Lake Forest College - Forester Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL)
- Class of 1910
Page 1 of 260
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 260 of the 1910 volume:
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L ,- -L -1' ww' .Yr-I . i l-fu S dl 'vii W: lb, ,it I-3 ' f - 1' 'fx -f I - h L -THA f. -Q 1 H , 1 '1 H ,PA-f-L ' ., .ig 'f-'-632:25 -is bf H-hh ...l lu. , , .LV ' 'M X 5 fn ,-r' . Lx Y . l gff TT' V 'Q ., A., r .lx.L. Q' J 5. X f ' .1 1' ' . , -'?f '1, u.- 44 5 ' :nr if A-L ,nfl 6 4- Wi . 51-g,iL T wtf- 'f .::f-.., , 1-an V - A I.. -V-, J L I A-iz. Y .I ' 7a1J+z f 1 W- : 1 - 1 .h 4 ,T 1 an-g,g. it :-ET--T I 1 1I - i - n 1, 4 - ,MY -.' 1 - ff '. L H L ,I b uf- 'Q-4, - I . 1-T .3 ll , fi ' J :H ,Hsu -. ,JL 1.0 'lffkgb c IL A S X ' 'Q ., .5 1 cy ll' 5 S ' yy '..areas-asaseaeeag'::asssszs:sz'f1 gzsfsg i eee T he Forester VOLUME XIII. Published by the JUNIOR CLASSES Lake Forest College Ferry Hall and Lake Forest Academy O ee elrjm 'g ri t ,L ' :SQ:,:'-- Qin Zahn Billirrs jfarluell, ibresihcnt uf the Buarh uf flilrustccz lake jfurzst Eklniheriitp. Lake Forest College and its preparatory schools stand for a thorough educational development toward a well rounded Christian manhood and Womanhood. The main object is not to produce culture or erudition, but rather men and women who can and will be of the highest service to the state. If the college can inculcate in each student as the ideal of life's work the spirit of unselfish devotion to the cause of pro- moting a better citizenship, a more loyal patriotism, and a more practical and every day Christianity, it will have fulfilled its mission. To accomplish this end, the curriculum, while preserving a broad and general basis, will be gradually specialized to a certain degree toward the very best instruction in English-the art of expressionAfAmerican history, Political Economy and Social Science. Its proximity to the City of Chicago will make it easy to bring the student into close contact with the great modern problems to be considered in this course, and to enable them to hear from men of affairs in the city, who from time to time will speak to the students. With these objects and these opportunities, together with a beautiful and most healthful location, the Trustees believe that Lake Forest will have a unique and most useful position among the so-called small colleges of the middle west. The loyal spirit now existing among the Faculty, the Alumni, and the Students will I am sure continue and develop a growing enthusiasm and co-operation which will bring all these hoped-for results. JOHN V- FARWELL- 5 Flmeewviwi-xiwfjtlwiiiwWir' We 'rr im we SgqwglgSgagg,5gg22aegq5S-aaglllAijS,QEwQfEgfQQ25QQ-Q iclS4lg3b'?4Si53ik4 w5vmliEEm.ea:sha'bf24aEEb?4 QENQEEEWQ Foreword E REALIZE that in strug- gling along the tortuous road toward public favor, we have erred into its maze of by-paths and failed to triumph over all the obstacles with which it is blockedg yet we hope this thirteenth volume of the Forester is not unworthy of the Junior Class. For those contributions which faculty, student body, and alumni have so kindly made, the e ditors extend sincere thanks 5 and if with their assistance we have depicted but one phase of college life with that realism which warms the graduate's memory of his college days, or stirs the under- graduate to increased love of his Alma Mater, our aim has been accomplished. 6 0NE5 T fTH fissocmrg sw srarxrlmqw CLARA srfewffk LOIS HALL EPI TOR ' CRAWFORD VAWE 6 2 1310 YQSTCT. 13 HA Rf? Y 5 ROBINSON BCAWNE55 MANAGER M xy 7 PRESIDENT JOHN SCHOLTE NOLLEN, Ph. D lifmr-:f!.i''t'e:WCi'Ni:i . J 4- T H E I 9 I 0 F O R E 5 T E R to John Scholte Nollen Our President was born at Pella, Iowa, January l5, l869. His grandfather, Henry P. Scholte, founded Pella in I847 and was from the beginning much interested in education, being one of the principal founders of Central College, Pella. A distinguished trait of this pioneer was that he opposed persistently all efforts made in this Dutch settle- ment to teach Dutch in the schools, saying that this was an English country. The Presi- dent's father was also an educator of some note, having been a teacher of Mathematics in a Dutch Gymnasium before coming to the United States, and giving his children the major part of a college education right at home. Being a good linguist, it is but natural that the subject of this sketch early developed a taste for the ancient and modern languages, and the teaching of the latter constituted his life work until his advent to Lake Forest. President Nollen graduated from Central College in ISS5, becoming an instructor there upon graduation. ln l887 he went to the State University of lowa, graduating from that institution the following year. He then went to Europe, studying in Zurich, Leipzig, and Paris, taking his doctorate from Leipzig in IBSS. l-le returned to Germany fBerlinQ in l900-Ol. l-le was Professor of Modern Languages in Iowa College, Grinnell, l893-l903 and Professor of German in Indiana University, 1903-07. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, the Goethe Gesellschaft, the Schwabischer Schiller Verein. the Deutsche Bibliographische Gesellschaft, and the Modern Language Association of America. He is the author of Goethe's Gotz von Berlichingen auf der Buhnef' l893, fprivately publishedjg Chronology and Practical Bibliography of Modern German Literaturef' Outline l-listory of Modern German Literature, l903, and the editor of Kleist's Prinz Friedrich von l-lomburgf' l899g Schiller's Poems, I905g and Schiller's Maria Stuart. During these first two years of Dr. Nollen's administration there has come a gradual change in the educational methods of the College. The group system of studies has been adopted, and the entrance requirements have been changed to agree with those of the other best institutions of the country. As a result, the Carnegie Foundation for the Advance- ment of Teaching now recognizes us to be in accord with its requirements, and the Harvard Law School grants our alumni unconditional entrance. The Trustees have taken action looking towards a large increase in endowment, and have adopted a plan for a distinctive educational policy in the direction of education for citizenship. Strong emphasis will be placed on Social Studies. ln all his efforts toward the growth of the efficiency and im- portance of tfe College tlfe President has the conhdence and the loyal support of the Faculty and Trustees. Dr. Nollen is by training and experience, as well as by nature, eminently fitted to deal with the problems that confront our beloved Alma Mater. He has the right tempera- ment for dealing with men, with human nature. Never ruffled, always busy, patient and svmpatl-etic, fe inspires energy in the present, cheery hopefulness in the future. His sturdy, conservative character precludes ill-advised action, his progressiveness, stagnation. His racial perseverance insures continuity of progress. 9 T H E 1 9 1 0 F o R E s T E R 6-Eh' .1 ' Trustees of Lake Forest University. Alfred L. Baker. Sidney A. Benedict Rev. Wm. W. H. Boyle John V. Farwell David B. Jones Dr. B. N. Linnell John H. S. Lee Frederick W. Crosby Albert B. Dick John V. Farwell - Rev. Andrew C. Zenos, Sydney A. Benedict Albert B. Dick - Chas. E. Latimer Robert H. Crozier - Clayton Mark Howard Morris Rev. Cs. K. McClure Cyrus H. McCormick John S. Nollen, Ph. D., Charles D. Norton Louis F. Swift James Viles Rev. Andrew C. Zenos, D. D. ex officio OFFICERS OF THE BOARD. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - President D. D. - Vice-President - - - - - Secretary - - - - - - Treasurer - - - Assistant Treasurer - - - - - - - - - - Secretary of the University --V- -i COHIHIEHCEIHEHI LllIlChB0n I0 Q. if THE 1910 FORESTER The Faculty 1oHN J. HALSEY, MA., Len.. K. Pearsons Professor of Political and Social Science. MALCOLM lVlcNEILL, lVl.A., Ph.D., Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy. REV. M. BROSS THOMAS, lVl.A., D.D., William Bross Professor of Biblical Literature. LEWIS STUART, M. A., Ph. D.. Professor of the Latin Language ancl Literature. WALT ER RAY BRIDC-MAN, lVl.A.. Professor of the Greek Language ancl Literature. FREDERICK W. STEVENS, B. S.. Jacob Beicller Professor of Physics. GEORGE W. SCHMIDT, lVl.A.. Professor of the German Language and Literature. WILLIAM L. BURNAP, B.A.. Professor of History. RALPH HARPER McKEE, lVl.A., Ph.D., Professor of Chemistry. JOHN IVIANTEL CLAPP, lVl.A.. Professor of the English Language and Literature. CORNELIUS BETTEN, lVI.A., Ph.D.. Professor of Biology. FREDERICK C. L. VAN STEENDEREN, lVI.A., Ph.D Professor of Romance Languages. HENRY WILKES WRIGHT, Ph. D., Professor of Philosophy. EDITH DENISE, B.L.. Assistant Professor of German. ARTHUR BROOKE CLAWSON, B.A.. Instructor in Biology. DOUGLAS CRAWFORD, lVI.A., Instructor in English and Oratory. BURT KENNEDY, lVl.A.. Instructor in Mathematics. D. ll WIFE. T H E I 9 1 0 F o R E s T E R , The University Club I908-09. ,Iohn Scholte Nollen - - - President Frances Laura Hughes - Vice-President Edith Denise - - - - - Secretary Clarence B. I-Ierschberger - - Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. Henry W. Wright fChairman until Novemberf, F. C. I... Van Steenderen fChair- man from NovemberD, Mrs. W. I... Burnap CI-louse Committeel, Mrs. M. Clapp fMusic Committeej, William Mather Lewis, with the Secretary and Treasurer. PRCC-RAMIVIE November I I, Paper by President ,Iohn S. Nollen- The Music of Richard Straussn. January 28, Paper by Professor W. Emmons of Chicago University- The New Mining Camps of Southern Nevada. February 4, Paper by Professor T. Hatfield of Northwestern University- Goethe.', February 25, Paper by Miss Eleanor P. Hammond of Chicago- The Fools of Shakes- peare. March ll, Paper by Professor I-Ialsey- Present Day Politics in Italy. March 25, Paper by Professor C. Betten- Some Present Day Problems in Biology. April I, Paper by Professor M. Bross Thomas- The Poet Isaiah. April I5, Musicale, given by Lois Durand Hall Ctlee Club. A I sEruQ45.f:luf 34 Kgvmg-'vgf? '13 ,315 42? , Gif? I2 HLMWDH f X X Q QW e -A ,V-,,-, 5,14 Rf an-. T H E I 9 1 0 r o R E s T E R ie,5 Alma Mater I. O Alma Mater, ever kind, Thy power is still prevailing: Thy children scattered far and near Proclaim thy love unfailing. Within thy walls, days bright and brief We loitered, spirits blending, And learned of wisdom, joy, and love, Nor feared the world's contending. CHORUS. Dear Alma Mater, noble, fair, Thy stately grace and beauty Binds all our loyal hearts to thee, Unites our life and duty. 2. Thy winding paths and wind-swept shores, Thy life poured out undoubting, Our spirits cheer, our souls revive, By mem'ries fond recounting. In busy mart, at sacred fane, Our hearts are onward pressing, Toward truth's far goal, where God reveals To each, His hidden blessing. CHORUS. 3. Through all the world we wave unfurled Thy banner brave and glorious, Our hearts al'lame, our hands upheld By faith and power victorious. All, all our crowns we gladly bring, And praises to thee render, For thou hast taught our eyes to see Cod's truth in all its splendor. CHORUS. CALVIN H. FRENCH, '88 I4 ' i T H li 1 9 1 0 F o R E s T E R Btntruhuntiun It would be well for every undergraduate to read and ponder the ten brief contri- butions which follow. They are written by alumni who are in the midst of the day's work, who have won a measure of real success, who bear among their friends the name of gentlemen, who are loyal to Lake Forest and eager that its students should conceive and maintain high ideals. The advice which they convey is, happily, implied rather than direct, but none the less emphatic. Whilst they are serious in tone, they also convey the note of the high joy of labor: there is not a pessimistic syllable in them all. They show that while a college course cannot give brains or habits of industry, it can give method and the power of judgment. Cpportunity comes not once, as John Ingalls has it in his brilliant sonnet, but many timesg but a college course is one of the greater and rarer opportunities. . Q Qt. lla 41' 9 Q ?g2gs'w?'c3P'i V D 7 A i' A se ' ' f ei 1 ' - il t ' P ' A , it t. i ..'i 5 ' I if ,-i. . I. 4 ' ,- f I5 T H E 1 9 I 0 F O R E S T E R The College Man in a Professorship. The College aims to reproduce itself and its atmosphere. When one of its loyal alumni becomes himself a teacher in another College he carries with him his Alma Mater's ideals. When he has charge of a class-room, his mem- ories go back to classrooms in his Alma Mater and he seeks to inspire his students as he was there inspired. When he asks students to his home, he thinks of the inspiration he received from close fellowship with some of the Profes- sors of olden days and he tries to make his per- sonal touch count for as much. When he watches the students in their athletic contests, he gives them all the encouragement he can, for he thinks of the time when he tried to uphold the good name of his Alma Mater. Again, when he is called upon as Dean to discipline some student for a College prank, he is helped to con- sider the question from the student's standpoint as well as the professor's, for he remembers some of those old pranks in which he had a part, of which the Faculty perhaps never heard. ' Then let a healthy, loyal, Christian spirit live in every College and let the College walls resound with the cheers of her true sons. Be assured that this spirit will go out to reproduce itself on many another College campus. A Wooster University MILTON VANCE, '96. Wooster, O. The College Man in Business. There has been a feeling that the successful business man, the so-called self made man, is one who started in as office boy at the age of twelve and worked day and night steadily for years, until, his youth and young manhood gone, he had in middle age estab- lished a business that enabled him to take things easy and enjoy life. There are many successful business men of this kind and a college career might not have improved them: might possibly, by giving them a taste for other things, have rendered them failures in the business world. On the other hand, I contend that the average man with a college education and training will outstrip the average man who has not enjoyed such advantages, in practically every business from real estate to groceries. A college man with determination and perseverence can learn more quickly because of a trained mind, will take more responsibility, and consequently can rise higher than the poorly educated man. He is usually a quicker thinker, has a better address and more originality. I6 T H E I 9 I 0 F O R E S T E R 4' 5 But I want to drive the thought home that I am speaking of college men who have taken advantage of their opportunities and trained their minds to lhinlf,-not the college man who has Hsquirmedu through, got a diploma, and looks to the world to provide him a living. This is an age of strenuous competition, and the man out of college at twenty-one or two must begin again in the college of business and learn some particular branch before he becomes of value to his employer, competing at the same time with young men who have already worked, say, ten years in his line before he has started. But the training will count if there is grit and pluck to back it up and the college man will in a short time forge ahead of the other and rise more quickly and more surely. In our University Club of 300 members, fifty per cent are business men, most of them under forty years of age. The President and Directors are all business men. There are members in insurance, dry goods, groceries, jewelry, meat packing, real estate, paint and oils, railroading, boots and shoes, drugs, fuel, banking, hotel business, and I know not what. They are all more or less successfuhior they couldn't pay thei' dues. There is a fine chance for the earnest college man in business and I believe a better one than in the over-crowded professions. Kansas City, Mo. FREDERIC C. SHARON, '93. Much has been written and said in regard to the value of a college training for a man in business life. It is impossible to measure this value accurately, for no one can say what success a college man might have attained without his collegiate training cr what a non-college man might have accomplished with such a training: but that it has tangible value is undoubted. Possibly its most important function is in developing a capacity for detail. The successful man in modern business is the one that has not only a broad grasp of the general situation, but a knowledge and application of the infinite detail of his business. The importance of this will impress itself more and more upon one as he advances in business experience. Even though a successful business man may place an actual tangible value upon his college education in the advancement of his material interests, its principal value will always be the higher ideals, the better tastes which his college life has created for him and which afford a means of enjoying the fruits of his success. MAURICE K. BAKER, '97- I7 ' 'fri 'T'T'fV f Z '21'W3Lr3 m'3'?'F TQ ifiiffg -.5791 S71 T H E I 9 I 0 F O R E 5 T E N 5 The College Man in the Ministry. The primary reason for a college training is that a man may make the most of life by the scientific development of his inherent powers. Having obtained this scientific development of his inherent powers-education-the problem is: How shall he most advantageously use it? Believing that true success in life is doing the greatest good to the greatest number, I should say that no field is so inviting to the college man as the Christian ministry. The business of the Church is to lead into the likeness of the Divine Master. This is to make them unselfish, com- panionable, altruistic. It is to remove the causes of present-day discontent, substituting therefore the spirit of mutual burden bearing: it is to dis- pel doubt and confirm faith: it is to minimize temporal disappointments and magnify the larger l . hope git is to reveal his real self, and God, to man. The Christian minister being the appointed leader of the Church, the college man can find no larger scope for his trained powers, nor no more profitable investment for his life, than in the Christian ministry. NEWMAN I-IAL1. BURDICK, '93. Helena, Montana. The College Man in High School Circles. Two facts are especially significant in regard to the place of the college man in High School education. The first is that the schools are looking to the colleges as the principal source of supply for the trained teachers which are necessary to carry on modern school work. The present change in the ideals of education has necessitated the pres- ence of trained men and women to meet the needs of progress. Whether or not the college includes preparation for teaching as one of its definite ideals, the fact remains that the college is the principal source of supply for high school teachers, so that in the contest between traditionalism and progressiveness in education the influence of the college is being felt on the side of the latter. IB T H E I 9 1 0 F O R E S T E R 1 1 - The second point of significance is that college men are not as numerous in secondary education as they should be. There is a great need today of more men teachers in the high school. The fact should be emphasized, however, that it is not merely men which are needed, but efficient men-men of high quality of ability and character. No one thing means so much to the education of the American youth today as the possibility of securing the devoted service of young men of ability. The field should be .an attractive one as its possibilities compare very favorably with those of other professional fields. If its compensations are not as profitable as those of commercial pursuits, at least it offers possibilities of service second to none. It is not possible to devote one's life to a better cause than the training of the coming generation. Modern education means more than the mere keeping of a school or the inculcation of a little learning. It implies the development of all the powers of mind and body to such an extent that the individual shall be rendered socially efficient. The work of the teacher is truly social service and is the surest way in which a man can contribute his greatest infiuence to his day and generation. Omaha, Nebraska. E.. W. GRAFF, '97. The College Man in Newspaper Work. My experience and observations have been that the best fruits in the newspaper profession do not necessarily fall to the college man, but, as in other callings, his way is made smoother and his opportunities more numerous as a result of his collegiate training. The young college man with no newspaper experience but with a diploma in his hand and the consciousness of being an embryo Dana or Brisbane, if persistent enough, usually settles to his place in a short time as a plain newspaper reporter at ten dollars a week, if indeed he does not begin his career as a cub Each Saturday night his pay is handed him by a business manager whose Alma Mater probably was a business college. But let him persist and he usually will find that his college training plus the same energy displayed by his associates without it will win him the better prizes. If he secures charge of a paper, large or small his college experience should help him still more. The com- mon weakness of editors, on smaller papers particularly. consists in taking themselves too seriously and viewing things out of their proper proportion. This, the training that the college man has received, helps him to escape. He is usually an optimist, under criticism and even in debt. Without discussing the achievements of The College Man in my Calling, his place in history, his influence today is shaping national events and in bringing about reforms, I will only say that his position is one that should give him satisfactory returns even while he meets its severest responsibilities. Little Rock, Ark. G. L. MALLORY, '02, I9 - ,,,, , , .- .,, F-.pf sf,--gf---Nqr - - ' Q 5- y - T 1-1 E 1 9 i 0 F o R E s T E R The College Man in Law. Law, medicine, theology, and pedagogy have always attracted college men and will con- tinue to do so, despite the increasing demand and reward for the collegian in business. The border line between business life and profes- sional life is constantly narrowingg of recent years the business man has had to learn a good deal of law, while the lawyer has had to be- come more or less of a business expert. Indeed, it may be broadly stated that the best of modern lawyers are fbecause they must bel good busi- ness men. This exempts, of course, the Held of crimi- nal law, except where the criminal law impinges the banking business. The bankers' colony, so called, in the federal prison at Fort Leaven- worth is large, and bankers are also represented at most of the state penitentiaries. It has taken lawyers with knowledge of finance to prosecute these bankers, and other lawyers similarly equipped to defend them. It requires a busi- ness-like, analytical mind to follow a sharp, clever transaction through a maze of crooked commercial details. The same is true of questions involving illegal rebates, unlawful combinations, and trusts either predatory or non-predatory. Old-time lawyers deplore the commercializing of the profession, but whether they like it or not, the fact remains that law and commerce were never nearer together than now. The hint in this for the college man is to study business as well as books, and finance as well as politics. Law is a progressive science, popular impression to the contrary notwithstanding, and it gradually conforms itself to the spirit of the age. In law, the successful counselor or practitioner must always keep an open and a studious mind. He must be honorable first, then observant, judicial, and analytical. Literary and oratorical fluency are desirable but not absolutely essential. The re- quisite qualities can be cultivated in any college, provided the student possess a modicum of diligence and will power. HARRY L. BIRD, '94. The College Man in Medicine. The past decade has been characterized by a rapid advancement in the require- ments demanded by medical colleges and a change in the conduct of the medical courses. The best proof of the value of a college education or its equivalent is furnished to the prospective student of medicine by the raising of entrance requirements for medical colleges and the attempt at standardization of these throughout the different states. Whether the ideal course should be a combined one of six or seven years leading to both a bachelor and a medical degree or should consist of four years undergraduate work 20 T H E 1 9 1 0 F o R E s T E R and four years in medical college is still a mooted question. The preliminary training obtained in undergraduate work is of inestimable value to the prospective medical student as it enables him to select in his later work the essential from the non-essential and enables him to concentrate his mental energies, a result which is essential in the modern medical schools, as the advances have been so rapid in medical sciences that it is hard at the present time to crowd all the subjects into a four year's course. It seems to matter little whether this preliminary training is obtained in the scientific or classical course. It is argued by some that the broad culture provided by the classical course is the essential thing for the medical student, by others that the scientific course makes one more critical of existing ideas and conditions and arouses in the student the mental attitude of construc- tive doubt which is so essential at the present time. The student entering medicine at present arrives at a time when the material emolu- ments are on the wane. Preventive medicine has deprived the practitioner of the -finan- cial rewards associated with bygone epidemics, is gradually destroying the white plague, and is teaching methods of living which conduce to continued health and long life. The tendency at present is for each one entering upon medicine to contribute to medical knowl- edge by personal effort rather than to consume that which has gradually accumulated. The preparation required at present demands an undergraduate course, four years in a medical college, from one and one half to two years as an interne in a hospital, and later an assistantship with an older man, well established in practice and inspiring in character. It has been amply demonstrated that the college preparation best fits a man to attain to the requirements above and to discharge the duties demanded of him by the community and profession. 555l Monroe Ave., Chicago. DEAN D. LEWIS, M. D., '95. The College Man in the Engineering Field. Engineering has been aptly defined as the art of making a dollar earn the most interest. In this definition the practical nature of the subject is clearly emphasized. The scope of the engineering field has increased wonderfully in comparatively a few years until now there are many subdivisions of the general subject and each of these offering a field large enough and wide enough in range of application for the best efforts of a large and increasing number of young men. Along with the mining, the electrical, or sanitary engineer we may soon expect to have developed the agricultural and the aeronautical engineer. Take, for instance, the American railway of today which is a stupendous institu- tion in so many different ways affecting the lives and offering employment to a vast army of workers. ln the early days of its development the engineer acquired his skill largely by tradition and experience, and was engaged mainly in the initial building and projecting of possible new lines, leaving the completed road to the care of the unskilled and untrained. Vvhereas now every system of consequence has a large corps of trained engineers and a much larger corps of recent graduates, hopeful and anxious to secure that experience which is so necessary in making them capable and successful in their chosen work. Nor is engineering wholly an end in itself but to many, a preparation and a means to greater rewards. What is perhaps the foremost railway system in the country chooses its executive officers, from president down, largely from its well organized and trained engineering department. It is well to note the difference between the engineering profession and that of either law or medicine as affecting their relations with the publicg in the latter one generally 21 Pl fji T H E 1 9 1 0 F o R E s T E R deals with an individual, while in the former, with a corporation. This in some way may affect the pecuniary reward which many think is not generally commensurate with the high standard of attainment required or the successful prosecution of the object sought. Nevertheless it is a fact that the recent graduate need not expect his services for a year or two to be regarded as very valuable to his employer, however much they may be to himself, and it is needless to say that this fact is duly recognized in the monthly pay check. Engineering is very largely a matter of common sense and experience, and not- withstanding the scientific basis of the subject and technical training which now has become of the highest importance, one who has not a bent for the practical in his nature is not likely to find either the work or the rewards therefor permanently attractive. Davenport, Ia. M. WOOLSEY, '96 The College Man in the Mission Field. In order to learn and -master the language of an oriental people and put himself in proper working relations with their customs and social conditions a missionary needs just that mental equipment which only a college education can give. Life on the mission held is very primitive and simple, and again it is very complex, in the sense that the missionary, the man from the outside country is supposed to know all about the heavens above, the earth beneath, and the waters under the earth. Every bit of intelli- gent information that the missionary can give to the satisfaction of the native's inquiring mind will be so much pure gain in reaching the hearts and establishing confidence in those whom he is seeking to evangelize. When the missionary comes to the task of translating the scriptures and making a literature for the people or preparing text books for the schools, he will be grateful indeed for every hour of conscientious college work spent in the study of languages. The great mass of material pre- pared for class room work may be forgotten but there remains a language habit which will enable him to translate with facility and skill. While a student the college man has had ample time to develop himself socially. This is a prime requisite on the mission field. As a missionary he has relations with the peasant, the merchant, the prince, the priest, and with the highest officials of the land. l-le numbers among his associates ambassadors, consuls, doctors, lawyers, and commercial men-graduates from the best institutions in England and Europe. Therefore as a college man whose social instincts have been properly developed he will commend him- self to the native people. He will approach the great oriental religions with a courteous spirit and will be gentle and tactful and fair to all the life-long customs and habits of the people. Among the foreigners and Europeans he will appear the jovial, wholesouled, dependable Christian gentleman whose very presence radiates sunshine. The college man is a necessity on the mission field. l-le is qualified to cope with the great and varied missionary problems. Whether in the capacity of teacher, evangelist or physician he holds within himself the forces which can help transform a heathen world and make its life and conditions sweeter, happier, and holier. Lake Forest, Ill. HENRY WHITE, 22 . L . , iq: ,Fi FQ T H E I 9 I 0 F O R E S T E R .Eff 155132 Qlumni Qwiuriatiun. William Cn. Wise, 'SS --------- President John F. Haas, '00 ------- First Vice-President Sarah Williams Rice, '98 ---- Second Vice-President Allen C. Bell, '03 ------- Secretary-Treasurer Heaven be praised for sentiment-the working of the heart in a sordid world! More and more as the years pass are the alumni growing in a loyalty to Alma Mater and the old friends of youth, which finds expression in chance meetings or reminiscences of the days which used to be. One day is set aside during Commencement week when the former students can rally once again, and each recurring year sees increasing numbers of Lake Forest men and women gather at the shrine of the red and black. Athletic contests of a character to include all are a most enjoyable feature of this day: class reunions are held and the annual meeting and dinner close the occasion. The old Lake Forest student who misses Alumni Day, cuts a happy chapter from his life. The Qtltjiragu Qtlumni Qltuh. Walter A. Graff, '98 --------- President john H. Jones, '96 - - Vice-President N. T. Yeomans, '05 ---------- Secretary John F. Haas, '00 ---------- Treasurer For almost a score of years the Lake Forest men in Chicago and its environs have maintained a strong organization having as its object, the growth and advancement ot the college. lncidentally, this club enjoys monthly dinner meetings in which the finest fellowship rules. The enthusiastic November meeting is held at the Durand Commons, following a football gameg the other great day of the club is its mid-year rally about the dinner table in Chicago. This meeting in l909 was the best of a long series and clearly demonstrated the happy loyalty of the Lake Forest alumnus. The new ,igurk Qltumni Qlgsuriatiun. Theodore Starrett, '84 --------- President Charles G. Smith, '95 --------- Secretary For several years the Lake Forest men and women have maintained the light of the college brightly burning among the many altars of college devotion in the metropolis. At the reception dinners the days at Lake Forest have been relived and the interests of the college advanced. As the days pass, more of our people seek the city of The Great White Way and this Association not only welcomes the new comer, but adds much to the pleasure of the dweller in the loneliness of the multitude. fttnganfpurt Qtumni Cttiub. Perry l-l. Stevens, '06 ---- ------ P resident Gertrude Funk, Ferry Hall, '06 ------ Secretary An index of the growing strength of Lake Forest in Indiana was the organization of the Logansport Club, three years ago. Its purpose is akin to that of the New York and Chicago Clubs-Lake Forest Fellowship, loyalty and devotion. ln its short history the club has already accom- plished much for the college and its members. 23 +' ' 1 ' ' T H E 1 9 1 0 F o R E 5 T E R !Wv'? : K ' CHARLES DYER NORTON Lake Forest, not old enough as yet to be able to choose her trustees wholly among her own alumni, has been fortunate in finding public-spirited men, prominent in the life of Chicago and the West, to serve on her governing board, and give time and effort, year after year, to her interests. One of the most active of the college trustees is Mr. Charles Dyer Norton, recently made First Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, one of the youngest men by the way, ever appointed to that position. Mr. Norton, a graduate of Amherst College in the class of l893, and ever since con- nected with the Northwestern Life Insurance Company, is one of the best-known and most useful citizens of Chicago. He has been interested in many branches of civic life, bringing to every field of work remarkable energy, thoroughness, and public spirit. Not the least of his services to Chicago was his active participation, as President of the Mer- chants' Club and later, with the working out of the elaborate system of parks. boule- vzirds, and breathing-spaces for the city. He has shown the same energy and clear foresight as trustee of Lake Forest. The comprehensive Campus Plan recently adopted by the college and now in process of realiza- tion, by which the great natural beauty of the site is given the fullest development, and a wise plan of growth arranged for all time, is owing very largely to his initiative. In all the efforts of recent years for the enlargement of the college and the improvement of its standard he has borne an active part. PROF. JOHN M. CLAPP. 24 T H E 1 9 1 0 F o R E s T E R Thirtieth Annual Commencement. Sunday, June 7, l0:30 a. m. ----- Baccalaureate Sermon by Dr. Nollen The Presbyterian Church. Sunday, June 7, 4:45 p. m. ---------- Union Vesper Service Reid Memorial Chapel. Address by Rev. W. l-l. W. Boyle, D. D. Friday, June IZ, 4:00 p. m. -------- Senior Class Day Exercises Library Chapel Court. Friday, June IZ, 8:00 p. m. -------- Lois Durand Hall Musicale Reid Memorial Chapel. Saturday, June I3, l0:30 a. m. ------ College Commencement Address By Charles D. Hutchinson Reid Memorial Chapel. Saturday, June I3, l:00 p. m. ------ - Commencement Luncheon Calvin Durand Commons. Saturday, June I3, 4:00 p. m. ---- Reception hy President and Mrs. Nollen The Presidenfs l-louse. Saturday, June I3, 8:00 p. m. --------- - Alumni Banquet Calvin Durand Commons. SENIOR CLASS OF 1908 25 Elnsrpb lanhon lush Burn Qlugust 8 1886 EBM: September 2 1908 3511 jliilemnrialn 26 ll' if x 'iff fy 1' I 1 1 ' ' N. -,:f HT ll f' Al I - E Y 47 wil ww ,fu U H ' l'f'-ri 1' 'U' b J, 4, 'ia h f Lg ': V if , KT M A :my sf' M gr ..-L 4 A ' A EE AV, fl , II li 2 N x V 4 I X LUX: G K J 5AN N , 4 95 H 4622313 ' R17 , V1 ifxfwffiigfn I 7 H . , V Wm , L mg-MQW ' ' ,, ., 41, W4 ' M13 mf W, 1 2 X . Yi ' I -Q 1 V K XXX Z lj N XXX! 2 xg -- 'J xg? N ' :X,, 'fQ5?4Q w Qs -1' :SSSi6 Q K -5, X wx, ' A Q maklfiw, NX w ' ' N XR if ' alifgw 3' b Q Q, ,s ,Q . ,. . 1,-4.wM,,f.4 I - igfi? igf 1. f 'gr ' . xr--.541 .1 - , .--. 15, f ---wgyf... 55' -'- A 'tg'-?59-X uf. .. 'Gif 4. i 27 i T H E ' 9 ' 0 F O R E 5 T E R Senior Class History. 'Tis the fall of the year A. D., l905-a most momentous time, for has not the great class of I909 come to add its chapter to the annals of Lake Forest College? How big-chested and proud we are as we go about the campus, for are we not college men and women now? But older students do not seem to show us due deference. fWe cannot yet appreciate the fact that the reason they see through us and past us is that they cannot distinguish us from the verdant background of the campus., But we do not worry and, blissfully ignoring the apathy toward our importance, we go merrily through the year. We get the jump on the sophomores at our class election. Our team is defeated at football, but we know that that is as it should be. On the track we are unconquered, and from our number we give full quota to all varsity teams and college enterprises. All in all, we are satisfied with our beginning. Another year has rolled around and again we are on the good old campus. Now we are truly important. Think of our responsibilities! The horde of savages in the Freshman class must be subdued and schooled in college etiquette. Our men with trousers rolled a notch higher soon allect the proper Sophomoric swagger and don con- trastyn clothes. Our ladies acquire the Hsavoir faire without the slightest effort. In the class scrap our cohorts show the Freshmen that the back door of College Hall is as good as the front door, by scaling the fire-escapes like veteran firemen, and attacking the enemy from above. Wve are told that we are big-headed and too confident, but this self-same confidence gives us nerve to break into places where we afterward make a suc- cess. This year the Carrick Club gets some valuable material from our number and we furnish the basketball captain, also another member of the team, and on the track hold the lead. As the year closes once more we feel content with our achievements. The summer has passed and for the third time '09 is on hand and ready for business. Now we are upper classmen and we assume a dignity that is very noticeable. The altercations between the classes below us, we view with tolerance: and insist that, in times past, our part in such activities was much more strenuous. We notice now that our opinions are sought after and valued: but, through discretion gained from former experi- ence, we try not to be afilicted with cranial enlargement. At a most successful beach party, our get-togethera' spirit is so renewed that it carries us as a unit through all class enterprises of the year. Our Forester and Junior Promenade are, we think, just a shade better than those that have preceded them. But soon we see that our class loyalty should serve only to increase our college loyalty, and as the year with its increasing responsibili- ties goes on the latter feature becomes the predominant one. As our third year closes our sincere desire is that we shall be able to carry out the duties of the coming one. Our last year has come and as we again return to the old haunts we almost shrink from the thought that one short year must end our residence here. No longer is our dignity assumed. It is real. The childish capers of younger students provoke us save when we harken back to the good old memories of former days. We now furnish the leaders for almost every branch of college activity, the captains and managers of the football and track teams, and the captain of the baseball teamg the president of the Gar- rick Club, the leaders of both C-lee Clubs, and the manager of the men's club. More and more do we realize the debt that we owe to old Lake Forest for all our advantages- a debt that can be repaid only in a measure by our undying loyalty now and in the days to come. As our commencement day draws nearer, the day which will be the beginning of that future life for which our Alma Mater has been so faithfully preparing us, although we know that the separation will come with a pang of regret, we cannot but look forward with joy to that time when, having accomplished greater things in the life of the world, we shall be proud to be called graduates of Lake Forest College. 28 JACOB SCHWARTZ, President. Born in Chicago, Illinois, l888. Prepared for college at Waukegan High School, Wauke- gan, Illinois. Entered Lake Forest, l905. Freshman Debating Team, 1l1: Athenaean Debating Team, 121, Intercollegiate Debating Team, 121, Carrick Club 121, 131, 1415 Manager, 141: C-lee Club Reader, 121, 131, 141: Athenaean Treasurer, 1215 Vice Presi- dent, 121: President, 131, Critic, 131: Alumni Debate Prize, 121: Editor-in-Chief l909 Forester, Class President, 141: Presi- dent Student Council, 141 9 Major Subject: Po- litical Science. Will study law. Home ad- dress: Waukegan, Ill. FRANCES H. PRESTON. Vice-President. Born in Paw Paw, Illinois. Prepared for college at Paw Paw High School. Entered Lake Forest, l905. Lois Hall C-lee Club, 111, 5 Secretary and Treasurer, 121 g Aletheian: Vice-Prisident, 131 3 Program Committee, 131: Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, 1l1g Forester Board, 131, Prom. Committee, 131, President Lois Hall House Committee, 1313 Class Vice President, 141 : Major subject: Ger- man. Will teach. Home address: Paw Paw, Illinois. BLANCHE EDITH HAUGHEY, Secretary. Born in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared for col- lege at Englewood High School, Chicago, Illi- nois. Entered Lake Forest, l906. Basket- ball, 1213 Lois Hall Cnlee Club, 121, 131, 141. Aletheian: President, 1415 Treasurer Lois Hall House Committee, 141 5 Class Secre- tary, Major Subject: German. Will teach. Home address: Chicago, Ill. ELVEN JAMES BERKHEISER, CAT Treasurer. Born in Denver, Indiana, I887. Prepared for college at Sheldon High School, Sheldon, Ill. Entered Lake Forest, l905. Class Foot- ball, 1l1: Football, 121, 141: Captain. 1413 Class Basketball, 1411 VICE Pl'CSi- dent Athletic Association, 141 : Class Treasurer, 141. Major Subject: Chemistry and Biology. Will study medicine. Home address: Sheldon, Ill. 29 HENRY WHITE Born in Dromore, Co. Down, Ireland. Pre- pared for college at Lake Forest Academy, Lake Forest, Illinois. Major Subject: Chernis- try. Will be Presbyterian Missionary in Siam. Home address: Vineland, New Jersey. ZELDA MAUDE AYRES. Born in Leaf River, Illinois. Prepared for college at Mt.Morris Academy. Entered Lake Forest, l905. Lois Hall Glee Club, CU, 121, UU, Secretary and Treasurer, Aletheian: Secretary, C31 3 Program Committee, C415 Class Secretary, C323 Stentor Reporter, C41 3 Social Committee, Q41 5 Lois Hall House Committee, f4Jg Y. W. C. A. Will teach. Home address: Leaf River, Ill. EDITH A. BAILEY. Born in Wellsboro, Pennsylvania. Attended Bucknell University, Lewisburg, Pa., UD: College of Architecture, Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y., QZJ, UO. Entered Lake For- est, l908. Major Subject: Mathematics. Will teach. Home address: Wellsboro, Pa. PAUL JOHN BAST. Born in Essen, Germany, l88l. Prepared for college at Lake High School, Chicago, Ill. Entered Lake Forest, l908. Major Subject: Political Science. Will teach. Home ad- dress: Lake Forest, Ill. 30 CAMILLA C. BOCKHOFF, E T Born in Richmond, Indiana. Prepared for college at Indianapolis and Dayton High Schools. Entered Lake Forest, l905. Class Secretary, C119 Carrick Club, C21, C31, C41: President, Y. W. C. A.: Cabinet, C21, C31, C41, Vice President, C41: Lois Hall House Committee, C21, C31g Secretary, C215 Social Committee, Aletheian: Program Committee, C213 Stentor Reporter, C31g For- ester Board, C31. Major Subject: English. Home address: Indianapolis, Ind. THOMAS LYLE BOYS. fb Il E Born in Lacon, Illinois, 1887. Prepared for college at Streator High School, Streator, Ill. Entered Lake Forest, I905. Clee Club, C21, C31, C41: Manager, C41: Carrick Club, C21, C41: Assistant Manager Football, C314 Manager, C41: Student Council. C41. Major Subject: Political Science. Home ad- dress: Streator, Ill. GUY CHIESMAN. 94' Born in Newville, Indiana, ISS6. Prepared for college at Coldwater High School, Cold- water, Michigan. Attended Clivet College, Olivet, Michigan, Cl1, C21, Entered Lake Forest, 1908. Class Basketball, C413 Class track, C41 3 Football, C41 g Baseball C41, Manager, C41: Major Subject: Chemistry. Will be a Government Chemist. Home address: Sherwood, Mich. SARAH MAE CAMERON. Born in Chicago, Illinois. Prepared for col- lege at Lake View High School, Chicago, Ill. Entered Lake Forest, l905. Major Subject: History. Home address: Rockefeller, Ill. 31 LULU HARRIET CROZIER. 9 X11 Born in Taylors Falls, Minnesota. Prepared for college at Minneapolis Central High School, Minneapolis, Minn. Attended University of Minnesota, C21, Entered Lake For- est, 1908. C-arrick Club, C41 3 Lois Hall Glee Club, Major Subject: English. Will teach. Home address: Minneapolis, Minn. EDWARD ALAN CHAPPELL. Born in Mukwonago, Wisconsin, I886. Pre- pared for college at Mukwanago High School. Attended Wheaton College, CI1, Wheaton, Ill. Entered Lake Forest, I906. Athenaean: Vice President, C31 p President, C41 3 Class Baseball, C21, C31 3 Stentor Board, C41: Student Coun- cil, Major Subject: English. Will teach. Home address: Mukwonago, Wis. SETI-I CLAYTON CRAIG. GT Born in Gladstone, Iowa, I884. Prepared for college at Perry I-Iigh School, Perry, Iowa. Entered Lake Forest, IQO5. Class Football, C21. Zeta Epsilon: Treasurer, C31, C415 Vice President, C41g Class Treas- urer, C31: President Y. M. C. A., C31, C413 Student Council, Major Subject, C-reek. Will study for the Ministry. Home address: Perry, Iowa. ANNA FAYETTA HANCI-IETTE. Born in Parker, South Dakota. Prepared for college at Sioux City I-Iigh School, Sioux City, Iowa. Entered Lake Forest, IQO5. Lois I-Iall C-lee Club, Librarian and Treasurer, C31g President, Aletheianz Program Commit- tee, C314 Prom. Committee, Major Sub- ject: Biology. Will study music. Home ad- dress: Sioux City, Iowa. 32 HARLEIGH HOLROYD HARTMAN. Born in Genoa, Illinois, 1888. Prepared for college at Lake Forest Academy, Lake Forest, Ill., and Deerfield Township High School, Highland Park, Ill. Entered Lake Forest, 1906. Zeta Epsilon: Debating Team, Vice President, 131. Leader Freshman De- bating Team, Discussion Contest, Major Subject: Political Science. Will take lVI.A. degree at Lake Forest College. Home address: Lake Forest, Ill. FAITH HUBBARD. Born in Neenah, Wisconsin. Prepared for college at Agnes Scott Institute, Decatur, Geor- gia. Entered Lake Forest, I905. Major Sub- ject: English. Will be at home in Lake For- est, Ill. HELEN MAY HICKS. Born in Cincinnati, Ohio. Prepared for col- lege at Lake View High School, Chicago, Illi- nois. Entered Lake Forest, I905. Aletheian: Treasurer, KZDQ Lois Hall House Committee, flj. Y. W. C. A.: Cabinet, QU, 121, f3j: C-reek Prize, CZJ: Trophy Room Committee, f3j. Major Subject: History. Will teach. Home address: Chicago Heights, Ill. ABRAHAM JAMES HENNINGS. cw Born in Barrington, Illinois, I885. Prepared for college at Elgin Academy, Elgin, Ill. En- tered Lake Forest, I906. Class Football, fl, 3 Freshman Debating Team, QU: Leader Inter- Collegiate Debating Team, QZJQ Alumni Prize in Oratory CZD 3 McPherson Prize in Declama- tion, ID. Zeta Epsilon: President. C453 De- bating Team, fZJ, UU: Football, UU: Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, Major Subject: Political Science. Will study law. Home acl- dress: Barrington, Ill. 33 JOHN DARROW HUBBARD. SN' Bom in Mobile, Alabama, l887. Pre- pared for college at Trinity College School. Port I-lope, Ontario. Entered Lake Forest, I905. Class Football, CI1, Athenaean: Cnarrick Club, C31, C415 Clee Club, Major Subject: Political Science. Will enter business. Home address: Lake Forest, Ill. LLOYD THEODORE JONES. rm Born in Raymond, Illinois, ISS7. Prepared for college at Raymond High School. Entered Lake Forest, I905: Track team, CI1, C21, C31, C41 3 Captain, C31. Captain and Mana- ger, C41: Class Football, C21 9 Class Baseball, CI1, C31: Class Basketball, C31, C413 Treasurer Athletic Association, C415 Football, C31, C41g Basketball, C41. Major Subject: Mathematics. Will study mechanical engineer- ing. Home address: Raymond, Ill. VVILLIAM BELL MARQUIS CP H E Born in Rock Island, Illinois, I887. Pre- pared for college at Rock Island High School. Entered Lake Forest, l905. Glee Club, CI1, C21, C31, Leader, C41: Cnarrick Club, C21, C31, C41 3 Treasurer, C31 3 Stentor Board, C31, C41 3 Forester Board, C31 3 Chairman Jun- ior Prom Committee, C31, Track Team, CI1, C21, C31, C415 Class President, C31g Y. M. C. A., Treasurer, C41g Student Council, Home address: Rock Island, Ill. LOYAL CHRISTENER PRENTICE. Born in Indian Village, Indiana, I887. Prepared for college at Frankfort High School, Frankfort, Indiana. Entered Lake Forest, I905. Class Baseball, CI1, C315 Class Foot- ball C213 Secretary Athletic Association, Major Subject: Political Science. Will enter business. Home address: Dallas Center, Iowa. 34 LOUIS MOLLYNEAUX SCOTT 4' U E Born in Logansport, Indiana, I887. Pre- pared for college at Winona Academy, Winona Lake, Ind. Entered Lake Forest, l905. Base- ball, C21, C31, C413 Captain, C411 Basketball, C21, C313 Captain, C215 Track, Cl1, C413 Captain, C213 Class Football, CI1, CZJQ Prom Committee, C31g Vice President Y. M. C. A., Ma- jor Subjects: Political Science and I-Iistory. Occupation undecided. Home address: Wino- na Lake, Ind. RUSSELL ADAMS SCOTT 'P I1 E Born in Logansport, Indiana, ISS6. Pre- pared for college at Winona Academy, Winona Lake, Ind. Entered Lake Forest, I905g Basketball, Cl1, Captain, C31g Baseball, C313 Track, C21, Major Subjects: Chemistry and Biology. Will study medicine. Home address: Winona Lake, Ind. SUE TATE. Born in Grand View, Illinois. Prepared for college at Paris I-Iigh School, Paris, Ill. At- tended Hanover College, Hanover, Indiana, CI1, Entered Lake Forest, I908. Major Subject: English. Home address: Paris, Ill. DAVID THOMSON B P A Born in Chicago, Illinois, 1883. Prepared for college at Englewood I-ligh School, Chicago, Ill. Entered Lake Forest, l905. Class Base- ball, C213 Class Football, C213 Glee Club, Cl1, C21, C313 Student Council, Major Subject: Biology. Will study medicine. Home address: Chicago, Ill. 35 GRACE NOWERS TAYLOR. Born in Virginia, Illinois. Prepared for col- lege at Virginia High School. Entered Lake Forest, 1904. Aletheian: Treasurer, C21 9 Lois Hall House Committee, Q3Jg Y. W. C. A. Home address: Virginia, lll. . GEORGE ALBERT WALDORF K- 3 Bom in Freeport, Illinois, l888. Prepared for college at Canton High School, Canton, Ill. Entered Lake Forest, l905. Carrick Club, QZJ, f3J, UU, Clee Club, Zeta Epsilon, Vice President, QD 3 Prom Com- mittee, f3jg Manager, '09 Forester, Student Council, Will enter business. Home address: Canton, Ill. rmglzigggr W FP XMI pq! w m . nw' Q l X.,.Q'f' ME ,. R. , Q 1 - ' f aiag 2 teiii'?eo54in-L- 1 tEeS05F40ERllf'2 :refs-'Pet' fAj?Q5y? 36 37 I t' T H E 1 9 I 0 F o R E s T E R Junior Class History. If in the recital of our virtues we are prone to vaunt them, we crave pardon: but it is difficult to contemplate the diverse talents of l9l 0 and not wax enthusiastic. We now have reached that stage in our collegiate course which in some respects is broadest of all. Below us are The Freshmen, impressed with their self-magnified importance, and the Sophomores, who swaggering about in theri traditional toggery, have respect for nothing except Might. Between these classes is constant friction over their respective rights. This discord the Junior views with an amused tolerance: yet the Senior, who to affect dignity, dons a garb of loftiness and scorn, must by the very nature of his position create antagonism. Thus the Junior, who of the four classes alone dares be his own true self, may wisely and kindly mend a quarrel, here, or give council, there, with a poise, which while not assertive, commands respect. The slur that quality, not quantity, marks worth cannot be cast at us, for although we reached the top notch in student numbers, we were not lacking in a high ambition that won us honors in each collegiate enterprise. Nor were we so wrapped up in single- ness of aims that we forgot the higher ends that brought us hereg the class room claimed its due: between man and man, between woman and woman, as well as 'twixt them both there lay a common ground of interest whose value ranked more high than personal distinctions. It is but natural that we should have been wearied by our severe exertions: so we are not humbled by the failure of our sophomore year to match its predecessor in the range of its activity. We neither condone nor excuse our apathy last year: but in our Junior year is being shown the value of that rest, for in that term of quietude we so restored our fatigued limbs that with infusion of new life from other colleges, we have taken up the reins of power to drive strongly through this year, and end the next magnifi- cently. Yet, withal, we shall not consume our strength in one bright flame, which though it dazzles the beholder, has burnt its all, but rather shall we expend it judiciously and when our college course is done, we still shall have that reserve power which helps us forget our way with telling blows through the harder tasks of after-life. 38 JAMES PERRY COYLE. Jimmie It has been the Irish well nigh since the world began and so it was with Logansport when on Oct. 20, ISSS our Jirnmien first saw the light. After making the circumambient atmosphere of Logansport High School redolent with gems of Irish wit, he entered L. F. in l906, in order to have a wider field of action-since when has taken part in the following: Clee Club, fl J, 121, C30 5 Student Council, C41 g Editor I9I 0 Foresterg Class President, OLIVE MAY KEITHLEY. Sis The Stentorian tones of Olive May Keithley roused the slumbering inhabitants of Peoria, Ill., in-well, anyway it was several years ago! It took the combined efforts of Bradley Polytechnical Institute and Belmont College to bring Sis's en- trance requirements in Math. up to the standard of L F.-but once past that barrier, Olive has made her mark in college activities. Having the honor of being the first Lois I-lall editor on the Stentor board, she has found little of the expected rest-cure. By Pegging away, however, on Sunday nights she has nobly performed her Stentor duties, and between times carried on her work in the prescribed courses of ravine-study. From the height of an advanced student in the latter she advises Freshmen to cultivate weak ankles. Lois Hall Glee Club CZD, C313 Y. W. C. A. Class Vice President Aletheian. STELLA MAY DALTON. Stella is another of the Paw Paw stars who have radiated their light in Lake Forest. One of the most faithful of the ranks of 1910, she has sus- tained the reputation of Paw Paw by holding down oflices, some of phich are Culee Club: House Treas- urer, Aletheian Treasurer Y. M. C. A.: Cabinet, and Class Secretary f3J. VICTOR GXLETY HELLER. ic Is, thank heavens, no longer what his name im- plies. Vic was born at El Paso, Ill., but the Pon- tiac I-ligh School claimed his scholastic days. Ar- riving in L. F., a monomania for Chemistry soon laid so close a hold on him that it was all he could do to find time to devote to class track UI C22 Class basketball f3jg Class Treasurer C31 and Zeta Epsilon sec'y He advises Freshmen thus: Don't be fresh Freshmen. 39 IRWIN E. BRADFIELD. Brad, The Bradheldian smile first brightened this mundane sphere of ours in St. joseph, Mich., Dec. 22, l887. Cass City I-Iigh School and Alma College added materially to his fame and so as- sisted in sending his name Resounding down the Halls of Time. Brad has not only taught us how to play football but has likewise found time to make the Athenean Debating Team and the Glee Club. MARGARET EUNICE BATES. lVlarge. That independence which has characterized Marge during her college career asserted itself at an early age. With its assistance she managed to ply her way through courses at Elmhurst I-ligh School, from whence she came to l... F., to watch over her little brother. Her only college griev- ance is Jim work, but with this exception there is nothing the Mather with Lake Forest. She advises Freshmen to UKnow a good thing when you see it, and then hang on. lVl. IRENE BUCKWALTER. Dixie, Bunny, Kentucky. Dixie and her blue grass dialect drifted in last year just in time for the Prom Belmont had been her former Alma Materg but she wanted to specialize and Lake Forest offered a fine course in Pre-Mat. Then again the Lake is not so very dis- tant and all Kentuckians just love water. Dixie is somewhat of an artistic temperament and her drawing qualities are first class, vid. Y. W. C. A. poster work. We cannot say for certain but in all probabilities she will spend her future days near the Charles. IRL MARSH BAKER. uDocH Bake Bake has a great deal in his favor when he gives Ottumwa, la., as his birtlplace, from the fact that Ottumwa has sent us so many celebrities. l-lis history dates from Mar. 23, l888, when l'e flrst began to collect that choice stock of negro dia- lect stories with which he now delights his hearers. l-le attended Ottumwa l-ligh School with the rest of de gang, and when they packed their trunks for l... F., it was only natural, as he says, that he should follow them. The only fault he has to lind with his present residence is its distance from home, but he has evidently resigned himself to his fate and has taken gracefully to the following offices: Junior Prom Committee f3J, Glee Club fl, fZJ f3D, baseball fl, QZD, class basketball f3J. 40 CALISTUS ASAHEL BRUER. Cal. Moon, lVlr. Calistus Asahel Bruer opened his eyes upon a serene and complacent world at Pontiac, Ill., Sept., ISS5. Graduating from the Pontiac High School, he turned those calm eyes Lake F or- estward, where, since the fall of '06 he has found no college grievances. In his own quiet way, however, Calistus has made a good record.-vid. Freshman Debating Team UD g Oratorical Decla- mation prize UD, Zeta Epsilon Sec'y Q21 g Pres. CQ, Intersociety Debate QD: Class Speaking Contest f3J, Statistician Forester Board CLARA SYDNEY CRAWFORD Bugs Sid Bugs -na peach of the Crawford varietyf, to quote the distinguished Professor Burnap- was born on a date which we can all remember in that down-state town of Monica, Ill. Perhaps from a feeling that travel would give a broader scope for her genius, she has spent various periods in her life in Stanton, Va., Cincinnati, O., and Rock Island, Ill., in which latter place she pre- pared for college. Since entering L. F., in 1906, Aletheian, Y. W. C. A., and the I9IO Forester have claimed her attention. CLARA B. ENOCH. After skating her way through the Cttumwa High School, Clara came to try the rink at Lake Forest. She has glided through college to date without taking a tumble in her major, fl-listoryl but some perverse accident ran her up against Ger- man, from which she luckily escaped without a scar. Her skill has aided her in doing the Dutch roll and side step through the offices of House Com- mittee and Prom. Committee without any serious injuries. Her only grievance is that every day is not Hall day at the rink. Along this line also she advises Freshmen not to skate so fast they can't stop when the bell rings. FRED DORSEY GRIFFITH. Grill, Began to ask questions of a controversial nature near Milford, Ill., in August, IBS6. Prepared for college at Sheldon High School, from whence he followed certain other distinguished Sheldon- ites to L. F. In regard to college activities C-riff signs himself not very active. His advice to Freshmen shows his attitude toward social distinc- tion- Beware of women. Being thus self-lim- ited, Griff confines himself to the labor of the curri- culum and to the pursuit of the higher pleasures 4l LIDA ROBINSON GOURLEY. Lida first showed that she was not like other girls in the near vicinity of Waukegan-and three years of college days at Lake Forest have not les- soned her individuality. Not only does she declare that she is unable to tell one man from another, but that she has no college grievance, no advice to Freshmen, no nickname, and even that she has no college activities to her credit-but Y. W. C. A., and the hall life in general testifies to the contrary. Lida furthermore possesses that rare quality of say- ing something when she speaks. I-IARRIET I-IENRIETTA HALL. I-lat Amrah Lake Forest was the recipient of a new Hall, benehcial to say the least when l-lat was gently wafted in on the Cherokee limited. Although taking part in most things of vital importance to her Alma Mater, her Ames extend far beyond the confines of the campus. That ab- sence makes the heart grow fonder was certainly proved in l-larriet's case for she returned to us this September after an absence of nearly a year on ac- count of sickness. ROBERT TURNBULL HALL. Dad Cutey. Jan. 6, 1888 marked the advent of our lyric tenor into Chicago society circles. After making himself agreeable to everyone in University l-ligh, and incidentally absorbing a little of the knowledge dispense dthere, he managed to appear wise enough to get past Little Mac and the rest of the En- trance Committee in l906. For his first two years he was an ardent devotee of Ferry Hall, but on assuming the duties and responsibilities of upper- classmenship, he seems to have seen the error of his ways. The following activities have appealed to him: Baseball C21 Q Mgr. Q21 3 Class football fl, CZJ g C-lee Club Q25 f3D 3 Chairman Junior Prom. Committee RUBY ALPHILD I-IOLSTROIVI. ln her childhood Ruby was so well taught to observe that excellent aphorism children should be seen and not heardi' that to this day she is as still as a mouse save for an occasional ripple of musical laughter. While apparently loitering idly about the ul-lalll' she is really very much engaged-in her thoughts. Her activities have been Junior Prom. Committee and l-louse Committee. 42 DELTON TIQQDMAS HOWARD. eg. Peg began to discuss philosophy in South Bend, Ind., March, ISS3. The following day, in a lec- ture before the family circle, he laid the foundations of a metaphysical system which was developed during his years of preparation for college, and which approached maturity when he entered Lake Forest with the class of l907. Immediately he made good along the following lines, Athenean: Inter-society debate, '04-05, Inter-collegiate de- bate, '05g Declamatory prize, '04, Stentor board, 'O5g Editor-in-chief, '06g Glee Club, '05-06g Gar- rick Club, '05-09. After an absence of two years he has returned, bringing dignity and fatherly advice to our '10 circle. Undoubt- edly Peg's future will be 982, philosophy and poetry. In this line he has done much already, and though To Alma Mater is his gem ,he has many others comparable to it. NELLIE D. HOLLAND. Dutch . Freeport's great claim to fame is based on the fact that Nell there chose to spend her childhood days. After having all the fun possible in the grade schools, she inveigled the faculty into letting her enter the Freeport High School. Masculine society helped to make four years of High School endurable. This strenuous life was continued for a couple of years at State Normal and then in 1908 Dutch came to L. F., to take the rest cure. Her eyes of Irish blue, however, interfered with this intention and already she gives as her college griev- ance To much society. She is a member of Y. W. C. A., and Aletheian, which activities together with walking and roller skating make Nell a notori- ous grind. JANE HUNTER. Shorty. Kurz. Exemplifies the adage that good things come in small packages. Beside being a member of Alethe- ian, Y. EW. C. A., and Glee Club, Jane was class secretary her Sophomore year. Since her advent as House President, her brievance is that she must spend so much time in curbing the spirits of her Wild roommate. KEITH JONES. Pilgrim Caruso, Refuses to give us any history of his dark past, but rumor has it that he began to raise a pompa- dour in Edgewater, somewhere around ISSS. Wan- dered from Evanston Academy to Stonels School, Boston in pursuit of college preparation, and finally entered Lake Forest in l906, because of the op- portunities for operatic study afforded by its prox- imity to Chicago. Who, making the best of those doubly-precious last few moments before 7:29M a. m., has not groaned inwardly as he listened per- force to Caruso's inimitable rendition of The Misereren or Cavatina? Carrick Club QZJ, C313 Track C215 Stentor Board Q25 Forester Board 43 MADGE IRENE. KIRKPATRICK. Patsy, La l-larpe's limitations were far too great to hold our friend Patsy. After migrating to Peoria and gesticulating her way through Bradley Polytechnic Institute, she was led by an enthusias- tic friend of Alma Mater to make a move in the direction of Lake Forest, which she did in her Jun- ior Year. Here her aids to eloquence served her in such good stead that ere she had been long off the train she was wearing a Cxarrick Club pin. She is a star with many fine points. These, however, are hidden at times by such a veil of irony that they are only discernable to those who take the trouble to lift it. Her principal interests are Carrick Club, Aletheian, and Y. M. C. A. HAROLD CLIFFORD LUTZ. Hal, First began to take life easy Sept. l, ISSS, in St. Cloud, Minn. Following the line of least re- sistance he passed through Mantorville and Man- kato High Schools, and then gravitated toward L F., where he entered the class of 'IO in his Sophomore year. Hal and his pipe are about the two best friends that ever got together. He finds nothing wrong with the college, but worries very much over The fact that there is no tobacco store on the campus. Last year he played on both the class baseball and football teams. JAMES WHEELER LOWE. Saufer. Whether James Wheeler Lowe first began to show his surprising intellectual acumen as early as jan. 28, l88 7, the chroniclers do not relate. Cer- tain it is, however, that during his Freshman year he soon won first place for Circleville, O., in that never-to-be-forgotten Intellectual War of the Vil- lages. Ever since the Commons ordinance no seconds on meat went into effect, Lowe has held this up as his grievance, for he is an active expo- nent of anti-vegetarianism. Saufer was in Class football QU f2Dg Basketball fzl f3J and class baseball JOSEPHINE. MACK. ..-IO... Already one Jo Ma cnhad become identified with L. F., when in September, I906 his name- sake appeared, and forthwith caused confusion on the other side of the campus especially. Waterman Hall thought it had sent out a finished young lady but Jo preferred a little of college life before 'Lcoming out in Joliet. As good practice before returning home, ,Io has managed the social side of Lois Hall for the last year. Beside this, she has to her credit: Class Vice-President QD: House Committee: Y. W. C. A., and Aletheian. 44 NINA ANNE MERRY. Neenah. Betsey, Neenah claims distinction by virtue of her wit, which were we not carefully on our guard is likely to take too practical a turn, only a determined stand on our part enabled us to frustrate her deep laid plans to surplant the Junior Prom. by a skating party. Her flowery eloquence is the fruit of long, long hours spent with Webster's Dictionary and it is too bad that most of her pretty sayings are lost on the l'loipolloi of Lake Forest. If Hebron has produced more of Neenah's type we need them at L. F. Her activities include Aletheian: Vice- Presiclent f3J, Y. W. C. A.: Vice President, UO 3 Reporter for Stentor. EDWIN JAMES MATHER. Jim, Eagle Eye, UCap. Eddie, after four years of undergraduate work in Ottumway High School came to Lake Forest in I906 to major in athletics. When the new system came into vogue, however, he made it a double major by adding Lois Hall to his registra- tion card. Last year he performed the onerous duties of the position of Slav driver very well-be- sides this we will remember him in the years to come for football fl, QQ QQ: Basketball UD CZI f3J, captain and manager Q35 3 baseball Q21 g track CU 5 Junior Prom. Committee CLAUDE HOXXEAETRD MORRISON. 1 y. . The youth whose picture you see herewith hails from Pontiac, Ill., where he first cooed July IO, IB87. His real, actual name is Claude Howard Morrison, but we know him better as Biffy. This sobriquet he gained for himself last year, when in an inter-class baseball game with two men out and the bases full he lined out a terrific, homer, win- ning the game for his class and bringing down salvos of applause on his own modest head. Be- sides class baseball he has been interested in Cnlee Club f3J, Class Basketball QZJ, Zeta Epsi- lon debating team Q21 FREDERICK WI1l5.LlAM PETERSON. etc. Pete's greatest grievance is the Cad Book- store, which keeps him away from our campus more than we wish it would. At times, however, he manages to escape its toils and finds time to attend an occasional class. Also when Pete at- tended the Cad, he fell into the habit of going to Ferry instead of Lois Hall, and psychological stud- ents well know the force of habit. 45 HARRY EATON HURLBURT. Hike, Entered Lake Forest at the beginning of the present semester. He was born at South Haven, Mich., ISS6, where he attended high school. At Olivet College he made a great reputation as an athlete during the two years he was there, and he will make a valuable adjunct to olir squad. MABEL JUSTINE SMITH. Mabel Justine first opened her orbs in aston- ishment in Chicago, but not being satisfied with her environment, she moved to the town of Lake Forest to rusticate. From thence she took her way daily to the Highland Park High. Having won her way through this institution she came here to college. Her grievance is that she does not live in the Hall. Y. W. C. A.: Aletheian. MARY LOUISE SMITH. Smithers.', Although Mary is no ordinary time-keeper she is no exception to their rule to regularity. After measuring off four years in Elgin High School, she struck the next year in L. F., since then her hands have never rested. During three years this guaran- teed Elgin has never run down or lost time, thus proving of great value to the Lois Hall Glee Club. Nlary advises Freshmen never to lose time being homesick. RALPH SYDNEY POTTER. Van. Van Dusenf' First asked for the nmakinsu in Fairbury, Ill., March H, l888. Fairbury High School con- tributed its quota toward his cranial enlargement, until he entered L. F., in IQO6, along with that famous contingent. Since then he has spent most of his time in fighting shy of Lois and Ferry Halls, for what reason we cannot state unless it be loy- alty to the girl he left behind him. 7:00 breakfast is his college grievance. Class baseball QU QZJQ Class basketball QU Q22 RALPH H. MCCOLLUM. Mac. He of the long raven locks and Poe feticl inclinations is another bojack Junior, coming to us from Alma, Mich., where he was born Dec. 2, ISS3. Mac attended Alma Cad and Alma College until he grew too big for the place, when he left it and came to enter L. F., last fall. Of course he modestly denies this, giving as his real reason for coming to L. F., to escape matri- mony. With this danger off his mind, he has assimilated rapidly the L. F., spirit, and has en- tered heartily into college enterprises. Football Q31 and Inter-Society Debate constitute his record so far this year. 46 N HARVEY LEHMAN RICKERT. The ranks of our class have this year been aug- mented by the person of one Harvey Lehman Rickert, who though born in Columbiana, O., spent his first two collegiate years at Goshen College, Goshen, Ind. Since in high school he was com- pelled to hide his Thespian talents under a bushel, he made for the broader horizon of the college world, yet his experience in our neighboring state served to convince him that Hoosiers are to be moved neither to tears by Melpomene, nor to smiles by Thalia. Rickert therefore came to L. F., to once more woo the muses and that he has succeeded, vid. Ciarrick and Zeta Epsilon. GRETCHEN SMITH. Although she entered Lake Forest only last fall, this Girl of the Colden Westi' has already intro- duced to us some of its freshness and novelty. Four years at Greely High School, two at Colorado U, and, we hope, two years at Lake Forest will be among her fond memories. When asked the eternal question, Why did you come to Lake Forest? she replies, For reasons too complicated to mention. Her main college activity is serving as first aid to the ignorant in the Library. CLARA MILLARD STRYKER. I-loney. After serving a full term behind the bars of the Joliet Township High School, Honey escaped, heading for Lake Forest as a refuge. Here, with a large supply of witticisms and a knack of sketch- ing real life views of her prof's, Clara kept happy and free from care, until the fall of 1907, when she was burdened with the responsibilities of looking after a Freshman sister. i'Don't you smell popcorn? Yes, let's go up to Stryker's and get some. And hospitable Clara was never known to turn anyone down. Aletheian, Y. W. C. A., Forester Board HARRY BRYANT ROBINSON. Robbie If the stork that dropped Robbie in Clarinda, Iowa, on Dec. 7, '88, then knew his protege would later become a rabid baseball fan, he would first have outflown the bounds of fandom. Robbie ad- vises Freshmen to root for the White Sox and in spite of the fact that they lost he preserves his perennial smile. He was Athenaean Secretary and Manager l9I0 Forester, which accounts for his recently acquired worried look. 47 LUCY LOUISE SCHENCK. Paris styles haven't changed much since this miniature school-ma'am emerged into the social whirl. Englewood High School prepared her for the higher joys of Lake Forest-where her big disappointment is that seven o'clock permissions on Sunday night are-well unpleasant. Proba- bly in Lucy's advice to Freshmen to go to bed early lies the reason why she has reached the positions of President of Y. W. C. A., President of Junior Aletheian, and Critic of Senior Aletheian. BESS LENONE SHANKLIN. Bess's first cries were drowned by the cackle of hens on a little farm near Cutler, Indiana. After a liberal education in churning and market- ing, she hitched up the family gig for an extended trip to Crawfordsville High School. Lake Forest because of its beautiful country-like scenery ap- pealed to this sound Hoosier in 1906, since when she has learned to discard the sun-bonnet and pail for a Merry Widow and a Wallenstein. The Glee Club furnishes a vent for all her out- bursts of joy and sorrow. RUSSELL OWEN WHARTON. Sis Is the product of Bringhurst, Ind., vintage of '88 He honored Flora Clndj High School with his attendance until he graduated, just in time to follow his brother to L. F. and fell heir to his nickname. Sis has found diversion from the strenu- ous labors of the class room in the following enter- prises: Glee Club, CU Q23 f3J 3 Track, CIJCZJ: Class football UI QD: and Zeta Epsilon Secre- tary f3j. VERA MOFFIT WILD. Weary. Wild excitement prevailed in Gilman, Ill., when Weary came to town. She was a pre- cocious child, and after startling the home com- munity she came to Lake Forest to add to her store of Knowledge. ln lieu of a course in Cook -ery, she decided to major in English, paying especial attention to E.liott. Weary while here is taking a correspondence course which will undoubtedly enable her to obtain a future posi- tion. At present she has to her credit Crlee Club, Aletheian, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, and Class sec- retary. RALPH HOPKINS BUSH. ln the fall of '06, a hitherto obscure and slgihted youth suddenly came to fame and pro- found attention by the casual remark, Hair on the suit cases. So sincere were the Sophomores in their attention to him after the casual remark above recorded, that Bush's sole advice to Freshmen is never to give vent to a similar utterance. 48 2 V -fx-arawgqqsaslwa V I 'F AW' . -.,,.L 'te ,i 1 -1 X - if If V' U Q ' r-i-f--Q13 HV 2+ , ' ,-:Wi , gsgii - . - -A-M .gn - GSW, f 'H-. i L ug, 'V f fu III 5 46 Hiram 'K Q- if 4 ., . v- ,W Y 4 X, V ' X 'x5 J, X , R 'rl ' , ll: ' Q , -fx f F Qi' - ,. bf l fi ' f U Q J.a'f+4 gl 5 ,5f j,f ff7 'H -EQZTQ, '1 ' f '4ff: K V W9 7Vl15Ll7W 'f'S4F? T'5'T5f'W'Wf3 .'2...f3 T H E I 9 I 0 F 0 R E S T E R Awarded During 1907 08 THE MCPHERSON PRIZES 31311 185 i f A S ' IN GREEK. Equally divided between Frances E. Davidson ------ Class of Franklin E. Allemong - - Class of In Philosophy Marion Lee McCandless - Class of ln Oratorical Declamation Abraham Hennings - Class of In Dramatic Declamation Roger O. Lane ----- Class of THE ALUMNI PRIZES In Debate Calistus A. Bruer ----- Class of Abraham Hennings - Class of Claude H. Morrison Class of In Oratory Abraham Hennings - - Class of The Stentor Short Story Prizes First Prize-Roger 0. Lane - Class of Second Prize--Russell Browne ---- Class of The Student Council 1908 1912 1910 1910 1911 1910 1910 1910 1910 1911 1909 A consciousness of the prevalence of a spirit of factionalism which not infrequently manifested itself to the detriment of honest rivalry, and the fact that year after year the same difficulties were met in securing a sufhcient number of men for the second teams are the prime causes which gave birth to the student council. Leading men from various groups in college were invited to become members and several small matters were immediately adjusted. Although the duties of the organization are not yet clearly defined, it aims to do something constructive, to be the formulator of student opinion, to be the mediator between students and faculty and in every way to exert its influence for the harmonious manage- ment of student affairs and for the participation of as many students as possible in all student enterprises. THE COUNCIL. S. Craig P. Coyle W. B. Marquis E. Berkheiser R. H. McCullom, Sec'y. T. L. Boys Cu. A. Waldorf D. Thomson E. A. Chappell R. T. Hall C. A. Bruer, Treas. Schwartz, Pres. 50 f -V.. f QR , .QQ ,.:Z'A.l,f 6 f N Ei-Qilfl , Y T I :www , h V f-Y lfif' O if -K v X ,X K f r :Q . I E ' 'Y -I 2 H, 1141! ', 11511 N r 'I - 4 W J .diln r I ?f',5 ?4' , ,ff Q35 fwiwn, 2 ff' Ea ffa If-f IV' ff -- f--H1 -k - W yd X -fw Y Pe , V 'B K f . a- , , , ,, A, , A 7 Q N iff 4 Sb ,4Mg3,,4+ :ME X K Y' 'Af?fi5 D K' X-ff?-Q-Q., L4 N 'AQ ff M RY N' pw my ,V 'L 5I GEORGE C. GOODE, MARY STRYKER, EDNA MURPHY, ALBERT M. WALLACE, President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Sophomore Editorial. To the public at large, the word Sophomore suggests a species of individual afflicted with that dread disease, enlargement of hat band. In a class by himself, the Sopho- more is not as the Freshman, an interesting study, nor as the Junior, a weight in college affairs. The Chronicler must therefore be careful how he lauds the praises of his class, lest the finger of ridicule be pointed at him. Our eventful career began on September Z3rd, i907--that is it started to begin- for the history of l9l I, like Rome, was not made in a day. But that start was an auspicious one, as is testified by the fact that since then we have been doing everything and everybody. The admirable self control with which we submitted to the indignities heaped on us during the first week's hazing, was evidence of a clever bit of strategy on our part: for we knew our time would come. And it did! On good old Farwell-that field which we so often had patiently lined under the surveillance of those self-same Sophs-we and our oppressors closed in bloody conflict on the gridiron. When time was called fjust in time for the Sophs tool the score was a tieg a thing unprecedented in the annals of L. F. This Fall we returned more mature in stature and hardened by the experiences of last year. imagine our joy, then, when we found that the Stork had already preceded us, and a large consignment of infants awaited our paternal care. Verdant specimens of Genus infantumn ran loose upon the campus: in classroom, in powerhouse, in Dorms, we found themg and, would you believe it, some had the audacity to usurp our Bench. They soon learned, however! In that we furnished the Freshmen fat their expensej with green caps, we estab- lished a precedent this year. Our thoughtfulness apparently pleased, for they wore them constantly. By the time of the class scrap the amoebae had developed surprisingly aud our hard won victory was due mostly to the strenuous efforts of Babe Next came the game-but why go on? The record of our success is merely a catalogue of achieve- ments, marvelous as they are comprehensive. l9II boasts capable representatives in every college enterprise, and in their praise the pen could fiow on forever, but our modesty forbids, and we close with that immortal saying: A truth must find its proof in reason or experience and not in ink, which proves nothing, but presents it to these tests. 52 ,m 1, Y '1 v f IX r-iii X ,ix X1 1 ,UK M-J if I l it Y ' ' b:f7mwwfJn1U,g 4 if :ii-, JL 5,l:::::::::- , qv, . 'i ., i f '- V i' 9 2--f:,:f., f'2 C 4 , . THA 'L I' W ,qv -S719 M7 1 1 g o.:::'.:.15jf -u-li-x..1.Lr1'! rw W A W , -, ,S 2 -f i 'ff.,'1,ffikf ffJW ' U m ' H W M i j F, l1w f x:xw:3 l wifilk l dh 1 6 Q , HQ 4 : 5 W far 1 f ww mf H x ' ix ' M, H ' Mn W W f x FTW' Jw! I C r fb X X ?Nixs5w:wN NNg vw J w wf Wa' ww' I 'mw fef QQMMBM w qiW JN 9-QiGi3e5fgff'731gS5ixy i ikwp mvfa QQ M ' 'BENQ J ude NH' I If N Q 'WN X X X typf sxwu xx ,V 'A WR fjxftwf W N M V-!1ML', 15ff ' 51 W X V U Wm? . mA5ASRMms3Mii n mN11wQQQ1fuv. 45 I' 5 r' H , l , L! r 53 t RALPH CURTIS, FLORENCE KNOX, RUBY HALL. MAX MYERS, President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Freshman Class History. There were just forty-five of us, a fairly good looking lot this year. Nor were we all ul-loosiersu or Suckers.', There were Perry and Cherokee, Toronto and Boston, and even distant Kenosha represented in our ranks at the first roll-call. But even though we were such a cosmopolitan crowd, the Sophomores said we blended well. We never did understand what they meant by that. In spite of the sharp eyes and keen ears of the mighty Sophomores the class of 'IZ met in the Art Institute on the afternoon of October 2, but for various reasons which we need not state, nothing in the way of organization was accomplished until the beach party at Highland Park a week later. There, after first putting the Sophs to swift and hasty flight by means of hardtack and dog, we elected officers and had our first good time together-the official beginning of the illustrious class of I9I2: our motto: May she be ever greater than ,I I. Even before we came to Lake Forest we had heard many terrible tales of the horrors of the first week, and particularly the first Friday night, but our fears were only partially realized. We didn't mind the petty Hraggingn at the hands of the Sophomores, and really enjoyed the funnel game. As Bright Eyes said, I don't mind the Sophs, I like to see them enjoy themselves. We nearly won the Sophomore-Freshman football game, but late in the second half decided not to break college tradition, but to allow them one touchdown. Score, 6-0. In the contest for the Inter-Class basket ball championship I9I2 won two games but lost in the final game with the Seniors. As a representative class, I9l2 has the distinction of having three monogram foot- ball men, two of the three substitutes, and also two on the Varsity basket ball team. Aside from athletics I9l2 has won eight places on the C-lee Club, two on the Carrick Club, besides taking an active interest in the Literary Societies. One of the chief joys of Freshman life this year was the new Commons. We just Hlled two tables, and certainly did keep things lively. Our table manners were very nearly perfect, save for occasional outbursts of slang such as, Slide the grease, More rain, more rainql' and Freshman, shoot the red-eye. The good, kind Providence seemed to be against us in one way, however. Pray as we might, it never would snow enough for a bob-ride: but we did have a roller-skating party, and a thoroughly enjoyable one, too. The Sophomores couldn't steal that. So has the Class of I9l2 passed through the vicissitudes of Freshman life, never complaining, ever improving. Though few in number we are strongly in favor of the new student movement, and hope to see twice our number enter as Freshmen next year. 54 -w,-,-, L -LYIELD FRE HIVIEN. + I Ye unsophislicaled, uncoulh, braiuless. blatant, CRAVEN HILKSOPS. Ye awkward. lubberly. gawliy. conlemplible, ulrescenl. puslllanimous, puny, vile, base, scnxbby SCUH OF THE EARTH. Ye unenllgllinlened. uncullured. willess, des icable, bungling. bone- headed class of 1912. OBEY AND SUBMIT YOURSELVES TO Tlrl-I FOLLOWING EDICTS promulgated for the restrain! of your puerile habits and juvenile demeanor by your EXALTED AND PRE-EMINENTLY PARAMOUNT PREDECESSORS OMNIPUTENT cuss or 1 T We I fn mm me -umm mpm me hnmlltly 4 I z N x n ugnmrm, I 1 11: u uq. fu.. 4 4 Al hue mu.: me uf u me evening mul ma nn Sundu mu 9 5 smnmg af enemy .U rn. umm u remand... mu cm:-u 9 e. Wen mann Wu on swan, 4 1. ww me rmnm... up 'nu ummm n. A cummmm for . man .mf every lmponuu .-mm. vluory I Q, um me rum! ul .mum mm In ma from rn. mm I 4 lu. 'rm rm um In :nw na an nm pm our mm upper ummm Il. Never NIT! cunts. nz me :mr mu In ul dum I na. fuwm mp openhoxue I. .ww mluxmen I ll, Wu: prep. xchool emhlmu only an the bull. l5. Suck: and lln lr! lo be seen Ind Ml hurl. ' lb. Learn lhe Edlcu and ALHA HATEI by Frlhy. Sept. ZS -1 ., Disobey,ar1d Swift,Terrible Retribution Will Be 4 1 911-Your Fate:You WILL BE Annihilated.-1911 fm. . iQm 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 SUMW RELIGIOUS ORCANI ATIO S 57 s f t T H E I 9 1 0 F o R E s T E R Young lVlen's Christian Association. OFF ICERS. Seth Craig - - - - President Wm. B. Marquis - - Treasurer Frank Allemong - Recording Secretary Robert T. Hall - - - Corresponding Secretary The Y. M. C. A., is steadily gaining in its place as the center of collegiate life, and, it is hoped, will in a few years reach that point from which all other activities will radiate. Two Bible classes and one Mission class were arranged this Fall under compe- tent leaders, but were poorly attended: nevertheless, those faithful in these, have recom- penseol the teachers for their efforts. Though only a few of the faculty have been actively engaged in this work, all have been deeply interested in the welfare of the Association. This year we were fortunate in securing Mr. A. Elliott for a short evangelistic campaign. His public addresses were well attended and he also met many of the men privately and in the fraternity groups. Dr. Boyle also helped in this work. Though the membership of the Association is large, there is not felt that element of responsibility, which is essential, if the work is going to be truly effective. It has been our plan this year to encourage in the meetings free expression of all ideas on Christian and college lifeg by so doing we hope we have made them interesting and wholesome, THE Y. M. C. A. ROOM 58 THE 1910 FoREsTER ff V ev Young Women's Christian Association. OFFICERS Clara Crawford - - - President Nina Merry - Vice President Hattie Hall - - Secretary Mabel Etnyre ------ Treasurer The past year in the Young Women's Christian Association has leagued substantial growth with genuine inspiration. Our aim has been to make the Association of intrinsic value to life at Lois Hall. There has been an effort to depart from the old cut and dried methods and to have the organization stand for what is alive and practical: and herein lies the secret of this yearfs success. These diverse efforts of the President and Cabinet have given the girls both pleasure and profit. First of these ventures was the March Morning Breakfast, to the success of which not only the girls. but the men and the faculty also contributed. The financial returns from this experiment were but secondary to the closer union it effected: to the bond of co-operation that transcends wealth. Carols early Easter Morning and a song by the girls instead of the usual benediction at breakfast, beautilied that day. Miss Wheeler and Miss Stevenson whom we brought to the Hall this year exerted a lasting influence on the girls. Miss Denise's Bible Class for .luniors and Seniors ran through the whole year. Mrs. Nollen's Bible Class for Sophomores and Freshmen was given over to Mrs. Bridgeman this fall. The Mission Class has prospered. Eight delegates to Naperville: three to Lake Geneva: and three to Bloomington is our record this year. THE Y. W. C. A. ROOM 59 8 ..-1 Interiors of Fraternity Rooms. lligummn Alpha Upsilon Phi Pi Epsilon Beta Rho Delta Omega Psi Kappa Sigma 60 W ' S ll 474' Xu' YK X ! X Nb x . ff Xfr. xg I I ' I 4 f 5 f 1 L X 4 3 C QQ A H A ':f1':1i1,,-1' H 5 5 S , 2 5 I 61 T H E I 9 I 0 F 0 R E S T E R Athenaean While the year was not especially eventful, yet we have steadily gained ground. In addition to the programs which have been interesting and helpful, business meetings have afforded profitable parliamentary drill. A congenial membership has resulted in har- monious work interspersed with a judicious amount of entertainment. The new members have added much to the strength of the society, for our ranks have not been swelled by raw recruits unwillingly Hshanghiedn by persuasive Hboomersgn but by seasoned veterans, who have applied for admission realizing the advantages we offer. Athenaean's sons are found uppermost in every Literary activity of the college: vide: the Forester and Stentor Boards, Dramatics, Declamation contests and Debates. Although we lost the debate this year, it was due to the abundance of the enemy's powder, rather than to their marksmanship, or to the thickness of their armor. Those who leave Athenaean at the end of the year feel that she now stands more firmly than she has for yearsg feel that through the common interest which unites her members, she will continue to hold that predominant position which is rightfully hers. ' - Y J' ,441 fi? -- .ax ' YQ..-wi e-'?: S - . I Q N. A 'cbs f' ' I H3 62 SVWOHJ. 'H CVIOOD TTEIJJVHD EINOD SHNOI' 'X HOOD 'El W i'l'l'l F133 W CIHVHHYIH NOSNISIOH HNV1 GTEIIHGVHH HOOD 'V NMOS IAHV N SIFIOHVW Qi? T H E 1 9 1 0 F o R E s T E R Zeta Epsilon At the time of the organization of Zeta Epsilon in l880, the College was small, its activities were few and consequently well supported. Zeta Epsilon and her rival Athenaean, had no clifiiculty in establishing a literary spirit and a desire for literary com- petition. As literary work was the chief activity in the College, the intellectual and social life was centered in the literary societies, and there many activities were started which have since contributed much to the welfare of the College. The Stentor and later the Red and Black had their inception in the two rival societies, but since the College was not large enough to support two weekly papers, their staffs consolidated and continued writing under the name of our present weekly. A Glee Club was organized and pub- lication of the Forester was started. But, on account of the increase of the number of activities and organizations in the College, the interest in the literary societies gradually waned. It was revived temporarily by the competition for the Thornton Cup, which was won by Zeta Epsilon. At the present, as in the past, the main function of the societies is to maintain interest in literary work in the College. Zeta Epsilon has always been well represented in all literary work, and especially on the College Debating Teams. Particular effort has been made to support the College team and develop new debaters, by furnishing scrub teams for preliminary practice and by good attendance at the debates. This year she is in a fiourishing condition, six of her men were among the eight chosen for the final discussion contest, one of whom was the winner, and there will be a good representation on this year's College Debating Teams. In the annual debate with Athenaean a unanimous decision proved the superiority of the Zeta Epsilon debaters. The continuance of literary work in the College depends pri- marily upon the literary societies, and Zeta Epsilon will always endeavor to maintain this work, as she has in the past. 64 V311 H :I SEINOI' ' HFIOXHI SHELUNI H H I'l'lEl I' 'W SINO GNVTIIHOH Hllzld HD NVINLLHVH NOSIHHUW DNO1 SDNINNEIH 'V NOS XIOHL -. NOLHVHM T H E I 9 I 0 F O R E S T E R Aletheian Quoth a Freshman:- Yes! Of course I like Aletheian. Why they gave us that 'Luny Park' party with the merry-go-round, bump-the-bumps, and that red lemonade. And the meetings aren't half bad, for I never have to do anything harder than 'devotion- als.' It isn't however, so pleasant to be always carrying chairs for it, so I much prefer the fire-side meetings. Quoth a Sophomore:- Freshmen carry chairs! I have used up all my excuses, so I really have to go to Aletheian tonight. I was too busy this afternoon to go to the library. That Aletheian Reading Table down stairs just saved me, for I managed to find a few items for current events. I think that no one will suspect that I have put only ten minutes time on them. I believe that Aletheian could be made very interesting if I could find more time to devote to it. Quoth a Junior:- Yes, I feel we have made a good thing out of Aletheian this year. It is needless to say, it is due to the Juniors that so much life and ginger has been put into it. Don't you remember the success of that May Day Fete? Then, too, I think we are responsible for so many underclassmen being interested in literary pursuits. Quoth a Senior:- Of course, I never take a very active part in Aletheian now, except perhaps as a criticg but it certainly has been a great help to me these four years. I realize I never could feel so much at ease before the public, had it not been for this training. As I look back, this whole year has been a most successful one for the society: and having been Aletheian preisdent, I now feel fully capable of presiding even over a Federation of Women's Clubs. 66 uosuaqog .unw lll0JlSllll0 H Aqdln W ug lm 'sl 0!H 551 Jalnqxuattmlg quaqag nllgvxuall uug ,ml U0 V 59.13 xaumlg ploj nlug AaqannH uylng I3 U S! 9yI3!H 'H omni UUQQV IMKI. 'D Ju Saws JD flvwvdnlerl l'-l?'U'49S .Q amlulg HH IIB ssns U!J0lxl Qhaqund Supofl SSAILIO a11aq:xunH 'l1!'l'S WLWINI Ulu-L umH l 315118 'W 13 WINS unlsnxd .IDIUIIH ..,. 7 'Z A-' .,-. - ,x 1 L' 5 cf '1'Xf 1 Pe T 'G' r ' ,J xy' I . Q T H E 1 9 I 0 F 0 R E s T E R Inter-Society Debate. REID MEMORIAL CHAPEL, MARCH ll, l909. Chairman ---- Professor John M. Clapp Vocal Solo ---- Miss Hanchette QUESTION Resolved, That American cities should seek the solution of the Street Railway Problem through private ownership and operation. AFFIRMATIVE-Zeta Epsilon. C. A. Bruer A. Hennings C. H. Morrison NEGATIVE-Athenaean S. D. Marquis R. H. McCollum. I. E. Bradfielcl Music ------ Aletheian Quartet Decision in favor of the Affirmative. JUDGES Professor R. L. Sandwich Mr. E. G. Rice Rev. George McGinnis Highland Park, Ill. Lake Forest, Ill. Waukegan, Ill. Freshman-Sophomore Declamation Contest. REID MEMORIAL CHAPEL, MAY 27, 1908. Chairman ----- Edgar White Burrill JUDGES Instructors in the Department of English First Prize in Oratory was awarded to - Abraham Hennings, 'IO First Prize in Declamation was awarded to - Roger O. Lane, 'Il Beloit-Lake Forest Freshman Debate. AT LAKE FOREST, ILL., MAY STH, 1908. REID MEMORIAL CHAPEL. QUESTION. Resolved, That a moderate property qualification for the exercise of the municipal franchise in the United States would be desirable. AFFIRMATIVE-Lake Forest. 5. D. Marquis C. D. Murphy D. A. Thomlinson NEGATIVE-Beloit. John Candy David Williams Harold Yahn Rebuttal by John Candy and S. D. Marquis. JUDGES. Mr. E. S. Whitney Prof. W. E. Hotchkiss Mr. A. R. Wiilliams Chicago, Ill. Northwestern University Highland Park, Ill. Decision in favor of Beloit. 68 ' s 7 T H E 1 9 1 0 F o R 13 5 T E R ,- lnter-Collegiate Debating. There will be two College debates this year, both upon the questiong Resolved: That American cities should seek the solution of the Street railway problem through private ownership and operation. Lake Forest upholds the Affirmative of this question against Illinois College on April 30th, at Lake Forest, and a week or two later supports the Negative against Lawrence College, at Appleton, Wisconsin. To prepare for these contests a debating class was organized at the beginning of the second semester and a call sent out for volunteer debaters. A goodly number re- sponded and work was begun at once. By a weeding-out process the number of the squad has been reduced to nine and the men are now hard at work. Illinois has won four out of the seven annual debates and Lake Forest is determined to make it a tie this year. This is our first debate for several years with Lawrence and we wish to show them there is still plenty of good debating material at Lake Forest. With two teams working up both sides of the same question the problem of preliminary practice is solved: it is actually easier to prepare two teams than one. The men out for the teams have all had experience in Inter-society or Inter-collegiate debates and in the Contests in Discussion, and the prospects for two winning teams this year are very good. Nothing is being left undone by the English Department or the debaters to give Lake Forest two victories. MEMBERS OF SQUAD Rudolph C. Bourland Harleigh H. Hartman Ralph H. McCullom Irwin E. Bradfield Abraham Hennings Claude H. Morrison Wallace B. Graham Stewart D. Marquis Calistus A. Bruer The Discussion Contests. We have all heard old Lake Forest graduates tell about the Declamatory and Oratorical contests in their days. We have such contests in Lake Forest still, but we are realizing that the world today is not looking for the declaimer and orator so much as for the man who can talk whenever he is called on, who can get up and in a few minutes give his opinion on a subject in a clear, interesting and simple way. For the purpose of giving Lake Forest students such training, the English Department began this year what is known as the Contest in Discussion. There are four class contests, for Seniors, Juniors, Sopho- mores, and Freshman, and a final contest in which two representatives of each class com- pete. In the class contest a topic of current interest is announced some ten days before- hand. On the evening of the discussion the contestants draw for places on the program and are given eight minutes each for a principal speech and four minutes for rebuttal. The decision is based on all-round excellence. To the winner of the final contest, which is conducted in the same way, a prize of twenty-five dollars is given. The contest this year was well supported, and was very satis- factory to both Faculty and students. Discussion Contest. REID MEMGRIAL CHAPEL, FEBRUARY IS, 1909. Subject:-The President and Congress. l909. Harleigh H. Hartman I9I l. Rudolph C. Bourland Abraham Hennings Stewart Marquis l9l0. Calistus A. Bruer l9l2. Roseel L. Long Claude H. Morrison Cn. Harrie Thomas Prize was awarded to Harleigh H. Hartman. 69 T H E 1 9 1 0 F o R E s T E R 5 ' - I. D ,M 0.424492 , e 14955 i W-L College Traditions ,f-Q ' The junior Bench Ceremony. The ceremony of handing down the Junior Bench to the Sophomores in recognition of their transition from underclassmen to upperclassmen is probably our most attractive tradition. Five Junior classes had already left their mark on the Junior Bench, when on the evening of June llth, I908, the time came for its presentation to the class of l9l0. Mr. Marquis of ,O9 was Master of Ceremonies, while Mr. Schwartz made the presenta- tion speech for the outgoing Juniors. Mr. Thompson gracefully accepted the Bench in behalf of 1910, and after President Nollen had made a short speech, there were im- promptus from Professors Burnap and Betten, and Mr. Jean Clos. The Pre-Vacation Dinner. The annual pre-vacation feed place in the new Commons on Monday night, December Zlst. Roast duck was the piece de resistance and it is needless to say that the fellows did justice to the bountiful spread which Mother Harper placed before them. Dinner over, the men adjourned to the lounging room where Mather and Baker entertained themselves and spectators a few minutes with a couple of clever clog dances. The Glee Club then took the lead and sang their medleys, until that portion of the student-body from across the ravine appeared on the scene of festivities. Prof. Burnap as head of the Athletic Board then made the presentation of the foot-ball sweaters and the track and base-ball mcncgrams. When this formality was over with the meeting resolved itself into a new-student-movement, which was enlivened by speeches by Dr. Nollen, Messrs. Palmer, Crozier, Bedell and Kennedy, Captain Berkheiser, Cap- tain-elect Mather, and the Misses Merry and Bocl-thoff. The Glee Club Feed. Last Spring, Manager Dickey followed the precedent established by Keithley, '07 and made the Clee Club his guests for an evening. The party was held in the Phi Pi Epsilon rooms where the men once again sang the songs and heard the readings with which they were more than familiar. But the fact that it was the last time the C-lee Club would be together gave an added interest and zest to the performance which made it very pleasant. After this was over the men donned their old clothes and having placed a piano in a wagon, started out to give their Official Serenade to both Lois and Ferry Halls. Here they roused out two enthusiastic audiences, who while highly pleased with the attention shown them were nevertheless discreet in the demonstration of their appreciation. ' 70 Senior Play. Instead of giving a class play during Commencement Week, the Seniors strayed a little from conventional lines and acted out a class prophecy, which fulfilled its mission in that it amused the audience: nor was it lacking in a certain amount of wit and cleverness of construction: but the criticism of it lay in its failure to represent the real spirit and aesthetic tone that the class actually possessed. Freshman-Sophomore Open House. The plan started last year of having the Sophomores play the hosts to the Fresh- men, was duly observed by l9ll last fall, and again proved its value. The hatchet is literally buried pro-tem and a feeling of amity and good fellowship is created in hitherto antagonistic souls. Up to this time it is Bow, Freshmen, Bow but the ceremony is properly observed by the Sophomore men doing lit obeisance to Freshmen beauty. This year the Sophomores fairly outdid themselves as hosts. The hall was prettily decorated and neat little programmes done in class colors had been prepared by the girls. The method of drawing for partners was employed and in most cases proved satisfactory. This simple device of giving an open house is an excellent means of breaking the ice between the under classmen and we trust that l9I2 will see fit to encourage the custom next year. College Day. The lack of a day when both students and faculty could enjoy an outing together had long been felt in Lake Forest and it was to establish just such a day that the college held a picnic at Diamond Lake last Spring. The affair was an unqualified success, for not only did it supply a Crying need in our college life, but it did away with the unsanctioned and rather destructive holiday that the students had been accustomed to take on May first. The value of this College Day lay in that it promoted good fellowship and increased our love and loyalty to Alma Mater. The Funnel Game. After a lapse of a year the classic Funnel Game was revived, and though there was only a suggestion of the old time pomp and ceremony evinced in the performance of the rite, the Sophomores are to be commended for the spirit shown in unearthing the tradi- tion in face of much discouragement. The field chosen for the performance of the cere- mony lay directly back of College Hall where the Freshmen were herded unresistingly. In the matter of procedure the Sophs were strict and business-like, and the rite was un- relieved by and excitement other than that caused by some upperclassmen who from the roof of College Hall threw water on the men below. 7I -1694 ff-Qsvfahfrnvfc 72 73 ,X 5 T H E 1 9 1 0 F o R E s T E R iS Phi Pi Epsilon. Founded l895. l..0C3l. COLORS: PURPLE AND GOLD. FRATRES IN URBE E.. Pierpont Cobb. Charles L. Cobb blames T. Fales john Gould, Jr. Andrew O. Jackson David l-l. Jackson John Jackson William M. Lewis Ernest A. Palmer Richard Cu. Watson Wallace D. Rumsey FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE Thomas L. Boys William B. Marquis Ralph I-l. Bush Neil C. Arvin William C. Baer Paul F. Bruner Otis L. Helfrich I 909 Louis lVl. Scott Russell A. Scott l9I0 Edwin Mather I9I l Wallace B. Curaham Stewart D. Marquis Julius P. Schulte I9 l 2 -I. Carlos Paskins Harlan Ci. Kauffman John Thomas Joe Thomas Pledge:-Harry E. Hurlbut. 74 WVHVHD LLODS .KOH S .LLODS 'H SIHOHVW 'M HV NIA HHVH SNIEISVJ NNVN:l:lflX 5l HHNYIHPI HDl2I:l l'ElH SIYIOHVW 'S SVWOH1. HOF EIJIIFIHDS HHHLVW SVINIOHL NHOI' THE 1910 FORESTER mr., -A of. Kappa Sigma Alpha Chi Chapter Chartered 1896 COLORS:-SCARLET, EMERALD, AND WHITE. FRATRE. IN URBE.. Carl Copeland Gibbs FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE. l909 George Albert Waldorf l9l 0 lrl Marsh Baker Robert Turnbull Hall Frederick William Peterson Harry Bryant Robinson l9l I George Clarke Goode Merritt Le Roy Cone Albert Monroe Wallace Tom Filey Beveridge l9l2 Glenn Carlton Bown Homer X. White PLEDGE:-Frederick John Darch 76 YVALDORF BOWN CONE WALLACE BEVERIDGE ROBINSON PETERSON 77 HALL BAKER GOODE H. WHITE T H E I 9 I 0 P 0 R E S T E R Psi--- Alpha Rho - Beta Kappa Alpha Lambda Beta Alpha Alpha Kappa Pi - - - Alpha Delta Alpha Epsilon Alpha Phi - Beta Delta Beta lota - Beta Pi - Alpha Alpha Alpha Eta Zeta - - Eta - Nu - - Upsilon - Beta Beta Delta - - Eta Prime - Alpha lVlu Beta Upsilon Alpha Nu Alpha Beta - Alpha Tau Beta Lambda Beta - - Beta Eta - Theta - Kappa - Lambda Phi - - Omega - - Alpha Theta Beta Nu - lVlu - - - Gamma Epsilon Gamma Delta Gamma Eta Gamma Zeta Gamma Iota Gamma Kappa Gamma Theta Gamma Alpha Kappa Sigma Founded at lhe Un versity of Virginia, l8t'J7. ACTIVE CHAPTER ROLL. University of Maine, Orono, Me. Bowdoin College, Brunswick, lVle. New Hampshire College, Durham, N. l-l. University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont. Brown University, Providence, R. l. Cornell University, lthaca, N. Y. Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, Pa. Pennsylvania State College, State College, Pa. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa. Bucknell University, Lewisburg, Pa. Washington and jefferson College, Washington, Pa. Lehigh University, South Bethlehem, Pa. Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa. University of Maryland, Baltimore, lVlcl. George Washington University, Washington, D. University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va. Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, Va. Xxfilliam and Mary College, Williamsburg, Va. C. Hampden Sidney College, Hampden Sidney, Va. Richmond College, Richmond, Va. Davidson College, Davidson, N. C. Trinity College, Durham, N. C. University of North Carolina, Chapel I-Iill, N. C. North Carolina College, Raleigh, N. C. Wofio1'd College, Spartanburg, S. C. Mercer University, Macon, Ga. Georgia School of Technology, Atlanta, Ga. University of Georgia, Athens, Ga. University of Alabama, University, Ala. Alabama Polytechnic Institute, Auburn, Ala. Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn. Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn. University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn. Southwestern Presbyterian University, Clarksburg, Tenn. University of the South, Sewanee, Tenn. Southwestern Baptist University, Jackson, Tenn. Kentucky State College, Lexington, Ky. Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Va. Dartmouth College, l-lanover, N. H. Massachusetts State College, Amherst, Mass. Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass. New York University, New York, N. Y. Syracuse University, Syracuse, N. Y. University of Oklahoma, Norman, Okla. University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho. University of Oregon, Eugene, Ore. 78 T H E ' 9 I 0 F O R E 5 T E R Alpha Upsilon - Millsaps College, Jackson, Miss. Gamma - - - Louisiana State University, Batton Rouge, La. Epsilon - - - Centenary College, Jackson, La. Sigma - Tulane University, New Orleans, La. Iota - Southwestern University, Georgetown, Texas. Tau - - - University of Texas, Austin, Texas. Xi - - - Alpha Omega Beta Gamma - Beta Sigma - Beta Chi - Alpha Psi - Beta Tau - Beta Omicron Alpha Sigma - Beta Phi - Chi - - Alpha Pi - Beta Theta - Alpha Gamma - Alpha Chi - - - Alpha Zeta - Beta Epsilon Beta Mu Beta Rho - Beta Zeta - Beta Xi - Beta Psi - - Omega - Beta Gamma Gamma - Gamma Beta - - Gamma Lambda Gamma Nu - - Gamma Mu - Boston, Mass. Washington, D. C. Yazoo City, Miss. New York City, N. Indianapolis, Ind. Ruston, La. San Francisco, Cal. Ithaca, N. Y. Fort Smith, Ark. Kansas City, Mo. Jackson, Miss. Vicksburg, Mist. Chattanooga, Tenn. Covington, Tenn. Y. - University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Ark. - William Jewell College, Liberty, Mo. - Missouri State University, Columbia, Mo. - Washington University, St. Louis, Mo. - Missouri School of Mines, Rolla, Mo. - University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb. - Baker University, Baldwin, Kansas. - University of Denver, University Park, Colo. - Ohio State University, Columbus, O. - Case School of Applied Science, Cleveland, O. - Purdue University, Lafayette, lncl. - Wabash College, Crawfordsville, Incl. - University of lncliana, Bloomington, lncl. - University of Illinois, Champaign, Ill. - Lake Forest College, Lake Forest, Ill. - University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. - University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis. - University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. - University of Iowa, Iowa City, la. - Leland Stanford, Jr., University, Stanford Universit - University of California, Berkeley, Cal. - University of Washington, Seattle, Wash. - Colorado Clolege, Colorado Springs, Colo. - Colorado School of Mines, Golden, Colo. - University of Chicago, Chicago, lll. - lowa State College, Ames, la. - Washburn College, Topeka, Kansas. - Washington State College, Pullman, Wash. ALUMNI CHAPTERS Cleveland, Ohio. Jackson, Tenn. Buffalo, N. Y. Louisville, Ky. Los Angeles, Cal Danville, Va. Norfolk, Va. Philadelphia, Pa. New Orleans, La. St. Louis, Mo. Memphis, Tenn. Denver, Colo. Waco, Texas. Atlanta, Ga. Chicago, Ill. Pine Bluff, Ark. 79 Concord, N. C. Little Rock, Ark. Lynchburg, Va. Richmond, Va. Durham, N. C. Kingston, N. C. Birmingham, Ala. Mobile, Ala. Nashville, Tenn. Milwaukee, Wis. y, Ca Salt Lake City, Utah. Portland, Ore. Pittsburg, Pa. X X T H E 1 9 1 0 F o R E s T E R Omega PS1 Local. Colors:-Green, Black and Cold. FRATRE IN URBE. Allen C. Bell. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE. 1909 4 Guy Chiesman John Darrow Hubhard l9I0 Irwin Edwin Braclfielcl James Perry Coyle Delton Thomas l-lowarcl Keith Jones Ralph H. McCollum l9l I Harlen Burtran Bedell Alexander Eugeon Cook Edgar Charles Cook Charles Reed Goolcl 1912 Allan Wylie Cook Ralph Yocum Cooper Ralph George Curtis SQ, E Q I 80 NVWSEIIHD HOOD 'El 'V CIHVHHHH W ITVIODOW l Ii-IGEIH EFIAOD SLLHHO C1009 HEIJOOD ElNV'I HOOD 'M 'V MOOD 'D 'H SHNOI' Cl'lEII:lGVHEI T H E 1 9 1 0 F o R E ST E R gk Digamma Local. Colors :-Orange and Brown. FRATRES IN URBE. Albert D. Jackman Floyd L. Berkheiser Harry W. Otto. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE. l909 Elven Berlcheiser Abraham Hennings Seth C. Craig Lloyd T. Jones I9I0 James W. Lowe Claude H. Morrison Russell 0. Wharton. l9l l Samuel Craig Elbert M. Stone I9IZ Milton D. Jones Elwood B. Leaf R. Wallace Karralcer Howard B. Jones l-larold T. Wilson JSfQi,-bib 82 dl Of SIN NOI' 'W Sl! NH! DNIN S lM0'l 0.l.S EIN NOSIIIHOW :lVEl'l THE 1910 FORESTER Beta Rho Delta Local. Colors:-Old Gold and Black. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE. I909 David Thomson Victor Guy I-leller I9I0 Calistus Asahel Bruer Harold Clifford Lutz Fred Dorsey Griffith l9l l Charles William Dawson Rudolph Codding Bourlancl - Robert James Mason l9l2 Roseel Lincoln Long Max M. Myers Hugh Russell Johnston Charles Maxwell Harmon Ernest Cleveland Moore QC ii we 84 H.Ll:l:-IIHD NOWHVH NOSVW Z.l.fT'l DN01 HEl'l'lElH NOS WOHJ. SHEIXW NOSMVCI 'D HEHIHH GNV'lH1'lOH NOJ.SNH0l' THE 1910 FORESTER ga Sigma Tau Local Color:-Violet. Flower:--Violet. SORORES IN URBE. MHTY Jackson Katherine Caroline Halsey SORORES IN UNIVERSITATE. I909 Camilla Bockhoff Lucile Rhodes l9l0 Irene Buckwalter Olive May Keithley Clara Syclney Crawford Madge I. KirkpaK1'iCli Nell Holland Josephine Mack Jane Hunter Vera Moffat Wild l9l l Eloise Bramlitt Laura Cowley Mabel Etnyre l9l2 Ruby Hall Alice Louise I-Iammitt Ardis Schnebley K0 u N X Va FN TT S6 HHLFIVMXDHH EIH.KN.l.El .KEVIH3 NHDS XDVW SE-IGOHXI 'I'lVH l..Ll'I WVHH DIDIXLLVJDIHDI .LLVWWVH XH'lH.l.IEDl HELLNIIH ,KEITMOD G'lIM G?IO:lMVHO GNV'I'lOH Si EE f 'Er ...I Dx 'b T H E 1 9 1 0 F 0 R E s T E R X Theta P si Local Colors:-Qlcl Gold Flower:-Chrysanthemum SORORES IN UNIVERSITATE.. 1909 Lulu Harriet Crozier 1910 Margaret Eunice Bates Harriet Marie Hall Nina Anne Merry Ruby Alphicl Holstrom 191 1 Alma Luce Swan Ruth Merrill Morgenthaler Hazel Kirke Graves Esther june Goodman l9lZ Florence Anna Knox Glaclys Orrel Tuttle Helen Marguerite Abbott fs' J' L ef. gillsgwkilfigsf at-a,bw,'?fq' t7i?f1'1117:f'2E1 'airtim- 88 WO.l.SW IOH HEl'IVH.LNE-IDHOW 5l I.L.Lfl.l. 'I'lVH H SELLVSI NVMS XONQI XHHE-IW LLOHSIV HEIIZOHD SHAVHD NVWGOOD X ' .0 1 R s Q N x 'X-lv Q 4 N X , -P' l X X. k -v v f 1 i I ! 1 S E 1 V171 1: 'f' 'M Q X .sa W B PL , 7, K 8 'xVA Ks 1'.,,'ff' 0 4' 1, .1 ,,, -. Q 4 my . K Q 4 Q X :fr g 4, ' , -.iv 'v . ' 8 - 5-Q.. si T ', V i K 35? 1 Y-ii N R THE 1910 FORESTER Football is King. Hurrah for the King! And football is King! Bid Tumult awake, let the fever of life Through the frost-tingled blood of the North, in full swing, Break forth into ecstatic, unrestrained strife! To fight is to live, and the joy of the fight, Beats high in the hearts of a conquering race. Strength matched against strength, and might against might, Shall give good return, when to yield is disgrace. Ah, to fight a good fight in the face of defeat, When courage meets courage and will confronts will, When strength is fast ebbing, to know no retreat, To laugh at misfortune, and be victor still! The conquered are stronger whose wills are untamed. The victor knows well he has struggled with men, To them no disgrace, let none be ashamed Save he who turns not to the battle again. Then on with the fight, Let Foot-ball be King! The fire of our fathers shall still be.our trust, And our cheers for the gridiron victors shall ring Y Till the state that they founded is buried in dust. 'B it ', V5 so ,ff Ni X SX Mx -ff x XQQ9 dl W ff f' 'yf l, 1 m.,,X FW5? mq6'1h1w Wiz IZ ff XJ WJ AX Jm vu- 91 Mather Baker Enoch Hall Holmstrom Ninth Annual Promenade, Class of l9I0 DURAND ART INSTITUTE, FEBRUARY 19, 1909 Jacreprinn Glummittee Dr. and Mrs. John Scholte Nollen. Mr. and Mrs. William Mather Lewis Miss Francis l... Hughes. Miss Edith Denise. Mr. James P. Coyle. ibrnnutnabe Qllummittcr Robert T. Hall - Chairman Miss Ruby l-lolmstrom Miss Clara Enoch Edwin Mather lrl Marsh Baker Junior Prom Decorations EWMYWWI IJWUWEFIFWFNIKWO ,gn IWW lllkmll ll! W lil M WM A def? fwfxx mf fig Mix 'J ww:-if' 3 gk E. K JF? X 1 2 ' 5 MXN 5 ' - .xl XY wx' X f E T v -'x , iW KXbmX'HN n j 5 ' 'A SWL TV :P S WU pf W 2 N 7 ' 1 -.,. .X xx H! Y f. N N 5 X ff JH L- x - i if ' X4 iwiakggaxl Ziff r 9 v X 93 T H E 1 9 1 0 r' o R 11 s T E R The Stentor Published College. W7 MEQ fF f1T Q 3 'Dj , .filfsii every Thursday during the Collegiate Year by the Students of Lake Forest BOARD OF EDITORS W. B. Marquis ----- E. A. Chappell - Miss Olive Keithley - S. D. Marquis - - W. B. Graham ----- STAFF OF REPORTERS Miss Zelda Ayres l ,,,,. . Miss Nina Merry BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Prof. W. R. Bridgman Miss Olive Keithley Miss Zelcla Ayres Miss Nina Merry Miss Charlotte Maxam - Julian Jack - 94 Class Class Class Class Class of l909 of 1909 of l909 of I9II of I9Il Lois Hall Faculty and Alumni Lois Hall - Ferry Hall Academy T 1-1 E 1 9 I o F o R E s T E R The Forester James P. Coyle - - - Editor-in-chief Harry B. Robinson - - Business Manager Keith Kones C. A. Bruer - Clara Crawford Clara Stryker William B. Marquis Vera M. Wild Roger O. Lane Harlan C. Kauffman Joe Gibson Martin Margaret Bates Clara Stryker Mary Stryker Albert M. Wallace Ernest C. Moore Russell O. Wharton Milton D. Jones Associate Editors Class Representatives Artists Photographers The Y. M. C. A. Handbook. Published each year by the Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. 95 Assistant Editor - Statistician Lois Hall Editor Lois Hall Editor Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class l909 I9l0 I9lI 1912 l909 I9l0 I9l0 l9Il l9ll I9I2 I9l0 I9I2 THE 1910 FORESTER My College Romance. Yes, here is the bench, the same old bench And the lake is here-and the winding way That leads to the sands below. But the bench is cruder-it seems-and the lake,-well, say, ls not so blue as of old. Perchance, The day is too dark, for nothing's the same As it was in the days of my college romance. Oh that wonderful college affair of mine! And the wonderful world in which we strolled- Strolled when the tempest swept down from the North- Strolled in the summer while Vespers tolled! For all the world smiled-a genial smile,- And time stood still in a dreamlike trance,- They were good old daysg but they're faded and gone With my wonderful-beautiful college romance. ju 96 U- , ?' .7 L., ., ,,---.. ,L , I U, , , I-L zu , ann qv.:-..,,. II wx? fy-sx Nil -tx. sf, ix H ,lf Q-fQ...,-,-,, lf?-QW yin ' 111' A 1 - 5 1 l .nv T H E 1 9 1 0 F o R E s T E R Carrick Club. Passing through the embryonic stage under the supervision of s -,-v , Vlfilliam Mather Lewis and John Mantell Clapp, the Carrick Club if fi. lv l 3- 1 Us 1' te: A- ' '- A began the season of l908-09 a splendid organization. The system 'A of trying out candidates for membership was exceptionally strict this year, and the standard of ability higher than formerly. It is K safe to say that the talent obtained this year was unusually good and 5, added to the old members, made up a representative organization. This year the club produced Oliver Goldsmith's, She Stoops to Conquerf' The result, thanks to the assistance of Professor Clapp. and the willingness of the cast to take hold and work, was a play equal to, if not excelling anything the club has ever yet given. Not only from a dramatic standpoint, but financially as well the play was a big success. Expenses were cleared and a comfortable bank account placed to the credit of the club. Instead of giving two plays the Garrick Club will produce a Vauderville the latter part of May, in which not only members but also gifted ones of the student body will participate. With the firm founda- tion established this year and a neat sum to start on next fall every indication favors another prosperous season. THE TRIA LS. During the past few years clever plans have been devised and put into practice for testing the merits of aspirants to membership to the Carrick Clubg but of all the schemes employed this year's seems most efficient. Previously, the candidates after being rigor- ously coached in their respective parts, gave their performance before a public audience, but this fall in the working up of their dialogues they were left to rely wholly on their own initiative, and at an appointed day presented their skits before an audience restricted to the members of the Club. The advantage of this procedure lies in the more equal dis' tribution of roles, and it demonstrates the applicant's efficiency at interpretation. The new members takein are of marked ability and will form the ground work of a club of exceptional worth. 'E W w as X gf 'Ny 98 P 9qq H 1952013 aJAu13 11011519051 'H Ile!-I wvvdfwx ZIJEAALIOS aueq sauof 'X spmg sfiog POPIBAA weqmg sgnbmw -M sgnbmw 'S She Stoops to Conquerf' CAST or CHARACTERS Sir Charles Marlow ------ Mr. Hubbard Charles Marlow fhis son? Mr. W. Marquis l-larclcastle ---- Tony Lumpkin - - - Hastings ----- Stingo CLancllorcl of The Three Pigeonsnl Mr. H. Beclell Mr. E. Cook Mr. Curtis Mr. Hall Mr. Cone Patrons of The Three Pigeons Marlow's Servant Miss Harclcastle Miss Neville Maid - Mrs. Harclcastle l-lardCastle's Servants Mr. Howard Mr. Graham Mr. Lane Mr. Richert f Mr. Cone l Nlr. Cook 7 Mr. Hall L Mr. Curtis Mr. E. Cook lVliss Hall Miss Boclehoff Miss Etnyre Miss Crozier :H N 4 -. . - :- .- 2- -mf-:ff-.:.-sf112'-41?'f-'-.V 5,1-1 -,, .' at 'q.- 3- 1-',v1uaN,J... .wi -a-..f. WhQUlQ6ClUb I Y . C ,' k ' . -.. J, , V4 . V, , U 1 . :fir an 1, .f ' , V. v lwlfrx' -. - ' z'7?g,f1. 1- rab-n.3,:,.:'r1 uc -1.1,--1 . 1'-1 ' ' :.f.,..r-.:' Y '- w - 'NLE' J ' , 1' :,?,j.: . '- ly I., . H, , ,.L,- 4, ,s rf, 1' ,413 L t if 1, W- 6 bm: 'Q f , .261 Q V :JI . .- H. . , --. - ' 1 . E. --::,-V ,. . 1 ,la IOI .. L, - fp, 13,25 if fiirfw , gi. ' -P ,Si:f:'I,,,.'1x-' 1 . , ,I -f,., V. --, '- w 5 if1ff-a,i.1ji- .-:gf-:13.'--5' 0. I 5 ' 2 - 4 ..f ' ' -4 H ,v!. oc, 1 . .J A n. 0 .1 . A -1 -a -..,.. if' .- v, , , sf - ,- n T H E 1 9 1 0 F O R E S T E R LAKE FOREST CGLLEGE GLEE CLUB. D. L. Smith, Direclor. W. B. Marquis, Leader. T. L. Boys, Manager FIRST TENOR. R. T. Hall, 'l0. R. Y. Cooper, '12. R .C-. Curtis, '12. W. B. Graham, '1 1. C. H. Morrison, '10, SECOND TENOR. F. Darch, 112. E.. M. Stone, '10, 1. E.. Bradfleld, 'l0. E. C. Moore, '1Z. R. O. Wharton, 'l0. FIRST BASS. T. L. Boys, '09. H. G. Kauffman, '12. W. B. Marquis, '09. .D. Hubbard, '09. SECOND BASS. S. D. Marquis, '1 1. M. M. Myers, '12. E.. B. Leaf, 'l2. P. Coyle, 'I0. C. M. Harmon, '12, OCTETTE. R. T. Hall, '10. M .M. Myers, 'IZ. R. C.. Curtis, '12, XV .B .1Vlarquis, '09, E. M. Stone, '1 1. S. D. Marquis, '11, F. Darch, '12. T .L. Boys, '90, READER, Schwartz, 109. SOLOIST, W. B. Marquis, '09. ACCOMPANIST, N. C. Arvin, 'I I. VIOLINIST, D. L. Smith. PIANIST, R. C. Bourland, '1 1. 102 uosxazad P-'9'lq H ZJJBAALIOS uunwyneyl SJQAW lueqmg uosluoql sfiog Jwl uosguow sgnbmw 'M JJOPIBM punpnog '-IWUS auo1S s!nb.mW 'S .ladoog HBH 91,403 qowq PPUPB-'H uouuqm T H E 1 9 1 0 F o R E s T E R Lois DURAND HALL GLEE CLUB Fay Hanchette President Zelda Ayres - Librarian Mrs. M. Bross Thomas Director Madge Overholser Accompanzsi First Soprano Fay I-Ianchette Zelda Ayres Lucile Rhodes Francis Preston Irene Buckwalter Alice Hammett Second Soprano Lulu Crozier Jane Hunter Stella Dalton of Xt First Alto Blanche Haughey Olive Keithley Vera Wild Mary Smith Faye Ellis Second Alto Clara Enoch Bess Shanklin Mabel Etnyre Esther Goodman I04 uozsaxd .l2!'Z0.l:J uempoog 5911131931 .la1unH 11aluu.usH SEIIEI HM P WUWIS '-'El H naqouu 9 QDOUH QJAUJH sa.1AV uo1IBG ulr'-Us ww .xasloq.laA0 Aaq3nnH Jaqnmxlong T H E 1 9 1 0 P O R E 5 T E R 'Q ALMA MATER. Lake Forest dear, our alma mater, Beneath thy forest shades reclining, Thy praise we sing with heart and voice, We gather knowledge at thy feet: Thy red and black float proudly o'er us The happy days pass all too quickly, And in thy glory we rejoice. With friendship bright and pleasures As stanclsthy brave old trees about thee, meet. Strong as thy lake's fierce waves in storm. And when, in after years,life's striving So stand thy children to defend thee, Shall turn our joys to care and pain, While love in every heart beats warm. The loves and friends of alma mater, Our richest treasures shall remain. Lake Forest, when forewell we bid thee And from thy College halls depart, As, when by land or sea divided The love of country fills the heart, When courage fails, or hopes are dying Our thoughts shall ever turn to thee, Our watchworcl be, till time is ended, For God, Lake Forest, Victory. -ALVAH W. DORAN, '93. gn . .v -mizvft .- rv-:--f-r - V -- 'li ----e - f t - 'se. ' To Alma Mater. Wt, K ..... , Irvgv , To Alma Mater 5 . , .V Let our songs ascending 'ii A sg, N N . Form one harmonious strain F N In her praise unending, X. 2 . k M ' Lake Forest, may thy sons If i To thy fame attending, X Faithful and loyal be! Now while we dwell , Within thy halls of learning , And in the after years Back to thee tuming, , N i Thy standard shall lead on, l And the truth discerning, l Increase our loyalty! -D. T. HOWARD, '07, 106 fF hy, X Ni ,Z Wk ffl '1 bf X ! x if f V K N ' f' L ul XXX 1512! PW N f xg Xgx 1 HTHLETICS g? Q-Q1 ., ZrQ,?F.wv,, if-,VX --l 4f'Rfi aP34'mh 1 ff 7 ' iqsrifgiyqqxw 7 ' X if, Y 7 x A 'fak-k,'45f',w g ,X 1 ij EVQXXXQ fiiwviy A W .,1, , X 1 xx. QW-'xxg 7 Him! X I ' 'HW :VV X Ffh .A i w,QlQdff1g,g5i S I .H. R J g y XQ-eel?-f' NHL , W fm klf Is 'I f wmv , N X. Wk, Qi p nFg' 4,X3lix,fQSsSQ -Ng NX fm 2 . - VW fx ' X NX LA. TYV7 N - X .. . ,,, Am THE I9l0 FORESTER Board of Athletic Control. OFFICERS Professor W. L. Burnap - - - Elven Berkheiser Loyal C. Prentice Lloyd T. Jones Burt E. Kennedy Edwin Mather Louis M. Scott Lloyd T. Jones Edwin Mather Julius P. Schulte Guy Chiesman Lloyd T. jones Edwin Mather A TEAM CAPTAINS TEAM MANAGERS Coach Kennedy IOS President Vice-President Secretary - Treasurer Athletic Director Football Baseball Track Basketball Football Baseball Track Basketball if -.,- U- .. THE l9l0 FoREsTER The V908 Football Season. The season of l908 was interesting both to the spec- tator who watched the advance of the team and to the players themselves, whose intelligent and unremitting practice alone enabled them to cope with the splendid scheduel with such excellent results. There were only four monogram men back this fall to form the basis of the team but the new candidates were hard, willing workers and though practice did not begin until late in the season the team was enabled to defeat Carrol College in our first game, by a score of IO to 0. This was encouraging, but the men realized that the hardest game of the season was going to be with Beloit the following Saturday and to the end of defeating this college, Coach Kennedy and the team bent all their energy. And never was effort more wisely directed, for that game proved to be the hardest fought and most brilliant of any that our teams have played during the last four years. The fact that one of their men captured an intercepted forward pass and got away for a touchdown and thus made the score a tie 6 to 6-should in no sense detract from the credit due the team for their magnificent playing. Manager Boys Capt. Berkheiser Before a large crowd of loyal Lake Foresters we lost our only game to De Paul on their own field. Though the score was I8 to II their points were practically all made by one Burson, a drop kicker of exceptional ability. The game was replete with thrills and exciting moments which filled the spectators with intense enthusiasm. Barring this defeat at the hands of De Paul we were easy victors over the Illinois colleges of P. or S., Knox, and james Millikin University. Monmouth also gave up her claims to champion- ship honors when she forfeited her game to us because of her crippled condition. Moreover comparative scores show- ed we had a decided advantage over them. The men can not be too highly commended for the splendid way in which they trained and sacrificed them- selves in personal matters to the end that ours might be a winning team. With the true Lake Forest support from the student body, with Mr. Kennedy as Coach and Captain elect Math- er for leader, Lake Forest will have again next Fall a team of championship caliber. l:.lven Berkheiser. Captain. IO9 .-ir. T H E 1 9 1 0 F o R E s T E R Sf N- Imager we Lake Forest College Foot-ball Team , SEASON or 1908 ' Elven J. Berkheiser - - - Captain in ,I . : Thomas L .Boys ---- Manager Burt E. Kennedy ---- Coach TEAM Left Encl Mather Left Tackle Beclell Left Guard Baer Center - Berkheiser Right Cuuarcl Hennings Right Tackle McCollum Right Encl - A. E. Cook Quarter Back - Chiesman Left l-lalf Back - Helfrich Right Half Back John Thomas Full Back - - Braclhelcl SUBSTITUTES Joe Thomas L. Jones Paskins A .W. Cook SCHEDULE Lake Forest IO Carroll Lake Forest 6 Beloit Lake Forest 45 P. or S. Lake Forest 22. Knox Lake Forest l l DePaul Lake Forest - 43 Millikin Lake Forest 137 Opponents sfiog 'JEIW PIQHPU-'H 21003 '21 'v smuoql uqof smuoq-L aof Jasgaqng Jdng 'Pl-'!l9H unwsgaqg .lang .laquzw sauof 'fl 31003 'V WOIIHDOW s3uguuaH ll9P9H suplsnd Apauuax qonog THE I9lO FORESTER L 1 if Q 7 Y Q 1 f f ' 1 I il 1 1 Lake Forest Baseball-Team. 1 ' P' ll' ' We-1 SEASON OF l908 A l'l. lVlcCrea ---- Captain ' , R. T Hall - - - - - Manager TEAM Mather - - - Catcher Galbraith - Pitcher lVlcCrea - First Base Callahan - - Second Base L. Scott - - Short Stop Stone - Third Base Schulte - - Left Field Dickey - - Center Field Mason - Right Field Baker - U I D R. Scott - - Xl llllty SCHEDULE April I5 Lake Forest - - 3 Armour Institute - - 5 U I8 H H - I9 Northwestern College - 6 25 H - l DePaul University - 3 May I6 H - l Beloit College - - - 7 U 20 H - 3 Michigan Agr. College - 5 H ZI H - 4 Michigan Agr. College - 6 H ZZ U - Z Alma College - - - 5 H Z3 K 5 Albion College - - 6 II 51931 11005 -1 uosnw aqnqas was 'H zz-ugow UWIEIIUD .laqn-rw '-'3W WH wma Numa 'lmwqwo auols .laying qonog 'q3nequ1n.lg Review of the Baseball Season of 1908. We started training in early February in the Gym. under the supervision of Coach Brumbaugh and Galbraith: but on account of bacl weather we were forced to stay in- doors until the first game was almost on us. This game with Armour-probably our hardest of the season-was played in a cold drizzle and we were unluckily beaten by a small margin. At the time set for our Indiana trip their diamonds were so covered with water that we were forced to stay at home. Everybody was eager for the Michigan trip: but the long weeks of idleness left us in poor condition and We lost all four games to M. A. C., Alma and Albion. The things we would have clone if we had had those three weeks practice! But cheer up! Another Spring is at hand and Mother Nature may be a little kindlier toward us. And if she is, just leave it to Lake Forest baseball men to pile the victories on our side of the fence. Mgr. Hall The 1908 Track Season Capt. Jones Although the l908 track season was not a wmnlng one, yet it showed a steady development toward a well bal- anced team: thus accomplished victory is easily within our grasp. In-door work during the winter rounded the shot- putters, sprinters and high jumpers into better form and hard- ened their muscles before the out-door season opened. Cross- country running was started during the latter part of Feb- ruary and kept up faithfully until spring vacation, when the annual cross-county race was run. Several new men showed up well and it is hoped that this year's cross-country team will be the means of bringing out a number of good distance men. ln the first meet of the season with De Paul at Chicago, Lake Forest lost 68 to 58 through our slowness in the middle distances and two mile race. The best work in this meet was done by R. Scott who not only won the mile in 4:4l but also took first in the high jump and a place in the high hurdles. Bedell made a new college record of 41 ft. 3 in. in the shot-put, and l... Jones in the hammer throw with l I4 ft. 3 in. Our triangular meet with Beloit and Armour at Beloit was run off under exceedingly trying weather con- ditions-the cold and rain showing its effect on the men all the rest of the season. Northwestern College in our final meet showed strong on our weak places and won 27 to 24. With practically all the old men back. and some good material in the Freshman class, our outlook for the season of '09 is particularly bright. I04 T H E 1 9 1 0 F 0 R E s T E R TRAC A M Lake Forest College Track Team A . SEASON OF 1908 X Lloyd T. Jones - - - a Alben F. Bates - Captain Manager , pf- .jf 1 a, 1- f 214,-. , f 5-fff, ' ,, ff B If f X ,IE If ff- PT X O 1 f X. X TEAM l... T. Jones L. M. Scott W. B. Marquis Cs. A. Dawson R. O. Wharton I-l. F. l-larvey E. Berlclaeiser R. W. Ralston R. A. Scott F. F. Fitt E. N. Prentice l'l .B. Bedell S. Craig MEETS lVlay l2-Lake Forest May l8-Lake Forest lVlay 23-Lake Forest 58 DePaul - - - 26 Armour 28 49 Northwestern College 2 525 H Tflaiif F35 II5 Beloit 63 as .M , T H ti I 9 I 0 F O R E S T E R XS - FL' 'At' 212, 4- K E av I I L lf sl ff? Lake Forest Basketball Team. SEASON OF l908-09. Q Eclwin Mather - - Captain ancl Manager TEAM Joe Thomas - Left Forward lvlyers Right l:Ol'Wal'Cl Mather - Center Schulte Left Guard L. Jones - - - Right Guarcl SUBSTITUTES Scott R. Scott S, Marquis Paslcins john Thomas SCHEDULE 1.. F. OPP. January I9-DePaul University at Lake Forest 35 - I4 I3-Lewis lnstitute at Chicago I7 - 38 l6-Armour lnstitute at Lake Forest 38 - 26 ' 20--DePaul University at Chicago - Zl - 43 U 23-Northwestern College at Napierville 9 -- 48 February 5-Armour Institute at Chicago - 23 - 46 H I3-Northwestern College at Lake Forest 24 - 27 l7-Lewis Institute at Lake Forest - Z3 - Z7 M 20-Northwestern University at Evanston Z5 - I3 II6 91lml9S sgnbnsw -S sauof 'fl SJQAW nous 'H .xaqznw suplsnd 110:15 -1 smuoql aof Class Champions. lnter-Class Basket-ball. The inter-class basket ball series was an unqualihed success from every point of view. It developed the new material for the Varsity team and aroused the interest of the student body. The fact that the teams representing the four classes were very evenly matched added ginger to the games, which were characterised throughout by clean hard playing. It is only natural that the experienced men proved the better players, though their superior work in no way detracted from the credit due the others for the enthusiasm and stamina with which they played. This factor, in the case of the Scott brothers, largely accounted for the winning of the pennant by the Seniors. Whether or not the consciousness that a pair of blue eyes were watcling him, made Mather play that phenomenally good game of his is a question for the knowing to answer. Inquiry might elucidate but certain it is, as Pat said, lt Bates all how he did play. The Sophomore team was lacking in stars, but the personnel of the team was uniformly good. They played the game with the avowed intention of winning, and tlie only reason they did not, is that there were three other teams animated with the same idea. The two Thomas's and Myers of the Freshman team played good ball. Their occasional lack of team work was more than made up for by the unity of support accorded by the verdant section of the college community. The lirst four games of the series resulted in one game won and one lost for each team. ln the next two games the Seniors put the Sophmoers out of the championship class, and the Freshmen did the same for the Juniors. This left the Seniors and Fresh- men tied for first place. In the final game the Seniors came off best man and captured the much desired pennant. Following is the result of the games in the order played: lst Seniors 22 Zd Sophomores 2 7 3d Seniors l 6 4th Juniors 20 5th Seniors Z l 6th Juniors 2 7 7th Seniors 27 IIS Juniors 6 Sophomores l 7 Freshmen 24 Freshmen 20 Sophomoresl 3 Freshmen 24 Freshmen l 6 Review of the Season. BASKETBALL. Paradoxical though it may seem, the basketball season of I908 and l909 was sucessful and at the same time un- V, gs' successful. Of the nine games played. we won only threeg but when the fact is taken into consideration that the same Y team played together in only two successive games, the score may be viewed in another light, and rather than poor, it was really very good. Consistent practice by the logical team was rendered impossible by the ill-health of one or another of its members, and by a series of inopportune injuries. The Scott brothers were particularly unfortunate in this respect. The way, however in which the men stuck by the game in spite of all reverses is worthy of sincere praise. The playing of Thomas and Myers at forwards was very creditable. They will therefore bear watching next year. Lloyd Jones and Schulte at guards played very 'K K' well indeed and together they made a combination their opponents found hard to solve. Mather, Captain, playing at center was easily the star of the team. l-lis playing was not only brilliant, but he was a thoroughly consistent point ' iifi H C . winner in every game. The work of John Thomas, L. Scott, R. Scott, Paskins and S. Marquis is to be commended. ' Though we lose three of our players by graduation, there is left the nucleous of a strong team for next year. Cam' Mme' . , ,. , a , . f 'P f -at ,.--- sw ..-, -fan:-Q fa.1.,:il6s:.:L,iiLf.f, .1 II9 F' A THE I9l0 l-'ORESTER Ei .J sl?--ifpfeii A SS Wearers of the L. F. FOOTBALL SEASON OF I 908 E. Berlcheiser, '09 O. Chiesman, '09 ' H .B. Beclell, 'II A. Hennings, '09 ' A. E. Cook, 'II I, E. Bradhelcl, 'IO -f O. Helfrich, 'IZ E. Mather, 'IO ' C. Paskins, 'IZ R. H. lVlcCollum'I0' John Thomas, 'I2 BASEBALL SEASON OF I908 L. D. Callahan, ,OS P. R. Stoltz, 'IO L. G. Dickey, '08 R. Mason, 'II H. lVlcCrea, '08 I P. Schulte, 'll H. B. Galbraith, '08 E. M. Stone, 'Il E. Mather, ,OS ' L. M. Scott, '09 TRACK SEASON OF I908 L. T. jones, ,09 R. A. Scott, '09 - W. B. Marqius, '09s H. B. Beclell, 'll L. M. Scott, '09 BASKETBALL SEASON OF I908-09 L .T. Jones, '09 lVl. Myers, 'I2 E. Mather, 'IO -loc Thomas, 'IZ J. P. Schulte, 'I I 120 W. C. Baer, 'll W M. my 'W' HwwnkkU1 ,.,,mh Mg. WIRHWL Nm M ww lu 1 ug uw- 1 V mm IWMVMX Wil MQ W 'll R HMIWK Mi, sw NX f T H E F 9 I 0 F O R E S T E R The Shame of the Colleges. LAKE FOREST-TI-IE COLLEGE IVIATRIIVIONIAL BUREAU. With apologies to Wallace Irwin. There was such an irresistible lure about a college that had the brass to advertise it was situated on a blufff, that l could not withstand the temptation to explore it and to that end I visited the college during the latter days of September. I had heard that every prosperous looking individual who stepped off the train at Lake Forest was im- mediately imprisoned by the faculty and not released until he had consented to have his name appear among the board of directors: but I was not quite ready for that honor, so to allay suspicion I stepped off the train in the garb of a Freshman. Lake Forest is nothing if not cordial! No sooner had I alighted from the car than a dozen men whom I took to be collegians rushed up to me and demanded whether or not I was going to the college. Upon my replying in the affirmative they all fell to fight- ing among themselves, until one big fellow broke loose from the crowd and after grabbing my luggage up under one arm and myself under the other, he started pell-mell down the platform and never stopped until we were safe from pursuit. Thereupon he set me down and together we straightened out our clothes a bit. I-le apologized effusively for his rudeness. i'But, he added, you had a narrow escape, to which I agreed, but asked him from what I had escaped. I-lis eyes opened wide in surprise. Those fellows were scouts for the Ki Yipps and the Ara Pie's and if they had captured you, you would not have seen the campus for a week. And for this rescue I silently thanked my stars. We were winding along the labyrinth of streets to the college campus when my new found friend suddenly turned upon me with a most amazing question. You dorft need to know our bunch because I know you'll like them. Yes. I knew so. l'm a Tappa Keg and we are IT: we are the AI crowd. I-le stopped and Hashed a glitter- ing badge before my eyes. See this? I congratulate you. You're now one of Us, and befcre I could oher the least show of resistance he had screwed the button to my coat and was effusively congratulating me that I had made the bunch. Its lucky,', he said, that you made so little fuss about it or we would have locked you in your room and starved you into submission. As it is, you are now free to go where you choosef, I didn't care greatly about the colors I had so easily and quickly won, but I was grateful to my friend for giving me my freedom. After we had lost our way several times among the winding streets, two big buildings hove in view in front of me and my companion kindly offered his services as interpreter. This building he indicated a red stone effect which loomed up a hundred feet ahead, is the Art Institute, so called from the artistic manner in which its donor's name is blended in the stone work above the door: here a clique of sculptors meet once a week and chisel out Cs and D's which they hand to us at the end of each semester. Therein dwell our Brexy and our Bush, and were it not that they both want particularly to see me, I would show you through the building. just as we rounded the corner of the Art Institute I saw a huge red brick structure with a gabled roof which I would have passed by unconcernedly had I not been startled by a feminine shriek of Look who'se here. Almost before I could look up, the windows and doorways were filled with a multitude of girls. Uls this a convent or a mad-house? I cried in sheer astonishment. Alas he answered, it is neither: the girls you see there are the backbone of the bureau. The buseau of self-help? I queried, but his attention was wandering. Yes, he replied abstractly, the bureau of help-yourself-then he caught himself- The matri- monial bureau, he corrected. ln answer to my unasked question he raised his hand and pointed sadly around the campus-and then for the first time I woke to the fact that with- IZZ T H E l 9 1 0 is o R 13 s T E R --.lsr I E171- in the short compass of my vision, a score, nay-two score of couples were wandering about the grounds and by the motion of their lips seemed to be muttering sweet nothings to each other. From a couple who passed very close to us I overheard the following bit of whispered conversation: Sh C He- She u u He- . ...just dandy! And the cottage shall have two rooms and a fire place. Yes and we will cook over the open fire. I hate stoves. After dinner we will sit and watch the dying embers in the grate. She- Won't that be just grand? He- Ah! such love! Such romance! She-mlnhat will be the awfullent grandest ti.ne. So dandy! Wcnit that be just gran. .. But I failed to hear the last of this interesting discussion because the pair unfor- tunately had by this passed out of earshot. The extreme narrowness of the sidewalks struck me as very inconvenient, for one or the other of us was constantly slipping off as we tried to walk together. Yet it was not until we had passed the thirteenth couple that it dawned upon me that the walks were so built with business aforethought. After we had passed a first he was highly indignant that I should ask him whether he had ever been to chapel Halls, where tradition has it that students once upon a time attended classes, we came upon two very handsome structures of white stone. One of these he said he was sure was the chapel but he blushed to confess he really did not know what purpose the other one served, though he hazarded a guess from its psoition that it might be a crematory. At first he was highly indignant that I should ask him whether he had ever been to chapel.. but after a moment's reflection a broad smile brightened his visage and he answered that he had been there twice: once on St. Patricks Day-once to a Stentor election. Two brick buildings that might have passed for barracks were now ahead of us and these my guide said housed the warring factions of the college. The third building, the commons, had a pretty little tower on top of it, that I took for a chimney or a dove cote. He introduced me curtly to these three imposing edifices and then whisked me into OUR Rooms. Here were congregated a fair sized crowd of good looking fellows who stared at me with some embarassment and curiosity. lVlr. Coin, said my companion, I wish you to meet the Bunch. They crowded more closely about me but seemed still a little shy. Coin, the Bunch. Bunch, Coinf' and thereat they shouted with joy and all fell to pumping my elbow. After we had all pretty thoroughly mixed, a nice looking chap offered to show me about the building and as we passed along the corridor, I gleaned some scraps of conversation from the different rooms. For instance from one, I heard these remarks. Let's go to Lois Hall. Oh hair on Lois Hall! Let's go to Ferry. We're on to youg the Tit-For-Tats, turned you down, so you're sore. This from another room: Hast match? Hast notf' Wouldst go down town? Wouldst, but hast lesson to get. Van didst jump on my frame with much gusto this A. M. Art rich? Art broke. Willst suffer. Ye suffering shades of Webster! I thought and hurried on. When we had toured the structure and stood again by the front door, fortune favored me, for while my friend went in search of a relief corps, I bolted for the station and barely reached the train in time to catch the last car of the 4:45. I regret that I had to leave Lake Forest so hurriedly, for I left my suit case there, but I brought away a favorable impression of the limitless possibilities open to that college as a matrimonial bureau. I23 T H E I 9 I 0 F O R E S T E R WHICH GIRL P With Apologies to C. D. Gibson. 25 fs 1, ' ' ' T er: P iff f t if If 44552. I I : I 27' I I 'q'I.l -'Wit-iI'.fIE. ' f 1 i fflflt Illliuli, eflfllailf X . 'T-f-I I 2 tif. 1-I+' L' I ' ip1,.'. if I . I 'I Ilwilli .lllilfli li li ,bill LIN I .. , -I I .tart It . vm.. M Q V Iptlimikfk It I W V If 3 It 7X I 4 I :ffl X ll, ', H ., F , rf., ri. ,ii-N 1 X, , Lff? 5, L 44 I -'lllwll I 'I h tiff f ' f I -,W' ' Wi ' I 55111-I f :'V f'fI.e.z.,3,'7 Jo., .. ' '4' .It I' f 1- ' .Aff M1s9LoisHal1 Lines by an Athlete. Adah, Adah, thou hast left me And your absence doth molest me! Adah, Adah, thou art cruel To withhold the ardent fuel That might keep our love aflame, That might make me docile, tame! I, so huge, so strong, yet tender, Thou so sweet, petite, so slender. Take me, Adahg oh, let my arm Keep safe and sheltered from all harm Thy lucrative Iowan farm. ECHOES FROM HISTORY ROOM. The Prof.-UDO you dance, Miss Tate? Sue- I think it was in I066-. OVERHEARD AT THE PROM. I-Ie fconsulting dance programmej Let's see-ninth dance-Miss Blank-Now who the ----- is she? Ch, yes-it's the sad birdie ,lack imported! There she is now, and she is a horribly poor dancer. I'lI just delay the agony as long as possible. fl-Iides behind pillar until first encore begins-then rushes up to the girl all out of breathj O, I beg your pardon for being late, but I had to take a bashful Freshman brother around and introduce him. I..et's hurry, or we'II miss all this delightful music. Isnyt the floor great, etc., etc. 124 T H E. l 9 l 0 F O R E S T E. R Y 1 5 W M 'A h A YIIIHHIIIIIIIIIIIIHIII nnrnnnlrgpppnnummgmyp , . 4' f OURTOHM AST ESORT ii lik C at t gan I ,:v Slim- on uc, e d. f l M A DA M E DE C' E I V E f3i r'5i'- ' 9 Correspondents desiring confidential replies enclose self-addressed stamped envelope. Dear Madam De Ceive:-- When the majority of our orchestra insist on serenading one end of Lois Hall, and my friend lives at the other end, what should I do? HBub Stone. This is a very delicate question and can not be discussed in these columns. Send self-addressed envelope for confidential advice. Dear Madam De Ceive:- What attitude would you suggest that I should adopt, as befitting a young man who has been jilted by his lady friend? Roy Cone. Adopt a devil-may-care attitude. Your picture shows you are handsome enough to win another home. Dear Madam:- What can I do for my hair? It is so stubborn I can't do a thing with it. Keith jones. We would suggest for the first treatment a trip to the barber-shop. Dear Madam De Ceive:- The girls all pursue me until I canit escape them. What shall I do? Helfritch. Get an awful case on some one of them. She will protect you from the rest. Dear Madam :- With how many young ladies may I with perfect propriety, or rather with perfect safety, make dates within one day? Anxious Alex. It is quite probable that you have reached the limit when you have called on three. Dear Madam De Ceive:Q What flowers should I give the young lady whom I am to take to the Prom? Sqhlirz, We would suggest lilies-of-the-valley. They have the dearest odor. Dear Madam De Ceivez- Am I premature in rushing another young lady, when my affinity has just left? A, Wallage, Yes-A decent period of mourning is necessary. Dear Madam:- Would it be proper for me to thank the young man whom I suspect of having returned my lost puff in an anonymous letter? Laura. No-it might be the wrong gentleman, and then still another would learn your terrible secret. l25 T H E 1 9 1 0 F o R E 5 T E R l-ler old man- Do you smoke, young man? ' 5? - G A5 -'Q 1 Babe fmoclestly, expecting a fat l-lavanal Lf -'jf . V -- Yes, sir, sometimes. H. O. M. fhercelyj- Well, it's a bad habit, sir-a very bad habit. , ll W lilly The long-suffering English Professor had lost his practice at last. I don't believe you know even the A B Cs of your mother-tongue, he declared. No, sadly replied the Soph. No, I can hardly claim to be even acquainted with them. -I never got higher than D. KX ...tl ll rx' We U ' Q ,riff 7 ijt 5:22. 49:'..f.fw qllw ' A .sig ,ff I II The Foot Ball Game of the Future. CH, SLUSH! They were sitting on the beach close together. In front of them stretched the vast expanse of water, veiled in Stygian darkness, except for the cluster of jeweled lights of the city far to the north. The tide was coming in slowly, and with it the rising wind. A fitful gust blew her errant ringlets against his cheek-he patted them lovingly. Timidly and unobtrusively her dainty little hand sought his own. The waves crept higher and higher-and gradually they came close enough to hear her mumur, Oh! Percival- it's the first time- But the waves don't tell! E.. Cook 'll- I could do it myself if I had a little bit of assistancef Prof. Van flecturingl-- The sons of Martelle took after their grandfather- Mather fsotto vocef- Did they catch him? 126 nmsw ' T H E I 9 I oller skating at the rink ffers great fun, don't you think? oud harsh music fills the airg aughing couples, darl-1 and fair, ver winding to and fro ouncl and round the rink they go. warthy athletes, big and tall indly aiding those who fall- nd when these are on their feet hey skate madly, till they meet n their path a loving pair oticing naught-when clutching air o falling clown in mad despair. 5 11.1 yi- - n 1. new in ,I y his f 9 ui sl! 'f:'Q SQ: f'llfL?: Q-ill :fait '7l1f3 X -' X is xxx . qi X V UG ' X' fe 6 W' . Q X gg N X 5: Xi' X X FORESTER . my . 51 x 7 f I' , i S i t xi he vb' 4 f fl f X Xxx gf XXX X ,ffl 4 X-R, Qi , - 5 1 will K 53 1 . ' F 1 ,lf , -1 J if if ' f Gag., X aims 4 G 5 DNA azz., ' Q: fo - QL- 8 ' Nik. if - . 'L-:,f :QFx i e- ill H I27 E T H E I 9 I 0 F O R E S T E R Some Familier Sights on the Campus. 'QV Q42 .4 S , X t Jill lu, . if be by p g J , A M s 5 y f F N . i - Ex 4, 'K Cad', Ryon fof Cooper, 'IZJ- C-ee! ain't he cute! I wish I had him for a watch-charm. Lida once wished to go sailing, And the sails they changed to be failing, So he stuck his ears to the wind Which breezed from behind, And then-no cause for bewailing. AN ODE. The night was dark, the wind did howl, A bachelor, I, sat in my room: Alone and undisturbed was I, My friends, like moths which seek the Howers That bloom at night, had gone to while Away the time at open house. The wind beat fiercely on the pane: At times the waves were heard to dash Upon the lake's ice-girded shore: My clock had struck the hour of ten When-what was that! l my heart stood still, Infernal sound! what could it be? Vvas Hell let loose? What ghost or ass Or one insane could be about To bray and shriek in such a storm? And then I laughed and went to bed- No fears had l of grewsome dreaming, It was only Herr Shulte singing. 128 me iirgrvfv'-fr-'-'tu ,it ',,,t Y ...HS-. A ogg, s fig- T H E I 9 I 0 F O R E S T E. R lf We Could See Qurselves as Others See Us. QM W i-ag ' ', iw lt Egg. '4 Eg M 1' . is my le sl ' ' tm it 4 , E - l it f e .L wx fi l f . -4 ' L W i, ', Ny X 7 N y ,-1 gl ' X ff' ltr l , X X f ' i, - .. f f x ' .551 Scene: South reception room-Ferry Hall. Time: Nine o'clock, Saturday evening. Music in distance. Dramatis Personae: Miss M. and Mr. B. seated at opposite ends of the daven- port, Miss Hughes' small clog lying between them. Mr. B.- Miss M., does it seem possible that we, beg pardon, that I ever evoluted from this, pointing to the dog. Miss Nl. fyawningf- Very possible! Really, very probable! Dawson ftranslating Cermanl-H At this tears stepped into her eyesf, Lane fto Miss Maxwell as the conversation lags,- Have you been here ever since lfie school started? The way that busy Billy B. Spreads on each shining hour, And smears the page of history, Transcencls my telling power. IZ9 T H E I 9 I 0 F 0 R E 5 T E R X Boys fon the Glee Club tripj- Gee! I E ' ' I-lere's an observation platform! if Schwartz- I-Iey! Save me an observa- 5 E9 , tion! L muhwvs 72- 4,6 Baker fin Psychology class, - The G . x 'vu Q ,prix pressure of the hand produced a sensation of . 5'-LQ tenderness. I . Pres. Goode fat Sophomore class meeting, when vote has resulted in a tie,- Well, if f i' you'd just as lief, Weill vote over again, and The College lVlan's Brainl?1. I won't vote this time. SONGS THEY MIGHT SING. as I'se 'Gwine Back to Dixie . . . . Come Away With lVle, Lucille . Wait Till the Sun Shines, Nellie . .5 That's Gratitude . . . . . . . A Heart to l..et', ....... Is Marriage a Failure? The Girl I l-.eft Behind Me .. Coming thro' the Rye ......... Please Go Way ancl Let Me Sleep . u I've Lost my Heart, but I Don't Care Gee! I Wish That I I-lacl a Girl . I'm Married Now ......... .. . . .Coold . . .L. Scot! . . . .Coyle . . . .Cone . . .Wallace . . .Wharton .......Curiis .. .A. E. Cook . . . .Beveridge . . . . .Waldorf ....Allen Cool? ... Fai Gibbs l30 K., T H 15 1 9 1 0 F o R E s T E R :uHm,H 'ig' lhada Carhuncle. el Founded l907 X Local 'ij5,'l l, 5 FRATER IN URB15 1 I , Bud Berkheiser ' , 1 ' X 2 FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE lf- 1 IJ 1 1909 I ' f 5 Abe l-lennings Blossom Berl-:heiser gllx ' 1910 4 , 4 1 Hlfcldiel' Mather Hjimmien Coyle li A ', 11 1911 N' X! Q L N Cone 1 l 1912 Q Rum Karraker Doggy fto lVliss Strykerjiuls the junio for? Our Staff Photographer was fortunate in catching Longboat fl-lowarclj Jones in his famous Marathon Novelty- Home only 5 miles away. Notice his form! l3l r Pro m the only thing you came to college 4. ' OR sr I- M ' 5I llLES -Q I it 2 ' 1 . - 1 , F ' 5:0 ' ' U4 if? ,ff .. ff 1 i . LP? ,7 E: 7 .3 E L - wxfvv Faculty Meeting. i' 41 li . gf ,- '5i . ' sg. sc' . Q59 si. Q ii ls- s4:2iMf lo l z . NA , f -'ut w. M k S21 x?lUHnmgrnnalmgunmMil gt l ff' Nts .li ul--5 V 4!Jf g V 1 v ffl' ff K ijf' Ah, X , 4 . Prexy-- This-a petition by the students has been left on the table since the last - ,. meeting. Crawford- lf it's comfortable, let it remain lying there. Prexy- Well-a the-a pointisthis, in order togetout a week earlier they propose hold- ing classes five Saturdays previous to vacations. Dr. Thomas- My opinion in the matter is that it would be too great a strain on the students. Clapp- Put it through. Denise- Agreed Prexy- The majority rules- the petition is granted. Halsey- What kind of work is Boys doing now? Burnap- Kind of work! Why, my dear friends, I never heard he worked at all. Prexy- Let us hear report of committee on absences. Clapp- lVlather's condition on account of his many absences was removed on his assertion that he really attends more classes but goes to sleep before roll-call. Prexy- Will the-a social committee please report? Denise- Open l-louse postponed because State Secretary here. Could not grant the request of the two fraternities to give dinner parties because of black plague in North Chicago ...... . Lois Hall dance date given over to Academy track meet. Dr. Bliss's lectures in Chapel on The Archaeological Discoveries in Siberia will prevent Senior Class theatre party Friday evening. Prexy- Is there any discussion? I Clapp fto terminate long discussion,- There is too much frivolous wasting of time here? I move this report be accepted. business. Prexy- lf there is no further discussion the report is accepted. ls there no further D., Clawson-ul move we adjournf, General grabbing of hats, canes and golf capes-and then exeunt. l32 . -4 ,. ,1 'L' , . ' W jg N- X 'fx 'x ,H r WW x'Q9,,. XW VVQ- . Z-H 1 14.:':R -. - I- 1 - L M fx .4 V1 Y Qs, - . .T 'I?fZ'f,5-E? Q, ' ' f . 'bv N61 QA 1 'f f If , -X I. , . ff -f X wg y,um a1 m --K -.Mr ' A eg Q ' ff'in..i, NX gg' b X 92' Y l ,, Nic k-,aryl -X XX. hgff wuixg 1' S x N. '11, -1v X A 52 1-. XX xxx, ' - '7 I 'N' XX . X ,few ?.S X H ,f - X ,1 N, 1 , X - Q E.. f. :iff rf ! g ' - , - kk i M M 11,415 . RNS , ff ' - ' , k' if ' 4'I Yi 4 iii ' - ,, ' - K fx j 1 .1 fx ig A - ig k - .371 ' f ? f :gf15. fi 'f? -'f ,A b' 'l1A' 4? ---- -, W 4, Wx if ' I fi-jf?-Q--fm 133 K' .us A cf ,S G 9 3 I' . I, .X .ya e f' By. 1 April 14 all I ... -L QM April 17 1 c E April 27. APRIL 1908 7 - Prexy introduces new co-edu to return- ing students. 9-Freshmen men take childish delight in turkey feed. I0 - Phi Pi Epsilon formal. IZ - Hill and Pitt give election smoker. I4 - Town election. Gals, band works up enthusiasm. I5 - Stevy's class assists him in moving. First baseball of season. L. F.-O. Armour-5. I6 - Prof. McKee in chapel asks that spoon- ing in Ferry Hall ravine be less open. I 7 - Lois Hall circus. See picture. I8 - L. F.-I9. Northwestern C.-4. I9 - Easter. Grand display of millinery at church. Z0 - Blue Goose ducks its head to the tune of 4 to 0 to Varsity. 21 -- Glee Club sings to eight thousand fseatsl at Zion City. Z3 - Breezy uses starch instead of borax on I'Iaxen locks. Z4 - Theta Psi formal. 25 - Glee Club Home Concert. Lida's honk fails to work. 26 - Dad Hall sells Perry Hall Almanacks at 30 cents per. 27- Mike and Jack come to disagree- ment at 3 A. M. in Blackstone Hall. 28 - Bruner- Did you ever hear a bed tick. Z9 - DePaul-3. L. F.-I. 30 - Inter-class meet. '09 wins. MAY I - Mary Anne crowned queen of the May. Kingf U Mike is seen on campus. 2 - Mike prolongs visit. 3 - Gal and Mike fthe dogl leave us. 4--Seniors' Hrst appearance in Commence- ment regalia. 5 - Prexy speaks of Senior dignity in Chapel. 6 - Senior girls' grate party. 7 - Hedda Gablerf' Crosby breaks ice between Cad and Lois Hall. 8-Sigma Tau At Home. Beloit-L. P. Freshmen Debate. Beloit wins. 9- I909 Forester out. Jake celebrates. I0 - Ex-president Harlan visits us. I I - Fine day! No quorum at chapel. I2-Senior girls initiate Pete into mysteries of l908. I3 -Another fire at Lois Hall. I4-Fire sale at room I7. Y. W. C. A. Cabinet dines at Ferry Hall. I5 -K E Dance. Lots of moonlight! I34 I6-L. F. lnter-scholastic. L. F.-0. Be- loit 5 I6 - Sigma Tau hay ride-Pete bluffs mayor of Lake Bluff. I7-Scarlet fever scare. Rain checks dis- tributed to callers at Lois Hall. I8 - Winifred quarantined. I9 - Stone wears an anxious air. 20-Stone flunks in his classes. 21 - Heiney philosophizes on new-student movement. 22 - Omega Psi dance-almost. Z3 - Fat takes affinity to Fort Sheridan dance. Z4 - College uforcedu to stay home from church. Z5 - Sophomoric effronteryf' NoI9I0 ban- quet. 26-June bugs, mosquitoes, flies, etc. invade dormitories. 27 - College picnic at Diamond Lake. Fac- ulty show fleet-footedness. 28 - Lights out. No lessons. 29 - Declamation Contest. Lane and Henn- ings S25 to the good. 30 - Decoration day exercises in Chapel, 'IO beach party. JUNE I - Inter-class Baseball begins. I9I0-8. l9I I-7. 2-QSHE6: KEO. 3 - l908-7: I907-2. Official Cnlee Club serenacle. 4- Ferry Hall faculty entertains Aletheian. Has-beensu begins to arrive for Com- mencement. 5 - Lois l-lall Dance. Co-eds have pressing engagement in L. l-l. basement. 6 - Reception for town and gown at church. 7 - Serenade. 8 - Prexy preaches baccalaureate sermon. 9 - Sophs go down before Seniors 8-7. Senior flag hoisted over Lois I-lall. IO - l-lurray! Classes over! Junior Bench Ceremony. Burnap keeps his hat on for physiological reasons. I I - Senior Chapel. Serenade? yes? no? Only a lonely mand- olin. I2 - Senior Class Day. Lois Hall Musicale. I3-At last the long-sought diploma! Alumni luncheon at the new Commons. Prexy's Reception. Alumni Reception. Finis! I35 If ' I ivlhvl IZIJW C 3, Q lk - ii 3 :Llglc ix llnr-1:-X ncxx7i': A xg 5, S.:-n May 17. M June 5. I ,W H '- Wh, ff- I5- : - 3.12 Y Ah M I 1 . .Ev lf... it 54' , --f - 0-5- June 13. ,JK X 'x L s ' I 5 :Mix Q, gl O0..,5l..v. s. October 3. .. ....4 .1 -.- October 28. IA: C b . IQ! - .T . SEPTEMBER 22 - Kerrigan again busy. Z3 - Registration begins. Stone looks ,em over. Edicts ancl green caps appear simultan- eously. Z4 - Classes begin. Some attend. Prexy eats at commons to see the fun. Coach says gentlemen-and sopho- moresf' 25 - Prexyls Reception. l-lurrayl Funnel game revived! 26 - Omega Psi tea. First Open I-louse. 27- Convocation service Memorial Vesper service for the late V. Farwell. 28 - Sophomore-Freshmen scrap-debrutalized and sterilized. 29-More football material rolls in. Pros- pects brighten. 30 - Try-out for men's Glee Club. OCTOBER I - Varsity scrimmages with the Cad. 2 - C-eneral exodus of Freshman men to Perrin's dancing school. 3 - First football game. L. F.-IO. Carroll College-0. Lights out. Fussers late to evening calls. 4 - Babe and cane call at Lois Hall. 5 - Meeting of Girls Anti-Glee Club. Football mass meeting. Lots of enthus- iasm-yes-no? 6 - Freshies almost have class meeting. Lois Hall Glee Club beach party. 7-Jungle gets a tray of hot dogsu down his neck. 8 - Freshman girls do their stunts. 9 - 41 II E At Home to Lois Hall. IC - Beloit-6. L. F.-6. Lois Hall toasts herself at new girls' dinner. I I - Someday! Cb? IZ - Sophomore beach party. Freshies kindly gather the wood. I 3 - I9I2 beach party. Their rooms 'Brough- housed. I4 - Coach delivers philippic against Sophs. I5 Q Carrick Club try-out. Amateur Thes- pians abound. I6 - K 3 entertains. I7 - L. F.-45. P. 81 S.-IO. I8 - College choir makes its appearance at church. I9 - Blue Monday. 20 - Schlitz departs for Knox and three I I 230 permissions. 136 22 - Psychology class sees things at nightf' 23-Football mass-meeting. Prof. Van as cheer-leader. I... F. 22-Knox-0. Bright-eyes makes his debut at Ferry Hall. 25 -Tommy Hobbs shows himself candidate for Carnegie hero medal at Lois Hall Iire. Z6 -Three engravers pursue our manager about the campus. Z7 -Admiral Ross lectures on the American Navy. 28 - Hurray! an item found in the Forester box! 29-All a mistake! Only a piece of waste paper! 30-County Fair. Wallace haunts the for- tune teller's booth. 31 - Open House. Men in great demand. NOVEMBER I-Lida and Bill go to scare up Crlee Club dates. Voters leave for home. 2-Campaign rally. Great enthusiasm. 3 - Election returns at Art Institute and Lois Hall. Sen. Hunter wins. 4- We are given till Chapel to read about II. 5 - E.. A. Halsey leads Y. lVl. C. A. 6 - Mr. Smith gives recital to Lois Hall. 7-Stella and Sis sit for family group at Chicago. De Paul-IS. I... F.-I I. Omega Psi White City. 8 - Ministers to bei' dine with Prexy. 9 - Extra! Waldorf seen with Lois Haller! I0 - Bub and Lou cIon't go walking. II-Freshies drag Y. IVI. C. A. piano to Commons. I2 -Carrick Club try-outs, strictly private. Curtis wants his picture taken for mamma. I3 - Indian summer-Reunion on the bench. I4- L. F.-43. Milliken-0. Alumni dinner. I5 -Pinkie and the old Crlee Club get to- gether. Lots of harmony. I6 -Zeta Epsilon initiation and banquet. I7-Skating rink opens. College well re- presented. I8 - Football team clisbancls. Heroes take a smoke. I9 - Sophs-6. Freshmen-O. 2.0 - F. H. Delano speaks at Commons. Bur- nap finds out about watered stock. 21 - Sophomore-Freshmen Open House. Mrs. Prexy entertains the Seniors. 137 f .Jigbuxf i I QE., , F .,- xxx I . H L x K ful M F xx x N Sv 7. If7 November 1 J' '57 A 5?- I Mi iid ,fl . .s ' ' :.- M . n ,GL 1 November 7 v November 30 .c'sw A . 9 Xie. wir' 2 l 'w ts t QW .5 ef: X December 19. Q 't 'WEB Januaryg. 0' V31 F 5.1. , mf, fqgig I if-F? U is 1-- February 3. Cslee Club squad sifted out. Katherine back. Schlitz in smiles. Prof. and Mrs. Clapp entertain Seniors Dr. Babcock speaks at Commons. Home to mother and turkey. Scarlet fever scare. All feel sick. More scarlet fever: some say Doc' Haven wants a new auto. Poison squad hangs out its banner over College Hall. Evening of Bliss-Bross lectures begin. a DECEMBER Big Napkin Ring sale at Commons. Lida samples Lois Hall pepper plant. More Bliss. Dino. B P A Matinee Dance. Pickle Stubbyu goes walking with Miss Cowley. Captain of water polo team issues call for candidates. Juniors almost have a bob ride. New malady on Campus: Karracker has hives. Prexy asks that all who attend lectures for social purposes stay away. First inter-class basketball game. Seniors forfeit to Sophs. Senior men entertain Senior women at commons. Cad vaudeville. Prof. Wright speaks at Vespers. Last Bross Lecture. Amen! Sophs-27, Freshmen-24. Seniors-I6, Freshmen-20. Junior Prom. Committee elected. Juniors-20, Sophomores-l3. Van leads Y. M. C. A. French Class in attendance. Seniors-21, Sophomores-l 7. Juniors -Z4, Freshmen-26. Lois Hall Musicale. Christmas Oratario. Seniors win Basketball Championship. Xmas feed at Commons. Babe waxes eloquent. Gff for the holidays. JANUARY We pull in with a blizzard. Men mourn-hereafter no meat- seo onds at Commons. Men's Gym. class starts- slim ath- letes to the fore. First Varsity Basketball game. L. F. -35. DePaul-I3. dw II E Banquet. I0 - Men invade the sacred precincts of Lois Hall dining-room. I I - Bright-eyes and White return to us. IZ - French students visit Theatre Francaise I3 - Lewis Institute-39. L. F.-IZ. I4 - Estelle back-Lida gets long-distance call from Lois Hall. I5 - K 21's and their friends dine at Bobs I6- L. F.-38. Armour-26. Senior progressive dinner party. I7 - First Prom. gown arrives. Great excite- ment in Lois Hall. I8 - Lois Hall roller skates. I9 - Senior discussion contest-Packed house! 20- DePaul-43. L. F.-27. ZI - Junior discussion contest-also packed house. Why ? 22 - Dad Elliott comes to stay awhile. 23 - Lois Hall visits Hull House and Juven- ile court. 24-lVlen only at Vespers. Elliott stirs up things. 25 -Wallace and Hazel engage the skating rink for the afternoon. - Aletheian and Zeta Epsilon joint meeting. - Coyle and Lane make eight o'clock French class on time. Z8 - Lucile back-Louie breaks his first New Year resolution. 29 -Junior class does stunts on skates. 30 - Theta Psi Informal. 31 Z6 27 - Sunday. FEBRUARY I - Examinations. 2 - Soph. discussion contest. Football team en masse hears Babe Horatef' 3-Snowball fight. Prof. Clapp gets it in the neck. 4 - Robe cle nuit serenade at Lois Hall. 5 - Prexy and Mrs. Nollen entertain Juniors. Armour Institute-46, L. F.-23. 6 - She Stoops to Conquer. 8 - New semester begins-'tDicl you get through? 9 - Pre-Mat. course begins. Mather, Stub- by, ancl wives enroll. IC - Freshies wipe floor at roller skating party. Freshmen discussion contest. I I - Day of Prayer. Moore of Harvard speaks. I2 - Lincoln celebration offers opportunities to those of Glee Club socially inclined. I3 - Valentine Open House. Naperville- I 7. L. F.-15. I4 - Still another one of those Sundays. I 5 - Prom. committee begins to get busy. I6 - First sign of Spring. When's the Forester coming out? I39 QA? February 4 i nl SSH, I E safeff ag.. .y .Ibv'.5' I- V'- iii ,NE 5' -- - - . . eg.. Ii x 4-1 5 -5 - nl February IO. f 'XX 4' CK -A Nfl ' 'N ' ,Z I xy ii I3 x fa - , 'F lg N A uc-. February 22. - .T ts D March 6 '46 XI h 7 E i .f f iw 4 ji: y, i 'N .np I was Murch 24. I7 Lewis Institute-I 7. L. F.-I4. I8 The Prom. 20 The day after. Northwestern U.-I 3: Lake Forest-25. ZI Prexy draws beautiful metaphor from the sparrow on the chandelier. 22 Day of sleep. Thanks, George. 23 Graham Taylor of Chicago Commons speaks at Commons. 24 More signs of Spring-Campus baseball. Z5 Extra! Al. Cook attends all classes! Zo All new-comers get their pictures taken before the bench. 27 Open l-louse. Cook, 'IZ makes hit with the ladies. 28 Mr, Speideln calls up all delinquents on the campus. MARCH I Like a lamb. Z Prof. Meade of Chi. U. speaks at Com- mons. 3 Burnap lands on the Junior Prom. as the college institution. 4 More knocks! Doggy says scholar- ship should be the thing. 5 Sigma Tau Formal. 6 Moonlight night-Everyone goes to the Cad play. 7 Fitt angles for the alarm clock. 9 New-student movement inaugurated at chapel. I0 Inter-class indoor meet-Seniors win. Prof. Wright entertains philosophy sharks, I I Inter-society debate. Zeta Epsilon wins. IZ Clee Club tries it on the dogi' at La C-range. I3 Ferry I-Iall Junior-Junior Prep. matinee dance at the Art Institute. I4 Audience at Vespers-four men and ten women. I5 More new-student movement. I6 And still more! I7 Saint Patrickis day. Green in evidence. Van speaks at Chapel. IF Inaugural ball at Lois Hall. Glee Club sings for its dinner at Kenosha. I9 Judging from absences one would think everyone belonged to the Glee Club. 20 Lois Hall Open House well patronized. Zl Rev. Chidester of Waukegan speaks at Vespers. Z2 Booster banquet at Commons. 23 Stentor election. 2-P Calendar committee get locked in the library. Married men-bachelor's base- ball game. 25 Nearing the end. 26 Requiescat in pace! H0 , , , YF -,w W ff --'ff ,.Y-f.-,M Y if-.,....... ---rw W, . ---,. , FERRY HALL .JA arf' LN 'MQ'-u,,-A. 1 1 PY vb K w : l ry , f- WA V f ix Cf-.ZL ,Q ,, P-Q if , s 32 . 'i - 1 A -,I S . sig .. ' 3- J E 2x., . ,l . Miss Frances L. Hughes, Principal Members of the Faculty of Ferry Hall. FRANCES LAURA HUGHES, B. A. fWellesley,, Principal Biblical History FRANCES LOUISE KNAPP, B. A. fWellesley,. Assistant Principal English AQMARY ELIZABETH TAYLOR, M. A. fLake Forest, Latin FANNIE BELLE MAXWELL, M. A. fUniversity of lncliana, German MARY PICKETT, B. A. fSmith, French ANNA JAMES MacCLlNTOCK, Ph. B. fUniversily of Chicago, English EDITH SCHUTTE HURST, B. A. fUniversity of Michigan, History CLARA JANE BROWN, fNational School of Expression ancl Oratory, Philadelphia, School of Expression, Boston, Elocution HELEN MILLER NOYES, B. S. fCarthage, Mathematics ELIZABETH SOPHIA WEIRICK, Associate Ph. B. fBraclley Polytechnic lnstitute,g S. B. fUniversily of Chicago, Science VERA GERTRUDE SKILES, B. A. fUniversity of Michigan, Latin JESSIE LAVINA FERGUSON, B. A. with Library Science Uames lVlillil4in,, Cireek, Librarian FLORENCE ETHEL STROHMEYER fPratt Institute, Domestic Science FRANCES ADELAIDE MOOERS fsargent Normal School, Physical Training VICTOR HEINZE fpupil of Leschetislcy, Piano CLARENCE EIDAM fpupil of Victor Heinze, Piano CARRIE RIPLEY, B. Mus. fPupil of Madame Wienzkowska, Piano ANNIE KENACA SIZER fpupil of George E. Eager and Calvin B. Cady, Piano, Harmony HELEN FOWLER FLEMING fpupil of Jacques Bouhy and Georg Henschel, Voice MATTIE EMILY AKELEY fChicago Art Institute, Drawing, Painting ALBERT GREEN fRoyal Conservatory of Berlin. Director Albert Green Violin School, Mobile, Violin CLARA LOUISE THURSTON fpupil of Enrico Tramonti, Harp ELLEN ELLIOTT KING Purchaser ancl Inspector MABEL DARROW Chaperon 'Absent on Leave. l43 The Chapel gl!!! Ferry Hall if !' ? 'v 7 ff' ! 2 'ff ml' ' gf-.1i f?if+':' V i p-'U 1 r .?fv 1 'Ext ' , . -s. .' .x -W, I , '- J' 7 A 4 t,., 'Ag .' 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V g' Y 'N -.RWIQY - Y a ' f -wg -,W W f?f -13 ,- , g o v W Q - -If-'ra-:f--1-:,,,, , V ' 1 Arritri 'A ' A'-:,:-- ,A ' ,y , Y f- N Y V I fl. V y 1 E il 1 ,. . 44 .. , , , - 5' I-.-qfE.zLf. ,- V 1 4 , w --if ' ? -' ' :if'1 f ' 'Q-M Y t 7.53311 P ' ' .1-J3l,,- ' - Qi TL, 15:5 9 ' z,, ., ,. 125' A S - . --x 'f' -,., wiv' . me -b 'V :gg 1 Q, , --192125,-g ' , ' '-'mf--V2 f ' 1 as-1, - ' ' ,- N.. f s-.f+.J-f . Q G ' MT-az, ESYSKQ -- ' 'lf ' V: .' H' I ' ' 'F' -L ' 'i f'! 4' w, . f,i fa: A :X ' 3 f -.N ,K v- ,x- , , 'lf V. , ,El K 1 Z.. '33,-T ' w . : , ,Eg 1: '71, - ' ' 3 - U y ' f:b5QjtYx.2fRQi:5-' ' ' 'I 2-if-:A-S'-b . f , Ti M-5, 1: .5 Qffwbfliip. lzfil 'E . 555 K' X 11115: -G f'-E-41lif1.a5rfg::.'.L ' ' . . , 1-:R A :ffx.,f::',gf - wait: 4-1g,,:x-5:4 I ' gf, i QL- k 5 Q Ai, 'f x uf V, 'ifrfgzwgi2i'.E5fjjg5:51- ' 4 is ' V f i . - V .:: . , Tr.-., - ' - .' X-' - I 4- , ,i 1 ' I , LIE ' -- 2 ' 1557 f 'M fx t 12 . ' A 2 il If A A : -. ., . 1 4 : . i E f 1 : I 2 r ! 5 i 1 ' 5 f a x 3 . 1 xx , N i 1' 'f t E L gs. 5 I n--. Q ' '- 1.-,-., W Y I46 T H E I 9 I 0 F O R E S T E R Senior Editorial. AST year as Juniors we began one of the most brilliant careers of any class in the history of Ferry Hall, and we then won the respect of our under- ? 2, classmates and held it throughout the year. Now we are standing on the eve of the proudest, happiest, and yet saddest season of our school life. J v! . . . . . We are arriving at the goal for which we have been striving by 3 J, ..x2n.-fs: ,, 7 f ig cs it 3 lg' , le n earnest labor and with helpful encouragement from those who have been guiding us. Now we have learned to place our goal still farther so that by our endeavors to reach it, we may strengthen and develop our individual characters. We thought at first our life apart from the whole school in our own cottage would be strange, but it has drawn us closer together, and has made bonds of friendship which are the most sacred in our lives. Loyalty to each other and to our aims has made us usually successful in our under- takings. When misfortune has overtaken us we have soon pulled ourselves together, and have risen to the top again. We do not say we have succeeded in all things, but our efforts have been sincere, and the ideals which we have striven to follow have made the dignity and worth of 1909 felt throughout the school. uv 1 ,12s'viW:.F fl fy ,A w ' -'Nu' l W 51 g Klan isfrf W. l'Ql.I KVI! 1 K i I 147 W, .v . 'gg-X I 13.49 . il K J X fs ffl 4 ' fi Y 1 9 , 1 li' L L ' - f 5. ' .1 .Y ll ., -., X, . F13 xr. 'I ' ' is - -f 'l f . f Q ,V .X l we-X ' , Z'- ,,r I. x ' B 1 A ' L W -2' i I ' . P' V El .X X - V l l il iw. ' F fi, . , ' ' I ' llll ,ei A r ll H I X M ' x 1 i i 1 i 1 i . KATE ALLEN, President. l'm so busy all the time l just Hy in one door and out another. My favorite stunt is punning, that is-when I have time. l'm always in loo big a hurry to walk down Senior stairs, so l generally fall down to save time. At first it caused the dwellers some excitement, but now everyone understands it, and even the racket cloesn't disturb them. l have an iron will, in fact, it's a fright. l like a variety in regard to men. l:aithless nearly broke my heart once but now-Ye Gods!! It lives!! HELENE ZENOS, Vice-President. l'm perfectly good and solid. l just howl at my room-mate most of the time, ancl it's been an unending surprise to me how very well we get along together, even though l have a terrible time taking care of her. My course is fearfully heavy, and l don't ever have time to breathe. l certainly do envy the other Seniors. It makes me nervous when snow-balls come sailing in the window at night. ANNABELLE. KLAUS, Secretary. Honestly, girls, l'm getting so thin-you don't believe it, but I am. l've worried so about what they're going to put in the Forester about me, certain things. you know. l wouldn't want to show at home. I just love to have luncheon at the Annex, and I adore the theatre. At 9:30 l take the role of Sis Hopkins and act accordingly. My class otlice keeps me so busy I don't have time to do all the sewing l would like to, but I guess I'll get it done in plenty of time. Note: No insinuations. FLORENCE BAKER, Treasurer. It makes me so mad! It isn't right to make one person do so much, but l really did have an awful nice time at Glencoe. l certainly did. My usually perturbed spirit seems to be a sort of amusement to the girls. l'm the pianola which belongs to the house. I work most between 9:30 and I0:00 o'clock. I have a faculty for lighting my gas during the day, and l just can't make that fireman under- stand me. l have an awful time with him. l'm the guiding spirit of the house, and keep all the girls under my wing. l'm sort of mother to them all, and they love to hear me laugh and tell my funny stories. l48 LUCILE BRUEN. I think maybe iI's well that I don't live in Senior House, for my existence there would be doubtful, I'm afraid. It justs kills me when the weather isn't nice, but even if it dues rain, I go walking. I don't mind going to church any more, in fact I rather like it. How many dances do you think a girl ought to take with her partner? I clidn't know, so I took all to make sure. I'm wild for a bull dog. but I know I won't get it, so I guess I'll ask for a diamond ring instead. I've got an idea. Wait till after a while, and I'll tell you. BERTHA HARTIVIAN. I'm awfully quiet-at times. I spend most of my time trying to keep my sister awake, and in collecting my scattered wits. There are six in our family if you count Charlotte and me as two. I scarcely blush at all any more at the table, and my conversations are lengthy and weighty. I love music, but the manipulation of the piano keys isn't one of my arts. l don't believe I would cherish very fondly a career on the stage. CHARLOTTE HARTIVIAN. I'm little, but of great importance. I cause a good deal of trouble in Bible in the morning and often I've been forcibly ejected from the room, but I don't really think the girls ever get very cross. My sister and I get an awful lot of candy QI get a special kind some timesl, and when it comes, I wish you could see the Seniors file in our room. Bertha and I just howl, but we never mention that we're laughing at their sudden desire to see us. I have an awful habit, and it's sleeping. German is the class. I usually miss as a result. MABEL JAMES. Believe me, girls, I have to go to the city. Won't you have some tea? Anytime you want it, it's ready, for I have to have it about five times a day. I have loads of room since I moved last. I really never knew before what it meant to be comfortable. It's a treat to spend cold nights in my room and I get a great deal of enjoyment out of it. I had to give up a certain kind of cheese I like in order to preserve my life. I wish Shakespeare had never created such a being as Hamletg he's caused me an awful lot of trouble, and I really don't think I'll ever get over lt. 149 -,.f.I -f., ff. Eb fr 4 is Fx IS 'Was 1 sm- 1 ANNA KAPIVIEYER. My principal accomplish- ment is speaking German. The girls laugh at me when I do it, but I can say lots of things that way to them. which I woulcln't dare say in English, for they cau't understand. l'm pretty badly spoiled. I guess it's be- cause l have a good many aunts, who think lots of me. I hate to practice, but I do it, much to the amusement of tlie frenzied Seniors, who throng toward the door when my daily concert begins. It's always my luck to have to wash all the cups at the house, for the other girls put them away dirty, but I do it cheerfully, and I think I'll make a pretty nice housekeeper for some one. FRANCES KARRAKER. I sleep a lot and go walking a good deal. I have a brother at the college and you know that makes it awfully nice for me. I sing quite a good deal and play too, but l'm not in the least conceited about it as some of the other girls are. I always say I like to hear that miserable mandolin. when I really don't, but that just goes to show how very agreeable I can be when it is necessary. The Kiddos worry me a good deal because they're always correcting something I say, but goodness, I don't mind that, and just sleep it off. Some people say I have a heart of Stone, maybe it's true, but I'm not in a position to say ex- actly. EDITH MOORE.. I'm really awfully livelyg everyone doesn't think so, but the girls at the house know, and they just die laughing. Once in a while I hate everyone, then it's awful, but if I drink coffee for breakfast, I'm all right. I like Math. I'm the only girl in it, and it's so interesting, so I never cut. People always bring their tales of woe to me, and I don't see why they do it. I can't set everything right in the world. I tix up all the patents for the girls, the mattress tobog- gan. how to get in second floor windows, how to let a box down to the Hartmanns as a hint for something to eat, etc.g besides this I think I'm just mapped out for a career on the stage, and with my altruistic mind. l'll be sure to succeed. MARY RAYMOND. The g'rls get so furious at my insatiable desire to talk, that it really is hard to get along with them. I treat one girl upstrairs especially bad- ly, I really clon't mean to, but I do it without thinking, I guess. I'm particularly fond of going home over Sunday and making calls on all the girls, I just sort of oversee things to know that everything is moving along all right. It pleases me very much to have people tell me I look like Helene for I really do think we're very much alike. I have adorable eyesg most everyone likes them, I think. l50 HELEN STERL. l came from Abilene, Kansas. Of course, you've heard all about the town. Yes. Abilene, Kansas. At home l'm called Toodles, but the girls here think l'm too dignified for that, so they just call me Helen. O-o-o-o-h-h-h-h. I wonder what my special attraction is, for the girls always want me to be in pictures and I don't care to, don't you know? I have a wonderfully sweet temper, but I rather keep the new girls in awe of me. And you know, I have the most wonderful niece, whose name is Mary Alice. You should see her picture! MARGARET WATSON. l'm young and have t' e most adorable disposition. I never have assumed any g.-eat responsibility, but the girls have always so much to do, that l feel as though l'd rather do it myself. I supposed of course we had slanting roofs now, so we could have attics, but l guess l'm mistaken for everyone laughed at my suggestion. I love boxes from home, so we can have feasts after ten o'cloclc, but l'm not crazy about loaf sugar for grape-fruit. 5 4' ? I-I n -g 1 J-4 44. sul- ' -if -- Il- ll' 2- il 6.'r'I.1.0.Y'.9 a,-zrorz. Soir' i hr Wagga I X r - NN - A 5 ,A . , ..s'N'z,i 1 i ' I5 -.l :QP . Q b A .4 ' H it 1 as .. 3 ,A N . l lf L ' T fwi-QQL ISI Ju I m . :J 9. .1 Ei 2 If if 2 New X, P , -N..t:, ..... ., ,,,,,,..,, ,, A ,-f f' T' ' . M,.A.,wW Wg, X I X T V Nw, xt N X W H 'SKA 1 .1 .QR lv 4' 2 . X QW' 'm'4ff 4' ' X 5 X mx O lx ' X 5 A. .Y ,- Ny Q Al ,XS I, . If Q.: if ,jf I H - ,J K R, ., Qx W Y. f ILPJA qv , '-' fm--' 'Wi ' F' ' i V ' ! 7 .fikxql SAF 4 '- N 15, f Yr- K ,,,..... . Xi: , Y X , Xx X . N9 H- K, ,. R 'X 2 ,71gt,'F2.!L55'i-ea T H E 1 9 1 0 F o R E s T E R JUNIORS. Venimus. Such a fall it was, fellow-students, when in the gay and gladsome weather of last September most of us came! And it has come to pass that the faculty have been wondering ever since how so many stars of the first magnitude could dawn upon the horizon of this unsuspecting community at one fell swoop. At first we were a varying quantity, but gradually approached the limit of twenty-eight, and it was the end of the first month. Vidimus. Oh, we saw many things: first of all, the crying need of our heterogen- ous multitude for organization. The Seniors,-well, they saw matters in another light, and there ensued a gentle conflict behind locked doors on the second floor of our domicile. It is written in the archives that when the fumes of the conflict had rolled away, only certain decorations accustomed to repose above our intellectual brows were missing. These, however. we found on the bulletin-board next day. A sweet conclave soon after elected such mighty champions that the Seniors waxed sore afraid, and have been our friends ever since. Vicimus. Indeed we conquered everything from our home-sickness and our appetites to the Seniors and the Faculty. Thus we expect to continue until like youthful Alexanders we will be obliged to sigh for new worlds to conquer. 'cf' I . f 5,5 5- f' fn- 'R 5l, eiQf5:af ? 1 Wa IS3 L. Rodatz A. Felch C. Winter M. Blackman M. Mosenfelder . Seyster I IN SDH HW D M. enry M.H Shock E. V. Ludlow M Stewart Budlong I eyn M.H Meginiss E. Bnyne P. Kirchhraun S. rd V. Hubba R. Cone A. Vocke J Gilbert R. Petefish F Dugan E. Armstrong ednllie M E. Cl' C. Wertheim mmm? JW ffffW M ff? WW fl? , gli? 5' W Jf v Vfgfjyjfk I 5?f,fSMSr5 Myfi A53 xomfqidk r af? ww-2-X . FJ! f'4.i W M mwy wfgwfp ip W MM 2 Www XX WWxX0',W-W ' f 'X-3 ' M XOX Q-Q 'Q Q 155 J ff. wif' ' 'P 1 WW 07 7'f w4,,,,wm,f21Q CB E'H g fi, ?2:f E SX? E Q W J, Jbffi 1' 5532. WM . 'gy gigs. MJLWQLQZBL Www' W www 4445551 GHUMML - 74W Wu: ZW 46 ZMW ww ff,-f2,3Z7'e wQfj,M!,W HP E, 1 , 3 -sk Q . , ,iq wifzpffkf iv 43-il X W' 595 ijjilx W axjq' 522: W M . 'Q'1, Egi R 3 'Q ' if rffiqx vga? 4,474 ' Qft if w' ,ff ,1gdMM ' - swwfjfif ww vi WMA-g.m. was M . .fy i XX . XAA ..v1ac,,Q.:,.,..'f- P bak i 11 R 158 Jim 'E-Q TI-IE I9I0 FORESTER 2- 'fx Qsgr' mimi' is the Preparatory Class. ft 43 W1 It is bounded b the two N2 Y upper classes and the faculty, tial 4 fr!-FL!! rf' . . from which bounds it may not leave before four years without thirty-two credits. Its chief character- istics are: its physical strength, its studiousness and its love for fellow-men. It abounds in the beauties of nature---towering mountains of false hair, gushing springs of mirth, murmuring brooks of complaint against upper classmen, Vails filled with Plants, which Blossom in Winter as if under the spell of the God Pam The average grade insures a delightful resort for Hunked juniors. F or rates of admittance apply to its local agents. I59 T H E I 9 l 0 F O R E S T E R Charlotte Maxam Pauline Sauerman Manor Hoover Marion Hooton Ruth Brownell Inez Thompson Isabelle Shiffer Helen Harriman Loraine Blend Preparatory Classes. SENIOR PREPARATORY CLASS JUNIOR PREPARATORY CLASS - President - Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer - - President - Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer SOPHOMORE PREPARATORY CLASS 75, 1 ,-G':' l ,235 Ab ME. l 'I n 7, xg- K w E74 leo - - President - Vice-Presfdent Secretary and Treasurer .f . Q , ,fx Q l ff w 9 XML f ,ff f j 'A 5, '17 ffjx 4 1 ' if X' Walt? xx Acvf-fi. K , .as ,,X?X'--54-I Helene Zenos - Pl'CSiClCUf Frances Dugan Vice-President Lucile Bruen - - Secretary Manor Hoover - - ---- Treasurer One of the most helpful things in the life of Ferry Hall is the presence of the Young Wiomenis Christian Association. It is connected with the national work of the Young Women's Christian Association, and reports regularly to the National Board. The Wednesday vesper services are under its control, and are led by different members. Two delegates attended the State Convention held in Bloomington in the fall, and brought back practical, working ideas. Seven Bible Classes have been organized with different girls as leaders and with an average membership of eight. There is need for more work in the highest sense of the word, the social impulse in the life of the school. The aim is to bring its members into closer touch with Jesus Christ and since its first year in Ferry Hall the Association has steadily increased and all except a very small number of the school are now members, either active or associate. The chairmen of the Committees are: Membership - - - Frances Dugan Finance Manor Hoover Religious Harriette Pease Bible Study Mildred Henry Missionary Helen Graham Social - Margaret Watson Extension - Rita Cone Intercollegiate - Isabelle Shifter I6l THE 1910 FORESTER i 2 ,f W 'N E , , N . 'F em-is-1-X i .,,,' , I , J H A ' '-7 'ijgg , EY R eaeee is ieee EXTENT eve D R FEM A 'V L5 QT The Lyric and Dramatic Club is an organization in which all students belonging to the departments of music and elocution are entitled to membership. The meetings are held the first and third Mondays of every month. The aim of the club is to give confidence to the members performing before an audience, and to promote their interest in the best music and elocution. LIST OF OFFICERS FIRST SEMESTER Florence Baker ---- - President Miss Brown ------- Vice-President EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Margaret Stevenson -------- - Chairman C-ladys Floete Mildred Henry SECOND SEMESTER Florence Baker ---- - President Miss Ripley -------- Vice-President EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Marion Hooton --------- Chairman Helen Simon Margaret I-leyn I62 T H E ' 9 ' 0 F O R E 5 T E R Glee Club and Choir. The Ferry Hall Glee Club is an important factor among the various organizations in Ferry Hall. It is reorganized each fall, many new members added, and is under the direction of Miss Helen Fleming. The Clee Club meets twice a week for practice. It is an organization which affords pleasure and benefit to its members. The club leads the singing every morning in chapel and Sunday evenings at Vespers. f?2 'ff' '!5'?'f'-3 Q v- 'Q':f,E4 A-in , 1' 9- fi I A i? s-f aj The Curry Club. As a means of realizing the nature of dramatic instinct, and of developing its power, the Curry Club was organized. All private pupils in elocution are eligible to membership. The work includes: fl, Criticisms in dramatic modulations of voice, harmonic physical training, and pantomime, the reading of lines and the interpretation of character: Q21 Dramatic interpretation of farce, burlesque, melodrama, monologue, comedy and tragedy. Margaret Stevenson President Helen Graham - Vice-President Mildred Berger Secretary and Treasurer I63 Cl' rlich E Wise Henry aile V Henry H 1. u PQ c I Shock Aiken S0 Thomp Cone eyn ubbnrd H V. A. H ubbnrd Burgetl SENIOR BASKET-BALL TEAM Watson Slerl Allen Zenos Klaus Moore JUNIOR BASKET-BALL TEAM Henry Bayne Dugan Armstrong Petefish Vocke 165 THE 1910 FoREsTER gf? 4,5 E1 Thirty-eighth Annual Commencement PROGRAM Overture to Der Freischuetzu - - - Weber Siegfried Gruenstein Hail to thy Dawning, O Morn - - - Dudley Buck Ferry Hall Choir Prayer W. H. W. Boyle, D. D. Commencement Address: The Social Function of a Liberal Education Nathaniel Butler, D. D., L. L. D. List! The Cherubic Host - - Holy City, - A R Gaul Miss Cone, Mr. Wm. Marquis and Choir Address to the Class Frances L. Hughes Presentation of Diplomas Benediction SENIORS Alta Elizabeth Gooding Ruth Ernestine Corlett Mary Krone Fl-larriette Kyler Pease Era Keeling Helen Estelle Watson Cora Mae Lane 'F First Honor. JM' Second Honor. Marjory Marsh Mabel Wyeth Hardin 'McMaud Rogers Jeanette Brooks Hill Mabel Ruth Bruner Anna Huizenga T H E I 9 I 0 F O R E S T E R The Revenge of Shari-Hot-Su. A Japanese Comedy in Two Acts by C. B. Batchelder PERSONS OF THE PLAY Shari-I-lot-Su, a learned Japanese Kioto, a young Japanese - Harold Armstrong, a young American Mrs. Beaconstreet, from Boston Vrina, her daughter - - Moiguifa, called Cherry Blossom Toyama, the mother of Moiguifa Campus Dramatics, presented jointly by the Curry Club and the Junior Reading Class, at Ferry Hall, in the Month of June, l909. Mary Kidd Elsie Clarke - Helene Zenos - Estelle Steger Marie Mosenfelder Helen Sterl Martha Ehrlicher Quaint, pictorial, poetic, Whimsy, the Revenge of Shari-Hot-Si proved a pleasing novelty with distinctive artistic and educational values. The motives, manners, and customs of a most interesting people were seriously and honestly presented, with a con- vincing atmosphere of situation and character. - 'r i Y Ax I67 ,Q -...K WP .bm I68 :sis VHA? A1155 I9-Q0 - Q A 3335335 v ---er.. nf- Q? 'f -' ' fwzgfqn-an iw.- ,- -. lv '-:Qnff-f E 1 :, X M . , 9- 1. c N sei 1 -- E F53 ' X , CY 1 Q55 F' ,iii ESQ! .GSS RCSB if '-19k V .fr-.,:.:,. 155 53.6 .ll Q SQ ii SE ' .N .QR P-Q.. Kgs EQ:-' ii Si .1 if im. ig- Rx-'l Q15 ag- ' kit. Q . L-'Q ti Q +3735 L if j i. 555 Q ' A'f 1 ,. 1 .Al Wi -. N , ?w .sz - ' 1-.-+..a,.., 'ffzf'-N -X ':,.,: A S .- , . ,. .Ln-N --'NN Vx .. .x SX lb swivel vi, x +-M ' ,.,.-mx, n-4 I A. ff 2 O -4 CD terl S Helen Lydia Marks Helen Zenos Katherine Percy Kate Allen Ri Petefish Lucile Bruen Davenport Amy S2 inn Wi Lill hiffer Sc Isabelle Murien Hooten K xx x X3 Novllif' N-w,,,N.Ja-x ,..4v--V 4 I-' J lil Q I n. Mary Raymond Elizabeth Crumb Edith Moore Frances Dugan Margaret Watson A T H E 1 9 I 0 F O R 12 S T E R DQR .AL'.5fQw III U E U CALENDAR U I ul E up I f I NE , H T L' i 4 EPD U -fs' We ' ' PT- - September 26. J x ANQTZSS' N 0950, lt l ' V A :-'NW if J' ,H L, . ' l li ' A slnlfelf it gmt Jzcz-Jr. oy, October 12. OJ3! SEPTEMBER 23 - General down-pour of new girls, old girls, and trunks. 24 - Departure of fond mammas and aunties. 25 - Everyone talks herself at the Gab Party given by the Y. W. C. A. in its room. 26-Grand exhibition of the Cad freshies in costume given by their upper class-men for our benefit. OCTOBER I - Dedication of the Sargent Memorial window. 2 - The Seniors receive in the afternoon, and the Delta Phi Delta in the evening. 3 -Wholesale introduction at Open House. Many meet their affinities, from all appearances. 4 - Sunday evening song service in the parlor. violent attacks of home-sickness become the fashion. Great weeping and wailing. 9 -The noon walk is introduced. T IO -The cross on the porch roof converted into a ghost by sheets and pillow-case. II - Mademoiselle reconverts it to its natural state by a broom. I2 - The juniors organize after encountering much resistance on the part of the Seniors, who are so ofiicious as to lock them in various rooms till they humble them- selves by taking down their hair. Oh, wad some power the giftie gie us. To see the Seniors 'ere they see us. I3-Alarm clocks secreted under the tables alarm the dining room at 6:15. l73 T H E I 9 I 0 F O R E 5 T E R I5 - Junior-Senior baseball game. The score was in favor of the Seniors, but the FOR Juniors said, We ain't feelin' bad. I -I-AFT I6 Gymn s' cl es eet I - - a rum ass m . 7 ' ' I 23 - Seniors entertain elaborately in the Gym. X f H 28 - Mrs. Bertha Kunz Baker gives the first 5 F 'fl of her series of readings. 29- Torch light procession around the cam- I pus followed by a grand rally in the Aud- I gorium with speeches by all the candi- ates. I Y , October 29. 3 - Everyone votes at polls in front hall. 7- Miss Everett's temper ruffled by a bell in the study hall. W X I0 - Elfhistle blown mysteriously at I0:30 Fgom wi-ieuce xi- . M. COM ETH stil' IZ -Curry Club entertains Mrs. Baker at ' E . 'I' d' . Q' THE Avvpul. an inner E 9 1- 24 - Barn-yard corcert attempted but not i' g ' ,, ' WH'5TLE- appreciated by the critical Faculty. I ' . 28 - Everyone back on time. , M ' :K 30 - Grand racket at ten-thirty caused by ' ' -sl 'L accidental dropping of chafing dishes etc. ' . -f DECEMBER ' f .1 'R 8 Esther spills prune whip and custard November 10' pie in front hall. IO- New statue arrives, and is bedecked in a visitor's hat and coat. -1 G , l. ,I I3-lndustrious search for Madeline after IJu7lLl. Lbs ten o'cIocIc. At last found safely tuck- Q3 I J ed away in her own little bed. Mft ann ffl I5 - The Ghost Parade. yetu-tus depart for a taste of the gay life. RY 6 - Return of all who could not plead illness or some excuse satisfactory to the . faculty. 7-Studies begin with a vengeance. if . IZ Ri comes back and brings a mandolin. Deumbe' Io' I5 - Marion acquires one. Worse luck! 174 M' THE. I 91 0 FORESTER 5 U H, 20 - House meeting. No more Monahan's! ' ----ff' ff H'-S66 W H 'A 30 -Juniors and Seniors invited to Mrs. Q , QV' Ag Qlfu N X 1 Nollen's tea to meet Academy Juniors N. 1 , X N0 and Seniors. i sa Q 'I WI l l Puzzle: Find the men. KL L. , ' gk, NDT . T- :Iii 7 E 1 TAL FEBRUARY ' f b- ' l l W M' li ll' , l U l l - Furious cramming begins. iff YU i i 2 -Clee Club entertains in the Amusement l Hall. l Dancing and eats the feature of the l WJ'-V--W-FA evening. Gleeful time! 3-Exams begin. We will not dwell on this painful recollection. II - Day of Prayer. I2 - l..incoln's Birthday. Talks at Chapel. I9 - College Prom. 24- Y. W. L. A. gives tea for Miss Fuller. 26-Mrs. Todd lectures on The Panama Canal. 27- Ri, Marion and Julie cream shrimps in the privacy of a closet, only to be rudely disturbed by Walker and Miss Stroh- meyer. MARCH 5 - Seniors give a Colonial Ball in the Aud- itorium. Great success. 6 - Academy Play. I2 - Mrs. Luella Chilson Ohrmann gives a recital and is enthusiastically received. I3-The Junior Dance. The affair of the season. Followed by many masculine dinner guests who remain for the evening. I9-The Senior Plays: l'lamlet,s Bridesu and Pygmalion and Galateaf' Dinner for the casteu later. 23- Maggie pilfers Miss King's machine. 24-Miss King, with the aid of Mlle., suc- ceeds in recovering it. l75 January 30 -ff-2 ' sue ' ....,, Em ,' RTE i ' .if 7d HLONE ' . ff. I 'r fl uf 'f' y.. J . . .-If flfxi ,f!: . 'f za f I 'I' so .fa i 772' lv X I X I Q February 27. T' if v -Anal 5ol1l1e3 ZXILLCK Lf 4 'home D' I' X f i it ' T H E 1 9 I 0 F O R E S T E R A. M. 4:30 5:00 5:01 5:30- 6:00 6:15 6:30 6:42 6:51 6:55 7:00 7:03 7:08 7:15 7:30 7:45 8:10 9:00 9:29 9:30 10:4-5 12:15 From Morning 'Till Night. - Frances Dugan makes tea to sustain her in her morning studies. - Sylvia begins to arrange her puffs. - Mademoiselle dreams that she has forgotten to tell Miss Weirick how she solved the latest school mystery, and awakes, greatly distressed. Elizabeth creeps down from Blos- som's room. -Water pitchers and ink-wells begin to thaw. - lrene and Elizabeth begin talking. - Cheerful sounds resound through building. - Happy decides not to be blue for another day. -Norma directs one of Helen's No. 10s at her head. - Maids clatter down-stairs. -Advance guard arrives in the dining- l'O0IIl. -Stragglers begin to wander in. - 1.,ucile and Angie come to breakfast. - Miss l-lughes, bell. Joyful tidings? - Howling mob in stationtry room. Why, Miss King, I'm next! - Dust is carefully brushed under the rugs. - Everyone takes a fresh look at her books. - Let us begin by singing No. 527.7 - Miss Darrow: How often do I have to say that four minutes is enough to get quiet? - Miss Ferguson pins some little jokes and cartoons on the bulletin board. - Miss Mooers and Nila have a little tete-H-1916. - i'Miss Hughes, may I please be ex- cused from walking today? 176 12:30- 12:45 1:00 1-15 1:30 3:00 3:10- 5 5 15 30 6:00 6:45 7:00 7.15 7 8 9 I0 10 11 I2 I2 30 15 30 00 13 43 '01 30 Great throngs on the porch clamoring for admittance, only to hear, No, girls, just run seven times more around the campus, and then weill see what time it is. Clamoring throng admitted for lunch- eon. noon mail. E. Rowan Rush for the heard to say, Oh, I'm so mad! I only got five. Virgil class assembles in the Study Hall. Work again. - 1-larriette and Isabelle fight to lead the gym class. Lucile starts for her afternoon walk. Queer noises. Investigation proves that they are caused by the Glee Club practice. Window shades carefully lowe ed and lights turned on. Rites of van- ity take place. Return to roast-beef and pottoes. Seniors joyfully repair to the Aud- itorium. The dailies and a few other letters are dsturbed in the mail-boxes. Mildred Pam and the little ones plan a spread for study-hour. Julie, Marion, Marietta and others sit down to answer their dailies Miss Sizer hunts up her cherubs and hustles them back to their rooms. Kimono procession in the laalls. Lights out. Marion ties a rope across the hall for Walker.', Frances snuffs out her candle and retires. Ditto the Forester Board. Innocent, innocent sleep. ,......,,.....--.................W...,,1,.....,..w.v, -M--... WNY -WA - J- -- --A--- Lf- f' 1 --- -W' --:L-1' Q 3 l 3 .li ., . I l ' A I 1 'am' I ,C 11 .Qq:1 ':1f3-' , .. L X ,',tL:,xx5-...f,'5Q g - -x ' 51.-.Jn v - J ' . l - f.:f..u:f: ' . . 'I-visa ' 1 j V 1' fb- v 1 .- ' ' A---,qfmskigfiyx gggei- 41 f 1 1 . 'l?'f9i8:PFs'A- f 1f-f5 'fPf'M- ,jrw-., X 'rfiL'i!i2:.Yqi --'gfwwv A I H.,-.L -,vu - 'L,4 '.-V.:-TQ 'f7': 'i: if-'rg g k, 3-'C .f4f ' lv.: . 1 .- . ,,L....,,- V 1 .-'.w Q , , g........4.,.,,,,..-...-f,-..x..-mx.,,.1vuy-...... nmd.-.Anwar w....u.......f..m..:maa.:awL I77 THE 1910 FORESTER Picked Up in the Passing. I was at the foot of my class last week. How was that? Well, it wasn't my fault. Marjorie Dawson was in the infirmaryf' Lucile and George went to the park, They strolled along the strand, They sat upon a wooden bench, He gently held her .... parasol. Billy, -fin the Amusement Hall, l donlt see how all you girls can lead. I'rr so used to following the men! Dorothy S.- I can write about anything. Miss MacClintock- Then please right-about-face. Miss Hughes- I have lost Teddy. Miss Knapp- Why don't you advertise? Miss Hughes- What's the use? I-le can't read! Julie had a little lamb, As Mary had of yoreg But Julie always passed her plate And had a little more. I wish I could wear a ribbon around my hair, with the bow over my ear. Why on earth can't you? Well, you see, we're not allowed to have beaux on the side here. Ri- Doesn't Miss ........ wear her clothes poorly? l-lappy-i'Yes, she always looks as though she said, 'Well, clothes, l'm going down town. If you want to go along, hang on'. Yes, Mildred, you've beauty, we know it, For you're ever so ready to show it, But our critical eyes Make us sometimes surmise That Nature did never bestow it. fAdapted.j I78 T H E I 9 I 0 F 0 R E S T E R 7 Miss Hurst-- Just who is the absent girl in the vacant chair I see before me? Miss Hughes fin Bible Historyj- Why do you suppose people have stopped having Hat roofs like that of the Temple in Jerusalem? Margaret W.- Was it because they needed attics? A hair-lip is a misfortune, A club-foot is a deformity, But a psyche is a woman's own fault. Jn Miss Weirick- Who will give me an example of the uses of toward and dozen Helen A.- I dozen know how I toward my dressf' Nila-fover the phonej: ML Calvert? I want some violets. About how many will there be in a hundred Y' Mildred l-l.-'il sang in the Chapel once.', Ethel M.- That's about all most people would stand forf' There was a girl in our school, And this girl's name was Wise. One night she had a caller, Who wasn't quite her size: And when he found an Heasy-mark, This crafty Mr. I-laigh, Told Angie l'lere! just squeeze it! What, a lemon? No, an egg! l l PERVERTED PROVERBS A rolling stone gathers no moss, but a rolling pail at l0:l5 gathers the faculty. as as as Uneasy lies the head that wears the wire rat. as as as Marion says: A hair in the head is worth two in a switch. as as -is Don't cry over spilt milk! One less milk-toast luncheon-maybe. as as as All things are in common among friends-at Senior House, at least. as as as Beggars may not be choosers, but are we begging for hash? as as as As ye sew, so shall ye rip! I79 Efvye-if '- 'xml-pf: 'xr 1 T H E 1 9 1 0 F o R E s T E R 5.Jme.1- - ,., - ,'L2Si..T. cialis' iris' V' v L... . A sewing machine Miss King once had Which stood out in the hall. One afternoon when she came home 1 It wasn't there at all. lVliss Pickett then came to her aid: They searched with might and main. At last, 'twas found in lVlaggie's room. And hustlecl home again. HOW TO BE BEAUTIFUL. Q.-For many months I have been attempting to grow eye-brows. My hair tonic proves of little avail. What do you suggest? M. l-looton A.-Donit roller-skate on your eye-brows. 64 96 55 Q.-ls there any means by which I can become slender and willowy? Blossom Bloss A.-Avoid all fattening foods such as Heaven, especially in Silent Hour. A4 95 96 Q.-Can ycu tell me hcw to increase my stature? l would like to attain a queenly height. Marjorie Blackman A.-Aspire to higher things. Try College studies. 56 56 56 Q.-What is the key-note to an interesting pallor? Dorothy M. A.- B natural. THE SEVEN WONDERS OF THE WORLD l. lVlarjorie's Dawson's coiffure. 2. Happy l-leine's conversational powers. 3. 'That laugh of Ellen's. 4. Miss Sizefs Polar Bear Story. 5. lVlaggie's disposition. 6. The Chorus Girl, as sung by Helen. 7. Helen Aiken's grammar. I80 , ,.N- . F.-- THE 1910 FORESTER DON'TS. Here's a warning for the very thoughtless few! Read it well and see if it refers to you. For at Ferry Hall we need Girls of culture and good breed So take notice of the things you shouldn't do. Donlt be peevish in the morning when you rise, Don't appear at breakfast late with sleepy eyes, Don't have bed room slippers on, Don't look bored and don't you yawn, And the food before you do not criticize. Don't buy candy in the middle of the week, Don't be noisy when you're walking on the street. When you pass a man clon't stare, Don't you whistle, don't you swear, Don't you swing your arms, and clon't you scuff you Don't forget to sweep the floor beneath the bed, Do not let your blankets hang below the spread. Don't leave shrimps around in cans. Don't you go to lVlonahan's, And don't say things you know should not be said. Don't do anything the Fac. would think a crime, Don't quit struggling if you want to higher climbg Don't be loud and don't be rash, Don't you grumble at the hashg 5 Don't forget to be a lady all the time. ' ,x 4 ' 15' It X f- . Y a s si? Q NX ISI eet l82 ESI' '32 Qin Qilnmunh EI. ifwnutorff, for tm prars Sfffliff 9-Iasrrr uf 'Bakr jfurrst RCHDPIIIQ this-r pagrs arf rrsprftfutig Druicatrb by tin' Eiuniur Glass uf 1910. I8-4 pw af.. F' FACULTY. WILLIAM MATHER LEWIS, 111 ll li, ffl .N H Head Master Graduated from Lake Forest College l900. Received degree of M. A. from Illinois College l902. Student Emerson College of Oratory l9Ol. Instructor in English and Oratory Illinois College l9Ol-IQO3. Principal Whipple Academy i902-l903. Instructor in Oratcry and Debate Lake Forest College IQO3-l906. Principal . Lake Forest Academy i906 EDMUND RENDTORFF, 5 4' Senior Master Science Graduated from University of Wisconsin l895. Re- ceived degrees of B. S., E. E., M. S. from University of Wisconsin ISQ6. Post Graduate Northwestern University l898. Instructor of Science Iowa City High School l896- l897. Assistant in Physics in University of Nebraska i898-l899. Master Lake Forest Academy l899-. CLARENCE B. HERSCHBERGER, :K A '11 Mathematics Director of Athletics Graduated from University of Chicago l898. Received degree of A. B. from University of Chicago l898. In- structor in Princeton-Yale Preparatory School l898-1902. Instructor in Physics and Matlmematics, and director of Atl- letics Lake Forest College l902-l905. Master Lake Forest Academy IQOSA. 1 GEORGE ARCHER FERGUSON, .XT A. 41 B K Classics Graduated from Wabash College ISQS. Received degree of A. B. from Wabash College l899. Fellow in English Wabash College l898-l899. Instructor of Latin and Greek Shortridge High School, Indianapolis l899-l906. Student Cornell University l90l. Master Lake Forest Academy l906-. JOHN PAUL BAST Manual Training Graduated from Lake High School l900. Student Chicago Manual Training School 1901-I902. Instructor in Manual Training Kenilworth Rugby School and Glencoe Grammar School IQO3-l904'. Engaged in Chicago Vaca- tion School Work, Summers of 1901-IQO6. Student Lake Forest College l907-. Master Lake Forest Acad- emy l904-. 185 THE 1910 FORESTER GUY MORTIMER KNOX Modern Languages Graduated from Syracuse University 1907. Received degree of A. B. from Syracuse 1907. Student Wesleyan University 1903-1904. Master Lake Forest Academy 1907-. ERNEST PALMER. Debate-Commercial Law Graduated from Lake Forest College 1907. Received degree of A. B. and M. A. from Lake Forest College 1907. Student Northwestern Law School 1907-. EDWARD OLIN HARNED Lower First Form Graduated from Syracuse University 1908. Received degree of Ph. B. Syracuse 1908. Master Lake Forest Academy 1908-. MARSHALL C. CROUCH English Graduated from Cornell College 1902. Received degree of A. B. Cornell College 1902. Instructor Keokuk High School Keokuk, Iowa, l902. Principal of High School at Columbus Junction Iowa 1902-1903. Superintendent of Schools, Columbus Junction 1903-1906. Lecture Work 1906-1909. Lake Forest Academy 1909-. N GUSTAV BIRN Student of Herr Ladwig Deppe, six years, in Piano. Studied violin with member of the Royal Orchestra in Berlin. Instructor in Music Lake Forest Academy 1895-. T H E 1 9 1 0 F o R E s T E R 2-Q The Alumni Association. The Alumni Association has been unusually active during the past few months and is doing much for a GREATER ACADEMY. Last June at the Annual dinner held in East House the following oflicers were elected and at once took active hold:- Cornelius Trowbridge President Arthur Bissell . Vice-President Bernard Forman Secretary W. M. Lewis ...... Treasurer These officers started a movement early in the winter for a greater rally in Chicago which was held May 4th at the Union League Club. In preparation for the rally bi-weekly lunches were held at the Tip Top Inn, and these were attended by from 6 to I5 old boys each time. During the next few months a complete Alumni list giving the names of all students who have ever received an L. F. diploma will be issued. The Alumni were called upon in February to mourn the death of a beloved friend, Charles Alden Smith, who was principal here from l890 to I897. Among the individual Alumni who are bringing glory to the Academy this year: John V. Farwell, merchant, who was prominently mentioned for Secretary of the Interior in Taft's Cabinet. Charles S. Holt, Lawyer, President for the second time of the Presbyterian Brother- hood of America. Charles Wacker, merchant, leader in the Philanthropic work in Chicago. l '3lis 4 .NW 'P--916 'f1gr. qgm . ng 1-N Fgpxn fa 14 'gggaeieyeeg i 17, ' l,....,,ll '91-L . N fl. -.. 5 5 187 TI-IE l9I0 FORESTER A555595 Senior Editorial It is hard, truly hard to feel that at last prep school days are over and that we are going out into the broader and more humilating sort of life, for after all prep school is the place where our characters are formed and where we hrst learn to enjoy existence. No matter how harsh and exacting our future may be, nevertheless, let us take things cheerfully and optimistically. The keynote of success is persistence and sportsmanship. We leave behind us associations and friendships that will be cherished all our lives but as we make our way forward in the moving current of life we shall find new ones perhaps as dear to us as those we left behind. Through each separate encounter, however, may we all prove ourselves genuine gentlemen. This alone remains to be said. There will be no blank marks against us in the book of justice if we follow out to the letter the code of morals and sportmanship taught us at I... F. A. 1 ' . I88 THE 19:0 roREsTER 45- T. Hoyne Wells, the class president was born in Chicago on Arpil 2, l890. Hoyne's chief occupation is killing rain or shine, weather doesn't make any difference to hifn. Before coming here in l907, he ufussedu at University High and Chicago Latin school and then found out L. F. A. was the best place on earth. Vice-President of the Jun- ior class: Second football team '07-'08. Captain 'OSL Hockey 'O7g Dramatics, ,OS-'09: Track '08-'09g De- bate 'OSQ Manager Basket Ball ,093 Forester Board 'OS' 'iTommy expects to take up Engineering at Princeton. Alex. L. Moll, the worthy secretary and treasurer of the Senior class was born in Norwalk, Wis. on Nov. l9, ISSS. Before deciding to come here in '06 he attended La Crosse H. S. Dramatics 'O7g Basket Ball '09g Manager Base Ball 'O9g Second Basket Ball Team '08g Cctv intends to enter Wisconsin. Selden Brown was born in Minneapolis, Ninn., on Nov. 7, l890. Sabo attended East H. S. Minneapolis and as soon as he heard of Ferry Hall started for Lake Forest. Second Football team '07. Dramatics '09g Spectator Staff '09, uSabo intends entering Leland Stanford University. Halstead Carpenter was born in Monticello. Iowa, cn Feb. Zl, l89l. Before attending the Academy in I907 Carp went to Monticello H. S. Carpenter is one of the best students in school. He nct only excels in his studies however, but is a good debater. Football '07-'08: De- bate Team '08-'09: Base Ball '08, Capt. '09g l-le expects to enter the University of Chicago. l89 VSV '-,Saw r f 'EX f5f.' T H E I 9 I 0 F 0 R E S T E R Carl Wood Clark was born in Vermont, Illinois, on Nov. 2, l890. Carl attended Vermont H. S. before com- ing to L. F. A., in l907. Captain Second Basket Ball Team '09. He will enter Leland Stanford University. Richard Lansing Conolly was born in Waukegan, Illinois i Va on April 26, l892. Dick attended Waukegan H. S and then decided to follow his brother to L.. F. A.. He has attended school now and then since l906. Dramatics 09 Undecided i Carroll Stephen Crosby was born in Fond du Lac, Wis., on Oct. IO, l889. He attended Evanston Academy and Evanston H. S. until he thought Lake Forest was the best place for Dat Loving Rag. Red started in L. F. A. in I906. Football '07-'O8g Hockey '07g Debate '08- '09g Dramatics '08-'09g President Junior Class. Forester Board '08g Second Football Team ,06. Red intends to take up Engineering at Pennsylvania. james Howard Cunningham was dropped by the stork in Yvashington, lowa on April 3, I89I. Before coming to Lake Forest in '08, Aub attended Washington H. S Second Football Team 'OSQ Basket Ball '09g Debate '09' Spectator Staff '09. Howard Perry Gates was born in La Crosse, Wis. on April Zl, l892. He attended La Crosse H. S. before entering L. F. A. in l908. He intends to go to Wisconsin. 190 T H E 1 9 1 0 F o R E s T E R J . Karl George Gluek was born in Minneapolis on an 8 -t l890. He attended Shattuck Military Academy and East .ig J ' r 1.- . James L. P. Goodson was born in Jacksonville, Texas on April IZ, l887. Before coming to Lake Forest in l908, he attended Alexander Collegiate Institute. Oratory 08g Debate '09: Intends going to Williams. .1 Ms-V-sv- , :rf '- 'fR:i,.- t 5 get .g S'-5::31f N X ' ' g gt I '. 'Q Q '-x- Burton H. Hawkins was born in New X ork City N Y 5 g i on Nov. 25, I890. U 'arryn is one of the best students in ' school and stands high in his classes He xx ent to Waukegan H. S. before coming here in I907 Undecided Hugh -Ierone Hotchkin was born in Mont Rose, South Dakota on Nov. 23, ISS5. He attended Lake High School, Chicago, before coming to l... F. A. in l906. Foot Ball '06, Capt. '07-'OSQ Track '06g Basket Ball Capt. '06- '07g Debate '09. Winner of Headmaster's cup ,065 Spec- tator Staff '08. Undecided. University. l9I if High School before finding out that a certain young lady attended Ferry Hall and then he thought L F A xx as only place outside of Minneapolis Football 08 He ex pects to take up Forestry at Minnesota Julian Riette Jack was born in Mr Carroll Ill on April 27, ISS9. Ajax, went to Los Angeles H S before he decided to come to a good school Second Basket Ball Team ,071 Second Foot Ball Team O7 08 Editor Fores ter Board ,08Q Spectator Staff 09 Debate O9 Basket Ball '09. He intends taking up Engineering at Stanford T H e 1 9 I 0 F o R E s T E R Alfred C. Kolls was born in Ackley, Iowa, on May 7, l89l. Before coming to Lake Forest Academy in 1907 he attended La Crosse H. S. Dramatics '07. AV, ex- pects to go to Wisconsin. Robert Carson McCoy was born in Washington, D. C. on July 30, l89O. lVlac's only dissipation is a Cool, sweet smoke after each meal. He attended Lawrence Aca- demy before coming to Lake Forest in I905. Mac is the only Senior who has served his full time. Basket Ball '07- '08, Captain '09. He intends entering Minnesota. Ducan M. Rowles was born in La Crosse, Wis., on April 4, l89I. He attended La Crosse H. S., for one year before coming to Lake Forest Academy in I906. Dramatics '08- '09g Spectator Staff '09, Orchestra '06-'07. Dune ex- pects to go to Wisconsin. Roy Forrester Sherman was dropped with a IZ lb. shot by the stork in Sioux Falls, South Dakota July 3, IBS9. Before coming to Lake Forest in I907 Rough attended Morgan Park Academy. His special forte is basket ball where he can show most of them. Basket Ball '08-'09, Track '08-'093 Captain Foot Ball 'OSQ Base Ball '08. He intends entering Princeton. C. Arthur Lynch was born in Chicago,Illino's, on May 20, l889. Mike attended Michigan City H. S. before deciding to cast his lot with Lake Forest Academy in l907. Track '08, Manager ,093 Foot Ball Manager '08, Spectator Staff '08-'09, Captain Second Foot Ball Team '07: Captain Second Basket Ball Team '07: Secretary of Athletic Board of Control '07-'09. Intends to take Journa- lism at Wisconsin. I92 lI9 q'U!9H Aalsugl splomiag WON -'HBH 0PI9llS 'CIHVOH HELLSHHOH 'X f-fxipwm-fxqw-'ff Win -V T H E I 9 I 0 F O R E S T E R Junior Class of l9l0. We the Junior Class wish to express our regret at the leaving of the seniors. As autocrats of the academy they have conducted themselves with kindness and judgment. We wish them much happiness and success in all they undertake. Upon us now falls the responsibility they have so ably carried and our only wish is that the tribute at our leaving may be as kindly intended as is this. Hubert North President Samuel Sheldon Vice-President Robert Tinsley . Secretary Whitney James Treasurer CLASS ROLL Carlisle l-leimbach Frederick Rahr Carl Heimbroclt James Reynolds Robin Hoffman Harold Samuel Eugene Ludlow Dwight Smith Alexander McClintock i R nr? tg V 7 'Y ax 'ja gi Q if 'V I VZ' 'JQQJQ m . 4 M6539 L Y I afagafss v J9 '07 1 1? lx M t K l jim i , lla All mir I94 lil! -'S um.ug0H '-'0PI9llS ISIIUJUS '-l9 'I'U!3H lpoxqmga-:H s:-mmf Molpn'-I sploulmg WON .lqng Aalaugl 'SSV'lD HOINHI' Hubert L. North, Robert Marsh Watkins. Hamilton Patton, T, Hoyne YYelIs. W er Howard Nlorris Yvinner of Haven YVinner of Arthur Summerville YYinner Boyle Pfize- l'rize. Medal. Reid Medal. Forty-sixth Commencement PROGRAM Saturday, .lune I3-Alumni Day Friday, June l-4-Baccalaureate Sunday l0:30 A. M.-Baccalaureate Service . . . Sermon by Dr. S. Nollen 5 P. M.-Union Vesper Service . . Sermon by Rev. W. H. W. Boyle Monday, hlune l5-Commencement Day lZ:3O P. M. -Luncheon in the Gymnasium 2 P. M.-Commencement Exercises 4 P. M. -l-lead Masters Reception. COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES Music ...... Herr Gustav Birn Prayer . . .... Dr. W. l-l. W. Boyle l-lymn, America Address . The Mission of the Preparatory School . Eugene Hoyne de Bronkart Class President Address The History of Four Years . Robert Marsh Watkins, Valedictorian Solo ......... Leon W. Cooley, 'I0 Address-College or University? Oration. A Nation's Awakening . Song . ..... . Awarding of Prizes Address to the Senior Class ..... Awarding of Diplomas Hymn, O're the Harvest Reaped or Benediction ...... l96 Robert Donaldson Gordon . Wai'ren Ellis Faxon Academy Quartette . The Head Master Lost Rev. A. G. Richards . , ' 1-1 ax I I97 T H E 1 9 1 0 F o R E s T E R 'x-1 -Vo rr mf- rf iii-1'Sn:'Ef--flyi 'H . .far , en, Ruhr Ferguson Cunningham Rowles B Samuel Coonley Lynch Jack Spectator Staff. C. A. Lynch, '09 l-loward Cunningham, '09 Alfred C. Kolls, '09 Duncan lVl. Rowles, '09 Selden Brown, ,09 l-larolcl N. Samuels, 'IO Frecl W. Rahr, 'IO Alfred Coonley, 'IZ This year the Spectator changing from the monthly magazine o to a bi-weekly newspaper was published with great success. 198 r0wn Kolls Managing Editor News Editor East Reporter Durand Reporter Remsen Reporter Town Reporter . Illustrator Exchange f preceding years Ngf jg it T H E 1 9 I 0 F o R E s T E R DEBATE TEAMS. Hotchkin Jack Goodson Cunningham Carpente Crosby lnter-House Debate. The Inter-House Debate took place on the evening of January third at Reid Hall for the purpose of picking the Academy Team, the Inter-Society Debate being abolished. Question:-Resolved: That all towns over 20,000 people in population in the States of Illinois and Wisconsin should adopt a commission form a government, based on the Des Moines plan. Remsen house was represented by Hotchkin, Goodson, Carpenter, and Jack: Durand by I-loobler, Crosby and Savage and East by Cunningham. The following men were chosen for the team: Hotchkin, Goodson, Jack, Carpenter, Crosby and Cunningham. The cup went to Remsen House having the most men picked for the Academy Team. The l-louse winning three times, keeps the cup. The judges were Mr. Crozier, Prof. Wright and Prof. Betten. Mr. Lewis pre- sided. as as an INTER-ACADEMIC DEBATE In the third annual Inter Academic Debate the subject was the same as that of the preliminary Inter House Debate. The schools represented were Wisconsin Academy, Evanston Academy and Lake Forest Academy. Although the honors went to Evan- ston, our fellows deserve much credit for their good showing and earnest work under the able coaching of Mr. Palmer. I99 T H E I 9 I 0 F O R E S T E R Vaudeville. The Academy Vaudeville Troop made its first appearance in the gym on December l2th '08 for the benefit of the Athletic Association. Most of the acts were original and were well produced. The Half-Backf' On the evening of March 6th i909 the Academy Dramatic Club presented The Half-Backf' The play was a great success and the large crowd in attendance expressed their appreciation by hearty applause. The success was due to lVlr. Lewis's faithful coaching assisted by Mr. Knox and Mr. l-larned. The principals all did remarkably well, those deserving special mention are Cnrassie, Crosby, Wells, Reynolds and Brown. Larrabe and Coonley were real beauties and played their parts well. CAST Sandy Smith, The Half-back .... George Curassie Kennith Sumner, Mgr. Kingston Foot-ball Team . Selden Brown Philip Krop, Manager of Queenstown Foot-ball Team . l-loyne Wells J. Booth Mac Ready-Tragedian . . . James Reynolds Bill Short, A quick changer . . . Weldon Larrabee Mable Sumner, a fair co-ed Dick Hart . Josiah Krop, agriculturist joe Fleetwood Babe Van Twiller Arthur Medrow Prof. Dryden Karl Woodstone Albert Coonley Richard Grant Carl l-leimbrodt l-lubert North Carlisle l-leimback Samuel Sheldon Duncan Rowles C-alt Brookfield James Russell . . . . . . Ralph Haynes Percy Gordon Pirates Bold-Merle Savage and chorus-Eggert, Wilbur Larrabee, Fitz-Hugh, Bailey, Bridgman and Van Gorder. Cakewalkers-Savage, Eggert, Wilbur Larrabee and Grassie 200 ixaqunag SQQBJJB1 'M 131505 Aalgug uaiig .xopxog UBA vnu wa PI395100-'H unmaippg WON 1p01qu1gaH UUPIQ'-IS xwqwlau SauAHH lung QQBABS salmog UMOJH aaquuej 3!5SE.lD Aaluuog AQSOAD splouAaH 'HITID DLLVWVHCI T H E I 9 ' 0 F O R E 5 T E R Oratorlcals. In the Inter-Academic Oratorical Contest held in Reid Hall we were represented by Faxon. It was our privilege at that time to entertain the other contestants and we believe they enjoyed themselves. The honors went to Elgin with Evanston in second place. ae ar as The Academy was represented in the University of Chicago oratorical contest by James L. P. Goodson. Although he did not win the contest he qualified for the linals. X 1 :QQ MQ. 4 ' x IW l I hr ,,.:?!x,X ,' X 'Sli S li I f fI52f3f'2e l 9 'iiajigr Q-Qvfi'-g.,1' f .1'-Ml,-' ffl-Sgfijzt ' -1--Y .P Q-g'1fl1x'f5 5 - 0 5. O J Q Q X J 202 UWXTMETU Carpenter Hotchkin McCnry Glueck Lynch Mgr. Nfonier North Coach H erschherger Miller Bulman ngersoll Sherman aynes Capt. H HI1 m nke B shy rn C Ludlow THE 1910 FORESTER-if i Champions of the Middle West, such is the title gained by the football team during the l908 season. The sched- ule covered a period of two months and included the best teams available. The support accorded the team during the past season both by the student body and the townspeople was without a doubt the best ever displayed in Lake Forest. The attendance at all the games was remarkably good but the final home game, that with St. .lohn's Military Academy, broke all records. More than 800 people witnessed that struggle. The members of the team set a record for training that will go down in the annals of the school history as par ex- cellence. From the beginning of practice which started ten days before school opened until the last game was played not one member broke a training rule. To Mr. l-lerschberger a goodly share of praise is due for making the championship possible. His untiring efforts for a good team were crowned with success. We should like to go into detail about each game on the schedule but space forbids: let it suffice to say that the schedule was so arranged as to lead up to a big final game and it worked out well. The St. ,lohn's game was by far the best game ever witnessed on the Academy field and to have the victory so distinctly ours makes it so much better. The record set by the team will be one long to be remem- bered, and will be an incentive for coming teams to strive to equal it. 205 ,qw Capt. Hay ff c'-x'- 'ya-rv-rs fxrp ' - '-1 ,anim 51 L -'-iii, THE 1910 FORESTER Oct. 3-Lake Oct. I 7 Oct. Z4 Oct. 31 Nov. 4 Nov. 7 Nov. I4 -Lake -Lake -Lake -Lake -Lake -Lake Forest Forest Forest Forest ..... Forest Forest ..... Forest The Schedule. Lane TechnicaI......... East Division fMiIwaukeeJ . 27 I6 Evanston High ........... . . . . 23 Chicago Veterinary College . . . . . I I2 Troop A Fort Sheridan . . . . . . 97 Northwestern Academy . . . . . . . . 23 St. Johns Military Academy . In a post season game on Nov. ZI, l908 the team was defeated at Minneapolis while seeking new Titles by the Shattuck Military School of Faribault Minn. by a score of 29 to 6. LINE UP Carpenter , . . Center Butman Left Guard North Left Tackle Monier . Left End Haynes fCapt.J Right Guard Cluek . . . . Right Tackle Sherman Right End Crosby Quarter Back Mccary-Miller Left HaIf Hotchkin Full Back Bakeman ..... Right Half in ,,, Q . 5 I L 206 I N DeBronkart Percival. TRACK. Following the brilliant showing of our indoor relay teams came the most remarkable track season, both in schedule and performances, that the Academy has ever had. Everything was auspicious. Splendid weather, a hard working, conscientious, reliable captain, men of muscle and grit, and the enthusiasm of the school back of it all, was a combination which could spell any victory. The schedule was one of the hardest ever attempted by a prep school. ln point of performances the team clipped six of the school records, hung up eleven inter-scholastic records and shattered one world's inter-scholastic mark. The school records that were cut, were: the Shot, Hammer, Discus, Mile, l-lalf-mile and Quarter. At the lnter- scholastic meets new marks were made in the following events: Lake Forest-Shot, Hammer, Discus and Half-mile: Michigan-Half-mile and Discus: Northwestern-Half-mileg Chicago 7. -Half-mile and Discus. The Half-mile run at the University of Chicago lnter-scholastic being the new world's record in that event, the time made was l:59-2f5. The team while not as well balanced as it might have been in the larger meets, showed better balance in the smaller contests and brought out quite a number of men who won the monogram. A team composed of DeBronkart, Alderman, Percival, Miller, backed up by such men as Sherman, Rahr, Turner, Smith, Bishop, Wells, Barker and l-laynes made a splendid showing. Outside of the record-breaking trio, Alderman, Per- cival and Miller, Captain DeBronkart did stellar work in his pet event, the Half-mile. l-le pulled into third place at Michigan and Chicago, the time respectively being 2:03 and 2:02. We are all proud of his per- formances because his four year stay with us makes him a home product. We are look- ing to Captain Sherman as leader of those who are left and the new material to make the best effort they can to live up the pace of the cinder path artists of l908. Alderman. 207 TRACK. The following is the outdoor track calendar with achievements, and new records. April l8-Staggs Relay Tryouts: Team Flewellyn, de Bronkart, Miller, Percival. April 25-Pennsylvania Relay Carnival: Team. Percival, Miller Haynes, cle Bronkart, Fifth place, Time, 3:3l. Alderman third place in Discus ll8'9. May I6-Lake Forest Inter-Scholastic: Lake Forest 481.5 Lewis l. I4, Armour 91,i5,. New records by A. l-lamuer l59'l. Shot 45 ft. in, Discus l42 ft. 3 in. l-lalf-mile 2:09, Quarter 55 seconds and Relay l:42 fde Bronkart, Cooley, Lynch, Miller.j lVlay Z2 and 23-Michigan lnter-Scholastic: Detroit Central 3515, D. U. S. 305, L. F. A. 27, New Records by L. F. A. Discus II9 ft., l-lalf-mile I:59Eg also tying worlds mark. May 30-Northwestern lnter-scholastic: D. U. S. 371.f,. Oak Park 25. L. F. A. I4. New Record by L. F. A. half-mile 2:30. June 5-Inter-Academic Meet. June I8-Chicago lnter-Scholastic: L. F. A. 25, Oklahoma Prep. l5, Oak Park ll. New Records by L. F. A. Discus l25 ft. 7 in. Half-mile P59325 fNew World's recordsj 'f'E3fj Q75 ral? 208 PIV .I3 UULU QJUAHH IS 5 UBlUJ0l ldng Jxnxquoqlag IEW JO lrmloxad .L .ISUJH qoukl Jaxpnd :sag ll !lUS QDBOD :qua M sua Aaloog we JI-I DIDVHJ. VELL 'w T H E I 9 I 0 F 0 R E S T E R I es, .. 'K L- ' 31,5 , 1 , I T This years basketball team was the best turned out since the sport started here three years ago. Wvhile it was not a championship team it deserves considerable credit for its consistent playing and hard work. More material came out this year than ever before and the result was a good second team which showed its school spirit by regularly practicing with the first team, without any hope of reward. R. A. Scott deserves a great deal of credit for the interest he took in the men personally and the time he devoted to coaching the fellows. Capt. McCoy also deserves mention for his fine work at forward. McCoy has played three years for the orange and black. Wells should be congratulated in getting such a good schedule. GAMES I ' Lake Forest Academy . . . . . 25 Deerfield ......... . . . 23 U N U . . . 66 Englewood H. S. . . . . . . I3 N U H . . 49 Englewood H. S. . . . . . I8 .. 29 Crane H. S. ......... ... I3 . . I5 Northwestern Freshmen . . . . . 35 . . 35 Northwestern Academy . . . . . . 23 . . 42 Joliet T. H. E.. ........ . . . 22 . . 42 Northwestern M. A. .... . . . 20 . . 26 Northwestern Academy . . . . . . Z9 . . Zl Spalding Ms. of Peoria . . . . . . 28 . . I6 Chicago Freshmen ......... . . . 20 . . 40 Armour Scientific Academy ...... 22 . . 24 Deerfield Fl. H. S. ......... .. . 27 H H .... ZI Culver M. A. Total .... . . . 45I Opponents . . . . . . 3I4 ZIO umuaaqg WWI' :JW Jdng AOD IJOOS IIOEOD l.uuq3uguunD IIOW 'TIVH .LEDISVH T H E ' 9 ' 0 F O R E 5 T E R Mnqwmilz in Y I K 1 BASEBALL I Handicapped by the loss of 'gixxgh practically the entire team of the X f s'-'-If year before, lcoupleddw-ith unsatis- ' ' , 'gif f ,f- , actory weat er con itlons, in a iW g I large measure cost us most of the A ' g , baseball games of last season. Not f ' K , X f' , 1,-f until the latter part of the season did the .X , M N' N team show much form. The final game I , I 1 with Evanston Academy to a great extent li-i elvened up .for adgreat' mimi losses wherg . ' 'V' t e team trimme its nva s y a score o ' ' N I 5 to 4 in an extra-inning game. 5 - X, t V, Captain Taylor and Carpenter did the H most effective work of the season. This :QQ -f year with live of last year's team as a X' 1 ' I nucleus and with some excellent material ' Xt 'W A among the new men we felt safe in predict- X-, . ing a successful season. The schedule is I 9' xl hard and well arranged, but with such wwwfggf ' fit- ' good examples as setiby the football and xwtwf- cf- I ,ii M basketball teams during the past season tu. yu. we predict that the baseball team will not SQ -- Pi be found wanting at the close of the sea- ' WN- son in June. TEAM gaylor fCaptD . . . . Cgatcllqer arpenter . . . itc er Monier . First Base-Right Field Jack . . Second Base Caldwell . Short Stop Sherman . . Third Base Vail . First Base-Right Field Miller . First Base-Left Field Cooley . Left Field Rahr . . Center Field Matson . . Right Field Lake Forest Academy . . . . . GAMES l Armour ........... .,...... l 7 7 Wendell Phillips, fhve innings, . . . I0 4 Morgan Park ................ I4 8 University High .............. 7 7 Northwestern Academy, U0 inningsj 8 8 Armour .................... I2 0 Chicago University Freshmen . . . . 5 l Morgan Park ........... . . 5 0 Racine ............... , . 8 5 Northwestern Academy . . . . . 4 212 T H E 1 9 1 0 F o R E s T E R X E K Monogram Wearers in School FOOTBALL '5Crosby 'Ml-lotchkin Carpenter Sherman Gluelc Butman AcNorth BASEBALL Carpenter Jack Sherman Caldwell Rahr TRACK Rahr Sherman Smith Wells Lynch BASKETBALL McCoy l-lotchkin Sherman Cunningham Jack HOCKEY Crosby Wells xln continuation of a previously acloptecl plan the Athletic Board gives a man who has played on the football team two years a star on the sleeve of his sweater three years two ancl so on. 2l3f X TH E I9 1 0 FORESTER .fx X-S i ,. KQQT K, up ' 1 AA f X ' - ' I navy' 'ifI 7. Q f r-cf Pl X fe -- f-ff llill' fgffu X Q . Wa,f.,rfip,,2,r za .. ,ya - . H Y ?LG,svgjfr,!'75ff.f,.Jffff Ili 'Y 'f ff ff H is . . , X ' fl 1. A 1' is Igxiif- ., 9 A . c i, N' t J X xx g......f A 5 y X' ' - 3 -'LT I-Milli.. :D J .J - . A Q LHB QU LS WORLD'S INTER-SCHOLASTIC RECORDS. Time, Height or Event Holder Distance 880 Yard Run .......... Percival ............. I:592fg seconds l20 Yard High Hurdles. . .Schnur ................ . . H535 seconds SCHOOL RECORDS 20 Yard Dash findoorf .... Schnur ................ . . :O2155 seconds Cooper .... 40 Yard Dash findoorl . . Scott ,...... . . :04Jfgg seconds Zimmerman . . 60 Yard Dash findoorj .... Schnur .... . . :06?rg seconds l00 Yard Dash ......... Cooper .. .... :IO seconds 220 Yard Dash ......... Scott ...... .. :ZZQL seconds 300 Yard Dash findoorl 440 Yard Dash ,...... 880 Yard Dash ........ I Mile Run .......... l20 Yard High Hurdles. 220 Yard Low Hurdles. Shot Put C16 lbsj ..... Shot Put U2 lbsj ..... Hammer Throw U2 lbs., Discus Throw ......... Running High jump .... Running Broad jump .... Pole Vault ........... C6 men, indoorj ..... l Mile Relay ...... . I Mile Relay .......... C4 men, indoorj .... . .Zimmerman . . Miller . . . 1 O . . . . 13825 seconds seconds :54 59 . . Percival . . . . . . l : seconds . .Percival . . . . . . 4:59 seconds . .Schnur . . . . . :ISIY5 seconds . .Cotton . . . .... :26 seconds . .Bedell . . . .... 38 ft. 6 in. ..Alderman . . .... 46 ft. 4 in. . .Alderman . . . . . I64 ft. 2 in. ..Alderman . . .... IZ5 ft. 7 in. . .Purdum . . . .... 5 ft. ln. . .Cooper .... . . . Zl ft. IOLQ in. . .Zimmerman . . ........ I0 ft. Bishop .... Flewellin . . . . Miller ...... . . . .... . . . 3:4823 seconds de Bronkart .... . . . l Haynes ..... . . . l Barker .... . . . ' Bishop h .... . . Flewellln .. Percival ....... . . . f Miller ......... . . . I 214 3:48 seconds T H E I 9 ' 0 F 0 R E 5 T E R lnter-House Athletics. House BASKET BALL. In the House basketball contests East House duplicated her feat of the year before by winning the Championship. The final game was played between East and Remsen, East winning by a score of I7 to 9. The games this year were better contested than the year previous and many excellent games were played. It might be well to add in explanation that first team men were barred from all contests excepting the House Meet of May lst. There is yet to be played the baseball series and the House Meet and from all indications both sports will be very well contested. The Inter House Athletic contests have been of a more finished nature during the past seasons than ever before. More rivalry of a wholesome nature among the various houses has been manifested than heretofore. THE ANNUAL HOUSE MEET The lst of May House Meet last year was perhaps one of the best meets held since its inauguration. Remsen House for the first time won the meet largely through the excellent performances of Alderman, Percival and DeBronkartg Town was second: East House dropped into third place and Durand brought up the rear. The points were more widely separate than previously and many of the events were closely contested. THE HOUSE BASEBALL CHAMPIONSHIP The House baseball games were remarkably well played last spring and it took an extra game to decide the Championship, which went to East House in a 5 to l game with Remsen. Durand hnished third and Town fourth. East House was awarded a hand- some banner by the Athletic Association in recognition of the Championship. HOUSE FOOTBALL East House retrieved herself from her defeat at football by Remsen the year before by defeating Remsen in a fast game last fall by a score of I2 to 0. This game netted East another Championship. The work of H. lVIcCary, Lynch and Miller for East were features of the game. The points were scored by two touchdowns and a saftey. 215 T H E 1 9 1 0 F o R E S T E R lnter-House Meet. While the material brought out at the Novice Meet was not very plentiful, what there as to our having a first class track team. Bakeman won the Headmaster's cup, securing 33 points. was of it was goodg so judging from the meet there should be no cause for worry RESULTS l00 Yard Dash-Bakeman, Ingersoll, Horton, Haynes.. .... l0:03 min. l20 Yard High Hurdles-Matson, Way, Parker .... .... l 9:01 min. Mile-johnson, Jones, Caldwell, Knight ........... ..... 5 :50 min. 440 Yard Dash-Bakeman, Vocke, Haynes ........... .... 5 9:03 min. 220 Yard Low Hurdles-Bakeman, Way Parker, Watson. . .... 30:1-5 min. 220 Yard Dash-Bakeman, Salzer, Moll ............ .... 2 4:04 min, Half-mile-Jones, Clark, Sheldon, Manus. . . .2:40 min. Discus-Parker, Clark, lVIcCary ........ .. .73 ft. 7 in Shot Put-Bakeman, Parker, Gluck ...... .... 3 5 ft. 6 in. Hammer Throw-Parker, North, Glueck .... .. Broad Jump-Bakeman, Moll, Watson .... High Jump-Moll, Bakeman, Way, Watson ..... ..... .......... 5 f t. 2 Pole Vault-Watson, Bakeman .................................. 7 ft. 6 .....89 ........l8 Relay-Remsen lst. flngersoll, Cooley, Wells, Barkerjg East 2nd, fl-laynes, Knoll, Horton, Lynchjg Durand 3rd. fparker, Miller, Bakemanj JUNIOR EVENTS 50 Yard Dash-Foster, Eggert, Smith, Davidson. ....... .... 6 :Ol min 440 Yard DashTSrnith, Foster, Davidson, Larrahee. . . .... l :l0 min Faculty Base Ball Team '08. ZI6 ft. ft. IH. ln. Bishop High-Jumping. Turner winning the hurdles. L., 4.52. L. F. A. vs. Evanston High. A. 41 A .9 ...if - Percival running the mile. Sherman throwing the hammer 217 ' ' 1'-Xffizlffn 392' ff.. FEIIFQZ' Sflfml feifvzg at T H E I 9 I 0 F O R E S T E- R L aff: N The Novice Meet. In the eighth annual House Meet, East House was defeated for the first time in its history, Remsen carrying off first honors. The final score was: Remsen 70, Town 2515, East I 7Vg, Durand I3. RESULTS l20 Yard Hurdles-Alderman KRD, Turner KDD, Smith l00 Yard Dash-Miller Haynes KED, Tuthill KDD, Horton Mile-Percival KRD, Wells KRD, de Bronkart KRD, Boysen KED. Shot Put-Alderman KRD, Bishop KRD, Percival KRD, Miller 440 Yard Dash-Miller KTD, de Bronkart KRD, Haynes KED, Kolls Pole Vault-Alderman Bishop KRD, Smith KTD and Rahr KED tried for third. Broad jump-Barker KRD, Bishop KRD, Alderman KRD, Miller 220 Yard Dash-Miller Lynch KED, Turner KDD, Cooley High jump-Alderman KRD, Moll KED, Bishop KRD and Miller KTD tried for third. 880 Yard Run-Percival KRD, Wells KRD, Miller Discus-Alderman KRD, Percival KRD, Miller 220 Low Hurdles-Parker Lynch KED, Smith KTD, Turner Hammer-Alderman Sherman KED, North JUNIOR EVENTS 440 Yard Dash-C-oldschmidt KED, Eggert KED, Foster 50 Yard Dash-Goldschmidt KED, Foster KDD, Eggert 2l4 i,,..?,.,?.f.i,,' . ,sei 'Eifft 3, ifiijit .QW-ti:-g-. 218 5 1 if 7 2 g 1111111011 Z -fufl Z 1 f , ' 1 lllllfldzi j 71? 7 j I bm-fb-f, 5 If ZA Z Zi 5 5 . f ' I gllllllfllllllh - if gl' f RQ, fa ws '-'L vi- A 'MF xr I X N f av l 3 T- . 'Af' ' .7 INS K ,lu W ,V 37 I V '--' wif 2'2 '1 ' 'L W? S-149 ,ff A .mlm .- , Q--f WZ fx KV, X aw' f M5 H' S u 'J . I .5 X x ,W , '- 1 ' ' fi Y .. .1 'M -Q V M- . X - X, N....: i- XS X' Q- x , f ' , 51 I-t-X ht-xv ,I ff 'T xa w. ' L' 2l9 sri THE 1910 FORESTER The Charge of the Mark Soakers. We have some Profs in our school You would be glad to know And if you come around this way Stop in and I'll prove it so. First comes Bill' Lewis Who holds the Head-master's chair All the fellows like him Because he's on the square. Next is dear old Sned Who gave my marks a booster He's the king of the chemical lab But have you heard of his little rooster. Now we come to I-lershien Who's held in high esteem He labored long and hard And brought out our champion team. Oh yes there's Archie Fergien Our Latin Prof from Rome They say if he ever fell down He'd surely be half way home. All hail the mighty P. Bast As he comes singing down the hall Many have told him they liked his voice But have you heard of his little rooster? Oh I couldn't forget Guy Mortimer Our language Prof so sweet??? And when it comes to soaking marks He never could be beat. Then there's Ernie Palmer Our lawyer quite sarcastic He tells a lot of stories But to me they seem elastic. Sure there's Marshal C. Crouch A new Prof. in L. F. A. Teaching English is his forte And we hope that he will stay, Baldy Olin Hamed Is another new one here l-le tries to quell the young kids But of him they have no fear. Last is Gustav Birn Our music Prof from Chi. I-le's taught many a Cad To play In the Sweet bye and bye. r 220 T H E I 9 I 0 F O R E S T E R AGRIND Moll is having a Cadilac 30 built to order and Lynch has volunteered to be the tank. 55 at 'F Bake-fafter looking around to see which knife others are using.l Say, which one do you use.? Lynch-Take the duller one, you wonit be so liable to cut your mouth. as as is Mr. Rendtorff-Say Brookfield I don't see any use of studying declensions in French and German. Take the Ferry Hall girls for instance, they spend four or five years on them and when they get through, they can't even decline love. Brookfield-Ha, Ha. Mr. Rendtorff-You'll pass. as as as How about the Bamboos fBaboonsD, King? as as vs Miss H-Oh Mr. North, do you always enjoy open house night at Ferry Hall? Tub-fabsent mindedly while looking at clockl Why, Oh, No, not necessarily. , if 774 we Voice-Smatter Rowe Rowe-fwith desperate look on facel I'm on campus and the telephone IS out of HEIGHT OF IMPOSSIBILITY Moll serious. Knox taking off a mark. order. Bingham singing. Lynch quiet. T. Hoyne Wells is spending seven cents a week on city postage. Gluek and his puppy love. James Howard Cunningham Who lives in a house called East Has a foot as big as a ham And a face like a cake of yeast as as as Mr. Rendtorff-fat lantern? Brown if you will turn on the water over in Remsen we will shine a rainbow. Brown-freturning from the task, Sees rainbow thrown upon the canvas. Most Popular Gluek Biggest Bluffer . Lynch Biggest Fusser . . Wells Best All Round Athlete . Hotchkin Greatest Grind . Cates Windiest . . Moll Laziest . McCoy Best Student . . Kolls 221 CALENDAR ,f F gy ! y - f S E l l 1 tx kf 1 . m l Q X KU: ses for ssQf?e ' xx . ,x S y .. I xfb . s 3f 6 ' ' 52-. iv txxX V530 ' -iff Nthk October 3. - N' .gg Km K? Wi 1 XX N xx jfs. XX x -'!'fg 7 ,:,--.-22: ...N xj .st N E TX .,. 1 . 'l 'f. '5-1 xgl:',5:U-'J .X - , 'yall' Rss- SEPTEMBER School opens with large enrollment. Bo's get busy putting trunks away. Bo's do their little stunts for the Ferry l-lall girls. Union Vespers. OCTOBER Bo ,lacks introduced into Ferry Hall society. Football. Lane High, 0-l... F. A., 53. Tub North pleasantly entertained at the Sem? Novice Meet. Bakeman wins the cup. Address by Dr. B. W. Parmenter. Spelling contest. Football. East Division l-ligh, I5-L. F. A., 27. Stereopticon lecture by Mrs. Reicl. Football. Evanston High, 0-L. F. A., I6. Football. Chicago Veterinary Col- lege, O-l... F. A., 23. Hal- lowe'en party in the gym. . Ni.. ' . 3 Xssx l .K x L Y. X txxx f xxfx V 1 -.,N...L-'S . X - s x .-V I ,K X x il- I-Pllf V. A - ' f 2 -ts.. 1-Y I 'E RM '- J V fi' A-' V- I- , -B -,N ' I f s: 7 -.Q .vm x ,. ,ax xxx , V X lx' X X X 11,97 X Q ri A v Oct. 31. Y wg-4, . X X I I are 'S is -X' nl' ' 4 .1 arm, ul fm : . , ' MN N Nov. 16. i QS I A --Q JJQWHX gl T - ,X I 1 WT: I- 'gig T 'T .Ill X F-4- . 9 is . 0 .-. - I J' , it if 1 Aer lk 'J -TT-A' I 'S Q 6 ufxg, -4 c 'S 9-wan 'Nm A A 2 Nov. 30. NOVEMBER 4-Football. Fort Sheridan, 0-I... F. A., II2. 7 - Football. Northwestern Acaclemy, 0-L. F. A., 97. I3 - Most successful mass meeting in history. Many alumni back for St. ,Iohn's game. I4-Football. St. John's, II-I... F. A., 23. Bonfire and celebrations in evening. I6 - Holiday. Big paracIe. I9-Team goes to Minneapolis. ZI - Football. Shattuck, 29-I... F. A., 6. Z3 - Some preliminary House basketball. 30 - Gym class started. DECEMBER 5 - Football. East, I2-Remsen, 0. 6 - Lynch elected track manager I909. James elected I909 football man- ager. I2 - Vaudeville performance in after- noon ancI evening. I6 - Vacation for bright students begins. Basketball. Deerfield, 23-L. F. I9 - Vacation begins for the rest. 223 Q6 if lf H 4 X' 3 Q I I xi. EELS .I if 'rr 1::i' - . X' , N , x wa- I i' OW' JANUARY 5 -Christmas vacation ends. Every- Kgs,- ' - , . -- I J! body happy? 's A 8-Senior sweater vests for night- ' g 55 0? shirtsj arrive. X I4- Mr. Blakeslee compelled to leave if - M N school on account of poor health. .f E 5- ' 1 I6- Basketball. Englewood High, I8 I-'N 1' V -L. F. A., 66. I7 - Haynes and Barker leave school. Dec. 12. I9 - Basketball. Third Team, I3- Young lVlen's Club Juniors, I6. Z3 - Basketball. Crane High, I3-I... ,ff F. A., 49. Remsen wins inter- M . V' ' Q-V,VfL'f house debate. Reception for Juniors lu - E9 .fi - d and Seniors of Ferry Hall and jw.3X I we-.ik - l ift Academy given by Mrs. Nollen. -if-gif eff' Z4 - Basketball. East, 29-Durand, 'SX Eg ! 5. Reynolds at last gets a steady SWE: 'fx 15 5 X at the Sem. ffl NX R' i 5 I K' Q 26 - Lynch above grade in all his studies. x fl? in 27- Basketball. N. W. Freshmen, 35 Dec- 16' -L. F. A., 29. Basketball. Rem- sen, 37-Durand, I5. - 30 - First Regiment meet. Relay team Al 5 NYM I wins. Informal dance given in the i E I !-59: library. NiF 5'?FiQ W i' 'yt 31 - Aub Cunningham gets a letter 'Z i ' li Il from Grinnell. 'Wi ll I' 1 ll 'A J 3, gi FEBRUARY X i'lTF,nl0 V 3 I XX, A lfa ft I - Inter-House meet. Remsen, 32I X X -2, Durand, I7l-2 3-Basketball. East, I6-Remsen, 9-L. F. A., 39-Waukegan Jan. H. Maroons, 22. 224 5 6 Inter-House meet. Durancl, 40- East, 29. Basketball. L. F. A., 42-Joliet High, ZZ. 9 Reynolds visits the French l class. I0 Inter-House meet. East, 34- Remsen, 27. Il Day of Prayer. Special chapel services. I2 Basketball. First games of tourna- ment, L. F. A., 43-L. F. A. Reserves, I5. I3 Basketball. Evanston Academy, Z9-L. F. A., 26. I9 junior F'rom. Z2 Basketball. Spalding Institute, Z8 -L. F. A., Zl. 27 Basketball. L. F. A., l6-Chi- cago Freshmen, 20. 28 Basketball. L. F. A., 3lw-Ar- mour Acaclemy, l5. MARCH 3 Basketball. L. F. A., Z4iDeer- held, 27. 5 Basketball. L. F. A., 2l-Cul- ver, 24. War. Fergie', ancl Abe armecl to the teeth. 6-Academy play. The Half- Back. ' Track meet. Lakeview, 53iL. F. A., 29. 7 -Aclclress by Mr. Carriell. 9 Stereoptican lecture on true sports- manship. I0 - The End. 225 .. -Atl.-Y MN, I !'4J.rJ XI Ni 6' XX A. 1' llilillll ,fff tl, L' 'CH' -it January 23. Q' f-V--. lil ---i4 A- 1 F' ,fi T i if gg ,jp Limit- -W -:.g:LL.1fii, I 5 Q gil 4? li 'N Q2-147 fel ii fb 4 . .. 1 ' February 3. 1 - V E U w ir 7 Tr. 7 Mfr jifflil-X , 'Wigs I 1 i M March 6. Q,-if ll UIIHIIIIIIIWWHUIIIIIII I VIIINIQWQII w, 1, PNN-llllli WI III WIII1 w W 'El' W! RW, 'LTL' -J ,N ,A 'V X 257 X 1-A ..,: f - X A fu f Y H' . X -f Z X v , , X :N T N . Q ff f?-rf-'f ' X ., X , f F Q 1 2 5. Ina- V' my 5 r' :l' -f '.. . -CE? M . , X In f R E E , ,A 5 2 , A . L ? Enuumnmku ' a. f' .xMwllrmx 'mmmmln m 226 YGUR TAILOR Should be able to fit your ideas as well as to fit your body YOUNG MEN Generally know how they'd like to look but they find it hard to get their tailors to make them look that way YOU'LL FIND Now in my shop a splendid lot of blues, greys, stripes, pinched checks, over-plads, etc., in spring weights and you'll always find me keen to carry out your ideas of how your suits should look on you AT 340,00 My suits for young men are the best value you will ever find M. 1. COFFEY 1114 Association Bldg. CHICAGO EDW. MATHER, RUSSELL A. SCOTT Lake Forest Agents Lake Forest College W0 Tk The Group System of studies, offering a wide range of selection, while securing the advantage of a carefully balanced course in each group. Fourteen departments of College work. The best preparation for graduate, professional and technical study. P lan t A finely wooded Campus of fifty acres and an -ll Athletic Field of seven acres. Twelve College Buildings---modern dormitories for men and women, new Commons for men, Chapel, Library, Gymnasium, Recita- tion Halls, Laboratories, Hospital and Central Power Plant. F our new buildings recently completed. All the students live on the Campus. ' The most beautiful residence suburb of Q Chicago, on the high shore of Lake Michigan, 28 miles from the city. Health conditions excellent, the moral and social atmosphere unusually pure. The sale of intoxicants is prohibited by the charter of the town. Ex enses Board and room, tuition and general fees if 5250.00 to 3291.00 for men, 55300.00 to 5367.00 for women fincluding laundryl. Scholarships and a loan fund available for a limited number of worthy students needing aid For catalogues and detailed information address JOHN S. NOLLEN, President LAKE FOREST, - ILLINOIS Three-Fourths of the Plumbing in I l..al-re Forest is done by f J. E. Fitzgerald lsn't that a guarantee of FIRST CLASS WORK? TELEPHONE ee James Mitchell l Consumes about 332 feet of gas per amgatthtg ann hour per lamp A Ask for special bool-:let on 171112 Elfman? REFLEXOLIER LAMPS North Shore Consolidated LAKE FOREST, - ILLINOIS Gas Company The oot Studios V .ID 8 K X45 L Original Ideas and Exclusive Styles His parlors and dressing rooms are at the disposal of the girls at Lake Forest College and Ferry Hall PORTRAIT5 BY PHOTOGRAPHY oe 243 Wabash Avenue I T ohert QE, linhsap LINDSAY BROS. 49 and 51 Jackson Blvd. CHICAGO, ILL N 4? 'S l l NI Sl.HVd I'lV OJ. G3ddIHS Ufl 9,1 Aauow Jo pamuwenfl xoq MSA:-J pun sn Aq Aluo spew 1090119 zfggswmrzgu uvqvuo alll I0 EI W O H alll Plm G alll 'V 'S' 'D 'sgougnl 'gszuod alinj 9117103011 S' UDl1DLlO c -l ge , S3381 if lqj If me Wig X ,ag 1. .X U5 MH 9 ,il P Il ll .0 0 .,, fy X3 :QU 19 91 3 Z ff, L54-'ff f l 5 ,... if-'W 'SQ .1 6c 53 -'Z ' if f ,E-: gg Z fy!! II XX! ? -M x .. . mis ,1 -44 -s t ,.gi: '31 lv. , A ':'T 1-'j':iS--dl , wg' Q, L: gi: - gf,--E'Z,'lN-1195 : Q-D f --fi- 4 ?fr'.'.- ' f -,.+l- -L-'Y-g i ' -nl' 1 ' J Q. to ' ff f :-:f'::T -iii H-55571-.,.' ., '-:f- 1 flx-R ,5.if,Il:,,,.' ' 5'Z? 2' 5?i-i5I5..'D' gl 4-in ',f4 -f',5 2 5 '- Lf .. gf I 52 ff.. .,. K 9 -ex, X ' . 'X gr- s , x - lv ,X ' gl' , ,Y , . ,.,Q': -L -, Q ' .- -V - f' 5-33 -244541 , .1 E---' ' -f Z5 'l?4i4S V 4- - ff f l gf , 17 4. J I P l - ' , ' .,g.. i i + l Q X li ' I ' 4 A, . 1. ffrsgsg ,Meri ' H ' ' N 453 1-7 'Zf!fL! ' . l i - X T Q- if 'ex IX ' e '- , X :ss -: th-ef5'04z5 'f , x xxx .H F Y? 1: .,., E 2.32.2 , KF, Y... N fe . lmfaszfawq e r is 'free Sig: -its aiii ,i . .,.- .A X' gg ,LAW N-f 1, Fl' Qi'-'ine ' 9 ,g 1 Q 1 Mir, ' l 523. ff' was , Q. 4 ' X lf Quaivgiy-, N, - , - ' -g -- V Q-i' t . - -lv x, 4 s.w.e:.ff' ' ' 1 1 l - 2 lf ' ' .- ' ' '1S1w'-if e e A '1'5i21r,.-:f' f ell , I -' 9 A A - e i' U 1 if 1 . in . ., ff: fi ' ,Y d . V .,.. Y -- FY: i. ...1i, 5 It .1-igxkn . . . X ,,,,, fs FERRYCHALL College Preparatory School for Girls Junior College for Young Women The college certificate admits to leading colleges. College work is olfered for high school graduates. Special courses in art, piano, violin, voice, elocution, cooking and sewing alford unsurpassed advantages. Country life with city opportunities offers unique conditions for study. Early registration is necessary to secure entrance. For catalogue and bool: of views address Principal Box B, Lake Forest, Ill. + 1 1111. ZL. Qliasttuoou Qbcnts jfurnisbings Agent for laotrpronf itmsirryg lake jfurzst, 4 Elilinniff Y i I I Office Hours: 9 rn I2 A. M. and I 106 P. M. Evening work by appa intmenl Dr. M. OLIVE READ iBcnti5t 465 Anderson Bldg. 'Phone 2733 LAKE FOREST, ILL. Telephone No. 26 Dr. ALFRED C. HAVEN Physician in Charge Alice Home OFFICE HOURS 8tol0A.M. 5to6P.lVl. LAKE FOREST. ILL. George Findlay. Pres. Samuel Blackler, Vire-P Elton G. Rice, Cashier State Bank of Lake Forest Capital 550,000 Surplus 510,000 Organized as a Trust Company under the Laws of Illinois Safety Deposit Vaults, Boxes for rent and storage space for silver and other valuable packages Three Per Cent on Savings Fire Insurance Written Steamship Tickets TES. b .. 1 ' 3725- . 1 5. 1 . M . ,..,?7. -I 1 , . 1' rf W ' Q ? - X M i v N 'A wr: gxfsf-gif tx X Q' l . 1 js r - . , nf l. -. Q ' dig 5 ' ,Q r ' i ,fin xi i so -Q A 1 f , . . A ,N XX n l . . It Q? i' I mf if Q ' .i , ml, ,, , ww pygmy' my 'Q Flilivwl? X :ll , 5 ft 132255. if l l 1 'ri' ' S? 1 'A ,, rf In i kg,-' X: I u 51 i r, li K if Q, .251 1:2 wi rg 4 ,i . A M if A 5 lfh S 'ff -1: A! X Freshman Sophomore Junior Senior 66Cl0theS do not make the man, but, a poorly litting suit of clothes can come as near unmak- ing him as anything, except vice. It matters not whether you are a Freshman, Soplzomore, Junior or Senior you wear clothes- and being a College Man means that you should dress correctly at all times. We have a special College Department in which we make suits at the College Man's prices, -335.00 and up. A constant study is made of your requirements and we are sincere in saying we can meet them at all times. CARVER 8c WILKIE MERCHANT TAILORS Nos. 187 AND 189 DEARBORN STREET CHICAGO N , -, - 1 T I ph R denc: 266, Omce 160 Ch g C 1480 Grzfith 5' W arren INSURANCE INVESTMENTS PROTECTIONS LOANS RENTING REAL ESTATE LAKE FOREST, - - - ILLINOIS C. L. Krafft Telephone66 R d cePhone242l T. S. Proxmire, NI. D. DRUGGIST I - 1 ff 'nm' Office: New Anderson Bldg. Kodaks and Supplies HOURS: H o I0 A. M LAKE FOREST, ILLINOIS 1 0 3, 1 to 3 P M C. G. WENBAN F. P. WENBAN Telephone: OfHc No. 22 L O R Telephone: Reside No. 285 C. G. Wenban 85 Son Telephone No. 2472 if in mi, WW V , Y LAILL FOREST' ILLINOIS FUNERAL DIRECTORS Proprietors of I-Iuntoon's Bakery FOR PURE ICE CREAM AND Fine Bakery Goods The Lake Forest Livery and Boarding Stable Carriage and Auto Trimming and Painting Piano and Furniture Moving LAKE FOREST, ILL. Moore 86 Evans Qeneral Sporting Goods 157 Wabash Ave. THE VICTOR LINE Engraved Copper Plate and 50 Cards - - - 90C BR OC H ON CU. Engraving and CollegeJewelry E N GRAVED dlummenremcnt Slnbitatinns Embossed Stationery Dance Programs We are the only Engraving House in the West who have a Leather Em- bossing and Stamping Department, we get our prices on original designs in leather covered Inzvitalions and Programs The Bicknell- L a n g C 0. Steel and Copper Plate Engravers 17 Milwaukee Ave. 190 Fifth Avenue CHICAGO CHICAGO OUR SPECIAL School and College Suits 335.00 TAILOR FOR YOUNG MEN TWO STORESQ 44 Jackson Boulevard 131 La Salle Street CHICAGO Get that Check from Home cashed at the First National Bank of LAKE FOREST YVe offer you every accomodation cons te t with sound banking OFFICERS David H. Jackson President George Anderson Vice-President Frank W. Read Cashier Savings Accounts, Commercial Accounts Safe Deposit Vaults Do your business with a National Bank Olhee Hours: I lo 2:30 and 7 to 8 P. M. B. N. Parmenter, NI. D. LAKE FOREST, lu.. Oflice and Residence, Westminster Avenue Telephone No. 19 Office Phone ll0 Dr. Charles W. Young D E N T I S T 405 OFFICE HOURS 9lol2A.lVl.andlto5P.lVl. Or by appointment Lake Forest, - Illinois L. H. W. Spiedel Kerosene, 0ils and Gasoline Notary Public, R. R. Tickets Otlice: Western Ave., Tel. IHS Residence: Deerpath Ave., Tel. ITS LAKE FOREST, - ILLINOIS Deerpath Inn if G. D. MORRISON, Proprietor Lake Forest, Ill. Residence: Tel. ZSI3 Otlice: Tel. 2571 John Kerrigan W ' ,EXPRESQMAN snoe , , BFOR THE MAN WHO CARES' Prompt Amen!!-T-Easilven to Student Latest Styles and Lowest Prices Lake Forest, Illinois Karl IVI. Rasmussen Two doors norlh of Express Ojice LczleeFo1festA cadem 0 Qi . 'iz !7 - 'L fo 1' Ii fi? ll 0 1, Qvsz, . gvgli :F A -'i'9'fi'P 0 Vi'i e f:: 11 A.. gt. 1 v . ao s 4' bv ' W4 Q-Q .QW C Opened in 1858 Prepares Boys for Universities and Business EQUIPMENT COMPLETE QE I ff 573' IISPYG I House System Insures Individual Attention Catalogues and other informati t n application ADDRESS: W iiliam Mather Lewis, 'lysis' LAKE FOREST, sal J- .al ILLINOIS Telephones: Nos. 40 and 41 C. T. GUNN GROCER 405 Lake Forest, - Illinois Lake Forest Laundry F. G. PRATT, Prop. Special reduced rate t students J- Lake Forest, - Illinois Walter O'Neill Ji .Ada CIGARS, TOBACCO and THE WALINGIR lIOMPANY ibljutugraphrra POYVERS BUILDING 156 Wabash Avenue Northeast Corner Monroe St Special Attention to Sorority and Fra- ternityGroups. Only the latest and Best things in the Photographic Art OSCAR PEARSGN UPHOLSTERING AND FURNITURE REPAIRING NEWSPAPERS Picture Framing Phone 55 ROLLER SRATING RING Lake F01'C5t Lumber Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday Nights Wednesday and Saturday Afternoon Special Nights for Clubs Lake Forest, - Illinois DEALERS IN LUMBER, LATHS and SHINGLES Lake Forest, - Illinois Alden, Bidinger 86 Co. EEMEQEQWHQUEE PIANOS RENTED Phone 247 Waukegan, - Illinois Wall Paper. Paints, Oils. Varnishes, Brushes, Glass, Sponges, Chamois S. T. CRGFT Decorating, Painting Telephone 2304 The Idylwylle iunrijcs, Gtteamg, jlftuits, Qllanhiei Everything in the line of refreshments JAMES L. SMITH Gracefully yours, elc. FVRED. WEISS MERCHANT TAILOR Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing x Lake Forest, IlliI10lS Ladies and Gents Garments F. BAI RSIQNQJI f 'E ' jg stab is ed 5 E Ji Telephone No. 31 if iff? li e- S eeee - E ..ltl , E NP Marble and Granite L :ll-il gf,-, Nw M O N U NI EN TS 11,2 , l-sv 5' Cemetery Work of Every Description , . Cut Stone for Buildings Lime, Plaster, Cement, Sewer Pipe, Drain Tile, Fire Brick, Fire Clay, Pressed and Common Brick, Monumental and Building Stone, Coal, Coke and Wood J. BAIRSTOW, Manager Office 138 30- Genesee SLE! ILKEGAN-Jloll BOOKS The Largest Stock in the United States ofthe Books of other publishers. ENGRAVING Cards, Invitations, An- nouncements and Pro- grams, for all occasions, in faultless style. FOREIGN LANGUAGES An incomparable stock of the New and Standard Works in French and Ger- man, also many others, Spanish, Italian, Esperanto, etc. MONTHLY BULLETIN A monthly descriptive list, with illustrations of every title received in our retail store. It is impartial and complete. A. C lVIcClurg 81 Co. 215-221 Wabash Ave. Chicago I'hone 29-49 The Blackler Market Mfifl 403 BUTTER AND EGGS A specialty Poultry, Game and Fish PHONES: Ollice, Lake Forest I6 Res. Lake Forest 1264 G. L. Blanchard COAL AND WOOD Building Material Lake Forest, - Illinois THE Blakely - Oswald Printing Company I26-I32 Market St., Chicago PRINTERS OF Fine Books, Magazines and Catalogues All Kinds of Commercial Work VVhfen you wish the best of jlutuers 403 Call on or Telephone P. CALVERT QSON Lake Forest, Ill. C. L. HARDER, Jr. Sparring Qbcuhs A L4 House Furnishing Goods General Hardware lh ne 93 LAKE FOREST, ILLINOIS MRS. M. FITZGERALD Svtatiuncrp. Qllunfertiunrrp dihnirc 4ILigar5, Tlnbarru Lake Forest, Illinois FALL MALL FAMOUS CIGARETTES Tlme King? Size T116 afier-clinner smoke JOE GIST The Livery Man 405 The Lake Forester Book, Job, Society and Commercial Printing Gives a square deal and answers calls for is Ca 'geS p 'I y D. W. HARTMAN, Proprietor Lake Forest, III. Phone II74 PHONE 195 C. VV. Paulson las. AHGCFSOHQSOHS SLJCCESSOR TO SMITH 2, Y, DE,-XLERSIN There with a Classy DRY GOODillD GROCERIES H A I R C U T OPPOSITE STATION GENERAL MERCHANDISE TELEPHONE 37, ss, 39 IOHN A. HAND ARMIN F. HAND Direclor 'Residence 3915 Harrison 497 Webster Ave. Manager Phones: Lincoln l282, I-122 HAND'S ORCHESTRA 220 Wabash Avenue CHICAGO, ILL. You have heard them at THEYIUNIOR PROMENADE SIGMA TAU THETA PSI SIGMA PHI DIGAMMA ALPHA UPSILON DELTA PHI DELTA PHI DELTA PHI PI EPSILON KAPPA SIGMA OMEGA PSI SIG ' MA IxAPPA BETA RHO DELTA FALL MALL FAMOUS CIGARETTES Tlme King? Size T116 afier-rlinner smoke JOE GIST The Livery Man 405 The Lake Forester Book, Job, Society and Commercial Printing Gives a square deal and answers calls for Ki C'1 'ages y D. W. HARTMAN, Proprietor Lake Forest, III. Phone II74 PHONE I95 C. W. Paulson Jas. AndersonS,Sons SUCCES-SOR TO sxnm Z4 V, DEALERS IN There with a Classy DRY GOODiID GROCERIES H AIR C U T OPPOSITE STATION GENERAL MERCHANDISE TELEPHONE 37, ss. 39 IOHN A. HAND ARMIN F. HAND Direclor 'Residence 3915 Harrison 497 VVebster Ave. Manager Phones: Lincoln IQSQ, I-I22 HAND'S ORCHESTRA 220 Wabash Avenue CHICAGO, ILL. You have heard them at THEYIUNIOR PROMENADE SIGMA TAU THETA PSI SIGMA PHI DIGAMMA ALPHA UPSILON DELTA PHI DELTA PHI DELTA PHI PI EPSILON KAPPA SIGMA OMEGA PSI SIGMA KAPPA BETA RHO DELTA Mc Q 17 JO Q, P5 TTI 7 H, NCQ, 4g5fCOl, ' 4 ' x x, X -f 7 :E 'f 3 wi 3 TEX' U5 Prove Our Claim that f' SWiIt,S Premium Hams and Bacon are the finest smoked meats pmdueed The Proof is Easy Order from your dealer and serve SWift's Premium Ham or Bacon on YOU? table. 3 Swift Sc Company, U. S. A. SWTH ENG Jnnuals Cllgf 511 1 HINGH QUALITY PROMPT SERVI c WEHU th all 0 9 33'9 d 6' 005 Esflhzafes fear a e a ' d Y G0 H EQ Can MXL WAIQQEE f CHICAGO 169 H ENGDAVIN GC 327 I F! 9 - v - gn D' . , 1 p .I w- bl-A ww r .yy -n, f l 9' I 'lf 0 'P . H ll' . - 1' T ll -V Y-,QA-'A'.l F- L 41 ' - ns 1 I, '-2:-f 1-. , l' T' ' ' L Y 'V' 1-L' . 5 F '-.Jf.'s -',1- I -'ff L -I A3'Q- J , i' pq Q' -I-2 . .Ii-,Wg 1:-4-I I in ... 1, .. W ag' -A Q 11 Bti , I M P -irhlgvv :VI A . Z Il, '13 -' 1 Yi'A'I.'w. 'IH'-' I-if a Ll 'www E ', . -1-s,:- , ,431 .-- . ,t,.' I I 'fb ' ' lfgg , ' I-YLIA '...,..' - g T' I '-r I ,vip f 1 S I- ' 1. ' - .' ' L 5 1 A, I-. . v i - 5- U -I Whir- E nl T Vs.: J qi '+ H - 111- I I' Y 1' N451 '05 , 'Ii -SV xgjl-'rr Y-VI, ' i Y i -T ', Iii, ,Q - 'V z YW , Q U - ji- I 57 14- Y fm-If 2 Pi- qty L F- in Q II ' 3 ' ,,. F yan 1 . '.i' v K, .lf . Q- n Ina- .,L- LJ- Y -E, .J ' , -' 1 Y If . .5 2- - 'I I? I , 'P V 3 A ,A lL ,Q-,-'1 li 4' J I , 1- '-:sg .4-4: Q J V' ' - ' L 1' 'of I -' I I . 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