University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS)

 - Class of 1902

Page 1 of 188

 

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1902 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 188 of the 1902 volume:

John Taylor DRY GOODS COMPANY. Established 1881. IO34-lO40 Main Street, KANSAS CITY, MO. a a 1.1 a When Needing Any Article That can be purchased from a Hrm dealing exclusively in Dry Goods, you cannot buy more dependable merchandise, or at any lower price, than that which is sold hy the John Taylor Dry Goods Co. 0 Q Their Reputation is Firmly Established For selling only the most reliable goods, and in many lines of merchan- dise you will iind no ,greater variety of up-to-date fabrics in the West. 0 Q Their System of Doing Business Enables them to sell goods on a closer margin of profit than stores that do a large credit business, and by this saving in the expense the customers derive the benefit in paying less than they would ordinarily pay for the articles they buy. Q SP Their Mail Order Department Is one of the largest in the West. Orders are tilled promptly. Nothing is ever substituted. The firm prefer to lose a sale than displease a, cus- tomer by sending an article that was not ordered. Catalogue and sam- ples sent on application. 'anna John Taylor DRY GOODS COMPANY. Eistablished 1881. IOZ4-l040 Main Street, KANSAS CITY, MO K BOWERSOCK MlLLING CO., Lawrence, Kansas. Wllllll Ullll alll lllllllllllll lllgl ,Just a Little Luigi ..A-Spread, a Dinner, -ef0f alianfslgf, at -----VlSlT---0- IllILElllllN'S PHHK EHUGEHY, LAWRENCE. KAS. Books! We are prepared to fill your order on any book usually carried in a First-Class Store. W h a er com lt l' e ave v y pee me of Late Books, Standard Books in sets, and Books in Fancy Bindings. We also carry all the Text Books used in the University of Kansas. Our prices in all lines are always right. We hope to receive a share of your patronage. D. L. ROWLANDS 819 Massachusetts Street. LAWRENCE. Kas. Fine Neckwear and Fancy Shirts -W. E. Spalding. iililiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'19f'li3Kl?9if3F96f59E'lliliK'4Xi?KiKi53K'iSS?Si?8i?Sl ?6E38SBK?KH35Xi392962E889fi89KK9K!l 55 M 55 Q we we an 5 2 X X 4555! ill! ii K 35 I 5 2 F 2 I Z 5 i Sli X 'S 2 E 5 32 . 2 2 llbhoto Elrtnst. 5 2 JACKSON BUILDING. '32 5 5 2 Telephone 4II White. 2 BK X 2 LAWRENCE, KANS. 2 if 32 2 -ew If 25 ees as nf sas ees as an as as as as va se: ff ea 45 we we 985 5 are ees as as as as 'B 595 ees 45 5 + fa ees Q 45 1 Qs fa 1 35 Q2 we we af as as an an me The Lawrence Planing III Co. GENERAL PLANING MILL BUSINESS. We make xx Specialty of WOOD WORK OF THE BEST CLASS. No cheaply made Stock Sizes, but EVERYTHING MADE TO ORDER. Telephone 163. 17.50. A Wafffhl OOLID COLD ! I , l4kt. If ,,fffff9': 1'-K l , A .- jf. ' .4 'N H 1901 '-ri ie . ii A, ' , I I, me . .if 11532 j, I V I 17053 it Iv' I .II,: j .g5gEi.. -S 50 AYVK gg iw lilgm Ol' lt' I W I h 'P A Rv Q a t am H J l .I Movement. JK Send for GI1aI'untc-od by the Jaecard Company to be QI OUfFffCCafa108UC- good, reliable t,iInekeepeI' and exactly as repre- sented. A variety of engmwings to Select from. jaccard jewelry Compan , F032 Main Stre-et. Kansas City, MO, The Works of a Master. 'BISHOP ON CONTRACTS. Une Volume. 86,00 Net. BISHOP ON NON-CONTRACT LAW. One Volume. 56.00 Net. BISHOIVS NEW CRIMINAL LAW. Two Volumes. Sl2.0U Net. BISHoP'S NEW CRIMINAL PROCEDURE. Two Volumes. 312.00 Net. BISHOP ON MARRIAGE, DIVORCE AND SEPARATION. Two Volumes. Sl2.00 Net. BISHOP ON STATUTORY CRIMES. One Volume 96.00 Net BISIIOP'S DIRECTIONS AND FORMS. ' One Volume. S6 OO Net. T'H-Fl:5?.Q.Q.. .... ,Q,Q.I,.liElPUShtfS xxxaksk XXXX hat roverbial eakest Link I-IE told saw about the wlelakest link Epiplies ,P wit specia orce top armacy. uca- tiong technical trainingg store fittings: appliances and utensils: completeness and quality of stockg capable assistants-all are links in the chain that binds the public and local physicians to a pharmacist. But suppose he doesn't discriminate in buying chemicals. There will be a very weak link. l-le will miss many good words from physicians-words very valuable as advertising. F. E. Whitcomb, 2950 Washington Street, St. Louis, evidently considers Merck's chemi- cals a strong link. l-le has sent us an announcement which tells of compounding 14,577 prescriptions, andasks I-low's this for a year with Merck's chemicals ? I-Ie is only one among many pharmacists who foster professional reputation and increase business revenue bystockingMerck'schemicals. D0 YOU Specify Jfaefuvfifa? Vnlljrgrglxfogface M 6 CO- Rasgszgosg. XXXXXXX XXXXFKX J f l I vie W . f 25 lllll 9' l y t. 'f Nw 'i n e A 4' f iti l? W 9-i n I ' ' w ill 1 .A il, l' ill lligla, ll lf ' vflf ir!! . lt! J:A,,g,'4 giA.J? .X A y AH . -fyytr. in , ly L 'XX ffl' l i.N,,f Cebu N 1,f2 TllCfC,S a big differ- ence between getting fit- ted and staying fitted in Suinnier Clothes. It is easy enough for a clothier to put a coat on you, but- ton it up nicely, smooth out the wrinkles, and say, Tl1at's a good Ht. But how is it after the first rain, or when you have worn it a month? Tl1at's when the tailoring shows -if there's any tailoring in it. Wlletliei' you pay us 37.50 or 515.00 for a Flannel, Crash or Serge Suit, we owe you a Fit all Summer. Don't forget it. We are as anxious as you can possibly be to have it a success. If we fail, it's on us-so you see you are safe. OBERS, GIOTJIIBFS, fldl3l36I'S, Fllf'Ill5ll6I'S. LAWRENCE. KAW. Wilder S. Metcalf 702 Massachusetts Street, LAWRENCE, KANSAS. FARM LOANS Safe and Prompt. 9 9 EARL H. SHELLEY, hotographer, 7I0 Massachusetts Street, LAWRENCE, KA N SA S. WE CAN HELP YOU H llnj- li .-..' 21.35 ROCURE your share of bene- Q -, F fits of tlIe good times by our Ae,-V N - ,. .N attractive Printing. All print- pw - ing should be good printing. 'W' Q VVe can do any kind in a way : I to please you? and as you prob- 'fi-EQQ f11ff??fi:s1iu?E.' ably rest 111 Slllll 111G1', we would suggest that you keep some silent reminder in the shape of a BOOKLET or CIRCULAR before your prospective customers for fear they should forget you. I LITIIoGn.xIf1IIxG, I:xG1mvIxG, WYE DO - PUBLISHING, AND. IN FACT, i EVERY THING IN OUR LINE. if 4 W HUDSON-KIMBERLY PUBLISHING CO., IOI4-I6 WYANDOTTE ST. KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI. GI 15 632-153. rfdx :ff-Q MN A A :bf gxv' A To FRANCIS HUNTINGTON SNOW ln grateful recognilzon of lhe unfhhrg efforts he has put forth Io make possible the educational prlwleges we have enjoyed for the past four years, we dedicate this book. er- - ' .,-ff cg? 132 Q win J 1 .5f .X V3 ,....... fx yi, N W 'Ml f ,iff if M A ,I 1 --,' fx f ff rw. T: 4 -- -1 ' -...V E ....-ff - ff' W- 7A '-T T -H f 4 X T-I :- N 7 ff M' ' FX U, ! fl' 2 4 N ga f . 1 ,. 4 42 :D --3541 A, , Egg, ,,4' ' ' ,gL::'Z'-' f , X f' 1 vw ' 'R A wk Aw ' E ,f U' w X ge ' ,M - QQ 'W l f , ,1r7 'fQg f xf W wa- ff f W' ' L X HQ ji f 'N' lf' is 27 - ff RX 'L 'J 1 1 fx , A f-. If f x 1 1 V gu ww , A 1, 'N J uQ1vm,S1mm5 mv '9- - ,f..g,.mggg55. .1 ... f' ' U I ,WX AX. X ze AX Lig a ! 77719 f y ' 6 M3-Ln Ai fr., ,A 2, '- A if ' J . aN5 Q, , ,N 'Q t DI ORS Sl f' 1151 H7 . ., - S 1 -4 ' B5 7 x 'AFX 'N QL 1 LOUISE HAYNES, lflditox--in-1 'hiof. 4 GUY NYARIJ, .Bllsinvss lW2Ll1llN,Q'Gl'. Department Editors. ' N J. H. TOLAN .............,........... Law ,GB T. J. K1NNl':.x1: ...... ...... A Iedicim- F. M. BUSHHY ......... .... I ':l'lfIiI'l0l'l'illL.l' 0 In V DOr.r.1E M. 'l'1r.If'onn .... .. . Fino An-ts 1. V ...W -H- '4 Qual Associate Editors. K IIAUHI-nr. PUGH. I Q ' , - Ai , X if-2? t'.x1mor.YN Amxismz FRANCI-ns Towsnlyzlc HIQH A up H A liGR'I'IA Was. NORMAN M. IX'IUUll.l'.lVliAY. HELEN I.. C.xl.HoI'g .... Z ..... ..... ..............Hdlllil'-Ill-l'11ll f, I'9Slg'l1Oll Proem. HIC .TAYIFIAXVKI-Ill is a, compilation of lnztteriul hurled ut the crowd by that Academy of lnnnortatls who leave Mount fDl'l-'itil in the year of our Lord Nineteen Hundred Two. It contains the likenesses of the Seniors. records some of their sztyings und a. few of their doings, and passes dow11 at few useful knocks whereby the underlines will do well to protit. The achievements of euch clztss that leaves K. U. constitutes at record for its successors to surpass-if they cam. NVQ- ztdd the Annuztl to the nmny other products of Naughty Two. To those living' without the pale of the elect, who will never leurn to understand university life. we say: If you do not know how to take thing's you had better not try. Perztdventure the Seniors as well as others muy find therein some vuluzmble hints. Some of the hits llllty hurt at hit because some people cannot learn truth without pain. You huve the key and the clue wherewith to search the treasure house. G0 forward, for it is open to you. Sl Francis Huntington Snow, RANCIS HlIN'l'lNG'l'ON SNOW, to whom We are so greatly indebtml for the hroad scope of iniiuence and high rank which our Uni- versity has attained, was born in Fitchlnlrg, Mass., June 29, 1840, where his father, Benjamin Snow. a native oi' Westmoreland, N, H.. was a merchant and paper-manufacturer. Dr, Snow graduated from thc High School of his native city. and matriculated in VVilliamS CGI- lego, from which he was graduated with the degree of AB, in 1862, leaving behind him a record unsurpassed in tl1e history of that institution. Three years later his Alma Mater conferred upon him the degree of M.A. In thu year of his graduation from VVilliams College he accepted the principal- ship ol' the Fitchburg High School. In the full of 1864 he entered Andovcr Theological Seminary. from which institution he was graduated in 18611, and was licensed to preach in the COTiBQl'0gEitlO112lrl Church. Immediatolv afterwards he was called to lill the chair ol' Matlieinatics and Nam,-al Science in the University of Kansas, which was then being Ggtalyliglqmll On arriving in Lawrence, he found himself onc of a faculty of tlu-on in- structors in a university with an attendance of tifty students. In 1868 Dr. Snow returned to Andover, Mass., whore. on the Sth of July, he was ni-arried to Miss Jane Appleton Aiken, a native of Lowell, Massachusetts. Two years later, in 1870, Dr. Snow was transfcrrcd to the chair of Natural History. In 1889 he was 1-let-ted President of thc lnacultyv and was placed in charge of the educational work. At that tinw the aitemlfmwt of the school had increased to tive hundred and eight, while the lnacuuly had thirty-three members. ln the following year he was elected to the chzlncellorship. 'l'he pest tGStllliUIly oi the efiicieucy with which he 5110.1 the ofiice is the subsequent growth of the school. In the second year of his administration, the Preparatory Department was cut oit. Notwith. standing this, the attendance cf the school continued to increase until, at the time he resigned, there were twelve hundred students, with a Fac- ulty of scventy-nine instructors. Last year. because of ill-health, brought on by the sudden dt-ath of his eldest son, he was compelled to tender his resignation as Chancellor. Having since regained his customary health and vigor, he has resumed his old position of Professor of Natural His- tory, which he held prior to his election to the chancellorship. Dr. Snow's encrgies have been directed not only to increasing the attendance. but also to making the University the leading educational institution in the State. During his administration many new buildings were erected and equipped, both by private donation and by State appro- priation. In 1895 Blake Hall was erected by an appropriation from the Leg- islature. Three years later the Fowler Shops were built, a. gift from Geo. A. Fowler, of Kansas City. The most valuable private donation received by the University was one of 9,595,000 made by Wm. B. Spooner, uncle of Dr. Snow, a wcalthy Boston merchant. This fund was employed in the erection of Spooner Library and the Chancellor's residence. In 1900 the new Chemistry Building was built by State appropriation. -and a new building for the Museum of Natural History is now in the process oi construction. In addition to his other labors, Dr. Snow for twenty-live years has devoted his vacations to collecting material for the Museum of Natural History. ' Great as has been the growth of the University during our ex-Chan- celloi-'s long connection with the institution, it has not entirely absorbed his attention. Since 1889 he has been an 1-.1--ufiiv-in member of the State Board of Education. To various scientific journals he has contributed about one hundred articles. He was om- of the founders of thc Kansas Academy ol' Science, of which he is a life member. I-Ie is director of thc Muscum of Natural History as well as director of the University Experi- mental Station. He is a member of tht- Cambridge Entomological Society and was at one time editor of Ihvyf-lu', the official publication of that society. The National Educational Association numbers him among its members. as does also the North Central Association of Colleges and Sec- Ofldafy Schools. He has also bccn for a long time connected with the American Association for the Advancement of Science. In 1881 Dr. Snow rcceived the degree of Ph.D. from Williams College. Nine years later, upon his election to the chancellorship of Kansas Uni- versity, Princeton College conferred upon him the degree of LL.D. While his efforts have been mainly directed along educational lines. Dr. Snow has always been actively identified with the Congregational Church, During his first years at thc 'University he preached every Sunday in tho churches of Lawrence and its immediate vicinity. For I'I10l'9 than IWGHW-five years he has been teacher of the Bible Class in Plymouth Con- gregational Sunday-school. Dr. Snow has done much for the University of Kansas, and his work is not yet ended. The school on the Hill silcntly attests what manner of man he is. . By their fruits ye shall know them. ' W. C. SPANur.1f:R, Ac:r1'1Nm: t'H,xNm:m,l.on NIWILIAJIQ FRANK !i'l'lll,l Oiiicers of Naughty Two. Fl?8Shm8.Il YBHP. President ........ Vice-President .... Secretary ......... Treasurer .... .. .. Sergeant-at-A1'11is .... Sophomore Year. President ...... Vice-President. . . Secretary ..... . . Treasurer. .. Junior Year. President.. ...... . . . .. .......... .... Vice-President. . . Secretary. ........................ . . Treasurer ....... . ............... . . . . . President, rim McGilliv1-ay resig'nod ......... Senior YBRP. President ...... . 'Vice-President .... Secretary ..... . . ........................ '.i.'I'6iLSl1l'6l'. .... . .V .... . .....,............ . . Secretary, vice Miss PlffDll1Q.1'Gl' 1'8Slg'l'l0li .... Senior Annual. Ma.nu.g'or .... ...... .... ................. . Editor-In-Chief .......... . .... h ..., . . . Editor, rice Miss Calhoun reslgnefl. .. Senior Play. Manager. .... .......,.... . ... Chalrlnan. . . . . ..WAI.'rr:Ic l.-IENN . . . MYIITLIQ COLLINS: ..... .. LOUISE HAYNIIIS . HULARENCE I-IINDMAN . ,. GILFORD UIIAPELL . . . . .. RUFUS IGMEIIY . . . . . . . LOUISE HAYNIQS . . NiIUl'ON BLANOHAIID: . ...... CHESTER JONES. NORMAN IVICGILLIVIIAV. . . . . . . .INIYRTLE LASLICY. .........RACHEl'. PUGH. . . . .GUY HAIzsHH11:nGlcn. . . . . CH1cs'1'1f:Ic JONES. . . . . . WALTIGII MEICK .. . . . . .FRED NICHOLS . . . MARTHA PI'r'I'1Nu1gR, . .... .. CLYDE N IOHOLS. . . . .MARY LADD SMITH. ........GUY WAND . ..Hr:LIsN CALHOUN . . . LOUISE FIAYNIQS V. PIERSON. . . .Timm D A Vucs. SENIOR CLASS I Q ,-f -.C uid - -H Genes1s. ROM the t11rq1111isv 111' the Kansas slay the Spirit 111' tl11- Prairice - loolied flOWll 1111011 her l'av0re1l Sl2lll'I 1111011 the S2ll'l!l'0ll tint 111 sunflower and lJj0ltl1'lll'UllQ 11111111 the l1r0w11 heads 11f Wheat and the tassels of the 1-orng 1111011 the land which l'lll'IllSllGS daily nov- , cities for the WV0l'lll, Carrie Nations Ill' patent Aglllllillll0-CEi1ti'll6l'S. fl'1lVi'kll'll the Acfropolis on the Hill she saw 11. new g2llt'l'Zlll0Il headfwd. Vi'l1e1'11at the Spirit of the Prairie rej0i1'111l. it was the time wlien 11111 people of Kansas, ex11e1:t,i11g a l1o11ntif11l yield, l'02lf'llCIl into the River 111' lilill1 a111l Honey and fflllllfl that their Dipper had l1aal11a1l. But the Clllltll'0ll 111' mon, lll1'lll'lillO with i.l11: llOlJ0l!lll spirit of tl111 Wtst. raised the flaps l:1'U1Ill the tents 111' their fathers, saying, C11111e, let llS dwvll here in flZll'klll'FS 1111 l0llf3QG'l', We have let the Sand 111' the plains silt i11t11 11111' hair long Gllflllgllf' S11 tl111y issued forth and the 'l'r:1il l1-1l to I aw11.111'11 and l.G?ll'I1lll,'.'C. I. Tells How the Chosen Came Down Out of Egym. l7l'Ulll all the 11111111ti1zs that f'llt l'lil l' tl111 Kfiiwaw 1e1m1n111:1w11altl1 they 1a111-1: 1'r11n1 lllll' 1'11al-l111ls 111' Cl1er11l11111, from 1.1111 wl1e'1t-1iel1ls 111' Wvilllilllll- 51111, i'1'0111 11111 prairies 111' C11111an11l111: 1l1111111:jl1 11111 lJl'UXVlllll13Q llllltfillfl ggiziss-. past thu Wllllfl-tl'lllllitZKl sy1a11111rPS and the 1:1'i1111+011-l1111'1'is11l Slll'lllll'llS. till Ill 11111 1'1111t 111 llllllllll. Ol'f'illl tl111y 11111s11a1111111l. 21-01111 as the most l101111l'11l 11:1t1:h of alfalfa i11 s111'i111Zti111e, l'Oll2,ll 1l111 llfllll' 111 a lll'Hll'lf'-Ilflf-I villagv. li'l11111lay lllOl'lllllg tl111y g?llllCl'1lll in Fllilllfll 1'0r ihc first 1'1111v1111-ati11n, I0 111111-11 1l111 l,l'l'll3E5S0l'S 11111111 tl111 sl11i1'11-1:at1's 01' the River 111' l111111'11i111:g Slllll irrigat11 the arid 1'11111'11l11ti1111s ol' li'l'F!Slllllilll lll'8.lllS. Scanl. they were 111 llllIlll'0l'S, l111t goodly to 1111111 11111111 and full 111' l1lllCYl'Ulll gl'6!2ltll0SS. Slll'lll 1.'11111l111 , heads were larger than 11111lev11l1111111l l'Pl'flllq1llll'1lS and llll0Olllll ll 1112111111115 VV'2ll'l'2llllG1l. Anyone who has lived i11 a. villaga 11111 1111 tho jark- watcr with 11 C'0ll1llG 111' imi1':1ii1111 111-11-lc fronts fvrls flattvrcrl by il hid 1-1 11, l1'111111g W11n1an's Clll'lQtl2lll Ass111:iati1111 affair, and even one wl111 rogistwrs i'r11m the centers 11f1'ivilizaii11n 11111111111 l'0jll'9SS a fcsling 111 im1111rt11111:1- wl11111 Eve agents 51111111 l1im, witl1i11 his Hrst llkllf-llfilll' on the I-li1l. for the laun- 1lry he never ex11e1fts to lilave. S0011 thziy l1r11l11s i11111 the Y. W. ring tl111111- selves, illlll many a 0nQ l111f11r11 11111 year was gone llGC2llll0 a Prince among Crafters. l11 lfllklllkil the 0l'flf.tll'S 1l:1i3111rw1l the lll'lllI' 111' tl11' 11ew111111111rs: the Profs smoked the Peacci 1'-'ip11. 1111e11i11g th1-ir vlasses with puns or pleasant l,1ear-st01'icsg the 111111er classinen forgot for a moment their jihes and 101'- 1'11e11ti11gs, then all, when the hearts of the C.llll1ll'f ll wore- warming towards them, waded i11 and went. after the l1arna1-les. II. After' What Manner They Came Unto Their Own. Those pioneer days, when they who sought the truth ranged through the halls with their eyes on the pink kalsomine, and their unw-ary feet heating staccatos on the well--oiled stairs. were three rings and a menag- erie of wonder and ani-azement. Everything from the Megathcrinm in the museum and the Zeus in the symposium to the latest in rod-striped shirt wa.ists spelt novelty in black-f-accd initials. Thanks to the strenuous knocking ot Profs and the hector- ing of Soph and Senior above them, the green layers gave place to gray. Some learned out of books. some learned outside of them. Some picked up the University Billingsgate with surprising rapid- ity. Some, coralled by the fraternities, rejoiced in the alphabet Agents of the Greeksg some, remaining Barbs, exultcd in the lltt0l'lI1OSt conlines of Galatia. As the curtain rose the novitiates plunged recklessly into the horrors of a political campaign. For the first and last time 0 Naughty-two was embroiled in interfactional wa1'. Incipient f ji bosses. Rival candidates. Plots and counterplots: oaths and 6 the breaking of oaths. In the auditorium of Snow Hall two hun- dred shorthorns watched the heroes stream into the lime-light of QQ. .the arena. Then the bosses opened the throttle, a little steam. X a head-end collision, and Walter Re-nn pulled Victory out of the I wreckage, two votes to the good. V Two parties, colors, and a yell were the first vintage of the class. The yell came out spontaneously beneath the weight of On Mecszaihs numbers or upon suflicient provocation. The cherry' and white showed up. semi-annually in the Reception-room. and rather A oftener on the grandstand roof. The parties were counterparts W , of all such infantile diversions where youths standing around x J S .,,,- the walls, their heads hanging like ungainly suntlowers, wishcu fi ' Q themselves at homeg while the misses sitting at home anathema- tized the fortune which doomed them to Waste their fragrance on the desert air of a back-parlor. By the second event the boys G3 had braced up so that they did not outnumber the girls more than four to one, and could unhlushingly sit and play crokinole in a corner beneath the gas-light. III. In Which the Chosen Go Forth Against the Midianites. Just what it was that caused an ebullition of the lighting - spirit is all uncertain. Perhaps it was the martial spirit of the timesg perhaps the old Adam in the garden: peradventnre it was the ladies who looked down into the lists and said as they pinned ..', M lb 'Q K 2 2' . C9 r Ks E .. V . . .. f' H ,W ,L their tokens on chosen knights. Fight for me to-night. How- ... H, .I-md: vv-'I fi mfluf ever that may have been, a very quiet class planted the bomb that shook the 'flittle tin gods in the council chamber and made the Hill think its Enceladus had the jimjams again. ,, A May pole of gas-pipe, a hole in the Campus, a cherry and 'W white canvas and the Legion-aries were calling for obeisance to Q , s the image. So determined was the attack, the guards scarce had In . time for a prohibitive if before she was spiked fast. People ought to learn sometime that Prohibition doves not prohibit in Kansas. When the Little Chancellor mustered his forces over .PZQQS against them. told them they were pm-.wnur nun. yrulu- on his gr-ass, if .. ' '4 X, . 1 ic? fl 0 I ,lik ff, HN' they laughed a hollow equine laugh. Some renegades in the trear ranks cried, Down! some few were getting their pass-out checks behind the evergreens, but the line of triple brass, measured by the Faculty's Bertillon System. made good. The Chancellor looped the loop three times before he got in an effective broadside, then held a Court of Inquiry all his own, for names were hidden deep in bosoms of sweaters and the Head was reported to be poor at remembering faces. For the rest, the Freshmen Class, aided by the doughty men of Naughty-naught, did battle right valiantly against -fyfanffkfjiyff-5U'5'9all comers. When the colors wont up the steps to the chapel- desk, all said it was a glorious day, -and when the much bedrag- -l gled warriors sang t'Praise God from Whom All Blessings Flow, , the words came with a ring of unaccustomed truth and vigor. ' jg , 169 After the excitement had died down and the lessons for the as it . . . . ,. year were liuished, Naughty-two want back whence they came, 1 fl w x leaving the corridors to the scrubbing gang and the Campus tn ' E' Lf Ji.- ' the weeds. I ' In September, when the rooming-houses tacked up flaming Rent signs, the class came back. With that unanimous vote . which had grown to be the custom of the Naughty-twos, they Odewance ' ,I , Lazgk 1 ll T ll H 9295 . r r , A Glorious Dqq F' N . l i T ,,I r ,flhilf Cfzarrmfzff Garb elected Emery Chief. Though depleted in numbers, the class with the most charm- ing girls and the graftiest grafters on the Hill could not be re- pressed. After xt certain memorable night. when the Sophs .met double their number ot' granger Freshman on McCook and smote them hip and thigh and occasion-ally in the neck. war was openly declared. Naughty-two outgeneraled them. Met them again a. week later. Same result. To the proposition '02 is the better class, wrote Q. E. D. in big black letters. Taught them. Forgot the maxim of the great Napoleon and fought them too often. lt they haden't, would have come out completely victorious the sec- ond May Day. As it was, they made the pole kiss the blistered sod where the blue grass looked up the day before. Then the Council brought out the carpet, well worn by the knees of many suppliantsg turned the lights on the nakedness of the baldheaded truth and on the culprits in all the iniquity of their moral undress. The Chancellor called it unarchy g Haworth, recalling his Soph- omore days, called it the immutability of man : and Williston called it thirty days. They had a regular May Day among themselves, and, adopting manners to stop it next year, ended by saying, ll-laiianaf' after the cuss-words of the Mexicans. IV., In Which the Juniors Move Into the King Row. Half-way to the top and still climbing. Got up so high peo- ple could see them shine. Dropped the purple toga on McGilllvray, and when the spring came, passed it on to Jones. Held two grand parties during the Sophomore year, but resolved to make them show like lead nickels in a pile of double eagles alongside of the Junior Promenade. Bought up a. hall, brought in the Seniors. and xvultzerl through a happy evening, while the heathen raged without. I Throughout. the course, whenever it became necessary to hook a political oflice, Naughty-two seemed to have hold of the l Q ff it 11 ' V al t 51. I sg 4- Yiugha 77z2m ac Q , 'I lui NU .5 jf .Sf 5fa2g 2ZQ1ZZieQf,M5 it 5 it t Wil' ffze Pram. iff it f I f X My 'X :f9,:f?: f7a12fg7QfeZ!zfr if .hfgi-wcaggeaf reel. Always had. Of course, Freshies are not supposed to hold anything higher than Freshman presidency, if indeed the Soph- omores allow them that, but as the Naughty-twos climbed out of the incubator they had greatness thrust upon them. That was because they hung together. From their number elected two Foot-ball Captains, one and then the other. For the Senior year they moved men into the managerships of Foot-ball, Basket-ball. and Track Team. Didn't. make a play for Base-ball, for they had already held it for two years and didn't like to crown all pieces at one time. What other class can boast of three editors for the Weekly in as many years. besides managers, presidents, and other honors numberless? Successfully the class went on until Jeshurun waxed fat and kicked over his milk-bucket, as it saith in Deuteronomy. That. was when the other calf came out in blue ribbons. Then came a merry mix-up of trickstering politicians, much palaver, and a. pow-wow, which gave back t.he lie. Quiz-time found them ready to receive the mantle of Elijah which Naughty-one dropped as their horses drew them through the goal. V. Which ls the Beginning of the End. When the Faithful started on the last quarter, they found how many had fallen by tht- side. But those who failed to re- turn, as many had failed every year from a shortage in corn or a shortage in coin, said, We will come again next year, for nt-xt year is always the slogan in hopes that next yt-ar the kernels will break off the ears in the corn-field. Those who did come were much shy like they once did if a maid wig-wagged to them across the street. In a mingled atmosphere of poker-chips and Bodenhausen Madonnas they lived and thrived. Pulled wires in the hall awhile, then held unanimous elections in Room 17. Elected Meek pres- ident at the head of a ticket. Mixed up in school politics, spent a few social evenings. then settled down to books. Some were trying to be Phi Beta Kappas, some trying not to be flunks. Played a play. made an Annual, and proved themselves worthy of the Name and Fame they had gained in four years at Kansas University. Kansas, where we live in number so many they will improved. The lads didn't. VI. Set Forth a Few Things not in the Curriculum. When they stopped the exciting game, they found that they really had learned a great deal about the rules of the game since the cards had first been dealt. They were onto the tricks bet- ter than at first. but not half so well as they thought they were at the end of the second year. now as there had been then, but they had gold isn't taken with a pickg there were There were digs learned that all the workers now as then, but they had learned to graft as well. Found out that day, that they might month. it they couldn't run up the Hill the first learn to walk up it by the cntl of the first. Learned that if ons- couldn't work the Profs, it was better to work one- selfg and it one didn't make a I to be happy, it wasn't a Hunk. Learned that peculation is like the old domino deal, only stopping when the last domino Ilnds nothing beyondg and to take the best pair of rubbm-rs left. Learned that a Fraternity was a good thing to stay out of until one was sure he wouldn't be a maverick: and joined the first one that asked them. Found out that the reason so many students burned the midnight oil was because so many were enjoying the moonlight at eleven: that it takes an ace to beat a king. but that the right kind of a queen can In-at anything in the deck. When they halted in the midst of the .Tune roses before the portals of the Mecca they had set out for, they were better students than they were at first, albeit they had forgotten what they tried the hardest to re- member: but the-y didn't cry over inability to reca.ll the binomial theo- rem or thc nervous system of the grasshopper, for they knew the hours spent had not been wasted. i Exodus. Thus the class went on until their time came to pass under the wire. Some wo11 out handily, some had to sprint before the last hundred yards were over, some few never reached tho go-al at all. But when the Great Pontifex closed the race, no one but rejoiced that he had entered it. tl l N. M. M. tw Q W XSYQ7-.1 - X N M I , 4 ggfa j f ,, ., 77? y f I .2-vc: 'Ln ,iq fi' '4 f f N .N lxa ,-.q. 4 ,fl I :,,s M15 LL .Z' A J, Yi 'rf ,...- ' Y I, 7 I FA, lof t-'lg' If flu .5 an T'- L- Art School. ANSAS UNIVERSITY is ont- of the youngest of the greater educational cen- ters. After a hard strug- gle for existence under the control ot' diitert-nt churches, it at last came under the management of the State, and on November 2. 1863, thc Governor gave out a proclamatioin de-- claring the institution permanently located at Lawrence, and in thc next year passed a law for its organiza-1 tion. The first Board of Regents was appointed March 2, 1864, and Mix' R. W. Oliver was the flrst Chancellorl ln these early days the University? consisted of but on,e department, that which has since developed into the School of Arts. There were in this department three- chairs, that of Belles-Lettres, Mental and Moral Science, that of Languages, and that of Mathematics and Natural Science. This formed merely a preparatory school, and it was not until the nt-xt year that regular collegiate worli was undertaken. 'I'hen two young women were fitted to enter the Colle- giate Course, and from then on the University was divided into two depart- ments, Preparatory :uid Collegiate. ' lt was not until .1875 that any ililiferent course of instruction was oi'lTered, and then the Normal Department, was opened, but it only existed until 1885. In 1891-2 the Preparatory School was discontinued, and the entire school was reorganized. During this year the Regents divided the University into separate :chools and appointed a. Dean ova-r each. Professor D. H. Robinson was the first Dean of the School of Arts, and he held this position until 1895, the time of his death. Prof. E. Miller was appointed in his place and is now the acting Dean of that school. 'l'l1e Facility in this department has grown 1'rom three members to forty-eight, and the number of students has increased from two to six hundred. There are several scholarships and prizes awarded in the School of Arts. Those open to thc graduates of this school are the D. ll. Rob- Ifl. MILIJIR. inson Latin scholarship of S100, and the Lawrenoe Citizens Latin schol- arship of 5100. There is also a li. H. Robinson Memorial scholarship. lt is supported by the Alumni association, and consists of 5100, and is open to Juniors and Seniors of the School of Arts. 'l'he Alumni members of the Pi Beta Phi Fraternity established the Lucinda Smith Buchan Memorial Scholarship. It is a loun of S200 for three years without interest, and is open to the young women of Junior and Senior classes. In 1898, Mr. W. J. Bryan presented the Ilniversity with 55250, the yearly interest of which was to bo given to the student presenting the lzost thesis on some one prinfiple of our Government. The details of the contest are entrusted to the Faculty of the University. This is known as the William Jennings Bryan Prive Fund. 1 J? 1 ' TW XX! , ,A :TQEI f. 0 I X - f ,ig gwifwfff ,F Q , f , -,f X 'LM WL . 1-. . , 'x f My , 4' , X K Ass X L f K Q if X 712:19 :XX v-,J V-bf.,-, - 'X 4 , I4 J I I, -- z, X wimkz jf S' 'ag N W, . J i -ff , -, as fr gift mfg f 1 f to xA IIIUHQRI1 ll.xl:4:mA1,xx'l'1s ................... .......... . ..,. ' I'0pl-lm XN'ZlSllhllI'll I,l'0IHll'2llOl X' School: -l2l.YllZl.Wk1'l' liouml. qw I5 K Mum Nlcfllomx ......,..................................... .llm-mn llurlun Illgfln Svlxool. II:-:1mr4:1c'1' H.x1l,l-:Y ..,...........................,.......... I,mvx-mmcv Si'l1iOl' l'l:nyVcmnmtu-1-:l.z1w1-1-ucolligln Svlmol: A 'l' Q E ': , ... .MUN H1:u'l l' Imlumllllz ........... . ........ ........... K llunlw Ulutlw High Svlmol. ANNA XV,xx:14'11-11.11 , .. .,............... A ..,..... .........,... . fXlril1-nv Alvile-nu lligll Sc-howl: S04'll'1j' lflditm' XY1-c-kly '01, yyfwklx. HU2ll'd '02, S1-nim' l'lu,v f1OlllIIlilll'l', K A 4.5. ' IIUIPUS IGMICIM' ......,........... I .......... .................. S um-cu SUIIUCZL lllgll Sclmulz l'l'1-slrlc-In Suplmuxorv Ul:Lss.AINI1h-lic Iiditm' XV01-lily WI. Alhh-txiv I-Sozwml '01, f'2llDlZlill 'l'uml,- lillj1'il'4'ZlIll four yours. IS I-J Il, ll u'Hl43l. PUUH ....... . .... .. ....... .,.. ..... .... . I 1 nlvpemloncv. lmh-pm-nrlcm-0 l-ligh Sm-huolz St'l3l'l'll2lll'j' flllI1l0l'ClilSS, .Tary- hzlwkcl' liuau-cl. l'lrlitm'-in-l'l1iPf of NV1-1-lily '01, Sm-lvty liditm' '00, Aclvisury Huurcl 'OIL K A GJ, lmzuux .I. KINNICAR, A.I5. in Mecliuim- .................. Vulalwl-ll Vzmlclwvll Hiu'h School, S0llllIWPSl. 4'nll1-gv: .lzLylm:m'ke1' limn-cl. E Z, I.: 'VH I-ZWINQ: ........ ...,........... ......................... I 1 nhl lolzl. Higfll Sm-luml: l x'vsirl4-nt Y. XV. V. A. 'lll. Um-m'l':ll Sw'- l'l'l2l.l'j' Y. XV. 1'. A. Will. 1 I XRl'1NLJl'1 Iiluuus ..................................... Hun-hinson llutclminsun High Sm-hool: Ih-zunutivi'l11lr. fb l' A, lsx' li1f:Ll,1-:Y .......,................................... lJilfWl'4'I'1Cl' l 1'anl:l'm't lligh School. 4 I -x lncxmvl-1 MILLS ............................... ...l'13,WI'lllll'0 l'll'Rllllil'0l'l High Sulxmml. l4I'lUl,.X S'1'umw:... .............. ' ............. ...l'ulumlms. f'Ullllllh1lS H1211 Smrlnrml. If'lc.xNmc ffl41Hl,lK.. ........ Z ..... Z ............. .... I Svllovillv livllvvlllu High Suhuol. IAJITIHIG IIAYNI-us. .f ............ '. .i .... : ..... I .t ......... IJv:u'vx1wm-bln. lVA!1l,Vl'llW0l'!,ll Hugh School: l'.lllUDl lll-1 Thwl JllXlI1lWk1'l', Sovro- tary lf'l'0ShIllllll lflnss, Vim--I'1'x-simlvlmt Suplnmnorv Class. lADl'lSI'1HMI'l'll. ................... .......... ...,. . , ,'I'0lwkgl lim-thully i'oIlm-ge. K A 69, lQ1mxzxl:ntl. l'ul.s'r1-11: ......,....................... lmxtvx-Sp1'111g's. Hukm-r lTlliVk'l'SiYj'Z 3ll'ITll!L'l' of thx- Ul'2l,dl1lLllf Hchuul. Q ,Xl.x'l-:1:N.x Il1':lcl:.. ..... V 4 ........ Z .... 5 .... ..... XV:ll1u-gn, XX ZllIll'.LI'U Hl.L:'Il hm-Imnl. l 1c.xNK M. '1'HoM1'sox ....................,...... Kansas City, Kas. , Kansas Pity. Kansas, High S4-luml: Milv hun '01, E. X, ANNA Fhxlclclsox ................................... ....... ' Fopeku Hetlxuuy Collcgv. K A GJ. 'W A LTI-:lc M1-11-:K ............ ............................. .... X I milvue Dickvinson ftblllllj' Higrll Sc-lmul: lirlitm'-i11-1 'hivt' XX'wflily '00. l'r0sidm-nb SL-nim' Flaws. ,X 'I' SZ, fb ,li K, P. E. tlL'1l,,x Mwzxcs .......................,. ,.. . .... ......... l Ulu lolu High S1-howl. CID U K, Hl+1l:M.'xN LANliWliIl'l'HY ..................,............ lm1vo1m'm-tl: Leuwlmwl-tll High School: I'l't'SidL'llT. Y. Bl. V. .X. 412. cb B K. BlY1:'l'l,l-: Srmxl-1. ............... . ................ . . .I12,lWl'UI1C'0 T.uxx'1'vm'v High Sn-lmol. AIIIJRICY Goss ..... '. ..........., ,..: ...... ............ . l,'lm-alszmtoxm. l'lm-alszmtou Hugh School: 5Pl1lOl'l,l2l15'f'OlllllllllA'l'Z qw lg K. l'lRNl'IS'I' W1-:Isla .......................................... Ilauvn-em-v Lamww-m'v High S1-hool. MA1c'l'11A l'I'l l'ING1cn ........... ... ............... Nl ansticld, Ohio. Munsiielcl High School: St'Cl'1'Hlfl'y Y. XV. U. A.. Secx'eL:m'v Si'lll0l' Vlzuss, dv li lx, K A 00, ' Cri,xnc1.1f:s Ilomsms ....... ............... ............... . I lussell. Russell lligh Svhool, Sl?lllOl'1,l1lj' Ctlllllllll-lE1', cp jg K. BlYli'l'l,l'1 ll.-XHLICY. .................,.............. Iizmnsims Vity, Kas. Kansas l'iLy. Kansas, High School: x7lCl'-Pl'GSlf1l llt .Tunior Flaws. fb B K, Nl. D. lS,xmu:A1z'1'N1-zu. .. ....... ,. .,.......... , ............ Nvwuon. Bla-nnonitv Smninzu',v. l'laLls14'-ml: lietlwl Vollvgwa, N1-wlml, C I.. Woulmlflu' ,......... ......... ........,. .... . . N Ialryvillc-. Mo Rlzu'yvill1-Higrll Sclmol: Missouri lf11ix'ers1t.y. I RllRll l'Hl-I vox l'Nw14:u'l'H ...................,... Kansas Pity. Mo Kansas Pity f'Ul11l'Qll High Sm-howl. cb B K, I A. Snlvlcm' ......... ......,................... ...... 4 X tuhison Stzxlv Normzml. Advisory Hozwd of NYM-kly. dl IS K, HIHUN 'l'1l.m:N lim-is ...... ............................... S uhm-tlmu Snln-thu lligrh School. .x N11-1 I-1 P1l.mfH1-:lc .......................... ...4 Jlzuhe Olzltln- High Svhuol. xxli H. SMITH .................. ..................... I .zmvremce l'zux'11evt'iIy. Nehraukzm. ,VXQ-mh-xmxyz l'm-sidfmt, Y. M. V. A. '01, Ss-nim' Play Kfmxuxlittev, Jzmylmmvkw fJllill'Lk'tIl '2 dv B K. l'1Dl'l'H .Tmaxsux ........ : ....4... .... ......... .... H i z mwutlm. Hluwuthu High Schmwl A1:'1'HrY1: H1l.l.1Nus. I .. ......................... . ........ Uwrn-vvnh-. fudopendencv Hljjll Sclmul: won Iiryzul Vrixv '00, 'flmlllhsfhvll Luw Prize '01, l+1l,lz.xm-:'l'u lilcuxox ........ . .............. .. ,,,, lguswn llussull High School. IC. 1-3. lil!!-1HHIl4I'I, ................. ........................ T -lwlr-me-Ld rfulsrwll High School: umm-1 volleg-Q, gb B K 4 ' ' hm S'l'l'lM ............,. U . . . .J ........ 1. . .. .......... .... I VA'1lVGllXYOI'Il1, IA'llYEl1WUl'lll Pflgll Sm-11001: mummy Play f'0IlllllillPl'. t'1,Y1m Nniluwns ............................................. Oluthw. Olutlu- High School: 'l'rc-usu1'v1' Y. Rl. V. .X. '00, Mumlg-,.V , buss-hxlll '00, 'l'r'vzlS111'u1' Slxllifil' Vlnss. B 6-J ll :ln B K , . f c ' Q - 1 l .xR1cum'N .XRAISHY ....... .....,.........,....... . .1 Ullllvll hx-on Uluthv High Sm-hnol: l'1ll'1L'l0l1 C'ulh-gv. AlillIl0ZlIiOliS, Jay- huwkel' liozwd. li li l', WM. Bl1's'1'.x1:u ............... ......,........... . .'1'ulmug Ahilenv High Sulwulz cp B K, lmrzlcx I,l':s1,xr: .... . .......,.....,.............. ....... I .auvn-1fuc1 Ilutvhinsuu High Schnol. ll I5 QD, fb li K, ISIGNJAMIN XVARD ....,........,. .........,............ B Iilll1U2l1lll1i NliIllll'1lIbU1iw High H1-lmul. , ' ' ' ' Ill l'.lHl'.l, l:lI.l'lN... .................,........... .Xllllv .Xhilvlmv High Svlmol. Linux l'.xI'1. l3.xl.mv1N .....,...................... .4.l'Zm-ek Httuwu l l11X'L-l'sll.Y. L 3, l' N E Iilixm' l-Rll,l,lNusl.l':Y ...............,......... ...Hi-llwillv l3vllox'iii1-ilig'h School. HENRY VA N I I.l-11-I'l' ...... .... .......... ....... . . . .Killgflllilll Kinglmam Hipfh School. XYINIIVICICIJ I'Zvlf:l:1Nm:HAM ......................... .......... ' l'op1-lm NGiIl'ilSk2li lfliivm-1'sit,y. 'lf1'0:Ls111'ul- Y. XV. U. .-X.. K A 09, AQQNI-ZS i3ITliNl'1'l l'. , ....... , .......................... ...Wnla-iield Dickinson County High School, cb B K i'il IWAICID IiANuwoll'1'11Y. .................... ....... T 4E'iliYl'IlWOl'l,il T191LV0llWOI'T.il High School. Iso,-x H Ii0CKl'll ICI.IAI'Ili ..................... ......,..,... . .fl-Iolton Holton High Sn-hooi. Vlllllllillxii lfnivvrsity. .IULIA l r:1zz14:l,l,. .. .......,.................. .... I lulsu-nd Hulstvud High School. .I. X. l'Il41Rs4rN ,..... , ...............,...............,... F1'z1nkfm't l 1'zLnkfm't High School: hl,ill11t,2'6l' Svllitll' lfluy, Nlzlllugm- Football, '4l2. Lmflsrz SHI!-ILIJS ............ , ........................... Highland Higg'hluN11d l:1liVL'1'Sit.Y. lTIliVGl'5it.Y of Cllil'2ljIOQ Gem-rzll Svc- l'l't2l.l'j' Y. NV. V. A. S'I'lUx1c'l' smvsux ...................... .... ........... A I 1-I'lu-1-sm hll'Ph01'SUl1 High School: Bzlsm-hull hl2lUilg.l'L'l' 'OL B C9 ll, GRAVI-1 l'1I,l.S XVUIi'l'l'I ...... , ................. , ......... llldn-poluh-lmcv 'i'um:1, Iowa. High Sm-huol. Flu-:lu Lmmox ...,............................. . ........... .1 bllvet-tra 'I'o!vdn. Ohio, High Sc-hnol: l'1'4-sid011t Sl1UWLiT0l'llI'j' '01 Mim-: 1:1-zixxux... ........................ , .... ...llussl-ll. llussvll High S1-lionl. LI-INA Am-31. .. . ................. . ...,.... .... S ulinu. Suflimm Higfh School. .Tosmii KRAM1-:R ........... . ............................ ..Spivcy. f'Pl1ll'lLi Norniul. Gl'f'1lYi Bend: Szmlilizn l'nix'm-sity. K. U. Ormui- 112, XVm-4-kiy AliViSlJl'j' HOZl1'd '02, Hi':1'l,,xi1 l luzzm.r.. ........................... . . . H ulstioad Halstead High Sw-hool. Flu-in Avlu-Ls. . . ........................ . . . .Suzimlinu Kzmszms XN'f-S11-yan. NYlC'l'l.l41 COLLINS ..,.......,....................... ...... S aln-Llizm. Suin1tilizl,Hig'Ii School: Vive-l'i'vsizlr-nl. l4'1'vsI11nzLi1l'i:1ss, cb B K, 1 ISV:-:INN s'1',xx'1'0N .,......., ........................ ...... I J axvm-mm 'P1'ivate- 'lwlllllli Se-aim' l'lay l,'ul11n1i1,1vv. I . M. HOAIJ ..... ......,. .,...........,.. . . ..I104'0ll117Ull1 Lam- IvDiVt'l'4il'Y, E E, DAISY DEAN ................................,. Kansas Pity. Kas Kansas Vity, Kansas. High Hr-lmul: S1't'l'1'I2l,l'y Y. XY. V. .-X. 1000. F. H. K1-:1zsHNl-za.. ...................... . .Baldwin liakm-1' l'nivm'sity. S.,xIa,xH Scqvrln-3 ........,................. ........... . .Sterling Stm-Vlingg' High Sw-11001. Coopm' ibllvgm-. C. L. DA Yms. .. ............................... Kansas Vity. Kas Kansas City, Kansas. High School: f'hilil'll1Zlll S1-aim' Play i'mn111iLt,c-Q, Fvm-ing' Vlllllllllilbll 'HL B 09 Il, gp B K, , A M I4'l.c,xNc'r1s Sr.m'mxll4l1:, ............... ....... ...IH-ulwmly l'L-zllnnly High Sm-Iluul. l'1,xlcNl4:S'l' l'UlTR'l'Rlllll'l' .... ............... ...,. . .... I 1 ulm-pl-mlm-nm llldm-pmmllm-111-0 Iligrll Sm-Imul. Am' lmlm SNIl'l'H ...................................... lluwlw-1101-. HozLLx'im:1-, Nr-lmruslcan, Higlm Schmmlq Sl'Cl't'llll'.V SL-uinr Vluss. I'fl4:l.1cN t',xmu1UN ......... ..... ....................... I ' 'oz-1, Svmt I m'L Sr-ott, High Hclmcml. Vicm--l'1'4-sirlm-111 Y. W. t'. A., I'lmliLm'-in-I'Im-f, l'usig'm-41. J1l.Yll2lWkl'I', K A 4.3! AMES L. lluwlld ........................................ I1zlu'1'u11m- lI11iv1-rsity ui' XV1lSllil1g'Nbl1. Sm-zmtmlf-. l Hl'IIH'lHlU.X I' l'll'I'SH.X INN ......... ..........,.............. I 11lWl'l'lll'4 K1l1IlSZLSf'il.Y, Mo., High Sn-lmoul, cb 15 IQ, l'l,,xm:Nf'x': Hlxml,-xx ................., . ..................,, ulmlme Ulzuhv High Svhnulz 'l'l'lxEl9lll'1'l' l 1'c-5111111111 Vluss. Assuciuxle lidilm' XVl'1'k1.Y WT. B Q ll LYIJIA XVAxx1vr.1-1:: ........,......,.,,........... . Knob Nosmm-. Mu Missouvi Stane Nurmzml. Klux Lrxmx .. ............. .. , .........,... .... 4 'll1'l'l'j'VZLIO 1'llQI'l'j'V1lI9 High Svhuul. XVAI. V. XVHITI-I ........... ........................... I Czmsus Pity Kzu1sz1s1'ily High H4-howl: Hzlsm-lmll f'llIlI2lill '02, S'r1':l,l.,x HM.:-3 ................................ ...Kansas Vity, Mu Kansas City. Blissuln-i. High School. Inu t'1:u1foo'1' .,..... ...,.,... .,..............,..... . . .Wilson XVils1n1 Hig'h School. ... , ld. II. MuM,x'vxl ............................ ........,...... I ,uwn-vncf Atchison Vuunty High School: Allllllljfffl' Kansas lTnix'vl'sity VV1'vkly 01. H Mun' I.. Mll',l'.l'1Il. ................................ .... 1 'vm-1-lx Kansas SHlYl'NUl'llllll,1I3 li K, lm' HAl:sl11n-:lcul-:lc ..................... .... ............. I . aww-m-4 lAHVl'1'lH'I' High Sclmulz 'l'x'4-usllm-1' .Iunior lflzass, lvmmllmll 0lillHl:Il'I' '0l. Allxh-lic lqilillll' XVN-lily '00, IUl.l,xN .'Il'1Nsc1NsuN ....................................... llaylm-41 I1iLWI'1'lll'l' lligll Svlmol: Vuplznin I m,mlIr:lNll 'I.'t'2llll '01, 'I , I Y. X. .I. I I..xmx ...... ............ ............... . . .I'l'2ll1lxI0l'I. I 1':u1kfol'l High Sclmnl. l'II.XNI'l-ZS Tlfuwsm-:I-I ...................,........... Iilemvuml. Iowan Iilenwoml High S1-Imol. 'l':Illm' I'nlIog'v: .lzI,vII:IwlcI-1' lluaml. Sm-niur Play Iknnmitta-I-. II.xmn' S. Mwlil-:I1:x'I4:r: ....................,... Valley Falls Ifzunpln,-ll IvIliVI'I'Sil.Y. lm-IN .XNIIIIICW Iilzrcssu ......,................. .... I 'lux-I-ku Iiulw-kan High SI-lmzgl. I.:-:nov W. I3.xx'1'I'1l: ......,.................. .......... I 'nlumlms Xl.lII-IR'l'.X IIl:.u:KNI-:Y .. ...XVlll'I'l'IlSIIlll'Q'. Mo sun Kmm ........ ...., ' Fukiu. .lapam II. 'l'. l1.Xl'l'1Y ........ ........ I Dillon I3WII:II'I' ll. III-LAD .... ...l I'1-dolliu I'. I . llI'M4wl.lx ..... ..,..... I Dillon Emu SI'u.x1u'rI .... .... I innsns I'i1,v 1 - Law School. ORN in the month of Of:- tober. in the year 1878, with James lVo0ds Green structor, the haw School of thc l7nivcrsity of Kansas has grad- ually grown and matured under that worthy gentle-man's care :ind tutel- age. from a. school of about a dozen students, with a two-years course, to one of one lnmdred and seventy students and a thrce-years course, leading to the degree of I.li.B., and recognizing no superior west of the Mississippi. with the probable ex- ception of iowa, which has a slightly greater enrollment. This department, which in its inception could be eas- .IAMI-:S XYUODS tiRl'lI'lY. ily handled by one instructor, has now cight instructors, including lect- urers on special topics, and comprising some of the best legal talent in the State ot' Kansas. Taking into consideration the many difficulties which had to be overcome-for the Law School has not been unduly favored over the other departments of the University--this surely is a rcmarkablc growth. From Log-cflbin to White House is the story of the varied lives of some of our best Presidents. and we may say that the career of the Kansas Uni- versity l,aw School has been fully as diversitled. From old North Col- lege, with no accommodations whatever. to one of the bcst buildings on the Uniyersity Campus, with all the facilities of a, first-class law school, will, in a few years, be the completed history of this department ol' our institution: for thc people ol' the State as well as tho Regents of the lfuivcrsity realize that this department plays no minor part in the affairs ol' this institution and dcscrves at least a part of the credit in having made it one of the recognized places of learning in this country. The I,-aw School at present occupies the north wing of the first floor of Fraser Hall--quarters entirely too small to accommodate the increas- as Dean, and only in- ing l1lll1llN'l' ul' stmlonts. No llflDill'lll'l0lll in the l'nive1'sity is so over- t-mwrlvcl :mul no tlepartment BO tloscrveclly in need of lie-ttf-1' facilities. T110 Clasw ot' 'Il2, whivh is composecl of about, fifty members. is the tirwt tlirec-your vlahs to gracluatv from th? svlmol. This flCD2ll'Klll'6 in this lrfngtlirtning of tho p1'0sm'ilvf-rl r-mnsv was qiwstinne-rl somewhat at first. but. its slit-miss is zulmittffrl hy all at prosmtt. :mtl the ability of the Svllllil' Class is a strong: 2111111111:-lit. in its favor. Pwliaips no class in the history ut' the institution has in-en so well gxroumlerl in the basic: prinvi- ph-s of tho law: no 1-lass whiz-In has slmwn more all-around merit, whether it lu- in thc- c-lass-rounn, in dolmtinsr. in orzllory. in atlilotirfs, than the VUVKP 1-lass ol' 'HCL Thx' grafluating r'lusS 1-xtvmls thc- liaml of rvspflc-I, and gmtitlifle to llflain Green, Pl'Kll'. Hlll'lll1'li, and Prof. Higgins, :mtl wishes tlw Kansas l'1iiv1-rsity lmxx' Srlmnl :ill the ble-ssiligs that this wrmrlcl nl' was 1-:ln lwstmv. Uu'l l'lflumlm .l. lwmz ........................,.... Lmvvvnm- Miuislvr. Le-ct11l'Ql'. lqzlwyw. UAH. V. CARI-LY, cb -X 60. ........... ................ , .. ...Uzwm-tt Mmubm' of tha- Phi Um-Ita Phi Fl':1t1-1'nily. l'!Mlll 0Rlv Mulimzx ..... ........... ...................... I 3 1-lk-villv Iiditm' Kansas Lawyor '01, Mx-111111-1' 'Vzwsily lizmselmll Team '01Z. llolcl-im' H. I'1r.m-11: ........... ...... . .. . ............. Wullsfm-d Qllill'l,Ul' Huck 'Vau'sit,x' Fuotbzmll 'IR-um '01, Mmcmx F. lmcrcwcrlc ............................. ..... . .Mun-ysvilw A good student and lTlliVGl'SiLj' Stn-11og'1'uplw1'. I m4:l'uu1f:1: I'uH,1,l1'w ......,..... ......................... I ,uwn-vxmcv Fivsl HRLSPIIIILII on haw Tt'1llIl '02, II l'wl:'l'14:r: Iwwmzs. fb ,X cp A. IS ....,....................... 14011, U1-zuillzm-41 frmn .Xl-I+ llupznrtlm,-111 '00, Sm-nim' Vluss Vrvsi- de-nt 'OIL Arn. S Il. Nw-zusux. 'P A W. W N I5 ........ ........... .... I C :1m1lsf'i15 Nh-mln-x-ufl'l1i Delta: l'l1i l l'1llCl'llily. 1 lvm-1 H. .Xl.I.I'HIN ................,,......................... 1,1-mu 'V:u'si1.x' l'vKl1lflHl.H'Vl'lllIl '1HP.'01. I'iI1'llL'l'Ull 'X':u'siLy llznsvlmll 'l'n-:nm 'lll. 'Ui H1 mu-:::'i' I4.XIClvNl'Il! .........................,... .. . .... lft. S4-mt Sv-1-tirm-Inanul. 514111111'I'l'1ll'Tl4'l'.f'll'l'k Distvivti'4v11l't.l,z1Wye1'. X I.I.I.XM I . Xl1rWIiY.'I' -3 'TP .... ..........,. ......... . . Wie-Elitzu V11-side-111 Kznnezu l'11ix'v1'si1.x' lSl',v:111l'l11h: Um-lmtn-1'. Kansas- Vulmuulo 'HIL 'll1. lizlrzsans-5lissm11'i '02, l H.X1!l.I'lSf'. t'.xl,mx. ....,...... ............... ...Ulm l'l'1-wide-nl Junim' I.:1wt'1:1ss 'HIL . 1 - x . Iuux Nlvluxxl-iv. L A ......... . ............... l'1. hw xlilkillg' ilu- I12lWf'0lll'SC in Um- Yvzlv. L ILXICIAI-ZS l'l:l-:Y. 1 N. .. ............................ . .lN'l'I'Ill'UUlx xlL'IllIJl'l' Phi lk-llu l'l1i: 'V:l1'sily Hull 'IH-:un '01, IJ.-xxll-11, W. l 1-:.x'l'Hlc1c1clme ,,............ .......... . .. lflm-vmf I'w-sidvnt uf thv K4-nl Vlulv '01 1 u.xm.l-Ls lf. 'l'l:1NKI,1-1 ............,.............. . .Lu vygm .-X l':lp:1blo Lam' Studs-ut. Imax H. 'l'ol,,xN ........,......... , ..... ..,.. X mu-fmmlu. Mum Ilvhzltur. IQZIIISIIS-MiSSU1ll'i WM. 'HL '01Z. l'l1i Ile-Ita I'l1i. + mn, I-Z. Ihlcxl-:s ....,..........,................,....... 'lbpvlcu SL-com! Iiusm-1:11111 on thx' Svuim- Law Vlzlss 'lfvnm. rv f f'H.xl:l,l-is XY. 1Q.xl:1fls4vN. fb .3 1-b ..., ,...,........,,.. . .tlzxrm-It .xl1u-rlmln-1-nlilwI'i1i IM-hu l'lmi l l'IlIl'l lIiTj'. 5.XMl'l-1I.l7. lIl l'1'HlN1:s. fb K W .........,. ,.......... I i:n11e:nsf'ity NI.-n11Iw1-4,mt'llw Vlni ll-llm Phi l l'1l1QI'lliI'X'. IIIVIN l-'. llr:xr:s'1'. ,x 'I' iz. qw 3 fb ..... ,.............. . ..Se-x'vl'.x' l'I'l'rilll'XlT Nlilhllf-I,:uvt'l:uw'uu-'1ll. .IIIHN H.1'lll-1.xlmI,l': ...,..,.....,..,... ...,......... 4 'lu-mln-4-. Hklu.. In-lvzm-V K:11x+:u--Xvlwzlkan 'EN KIIIISIIQ-Xli4SOlll'i 'UL , lwl-1:1- 1 l' N 9I1ll'1'H fmim-y . . .XNNiNT2lIlI Lam' l,iln-:n'i:m 'Hl-'Hill .X Vlnw 5111414-nl ut' tln- L:nw V. I-i,xlH:Y H.'I.xx1:1'2A1.xXX. 1 X. fb ,X fb fb B K, .............. NPXYIUII. UI'illillilYI'1l .Xl-I S1-lnml 'WL llI'IlilU'I'. KHIINII4-NPlPI'ilNk2l 'HL Kaxlwau-1'nlu1':ul1v VII. 5 IUHN MVK!-ZNNA .... .................. . .... ......., 1 C iugmam. Hlliilltfii Nlanmma-1'KansasImwym-1-'lil-'ll2. 'V:u'sity l1'.nl-1111111 'l'e:un 'HL 'ruxnm S. BVZZI. .X.l1. .................,,.....,,... x.l'kllll'llS Vily. NIUIIIIHUI' 'X'u1'sitA' Hull 'IH-:lm 'Hi Nl:-mnln-1'l mr1lw:llI'l'1-21111 '-ll. .xl.'l'l'11-1 V. l!l:11Yl.l1Zs. ...... . .....,......... ..... S l'YUl'Lllll'l' .Xmllniltn-xl to ilu- lim' in 1!Nll. Hxl:uI.11HI,suN. .MIS ........... .................. . .Nlmmilur llx-:ulxlam-11 131-th:111x' 1'1,llv-w 'ny Ml-IS M. HAIDIGII HIINIIIUQS M mu a gv1'K:n1s:1a l'uiu-1-sity XXX-L-klx' ' Bl. .X. lvl!!-.ICN I X ..... .....................,... ,,.,, , t':111'uiu 1ltl1k':1x':1h'y, l'l1ilipp11u- 'l'l'UUIJS. ,., Ul:Lt,l1v 11.2. l ul'l Scott XYlI.I,lAM IX. lliviilxxwx. qu -N, cb .... ............ l mls-p1-11114-Irv:-. Nl f'u111111itI4-141111111111 IM-lnzxtillg' fvflllllvil 'H . TH mms Xl. llvms .,.......... ..,...........,........ . .. In-lou liditul' uf Kzmszu lA2lW.YQ'l' 'Hi UIVIS XV. JUIINSUN. 2 XI f-J N IQ ................ ...l'1-Mlm l.1'aul1-1-u1'tl1w- I'1mix'1-nity l!:1ml'U1. Il. V. lIl'NPlCI.I,.1IY ,X I-J' .X. H ...............,.. .....,. 1 ir:-all Un-ml X 191-zuhlzm-ll fI'1Plll.Xl'! Sulnml Wm. I'l1i llc-lm Phi. SYIN1-:I:ll's S.H::w1f: ,............... ..,............ I mh-pm-nfh-:mu I,z1xvl.ih1':ll'i:m '0l. 'HLZZ ull 2ll'llllIHl Atlllvtef. l91:u::1:x-: I-I. 'I'l'1'lil-Ill. 1 X, cb .5 cb .... ............... 1 'uwkw Vin 5111111-m ae wr-ll as um- of lfzlrwzwl'l1ive-1'sit.x'1l'o1'n-111usi.Xlhlv-la 5 ltxlcl. M. HHl.3IQI'IS'I' ..... ,, .................... ...Mcntur SUCl't'l1ll'.Y Km-nl Vinh '02, Wn,l.1AM Bl1'l'1'u1-:l,l, ..... . ............... .. .......... North I-Ex-um-11 F01-two ya-urs zu h-aiding: n-mlmxxxilu-elnun of the- Kansas l'ui- versily Debating- Volllwil. GMA-:N li. 1'.xssi'1'Y. dl A fb ................ ......... .......... l 3 or-n Pm-side-nt ut' Kansas lflliVl'l'Sil.Y llvlmtilmg' filllllllfil. lf'R,xN1c I.. 5l01'1,'1'ux .............. . ............. ..... I flutulminwu .Xu .Xspix-ing' lluilroaul .Xlturm-y. fXR'l'l1l'li ll. IlIl,I.lN1::4. .MH .........................,... l'l101'1-.vx'ul4- XVil1lll'l' of Iidwzu-11'Hlompsou l'I'iZ1' '01. HIQYZII1 Pvize. '00, IUMA II. XVHl'l'I..X ....4..............,.. ............ ..... I ' :dL!'1'l'lOll .X Good Slumh-ut and Vuptnin S4-uoml lfmrtlmll Ts-11111 '01, SllllSIilllI1'UIl 'Yzlrsity lfuothull '.lwl'illll '0l. Nlvmwx W. WHVVI-1. Czum- to us from XYusI1I,11rn. I'l:myoml wwe on our Filillllllll 'I'1-um. .-Xmhnitterl lu the Hur. l'fI'4iI-BNI-I H. W.xm4:. cb ,A GJ. Q N ld ......... ..... .......... ' 1 'vpn-ku Son of Il'0Ul1lliH. A Ijllllllllll' lmw Stnrlom. Axmu-:w W. W1l.sux ..... ............................. I yu t'x-naw I,l'1'SidL'llI of ilu- S1-mir-r I.:uvC'1:1ss. Ql f 4. Ni. . 9 ., ? 4J'f19 1 I lllll llll h lllllil clil n f ' I 0, f , z - IH? 'yi' Vi!- 5 115 ww'-wQ3 ff,'-w ' M Ti' Q-'m ,'f. 'P-H NS. , Asp?4g'yi1i'F?fv-ff Qs-if 4g5??9+'5 Ql .75 'i'f',fv?g2', g4 ' Af : 'f1?Y?in .. . . . uf - -af an fa .f-'fi f'11'1'1W' -Plfffwkfifmfwl' P' 1 f Miiffp n' +a'l.!l1w. 1-A- -. . 1-f'ff 5:'f'fUf'f4+ 2 - ' N k'ff'm' W , A W . I 4:21-Z'-' law 'aifdffib ifv 41. 11 f 4 w ,m , 2 Q4 . .'-if'5iii1.: ' '. '-A' f:fI'+iVZ9 uff'f ..av'. fi' W - f fii' 'Wim W W':W-'5-1 !g'f:.!l+f' . 4. Q . v.. ,' ' ' , ', ..-- .. f- . -. gg . . -1' .!-4-A'uL.-L-.. - .fp Adj. 1 VA 1, W ai? ir ' ' i' 'ffigf-'guiif - - far --1 ' M M- a 4' fr- ' I lf . . .N ' N ' fx ' . v-f' 4 I Said . 'Q I S: ' .' 'i Q Q- I .L W,-A ll- I a ,.' i , , ? 'n A 1, E ,MF- A-. 631W r f as a N f P ' v f' - I H.-55' - f .- ' mfg, '- iff ' J'-Q fi .21-V2.5 qf 45' 5. -E !!4g1l,9'7-'auf 4 .- :U-.M!'.:j, ,.,,..,.1,, f ' Q In , Y .4 V A -. -M. ,A J ww-2 . -. . 1' - fi g.Q,4,1 ,.. --J .?:2pf1.-.-,H-f,'-0:- .. M. .- w f V -- ',,- ,,. 1 , I ,, ' Q I ' '1'1N g 'fif -2 'V ' .7's:1',4Vf '?-f' ','- V 'F 1' 3 .4 , .,....,,,. .A 'Af w er., . - 1-V, ' - -' -,I ' V , 1, Q ,412 ' 4. 4 :I lg-nlvf-L, Y yv'-:,Zi'.-, ::u':'f'. ' -rg1:,1k. ' ' f N ' ' ' X ' ' ' ...' '- 2f-'- '5 1 ' , .1 -f -- .' . 7f'f2 - -, , ' J:-1'5,f54-..'7 V? r - 5.1 Iffs 55' can h yy 5.1. 'O -A - -f ,aan .m a 3 115 'KE '-211 Tc-is .:.,.g.1: 5. - QM W9 M M E Mig' H :zu :aaa gn- - Q . - , -9ifg:'-ff'-1-'gre .-f-1fi'ff '9 iff? V l ' A J-1 f-W.EPP5 The School of Engineering. ANSAS UNIVERSITY is young as universities go, but the wort: ol? the Kansas University ell' gineer is in evidence from Alaska to Peru and from New York to Hawaii. One of the best-known and most highly respected engineers in the NVnst once made the remark that the School of lllngineering of the University of Kansas turned out the most thot'- oughly equipped and prepared grad' uates of any engineering school with- in his persoual knowledge. This opin- ion was based upon an intimate 21.0- quaintiance with engineers and CII' gineexing work extending over a 119' rind of thirty-Eve years. W' 0. MARVIN. lt is extremely doubtful if any of the strictly technical schools call show a greater percentage ol' graduates actually engaged in some branch of engineering work: or. what is more, a greater percentage who have attained a. c-onsiderablc flegree olf eminence and usefulness in their chosen fields. A brief mention only can he made here of a few ol' those who hav0 contributed to the prestige of the Kansas University Engineer. In 1892 a. short-grass boy went out as one ot' the first graduatCS in Electrical Engineering. He seemed to have found his proper sphere? delighted in working and experimentineg, took up the study of the X-ray! made several important discoveries and inventions, and is now director of tho John N. Gibb's X-ray l.'8.lJ0l'ZltOl'y in Bellevue Hospital, New York Cityg the best and most thoroughly equipped X-ray laboratory in thC United States. llls name is E. 'l'. Caldwell and he has 'a national repu- tation as an X-ray expert. James C. Kelsey, EE., '05, has been very successful in telephone work. For some time ln- was in the employ of the Northwestern Tele- phone Exchange at Minneapolis-1, Minn., but has recently been appointed a lecturer on telephone pr'acI'ice at Purdue University. Ernest L. Blaker, E.E., '93, is an instructor in Cornell, and has re- ceived the degree of Ph.D. from that institution. W. C. lload, '98, is now assistant professor of Civil Engineering here at our own University and is deservedly popular with the students. Harry E. Riggs, '86, of Toledo, O., is one of the best known con- sulting engineers in the middle West. He has been president of the Mich- igan Society of Civil Engineers and a member of the Michigan Tax Com- mission. He is now in charge of the construction of an electric line in Ohiog associated with him is 0. C. Le Seur, '88, who previously to his asso- ciation with Mr. Riggs was well known in the South as a competent rail- road engineer. Franklin Rlfile, '80, of Portland, Ore., and his brother, Albert S. Riille, '84, ot' San Francisco, have both achieved enviable reputations. The former in railroad and bridge work in the' Pacific States and the Northwest, and the latter in bridge work in various parts of the United States as well as in Peru, S. A., and in Hawaii. Wm. L. Brayton, '93, is with the Pennsylvania Steel Co., as a bridge expert, and has recently been granted a patent on an entirely new and improved form of rolling lift bridge. R. W. Carter, '94, is with the Missouri Valley Bridge Co., at Leavenworth. John L. Harrington is a very successful bridge engineer at Elmira, N. Y. Hans Von Unwerth, '97, is chief draftsman in the offices of Waddel 8: Hedrick, of Kansas City, one of the leading firms of bridge engineers in the United States. Cecil N. Haggart, '98, is located at Pittsburg, Pa., and enjoys a good practice ns a bridge engineer. Wm. H. Kutz, '94, is bridge engineer for the Union Pacific Rall- road. with headquarters at Denver. J. B. Jacobs, '98, is bridge engineer for the Southern Pacific, and Arthur O. Ridgway, '92, holds the same posi- tion with the Denver 8: Rio Grande. Philo Burkholder, '98, has been engaged in railroad work in Mex- ico for some time and is now division engineer of maintenance on the Mexican Central. .Tohn A. Lahmer, '95, has charge of all the oflice work in the oflices of the Chief Engineer of the Kansas City Southern. B. J. Dalton, '90, is chief engineer of a railroad under construction in Arkansas. Walter N. Armstrong, '90, is assistant chief engineer of the Kansas City, Mexico Se Orient Railroad. Hugh Tudor Richards, 78, has been very prominent in railroad work in Mexico and the Southwest. Arthur L. Adams, '86, has done a great deal of irrigation and canal work in Washington and Oregon, and, like Mr. Lippincott, has done con- siderable original work in hydraulics. The results of his experiments are incorporated in some of the best text-books. Mr. Adams is now manager and superintendent of the water-works system of the city of Oakland, California. The list might be extended much farther if space would permit. In- deed, the record is a creditable one, and if the present and succeeding classes but attain the high mark set by their predecessors, Kansas Uni- versity may always be proud of her Engineers, W.xl.'1'l':l: A. X'xvHl'1I'IIAl'lH .... ,.........,..... ....... I Q :u1s:n.s1'it1y. Mo ' 1 1 - 1 v 1- 1 1 N. MJ . A.. 1 1-mrul II1gg'Iu5r-Imnul. lxzmsnst 1I1.x', M1r.:I . lu. If' 'X1 lil ' ' . . . - sum ..................... ,.., ..,....... , ....... h 1 -...mlm I-311111-x'iIIv lliglm S1-howl: S4-niov l'l:l1yf'un1lni1Im-1-. .I:n,yllzl1wkvr- Ilozwml. Ar1x'ism v Iluaxrll 51.11111-l1t1 l'1llr1im'u11im1s. V. li. HON' II. IIIGNIMY, E X ....,............ , .......... l.:1wl'm'11m-v I,:n.wl'4-m'1- lliggh Sm-lmul: Ii. Ifl. .l1mN A. 'lJl1:vl,lN ....................... . .................. N4-wum Y. M. V. A.. Swim- N0l'IlHl1lI W1-vkly Ilozwll. liz1l1su.s-Nv- Immskzl. Ilm-lnm- 1901, l'h1-111. IC. - All'I'HlTH Vluxlcli I-!l:,xlwl,l11Y. 2 X. ..........., .... l.:uvx-arms Sllliikllbll lligll Sm-lnml, V. IC. I1'l:.l11n Ii l'm:'1'l1:l:. Sigfum. Xi .......................,....... Hamldwizm. Y. M.1'. A.. Ihmlmlwilm HiffllS1'llKNllIf1ll1'lYl. li. . F Iwi II I ws1:mzN.E A ....... . .... .... ...... ..... , . I lU2lIHlII-X. I'ouImmIy l'lig'I1 Svlmoli IC. IC. I 'XX I I IN ............................... ......... . ..'l'up4-ku. Y. M. V. A., XV:14I1Irur'l1l'uII1-gs-:I'. IC. I rx XX xml. E X ....,....... ............................ I SI-III-villc-. In lla Vilh- High Svllrmli Ilmleim-ss NIllllZl.Ll'l'l' .lilj'II2lWlCUI' IWU2. l'. IC. I I. XII IiN11:II'l'. cp 1' ,AI 'l' N li .........,....... .,.... I I1m'tim14'iLy. .Ium-tion Vity High SI-lmulz li. IC. I II XI 1 1 N .X. I-'rel-:s ................. ................,... .... X X 'in-him N NI. I' X I '1il'11m1mt l'olls--rv' Hzlslcet-HQIII 'l'I-um 15101 ,....l ,.,. lllll 1902. IC. IC. I1 I In Ixmmlclm .............. ,...... ....,...... I x u11a.Iw.f1r5.Ix.Lw. 'z sas. 'gn .R-Iuml. Alznrxangw- Ihwln-I-II:1II Ixm IS VIII Ixm 1 II1 II S IU02. I-' I-' I . .X. NIm'Hrrl,s. A 'I' 52 .............................,...... Ilm-1.011 Y. BI. V. A.. IIrn'lrm IIigg'I1 S4-Ilrmlz Vim--I'r'r1sirI1-nl. IEIII2 SUIIIUI' yvamr. IC. IC. l'. .I. AIw'f',xlc'1'uY ....,................ ......... , .. ...llulw-s Vily Ilznlvuw Vily IIi,Q'IlS1'IlmmI:l'. IC. XV,xl,'1'm1c II. .XNlml4:w's ..,.. ............... .... ...., 1 ' I niczmgo. III Y. NI. K'. A.. Unk I':l.1'Ii. Illimvis. IIigg'II Hvllrml: IC. IC. lll'3u1c1:I41 .I. Iluolr. A 'I' 52 Sigma Xi ............. .... I 'nIsu.1I1-ilu. l'zLI . 1 f'I:n.vl'n-1111-1'Iligh Hvlmul: VII'l'-I,I'l'SI1II'llI-1,111.55 ISIIIII 8011110- lllKlI'I' YI-:1l', NI. IC. NIIMIAN XI1'l.ll,l,lvlf.xN .................................. I+'l':mklm-I I I'2lIIkIlHI'I IIig4'I1Sm-IIrmI:XY1-4-IQIII'IIo:l.r'1I.I'l'1-sill:-nt!IENIZ JIIIIIUI' Your. .I:l,vI11lwIu-x- Hman-ml, S1-nim' I'I1l.j' f.10lIIlllIIII'1', V. IC. IAYNNIII IC. NI .ISHN .,....,........ ...., ........... ... ..,. I,:l.wl'1-In-v I,:lwr'4'm'v Iligfll Svlluoli IC. IC. W1 mx I. I,I'I I'I,I-1..IR.,dD l' ,X ................... HI:1tIw XI. 1 . IIl,.xxm II um II1:Iw:11III Xczulm-111y: Hl'1'I'4'l1ll'j' IEIIIZ. Supllmlmmw- ,Y1'?lI'Z V. Ii. I II.XliI,I',5 Ill In .I-IN. HI:1tI1e IIig'I1 Svlmulz NI. Ii. EX ......... .. ....... .............. II:am XY NI'l1'vviIIP xI1lI'.YX'IIII'ITIj1'IlSUIIUIIIZ I-I. IC. Iin I mflv XX owlcxs ..................,. .... . ........... I ..mu-I-ncI- cm- Villv. Imvu. IIig:Iu H1-I1rmI: Iiuskm-I-II:1II 5l4IlI1l X1 I II l1-:unIIn-I-:- ve-'n's. VZIIIIIIIII IIIIII. IC. IC. A XX. II 'I'nlIl'.N I5 U ll ...............,........ ......... X XIINIIIIIQIIUII N NI. I A.. XYIIGIIIUQIIUII IIig'II H1-Inmlz l':x1nuin 'I'l'1lI'k 1 I I1 IIII IIIEII 'I'r'm'Ic 'I'vum l.lII1.. Ixulwus I IIIVI'l'SlI.Y I't'4'0I'1I fm II1gIn.lum1a:maI Iiic,-.vcI4-. III-sl Mining: Q'I'IlllIIIlIl'. Mm. li, vw-Q ,. l,l. Il. XII IHIIY fb-X1-J I X I-, ........ ......... I .45 .XIIIIll1lN,f4II . . . . , . I . I I I Xlllllll II1gjI1 N-ImuI: .XQSHUIZIIU l',1I1lm' :II XX I-4-NIIJ . In, JONES, A T K2 ...................................... llumbolt M. U. A., Humbolt High School: 'fl'Cil.Slll'L'l.' 1902 Sfnplm- 1110115 Year, lfwsidvnh .Tuuior Yvur, Sl'Ul'6Lll.I',Y Athlc-Lic: Hoawd, IG. E. Bl-IAMAN .... ........................ .............. S L erhng' C oopm' Memorial Uollogcwg Footlmll TIR-:nu 1901, 'lfx-ack Team 1900 :md 1902. Kansas IIlliVl'l'Sity llecord on llzuuunm- Throw, Shut Put, and Gunornl Strength Tust. IQ, i ii- X S 55 gi , L w. .v if 2.3 .31-' - mr-,ef -1 JA, f 1 pg,-.5 ,gn .. ,, ,. V ss .- -' v yn 19 1 - ' 2 -L54 , 1- . is ,J , , 4- -X , 16.1 lf. fy. W -E6 J 4. .5 . ' - -- Ng g F! ' X ., -Aj. ,gf -'J - , NV 1 1. ' 9 1:1 ' 1 5 ,. 7 3, Eiffs- .' 1311-1 ' f ' 1- 9 Q ' 611, 1 J 2' ' T222 :- -- ,- I 1. .. A- ,gr A. . xg? , . V F. .. F- 917' Uv- - '-1 . l. -N' -.9.,g:.4 , lu , - V 2421? F,-fl 'lj' -z gfi rl I 1 I if J, V. I 6,3 :j df -. V F ,, 53:1 ' M- I' - 4 Siifg ' w Q .Ii . if .'-.2 , y. -u y.. 'msg ' l I.: :lf ,np W1 -15, 55' Jjtf. ' ' E 1 f1.- 'J in IEEE : .Q ,- ,WM A . M: V' 1 -7 :ja r ' -12 A 'A f 1- lex , fwplg i :-ju? -f5 a- 1 .,'?1-' 4 ? rf. af , V-5.44: h- , wlfffff' .- u.. H .. - . . My K ,qw-. , f m f , ., ,That 7. 115' Qzjifyi ' .' iw' Uv ' 1511 ' .l K :ff . ':!v:t . 11 l:.. 'l -v 9, 7' ' Lf, Um 5 , W,-I .- , Jw, 3.--Q. . ., H M - I W, ., ,,, Q 7 H 1-. I 'f 1' ., ' Z., fs 1 'H 1 Lvl 5 F'-'-e - f ,. 1A'. .Q ff 'Ai 51 . '. r.- -'--w -1 . r' 4 7'-fvli qi , gg gl F A . eff 11 J 6 . VX ' ,A F-. , I '.Ii' .' 3,1 ilu.-' . . 2 .IG 'lib' Ndiglx-.Sadhu , 'inn I .1 . . 1 :W U .-'..ff5'5'.1P f ff A 1 'X J , Ei A wg: 3 FH I. ,. E iz. Z li- ,X A -va 9.5. L, ll. 'tt Y. , -.'g..ff.' ' -, - 4. .W 3 4. ,, .I ...fn ,, xii- ,R-YE up - + - ,fy ,, ,., I 'lg -IF.:-3.21, y, -'--. 4' ..- -.' : , y. .v gf, x - 0 .- ., '.. 5 '51 ,W -5 i q, H .4-1, A rl A- L 1-. -- if '- z f- -A '5 A f fm ' ' ' f Elia All 3 , I-1 '14-. ,hf ' ,551 ,- H, x nn Y ' .4 y f ,N ,V Qifv - ,- ' ' wh' I L - - 1' - Q f -- LS? '-if f?-1' -.'aa,.'F '- , L v T141--1 'Tw , : Vi 2 .1 .-jf - Hifi- . .- . V ,. .... in .,, P In , uf, , , 'y V, ,. V. .pg-'Q 'i32 ?i' . 'f-4, lv kufyv, ..d-.2-'gg.+ . - . I '-L'-, A . HW... iv. School of Medicine. N 1881 tho Medirul llopartinont ol' Kansas University was founded. The work given was known as the Preparatory Medical Course and wus generally accepted as the equivalent of tho first year of any medic-al school. About ten years ago, when leading mod- ic-al schools were llll'l'G9,SlIlfJ,' their course to four years, our pro- parntory wcrk was disf-redited and auveptorl only by smaller schools, and it was not until 1898 that our department regained any importance. At that time courses in human anatomy were added, other studies we1'G UR. W1l.l.lS'I'0N. strengthened and improved, and the existing two-years course was intro- duced. Even with those improvements. it was difiicult to secure propel' recognition from leading medical schools on account of 21 prejudice against partial courses in schools not giving the degree of Doctor in Medicine. Finally, through the continued efforts of Dr. Williston, the work offered here was accepted by several of the best medical schools as equiv- alent to their own first two years, and now is not only accepted as equiv- alcnt to their own work by the li-ading medical schools in America., but is oflicially recognized by the State boards. In addition, the Kansas Uni- versity Medical School ls a member of the American Association of Mcd- ical Colleges, which in itsa-lf is a positive testimonial as to its standing and to the student here a. guarantee of recognition of his work wherever he desires to complete his work. The entrance requirements are already high and tne tendency is to raise them. making the entrance conditions for this course the same as those of the .lunior Class in the Art School. Just now the outlook is bright. The completion of the new Museum will give the now overcrowded departments of Physiology, Histology, and Bacteriology an opportunity to expand in .more commodious labora- tories in Snow Hall. With the efiicieni corps of instructors now in charge and the additions to the course which are being constantly planned and perfected, the future of the Medical Department is assured. If, through the generosity of the State or some public-minded philanthropist, suitable hos- pital facilities could be secnri-rl, by reason of their superior training the M.D.'s graduated from Kansas University would stand in the front ranks of the medic-al profession. .--ff.. f ,.5,, -.sux .-fg-1' 45 . min V fffff 'Mf'l.-lfit' i ll' X lvl VP. t ll Wil. gf E If ll. l -V il tw l 4 11' 11. '1'1x1:1:.x11'1' H111 ' 1xs.1'I.1!11uwv X.11... 1'Ii11g' 11i,g'11 Svlmul. S. 1l1g'11l.1111l l I11Y0l' ltv' l 41r1l11'111 'l'1-'1111 IHUN ' 5,11 1'1 1'1I11 x11'1', A. 11 .1 ' x 1 . 4 1 1' 11. 1011111111 1 x1s'1'1'11c 1211111111: 11. 111:11 Xilil Nm RIN ......... K11 For . 1 .. . 'I 1411 11 114111111 ..............,.... ........... . 1 -11111 UH11111' Y XI 1' Stv1'1i11g.g', lIig'111:11111 Y. 51.1211 ..Stv1'li11g', 41'1'u111p1l1l1. X. . Sbl'1'11I1g.L', ox 1101111.21 11114. 1. M. 1 . 11. l':11'su11s l1i1'l1 81111101 X N1 1 ..I 'll1'S0l11-5 A. K:L11s K:111s K:1,11s Kzms Kama K:1,11s V v ,. IWYIIIP Ii. llmnsmzs ....................... .,...., . lxumus 1 ny. Mo f'0lNl'ill High School: Kz111sz1s1'iIy. Mo. Iflmxsls IC. l!.xlc1u4:'l' ...,....... ...,........... X Vmm-gn. Kansas XV:u11Pgo High Hvlnml, Y. Xl. V. .-X. .'XI:'l'lil'l: D1I.l.oN ...........,... .................. I 'Il1l'vku. Kansas lim-1-ku Avaxdf-xxxyz II1-gistm-1-1-rl l'!1:xl'l11zu-ist. . Q Q an X '-xv-smx , gg, f -my Q ww me if xx 5, fff.-.efbm 1' 4 Aww 45'-:grip N iw? gfww .JN '- 3 I DM' 1 5 I 3:5 K HHS?-Qfxpgw, 'QQ 7,Ni11-x XV' 95' v:.,pf, Q M4353 .Q G' iQ'-'.,,Q3AAQi,,f. gg Wi Wy9fQewQwFwQMfw5 Q, ,f X ,, L15 X Q by -spin FHNE ARTS MUSHQ IDJRAW2 UNSW DESIGN The School of Fine Arts. N Tl-IE University catalogue of '75-76, among the list of memlil-rs of the Faculty was Alice G. Houghton tnow Mrs. Blackwelder, of Chicagol, as Teacher of Instruinental Music. This was the beginning of the School of Fine Arts. From this modest lie- ginning has developed our present school with its departments ot Music, Drawing and Painting, Elocution and Oratory, and Physical Training. In 1377 two instructors were em- ployed, but when Mr. William MC Donald was appointed Dean of the Department of Music in 1884, it waB then that a. well-defined course in Music w-as established. At this time UNO- H- PENNY- there were several assistants, among whom was Mrs. Anna March Dunlali. who was appointed a professor in 1888 upon M1'. Aldrich's resignation. Mr. McDonald resigned in 1889, and Professor George B. Penny was Bill' pointed Dean of the school. As each department was developed and brought up to a paying basis, it was turned over to a. specialist. The iirst was Mr. Carl A. Prcyer, the present director of the Department of Piano'- forte Playing, who was chosen for the position in 1892. The Depart' ment of Violin was established in 1892, with Mr. K. Geza Dome as in- structor. He rl-signed in 18118 -and his successor was Mr. Joseph A. Fai'- rell, who also took charge of the Vocal Department. Upon Mr. Fill 1ell's resignation in 1900, Professor Penny again took charge of the Vocal Culture. The courses of study are similar in extent to those of the bl'Si American conservatories. The Department of Drawing and Painting was incorporated with that of Music in 1893, and the School olf Fine Arts established. But if was in 1885 that Art was lirst, offered in the University. Miss Mary l,ouiS0 Simpson was the instructor and conducted a course of one year in lfrec' hand Drawing in connection with the regular class-work of the sub-Fresh' nian year. As the department was not separately established for some years, the pupils who took Art work were not considered members of the University, and so did not register. The method of paying by the lesson continued until 1899, after Miss Simpson's return from abroad. 'lhe work was then put on a graded basis and so continues. In 1890, Miss Parker was the only teacher in the Art School, Miss Simpson having given UD the work. Professor George Hopkins was given charge of the Art Department after the consolidation. I-le carried on the work until 1895, when A. H. Clark was elected. After flve years of service, he resigned, and Professor W. A. Gritllth, the present instructor, was elected. Professor Griffith is infusing new life into his department and is endeavoring to establish an art school that all will be proud to claim. The Department of Organ Playing and Church Music was established by the Dean four years ago. In 1893 the Department of Elocution was added, with Georgia Brown at its head. Next was added physical training and Mrs. Mary Pierce Clark took charge. In 1899, Mrs. Cora McCollum Smith, the present instructor, was elected to take charge of the young ladies of the Department of Elo- cution and Physical Training. -f. . :. .fl ja:-' .V ,fy xg' gb' Ne w . ,.i,pmj+ . - , . el!-I-.fd ,, LM V .A ff' EGU, i 9 , , sw,-' ,,4'r--11. 5 , . .I i:.mm I Wi X U Af' 'fffffflzli lu , 4 it ss MMV: I H .IU I, ji: ' ' fm x aiigif .L 4 it-' ffyf' ,tt fwfr ji fp' tire. ' x fi Wit. ', l Q2 .V t li- ,E 7 T 5 'Q I ' y L1 I . i 3 U - if- wir . 1 r F ' , ,sw ',1 f --- V , 1 w e-' r ' M L Ll' Wm Lil, - -- - ,hi-vlrilf .gsieaw sqft . ., -gg T fx'--'v j-5 4 .4 LONA Mll,l.l'1R .......... ,,.. .............. ..... .............. . I 'm'l'y- Holton lIr1iv4fl'siLyg ID:-sigjlmul' of UwVUl'dSXVOl'lfll,S lo-IOW4'l' l'1w111s.', Lo'1'fl'll-1 H. IIAIUI' ..................,........... ...Na-wmn. Nmvtnon 'lligill Sclload. f,lII.U M. l'If1AK... ......................... . ..NlUffllll1'- N10f'llI10 Iligll Hs-howl. lil-zsslm M. N,xvl.o1z ........ ...................... . ..Y:m.4-S 4'm11,m' Y:1.1.us f'1'Il1f0!' Hi,g'h School. Zum SlNNo'r'1' .. ............................. ...fbsxvn-gn. Osxvogo lligh School. MAIJIJI-1 1XI,l17lC l!l:mvN ...........,.......................... Ummvzm- Ot,L:LwzL High Sclmol: Licio Fl'il,llW Moxiuzmo. K A 00, 4 A Uc:Us'l'A FI.1N'l'OM .......... .... .................. .... T A z l,Wl'f'llUl'. TJfLWl'1'Ill'lx High S1-howl. K A CD, DOLLIIQ MAE '1'1mfo1m ...................................... 'l'upe-ku. 'lblwlw High sulmnl: isf-nmny mlxt-g-Q. lm AINCVICELII Hoy i'ulm-nrlur. H igner of 'l'hv Mus. M. B. XVORIJQY ................ ................... 1 Ddessa. Mo. 11-ntval 1'nl1vg'e, 'l'oxzLs. Mo. L- T3I'II.LE KENNICDY ............................ , ......... Luww-mfv. Normal lJOP2Ll'flIll'I1L Kansas I'11ivc,-rsity 'El-I. 13 BRG fi7'Xx 5 , IQZEIVNJ1' wi wifi fiv e? ga, .J A QM' ' f 5 55591 gv?D b4'ifC'i?Mbu54x v is V f ' -7 X v ' 'Q v . - -+-'J X Vx 6 . 15: -Cv! I ,-. ,- -,Q A A .F , - - - 'z2 ,rw L ' 5-' A ', - E ? F. X 1, Q if ' , - 0 ' ' ' V ' J f ' mx-:W f Ja ' x ' 'Dm v ' ' I J V? CJ A, wt M ,A ,,...- -v ,.:., I N ' , . ' ' N W- ' , - 13 , 4 ' A V QQQQE f School of Pharmacy. N 1867 the pharmacists ofthe State formed an organization for the purpose of advancing the inter- csts of their profession. Among prominent druggists who took an active part in this movement were R. .I. Brown, of Leavenworth, B. VV. Woodward, of Lawrence, and Os- car Seitz. of Salina. From this or- ganization was developed a permanent one, known as the Kansas Pharniaceu- tical Association. During the session of 1885 this body introduced in the Legislature a bill to establish a De- partment of Pharmacy at they Unl- vt-rsity of Kansas. The Hrst school year of the 'DG- partment began September 15, 1885, when three Seniors and sixteen .Tun- iors were enrolled. The work WHS carried on in the south basement of the main building. Later a build- ing with better accommodations was constructed for tilt' Pharmacy and Chemistry lit-partments. But in 1899 it was deemed necessary to provide a larger and better equipped building, and an appropriation of 555,000 WHS made by the Legislature for that purpose. The New Chemistry Building was completed in the fall of 1900, with the School of Pharmacy located ill the basement and on the tlrst and second floors of the east wing. Seventeen years have seen many students go out from the sch001- At first a two-years course was instituted, upon the completion of which and after two years' actral expeiicnce in a drug store, the graduate received the degree of Ph.G. New a tlirfe-years course is open to those who desirv to take more time for the completion of the work. A special feature added Lo this course is a dispensing laboratory, consisting of a model drug stOl'9f where a student is required to perform the various duties pertaining YO the operating ofa modern dr-ug storm-. For this course the State Board of Pharmacy allows a years credit for actual experience. There is also fl four-years course leading to the degree of B.S. This course is intended, to ht the student for managing a manufacturing establishment or for the position of an instructor. L. E. HAYRIC. i 6 JU IORS, SOPHO ORES AND- FRESHME , AD INFINITUM, ' sUccEssoRs TO '02 -po. ' Owing to various interests, tailor, cabman, confectioner, etc., our Senior partner has decided to leave the town. We shall continue in business at the old stands, one at the corner of McCook and one at tb? COrner of the city water pipe. In addition to these places, in ad- t1C1Pat1on of a big rush next year, we have leased the buildings, gf0unds and fixtures formerly used by the Kansas State Kindergarten but now used as a fancy horse and donkey farm. The buildings and grounds will be fitted out from time to time to suit our notion depart- fneflt, the furniture will be further enhanced by much additional carv- lflg, and the exterior mural decorations frequently retouched with a little fresh paint. Encouraged by the popularity of the disciplinary department, which was established prior to our connection with the buS1ffeSS, we have made arrangements to bring it more than ever into Public notice. It will be fitted with much new apparatus in the line of search lights, telescopes, field guns, dip-nets, grappling irons, pikes, lancC.S, prods, lassoes, pole-climbers and automatic plot smellers to en- able it to handle the collar, cuff, and suspender business. To encour- 3-Ee .Physical developement and a love for amateur sport we shall es- tablish in connection with our game department a free open-air play ground under the direction of expert instructors. Marbles, mumble- Peg, .and bean-bag will be the principal sports. Teams will be organ- ized in each for championship games on the home grounds., and in no Case shall a team be allowed to go as far as Eudora. We shall carry 51 full line of Hunks, a limited supply of Phi Beta Kappas, and a large SUPP1y of paint. Wa,tcli the Papers for our Add. f. f Mfr f ,f , I 31747, :- W f - .+- , f 1 - ' x lli ... ,f ll lllih ' ----zz.. - Illllllllll if JIM, 1 -,, x I EW A r IIA ,..:i2!5555i3:h . l 1' , ails.. In-I X ':L. ' 222a2::::ff + l I 'M If I' . ' X , ' I Y 1 l hlvlqp f, v ug , T ' 43137 . wi Us 'J ' v F 'Y U fy' M 5 1: ,W QS:-.-xx - ' 7 .in '4y 'QF A .- H. - -1 fa -'MA '1'.I-IE J UNIOR. Class of 1903. Y ICLL: -- Ilan, lla. I-lu, Zip Boom Zee 7 Rock Chalk, Jayhawk. 1903. C'oL0Rs:-Purple and White. OFF H HCHS: President ...... . . .... ICD. SHIQPARD Vice-President. . . . . FRANK Sc,:H,xlf'1v1m Secretary ...... . . .Jlcssuc PARKER TREASURER. . . . . . .LESLIE Goumm President .... Vice-P1-esidonb. . . . Secretary ..... T I 1 PEISIIPQI' . . . F-wg! ' . 5 --Q-xx'riI'i.XW' ' ' W XM, 'il I v X 1 K ...P'- 'K Y' 'I' H H HOPH OMOHE. Class of 1904. ....1- YEL L:- -Af- Let 'er Hip, Len 'er Hour, Let, 'ex' G0 Once Move, Rock Clalk, Jayhawk. 1904. VOLORS: h-Xvhite amd G reen. OFFLCICIIS: .......TouNGR0v11: . . . .Grzonclc Nl'T'1'1Nu . . ..Fr.ox:1sNc:1+: 1+'0RREs'1' .....M. A. S'1'A1N1su A -V fx?- 4 fx Q 5 - Y a J I Q x 'f 1 ' 592- ' cf I xf Positively his iirst Ll,DIlCil.1'il,llC6. Class of 1905. YlGLL:- Boom-a,-lack, Boom-a-lack, Zip, Zim, Zive, Rock Chalk, Jayhawk, 1 305. COLORS :-Tied and White. OFFIK IICRS: President ......... .............. .... O S CM: KUUHS Vice-President ..... ..... . .. .... ICVA OLIN Secretary ........ . . . CONSWPANUI-1 UAI.!RU'l'H fI?l'GZLSlll'GI'. . . .. . ...... . . . .-. ---. FISCH The Middle Laws. .....1- NE of the most interesting classes of the Law School, if not Of the University, is the present Middle Law Class-the Class of 1903. Only twenty-two of the forty-founmembers are native Kansans. Missouri fellows with :ei record of seven: Iowa is third with a record of five: the others of the eleven States are as follows: Illinois. Ohio, and Pennsylvania. two eachg and one each from Kentucky, West Virginia. North Carolina, Indiana, an c0lmU'y. far-off Japan, is also represented. Four of the tive races of men w ' 1 d Michigan. One foreign HFS found. Two members responded' to the call for tloops in the war wit 1 h Spain. one being a member of the famous Twentieth Kansas, the ot er 551'Y111g in the Twenty-first. By far the majority of the class is from the ranl.s of the gre-at middle class, for as to occupation ten have been farm- el'S, seven teachers, the remainder clerks, bookkeepers, bankers. miners, PYITUCIS. lumber-dealers, grocers, sta-nographers. etc. EVCFY lii81'al'y society cn the I-lill numbers one or more of its mem- bers frozn the Middlers, and the Young Me-n's Christian Association has a Hivng Y'CI'll'4'S9llt3li0Yl. Oratory, debate, athletics. college publications. fra- ternities, ale some of the college interests that receive the support and 0nC0llI'agement of this class. In short. it is one unit in the gri-at whole ff Kansas University that gives the University affairs its heartiest efforts mid minglvs the yell of the LL.B. with the old Rock fhalk! Jay-hawk! K. U. 4444 The Junior Law Class. HEN the Juniors entered the University, they organized and elected J. G. Law President. He presided over the class for one term, at the end of which time, having con- cluded to take a rest from his strenuous law work, he resigned. W. T. Grant was President of the class the second tt-rm. The other oflicers-R. H. Wilson, Vice-Presidentg F. M. Gold, Secretary: and S. S. Linscott, Treasurer-served during the whole year. R. C. Martin and L. E. lVl.errll1 represented the class during the year on The Ix'uns11x Iirldyfcfr. The Juniors have the largest class of the Law Schcol. They, how- ever, are a class that trusts to its size only in so far as it gives them rep- resentative men in the many phases of university life. Its history has been brief, hut in that short period its representatives have contested in various university affairs and won enough to lm-nd honor and dignity to a much older class. In foot-ball, A. Brummagc, Joe Louthan, W. C. Hawk, and F. B. Dodds did work that won the gratitude of their classmen. Dodds was also man-- ager of the track-team and is serving as captain of Co. H of the Kansas National Guards. The last position is perhaps due to his work with the Twentieth Kansas. In base-ball, Henry Boyle, H. A. Poorma,n, and D. M. Akin are the Junior leaders In debate, the Junior classmen havi- round themselves victorious. R. C. Martin was one of the University representatives in the Kansas- Nebraslta debate. In scholarship, the hard students of the class -are making a record that is already winning recognition. S A. Harvey, one of the Juniors, has already been admittff' to practice before the Supreme Court of Kansas. f 5 '7z5wuu.'nffLsr....f.wvi R 1 . ,pf ,mf K Q' ' ffl. -r ., v F N V llry 4- X fu ' Q ikw, ,k X , ' ' in -V - r L X ' l Professor Preparing his Pruning' Knife. - ,N Uunm 4- un -- mmmmmununfund:um1Inufmvownuuunulmonuumunmum if-47 . 1 I if . W T5 f, ,H H ummm umunu umnmu ummm ummm uw- , , F , I . h. I ' ,,1. Ql Q,, f'1'!1 .r I., It f r UIQ QEQ :IL 1 ly, 15 ' 1 mrmnm H , . mu m - , , , 15' im.. i ,P EJ lr. 'EI IIIIIHUIII Q Hmm' I v - Illllll ll lllllll XXL J IIHIIIIIIIHH I-I1 II ! AW N Q N i 0 I Ull HAH , I A 1 V M11 fff1fUnln1lu1 -fHUllllHll!H!lH!MW ., Ill! 'lv hi alll- I 4 ' xr 9 1 HI 'X Illllllflfmlllllllfl F4 I :IIVIKIIIINIIIIETGE Y 'lI!IIlHllI'II1 .f. nu J Athletic Board. VV. C. Sl xv LHR. f'h1liI'lIlllU. . W. GREEN, lfl. I-IAwoIc'1'H. A. T. W.xr,m-zu. M. W. S'l'1mr.lNc.. .I,xs. Nmsmrru, ll. D. 0'Llf:.xm', J. IC. MCDuN,u.l I'ZUu1-:Nl-1 SAI.I.l'1l'1. 0. H. SI'1YS'l'l'lR. IG. li. liruwlc. .Az-L .f4Lw...Lw Y 'G !,l -- -fi ' :ui sg- ' V E CHIC Tflff '.1r - fqz. s? a I - GQ' Y b ,. Games Played Season 1901. .....- GAMICS AT HOME. . sconns. K. U. VS. SGPU- 23. K. U. vs. Qttawa, University, McCook Field ..... 5 17 get- D- K. U. vs. Kansas State Normal, McCook Field ....... 35 10 OV- K. U. vs. Haskell, McCook Field ......., . ....... 6 18 NOV. 25. K. U. vs. Texas University, McCook Field .... . .. 12 0 GAMES AT OTHER PLACES. I It Oct. 12. K. U. vs. Kirksville, Kirksville, Mo ............. 17 5 . 0 0 Oct. 19. K. U. vs. Washburn, Topeka, Kas .... .... ........... 006- 26. K. U. vs. Oct. 29. K. U. vs. NOV. 16. K. U. vs. Nov. 28. K. U. vs. FIRST TEAM. NVILBUR VINcI4:N'r, ff. b.b Wisconsin University, Madison, Wis ...... 0 50 Beloit College, Beloit, Wis .... ........ . . . 0 0 Nebraska University, Lincoln, Neb ..... . . 5 29 12 18 Missouri University, Kansas City ..... jig- ANTONIO S. BUMI, Cl h. b.7 JOSEPH LOUTHAN, fr. g.y l'Lx'nI-1 H. ALLPHIN, Cl. t.y' J l.OLLA NOFSINGER, Capt.. 1902, fr. e.J ALPHA BRUMMAGE, Cr. t.5 ALHI-:wr HICKS, il. e.J FRANK Domus, Cl. 5.5.7 XVILL Hnss, 10,5 SUBSTITUTES. RALPH 141. ELLIS, fendl. RALPH E. BIORRISON, ffulll. C. E. BROWN, itacklel. .TAY F, BEAMAN, qguardj. IC. 1i.WHI'l'LA, Cendj. INIARION RUSSELL, fendj. VVILLIAM J. LI-IIOHTY, Ccenterj. VV. C. HAWK. Ctackleb. IQARL ALLEN, ihalfj. JULIAN JIQJNKINSON, Captain, fr. 11.1 llOmcR'r H. ELDER, iq. 11.5 GRORO1-I O. FOSTER, General Manager Athletics. GUY HARSHIII-:RGIcR, '02, Student Manager Football Team. N .V 'x . X .,. f Man. ,M 'Ins 4. Q .4 sw' - X TIAIAN .l'MNKINSUN, , 1 MM .,..,,..- 1 Q. -ndbs A I H. IC. NOFSINGER, Capmiu '02 I 1 in .ff I milf i ' Qt? L :2gfff3lE..Ef? ig.-E EE - : ga.. E L'-:1 .2 2 . Q1 1 EE -e E95 1 Wi ' . J. F. Beaman, KANSAS UNIVl'lRSITY,S STRONG MAN. :Zig pounds: Huck lift .... Leg lift ....... Left forearm. . Lungs. . . .. . Pull-up .... Dip ...... Totuil. . .. L.. .. Right forearm .... In at strength test tatken April 34 1902, Mr. Bemnztn made the Pe' mztrkitble reeord of 1933 points 915 follows. Points are measured in kilograms, and one kilogram GQU-3' I ls 440. 792. . . . 112. 112. 1 QI 15.5 Q 201.3 2 260. ,,, 1933.0 N S This breuks all collegiate rcC0I'd with the exception of at test made this your by Arthur Tyng, 'ol Hztrvurd, who succeeded in pa .I3eztu1atn's record. Tyng's iLdV3'n tinge, however, lies wholly in the dip und pull-up.', In every ss1nFf. Bea' other test be is beaten by MF- 1 mam. 'In the forearm testS Bea' g,ciUY mam was limited bythe CHP Q of the nutehino uscdg but as 11? Wifn be exceeded Hztndow's recOI'd 1 the sztme test by forty points. I in Mr. Bezumm is 5 feet 10, amd weighs 185 pounds. His home 15 5 d tmv' 01915 Sterling, Kztuszts, amd he is :L member ol' this yeztr's grit un ie in Civil lllrlginc-kr-xl'in,g'. i Ii,' lm- vlwl 1' :A v 5. ixg eg 'S fl 9 - 'A 1 I I I t A' lie Baseball Team 1902. W. C. VVHI'l'1c, 31-fl b. llfaptalnl ALVIN MAr.'lfm', p. I'll+lNRY Bovmc, lst ll. A. IG. CURRY, s. s. UuAm.ms Plu-LY, e. f. . l-IUWIN ZIMMIGRMAN, c. t2m'D1+: Ar.LrHlN, p. THOMAS lVlCUAMPlll4lLT,, 2d b. HAY S1cx'roN, l. f. ljmm-'oan MoKm:N, r. f. and c. A. S. HUZZI, Manager. ' ' Kansas University Baseball Schedule. SEASON 1902-Meeoox 1f'1l+:Ln. 17 l April 5, Haskell, 7. May 15, Nebraska University, 2. April 12, Baker University, 8. May 24, Haskell, 3 April lll, Kansas City Athletic Sl. May 28, l9Iig'hland Pai-RCOUGS9 Club, 10. May lil, Kansas State Agricul- 4 May 8, Missouri University, tural College, 5. May 10, Ottawa University, ll. .Tune 6, VVasl1burn College, 6 May 14, Nebraska University, l2. .Tune 10, Alumni. GAMES PLAYED NOT ON Mectoolf l1'1ltl,D. 1. Ottawa University ..... ...... 1 Jttawa ........ . .... AUP- 7 2 Haskell ..... .. ..... .... I 'Iaskell wma ..... .... A pr- 11 3 Baker .......... .... . Baldwin .... .... A pr. 21 4 M. S. U. ......... .... C olunmbia .... .... A UP- 25 5 Highland Park ..... .... l Jes Moines .... .... A pI'- 23 6. Simpson College .... .... I ndianola. . . .... APP- 29 7 lowa State College ...... .... . Ames . . . . .... ADP- 30 8. Nebraska University .... ..... T lincoln .... .... ll flap' 11 9 VVashburn. . . 5 ........ . . . . Topeka ..., .... Nl ay J ' 'WIC' si mx Q' H' vw Nm f 3 6' - A lix fm.: Elf--.f.af..i.f fwv'i W55Wf5i'Q::m4m+5 - 4 . - -.N i Wgyw iwiflifkf M 14 if-.. .vi- illsaziwtx. ' Q1 W . sf-134,.15-fii44'k.fpffq7?m.asa-4512 Fei .ei 'fiikfliage e eaw . 4 5518313 9-f'f'Cw Wm'ff.i1ff ' 'ilrviilffffafe :fe .f iq page .Gy l R f -3 in xx, I W . 4 wr I I , N be -.QV V-:VI sl- I-2, It fy wi ' M 2 ' fqf fl 7,1 . A v H K? Q X f r . W - ' 514 ' 4 5 .5 . 5 if Ei ez ,-1 1 1'--'11 'mx wmviv. 1 ' :..'f1.mfMivL1ai1S1.J Basket-Ball Team, 1902. B- J- BERNHARD .... .... A Ianager. C- A- SMITH. ............. .................. . Captain. F. W. OWENS, ' DoN ALFORD, 1 JOE ALFORD, PAUL ATKINSON, C. A. FEES, C. B. JENNINGS, J. H. TOLAN. U Basket-Ball Score. V u AT K. U. OPP. Kansas my 'hgers .... .... K .mas City. . .. 35. . . . . .21+ Haskell ' 07 2341- Wm J. ............ .... L awrence .... .... .. ..... . i Haqll Ewell .... .. . .Lawrence .... ---- 1 2 ------ 11 Y'Me6'-----' ..... La.wreuce.... ....19......31i Y' M' f- Ay... ...Deg Mginesu, . H23 S'U- C.A ...... ............ N Iuscatine... ---- 25------38 - - I. ............... Iowa City 27 ..... .40 CGM mth? .... ' um Y M A Neg., 1. N. G ..... Fa1rlie1d.... ---- 17 ----- ' - - ..................... Ottumwa .... 10 ...... 2' XVIII- Jewell .... . ...... .... L iberty .... .... 1 9 ...... 14.42 Yetiiafifa- University .... .... L awrence ..... .... 2 9 ...... 35 ' ' ' A-v .... Leavenworth .... .... 3 6 ...... 7' Games Played 12. Games Won 6. ? 57 .L K is 'ts-E-ix F N- EPPL AST year Kansas University for the Iirst time met another 001' lege on the Tennis Court. Two meetings were held with Nebraska- University, one at Lawrence and one at Lincoln. It was thell -agreed by the Universities to have two such meetings annually' and to unite in the effort to include Missouri. These meets are arranged in the hope of arousing some interest in Tennis at the University. At present Tennis is run entirely independellf of the Athletic Board, and expenses of local and intercollegiate tournil' ments 1nus't be guaranteed by a few Tennis enthusiasts. The meets thiS year have been far from successful from a financial standpoint, and will have to be given up in the future if more encouragement is not received- Several attempts have been made to organize a University TeI111i5 Club, and at last the efforts bid fair to be successful. Last year an orgillli' nation was formed and courts 1-aid out east of McCook Field. Tl1e SGH' son closed before the work was completed, so it had to be postponed HU' til this year. 'Phe club is well organized and will fill a long-needed Willlt at the University. The only other club of any importance is the PTO' fcssors' Club, located at the foot of the hill on Adams Street. Here there are two very good, well-kept courts, which in nice weather a1'6 in constant use by members of the Faculty. Efforts are now being made to place Tennis on the same basis 35 Foot-ball, Base-ball, and Basket-ball. When this is done and Tennis K's are awarded by the Athletic Board, Tennis may look forward to il much brighter future at the University. ROLLIN FEITS H A NS. GEO. M. SHARRARD a 2a,Q' l,,fZggz, ggigigigm - .- '53-u.. I Q Q . Q .I X Q Q MWHA X K it-X 'ffviy Q .B-L1 ! K D I , 'A Q96 ' Km I ,HL 4 K ' A fX Hxxx1, A2833 r ml I 1 y K . l iw K nvucsnullltBY'Z Jlumf IX' V P -,Q K, 'if umm- -.W . A Qggfwu 'V fk Mm? JPN' -llllllm..- tn -2 K Vg? , I A e ,S , ,fl ' ' f A - ! A A' ' ,Q 1 ' vlhi . 4- A' Q - af p l I f , X . fX THE SEN O ' YH.-S ENTERTAIN A GUEST ON THE FIFTI1 FLOOR. gust! .5- QW '5 9x44 I Aff 4- Lgcfg' F21 9 Y A EQ- YQ ,P K ? Lf A9444 l5X4L ' M ff f Jig,-4 if wax ,fg pi v Ajax Fraternities. FRATERNITY is an organization composed of congenial stu' dents banded together for mutual helpfulness and enjoyment. There are at Kansas University seven men's fraternities, and the young women have three sororities. These are Beta Theta Pi, Phi Delta Theta, Alpha Tau Omega, Sigma Chl, Sigma Nu, Phi Gamma Delta, and Phi Kappa Psig Kappa Kappa Gamma. Kappa Alpha Theta, and Pi Beta Phi. Among the men there is also an inter-fraternity composed of a few men from each. This was formed to promote good-fellowship among the different fraternities Aside from these, and of a very diffenent nature, are the honorary societies: Phi Beta Kappa among the Arts students, Sigma Xi in the Science Department, and Phi Delta, Phl in the Law. ' The fraternities are not wholly democratic in idea. About one-fifth, or less, of the student body belong to such organlza,tions. N' The defense is made that in a school as large as Kansas University there will of necessity be sets and cllques among the students. The fraternity places these cllques on a firmer, more unselush, and more helpful basis. It makes the choosing of congenial companions a much simpler and easier matter. It is composed of members from each class, and from the differ- ent sehools of the University, thus bringing together those who would not otherwise be likely to meet. In this way, too, the members keep 111' touch with the school as a whole. The fraternity ls founded on the idea of brotherly love toward each other, but this does-not prevent its mem' bers from forming close friendships outside the fraternltyg nor does it prevent them from taking an active part in all enterprises for the Hd' vancement of school and class. The advantages of the fraternity life mean extra expenses through' out the college course. This is 'largely on account of social affairs. The fraternities devote considerable attention to the social side of University life, believing the training in this respect ls important, not only to the happiness of the student during college days, but also in the life aftol' leaving the University halls. Several of the fraternities have chapter-houses, where the out-Of' town members live together. These form general headquarters for fra' ternlty life, and a place where the alumnze members may visit and thus keep in touch with the active chapter. Many of the professors and ill' structors are members of fraternities. wfrafl 4 '5 F 3', -x. WY? 4 ' 'f yagqigg FRAT ERN I TY VVHISTLES L' KA ca F W g fl, GNE lA J'J' iL5 B + 'PA e iQmfg 1 ?fzs1 QF' Q, I T5 f- .w dl FA . 22 X ' U-Q 'U hdlen i 11-:ww Y , Mn 5 KKP , ' EN ' N fm '- ' ' ' ,, 111 KID Qin 1 Q UI B an U I f ' ,s g dum ffaeggam 3' Ben ' Q M ' 4 -J Qqjifr' BETA THETA PI gi Clyde Nichols, ' i1l'ence Hindman Beta Theta Pi. l3ADoE-'l'luw Shield. QTOLORS-Pink and Blue. l Low1sR-V--ilflie Red Rose. PU1sL1oA'l'IoN-Boba Them Pi Yum.-Phi! Kai! Phi! Phil Kai! Phi! Wooglinl Wooglinl Beta Theta Pi! FOUND!-119. Miami University 1839. Pos'l'-c:lcAnUA'l'l-1. Millard Slmler. SENIORS . Rufus Emevy, Stuugb Simpson, Mzmgazine. Leland Davies, VV. H. Tobey. 7 Leroy Baxter, SENIOR, Ml-LDIC. Howard CZ. Leonarcl. J UNIORS . lfliigene Sallee, X Illarl Murray. film-119 Lovoluoo 'isbn Groves, , yi-on Hilinphrey, ISQPKJ Beach, .1 UNLOR LAW. Ray Adams. PHARMIC. .Roll Llmlh111'g'. SOPHOMORES. l. l'lLI1k Burford, Edwin Bliss, Frank Kaul, l Rl'lS HMA N. Mui-1 King, Fred Price, Brook Goddaml. Rich an-d M ieth. Qdi.. .agvxv :A P1 BETA PHI. ,,H. 14.11 Leland, Pi Beta Phi. BADGE--The Arrow. -I QOLORS-Light Blue and Wine. FLONVER-Tl16 Red Carnation. PUBLICATION-4 'The AI'l'OW. U YELL-Ring, Ching, Ch Ho, I-Iippi, Hi! Haro! Arrow! X Pi Beta Phi! ing I Founded as T. C. Sorosis, 1867, at Monmouth, Il SENIOR. Loren Leslie. .1 UNIOII:-1. Elsie ICV ans, Mary Dudley, M an-yi Spencer. Q SOPHOMORES. Rlmlliigjlfllnllv Mm'gi'a.ret Parrot, 1111SU0n. Eva. Olin, , Mabel McL1tug'hl.in.- FINE ART. Maud Rush. Ella, N I FRESHMEN. 7 . w Lil' Y V linois. Kate Dinsmore, Natdine Nowlin. ,lieu Wilson, Mary Kellogg, Florence Hill., Agnes Hill.. -VG, L- 1' H'll Sa , es ie 1 , M Wilder, Q Halen Robinson, , Mznrthu. Manley fpledgedl. FINE ART. ' Jessie Hill. Kittie Plumb, Margin-vt H nmmoncl. SPECIALS. Ida Bury Dunham. Nelle 'l':1.ylo1', Mary Copley, Aimvu Rudiger. EHI GAMMA DELT A Phi Gamma Delta. BADGE-The Diamond. COLORS--Olcl Gold and Royal Purple. FLO W ER--The Violet. PUliI.ICA'1'ION-The Phi Gamma Delta. YELL--Hippi! Rip! Tiji! Phi Gamma Delta Hippil Hi! Zan! Zelta! A Hal Hal l FOUNDEDI Jefferson College, 1848. Clarence R. Briggs, James R. McKnight, Engineer SENIOR. John T. Little, lCl12'll1t'8l'lIlg', ing, Arthur T. Noble, Pharmacy. Edward Otis Perkins, Pharmacy, J U NIORS . Harry B. Behrens, Pharmacy, Ray Ulbmpbell, Arts. 'Bernhardt l. Tlitowioh, Law, SOPHOMORE. Arthur B. Sim I'lng'iuvrring'. ! ' FR.l'1S'HMluN . Le H P . , WIS A- Hitting, Iflngineering H . unter L. Martln, Arts, Hap . H-HV9 J- Pierce, Engineering, V 1 - . . P- Wilson, lilngineeringr, G my W- Levy, Arte-1. , Burt G. Pierve, Middle Law, Jay. N. Patmore, Middle Law, George M. Brown, Middle Law Albert D. Carroll, Medic. v KAPPA ALPHA THETA. 1 I Kappa Alpha Theta. l5,xlxm-flfho Kite. KFOLORS-lilauzk and Gold. b'l.owv1cR'-fBlack and Gold Pansy. PUIlLIUA'I'ION- 'Vlflm Kuplm Alpha ',I'l1et:L. Fcmmlml nt, D0 Pzmuw Univere-wity, 1870. Maud Brown a1+:N1ons. . ' Winifmd FV v I. l Lomso A. gnxntllm, ltnmm Wumheld, Alma, Hmiljiselllltllllwll, Allgllstu l lmt.om, lqmclmel Pugh, UU1 Mzwtllu Pittingrer, I-lclen Ulblllllllfll JUNIORS. lsubvllc Hazen, Helm'-n NVilli:Lms, lnvz C1-oss, Annu. llankin. TJilfllI'1L Glwmlmzmm. MMV I Solfliomolclfls. ' l W lls Myrtllo llal1l1'iclg'v. Nollv Wlllllllllll. I-'luf1SHMlcN. Dzwlm-n Douhlvdny, i'zu'olin0 Dm1lxlmlu.y. Vvrzn llnll. Mzmlwl Iiarlmor. Sl'I'1U,lAllS. Cfforzm Belle Monro, Man-y linux. PHI DELT .X T H ICTA Phi Delta Theta.. HADGIQI The Shield and Sword. COLORS-NVliite and Sky-Bluv. l1'r.oWI4tzw-The white Carnation. PUISLIUATION-''Scroll and lf'alladium. YIELD-Ei: riwvfpf Ei: rivilpl Ousefel 011862.92 Ov8ei9 fiviypl Rah! Rah! Rah! Phi! Ke-il A! Phi Delta Tlfhetlal llah! liali! llali. lfounded Miami University 1848. HIGNIORS, lCNGINI7lI'lRlNG. Will Il. Murphy. QENIORH' LA W. mu e A . g m' H' VYUIT- H. Ralph Nelson. ll. Coe Russell. Chas. W. Garrison. Gail l'. Carey. T JUNIORS, ENQQINIQERING. X - Ohn M. Sills. CT. Vllaltei- Hviuecke. T .lUN1ons, Awrs. ' WSG VV. Heinocko. Hill-j'lll0l'ld J. De Lano. JUNIORS, LA W. Alfrud M. Seddon. llldwnvd ll. Moses, .1UN1ous, PHARMACY. lvlarsliall J. Cloyos. Louiw I ll - sovuomomcs, IALNGINIQIMRING. ' r , 4 A U ' . hm- Ulll'ilSS Ill. Tlfi-ussvll. 1 has. VV. Fleusov Albert L N S0l1HoMoIu':s, ARTS. ' w'llllll- F. Dix lfletclier. Clan-umze T-T. XVhit.e HWSUGI' Cook. Goomfu li. Davis. ' Re l1'lmsHM1-IN, Awrs. . , , v' x' I I .3 ed B v ' NSPS-' hohorb H. Brooks. Loyd C. lialcm. lfnlvxin ll. Hunoc cc ation llussvll. llay F. Sexton. Robert. Y. Jones. A KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Kappa Kappa Gamma. .--ir BADG1-1-The Key. ' Co1.ons-Light and Dark Blue. FI.0WE1c--Fleur-de-lis. PU1sLICA'1'1oN--' 'The Key. 1-1-1 Founded Monmouth, 1-11- lllinois, 1870. POST-hlRADUA'1'ES . Esther Wilson, Ethel Luther. SENIOR. Uztrrolyn Armshy. .lUN1o1cs. Muud Spinning, 'ldu McKnight, Katherine Selling I-'INR Awr. Gretchen Elmore, Louise Lewellingx SOPHOMORES. losephine Seurles, Neva Lehnxztn, Mary Burn Lilian Axtell, Matucl Russell. FRES HMEN . 'lf'eurle Trickett, Marie Dai-rough, Eva Hirst, Vivian Springer. I-lortense Street, Winififmid Hzmunoml Edith Levan, M any Kamagu, Murry Smith, Eva Mitchell. SIGMA CHI Sigma Chi. ,BADG1-1fHSt. Georg.1'o 's Vross. COLORS--eAzure and Old Gold. Fl'40Wl'll!--Tlle White Rose. PUnr.1oA'1'1oN-''Scroll and Keys. H YIGLL-Who, who, who, mu I? I um u loyal Sigma Chi! VVhoop lu hi! Alpha Xi! Sig'emu.-Clii! 11'0UND1aD. Mizuui Uo1l.r:g'e, 1853. SENIORS. Hurry H. Tl1.ll,LI91ll8.l1, Law, Harold B. Henry, Fine Arts. Milton U. Blanchard, lllngineering, Guy Wa1'd, lilngineeriug, John S. Viforley, lllngineering. F1'9J11k W. Thompson, Arts, Roy A. Henley, Engineering, Neil S. Jones, Law, GBOPEG IC. Tucker, Law, Arthur C, Bradley, Engineering, 'T' Floyd Tilford, Pharmacy. JUNIORS. Milo T. Jones, Arte, QT. E. Dudley Doolittle, Middle Law, guy Clitlord, Arts, Ernest C. Quigley, Middle Law, - Rollin Feitshans, Engineering, Charles Faust, Middle Law, Will C- Edwards, Engineering, Albert VVo1'ley, lllngineeringr. SOPHOMORE. gov W- Winton, Arts, Ben F. Hegrler, Jr., Arts, Calllh W. Morrison, Engineering, Ralph lil. lY!!Ul'l'lHOll, Arts. luire J. Cowley, Arts. 11'RESHMl'1N. T' 'T0!'lf1S0n Strickler, Curl Ill. Riley, Hoy Cater Clvledioinej. ' Roy Klise, George Hansen, lfld Zimmerman. SIGMA XL' - Sigma Nu. BADGE-The Five-alflnod Star. COLORS-Black, VVhite and Gold. FLOWER-The VVhite Rose. PUliL1UiVl'I0N'A''TIME Deltai' YELL--Hi! Rickety! VVhoopty! Doo! What's the matter with Sigflllil. Nu? Hullabaloo! 'l'e1'1'ag'alioo! Augrezeiclmet! Sigma Nu! Founded Virginia Military Institute, 1869. SENIOR, ARTS. J. Paul Baldwin. JUNIORS, ARTS . Kit Wilson. 'Burt W. Vooth. SOPHOMORICS, ARTS. George S. Allen. William F. Lower fpledgodl. SENIOR, ENGINEERING . Louie J. Osborne. HOPHOMORES, l'lNGINl'll'lRING. Charles G. Stolpe. Ora A. Clark. William U. lntfmlll SENIORS, LAW. Louis W. Johnson. Charles Prey. MIDDLIC, LAW. John K. Rankin Qpledg0d.l JUNIOR, MEDIUINIQ. Havry L. Adams. . fri. ALPHA TAU OMEGA. Alpha Tau Omega. ljlxlxzlc-A--Tlfhc Maltese Cross. VOLORS' Sky Blue amd Old Gold. l r.0wlcR Thu White Text Roso. l'Ulxr,u:A'r1oNYQ--Alphat Tau Omega Palm. YIQLI,-----Hip, Hurrah! Hip, Hurrah! Thrue Chvors for Alpha, Tau, Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah! IUOUNDED. llichmond, Virginian, 1865. SENIORS. Walter Mem-k, Arts, Cleorgu Hood, lflnginm-1'i11g', Hrrlmert. Batiluy, Arts, A1lJ9l'bH:0l'lIllLD, Plmrmawy. . Chester Jones, l'lng'ineering, .lrvin B4-nest, Law, Fred Nichols, lCng'ineering', JUNIORS. Lrslie Gould, Arts, George Trombold, Arts, Carl Meyers, Arts, Iflrnest Barkmtmn. Iflngxineering. SOPHOMORE. Gvorgre Nutting, Arts, Harry Bvdell, l4l11pg'il10ol'i11,g.:', l'hztrley Brook, Arts, lmlfls HM A N. Ray Taylor, lCng'inee'1'ing'. GRA DU A TNS. Orville Brown, David McFarland, Walter Hull, W. li. Rouse FH ETA N Tf RPSILOX Theta Nu Epsilon. Theta Nu Epsilon was founded in 1870, at Wesleyan University, and had on January 1, 1902, forty-nine active and seven sub-rosa chapters. Beta. Epsilon Chapter was instituted in November, 1894, with four- teen charter members, and since that time has enjoyed Prosperity with nn UDDGI'-case P. I The features of the Fraternity are its unique method of rushing-its 11051151011 in the estimation ot? the Disciplinary Committee and its annual llarty. PSPSOYIIIBI J- R. MCKNIGHT. 1-I. C. LEONARD. E- H. WARE. M. K. SHALER. MILO JONES. L. W. JOHNSON. GEORGE DAVIS. J- N. PATMORE. G. M. BROWN. J. F. TILFORD. J. P. BALDWIN. , J-8 s. R. NELSON. A. '1'. NOBLE. W. HIMNECKE. W. R. MURPHY. Krr WILSON. A. M. SEDDON. A. B. SIM. G. WV. LEVY. R. BYERS. J. E. D. DOOLITTLI B. C. HOEFER. PHI Dx-:LTA PHX Phi Delta Phi. Chi, Chi, Chi! Chi, Chi. Chi! C. C. S.! Phi Delta .Phil The Fraternity of Phi Delta Phi was established at the Law Depart- ment of the University of Michigan, in 1869. Its purpose is the promo- tion of a higher standard of professional ethics and culture in the best law schools and the legal profession, Its membership is coinflned exclu- sively to the students of such schools and to members of the profes- sion, the latter being admitted as honorary members only. In 1882 the Fraternity was reorganized, and since that time its growth has been remarkable. There are now chapters in more than thirty of the leading law schools of the United States and Canada., besides the alumni chapters situated in many different cities. Some of the most Drominent men of the profession are to be found among its members. The Fraternity is only nominally secret. 'Phe motto, the grip and the DHSS-words are not communicated to outsiders. The badge is a mono- gram of the Greek letters, the colors are wine and pale blue, while the flower is the forget-mc-not. The Green Chapter of the University of Kansas was established in thc month of May, 1897. It is the ruling of this chapter to admit none save those who have been recommended by their professors for excellence in scholarship. 6:4 , nmfzmxlfigy D rairrnliiw Phi Beta Kappas, 1902. l IRS'l' ICl.I'lU'I' Lm-on Leslim-, F11-Llen'iuu l4'uiLsl1uns, Ricllzwcl Hu1'g're:m'0s, Audi-4-y Goss, Clmrles A. Sllively, Guilzm Myers, Wzmltm' Meek, Mfyrtlo lmsley, l'lm'ry L. Millur, llumrlzm lm.ng'wm'tl1y, ION. I'1dw:m'd ll. Krehhiul, Agnes llllrnott, Chas. L. Ilolxlrins, Myrtle Collins, lqc-me Davies, Mzurtlmu ,l'iLLing'm', Ulyrle Nichols, VVllll,iLll'l lX'l11e-atzml, Al'1Y'dl1lllDlll' von Unwurtlm, Frzmk H. Smith. Sigma Xis, Fred Own-ns, Orvills' ll. li:-own, M. XV. Iiluulmlan, He1'bm't S. Hamill-5', fI'hm-on J. Kimwzw, 1902. l 1'm-mlm-ick ll. l'm-Lol-, Ul!Ol'Q'0 J. Honrl, W:LlLu1- J. Mock, l+'. M. llmul. I W, ik I 2 x x M . .1515 MM AX x ff . N ., Qc. f Wjliskafif .S I X f fpmrx ,hrxx i '-f, 5'Q:f Q. 0 . :N S 2 ' ' Xq , 1 , u id VW l I + Q-. yg' .:f Qifuivduj N!-B 2 ul! 'SQVVQV' 1 puff, 'wif AW' up ff -I 'ii X' ' ,V 6 .fllii1'Tn'll, 114' W o HE Young Men's Christian Association came into existence in the University of Kansas in 1852. with a membership of one hundred and thirty memhers. At iirst they held their meetings in tho city Y. M. C. A. rooms, hut later changed to North College. They now have their headquarters at 102-1 Ohio Street Tho Association has grown to cover many H1103 ef Chfis' tiau work: there is an Employment liureau, through whim-h many stu- dents are enabled to find work, and there are also Bihle and Mission classes and semi-weekly meetings. For the last. three years the Associa- tion has had to employ a, General Secretary to take the burden ol' the work. This your the position is Hlled by Richard Nvilliamson. In 13813 the Young Worm-n's Christian Association had its begin- ning. The meetings were held Sunday afternoons in the parlors of the Congregational Church. This organization only existed a few years, and it was not until 1892 that it was reorganized. The Young Women's As- sociation also employs a General Secretary. and Miss Louise Shields holds that position. The purposes of the two Associations are prac-tieally the same, and both require that an active member shall he united with some evangelical chureh. A comparison oif the work done in the State llniversitv with that done in other education-ai institutions in our State may he seen from this report: Younz Mon Aciivo lilexuhurs in School. ol' Y. M. U. A. Halter.. . . .,... 231 113 Ottawa ..... . . . . .170 59 Washburn. . ............. . ..l50 39 K. S. Agricultural College ..... 831 386 lfniversity ol' Kansas ............ 745 261 Youuur Wouiuu Aetivo Moiubors H ill51 'l00l, ill Y. VV. C. A. baker. . ...... A150 37 Ottawa ............ . .. 95 25 Washburn.. . .... . ...... .. .. K. S. Agricultural Cfollege ....,., 2411 40 State University.. . .. . .......... 2715 265 The State Agricultural College has the largest membership in the Stale fm' U10 YOUIIZ Melts Christian Assofriation, hut the Kansas Unl- versity Yo W i '- .. ' llllg Vomtns Association takes the lead, with 265 members mit Uf Ulf' 376 YUUHEJ Women in the lluiversity. Literary Societies in Kansas University. IX general literary societies exist at Kansas University and all are active and fairy prosperous. Each of the six is represented in thc Debating Council, an organization which arranges for inter-state contests and has general supervision of debating af Kansas University. Each society holds weekly meetings which arc open to the public. The Adelphlc is the most venerable society in the University. It is an outgrowth from the old Orophillan and Oroad societies, which were 01'ganized in 1866 and 1870, respectively. At present its membership con- sists principally of Law students. The Kent Club has had an existence of nineteen years. Its mem-- bership is limited to Law students, as is also that of the Cooley Club. The Law students, seeing the practical benefit of such work to their profes- sion. have always been the most ardent supporters of literary societies, and have always carried away the lion's share of the honors. Six of this YG8.I s inter-state debaters are Laws, .two are from other schools. The Snow Literary Society is just completing the fifth year of its existence. . It is the most popular society on the Hill now, because it makes the social life a feature of its work. The membership is restricted, which gives tho society the power of selection in adding members. Men and Women are about equally represented, and the Snow ls the only society which has had mixed membership during the past year. Music, declama- fions, short stories and poems, impromptu t-alks, current events, parlia- mentary drill, and debate form the basis of the work. The Burke Literary Society was organized in the fall of 1899. Al- th0l1Eh composed largely of underclassmen, it has obtained its share of honors, especially in debate. A peculiar feature not in vogue in other S00icties is the establishing of two parties within the society. Thus Dolitical training is given. The President has absolute power within the Society and the spoils system prevails. This method of work has been found Dractical, interesting. and highly satisfactory. The X. Y. Z. Society is the youngest literary society in the University. It WHS organized in November, 1900. by members of other societies who were especially Interested in debating. The meetings are well attended mid all the time is given to debate, extemporization, and parliamentary drill. The X. Y. Z. is perhaps making more rapid progress in its special HUC than any other society in the University. Literary societies at Kansas University have had many ups and downs. Sometimes they have been the most popular field for student energies, sometimes receiving the slightest public approval for the most commendable intellectual efforts. The past year has witnessed a literary revival, and the gains seem to be of a. permanent nature. The societies are no longer looked upon with indifference and there is scarcely a. stu- dent who has literary tendencies who does not find it profitable to be- long to one or more of these organizations. A glance at the old records of literary societies in the University is interesting. In 1873 the Orophiliau and Oread were rival societies. The two societies numbered seventy-three members. Among those names may be found at least two of national reputation and a dozen more who have been successful in a literary way. Whether these facts are merely coincident or cause and effect, they give strength to the claim that liter- ClElSS'I'0OII! 1,53 'C wx- X ixpxxxsa Ps I Ill? 'Y 5 9i,,j.w,? gf , ,' .ijp , ,., . 1 wr-:gf . t ' f'-fav, .ft . Ziff? -. .- -. 1,,,1za ' ' - ,.as - . .-.t ' Ir::f'i-Ely: :rf . . .r L, .Q.i-4.22.1-,. ' - A-- V Y , .- -.-P----.... -,, ug ,A-, Z h- ,: -Jie!--:' -'-'::.:' ' i i' 1 QQ we--:': ,1 M -..,' 3? -' V ,--sa.: ti 1 .. ,QV -1 Lf'- -1. - f 751 'li u f' f ' ?.:wq.gwv1f., 9 34 Elin'-QQ5Lf:!': I' 'l Ill, bi vs. l lil '. .1 Nh 1 . 'l ffl 5:5-1: ..,,.-... ,- - .gi-5 -. - L Z.' .r ' fa..-..s.. , -, v. . ary societies are the most important of any student interest outside of the H Llfgwg 11,-1 v - T .- wif ' r i fail - v :- '- , -- tx .-,. .. A ,--N gp lu ,,. ,r i- .. L i 1.5 , lag-P . 6 1 w,.'3xT YL . '- 1'. .-X - ' -,, '- ' 1.:.f'- i- R, -Q .- . l 'ev . - 41.1 , I .51-.gyaw -:W 'J 'H' A' f1'fwf'f-1 U' Qi' V. q,',U'.' A 4.'x..,ie,g2 fb.-y r we y .ll .U . , - igvrmlj... lg' , lac Q 'any 5 E331 4 fu w' ' C l ' ' .,. bidi - i -, gin, 1 J K. A if ' V Y - . Q X 9 . . . f A - ' 1 ' I ' W 'Milli' P' 'egg P M g1wi.n.,4an I l I' Illl ii' t . 1' y If i 'nl 1 ' ?-Q W1 ' E!-n H a f 'u Q ' 'll ' - . s sr A 'l ' jawgit v i Z.. sig., , , . -I' A W 1 , , X . f rv '., i' 4 If 5 , W. f 'ex 4 n, I 4 . A M. l J W ' ' 'S . . 2 l . 'f - ' f 'W'f- -.H W 'af if A 5-IL L, ..' -A l l r .2 - . in if , 1 4 7 ,lr , I 7 A' --A-.. -2.1. 'l-wi A 1 Y' U 1 a l rum l- , 3 X. , . Jayhawker Quartette. C. W. KIJNIC. J. W. IGHY. J t R'l'RTTDI'l IHGAIJPZIQ. HARRY SHIPMAN. FRANK II. SMITH .,, Q , A. 'U . I VE u 0 ' My ,, H, ',:X' ' I QIIW f' V' W E. f- 8- 'JF' .4 'Q 9 1 If Q! it 'x' 1 x fl la' ' l. S . 4'-Drs Y' he ffvll 725415 Uh Z.2'f67'.S'Z.f.jf PVeehQf. 1 1HA'R,l1ES A RKICH Ill IODIGS, ICKHYOI'-il'1-f Yhiuf. The lfmzsezs Lawyer. 'l.'. M. HYIIIC, lqdilibl'-ill-f!IliGf'. - I The Jayhczfzvheff Qzmff. ASSOc2I'ATI'1 l+1DI'l7OllS: W1NI1-'msn l'1Yl41RlN IINM lim lYln:KN1c:u'1' 'lm-zz 1'l,UMn, Igomsl-1 Incwlfzl I IINK Y' he 156572505 U7zz'ffe1f5z'z'y Qzmrfeffbf. lf'ROl4'I41SS0R HL B. NMWSON, Iddiuor. Oratorical Association. HE first organization of this nature which existed in Kansas University was established in 1884. This was a student or- ganization, but was under the supervision of the lfaculty. It was extant several years, but in 1889 it dim-d. This same year there was organized, entirely among the students, an association to control local contests in the University. 'l'his organiza- tion existed until the present year when at new one was perfected. lt is a branch of the Intercollegiate Association ot' the State. the contests of which take place annually in the various college towns of the State. This in turn is a branch of the interstate Association, the contests of which are annual. The local contest at Kansas University takes place about one month previous to the intercollegiate contest, and the contest- ant winning first place is sent to represent the University in that contest. When this takes place, the contestant winning tlrst place represents Kan- sas at the interstate contest. Josiah Kramer won the local contest this year X I . X K3 , J. B. WILSON, l-1. G. FRAZIER, E resldent fJl ZLt1Ol'iG2Ll Association. Pl'Of0SSO1' of ldlocutaion amd Ovutory .Iosmu KIIAIVIIGIC. Kansas lT11iv01.'sit,y f,l'1l.LOI' '02, Records in Debate. Previous to 1894 there was no interest taken by the University stu- dents in intercollegiate debating. But in 1894 an organization was per- fected between Kansas and Nebraska, which assured annual debates be- tween the two colleges. At present Kansas has annual debates with Nebraska, Missouri, Colorado, and Baker Universities, with whom we have fairly held our own, as the following records show: ' 1895. Kansas-Nebraska, Kansas won. Kansas University debaters, T. J. 1896 Kansas-Nebraska, Nebraska won. . Kansas University debaters, B. B. 1897 Kansas-Nebraska, Kansas won. Kansas University debaters, C. Coleman. .iw 1898. Kansas-Missouri, Missouri won. Kansas University debaters, A. McCall, Simpson. Kansas-Nebraska, Kansas won. Kansas University rlebaters, Perl Decker, ' -1899. Kansas-Missouri, Kansas won. Kansas University flebaters, Perl Decker, Kansas-Nebraska, Nebraska won. Kansas University debaters, T. M. Brady, 1 1900. Kansas-Missouri, Kansas won. Kansas University debaters, J. T. Botts, J. Kansas-Colorado, Colorado won. Kansas University debaters, W. S. Hyatt, Kansas-Nebraska, Nebraska won. Kansas University debaters, L. J. Lyons, 1901. 1 Kansas-Colorado, Kansas won. Kansas University debatcrs, W. F. Mowr Kansas-Nebraska, Kansas won. Kansas University debaters, J. A. Devli Rumold. Kansas-Missouri, Missouri won.- Kansas University debaters, J. H. Tolan, J. H. Madden, J. F. Little, F. M. Brady. A. McMurray, N. S. Guyer. M. Sharpe, F. H. Wood, W. C. S. Kretsinger, B. B. McCall, G. W. Layton, J. B. Cheadle. E. H. Brady, W. S. Hyatt. F. Baker, O. J. Lam. H. Tolan, L. F. Rice. W. F. Mowry, G. L. Davis. J. A. Anderson, J. Vandal y. C. A. Gardner. H. H. Tangernann. C. F B. Cheadle, E. H. McMath an I QQ, In V x Us -05 4 lm. H. ...x ' xW JUNIOR ,I'lcoM, Avlul. ISI, 1901. Senior Play. JESSE V. PIERSON, Manag'er. COMMlTTlCl'1. CHARLES LELAND DAv1Es, Chairman. ICVELYN STANTON, CHARLES L. RoHls1Ns, FRANCES TOWSLEE, NORMAN MCGILLIVRAY, ANNA WARFIELD, HERBERT BAILEY, AUDRMY Goss, F. MI. Busmw, IDA SWIM, FRANK SM1'1'H. The Travesty of Mr. C. J. Caesar. C. J. Caesar .... Clyde Nichols Mark Antony ..... ......,...... ............ Octavius ........ Lepidus ........,. .... Brutus Carruth' ,....... I Cassius Sterling' ....... ' Friends of Caesar .-.Leroy Baxter ........Rufus lCmery ......Ta.y F. Beaman ....Charles L. Robbins Censpirators. ...... Clarence M. Mills Casca. Wilcox .... ...... i .... Clarence R. Briggs Cicero Green. friend of Students... ................ Harry Miller Cinna. Penny........ ..... . ....... Metullus Templin .... Decius Dunlap ..... LigariusRice................ ...... . . . . ...Coe Russell ......l . M. Bushby ..lQdward G. Polster .... Kirk Logan Lucius, student in league with t-he Facultly .... ........ l Cdward Krehbiel. Flavius Filkin, guide ........ Marullus, guide .... .... Chancellor ............. ,l ' ' ' ' Calpurnia, Caesar's best girl Cleopatra, A,ntony's best girl .... Portia Mcflullom Smith ...... Idugenia ............. . . . . Caia..... . Valeria. . . . . . .. ........... Virginia, college widow ..., Octavia ....................... .... .......... Aunty .................... Rich ard Hargreaves . . . . . . .Herbert 'Bailey Frances Towslee Stem .....lCvelyn Stanton . . .lscah Rockefeller .....Anna Warfield .. ...Louise Haynes ....Carrolyn Armsby . .... .. ...Audrey Goss Students, Maypole Girls, Football Men, Pi Phis, Phi Delts, Y. VV. C. A. Girls. Nalnhaniol Hurry. . . Martin Borry. . . -Tool Gates .... Josiah lilakv. .. Sam Warren. . . Mail Driver. A Capt. lien Hutchins. .. Ur. Leonard ......... Squire Andrews .... Yflung' Nat Berry. . l-lulon Hurry ,.,,,, A1111 Berry .... l '01'1vy .......,.... Liddy Ann Nyo .... Mrs. Andrews .... Mrs. Leonard .... Bob B01-ry -'.. Millio Berry. .. MMD' Berry. .. M audy Gatos. . . WIS Mikado of .Ta Jan ......................... Elilinlci-l,'oo Chix sonj .................... -- PU'-K0 Ulord 'I-I'ig'h EXPCllUl0llt'l'l .......... - - PQQ- lfali Chord High l'lVGl'j'tflllllg.l' ldlsm'-D .... - wh ,l ush fa nolilv llordj ............ ... Klbtislia. QRZKQEZQEFEQ CQEWQ ..I'ld,g'ar ll. I. razior . . . Ilobt.. H. Brooks ......O. B. Seystor Clarence R. Hri,Lf,Q's .lilliuor li. Sanford . . . .Harold Henry ....Hay i'li1Tord ......Hoy Winton . ..J'. Il. McKnight' . . . . . . . D. C. Svowir . ..lXl.aud Morrison ... Ida Dunham . . . . .Maud Brown . . .ljouiso lmwelling' . . . . .Fannie Tracy . . . . . Mary Copley . . ...lyaurvnce lfluglv . .Loontino Sullivan .......A,g'nes l'Iuglo . . . .Louisv Smitih .. . . .Il0b1,. Hrooks . . . . .Eugene Sallov ..l41lmer' H. Sanford ......Hoy NVinLon ......Hay i'lill'ord . ..A1I 'llSl1!L Flinton E.l1m'YlIIH, ............................... ........ . .. S Maud MO1'l'1S13ll ' 1- , V xl Y v ,, . Pltti-hing, - ......... Sistors, XVards ol ho-Ko. ....... Danny ll4LCj 0 eeD'H0, l .................. .................... .... l I louise Lowulliug' J 1' School-Girls. Nolmlvs, Guards and Uoolivs. -1 THE UNIVERSITY fy DQ .f-'+V Q A . X' ' + egg- W W, WW' Q K K X 'iiflix m X Q-Meth ' W9 .f1:::f '3'I:. 9 WK ifsfw' 1 WNfi5'7fiN Jsiiwx PM H5220 -,453 1 Ml XX fQv5gk11,a5'ffw -1.53-3-gg wry! if ggi,-A-,.g.,g. P ,Wf'x1. 'Wax PM .J . Qgx Wigs I4 JW! N A- XX Y 1 .4 1 , ' AjE:Ei:v.,x2b,.l s lfffrg -xxx, flwqx Wx f - ,qx-QXXXX , V Aglagnff M :SSN 'll' - 5 ff-M r' 9 , ., -fy - 4 6 A K'-1, ' .f-WWW - - I - Q,. OQ' 3 O. 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H it YPN- 'K V 1 ' . i g T J-1 Mr. Dooley at the University. KWITH Al'OLOGIl'lS 'ro lv. PETER DUNNIGJ Phwat 's the matther? said Mr. Hennessy. Ye look like ye had just r-rayturned from th' funeral iv wan iv y'r best freinds. Wur-ruse than that. Hinnissyf' said Mr. Dooley. I 've just r-ra.y- turned fr'm th' 'fhanksgivin' foot-ball game. The f-act is, Hinnissy, I w21S indoolgin' in a few iv phwat me frind Barcus wud call 'soulful 1'-I'llIlI'Ily' niscences'- lackin' th' means to indoolge in annythlng ilse. We 've been havin' a little dlscusshun, at the 'Varsity lately, Hin- nissy, on th' subjict iv foot-ball. Me frlnd Professor Don Kossuth, th' immynlnt Spanish-Rooshian who holds th' chair iv r-romance on th' Hill, shtarted th' ball rollin' by a little talk in cha-apt-l wan mornin' whi11 l chanct to be there. I-lc 's a great man, Hinnissy, is the Protissor: YE' can tell it be th' tone iv his vice. 'I do not w'ish,' sez the Profissor, 'to be undershtood as sayin' anny- thing agin th' game iv foot-hall, exceptj sez he, 'that it is brutal,' he sez, 'an' immoralj sez he, 'an' dishonesty if,' sez he, 'we cud abolish these ondcsirable features an' make it as harmless to life an' lim' an' th' pur- soot iv happiness as crokay,' sez he, 'or parcheesy, why thin I think we cud admit iv th' game. I do not thinlc,' he sez, 'that ye will question th' wisdom iv me wur-ruds. F'r,' sez he, 'as th' first foot-ball coach th' 'Varsity Ivor had, I may be said to shpeak wid th' authority iv thradi- tion. 'Tis thrue,' sez he. 'that since that toime I have niver witnessed a game, but.' sez he, 'I larn fr'm th' r-rayports in th' Topeeky Uupilul, an' fr'm me frind Ed Howe, who cuddent tell th' difference betwane a cin- ter-rush an' a potaty-digger, that th' game lacks coolcher an' r-rayfln9- mint. I do not wish,' sez ha-, 'to make cha-arges aginst anny individooa1S lv th' team: 'tis onnicessaryf he sez, 'ye know all iv them. Besidesf sez he, 'a few iv thim ar-re nie personal frinds-onbeknownst to thim- silves, an',' sez he, 'barrin' th' toimes whin they ar-re not, they ar-re girl' tlemin,' sez he. 'I hope ye will pn-ardin me these few r-raymarks,' sez he: 'but I was afraid I might not get a. chanct to take another shot at ye, an' I wished,' sez he, 'to leave behind me a lingerin',' hc sez, 'an' aflllckshunilfe r-raymimbra,uce.' l was a great shpeech, Hinnissy, and imminintly satlsfacthry to th' Protissor. In th' coorse iv a few days we had a mass-meetln'. Mass-meetin'5f I-Iinnis-sy, nr--rc hlld in the cha-apel, an' ar-re f'r th' purpose iv givin' th' Laws a. chanct to yell an' th' Inglneers a chanct to r-rayshpond to a CHU iv jooty---the jooty iv outyellln' th' Laws. Th' meetin's ar-rv presided over be me frlnd Jimmy Green, th' same as passes out th' diplomys to th' Laws afther they 've answered roll-call f'r Higgins an' thried to work Burdick. This mass-meetin' iv which I am sh,peakin', Hinnlssy, was jue to what might be called an' extonooatin' circumstance, th' circumstance bein' th' Proflssor's shpeech. Yu see, Hinnlssy, th' Proilssor's little talk didn't seem to take well with some iv th' byes-an' girls, too, f'1' that mattherg l?'r th' girl's at th' 'Varslty, Hinnlssy, ar-re lile to th' institoo- shun-an' to th' bycs. Mc frind Jimmy presided as usual, an' th' or-rathor iv th' day was me frlnd Higgins, only on this occushun he didn't, shpeak. Me Erind Green made a few.prelimina,ry r-raymarks, an' thin called on me other thried an' thrue frind, Proflssor Frazzle. Prodssor Frazzle, Hinnlssy, is 8 gr-reat or-rathor. Ye 'll know it as soon as ye see him shmile. ' I cuddent tell ye all iv his shpeech, Hinnlssy, f'r I was ca-arried 9-WHY be me emoshuns. But th' Proiissor has a good idee, Hinnlssy, ull' he told a thrue shtory to illusthrate it. 'Why,' sez he, 'down on old McCook,' he sez, 'I wanst shtarted a cheer be mesilf, an' me vicc,' sez he, 'Shmote th' air silent an' alone,' he sez. That must have been a awful dlSHDpintin' momlnt, Hinnlssy, like whin ye think ye 're all 1'-ready to shnoeze an' ye nin't. But th' pint th' Proflssor ma.kes, Hinnlssy, is that Whin he yells we shud all yell. An' afthor he-arin' him shpeak, Hinnlssy, I am foorccd to agree with him. Whin Protlssor Frazzle left th' stage, me frind Jimmy sez, sez he, 'Perhaps yu'd like to hear fr'm some mimber iv th' Law School- IQI-I mane iv th' foot-ball team,' sez he: an' thin, Hinnlssy, there FH'-rose a tremenjous shout fr'm a gr-ra-nd concoorse iv four min, f'r me friud Clyde All-1-phln. 'Is Misther All-l-phin prlsint?' sez Jimmy. 'He is,' sez Clyde, modestly comin' forward. 1-Ic's a. foine-lookin' la-ad, is Clyde, Hinn ssy, a AS me frind Dusty Rhodes, th' la-ad who writes th' paaper, sez, sez he, 'Misther All-l-phin,' he sez, 'possisses a prisince commandin' in its cor-r- D0-real amplitood, a. shmile corruscuthory in its b-r-rillyancy an' th' ad- Svitltchous virtoos iv an inhlrc-nt :mtlpathy f'r contumatchous discoorse' HH' all iiagitchous terglversaslum' But I'm not tellin' ye about his shpeech, am I Hinnissy? Well, afther a tolme Clyde suceedcd in reachin' th' platform in shpite iv th' i n' wan lv th' best. Cheers that was hui'-ruld at him. 'T'his,' sez he, 'throwln' out his manly chist an' drawin' siveral She9tS iv maunyscrlpt l'r'm his pocket, 'ls ai. gr-reat surprise to mc. But: sez he, 'it ye will be patient with me a little whlle,' he sez, 'an' not get tired' too quick,' sez he, 'I will read ye phwat I think ye want to hcar,' sez he. 'A week agof sez he, 'I was foorced to sit here an' listen to an flflfihressf sez he, 'in which illvvn lv Lgfldill' mesllf.' he sez, 'were accused Seilll horse-shtealing' to pothry-writin' 10. 'an' listened to this base atta-iekt on these poor. wake, dafinceless th' noblest mln in th' 'Varsity-im iv all th' cr-rimes on th' callender an' golluf,' he sez. 'As I sat there,' marthyrs' sez he, 'I cud have wipt,' he sez, 'with th' intinsity iv me emoshuns. Me hear-rt,' he sez, 'would have bled f'r thim, only it was otherwise ingaged. Ah,' sez he, 'th' ir-rony iv it! To be thus bfasely aftackt at home,' he sez, 'whin they were away upholdin' th' honor an' th' 1'-reppytashun iv th' 'Varsity on a for-run shorel' sez he. 'Cud they have known it at th' toime,' sez he, 'how their hear-rt shtrlngs wud have been torn! 'Their ma-anly sobsj he sez, 'wud have shaken th' goals on a fleld made shllppery with their tears. F'r well they might know,' sez he, 'that th' wur-ruds iv such an' immynint an' powerful ijica,thor,' he sez, 'wud in a few hours he flashed be th' illictrick tillygraft to th' utter'- most parts iv a waitin' an' lxpectant wur-ruld.' He read considerable more, Hinnissy, lv which I don't r-ra.ymim- ber, but it was il gr-reat shpeech an' made me frind Clyde a hero. All th' same, said Hennessy, I think th' Proflssor is right. Th' game ought to he abolished or 1'-TaYfOI'1'1l0d into something llse. Well, maybe so, said Mr. Dooley: but they 's a lot iv us that like it, incloodin' me cousin Teddy Rosenfelt: an' until ye can furnish us some- thing as good in th' way iv a game, why I guess we 'd betther shtick to foot-ball. .-qu - - -W , The Senior's Lament. ,I'1'ltE leaving, old U W6,1'0 leaving, N0 longer our feet will tread, The street of the quiet hamlet, O 'er which Oread raises its head. We 're leaving, old U we 're leaving, No longer we 'll haunt thy halls, And make them echo with laughter. And ring with our college calls. We 're leaving, old U we 're leaving, No longer we 'll smilingly greet, The friends whom we 've been accustomed Daily for four years to meet. We 're leaving, old U we're leaving, With many a tear and sigh, We grasp the hand of a classmate And reluctantly say good-bye. Hallucination. Oh, girls! isn't the new man at our club perfectly fine? exclaimed Pauline, rushing into the room after supper, and bouncing upon the be-l so violently as to cause the springs to give forth a painful little squeak as if objecting seriously t,o being sat upon. The girls had just settled themselves comfortably for their usual evening chat: over in the corner, curled up among the cushions of a lux? urious o-ld davenport, were Bessie and Marie, perched upon the footboard of the bed, with her daintily slippered feet dangling in the air, was jolly little Nang while Lorna rocked slowly back and forth in the big arm- chair. Yes, isn't he a handsome fellow, even if he is rather delicate-loolv ing? said Marie. Did you ever see such beautiful blue eyes, such flne features, and- And such teeth! broke in Nan. Teeth! there it is, exclaimed Bess. Nan would be sure to notice his teeth, that 's a strong point with her. Just because she happens to be blessed herself with a beautiful pearly set, she can't see anything else in a new face until she has made sure that they are satisfactory, said Bess. But he has such a good, strong face, chimed in Lorna: that 's what impresses me. I don't usually count much on first impressions, but in this case I am sure I shall not be disappointed. I have been told that he is from Yaleg that he has come west for his health. I think some one said that he is threatened with consumption: you probably noticed that peculiar flush in his cheeks. 'lt hardly looks like a healthy glow. Poor man! exclaimed Lorna: I hope he will have a speedy recov- ery after breathing these fresh Kansas winds for a time. Here Nan interrupted, Well, if he doesn't. ilnd his health out here. he might as well make up his mind that he is destined for the next world in short order, and make his plans accordingly. The girls laughed heart- ily: indeed, they always did so when Nan spoke. Sympathetic Nan, sighed Lorna. t'Wonder what frat he will join, said Pauline. Frats in heaven! exclaimed Bess. But perhaps they don't have them there, and what will poor - do then? Oh pshaw! said Pauline, I don't believe he 's going to die. No, I hardly think so, said Marie: at least, not very soon. And he will undoubtedly go frat, rejoined Pauline. 'Well. I'm not so sure, said Bess: he looks like an independent sort of fellow, who might not enjoy the supposed restrictions of frat life. But if he does join, hc will make one of those ideal fraternity men who are not puffed up by their distinctions. I am sure he will never be a snob. Well, in case he does go frat, added Pauline, who was a strong Beta girl, 1'll venture that he 'll he a Beta. I hope so, nl leastg he surely has the appearance of a man destined to make a good politician and-- And he would be an expert around turkey roosts, too, put in Nan, who was not at the last Beta party. Did you notice what extraordina- rily long arms he has? So convenient to-to-to- Yes, screamed the girls, so convenient to-to-to- Oh, Nan! And Nan's indignant protest against the sentimental interpretation of her ' ll di ,d remarks was drowned in peals of laughter. Vlfhen these had ilna y e away, Lorna venturedg I think he will be a Phi Delt. Let me prov y the marks of a Phi Delt already stamped upon him. You will admit he looks like a man who would get up n dreadful case, and foster it so ten- f 'dorly through the springtime that it would all be a settled affair be ore e to ou that he has all the June roses began to bloom. Oh, how lovely! exclaimed the girls. And another thing, said Pauline, he has that gait so characteristic of the Phi Delts, walks like he had traveled two miles through a swamp. There is certainly nothing just like that gait on the Hill. And lastly, he wears those extremely broad trousers, so suggestive of a Turk, and that, you know, is an unmistakable sign of a Phi Delt. Vos, said Nan, I should recognize a Phi Delt in Africa by those charming sack-like trousers: that settles it. He'll be a Phi Dell. Oh, do hush your nonsense! said Marie, who had no admiration t for Sigma Chis in general, for Phi Delts, but a warm place in her hear and for one in particular. He will be a Sigma Chi, or I'll miss my guess. Yes, exclaimed Bess, he would doubtless make a line ladies' man. Marie gave her a rather contemptuous little smile and said no more. . . t. Well we certainly differ in regard to this wonderfully fllSClI'lRll1g man, said Pauline. We shall know in time wh-at place he is to fill in University social circles. I am so glad he sits at our table, said Nan. 'Won't it be jolly to hear him tell of student life at Yale? What fun, to be sure! exclaimed Pauline. Who would think that the appearance of a new man at a boarding-club could cause such a sensa- ' E tl9H Why, even Miss Ashbarger, that staid maiden lady at the end 0 the table, told me she had almost lost her heart to this son of Eli. Here Nan jumped up and, widly brandishing a cushion in the air, began to quote in rather high-pitched tones: 'What a piece of work is a man! How noble in reason! how indnite in faculty! in form and moving, how express and admirable! in action-- Oh, ring off, Nan! shouted Lorna. I am sure Shakespeare didn't V kH0W what he was talking about when he wrote that. Just think of it. 'In action, how like an angell' There may have been some of that type in his time, but they have certainly become extinct. Why, girls, it is eight o'clock!'i exclaimed Bess, and I was to lie at May's to study French at seven-thirty. Joy go with the new man and peace remain behind, were her parting words as she snatched her hat and book and flitted down the stairway. The assembly wa.s soon broken up and the girls found themselves trying in vain to concentrate their minds on the work before them. Do what they would, their thoughts continually reverted to the subject which was now of all-absorbing interest to them. The days of the next week were full of interest to the girls, for each day brought to light some new facts in regard to Mr. Lextro. Their inter- est became even greater now that the whole school began to notice him, and two or three of the fraternities had become so deeply interested in him that his social outlook was full of promise. Mr. Lextro, however, did not prove as interesting at the table as the girls had imagined he might, for, though they sought again and again to start him to telling stories of Yale, they could get little out of him. Sedate ln manner, and not talk- ative, he only occasionally took part in the discussions, and took only a mild pleasure in the frequent jokes. To his fellow-boarders and indeed to people generally he continued to be a mystery. The girls often spoke of him as an unknown quantity, for as time passed nothing occurred to change appreciably their first impressions. lk ll' Ill W Ulf A few weeks passed. He was now greatly changed: from having been quiet and almost Saturniue in disposition, he was now the life of every social gathering. One night found him at one chapter-house for supper, the next he was at a smoker, and on the following Saturday he was the central figure of a tally-ho party at the ball game. So it was for yet another month. , The new man, Mr. Lextro, is certainly having a good time, said the students. As far as could be learned, there were no indications which would be the fortunate fraternity. Every day the people at the club watched for some significant colors on his coat. The girls' interest was still at its height: it had never waned since his first appearance. One afternoon Nan burst into her room with the triumphant announcement: Oh, Mr. Lextro is going to call on ME next Thursday evening! Envy was pictured on the face of every girl in the house, and Nan was well aware of the fact and strutted about with a lofty air of her importance. lnsisting-though it was useless-that the honor had not been soughl after. At length the eventful night arrived, and eight o'clock found Nall togged out in her tluiutiest white Gibson and blue ribbons, a combination in which she loolcedlher best. Nature had been kind to Nan and en- dowed her richly: not only did she have a lovely disposition, but a fine face, in which were both beauty and character. It was not strange after all, the girls were forced to admit, that Nan should be the fortunate girl of the house, she was admittedly the most popular girl in the college. The bell rang: Nan jumped up. gave the finishing touches to her twilight, as the girls always termed toilette, and a moment later was in the paror below, smiling and chatting in her most accomplished style. Meanwhile the glrls above discussed Nan and the new man. Well, said Pauline, I shall not be in the least surprised to see a case develop if Nan happens to fancy him. Yes, we all know about Nan, said Bess: her charms seem to be simply irresistible. But pshaw! lhis is not Anglo-Saxon. said Marie. Let 's to our lessons, or I'll surely ilunk in the quiz to-morrow. shortly after ten, while the girls were lndustriously digging away, the door opened and Nan appeared, looking so exquisitely happy that the girls, glancing up, exclaimed in amazement: Weill surely he hasn't proposed already? No, hardly, said Nan, but, girls, he is one of the most delight- ful men I ever met, so very interesting. He seems to have traveled a great deal. He was in Rome last summer, and has visited Venice, Ber- lin, and dozens of the loveliest places in the world. What did he say about Yale? interrupted Bess. Yes, about Yale, echoed the other girls. Hardly a word, returned Nan. It seems strange he does not care to talk about the subject at all. But, gracious! we must defer this dis- cussion. I will tell you more to-morrow: l' must get my 'Advanced Comp' yet to-night. wk ik lk Ill Another month and still no new developments in regard to Mr. Lextro. He was still being rushed, though not so vigorously as at first. He was a.s truly a mysteryas ever: no one seemed to know much about him. When it became known that he had not yet enrolled on the Hill, the mystery deepened and the wonder grew. From time to time he was missing from the table, and upon inquiring it was found that he was being entertained by some of his fraternity friends wh.o had not, yet given up hope. Once again, as the girls settled down for their evening chat, Nan, Who had tarricd long at the supper-table, stole softly into the room. There was an expression of blank astonishment on her face as she threw herself l1D0n the old'da.venport and buried her face in the cushions. Oh, girls, it is awful! she exclaimed. What is awful? gasped the girls. I-I-as some freak asked you to go to the . un or . I Who had just suffered a similar affliction. Are you sick? said Bess. A moment later all the girls were standing over her, one fanning her Violelltly, another with a pitcher of water in her hand, while the third Was trying to open the smelling-salts. T i P'om? asked Pauline. Nan could stand it no longerg sitting up on the couch, she began to laugh, at first quietly, and then, as she watched the queer expressions on the girls' faccs, immoderately, wildly, frantically, until the girls began to think she must bc going crazy. But what 's the matter, Nan? they cried, half anxiously, half. sus- picious of a joke. Finally, straightening herself, and motloning to the girls to sit down beside her, she began, What do you think has hap- pened? The charming Mr. Lextro has- Has put on colors? interrupt- ed Paulineg Nhas-has-he has- No, how stpuid you are! laughed Nang he has left town! What! left town? exclaimed Marie: just gone for a. few days, I presume. - Neg for good, bag and baggage, and nobody knows where, replied Nan. How awful! said Bess. Yes, but that 's not the worst ot' it, said Nan: the steward of our club is thinking seriously of sending the sheriff after him: and a number of the boys, who had thought it smart to loan him their extra tens, are very likely to form a posse. Why, even the laundryman is making savage threats. Only with his landlady is his standing still goodg you see, he simply had to have his trunk. And this is our Yale man! said Pauline. Yale! laughed Nan: they say hc never saw Yale. lJreadful! dreadful! said Pauline, I am afraid it is Still true that 'All is not gold that glitters' l'f'l.'7i l ,.. ,sy git! tllllliiflffl, , ',-' QXL1 vfxslyx fl f' tum I 'si 'iflyfwl Ml1H Nl'l'+l W ii- ffvll-lmllh Hi Wi, ffl' fi ill' 'llh' - I ll lu ' ' my I W T!! I fr W 4 751' vinyl' q. - ,- - :Z-I I-E. V' 7 'A -' ' - -'V-J41' -' 'f','af'1'4ff-' f:i ffe' ' ,il If . IW IWMIQE jimi Q XJ a ff i ,,.,i::.:'.:' N' LIZ...I5:inmi,,4i:q,',:,5,...lem: 52,21 1.1.-,v,41N:.,.E ,1:,:i:hl I xl! ,, ,.4.-1v,f.fg. 5,:g,- .4 J.. 42:7ai-friaztl-wleg.ff-1'-Z:,.1 'f'1f,',:3n',I,2--:. , ,.' -tr ,z N 'wc lf .L-nw,-.t.1 . i.. -g- .---,mv ,.v - it e 1- ---w.:.,:r:.1-.z---'-- .. ' 1E,InQ:fE32ifZ2T:',1.'I: 'j.,.gif' ' 'J Tf.,1:' Q-15'-- .:1:LJi,3Qgf3'. f5f.:.w-Q'f.il V' 3.25-5!,'ful.L1,.i1.f:'-I-2-ff:.Ag'ig. 55-'f?F.4A'J111r5 'ff' ,1':f,' -if'11ff. .'.'-'f-:Ziff 6' 31 iilf-7:5'f- ' W- EE.f.'-':'I,21'l7:f f 'Fglt':fl-- 'fl':i 'SIL ' '5'i5EI5i.'sf1-'1,'. .55 .z5f.2fi'5 'J ' 151759-5.9-l?ii'-H' ' 'K f'?'-'iw 1:.':f5 1?'-f1 E':fu 1'5 Z ' -1 .W -1 ' 1 l 72' it 1 hm 1.i Iii N -fi! I ' ,. I-S' ,QYSJMV l l 'W ,. ... my ' . Ji f v . A5 g3.,,:4-V iii lg! ' ' , I 2 l I itll I. f711Al'TlClt I. 1. The proverbs of Solomon II., son of Kansas, king of Oreud. 2. The fear of the Prof. is the beginning of knowlcrlgeg but the fool laugheth not HL his joke, and is flnnlxed. 3. Despise not the chastening of the Committee, neither be wi-ral? of their correctiong 4. But hearken to their absurdities, that thy days may be long ill the hall of Fraser. 5. Happy is thc man that llndeth wisdom: but lucky is he that gef- teth his rubbers. G. Envy not the grafter, and choose not his ways, lest thou t00 become rich and powerfulg 7. For the rich are the greed of the frats, and the powerful the prvl' of the politician. 8. Listen thou not to a liar, lest thou skip the wrong class and arf flunked. 9. Go to the Pharmic, thou Iiunkerg consider his horse, and be passed. 10. It is a wise father that knoweth his son's finances, and no mother nnderstandeth the way of her boy. 10- He beC0'I11Gfh DUOI' who playeth fairy but whoso stacketh U19 deck shall h-ave a. full house, 12. A good chapter-house is rather to be chosen than new membeie and rich sisters rather than beauty. f 13. Be not slow to lend to thy brother. for he may return it a hun dredfold at quiz time. 14. Forty-cent shares are it sure thing g but a Y. M. pull with Sterling is the winner 15. Better is a single bottle on tho Q. T. than a whole case with the Discip. Committee. 16. Wine is sm. mocker, strong drink is raging, and WIIOSOPVPI 1 a 'l'. N. E. is not wise. 17. A good pull is rather to be chosen than great riches, and a pretty co-ed. rather than silver and gold. 18. The prudent man for-see-eth a quiz, and crammeth for it but the simple pass on, and are ilunkod. 19. There are three ways to enter a frat, yea, four now at K. U Verily, rush one, enrich one, ronst one, or build one. J-10 AQFunny Thing. O11r1zmguaL,g'e as 'tis taught by .Tone A sort of uwe inspires, The student always says he sweats Professor says 'Aperspires. 5: J X K. U. Dictionary. EXAM, n. A condition ot extreme unrest, palpitation of the heart, and nervous prostration. Syn.-Put up a. talk to the Prof. CRAM, 11. The exercising of the mental powers. long grown over with dust and cobwebs. Syn.-Sick for a week. FLUNK, fu. To be drowned in the river of remorse. Syn.-A colored card. PONY, u. The automobile of every quiz, Syn.--nx. A GYM, 'n. A 2x4 room in the basement at Snow Hall. Syn.-Doc. Nai- smith's home. ORATORY, n. A mansion in the skies. Syn.-No rest for suffering m0I tals here below. REBUTTAL, 11. The billy-goat of debate. Syn..--A hard proposition. J. BIRD WILSON, lt. President of the Oratorical Association. Syn.-A tree full of owls. ANNUAL BOARD, nr. A hard-luck combination. Sym.- What will the people say? CHAPEL, n. Uncle Ji1nmy's hcme. Sym.-Once every year. FRAT, n. An individual whom papa. always protects. Syn.- Please send me ten. f BARB, n. A believer in university socialism. Syn.- Down with all fraf ternities until I join one. COLLEGE SPIRIT, n. Not found in K. U.'s dictionary. Syn.-The Fad' ulty cut it out. FACULTY, H. The ability to' look down from a dizzy height. Sfm.-Take a tumble to yourself. SOCIETY, H. worship daily. Syn.-Broken hearts and broken pocketbooks. The altar of Vanity Fair, where hundreds of our students Into the Haven. I watched where the wind came over the Hill, Watched it swirl round the Physics Buil, I noted a Freshman maiden prim Start over south to the ladies' Gym. With a dauntless look of proud disdain, As if the zephyrs blew in vain, She hurried forth, her hat on straight, Smooth-lying hair, and a perfect gait. But cyclonic winds from a windy State Came- over the Hill at a cyclone rate. A stiff, bending form in clinging dress, Her flying hair like a Hag of distress, Struggled to the lee where winds were still, And thanked her stars for the Physics Bull. The Freshman Party. Listen new all for a while as I tell of the flrst Freshman party: P1'oudly, indeed, we attended. but surely you all well remember, , See in your mind's eye the picture-the dancing hall brilliantly lighted, Nooks mid the ferns and the palm-trees conspicuous quite by their absence, Punch of a weakness amazing, reminding one much of a circus, Served by a fair Freshman maiden, refreshed the exhausted young dancers. Freshmen there were in great numbers, at least those of masculine gender. 'Damsels of much grace and beauty donned for the occasion long dresses. Elegant dancers were they, especially one pretty Freshman, But while she was gracefully waltzing her partner danced madly thc two- step. Centers of interest were others-a round chubby youngster. for instance, Danced with a. wlllowy maiden--a pleasure 'twas surely to watch them-- 'Hcadtng the intricate mazes, waved wildly the-ir arms il. la Lincoln. HHDD5' were all the young Freshmen, 'twas surely a. joyous occasion, 0110 to beever remembered. Light-hearted they all left the dance hull, Light-116311611 they went home with laughter-and that was thc first Freshman party. The Senior Spread. Four years from this evening delightful, were held just across from ,the court-house Solemn and serious orgies, the spread of the Naughty-two Seniors: Or, is it four years?--no, it can't be. Is it possible that we are Seniors? Yet gazing upon this assembly, with a thought and a look retrospective, Plainly we see that time fleeting has left behind very great changes. Look at those dignified Seniors, as they sit on tho door eating olives: See that boy throwing a pickle-he 's a newly pledged Phi Beta Kappa: 'Phat one now chasing a sandwich has a class and is called Herr Professor. These are the Naughty-two Seniors, the brightest and best class that ever Spurs won in first of May battle, or shone in a. class-room in quiz week. Naught-two has the best troop of horsemen, and infantry too Clllitff illustrious. Social its great inclination and prominent quite in athletics. Orators brilliant and witty are found in this wonderful body. Surely 'twas shown at this orgy-this spread of thc wise and the witty. Speeches profound were delivered--one called, I think, 'l'hree Irish Storles 5 Another, quite deep, on the subject, Why l Have Escorted No Ma,iden 9 Others of gravity equal quite dimmed the post-prandials of Chauncey. Hepaired to the dance hall-toasts finished'-these learned and dignified' . Seniors - Gracefully danced there the German and in thc- old reel of Virginia Rvncwed they the days of their childhood. This was the spread of the Seniors- 'l'he spread of the Naughty-two Seniors-the pride of K. U. and of Kansas- S. H. '02, Ph 1 fr 1 The Frat. I ,Ill ill Ii. II. llllllll ol' IIZIIHIIIOII, I lend a life ul' social 4-uso, And my fzLLI1c1' is the lemon, All I Iizilvv Lo do is sq111-vm-. The New Magazines. Fha: Wo111z111's Home C0m111111io11... I'I1n Yo11tI1's Co11111:111io11 .......... 'vilflllyu ..... . .... . IVOQIIGII.. . .... . 0 I-lomn COUIIIOIIU.. Phe Smart Set . Phe P111'itun ... UIIIIG IIOOIIIHHIIII.. . The I4'II'GSIlIG Gem .. New Idea . Kansas IKIIOOIQCVII ..... . A111e1'iua11 A11tiq11z11'iz111'.. IIIIQ ... The IINIOIJGIIKIIGIIIH .... . 'l'l1c A11lo111obile . 'Phe Galaxy .... . The Critic . . ....... . . .. 'l'l1c Kzinsas Ch111'rel1111:111 .. The P11ilisli110 . .. . ..... TVIILIIII.. . ......,.. . . .. The Cliristimi Advoc-z1tu . ...Loc Davies . ..f'lll'l'0I1'll Armsluy Ii:1l1lwi11 Inez Pl11111l'1 . . . .Walter Meek .....lf'l1i Gums ...Myrtle I1Zl.SIf'j' P. Mike Gl!l'll0Il C. .loiics lVl:11'y Ilzuld Smith .........M1lo Jmios. ....I. Il. Howie ........l,o11ise Smith ...........lClsi0 ICVZIIIS- ....Iayl1z1wkc1' Q11a1'tr1t1f1 .....Mz11'tl1z1 Whitney ... Pa1t lVl111'1z1y . . .Mabel Conboy ....Kit VVils011 .. . .Rzlclivl Pugh Clothes Qclozj. The farmer, dressed ln his honzespun clothes, Into his Held in seedtlme gothes: With lavish hand his grain he sothes, Or, mayhap, plants the stuff in rothes, And then the good seed sprouts and grothes. Tho' some is stolen by plundering crothes, And some is nipped by cruel snothes, A goodly green on the Held soon shothes That the wise old farmer undoubtedly knothes A thing or twog and, spite of his fothes, He 's sure to reap much more than he sothes. But later his ripening crops impothes A lot of labor, but don't suppothcs That the farmer objects or turns up his nothes At the splendid increase that Nature bestothes. Tho' the summer sun in fury glolthcs, And a wind as hot as Sahara blothes. He sticks to his workg for well he knothes That the golden kernels that his crop compothes Will help him to pay all the debts that he othesg When winter comes, he can calmly dothes Before the fireplace and toast his tothes. Hu-c fabula docet-that means that it shothes To what an extent a ma.n's idiocy gothes When it bumps up agamst a strange word like clothes Out of the Stacks. To Have and to Hold-by Billings. A Fair Barbarian--by Leslle Gould. Who Struck Billy Patterson?-by 1'mn Sayre. As Seen by Me-by Walter Filkln. The Reign of Law-by the Disciplinary Committee. Under Fire and Lives of the Hunted-by B. J. Bernhard. Innocents Abroad-Freshmen. A Foregone Conclusion-by Helnicke. The Uncalled-by Judy. Reverles of aa. Bachelor-Archie Hogg. One Nlght's Mystery: or, Who Painted the Standplpe?-by Prof Templin. Wanted, A Matchmaker-by Daisy Kelley. Trumps--by Mike Gernon. As You Like It--by Prof. Adams. Story-Telling Made Easy-by Dick Hargreaves. My Study Window--by Shorty Duigenan. A Lily of France-by Prof. Lincoln. Tempest-by the Freshlnen. ' Fables in Slang-Prof. Walker. The Light That Failed-Guy Ward. Our Mutual Friend-by Epps 85 McGilIivray. Much Ado about Nothing-by the Disciplinary Committee. The Verballst-by Dusty Rhodes. J My Boys-by Ikea Wilson. The World of Graft-by Billy Reynolds. The Leavenworth Case-by Walter Hall. Faust-by Gretchen Elmore. wit and Humor--by Prof. O'Leary. Reflections of sm Married Man--by John Grove. The Red Badge of Courage--by the Sophomores. The Heavenly Twins-by Tommy Tl1cmp:.r-::. Old Curiosity Shop-by Frank Merrill. The Strenuous Life-by Jim McKnight. 4 The K. U. Primer. LES-SON I. I. The Queer Shell. See the Shell! What is in it? It con-tains a Be-ing who is called a Hard Stu-dent. He does noth-ing but stud-y. Does the Hard Stu-dent know that he is in a Shell? No. He is a Grind and he thinks that Naught but the Ut- most Con-fines of the U-ni-verse lim-it his Ac-tiv-i-ties. Is it not a dole-ful State! LES-SON II. II. AWin-ter Ob-ser-va-tion. Papa, why does the heav-y Cloud of Smoke hang no more over Fras-er Hall. It is, my Son, be-cause the soft IE-0-li-an Zeph-yrs of the Sun-ny South-land no long-er fan the Fire of the Faith-ful Frat's cloud-mak-ing Gig-ar-etteg but the wick-ed Winds of wild Win- ter with wan-ton Will-ful-ness drive him to the ple-be-i-an Warmth of the Reg-is-ter in the Hall within. LES-SON III. III. The Fun-ny Ladder. O Pa-pa! what a fun-ny Lad-der! It has so man-y holes in it and such a teen-ty Ween-ty few Things a-cross. -Why, my Son, that is not a Lad-der! Have you not liv-ed in Law-renee long e-nough to know that that is a Side-Walk? Let us gaze in awe-struck Won-der at the De-cep-tive Side- Walk. ' LES-SON IV. . IV. The Zeal-ous Ger-man Stu-dent. See the Stu-dent! Why is he run-ning' so fast? That re-quires some EX-pla-na-tion. It is near the Time of the Bi-cen-ten-ni-al Quiz and the Stu-dent is mak-ing Great Haste to the Ger-man Ver-ein in Or-der that he may ob-tain the Good Will of the Ger-man De-part-ment. Is his Haste not ex-plo-sive-ly lu-di-crous? A Senior's Wail XX oulal I wow :I IIIITSIIIIIZIIIII vV0llIlI I wvrm- zu, Suphl XX oulml I we-rv 21. .luniorl Would I W1'I'l!2l I'1'uI'I nuld I wm-I-0 III I'II:n'mi1-. Ur 'von za, Izuvve-1' g'a1,y! W1 Vould I only slay! mld I wt-rv 11nosl,z1,l1ylI1ing3 A Law's a Law for a' That. lQWith apologies to Bobbie Burns.1 Is there, for honest. law student, That hangs his sign, and a' that? The Li..B., we pass him by, He dfures be a Law for a' that! For a' that and a' that, Our course so low, and a' that: The Art is but the guineajs stamp, The Law 's the gold for a' that. What tho' on homely fare he dines, Wears, too, old clothes, and a' that: Gie Arts their silks and Profs their wine, A Lfaw's a Law for a' that. For a' that and a' that, Arts' four-years course, and a' that: Thu honest Law, tho' e'er sae poor, Is king o' mon for a' that. Ye see yon Arty, ca'd a lord, Wim loves, and dreams, and a' that: Tho' hundreds worship at his nerve, He 'S but a coof for a' thatg For a' that and a' that, His eloquence, and a' that, The Law, he of the winning kind, He looks and laughs at a' that. X Our Mother Goose. Little Miss Idy, So pretty and tidy, Saw Leslie on Sunday p. ni., She pulled down the shade, VVhy was she afraid? ' Nobody would dare peep at them Bye Bertha Jones-y Billings gone alone--sy To get a little paper To keep you for his own-sy. Little George Davis 'Go blow your horn, To the sheep in the meadow And the cows in the corn. Dickery, diekery, dock. Miss Sutliii' saw the clock, The clock struck one, Bliss and Heinicke run, Dickery, dickery, dock. Ding, dong' bell, Hindman had a spell, Whom was it 0 'er, Charming' Elmore, Who out him out? Big' Mr. Faust. Daisy dear, Daisy dear, Fly away home, Tony on the steps, Waits for thee alone. Little Miss Avlnshly, Sat in alarm-shy, Thinking of Lee and Ray. Along came the Campbell, And asked her to ramble, 'l'hus searing poor Davies away liittle Fvank B111-ford, Sat on the turf-ord, Considering' all of Pi l hi, He stuck in his thumb. Pulled out a Plumb. And said what a LL'l'OEl,U hoy am I ,..,..N V -..--M Nu If if W l A Chapel Talk. Hr- sat him in the chapel. nine to ton. llle had ru- 'er hem-n there lwforoi He llD2li,L1'llll'Kl it a hore, 'But diseovm-ies led the hoy to go again. She always sat in chapel. nine to ten, Shu had hc-en them- terms lu-fore: And she know it was no hom, For she always had aflmil-4-rs 'mong the 'lfhey togethei' sat in chapel, nine to ten, Why had they m- '1-1' met before? All time past had hc-on a hore! Ono only. her admivers ,lI10lljJ,' the mc-n. I lllllll. The Case. 1. The world is full of trouble, The most of which is base: The cause of all this evil Is the simple little case. 2. l hear you say A day dream'l! A yarn of line-spun lace ! But listen to my story And you 'll tlnd it is the ease. 3. A lawyer in his study, VVith wrinkles mars his face, The reason of the wrinkles- works to win his case. 4. The doctor in his carriage Drives of? with rapid paceg The c0untry's full of fevei-M He has a fever case. 5. The Phi Gains at their manor Are keeping in the race, They awaken all the neighbors, They also have a case. 6. The Freshman from his Latin A meaning tries to trace, He would like to get his lesson, But he cannot tell the case. 7. Of all the different phases, To be found this side of Thi-ace, The one that is the very worst ls called the student's ease. 8. Two people are togethei-, At every time and place, Wliile those who eh ance to see them .Know they 'er worried with a case If our lives are to be brighter, ' And care's to have no space, Let us clear our dictionary Of that ag'g'ravatingJ,' vase. NM , f A-va' Nm- A '45 e .vs rv. just Because We 're Naughty. AS SUNG AT THE JUNIOR PROM, APRIL 19, 1901. ,..i-. 'Twas in the fall of ninety-eight, when things were mighty slow, That our great class, at the best of pace, burst in at old K. U. With merry lad, and charming lass. We 've tried our best to make things hum, put up a Pole, although Our little Chanc'lor said, If you do, 'twill be the worse for you. We fought the tight-and beat that class. CHORUS. Just because, because we ,re Naughty Two, We like those scraps and Poles and banners too. We are the best in school, but we like to break the rule, Just because, because we 'er Naughty Two. In classes we come out ahead, though others claimed perfection, Took History, English, and German II, Descrip and Conic Sections, With a pony-and all got through. What if our learning be mixed up with Plots and Proms and Quizzes, We 'er most the whole cheese on the Hill, with all our men and misses We like our fun-yes, that is true. CHORUS. Just because, because we 're Naughty Two. - We like those scraps and Poles and banners too. 'Ne are the best in school, but we like to break the rule, Just becanse, because we 're Naughty Two. From the Senior Engineer to that innocent little miss Who says she doescn't know a jack-pot from a kiss, We welcome you-here to our Prom. For three whole years, O Seniors all, you 've been our doughty foes. Since part we must, take our good will and our affection close As back you go-where you came from. CHORUS. Just because, because you 're Naughty One, We like those scraps and Poles, and all that fun, We are the best in school, but we like to break the rule. Just because, because 'wckrc Naughty Two. GOLF LINKS K U. Nights' Entertainment ' r as-1 'T' ' ' Scarlet shone the moon above us, Checking shadows on the clover, There the bulbul sang in triumph In the mlnple by the pine trees, And my Shezerade whispered To me tales of love and lovers, 'llalesvof wonders that had happened On the' Hill above the city, Tales of maids and moonlight boating, Tales of gallants and of cowards, 'Dales of wars and foolish prating. Story of the Man Who Dusted. First of all my Shezerade Told me of a shrewd evasion, How in haste a young man Dusted, How he made his get-away: In the parlor on the sofa Sat the editor and maiden. Ten o'clock the time-piece sounded- TI'o his feet the young man bounded. He knew well the rulings there, But decided uns the old folk To the Prom were all departed, He 'd stay on till midnight ushered ln the morning of that April day. Two more hours passed too swiftly- Maid andfrhan were gently dreaming, Quite forgetful, midst the l-Iouris ln a far--off Paradise of Bliss. To her feet the mlnlden bounded, Grew her face with terror pallld, While the scribbler in the corner Heard :tl1eq.Pater homeward coming, Heard his tread upon the gravel: Heard his voice without the doorway To his head a scheme came rushing. Patel-'s eyes beneath the curtain uf. Saw his heels in hlnste retreating Through the open kitchen door-way. Story of the Young' Maidens Who Were Hood-ooed. Sheze1'ade laughed lo see thus Pictures by her brain upconjuredg Then she spake how a Mechanic Two fair maidens one time Hood-ooed: To his shop the maidens hied to Dine by invitation, and there, In his basket safely hiding, Spied' some golden yellow peaches- Spiod um jar of yellow peaches, Saved up room to stow away a Gooldly share of yellow peaches. Having finished, the young ladies Smaeked their lips anticipating, When the young man, no more craving, Put away the yellow peaches, Saying: No more need hwave I of Eatingg I will save these till the Next time. And the ladies knew that Their Hood-oo sure had found them. Story of Three Maidens Who Cllmbed the Wrong' Hill. And my Shezerade, ending, Laughed again and then went on: They are not the only maidens Who 've gone hungry on the Hill side, Three fresh maidens, Pi Phi maidens. Cllmbed aloft to Chancellor Snow's house, Thinking that they were invited- ' Were invited out to dine there. But their hostess Snoweld them under Till they 'gan to think it over- Found out that they were mistaken- Were mistaken in who asked them, And then they went adown the Hill. Sorrowful they were and shame-faced, As the girls all jeered and joked them. Story of the Sinner who was Revived. Then my Shezerade turned her To religion and revivals: Pi Phis three and Sigma, Chi men Went to church wherein evangels, Preaching unto sinful souls and Reaching after hell-bound sinners, Gave them transfers to the road that Runs the other way. Here they in Front seats wiggled in contrition. When the preacher in his lardor Called for sinners to stand up, then One poor Sigma in his terror Quailed and stood before the altarg Stood and got the benediction- Tried to raise a maiden with himg Tried to take her into Heaven By the collar as he stood there, Heard behind rl Pi Phi giggleg Heard the Preacher loud rebuke it, Till the preacher spoke in earnest: ln your face 1 see much good, lad - Even in a. Sigma Chi's face. To Professor Adams. Teacher, ad viser, friend, adieu! No monument of marwble hue Stands grimly to -attest the praise Of all thy works to future days. Calmly, faithfully, hast thou wrought, Impressing the influence of thy thought More lastingly into human brains Than a channel worn by n thousand rains. R.T.H All the World 'S a Stage. BROCK GODDARD. 1 wouldn't be a true Beta were I to sit down in a room while a lady stands. FRANK MERRILL. Very like a whale. MISS SHIELDS. She speaks, behaves, and acts just as she ought. HAROLD HELNRY. You 'ri doubt his sex, and take him for a girl. MISS BARRETT. Oh, those coquettish glances! J BEN HEGLER. Better late than never. ORA CLARK. HI must be a fascinating young mulng 'tis not my fault-the ladies must blame heaven. EDWARD SHEPHARD. Lenin as a starved ghost- Long as the moral law. CHESTER JONES. 'He has become a ladies' man with great violence. MILO JONES. He 's a pretty little feller. ROY WINTON. Lieber l-limmcl, was haben wir hier? JOHN PAUL BALDWIN. lt implies leisure. BILLY EDWARDS. Oh, Josephine, I am wholly thine, but thou dost reject mc! CLYDE N'IC'I-IOLS. The very hairs of thy head are all numbered. MISS CONBOY. 'No-, I do not wish to marry: my chief desire is to be a sweet old maid. DICK HARGREAVES. An individual wholly unparalleled in the biographical records of amiable persons. TODDLES HEINICKE. I cannot love, I am too young. KIT WILSON. Other men have acquired fame by industry, but this man by indolencef' FRANK KAUL. 'Much mlny be made of a Dutchman if he the caught young. JIM RZDER. Fit for the 'mountains and barbarous canes, where manners ne'er were preached. SAM HUTCHINGS. No, I will not associate with barbarians. fThey are above his levlel.J .TACK CLOYES. O wad some power the giftie gie us 'Po see ourselves a lthers see us! REA WILSON. A man, a munn, my kingdom for a man. WILLIAM MUSTARD. He reads mut-hp he is a great observer, and he looks quite through the deeds of men: he loves no plnysg he hears no music: seldom 110 smiles. BERNICE BERNHARD. , An adept in the art of blufllngf' JOSIAH KRAMER. He has the stamp of an orator. SEEWIR. In the morn and liquid dew ot' youth. FRED JOHNSON, '01. Absent in body. present in spirit. Laziness.. .. Athletics.. .. . Bashfulness Q Modesty. ' Silence.. .. .. .. Dullness.. .. Flunklng.. .. Slang.. .. .. ... Deep thought.. . Studying.. .. Addictions. ..Billy Reynolds Wm. Mustard Bernice Bernhard The Laws .Phi Beta KHDDH5 . . . .Clyde Nicho1S . ..Prof. Wilcox .. .. ..Linco1I1 . ..Mike G6l'I'10n What Might Have Been. Down at the house of Sigma Chi two warriors convenedg 'Twas Morrison, the exquisite, and T'ubby -foot-ball fiend. Their looks were dark, tones low and fierce, for May-day scrap wns nighg And as they talked the flre shot from Tubby's glittering eye. 'Twas plain to see that in their brains some daring scheme held sway, And woe be he who 'd cross their path upon that fateful day. The while they talked the garret held the other Sigma Chi, Who trembling hid beneath the bed until the storm blew by. And thus they plotted there alone upon a fearful deed: They 'd fall upon their brother frats, Big Strickler and the Swede: 'llhey 'd haul them to some lonely spot and put them to the sword, And then upon the hlll at dawn 'they 'd slay the Freshman horde. And so they gathered round about their Sophomoric braves And seized upon Big Strick and Hans and bound themlfast like knaves They loaded them into a van and started for their lair, Like Frenchmen to the guilloltine in days of Robespierre. But on the way Big Strlck got loose-plucked up a small-sized treeg Our warrriors wise made compromise by setting Hansen free. But Stric-kler's voice was raised in wrathg he swore an awful oath: That if they dared the hill at dawn, he 'd surely lick them both. Then Morrison, the tether, indulged in some hot air, And Tubby squared his shoulders buck and muttered, We 'll be there. Upon the hill next morn at dawn Big Strick made patient waitg But Tubby and the other-ah!-alas!-they slept too late. At each recurring May-day scrap as the years to come pass by Will this tale be told of two warriors bold, to future Sigma Chi. And they will listen with bated breath to the story of how this date W0'llld have marked a new Bartholomew, Im! the lllorrisous slept too late. 4 , v J JIZM V ' lffl W , X f ' W U V' ' J. D. BOWEBSOUK. IRVING l Pr epfreeer. ruxffgef. 8 Lawrence Iron Works. ,MPORTERS ' JEWELERS,, FOUNDRY and su.vEnsrvn'rHs. MACHINE sHoP. ne Reparr Cast G0ll0l'8.l Mllclll ' lllgS. Manutacturers ol lllgh Grade Fraternity Emblems Fraternity Jewelry, Fraternity Novelties, Fraternity Stationery Contracts Estimated. Building F 0nfS- 140-144 Woodward Avenue, All Kinds of Repair Work. DETRQIT, MICH. A. H. FETTING, Mzen11l'zec:ta11r'o1' of , JNO. B. STETSON C0.'S Freternrty Jewelry. dl! 14-16 St. Paul Street. Manhattan Shirts . BM'T'M0RE' MD' Earl 8 Wilson Collars An: oun Lumens. Meruovzendum package sent to any - Zrzeternity llllllllbl-'I' tlrrcglgglr tlfel secre- zwy f l Cl' t '. ' me-' c esigns lLlldGgtJill1:lllGS tizgnilmeed Emimbgleessilailrs, W' B M E C K Rings, Medals, um. 9 LAWRENCE. KANSAS. 'Q -X25 'if 5 FMSQHE it ARE ' GOOD SHOES 814 Massachusetts Street, LAWRENCE, KANSAS. Star Grocery and Meat Market. 1337-1339 Massachusetts St. C. H. TETER, Propr. J. A. BENSON, Plumbing, Gas and Steam Fitting. Phone 34l. 937 Massachusetts St. LAWRENCE, KANSAS. G. F. eonome, Livery and Hack Stables. 8l0-I2-I4 Vermont Street, 'Phone 139. LAWRENCE, KAS. WALTER L. FLOWER. J. C. HILDRETH. FLOWER 81. HILDRETH, Lubricating Olls, Greases, And Engineers' Supplies. 1610-ll Chemical Building. ST. LOUIS, MO. Everything new and up-to-date.-W. E. Spalding. 'N 5, EF my 'il if fir? ff! X Y Wm ' 3. u l I t gb u I XZXZNXZXZXXZXIN A W. B. YUUNG. SUPPLY CIIMPANY. JOBBERS OF WIND MILLS, PUMPS. PIPE, ENGINEERS' and STEAM FITTERS' SUPPLIES. 2 l 2-214--216 Delaware Street. Kansas Ci'y, Missouri. Star Wind Mills and Towers. HEADQUARTERS FOR THE I Official U. of K. Class Pin. '02 and '03 PINS IN STOCK. Any Other Date Made to Order Without Extra Charge. Mail ordcrs Iilled. Souvenir K. U. Spoons, Fobs, Pins and Hat Pins, enameled in colors. Fine Watch and Jewelry repai1'ing'. First Class Optical VVo1'k, at right prices. HESTP R S J 9 andjeweler. 83l Massachusetts Street. L LAWRENCE: KANSAS. The Coates House 10th and Broadway, Kansas City. V AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN. .Take ldlecti-ic Cars passing' Union Depot door marked Obse1'vaLti0n Park direct to the Uoates House. INTERSTATE I'IOTEI. C0., Proprietors. GRAEBER BROS., Sanitary Plumbers. Contractors of Steam and Hot Water Heat- ing and Electric Work. LAWRENCE, KANSAS. Dick Bros. for Toilet Powders. W-I S TOPEKA STEAM BOILER WORKS 1'PH0NE 63 Q NDEPENDENT. Manufacturer of STEAM BOILERS WATER, LARD AND of all Kinds. And all kinds of SHEET OIL TANKS, SMOKE R I I I d d IRON WORK, BRASS FIT- epazrzngprompiy arten e TINOs STEAM GAUOES STACKS AND BREECHING' zo M any par! ofthe State. FLUE ,CLEANERS, ' Etc. Kept in Stock. Please Wfrite foo Prices. 119-129 JEFFERSON ST. TOPEKA, KANSAS. DR. A. J. ANDERSON, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Phone 124-3. Olf'l4'ICl'I, 715 VERMONT STREET. F D. MORSE, AM., M.D. Otlicze Over WOOdwa.vd's Dr-ug Store. RESIDENCE, 1041 TENNESSEE ST. DR. W. Y. LEONARD, Health Officer. 716 NTASSACHUSI4i'l'TS STREET, LAWRENCE, KANSAS. li- s IC E -l-if GRAYSON 81 REINISCH, ABOUT FURNAOES AND THEIR TIME. DRAFT REGULATOR. 1! turns on Ihe drai while you sleep. ESTIMATES FURNISHED. WORK GUARANTEED. 1029 Massachusetts St., Lawrence, Kas. C. J. ERIKSEN, DEALER TN GENERAL HOUSEHOLD GOODS A' GIFFORD, M.D., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Assistant Surgeon. Kansas Division Union Paclllc R. R. REEIDENOE. 116 QUINGY STREET OFIPICE, 927 NIABSACHUHETTS STREET. Phone 24. Otiice Hours, 11 to 12 A. M., 2 to 5 v. M. FURNITURE, CARPETS, STOVES, TINWARIG, CUTLERY, GLASS AND CHINAWARE. SECOND HAND GOODS BOUGHT AND SOLD. 936-938 MASSACHUSETTS ST. CAITL PHILLIPS, M.D., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Oriice 745 Mass. St. Phone 195. Res. 714 Rhode I.:-:land St. Phone 373. LA WILENCE, KA NS A S. GEO. W. JONES, AM, M.D. PHYSICIAN AND SURUEON. Phone 35. OFFICE, 7425 NTASSACHUSWIYTS ST RESIDENCE, 901 OHIO ST. FOR RELIABLE LIN- FORMATION AROUT REAI, ESTATE in Lawrence, apply to Alfred Whitman, Eldridge House, Lawrence, Kas. CITY Pl.i0PER'l'Y AND RJCNTALS A SPECIALTY. Try RaymOnd's Favorife Perfume, Thelma. O Balm of Gilead R. E. PRQTSCH, CUUGH BALSAM For the Perm anent Cure of T A I L. 0 R Consumption, Coughs, Colds, , and All Disorders of tho Throat and Lungs. Manufactured by C I f 11 1. ,arrres a, u tne of I Foreign and Domestic Woolens LAWRENCE. - - - KANSAS- We would suggest that , you figure with . . . Students Brown 81 Parish Trade t On all kinds of ' ' Lumber and Building Material. 633 Massachusetts St., Lawrence, Kas. 'rerephona NO. 113. 717 Massachusetts Street. 'Established 1859. , Herman Kohlbusch, Sr., l94 Broadway, New York Cllv, I l Illunufacturer l' I Fine Balances and Weights for every purpose where AC- CURACY is required. Send for illustrated catalogue. Dick Bros. for Fine Perfumes. 7iafiiiginaazrmmiarirrararrsraarnatisianraararirunfair Biiiiiiik Greetings To 1902, 1903, 1904, 1905, and 1906 Intercollegi- ate Bureau of Academic Costume, Cotrell SL Leon- ard, Albany, New York, wholesale makers and if Q renters of the Caps and Gowns to the American . . ' Universities from the Atlantic to the Paciiic, to Kansas, Iowa, Missouri, Illinois, University of Chi- ' cago, University of Michigan, University of Minne- 1 E sota, University of Wisconsin, Harvard, Yale, Princeton, University of California, Johns Hopkins, ' Columbia, University of Pennsylvania, Wellesley, . Bryn Mawr, Radcliffe, Barnard, Wells, WOl11H11,S College of Balti111ore, Tulane, University of Texas, ' and others. Rich Gowns for Trustees and Facul- ties, tlie Pulpit, Font and Bench. Illustrated bulletin, samples, etc., upon application. Class ' contracts a specialty. ' 1 Let Raymond Order a Camera for You. ' L ll I5 I , . ,lj lla E h I C all II? e ng IS uppg umpang, ,I IU IQ-If I I1 ARE HEADQUARTERS FOR IW FIM BOILERS, BELTING, W2 ENGINES, HOSE, QII LIZ STEAM PUMPS, PACKINGS, ,lil IIA HEATERS, PUI.I.EYS, WI I fl ' ' ', III? MACHINERY SUPPLIES. QII 4IU-I2-I4 West 5th SUBBL KANSAS CITY, MU. Telephone 148. I F- R. 2l,. 0 I,Ig M Eldndge House West End Meat Marker 513,-I Llveru, Boarfllng aIId llaek Stables DEALER IN wg A, J, MOM, lp, M Fresh and Salt Meats. ZH II I w. E. IIIoIIK,I 'O' 10 of ply! IN v v U Special Rates Glven no Clubs. QJII IIIl2I?'?:IIII'2 P5iST.?IySTIR2Ef3il1I ea. Phone 314. LAWRENCE, IIAS. fl WEBSTERS INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY New Words 2 Ph1-5303 Etc WEBSTER S INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY Prepared nder th d ect perv on ofW T HARRIS PhD LLD United States Comm s er of Ed c t by a l f mn t nt spec ali t and ed tors N w Plates Throughout Bindings 2364 Pages 5000 Illustrations Ih ln! Ilf If I ll 1 Ill M 111 A Xl WebstersCo11eg1ateD1ctIonary l 1, 1' 1 PI r ylf 15 I fm QD . 1.51. 5 0 , 533' II. u e ir su isi . . , . ., . ., i sion u a ion. assisted nrge corps o co 1 e e i s s i . mn A e . I' . . E XII.. , . . . .. I . ,. ,. , ILE I' I'r1I III III rrII1.vj11'.I' 1.I-.I'uI'Il I Agn, .l'lltAl'l'l'1l ng I' lf1lI11I'IAqI'I1'. IM' 'rw B LQ fflllllffllll If MI' l11lI'1'11I1l1'I1m1l fr'I1.I' i.r.I'11I'Iz'1'n 0I'lnbI'1', IQ00. Url M: lI1lI'sl ami MI' bmi. wg Q- I I I su wIl I n v:IlII:IIllc Scumsh lrlosszxrv, etc. ' Ia! II - I I V A First class in qunlily, second class in size. JVl2'h0 as I u ra utII'r. II ' I ,' - A , .S7It't'l'lHt'Il pI1gI'.I', dr., of both lmnlcx svn! on KI 1111211 I m. I . - -r v . 1 I - A ' - G 81. C MERRIAM CO Publishers Springfield MasS.,U S A THE U IVERSITY OF KANSAS. 'SBIG- A Co-educational, Non-sectarian State Institution. Established by the Legislature of 1864, and maintained by legislative appropriation, it stands at the head of the public educational system of the State. Is directly related to the pub- lic High Schools of Kansas, 145 of which prepare their graduates for admis- sion to the Freshman Class without examination. Students admitted upon cer- tificate from colleges, academies and preparatory schools of recognized standing. Oilers Free Tuition. To every resident of Kansas, who is qualified for ad- mission, it offers free tuition in every department except the School of Fine Arts. Reasonable charges in this de artment for high grade instruction in Piano, Voice, Pipe-organ, Harmony, Igrawing and Painting, Elocution and Oratory. In other departments no charges except Laboratory fees sutii- cient to cover actual cost of materials used by the student. Moderate living expenses in Lawrence make it possible for young men and women of limited means to obtain a liberal education or thorough professional training. Many opportunities in and about Lawrence for students to secure employment. More than half the students in attendance are self-supporting. Possesses Superior Facilities. Nine well-equipped buildings used for pur- poses of instructiong modern in construction and designed for special uses. Laboratories supplied with apparatus for advanced research work. A 875,000 Library building, containing 38,000 volumes. A 875,000 Museum building, in process of erection, to contain the natural history collections valued at FB200,000. A ,campus of iifty acres and large athletic field. Total value of buildings and equipment, 81,000,000 A Faculty oi Eighty Members. Graduates of the leading Universities of Europe and America. Each prepared by years of specialized study to give advanced mstruction in a particular department. Seven Schools in One. The University comprises the Schools of Arts, Law, Engineering, Pharmacy, Medicine, Fine Arts, and the Graduate School. Twenty-two departments in the School of Artsg much freedom allowed in selec- tion of studies for various degrees: special instruction for teachers, and con- ferring of teacher's diploma and State Certificate on graduation, Diploma of Law School admits students to practice at the bar in Kansas without examina- tion. Graduates of Pharmacy School become registered pharmacists upon certificate. Completion of two-year medical course admits students to the third year in the best Medical Colleges of the United States. Engineering School offers four-year courses in Civil, Electrical, Mechanical, Chemical and Mining Engineering. Twelve Hundred Students. More than 1,200 students enrolled in 1901-02. The sons and daughters of Kansas, for whom the institution was founded. The same opportunities offered to the young men and women of other states, at a tuition of only 810 to 8525 per annum. I Favorabiy Located. Midway between Topeka and Kansas City. Excellent railroad connections with all parts of Kansas and neighboring States. Law- rence, a beautiful, healthful city, full of historic interest, and noted for high in- tellectual and moral tone. For Catalogue and further information, address W. C. SPANGLER, Acting Ch anccllor, LAVVRENCE, KANSAS. Dick Bros. for Fine Toilet Soaps. S noor a siemens, Architects, 701 Postal Telegraph Building, KANSAS CITY, MO. Architects Fowler Shops and Natural History Museum. K. U. Kansas Seed House F. Barteldes 8: Co. Seed Growers, Importers and Dealers. Ollice. 804 Massachusetts St. Warehouse, 805, 807, 809, 811 New Hamp- shire Street. Catalogue Mailed Free on Application. Waiter l. Hnwei it En. COCHRANE HEATERS, COCHRANE SEPARATORS, LARGE COCHRANE SYSTEM BOILER, FEED WATER PURIFICATION, STEAM TRAPS, Etc. 1610-II Ghemicat Building. SAINT LOUIS, . . MISSOURI. l'lSfI'Alll'.ISl'lICl5 1842. J. Bishop Xe Uompang, NUFAC Ii P ll3llllll8lBll Pliilllilllll Wall! Of all kinds, Guzuramtood .lflrev of BLISTICIIS or IPLANVS. All ticlos of Pint l eg nirod ut ron. ll ts lgunrantecml. Send t' lnr and prices. Exp. Ollice, Malvern.Pa. SUGARTOWN, PA. We strive to please.-W. E. Spalding, Clothier. W. T. OSBORN 6 COMPANY.. Electrical Engineers and Contractors . . . ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES. ELECTRIC MOTORS. ELECTRIC LIGHT and POWER GENERATORS ELECTRIC FANS. TELEPHONES and SWITCH BOARDS. Aaents General Electric Co. Tel. 828. Kansas City, Mo. '!'4 i' 'I' -5' 'B' 'E' 'i' '5- 'Q' 'B' '5- 'E' ri' -4' 'Q' ri' 'i' 'E' 'i' 'E' 'E' 'E' 4' 'i' -E' 4' 'i i i' -z--1--:--t--z- 1 2 'S f'D 5 Q CD +4- 4--i !' 'R'-5-'I' 'ici' 'ini' 2 '! i i ! i ! ! ! !'+'i i ! ! ! ! ! E i i i i' 'I' 4' 'I' 'E' 'S' -5' -4' 'I' -3' -5- 4' '5- -E' '5- 4' -E' 'i' 'E- 4' -5' -I' '35 ' 'E-'! i'+-i i'+'i'-E'-!'-i'++-i i-4' 'i'-i'-5'-l i ! i i'-E' Water Company. 727 Massachusetts Street. Telephone I50. Lawrence, Kansas. MERGHANTS NATIUNAL BANK. A- Monroe. i M. Newmark, President. Vice-President. W. F. March H S. A. Wood, Caslzuer. Assistant Cashier. C ' I W aplta, O0.000. surplus, 320.000, I 5 cb Q- CD B DI I5 :C rn 'TI I-IF' we C1 ZF! m0 X1 QUU 51-3CI F2 55 Um cn For the Quality and Character of its Refreshments, Confectionery. Ice Cream and Fruit Ices. The very best is used in the composition of each and every article sold. Then, ton, you always receive such courte- ous treatment at Wiedomann's that you always return. Isn't that u fact? Be sure to Directors: n A. Monroe, G. Grovenor, M. G. Manley, S M. Newmark, W. F. March, A. Marks. Eben Baldwin. with your Best Girl soon. Sure. Let Raymond Order a Camera for You. Cool it is liahl ev than herez: urnia.. as ns A MM 69 66 4K4 Q3 evo om '51 'U H' X: i fo-6,84 My SEQQQ Me? HE mercury rarely registers so high during a California summer as it does here. Ninety degrees is unusual, and this occurs for only a few hours on several days scattered through three or four months. At the sea- shore and up in the moun- tains there are constant and refreshing breezes. Ride there across cool table-lands of New Nexico and Arizona. Low rates to California this summer. Literature for the asking W J BLACK , Cillll mll as n G1 A ent,ThoAtehi- l 0 Railway Topeka Kansasl . was y R: 4 Q 4 gh X lf, 4 dd it H .tflrd 4' 4 . N334 i Q H 'mild Santri . at A A 1 -A ' ., sr Send to Raymond for Gold Fish. SNllTH'S NEWS DEPOT Headquarters for Base Foot and Gllllilsl LAWRENCE, KANSAS. EASTERN STAR BAKERY. HENRY GERHARD, Proprietor. Wholesale and Retail Dealer in BAKERY GOODS AND CONFECTIONERY. 825 Massachusetts St , LAWRENCE, KA 5. P.. PI. STETWART. Proprietor oi' The Tipton Barber Shop and Bath Rooms. 838 Massachusetts Street, lleixvrerdoel Ifiurxsrenr-u, NEW YORK LAW SCHUUL. NEW YURK CITY. llwlght. Method oi' lnstructlon. lmy School, 35 Nnssnu St. l'lY1fllllllL' School, 9 West l8th St. Summer School reight weeks, June-Augustl, 35 Nassau St. Degree of LL B. after two years' course: of L4L.M. after three years' course. Prepares for bnr of all State-1. Number of students for the Fast yeur C1900-l90lJ. 7 70, of whom 285 were col- ege graduates The method of study pursued aims to give the student n thorough knowledge of legal prlnelples and of the reasons upon which they rest, and to render him well equipped for the practice of his profession. The location of the School in the midst of the courts and lawyers' ollices nllfords also an invaluable op- portunity to goin a knowledge of court pro- cedure and the Practical conduct of nileirs. Send for cate ogue explaining Dwight Meth- od, courses of study, etc., to GEORGE CHASE, Dean, 35 Nassau St. fff X ll iff X far X M efif' fV'f'l er a pen nr wx X V W ' X X ,M rf I X' r . Helix- it V V if , '.,! My xixxs 4529, All fl! W , . A.: ,Q vm N 4. ' :Hr X I ':,r 4' 'X' X . ':, , .ri IDEAL 0 NTAIN PEN The Ideal Pen for the Student. Ask you dealer, or L. E. WATERMAN Jz CO., 155-57 Broadway, New York. F. W. JAEDECKE. Hardware and Sponing Goods. 'Phone 178. 724 Massachusetts Street. J. Donnelly. N. Donnelly- DONNELLY BROS. LIVERY. BOARDING and HACK STABLES. ALL RUBBER TIRE RIGS. 700 to 717 New Hnmpshire St, Lrr.wronC6. KW- Telophone 100. Xovooovv sv. .,.v-.-. .,....u --.---e., vw- -o--vQv0 2 Charles l. Clegg, 3 2 Official Fra- 5' ternity jeweler. 55 ., c 2 55 Fraternity P1ns 1: .. 4. 1' and Novelties.. H gi Class and College ie Pins. Rings and Prizes. li 616 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. .v cease: zcaaoooooufsqeasxrc own-.::::::: Robinson Winey, The Up-to-Date Clothiers and Furnishers. 742 Massachusetts Street, LAWRENCE, KANSAS. ANYONE WANTING A COPY OF THE JAYH WKER, G Y W RD. Lawrence, Kas. A Gos Stove for Summer Cooking. I T IS 142 IC?-1-I '1' P' CD12 Comfort ond Economy. Lawrence Gas and Electric Light Conippany. he One Thing a Student Should Learn at aw School. On any question always to consult first the Lawyers' Reports Annotated. To search the INDEX TO NOTES Cwhich is furnished for the askingl knowing, if the question is annotated, your work is done-covered more fully than in any text-book, encyclopedia or digest. This lesson well learned, and you have a Great Truth by the tail. llt will later pguide you to success against older and perhaps abler opponents, who have acquired the habit of depending' upon inadequate, back-number methods. Digests may include all cases, but when are you sure you have found them all? Text-books are ,Lreneral reviews of broad subjects, and eneyclopedias are essentially collections of sketchy text-books--,g'ood, had or inditlerent. They all have their value, of COIIVSG. But suppose you want help on a brief-point like, say: life inswo-rrnrfe, us assets Q1' ll, IlttHlx'7'llQ1t,l,01' ilu injuries lo person mul ynroporty rronstilulc one or Lfuro causes 1gl'tLc:t'ioii,Lf ' You might, in time, dig' it 'all out of the other hooks, as our editors have, if you had all the books and aper- fect working' lcnowledge of them, but in Lawyers' lieports Annotated you'll lind an exhaustive review of all on the subject-a complete brief-with a-full. l t report of the ates '. Look up and get familiar with the Lawyer's I-Reports Annotated. Tllere are no reports like them: Every law school should have the set-most of the best 01' them have. Send for the INDEX 'PO NO'l'ES.,' A postal will bring' it. '-I F The Lawyers' Co-operative Publishing Co., m?l'if.1S2'siQ' C Em 'NEW YORK' 19Nf+!.l'2.I'?i. Dick Bros. for Soda Water. A. L. SELLGS General Inssgranog .AGENCY . t with vvliwble Fire, Lifv. Tm'- Will pnfovidu you at reasonable ces ,I g f . I gf I 1 nudo amd Accident ,l,llHlll'iLllCG. Will furnish lmnd YQ1- 11lIllV1Clll8.l!-3, administrators, executors, ,2'11iL1'tlliLIlS, public otiiclals, corpora- tions undcmit1'actm's. Orders by telephone prompby exe-cutgud. . j 0l1ice, 19. S G Telephone Noe- 4 Residence' 31' . The Lawisslce lilaizinnal Bans. UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY. PAUL n. snooxs, cashier. J. D. BOWERSOCK, President, R. W. SPARR, Vice-President. H. E. BENSON, Assistant Cashier. LAWRENCE. KANSAS. J. W. ROBERTSON. E. M. ROBERTSON. E I 2 D 9 Importers and Manuiacturers of Gnsmlual ann Plluslcalxplnuaralus. and Esau nouns ann linemnnsl Jena Glassware lallurainru. Undertaking. Pure Hammered Platinum, Finest Analyticql and Assay Balances and Weights. Bil0l70l'i0l0R1 cal Ap nratsus, Porcelain and Glassware, C. ' ' ' ' 'l Pu ers, Micro scopes andAccessor , P. U1 mlcals and Reaszontss, Kohl's World Ro 808-810 Massachusetts Street, le nowned Physical and Precision Appuratqs. N. B.-Glass blowing done on our premises. LAWRENCE. . . . . KANSAS. 205-211 Third Avenue. NEW YORK. - Full Dress and Tuxedo Suits.--W. E. Spalding. Schleicller bcliull s C, P. Fx tier p ies Kuhlbnum's Strictly C. '1--1-.em T'-I-I-I-I7-yiqxr 'VL QD 1 I'-I gi ,! -In I 'Vg I '14 BH IJIIIIIIIIEETI I In il P, fl g'FE'Ei'FF I'FF'FF'FFFf I E I . I ' ' v,...,. '- - I ---J- -.-. Y. ' - -gh.-. '-7 A . . . - A I I X, IRI Z, MOE M . , 3-Lx, - J uf ,,,, , gr, ,,:lQ'ff,! ,- QL-5-,:i0i:g,: l I .N I ,L ,, ffZV11Iy,1!,Yw LA lv I Igle, g :-:-1'2+22.' '71: 'f3'l'I' A 5-' I .1 vizi E- f I' '- fl I R J ' 0 2' if ' ' I- Ieuwn up 5' V I 'T 3 fv ,,.,. x -11.5-I rg-in V 1 ' ff , elm? .Egf15f -F' A 15 ,I I, 'f',.'U If 1' I -X 'F 5.4 2? l e igh'-x-.5,A':jI.,! ,k-.l'.,E-A V I :': 'ggf,g','f5 yuflj QB Brian H 3- N' I ig Il ,Inn I..,,l mu I vig FM'f' 7I4.' . 5 3 QIWI' Ulf 'I Il ..,.1-1EJ-iLEL II - f.uI .LI'L. 3w,II'1:rIIIl1' II I F I' 125. 3 ' ' '- If I,1H.gmf!MI'I,i Lil! I' H I 3' III! - 5 ln, :JSE ' k' 1 E: E mi 'I- ' ?ff HI P' F4 P I-I 2I1TiTEm37g' I II. If JIIII I tl ' IL, .71 N' 'EZISR 'W -I -I 'J' i' 15312. I-H lj.. jgy jg ,,'Q'Qf4 ? !2 52 A :TI ,,-If ml 31' T ,I ISI 'II fm - - -If I :L - . ., fw.. III 1, : I I I' . E. In 'J ' uf- IIIII ' -' ' 'I ' I , frm NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY, MEDICAL SCHQCDL ff 1 HIUAGO M. IGDLCA II C0 LTJIZG ICD BUILDINGS AND EQUIPMENT NEW. . CLINICAL OPPORTUNITIES UNEQUALLED. FOUR HOSPITALS IN AFFILIATION. DISPENSARY TREATS 28,000 PATIENTS ANNUALLY. THE RECOGNIZED LEADER IN MEDICAL EDUCATION. lfbo' Oiroulm' cmd lI1fm'mation Address DR. ARTHUR R. EDWARDS, Semfemvfy. 2431. .DEAIIIIOIIN STRIIET, CHICAGO. AI.EXANDER LEWIS, .Av LUMBER AND BUILDING MATERIAL .29 1046 MASSAOHUSIQTTS STIQIIIIQT. W. N9E.A 1 li- M O n e y Always on Hand to Loan On City cmd Oozmtfrqf Pvoperty at lfeasfmable Ifates. R. B. Wagstaif. Staple and Fancy Greeeries, T.I1:LIcvHONE 25. LAWRENCE, - - KANSAS. ED. ANDERSON, 1 . m 53911 V QUT ..?Qi.QQlQ2 Y - ICE CREAM, FRUITS AND OvsTERs IN SEASON . . . B251 Meals of any Restaurani 131 the CIW. HARDWARE WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. BUILDERS, HAIIDWAEE A Specialty. GUNS, PISTOLS, AMMUNITION, FISHING TACK- LE AND SPORTING GOODS, IRON, STEEL AND WAGON MATERIAL. CREAM FREEZERS AND REFRIGERATORS. Telephone No. 267. CHAS. ACHNING, 715 MASS. Sw. LAWIIENOI-1, KAS. 5522 MASS, Sq-, IJAWRENC1C, Lee - THE REMINGTON 1' 'ei-f x N ,Q . .gl D TYPEWRITER. all 1 f-G .v -f 4- I. ' 7 'iWQIiiX'A il . A' 'if We Repair Typewriters. my WAN We Rent Typewriters. Q fi-T..-IIi'.IM,M, ITQI. We Exchange Tynewriters. fe lMi21'e-.-LJ, I .eb if Lf, '5 g Typewriter Supplies and Furniture 5' 7 for all makes of Machines. 'er'es.giL I' 'T 5 - I-:. Is. MacDOWELL. Resident salwm. I ......... ...W ' - column:-n BuIIdlu1,'l'0PEKA, KANSAS. In 'I' Telephone 559. fItEuLEPHONE. 1632. Carlton 85 Rose, 113152922 Zinc Etchings, ft1IiBtiE8 ottlflafesh By All Known Processes. 1016 Wyandotte Street. KANSAS CITY, M0 The K. U. Girl ' is IQANLY HDUCATIQLD TO IQXLMZ ex THE FACT THAT WHAT ,wW5Q5W,'MEflX CANNOT BE FOUND AT lie., 11'-155. ,Q M f-h.', :cL f,ai3Hl,f Q 11 '-' Llllul 'll xx ry. 1-ffl, ' ',,1Q',,'l .55 'veg N., is NOT WORTH WASTING kfl'-T gh Hemi TIME ABOUT ANY WAY. -' 3 ' IT'S SUCH AN lcAsY STORE TO TRADE IN, TOO, THAT SHE SOON TURNS TO ,IT AS TO AN OLD FRIEND FOR ALL THE DRY GOODS, GLOVES, HOSIERY AND READY-TO-WEAR FURNISHINGS SHE MAY NEED VVHILE IN LAWRENCE. WE ARE PROUD OF THE DISTINCTION OF BEING K. U.'S DRY GOODS STORE. al A JC A A al 15 sl :K of INNES, BULLENE C? HACKMAN. The Kansas Medical College, TOPEKA, KANSAS. THE NEXT SESSION OF THE KANSAS MEDICAL COLLEGE l NNILL BEGIN September' 16, 1902. Continuing' twenty-six weeks. The College Oilers unsurpassed Clinical advantages and Laboratory Facilities. The course of study extends over four years. The school is a member of the association of American Medical Colleges. A catalogue and full information relative to the school will be sent on application. R. S. MAGEE. M.D.. Secretary. J. E. MINNEY, M.D.. Dean 634 Kansas Avenue, Topeka, Kansas. Raymond Can Fill Your Wants.


Suggestions in the University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) collection:

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1893 Edition, Page 1

1893

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1899 Edition, Page 1

1899

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1901 Edition, Page 1

1901

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1903 Edition, Page 1

1903

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1904 Edition, Page 1

1904

University of Kansas - Jayhawker Yearbook (Lawrence, KS) online collection, 1905 Edition, Page 1

1905


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