Kansas City School of Law - Pandex Yearbook (Kansas City, MO)
- Class of 1905
Page 1 of 91
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 91 of the 1905 volume:
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Elvis lpear Jbook, of the class of 1905 of the lkansas Gilto School of law, is oeotcateo to the jfacultp, bp vobose liberal ano generous aio its pub- lication was maoe possible. I asf, Q9yg D. P. Tl1'0HS0fY, 0FFl0ML PHUTOGHIPHEH. , JUDGE FRANCIS M. BLACK FRANCIS MARION BLACK. 5 9 HERE are three chief sources of inspiration, first, the forces and aptitudes within us g second, the record, ex- periences and thoughts of those who live in the booksg third, the strong characters we have personally known. , Francis M. Black was born July 26, 1836, in Cham- paign County, Ohio. He was a farmer's son. He was born under a happy star, in this : that every circum- stance and surrounding of his boyhood ministered to the development of physical strength and mental stamina, to the creation of sturdy self-reliance and ambitious eifort. He was completely fashioned to guide strong young men along strong lines. In a log district school house he began and continued his studies, as far as his home duties permitted, whilst his vacations were constantly spent in farm labor. His further education, as far as it was at all made depend- ent upon others, was completed by a one year's attendance at the high school of Urbana, and a three year's course at Farmer's College of Ohio. Here he mastered the English branches and literature with a thoroughness that made strong and clear his writings in after lifeg whilst his excellency in moral philosophy and higher mathematics not alone won him college honors, but far better created that love and power for thorough investiga- tion that peculiarly distinguished his subsequent labors. At the age of twenty-eight he was admitted to practice at the bar of the Supreme Court of his native state: but almost immediately his ambition sought newer iields. It is uncertain why he selected Kansas City as the 'deld of his future labors. It surely then seemed not the land of promise, it was passing through the stormy and meagre days of its history. Legal services were not here and then richly rewarded. The country was poor, war-ridden, and sparsely settled. Everything was scattered, save money. But there is a destiny which shapes our ends, and it is doubtful if this self-reliant, determined young worker could have made a happier choice. 5 He was splendidly moulded to meet and overcome hardships. Slowly, yet surely, he began to enjoy his share of the practice 1 though tradition relates much of what he endured to conquer, but never stooped to conquer. In 1867 he married Miss Susan B. Geigerg the beginning of that ideal home life that only ended with his death. Along the path of steady and honorable progress, Francis M. Black continued, as a member of our bar, for sixteen years. His lines of legal battle and practice were always cast on the elevated planes. He was an open fighter, and never a crafty one. He had not a quality of mind, heart or character that so much as suggested the need or charm of evasion and subterfuge. He was content to rely upon manly power and legal principles. His ideas of the ethics of our profession, and of the wholesome code which should govern the practice of the law, were high and pure. He carried his knowledge and love of moral philosophy into daily action. Rapidly his cases became of the most important type, and his advice in the oflice and services in the courts were sought by wealthy clients and leading corporations. In answer to the strong desire of the bar, he was elected Circuit Judge in 1880, and discharged the duties of his oilice with marked ability, industry and fairness. So rapidly grew his repute as a jurist, that January 1. 1885, he became a member of our Supreme Court. The opening phrase of the speech that placed him in nomination, proved strong and thrilling, An hon- est judiciary is the chief defense of a state. He entered upon his enlarged field of labors with a zeal and industry that never knew abatement, and has made famous his record for judicial ability and untiring labor. Throughout forty-three volumes of our state reports, beginning with the 84th and closing with the 126th, his opinions, over six hundred in number, are found. They constitute a most enduring monument. How many an anxious lawyer of to-day, bewildered by the created uncertainties of the law, by conflicting decisions and thoughtless dicta, has found his relief or ruin in one of the opinions by Judge Black! His plain, terse statement of the facts, followed by his able, decisive appli- cation of the law, are models of judicial literature. In 1893 the Democratic State Convention renominated Judge Black for the Supreme Bench. For the first time in the history of such a convention the nomination was unamimous. He was defeated at the polls. The over- confidence of his friends, the political tides which sometimes ebb and iiow without even the excuse of the influence of the moon, and his independence as a judge, have been the only ascribed causes for his defeat. But of him, as of Chancellor Kent, it can be justly said, he could far better afford to re- tire to private life, than could his state afford to suffer him so to do. The Kansas City School of Law was established in 1895. It was richly endowed by the hopes, zeal and eiiorts of its many friendsg but it did not 6 require great perception to foresee that its early years must prove its most trying ones: it required even less perception to determine how much of its success must be made dependent upon its chief leader and sponsor, it re- quired no perception whatsoever to decide that Francis M. Black should be chosen as its president. His eminence as a citizen, lawyer and jurist, his wealth of legal learning and experience, his proved executive ability, united to fit him to especially aid in founding an institution of law. But, perhaps, then, it was not fully believed, either by himself or others, how completely he could bring himself into touch with the students. It was altogether a new field of action for him. But his rugged strength, his devotion to the school, his conscientious efforts, throughout his lectures on equitable juris- prudence, to share with them his learning as a great equity lawyer, aroused their immediate admiration. Beyond all this, they soon discovered that though his manners were oftimes stern, abrupt and authoritative, his heart was never severed from the humanities of life. Francis M. Black, in the full possession of all his powers, suddenly died, May 24, 1002. -.lolm W Snyder. X .. .. X .-:1::.1.., ' E n V 4nm's2jgE 7 l FACULTY. 5 5 HON. OLIVER H. DEAN, President and Lecturer on the Law of Corporations. MR. SANFORD B. LADD, Lecturer on Real Property. HON. JOHN F. PHILIPS, United States District Judge, Lecturer on Jurisprudence and Practice of the Federal Courts. HON. J. V. C. KARNES. Lecturer on Bankruptcy and Commercial Law. MR. D. B. HOLMES, Lecturer on Equity Jurisprudence. HON. R. J. INGRAHAM. Lecturer on the Law of Torts. HON. WILLARD P. HALL, Lecturer on Extraordinary Remedies. MR. A. L. COOPER, Lecturer on Code Pleading and Practice. MR. JOHN W. SNYDER, Lecturer on Agency, Partnership, Evidence and Kent's Commentaries. MR. WILLIAM P. BORLAND, Dean and Lecturer on Contracts, Wills and Bla.ckstone's Commentaries. MR. EDWARD D. ELLISON, Lecturer on Common Law and Equity Pleading, Commercial Paper, Bills and Notes, and Statutory Rights and Remedies. MR. JOHN B. PEW. Lecturer on Criminal Law and Practice. MR. ELLISON A. NEEL,Z Lecturer on Domestic Relations. SPECIAL LECTURE RS. MR. C. O. TICHENOR, Constitutions. JUDGE EDWARD L. SCARRITT, Constitutional Law. JUDGE EDWARD P. GATES, History of the Codes. HON. R. E. BALL, Equity -Pleading. JUDGE SHEPARD BARCLAY, Trade Marks and Unfair Competition. JUDGE W. C. MARSHALL, Municipal Taxation. JUDGE J. B. GANTT, Magna Charta. 8 QAM ' HON. OLIVER H. DEAN, President 1 II 4 '.f...., I2 1 1 I 1 I3 THE STORY OF OUR LIFE. 9 i HE Kansas City School of Law is ten years old this spring. It was incorporated in May, 1895, and iirst rg 4 , ,, opened its doors to students in September of that year. . Those who are familiar with the Kansas City of ten M A years ago, will recall that we were at that time just J crawling out from under the crash of 1893. The panic - was severe enough everywhere, but it fell with especial force upon those western cities which had shortly previous been enjoying a boom, and Kansas City was one of these. By 1895 the great work of the panic had been done: the weak had been driven to the wall, and wrecks had been cleared away, every business and profes- sion had been pruned down until only the hardiest survived. We now know that the time of depression through which we passed was not without its wholesome eifectsz that after the storm cleared away, the men and the opportunities were here to lay the solid foundation of a great city. But it took courage and faith to establish a new institution at that time. The faith was justified--Kansas City is the location for a great law school. Among the earliest of the projectors of this school was the late Francis M. Black, who had then just retired from a ten year term on the Supreme Bench of Missouri. Judge Black entered into its organization with all the characteristic energy of his nature. He was its first president, and contin- ued to direct its policies up to the last day of his life. He loved the school and its reputation, and he showed it as a father shows his love-by the strictness of his discipline and his jealous watchfulness of its standing. His close friend, Mr. O. H. Dean, was also one of the founders. Judge E. L. Scarritt gave unsparingly of his time and labor to put the new insti- tution on its feet. So did Mr. Sanford B. Ladd, Mr. R. J. Ingraham, Mr. James H. Harkless, and Judge Edward H. Stiles. Our old friend, John W. Snyder, enlisted on the iirst call for troops. Mr. E. D. Ellison was one of the organizers and so was Mr. E. N. Powell. The classes were small then, but larger than was expected. The first class numbered twenty-seven, with a corps of five instructors. Since then the progress has been steady to increased attendance, larger faculty, and a lengthened course of study. The proudest record of the school has been the pronounced respect and unamimous support it has received from the bar of the city and the state. K I4 The leading idea of a school founded upon the plan of evening sessions is, that students undertaking the study of law should be brought as much HS possible into constant touch with the practical part of the profession, so that their practical and theoretical knowledge may progress, if possible, to- gether. The faculty are none of them devoted to the business of teaching as a means of livelihood, but are all constantly engaged in the active exer- ' ' 1 f CISG of their profession. They bring to the class-room the fi esh resu ts o eV91'y day contact with the administration of the law. The students are, ' ' ' h t f many of them, located in law oiiices in the city, and spend the ours ou o the class work in learning the details of practice, the operation of the courts, b and the general duties of the advocate and the counselor. It has long een found that the large city is the only proper place for the location of medical . . . f and dental professional schools, the reason being that the opportunities or clinics and practical training in the hospitals of a large city, the variety of cases which can be observed there and the wider scope of practice, gives a Y lfb1'S9 City an insurmountable advantage over the smaller towns. Phe same reasoning has now come to be applied to pro large City. With its multitude and variety of courts and its great oiiices, its municipal problems and its large corporate interests, has a tremendous ad- Vfmtfbge over the smaller town, where a law student, however fine a theo- retical training oifered to him, would fin ' ' pensable, practical training of his profession. Even in this age of rapid organization and progress, it is hardly possible for an institution of merit to spring full armored into the arena. It re- quires some growth of years to perfect an institution and to reveal its weakness or its strength and this is especially true of an institution of lefifnillg- ' The capital of such an institution consists in .its expenditure of intellectual labor: the pillars of its strength are its Alumnig year by year, -Sililllering around the common center and building up its walls more endur- mg than brick and mortor. The Kansas City School of Law has not been without its struggles, and its present success has not been without the ex- penditure of patient, self-sacriiicing effort on the part of the faculty, whose principal motive has been the establishment of a useful center of profes- sional 192l1'11iUg in Kansas City and whose chief reward has been the ad- vancement and elevation of the cause of their chosen profession. After ten years of unremitting labor, much of it under circumstances of great discouragement, their reward has taken tangible shape. An institution widely known throughout the Central West for a well chosen curriculum, thoroughly and earnestly followed, a high standard of scholarship and pro- lumni dotted all over the western states rapidly making itself felt at the bar. fessional law schools and the d himself isolated from the indis- fessional ethics 3 and an a -ll'1'n. P. liorlfmd. 15 Go, little booklet, go, Until everywhere that you have went, They 're glad that you have came. 16 James Whitcomb Riley H. M. BOYLE. O. D. LEMING. IC. E. MORRIS. T. F. RAILSBACK. H. B. MANARD EDITORIAL STAFF. 17 E ,,,,...,:. '..:T1- zwil. 2 1.1: 'E-.Ti 2 gaz: 5+ 3553 1 '?:2-1 ng, - , rg- :N- , . ' 5 N:'5.-J- F.5ig.f?? H. Ii SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS. 9 5 J. E. MCPHERSON . .... ...... P resident MRS. J. F. V. I-IARIUS. .. Vice-President. J. L. HOGIN ........ .. . .... Secretary. J. H. ARNOLD.. .. .... 1b'easu'rer. 20 J. E. MCPHERSON. MRS. J. F. V. HARRIS J. L. HOGIN. J. H. ARNOLD, Jr. 2I SENIOR CLASS COMMITTEES. il 5' DEBATE. W. E. GRIFFIN, Clmirlnzm- SANFORD. JAMES L. HOGIN INVITATIONS. PREELE HALL, Chairmem. GENTRY. ' FRANK A. UPDEGRAFF CLASS PICTURE. CLYDE WILCOX, Clmirnmn. TSCHUDY. M. D. PYPES. BANQUET. JAY TSCHUDY, Chznirmzm. OVERALL. F. E. PARK. SMOKER. W. T. DUNN, Clmirman. RANDALL. S. B. STEPHENS. 22 CARL H. ADAMS. JAMES I-I. ARNOLD, JR ANDREW G. BODWELL. H. MURAT BOYLE uf ALMOND D. COCI-IRAN. GEORGE C. COLBURN. WM. C. COUNTER. JULIAN K. DAVIDSON. GLENN R. DONALDSON WILLIAM T. DUNN. CLEMENCE P. EHINGER HARRY C. FARABEE. ESKRIDGE R. GENTRY. JAMES GREEN, JR. WENTWORTH E. GRIFFIN. E I r . i ! Q I fit' ' ,ir L .4-.......' 27 .1,. v,,fu, ,. .R LL, . Aw - ,,.x.H.,fK V... , . . ilk: .'-5' . ,Y qQ33.yE,.'1 - - ,, . ,V . 'Q i PREBLE HALL GEORGE T. HALL MRS. J. F. V. HARRIS SAMUEL A. HARRISON. BENJ. R. I-IOGIN, JR. JAMES L. HOGIN. Ak.: i lr: Lf? 731' .' 'fy ,ff ,Q 29 WILLIAM F. HURT THOMAS HOLDWORTH. soowfr 12. KELLOGG. FORREST M. KENNARD ABRAM R. LONG. OAKLEY D. LEM ING. GEORGE LOSEY HARDIN B. MANARD. EDMUND E. MORRIS. JOHN E. MCPHERSON. OMAR R. NAGLE. A. E. UFLAHERTY, M.D 1 4221. WILSON L. OVERALL FRANK E. PARK. MELANCHTON D. PYPES. T. F. RAILSBACK. WILLIAM S. RANDALL EDWARD W. REED. FRANCIS C. REINECKE. JAMES G. ROWELL. WILLIAM A. STOUGH ELMER B. SANFORD. GEORGE S. SHELTON. HENRY M. SPALDING GEORGE.P.ST.JOHN STUBERT B.STEPHENS. ADDHKDJVXTHURMDND. ROBT. H. TSCHUDY. JAY TSCHUDY. FRANK A. UPDEGRAFF GEORGE IW. VETTER CLYDE WILCOX. CHARLES S. WIX. MARTIN J. O'DONNELL 'N 'i RW X N X- I- 4 .ml . XTX '-:ii K X X . Xb. 1-1 Sl?-:S I'I D GI JYIORRIS APRIL 502' IQ 04- 4 l me sm 5 I 25,7 THE SENIOR CLASS. i 3' O - ,T .wa ,'ITH emotions of honest pride, we take up the pen 31 Hifi? io of the historian. The events to be touched upon J ' ,D I ' are so laden with interest that we shall consider g 5. 1 I only the most salient points of a career extending 5, , QQ ' over a period of three years. If we should attempt ,. Q a full discussion, it would be ditlicult to confine our X - . narrative to any reasonable space. Usually the his- torian of a senior class gives so much play to his imagination, that the truth is found in such perfect disguise as to be abso- lutely unrecognizable to the ordinary individual, and if, therefore, we do not sing our praises as loudly as precedent invites, bear in mind that we are confining ourselves strictly to facts, and that the glories of the class of nineteen hundred and five are excelled only by its modesty. We would not stoop to make our own glory conspicuous by heaping abuse upon rival classes, but it has always been our policy to encourage those who have aimed to imitate our Iiight with weaker wing? In the year of cur Lord, One Thousand Nine Hundred and Two, and in the ninth month thereof, there gathered together in the palatial halls of learning of the Kansas City School of Law, at Kansas City, the gateway of the West, the most distinguished group of young men that has ever been assembled since the history of the world first started upon its mad race with time. Strangers to each other-strangers to the mighty subject they proposed to master: gathered from the cities, from the villiages and from the farmsg branded with the wild-eyed, wondering stare that freshmen are always prone to wear: profusely adorned with green-in fact a typical freshman class, yet even at this embryonic period, even at its inception, the class of nineteen hundred five of the Kansas City School of Law possessed that indescribable something that would cause even the most casual obser- ver to pause for a second scrutiny and say to himself: Behold, these are meng their deeds will be mighty as the thunder of J ove, and aslnumberless as the sands of the sea will be their accomplishments. Even at its first roll- call the air was pe1'meated with ambition, with the noxious odor of Duke's Mixture, and with high resolves, and e 'er the work of initiation was fairly begun, the class of 1905 was dubbed the banner class of this grand old insti- tution of learning, and who can say that it has not borne its laurels with fl x., s 43 beiitting grace and dignity. Right royally has it fulfilled the rare promise that was prophesied for it. In class work, in literary work, in debates, in entertainments,--in short, in all things that enter into the history of a class or of a school, old naughty live has been weighed and found not wanting. Classes have arisen, flourished, fulfilled their destiny, and in peace departed, but naught remains to mark the field of their ethereal activity, save the time-worn, faded pic- tures that have been allowed to hang from the walls of these historic halls. Time may bring forth a class whose personnel will stand the racking ordeal of public scrutiny, but the one class whose record will stand out pre-emi- nent in the annals of this Temple of Legal Learningg the one class that has established that upon which every law of every land depends, precedent, is that class that has won the enviable pseudonym, the class that does things, the incomparable 1905. Who was it that always repelled the as- saults of the sturdy freshmen and drove them back to their quarters in ignominious defeat? From whence the silver-tongued orators that wrested from every competitor the laurels of the debate? Who was it that ever ex- celled in scholarship and learning ? Who was it that inaugurated a system of smokers and fraternal assemblies that have marked a new departure in the college life? To whom belongs the credit of the first Class Annual? The answer to all of these and a, thousand other similar queries must ever be found in the magic words. the Class of 1905. But why saymore? The English language contains no expression that will aptly portray the glories of that magnificent student body. Suflice it to say, that had Diogenes of old, in his life-long search. wandered, perchance, into the presence of that exalted assemblage, a look of ultra satisfaction would have appeared upon his wrinkled countenance, and he would have seen, not by the light of his iiickering lantern, but by the brilliant glow of intelligence fand electric lightl, not one only, but three-score creatures of heavenly mould, who would bear with becoming grace the denomination of men. 44 ? ESQ, 'N N fe X AT ! 49 --1 Ballintine, Frank John. . . Brison, William Morgan .... Bever, L. R ......... .. Burns, George Calvin .... Blum, Edward Young... .. Barkyoumb. W A. ........ . Crutcher, Loving Trevelyn .... Capron, Clarence Albert ..... Davis, Roy S .............. Davey, James .........,...... Ferguson, Clifford Elmo .... Fox, James Peter ...... Fulton, Lawrence Kirby ........ Griffin, Willard Hill .... .... . . JUNIOR CLASS. Ui' Garnett, Muscoe Russell Hunter .... Gauss, John James ............ Green, Harry Lincoln ......... Gossett, Claude Stone .... Howard, Elmer ....... .... Howard, Everett Burgess .... Hibner, Ole ................ Howell, John Henry ...,... Huff, Paul Ermond ........... Heene, Emiliene Jeanette .... Henderson, Cree John ...... Higgins, Richard ....... .... Hill, George Cleveland ........ Leary. Howard Archibald ..... Landrey, Joseph Lafayette .... Lane, Frank ................. Langsdale, Clifton ......... Laurens, Henry Le Roy . Richardson, Perle E ........ Ralls, Lemuel Leroy ..... Ryan. Harvey Lesley. . Riley, John Linus ........ Shaffner, Cyrus W ........... Solan, George William ....... Shubert, Leon Willard .... .... Screechfield, Ulysus Allison .... Standish, Roy B ........... . Talbott, Ingram J... ...... Thompson, Charles Edward .... Thorne, John R ....... ....... Vieregg, Charles Frederick .... Vieregg, Walter Lee ......... Virgin, Pittman Spencer ..... Wade, James Oscar .......... Witherspoon, Frank, Jr ..... Withrow, Roe Everett ...... Woodson, Aytch Perrin .... Wolford, Clarence ........... Winant, Frank Ingersoll 46 .Kansas City, Mo .Kansas City, Mo ....t.'edar Rapids, Ia Kansas City, Kas ....Kansas City, Kas .Kansas City, Mo .Kansas City, Mo .Kansas City, Mo .Kansas City, Mo . . . . .Kansas City, Mo .....Kansas City, Mo .Kansas City, Kas .Kansas City, Mo .Kansas City, Mo .Kansas City, Mo Kansas City, Kas .Kansas City, Mo .Kansas City, Mo Kansas City, Kas .Kansas City, Mo ......Olathe, Kas .Kansas City, Mo Kansas City, Kas .Kansas City, Mo .Kansas City, Mo Kansas City, Kas .Kansas City, Mo ....Kansas City, Kas .. ..-xrgentine, Kas .Kansas City, Mo Kansas City, Mo . Livingston, Neb Kansas City, Kas Kansas City, Kas ......Parsons, Kas .......Paola, Kas ..........Olathe,Kas .Kansas City, Mo ....Bracken, Neb .. . .Kansas City, Kas .Kansas City, Mo Kansas City, Kas Kansas City, Kas .. .. Olathe, Kas .Kansas City, Mo .Kansas City, Mo ...Argentine, Kas .Kansas City, Mo .Kansas City, Mo .Kansas City, Mo .Kansas City, Mo .Kansas City, Mo .Kansas City. Mo f f . Frank XVit.he1'spoon, Jr., L. T. Crutcher, V.-President. Secretary. G. T. Hill, Clifton Langsdale, A. P. Woodson, Se1'gea.nn-an-Arms. President. 'l'rea.suver. 47 HISTORY OF THE CLASS OF l906. F i HE month of September, 1903, should be remembered by every student of the Kansas City School of Law. Yea, ,ve it should be stamped in letters of gold on the brightest ', page of the history of this institution. It is needless for I n W me to give the reason to any thinking man, but for fear 'ji 'aa NXA that some bigoted senior or shamrock freshman should '- I gaze in blank ignorance at the above statement, I shall Q in say that it was during that month that the class of 1906 assumed the arduous duties of raising the standard and spreading the fame of the Kansas City School of Law. The leaves had not yet changed their green for the red and brown of autumn when this precocious class cast aside their emerald hue and gave outward manifestations of much gray matter. Mr. Borland saw he would have to make use of all his knowledge of Blackstone to answer some of their wonderful questions. Mr. Ingraham, it is understood on good authority, sincerely considered submitting some of the city's most intricate legal problems to the class of 1906 for solution. The members of the ex-freshmen class were the only ones too dense to recognize our superiority. They were presumptious enough to contest for places on the debating team, which afterward lowered the class of the Uni- versity of Missouri. It is useless to chronicle the result of that contest. We gave them one place merely that the team might represent the entire school and not one class. The faculty begged us this year to give the sen- iors and freshmen a chance, we let them have the places on the debating team. We could easily have captured them all. We have learned the Rule in Shelley's Case as applied in Missouri and think that it should be changed. There are several other rules of law in this state that do not meet with our approval. We intend to instruct the next General Assembly to correct them. This matter is now in the hands of our learned member, Mr. Winants. We have not allowed the greed for gold to warp our reason-Weill take silver or even bank notes. Yea, we intend to close our fists on all the green- backs that come our way while we are young and to keep it up when we get old. We wait in dread for what may happen when the class of 1905 turns all its ravenous wolves loose upon the unsuspecting public. We hope that the citizens of this state will not accept them as representatives of our sCh001 but will wait until we graduate. , We believe that the prominence of the members of the new J unlor Class of the Kansas City School of Law will continue in after years 3 that whether they be before the bar, in public life, or in the halls of Congress, they will command the respect and admiration of their associates. . Meanwhile, we shall continue the more humble service of lnstructmg the faculty and shall consent to answer their simple questions for another year. II 48 II A fa fN A FE VK f lwfw' N4 X ' WMM 1 gg.- NlklmQ 4 I 1 I t i- ts.. 1 5 E ! .S-Q4 'i ' fi.-Ili f ' f' I 1 :INN 5 5 5 u ii :fd ' xg lf, 5?-'3'-If xg 1, X-'15 S 2 3 Z I I 2--'Z 'R J! F 4 4 'L , v X. I A , Q .47 ' L WMI P FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS. R. M. SCARLET1' .... E. C. HAMILTON .... H. J. EMERSON G. M. F1-JNNIQR .... A. E. BRIGGS 1 ii CLASS. Adams, John Wash ...... .... ............... Anderson, Roscoe Florence ..... Briggs, Arthur Elbert ......... Bowers, Earl Eugene ........ Burk, Harry Lee ....... Brown, James Ernest .... Brown, Morland ..... Bell, Roy Hall ......... Ball, Eugene Edward .... Buchanan, Walter Il. .. Bruner, Ira Faust ....... Booth, Leonard lloscoe ..... Chastain, Willis Alfred ..... Costello, Patrick Henry ..... Cochran, J. A ............ ....... Drouillard, George Clitford .... Dabney. Frank Cornelius ..... Daly, Robert Emmett .... De Vault, Roy Newton .... De Coursey, James Henry. .. Emerson, Harvey James ..... Field, Percy Coleman ..... Fenner, George Meddill. .. . Gilbreath, Ellis W ......... Glore, Franklin Darian ..... Greer, Harry John ........ Gregory, Turner G ...... Hamilton, Eugene Clay .. Hepner, Leon Benjamin ..... 50 . . . . . . .Pl'CSllfl6'7lC.. . . . Vice-President. . . . . .SccretcL'ry. . . . . . . . . Treasurer. Sergeant-At-Arms. ....Kansas City, Mo .....La Belle, Mo ......Parsons, Kas ....Kansas City, Mo .. .Kansas City, Mo ....Kansas City, Kas .....Norbourne, Mo ....Ka.nsas City, Mo . ..Kansas City, Mo .........Lawson, Mo. ....Kansas City, Mo .....Billings, Mont Marshall, Mo ....Kansas City, Mo. ....Kansa.s City, Mo ,.....Cincinnati, O ....Kansas City, Mo ...Kansas City, Mo ......'Ocheltree, Kas ....Leavenworth, Kas ....Kansas City, Kas ....Kansas City, Mo ....Kansas City, Mo Kansas City, Mo .....Flemington, Mo . . . .Kansas City, Mo . .... Carrollton, Mo Independence, Mo .. ..... Denver, Colo Hogsett, William Sloan ..... James, Jesse Edwards ...... Kennedy, Walter Bayne ..... Keagle, Edward Wilson ..... Levin, Morris J .............. Lathrop, William Burrill .... Lyons, William Edward .... Lade, William. ......... .. Moore, Samuel Aaron .... Menny, Alfred Joseph .... Means, Carl Bell ...... Q. . . Madden, Louis P ............. Mulford, George Herbert... Marquis, Richard McClelland .. McClanahan, Anthony Robinson .... . McCarty, William Joseph ...... McMahon, Joseph Frederick .... McCombs, Don C . . .... .... . . McAndrew, Cora ............... McFelea, Bluford Alexander .... Nevin, Edward Patrick. . .... .. Nowling, Henry C .......... Ogilvy, Robert Samuel ..... Orear, Marvin Luther .... Plummer, Benjamin A .... . Platter, Robert Richard. . . Pratt, Thomas Carlyle ..... Rackerby, Susan Henry .... Rhoades, Herbert ......... Reed, William Haley ..... Shepek, John .... .. ....... .. Sweeney, Thomas Edward ...... Schweizer, Karl Frederick ...... Scarlett, Raymond McMurray ..... . . Smith, Lathrop .................. Skinner, Alton Headlee ....... Sparks, Marion Wallis ..... Staggers, John W ........ Stewart, Jr., Samuel ..... Thorne, Bert .......... Waggoner, Albert ..... Wagner, Joe Macom .... Wood, Ira Hubert ....... Wood, Charles Knapp .... Ziefle, William .......... .Kansas City, Mo .Kansas City, Mo. .Kansas City, Mo ...... Marseilles, Ill Kansas City, Kas .Kansas City, Mo .Kansas City, Mo .Kansas City, Mo ...Boicourt, Kas .Kansas City, Mo Kansas City, Kas .Kansas City, Mo .Kansas City, Mo ......Chicago, Ill ...Versailles, Mo ......Bethel, Kas Kansas City, Kas Kansas City, Kas .Kansas City, Mo .Kansas City, Mo .Kansas City, Mo .Kansas City, Mo .....Topeka, Kas .......Slater, Mo .Kansas City, Mo Kansas City, Kas ....Carthage, Mo. .Kansas City, Mo ......Fairfax, Mo .....Soldier, Kas Kansas City, Kas Kansas City, Kas. .Kansas City, Mo ....Sterling, O. T. .Kansas City, Mo. .Merriam, Kas. ....Marshall, Mo. Wheeling, W. Va. Kansas City, Kas. Wainwright, Kas. .Kansas City, Mo. . ...Sedalia, Mo. .Kansas City, Mo. Kansas City, Kas. ......Liberty, Mo. . THE FRESHMAN CLASS. il if HE Freshman Class, which is the largest division of the school, l- entered upon its work with an enrollment of seventy-iive mem- bers, of which seventy-three were young men, and the remain- ing two young ladies. While most of them reside temporarily ' in Kansas City or suburban towns, their homes are scattered throughout Missouri and Kansas, and in some instances, they come from the east as far as West Virginia, and from the west as far as Idahog so that in this mixed aggregation of citizens there may be seen those varied types of young manhood and womanhood common to our country, who, dependent for the most part upon their own resources, are striving toward the end of a fuller education, and that training in the law which now seems almost a prerequisite for the successful prosecution of com- mercial, as well as professional interests. Although the work proper began with the opening of school on Sep- tember 26 the class organization was not perfected until October 17, when it was thought best by some enthusiastic members that a permanent class organization be brought about and pursuant to a call meeting on the night of October 12 these ideas were materialized in the election of Thos. E. Sweney as presidentg Mr. Skinner, vice-president: F. D. Glore, secretary. Since then R. S. Olgivy, and R. M. Scarlett have regularly succeeded to the administration of the aifairs of the organization, and their able eiforts coupled with those of the members have succeeded in putting it upon an enduring basisg and it is to be hoped that the good derived from the varied and spirited discussions that have arisen upon points of current interest as well as the free exchange of opinions on points in the law, all of which have been rendered in accordance with parliamentary law, 'and with the decorum befitting a deliberative body, will prove of lasting benefit, and serve them in duties lying beyond the class room, when they shall, not only as lawyers, but citizens and as men be called to those duties that may de- volve upon them in the defense of whatever interests may be committed to their keeping. In the work of the year, the utmost harmony has prevailed, not only between student and faculty, but between student and student, as Well as between class and class. May the Freshman Class be known as a body standing for whatever is honorable, whatever is begotten of industry and fair dealings, or that seems becoming to those who have in contemplation the worl: of a profession so exalted as the practice of the law. 0 U 7 52 1 jk 'N if 5 M4-,ff SECOND M. S. U. LAW SCHOOL-KANSAS CITY SCHOOL OF LAW DEBATE. 3' 9 HELD IN CARROLLTON, MO., APRIL, 1902. QUESTION Resolved, That the combinations of individual industries into aggrega tions, commonly known as trusts, are detrimental to the industrial wel- fare of our country. Aliirmamlve: Negative: C. S. MARSH, H. E. DEAN, E. G. WAGNEII, of M. S. U. CLIFFORD SNOW, of K. C. L. S. E. T. CORLEY, W. H. HALLETT, Decision for the Negative. JUDGES: CAPTAIN WILLIAM EADS, JUDGE CUNNINGHAM, MR. NOBLE PRENTISS. 5 4 THIRD M. S. U. LAW SCHOOL-KANSAS CITY SCHOOL OF LAW DEBATE. if HELD IN AUDITORIUM, PEPPER BUILDING, KANSAS CITY, MARCH 13, 1903. QUESTION : Resolved, That the Monroe Doctrine has been weakened by the acquisi tion by the United States of Asiatic Colonies. Ajfirmative: Negative: F. A. THORNTON, L. C. ORR, J. H. JOHNSON, of M. S. U. C. W. BRUNN, of K. C. S. L. G. W. SOMMER, H. C. DONOHO, Decision for the Affirmative. I JUDGES: MAJOR WILLIAM WARNER, HON. J. MOD. TRIMBLE, HON. E. W. STEPHENS, of Columbia. 55 KANSAS CITY UNIVERSITY-KANSAS CITY SCHOOL OF LAW DEBATE. 1 9 HELD IN AUDITORIUM OF PORTSMOUTH B UILDING, KANSAS CITY, KAS., 1903. QUESTION: Resolved, That the policy of the United States toward the Latin-Aineri can Republics should be Such as will lead to their absorption. A,17'irma6ive.' Negative' S. B. STEPHENS, P. S. CONYVELL, I Q M. N WOOD, of K. C. U. E. M. NIESSACAR, -of K. C S. L. A. E. BRIGGS, V. A. DAVIS, S Decision for the Negative. JUDGES: HON. E. A. ENR.lG-HT, HON. W. F. GrU'l'HRIE. V L. W. KEPLINGER. 56 H. M. Boyle. S. B. SLI-phens. Frank NViLi10l'S13OOD, Jr. FOURTH M. S. U. LAW SCHOOL-KANSAS CITY SCHOOL OF LAW DEBATE. 3' if HIIJIID IN UNIvI+:usmfY AIIDITOIIILIM, COLUMBIA, Mo., APRIL 18, 1904. QUESTION . Resolved, That an appeal in crimiiml cases as :I Inattzer of right, should be abolished. A f1i'1'lllllHI.7l'.' Myjative : E, E. PEAIIUY, of S. B. STIQPHIQNS, '05, f E. A. GIIIIIIQN, M S U H. M. BOYLIQ, '05, K COS L FIIED KIcI,SI+:Y, ' ' ' ' FRANK WI'1'HERsPooN,JIz., '06, ' W' ' ' Decision for the Negative. JUDGES : HON. C. J. NVAIJIQEII, of Columbia, NIAJOR. .'l'. F. MISTIIIII, of Kansas City, W. E. CURTIS, of the St. Louis School of Law. 57 O. D. Leming. J. L. Hogin. M. D. Pypes. FIRST INTER-CLASS DEBATE. 51 il HELD IN MUSIC HALL, KANSAS CITY, Mo., JUNE 3, 1904. QUESTION: ' Resolved, That the senators of the United States should direct, popular vote of the people. be elected by Affirmative: Negative: JAMES L. HOGIN, U. A. SCEEECHFIELD, OAKLEY D. LEMING, Class of '05. HOWARD C. WILSON, Class of '06. MEL. D. PYPES, JOHN. J. GAUSS, Decision for the Affirmative. J UDGES : JUDGE ANDREW F. EVANS, MAYOR JAMES A. REED, JUDGE WILLIAM G. HOLT, of Kansas City, Kansas. 59 HOW WE TWISTED THE TIGEFPS TAIL. 5 i HERE is an exception to each and every rule, and conse- - quently the rule that Anticipation is greater than real- ' izationf' is like unto all others. Therefore, the writer , begs of you the closest attention to all that is herein written, with the request that you be kind enough to ' read between the lines, in order that you may the better l----- understand those things which of necessity were omitted. On the morning of April 18th, of the year 1904, a goodly number of promising young lawyers awakened, and looked out upon a day of more than ordinary splendor. Each and every one was happy because of the thought that on such a day they as delegates of the Law School of Kansas City, Missouri, were to meet and defeat the worthy debating team of the Colum- bia Law School. l' if - .,,, fl A 'lwll ' I' Q, V' lhnniaii-Ll f f' .r.'.::'f '- . , , s- - W - CMV ' X ' i MQ f , 1 , . 1 qpfay, ' f' Long before the time for the departure of the train, one of the mem- bers of this ardent delegation meandered stationward just to see perchance what might be doing. Sauntering through the costly and enormous Union Depot he had the good fortune to meet one of the most distinguished and beloved members of the Faculty, accompanied by a most learned and courtly gentleman who proved to be one of the judges for the debate. In the course ofa conversation it was deemed best that some refreshments be taken, and as it was but a short distance to some such furnishing house, We were soon busy discussing the coming success of our debating team. After returning to the depot more delegates were found, and a jolly and happy crowd took charge of the entire car. As soon as the train was in motion we broke up into small groups for the purpose of discussing questions worthy of minds well trained in the Legal Profession, and also the making of plans for the downfall of the Foe. We thought that it would 61 not be necessary to leave the train until the time to change cars rolled around, but the pangs of hunger soon made themselves felt, and as there was no chance to get a bite on the train, despair reigned supreme. In fact it had reached such a pitch that when the honorable member of the Faculty, above mentioned, generously suggested that lunch could be se- cured and the expense would be on him, many were actually caught with tears in their eyes. Just picture to yourself some ten or more hungry men trying to satisfy enormous appetites in fifteen minutes, and you have a scene not to be forgotten. Off again, on again, moving. Again on our way to the den which held the Foe. Only a short run and we were met by a crowd of young men who very graciously took us to our hotel, then towed us around in order that we might see and be seen. All the time this process was going OH they were smiling upon us with pity in their eyes, seeming to say, Just wait until to-night. Never once did we falter, and the more pity shown, the more determined were we to win, one of the contestants going so far A7 7 ' M AL 7 f ,. of 4 4 Q .9 ,gg if X 01 14' ?',Qi?,? i,,,W:f1Z ,W W X M W i7 Z W S , ,.,, , 2 .fl ,jg ,512 ' at N' ' UW 5' , LQx . as to say: It is do or be done, no mercy shall be shown, no avenue of escape shall be left unclosed. Those not contestants knowing that to the vigilant is given the reward, familiarized themselves with the ins and outs of that good old college town, and finding same deficient in many ways after the hour of twelve, had made provision for an after-debate jollification. This had hardly been accom- plished when it was time for the debate, and as, on to the debate seemed to be the cry of each and every one, on to the debate it was. After reach- ing the debating hall, many were struck with the absence of reference books dislayed by our team, only a pitcher of water and a glass being in evidence on the table reserved for them, while reference books piled one upon the other, together with journals, etc., were very much in evidence on the table of the other team. This was at once very encouraging to us, for the reason that it seemed to indicate that our team had the facts in their heads, While the other team did not, and probably would not, have t em. Many were the yells given by the members of that good old school, but not a return yell from us, for the reason that we knew we would win 62 and wanted to save our voices until the proper time. During this tumultu- ous yelling the contestants walked to their respective places and the battle was on. Not once did our team waverg always and at all times they per- sistently and relentlessly pounded the Foe. . At the close of the debate an intense silence pervaded the hall, hardly a word was spoken while the judges were making up their minds as to how they could best break the news of defeat to the other team. Although the Columbia people thought they had an easy victory because of the confidence they had in their own debaters, we were certain of victory because of the ease with which each of our debaters disposed of his opponent's argument, the vast superiority of the delivery. and finally the overwhelming and crushing blow given the entire argument of the opposing team by our rebuttal speaker. At last the judges gave their decision which of course was in our favor. In truth, we Won in a walkover. When we found it out, although few in number, we made those old Walls open their ears for some of the most original and piercing yells ever before given there. Victory was ours and much sweet- er than we had ever anticipated, and with smiles on our faces we went joy- ously to the banquet so generously prepared for us by the defeated Foe. That was indeed a feast, a most enjoyable social gathering. Around that ,l 45g- f ' - P : -- W A - wa ' . Ti L .Q Aj ! . .- '41,- Q-iVb4 I N -iu.::ceggf, . rye g r tllllllllll , 54.33,-L J' f ' i. 3 . i - ,wwk .f Wa- mtt alxff tr., A mn: i wif' Writ lll l'5 l ill W i Q - 6 er if-'i ii - XLS if A J gig' I festive board were men of famed repute, and many words of good, sound advice were greedily grasped and stored away for future reference by that student body. Passing now to the time when all formalities were over, our litt e group of victorious men talked of the success so well earned, and waited for the tardy members of the bunch. When all had reported, as one man we filed into the room wherein had been stored the jolliication material before mentioned, and proceeded to talk over success hoped for in the future. Gradually this happy little bunch began to break up: but those who retired were deprived of the best part of the entertainment. The hotel clerk who had been invited to join in the jolliiication for various reasons became pol- luted and when we endeavored to give him a cold bath, became unmanage- able, turned on the scalding hot water, and climbed in. Oh my! Did he want out? Well, --Yes. Could he get out? Well, lNo. Why? Well,--the sides of the tub were too high. After he was a beautiful pink color, however, he managed a successful leap over the edge of the tub, and so far as we could see, was none the worse off. Next-dressing-more fun. At last we succeeded in getting him back to work. No sooner had 63 we arranged ourselves at the breakfast table than he was upon us begging for the material which had been left over from the night before. Promises failed to satisfy, so one of the bunch had to give him that which he so much desired and which eventually made him, in his own mind at least, ' Monarch of all he surveyed. After breakfast a morning drive was participated in by such of us as had been able to persuade the fairer sex that same was necessary for health, beauty and happiness. That was a drive well worth remembering, for it gave to all participants a feeling of ecstasy not experienced more than once or twice in a life-time, putting every one in a good humor, and furnishing an appetite which was amply satisfied by the sumptuous dinner given us by the Sigma Chi Fraternity. With hardly time in which to catch our train, we hurried to the hotel to square accounts and say good-bye to those who had been so considerate of our every need. We left on time. A jolly bunch of college men wished us good luck and future success. The minute the town was left behind every one began 9- ,,- R P---N M -l f-ix R--..f',72 N fx'-kk f-. 9--R 1' X K I . in A Q. ,L A x .-'I B 1 X ,LQ , M '-. l f' ..f- J ' vi, : ' u Z ' .K 0 5 a s r i' i I,-1. 1' fc- 4a x gas, ' fgPf'4f, . .. .-'fa-iggQ4,.. 1 5 -'- J j- ,fi 1 6 -1,5321 ill r Sai 1' ffiyff naming: aww A ' - fin - Lf-'JY W i.-. f ff ' Iffff fjfsefxg fi.. c if 'Z f 0 19' ' N' ,G W... to keep his eye ope11 for blind tigers, thinking it would be a pity to let one go by without at least trying to do something for it. The general hilarity and good spirits of this bunch might well make even a BLIND TIGER sit up and take notice, for when good fellows get together--well, I guess you know the rest. The journey seemed a short one, and the conductor yelled Union Depot, before we had barely finished congratulating one another. - With a warning shriek, a large amount of puffing and blowing, the great engine pulled us into Kansas City at last. A great scramble then ensued, each fellow seeming to think it is his particular privilege to get off the train first. At length, those whose physical mechanism would per- mit it, boarded the cars bound for town, the others decided to honor the depot by remaining there, or near there, until dawn should tint the sky with pink and gold, and the sun should furnish a few straggling rays of light by means of which they could find their respective homes. A tired, but happy bunch were we, ready then, now and for all time to come, to give three rousing cheers for the Kansas City School of Law, its Faculty, and its Students. 64 Q Q PDGQUOSQUUUQUS Q Q EQUITY-A SOLILOQUY. 5' il With Apologakes to Hamlet. Equity original, or equity swiped from the book, That is the question. Whether 't is easier as a general proposition to suffer The onslaughts and attacks of outrageous Holmes, Or to make a stab at a sea of questions And by good guessing end them. To ilunkg to fail 3 No more g and by a tlunk to say we end The headache, and the dozen dismal dumps That Equity students fall heir to, 't is an examination Devoutly to be shun'd : To ilunkg to fail, To tlunk 3 possibly to pass 3 ay, there 's the rub 3 For in a dream of success what visions may come, When we have fought for twenty weeks this infernal subject Pray give us a rest : There 's the prospect That Holmes will use Bispham's words for his long life g For who would understand Fraud g actual or implied, The Junior 's horror and the Senior's nightmare, The pangs of Accident, the laws delay, The troubles of Mistake, and the surprises That he on the unwary springs, If he should his own lectures make Without a Bispham? Who would the chances take To grunt and sweat under a heavy exam, But for the hope of a diploma after all. The undiscovered grade from whose depths No Senior expected to return, puzzles him still, And makes us rather bear the grades we have Than fly to others that We know not of. Thus Equity does make cowards of us all And thus our ponies and cuff mark memo's Are knocked awry by our cold inquisitor, And the answers, in our dome of thought, Loose the name of action. Soft you now! The fair executioner! Holmes in thy dear dreams Be all the Seniors remembered. 66 Play a little ping-pong, Have a little chat, Make a little chocolate fudge, Then go find your hat. Say you 've had a jolly time. - As she waves her fan, Now, is n't that exciting sport To tempt a healthy man. -Lovvlngly Dedicated to Jerry McPhe'rson. Any old plug can get along if he pounds away hard enough, but only the brilliant man can bat around half the night and accomplish great things next day. . -Ah there, Rowell! Sanford woke on Jan. Hrst and felt queer 3 Said, Crackers I 'll swear off this year 5 For the lobster and the wine And the rabbit were line And it certainly was n't the beer. ' Some women talk a lot about wanting their own wayg but in most cases this is a reflection on their masters. Nearly every woman prefers to be bossed. It all depends on the way it is done. -Advabe to Billy Borland. At a baccalaureate sermon Mr. Snyder said, There, I will sneak out during this prayer! But the squeak of his shoes So enlivened the pews, That he sat down again in despair. , Marriage is like a charity bazaar-the admission fee is small but it will cost all you 've got before you get out. -Reflect-ion of J nn Green. Said the lady, With you I 'll not go, You ,re reported to be far from slow? Y Said Pypes, turning red, With a smile quite o'erspread- O madam, don't flatter me so!l' ' They say that Whisky inflames the stomach, beer produces Bright's disease, brandy ruins your kidneys, burgundy brings on the gout, and ab- sinthe destroys the brain. Now we know that typhoid and malaria lurk in water and tuberculosis in milk,-so what is a thirsty man to drink? - -Adams' Soliloquy. 67 Young Tschudy went out for a shoot, With a gun and a high rubber bootg He shot an old goat A guide and a shoat- But he 's best when he 's shooting the chute. After all there are some advantages about being a woman. She does not have to worry about having her trousers creased, her evening dress diiers from the servants, and if she is bow-legged every one does n't know it- -Mrs. Harris' defense of her sex. There once was a student named Dunn, Who always was out for the fun, Although it was said He was very well bred, He spent all his dough on a bunl'! Too much thinking leads to worry, too much planning ends in disap- pointment, and too much ambition destroys the last hope of happiness. -Warning to Tlmvvnond. It was Davidson who said, Oh, Why lucre 's so 'filthy and low! But his friends said, Oh shoo ! That is too good to be true-- You can bet that he's after the dough ! Temperance may be a beautiful principle, but nothing so cements friendship as the contents of a stein of beer. More beer, more friendship. -Recommenclation to Smoker Committee. Mr. Snyder: Do you mean to say that if a man had a residence on the top of a hill and a street were cut through which would transform that happy home into a light-house, that he would not be entitled to an adequate compensation ? Facetious Senior : Well, that family might do light housekeeping. First man-in answering a question which can be answered by yes or no- yes sir. Second man-answering same question- no sir. Jno. W.- That 's right, take the other shoot, girl or boy. 68 James L. I-login was born in Parisburg, on the Island of Ka Choo, in 1732. He is employed in Kansas City, Kansas as criminal engineer. He contemplates practicing law in Manilla. God made the moon and stars and sky, He made the Earth so fairg He first made things of beauty, And then made Davidson's hair. -Anon. Edmund E. Morris was born in the year 1492 at Madrid, Spain. He was educated at the inquisition. He was later shipped to America and is now engaged in the capacity of snitch.?' John Edward McPherson, A fine looking person, Our President in the past. He kicked up a fuss, This tailor-made cuss, With a parliamentary lass. She amended his motion, To suit her own notion, And taxed up the costs to the class. The cat that tried to stop the water-wheel learned considerable in a few brief moments, but knowledge ain't Worth much to a dead cat. The above applies aptly to an Equity quizz. Professor: What is the action which lay for the recovery of the possession of land, and for damages for its unlawful detention? Student: CPursuant to much coachingl Injection The class of 1905, unlike anything else in nature, was larger at the time of its birth than at any other time in its eventful existence. All men that are ruined are ruined on the side of their natural pro- pensities. -Imrke. Sheepskin, 5610-00- 69 - In - -.-- -1 ,---- - , - ee ' .JJ ifr x R' 4 2 4 if ' '51-tBDUT ON THE erfi ifATlO'f-ff-f ' Wasp-Y OTH EP HAND ax -1- f-A ' ' -4 -N ' N' wwf' Ev . 5-YAW-L,-,..,f:.. Il- ,, 'WE ,f 59 men' LIENT - l R N 'L x -1'-3 6uPPE---l ,. pfrervi lifegu i I 0 ' N COURT 5 n V1 HHNDOFW? Q gi F? 5 THE LA Q! CSPITAL f-A UNISHMENT 13 . if- K Truim Woui mmeas W THE PRovE X .V EN PINS x Q I xN,f J gff 1 pf? Lfagfmr L J THE SMOKER. QWIIIL apologies to liol Browrul A smoakir ave a plase whei' men go tu git drunk without glfeiibllll puld. they are segars and booz and things tu ete. we had one OIICL butt sum ov the fakultie cum whitch wer unfor- tunit fer they wuddunt. leave us hav inutch booz whiteh they wisht fer thereselfs. we had 3 nigcrs whitch plaid and sung on a gitar. mister neel toald a funy stoarie about a nigei' and the nigers didunt like it inutch fer a while and then they likt it sum bettir. when the booz and limburgii' wuz all et up the fellers put a fu segars in there pockits and went tu hoammutch refrecht inentily and tisickly ecksept jim hoggin what are desent and doant smoak. we hoap tu hav anothir smn day. p. s. the next day wuz sunday butt lhey wuzunt maney ov us what feltlike goin to sabeth skule. RECOLLECTIONS. il 0 Those years of school were very short, Their flight was all too fastg But in them, many years will linger, Fond memories of the past. In days to come, in retrospect We'll think of them again, And a longing will come o'er us, A longing-'most a. pain. There's Oakley DeLawter Leming, And Melanchton Defoe Pypes, And Clemence Peter Ehinger Whom everybody likes. 'We 'll ne'er forget Jim Hogin, Nor Davidson, nor Dunn, Three better fellows never lived, They were always full of fun. To be sure, there 's Stubert Stephens, An educated cuss, But his university manners Soon vanished, when he mixed with us. When we think of A. V. Thurmond, We again with mirth are filled How he Went down 'neath the table To recover what he spilled. Then there 's Bodwell, Boyle and Manard And J. E. fJerryJ McPherson: These dudes gave much attention To the appearance of their person. And so on ad infinitum, We can go clear down the line And remember every fellow, Friends of the good old time. 71 When we went to school together, At the K. C. School of Law, VVhere we studied hard what Kent said, In the village on the Kaw. VVhere we heard what D. B. Holmes read About Equity's bitter pills, And listened to Dean Borland When l1e howled concerning willS. Those were great, great days, those school And we hate to see them passg For we 'll ne'er again meet together, As we used to do in class. And we 'll never iind such friends again, No matter where we seek, As the friends we made at Law School YVhere we met three times a week. 1 C '72 days .Zi I JKINEM 52 DEATEM IPIPAE Sa Z ' V T 59 f5,:L?? .Li-F I Q U -5 gFgf1,fFf ffm' 73 X pi'- ' ftl. f rm .lv -Lwu ., r aw Q fiw' 4 'My NW S? 'v bfX'2f. ' Z-' 4,00 'Q' , ggy Q . 2 if OFFICERS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION. il ii MISS TIARA FA1mow. .... . ..... President MR. CLARE L. McAuTHU1e... .... Vice-President 74 CLASS OF l903. ii BERGEJHENRY C., General Practice and Collections, Attorney, member of firm of Berge Ez Cell, 505 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. ' BIRD, DANIEL E., General Practice, Attor- Hey! 518 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. BOXLEY, FREDERICK A., General Prac- tice, Attorney, with G. B. Silverman, 532 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. A BRUNN, CHAS. W., General Practice: At- torney, with English 8: English, 514 Kem- per Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. CELL, JOHN F., Commercial Law, Attor- ney, member of firm of Berge 82 Cell, 505 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. CLARK, CHESTER CHARLES, Dentist, 207 New Ridge Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. CLARK, FRANK F., Railway Mail'Service, residence, 3237 Garner Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. CONWELL, PAUL S., Attorney, with Wag- gener, Doster Kc Orr, Law Dept., Mo. Pac. Ry. Co., Atchison, Kas. DAVIS, VINCENT A., General Practice, At- torney, member of firm of Davis QV. A., '03l 8: Waldon Uno. L., '03J, Lee's Sum- mit, Mo. DONOHO, Harry C., Attorney, member of firm of Guyer CU. S., '02J 8: Donoho KH. C., '03J, 642 Minnesota Avenue., Kansas City, Kas. ENDERLEIN, THEODORE H., Stenogra- pher, Studebaker Bros. Mfg. Co., resi- dence, 706 E. 14th St., Kansas City, Mo. ESTILL, JAMES WILLIAM, General Prac- tice, Attorney, member of firm of Estill 8: Estill, 512 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. FAIR, JACOB E., General Practice, Attor- ney, 615 American Bank Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. FARROW, MISS M. TIERA, Bookkeeper and Stenographer, Kansas State Grain Inspec. Dept., 306 Husted Bldg., Kansas City, Kas. FUNK, CHARLES M., City Salesman Star Coal Co., 202 New England Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. GARNETT, GORDON R., Abstracter, Union Abstract Co., 717 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. 75 GENTRY, ARTIE M., Real Estate, with E. S. Truitt 62 Co., 21 E. 9th Street, Kansas City, Mo. GILLHAM, NEWTON C., General Practice, Attorney, with Porteriield, Sawyer Ea Con- rad, 603-5 Dwight Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. GILMER, .IAMES C., Attorney, member of firm of Gilmer 8: Gilmer, Real Estate and Insurance, 424 Westport Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. ' HALL, CLARENCE R., Clerk, Law Depart- ment, K. C. So. Ry., residence, 521 Pros- pect Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. I-IARDIN, JOHN H., Commercial Law, At- torney, ofiices with Albert M. Ott, Chris- man-Sawyer Bank Bldg., Independence, Mo. HAVERFIELD, GILBERT W., General Prac- tice, Attorney, 527-9 New York Lite Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. HAYDON, L. M., General Practice, Attor- ney, 43 Water Works Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. I-IENRY, CARL J., General Practice, Attor- ney, Butler, Mo. HOCHLAND, OSCAR, General Practice, At- torney, 527-9 New York Life Bldg., Kan- sas City, Mo. HOGAN, J. W. S., General Practice, Attor- ney, with R. J. Holmden, 713 New York I.-ife Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. HOGE, HOWARD C., Proprietor, Wilson Laundry Co., 1811 Grand Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. INGELS, EDWARD E., Bookkeeper and of- fice work, G. Bernheimer Sz Co., residence, 1221 Virginia Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. IVERS, JESSE, General Practice, Attorney, 409 S. Main Street, Carthage, Mo. KABURICK, EDWARD C., General Practice, Attorney, offices with Haff 8: Michaels, 521 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. KENNEDY, EDWARD P., Carrier, Postoflice, residence, 2722 Park Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. KERNECKEL, JULIAN J., Attorney, Port Arthur Townsite Co., 510 Gibraltar Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. KII ROY, JAMES L., Commercial Law, At- torney, with Gilmore Kr Brown, 510 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. LOGAN, CHARLES B.. General Practice: Attorney: otlices with C. W. Chase, 504 Heist Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. LOGAN, WM. J., Principal, Lowell School: residence, 1600 Minnesota Avenue, Kansas City, Kas. MANNING, CHARLES H., Clerk, Sirnonds- Shields Grain Company: residence, 3340 Charlotte Street, Kansas City, Mo. MATSON, MATTHEW L., Bookkeeper, Mor- ris, Butt 8: Miller: residence, 2125 C Sum- mit Street, Kansas City, Mo. MAY, LUCIAN E., Reporter, Daily Record: residence, 1324 Oak Street, Kansas City, Mo. McARTHUR, CLARE L., General Practice: Attorney: member of flrm ot' Whaley CN. C., '03J Sz McArthur CC. L., '03l, Lind- say, I. T. MESSECAR, EDWARD M., General Prac- tice: Attorney: 618 American Bank Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. MILLER, FESTUS O., Student of Stenogra- phy: residence, 1601 Harrison Street, Kan- sas City, Mo. MOORE, WM. B., Attorney: Turner Block, Muskogee, I. T. NIPP, JOHN C., General Practice: Attorney: 310 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. NOLAND, NICHOLAS F., Cashier, J. Rosen- baum Grain Co.: residence, 1201 Hasbrooke Place, Kansas City, Mo. NORTON, LEWIS B., Cashier and Book- keeper, Goffe, Lucas 8: Carkener, Grain Commission: residence, 1209 Cherry Street, Kansas City, Mo. ORR, CAMERON L., General Practice: At- torney: with Meservey, Pierce Ka Ger- man, 302-9 American Bank Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. OSBORN, JOSEPH B., Carpenter: residence, 1416 Forest. Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. PAI MER, HENRY C., Conductor, Union Pa- cific Ry. Co., 311 N. 17th Street, Kansas City, Kas. PERRY, JAMES G., General Practice: Attor- ney: member of firm of Perry Sc Perry, 648 Minnesota Avenue, Kansas City, Kas. PHILLIPS, CHARLES H., General Practice: Attorney: 618 American Bank Bldg., Kan- sas City, Mo. PUGH, CHAS. Y. O., Attorney: with L. A. Laughlin, 1042 New York Life Bldg., Kan- sas City, Mo. REES, CHARLES D., Collector: residence, 1512 Harrison Street, Kansas City, Mo. ROGERS, LEROY N., Pressman, Kansas City Journal, Kansas City, Mo. ROSE, CHARLES A., General Practice: At- torney for Retail Merchants' Association: Attorney: Havre, Mont. ' RUSH, ELMER E., Instructor, Central High School: residence, 526 Chestnut, Kansas City, Mo. SAMUEL, OWEN S., General Practice: At- torney: West 5th Avenue, Emporia, Kas. SMALL, CHARLES H., General Practice: Attorney: with Gage, Ladd 8x Small, 606 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. STALEY, E. H., General Practice: Attorney: 405 Heist Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. STRADER, ROBERT B., School-teacher: Pittsville, Mo. SUTHERLAND, JOHN S., Real Estate: 412 New York Lite Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. ULMAN, LEONARD, Stenographer: C. R. I. 8: P. Ry. Co.: residence, 712 E. 33d Street, Kansas City, Mo. VESPER, WALTER H., Country Collections: Deere 8x Webber Co., 1400 Fifth Avenue, South Minneapolis, Minn. WALDON, JOHN L., General Practice: At- torney: member of flrm of Davis QV. A., '03J 8: Waldon Uno. L., '03J, Lee's Sum- mit, Mo. WATSON, CLEM L., General Practice: At- torney: ofllces with E. L. House, 609 Bank of Commerce Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. WEl.SH, GEORGE WINSTON, General Prac- tice: Attorney: with Johnson 8: Lucas, 312 Keith 8: Perry Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. WESTPHAL, HERMAN LV., Correspondence Clerk, Crump Bros.: residence, 2217 N. Sacramento Street, Chicago, Ill. WHALEY, NATHANIEL C., General Prac- tice: Attorney: member of firm of Whaley KN. C., '03l 8: McArthur QC. L., '03J, Lind- say, I. T. WHERRY, ELI H., Assistant Claim Agent, Mo. Pac. Ry. Co., Iron Mountain Bldg., Little Rock, Ark. WIl.BUR, FRANKLIN W., General Prac- tice: Attorney: member of firm of Cromer, Mertsheimer 8z Wilbur, 320 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. WILLIAMS, MARSHALL .I., Accountant and Auditor for Fred Harvey: residence, 704 Troost Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. WILLIAMS, WEI.LS B., Creditman, Swift 8: Co.: residence, 704 Troost Avenue, Kan- sas City, Mo. WINFREY, NAPOLEON B., Physician: 509 Junction Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. WRIGHT, WM. A., General Practice: Attor- ney: with Karnes, New 8: Krauthoff, 604 Water Works Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. CLASS OF l902. 3' ATKINSON, JAMES Attorney, Shinn Sz Atkinson, Abstracts, Real Estate, Law and E Loans, 209 Main S:reet, Ottawa, Kas. BLOCH, LEON E., President Alumni Associ- ation, Manual Training High School, At- torney, with Wollman, Solomon 8: Cooper, General Practice and Titles, 45 Water Works Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. BROWN, OLAF G., General Practice, Attor- ney, member of firm of Brown 85 Brown, Granby, Mo. BROWN, WM. F., Clerk, Chicago, Milwau- kee Q St. Paul Ry. Co., 907 Main Street, Kansas City, Mo. BROWN, WM. J., General Practice, Attor- ney, member ot firm of Brown 8: Brown, Granby, Mo. CALVIN, WALTER W., General Practice, Attorney, member ot firm of Hamner, Hamner Sz Calvin, 448-49-50 Sheidley Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. CANNON, JOHN S., Drug Broker, Fisher Sz Cannon, residence, 1827 Independence Boulevard, Kansas City, Mo. CLEMENTS, MISS MARGARET, General Practice, Attorney, First National Bank Bldg., Independence, Mo. COFFIN, LEMUEL F., Proprietor, Ozark Restaurant, 1056 Union Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. CONELEY, MISS LYDA B., Instructor in Spalding's Commercial College, Kansas City, Mo. CRILEY, THEODORE M., Assistant Man- ager, Coates House, Kansas City, Mo. CRITES, FRED H., General Practice, At- torney, member of firm of Crites fFred H., '02J 8: Naber CE. E., '02J, 509 Temple Block, Kansas City, Mo. CROSBY, WM. EMMET, Corporation, Bay- cott and Anti-Trust Law, Attorney and Secretary National Association of Master Plumbers, 1109 McGee Street, Kansas City, Mo. DIETHER, WM. C., General Practice, At- torney, with Karnes, New at Krauthoft, 606 Water Works Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. DONNELLY, EDWARD P., General Prac- tice, Attorney, with A. S. Marley, 459 Kemper Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. 77 5 DUNLOP, CHARLES M., Real Estate, Kan sas City, Mo. DUNN, LEWIS C., General Practice, Attor- ney, offices with Kimbrell Sz Kimbrell, 935 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City Mo. DUVALL, GRABLE W., General Practice, Attorney, 509 American Bank Bldg., Kan- sas City, Mo. EVANS, FRED J., General Practice, Attor- ney, Washington, Kas. FORSEE, GEORGE H., Manager, Fair- banks, Morse Sz Co., 1.217-19 Union Ave- nue, Kansas City, Mo. FULTON, R. M., Postofiice Inspector, St. Louis, Mo. GLIDDEN, STERLING F., Railway Mail Service, residence, 1903 Stewart Avenue, Kansas City, Kas. GOBLE, CLAUDE T., Deputy Coroner Jack- son County, Mo., Attorney, 211 Chapman Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. GUYER, ULYSSES S., Attorney, member ot' firm of Guyer QU. S., 'OZD 8: Donohb IH, C., '03l, 642 Minnesota Avenue, Kan- sas City, Kas. HALSTEAD, EGBERT F., General Prac- tice, Attorney, member ot' flrm of Hal- stead 8: Ha'stead, 624 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. HAMNER, BURKS L., General Practice, Attorney, member ol' firm of Hamner, Hamner Ka Calvin, 448-9-50 Sheidley Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. HAYS, HERBERT F., Clerk, Armour Pkg. Co., residence, 2717 E. 12th Street, Kan- sas City, Mo. HENLEY, HARRY G., Circuit Clerk Jack- son County, Independence, Mo. HILLS, WM. H., Deputy County Attor- ney, Attorney, Room 15, Anheuser-Busch Bldg., Enid, Okla. HOLDEN, ARTHUR W., General Practice, Mining and Irrigation Law a specialty, Attorney, member of firm of Holden 8: Holden, B. W. Sz M. Bldg., Idaho Falls, Idaho. n HOOK, JOS. W. Qaddress unknownj. KIMBRELL, BERT S., General Pra'tice, Attorney, member of firm ot' KimL.ell 6: Kimbrell, 935 New York Life Bldg., Kan- sas City, Mo. KNOCHE, JOSEPH, General Practice, At- torney, oliices with Hatch 85 Middlebrook, 408 Hall Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. KOPE, REUBEN A., Clerk City Court, Dis- trict No. 1, residence, 919 Ann Avenue, Kansas City, Kas, LA VEINE, EDWARD N., Jr., Corporation and U. S. Land Office Practice, City At- torney of Coeur d'Alene, Attorney, Coeur d'Alene, Idaho. LEIDIGH, PAUL J., Secretary, Leidigh K: Havens Lumber Co., Dwight Bldg., Kan- sas City, Mo. MEDES, LLOYD, Fire Insurance, Wm. J. Medes, 8: Son, 102-3 Massachusetts Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. MEEK, JAMES M., General Practice, Taxes and Tax Titles, Attorney, with T. A. Pollock, 653 Minnesota Avenue, Kansas City, Kas. METZIG, FRED G., Clerk, Ridenour-Baker Grocery Co., residence, 1218 Lydia Ave- nue, Kansas City, Mo. MONROE, CALEB S., General Practice, At- torney, with Gage, Ladd Ki Small, 605-8 New York Lite Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. MORRIS, GEORGE M., General Practice, Attorney, Geary, Okla. MUSSER, ADOLPHUS, Manager, The Fair Department Store, El Paso. Texas. McCOY, CHARI.ES E., General Practice, Attorney, 949 New York Life Bldg., Kan- sas City, Mo. McEI.ROY, JAMES P., Foreman, Armour Packing Co., residence, Stratford Hotel, , Kansas City, Mo. McSPADDEN, WASHINGTON L., General Practice, Attorney, member of firm of McSpadden Sz Graves, 208 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. McVEY, EDWIN P. Caddress unknownj. NABER, EDWARD E., General Practice, Attorney, member of firm of Crites KF. H., '02J Sa Naber QE. E., '02J, 509 Tem- ple Block, Kansas City, Mo. NORMAN, FRANK, Abstracter, Norman dt Robertson, 16 E. 6th Street, Kansas City, Mo. OWEN, MISS ANNIE L., with Warner, Dean, McLeod Sz Holden, 524 Keith 8: Perry Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. PARKER, TOM C, taddress unknownj. PECK, JAMES B., General Practice, Kttor- ney, with Goldsby 8: Farrar, 322 New York Lite Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. PERRY, JOHN W., General Practice, Attor- ney, member of firm of Perry Sz Perry, . 648 Minnesota Avenue, Kansas City, Kas. PETTIBONE, ORIN H. Caddress unknownl. POTTS, CLAUDE H., General Practice, At- torney, member ot firm of Morrison Ka Potts, 9-10 Miller Bldg, Olathe, Kas. REINHARDT, GEORGE, General Practice, Attorney, member of firm of Reinhardt CGeo., '02J 8: Schibsby iFrank, '01J, 406-7 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. SCOTT, WM. J., Salesman, with E. A. Cook, Hats and Furnishing Goods, 204 Douglass Avenue, Wichita, Kas. SHELLEY, WM. W., General Practice, At- torney, with Williams 8: Hunter, 914-16 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. SHIELD, WALLACE B., Instructor in His- tory and Government, Manual Training High School, Kansas City, Mo. SHULTZ, ALBA E., General Practice, At- torney, ofiices with Haff 85 Michaels, 521-4 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. SOUTHALL, B. G. laddress unknownb. SUTTON, WM. B., Jr., Manager, Chautauqua. Oil and Gas Co., Peru, Kas. TREMBLEY, WM. B., Police Judge of Kan- sas City, Kansas, Attorney, 650 Minne- sota Avenue, Kansas City, Kas. WAYLAND, O. F., General Practice, Attor- ney, member of firm. of Wayland CO. F., '02J 62 White fJohn D., '02J, 850-1 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. WHITE, JOHN D., General Practice, Attor- ney, member of firm of Wayland KO. F., '02J 8: White QJ. D., '02J, 850-1 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. WINGER, MAURICE H., Attorney, Polo, Mo. WYSE, JOHN M. faddress unknownj. CLASS OF l90l. 99 BARROW, FRANK H., General Practice, Attorney, Meeteetse, Wyo. BIGGS, JOHN S., Law Clerk, United States Pension Office, residence, 1236 B Street, Southwest, Washington, D. C. BRANN, HUGH E., General Practice, At- torney, 435-6 New York Life Bldg., Kan- sas City, Mo. BRYANT, GEORGE S., Jr., General Prac- tice, Attorney, with W. L. Stocking, 567-9 Sheidley Bldg., Kansas City, Mo., residence, Independence, Mo. DARNALL, ORA, General Manager, Bolen- Darnall Coal Co., Kansas City, Mo. DRAKE, ALBERT F., General Practice, As- sistant to City Counselor, 1901, Attorney, with T. M. Noble, 421 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. EDWARDS, VERNE D., General Practice, Attorney, member of flrm of Thomas H. 6: Verne D. Edwards, 214 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. EVANS, ARCHIBALD M., General Practice, Attorney, 526 New York Life Bldg., Oma- ha, Neb. FERRIS, SCOTT, Jr., General Practice, At- torney, Room 14 E. and W. Bldg., Law- ton, Okla. FISHER, HARRY G., General Practice, At- torney, Keyser, W. Va. GOODWIN, WALLACE WYAN, General Practice, Attorney, member of firm of Goodwin CW. W., 'OID 8: Pew Uno. B., '01J, 603 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. GRAY, MISS MARY E., Clerk and Stenogra- pher, 605 Kemper Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. GRIFFITH, GEO. I., Judge of City Court, Second District, Kansas City, Kas., 403 Kansas Avenue, Kansas City, Kas. HAMMETT, ABEL MILLER, General Prac- tice, Attorney, Rooms 2, 3 and 4, Bloom- field Block, Oklahoma City, Okla. HARRISON, DR. EDMUND LEE, Examin- ing Surgeon, Board of Pensions, Physi- cian, 204 Portsmouth Bldg., Kansas City, Kas. HAZARD, HENRY E., Manager, Central College of Business and Shorthand, Kan- sas City, Mo. 79 HOWELL, NEWELL S., General Practice, Attorney, 851 New York Life Bldg., Kan- sas City, Mo. JOHNSON, JESSE T., Cashier, Bank of Ar- cadia, Arcadia, Okla. JOHNSON, LESTER L., Clerk, Postoffice, Station A, residence, 2400 Vine Street, Kansas City, Mo. KERAN, CHARLES C., General Practice, Attorney, with Ashley, Gilbert 8: Dunn, 213 Massachusetts Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. LAMBERT, WALTER C., Superintendent, Postofiice, Stock Yards Station, Kansas City, Mo. LANGAH, DAVID, German, Polish, Italian and Yiddish Advocate, Chairman of Educa- tion, P. 0. W., Attorney, 825 Wash Street, St. Louis, Mo. LEE, CHARLES H., General Practice and Titles, Attorney, Louisburg, Kas. MEADE, HENRY, Attorney, 15-16 Columbia Bldg., Kansas City, Kas. MORAN, HAMPTON, Traveling Salesman, Fischer Bros., Seattle, Wash. MORGAN, JACQUE LLOYD, General Prac- tice and Attorney for Title Guaranty and Trust Company, City Attorney of Kan- sas City, 1902-4, Attorney, 411 Bryant Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. MORRISON, GEORGE C. faddress un- knownj. MCCRUM, CHARLES A., General Practice, Attorney, 509 Hall Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. MCELROY, FRANK S., Attorney, last known address, Cripple Creek, Colo. O'F'LAHERTY, JOSEPH S., Chief Engineer, Central Coal and Coke Co., residence, 1016 Olive Street, Kansas City, Mo. PEAKE, GEORGE R., Clerk, Schwarzschild Kr Sulzberger Co., residence, 2228 Prospect Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. PEW, JOHN B., General Practice, Treasurer Jackson County Bar Association, 1903-4, Instructor in K. C. School of Law, Attor- ney, member of firm of Goodwin CW. W., 'Oli 8: Pew KJ. B., '01l, 603 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. PHILLIPS, GEORGE WENDELL, Real Es- tate, 527 Minnesota Avenue, Kansas City, Kas. . POMERENE, MELVIN, General Practice, Attorney, with James W. Boyd, 302-3 Geri man-American Bank Bldg., St. .Ioseph, Mo, POWELL, EDGAR P., Secretary U. S. Dis- trict. Judge, Attorney, 304 Custom House, Kansas City, Mo. 4, ROBINSON, HARRIS, General Practice, At- torney, with Elijah Robinson, 702 Heist Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. SCI-IIBSBY, FRANK, General Practice, At- torney, member of firm of Reinhardt QGeo., '02J 8: Schibsby CFrank, '01J, 406-7 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. SMITH, DAVID J., General Practice, Attor- ney, 310 Portsmouth Bldg., Kansas City, Kas. SMITH, RICHARD J., General Practice, At- torney, with George W. Wright and Wm. M. Whitelaw, 505-6-7 Temple Block, Kan- sas City, Mo. SMYKAL, JOSEPH, Collections and Com- mercial Law, Attorney, member of firm of Smykal 8z Alexander, Jackson, Minn. SNOW, CLIFFORD M., Salesman, Ferl-TUSOII' McKinney Dry Goods Co., residence, 5263 Vernon Avenue, St. Louis, Mo. SPEERS, JAMES R., Attorney, 529 Wil- loughby Avenue. Brooklyn, New York. TURNER, DE LOS W. iaddress unknownj. ULRICH, FERDINAND E., Student at Stan- ford University, residence, 333 Kipling Street. Palo Alto, Calif. WHITE, ALMA R., Attorney, member nf! firm of Sheley 8: White, Lawyers and Ab- stracters, Rooms 3 and 4 Wyatt Bldg., Independence, Mo. WHITE, ISAAC N., Jr., Banker, Independ- ence, Mo. WING, GEORGE L., General Practice, Attor- ney, Dodge City, Kas. YODER, WM. B., Jr., General Practice, At- torney, 20G-7 Massachusetts Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. 80 CLASS OF l900. 5' U ALLARD. HARRY, Civil Engineer, Engin- ee,-mg Dept., Frisco System, Springiield, Mo. ASKEW, RALPH KIRK, Askew Saddlery Co., residence, 4700 Rock Hill Road, Kan- sas City, Mo. BROADBENT, HARRY W., State Represent- ative 9th District, 1903-5: Secretary, Af' mourdale Lumber Co.: residence, 1229 Pennsylvania Avenue, Kansas City, Kas. BRYANT, CLAUD J., General Practice, At- torney, Lawton, Okla. BRYANT, HUGHES, General Practice, At- torney, 607-9-10 Bryant Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. BURKE, RICHARD D.. General Practice: Attorney, member of firm of Burke Sz Kimpton, 310 Massachusetts Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. COTTINGHAM, JAMES M., Principal, Ben- ton School, residence, 2845 Brooklyn Ave- nue, Kansas City, Mo. CUNNINGHAM, JOHN R., Odice Manager, Goffe, Lucas 8z Carkener, Grain Commis- sion, residence, 2737 Locust Street, Kan- sas City, Mo. DEAN, HENRY E., General Practice, Attor- ney, member of firm of Getty, Hutchings 8: Dean, 20 Court House Bldg., Kansas City, Kas. DENHAM, DODDIE D., Genera.l Practice? Attorney, with H. M. Merriwether, 617 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, M0- FIEI.D, ROBERT S., Cashier of Bank, Cor- dell, Okla. GATES, MARVIN Whipple R. E. Co., Kansas City, Mo. A., Assistant Cashier, H., Real Estate, B. T. HALLAR, JAMES Bank of La Tour, La Tour, Mo. HALLETT, WM. H., Attorney, 3 and 4 wm- son-Callaway Bldg., Nevada, Mo. HARVEY, GEORGE R., Assistant Attorney- General, Headquarters, Philippines Con- stabulary, Manila.. P- I- HARVEY, J. G. L., Attorney, Kansas City, M0. . KIMBALL. GEORGE E., Sales Mailagel' f0I' Alfred Wright, Perfumer, 47 Darien Street, Rochester, N. Y. LEA, THOMAS C., Jr., Mining, El Paso, Tex. LINGO, FRANK J., Stenographer, City Elec- trician's office, Cincinnati, O. MANN, ANDREW WILSON, General Prac- tice, Attorney, 405 Bank of Commerce Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. MARTY, ARTHUR M., Real Estate, Marty 8: Marty, 117 E. 9th Street, Kansas City, Mo. MESSMORE, JASPER, Jr., Attorney, and Cashier Granite State Bank, Granite, Okla. MOORE, EDWARD H., General Practice, Attorney, member of firm of Moore QE. H., 'OOD Sz Noble CE. T., '98J, Rooms 1 and 2, Peck Bldg., Okmulgee, I. T. MOORE, JAMES W., General Practice, At- torney, Dunlap Bldg., Okemah, I. T. MUCKLE, JOHN B., Assistant Ticket Agent, Wabash R. R. Co., residence, 418 W. 10th Street, Kansas City, Mo. MURPHY, EDWARD S., Creditman, George W. Perry 8s Co., 9th and Lucas Avenue, St. Louis, Mo. McDANIEL, LEX L., Abstracter, Land Title Guarantee Co., residence, 4308 Main Street, Kansas City, Mo. - McQUEENY, JAMES L., Creditman, Western Grocery Co., residence, 221 Linwood Ave- nue, Kansas City, Mo. PETERS, P. B. S., Instructor in Bookkeep- ing and Commercial Law, Manual Training High School, Kansas City, Mo. REICHENBACH, LA MONTE V., Assistant Manager, Singer Mfg. Co., residence, 3020 Michigan Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. RIEGER, EARLE C., Studying Medicine, residence, 1100 Bellefontaine Avenue, Kan- sas City, Mo. - SOUTHERN, ALLEN C., General Practice, Attorney, member of iirm of Southern 8: Southern, Wilson Block, Independence, Mo. SPERLING, LEON, Attorney, and Real Es- tate and Insurance, Dodson, Mo. STEPHENSON, DAVID J., Salesman, Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co., residence, Hotel Arno, Kansas City, Mo. STILLINGS, GEORGE E., President, Pre- ferred Tontine Merc. Co., New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. WHITELAW, WM. N. taddress unknownb. WINSHIP, WM. L., Clerk City Court, Kan- sas City, 1901-2, Clerk Probate Court, Wy- andotte County, Kansas, residence, 603 Shawnee Avenue, Kansas City, Kas. WOOD, SIDNEY B., Attorney, Elmdale, Kas. YEOMAN, FRANK, General Practice, Attor- ney, 514 Hall Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. 81 CLASS OF l899. ii ADAMS, LYNCHBURG B., General Practice, Attorney, 623 American Bank Bldg., Kan- sas City, Mo. ARMSTRONG, JAMES S., Newspaper Artist. Kansas City Star Kansas City, Mo. BAXTER, CLARENCE G., General Practice, Attorney, member of firm of Baxter 8: Baxter, Owensville, Mo. BROWN, ARTHUR C., Exclusively Patent Law, Patent Attorney, 401 Massachusetts Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. BROWN, EDWIN J., General Practice, Attorney, member ot firm of Parker 8z Brown, 713 Frost Avenue, Seattle, Wash. BROWN, MISS HELEN, Clerk and Notary in law oflice of Pratt, Dana at Black, 412 Thayer Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. CALLAHAN, MRS. EFFIE W., wife of Thos. F. Callahan: CALLAHAN, THOS. F., General Practice, Attorney, member of firm of Jameson Sz Callahan, 215 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. CASEY, MICHAEL E., General Practice, member of 42d General Assembly of Mis- sourl, Attorney, ofiices with W. W. Greene, 618 Bryant Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. CROWLEY, JAMES W., Jr., General Prac- tice, Attorney, 329 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. CULBERTSON, WM. C., General Practice, Attorney, 717-8 American Bank Bldg., Kan- sas City, Mo. ESTILI., BENJAMIN R., General Practice, Attorney, member of hrm of Estill 8: Estill, 512 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. FAIRMAN, CHAUNCEY P., General Prac- tice, Attorney, member of firm of Schaich Sz Fairman, 502 American Bank Bldg., Kan- sas City, Mo. FLYNN, DAVID W., General Practice, At- torney, Leavenworth, Kas. FRIEDBERG, HARRY B., Manager, Na- tional Wax Match and Taper Co., resi- dence, 2919 Olive Street. Kansas City, Mo. GORDON, FRANK, General Practice, City Attorney, Kansas City, 1900-1902, Attor- ney, 518 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. GRADY, WM. J., General Practice, Attor- ney, member of firm of Buckner 8: Grady, 905 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. GREENE, WILLIAM WALLACE, General Practice, Attorney, member of firm of Cook 8: Gossett, 618-19 Bryant Bldg., Kan- sas City, Mo. HAMILTON. HOMER, General Practice, Attorney, with Leach, Day 8: Sparks, 703 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. HARWOOD, LANDRY, General Practice, Attorney, member of firm of Harwood 8: Meredith, 811-12 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. HOLMDEN, RICHARD J., General Prac- tice, Attorney, 713-14 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. JACQUES, WM. R., Railroad Supplies, 509 Bank of Commerce Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. - JAMES, WM. R., General Practice, Attor- ney, offices with Clarence S. Palmer, 410 Heist Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. JOST, HENRY L., General Practice, Attor- ney, 416 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. KACKLEY, CLAUDE M., General Practice, Attorney, 631 New York Life Bldg., Kan- sas City, Mo. KLINGLER, GEORGE J., deceased. MADISON, CHARLES C.. Assistant Attor- ney for Missouri, Chic-ago 8: Alton Ry- Co., 513-17 Kemper Bldg., Kansas City, Mo., residence, Independence, MO. MILLER, CLARENCE A., Law Clerk, Pen- sion Department of the United States: residence, 53 J Street, N. E., Washing- ton, D. C. MILLER, CHARLES A.. General Practice, Attorney, member of firm of Miller, Bu- chan 8: Miller, 201-5 Husted Bldg., Kan- sas City, Kas. MONTGOMERY, JOHNSON S. faddress un- knownj. MOORE, HUNT C., General Practice, At- torney, 711 Bank of Commerce Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. MOORE, WM. R., General Practice, Attor- ney, with Ellison 8: Turpin, 801 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. McKENZIE, KENNETH K., General Frac- tice, Attorney, with Wilmer 8: Canfield, 49 Wall Street, New York city. McLAUGHLIN, DANIEI., Prosecuting At- to1'ney, Elmore County, Idaho, Attorney, Mountain Home, Idaho. NEEI.-, ELLISON A., General Practice, At- torney, 711 Bank of Commerce Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. NICHOLS, ADELBERT P., Real Estate, 628 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. PERRIN, WM. S. Qaddress unknownj. PORTER, PIERRE R., General Practice, Attorney, 818-19 New York Life Bldg. Kansas City, Mo. REITZ, MARVIN J., General Practice, City Attorney, Kansas City, Kas., 1903-5, At- torney, 14 Columbia Bldg., Kansas City, Kas. SMITH, JAMES H., General Practice, At- torney, Sterling, Kas. STEWART, FRANK W., Real Estate, with E. S. Truitt Cc Co., 21 E. 9th Street, Kan- sas City, Mo. SUMNER, CHARLES A., General Practice, Attorney, 615 New Ridge Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. SUTERMEISTER, CHARLES O., Stone Dealer, residence, 1637 Broadway, Kan- sas City, Mo. THRASHER, GEORGE C., Attorney, Ever- ett, Wash. A WARDEN, HERMAN, Assistant County At- torney, 1899-1901, Attorney, Tacoma, Wash. WELCH, CHARLES D., County Auditor of Shawnee C o u n t y, Kansas, Attorney, member of firm of Welch Sz Welch, Suite 48, Columbian Bldg., Topeka, Kas. WHITE, WM. F., Attorney, with Thos. J. White, Attorney and Referee in Bank- ruptcy, 10-12 Columbia Bldg., Kansas City, Kas. -sr frfff .x , N ,QW ' N j iH?g4E -ef 'iq Z4 . N055 x f I I X i H' -fa is A 33 CLASS OF l898. ii CAMPBELL, WM. T., General Practice, At- torney, with Grant I. Rosenzweig, 833-4 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. CHANEY, JAMES M., Jr., General Prac- tice, Attorney, member of firm of Chaney 8x Harrison, 20 Water Works Bldg., Kan- sas City, Mo., residence, Independence, Mo. COOPER, CLINTON E., Superintendent, Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., 1721 N. Ashland Avenue, Chicago, Ill. DENHAM, CLARENCE E., General Prac- tice, Attorney, offices with R. E. Ball, 617 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. ESTILL, JESSE M., Steel Ship-Building, 400 Fourth Avenue, Seattle, Wash. FAIRWEATHER, JAMES, Alderman, 10th Ward, 1900-02, Justice of Peace, Kansas City, 1902-06, Attorney, 12 E. 9th Street, Kansas City, Mo. FIKE, THOMAS H., Meter Inspector, City Water Works, residence, 1110 Forest Ave- nue, Kansas City, Mo. GANT, JOSEPH R., Cashier, Provident Sav- ings Life Assurance Society, 443 Sheldley Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. GARVER, RAYMOND, deceased. GEIST, FRED W. laddress unknownl. GUMM, EUGENE P., Odessa, Mo. I-IARTLEY, ALFRED F., Cape Nome, Alaska. HEIDELBERGER, W I LHELM, General Practice, Attorney, member of firm of Bremermann K: Heidelberger, 609 Century Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. HOWARD, BENJAMIN C., General Prac- tice, Attorney, 516 American Bank Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. - 84 KENNEDY, PHILIP H., deceased. LECKNER, GEORGE F., Mining and Pri- vate Banking, San Luis Potosi, Mexico. LEE, JAY M., Student, Harvard Law School, Cambridge, Mass. MAGILL, ROBERT D., Manager, Collection Dept., P. F. Collier 62 Son, 424 New Nel- son Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. MITCHELL, DRURY K. faddress unknownj. MOORE, FRANCIS R., Dispatcher, Chicago, Milwaukee 8: St. Pa.ul Ry., Ottumwa, Ia.. NOBLE, EDGAR T., General Practice, At- torney, member of firm of Moore QE. H., '00l Sz Noble QE. T., '98J, Rooms 1 and 2, Peck Bldg., Okmulgee, I. T. REED, JAMES C., Teacher of Commercial I.aw, McKinley High School, Chicago, Ill. SHORT, BURTON L., Assistant Postmaster, Kansas City, Kas., residence, 330 N. 7th Street, Kansas City, Kas. TROGDON, JAMES E., General Practice, Attorney, 31-32 Water Works Bldg., Kan- sas City, Mo. WHIFFEN, HAMLET H., Secretary, K. C. Navigation Co., 115 Navajo Bldg., Kansas City, Mo., residence, Monegaw Springs, Mo. WICKHAM, HARRY W., Attorney, with Thayer-Moore Brokerage Co., 105 W. 8th Street, Kansas City, Mo. WILLIAMS, JAMES C., General Practice and Commercial Law, Attorney, member of firm of Williams 8: Hunter, 914 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. WILSON, A. P. TONE, Jr., General Prac- tice and Real-Estate Specialist, Attorney, Warden Block, Colby, Kas. CLASS OF I897. ii' BETTON, FRANK H., Jr., Claim Agent, Kansas City Stock Yards Co., residence. 1409 Benton Boulevard, Kansas City, Mo. CRUZEN, NATHANIEL G. faddress un- known. FISETTE, RUSH L., General Practice, At- torney, Rosedale, Kas. GREEN, SIMON RALPH, Attorney, Guth- rie, Okla. fTemporarily in Ireland.J HARSHBERGER, CLARKSON E., Clerk, Engineering Dept., U. S. A.,. 92 Flood Bldg., San Francisco, Cal. HUMPHREY, HERBERT L., City Attorney of Abilene, 1900, now President of City Council and Acting Mayor, Attorney, Abi- lene, Kas. JEWELL, JAMES E., member Upper House City Council, 1898 to 1902, Attorney, 820 New York Life Bldg.. Kansas City, Mo. KIRKER, MILTON B., 7422 Bennett Street, East End, Pittsburg, Pa. LUDWICK, ANDREW B., Prosecuting At- torney, Bates County, Circuit Clerk, Bates County, 1901-2, Attorney, Butler, Mo. MOORE, WILLIAM HALL, General Practice and Indian Citizenship Cases, Attorney, with Mansfield, McMurray dt Cornish, South McAlester, I. T. MYERS, HARRY J., President, American School and College Agency, residence, 5829 .Iackson Avenue, Chicago, Ill. McKAMEY, JAMES W., Real Estate, 25 E. 9th Street, Kansas City, Mo. Mc-LAUGHLIN, HARRY R., Attorney and Manager, National Adjustment Co., 308 Hall Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. NELSON, EMMET B., Real Estate, Crow 8a Nelson, 20 E. 9th Street, Kansas City, Mo. NICHOLSON, WHEELOCK S., Clerk, Swift 8: Co., So. St. Joseph, Mo. PAGE, HENRY C., General'Practice, Attor- ney, member of firm of Holmes 85 Page, 413 Keith 8: Perry Bldg., Kansas City, M'o. PAGET, A., General Practice, Attorney, Loogootee, Ind. PAGET, EVERY M., Manager, Heller, Hirst 85 Co., 701 Kansas City Life Bldg., Kan- sas City, Mo. POWELL, THOS. E. faddress unknownj. PURSLEY, MARSHALL A., Justice of the Peace, Kansas City, 1898 to 1902, Auditor of Postoflice, Kansas City, Mo. RIEHL, CHARLES A., General Practice, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, Jackson County, Mo., 1902 to 1903, Attorney, 832 New York Life Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. RUDD, H. CHANNING, General Practice, Counselor in Corporate Law, Advocacy confined to United States Supreme Court fmember since 19003, since 1900, Profes- sor of Forensic Oratory, and also Sources, Classification and Elements of Law, and Law of Commercial Paper, in Columbian University, Washington, D. C., Attorney, 1106 Fourteenth Street, N. W., Washing- ton, D. C. STEELE, EVERETT E., General Practice, Attorney, 606 American Bank Bldg., Kan- sas City, Mo. THORPE, GEORGE Y., Patent Law Exclu- sively, Patent Attorney, 512-515 Ameri- can Bank Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. TURNER, FREDERICK E, President, K. C. Elevator Mfg. Co., 105-115 W. 19th Street, Kansas City, Mo. YOUNG, MISS HATTIE Z., Teacher, Lin- wood School, residence, 810 Linwood Boulevard, Kansas City, Mo. 6 U f K THE STAFF OF THE YEAR BOOK THANKINO THE ADVERTISERS FOR THEIR SUPPORT, HEARTILY COMMEND THESE ADVERTISE- MENTS TO THE ATTENTION OF THE STUDENT BODY. A .A ,Q .R Vernon Law Book Co. Law Book Sellers and Publishers. We can furnish any Law Book Pub- lished that is for sale by the Law , Book Trade. Call and examine our large stock of New and Second Hand Books. - , Y-.v,X. Venion Layyp Book Company. ot ' hones 14 1Main. 604 Wyandotte Street. KANSAS CITY, MO Nothing wins confidence and respect for a young man more rC.2Qi!xsr5ha13j,ml5,aCC025 It need not be large to afford evidence of his business meth- ods and the friendship oi his banker is a valuablewasset. 053.4 'lihe American National Bank Invites the Accounts of Young Men. Pipes-Reed Book Co Law Books VVe Sell Any Law Book Published 725 Wyandotte Street, KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI West Publishing Cofs if Books for Young Lawyers eine if The Giving the current decisions of the hi hest court of our own state R - S Y 7 r epolters Whatever state that may be. Back volumes preferable to the corresponding State ez Reports, and at one-fourth the cost. 0:46 4, , 1-fm A-e -451: li If 4, 751+ The , ' American An up-to date digest of late cases- . or of the last ten years-or of the and entire body of American case-law, as Q05 you like. Every lawyer must have Century ggi, the first and should have the last. Digests QE 1451: 'Q The is k . . . gf, Hornljook ma es a very serviceable beginning A complete set of these treatises rl uf- . ',' H?- i' a ' A iid 157' 'ST' Q YEL' Il Sir'-'P9',f2 Sai? Sf! tial Sli? fi if' ii J . for a library. The books cover all , 561.165 the main titles of the law, and are san the chosen ready-rererence books of experienced W practitioners. I- 'ff ' I fi? Qthel- Suggestions for building up a li- Books brary will be given. on request. gg, Write for information. J- ig? West Publishing Company, if fir 1 Saint Paul, Minn. 1- 0 tw 1 2? ga 35 '1 te M SE N 5? M -v. 6-'-v-'2'i-v. :'-.-.'!13'w-.'Jw-'5'4F'a'if26'wtfwf ' a v . J. H. TSCHUDY, 3 Hardwood Lumber ' Company, Twenty-Third and Broadw y ' Kansas City, - - Missoun. 1 O ?lLi,LiL94'0'LiAm9!,?AmQ-A.1A QL 13? Ka' rio' ra' 170' 1 iliii. nf T1Hr.i'i1ar7:'ri'v'3 11: OUR SUITS DRESS MEN, be Not Simply Clothe Them. gi WOOLF BROTHERS P. 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Coaches, Chair Cars, Cafe, Library, Smoking and Lounging Cars, Pullman Sleeping Cars, and Observation-Compartment Sleeping Cars. THE TRAIN THAT RUNS AHEAD OF THE REST. Chicago Night Expressv Leaves Kansas City 11:30 p. rn. Arrives Chicago 1:15 p. ln. Chair Cars and Pullman Sleeping Cars. CHICAGO 85 ALTON RY. THREE FAST TRAINS DAILY TO ST. LOUIS. 8:30 A. M. l0:00'A. M. 9:30 P. M. Tickets: Junction TiclKet Office, Union Depot,lst Grand Ave. Depot YOU ARE YOUR OWN OPPORTUNITY THE BU NGALOXV, 'NTH AND XVYANDOTTE S y -91--IG Make the best of yourself-one of the VERY IMPORTANT QUALIFICATIONS is a reasonable amount of ready money- systematic saving will accomplish for you whatit has for others-START IN ANDBUILD UP AN UOPPORTU Tv F - firt T A I L 0 Px Kansas City, Mo. NINTH AND WALNUT. NI UND your s deposit should go in to day. FREE HOME SAVINGS BANKS-3 PER CENT INTEREST. FIDELITY TRUST CO. 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