Northwestern University - Syllabus Yearbook (Evanston, IL) - Class of 1886 Page 1 of 190
Cover
Pages 6 - 7 Pages 10 - 11 Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9 Pages 12 - 13 Pages 16 - 17
Show Hide text for 1886 volume (OCR )
Text from Pages 1 - 190 of the 1886 volume: “
LINDSAY BROS Special Discount of 10 per cent, to Clergymen and Biblical Students. Ill MONROE STREET, IVTOTSTTATTK RT.OPK UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS GO LIBRARY A. H. i ARTIST! Mathem DRAFTING Pi. Class Book Volume NMVP ™ Je 07-1 0M DRAWING MATERIALS Of Every Description. No. 50 Madison Street, CHICAGO D. L. AULD, MANUFACTURER OF C1AS8 PIKS, ETC. 27 N. HIGH STREET, COLUMBUS, 0. Fite at I he • - — - — 5 - jjjrap er aad Q ailer Special Disgounts to Students. 507 DAVIS STREET yivlisls ' Jvlaierials. F. W. DEYOE SO. ' S tisjs ' - (Ibe • Qoloi s. Recognized by all prominent Artists throughout the Country as the Best Colors manufactured. F. W. Devoe Co. ' s Prepared Canvas. F.W. Devoe Co. ' s Academy Boards. F. W. Devoe Co. ' s Fine Brushes. A Complete Assortment of Artists ' Supplies. 176 Randolph Street, - CHICAGO, ILL, F opmeply Wu m ofgpown £2 J)pioF. 3AM B SHIRT MAKER W Pull Qine of Pancy pr;irtinas. Dress |) rjirts a ' pecialTy, oo: rqs 6, 7, 8 arjd 9, l TeYie eps eatpe miaii|g. CHICAGO. THE LOWEST PRICES FOR FINE WORK. ' • t WT t Wy t yWfW f W f V W tW f tW f y W fW f W T OT fWT W f Wf 1 COLLEGIANS ' outfitting ESTABLISHMENT. Wilde ' s Qlotbing ouse, Chicago. Two-thirds of your life is spent in your clothes. Why not take a little solid comfort, and wear clothes that give you ease and comfort, and still fit perfectly. It is often said handsome fitting clothes cure a sour disposition. Wilde ' s Tailor Made Clothing is the only tailor-made clothing sold at retail. THE WIDESPREAD DEMAND For Wilde ' s Tailor-Made Clothing forces us to add the entire second floor to our business, making our salesrooms just double their present size. We take pos- session May 1st. Spring Overcoats for Street or Traveling, $10 Young Men ' s Silk Faced Overcoats, - - 13 Tailor Made Overcoats, - - $15, $18, and 20 The Finest Art can produce, with Silk Lin- ings, Satin Sleeves, etc., - $25 to 35 Spring Suits, Evening Dress, $20, $25, $28, 30 Professional Suits, - - $22, $25, $30, 35 Cutaways, Chesterfield, and Prince Albert Suits, - - - $25, $30, $35, 40 Our $5.00 and $8.00 Pantaloons Conquer every prejudice. We invite the most critical inspection. Where can you find another store where such thorough reliability and low prices go hand in hand? FURNISHING GOODS To your heart ' s content. ALL THE NEW NOVELTIES As fast as they appear. Call and see with your own eyes. JAMES WILDE, JR., CO., Cor. State and Madison Sts., CHICAGO, ILL. FRANK REED, Manager. ' V Wf f W T P. RINGER. H. VEIT w c© n k i •- t - s - - - Fine Work a Specialty. 52 and 54 Wabash Ave. CHICAGO. • For Choice Confections £5 GO TO- v-t -$W? SWAN SON ' S 70 State Street. -3H Opposite Central Nltasic Hall. ni ' W@F i j %£ }Qool$ J§|i @, Established 1872. Students= = You are invited to make our Store a place of resort. Let your errand be business or merely pleasure, you are always heartily wel- Z come - CiEO. w. muiR. A - A - A - ' - ' ' A MHI A ' G-8p di f B ros - The Largest Dealers in Base Ball, Cricket FOOT BALL, LA CROSSE, LAWN TENNIS, AND CROQUET GOODS, BICYCLES, ROLLER SKATES, FISHING TACKLE, ETC. Base Ball, Lawn Tennis and Athletic Uniforms, and the highest class of GENERAL SPORTING GOODS, 108 MADISON ST. CHICAGO. 241 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. GEO, MTJIR, Evanston, .A.ca-ENT. SEND for ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE of SPORTING GOODS W e eV NSTON PRESCRipTlOfJ sto e. w  ll 9 S5f • iT errjujoictuFiiva arj a • k isperjsinq W Goi nei Davis Si eeii ahd Of ingiion pvE. EYAKSTON, HI, Dealer in pure- Drugs and fine Chemicals. GINN COMPANY PUBLISH Elementary English. Higher English. Old English. Latin. Greek. Sanscrit. Mathematics. Music. Philosophy. History. AND MANY j °Send for Descriptive GINN CO., Publishers Classics for Children. (Send for circular). Whit- ney Knox ' s Language Series. Hazen ' s Spelling Book. Stickney ' s Primer, Turner ' s Primer and First Reader and Stories for Children. Hudson ' s School and Harvard Shakespeare, and pamphlet selections of prose and poetry. Ban- croft ' s Composition. Choice Headings, Hand- book of Poetics. Irving. Milton. Baskersvill ' s Andreas. Beowulf. Caedmon. Sievers ' Grammar. Garnett ' s translation of Beowulf. Allen Greenough ' s Grammar and Texts with Lessons. Greenough ' s Virgil. Allen ' s Composi- tion. Lexicons. Classical Atlas. Goodwin ' s Grammar and Anabasis. Leighton White ' s Lessons. College Series of Authors. Texts of Euripides, Demosthenes. Perry ' s Primer. Whitney ' s Grammar. Lanman ' s Reader. Wentworth ' s Series. Arithmetics, Algebras, Geometries, Trigonometry, Surveying, Tables, Taylor ' s and Byerly ' s Calculus. The National Music Course, comprising a com- plete series of charts and books for schools of all grades. New grades coming out. Seelye ' s Hickok ' s Mental Science and Moral Science Lotze ' s Outlines, translated by Prof. Ladd. Myers ' Mediaeval and Modern History. Mont- gomery ' s Leading Fects of English History. Readers ' Guide to English History. OTHER BOOKS. Catalogue and. Circulars., BOSTON, NEW YORK, and CHICAGO. ■TT 1 lllll lltlllllll r irTTTT T TTT l IIMIIIIII I 1 ii SEMS QOLLEGE • 3°y s ' A P B IBS Alike must be interested in REVELLS •7VVY777 ' I O ' f ' l ' i ' P P P tt Ht y Y y V N emple of ® ( conorm 1 77?e Outfitters and Producers of more i ome §v ?eet omes 7 ?a 7 almost any other Temple of whatsoever kind. 44 Six Thousand Customers and Ten Thousand New and Happy Homes every year is our work. WE FURNISH PATERNITY H71LjLj3, {«- - L0DSE R00M3, gTaDENTg ' R00M3, And our stock comprises nearly every conceivable article of Household Furniture, Carpets, Mirrors, Stoves, Desks, Book Cases, Bedding, Curtains, Parlor Goods, Pictures, Parlor Beds, Etc., Etc. AT BARGAINS. ffc Therefore, in the future always remember jRpbpH ' s ©pmnlp • of • 5ronomg And it will pay you. Cor. Fifth Ave. and Randolph St. MLMEZI « 1886 PUBLISHED BY OF THE Northwestern University. VOLUME II CHICAGO : Brown, Pettibone Co., Printers. 1886. (JBtrttortal Boartr, HARRY HAMILL, B 9 II, Editor-in-Chief. STEPHEN J. HERBEN, £ K W. EDWIN L. SHUMAN, 2 X. FRANK A. DRAPER, $ K 2. ROBERT I. FLEMING, A T, ADA M. PEART, A £. MATTIE P. HUTCHISON, K K T. JOSIE B. CRANDON, A F. f - JFmanctal JSoarlx FRANK J. CAMPBELL, Z K W, Business Manager. WILLIAM D. BARNES, 2 K 2. HENRY CADDOCK, 2 X. HARVEY BROWN, B 9 II. OSCAR MIDDLEKAUFF, A T. ALBERTINE C. WALES, A 2 . IDA T. SUNDERLAND, K K I HATTIE T. HAW, A F. ' ' wv v v w To all persons of a liberal and philan thropical turn of mind, who possess a fortune of fifty Cents and over, this volume is most cordially dedicated by the ditors. 2 97803 Greeting. C-: «3 Qim HIS second volume of the Syllabus appears in spite of the oppo- C sition of the most adverse circumstances. Two editors-in-chief resigned ; one associate-editor left ; our first business manager was called away to pastures new, and two of his associates left. No work was done until the second term ; but then the grand array of genius and ability overcame all obstacles and pushed on to a successful issue the work so tardily begun. Whatever improvement upon the last there may be in this volume, the reader will readily perceive ! Our aim has been to make this volume commend itself by its worth to the student communit} and to the Alumni as a book of rare merit — and to pay our expenses ! We hope we have succeeded. Quoted from Syllabus of ' 85. - sisifyfy- Wyg) resident n JOSEPH CUMMINGS, D.D., LL.D., President of Northwestern Uni- versity, was born at Falmouth, Maine, March 3, 1817. He graduated from the Wesleyan University at Middletown, Conn., in 1840. He then took a position in Amenia Seminary, New York, as teacher of Natural Sciences and Mathematics. From 1843 to 1846 he was Principal of the Seminary, but at the end of that period joined the New England Conference of the M. E. Church. He remained in the active work of the ministr} 7 , filling some of the leading pulpits in New England, until 1853, when he accepted the Professorship of Theology in the Methodist General Biblical Institute, Concord, N. H. In the following year his Alma Mater conferred upon him the degree of Doctor of Divinity. He was for three years President of Genesee College, Lima, N. Y., and in 1857 was called to the Presidency of Wesleyan University. This position he filled until 1875. The eighteen years of Dr. Cummings ' Presidency at Middletown were among the most prosperous and progressive of that honored institu- tion. In 1863 a gymnasium was added. In 1868 a library building, capable of containing 10,000 volumes, was erected at a cost of $40,000. A chapel was built in 1871, and dedicated to the memory of the students and alumni of the institution who had fallen in the War of the Rebellion. In the same year a hall for Natural Sciences, costing $100,000, was added. In 1872, young women were for the first time admitted to the University. Dr. Cummings received the degree of D.D. from Harvard University in 1861, and in 1866 the degree of LL.D. from Northwestern University, After resigning the Presidenc}- in 1875, Dr. Cummings retained his position as Professor of Mental Philosophy and Political Economy for two years, after which he occupied the pulpit at Maiden, Mass., until 1879, when he went to Harvard Street, Cambridge, where he remained until called to the Presidency of Northwestern University in ,A A m 1881. His administration among us has been marked by that vigor and thoroughness which form prominent features in Dr. Cummings ' character. A more liberal elective system has been devised, and the curriculum modified in other ways to meet the demands upon our growing institu- tion. Improvements in and around the University buildings and gym- nasium have been made as fast as the funds of the school would allow. In scholarship and morality the standards insisted upon by Dr. Cum- mings are of the highest character. A comparatively small part of the useful and honored career of our President has been spent in connection with our own University. He came to us crowned with years of noble achievement in the departments of educational, literary and religious thought. In the class-room we are impressed with the breadth of his views and the keenness of his intellect ; out of it he inspires us with the force of his personal character. With a career so honored and successful both in the past and pres- ent, it is our hope that many years of usefulness may yet be allotted to our President. BONERIGHT. 4 ROBER1 JOSEPJ ,RSON. JULIUS F. KELLOGG. % f I : KT F. FI5K. ROBERT BAIRD. HEPPARD. JUNG. JOSEPH CILMMINGS, A.M., Wesleyan University, 1840 ($ B K), ( N Q) : D.D., Wesleyan Univer- sity, 1854, Harvard University, 1861 ; LL.D., N. W. U., 1861. i President, and Evans Professor of Moral and Intellectual Phi- losophy. DANIEL BONBRIGHT, A.M., Yale College, 1850 ( B K) ; LL.D., Lawrence University, 1878. Professor of the Latin Language. OLIVER MARCY, A. B., Wesleyan University, 1846 {$ B K), ($ N Q) ; LL.D., University of Chicago, 1873. Deering Professor of Natural History, and Curator of Museum. JULIUS F. KELLOGG, A. M., Noyes Professor of Mathematics, and Registrar of the Faculty. HENRY S. CARHART, A.M., Wesleyan University, 1869 (W V), ($ B K). Professor of Physics, and Secretary of Faculty. HERBERT F. FISK, A. M., Wesleyan University, 1860 ($ B K), ( £ 2V S). Professor, and Principal in Preparatory. ROBERT M. CUMNOCK, A. M., Wesleyan University, 1868 ( £ B K), (W T). Professor of Rhetoric and Elocution. ROBERT BAIRD, A. M., N. W. U., 1869 ($KW). Professor of Greek Language and Literature. CHARLES W. PEARSON, A. M., N. W. U., 1871 ($ KW). Professor of English Literature axt Histoky. ROBERT D. SHEPPARD, A.M., Chicago University, 1869 ( K W) ; D.D., Garrett Biblical Inst., 1885. Professor of History and Political Economy. A. Y. E. Y r OUNG, Ph. B., Michigan University, 1875 (A K E). Professor of Chemistry. MARSHALL D. EWELL, M.D. Michigan University, LL.B., 1868; Michigan University, LL.D., 1879. Instructor in Microscopy. RENA A. MICHAELS, A.M., Syracuse University, 1874 (A $) ; Ph.D., Syracuse University, 1880. Dean of Woman ' s College, and Professor of French Language and Literature. CATHARINE BEAL, B. P., Syracuse Univ ersity, 1876 (A £). Director of Art Department. vmv vmv m ri nme sityf nstees. OFFICERS OF THE BOARD. Hon. JOHN EVANS, M.D President. ORRINGTON LUNT Vice-President. JAMES G. HAMILTON Secretary. THOMAS C. HOAG Treasurer. THOMAS C. HOAG Agent. ELECTED BY THE BOARD. Term Expires 1886. EDMUND ANDREWS, M.D., LL.D Chicago. JAMES FRAKE, A.M., LL.B Chicago. NATHAN SMITH DAVIS. M.D., LL.D Chicago. HENRY SARGENT TOWLE, LL.B Chicago. HARLOW N. HIGINBOTHAM Chicago. JOSEPH CUMMINGS, D.D., LL.D Evanston. JAMES S . KIRK Evanston. Rev. ROBERT M. HATFIELD, D.D Evanston. Term Expires 1887. Hon. GRANT GOODRICH, LL.D Chicago. WILLIAM DEERING Evanston. OTIS HARDY Joliet. CATHARINE E. QUEAL Evanston. WILLIAM A. FULLER Chicago. JAMES B. HOBBS Chicago. FRANK P. CRANDON Evanston. Hon. JAMES B. BRADWELL Chicago. Term Expires 1888. J ABEZ K. BOTSFORD Chicago. Hon. JOHN EVANS, M.D Denver, Col. JOSIAH J. PARKHURST Evanston. THOMAS C. HOAG Evanston. DAVID McWILLIAMS Dwight. Rev. RICHARD HANEY, D.D Monmouth. TURLINGTON W. HARVEY Chicago. E. J. FOWLER WILLING, A.M Chicago. MARY FISH Joliet. DAVID R. DYCHE, M.D Evanston. Term Expires 1889. PHILIP B. SHUMWAY, A.M Evanston. ORRINGTON LUNT Evanston. HENRY A. PEARSONS, A.M Evanston. JAMES G. HAMILTON Evanston. CHARLES BUSBY Chicago. ROBERT D. FOWLER Chicago. OLIVER H. HORTON, LL.B Chicago. GEORGE H. FOSTER Milwaukee. JOHN E. WILSON Chicago. MARY B. WILLARD Evanston. 8 n rw ' V V f - ■■A - ■■- - - -Jjepartmervts of niversity (Lollege of liberal T rts. X 3 |ELLO there ! Have you decided what class } T ou ' re going to join ? I am still on the fence, but am leaning a little toward Soph side, and may drop that wa} ' at any time. pshaw ! Now, come here and listen to me. After you have heard some of the heroic deeds of our class I think you will immediately decide in our favor. Well, if 3-011 can prove that you are superior to former Freshmen, I ' ll agree to cast my lot with you. In the first place we are unusually verdant and fresh ; we are spun, woven and made up of greens. Our professors tell us that not- withstanding our extreme rawness we compare very favorably with Freshman classes gone before ; that we have shown an equally large stock of desire for knowledge ; that we have as seldom ' cut church, ' and less seldom recitations. ' Tis true there is no spontaneous gush to our fluency in the class room, still we always wear that I-know-but I-can ' t- think expression on our faces which satisfies the most exacting professor. Wouldn ' t } 7 ou like to hear about a victory of ours over the Sophs last term ? I think if nothing else will bring you around that will. The Sophs had a supper. One heroic Freshman said that night he was 10 '  t   i ' V m v w w w v w willing to give, if necessary, his 3 ' oung life as a bloody sacrifice to the honor of his class. In the words of the illustrious commander, ' he met the enenry and — he was theirs. ' He hid in the attic of the house where the spread was to be, waited until the Sophs went in to partake of the sumptuous repast, then stole quietly into the cloak room and threw overcoats, cloaks and wraps out of the window. It would have been well for him had he followed the wraps, but therein he showed his verdancy. He then went back thinking to find a spot to feast his hungry eyes on the luxurious viands placed before the Sophs. He drew near the dining- room just as a brilliant Soph was responding to the toast ' our girls ' — ' bless-um-dear-creatures-all-of-um-oh-how-I-luv-um. ' It is needless to say our Freshie smiled audibly. I will tell you the rest in the hero ' s own words : ' Before I had fairty recovered from that smile, I was sur- rounded by the blood-thirsty Sophs. One great big fellow caught me by the coat collar, another grabbed me by the neck, another dusted the tables, chairs and floor with the back of my clothes. Then they all pitched in and stuffed their whole supper down m} throat. The bill of fare consisted of hash, prunes, beans, hard tack, molasses and water, and I tell you it was hard to swallow. I was just getting mad when they let me go, and it was a good thing they did, too. ' There, what do you think of us now ? That ' s enough to turn a man with a heart of stone in your favor. ' ' Join ' 89 ? Well, I guess I will. It makes me smile. 11 k 7 nin: — 1 0ffieers. HERBERT F. BRIGGS, MINNIE JONES, . BENJAMIN L. McFADDEN, . STELLA BASS, . STEPHEN J. HERBEN, President. Vice-President. Secretary. Treasurer. Chaplain. 7V embers. Bassett, George, South Evanston. Baxter, Andrew Lawson, Chicago. Beers, Forrest Wm., A T, Evanston, Blodgett, Frank Hodge, K W, Beloit, Wis., Briggs, Herbert Ftsk, B -) IT, Napa, Cal., Byam, Norton Horsford, South Evanston, Demorest, Frederick Coe, A T, Muscatine, Iowa, Denny, Charles Norton, AT, Blair, Neb., Dixon, Geo. William, $ K W, Chicago, Dunlap, Harry Lane, Paxton, Elmore, Arthur E., A T, RockforcU Farley, Samuel, A T, Marengo, Iowa, Ferguson, Charles Wesley, A T, Malta, Ferguson, Clayton Chester, Evanston, Gifford, William Edgar, Evanston, Graves, Charles Stephen, P K W, Wallace, Greene, Evarts Boutell, Evanston, Hamilton, Joseph Robert, Argyle, Wis., Herben, Stephen Joseph, $ K W, Jersey City, N. J. Holden, Robt. Hyde, A T, Baraboo, Wis., Howard, Otis McGaw, 2 X, Glencoe. Howell, Harold, Des Moines, Kunstman, Gustav William, A T, Chicago, Leonard, Herbert G., A T, Minneapolis, Lyman, Nathan Adelbert, $ K W, Rockf ord, Middlekauff, Wilbur, Forreston. Morse, Chas. Leavitt, Evanston, 420 Church Street. Emerson Street. 207 Davis Street. Kedzie Street. 47 Heck Hall. 425 Church Street. 714 Emerson Street. 217 Orrington Ave. South Evanston. 44 Heck Hall. Greenwood Street. Chicago Ave. Chicago Ave. 465 Emerson Street. 203 Davis Street. 50 Heck Hall. 461 Emerson Street. 317 Davis Street. 737 Chicago Ave. 428 Church Street. 47 Heck Hall. 714 Chicago Ave. 516 Judson Ave. 418 Clark Street. 12 McFadden, Benjamin L., 2 X, Stevens, Charles L., 2 X, Sullivan, Mark Linus, Tisdel, Clark James, B 77, Waugh, Frederick Coe, Weeden, Burr Miller, 2 X, Whitehead, Frank Cole, B 77, Wright, Charles Burton, Young, John Ballantyne, B 72, Babcock, Florence, Bass, Stella, A $, Brown, Lizzie Myra, Caraway, Blanche, Cleveland, Frances Sevella, Edwards, Elizabeth Belle, A , Foster, Grace Ida, A P, Foster, Sara Mitchell, A T, Gammon, Dora May, Jones, Nettie L., Jones, Minnie, A f , Ludlow, Theresa, Lyford, Charlotte E., Morse, Isabel Russell, K K F, Noyes, Lizzie Browning, O ' Neill, Sara A., Richey, May C, Townsend, Ada, K KT, Wire, Jennie Louise, Havana, Chicago, Chicago, RockSpring,W.T., Evanston, Evanston, Evanston, Woodstock, Elgin, Chicago, Evanston, FondduLac,Wis., Tuscola, Sterling, Evanston, Chicago, Milwaukee, Wis., Odell, Arlington Heights, Evanston, Paxton, Evanston, , Evanston, Evanston, Chicago, Ottawa, Evanston, Evanston, 317 Chicago Ave. Park Street. 1021 Orrington Ave. Union Hall Block. 222 Judson Ave. Emerson Street. 137 Davis Street. 628 Chicago Ave. Emerson Street. Woman ' s College. 724 Gro ve Street. Woman ' s College. Woman ' s College. College Cottage. 510 Maple Ave. Woman ' s College. 836 Chicago Ave. College Cottage. College Cottage. College Cottage. Woman ' s College. 745 Orrington Ave. 418 Clark Street. Grove Street. 2963 Wabash Ave. Woman ' s College. 719 Hinman Ave. College Cottage. 13 I I OPHOMORE ! it needs but to utter the name, For all acknowledge the rank we claim ; We personify intellect, strength and skill, We represent chivalry, valor and fame, What we undertake, we do with a will. Well we remember when first we came, — How we hated and grumbled at lessons too — That Trig. — of Freshman ' s life the bane, But we conquered of course, we always do. And then we decided to lay it to rest, Yet we fear its spirit has haunted a few. The Sophs then thought they ' d spoil our fun, The}- captured our chief and a speaker or two, And very kindly, to save us expense, They issued programs of the evening ' s events. We missed a few from the solemn scene, But we buried poor Trig, on the campus green. 14 And this is but one of the many occasions Where we have outwitted the envious foe. There ' s no need to tell, for everyone knows, How the Freshies were left When they plotted the theft Of some of the Sophomores ' clothes. But why should we tany and stop here to state All the deeds which have glowed on our records of late ? Just ask the professors, ask one and ask all For the brightest class in the college hall ; They ' ll show you a record grand and great And tell you ' twas made by Eighty-eight. u 15 • iafi ti n 1 ® ij l KZSdr rW BBS r ' rSZZZ I m,%amm . i ffisgn ss s as asgHsz nsag aaa BHSE 0ffieers, HARVEY R. CALKINS, ANNIE M. SWIFT, OSCAR MIDDLEKAUFF, HATTIE T. HAW, IRA C. CARTWRIGHT, President. Vice- President. Secretary. Treasurer. Chaplain. 7V embers, Austin, Edward William, Bass, George A., $ K W, Bass, Perkins Burnham, $ K W, Bennett, Charles Steven, W 1 , Booth, Charles Horace, $ K W, Byers, Fred. M., Bradford, Columbus, A V, Caddock, Henry, 2 X, Calkins, Harvey Reeves, B 77, Cartwright, Ira Chester, Clifford, Chester Carroll, Davidson, Eric Adolphus, Derbyshire, Will Grant, Edwards, Arthur Robin, B II, Engelke, Julius, Hall, William Augustus, $ K W, Hitt, Isaac Reynolds, Hubbard, Giles, 2 X, Hunt, John E., B S 77, Johnson, Isaac, llnebarger, charles elijah, a v, Woodstock, Evanston, Evanston, Evanston, Thawville, Kirkland, Licking, Mo., Newark, N. J., Evanston, St. Louis, Mo., Evanston, Trade Lake, Wis. Kenosha, Wis., Chicago, Sydna, Iowa, Chicago, Evanston, Evanston, Ashton, Capron, 111., Hinckley, 16 Univ. PI. Chi. Ave. 724 Grove Street. 724 Grove Street. 828 Hinman Ave. Opp. Preparatory. Chicago Ave. Room 44, Heck Hall. Opp. Preparatory. 621 Judson Ave. Heck Hall, Room 43. 620 Chicago Ave. Swedish Seminary. Davis Street. 137 Davis Street. Sherman Ave. 456 Church Street. 723 Chicago Ave. Chi. Ave. Church St. 818 Hinman Ave. 43 Heck Hall. 28 Foster Street. I Little, Frank, $ KW, Osage City, Kan., Middlekauff, Oscar, A V, Rockford, Middlekauff, Samuel Henry, Rockford, Page, Edward Carlton, Mt. Morris, Quereau, Edmund Chase, B II, Aurora, Richardson, George 0., Evanston, Thwing, Charles Burton, P KW, Hamilton, Mo., Tuttle, William Harvey, K W, Dunlap, Vandercook, Robert Oatman, Evanston, Allen Cora, A P, Turner Junction, Alling, Elmina Belle, K K r, Evanston, Chapin, Louella, Chicago, Earle, Mary Hattie, Taylor, Fitch, Julia Paddock, Kansas City, Mo., Keely, Lila Fame, A P, Nora, Moulding, Elizabeth Watkins, A , Chicago, Pearsons, Helen M., A P, Evanston, Sumner, Mary E., A $, Schuyler, Neb., Sunderland, Ida Thorne, K K jH, Englewood, Stevenson, Luna Elizabeth, Boone, Iowa, Swift, Annie May, A $, Union Stock Yards Thatcher, Mabelle, River Forest, Univ.Pl. Chi.Ave. 1019 Sherman Ave. 1019 Sherman Ave. 1019 Sherman Ave. 624 Chicago Ave. Opp. Preparatory. 461 Emerson Street. Cor. Davis Street. 452 Church Street. Woman ' s College. Benson Ave, 300 W.Jackson Street. 1023 Sherman Ave. College Cottage. Woman ' s College. Woman ' s College. 714 Chicago Ave. Woman ' s College. Woman ' s College. College Cottage. Woman ' s College. 812 Hinman Ave. 17 pHERE have been a few classes toward which the gaze of the college world has been directed with the profoundest admira- tion and respect. Their superiority has been so manifest that all, from the highest to the lowest, from the President to the Prep, have combined to do them honor. But the bright particular star of this small cluster of brilliants has been without doubt the class of ' 87. Like Minerva we sprang full armed from thundering Jupiter. Our valorous deeds have been sung in every tongue. Do you doubt our cl aims ? Go to ' 86, and ask those boastful Bibs who brought them bound hand and foot before the fairest tribunal forsooth the sun ever shone upon, and made them answer for their misdeeds. Who so filled them with fear and trembling at sight of our pow- erful brawn that they dared not meet us on the cleated floor in manly contest for tug of war ? Whose banners waived triumphant o ' er the field in public debate ? With downcast eyes and mournful visage they murmur Eight} -seven. 18 Go to ' 88, and hear of them how their presumption was sorely punished and their impudent canes broken over their heads. Who boldly cheeked their disgusting orgies over the remains of their defunct enemy and our whilom friend, T. Rig ? In declamation, how vain their efforts to win from us the laurel wreath ! But why go further ? Our deeds are household words. Our fame is won. Now we can enjoy the pleasures of philosophy, art and song with a pleasing consciousness that so long as chivalric virtues are in good repute, our memory will be warmly cherished by future generations. 19 e$£0£ k%ites nDnnnnnaDDnnnnnD.DnnDD !EigHty=S£ven. □nnDDDDnnnnnDDnnDDnan %% ' Qfficers, HUGH ATCHISON, LODILLA AMBROSE, EDWIN L. SHUMAN, . FRANK MIDDLEKAUFF, RUTER W. SPRINGER, President. Vice-President. Secretary. Treasurer. Chaplain. 7V embers. Atchison, Hugh, A T, Sycamore, Brand, Charles Herbert, A T, Polo, Brown, Harvey, B IT, Evanston, Campbell, Frank James, $ K W, Fargo, D. T. Davis, Smith Cornell, Evanston, Gloss, David ' Hamilton, Evanston, Hall, Winfield Scott, $ K W, Ayr, Neb.. Larash, George Irwin, A V, Peoria, Lewis, Charles George, B S U, Evanston, McLennan. William Etridge, $22 IP, Evanston, Middlekaufp, Frank Gibson, Forreston, Park Street. University Place. 137 Chicago Ave. 456 Church Street. 42 Heck Hall. 1019 Sherman Ave. Foster Street. 25 Heck Hall. Oak Lake Sts. Cor.Univ.Pl. Chi.Av 516 Judson Ave. 20 Place, Chester A., Evanston, 743 Orrington A i Raymond, William Chamberlin, Evanston, 411 Ridge Ave. i Chicago, Greenwood Strec it. Springer, Ruter William, 2 X, Springfield, Chicago Ave. i [ Stowe, Bond, B 77, Evanston, 629 Hinman Ave Wright, Herbert Perry, 2 X, Woodstock, 628 Chicago Ave I Alling, Kate Mariah, K K r, Evanston, Benson Ave. i ) Ambrose, Lodilla, Evanston, Emerson St reet. i Coon, Henrietta Marie, A $, Hanna City, College Cottage. [ Crandon, Josie Bentley, A F, ColumbiaFalls,Me.,312 Forest Ave. ; David, Mary E., Minooka, College Cottage ' Gloss, Janet Clive, Evanston, 1019 Sherman A ; Harvey, Ida Mary, Chicago, College Cottage. Holden, Helen Minerva, Baraboo, Wis., College Cottage. Hutchison, Mattie P., KKF, Mineral Pt.,Wis., Woman ' s Colleg e- ! Towle, Frances, A $, Evanston, 741 Orrington A ve. J Wales, Carrie Albertine, A $, Lanark, 714 Chicago Ave ► Watson, Margaret Selkirk, Evanston, 310 Ridge Ave. 1 ► ! 1 i H s j ► fSPH v L K II HHI tit jfHwjp l 1 j! sJP 5sl jjjjEj lailKB i 1! i T g iif 21 ( ( 71 GREETING is but the prelude to a farewell. When we entered Gj these halls, consecrated to learning, this present seemed far in the future ; but the time so long looked for has at length arrived. We have advanced steadily up the mount Parnassus until the summit is reached, and from senior heights we look back upon our fresh- man days, which seem but a speck in the distance. Our numbers are smaller than they have been in corresponding classes for several years ; but although 86 has lost some of its brightest stars, yet she has received several worthy additions. Since we w ere last called upon to cite the annals of ' 86, very little has occurred worthy of note, so our history is brief ; yet it is a history of hard work, earnest endeavor and merited success. Our class has a record of which she may well be proud. We look into the future and see ourselves pointed out as worthy models for succeeding classes. We have sought for fame, for glory, and an undying name, and w T ho says that the} 7 are not ours ? 22 The time is almost here when ' 86 shall perform her last requisite services and receive an honorable discharge. Our college race is nearly run, and the goal which seemed so distant and shadowy when we began will soon be in our grasp. We are very near that golden milestone where our progress must be halted, and each bidding adieu to his mates must separate and wander forth alone into a new and cruel country — the world. We go, better prepared for what the future may bring, on account of school discipline, the effects of which will be more strongly felt in time to come. As we cut loose from the moorings of our Alma Mater, we shall - ' look not mournfully into the past, it comes not back again. We will wisely improve the present, it is ours, and go forth to meet the shadow} ' future without fear and with brave hearts. The lessons that may henceforth come to us ma} ' require more earnest thought and study than any which text-books contain, but as we separate it will be with a determination to gain the mastery. Destiny may bring no sudden changes to us, yet it is with feelings of heartfelt sorrow that we say — FAREWELL. 23 HENRY L. KINDIG, MINNIE E. KING, E. A. SCHELL, . ANNA 0. PETERSON, C. S. T0MLINS0N, Qfficers, President. Vice-President. Secretary. Treasurer. Chaplain. TVlembers, Colman, Edward L., $K 2, La Crosse, Wis., Edmondson, Stuakt Parrott, $KW, Sumner, Fleming, Robert Isaac, AT, Hill, Joseph H., £ K W, Kindig, Henry Leonidas, 2 X, Perley, Lyman Ormond, P K W, Schell, Edwin Allison, $ K W, Tomlinson, Clinton S., B n, Bumann, Caroline C, King, Minnie Effie, Peart, M. Ada, A , Peterson, Anna Olivia, Hannibal, Mo., Emporia, Kan., New Sharon, la., Emporia, Kan., Crown Point, Ind., Boone, Iowa, St. Louis, Mo., Evanston, Braid wood, Galva, Van Benschoten, May Eva, K K V, Evanston, Avenue House. 49 Heck Hall. 49 Heck Hall. 1313 Chicago Ave. 10 Heck Hall. 1313 Chicago Ave. 39 Heck Hall. 137 Chicago Ave. Woman ' s College. 1040 Chicago Ave. College Cottage. College Cottage. 321 Chicago Ave. 24 Special Students. Andrews, Wilbur J., K W, Evanston, Greene, Truman R., Evanston, Greenman, Guy, Evanston, Hamill, Harry, B S 77, Blunt, D. T., Poyer, Ulysses Grant, Desplaines, Shumway, Philip Raymond, B 77, Evanston, Adkinson, Fannie, Moore ' s Hill, Ind. Barber, Ella Ursulla, Evanston, Blackman, Clara Lucile, Chicago, Boardman, Sarah Brayton, Evanston, Case, Carrie, K K F, Prairie du Chien, Comstock, Fannie, Evanston, Ellis, Clara, Clinton, Iowa, Fisk, Aurora Thompson, A F, Evanston, Haw, Hattie T., A F, Ottumwa, la., Howell, Lillien Maud, Des Moines, Johnson, Georgia Edith, Dillon, Montana, Myers, Helen May, K K F, Evanston, Patten, Gertrude, Charles City, la., Shute, Bertha Ward, Evanston, Tiel, Maud Emily, Cherokee, Iowa, Timmons, Lydia Rebecca, Chicago, Thompson Emma, KKF, Evanston, Towle, Anna C, A $, Evanston, Towle, Harriet Naylor, A $, Evanston, Ward, May Bell, Wilrnette, Hamlin Street. 1313 Chicago Ave. Life Saving Station. Union Hall Block. Sherman Ave. 207 Davis Street. College Cottage. Park St., nr. Worn. Col. Woman ' s College. Church Street. Woman ' s College. Ridge Ave. Woman ' s College. 625 Judson Ave. Woman ' s College. Woman ' s College. Woman ' s College. Avenue House , College Cottage. French House. Woman ' s College. Woman ' s College. 314 Chicago Ave. 741 Orrington Ave. 741 Orrington Ave. Wilrnette. 25 VmV VW r v i Awards for 1885. KIRK ORATORICAL PRIZE. 0. C. Mars, 85. DEERING ESSAY PRIZES. D. H. Bloom. W. C. Chase. Mary Henry. (1. C. Mars. Mary B. Swail. NORTON DECLAMATION PRIZES. Kate M. Alling, ' 87. Ada M. Peart, ' 86. R. I. Fleming, ' 86. GAGE DEBATE PRIZES. Harvey Brown, ' 87. E. L. Shuman, ' 87. ADELPHIC ORATORICAL PRIZES. E. A. Schell, ' 86. R. I. Fleming, ' 86. OSSOLI ESSAY PRIZE. Mary E. David, ' 87. CHESS GOLD MEDAL. Mary Henry, ' 85. HERBARIUM PRIZE. Janet C. Gloss, ' 87. 26 u+ a t k - T r degrees and k)if lomas. r r f f r 2b 1885 i BACHELOR OF ARTS. Owen Wheaton Battey, Jr. David Hestor Bloom. William Cather Chase. Frank Cook. William Dyer Fullerton. Mary Henry. William Russell Light. Rush McNair. Gerhart Cornell Mars. George Abraham Mulfinger. Leonard L. Skelton. BACHELOR OF PHILOSOPHY. Samuel Lambert Boddy. Ellen Mary Sawyer. Kate Lucinda Sharp. Mary Benedict Swail. Nellie Frances Weeks. Charles Addison Wightman. BACHELOR OF SCIENCE. Edward Dunn Huxford. Eugene Edward McDermott. Charles Sumner Slichter. Sydney Watson. BACHELOR OF LITERATURE. Mary Eleanor Moore. 27  w f Tw t fP f W f f w f t wtwf f W f w? ifWf W fwf y f tw fW fP 1 ' ■• nnmepsa iea Friday, June 12. Oratorical Contest for Kirk Prize, . . . , 8 p.m. D. H. Bloom, .... New England Puritans. ' Mary B. Swail, . . The Reformation of 18th Century. Mary Henry, ... The Mission of Scepticism. G.C.Mars, . . John Quincy Adams (The Representative). W.C.Chase, ...... Ireland. Sunday, June 14. Baccalaureate Sermon, . . . . . 10.30 a. m. President Joseph Cummings, D.D., LL.D. Sermon before the University Christian Association, . . 8 p.m. Rev. Bishop Samuel Fallows, D.D. Monday, June 15, Class Day Exercises, Oration, History, .... Poem, .... Prophecy, .... Examinations for Admissions, Anniversary of Preparatory School, 10.30 A. M. . W. D. FlJLLERTON. Ellen M. Sawyer. W. R. Light. Kate L. Sharp. 3 P. M. 8 P. M. 28 Tuesday, June 16, Annual Meeting of the Board of Trustees, Field Day Sports, . Conservatory Concert, . 9 A. M. 2 P. M. 8 P. M. Wednesday, June 17. Business Meeting of the Alumni Association, . . . 2 p. m. Banquet, . . . . . . . 8 p. m. Oration, ..... Frank E. Knappen, 77. Paper, .... Miss Helen L. Miller, ' 80. Thursday, June 18, Commencement Exercises, W. C. Chase, E. E. McDermott, Rush McNair, W. D. Fullerton, D. H. Bloom, Mary B. Swail, G. C. Mars, C. A. WlGHTMAN, C. S. Slighter, Mary Henry, . Kate L. Sharp, Sydney Watson, . 10 A. M. . Mirabeau. Milton ' s Satan. The Augustan Age. Cicero— The Man. • Witchcraft. ' ' The Jesuits in the New World. The Fall of Constantinople. Henry Fawcett. The Patriotism of Sumner. The Alhambra. . Shakespeare ' s Heroines. The Monroe Doctrine. 29 Qffieers, President, 1st Vice-President, 2d Vice-President, Secretary, Treasurer, Critic, Sergeant-a t-Arms, Chaplain, Organist, Chorister, C. B. THWING. I. R. HITT, Jr. C. S. BENNETT. J. A. ENGELKE. H. CADDOCK. F. J. CAMPBELL. P. B. BASS. S. J. HERBEN. C. E. LINEBERGER. H. R. CALKINS. 7V embers, E. W. Austin. G. 0. Barnes. C. S. Bennett. P. B. Bass. G. A. Bass. F. M. Byers. F. J. Campbell. I. C. Cartwright. H. Caddock. H. ft. Calkins. C. C. Clifford. E. A. Davidson. C. M. Denny. J. A. Engelke. I. R. Hitt, Jr. J. H. Hill. S. J. Herben. H. Howell. J. E. Hunt. f. Johnson. H. L. KlNDIG. C. E. LlNEBERGER. S. Middlekauff. 0. Middlekauff. E. C. Quereau. W. Raymond. C. L. Stevens. C. J. Tisdel. C. B. Thwing. R. 0. Vandercook. 30 Qfficers. President, - Vice President, - Secretary, - Treasurer, Critic, Chaplain, Serjeant-at-Arms, E. L. SHUMAN. D. H. GLOSS. C. H. BOOTH. F. C. DEMOREST. T. R. GREENE. W. H. TUTTLE. W. A. HALL. Active 7Vl ern kers, Atchison, H. I). Booth, C. H. Briggs, H. F. Brown, H. Demorest, F. C. Edmondson, S. P. Fleming, R. I. Gloss, D. H. Greene, T. R. Greene, E. B. Graves, C. S. Holden, R. H. Joke ! Wright, C. B. Hall, W. A. Hamilton, J. R. Kunstman, G. W. Little, F. Leonard, H. G. McLennan, W. E. McFadden, B. M. Schell, E. A. Shuman, E. L. Springer, R. W. Tuttle, W. H. Weeden, B. M. 31 ' m 9 V W V ' li iiilffiilHiiiiiiiiiiiiiMl l H iimimi .1 • ■■i ■S50LI ? 0ffieers. Presiden t, - Vice-President, - Secretary, - Treasurer, Critic, iSergeant-at-Anns, MINNIE KING. JENNIE GLOSS. HATTIE TOWLE. LILA KEELY. IDA HARVEY. ADA PEART. 7Wembers. Belle Alling. Kate Alling. Lodilla Ambrose. Florence Babcock. Nettie Brown. Carrie Bumann. Fannie Butcher. Henrietta Coon. Mary David. Jennie Gloss. Anna Groff. Sara Foster. Hattie Haw. Ida Harvey. Helen Holden. Lillien Howell. Lila Keely. Minnie King. Charlotte Lyford. Etta McKenney. Ada Peart. Mary Richey. Belle Shuart. Luna Stevenson. Mary Sumner. Lydia Timmons. Hattie Towle. Fannie Towle. Jennie Wire. pv v wm 32 WW V 33 DKEKA.PHI ! - f y %r a f s j - - || c 7= FOUNDED FEBRUARY, 1852, AT JEFFERSON COLLEGE, PENN. Colors : Pink and Lavender. • 1 ACTIVE CHAPTER ROLL. ► Washington and Jefferson College. Wabash College. Allegheny College. Columbian College. Lewisburg University. Universit} of Chicago. Pennsylvania College. Universit} T of Kansas. Dickinson College. Universit} ' of Michigan. Franklin and Marshall College. Johns Hopkins University. Lafayette College. Universitv of Wisconsin. University of Pennsylvania. Beloit College. University of Virginia. Northwestern Universitv. Washington and Lee University. Carlton College. [ Hampden-Sidney College. University of Mississippi. Ohio Wesleyan University. Cornell Universitv. Wittenberg College. Syracuse University. Wooster Uniyersit} . Hobart College. University of Ohio. University of the Pacific. ► Universitv of Indiana. Simpson College. ► De Pauw University. University of Iowa. South Carol ina College. ► ALUMNI CHAPTER ROLL. I Attica, Ind. Indianapolis. Baltimore. Kansas Cit} Chicago. Philadelphia. Columbus. Washington. Harrisburg. Wheeling. 1 Grand Arch Council convened at Indianapolis, April 7, 1886. ! 35 1 • PHI KAPPA PS I. Illinois Alpha FOUNDED 1864. ratres in ||rbe. Charles K. Bannister. Edward L. Everingham. Alexander W. Clark. William M. Raymond. ratres in facilitate. Robert Baird, Charles W. Pearson, (Chair of Greek). (Chair of Eng. Lit.) Robert D. Sheppard, George H. Horswell, (Chair of History and Political Econ.) (Instructor in Latin). Charles Horswell, (Instructor in Greek, G. B. I.) fratres iri |X n i pers i a e COLLEGE OF THEOLOGY. John N. Hall. Gerhart C. Mars, A.B. Charles Horswell, A.B. William I. Taylor, A.M., William E. Wilkinson, A.B. ( De pauw COLLEGE OF MEDICINE. Rufus G. Collins, Ph.B., M.D., Rush McNair, A.B. (Beloit). COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS. Seniors. Stuart P. Edmondson. L. Ormond Perley. Joseph H. Hill. Edwin A. Schell. Juniors. Frank J. Campbell. Winfield S. Hall. William E. McLennan. Sophomores. Wilbur J. Andrews. William A. Hall. George A. Bass. Frank Little. Perkins B. Bass. Charles B. Thwing. Charles H. Booth. William H. Tuttle. Freshmen. Frank H. Blodgett. Charles S. Graves. George W. Dixon. Stephen J. Herben. N. Adelbert Lyman. 36 EO.R LOCKWOOO 8. JON.N EW YOF § f i ma •:• ©I i- § FOUNDED AT MIAMI UNIVERSITY, OXFORD, OHIO, JUNE 28, 1855. Colors : Blue and Gold. ACTIVE CHAPTER ROLL. First Province. — 2 0, University of Pennsylvania ; K, Universit} of Lewisburg ; P, Lafayette College ; 0, Dickinson College ; Q, Penn- sylvania College ; A A, Stevens Institute of Technology ; A , Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology. Second Province. — W, University of Virginia ; Z, Washington and Lee University ; T, Roanoke College ; F I Randolph-Macon College ; 2 2, Hampden-Sidney College ; A M, Virginia Military Institute. Third Province. — F, Ohio Wes an University ; B x Wooster Uni- versity ; Z W, University of Cincinnati ; A F, Ohio State University ; M, Denison University ; Z Z, Center College ; H, University of Missis- sippi ; A N, University of Texas. Fourth Province. — g, De Pauw University ; A, Indiana State Uni- versity ; P, Butler University ; A A, Perdue University ; X, Hanover College ; A X, Wabash College. Fifth Province. — G Q, University of Michigan ; A K, Hillsdale College ; A A, University of Wisconsin ; A Z, Beloit College ; D., North- western University ; KK, Illinois State University ; A , Illinois Wesleyan University. Sixth Province. — A H, University of Iowa ; A g, University of Kansas ; A E, University of Nebraska. ALUMNI CHAPTERS. £1. Chicago. Q. Cincinnati. I. Indianapolis. H. Lafayette. 37 SIGMA cm. Omega Chapter CHARTERED, JUNE 23, 1869. f ratres in |J[rbe. Merritt C. Bragdon, A.M., M.D. Dexter P. Donelson, A.B. James E. Deering. George Lunt, Ph.B. Frank M. Elliot, B.L. Henry A. Pearsons, A.M. Frederick D. Hesler, M.D., U.S.N. Edward H. Webster, M.D. Frederick D. Raymond, A.M. Sydney Watson, B.L. Frank M. Brewer, M.D. Charles A. Wightman, Ph.B. fratres in facilitate. CHICAGO MEDICAL COLLEGE. E. Wyllis Andrews, A.M., M.D. Nathan Smith Davis, Jr., A.M., M.D. fratres in {Xm uers it:ate. COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS. Henry L. Kindig, ' 86. Benjamin L. McFadden, ' 89. Ruter W. Springer, 87. Burr M. Weeden, ' 89. Edwin L. Shuman, ' 87. Otis M. Howard, ' 89. Herbert P. Wright, ' 87. Giles Hubbard, ' 89. Henry Caddock, ' 88. Charles L. Stevens, ' 89. H. Bert Adams, ' 90. COLLEGE OF MEDICINE. Robert R. Edgar, ' 88. W. D. Jones, ' 87. COLLEGE OF LAW. J. M. Morgan. 38 yvy ? f t vw ¥Oi r  T ' fff pp. ifn i FOUNDED AT THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, JUNE 23, 1850. Fraternity Colors : Black and Gold. ACTIVE CHAPTER ROLL. University of Pennsylvania, Washington and Jefferson College, Franklin and Marshall College, University of Virginia, University of North Carolina, Lehigh University, Randolph-Macon College, North- western University, Richmond College, Haverford College. -s s CSi i ft ' ■rn 39 ' ■—. ' ■—■' .— . -- ' -- - ' - ' . - . - - -- . - --—- ' .- - . - ' . PHI KAPPA SIGMA. Upsilon Chapter. Ss .-- 5 - FOUNDED AT THE NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY IN 1872. Fratres in |Xrbe. C. B. Rice, 78. Dr. Junius Hoag, ' 78. F. B. Dyche, ' 80. F. L. Rice, ' 81. J. S. CONWELL, ' 82. W. A. Dyche, ' 82. M. M. Gridley, ' 83. E. B. Quinlan, ex- ' 83. W. A. Phillips, ' 83. Conrad Bunn, ex- ' 84. Chas. S. Raddin, ' 84. W. D. Sargent, ' 84. f rater in facilitate. CHICAGO MEDICAL COLLEGE. Frank S. Johnson, A.M., M.D. fratres in |X n i vers a e « COLLEGE OF MEDICINE. Geo. A. Cook, ' 88, N. W. U. ex- ' 88. COLLEGE OF LAW. Albert Barnum, ' 87. H. L. Stillman, ' 86. Active 2Vl emD ers. Frank A. Draper. John H. Swail. TULLY ESTEE. W. D. Barnes. E. A. Meyer. E. M. Black. H. L. Dunlap. Deceased. 40 w§ e ,®ta- S ta -dp FOUNDED AT MIAMI UNIVERSITY, JULY 4, 1839. Colors : Pink and Bliit ACTIVE CHAPTER ROLL. Adelbert College. Amherst College. Beloit College. Bethany College. Boston University. Brown University. Center College. Columbia College. Cornell College. Cumberland College. Denison College. De Pauw University. Dickinson College. Hampden-Sidney College. Hanover College. Harvard University. Indiana State University. Iowa State University. Iowa Wesleyan University. Johns Hopkins University. Kenyon College. Madison University. Maine State College. Northwestern University. Ohio State University. Ohio Wesleyan University. Randolph-Macon College. Richmond College. Rutgers College. Stevens Institute. St. Lawrence University. Texas University. Union College. University of California. University of Kansas. University of Michigan. University of Mississippi. University of Ohio. University of Pennsylvania. University of Wisconsin. University of Wooster. Vanderbilt University. Virginia University. Wabash College. Washington and Jefferson College. Westminister College. ALUMNI CHAPTER ROLL. 1. Providence 2. Boston. 3. New York. 4. Baltimore. 5. Wheeling. 6. Richmond. 7. Cincinnati. 8. Cleveland. 9. Indianapolis. 41 10. Chicago. 11. San Francisco. 12. Denver. 13. St. Paul. V W V w iA A A ! BETA THETA PI. Northwestern Chapter ESTABLISHED, JULY 4, 1873. ratres in |Xrbe. Rev. F. H. Clatworthy. Wm. Treese Smith. I. R. Hitt. Darwin H. Cheney. Irving N. Queal. Frank E. Lord. Rev. C. H. Zimmerman. E. D. Quigley. Frank H. Scott. James T. Hatfield. Wm. 0. Shepard. Henry R. Hatfield. Frank E. Miller. f ratres in IXniuersitate. COLLEGE OF THEOLOGY. Chas. N. Zeublin, ' 87. COLLEGE OF LAW. David H. Bloom, ' 87. Everett A. Aborn. COLLEGE OF MEDICINE. ratres in acultate. Prof. J. H. Long. Prof. W. W. Jaggard. STUDENTS. G. S. Cox, ' 87. H. S. Metcalf, ' 85. Gr. B. Hopengarner. COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS. Senior. Clinton S. Tomlinson. Juniors. Bond Stowe. Chas. G. Lewis. Harvey Brown. Sophomores. Harvey R. Calkins. John E. Hunt. Arthur R. Edwards. Edward C. Quereau. Freshmen. Harry Hamill. Clark J. Tisdel. Herbert F. Briggs. Frank C. Whitehead. Phil R. Shumway. John B. Young. 42 GEO R LOCKWOOD SONNEWYORK T0= - JNta- Sp ilon FOUNDED AT WILLIAMS COLLEGE, 1834. Col oi ' s : Blue and Gold. ACTIVE CHAPTERS. Williams. Union. Hamilton. Amherst. Adelbert. Colby. Rochester. Middlebury Rutgers. Brown. Madison. New York. Cornell. Marietta. Syracuse. Michigan. Northwestern. Harvard. Wisconsin. Lafayette. Columbia. Lehigh. 43 wmw wmwm w '    y  «g         w « k LJ0 J jUk Jk t d DELTA UPSILON. Northwestern Chapter. FOUNDED, FEBRUARY 18, 1880. Fratres in |X rDe - P. D. MlDDLEKAUFF, ' 82. P. S. WEBSTER, ' 81. N. C. Miller, ' 81. ratres in Uniuersitate. COLLEGE OF MEDICINE. C. G. Plummer, ' 84. COLLEGE OF THEOLOGY. W. F. Atchison, ' 84. H. 0. Cady, ' 83. COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS. Senior. R. I. Fleming. Juniors. Geo. I. Larash. C. H. Brand. H. J). Atchison. Sophomores. Oscar Middlekauff. C. E. Linebarger. C. Bradford. Freshmen. F. W. Beers. Gr. W. Kunstmann. Fred. C. Demorest. Samuel Farley. Arthur E. Elmore. Robert H. Holden. H. G. Leonard. C. M. Denney. C. W. Ferguson. 44 v :? § mm. @ FOUNDED AT SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY, SYRACUSE, N. Y., 1872. Colors : Bordeaux and Silver Gray. ACTIVE CHAPTER ROLL. A. S} ' racuse. B. Northwestern. H. Boston. I ! 45 ALPHA PHI. Beta Chapter ESTABLISHED, MAY, 1881. §orores in |X rDe - Frances E. Willard. Carrie Calkins. Sorores in facilitate. Rena A. Mic haels, Ph.D. Catharine Beal, B.P. gorores in Uniuersitate. Senior. Ada M. Peart. Juniors. Henrietta Coon. Frances Towle. Anna M. Towle. Harriet N. Towle. Albertine C. Wales. Cora L. Allen. Lila F. Keely. Lizzie Moulding. Stella Bass. Lizzie B. Edwards. Soj)ho?7iores. Freshmen. Helen Pearsons. Mary E. Sumner. Annie M. Swift. Grace I. Foster. Minnie Jones. 46 KEFHIHHZBHHEjdjdcid i 1 i i i U 1 I gB asro HEHEHBKEgS; JMta • flamma, 3fc ZgPEEEEEgHEra ' EHHF FOUNDED AT OXFORD, MISS., 1872. Colors : Bronze, Pink and Blue. ACTIVE CHAPTER ROLL. W. Oxford, Miss. H. Buchtel. r. St. Lawrence. 9. Adelbert. Z. Albion. £1. Wisconsin State. A. Minnesota State. . Northwestern. A. Hanover. A. Mt. Union. X. Cornell University. 3. Ann Arbor. 47 rJ DELTA GAMMA. Sioma Chapter FOUNDED, MARCH, 1882. onopapj TVlembers. Alice D. Cummings. Lizzie R. Hunt, ' 77. gorores in |Xrbe. Sara E. White, 82. Carrie L. Hunt, ex- ' 85. Anna L. Crandon, ' 83. Alida Gr. White, ex- ' 85. Katherine E. Redfield, ex- ' 87. gorores in Uniuersitate. Junior. Josie B. Crandon. Sophomore. Hattie T. Haw. Fresh Aurora T. Fisk. Sara Foster. In Elocution Department. Camilla Ferris. 48 ti m?, ffl w j nuiiimiuii iTTT n giqnin 1 1 1 1 1 S 3 j j i rxx iiJUjrxxiixxiiJJjrJLi T ijix ixxjrM i .Ml F 369 5 Sz 1 i pfa • IQsppa • ga m ma FOUNDED AT MONMOUTH COLLEGE, OCTOBER 13, 1870. Colors : Navy Blue and Light Blue. ACTIVE CHAPTER ROLL. Alpha Province. — $, Boston ; B, St. Lawrence ; T, Syracuse ; W, Cornell ; yl, Buchtel ; F, Wooster. Beta Province.— z , Indiana State ; , De Pauw ; M, Butler ; K, Hillsdale ; H, Wisconsin State ; g, Adrian. Gamma Province. — E, Illinois Wesley an ; F, Northwestern; G, Missouri State ; X, Minnesota State ; 0, Simpson Centenary ; Z, Iowa State ; 2, Nebraska State ; O, Kansas State ; 77, California State. 49  w w w w KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA. Upsilon Chapter. ESTABLISHED, APRIL 18, 1882. Sorores in {Xrbe. Margaret Noble. Mary S. Morse, ex- ' 86. gorores in Uniuersitate. Senior. Mary E. Van Benschoten. Juniors. Kate M. Alling. Mattie P. Hutchison. Sophomores. Belle E. Alling. Ida T. Sunderland. Freshmen. Carrie Case. Isabelle Morse. Helen M. Myers. Emma Thompson. Ada Townsend. TS .4 — I — r i H- a 4 ?- gj- -H- 1 -J. - -«sJ- T « 50 Ik. N V td Phi Kappa Psi, L. 0. Perley, ' 86. W. S. Hall, ' 87. P. B. Bass, ' 88. F. H. Blodgett, ' 89. G. W. Dixon, ' 89. C. S. Graves, 89. S. J. Herben, ' 89. N. A. Lyman, ' 89. H. L. Kindig, ' 86. H. P. Wright, ' 87. R. R. Edgar, ' 89. 0. M. Howard, ' 89. G. Hubbard, ' 89. Sigma Clii. B. L. McFadden, ' 89. C. M. Stevens, ' 89. L. D. Wallace, ' 89. B. M. Weeden, ' 89. R. H. Harvey, ' 90. H. B. Adams, ' 90. W. D. Barnes H. L. Dunlap, ' 90. Phi Kappa Sigma. 90. E. H. Meyers, ' 90. T. Estee, ' 91. J. H. Swail, ' 91. Beta Theta Pi, H. F. Briggs, ' 89. F. C. Whitehead, ' 89. P. R. Shumway, ' 89. J. B. Young, ' 89. C. J. Tisdel, ' 89. C. N. Zeublin, ' 87. Delta Upsilon. F. W. Beers, ' 89. F. C. Demorest, ' 89. C. M. Denny, ' 89. A. E. Elmore, ' 89. S. Farley, ' 89. R. H. Holden, ' 89. G. W. Kuntsmann, ' 89. H. G. Leonard, ' 89. P t f tW fWf f Wf T W W 51 OUR BABIES. Mary E. Sumner, Stella Bass, ' 89. Alpha Phi. 38. Elizabeth Edwards, ' 89. Grace I. Foster, ' 89. Minnie Jones, ' 89. Delta Gamma. Sara M. Foster, ' 89. Aurora T. Fisk, ' 89. Camilla Ferris. Kappa Kappa Gamma. Kate M. Alling, 87. Isabel Morse, ' 89. Belle E. Alling, ' 88. Clara J. Thompson, 89. Carrie Case, ' 89. Ada Townsend, ' 89. Francis L. Chick, ' 89. Helen Meyers, ' 89. Emma Thompson, ' 89. 52 R RAYMOND, D.D., LL.D SYST. THEOL. THEOl HON. GRANT GOODRICH. PRES. BOARD TRUSTEES. ORRINGTON LU SEC. BOARD TRUSTEES. i?S ' z ' r J != ' ' != ' , = ' l! I Ifoffett Biblical Institute. Faculty. HENRY B. RIDGAWAY, A.M., Dickinson College, 1849; D.D., 1868. Cornelia Miller Professor of Practical Theology, and President. MINER RAYMOND, A.M., Wesleyan University, 1840 ; D.D., 1854 ; Professor of Practical Theology. MILTON S. TERRY, A.M., Wesleyan University, 1870 ; D.D., 1879. Professor of Old Testament Exegesis. LL.D., N. W. U., 1884. CHARLES W. BENNETT, A.M., Wesleyan University, 1852 ; D.D. ($ B K). Professor of Historical Theology. Genesee College, 1870; (W T), CHARLES F. BRADLEY, A.M., Dartmouth, 1873 ; B.D., G.B.I., 1878 ; (A A $), ( 2 B K). Professor of New Testament Exegesis. ROBERT M. CUMNOCK, A.M., Wesleyan University, 1868 ; (W T), ($ B K). Professor of Rhetoric and Elocution. CHARLES HORSWELL, A.B., Northwestern University 1884 ; ( £ K W). Instructor in Greek. WILLIAM ROLLINS, Instructor in Hebrew. 53 GARRETT BIBLICAL INSTITUTE. (©OMMENGEMENT 5EEI . May 9-13, 1886. Baccalaureate Sermon, . . Sunday, Ma} T 9, 10.30 a. m. Rev. Bishop J. M. Walden, D.D., LL.D. Anniversary of Missionary Society, . . May 9, 7.30 p. m. Inaugural Address, .... May 10, 7.30 p. m. Prof. R, M. Cumnock, A.M. Annual Examinations, .... May 11 and 12. Meeting of Alumni Association, . . . May 11, 3 p. m. Alumni Address, ..... May 11, 8 p. m. Rev. J. S. Chadwick, D.D., ' 61. Alumni Banquet, ..... May 11, 8 p. M. Meeting Board of Trustees, . . . May 13, 10 a. m. Joint Meeting of Trustees and Visitors, . . May 13, 3 p. m. Commencement Exercises, .... May 13, 7.30 p. m. Commencement Speakers. H. 0. CADY, A.B. W. C. HOWARD, B.S. A. F. HART. A. T. LUTHER. W. E. WILKINSON, A.B. 54 1 1 • ! ! ( GARRETT BIBLICAL INSTITUTE. J sIASIAN LlIiPE AF$Y i SOGIETY. • Pro Deo et Ecclesia. ; Qfficers. President, - J. w. EDWARDS. Vice- Pre sklent, - F. W. GINN. Secretary, - F. H. GARDNER. Treasurer, - J. D. LEEK. Critic {Senior), - - C. N. ZEUBLIN. ; Critic {Junior), - G. W. RODERICK. Chaplain, - EN OS holt. ; Sergeant-a t-Arms, - W. E. GIFFORD. Chorister, F. H. TAYLOR. ; i ► 55 i lA A A A A. GARRETT BIBLICAL INSTITUTE. CQissionai y Society, The w oi- Id is my parish. President, Vice President, Recording Secretary, Treasurer, 0fficers, J. D LEEK. H. 0. CADY. ENOS HOLT. RICHARD BROWN. Anniversary Exercises, jVfay 9, 1SSG. W. F. ATCHISON, A.B., W. M. DUDLEY, B.S., RICHARD BROWN, J. W. EDWARDS. 56 i4 i 4af i GARRETT BIBLICAL INSTITUTE. O p e n i n o Day OCTOBER 15, 1885. Addresses. The Preacher and his Pen, . Rev. Arthur Edwards, D.D. Preparation for the Ministry, Rev. Bishop Charles H. Fowler, D.D.. LL.D., 61. The Minister in the Field, Rev. Bishop Thomas Bowman, D.D., LL.D. Founders Day. MARCH 5, 1886. Memorial Address. Rev. AMOS W. PATTEN, B.D., Class of 1870. Retrospect. Miss FRANCES E. WILLARD. Ode. Written for the occasion, by William White, of New York. 57 1 GARRETT BIBLICAL INSTITUTE. ; ! i 0fficers of Senior ;G ass i J President, . W. E. WILKINSON. | Vice-President, A. F. HART. 1 Secretary, . E. J. ROSE. ( Treasurer, A. T. LUTHER. Students. SENIOR CLASS. Blue, Frank, . Jacksonville, N. Y. Cady, H. Olin, A B., A T, . Middlebury, Vt. Dudley, Willey M., B.S., Mapleton, Iowa. Hart, Alfred F., Ransom, Mich. Howakd, Walter C, B.S., Manhattan, Kan. Kamp, Henry D., A.M., Lowell, Wis. Luther, Alexander T., ... . Carson City, Mich. Rose, Edward J., Portersville, Ohio. Smith, J. Hamline, Wilshire, Ohio. Taylor, Lewis N., Fulton, Mo. Wilkinson, William E., A.B., $ K W, . . . . Evanston. MIDDLE CLASS. Baldwin, Fred L., . Marshall, Minn. Barker, John W., Statesville, N. C. De Weese, J. M., . Columbus Grove, Ohio. Dudley, Homer P., . Mapleton, Iowa. Edwards, John W., Alexis. Farquhar, Robert W., . Aberdeen, Scotland. Finley, Richard S., A.B., Parallel, Kan. Gannaway, William H., Charleston. . Thomson. Gardner, Frank H., Harmon, Josiah G., . Ingraham. Harmon, John F., . Ingraham. Hensell, George D., Grig gsville. Holt, Enos, . Riverside. Horswell, Charles, A.B., P K W, . . . Armstrong Grove. Huston, John W., B.S., Graham, Mo. Kinney, Melvin, . Mt. Carroll. | Knuckey, James T., Scales Mound. Lee, Nathan H., . Flora. 1 Leek, John D., . Buttonville, Ont. . . . . Sussex, Wis. Lean, John S., LUNDEOARD, ELLERT J., . Farsund, Norway. Deceased. 58 GARRETT BIBLICAL INSTITUTE t Marcellus, Edward F., . . Brock, Neb. 1 McDole, Azor, ...... Edna, Kan. Moore, Oliver T., . Tyron, Neb. j Norton, Niram F., B.S., Rowley, Iowa. Olsen, Joseph, ...... Norway. Pelley, Ebenezer G, . Niagara Falls, Ont. 1 Pierce, Reuben E, A.B., . Centralia. Pierce, William H., A.B., .... Centralia. | Rhodes, Wellington P., A.B., Denver, Col. Reuter, William C, Bethany, Mo. ► Rollins, William, ..... . Yorkville, Wis. J Reynolds, John, ...... . Parker, D. T. Roderick, George W., . Galion, Ohio. j Saunders, Albert, ...... . London, Ont. Smith, Robert T., Sheldon, Mo. Taylor, William I., A.M., £ K W, Richardsville, Ky. Van Pelt, John R., A.M., .... Bloomington. 1 Weir, Samuel, Otsego Lake, Mich. | Woods, Jesse S., . . Evanston. Zeublin, Charles N., B LJ, Chicago. JUNIOR CLASS. Anderson, Gilbert, .... . Chicago. Atchison, Wilbur F., A.B., A T, . Evanston. Bannister, Carlton, A.B., Nyack, N. Y. i Baskerville, Emanuel J., B.S., . Baldwin, Kan. ] Boardman, J. Stanton, ..... Olean, N. Y. Bowder, Henry J., A.B., ..... Rowley, Iowa. 1 Brayton, Fred C. B., . Blue Island. Brown, Richard, ...... Georgetown, Wis. 1 Burdick, Francis A., . Parker, Dakota. j Carlton, William Washington, A.B., Ph.B., . Clear Lake, Iowa. Carlyon, Richard, .... Sault Ste. Marie, L. Sup. Cattermole, Edward George, ... Vermillion. Cissel, Cassius C, Corunna, Ind. 1 ; Graig, Robert H., ...... Gray Co., Ont. ] Dawson, Ralph H., Mound City, Mo. j Derby, George, ...... Newark. Dewhirst, Andrew, ..... . Clay Co. Doble, William, ...... Chicago. Pox, Ernest L., A.B., ..... . Fullerton, Neb.  Fretts, Joseph R., A.B., . Stoners, Penn. Gaddis, Eugene S., . . . . . Dayton, Ohio. Gifford, William E., Evanston. Ginn, Frederick W., . Vail, Iowa. Hall, John N., £ K W, Evanston. 1 Hamerson, John, ...... Wall Lake, Iowa. Henderson, J. Ezra, ..... Arkona, Canada. J 59 GARRETT BIBLICAL INSTITUTE. JUNIOR CLASS— Continued. Johnson, James Albert, Kemp, John C, Kendrick, Milton H., Kopp, William, Lumpkin, Albert M., A.B., Mars, Gerhardt C, A.B., K W, Northrup, Frederck H., A.B., Parker, Murray S., A.B. Patterson, Edmund Booth, A.B. Peck, Alva B., Perry, Enoch, Place, Chester A., . Poland, John H., Porritt, Charles, Reid, John Wesley, Ryder, George M., . Scarrow, David H., Shambaugh, William, Shaw, James R., . Simmons, Albert N., A.M., Simmons, Charles W., A.B., Simpson, William H., Symons, Edgar J., Smith, Abner Clapp, Smith, Julius, B.S., Stangland, Egert M., Sweatt, Frank E., M.D., Taylor, Frank H., . Tippett, James H., Trezona, Henry, Villars, Ulysses S., Worrall, Charles Wesley, Warren, Edward D., Washburn Dewitt C, B.S., A.B. Winmell, Richard Morris, Wolff, Edward L., . Young, James, Yuasa, Kichro, Gainesville, Texas. Montezuma, Intl. Sycamore. Newark, N. J. Sharon, Kan. Galena. Beloit, Wis. Richmond, Md. New Buffalo, Mich. Woodhull. Bristol, Wis. Earlville. Stanberry, Mo. . Orion, Mich. Lindsay, Ont. Woodstock. . Mt. Forest, Ont. Osawatomie, Kan. . Kerwood. Jersey Co. Brookville, Iowa, Jacksonville, Fla. Camborne Academy, Eng. . Kansas City. Savannah, Mo. Evanston. Willsborough, N. Y. Kingston, Ont. Central City, Col. Scales Mound. Clinton. Chebanse. Minneapolis, Minn. Des Moines, Iowa. , Dak. Keithsburg. Tapley, Ont. Annaka, Japan. 60 l fcA«fc OA Al I GARRETT BIBLICAL INSTITUTE. £♦ B« !• W hington ' $ «girih iag tebraiioru Who was the first man ? — (G. B. I., Feb. 22, ' 86.) 61 VVf «f ' W f W ? W?  WtW? Wf ?W? WtW ?WTW fW T W ?W In jfltaoriam. X. m. aglor, ' 88. (Oarrett biblical institute.) Died September 22 , 1885, as. at. Cook, ee, (Chicago ZlDeMcal College.) lied pril 8, 1686 62 E. C. DUDLEY. JOHN E. OWENS. ■wmMi mz r z te z 6 LLEGE-OF| M EDICINE. yacultj . N. S. DAVIS, M.D., LL.D., Dean. EDMUND ANDREWS, A.M., M.D., LL.D., Treasurer. H. A. JOHNSON, A.M., M.D., LL.D. RALPH N. 1SHAM, M.D. J. H. HOLLISTER, A.M., M.D. J. S. JEWELL, A.M., M.D. E. 0. F. ROLER, A.M., M.D. SAMUEL J. JONES, M.D., LL.D. MARCUS P. HATFIELD, A.M., M.D. LESTER CURTIS, A.M., M.D. E. C. DUDLEY, A.M., M.D. JOHN E. OWENS, M.D. OSCAR C. DeWOLF, A.M., M.D. JOHN H. LONG, Ph.D. W r ALTER HAY, M.D., LL.D. FREDERICK C. SCHAEFER, M.D. CHRISTIAN FENGER, M.D. W. E. CASSELBtiRRY, M.D. W. W. JAGGARD, M.D. I. N. DANFORTH, A.M., M.D. A. G. PAINE, A.M., M.D. FRANK BILLINGS, M.D., Secretary. F. S. JOHNSON, A.M., M.D. 63 ftkago HU dJkal $ II«g«. (The ,, HE archives of the Chicago Medical College contains an interesting -J historical document in the first records of the Facult} ' . The first entry is as follows : At a meeting held March 12, 1859, at the office of Drs. Rutter and Isham, the following named gentlemen were present : David Rutter, M.D. ; H. A. Johnson, M.D. ; Edmund Andrews, M.D., and Ralph N. Isham, M.D. It was announced, in a few words, b} Dr. Johnson, that the object of the meeting was to organize a Medical Faculty of the Lind University, on the basis of a proposition made by the trustees of said University, and submitted to the above named gentlemen for their consideration. The Faculty was organized, N. S. Davis, M.D., J. H. Hollister, M.D., and five others being added, making the original Faculty of eleven membe rs. These gentlemen, without appreciation, syrnpatlry or support from an indifferent profession and an apathetic public, united in a determined struggle to establish a medical school — the first of its kind in the United States — with a graded and consecutive course of instruction, extending through a period of three 3 T ears. Brilliant success has crowned the efforts of the eleven innovators. The influence of the institution in the cause of higher medical education has been distinct and profound, and now the leading schools all over the land are gradually falling into line. It the year 1869 — relations with the Lind University having been terminated by mutual consent — Chicago Medical College became the Medical Department of Northwestern University. Status Praesens. — The character of the work now being done in the institution under consideration is indicated in some degree by the result of the last annual competitive examination for internes at the Cook County Hospital. Eight vacancies in the Hospital Staff were to be filled. Twenty-eight candidates presented themselves, seven of whom were from C. M. C. After a severe, though strictly impartial examination, lasting through two days, the examiners awarded six positions to the candidates from Chicago Medical College. With the prestige of a glorious past, a complete Faculty of energetic medical men, a corps of one hundred and forty well-prepared and enthu- siastic students, a powerful Alumni Association, new and commodious buildings, chemical, histological, physiological and pathological labora- tories, the clinical material of Mercy, St. Luke ' s, Michael Reese Hospitals and the South Side Dispensary, Chicago Medical College bids fair to con- tinue to flourish, bloom and bear fruit. 64 Nathan $mifh 7 airi$, J}.j -, ££! ., DEAN OF CHICAGO MEDICAL COLLEGE, AS born in Chenango Count} ' , N. Y. His earl} ' life was spent on a farm, and his elementary education was obtained in a district school. His manifest love for books led to his being sent to a seminary where he laid the foundation of his scientific studies, which were further pursued in the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Western New York. After three years spent in the study of medicine he began the practice of his chosen profession in Vienna, N. Y. ; but soon went to Binghamton, a larger and more flourishing place. He remained there, obtaining a large practice and a most honorable reputation in the com- munity, until 1847, when he removed to New York City. Within two years he acquired a good practice, received the honorable recognition of his professional brethren, and was appointed Demonstrator of Anatomy in the College of Physicians and Surgeons. In 1849, being elected to the chair of Physiology and Pathology in Rush Medical College, Chicago, he removed to that city, where he has resided and labored constantly for thirty-seven years. The following year he was made Professor of Princi- ples and Practice of Medicine. He has always been an advocate of a higher medical education ; was one of the founders of the Chicago Medical Col- lege, whose reform movement bids fair to revolutionize medical education in America. He has been constantly, both editor of and writer for medi- cal journals, and has published a number of valuable books, the last and most valuable being Principles and Practice of Medicine. He is the acknowledged founder of the American Medical Associa- tion, which is the great national medical organization of the country ; has been honored with its highest offices, and its bronze medal bears on one side the face of Dr. Davis, and upon the other, American Medical Asso- ciation, 1846. Little idea can be obtained of the work done by this untiring man. From 6 o ' clock a. m. till 12 at night are his regular hours. The hours of the day are spent in attendance upon the sick, the hours of the night in writing. He is loved by his host of friends, revered by his patients, and honored by all. Since youth he has been an earnest Christian, and a teacher of morality and temperance, both by precept and example. 65 COLLEGE OF MEDICINE. M ' 86. IN I I . I ( k GOODLY company of sturdy and intelligent manhood were the (Ah fellows that for the first time, September 23, 1883, filled the +J - amphitheatre of the Chicago Medical College. Sturdy and intelligent they were, yet, withal, as motley a company as ever came together. Chaucer ' s pilgrims at the Tabard Inn were not more varied in character than thej It was a cheerful class, an ambitious class ; and it was not to its dis- credit that sometimes in a mirage, at the horizon, it saw an eminent com- pany of physicians and surgeons, which resembled, to a remarkable degree, the individual members ; and a few who lived away up among the haughty hills of the intellect could see themselves reflected in heroic pro- portions upon the cloud-banks of the Future, a phenomenon not unlike the aerial shadow known as the Specter of the Brocken. The first year we had no class organization, but at the beginning of the middle term, feeling the need, we elected the following officers : G-. A. Wood, president ; C. G-. Rankin, vice-president ; P. J. Taugher, secre- tar} and treasurer. The second year was busy enough, to be sure. How the work piled up until the class thought that one straw more would break the camel ' s back. The one straw more was added, however, and relief was sought in the usual way, by petition. A committee ascended Mt. Olympus and tried to spread out its complaint, but Dr. Davis, to use Homeric phrase, spake and gave the nod with his dark brows ; or, in the words of one of the suppliants, he sat down on them. Jokes and bons mots, some of them winged ones, were in the air these years. Of course the odor of sulphuretted hydrogen was occasionally upon them. The third year opened with goodly addition to our number. In due time the evening for election of class-officers arrived. The ballots made a happy choice. Marble ' s name for president ; Smith ' s, for vice-president, and Taugher ' s again, for secretary, awakening cordial applause. At the close of the same meeting, the class, recognizing the marked ability of Mr. Hibbard, unanimously voted that he should say vale for them on Commencement Day. Commencement Day came, and the motley company, like Chaucer ' s pilgrims from the Tabard Inn, set out upon its way. 66 i — -  COLLEGE OE MEDICINE. j (Llass of JLigKtijOipc. ; i 0fficers. [ W. H. MARBLE, - - President. E. M. SMITH, - Vice-President. P. J. TAUGHER, - - Secretary and Treasurer. ! W. N. H1BBARD, - Valedictorian. H. S. METCALF, - Historian. I 7W em bers. ! Brand, M., .... . Chicago, 111. Brannon, George, Lowell, Ind. Brennon, D. F., . Chicago, 111. Broel, A. C, Dubuque, Iowa. Calkins, F. W., . Rockford, 111. ; Cowdrick, E. E., . Napoleon, Ohio. [ Easter. C H, Chicago, 111. Fleming, C. K., . Chicago, 111. Fredendall, G. W., . . Washington, Kan. J Froom, A. E., Chicago, 111. Hale, A. B., W T, . Chicago, 111. ' Hanna, E. A., Chicago, 111. | Henry, F. H., . Chicago, 111. Hibbard, W. N., A.M., 2 $, $B I Hyde Park, 111. Hurie, E. J., . . Newmansville, 111. Jenks, F. H., Piano, 111. Marble, W. H, A.B., A H W, . Ashburnham, Mass. Markley, P. L., . Archibald, Ohio. Martinitz, S. von, Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Normal, 111. McCormick, M. K., A.M., A (-), Metcalf, F. H., . Jacksonville, 111. Metcalf, H. S., A.M., B S 77. Mt. Carrol], 111 Miner, H. N., . . Colfax, Cal. Nelson, J. W., B.S., Collins, Wis. Pickard, W. 8., . Champaign, 111. Plummer, C. G., B.S., A T, Evanston, 111. . Rock Island, 111 Plummek, S. C, B.A., Rankin, C. G., A.B., Glastonberry, Conn. 1 Rogers, F. W., . Jackson, Mich. ] Sauerhering, D. L., Mayville, Wis. Sincere, M , . Chicago, 111. Smith, E. M., Cascade, Wis. J Steinbach. John, . Milwaukee, Wis. Taugher, P. J., Osman, Wis.  Thomas, J. S., B.S., . . Reedsburg, Wis. Wang, A. M., A.B., Ph.B., Chicago, 111. Warrington, L. P., A.B., Ludlow, 111. Wood, George A., Chicago, 111. 67 1 • COLLEGE OF MEDICINE. = = ' 8 7.= = Sept. 28. The class of ' 87, flushed with victory, return to pitch their tents — and pennies — in the domain of Whack ' em and Slaughter. Sept. 29. The neighborhood, aroused to unusual activity. Uncles erect their marts of exchange, where, but a short time before, the pensive william goat munched in peace the succulent stove-pipe. Oct. 1. The class meets and organizes. Peace reigns. The patrol wagon returns empty as it came. Brougham substitutes North Side vinegar for Aqua Regia. Smedley ' s new theon T of Foetal Development from Odonto- 5. Hodges buys a hundred trip ticket to Morgan Park. Jones gets malicious anaemia of the pocket-book. Greensfelder makes a new incision for Colotomy. Hillmantel dreams of ghosts in Schlitz Park. Pratt cracks a joke. Building fully insured. Cox resumes his clinics at the Dime Museum. Courtright gets hypertrophy of the 4th ventricle. Miller holds a spiritual seance in the dissecting room. Eddy and Schoonmaker join the Salvation Army. Connell presented with an automatic hair brush. Smith lectures on The Value of Colparysis in Dental Caries. Wesley — Essa3 T on Organs in Hot Alcohol. Rogers — Surgical operations from a religious stand point. Schener gets shaved. Jaques gets the Dispensary. Nembula discovers a new sugar test. Dies Lsetitiae — C. L. A. — Fern. Sem. — Bibs — Laws — Medics W. (J. Wing refuses to pass the facultj ' on their quiz record. Clark lectures on Hair Restoratives. Hall shows Prof. Long through the Glucose Factory. Taylor (E. P.) gets vaccinated. Classical areola. Jackman tells his famous story about the French actress. McNair experiments with amoeboid movements. Riese — New method of Paralysis by Owens. 68 Oct. 5. E Oct. 12. Oct. blasts 19. Oct. 26. Nov 2. Nov 7. Nov 16. Nov 20. Nov. 23. Dec. 5. Dec. 18. Dec. 25. Jan. 7. Jan. 11. Jan. 18. Jan. 25. Feb. 10. Feb. 22. — N. Feb. 24. Feb. 28. March 5. March 9. March 15. March 17. March 20. COLLEGE OF MEDLCLNE. CLlass of EightyOevea. 0fficers. W. S. HALL, - - President. I A. A. WESLEY, - - - Vice-President. W. K. JAQUES, - - - Secretary. J. P. CONNELL, - - Treasurer. F. C. ROGERS, - - - Sergeant-at-Arms. i B. L. RIESE, - - Historian. 7V embers.   Bailey, W. G.. . Chicago, 111. Black, C. E., B.S., Jacksonville, 111. Broughham, E. J.. . Chicago, 111. Clark. W. B., Worthington, Perm. CONNELL, J. P., . Osman. Wis. COURTRIGHT, C. W , Chicago, 111. Crist, J. C, . . Coffee, Ind. Doepp, W. L., Chicago. 111. Eddy, J. S , . . Cold Creek, Col. Egloff, W. J., Mason City, Iowa. Fredigke, C. C., . Chicago, 111. Greensfei.der, L. A.. Chicago. 111. Hall. W. S , $ K W, . . Ayr, Neb. HlLLMANTEL. J. L., Milwaukee, Wis. Hodges, F. J., B.S., . . Chicago, 111. Jackman, F. 0., Bloomington, 111. Jaques, W. K., Ph.B., . Dubuque, Iowa. Jones, W. D., 2 X, Pawnee, 111. Kennedy, C. F., . Rockford, 111. Kerr, E. E.. Springfield, 111. Lawther, F. H., . Columbia, Mo. McNair, R., A.B., $KW, Kalamazoo, Mich. Miller. S. E., . . Liberty Center, 0. Nembula, J. M., . Natal, Africa. Pratt, H. E, . . Saltville, Kan. i Redelings, T. J., . Niles, 111. Riese, B. L., . . Chicago, 111. Rogers, F. C, £ A , Milwaukee, Wis.  Scheuer, M. M., . Chicago, 111. SCHOONMAKER, F. H., Joliet, 111. Smedley, N. J., . Belvidere, 111. Smith, G. R., Bloomington, 111. Taylor, E. P., . . Berlin, Wis. Taylor, J. G., Boston, Mass. • Turner, B. S., . Chicago, 111. Wesley, A. A, A B., Chicago, 111. i Whitfield, G. W., . Chicago, 111. Wing, H. B., A.B., Chicago, 111. 69 COLLEGE OF MEDICINE. MA ' 88. IN C . l Cfra HE first authentic account we have that the class of 88 had material- ized was when its embryonic doctors assembled in the upper lecture room on the evening of the 22d of September, 1885. It was a motley crowd. The poor freshies went to the lecture room with trepida- tion, thinking freshdom in the medic involved barbaric initiation, such as prevails in other forms of college life, but their fears were groundless. That there never was in the Chicago Medical College a better looking class of saw-bones can be proved by our entire class. Our Professor of Anatomy often said the same, or like it, but as he referred only to our osseous and muscular development, and never spoke of our cerebral size or quality, we took the compliment with a grain of salt. The class feeling the responsibility of doing good work, devoted all the time to study when not busy smoking. The result of over-stimulation to work caused the once plethoric looking boys to become so atrophied and anaemic that the people on the street would now and then mistake one for a stiff, of which some of the muscles were not yet tetanized. Our class did not have its brightest and pleasantest times in raising class money, even for objects of common interest. In the third year of study a sub-doctor rarely retains sympathy between his purse and its pursuers. When men have imbibed at the Pierian spring, and have become plethoric with study, and are asked for spondulics, say for a ban- ner or an annual, they are apt to turn up their noses, secundum artem, and say, with neither meekness or diffidence, Be ye gone, ye proto- plasmic, infinitesimal, atomic globules of insubordination, and so we would retire without a nickle or a blessing. The material of our class combined much of the conventional. It also had some originality, as for example, marking the absences of a lecturer and going to labor with him. The term was not half gone till the class had passed examinations on such test questions as these : What is the color of red oxide of mercury ? Is it nicotine or the gastric juice that is secreted in the mouth ? What is the relation of Etiology to Osteology ? The class was harmonious, so much so that they voted, with but one dissenting voice, to give a copy of their countenance to the professors, and if they had the power they would have voted to themselves degrees ad eundem, and, as to qualification, they would do, as we saj- on the silver dollar, Trust in God. 70 COLLEGE OF MEDICIXE. Class of £ighty £ight. 0ffieers, THOMAS E. COLE. WILLIAM H. PARKER, CHARLES H. MAYO, . DANIEL N. EISENDRATH, THOMAS J. RUDE, President. Vice-President. Secretary. Treasurer. Sergeant-at-Arms. 7V embers, Bemis, Edward Augustus, - Booth, George Christian, B.D., Brown, Everett Josiah, Carriel, Henry Buttolph, B.S., Cole, Thomas Edward, Cook, George Albert, K 2, Cunningham, G. K., - Eddy, Julius Henry, Edgar, Roberto Ricardo, 2 X, Eisendrath, Daniel Nathan, - Fisk, Eugene De Loss, Gray, Frank Frederick, B.A., Gregory, Luis Lincoln, A.B., Hancock, Joseph Lane, - Hougen, Ole T., Hunt, Frederick Richard, Ives, Charles Gustin, Johnson, Charles Whitmarsh, A.B. Keeney, James Finley, B.S., Kuh, Sidney, Lippoldt, C. H., Marvin, Earl Leach, Mayo, Charles Horace, McIntyre, Charles William, - Miller, Harry Lovette, Montezuma, Charles, B.S., More, Charles Wesley, Morgan, James Jacob, Ph.B., - Morton, Edward Campbell, Palmer, Orange Stephen, Parker, William H, Phillips, George Samuel, Rude, Thomas Jefferson, - Ruthenberg, Erick Bemis, Sadlier, Harry S , - Schuman, Oliver Valandingham, Storer, Willis Daniel, Treadwell, C. S., Wagner, Charles Brentano, Walker, J. F., Whitney, Henry Charles, - Deceased. Plymouth, Wis. Chicago, 111. Decatur , 111. Jacksonville, 111. Champaign. 111. Mendota, Wis. Columbia, Mo. Janesville, Wis. Buenos Ayres, S. A. Chicago, 111. Chicago, 111. River Falls. Wis. Rockford, 111. Chicago, 111. St. Nazianz, Wis. Paw Paw. 111. Byron, 111. Chicago, 111. Jacksonville, 111. Chicago, III. Chicago, 111. Chicago, 111. Rochester, Minn. Pontiac, 111. Hyde Park. 111. Chicago, 111. Janesville, Iowa. Chicago, 111. Ft. Bridger, W. T. Chicago, 111. Oswego, 111. Chicago, 111. Burden, Kan. Chicago, 111. Gowrie, Iowa. Columbia City, Ind. Madison, Wis. Chicago, III. Chicago, 111. Ontario, Canada. Mt. Pleasant, Iowa. 71 A A A A Ai COLLEGE OF MEDICLNE. £x«r i$ $ at $♦ $♦ M u$ m 1. Prayer by Bro. Jaqoes (limited to thirty minutes.) 2. Mr. Bailey will then laugh (very hard) for ten minutes at nothing in particular. 3. Mr. Whitfield follows with a learned dissertation on How to Bun the Faculty. 4. There will next be a contest between Messrs. Smith and Egloif, to see who can expectorate more tobacco juice inside of five minutes. The winner to receive a fine nickle plated spittoon. 5. Visitors may now examine our fine collection of curiosities, which have been obtained at great expense. Among others (in glass cases to the left) : Little Jones and his big Plug hat ; the wonderful, long, blonde hair taken from Mr. Bedding ' s coat, etc. 6. Mr. Clark (our challenge wonder !) will then be introduced and will immediately proceed to turn red all over (a remarkable feat.) 7. Mr. Connell will read a paper on Malicious Anaemia. 8. Mr. Jackman (special request) will assume one of his patent poises, and look wise, 9. Senior Hurie kindly volunteers information on How to Pass Prof. Sam Jones. 10. Miller (from Ohio) will give us the History of Wesley and the Ill-will of Dr. Starkey. N. B.— Amply illustrated. He will have the classical s} ringe, hole-in-the-wall, water-basin, gas- stove, etc. 11. Informal discussion on Dogs. How to obtain, etc. 12. Two little Juniors will now be led in. They will cry for ten minutes, when they will be given 3i Tinct. Opii Camphor, and turned loose and allowed to destroy property. 13. All visitors will now be requested to evaporate, as the Middle Class will go into session, Mr. Hall in the chair. Speeches will be made on — nothing, with — nothing in them, by Messrs. Hodges, Turner, McNair, Whitfield and others. 14. Supper and benediction. Survivors will be pensioned according to gravity of injuries. 72 J HURD. MARSHALL D. EWELL. —e$_@y pllege of £ f Faculty. Hon. HENRY L. BOOTH, LL.D. Hon. WILLIAM W. FARWELL, A.M. Hon. MARSHALL D. EWELL, LL.D. Hon. HARVEY B. HURD. NATHAN S. DAVIS, M.D., LL.D. 73 ' w w w rw COLLEGE OF LAW. CLASS OF ' 86. , Bistorj dHE Class of ' 86 embarked upon the fathomless depths of 3 the Law upon the 19th day of September, 1884. It is at !L present composed of fifty-two individuals, all males. At the close of last term, however, we had with us one feme- covert and a feme-sole. The feme-covert has fled to the bosom of her family ; the feme-sole, alas ! sized us up and departed — both knocked silly by the overwhelming intricacies of the Law. I torn amid the turbulent wrangling of Politics, ' 86 has naturally an antagonistic and warlike disposition. It has already knocked out one elevator man, driven a second to suicide, and is fast rendering a third non compos mentis. Among other interesting events of the 3 r ear was the trespass of a horse (?) upon Prof. Ewell ' s eye, but — Be minimis non curat lex. ' 1 The class showed its great brain and vastness of its intellectual calibre at its recent election of Associate Judges to the Moot Court Bench. From Wilson — the leanest, lankest, skinniest of mankind — it skipped with one might} 7 bound to the Goliah-like Bradwell. Wilson eats no fat and Bradwell eats no lean, with such a Jack Spratt arrangement (if they were given a fair show) the Moot Court Bench would be licked clean of every scrap of injustice or partiality. The lectures upon the Romahny Civeely, b} T the German called Zeisler, have not been largely attended by the members of ' 86. The members of the class will recollect that one of the interesting offspring of Miller, the man who went to the funeral, took this man Z. for his much respected honor Herr Blackstone. God bless Miller and the kid ! Quoted from Syllabus of ' 85. 74 iO AI COLLEGE OF LAW. Since last year the Class of ' 86 has made neither progress nor his- tory. It is a question whether she has climbed the hill of learning to such a height that no communication can reach us ; or whether, in cross- ing the field of knowledge she has stuck in the mud of egotism, and, like a burr in a calf ' s tail which is borne along by the calf, the only move she has made was involuntaiy. The year rolled around and she moved with it. Sic transit gloria mundi ! Hie jacet ' 86 ! Editors. 75 COLLEGE OF LAW. + + CLASS OF 87 m — — 4- — — $ JN the beginning there was chaos, and smoke — cigar smoke — in the fourth floor loft on Dearborn street. The fiat went forth. The nicotine-loaded vapor curled graceful out the window, and, without further ceremony, the Class of ' 87 was in esse. Although born in a somewhat elevated position in society — about four floors above the common thoroughfare of life, although somewhat difficult to approach — because of an extremely con- servative and laborious elevator, the infant class is not proud. It is not of pre-Adamite ancestral descent ; it cannot trace its ancestiy back to a protoplasmal, primordial, atomic globule ; but in its humility and novelty it is proud of its plebeistic, cosmopolitan composition. Here upon a common footing, and in accordance with common law principles, are assembled the African, the Teuton, the Israelite, the Saxon, the Hibernian, the Melodramatic Divine, u Sir ' the feme-covert and feme-sole. Here with an intensity of earnestness positively painful, and with a fertility of eloquence strangely novel, fundamental principles of juris- prudence are discovered and discussed to an extent hitherto unknown in the annals of our college histon . The Class of ' 87 is an anomaly in comparison with the long list of its staid and sober predecessors ; it is at once an inspiration and revelation to the faculty, elevator boy, fruit vend- ors, and the better part of Dearborn street ; it is a creature equally of fate and circumstance, sui generis in composition and Athena-like in origin. It is a phenomenon, an interrogation point, a sine qua non to the future standing of the bar. In short, Nature outdid herself in its crea- tion, and, Uranus-like, stands aghast at her own offspring. Here, hidden beneath the mawkish exterior of school boy or office clerk, are many a Kent or Coke. Here — but modesty will not permit us to say more. Ours is a tale that is quickly told. Such is the present. What the future may be non sum informatus. Historian. 76 COLLEGE OF LAW. BRIEFS. V t -JVC Prof. Ewell. — I ' ve got a little list — I ' ve got a little list. Revell. — He made hay of his hair after he said this, and he stood a-tiptoe. Tachey. — The sports of children satisfy the child. Green. — Put it on the board. Wm. H. Morgan. — Remote, unfriended, melancholy, slow. Huston. — I don ' t quite see that, professor. McKee. — Yes, sir, — Professor, sir, — I think, sir, — that is so, sir. Prentiss. — I am, in point of fact, a particularly haught ' and exclusive person, of pre- Adamite ancestral descent. You will under- stand this when I tell you that I can trace my ancestry back to a protoplasmal, primordial globule, consequently my family pride is something inconceivable. I can ' t help it ; I was born sneering. Bloom. — The flowers that bloom in the spring, tra la, have nothing to do with the case. Miss W. — With no one near to sooth or aid, But that inspired and wondrous maid. 77 ■. . - ■. ■— ■gam jfrat rnitB FOUNDED AT UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN, 1870. Colors : Wine Color and Pearl Blue. ACTIVE CHAPTER ROLL. Kent — University of Michigan. Benjamin — Illinois Wesleyan University. Story — Columbia College. Booth — Chicago Law School. Cooley — St. Louis Law School. Pomeroy — University of California. 78 WTWTW TW TWy TW T yW y ! PHI DELTA PHI. 1 1 1 ► 1 i Booth c H A PT E R. i 1 j ESTABLISHED, 1877. ratres i n 1X r D e - S. G. Abbott. A. K. Manning. F. L. Brooks. W. A. Paulson. G. W. Cass. J. J. Read. F. L. Douglass. F. H. Scott. E. B. Felsenthal. H. C. Van Schaak. A. D. Wheeler. Judson F. Going. Adolph Lund. W. F. WlEMERS. Edward P. Maher. J. E. Babb. G. E. Porter, Jas. A. Burhans. L. C. Ruth. Edmund S. Cummings. Samuel D. Snow. H. G. Fitch. F. W. Walker. Harry Geohegan. Walpole Wood. F. A. Helmer. 0. E. Anthony. J. A. May. L. C. Brooks. M. W. Pinckney. Henry N. Cooper. G. M. Rogers. Joseph Fitch. Edward A. Small. J. H. Glade. L. Weinschenk. Martin M. Gridley. G. F. White. Louis A. McDonald. T etiue 7Vl ernDers in the genior Qlass. J. W. Anthony. Wm. McKinney. A. B. Camp. A. S. J. Magruder. H. B. Hubbell. Loyal L. Smith. Geo. L. Land. A. J. WlLLMARTH. F. H. McCulloch. Frank H. Clark. E. F. Runyan. Charles W. Fisk. S. A. Walther. Thomas D. Knight. ) Frederick A. Bangs Frank McDowell. Allan B. Forbes. Grant Newell. J Frederick P. Hopkins. H. W. Stillman. 7£ [  - - £ s - Sa - ' ?i Conservator - £ -:- - f  -:-.r .: OREN E. LOCKE, University of Leipsic. Director of Conservatory of Music. JAMES GILL, University of Leipsic. Instructor in Vocal Culture, Singing and the Italian Language. JOSEPH SINGER, Instructor on the Violin and Viola. PETER C LUTEIN, Instructor on the Piano and Organ. W. WARREN GRAVES, V.A.S., Peterselea School of Music, Boston. Instructor on the Piano and Organ. C MONTGOMERY HUTCHINS, Instructor on the Cornet, Clarionet, and Band Instruments. ROBERT M. CUMNOCK, Wesleyan University, 1868. Professor of Elocution. HENRY S. CARHART, Wesleyan University, 1869. Professor in Physics. 80 y P T vj ¥ w ywy w y  yw w wyw w w w w ' I Qfficers, President, - Vice-President, Musical Director, - Recording Secretary, - Corresponding Secretary, Treasurer, Chaplain, - Sergeant-at-Arms, ROBT. 0. VANDERCOOK. ANNA J. HENDERSON. CHAS. E. LINEBARGER. HOWARD M. DUFFEL. BELLE SHERIDAN, HARRIET G. BURDICK. MINNIE E. KING. FRED CHAPIN. T ctiue 7Vlembers of J[,mpbonian Society. Florence Bailey, Anna R. Burnett, Mabel G. Edinger, Nettie A. Goodrich, Anna J. Henderson, Alice C. Hart, Grace Hindman, Hattie L. Humbert, Georgie Johnson, Minnie E. King, Anna Millar, Lizzie G. Rye, Robert 0. Belle Sheridan, Cora V. Snyder, Emma Thompson, Frank H. Blodgett, Fred Chapin, Howard M. Duffel, Ernest Hoag. H. B. Judson, E. Larson, Chas. E. Linebarger, Laverne Nickel, Eugene Shutterly, Yandercook. 81 ••tf aii CI 1-1-1 K- professor. ROBERT M. CUMNOCK, Wesleyan University, 68. 7Vlembers. CLASS OF ' 86. Mamie Blackman, Irene M. Martin, Anna J. Henderson, M. Ada Peart. CLASS OF ' 87. Mrs. H. M. Ames, H. Louise Bailey, Nettie L. Brown, My rtle B. Cole, J. Gr. Scorer. Lona A. David, Camilla B. Ferris, G. S. La Rue, Julia S. Nichols, SPECIAL PUPILS. F. W. Beers, Belle Shuart, W. A. Hall, P. H. Shumway, W. E. McLennan, Almeda J. Soper, E. J. Ridgeway, C. B. Thwing, C. A. Phillips, W. H. Tuttle, W. 0. Sheppard, C. S. Tomlinson, E. A. Schell, Nellie Williams. 82 £RT. Z W director. Catharine Beal, B.P., Syracuse University, 76. Students. Cora Allen, Emma Bullis, Miriam Baker, Emma Blake, Edith Call, Jessie Coe, Lelia Crandon, Helen Cragin, Laura Copeland, Lillian Howell, Grace Hindman, Nettie Jones, Laura Keeney, Florence McKinney, Fanny McCord, Gracia McWilliams, Minnie McGee, Leonora Panushka, Emma Prindle, Lizzie Straight, Anna Swift, Mary Straley, Lydia Timmons, Louise Whitehead, Clara B. Logan, Laura Holderman. 83 ■TTTTT TT TT ' i n rTT?r T 1 .JIX|IT KX M ITII I lIIII Tirillllf fill III TTI Natural Histerg r=Jr=Jr=Jr=Jp=Jr=Jr=ir= Jr=ji — ir==-ii — ir= r=Jr=Ji — ■r=Jr=Jr=Jr=Jp=Jr=Jr=Jr=I M — L- 1 — - L - , — — ' ■— ' — - 1 - mfi ,L. L_L_ r ;r— j_ 1_|, = „ l „„!:„ ll |,„.„ faculty. OLIVER MARCY, LL.D, Deering Professor. MARSHALL D. EWELL, LL.D., Instructor in Microscopy. CHARLES B. ATWELL, Ph.M., Preparatory Instructor. Rooms, Lecture Room, Biological Laboratory, Preparatory Lecture Room, No. 19 University Hall. No. 18 University Hall. Preparatory Building. 7Vluseum This occupies the whole of the upper floor of University Hall, 90X70 feet, with the exception of two rooms. A part of this space is finished eighteen feet above the floor. It accommodates the skeleton of a whale, which is forty feet long, and the skeleton of an elephant, which stands eleven feet high. Horizontal glazed cases with drawers occupy the floor. Glazed wall cases surround the rooms and alcoves. The total amount of shelf room and drawer room is unknown, but all the shelves and drawers are full. 84 ¥W TWT wy wTWV v  ¥ W¥ W o ywy w¥ w v wT W ¥w ywy T i wf ? ¥ ' c± DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL HISTORY The material is arranged in the following departments : 1. Anthropology. 2. Zoology (Recent). S Botany (Recent). J .. Palaeontology (Both plant and animal). 5. Lithology. 6. Mineralogy. All the sub-divisions of Zoology and Palaeontology are well repre- sented, and the material is labelled and arranged in systematic order. be I iological laboratory Occupies a room 36x20. It is furnished with work tables, an aquarium and cultivating tanks. It has ten compound microscopes by the best makers and with the most recent improvements. 85 1 m PREPARATORY 1 ■ik Department. ® Faculty. HERBERT F. FISK, A.M., Wesleynn University, 1860 ; ( £ N S), {$B K). Professor, and Principal of Preparatory Department. JOSEPH L. MORSE, A.M., Wesleyan University, 1859 ; ( £ N ), ( £ B K). Instructor in Greek and History. GEORGE H. HORSWELL, A.M., N. W. U., 1879; B. D., G. B. I., 1882 ; ( $ K W). Instructor in Latin and German. CHARLES B. ATWELL, Ph.M., Syracuse University, 1879 ; {A K E ). Instructor in Physics. HARRIET A. KIMBALL, Ph. B., N. W. U., 1883. Instructor in English. MERRITT E. TAYLOR, Sc. M., N. W. U., 1883. Instructor in Mathematics. 86 PRE PA RA TOR Y DEPA R TMENT. Y{r philomaihia S ter rg Soei iy. ' - ' -■■■- ' ' ' V ... ' C - 4 0fficers, President, Vice-President, Secretary, Treasurer, . Ambassador, Critic, Sergean t-at-Arms, Chi plain, . W. J. JEFFERY. I. EDDY. C. M. STARKWEATHER L. R. KINNEAR. F. A. RICHARDSON. W. L. WICKMAN. J. McCONNELL. J. S. GRAHAM. W. J. Jeffery. W. L. WlCKMAN. F. A. Alabaster. J. F. Clancy. F. I. Collins. 7V embers. THIRD YEARS. J. V. Clancey. J. P. Davis. E. W. Erickson. J. P. Grier. R. P. Martin. J. H. Odgers. R. Breeden. E. J. Batten. C. A. Bush. L. R. KlNNEAR. C. M. Starkweather I. Eddy. F. A. Richardson. J. S. Graham. D. F. Green. SECOND YEARS. W. I. Thomas. M. C. Waddell H. B. Hall. A. T. Hauser. R. C. Harker. J. D. Henry. T. Kemp. F. M. KlNDIG. E. J. Ridgway. W. C. Stowe. FIRST YEARS. W. W. Batcheller. J. J. Guthrie. E. F. Hayslip. 0. D. Ferguson. G. P. Sturgess. J. J. Cole. M. B. Sherman. J. McConnell. M. L. Wilson. 87 - - — • PRE PARA TOR Y DEPAR TMENT. . ... ( ; $ LITERARY SOCIETY. 4 SP ' 0fficers. i President, E. SHUTTERLY. Chorister, C. T. WATROUS. J Vice-President, H. C. DAVIS. Organist, L. NICKLE. Secreta ry, J. H. SWAIL. Sergt-at-Arms, W. D. BARNES. i Ass ' 1 1 Secretary, J. M. WEBER, Chaplain, W. H. GIBBS. J Treasurer, J. L. RICE. Editor, C. T. WATROUS. Critic, H. E. BEEKS. Assistant Editor, R. M. PE ARCE. Ambassador, S. E. CRAWFORD. 7V embers. THIRD YEARS. j | W. D. Barnes. J. H. Kevan. H C. Davis. E. A. Meyer. i F. A. Draper W. E Reynolds. W. Humphrey. E. Shutterly. H. L. Dunlap. 88 PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT. SECOND YEARS. J. Adee. H. E. Beeks. T. C. Estee. W. H. Gibbs. W. C. Gigg. A. Haskins. T. HOLLINGSHEAD. E. Larson. L. A. Rogers. J. L. Rice. R, M. Pearce. T. C. Schulze. J. H. SWAIL. C. T. Watrous. J. M. Weber. W. C. Wyman. FIRST YEARS. E. W. Bacon. C B. Booth. A. Burton. G. A. Calkins. S. E. Crawford. W. F. Henderson. J. T. HlITTENDORF. C. C. Johnson. E. H. Lyford. J. McGlNNIS. J. Nelson. G. Roughton. C. S. Traver. L. NlCKLE. Quartette. J. L. Rice. E. Shutterly. H. E. Beeks. J. M. Weber. E. A. Meyer, Director of Quartette 89 President and Professor. ALBERT ERICSON, ' 58 ; Stregnas College, Sweden. SENIOR CLASS. 0. F. LlNDSTRUM, Charles Paulson, Gr. A. ASKLING, . C. A. Anderson, J. A. Forsberg, Pehr Frost, Haldor Hanson, Peter Munson, . C. J. Anderson, Ludvig Ellison, Frank Gustafson, F. Oscar Logren, August Larson, Carl A. Seaburg, Frank Swanson, MIDDLE CLASS. JUNIOR CLASS. Lake View. New York. Menekane, Wis. Ishpeming, Mich. Atwater, Minn. Trade Lake, Wis. Ishpeming, Mich. West Hill, Neb. Chicago, 111. Moline, 111. Ishpeming, Mich. Boston, Mass. Redwing, Minn. Omaha, Neb. West Hill, Neb. 90 ' wy f t t itw 1 $ Norwegian and T amsh s ffgr - h otegieal $«ho I. $ President and Professor. Rev. N. E. SIMONSEN, B.D., ' 80 ; Northwestern University. Students, C. G. Andersen, Alex. Andreasen, . H. Christofersen, J. A. Jacobson, Isaac Johnson, E. J. LtTNDEGAURD, . L. J. Olsen, Alfred Pettersen, . E. M. Stangland, Rasmus Wilhelmsen, Evanston. . Evanston. Whitewater, Wis. . Minneapolis, Minn. Chicago. . Farsund, Norway. Bergen, Norway. . Bergen, Norway. Evanston. . Neenah, Wis. ' w w m w m V mw ' mw ■91 ' W f Of t fOTWy I Religious SOCIETIES, Students Christian i $$ociation. ORGANIZED, JANUARY 24, 1880. Qfficers. President, Vice-President, Recording Secretary, Corresponding Secretary, Treasurer, Organist, - H. L. KINDIG. M. ADA PEART. S. J. HERBEN. C. A. PLACE. ALBERTINE C. WALES. H. D. ATCHISON. Young Worfiap ' s ]V[i$$ionary Society Officers. President, 1st Vice-President, 2d Vice-President, 3d Vice-President, Recording Secretary, Corresponding Secretary, Tr easurer, CARRIE BUMANN. MARY DAVID. ADA M. PEART. ANNIE SWIFT. GRACE FOSTER. LILA KEELY. MATTIE HUTCHISON. Membership Roll, Fifty-Nine. 92 $h«teh f u £ko £gm ' [ HE neat and commodious building which stands just out of the reach I of the waves that wash the campus, and which is alike familiar to Senior, to Prep and to Fern Sem as the Gym, is a very useful and tangible proof of the fact that the genuine college spirit and push exist- ing at Northwestern ten } 7 ears ago is not to be discounted by any that we have now. Dr. Fowler, the President at that time, seemed to have a knack of arousing an interest and love for the institution, and part of this enthusiasm took definite shape when, in October, 1875, William G. Evans and Frank M. Elliot issued a circular setting forth a project for building a gymnasium. The scheme found support, and, as a result, a stock compan} was organized under the laws of the State, bearing the name of the Northwestern Uuiversity G3 T mnasium Association. The incorporators were W. G. Evans, F. M. Elliot, F. M. Taylor, F. M. Bristol, A. W. McPherson and J. A. J. Whipple. The capital stock was $4,000, issued in shares of $10 each ; $1,400 were raised by the sale of stock, which was taken almost exclusively by students. A contract was let for a building 40 x 80 feet in dimensions, with brick basement and frame superstructure. The men who had the project in charge meant business ; especially was Fred. M. Taylor indefatigable in the cause. Some one remarked at the beginning, Gymnasium aedificandum est ; the rest of the scho ol must have responded to the tune of So Say We All of Us, for the building was formally opened for use on February 1, 1876 — that is, in two months less time than it takes to open a new edition of the Syllabus, formally or informally. A set of bowling alleys were built and donated b} the local chapter of the Sigma Chi Fraternity. For lack of funds, the walls of the building had not been finished off outside or in, and in 1881, mostly through the efforts of George Lunt, the stockholders were induced to donate their stock to the University, on condition that the latter should veneer the building with brick, assume all debts of the association, and maintain building and apparatus in good repair thence- forth, for g} T mnasium purposes only. In 1882 Dr. Cummings induced the trustees to spend the money necessary to fulfill, this agreement, and also helped the students with encouragement, and with a hammer as well, to put the smooth-wood casing on the walls and ceiling of the interior. In the last few years the amount of apparatus has been gradually increased, principally D3 7 means of the funds from the athletic exhibitions gotten up by Prof. Philip Greiner, the present gym director. In fact, the gymnasium has kept pace with the other departments of the school, and every student of N. W. U. has a right to air his vanity a little once in a while on the subject. 94 A AA-Aj EEciHcl ' EHcS Fdi g H E EE E Prof. Philip Greiner, . . . . . Instructor. Formerly of the Y. M. C. A. Gym., Newark, N. J. The following is a list of the leading gymnasts in general all-around work : G. W. Greenman. R. W. Springer. W. C. Raymond. R. Vandercook. F. C. Schulze. A. E. Elmore. F. Little. H. Caddock. F. W. Beers. G. I. Larash. W. A. Hall. F. W. Alling. E. Smackels. ug of W) ar T earn  Greenman, Hall, of ar J «txo««n Y« N. W. U. won first pull. Y. M. C. A. won third pull Waddell pulled in Hall ' s place, Hall being injured. Vandercook, McLennan, Greiner. [• S- ft- ♦ GMoasfo ait tf. W- U« Y. M. C. A. won second pull. 95 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. field Qa f. TUESDAY, JUNE 22, 1885. BY THE N. W. U. ASSOCIATION. E. E. McDermott, ' 85, ...... Marshal. JUDGES. Prof. Greiner. Prof. Baird. Prof. Horswell. 1. Quarter-Mile Run A. D. Welton, ' 89 Time not taken. 2. Climbing Rope W. A. Hall, ' 88 37 feet 6 inches. 3. Hundred Yards Dash A. D. Welton, ' 89 10i seconds. 4. Putting Shot, 15 lbs W. A. Hall, ' 88 27 feet 8| inches. 5. Running High Jump J. E. Hunt, ' 88 4 feet 10 inches. 6. Standing Broad Jump F. Little, ' 88 11 feet 3 inches. Sack Race, 100 yards R. R. Edgar, ' 89 32 seconds. Fancy Bicycling W. C. Wise, ' 90 No time. One-Mile Run J. H Odgers, ' 90 5 minutes 10 seconds. Three legged Race, 50 yds. J G. A. Bass, ' 88 { and return ( H. Caddock, ' 88 j ' Tug of War ' 88 over ' 89 1 minute 5 seconds. Tug of War ' 87 over ' 88 1 minute 20 seconds Base-Ball Throwing A. D. Welton 315 feet. ,17 seconds. W)estern Qollege Incise I all J eague, MEMBERS OF THE LEAGUE. University of Wisconsin. Beloit College. Racine College. Northwestern University. OFFICERS OF ' 86. President, Vice President, Corresponding Secretary, Recording Secretary, Treasurer, B. Stowe, ' 87. G. A. Bass, ' 88. H. Caddock, ' 88. B. L. McFadden, J. L. Rice, ' 91. DELEGATES TO LEAGUE CONVENTION. Frank J. Campbell. F. G. Middlekauff. BASE BALL NINE. Stowe, r. f. Parker, s. s. Lucas, 2 b. Rice, c. Middlekauff, c. f. Zeubltn, I. f. Substitutes. Kern. Lemoyn. Lewis, p., Captain. Austin, 3 b. Curtis, 1 b. 96 A A AOA , U« S- C e S av n S G revN3 ' Lawrence 0. Larson, No. 1, H. L. Kindig, ' 86. No. 2, T. R. Greene, ' 87. No. 3, C. H. Booth, ' 88. Captain. No. 4, G. W. Greenman, ' 87. No. 5, J. Nelson, ' 92. No. 6, H. Caddock, ' 88. R. VO. U. Football Gle en. H. Hamill, Captari RUSHERS. R. I. Hitt, F. M. Byers, O. MlDDLEKAUFF, E. J. RlDGWAY. QUARTER BACK. F. Waugh. F. C. Whitehead. HALF BACK. S. MlDDLEKAUFF. C. N. ZEUBLIN. GOAL WATCHERS. C. L. Morse. D. H. Gloss. SUBSTITUTES. J. H. Tippitt. C. Clifford. R. VO. U. Gun Giub. Motto : Niimquam animus, sed ignis via. OFFICERS. N. A. Lyman, . W. D. Barnes, F. I. Collins, . H. Howell. F. H. Blodgett President. Vice- 1 ' resident. Treasurer. . Secretary. Gen. Manager and Freight Agt. The Club meets annually at Rockton. For good conduct and sobriety refer to the Sheriff of Winnebago County. 97 ywT f W T WfW f wyy? R. VO. U. Bicycle Glub. OFFICERS. Prof. Robert Baird, A.M., P. B. Shumway, N. A. Lyman, F. H. Blodgett, H. L. Dunlap, W. C. Wise, . MEMBERS. Prof. Robert Baird, A.M P. B. Shumway, N. A. Lyman, F. H. Blodgett, Geo. P. Ciiappell, President. Vice-President. Captain . Bugler. Treasurer. Secretary. H. L. Dunlap, W. C. Wise, B. M. Weeden, F. Whitehead, W. F. Henderson. Cawn tennis G b I. M. S. Motto : An office for every member. Frank Whitehead, A. I. W. Minnie Jones, C. H. C. Phil. Shumway, C. L. H. E. E. Ada Townsend, P. C. E. ■P f Of W ' Prof. BAIRD, - - Surgeon- General. Gladiatores ulnerati. H. F. B. F. W. B L. A. B. W. E. G 0. M. H H. G. L. N. A. L. s. . s. R. .D. .D. D. . .N. B. M. W n. H. C k. H. R. C s. I. C. C t. S. H. M f. G. 0. R n. B. 0. V k. 99 Jtfft«Hft«W€ «8KIP . ' ' Object: Huts, Nonsense and Negotiosity. IVLOTTO: THE WOODS IS FULL OR THEM. Maxima Magistraitness Ceremoniarum, Supreme Irrepressible Presiding Genius, Geheimschreiberin Generale, Lord High Wily Schemer, Grand Arch Butternut Scansor, Incessant Sauserin le Baril, High and Lofty Tumbleoversome Teeterarch, Lord High Everything Else, Frances Towle. F. J. Campbell. Katharine Redfield. 0. MlDDLEKAUFF. P. B. Bass. Lila F. Keely. C. B. Thwing. S. J. Herben. Committee on Turnstiles, Turntables and Turnips : Harriet N. Towle. Belle E. Alling. Committee on Candy, Dates and Candidates : Albertine C. Wales. Annie M. Swift. Committee on Water, Walnuts and Weddings Helen M. Pearsons. Annie Towle. F. Little. H. Atchison. C. H. Brand. GRAND HIGH PRIVATES. Cora Allen. C. H. Booth. Grace I. Foster. w. A. Hall. Lizzie W Moulding. w. E. McLennan 100 A A fcA A, Musical ||ocieiies Gollege G h o ir - H. D. Atchison, Organist. Helen M. Pearsons, Alto. Belle E. Alling, Soprano. Forrest W. Beers, Tenor. Kate M. Alling, Soprano. Henry Caddock, Tenor. Mamie E. David, Alto. Frank J. Campbell. Basso. Daniel Bonbright, Honorary Basso. K W Orchestra. W. A. Hall, 1st Violin. F. H. Blodgett, Clarionet. N. A. Lyman, 2d Violin. F. Alabaster, Cornet. F. J. Campbell, Pianist. BSn 0cbestra. John E. Hunt, 1st Violin. Harvey R. Calkins, Tuba. C. N. Zeublin, 2d Violin. H. F. Briggs, Jewsharp. Bond Stowe, Comet. Harvey Brown, Kazoo. Clark J. Tisdel, Piano. be Rarl TVl 06 10111 Quartette. Frank Little, First Tenor. Chas. B. Thwing, Second Tenor. Gerhart C. Mars, First Bass. Frank J. Campbell, Second Bass. 101 ' y w ' -; Sl (T 99 J2 •vS rH«- MOTTO: GLUCOSE AND MOLASSES CANDY. H. M. M., V.-H. M. M., G. , W. M. £., Miss H. M. Pearsons, 88. C. B. Thwing, ' 88. F. W. Beers, ' 89. Miss L. Moulding, ' INITIATES. Miss G. I. Foster, ' 89. Miss B. E. Alling, ' 88. C. H. Booth, ' 88. H. B. Calkins, 88. Miss L. F. Keely, ' 88. S. J. Herben, ' 89. P. B. Bass, ' Semi-Annual Reunions in May and October. ! fltt %Qv %%%¥%% ? t «g ia Chapter, £$iaMi$h l, jfebruary S, %%4 Colors : Green and Yelloiv. MOTTO: EAT, DRINK AND BE MERRY. YELL: MICE! gorores in JXniuersitate. Junior. Matilda Polly Hutchison. Sophomores. Cora Lowizy Allen. Maria Euphemia Sumner. Lila Felicia Keely. Annie Mehetabel Swift. Lydia Bridget Timmons. Freshmen. Estella Hephzibah Bass. Caroline Quintilla Case. In Preparatory. Alameda Jerusha Soper. Ethelda Susannah Eddy. In Conservatory. Anna Zenobia Millar. 102 -£ J - f -i - - ks .t H i - f C tozdenb jp ess, .. - .. .i !  - - ! be Northwestern. The Northwestern is a 24-page magazine, published fortnightly, under the auspices of the Adelphic, Hinman and Ossoli Literary Societies, and in the interests of the students of Northwestern. It is on a prosperous financial basis, and is now in its sixth volume. BOARD OF MANAGEMENT. Editor-in-Chief, - - Edwin L. Shuman, ' 87. Business Manager, - - David H. Gloss, ' 87. Ahimni Personals. Stephen J. Herben, ' 89. Literary. Locals. Truman R. Greene, ' 87. Herbert P. Wright, ' 87. Lila F. Keely, ' 88. Helen M. Holden, ' 87. Exchanges. Charles E. Linebarger, ' 88. T e 7Yl usica l Register. The Musical Register is published quarterly by the Conservatory of Music. EDITORS. Oren E. Locke. C. B. Spencer. Established, June, 1881. The Syllabus. Published by the Fraternities and Soroses of the College of Liberal Arts, Northwestern University. 103 !,h £im KiI R Qlvfo. The early bird catches the worm. Grand Worthy Provider, Chief Engineer of Vommisery Dept. Hash Lifter Kindig. Guileless Odity Richardson. Password , High Ace of Clubs, High Jack of Clubs, . King of Hearts, . Right Bower, Left Bower, Joker, . Deuce (of a fellow) (Non-progressive) Poker, Scorer, Grand Bouncer, Officers. Cut to right and deal to the left. Wild Howler Tuttle. Ferocious Gooseberry Middlekauff. Sauer Craut Davis. Sad Hearted Middlekauff. Gormandizer Greenman. Carnivorous Bradford. Jaw Pulverizer Grier. Hang-On Cady. Waffle Jerker Jeffrey. Fike Eater Little. Committees. Committee on Hen-Roosts. Rev. Samuel Weir. Rev. Isaac Johnson. C. S. Graves. E. W. Austin, . F. A. Richardson, Rev. Abraham Mulfinger. Committee on Old Maids. E. C. Page. J. R. Nelson. Committee on Amusements. Dime Museum. The Conservatory Game. Common 7Vl em kers. F. A. Alabaster. G. A. Bass. J. A. Engelke. C. W. Ferguson. D. H. Gloss. T. R. Greene. J. E. Groves. W. E. Neely. E. M. Stangland. W. L. Wilson. 104 J i A A A A Al  •  • • ! ftoI4-®n Iub. Water, waite r ! Wafr you waiting Wound here for ? Qfficers. Steward and Bum Bouncer, President, Frame Climber, Beef Steak Wrestler, - Chestnut Man, Fritter Gobbler, Punster, - R. H. HOLDEN. F. J. Campbell. F. W. Beers. C. J. Tisdel. M. E. Taylor. Gr. W. KUNSTMANN. S. J. Herben. -«•- 44 Root gog o 7 iV Iub. Qfficers. President, - Scribe, - Joker, Punster, Chaplain, - Sergeant-a t-Arms, Waddell. Haskin. Hamilton. McConnell. KlNNEAR. Abbott. 105 ' MENU - SOUP. Dog Ear. Cat Fur. Whalebone. Cobweb. FISH. Skinned Polliwog. Pink-eyed Bullheads. Bow-legged Shark (caught in Rubicon). COLD DISHES. Hail Pattee. Cracked Ice. Raw Iceberg. Blasted Glacier. Blue Grindstone. ROASTS. Buffalo, a la Robe Sauce. Chicken, forty-eight years old. Crow, stuffed with Rubber Boots. Pony, a la Crib Sauce. Goat, Buttered Ends. Pig, stuffed with Squeal. Cow, a la Zimmerman. Cat, stuffed with Bootjacks. GAME. Old Sledge. Base Ball. Presbyterian Billiards. Hot Hand. Faro. Methodist Euchre. Purgatory. Poker. Lawn Tennis. Whist. Old Maid. Keno. TONGUE. Mother-in-law Tongue. Curtain Lecture. Prep Oration. Tongue Tied. Son-in-law Sass. Bib Volubility. ENTREES. Umbrellas, Rainwater Sauce. Broiled Bed Bugs, Coal-Oil Sauce. Spiders ' Toes, Breaded. Buzzard ' s Eyebrows on Half-ShelL Stewed Cat, Boston Style. Soaked Corn Cobs. Woolen Sox, Dipped in Glue. Dried Apples, Warm Water. Broiled Flies, in Molassses. Celluloid Collar (very tuf). Horse Blankets, Fricasseed. Busted Suspenders. VEGETABLES. Soft Corns. Onions, al a Pete Johnson. Corn Cribs (for Freshmen). Potatoes, Rolled in Clothes Line. Corn Cobs. Decayed Cabbage (Soph ' s delight). Beans, a la Holden. Dead Beats. Boiled Hair Brushes. PASTRY. Greek Root Pudding, Baird Dressing. Cork Screw Cake. Cussed Hard Pie, Left-handed. Flax-seed Pudding, Mucilage Sauce. Sawdust Pudding. Printers ' Pi, Devil ' s Dressing. Ground Hog Pie. Sanded. Coal Scuttle Dumplings. Cross-eyed Pudding. Crushed Sidewalk. DESSERT. Banana Peel. Mashed Finger Nail. Kicked Dog. Door Jam. Crushed Angle-worm. Toe-nail Parings. FRUITS, NUTS, ETC. Snow Balls. Boiled Acorns. Sour Grapes. Red Flannel Caramels. Fish Balls. Doughnuts. Chestnuts. Candy Dates. Croquet Balls. FLUIDS (Extra). Bug Juice. Fire Water. Eye Water. Bluing. Hair Oil. Lake Water (Evanston). Mucilage (with stick). Castor Oil. Sour Mash a la Fern. Sem. Concentrated Lye. 106 — J r- At Ottumwa, Iowa, October 8, 1885, Miss Mary Bonnifield, ex- ' 87, to Mr. Frank C. Hormel, of Cedar Rapids, Iowa. On August 23, 1885, at Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Miss Katharine B. Stoneman, ex- ' 84, to Prof. J. H. Long, late of N. W. U. On July — , 1885, in Wisconsin, Miss Emma P. Meserve, ' 81, to Mr. B. B. James, ' 81. On September 14, 1885, at Muscatine, Iowa, Miss B. C. Jarvis to Mr. D. V. Jackson, 79. On September 8, 1885, at Wilton Center, 111., Miss Stella Beedle, ex- ' 87, to Mr. C. A. Place, ' 86. On May 12, 1885, at Lincoln, Neb., Miss Cleve Lamb, ex- ' 88, to Mr. W. A. Green. At Geneseo, 111., May 20, 1885, Miss Edith Dunham, ex- ' 86, to Mr. W. H. Foster, ex- ' 85. On October 13, 1885, at Kalamazoo, Mich., Miss Victoria S. Taylor to Mr. Henry B. Hemenway, ' 79. At Elroy, Wis., on October 6, 1885, Miss Lizzie Morper to Mr. C. W. Darrow, ' 82. On November 4, 1885, at Hampton, Iowa, Miss M. L. Shabacher, ex- ' 87, to Mr. B. S. King. At Ottumwa, Iowa, on December 8, 1885, Miss Minnie Haw, ex- ' 85, to Mr. R. A. McPherrin, ' 82. On , at , , Miss Nellie Ballard to Mr. E. L. Cole- man, ex- ' 86. 107 ym w m v mw w wi At Chicago, on December 23, 1885, Miss Bessie Bradwell, ' 80, to Mr. Frank A. Helmer. On January 14, 1886, at Mansfield, La., Miss Alice R, F. Williams to Mr. Henry Frank, ex- ' 77. At Dillon, Montana, on January 14, 1886, Miss Anna Coffin, ex- ' 87, to Rev. Wilder Nutting. At New York, on December 1, 1885, Miss Grace Fancher Nicoll to Mr. William H. Harris, ' 78. At Ripon, Wis., December 24, 1885, Miss Belle Merrill, ex- ' 87, to Mr. Fred Austin. At Billings, M. T., March 28, 1886, Miss Florence A. Smith, Island Pond, Vt, to Mr. S. H. Wilson, ex- ' 88. At the residence of the bride ' s mother, Friday, November 20, by the Rev. Ichabod Van Twistum, ' 86, Elizabeth Ann Punch, ' 89, to Epaphro- ditus Jehosophat Gubtail, 88. At home Wednesdays, in December, from 4.30 to 5.30 p. m., on the corner of Pumpkin Avenue and Onion Row. The Groom wore the Editor ' s best suit, surreptitiously procured for the occasion. — [Note by Editor-in-Chief.] EBODVSIUGKINCIOVE, PULLDOWN THE BUND 108 THE MULE. BY A FRESHMAN. THE mule is a very kind animul he kan kick an ' sing an ' bra an ' eat oats, lie has no horns like a kow or an ele- fant but he has big ears an ' legs an ' kan kick hardern a rock, i saw a mule kum up to a pot of drid appuls on a fire an ' eat ' em. the appuls waz runnin over an ' he got lots of ' em all two wunce the mule busted kaus the appuls got to swellin an ' when i kum to i wuz up to my chin in apple sos the mule wuz ded. a mule kan jump stif legged an ' kum down as quick as litnin an ' you fea] like you wuz chopped in too. the mule looks sleepy an ' tired but he is sharpern a serpents tuth. a mule is oviverous or viviverous, i don ' t no which. When you by a mule get a kow or a kan of night-ro-glis-reen or a mustard plaster, a mustard plaster has no legs but it is as strong as deth. 109 w c c fe o t H H M P w Hi 1 H o W Pi GO H P a 00 oo P 2 to 03 a c GO 3 —5 u pp C o p c ti (0 Ph UJ £ ri o M H M P w hi « H o W Ph CQ „ a; a 4 «j j — c © °.P -=m  ™5 ts o 5 c P O rtrs a- -S 2 S2 3332 §■8 Mb si tr . ' h3 4) a; M fcj0 ' J=|gJof 5 Isf si! 5 1 as ss §3 H F p a j=J P 3 2 ! 5 E.P Sid .S a 5 J? a ' £tc _ a P ; ' -° 5- CO 05 F.C 1 o tco _ o -.2 = d a) oo — Sgfi6; « - 4 ea ' Ph-i O c3s3 ,B 0J 0) o S— ® o -£,2 ttfjW  ,2« 2 ■Sog g|2®S , 3 ? i5 ,a -a 2 57:2 fe eq 1 ra 4) fe ° « £ £ gs | C „£ OB  Q - c p m g s o £ o — g or , .2S£ 2 p « aJ as B.S Ot3 B Q_0 gS© 0Q c3-p F =3 § w g g r a) «j W) g b p P-- P 2 c 8 .a ■tc O 3 22 £ o- 3 ojfa ' oc oj •u t- a =s o ' p .ai .5  3 -2 ' CO H ° ' .2 S ° ' a a S.2 g £ P ja o a PS £ 08 2 P ooC • 08 OrQ O Hi CJ i 0) p . P £« rt c a, tc c ? 5 CO S2F co c u « ° P so- 03 W OJ ' at: a OQ 02 u I ££3 -co. El O i - ■z. C l s . ■g sis? - _- i c ce • _ M ; - -• — S J2 - a = = v. 5- r 5 o 1 litter, blighting, blasting Uthlesa hand of cruel fate snatch away this noble li lull ul Sine for future yea SoJSP = - - X I - „ It! nreeping Pleiades on hlgl t loose the flood-gatea of j lile aching hearts and tre is martyred blood, these a wary Death receive thy g yield him to thee at thj gather round the solemn d chant his last sad requi «— 1— I oo -J. ■■? j?h cp: O a - s 00 00 w L0 CO P e 0) c •£ ' q. £ en d O | H oj)E | c |2 ° 5 O 0! fcj)2? .rt o o a _ a OJ c« _ 2.2 a O a ha offl a 5 2 fc- 03 OO 3-35 |p§ • 03 O ;as a § ° °° S og w c p s;o.£ § BrS aP t Il C § jh SS a ji a ira ' g£2 oslSJ Im te ge .a M8ta to  £ o w a G c .p a ' 8|S P .a p p = CO P x CO 4) CO - o « m 03 «- O . K nj 3 • 4) O 0) 110 mial of f| % AN EPIC tf 1NG, O Muse, of the death of Viridum Folium Trig O. I) Nometry, and the baleful wrath of the sons of Sopho. ♦ Which of the gods has joined these classes in deadliest conflict, While mighty Jo(v)e was opposing their counsels with threatnings of vengeance. Leader for years of the Freshies in many a struggle and conflict, Faint and discouraged at last with futile and fruitless endeavor Any impression to make on the minds of these verdant young Freshmen, Leaving his body behind, poor Trig sent his soul down to Orcus. Then Eighty- eight did assemble, both Greeks and Barbarians together, Maidens and youths, and old men with visages solemn and mournful, Funeral pomp to prepare, and, with incense and rites sacrificial, to Rescue his Shade from contempt in the dreary regions of Pluto. Dazed and distracted with grief, and busy with preparation, Never a thought of the enemy troubled their pious young spirits, Till, in the guise of Richardson, guardian angel of Lakeshore, Mercury, fleet-footed herald divine, announced that their leader, Crafty in counsel, and also their organ-mouthed orator, Atreus Helio-gab-alus Henry, were snared by the wiles of the Soph ' mores, Captured and hurried away to a dismal dungeon in Glencoe. Then, for the moment dismayed, their plans overwhelmed in confusion, Sadly the Freshmen assembled, despair on each visage depicted. Then there arose in the council a sage, honey-mouthed like to Nestor, Isopus Resurrectaterus Hitt, with winged words speaking, And with eyes rolling, cried fiercely, We ' ll do it or bust ! There was the council dissolved, while each with new courage inspired, and Struggling with deepest emotions, went to the duty assigned to him. Crankus Berecyntiades Thwing, from the foe by the giants Cleveland and Hansen, protected, raving and tearing his hair and 111 Invoking the Pun-ic divinities, brings from the cavernous, soundless Depths of his unfathomed brain the eulogy, wild and erratic. Meanwhile Editus Charitoblepharous Quereau, the mournful-eyed Child of despair, in the depths of his den sits courting Melpomene, Whence he emerges at last with his sad and tearful oration. What are those strains that I hear, as sad and subdued as the fog-horn ? Nearer and nearer they come : ' tis the doleful funeral procession, Wending its sorrowful way to th ' appointed place of cremation. Dark is the night, and heaven weeps in sympathy with them. Sadly surrounding the bier they discharge the last mournful duties, Poem, oration and eulogy wring from hearts of the mourners Tears, lamentations and wailing. Then were the torches of pine wood Placed ' neath the pyre, and the flames mounted heavenward with the lugubrious Notes of a dirge, composed by that gifted child of Apollo, Charles Erucephalas Linebarger, petted and loved of the Muses, Sung by himself, with the aid of Caddock, tamer of horses, Little, his twin brother, mighty at boxing, and gentle-eyed Calkins. Ended the dirge, and the ashes, gathered and heaped in a barrow, Silent as death the procession, winding along in the darkness, Entered the campus at midnight, and there ' neath an oak-tree they buried All that remained that was mortal of Greenleaf Trig, and departed, Sad at heart, while the Soph ' mores straightway went off on a Tangent, Teeming with jokes of Sophomoric and puns on the names of the Freshmen. Then on the morrow, as Dawn, rosy-fingered, arose in her beauty, Clad in the insignia of woe, the Freshmen came, silently bearing Garlands of flowers and leaves to strew on the grave and adorn it. One who was skilful at carving inscribed on the trunk of the oak-tree Symbols dear to the dead and a name that will live through the ages. Fain would I sing of the woe that befell the impious Soph ' mores, Who, in defiance of law, interfered with the innocent Freshmen ; Fain would I tell — but my Muse is scornful of themes so prosaic. 112 y  y f f f t f f¥y f T W tWf f  f oifi ero, AN ILL LiIsye yed po E. STRIPLING youth to college came, Intent upon his future fame. He bore aloft in colors green, A banner upon which was seen Excelsior ! He hastened to the President, To tell his fervid heart ' s intent : I ' ve come to climb the hill of lore, And try the Pass ; though small and poor, I ' ll get there, sir ! The President his glasses raised, And looking on the youth amazed, He said : We ' ll put you in a class Of bright, Fresh youths, to try the Pass Together, sir. But soon the way became quite rough, The stripling thought it was quite tough ; So steep, so high this hill, he cried ; How much I wish that I might ride, I wish it, sir ! He heard the voice of one so kind, Of well disposed, fraternal mind : Once I was in just such a boat ; I joined a Frat and rode the goat, And got there, sir ! 113 Another philanthrophic friend, Had otherwise to recommend : ' There is a way where there ' s a will, ' A pony takes me up the hill — I get there, sir ! Then next was heard a trembling Greek : ' The}- tell us, sir, that we are weak, ' But when we ' re worn down poor and thin, Our Leader kindly takes us in The ambulance. The youth was wondering which to ride, When lo ! another sight he spied. I see, ' ' cried he, a big balloon ; What else will take me up so soon As it will, sir ? Then shoot your pony, hang 3-0111 goat, Awa} with ambulance and boat ; Of gas I have a full suppl}-, To lift this balloon to the sk} r , I ' ll get there, sir ! ' Tis but a zero, Freshie dear, A veteran said, who stood quite near, It stands for nought ; it tells the tale Of all who in this journe3 «i7 To make the Pass A tear stood in his fading eye ; He drawled out in a pensive sigh : O blessed nothing ! zero blest ! I ' m breaking down, I must have rest — Collapsior ! 114 1 1 J - lu u ► 1 ► 1 -. 1 1 1 c c c c ► 1 1 1 S3 ft o u O o f 0. c (2 - - — ' 1 1 i ,ft £ c c fee g c o «- .4 X CO - £ c Ministry. Idem. 1 Getting ma Laughing. Printer ' s d 1 CD 00 o o 03 S a ,4 s T3 6 M s T3 fc 3 o 5 e °j CO a c« a c 03 03 03 03 o o 35 z s b c c 1= 1 bo a a - s 5 . 03 O DO £ §5 CS o OS C5 00 CO O S! - 3 TjH 1— I ft ■s ej S3 LC 03 CC ■Tt fc- J r 0 OS 10 W J -M o ft 5 a? ; £3 b bo : 03 33 § 9 ft 7 P d 2 c 1 E S3 - CO be -2 bo jg P5 O C . DO $1 o - o OQ o e3 bo a a 13 si — ' CO c a H s o «1 £ c o -: c 5 •- ' g a n ' 0 y - 8 DO O - PL • 0. c Ph - r£ ; H o • • h HM or I 4 - DO c3 3d b 3 1 - V 5 CP p a s8 r .22 f- 03 0. 03 c £ b c K , O T3 — t: ■O • | 3 £ t— pq bo — S 3 2 ' £ p 1 1 5 3 o .4 z C 6 a C ; 1 i CO a o - b c CO a k c g, O CO a i 1 S3 7U 1 p- • 35 a - c i c S 5 1 .3 PL a 1 1 1 1 c 1 s 5 SQ tt 1-3 c 02 d 1 1 115 - Gone, but ] fot forgotten. ' 86, HERE is a class called So I hear, Much famed for dark and treacherous tricks, Far and near. Upon its record dark, Tis said, a charcoal mark Would loom up dazzling white. But hush ! speak not so loud ; Its deeds let sorrow shroud In kind oblivious night. A gloomy weight of sadness hangs Even now, Thick as some straight-haired school girl ' s bangs, O ' er its brow. Excruciating brief The harrowing tale of grief To sympathizing souls appears ; Indeed, it ' s so soon told, And eke so ancient old, There ' s scarce a chance for tears. A few short years ago that class, Fancy free, Recked not that where they chanced to In their glee, There fell a greener shade On every little blade Of fresh and verdant grass. Alas ! alack a-day ! Time lured two-thirds astray — Two-thirds of all the class. 116 A But when the rest, the true and tried, Seniors now, Came back for one last pony ride, Ere their bow, Adversity severe Had made each doubly dear, Of all that little clan. And now — dear ! dear ! Forgive this scalding tear — They mourn their bravest man. You see they fooled (like Freshmen raw Kound a pony) — Fooled round that sharp-toothed buzzing saw, Matrimony. Ere yet they dreamed of harm, Two fell beneath its charm, Entranced to hear it sing. But one was much too bold — Oh ! would the tale were told ! — He tried to tame the thins ! Don ' t monkey with the buzz-saw, ' Every throat ; cried Yet swore he that the thing he ' d ride, Like a goat. Since that sad day, no shred, Or hair from off his head His classmates e ' er have found. No wonder gladness dies From ' 86 ' s eyes Whene ' er his name you sound ! 117 BON DIEU ! ! ADSPICE PACTA! Mirable Visu ! Mirable Dictu ! Frigida est dies cum disistimus ! ! FOR A FEW DAYS ONLY. Si vis pacem, para belluxn. Ach! Dunnernund Blitzen! We are WEEDEN out our competitors, and having received a Fresh Assortment of DRESS COATS, are prepared to show at our MISFIT PARLORS. THE FOLLOWING STYLES: The HE A VY FLUNKER —A la Brigg-amle, the Masher ' s own suit. The CORKSCREW SKINNY — Appropriate for solemn and Grave occasions. The FAT MUG W UMP — Madame DemoresVs latest in Cottage fashions. The MUSH FADDY — Corset Cut, suitable for all occasions, but one suit necessary. The CLAP JAW — ' Tis a beauty— Tis-de-l-atest. The FOGHORN WARBLER —Waiter ' s Costume in Beer Gardens. The NOISY ANGLE-TOED —Good suits for a L{a)yman. The -JUMBO ALMIGHTY — Worn only by the Young. The HA(Y)MILL —Worn by Clodhoppers. The •• CENTRE-COUGH-CUT-AWAY — Cut away as much as you please. The HELL GATE — Worn by Bib. Leon d in the First Crusade. The STALE JOKER —In use by that girl of mine and Her Ben. The FATHER HUBBARD —The latest style of Overcoat for Alumni, used by Gods of War. We have many other styles too nobby and fantastic to mention. Our competitors, driven to the Waughl, are palming off last summer ' s goods for Fresh styles. Holdon ! See us Wright away, or you ma y have cause to Howell. Special rates to Clubs. Bibs and Dudes, 25 per cent. off. COME ONE! COME ALL! , 118 ( . -$ 0 I3° n D ' eu - - jforeknow by this the tenor of my song : Review I shall a tale that ' s somewhat long ; £xact I ' ll tell how youth and beauty vied, §o have no fear that any are belied. JJowever, that the fruits foretell the tree, Jfcjark, well ! the time was eighty-five, B. C, £t place, to shores of cooling lake was near Jjfow read with care, but be not too severe. Should you ask me whence these stories, Whence the legends, and traditions, Which they call the jokes of college, With the dew and damp of ages, With their frequent repetitions, With their wild reverberations, As of thunder in the mountains, I should answer, I should tell you, From the eastward and the westward, From the great schools of our fathers, From the land of grand old Oxford, From the land of our own Harvard, From the many courts of learning Where the great men of the future Now are laying their foundations. I narrate one as I saw it In the moonlight of November. I narrate it, I repeat it For the good of those not knowing The excitement, the enjoyment, The chagrin, or satisfaction Of a good old college squabble. As the Bible wisely sayeth That of wars there shall be rumors, That of wars there shall be many ; So the year of this our story Well fulfilled the prophet ' s saying. Many times the tribe of Pewnees Had in battle met the Moguls, Had by Moguls been defeated, Had by all been much derided. Had been jeered, and scoffed, and scouted So that as the time drew nearer For the Moguls ' yearly war-dance, It was plain to all observers That there was to be a something Perpetrated by the Pewnees, That should make victorious Moguls Evermore to be as exiles Shunned and spurned by all the nations. The Pewnees ' Council. In a rage and in a passion Heavy Flunker a briggande, He, the chief of Pewnees, chafing Like the steed for battle waiting, Sendeth forth a proclamation, Calling all his men together, — Calls his warriors to his council. Down the alleys and the by-ways Come the warriors to his wigwam- Corkscrew Skinny, Mush McFaddy, Fat Mug (wump) and Clap- Jaw Tizzie, Ha(y)mill, Hell Gate, Foghorn Warbler, Jumbo, Leo. Father Hubbard. Now they gather in a circle With their weapons and their war gear, Painted like the grass of springtime, Painted like the robe of summer, Wildly glaring at each other. In their faces bold defiance, In their hearts the pangs of vanquished And hereditary hatred. Heavy Flunker a briggande Looked upon them in his passion, Looked upon their wrath and wrangling Then with haughty mien and manner 119 Spoke to them with voice majestic, As the sound of far-off donkeys Braying on a frosty morning: Corkscrew Skinny, hear my message. Brave of braves, on you it resteth To retrieve our fallen fortunes. To restore our name for valor. To outwit the tricky Moguls. Now. to you I give the mission, Give the planning, give the scheming, Give to you the use of money. Every brave of our great nation At your nod, shall do your bidding ; This my order, now perform it Yon shall be forever honored. Corkscrew Skinny, for a moment, Bowed his head in meditation ; Then with look of exultation, As of one who, in a vision, Sees what is to be, but is not. Brew an arrow from his quiver, Shoots it high into the heavens ; Then, as it began descending. Sternly said, with deep emotion :— What goes upward must come downward. Moguls shall be no exception. On this evening feast the Moguls At the home of Calkinsensis, On this night shall fall disaster On the heads of his pale brothers. If not so, I hope the morrow Finds me with the happy hunters. This shall be our plan of action, Listen, each one to his portion. Clap-Jaw Tizzie, you have access To the house where feast the Moguls ; So, before the evening falleth, Take this youngster and secrete him In the attic ' mong the rubbish ; Bid him wait there until nightfall, Till he hears the noise of dancing, Till the Moguls all are merry- Lost in revelry and music. When their chiefs are captivated By the glance of dusky maidens, When the song and dance rage highest, When the music falls and riseth, Bid him gently leave his covert, Softly steal down to the chamber Where the braves have left their wrappings, Left their gowns, and robes, and weapons ; Take them all up to the garret, And from thence upon the house-top, Make them fast in goodly bundle, Let them from the roof come downward. In the meanwhile other warriors Will procure a sledge and mustang, And be waiting down below you To assist you in your effort, To convey you and your treasure Far from harm and far from danger. Thus by bold and fearless action We ' ll retrieve our fallen fortunes, We ' ll heap vengeance on the Moguls, By compelling them to wander Through the streets and in mid-winter, Barehead, robeless, with their sweethearts, Barehead, robeless, to the Fern. Sem. In the weeks and months that follow Every class that ' s in the college Shall upbraid them, shall torment them. Shall deride them as insipid ; They shall be of song the subject In the Annual of our college. Thus spoke Corkscrew, with excitement, And a war cry rent the heavens, Every warrior to his feet sprang, Sped away to do his bidding. TWoguls W)ar Ranee. Bright the moon rose o ' er the waters, Shedding rich effulgent shadows, Burst in all its silent splendor On a band of happy Moguls, Wending to their yearly war dance, Filled with merriment and jesting, Filled with song, and filled with laughter, Clad in all their richest raiment, Robes of fur, and caps of sealskin, Splendid with their streaming feathers, Beautiful with beads and tassels. At the doorway stood their chieftain, Waiting kindly, to receive them. In his eye a secret twinkle, In his grasp a knowing pressure. Gladly welcomed he his people, Bade them enter and be merry ; In they went unto a chamber, Left their wraps, applied their war paint, And appeared in dancing costumes, In the gayly lighted parlors. But their chieftain with a gesture Motioned silence to his people, Called upon his braves to meet him Instantly in private council. Ten, the bravest of the warriors, Followed, wondering, while he led them Up the stairs into the attic. Now, imagine their amazement When they saw, right there before them, Tied and bound unto a bedstead, Black with rage, a puny Pewnee. Then he told how he had found him. Dressed appropriate for service, Hid away behind the boxes Lying flat upon his stomach. Now, my braves, be quick ; decide you W T ho ' s this Pewnee ? What ' s his purpose ? Is he sent here by his people ? What shall be our plan of action ? Then with minds well called prophetic, Quickly they divined his purpose Was to rob them them of their wrappings. 120 .A A A A A A A, Since a rope was on his person It was easy to determine Plot, and plan of execution. So the Moguls, quick at scheming, Soon decided in their council, To reverse the joke intended, To instruct the guileless Pewnees Not to monkey with the buzz-saw, 1 ' Not to pull the tiger ' s tail. Out of quilts was made a bundle Looking some like robes and mufflers, And about the time that Bacchus Should have all intoxicated, One short Mogul, dressed precisely As the Pewnee that was captured, Took upon his arm the bundle, And appeared upon the house-top In the frosty liquid moonlight. Just below them, in the basement, Stood ten strong and stalwart warriors Waiting, watching, at a doorway. One low whistle from the house-top Brought to view, as if by magic, Myriad warriors grim and silent, Dressed like goblins in a legend. Here and there they darted swiftly. No one spoke a single sentence, All gazed upwards hushed in silence. Verily, the moon above them, Must have halted in her orbit Wondering at the scene beneath her,— Wondering at the spectral warriors, Which her beams but made more ghost-like. Slowly o ' er the roof descended In the shadow of the building, Large and long a goodly bundle. One could see a slight commotion, Every warrior pressing forward, Reaches high above his fellows, To be first to seize the booty. Near, and yet so far ' s a saying, Never yet was better proven ; For as thunder in the heavens Belches forth, most quick and sudden, Or as panthers in their preying Spring on their unconscious victims, So from out the basement doorway Sprang the watching, waiting Moguls, — Sprang on those unconscious Pewnees. Four they seized and chased the others ' Cross the lawns, and round the houses, Down the alleys, over hedges. Some for refuge fled to maidens, Tied themselves to strings of aprons, Tied themselves, and when demanded, Whining said, ' I didn ' t mean to. ' Mong the others, there was taken What to many was a wonder : Dude of dudes— and guns ! the collar Was enough to make a goblin Out of Afric ' s darkest heathen. When he spoke he made a rumble Like the hollow depths of Hades. Then another there was captured, Of whose name and reputation Very little shall be written. Like unto a dog he acted, Snarling, snapping, growling, biting, But ' twas said he must be pardoned Since papoose was his cognomen. Verily, it were a pity Such an one had not. died early. Clap-Jaw showed his mighty valor, By imploring squaw protection. But of all the prisoners taken In respect unto good breeding Mush McFaddy bore the palm leaf. At a late hour in the evening, All the captured ones were taken, Showed unto the kindly hostess, Gently led out to the doorstep, Sent away to meet their brothers, ' Mid the war cry of the Moguls. As the grass is in the morning Green and fresh with dewy showers, But cut down, at noon it withers, Fades away and loses sweetness, So the scheme of Corkscrew Skinny, Which at first so much had promised To the oft-defeated Pewnees, Fell before the Moguls ' sickle- Fell to rise no more forever. Resultat. Full of wrath was Sitting Bullock When he woke up in the night time. Found the people in confusion, Heard of all the misdemeanors, All the malice and the mischief, Of the cunning, tricky Moguls. Hard his breath came through his nostrils, Through his teeth he hissed and muttered Words of anger and resentment, Hot and burning, like a hornet. I will squelch these Moguls,— Squelch these mischief-makers ! said he Not so long and wide the world is, Not so rude and rough the world is, That my wrath shall not attain them, That my vengeance shall not reach them ! ' Then, again, old Sitting Bullock Rolled and tumbled on his blanker- Rolled and waited for the morrow, When he should present his grievance To his colleagues in a council. Big-e-Man-i-Joe the mighty, When he heard the dreadful stories. Summoned to appear before him, Both the Moguls, and the Pewnees. Looked upon them with compassion, With paternal love and pity ; Over them he stretched his right hand To subdue their stubborn natures, 121 W WT WTWT ' W W W ' ■w mw i A A A AIi To allay their thirst for vengeance, By the shadow of his right hand ; Spoke to them with accents earnest, Warning, chiding,— spoke in this wise : O, my children ! my poor children ! Listen to the words of wisdom,— Listen to the words of warning. We have giv ' n you ' Gym ' to box in, Giv ' n you ' Tugs of War ' and Base-hall, Giv ' n you long beaux, giv ' n you cross beaux, Take your choice in ' Brick 1 or ' Cottage. ' Giv ' n you of the best of knowledge, Why, then, are you not contented ? Why, then, will you fight each other ? We are weary of your quarrels, Of your wranglings and dissensions ; And since Sitting Bullock worries And declares it his purpose To deprive us of the pleasure Of his papoose in the college, If we do not take some action To subdue these awful wranglings. Therefore, know ye, here henceforward, We, the sachems, have in council. Like a boulder on a pumpkin, Set ourselves upon your socials. ' Note.— To make this poem compatible with the events upon which it is founded, it has been necessary in several instances to use phrases and to introduce scenery not in strict harmony with my plot. I desire to take this opportunity to thank my friend, Henry W. Longfellow, for many valua- ble suggestions and much useful information. The Author. Chorus of citizens. What have Ave here ' A carpet sale? 122 ? w  w ene at ftti aft 1886. June 24. Thursday.— Commencement. Sept. 14. Tuesday.— Examinations for admission. Sept. 15. Wednesday.— First term begins. Sept. 21. Tuesday. — Year begins in the College of Medicine. Sept. 22. Wednesday. — Year begins in the College of Law. Sept. 22. Wednesday. — First Term begins in the Conservatory of Music. Dec. 15. Wednesday. — Term Examinations begin. Dec. 17. Friday. — Contest for the Norton Prizes in Declamation. Dec. 22. Wednesday. — First Term ends. 1887. Jan. 5. Wednesday. — Second Term begins. Jan. 6. Thursday. — Seniors present Essays for Deering Prizes. Jan. 27. Thursday.— Day of Prayer for Colleges. Mar. 22. Tuesday. — Anniversary of the College of Medicine. Mar. 23. Wednesday. — Term Examinations begin. Mar. 30. Wednesday. — Second Term ends. April 6. Wednesday. — Third Term begins. April 8. Friday. — Contest for Gage Prizes in Debate. June 6. Monday. — Senior Examinations begin. June 16. Thursday. — Anniversary of the College of Law. June 17. Friday. — Contest for the Kirk Prize in Oratory. June 19. Sunday. — Baccalaureate Sermon. June 20. Monday. — Examinations for admission. June 20. Monday. — Class Day. June 20. Monday. — Anniversary of the Preparatory School. June 21. Tuesday. — Annual Meeting of the Board of Trustees. June 21. Tuesday. — Conservatory Concert. June 22. Wednesday. — Business Meeting and Anniversary of Alumni Associa- tion. June 23. Thursday.— Commencement. Sept. 13. Tuesday. — Examinations for admission. Sept. 14. Wednesday. — First Term begins. c 123 mw w v v mv v v mmwmv n al Qalenda t 1885. Sept. 16. College Term begins. Sept. 25. Sun rose at 5.50. Oct. 2. AT reunion at Miss Crandon ' s. Oct. 5. Eugensia mortua est ! Oct. 13. KKT jubilee. Oct. 24. Sun rose at 6.28. Oct. 30. Beta jubilee at Calkins ' . Nov. 1. Sun set at 4.54. Nov. 13. KKT chocolataire. Nov. 17. Perley gets mad at Lakin. Nov. 20. Hinman open session. Nov. 20. Sophs steal the Freshmen clothing. Nov. 21. OBonDieu! Nov. 21. Freshmen steal the Soph ' s clothing. 8 p. m., Hemenway discovered. Freshmen captured and bound. Nov. 24. Preps faculty send tutor Tisdel his resignation. Too much class row. Nov. 26. Thanksgiving. — Turkey goes down. Nov. 27. Sick students. — Turkey comes up ! Nov. 28. Perley said Hello ! to Lakin. Dec. 1. Fleming pulls the green cord. Dec. 5. Sun rises at 7.14. Dec. 10. A reception to Miss J. M. Bancroft. 1886. Jan. 1. New Year. Jan. 6. Second term begins. Jan. 7. Five Seniors present essays for Deering prizes. Only five prizes. Jan. 15. Five Seniors gain prizes ! Jan. 20. Baxter pulls the green cord. Jan. 24. Sig goat lame. Carried double. Jan. 25. Baxter pulls the green cord again. Jan. 29. Hamill receives his second notice to pay his term bill. College in financial peril. Feb. 1. Hamill paid his term dues. College firm again. Feb. 2. Baxter and Fleming both pull the green cord. Feb. 5. Tau Beta Gamma founded. Beta chapter. Feb. 5. Prof. Pearsons entertains the Senior class. Feb. 7. Oysters at Holden Club ! ! Feb. 10. Dr. Marcy winks at the logic class. Sun sets two minutes early in consequence. Feb. 12. Baxter pulls the green cord. Feb. 13. Algebra gets away with the Freshmen. Feb. 15. Springer introduces resolutions by which the government may be saved. Feb. 16. Prof. Kellogg laid out by Freshman chirography. Feb. 20. Perley and Lakin O. K. Feb. 22. University day. 12 p. m. to 1 a. m. Midnight dissipation and Bacchanalian revels by the Bibs ! (See cut p. 61). Feb. 24. Baxter pulls the green cord. Mar. 8. Science Hall a settled fact. Torchlights and horns. Mar. 25. Baxter pulls the red cord. Mar. 26. Pan-Hellenic movement inaugurated. Mar. 31. Second term ends. April 1. The fool ! April 7. Third term begins. April 8. Mirabile visu ! Juniors bloom in white plugs. April 9. Junior-Sophomore debate contest. April 12. Prep Faculty on the verge of ruin ! Tisdel reappointed tutor. Facult} r saved ! April 14. Asinine majority defeat the Pan-Hellenic movement. April 15. Baxter pulls the green cord. 124 P hTfihi i $$ociation Qfficers. President, .... HENRY A. PEARSONS, ' 62. Vice-President, . . . MARIE HUSE WILDER, ' 68. Secretary and Treasurer, . . FRANK E. LORD, ' 83. G cecutiue Committee. Henry A. Pearsons, ' 62. Frank E. Lord, ' 83. Marie Huse Wilder, ' 68. Martin M. Gridley, ' 83. Merritt C. Bragdon, ' 70. I oard of directors. Term of Office Expires 1886. Merritt C. Bragdon, 70. Henry A. Pearsons, ' 62. Frank M. Bristol, 77. Term of Office Expires 1887. James H. Raymond, ' 71. J. Frank Stout, 75. Frank E. Lord, ' 83. Term of Office Expires 1888. Marie Huse Wilder, ' 68. Martin M. Gridley, ' 83. E. Wyllys Andrews, 78. historian. Term of Office Expires 1886. Elizabeth R. Hunt, 77. Membership, ....... 232 Endowment Fund, ...... $2,460.00 Total Assets of Association, .... $2,712.62 125 J lumni, Compiled by D. H. BLOOM, ' 85, and C. J±. WIGHTMAN, ' 85. ( 1858. f Lydia M. Waugh, nee Hayes. 1859. M.D., Holland Thomas E. Annis, A.M City, Mich. Winchester E. Clifford, A.M., Insurance, Evanston, 111. Samuel L. Eastman, A.M., Newbury, Vt. Henry M. Kidder, Ph. B., £ A , Busi- ness, N. Evanston, 111. 1860 Elhanon J. Searle, A. M., Lawyer, St. Louis, Mo. f Margaret McKee, Batavia, 111. f Frances E. Willard, A P, Evanston, 111. Alphonso C. Linn, A.B., died in army, (1864.) William A. Lord, A. B., St. Joseph, Mo. Homer A. Plimpton, A.B., Mining, Den- ver, Col. Wm. H. H. Rawleigh, Ph.B., 2 A , Business, Baltimore, Md. Elmore Q. Searle, A.B. Melville C. Spaulding, A.B., Real Estate, 348 Washington Boul., Chicago, 111. Frank A. Springer, A.B., Teacher, Wash- ington, D. C. Hart L. Stewart, A.B. 1861 f Elizabeth D. Benthall, nee Wilson, Quas- queton, Iowa. f Julia Jones, nee Wood, Howells, Dak. f Julia Miller, nee Atkins, Sheffield, Mass. |Ada Marshall, nee Ward. fM. Louisa Medlar, nee Dake, Wood- stock, 111. f Martha J. Smith, nee Stewart, St. Louis, Mo. fMary H. Willard, nee Bannister, Editor The Signal, Evanston, 111. |Mary E. Willard. James W. Haney, A.M., Rev., Blandins- ville, 111. Martin Mohler, A.B., Teacher, Downs, Kas. William A. Spencer, A.B., D.D., Rev., Philadelphia, Pa. Warren Taplin, A.B. JohnC. Wilson, Ph. B. f Celia E. Boyd, nee Stow, f Louisa M. Fitch, nee Bragdon, Evans- ton, 111. 1862. f Lydia M. Howe, Teacher, 215 S. Peoria St., Chicago, 111. f Margaret J. Kinney, nee Shannon, Cin- cinnati, Ohio. f Mary L. Ludlam, Evanston, 111. f Isabella S. Foote, nee Miner, Pasadena, Cal. f Mary E. Shepherd, nee Bragdon, Evans- ton, 111. Robert Bentley, A.B., Rev., Alameda, Cal. Bennett B. Botsford, Ph.B., Salesman, 95 Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111. Isaac W. McCaskey, A.M., Gov. Service, 27 Gov. Building, Chicago, 111. Henry G. Meacham, A.B., died in army, (1863.) Henry A. Pearsons, A.M., ' E X, Real Est., 92 Washington St., Chicago, 111. William F. Rose, A.M., Rev., Pecatonica, 111. 1863. A.M., Lawyer, Pitts- David Sterrett, burgh, Pa. Harriet C. Furber, nee Wood, Chicago, 111. Mary E. Harding, nee Clifford, Goshen, Ind. Emily M. Jones, nee Hall, Lincoln, 111. Georgia A. Muller, nee Bryce, Buffalo, N. Y. Cornelia F. Emmett, nee Winslow, Sib- ley, Iowa. Henry M. Bannister, A.M., M.D., Kan- kakee, 111. Almus Butterfield, A.B., Com. Mer., 182 So. Water St., Chicago, 111. f Frances A. Bentley, nee Harvey, Ala- meda, Cal. f Harriet A. Fisher, nee De Coudres, Buffalo, N. Y. f Aurelia M. Ferry, Michigan City, Ind. f Cornelia S. Ferry, Michigan City, Ind. f Louise Huntoon, nee Gamble, Laporte, Ind. f Jennie M. Pearce, nee Wheeler, Balti- more, Md. f Mary E. Stephens, nee Bishop, Winona, Minn. 126 _J 1864. Frederick J. Hutchings, Ph.B., Farmer, Northfield, 111. Milton C. Springer, A.M., K W, Busi- ness, Wilmette, 111. Geo. E. Strobridge, A.M., D.D., Rev., $ KW, New York. f Cornelia A. Waukegan, f Clancine R. Orange, N. •f Belle Wallace f Sarah E. Wright, ford, N. Y. Holyoke, nee Wheeler, 111. Mann, nee Borchsenius, J- nee Denning, Paris, 111. Holmes, West- 1865. Chas. C. Bragdon, A.M., $ K W, Princi pal Lasell Seminary, Auburndale, Mass. Melvin A. Pingree, A.B., KW(iS66.) Elbert B. Wheeler, Ph.B., 2 K W, Farmer, Arlington Heights, 111. f Emilie G. Bishop, Oregon, Wis. f Josephine Hill, nee Day, Ishpheming, Mich, f A. Vernette Snyder, nee Forbes, Sabula Bluffs, Iowa, f Mary E. Springer, nee Ward, Wilmette, 111. f Martha W. Wilson, nee Richardson, Abingdon, 111. 1 1866. James Frank, A.M., $ K W, Lawyer, 86 La Salle St., Chicago, 111. Liston H. Pearce, A.M., Rev., Baltimore, Md. Joseph C. Thomas, A.B., Rev., New York. Arthur J. Wheeler, A.M., Rev., Byron Centre, Mich. f Alice S. Comstock, Evanston, 111. f Ellen E. Garnsey, nee Bradley, Wil- mette, 111. f Amelia Holcomb, Libertyville, 111. f Mary E. Lott, nee White, Sycamore, 111. f Emma J. Phelps, nee Kyle, Rogers Park, 111. f Ella C. Palmer, nee Judson, South Bend, Ind. f Mary E. Sewell, nee Wright, Indian- apolis, Ind. 1867. John W. Bissell, A.M., D.D., Rev., Pres. of U. I. University, Fayette, Iowa. J. Howard Brooks, A.B., Rev., Saint Paul, Neb. William C. Comstock, A.B., £ K W, Commission Business, Evanston, 111. Morton Culver, A.M., K W, Lawyer, 153 Randolph St., Chicago, 111. John Ellis, A.M., Rev., $ K W, Mt. Car- roll, 111. John B. McGuffin, A.M., Rev., £ K W, Turner Junction, 111. Thos. R. Strobridge, A.M., Rev., $ KW, Aurora, 111. Geo. W. Winslow, A.M., Rev., Frank- fort, 111. } Frances J. Bright, nee Roberts, Wau- paca, Wis. f Mary Ann Fisher, nee McKean. f Lucy I. Mappin, nee Pearsons, Elgin, 111. f Margaret J. Miller, nee McKean, Rock Falls, 111. f Harriet P. North, nee Linn, Chicago, 111. f Ada S. Kinsman, nee Wanless. 1868. Edmund W. Burke, A.M., K W, Law- yer, 162 Washington St., Chicago, 111. Frederick J. Huse, A. M. , M. D. , Piano, 111. William C. Knapp, A.M., Abingdon, 111. f Annis A. Gage, Dowagiac, Mich, f Nellie L. Henry, nee Case, Rockton, 111. f Fannie C. Larkin. f Annie M. Loiseaux, nee Roberts, Chi- cago, 111. f Alia M. Raymond, nee Beveridge, Chi- cago, 111. f Elizabeth Torrence, nee Norton, Chi- cago, 111. f Lucy M. Wilder, « ? Huse, Evanston, 111. 1869. Jacob R. Allen, A.M., Rev., Oak Hill, Ga. Robert Baird, A.M., £ KW, Prof. North- western University, Evanston, 111. Charles K. Bannister, A.M., £ K W, Business, So. Evanston, 111. Andrew B. Bishop, A.M., M.D., £ K W, San Jose, Cal. Willis Butterfield, A.M., M.D., £ K W, Belvidere, 111. Hiram Curtiss, A.M., Rev., Sutton, Neb. Albert C. Kennicott, Ph.B., $ K W. Wm. M. Raymond, A.M., $ K W, Gov. Serv., 216 Cass St., Chicago, 111. Chas. G. Root, Ph.B., $ K W, Business Indianapolis, Ind. Henry T. Scovill, A.M., Rev., £ K W, Chicago, 111. f Fannie J. Best, nee Stout, Quincy, 111. 127 1870. Wm. H. H. Adams, A.M., D.D., Rev., $ K W, Pies. 111. Wes. University, Bloomington, 111. Wm. D. Best, A.M., Rev., Champaign, 111. Rollin P. Blanchard, Ph.B., Lawyer, 80 Adams ' Ex. Bldg., Chicago, 111. Merritt C. Bragdon, A.M., M.D., 2 X, Evanston, 111. Thomas Craven, A.M., Missionary, Luck- now, India. Michael Finity, A.M. Joseph H. Gill, A.M., Missionary, India. Ira B. Henry, A.M., Rev., , 111. Albert L. Langworthy, A.B., 2 X, Deputy, Chicago, 111. Amos W. Patten, A.M., Rev., Engle- wood, 111. Wm. Plestead, A.M., Business, Trinidad, Col. Homer Potwin, A.B., Business, 126 Wash- ington St., Chicago, 111. Levi Van Fossen, Ph.B. Frederick C. Winslow, Ph.B., M. D., 2 X, Jacksonville, 111. + Emeline Badger, nee Green, Sterling, 111. f Ellen L. Davis, Jacksonville, Cal. f Anna L. Davis, nee Marcy, Evanston, 111. f Alice M. Galloway, Fond du Lac, Wis. f Fannie Gradle, nee Searles, Chicago, 111. Frances Green. f Ella E. Hussey, nee Badger, Sterling, 111. f Florence L. Knapp, nee Galloway, Fond du Lac, Wis. f Ella Merwin, nee Bannister, Evanston, 111. f Eliza Powell, nee Thompson, Delaware, Ohio, f Elizabeth R. Sullivan, nee White, Chi- cago, 111. I Lily R. Webster, nee Winne, Evanston, 111. 1871, Daniel O. Fox, A.M., Missionary, India. Edwin D. Gould, A.B. Sanford H. Mclntyre, A.M., Teacher, Negaunee, Mich. Amos H. Miller, A.M., Rev., Morrison, 111. AlbertB. Norton, A.B. , Missionary, India. Charles W. Pearson, A.M., $ K W, Prof. Northwestern Univ., Evanston, 111. Arthur W. Penney, Ph.B., Business, 161 La Salle St., Chicago, 111. James H. Raymond, A.M., Lawyer, Honore Block, Chicago, 111. Ozro Rovs, A.M., Rev., Lewiston, Me. Richard D. Russell, Rev., Galva, 111. Edwin R. Shrader, A.M., Teacher, Quincy, 111. Herbert W. Woodruff, A.M., Rev. Hamilton S. Wicks, Ph.B., 2 X, Busi- ness, Kansas City, Mo. Levi S. Wilcox, Ph.B.. M.D., Lacon, 111. Geo. L. Yaple, A.M., 2 X, Lawyer, Mendon, Mich. f Amelia J. Foster, nee Conwell, Evans- ton, 111. f Josephine C. Gibbs, So. Evanston, 111. f Cora H. Merrell, Evanston, 111. f Alice A. Wilcox, nee Yaple, Champaign, 111. f Mary E. Yaple, nee Hankinson, Men- don, Mich. 1872. Ellery H. Beal, A.M., Rev., 2 X, Platte- ville, 111. Thomas S. Berry, A.M. (former Presi- dent Simpson College.) George E. Bragdon, Ph.B., 2 X, Busi- ness, Pueblo, Col. James E. Burke, A.B., 2 X, Lawyer, Aberdeen, D. T. Curtis H. Castle, A.B., Lawyer, Knox- ville, 111. Lorin C. Collins, A.B., 2 X, Judge Cir. Court, Cook Co., Norwood Park, 111. Lewis P. Davis, A.M., Rev., Alpena, Mich. Robert B. Edwards, A.B., Lawyer, Lin coin, 111. Eltinge Elmore, Ph.B., 2 X, Business, Milwaukee, Wis. Edwin J. Harrison, Ph.B., 2 X, Busi- ness, Sauk Center, Minn. John M. Johnson, A.B., Rev. Mather D. Kimball, A.B., Business, Evanston, 111. George Lunt, Ph.B., 2 X, Com. Mer., 102 Washington St., Chicago, 111. Hiram H. Palmer, A.B., Business, Jack- sonville, 111. Clarence R. Paul, A.B., 2 X, Journalist, Washington, D. C. Wilbur O. Peet, A.M., Rev., Pike, N. Y. Fred. D. Raymond, A.B., 2 X, Auditor Union Steel Co., Portland Blk., Chi- cago, ill. James F. Robinson, A.M., 2 X, Banker, Rock Island, 111. Fernando Roys, A.B., M.D. Amos L. Smith, A.B., Lawyer, Milwau- kee, Wis. Herbert M. Thiers, C.E., Lawyer, Keno- sha, Wis. Edmund B. Woodson, A.B., Business, Chicago, 111. • Roxie Haney, nee Doe, Lansing, Iowa. Livonia Hills, Rockford, 111. •• Ella L. Horton, La Crosse, Wis. •• Martha C. Huntoon, Evanston, 111. Mary L. Martin, Waukegan, 111. Anna C. Cumnock, nee Webster, Evans- ton, 111. 128 1873. A.B., Rev., QKW, A.B., Business, Mo- Ph.B., 2 X, Lawyer, Ph.B., $ K 2, So. Edwin C. Arnold, Waukegan, 111 Lewis Butterfield, mence, 111. Henry A. Cooper, Racine, Wis. F. W. Cleveland, Evanston, 111. John M. Dandy, A.B., $ K 2, Journal- ist, 89 Clark St., Chicago, 111. Byron H. Eldridge, C.E., Locating Eng. Mexico Cen. R. R., Chihuahua, Mex. Chauncey Gaines, A.M., Business, San Francisco, Cal. Henry Green, A.B., Lawyer, Sterling, 111. Fred. M. Husted, A.M., £ K W, Law- yer, San Francisco, Cal. William King, A.B., Evanston, 111. Draper A. Lindsay, A.B., Lawyer, Fargo, D. T. John R. Leslie, Ph.B. Wm. J. Minium, A.B., Rev., Atkinson, 111. Adolphus H. Needham, A.B., Rev., K W, Healdsburg, Cal. Edward L. Parks, A.M., Rev., $ K W, Pies. Simpson Col., Indianola, Iowa. Lee J. Pitner, A.B., Real Estate, Evans- ton, 111. Emma V. Bannister, nee White, So. Evanston, 111. 1874. Frank M. Beatty, A.B., K2. Henry S. Boutell, A.M., LL.B., B 77, Lawyer, 1st Nat.Bk.Bldg,Chicago,Ill. Alex. D. Brainard, A.B., Lawyer, Blair, Neb. David W. Casseday, C.E., K 2, Real Estate, Minneapolis, Minn. Chester T. Drake, C.E., 2 X, Machinist, 160 So. Clinton St., Chicago, 111. Wm. C. Estes, C.E., £ K 2, Bay View, Wis. Oscar L. Gibbs, C.E., Business, So. Evanston, 111. Joseph M. Hawkes, A.B., B II, Busi- ness, St. Paul, Minn. Richard G. Hobbs, A.M., Rev., B © II, Springfield, 111. Deforest M. Hyde, C.E., $ K 2, Lum- ber, Appleton, Wis. Matthias S. Kaufman, A.M., Rev., Fall River, Mass. Wm. M. Knox, A.M., 2 X, Journalist, Daily A T ews, Chicago, 111. Chas.Leach, Ph.B., Rev., Santa Maria, Cal. Oliphant Lewis, A.B., Lawyer, 99 Ran- dolph St., Chicago, 111. Eli McClish, A.M., Rev., Prin. Grand Prairie Sem., Onarga, 111. Wm. L. McGarry, Ph.B., Lawyer, Evans- ton, 111. Wm. L. Martin, A.B., $ K 2, Business, Kankakee, 111. Wm.Omelvena,A.B.,Rev., Rockville,Ind. John W. Richards, A.M., Rev., 137 So. California Ave., Chicago, 111. Daniel C. Riehl, A.M., Rev., 2 X, Ed- more, Mich. Wm. B. Robinson, A.M., Rev., Omro,Wis. Andrew J. Scott,A.M.,Rev., Evanston, 111. John W. Scott, A.M., M.D.,Winnetka, 111. Gilbert M. Si immons, Sc.B., 4 K 2. Business, Kenosha, Wis. George H.Smith, A.M., Rev., Deposit, N.Y James Trewartha, A.B., Rev., Wessing- ton Springs, D. T. Oscar W. Willitts, A.M., Rev., Detroit, Mich. Melville C. Wire, A.B., Rev., Salem, Ore. Thomas J. Ziegler, A.M., Rev., B S 77, Dayton, Ohio. Rebecca Childs, nee Roland, Ph.B., Evanston, 111. 1875. Geo. A. Babbitt, A.B., Reporter, 618 W. Monroe St., Chicago, 111. Joseph H. Bates, A.B., M.D., £ K 2, Neponset, 111. Charles H. Burke, A.M. Lucius C. Colman, A.B., P K 2, Lum- ber, La Crosse, Wis. John J. Crist, A.B., Rev., B O 77, Winona, Wis. John W. Dickson, A.B., $ K 2, Coal Dealer, 2826 So. Park Ave., Chicago. Chas. A. Gaskell, A.M., Publisher, 1024 W. Adams St., Chicago, 111. Albert D. Gillespie, Sc.B., Draughtsman, 5 Lake Park PI., Chicago, 111. Cortez J. Goodenow, Sc.B., B S II, Business, Granite Falls, Minn. John H. Hamline, A.B., 2 X, Lawyer, Portland Block, Chicago, 111. Frank A. Hills, A.B., Farmer, Oregon, 111. Frank M. Harris, C.E., 2 X, Business, Kansas City, Mo. James L. Harrison, A.B., Rev., Worces- ter, Mass. Robert B. Hostetler, Sc.B., $ K 2. Robert Lewis, A.B., Lawyer, 99 Ran- dolph St., Chicago, 111. Chas. E. Lambert, A.M., Prof. Univ. of Oregon, Eugene City, Oregon. Henry K. Metcalf, Ph.B., Rev., Elvas- ton, 111. John T. Ray, Ph.B., Teacher, Highland Park, 111. Albert R. Robinson, A.M., Prin. Dore Pub. School, Chicago ; Hinsdale, 111. James F. Stout, A.M., Rev., B 77, Dan- ville, 111. Chas. W. Turner, A.B., Milwaukee, Wis. Herman H. Unland, A.B., $ K 2, Busi- ness, Beardstown, 111. 129 WT WT W 1875 (Continued.) Thomas Vanscoy, A.M., Rev., Pres. Will- amette Univ., Salem, Oregon. Francis M. Warrington, A.M., B II, Theo. Student, Boston Univ., Bos- ton, Mass. Emily F. Wheeler, A.M., Boston, Mass. George H. White, Ph.B., Lawyer, Min- neapolis, Minn. Amy C. Kellogg, Ph.B., Ft. Atkinson, Wis. Emily W. Minium, Atkinson, 111. 1876. Nathan R. Allen, C.E., Business, Keno- sha, Wis. Alanson S. Appleton, A.B., 2 X, Jour- nalist, 133 Clark St., Chicago, 111. William S. Arnold, A.M., Prof. Willa- mette Univ., Salem, Oregon. James E. Bell, A.B., Rev., Hollidays- burg, Pa. Smith S. Bradford, A.M., Rev., Traer, la. Walter Lee Brown, Sc.B., Chemist and Assayer, Metropolitan Blk., Chicago. Leonard G. Cochran, A.M., Rev., La Fayette, 111. Drayton L. Connell, C.E., $K2 (1883.) John Currer, A.M., Rev. Chas. M. Ellinwood, Ph.B., Prof. Simp- son Coll., Indianola, Iowa. Theophilus B. Hilton, A.M., Rev., 2 X, Sterling, 111. Charles W. Hudson, A.B., Business, Waukegan, 111. Francis M. Jones, C.E., Pueblo, Col. John Krantz, A.M., Rev., Newark, N. J. Frank W. Lord, A.B., M.D., Piano, 111. La Fayette E. McGarry, Sc.B., Teacher, Calloa, Mo. Samuel S. McPherrin, A.M., Lawyer, Clarinda, Iowa. Andrew W. McPherson, A.B., B 77, Teacher, Rockford, 111. Winfield S. Matthew, A.M., Rev., 2 X, St. Paul, Minn. Earl F. Potter, C.E., 4 K 2, Civ. Eng., Huron, D. T. Frank H. Scott, A.M., LL.B., B O 77, 101 Washington St., Chicago, 111. Fred. M. Taylor, A.M., 2 X, Professor Albion Coll., Albion, Mich. Samuel E. Van Petten, A.B. Charles P. Wheeler, A.M., 2 X, Sec. Eureka Coal Co., 95 Dearborn St., Chicago, 111. John J. Whipple, A.B., Rev., $ K 2, Arlington, 111. nee Brown, Sterling, Marengo, III. Ph.B., nee Parks, Jessie Hilton, A.B. 111. Etta S. Linn, B.L.. Emma E. Weller, Pomona, Cal. Mary Pattison, Ph.B., Freeport, 111. Jane E. Kryde r, Ph.B., nee Pattison, Ore- gon, 111. 1877. Martin L. Andersen, A.M., 2 X, Stock Raising, Ravenswood, 111. Howard R. Antes, A.B., Rev., Newark, 111. Edwin J. Bickel, A.M., Rev., (Ed. Mon- tana Christian Advocate) Helena, Montana. Timothy C.Bradley,C.E., Kansas City, Mo. Frank M. Bristol, A.M., Rev., $ K 2, Pastor Grace Church, Chicago, 111. Albert H. Burr, Ph.B., M.D., 584 State St., Chicago, 111. Wm. W. Carr, Ph.B., Rev., B G 77, Toulon, 111. Frank F. Casseday, Ph.B., M.D., $ K2, Kansas City, Mo. Alfred Cook, A.M., Journalist, Piano, 111. Frank H. Cutler, Sc.B., M.D., Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Robert E. Earll, Sc.,B.. Prof., Washing- ton, D. C. Albert D. Early, A.B., 2 X, Lawyer, Rockford, 111. E. B. L. Elder, A.M., Rev., Ellis, Kas. Frank M. Elliot, B.L.,21, Real Estate, Evanston, 111. Wm. G. Evans, A.B., 2 X, Real Estate, Denver, Col. Clarence A. Gardner, Ph.B., $ K 2. Wm. J. Hathaway, A.B., Rev., Decatur, Mich. Arthur S. Kimball, A.B., B II, Com. Mer., 22 Pacific Ave., Chicago, 111. Frank E. Knappen, A.M., 2 X, Lawyer, Kalamazoo, Mich. Charles L. Logan, A.M., Rev., Bishop Creek, Cal. Oliver P. McCool, A.M., B Q 77, Busi- ness, Freeport, 111. Charles H. Morgan, A.M., Rev., East Saginaw, Mich. Lorenzo T. Potter, B.L., M.D., £ K 2, 2139 Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111. Cornelius E. Rice, A.B., Teacher, Stur- gis, Mich. Martin S. Robison, Jr., C.E., $ K 2, Street Car Railway, Cleveland, Ohio. Rob ' t B. Seaman, A.M., Rev., Maquon,Ill. Charles W. Thornton, A.M., Rev., BSU, Mendota, 111. Delos M. Tompkins, A.M., B S II, Missionary, Nynee Tal, India. Anna A. Elder, nee Davis, B.L., Ellis, Kas. Elizabeth R. Hunt, M.L., A F, Evans- ton, 111. Marion L. Matthew, nee Pomeroy, Ph.B., St. Paul, Minn. 130 1878. George E. Ackerman, A.M., Rev., B 77, Warsaw, N. Y. E. Wyllys Andrews, A.M., M.D., 2 X, 65 Randolph St., Chicago, 111. Geo. M. Bassett, A.M., Rev., 1612 Mil- waukee Ave., Chicago, 111. Wm. M. Booth, A.M., 2 X, Lawyer, 152 Dearborn St., Chicago, 111. Abner Clark, A.B., Rev., Waverly, 111. Wm. L. Demorest, A.B., Rev., 2 X, Downers Grove, 111. John R. Edwards, A.B., Cheshire, Ohio. Conrad A. Haney, A.B., Rev., K 2, Normal, 111. Wm. H. Harris, A.M., 2 X, Lawyer, New York. Clarence H. Harvey, Ph.B. Junius C. Hoag, Ph.M., M.D., £ K 2, Winnetka, 111. Frank S. Johnson, A.M., M.D., £ K 2, 4 Sixteenth St., Chicago, 111. Jacob Kagey, A.B., Rev., Buena Vista, Col. Louis Karcher, Ph.B., $ K W, Lawyer,, Freeport, 111. Edward M. Kinman, A.M., B (-) II, Post- master, Jacksonville, 111. Cvrus F. Kryder, B.L., B S 77(1884.) Joseph T. Ladd, A.M., Rev., Galena, 111. Frank Macard, A.B., Rev. Rasmus Nielson, A.B. Charles S. Northrop, B.L., Lawyer, Nord Land, D. T. Charles H. Quereau, A.M., Business,. Aurora, 111. Charles L. Root, Sc.M., $ K W, Lyons, Iowa. James M. Wheaton, A.M., Rev., New Milford, 111. Mary E. Garst, B.L., Champaign, 111. Bertha G. Goodwin, B.L., Rockford, 111. Mary E. Ring, nee Parks, B.L., St. Law- rence, D. T. Ida Breed, nee Stuart, A.B., Pueblo, Col. 1879. Edward C. Adams, A.M., M.D., $ K 2, Watertown, D. T. Isaac E. Adams, A.M., B ( ) II, Lawyer, 90 La Salle St., Chicago, 111. Charles E.Cook, A.B., M.D., Mendota, 111. Dexter P. Donelson, A.B., 2 X, Busi- ness, Evanston, 111. Wm. A. Hamilton, A.M., B S II, Law- yer, Superior, Wis. Hugh Harrison, Ph.B., Business, Minne- apolis, Minn. Henry B. Hemenway, A.M., M.D., Kala- mazoo, Mich. Wm. T. Hobart, A.B., B 77, Mission- ary, Pekin, China. Thomas H. Hood, Ph.B., B 77, Law- yer, Opera House Bldg., Chicago, 111. George H. Horswell, A.M., B.D., Z K W, Instructor, N. W. U., Evanston, 111. Douglas V. Jackson, B.L., $ K 2, Law- yer, Muscatine, Iowa. Wm. B. Leach, A.M., Rev., 652 W. 21st St., Chicago, 111. S. Lewis, A.B., Miss ' y, Chunking, China. Joseph Coombe, A.B., Rev., Catlin, 111 Nathan S. Davis, Jr., A.M., M.D., 2 X 65 Randolph St,, Chicago, 111. Frank B. Dyche, A.B., $ K 2, Lawyer 123 Dearborn St., Chicago, 111. Charles A. Foulks, Ph.M., M.D., 2X Vincennes, Ind. Almon W. Greenman, Ph.B., Missionary Queretaro, Mexico. Charles H. Hamilton, Sc.B., K 2 Miller, Ottawa, 111. Sidney M. Harris, A.B., A K E, Herman Minn. George W. Hewitt, A.B., Franklin Grove 111. James T. Musgrove, A.M., Rev., B (-) 77, Argo, Col. Edward L. Stewart, Sc.B., 2 X, Lawyer, 162 Washington St., Chicago, 111. Frank E. Tyler, Sc.B., $ K 2, Kansas City, Mo. Wm. H. Wait, A.M., B G 77, Prof. 111. Wes. Univ., Bloomington, 111. George W. White, Ph.B., Rev., Brandon, Wis. Ella V. Ambrose, B.L., Decorah, Iowa. Mary Bayne, B.L., Warren, 111. Lilla M. Hemenway, nee Bradley, B.L. Lillie C. Musgrove, nee Casey, Ph.B., Argo, Col. Jessie McPherrin, nee Moore, A.B., Clarinda, Iowa. Sarah E. Patten, nee Prindle, Ph.M., Englewood, 111. Clara Shumway, B.L. , Polo, 111. Isabella B. Parks, nee Webb, A.M., Indianola, Iowa. Jane H. White, Ph.M., Teacher, Evans- ton, 111. 1880. Robert B. Jessup, Ph.B., M.D., 2 X, Vincennes, Ind. Duston Kemble, A.B., K W, Mission- ary, Leon, Mexico. John E. Lipps, Ph.B,, 2 X, Silk Manu- facturer, Riveria, France. George Merritt, A.M., Rev., Ada, Minn. Charles J. Michelet, A.B., Lawyer, 115 Monroe St., Chicago, 111. William B. Norton, A M., Rev., B 77, Erie, 111. John H. Pryor, A.B., $ KW, Newell, la. Elias F. Shipman, A.M. ,M.D., Chicago, 111. Nels E. Simonsen, A.B., Rev., Pres. Norw. Theo. Sem., Evanston, 111. 131 1880 (Continued.) Levi P. Warrington, A.B., C. M. Col., Chicago, 111. Thomas C. Warrington, A.M., Rev., Peotone, 111. Francis A. Wood, A.M., Aurora, Neb. Bessie Helmer, nee Bradwell, A.M., 1428 Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111. Nellie A.Barnes, « Lewis,B.L.,Joliet,Ill. Dolly V. Purcell, nee Mesick, B.L., Plain- well, Mich. Helen L. Miller, Ph.B., Riverside, 111. Emma Lacy, nee Nind, Ph.B., Pleasant Prairie, Wis. Ellen M. Pryor, Ph.B., Moline, ill. Cassie M. dishing, nee Scott, Ph.B., New York, N. Y. Ettie L. Smith, A.B., Havana, 111. Julia D. Watson, Ph.B., Evanston, 111. Mary E. Rice, nee Webster, B.L., Evans- ton, 111. 1881. Frank T. Andrews, A.M., M.D., 2 X, 65 Randolph St., Chicago, 111. Arthur H. Briggs, A.B., B 77, Theo. Stu. Boston Univ., Boston, Mass. John P. Brushingham, A.M., Rev., K W, 65 Artesian Ave., Chicago, 111. John C. Butcher, A.M., M.D., A T, Missionary, India. William R. Chamberlain, Ph.B., A T, Lawyer, 80 Dearborn St., Chicago, 111. Eben P. Clapp, A.M., M.D., Evanston, 111. Joseph M. Cormack, A.M., Rev., A 2 , Wilton Center, 111. Moses S. Cross, A.M., B 77, Student Leipsic Univ., Germany. Raymon d N. De Groff, Sc.B., 2 X, Journalist, Sterling, 111. George A. Foster, A.B., 73 77, Busi- ness, 147 5th Ave., Chicago, 111. Walter B. Helm, Sc.B., M.D., Rockford, 111. William H. Huston, A.B., Farmer, Britt, Iowa. Geo. N. Herrick, Ph.B., Rev., Knights- town, Ind. Benjamin B. James, A.M., Teacher, Evanston, 111. William H. Lacy, A.M., Rev., $ K W, Pleasant Prairie, Wis. Joseph A. Matlack, A.M., Rev., £ K W, 386 So. Paulina St., Chicago, 111. Nathan C. Miller, Ph.B., A T, Teacher, McGregor, Iowa. James E. Nichol, A.B., Rev., Russell, Iowa. Frederick Porter, A.M., Rev., A V, Batavia, 111. Frank L. Rice, Sc.B., 2 K 2, Boiler Manufacturer, Evanston, 111. John Schneider, A.M., Rev., Edgerton, Wis. Claudius B. Spencer, A.M., Rev., $ K 2, Detroit, Mich. Polemus H. Swift, A.M., Rev., A V, Rockford, 111. Frank H. Thatcher, Ph.M., B (-) 77, Law- yer, Aurora, 111. Parker S. Webster, A.M., AT, Lawyer, Dubuque, Iowa. Frederick S. Wheeler, A.M., Business, New York. Elizabeth C. McArthur, A.M., Rockford, 111. Jane H. Cormack, nee Marshall, B.L., A $, Wilton Center, 111. Emma P. James, nee Meserve, Ph.B., Z , Evanston, 111. Martha G. Pooley, nee Skelton, Ph.M., Joliet, 111. 1882. Stanley P. Black, Ph.B., M.D., $ K 2, Cook County Hosp., Chicago, 111. Alva G. Briggs, A.B., B 77, Business, Sierra City, Cal. William F. Carroll, A.B., B (-) 77(1885.) James S. Conwell, Sc.B., $ K 2, Busi- ness, Los Angeles, Cal. Chas. W. Darrow, Sc.B., Lawyer, C. B. Q. R. R. Gen. Offices, Chicago, 111. William A. Dyche, A.B., 3 K 2, Drug- gist, 65 Randolph St., Chicago, 111. Walter A. Evans, A.B., Rev., A T, Janes- ville, Wis. Nathan J. Harkness, Ph.B., Rev., A T, 589 W. Erie St., Chicago, 111. John Lee, A.M., Rev., Wyanet, 111. Robert E. McPherrin, A.B., A V, Busi- ness, Ottumwa, Iowa. Frank W. Merrell, A.B., Rev., £ K W, Princeville, 111. Peter D. Middlekauff, Ph.B., A T, Busi- ness, Evanston, 111. Harry H. Miller, Sc.B., B 77, Mining Eng., Port Arthur, Ont. Wm. Otjen, A.B., Rev., Milledgeville. 111. Charles E. Piper, A.B., 2 K W, 3443 Paulina St., Chicago, 111. Robert H. Pooley, A.B., Rev., A 1 , Joliet, 111. Fred H. Sheets, A.B., Rev., 73 O 77, Oregon, 111. Jessie S. Brown, w Cowles, Ph.B., Fre- mont, Neb. Emily M. Hobart, nee Hatfield, A.B., Pekin, China. Lydia L. Jones, A.B., K K F, Teacher, Fremont Normal, Fremont, Neb. Emma M. Prindle, Ph.B., Evanston, 111. Adele Hall, nee Somers, Chicago, 111. Ella M. Tarr, B.L, A F, Lewiston, Idaho. Sarah E. White, Ph.B., A F, So. Evans- ton, 111. 1883. John C. Bannister, A.B., B S 77, Teacher, Princeton, 111. Henry O. Cady, A.B., Rev., A T, Student G. B. I., Evanston, 111. Asahel H. Denman, Ph.B., Lawyer, Iowa City, Iowa Martin M. Gridley, Ph.B., £ K 2, Law- yer, 89 Madison St., Chicago, 111. James T. Hatfield, A.B., B S 77, Evans - ton, 111. Alfred E. Hills, A.B., A V, Post Grad. Stud. N. W. U., Evanston, 111. Frank E. Lord, A.B., B II, Lawyer, 101 Washington St., Chicago, 111. Wm. A. Phillips, Ph.B., Z K2, Student Harv. Med. Coll. ; Evanston, 111. Louis S. Rice, Ph.B., $ K 2, Business, Denver, Col. Charles H. Sharer, Ph.B., B 77, Asst. Post Master, Mt. Morris, 111. Amos R. Solenberger, Ph.B., M.D., £ 7i W, Itasca, 111. Merritt E. Taylor, Sc.M., Instructor N. W. U., Evanston, 111. Nelson P. Webster, Ph.B., Business, Topeka, Kas. Wm. E. Wilkinson, A.B., £ KW, Stu- dent G. B. I., Evanston, 111. Anna L. Crandon, Ph.B., AT, Evanston, 111. Emily Greenman, Ph. B., Marion, Ind. Harriet A. Kimball, Ph.B., Instructor, N. W. U., Evanston, 111. Minnie R. Moulding, B.L., A $, ' Lake View, 111. Mary E. Norton, Ph.B., Winona, Minn. Isabella Ross, Ph.B., Teacher, Rogers Park, 111. 1884. Wilbur F. Atchison, A.B., Rev., A T, Des Plaines, 111. Leon E. Bell, A.B., Rev., A T, Orange- ville, 111. Wm. H. Crawford, A.B., Rev., £ K W, Ravenswood, 111. Albert D. Currier, Sc.B., 2 X, Student Mass. Ins. Tech. ; Neponset, 111. Chas. Horswell, A.B., $ KW, Instructor, G. B. I., Evanston, 111. George P. Merrick, B.L., 2 X, Law Student, 106 Dearborn St., Chicago, 111. Edmund B. Patterson, A.B., Rev., New Buffalo, Mich. Chas. G. Plummer, B.L., A T, Med. Student, 70 Monroe St., Chicago, 111. Charles S. Raddin, Sc.B., $K2, Busi- ness, Evanston, 111. Wm. D. Sargent, A.B., £ K2, Student, Evanston, 111. Zella F. Adams, B.L., Prof. Atlanta Univ., Atlanta, Ga. Mary A. Bennett, A.B., A r, Rossville, 111. Florence M. Cowles, nee Call, B.L., Algona, Iowa. Leila M. Crandon, B.L., A T, Prof. Lewis Coll., Glasgow, Mo. Mary A. Sheets, nee Hill, B.L., A T, Oregon, 111. Adella G. Maltbie, B.L., A 4 , Prof. U. I. U., Fayette, Iowa. Helen M. Redfield, Ph.B., A T, Teacher, Beloit, Wis. Fannie Simpson, B.L., K KT, Teacher, Troy, N. Y. 1885. Owen Wheaton Battey, A.B., A V, Tis- kilwa, 111. David H. Bloom, A.B., B II, Student, U. C. of Law ; Tiskilwa, 111. Samuel L. Boddy, Ph.B., B G 77, Law Student, Cherokee, Iowa. William C. Chase, A.B., Business, Quincy, 111. Frank Cook, A.B., A T, Crete, 111. Wm. D. Fullerton, A.B., B S 77, Teacher, Walnut Hills, Cincinnati, Ohio. Edward D. Huxford, Sc.B., B (-) 77, Cherokee, Iowa. William R. Light, A.B., Teacher, Mont- pelier, Vt. Rush McNair, A.B., 4 KW, Student C. M. Col., Black Berry Station, 111. Eugene E. McDermott, Sc.B., A T, Law Student, Lancaster, Wis. Gerhardt C. Mars. A.B., K W , Stu- dent G. B. I., Evanston, 111. Leonard L. Skelton, A.B., A 7 , Teacher, Vineyard, Ark. Charles S. Slichter, Sc.B., 2 X, Teacher, 166 Egan Ave., Chicago, 111. Sidney Watson, Sc.B., 2 X, Clerk, C. N. W. R. R., Evanston, 111. Charles A. Wightman, Ph.B., 2 X, Asst. Ticket Receiver, Pa. R. R. Co., Evanston, 111. Mary Henry, A.B., A $, Teacher, Ne- braska Central Col., Central City, Neb. Mary E. Moore, B.L., A i , Winona, 111. Ellen M. Sawyer, Ph.B., A $, Streator, 111. Kate L. Sharp, Ph.B., KKF, Maywood, 111. Mary B. Swail, Ph.B., A $, Teacher, Belvidere, 111. Nellie F. Weeks, Ph.B., Student Vassar Coll., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Deceased. t Graduate of Northwestern Female College. 133 v v w + v m v v mv r J H. L. K— nd— g : To follow foolish precedents and wink with both our eyes, is easier than to think. W. E. G—FF— RD : Fat, fair and forty. O. I. L sh : He is a little chimney, and heated hot in a moment. C. E. L — B — rg — R : I protest against this whole proceeding most emphatically. C. H. B— th : Then I fixt my wistful eyes on two fair images. A. R. Ed rds : A mighty wonder bred among our cpuiet crew. R W. SP G— R : Noisy was he, and gamesome as a boy. E. C. P— ge : Heavy his low-hung lip did oft appear Deprest by weight of musing phantasy, Profound his forehead was, though not severe, Yet some did think he had little business here. F. H. Bl tt : To sleep I give my powers away. H. C — dd — ck : Comrades, leave me here a little, while as yet ' tis early morn. F. L le : Hath any man seen him at the barber ' s ? D. H. CxL ss : A voice, if it can be called so, like the efforts of a broken old pair of bellows. E. C. Q R u : A mighty man at cutting and drying he was. W. A. H— ll : Iron-sinewed, horny-handed, Shoulders broad, and chest expanded. 134 H. B wn : A big, loud man with a stare and a metallic laugh. F. C. D— m st : Yet, even in his fancy reigned supreme, The ideal woman of a young man ' s dream. H. 0. C— DY : And leaning back, he yawned and fell asleep. M. E. D— v— d : A maiden modest and yet self-possessed. C. Br — df — rd : A shock headed, awkward, shambling lad. E. A. Sch — LL : Still dauntless, ' mid the wreck of earth, he ' d smile. ' B. L. McF— dd— n : Little epitome of man. B. M. W d— n : Blest with an infant ' s ignorance of all But his own simple pleasures. G. W. K stm — nn : Brimful with learning, see that pedant stride, Bristling with horrid Greek and stuffed with pride. ' F. W. B rs : One, whom the music of his own vain tongue Doth ravish, like enchanting harmony. F. T— w— E : There be none of beauty ' s daughters With a magic like thee. E. B. Gr ne : In years, I ween, he was rather green. G. W. L— w— s : Thou art said to have a stubborn soul. H. M. My — rs: • jj er voice was ever soft, Gentle and low, an excellent thing in woman. W. J. And ws : Look to your babe, my Lord, ' tis yours, C. J. T— sd— l : What cracker is this same, that deafs our ears With this abundance of superfluous breath ? E. W. A — ST— N : O, little feet, that such long years, Must wander ' round through hopes and fears. 135 W. E. McL— nn— n : On his upper lip His beard a good palm ' s length, at least, Level and pointed at the tips, Shot sideways like a swallow ' s wings. The Bib : I am a man whom fortune hath cruelly scratched. C. C. B— M— nn : Ah, pensive scholar, what is fame ? Dr. B — NBR — GHT : Please draw the green cord. O. M. H — w — rd : As idle as a painted ship Upon a painted ocean. Freshman Girls : Uncertain, coy and hard to please. M. J— n— s : Varium et mutabile semper femina. L. O. P— rl— y : He ' s quite altered — they ' ve made him a dandy, quite a new sort of creature, unknown yet to scholars. C. S. T— ML— NS— N : He was the mildest-mannered man That ever scuttled ship, or cut a throat. O. M — DDL — K — FF : But strive still to be a man before your mother. Adelphic : We adjourn this count till further day. C. L. All — n : There ' s little of the melancholy element in her. H. D. Atch — s — n : I am loved of all the ladies. E. L. Sh — m — n : All the wealth I have Runs in my veins ; I am a gentleman. Senior Boys : Very unclubable men. F. By— rs : Thou little girlish boy ; Fit play-fellow for fairies, by moonlight pale. ' ' H. F. Br— ggs : A horse ! a horse ! my kingdom for a horse ! 136 Prof. Gr n — r : Lay on, MacDuff ; And damned be he that first cries Hold, enough. H. M. H— ld— n : I was not born under a rhyming planet. S. S. F— RL— Y : Methinks, sometimes, I have no more wit than an ordinary man has. J. E. H— NT : Heaven bless thee ! Thou hast the sweetest face I ever looked on. F. M — DDL — K — ff : Now Jove, in his next commodity of hair, send thee a beard. S. P. Edm — nds — n : For I am nothing, if not critical. T. R. Gr ne : And when you stick on conversation burrs, Don ' t strew your pathway with those dreadful rrrs. H. R. C — lk — ns : When he shall die, Take him and cut him up in little stars. Junior Girls : Wretched un ideaed girls. J. B. Y ng : And each particular hair did stand on end, Like quills upon the fretful porcupine. G. 0. R— ch n : Be wise with speed, A fool at forty is a fool indeed. F. C. Wh d : A proper stripling, and an amorous. Prof. P — rs — n : A man that hath a mint of phrases in his brain. E. L. C— l— n : I have married a wife, and, therefore, I cannot come. W. H. T— tt— e : Well, I am not fair, and, therefore, I pray the gods make me honest. P. R. Sh— m— y : The eye of man hath not heard, the ear of man hath not seen, man ' s hand is not able to taste, his tongue conceive, nor his heart to report what methinks I am. B. St e : Why, here he comes swelling like a turkey-cock. 137 A A A A Ai R. O. V— ND- Still conscious of his wondrous excellence. C. L. St — v — ns : A gentleman that loves to hear himself talk, and will speak more in a minute than he will stand to in a month. S. H. M — DDL — K— FF : He sits among us like a descended god. G. A. B— ss : When I come to woo ladies, I fright them. S. C. D— v— s : If he be not in love with some woman, there is no believing in old signs; a ' brushes his hat o ' mornings ; what should that abode ? A. O. P RS— N : Thou wilt be as valiant as the wrathful dove, or most magnanimous mouse. I. H — rv — Y : Ask me if I can refrain from love. R H. H— ld— n : Though the chameleon love can feed on air, I am one that am nour- ished by my victuals. P. B. B— ss : I am as true as truth ' s simplicity, And simpler than the infancy of truth. W. D RBY E : God made him, and, therefore, let him pass for a man. K. M. A ng : An angel is like you, Kate, and you are like an angel. C. M. D ny : Small show of man was yet upon his chin. Senior Girls : Maidens withering on the stalk. 1. C. C — RT GHT : For methinks I am marvelous hairy about the face, and I am such a tender ass, if my hair do but tickle, I must scratch. H. M. P rs — ns : Sir, as I have a soul, she ' s an angel. C. B l : There swims no goose so grey, but soon or late, She finds some honest gander for a mate. Dr. C — M NGS : Explaining metaphysics to the nation, I wish he would explain his explanation. 138 H. H— W— LL : You beat your pate and fancy wit will come, Knock as you please, there ' s nobody at home. L. F. K ly : Some Cupid kills with arrows, some with traps. Prof. K — ll — gg : He was in logic a great critic, Profoundly skilled in analytic, He could distinguish and divide A hair ' twixt south and southwest side. C. C— se : She is pretty to walk with, And witty to talk with, And pleasant, too, to think on. L. Ch — p — N : The baby figure of the giant mass of things to come. A. M. Sw — ft : She move a goddess, and she looks a queen. G. H — bb — rd : A fine press gentleman, that ' s all perfume. C. H. Br— nd : That one can smile, and smile, and be a villain still. J. H. H— ll : None but himself can be his parallel. A. T. F— sk : There ' s nothing ill can dwell in such a temple. C. A. Pl— ce : It is not good that man should be alone. Tau Beta Gamma : Thirteen Big Geese. A. T — wns — nd : Had I been two, another and myself, Our head would have o ' erlooked the world. C. W. F— rg n : Speak to him, ladies, see if you can move him. A. T— w— e : Then (s)he will talk ; ye gods ! how (s)he will talk. R. I. Fl — m — ng : What he says you can believe, and pawn your soul upon it. G. W. D— x— n : The polliwog died a ' laughing To see him wag his jaw. 139 A«fcA A A A A A«fcA A k G. Gr — NM — N : Fit for the mountains, and the barbarous eaves, Where manners ne ' er were preached. Chapel, with Sophs on Back of Seat : There was a general whisper, too, and wiggle, But etiquettee forbade them all to giggle. Prof. C — mn — ck : Now with a giant ' s might He heaves the ponderous thought ; Now pours the storm of eloquence, With scathing lightning fraught. The Faculty : To mourn a mischief that is past and gone Is the next way to draw new mischief on. C. C. Cl — FF — RD : Hence, horrible shadow, unreal mockery, hence ! I. R. H— tt : Plenty of room at the top. Prof. B rd : Cut it down. L. Ambr — se : Man delights me not. A. C. W— L— s : She has spirit to act whatever her heart approves. ' Sophomore Girls : Woman ' s at best a contradiction still. 140 w mm u n i i i n. T I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I J v QT xsxng Fi FEEEEFEE £HE Edj J I l 1 : i gftai?6m@ri£ K P rl rlrJ g -p-; SUPPORT ML. Rl V 5 M THE FLOWERS THAT BLOOM IN THE SPRING, TRA LA. j}j ' ,, • - i2 BY f-.- D atronizin? the Mv«rti$er$ Xheij have made this book possible. a a a f f a i o a o«. JBooMers anb JfraHonprs, 57 Washington St.. CHICAGO. X© . WESTERN AGENTS FOR BOOKS OF C. L. S. C PUBLISHERS OF THE AUTHORIZED EDITION OF SAM JONES ' SERMONS Sunday School Lihrary Books and Requisites our Specialty GATES the WaTTER Hee wear, Collars and Guffs, 72 G. Rdams gt - GF3IGRG0 - f Opposite the air.: - fine e G on f ec f i 01761 - Society and ©lass Catering At Reasonable Rates. Cor. Davis Street and Chicago Avenue, -w Gyansjpon, III, H. Hallstrom Co L Alums, GENTS ' FTJ]E IsriSH:TIsrG- O-OOIDS, Opposite Post Office, Evanston, III. J. L. HEBBLETHWAITB, ' uvniiuve and ndevta]fing 9 620 DAVIS STREET, CORNER MAPLE AVENUE, EVANST©N, IU. Upholstering and Mattress Making a Specialty. ®( 110 and 112 Madison Street, CHICAGO, ILL. BH-A.UCH HOUSE -A.T 95 EAST THIRD STREET, ST. PAUL, MINN. Agents for Oneida Community, Limited, Packers of Fruits, Vegetables and Poultry. Directly connected with the Leading Manufacturers of Food Products in America and in Europe. Goods delivered free of charge at Evanston (North and South included) every Friday, C. M. BARNES, 151 153 WABASH AVE., CHICAGO, IS HEADQUARTERS FOR Cheap School and College Text Books,  - It will pay you to call on him when you want to Buy or Sell such books. TRY IT AND BE CONVINCED. 4 I ortbvuestepn University, Joseph $ummmg$, j j v SSi -, Pr Htod. $ixiy professors and Instructors, and oucr 00 giudcnts. The University includes the following Departments : i. The College of Liberal Arts, with four regular courses of study and opportunity for a select course. 2. The Woman ' s College gives a young woman the highest advantages of a well regulated home. They are admitted to the same courses of study and receive the same degrees as young men. Those who choose, may pursue preparatory and aca- demic studies, and Music, Drawing and Painting. The College Cottage is a conven- ient, well furnished home near the College, and by the special arrangements there made, excellent accommodations are furnished to young ladies at a very moderate cost. 3. The School or Oratory. 4. The School of Art. 5. The Preparatory Department. This gives opportunity for preparation for any college, and furnishes, under highest advantages, a wide range of academic studies preparatory to professional or practical pursuits. For academic students there is a course requiring three years ' study, on the completion of which a Diploma will be given. 6. The Conservatory of Music, in which all departments of Music are taught. 7. College Theology. College of Medicine. College of Law. The University is located in Evanston, which is the most beautiful suburb ot Chi- cago, and is one of the best and most healthy summer resorts on the Great Lakes, having all the advantages of City and all the enjoyments of Rural Life. It is unusually free from immoral influences. The sale of intoxicating drinks is prohibited by its charter within four miles of the University. For Catalogues address the President, or Prof. H. F. Fisk, the Principal of the Preparatory Department. w yw AAtAA A A A A (£l)tcag0 SO?ebtcal (Mege, Cor. Prairie Ave. and Twenty-sixth St., CHICAGO. Medical department op the N. S. Davis, M.D., LL.D., Dean. The twenty-seventh annual course of instruction will begin on Tuesday, September 21, 1886, and terminate on Tuesday, March 23, 1887. The course of instruction is graded, students being divided into first, second and third year classes. Qualifications for admission are either a de- gree of A. B., a certificate from a literary college, scientific school or academy, or a preliminary examination. The method of instruction is conspicuously practical, and is applied in the wards of Mercy, St. Luke ' s and Michael Reese Hospitals. Fees in advance: Matriculation, $5.00; Lec- tures, $75.00, (for first and second years only) ; Demonstration, $5.00. Hospitals,— Mercy $6.00; St. Luke ' s, 5.00; Laboratory, $5.00; Breakage, $5,00. Final Examination, $30.00, Feb. 1st. For further information address, FRANK BILLINGS, M.D., Secretary, Chicago, III. UNION COLLEGE OF LAW, Under the joint management of THE NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY AND THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. FALL TERM BEGINS SEPTEMBER 22, 1886. Thorough preparation for the legal profession. Diploma admits to the bar of Illinois. For Circular address, H. BOOTH, 214 Opera House Bld ' g, Chicago. $rt ttii JkMittt litsiiiftk EYANSTON, ILL. HENRY P. RIDGAWAY, D. D., Pres. and Cornelia Miller Prof, of Practical Theology. MINER RAYMOND, D. D.. LL.D., Professor of Systematic Theology. CHARLES K. BRADLEY, B. D., Prof, of New Testament Exegesis. MILTON S. TERRY, D. D., Professor of Old Testament Exegesis. CHARLES W. BENNETT, D. D., Professor of Historical Theology. ROBERT L. CUMMOCK, A. M., Professor of Elocution. CHARLES W. HORSWELL, A. M., Instructor in Elementary Greek. WM. ROLLINS, Instructor in Elementary Hebrew. The HON. GRANT GOODRICH, President. I fi , . Trustee „ Mr. ORINGTON LUNT, Secretary. £ Board ot lrustees. ' ' Wf f P fW T T W f fPtPf P TW yp t T W T PfliTWfW ' (LJISS CjROUPS §§fo — OR — = §$ QlNGLE JTgures — IN THE — jfinest Style of rt Lowest Prices consistent with A 1 PHOTOGRAPHS -• 351 BEAMIB©MK ST, CHICAGO. KOELLING, KLAPPENBAGH KENKEL SUCCESSORS TO GUSTAV HINSTORFF, u COLL A I LOR, pioneer of TVloderate ' prices.K |-ASHIONABLE - |AIL0RING, MODERATE PRICES. Suits to Order from $20.00. Overcoats to Order from $16.00. Pants to Order from $6.00. Bicycle Suits to Order, Imported Bicycle Stockings in Stock, Lakeside Building, Cor. Clark and Adams Sts., CHICAGO, FOR NEAT AND RELIABLE WORK GO TO be (Mansion gteam Caundrjf, P. O. MAGNUSON, Prop. Corner Chuireh Street and Sherman Ave. Your Goods Called For and Promptly Delivered. Always a Liberal Discount to Students. STUDENTS PATRONIZE THE pala garb r Shop, 3d Door West of P. 0. PETER R. SCHAEFER, Proprietor. A. I. TKEMAIH, H FLORIST, J ppO$it« fomSLXl ' @oIU$e. idfcA A d i 4 a aoa4i [1e W. 4 coo D ' D hoto-]V[«c anical printing Cornpany, 89 Randolph Street, Chicago. Are producers of Illustrations by the most Approved Photo- MEchanical, FhDtD -Lithographic and Photo- Engraving PrOCBSSBS, fac-Simile$ of ]Ykdal$ and Coin$. i ncient ]Ytafiu$crij t$, paintings, Drawings, Sketches and Autograph) Circulars, Views and Portraits from fJature, jVIedical and Scientific Objects, Antiquities, Etc., Etc., Etc. CDLDR • PRINTING, BY NEW MD IMFRDVEE FRDCESSES, Novelties in Artistic Advertisements a Specialty, Special Attention paid to the reproductions of Archi- tects, Engineers ' and Surveyors ' Drawings, EstimatBs and Specimens Furnished on Application, The Portraits of the Professors in this Issue were made by this Company, - • co m C£ 6 CtJ o fe- es d z Nl (0 cau X Q. IS. ' m r cc C5 t „JQj CD 9i ATIONE as o I h Q Z - dr 1- 0) CD G2 z 0$ %4 © o %- z ( l 93 2d UJ p HE v LM?JTMf ■dam. — k, xbml ■fi— ■ymmmmmwm. -mask. S«m xam. mho , vast. ! choice jk 3EM fLo L clJj floWe s. DESIGNS i SfEGiA-LTT- FL0M8T P 3 jTm plants in §«a$on. 403 Davis Street, Evanston, 111. THE FINEST RIGS IN TOWN t AND .« 5 -.- STORAGE ROOM FOR CARRIAGES - AT THE S«?- - S OF t -« POWERS SCHWALL, Evanston, III. J..SCHEPPLBR, 124 NORTH CLARK STREET, Entrance on Ohio Street, - G i ea S o - HILPERT CHANDLER, WOOD ENGRAVERS, — AND — ELECTROTYPERS, 167 DEARBORN ST. CHICAGO. Probably no invention of this century has done so much to econo- mize time, reduce ex- penses, and facilitate the dispatch of office business, as the REM- WEBSTER In various Styles of Binding, with and without Patent Index. f 0NABRme7£ l,B % ARY i WlGTIONAfiJI ' ITSELF The latest edition has 118,000 Words, 3000 Illustrations, a Biographical Dictionary (nearly 10,000 names) and many other valuable features, to which we have JUST ADDED A. NEW PRONOUNCINa GAZETTEER OF THE WORLD, Containing over 25,000 Titles, describing the Countries, Cities, Towns, and Natural Feat- ures of every part of the Globe. WEBSTER IS THE STANDARD Authority with the U. S. Supreme Court and in the Gov ' t Printing Office, and is recom- mended by State Sup ' ts of Schools in 36 States, and by over 50 leading College Pres ' ts. It is an invaluable companion in every School and at every Fireside. GET THE BEST. G. C. MERRIAM CO., Pub ' rs, Springfield, Mass. the fundamental prin- ciples of Writing Ma- chines, and the latest improvements. Send for illustrated pamphlet. Wyckoff, Seamans Benedict , 38 Madison St. Chicago. www vmv vm w mvmvmvmvmv wm SPECIALTIES Sold by the Trade Everywhere. VTAT FT TOILET Perfume from the f JLU.Li.Ci 1 SOAP Natural Odor of the Flower. Real Merit. JUVENILE t s °oap et iSSSSSr Lasting. Pronounced by THE Connoisseurs 7l?xrTrrxrT A FAVORITE to be the ArjJMJLUlA COLOGNE Perfection of Colognes. JAS. S. KIRK « COMFY, Soap Makers, Perfumers, Chemists, CHICAGO. sMm TBG STReHGGST AND- Most D« p cible WHting Machine - { Offered, as well as the fastest.} i It Stands at the Head. 1 These instruments are shipped subject to approval. FULLY WARRANTED- Caligraph and Type Writer Supplies of all kinds For Sale. Circulars and Specimens on Application to S. H. Vowell Co., 179 La Salle St., CHICAGO. ' mw w mw ww w mwmrw w _ m - _ , WfcAjfc A A 1 A Ai AVENUE H0I56E, EYANSTON, ILL. Rates $2.50 and $3.00 per day. C. H. QUINLAN, Proprietor. JOSEPH GILLOTTS GOLD MEDAL PARIS, 1878. His Celebrated Numbers, 303-404- 1 70-604-332, and his other styles may be had of all dealers throughout the xoorld. Joseph Gillott Sons. New York. FHE HAT PALACI HAS REMOVED TO THE N. W. GOE. MABISIH ANB Ik SAttE STS, CHICAGO. STTJDEUTS ' TIR-A-IDE - SPECIALTT. . w  «p  tw  w tw  ' |jte 3 5i£3 30122105755885 ■P ■fl BffTJM wESSKm KM ■H
”
1885
1889
1891
1892
1894
1895
Find and Search Yearbooks Online Today!
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES
GENEALOGY ARCHIVE
REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.