broad light of day. In a crowd, his multisonous tread can be heard above the tramp of the multitude. He is like the peddler of fresh fish, who toots his horn to let you know he is coming. The owner of the musical boot is the man who ambles down the aisle to the front seat while the minister is praying, regardless of the ushers' strategic efforts to side- track him into a rear pew. While he walks on a soft carpet, the grandeur of the symphony is impaired by the imperfections of the soundingboardg but when he reaches the bare Hoor, the wholej brass band breaks forth into an ff crescendo two-step. The squeaking shoe is a most marvelous stringed in- strument. The music continues even though the strings are broken. It is perhaps justiiable for the man who buys a new shoe only once in three years to advertise the fact with the sound of the trumpet. We will rejoice with him over his new found treasure. But we trust he will not be' long for this world. L. B. W. 71 GLEANINGS FRGM THE POETS. Mr. P---r-se. May .love in his next commodity of hair grant thee a beard. Mr. A-s-n. A man I am, crossed with adversity. Mr. H-t-h. His faults lie gently on him. Mark Hanna. Another lean unwashed artificer. Mr. D-n--d-n. I am not in the roll of common men. Mr. S-v-s. But, Oh! ye gods to hear him sing. Mr. McM-ll-. An Irishman, a very valiant man. Mr. B-n-tt. I-Ie's a daisy, he's a darling, he's a dumpling, he's a lamb. Mr. McC--y. - Too much learning hath made him mad. Mr. Up-h-. Wisdom shall die with you. Mr. McD-n-d. I have an exposition of sleep come upon me. ' Oom Paul. Where did you come from, Baby dear? Sophomore. Pm something of a liar myself. Mr. R-b-s-n. There is more innocent fun in me than a casual spectator would imagine. You have never seen me frolicsome. '72 Jfssociations YOUNG WOMENS CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION ORGANIZED 1884. OFFICERS. PRESJDENT-Flora Belle Hermann. VICE PRESIDENT-Bessie DeYoe. SECRETARY-L. Mabel Woods. TREASURER-Anna. Ellison. 4 YOUNG MENS CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION ' OFFICERS. ' PRESIDENT-Stewart Bates Crandell. VICE PRESIDENT-Benjamin Edward Robison. RECORDING SECRETARY-Raymond Frank Cashner. CORRESPONDING SECRETARY-H. J. Stoutemyer. TREASUREN-Clarence Spence Burns. ll , ff ff:- ' .tmv X . 1 -f 4-'ll' .A-. ,,,,, ,X ' rm?-.ml-Q, -f vvu -'wwx,m- ' Y 1 xggx'-,,N .::. M2 1 45035 .-.L . . A W 3 40 +-4171 iw: M WF -fWl, 'H .....--Q-U, .-I n iw' THE CAMPUS GIRL. 76 .vfthletics TI-IE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION OE KALAIVIAZOO COLLEOE. S an organization of long standing, having been formed sometime in the '70's, but it held a very insigniiicant place in college affairs until application was made, in the spring of 1895, for admission to the Michigan Inter-collegiate Athletic Association. At that time the request was refused because the college had no record in athletics. Hard, earnest work was at once begun along several lines, and in the spring of 1896 appli- cation was again made and granted. 'Since then Kala- mazoo has alwavs been in the game. Three times the Football Cup has occupied a conspicuous position at the Ladies' Hall. Twice have the Relay and Baseball Cups graced the piano in the reception room at the Hall. Since being admitted to the Inter-collegiate Association, Kalamazoo has been represented at Field Day every year, save one, by its Baseball team. The secrets of our success have been, to a considerable degree, an interested Faculty and a hard working mem- bership. The latter supported by the former, together with a sympathetic student body, has brought our Ath- letic Association to the exalted position which it occupies. We have thus far received our share, and perhaps a little more, of the Inter-collegiate Athletic victories and honorsg yet we are not unwilling to accept more, and so long as our representatives shall be able to prove them- selves victors on the Helds of contest we shall raise our voices in loud shouts of rejoicing. That the Athletic Association may live and prosper with the increasing prosperity of the College, is the hearty wish of the class of 1903. vs MEN WHO WEAR THE K. W. A. C. M. S. G. C. R. C. G. .T . J. A. O. M. BECKWITH. W. BRowN. S. BURNS. CHAFFEE. B. CRANDELL. F. DASHER. J. DYE. EDWARDS. L. HAUSE. M. JoHNsoN. E. KALMBACK. E. Kosrnu. LENDERINK. P- LIENAU. N3 T. C. R F. H R I5 C. H N P. H J. H. MACDONALD S. Nonra. A. PALMER. SANGER. C. Sci-IAU. Scuocx. Sunovmz. A. SIMPSON. A. SMITH. B. STEELE. S'rE'rsoN. S. UPJOHN. A. VAN Drs. SEM.. SONG OF THE EDITOR. I've thought it over carefully, And I hardly think it's fair, I've stormed, complained and threaten I've torn my tangled hair. When Professor Squires in Literature To our class says Now you must E'er this hour on the morrow Either poetize or bust, Why straightway every student, Sweats a poem he will write: He reads it in the class next day, And we say it's out of sight. But when the miserable editor Of the Junior Almanac, Declares a poem each must write, They smile behihd his back, And think it's awful funny, That he should e'er suppose, That they could write a poem: Why, goodness only knows? They couldn't even write a line, Why not a single wordg He ought not to expect it, The idea is quite absurd. I've thought it over carefully, And hardly think it's fair, For literature they all can write, For the Almanac nwaire. 80 ed 1' FOOTBALL. E. R. YOUNG, Managef. I M. G. WATERBURY, Coach. A. W. BROWN, Captain. 'E gw fc I If , haul? mg . SHROYER, - - Center. . E. KAFMBACH, Right Guard. S UPJOHN, - - Left Guard. P LIENAU, - Right Tackle. S BURNS - - Left Tackle. M BEc.Kw1'rH, - Right End. W BROWN, - - Left End. S NORTH - Quarter Back. E Kosarzn, - Right Half. S CRANDELL, - Left Half. STETSON - - - Full Back. SUBSTITUTES. E LENDERINK, H. C. SCHAU, SCHOCH H. H. SMITH, R A. PALMER. Q 'i'4 '34 ai' WQ5 6 ft' 4, 'qw 3m39 ' .wi vit f J we ...V 3' ' ,.:iv: ' ' ' v' A' I ' C. . , V yN ' f ll R P. , U i A. . . R' y .1--,Ai Vg, 2 . -' 4-.,,,w P R an ' .mwfw At a football game she's always ere, With sparkling eyes and Hying h ir, Her cheeks grown red with chill fall ai THE FOOTBALL GIRL. 1 Al E'en though it blows she does not care, A storm of min or snow she'll dare, This merry football girl. F' d f, g i A Yihi '. Lttt otool o-oo so l .57 , ' is 5 B r If With eager eyes and Hag in hand, Along the lines for hours she'll stand And when the ball they safely land Across the goal, Oh, isn't it grand! Excitedly' she cries, just gr:-1ndl , This merry football girl. I 82 1, U T31 -1 1' BASKET BALL. COACH-G. M. JoHNsoN. ,nf . -' .5 ' '1xg I 1 ,X A J? . X I f 'f I V.-1, CENTER-J. E. KOSTER. Forwards-J. A. VAN Drs, C. S. NORTH. Guards-A. LENDERINK, L. P. APPELDORN. Substitutes-J. E. KALMBACH, N. W. MUNGER 83 THE BRIDGE. We sat on the bridge by moonlight, As the bell rang half past nine, And I knew but another half hour Of happiness yet could be mine. I watched, in the hazy shadow Of that lovely night in June, Her eyes, that gleamed with a radiance Brighter than thatmof the moon. And my heart grew hot and restless, For my love was true and deep, And the secret that made my heart throb, Seemed greater than I could keep. But now it has fallen from me, It passed with the passing years, Yet the memory of that June night Still fills my heart with tears. And I wonder how many others, Of care-encumbered men, Who have sat on the bridge by moonlight, Sighing, wish for the old days again. Forever and forever, As long as the bridge is there, Ae long as young hearts have fancies, They will sit in the moonlight fair. im! : !Q?'s'sf Q 'I '4 Wrtywwh 1 'rise .9555 jf? 'I I ' T' 5. s I I wg r 4 ' 'Ir i it-:Iii Ai Jz by - ' , I Ersiilifff . 57 3' f V fy X 1 f pin . Quartz, if in - f ,, ,fig -N X S4 F.B.H W I5 fr Q A Af .4 Y A 5 H IC m f O ' ,I ,-Q 511 72 A v,-L .. XLL ga ...C .Fl t. ' .1 J! R. YOUNG-Manager. C. S. NORTH-Captain G. M. JoHNsoN-Coach. M. CHAFFEE-Catcher. F. SANGER-Pitcher. . T. H., MACDONALD-First Base. C. S. NORTH-Second Base. C. L. HAUSE-Short Stop. G. F. DASHER-Third Base. H. S. UPJOHN-Right Field. J. E. KALMBACH-Center Field. C. A. SIMPSON-Left Field. RH?1EVYAL1Ri'wIN?g Substitutes. 85 'K K l -Wg, 1-45- X J-.lx 4 l I Oh why is a peninsula Like rubber, dear ? quoth he. Because it is, the maid replied, A neck stretched out to see. .-- ..-1- ROUND SHOUL DERSJ' Round shouldered? Well, maybe I am, For all these years I've had to cram, Bent bow-like over wisdom's book, That I might gain that Senior look. If you cannot on the grand stand Shout above the loudest there, You can get down on the side lines, And help split the campus air. Des J. Cin history classl--That event occurred at the beginning of our area. 0 Miss Millspaugh had a Schoch but retained con sciousness. S0 X .1 4 TRACK TEAM. 1.11.- J. E. KOSTER-Captain. E. G. PIERCE-Manager .:1:I3b- ' I .KY .J ...'. N ,4 . N 3 .'r,' t 'Q R. F. CASHNER. H C. G. HILL. R. L. HOPKINS. O. P. LIENAU. J. R. MONROE. ' N. W. MUNGER. ' H. A. POLLEY., H. P. ROWE. R. SCHOCH. P. C. STETSON. H. J. STOUTEMYER. J. A. VAN DIS. 87 . 5 07 :ww rw W so ff t ' ui M41 f .5311 i f -5. ,' A 2 is 'ao t I 1 1 W I 1 K 1 H 454' E In the Spring i ' 5 Ayoung II1E111,S fancy , . gr. if Lightly turns 5 S5 5 5 - - To thoughts of love. ' 1 if -5 R '- E' 'iii 1 ' 5,-argl ' Er' ' 'Double method of agreement. ,., 4 ' v A4 ,I N , .f t 1' on t :-,, .ut.1 88 IXDEX STAFF STUDENTS PUBLISHING ASSOCIATION OFFICERS. PRESIDENT-E. G. Pierce. VICE PRESIDENT-CIHTCUCC Austin. SECRETARY-J. A. Phillips. TREASURER-A. B. Hatch. - INDEX STAFF. EDITOR-IN-CHIEF-R. A. McMullen. LOCAL EDITOR--O. P. Lienau. ASSISTANT Loom. Emron-Belle Hermann. Socnscrv Enrron-Naomi North. ALUMNI EDITOR-A. W. Brown. ATHLETIC Enn-on-T. H. Mac Donald. SUBSCRIPTION EDITOR-N. B. Steele. EXCHANGE Enrron-H. P. Rowe. 'BUSINESS MANAGER-B. S. Crandell. ASSISTANT Busmnss MANAGER-E. McCabe. 89 QRATORICAL ASSOCIATION. OFFICERS. R. GORDON-President. C. G. MORSE-Vice President. B. S. CRANDELL-Secretary. S. D. STRONG-Treasurer. HE Oratorical Association of Kalamazoo College was organized in the fall of ninety-seven. Special attention has been given to this important branch of college training. The results in the past few years have been exceedingly satisfactory. Probably not a college of our size in the country can boast a better record along Oratorical lines than Kalamazoo. The following is our record for the past three years: In 1900 the Kalamazoo debating team defeated the Ypsilanti team in an Intercollegiate debate. James McGee won 'first place in the State Oratorical Contest. C. L. Maxield won first place in the State Prohibition Oratorical Contest. In 1901 Kalamazoo again defeated Ypsilanti in debate. A. N. DeLong Won second place in the State Grator- ical Contest. R. Gordon won first in the State Prohibition Orator- ical Contest. In 1902 Kalamazoo defeated Franklin College of Franklin, Ind., in debate. A. W. Brown Won second place in the State Prohibi- tion Oratorical Contest. 90 ALPHABET. A 's for the Antic, played at the Hall, The episode frantic that ended the call. B is for Banner we wave at the game, On diamond or gridiron we win just the same. C' is for Coed, light-hearted and gay, Who often hath showed she'll have her own way. D is for Ducking that's done at the Dorm, You're always in Danger when weather is warm. E is for Eatables Eagerly swallowed, ' And the Evil Effects which afterwards followed. F is for Freshman, addicted to Folly, The Farmer, the Fresh and the red-hot Tomalie. G is for Gallants who stroll in the Grove, With Gay Graceful damsels they endlessly rove. H is for Heartache that some people feel, When a con or a Hunk makes the warm blood I - congeal. I is for Ice that grows on the pond, That furnishes skating of which we're so fond. J is for Junior so jolly, so wise, Nowhere in the world you will find one his size. K is for Knocking at Faculty Table, ' With gossip and chatter that makes such a babel. L is for Laziness coming with Spring, And Languishing Lovers Long Lingering. Mis for the Mystery that hangs in the air, Oh! where have they carried the dear Doctor's chair? N's for the Nuisance that bothers Prof. Squires, He says he won't stand it, and straight up he fires. O for Orations, the bane of all here, Writ under protest and given with fear. 91 P's for the Pulpit the Sophomores stole, And the Penalty Prexy down on them did roll. Q's for the Questions that fill up the time, 'Tis so necessary, 'tis surely no crime! R for the Ruins , that far-famed Retreat, Where lovers oft turn their slow-wand'ring feet. S for the Sleighride, the Shout and the Song- The Spread and hilarity lasts none too long. Ts for the Tumbles we take on the hill, They Tumbled, we Tumble, and others will. U's for the Umpire who dispels our doubt With his joy-b1inging Safe or dreaded You're out. V is for Vandy , who broke through the ice,- In again, out again, all in a trice. W's for Weather, which none can forsee, There's no use in growling whatever it be. X is for Xmas and home friends once more, And the joys we remember long after they're o'er. Y is for You, whoever you be, If you think this easy, just try it and see. Zls for the Zero we get when we're late, No plea nor excuse can change our sad fate. S NW fi! 92 THE EVOLUTION OE KALAMAZOO COLLEGE. KA CHAPEL Onxrxon nsuvx-:RED IN 2002 A. D. av B. Drmwos NOSIBORJ COME to recount a few of the changes which Kala- ' mazoo College has witnessed during the one thousand . sixty-nine years of its existence. When it was Ofganized Oxford and Cambridge had been centres of learning for hundreds of years. During its early days Yale and Harvard celebrated their centennial anniversaries. These colleges, once the foremost in the world, are now no moreg nothing but heaps of ruins remain to mark the spot where once they stood. No chronicler ever com- mitted to immortality the reasons for their decline. As truly as water removes stains from soiled garments so has time effaced all memory of the reasons for their downfall. Though they fell, ours has kept pace with the rapidly advancing thought of the times and is now the greatest 1nst1tut-ion of .learning the world has ever known: the centre from which radiates, the governing influences of the intellectual life of the universe. Oxford, Cambridge, Yale and Harvard have disappeared, but Kalamazoo has taken their place. - One thousand years ago this would have been in- conceivable as the only way to reach New York from Liverpool or Berlin was by means of slow-going steam- ships requiring five or six days to accomplish the journey. Think - of such- a state of affairs, ifellow-students from England. who two hours ago were seated at your break- fast tables in London! Think of -it, fellow-students' from Germany, who, after completing' your work for today, shall cross your thresholds in Bremen 'ere the chimes in the church spire ring out the hourof six! ' - os . I recently found in the library, among the carefully guarded articles of historical interest, a volume called the Junior Almanac , published by the class of 1902. Therein is a description of what was then a magnificent building, Bowen Hall. In the rotunda of Slocum Hall, so named in honor of the man who was president of the College in 1902, and to whose activity was due the begin- ning of the marvelous growth of the institution, may be seen the corner stone of this building. Did the student then dream that ten centuries later the students of their Alma Mater would be increased ten thousand-fold, that they would gather each morning, not from all parts of Kalamazoo, but from all parts ofthe world? Could they comprehend that the time would come when students who desired one ho11r's recreation would go to the orange groves of California, or to the rocky confines of Yellow stone Park. Could they conceive that college classes would ever be held on the moon, or that exploration parties would journey to the sun to study those spots which formerly baffled astronomers? ' In 1902 Kalamazoo was affiliated with the University of Chicago. You ask where was this University? Be not surprised when I say that it still exists, however, as a a small portion of Kalamazoo. You all know the location of the homes of the leading literary societies. These old buildings, beautiful even in decay, are all that remains of the home of the University which inspired our predecess- ors to nobler thoughts and deeds and aided them in the accomplishment of that which we behold and enjoy. We look with reverence upon these ancient files, and the hallowed associations which cluster about them have inspired many students to do literary work of unexcelled merit. Why did our college grow while others perished? The countless massive structures reaching for hundreds of miles in every direction, which from the home in Kal- amazo'o, and the wonderful deeds accomplished here prove that the fittest survived. 94 May Kalamazoo College ever occupy the prominent place she holds in the thirtieth century. May she ever be the Mecca for pilgrims seeking knowledge! May those who shall be the future students here love our Alma Mater as much as do we and as much as did the students a thousand years ago! Let the glad Sl1011l1 arise and may it echo from the vast dome of the heavens:- Long Live Kalamazoo College! ACH! That little Dutch girl, oh that little Dutch girl, Another like her es ist kein3 ' With her fairy blue eyes and her bright bobbing curls, And her quaintly said, nach, ya and nein. That little Dutch girl, oh tha.t little Dutch girl, Her cool ways my fondest hopes doom, For whenever I ask her to love me, she says, With a. bright teasing smile, und warum? And whenever I tell her I've something to say, Every time without fail, on my soul, She'1l jump up and say, as she hastens away, Pm busy just now, Lebe woh1. Such treatment I say I'll no longer endure, Of me fun no longer she'11 mach, Pm patient as Job ever thought he need be, But P11 no longer stand such a. sach. 95 OBSERVATIONS. During Mr. Dye's recent illness at the Doctor's he says that among his many callers Paul Stetson was the most faithful. Mr. Dye is able to be out now, but the gratuitous exercise seems to have become a habit with Paul. Mr. Austin recently took an offering at Englishville for Ministerial Education, and the sum he received was flattering, to say the least. It is plain that the people fully realize the need. That a college education is an excellent thing for young ladies has become an established fact at Kala- mazoo. It is very noticeable that at least two of the Freshman girls have become exceedingly Wiley this year. There is a good deal of rivalry among a certain few in the Freshman class for honors. It is a question, how- ever, as to who will be successful in obtaining her Ames. French Teacher-Well, but Miss North, if you are going to use kisses, you must use the correct form. Grimes:-What broke up the ice races? Gromes-The last heat was too much for the ice. O. P. L.--And many people wonder how such a small head can contain all he knows. A number of two-legged chairs will be installed in the new building for the benefit of a few gymnastically inclined students. Furnished Rooms to let in the upper story. Apply to Senior Class. . , Died-Class spirit in the Senior class. Miss Wiseman--Miss W--ds, what is the word for arm? Miss W -- ds-Brasfsl . Miss Wiseman-Quel Gendre? Miss W--ds-Why, I should think it ought to be masculine. 96 iTi51I12l22I25ZBEIJ1 Dry Goods Cloaks Carpets Silks Suits Rugs Dress Goods Skirts Curtains Wash Goods Waists Draperies A COMPLETE LINE OE NOTIONS GOODS OF THE HIGHEST QUALITY 1. PRICES ALWAYS THE LOWEST GGGCGGGGGGGGSGGQGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG D HGEIUZIGIIB, S . whether it be a nervous or sxck E 1 headache, will be relieved in a. hurry if you take SWAN'S HEADACHE TABLETS They contain no Opium, Mor- ECON- Ing T6I'l'lDl6 phine,Antipyrine or other deleter- ious drugs. NO SHOE OVER 53. ..-...- 25 255, at THE NEW SHOE STORE, J. L. WALLACE'S Drug Store, 120 East Main sired- 115 S. Burdick St. ALUMNI. 'ss Orrin Bonney. John Lansford MeLoud, Cyrus William Reel. Brainard Slater, Henry Silas Tibbits. Sidney Walter Dunning. - '57 Samuel Marwin Hubbard. Charles Pelton Jacobs. James Preston Rexford. ' William Henry Rexford, '59 Harry Church, Helen Davis Hicks, J oaeph W. Hicks. William Henry Porter, Edward Strong, Howard Bailey Taft, George Martin Trowbridge. Thomas Wells, Frederick Wilkinson, '60 Boardman Judson Boynton. Allen Jeremiah Curtis. Philip James Hoedemaker, Thomas Gale Merritt. Alfred Gardner Pierce, Luther Henry Trowbridge, 163 James Piper Cadman, James Ferdinand Hill, Sanford Charles Hinsdale, Nathan Pratt Barlow, William Westell Huntington, Chauncey Strong, ' '66 Joseph W. Caldwell. Detroit, Mich. Grand Rapids, Mich. Benicia, Cal. Chicago, Ill. Plainwell, Mich. Marshall, Mich. Kalamazoo, Mich. Weston, Mich. Santa Anna, Cal. South Haven, Mich. Amsterdam, Holland Union, Mich. Detroit, Mich. Chicago, Ill. Northfield, Minn. Denver, Col. Greenville, Mich. Minneapolis, Minn. Kalamazoo, Mich. 'G rn is fling -o 40s MARK The Unbf Haltei Predllqested, Thoroughb' Cooked Haired Com Food ALWAYS READY TO EAT li! It is less heating than wheat or oat foods. Starch is the heating element in all cereals. Wheat contains over 66 per cent. of starch and oats 58 per cent., while the Southern grown corn used exclusively in making Korn-Krisp contains less than 50 pez' cent. Ita contains twice as much nitrogenous or muscle making food as either wheat or oats. Of phosphates or brain and nerve food it contains nearly three times more than wheat, and more than 35 per cent. more than oats, hence it is UNEQUALLED FOR STUDENTS MADE oNLv av THE KORN-KRISP CO., Limited BATTLE CREEK, MICH. ALUMNI-Continued. P67 William Harrison Davis, LeGrand Alexander Copley. Austin George, John Lord Gilpatrick, Sylvester Pomeroy Hicks. Marshall Laban Howell. William George Howard, Joshua Smith Lane. 169 Robert Dale Clark, Howard Gordon Colman, Henry Marshall Fish. Judson Carey Price, '70 Catharine Eldred Copley. Reuben T. Stiles. Elizabeth Tibbits Willson, 171 Ella Osborne Adams, Arthur Andrew Bleazby, Nancy Hough Bleazby, Gordon Lee Miner. William Lemuel Munger, Grover Pease Osborne, William Henry Smith, Augustus Joseph Teed. Judson Vradenburg, S. George Cook, Julia A. McFarlane. I72 Albert Charles Kingman, Reuben Elias Manning, Theodore Nelson. Frank A. Miner. Lewis Stuart, '74 Mary Allen Brown, Sarah Howell Colman, Elmer Lionel GriHin. Alma Burr Marsh, Elias John William McEwan, Lemuel Call Barnes, Mary Clark Barnes, William Low Eaton, '77 Adrian Wilson Ames, Norman Henry Brokaw. Hutson Benedict Colman, Alexis Labrey, Chicago, Ill. Ypsilanti, Mich. Granville, Ohio. Kalamazoo, Mich. Eureka, Cal. Kalamazoo, Mich. Republic, Kansas. Leslie, Mich. San Jose, Cal. Detroit, Mich. Detroit, Mich. Jackson, Mich. Cincinnati, Ohio. St. Clair, Mich. Holland, N. Y. Minneapolis, Minn Battle Creek, Mich Chicago, Ill. Lake Forest, Ill. Los Angeles, Cal. Kalamazoo, Mich. Big Rapids, Mich. Logan, Utah. Pittsburg, Pa. Pittsburg, Pa. Rockford, Ill. Windon, Minn. Kalamazoo, Mich. Denver, Col. ll!X1'S THOROUGHU MALTED- coonro t The Chzldren s Breakfast. Norka Malted Oats is oats crushed, malted and cooked. It p0S sesses a delicious and appetizing daintiness found in no other breakfast food. Nothing better for children can be found. Ask your grocer for our book, Brain and Brawn Build- ing, and learn why oats is the best food. N orlia Malted Oats, l5c. At All Grocers. Give the children Norka Malted Oats and cream with chopped dates, figs, bananas, shredded cocoa- nut or other fruit. Makes 'em happy-keeps 'em healthy. THE MALTED FO0D CUMPANY. Ltd., Buttle Crook. Mich. ALUMNI-Continued. P78 George Everett Clark, Clarence Livingstone Dean, Alexander Hadlock, Roswell Curtis Mosher, '79 Charles Warren Barber, Robert Winters Kane, August Kuntz, Marshall Horton Pettit, '80 Helen Brooks Mahon, Helen Colman Eaton, Charles Fremont Daniells, James Sabine Heaton, Fred Marvin Hodge, Lewie Dumont Pettit, Mary Woodward Barber, Edith Blenkiron Gould. Charles Macauley Stuart. '81 Albert Isaac Bradley. Sarah Buttolph Earl, Helen Curtenius Montague, William Herbert Palmer, Henry William Powell, '82 Willis Austin Anderson. John Wesley Tanner, Dio Pease Sheldon, Jacob Poppen, 183 Henry Herman Barber, Agnes Barney Smith, Frank Levell Boyden, Allen Everett Cloubgh, Charles Augustus letcher, Andrew George Fuller, Charles Henry Gleason, Frederick Herbert Britton, Sybrant Wesselius, Barton James Yates, 184 Mary Francis Axtell, Sarah Bennett Cheney, Hannah Frances Davidson, Elmer Ellsworth Dresser, Frank Charles Marshall, Eliza Ward Taylor, John Calvin Anderson. Stillwater, Minn. 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DUTTON AND PEARL 'Q TELEPHONE 114 X' ' 2 1 2 GGGGGGGGCGCGGCGGCQGCGGGGGGGGGGGCCCGGCGCOCC3? .Q'Qv'Q'Q QvQv'QvQQ'QfQ'Q'QfQ Q'Q-Q'9'QfQ Q'Q'Q'9 Come and Stulting Q S68 Us and o I 0 save Money Vroegzndewnj THE BEST PLACE IN THE CITY T0 GET CLOTHING HATS AND FURNISHINGS .ii-1-i 1 - I 122 North Burdick sf. 'SQ' ALUMNI-Continued. 185 Ellen Carman Sonderickcr, John Elza Cheney, Walter Hoag Merritt, Miner Cole Taft, Lyman Horatio Wood, John Edwin Kinnane, '86 Charles Horace Brownell, Harry Hulbert Pettee, Helena Augusta Smith, Fred Ward Stone. George Wheaton Taft, I87 Romaine Cordillo Fenner, Belle Richards Bunker, '88 Earnest Alanson Balch, Louis Edwin Martin, Mabel Young Hemenway, Ellen Adelaide Knapp. 189 Margaret Chesney, John Wayland Davies, Elizabeth Fletcher Kurtz, 792 Emma Jane Cheney, Charles Asa Hemenway, Delno Chauncey Henshaw, Frank Kurtz, Blanche Delma. Weimer, Wallace Edward Wright, Orange Charles Flanegan, Oren Samuel Flanegan. '93 Sara Hutchins. Mary Hopkins Shillito, '94 Eugene Haines, Grant Martin Hudson, Charles J. Kurtz, David Tristan Magill, Leon Edgar Reed, John Elijah Smith, Caroline Maria Taylor, Sumner Allen Remington, Newton, Mass. Alpena, Mich. Chicago, Ill. Kalamazoo, Mich. Chicago, Ill. Bay City, Mich. New Orleans, La. Detroit, Mich. Pryor, Col. Hamlon, N. I-I. Gaylord, Mich. Natal, So. Africa. Detroit, Mich. Ongole, India. Kalamazoo, Mich. Onaga, Ill. Mason City, W. Va Vinukonda, India. Bangor, Wis. Kalamazoo, Mich. Chicago, Ill. Vinukonda, India. Kalamazoo, Mich. Kalamazoo, Mich. Chicora, Mich. Marcellus, Mich. Penn Yan, N. Y. Schoolcraft, Mich. Chicago, Ill. Mil ford, 'Mass. chicago, 111. Kalamazoo, Mich. Kalamazoo, Mich. Belt, Mont. NATU RES MORNING N IGHT '1egm,,,, Alwavs mov 'L NOON EOR on OLD OR TO EAT 'lllalta-?i7iia MALTA-VITA, the perfect food, pure, palatable, nutritious, ls I0 prepared as to be easily digested and perfectly assimilated by the weakest system. It is made from the whole of the wheat, thoroughly cooked, scientifically cured and impregnated with diastase ol barley Qmnlt extract l, Baked and toasted 5 may be served in many appetlzing ways. MALTA-VITA contains all the food elements necessary to insure perfect growth, sustain life, and regulate thc systemf It is the perfect food for BRAIN and MUSCLE. A proper use of MALTA-VITA insures health fperfect dlgestionl, clean white teeth, sweet breath, bright eyes, and a clear, active brain. A trial package will convince the mos! skeptical. MALTA-VITA ls sold in large, carefully sealed packages: 15 MEALS for 15 CENTS. ll your grocer does not keep lt, send his name and address and 25 cents to pay for packing and express, and we will send you a large package direct,-6 packages direct, 51.00. FREE-a sample of MALTA-VITA and a beautiful cook-book, 72 Dainty Dishes on request. MALTA-VITA PURE FOOD CO., Battle Creek, Michlgan HEALTH TONIC IN EVERY PACKAGE ALUMNI-Continued. '95 Alice Mabel Brooks, Nathaniel Thomas Hafer, Claud Walter Oakley, William Carey Oldfield, Margaret St. John Christianson Er win Brigham Taft, Arthur Francis White, 196 Fannie Elizabeth Barrett, Isabella Bennett Kurtz, Frank Eugene Deyoe, James Butler Fox, Samuel Jasper Hall, Almon J. Hutchins, Herbert Claire Jackson, ' Albert Earnest Jenks, Marquis Joseph Newell, Pauline LaTourette. Walter David McWilliams, George Vail Pixley, Francis Burt Sinclair. Edward Lewis Yaple, '97 Harold Lucius Axtell, Albert William Bolt, Williard Fox Dowd, George Ellis Finley, Ernest Elliott Ford, Lulu May Hough, Annis Jenks Fox, Florence LaTourette, George McDougall, Muriel Massey Dowd, William Lloyd Mercer Carlton Hosner Snash Anna Warwick Munger, Albert Egbert Broene. 7 all, 193 Helen Rowe Colman, Sarah Elder, Moses Allen Graybiel, Albert George Newberry, Wilbur E. Post, Oren Gifford Quick, Guy Delwan Smith, George Gottlieb Stroebe, Arthur Clifford Tredway, Charlotte Willmott Yaple, '99 Alfred I-Ialsay Bailey, Ira Rudowhus Bullock. Addison . Chamberlin, Enos Anson DeWaters, Kalamazoo, Mich. Alma, Mich. Kalamazoo, Mich. Kalamazoo, Mich. , Hartford, S. Dak. Prescott, Ariz. Mason, Mich. Kalamazoo, Mich. Chicago, Ill. Breedsville, Mich. Manistique, Mich. Brooklyn, Mich. Holliston, Mass. Kalamazoo, Mich. Washington, D. C. Evanston, Ill. Jackson, Mich, Skaneatelis, N. Y. Kalamazoo, Mich. Rome, Italy. Otsego, Mich. Impur, Assam. Philippine Is. Farmer, N. Y. Fenton, Mich. Manistique, Mich Flint, Mich. Vernon Centre, Minn Impur, Assam. Buchanan, Mich. Chicago, Ill. Kalamazoo, Mich. Kalamazoo, Mich. Kalamazoo, Mich. West Medway, Mass. East Chatham, N. Chicago, Ill. Manistique, Mich St. Joseph, Mich. Ann Arbor, Mich. Detroit, Mich. Kalamazoo, Mich. Y. Hamilton, N. Y. Harvey, Ill. Bangor, Mich. Ann Arbor, Mich. Gec1r9'S Art S t o r e Strictly High Grade Goods and Work- rnanship. . . . . ' Picture Frames, Artists' Material 118 South Burdick Street James A. 0'Neill Sanitary Plumbing Gas Fitting and Sewerage Iobbing Promptly Attended to. Estimates Furnished. QIQ' 304 West Main Street KALAMAZOO, MICH THE POCO CAMERA CONTAINS ALL THE LATEST IMPROVEMENTS. FOR SALE AT THE SIEWERT STUDIO, Cor. Main and Burdick, KALAMAZOO, - - MICH. B119 your Groceries .... IIQFII J. G. TAIQIQMAN. The Best in the City ALUMNI-Continued. Frank Coburn Dickey, Fannie Gerould Fisher, Alfred Curry Gilbert, Alice Joanna Harrigan, Coe Smith Hayne, Emilia Hochstein, John Bert Jackson, Arthur McGugan, Hugh Sager Mead, Marcia Elizabeth Warrant, Oreb Theodore Crissey, Russell Robert Latham. Dollie Pierce Beckwith, Henry D. Shultz, Mary Eldred Sinclair, William Clayton Stripp. Maurice Glenn Waterbury, 'oo Sarah Pamelia Allis, Frank Blanchard, Henry Sidney Bullock, Laura Mae Chesney, Charles Milton Dinsmore, John Wellington Hoag, Leroy Hornbeck, Harry Barnum Irland, George Hollenbeck Martin, Harry Adelbert Miller, Richard Weymouth Paltridge Agnes Blanche Powell, Arthur Francis Purkiss, Mary Auzella Reid, George Edward Sutton, Lew Augustus Walker, Ernest August Wreidt, Hilton DeWitt Girdwood, 'oz Emory Dunklee Bixby, Florence Adelle Bixby, Roy Eldon Cody, Minnie Pauline Davis, Arthur Nelson DeLong, Ella Louise Fulton, Frank Delamore Gilchrist, Merritt Lorraine Hoblitt, Charles Lester Maxfield, Raymond Scott McCurdy, Charles McHarness, Frank Estes, Millar, Wilbur Nelson, John Cadd Paltridge, Louise Lydia Scrimger, Fred Milton Sellers, George William Sigler, Arthur Gaylord Slocum, Jr., Gideon Baxter Travis, Harry Hinman Treat, Fred Roger Williams, Mary DenBleyker, Nyack, N. Y. Lawrence, Mich. Grand Rapids, Mich, Kalamazoo, Mich. Chicago, Ill. Atlanta, Ill. Ann Arbor, Mich. Denver. Col. Philippine Is. Prairieville, Mich. Lake Forest, Ill. Plymouth, Mich. Detroit, Mich. Lansing, Mich. Alma, Mich. Adrian, Mich. Oscoda, Mich. St. Clair, Mich. Bellevue, Mich. LaFayette, Ind. Chicago, Ill. Kalamazoo, Mich. Lockport, Ill. Durand, Mich. Big Rapids, Mich. Chicago, Ill. Marshall, Mich. Chicago, Ill. Marion, Iowa. Pontiac, Mich. Newton Centre, Mass Clinton, Mich. London, Eng. W. Superior, Wis. Coldwater, Mich. Chicago, lll. Otsego, Mich. Climax, Mich. Kalamazoo, Mich. Kalamazoo, Mich. Chicago, Ill. Rochester, N. Y. Chicago, Ill. Newton Centre, Mass Council Bluffs, Iowa. Newton Centre, Mass Kalamazoo, Mich. Watervliet, Mich. Spring Lake, Mich. Munger, Okla. Boston, Mass. Washington, D. C. Rochester, N. Y. Ovid, Mich. Kalamazoo, Mich. v Ability ...1 THB Inclination.. We have the ability to serve you with good shoes, at rea- sonable prices, for we have large new stocks. We have the inclination to serve you, for good service will cause you to return. 'Our stock embraces all kinds of shoes except the poor kind. Our shoes have char- acter, style and quality. WARE 8ZL CHASE City Shoe Store. IFHDGFIHI T66 60. ll! 148 South Burdick Street We Make a Specialty... ..0p.. COIQIQEGE TEXT BOOKS. Will take old books in ex- change for other goods. The Caryl Book8l Music Store, 110 So. Burdick St. JACOB WEECKGENANT DRY GOODS, CLOAKS, FURS, CARPETS, OIL CLOTHS, LIN OLEUIVIS, N OTIONS. 11.1.1- No. 4 EAST MAIN STREET, BATTLE CREEK, MICH 9 o - -1-1-1-I-1-1-1-1-1'1'f-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-ru'X 1.6 gl l S V l 5 I S V l 3 Xl 4 3 V 1 . The Drawings for This Book Were Made By gg Il.B.Bcrrv Zo. Q5 EXCHANGE PLACE . . N I l 3 U l S I l 5 V sl lf - I K' '-' The Most Delicious REMEMBERA, Confectionery and Strictly High Grade Goods, as Our Famous Lorrains 0ur Chocolate Lunches Caramel: and Creams, manufactured fresh each day. The Favorite Drinks Ping-Pong and Queen Charlotte are delicious and Cooling. Ices and Fancy Creams for Socials and Family Orders. Best Ice Cream Soda at MEADIMBEFJS PALACE OF SWEETS Main Street- ii-.-i- -1-1 the Kalamazoo Sanitary Milk Company when or- derlnl Ice Cream and lces. We make a spec- ialty of furnishing social organizations in any quantity desired. Call 'phone 727 and get prices -.11 a a Kalamazoo Sanitary Milk Co. Kalamazoo. Mich. E. B. For a first-class M Shave Sole Agenr for or Chase 8: Sanborn's ' Han'-Cut Teas and Coffees Call on QQ Telephones 61 and 1537. 210 South Burdick Street Wheeler North Rose St. The Bell Shoe House Leaders in Men's and La- dies' up-to-date Footwear -E- New Line of Ladies' and Men's Oxfords, for graduat- ing purposes, iust in 4- 4' 124 E. Main St. Kalamazoo ' , ' . ,x.H,j..- fb, - ,ri -,I -' '.'..f. J + L , 4---. W ski, -.-. ..vfl ' f-uw-vi' , VL... 7 ' r I 4 1' 1 07 -' ,, '55e' ' 'o, '5UUu1 91 ,2383v 'v - .u12,'2l!5- 0g:Nuu-wp '-'f5iQ:+ - a 6-ea-ze-f 4 . Noi like olher girls. 4.4.9 BIG LINE .awf- CANNED MEATS Picnics and Parties. Canned Corn Beef, Roast Beef, Dried Beef, Corned Beef Hash, Veal Loaf, Beef Loaf, Ham Loaf, ViennaSausageg In Toma- Eng. Lunch to Sauce Sliced Bacon, as as Ham, ' Canned Salmon, Lobsters, Shrimp, Boneless Chicken, Turkey. S. O. Bennett 801 W. Main St. Go o d Drugs Good Service Up-to-date Fountain Mixtures Our Own Ice Cream Blake's Drug Store 214 West Main Street. Banks Baird's ....Nlusic House... Everything in Musieal Merchandise Old Instruments Bought and Exchanged gg Band Instru- ments a Specialty gg Piano Tuning and Repairing gg pg Telephone 1178-2r. 206 West Main Street, KALAMAZOO, MICHIGAN ,mn -li 1-- -l- it f .aougpfgga ,,,,, ugvznlans' LAKES ' W Iwh I ho elrooaaat .QE fp A , i I . vga? I ,: , m . . I, - 1-1 -xv.. .fi i flloroug 11111 V214 ,af Cooked K, 5,5 .. fnaaay 1013.11 1 I :noi-nil15', noon I . and night Ei' Af ' 1 i5'1'.11::15a11t:.: :'.':':1f:,c ff: 1 iE21 5 fill lr .,1.i .1 iiiii Li 'hr ' - I L 1 lr 1 A BOURDEAU FOOD CO. pri u X'I l'l,li clu5uK.Nr 'nrrAN. u.s x iu, . - SAY 1 BE U P-T0-DATE Tryabita Food KA Pepsivz Celery Wheat Ffalzel - The Greatest Health Cereal Ever Produced ' Nourishing Delicious Ready to Eat YOUR GROCER SELLS IT MANUFACTURED BY Tryabita Food Company, Limited T0 THE P BLIC.. 'kai' Give us a trial and be observing and we are cer- tain you will call again. +4- Stamm's Antiseptic Barber Shops' and Bath Rooms Stamm 8 Corsette, Props. ZIZ East Main 3lZ West Main THE HUB RESTAURANT Q Quick Service Everything First Class 120 West Matin Street fmt. .. Irs BEANS Now: Beans have always been held in high favor as a strength-forming food, but on account of ignorance as to the proper manner of preparing them, full fifty per cent. of the people, and even a larger percentage of those of sedentarylives, cannot eat them without distress. This Adistress, such as fermentation, fiatulence, etc., is caused wholly by the hulls or skins, of the beans, composed of cellulose, which cannot be digested. Sanitas Hulless Beans Are prepared by an original process of re- moving the hulls, yet preserving all the valuahle nutrient properties of beans. In this form they can be cooked ln less than half the time required 'to cook ordinary beans, and by actual test are one third more valuable in asslmllable strength-prm duclng elements, easily digestible by all, causing no distress or disturbance. Purees and soups can be made from Sanltas Hul- less Beans in one hour. Each carton contains nutrlment equal to that of two and a half pounds of best bee!- steak and one and three-fourths pounds of bread. Sanitas Hulless Beans in cartons,15 cents at your grocers. Seven bean recipes printed on carton. lf your grocer has not secured stock yet, send us his name and address, and write to us say- ing that you would like to try Sanitas Hul- less Beans, and we will see to lt that your grocer is supplied. 'Q O Q' Sanitas Nut Food Co., Ltd. BATTLE CREEK, MICH. S.. 53 c. H. BARNES ez co. 5: 42 Q Q PRINTERS Q Q W ZS S? is E5 If you have any poor prz'ntz'ng g bring 22 along. This book 119 a sample ofourworst. ZS '7 ll U ll 517 SOUTH BURDICK STREET M BAUMANN nnocx Q Q Q TELEPHONE 1214 V :ee-: For Patronize QUalltY New Process Laundry Style Gpg 159 S. Burdick. Phone 286 Call on FRANK KRUEGER The Tailor. 119 North Burdick Street Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing Done TELEPHONE 1066. Leave Laundry 116 North Rose Street Phone 115. WHALEN Independent Laundry ou'll ind t a. Pleasure As well as a comfort, to be able to step into fashion- ably-cut, properly-fitting clothes, the hour you need them, and get as good as were ever made to your measure. am Folz's Clothes At perhaps half the tai1or's charges. We risk that you'l1 like them-because we take them back if you don't. We are sole agents in Kalamazoo for the Stein- Bloch justly celebrated suits and top coats. Prices on these S12 to S25 Cheaper grade, S6 to S10 All goods pressed for one year-no charge. SAM F 0LZ Big Corner One Price Clothier Hatter Furnisher 'Gollege .vfnnual .Slllu trations We have been doing Annual Work for 14 years, and our experience is at the disposal of any Board of Editors. Write us and get any information on the subject of half-tones or any other kind of engraving- IQYXLJXYVYFXZOCD CGDLLEGE OFFERS TO AMBITIOUS YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN AN OPPORTUNITY TO SE- CURE A LIBERAL EDUCATION AT MODERATE EXPENSE. .... Affiliation With the University of Chicago. Graduates of the College can secure the University degree by doing twelve weeks additional work there. Thrce Fellowships are Awarded Each Year, Furnishing free tuition for one year in the Graduate Schools of the University. College Teachers' Certificates Are granted by the Michigan State Board of Education to graduates who take the course in Pedagogy. Assistance is Rendered By a committee of the faculty in securing desirable positions as teachers. The Preparatory Department Is intended especially for those who expect to prepare for College, although others can enter it with profit. The Musical Department Offers thorough instruction in vocal and instrumental music. Many opportunities are furnished students for earning part of expenses. Graduates of approved schools are admitted without examination. Send for catalogue containing full information regarding courses of study and expenses. R. GRYLGRD SLGCUM. LL. D. Pnssxnsnr. F C American Beauty Corsets l I Are deslgned and patterned from the very latest fashlonsg made 1n all shapes 'ft A4 and colors to meet the demands of the most f8Sf1d1OUS Every corset sold un der thls llberal guarantee: M yrfnded ftrfo rw Ks lf orstlsntst fctory Th se Tr d M rlis-wh oh ppear on label qf ittxng w ll W r g corset .11 KALAMAZOO MICHIGAN 0 0 Q ' ' El 'l e a e a i a dl box and on inside of corset-insure you a well- 'l l ' . e - ea in . Kalamazoo Corset Co. Makers I. For Sale by all Local Dealers. 5 s s s s s E 2 QQQQ S S O S 2 Honest Work Lull cf Skinner Manufacturers of Fine Vehicles Kalamazoo, Mich. DR. E. P. WILBUR Diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat a Specialty. R IAGLASSES FITTED.. 139 saaial isa.g1aak sm., Kalamazoo 1 . DR. HUGH E. SMITH Physician and Surgeon Room 35-36. Chase Block DR. CEQA. 1.2. CRONE DR. EDWARD AMES Diseases of OFFICE, 319 S. BURDICK STREET EYE, EAR NOSE and THROAT Hours, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p. m. ONLY. ' 123 East Lovell Street. Hours, 9 to 12 KALAMAZOO - - MICHIGAN I-I. FURST 8a SON LIVERY STABLES 73' 110 East Water Street. Telephone 123
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