Northwestern University - Syllabus Yearbook (Evanston, IL)
- Class of 1906
Page 1 of 428
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
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Pages 12 - 13
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Text from Pages 1 - 428 of the 1906 volume:
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L4 - cv . 3:41 if V ' . - LL., -M., Sas- SYLLABUS W A I Class of 1906 in L' OF O 1-1 Northwestern I A 1 Gs-AJR, L if University A BY ALFRED ERLE SHIBLEY, '06 OF THE COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS EVANSTON, ILLINOIS Nineteen Hundred and Five VOLUME TWENTY-ONE PRESS OF THE EVANSTON INDEX COMPANY E Ill 'A llama SYLLABUS I NlIIIIIllIlIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIllIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIQ E 'ro T1-us E 2 Igrnfrmanr Ruben Zfiairh 2 E THIS Boon E E 15 E E ILESPECTFULLY DEDICATED E 7 2' WlllllllllllllIllIIllIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIllIIIIIllIllllIIIIIIIIlllllIIIIIIIIlIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHW THE Faculty of the College of Liberal Arts makes the following minute of the death of Robert Baird, LL. D., Professor of the Greek Language and Literature, who passed to his eternal rest February S, H9052 V Student in the Academy, lS6Q-65g gradu- ating from the College of Liberal Arts iS6Q, with the degree of A. E3.g taking the degree of A. M. in course, lS72g Instructor in the Acad- emy, 15569-Sig Professor, lSSl-lQO4ig and Professor Emeritus, September, IQOU., to the time of his death, honored by Syracuse Uniyer- sity xxfith the degree of LL. D.-for more than forty years he has been identified with the institution as student, instructor, and professor. A man of xxfide knowledge, xxfise counsel and deep religious lifeg a true educator, a friend of youth. and a brother beloyedg we as a faculty record our profound sense of the loss sustained by the institution and our appreciation of his service to the University, to the Church, and to Society at large, during his long educational career. 5 E? w ' l r lllll ll f l lll l ll xi ' M nllfxl l XX l lf X ' w w MH ldaw M1 Nfl -r M l l ll!! lllll. SHELBYlW HARREON Editor-in-Chief College of Liberal Arts KENT KERCH Dental School I-l. E. FRENCH Medical School R BOARD EDITORS lN.M.DAVE Law School 0. D. WIPPERMAN School of Pharmacy C. E. WlLCQX Schools of Theology ARTHUR l.,. GATES School of Oratory jOHN M.ROSBOROUGH School of Music J fl- 5m fha! QM, mv hauh gnu uniu thv Elumtg-tirzi hulume nf the Sglluhua. Uhv 511112 aim nf th? Ehitnra has hmm tu gihe at irue iu1I11IiI1?.IfPh rrflvriinn nf all pharma nf atnhwt Iifv huring unnihrr gran' at 1119 Hnihvraitg. V ' r x I fly!! ffmlwl 'Nl , X f I X WNV if '. I M me mag gun, take ihr l I!,iA'j -,, 4 5fiT fdfnrt kiuhlgg in nz, it IB murrvhly nur hvat. , 1 M f' 'Wg ' '2 :' 1 ,f ff ff .,f, , I fi ff fy! -- ' A. , ,, X ffb fffj K w I3 fy Hl'-- I fidxv ff! WW W 'KiKXux , WX? ,ff fy f ,ff lux gg Mg fm, N X K Q M mwm Q x AK X X b if' f WW N Y f 'Q Biff' f X N li X X 4 , - Af f f fqff f f f x X S gzf x X K 2 ,S X mm R R V Qx 'T.n.w..-- -y mam! Y- 'S I' ' Y ' 3' A Y A .A A W, M ff Q Y. rw... Jmnfff Eg.-,..:ff, :g11g1.g.'-'::Y'S '1:?.'I.'1f4' Fif--41'-.151 K 4 W S2 ff' . .J.,. . M, f, ., YU. .,,,,, .., .,Afff?.s. ,551 ,Q .-K. W R mf S ,M E w?Q,ff,I?f :I ,, ,Af +a..wif,,fYY,WAw,ff. ,, 1.51.-?.ko'717Y':5'9U:E Y . ,Aw DC :,31a.w42s.fJ Zim .gk 5 -44 :Y my Gigli A -' -1,53-sr, Augw., I --665'-5:2 4 '1 1 '- Wwe? . A. ff-swift A ,ff fm-9 If 7' 0:25:33-323 I-Q51 -hmm-,f fx gps:-4 ff,-F: jg-, -f Igvz-.Will ' .3-1'lK!iEIIx5,E r1r5 -,-A, II-I-Syd, Y ,W,vAQA,Y,,2 Esfgvaww IM, A: Ns: xkimxie-EAYYYA REST', THE HOUR WAS NOON, AND I, A WEARY LAD HAD LAIN ME DOWN TO REST IN GRASSES DEEP, BEANEATH A SFREADING OAK, AND THERE MY FEET LONG RESTLESS IN THE WORLDLY WAYS, WERE GLAD TO SINK INTO THEIR DOWNY BED. MY MAD TOSSED OURLS WERE KISSED AND FANNED BY BREEZES AND HONEY'D FLOWERS, THEIR PETALS OPYNING DEEP, STOOPED DOWN TO STILL AND OOOL THE PULSE WHICH HAD IN RUGGED PATHS GROWN FEV'RISH. IN MY EARS THERE SEEMED TO BE THE SOUND OF QUIET SEAS, AND SONGS THE MERMAIDS SING, AND ALL MY FEARS OF DAYS TO COME, WERE LULLED BY DRONING EEESQ AND FAIRIES OUT OF DREAMLAND GAME, AND CREPT TO KISS MY LIDS AND WHISFER 'KRESTHI I SLEFT. SWEET, -BESSE DOLAN. 8 4 'lf-I .W mfg 4,, I ff -...A v --, :LQ .1 Fl- lf 'if'-12. 2. ,I ' Poi :L , 3 'tc v 's .. whey, - r sf vT,s', f, - ' ' -. I .Nia Q Sz? K . grief:-n xii III '-'1 '7ijT-IGS.. Q U, if I 'S 2 ' Q QQ- .,j 'ixy i, , K Fa 'gtgf fLE ?5G LS31 -1 Hi-I RN- 4321 j!Qi 48Qgqg4s5:: ' ek f -.Wil F IPQCSSW ' ' - ' 9 I 45 5 1-PQYI 'I if-sg- Iv: 'Z 7 4 ,I J, ,Q M EIQNQH gg 555 9'-V: ' ' .'-. if I : .-bv' I I1 I -- T-17 i?x ' 23, ir X111 ' I .7LR?L5e1gtR .gin f' '12 If 2' 1-,q,,xg k.1.-e.ff H! f 1'!g. ww I IQII. .-f 5 .- - mv? AISH,,ff.f?fI?G'LI' lfiwiw , r f IJIIIIII IIIIW ' R fIIwzIIfIl+.IlI1ffffwfi'fIfI:4II ' I,f?LIIII3ti,:fg-152. V I 1Ef,f.'.yd I I. ,7 Im:,!lnI,l',IwI1rI'1qy-fyEllyWwflllhff will ' I, - uma. 'ZL I,m'I,',e:q',bJ'.1.'.'f1,',g.'s.w',,' 1 I I -X ORTHWESTEHN UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY YELL Ir ,I it RAH! RAH! RAH! RAH! IN I I U. NORTHWESTERNI I I RAHI RAH1 RAI-I! RAI-x! RAI-1! I I J p UNIVERSITY COLOR ROYAL PURPLE RN I 6 UE 4? pl! 'Y H+ 41 vb ' o L I + s g-I f g HJ MFQVISIIUI' ' I 4 I , 4 Im g apm m rf: 90 -'f' ' Y fb W T X 'X A r 185k HN' L - ..- I I I-I -ggi.. ii- if BOARD TRUSTEES CR-PCR. Gfficers WILLIAM DEERING, - - - - President OLIVER HARVEY HORTON, LL. D., - First Vice-President HUMPHREYS HENRY CLAY MILLER, A. M., - Second Vice-President FRANK PHILIP CRANDON, A. M., - ' T Secretary JOHN RICHARD LINDGREN, - Tre-QSUYST WILLIAM ANDREW DYCHE, A. M., - - Business Manager Trustees Tcrm e.1j1fI r's in 1905 NORMA WAITE HARRIS NATHAN SMITH DAVIS, JR., A. M., M. D. HARVEY BOSTWICI4 HURD, LL, D. JOHN RICHARD LINDGREN HIIMPHREYS HENRY CLAY MILLER, A. M. ELBERT HENRY GARY MILTON HOLLYDAY WILSON ALEXANDER HAMILTON REVELL HENRY SHERMAN BOUTELL, A. M. Term C.'ljJl l'f?S in 1906 HENRY SARGENT TOWLE, LL. B. HARLOW NILES HIGINBOTHAM CHARLES BOWEN CONGDON JAMES A. PATTEN CHARLES T, BOYNTON WILLIAM HENRY HENKLE GEORGE PECK MERRICK, LL. B. Tcfrm 6,'lYll'I'C'S 'fu 1907 OLIVER HARVEY HORTON, LL. D. WILLIAM DEERING MERRI1-I' CALDWELL BRAGDON, A. M., M. D. JAMES BARTLETI' HOBBS FRANK PHILIP CRANDON, A. M. LORIN CONE COLLINS, A. M. WILLIAM ANDREW DYCHE, A. M. PERLEY LOWE LUCY DAVIS ROWE Term c4qn'rcs fn 1908 ROBERT DICKINSON SHEPPARD, A. M., D. D. JOSIAH J. PARKHURST DAVID MCWILLIAMS CHARLES4 PINCKNEY WHEELER, A. M. CORNELIA GREY LUNT HENRY HOWARD GAGE WILLIAM FRASER MCDOWELL, D. D. EDWARD FOSTER SWIFT Elected by Conferences Huck River Dwimit JOHN PATRICK BRUSHINGHAM, A. M., D. D. JOSEPH FLINTOFT BERRY, D. D. JOSEPPLTHING LADD, A, M., D. D. C7'Hf7'1Il IUIIIHHYS j,1Il'l'7LigCL?'l GEORGE RUTLEDGE PALMER, A. M., D. D. EDWARD GEORGE LEWIS, S, T. B., D. D. JACOB WELLINGTON FRIZZELLE. A. M., B. D. WILBUR ISRAEL COGSHALL, D. D. 0 IO S FAC L TIES WW wg- , Wu S- .1159 l ! 1 ' -3, Ut A I IW. J 1 I fl H 1. SX THOMAS FRANKLIN HOLGATE, Ph. D., 411 B K. Acting President of the University. Dean of the College of Liberal Arts, and Professor of Applied Mathematics. B. A.,Victoria College, Toronto, 18843 M. A., 18893 Ph.D., Clark University, 18933 Mathematical Master, Albert College, Belleville, Ont., 1884-903 Fellow in Mathemat- ics, Clark University, 1890-933 Instructor in Mathematics, Northwestern University, 1893-94: Professor of Applied Mathematics, 1894- 3 Acting Dean of the Faculty, 1902-031 Dean, 1903-3 Acting President of the University, 1904-. O College of Liberal Arts. DANIEL BONBRIGHT, LL. D., 'IJ B K, Dean Emeritus, and John Evans Professor of the Latin Lan- guage and Literature. A. B., Yale, 18503 A. M., Yale 18533 LL. D., Lawrence University, 18783 Tutor, Yale University, 1854-563 Student, Berlin and Goettingen, 1856-583 Professor of Latin Language and Literature, Northwestern University, 1858- 3 Dean of the Faculty, 1898- 19003 Acting President of the University, 1900-O23 Dean Emeritus, 1903-. REV. HERBERT FRANKLIN Fisk, D. D., LL. D.,fIf N 9,113 B K, Professor of Pedagogics. A. B., Wesleyan University, Middletown, Conn., 18601 A. M., Wesleyan University, 18633 D. D., Wesleyan University, 18883 LL. D., Allegheny College, 18993 Teacher of Mathematics and Latin, Delaware Literary Institute, 1860-613 Principal of Shelburne Academy, 1861-633 Teacher of Latin and Greek, Cazenovia Seminary, 1863-673 Teacher of Latin and Greek, Wesleyan Academy, Wilbraham, Mass., 1867-683 Principal of Genesee Wesleyan Seminary, Lima, N. Y., 1868-733 Principal of the Academy of Northwestern University, 1873-19043 Professor of Peda- gogics, Northwestern University, 1888- . ROBERT MCLEAN CUMNOCK, L. H. D., XII T, fb B K, Professor of Rhetoric and Elocution. A. B.. Wesleyan University, 18683 A. M., 18712 L. H. D., Dickinson University, 19033 Professor of Elocution in Garrett Biblical Institute, 18683 Director of Cumnock School of Oratory, 1878- 3 Instructor in Elocution and Rhetoric, Northwestern University, 1868-73: Professor of Rhetoric and Elocution, 1873- . ROBERT DICKINSON S1-IEPPARD, A. M,, D. D,, XII T, CP B K, Professor of English and American His- tory. A. B., University of Chicago, 18693 B. D., Garrett Biblical Institute, 18703 A. M., Uni- versity of Chicago, 18723 and cad etmdum Northwestern University, 18753 D. D., Garrett Biblic- al Institute, 18853 Student German Universities, 1885-863 Professor of History and Political Economy, Northwestern University, 1886-993 Business Manager, 1892-19033 Professor of Eng- lish and American History, 1892- . ABRAM VAN EPs YOUNG, Ph. B., A K E, fb B K, Professor of Chemistry. Ph. B., University of Mich- igan, 18753 Assistant in Chemistry and Physics, University of Michigan, 1875-773 Graduate Stu- dent and then Fellow in Chemistry, johns Hopkins University, 1877-793 Graduate Student, then Assistant in Chemistry, Harvard College, 1883-853 Professor of Chemistry, Northwestern Uni- versity, 1885- . GEORGE WASHINGTON Houci-1, LL. D., A T, CID B K, Professor of Astronomy. A, B., Union Col- lege, 18563 A. M., 18613 LL. D., 18913 Assistant Astronomer, Cincinnati Observatory, 1859: As- tronomer, Dudley Obseravatory, Albany, N. Y., 1860-633 Lecturer on Astronomy in the Albany Female Academy, 1862-66: Director, Dudley Observatory, 1863-743 Professor of Astronomy, Uni- versity of Chicago, and Director, Dearborn Observatory, 1879-873 Professor of Astronomy, North- western University, and Director, Dearborn Observatory, 1887- 3 Associate Member of the Royal Astronomical Society, London, 1903- . 11 FACULTIES-Continued JAMES TAFT HATFIELD, Ph. D., B 9 II, fb B K, Professor of the German Language and Literature. A. B., Northwestern University, 18833 A. M., 18863 Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 18903 Student of'Sanskrit, Canning College, Lucknow, 18843 Professor in Rust University, 1884-853 Principal McCormick School, De Funiak, Fla., 1886i Graduate Student and Fellow, Johns Hopkins University, 1887-903 Professor of German Language and Literature, Nothwestern Uni- versity, 1890- . CHARLES BEACH ATWELL, Ph. M., A K E, if B K, Professor of Botany. Ph. B., Syracuse University, 18793 Ph. M., 18823 Assistant Principal, Lowville fN.Y.l Academy, 1879-803 Instructor in Mathematics and Physics, Academy of Northwestern University. 1880-823 Principal of Schools, South Evanston, Ill., 1882-843 Instructor in Biology and Physics, Academy of North- western University, 1884-88, Instructor in Biology, Northwestern University, 1888-913 Freiberg University summer, 913 Professor of Biology, Northwestern University, 1891-943 Professor of Botany, 1894- 3 Registrar, 1890-1902. HENRY CREW, Ph. D., CID B K, Professor of Physics. A. B., Princeton College, 18822 Ph. D., johns Hopkins University, 18873 Fellow, Princeton College, 1882-843 Fellow, johns Hopkins Univer- sity, 1884-873 Assistant in Physics, Johns Hopkins University, 1887-883 Instructor in Physics, Haverford College, 1888-913 Astronomer at Lick Observatory, 1891-921 Professor of Physics, Northwestern University, 1892- . J. Scorr CLARK, A. M., Litt. D., A K E, dv B K, Professor of the English Language. A. B., Syra- cuse University, 18773 A. M., 18803 Litt. D., 18981 Principal Evanston High School, 1879-823 Instructor in Rhetoric, English Criticism and Elocution, Syracuse University, 1882-865 Professor of the same Department, 1886-923 Professor of the English Language, Northwestern Univer- sity, 1892- . jo!-iN HENRY GRAY, Ph. D., A T, LP B K, Professor of Political and Social Science. A. B., Har- vard University, 18873 Ph. D., University of Halle, 1892: Principal Centralia fIll.1 High School, 1881-82Q Graduate Student, Harvard University, 1887-883 Instructor, Harvard University, 1888- 892 Student in Halle, a. s., 1888-903 Student in Paris, 1890-913 Student in Vienna, 18913 Student in Berlin, 1891-923 Professor of Political and Social Science, Northwestern University, 1892- . GEORGE ALBERT COE, Ph. D., XI' T, fb B K, john Evans Professor of Moral and Intellectual Philos- ophy. A. B., University of Rochester, 18843 A. M., 18881 S. T. B., Boston University, 18873 Graduate Student, Boston University, 1887-883 Jacob Sleeper Fellow of Boston University at Berlin, 1890-913 Ph. D., Boston University, 18913 Professor of Philosophy, University of South- ern California, 1888-903 Acting Professor of Philosophy, Northwestern University, 1891-933 john Evans Professor of Moral and Intellectual Philosophy, 1898- . ALJA ROBINSON CROOK, Ph, D., fb I' A, Professor of Mineralogy and Economic Geology. A. B., Ohio Wesleyan University, 1887i Superintendent Mt. Carmel, O., Public Schools, 1887-893 Studied in British Museum, London3 Jardin des Plantes, Paris3 Musee Naturel, Brussels3 Uni- versity of Berlin3 University of Zurich3 Ph. D., University of Munich, 18921 Professor of Natural History, Wheaton College, 1892-933 Professor of Mineralogy and Petrology, Northwestern Uni- versity, 1893-993 Fellow Geological Society of America, Mitglied den deutschen Geologischen Gesellschaft3 Honorary Curator of Mineralogy of Chicago Academy of Sciences3 Professor of Mineralogy and Economic Geology, 1900- . HENRY SEELY WHITE, Ph. D., XII T, fb B K, Henry S. Noyes Professor of Pure Mathematics. A. B., Wesleyan University, 18823 Ph. D., University of Guettingen, 18903 AssistantinAstronomy, Wes- leyan University, 1882-833 Instructor in Mathematics and Chemistry, Hackettstown, N. -I., 1883- 843 Tutor in Mathematics, Wesleyan University, 1884-872 Student, University of Gcettingen, 1887-903 Instructor in Academy, Northwestern University, 18903 Assistant in Pure Mathematics, Clark University, 1890-923 Associate Professor of Mathematics, Northwestern University, 1892- 94: Henry S. Noyes Professor of Pure Mathematics, 1894- . WILLIAM ALBERT Locr, Ph. D., A T, YP B K, Professor of Zoology and Director of the Zoological Laboratory. B. S., University of Michigan, I88IQ Graduate Student in Biology, ibicl., 1881-823 M S., 18843 Ph. D., University of Chicago, 1895i Fellow in Zoology, Harvard University, 1884-853 University of Berlin, 18913 Investigator Marine Biological Station, Wood's Holl, Mass., Seasons of 1892-93-943 Honorary Fellow, University of Chicago, 1894-953 Biological Station, Naples, Italy, 1902-033 Professor of Natural Science, State Normal School, St. Cloud, Minn., 1885-863 Director of Biological Instruction, High Schools, Minneapolis, Minn., 1886-873 Pro- fessor of Biology, Lake Forest University, 1887-893 Professor of Animal Morphology, fhizl., 1889-963 Professor of Physiology, Rush Medical College, 18913 Member Faculty, Marine Bio- logical Station, Wood's Holl, Mass., 18963 Professor of Zoology, Northwestern University, 1896- . 12 FACULTIES-Continued GEORGE OLIVER CURME, A. M., CID I' A, Professor of Germanic Philology. A. B., University of Michigan, 1882: A. M., De Pauw University, 18851 Student, University of Berlin, 18903 Pro- fessor. of German, Cornell College, lowa, 1885-973 Professor of Germanic Philology, North- western University, 1897- . ,JAMES ALTON JAMES, Ph, D,, Lb B K, Professor of European History. B. L., University of Wiscon- sin, 18883 Ph. D., johns Hopkins University, 18933 Principal of High School, Darlington, Wis., 1888-903 Scholarship in History, Johns Hopkins University, 1891-923 Fellowship in History, johns Hopkins University, 1892-933 Professor of History, Cornell College, Iowa, 1893-973 Pro- fessor of European History, Northwestern University, 1897- 3 Studied in Paris, France, 1901. EDOUARD BAILLOT, L. H, D., Professor of Romance Languages. B. Sc., Paris, 1879: L, H. D., Illinois College, 19033 Graduate Student, Sorbonne, Paris, and Carlsruhe, Germany, 1881-823 ln- structor in French, Solent College, England, 1882-843 Instructor in Romance Languages, Buf- falo, N. Y., Seminary, 1885-90: Instructor in French, Cornell University, 1890-923 Professor of Romance Languages, Indiana University, 1892-973 Professor of Romance Languages, North- western University, 1897- . REV. Amos WILLIAM PATTEN, A. M., D. D., LP B K, Professor of Biblical Instruction. A. B., North- western University, 18701 A. M., Northwestern University, 18743 B. D., Garrett Biblical Insti- tute, 18713 D. D., Garrett Biblical Institute, 18883 Student, University of Leipsic, University of Berlin3 Professor of Biblical Instruction, Northwestern University, 1899- . ULYSSES SHERMAN GRANT, Ph. D., APY, 'lv B K, E E, William Deering Professor of Geology and Curator of the Museum. B. S., University of Minnesota, 18883 Ph. D., johns Hopkins Uni- versity, 18933 Fellow, University of Minnesota, 1888-893 Fellow, Johns Hopkins University, 1891-923 Fellow by Courtesy, 1892-933 Instructor in Geology, University of Minnesota, 1897-983 Assistant Geologist, Minnesota Geological and Natural History Survey, 1893-993 Acting State Geologist, 1895-973 Geologist on Wisconsin Geological and Natural History Survey, since 18993 Assistant Geologist on United States Geological Survey, 1901-03: Geologist on United States Geological Survey, 1904- 3 Professor of Geology, Northwestern University, 1899- . JOHN ADAMS Scoi-T, Ph. D., 111 B K, Professor of Greek Language and Literature. A. B., North- western University, 1891: Ph. D., johns Hopkins University, 18973 Student, University of Goettingen, 18963 Assistant Professor of Greek, Northwestern University, 1898-99: Associate Professor of Greek, 1899-19013 Professor of Greek Language and Literature, 1901- . ASHLEY HORACE T1-IORNDIKE, Ph. D., fb N O, 111 I5 K, Professor of English Literature. A. B.. Wesleyan University, Middletown, Conn., 18933 A. M., Harvard University, 18963 Ph. D., 18983 Instructor, Boston University, 1895-983 Instructor in English, Western Reserve University, 1898-IQOOQ Associate Professor of English,Western Reserve University, 1900-02: Professor of English Literature, Northwestern University, 1902- . OLIN HANSON BASQUIN, Ph. D., A T A, Associate Professor of Physics. A. B., Ohio Wesleyan University, 18923 A. B., Howard College, 18943 M. A., Northwestern University, 18953 Ph. D., 19013 Fellow in Physics, Northwestern University, 1900-013 Associate Professor of Physics, Northwestern University, 1901- . MARTHA FOOTE CRow, Ph. D., A f-ID, Q XP, LI, B K, Assistant Professor of English Literature and Dean of Women. Ph. B., Syracuse University, 18763 Ph. M., 18793 Ph. D., 18853 Preceptress, Ives Seminary, Antwerp, N. Y., 1876-773 Lady Principal, Waynesburg College, Pa., 1877-783 Teach- er of English Literature and German, Newton tMass.l High School3 Lecturer on History, Wel- lesley College, 1882-843 Lady Principal Iowa College, 1884-913 in Europe for National Bureau of Education, 1891-923 Student, Oxford, 1892: Assistant Professor of English Literature, Uni- versity of Chicago, 1892-19003 Dean of Women and Assistant Professor of English Literature, Northwestern University, 1900- . OMERA FLOYD LONG, Ph. D., fb B K, Assistant Professor of Latin. A. B., Kentucky Wesleyan College, 18903 A. M., 18933 Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 18973 University Scholar, johns Hopkins University, 18953 Fellow in Latin, Johns Hopkins University, 1896-973 Instructor in Latin, Northwestern University, 1898-19013 Assistant Professor of Latin, 1901- . WALTER DILL SCOTT, Ph. D., fb B K, Assistant Professor of Psychology and Pedagogy and Director of the Psychological Laboratory, A. B., Northwestern University, 1895: Diploma of Graduation, McCormick Theological Seminary, 1898: Ph. D., University of Leipsic, 1900: Student, University cf Halle, 1898-99: Student University of Leipsic, 1899-1900: Instructor in Psychology and Peda- gogy, Northwestern University, 1900-013 Assistant Professor of Psychology and Pedagogy, 1901- . 13 FACULTIES - Continued HERBERT GOVERT KEPPEL, Ph. D., Instructor in Mathematics. A. B., Hope College, Michigan, 1889' Ph. D., Clark University, 1901: Instructor in Mathematics, Northwestern Classical Academy, Orange City, Iowa, 1891-92: Student and Fellow in Mathematics, Clark University, 1892-95: Fel- low at Clark University, 1900-01: Instructor in Mathematics, Northwestern University, 1896- OLIN CLAY KELLOGG, Ph. D., CII' B K, Instructor in the English Language. A. B., Syracuse Univer- sity, 1892: A. M., 1893: Ph. D., 1894: Instructor of Elocution and Rhetoric, Cazenovia Seminary, 1892-94: Instructor of English Criticism, Rhetoric, and Elocution, 1894-96: Instructor in the En- glish Language, Northwestern University, 1899- . GEORG EDWARD, Instructor in German. Realschule, Giessen, 1877-80: Gymnasia, Mainz and Giessen 1880-88: Instructor in German, Northwestern University, 1900- . I .IOHN PRIOE ODELL, A. B., Instructor in the English Language. A. B., Northwestern University, 1894: Principal of Wilmar tMinn.l High School, 1894-97: Instructor in English, Moline QIll.j High School, 1897-1901: Instructor in the English Language, Northwestern University, 1901- . ROBERT RICHARDSON TATNALL, Ph. D., CID B K, Instructor in Physics. S. B., Haverford fPa.l Col- lege, 1890: A. M., 1891: Ph. D., johns Hopkins University, 1895: Student and Assistant in Physics, Haverford College, 1889-91: Graduate Student in Physics, johns Hopkins University 1891-93: Fellow and Assistant in Physics, Northwestern University, 1893-94: Instructorin Physics, University of Pennsylvania, 1895-97: Honorary Fellow in Physics, Clark University, 1897-98 Instructor In Physics, Academy of Northwestern University, 1899-1901: Instructor in Physicsi Northwestern University,1901- . JAMES NEWTON PEARCE, Ph. M., Instructor in Chemistry. Ph. B., Northwestern University, 1896: Ph. M., 1897: Assistant in Chemical Laboratory, 1896-97: Two years' graduate work University of Chicago, Instructor in Chemistry and Physics, La Salle 1111.1 High School, 1900-03: Instructor in Chemistry, Northwestern University, 1903- . JOHN WESLEY YOUNG, Ph. D., E El, Instructor in Mathematics. Ph. B., Ohio State University, 1899: A. M., Cornell University, 1901: Ph. D., 1903: Fellow and Assistant, Ohio State University, 1899-1900: Oliver Graduate Scholar, Cornell University, 1900-1901: Erastus Brooks Fellow 1901-02: Assistant in -Mathematics, 1902-03: Instructor in Mathematics, Northwestern Universityi 1903- . WILLIAM ABBOTT OLDFATI-IER, A. M., CII A 0, Instructor in Latin and Greek. A. B., Hanover College, 1899: A. B., Harvard, 1901: A. M., 1902: Principal of the High School Charleston Ind 1899-1900: Shattuck Scholar, Harvard, 1902-03: Instructor in Latin and Greek, Northwestern University, 1903: Registrar, 1904- . HERMAN GI-IUROI-IILL, A. M., B 9 H, 112 B K, Instructor in the English Language. A. B., Syracuse University, 1894: A. M., University of Wisconsin, 1902: Instructor in English, Canandaigna Academy, New York, 1894-95: High School, Menomonie, Wis., 1895-1900: Graduate Student, University of Chicago, 1899: Instructor, Madison, Wis., High School, 1900-01: High School, Rock Island, Ill., 1902-03: Graduate Student, University of Wisconsin, 1901-02: Instructor in the English Language, Northwestern University, 1903- . JAMES WALTER GOLDTHWAIT, A. M., 411 B K: Instructor in Geology. A. B., Harvard University, 1902: A. M., Harvard University, 1903: Assistant in Geology, and Austin Teaching Fellow in Geology at Harvard University, 1902-04: and Assistant at Radcliffe College, 190294: Instructor in Geology, Northwestern University, 1904- . A. BUssE, A. M., Instructor in German. A. B., Northwestern University: A. M., Northwestern University, 1900: Theological student at German Theological Seminary, St. Louis, Mo., 1892- 95: Student at McCormick Theological Seminary, Chicago: Fellow and Assistant in German, Northwestern University, 1899-1900: Student at Berlin University, 1900-02: Student, Shattuck Scholar, and Assistant in German, Harvard University, 1902-03: Instructor in German at University of Wisconsin, 1903-04: Instructor in German, Northwestern University, 1904- . HAROLD CLARKE GODDARD, A. M., fb B K, A A flf, Instructor in English Literature' A B Amherst College, 1900: A. M., Columbia University, 1903: Walker Instructor in Matheinatics: Amherst College, 1900-1902: University Fellow in English, Columbia University, 1903-1904: Instructor in English Literature, Northwestern University, 1904- . ROYAL BRUNSON WAY. Instructor in History. Ph. B., Albion College, 1894: Ph. M., University of Michigan, 1896: Graduate Student University of Wisconsin, 1902-1904: Principal High School, E t R 'd ' - ' ' ' a on api s, Mich., 1896 98: Principal High School, Saginaw, Mich., 1898-1902: Instructor in History, Northwestern University, 1904- . 14 FACULTIES-Continued FREDREICK SHIP? DEIELER, A. M., fb A 0, A. B., Hanover College, 1900: A. B., Harvard, 1903: A. M., lbid., 1904: Principal High School, Paw Paw, Ill., 1900-02: Instructor in History and Economics, Northwestern University, 1904-. WALTER WILEY DAVIS, A. B., Tutor of Mathematics. A. B., Ohio Wesleyan University, 1903: Profes- sor of Mathematics, Greenville College, 1903-04: Tutor of Mathematics, Northwestern University 1904- . JAMES WILLIAM PUTNAM, A. M., Instructor in Economics. Ph. B., illinois College, 1894: A. M., 1898: A. M., Cornell University, 1903: Graduate Student, University of Chicago, 1895, and Summer Quarters, 1900, 1901 and 1903: Instructor in History and Political Science, Illinois College, 1895-1898: in Charge of Department of History and Economics, 1898-1902: Graduate Student and Fellow, Cornell University, 1902-1903: Assistant and Graduate Student, University of Wisconsin, 1903-1904: Instructor in Economics, Northwestern University, 1904- . I ALPHONSE DE SALvIo, A. B., A. M., Ph. D., Instructor in French. A. B., Trinity College, 1899: A. B., 1902: A. M., 1903: Ph. D., in Romance Philology, 1904, Harvard University: Instructor in French, Northwestern University, 1904- . EUGENE H. HARPER, A. B., A. M., Ph. D., instructor in Zoology. A. B., Oberlin College, 1890: A. M., Harvard University, 1895: Natural Science, Fargo College, N. D., 1896-99: Graduate work, University of Chicago, 1899-1902: Ph. D.. 1902: Biology, Alma College, 1902-04: Instructor in Zoology, Northwestern University, 1904- . G. F. STARKWEATI-IER, Superintendent of the new Department of Buildings and Grounds: Graduated at Kenosha, Wis., High School, 1861: two years P. O., Columbus, Wis eighteen yearslll. Cent. R. R. as Machinist, Foreman and Draughtsman: six years Union Foundry, Pullman, as Mech- anical Engineer and Asst. Superintendent: eight years Paige Iron Works, Chicago, as Man- ager: University Engineer, jan., 1901: Appointed Asst. in Shop Work in the Fall: Master Mechanic, 1902: Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds, 1904- . Medical School NATHAN SMITH DAVIS, IR., A. M., M. D., E X, fb B K, N E N, Dean of the Faculty and Professor of Principles and Practice of Medicine and of Clinical Medicine. A. M., Northwestern University, 1883: M. D. tChicago Medical Collegel, 1883: Professor of Principles and Practice of Medicine and of Clinical Medicine and Dean of the Faculty, Northwestern University. EDWARD O. F. ROLER, A. M., M. D., fb P 2, Professor Emeritus of Obstetrics. M. D., Rush Medical College, 1859. Joi-IN HAMILCAR HOLLISTEE, A. M., M. D., Professor Emeritus of Clinical Medicine. M. D., Rush Medical College, 1847. FRANK SEWARD JOHNSON, M. D., LDP E, Emeritus Dean and Professor of Medicine and Clinical Medicine. M. D., Chicago Medical College, 1881. JOHN HARPER LONG, M. S., Sc. D., B 9 II, Professor of Chemistry and Director of the Chemical Laboratories. , EMILIUS CLARK DUDLEY, A. M., M. D., A K E, fb B K, N Z N, Professor of Gynecology. A. B., Dartmouth: A. M., Iowa College: M. D., Long Island College Hospital: Interne of Charity Hospital, New York City: Womans State Hospital, New York City: Gynecologist to St. 1.uke's and other Hospitals: Professor of Gynecology, Northwestern University. JOHN EDWIN OWENS, M. D., ll' P E, Professor of Surgery and Clinical Surgery. M. D., Jefferson, 1862: Surgeon-in-Chief of Northwestern Railway. Professor of Surgery and Clinical Surgery. Northwestern University. WILLIAM EVANS CASSELBERRY, M. D., A K K, Professor of Laryngology and Rhinology: M. D.. Uni- versity of Pennsylvania, 1879: Professor of Materia Medica and Therapeutics.Northwestern University, 1884-1892: Laryngologist to Wesley Hospital, 1894-1904: Laryngologist to St. Luke's Hospital. 1896-1904: Chairman, Section of Laryngology and Otology, American Medical Asso ciation, 1897: President of American Laryngological Association, 1899- 1 President of Chicago Laryngological and Climatological Association, 1901: Professor of Laryngology and Rhinology. Northwestern University, 1894. 15 FACULTIES-Continued EDWARD WYLLYS ANDREWS, A. M., M. D., 2 X, 112 B K, fi, P Z, A fl A, Professor of Surgery and Clinical Surgery. A. B., Northwestern University, 1878: A. M., 1881: M. D., 1881: Surgeon of Second Regiment, Illinois National Guards, 1884: Surgeon of Wabash Railway: Surgeon of Mercy Hospital: Surgeon of Michael Reese Hospital: United States Pension Examining Surgeon: Professor of Surgery and Clinical Surgery, Northwestern University. FRANK TAYLOR ANDREWS, A. M., M. D., Z X, fb P E, Professor of Clinical Gynecology. A. M., Northwestern University, 1885: M. D.: Professor of Clinical Gynecology, Northwestern Univer- sity, 1895- . GEORGE WASHINGTON WEBSTER, M. D., N E N, Professor of Clinical Medicine. M. D., Northwestern University, 1882: Professor of Physiology, Northwestern University, 1885-1895: Professor of Physical Diagnosis, Northwestern University, 1895-1903: President of Illinois State Board of Health, 1901- 3 Attending Physician, Mercy and Wesley Hospitals: Professor of Clinical Med- icine, Northwestern University, 1902- . JOSEPH ZEISLER, M. D., N Z N, Professor of Skin and Venereal Diseases. M. D., University of Vienna, 1882: Post Graduate lnterne of Vienna General Hospital: Assistant Dermatologist, Michael Reese Hospital: Professor of Skin and Venereal Diseases, Northwestern University, 1889- . WILLIAM EDWARD MORGAN, M. D., N 2 N, Professor of Clinical Surgery. M. D., Northwestern Uni- versity, 1882: Attending Surgeon, Mercy Hospital, Provident Hospital, Baptist Hospital: Pro- fessor of Clinical Surgery, Northwestern University. HORACE MANN STARKEY, M. D., Professor of Clinical Ophthalmology and Otology. M. D., Chicago Medical College, 1876: Professor of Ophthalmology, Chicago Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Col- lege: Professor of Clinical Ophthalmology and Otology, Northwestern University. HENRY CRADLE, M. D., CP P E, Professor of Ophthalmology and Otology. Professor of Physiology, 1879-83: Professor of Hygiene and Clinical Ophthalmology, 1895-97: Eye and Ear Surgeon, Michael Reese Hospital, Wesley Hospital: Professor of Ophthalmology and Otology, North- western University, 1897- . ARCHIBALD CHURCH, M. D., 111K if, A K K, Professor of Nervous and Mental Diseases and Medical Jurisprudence. M. D., College of Physicians and Surgeons, Chicago, 1884: Neurologist to St. Luke's, Wesley, Mercy, Chicago, and Lakeside Hospitals: Professor of Nervous and Mental Diseases and Medical Jurisprudence, Northwestern University. -IOHN RIDLON, A. M., M. D., A K K, Professor of Orthopedic Surgery. M. D., College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, 1878: Surgeon, St. Luke's and Michael Reese Hospitals: Surgeon, Home for Crippled Children: Professor of Orthopedic Surgery, Northwestern University. WINFIELD ScoT'r HALL, A. M., M, D., Ph. D., 111K XII, N E N, A S2 A, KID B K, Professor of Physiolo- gy and junior Dean of Faculty. B. S., Northwestern University,1887: M. D., 1888: M. S., Northwestern University, 18891 M. D., Leipsic, Germany, 1894: A. M., and Ph. D., Leipsic, 1895: Professor of Biology, Haverford College. Pennsylvania, 1889-93: Professor of Physiolo- gy, Northwestern University, 1895- : Junior Dean of Faculty. ARTHUR ROBIN EDWARDS, A. M., M. D., B 9 II, 42 B K, N Z N, Professor of Principles and Practice of Medicine and of Clinical Medicine and Secretary of the Faculty. A. B., Northwestern Uni- versity, 1888: A. M., 1891: M. D., Chicago Medical College, 1891: lnterne, Cook County Hospital, 1891-92: Professor of Therapeutics, Northwestern University, 1896-98: Attending Physician Cook County Hospital, 1893- : Attending Physician, St. Luke's Hospital, 1895- 1903: Attending Physician, Wesley Hospital, 1897- 3 Attending Physician, Mercy Hospital, 1901- : Professor Of Principles and Practice of Medicine and of Clinical Medicine, North- western University, 1898- : Secretary ofthe Faculty, 1901- . WEL!-ER VAN HOOK, A- B-, M. D., N E N, Professor of Surgery and Clinical Surgery, A. B., Uni- versity of Michigan, 1884: M. D., College of Physicians and Surgeons, Chicago, 1885: Prof- essor of Surgery and Clinical Surgery, Chicago Polyclinic: Surgeon, Cook County Hospital: Wesley Hospital: Woman's Hospital: Professor of Surgery and Clinical Surgery, Northwestern University. JOSEPH BOLXVAR DE LEE, M. D., N Z N, Professor of Obstetrics. M. D., Chicago Medical College, 1891: Demonstrator of Anatomy, Chicago Medical College, 1892-93: Demonstrator, Obstetrics, Northwestern University Medical School, 1894-95: Lecturer on Obstetrics, 1896-97: Attending Obstetrician, Mercy, Wesley, Provident, and Cook County Hospitals: Professor of Obstetrics, Northwestern University, 1897- . 16 FACULTIES - Continued ROBERT BRUCE PREBLE, A. B., M. D., QD K XII, CIP P Z, Professor of Medicine. A. B., University of Michigan, 18893 M. D., Northwestern University, 18913 Instructor in Medicine and Pathology, 1894- Q Professor of Medicine, Northwestern University, 1899- . FRANK XAVIER WALLS, M. D., ID P E, Professor of Clinical Pediatrics. M. D., Northwestern Univer- sity, 1891g Professor of Clinical Pediatrics. Northwestern University. JOHN B. MURPHY, A. M., M. D., LL. D., N 2 N, Professor of Surgery and of Clinical Surgery. M. D., Rush Medical College: A. M., St. Ignatius Collegeg LL. D., St. Ignatius College: Profes- sor of Surgery, Chicago Post-graduate School and Hospitalg Professor of Surgery, West Side Clinical School: Attending Surgeon, Cook County, Wesley and Mercy Hospitals: Consulting Surgeon, Alexian Brothers' Hospital, St. joseph's Hospital, and Hospital for Crippled Childreng Professor of Surgery and Clinical Surgery, Northwestern University. FREDERIC ROBERT ZEIT, M. D., A K K, Professor of Pathology and Bacteriology. M. D., Western Reserve University, Cleveland, 1887: Professor of Pathology and Bacteriology, Post-graduate Medical Schoolg Profesor of Pathology and Bacteriology, Northwestern University. SAMUEL CRAIG PLUMMER, IR., A. M., M. D., fit P E, Professor of Surgical Anatomy and Operative Surgery. A. M., Northwestern Universityg M. D., 18863 Surgeon in Chief for Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railwayg Professor of Surgical Anatomy and Operative Surgery, North- western University. WILLIAM EDWARD SCHROEDER, M. D., fb P E, Professor of Surgery and Clinical Surgery. M. D., Northwestern University, 18913 Professor of Surgery and Clinical Surgery, Northwestern University. THOMAS JAMES WATKINS, M. D., N E N, Professor of Clinical Gynecology. M. D., Bellevue Hos- pital Medical School, 1886g Interne, St. Peter's Hospital, Brooklyn, 1886-883 Interne, New York State Woman's Hospital, 1888-90: Gynecologist, Wesley, St. Luke's and Mercy Hospitals3 Pro- fessor of Clinical Gynecology, Northwestern University. LESTER E. FRANKENTHAL, M. D., Professor of Clinical Gynecology. M. D., Northwestern University, 1885: Professor of Clinical Gynecology, Northwestern University. HUGH TALBOT PATRICK, M. D., 112 A 9, N E N, Clinical Professor of Nervous Diseases. M. D., Belle- vue Hospital, New York, 18843 Professor of Nervous and Mental Diseases, St. Peter's Hospital, Brooklyn3 Utica City Hospital: Interne, Randall's Island Hospital, New York: Neurologist, Chi- cago German Hospital, Passavant Hospital, Maurice Porter Hospital3 Consulting Neurologist, Eastern Hospital of the Insaneg Illinois Charity Eye and Ear Infirmary: Professor of Neurology, Chicago Polyclinicg Clinical Professor of Nervous Diseases, Northwestern University. CHARLES I.oUIs MIX, A. M., M. D., Xlf Q, A K K, fb B K, Professor of Physical Diagnosis and Assist- ant Professor of Anatomy. A. B. fsumma cum laudel, Harvard University, 18903 A. M., 1891, M. D., 18943 Professor of Medicine, Post-Graduate Medical School, 1899: Professor ofAnatomy, Northwestern University Woman's Medical School, 1899-19013 Professor of Anatomy, North- western University Dental School, 1900- 3 Assistant Professor of Anatomy, Northwestern Medi- cal School, 1901-043 Professor of Physical Diagnosis and Assistant Professor of Anatomy, Northwestern University, 1903- . FRANK ALLPORT, M. D., Professor of Clinical Ophthalmology and Otology. M. D., Chicago Medical College, 18763 Professor of Ophthalmology, Chicago Polyclinicg Oculist and Aurist, St. Luke's Hospital, Wesley Hospital, Chicago and Northwestern Railway: Professor of Clinical Ophthal- mology and Otology. Northwestern University. E. H. GREGORY, Jr., The Robert Laughlin Rea Professorship of Anatomy. CHARLES BERT REED, M. D., XII Q, KID P E, Assistant Professor of Obstetrics. M. D., Rush Medical College, 18873 Professor of Histology, American Dental College, 1891-933 Professor of Histology, Northwestern Dental School, 1893-943 Demonstrator of Obstetrics, Northwestern University, 1895-19013 Assistant Professor of Obstetrics, Northwestern University, 1897-1904: Obstetrician of Chicago Lying-in Hospital, 1894-19003 Associate Obstetrician, 1900-043 Obstetrician Cook County Hospital, 19084345 Assistant Professor of Obstetrics, Northwestern University. CHARLES HILL, Ph. D., M. D., A K K, Assistant Professor of Histology and Embryology. B. S., University of Michigan, 1891: M. S., 18923 Ph. D., Northwestern University, 18993 M. D., 1902: Assistant, Morphological Laboratory, University of Michigan, 18913 Professor of Biology, Uni- versity of Washington, 1892-99: Acting Dean of Department of Pharmacy, University of Wash- ington, 18953 Fellow and Instructor of Zoology, Northwestern University, 1898-99: Acting Pro- fessor of Zoology, Northwestern University, l9Ol-O21 Assistant Professor of Histology and Em- bryology, Northwestern University, 1899- . 17 FACULTIES - Continued Lucius CBOCKER PARDEE, M. D., N E N, Assistant Professor of Skin and Venereal Diseases. M. D., Northwestern University, 1894: Interne, St. I.uke's Hospital: Assistant Professor of Skin and Venereal Diseases, Northwestern University. CHARLES HENDERSON MILLER, Ph. G., M. D., CID P E, Assistant Professor of Pharmacology, Graduate in Pharmacy, Northwestern University, 1892: M. D., 1898: Post Graduate work, University of Vienna, 1902-03: Instructor ofiPharmacy, Northwestern University School of Pharmacy, 1892: Instructor of Chemistry, Northwestern University, 1892-1897: Instructor of Pharmacology, 1897-99: Assistant Professor of Pharmacology, 1899- . PETER THOMAS BURNS, M. D., A K K, Assistant Professor of Anatomy and Director of the Anatom- ical Laboratory. M. D., Chicago Medical College, 1891: Assistant Professor of Anatomy and Director of the Anatomical Laboratory, Northwestern University. LOUIS EARNEST SCHMIDT, M. S., M. D., Ph. G., N E N, Clinical Professor of Genito-Urinary Surgery. Ph. G., Chicago College of Pharmacy, University of Illinois, 1889: B. S., University of Michigan, 1892: M. S., Northwestern University, 1895: M. D., 1895: Professor of Genito-Urinary Diseases, Chicago Polyclinic: Attending Genito-Urinary Surgeon and Dermatologist, Alexian Brothers' Hospital: Attending Dermatologist, Cook County Hospital: Clinical Professor of Genito-Urinary Surgery, Northwestern University. WILLIAM ALFRED MANN, M. D., A T A, KID P E, Assistant Clinical Professor of Opthalmology and Otology, M. D., Chicago Medical College, 1883: Oculist and Aurist, Michael Reese Hospital, 1890-99: Provident Hospital, 1899- : South Side Hospital, 1902-03: Professor of Ophthalmology, Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat College, 1899-1903: Assistant Clinical Professor of Ophthalmology and Otology, Northwestern University, 1903- . FREDERICK MENGE, M. D., fir P 2, Assistant Professor of Laryngology and Rhinology. M. D., Chi- cago Medical College, 1892: University of Berlin: Instructor of Anatomy, Northwestern Univer- sity, 1894-1896: lnstructor of Histology, 1896-1903: Assistant Professor of Laryngology and Rhinology, Northwestern University, 1903- . WILLIAM CuTnEERTsoN, M. D., Lecturer on Clinical Gynecology. M. B., Toronto University, 1883: M. D., C. M., University of Victoria, 1883: Professor of Surgery, Chicago Clinical School, 1896-1900: President of Civil Service Medical Board, Chicago, 1897-99: Gynecologist, St. Luke's Hospital, 1900- : Lecturer on Clinical Gynecology, Northwestern University, 1902- . WALTER STEELE BARNES, M. D., LI' P 2, Instructor in Gynecology. M. D., University of Buffalo, 1892. GEORGE EDWIN BAXTER, Ph. B., M. D., N E N, Instructor in General Pathology. Ph. B., Illinois College, 1896: M. D.,'Northwestern University, 1899: Instructor in Clinical Haematology, North- western University: Assistant in Clinical Medicine: Member Dispensary Staff, St. I.uke's Hospi- tal: Instructor in General Pathology, Northwestern University. FREDERICK ATWOOD BESLEY, M. D., NZN, Instructor in Surgery and Clinical Surgery. M.D., Northwestern University, 1894: lnterne, Cook County Hospital, 1894-96: Attending Surgeon, Charity Hospital: Instructor in Surgery and Clinical Surgery, Northwestern University. ANDREW JACKSON BRISLEN, M. D., lnstructor in Clinical Orthopedic Surgery. M. D., Northwestern University, 1895. COLEMAN GRAVES BUFORD, M. D., N E N, Instructor in Clinical Surgery. Resident Physician, Illinois Eastern Hospital for Insane: Assistant Surgeon, Passavant Hospital: Surgeon, Mercy Hospital: lnstructor in Clinical Surgery, Northwestern University. WALTER H. BU!-ILIG, B. S., M. D., lnstructor in Bacteriology, Northwestern University, 1904- . FRANKLIN K. BURR, M. D., lnstructor in Clinical Laryngology and Rhinology, Northwestern Uni- versity, 1904- . JOHN GAILEY CAMPBELL, A. M., M. D., G A X, N E N, 411 B K, Instructor in Clinical Medicine. A. B., Hamilton University, 1893: A. M. 1896: M. D., Northwestern University, 1896: lnterne, St. Luke's Hospital, 1896-98: Demonstrator of Anatomy, Northwestern University, 1898-1900: In- structor in Clinical Neurology, 1899-1901: Instructor in Clinical Medicine, 1901- : Attending Physician, St. l.uke's Hospital Dispensary, 1904- : lnstructor in Clinical Medicine, Northwestern University. - PAUL CI-IESTER, B. S.. M. D., N E N, Instructor in Physical Diagnosis. B. S., University of Illinois, 1893: M..D., Northwestern University, 1896, junior Attending Physician, Mercy Hospital: In- structor in Physical Diagnosis, Northwestern University. 18 FACULTIES-Continued WILLIAM ROBERT CUBBINS, B. S., M. D,, KID A 0, N E N, Instructor in Clinical Surgery. B. S., Cen- tral College, Kentucky: M. D., Northwestern University, 1900: lnterne Cook County Hospital, 1900-02: Instructor in Clinical Surgery, Northwestern University. Act-IILLES DAVIS, Ph. B., M. D., 112 P E, Instructor in Medicine. GEORGE BOYD DYcI-IE, A. B., M. D., fb P 2, Instructor in Medicine. FREDERICK C. E.:-OERT, M. D., CD P E, Instructor in Operative Surgery. CHARLES ADDISON ELLIOTT, B. S., M. D., fb A 9, ONE, N E N, Instructorin Clinical Medicine. B. S., University of Nebraska, 1895: M. D., Northwestern University, 1898: Physician, Chicago Or- phan Asylum: Assistant Pathologist, Mercy Hospital: Instructor in Clinical Medicine, North- western University, 1900- . EDSON BRADY FOWLER, A. B., M. D., T K fb, N E N, Instructor in Clinical Medicine. A. B., North- western University, 1893: M. D., 1896: Interne, Mercy Hospital, 1896-97: Instructor of Clinical Medicine, Northwestern University, 1897- . ROBERT TRACY GILLMORE, M. D., fb P E, Instructor in Gynecology. ALEXANDER A. GOLDSMITI-I, M. D., A K K, Instructor in Histo-pathology. M. D., Northwestern University, 1901. FREDERICK R. GREEN, A. M., M. D., fb B H, First Demonstrator of Anatomy and Instructor in Anatomy. JULIUS GRINKER, M. D., Instructor in Clinical Neurology, Northwes-tern University, 1904. WINFIELD SCOTT HARFOLE, M. D., 112 P Z, Instructor in Medicine. M. D., Northwestern University, 1897: Instructor in Surgical Pathology, Northwestern University Woman's Medical School, 1897-98: Instructor in Pathology, Northwestern University, 1899-1900: Instructor in Medicine, Northwestern University Woman's Medical School, 1900-01: Instructor in Clinical Medicine, ' Northwestern University, 1900-03: Instructor in Medicine, 1903- . D'ORSAY I-IECI-IT, M. D., I-ID P 2, Instructor in Clinical Neurology. M. D., Northwestern University, 1898: Resident Physician, Michael Reese Hospital, 1898-1900: Instructor in Neurology, 1901: Chief of Neurologic Clinic, Northwestern University, 1903- . JOI-IN C. I-IOLLISTER, B. A., M. D., Instructor in Gynecology, Northwestern University, 1904- . GI-IARLES MAYOR JACOBS, M. D., Instructor in Clinical Orthopedic Surgery, Northwestern University, 1904- . WILLIAM JOHNSON Ph. C., Instructor in Chemistry. ALLEN BUCIQNER KANAVEL, Ph. B., M. D., A T, N E N, CD B K, Instructor in Clinical Surgery. Ph. B., Northwestern University, 1896: M. D., 99:Interne Cook County Hospital, 1899-1901: Instruc- tor in Clinical Surgery, Northwestern University. ELLIS KIRK KERR, A. M., M. D., E X, CID P E, Instructor in Medicine. A. B., Northwestern Uni- versity, 1896: A. M., 1897: M. D., 1900: Interne, Cook County Hospital, 1900-01: Associate Staff, Cook County Hospital, 1902- : Instructor in Medicine, Northwestern University. GOTTFRIED KOEI-ILER, Ph. G., M.D., AK K, Instructor in Clinical Pathology. Ph. G., Northwestern Uni- versity: M. D., 1902: Interne, Cook County Hospital, 1902- : Instructor in Clinical Pathology, Northwestern University. C1-IALES J. CURTZ, A. M., M. D., Instructor in Physiology. A. B., Kalamazoo College, 1894: M. D., Northwestern University, 1898: A. M., 1900: Assistant Instructor in Bacteriology, Northwestern University, 1896-98: Assistant Instructor in Physiology, 1898- : Assistant Instructor of Clinical Surgery, 1902- : Assistant Instructor of Operative Surgery, 1900- : Instructor in Anatomy, Y. M. C. A. Training School, 1900- . THOMAS HENRY LEWIS, M. D., Instructor in Gynecology, Northwestern University, 1904- . DAVID FAULKNER MoNAsI-I, M. D., SZ T H, Instructor in Obstetrics. 19 FACULTIES-Continued PAUL FREDERICK MORE, M.D., 112 P E, Instructor in Clinical Surgery. M. D., Northwestern Uni- versity, 18975 Interne, Cook County Hospital, 1897-98, Assistant in Surgery, Chicago Polyclinicg Instructor in Clinical Surgery, Northwestern University. JAMES MITCHELL NEFF, M. D., N E N, Instructor in Clinical Surgery. M. D., College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1898. ' ISAAC DONALDSON RAWLINGS, M. D., Instructor in Contagious Diseases at the Isolation Hospital. B. S., Illinois College, Jacksonville, 18903 M. S., 18983 M. D., Northwestern University, 18935 Instructor, Physical Diagnosis, Northwestern University, 1896-97, Demonstrator of Bacteriology, 1896-98: Instructor in Contagious Diseases, Isolation Hospital, 1902- . HARRY NIORTIMER RICHTER, M. D., Instructor in Clinical Surgery. HENRY EDWARD SAUER, B. S., M. D., X Xlf, N 2 N, Instructor in Gynecology. Ph. G., Northwestern University,1889: B. S., University of Michigan, 1892: M. D., Northwestern University, 18963 Secretary of Staff and Attending Surgeon, German Hospital: Instructor in Gynecology, North- western University. GEORGE C. Sl-IOCKEY, M. D., Instructor in Neurology, Northwestern University, 1904- . WILLIAM SHERMAN BRACKEN, M. D., Assistant in Clinical Laryngology and Rhinology. M. D., Northwestern University, 1902: Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy, 1902- . FRANZ H. BRANDT, M. D., Assistant in Clinical Medicine, Northwestern University, 1904- . JOSEPH BRENNEMANN, M. D., N EN,Assistantin Clinical Pediatrics. Ph. B., University of Michigan, 1895, M. D., Northwestern University, 19005 Interne, St. Luke's Hospital, 1900-02. WILLIAM E. BRENNEMAN, IR., M. D., Assistant in Clinical Neurology. M. D., Rush Medical College, 1890. DIEDERICH A. BRUMUND, M. D., Assistant in Genito-Urinary Surgery. GEORGE BASSETT BUTT, M. D., Assistant in Clinical Medicine. GEORGE JAMES DENNIS, M. D., 111 P 2, A E A, Assistant in Clinical Laryngology and Rhinology. D. D. S., University of Michigan, 1886: M. D., Miami Medical College, 1887: M. D., Northwestern University, 18993 Instructor in Pediatrics, Northwestern University, 1900-035 Instructor in Medicine, 1902-03. CHARLES M. Fox, M. D., CID I' A, CD P E, Assistant in Clinical Medicine. M. D., Northwestern Uni- versity, 1901g Interne, Mercy Hospital, 1901-02. HAROLD KENNETH GIBSON, M. D., fb P 2, Assistant in Clinical Medicine. ALEXANDER PHILIP HORWITZ, M. D., Assistant in Clinical Ophthalmology and Otology. PHILIP C. Joi-IANNES, M. D., Assistant in Clinical Genito-Urinary Surgery, Northwestern University, 1904. ARTHUR C. KLENTGEN, M. D., Assistant in Clinical Medicine, Northwestern University, 1904. EDGAR NELSON LAYTON, A. B., M. D., Assistant in Clinical Neurology, Northwestern University, 1904. VICTOR D. LESPINASSE, M. D., Assistant in Clinical Genito-Urinary Surgery, Northwestern Univer- sity, 1904. CORNELIUS A. LEENHEER, Ph. G., M. D., Assistant in Clinical Ophthalmology and Otology. OTIS HARDY MACLAY, B. S., M. D., XI' T, Deru, fb P E, Assistant in Clinical Laryngology and Rhin- ology. B. S., Northwestern University, 18975 M. D., 1901: Assistant Demonstrator of. Anat- omy, 1902-03. CHARLES M. MAT-TER, M. D., 'D P 2, Assistant in Clinical Surgery. THOMAS CHARLES MCGONAGLE, M. D., A K K, Assistant in Clinical Pediatrics. M. D., Northwestern University, 1898. ALBERT EARL MOWRY, M. D., Assistant in Clinical Medicine. RUPERT MERRILL PARKER, B. S., M. D., 'IP P E, Assistant in Clinical Surgery. M. D., Northwestern University, 1896. RICHARD STARR PATTILLO, M. D., A K K, Assistant in Clinical Ophthalmology and Otology. WILLIAM A. PETERSON, B. S., M. D., Assistant in Clinical Ophthalmology and Otology. B. S., Iowa State College, l887g M. D., University of Illinois, 18973 Principal Public School, Lindsborg, Kansas, 1893-94. ' ALICE PITKIN, M. D., Assistant in Clinical Surgery. 20 FACULTIES - Continued ROBERT EDMUND RANSMEIER, M. D., Assistant in Clinical Laryngolgy and Rhinology. FRANK E. SIMPSON, M. D., Assistant in Clinical Dermatology and Syphilology, Northwestern Univer- sity, 1904. EARNEST C. RIEBEL, M. D., Assistant in Clinical Surgery. DAVID SALINGER, M. D., A K K, Assistant in Clinical Ophthalmology and Otology. MORTON SNOW, M. D., CD K XII, fb A E, Assistant in Clinical Pediatrics. A. B., University of Kansas: M. D., University of Pennsylvania, 1900: Assistant Surgeon, lst Cavalry, I. N. C. . JOHN PERLEY SPRAGUE, A. B., M. D., A Ii K, Assistant in Clinical Neurology. A. B., Bates College, 1898: M. D., Northwestern University, 1903. ROSS C. WHITMAN, A. B., M. D., 9 A X, Assistant in Clinical Neurology. A. B., University of Michigan, 18945 M. D., 1899: Assistant City Bacteriologist, Chicago, 1903: Acting Professor of Pathology, Chicago Polyclinic. SHERMAN E. WRIGHT, M. D., Assistant in Clinical Ophthalmology and Otology. M. D., Northwestern University, 1900: Lecturer on Anaesthesia, Northwestern University Dental School. CHARLES BENJAMIN YOUNGER, M. D., CID P 2, Assistant in Clinical Laryngology and Rhinology. M. D., Northwestern University, 1902. WILLIAM A. HILLEMEYER, M. D., Demonstrator of Anatomy. EARNEST RAY REYNOLDS, M. D., Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy. HENRY DEDRIK ROEHLER, M. D., Demonstrator of Operative Obstetrics. M. D., Rush Medical Col- lege, 1900: Interne, Chicago Lying-in Hospital, 1900: Attending Obstetrician, 1902. JAMES GEORGE Ross, M. D., Demonstrator of Bandaging. M. D., Rush Medical College, 1900. FRANK P. ST. CLAIR, M. D., Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy. M. D., John C. Creighton Medi- cal College, l895: Captain and Assistant Surgeon, I. N. G., 1898- : Lecturer in Physiology and Chemistry, St. Gabriel's High School, 1897-1901: Demonstrator in Minor Surgery, Lakeside Post-Graduate School, 1899. HERBERT MARION STOWE, M. D., Demonstrator of Operative Obstetrics. JAMES CASEY, M. D., Clerk. MAY T. HILLAN, Librarian and College Stenographer. THERESA ZICKERT, Stenographer to the Secretary. Law School JOHN HENRY WIGMORE, A. M., LL. B., Dean, and Professor of Law. Urban Academy, San Fran- cisco: A. B., Harvard College, 1883: LL. B., Harvard Law School, 1887: Professor of Anglo- American Law, Fukuzawa University, Tokio, japan, 18895 Professor of Law, Northwestern University, 1893- . HARVEY BOSTWICK HURD, LL. D., Emeritus Professor of Law. Admitted to bar of Illinois, 1848: Professor of Law, 1862: Member of a Commission of three to complete and revise the Statutes of Illinois, 1869: Editor of the completed Revision, 1874. NATHANIEL CLINTON SEARS, A. M., LL. D., Professor in the Law of Procedure and Practice. Elgin Academ 5 Knox Colle e: A. B.. Amherst College' Berlin University: A. M., Amherst College, Y 8 I 1878: judge of the Superior Court of Cook County, 1893: re-elected, 1900: Justice ot the Appel- late Court for the First District, 18975 reappointed, 19005 LL. D., Northwestern University, 1897, Professor in the Law of Procedure and Practice, Northwestern University. CHARLES CHENEY HYDE, A. M., LL. B., Assistant Professor of Law. A. B., Yale University, 1894: A. M., 1895: LL. B., Harvard Law School, 1898: Assistant Professor of Law, Northwestern University, 1898- . ALBERT MARTIN KALES, A. B., LL. B., Assistant Professor of Law. A. B., Harvard University, 1896: LL. B., Harvard Law School, 1899: Instructor in Property, Northwestern University, 1900- . SAMUEL ADAMS, A. B., LL. B., Professor in the Law of Procedure and Practice. Cornell University: A. B., Harvard University, 1892: Harvard Law School: LL. B., Northwestern University, 18933 Professor of Law, Same, 1900- . A 21 FACULTIES-Continued JOHN HENRY SHELDON LEE, A. B., LL. B., Assistant Professor in the Law of Crimes and Criminal Procedure. A. B., Harvard College, 18965 LL. B., Northwestern University, 18985 Assistant State's Attorney for Cook County, 19015 Assistant Professor in the Law of Crimes and Criminal Procedure, Northwestern University. CHARLES GEORGE LITTLE, A. B., LL. B., Assistant Professor of Law. Syracuse High Schoolg A. B., Amherst College, 1895: LL. B., Northwestern University, 18975 Assistant Professor of Law, Northwestern University. HENRY SCHOFIELD, A. M., LL. B., Professor of Law. Nichols Academy5 A. B., Harvard College, 18875 A. M., 19005 LL. B., Harvard Law School, 19005 Assistant Corporation Counsel tothe City of Chicago, 19005 Instructor John Marshall Law School, 1899-19015 Professor of Law, North- western University, l901- . LoUIs MAY GREELEY, A. B., Professor in the Law of Conveyancing. Chicago Schools5 A. B., Har- vard College, 18805 Harvard Law Schoolg Professor of Law, Northwestern University. LEVI HARPER FULLER, B. S., LL. B., Professor in the Law of Procedure and Practice, B. S., Upper Iowa University, 189Og LL. B., Iowa State University, 18925 Lawyer, Chicago, 1893- 5 Lecturer on the Law of Corporations, Professor in the Law of Procedure and Practice, Northwestern University. FREDERIC CAMPBELL WOODWARD, A. M., LL. M., Professor of Law. LL. B., Cornell University, 18945 LL. M., Cornell University, 18955 A. M., Dickinson College, 19025 Lecturer on Real Property, Cornell Summer Law School, 18955 Lawyer, New York, 1895-18985 Professor, Dickinson Law School, Carlisle, Pa., 1898-19025 Professor of Law, Northwestern University, 1902- . CHARLES CLARENCE LINTHIGUM, LL. B., Professor in the Law of Patents. LL. B., Northwestern University, 18825 Reporter for the Fudeml Repo1'ta1'5 assisted in organizing Patent Law Associa- tion of Chicagog Editor of its Journral, 1885-19005 President of Patent Law Aassociation of Chi- cago, 19005 Professor of Law, Northwestern University, 1902- . WILLIAM HENRY DYRENFORTH, LL. B., Professor in the Law of Patent Practice. Gymnasium of Carlsruhe, Germany, 1870-18735 Instructor, Dyrenforth College, Chicago, 1873-1880: LL. B., Northwestern University, 18825 Lecturer on Patent Law, 18865 Professor in the Law of Patent Practice, Northwestern University, 1902- . OTTo RAYMOND BARNETT, LL. B., Associate Professor in the Law of Patents. LL. B., Northwestern University, 18885 Secretary of the Patent Law Association of Chicagog Associate Professor in the Law of Patents, Northwestern University, 1902- . MITCHELL DAVIS FOLLANSBEE, A. B., LL. B., Lecturer on Legal Ethics. A. B., Harvard College, 18925 LL. B., Northwestern University, 18935 Lecturer in Law, same, 1902- . EBENEZER WASHINGTON ENGSTROM, A. B., Northwestern University. Instructor in Voice Training and Forensics. HENRY LEE PRESCOTT, A. B., LL. B., Harvard University. Instructor in Forensics. JOSEPH ROBERT, Instructor in Parliamentary Law. CHARLES PICKARD, Lecturer on Trade-Mark and Copyright. CHARLES BYRD ELDER, LL. B., Northwestern University. Lecturer on Extraordinary Legal Remedies and Judgments. HENRY CLAY HALL, B. S., LL. B., Lecturer on Insurance. B. S., Wabash College, 18955 LL. B., Northwestern University, 18975 Callaghan Prize, 18975 Lecturer on Insurance, Northwestern University, 1902- . FREDERIC BEERS CROSSLEY, LL. B., Secretary of the Law School and of the Faculty. Harvard Uni- versityg LL, B., Northwestern University, 18995 admitted to the bar of Illinois, 18995 Secretary Law School of Northwestern University, 1901- 5 Secretary of the Faculty, same, 1902- . CHARLES YOE FREEMAN, A. B., LL. B., Lecturer on Corporation Practice. A. B., Princeton Uni- versityg LL. B., Northwestern Universityg Lecturer on Corporation Practice, Northwestern University, 1904- . HERBERT J. FRIEDMAN, A. B., LL. B., Lecturer on Liens. A. B., LL. B., Harvard University5 Lec- turer on Liens, Northwestern University, 1904- . DWIGHT ST. JOHN Bose, A. B., A. M., LL. B., Lecturer on Public Service Corporations. A. B., Northwestern Universityg A. M., LL. B., Harvard University5 Lecturer on Public Service Gor- porations, Northwestern University, 1904- . 22 School of Pharmacy OSCAR OLDBERG, Pharm. D., CD X, Dean, Professor of Pharmacy, and Director of the Pharmaceutical and Manufacturing Laboratories. Dean and Professor of Pharmacy, National College of Pharm- acy, Washington, D. C., 1873-81: Medical Purveyor of the United States Marine Hospital Service, 1874-81: Member of the Committee of Revision of the Pharmacopoeia of the United States, 1880- : Dean and Professor of Pharmacy, Chicago College of Pharmacy, 1884--86: Dean and Professor of Pharmacy, Northwestern University, 1886- . WILLIAM E. QUINE, M. D., Emeritus Professor of Physiology, Therapeutics, and Toxicology. tSee under Medical School.J HARRY MANN GORDIN, Ph. D., 'IP X, Professor of Organic Chemistry. University of Moscow, 1884: Student, Universities of Paris, Geneva and Munich: Ph. D., University of Berne, 1897: Research work, University of Michigan, 1897-1900: Professor of Organic Chemistry, Northwestern Uni- versity, 1902- . THEODORE WHITTELSEY, Ph. D., A T, fir I , Z E, Professer of Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry. B. A.,WilliamS College, 1890: Ph. D., University of Gclettingen, 1895: Assistant in Chemistry, Williams College, 1890-91: Director of Chemical Department, Pacific University, 1891-93, 1895- 97: Instructor in Chemistry, Cornell University, 1897-1903: Professor of Inorganic and Analy- tical Chemistry, Northwestern University, 1903- . RAYMOND HAINES POND, B. S., M. S., Ph. D., KP X, Professor of Botany and Pharmacognosy. B. S., Kansas Agricultural College, 1898: M. S., 1899: Ph. D., University of Michigan, 1902: Assis- tant in Botany, Kansas Agricultural College, 1895-98: Assistant in Chemistry, 1897-98: Assistant in Herbarium amd Plant Physiology, University of Michigan, 1898-1900: Special Investigator U. S. Fish Commission, 1899-1901: Instructor in Botany and Chemistry, Sterling and Coloma High School, 1902-03: Professor of Botany and Pharmacography, Northwestern University, 1903- . MAURIOE ASHBEL MINER, Pharm. M., fb X, Assistant Professor of Pharmacy. Ph. C., University of Michigan, 1871: Pharm. M., same, 1897: Instructor in Pharmacy, Northwestern University, 1888-1893: Assistant Professor of Pharmacy, 1893- . CHARLES WAGGENER PATTERSON, Sc. B., Ph. C., B 9 H, fir X, Assistant Professor of Analytical Phar- maceutical Chemistry. Ph. C., Northwestern University, 1895: Sc. B., 1901: Instructor in Dispens- ing, 1893-1901: Assistant Professor of Analytical Phamaceutical Chemistry, 1901- . HARRY KAHN, Pharm. M., M. D., CID X, Professor of Physiology and Materia Medica.: fSee under Medical School.J I DAVID CHARLES ECCLES, A. M., fb F, Secretary and Instructor in Pharmacy. B. S., Columbia Uni- versity, 1900: A. M., 190l: Instructor in Chemistry, Washington Agricultural College, 1901-02: Instructor in Chemistry, Northwestern University, 1902-03: Instructor in Pharmacy, 1903- : Secretary of School of Pharmacy, 1903- . GUSTAVE E. P. LUNDELL, B. A., CIP 11, Instructor in Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry. B. A., Cornell University, 1903: Assistant in Qualitative Analysis, same, 1903: Instructor in Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry, Northwestern University, 1903- . GERHARD H. JENSEN, B. S., 2 IE, CID X Instructor in Botany and Pharmacognosy. B. S., University of Cornell, 1899: Instructor in Botany and Zoology, Wisconsin State Normal School, 1899-1901: Graduate Student, University of Chicago, 1901-02: lnstuctor in Botany and Pharmacognosy, Northwestern University, 1903- . WILLIAM H. HARRISON, Ph. C., Assistant in Chemical Laboratory. Ph. C., Northwestern University, 1904: Assistant in Chemical Laboratory, 1904- . ERNEST F. WOBLET, CID X, Instructor in Book-keeping and Commercial Arithmetic. JOHN F. FISHNAR, Ph. C., fb X, Assistant in Pharmaceutical Laboratory. Ph. C., Northwestern University, 1902: Assistant in Pharmaceutical Laboratory, Northwestern University, 1902- . LEONARD A. JOHNSON, Ph. C., 111 X, Assistant in Chemical Laboratories. Ph. C., Northwestern Uni- versity, 1902: Assistant in Chemical Laboratory 1902- . 23 Dental School GREENE VARDIMAN BLAcK, M. D., D. D. S., Sc. D., LL. D., A 2 A, Dean, Professor of Operative Dentistry, Pathology, and Bacteriology. D. D. S., Missouri Dental College, 18713 M. D., Chi- cago Medical College, 18841 Sc. D., lllinois College, 18923 LL. D., Northwestern University, 18983 President, illinois State Dental Society, 18713 President,National Dental Association, 19003 President, Institute of Dental Pedagogics, 18973 Professor, Special Pathology and Therapeutics, Chicago College of Dental Surgery, 1886-18893 Professor, Special Pathology and Therapeutics, Dental Department, University of iowa, 1890-18913 Professor, Special Pathology and Bacteri- ology, Dental Department of Northwestern University, 1891-1897: Professor of Operative Dent- istry and Bacteriology, Northwestern University Dental School, 1897- . THOMAS LEWIS GILMER, M. D., D. D. S., A E A, Professor of Oral Surgery. M. D., Quincy College of Medicine, 18853 D. D. S., Missouri Dental College, 18823 President lllinois State Dental Society, 18822 President Chicago Odontographic Society, 19003 Oral Surgeon, St. Luke's Hos- pital, 1894- 3 Assistant Professor, Oral Surgery, Chicago College of Dental Surgery, 1889-903 Professor of Oral Surgery, Northwestern University, 1891. ELGIN MAWHINNEY, D. D. S., A Z A, Professor of Special Pathology, Materia Medica and Thera- peutics. Collegiate lnstitute. Ontario, 1880-833 D. D. S., Chicago College of Dental Surgery, 18873 Special Student, Toronto University, 1883-843 Professor of Materia Medica and Terapeu- tics, Northwestern University, 1891-933 same, University of lllinois Dental School, 1897-993 same, Northwestern University, 1899- . EDMUND NOYES, D. D. S., A 2 A, Professor of Dental jurisprudence and Ethics. Ohio College of Dental Surgery, 1866-67: D. D. S., Chicago College of Dental Surgery, 18843 Professor of Dental Pathology and Therapeutics and Operative Dentistry, College of Dental Surgery, 1884-913 Secretary of Faculy, Northwestern University Dental School, 1891- 3 Professor of Dental juris- prudence and Ethics, 1892- . CHARLES RUDOLPI-i EDWARD Koci-1, D. D. S., Secretary Dental School. D. D. S. tHonoraryl Dental Department Washington University, tMissouri Dental Collegel St. Louis, 18893 Secretary lllinois State Dental Society, 1871-72-73-743 President Chicago Dental Society, 18763 President lllinois State Dental Society, 18781 Member Illinois State Board of Dental Examiners and Sec- retary of the Board, 18863 President lllinois State Board of Dental Examiners, 18903 President National Association of Dental Examiners. 1890. JAMES HARRisoN PROTHERO, D. D. S., A E A, Professor of Prosthetic Technics, Prosthetic Dentistry and Metallurgy, Kansas State Agricultural College, 18803 D. D. S., Missouri Dental College, 18903 Superintendent of Operative Dentistry and Lecturer on Dental Anatomy, Missouri Dental College, 1890 923 Superintendent of lnfirmary, Northwestern University Dental School, 1893-952 Professor of Operative Dentistry, American College of Dental Surgery, 1895-963 same, North- western University, 1896-98: Professor of Prosthetic Dentistry, 1898-993 Professor of Prosthetic Dentistry, Prosthetic Technics, and Metallurgy, 1899- . FREDERIC BOGUE NOYES, B. A., D. D. S., A E A, Professor of Histology. B. A., Johns Hopkins University, 18933 D. D. S., Northwestern University, 18953 Professor of Dental Histology, Northwestern University, 1895-973 Professor of Histology, 1897- . TWING BROOKS WIGGIN, M. D., XII Q, Professor of Physiology and General Pathology. Janesville tWis.l High School, 18821 Vanderbilt University, 1882-833 M. D., College of Physicians and Surgeons, Chicago, 18863 Graduate Student, New York Post-Graduate Medical School, 18863 Hospital Course, Vienna and Paris, 18993 Laboratory and Hospital Course, johns Hopkins Hospital, 19013 Professor of Physiology, American Dental College, 1890-953 Professor of Phy- siology and General Pathology, Northwestern University, 1895-1902: Professor of Physiology, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Chicago, 1896-993 Professor of Microscopical and Chemical lgggnosis, 1899'l902Q Professor Physiology and General Pathology, Northwestern University, VERNON JAMES HALL, Ph. D., XI' SZ, Professor of Chemistry. Rockford High School, 18903 B. S., Northwestern University, 18943 M. S., 18953 Ph. D., 18963 Student Mining Engineering, Uni- versity of Lehigh, Summer Session, 19003 same, Michigan College of Mines, 19023 Assistant Professor of Chemistry, College of Liberal Arts, Northwestern University, 1895-973 Professor of Chemistry, Northwestern University Woman's Medical School, 1897-19023 Professor of Chemistry, 1902- . GEORGE Amos DORSEY, Ph. D., Professor of Comparative Anatomy. Granville Academy, 1881-843 A. B., Harvard University, 18901 Ph. D., 18943 Instructor, same, 1894-963 Curator QAnthro- pologyl, Field Columbian Museum, 1896- 3 Professor, Comparative Anatomy, Northwestern University, 1899. 24 FACULTIES-Continued CHARLES LOUIS Mtx, A. M., M. D., XI' Q, Professor of Anatomy. tSee under Medical School.j FRED WILLIAM GETHRO, D. D. S., A E A, Assistant Professor of Operative Dentistry and Dental Anatomy. Northwestern University Dental School, 18993 Demonstrator Operative Technics, 1900-19013 Lecturer on Operative Technics, 1901-19043 Assistant Professor of Operative Den- tistry and Dental Anatomy, Northwestern University, 1904- . ARTHUR DAVENPORT BLACK, B. S., M. D., D. D. S., Assistant Professor of Operative Dentistry and Assistant in Oral Surgery. B. S., Illinois College, 18923 D. D. S., Northwestern University Dental School, 19003 M. D., Northwestern Medical School, l9OlQ Quiz Master and Assistant in Oral Surgery, 1901-043 Assistant Professor of Operative Dentistry and Assistant in Oral Surgery, 1904- . BENTON SELLERY, D. D. S., A E A,Associate Professor of Orthodontia. Graduate, Normal School, Kincardine, Ontario3 D. D. S., Northwestern University, 18993 Demonstrator and Quiz Master Prosthetic Dentistry, same, 1899-19013 Demonstrator in Orthodontia, 1901-023 Lecturer in same, IRA 1902- . EUGENE SHAW WILLARD, D. D. S., XII Q, Assistant Professor of Lake Forest Academy, 18743 Monmouth College, 1874-773 Theological Seminary, 1878-813 D. D. S., Northwestern Quiz Master, same, 1899-19013 Lecturer on Bacteriology, Operative Dentistry and Bacteriology. Westminster College, 1877-783 Western University, 18993 Demonstrator and same, 1901. SHERMAN E. WRIGHT, M. D., Lecturer on Anaesthesia and Assistant in Oral Surgery. Demonstrators FREDRICK ALBERT BONTHIUS, M. D., Quiz Master in Anatomy. CHAS. REEDER BAKER, D. D. S., A E A, Demonstrator in Orthodontia. JOHN MARCUS BECKETT, D. D. S., Demonstrator. D WILLIAM EARL BLAKE, D. D. S.. NI' Q, Demonstrator. JAMES WILLIAM BIRKLAND, D. D. S., A E A, Demonstrator tSpeCiall. HENRY BANISTER CLARK, D. D. S., Demonstrator. CHARLES HENRY CONVERSE, D. D. S., A 2 A, Demonstrator. MONT RANKIN GILCHRIST, D. D. S., if Q, Demonstrator. HARRY ALEXANDER GILCI-IRIsT, D. D. S., X11 Q, Demonstrator. BAKER AURON HAMILTON, D. D. S., Demonstrator. LEsLIE E. A. HOOEY, D. D. S., Demonstrator. JAMES ROWLAND LAUGHLIN, D. D. S., A Z A, Demonstrator. HUSTON FRENCH METHVEN, D. D. S., Demonstrator and Quiz Master. MERLE MAYO PRINTZ, D. D. S., KI' Q, Demonstrator and Quiz Master. GEORGE CORWIN l3OUNDSTONE,D.D.S.,DC1T1OflSlil'2.lO1' and Quiz Master in CHAs. SCOTT REICHERT, D. D. S., A E A, Demonstrator. RAYMOND JULIUS SAUER, D. D. S., A 2 A, Demonstrator. WlRT ALLEN STEVENS, D. D. S., Demonstrator. GEO. PATTERSON THOMPSON, D. D. S., KI' Q, Demonstrator. Histology and Bacteriology. HARRY lsAAC VAN TUYL, D. D. S., M. D., A. B., Demonstrator and Quiz Master in Anatomy. EUGENE SHAW WILLARD, D. D. S., XI' Q, Superintendent of Infirmary. GEO. BUCHANAN MACEARLANE, D. D. S., A Z A, Demonstrator tSpecialj. BENJAMIN WALDBERG, D. D. S., II' SZ, Superintendent of Prosthetic Laboratory. Mtss KOTZIE WILLARD, Librarian. School of Music, PETER CHRISTIAN LUTKIN, Muc. Doc., Dean, Professor of Piano, Organ, Theory and Composition. Founder American Guild of Organists, 1893. Mus. D., Syracuse University, 19013 Student under Mrs. Regina Watson, Clarence Eddy, and Frederick Grant Gleason, Chicago, 1878-813 under Oscar Raif QPianoj, August l-laupt tOrganl, Waldemar Bargiel tTheoryl, Royal High School of Music and Royal Academy of Arts, Berlin, 1881-833 Theodore Leschetitzky's Piano School. Vienna, 1883g under Moritz Moszkowski, Paris, 18843 Director Theoretical Department, Ameri- can Conservatory of Music, 1888-953 Dean and Professor of Piano, Organ, Theory and Com- position, Northwestern University, 1895- . 25 FACULTIES-Continued HAROLD EVERARD KNAPP. Director of the Violin Department, Professor of Violin and Ensemble Playing. Oberlin Conservatory of Music, 1885-873 Leipsic Conservatory, 1887-893 Solo playing with Hermann, Sitt, and Petrie3 Orchestra and Quartette playing with Brodsky. SAIDEE KNOWLAND CoE, A X Q, Professor of Piano and Musical History. Student under Carl Baer- man tPianol, and John W. Tufts tTheoryj, Boston, 1886-883 Director Piano Department, Uni- versity of Southern California, 1889-903 Pupil under Heinrich Barth and Moritz Moszkowski tPianol, Reinhold Succo tTheory and Cornpositionl, and Waldermar Bargiel tEnsemble play- ingj, Royal High School of Music, Berlin, 1890-933 Professor of Piano and Musical History, Northwestern University. ARNE OLDBERG, Professor of Piano and Composition. Student under August Hyllested CPianoJ1 Chicago, 1888-923 under Wilhelm Middleschulte tTheory, Composition and Counterpointlf 1892-933 with Theodore Leschetitzky, Vienna, 1893-95: A. Koelling tCompositionJ, Chicago, 1895-963 under Frederick Grant Gleason tlnstrumentationl, 1896-973 tTheoryj Koenigliche Acad- emie der Tonkunst, Munich3 under Hans Bussmeyer tPractical Orchestra Leadingj3 under -los. Rheinberger tCompositionj, 1898-993 Professor of Piano and Composition, Northwestern Uni- versity. KARLETON HACKETT, Director Vocal Department, Instructor in Voice Culture. Private student Corn- elius Chenery, Boston, 1884-893 under Vincenzo Vannini, Florence, 1889-923 George Henschel, London, 18963 under Professor john K. Paine tTheoryl, Harvardg Editor, 'tWerner's Magazine, New York, 18943 Editor, Vocal Department, Music, Chicago, 1894- . WILLIAM HENRY KNAPP, Instructor in Voice Culture. Graduate Whitewater State Normal School, Wisconsin3 Oberlin Conservatory of Music, 1889-913 under Arthur S. Kimball tVoice Cu1turel3 under Charles P. Doolittle tVioloncellolg under F. G. Doolittle tViolinl3 under Fenlon B. Rice and George Andrews QTheoryl, London, 18983 Instructor in Violoncello and Voice, West Michigan College, Grand Rapids, 1892-933 Instructor in Voice Culture, Northwestern University, 1893- 3 Musical Director, Church of the Ascension, Chicago, 1895- . MARGARET CHRISTIE CAMERON, Instructor in Piano. Private Student August Hyllested, Chicago, 1889-923 under Theodore Leschetltzky, Vienna, 1892-933 under Heinrich Barth, Berlin, 1894: under Louis Falk tTheoryj, Chicago3 Instructor in Piano, Northwestern University. NINA SHUMWAY KNAPP, Instructor in Piano. Northwestern University School of Music, 18953 under P. C. Lutkin tPiano and Theoryl, 1896-19033 Teachers' Certificate, N. U.School of Music, 18973 under Alberto Randegger and George Henschel tVocal Culturel, London, 18983 Graduate in Piano and Vocal Culture Departments, Northwestern University, 18993 Instructor in Piano, Northwestern University. Louis NORTON Donoe, Director Preparatory Department and Instructor in Piano and Theory. Stu- dent, Northwestern University, 1892-953 under Scott Wheeler and Clarence Dickinson tOrganl2 Teacher tOrganJ, Tacoma and Seattle, 1895-973 under Robert Weisbach tPianol, 1897-19032 Graduate in Music, Northwestern University, 19033 Instructor in Piano, same, 1898- :Director Preparatory Department and Instructor in Theory, same, 1903- . ANTHONY STANKOWITCH, Instructor in Piano and Clavier Method. Leipsic Conservatory tPiano and Theoryl, 1877-803 under joseph Dachs tPiano and Theoryl, Anton Bruckner tTheoryl, Vienna, 1880-843 Instructor of Piano, Philadelphia Conservatory, 1885-88: Ogontz School, 1887-931 Virgil Piano School, New York, 1894-963 Director Virgil Piano School, Chicago, 1897-19003 Instructor in Piano and Clavier Method, Northwestern University. HARLAN 1. COZINE, Instructor in Voice Culture, Sight Reading and Choral Music. Graduate, New England Conservatory, Boston, 18863 Director, School of Music, Whitman College, Walla Walla, Wash., 1886-923 Dean, College of Music, Puget Sound University, Tacoma, 1892-1900: Gradu- ate Examiner for New England Conservatory, 18933 Instructor in Voice Culture, SightReading and Choral Music, Northwestern University, 1901- . LEWIS RANDOLPH BLACKMAN, Mus. B., lnstuctor in Violin. Graduate, Chicago Musical College, 18973 under S. E. Jacobson and Berhard Listeman tViolinl3 under Louis Falk and Felix Barowski tHarmony and Compositionl3 under Frederic Grant Gleason and Hans Balatka3 Post Graduate Course, Chicago Musical College, 18983 Mus. B., and Mus. M., same3 Instructor in Violin, Northwestern University. DAY WILLIAMS. Instructor in Violoncello. Student under Prof. Gustave Segul Wioloncellol, Akron: O., 1883-853 under Charles Heydler, Cleveland. 1885-903 under Jan Dolas and Frederich Hess' 1893-95: under Bruno Steindel, 1895-19003 under Johann H. Bech tTheoryJ, 1890-913 Adolph Weidig, Chicago, 1897-19003 Instructor in Violoncello, Northwestern University- . 26 FACULTIES--Continued WALFRIED SINGER, Instructor in Harp. CHARLES JOSEPH KING, Instructor in Clarinet, Oboe and Bassoon. WILLIAM COLE, Instructor in Flute. CHARLES JOHN l-IAAKE, Assistant Instructor in Piano. HILA VERBECK KNAPP, Assistant Instructor in Piano. BERTHA ALTHEA BEEIVIAN, Assistant Instructor in Voice and Piano. MAUD IIILIET MARCEAU, Assistant Instructor in Piano. CHARLES S. HORN, Instructor in Cornet. SARAH MOORE, Assistant Instructor in Piano. ELIZABETH LIDDELL SHOTWELL, Assistant Instructor in Piano. NELLIE BEULAH FLODIN, Assistant Instructor in Piano. WINIFRED HULL, Assistant Instructor in Piano. ELEANOR KIRKHAM, Instructor in Voice Culture. ELLEN GREEN Fisk, Instructor in Physical Culture. IRVING HAIVILIN, Secretary. Schools of Theology REV. CHARLES I. LITTLE, Ph. D., LL. D., President, Professor of Historical Theology. Graduate, University of Pennsylvania, 18613 Ph. D., De Pauw: LL. D., Dickinson University: Professor, same, 1874-853 Professor, Syracuse University, 1885-91: President Garrett Biblical Institute, 1891- . Fernley Lecturer to British M. E. Conference, 1900. REV. MILTON S. TERRY, D. D., LL. D., Professor of Christian Doctrine, and Librarian. A. M., Wesleyan University. Middletown. Conn., 18703 D. D., 18805 LL. D., Northwestern University, 18955 Professor of Christian Doctrine, Garrett Biblical Institute. REV. SOLON C. BRONSON, D. D., Professor of Practical Theology, and Registrar. A. B., and A. M., Upper Iowa Universityg B. D., and D. D., Garrett Biblical Instituteg Professor of Practical Theology and Registrar, Garrett Biblical Institute. REV. CHARLES M. STUART, D. D., fb K NP, fb B K, Professor of Sacred Rhetoric and Secretary of the Faculty. M. A., Kalamazoo College: M. A., Northwestern University, B. D., and D. D., Gar- rett Biblical Instituteg Professor of Sacred Rhetoric, and Secretary of the Faculty, Garrett Biblical Institute. ' REV. DOREIVIUS A. HAYES, Ph. D.. S. T. D., LL. D., Cb 13 K, Professor of New Testament Exegesis. A. B., and A. M., Ohio Wesleyan Universityg B. D., Ph. D.. and S. T. D., Boston University: LL. D., Missouri University: Professor of New Testament Exegesis, Garrett Biblical Institute. REV. FREDERICK C. EISELEN, A. M., B. D., Professor of Hebrew Language and Literature. Student, Gymnasia, Landsberg a. W. and Cuestrug B. D.. Drew Theological Seminary, 1900: A. M., New University, 18993 Professor of Hebrew Language and Literature, Garrett Biblical Insti- tute, 1902- . ROBERT M. CUIVINOCK, A. M., L. H. D.. XII T, 412 B K, Professor of Elocution. tSee under College of Liberal Arts.J REV. JNO. j. RAPP, A.. B., B. D., Instructor in Hebrew and Greek. B. D., Garrett Biblical Institute, 18905 A. B., University of Chicago, 18983 Instructor in Hebrew and Greek, Garrett Biblical Institute, 1902- . A REV. NELS E. SIIVIONSEN, D. D., Principal of the Norwegian-Danish Theological School. REV. S. C. ADAMS, Assistant Librarian and Assistant Registrar. REV. ALBERT ERICKSON, A. M., D. D., President Swedish Theological Seminary. Student, Maria High School, and Strangnas Gymnasium. Stockholm, Sweden: Student, Stockholm, Sweden. 1866-67, A. M., Northwestern University, 1887: D. D., 1900: President, Swedish Theological Seminary, 1883- . REV. CARL G. WALLENIUS, Professor of Swedish Language and Literature. Student, Upsala Uni- versity, Sweden, Boston University: Professor, Swedish Seminary. Evanston, 1889-96: Professor Swedish Language and Literature, Swedish Seminary, Evanston. 1900- . HENRY M. SWAN, Ph. B., Instructor in the English Language. Student. Northwestern Academy, 1895-97, E. Des Moines High, 1897-98g Drake University. 1898-993 Ph. B., Northwestern Uni- versity, 19025 Garrett Biblical Institute, 1902- 3 Instructor Swedish Seminary, 1899-1900 and 1901- . 4 L nn Forty-Sixth Commencement Order of Exercises Thursday, May Twenty-sixth SCHOOL OF ORATORY- Graduating Exercises at Annie May Swift Hall, 8:00 o'clock, p. m. 0 Tuesday, June Seventh SCHOOL OF Music-Concerto Eveningxby the Graduating Class at Music Hall, 8:00 o'clock, p. m. Thursday, June Ninth SCHOOL OF Music-Annual Concert and Graduating Exercises at Music Hall, at 8:00 o'clock, p. m. Sunday, June Twelfth BACCALAUREATE SERMON by the Reverend Jean Frederic Loba, A. M., D. D., of Evanston, at the First Methodist Episcopal Church, 10:30 o'clock, a. m. Monday, June Thirteenth COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS-Class-Day Exercises in Assembly Hall, Orrington Lunt Library, 10:00 o'clock, a. m. Class Statistics - - ---- E. E. ELLIS Class Oration - - MILETUS L. FLANINGAM Class Song - - - - - CHAS. E. STIOKLE Class Poem - - - - ELIZABETH BRONSON Presentation of Gift - - - - ROBT. J. HAMILTON Continued on the Campus lvy Oration ---- MYRTLE L. JOHNSTON Class History ----- C. G. SABlN Class Prophecy - - - AMY H. OLGEN Presentation of Gifts - - - HARRY l. ALLEN Oratorical Contest for the Kirk Prize at the First Methodist Episcopal Church, 8:00 o'clock, p. m. AOADEMY-Class-Day Exercises in Fisk Hall, 10:00 o'clock, a. m. Tuesday, June Fourteenth BOARD OF TRUSTEES--Regular Meeting in the Faculty Room, University Hall, 9:00 o'clock. a. m. MEDICAL SCHOOL-Annual Reception and Banquet of the Alumni at the Auditorium Hotel, Chicago, 6:00 o'cloclc, p. m. LAW ScHoOL'Annual Banquet of the Alumni Association at the University Club, Chicago, 6:30 o'clock, p. rn. ACADEMY-Graduating Exercises in Fisk Hall, at 10:00 o'clock. a. m. Address by the Reverend Eli Phillips Bennett. A. B., of Detroit. PHI BETA KAPPA SOCIETY-ADUU2l Meeting in Assembly Hall, Orrington Lunt Library, 4:00 o'clock, p. m. Address by Edgar Addison Bancroft, LL. B., of Chicago. Subject: The Scholar in a Commer- cial Age. Memorial Hall, 8:00 o'clock. p. m. Wednesday, June Fifteenth COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTs-Class Reunions, 10:30 o'clock, a. m. General Assembly of Alumni at University Hall. 12:00 o'clock, noon. Procession through the Campus. ' Luncheon to the Alumni and other guests at 12:30 o'clock. p. m. lnformal Addresses. Business Meeting of the Alumni Association at Memorial Hall, 3:00 o'clock, p. m. MEDICAL SOHOOL-Annual Meeting of the Alumni Association at Davis Hall. 1:30 o'clock. p. m. THE PRESlDENT'S RECEPTION-OfflI1gtOD Lunt Library, from 8:00 to 11:00 o'clock, p. m. Thursday, June Sixteenth ANNUAL COMMENCEMENT at the Auditorium, Chicago, 8:00 o'clock. p. m. Address by the Reverend Albert Carman, M. A., D. D.. Toronto. Subject: Our Civilization and our Universities. 29 UNIVERSITY UNION f if li g J, P ,f dxf , Nw --.Z Lxf ff I - - X! L, ' IAl'l Jill' W XX I ' I I 2- Taj rf . L at It fa + dy came... ll- -I President - - - PROP. J. T. l'IATFIELD Vice-President - PROP. S. C. BRONSON Secretary - - - MRs. JAMES A. JAMES Treasurer H PROP. FREDERICK C. WOODWARD The University Union was founded in November, 1900, as a club Of members of the teaching body of the University, with their fam- ilies, in order to promote social life in the University circle ..... I3 The social gatherings of the Union are held about Once a month. Its affairs are largely conducted by a Standing Committee, of which the members are: 2 : ' 2 : PROP. P. C. LUTKIN - - - PROP. THEODORE WHITTELSEY MRS. A. H. THORNDIKE 30 Chairman MRS. HENRY CREW MRS. WALTER D. SCOTT 1 ' V Qu., 13, ,,- .3. -.. I -:-':-.+-f---- 3, 1 fr 1 1. . - ...gif '?'f,J.gf,ga'1.g 5 '- ,S..f i L. ' ' 'fe Mi? V' ,, .' '. H .xt f. -. ' ' L 5-'tif MX T W- L' k ff' i ', -,' '. xiifw '- -' -5-'ff f1':'x7. , . 'f' x . ., '4-. xg .v 3.- ' ...g I .f 9, ,sf ..: 3. 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A 1 5 .-.-1',- '-1. - yr. 'Q 1 7... .f !,.'?L1 '1- 51., fL,5'. -lfvx. V. , .-..f3. -rv - J' 1, ..x . . . 11 '- ifvi - vs. L 1-' '- .- ., ..-7-1 'g . iw' lj. ' vf. -tl r! : 5 ., .. .. ., 1.-7 ' :mu Ll ' MJ 'fr 'An' . .gf-h:' 1 I'-g I Ki '1-:.- A .'. . - f .U 'wi-11. Lf.:-. ,:f:,.1f-,,. .W ,- 'Q A ' JI .L '-'. -IQ. f.' I X .. HW? K Yi. Q.-' -13.53 . . -, ' v: f'Q:1.': - F- . . - P9 u1.fX.' '-'. .- xr f ' ,..-My-2,-33, 3, phi -.V - , . T.. 3 '9' -lf' A '... . '- -A ' .TJ .aff .'...f. v . 5 ev-.'mw w 224 f1'.iff.if F: '1 -If 95.325 . j3Yi::..g4,j- -up 'a-za. H -' . -2.12 , llfqff V' 2 '4 512' a.f.f1'1g' 2- -- 4 LAY - t.,'L'L.: -Q I X . - . I I . C X 'Hr ' X' , -. Q . X V: 'fix 1 iii J ,' 1: 54 ar .f.-1':LLi- ff? 2.9 ' . 1 ' f .' .. Q':.,:-.1: - . ef- .,',kR'f 5.59 J 'Z mm 'S Z l- XQ 1fl fix f X If ff X Northern Uratorlcal League Officers of Northwestern Branch - - - - H SHELBY M. HARRISON Fla A If Il ' ' I ,, ni ' 'tl-f iam- al l 'll' ly fl glgq ll . il Wlsglllgf I Ill I President - - v Vice-President, - - - E. F. BIDDLE Secretary, - DWIGHT C. HUBBART Treasurer, DOUGLAS F. STEVENS Local Contest, March 5, 1904 First- CHARLES J. JOHNSON - - The Dash for the Pole SEIJOTLCZ-DWIGHT C. HUBBART - Hamilton, the Constructionist and Patriot I Final Contest, May 6, 1904 Members of League MICHIGAN NORTHWESTERN CHICAGO OBERLIN WISCONSIN IOWA MINNESOTA 32 NORTHWESTERN versus lVIicH1oAN, january 20, 1905 MINNESOTA versus CHICAGO, January 20, 1905 Semi-Final Debate Resolved: That all corporations doing an inter-state business should be compelled to incorporate under a national law, granted that such a law would be constitutional. a'l.l7lI'l7lClffl'C-N ORTHWESTERN Negcztzwf MICHIGAN Decision in favor of the negative Northwestern Team JOHN I-I.l-IOLLAND FRED M. PERRILL J. H. WALKER 33 ,.- '. A' ,. ' . 15 ai .Z Q03 . . 5 CQ.Pw.R. ll YR 4 N a -14 , CHARLES S. HORN. Gfficers HERBERT J. PLAGGE. - - - - HOWARD M. ROSINE J. R. BROWN. Y - Secretary A. L. REAM, - Executive Committee HERBERT J. PLAGGE j. R. BROWN Members C. S. HORN, Cornet E. J. Sci-IAEFER, Cornet H. M. ROSINE, Cornet S. E. POLLOCK, Cornet R. W. SNELL, Cornet J. H. GILSON, Cornet Director President - Manager and Librarian - Treasurer HOWARD M. ROSINE W. A. BARBER, Cornet B. R. MCKNIGHT, Cornet K. R. GILMER, Cornet H. J. PLAGCE, Clarinet O. L. VEECH, Clarinet F. B. POOLE, Clarinet j. M. ROSBOROUGH, Clarinet F. M. GIBSON, Clarinet A. L. REAM, Clarinet F. C. KELLOGG, Clarinet J. L. MOSS, Piccolo H. VAN PETTEN, Piccolo j. R. BROWN, Alto A. H. ZELLER, Alto G. M. SHAPLAND, Alto W. H. HANNS, Alto T. S. SNELL, Alto C. STRATTON, Trombone J. R. MCKINNEY, Trombone R. W, E. SUMMERVILLE, Trombone RAYMOND GILBERT, Tenor C. H. WOOD, Baritone W. E. KEETON, Baritone E. B. HOWE, Baritone C. H. Cox, BBb Bass j. P. COCAYNE, Eb Bass W. E. CRAY, String Bass C. C. BAKER, Snare Drum A. B. CLAYTON, Snare Drum W. H. HARRISON. Snare Drum E. S. BAKER, Bass Drum Concerts First Annual Concert, Fisk Hall, january 22, 1904. Waukegan Methodist Church, April 29, 1904. Joliet High School Auditorium, May 4, 1904. Evanston, Fisk Hall, May 13, 1904. Second Annual Concert, Fisk Hall, March 3, 1905. 34 IGLEE CLUB I HARLAN J. COZINE, WALTER EDIVIUND SQUIRE, EDWARD F. EILERT, J. H. El-ILERS, WILLIAM H. LONG MKLT DWIOI-IT C. HUBBART Musical Director - Pianist Business Manager - Reader First Tenors ON W. EDDY ALFRED j. TEARE SINCLAIR A. WILLMARTIAI Second Tenors HERBERT j. PLAGGE Baritones EDWARD F. EILERT HARRY MONAMER Bassos WALTER A. STU LTZ x 1. HAROLD GILSON HOWARD M. ROSINE BORGO E. LEONARD 37 CHAs. H. SCHREIBER -:Qi la' we -.,-, v i-l-wh , ' I V ....a,m,,, nm M-.. - -VW , W ,- V . , . , L orihwesiern VUL. XXV No. 21. EVANSTON. MONDAY, 'NlJYI'IMBEH. 14, MXH, K,!'ll1i,?M.HfL 11.-iw 5, i-C.m,, 1WD PIL 2to6 ix, :xml Sunny mr 3 11,53 All-I Sum!! lim? hm Yllilil' uma, mm-. 'nm bzwlas , .wwnpfl ,, may Q mcrnnc mylxxym-,x lm 040 reicu-rl 1-y mf 3-:mug 'vf urmmry. xfius Q65 mu gmnln-1 604274, cfwenffxv me Y, WU NM N 1 m-mm.: 0. 65 hw by ur me vhrwty XC., 5 mlm A ' ,n-,ummm um ,,w,,,,gy mg 1 - bmmxsnll. U, lwimflqmml x 5 xxwyiml Imp un I'-lnlura-S mt me grnue. Dnvir :hu null an A-uwm-. 1 his invwq-s.,mff,, mm Lx- uh- pap Jain nu :er,mxnwui. nm Vain, .iohnso lm Fire! Hglf In D xml llnv. Kirk xfqnnnmn xmfmm uri A pwyung USDGI' GIA U10 HW! :And Kirk. mm rm! IL bunk l.wn:LI3' Ynrl, Xwlmrlrbr, who was 1 all Ullnuis' fflrlj in Hllll llmlrlvl! Rllchl luqnu in me ml- may unmcr llliulrz four frm. na mms was 1 me may on xhur mm- wrns. we uw gn-im,mage, Rvpcr :mme it ml! had ndvzmeed C A PUBLISHER. EDITOR ll N1 v electric me w S l ll K 1' . I l E E nt su M SCH mm flilen thu nllaurd gg 'hui mfrl' ALBRIHON 151 umm LZ' ' Swmw Locfx L 1-hu W N11 0 vw-im :h'v: F 4 of ns- vm practice every yr-nr than you dn for the HIV U' MHC B m mm every week mg or me gospel,-' ln Arcadie, fair Arcadie, The violets spring in lane, on lea,- And showers fall as faint as dew From skies that never lose their blue,- And all the land is fa1r to see A In Aroadie, fair Aroadie. 40 POLLY B. LITTLE I fIIIIIIe1:eeLLL In I A III I IIIIIIII III I III-III M I if 5 ' 'J f 7 f xx w W i i W IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII l1RmmIIpInl,lI Hymn 1l'IllIIlj IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Il E IIIIIIIIW V 'W 'W L I I Im mlllu lim I IIIIII mn Il I V IIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIII I IIII ., ,f If -,:-W I , III Ivy I 9 U uImn,,m WIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWP I II IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIM -4 - Imlv- NIIIIIIWM . API. IIIMAIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I .I I Tm' ' Issued every month during the college year SCOTT STRICKLE NORTRUP ----- Editor-in-Chief MARGUERITE BIGELOW, J - - - Associate Editors J. E. RUSSELL, CARL F. JORDAN, Literary Board LYMAN NORTH ODELL SI-IEPARD E. S. CRAVEN MARTHA TEAGUE CHRISTINE MCGAFFEY ELSIE WILLIAMS FRANCIS HARWOOD ---- Business Manager A E. S. BRADEN ----- CIrculation Manager WALTER E. MCCORNACK FOOTBALL COACH I 1 1 1 1' I ,- ,y '11 ' wx 1. 51 fx :mgilx 'T LQ.'1ff1X,1fi 11.26 7' 1 Lg, . 3 '51 ' ' f 1 1' -, .ai 7 V I P .1 I ' ' W' FH ' 1 Q!! M 51 I X31 M1 mn' 'UW' ' H M flu ' '- . 1 - ., 'V' ef I .ff I1 .,1, ' ,i,'1Q'-HJAZQ? v. fi' -73.217 1, .. V -, 1 '17- Qfx 25. u f .Eli 5aI'1Ha.f. Affffi is '1 ' - 'ini Sl..--' 25-1 -'Q 154551 -1 -'Tig'-' ,. 1 41- ' , ' 'fx fi A-J:-M XXX -1 ff, '- , . ,I 1 ' M rxvgf, .NJ uf, f . 1 , 1 I-If ' f'-1-1, . 1 311. A ' ' s, E1 ' 'Q'-fi t ' WYE? 1 ' ,. ' 5 ':' f fx -. X lx 'fmx :H-N 1 ix-gl X wfgfr. .11 g X, JV- -41.1 ,ffwf NN x X H u w' YR . JV N-N MK... ., ,. If , 'M 'R a' ' f1 -I. E 1,1 '1' 5 '-f1Gfi-',:1w2- - 7 T' if 1 4' -f'fi3.f.5i'11j' 'L , Agf,1Q1,,f fi? . .-.. - 951 jx :V ' - H, f 'f' 'f. .fly 'viii fl TZ! :- N-,E ws I . wg,-m' 1 4 4. . .J5 p' YY . 'Sf 4? 'I 72, ' .. - -11 . . 1 - 4 if Q , 'ff 1- ,, ,ff ff 1, Viv A , wg -1:-, aku-A I X I Mx I F 2 1 1 1 91 11 11 .I -5 .' 3 13 ,111 K x JI M' ' Hula! XV I 1 .5 ' gl I Ms ' 3 1,-4 P1 JLM! 1 5 ' 1 . 'f..,:1'- xx ff. 'W' 1- ':ilQ.?.7' - -J If 'Q ,, -,Rf If cffb- E, ' ' 1 '.! f -1. ffivkg 1 I 1 mn, 1 .',,fi . -L ,1 r w ,IG fy ' 'fs-1' in .Q . ff, . Ffa- R fa, 'ff '1-1 P XMI' 'fi I 9? 35-1 ' , x 4Hf'7y I 'iff ix Q I 54 535. ,221 W - A' .1 f .Y -f4..f,p-,,14' 1. ' , -,-fg -.' Af: 1- ff . . 13'-ff .fx ,.,. ,. I IP 719212 1 Wx' fl :V if I g V! x lf ., 1 1 1 N .- ,new I . Tig a ! 11 'vi ' 1 1' iff? .al 1 . CR , HARRY I. ALLEN, Captain 'O4. THLETIC ASSOCI TIO Athletic Board of Control President. DR. O. F. LONG Secretary-Treasurer, PROP. F. C. WOODWARD College of Liberal Arts DR. O. F. LONG. - Faculty MR. FRANK E. LORD, Alumnus DAVID HANSON, - Student Law School PROF. F. C. WOODWARD, - - Faculty NIR. W. E. HUMPHREY, - Alumnus FRANK SCHEINER, - - Student Medical School DR. W. S. l-lAI.I., - Faculty DR. G. W. WEBSTER, - - Alumnus j. W. STDIBLING, A - - Student Dental School DR. E. S. WILLARD, - - Faculty DIR. FRED W. GETHRO, - - Alumnus IVAN KERCH, 1 - - Student FRANK O. SMITH Manager of Athletics 45 Pharmacy School DR. D. C. ECCLES, Faculty DR. R. L. GIRTON, - A Alumnus AI.. WEINBERGER, - - Student Executive Committee DR. O. F. LONG MR. F. E. LORD DAVID HANSON k WWI IEIVIPEA' ALLEN 'Z' fy A MICOJILTCMYI m HUEQEQ SCUTT BLADE CMHLSWW DEWD55' 1 A 15 Jlammmsrmml P3 WMD EQ :LEEEEQXED Cj7fQ449 Qgifkgf N FOOT BALL Cx. lx. R ,Varsity Regulars 'Varsity Reserves Center DAVIS Left Guard WARD, SCOTT Right Guard CARLSON Left Tackle KAFER Right Tackle ALLEN tCaptainj Left End DAVIDSON Right End WlLLlAMSON Quarter Back JOHNSON Left l-lalf SIMPSON, VANRYPER Right l-lalf REUBER, COLTON Full Back BLAIR Northwestern 17 Northwestern - 34 Northwestern 18 Northwestern Northwestern Northwestern Northwestern Northwestern Northwestern Northwestern GILB HANNS HANSON HUNTER JENKINS KING MERRILL C. ARTHUR REUBER CAPTAIN 'O5 Season of 1904 Ft. Sheridan - Naperville - North Division Lombard Beloit Chicago De Pauw Oshkosh Illinois Minnesota O O O , 9 ,eg -' O 1231 EUS' of mg, is-S, -QX BULLOCK COWDEN FARRELL RETH MCPHERRIN POPE TURNER WATTS WEINBERGER Clif Ilkpxi ,MD , A ' f T WATT' - 55 - O 1 , . - 34 ' - O O . - 1 b 4. ., - 45 - O . I tif' . ' - 98 o 51t..,G .. , l . 12 ' ' - 6 I. fy? FX 0 ' - - 17 Q if ' QL e TT ' ,JI - ,W After the season of 1904 Football Fobs were presented to ALLEN and KAFER 1. BASE BALL 'Varsity Baseball Catcher ---- ISAACS tCaptainj Pitchers - KERSTEN, NUTTALL, BRAGG First base - - - BRAGG Second base WEINEERGER Short stop - - - BUTLER Third base - - - WILKINSON Left field - - - MCGOWAN Center field PALMER, BUGGE Right field - - - NUTTALL Season of 1904 April 13 Northwestern 8 - West Division O at Evanston April 16 Northwestern 11 P.8cS.College 10 at Evanston April 20 Northwestern 5 Chicago at Evanston April 23 Northwestern O Illinois at Evanston April 27 Northwestern 1 Beloit at Evanston tApril 30 Northwestern 1 Wisconsin at Evanston May 4 Northwestern 2 Illinois at Champaign May 11 Northwestern 1 Chicago at Chicago May 14 Northwestern 1 Notre Dame at Evanston May 16 Northwestern 1 Michigan at Evanston May 19 Northwestern 2 Wabash at Crawfordsville May 20 Northwestern 4 DePauw at Greencastle May 21 Northwestern 1 Indiana at Bloomington June 1 Northwestern 1 - Chicago at Chicago X13 Innings HARRY-A. FLEAGER ROBERT LYNCH Coach '04 Coach 'O5 52 we ls TRACK J if L Track Team BAIRD, - - - CAPTAIN X MATTHEW MCJOHNSTON 2 -Nf- WATTS SHAPER BARKER Sorority Race SMOTHERS MATTHEW for A X 52, First JONES BAIRD for A '-P, - Second SMOOT WATTS for K K F, - Third SPENCER POPE dk -Xf- SCOTT THOMAS HOLLAND WEINGERSKI Coach, 'O5 Naperville Meet One Hundred-yard Dash-MATTHEW, Northwestern University, first, WATTS, Northwestern University, secondg SMITH, Northwestern College, third. Time-O:lO 2-5. One Hundred and Twenty-yard Hurdles-SI-IAUVER, Northwestern College, first: JOHNSON, Northwestern University, second: POPE, Northwestern University, third. Time-0:16 1-5. Two Hundred and Twenty-yard D3Sh-MATTHEW, Northwestern University, first: WEINGERSKI, Northwestern University, second: GURSI-II, Northwestern University, third. Time-0:23 l-5. One Mile RUE-SPENCER, Northwestern University, first: JONES, Northwestern University, second: ELFRING, Northwestern College, third. Time-4:58 1-5. Two Hundred and Twenty-yard HUYdlCS-SHAUVER, Northwestern College, firstg SMITH, North- western College, second, POPE, Northwestern University, third. Time-0:27. Discus Throw-LUEHRINO, Northwestern College, firstg WATTS, Northwestern University, second: KOHLANDER, Northwestern College, third. Distance-lO9 feet lO inches. Shot Put-SCOTT, Northwestern University, first, LUEHRING, Northwestern College, second, SI-IAIJVER, Northwestern College, third. Distance-32 feet 8 inches. - High JUITIP-SHAUVER, Northwestern College, first, KOHLANDER, Northwestern College, SMITH, Northwestern College, and Mc-lol-INSTON, Northwestern University, tied for second and third places. Height-5 feet 7 inches. Eight Hundred and Eighty-yard RUN-BAIRD, Northwestern University, first: SPENCER, North- western University, second: JONES, Northwestern University, third. Time--211221, Broad Jump-WEINOERSKI, Northwestern University, firstg SMITH, Northwestern College, second: WATTS, Northwestern University, third. Distance-20 feet 2 inches. Pole Vault-SHAUVER, Northwestern College, firstg SMOTHERS, Northwestern University, second: KOHLANDER, Northwestern College, third. Height-9 feet 4 inches. Hammer ThYOW-LUEHRING, Northwestern College, first: SCOTT, Northwestern University, second: STULTZ, Northwestern University, third. DistancevlO4 feet 7 inches. Four Hundred and Forty-yard Dash-MATTHEW, Northwestern University, first: WATTS, Northwestern University, second: BARKER, Northwestern University, third. Time-0:53 2-5. 56 W. E. CVFLAHERTY GWER OF THE FAMOUS 'LO's FOOTBALL BANQUET 1 1 fl 1 X1 Qi E ff... f 'f TRACK RECORDS One Hundred-yard Dash, 1O seconds-A. R. JONES Two Hundred-yard Dash, 22 1-5 seconds-A. R. JONES Four Hundred and Forty-yard Run, 52 seconds - R. S. STURGEON Eight Hundred-yard Run, 2 minutes 2 seconds-R. S. STURGEON One Mile Run, 4 minutes 35 seconds-H. BAKER Two-Mile Run, 10 minutes 21 4-5 seconds-F. E. lVloRRiS Two Hundred and Twenty-yard Hurdles, 26 2-5 Seconds-J. A. BROWN One Hundred and Twenty-yard Hurdles, 16 2-5 secondsfj. A. BROWN High jump, 5 feet 9 1-4 inches-CLAUDE SMITH Broad jump, 22 feet 5 inches-O. DAVIS Pole Vault, 1O feet 6 inches-R. E. WILSON Hammer Throw, 126 feet 1 inch-ARTHUR BAIRD Shot Put, 39 feet 9 inches-ARTHUR BAIRD Discus Throw, 121 feet 3 inches--ARTHUR BAIRD 59 GIA ri ,Q Center I 1'x.,'xJ X X I N' x fx f N xy-If fik BASKET BALL MCJOHNSTON R1ght Guard COWDEN Captam ' Basket Ball Team I Left Guard-WEINBERGER Right Forward-DORNER Left Forward-C. j. MILLER Substitutes R. E. MILLER and WHITNEY Schedule Dates FEBRUARY 24 CHICAGO - - AT CHICAGO MARCH 8 BELOIT - - AT BELOIT MARCH 11 IOWA - AT EVANSTON MARCH 18 CHICAGO - - AT EVANSTON t 60 X U EH m Y ., X X QLZQW 1 KS fi Iii 181 Ar we T R iff! - I gx ' 71 I, f 1 1 11 . -, ,, tg ' ll Tawfytixf Q -Www M f f ff ffffffQfQE1?ffP'f't 7 K Q VI Founded in 1891, Corner Noble and Augusta Streets, Chicago Officers of the Settlement Association Head President --H- RAYMOND ROBINS President - - WILLIAM HARD Vice-President A - T. K. Webster Secretary - - ALICE M. HOUSTON Treasurer - - - - - NORMAN W HARRIS Resident Workers RAYMOND ROBINS MISS LOUISE SCI-IWENDENER JULIUS WENGIERSKI MISS FRIEDA MAYNARD A. K. MAYNARD MISS MARY B. COOLEY ARNOLD DRESDEN MISS MAUDE DOWDELL J. M. STILERS MRS. A. K. MAYNARD UNWEPTSHTY CUHL MRS MRS MRS MRS MRS MRS MRS MRS. MRS R. D. SHEPPARD - POTTER PALMER HENRY W. ROGERS J. C. SHAFFER - J. SCOTT CLARK - C. H. ALDRICH - 1 5 . WALTER D. SCOTI' - IRWIN REW - J. A. GRIFFIN - 1904 - 1905 Founded in 1892 Officers 62 - President Honorary Vice-Presidents First Vice-President Second Vice-President Third Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary - - Treasurer FIRHAWIEHNUTFUESB l Z 3241.111- P- il--Hllllllllvl I lflllllnilulan nnu-:-- A-:aan lllul lll I llllll Illlll lllll I ll lllll lllll lllll lllll l7 l f' 7 1 W' 2Z:1 4f 'f I, 1 mg'-WZ 1 I ffill If A A I ,IW !!,n. ,ig inn? f ' Al 1, ll 2 Jusllllr 1:My mme 10115 ,ie .5 0 Qzyfdfgflf f ' In is , M I , ,,lJr' I , P!! grain ll 'guy ,Ml I, ww' mil' .1 I' ' ffm' X Ill if nr.: 5, N 7,-:xx 'r Z7 ,ff ffm' wi qxkx ,Wins I ' s JPSX 3:5 'E f 1 ,f . 2 A MN 'lfml .ya I' X Ill L 115. 3 ull arcs . I 3 -?j .. yr v I K yi N xihnxlulk K x I NN illlull nllll i1 ' H up i ,v-- N 1 VN Y . :,1'Q,f'H4gn un Ill -qf-A maui' if ,N df, -gf s sslliml f I X 'il' BL -5 lffl 1:7 gif- A Il' ,.,-'dawg I -- 1,1 fl ull! ig' ll f W f 5 1A,,..ff-' I l,l-f-J I ,.--47' F 31:1 ,ir-S I IIIII I .1-1 51:11, ' ' QI. lie? il? 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AA .AAL - -I g llI:: :mn:EEn ,, 4...-.i -V 'A -- ' ' I I 'rw ,.1 fix -Q ,A :iq-v':'!A'Am 1 .: -unuuunnin I ' .'.' ,g,,,-,,-,M -QIV ' Y-'HR' , Q 1. --1 ---'IWC' IV! 1 3, Ile!-5 '. ' :4i'1f- ?Z5:i:f.v3A - ti: .il '. ' 'M l .,' 1' H lx 'f-- Wy -' - - f ww -X.-. -.: ' -4 'za I -6- f I - ---.111 ! -'4 H.: .iff i'r 9x:x..'. --.ww , SN 7 1 .ff '-H Mx -. ' ,i:..:.- ' -1 'A'.:ff:'s9p x X- Mm M 1 1 . - 11:11 cf' 3 '7 7 w ' 7 'f f'5lE 11 --I 'NVQ 'L 1 I, , ff' -n.1guF'1 2' Lv- I'- if . - - haf:-i -Iq INGB . y'4' lu, 4-4?1 ?f' 5 W wie... . .A ,241 - ----1: 2' ' aw , Ugefl,-' .Ie ',. ,f '71 -- 1' 1,?' ' - . ,Q Q V, Y Til I j 1' An:-fu 'Task I X li! N W ' L - l 72071 ' -'QQ 1 f fl' I faff f all' N 4' - 1 f-.. -.'., Y ,- l- - . :kv Qfguhl lr W w f Y H' 1 E72 -ygvk f A. X -'-C--'xi f-f f il'7 'A 4 X II- .',g.,,f, l .. I Q---1,4 X453 91-iid. 1-1. U M -1444? .x I X-T .. AQ- -1-L L' 1-I, L A , W - H Q W '-.T ff px 5-ZBJEQK ' W '4- '. I N ' ' .1 , ,Q V-fb! 4. - V E N7-1 - L- If.: 1 1 ' ' ' ' , rj' 'Qx xx 1 f . - ' ' 7 '4 f Fir' , ' 'wx Inf. ,Jyf Q f, D 1, :ff ff' - 1. Q5 - - . X -f- - Q - - f I RHP- f5,'fT:,. i -PT:-' 'Wo' - jf Lf-Q f-f-f-'F -1-24 :X rg:-2 '- '-ul ,,, I-- M:'-mn,-,,.,.f . 7 A . . I ' N' W nf nf A Sigma Chi Omega Chapter Established at Northwestern University, june 23, 1869 Fratres in Urbe M. C. BRAGDON C. B. KIMBALL CHARLES A. WIGHTMAN ROLLIN T. WOODYATT H. H. KELSEY j. B. WHITCOMB WILLIAM G. LEISENRING LYNN A. WILLIAMS CHARLES H. BARTLETI' C. B. EYER R. ROY SHUMAN DAVID D. THOMPSON Mjj. KIRKMAN C. H. PENDLETON GEORGE H. ELLIS WILLIAM A. HEATH WILLIAM B. DWIGHT PERCY E. PICKRELL CORNELIUS B. BARNARD J. E. DEERING H. D. RAWSON ROBERT D. HOLABIRD G. B. WILLIAMS JOHN A. SEXAUER DEXTER P. DONALDSON HENRY A. PEARSONS EDWARD H. WEBSTER N. M. HUTCHINSON FRED P. VOSE JOHN 1. FLANNERY WALLACE W. CUMNOCK LORIN C. COLLINS, JR. PAUL W. CLEVELAND EDWIN L. SHUMAN FREDERIC H. WILSON GEO. P. MERRIOIQ WALTER S. VOSE F. M. BREWER ARTI-IURT. MCINTOSH J. K. BROWN FRANK M. ELLIOT PAUL B. RANSOM ERNEST WOODYAT-T F. D. RAYMOND C. P. WHEELER A. D. CURRIER WILLIAM M. BRAY VICTOR C. ELSTROM Fratres in Facultate NATHAN SMITH DAVIS, JR., A. M., M. D. FRANK TAYLOR ANDREWS, A. M., M. D. E. WYLLYS ANDREWS, A. M., M. D. ELLIS K. KERR, A. M.. M. D. Fratres in Universitate Law School WILLIAM V. BROTHERS HENRY S. LIGHTHALL CHARLES O. RUNDALL College of Liberal Arts .hmiors CLAUDE B. CUMNOCK WALTER G. MCINTOSH IS'oplI09I10res CHARLES S. ROBERTS LLOYD R. ROBERTS RALPH C. TAYLOR WILLIAM J. TAYLOR GUY M. BLAKE RAYMOND O. WARRINGTON 1'17'6SIL7l7,67L WILLARD J. DIxON MIOHN L. MOEI-ILE ROBERT W. LEACH Pledge CLINTON P. MERRIOK Colors Light Blue and Gold 64 x Phi Kappa Sigma Upsilon Chapter Established at Northwestern University, July 8, 1872 Fratres in Urbe E. J. WILLIAMS, Ex-'96, G N E C. F. W. CLEVELAND, '73 W. A, PHILLIPS, '83, 111 B li H. W. WALKER, Ex-'98 C. S. RADDIN, '84 E. R. M. V. A. H. MCCONNELL, Ex-'Ol, 9 N E F. R. L. SHEPPARD, '94, 9 N E, Ll' A 'lf J. W. F. SINGLETON, '72 F. T. MURRAY, '96, 6 N E W. A. DYCHE, 83, 4' B K F. C. HOLLINCSI-IEAD, '92 W. O. COLLINS, Armour L. K. STEWART, '94 V. E. BROWN, '98 Inst., 'OZ F. R. R. RICE, '78 QIJINLAN, Ex-'83 SMITH, '92, 'll B K M. GRIDLEY, '83 HALL, '94, 9 N E RICE, '83, 4' B K PECKHAM, Ex-'04 DYCI-IE, '80, QT' B K MOCKFORD, Ex-'03 HITCHENS, Ex-'03 W. J. CRUMPTON, Wisconsin O4 S. S. JACKSON, A, 86 L. M. OLDS, '96 G. M. SILVERTHORN, 'OO F. L. NEES, '03 Fratres in Facultate FRANK J. A. JOHNSON, A. M., M. D., Il' B K STANLEY P. BLACK Ph B M VERNON J. HALL, Ph. D., M. D., 9 N E Fratres in Universitate College of Liberal Arts IS'erI1frIrs DAVID T. l-IANSON CHARLES S. BLAIR F. HERBERT MCDOUGAL .lu nfurs ARTHUR J. BLAIR HOWARD M ROSLNE Soplz 0 Ill orfs CARL S. LONG RALPH W. ROOT 1 I'zfslI 171 0 II RAYMOND GILBERT WYNNE MCDOUGAL LLEWELLYN MERRELL HAROLD S. MCMULLEN Pledges HENRY G. GOODSELL J. F. JOSEPH Colors Black and Old Gold 69 Beta Theta Pi Rho Chapter Established at Northwestern University, july 3, l873 Fratres in Urbe FRANK E. LORD WARD B. SAWYER PHILIP R. SHUMWAY ROBERT B. SAWYER WILFRED F. BEARDSLEY GEORGE W. WALL C. M. HOWE ROBERT LARIMER PAUL j. PITNER JOHN H. QUINLAN T. M. BAXTER CHAS. G. LEWIS EDWIN E. ELLIS HENRY S. SHEDD H. F. POST JOHN EASTMAN CLARKE J. TlSDEL FRANCIS C. MILLER ALBERT D. SANDERS, GEO. H. MILLER FRANK MCELWAIN WM. D. DEAN LAWRENCE J. HESS C. W. SPOFFORD LOUIS P. SCOVILLE ARTHUR W. WOODS THOMAS A. LEWIS HARRY A. FLEAGER A. W. UNDERWOOD W. E. MYERS J FREDERICK CLATWORTHY WM. A. HAMILTON ERNEST H. EVERSZ HARRY P. PEARSONS WM. A. HARD S. W. HUNT WALTER G. LOGAN J. A. BURHANS W. T. SMITH GEORGE A. FOSTER EARLE S. BARKER SHELDON DICKINSON WILLIAM O. MAT-rHEW WM. WHITEHEAD C. H. ZIMMERMAN, SR. Fratres in Facultate JAMES TAFT HATFIELD HERMAN CHURCHILL ARTHUR R. EDWARDS School of Music JOHN M. ROSBOROUGI-I FRED L. MCKINNEY GORDON S. FULCHER LOUIS C. WEST JOHN H. LONG PETER S. GROSSCUP E. T. EDGERLY Fratres in Universitate Law School H. F. BALLARD College of Liberal Arts Samoa-.S CHARLES E. FLETCHER CHARLES R. BRAGDON LAWRENCE N. DEGOLYER DECLIFFORD CHADDOCK H. G. WINCHELL FRANK C. WHITEHEAD CHAS. A. PHILLIPS EDWARD W. RAWLlNS JOHN H. KEDZIE, JR. GEORGE F. BALLOU A. S. KIMBALL CLAUDE R. ALLING JOSEPH D. HUBBARD HENRY C. MORSE EDMUND S. NOYES PARKE BROWN W. B. NORTON LOUIS N. DODGE CHAS. W. PATTERSON J. H. SCOTT Garrett Biblical Institute J. WESLEY HOLLAND SCOTT S. NORTRUP ALMON A. GREENMAN LYMAN H. NORTH Juniors MYRON E. TAYLOR SHELBY M. HARRISON HOWARD C. MCPHERRIN JOHN C. KING S0j7Il0l7lOl'l'S L. ARTHUR WATTS EARL BRONSON MELVIN M. HAWLEY CHARLES W. RAMSHAW EDWIN S. BRADEN Fresizmen PHILIP RAYMOND H. GARMAN LUTKIN THOMAS M. WHITSON JAMES W. NORTHROP J. STUART AlNSLlE DEAN FARLEY Colors Pink and Blue 70 . Phi Kappa Psi Founded at jefferson College, Pennsylvania, 1852 Illinois Alpha Chapter Established at Northwestern 1864. Re-established 1878 Fratres in Urbe CONWAY WING HILLMAN, A. B., C. E., fb I3 K WESLEY LINCOLN KNOX JOHN AUSTIN BELLOWS, Ph. B WILLIAM GRISWOLD BURT ALBERT EDWIN BUTLER ALBERT MONTACUE FERRY JOHN TRUMAN LING THEODORE GRAHAM LEWIS, A. B. PERKINS BURNAM BASS, A. B. RALPH RENWICK MCKINNEY JOHN LEWIS ALABASTER, A. M. FREDRICK SIBLEY LOOMIS, A. B. FRANK STANBERY JOHN EMIT ELLIS, LL. B. JAMES PARKINSON GRIER, A. B. JAMES FRANKLIN OATES, A. B. JAMES KELLY BASS, A. B. CHARLES MACAULEY STUART, A. M., D. D., fl' B K CHARLES CLARENCE BONER, B. S. WILLIAM WHEELOCK SICKLES, A. B. DORR EDWIN KIMBALL HUGH WILLIAM MCLEAN CHARLES HORSWELL, Ph. D., B. D. WIRT EDWIN HUMPHREY, Ph, M., LL. B., fb T3 K FREDERICK HILTMAN CARPENTER, A. B. ERNENST FRANCIS BURCHARD, M. S., KP B K JOHN WILEY FRANCIS, A. B., B. D. WILLIAM SANBORN YOUNG RALPH WILLIAM HOLMES HENRY WILLIAM CRAVEN CERHARDT CORNELL MARRS, A. B. FREDERICK A. COLLMAN CHARLES EDWIN LESLIE WALTER A. SAWYER . CHARLES DRENNEN MARSH JOHN HORNBROOK, A. B., C. E. WINFIELD SCOTT HALL, A. M., Ph. D., M. D., N Z N, IP B K FRANK WHITNEY CARPENTER Fratres in Facultate CHARLES MACAULEY STUART, D. D., fb B K WINFIELD SCOTT HALL, A. M., Ph. D., M. D., N E N, KP B K ROBERT BRUCE PREBLE, A. Nl., M. D., 'lf P E Fratres in Universitate Law School HARRY SHAVER, 'O7 THOMAS MORRIS, 'O7 J. STEWART RENWICK, 'O7 Dental School GEORGE C. MCCANN Garrett Biblical Institute Medical School A. TURLEY STEPHENSON DON WEST DEAL, ID P E College of Liberal Arts SEIIIOVS FRANK R. NEWMAN EDWARD S. CRAVEN .funz'In'S JOHN A. SLOCUM lSAAC E. SPRINGER DEAN S. FANSLER Freslz Ill fn, BRUCE S. WEAVER RAYMOND F. 1-IARTMAN BARCE E. LEONARD DALE L. MARTIN EDWARD R. LYON 75 Delta Upsilon Founded l834. Northwestern Chapter Established February, 1880 Fratres in Urbe CHARLES ARND, A. B., LL. D. FREDERICK ARND, A. B., LL. D. WALTER S. ASHER, A. B. WILLIAM A. BUROH, A. B. WALTER F. BROWN, A. B. WILLARD K. CLEMENT, Ph. D., QP B K JOHN M. CURRAN, A. B. CHAS. G. DAWES, A. B. PHILIP W. MOORE, S. B. Lucms C. FULLER, B. S. ROBERT HOLDEN. A. B. CHAS. S, HARMON, LL. D. WAYNE F. BROWNING LOUIS G.JONES PARK E.fSIMMONS, LL. B. BENJAMIN A, GREENE, A, BJ D, D,, 49 BK WILLIAM R. PARKES, B. S., M. D. SHELBY M. SINGLETON, A. M., LL. B. WILLIAM R. WALRATH, A. B., fb B K ARTHUR L. WHITELY . JOHN W. SCOTT, A. B. JOHN C. SINCLETON, A. B. JOHN Q. ADAMS, Ph. B., fb B K GEORGE CRAIGE STEWART, Ph. B. DAVID I. WILLIAMS, Ph. B. CLARENCE M. THORNE, A. B., LL. B. Fratres in Facultate. JOHN I-i. GRAY, Ph, D., dv B K GEORGE W. l-IOUOH, A. M., LL. D., fl? B K WILLIAM A. LONG, Ph. D., 42 B K CHAS. B. ELDER, LL. B. LEONARD L. SKELTON, B. D , M. D. THEODORE WHITTELSEY, PH. D., QD F, E E ALLAN B. KANAVEL, Ph. B., M. D., 41 BK, N E N WILLIAM C. DANFORTH, B.S., M. D., Deru Fratres in Universitate. Law School MORTON H. EDDY, A. B., A X ROY E. HOWSER KENNETH H. DAVENPORT, A. B., fb B K., Deru., A X Medical School EVERETT B. WILLIAMS, B. S., N E N RAWSON J. PICKARD, A K K R. O. l-IUMMEL, B. S., A K K College of Liberal Arts A Smiors W. GARFIELD RILEY GILBERT I-i. CADY B. FRANK BROWN I-IEYE EILERS Juniors PAUL S. ST. CLAIR THOMAS SCOTT Sophomores W.CLAY SMOOT ELMER J. SHAFER JOHN P. GILBRETH Freshmen M. RAYMOND TILLOTSON FLETCHER B. POOLE Colors Sapphire, Blue and Old Gold 76 Alpha Phi Beta Chapter Established at Northwestern in 1881 Sorores in Urbe DR. ANNA D. GLOSS, Ex-'84 MARY HENRY ROSSITER, '85 LOUISE CARTER HOWARD, '86 ELIZABETH EDWARDS FIELD, '89 ERIE VAIL DACCAY, Ex-'90 MARY MALTMAN BASS. '91 MINNIE RUTH TERRY, '91 MAY BENNETT DYC1-IE, '91 FANNIE ALABASTER, '93 MINNIE TURNER, '94 GRACE GERMAINE HOLMES, '94 ANNA MILLER SCOTT, '95 LULU MOORE, Ex-'95 CORA PERKINS LETTS, Ex-'95 ELSIE HOPKINS BILLINGSLEA, '95 JESSIE THOMPSON BALDERSTON, '95 ETHEL GRAY SCOTT, '96 RUTH BAIRD MITCHELL, '96 ROSE BATES, Ex-'97 MARY PLIMPTON ALABASTER, '97 lNEZ PETTIBONE HILL, Ex-'Ol EDITH DEAN WHITLOCK, 'O2 HARRIET NORTON, 'O3 ALICE ROBBINS ROCKWELL, '97 MARION ZIMMERMAN POOLER, 'Ol MARY NORTON, Ex-'OZ AMBER EWEN TAYLOR, EX-'O3 EMMA STANBERRY, Ex-'O4 Sorores in Facultate MARTHA FOOTE CROW ANN ESTELLE GARAWAY Sorores in Universitate S077 z'o rs HELEN SLOCUM EMILY HARRIS ORA DAVENPORT GRACE BOLSTER JIl7l1'0l'S EMMA PATTEN FRANCES GRAVES PATTI RODGERS Soplzonzorex HARRIET LANE LOUISE HOBART HELEN COBB LUCILE RADER F rash 772071 MARGARET KlNGSLEY ALICE FULTON SARAH DERTHICR MARGARET MCMULLEN LULU BUTLER ALICE NEELD Colors Bordeaux and Silver Gray 81 Delta Gamma Sigma Chapter Established at Northwestern University in 1882 ' Sorores in Urbe MAUDE ANGUISH HELEN NAY LOUISE CONGDON MARGARET DEWER COOK CORA TARR BOYD LORINE WASHBURNE PIERCE AVIS WINCI-IELL GRANT SARAH FOSTER BRIGGS ELIZABETH REVELL JOSEPHINE HASKELL MRS. WILLIAM CALDWELL LOUISE RICE RAGNA HANGAN LELA FOSTER JULIA STARKWEATHER ELEANOR HILLMAN GRACE HINSDALE EMMA WARREN WARE MARGARET MORRIS ANNA HITCHCOCK ANNA CRANDON HELEN HARVEY WILLIAMS ANNA MCDONALD ALIDA WHITE SHERMAN LOUISE REDFIELD MILLER HARRIET REDFIELD MILLER LOUISE WHITEHEAD EOYNTEN BESS HARBERT MARY RAYMOND ELIZABETH BRAGDON ROWENA FARGO GERTRUDE BRADLEY ANNA SMITH CORINNE HARBERT FLORENCE CARPENTER SMITH RHODA GOOCH NINA WINANS ELIZABETH WHITELY IRENE COOK PHILLIPS VIRGINIA SHEPARD MARGARETHE SHEPPARD RUTH CRANDON MARY LORD ALICE MCCAEE Sorores in Universitat:-3 Post Graduates ELIZABETH HILLMAN HELEN HOLBROOK LUISE RAEDER Sem'01's ELIZABETH WILLIAMS .Ill Il iors ELLA TRELEASE HAZEL SPENCER Sf1p7w'nwre.s FRANCES HALL ALICE KEITH ELLEN LLOYD ESTHER BARNARD I'1'l'l S1l nzen EUNICE M. MCINTOSH HELEN ALDRICI-I HELEN HEILMAN ALICE CHRISTOPHER RUTH GATES MABEL GASCOIGNE GERTRUDE CONGDON 82 Kappa Kappa Gamma Upsilon Chapter Established at Northwestern University, April 18, 1882 Sorores in Urbe JESSIE BLISS SYMES ZILPHA HULL HAR-RIET MOORE THOMAS BELLE ALLING PADDIN GRACE CRIPPEN EMMA THOMPSON SHUMAN ELLEN GREEN FISK GERTRUDE REED BEEMAN GRACE SCRIPPS DYCHE EMMA ALLING ESTHER MILLER LUCY SHUMAN MASSLICK ELIZABETH BRONSON FRANCES SIMPSON MARY MORSE MINNIE HAMLIN CREIGHTON LAURA WHITLOCK DART MARY BROWN EDITH BAKER DIXON HELEN BLISS EDITH BRADLEY j. ANNA CARPENTER HALL Sorores in Facultate ELIZABETH RAYMOND WOODWARD ISABEL MORSE WINIFRED HULL ELLA BRADLEY Sorores in Universitate School of Music HAZEL SEERLEY School of Oratory EDNA TERRY ELSIE VANDERPOOL College of Liberal Arts SenI'o1's POLLY LITTLE HAZEL SCI-INAEELE Jil I II fora FRANCES NORTHROP HENRIETTA SOHREECK SUjJll077l07'L'3 IVA BISHOP FRANCES BOWDLEA Fresh mrn ISAEEL MABIN Colors Dark and Light Blue Flower Fleur-de-liS 87 OLIVE GAIL SEELEY FLORENCE SPECK HENRY M. KIDDER ARTHUR W. LITTLE WM. S. HARBERT HERBERT F. WHEAT GEORGE T. KELLY NICHOLAS G. lGLEHART HARRY F. DICKINSON ANDREW COOKE RICHARD NORTHRUP NED J. CONLEY Phi Delta Theta Illinois Alpha Chapter Established at Northwestern University, Re-established, 1886 Fratres in Urbe CLYDE M. CARR CHARLES A. STEWART FRED W. GlLLE'l'l'E EDWARD J. MURPHY HARRY E. WEESE W. R. PAGE MALCOLM H. BAIRD J. ARTHUR DIXON JOHN BARTHOLOMEW ROBERT S. MATTISON Fratres in Facultate l858 FRANK J.' R. MITCHELL CURTIS H. REMY H. H. MALLORY JNO. M. CREAMER HOUSTON B. WATT GEORGE NORTHRUP CENTER C. CASE FRANK W. PHELPS HARRY CURRAN LEON L. HEBBLETHWAITE WILLIAM A. OLDFATHER FREDERICK S. DIEELER HUGH T. PATRICK WILLIAM R. CUBBIN CHARLES A. ELLIOTT Fratres in Universitate Medical School JOHN A. GREEN Law School FRANK H. SCHEINER JOHN B. ROMANS HAROLD A. ROMANS MAX MURDOCK HARRY I. ALLEN JAMES VAN RYPER CI-IAUNCEY C. COLTON NOBLE B. JUDAH College of Liberal Arts Seniors ELMER FRANCIS BLU ROBERT WILSON BAIRD JNO. FREDERICK WULFF OLIN A. WAKEMAN ROYAL ANDREW WILLSON Jzmzfors ORIS HASTINGS Sophomores ELMER S. ALBRIJTON JOHN LAURANCE BARKER FLINT BONDURANT Fvuesh m an LEON T. WILSON RUSSELL S. EEGG ALLEN RADER GEORGE J. Cox 88 x 'V . Kappa Alpha Theta Tau Chapter Established at Northwestern University, September 29, 1887 Sorores in Urbe ALTA MILLER, '97 MARGARET PEARSONS ORCHARD, Ex-'O3 SUE WELTON SHEPPARD, Ex-'96 IDA SAWYER, '96 HARRIET ILLSLEY, Ex-'05 HENRIETTA JENNINOS OATEs, '93 EDNA COOKE, Ex-'03 RUTH RAY, Ex-'02 EDNA FLESHEIM MERWIN, Ex-'98 LIDA SCOTT BROWN, Ex-'95 DIXIE BAGSHAWE KIMBALL, Ex-'97 NELLE FLESHEIM MURRAY, '96 AGNES HAYDEN, 'O1 ALICE SPIEs PEAKES, '96 EVA HALL, '90 JESSIE SAWYER, '97 MARY ORTH WEBSTER, Ex-'OZ JosEPHINE MORPHY SHARP, Ex-'04 JANE DALE, Ex-'O7 IRENE GRAvEs BENNET, Ex-'02 RUTH KIMBALL DOUGLASS, Ex- CATHERINE WILSON, Ex-'06 ANNETTE BUTLER, Ex-'98 MARY GLOSS, '91 , Lois RICE MCMULLEN, Ex-'95 LEONE GOULD, Ex-'92 LILLIAN RICE, Ex-'95 ELIZABETH DOUGLASS, Ex-'06 '06 JOSEPHINE WEBSTER, Ex-'O5 University of Wisconsin Leland Stanford University - DePauw University - Hanover University University of Minnesota MARY EVANS MAsON, CARRIE BEAN BURWELL, CARRIE SMITH CURME, - AGNES GIBONY OLDEATHER, WILHELMINA THOMPSON GILL, Sorores in Universitate Juniors EDITH LITTLE FLORENCE JENKINS RUTH DALE MABEL CURRER LEILA THISTLEWOOD Sophomores SARAH YOUNT FLORENCE POND Frfshmcn GERTRUDE CURIvIE GWENN CLARK HELEN HOLTON JULIA EvANs Colors Black and Gold 93 Gamma Phi Beta Epsilon Chapter Established at Northwestern University, October 13, 1888 Sorores in Urbe CLARA WEIR STOCKLEY, Michigan, '83 GERTRUDE BUNDY PARKER, Michigan, '93 M. LOUISE WILLIAMS, Smith College, '95 ANTOINETTE SHRYOCK, Northwestern, '91 OLIVE FOSTER CORLETT, Northwestern, '91 M. lMOGENE KEAN, Northwestern, 'OO HOPE WOODBURY GIBSON, Wisconsin OLIVE MCDOWELL, Barnard College GRACE LASTUR BERRY, Northwestern, '98 MARGARET LITTLE DUNI-IAM, Syracuse FLORENCE MITCHELL SMITH, Northwestern Sorores in Universitate SC'T7,2'U'I'.S SIDNEY HALL BERNICE WORKS ETHEL WORKS TI-IEKLA ROMFEL J1m1'ors GRACE LASHER LAURA WILBERTON ALICE LYONS JOSEPHINE RUSSELL AGNES MACDONALD SUll7l0'77'l07'6S FLORENCE WALLACE MARY BIERER SARAH SHUTE F1'e.sl1men HELEN COWLES LAURA MCCARTY EDWINA COPE RUTH WOODBURY School of Music HELEN R. JACKSON ANNE MCCLELLAND Colors Light and Dark Brown Flower Carnation 94 w w 1 Delta Tau Delta Beta Pi Chapter Established at Northwestern University, March 18, 1893 Fratres in Urhe E. L. SCOTT R. B. DENNIS R. C. BROWN A. V. COFFMAN E. R. LADD O. H. BASQUIN G. R. BROWN ALBERT V. HORN M. O. NARRAMORE H. VAN PETTEN D. A. HAYES C. S. JEFFERSON J. T. BROWN ROSCOE S. VAN PELT HORACE BAKER C. G. MARQUARDT FRANK E. MORRIS E. W. ENGSTROM G. W. l-lILL D. A. HAYES RUSH M. HESS Fratres in Facultate O. H. BASQUIN E. W. ENGSTROM R. B. DENNIS R. C. LIBBERTON ARTHUR FRANK O. SMITH A. E. SI-IIRLEY W. ODELL SI-IEFARD ALVA B. SOWERS R. E. MILLER ELMER l-l. FOUTRA RALFI-I YI . HORN WILLIAM ALFRED MANN Fratres in Universitate School of Medicine C. W. MOGG School of Law C. REUBER GEORGE FOLK College of Liberal Arts Semiors HORACE G. SMITH Juniors DWIGHT C. HUBBARD FRED F. SI-IAUVER Suplm11IoreS MINER RAYMOND TI-IADDEUS S. SNELL l I'eslI17'IwL RODS ER P. MARSDEN Colors Purple, White and Gold 99 D. R. NELSON C. B. GILLSON MERRITT N IGI-IOL POPE ROY W. EGBERT GEORGE A. ROCHELEAU RALPH C. j. WALLACE GEORGE E. FARRELL JAMES A. TURNER SNELL F. MANSON Pi Beta Phi Illinois Epsilon Chapter Established at Northwestern University in 1894 Sorores in Urbe MAE DOLAND MRS. JOHN HAMILTON l'lED'NIG MUELLER LENORE NECUS AMY YOUNG BINGI-IAM ELLA MCNULTY JOHNSON NELL OVBRIEN SADIE THOMPSON MRS. HAROLD E. KNAFP MRS. J. E. GEORGE MABEL HOLDBROOK KING MARJORIE L. FITCH GRACE DOLAND V FLORENCE REYNOLDS LAURA OYBRIEN MARY ISABELLREYNOLDS EDITH THOMPSON JOSEFHINE COLLIER EMMA DOLAND LUCY DERICKSON GERTRUDE BALDWIN MABEL ELLIS Soror in Facultate CORINNE COHN Sorores in Universitate School of Oratory Svnior ELEANOR JUST Juniors NINA WILLIAMS ETHEL DECKARD College of Liberal Arts JI wziofns MARGARET HAMMOND MARIE HAMMOND Soplzomores LENA LINN NADINE ROBERTSON F7'l'HllTH67l CLARA LUCY GLOSS ANNA THOMPSON AMY ONKEN MYRTELLE ROGERS LILI I-IOCHBAUM IOO ' Sigma Alpha Epsilon Illinois Psi Omega Chapter Established at Northwestern University, October 17, 1894 Fratres in Urbe WILLIAM COLLIN LEVERE DAVID K. SMITH ALBERT Z. HORNING ARTHUR H. KNOX THOR H. ERICKSON WILLIAM S. GAZLAY ERNEST H. PRATT HARRY S. BUNTING GEO. P. DERICKSON Frater in Facultate WALTER DAVIS Fratres in Universitate Medical School CHAS. G. SABIN GEO. P. SHILDLER NEWELL C. GILBERT School of Music WALTER SQUIRE School of Oratory JAMES ALLEN WHITMORE I College of Liberal Arts Seniors PAYSON L. NUSEAUM H. A. ERNEST CHANDLER GRANVILLE H. TWINING JULIUS G. CARLSON Jlmiors HERMAN L. BROCKWAY CHAS. A. BRIGGS SYLVESTER SPARLING A Soplzomores CLYDE D. FOSTER JOHN E. RUSSEL AMBLER B. PA'l'I'ON WALTER E. LONG FRANK G. ADAMS IPVESILHZGIL ARTHUR T. JOLLEY DON E. HOPKINS HAROLD H. SCOTT Pledge RAYMOND P. BOWMAN Colors Royal Purple and Old Gold Flower Violet lO5 JOHN H. HOSTETTER JAMES D. LE CRON AURELIUS C. ROOT Delta Delta Delta Upsilorl Chapter Established at Northwestern University in 1895 I Honorary Members MRS. ELLEN EASTMAN LoCY MRS. LOUISE VAN GROTENHUIS Sorores in Urbe TERESSA METCALF BONAR EVA BARKER FROULA HELEN HANDY AMY H. OLGEN MINETTE M. BROCKWAY FLORENCE F. ENGSTROM CORA ELLIS CHARLOTTE GREEN ISABEL LOW CHARLOTTE REICHMANN EDNA WOLFE PEARSON Sorores in Universitate College of Liberal Arts .fu rtiors FRANCES TURNER LILA SNELL MYRA POWERS GRACE HARRIS Sophomores EDITH CASSIDY BLANCHE LAWSON IRMAGARDE LEACI-I MABELLE MILLER RUTH MINIUM RENA HANDY ELEANOR HALL JEANETTE WELCH Freshmen LUCY HORNBROOK ZETA MASSY HELEN WELCH School of Oratory GRACE JAMISON HERBY JOHNSON School of Music ELIZABETH WARD 106 ,, ,,,,,,, ,HA Deru Senior Fraternity Established at Northwestern University, January, 1896 Active Members SCOTT NORTRUP CHAS. FLETCHER O. S. HUBBART F. O. SMITH MERRITY POPE H. A. E. CHANDLER GRANVILLE TWINING ELMER F. BLU ROBT. BAIRD E. S. CRAVEN W. G. RILEY Alumni 1896 C. S. PETERS L. H. LOWE S. M. MILLER GEO. BOOTH A. W. CRAVEN HENRY B. MERWIN C. D. MCWILLIAMS A. E. PUCKRIN E. H. FRETZ C. W. SPOFFORD C. N. JENKS W. P. KAY F. J. R. MITCHELL 1897 LEROY W. WARREN O. H. MACLAY C. S. WITTER E. J. RIDINGS C. H. MOWRY T. M. FOWLER J. W. R. CONNOR 1898 G. H. TOMLINSON M. P. MITCHELL C. H. PENDLETON F. H. HALLER W. A. HERDIEN J. H. SABIN B. L. PERKINS G. H. MILLER 1899 FRANK MCCLUSKY C. M. THORNE R. PRICKETI' E. W. RAWLINS F. A. MOORE J. M. SPRINGER E. L. LONGPRE A. R. JONES C. M. C. BUNTAIN 1900 H. B. GOUGH DE G. CHADDOCK N. P. WILLIS E. R. PERRY W. C. DANFORTH P. E. THOMAS C. H. GREEN R. S. STURGEON T. V. HART W. A. HARD J. B. PORTER 1901 ALFRED T. LLOYD HORACE S. BAKER GEORGE E. NICHOLS LOUIS CLEMENTS CYRUS E. DIETZ ALTON F. JOHNSON ALBERT D. SANDERS, JR. PERCY R. DAVIS ROGER L. DENNIS HARRY A. FLEAGER HARRY l. ALLEN JOHN BARNES PARKE BROW Deceased. JOSEPH DUTTON ARTHUR G. TERRY FRANK W. PHELPS 1902 MALCOLM H. BAIRD HASSE O. ENWALL LESLIE P. KINCAID FRANK H. WEST HARRY E. 1903 W. l-I. BLAKE E. S. JACKSON C. P. MCCONNELL 1904 KENNETH H. DAVENPORT WILLIAM S. GAZLAY N HUGH W. MCP WEESE HERRlN Colors Blue, Green and White lll RALPH B. DENNIS PAUL W. SCHLORFF CI-IAS. W. PATTERSON WILSON M. CRAWFORD ARTHUR J. ELLIOTT WARD W. PIERSON ARTHUR W. CAMPBELL FRED L. MCKINNEY FRANCIS G. PORTER CHARLES E. STAHL FRANK E. MORRIS C. GILBERT SABIN F. E. SMITH Sigma Nu Gamma Beta Chapter Established at Northwestern University, january, 1898 Fratres in Urbe EDWARD E. SILK G. 1. BELL J. C. SANDERSON CLARENCE J. LUTHER C. H. WOOD CHARLES PINOI-IEON R. W. MILLIZEN H. H. MOORE FRANCIS H. HENDERSON E. E. OLP C. H. HAILE Fratres in Universitate Medical School GUY W. LARIMER ARTHUR H. SANFORD College of Liberal Arts Post Graduate E. N. PARMALEE Senior E. W. GSELL ,hmiof-s JAMES G. WILKINSON GILBERT H. RECH EVERETT E. BRAGG CARL E. JORDAN Sflphomowls EARL B. KITTLEMAN ERNEST O. BENDIX FRANCIS L. HARWOOD CI-IARLES EDGAR HONNOLD Freshmen MILTON E. BELL GEORGE L. APFELBACH FREDRICK A. WESTON WARREN E. KNAFP T. HAROLD GILSON Colors VJhite, Black and Gold 112 Chi Omega Xi Chapter Established at Northwestern University, December 6, 1901 Patronesses MRS. j. C. SHAFFER MRS. B. C. ROGERS MRS. J. F. PEASE MRS. J. G. DECKER Sorores in Urbe JULIA WINCI-IELL, 'O3 MABEL A. DECKER, '04 EERTIIA WELLS, Ex-O6 MAEEL H. HUBBARD, University of Illinois LOUISE LAKE, University of Arkansas Sorores in Universitate College of Liberal Arts Gracluazfe Sludent ELEANOR F. LEWIS Seniors ALICE E. SHURTLEFF LELIA W. HARWOOD Sophomorccs ETHEL SWITZER MABEL l-IAZELTON LILLIAN W. PATTERSON QUEEN S. SHEPHERD Fl 68fL'171Lf77, l-IALLEY A. PEASE LETA W. MAGEE I-I. GRACE RANDALL School of Oratory Sem'or.9 EDNA M. TOBIAS ELIZABETH W. KUEHMSTED Colors Cardinal and Straw Flower Vxfhite Carnation l 17 Zeta Phi Eta Established at Cumnock School of Oratory, October 3, 1893 Sorores in Urbe MRS. GUY PEIRCE MRS. PERCY PICKRELL MRS. WALTER SHORT MARY MANSON MOLLY SPROULE ELIZABETH Cl-IAPIN Soror in Facultate ISABELLE LOVEDALE Sorores in Universitate Seniors RUTH LILIAN I-IEMENWAY SUSAN LOONEY ORA GARVER HELEN THOMAS MABEL PARSI-IALL ESTHER HARSHBERGER WINIFRED WARD Juniors VIRGINIA I-IAIGI-IT FANNIE BERNHISEL FLORENCE ASI-ICRAFT ROXY BUTLER PEARL WALTON HAZEL WAGNER Colors Green and White Flower White Rose 118 1 Ei Alpha Chi Omega Gamma Chapter Established at Northwestern University School of Music, November 14, 1890 Sorores in Urbe MRS. RALPH DENNIS MRS. PERCIS BRADSTREET ELLA S. YOUNG MRS, GEO. W. WOOLEY THEODORA CHAFFEE RUTH V. INGLES CLARA GURNEE LORETTA O,BRIEN MABEL SILLER MARION EWELL PRATT LOUISE WHITE MARY MARSHALL MAEEL JONES MRS. GEO. MITCHELL MRS. E. W. KIDDER MRS. W. I-l. WYOKOEE MARIE WHITE Sorores in Facultate MRS. GEORGE A, COE ' MRS. ELENOR KIRKHAM GRACE ERICSON l-IEDWIO BRENNEMAN Sorores in Universitate School of Music Post Grczcluazfes ESTER l-IINMAN BERTHA PORTER BERTHA MOCORD S6IZi'0l'S RACHEL WILLIAMS JULIA MARSHALL JImz'ors HAZEL DE GROFF MAE SMITH BESS LINDER School of Oratory ANNA M. SUYLANDT College of Liberal Arts Sophomore FANNIE GILLAN Colors Scarlet and Olive Green Flower Scarlet Carnation 123 Sigma Alpha Iota Beta Chapter Established as Emanon at Northwestern School of Music, November 9, 1903, and initiated into Sigma Alpha loia, December 3, 1904 Honorary Members MDE. LOUISE l-loIvIER MISS MURIEL FOSTER Patronesses MRS. J. S. CLARK MRS. I-I. C. COLBY MRs. J. H. GRAY Soror in Urbe ALICE HURN Sorores in Facultate NINA SHUMWAY KNAPP BERTI-IA BEEMAN Sorores in Universitate School of Music Post Gmduazfes NELL FLODIN ELIZABETH Sl-IOTWELL MAUDE MARCEAU Senior BERTI-IA I-IARDIN Junior ELSIE ORCHARD Soplzom ores MARY HEA VIRTINE FROST LURA BAILEY Freshnmn GRACE Woon GRACE LOOMIS OLIVE MCCHESNEY MYRTLE LE CoIvITE NORMA OWEN Colors Red and White 124 ,f-f DR. G. V. BLACK Delta Sigma Delta Eta Chapter Established at Northwestern University Dental School in 1891 DR. E. J. MAWHINNEY DR. EDMUND NOYES DR. J. W. BIRKLAND DR. LAUGI-ILIN R. R. CLENDENEN F. P. LA BOUNTA Fratres in Facultate DR. THOS. L. GILNIER DR. A. D. BLACK DR. IRA B SELLERY Demonstrators DR. G. B. MAOEARLAND DR. CHAS. BAKER Fratres in Universitate Officers W. K. HULL - - R. A. WEIR P. W. GURLEY - I. K. KEROI-I DR. Jos. H. PROTI-IERO DR. P. W. GETHRO DR. P. B. NOYES DR. C. H. CONVERSE DR. RAY SOUER Grand Master Worthy Master - Scribe Treasurer Senior Page Junior Page C. M. UGLOW - Historian T. E. SHUFORD - - - Tyler Members Seniors W. W. GIBSON R. W. CROUSE C. E. ELLIS M. C. ROBERTS R. V. DILLINOI-IAM H. S. STENSON T. E. GILMORE G. E. SIVERLING J. H. MAXWELL W. G. MEEK A. WEST E. B. MONTEITI-I G. O. LEE F. M. HIGLY . A. L. MCCOLLOUCH E. G. SWAIN T. D. TRAVELER L. A. PHILLIPS W. F. LARKIN W. F. FEIBIG J. J. DONOVAN W. G. MYLORIE W. E. SARGENT P. R. PERCIVAL B. JACKSON W. W. IRWIN J. H. BOWE F. S. FRITZ A. C. LA FOUNT R. BRISTOW E. R. LEVERTON E. B. Pl-IELPS R.S. BETTIS J. J. CURRAN Juniors C. P. LEIBERTI-IAL J. F. MOHAN V. A. MILLER G. P. REYNOLDS B. S. PARTRIDGE Fwslzlflfvn G. A. THOMPSON R. E. GWENS E. R. DANFORTI-I H. C. MITCHELL A. W. PAILTHORP J. O. WILDER J. H. LONG S. C. HAMM O. F. FOSTER A. C. MCCLAREN C. A. RASOI-I 129 Psi Omega Iota Chapter Established at Northwestern University Dental School, 1896 Fratres 'in Facultate TWING BROOKS WIGGIN, M. D. CHARLES LOUIS MIX, A. M., M. D. J. VERNON HALL, Ph. D., EUGENE SHAW WILLARD, D. D. S., Lecturer Demonstrators MONT R. GILCHRIST, D. D. S. HARRY A. GILCHRIST, D. D. S. WM. E. BLAKE, D. D. S. H. l. VAN TUYL, B. A., M. D., D. D. S. MERL MAYO PRINTZ, D. D. S. BENJAMIN WALDEERG, D. D. S. GEO. P. THOMPSON, D. D. S. LESLIE E. A. HOOEY. D- D- S. Fratres in Universitate Officers HAROLD SLAYTON SMITH - - - GRAND MASTER CHARLES JOSEPH WEBSTER JUNIOR MASTER CLAUDE CECIL CHADWICK - - - SECRETARY WILLIAM SHIRLEY PEISLEY - - - TREASURER WALTER JOHN BAUMGARTNER - CHIEF INQUISITOR OSMOND STANLEY MOORE - CHIEF INTERROGATOR WALTER HAROLD RICHARDS A - - HISTORIAN PERCY OSBOURNE GILES - INSIDE GUARDIAN LYULPH PEACH - - OUTSIDE GUARDIAN - - SENATOR DAVID HILL DANEK - CHAS. BARKER BOYINGTON CLARENCE EDWARD BRIGGS ARCHIBALD ANGUS MCRAE WILLIAM GARNET MOORE LEONARD CASSELL WILLIAM HENRY STENZ SenIfo1's LEROY BENSON MANCHESTER LEO ANDREW VIERSEN FRANK WILLIAM SMALL BISHOP ALBERT CONKLIN LEIGH W. SHERMAN CI-IAS. ABRAHAM STREET FRANK CORY MENDENHALL FREDERICK CASSlUS KNECHT THOMAS SHUTTLEWORTH THOMAS FRANCIS REYNOLDS WALTER JOHN WRIGLESWORTH LEONARD E. HUTCHINSON NEAL AME KUYPER EMIL FREDRICH KRIEBEL CHARLES S. OMSBERG HANS FUCH, M. D. .funiors LYULPH PEACH OSMOND STANLEY MOORE PETER MAHONEY FRED THEODORE WEEKS ARTHUR F. W. WALTHER F1'eslImen ANDREW WATSON MYLES PAUL WALKER WINTHROPE JOHN ELDER FORSYTHE WILLIAM CHARLES MASON CHARLES SUMNER SAVAGE JOHN S. WEHRHEIM GEORGE ROY HEAP 130 Xi Psi Phi Rho Chapter Fraternity established, 1889. Installation of Chapter at Northwestern University Dental School, 1900 Fratres in Urbe DR. E. G. HECI-c DR. C. J. MAGEE DR. H. P. CHRISTIE DR. D. J. NORMOYLE DR. S. B. PARDEE DR. E. R. TEASDALE Demonstrator DR. HENRY B. CLARK Fratres in Universitate Officers HOLLAND E. WIGHT, - President CLARENCE L. MASON, Vice-President S. BIRNEY POWERS, - Treasurer RAY F. TOPLIFF, - Secretary OLAF J. OLAFSON, - - Editor EDWARD E. JAMES, - Censor Seniors EDWARD J. BLASS WALTER R. CARRINGTON WINFIELD H. COLBY EDWARD E. JAMES ALBERT N. JOHNSON D. GARNET LECKIE THOMAS H. MCGOVERN CLARENCE L. MASON ROY C. BUCKLEY MILFRED 1. MERRITT OLAP J. OLAFSON OSCAR C. PRIDEAUX HARLEY J. PORTER S. BIRNEY POWERS JOSEPH SOUKUP WILLIAM J. SENGPIEL G. C. THORSENESS ELMER C. UNBEHAUN HARVEY B. WASHBURN J. WILLIAM DALY H. FLOYD BEST WALTER P. CROOK ELISHA J. CRARY ROBERT H. GATEWOOD LOUIS P. KRUEGER GEORGE A. NELSON HOLLAND E. WIGHT ART W. MURPHY .flIlll'0I'S COLONEL M. RICHARDS JULIUS F. TILDEN WALTER TEITGEN RAY F. TOPLIFF CHAS. W. MCKENNA Freshmen ALPHONSO G. CROSE CLARENCE K. WEAVER KARL B. PASCHAL W. H. PLAXTON CHAS. N. WEYER BERT G. ANDERSON CHARLES CANDY ARTHUR C. AGERN E. J. DONAHUE LUKE L. NORRIS ARTHUR B. LEE BOYD L. KELLEY HERBERT P. KINDT LOUIS SCHULTZE GEORGE G. KIMBAL WILLIAM P. HEISLER HENRY L. MILLS HARMON S. SCRANTON NICK W. Cox KELLEY R. SPIERMAN JOHN M. DONOVAN WILLIAM A. SQUIRES JOHN B. KOHAGEN Yell Rip, roar, blood and gore, Xi Psi Phi for evermorei That 'S us, every guy Make a fuss for Xi Psi Phi! Colors Lavender and Cream Flower Red Rose 135 Phi Rho Sigma Alpha Chapter Established at Northwestern University Medical School in 1890 Fratres in Facultate Professors Enfemfus ESEDNIUND ANDREWS, A. M., M. D.. LL. D. R. M. PARKER, B. HARRY KAI-IN, Ph. E. K. KERR, A. S., M., M.. O. H. MAOLAY, B. S., GROESBECK WALSH, A. B., C. DI. DENNIS, A. J. BRISLEN, W. S. HARPOLE, D. O. HEOHT, E. O. F. ROLER, A. M., M. D. F. S. JOHNSON, A. M., M. D. Prohfssm-s E. W. ANDREWS, A. M., M. D. F. T. ANDREWS, A. M.. M. D. R. B. PREBLE, A. B., M. D. J. E. OWENS, M. D. S. C. PLUMMER, A. M., M. D. W. E. SCHROEDER, M. D. C. H. MILLER, Ph. C., M. D. C. B. REED, M. D. W. A. MANN. M. D. F. X. WALLS, M. D. F. J. MENGE, M. D. HENRY CRADLE, M. D. Il'lSll'itC'lf0l 'S ' C. B. DYCHE, A. B., M. D. P. MORF, M. D. A. DAVIS, Ph. B.. M. D. W. BARNES, M. D. P. O. OWSLEY, Ph. B., M. D. P. EGGERT, M. D. M. D. R. M. D. D. M. D. H. M. D. G. M. D. C. EEZ! 0000 G .D. . .D. . .D. . GILMORE, M. D. HILLIS, M. D. GIBSON, M. D. SHOCKEY, M. D. MATTER, M. D. E. YOUNGER, M. D. M Fox, M. D. JACOBS, M. D. J. KLUETGEN, M. D. Fratres in Hospitalibus Infwnas KARL SCHMIDT, Cook County Hospital C. C. GRULEE, Cook County Hospital B. A. MODERMOTT, Mercy Hospital C. P. SAWYER, Mercy Hospital D. W. DEAL, Wesley Hospital C. P. BLYND, Alexian Brothers' Hospital, Elizabeth, N. J. Fratres in Universitate Sen:I'oI's E. D. CHASE, fb T A C. M. CLINE, A T A A. W. GOEBEL, G N E J. F. DUNCAN . W. j. FAHRNER, A SZ A W. V. COODER R. A. KROST, B. S. R. J. LYNcI-I, A T A L. MCELROY, B. S. R. C. LIBBERTON, B. S., A T A C. W. NEWELL, 9 N E J. Q. A. SCROGGY, Ph. G., fb X, A SZ A Jumfors j. W. BEARDSLEY, LI' H G. DUNTLEY, Ph. C. W. D. DU BOIS, B. S., K E JOHN W. IDDINGS M. JAMPOLIS, A. B. W. S. SHARP, All K Xl' J. W. WALLACE, B G H W. C. TUCKER C. E. WOODWARD, K E E. W. JONES M. C. ROBERTS Sophommvfs M O. CLYNE FRANK HOOVER O. P. L D I DWAN, B. S. R. B. KERS1-IAM, PH. G. U Wo L. C. C. D. HOY G. P.SHIDLER, A. B., E A E K W. C. GYLBERT, B. S., 33 A E L. E. KELLEY, B.S., 41 K AI' BURT S. STEPHENS, Ph. C., B KD E W. W. ROSS, Ph. A. HUDSON aDeceased. I'lI U8IL'IllH7I, 136 W G., dw X F. MAURER . MCCLEAN, 9 N E, B G H A Nu Sigma Nu Zeta Chapter Established at Northwestern University Medical School in 1891 ' Fratres in Facultate. Professor Emrerffzzs MARCUS PATTEN HATEIELD, A. M., M. D. P rqflwsrws N. S. DAVIS, A. M., M. D. A. R. EDWARDS, A. M., M. D. j. B. DE LEE, M. D. W. S. HALL, A. M., M. D., Ph. D. W. VAN HOOK, A. B., MI D. T. J. WATKINS, NI. D. J. B. MURPHY, A. M., M. D. fEtal J. ZEISLER, M. D. H. T. PATRICK, M. D G. W. WEBSTER, M. D. E. C. DUDLEY, A. M., M. D. L. C. PARDEE, M. D. W. H. ALLPORT, M. D. W. E. MORGAN, M. D. L. E. Sci-IMIDT, M. S., M. D. I?7Sll7'lICfOI'S A. B. KANAVEL, Ph. B., lVl. D. O. P. CHESTER, B. S., M. D F. A. BESLEY, M. D. H. E. SAUER. B. S., M. D. G. E. BAXTER, Ph. B., M. D. E. B. FOWLER, A. B., M. D. L. L. MOARTIIUR, M. D. C. A. ELLIOTT, B. S., M. D. W. R. CUBBINS, B. s., M. D. J. O. CAMPBELL, A. B., M. D. J. M. NEFF, M. D. CEtal C. C. BUFORD, M. D. T. H. LEWIS, Ph. B., M. D. W. H. BUHLIG, B. S., M. D. P. H. BRANDT, M. D. lClinieal Assistantl J. BRENNEMANN, Ph. B., M. D. fClinical Assistantl F. E. SIMPSON, M. D. fClinical Assistantl Fratres in Hospitalibus Lifernas P. W. PI-IELPS, B. S., M. D., Cook County Hospital W. S. GRAYSTON, M. D., Cook County Hospital E. P. NORCROSS, M. D., Cook County Hospital F. G. DYAS, M. D., Mercy Hospital L. G. HARNEY, M. D., Wesley Hospital W. G. ALEXANDER, B. S., Ph. B., M. D., Wesley Hospital A. W. WOODS, B. S., M. D., Wesley Hospital E. A. MINER, Ph. B., M. D., Wesley Hospital Fratres in Universitate Senz'or.s J. B. CROUCI-I W. M. BURBACH J. S. DYER V. A. SMELKER O. W. HOLCOMB, Ph. G. G. T. JORDAN, B. S. F. O. KERSHNER, A. B. T. P. RANNEY H. V. KAI-ILER H. E. PFEIFFER Jlllll-UVS H. P. HENDRICKS j. A. GREEN G. W. HOCHREIN R. E. KEYSER E. S. HOTTINOER E. B. WILLIAMS, B. S. O. BROOKS B. S. HUTCHESON C. BAKER iQ0jJ1l0Tl?07'C8 R. G. MILLS, A. B. A. D. KlRBY H. E. FRENCH. A. B. C. G. SABIN, B. S. L. 1. WITKOWSKI E. E. TORELL, A. B. J. H. GARBERSON, B. S. L. L. CORCORAN Fwslnnrin Pffflflf' J. S. EISENSTAEDT E. V. MCCOMB ,141 Alpha Kappa Kappa Xl Chapter Established at Northwestern University Medical School in 1901 Fratres in Facultate 'L ARCHIBALD CHURCH, M. D. CHARLES LOUIS MIx, A. M., M. D. JOHN RIDLON A M M D FREDERICK ROBERT ZEIT, M. D. , . ., . . WILLIAM EVANS CASSELBERRY, M. D. PETER THOMAS BURNS, M. D. RICHARD STARR ALEXANDER A. GOLDSMITH, M. D. PATTXLLO, M. D. CHARLES HILL, A. M., Ph. D., M. D. DAVID SALINGER, M. D. G H C KOEHLER Ph G M D ERNEST CHARLES RIEBEL, M. D. . . . , . ., . . VICTOR DARWIN LESPINASSE, M. D. JULIUS GRINKER, M. D. THOMAS CHARLES MCGONAGLE, M. D. JAMES G. CARR, M. D. JOHN P. SPRAGUE, A. B., M. D. Fratres in Hospitalibus J. STANLEY WELCH, B. SC., M. D., Cook County Hospital LUTHER JAMES OSGOOD, M. D., Cook County Hospital FRANK WRIGHT, Ph. G., M. D., Cook County Hospital WILLIAM MARTIN COOLEY, M. D., Michael Reese Hospital H 't l, Joliet, Ill. WILLIAM OTIS MCBRIDE, M. D., St. Joseph's ospi a M. E. EMERICK, M. D., Augustana Hospital ROBERT H. WOODRUFF, M. D., Colora do Iron and Fuel Hospital HERMAN KRETSCHMER, Ph. G., M. D., Alexian Brothers' Hospital ROBERT BRUCE BLUE, A. B., M. D., Alexian Brothers' Hospital WILLIAM F. ZIERATH, M. D., Wesley Hospital CLAIRE W. FULTON, M. D., Post Graduate Hospital Fratres in Universitate Seniors GEORGE HARDIN CURFMAN, Ph. B., fb B K, A S2 A GEORGE AII-:EN DOWLING, A S2 A RAY ORVIN HUMMEL, B. SC., A T RALPH WARD JAMES, A S2 A JOHN MATHEW LILLY, A. B. GUY WAYNE LARIMER, A. B., E N, A Q A GEORGE AUGUSTUS WOOD BERT L. DOANE, B. Sc. WILLIAM O. KROHN, A. M., Ph. D. HARRY C. BLANKMEYER, Ph. G. EDWARD W. ROWE, B. Sc. Juniors NEILE SPOONER STORER ROBERT G. STEVENSON JOHN G. THOMPSON MATTHIAS J. MOES RAWSON J. PICKARD, A. B., A T JOSEPH D. BARRY, B. Sc., A T Q ROBERT AURAND ALLEN, A. B., 111 K XII WAYNE ALONZO MUNN Sop7wmo'res EDWARD CLAY MITCHELL FREDERICK DENNISTON CARPENTER CLARENCE EDISON DORLAND, Ph . G. ARTHUR HAWLEY SANFORD, A. B., 11' B K, Z N DAVID LUTHER BARNARD, B. So. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN LOUNSBURY, B. L. Freshmen ALVIS E. GREER FRANK LEROY SMITH DORR FOSTER HOLLENBECK Pledge RALEIGH HALE 142 L rf Phi Beta Pi Theta Chapter Established at Northwestern University Medical School in 1902 Honorary Members F. R. GREEN, A. M., M. D. H. M. STOWE, M. D. C. A. LEENHEER, Ph. G., M. D. N. D. CURRY, M. D. FRANK ALLPORT, M. D. W. B. HENRY, M. D. CAJ Fratres in Universitate Seniors G. W. ANGLIN E. B. BROOKS, B. S. W. G. MAGEE, M. Di. F. M. MCGAULEY G. E. BEECHER R. A. CUNLIFFE, A E B flil GEO. H. MARTIN J. J. MclNToS1-x, A S2 A M. T. BLEWETT GEo. E. EGLOFF j. S. MCEWAN W. T. TREWYN Juniors A. H. STALL R. H. SNOWDEN J. O. SALYERS A. H. PARKS, A. B. fBl, E X H. R. PASCOE, Ph. B. W. K. LONG, B. Sc. Sophomores W. T. BLACHLEY R. G. JOHNSTON, Ph. G. FRED. E. REDMOND ELTON B. ROGERS, A. B. GEo. W. SWIFT, Ph. G., fb B CHAS. F. PETERSON A. T. WANAMAKER, Ph. G., lb B Freshmen J. T- BIRD A. B. GROSVNER G. COURTNEY H. GOWLAND P. B. COOPER, Ph. G. 147 Gmega Upsilon Phi Mu Chapter Founded Northwestern University Medical School in 1904 ' Fratres in Facultate D. F. MoNAc1-I, M. D. M. L. SNOW, A. B., M. D.,lP K XII Fratres in Hospitalibus F. A. NORRIS, M. D., Mercy Hospital J. F. GOLDEN, M. D., Mercy Hospital M. MANDEL, M. D., Mercy Hospital M. B. WOLEE, M. D., Cook County Hospital D. LAUGHLIN, M. D., Chicago Eye and Ear Hospital F. WERNER, M. D., Chicago Lying-ln Hospital 1. j. COLE, M. D., Mercy Hospital H. M. MILLER, M. D., Mercy Hospital Fratres in Universitate Scfmors F. F. FAIR j. T. S. HAMILTON A. E. BEACH S. F. RUDOLE J. R. HOWELL E. M. SI-IEE1-IAN -I. W. STRIBLING E. J. KELLEY D. W. LYNCH Juniors . R. INGRAHAM R. D. WooD J. D. WHITESIDE R. F. ROHLFING F. W. MORLLER F. D. CULBERTSON E. A. SPITZ C. SEYFARTH Sophomore C. F. NIoIcERsoN F1'e.s7Iw'1m'I, C. O. PETERSON H. M. LYNCI-I 148 Delta Chi Founded at Cornell University, October 3, 1890 Northwestern Chapter Established at Northwestern University Law School, May 5, 1893 Fratres in Facultate HENRY CLAY HALL FREDERICK CAMPBELL WOODWARD Fratres in Universitate Seniors MAX MURDOCK, fir A 9 FRANK H. SOHEINER, LD A 9, 9 N E HAL L. BRINI4 AARON R. EPPSTEIN JOHN B. Jzmviors ROMANS, fb A 9 CHAUNCEY C. COLTON, fb A 9, 9 N E WILLIAM HAIGHT MORTON EDDY, A T HAROLD A. ROMANS, fl' A 9 WILLIAM BROTHERS, E X Ffreslwn en KENNETH H. DAVENPORT, A T, Deru FRANK O. SMITH, A T A, Deru N. P. MOERDYKE FRANK C. RATHJE P. N. MOCAUGHAN GEO. W. CROSSMAN H. F. BALLARD, B 9 H. l53 Phi Alpha Delta Melville W. Fuller Chapter Established at Northwestern University Law School in 1898 JOI-IN M. BRYANT, 'O2 JEROME J. CERMAK, 'Ol CHARLES L. DALY, '03 JAMES E. GARRETT, 'Ol ROLLAND M. HALLOCK, 'Ol OSCAR KROPFT, 'OO LOUIS H. KEPLER, '04 ELIAS MAYER. 'O3 SIDNEY B. MEYER JOHN A. NILES GEORGE B. WATSON A. CAMPBELL DAVID TAYLOR Alumni Fratres FRANK CLEVELAND, 'O E. WAYNE COLBY, '02 DAVID O. DUNBAR, 'O3 CHARLES W. HADLEY, 'Ol W. P. KNAPF, 'O3 VICTOR KROPFT, '03 CURTIS C. LEE, '03 STEPHEN C. MALO, '99 'O2 ROBERT MCCLURE, 'OZ , 'O3 E. C. OGGEL, '98 B. W. ROSENSTONE, '03 , '02 ALBERT HOLSTE, 'Ol A. T. TOMPKINS, 'Ol V. F. RICHMOND, '98 Fratres in Urbe ARTHUR F. HUGHES JOS. OTTO KOSTNER Fratres in Universitate A. A. I-IINMAN Sz'1z1'qr.S RICHARD L. BOGGS D. CLEVELAND DOEBIN LOUIS R. FULTON D. D. KOGY CLARENCE A. LUDOLPI-I HUGO L. PITFE WALTER QUITMAN JEAN F. SARGENT JULIUS F. WENGIERSKI Jrmiors GEORGE A. FINLEY LESLIE C. ATHERTON Freslz m en HENRY A. BRISZKI OSCAR E. GRANBERG TOM LINDSKOG GEO. MORGAN 3111 illllvninriam WALTER GEORGE KERSTEN 154 lk Alpha Kappa Phi Established at Northwestern University Law School, October 20, 1902 Fratres in Urbe ALFRED R. BATES JESSE E. ESCHEACH OTIS W. FOLLETT CHARLES G. ROSE NATHAN L. KRUEGER HARRY A. SWIGERT Fratres in Universitate Seniors EUGENE W. BELL ALFRED R. EGGERT CLYDE CAPRON HENRY S. LIOHTHALL, Z X HARRY C. LEWIS OTTO G. RYDEN HERMAN W. STOWE .hmiors WARREN M. DAVIS . ROBERT L. MONEIL EBENEZER W. ENGSTROM, A T A FRANK P. MIES GEORGE R. WARNER Freshmen ROBERT F. MARSHALL OSWELL L. MONEIL GEORGE R. NICHOLS CHARLES E. SWANSON Colors Blue and Gold D Phi Chi Founded at University of Michigan in 1883 Beta Chapter Established at Northwestern University School of Pharmacy in 1895 I Fratres in Urbe 1. W. GERMER, M. D. W. A. FORBES C. M. TURNQUlST H. D. BROCK H. A. GILMORE A. E. BUESCH L. E. BANGERT A. B. SHUTTS J. C. SI-IIEK F. H. ELSNER O. J. MILLER H. H. TODD H. E. ERICKSON Fratres in Facultate OSCAR OLDBERG. Pharm. M. MAURICE ASI-IEELL MINER, Pharm. M. CHARLES WAGGNER PATTERSON, Sc. B., B 9 Il HARRY KAI-IN. Pharm. M., M. D. HARRY MANN GORDlN, Ph. D RAYMOND H. POND, Ph. D. JOHN FERD. FISCHNER, Ph. C. WILLIAM H. HARRISON, Ph. C. Fratres in Universitate OWEN C. DEVINE Medical School MARINUS L. HOLM J. Q. A. SCROGGY, KD P E HENRY B. CAREY School of Pharmacy Class If 1905 Class of 1906 L. CLAUDE FREEMAN CI-IARLES ENOLEI-IART WALTER T. BREAN IVAN C. RICE OTTO D. WIPPERMAN AVON H. ZELLER ALBERT W. WEINBERGER H. D. GRAHAM JOHN EDWARD DAVIES GUS HENRY GOETHE CLAUDE j. MUSSELMAN ORVILLE A. HENKEL LEE E. ENNIS CHARLES WILSON RALPI-I C. CROSBY CARL C. WALBAUM FRANK H. SNYDER H. RUSSELL VANSE GUY F. BURKETT WILLIAM E. CLAYFOOL CARL F. RANGER JA5. STONE CI-IAS. I. LONG F. C. RUGGLES HOWARD C. VAN CISE, ll' A 9 HENRY W. HOWE Colors Wine and Old Gold 160 D 4 K Phi Gamma Founded at Northwestern University in 1902 Alpha Chapter Established at Northwestern University School Of Pharmacy in 1902 Fratres in Urbe LESTER A. SCHULTZ FRANK P. WRAY ELMER CORTWRIGHT CHAS. C. PRlCKETT ROY BATES LOUIS VAN DYKE ALBERT J. HARTIG WIVI. HOLLIDAY WIVI. WELLEROCK ELIVIER CREENWELI. FRANK M. HASSETT ORVILE CISSELL JOSEPH C. HIGGINS BERT R. VAN DE BOGART ROY HUNTLY JOHN C. KLEIN J. TRACY WYLIE ARTI-IIIR P. STEBBINS O. B. ROLAND FRANK J. RITTER N. M. LEWIS ARTI-IER M. GREGG FRANK C. KEESECKER Fratres in Facultate D. C. ECCLES, Sc. B., A. M. GUSTAVE E. F. LUNDELL, Sc. B. THEODORE WHITTLESLY, Ph. D. G. H. JENSON, Sc. B. JAMES W. REDMOND HARRY E. CHAWGO C. A. WALZ Fratres in Universitate Class of 1905 VIRGIL D. WEISENBURGER EVER JOI-INSON DON. F. WRIGI-IT Class of 1906 GUY F. HERSHEY MARICE B. CONRAD J. F. REIFERT DAVE J. GEIVIIVIELL ROBERT H. BRIGE lVlAURlCE E. FELTENSTEIN JAMES B. TAYLOR NEAL B. KELLER FRANK C. HUSS CLARENCE R. REX MARK DAVIS TRUE HOWARD Colors Black and Red 165 L. LEON HARLON ROGER RUGG HARIVION K. MORGAN Three years, then four, we walk this road Alas, how short our stay ! But we mfstalfeg it is not short,- ln thought we dwell for aye. 166 COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS -xldfl . - - -ees: 'E SYLLABUS BOARD wld QW - LOCBI. MfrmgggR- ?E7ZJ 5fCZ W , D W 'W X A . CALENDAR Um any QWQMM. bww Tutu flu-J,42,uA, 9441- . OfLLQs3.14wsrz4XQ, GAJl7flW,C5.fx ' FRRTEFQPIITIES Fl-rrfuivucs , QYmmum1rYwursNQ1,L 746 q I ILLUSTRATIONS If L ' . ' X MJ ,f. f L ff GAR- ' i C 1 flfff- 5-A. ,ffn THOMAS F. FIOLGATE, Ph. D., Dean of the College of Liberal Arts ,,,,, ,L . F ' 4 - 4 JOHN EDWARD GEORGE John Edward George was born near Braceville, Illinois, on the 12th of May, 18655 prepared for college in the Grand Prairie Seminaryg and graduated from the College of Liberal Arts of Northwestern University in the class of 1895. He was a member of the Life Saving Crew, of the Hinman, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, and Phi Beta Kappa societies, and the recipient of the Cushing prize in Economics while in this college, and during his course of graduate study became a Master of Arts of Harvard University and a Doctor of Philosophy of the University of Halle. In 1900 he was appointed Instructor in Political Economy in this University, in 1901 Assistant Professor in the same department, and in 1903 was elected Secretary of the Faculty, a position which ill health soon compelled him to resign. I-Ie died at Wesley Hospital, Chicago, January 18, 1905, after an illness of eighteen months, borne with indomitable courage and patience. Death came to Professor George when his work seemed hardly begun. His unspar- ing labors were not crowned with the full achievement, of which they offered so bright a promise. Yet the record of achievement is beyond his yearsg the list of his publica- tions is a long one, bearing testimony to a life of unwasted endeavor, and constituting an important addition to this University's accomplishment in the field of scholarly research. In so brief a period of teaching perhaps no one has ever so completely won the respect and the affection of both faculty and students. To Northwestern, his best years were bound, to the assistance of its students, especially to those earning their own education, his time and services were given with absolute forgetfulness of self, and in the performance of its burdensome duties, his chosen work and cherished ambitions were loyally laid aside. Such a life as his nourishes a just pride in the University that fostered it, and olfers us noble incentives in the bravery of his long struggle for an education, the unsellishness of his devotion to the ideal of service, his unyielding adher- ence to what he believed right, and his sweet kindliness of heart. 175 2 s g ug! ,4 --Q is ' .-2:-Q, asf.-.. ,I si' gi, '22, - f 1'. ,f1Z:2f'-425231: -::, 2i i5Ff:4',3-:2.': ' -21: 15.11 9-:1::::f-rsszffgf:1.::r:g::i:14Ap6 -' - , - -, ' . , vu - -:N-.. .og-44,,,,,,,,,.1,., , 33 'W Q - 'Q , '-' ' J 1 s . P . BRIGHT LAKE VIEWS. 1 'MT .E NN f Q Q 5 X QW HQQ X X SO 1 CLASS ORGANIZATIONS ff 1 1 Sly mg H N7 H Q ns X7 W H 0 :ml L 5 FV Nil Of AQOH Officers President - - OLIVER S. HUEBART Vice-President - ELIZABETH WILLIAMS Secretary - - - DAISY W. GIRTON Treasurer PERRY I-I. CLEVELAND Sergeant-at-Arms - DAVID T. I-IANsoN is - ,.- Aim ill-fill GRA-R. Officers President - MILDRED C. AUTEN Vice-President - ELLA TRELEASE Secretary - - - - - - ELSIE M. BAKER Treasurer - - - - IDA I-l. KING Sergeant at Arms - MABELLE C-. HILL LILIAN ANTONIA ANDERSON, Evanston ,.:: -'-- i Classical Course. Y. W. c. A. , I I- My favored temple is an humble heart. CHRISTOPHER LAWRANCE ARMSTRONG, - - Milan Scientific Course. Y. M. C. A., Trig Committee flj, joint Author Trig Play ill, I-Iinman Literary Society QZJ, Nortltwestccrn Staff QQ, lV0rtlLwe-Stern Magazine Staff QZJ, Syllabus Board, University Band flj QZJ. I never dare to write AS funny as l can. LUCY MAY ARMSTRONG, Ottawa Classical Course. Y. W. C. A. The highest degree of earthly happiness is quiet. EDWARD JACOB ASTI-IALTER, - Muscatine, la. Scientific Course. Y. M. C. A., Manager of Canvass-Student Lecture Course 135, Volunteer Band, Rogers Debating Club, Vice-President 131, Trig Cremation, Asst. Manager Junior Play, Cabinet Y. M. C. A. 'K There's no art To find the mind's construction in the face. MILDRED GARVIN AUTEN Evanston Scientific Course. Y. W. C. A., Eulexia Literary Society, President junior Class. 'Tis the mind that makes the body rich. 179 f vi: 5:2 ' . ' 3:11 4 e-.:Rg2f!1.g1 Z ' A, . i . v 1- if if gg: 9 f 131' , flrc fl 4-.., 4 W , f J 1 Class of 1906-Continued ELSIE MARGARET BAKER, - - - Evanston Classical Course. Syllabus Board, Eulexia Literary Society, Sec- retary of Class of '06 135. 'tAt sight of thee my gloomy soul cheers up. - X 1535195 il-3 NELLIE ALFERETTA BALLARD, Morrisville, Vermont ff- Scientific Course, :.:1 8 I-ler voice was ever soft, gentle and low-an excellent thing in woman. --- ':3g:g.,:,:-:fx-: ,:-:- eP3::s35: '1r3ErE'1'5:3j-115.. 'ze ei? , MABEL BEAVER, - - Shermanville 5 . Classical Course. tl Y. W. C. A. The fair, the chaste, and unexpressive she. ELvERTUs FRANKLIN BIDDLE, Scientific Course. Y. M. C. A., Trig Play, Adelphic Literary Society, Gage Debate QSJ, N. O. L. CZQ, Vice-President, N. O. L. CBD, Syllabus Board, Sargent Contest, QSQ, President Hamilton Club Q3j, History Club Junior Play. l am not only witty in myself, but the cause that wit is in other men. LOUISE BIRKHOFF, - - - Chicago Classical Course. Y. W. C. A. Her open eyes desire the truth. ARTHUR JOHN MAZON BLAIR, fb K. E, Classical Course. Y. M. C. A. Measures, not men, have always been my mark. EDNA LOUISE BOVARD, - Marseilles Classical Course. Y. W. C. A. Eulexia Literary Society. She, like the hazel twig, is straight and slender, and as brown in hue as hazel-nuts, and sweeter than the Kernels. EVERETT EUGENE BRAGG, Z N, - - - Evanston Scientific Course. Y. M. C. A., Class Base Ball flj, Varsity Base Ball f2j. A man of virtue, judgment and prudence speaks not until there is silence. CLARA BRAWTHEN, - - 1 ChiCagO Classical Course. Y. W. C. A. Pull of forced, abnormal quiet. RUTH BORING, ------ Chicago Classical Course. Love seldom haunts the heart where learning lies. 180 Sw .y 2 Class of 1906-Continued l-IERMAN LYMAN BROCKWAY, E A E, - Ramson, N. Y. Classical Course. Y. M. C. A., Aleph Teth Nun. l-le draweth out the thread of his verbosity finer than the staple of his argument. RUTH BRONSON - - - Luverne, Minn. Classical Course. , Y. W. C. A., Eulexia Literary Society. A maiden of our Century, yet most meek. ANNA LAVINIA BURDICK Assumption Scientific Course. Y. W. C. A. 'Tis only necessary to be good. GRACE BURNETF - Newlcirk, Okla. Classical Course. Y. W. C. A. A mind at peace with all below. FLORENCE JULIA BUTZ. Wilmette Classical Course. Alethenai Literary Society. Continual cheerfulness is a sign of wisdom. LUCILE FOLLETT CANNON, Englewood Classical Course. Y. W. C. A. Browning Club. tt Ease of heart her every look conveyed. FRED THAYER CAWOOD Sullivan Scientific Course. Assume a virtue if you have it not. JOHN RICHARD CHEUVRONT Selbyville, W. Va. Classical Course. Y. M. C. A. L' 'Tis pleasant, sure, to see one's name in print. JESSE PERYLE COCAYNE Scientific Course. Y. M. C. A., University Band, Secretary Engi- neering Club f3j, Trig Play Cast, Clee Club. Now, Heaven blessthat sweet face of thine. l81 Mediapolis, la. ' .TI A , y 4 - f' I ? ff 5 f,1- .55 4' eva , .Q . 0 Q X ..,,. 1 :I .:.-.. : .: nm A , 1 ks-,Vf .59 Class of 1906-Continued WILLIAM CODDINGTON ---- Princeton Scientific Course. Y. M. C. A., Engineering Club, Cross Country Club QZQ, Class Foot Ball Team Qlj CZJ, Mana- ger Ticket Sale-Student Lecture Course 135. t'Speech is great, but silence is greater. CLAIRE CoLTI-IURsT, - - Morris Classical Course. Y. W. C. A. True as the dial to the sun, Although it be not shined upon. L 4' A, 5 . fa L,,. . . ERNEST E. COLVIN, ---- Wichita, Kan. fiifi Scientific Course. 'K I Q Associate Editor of The Northwcste1'n. .5 A,--. . 'tThey say, best men are moulded out of faults. 6' ' CLAUDE CUMNOCK, Z X, ---- Evanston Scientific Course. l've touched the highest point of rny greatness. RUTI-I GERALDINE DALE, K A 9, - Winnetka Classical Course. Eulexia Literary Society. 'LA modest blush she wears, not formed by art. A Scientific Course. t, ,,, .. N., ,w3 !., . v L , 1 yr. ,. LUCRETIA ELLEN DANIELS, - - Danville 2 ' Y. W. c. A. A peace above all earthly dignities, a still and quiet conscience. Classical Course. Y. M. C. A., Adelphic Literary Society, First Prize Bragdon Debate til, Trig Play Cast, Junior Play. til pause for a reply. ' LOVERNE ANN DOLBEER, - Chicago Classical Course. Y. W. C. A. I-ler face had a Wonderful fascination in it. lt was such a calm, quiet face! ELIZABETH DOLBY, - - Chicago Classical Course. Y. W. C. A. There is no truer-hearted. l82 LLOYD LYNE DINES, ----- Quincy A Z 5 ,W ,W Q Z f ' f 575!g2:1'f 741 V T L: . , 9 il 1! 'G I -Y . t 2' 53 42 I I ., C, . ,.-. . f Class of 1906-Continued RUTIQI ELIZABETH DREW, - Hobart, lnd. Classical Course. Eulexia Literary Society. The joy of youth and health her eyes displayed. EDWARD FRANKLIN EILERT, - - - Baraboo, Wis. Scientific Course. Manager of Glee Club 131, junior Play. Music hath charms. ALICE STANLEY ELDRED, ---- Joliet Scientific Course. Of spirit so still and quiet that her motion Blushed at herself, BERTHA MARGUERITE ELDRED, Joliet Classical Course. 'tAs frank as rain On cherry blossoms. DEAN SPRUILL FANSLER, fb K NP, Evanston Classical Course. Syllabus Board, Pan-Hellenic Prom. Committee, Pres. Deutsche Gesellschaft, junior Play. The rnan that blushes is not quite a brute. MAMIE EVA FEI-IRMAN, Classical Course. Y. W. C. A. All her paths are peace. Evanston FRANCES GRAVES, A 111, Classical Course. junior Play. There is a garden in her face, Where roses and White lilies grow. Hinckley BLANCI-IE LENORA GRIGSON, - - - Augusta Classical Course. Y. W. C. A., Eulexia Literary Society. Not stepping o'er the bounds of modesty. MARY HAINES, - - - Classical Course. A holiness in those dark eyes! - Chicago 183 X I -. .ll l 3. 57 'A ,-.,..k , ,rm ,,,y,. z g.:aw , , W' U ff 5 H , ,J ' f '- :lf 5' l f af x ' 1 49, , , I-N 5 ff ,-w a..-:fs 1- . iff af, , . 1 1 n M I VA f ,-.'I g'-X, V ..- -. , I I Q .cj 1 GRACE M. HARRIs, A A A, - - Fort Collins, Colo. Class of 1906-Continued Ruifus CLIFFORD HALL, - - - . Chicago Scientific Course. The Power of Thought, the Magic of the Mind. MARGARET HAMMOND, H B 112, - - Evanston Classical Course. J Alethenai - Literary Society. A maiden never bold. - ff 4' MARIE HAMMOND, H B fb, - - Evanston , Abqv Qfflix Classical Course. ' , 'fix Alethenai Literary Society. .V 4 V lulffvga A sweet, attractive kind of grace. 4? + U, 3 . tx '. gif : Classical Course. HA willing heart lightens work. SHELBY MVILLARD HARRISON, B 9 II, - - Leaf River Classical Course. ,H Y. M. C. A., Hinman Literary Society ill, t2j, D President Class til, Joint Author Trig Play, ' ,,, , Aleth Teth Nun, Tri Play, Treasurer N. O. L. f2j, Vice-President Y. M. C. A. 125, N.O. L. Stereopticon Show, Class Base Ball Team 125, ' ' Junior Play Committee, President N. O. L. C3l, ' . PresidentY. M. C. A., Editor-in-Chief of Syllabus ' A And when a lady's in the case, . You know all other things give place. Q- 9 X EMERY A. HARTMAN, Ashley, Ind. Classical Course. Junior Play. Hartman- A quiet, thoughtful, good, sincere lad. ORIs B. HASTINGS, fb A G, - - Cairo Scientific Course. . Class Football Team 123, Captain Class Baseball Team 121, Syllabus Board, Junior Play. On with the dance! Let joy be unconfineclf' HEFLIN, - Wenona Special. Y. W. C. A. t' Her eye was blue and calm, PEARL . sg . .. 'fl ,.- 'La .- . ' 3 f-Lf., , - ef 1265241 1 'A A'-:Q'affZL As is the sky in the serenest noon. MAEEL GERTRUDE HILL, - - - Jacksonville Scientific Course. Y. W. C. A., Class Sergeant-at-Arms CSD. K ' t'Life without laughing is a dreary blank. ,X-J 184 iii Class of 1906e-Continued Louis RAY HORTON, ----- Littleton Classical Course. Y. NI. C. A., Trig Cremation. junior Play Cast, Syllabus Board. Wit sometimes enables us to act rudely with im- punityf' DWIGHT CONKLlNC HUBBART, A T A, - Monticello Scientific Course. Y. M. C. A., Treasurer of Class QZJ, Treasurer of Y. M. C. A. CSD, Quest of Quezarreu Cast, Hin- man Literary Society, Trig Play Cast, Glee Club QU Q21 Q3j, Sargent Contest QCD, Secretary N. O. L. CBJ, junior Play, Second Prize N. O. L. QQ, Hamilton Club, Syllabus Board. Honesty is a warrant of far more safety than fame. MABEL LOLA livlus, - - Mendota Scientific Course. Y. W. C. A. I am contentf, GERTRUDE lNGE1.s, ---- - La Fayette Classical Course. Virtue alone is happiness below. A GEORGE EDGAR JAMES, ---- Rochester Scientific Course. Y. M. C. A., Rogers Debating Society, junior Play. Wisely and slowg they stumble that run fast. FLORENCE JENKINS, K A 9, ---- Chicago Scientific Course. Oh, she is fairer than the evening air, clad in the beauty of a thousand stars! CARL FRANCIS JORDAN, 2 N, - - Burlington, la. Scientific Course. I-linman Literary Society, Y. 'M. C. A., Associate Editor of N0'1'tl1.wr'.stf'1 n. f3J, Syllabus Board. I-le was a man, take him for all in all. WALTER DENMAN KELLEY, - - Cheyenne, Wyo. Classical Course. Y. M. C. A., I-Iinman Literary Society, Glee Club f2J, I-linman Debating Team t.3l. 'Fling away arnbitiong by that sin fell the angels. MABE1. KIMBER. - - - Springfield Classical Course. Y. W. C. A. 'Tis virtue that doth make her most admiredf 185 . 42 , , V . 5. , , X. ff ,. .,.. , 5.14 , waz' Class of 1906-Continued IDA HARRIET KING, ----- Evanston Classical Course. Y. W. C. A., Syllabus Board, Eulexia Literary So- ciety, Secretary Class QZJ, Treasurer Class CD, Junior Play. 'tThey are never alone that are accompanied with noble thoughts. AMY KLETZING, . ----- Chicago ' Classical Course. I, thus neglecting worldly ends, all dedicated To closeness, and the bettering of my mind. RAYMOND CASLER Korz, - - - Chicago Scientific Course. And either victory, or else a grave. ALLIE LUELLA LAIRD, - - Evanston Classical Course. Y. W. C. A. Infinite riches in a little room. GRACE ESTELLE LAsI-IER, F 119 B, - - Evanston Classical Course. Eulexia Literary Society, Secretary Browning Club. 'AA noble type of good I-Ieroic womanhoodf' WILLIAM I-IENRY LONG, - - Marshalltown, Ia. Scientific Course. . Y. M. C. A., I-Iinman Literary Society, Trig Cre- mation, Class Historian lil, Clee Club til KZJ CSD, Hamilton Club, Y. Nl. C. A. Cabinet 137, Missionary Board of Control 125, Syllabus Board. A merrier man, Within the limit of becoming mirth, I never spent an hour's talk withal. ALICE BELLE LYONS, 1' 112 B, - - Ludington, Mich. Classical Course. Y. W. C. A,, Syllabus Board. Thy voice is sweet as if it took its music from thy face. EGBERT FRANK MANsoN, A T A, Evanston Scientific Course. A shrewd man this. DANIEL LAsH MARsI-I, - - Fitz I-Ienry, Pa Scientific Course. Y. M. C. A. Ask for me to-morrow and you will find me a grave man. 186 X-X 152311433 ff 5 r Q.. ,,., ,af .. W , .. 2 ,. 22 .:'i':::' Sf 1 rr Vg.-xii-:Av-.1-.-2 L 1 - l Class of 1906PContinued MARY MARTIN, - - - Chicago Classical Course. Alethenai Literary Society. . A girl who has so many willful Ways. CHRISTINE MCGAFEEY, - - - Chicago Scientific Course. Chairman junior Play Committee, Alethenai ' T9 Literary Society, Y, W. C. A., President Le Cercle Francais, junior Play. 'tl-ler infinite variety. DAVID RANDOLPH MCCREW, - - - Evanston Classical Course. Y. M. C. A., l-linman Literary Society, l-linman Debating Team f3j, Raymond Prize Debate f2j, Manager Trig Play, Syllabus Board. What man dare, l dare. WALTER GILBERT MClNTOSH, E X, - Clear Lake, la. I-le was ever precise in promise keeping. BEULAH CLARE MCKEE, - - - - Evanston Classical Course. Let all the number of the stars give light To thy fair Way! HOWARD C. MCPI-IERRIN, B 9 H, Kansas City, Mo, Classical Course. Trig Play Clj, Class Baseball Team flj f2j, NoI t7Lwestern. Staff Q25 Q3j, Football Team C3j, H Pan-Hellenic Committee t3j. ,Qf I am sure, care's an enemy to life. . , RAYMOND S. MoREoRD, - Evanston Classical Course. Adelphic Literary Society. All tongues speak of him. ' I JOSEFH L. Moss, Chicago Scientific Course. , i' Y. M. C. A., Clee Club tlj, University Band f3j, X Rogers Debating Club flj Qj, University Orch- ---fn estra QZJ, Class Baseball Team CZJ, Class Treasurer t2j. junior Play Committee, Syllabus if , -' Board, junior Play. ' . He had a daily beauty in his life. - at is 1 ORPI-IA ELLEN NESEIIT, - - Paunee City, Neb. Q ' I ' Scientific Course. 3 3' Faithful, gentle, good, wearing the rose of wom- , ' .' anhood. - 187 .K f X 4' Class of 1906-Continued ,nf LYMAN H. NORTH, B 9 H, - Riverside ig. Classical Course. My heart is turned to stone. -f if J FRANCES lVl. NORTHROP, K K F, - - Woodstock N A V 'b',V Scientific Course. Y. W. C. A., Secretary Class Clj, Syllabus Board. She looks as clear as morning roses washed with dew. . H Louisa W. NORTON, ---- Chicago Classical Course. Y. W. C. A., Alethenai Literary Society, Syllabus ' Board. Sweet promptings unto kindest deeds were in her Very look. XX! CHRIS J. OLESON, ---- Duncombe, la. Scientific Course. t'With manly rnien he stalks along the ground. LEONORA OREM, ---- Chicago Classical Course. Excellence is the reward of labor. MAUD OSBORNE, ---- Scranton, la. Classical Course. Shall l not take mine ease, in mine inn! LAURA GERTRUDE PAGE, Correctionville, Ia. Scientific Course. Y. W. C. A. 'tThe soul's calm sunshine and the heartfelt joy. SARAH PARKS, - - - Evanston v Scientific Course. ., Y. W. C. A. f'-'-' n I-le is well paid that is well satisfied. ' 1 Q EMMA THEODORA PATTEN, A fb, Evanston -f'f 'f 1 Classical Course. . Y. W. C. A. . jf My crown's in my heart, not on my head. N J l88 Class of 1906-Continued HILDUR EVELINE PETERSON, - - Chicago Classical Course. t'Atruer, nobler, trustier heart, More loving, or more loyal, never beat Within a human breast. HERBERT jot-iN PLAGGE, - - - Barrington , I T .I Scientific Course. ' gg' ,' , Y. M. C. A., The Wranglers, Glee Club 125 135, .::- g i-+V' ,411-r... ga 'R A A, R' Q. ? iv' ug? ffs. University Orchestra 125, President of University Qfg ,:- -- - rf'i ' Band 125 135. Q just at the age twixt boy and youth, A , When thought is speech, and speech is truth. nl . V 'I A,.'- fr. V:- MYRA POWERS, A A A, ---. Chicago yg Classical Course. junior Play Committee, Eulexia Literary Society, . Y. W. C. A. High erected thoughts seated in the heart of CATHERINE SARAH PRINDLE, - - Bon Air, Va. . Classical Course. 1 A, ' Y. W. C. A., Alethenai Literary Society, President, ' Q Y. W. c. A. 'tls she not passing fair? , - y orv1 e Q, ..gA ,- CHESTER BERTRAM RAPE Ta l All ' Classical Course. if .. ,,. , 3 Y. M. C. A., The Wranglers, Volunteer Band. ' '- 4 4 He was the mildest manner'd man. ' ' GILBERT HENRY ANDREW RECH, E N, - - Chicago Classical Course. Y. M. C. A., Ti-ig Cast, Glee Club, Hinman Liter- ary Society, Class Football Team 125. First Prize Raymond Debate 125, Syllabus Board. ADELINA PATT1 RODGERS, A QD, - - Charleroi, Pa. Classical Course. Y. W. C. A., Vice-President Class 125, Eulexia Literary Society, Syllabus Board. Eartl'1's noblest thing, a Woman perfected. . , ELSA AUGUSTA ROESSLER. - - Chicago , ,,..!A -Q Classical Course. Thy modesty's a candle to thy merit. ...re R 11,31 HOWARD MYRON ROSINE, 112 K E, - - Evanston '-yligiff' Scientific Course. I Y. M. C. A., Trig, Secretary University Band 125, Manager 135, Class Baseball Team 115. 125, 135, Engineering Club, Glee Club 135, junior Play Cast. And of all men that ever lived, I'd do the proper thing. 189 ,941 fr 1 5 -fr J L va. . f iifm 1. if .- .ff W 4 ff gg. 1 .fa ff-52s we QW 'y ' ff 5 .' 'v1, ! 8. awggfigaaf Sax f f 3. S S. Class of 1906-fContinued CLIFTON DEBE VoisE ROYAL, Classical Course. Y. M. C. A., Adelphic Literary Society. I bear a charmed lite. - U Des Moines, la. ALBERT B. RUTT, - Classical Course. Y. M. c. A. I The testimony of a good conscience is the glory of a good man. Goshen, Ind. f b.,. , t 'f . Sw ,, i 5 , ELI I. RUTT, - - - . - Goshen, Ind. Classical Course. h ' Y. M. C. A., Student Volunteer Band. L, An honest man is the noblest Work of God.'-' 3. G. H. Rurr, ----- Goshen, Ind. , .1-V Classical Course. 25. Y. M. C. A., Student Volunteer Band. I t'Who so lives for humanity must be content to lose himself. ' , Al l MRS. GERTRUDE GIBBS RYDEN, - . Evanston Scientific Course t'l-ler sweet idea wandered through his thoughts. . ZACCHEUS EUGENE SARGISSON, - - - Berwyn A , 'I Scientific Course. Y. M. C. A., Rogers Debating Society, Engineer- Hi s' Q ing Club. 'gif The smile that won't come off. THOMAS Scorr, A T, - - - - Onarga Scientific Course. Y. M. C. A., Football Team QU Q25 f3j, Track Team QZQ, President Canadian Club, Corres- ponding Secretary Y. M. C. A., President Grand Prairie Seminary Club, Class Sergeant-at-Arms QU, Syllabus Board, junior Play. Who battled for the true, the just. Ri-1oDA SEED, ----- Mt. Vernon Scientific Course. Y. W. C. A., Eulexia Literary Society, junior Play. Wit is the lightning of the mind. ETHEL ESTELLE SHANNON, - - Minneapolis, Minn. Scientific Course. Y. W. C. A.. Silence is the perfectest herald of joy. GERTRUDE L. Rutcic, - - - La Grange, Ind. Classical Course. Y. W. C. A. l-low brilliant and mirthful the light of her eye. 190 1 , 42E5s2:..,1:E55:j,:,.:j. 3 2 lf v 9 9 gg-g,3.5.5.v: LL 5 x , ,N wa .99 V04 Y fi' 5, s 1 i I A , 2 9 f ' PV 71 22? Q5 ,, ' A H Ta. 35- 1 -ciiazlri' '::,:?,gTf- -' ,f,1ff31-.yy fi f 1 Qi f 'Q l 1 wg i Qt 1 t igsfn, ' gf 1 za Q 4, 6 45 9 jp, A get ' 13 V3 '3':':'317?EE6f3: f f xv' N x X , , Lew Class of 1906-Continued FRED FERDINAND SHAUVER, A T A, - Middleton, Ark. Scientific Course. Y. M. C. A., Football Squad 131. His life was gentle, and the elements so mixed in him, that nature might stand up and say to all the world, 'This was a manl' W. ODELL Si-IEPARD, A T A, - - - Chicago Classical Course. At whose sight all the stars hide their diminished head. ALFRED ERLE SHIBLEY, A T A, - - St. Charles Scientific Course. Aleph Teth Nun, Engineering Club, Trig Crema- tion Committee, Trig Cremation Cast, Glee Club 125, Business Manager Syllabus. For he was strong, and of so mighty corse as ever wielded spear in warlike hand. JOHN AINSLIE SLOCUM, 112 K XII, - - - Chicago Classical Course. Nature hath fram'd strange fellows in her time. ARTHUR ELTON SMOTHERS, - - Rossville Classical Course. Y. M. C. A., Cross Country Club QZJ t3j, Presi- dent l-linman Literary Society t3j, Track Team QZD, Second Prize Raymond Debate QD, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet t3l, Browning Club, junior Play Committee, Syllabus Board. 'tGreat always, without aiming to be great. l.lLA I-IENRIETTA SNELL, A A A, V - - Chicago Scientific Course. Syllabus Board. The beauty of a lovely women is like music. ROY WALDO SNELL, A T A, - - Ida Grove, la. Scientific Course. Class Football Team Q21 631, Y. M. C. A., Syllabus Board. My heart is wax to be moulded as she pleases, but enduring as marble to retain. HENRIETTA SOHBECK, K K Il, - Moline Classical Course. Alethenai Literary Society. Contentment is the pearl of great price. HAZEL l-IARRET SPENCER, A F, - - Chicago Special. A work so majestical and stately! 191 - - - 4 Q1 A H g 2' 'T k I A W fl f ff at 1461, 4 4, X W' -:B 1 -' ? , ,g 4 , a f P Z 1 if 'E122112.' .gjQ'f1' N- .Eg -- waz. .v - 1 I , . .. f f'-' . Q- ,gf-4. 1 'Uag --- 231 , 213. - f-1 2: 12 'nf . , ' 1 - ff Class of 1906-Continued PAUL S. ST. CLAIR, A T, - - - DesIMoines, Ia. Scientific Course. Y. M. C. A., Syllabus Board, Trig Committee, Northwestern Staff 131, Advertising Manager Y. M. C. A., Lecture Course 131, Secretary and Treasurer Athletic Association 131, Trig Flay, Class Football Team 111 121, Class Baseball Team 111 121, Class Track Team 1Capt.1 121. But, if it be a sin to covet honor, l am the most offending soul alive. DOUGLAS FRANKLIN STEVENS, - - - Evanston Scientific Course. Y. M. C. A., Manager Student Lecture Course 131, Local Manager of Syllabus, Vice-President Engineering Club 121 131, Treasurer N. O. L. 131, Business Manager junior Flay. 'tThe keen spirit seizes the prompt occasion, makes the thought start into instant action, and at once plans and performs, resolves and executes. FLORENCE ALBERTA STOCKLEY, - - - Evanston Classical Course. Wisdom is better than rubies. A WINIFRED LUELLA STOUT, - - Hurley, So. Dak. Classical9Course. Y. W. C. A., Student Volunteer Band. Blessings ever wait on virtuous deeds. MARGARET LEE STOUTEMEYER, - - - Onarga Classical Course. Y. W. C. A. Of all our parts, the eyes express, the sweetest kind of bashfulnessf' MYRON EUGENE TAYLOR, B 6 H, - - Barron, Wis. Scientific Course. Y. M. C. A. Treasurer 121, I-linman Literary Society, Aleph Teth Nun, No1't7Lweste1'n. Maga- zine Staff 121, Sargent Contest, Class Baseball Team 121, Class Football Team 121. As proper man, as one shall see in a summer's day. LEILA THISTLEWOOD, K A 9, - - - Cairo Scientific Course. Noble minds have no resentment. ELLA TRELEASE, A I', ---- Evanston Y. W. C. A., Vice-President Class 111, Vice- Presi- dent Class 131, Syllabus Board, Treasurer Wom- ans Athletic Association 131. As merry as the day is long. FRANCES VIOLA TURNER, A A A, - - - Chicago Scientific Course. But then her face, so lovely, yet so arch, so full of mirth. The overflowings of an innocent heart. 192 Class of 1906-Continued l-IEDWIG UNzxc1cER, - Scientific Course. Earnestness alone makes life eternity. - - Chicago NINA ELEANOR VEST, Classical Course. Y. W. C. A., Eulexia Literary Society. Diligence is the mother of good fortune. - - - Montezuma, la. MARY SOPHIA Voior, - - - Kankakee Classical Course. Y. W. C. A., Volunteer Band. 'Tis chastity, my Brother, chastityg She that has that is clad in complete steel. LAURA WILBERTON, I' CID B, Winona, Minn. Classical Course. Y. W. C. A. And as the bright sun glorifies the sky, So is her face illumin'd with her eye. SINCLAIR ANSON WILLMARTH, - - - Glencoe Scientific Course. Track Team llj, Glee Club CBJ, Engineering Club. Tennis Team 123. Of my merit, On thet point you yourself may jedgef' Joi-IN I-l. WITTER, ----- Creenview Classical Course. Y. M. C. A., Adelphic Literary Society. None but himself can be his parallel. CASSIUS l-IIRAM Wooo, - R - Cass City, Mich. Scientific Course. A quiet disposition, earnest and brilliant. VIRGlNlA JEANNEWE WULFF, - - Kenosha, Wis. Classical Course. Who deserves well needs not another's praise. ARTHUR EDWIN YOUNG, ---- Evanston Y. M. C. A., Adelphic Debating Society. Psychol- ogy Club, junior Play Cast. To be young is surely the best. if the most pre- carious gift, of life. 193 f Al will 4 .4T417!4f1. . 1 1 ' fig' L44 .sf AW 3' X? I gl: t ' x 4 ff fo? a J? :M V L ? , 5. , A z,' 't pf' ,Mi If , wi' f ,-, -1-::z:w.v ,E . if ' ' 1 14 f f we i iii , 4' . 'Yes . , I -- '-iwmuwlfe-' --:f :iffy 4 ' 'f f , J' A- . -NCI' YYATT5- Officers i I President, - CLYDE D. FOSTER Vice-President, SARAH SHUTE 'jp Secretary, - EDITH GoRsUcl-I Treasurer, - - W. CLAY SMOOT Sergeant-at-Arms, - GUS BROWN Historian, - CHARLES W. RAMSHAW rx 5 . FW? o F QC -A fx A 172, ., 3 N! A E fi u X W ' Officers gi wg ,JJ X ff, if 51 5 President, WILLARD J. DIXON , V, ci ,f I Vice-President, MABEL SHANNON f i 'K cf v f I N, X Secretary, ALICE A. FULTON Q -Q 2 'I-Q' - . ' Treasurer, - WM. CLIN HUNTER .1 ' . Sergeant-at-Arms, GEORGE E. FARRELL - L- ' I 'V Historian, - AMY B. ONKEN - My mvns - 195 Av 14. ,Liv , 5 an V Honors X few ,5f?W??'f ,QAM if as-M I ,..,,,, MMM, Ii I- Al .. I , , ' ,T If '- .. lKW2, 5'-135, 1 jj .Lf. .gr , fqxrf i f A I , Harris Prize WILLIAM D. KERR CHARLES A. BRIGGS First Prize Sargent Prizes Kirk Prize ALLISON R. HEAPS FREDERICK L. BINDI-IAIvIIvIER Second Prize 7 I ,A 9 .. 5 L ' I ,Q Wf7 f ' if f - 2 E15 5 E A f 5 g g Z 5 ig g.3g fa gi g Gygz L E E ' s E 74 E TRS R Si .ss ESRSR S I Officers President, - - - - - HENRY S. WHITE Vice-President, - - JOSEPH MORSE Recording Secretary, - Corresponding Secretary, - Treasurer, - - EDGAR ADDISION BANCROFT GUY GAILLAIRD BECKNELL KENNETH HOWARD DAVENPORT HENRY VICTOR GALLUP MYRTLE LAMINTA JOHNSON AMY HEDWIG OLGEN CHARLES GILBERT SABIN Members Initiated Iune 14, 1904 ALKIN GARFIELD ANDERSON GEORGE IRVING BELL EDWIN ERASTUS ELLIS HUGH HENRY HARRIS MAUDE MARGUERITE MARTIN ANNA KATHERINE PAUPA ARTHUR HAWLEY SANFORD .IENNIE BETHANY WHITE 197 CARLA FERN SARGENT O. F. LONG - FRANK E. LORD ELLEN PERCY BARROWS ELIZABETH GERTRUDE BRONSON AXEL LOUIS ELMQUIST HEDWIG HERMINE HOCHBAUM EDITH AGNES NORTHRUP LUISE WILHELMINE RAEDER ISABEL ORWISTON WARRINGTON Young Wome n's Christian Association Officers DAISY MATI-IIS, - - - President FANNIE CAMPBELL Vice-President EDITH LONG, - - Treasurer LucILE RADER, Recording Secretary AMY OLGEN, General Secretary Chairmen of Committees Missionary, - ---- REBA HURN Devotional, - - INA BUSWELL Membership, FANNIE CAMPBELL Social, - - SARAH Sl-IUTE Bible Study, - BERTI-IA CREEK Intercollegiate, - LOUISE HOBART Finance, - - EDITH LONG Board of Control, - DAISY GlRTON Academy Association, - ETI-ILYN PARTRIDGE Advisory Committee MRS. JAMES A. JAMES MRS. THOMAS F. HOLGATE MRS. JAMES A. PATTEN MRS. WM. A. DYCHE MRS. AMOS W. PATTEN MRS. MARTHA FOOTE CROW MISS ELIZABETH BRAGDON 198 ' Young Men's Christian Association Officers President, - - - Vice-President, - - Recording Secretary, - Corresponding Secretary, - Treasurer, - - General Secretary, - Committee Membership, - - Religious Meetings, Bible Study, - Finance, - Lecture, - - Social, - - intercollegiate Relations, Missionary, - - Statistics, - - - Missionary Board of Control, Philanthropic Work, - - Advisory Committee J. A. JAMES T. F. I-IOLGATE G. A. COE W. A. DYCHE J. F. OATES G. l-l. TOMLINSON Board of Directors WILLIAIvI DEERING W. A. DYCI-IE J. A. JAIxIEs T. F. l-IOLOATE G. A. COE WIvI. R. JOHNSON lvl. E. TAYLOR 199 - - WIvI. R. JOHNSON S. M. HARRISON H ELNIER SCI-IAFER - - TOIvI Scori- - D. C. l-IUEEART E. N. PARMELEE Chairmen - R. E. MILLER - F. A. MOON - JOHN LAW - D. C. l-IUEBARI - DOUGLAS STEVENS - E. A. BRONSON - TOM Scorr - J. R. BANNISTER - P. I-l. CLEVELAND - GLEN P. WISHARD - OLIVER S. HUBBART E. N. PARMELEE. General Secretary. Illustrators of the 1906 Syllabus J. E. RUSSELL J. G. CARLSON L. A. WATTS G. A. ROCHELEAU NORTHWESTERN DELEGATION AT Y. M. C. A. CONFERENCE, LAKE GENEVA, JUNE, 1905 ZOO WoII en Sie- Mlfgehenww f Q1 S7 mc, L +lxeP +nd Whos Who WW X T J X' A W! SS 9 ev lp . -.-. is , -5 ff' 349' . - - my If-I Q-. , A I' INA N fglfgfre e o JSJHSS VHIIA' 7 if 5 ifw - HRT WATTS- Trig, the Pretender, or Whols Who? Presented by the Freshman Class of the College of Liberal Arts, Northwestern University, by ROBERT E. MILLER JOHN A. CLARK Music by ELMER S. ALBRITTON Saturday Evening, May 28, 1904, Fisk Hall, 8 o'CloCk, Cast of Characters TRIG-Pretender to the Throne of Riartania - - O,RlARlTY1ll,+H6lY Apparent to l the Throne Of Riartania - PNEUMATIC TIRE-A Tramp TOM-A Northwestern Freshman, Class 1985 - DICK7A Northwestern Student Managing the Campaign - HARRY-A Northwestern Student in Love with Jane PRINCESS UNEEDA ----- JANE-A Ward of Trig'S MINIONS OF TRIG- Touchard Patmary - Mr. F. O. PAGE - - OLD GUARD - ---- - Waiters, Students, Towspeople, etc. ELM ER S. ALBRITTON Evanston, Illinois. - W. CLAY SMOOT - CHARLES W. RAMSHAW - LLOYD I-l. ROBERTS - MELVIN M. HAWLEY JOHN L. BARKER - JOHN A. CLARK NED J. CONLEY - JAMES C. SHAW - MINER RAYMOND - EARLE B. KITTLEMAN - SIDNEY WEST CLYDE D. FOsTER WALTER A. SAWYER , S 2 Chorus: ERNEST O. BENDIX WALTER F. NUZUM GEORGE P. DERICKSON ESLIE A. PETTITT LEON L. HEBBLETHWAITE ISAAC I. SCOTT CHARLES E. LARSON ELMER SCHAFFER ROBERT E. MILLER RALPH C. J. WALLACE VICTOR E. NELSON GLENN F. WISHARD WALLACE P. WOOD ROY E. FULLER - ----- Business Manager Trig Cremation Committee WILLIAM O. MATTHEW -------- Chairman CHARLES W. RAMSI-IAW TI-IADDEUS S. SNELL JOHN A. CLARK JOHN L. BARKER I-I. P. ROUNDTREE - - - - 202 - - Trainer K w ,J 1 WOR RTA JHLH' 00 T0 CDIYOVZBQ Goldsmith Presented by the Class of 1906 Evanston Country Club, March 31 CAST OF CHARACTERS Sir Charles Marlow, - - - - - Young Marlow, his son, ----- Hastings, friend of young Marlow, in love with Miss Neville, l-lardcastle, retired country Squire, Tony Lumpkin, his dare-devil step-son, - Diggory, the family butler, - Mrs. Hardcastle, eccentric old woman who doles On Tony, - Miss Hardcastle, who Hstoops to conquer, - - Miss Neville, niece of Mrs. Hardcastle, Maid, ----- IDA H. KING Stingo, the landlord, - - E. A. HARTMAN Simon, I S - A. E. YOUNG Ralph, servants, - L. L. DINES Roger, - - C. E. JAMES Mat Muggins, 2 S - H. M. ROSINE Tom Twist, fellows, - - j. L. MOSS Jack Slang, S 2 - E. F. EILERT Committee CHRISTINE MGGAFEEY, Chairman ' SHELBY M. HARRISON il. L. Moss MYRA POWERS A. E. SMOTHERS R GEORGE F. BIRD, Trainer DOUGLAS F. STEVENS, Business Manager il' E. J. ASTHALTER. Assistant Manager SU, - Y Mm D 205 HRT YYRTTS' ORIS B. HASTINGS DWIGHT C. HUBBART DEAN S. FANSLER E. F. BIDDLE - L. R. l-IORTON T. S. SCOTT - R1-IODA SEED FRANCES GRAVES CHRISTINE MGGAFEEY S , l' ll Willard Hall Committees and Chairmen Committee of Advisors EMILY HARRIS MRS. MARTHA FOOTE CROW Dean of Women Settlement Committee MISS HUEGIN Music Committee ELIZABETH WILLIAMS Chapel Committee DAISY MATHIS Social Committee POLLY LITTLE Physical Culture SIDNEY HALL Amusement Committee ORA DAVENPORT Art Committee EDITH SHEDD MISS ANNIE W. PATERSON Matron of Willard Hall 71 1 11,0 ccmcpvz' 0 , T T A 'KJ' e is-li F 3 25' po Q 0 ,. Q., 'ICI ol fi' 495,-,,g,LL' ,LAL-Z H--Mfffaffg SMQQJMQ +C L.2llZ5 ow4G'1' 206 m.'F C- --x - 'em x --. - , ,,g,g,A-, 5 f K D Q if Ei iii l S H - 4- - --.--'Rx N. x K . ' I-,hr t at it w I Q 'Q L I ix! is I .4 -HRT WATTS FRANCES CURREY PIERCE FLORENCE L. MITCHEL Preceptress Pearsorfs I-lall Preceptress Chapin Hall - - f 5 -E E 'E E 5 Es , ..,. E 5 5 E E 5 l - El TE, E ., EAS, E 55 gg E .ei-H? AE E 5 l. l ur? 1 5 pi S5555 gg . S 59 A -bE- 25- 5 gs-2-Aj: 55? Sig? E5 5 5' X fs ga? ge? 55 E a?EEE 5,5E,? x XX x X if,2..1 f-E,. f21gZC -nm WATTS - X C f E51 ' 207 2 ? 5. 'S is J m l i E K M New YQ N WJ mv f f rj M R 3 X A, - 12 ' , iw mg QD xL.,. if 3 ff X Rf' Xi.. W? JD MQ Q fp kr 1 'F A S k My kiln Q Q nj Xl Q MEQ ffm Q I J- ffl: W Q X XQQ ,jg , Q53 Q3 K 9 is lil? 4 .:,,iT.,Vl7f gg, ff-'V-N UN W, W Q I ,N F A xglrif Mfrs- PN N MT W 5 343 W President, - Vice-President, Secretary, - - Treasurer, - Sergeant-at-Arms, Censor, - D. R. MCGREW A. E. SMOTHERS G. P. WISHARD G. I-I. WILLE'FT G. T. PETERSON Officers H A. E. SMOTHERS D. G. HUBBART - T. P. HORN - G. S. FULCHER J, P. FAULKNER Members J. P. FAULKNER G. S. FULCHER T. P. HORN D. C. I-IUBBART W. D. KELLEY W. R. MEISNER V. K. BROWN T. M. DAHM L. S. I-IIO1-1 N. A. PIERCE QBLQVQR95 210 1-I. E. RUSSELL F. A. MOON F. STAHL R. L. MARSDEN M. E. TAYLOR R. E. MILLER f P 1 4 11, 'lynx H Y l ,r Y' 4 ' , I rf ' Hu PEE M . 2:1 J ,Y Eb - HRT YYATISI' Rogers Debating Club Officers C. L. SURPRISE - - - - - Pregidem E. J. ASTHALTER - - Vice-President F. A. NAGLEY Secretary A. I. HARDY Treasurer M. W. MERRELL - Chaplain J. T. NUTTALL - - Sergeant-at-arms E D Members W. E. HARDY J. R. BANNISTER E. A. LEMOINE O. T. GILLET J. B. TURNER C. L. SURPRISE E. J. ASTHALTER F. A. NAGLEY A. I. HARDY F. M. GIBSON G. A. JAMES G. A. WARMER M. W. MERRELL J. T. NUWALL A. M. HAMILTON E. E. ANDERSON W. E. GRAY J. F. ROMMELL C. C. WELLS J. M. BLUM 213 'TIE J .3 I- ,f 1 ' ADFZM ADH Q X I .QJJ We MM J 'ff AIM, Adelphic Literary Society First Semester Officers J. CALEE JUSTICE S. H. GILBERT - CARL LONG - - GUS S. BROWN - EMORY S. BOGARDUS MOISES MERUBIA - - FRANCIS L. HARWOOD FRANCIS L. HARWOOD DE BE VOISE ROYAL EMORY S. BOGARDUS EDWIN A. GREENLAW, Gus S. BROWN J. CALEB JUSTICE FRANCIS L. HARWOOD FRED H. CLUTTON S. H. GILBERT WILEY J. SHANNON EMORY S. BOGARDUS RALPH C. J. WALLACE A. L, FRY CARL LONG ROY COFFEY B. C. GRIMES Officers F I J Ph. D., Members 214 xii wily - President Vice-President - - Secretary - - Treasurer - - Chaplain Sergeant-at-arms Ambassador Team Captain Critic DE BE VOISE ROYAL RAYMOND S. MORFORD , CLYDE D. FOSTER MOISES MERUBIA A. E YOUNG VERNON R. LOUCKS FAY N. SEATON HERNIAN GEORGE E. S. E. POLLOCK H. WILLIAMS J. G. CARLSON E. F. BIDDLE BEGGS Lgx ei WW .I - lf V UVIISMJIMXI Eulexia Literary Society -- RRT WATTS - Officers RUTH G. DALE, - - President RHODA SEED, - Vice-President BESSIE E. DREW, - Secretary ELANCHE L. GRIGSON, - - Treasurer MAY HUGHES, - Sergeant-at-Arms Honorary Members MRS. J. SCOTT CLARK MRS. MARTHA FOOTE CROW MISS JANE DALE MISS EDITH DENNETT MISS HELEN HOLBROOK MRS. THOMAS F. HOLGATE MISS FRANCES D. HULBERT MRS. JAMES A. JAMES MISS FRANCES PIERCE MRS. ARTHUR H. WILDE Members DAISY M. GIRTON SIBYL HORNINC DORA E. JONES GRACE E. LASHER MILDRED G. AUTEN ELSIE M. BAKER MARGUERITE O. BIGELOW RUTH BRONSON RUTH G. DALE BESSIE E. DREW ELEANOR FALLEY EDNA L. BOVARD HELEN F. GOES AIMEE W. DOOLITTLE RUTH E. DREW ALICE M. MONTGOMERY MYRA POWERS RI-IODA SEED SARAH C. SHUTE NINA E. VEST FLORENGE J. WOODWORTH SARAH YOUNT PA'l'l'I RODGERS OLIVE R. SIBERTS 217 BLANCHE L. GRIGSON MAY HUGHES IDA H. KING EDITH L. LONG KATHLEEN M. MOORE QUEEN L. SHEPHERD . Alethenai Literary Society MOTTO-K'LIVE Officers President, - EMILY HARRIS Vice-President, - EDITH GORSUCH Recording Secretary, - BESSIE PEARCE Corresponding Secretary, - - MARIE HAMMOND Treasurer, ------ LOUISE HOBART Historian, - - ALICE GRIFFIN Critic, - - - - - EDITH SHEDD Sergeant-at-Arms, S - - LOUISE NORTON Members INA BUSWELL FLORENCE BUTZ FANNIE CAMPBELL EDITH GORSUCH ALICE GRIFFIN MARGARET HAMMOND MARIE HAMMOND FLORA HYDE DAISY MATHIS CHRISTINE MCGAFFEY ETHELYN PARTRIDGE EESSIE PEARCE DAISY PEARCE CATHERINE PRINDLE EMILY HARRIS REBA HURN EDITH SHEDD HENRIETTA SOHRBECK ALICE SHURTLEFF ETHEL SWITZER ELSIE WILLIAMS LOUISE HOBART LUCILE RAEDER I-IAZEL SCHNABELE LOUISE NORTON EVELYN TEAGUE RENA HANDY EDNA RAMSEY MAY MARTIN MAUD WEARY 218 i x l 2 3 Ss sg Anonian Literary Society Motto V Up and Not Down Colors Q Pale Green and White Ufficers President, - MARGARET V. WAX Vice-President, - M MABEI. KIMBER Secretary, - FRANCES GRAVES Treasurer, - - LILA SNELI. Ambassador, - MARTHA BRODBY ' Critic, - - JESSIE Cox Marshal, - ESTHER WHITE Members AMY ONKEN NEI.I.E BEGGS LENA LINN CEORGIE STERLING EVELYN JONES FRANCES GRAVES ESTI-IER WI-IITE VERNA ISAACSON EUNICE COWLES MABEI. KIMBER LOUISE CATER CORNELIA HAUSER NEI.I.IE LAUDERBAUGI-I MARTHA BRODBY HARRIET SMITI-I CAROLYN PIPER LILA SNELL GRACE PIERSON SARA DOHT EDITH FONDA EMMA PETERS FRANCES HALL GRACE BURNETT MARGARET V. WAX ABBIE RIET1-IARD JESSIE Cox SARA BROWN 220 EMMA PATTEN SARA PARKS ALLIE LAIRD MARGARET STOUTEMEYER 'I CLUBS WN W Xt Kjltmtwcawamsll new Established at Northwestern University, May 20, 1904 Members in the University School of Oratory JOHN A. BARNES, A. E. FRANK M. RARIG, A. B. College of Liberal Arts bkfniuvrs SIMON M. KANAGY JOHN G. LAW ALBERT H. NASH GEORGE T. PALMER FRANK N. REED FRED ROWLEY BARTI-IOLOMEW j. SPENCE HENRY J.WHITNEY .fuzziors C. BERTRAM RAPE HERBERT J. PLAGGE Sophomorcs Gus S. BROWN ROY E. FULLER SAMUEL H. GILBERT WILLIAM R. LESLIE HARRIsoN MCJOHNSTON Ismc I. SCOTT GLENN P. WISHARD F2'es71.n1en ROY COFFEY GEORGE P. HOWARD WILEY J. SHANNON CHARLES WHITNEY 222 ,. -if 'Ei 1511-A As Q ENGINEERING ' CLUB ff ' 1 , I L 3 - . G A T ' D ,fff I-,X t,....k,, G49 ,iff GQAJK. 1 President, GORDON S. FULO1-TER Vice-President, DOUGLAS F. STEVENS Secretary, j. PERYLE COCAYNE Treasurer. - C. U. SEGAR Members E. M. BALDWIN GEORGE E. BEGGS A. j. BLAIR J. R. BROWN J. P. COCAYNE WM. CODDINGTON GUY I-I. Cox P. L. DORNER M. W. EDDY j. P. FAULKNER A. L, FRY GORDON FULCHER ALFRED E. HARRIS L. S. JONES FRANK LUZA 1. G. MAMER E. F. MANSON j. T. NUTTALL I-I. j. PLAGGE THOMAS L. PORTER MINER RAYMOND A. L. REAM W. T. REED HOWARD M. ROSINE T. E. SAROISSON C. U. SEGAR A. E. SHIRLEY DOUGLAS F. STEVENS M. RAYMOND TILLOTSON S. A. WILMARTH 225 ALUMNI 'VI g ev- EJ ' .AI C f V- ' U rI'VYfff 9x,E- 9 , '13 xy Q , GER-R Z Officers J. L. ALABASTER, - President J. T. HATFIELD, - Vice-President ELIZABETH ERAGDON, - Recording Secretary J. F. OATES, - Corresponding Secretary M. C. BRAGDON, - Treasurer Directors J. L. ALABASTER J. T. HATFIELD J. F. OATES ELIZABETH BRAGDON J. A. BELLOWS G. P. MERRICK E. P. CLAPP G. A. FOSTER J. P. GRIER C. W. SPOFFORD H. I-i. BROWN PARKE BROWN Y ' . 1 HRT YYRTTS T Officers President, DAVID I. WILLIAMS Vice-President, FRANCES C. PIERCE SSCFCTHFYI - EDITH DENNETT Treasurer, - - WALTER E. ROLOFF get D EA JJ. g Ex . I J I I A 4' NJ RAR. L - Leader, O. S. HUBBART Vice-Leader, JULIA KIPP SCCTST-ary, - DORA E, JONES Treasurer, CALEB JUSTICE 226 HISTORY LUI3 ii 'ft YI,-,-1- 1 . .f 1 ..- T The History Club Officers President - - - JOHN MASSEN Vice-President - - - DAISY M. GIRTON Secretary - - - - - FLORENCE JENKINS Treasurer - - - - JESSIE V. Cox Sergeant-at-Arms ---- JULIUS G. CARLSON Executive Committee ERNEST E. COLVIN ----- Chairman H. A. E. CI-IANDLER LAURA B. SAMFSON M. SIDNEY HALL MR. ROYAL B. WAY ' X447 7 XX Q I -' V i' 1 K T ' is fx K 'IL 3 I' Am , 4 if ' i Q X , I S Q L4 N1 gf j 1 je, mf , w II I fi lf! ' J j 4 1. if ji jf- I d fy FAC I W J EDWIN ALMIRON GREENLAW, Ph. D., - Leader CK Q ij?-'f R. Louis ELMQUIST - - - President L ,MA Ny GRACE E. LAS!-IER - - Secretary WALTER D. KELLEY - - Treasurer S Honorary Members DR. ASHLEY HORACE THORNDIKE PROP. WILLIAM A. OLDFATI-IER DR. JOI-IN A. SCOTT Associate Members MISS HEDWIG HOCKBAUM MISS MYRTLE E. MOWRY MISS CARRIE M. SPERRY MISS ELNORA SCOTT MISS DAISY DEAN Members MISS EDNA BAKER MISS LUCILE CANNON MRS. MARY F. FRAZER MISS JOSEPI-IINE HAEE MISS ELIZABETH HILLMAN MISS HELEN HOLBROOK MISS GRACE HOGUE MISS HELEN E. HOLTON GRACE E. LASHER MISS ELEANOR F. LEWIS FRANCES PIERCE MISS LAURA SAMPSON MR. WALTER W. DAVIS MR. A. LOUIS ELIMQUIST MR. WALTER D. KELLEY MR. WALTER E. ROLOFF MISS MISS MISS OLINIA MATTISON MISS JEANETTE WICKES MR. EIYIORY D. FRAZER MR. JOI-IN HUBERT SCOTT 227 MISS ORPHA NESBIT MR. GEORGE E. BEGGS MR. CLOYD S, HEAD MR. W. ODELL SI-IEPARD SCIENCE CLUB wt., i lr ? gp A W I , , g Ji X hu -,- Q, PROFESSOR A. R. CROOK, President FLOYD FIELD, - - - Secretary Programs 1904 March 4-.-PROP. A. R. CROOK.-t'The Occurrence and Mining of Diamonds. April 1.-DR. R. R. TATNALL.- Discovery and Properties of Radium and Other Radio- Active Substances. May 6.-PROP, Locv.-'K Biological Station at Naples. October 7.-PROP. I-IOUGH.- jupiter, November 4.-PROF. R. l-I. POND.- The Role of the Larger Aquatic Plants in the Biology of Fresh Water. December 2.-PROP. A. V. E. YOUNG.-L' Mendelieff's Chemical Conception of the Ether. j. N. PEARCE.- The Preparation and Some of the Properties of Callaidal Metal Solution. 1905 January 6.-DR. W. M. STRONG.- Some Points of Interest in Mortality Tables. February 3.-J. W. GOLDTHWAIT.- P0311-gl2.Cl3l Land Movements in New England. PROP U. S. GRANT.-t'R6C6Ul Contributions to Metarnorpl'1isrn. March 3.-PROP. A. R. CROOK.!- TDC Geology of the Grand Canon of the Colorado. A Die Deutjcbe Qiejelllcbait .A A it A A if A DEAN S. FANSLER, - - President ALICE E. Sl-IURTLEFF, - Vice-President FRANCES B. BOWDLE, - - Secretary ,, Q 0 .. ' ELMER j. SC!-IAFFER, - - Treasurer Q Executive Committee GEORG EDWARD PROP. GEORGE O. CURME PROP. JAMES TAFT HATFIELD DR. ADOLPH BUSSE 228 M1 Aleph etlxNun wer W ii WG I ' VV NL Ii P cc - - no I' P 'li f , qu. W I ji f 13 -I T gi e - ' H I V .I I VII J I L Q I Let Us Be Good Citizens fl Founded ID 1902 For the Study of Practical Politics N ELIOT C. WILLIAMS - - Organizer . ,X l xl FRANK N. REED - - First President I Iwi I .T I ii Officers i L N W GRANVILLE H. TWINING President MYRON E. TAYLOR - Vice-President H. L. BROCKWAY - Chaplain FRANK O. SMITH - Secretary Honorary Members ELIOT C. WILLIAMS ROBERT H. LORD ' CARL R. BRAODON EDGAR T. WALL T. MARSHAL KANAVEL ROY H. MONIER ROBERT B. ATCHISON ELBERT A, WATSON M. L. FLANINGAM W. R. WILEY Advisory Board PROP. GRAY PROP. JAMES FRANK MCCLUSKEY D. I. WILLIAMS MALCOME BAIRD M. MATTISON Members W. GARFIELD RILEY HERMAN L. BROOKWAY FRANK O. SMITH MYRON E. TAYLOR SHELBY M. HARRISON F. L. BINDHAMMER FRANK N. REED ERNEST E. COLVIN G. H. TWINING C. D. FOSTER HERMAN H. WILLIAMS A. E. SHIBLEY JOHN MASSEN M. M. POPE ARTHUR STRAWSON F. M. RARIG RA-I. QP LE CERCLE FRANCAIS CHRISTINE MCGAFFEY - - - President ELSIE WILLIAMS Vice-President J. C. RUSSELL - - Secretary JOSEPHINE S. RUSSELL - - Treasurer T 229 Epsilon Beta SENIOR SORORITY 4 Beta Chapter Founded at Northwestern University, May 13, 1904 Patronesses MRS. MARTHA FOOTE CROW MRS. W. C. SHURTLEFE ALICE E. SHURTLEFF FANNIE CAMPBELL CORNELIA HAUSER SIDNEY HALL ORA DAVENPORT EDITH L. LONG WILI-IELMINA M. SOMMER MABEL K. MIEHLE ETHLYN H. PARTRXDGE HARRIET MAE DONEY POLLY LITTLE JESSIE Cox LELIA I-IARWOOD JENNIE G. WHIPPLE HARRIET STRONG FRANCES I-IULBERT MRS. S. D. WORKS Sorores in Universitate INA L. BUSWELL DAISY MATI-IIS ELIZABETH WILLIAMS MARY I-IILL NAOMA W. POLLARIJ ESTELLA TRUBY SARAH D. ULMER DAISY M. GIRTON REBA J. I-IURN DAISY I. PIERCE HAZEL SCHNAEELE JOSEPHINE HAEF EMMA j. THOMAS AMELIA WINDOW PEARL MCKENNEY BERTHA CREEK ALICE M. MONTGOMERY DORA E. JONES EDITH SHEDD THEKLA ROMPEL KATHLEEN MOORE ELEANOR FALLEY LOUISE CATER JULIA I. KIPP I-IARRIET SMITH ISABEL COOK ETHYL WORKS GRACE BOLSTER EMILY HARRIS Colors Garnet and Rose Pink ' 230 BESSIE G. PEARCE OLIVE RUTH SIEERTS SARA J . BROWN FLORENCE j. WOODWORTH FLORENCE ARNOLD MARGARET V. WAX VERA M. BROWER ELIZABETH BARNES ABBIE G. REITHARD 5 ,ff f K fe f .uv- av wf my 2' 1-24' :jf:,3Q-.v:,, , . 2. '-EZ? i24 ' ,, Q -rf . ff3 '. 1 I , , , fffs ' ' ' ' wr, . '-g ' ,V ,. V -. - V1-?Zli?' -f' ,fC'7'+--'L 1 ami:-:f::E'f'1-21:11 1.,s:a:ssif-9 1- Lv m.-.1-.-nw my .gr X ix , .f av -f ff' .- ,-,355 W-.1 3 fl in f ,:,1 55-32 1 1 I . lganj-15116 may X N 1 me f .. . A iggomerxadejl - HRT YYsl'l'T.:- Evanston Country Club February 24, 1905 A K Officers 5 gm 'Z' tif . ff, DAVID l-IANSON, - - General Chairman ww' O 7,1 fi I 'T fxifcfflgf. 15, QU LLOYD R. ROBERTS, - Secretary grkj A '-4 'inf'-vT'NC.P'-V.. ' 7 ' ' ELMER F. BLU, - Treasurer Committee Phi Kappa Sigma DAVID HANSON RALPH W. ROOT Phi Kappa Psi DEAN FANSLER JOHN SLOCUM Phi Delta Theta ELMER F. BLU R. A. WILLSON Beta Theta Pi HOWARD C. MCPHERRIN ALMON A. GREENMAN Sigma Chi CLAUDE B. CUMNOCK LLOYD R. ROBERTS Q V 'Y' 233 L LIFE-SAVING PETER JENSEN, Captain CREW. NO. 1. E. B. PHELPS NO. 2. F. L. BINDHAMMER NO. 3. E. F. MANSON NO, 4. W. E. WALLACE NO. 5. E. E. ANDERSON NO. 6. F. M. GIBSON NO. 7. SYLVESTER SPARLING G - HRT WATTS - SV' IZA Q Sl Officers President, - - THOMAS SCOTT Secretary, - ALPHEUS L. FRY Treasurer, - - NELSON H. JOHNSON Members . DEAN THOMAS F. HOLGATE MURIEL FULL MARTHA M. DICKEY MABEL F. TURNER E. W.iFORBES ' -:Hb ,. av 33. 7. GEORGIA B. HOLGATE THOMAS SCOTT A. L. FRY B. D. LEMERY N. H. JOHNSON .,--. -.fig . Rl ii.. I .5 Orrin .fs-1: AA I ' - A:-,x .f-:J r:-.- I .11 r ., . V .2 xx! :.,--- A 1 I I Q., .iw I 7 F. 'Nw I-. -5 f, . 1-,-xg: 11.2 2 -+P-5 1- Aki' .f .v-1 P f' fa' L 4' :J E - 5.1, . . 1 ,gj -, ' gy ' 1' .. I :V Q Q.. 1 cf . .1 f,. Ia-.. .. .A A A. .., . -. 1-K... --, - , .1 . .. J . IU., .. a, - .V E ,,,., V JOHN A. BARNES 4 CHAS. JAS. DICKEY I J. PHIL JOSEPH P. M. LAVERY 1. JOHN AYLING If' fii 1 A ,E 1 3.4 giggle fi... ii 3.55:--fifi. A4 I - -- ' -qI2.r WATTS- DAVID T. HANSON, President - CHARLES W. RAMSHAW, Secretary - CLYDE D. FOSTER, Treasurer OTTO C. RYDEN ERNEST W. MCDONALD FRANK O. SMITH THOMAS SCOTT JOHN W. HOLLAND DANIEL L. MARSH CARL S. LONG A. CHRISTOPHER THOMPSON R. EERNHARD KLEINSMID PROP. ROYAL B. WAY MR. BUSSEY 234 COLLJ THLETICS 7 ct: J J, Q.A.R. BASE BALL FRESH-SOPH , 0,53 Line-up 1906 1907 1906 1907 HARRISON - - Catcher - ROBERTS, fcj R. SNELL - Left field SOWERS ROSINE - - Pitcher - - WATTS HORN - Center field - - SHERIDAN HANNS - - - Short Stop - - PETTIS MOSS - - Right field - - RAYMOND HASTINGS, fel - - First base - DERICKSON - - - TAYLOR - - Second Base - - BLAKE Score 1906 2-4-1-Onl-2-O 5 2 17 BAIRD - - - Third base - - BARKER Score 1907 1-3-2-2-2-1-3-3-l-18 I I P5 , g eg . X h Line-up 1907 ' 1908 1907 1908 SOWERS - - Left end - TOUOKS BLAKE - - Right end - DE FOE HAWLEY - Left Tackle - WESTON EARKER - - Quarter - FARLEY WISHARD - Left Guard - HORN, Qcj ROBERTS, Cel - Left half - RAEDER WARRINGTON - - Center - CHASE MCGOWAN - Right halt - - AINSLIE SMOOT - - A Right guard - JULXAN l. SCOTT - - Full back - - E JEFFERS NAOLEY - - - Right tackle - - BELL Score 1907 65 1908 O. Time of halveS, IO minutes Soph Base Ball Team Fresh Base Ball Team ,7:'ii- k 1 ' INTER Q NX x XX H 1 Rf '47 1 1.1111101159-is 71, 12. .4 ff ' .,--- .-,falqi , N 1 Z l 11 W , 1 SW Teams Played Won Lost Percr. ,I Phi Delta Theta - 5 5 0 1000 'WW Inq., Beta Theta Pi - 5 4 1 800 .-X 'X Sigma Nu - - 4 3 1 750 1 Delta Tau Delta - 4 3 1 750 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 5 2 3 400 Ng Sigma chi - - 2 0 2 000 5 v f Delta Upsilon - 2 O 2 OOO SQ C'A 2' Phi Kappa Psi - 2 0 2 000 Tennis Team NASH WILMZRTH JAINLIES FULCHER NORTH CONANT 111 1 237 5 5 2 E 2 , J Q X f 7 j 4 in y M CALENDAR me fi ina... .Zum f 1-Qtr. X .JL s,,,,1.,,H, xi 4 ky 1 A Wm, X g,f,f-l ff' - fx ff ' . 'zeal jrgrxbgg I N 'W 'Mull N . 'fwm ,ty FRNN4 ,XX X Lf J gage 6 ,-fax? yglap 5545- . : it FF J - ' al eil-ffnffjijp ll, ' vv - yet PTQQETKX ug' :si-3-l'5f.??i92'f - aff' z ' -1-12' fsfrg flvf ff ,f XJ al' ?f5T'fQiTf .f.f,1 Fly X! 5 fxxgffiygv V ff . ' af New or he M U l l-5551 if 1 sf 1 .1591 ltttljtxl NWN lW'll'.l 1 - .ffl if 1 ' ll K 'V fiemwak if . jaw. ,ll 6 lag f gf . at S-bwg fvf reef'-PM 1 L ft as ES? PM lbiilfff. 4.2, c f 'Q ? A 1 Atari? Vi'-ff , 1 1 Lmgwiixw I ' rf, 37547K , lr3t:r'f'l'l -- F7 ul 27. Buswell's Johson exits through a Sheridan Co the night Watchman. 28. Professor Crook leads Chapel. WERCH 1. The Calendar Committee makes its debut. 2. Bobbie Mattison goes to an eight o'clock one hour early. 3. Professor Edward asks Ethel Works if he might change her name. 5. Elsie Williams moves near Allie Green- man. Elsie says that she likes to live outside the I-lall. 6. Sig Alphs try to detail Murphy-Doggone! 7. Professor Coe tells lnt I-lout that Given time enough he would become a God and the class thinks of eternity. 8. Mary Raymond, Professor Crook, and Doctor Long try the new track. 9. Professor Thorndike to Frances Graves: lt is possible for you to steal, take poison, or hang yourself, but it is not possible for you to come to this class without a book. Athletic Benefit. Oratory students illustrate goo in three plays. 10. Colvin and Bill Johnson ask the usual number of questions in Philosophy E. 11. Seniors are given seats in Chapel where their dignity will most impress the underclass- men. 12. Deutsche Gesellschaft entertained at Willard I-lall. Everybody claps when Mrs. James does. 13. Twelve Phi Delts attend church. 14. Nine-thirty. Louise Raeder waiting on Willard I-lall steps, after Frat meeting, l wish Ollie hadn't gone to Texas. 15. Frances Northrop, 'tl know lots of jokes for the Syllabus but they are all on myself. 16. Snowstorm. Allie Greenman and Edna l-lolderness appear in spring clothing. 18. The Juniors rehearse their play before a large audience and, true to Holmes, the cur- tain sticks. 19. Scott Nortrup helps remove scenery. A Prep remarks that he acts just like he did in the play. 20. Thorndike searches for the bottom of his pockets. 21. College Chapel eVolutes to Fisk Hall. 22. McCullough takes Florence Leekley to recitation in a wheelbarrow. 23. Noted German educators and Professor Hatfield speak in Chapel. 24. Professor Clark, accompanied by forty young ladies, makes his way through a cyclone to the Northwestern Settlement. ' 25. Reverend Mark Guy Pearse of London delivers an address at the theological school. 26. Bindhammer sends Martha Barr apotted geranium and asks to call. Pi Phi party. Miss Coleman desires to see her brother, who for the first time appears in a dress suit. ttage window at eleven-thirty and is caught by 30. Billy Kerr walks to Chapel with Louise Congdonf' 31. Professor Coe closes his series of lectures on The Education of Children. 24-O HPRIL 1. Baseball game, Northwestern makes first down. 2. Easter Sunday. Bindhammer sends Martha Barr a basket of Easter eggs and again asks to call. 3. Flint Bondurant to the tonsor: t'Please cut my hair like Blu's. 4. The Syllabus Board meets and incidentally takes Professor Clark's Hex. 5. School Htuck up. 6. Thorndike discovers the bottom of his trousers' pocket. 7. Polly Little sings Where is My Wandering Boy Tonight? in the German class. 8. The D U's decide to give their annual ball. Ella Trelease: Do my lips look nice? I want them to be smooth for the party. Mite boxes appear in Fisk Hall Chapel. 9. The Gamma Phi party. Ramshaw and Braden are lost in broad daylight while hunting for a girl in the Woods near Ft. Sheridan. Horace Smith gets his inspiration for the debate. 10. Stella Strother: I don't expect to draw to Chi Omega be- cause Amy Olgen is going to do most of the inviting. 11. At Professor Coe's suggestion, Murdock leaves the class to practice his philosophy of religion in the cold, cold world. 12. Bigelow-Chapel-green suit-orange tie-buttons. 13. Mrs. Richards says: 'tThe college teaches young people everything but how to live. 14. Bess Bronson puts on her solitaire. 15. Northwestern Debating Team defeats Michigan, giving us another championship. 16. Chi Omega party. 17. After the debate Myrtle johnson said: ul would just like to hug john Barnes. 18. Blue Monday at Michigan. 19. Florence jenkins, Edna Holbrook and Mike Barnard play ball. 20. Sig Alph Baird to Lila Snell: May I walk to Chapel with you, as l can't see anyone else to walk with? 21. Dr. Simpson and his donkey visit Central America. 22. Seniors roll hoops at Prouty Hall. Professor Gray in his usual manner: Well, we have come to the stage of the game where we ought all to be bristlingwith questions. 23. President's reception brings rain. 24. Bibs' baccalaureate. 25. Syllabus fails to come out. Nobody disappointed. Father Smyth teaches Professor Wilde's class. 26. '05 Syllabus Board issues its Daily News Almanac. The Patten family leave for Europe. 27. Greek F, 2:00 P. M. Professor Baird absent. Fifteen minutes later Bobbie arrives: Papa has overslept. 28. Bibs made preachers by degrees. Professor james: We should pay more attention to what is go- ing on in our midst. 29. Miner Raymond to Miss Shute: 'tMay 1 have a dance with you at our party? Miss Shute: 'tl am sorry, but l have not received an invitation to your party. 30. Blanche Lawson, showing a Sigma Chi pin: Well, it's already been decided that 1 won't be an old maid. 31. junior Party at the Beta House. 10:30, t'Good night, Pro- fessor Clark: 10:45, class returns for the grand march. 241 ty 'il' li 'A '1 f' fixlff! t ei Efay,'f 5 -ill .7 'ij Wwlfgi gt' fe Wi 1 , ' , 1 1,31 , l 'l if 1 ,,f, 1! .f , . 1 W1 t WU 1 tip. .l A 'gpflx .F x. fsl X fi gf of if l lf Xb-Z... I ai? .Q- ' 1 Vt, '9 Y -9 C l f, .fi x 3366? I . l ffl f, X V iy if 1' ll 7 f -SE. fu -' xx Rt 1 tl 24? W? 'J V W., yll l - W :g ait X , w p . f 26 i MQQLNJ I l 1 1. r I ., . 1k-7-'l 28 ,Vx t X11 'x 7 l M 1 l , .. .i- if E Q 1. IRT, :E fill f 3 . aff 0 ' l ' N1- . ML it 2 ' 1 ff . If ff ,I mfr, ' 2 Wi' Kawai' 'Wfiil 1 214 .f12,,fAZqgZ,.f,,5'a ,f ifjtfrfffj fo if 'flirt Wig, W f T- 1 QA vt Vial-T S l tl A yt Xi n may L N K .1 ,- 2 .igg'.'eepf, fygfgv- Q gfgi wwe ss tZf..w,y-,':w,-- . I a gf,fv,-iyfibvfzfry A-zowfixw 4-,Legg fi '1If4rgp:ilW ' 'f', . I ' 'rlli1, ,F f' ,ZQ.3,ff'- that s 28. 29. 31. t fl Qi TQHY 1. Elsie Willlams chases off to Chicago with a man's suit case. 2. Y. W. C. A. convention at Lake Forest. 3. Dixie Fleager tells the D U'S that Sheppard field is the Beta's play- ground. 4. Asthalter can't see how he re- sembles a clothespin. 5. German play given by Kappa's and Phi Psi's. 6. Frank Morris out walking with a co-ed is accosted by a tailor who demands the money for the trousers that Frank is wearing. 7. Phi Psi's tell us that they have several jokes on themselves. 8. Dean l-Iolgate and Parke Brown hold a special prayer meeting for Parke's deficiency in Chapel credits. Parke says Amen. 9. Miss Jones reads a paper in English B to prove that Women are better fitted for high school teachers than men. 11. Dean l-iolgate seeing Scott Nortrup sitting with Elsie Williams in Chapel, says: I see a very young man in a very strange place but l hope he will learn better as he grows older. Scott ducks. 12. Chandler spoils his reputation and rushes a Tri Delt. 14. Trig cast concludes that Rape isn't long enough, and stretch him. 15. Cookie Holbrook in church: 'tMy, but I like hims. 16. 'tBib Blu tries to grow side- burns and gets trimmed by his frat brothers. 17. Seniors' t'exes come up in faculty meeting. Eight Professors cut the meeting. Seniors then cram. 19. Anderson and Robinson de- cide that they do not care to go to Wisconsin on the survey. Professor Grant and Perdue decide the same thing the day before. 20. The last hope of leaving the University a token of love is buried under the old oak by the class of 'O4. Co see the tombstone. 21. Latin A have a picnic. Next morning the papers tell how Arthur Watts fished Frances Bowdle from the lake. Expected-an excess of registration for Professor Oldfather. 22. Kappas eat Sig Alph's grocer- ies sent to them by mistake. 24. Professor Crook announces ome of the Chapel cards show three persons in the same seat. Maybe he was right. Trig play ? I I Doctor Patten should have been there. Many of the Seniors want to count Trig play for Chapel credits. Senior Chapel. Violet scene instituted. JUNE 1. Ex's begin. 2. Since A. V. Coffman has become the college dentist he begins to look down in the mouth. 3. Frank Gibson: Heaven is a place Where everybody is as good as I am. 4. Ike Springer concludes to get rich in oil wells, and to get everybody else rich. 5. A professor refuses to ask Sidney Hall to recite in an oral examination. 6. Mrs. Waterman discovers a new wrinkle. She ought to be an inventor. 7. Walter Roloff and Axel Elmquist are the newly elected mascots of the faculty. Professor Coe promises to tend them in his pedagogical nursery. 17. Seniors stay out all night. The old board walk to the Gym affords them a last ray of light. 18. Miss Parshalle mistakes F. O. Smith's invitation to the annual Deru picnic for one to a dern picnic. Smith told every member of the Syllabus board this joke. JULY lO. Some Polonius makes himself a- c -quainted with the archives of the sororities and concludes that Alpha Chi must hold her meetings alternately with Kappa. SEPTETQBER 19. School opens in spite of the absence of C. l-I. Mark. 2O. New student to Professor Odell: l don't want to be in Odell's section, they say he's punk. 2l. Thetas try to make dates with a Chi Omega transfer. 22. First Chapel. The Dean's address has its usual number of conclusions 23. College Night. Mabel l-lill leads the yell. F, O. advocates a girls' rooting club. 24. First football game mit de brass buttons. 25. Freshman to Miss Partridge at Chapin l-lall: How do you do? You are the matron, I suppose. 26. New Students are getting used to their Sunday clothes. 27. Arthur Smothers wants to be called 'tPort Arthur so that the girls may besiege him. 28. Chunk comes from California to show Bindhammer how to lead the yell. But Bindy fails to see the point. 29. Wentworth and john Massen favor socialism. 30. The Sigma Chis and Delta Cammas give an informal. 243 4' Q Hx 7' ,xr 'llm,,x ffff C 1- .- ,- at ffvf, 5. Nm 2 757 amen is 'Wm wif. si ' ig, I7 if tu.l'.'2 1 'L l tl'ilii'1, ,iifi'1' il, Wu. 'i' 2iki.Q'f lllli. 'M , W .fin-1Xt.'i,iu . ll :ffsgil,ff't at f , Q fm w,wf f 4 I Y -' lf f 4 'jfs V' I fx f f I rt 1, VY ji 'v' NL' fy, 'I P' I ,fy 1 '31 ffvx ky, 'V .5-, M 'P fwxillfjsml lf wfwn MX if A lf -7'q -gs 'ff-AN if f5tez?W' Qwm fb to xt . .f 1 i v. V X CQJL . . iWVtMvt - 14 W if N 'WZESQQ Te A - l sj l 'F' X lr JW J Z wif i ei 19 ff O! X516 ' s f-PM f f J J f 1 Wi ,iff 'L f fl fZ7ff H 1 V117 X499 W1 Ot 1, fil m, VW - C9 .f 1 0 . - .tg f' . ,. X 'T ,Avg . T '. ,ml 213. f if fy! 1 H eater? f 1- 7 X fl ,I Q, 1 Tgiflf f ff J 9 -- Vg .-'l7'f !1l,l ?' e: 17-'fe-iyugf. ,-751: 1,1-,:: A Ha. 1. f?a1 l 'TL--I Y WP m bl ' OCTOBER 1. An Alpha Chi pledge at the ball game expresses her regrets to Hazel Spencer that she was unable to meet them at the train. 2. Calendar committee does not meet today. 3. DeSalvio to Miss Robertson: Do you know A? 4. Busse to Ralph Horn: 1 want you to translate, extempe roariouslyf' Children's day at the Northwestern- DePauw football game. 5. Carl Jordan dreams that he sees himself as others see him, but we hope not. 6. Seth Low, after eating a seven course dinner, tries to make a speech. 7. Professor Young entertains the freshmen. 8. Rader, '08, trying to reach Evanston, takes asouth bound car at Wilson avenue. 9. Clipping from THE NORTHWESTERN after the Lombard game: 'fMcPherrin went in at left end in the second half and played brilliantly. He is one of the best ends in the West for his weight. H. McP-, Athletic Editor. 10. The Freshmen make even the flagpole look noisy. 11. Dr. Frost makes a snappy speech in Chapel. 12. Wings first appear on the backs of Epsilon Betas. 13. Prof. Long wants to see all the girls who have not made arrangements to go to the Chicago game, but the girls all seem to have dates. 14. At the Beloit game Simon Kanagy goes right to the root of things. 15. Parmelee and Amy Olgen at 11:30 p. Hall steps. They talk Association, 16. Mary Hea reported ill. McGrew has to the football game to sell. Seniors give Willard Hall. m ., Willard two tickets a dinner at 17. The Senior men become lily livered and with- draw their challenge to play football-with the juniors. 18. Mr. Trueblood: Professor, I can't decline 'to drink.' Chi Omega invites. Hally Pease brings shin- guards. 19. President Dickie comes by way of Milwaukee, but never reaches Evanston. 20. There is a tide in the affairs of football men which, taken at the enthusiasm meeting, leads on to success, but the next day after - 21. The Maroons save the Methodists' kindling wood. 22. Sunday, students stay religiously at home. 23. Enthusiastic post mortem examination in Chapel. 24. Four men present the following bill to the Sopho- more class: For printing Soph. procs, - - S15.00 f'Por donation to the police fund, - 16.00 f'Signed: Wishard, Foster, Smoot, Scott. 25. Class allows the bill, the men are released from the police station. 26. Christine McGatfy entertains LE CERCLE FRANCAIS. 27. Pedagogues in town. Mildred Auten entertains. Pearsons and Chapin celebrate Halloween. 28. The Christian Associations give a peddlers' parade at the old gym. 29. Anna Burdick has a visitor from Illinois. She faints on the car and three men carry her to a drug store. 30. Mary Hea announces her engagement to David McGrew. Nobody alarmed. 31. Garrett debating team win the first preliminary. Heck Hall stock goes up ten per cent. 244 ROVETQBER 1. Halloween at Willard Hall. Chee Fow Speck and Whang Hong Lomelino coup the prize. 2. McPherrin tends the furnace for Harriet Lane. On duty only until twelve o'clock. 3. Wishard spills a glass of milk down Miss Aber- nethe's neck. Glen mourns on the ashpile. 4. Sophomore football team make the Freshmen class look blue. 6-O. 6. Alpha Chis entertain at a waffle supper. 8:30 the guests report at O's. 7. Louis West falls off the 'Varsity steps and hopes that the Syllabus will take note of it. tlffmbilc' dictu. 8. Walter Kelly casts his first ballot for Watson B. Swallowvelt. 9. The most effective eloquence that I ever heard was delivered in a whisper. -Cy Dennis. IO. Practice game. Mary Bierer and Miner Ray- mond chase the ball down side lines. Mary makes a touchdown but Miner hurdles. 11. Sophomores ask the Dean if they might please paint the flagpole. Yes, my children, as I told you a year ago. 12. Our football squad sends Illinois back with a black I. Bet President James wishes now he hadn't. 14. Illinois elephant strays into Lake Atwell. 15. Pearsons Hall, 5:30, no lightsg echo from the parlorg Fanny singing Because I love you 5 Larry re- luctantly joins the refrain, If I but knew. 16. Bindhammer asks Dave Hanson if Harriet Doney is wearing jean Smith's pin, and still belongs to the Volunteer Band. 17. Dr. Patten and the Dean refuse to cover Minne- sota money, but then, nobody bets here. 18. Bonfire at the old oak. Connor of Harvard makes the speech. Jay Turner tries to embrace coedu- cation. Reba Hurn helps him to change his registration. 19. Northwestern meets Minnesota. The elephant succumbs to the shock and prostrate falls. 2O. MISS MOLLIE BREVOORT LITTLE AND MR. OLIN ALONZO WAKEMAN take a walk. 22. The Garrett team wins the last preliminary de- bate over Adelphic. 23. Frank Newman attends aPhi Psi smoker at Cham- paign. He returns with a broken arm and a dislocated rib. All due to his searching for adim religious light. 24. Thanksgiving dinner enjoyed by the team. Dean Crow sees the St. Louis Pike. 25. R. S. Morford holds an informal. Four couples grace the occasion. Will the fraternities please now reciprocate? 26. Fat stock show opens at the Union Stock Yards. Does anybody miss Cupid? Walter D. Kelly and President Roosevelt attend the Fair. 27. Professor Way gets married. Did he take a idal tour a club to'er. 28. Mabel Gascoigne uses Lunt Library as a dressing om for Frank Newman. 29. Telephone rings for Freshman Hunter. He is not in. See Dec. 2. 1 .. ff, jtfllif jgiif M7454 Vi l I lrlllllgpu 3 ur r 7 ,, . XQAE . if ,bl 'Za ffl! fx f Af W VW? 1 W , 9 x Hl i5Q all 'ffyllfl Z' welfare!! fgiff WV? I 1 fy f I ll f fl I I Xi , J lzli I Z 24. l 41? its IF 1 rife if .4L .. , f T' . . E ...I K .7f, 25,! N.. Y 1-.Qtr 7 , ijt! .1 :Q lf , I 2,1 , ,' . . ' fc .3-Q. , .NX if 14' 4 ff. Q an ff ,fr ,KA 1 K ffxx Q . Z iff ' ,af , G L l , , ,. , Z fi - Wff 4 I QL tl ,, yi, , ,if?, 'l J,i'ff V , I Y' 31,1 -,g 9.4, ..,,Qg..LL i 17555 'r fp' V353 M 5545... ll ff' xl +593 fjt f'Y rg., . 1 X X-Le.-ME ll ,f . Q54 lf, 4.. t ,lf ' Y, ' if 'Iv 'I ,ft I ' r.l'fl5.?lQ-fjfx , 1. , I f fby , ' f l , s ,.l I l , 1 fl' X, J fl' wtf' 30. Sidney I-Iall to De Salvio: 'tHow do you say in French 'I fear lest he will not come? 245 Til. titties frftpfillxlf Qxt15,,V4g' lj ,Nitty 1, 7 f .f. 'Q I y. , in 47, M4420 r . ',,,t li- zo ,gy a rxfgxl' M2 Zoe Qi 3.3 30 fx ot 30. The Wi J DECETQBER 1. Foot Ball Banquet at the Gym. The gymnasium mirage appears again. 2. Hunter at the telephone: Hello! Central, who called me up last Monday? 3. Dwight Hubbart's new shoes detract from the joys of Parsifal, so he spends the evening in the corridor, unshod. 4. Dean Holgate goes East to study t'How to become a college President. 5. During chapel services Scott and Allie are invited to come forward. 6. Olive Seeley and Hazel Schnabele are locked in their room, but the fire department helps them to make an eight o'clock. 7. The announcement of Prof. Grook's engagement pushes the war news to the fourth page in the Chicago Dailies. 8. Prof. Gray invites the seminar class to his home,-to move the piano. 9. Prof. Kellogg reads for the N. O. L. benefit. 10. Die Deutsche Gesellschaft kam in Fisk Hall zusam- men. Die Tafel wurde fur siebzig gedeckt, aber nur dreissig kamen. Sie hatten einen Weihnachtsbaum und der Herr Edward war Santa Claus. 11. John Slocum begs the chapel committee to let him eat his lunches in Winnetka, in order to escape the temp- tations of the pool room. 12. Clay Smoot exhibits his 'O7 sweater from a box seat in the Chicago Opera House. 13. At the request of seven hundred students, the faculty reluctantly give us forty eight hours additional vacation. Their generosity is worthy of honorable mention. 14. Frances Graves in Poly-Con., I think the faculty are a set of dubs. 15. Christine McGaffey thinks the Junior boys are a bunch of sticks. Maybe its because they don't. 17. Elocution charts sell at a premium. Those marked A for the three preceding years go at the highest figures. 18. Beth Harper and Effie Bradley try to escape Sheridan Cottege board by locking themselves in their room and turn- ing on the gas. 19. Prof. Gleason Fillmore Starkweather, Master Mech- anic and Assistant in Shop-work, College of Liberal Arts, missed Chapel. 20. The faculty and students of Garrett Biblical institute are at home. Mrs. Crow considers that Willard is not really invited, and Miss Mitchel of Chapin is still considering. 21. Medals were given to Smith, Barnes, and Massen for winning honors in debate, and to Johnson for representing Northwestern in oratory. Helen Slocum and Robert Baird are seen selecting a 22. doll at Marshall Field's, one that will cry when you squeeze it. 23. keeps. Frank Newman goes to a Champaign smoker for Does anybody miss him? 25. Santa Claus brings Ora Davenport a doll. 26. After the graduate club meeting at Y. M. G. A. house, Parmelee finds that he must have more cider, to sober up on. 27. Bruce Weaver calls on Helen Aldrich. A snow drift before the door forces him to go in through the kitchen, dining-room, and den. 28. Mr. Aljah Robinson Crook, and Miss Florence W. Purdum are united in the bonds of holy matrimony at Chillo- cothe, O. Prof. Crook, let Hartman feather your nest. llard Hall Committee, supposing the main entrance to the reading room to be locked, goes through the kitchen and crawls up the back stairs. 246 JRTXUHRY 1. Elmer S. Albritton takes an invoice of whathe has spent on Ora Davenport in sodas, carriages, theatre tickets, and in vain. 2. The last night at home. l..inke'd sweetness long drawn out, -and unlinked. 3. Everybody wears his new waist that mamma has made during vacation. 4. jack Russell to Lulu Butler: When Pan-Hell. was started the five poorest frats had to go together to give a party: that is why we are not in it. And, besides, after you have been a couple of times it is a bore to you. 5. Clay Smoot, at a Sophomore caucus, weeps and cries: Fellows, it will break my heart to give up running for editorship of 'O7 Syllabus. 6. The juniors hold a Mother Goose Party. 7. The Epsilon Betas hold an enthusiastic party. Their principal enjoyment was found in singing I was seeing Nellie Home. 8. Odell Sheppard inquires of F. O. Smith about Deru requirements. 9. Cox lifts his hat to a girl. 1O. Frances Bowdle tries for head waitress at Chapin l-lall. 11. Band Concert on the skating rink. Stilts provided for the spectators, bathing suits for the skaters. Students with season tickets conclude that ice is just what it's cracked up to be. 12. Julia Kipp spends half an hour at the door of Fear- sons Hall trying to persuade a visitor that he is not at Heck. 13. Sigma Chis give an informal at the Rosemont. Budge Roberts pays the bill. 14. With the fourth trial the Delta Gammas succeed in persuading the photographer to take their picture. After pressing the button he remarks: Now you may resume your natural appearance. 15. The Seniors at Willard Hall get up before breakfast and beat tin pans. 16. lt appeals to me, students, that you can increase your power of emotion by practicing the sentence, tl love you,' with a diaphragm grip to your words. -CY DENNIS. 17. A stranger calls at the Sigma Nu house for Amy Olgen. 19. Betty Burroughs borrows 15 cents to go skating. The telephone rings and immediately the money is returned. 21. Sheridan Cottage takes a smoke. Nobody says Alice Hurn set it on fire. 22. Hin French there are two words for spoon, one mas- culine, the other feminine. Both are considered good form. -De Salvio to a coeducated class. 23. The following petition was circulated in chapel today: We, the undersigned, having shivered for years in lake zephyrs, hereby suggest that the senior class gift be a wind- break in front of the chapel door. Frank Snow A. j. Stranded Henry Thinskin Blow Z. Row G. E. E. Coldfeet M. E. Frozenstiff I. V. E. Gotacoldski Frappe' Iceberg I. C. Berg N. O. Sunshine E. Z. Blow W. Z. Wabbleleggs 28. Smothers, Long, Flossie Abernethy, and Evelyn Teague, while watching Dr. Bragdon's barn burn, became boisterous at the approach of examinations, and the fire de- partment, gathering them into the hose card, started for the station. Not until they reached Leffingwell's did Long and Smothers succeed in proving that they were members of the Syllabus Board and therefore inviolable. 6 471 X WU I ' O jf! I L ,,, ,E 'mmwm . 7 J .OS . QX y it ,',' fl: ,t 1 I Ii . If sr t ZQQEEQ7 ,ma 5 W 'rf' Eflf, ll V, tiff WWW? .mlm cfjtpyt iff if 7 ff- X 3 ,,,.,. . I L qwj - Qi T' J .- fp, 'MHZQZ C13 .yt 5, if ,, ,O IW It ' t 'gf l,' . XE N L-Wwffqj X si 17 fl! I j 1 fm I X - 2MQ f j M 0 X If Vx r-f 7 jigx L y I ff-, I 15 i t gf , ur If . ....,:. fl N , ,f 10 Va gkgf Jjjgljf X f mf ? PJ ' f M ff, I 'F' tt, . 1 ' j JM7 X Shi Q e gmffs P' f fc iii, gb? fi fwfmf' 1 iii P ., X ij sf ,fu X . tit X17 7 ,i It I f s ,1 ., f fits' aff My 4 Hiifi P' 1 4' my if 'E X21 Wa'-X f ' fff 'fig 12 ,, ff 1' x' ,W 2 jfggjmg f f' gm if it .ffa .- 1 '1N ?f, 5 ' f 1 gk' f-gjtllg Eiga 't.stf'fitft.t. .t ff .W Tiff 'fzf' fff 5 . Dai,-Q sv'-' fr' Q--L i X Jnex-xi X X I ,4,. ff 7' SX- . . . . x' , . x-::- F I F N 1 To ra 'fist ' f 'J X, are FV Iw i , X FEBRUHRY 1. Examinations. ' In his dreams: 1' Anyhow, I would rather be right than be president. 2. Herbert Plagge's landlady gives him a much needed reproof, closing with the significant remark that Mr. Plagge was a very decent boy before he joined Ringling Bros. 3. Leslie tries to break up the street car company. 4. While Hawley and Norrup flip pennies to see who'll call on Ella Trelease, Jordan takes her to the theatre. 5. Sunday. Ethel Switzer to Dean Crow. I am just super- stitious enough to think that if I studied today I'd flunk my examination. 6. Miss Heugin gives an exhibition of her athletic skill on Willard Hall steps. - 7. Prof. Royce, of Harvard, talks to the Ladies' Guild on the subject- Some Limitations of the Thoughtful Public. 8. Claude Cumnock asks Prof. Holgate how many hours are required for a major in astronomy. 9. Milton Eddy takes Miss Burrough to the Post Exam. Asthalter snares her at the door, and they chase off to the basket ball game. He returns her in time for Eddy to see her home. IO. Geologist Goldthwaite entertains himself by filling up the fissures in his sox. 11. F. Hopkinson Smith tries to be both profane and polite. 12. Pipes burst in the preceptress' room and Chapin Hall has a flood that was not ttconsideredf' 13. All the Gamma Phis get A in psychology. Allie Greenman manages to finish college. 14. Flunkers' notices arrive as appropriate valentines for many. 15. Eunice Mclntosh- Is this solid Geometry? Well, I haven't any ticket. 16. Hatfield to Eleanor Hall,-'Wtfhen I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child. 17. Sargent contest. Charlie Briggs does it better than the rest. 18. Pete Sohrbeck- German love stories are not inter- esting. Prof. Edward- Ooh, you just wait. 19. Freshman Nichol, suffering from nostalgia, says that he has not seen a pump or heard a rooster crow in Evanston. 20. Howard: The fellows have decided not to send flowers to the girls for the Prom. Harriet: Well, that won't make any difference to me, I guess. 21. Trainer Livingston picks the all-star junior play cast. 22. Larry Barker, ordering a carriage: Say, I want a double-seated coupe, with two white horses and yellow harness. 23. William jennings Bryan treats Northwestern students with his lecture on The Value of An Ideal. It comes too late to benefit the Seniors. 24. Pan-Prom. happened, Hell! 25. Tiny St. Clair announces that Miss Helen Welch is his cousin. 26. Tom Scott discharges his duty towards one of his fellows. Didn't you hear the report? 27. We are not dependent on the twenty-ninth day of Febru- ary to distinguish this Calendar. 28. Blessed are ye when men shall revile you and perse- cute you, and say all manner of evil against you falsely,-rejoice and be exceeding glad, for great is your reward,-for so perse- cuted they the prophets which were before you. 248 Y z Y: 'dr 1 '67 .- ii I i 45 f X K I W f it f f ,105 G Nl v 'fi' A i 5 2 4 5 f Y L I if., Z4 dime 7 Qui, 'fl . Q . Q 1-33 I Z Z J Y mllllml WZ A . 7 ea lx JUST ONE WORD get ' .mf lf 'T llWllmMw rf'eX lllll Ml fe Nffxxllwtx 4131 Q 42' Must I slzclcmfl here all day and roar lilse CL lion! ! Ach J Hippity-hop through the rain and slop, Polly and her Dandy. Down to the lake and back to the Hall Or any old place that's handy. Sigma Chi Symphony Just keep trying, Sigma Chi. You will get there bye and byeg Social steeps are hard to climb, Maidens critically incline. Never worry, never fret, Solace with a cigaretteg Trouble not if grades are low, Studious men were ever slowg Whats the diff' though credit's short If one be a dead-game sport. 250 TRIG QUARTETTE lex fS fx -N HRT WATTS- KITTLEMAN PETTIT sivioor ROBERTS One grand harmonious discord Student Mottoes ' Pan-I-lell or bust. -RENA l-IANDY. ' ' N l'll make a frat yet. MORFORD. l , l will wear all my clothes at least once every week. - . ,.,, , ' LAURA MCCARTY. . t'Sinee appearances are deceitful, they should deceive for me Q and not against me. -ANDY WILLSON. ttl'll take all the rushing l can get. -HAROLD GILLSON. The turkey-cock swells up and why should not I? -Ai: BRITTON. This I say to one and all l'll never make a party call. -BENDIX. l'll entertain a young man Qsuch as Elmer Blul just as late as he will stay. -LAURA WILBERTON. l'll Russell for my living. -GRACE BOLSTER. l'll see but little here bClOW.H-LENA LYNN. I'll make good yet with Kappa MU.l,-MINER RAYMOND. HKTVINTTS' X., BESS HILLMAN TOVGCORGE I'1llKT ill' DELTfl' GHMNH PHKTY:- 'O,CrEoRfrE, l HRVE THE nrxr nnmcc on mv rm:-ws? Jack Russell, the Sig Alph with a dress suit: all the rest are ringers. Prof. jno. Scott, in Greek class: Swaney, l'm glad you shaved. 251 'STORY YTPTVOUT YYOKD5 ' XT!! C' ' iw ,?- - v Ky l ' X I 1 ,y 7 fm, X K l 'N' l fi f as 2. f iff . U 6 1 X-2 D 7 , Z M 2 l Q KX Bunce F-It -N fx-1 XA -'L A HRT we-rrs-s wr1fxT3 Tnt ust OF wotmmc mutt mornin urls HER HEHLTH 2 Ura With nature's endowment of beauty and wit, I will strive at all times to make a great hit, By pluming, capricing, and dancing about, For I want the whole world to find me out. Robert No need for me to be polite, l'm Robert Baird, and have a right On other's tolerance to presume, Act rude and silly as a loon. How strange it is that of so proud a line, The youngest son is asininef' His Consolation She isn't quite so fair to see, As is the snobbish Alpha Phig She isn't quite so prone to slam, As is the falling Kappa Gamg She isn't proud of mansions swell, As those Wherein the D. Gfs dwell. She isn't prone to roughish eyes, As the unassuming Gamma Phisg She isn't prone to roguish eyes, As Theta which was once so fastg She isn't quite so young or slender, As Pi Phi girls that I remember. She isn't quite so apt to wed, As Tri-Delts ere her lovers fledg She isn't dressed in clothes so loud, As Zetas of whom Gillson's proudg She isn't, though I know not why, So shy on clothes as Alpha Chi. She is a Chi Omega. When Sedgwick was a little boy he drank a whole teaspoonful of champagne, and it never made him Usiek at all. 252 New Organizations . . -HRT wr:-rrs - JENKINS ALBRITTON KING COLTON NEWMAN APFELBACH PROP. EDWARD STRAT-TON ftBINDHANIIvIER CARLSON ROMANS WEST WARRINGTON iifBindhammer drinks Peruna. xx I I7 , X X .En N A Q: l -Am Nuns- l6l OsI?l0.l Qotoltoiltrzs goelelbl TINY ST. CLAIR KANAGY JOSEPH MCGREW President President Financial Ir moat eguor-ztz to .Set ca-Fzeesl, ff-f fi-f 565 Gt-laeed of wed. EFFIE FIXEN ROSINE JENNIE WHIPPLE WISI-IARD DOUGLAS STEVENS CHARLIE BLAIR MABEL SHANNON ANNA BURDICK A. J. BLAIR I-Iow it Looks to a Visitor on the Campus of University, of Trustees, : Manager, : Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds, First Assistant, : : Second Assistant, : : Dean of Faculty, Professor Professor Professor Professor Professor Professor Professor Professor Professor Professor of History, 1 of Psychology, of English Language, of German Language, of Greek Language, of Astronomy, : of English Literature. of Mathematics, : of Agriculture, : of Economics, 253 . REYNOLDS BIND!-IAMMER 2 JOHN WULFF . CLAUDE CUMNOCK ALLIE GREENNIAN : FLORENCE JENKINS z DAVID I-IANSON 1 : JESSIE Cox SCOTT S. NORTRUP : ALICE FULTON MRS. JAMES T. HATFIELD : VIRGINIA WULFF 1 R. E. MILLER 1 LOUIS R. HORTON EARL B. KI'I'rLEMAN JOHN MASON 1 IKE SPRINGER BOIKD TIN LLE BU THE l 0K S SUGGEST IOKTHWESTEKH SOCIETIES RTHLETICS GENERAL FACULTY .1 S'-S CQ.: 15012: FFIQULT VJ VI ci di ME E20 vu' P-U I What did the Woggle-Bug Say? What proiiteth it a man, if he make Beta Theta Pi, and lose his own Head? - Charles W. Ramshaw. The Parthenon is a style of moulding used at that time. -G. H. Cox. What do they do when they expel you, return your money? -Aurelius Root. You're a peach! You're almost as good as I am. -Louis Coulton West. Frances Northrop, spooning with some of the girls at the Hall, says she feels foolish, One of the girls suggests that it's a good thing sheis not going out with a man. O no, I always get terribly dignified when I'm with a man. CIn Phil. AJ- Is there any physical connection, if you hold any one's hand or put your hand on their forehead? -Scott S. Nortrup. Some one remarks that Ora Davenport wasn't 'fknockedu in the 1905 SYLLABUS.-HO well, you see I had Calendar and Robert had Cuts and Grindsf' Well, on the whole, I believe Trig was more of a success this year than last. - Elmer Albritton. Miss Bosworth, speaking of Mr. Rollo.- No, he doesn't belong to any frat. I think he's very wise. X Biddle, being asked if he intended to go to the Sheridan Cottage sleighing party.- No, I might get my arm out of place. Deibler fin Econ. GJ.- If prices were raised, we'd wear the clothes We have longer, but would finally reach the limit. Budge Roberts, suddenly, while dancing with Sarah Shute.- O, Cookie, I wish I had all my dances with you! Deibler Cin Econ. G5 .- 'Is it easier for a man with a large salary to save than a man with a small one? Clutton.- It depends upon the man. Cawood Qbutting inJ.-- Depends upon the wife. I'm sore on this schoolg I'm going somewhere where they have athletics. -Budge Roberts fatter Chicago gamej. Love the theater, love me. -Albritton. Come on fellows, anything to beat the Betas!',-R. E. Miller. I have three brothers, counting myself. -Bondurant. Hurray for Delta Tau! I got an A in Poly-Con! -Van Pelt. Ike Springer to a Beta.- Tell the truth, I never knew we were rushing Ainslie until after vyou'd pledged him. Scene-Skating rink. CMr. Pope in backgroundj Louise Norton, introducing her room-mate, Miss Eddy, to Mr. B., becomes suddenly aware of Mr. Pope's presence. Mr, B., I want you to meet my room-mate, Mr. Pope. lTableau.J I lead chapel the most beautifully of any of the faculty. -Hatfield. Crook.- I never read the SYLr..xnUs. CNeither did he subscribe for it.J Bondurant.-Wakernan's understudy. Briggs, to Shibley.- Do you want my picture for the SYLLAI3I'S?H Lou West.- I expect to be roasted on every page of the SYr.LAniis. Question, please.- Say, Budge, of what use is the program properly filled, when the invitation forthcometh not? 255 I IIMWQ QRQQIKEDJJTGUE M QQ? Ffx I -I lr.: l ,Evi- Who cracked the moon? ' O W7 I H 'rms I, Said old F. o. O 5 'IZ ,fl managed it, you know, ,' W I cracked the moon. hh. If rr S fr nf' 1- f Q I W ix f X fi 0 I 4 QI xx Q! 'ef e fi Q 6-A far-X331 K Who cracked the moon? A 'K 'Twas I, sang chapel choir, X M X! I raised my voice on high, Y I cracked the moon. f I II ff Q T Who cracked the moon? 'I 'Twas I, Iaughed Gamma Phi. ', K, 5 I, with my roguish eye, 'x f X I cracked the moon ' f 5 f oy Y 'lt 'kg PRINCE QF I X M'1,gIcff?5,....x WLSEM Doa 1 3310 Who cracked the moon? ,-QSQQ 514 'Twas I, said young Albritton. RI gfmfzlfq I With the songs that I have written I III' - I cracked the moon. II f ' 'ff W nm ffff E I 1 I Mu-VP-Ev QSM' X 555.011 A0191 WIA I ,aff A-1' - 'I- Who cracked the moon? Hom' ' y I . . , l' ,I Twas I, ' chirped Mildred Auten. Gee! :EQ Y With my entertaining, see? szfgfiglgx X 9.4.5 ax I cracked the moon. X if who cracked the moon? X ,L . 6' n ,I vq. , , -I , u,- . 0 ' 6' . - I I f, ! fl'0l'mW ,I 'Twas I Dean I-Iolgate cried. 'One Wordl WM M X ,IZ 'yy 'ff 1, S3223 I ElriaeCdk33dhS5iiij':iIlT unheard, My ., 4 X ' ff f - If I, f WXI If H'i.1f-F W'ho cracked the moon? UIQ MII I-.A 'Twas I, quoth Ikey Springer. HI, - When my oiI scheme soared so high, 3 ou' ,- I cracked the moon! wsu, I l l Professors' Pet Phrases 4 , Professor Seott.4 NoW then- Mr. Way.- When did the Venetians elect their first 'Doggie'? Prof. Crew.- Is it perfectly elear?', Dr. Long.- Apropos of this- Mr. de Salvio.- These things ought not so to be, don't you know. Prof. Scott.-'KIt is simply astounding! , Dr. Bonbright.- I think the class is tired.. You had better stand up a little while. Mr. Dennis.- There's just this thing about your delivery. Mrs. Crow.- Isn't this a beautiful morning? Prof. Clark.- This is the greatest piece of work in all literaturefi I have a patent on that sneeze, etc., etc., fincluding most of his jokesj. Prof. White.- Well, let's see. Mr. Kuhne.- Go up on the blackboard and write me that down. Prof. Scott.- He,s just an A No. 1 man!,' Mr. Way.- The encroachments of the Papacyf' Mr. Roloff.- And- Prof. Grant.-t'NoW, one more point. Prof. Gray.- Suffice it to say- Mr. de Salvio.- Of course- Prof. Gray.- It Would be interesting if we had time. Now, this is a little digres- sionfi That's a capital question. Prof. Thorndike.- And-and-and-and what not. Prof. Clark.- This article is too good to waste its sweetness on the desert air. Mr. Edward.- When I die write on my tombstone, 'He taught German A, A.' 257 Popular Books of the Season. Business Is Pleasure. By Egbert Nelson Parmelee and Amy Hedwig Olgen. Illustrated by the secretaries and published jointly by Delta Delta Delta and Sigma Nu. The authors need no introduction to the college world, and all the material has been gathered on the Northwestern campus. This little volume clearly shows how to combine religion with fudges, calls, strolls, and hammerfests. Art of Personal Neatness. By G. G. lVIcChesney. Illustrated by the author and expur- gated by Phi Delta Theta. A little dog-eared volume exploiting a method of obviating the necessity of washing face, hands, or teeth, brushing clothes, shoes, or hat: cutting hair, beard, or class more than once a year. tSales should be enormous.D Short Talks. By Douglas Franklin Stevens, author of Short Cuts to Success, Troubles of a Local Manager. A compact book in a red hair-cloth cover. Keeps to the subject and seems to make its point. Symphonies. By Christine lVIcGaffey. The author speaks for herself. Chapel Etiquette. By John A. Slocum. The author attempts to show the difference between man and monkey by demonstrating that while man observes a reverent decorum during religious exercises, monkey becomes strongly excited, and scrapes its feet, chatters, and when opportunity is given Hees as if from a cage. This is the first of a series of three books on chapel etiquette, the other two by Scott Nortrup and Almon Greenman are now in the hands of the publishers. How to be Happy Tho' Foolish. By Nadine Robertson, better known as the society man- ager of Pi Beta Phi. Though very good, this 'Ancly little volume is of little practical value to the ordinary persong for great discernment is necessary to appreciate its full portent. One chapter deals with the subject of humor, and the author advances her conception of a joke. Laugh at everything, joke or no joke, is the substance of her advice. The Fetching of the Five. By Scott Fickle Nortrup, author of The Art of Jollying, Effusions of a Fusser and the rest of the Forget-me-Not series. Like its pre- decessors the latest of this series is conveniently bound in the daintiest pink and blue silk. To explain the title, the fetching refers to the author himself, and the five to five pining maidens who are suffering the pangs of jealousy and a divided love. Scott advises us incidentally in the Haffaires cle coeur upon which subject he feels himself amply competent' to judge. He, of course, assumes that his readers have great dexterity in dealing with feminine idiosyncrasies, and proceeds to solve the problem of being a carpet-knight, with marvelous ease. The Charon of Reticence, by Louise Norton, is a short dissertation, or rather admonition to college girls, in regard to maintaining a reserved, quiet demeanor in all phases of the college life. She treats successively the class-room, library, dormitory, and dining-room etiquette. Then in the later chapters of the book, she takes up the subject of dignity in social contact, especial stress being put upon conversation in well-modulated tones, in the halls, on the streets, and on the skating-rink. In conclusion, she cautions the college girl to be, above all else, diflident, unassuming and retiring. College Blue Book. Virginia J. Wtilff. The results of the author's own investigations are given in an interesting, chatty way. Every well-known member of a fraternity, and of the college community in general, can be found in the list, together with minute details of his past history, and all his intentions and future hopes. Although the author is very young to undertake such a work, her skillful grasp of the subject shows intimate acquaintance with all who are given place in the book, and proves conclusively that she knows whereof she Writes. Twenty Beautiful Years. By Lloyd R. Roberts, being the autobiography of a social star. The author relates in a modest, naive way the tales of his wonderful boyhood, and gives us a pathetic picture of the breaking of home ties, upon the occasion of his departure to make his triumphal entry into Northwestern. He then gives us a detailed account of his meteoric career, what he did for Northwestern in a social, intellectual, moral, and athletic way, concluding wiph an expression of confidence in what the Future will bring to him. Lim-lericks. By Ed. J. Asthalter, the Long fellow of Northwestern University, written in his study over the kitchen stove and dedicated to the aspiring students of Evanston. His Lim-ericks are long but the volume is not heavy. It appeals strangely to those of an athletic leaneing, and yet it spare-s space to devote itself, in a manner more or less successful to the fair sex. Some criticise the book on its length, yet on the whole it is believed that it will have a good run this spring. Saved from the Fire R UML QW WE 95599 PRGE FROM A Pm DELT EXPENSE Qncoomv. Likes to Attend Parties. f53,aMfm,eQf55a Maxi X7 0 if Wfrrwfiawf 23 J' may aa we ' fw-+447 wiaffidwuu if Ma dam fmt, MMM LFacsimileJ Too Green to Burn 7 3,6-2,4-, Warm? QL-Mawf-fcw9L ww f-,NJ or aiwfi - fmwf.M.J- 'ff wi -IJ' Aww-Kwan . ICYQZS Ifs- ffwmxq, fwilw-MMJ, ar 81?4aA.4,RZ., U f ML TNE Afvii-M, 3 0 wnfdr. xwoal .7-J' Siu 1 av 29611-uw X fo C4fm.cQM,c. :YUOOY Awww? fffzif f O., 9150-oavm K3 Oo 0 'Wwe W-.1-,U I o E qq 5' C: 'P G 0 C1355 0 P' are H ali 'W' The Coat of Many Colors Edith Long.- Why is Kanagy like a hard-coal stove? Daisy.- I donit know. Why? Edith.-4'Beeause he's so hard to shakef' Did any one ever find an of th f 0 y e ragments of that Sophomore Frat ? Oris Hastings to Romaine Hardcastle, at Pan-Hell- Did you get into that dress with a. shoe-horn? THIS SPACE WAS RESERVED FOR A PICTURE OF THE DEVILS. 259 .fa-1-'N ff-ff K , - ' 5' f Q49 M141 A Q9 M Z ,Q JZ' yf ' so fl f l f ' K ' e ls t X X X1 ' :M KNAW Z l ,f A in : 5 1 ,, f mfs: I THE DEAN GUARDS THE FLAGPOLE On the morning the Sporting Extra appeared, Albritton often remarked how sleepy he was- F. O. at Senior Vaudeville.- Carlson, Massen, Chandler, come here, and bring Wakeman and Fletcherg here is Miss Gascoigne and a Junior and I have only a cane. Lecture Course Announcement C OM M DOU F 5 COMMITTEE OR LECTURER5? E J C Hnmixwkganflfffi 5 NWEIEHSAON I9 ' I H DEFENBER R qlnlgniii NWN 'Ne x HDUAHQE QRNVRSS r 1 WILLIQEQ CODDINGTON I GGITDOHSQFULCHEFQ W u r FTNUL Qr3lCL'l'R . YI. it i JI, 260 HH 5l'lflYY fR 6irR,. mum wh 'I NLEiQ,,..E,,, FKRNK R. RO5ER5'b'i FEBRUARY ry' 0154011151 mmm A-5 'vw l:.HOPlilN5ON SMITH I Mazen Ii HREQWM :RE-ws MM- DK. HENRY ww DY In B 'jf v'h.. -' V A Y ' ' Delta Gamma Troubles There, Mabel dear, don't cry, You've only one frat, I know, And an oyster fry ls enough to try The hardiest here below. But childish troubles soon pass by, There, Mabel dear, don't cry. There, Elsie dear, don't cry, You were written up, I know, In the Chicago press Too much, I guess, For one who would be just so. And it's hard to be in the public eye, There, Elsie dear, don't cry. There, Esther dear, don't cry, A dress you must wear, I know, And the football field Is hard to yield, And girls must be girls, I know. But Vassar holds all for which you There, Esther dear, don't cry. sigh, lg L xv' AK Name Wzyfwe Zwvw NAME Zia Jpnm? nooasss fzfslwwf for Anmzass x74 f-,fwfeff TEL. Zim, Wwrgaz TEL. 241531 2444 HEIGHT 174. 714. HMHT ffl. fam, aes ,zf 7141. nes 27 7fw, www X3 7 MQ. wane-HT fapfzda. x. EYES az.,o-1.1.1-AJ EYES WHO 5 WHO D if-mv-JJ fP fray LJM K S5 D A-efz,Ef:rfm,,u,f A POCKET cfunmi E ' I Rm To SCHEDULE 7f'lM. ffufni SCHEDULE 7f1f ! 0- Cb. fo fe -- 36- A4 104 f- Zcwl. H.. .. LOC, ,,,. SAE. CHHNDLERJ PERSONAL PERsor1nL rue, soon Om W' , R93 -1... Y ' , -S1 261 -A-.-r wa-f--rs 15 ,A xx? 5 ll lx, Kelly ls there any chance of me getting on the junior Play? johnny Slocum Are there any vacancies on the Syllabus Board? Say johnson-B111 ohnson, we mean- Billy Shake- speare says: Love thyself last. Professor jack Scott announces that all great students study at night. Straightway many students begin nocturnal study of human nature, along the lake shore, using the laboratory method. Now that the days are getting warmer, Holland and Daisy Pearce won't have to hold their daily tete-a- Alice sweeps, and Laura Shoes the dust 4 3 4 A A- ti ' .i.. X X . -..,v-v I A T H an Xgc ' ' 'ffl W ' Q X f-I ' ff -- -H 'rl ' K ' 'J Nw , L fx -af A 'I Ann Planck, beginning to get ready for the next waltz. Zales in the Library. t'Neither silken hats nor dress-suits make the frat. Q1-J ' 2312? I-la. . : C + I-IRPPY DRZEU Does Foster really like to look at himself ? -HRT' WRT TS Wonder what J. Scott C. will say is the best thing in this Volume? Some one said that Romans' editorials 'might be good if Signed anonymously. X . X xx X X f 1 N X X X X X XX 'X X f f X A X' fgf' , FN X Nfgmfszmai foam! fa , 1 mari ,,51Q.f,T5-T N411 1, , , l. ,,,,,,, DAWN f Kyo Qlf' l DARK J EAHTX Book f PAIRS IMO Ngff BD iv I YxTHE's'?i'Aci2ff'Ivnv.efQ M 'D 'L '. 'fr' lf'WV Ql5'l' azszwxizsvrfnrxfzisyh,Je XT- ,-'vvefvyf-xox , .f.mr.....,M .,.. -rf, 4 .EH The Day! A Day! party? The D, G.'s don't. McCoy! Sad Boy! Who knows how Lou West got tothe Delia Gamma X 'T' 727 Bill Shakespeare to Larry Barker: How dost thou, Coach Holland looking for Track candidates. Benedict, the married man? 263 You Can Always Tell Hanson by his mustache. Bindhammer by his flower. McDougal by his punning. Carlson by his grin. Polly by her pout. Buck by Polly. Charlie Blair by his walk. St. Clair by his hair. West by his talk. Bill Johnson by his Worries. Cleveland by his chin-elang. Christine by her collarette. Rizzie by his squeak. Willson by his beak. Puzzle: Find Publisher Elmer Albritton says that he didn't Work it right or he could have made more money on the Sporting Extra. 4 U11 f How Fansler happens to be such an ardent lover. me ill l How Pope got to the senior minstrels. Why Sigma Nus always make dates a. few months before gr I WINGS WORTH LOOKING INTO ll O lf l' P J X I hand. 1 X Wliethei' the '4Sore-Eyes Club has entirely disappeared. Q57 my Jen Dobson's faint. A see -A... ' ll Slocum-Albritton method of passing an examination. ,l i gl:-2 I F 7 . 7 we ,,., rank Newmans Accldent. it Ill HH HHH lllllllll llllllllllllllllllll ui .,,, in, f 5 ggggnun lf mllw qfl X I1 i fi l '- .Oxcvmc-A. If U UU J .O n ,el 264 To Polly and Olin They who love, in secret should love, For 'tis there that love most is admiredg But the lovey-doves that don't care where they love Make the public most mortally tired. Sigma Chiis farewell gasp Remaining the same to you,' and to all the Delta Gammas, I am Your sincere friend Raymond Warrington, f? x Qand all the Sigma Chis.l O Happy Day When- Sarah Shutei Kittleman forgets he is Sigma Nu's steward. Eleanor Hall acts older than five years. A joke is found on Betty Borough. Cleveland puts away childish things. F. O. Smith has nothing to manage. Horton keeps still. O. S. Hubbart gets there on time. College engagements are suppressed. Eunice Mclntosh hurries up. Patti Rodgers combs her hair. Dave Hanson gets an original idea. Sidney Hall subdues her voice. Eddy stops eating honey. Leonard reads 'tgood form for men. Foster wakes up. Lena Linn gains self-confidence. -Do you know, l never knew anything about Gamma Phi's national standing until I joined. I find that in some places, Alpha Phi is ahead of Gamma Phi! O A ., nrftucetnr an ann HELEN BOSWORTI-Ill JENNIE DoBsoN!! VIRGINIA HAIGHT LORETTA O'BRIEN LILA SNELLH! FRANCES GRAVES LOUISE NORTON! NADINE ROBERTSON? IX! FEZUTEGTBUE EBBXGQUEWUGIU Rf EDNA TOBIAS LELIA HARWOOD Ol FANNIE GILLAN ORA GARVER HARRIET LANE GRACE -.IAMIESON STELLA TRUBY MABEL GASCOIGNE? 265 ANNA THOMPSON MARY BIERER ELSlE HORN HAZEL SCHNABELE MARIE WHITE FRANCES BOWDLE ETHEL WORKS ELEANOR HALL Q- lltltill SHED fx il l .fx K!-Ae ? N , l ls -nmynm-' 1 l BAIRD NORTRUP WEST WAKEMAN BLU ST. CLAIR l 4' Volunteers 5 l ' R.E.MlLLER ANDY WILLSON j. NORTHROP PARMALEE HARRISON COLTON ' ,I y if lst Reserves 4 4- N HAWLEY Dixon HANSON xl! Last Call P1-11 KAPPA P si No, you dare not roast me, I A j Kelly fiercely cried: , 1, 1 .', 'A I: - l'm perfect, you should toast me, 3. 5 4 Foolish Kelly sighed. A' N9 t -1 1 x' ' 'iff ,, - lisp, H 5 Behold fraternal devotion, 'I-gfgf 7. LL L Nowhere such as mine, ' Oo Wg, , . JSENSEL S And in beauty l've a notion, iitiff CHWEFJ. ESS FOR None ourselves outshine. , gif lm ' I -- N Mcpo No, we will not roast you, 1565-ER G UQHL Mere words would be too tame, A A VY BL Words hot enough to roast you, CURLY NU ENE Would make these pages flame. HQ f F 5331117 ,i N03 RHNFE5 G? In Farewell N NHZEL HVE5 With malice toward none, charity O5 L QSEERLY toward all, with firmness in the right, as H04 C HRRY 5,7 we were given to see the right, we strug- ' RWE l d in the work we were in' to o en LY R ge on , p SPUIY7-Eli DE IE57-E up again the old wound, or make one HLLIE li where it was deserved, and to do all that EEE we could to establish a Just and lasting NMHH reputation, that those who sow might reap. XENT 5 ew-T 5. 266 ,fgx 21 - YE yi .5 ,f' .fi za -w A 11, 1Af1,. , fi X :ff :: N. , ,V -A 1 H' ffm 1g A W .1 7' -my ww- .v,, , 31. I , 'E 5 'Q ' ' ,- , X ,IL i u 'ff' ff? , ,,,,,7,11,11Z-lgvggi'-'Im'-v - EE X if Nu P - Hg!! gnu- as , 4 ,.,.,,- Q - . he 'y !:g!f:54z'f.1v Ip ,, ,,.,,a-Leaeifeglg -Rx .:,-rqafgiw' 1, ,f , , Q , f!.7 gaagzzguff 4, g y M ,Q--Luv' ' ..,H X E fl:r1E3.:' H11 ' 1'Il:5 iiE!l!IEEs 'L. iE?5?ii55,'!!:'!' W- iff' I' Illhigil ' 155' ui J1E?!iiii!l?ig!11,ik ff. I W -Jlqff' X :!!- nazi' an-. 'f ienii' 'mail 'ins-4 li? .q'r'wQ-Vf'w4F.,, WW' fggfgm EFF: all usaae.. In 1 'W , - ' f 1, 01, 'W F- ,' .::... ss .5 A. fl 'v Ealml F21 !h. T' if-31 5 X! ' fa K Z W ?g09fV 'f, ' QW 'in '- Iii? iii I V , . ff ' 9 ' W 'va' '- -.1-f 1, ff , ' , , 'fr-. 'EEs:sgIlii!ui4 gg. gg ' Z '44 Q Eg X K liiiiiuiiiii Z - A 2 W X f - m -sd ' ,,, '-S ,555-Ihaasziii ': 3, 4 , , ,f ' 4 W 4, X X X :illllll J ,jlljhxs-I fxh E : - W ' l 51, A X lIll! '!ulm! .'?1'441'?iWQ'-'TL X 1 ' 'WA ' 9' ' .:::: jjj' - o X o ' 5 uiing-:E Ii if i ' .glib I X' 9 ,O wx Q, 'Q ..gl!l,glgg:mI v!:1,,?., 43. xgfyfhy Z-A4 f yy 1 I 7 -35,4 ,X NJ, 6 ESI!!! 'ia :::- fp 'viii' -f' 41954 4 4 Wffff 'Q N8 56 WN 6. Qi.--ll f W- 2 zwffyi-W- an - vv-W - illllulligffl WMA-fZ'1 yarn- . Q v. -.M P :. gg in , -. , -'-ff.xA',f1'wf.,M449514 . , rZ'-M f 'ww M W X --1 uma. nv T -. - - f 21. fans.-wh E X' -M. M ' - 4. -4239A4 :??x f45'?sQ9 '. 'wffhffiflfi ' Kg 's 'WWW -V ' jg? Q Ja , QW? . it-X'2:fQ52v,f.ggsggtgwf, 1 .-yyfsx me , x rx N we ' Mm 3 1 A 3 4,- , ,., ,gig Q-!lQ!5'f?,o 'QW fn, V , -.v1::::f: W' ' 1- w?a2212i :22:f 11' 1 1 ?'+!-M VB- -V4 'Ni-. Wy f' ff .wi- i121'1?p5f9449'f.'j 1 Q ,f 'W Q lp A .K 44..- '--L-.ju--q,, ,,.,. .1-27 ,I 'fp til h gf I ff'4'?.. Sell ' 12- ' I ' i'. wf ' ' V z'..T'Q.f ,' '. 1 1-'legvimiggi-a.fj'f.7,'--I ' WX, fx - .ra -'51 --..-rf W Q. sw g - 14.11 I1- - 2-fm ' f1f l'ffm 2' '4r'.ey - 'W - ' afiffif if Q - tigflij digrfyrfg L 4 152137 4' ,, . ' Qi, 'LW' j 4552555.35 ff Q9 4 1 . wi, , 'J . '- viii' A HIS SYMPHGNY HE old, white-haired musician sat in his attic chamber alone, delicately fingering the yellow keys of his piano as he played the sublime strains of the music before him. Feebly his hands roved over the keys, for he was weak and exhausted. For four days he had tasted no food. Beg he would not, and sell his symphony, he could not. He could not be so sacrilegious. Once he had offered to sell a cherished poem, - as he called it,-at the music store around the corner. How the big, burly publisher nearly frightened the little, bent musician as he cast his fiery, blood-shot eyes on the carefully written music. He threw down the sheets carelessly, after a moment, and said that the public demanded something more catchy, And the little old musician had walked out of the shop more proud than when he entered. He felt honored. But his symphony,-no! he could never sell it. 'It was his joy, his pride. It was the story of his life. First, happy childhood, care-free and gay, no sorrows, no burdens then. There was the prayer he uttered each night at mother's knee. That was the Spring- time of his life, full of sunshine and happiness. As he grew to manhood, love entered his heart for a beautiful woman. Gentle, delicate strains now, whispers of love. There was the serenade he played beneath her window as the moonbeams danced about her smiling face above him, while she leaned from her latticed window. Again, they sat beside the gently Howing river, rich in each other's love, and the strains told of the gentle purling of the silvery stream over the pebbles, while the lovers sat in silent devo- tion. His passion grew deeper. It filled his entire being, Without her he could not live. Strongr, quicker grew the music, then, soft and wandering, now almost too faint to be heard,-a doubtful, plaintive tone it was, suggestive of his anxious heart as the beautiful maiden plucked the soft petals from the rose he had brought her. She was his own, and the joyful wedding strains burst forth. But all too soon the funeral knell sounded with awful, solemn tone as his loved one was borne from him and their beautiful world forever. Deep notes of sorrow and bitterness now from a broken heart, like a cry from a wounded bird which could never soar again to the realms of light and of sunshine. Thus did the wounded heart bend beneath the heavy burden, alone. forsaken. Swiftly he approached the Winter of his life. Storms beat heavily upon him. The symphony burst into an impassioned melody, portraying the grief of a lonely, storm-tossed old man whose pride could not become submission for many years. At last the storm breaks. The impetuous winds grow weary. Despair, the tor- turer, is conquered and is vanquished by Hope. Like a flood of sunshine once held captive by the storm-clouds and set free again, peace pours forth and, in the glory of its ministry, it touches the heart mellowed by life's sad experiences. The strains rose to an unheard-of grandeur, rich, and full, and sweet. His life was nearing its close. Slowly the sands were slipping through the hour-glass, and slowly his life was slipping away. His head dropped lower and lower over the music, his hand was unsteady. It dropped, and as a great Hood of sunny splendor burst through the narrow attic window and fell upon the musicians snowy head, an angel came and bore him away. He, a mortal man, had ended his earthly existence. But his symphony will never cease to live in the hearts of thousands, for it had, within it, a S0111- JOSEPHINE HAFF. 268 Ig jiiliiilq FIHIII2 I. My little lady of years gone by, Why do you hurry, prithee, why? A quaint wee figure in scaut array, A head that has tossed all its gold away, A tiny hand holds a clinging skirt Away from all worldliness, dust, and dirt,- She always hurries, I wonder why, My little lady of years gone by. II. See when the sun shines a glad good day, My little lady upon her wayg See how she smiles, she has cheer to spare For housemaids, at work in the early air! See! she lifts in her slender arms A gutter baby whose heart she charms. Ah, how he loves her, I wonder why, My little lady of years gone by. Watch her pause at a humble door, Quickly she goes, and is seen no more, But the dying man, as he lies in pain, Thrills to the sound of her voice again, And the wretched wife, with misery spent, Wonders where care, and squalor went When she appeared, I wonder why, My little lady of years gone by. IV. See her in corridors rich and rare, Talking to wife and mother there, Touching gently a jeweled hand, Telling of love in a fairer land, Where son, and husband can never be Loveless as he is,-loveless as we! See their lips meeting, I wonder Why,- My little lady of years gone by. V. Watch her passing the portals wide Of a dark old church, to its dim inside. Lo! She kneels on the marble cold. Was ever a saint more pure of old? - And the flowers that bloom 'neath the altar light, For burial sad, or wedding bright, She places them all, I wonder why, My little lady of years gone by. VI. Long years ago, when her cheeks were pink, There was a man she loved, I think. She sang when he came, she smiled as he went, Her days, to his love, and his joy, were lent. And he said, Sometime, perhaps, I may, Who knows? Some quite convenient day. He chose another, I wonder why! My little lady of years gone by. VII. And so, he lost her, his little bird, With her plumage soft, and her love un- heard. But now, at last, when 'tis growing late, When the time is short that he has to wait, He longs for her smile as in days of yore, The days that have gone, to return no more. He is dreaming of her. I wonder why, My little lady of years gone by. VIII. And when, from the church where you often go, They carry you out to a bed of snowg When your dainty feet are forever at rest, Can I say, O Lord, 'tis all for the best! Can I say, if I press dead lips to mine, That love is highest when all divine? Can I drink the dregs, as I drank the wine? God knows I cannot! I wonder why, My little lady of years gone by. BIARGUERITE Bmnnow. HCOLLEGE DAYS SHELBY M.HARR1s0N 62 W d M ' b . ' or Shy CHRISTOPHER L.ARMsTRoNG me y CARL M BEECHLR In a reflective Iinunner I -I I I I 'I W 7 ' I -I J J If r E9 , -I LI I I Iff - I OJ I Chil - drenthine, fair old North-west - ernf We shall e - ver sing thy praise Col- lege days are swift -ly pass- ing VVitl1 their plea-sures and good cheery Col - lege days are still the fair - est That our lives may e - ver know,- Moderato , , , ' 3 3 l -I -I I I I ' ' ' I I -131 I is I d I I I I I 0 ocy snslnine A J J I , RJH- .L J , J I J I - I I I I 3 3 3 , 3 3 I I - I I I I 5 J I if e . , Al- ways pledg-ing thee our feal - ty, Seek - ing high thy name to raisey Ev - 'ry day a page we're turn -ing Paint - ed full of scenes so dearg Care-less, free, with out a wor - ry, List -less of the winds that blowg I1 . I I I I 4 J I I I ' 3 l I I I I ' I 1 I 3 3 3 3 3 , 3 I 3 I7 I - H A p I WI I I I I ' Fair old, true old Al - lllll., Ma - ter. With thy love our hearts do blaze? Oh, the oaks and roll - ing wat - ers Oh, the paths trod brown and sere,- Ah, these days we'll sure - ly cher ish, And as trea-sures they shall grow: I7 II I I I I ' I I ,J I I I 1 I I I Jw A . I I I I I J - I9 i I5 I g I I I , I I , I I I J I I I I., ' A J Iiavql Egg V I-'I , if I' I , t,-y I ' I We are loy - :Il, fond - ly gm-cions, For these fleet - ing col - lege days. Pic - turcs,-1IIeso for fond old IllClll - ,ry Of North-west - ern Ilnys so dcnr. ln our mem'rles we shall live them As in drezmmslhey conm and gn. . . : , I ' --v-H-2 E'Z III Iliii EE JIIIEI J llJlJ. I I I I I I I I ' ' Copyrig iMCMV bg! JBoec:lII:I',Armstrong q 18: Hurrisog 114. Hmm :J IJ E17 5:52 rg: 1 EQ E if ,. Q I 1 V fi aiiiiiiibdl 3-3f , V :FQ if F x 1 . FE, f - K 54 fum- :fr-E1 fur?-54,5 .'l I fgis-1-g5QMPiJ.2w5.J, ibiliihial- Q Q Fx if 3-Fgfxfifi 3 WF- Lg. HTVQ- UJJHVAVEG VE? I mg? e l Z 5 g jet Ejjfiigillisiiffibul V , F , V x x x Q x 3 F' 56 rw V4J'AV4:UH:V VEg?E'9'H Qbfiibffffglfgqlimfgiigl , a V Q V 1 1 f I Mr. Dooley on the Cumnock School That' a grand schule, that Oumnoclr place, said Mr. Hennessy. Oi believe ye, answered Mr. Dooley. 'Tis a foine thing t' rayileck that th' youth iv th' land can be learnt t' say sich things as-'Thomas Throstle thrashed a throughfare through thistles'-widout gettin' his tongue twisted into a thru lover's knot an' requirin' an operayshun. ' Oi wus there f'r th' Hrst toime jist Nll SL A th' other day. Wid all due rayspict f'r ,EQ-w A W' an institooshun so great and Valyble. em 13' N O1 must say that ut- sounded more loike We. X xx a cage uv wild animals engagin' in a U ' X ' K' 1' 'Q free-for-all or loike a wimins' club ti' X, Wie wid th' roof off than mike th' edicay- si kfwowxigx tin' place f'r a grand an' noble a-art. , ' At wan Winder Oi seen a beauchus maidin giving' forth whoops kalkilated N t' make th' blood iv a Comanchee Chief 1 l run cowld. Fr'm another proceeded sounds closely raysimblin' a Jersey cow in deep disthress. Th' air was iilled wid onearthy shrielrs an' beller- 1n's. NJ A Thinkin' that perhaps th' place wus ' aiire or that a savidge attackt be brig- fpi gfq ands wus goin' on, Oi dashed in at th' door. Oi found mesilf in a hall. There Oi ' seen an ilderly gintlemin holdin' forth 8,3 in what Hogan calls 'impassioned 3 speech,' t' an aujence of both sects. Q Calmed an' intherested Oi took a f sate. An' -Oi wus well rewarded. In a - If minyit th' ilderly gintlemin began f'r X f to weep in a hear-rt-breakin' way, jist kv , tearin' iverythin' wide open. Me in- ' , dignashun rose that a lot of bys and gurls should have no more rayspict f'r - - an owld gintlemin, when all iv a sud- den he swabbed away th' tears an' gave vent t' a large an' most seraphic smileg jj 'Now,' says he, 'ye can think what ye XX - loike,' sez he, 'but that wus well done,' X sez he. 'Me wather-wur-rks,' sez he, KZ 'are permanintly inpairedf sez he, 'an',' ' X k sez he, 'if ye want t' be a great r-read- S5 ' er,' sez he, 'ye must put y'r own in th' f in-if same state,' sez he. 'Jist wash y'r eyes Qi in dynamite ivery mornin',' sez he, 'an' say y'r yelocution catechism backwards each night,' sez he, 'so's y'r tears can flow at all toimes. Zut,' sez he, 'niver think ye can ekal me,' sez he, 'f'r,' sez he, 'there can be no other so good,' sez he. After that he gave a pleasin' discoorse about pronouncin' wur-rds, twistin' thim out iv all sinsible shape, an' makin' sounds exackly loike th' man fr'm Boston who thried t' talk loike an Englishman but cudn't. 'tWell, said Mr. Hennessy, 'tis a good thing t' have a schule iv yelocutionf' Right ye a-are, said Mr. Dooley. 'Tis inspirini Unly ut seems t' me thet ut wud be bether f'r th' peace iv mind iv all concerned if they built a wall fifty high be nve thick around ut, or else moved ut out into th' middle iv th' lake someplace. Joi-IN EDWARD RUssELL. 272 7 Mr. Dooley on O s Oi say. said Mr. Hennessy, 'tdid ye iver ate at O's? Where? asked Mr. Dooley. At O's, leastways th' Orangemin's place, 'tis kep be a la-ad named O'Flaherty. Shure, said lvlr. Dooley, now Oi take ye. Manny's th' toime Oi've had me digestive apparatus overhauled f'r repairs on account iv over-coalin' at that palashul resoort. Evinston, being th' home iv 'iff A so many famous min, is well i - kalkilated t' support sich a mag- 1? niiicent establishment. 'ag -X Oi wus there jist th' other K N J 5 day. Advancin' bethween a dou- ble row iv sumchoos palms Oi D'-' ' 'Ng 'l' ilbowed me way through a mot- ,+', M ley throng. iv millionaires an' -1. college prisidents an' approached 24 i 1 th' bar. Here a slim gintlemin, wid frayed hair an' a nose loike - a clo's-pin, w'ich mimber sup- ! ported a lar-rge pair iv goggles, f I?-s uf X X W , A ' I ,, ,. , Xt!-x . 1' ' lllilly 5 If ,Jr -' came dancin' a hornpipe along th' aisle at th' back. Stoppin' be- fore me he projooced some sounds closely resimblin' a throl- ley-car whin ut thries t' make a landin' an' prothests at th' bad usage. Fr'm what Oi cud gather th' la-ad wus callin' me 'dear-r' an' demandin' me ordher. Raysint- in' th' endearin' term, but recog- nizin' fr'm certain shure signs a brother exile fr'rn Erin, Oi mum- bled forth me commands. Mean- while Oi tuk me sate on a quare little sthule wid a round top somethin' smaller thin a butther- dish, an' twice as greasy. In a minyit here comes th' faceshus gintlemin doin' the double shuf- 51? f ' I fle an' ar-rmed with croc'ry iv all X,-3 1 , if A - soizes an shapes X X N-'D-jg Q Slammin' siveral down b'fore N me place he continued on his ju, -1 . m v xl mad career. Oi examined th' ob- '5 53, jecks on th' bar wid mingled '-E-- feelin's. Proceedin' cautiously t' '45 th' attackt, Oi first encountered I somethin' raysimblin' a cross be- thween a piece iv pethrified shoe- leather an' a small pavin' stone. This wus flanked be a large bowl iv a villinous con- cockshun iv the color iv y'r hat and smellin' vile, wich a kind gintlemin on me right assured me he confidently believed t' be f'r th' purpose iv drinkin'. Stiiiin' me emoshuns Oi proceeded wid me invistigayshuns. Bringin' up th' rear was a small cube iv a pasty substance, pale an' sickly in color, an' rernindin' me iv th' zinc ointment Oi wance bought f'r a bruise. Overcome be the gnawin's iv hunger, an' takin' courage fr'm th' example iv th' college prisidiuts, who sat on eyther hand, wid their legs wrapped gracefully around th' sthules, an' flllin' their lank an' hungry face wid stuff loike what Oi saw b'fore me, Oi partook iv th' luxoorious raypast. A few minyits later, Oi found mesilf staggerin' through th' streets iv that classic town, wid me hand pressed vilintly t' me stummick, an' a rough-house takin' place in me innards that wud bate Archer Avenioo on Saturday night. YVell, said Mr. Hennessy, 'tis not sich a bad place, is O's. Ut is not, said 'Mr. Dooley, f'r a man who wus brought up wid th' owstriches iv Africa an' who thinks nothin' iv a meal iv ten-penny nails and fiath-irons, Oi don't know a betther. An' its savin', too. .Tony IEIJXVARIJ Rtrssicm.. The Gym O building gray, worn by the blasts of years, Staunch comrade of the waves that wash the shore, The theme for would-be poet o'er and o'er, And cause for coed's pleas and athlete's tears, Alone thou stand'st, unmoved by rage and fears, Steadfast and firm, nor mark'st the tempest's roar, Unheeding, far away thy soul doth soar Above the biting scorn and petty jeers. Ages ago, when thou stood'st in thy prime, Thou Wast the joy of many a noble heart, While pride then moved the football man to tears, Fond mem'ries round thee cling of that old time,- Mem'ries that will remain, nor e'er depart, For thou, methinks, wilt stand a hundred years. RHODA SEED. 1 X Lllj If-'Qi Rell Ha der, Bud, said the young fellow with the reedy legs and the brick-colored gloves to the sallow youth with the blotchy expression and the cigarette in his face, how 're yer goin' ter tell if a gieser's got de dough? Wotcher gettin' at? asked Bud. Wall, wot I mean is, how're yer goin' ter calculate by lookin' at a feller's coat wether he's good fer jest one more beer -or wether he's got a green roll like yer fist? Aw, say, unfurl, cut in Bud, as he breathed through his nose, and threw off puffs of smoke, put a feller wise, quick, or choke off. Wall, dontcher git wrathy nowg jist keep yer shirt on, an' I'll tell yer how 'twas. Ye see, me an' Jack Kelly an' Pat O'Bride was a-comin' home, Saturday night, from de 'Seventeent Annual Stag' wat was a-given up ter Masonic Hall, an' wen we got ter 'Maloneyts Place.' Jack, he sez fer us ter come along in, dat he'd stand fer de fizz fer us ter wet our whistles wid. Wall de place was kind uv crowded, an' de fellers all seemed ter be enjoyin' 'emselves, all 'ceptin' one seedy lookin' guy, wid a tall tile an' no collar, wat was a-standin' near de door wid his chops a-fallen, an' a kind uv sick look round de gills. An' me an' .Iack an' Pat we was a-feelin' jolly rum, an' we felt sort uv sorry fer de bloke, an' dought we'd like ter do de royal act, so we let 'r lunch-hooks down in ter 'r pockets, an' scratch'd up forty bits, between us, fer de guy. De fellers sez I must take de dust up ter him, cuz I'd got de most face. I felt like a rotter, all right, all right, it looked kind of cheap, forty cents did, but I know'd it was up ter me, so I swings myself up ter de guy, sort a careless like, an' started askin' him a few about wer was de best vaudvilley show in town. Wall, he look'd like he was graveled. I kind uv phazed him, I guess yes, anyhow, he sez Chicago Opera House was de best, an' den, kind uv sheepish like, I reached him de forty cents. 'Wat's dat fer?' sez he. 'Fer de infurmationj sez I. 'i 'O-h-h, all right,' sez he, pocketin' de coin, an' walkin' off, an' wen he got ter de door he turned back, an' wid a smile wat wont come off, sez, 'danksf An' Wat gives me' sich a grouch 'bout de hull gall darn alfair is dat Maloney hisself tol' me, dis mo.rnin', dat dat wery same gieser, de same one wat had de tall tile an' no collar, was a guy from Texas wot had jest got eight hundred dollars fer a load uv steers, an' wot 'ad jest put up dree treats fer de 'hole bunch a-fore we came in de odder night. Moral: The man and the clothes. LEONORA OREM, 274 HRT VP TS A-vfx CUT our A 12 DHT 6l?o1JcH T f N ZQQZTQSJ S0 ii 2Q5lElb ?7 ef' HRT MKTTS Rastus Abraham Lincoln Jackson was the works of Alley C, but today he was chopfallen, and there was a bad look in his eye: accordingly, getting next, the Mahket Street Branch of the Afro-American League of Crap Players had a Hgrouch for fair, and the boys were all lying low till Rastus should speak, and till the atmos- phere should clear. I By jolly, fellahsj' he began reminiscently, after a prolonged and dismal whistle, mine uz sutny someping uv ah cronsheh: 'at theh baby guhl was sutny a wahm one, a peach withou' a stone. Why, when we'd go bucketin' 'long Thi'ty-fou'th St'eet all 'e colohed folk would plug up an' leave theh happy homes to rubbeh at us. On 'e squahe, she was such wahm baby 'at she'd melt the nails in the sidewalks. Wats dat, was she ah dwesseh? Whey! She was loud, I guess yes, an' noisy dat South Side lady was: why, when she got into ah cah wid dat sassy floweh gahden 'at of hehs, she stir'ed a breeze, suah as yo' bawn, an' she nebeh had to sit in no colohed boy's lap to be noticed. She wuz a suah-'nough spoht, 'at baby wuz, an' she could plant any huckelbeh'y she want'd on heh resehvation. I sutny wuz st'ong wid dat lady, fust in line on de inneh twack, an' she gibed eve'y colohed boy de brush-by sign faw me. An' often in a way we'd sit on heh ol' man's Sunday steps, an' she'd hang onte me clowse cafse she wuz 'fhaid d' dahk, an' we handed each otheh wuhds so wahm we could see 'ern smokin' when d' moon wuz hid. An' ebe'y day, when I didn hav' no wohk, she'd put on dat sassy iioheh gahden 'at uv heh's an' a dwess dat talk'd, a yallah one wi' black spots as big as aigs, an' eve'y time I treated heh to cough drops. Why, I'd uv drop'ed any coloh uv money faw 'at honey bug an' she know'd it. Sunda' night we'd go down to d' Twelf' Street Church wheh 'd' swell colohed folks go, jus' Ethiopians, head waitehs an' caih'age drivers: no com'on coon oh naggah eveh dahed tew show his sunbuhned figgah 'roun' dehg an' w'en Pahson Johnson would staht tew swing a few 'bout lobe movin' d' wohld, cl' heaht of dis chile would thump P. D. Q., an' out uv sight, dis cullah boy would sque'ze dat South Side baby's ebony hand as she sat nex' by me, an' den we'd both give 66,06 sighs, an' if I shet my eyes faw jus' on' minute, I'd see 'maih'age license, two dollahs, maih'age license, two dollahs' dancin' al' roun' me till I wuz 'fhaid l 'ad d' D. T.'s, like de time afteh de Coachmen's Ball when thehe was cocktails with phese'ved cheh'ies an' slices o' lemon run'ing aftah me. An' eve'y time when I'd leav' ma baby guhl at 'd' dooh, I'd hug heh till it loosened heh back haih, an' I'd gibe heh a wahm one on 'd' kisseh, an' she'd put heh ahms 'ro- Could I but feel yo' deah ahms steal, a'roun' ma neck, so tendah an' wahm, piped up the Mahket Street Branch of the Afro-American League of Crap Players, but Rastus silenced them with a curt, Cut et out. And then he continued: Yes, seh, I sutny was one-two-th'ee-I ad eve'y oth' cull' boy faded wid 'at lady, 'at's a cinch. Fhida' night, 'at's cull' man's night, I went to see ma baby-I wuz goin' te pop, an' I 'ad a bag uv Hesh culloh'd drops faw ma Venus. W'en I got te d' dooh deh wuz dat 'aughty beauty sittin' on some culloh'd pipe's lap, an' ey' wuz tryin' som' uv 'eh love stunts, an' wuz a-handin' goo to each otheh. Yes, she string'd me hahd, dat guhl did: she gave me a nasty deal, an' Chadwick'd me good an' propah. No, fellahs, I didn' go in-I jus' snuck 'way-Wuz all balled up, jus' as 'o' I'd been run oveh by a whiz wagon. I lob'd dat baby so: she wuz sutny wahm'st baby dat eveh wohe shoes. She wuz ma black- bird faw faihf' Then painfully drawing himself together: Sa' fellahs, want some feed? And Rastus pulled from his hip pocket a crumpled bag of chocolates which he threw on the ground, then he turned and disappeared down C alley. MORIXLI Teasing, teasing, I was only teasing you. LEONORA Omcxr. 275 Mother Carleton at the Football Game Good morning, Mrs. Carleton, said sunny-faced Mrs. Hutchins, as she ran up Mother Carleton's front steps. I just thought I'd bring my sewing over and visit you a bit this morning. I want to hear about your trip,-I saw in the paper that you had been away. 'tMercy, yes! and Mother Carleton threw up her hands. Come right in. I should think I had been away. I was afraid they would take me to the asylum if I stayed any longer. I haven't been so giddy since Henry and I used to go to the country fair forty years ago. You see, my grandson Phillip wanted me to come to Ann Arbor for the great football game between Michigan and Chicago. I told him I didn't know anything about the game and would rather be excused, but no,-I had to do it to please him, he said. They were going to have a great time and he wanted me to be there. I told him, I was that selfish,-that beinis how I didn't undertsand the game, like as not it would be most awful stupid for me. Phillip was wicked enough to write back and say that he would warrant it to be almost as excitin' as our prayer-meetint when Brother Peters gets started on predestination. Well, I went, but with a most fearsome feelin'. It seemed so frivolous for an old woman like me to be a-goin' off to a football game just like a girl of twenty. You may be sure I didntt let our preacher know what I was a-goin' to do,-he would have said it was very unsanctimonious. I got there at one oiclock. Phillip said we would go to the hotel for lunch. 'Lunchl' says I, and I tried to tell him that I had some lunch.-if that was what he was goin' after,-right there in my shoe-box. There was some of Sary Ann's nice molasses-cake, and chicken, and apple-pie, and bread and jelly, and lots of things that I could eat right there in the station while he went to get a bite for himself. But he insisted on our goin' on together. After that, we went up to his 'frat' house,-at least that's what he called it. When it was time to start to the game, there was the funniest-lookin' thing there at the door to ride on. Phillip called it a 'tally-ho' and said, 'Now, grandmother, here's the seat of honor for you.' 'Phillip Carletonl' says I, 'If you think I'm going to ride on that! Never in the worldl'-and I saw the thing just alive with girls dressed up gay as though they was goin' to the theater. 't 'Neverl' says I again, and was stopped in the act of stampin' my foot by Phillip and several of his friends pickin' me up bodily and settin' me up there. One of the girls gave me a big bow of ribbon to pin on,-the college colors, she said. That was not so terrible, although it was a pretty big bow. Then one of the boys says, 'Here is a horn for you to blow, Mrs. Carleton! Me blow a horn! But he was so handsome and so very polite that I couldn't refuse, so I just said, 'Thank you,' very meek-like. I felt about like something goin' to seed right in the middle of a gay flower garden, but those young folks just laid themselves out to make me have a good time. Well, that game was a sight to behold. Everybody kept yellin' an' blowin' their horns, and finally, I got so interested that I stood right up on the seat and Phillip says, 'Yell, grandmother, we're lickin' 'em!' Just as I was goin' to yell, one man was hurt dreadfully. I thought they'd kill him tryin' to bring him to and was tryin' to collect myself enough to remember Mis' Davis's recipe for a good poultice and have somebody take it to him quick. But I guess he was just playin' possum, for in a minute he jumped up ant ran fastertn any cf them. 'lf he'd only make another touchdownl' says everyone. 'If he'd only make another touchdown!,-and they all yelled, and screamed, and howled, and blew their horns,- and me as bad as any. 'I believe he's goin' to do itlt shrieked somebody. Then Phillip says, 'Cheer, grandmother, cheer! Blow your horn! Anything to help him on, for a lot depends on you.' That kind of got me started worse than ever, you know, but I wanted to help him, -he tryin' so hard, so up I got again, an' with my best Sunday bonnet a'hangin' down 276 my back by the strings an' my hair a-blowin' wild about my face, I waved my arms and yelled just like Phillip did,- 'Go it, old man! go itl' And I tell you, he went, and we won the game. Then they all shook hands with me and patted me on the back, and said that I helped him win the victory. That night, that fellow came over and said he wanted to thank me, for without the sight of me up there screamin, and cheerin' him on so, he never could have run so fast, and he said all the victory was due to me. The boys in the house gave me a large bunch of roses, and acted as though I was royalty. Well, I know I acted just like wild, but I tell you, Mis' Hutchins, seein' as I helped them so much, I'm awful glad I went. JOSEPHINE HAFF. ig Lines to An Alarm Clock On Hearing It Strike at Four I-Ia! There ye go, ye snarlin' varmint, Who ever kenned 0' sich a tarmint, A wheezin' out as if by deil sint, Afore cock crow? An' Faith, my sinses all are fu' tint, Ye sturt me so! Ye pechin, scraichin' blastit beastie, Hornie himsel' is in thy breastie, Ye sure rin sleep awa' fu' hasty Wi' ranting prattle. , I wad your clap cleek fell, or baste thee Wi' walie pattle! Oiclock in the Morning Alake! Nae need ava to coe'r my head, Or cow'r atween the claes oi the bed, I surely ken the cursed speed The blastie's taking Ah! The howlet-faced thing, I dread, Is hyte me makini. O wad some power the giftie gie us. Frae fashous 'larum clocks to frae us, How bonnie sweet the mornings for us With these awa. They'd only leesome slumber lea'e us Gin gaen for ay. RHODA SEED. .l- Dictionary of Don't gush. Don't buttinski. Don't crib in Bible A. Don't become a mucker. Don't be like Knocko, the Monk. Don't swear on the campus, the dean might hear you. Don't ask foolish questions, you may expose your ignorance. Don't try to impress everybody with your importance. Dontt Hunk too many classes, it may embarrass you at the end of the year. Don't allow your head to swell too much while you are a freshman, it may burst. Don't, if you are a coed, linger in the halls to chat with the men. Don't fumigate yourself too freely with cigarette smoke just before going to class. Dont's Don't work the chapel committee too much. they may condition you. Don't take the same girl to every party if you wish to avoid complications. Don't forget to read your text book once in a while, it may aid you in exam- inations. Don't think that because you belong to a frat that you are an exceptional person. Don't make a practice of bluifing, it may work once or twice but not all the time. Don't rely too often on your general knowledge. Don't exclude yourself too much even if you are working for Phi Beta Kappa. Don't do C rfork and expect an A grade. Don't forget to graduate. Eicxl-:sr E. Axmausox. BLACK AND GOLD The dark, broad Hudson River at night, crossed by slender gleaming pathways of light from the villages on the banks, was a chiaroscuro .in black and gold. Near Kenton's Landing, the means of access to Hubert Kenton's country home, a large canoe was beached. Beside it, in the shadow, two gaunt, unshaven, hungry men were standing and talking in undertones. They hitched their trousers and tightened their belts, as though preparing for action. Hope the kid won't take on much, Jim, I'll just ask him if he don't want to go on a picnic. Did you get the ladder? Cautiously the men moved toward the house and placed the ladder under the window of a room, where they knew the boy was sleeping. Jake climbed up and looked in. Golden moonlight cast the black shadows of trees on the bed where a rich man's live-year-old son lay sleeping with arms thrown wide. Awful cute kid! Jake murmured, his pa must think a heap of him. Then he whistled softly, like a bird. Tommy Kenton opened his eyes and looked at Jake. f'Hello, sonny, how'd you like to go on a picnic this evening? Tommy stopped yawning, gasped, his eyes sparkled with delight, and then he hesitated. With an inviting smile Jake continued: Me and a pal is goin, down the river in a canoe. We thought maybe you'd be lonely, and like to come. Tommy slipped out of bed and pattered to the window. 'tWould you take awful dood care of me? he asked. Sure! said Jake. I hnk it would be dust gweat! remarked Tommy. Jake picked up a little blue flannel wrapper, and a pair of stockings, and with Tommy in his arms went down the ladder. Jim was standing at the bottom. They carried the canoe to the landing and Jim got in. Gimme the kid, he said, and you kin paddle. But Tommy suddenly turned to Jake and said, I want to sit wif you, Mr. Jake! Both men laughed and Jim remarked, Better let him have his way. We don't want a scrap yet. And now for grub. As they swung out into the river Jake and Tommy opened a parcel containing half of a chicken and two dilapidated pies. They agreed to eat first, and then Jake was to paddle while Jim took his turn. Tom remarked that the pie looked like the kind we have at our housef' Well, explained Jake, you see we thought as long as we were supplyin' the canoe, you wouldn't mind supplyin' the grub. That's square, ain't it?'t Course, Tommy agreed, and after a pause he added, with his mouth full. This is like 'rub-a-dub-dub' only it's three men in a canoe, ,stead of a tub. Canoes is more fun 'n tubs! Another pause and then Tommy said, 'Tm drefiiy sleepy, Mr. Jake 'n it's dreffly late, let's do home, and if you'll dus' hold me, I'll do to sleep till we det there. Jake took the little chap clumsily into his arms and smoothed the folds of the wrapper gently. For ten minutes the only sounds that broke the stillness were the childis deep breathing and the steady dipping of the paddle, At last Jim spoke. i'Say, ain't it about time fer me to have a little grub? - l'Shut up!'l Jake answered. 'Aw, say, that's good enough when you've had somethin' to shut it on. Play a square game, pardf' Jake sat up a little straighter and spoke very softly. Turn aroundl' What! Not melt' There was a moment's silence while the rocking of the canoe showed indecision. and then Jake drew a revolver and pointed it at Jim. Jim, he whispered, you turn round, or I'll blow you straight to hell! The canoe swung up the river, What about the money, the cash ransom? asked Jim. t'Damn the money! was the answer. An hour later Jake carefully laid little Tom Kenton in his bed and drew up the covers. Then the great, rough, dark fellow kissed the little child's soft forehead. Awful cute little chap, he murmured. Goodnight, sonnyf' And gradually the black shadows brightened into the golden light of the morning. MARGUERITE BIGELOW. 278 Set of Characteristics of Style of Six Student Authors No. I. Eng. A. Extract from Narrative Essay IHere the future Marie Corelli shows her command over thrilling situation and effective language. A striking example of the early out-cropping of geniusj . . . Standing on the verge of the terrible abyss where the frightful blackness and awful depth appalled the very soul, Aldrich Veronon Montague cast a trembling glance below, shuddering in every limb, gasping with sickening dread, and, in the extremity of his emotion, felt his very heart-strings crack and his very heart rise to his mouth, at the heart-rending possibility of a fall? No. II. Eng. A. Extract from Descriptive Essay LNote the natural flow of words and the depth of moral sentiment which distinguish this writer. If there are errors in orthography they may be pardoned in one evidently destined to succeed Ralph Waldo Emersonj Trees There are many kinds of trees. Maple, elm, poplar and birch is some. Once there was a man who had a tree in his yard next to ours. It was a big tree. Once a little boy took a axe and started to chopp it and then he told the man he could not tell a ly he done it I think the boy was a good honest yuth. There are many kinds of trees but these is the mostf' No. III. Eng. A. Extract from Narrative Essay fNothing is more evident than that this youthful author is destined to be a great stylist. But for his command of the dramatic one might prophesy a second Walter Paterg as it is, his talents point more directly toward Robert Louis Stevenson.fI . . . With manifold contortions of his venerable countenance, expressive of disgust, Sir Ralph drew his prepossessing person to its greatest altitude and presented to the assembled multitude an appearance at once defying and scornful. 'Your allega- tions and imputations are hypotheticalj he hissed. 'Let it infiltrate through your weak intelligence that I am not the intercipient of the missives! Avaunt, ye curs!' No. IV. Eng. B. Example of a Paragraph LNote here the extreme simplicity and forcefulness of the language, the compression and exactness. Surely this writer will become the American Victor Hugo.j He started. He fell back. Was he mistaken? No! Yes! No! It was the long-lost! He gasped. He cried out. He knew that face. Could it be? Yes. It was she. Only changed. Sadly changed. Still it was she. He could not speak. He staggered. He choked. He reeled. He clawed the air. He fell. He was dead? No. V. Eng. C. Example of Versification lPoetic genius is mined for, discovered, coined, and made useful in English C. This is one of the most promising examples. One hesitates whether to place the writer in the class with Shelley or in that of Bryant. His ability warrants either.l And the man shall never know Man will take his evening ease What it is to sew and sew. While his wife will shell the peas. Neither can he ever guess He can eat the juicy steak What it is to make a dress. Which to roast has caused to break For it is a woman's work Spirit of his faithful wife. 'Tis a work she cannot shirk. This it is-a married life. CEtc., etc., acl infi.nittLm.J No. VI. Eng. F. Example of an Editorial Hn English F, aspiring journalists acquire their final polish before stepping into the editorships of various newspapers. The writer of this example will go to New York next year to take charge of the editorial department of the New York H6?'CLZCl.TI We perceive with scorn and indignation that some of our very best families allow their female members to wear hair-ribbons! Most pernicious! Outrageous! What is the country coming to? This frightful practice must be abandoned if the nation is to survive. With nothing' but the motives of the purest patriotism we take this oppor- tunity to publicly denounce this vile tumor on our social fabric which must be immedi- ately removed at any cost if we wish to be free from the taint of the effete institutions of monarchical and feudal countries. Down with the hair-ribbon! -JOHN Emvxnn RUSSELL. 279 4 s. t X X ,WJ Q j. 1 1 2569 - ,I-'Wy - - h 4 ' ' D ,L . FEI' XXL ! f' jfflm f n . Best Prose Literary Production-t' I-l1s Symphony 2610.00 JOSEPHINE HAFF 0 if 7 Second Best Prose Literary Production- Black and Gold : 5.00 If Z A MARGUERITE BIGELOW. ' A' Best Humorous Production- Mother Carleton at the 0 ' Football Game, : : : 5.00 JOSEPHINE HAFF. ' Best Set of Mr. Dooley Articles on Northwestern Subject 5-00 JOHN EDWARD RUSSELL. Best Lyric Poem- My Little Lady V: I I 5-00 MARGUERITE BIGELOW. Best Northwestern Song- College Days : : 1 : 12-00 SHELBY M. HARRISON 2 and CARL M. BEECHER CHRISTOPHER L. ARMSTRONG Best Sonnet- The Gym 1 : : : ' ' 3-00 RHODA SEED. Best Cover Design : : : : : 5-00 JOHN EDWARD RUSSELL. Best Parody- Lines to an Alarm Clock 1 : 3-00 RHODA SEED. Best Dictionary of Dont's- For a College Student 1 2-00 ERNEST E. ANDERSON. Best Set of Characteristics of Style of Six Student Authors 3-00 JOHN EDWARD RUSSELL. Best Set of Fables in Slang : : 2 2 2 3-00 LEONORA OREM. Best Set of Professors' Pet Phrases : : 1 2-00 IDA l-I. KING. GEO. E. BEGGS, EMORY BOGARDUS, Sna Shots p LAURA WILBERTON, LE. J. ASTHALTER. Largest Number of Syllabus Subscriptions. U14 Subscriptionsj : Specially Bound Copy of Syllabus E. J. ASTHALTER. Second Largest Number of Syllabus Subscriptions. Q88 Subscriptionsj 1 One Copy of Syllabus lDA I-I. KING. 281 'k1P.wLvLPA4Av4v4v E E Q 1 R F c Q V Q Z E 4 1 -6 11 Q 3 I Q , 'nvgv,,v4vn. 1 AV Ye TAVAYAY-Q' ii mm msiws:num1914-s nraremQ!a1m'vesos+fvmYr.ifmw2s'YAY4S'eS'I:I4ble Ne! ' YQ' 1-x ir! 'jg vq Ns 5' 'W 'Qs' ' ...iw ,- - , ,... .43 , ,.. . --.,,5-,aff .0-ef .,-, f...- f-'- ,ff 1 u I l C I I L n I 1 ' I la ig f W H' X . -JFAFQ?-.--7.-+---3-.13 -i-14,-1-.7 -r- .Arr -U7-.gf uaZ'..e:.-- ,-.-gs -e.-5-ig: -ir gg, .---Lg -, ?-r- qw- -49.7-.JW N, Q, I A ' ,'- fl. I J alll' .1-', 1 . . .' ,-, ,mr rf -' A L4 ,. ,L - , 5 I - 4.7.4 ' '! fi- , ' , , ,, I A , X xx K . E' -I If X X 4 V! ml xnj V , sy .j, X, K mix-?mmnrpmv23vnp my - ., A , . T-.711 'wfyf' -' - -- Q P1 .V - .' I 'I ' ' i'f ' ' : AK '- . - I ' jx--1 Y If- 1 X ',Z!f ,K 1 , f A W W' f g Q ,. ' V' I 5 I -X5 - 1, - ' - , v - V A 'I 'ak ' V , N 9 N ' X K H - 1 . ,,- 5 4 , - ' gf , 1 , . Ji -ll' . .I F V. :S . V I . . viii, X Q N . ' 'Q E5 if F, . I f ' , 1 ,a ,- H in , 3 rf 4 Au, ' -,.,'l -nw, xx ' -I .. . A V.:-by-,. , EJ A, I Q S Q H b A , I 5 fy - fi 1 1 f ' I - 72 -1 - AQ?b -..EYE 5515- wa Q5 GX. humid! f 2'-h ...-4 ,fi ff AA Cm.FX.NeLapNxJr, L, , In the Great Operative Clinic I GREENE VARDIMAN BLACK, D. D. S., M. D., Sc. D., LL. D. Moulded of elements that have borne the test of time. His mind, a scholar's, broad, resourceful, keen, His hand, long practice and marvelously skilled. Unceasing toil his choice, his one great aim To uplift and broaden his science and his art. Long delving in nelds of scientihc lore, Oft leaving beaten paths and striking forth, Upsetting olden fallacies, to prove the truth And priceless worth of methods new, and eastin On many a mooted question. Ever on and on By constant work and unabated zeal, He grew a giant in his chosen Held. And now, N0rthwestern's pride, to him we come And 'bide a. while and leaving carry away The memory of a man. 285 light J. W. PEROUTKY V A '7 SYLLABUS BOARD LA A KENT KERCH : Editor ROBT. R. CLENDENEN . Manager JJ' Associate Editors D. H. DANEK, W. H. RICHARDS B. S. PARTRIDGE, V. A. MILLER, G. A. THOMPSON, G. E. SIVERLING, G. A. NELSON, J. F. C!-IRISTIANSON A. C. MCLAREN, J. B. KOHAGEN. 44 CLARENCE K. WEAVER : Stenographer 287 TO THE GLASS OF NINETEEN-FIVE I fain would sing a song of praise Of N. U. D. S. college days To you of Nineteen-fiveg Yet, though the Muses I may woo, I know I cannot justice do With all I may contrive. Could I but help you to recall The pictures still on memory' s wall When years have rolled by, The life you lived, the battles won, In this modern Babylon, Happy then were I. The songs, the cheers, the rousing roars In college halls and corridors, The classmates, one and all, The honored Profs we shan't forget, Not even Dugong,H you can bet, Whatever shall befall. How time has iiown since first we came, Attracted by Northwestern's fame All manner of men,- Mechanics, tradesmen, pedagogues, Farmers, what not, but what odds What vocation then. 1 We came and formed one brotherhood And hard we've worked, as students should In fellowship togetherg Together laughed and boned and planned, Lending oft the helping hand As brother unto brother. Commencementis nigh, soon shall we s At the portals of that broader land, While on the years roll, Still up and onward e'er to press More worthy proving to possess No1'thwestern's honored scroll. Farewell Northwestern! where'e We still shall show our loyalty To the Purple and the Gold. tand r we be Our fondest wishes are with thee: Our Alma Mater henceforth we In fond remembrance hold. 288 Senior Class Officers President, - - ANDREW VACHEL LOUDERBACK, M. S. Vice-President, THOMAS LESTER RICE, D. V. M. Secretary, - WARREN KENDALL HULL Treasurer, CHARLES JOSEPH WEBSTER 289 Junior Class Officers President, EDWARD I-IOLBROOK ASHLEY Vice-President, FREDRICK S. LAWSON Secretary, WINFORD ALDRICH HUNT Treasurer, COLONEL MELZAR RICHARDS Sergeant-at-arms, CHARLES WERMOR MCKENNA 290 ,f Q , ,T ,o . fixmwx 'v ,J ,f f f IQ: '- ' 2252 Freshman Class Officers . President, DON DELBERT DRAKE Vice-President, WILLARD T1-los. CONLEY Secretary, ALVIN FABIAN JOHNSON Treasurer, ERMIN PETER BAUR 291 AN IDEAL HERE is nothing better to my eye than a bright, healthy young lad just from home to attend college to prepare himself to make his mark in the world, who is a good fellow and wears well with everybody, who has had a good home and a wise and thoughtful father and motherg who knows the homely virtues of truth and hon- esty, and practices them, and who worships at the shrine of the only one grander thing in this world than he himself:-a pure, wholesome and true-womanhood. A lad so grounded can and is sure to come in contact with all the influences of life, good and evil, and get nothing but good therefrom, and getting his own experiences, and not some one else's, will give him a proper, broad view of the world and his fellowmen, and he can always strike a point of moderation in his uses of the goods, uses, and theories of the world. Such a lad loves his work, and what a magic touch this gives all that he does in either theory or practice. He is humble as to his possible lack of some of the knowledge of the world. And about money! If our fine lad is a remittance man, all is well, and he spends his money sensibly. If not, he gets what he needs by working for it, and he finds many who are glad to help such as he, and he goes on the philosophy that rather than have that which he does not need, he would rather go without that which he does need, also, that what he needs he will get, and what he does not get he does not need. Money will not buy health or character, and he knows it, and carefully guards them both, and therein lies his strength and he is not apt to go sailing in the clouds of either theory, or eternity either until he has lived his life. And after he graduates a good dentist does he have to look very hard for a location? or does he become a charlatan? Nix! He picks out a spot where there is business, where he would be contented to live, and where there are not too many as good dentists as himself, and, most always after marrying, as he should, he settles. And seldom do you hear of his failing, even if you measure his success by the money that he has made. Nor does he have to advertise himself otherwise than to proclaim the beauty, strength, and aesthetic value of his handiwork as worthy the possession of any man or woman who cares. If only such attended our school, we would not need a course of ethics in the freshman year by Dr. Hall, much less one by Dr. Noyes in the senior year, and our old school would turn out such a grade of dentists that other schools would lose their reputations. But we do not do so badly now, at that. After some few years of contact with students around this good old school, this is my ideal. I might be wrong, but I really do not know where. My experience has done me good, as I have met many who were in many ways like my ideal. Do unto others as though you were the others. 292 -W f Ld v! ll L l l 41 1 I4- Iilllul , gp ll SLLERLILLQ . svn' -S, -url V l!M r-Qrnrgl' H lg H I -ri-t A ll 1 l I - U I i? x,, e - I ll, r. I A.. --M-I i F. . ,' s alll MJ Q nfl X r l v -V, I b i NW! 1 U, 'll' f QUARTETTE AWE First Tenore de la skyscrapo primo, - - - - - Second Tenore mezzo-tremulo a la t'Breeze carrier, - First Bass le barytonio la somnambula pianissimo in G minor, - MEF - BENJ. S. PARTRIDGE GEO. FORD REYNOLDS - WALTER J. BAUMGARTNER ST Short-Stop virtuose protundo de la tempo heato, ----- WILBUR R. CONKLIN Substitutes in the line, ------ l. E. CLOSE, C1-if-is. MOKENNA, B. ANDERSON Drum Major de la Barber shop connoisseur, ----- VERNE A. MILLER Pianiste Officiale, ------------ WM. S. PEISLEY Repertoire 1, One Squeaky Solemn Thought. 2. The Moss Covered Molar That Hung ln Grandpa's Jaw. 3. Looked ln The Stable Near The Sheep, tFantasie Extremoj 4. Sisters Teeth Are Plugged With Zinc, tCon Expressionej 5. Far From the Old Soaks At Home, tAdagio.j 6. We Sat For A Bridge Till Midnight. 4 If w: fix? Ls. .X l . .Q 'S 54 FV Oh l am a bad man from Texas, We never let Dentistry Vex us. We're on to its tricks, All your teeth we can tix, Now wouldnt that rattle your plexus. v f .1 ff' ,A -.C dx F , .9 xii' fuilq ,ff mf' ML si! -4-Qgifdi ' lif l aasmwmw . .sikgrgm i.. I L rslflw - i' v N: ' E , L -- ,, ., ,.-B 293 Entrance and Rotunda, Northwestern University Building ln the Histological Laboratory. 294 J' ,. . -X x - Pathogenic KTUNE: Back to Baltlmorefl Said the abscess to the tumor, Who was in the best of humor, I may look alright, But l feel very sore. - V-xg ' The tumor to him then did spiel: Come in my corpuscular 'mobile And we'll roll through the Antrum of l-lighmore. QTune of Back to Baltimorel For we like Printz and Hall and Doc Van Tuyl We Wish the rest of them were just their style. Gethro makes us carve and poke And grind old teeth most till We choke, Till We wish We had never seen a file. iff f'-1 'iiwx ATT If lin . ji origin., ,tx ,X .. -1' six if! Y, 'Q .Q 3 gg 1 if MQ t 5 H' 4.1 ,N ,ln K nfjftff X X. WMU :lc slim! 9 A V EUKN YQ. gl ix. Xxfx I . f w is But when Old Mix Then Wiggin he comes in with his broad smile And keeps us guessing 'round for quite a while gets in his picks We don't know as much as two old sticks. So, 'Rah for Printz and Doc Van T. rm W illgilm frm' i . . .. rf lf' 'VW rr :.1-fi si,--5 iIiitw1f'H KW YJ if 1' ' f ., ' 1 - f fvfit-1--:'i 7'1 il f Q10 1. ,Q U WAIT FOR THE ELEVATUR By my side From day to day, It is my fate, I'm sorry to say, ,mln Q65 To sit beside ijt! Q A chapl think 71' ' Who really is 51 4 ij. , The missing link. ,-,, 1g9Bi,.2rj :Q -fFursytlz, Fr. 110 to Fr. J 09. TEM T00 SMALL A PUINT UF GDN-TAGT , The Night Before Examinations E9 at T -1, Fi! 11-7 CQ. hill? A Qfi' swirl' 1 3 lwmy V ,, X 'Ft X M, N ,Pig - - fiygf i 'ff-,:',fg t' 5 ' 'Q' 1 1 'gif til 1- V25 '55 5 X 2 LL - xiziv-Q -. FRESHMAN JUNIOR SENIOR 295 ,,f A - it X If Y '9 Suggested State Board Questions 1. Name three kinds of medicine. Should water be taken afterwards? 2. Can a dentist sue a patient who died during the preceding summer for an old debt? Explain procedure. 3. In dissecting a live subject where should you begin to carve? 4. What is the meaning of the surgical expressions, To shoot hot air into it? I h got my finger in it? ave g g 5. After an operation and before pulling a leg, is it necessary to administer an anaesthetic? 6. In disabling a competitor which blow is preferable, one on the inferior maxillary or on the solar plexus? 7. If you were to find a person of respectable appearance with money and jewelry, lying unconscious in the street and there happened to be no one at hand to assist you, what would be the nrst thing' to do? 8. Give the chemical name of the following, to-wit: Ice, simple syrup, angostura bitters, one jigger of booze, ditto of vermouth cherry, and one Manhattan. 9 Are you in favor of eight-hour day for jumping toothache? 10. What is a joint? Give location of Mike's Place. 11. When is it permissible to use your mouth as a chip blower? 12. According to the laws of hygiene, what is the correct poultice for a Frank- furter sausage, mustard or horse-radish? 13. What has been your experience in the use of instruments? Do you use Black's? Which is more highly endorsed, a razor or the knucks? 14. Is Schlitz beer an antiseptic? 15. Do you use your knee in holding a patient while extracting an impacted third molar? If so, which knee? 16. To amuse a patient. would you resort to tickling an exposed pulp? 17. Describe the following parts of the human body: Cal the lamps, tbl the mits, Ccl wild hairs, fdl the slats, Cel ingrowing toe nails, ffl the beak. ,.. ,I . it 'W X l .Aidan 1 H , ,X . 1 1 xl 5 ',01,' WW 1 0 f i F. SE xdxse' JT X X .' -942. .. 'C ' far- 152' A ' ' 21' f :lf -gl - .vi gg-A , at ,.iu::, 1 X.-e- -241 18. What is your opinion of the Wiggin Theory of Fertiliso- Matabole? Would you use it in practice? 19. Would you have your patient's head high and go slow in operating on the anterior teeth? Give the grasps and preliminary steps. 20. At Post Mortem examination, who is entitled to the teeth? 21. Do you believe there is anything in the theory that if you break your leg on Friday, you will regret it? Note and Precaution.-To those who have had experience, extra credit will be given, so relate your experiences that have a bearing on the questions. You need not demonstrate. ONVEN E. CAss1LL. The Patient A maiden comes to be exarninedg She is fair of face, with queenly grace, No matter what's her name or race. The boys in line, will fight and squirm To see who is the first in turn, And wishing all to take his place That they might first be in the race To get this lovely patient. Another comes to be examined. She is not fair or good for fun, The line looks glum and on the bump There are no craning necks, or faces All aglow with manly graces, And no one worries or looks discouraged If they do not get this patient. BUSHBIAN. 296 J., : , gf. .54-.1 3 cunsws -., + 'ff SA H E A ova. m e , QV' 2 ,cg ' 3222 -Q Z fe- 4?' R vw 13 fa., fag w-nhl.-n not 'En 14.5, . . Y K1 a , ff 1 in f 4 22,23 N N A ft , , if 3 is 3 1 - V gg,- li 9 x tgifje f 61,5 iss , 7 ' ..,. ' .370-mm ,f HDOLLY ON GUARD DIXIE About a child from the Sunny South, Who's future work Within the mouth With chisels, hoes and burs by scoreg Sizes 4-11-44, His Way will hack. Peeping through his gold-chained specs At molars Wrought with vast defects, With sparkling gems upon his fins, And dreamy smiles to match his glims, His face will crack. A nose at angle 28 and more, A facial line like a cellar door, Tuned up in voice to the key of moans Answering 'phones and phoney 'phones His lungs doth heave. A GOOD EXAM PLE : J 2 97 Q. . if -r , - it -X N fl- ... ' Kg- X six. X I i , was ff 6 ' -27 ' -is-TE.. or JUST OUT A ilannel shirt oft' times he fills With contoured frontg saves collar bills His ankle's bound in a buckled muff, So no moneyis spent to buy the stuff Of Shaw-Knit Weave. He's but a boy, so let us hope By opening the future by a nasal poke. In this large rent he may rely To get bearings by a Hfoursightn eye For all things bad. S. A. A. Lecture Room No. II In the Prosthetic Clinic 298 I j I ..1.. .A,, . lliljl . wir Jw -- I , AQE III I, Q-gig! L' be A7 H , ,L 1, A-tf FLD fifrrza Q HISTOLOGY SONG fTune of Robinson Crusoe.J There is a good guy in the Histology Lab., Who talks just like an old dago. He asks funny questions 'bout frog's spit , in ponds, In answer to which the Whole class do re- spond: CHORUS. Poor old spyrogyro, Who just came over from Cairo. He looks at all dope Through a big microscope, Poor old spyrogyro. The first thing to do is to carefully read through The paper that's just laid before youg Prepare on a slide a small piece of hide S W' 'T .gg-f I' il all ilxwi iii!-g L .4:l.--H5k .. ..f .. I.--ig Q. LI E! 7 f 1 N X And don't use a Cow till he tells you. A ,EWR kwglg M A r T lr j :N .xii b Jmwtwm n, .bnl W fm Qiwwgarw Q .. N - E ,, - , KWH? tk LQQQ Eamon? qluwigllge ! Wm '1 l P r' f T ii 4-gag TNQ --Q- ,GHG Kel? if QQ? -I Q2- 2 A Study in Expression when Grades are Read- 299 Z' I ll were att its wana if amass- alse Qelies to .lat-qesxvszwlef I USG- A Y In r And I hear outside my window, as they joyously 'tKi-yi The voices of the fellows and their girls as they pass byg 'Tis the irony of fate, that I must hear them every time, The trials of old Tantalus can't compare with those of mine. When I'd rather be out skating with that pretty girl of mine. 1 ,W - 4-3 .Eu V X X H 1 -A : , t , , at N U 'r f- lk M I ' S N P' X, K I In short, to be real honest, in this life one grows ennuied, If one travels at too slow a gait, without a little speedg And I find an extra flavor in a bottle all alone, Which makes me drink the deeper, 'cause I'm obliged to bone A face with little sympathy, and a form which suits the face Confronts me in my pipe dream, and the vision won't erase, He told us things so just it caused queer feelings in my pate, And often he would stop a while' To re-ca-pit-u-late. 300 ' As one who crams at evening, in an attic, all alone, And muses on the muscles and the nerves that he has known, So I turn the leaves of Cunningham and there, in faint design, ' I can see the Brachial Plexus of that strong right arm of mine. The gas light spits and sputters as I study to grow wise, And I turn it low, still lower, just to rest my weary eyesg Then I light my pipe in silence, save a groan which means-no The long names of those muscles with my mem'ry raise the deuce. 'Tis a hateful retrospection and the thoughts which seem to start, Bring up the unlearned lessons which I should have known by heartg Bah! To dream those stale dreams over, is not luxury divine, is as 1 2 v f 1 df? S 5.55: . '5N1 .. ., iff o l ie ,, f I can see the Well trimmed side burns, the small sized mustache, too, He Wore when Hrst I met him in class room Number 2. His manner was most dignified, he made a pleasant bow, And said, Although you see it not,-my fingeris on it now. And again I feel the pressure of his cold and clammy hand, As We stood and talked together of the future father'd planned, When I should leave the college a full fledged D. D. S., And open up an office with a Hourish of success. When I could diagnose a case or crown a tooth with gold, Or make a plate of shining pearls and charge it up as sold. When my list of paying patients should lengthen each day, quite, And the balance in my bank book should fill me With delight. W ifrfzf In a bright red-devil auto, I should ride the country o'erg , , X I Have a mansion on Fifth Avenue, and servants by the scoreg ll 'lk X J I'd own a yacht and golf links, a racing stable fineg L V ,, R And the partner of my joys should be that pretty girl of mine. Xxx -fl f I X But, ah me, my dream is broken by a step upon the stair. And at last the door is opened and the Landlord standeth thereg All my eagerness and rapture, all my visions are resigned, To greet the man who's asking for that last month's rent , of mine. GEORGE FORD REYNOLDS. in 'rf lx X ,f r Xl ff .x g S 'Q l xl. N' Illustrated by Arthur C. Agern. 301 In the Oral Surgery Clinic I it Hit or Miss is LBLELSLBLSCSLBCBLBFUUUUUUUUUU Dr. Prothero, from the pit-Can anybody answer that question? After considerable hesitation Crawford volunteers midst great applause. He said something but from the unusual noise which followed we judge that the question was still unanswered. Let us hope that Dr. Gilmer's dream shall never be realized. Dr. Methven has shown himself an able shepherd. Not every man can drive 240 sheep into quiz. J. Pierpont Diffenbacher has been engaged to assist Coach Stagg in coaching K'The Kerosene College Football Team, while Timmis will teach them the art of playing the ponies without going broke. It is rumored that Cassius Knecht will establish a foundry for manufacturing coal by the dry distillation of fish. Webster has been engaged as Professor of Chemistry in the Denver Dental School, and will be associated with his old college chum, Dr. I-larry Ellis. The Beard Club has been duly organized. The following officers were elected: Amiot, president, Murphy, vice-president: Danek, secretary: and Cassel, treasurer. Requirements for admission are as follows: Applicants must show at least a four days' growth and give evidence that they are lacking the ordinary barber's fee. An Eastman has come back from the west to complete his course with his old college chums. Leutcher has put in an application to the trustees to fulfill the vacancy made by the retirement of Dr. WVright. What's the Matter With the Mail? as sung by the Boy Soprano, Buster Brown. O'Hara is still busy taking notes on the lectures. We understand that he is going to revise the American System of Dentistry within the next year or two. Wanted-A good dentist: must be especially good on anterior bridge work. Apply to Cupid,,' N. U. D. S. Omsberg says that removable facings are only good for masquerade balls. Lost-A voice, somewhere between the Junior and Senior year: finder please return to McDonald and receive reward. Mr. Stenz will make a specialty of treating abscesses that are On the Square. The knowledge which some people have of dentistry is shown by the following letter which was received by one of our former graduates: Dear Dr.-I want a set of false teeth. My mouth is three inches across, five-eighths through the jowl, some hum- mocky on the edge, shaped something like a horseshoe, toe forward. If you want me to be more particular I will have to call on you. Yours truly, - Mrs. B 1 Class Championships Hot air-Pierpont. Checkers- Buster Brown. Pool- Dick Wells. Lady winner- Circus Sollyf' Sprinter-Rice. Speaker-Ellis. Rifle shot-'tTexas. Wisdom-Crawford. Writer-O'l-Iara. Love- Cupid. Crown stick-Mason. Prosthetist-Uglow. Treating canals-Walsh. Singing-Larkin. Gold-Burns. Amalgam-Omsberg. Manners-Lauderbach. Rowdyism-MaHaffy. Discipline-Beardsley. Mixer-Woodworth. Beards-Amiot. Wilson-That's All. D. H.D ' '-535 E SENIOR CLASS INSTRUCTCDRS5 Of our Dean, our poor words of praise Are but weak, yet we will raise Our voices up, and do our best His many virtues to attest. Kind indeed we've found him ever, And while gathered here together, No better friend. Nobler man you cannot find, Kind in spirit, great in mind, The pioneer of most progression. He has taught in our profession Things to startle a lesser mind That by prejudice is blind To advancement. He was first to urge for extension Of cavity walls, for prevention Of recurrence of decay. And we see, from day to day, Those who were antagonistic Now the ones most optimistic ' Of his way. This achievement is but one Of many things this man has done, And great indeed has been his fame, And highly honored is his name In every village, town, or city Wherein the engine sings its ditty As it grinds. Gilmer always is our friend. How we like to see him mend A broken jaw that's all lop-sided, Or that's from its socket glided. Tumors, ulcers, or an abscess bad At once are gone, when they have had His magic touch. Elgin MaWhinney, the Therapeutic man, With drugs galore our craniums cramg With his Quaker Oats smile he stands before us And says, in a voice that's quite sonorous, Now please, Sirj' will you kindly tell How you can cap a pulp so well That it will live? And Willard, king of bacteria hordes, A finer man no book records. He's square as they make 'em, through and through, His sincere help l1e'll give to you And coach you hard to do your best, So when you needs must stand the test, You will not fail. Jurisprudence and Ethics Dental, And other things quite instrumental To our success in after life, When we're besieged by doubt and strife, We thank Doc Noyes, that veteran, who Has taught it us, tho, made us blue To even think of it. If we secure UA three point contact In all our plates, then its a fact Our fortunes made for us, says Prothero, And heis a man who ought to know, For he is great along those lines, On crowns and bridges none outshine His perfect work. In Orthodontia, Sellery's there, Though, sometimes, he may want to swear When we cut up, or won't keep still And make all kinds of noise, until He says, Now boys.'.' Then quiet reigns. With just a word he brings this change In our behavior. Anaesthesia by Wright was given, And for its mastery we have striven. As we quite often will give gas And closely watch the stages pass. The first three stages are alright, Against the fourth, though, we must iight Or lose our fee. A. D. Black conducts the quiz In oral surgery, and its his biz To ask us things we do not know, And otherwise our failings show. Still we all like him just the same, And none better could we name To nll the post. Methven's Prothero's right-hand man And quizzes us whene'er he can, But seems we all are busy when He starts his talk 'bout half-past ten. Sometimes, he even must' desist, Because the boys oft times insist On sneaking out. 4- H THE ORGANIZATION OF THE R. A. B.'s. 'Twas late. The bright light of day was just giving Way to the deadly shades of night. The lake was a mass of inky blacknessg the noise and clamor of a busy day in the city was nearing its end. Silently, stealthily, five dusky forms merged from a door- way over which emblazoned in golden letters Was the sign: Mike's. Ha!y' said the fore- most and the HG. H. P. of the bunch, 'tthis darkness is Well. We shall proceed. With apanther-like tread they advanced through the ebon shades of the evening to the depths of State Street. This bloomin' road-woiy is 'ard, again quoth the chief. Therefore let us depart. We shall meet again. Farewell. This mysterious parting signified that the HR. A. B.'s of intercollegiate fame HAD BEEN ORGANIZED-BEWAHEI QAQWWW5 CIRCUS SOLLY kd h qw- d.- ' . ' ,Ep is at S-'Fa 9 'Ill as Y 'I ' C21 ill Q 4' g- ' J' NEKT: 5 F' 1x.37iX A nmcwe 'lhe chief detective of the Grass- ville Police Force has been seen around the college a number of times on the Watch for Circus Solly' Conklin. ,WVUAA WS f 1 if ' ., af' , ,U I.. xv' 2 . '.. '-sf ' as f W'-' Extract from minutes as kept by Grand High Keeper of the Seal. '.- ! Q-J-Tm. T ' af ...I A .lm I . 7 f- JI I. ' Eff! . 'I W Y 30. I gftxq QI V If If S if I X Q , XI H ,w t 1 4 , , f A q 1 L ilk' ' X WI' , I 'HSI IWW .A -1.. H. 45 I u Wir I I ff s II x li Il NI 4 I I r 305 x -. 3 :sd , ,A. , .M . ,. ,. Wg? In the Senior Prosthetic Laboratory In the Operative Technic Room 306 L A X Xin X . 'X-s, li J? .--sv . - AX ,Zvi LT -A 45 l A xr- I L F i vi : 3 ni NN g X 1 H. XX 1 LIMERICKS. There was an old fossil named Ben, There was an old man from Tarrentum Who looked like an old spotted hen, Who sat on his false teeth and bent 'emg His fedder edge stunt He will do with a grunt When plates you pass into his den. Big Steve is a wonderful man, With a head shaped like a tin can, As big as a house, With brains of a mouse, As examiner he's a great sham. Lauderbach has a big name, No wonder he gets so much fame, As speech maker bold, I've often been told That he can put Bryan to shame. gsrslgs f if . IQ X X I A e .Mi nn is T .Z 'ff -ff -5 N Llff .' H I ffxsi :sr-'jig be . , rjgj. gg - , Q- KWH I ' me-. ,, Hr X' frf Rx yif: l'ffL7'w+ I - A X54 Q--.. - ' X ' ff 31. 'VX ...- -Q.-1,,,i-1-S442 . X3 - 1 sin.. ' ' EXIT GRAY'S ANATONY Now Larkin is great in a choir, The dear girls him do admireg His voice is so sweet To hear it's a treat, We fear for the stage heill aspire. , A- f . -R 4 .., When asked what he had lost And how much they cost? . He replied, I don't know. I just rent 'emf' ll HDR. Tolvuvav WALSH s CONTRIBUTION 'ro THE Muszum A Senior having neglected to write home for a month after making a touch received the following lines: We find ourselves almost disgusted With a certain young Dent whom we trusted. He never wrote a word To his folks, I have heard, Except when teetotally busted. 'f ii 1. Q . ef--Mg.. 1 :. .2 ',' -'1::'?,,.1a :qs .. . J. -I f , -7 Mr sv ., .a ... A 1- , .. I vs A .c, '4 '4' G ifs Y ,nr 5.---,I 5, gi-if? 'X . :H , il' W MQUV- .1 variant ! -we 1 .x ull X J A GOOD OPENING FOR A DENTIST QIIIllIIllllllIlllllIIIIIllIIlllllIIIIIIllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE SNAGS illIIIIIllIllIIIIIIIIIllIIllIIllIIIlllIllllllIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE What is anatomy? I , Freshman: The definition of anatomy is synonymous with Sherman's definition of war. One of the Freshmen remarked that he had often heard of the trombone, but he was unable to find any reference to it in Ounningham's Anatomy. Quiz Master: What would happen if chemical attraction should cease? Freshman 37: The atmosphere would catch on iire. Dr. Black: Will you please name four of the noble metals, Mr. Beardsley. Beardsley: Gold, silver, platinum and gutta percha. I Did you ever notice Reggie come in late, crawl into his seat and pull his legs in after him? Dr. McWhinney in lecture: At the second sitting I always work under alcohol. I like alcohol. Uglow's new method of mixing plaster has reduced the time of its setting so that he can remove the tray from his patient's mouth in three-quarters of an hour. A forthcoming book, entitled, t'Only a Miller's Daughter: or, Robert Entangledf' Could it have been El1is's warm language that burned up the Bicuspid crown? Murray had his anatomy examination all O K with the exception that he misspelled one word? I feel so extinguished. I have a job.-G. F. Reynolds. Histology up to date: The people who come early to avoid the rush form the nucleus of the crowd. A man prays when he has trouble with his teeth and swears when the dentist presents his bill. Some of the Freshmen belong to this school, but the majority think the school belongs to them. Only a dentist can repair some typewriters. A Junior's idea of a Strategist: One who captures his first patient in the clinic. A Dentist's idea of Hades is a place where every one must practice on his own teeth. Bacteriology up to date: Microbes and kisses are often fatal. At least, they often develop matrimonial germs. A Prosthetic spasm.-E. Bertleson. Authority on Therapeutical value of water.-C. P. Lieberthal. Little Willie Rough House.-Cardy. Here is a gold brick. Where is your come on? -Schmuck. Comedian.-Lehrbach. Bloody bloomin' bugga.h from Australia.-L. Peach. Satisfied with Life.-Galbraith. Gee, fellows, I met a swell girl last night. -E. J. Crary. Agern-Agent for high grade perfumes. Seven Sleepers of the Junior Class: Baumgartner, Ericson, Larbach, Wright, R. Close, Scobie, Mercer. Strangers in a strange land. Jerusalem is our home. Leiberthal and Eisenstadt. Poison Label.-B. S. Partridge. Bullneck.-G. F. Reynolds. Do you believe in a college education? ' Yes. It teaches a boy's father how to take care of his money. There is a good deal of betting going on in the Junior class as to how long it will take Bertleson to kick a hole through the back of the seat in front of him. Sometimes a student's love for ponies is but a hobby he has for fun. A Junior spoke of a man who went to sleep in the chair while he was repairing his teeth. The story is true, but he neglected to add that the teeth were false. Old Lady, to Erickson: You are too young to do this work. Erickson: Well, madam, we have some baldheaded Freshmen if you care for one. Student to Dr. Sellery: If mal occlussion is the rule rather than the exception, and granted that it is exaggerated in transmission from parent to offspring, would the child of one who had worn a Knap Jack-screw be born with an arch bar in position? The reason Kaclal does not operate in the clinic is that his face becomes the color of his hair when he is caught removing the dressing from a tooth. 308 , THE I-IERALDS Once Wilson Highball had a dream, And dire it was in the extreme. In second lecture room he sat, His time piece marked 8:20 Hat. Ten big long minutes yet to wait, I might have slept and not been late, For this hard seat I'd like instead To crawl back in my little bed. Now fellows quit your monkey work, As Stewart gives his hair a jerkg si Then Street puts something down his back, And Hinkley gives his head a whackg Next Bronson tickles him with a hair, And Wilson Highba1l's in the air. Thus time drags on with sluggish pace, Still no Professor shows his face, As Wilson's patience all gives out, The Heralds! The I-Ieraldslu the student I-Ie raises then a questioning eye, To note them each as they pass byg First comes Kocher-a hopeful sign,- Next Lowes-still hopeful-close behindg Then comes Crawford,-Wilson smiles, When through the passage Teitgen filesg O joy, there is Woodworth in the rear Now I KNOW the Prof. is here. I wuz ,K 9 f 24, if BEFORE Q Qviqlwittvifa 1 3 'S 4- s shout. ISUQJJILK em 2 ,ff m ! N emit E SUGGESTED TREATMENT OF STUDENT DEMONSTRATORS AFTER 2-W SENIOR-Let me take a quarterj will you ? FREsHMAN-Sure. Qx R Ndsw AFTER GRADUATION. FRESHMAN-Where are my two bits ? GRADUATE-What is the name, please ? 309 f Corner in Library Junior Prosthetic Laboratory 310 FILLINGS Uneasy lies the tooth that wears a crownf' Why is a certain Senior like a sponge? It will 'Soukup'! Prof. Hall- What is the chief product of coal oil?i' Knecht - Universities and Bible classes! IN MEMORIUM. Little Timmis died last night, His face we'll see no more: For what he thought was I-I2-O, Was H2-SO4. Ask the Mann! Wilson, that's all! Freshmen come and Freshmen go, but I go on forever! - Dick Vifellesfi Prof. Wiggin: What are the principal uses of the bones of the body? Gibson: To hang meat on! There is nothing small about Anthony fMorrisJ ! News Note-Hawkins CLewD sold his automobile. It brought such an army of bums around the house. They admired it because it wouldn't work! Dolly Webster went duck hunting and met with a serious accident. Yes, he shot one! CSpring Lake Press? Dear Dr. Clark : For some time I was troubled with sleeplessness. I pur- chased one bottle of your insomnia rem- edy and gave it to the cats in my imme- diate neighborhood. Since then I have slept like a top. Yours gratefully, Oscar Deitz, The Milwaukee Kid. Married men don't live longer than single ones: it only seems longer. - Knecht. Kissing is unhealthy-if father catches you at it.-Dillingham. For Corkscrew', root fillings see Tom Walsh! Sufferer:. Does pulling a front tooth like this one of mine hurt much? Cupid : Not a bit! I never sprained my arm over anything but a third molarf' Baikie: The trouble is evidently due to a dying nerve. Patient: 'tWell, it's up to you to treat the dying with a little more respect. IN THE EXAMINING ROOM. Dr. Stevens: MAGNIFICENT! MAG- NIFICENTV' Patient: Then you don't find anything the matter with them? Dr. Stevens: To do with them? Why, there are four to be pulled, six to be filled, and three to be crowned. A KNOCK. Dr. McWhinney: I always tell my pa- tients funny stories when working on their teeth. Student: But don't you think they suffer enough anyway? Dr. Wiggin in Pathology-Will some one describe the effects of a diminished food supply? Chorus of Junior Students-I can! I can! We understand La Baunta, Owens, and Danforth are still holding their regular meetings. Dr. Erickson tdental prodigy-demon- strator aspirantl-In all my experience I have found nothing that equals Black's 1-2,3 in Pyorrhoea cases. Have you seen Murray's instrument case? He made it himself, and the inlaid top contains 19,462,399 pieces. Yes-sir. Much troubled married man! V. A. Miller. Peisley is wondering which one it will be when the hair-pulling is over and he goes back to Australia. When God made Circus Solly He made him the longest, But when He made Dietz he made his feet the strongest. The Original I-Iall Room Boys: Smith and Chadwick lnot related to Cassie. J Along the street she passed so neat, So pretty, charming, and so sweet, A mere slip of a girl. To see this girl was quite a treat, But a banana peel disturbed her feet- 'Twas a mere slip of a girl. l-L...l1l1- ll...11..-if 'WXOSVYLQTIUE EENTHBTV M A .H .v W 1 Q , .-1-' xgilflfllf-5-1,5-.jiilgqgf - 754: .251-.', LZ gl iw U Nw-ff: 7529 'ff P -?V22?e2F5L?ii-5 ' ' N 15214-mi. - Sf? :qw :fi ,. ziffmf-7'-, f f f -2-.fi.:,:-62v7Q gr aff f ., qi 'riff-' ' --1319-1' gff.'f' ,f -gi gg. 71 ,-I., ' 'Q?f?:,, fi 1. - .vw . ' - A .,'?- '5,b.i,',45,-:xL!,, . 'gg .?f'.,.g,f - 4: 45, - I ggjeg ff, - L ji--qzjig ,L , 1 A Reef., My , .w1gfJ1-1-A ' ,,b-.Ff.,,:- -P N-,,?p, 1k 5 J' 'WTKL 2 ,9411 .fjffzz-11g'w. :'f LgFf'.g '3 ' ' . ,f ' - 591, HZF,,.1, . .. - .1 , .f,11m..- 154' .. -3+ Urn.. -, ,,e- .- nd... 7.p5,i- J., gg-.ilgnygijzg-1? 1:k:.t4, Q.,-T.w2ik?,a'.k,'1 ig, --51 vw, 'jjeajfiiv .-r .ww 1 zfif.-1, -' 'gf' ,Q g, , , . '1i:7fQ'?i3g5i 5'7H4f Q65- :,f -I N'f5?'.rxi,zr- , . . . ruff- s -5' if J-.- , '. rw' gi.':,f1.,-H, . ' I Af ,-'-f' 1, ' A' 1 -. 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M., , 1, . 1, I 4. ,Q ps.. 4. 1 . , A S . , Q -f . 1 . 15554-f .. 11. . . - ' -.q-4. f,,-: 5 - . - -, '. -, ' . ,gg h -, 1395 2-1' -- r 51,1 - ' 1-1 gwaff - J.: ., 15 7- N11 ggi HQ-ff :'f.yT7fiiff53,:1?:'f' -.iiff 416- -Qf.-ii? , 325.111-if f A ,i 4 - -fm-,554 .-wffalkf wigs! - -, v - L' x-fm - ' Tai-rf'-:i.., ' .- -ri -1 ' 'S' g,f.e-::'-v-zf'.a- f :rar ' 1' .xsrgpazvy ,L-.-if' 3 I 4 I QQ I Q 4 jv . We 5'3ff?ff A B. L. DOANE W. H. PERRY C. H. BARLOW W. A. BESSESEN B. S. HUTCHESON, Mgr. H. E. FRENCH, Editor H. JACKSON J. R. CONDON P. B. COOPER 4 I ai-is I Looking Backward-and Forward , fa-ig I HE PASSING of three of the five original members of the faculty of our school during the year 1904 turns our thoughts backward to the time when our school had its beginning. We might with propriety say that the Northwestern University Medical School was founded upon a lofty purpose. Its object was to elevate the standard of medical education. At that time the method of medical instruction was the absurd one of having the student take the whole course the first year, and then come back the next year and take it all over again. Our school introduced the first graded medical course in the United Statesg the preliminary studies were taken first, the clinical branches later. What wonderful foresight was shown when this revolution in the method of teaching medicine was inaugurated, is evidenced by the fact that to-day every medical school in the country has adopted our plan. The conception was a grand one, the aim noble, but think of the tireless energy, the self-sacrificing labor and the tenacity of purpose which were required of the members of the original faculty to develop the school and place it in a position of eminence, where it was to serve as an example whose effect would.be the general elevation of the standard of medical teaching, and, through that, the improving of the status of the medical profession as a whole. Not only did they donate their labor, but they also gave the struggling institution financial aid. Never did they reap any material reward, for as the income of the institution grew, the surplus was used to better the teaching facilities. Each member was in active practice and the students reaped the benents of the large clinical experience of their teachers. This was of great value, as hospital and dispensary facilities were not at hand, as at present. Constantly it was borne in mind that a well-taught physician must first have a thorough training in the preliminary branches, and then supplement this by clinical training. Let us think of the status of some of the branches at that time. Bacteriology was unknown, cellular pathology in its infancy, microscopy but little developed. Of necessity laboratory courses were limited to anatomy and chemistry. In anatomy a demonstrator visited the dissecting-room occasionally when he could Hnd time, but the student was left, as a rule, to work out his own salvation. Chemistry was taught by a general practitioner with the aid of what meager apparatus was at hand. Nevertheless these were beginnings out of which greater things were to grow. As fast as possible the laboratory equipment was improved and enlarged and the courses broadened. Nor was the clinical side neglected. An arrangement was made with Mercy Hospital and a dispensary was established. All honor to Nathan Smith Davis, Hosmer A. Johnson, Edmund Andrews, Ralph N. lsham, and John N. Hollister. These men worked and planned not for gain, not for fame, but for an ideal. Never satisfied with present accomplishment, they saw far into 315 the future, and struggled faithfully and intelligently to make that future great for the school. Dr. Johnson died some years ago, but not until it had been demonstrated beyond question that the plan upon which the school was founded was the only correct one. Dr. Hollister is now the sole surviving member of the original faculty. Drs. Davis, Andrews and Isham died during the past year. They were spared to a good old age, and were able to look upon a fruition of their labors, which must have far surpassed the expectations even of such far-seeing men as these. Instead of the meager laboratories of anatomy and chemistry, presided over by general practitioners, they lived to see fully equipped laboratories not only of anatomy and chemistry, but also of physiology, pathology and bacteriology, each under the charge of a trained specialist giving his whole time to the work, and furnished with an ample number of assistants. Instead of the limited and uncertain supply of clinical material with which they at first had to give their practical instruction, they lived to see the faculty in exclusive charge of two large hospitals and one large dispensary. They lived to see not only the success of the school but the accomplishment of the objects which the establishment of such a school contemplated, the elevation of the standard of medical education throughout the country and the improvement of the medical profession. What of the future? The old faculty saw not only the school developed into a great institution, but they saw their work being carried on by a younger set of energetic men, men with an eye not only to the present but to the future needs of the schoolg men, many of whom were trained by the old faculty themselves, and to whom these noble teachers imparted their high ideals. The Northwestern University School was organized by the old faculty to be a leader among schools. It was a leader. There has never been a period of standing still, of being satisfied with what has already been accomplished. The school is still a leader. The majority of the old faculty have gone to their rest, their labor accomplished, but their souls go marching on. Upon their successors has fallen their indomitable spirit. The Northwestern University Medical School will always be a leader. S. C. PLURIMIER, Secretary of the Faculty. M525 NATHAN SMITH DAVIS, M. D., LL 1In flbemoriam r DR. NATHAN SMITH DAVIS HE DEATH of this distinguished man marks an epoch in the medical history of Chicago. No other of the medical fraternity so related the past with the present as did he, for of all the older generation he was one of the most conspicuous, while with the present he was alike prominent until, at the day of his death, he had become the binding tie of two generations. Of the old first faculty of Rush Medical College not one remains. Of those who were associated in the organization of Lind University, long known as the Chicago Medical College and now as the Medical School of the Northwestern University, only one besides him had survived. All others of the physicians, in active practice in Chicago, so far as careful inquiry can determine, have passed away. It is but a simple tribute of justice to say that the physicians of that generation were, in the main, strong men, able in their profession, good men and true, whose memories we delight to honor. Their works which remain bear witness to their worth. It was theirs to found Medical Colleges. It was theirs to organize our Medical Societies. It was theirs to develop our first Medical Hospitals. It was theirs to initiate the Sanitary Measures which have rendered Chicago the healthiest city of the world according to its population. In the creation of these institutions they laid the foundations so broad and strong as to require but little reconstruction. During these fifty years and more, in all that pertains to medical progress in the city, by common accord, Dr. Davis held a foremost place. He was a man of unusual intellectual ability. He was remarkably logical and forceful in his methods of reasoning-and convincing in his conclusions. He believed in his convictions with all his might, and it seemed impossible for him to utter views either in public or in private, or easily to tolerate those of others that were alien to his own. He had the happy faculty of saying the right thing in the right place at the right time, and with a presence and power which carried conviction to his hearers. He was not visionary but eminently practical. He was a natural-born organizer. Of the little band which first comprised the Cook County Medical Society he was the central ngure. He was alike conspicuous in the organization of our State Society. Earlier than this and before his removal to Chicago his circular from Binghamton brought together in New York City the first gathering of medical men, who a year later in the city of Philadelphia, organized the American Medical Association. His gathering together of a few beds in the old Lake House, coupled with the worthy labors and co-operation of the Sisters of Mercy, gave to the city its Iirst public hospital, and from which little beginning the immense institution known as Mercy Hospital is the outcome. It was for him, with such strong associates as Drs. Homer A. Johnson, Edmund Andrews, Ralph N. Ishain, Wm. H. Byford, J. H. Hollister, and Henry Wing, to organize and carry on through all its perilous years and loyally bring to its present success the 318 Medical School of the Northwestern University, first known as Lind University and later as the Chicago Medical College. Of the Northwestern University, he was the first formally elected and a life-long trustee, and the records of that institution bear witness to the eiiiciency of his labors in its remarkable development. He was withal a strenuous advocate for the abolition of all alcoholic drinks, and the Washington Home for lnebriates was largely developed and maintained through his instrumentality. He was eminently a Christian man-exemplary alike in every home and public relation, and benevolent to the poor, both of time and money well nigh to a fault, if such bestowments could be so called. But the weight of years was too heavy longer to be borne. His life was full orbed and finished. His prayer was that he might he relieved, and he was conscious that the hour for his release had come. Gentle was the summons, and gently he sank to rest. We can but mourn the passing from us of such a man, and yet from all our hearts there must come the silent response-It is well. DR. RALPH NELSON ISI-IAM NOTHER of the men that all connected with the medical department of North- western University had long loved to honor was Dr. lsham. Dr. Ralph Nelson Isham, Professor Emeritus, was one of the founders of the Northwestern University Medical School, was the first to hold in this institution the chair of surgical anatomy, and later was for many years professor of the principles and practice of surgery. His reputation as a teacher and his fame as an operating surgeon may be read in the character of the institution he so long served. Moreover his erudition outside of the medical profession was as great as his learning in his chosen calling. In his relations to the community in its broadest sense-in the institutions with which he was connected -we see a worthy model of the physician as a citizen. DR. FREDERICK CHRISTIAN SCHAEFER R. SCHAEFER was one of the early alumni of the Northwestern University Medical School, and was for many years a member of its faculty. He was a tireless student all his lifeg he loved his professiong he loved to impart to others the powers he possessedg he was always generous to young physicians and took an interest in their welfare. Of him it has been said: Few persons have as high a sense of honor. He was a noble type of manhood, with exceptional gifts of mind and a liberal spirit of twentieth century progress. Upon qualities of such character the strength of the pro- fession rests. 319 Young Men's Christian Association Northwestern Medical School Department, 2431 Dearborn Street, Chicago Cfficers for 1905 President, -H-- J. E. HUGHES Vice-President, - R. G. MILLS Recording Secretary, - O. H. CRIST Treasurer, - - A. G. ANDERSON Department Secretary, - - - H. S. HOLLENBECK Committee Chairmen Religious Meeting, : C. H. BARLOW Bible Study, 2 J. G. VAUGHAN Membership, 2 F. E. MUNCH Missionary, ' J. E. GOSSARD Social, : WM. DE KLINE Finance, : A. G. ANDERSON Employment, : N. K. HOPKINS Music, A. E. DILLER Committee of Management PROP. H. M. STARKEY PROP. N. S. DAVIS, JR. PROP. A. R. EDWARDS HE work of the association has been conducted along the usual lines and is pros- pering, though in some departments the high level reached last year is not being maintained. This is true particularly of the membership, but this may be accounted for in part at least by the fact that the number of new students entering the institution was smaller. The religious meetings have been prontable and the attendance good. The games and magazine table have been popular and the rooms have been used more than usual. The Employment Bureau proved a valuable adjunct to the work, and through it a number of students obtained profitable employment, some even to the extent of earning all expenses. In the fall nearly all who wanted work and had time to do the kind offered were soon helped to a position, others having but little time to spare were unable to find the opportunity desired. The interest in missions appears to be increasing, as the amount subscribed to that department of work shows an increase of 54000. The mission study class is growing and continues its weekly meetings. Fourteen students belong to the Volunteer Band. One interesting feature of the work, which is full of promise for the future, is the canvass for funds for a Y. M. C. A. Building, which will contain dormitories and a gym- nasium suitable to meet the demands of the students. The total amount subscribed has passed the 315,000 mark. This has come largely from students and faculty, and it is hoped that outside friends will increase the amount very materially in the near future. 320 CD6 C1366 of 1905 I. FEW years now we've worked O'er text, in clinics and in lab, And we are thru at last. Tho many duties we have shirked, We still are rather glad That college days are past. II. THE time to come may have in store For those ambitious, even more, Perchance, of fortune dark or fair Than we have dreamed to dare: But the man of earnest heart Is always ready to play his part. III. TO each one will come the test If worth in him does rest: In roads unsafe he drives. The man who fears, nor strives . For all that is high of aim, Is living then in vain. IV. THE man who is true and brave, Nor doubts, tho near his grave, That win he will at last Is he who does not cast Aside the chances few, Which mould a being new. V. STRONG arm with depth of thought These two together wrought Make victories doubly sure: What mind can well endure The strain and stress it must. Which lacks physique robust. VI. TAKE the old message yet new, Be to God and thyself ever true- Onward and upward thy aim. Let not thy chest protect A heart that does not beat With honor, in defeat. W. A. B. Student Life at the Medical School Compared with Student Life at the Liberal Arts Department By Joi-IN A. KAPPELMAN, B. S., '04, N. U. M. S., '07 I-IE UNIVERSITY student entering another department finds himself in another world. I have in mind particularly, a comparison of the student life in the Liberal Arts Department with the Medical School of our university. In the nrst place, consider the location of each department. Nearly everyone who has visited Evanston is acquainted with the University campus along the lake shore. In striking contrast is the location of the Medical School at the corner of Twenty-fifth and Dearborn streets Chicago, not being in the University Building at the corner of Lake and Dearborn streets, as many think. Located on the south side, among the colored poor of the city, the environment, though not inspiring, affords a great deal of valuable clini- cal material. Consider school or college spirit. At the co-educational Arts Department, the daily grind is not so severe and time is left for athletic contests and many side issues. Not so at the School of Medicine, where conditions are almost the reverse. Being about four years older than the Arts student, the follower of Esciilapius naturally looks upon his work with more seriousness, and from the very nature of that work, he finds himself in an entirely new field of activity. His time six days a week, instead of five, from 8 a. m. to 5 or 6 p. m., is spent at the school building, thus allowing evenings for the preparation of the next day's lessons. fl must confess I never knew what real work was beforej There are no regular gatherings of the whole student body, as at the Arts Department, to inspire. Yet when the classes gather for recitations, a more jolly company is not to be found, although, the recitation or quiz begun, every moment means businessg for nearly every man has entered the school because of the advantages it offers him for medical work and not for any other reason. Class-room work never lags and competition is keen. Nearly every member of the faculty is a practicing physician. At the Arts Department tuition is eighty dollars a year, at the Medical School one hundred sixty-Hve dollars, with the addition of deposits against breakage of material and apparatus used. Medical books cost from one dollar to seven dollars, the larger number approaching the latter price. Considering all, I think Northwestern University Medical School, with its environ- ment, its curriculum and its faculty, deserves the best thought of those who are plan- ning an allopathic medical training. 321 I if vIC?1 l4f' iw'iX Uaefmvnw f f vp.-, 1 'vi Q A . W A if :BHLI MELAN IN Rupegtfunv 4,43 if ,, 4 , M f V, lx THE BILE V '47 f' fm? yr , V f 23, f Q 2 , ml 1 ff URE-ABILIN Med t Ill + .j Qfazu -l V 1-, gnu .n d N I G 'vuu -'av' + fr f fc 1, , 94 + A ev 0 i f 1 + X ' , 2 'F 45 ,xl ve N ,dl 'W A up ' U 1. . r . T , r0ne 1111219 we 3.6 NSY xxave ai 'Jf.U.Yl-'23, We lo 'Wir-1'KlV2 Une She-3.ocT:feSS 'POA Some bcXepf'1ZNxe'x'xen :B VJU zum-wks 1 The Cla-asei' an confess The-F3 Xmf- not 'her vw-GLB. vfviw We Adm-e not Jw Rev jwaiwve Aerv' V .Aifhoxgk we feflsk wif co-.dd How. Yaemifkfuk she' 'vcodcl 1.5-ye-HCV' LF sMe vm-e'4Sa.vr'e3' Fofgooi Ill. A-nd' 5o'W1hu-,,l-17 -:Lg sex. ca.YlePI iaxv ? We TUX! on , 3.2.5 bg 3.365 Gun' S0235 vang uitpoh the BXZIY' We've glad. 5he5 gone to 'sig- P-cmims A. I -Prspfmr L.-1. 5 0 wi f. 1 9 A 'ls xiu ff BILIVERDIN X- fa 55 ,1 Ai M E , u.xRuB1N u O1e'f '.E-H'TF3wr.n, A.,.,r.u-t 'Vid-ahgish 5513- -A 9' wh' .. 5,514- ' Ah EYQB1-pn aocfov- Clula-.Y3 t'Y ' 'lie-aesseb. -2. f-alvv 3:o.mseX but WOYTBT' : G-flfff So 'Gull had .pubhc P097 --:Eif To Sean-ckx fm- he'r- Sheff To wmforf Poo,-'Fostex-,who lostkr. .lj --gji -mr 6 'TJ-1 F. Exam I 2 V' 'Q 54 The An...euQA1oR QRD vw' Ani 511 .. K 1' . Ei ,gif I A- 4 Thus beast -so Terri- 5-by . lj QUT ft H ' lg..-11 21: Ln NA. 1-lm, ff ,Q x BAKVHEFANKI1 1 Ufp fm' 14 Bfh-n-'13 aa th El Ewa BNJXANT N uhm. ,Z , Nixon Rav-Qui St-ulenis S A f r - . M f1....a, ' 'l'f , owen-5 I 1 A . A wa., W1 5...f,.. un 6 ,I ' hi smde I uni' p 3555 M mi, l 'P k 'f.?di iW' QP'-if ' Q xif 3- - ,X se , e ruse 1 H , '- A n It g The mmwe-v L3 3 'MJ -mlle. 'X k , A sia 1. 4 -1 ,ml -r..1a..- W Bn.wfmsm. is 3. ,Q ,. P-4. , , X' Q fi . s 0 s f . t I . N 331 l 'Inf X -Y ' m Q. --2555335 531 ' 5 CQ. 1 -' -B - h f t ' t vrigqmrro K I Q ff!! M , 1 O Q, 1 'fish X ' ' 5 . , t i t , M , A lx Roll of Honor ' xi 'gig 1 Junior Class A Y V K ALLEN, j. R.-I-lis face slips. X 1 f BAKER-Papa and President. BLACK-Marshall Field's friend. W- BURKE-Ye old family physician. ' t BLOOD-Soldier suit, lady? Soldier suit? y CHRIST-JOkCS associated with tenesmus. I' ' DoNoi-IUE-Gets biblical lore confused with oleum Amygdalae. I DRtscoLL-Shapely and willowy as a leucocyte. l N' FOSTER-LOVCY Mary sideburns. - 1 GRANT-Smug and comfortable, a cock-sure physician. ' .b HERSCHFIELD-Neither his milk white robes, nor his high office, saved him I ' l from the rabble. '- 5 l l-IOAGLUND-Tidy Tilly. Lg 1 I HUBBARD-Ye Gods! What confident syllable stumbling. A i INGRAHAM-The Pittsburgh Tobie. If , ' ' JAMES-Trypanozoma infection. ff jAiviPoLts-Well acquainted at Mercy. lt LASHBROOK-l-lypertrophied head-gear. f MEYERS-Slayer of rabbits and other ferocious animals. ll NAPHEYS-Immaculate. Il. NELSON--Lavishes the whole wealth of his affectionate nature on the female H patients. OLDHAM-Synonym for dignity. PENGELLY-Lemon jelly. ' PENNY-fTen mills, Pteimao-Circus Solly. I X REINECK-'Of last year's notoriety. it N SEYFART1-x-Chicago is a suburb of Blue lsland. 5 Q In ilk SILVERTHORN-Congenital refrigeration ofthe pedal extremities. ff v 'i i i STOLL-Likestogiveadvice. N I lu-it ' ri STORER-That's why you ,ll Q. i n eatin hydmphobia. X. 'Vi ' s ii A SWANK-fAcromegalia. gi V 4' bei L? P TULLAR-Though sometimes - late he butts to the front. WALKER--Sleep to him is Such a treat, WHlTESlDEfeA cow-puncher who wears pinc-nez YUDELSON-A husky, brutal Marshal. 323 -ff ff T6 7 H .. l ROASTS P ' :lil ' W' if Y. f K' 'ff tl I, D d A l 'Wy' f' - ea , . CoNNoR lb, ,Q 2,720 X Bunge, : BAILEY ll U A QIHW 'O Y Cupid : ASI-IER lkwyvay ', r -' 'W ' i x Y ', , I VM WN! U Deneen, Q KAPPELMAN . I , W P Pinkerton, 1 NELSON Q, F0 ' Q 1 f Perpetual Masticator, : WEIDNER -gow L -X ,f 'U ln love, : TORRELL 4 0 eq A M ' ' Our re orter ' LAMB e X Gem -gs i P f - ERT to , Q ' wg - A second Gray, : BURGER 'v'i,'0v A ,77 my Abd h . R JE K -V L A, we A N ,A lm, z a coug , . EDMAN +QN.:'1,-, S , , mmm The better element, 1 MORSE ,If ' of-f -, js E-75, All around athlete. : SOUEREY' 21 .- '35, ' I f' l-le also lined up, 2 Wmcowsm X 1 X Chronic kicker, : CARPENTER I lam it, : FARRELL ff 1 6 First cousin to the faculty, : EUSTACE L ' The champion Wrestler, 2 I-IOFER Q. W!!.. ,qmmp1iy JAH NNE D. vf., :formme Lone, lf it iss not Svedish it iss no good, 2 JAGER , A5 mANc.esR ara ME,,,cM-Cg,,-LEGE ,Zia fi .-,l rr Af ' A i A ' g WW r .tx iifxs flqliia I fl ff X G '.Q 'ibm --F jk ' ,fly N' txitxffifffwj 4 AA! '7 2 sUf ' fi 5 1,1 ,-A W r. I i ' THE me FE , NM I X ff-Q25 -1543 We HAR-VQLEQAT -i.5,!Js 2 J Q-V U W LL KQJ Itlsr hon-ld, -meal-x iv ifut .Vu KAL NX 5?-1 'J 'V .9 x cpe I Yodvg suck a ANU' L X, In Jw Zaitfh' r Bot 'tn XWKUQS out hr , the SFHABDLS A We mus-r me will . I .wx m i f-, , 9 - , Lf? ? .:1 j:',j.- .7 ttf,5,?fif' ,A A 53,5 H: .i -QWI Q are if-fi :B A .I+ E ...z1:' .L f , J ' -a ' f ,-P ,Agile -Ye' Rownr fm,,VN. ' U LT HE MENAGEKIE VQNN 1 324 , K gzafzfza xxif i f ,f' ,At-1 s .lffwlyf 5 . , ,Mfffn I, ,g Nf itg l g - i 2?fl7:f es Qit , ...,.. hllllmt' ' -'L f 5 1-,' Em ., y f,g, 1 Lt .. if ff f . rf' ev i 5 I - El E , ,Q - K Z ' -X . f l l L 1 i , ' . X I I ! Q3?3 'Tue Fxesrmmq Lu.,-, uve.. IT A3 A dgt ' Baia fe I REQULAQ Luunoo rtow-uv arms 18111 'IZHE Q- -'xx X . I If SENM-f 1 D Di ' V' W sm ' ' ef ge t Ji? t 41 ' 4 JN - It Q, 29 A I' lmE. Hw BJVMPV' A - QL ,U Place-Amphitheater of Laboratory Building T' e-February 27, 1905: 5:27 P. M. im Dramatis Personae-lst Section of Junior Class GEORGE BOYD DYCHE, A. B., M. D. Act I Scene I Enter DR. DYCHE-Fll.ll'1kS most of the class. Pornpously elucidatiang the subject of bloodfindings- DR DYc1-IE- Ph-hum, CYTE, means-without a neudclelusl, aw, aw, aw, without a nucleus. Class-One broad suppress g ro but this year the Last year we had a he Sophornores have one. Mr. George Swift, assistant in Histology laboratory, figures as rescuing angel in a fierce Dru Store explosion g . l-low many lives he saved will probably never ecause Mr. Swift is a very be fully known b modest and unassuming young man. Prof. Zeit- ln such a condition, gentlemen, ill sa 'l killed that Woman, and l will you w y, never do it again,' or 'l killed that man, and l will never do it again. , i 'H L . ' elf QE' 743, 5 I 1' E 51 i.5,,lfes.s' L 5 Nl, .fgifiaal ir! 13 .. - 1, 'bl 315 tai lnqxg 4' ltr 7 fi' .ex e E? 1 i ,.?2'c.v'.'x9xx lowly ' 7 NJ-4-213 sw t We f - xgfts W ' 9 gif Wzmmi'-5 '-H-Wik gucci Lose. 'one Quzcujxow Court Appointments - - - - - KROST Axem an ---- - - SMELKER Chief Crafter - Court Beauty - - - NIEMAN Dignus Pater - - - KROHN Chief of Cellar - - KELLY Liar - - CRUMPACKER Signet Bearer - l-IIEBERT Court Jester NEWEL Foreign Consul - SCI-IMIDT Sage - - - BURBACH Prime lVliI1lSi6I' - - BURLE1G1-1 - HAMILTON Guardsman - - Master of Horse - Courtiers - - - - - - - MCELROY - - - - REST or CLASS They say that Loser'S got a prize, That fairly he has won it: , To each and every one's surprise Our Umlaut's gone and done it. Of all the frowzy beards e'er seen, I'll wager all my stake If all were thrown upon the Screen Fid Wittman's would take the cake. A beard for Seniors? Possibly. For Juniors? Not at all. For Sophomores? 'Tis preposterous. For Freshmen? Simply gall. Third Floor, Davis Hall What means you meditating group Curled up like folding beds? Why look and dream and cogitate, Then fiercely scratch their heads? Why write, erase, then scrawl and scratch, Then rub it out again? But soft you now! Walk gently, Sir, They are the quiz-class men. When Mr. Peck, ln Dermato- Prof. Zeisler, Discussing Alo- Prof. Murphy-f'Define gastric pecia Areata, The first and ulcer. Mr. Burke, of junior logy clinic, failed to diagnose foremost necessity Ctaking a class.- Gastric ulcer is an impetigo contagiosa, he re- full drinkj is powerful stimu- ulcer of the gastric part of ceived the appellation of 1afiOD-l' the stomach. Peck's bad boy by the Prof. They Say that Trewyn's getting fat, That Krohn is getting fatter, That Meyerovitch loves books and kraut, Especially the latter. They say O'brien's growing small, That l-lymer grows yet smaller: lf White insists on growing tall, Let Cunliffe grow no taller. fl f fig r we THE. MQRYHY Bvvrou . 326 Mr. Frey fin phannacologyl - Alcohol has a distinguished odor. Prop. Burns tin T. and A. quizl- Mr. Mills, if a man should drink a quart or two of Champagne would he still have a pit in his stomach? Mr Mills- Well really, Professor, I cannot say, I have never had any experience' Prof. Burns fatter looking around the classJ4t'Well, Mr. Mitchell, you tell us about it. Sophomore Shakespeare Club Name and take them But if We fail Talk so like a gentle woman, of gums and drums and wounds. But, he! why he hath a horse better than the Neapolitans. I am pressed down with conceit-conceit my comfort and my injury. Who's there that knocks so imperiously? Nor learn enough to be thought a good student. I C' f' K ' .5 Stgnatures M V IXJ: A' Sunn Jim .... RAN J. nv., y Q Umlaut - - LosER l' P 1 .- ,, Meyerovitchski - MYERs ll Fetus - - - FAIR V X X K Lenghty - - BEACH I . t Fatty - KILLIAN ,fl If , f Z5 Cataract BRADWAY l -it X, ' I-lair-lip - CROUCH .. gf' Z' , 'S' , UL Koch - - BRANDT pin Y ' C' ag? S KELLY at gf 5 Comedians 8 SMELKER Q65 1--2.969 get 'Pilaad 2 Awe ,,...' S-a:3LXX.l 'Qce.5,e.nK,BnXEq The I-Iochreinoceros The I-Ioch-rein-ocer-os my child Roams through the clinics here His Visage though so fierce and wild ' 4? , - .Y l 1 Q - F -li: t'y...'l5I5-x it ,J M: fL't-itil 'WY' , V. f i P ,.,iLv,', .E if A?53:1.y.y,.g .Hx 4 H' ' Nl! . 3123 W fri tg-gg! You surely need not fear ,. 1-.1 ' Y 5' W: eg,-N 452, 1 The milk of human kindness flows Throughout his Whole career. . PM iii D B ll I-Iochreinoceros Crumpacker, dispenser of plug tobacco and hot air. Why did Beecher shave his mustach? Because his supply of silver nitrate was exhausted. Wilson's Whiskers That's All! ! ! ! !! Prof. Filmore-Is Dr. Kahler here? Dr. K.-Ses-s-s-s-s Prof. Gilmore 4Absentl Dr. K.-A-sir-here!! I didn't understand the question, Dr. 327 pclllulby Ufuhqqy 4 F, Q A C . . f ' - 375:90 Q , - A. . ,Z N t ., V M -1 V , Z gb 7 ' A 74 ' Q: lug 1, N --125. , . cs: 'eo ' H ,- fe-,yl ,N Q. sf 1 ,LK '. f nv ' 9 5 47 aim Q is NX W' ' Z Q iiffvza '- 6 , 1 ,sf mg, 5 ,QD G Z I 7 iv! KX 2 .P 7 g 5 N 49 N - x X gf K ws? llw Glam' KOEHLO-THE WONDER !! Hr-: EA'rs 'EM Auvz ll lf this terrible grim-vlsaged creatyer Should grab yer and proceed to eat yer, Would yer scream and object, Or simply reflect That 'twas fine-for the creatyer, to eat yer? YES, SIR! YES, SIRI Exactly WRONG! l I O O These zero's DO count. 'TF ARRIED - , Q Serum- Class ff l. .. if M Wmlhelm Losev Latter part .5 f..-sr se.-..,t:v -4- l if 1 JUNIUR EILASQ 'Uceo.A.'lTl4xNNev 5,.,1- va-fr my -f-nv-ft www.-. Ernest POXrXhnm just 'heiere 'fin-ff snmeshv. Snphomqv-e Class ,- Nu vic.ox-2x 'Farah mm-x Clnss is Nut ulieno-:gh qt Ja: J? php in fig 'f'i'!g q-F O BE .TKLBIRYQEDXZDQN . 1'-'jQ,mUMn ff i-1 Tumun Cla-as - L X, T, i -43 ,vlvm Clarence i , S Y- - .4 lv .. V sf- x E!l3SfaY'T.+L 2 A-111553,-, 'AQ ,mg 1' fr , fig:-5 'Q1-' 'lj cm-,,,,. ?' - 1 fn Ummm Numa-ra, 328 r A r W! ffrlfg .40 '5 N J fun: was A 'PRvF, wno 'ann- WHAT A.-.s 1-we 'PATIENT ness an 1-ms co'r Cum: :am-in ro rue .Ben FEEL HER 'T-'uns naw -nz :Am DLD 'REINEQQ FEEL I1 ow, NoT? , fiG.ggf:. X., H lr M, W, , all l fl 'Tie Bmimbeav Tm rm xml. timid Bmln hen- T.-. lean as he can bei ni-. thln gn., wi-1' ua- 5l 5 3 Rlnnrs -dw. Sxvttt 501-LS'-1. Leaking as wise 35 'RWTH' LA -Bs Junmgs all afyrzllztm- 'll' H1 It t. . ll -. s ,.l. .- A student called Driscoll, J. P. Was afflicted with corpulenc-ee. l-le chewed monstrous quids, Spoke the language of kids, This irascible student J. P. Roach tComing down stairsj -Well I thank the Lord l've finished that ? l l - it dld Koehler. Dr. Koehler tOn the stairs behindj-O, you are, are you? Dr. Davis-What would you do for indigestion? Jampolisel'd get a large cannon ball, or two round stones would do, and roll them about over the abdomen. Dr. Butt-l-low would you treat Diabetis Nellitis? Martin-l'd cut out a good deal of the food they'd been eating and support the abdomen with a bandage. Dr. Davis-ln gangrene of the lung what are the characteristics of the sputum? Bill Napheys-lt is putrid to the taste. Dakin t'l'o a member of the Student Volunteer Bandj-What meeting is there in this room now? Member-The Student Volunteer Band meets here. Dakin-Ohl is that so, what horn do you play? Dr. I-lultgen tLecturingj-We must, in the future, inclose this study in our curriculum. It is rumored about that B. M. l-lart is a pugilist of no little prowess. We have no reason at all to doubt it, because he tells it himself. The Hendricksnake YV . X ml . .1 ' 1+ f s :N ' ' l 'Frm A - 1' - , , 4 'W . it The shy and sallow l-lendricksnake Delights to snoop aroundg He follows after all the Profs., With questionings profound: Beware of stepping on his tail, I-le'll strike you from the ground.- 329 Did you ever see a man with a HECTIC flush? f.. I , f 4 . f No: but l've seen afour flusher. Z X W ff, 'f Dv , . X ' v What treatment is best for BURNS of any degree of W f Q- ,A W severity? . V in Tincture of GREEN soap. ' l-lave you had this disease LONG. FM: ' Nein, ich habe es nur ein KURTZ Zeit gehabt. f5kaAy'Q, czvw-S5-ne 1 swam-, The freshman class beclecked with eosin. Marehed up to l-IILL and then--marched down ag'in. CASEY he Waltzed with a strawberry blonde. What caused the break in the DYCHE? Weakening of the WALLS on account of the heavy SNOW. Why did Patrick rise up so quickly? Well, his name's DENNIS. NEFF er mind, JACOBS-lKENBERRY BRlSLEN rneinselluf. The poor lady died in DEELERIUM during the operation. Was MURPHY Butt'n MANN? No: the KERR chased him off. But VAN, HOOKED the PLUMMER. Did you hear about the big Mix in the HALL? No! Where was it? lt was over at the CHURCH. WHO HAS A LADY FRIEND? The Junior Class at Northwestern Continually propounded this question Of a student with fair, Rosy cheeks and White hair, Who has a lady friend --EASTON. Did you ever eat any Casselberries? IT Oh, my eyes! IVIENGE times. A cute Yellow u -'BP ' Atv-oPl:3 H ' nxa uamrgx 1. 1.14.-l.:3f Who turned on the lights? Ingham. 330 jampolis had a friend visiting him from the University of Michigan who is taking a medical course and being interested in things surgical he asked jampolis if there were any clinics during the mornin . l' ' ' ' ' ' g jampois wishing to show his aquaintance with the advantages we enjoy at North- western, said yes that there were some surgical clinics. I-lis friend then asked him if he ever saw Dr. Murphy operate. 'tWell l should say so replied jampolis u on th t - , p e urgen request of his friend that they go to see Dr. Murphy. jampolis started out and walked south on Wabash looking for Mercy Hospital. At last he reached 29th st., where the Sisters of Mercy have their seminary. Walking boldly up to the door, his friend following in his wake, he stepped inside and was met by a wondering sister who asked him what he wanted. Whereupon he replied that he would like to know where the operating room was. She replied that there was no operating room in this building. lt's where Murphy operates, replied jampolis. l guess you've made a mistake. Murphy is down at Mercy l-lopital on 26th and Calumet. Then amid the broad smiles of his U. of M. friend, jampolis backed out into the cold dreary world but for some reason he did not feel cold. l-ie says now that hot air is not always the best policy. A class mate who knows. if eJm' 'RESOLVED y ' ' + Thaf my name rl: Banter Z, 1 Br.-,y,. .ff mffhgnn, fl!-mvl , 9'C'LE-'LK' ,Q 0 . . that' -my dog? name ff' T1'-af rn ff., J .H--'.-s'iL, .,'-1 ' x - 9 W tv -1'.-'73 N 5 J itll: 1-Illlealntilerllazf llneilillekn wn H f ,'QZK5gig, -g,ix? LQ'5'E1:2 ? f 5' .4 uioqabre may 5+ vm-mme f K , QZV'jSi'qv5'i ' ,ry -:Za digllw ' -rhawifkea ma fbllll 'Jllfft' 1, YV 'QU gl' l -qx when Ylo mar- pi-5-fgfch 91 ' but vii Sflwgq ifhmfflmf , ,IN Q-Lk r. 0 ev an 0- 'M ' -1-mg i llgfhz, , Thus ns he join. -X M 111,-eh Hunks in al soct ., Kwgxx H Q 25 edossn The YunzLsvNr:sH i X like Vg 90 Svncfekl E3 Q09 1 . .--ska coukclt hardly 1- Iewme che 'l1.delsunf-shrltelgi 5:LQ':1,:.,kf:1rlg 4. 1,1 leamm e Q . ,f , NA hav 5.59 i lsslilenewgalciow sci., ip.. rg, Yin-.. lg lx f B mr Whellaer its Hef or A-1:51 . in I 'L Olmmnf ,ann-un f He vnaw-studs all the Jun-uni flu -2 .. fi' S 7FfQ'ff '- Ana makes the babies cm- -gi FEW' gf f f?1?.f-t 2-AQ 'f Wiz '. lQX i 'ri lin! I -N Y! ni if sis! A 331 .KN A51 A x 'Fms'r:-brhq-Hr A RLAM rm.. vw... , -'-T.-Q 1.1 vm jj J 'ff K' Tn: Fnesm-Mui I 'Q 1 411 K L3 qi XZXXXK N R X r 'm. ' Q ' 'X N' ' I .Inj R r K If v f L f , -'B f J 1 FJ J 0 4 x X f I , ,fffdifff 1: ' N 1'2.,'?i S, 6 6 'NEP' LY Twnv 5 LAW SCHOO N Um IL, 'mmm ' X X a! gp if 0 glllllf' wifi' l ,' , 4.11 .r X ill M N, w X X X jj Wx gf PY N XXX ! pd' X7 ' ' 1 X--X A X ' A A Ai' H LAW SCHOGL BOARD G. R. WARNER - WM. V. BROTHERS I-I. S. LIGHTHALL CLINE W. M. DAVIS, Editor joI-IN B. ROMANS, Manager KENNETH DAVENPORT E. W. BELL PHILIP N. MCCAUGIEIAN GEO. I-IOLLETT 334 The Class of 1907 The Freshman class arrived on schedule time at the Universit.y Building, Septem- ber 19, 1904, and enthusiastically commenced the study of law by taking a week off. Reassembling on September 26, it underwent successfully the anxious scrutiny of the Secretary's benevolent eye, and was officially enrolled on that date as the Class of 1907. Three days later it discovered the location of Booth Hall. and secured that commodious auditorium for its premanent headquarters. From its inception the organization exhibited a desire for distinction, which reached its first expression early in October, when Wells, the man of many words, arose and addressed his fellows, in meeting assembled, declaring his belief that the class should celebrate its birth with unprecedented Bacchanalian rites. After argument by Cuneo and Blu, Forstall stamped the proposition with his approval, and Moerdyke con- curred. Here Dodson slipped his leash, and furiously insisted that Hill, and none' other, should arrange the festival. The class was cowed, and Hill appointed. Friday, October 21, we foregathered at the Sherman House and treated the pro- prietors of that hostelry to a scene of brilliant revelry. After enjoying a bounteous din- ner, we gave ourselves up to the joys of social intercourse. Good fellowship prevailed everywhere, and wit and scintillating repartee became the order of the day. Papa Howi- son, the soul of good nature, was haled to the chair, and regaled us with choice bits of humorous narrativeg everybody told a story. Cuneo gave an excellent imitation of Demosthenes' first attempt. Wells discussed class politics, delivered a.n eration, made a speech, and then addressed the class, after which he talked a few moments, and closed with some appropriate remarks. Everybody had a good time except those who stayed at home. October 21 was election day. Judah was elevated to the presidency with great eclat. Hill was entrusted with the keys of the treasury, and Moerdyke appointed to guard the freshman interests on t.he House Committee. Rathje was chosen Court bailiff. Shortly after taking the chair Judah betrayed an unsuspeeted lrlibernian streak by shouting, lf this confusion continues, it will have to stop. December 16, Strauss, he of the gleaming eye and confident bearing, frightened Prof. Lee into silence. Later, when arraigned before the House Committee, he proved insanity, and was discharged. Why is this mad man not incarcerated? Forstall is engaged in writing a three volume treatise entitled Crepitations from Criminal Lawg or, Gurglings from the Gallowsf' We predict a large sale, and recom- mend that he conduct the canvass for subscriptions in person. Friday of examination week F. O. Smith, the rubicund manager of athletics, dis- covered that he had pulled out half his hair. He saved the other half by cutting the ex. in Property. Dodson refuses to give up without a struggle. He is still looking for the case tl1at he can 'discuss intelligently He almost got it once, and twice caught a glimpse of it as it turned a corner. January 25 narrowly escaped becoming famous. Beaubien was absent, Forstall failed to ask a question, Moerdyke was silent, and P. G. Stevens nearly recited. Moer- dyke spoiled it all by hooting on the home stretch. h Flelbruary 10, Stark lost his self-command and talked loud enough for the class to ear im. January 12, Frake kicked over a cuspidor in Lowden Hall, and was chased by the House Committee through the halls and the library into one of the study club rooms. When he sawt vvhere he Was, he gave himself up and requested the Committee to take nm in o cuscocy. tl .laniiary 11, Andy Willson forgot to wake up after Property, and was locked in by ie Janror. The class met with a severe repulse in the encounter with the mid-year examina- tions, but though the casualties were many and the wounds serious, most of the com- batants survived the engagement, and we are now able to present. a formidable front to the enemy, with a fair prospect of a victorious campaign. More brilliant classes there probably are, but there are none that apply themselves more seriously, that labor with greater assiduity, or that apprehend more fully the demands the lahw makes on those who presume to expound it. IQICNNICTII D.w1-:Nron'r. 335 Commencement LargBSl Gifvlllil- EM. CURST'S BAR EXAMINER ,ioninghicago ll0Il PRICE, 1 CENT .ll CHICAGO, 1LL.,JUNE 15, 1905. Chicago in Luck. This is commencement day for Northwestern Uni- versity. Chicago is certain- ly in luck to be the seat of such a university, which is not only the university of Chicago, but is also the uni- versity of the Northwest. Northwestern has added much to the luster of our great and progressive city. But the department of the University of which the EXaminer is especially proud is the Law School. The Law School has a very able faculty. Judge Capron says that Dean Wigmore is the greatest teacher of law beyond the confines of Egypt. The Honorable A. R. Eggert of Iowa, in his fa- mous speech made in Prac- tice Court in December, 1904, said that he would consider it to be a greater honor to receive a degree from Northwestern Law School than to have his pic- ture placed upon Danderine postersg and the Exam- iner heartily coincides with the sentiments expressed by Mr. Eggert on that memor- able occasion. If Chicago is fortunate in being the seat of this great University, she is doubly fortunate in the character of men composing the class that is this evening to re- ceive degrees from the Law School. Never, since God made Ben Combs, has such good fortune been bestowed upon mankind. Many of these embryo lawyers will undoubtedly become famous some day, and strive to be as much in evidence as our honored Dean. But let us look at some of these promising young men, who are destined to become jurists, or states- men, like Mr. L. R. Fulton. Space will not permit us to do them justice, as the elo- quent speech delivered at a class meeting yesterday by Mr. Fulton of Kansas has crowded us for room. Mr. Fulton's speech is to be found elsewhere in this is- sue. Probably the best lawyer in the bunch is Boggs, C. J. He knows the fine distinc- tions in the law, and how to use them. But knowledge of the law can't always take the place of a good, stiff bluff. One of the chief ele- ments of success is to know but little and impress upon others that you know much. Freeark, Lynde, Murdock, and Bartlett have learned this lesson to perfection, and it might be well if oth- ers in the senior class of the Law School could emu- late them in this particular. Herman especially needs to learn to be audacious. Alex- ander conquered Persia by his boldness. The armies of Europe 'Hed panic strick- en before the cohorts of Na- poleon, because Napoleon, with his five feet two inches, made himself to look like a giant. Let Herman become bold like Murdock, and he, too, could, with a waive of his hand, make others fall prostrate before him. But young people who are climbing the ladder of life must remember that a much surer a11d quicker way of at- taining the topmost rung is fContiuued on 1J2lgGfOUl'.l 4 CURST'S BAR EXAMINER QCOlltlHll9d from first. page.J by getting a man at the top to give you a pull rather than your relying purely upon your own knowledge and bluff. Mr. Curst and the Examiner are in- formed on good authority that Mr. J. N. Ott has made a contract by which he is to form an alliance with cer- tain officials of the First Na- tional Bank. Mr. Ott hopes shortly to secure a specific performance of his agree- ment. The Examiner is sorry that it can not go more into detail in describing the many virtues of this re- markable law class, but Mr. Fulton's speech and other articles of interest forbid. Suiiice it to say that this class outshines all of its competitors, and that Chi- cago will always be proud of the fact that it was within her corporate limits that the members of the Class of 1905 of Northwestern Uni- versity Law School received their legal education. Graft in High Places. Yesterday the grand jury of Cook County indicted H. C. Lewis on the charge of being a grafter. It is a ter- rible disgrace to the hon- ored Class of 1905 of North- western Law School to have one of its members do as Mr. Lewis has done, and draw pay for occupying a responsible government po- sition while in Law School. Rumor has it that E. R. Fifer is an accessory after the fact, and has shielded Lewis in his wrong doing. Foxy Cupid. R. E. Howser, a senior law student, has been acting peculiarly of late. He is or- dinarily a man of excellent judgment, sober, and reli- able. For some time it has been feared that his mind was affected. He would take out his watch, open it, rush to his locker with his watch in his hand, and in a minute he would reappear, still car- rying his watch, from which some fluid would be drip- ping. However, the mystery was solved this morning when a friend discovered that a picture that Mr. How- ser carries in his watch is kept saturated with perfum- ery. A Narrow Escape. Mr. Norris Cline was com- ing down town this morning, and when at the corner of State and Lake Streets, thinking that no policeman was looking, expectorated upon the sidewalk. Unfortu- nately a policeman stepped around the corner at that in- stant, and a hot chase en- sued. Mr. Cline would cer- tainly have been disgraced by being caught, if it had not been for his great physi- cal activity. L. R. Fulton's Speech in Full. Gentlcinciif- I-I-Iaunyourwo rtliypresident. I:una1nsi11'etliz1.ty OllZLl'0gl2l.dtUl10il.1'lJ1l3S1J0ilik. lamp roudtosei-yt.l1attliisistl1eg1'e:i.t.estz1. ndm ostgl o riouscl asstlizittliesun e vershownupon. JustluokatCline DilllblllPGl'l'lHPi1'OS1lQlllt1llilHSEl.d 161'Sil.1'g0lltR.OSGllb1ll1l1CiLSGb96l'Pl tteYVultiinireanrlinyself, allofwli oinareboundtobccoiiiefamious. I think that we iniglitas well adj urn. Butbeioreweudjurnlwouldlikcto suggestt li ut. webeinoreproinptin atteiimling these ineeiings. Allin fav 0rofadju1'i1ingsa1yz1.ye,cz1rricd. PERSONAL IVIENTION. Mr. A. A. Strickland has purchased a setter dog of changeable colors, which he exhibited at Practice Court one evening. At times the dog is brown with yellow spots, and again he is yellow with brown spots. Mr. M. O'Mensel does not expect to return to Ireland, but will probably locate in Wisconsin. E. P. Rich has lost inter- est in stenography since the office help at the Law School has been reduced. Bartlett didn't say a single word in class on April 2-there are no recitations on Sunday. It is reported that Hal Brink stayed through one entire recitation recently without once leaving the room. VV. E. Comaii has pur- chased another new suit of clothes. It might be well to look after the House Com- mittee funds. F. H. Scheiner, who was unwise enough to attend three recitations in one day, was sick the day following. It is said that Rosenblum has actually learned the dif- ference between a shotgun and a revolver. H. W. Srowia. THE HOUSE COMMITTEE zf. WILLIAM BROTHERS Moor COURT OF N. W. UNIV. LAW SCHOOL, FEB. 29, 1905 flteportetl 1, Wilcox 1.1 This was an appeal from a decision of The House Committee sitting in Star Cham- ber Sessions without a jury, convicting the defendant of willfully, maliciously, and feloniously expectorating upon the floor of the smoking room, contrary to the Statute made, provided, and enforced by The House Committee acting as Legislature, Judge, jury, and Prosecutor simultaneously. The defendant pleaded, upon the trial, innocence of intention to offend the August Body, and that the act complained of was purely accidental, unwillful and inadvertent To substantiate this plea he proved the following facts: that he was lawfully in the smoking room smoking an old and powerful pipe of his father's when he was affection- ately approached by one Rundall, whose warm breath in the frigid atmosphere of the said smoking room so fogged, beclouded and opacated the lenses of his, the defendant's, glasses which he wore according to custom, that he was unable to see through them, that just at that time, the old and malodorous pipe aforesaid, gave up a part of the accumulation of years, and it thereby became most necessary and imperative for the defendant to expectorateg that in pursuance of this necessity he took as careful aim as possible under the circumstances, at a nearby cuspidor, but because of the aforesaid befogged condition of said lenses of said glasses, the projected stream was imperfectly directed and contrary to intention overshot the said receptacle not more than half an inch, and lodged upon the floor. After proof of these facts, The House Committee instructed itself that innocence of intention and absence of malice is no defence, for according to Rule 9,463 of The House Committee Rules . . . any person whatsoever who shall expectorate, must do so at peril. Verdict, guilty. The defendant now brings his appeal to this Court. Presiding Elder Yates now called the Court to order, and relapsed into slumber. Wnrrconrn, for the defendant: The right to expectorate when, how, and where a man pleases is an inseparable element of that inalienable and God-given liberty which is the thrice blessed heritage of every man, be he great or humble, who is born under that emblem of freedom, that scourge of tyrants, that-that-that insignia of the highest liberty ever attained, the Stars and Stripes! And when in the course of human events, a self-creating, a self- sustaining, a self-exalting, a self-suflicient Spirit of Evil such as this prosecutor, this House Committee, attempts to wrest from us this priceless liberty for which our fathers bled and died, can it be that this Court will sustain it in its tyrannical and high-handed career? No! No! Ten thousand times no! Forbid it, Almighty God! Give us liberty or give us death! After opiates had been administered to Mr. Whitcomb, there appeared MR. DAVIS, for the prosecution: This appeal does not come properly before this Court. This Court is not empow- ered to hear an appeal from the August Court which has rendered its judgment in this case, The Omnipotent House Committee received its power direct from the beneficent hands of His Deanship, and ipso facto et eo instante became and is a court of last resort. As a matter of grace, it has been graciously pleased to establish a precedent by which a convicted defendant may appeal directly to one of its Viforshipful Members. Herman v. The House Committee, a trial by battle before Lord Murdock, sitting in Basement Sessions, in the Court for the Correction of Errors, is the precedent referred to. But Qhisis the only manner of appeal accorded a citizen of this community. Now in Cali- ornia- Here the learned counsel was compelled to cease by the disorder. u Order being restored with the retirement of Mr. Davis, the unassigned counsel were given opportunity to argue the case, which they improved by devoting an hour to the discussion of various subjects ranging from the origin of consideration to the remov- abillty of fixtures. This formality having been complied with, the case at bar was expounded by MR. KOLB for the defendant: This here prosecutor hasn't got any right to say this here defendant can't spit when he wants to.. This is a step in a most monstrous attempt to curtail the liberties which we have a right to. I 'spose next thing House Committtee'll do'll be try to make 338 me quit talking. I won't stand it! This here Court mustn't stand it! It's infamous! Learned 'posing counsel's 'nidiotl Arouse Committee hasn't any right to say we must spit at Perrill. If I was Perrill, I'd have 'em 'restedl Prosecutors shameless 'n guilty tyrant! 'Sall wrong! Hon'ble 'posing counselsliar!! The bailiffs having removed Mr. Kolb, the arguemt was closed by MR. Frnnnrv for the prosecution: The-aw-it seems tu me-that the-aw-defendant ought not to escape the-aw- punishment of his-aw-crime, whether he-aw-committed it or not, for-aw-by his -aw-counsel, he has been so-aw-unladylike in the presence of this-aw-court, that no-aw-punishment can be too severe. Aw-U Here the Presiding Elder awoke and announced that the time had expired, and Mr. Finerty was succeeded by The Lord Critique Engstrom. LThe reporter, unfortunately, failed to make any note of the discourse of The Lord Critique, a sufficient reason being that the Chesterneldian grace of delivery. the unparalleled beauty of tone and diction, completely distracted the iinite mind from the mere meaning to be conveyed, until it was eternally too late to preserve the gems of thought which fell from the lips of His Eloquent Lordshipj KALEs, C. J., now condescended to point out the mistakes of the various counsel, but, in view of the libel laws, a detailed report is deemed inadvisable. In brief it may be said that His Lordship sufficiently chastened and discouraged the learned counsel, and completed his discourse by congratulating them upon the fact that, on the whole, they had not done so badly as they might have done, had it been possible for human beings to do worse. ,At a later day, April 31, 1905, the following decisions were handed down: DICKINSON, J.: While upon the mere facts of the case, uninduenced by extrinsics, l should feel it my duty to decide for the defendant, still, my relations with one of the Judges below, as well as those with the learned counsel who closed for the prosecution, are such that I am precluded from questioning the correctness of the judgment. l must, therefore, vote to sustain it. COHAN, J.: I did not hear the argument for the prosecution, but as the defendant is a personal friend of mine, and assures me that that argument was utterly without merit, I must vote for reversal, KALES, C. J., being and continuing to be too occupied to vote, the case remains unde- cided, but the prosecution has executed the prescribed fine of five cents upon the defend- ant, on the ground that no reversal being had, the Court below is sustained. Evidence psopsfcuee . What is a Law School? . A law school is a factory in which legal minds are turned out. . Who does the turning? Profs. . What are Profs? They are modest learned men who sit in front of the class and make the stu- dents tell what they know and bluff at what they do not know. They give grades which sometimes show the student's ability and industry. Q. What are students? A. Well, students are the men who attend law school. They pay tuition, buy books and read law. Q. What are books? A. Books are expensive collections of cases. When new the books are very expen- sive, but they may be secured from McNeil, second hand, for Hfty cents less. Q. Are second hand books desirable? A. Yes: they have the important facts and sayings underlined, while a new book requires the reading of the whole case. Q. Do students like the latter? A. Only three do, Bill Haight, Bob Candee and Cy Adams. Others read the case because they have to. Q. Are not the Northwestern students all grinds? A. Yes, they are not! Some are hoot owls. Q. What is a hoot owl? A. A student who argues with the Prof on some small idea, using the time of the class, thinking he is making a hit, while he is, in reality, making of himself an it. He tries to have his idiotic questions answered at any and all times. Q. But he pays tuition to receive instruction, does he not? 339 A. Yes, but tuition does not include the furnishing of a new set of brains. Q. Has the class no remedy for preventing such loss of time? A. The only one is, when the hoot goes too far, chairs scrape, feet fall on the floor and books are pushed about. Q. Do the Profs inspire respect? A. As a rule. Q. What is a Prof? A. He is the man who knows all about the subject. Q. Are the Profs smart? A. In our school, yes! They are modest also and so hold the respect of the stu- dents. Q. Of all students? A. Yes, the respect, altho some students often disagree with the Prof. Q. What students? A. Mostly the little fellows who were quite bright in High School and have not yet found they are in older company. Q. How do students deport themselves? A. Mostly as gentlemen, but slight fines are imposed for such offenses as are plainly not proper, such as missing the cuspidor, failing to allow tobacco smoke to sift into your hair in the assembly room, or allowing a good Havana to keep burning in the hall. Q. Where do the students pay these fines? A. To the Perfects in the club room. Q. Who are perfect? A. Bob C., Bill I-I., Max M., and Comen. Q. What if one refuses to pay? A. Then his nose is attended to by one of the Perfects, who is handy with his dukes. Q. Do the students eat at noon? A. Yes, the students eat. Some eat at the Union and College Inn. Others eat at Kohlsaatis. The third class dress up and wear gloves and start away from the build- ing. It is only a bluff, however, for they go to Thompson's, just around the corner. Q. Where do students study? A. In the library. Q. What is the library? A. It is a long L-shaped room, containing a confusing collection of many books of law, all of which disagree, placed on dusty shelves. Q. Where do students recite? A. In Hurd Hall, a large room which is usually dark. Each morning the students ilnd a layer of soot and dirt on the chairs and tables, which has been deposited there by the janitor in order to soil hands and ruin clothes. Q. How can this be avoided? A. With a big cloth and ten minutes of elbow grease at 8:30 o'clock each morning. Q. Do students smoke and drink? A. The students are presumed to be men having independent standards of con- duct of a good degree, and no one interferes or questions unless the good conduct pre- sumption is overthrown by a flagrant breach. Q. Do the Profs give exams? A. Yes, and they are stiff ones. Q. Do the students cheat? A. N05 often men go out to smoke and relax their nerves and when several are so gathered, in the middle of an exam, even Sherlock Holmes could not guess where they came from or whither they go. Q. Do second year students have court practice? A. Yes. Moot court. Moot court is the beginning of a man's ideas of law In this course he is given a partner and together they fight a fake case, citing authorities and workmg as hard as possible. Q. What is the result? A. The faculty have two representatives present who speak to the students after the latter have toiled as best they know. One finds fault with each man's gestures, tone of lvoice, etc., and the other tells the student how little he knows about brief making. Neither are very encouraging. Q. What is the chief aim of each student? A. To get out of school and pass the Bar Ex. SECOND YEAR MAN. 340 jf V S C hool of PHARMACY and CHEMISTRY fix 4 . ' 1,1-'H if 'V yfx' yff ' bf ' -I A -.1 SXIIIIllllllIIIllllllIlllllIllIllIIIIIIIllIlllllIlllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIQ 2 SYLLABUS BOARD 2 WIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllIlIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIW OTTO D. WIPPERMAN, WALTER T. BREAM, CHARLES WALZ JAMES W. REDMOND L. CLAUDE FREEMAN HARRY G. DARE FRANK F. FOSTER EDITOR MANAGER HARMON K. MORGAN CHARLES S. PIEIALEN CI-IAS. G. WALLBAUM WILLIAM E. WALLACE CARL R. SEYFERT Z - V. i V w 1. r 1 e 1 i 1 1. Q. i 1 Ll I 1 r X r I a i i i I 3 L Glee Club ERNEST WA1,LEvr, - Instructor WALTER T. BREAN, ---- Manager ADOLPH PUHL S. I-I. VEACO HERMAN F. STAXB A. F. EURHOP PIERRE E. I-IAYNES HOWARD G. VAN CISE E. W. GSELL SAMUEL ROBIN JOHN SPAIN GUY F. HERSCHEY A. H. ZELLER J. E. DAVIES 345 CHARLES PRICKETT CHARLES D. BORING EVER JOHNSON GEORGE A. MCCULLEN OTro D. W1EPERA'1AN G. E. TURNER Class of '04---Officers. p 1 'Xrfgw --rrp Rx of 1 BERTRAM MEYER, HARMON K. MORGAN, Louis W. JADERSTROM, W. BLAINE EVERNDEN, President. Vice-President. Secretary. Treasurer. Class Yell. ' BIICR-El-C16-IPS! De-roo! De-roar! ! Buck-u.-de-reel De-roo! De-roar! Vlflio roar! TVe roar! Senior I,11Zll1'illIlliCS Nineteen-tour. History of the Class of 1904. HE December class of 1904 came into the history of the Northwestern University School of Pharmacy September 7, 1903. On that day there were enrolled 102 sturdy looking students, who had come for the purpose of preparing themselves for that most honorable profession-Pharmacy. As a junior class we were well satisned with ourselves. But often times the seniors cast their very subduing look, as they thought, down upon us, but not until we became seniors could we realize its meaning. Overcoming many obstacles the class advanced rapidly, not only in their studies, but also in importance. This the seniors noticed, and after several attempts, both classes came together in the annual class rush. The juniors, to be sure, won the victoryf?J. From that time on until April 15, 1904, we reigned supreme. April 15, being the close of the junior year, brought many changes for our class. Most of its members went home to enjoy their vacation, while the remaining portion stayed to continue their course through the spring term. The ones remaining composed the class. For a few days after the departure of our former classmates everything around the building seemed so dull. But in a short time the professors grasped the situation and began to entertain us along various lines. Soon all our loneliness vanished. The spring term was joyfully spent by all. And on July 20th, which marked the close of our school year, all in high glee started for their homes, but each one with a longing for September 12, which would again bring our class together. Of our last term, not much can be said. We were dignified and studious, as all seniors should be. We attended all football games and usually in tally-ho parties. Lest we forget, let it be recorded that our president, Sliver Meyers, was appointed, by some- one, as yell leader for the entire Universityg a precedent for the downtown departments. December found us through with examinations and ready for commencement. This event was so elaborate that some of the graduates, Brean, for instance, forgot to come. 346 President, Vice-President, Secretary, Treasurer, Executive Committee, Class of '05 Officers 347 WALTER BREAN CLAUDE MUSSELMAN SAMUEL ROBIN HENLY L. THORPE GEORGE MCCULLEN HARMON K. MORGAN President, Vice-President, Secretary, Treasurer, - Executive Committee April Class of ,OS Officers 34-8 T1-los. CURRY DEDMAN - LEE E. ENNIS JOHN SNYDER BARBEE ALBERT W. WEINBERGER RALPH C. CROSBY DONALD FRAz1oR WRIGHT - June Class of '05 A Officers President, - - RUSSELL VAUSE Vice-President, - HOWARD G. VAN C1sE Secretary, - - HENRY W. I-lowE Treasurer, - - - - - GUY F. BURKET I-loo! Rah! I-loo! Rah! N. U. Pharmics. Chew 'em up! Pound 'ern up! 1906. Colors Pink and Blue 349 Class of '06 Officers President, RAY P. KILE Vice-President, Miss ELLA I-l. PATTERSON Secretary, FREd W. LORD Treasurer, FRED J. KIMMEL Junior Class Poem, '06. In the early part of the year '06, There will be added to the list of Phar- mics The names of those who have learned the art Of how to mix drugs, part by part. We have been together for many days, And have come to like each other's ways, So that the parting we soon shall know Will be seasoned with joy as well as woe. We can never forget, I must confess, The pleasant odors of HZS. I think it was Veach who used to tell The boys how to make Green essence of H.. His room-mate was just full of fun, A jolly good fellow is Robertson. Boring is fine and hard to beatg He always looks pleasant and dresses neat. Do you know Foster, well I should say, He has such a very pleasing way. And there is Wallace, without a care, Holding onto his bright red hair. For a man who has dignity and style, Look around for our dear friend Kyle. Woods should have his voice re-tuned, And Snyder his midnight breath per- fumed. McKinney played once in the band, Wharton tells us it was something grand. And there is Hynes who went on a toot Almost every time he played the flute. At the grand reception given last fall We could plainly see Goettie, but where was Hall? Another thing, though it may seem queer, In every rough house we find Bouchier. There is Carl Reber Seyfert from Circle- ville Who for funny jokes just fills the bill. Close by his side in lecture-room A James Spitball Sexton is seen each day. We all know well our friend Sundine, But where on earth is the town Moline? Kimmel got seven good tests for a noise In a room half full of the smaller boys. Englehart and .Iacobshagen have a quiet way Which is rather strange in this age and day. Linder is a hummer and an awful tease, Always using rennin to change milk to cheese. ln our class, we are proud of one By the name of Miss Ella H. Patterson. What a one-sided affair college would be If no young women studied for Ph.G.! Some boys seem to think it a shame For each one not to have his name Stuck some where in the school halls, Or take active part in shoving squalls. On one locker some naughty paw Had written, t'This is Tracy, the outlaw. Of course none of our peaceful few Would ever think of being so new. In another place you could plainly see The double oxide formula for HN03. And in the lecture-room each day The fountain pen brigade throw ink away. This lasted until the actions were heard By our dear old friend, Dr. Oldberg, Soon after this we had to appear Before the Dean, his words to hear. He made it plain that the school would take Each one to task for the things they break, And, in a voice firm, yet kind: Stop your fooling, or another school find. Dr. Kahn's exam. was not so hard, But there was a bunch of fellows barred. Boys, the next time you come to bat, Be sure and know how to trace a fat. Can any one tell the exact relation Of Professor Eccles to an examination? One thing sure in this connection There was no cribbing in his direction. The second term began, as you know, With the handing over of our dough, And the flashing of receipted bills Before we were allowed to dispense pills. The first-term Juniors were shown the art Of how to passem up and trouble start. It was fun to see their curious eyes Assume the sage look as they grew wise. As the space we have in which to men- tion The many things that should have atten- tion Is not at all suited for the task. We think it only fair to ask: That you look upon our address page, At the list of great men of this age. Years after what an honor it will be To say, why he graduated with me. I always knew by his natural bent Some day would see him president. This is not the only honor in sight As we can all be men that will do right. H. G. D. gx.il -'k' Zy Cuts and Grinds A 1. This is the epidermis, from dermis, meaning hard. 2. Gentlemen, look at the root cap and compare it to the Roman Warrior, as he plows his way through the stones and mud. 3. Attention! Drop all work! Scrape off desk! Grab microscope! KNOW you think you are excused, but you ain't.J Lock your desk! Turn! Rise! Front dress! March! 1, 2, 1, Z! Stone- The saddest deeds or pru, are these little words, I ilunked again. Brother Burkett claims that an oxygen atom is of no value in a compound because it resembles a naught. Prof. Eccles has missed his calling. He should have enlisted in Pinkerton's forces. Pyles-The missing Gold Dust Twin. Ever Johnson- Conceit, in weakest bodies, strongest worksf! Virchow- Who knows but that I may become as great a chemist as my ancestor and namesake. Dedman- A true son of Southern soil. A. XV. Lewis- Too wise for this school!!!?,' Mr. Lundell- What acid can be formed from Iodine? Freshman- ldiotic acid? Crosby led Mr. Lundell in the parade at the Faculty Reception: he must have felt like the elephant driver in a circus parade. Reisl- I'll be worth 310,000 per when I finish my Ph.G. course. Those annual jokes of Dr. Oldbergis are all right, but we would suggest that he get some new ones. Meyers- As a leader of men, I have no equal. Truth is stranger than fictiong school keeps without the Class of '04. Harlan-'05? '07? Henry George- I am for men? Long- I am for women. McCullen- O fudge! Blount-'fAn advocate for P1'ohibitionf'?????????'Z If suggestions are in order, would Blettner please quit Hbutting in on the new Freshman Girl. Rug- What manner of man is this? Van Cise-Not on the matrimonial market. Musselman-A coming chemist.??? Stone-Sleepy hollow. Freeman- What sacrifice a man will make for woman. Ranger-The other of the Hall Room Boys. Brean- Tell me who ran the Ph.C. class election? Vause- I can tell Prof. Gordin a few things about Organic Chemistry. Engelhardt- I wake up January lst each year to see the New Year come in. 351 Zeller- Ten years of my life for 2152.60 and Friberg's Hall. Claypool-A 'tfavoriteu of Sunny Jim. Good morning! Have you used Harlan's Etherial Soap? Riester still assumes that foXy'i look when the girl question is brought up. The question as to what part of the country was guilty of producing Mulvay has at last been settled, and a new one now arises: Which one of his numerous homes will he decide to honor with his residence? J. E. Davies- It takes time to accomplish great things. Puhlis favorite song is Genevive. Wonder why? . W1'ight- Wl1istling Rufus. Stowe- The missing linkf' Prof. Pond flecturing in Pharmacognosyl- In plants we iind the division of labor. Then Mooney Cwaking upl- Let the women do the work. Leischner- A callow, tow-headed youth. Ennis- Just as Prof. Whittelsey is, so may I also be. Barbee- That drug does not grow this way in Montana. Class of '06- An inlinite deal of nothing? Fischner- Prof Miner's second. Extract from the Chicago Rccorcl-Herald-''Captain IfVeinberger says that baseball elevates a man physically, mentally, and morallyf' Truly he has the right spirit, but- What you don't see in the U. S. Pharmacopeia, ask Palmer. Chilcote fof Gooch crucible famel- I won't borrow any more cruciblesf' Prof. Jensen-'tBack to the woodsfi Weisenberger- Gosh! I'1n sleepy, I was out 'till ten o'clock last night. Beans freciting in Organic Chemistryl-''Tri-tri-tri-tri-Methyl Chloride. Prof. Gordin- Try again. Hallett-Far famed as coming from Greeley, Colorado. Thompson- There is more behind that quiet, unassuming manner than one would be led to believe. Wipperman- The Railroad Magnatefi Judging from the names of some of those in the '06 class, such as Caschoutschi, Czoulka, Shimmelghentic and Ciaragoerott, surely these men must be Russians and are undoubtedly related to General Overhoaulowski or the Grand Duke Runlikehellski, or perhaps to Captain Brakemuski, and some of the rest of the Royal Bunch. If it were not for Hinkel, Clott, Snyder, Rushton, and Steinell we fear that Hyde and Behman's Theater would go to the wall. Rushton is studying Paracamp's great book, First Aid to the Injured, as he is going to learn the barber trade this summer. Everyone does not receive his just dues at this University. If they did, Schwartz would have been pushed down the elevator shaft long ago. See Sundine for a patented remedy that is a great boon to skaters. Sundine claims that after a sudicient number of doses of this wonder worker, which he had named Nips, no matter how hard you fall on the ice it does not hurt you when you fall. COf course if you fall on the bottle and break it, you will feel bad over that.J Sundine has a list of testimonials, at the top of which is C. R. Seyfert's testimonial, telling of its wonderful merits, tested one day at Jackson Park. They do say that Hansen and Wallace saw things out at the steel works that no one else in the whole crowd saw. That's queer. After gazing for two minutes at a beer sign, Linder will swear that he is getting dizzy. All Germans are affected in a like manner. , That's All Wilson indignantly denies that he is still taking Mellin's Baby Food. Eccles-An expert in Dispensing and perhaps a good instructor in Pharmacy, but a man with few friends. It is a well-known fact that S. Gladstone Timson couldn't see a joke with the high power on. XV. D. Lee's case can be described in poetry more easily than in mere prose. I may be freckled and covered with fleas, but my pants, thank the Lord, don't bag at the knees. Unless you know Lee you can not appreciate the sublime beauty of this verse. 352 Sherrick Stands next to the head of our class,-when they stand in a circle. Some of the Seniors valences seem to be absolutely unlimited, but we think that the faculty will act as a reducing agent when it comes to an analysis. All men are not created equal, that is a cinch. Look at Bouchier and then at Petry. lsn't that the long and short of it? It is rumored that Lord refused to go into partnership with Prof. Whittlesy to write a book on Qualitative Analysis, Lord, of course, to furnish the knowledge and the Pro- fessor to furnish the financial backing, and perhaps to write the preface. We under- stand that the reason Lord gave was, that he thought it might injure his reputation as a chemist to link his name up with Prof. Whittlesy's. It is said that Schoupman, after he had passed the State Board for Assistant, wore a hat the size of a barrel, instead of the usual purple ten cent piece, with the letters N. U. S. P. on it. Any one observing the door of the University from both sides can quickly see that it takes a pull to get in here and a great deal of push to get out. And that's no fair ground joke, either. It is not generally known that we have a freak in our class. 0. T. Davis is 16 years of age, has graduated from high school, taking twelve years, claims three years' experi- ence in a drug store since his graduation, and so, according to these official statistics, started to go to school at the tender age of one year. All hail to Davis, pride of Mulberry Corners, Ill. Paderwiski Wolfe has a well developed case of Simplex melancholia. Hansen should be placed in the Field Columbian Museum as the only one who ever cut too thin a section in the Microspical Laboratory. If Gettsloffis brains were ink, he wouldn't have enough to dot an i. It seems that Prof. Whittlesy would get out of patience with that cerise blonde, Wallace, for he sits right on the front seat and positively sniffs at everything the Prof. says. , All Gimmel's head is good for is simply a knot on the top of his body to keep it from unravelling. When it comes to improving on Strasburger's drawings, Chas. Feyder Cwho is the same Feyder that was turned down by the Girl in Blueb, is there with the goods. Almost every one seems to think so except Prof. Jensen. When will we have a Democratic President again? When Curry makes a recitation, or in other words, Never. If you firmly believe in the old adage, A barking dog never bites, and are positive that there is no exception to the rule, then approach Haynes without fear of having him taste you. Otherwise, Beware of the dog. Bouchier may be all right and he may be honest, but there is no denying the fact that he certainly does look crooked. The more you look at Kimmel's nose the more it reminds you of an U tube. His nose, while not broken, is certainly badly bent. The only dinerence between Carnegie and Goette is that the former is de steel and the latter is di still king. Look out for the revenue officers, Goette. A iierce battle was fought in the mfg. lab. on Jan. 13. It was between Hitchcock and Goette. Hitchcock had all the better of the argument until Goette tried a new blow, recently invented, called the Swedish Punch. Altho this Swedish Punch did not put Hitchcock down and out, yet he grew very groggy from the effects of it, and bystanders say that his eyes rolled heavily. Information in regard to this famous punch may be had of Goette, who is the sole owner, inventor and patentee. From the way in which Dr. Kahn knocks on Kohlsaats lunch room. one would think that they had refused to trust the learned doctor for some coffee and a few sinkers. A good investment would be to buy Kile for just what he is worth and then sell him for what he thinks he is worth. Then buy out the Standard Oil Co. with the proceeds. The details of this transaction would involve as much cash as Frenzied Finance ever dreamed of in Everybody's Magazine. Every time Woods gets an unknown solution wrong in the Chem. lab., he lays the blame on Prof. Lundell's poor system of checking up the unknowns. Woods seems to have the idea that the unknown solutions are guessing contests. Thus far, Woods has not received any medals, except of the leathery kind, for his guessing. 353 N. U. S. P. RooTERs Hot Air Meyers of Pharmacy, By the Pharmacopeia swore That the Evanston Rooters Were rotten to the core. By the' pharmacopeia he swore it, And then he swore again, For good, whole, hard rooting It takes the Pharmic men. So he called the bunch together, And this is what he said: You might as well be buried, For you are all as good as dead. You're a bunch of yellow quitters, So everybody thinksg Now fellows, be up and doing, Go out and raise high jinlzsf' And lo, it came to pass that when The Purple met her foes, The little bunch of Pharmic men Were up and on their toes, Giving forth with right good will, With lungs both true and strong, The old Northwestern College yell, Out clear and loud and long. So l1ere's to !'Windy Meyers, And here's to the Pharmic men, Their fame spread through all the college From the city to the Music Hall. How the smallest school at Northwestern Had rallied to her call. And all through the Football Season, Whether the Purple lost or won, N. U. S. P. stood by them, For quitters they were none. So here's to Ward-heelerl' Meyers, And here's to the Pharmies true, Here's hoping we shall meet again Our friendships to renew. But if we never meet again Till on the other shore, We'll get the bunch together And root-forevermore. C. S. P. 354 uuwyyp a-dba-s ADVICE TO JUNIORS ' A-sly!-0 HWFQJ HAT an undertaking! to advise JUNIORS! Think of it! My audacity appals meg my hand trembles so that I can scarcely write, and my heart goes pit-a-pat against my suspender buckle! But it must be doneg they must be told where they are wrong so that they may see the error of their ways, and brace up and hit up the straight and narrow. To begin-. tIt's hard to iind a place to begin.J As a rule the Juniors have one fault in common, which stands out strongly in the spotlight of publicity, namely, that of getting into classes according to schedule time. This is a very bad habit to have become permanent, and Juniors,-take my advice,- cut it. It will lead to other things worse than itself, such as getting to work on time in the morning, when you have Hnished your course and are working. There is an idea which runs all through the Junior Class-they think that Dr. Old- berg and the Faculty run the school! BANISH THE THOUGHT! Run it yourselves, to suit yourselves. Who is better able to run the school than a Junior? If you do not believe this, ask Lord if he does not know of at least one Junior who could run it. Just a word or two to fight promoter Dix Glenn and his pugilistic friend Gimmel. Please keep your combination back for a while. A combination of a manager like Glenn and a batter like Gimmel would have all the present day stars on the run. I would advise Shenrick and Schuman to quit posing around the entrance of the school with pipes in their mouths trying to captivate the passing damsels. It may cause people to think you are the original of the Hall Room Boys. You Juniors who stay at home nights and burn good gas studying had better for your own health and peace of mind go out a little evenings. This applies especially to Wallace, Conrad, Sterling and a few more. Sexton and Siefert have got into the bad habit of never saying a word. They are not like Zeller and Snyder, always loud and boisterous, but are such quiet, retiring little rascals. Wake up, fellows. Do, Heitman, if you love your country, friends, and Alma Mater, forget that you are an athlete. Remember this: Belonging to an athletic club does not make one an athlete. Come around some day and let us feel your muscle. Keller and Huss must stop their giggling in classes. Sieferend, cut out telling about what fine men come from South Dakota. We have seen samples of them in our class and know that they can't be beat-in some ways. Even though you do delight in having fun with Freshies, Fayder, you should remember that along about last September there was a green, auburn-haired, freckled face fellow, by the name of Charley, who registered here. Please, Mr. Shimmeliinick, take that smile off your face. It doesn't look right. WVe may be led to believe with Shakespeare, that you are a villain with a smiling cheek, and this would never do. So please cut that permanent smile. I would like to advise further on this subject, but there is so much to be said and it would have to be said so often before you egotistical Juniors could see your way clearly, that I will give up in despair. The task is even greater than one would suppose to pick the worst cases where advice was needed, so I stop right here and say what can't be cured must be endured. C, S, PLIALEN, 355 i A R R E T T I B L I C A L N S T I T U T E SCHOOLS CF THEOLCGY Place of Seminaries on the Campus HILE Northwestern University and the Seminaries are not organically connected, the friendliest rela- tions exist between them, the Seminaries being virtually the Theological Department of the University. It is of the utmost importance to any church that her ministry be well-trained and well-educated. Garrett aims to furnish the Methoist Episcopal Church not only with thoroughly equipped Christian scholars, but also with ear- nest and eflicient pastors, who shall by their persuasive speech, and pastoral skill lead many to Christ. The Methodist Church has never yet been able to meet the demand for new preachers each year, entirely with college graduates. Men must be taken from the fields, the stores. the blacksmith shops, as well as from the universities, and placed in the pulpit. For these men, not having had the advantage of a college education, the Seminaries provide a course in Sacred Rhetoric, Homiletics, Elocution, and the English exegesis of the Scriptures, with supplementary work in Greek and Hebrew if it is desired. For college graduates a course leading to the degree of Bachelor of Sacred Theology is offered, and arrangements have been made so that Northwestern students may take both their Bachelors Degree and this degree in six years. The Degree Course is the equal of that offered by any theo- logical school in the land, and among those now pursuing it may be found representatives of almost all colleges and universities west of Philadelphia. Among the twenty-two theological institutions of the Methodist Episcopal Church, Garrett is in many respects nrst. Her endowment of 3600000 makes her the richest of our divinity schools. Her faculty outnumbers that of any of the other institutions in the United States, and is the best that can be secured. Each man is a Christian scholar, a specialist, and a leader in the church. In the matter of enrollment, Garrett was third last year, but this year with the Summer School, it is thought she will advance to Hrst place. Her record, during the fifty years of her existence, is one of which all Northwestern men may well be proud. Among her alumni are numbered bishops, educators, editors, pastors and leaders in the church all over the world. F. HERRON SMITH. SWEDISH SEMINARY 1ln flbemoriam MRS. LITTLE. On Wednesday morning, November 9, at her home in Evanston, Ill., Mrs. Charles J. Little, wife of President Little of Garrett Biblical Institute, passed away. Mrs. Little was born at Stolpmende by the Baltic, and on both sides was of distinguished lineage. Her gifts and training were exceptional. She was an accomplished linguist and her tastes drew her to the poets and thinkers of her own and other lands, whom she read widely and with instant and appreciative delight and relish. Religiously she never departed from the simple faith and serene piety in which she was so conscientiously reared. To the very last, life was full of interest for her. She never lost touch with the currents of high and noble thinking, and the manifold responsibilities of family, school and commu- nity life, she esszyed far beyond her strength. The memory of her to those who were permitted to know her intimately is a rare spiritual and intellectual blessing. MRS. J. A. KETTLE. Mrs. J. A. Kettle, with her husband, entered the Junior Class of Garrett in the fall of nineteen hundred and three. She speedily won a place in the respect and affection of both faculty and students on account of her thoroughness and capability in all her work and on account of her sympathetic, cheerful, womanly nature. When, on the ninth day of November, she was suddenly called home, a hush came over the whole schoolg each felt a personal loss. Her memory lingers with us. No one among the body of students was better known or more generally loved. No one came into her presence without feeling clouds lifted and his heart made lighter. 358 Syllabus Board. C. E. WILCOX C. H. Sc!-IREIBER H. H. MooRE A. T. STEPHENSON D. M. SIMPSON H. M. SWAN H. H. KAFER A. T. HENRY J. J. WANG A. C. NORTHROP E. V. BRONSON Class of 1905. President, Vice-President, Secretary, Treasurer, - Officers 360 J. W. HOLLAND T. P. BRANNEN C. BURNARD S. S. CLAY P Garrett's Missionary HERRON SMITH of the class of '05 in the degree course has been selected to 0 represent the Institute in the foreign missionary held during the next two years. Mr. Smith was born in Illinois nearly twenty-six years agog prepared for the university at Pawnee City Academy in Nebraska, and then entered the Kansas State University, graduating in 1902 with the degree of Bachelor ot Arts. He possesses three qualiiications that eminently fit him for the work for which he has been selected. Q13 Throughout his career in the Academy, the University, and the Institute he has main- tained a high standard of scholarship. In recognition of his scholarship at the Univer- sity he was elected to membership in the Phi Beta Kappa fraternity-the honorary fraternity of the University. Q23 He has a deinite call to the foreign mission field. He joined the Volunteer Band at the close of his Junior year in the university and has since been a missionary enthusiast. Q37 He is an optimistic evangelist. During his course at the Institute he has served as pastor at Brighton Park, Chicago. In this time there have been one hundred and twenty-iive conversions, the membership has been doubled, and plans made for the building of a new church. December 24, 1903, he was married to Miss Gertrude Bamford, daughter of Rev. Dr. M. Bamtord of Ft. Scott, Kansas. With his wife and babe he expects to go to Japan about September lst of this year. The same abilities that have made him successful here will make him successful there. The good will and hearty support of Garrett will go with him and his wife to their new field of labor. 361 1 .. 'J A Officers. Y. M. C. . F- H- SMITH, 1 ' : President. 5- C- ADAMS. I ' Vice-President. G. G. STANSEL1., : : : Secretary. F- M- PERRILL, I . : : 1 : Treasurer D- A. HAYES, Z . Faculty Representative. Chairmen Committees. A. S. WARRZNER, Devotional. W. l-I. WHITLOCK, Missionary. G. l-I. PARKINSON, Literary. G. R. MCDOWELL, Social. S. C. ADAMS, Reception. A cjxj VX 1 oi t X J facie NK Class of 1907. , , ,a A 'ce President. Officers, V. F. l-IENDEE, V1 - QI. l-I. LEWIS, Chaplain l'62SLll'61' . 'NX.j. PERDUE, President. . J. A. BLAKE, T 363 A. S. BUEL L, Secretary Class of 1906 Officers President, - - A. D. WELCH Vice-President, W. H. VJ!-HTLOCK Secretary, - C. M. Woon Treasurer, - C. E. WILCOX Roll Call BARKLE, Tough job BRECKEN, Ancient Wizard CARSWELL, Go Careful CARVER, Good Roundsteak CHRISTENSEN, Awful Hilarious CORRIE, Everlasting Sure CRUMBAKER, Veritable Angel DEAL, Critical Examiner DE LONG, just Excavator DEUEL, Gigantic Eloquator DEUEL, Eloquator's Helpmeet DOENGIS, Remarkably Complaisant FIDLER, Adelphic Adulator FRID, just Windy GEORGE, Able Entertainer HARROP, Capable Wrangler HENRY, Artful Theologian HERRICK, Little Miss HOLM, Gravitas Carmenfactor HORTON, Angelic Bachelor ICHAHASHI, Thoroughgoing JAGGERS, Awful KELLY, Fiery Organs 365 KETTLE, judicial Administrator LANDOCK, Simple Simon LISTON, Wont Worry MORRlSON, Chubby Hunk NORTHROP, All Consuming NIKON, Lingering Wisdom PARKINSON, Galloping Hustler PERRILL, Erightful Menacing POLLOCK, Sweetly just POTTER, Rapacious Alligator QUIRIN, Answering Johnny SCHREIBER, Commodating Helper Scnurz, Honorable judge S1MPsoN, Dear Me STANSELL, Grave Gentleman STEININGER, jolliol Soul TERRILL, Welsh Crank TROXEL, jerusalem Soprano WALKER, jumping Harry WELCH, Austere Dominus WHITLOCK, What Higher WILCOX, Careful Engineer Wooo. Common Metre W ' TW , .l , M a 1 -1. If ' - l .-f T: D '4 5 :JF ' E 1' .Q- -i Hr? -efM'1x E2 P' X .3 ,I-Q3 Garrett's 1905 Debating Team 1.. .1 . fiigsg . . ll! . ,1- ni MJ ,Q L ,ri -' i.. v,.w, 'i37' X' .1 ' .g-3-ff. 'fry Wifi Z UW' i it U r1f2elPc.- 1. x ,fr- i - 'iw fit , -'fi x 5 fall vr, fit, iltnll lugn rl llil tlyml gi .fy jttiiiff Q, t i 'N al- K X ljks l . 4 . N' I I g Nb x :vt it 5E eg TE V' -l sei-K' , ly pg QS. tr! 'I tt XS lk!! s x .LEA --gilt fi Z-2 f.,i fl: MX l tl, I X JI Garrett has formerly Won honors in the debating arena on the Campus of North- western University. But in the year 1904- '05 the team from her society defeated the teams of both the Hinman and Adelphic societies, and Without a break in its number was chosen by the judges to represent Northwestern in the lnter-Collegiate debate with the Univer- sity of Michigan. The debate with Hin- man occurred on the lst of November, in which Garrett had the negative. Three Weeks later they met the Adelphic team, T ui 5V'- Afsrlk 'u X llnxvt, , A 'Ki .rlQlrdbMMtMx' llll,ll- in it l H -if,-f ' , ?XN7rmN'f7.4Zfi t NEW: idlflnnzqf H1114 Austerc and Terrible WAi,Kis1a still having the negative, and, although using substantially the same argument as before, yet their numbers were un- broken. The three men at once began preparations on the affirmative to meet the team of Michigan. They prepared them- selves thoroughly, showing great originality in their argument. Brannum, in Chapel, on the day of their departure for Ann Arbor, characterized them as The Austere and Terrible Walker, the 'tYoung and Logical Perrillf' the Brilliant and Handsome Holland. As their preparation progressed Walker showed evident signs of being still more terrible, Perrill of being still more logical, and Holland of being still more bril- liant. It is a fact of history that they were declared defeated . T . -MT- -,l 'V - lv, ' 1' j .. A n.T'2'4-.. '- ' ' ,if- .A ---g , X -'-..:'f -. ,,-,f . , 1 --.-. bi- .N 5 -qi-?-fgffii i'-:Q AQ : ,' iii i' T? 3-1 1-:, kv-- ga , ee? gif R 1 'QA ' - . 1 2 Pima!! Il ML Ma gix ,'l TVvn.. , tl r '11 wy f -rf 'M ill-l f .- ' rf lu til I'lm'll!llJL 7 'H d with iv ygfg .:i ff' tl A AE?-K W X .1-Y! ,filth X Jil 2. W , JE ,. T -- H. Y.. h,.....,,,- . - ..Y.:.f--.4 -1' '- ig' Youthful and Logical PERRILL 'zzz Wig? , f iff l I 1 HIL X I 'I ,4. at lit It by . ter -. .V i '. 'Qi , Brilliant and I-Iniiclsome HOLLAND at Ann Arbor, but it is a fact that the Ann Arborites and the people of the University both declared they had not had such a debate for years. and one of the judges said, as he handed in his decision: 1 have given my vote for the Michigan team, but you tell them they have nothing to boast. The strength of the team in their appear- ance on the platform, in their excellent choice of English and in the forcibleness and clearness of their argument, were manifest from the first. Garrett was proud of them, is proud of them, and will be proud of them henceforth and forevermore. A DREAM THAT WAS NOT A DREAM I had a dream which was not all a dre I arose from my cot at midnight, Drew aside the curtain, and Gazed adown the back-yard fence Where seven cats as black as tar Were seated in a row. am. Their eyes did glare like molten balls, And as I gazed, those cats did give A low and grewsome yowl. The night was dark and awfulg The world seemed full of gloom- Then suddenly as if by fire! ! !! Those cats were all consumed. iii ir Pls 21 if 24 YF For many days that vision strange I pondered in my heartg Then hastened to a fellow boarder My secret to impart. That's no dream, exclaimed my friend fWith the accent on the dream J , Such things often prove quite true, However strange they seem? 'tl can solve the mystery-you Will not think 1,111 rash- For well you know that following morn We breakfasted on-hash! i ALL All is not lost, my child! Although your childhood toys May broken lieg the joys That once your mind beguiled Have Hed: and you be left In bitterness bereft. Count not thy loss-full soon Thou'lt find Love's precious boon. All is not lost, my child! All is not lost, my child! Though trusted friends may leave Your plundered heart to grieve In gloom where beauty smiled. 'Tis folly to lose hope, IS NOT LQST Or long in darkness grope. In some deep friendship true, Thou'lt find thy life anew. All is not lost, my child! All is not lost, my child! Though Life's loved ones lie dead, And on thy wintered head The snows of age are piled. The soul is lost that fearsg So check thy blinding tears. Death took thy friends away To give them back some day. All is not lost, my child. J. Wnsmsv HOLLAND. , HECK HALL Old Heck's the pride of all the Bibs, So airy, light and warmg We thank the Lord that we are here, And revel in her charm. We are the only men in school Who have the lake-shore viewg We and our brothers in S. S. Are of the chosen few. Aristocrats in Vifillard Hall I-Iave dusty Orringtong The happy, busy Pearson girls Have even less their own. And Chapin is so tucked behind The monstrous Music Hall The pretty girls residing there Can not see out at all. We're favored with the best of folks On Sheridan or the driveg And though we can not sport their tin We somehow live and thrive. And how our boys from year to year, Go out and take the vow, Is more than I can understand From my position now. Old Heck's the pride of all the Bibs, So airy, light and warm. Clean, tidy? Well, don't mention thatg Youill only give alarm. But we will cherish long and clear Fond memories of the placeg And hope to meet her scores of men Up yonder, face to face. W. H. WHITLOCK. Gdin Literary Society Swedish Seminary. Officers. A C. RYLANDER, President. C J. ROSENQUIST, Vice-President. GUSTAF EKSTRAND, Secretary. ALBERT JOHNSON, Treasurer. I-I M. SWAN, Chorister. OTTO CHELLBERG, Chaplain. DAVID K. ENGLUND, Editor Falkenf JOHN A. JOHNSON, Critic N W. BARD, Sergeant-at-Arms. FRANK T. WILSON, ADOLPH LINDSTROM, EDWIN I-IAOLUND, CYRUS LINDQUIST, O. J. SUNDBERG, Members. ,fix AXEL E. ABRAHAM, NATHAN ACKERMAN T. J. ADRIAN, O. R. APPEGREN, S. EDLUND, GIDEON ENGSTROM, C. A. I-IOLNIOREN, DAVID JOHNSON, BERT V. NELSON, EMIL V. NELSON, CLYDE NORDQUIST, ARTHUR PETERSON, NATHANEAL SUNDIN G. B. LARSON, THEODORE MOBERG KARL MALMQUIST, GUSTAF NORDBERG. Norona Literary Society- of the Norwegian-Danish Seminary Officers President JOHN J WANG Vice President - - O ROHR STAFF Secretary - - AUGUST PETERSON Treasurer, - T. M. TALLIFSON Chaplain, - - ARNT ANDERSON Sergeant-at-arms, JOHN CLAUSON Members JOSEPH ANDERSON BERGER WANG EDWARD ERICKSON BERT OAKLAND GOTFRED NELSON RICHARD SEv1N HANS S. HAVER JOHN J. WANG O. ROHR STAFF AUGUST PETERSON T. M. TALLIFSON ARNT ANDERSON JOHN CLAUSON Principal - - REV. NELS E. SIMONSEN A M B D D D 371 CUTS AND GRINDS A RARE COLLECTION ,aim .4 1-fall? ,J-:f'f.,e Animals-Campbell, Lyons. QL4j3lfff 5-35 Birds-Gosling, Swan. fr ' rr 5 121552 Qnffjgc. City improvement-Suhr. Q1--gi ' if College-Perdue. ',f7,g-, W g G Colors-Brown, White. fig jfml ig: 1A,W ig1- Ill-gjef?iji Country-Holland. if , , . 1 , Garments-Bloomer, Shawl. Crude materials-clay, Kettle, Perieei, weed. W-Eftwi dl -sriiijii Occupations-Baker, Brewer, Carver, Clerke, Cook fi? - 'Elf' C- b 1' Fudi Hefner Leatherman Miner m i., .ni e e, ium arer, 1 er, ll , , Miner, Potter, Tyler, wenrer. Peoples-Kafer, Pollock. ' What we do-Gamble. ' 'ft-gfqrf ' 6 M, Miscellaneous-Deuel, Garrett, Hutt, Marsh, Perrill, 4' ,MYM W ' Rinkel, Rinker, Rumohr. lovlglarrop declares himself to be in M H A - W- -iff ,+- Greek Refraineru-McDowell. V E , Prof. B.- Bro, Quinn, I have 5 'U lla , .Eg four absent marks on my books? X, 'def Q, Q' , ef ,LK ,5- Quinn-f'I am havine funerals C554 in I ll Y- f SS ,, e Q 5f.e,5t ifgsf,. sir,'f .rll ' ,f pro e or. .gm gssyffgigl vs- if f You should hear Wood wax elo- iw ff '1 l quent when speaking of Carter Har- Q l .'Xg 2 I 'J 2. g rison's sermon at the Desplaines Q,i'il,l','l' ,L ,,' ' 'l ,V 'EZ V jg I 933' , 'fe Y ' .J I Q Cagipolggliglggtiestion professor 7 ' 5 .. ' - Prof. Rapp- Broi Troxel, be- , lieve that when you were born the Vg Y i t moon was in the form of an interro- gation point. ' Q' FQ, 1 2 G .- . ,l ,A-1. S-L,-J. , gs?.-,i,gE,W::4 :- .. , 1. --gr eg X W 9' ,7 Ear , if are 9 -an 5:25 i3?'-5 2 X Q .-2024 .-:I :N -7 5 , L 7 df '2 2, 7 3 '11 XX ,-1,5-f-3 X43 5- X 7, 'E 1 ,, 'J az'-:Ta U- ' f ' ' .. 3 ,e ,- I - gp s V Wee: if ' it l l ff ee-if ,, df, 1 , , ,L f Amd, if 1' 4, -...-g 'Y gf' Y? 4' Xu , 53? f, Z.-z 'iw I 'rf, . f ' - fir , ,-' , H- na. , 7 'L' 4. - in-'elf mL'm.V - ' ' V YZF-v IiUM'MELL- P1'Of8ES01', we rlidn't have that written in our hooks. Steininger- Doctor, if it's perti- nent, I would like to ask a question. What motive could a young man have in calling on a lady friend three nights in a Week? Dr. Little- Dear me, who can tell ! ! ! Mr. Crumbaker of Garrett Bibli- cal Institute has recently announced that after completing his course of study he will devote the remainder of his life to the rearing and im- provement of the common marsh hay. Mr. C, has been experimenting for a number of years and after many futile attempts has succeeded at last in producing a species of hay that is nearly full-blooded. He ' will furnish clippings to all stu- dents at half price. -Y -- , f5 -it , 1 - M , fr 1.---5 -,,, ,ee - -.S:f?-3-1-sh ? 'r 'AH -'iw ' ' 'N I CHrzIs'rlcNsnN eiiilmiwures an opportunity Kelley said that if we put that in he would tell mamma. Is it any wonder that the paper should say: Rev, C. W. Bragg will preachu? .I. W. Frid, the Great Lecturer. I-Iear him tell of his nerve-harrowing experience, Around the world in three years, on a buck- ing bronchof, ' jgffsefyfmgfyff I f - ' W N N3 it X,fu -A W S- H- ,I '24,- ,..4 ,, - A T. ,. Q. NH' pg, 2 ' or X it 77 f if J +V ip , -- , -I . MZ. ,- . ff ki--.. -. Q' ' ..-A C ,,,,,,, ,.,,nJ, Q - . my may :V X X ' +1 'gli' Wm: I in-:EE unto 'H ' -1 u.,fflwfff, I mfs I :f u 155 322 i X gi ff , N X X X is it XSXGX 1 3 3: PXP ' X 'Y so +L . , Sze? ' 4'3'1'.if' .ie-f r c . :gi- il M ff. ff 351735 - , ,..f. J .43 , H' eff ::'11-it 'wi ifgzf-flmlf-I f ::T?TLiff- - 'E?!47 fi? vi 'f3t'.e x X X .L XX ll' l??595llf',ii ii , J '-1 I :cm'1 '-r, .f K- H 'X . , ,I . ,. yr' - ,c p ,,, -1 ',. ., Q r-1-A 4 ' ., , . '4 41- 6 TA: N-, 5 f- ' - ! Qf51ff1'j2' ,'f v?i1'KJff. .X-'. - ,f -'iggff- 'A 3 .K V- f 1 Q . , Q-wfifds-LQ -x if lywzfy, Pf -' f , V. , '2-wwe? , ,- 44:56 '- .E,i1:fp.f.,.,y ,f f.:q,, - Q hz 3244 f' n ,AA .gmfwf f A M-,Lg A- A ji ' g,gv2 s1f,E Q' 5' ' 4 +,w9 4' N f: 5 'M ,V -1-, ,. , I , 1,3 M 5' .gf Ig' Q , 12 ' 1 'A L H 1. ffl, ww' 'f 6,4 1 if -1 73- gm.. 5,14 if? :V wa X , ' w X, ,M F1 ' ,N - ' 4 ,. Wi n, + f 'QM 1- .q gwu -- 1y,g5f5gs,,1 c X , z , , Q , Q3 91 ,M -:gps-X ff H H - Y ' . 1 'V . ,fi 1 :ixx 151743 X '- , 1 v,. ' -' 41 V ' A . ,, . , . 4 M- p2E.v:,Q 5 f T f-. ' Y K 5- 1,1 2+ uvw gjg Q23 V 1- 153575 fa K, Q, .nfff . ' 4 :V .. 'O : Q-Hg., ., , ,,,,,. ff' 4 - I ' - Nlwigf 'T - -xk:,cz N- fag... ,Aff 5 ilffalfs ,. ,rw . ,X 'f+'1 ' nf .4 H ff ,. ,M XX, Y Q 4 Sm KMA-fm llllllll Illllllll Smmmlmllllllll lllllllllllIllIlllllllllllllllllllllllll IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIM ZIIIII Illllll H15 lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllll -v-g,f5gggfy,- NSEPARABLY connected with the history of the School is the work of its founder and present director, Robert McLean Cumnock. Born 184-l in Ayr, Scotland, edu- cated at Wilbraham Academy, Massachusetts, and in Wesleyan University, Connec- ticut, he came to Northwestern in 1865 as Professor of Rhetoric and Elocution. In 1871, his Alma Mater conferred upon him the degree of Master of Arts, and more recently, Dickinson College has honored him with the title Zittercmafm, lmmzauarum doctor. Since 1868, he has taught in the College of Liberal Arts and in Garrett Biblical Institute. When Annie May Swift Hall was erected in 1878, the first building ever designed and used exclusively for elocutionary purposes in this country, he became director of the new school. In 1881, the first class was graduated from the institution, and since that time 398 students, besides thirty-three post-graduates, have received diplomas. The work was begun on a small scale. In the early eighties, the director alone gave all the class room and private instruction. One assistant was employed and then another, until now there is a faculty of nine members, including the director, an instructor in physical culture, and one in English and Literature, besides six private teachers. The attendance has been increasing steadily until now it numbers 120. Occasionally we hear men belittling the work done in such a school as this as though it were a mere science of ornamentation unfit for men and women with earnest- ness of purpose. Has a man breadth of learning, depth of thought, and keenness of feeling, elocution, combined with physical training, will assist him to express all that there is in learning, all that there is in thought, all that there is in feeling through the channels of taste and beauty. We would put one question to those who are inclined to criticize. Why is it that from time immemorial, wherever, in the forum, in the pulpit, or in the school, has been found a living voice that informs of beauty, traces rugged truth, and gives force and energy to its utterance, there the people throng and crowd? This fact in itself is sufficient reason why vocal and physical expression should rank among the highest departments of education. The School of Oratory aims to develop the ability to interpret literature, to see vividly the life it portrays, and to feel and express the emotions with which it throbs. It aims to develop the whole man-the thinking power, the perceptive power, the intui- tions, the imagination, the emotion, to develop physical expression-the emphasis of the body, the power of the eye, and finally, to train the voice to speak truth in tones clear, simple, sincere, forcible, convincing, and effective-for this is eloquence. To men and women who are in earnest, even though they may never come before the public as readers or as teachers, such a training cannot fail to give a love for the best literature, a wider knowledge of men and their motives, a broader outlook on life, and a keener appreciation of its manifold phases, all of which goes to make up a liberal education. JOHN BARNES, 375 Faculty AGNESS LAW JULIA BETH FARRELL ISABELLA LOVEDALE RALPH BROWNELL DENNIS MAY ET!-IEL NEAL JOSEPHINE FRANCES MCGARRY CORINNE AGNES COHN ANNA GERLS PEASE 376 If ,, , -f' up- ? ' N ' V' ' ,.. ' 'fi 7'fwff',f, ' -, 5 n A , M r'-', 1, 'J 1,5 .- ' 'i,44.., fu, .59-I ax, -, LK NVQ ' -5-, :QQ -,rf . - J -.41 :Q - V ff ' Nlpxff A-lr' V4-f ' .-e3 .wr-V' Mudd -Q I-xii. 5' ,-x lj 'lg-,V'.,4fig.' 15 2'-P' iff-1 - 'V ! We 'N-.ww-. A ,f.,M' i . f-23 . , gfkgx,-x -X, J 'Y' . ., g fwgfl i 'VR x 'QV' 7?'x sill!!! 2 vga., ' T177 I AN vw 5 .24 QW: Q g H-:.f:::2:f 1 , -,Z V WE. . fy 954, 1 .Q ' ' 2.-:zfdifr ' '-f 2 ,-.5 . x:,4g...f MY, 1:-:fm-:.::g:p:rg,Q . -f y .- W1. Mgt W-0, 1 A 'Q fffb-3 A 1 I ,J fr, , W- -V U! jvyzf V 3 f-.S . E' ' 1' V 'V' ' , if: ' T ' E 5 Ay N L5 I r 13 -.,f'-fz:..a2af.w .wav -. '- . ff A - faZj5.3.E.13. . 1 FE T' f . Ii' - 555.141 I V, , f- fi -. . '. . .- ff 5 . , , . .gy-3' I W 1- . ! f ' ,-f' ' 1- .15 ' - :ms -' f ..Z:45 ' -. , f W E ' ,,... , ' - :.,,1- ' A . ' fs Y V- ., ,,,z,,f Zggy- ' -- Syllabus Board ARTHUR L. GATES, ' : Editor CLARION D. HARDY, : . : : Manager Mlss ESTHER I-lARs1-IBARGER M1ss PEARL MAUS Miss EDNA TERRY Miss EMMA MAE MAYNARD MR. HER MR. JOHN BARNES MR. FRANK M. RARIG 378 BERT L. ENO 1 Senior Class Officers. President, : : : MR. CLARION D. HARDY Vice-President, : 1 1 Miss Es'rHER HARSHBARGER Secretary, : 1 . : Miss PEARL MANS Treasurer, : Miss AELSA BAEBENROTH Junior Class Officers. President, MR. HERBERT L. ENO. Vice-President, MR. RALPH SMITH Secretary, Miss JAMESON. Treasurer, Miss ANABEL JOHNSON. 379 Men's Club 1 MR. HERBERT L. ENO MR. 1. C. WHITMORE MR. ARTHUR L. GATES MR. CLARION D. HARDY MR. FRANK M. RARIG MR. ARTHUR JOLLEY MR. RALPH SMITH MR. HERBERT SMITH MR. J. W. REYNOLDS MR. -IOHN BARNES MR. j. C. KLESFIE MR. JAMES PURDY SMITH Z GAEHLET Given for the benefit of University Athletics by the Senior Class of the School of Oratory. The Philosopher, Miss May, - Barbara, Lily, Cecil, - Mr. Finnicurn, Lady Minever, - Florence Hartley, - Lord Minever, Frank Ringwood, NOTE Annie May Swift Hall, March 9, 1904. The Philosopher MR.A. L. GATES Miss LEO SAYERS Barbara . - Miss MARY ERWIN MISS MARY MASTERS - MR. KLESPIE MR. BAILEY Locked In MRS. STEVENS MISS ZEINER Mr. JAMES MR. GATES Owing to the sudden illness of Miss Zeiner. Miss Corinne Cohn took the role of Florence Hartley. 381 Events of the Year junior Party. 'x Miss Baebenroth's Herve Riel. Jax 5 Q Professor Curnnoclds Commencement program. ,099 1 Aglw if Roxy Butler's advent into C. S. O. K ' A Opening reception, Miss Cohn reads t'Madam Butterfly. if li ' I it I Klespie comes back. Miss Jeanette Atwood reads BroWning's A Blot on the 'Scutcheonf' Organization of Men's Club. Hardy does Miles Standish in ten o'clock. Miss Neal dismisses class on time. f J U 1 I I? if N 17 -- , 9 ,. L e f- f K N eo Glass 1- Ul 'JIXYAC ire ry?- Mrs. Pease ditto. Reynolds' inimitable rendering of 'tThe Blind Archerfl Miss Lunt reads Judith and Holofernesf' V fe? me f .V -' , W X . M9 :ffm f- 'wf -rN. A J 5' X Q Ani xg x Mi, 1. 1, '. If 520-t -Tgiev' 40 -Up 30 -30 as ' -10 lv fo 0 o lo '-IG Things We Canlt Understand Miss Dobson's charms. Miss Ashcraft's articulation. Why we shouldn't have a lecture course. Why Miss Honey can't read orations. How Professor Cumnock got his dimple. The elegant demeanor of Mr. Cates. Why the damsels are afraid of Mr. Dennis. Why Miss Neal didn't take it seriously. Why the girls wear hats in lO o'clock. Why Hardy is! If he is! He isn't. Why Mrs. Pease lectures on the marriage relation. Why Miss Hemenway should be so swelled on herself. . ,fm X5 WK. ix s ei j ' i Wm. ,kkggjr It h w av W in -X ease -f s'-4. X fp V g 1 :. N v a 2, ft EN ' Q 7 6' . Q, r 45, ,Cr Q T i 3 i 'i -i X: i 'ea ,W xl.X:.MT W - fa- -.. i - -f i5 p--L I . -i ' Sqrpov Glass lXvbft'Tf,--Nxfxilvtntl V 16' fr Q. GYlLducL'ieA .1 Q, Suggested Fits and Misfits for a Closing Recital Come into the Garden Cataline's Defiance, The Silent Voice, Othello, - - Shylock, - - , Maud, - - - - Marrnion and Douglas, - The Absent Guest, I - Mrs. Browningls Sleep, - - Four Couplets Who is it all of us can see In every place that one can be ? -Sophia. Come, let me take a moment of your time, While I read to you 'That Old Sweetheart of Minef Anatomy I do not care to take: I fear it will me graceful make. -Pearl Mons. 'AI have little hands and feet and Waist And I really think I have good taste. -Eleamm' List. Wouldn't It Jar You The way Miss Tobias leaks conversation in ten o'clock. Jennie's desire for a man. Smith elephantine grace. Miss Baebenroth's tragic deportment. Miss I-Iolms' gift of gab. If the Professor really should bump his head against the wall. Mrs.fSut evlefns' culchah. To see the Zetas' 1oVing-loving- ness. , ro'lra.lrle l0-U6 Qlxerf, Tlte ro lesser' llas bumped ,his head qliaiqsl The vvdll- rL5Y..'.,,. 383 vi - SMITH I. Miss WOOLFE Miss I-IARSHBARGER MR. JOLLEY Miss BOWMAN Miss FRANCIS MR. HARDY Miss PAULSON Klespie. Q1 I I W , t S lil! '.,4'i-- I ,E-in , tv rv, 'I 3' fffilix Mr. Dennis' re- cital face. If. iii twimtlnlnn-mntanmtnmm.m. QOV9 lioyieifig On H22 llaculg ulnlmhil hm fldllllllllll Ilrlmld' There is a young lady named Neal Who at singing did constantly spielg I-ler ambition's to shine ln the opera line. ' Success to the aforesaid Miss Neal. There is a fair maid named Corrinne, Who knows how to take people ing She reads here and there And leaves folks in despair Till they once more can hear this Corrinne. There is a sleek teaeher 'clept Dennis, Each attempt to describe him quite vain is: I-le's so sweet and so shy, Such a dear, oh me eye! And he has such a cordial urbane phiz. There is a gay damsel called Farrell Who's added a ring to her 'pparelg Alas, she must go! Fate has ordained so. There's a shy damsel named McGarry, The cleverest rhymster must tarry And pause for his rhyme: l-le is stumped sure this time. The one Word he can think of is marry. She is young and her name's lsabelleg Alas, there seems little to tell. Her chignon is a fuzz. Shall I say, How you vas? Or politely, I hope you are well? There is a fair lady named Pease Who suffers with this dread disease: We don't want to be bold, But the truth must be told, She talks with such consummate ease. There's a popular teacher, I guess She is Scotch, for her name is Agness. She says 'tairmine for er- Mine: a little Scotch burr But it's his fault, so don't blame Miss Farrell. Must have caught in her pedigree.-Yess. X,x,.,s.,-., ..,..,-sag Not to Be Left Unmentioned- Miss Farre1l's Diamond. l-lardy's Napoleonic mien. Prof. Cumnock's recital smile. Miss I-loughton's adoration of Jolley. Rarig's sense of his ego. Miss Maynard's graft with Prof. Eno's book agent insinuation. Miss l-lorner's smile. The general admiration of Miss Law. Whitmore's blush in gym. class. ,v fl- Q'-S -1 S Q - --f l--- QT- ff fl '- .1lgllm ' ?x f L a- -1 a -QL., Pin fig A QMKYXABYA NXEVWXOA uv vitxtllxg 384 QNX! ll 114, -V 2 T G 0 f Mr. Pease fwith an impressive air, after close scrutiny,-'tMr. Klespie, do I-I ' believe I do-I'm sure I do, see one gray hair extending all the way across your fore- head. Wednesday afternoon, Miss Baebenroth reads Babble and The Littel Minister. john Barnes, the next morning, to Rarig: 'tSay, you know, I dreamed last night that I A A was The Little Minister. I Elocution Glass in the Academyg student to Mr. Gates: 'tMr. Gates, what is a Q K good cure for stage fright? Mr. Gates: Nothing that I know of but a good dose of carbolic acid. Used For The Thousandth Time Age cannot wither her nor custom stale her infinite variety, - - - MRS. STEVENS Why should a man whose blood is warm within, sit like his grandsire, cut in alabaster? - REYNOLDS Now, good digestion wait on appetite and health on both, ---- SNEERER When I said I would die'a bachelor, I did not think I should live till l were married, ENO They say best men are moulded out of faults, ------ SMITH I. Two lovely berries moulded on one stem, - - TERRY and VANDERPOOL She hath never fed of thedainties that are bred in a book, - - - KUI-IIvIsTED O, I could play the woman with mine eyes and braggart with my tongue I-IARsI-IBARGER Let me have men about me that are fat, ----- - GATES Company, villainous company, hath been the spoil of me, GARVER For I am nothing, if not critical, - - - - DENNIS I will wear my heart upon my sleeve for claws to peck at, - TOBIAS I'll put a girdle round about the earth in forty minutes, - - I-IENIENWAY The glass of fashion and the mould of form, the observed of all observers, - JUST The ladies call him sweet, -I ------ IOLLEY Now, by two-headed janus, Nature hath framed strange fellows in her time, SMITH Il. If I chance to talk a little wild, forgive me, : IVIILI-IENING 385 A MOST ELOCUTIONARY STUDY THE FAMINE I Arranged for pantoinirnel lRead and ponder well, all ye who have anibitionsj I-Iark! she said, ' Hiring left hand to breast, carry right arin ont toward Nokoinis, as if silencing herj I hear a rushing, Hear a roaring and a rushing, LSlowly bring right arvn toward breast, tnrn head to left, and incline it toward right, as if listeningj Hear the falls of Minnehaha Calling to me from a distance! LC'lasp hands in great joy on breast,' expression of delight upon facej UNO, my child! said old Nokomis, 'Tis the night-wind in the pine-trees! LNow suggest Nokoonis, who shall talk from the lefty look down, slowly shaking head, expression of pity on face.J Look! she saidg I see my father LOlasp hands upon the word look, then extend both arins, to right, toward the father, head rnoving back,' an expression of lone and longing npon the facej Standing lonely at his doorway, LClasp hand and bring thein to breast, head inooing forwardj Beckoning to me from his Wigwam LExtend right arin toward fatherj In the land of the Dacotahs! lSway forward, bring right hand np, as if shading eyes: eye fixed upon imaginary fatherj Ah! said she, the eyes of Pauguk Glare upon me in the darkness, fStart back in terror, throwing ont both arins in repnlsion, as if wardl ing off the spiritg body inooing back toward left, eyes to right and fixed npon spirit, expression of terror on face.j I can feel his icy fingers Clasping mine amid the darkness! LPlace right foot back of left, and cronch as low as possible, bending both kneesg clntch breast connnlsioely with both handsg expression of wild horror upon faced Hiawatha! EStart forward, throwing ont both arrns in wild terror and appealj Hiawatha! Uieel backwards, throwing np arms in despair and clutching headj LNOTE.-This is taken, Without revision and without extra annotation, from a book published in good faith in 1891.1 386 I GRAVY X FTER many days of weary struggle with a dismal future, I tucked a C. S. O, cata- logue under my arm and resolved to Cum nock at Annie May Swift Hall. As I entered, the daintiness Within suggested a Love dale, but when I glanced at a paper on the door and read the Law, I began to Neal, fearing my name might be Dennis. Then I discovered a large Auditorium beyond, where nodded a bunch of sweet Pease in a Cohn-like Vase, with the little fairy lVIcGarry standing to guard them. Said I, A spot so Fair 'll make life sweet, and I entered. There sat Fitz-James and Roderick, the Second, indulging in some crisp, new remarks: In order to become a natural speaker, you must be up to the facts, my dear young peo- ple. Now, as I do not feel very 'gay and animated' this morning, I will render a bit of 'pathos' with every inflection perfectly adjusted. 'Lady Clare Vere De Vere,' with hair like 'The Raven,' was visiting 'Old Chums' in 'South Carolina' and 'Massachusetts.' One morning, while 'Drifting' by 'The Brook- side,' she heard 'Ye Mariners of England' singing 'Long for Homef 'The South Wind and the Sun' seemed to tell her to go back to the 'Old Folks.' So she bid an 'abrupt and startling' adieu to 'Aaron Burr and Mary Scudder' and started home in company with 'Romeo and .Iuliet.' Romeo stopped over to see the 'Burial of Moses,' and Juliet went on to the 'Marytrdorn of Joan of Arc,' so 'Lady Clare' became a 'Book Canvasser.' 'A Critical Situation,' surely, but 'For a' That and a' That' she could only think and 'Dream' of 'Eugene Aram,' her loving father. This being an 'Incentive to Duty,' she was inspired by 'lVIary's Night Ride' to return in the 'Low-Backed Car' to her home among the 'Brushwood' and hear once more 'The Charcoal Man' and see again 'The Old Clock on the Stair,' and hear 'Little Dombey' tell 'Moth-er's Dream.' Ach, Liber! How happy she was! I-Ier voice rang out like the 'Three Bells.' Yet there was a 'Lost Chord' in her life and she longed for an 'Idol' on a 'Rainy Day.' She glanced down the 'Subscrip- tion List' and found the name 'Lochinvarf How musical to her ear! Not being able to reach him 'By Telephonef she told her little 'song' in 'Her Letter'-said she had never had 'A Similar Case' He immediately sent 'An Order for a Picture,' decided not to wait for any 'Courtin', presented his 'Petition' at 'Her First Appearance' and she said 'Imph-m.' He asked pa-pa and pa-pa said, 'Ye Vagabonds !' The greatest happiness in life is the successful pursuit of a worthy object, ' and referred them to 'The Widow Malone? However, 'Cupid SWallowed,' they started on life's journey on 'The One-Hoss Shay' like 'Two Runawaysf intending to see everything 'Bounding the United States,' and also visit 'William Tell Among the Mountains.' On their way, they saw 'Evangeline on the Prairie' watching the 'Kye Come Hame.' Then came the news of 'The Revolu- tionary Rising' and of 'The Charge of the Light Brigade' Being filled with patriotism, he became a 'Picket Guard' and was killed in 'The Battle of Ivry.' 'Lady Clare Vere De Vere,' 'The Volunteer's Wife,' wishing to drown her sorrow, sailed on the 'Wintry Sea,' and in 'The Wreck of the Hesperus' was washed ashore by the 'High Tide on the Coast of Lincolnshire? So the sad tale ended, like a Funeral Hymn , the class, with tear-stained faces, silently one by one, left the room, to weep alone over this Romance of a Rose. They had learned one of life's great lessons. ESTHER EMOGENE HARSHBARGER. 387 O Connell Webster could address a 2' bench of judges: Everett could charm collegeg Choate could delude a lU1'Y3 and Tom Corwin could hold the mob in his right hand. The wonder about O'Con- nell was that he could out-talk Corwin .... . I know what was the majesty of Websterg know what it Was to melt under the magnet- ism of Henry Clay: l have seen eloquence in lilgenjron logic of Cal- 388 127' X Elucidated X ' J Z 'Rn- effax' MQ? bf .-X ,ilf y X ,o A hill 1 was WF X232 4622 A5 KY' f 5 ,VZ tv nj Q ll ' a C f ay YQ 5 'I f 'ff fifgrif' lMlif'.? A W X f ' lil !! y , I' f Q f ff Q. QE! . -, ff V Al g but all of these men never surpassed and no one of them ever equaled the great Scotchman-f Cumnock. Prof. Cumnock in ten o'clock tapproximate temperature outside, 5 degrees belowj: Now, young people, young people, when you go out of this building, keep your mouths shut. QA little laterj: lf it isn't warm in your room, go down below where it is warmer. Reynolds treading in ten o'clockj: When stars are in the silentsky, Then most l pine for thee. Prof.-K' Now, the only trouble with this young man is that he hasn't talked it. Miss l-larshbarger and Mr. B. at the cate. Mr. B. orders from a French menu card. Five minutes later the waiter appears with a plate of onions. Dr. Curnnock announces in class that his best readers have been young ladies. Mr. Rarig leaves the class. l wonder why Prof. C- has fitted the building with electric bells. -l-lushl Peace, be still ! Isn't it strange that Eleanor just cawn't express herself in class ? I-lear The Green Fields of Virginia sung by the Looney Phonograph Company. Prof. Cumnock-reading New Testament from memory-1' Behold, the fowls of the air. they sew not neither do they spin. D H Q .QR , 1951- Ze 12 Mr ns yi. W ti: .jimi 'gl bg-517 2 'a , , gy cgi T W ,-, M' Q A' - H- i -' . h A ut UPT0'l'llBf'qc1'5 1- A L I 389 V ZGIIIIZIDZIIQQ l:With a thousand tender apologies to Edgar Allen Poe and his Annabel Leej It seems to me ages and ages ago, In a far away isle of the sea, That a maiden lived, whom good men know By the cognomen, Cannabaleeg And this maid she developed at very first sight A consuming love for me. Now, I was a weathered old missionaree, In this far away isle of the sea, But I loved this maid with a righteous love, My perishing Cannabaleeg In fact, my affection grew deeply and strongly Attached to this Cannabalee. Which was probably reason enough, I trow, In this far away isle of the sea, That a tender burst of affection warmed My amorous Cannabaleeg So that she opened her pearly teeth And gulped me down with gleeg I was sorry for her,-if I'd known it be- fore, I'd have offered a Ripan or three. The angels, not so happy in heaven, Went pitying her, not me. For they know what a tough old nut she'd got In this far away isle of the sea. But she smiled a satisfied smile as she thought How sweet it was of me. But her love he was tougher by far than the loves She had munched upon previously, Of those who had gone before meg And neither the angels in heaven above, Nor demons down under the sea, Can ever dissever my soul from a soul So strongly attached to me. And the moon, it beams, and beams, and beams, But it macht uichls aus mit she, For she closes her eyes and wiggles and sighs And thinks of her missionaree. And all the night-tide, she has pains in- side, Real, genuine, soul-stirring pains inside, But I can't help it, you see- She's so strangely attached to me. A. L, GATES. D3 H :FE Dream of The Forest of .Wrden HE scene of this dream, as it came to me, was at the edge of a dark old forest. Great vines hung from the ancient giants of the wood, and masses of moss clung like gigantic beards to their hoary trunks. The century-old shadows that crowded each other under the trees were only occasionally pierced by a sunbeam. The place was near the sea, blue and sparkling in the light of the morning sun, and dotted with islands that were crowded with the temples and shrines of the ancient gods. Through the wood ilowed a river, which drew its peaceful length from the deep shades of its woody bowers, to mingle its inland calm with the ceaseless music of the waves. Everywhere might be seen the inhabitants of this ancient country. On the sand of the seashore a company of fairies were keeping time with their tiny feet, to the tripping music of the Waves. Gliding down the river was a boat made of flowers interwoven with sunbeams caught in the net of a cunning youth named Fancy. Never did mortal behold a merrier crew! Fancy, jauntily wearing his rainbow mantle, sat at the helm and guided the holiday craft, while nymphs of the wood blew soft airs from pipes made of willow-bark, and naiads of the river sprinkled the air with the dulcet notes of their reedy music. As the prow of the boat touched the shore, the occupants disembarked and joined the dancers on the sand, all singing the while a song of invitation to the other creatures of earth and sky and sea: Mermaids fair and mermen bold Nymphs and naiads, elfs and gods, Come and join our holidayg Time has come, at last, for playg Tripping o'er these sands of gold, On dull Care we'll pile the sods, Join with us in jollity. And right merrily trip away. Many others at once joined the merry throng. Ancient gods of the sea came, clad in brightest sea-weed. Mermaids, robed in mother-of-pearl, lifted their heads above the waves, and with Howing locks and glistening arms, kept time to the stepping of the dancers. ln the meantime, Fancy had been busy with his golden spade, digging a grave in the sand. His task completed, he blew his trumpet a.nd waved his many-colored wand, whereupon two fairies, Music and her mate, the Dance, lifted a flower-covered coihin and lowered it into the grave. Everyone at once began to pelt the grave with fl r . V owe s ery soon it was filled with all manner of sweet blossoms, plucked at sunrise from many a far-off mountain and valley and meadow. Then, in a circle, all joined in singing: Dead is Care, Glad are we- Joy at last is freeg Buried deep in the sand, Nevermore he'll vex this land. From far away We've come to-day, From mountain, wood, and glen: From sea and cloud We've brought this shroud To bury the foe of men, We such work Will never shirk While Fancy is our kingg We'll do his wist Where'er our 'tryst May us together bring. Our home is in the morning cloud, We ride upon the windg We speak in voice of thunder loud, And guide the tempest blind. This charmed time is on the wane, We must away. away To mountain torrent, mist, and rain, Therein to dwell alway. Then away, away through space We flee, Into the heart of the dayg Over mountain and prairie and sparkling sea, Away, away, away. F. M. RARIG. SF 1, if Jlixveningrgllmlvocezttion 3 CQQB Soft breath of evening ateanng 'Ctbrougb the ClO5il1Q 1331165 of the UHQQ Ubin btrofnotea far eff faotng, 1In the glooms of the wooolano WHQQ waves' mellow music murmuring wn the yellow Banos belovog 'white oreamsclouos o'er me orifting, 'JLeo bp tbe voinos that blowg lights abffttng, facing, oging ffOm earth HUD 5RQ H110 SCH,- 16806 H that is eternal Deep in tbe beaft of 1116. W ftgbta ano abaoowa futttng over tbe orlfting, shifting sea, Zlno oaQ's oeparting glory 'Quilt O11 U36 shy fOlT INCQ- 0 winos ano btwa ano wooolano, Elno eartb ano shy ano sea- 'JLHIZC 3116 V000 HUG Win me, :mane me a ebtlo of tbeez -F, M. RARIG. 392 SCIJFQOL J M USIC .. 1, LUR - Syllabus Board jorm M. ROSBOROUGH, - Editor and Business Manager. Associate Editors A KNEELAND CECILE DUMARS HEDWIG BRENNEMAN BERTHA PORTER BERTHA R. I-IARDIN HAZEL DEGROFF JENNIE MILLAR GRACE HOPWOOD PAM NOBLE BERTHA MCCORD x,,,.,-s,Q.. -..,s.,--,fx BERTHA R. I-IARDIN. AMELIA I-IOFF. 395 JOHN M. ROSBOROUGH. JO!-iN'G.wSEELY - 1 A , . We ' 'W -19- f 1 .,,. , ' 'wi f .f ,N ,f 1 I President, - Vice-President, - Secretary and Treasu rer, JESSIE LOIS BrOwN CLARA LINDSAY GURNEE BERTHA CLENDENIN MCCORD ROBERT NICHOLAS GRACE Junior Gfficers Members WILLIAM PETRIE CHRISTY GRACE BELLE HOFWOOD WALTER EDMUND SQUIRE GRACE HOPWOOD BERTHA MCCORD JESSIE BROWN MYRTA MCKEAN DENNIS WILLIAM ELMER KEETON MARY LOUISE WATERBURY BERTHA BELLE PORTER if f 'I' IT1. I 1 I I LS .III I I I f If -- 'I In? .' .: -, .fy President, Vice-President, - Secretary and Treasurer, LURA MARY BAILEY FLORENCE VIRTINE FROST LURA KNEELAND JENNIE MAE MILLAR HAZEL VIRGINIA SEERLEY LENA WARD MARY BILLINGS TAYLOR ESTHER JANE ARMSTRONG GEORCE LEONARD APFELBACH MORA MURDOCK HELEN LOUISE SNYDER Sophomore Officers Sophomore Class CECILE AINSWORTH DUMARS GRACE GARRETI' MARY STEVENSON MARSHALL MILDRED GATES NICHOLS RUBY HAZZARD STACEY RACHEL GETYY WILLIAMS LUCY RICHARDSON MILDRED HAWKS ADOLPH GUSTAVUS BOCK ELSIE HELEN ORCHARD CAROLINE MOCROET FLORENCE FROST MARY MARSHALL RACHEL WILLIAMS 1-IATTIE LOUISE FISHER NONA EVA HIEBENTI-IAL JULIA SHELDON MARSHALL SUZANNE HASSIE PRIGMORE MABEL I-IARRIET SURRY NINA MAY WOODRUFF WALTER ALLEN STULTS FRANCES MEREDITH EDWARD FRANKLIN EILERT ESTHER CHRISTINE I-IINMAN GRACE MAY LOOMIS THERESA IRENE CARSON ROSE META HUMMEL Freshman Officers I LILLIE ECKERT, - - - - President ROLLA M. ANDREWS, - - Vice-President GRACE HARRIET WOOD, - Secretary and Treasurer ROLLA M. ANDREWS FLORENCE BERNICE BRIGGS HAZEL LORINE DEGROEF MRS. ARTHUR GIBSON ' I-IANNAH MARION JERMUNDSON MARGUERITE DOLTON LEWIS RAYMOND SPARKS MOREORD NORMA VERA OWEN MAE ISABEL SMITH ELIZABETH THOM Freshman Class STELLA LYDA BENSON MARVENE GOLDIE CAMPBELL LILLIE ECKERT AGNES JANE I-IANMER ALICE LUCILE KENNEDY BESS LINDER ANNIE VAIL MCBRIDE VIOLA EMMA PAULUS FRANCES ELLEN SBALDING HEDWIG BRENNEMAN NINA LEE COMES EMILY HENRIETTA GREENMAN HELEN RUTI-I JACKSON LULU MABEL LAWRENCE ISABEL MABIN PAM NOBLE BERTHA HELEN S!-IEEAN LUCILE STRANG LOTTIE EVA WALL ETHEL BLANC!-IE WEAVER GRACE I-IARRIET WOOD .I el 397 Leaves from a Music Hall Diary REVIEW of events the past year or so shows outside concerts innumerable in Chi- cago, a surprising number of notable affairs distinctively under the auspices of the School of Music. Looking over our calendar to see what treats have been avail- able, say, to a second year student at the close of the first semester of his second year, we find in the first place nine recitals of chamber music. Seven of these were by our own University String Quartette, under the direction of Prof. Harold E. Knapp. One was given by the celebrated Kneisel Quartette of Boston, the other by four wood wind musicians from the Chicago Orchestra, who, with Prof. Arne Oldberg at the piano, gave the Bee- thoven and Herzogenberg Quintettes, Mr. De Mare also giving a group of horn solos. In one concert of this series, Prof. Oldberg's Quintette in B minor was given its first public hearing, and in another Prof. Coe played the piano part in the Caesar Franck Quintette. In the concerts of the Evanston Musical Club, directed by Dean Lutkin, have been heard singers of the nrst rank only, and among them those of such repute as Genevieve Clark Wilson, Muriel Foster, Glenn Hall, Theodore Van Yorx, William Howland and Guillam Miles. Many students have shared in the production of these choral works: Han- del's Messiahg Coleridge-Taylor's f'Death of Minnehahawg Dvorak's Stabat Materg the iirst public production of Alice Brand, a recent cantata from the pen of Mr. Alfred G. Wathall, of the facultyg and not the least notable, the first production in this part of the country of Elgar's t'Caractacus, an involved work of great dimensions, this once in Evanston and once in St. Louis. The School of Music, as well as the musical clubs con- cerned, was honored in the awards of prizes by the St. Louis Exposition, one of thirty- five hundred dollars to the Evanston chorus, one of one thousand dollars to the Ravens- wood chorus, both of which are directed by Dr. Lutkin, our Dean. We are all fresh from the experience of the last concert, when the unusually inter- esting features were Miss Muriel Foster, the English contralto, in the Elgar Sea Songs, with orchestral accompaniment, and Prof. Arne Oldberg, at the piano, giving his latest work, the brilliant and original piano concerto, which created so enthusiastic and so pro- found an impression. Elgar's t'King Olaf is announced for the coming concert. Closely following this concert came that of the Pittsburg Orchestra, with Mr. Emil Pauer as conductor and as piano soloist. The Beethoven Egmont Overture and the E flat Concerto were played, and Tschaikowski's Patheteque Symphony and NVagner's Vorspiel to Die Meistersingerf' Students were previously made more familiar with three of these works through the informal rehearsal of the concerto by Mrs. Mabel Dunn- Madsen, a graduate and a former faculty member, and four hand arrangements of the Tschaikowski and Wagner numbers played by Mrs. Elizabeth Raymond Woodward, Prof. Arne Oldberg, and Dr. Lutkin, all of the faculty. In the series of Artists' Recitals, Faculty Recitals, and other supplementary concerts, have been heard such vocalists as Miss Elizabeth Peichert Schiller, Mrs. Eleanor Kirk- ham, Muriel Foster, Gustav Holmquist and Guillarn Miles, each in individual recitals. Other solo recitals have been given by Mr. Leopold Kramer, violin, Mr. Lewis R. Black- man Cfacultyi, violing Mr. Day Williams tfacultyjj 'cellog Miss Winifred Hull Cfacultyl, and Miss Augusta Cottlow, pianists. At different times supplementary numbers have been given by Mr. De Mare, French horng Mr. Franz Wagner, 'cellog Mr. Henry Scheld, violin, Miss Margaret Cameron ffacultyb, and Mrs. Elizabeth Raymond Woodward tfacultyj, pianistsg and Mrs. Lilian French Read, Mrs. Eleanor Kirkham ffacultyj, and Dr. Williams, vocalists. Not to be forgotten is the work of Mrs. Nina Shumway Knapp as accompanist on various occasions. Students are looking forward to Prof. Coe's again giving her musical setting of Longfellow's Hiawatha, for reader and piano, this time as a part of the regular school series. Though not a Music School concert, the Guilmant organ recital was a memorable event here in Evanston, attended widely by music students. Last spring we were favored by Prof. Stanley of Ann Arbor with his lecture of rare historical interest, Venetian Opera of the 17th Century, illustrated with stereopticon views. Many signiiicant things were brought to light of the times and works of Fal- coniere, Rontani, Caecini, Monteverde, and Cesti. Misses Beebe and Hazelton assisted with vocal excerpts. Besides the series of Wagner lectures in our regular History Course, Prof. Coe gave a special and extra lecture on Parsifal before the 'fParsifal sea- son this year in Chicago. The original works in larger forms from the pens of our faculty, written or first produced during this period, include Prof. Coeis melodrama fpianol, Hiawatha , Mr. Alfred Wathall's cantata, Alice Brand g a more recent religious work entitled, The Martyrdom of St. Vincentf' and a suite for orchestrag and Prof. Oldberg's Quintette fpianoi, a most significant work, and the recently heard piano Concerto. X n-Y Gym- Wm, Mm 6Nr.'? 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M '1 .1 P f -X , .f f , V .ff , XX., -Uv ..,, f Q , I Sa, 1' Y ' v r 'fx ' 1 x. f ' . 'Q . 2' 'lf 4' 1 5 1. 1 4,7 I I fl 'w ' 2 1 f 2?-F x 9' , w .. ...KF-fpz 1 1 A I N3 ARTHUR HERBERT WILDE, Ph. D sup, GNL Foster Debate Inter-Academic Debating Team B W. G. LEATHERS C. P. GREEN ' W. G. KING Prize of 540.00 given by George A. Foster, A. B., Evanston, Illinois, Ztififfj' H ' ' ff ' AM9 ' ff' ZVWWKW ' I I 1: f ' '91 Wi f' W A, Q , if 1 ,, az if 'gif' f any 4, QM , Q-M 2 wf. Inter-Society Gratorial Contest First prize, ---- 525.00 La..Ieune Churcher Forrey of Illinae. Second prize, ---- 515.00 W. C. Wermuth, Jr., of Philomathia. Prizes given by James P. Grier, A. M., Evanston, Illinois. 402 MELISSAQ A TALE OF THE SEA Awarded Class of '05 prize of :BIO for the Best Literary Production Iixnfr I. Comely and tall was Melissa, Though timid, yet openly frank, Like the Driads, or nymphs of the river. Or Narcissus which droops from the bank. 'Twas many a year since the illefated voyage When the Concord had settled to rest. Which bore her good mother and father Beneath the serene ocean's breast. 'Twas then a kind mariner found her, And, thwarting the billows amain, Snatched from a wat'ry enclosure His daughter, should heaven so deign. Since then the small cot of the seaman. With its old-fashioned garden and wall, With its thatches and neat curtained windows, Has been blessed with Melissafs sweet call. A brother she had in young Christy, Whose sire was the man of the sea. Who brought home the tempest-tossed maiden To enlarge his wee family of three. But now that wee family is sundered, For the sire in the church-yard now rests, And' Christy for years has been sailing The breakers' white, foam-covered crests. PART II. The Northland steamed into the harbor, Proudly iiying her colors asterug The colors of bonny old England, Then thc Uuion's bold ensign in turn. Melissa stood anxiously waiting As the traveler steamed up the bay: 'Mid cheers from the decks and the landings, The graceful l1ull came to the way. The captain gave orders to helmsman, And bells for the engines to slow, But the daring young seaman of twenty Sprang to the landing below! For the sailor-'s quick eye was arrested By the kerchief and eyes of the maid, As the watclrs which sweep the horizon And by a distress sign is staid. A family of brother and sister, Of guardian-lover and charge, Was united that moment with kisses, For love would each spirit enlarge. l'.x1rr III. The Northland steamed out of the harborg Her colors had dipped a farewell: The long streaks on the eastern horizon A stormy night seemed to foretell. Melissa and Christy still lingered At the stern as the sun sank from sight, Till the sea and the sky ran together And the evening sank into nightg For their souls had long yearned for each other, And their hearts had long beaten as one, And now gentle love found expression As sweetly as it had begun. And Christy, the noble young guardian, With tenderness pure as devotion In sorrow, was blessed with the presence Of sympathy deep as the ocean. The wind soon screamed in its fury, And turbulent billows soon rolled With a wild and a fearful commotion And their wonted terrors untold. The night was such. with its blackness, As make mariners tremble and shake, For, laden with death and destruction, Creation's whole frame seemed to shake. The captain, alone in his cabin, Fought out the first watch of the night: The young mate held his fort on the lookout. On the storm-swept and spray-covered height. The storm now broke full in its fury, And the path-finder lumbered and rolled, Adrift 'mid the wild, driving tempest, Hesigned to a fate still untold. The captain, a man of decision, Though hopeful as hopeless could be, Choosing a meager alternative, Cried. Down with boats! Put to sea 1 Wan hope seized the staunch, weathered sailors, For the boats were all gone save so few That only perchance might the weak ones Be launched, of that numeious crew. Melissa was borne by her saviors Away toward the storm-harassed coast: The Northland plunged on toward destruction, And Christy still clung to his post. PART IV. On the wild and bleak coast of New England, As a sentry, a lighthouse stands guardg It stands as a beacon of warning, The marches of death to retard. 'Tis here the venerable keeper, Of three score and ten or more, Attends to his oflice of mercy, And defies the bold waves when they roar. Assisting in these goodly duties Is a daughter, so Winsome and fair That blue--jackets, dshers, and sailors Esteem her a creature of prayer. Courageous, yet sweet a11d endearing Is Melissa, the light-keeper's maid, Though three decades have passed since the Northland In her moss-covered crypt has been laid. Steadily sadness has entered The luminous depths of her eyes, And left a sweet, pensive demeanor Intact 'mid an ocean of sighs. The curse of her star has long staid her, And bound her with love to the SGH, But the wind and the waves weep for pity, And swear that her love shall be free. PART V. 'Twas late in the month of November. In the year when the comet appeared, When a storm-blown and ocean-tossed wan- derer, In his bark, toward the rocky light steered. For many long years had he wandered Over oceans and continents wide, In vain hope of finding some loved one, Or traces of one, ere he died. And here in the northern Atlantic His heart but throbbed deeper with woe. And sad recollections crept o'er him, Thoughts of the bright long With neither direction nor compass, Wrecked and lost, save the gleam he could see, Life found its hope in the lighthouse, And rest sought the floor of the sea. For again was a family united, And the tales of a lifetime retold: Again two sweet spirits expanded, As the buds of the lily untold. Old, gracious, blessed, and alone. Melissa and Christy still live. As brother and sister light-keepers, And service to others still give. W. G. Lnxrlinizs. Philomathia Literary Society Organized 1868 Officers President, - - E. F. NUTTALL Vice-President, P. M. ARMSTRONG Secretary, - C. E. BUFFETT Treasurer, - W. C. WERMUTH Chaplain, - J. E. DEAN Sergeant-at-Arms, - A. W. WERMUTI-I Pianist, - - H. L. GOODRICH Chorister, - R. E. HANNEMAN Ambassador, J. H. VOJE Critic, ---- H. E. RUSSELL Alumni in Universitate JOHN BARNES F. L. BINDHAMMER J. T. NUTTALL HOMER LAYMAN O. ASPEGREN C. R. FOLLETI' C. J. JOHNSON J. R. CI-IENVRONT W E ROLOFF J. F. WOLFF C. H. SCI-IREIBER S W SMITH I. J. INGRAI-IAM C. M. TAYLOR Members F. M. ARMSTRONG C. E. BUFFETT L. W. FISHER J. W. GLASGOW R. E. HANNEMAN R. P. JONES B. KIRKPATRICK R. C. LAMKE A. A. REES H. V. A. TRACY D. SJUNNESSON J. F. SWARTZ J. W. BUNCH J. E. DEAN E. I. RUDOLPH J. W. BANKSON H. L. GOODRICH G. HUBBARD H. F. RABE J. O. JACKSON I-I. H. POUND W. A. SWIM C. T. TRAVIS E. F. NUTTALL J. H. VOJE W. C. WERMUTI-I A. W. WERMUTH J. LOOMIS W. C. WILSON C. O. SHEPARD Yell Agomen! Dirkomeiil Rip! Ray! Rah! Philo! Philo! Sizzl Boom! Bah! Motto l,f1lfrn' Ulllllfll l'I'7lCl'f. Colors Red and White 404 Pieria Literary Society Organized 1902 Officers NELLIE BAKER, - President. MELISSA FOSTER, - Vice-President. ELEANOR POOLEY, - Secretary. MARY MORSE, - Treasurer. NELLE CLAY, - Sergeant-at-Arms. VAN S. LINDSLEY, - Ambassador. CLARA BAKER ANNA DUNCAN, - Chaplain. Alumnae in Universitate DORA JONES LUCRETIA DANIELS CORA KERCI-IER MARION NORRIS GRACE MOORE ELEANOR BEATON Members MARY MORSE NELLIE BAKER VAN S. LINDSLEY MELISSA FOSTER ANNA DUNCAN MARY TROTTER JEAN FAI-IS ELEANOR POOLEY NELLE CLAY LUCY RUTLEDGE ANNA LEHLE LAURA GALLOWAY ELSIE PETERSON EDITH ELDEN BEATRICE BREWER EVA MONROE LOUISE BARNES GERTRUDE STUART GRACE GARRETF Yell Rah! Rah! Rah! Si! Na! Mal Pie! Pi-e! Pi-e-ri-a. Motto ' fNo Steps Backward . Colors Canary and Old Rose. 406 V Euphronia Literary Society Organized 1872 Officers President, - - RITZE MULDER Vioe-President, FRED J. STEINHILBER Secretary, - NORTON A. Booz A Treasurer, LOUIS AUTEN Assistant Treasurer, I - RAY F. LYHOTE Chorister, - HORACE M. BUCKLEY Ambassador A - W. JOSEPH HARRIS Chaplain, - - HORACE M. BUCKLEY Sergeant-at-Arms, - JOHN C. BURG Critic, - - - - - - - E. F. BIDDLE Alumni in Universitate HENRY FEHRMAN - FRANK M. RARIG O. S. HUBBART W. O. MATTHEW I. I. SCOTT R. O. WARRINGTON E. E. ANDERSON E. L. LYON E. A. HARTMAN J. G. MAMER A. B. SOWERS T. A. O'l-TERRELL E. A. LEMOINE L. R. HORTON S. M. KANAGY D. C. HUBBART A. L. REAM l. E. SPRINGER C. E. BEGGS A. E. HARRIS C. A. BRIGGS R. E. FULLER GFP. HOWARD CI-IAS. LYONS D. S. BOGARDUS A. A. HEIST Members W. G. TEGTMEYER J. C. BURG J. W. DEES R. H. CEE J. E. LOCKEY G. C. LEE C. L. CAMPBELL W. J. HARRIS C. F. GREEN J. H. LETTOW R. M. BEITEL LOUIS AUTEN E. H. LANGDON D. B. SYLVESTER F. J. STEINI-IILEER E. M. CRIM C. C. COLLINS S. D. ERWlNE H, R. JONES S. R. TODD Yell Vive La Euphronial Rah! Rah! Rah! Vive La Euphronial Rah! Rah! ' Rah! Vive La Euphronial Vive La Euphronia! Academy! Academy! Rah! Rah Rah! Colors Pink and Lavender Motto Eis' To 1rp6o'l9ev 409 H. M. BUCKLEY J. C. WILLIAMS N. A. Booz RITZE MULDER F. H. JO1-INSON A. D. CROSS R. F. L'HOTE M. E. JAMES A. F. LINES W. T. SPRY Illinae Literary Society Organized 1895 President, : : : CLAUDIA MADDEN Vice-President, LOTTIE WILCOX Secretary, : HAZEL LAWRENCE Treasurer, . : JOSEPHINE LYNCH Chaplain, MABELLE POUTRA Embassador, : : ERMA FLETCHER Sergeant-aut-Arms, : . FLORENCE RALSTON Alumnae in Universitate AMY ONKEN PATTI RODGERS MABEL SHANNON LA VEITA BOYER FRANCES GRAVES BERTHA MCCORD GRACE GREEN RUTH GATES RHODA SEED EDITH CASSIDY LAURA FRANCIS MARGARET WAX EMILY GREENMAN -2 ALICE MONTGOMERY JENNIE WHIPPLE C' WINNIFRED SEIBERTS ELEANOR LEWIS LELIA HARWOOD EMMA PATTEN FANNIE GILLAN ORA DAVENPORT LA JEUNE FORREY GRACE HOPWOOD FANNIE CAMPBELL ORPHA NESBIT RUTH MINIUM FRANCES NORTHRUP NELLE BRUBAKER Members RUTH CADY JOSEPHINE LYNCH FLORENCE RALSTON ERMA FLETCHER LOTTIE WILCOX F LORA DEWEY LAURA SHUMWAY SARA SHORT ELIZABETH CAMPBELL HAZEL HENDERSON MABELLE POUTRA Ye HELEN PATTEN CLAUDIA MADDEN ESTHER TROTTER GRACE STARK HAZEL LAWRENCE LOUISE DOUD HELEN JAMES LYDIA MORGAN JESSIE CAMPBELL Tah-Tit-Tool Tah-Tit-Too! Tah-Tit-TOO! Tahl lllinael Illinael Rah! Rah! Rah! Motto For thought and the power of expression Colors Green and White 410 W S Qs? N A 1 K if Q 5 Q N' y 3 i ijxjv? Q Q f Q2 A I M Q55 w Zetalethea Literary Society Organized 1890 Gfficers President, - - - W. G. KING Vice-President, - R. J. HAMILTON Secretary, - G. W. BARLOW, Treasurer, - - A. C. THOMPSON Chaplain, - - W. G. LEATHERS Critic, - - H. A. WYLDE Ambassador, - - - F. C. HANK . Alumni in Universitate C. L. ARMSTRONG L. A. WATTS GEO. ROCHELEAU C. E. FLETCHER E. S. BRADEN W. J. SHANNON F. M. GIBSON G. S. BROWN R. D. MARSDEN M. MERUBIA H. J. PLAGGE D. M. SIMPSON R. E. MILLER E. S. CORRIE J. A. JOHNSTON D. R. MCGREW N. H. JOHNSON H. M. SWAN . A. H. NASH F. O. POTTER W. R. LESLIE C. W. RAMSHAW H. R. POTTER N. F. SEATON C. N. SEGAR M. E. TAYLOR R. A. WILLSON SHELBY M. HARRISON E. S. ALBRITTON A. E. SHIBLEY Members RALPH T. BICKELL G. W. BARLOW S. BARLOW GEO. C. BAKER J. G. BROTJE H BUSSEY E. F. BOOTH C. M. CORRIE M A. CARROLL G. CRUMBAKER J. W. DADLEY C. M. EDMONDSON R. F. ERNST KENNETH B. FISKE C. G. HOBART F. C. HANK R. J. HAMILTON R E. HULL T. R. JOHNSTON W. G. KING F. G. KELLOG W. G. LEATHERS CHARLES LOWERY G W. LESAR M. O. MILLER L. MURPHY R J. MAHON E. C. MONTGOMERY A. E. MUNYER E. V. NELSON R. E. NICHOL R. T. RICHARDS C. J. SHAEFFER R. E. SMITH E. Z. SUNDIN R C. THOMPSON H. A. WYLDE Yell 'lRah! Rah! Rah Zisl Boom! Bah Zet-a-le! Zet-a-le! Zet-a-le-thi-a. Motto Colors fPer 'nomm igvwfum' Shell Pink and Pale Blue 413 Director, . President, : : Academy Glee Club Secretary and Treasurer, 1 KIRKPATRICK C. 'THOMPSON W. LESAR F. SPARKS A. Booz M. CORRIE BUSSEY L. W. FISHER I-I. JOHNSON ARMSTRONG Members E. I. RUDQLPI-I M. E. JAMES J. C. WILLIAMS I-I. C. BURBANK F. G. KELLOGG C. O. SHEPARD R. BERNARD KLEINSMID : J. C. BURG I-I. L. GOODRICH R. E. LAMKE R. M. CORNING G. C. BAKER G. W. KING G. J. BROTJE The Academy Athletic Association President, - W. C. Wermuth, Jr. Vice-President, - P. T. Hummelgaard Secretary, - - - A. Morris Treasurer, - - Miss Ada Townsend Wearers of the N. A. BASEBALL. TRACK. FOOTBALL. Phelps, H. Bishop lCapt.J, Bell, Wasson, Blair, Schuett, Linthicum CCapt.J, Smith, Wilcox, J. Stewart, A. Bishop, Baker, G. C., Schneider, Steinhilber, H. Bishop lCapt.J, Hodgekins, Scholes, Cross, E. Brown, Atwood, A. Bishop, C. Stewart, Underhill. Atwood, A. Morris. Johnston, This team won every League game and Hamilton, the school received the championship ban- Lavery, ner. Kaywood. GIRLS' BASKETBALL TEAM. Gertrude Smith CMgr.J, Lottie Wilcox CCapt.J, Hazel Earhart, Blanche Portman, Melissa Foster, Flora Dewey lSubstituteJ. 1904. OCTOBER. MARCH. 8 Y. M, C. A. and Y, W. C. A. Recep- 11 The Academy Won the Inter-Aca- tiong to new members. demic Debating championship. 22 Joint meeting of Illinae and Euph- APRIL- I'011ia. 16 Zetalethea's Banquet to Illinae and NOVEMBER. Pieria. 11 Third Year Social and rough house. 23 Zetalethea Oratorical Contest, C. E. 12 Fourth Year Social. Butterfield won first prize. 18 Joint meeting of Pieria and Eu- 2G SYLLABUS appears. phronia. 28 Inter-class and lnter-society track 19 First Year Social. meet, Class '05 and Euphronia DECEMBER. Wlmlefs- 1 First issue of the ACADEMIAN ap- 29 Illinae visited Zetalethea. pears. 7 13 21 1-10. 11 13 14 19 MAY. 15 Euphroniafs Banquet to Illinae and 17 Pieria. Lemoine won Shutterly Oratorical 23 Contest in Euphronia. 1905. Pieria and Illinae gave reception to Philomathia, Euphronia and 4 Zetalethea. JUNE. XXXX Trouble. XXXX 13 14 Illinae won Hrst prize in Inter-So- 21 ciety Oratorical Contest. 27 Class Day. Commencement. Address by Rev. 1,10 Eli P. Bennett of Detroit, Mich. 7 SEPTEMBER. 10-14 We registered. 15 415 Illinae gave sleighing party. Second Year Social and Third Year Thieves appear. Released for thirteen days. JANUARY. Revival of learning. Academy lost Inter-Academic De- bate to University High School. Zetalethea skating party. Zetalethea sleighing party. Illinae sold fudge. ' FEBRUARY. Mid-year Examinations. Pieria sleighing party. Vacation. The end. Young Men's Christian Association Officers President, 3 3 1 l-I. M. BUCKLEY Vice-President, : : . ' - I W- G- KING Recording Secretary, 2 I R. P- JONES Corresponding Secretary, W. G. LEATHERS Treasurer, 2 : C. M. CORRIE Assistant Treasurer, E. F. BOOTH 1 Committee Chairmen Religious Meetings, 1 : 1 G. C. BAKER Bible Study, 1 1 N. A. Booz Missionary, 1 F. J. STEINHILBER Membership, H. A. WYLDE Social, 1 F. G. KELLOGG Finance, 1 : C. M. CORRIE New Students, 1 . l-l. M. BUCKLEY 7 N . . . . Young W omen s Christian Association Officers President, : 1 : ' . : VAN S. LINDSLEY Vice-President, : : : HELEN PATTEN Secretary, 1 1 JOSEPHINE LYNCH Treasurer, MELISSA FOSTER Committee Chairmen Religious Meetings, : : JESSIE CAMPBELL Bible Study, : 1 MARY MORSE Missionary, : LAURA GALLOWAY Finance, 1 MELISSA FOSTER MCFf1b6f'Sl'1iD, NELLIE BAKER Inter-Collegiate, GERTRUDE STUART Look Out, : LOTTIE WILCOX Reception, : : LYDIA MORGAN Board of Control, LAURA GALLOWAY Librarian, 1 : : : NELLE CLAY The Academian Editor, 2 I : : G. L. CAMPBELL A - j RUTH CADY Associate Editors, Z W. C' WERMUTH, Jr. Business Manager, 1 1 2 J. C, BURG Assistant Business Manger, 1 G. W. BARLOW Circulation Manager, 1 . LAURA GALLOWAY Associate Editors Christian Association, 1 : W. C. KING Exchanges, : ' - W. G. LEATHERS Athletics, I I C, G, I-IOBART Alumni, : JESSIE CAMPBELL f E. F. NUTTALL NELLIE BAKER Locals' FLORA DEWEY N. A. Booz 416 ' Santa Catalina Piaria Litcf'1'a'ry Proflluffion RIGHT days are not a rare thing in southern California, and on one of these clear August days, a party of tourists found themselves aboard a steamer on their way to Santa Catalina, a small island in the Pacific Ocean, about thirty miles from the mainland. This island is but a dot in the great ocean, and is no larger than some of the cattle ranches in the Western States. It seems to be of volcanic origin, for it has hills and uplands, scarcely of a sufficient height to be called mountains, nor regular enough to be spoken of as a range. Winding in and out among the scattered trees, dusty, yellow paths are seen leading to the tops of the hills. Along the beach, and clinging to the steep sides of the miniature mountains, are the cottages, hotels, and restaurants which make up the village of Avalon, a favorite resort for tourists and Hshermen. Here the beach, at some places only a few yards wide, at the most not many rods from the hillsides to the sea, and entirely covered with smooth pebbles instead of sand, forms a semi-circle, at one end of which nestles the little town, while at the other end, two huge masses of rock rise abruptly out of the water, forming a natural gateway and appearing like tall, steadfast sentinels jealously guarding one of the gems of this great ocean. For ages, no doubt, the waves have worn away the rocks, little by little, and this natural wonder is the result. Still the waves continue to ripple softly over the pebbles, or play at hide and seek among the uneven rocks projecting from the shallow waters. Many strange sea-weeds cling to the ragged edges or have found a lodging place in some cavity worn out by the action of the restless sea. From a glass-bottomed boat we are to see more beautiful things than we have ever imagined. Through the clear water we look to the bottom of the ocean. What wonders meet our astonished eyes! Everything below the surface can be distinctly seen, and visions of the wildest beauty, unsurpassed by the vegetation of the surface of the earth, break upon our view as the boatman rows onward over the marine gardens. The sea- weeds vie with our ferns and wild flowers of the forests, for the rocks are covered with the most luxuriant growth of wondrous plants in colors of pink, green, brown and yellow, while fishes of as varied colors, darting in and out, as if playing in the sunshine of this watery forest, lend a dash of extra coloring and effect, which may be compared to the sparkling of sunlight on the rippling brook. The most interesting of sea-weeds is the kelp. Fastening itself to a rock at the bottom of the ocean, it grows up and up as if striving to reach the open sunshine, and is swayed to and fro by the moving water like a sapling in the breeze. At its foot, in undisturbed quiet, can be seen multitudes of sea animals of all sizes and descriptions. But now the water becomes too deep for our sight to pierce through, and even if it could, the myriads of Hshes would obstruct our view. So our boat is turned and soon we are again on dry land, feeling that we have seen another of the great wonders of God's creation. ANNA DUNCAN. The Way of Fate I llfnae Literary Procluction When inspiration seizes me, I write a lit- tle sonnetg Never mind what it's about, perhaps my lady's bonnet. I send it to the Editor, Fames knocking at my door. Alas for me, and dreams of Fameg I hear of it no more. When genius grips me at the heart, I write a simple ballad, My little purse is empty now, my cheeks are growing pallid. I send it to the Editor, I expect the needed cash 5 Alas, it cometh back to me with the pen- ciled word of Trash When I'm almost starved to death, I pen a lengthy Ode, Full of the trials of my long life, for I am growing old. I send it to the Editor, and hope him to be moved, It cometh back with these blunt words, Your style can be improved. When slowly with my trembling pen, I write some saucy' rhyme, Without much care or thought I dash line jingling after line. I send it to the Editor, t'Ye gods! it can not be! Your jokes received, we're very pleased, he writeth back to me. FLORENCE A. RALs'roN. THE MOONLIGHT Philomathia Literary Production In the east the moon is rising, All the S01'did UUHSS of daylight, Lighting up the somber sky. All the commonplace of 110011, In a wealth of gleaming silver Seem to breathe a magic glory All the hills and valleys lie. 'Neath the w1tcl:1'ry Of the 1110011- HOW it thrills me as I Watch it O'er the heavens it is drifting with its ever radiant light: ' Till it dimly lights the we-st, Changing darkness into brilliance, And lim Wrapped m medltauon Making glorious the night. AS lt Slowly Smks to rest' J. W. BUNCH. WHY PM NERVOUS Euplironia Literary Production ACK returned a week ago from a two years' stay in Death Valley, Arizona, and I went over to see him last night. When I was about to leave he asked me if I believed that inanimate objects could cause dreams. I said promptly that I did not and in return asked if he did. For reply he quietly pointed to a human skull which lay grinning on the table, and said that he would give it to me as a souvenir if I would sleep soundly all night with it in the room. I at once decided to win it, for it was a magnificent specimen, evidently having belonged to some one fully able to keep it up in style, for some of the teeth were filled with gold. I took it home with me after he told me of nnding it near a spring in the side of a butte just out of Lead Hole, set it on my table and went to bed. Some little time after this I left the office and went to Arizona for the sake of my health. The doctors had demanded the dry-air treatment and I took to living out of doors. One glorious day I had climbed to the top of a knob of rock near town, and upon starting down I discovered that my canteen was empty. I remembered having seen a spring a short distance down the side and started towards it, but in a few moments I was provoked to find that, although it was below me only about twenty feet, we were separated by an almost perpendicular wall of rock. After I had thought it over I decided to take the risk, and sliding down I arrived at the bottom in a heapg but when I tried to get up I was horrified to find that I had jammed by leg in between two boulders and could not move it. I threw myself about in fruitless efforts to get free, but succeeded only in wrenching my back. The spring, too, was not six inches out of reach but I could not get a drop of water. I must have fainted soon after my fall, for I slowly became conscious of the fact that the sun was sinking below the sage-lined horizon and that I was commencing to feel the cold of a clear Arizona evening. As my head cleared more and more I noticed a rock lizard which peered at me curiously over the top of a rock and then scurried out of sight. I noticed that a huge buzzard was wheeling in circles above me, 'round and 'round and ,round until I grew dizzy watching it. The stars came out and it grew colder. I could sleep but little on account of the pain in my knee and back and spent most of my time counting the howls of the coyotes on the plain below me and wondering if I would ever get free. After a long time the sky lighted up and I was sure that day was at hand, but only the moon rose-hard and cold. I thought of other evenings that I had known when I was at home, and of how I had liked to stay up to watch the moon rise, but now it was a cheerless sight and again I wondered if there was any hope. At last, after a seemingly interminable night, the sun shot up and another hot day had begun. My thirst became torture and I commenced to see moving things which I knew were not in existence. Then I thought of the first time that I ever was thirsty. It was circus-day in a country village and I had just money enough to buy a ticket. I had been on the circus ground since early morning and now it was nearly noon and I wanted some of the beautiful pink lemonade, oh, so badly. My bare feet were tired and sore, and my mouth and throat were coated with the dust which hung as a pall over the entire village. Oh, how good some of that lemonade would taste! I went around to where the elephant was chained. He was drinking water out of a barrel and was enjoying it hugely. Everybody seemed to be having a drink except me,-they were even filling the boiler of the calliope. A snake gliding across my hand recalled my wandering senses, and knowing that death was not far distant, I despairingly threw myself forward toward the spring-and landed in a heap on the Hoor. I-Ialf dazed by the fall, I slowly gathered myself together, and there on the table in the moonlight, still grinning at me diabolically, lay the skull. JOHN C. VVILLIAMS. . ON THE TRAIL Zetalethea Literary Production T WAS a hot day in August in the year 1868. After a long ride over a wide stretch of Montana waste-land, Cale Roberts and Joe Scott arrived at a little spring surrounded by a thick clump of willows. They unsaddled their tired horses and immediately began the preparation of a scanty lunch of bread and bacon, to be washed down with hot, black coffee. When the meal was almost ready, Scott walked up to the top of a near-by knoll to take a final look at the horses before eating. As the Indians were causing much trouble in that section of the country Roberts was greatly startled by the sound of Scott's voice from the edge of the willows. Cale, Cale! The horses are gone! Turning quickly around he saw his excited companion motioning for him. Like a Hash he realized the cause of Scott's excitement. Hastily throwing some provisions into the brush, he seized his rifle and joined his partner. I have looked all around and they are not here anywhere, whispered Scott. It was a desperate situation. Horses stolen-and over sixty miles to the nearest aid. To travel this distance on foot would mean the severest torture from thirst, if not capture by the hostile Sioux. There was but one chance to take. Follow the thieves and recover the horses, even at the risk of life. Without the loss of a moment the two men began to search the ground for signs. To an inexperienced eye probably nothing would have been visible but the sharp hoof-prints of the horses. But the keen sight of the prospectors detected the light moccasined tracks of an Indian on the sun-baked earth. They knew the meaning of this. Everything was as clear now as if they had seen the Indians themselves. Without further delay they set out on the scattered trail of the horses. For perhaps two hundred yards it led directly away from he spring, then turned sharply to one side. What does this mean? said Scott, They surely wouldn't go that way, pointing in the direction of a bare hill in plain view of the camp. It's another of their clever tricks, replied Roberts. They hurried on again, but had gone only a few feet when both came to a sudden stop. There in a little hollow, where the grass was still green, were the three horses quietly grazing in the cool air of the evening. With a laugh Roberts said, I'll bet those tracks back there are old enough to vote. KENNETH B. FISKE. Awarded First Year Class Prize of 55.00 Open to Members. EVANSTON, ILL., January 25, 1905. MY DEAR FOLKS: I bade farewell to you, I think, About four months ago, And took my seat with other boys On education row. I started in, real confident To scale her mighty wall. But found I'd have to have some cash Or else I'd have to fall. At first I thought I'd earn it, but, When all my debts came dueg I saw to keep my credit, I Would have to write to you. The first bills were a mighty drain Upon my scanty store. Tuition bill, a bill for books, And laundry bills galore. A bill for our society, A bill-a bill-ah well! A thousand other minor bills Too numerous to tell. But the worst bill I remember fAnd live thought them over twicel I call, and justly call the bill, Of Faculty advice, 4 You see, I liked the facultyg I even said, They're nice, And so I thought I'd be a man And practice their advice. Well, about each day in chapel They would tell us 'ASO and so Was going to speak in Evanston And we had better go!! Or else they'd say with fervor that, On Saturday at two The football boys on Sheppard Field Will be in need of youg So let us give them our support The college spirit show, Why, they'll be sure to win the game If all the students go? I went to everything they said, Or tried to, any way, And that is just the reason why I write to you to-day. I hate to ask this favor, for- You know when I left home I felt as bug as cuffy, to Be starting off alone. Well I have got to close this now fThe bell just rang for lunch? I am, as I have ever been, Your loving son- JOHN BUNCH. Things We Try to Believe The Northwestern. That Tom Rollo is more intelligent than he looks. That some day the windows will be washed. That Grace Earhart is the South Ev- anston That cans. That Stiles is not a mis-nomer. That Corrie has stopped growing. That Rompel and Eunice Orr are really Society Leader. Steinhilber and Brotje are Ameri- estranged. That Miss Townsend is the greatest woman detective of her time. That Lottie Wilcox isn't in love with L'Hote. Miss Scott will not kill herself That learning to skate. That Saturday exams. should be per- That Y. W. C. A. girls dontt dance. That Goodrich ever was a modest, un- assuming little boy in kilts. That the Lit. Society rooms will ever be decorated. That Mr. Field knows Why ? That H. Bussey doesn't belong in the Awkward Squad. That Buckley knows he is alive. That Burg can sing. That Prof. J. H. Scott knows a debate from an afternoon tea. That Latin Cdl is not a 24-hour course. That Vawter has only been to eight clif- ferent Prep. Schools. That The Academian is worth 351.00 a year. That Prof. J. H. Scott knows German from Norwegian. That Kaywood has an equal in skipping mitted. classes. That Booz can talk. That Dean will grow to Ht his feet. That Beitel ever goes to church. That we are glad there is a SYLLABUS. A ' f s Qfgytogt.-',-j,'.-- Vx Z ' , ' '-. 1- . .., A, f ff 3 . , 5 .-4, . ,..--f g NNI I 'L tp!! ' 'W Y A f T I Xxx ' Facts are stubborn thhfgs. - . M McWilliams-Hobart: Your loud laugh Mary Morse: Thou hast never told thy bespeaks a vacant mind. love. M155 Cadyg Love Sought is good, but Window: Every inch, that is not fool, given unsought, 'tis better. is YOSUG- Helen Patten: Be not righteous over- much. Leathers: Drink no longer water, but use a little wine for thy stomachs sake. Nelle Clay: Pleased with a rattle, tickled with a straw. Miss Poutra: Ay, every inch a King. Gertrude Smith: Thou'rt a burning and a shining light. Nuttall: You think too little and talk too much. Buckley: Yet a little sleep, a little slumber, a little folding of the hands to sleep. 420 Edmonson: Thy conceit's enough, with over measure. Montgomery: Faith! thou hast some crotchets in thy head. Spearman: A little too wise, they say, do ne'er live long. King: Thou'rt much of a Muchness. Gee: Every Why has a Wherefore, but you. Della Whitfield: You look as if butter wouldn't melt in your mouth. Geo. C. Baker: Thou foster child of Silence and Slow Time. James J. Hayes: Hence, horrible Shadow! Unreal mockery, hence! Prospectus Modest President, JANE RoLLo. Certain, EMMA FLETCHER, LUCY RUTLEDGE, BEATRICE BREWER. Doubtful, SARA SHORT, GRACE STARK, ANNA LEHLE. Fcarftll Eafamplc, HlXZEL LAWRENCE. Mascots, Molly Club of Men Haters Probable, CLAUDIA MAUDEN IVIAIZELLE POUTRA LYEIA MoRcAN. Suspected, ESTHER TRo'r'rER, FLORA DEWEY, Lor'rtE WILCCX. MARY TROTTER. ANNA DUNCAN. T IS rumored that a new feature in the form of a Vaudeville will be introduced in the Commencement Exercises of June 2, 1905. The Academy has developed, at great expense, a company of artists of exceptional ability in their several roles. It is known of the program that Jolly Jane and Saucy Stella will sing Teasing to the non-graduating Fourth Years. Howard Tracy will recite his original Latin poem, Ego sum totae res. Parallelopip'd Field will mention The Evils of Cheerfulnessf' and follow this with a few stanzas of A Little Bunch of Whiskers Grown on Cheek. The Misses Cady and Poutra will give their own rendition of 'fCome Thou Almighty King, after which Remorseful Morse, in his inimitable terse style, will mumble those inspiring lines, Trust Vergil for That, and, Bring your credits in. The Awkward Squad's Exhibition Drill will consist of a Double-jointed Dance by Dean, a Wibble Wabble Walk DY Williams, a Correct Carousal Crawl by Collins, and a Glorious Galloping Gait by Galloway. Mr. L. VV. Fisher, the only original side-wheeler extant, will also walk. Then will come the presentation of the Official Hammer, a reward for faithful services, to Past Exalted Knocker, T. Rollo. When Aspiring Ada and Crusty Clara are heard in the hall singing that touching ballad, We'll catch one yet, youill know it is time to leave. It is hoped that Fussy Bussey will learn to do something, and that Newspring Stiles, the World's Greatest Funmaker, can be lured from the laboratory for the occasion. Plain Tales Mark now, how a plain tale shall put you downf' Miss M.- Won't you sit down, Mr. Leathers? No, thank you. I've been skating. H. R. Jones.- Miss Townsend, do you remember my mother? She went to school with you. Mr. Fiske.- Miss Fletcher, will you go skating with me? have another date? Miss F.- I'm sorry, but I Mr. Fiske.- Much obliged. succeeded Queen Elizabeth? H. R. Jones.- Search me. Miss Grant.- Never use slang in my classes. Cut it OUT. 'Morning. My name's Goodwinef' That's nothing, my name's Booz. New Student.- What's that awful noise? Veteran.- O that's only Gertrude Smith laughing, Miss Doney.- Oh, l'm rattled! Miss Grant.- Please understand we'll have no swearing in this class. Professor Morse tin Chapell.- Does anyone here want a cheap room and room- mate? Mr. Kleinsmid and Miss Townsend match hands at the 4th year social!!! Some one thought C. F. Green was abachelor. They knew he carried safety-pins, because some fell out of his pocket in class. Miss Grant.-- What ruler cf G' Nfl, W 3' ' ON FAME S ETERNAL BEAD ROLL ,L WORTHIE TO BE FYLED bpm MESA ffl fb f . fir? . . X M. ' X.k,3..d ' V FJ x E E fs 'funn S X f if mfggug Lmwl wllflvbi? QZFNDH' X-'L.I-LE. I I DULCOS - I.-. I IWHRWWWWWWWW 1 2 ' 3 file 1. JOHN CANDY W1LL1AMs. The foremost man of all the world. He knows it all. 2. ABRAHAM ELIAS MUNUER. The most exquisite combination of Japanese and Parisian art. 3. RUEIFUL R.UTII CADY. The greatest Unknown. 11. MLLE. FRANCIA Ducros. Queen of the Ballet-1875-1940. 5. CALCE FRENIS GREEN. CSee bust.J A1,,so FAMoUs: Smilax Sjunnesson. Made a name for himself before he could spell. Too FAMOUS Fon THESE HUMELE PAGES: James Russell Sparling, John Edgar Lockey, William E. Wallace, William John Scholes, Paul Princell. ONE DAY Mr. Field smiled: And Miss Pooley said. 'tDo lines meet at infinity because the atmosphere is round? And The Misses Tritschler and Jane Rollo gave an informal dancing party to a chosen few in the Y. W. C. A. rooms from 3 to 4 P. M.: And The faculty appeared at an Academy football game, but not a trace of Academy color did they wear: And Carl Milford Corrie spelled the same word eight different ways in the same com- position: And Miss Ralston asked to be put on the next Syllabus Board: And Sylvester busted a bust g And Grace Stark pointed to our statue of the Winged Victory, wanting to know what Fourth Year broke the head of THAT angel. A deal of skimble-skamble stuff, but ANOTHER DAY Schuett recited. Moreover, Miss Townsend announced that Caesar was very, very wise to do that thing. It is an act I have done many times myself. Moreover, Mr. Barlow said Railroads increased rapidly. One ran through Wordsworth and he lived to regret itf' Moreover, After the debate with University High School Miss Grant murmured. I don't want to be a sore-head, but this is a1,of1Ll. ' Moreover, 'Professor Morse said: Your translation is a mere discernment of superficial simi- larities. fx ? ? x Z-Z-z!!.J Moreover, Miss Lawrence asked, What are those fish-poles on top of the street-cars for? Moreover, Mr. Kleinsmid asked supplied with wafahs and chocolate. And Moreover, It then snowed. Miss Madden to Please see that my deah Miss Townsend is lf I I do the business. Knocker. I Notices - A l d ' h' Fgilfrgsend' A vote of heartfelt thanks is ex- to ggoifuigpgtywvlifihlnii I f ' -H I tended to those TWO members of docile, pretty, and modest, keelg fylfxrifygllewgyllfaiigillsge our loyal-faculty who have subscribed 9-PPIY to R J M h Look at you this time!! for the SYH9-hui ' S. 3'4- Wanted to know.. Rompel- Mr. Lowery will please call Who soaked Harmeman in the Grace Earhart. at the office and explain why ' , Y '11 'd th -tg he crept in the second story neck Wh Orange? on SESS Chapel sfiififlyfngs window at 5 A. M- WE NEVER SLEEP! So long as there is an opportunity of looking after other peoples' affairs. Our watchword is Everybody's business cheerfully looked after. We can furnish information on anyone's per- sonal affairs. HELEN D. JAMES, Accumulator FLORENCE A. RALSTON, Spreader and The Bigoted Bluffers wil! meet this week with Miss Grant as coach. Papers on bluffing by Bluffers Leathers, Anna Thompson and Mc- Williams. Speeches by Blufferrettes Nichol, Johnson, Tritschler, Pooley and Burg. Laura Galloway, Nellie Baker and Mary Trotter will kindly state what theatre holds late E t JOSEPHINE LYNCH, Corroborator Xaggera or enough to necessitate their walking from Gal- HELEN PATTEN, Treasurer of Facts vary at 2:15 A. M. CQME to me for an the News and be Will some one volunteer to blush for Mr. Deibler under Obligations to no One. when he speaks in chapel, as it embarassea him so. CLAUDIA MADDEN, M. T d ,H tl t t h h I - iss ownsen wi con inue o eac er c asses I do business by myself' by the kindergarten method. Take Deibler's History- 47 Varieties - Tasteless i Harmless - lnsipid - Save the Wrappers - Weakley Lectures. All academy young men come out and hearThC famous lecture given by the boy wonder B002 who will talk on the evils of drinking. You wiubn benefited and entertained. We WHIII you to be on Re-Examinations- Tell what study you en- joy most. The wrong answer to this question gets F on the whole course. CLARA G-Nr. hand at eight-thirty To-night. W. Jos. HARRIS, to his advantage. If H. R. jones will call at the office of the Woodberry Facial Renovating Company he will learn something Anyone furnishing the Faculty with the names of at least three reliable Matrimonial Bureaus will be excused from the exams. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN! We desire to recommend Dr. Morse's Latino Grammatical Nerve Pills. After using them four times a week, for six weeks we had ample nerve to drop the course. HANK NUT1-ALL HARRIS and some more. Meestir Scott. Anglish Teacher. Aye tank aye laik you vood lat mai gurl a- lone, you ask her after class did she laik you. und she vant to yump in die Lak. Everybody he know it. Aye like it purty gud off you cut it out, yes? HANNA's Brother-in-law. 423 A-f f: G wg tid i . f Kinarlfzpyelxes mjirfauliff. bf SMI? 'f lllti? 'twill rf X, if it if fw . '11 d . X1 l W t 42 f 'ff X 'Q 4 L N K 2 lf? 1, -di 'W rf I ,few W AB H-M V , 1 ' 5 X 'V Z Z 2237! Z , ,ff I . WX Il fpjf f Hmmwfrl Bad- Kgllqu Cages ka, Ifmsm-s Hob'-vffmfkscf his arm igleighinggv-IQ' ,ff gif . . Y V I lf X I 7 0 . H. ly-' 1 E 4 X fe 5 7 Y 'lmij s MAR! W W ill, f f ef f ' K t iff j Qi Q5 5 'ezffb 1-m,,HBu5g5y 51.55, he .- 11154 V n1.i,Gn1m5-W14wllnmvwmlmidfhlfn leHl30 '4'J 'r 1 '35 CMS- ' i j I ny If-' : VVV, . X' gh D af! My ' ---,grtteffa Wt N if . 7 M A f' Y X MN X 1, i glk Mfg, ff ffl- r IW ulll Q. M W lf-215137 X ' 6 ' j 6 ai? xl X rg L71 ffl M' W N llffl Nia! K' Q . 1 BUQM7 re Hn? 1 . , 1 V - - b -I-M-'L5,1e11mj'..5 LQf,tr1,cvi The. BRG- ' 7-I S3'5f1EM SImm1AY3'lJMuhjvLUvI4I'5- 'Un' ' At Parting E ARE sorry if you have patiently plodded to this point and found nothing but the end. If these pages fail to meet your approval, look gently on their faults and failings. Remember We have tried, and spent no little labor in their prep- aration, so give us the charity of silence. If we have been mistaken in our idea of what a SYLLABUS should be, at all events it has been our constant aim to deal With malice toward none, with charity for all. The unfortunate illness of Mr. M. J. Blair was a distinct loss to the SYLLABUS Board, and we acknowledge our indebtedness for his many valuable suggestions. Nor would we fail to acknowledge, Mr. W, G. Leathers' artistic labors in our behalf. THE Enrrons. 424 -53159 Nusa AL q 111111111111 fX 'llllllllllll '11 1 QS Lg mx ' 1, J' m'1h11 l I lm ' S .ET fi-EFX lui K 'fmlllllllllllllllllllu 'Q' IIIIIII Illllllll 'Q J Q11 ELGIN QCHDENY WN 'K Col. John S. Wilcox 111llllll'l'f'l'l'1D1ll1 W 11111 1' 1 By the Semor Class A A ANNA B. M J . D G D. N1 E H H O L P J 11 L H E P A H J E S W W Through the Syllabus Board J E S 05 P d 1 E H H 05 B M g G D M os 1v1 B D oe P B H O7 B G O8 O L B D p t H H P p t y D p t 425 President, - - Organizations Athletic Association ORA L. PELTON jr. Secretary and Treasurer, - -'-' WALTER R. MYERS Deutche Gesellschaft President, ---- EDMUND I-l. HAEGER Secretary, ----- MERVA B. DOLSEN Squirrel Club President, - - SARAH A. PRATT Secretary, - - M. LOUISE PRINDLE Treasurer, ----- ANNA B. MARKEL Wranglers Club President, - - - - JAMES DOLSEN Secretary, - - - JAMES KNOTT Class Organizations Seniors President, - - JAMES DOLSEN Vice-President, JULIA I. BUOKLIN Secretary and Treasurer, - - - ABRAHAM l-IENNINOS Juniors P1'C5id5I'1'f, - - - AMOS FLINT Vice-President, - WANDA THOMPSON Secretary and Treasurer, - - - - ELSA I-IAEOER ' Sophomores President, - - - JAMES KNOTT Vice-President, - - PEARL B. HOOD Secretary and Treasurer, - - OLLIE MILLS Freshmen P1'6SiC1CUY, - - - - CLAUDE P. WING Vice-President, - - LAURA MOBRIDE SCCYCTZYY, BERYL GILBERT TVSHSUYCY, CHARLES ULLRICK 426 Bovs' BASKET BALL TEAM THE TALE OF A CUP My home is in the northeast corner of the lower hall, and I stay at home nearly all the time. Perhaps you think I am lonesome. Oh! no! I am never without company, though I don't know that my hospitality accounts for the number of guests. Many's the time that a youth who is proud that he has been blessed with good looks, comes down stairs-not to see me, but my next neighbor the looking glass. He stays there, admiring himself, until he hears footsteps, when he walks away, trying to look innocent. Then come three or four girls, jabbering, chattering, and especially giggling, but while they are passing me around I hear an awed whisper, Prof! Then these hypo- critical girls walk upstairs as sedately and modestly as if they were going to a funeral. After peace has been restored, one of these fair lassies, a graceful, slender girl, with dark curly hair, returns. Queer how thirsty some people do get! Soon by chance- by chance, mind-a flaxen-haired laddie comes also to see me. Here this lad and lassie get to visiting, talking over relatives, past and future dances, etc. Alas! that this visit must end, as many another of like manner! But I'll not complain, for not many persons have as many callers as I do in my little corner in the lower hall of Elgin Academy. X A LIBRARY JACK This is the Academy Library. This is the book that lay in the Academy Library. This is the boy, so very small, that studied the book that lay in the Academy Library. This is the girl, so slender and tall. that flirted with the boy, so very small, that studied the book that lay in the, Academy Library. This is the Prof., that came down the hall, that caught the girl, so slim and tall, flirting with the boy, so very small, that studied the book that lay in the Academy Library 427 ' ,f- 'ef-...N I - ' ', Rik n ., x E f . . I N - v V XXX I :ll ' ! N xx V . r-e.,,,,,,..ff S-.N Q New Years Resolutions Mary S.: To get up an hour earlier. Merva: To know more or admit I know less. Herr M.: To get no more love stories for German II. Sammy: To keep awake in Cicero-when on the front row. Florence: To leave school, so as to have more time for correspondence. Newman: To stop that German song, Ich Libbie Christie. The bookstore: To remove-either to Lockport or to Dundee. All: To subscribe for the SYLLABUs-where someone else furnishes the cash. As They Like It Scene: Assembly room. Time: 3:30 to 4:00. Dramatis Personae: left, Amos and Wanda: right, Ora and Olive: center, Edmund and Edith. The Junior Goal: To stand on the platform before our relations And render with grace our final Vorations. Is the book of Lycidas in the old or the new testament? Ask Hennings and Wenholtz. Did Miss Pratt iind a red ear at the Sophomore party? How I missed her: How I missed her! How I missed my Clementine! Till I kissed her younger sister, Then I found it quite divine. ' O. L. P. How about those expenses of our football team up to Evanston? Ask the Evanston Academy. Notice Great Sale of Glassware!! We have more than we can handle! Come early and avoid the rush. For further information inquire of the Sophomores. Much Ado About Nothing-Freshman class meetings. When I was down in Texas. -B. B. H. A Herr Myers, like the I-Ienglishman, seems to enjoy escaping from Hellfelgin to Hefalvanston as often as possible. Public Notice: Grote, Ikerts and Co. dissolve partnership by order of S. A. Pratt. Why didn't Prof. accept that handout of ice cream from the football boys? The eleventh Freshman commandment to the Sophs.: Thou shalt not tease Jappyf' Wanted: Position as agent for glassware.-L. G. Pierce. ' Which one of Bob Ladd's mothers-in-law was it? And why does Brewster go to church? A Ladd and a Fair child were heard to say they were trying to rent rooms. 428 cs. 5 I 'M i I I 'TT-E'?i'ig' 4: i 'f':f -e w- Yr , -f.1- - :T-rt-5-asee .-eff! ' - N fa, M qi' Y if 3: 5 3-e '? f'g: uvii55IIEs'T5f 41-2, iffffffi-QF: M A ' ww f'1fl'!l H3.u:r:if17iT' iZ1..11iZ :i7lYf'?T4Qi Q- 2 sl it: I ,- Nik i- + if . at 1 v:-F 1 .- ,-,imfff - I ti aa ti at ' - .:,4 I .G :fe pan ff 1: , I N if f is Mi l Qf ,f , g.a Ea Egftttl H 71 12-'fl M tf ,w f a EQ aim Q ifuiff m ia I. ff if .a f 1 l E lllfdlllgg ' .--J.-. L..-QL. , ,,., rw Lv: ,gp g H12 41 - , ' 'I' XI ' .' 'E 1 , , 1 L,- A fi E 1 ff jga gg-ml g o msft gligzaqgf - tt. : 3 'fi t fi tga n i g le- .I Lua: MHNQQQ-jj if-rinjgi -'j-'11 53f?eNeeveffg..d.',4iis ' 'i ' ' 1-4: .-2',. - U jfigg-Qel .'-.'e 'ff NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY MEDICAL SCI-ICCL CChicago Medical Collegej N. S. DAVIS, Jr., A. M., M. D., Dean Buildings and Equipment new at are Four Hospitals in Affiliation, with 800 Beds at Clinical Work in every year. aa Ward Walks for Seniors Daily aa aa Dispensary Treats 50,000 Patients Annually at at TheRecognized Leader in Medical Education at For circular and information address DR. S. C. PLUMMER, Secretary 2431 DEARBORN STREET ------ CHICAGO. ,hun ,mgnuamlq Ii,-'fdlii' I SMALL CLASS IX LARYNGOLOGY Mr. Dooley Discusses Clark's Rhetoric You look tired, observed Mr. Hennessy, as he seated himself for a chat. I am, replied Mr. Dooley. HF-or siviral months l have been engaged in the deep and profound study of a deep and profound book. And what was that? asked Mr. Hennessy. Clark's Practical Rlntoricj' replied Mr. Dooley. You see, Hinnissy, I had been thinkin' of addin' some to the litherasliure of our beloved counthry, so I drew up a few productions and sent them tio the larned head of the English Department at Northwistern for his critical opinion. Whin they came back they had his oomplimints attached to the ind and a large variety of numbers dotted over the pages, with a note to infarm me that these indicated irrors, to be corricted by rifirence to Clark's Practical Rhitoric. I called to mind thin how I had wance seen. a headline about Clark's Rhitoric in the Chicago American. 'STARTLIN' ANNOUNCEMENT!! GREAT EXCITEMENT!! Northwistern shtudint said to have written two pages and a half of English, without violating more than twinty of the rules in Clark's Rhitoric. Corrictor said to have been bribed.' So I went down to the book store to procure a copy. The clark didn't have any handy, but wan of the sophomores from Evanston happened in, an' he offered to pay me to take his, for lie said it had onpleasant associations for him. So I took the book an' wan quiet evening I began to examine it. It co-nsists of three hundred an' tin articles of faith as to how not to write English, tharty-foive of thim having such exthrordinary merit that it extinds even to their numbers. Ach iv thim is followed by an illustration in the original, with an unimproved edition of the same sintince by me frind Clark. The committin' of these same to mimory is greatly conducive to the writin' o-f good English. Besides, he throws in commints about things in giniral whiniver he happens to think of it, as, for instance, 'The Yankee is known the world over for his substitution of I guess for I think,' which is parfactly thrue, Hinnissy, but thin, the Yankee is known for a good many good things. I-Iowiver, Hinnissy, to resume about me production. In looking it over I came to the conclusion that .me frind Clark was very partial to the use of commys, tSo, if it's commys ye want, me bye, it's oommys ye shall have,' says I, an' I scatthered thim pretty free over me production an' sint it back. By this manes I did not rajuce the numbers any, but I did procure a change in thim, for whin it came back, they all referred me to an article on the suparfluous use of punctuation. I had a great dale of thrubble corrictin' me production. There is wan arthicle where it says that as to the use of the simicolon, ye must depind largely upon the judgmint of the writher. That manes the judgmint of the corrictor, Hinnissy, Now there are various corrict-ors, but they all corrict alike with regard to this arthicle. They have wan very simple rule: 'If the writher puts in a simicolon it should be a commy, and if he puts in a commy it should be a simicolonf Finally I wint up to see me frind Clark. What is the matther with this sintince?' says l to him. 'Ye have made your frind Hinnissy say,' says the Proiissor, for I was wi-itin' about you, Hinnissy, 'Ye have made him say, I should like to have been there, but it ought to be, I should have liked to be there. ' 'But the first is what me frind Hinnissy would have said,' says I. 'Thin your frind Ilinnissy is likely to corrupt your English,' says the Prodssor gravely. 'I would advise you not to associate with him! 'And what is the matther with this?' says I. 'Tl1G1'9,S a wurrud in that sintince ye have used before,' says he. I was almost in despair iv ever satisfying the English Department whin I ray- mimbered havin' read somewhere that the great authors fixed the shtandard for English writhers. So I got some volumes of Dickens, and Thackeray, and George Eliot, and Irvin', and began to rade thim. But wan afther another I laid thim all aside because they violated the arthicles of faith in Clark's Rhitoric. 'tThin, wan day, I said to mesilf, 'I'll go and see me frind Clark and call his attin- tion to this! So I took me volumes an' me riferences an' win.t -out to Evanston. As I lC0IlCl11llt'll on ei succeeding' pagm-J EIHOLLS LLEIEIHJLS SIAVG University Drug StO1'6S RQSCQE L, WICKES Davis Street and Orrington Avenue Prescription Pharmacy Dempster Street and Chicago Avenue Evanston, Illinois AM AKK NHT BGH N Xiif XKXKVQVAJIE-SP4-E-:VQS M EISALF til CHICAGO , ,HMBK TELEPHONE, CENTRAL Y h lllll 'WZ p Q STATIONERY jnxnzfiig emit ANNOUNCEMENTS 5 Esicnzfzfg PROGRAMS IVIEINIUS ' --G-Gjbexlplxficbcoinu'-if Phone Hyde Park 1467 T 'Phone Hyde Park 7256 CHAS. LAWRENCE HARRY LAWRENCE Manager and Director Assistant Director 5745 ROSALIE COURT CHICAGO Lawrence Orchestra Dances-Receptions-Popular Concerts-Weddings and Theatrical, Dramatic and Minstrel Entertainments Over One Hundred Artists of Chicago's Best Musical Talen Under Direct Supervision of THE LAWRENCE ORCHESTRA Members of the Chicago Federation of Musicians PORTRAITS BY PHOTOGRAPHY Q1 .... Telephone 2022 z Evanston 1623 Orrington Avenue We Q Q ff 46 be if? g X The Y. W. C. A. General Secretary Brings Jordan Home from the City Well Loaded If Established A. D. O O O NJ A You were able to earn a dollar by Saving C0 L0 Woulddyoll School and College Text Books o lt 7 Stationery, Supplies and ' Fountain Pens Then do ll? il No 1578 SHERMAN AVENUE Century Building H. E. Shorey 19 Co Tailors 84 Adams St., Rooms 73 63 74 Telephone 3998 Harrison The Post-Graduate Medical School OF CHICAGO 2400 DEARBOIQN' STREET W. Franklin Coleman. M. D.. Prest. h Arthur R. Elliott., M. D., Vice-Pres. W. L. Baum, M.D., Treas. G. P. Head. M. D. . g Q A school for practitioners of medicine and SLl1'g6I'D'. Teacliing exclusive clinical. Abundance of material. Large hospital in school building. The Bacteriological Dcpartinent is under the direction of Prgf, I Zeit, Unsiu-passed facilities for Dog and - in ' F'ffE:....ff,,f '1 q n ' .iii H' i i 1: 3 ' wi' E' -,,- .'a.'.'lml H H tml? lsi Il! 'll L lll illjl x I w i 4 'M . - . . , elm H I, H ills' nn: I wi Saul ZH' : H Mm EE. .. Cadavcr work. Send for Bulletin of in- i is I ' nl u 7 ligigf- forination No. 10. i sf!:2Hf.fEEE-25:55-:assign s FRANKLIN H. MARTIN, M. D. Q h T SECRETARY A 'E -1 'A ' :Ae 04 J:- ... OO IDEARBORN STREET, CHICAGO. '-,-RNA ...Ii-X,-Afi.v..i.1:... E153 M W THE QETY QW VAULTS BANK? x 2 sm DEPOSIT 4, 5 5 .W ray-.. .... ..,. 1. 1 .2-'E ...... .5 1 1 1 ' f f 1 .- . .f E X-.x -1--Q J 1 . ,fz .- 1 13 ' 'mf ' fl .. .f W ' ' ' - ' '. I - ---.' . 14 ,' I I ' ..,. .,,.1, ---f L' J ,,,,.. 1, CQ QR' .s QQ A 1 ' 1 ' A 1 1 :Santa Fef- ul. , gSantaFe:. 4. 3xSanta Peg gSanta Ie-13. ,I is .,.A1 X L., .3 gk '5-ti ,L .gg ..-, 9 1 1 A - 51.1.11 me 1- Q . 3 ' , 1 2 N .- :mx . : -- A q 1 ,P .1 1 .U 7 A , 4 .I fs, Is Ras ' A. -1 E ' E I I 1A.. ,Y ll. I -'ff' I - i ' , 1 - J up l .- - ll to 1 an 1 1 I f n - ...I 1 1 , - T.. -'27 V'--4111 -1-- ...1:.f1a Cf-2Hfornl2af15stl'f-51112 giiffzrnia Lirnitiaj' LosAngeles fxpress of -fiiflfiancisrqfqjgegg .Y . .fs .. our tra1ns a ay--through South- West Enchanted Lan . r Leave Chicago morning or evening--go swiftly or at moderate speed--enjoy every luxury or have only necessary comforts-pay the top price or travel economically. The California Limited --The train of luxury -- Leaves Chicago 7:30 p.m.-- Reaches California in 68M l1ours-- Only train between Chicago and Southern California via any line exclusively for Hrst-class travel. California Fast Man --Leaves Chicago 8:40 a.m.--Anives California in less than three days -- Our newest train --All classes of tickets honored. Los Angeles Exgress and San Francisco Exgress -- Leave Chicago 10:00 p.m.--All classes of tickets 110morecl--Personally-conclucteclTourist Sleeper excursions. gy RAH!12M',q,,,tf W- ,G I A ,ig I ' fl-ii L Q, -T Q3 V25 JW WF' ff! x few A 7 Xiu aa'f2H1u.'Ey p f - ' ' gl f l I fy Q9 ff' Ab Eva.-n..f f7ou I 'fig Ar-r-ow 1'rLdg-tal-eiwrgitelrni I 'NZ I ef :z1e':2:,:::a7a,i, 5 ffdvs Q me 'Hi is , R ofa S R W e F of .tifszzzi O Aggyftifi if Y Noaruwtsrear-'KJV ' NORTHYVFSTERN 6 4 f y lf ml, scene I 'Hl',!fz ' ' 1 , I. f I J ff lcafwltv Q Ari f 'Z' 7671701 I If f K W7 1 2 'Tug Pb I -'23 '7 Q' f V h vm I. , or 2 I W 0' f W W H si , i I to 5 , QQ! X ,F 1. 'ggi - it , X . f me QQ tffkqqfigf goj G IW I ITM Hx nil 5 lb f I ff' I A f-ff? i,i1Mf3!fi77ff James Evanston Express EVANSTON : OFFICE: 530 DAVIS STREET Telephone 6. X -K CHICAGO Z OFFICE: 7 LA SALLE STREET TelephoneMain2640. James Evanston Express Telephone 174 Polk Chas. B. Brown BROWN'S 0RCH,ESTRA Successor to I-Iubbel1's Orchestra Chicago's Most Popular Music 373 Washington Boulevard Chicago. Dxilx- ARE WELL DRESSED IF YOU TRADE AT.. LU KEY'S CAP-A-PIE 614 Davis Street. in I , ' ' '5 ' Northwestern University Dental School HIS SOI-IOOL is unexcelled in its facilities for teaching Modern Dentistry. Its appointments and equipment have been arranged with a view of giving to students the most ample opportunity for individual progress and advancement. It maintains the largest Dental Clinic in the world. In this, Students receive a large share of practical experience as Operators, Htting them to conduct dental ofhces of their own. A course of three years has now been definitely decided upon. Each year will have thirty-two Weeks of actual teaching of six days in each week, not counting Vacations, Sundays or Holidays. For further information address, THE SECRETARY OF THE DENTAL SCHOOL NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY BUILDING, CHICAGO 5-as, fi .WA I' Q ,. - - ,,- ' 4-ac, ri ,,.q.-,J-f.': . :- .B . Z .I-3-yas' -A . K .. ' . , Ez:-35271 , ff XXX' .- .- A, - QQ?-1257 1 'iff .A mm N3 lilvr, Z ' lil -45 :i'wvx,xii 'i1k .Q . or if ff C A or . W .im uhllllll I, A. N.. A AI..Av.,.,i nik, W h J ,A X A f i, 1 . . . :fzgffig-A b I M, t, . i -- be LA W Th WEST Q ll vw 1 A e Q,'?6gf57 f'6 'j,.7r-x' .11 5 N -r5g.:.E,19'f,oaU:q, 1,7 fl, X villa? i I ' A . I ii f and NORTHWEST C i ' . 5 1 is placed in direct communication with Chicago ' ' by means of the perfect train service of the - Chicago 8: North-Western Railway, the - pioneer line west and northwest from Chicago, and is the Only Double-track Railway between T' Chicago and the Missouri River. Via its direct lines Chicago is placed in close touch with all -A More than 1,700 URTHW STEM important commercial centers and tourist points. stations, with a tributary population of over seven millions, are reached by the fast daily train service between Chicago and all points in Northern Illinois, IoWa,Wisconsin, Northern Michigan, Minnesota, , the Dakotas, Nebraska and Wyoming. I Four trains per day between Chicago, Council Bluffs and Omaha, three between Chicago and Sioux City, four between Chicago and St. Paul and Minneapolis, one between Chicago and the Black Hills, U and an unsurpassed service of fast through daily trains Via the I Chicago, Union Pacific and North-Western Line between Chicago and San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland, Ogden, Salt Lake City, Denver, Cheyenne, and all points in Nebraska,Wy0ming, Colorado, Utah, Idaho and on the Pacific Coast. A The Best of Everything. ' All agents sell tickets via this line. For folders, maps and full information address NW319 W. B. KNISKERN, I Passenger Traffic Manager, A I CHICAGO. H, v I,. -V. Ii , v3,f , , Y Y , ,ff ,. W W- - , -, T -f-.-V III ...V-V-gem , ,.-,vga -f--2g'Ijg f:'gT3.'-V+,'q gwa, V' A 'LS xl' V: 'W qi- 5135111931 V-! Ives' V715-xg, 5 :: . ' VA. , qw-i. . . . -,,I- A :Z - '-V.V-.Wi ViQ?ff?i1vvi5F3:VfVa'?VV QL. Yi1523225.1kf'iVifM:M-1.2--15?V'f5Ftnrf--2VfzV:,:w'.i'nv5fl:m5fv?ELe'E ,,i1ggf3fVEQ1rVa-f3'l'!Pf' -.V VNEVW G y:L'5f2EV ifFwm.V'9g.fYffFzv-wifi!-H1 2V'i'ffQigL kag gV TPI'-'Lf..:VrIqf2iV gr'VV--'1Q4:J41.zV,r-51.23::,J1EfVfVi, f-gVVf?ff .gr Zfi1Q?M.ZV- y-'1.V.3E-'fi-45?-115,55 gf'0'?u5Vfg5sifg CV girfvxjifgwffg 3. '-f,:Vg',f'V:IV53f'5.g,f'V-Q fiwz- ,,.QVf2:Qeg:g,-. 'Vw VV -TW.. Hz' f ff',.':'3Qf'a1'f' -1555, , 5-51 -if V2 .K .: f- ' - ' '- I ' I w-.' VVC. '5L 'a '-is-I: YS 'MN ' ' 'A 'ri 4 ' -1 f-5 - ILS' f' iw-I El :.','. TI', :': L'-,,'kifP,17'1'11,'TLI-3 f'k'1,:' '!N'.fvf .E 1.45:-1--'VQH 19'--'Q-'VJ'-' :15',y: 'uwg g-ski?-' Q . I-V.,f.1,Af'N--,VI., 9 V 1' 4- 3 ., V V Vi: M 'V ',' . . 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V V' is raving 1. ,TQ ,IQ ,fu 'Y' 35 'fr js VW V x 5 V A IR w,,IIjif 5 Mp, .1211 4711. -4' MN .4 4-4-YL .Gr -7 gg,- fha ' ,H , , . .. .,, 5-5 , .41-.V L 1 . 4 . -Q gg . . ,za ,h f' .1 ,f.g..'...gv.:f -' ,' 1. - 'J- ..m+' -' W. . .17-x-, -. . hx.-...H 'Z I V' q'fva',. .1 ,uf 1 ' 5.3. gp Lv -i-vlx-vw V-1.1 . :Q-.v:e.4,-:.'-T ww 'ri .,,. ,,,,..,, , .z,,lix.'7 ' .55 , ,, .wx ..,.,!..:! :fu f ,, -.M I vp.. f:.- lui., .g- if GL f h ,YT .JL 1 ff 4 ,lglvilgj ' .1 'lf' . JH .K .. ifgfifti- U - . V 1 5 .ap 5 4 , ., , .HU - ,,. V tif Hg ck. orthwestern niversity EVANSTON CHICAGO THE UNIVERSITY INCLUDES I. The College of Liberal Arts at Evanston Il. The Medical School at Chicago III. The Law School at Chicago IV. The School oi Pharmacy at Chicago V. The Dental School at Chicago VI. The School oi Music at Evanston The Schools of Theology at Evanston are in close co-operation with the University. In addition to the above degree-conferring departments the authorities of the University maintain the following preparatory schools: Northwestern University Academy at Evanston Grand Prairie Seminary at Onarga, Illinois Elgin Academy at Elgin, Illinois The Cumnock School of Oratory is conducted on the University campus APPLICATIONS EOR CATALOGUES AND CIRCULARS SHOULD BE ADDRESSED TO NORTHWESTERN UNI- VERSITY, EVANSTON, ILLINOIS 121 :::::::::::::: XF' A Very Good Mann:- And my sins are more than the hnlirs of my heard. f'The 20th Century Pen, for 20th Century Meni' THE BLICKENSDERFER TYPEWRITER TWU MODELS E21 3 EEZ? Eiliifiioigo 'A ,... ,.,.,1N!.N- VISIDIB Slmple ,Ala i oo . Kiki El ff ' Portable Sorvlooahlo Adaplahle Economical The No. 7 Blick AC11 lbs with casel, 550.00 The Blk-ki' is 21. thoroughly practical machine for all kinds of work, :uid is especially noted for extreme SIMPLICITY and CONVENIENCE, the No. 5 model weighing only 6 pounds, :ond the No. 7 complete with cnlse, 11 pounds. As ull its work is done openly and zlbove board, it facili- tates composition mentally as well as m:1.nuz1.lly. Its readily INTERCHANGEABLE TYPE- WHEELS and INK ROLLS afford unequailed facilities for vulrious forms of COl'l'9S1JOHflGllC9 :ond literary :md scicntilic com nosition and duplication. Any two type-wheels, one dozen ink rolls Cnny two 1-olorsj, onk case, tool box sind so ye:i,1 s gunraiitee with either model. Sold on 2ll1JIlI'OV2lllH :lt izernisio suit purclmsers. Over 200 sales in Chicago G Northwestern Universuities. University Representative, College Y. M. C. A. House, or 277 Dearborn St., Chicago I I 5529- f I Drawing Sets S l .75 tus alvorcj and up All instruments made of ine Ger- man Silver with steel points. We carry all the TH squares, trian- gles, paper, ink, etc., necessary for a complete outfit. OUR RED BooK No. 47 shows them. Sent free. Our Complete Tool Catalog No. 47 of 450 pages shows tools for everv trade. Send 200 to pay ex- pressaige and get a copy. 01111. e LOCKETT H A R D WA RE C 0 . Estccblvkhed 1872 71:73 Randolph St., . . . Chicago Blunt's BOOK STORE Where student's liberal patronage means permanent low prices L. E. BLU T 803 Davis St. Tel. 49. Opposite Post Office, Evanston's Leading Book Store. L o. E. B RRETT COLLEGE GOODS AND STUDENTS' S U P P LI ES Eine Stationery a Specialty 59 LAKE STREET : : CNORTH- WESTERN UNIVERSITY BUILD- INGJ 6 : : : z : CHICAGO ,QT - J - y ,L , , . . 6 1. 1 .. - V is ' Q -5' i -' E . 5 rmvmi-Mil? -IIIns 1-4E'LI!5BEi!r'f L 'if Wm M -f -'ff ' if V - -4 -- ' 1? 1 NA.. I f '.' '-.,. , - 'I J I 7 -f I f i ,. :':: '?'i-Q -wi 25: 2 3 - -' :1 11'-f'-Pr-. ' - , , .- ,-.- -W .-.4, - i- Jfzwf-.1-ff ' .,-. 11 - ' H T I ' jskqo ' . 'r' L' -Q'6Ymeib6f5'ar55ioi5-o omg ef - 'W ' ' Take-Down Repeating Shotguns The notion that one must pay from fifty dollars upwards in order to get a good shotgun has been pretty effectively dispelled since the advent of the Winchester Repeating Shotgun, These guns are sold within reach of almost everybody's purse, They are safe, strong, reliable and handy, When it comes to shooting qualities no gun made beats them. They are made in I2 and 16 gauge. Step into a gun store and examine one. FREE: Send name and address on a postal card for our large illustrated catalogue. WINCHESTER FIEPEATING ARMS CO., NEW HAVEN, CONN. CCont,inuerl from a preceding pagej was passing through the hall I met an important lookin' individual, and I says to him, says I, 'Can ye tell me what Clark's Practical Rhitoric is practical for'?' Tor projucing narvous prostrationf says he, 'I've thried it.' That was a frish- nian, Hinnissy. Thin I wint on and found me frind Clark, and I explained that since I had been correspondin' with him some time I wanted to call his attintion to the owdacious way in which some of the great authors violated his arthicles. 'I see,' says he, smilin' pleasantly, 'that ye are laborin' under an illusion. Ye must not draw conclusions consarnin' your own writin' from the great authors. WVhin ye become an Imerson ye can violate me Rhitoricj says he, 'and not before., H 'But I fear,' says I, 'that unless I do violate your Rhitoric I niver will become an Imersonf 'f 'And I fearj says he, 'that ye niver will become an Imerson anywayf I agreed with that, Hinnissy, so I came home and put up me Clark's Rhitoric and laid aside me pen.. I've read somewhere in Clark's Rhitoric that many people are developin' originality in a startling manner by rayfusin' t-o spell words in the orthodox, dictionary fashion. An' I've noticed mesilf, I-Iinnissy, that some people are growin' so original-that they niver spell a word twice the same way. But me frind Clark doesn't object to toriginality if ye are only original in the right Way. He is original himsilf. He is original in his way of teachini Whin ye want to larn to rade Latin, ye get a grammar and a lixicon an' go to radin' the classics. Wliin ye want to larn chimistry, ye take your chimicals an' blow up the laboratory thryin' to do as others' have done before ye. Whin ye' want to larn history, ye get down your histories an' go to larnin' it. But when ye want to larn to write English, me frind Clark gives ye a list of all the irrors people have ever made, and ye commit thim to mimory. An' any wan who wrote litherashure accordin' to Cla1'k's Rhitoric would projuce somethin' so original as to be unlike antythin' that has iver been written, or talked, or thought before. If ye want to look over the book sometime, Hinnissy, yetll find it in the garret. There's a great dale in it that will surprise you, An' there are a great many thims in Clark's Rhitoric that I don't know. But there's Wan thing that I know about itg as a study of English it is doubtless exhaustin', but as a book it is not eXcitin'. SARAH R. PARKS. ll- .ffwr -MTV Caps and ' j 's,,x Caps and Gowns Made Gowns Made to Order TQ .xuv to Order and i f R andd 411 E.. 57th Street. PENNANTS, PINS, FOBS, CAPS, COLLEGE NOVELTIES : : : : Send : for : Catalogue : : : : s.1viAscoL1No, Mgr.--R E S TA U R A N T TELEPHONE 2081 S. IVIASCOLI O 81 BROS. 1635 Benson Avenue. ...... Corner of Church Street. Confectionery and Fruist, Candies, Soda Water, Etc. BEST MEAL IN TOWN, 20c MEAL TICKETS 34.00 FOR 33.50 GOOD SERVICE BOOKS We carry a large and attractive stock of books upon all subjects, and at lowest prices. 444 We will take pleasure in procuring for you any book desired, and request the favor of your orders. JJ! JENNINGS at GRAHAM, A Well laundered Shirt We pride ourselves on do- ing perfect laundry work, and want a chance to prove it to you. Prices reasonable. -sv1Q,:-,fgu.XL,.- . . . Goods Called for and Delivered . . . STUDENT AGENTS FRANK REED, A725 Orrington Avenue O. W. RUMMEL, Heck Hall AMERICAN FAMILY LAUNDRY . C. CLARK C3 Company Randolph and MichiganAve., : : : : : Chicago. Make Clark Fountain Spittoons, Clark Revolving Cabinets, Clark Correct Gas Apparatus and other Specialties. We claim there is nothing in the mar- ket their equal. : Write to your dealer, he has them. Or A. C. CLARK 1? Company Randolph and Michigan Ave., : : : : Chicago. rags? . l . T 9 f M is ivlhv K D it HW , lf fr l lblffgwl A University Entrance Credits For Work Done by Correspondence. Students who successfully complete courses in th A d ' D , e ca emic epartrnent of the Interstate School of Correspondence will be given credit for their work upon entering the Freshman Class of the Colleen fL'h ' ' ' ' ' A ' be o 1 eral Arts or any of the Professional Schools of Northwestern University. These Academic Courses include English and American Literature, How to 'W rite English lby Professor J, Scott Clnrkh, Algebra, Geometry, First Year Latin thy Miss. Ada Townsend, ofthe Academy of Northwestern Universityj, Physics, Botany and Ancient History, In Preparaf tion: MEDIEVAL AND MODERN HlSTORY,in two volumes, will be ready in the autumn oi 1905, and UNITED STATES HISTORY, in three volumes, will be issued about January 1, 1906. New Courses of Study. Besides the above Academic branches, We have now ready a course in PHARMACY, by Dr. Oscar Oldberg, Dean of Northwestern University School of Pharmacy, which will prepare a stu- dent for examination before any State Board of Pharmacy. An Academic Course in GRAMMAR well bc ready about September 1, 1905. Normal and Commercial Departments. The Normal Department offers review work in twenty-two common school and high school gran:-lies, especially adapted to those who wish to prepare for teachers' exannnations. Phe . , . . - , .. . 1 ' ' omineicialDrpaitnn nt embraces a Complete Practical Business Course, which includes Book- keeplng, Commercial Law Commerci'1l Arithmetic and :P0l111l'LllSlli 1 a Shoith und Co d . , 1. - . , . u 12 ' 1 urse an a course in Touch Typewriting. Write for special circulars on any of the subjects mentioned above. Interstate School of Correspondence CAffiliated with Northwestern Universityb 378388 Wabash Avenue, Chicago. John A. Bellows, President. X t . l.1,l. . Z , X l iulll XX If N ff y N f A XZ' 21,5 l X 1 felis NT i .X . STATE BANK UF EVANSTUN Llistanblislleml 18745 . . . Davis Street and Chicago Avenue. . . Capital, Surplus, and Profits over - - - - - S200 000 D Deposits over - - - - - - 31,280,000 QIFFICERS Henry J. Wvallingford, President ll. H. C. Miller, Vice-President William G. Hoag, Cashier Edwin F. Pierce, Assistant Cashier DIRECTDRS Dr. M. C.B1'n.g1lon John R. Lindgren H. H. C.Mille1' Enlwzlrcl B. Quinlan Henry J. VVa.lli11gfo1'd Szrmuc-l S. Dingee Yvilliflllll A. Dycho Frank M. Elliot Frzrnk VV. Geronlri Willizun G. Hong If You Want the Best Go To . of ' . Zed if of Chocolates, Bon Bons, Ice Cream and Soda Water i... ....... 1.-x.,-1---.., 1-N...-.- , .. ' Phone 543 - - - 612 Davis EVANSTON, ILLINOIS Mussey's Billiard Hall and Bowling Alleys The handsomest, most com- pletely equipped amusement resort in America. Fifteen Billiard and Pool Tables. Eight Regulation Bowling Alleys ....... . STUDENT HEADQUARTERS 614 and 616 DAVIS STREET Evanston, Ill. : : :Phone732 H. B. WATT, - - - Mgr. 'Q Z. D fo n nn f emo leave Ioehinolyoo e 1. ll. momument jvirtoe. Write your name by kind- T n s, love and meroy on ' the hearts ge the thous- E7 enosyoof me ineonteet , gl with dw by dw and S w when you writequse 6. ' 'I f'X E I'I'7 iE s f l w e ' UQ, ' 3 roadway.NewYrK V Bm? .1jl. i.l. 'Z'Z..'C W fa.3fi EnC'r2.Lff.l'm'm'J I Po t 5 Llivgaterman Co I7 ISIBSX 605 Slh IM 0 5, F IG Lo lO7SJ 2 ats M ii. i ID. IHS. 'llillatterson Zlll. 3. Southwaro IE HB6 still making clothes for 1l1lorth: asc, western men who Q5 graouateo four pears ago OX N3 emo can refer 65 I you to them as X f-5? to excellence of 65 ff f! 50 is style ano moo: eration of our prices. Q? TJ Gall ano see us regaro: ing new features for this 56850113 STQICS. 'fllllatterson 8 Southvoaro flherchant Gallors 'IRooms 22:23, 206 Ia Salle Street Chicago Gelephone llharket U09 is 'f- Once Cx Nile bullion-moo Lmvecf o s Une sireejf, l.0VEd Q Mille buiioq-hole el?-WS Young ood for and sweefg W d ' t t k Tjfs5gQ?QBi2EabkG b:.5gjWf 5 ya I 5 Q . wRw,fa,5 Daze my f+,E3'A '5 -mere -ss some one -coo you guess? -Hll my becuei she Stole. Well me,QerpUe moadeo, mll you Be my bufioo-hole? Edwugo Lydlo Rape, Engl .IOH ORTLUN WHSIIIIIETUII STBHIH -Lalllldly 704 WASHINGTON STREET Telephone 440 V For Fine Work at Reasonable Prices go to the Washington Steam Laundry STRICTLY HIGH-GRADE OR DOMESTIC FINISH.. V SUPERIOR LAUNDRY CLUB Ernest Anderson, Agent ' - 1846 Sheridan Road NORTHWESTERN LAUNDRY CLUB John F. Wulff, Manager - - - 518 Davis Street f' .:::f' li I.l. t glliuln. ii' it I . - -U . PPT , 1'J3-aw! , ll: PE E! 'ii' '!','::! 'ITIIITTTTI I al I I-IORSMAN TENNIS RACKETS For 1905 ARE THE CHOICE OF EXPERT PLAYERS .... In up-to-date design, in material. workman- ship and durability they Six New Models The HCentaur Double frame and mesh. 1 The iiHyde Patent . .3 V Knotted Stringing. The A-1 Model Pat- ' I ent Central Stringing. , The B Model New 5 narrow shape. If, The Climax Maltese , ' stringing. 'fd The LSHOISEHD Ex- .- 1 pert Cane Handle. I E. l. HOHSMAN CU. 354 Broadway, N. Y. Sole U. S. Selling Agts. for the famous ll - - Ijgil, F, H. Ayres Championship -a:::fE 'iS'x 1- 2 X f r 'f,',5-1 +I 'Lt nj? ,rm I i n . fggwtt' li: S f2CigEIQ'1:T lead all others. T 'til +Qf'Tzf X E 'I' ' f -4: I f if Iii' fl ilk 1 'iv Nl 1 Tennis Ball Approved by the U. S. N. L. T. A. sem: ron CATALOGUE M eena- T4 1 5- v msn nnwzn snonnrss-A, . ' r. .rg QE .i , uma vowsn snnnrutss lin 'S . ' , TQ -, ' -1 -.-fgssi-'Er 'tF: ' .iitfif as-'f-is-if-2: -PL .'1f'T'l 'S-1r125x'v-f 'f3:1-anus'vvxw'-I - f .. ' - , f.. JQW.. .. ...Ui ..... .lu if tw i .s t..J 1,4 . - I - .l'liigiii '4': x I EN. 'n iggrlgfusi-giiacf .1 W iL.- tri-2 2 '1'- i ' Ku-l'5Ef3Q2 , uf , .., . ... ,, gf,-JI, ,. r, .. ..gj:'E:,lfpiojw H . ., -'.,qgq.nf:i ' 'X ' 1--5157 lF12ivii 'TiW x!iE'ff?2'i E. am ith: ,f an are 3, e4.ffif'.- ef.. - .np .ref A 3, .4zttggwif-iil.'-'.5.5f ip.-3,5-At3.gf ' wgmgzres H ?: W f-4.41 rr: '.-a1 A . 5- V -tt' . '1 '- 'X '21 'e i ' ' :' 5101 z'11.:,'-.1231 i'?2Hfi?e 5313 - Eff ?7f3ry,i2's'Sg. .,gi.9r,-f'f-,,k--5.l- I if . iw-,' F' fg.-.1--, . wma .9 Sd. - - 5. s, :.'I -. ' jilffkg 1lEQ4':1':f-Ei-239'f51f'T'E.f5i, .ff'LfT 2J9 4i f'i-if :HL '.i,l'w-' HEL . ,:- . l . .f' L , '.- :'- 1 -1. - -9- I' .'?.: 1 L:--::f :f'.!l2e!EEliii. . 'If ' ' - fe' '- 'V - ' '- ' - ' as , -' .'-'f Th ' 8 I - - ea Viiiiiiai -I -1..f1.rw-igzgfgy,All C .3 -55 MARLIN Cartridge is con- 55 1, e-uc. .a -1 .':2:2itr-:aaa-:if-if11- 1. ', ,. .1 ' I 2 ceded to be the most accurate, as well as .23afiEi5.1 I .. ,tte?.,Egf,::ifgi 'fan' 1. - . jg.j:.:g'-:5- I. ' ' A the greatest game kzller, ever used in a s,5 ,V g1i repeater. This size is now loaded with ' - High Power Smokeless powder giving in- jgif I creased velocity, flatter trajectory and . greater penetration. MARLIN repeaters igiqfflqgl. have Special Smokeless Steel barrels 'Z'-.TJ . V115-.gif . , 1 -I .. 'H - 'c' 5-. rig- -, much stronger and harder than the ordt- nary soft steel barrels. -4.1-if-I-.R '- A .mi-as ivwl- :' 5 'j.3n1g,-. -7.-1 Send 3 stamps for our 120-page, up-to-date CQQQQW ii i? C, JJ' arms and ammunition Catalog No. 'kiln' -Q aff ':. sam-e s THE MARLIN FIREAHMS Oo. new HAv:N, eo'-IN, ::oLoR PLATES. BARNES-CROSBY CO, PREsswonK, THE EVANSTON INDEX CO. x 'x m mwmm was Bamlacnosuwr :N :vm ET. J, ai' J . ,-w V he -. 5, X tkvxth X X lt , X 1 W. .,,x lg, ll I L EWG? Is anxlously expected and eagerly asked about for Weeks before It IS lssued 15 thoroughly enjoyed and earnestly dlscussed for days after 1ts appearance becomes an almost necessary refer ence book for 1ts owner durlng the rest of hrs college l1fe and 1n after l1fe wlll be an ever pleasant remlnder of the good old We are sure that the edltors have done thelr best to make th1s volume of The Syllabus a Good Annual, and ln carmg for the mechanlcal part of lt We have endeavored to do work worthy of their efforts. 2: :: :: 2: 2: BARNES-CROSBY CO. THE EVANSTON INDEX CO. . d . bl. CHICAGEJ EVANSTON 'QF' f ' W . . - . H , college days. :: :: 1: :: :: 1: 1: Artists an En ravers Primers and Pu lshers ll THE ill X Y f t 1 I I. , hit The French Laundry 1C OI' I' un , N, J 'Q x . . . r0prle vw of1aCFW7fDQ'9'D---P 'for AGENCIES AGENCIES PEEIIIE55 IAUIIUIII UIUU U' IIIUUUT 1945 IIIAPIA AIA' sure LAuNnnv ctua 1.6. mama am Foster si UIU IIEIIAUIE IAUUUQIJ2gIgging,on Ave A' E' SIIIUIIWS' ouzlurv LAUNDRY cruz A. E Shirley, 625 GhurchS1 ltunols Lnurmnv ctun G. L. Campbell, 331 Hamlin si. IIIUIUAI IAUIIIIIII UIUII513 church st UIWIAS IU- UAIASUAU STANDARD LAUNDRY CLUB Mr. Perdue, Heck Hall ' FIRST-CLASS WORK PROMPT SERVICE GI-OSS OR DOMESTIC FINISH I TELEPHONE 277 B06 DEMPSTER STREET EVANSTON, ILLINOIS SPECIAL RATES T0 STUDENTS SUITS SPONGED AND PRESSED .. .. 600 COATS . .. 354: PANTS 'K ' .. 2Oc VESTS ' . .. 15c OvERcoATs .. .. 5Oc DREssSUiTsTo RENT .. .. .. 51.50 EVANSTON PANTITORIUM, Phone 619, 1613 Sherman Ave., Evanston, Ill. . S. HIIGQYSOII Successor to ScbwaIl's 'Livery Dliherg ann Enarhing Stable U6l6DbO116 I2 l559 EIJCUTIEIIT avenue, Evanston, 1IlI. University Book Store C 7 TEXT BOOKS, new and second hand. College Requisites of all kinds. SPECIALTIES: College Stationery, College Souvenir Postal Cards, North- western Banners, Pins and Emblems. Posters. Bicycles and Athletic Goods. Photograph Materials, Kodaks, Developing and Printing. L 7 H. E. CHANDLER 81 CG., 630 Davis St., Evanston A sw s .:. - ' ' Lf' at A A fwsvmi me s N S 'I ., i I sl . ' 5 E 1 f sg st Q X ww OFFICE EQ IPME T An Ideal Investment It will enable you to take more rapid and accurate care of your practice, save your time and strength, and protect the patient from all unnecessary annoyance and discomfort. Can you afford to overlook so comprehensive an offer ? STYLE es TABLE AND BIHLMAIER vlamrron. ment by vibratory stimulation. You can QL ln the new automatic table a great advance is marked and our Patrons from all parts of the country are cn- thusiastic in praise of it. An ap- pliance of this kind will give you a life time of perfect service and yield a daily dividend of saving and comfort. The Bihlinaier Vibrator booklet which will be sent on request, con- tains soine invaluable suggestions on the very important subject of treat- not Properly consider this question without knowing the peculiar merits of the BII-ILMAIEH. You convenience is consulted, also, in the matters of terms. Write for our cata- logue and let us demonstrate the value of Well selected furniture especially adapted to your recluireiuents. W. D. ALLISON COMPANY INDIANAPOLIS C. H: KILLOUGH, Manager, 35 East. Randolph Street, Chicag0 lOlUTlAN6W Hema, V50 Jackson Boulevard Mosslefs College Clothes e ill This Store ,makes it a lnusinees to produce the kind -of 'clothes in keeping with the Nifty-nessn of College Men. These clotlies embody all the tone H and sar- forial merit of .the high class merchant, Tailor, the only gllffcrence is' our lower price. GH Most, .of 'the' swell clothes you see around school are garments. IVIOSSLER COMPANY 50 JACKSON BOULEVARD lOUR NEW HOMEJ 141 ' cmssgfgri ,Uhr ynlirrg inf 1112. Hunan nf mnsnilvr ini The 'policy of this Business is tot serve a particular patronage with a distinguished class df clothingg clothes that are perfect in 'point of ,sartorial merit and yet ready-to-put-on. ' III To personally serve each patron so that 'our f ' apparent appreciation is a tie that 'begets his confidepnce. V ' I IH To maintain and increase our patronage the same careful methods that have built upl tlus wonderfully anci exclusive clothing business. U Mcneay refunded always Without argument. mnsslrr Qlnmmxng, 50- Jacksfm Boulevailf The g lven GRAND PRIZE Highest Award WORLDS ' ' St.Louis. at the FAIR, Lunch Counter WK J! Includes in the New Edition 25,000 NEW WORDS, Etc. New Gazetteer of the World New Biographical Dictionary jg Edited by W. T. HARRIS, Ph.D., LL.D., United States Commissioner of Education. 2380 Quarto Pages. 5000 Illustrations. New Plates. Rich Bindings. FREE. A Test in Pronunciation, in- structive and entertaining. Also illustrated pamphlet. G. 6 C. MERRIAM CO., Publishers, Springfield, Mass., U. S. A. SHORT ORDERS FROM 6 A. M. to 6 P. UTLAHERTY 8. cu. HEADQUARTERS EOR NORTHWESTERN STUDENTS M. 635 Davis Street. , l fs 'R S 'I' E N S Rifles, Pistols, Shotguns are perfect in every respect. The S1J01'lfSl'llilll1 is never disappointed in the working of his gun if it's n. STEVENS-t.l1ey are safe, strong, accurate. cluruhle, and convenient to handle. ' A 4 , . :V iffy' - -.5 iff w .a'.:,A?gy, mf. 2, ' fy if E!x,qf5'2 Q 5. ' ., Ask your dealer and insist on our goods. lf you catnnot obtain bf ., V, .them we will ship direct. express prepniml, upon receipt ol price.. - gg, DON'T FAIL to send f0I'lllllSfI'i1,f9fl cntnlopq. It is n. book ot refxdy 'W psf reference and nppenls to all interested in the g'l'2l-llll sport. ot shooting. , , ' Mailed for 4 cents in stamps to pay postngge. I 'ii 1 , , ,jf HIT THE MARK with our RIFLE PUZZLE! This clever novelty If f y Q., will be mailed FREE upon request. V' , ' 4' fe ...fi -- M L., ' J Stevens Arms and Tool Company, . . ,, , . n A 33 EI. gf,v'i P o Box 3789 ff A if 444 - - - ,, V .-- . ' Q -' tj 0' fc . Chlcopee Falls, Mass. A L 'A Q ,L,- . 7.3, ' Q fx 1 Q iefjfggx.-Qf.,f...f ,V f .rl I 1. - - 'i,-. .,' iii - ,.. 'lug ' .-.. 'ec 'isa f ,.- 14 - .wx-.v -, . ss'--1.5-.iw-I' . 1. , ' .- . , ,: , ' - g , . cw- A. .- -A 5. ','PP'- A 4 -15124.12 'vi ' 4. J' r -- 1. -.PAQ 1ff' f?P5.591 L'9.. i ' f' 5-ffl, ' W ' . 5 2. A ' 7 -15' p f um 1 is- . KffX, i,f-?'.f'iI- '. . 5 '- , 71- 1 ,. ..-Du,-.,,x'Jg,gn,,1 ,,,,f ,Vue . 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