air ' ,, ' , X K ' h in ' .awk 1 QI 6-'xiii'-QF' I 1 .WJ 14 E ' ' 3 ' f 41' N - T f , s, 11,5 1 1 37' 1451? ' ' . 1 'ffqsn Y Wawib ' ', I X Z,flgLu ,ff ft: vt IZ, rl Ye. e . 4 f Ev 1-'-Y I I 6 wk. -1 2 f 1 I I 57215 wfbe reaigicfzzai zzeszkzeeszsffazzz- zfzg dcboolzmareh 53560050 0!'Zi56Q5Zafcqzff7Z- 822225 caffzffzefcwf Zfardfw afzdgaagaydzzazfffy cw 1776 H6392 Zywe z'c'c'c'zMa'fjcJxfc'0'z1cai'?0zz aa Qsfafifffd 6' AFEQUZOZEZZZXJZHEJQJFJ6 aw qzwz' Offifdf EWWUWJQZQQEZZWW! 5617 Wie? 6 zmzgzg M faggifiyfxperzezzcadnp iaaciezas zmgeriazz aide ieagiffjfizgryadfafz 'fffregjfggffzeesipefzffzfvy zzz 1776 orfdaffzfz M15 lfidflfll 1012 andeyeggahepafffffegjyffjevimf QQ-ge zeyizl 1140 iazfaadyezfzsffrzeffiev Beam 1z!Mzp1rafc'aQQiaQgzze azzdfqfvf c95,ZeczWefziq',R0z7ff7af7Q9i1pQoffjfffeff tg, Er mamma ww ! I 1 U V . ' ' f ' ' I . . - Y J l , ff -GT K --XA ix .Q -O 7 Williams ' .. . ' 1 . ' aw . V! PRESIDENT FAIRCHILD CC 9, THE H1-0-I-X1 P . NI .. . . UNIQR CLASS OI... QBERLIN CQLLEGE. OBERLIN, Ol'fIIO, 1890. R. A. NIILLIKAN .... E. H. ABBOTT I DITORS. Qoilege YQH. HI-'Off-XI 0:11120 H1:H1 0:1-11 OBERLIN. vx,NfvxfVxJxfvxf- Qollqgq Qoioxfg. CRIMSON AND GOLD OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. 5 INTRODUCTORY. -rv., For the first time the Hi-O-Hi makes its appearance in Oberlin College, and it is the hope of the editors and, we trust, of all the loyal sons and daughters of our beloved institution, that it has come tostay. It has a noble career before it.' May its mission be to portray, from year to year, the pleasant side of college lifeg to recall to the minds of the alumni into whose homes it goes, the pleasant days and happy scenes of their own courseg to fitly remove at each year's close the wrinkles and care-worn looks which a year's hard work have placed upon the student's brow, by reminding him of thejokes, pleasantries and oddities with which the year has teemecl, as 'well as of much that is of more permanent value, to picture a side of college life which no other publication cang and, finally, to honor our Alma Zlfla ter, and carry thejoyous shout, Hi-O-Hi, O-Hi-O, Hi-Hi, O-Hi Oberlin,int?o,every nook and corner of our land. 'V Our fond readers will not find this first issue of the Hi-O-Hi entirely impersonal. We shall deplore the fact if it ever shall become so. It is its peculiar pro- vince to deal familiarly with all, to better acquaint all our 1,700 students with one another, by enabling each to see how his own and his neighbor's name looking print, perhaps by presenting to each a mirror in which he may see himsel' as ithers see him. 6 OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. We have faithfully endeavored to be entirelyimpartial in our dealings with you all, and not to favor one more than another, either by more frequent or more conspic- uous mention. If a grain of unvarnished truth sticks out here and there, let no one feel offended. Everything is good- natured, nothing malicious. Heartily thanking all who have kindly helped us in our undertaking, and hoping that succeeding classes will improve upon our work, we respectfully dedicate the first Hi-O-Hi to you, kind reader, and bid you plunge in. w k W a. -fgwfff 1 lf A , f 1 N. l Q . 1 . OliEIlI.IN COLLEGE HI-O-I-II. 7 BOARD OF TRUSTEES. TER M EXPIR ES I J. E. MARSHALL .... . CHESTER I-I. POND .... .... TIION. JACOB D. COX ......................... TERM EXPIRES 1891. REV. JAMES H. FAIRCIIILD ..... ............ E. I. BALDWIN ......... ....... AMZI L. BARBER ..... .......... ELYIIIA. E. W. METCALF .............................. . . . . .SANDUSKY. .. . ..BRooKLvN, N. Y. CINCINNATI. OIIERLIN. CLEVELAND. .....NEw YORK. TREV. MICHAEL E. STRIEBY .... ............. N EWARK, N. I. TERM EXPIRES 1892. J. G. W. COWLES .... ........................ A. B. NETTLETON .......... REV. HENRY M. TENNEY ..... TREV. JAS. L. PATTON .................. ..... TERM EXPIRES 1893. WILLIAM SUMNER .......................... T. L. NELSON ........ W. I-I. UPSON .... TS. F. COOPER ............ .......... ......... TERM EXPIRES 1894. ALBERT H. JOHNSON ....................... J. E. INGERSOLL ...... THENRY L. TURNER ....................... TERM EXPIRES I895. E. J. GOODRICI-I .... ......... ................ F. C. SESSIONS ..... F. N. FINNEY .... TL. C. WARNER ..... . . . . . . -fNominuted by the Alumni. CLEVELAND. NIINNEAPOLIS, MINN OBERLIN. .GREENvILI.E, MICH OBERLIN. ELYRIA. AKRON. GRINNELL, IA. OIIERLIN. CLEVELAND. CLEVELAND. DAN P. EELS. .... . ..... ........ ........ .... . .CHIcAGo, ILL. OHERLIN. CoLUMnUs. MILNVAUICEE, WIS. NEW YORK. OBERLIN COLLEGE Hx-O-HI. FACULTY. PRESIDENT. REV. JAMES HARRIS FAIRCI-IILD, A.M., Professor of Theology and Moral Philosophy. FINNEY PROFESSORSHIP. JAMES MONROE, A.M., Professor of Political Science and Modern History. REV. JOHN MILLOTT ELLIS, A.M., Professor of Mental Philosophy and Rhetoric. STONE PROFESSORSHIP. REV. CHARLES HENRY CHURCHILL, A.M., Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy. JAMES F. CLARK Pkolfrsssonsmv. FENELON B. RICE, A.M., Professor of Music. ALBERT ALLEN WRIGHT, A.M., PH. B., Professor of Geology and Natural History. GEORGE I-IOLBROOK WHITE, A.M., Principal of the Preparatory Department and Professor of Ancient Languages. REV. WILLIAM GAY BALLANTINE, A.M., Professor ofthe Old Testament Language and Literature. Chairman ofthe Faculty. REV. WILLIAM GOODELL FROST, A.M., Professor of the Greek Language and Literature. REV. GEORGE FREDERICK WRIGHT, A.M., Professor of the New Testament Language and Literature. REV. ALBERT HENRY CURRIER, A.M., Professor of Sacred Rhetoric and Pastoral Theology. IIoLnuooK Pnovnssonsmv. REV. LYMAN BRONSON HALL, A.M., Professor of the Latin Language and Literature. GRAVES Pnornssonsnlv. FRANK FANNING JEWETT, A.M., Professor of Chemistry and Mineralogy. IRFV. FRANK 1-IUGI-I FOSTER, P1-1. D., Professor of Church History. REV. WILLIAM BENTON ICHAMBERLAIN, A.M., Professor of Elocution, and Acting Professor of Rhetoric. REV. HENRY CHURCHILL KING, A.M., Acting Professor of Mathematics. Registrar of the Faculty. OHIQRLIN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. AZARIAH SMITH ROOT, A.M., Librarian. REV. JOHN LEADINGHAM, A.B., Principal and Professor of Christian Doctrine in the Slavic Department REV. EDWARD INCREASE BOSWORTH, A. B., B,D., Professor of the English Bible. b CHARLES HARRIS, PH. D. Professor of tl1c German Language and Literature. 1f1uf:DEu1KA UREMER HULL PROFESSORSIIII' 01' MODERN LANGUAGES. HARRY IIUN'i'ING'I'ON POWERS, A.M., Professor ot' the French Language and Literature. FREDERIKA UREMER HULL PROFESSOR OF MODERN LANGUAGES. CHARLES BEEBE MARTIN. A.M., Assistant Professor ofthe Greek and Latin Languages. Clerk of the Faculty. WILLIAM ISAAC THOMAS, A.M., PII. D., Acting Prolessor of the English Language and Literature. ELISI-IA GRAY, A.M., Professor of Dynamic Electricity. ELMER HANVKINS STANLEY, A.M., Instructor in Mathematics. REV. ABEL I-IASTING ROSS, A.M., Special Lecturer on Church Polity. REV. JAMES DOUGLAS, A.M., Lecturer on the Relations of Science and Religion, and on Comparative Religion. DOUGLAS PROFESSORSIIIP. JOI-IN FISHER PECK, A.M., Assistant Principal ofthe Preparatory Department and Tutor in Greek FREDERICK ANDEREGG, A.B., Tutor in Mathematics. XVILLIAM EM BERT CHAMBERLIN, AJS., Tutor in French. LOUIS FRANCIS MISKOVSKY, Instructor in the Slavic Languages. ERNEST RICHMOND ATWATER, A. B., Tutor in Latin. IVIERLE AMOS BREED, Teacher of Latin. HOVVARD I-IANDEL CARTER, Instructor in Piano-forte. CHARLES WALTHALL MORRISON, Instructor in Piano-forte. MISS JANET BROVVNELL GLEN, Tutor in Latin. MISS LYDIA ELLEN PHIENIX, A.B., Tutor in Mathematics. MISS EDITH DICKSON, A.B., Teacher of Mathematics. ro OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-I-I1. MRS. HELEN MARIA RICE, Instructor in Vocal Music. Miss LUCRETIA CELESTIA WATTLES, A.M., Instructor in Piano and Harmony. Miss GRACE AUGUSTA FAIRCHILD, Instructor in Drawing and Painting. Miss CAMILLA MERCY NETTLETON, Instructor in Singing. MRS. KATE H. WINSHIP MORRISON, Instructor in Singing. MRS. LEONA G. IIOTTENSTEIN SWEET, Instructor in Piano-forte. Miss AMELIA HEGMANN, Instructor in Piano-forte. Miss CARRIE LOUISE RANSOM, Instructor in Singing. Miss MARY PARMELA BENTON HILL, Assistant Registrar. Miss DELPIIINE HANNA, Director of the Ladies' Gymnasium and Teacher in Physiology. Miss FANNY FOSTER WRIGHT, Acting Director of the Ladies' Gymnasium. GEORGE WHITFIELD ANDREWS, Instructor in Organ and Composition. EDGAR GEORGE SWEET, Instructor in Piano-forte and Singing. FREDERICK GERAUD DOOLITTLE, Instructor in Violin. ARTHUR SMITH KIMBALL, Instructor in Singing. CHARLES PARSONS DOOLITTLE, Instructor in Violoncello, and Lecturer on Musical Form and History JOHN ARTHUR DEMUTH, Instructor in Violin and Wind Instruments. FREDERICK CARL GOTTWALD, Instructor in Drawing and Painting. MRS. ADELIA A. FIELD JOHNSTON, A.M., Principal of the Ladies' Department and Instructor in History. MRS. ELIZABETH VV. RUSSELL LORD, Assistant Principal of the Ladies' Department. Mus. ABBIE FISKE EATON, Instructor in German. Miss MARY LOVINA ATWOOD, A.M., Tutor in Latin. Miss FRANCES JULIETTE HOSFORD, Tutor in Latin. Miss ELLA BROWN DOWNEY, A.B., Tutor in English and Latin. OBERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. II ALUNN I ASSOCIATIONS. General Alumni Meeting, Tuesday, July 1, 2 P. III. COLLEGE ALUM NI ASSOCIATION. PRESIDENT! JAMES O. TROUP, '70. SECRETARY! LIB'N A. S. ROOT, '84-, Oherlin. ORATQR FDR '89: PROF. WM. G. FROST, '7G. ALTERNATE: HASTINGS I-l. HART, '75. AnI1ual Meeting and Address, Tuesday, July 1, at 7:30. TIIEOLOGICAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION PRESIDENT: REV. J. R. NICHOLS, '83, SECRETARY: PROF. H. C. KING, '82, Oberlin. PREACIIER FOR '89: REV. C. C. CREEGAN, '79. ALTERNATE: REV. E. C. EVANS, '8O. Annual Meeting, Thursday, May 29, 7:30 P. M. NEW ENGLAND UNION OF OBERLIN ALUMNI. PRESIDENT: REV. JUDSON SMITH, '64, Theo. ' SECRETARY: PRES. HELEN A. SHAFER, '63 Lit., Wellesley, Mass. Annual Meeting at Boston in May. NEW YORK ASSOCIATION OF TI-IE ALUMNI OF OBERLIN COLLEGE. PRESIDENT: A. L. BARBER, ESQ., '67. SECRETARY: J. J. MCKELVEY, ESQ., '84-, 10 Wall street. Annual Meeting at New York in April. OBERLIN COLLEGE ASSOCIATION OF CI-IICAGO. PRESIDENT: THOMAS A. HALL, '72. SECRETARY: N. P. WILLARD, ESQ., '82, 36 Reaper Block. Annual Meeting thc Third Friday in May. NORTHWESTERN OBERLIN ASSOCIATION. PRESIDENT: REV. H. I-I. HART, '74-. SECRETARY: REV. WM. M. JONES, '82, Elmwood, Minn. Annual Meeting at Minneapolis early in May. OBERLIN ASSOCIATION OF THE MISSOURI VALLEY. PRESIDENT: REV. GEO. HINDLEY, '75 Theo. SECRETARY: REV. A. B. PENNIMAN, '79, Berlin, Wis. MID-CONTINENTAL ASSOCIATION OF OBERLIN COLLEGE ALUMNI. PRESIDENT: PRES. GEORGE T. FAIRCI-IILD, '62. - SECRETARY! PROF. WILLIAM H. TIBBALS, '75, Parkville, Mo. OBERLIN COLLEGE HI-0-HI. OUR STUDENTS' SENATE WHERE, O WHERE CAN IT BE? OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-Hi. 13 THE OBERLI IDEA. BY PROFESSOR WM. G. FROST. Great colleges are seldom of mushroom growth. Giant branches and swelling terminal buds imply depth of root. Oberlin is rooted in an historic soil which contains many boulders of sturdy principle, as well as many springs of pure moral purpose. Distinetively Christian, although non-sectarian and free from all denominational control, she has been called to pioneer work in several directions. It was in 1832 that Father Shipherd, with S33 in his pocket, started for New England to secure the land, the build- ings, the citizens, the students, the endowments and the faculty! In less than a year the school opened with forty-fourstudents gathered from seven states. In 1835 the duty of opening the school to colored students was presented, and by .the casting vote of john Keep, the college took her position in favor of the oppressed. It was expected that the town would be flooded with Negroes, and when a solitary African put in his appearance some months later, the little son of one ofthe trustees rushed into the house exclaiming, Mother, they are coming. The school has seldom contained more than four per cent. of' colored students, but the servieerendered to the colored race was immeasurable, while the'obliquy and hatred encountered was something which can hardly be conceived of to- day. Oberlin still suffers somewhat in repute, among those who are uninformed, from the prejudices engendered by her boldness in the cause of reform. Following the stand for equal rights for all came the arrival of Professor Finney, with his new school theological tenet, that Ability measures obligation. His preaching upset some of the traditions of men, and increased the opposition to Oberlin, but it roused the churches, and made friends as well as enemies. At this time also, the students from Lane Theological Seminary, forbidden to discuss -slavery, came to Oberlin almost in a body, and set up a theological department in Slab Hall. The institution was started upon the broadest and most liberal basis, and when, in due time, young women applied for admission to the classical course, they were received without either hesitation for the blowing of trumpets. The first women in America to receive academic degrees were three Oberlin graduates in 1841. The young women at Oberlin, however, are not treated as if they were men, but for all purposes of discipline are under the supervision of a Womau's Board. Oberlin is further characterized by the absence of all prizes and artificial distinctions-merit is its own reward, the encouragement .of self-supporting students, the merit of her literary societies- I4 OHERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. secret fraternities have no place, the cordial relation between teach- ers and students which makes cases of discipline about as rare as robins in January, the eschewing of' tobacco, and the standard of scholarship indicated below. Her dominant ideas have been so widely adopted by other colleges that she is rapidly ceasing to be peculiar. That her glories are not all in the past, let the recent inventions and publications of her graduates, the missionary volun- teers, and her present drawing power-bringing more students into Ohio than Harvard brings into Massachnsetts-testify. The college now provides three courses of study-the Classical, the Philosophical, and the Literary which receives no degree. In the Fall of '91 the Philosophical Course will be made equal in quantity of work with the Classical, and a Scientific Course of equal length will be unfolded. For admission to any of these courses four years of study will be required. These requirements are equal to those of' any American university, and distinctly in advance ofthose ofmost institutions. especially for the Scientific Course. In the three full courses-Classical, Philosophical and Scientific -prescribed studies occupy the entire Freshman year, and one-third of the time during the three remaining years. It is thus rendered certain that every student will make definite attainments in essen- tial branches, and at the same time enjoy ample electives, as is shown in the following table of In the several departments of' study: msg. ELECT. REQ. ELIQCT Mathematics ......................... 126 320 126 320 1 26 388 Physics and Astronomy ........ 11 6 164- 11 6 58 24-8 168 Chemistry and Mineralogy... 68 242 68 24-2 190 24-2 Natural History ......,............ 58 202 58 202 24-8 202 Greek and Latin ................... 304- 11 09 252 54-1 190 German, French and English 1-1-4- 916 332 916 916 HOURS OF INSTRUCTION OFFERED I REQ. txcnncr. CLASSICAL. PIIILOSOPIIICAL. SCIENTIFIC Rhetoric and Elocution ......... 334- 58 334- 58 334- ...... Philosophy ............................ 154- 24-8 154- 24-8 154- 24-8 Political Science ............ ..... ...... 2 - L2 ...... 24-2 ...... 24-2 History ............... ............... 5 8 136 58 136 58 136 Music and Art .........,............. ...... 2 08 ...... 208 ...... ...... The Literary Course stands by itself. It has seemed important to the faculty and trustees to provide a course which should be well arranged and atTord work ofthe best quality for those students who hesitate to begin one of the full courses on account of the length of time required for its completion. They have, therefore, arranged hereafter to give a two years' diploma to all students who have performed the work required for admission to college in either the classical, the philosophical or the scientific course, and who complete two years of' college work, including the following sub-courses: Chfiemistry I., Logic, Botany I., Psychology I., History III., and Et lies. It is only necessary here to mention the Theological Seminary with its one hundred and six students, the Conservatory of Music and the great preparatory schools, which help to make Oberlin big as well as great, and add to the general attractions of' the college. All in all, the Oberlin idea is applied Christianity, and is well ex- pressed by a line from one of Wesley's hymns: To serve the present age. THQ Qoiiegel Qi?X55e,s A115 Fdquifg xgioglfdlpiyieg. 16 OEERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. SENIGR CLASS. ,Ili gfflrff' ,I', 'j3L6MA I I, . .. : ' ' ,Ar f wwf ch A 1 P iffilif Mf H, XQ .gg I 7, A -. nhl W My IMI VR 1,-'iff . R Qffiifi ...E-..-....-A... fi . '-.Cf ',-.-' i-M :':LT Y. 1. f- M f. fffii. Z ?:143l1ff' '...-' ,L-ilili f flffigfgfiffs if-L '40 MOTTOI Uirtors milw 23 wmv. Z YELL: 0Urrvfs-05rrvrs-rackety whack, llflilflf-hUT1'Zl11-IICVBI' go back.-'90. COLORS: Ashes of roses and crimson. OFFICERS-CLASSICAL. President....... ......................................... G. C. JAMESQN. Vice-President ............... .... f X. M. GIBBONS Secretary and Treasurer ................. .... I P. B. MASON. PH1LosoPu1cAL. President ........... ........................ IX 4ARv E. TAYLOR. Vice-President .................... ..... A . B. SPEAR. Secretary and Treasurer ............. BERTHA H ARRINGTON LITERARY. President ............ . .................. ...... E DITH OLDS. Vice-President .................. ..... I 'IIELEN WALKER Secretary and Treasurer ..................... SARAH -I. EVANS. coNsERvA'roRv. President ..... ............. ............... . . .JOHN THOMPSON OHERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. I7 9095 race is almost run, and the sad duty of chronicling her suecesses and her failures devolves upon us for the last time. We are now directing our headlong course toward the old First Church, and expect ere long from its time-honored platform to pour forth suel1 floods of eloquence and truth that the Sophomore and his sweetheart will stop their chewing gum to listen and the dreaming deacons will awake to hear what '90 has to tell the world. When the last echoes of our message have died away, and our first alumni dinner has been put to rest, we will step behind the vei that shrouds the future, and the places that have known us so long will know us no more. But think you we will be forgotten? Nay, verily! Are we not the people? Did wc not wear hideous campaign plugs to protect our anterior fontanels during our Freshman year? ln our Sopho- more year did we not drive the faculty frantic with our designs on tl1e Father of his country and our plans for honoring his natal day? Did we not cross canes with '89 at junior Ex. and retire gloriously with many broken heads? Have we not written more class songs than any of our rivals? In truth, our deeds as a class have been most remarkable, but we have many worthies whose bravery must not pass unnoticed. There is our Laird, whose heroic Hunks bring tears to every eye, and Leuthi, with his well-worn stock of once funny yarns, Firestone's mustache, and Addams, the little curly-headed boy who never told a licg but tin1e would fail me to tell of Kofoid and Doolittle and Kim- ball and Carruthers and Williams and Saekett, who have entered that oft discovered country from whose bourne no traveller returns, save through a breach of promise suit, and Wilbur and Bennett and the many others trembling on the frontier of that Beulah-land, waiting Rn' the kiss of peace that shall bid them welcome to its sacred fields. Our girls, too, must be mentioned. Such wit and beauty set off by such dignity and grace was never before gathered beneath the banners of any class. Nor were they born to blush unseen and waste their sweetness on the desert air, for already most of them have come and seen and have been conquered. The star-eyed goddess commands the remnant that holds the misantln'ope's redoubtg but oft she gazes sadly at her fast weakening forces and sees the days draw nigh when thc citadel's defenders must all lay down their arms before the mighty little archer god. 90's tale is told. Her historian leaves his pen to the tender mercies of future chroniclers, shoulders his sheepskin and falls into step with his classmates to file through the future's folding doors that lead to fortune and'to fame. HERODITUS. 2 18 OBERIJN COLLEGE ' H1-O-HI. SENIOR CLASS. Osmer Abbott .... J. M. Ackley ..... A. Arnold ..... 'l'. P. Berle ...... W. M. Gill. Booth .... . E. W. Clark .... W. B. Crittenden. F. H. Cushing .... W. A. Dick ..... G. C. Doolittle... J. W. Crook ..... E. M. Fairchild . . R. W. Firestone.. J. D. Gibb ....... A. E. H. Harper .... R. W. Hayes .... CLASSICAL counsrs. .........................,.Spokane Falls, Wash Bennett .... . . , . . M. Gibbons .... Troupsbnry, N. V . .Canal Dover, O . . . .St. Louis, Mo . . . Providence, Ill . . .. . .Oberlin . . .Cl1else,a, Mass . . . . . .Turner, Me .. . . .Oberlin, O . ...... Toledo, O .. Manistee, Mich .Manhattan, Kan . .New Lisbon, O ..Harshavi1le, Pa . . . .. . Warren, O ...Port Byron, Ill Ill .......Morris, . . . . .Oberlin, O. ..: .... Avon, O A. R. jackson .... G. C. Jameson ..... C. E. Johnson ..... P. G. Knowlton . . '. .. C. A. Kofoid .... G. B. Laird ...... Loveland. R. L. J. Leuthi ..... F. B. Mason ..... T. D. Morleyu . .. C. H. W. A. Sackett. . . F. J. Van Horn. . E. Olds ...... H. T. Williams .... . . .... . . Normal, Ill ..Blissfield, Mich .......Lamar, Pa .Gnadenhutten, O . . . . . Chicago, Ill ...Mentor, O .....Oberlin, O. ........Akron, O. .. . .Northfield, O . ..... Moline, Ill . . . . . Bradford, Pa W. H. Wilson .... ..... Miss B. A. Anderson ..... .. . , H. G. Blaine 1' N. V. Davis. C. G. Durgin ..... . . Port Byron, Ill ........Elyria,O .Mineral Point, O ..Hillsdale, Mich . Nashville, Tenn. . . . . . . .Kenton, O .Lindenville, O. . OHERLIN COLLEGI: I-II-O-Hi Miss'A. A. Mannington. . . u Ml. Marks' ...... . . . .M. Martin. . .. V' M. C. Miller. V L. C. Pond.... C. Shaw. . . . Q.. 5.1-. Mellen ..... . IQ ......Genesea, Ill. .. . . Cleveland,fO. . . . . . .Oherlin, O. . . . . Rock Creek, O. . . . .Cleyeland, Ill. . .... Brooklyn, N. Y. . . . . . ...... Macon, Ga. . S. M. Townsend .... ...New London, O. 'H C. P. Winter .... ..... M iclcllefield, Conn. cg ' A l PHILOSOPHICAL COURSE. G. S. Addams ...... F. I. Carruthers .... A. D. Edwards .... ll. N. Kimball .... C. T. l.aCost ..... P. H. Metcalf .... A. F. Millikan .... F. A. Olds ..... B. W. Savage .... Roy Sexton .. . . . .. G. A. Wilbur ...... Miss L. E. Appleton H F H. ' . Catlin .... ..... J. E. Corbin... A A. , Ford ..... . ..... J. A. Green B. lrl. I'Iai'rington . . . . E. M. Moll .... A. B. Ring..... M. E. Taylor ..... . A. E. Town... Miss S. B. Bird ..... . L.. Ziegler .................................. Columbiana, O. . . . .Saleni, O. . . . . .Oberlin,'O. .. . .Dundee,'-Ill. ... .Madison, O. ... . .Farmer, O. .. . . . . Elyria, O. . . .Wichita, Kan. . ....Oberlin, O. ... ... . Ripon, Wis. .. . .. Streator, Ill. Central College, O. ...Victory,Vt. Washington, D. C. .Union City, Mich. . . . . Painesville, O. Washington, D. C. . .... Cleveland, O. . . . Hiawatha, Kan. . . . . . .Oberlin, O. . . . Mt. Vernon, O. . . . . . .Aurora, Ill. ......North Greenfield, Wis. H S. M. Bullard ..... ... ....... '. . .Oberlin, O. M. C. Champ. . .... Oberlin, O, ff S. J. Evans ..... .... O berlin, O. G. F. Harrison .... Granville, Ill. B. E. Hay .... .. . . ...... Panora, Ia. U J. H. Hegman .... ..... E lysian, Minn. U H. L. Hildrup .... ......... C hicago, Ill. H A. King. ..... .... Newton Falls, O. U J. A. Kump.. G. G. Leavitte. . . . ....... Atwater, O. . . . .Oberlin, O. zo OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-I-I1. Miss L. A. Lee .... ......... O berlin, O E. A. Olds ..... .......... O berlin, O. U F. B. -Phelps . . . .... West Suffield, Conn. H. L. Price .... ....... K ent, O L. V. Sears .... C. L. Smith.. . E. Steele ..... 4' J. E. Stiles .. K. M. Upp ..... CONSERVATORY. Miss Helen E. Hoskins .... Carrie Ransom ...... Kate Peck ....... Elizabeth Cady.. Grace ,Clarke .... Sarah. Keyes .... Frank Barrows ..... C. W. Best ...... john Thompson .... 59, Q nw A165 , SY, J . rf YQ . ..... Elyria, O Ypsilanti, Mich .. . .Oberlin, O. . . . .Oberlin, O. . . . Sandusky, O . .Sioux City, Ia . . . Alma, Mich . Duluth, Minn . . . . .Oberlin, O . . . . . .Chicago, Ill . . . . . Portland, Mich ......Ames,Ia . . . Mendota, Ill .....Oberlin, O . OBERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. zt CLASS STATISTICS, 'QO. Number of students graduating this year........ ...... ..96 Gentlemen. ........... .,.. . ........ ....46 Ladies ..... . ..... .... . ...50 Classicals. .... . ..... . ....... 46 Literaries. ...... .. . .... ...zo Philosophicals. ........... ................ 2 I Conservatory .......... . .......... .. .,.... 9 OI' this number 48 hail from Ohio, I I from States east of Ohio, 33 from States west of Ohio, 2 from the South, t from a foreign country. The class patriarch, J. W. Cook, has gladdened the world fOl 3I years, 6 months, 4 days. The class infant, Ralphie W. Hayes, has been born 20 years and 26 days. Average age of the gentlemen ........ ....... 2 3,9 Average of' ladies ..................... ...... l ................... ......... 2 3 .6 The measurement of the earth's attraction for R. E. Loveland, the class heavy-weight, is 180 pounds. Ninety's featherweight, Fred Arnold, tips the scales at I27. The average weight of the gentlemen is just 150 pounds. The average weight ofthe ladies is just I22.2 pounds. The tallest man, Booth, stretches 6 feet 2M inches toward the zenith. The shortest man, Fred Arnold, grows 5 feet 35 inches out ofground. Average height of gentlemen ........... . ................. 5 ft. 9.3 inches. Average height of ladies ...................................... 5 ft. 4 inches. 60 per cent. ofthe class think they have dark hairg 40 per cent. light. 50 per cent. ofthe class think they have dark eyesg 50 per cent. light. 40 per cent. of the class think they have dark complexiong 60 per cent. light. 44 per cent. ofthe class wear glasses 5 56 per cent. do not. 95 per cent. of gentleman belong to some college society, 85 per cent. ofthe ladies. 85 per cent. of the class are Congregationalists. 6M per cent. ofthe class are Presbyterians. The rest scattered. 60 per cent. ofthe class are Republicansg 20 per cent. ofthe class are Prohibitionistsg 20 per cent. of the class are Mugwumps. 22 OBERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. Seven men expect to enter the lawg 6 to teachg 6 to preach 9 2 to en ter the medical professiong 2 to be civil engineersg I to enter busi ness. The rest don't know. 56 per cent. honestly admit that they chew gum. The rest deny. The class has been in Oberlin 4.8 years. The vote on handsomest man in class is, Homer Kimball, 26. ll CI KG If ll Jameson, 6' H U U ' Metcalf, 4. u in u u u Crook, 3. GG KK Cl L4 ll Sackett, 4. Rest scattering, ' The vote on handsomest man in college is, Kimball, 22. L H ff 4' R. A. Millikan, 5. ll ll as H U Metcalf, 4. ll U IG Cl il 3. Rest scattering. The vote on most popular man in class is, Van Horn, 15. cc u as al ts Arnold, 12. ll ll If li ll 3' Il ll ll Sl Cl 2: Rest scattering. . The vote on most popular man in College is, Van Horn, 6. A C. B. Firestone, 2. 'f H H ' ff Abhott, E. H., 5. It sl ll ll H V Hutchins, 4. n n A u u Arnold, 4' KG Cl Cl fl ll 4. R. A. Millikan, 3. Rest scattering. OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. '9O'5 CLASS SONG. God protect our Alma Mater, Our college grand and free, May time weave thro'out the ages Laurel wreaths to honor thee. CHO.-Alma Mater, Alma Mater, May'st thou ever, ever be . Our watchword, our watchword Of the class of '90 O. C. Ever forward is our watchword, In the eager search for truth ' And on science's blazing altars We are purifying youth. I Cho. I For God and for our country, Is the keynote of our song, Which with joyous words we'll utter Udrrors rrufllzu Zywov. Cho. Iliirrore rrufllzu E' wav 7 We will raise our banner gay, We sing our song with joyous hearts' On this glad and 'happy day. . Cho. 24 OBERUN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. THE '90-'91 PARTNERSHIP SONG. Classmates and friends our greeting is fraught with joy to-d We hail this glad season with hearts and accents gay 3 We lift our voices gladly, and start a stirring cheer, Which day by day we'll heighten, thro' every coming year. Then, classmates, lift the watchword of right against the wro The prize is to the bravest, the battle to the strong. Three years of sun and shadow stretch backward o'er our w The vista of the future gleams bright with hope to-day. The goal is just before us 3 we see our colors wave, And ne'er a tbotstep backward shall be our watchword bra Yes, to the class of '90, our hearts are loyal, true, And underneath her banner will we our pledge renew. CLASS-DAY SPEAKERS. Orator, ------ E. M. FAIRCHILD. Eulogy, - ALFRED ARNOLD. Grumbler, - - MAY BULLARD, . Spade Oration, - J. W. CROOK. Ivy Ode, - ---- P. G. KNowL'roN. Prophecy, ----.. ELLA MoLL. FAREWELIQ 'ro 'gol FAREWVELIJ FAREWELLI ZW, ng, 9-Y, veg PROP -'O-FMIRIGHT' PROF- JAME5 MONROE'- LI-M'ELLl5' ' X KX Prof-wvc.-BALLANTINE r PROF' PROP-CHCHURCHILL' X OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. 27 PROFESSOR J. M. ELLIS. Professor John Millott Ellis was born in Jaftcry, New Hampshire, March 27, 1831. He came with his fath- er's family to Oberlin in 184-0. Graduated from college in 18575 taught school and studied theology one year. Was Professor of Ancient Languages in Mississippi Col- lege for three years. Continued l1is theological course partly in Union Seminary and partly i11 the Oberlin Seminary, graduating from Oberlin in 1857. Was called to fill Prof. Hudson's place as teacher of Latin and Greek for one year. During the year Prof. Hudson was killed and Prof. Ellis was appointed Professor of Greek. He filled this chair until 1866, was then trans- lerred to the chair of Mental Philosophy and Rhetoric, with work also in Evidences of Christianity, Political Economy, English Literature, and' other branches. This work has gradually been distributed to the Pro- fessor of History and Political Science. to the Professor ol' Rhetoric and to the Professor of English. For a number of years he has been one ol' the acting pastors ol' the Second Congregational church of Oberlin. He has been a member of the Prudential committee of the college since 1866. Married Minerva E. Tcnney, August 28, 1862, and has four sons. PROFESSOR JAMES MONROE. Professor -lames Monroe was born at Plainfield, Con- necticut, July 18, 1821. Began his education at Plain- field academy, and graduated from Oberlin College in 184-6, then took a course in the Oberlin Theological Seminaryg was a professor in Oberlin from 184-9 to 1862, was a member of the House of Representatives of Ohio from 1856-1859, was State Senator in 1860, '61 and '62g was President pro tempore of the Senate 28 ' Q OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-I-II. in '61 and '62 5 'was appointed as United States consul at Rio Janeiro by President Lincoln, which position he held from '63-'69. For several months in '69 he acted as Charge d'Af'f'airs ad interim, was a member of the 42nd, 43rd, 44th, 45th and 46th Congress. He left Congress in '81 and has been Professor of Political Science and Modern-History in Oberlin College since '83, PROFESSOR G. F. WRIGHT. Professor G. Frederick Wright was born at White- hall, New York, january 22, 1838. Graduated from Oberlin College in '59 and from the Seminary in '62. Was pastor at Bakersfield, Vermont, in '62 and at An- dover in '72. Became Professor of New Testament Language and Literature at Oberlin in '81 9 was assist- ant geologist at the Pennsylvania Survey in '81 and of the United States Survey since '84. He is the author of The Logic of Christian Eviden- ces, '80 and '83, Studies in Science and Religion, '82, Relation of Death to Probation, '82 and '83, Glacial Boundary in Ohio, Indiana and Kentucky, '84, The Divine Authority of the Bible, '84, Ice Age in North America, '89, He is one of the editors of Bibliotheca Sacra. He was made D.D. by Brown University in '88, and LL.D., by Drury College in the same year. In 1862 he married Miss H. M. Turner and has now four children. PROFESSOR C. H. CHURCHILL. Professor Charles Henry Churchill was born in Lyme, New Hampshire, August 21, 1824. He grad- uated from Dartmouth College in 1845. For five years after graduating he taught in Brooklyn Center acad- emy, and in the High school in West Cleveland. In Om11u.1N COLLEGE H I-O-ll 1. ' 29 1846, at Brooklyn Center, he married Mary Turner. In 1850 he entered the Theological Seminary at Ober- lin, graduating in 1853. While in the seminary he paid his way through school besides supporting his wife and one child by teaching music and drawing. From 1854 to 1859 he was Professor of Greek and French in Hillsdale College. In 18,58 he became Pro- fessor of Mathematics in Oberlin College and still oc- cupies this chair. Q ' In 1884 he was offered the position of President of the State Normal at Ypsilanti, Michigan, but declined. In 1885, at the reunion of his class at Dartmouth, he was chosen a member ofthe W. li. lr, Society, PROFESSOR WM. G. BALLANTINE. Professor Wm. G. Ballantine was born at Washing- ton, District of Columbia, in 1848, took freshman and sophomore years in Wabash College Indiana, entered the Junior class at Marietta College in 1868. While a student and after graduation, he was engaged in rail- road engineeringg became a member of the Geological Survey of Ohio in 1869, graduated from Union Theological Seminary in 18725 went abroad and studied Hebrew in Leipzig, under Delitzsch. In 1873 he went to the Holy Land as a member of the Ameri- can Palestine Exploring Expeditiong spent six months, mostly east of thejordan. Was Professor of Chemistry and Natural Sciences in Ripon College, Wisconsin, from 1874-18765 was Assistant Professor of' Greek in Indi- ana University from 1876-1878g was Professor of Greek and Hebrew Exegesis in Oberlin Theological Seminary from 1878-1880, and has been Professor of Old Testament Language and Literature since 1880. He -became one of the editors of Bibliotheca Sacra in 1884, received the honorary degree of D. D. from Marietta College in 1885. 30 OHERIJN Col.i.Emc H1-O-HI. CLASS OF '91, JU IORS. w I Iqwxgk 0 Q rf- ' ' .f fl , fiii.-.', '. 1 , ::' 1- ' J K, ' - - ,- -1- , M1 , .K- .s ,A fffrmgi., .IF fy 2 X Q, s . LS -QU .zu my SI-'4.'. ':.' fs! A n K rj' ..,isi:5N-4, ' I -bf' ffm' 9 v 'If X I A C filrjvilkk L , fC-jf? - -' -1 4.3...3:u b---H 1-.a L' ' .. --- Q1' ' 7 BOUND FOR GRADUATION. M OTTO: Nixp ry? rlfirlu. YELL: Eo, rah. rah! eo, 1'Z1I'1,f6lI1I eo rah! hui'-rah! ninety-one. COLORS: Pink and green. OFFICERS -CLASSICAL AND PHILOSOPHICAL. President ....................................... G. A. LAWRENCE. V ice-President ....... Secretary ......... Treasurer ...... Ch orister .......... B. B. Captain ............ ....... Foot Ball Captain ........................ President .... . Secretary. .... Treasurer ..... LITERARY. .................... .-H... Miss H ATTIE PECK. I. C. CHASE. A. P. HOWLAND. F. W. GUERNEY. A. P. HOWI.AND. S. C. MASTICK. MAMIE MCCORD. GERTRUDE STANLEY. EDITH COWLEY. vs. UBICRLIN Col.I.lco1L PII-O-I'Il. Sl CLASS HISTORY. The little lamb of '91, Although he must grow old Before he put a sheepskin on, Can now a tale unfold. When Prin first beheld in Prepdonfs auroral etllu- ence this naked new-born babe striding the blast, hc declared it to be the finest he had ever seen, nor did hc recant after he had nursed it through the first attack of the pantaloonery. Very shortly we pushed into other things. In spite of faculty canons we purchased our far-famed tobacco plugsg their full significance would probably have never been discovered had Prof. King not worn a sample out to milk and it kicked his cow. Our Sophomore year nurses the memory of the captured-lunior lulla-by. We stole beneath the moon singing it soothingly and wept for pity because they substituted prose from the depleted state oftheir bard- ism. 5 This year has recorded magnificent triumphs. The vhole college rises up to bless us for our magnaminity 1 stuhing the athletic meetings and insuring such pagnificent oflicers and captains. From incessant 'ging, we have generously consented, in return, to dulge in the base ball penant. They say we so cn- ant them our ball seems like a phantom, by the way T 2 phanned them out, and if misfortune gave a man a t he found, with Shakespeare, we were able to 1 iark his favorite flies. Field-day came, and when - cloud of conflict cleared we claimed a bloodless tory. The cause ofjustice and peace had conquered. e Seniors were restrained from excessive crowing Q A M-my --M--A-PM n N .. .- n 1 2 n....I4Qiii,.,f fg with '14 :wird . -,hln...,.-UPI. 1.4.1513 Qqjx' ,:Lx',-,Wax-.lg-'xilyjvgf ',.:q'g:'g-vp, wq, ' '-rf. f.'4.al.f:-H ,Q w IWAX 32 OliIEltl,lN Comxzcm H1-O-HI. over the preps, and from the humiliating insinuations of their superiority over undergraduate organisms. Let no one think our glorious achievements are con- fined to athletics. Once Diogenes, with his electric light,could not have found a man who owned,.by study- ing hard, he could not lead his class. Our pride was to brouse over books, solve our Horace and sean our Trig without serious cerebral inflammation. Now the class is all head. How we have bounded beyond the limits ofcurriculum! We have thrust pleasure aside, shunned the allurements of society and drunken deep of the Plerian spring until rescued from the inebriation of learning's verbosity. He have risen and looked upon the plotsam and jetsam of lifes gurgling sea and felt ourselves the pharos which should illuminate the wastes of earth. How we long to rush up on the cos- mos and declare the truths of our noble class! No, friends, prof. is not short for prophet, nor D.D. for devil diviner. Ourjunior Ex. asserts our transcendent superiority. The former efforts seem desultory con- cepts in a splash of words before the mighty grasp of our political philosophy and the wierd churls of our wild realms of fancy. The world shall recognize ant honor us. This year has placed something in our fore heads by which we shall be known. The blessedness 1 this visionary felicity is only marred by the sobbing A the faculty at the thought ofthe single year rcmainii before they are torn from our bosoms. Sympathy has formed many a union among us. l shrink from mentioning the Bachelors' club, but for ' relief of friends we will say that we have had tl' heads examined and have found them to be ncit idiots, malefactors or poets, but simply suffering fi in-judicious reticence, arising from early disappo ment. Among these internal organizations we ni notice the eating club, ycleped, ye Sapient Seven, T' . I OBERLIN COLI.l'ZGE HI-O-HI. 33 motto is, Education is not accumulation, but the de- velopment ofcapacityf' The special protection of St. Epictethus has been secured. One word concerning the inHuence of social life. The results ofthe rush for partners in this atmosphere of soul may be summed up simply as having been either subjectively objecting, or objectively subiecting. But oh, the scent of the roses she wore, ancl the glance of her sparkling eyes, or thejealous gaze ofthe other man 5-that bill ofmy tailors! Wlly, how sad and bad and mad it was, but then, how it was sweet. Such are dents of Chronos' tooth, for the chariot of time is rolling on and gnashing its teeth as it rolls. I VALE. K 8- W 1 34 OHERIAN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. L JUNIOR CLASS. E. H. Abbott ......... W. L. Beard ....... Theo. Breck ........... G. S. Callendar ......... I. C. Chase ......... J. W. Eldred .......... C. B. Firestone ......... E. E. Flint ......... W. Grifliths ..,.... W. Gurney... F. F. .... . L. W. Hatch ......... W. F. Ireland ........ W. L. Judkins ....... G. A. Lawrence ........ H. K. Loeb ............ S. C. Mastick ........ J. B. McCord ......... J. H. McCord ........ R. A. Millikan ....... E. S. Moulton ....... G. B. Sidclall ...... C. M. Sherrill ........ F. A. Sumner ......... H. F. West ......... G. D. Wilder .......... R. S. Wilkinson.. Miss Irma Alford ......... Judith Carter ...... J. M. Doren ......... C. T. Memmoth... CLASSICALS. ....................Sl1elby, Ia Birmingham, Conn ..............Brecksvillc, O ........Harts Grove, O ..........Oberlin, O ..........Curtis, N. Y ............New Lisbon, O ......................Hartford, O West Bloomfield, N. Y ....................Dover, Dak ......................Oberhn, O. .......Natal, South Africa. C. M. Johnson ........ . ........... Barnesville, 0 ................Norwalk, O. ........Woodville, Mass. ........Alameda, Cal. .......Shefiield, Ill. .......SheHield, Ill. ........Wicl1ita, Kan. ..........Oberlin, O. ..........Oberlin, O. ................Oberhn, 0. .......Eastford, Conn. ..........Sylvania. O. .............Huron, Dak. . ..... Charleston, S. C. .............Oberlin, O. .......St. Louis, Mo. ......Columbus, 0 . .... ........... Oberlin, oi .. .....Worcester, Mass. Frankie Robinson ......... ...................... O berlin, O. H U ' G. E. Stanton ............... ...... . .......... Sarah Waite .......................................... W. J. Black ........... W. E. Byrnes ........ PHILOSOPHICALS. ..Rochester, N. Y. .Paul's Valley, Ind. Ter. ............................................Lexington, Mich. ..............Bellevuc, O. . OBERLIN COLLEGE ' H1-O-I-11. 35 J. L. Carter ..... . A. L. Grein ....... T. L. Hopkins ...... A. P. Howland ....... G. W. Mead ......... R. T. Miller ....... A. B. Morgan ...... j. A. Solandt ........ J. W. D. C G. E Miss ll 'r li' .. ll ln ll Al ll ll 41 ll A4 Miss bl tc AL it at at u at na H H Wright ........ . ,Grover ................ . Plumb .................... L. B. Banschback ...... A. D. Arnold ......... ' E. C. Bates ........... M. H. Burge ...... Lulu Frazyer ....... T. F. Garfield.. ...... Hattie May ....... H. A. Peck ......... M. C. Phelps ........ M. B. Safford ....... C. E. Silliman ...... H. A. Watson ....... M. A. Westcott .... M. L. West .......... . Maud Cleghorn... A. E. Densmore ....... B. M. Dressler ...... Idaj. Generals ..... H. E. Harward ........ A. A. Johnson. ..... . A. J. jones .......... Ella Marsh ........ M. E. McCord ...... G. M. Stanley ....... N. E. Sumner ........ M. M. Tobin ........ .........Elyria, O. ........,BuiTalo, N. Y. ........Asl1tabuIa, 0. ........JeFf'erson, O. O. ..............Norwalk, . ......Scottsville, N. Y. . ......... A ........... Starr, O. ..........In.vernessg Quebec. ........West Rosendalc, Wis. ........Harts. Grove, O. .............St1'cator, Ill. Pue,Ill, ........Canal Dover, O. ...........Lceton1a, O. ..........Oberlm, 0. .......Marietta, O. ...............Sheflield, O. ........Annapolis, Mo. .......Duluth, Minn. .............Nova, O. .......Madison, O. ........Hudson, Wis. .........Hannibal, Mo. ........Kenclallville, Ind. LITERARIES. .................................Suspension Bridge, N. Y ............Noel, Nova Scotia. .......................Akron, O. .. ........... Atchison, Kan. .Central College, O. ................Oberlin, O. .......Allegheny, Pa. .......Barabo, Wis. ...........Sl1effic1d, lll. .................Teintsin, China. ......Mansficld Center, Conn. ..........ObCl'lll'l,'O. .............Oberl1n, O. 36 Oisnunln COLLEGE HI-O-HI. STATISTICS. The grandpa of the Junior class is A. B. Morgan, age 28 years. Go nearly a decade in the other direction and you tind S. C. Mastick, age I9 years. 60 per cent, of the class have dark hair, 30 per cent. dark eyes, and 32 per cent. dark complexiong 20 per cent. wear glasses. For the pretty man of the class R. A. Millikan received 8 votes, G. B. Siddall 6, R. T. Miller 5, G. S. Callendar 2, and C. B. Firestone 2. For the pretty man ofthe college the class voted for H. N. Kimball 5, P. H. Metcalf 4, R. T. Miller 3, C. H. Ewing 3, G. C. Jameson 2, Up Firestone 2, Whitecomb I, and T. W. McGregor I. 62 per cent. ofthe class are Congregationalists. I9 per cent. belong to no church. 7 per cent. are Episcopalians. 5 per cent. Presbyterians. 5 per cent. Baptists, and 2 per cent. Methodists. The most popular man in the class, C. B. Firestone 17, E. H. Abbott 9, G. B. Sidda1l3, J'. W. Wright 2, F. W. Gurney 2. In college, F. J. VanHorn 6, C. B. Firestone 5, E. H. Abbott 4, W, J. Hutchins 3, Harry Summer 3, W. H. Wilson 2, P. H Metcalfl 65 per cent. chew gum. 5 per cent. are going to sell books this 6 per cent. are going to study law. 5 per cent 6 per cent are going to study theology, Summer. are going to study medicine. The gentlemen prefer sciences, the ladi Average weight of ladies, IZZZ lbs. Average weight of gentlemen, 159 lbs. Average age of gentlemen, 23 years. Average age of ladies, 20 I-5 years. Oldest lady, 24, youngest, I9. Average height of boys, 5 ft. 8 inches. es languages OBERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. Average height of girls. 5 ft. 3 inches. Tallest gentleman, R. T. Miller, 6 ft. 2 inches. Shortest gentleman, R. S. Wilkinson, 5 ft. 4inches. Tallest lady, 5 ft, 7 inches. Shortest lady, 4 ft. 8 inches. 30 per cent. are Prohibitionists, 42 per cent. are Republicans. 8 per cent. are Democrats. 20 per cent. are Mugwumps. Average of number of years spent in Oberlin, 3 2-5. following States: The class come from the Ohio 33, Pennsylvania 3, Wisconsin 3, Kansas 2, S. Carolina I, Mississippi I, California I, New York 6, Michigan 3, Connecticut 3, Canada 2, Massachusetts, Iowa I, China 1. 6 Illinois 6, Missouri 3, - Dakota 2, Minnesota I, I, Africa I, Indian Territory OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. CLASS SONG. p Ninety-one, Ninety-one, class beloyed, I How our thoughts unto thee e'er will turn, As we think of the joys thou hast given us, Of the truths thou hast brought us to learn ! Ever fast will we hold thee in mem'ry, With thy friendships, thy joys, and thy pain, And thy teaching so true and so noble It shall be our life's task to attain. Though our strength of to-day is full feeble, And the future is veiled from our view, There is promise of power and of valor In the work thou hast set us to do. There is much that our zeal can accomplish If our purpose be kept pure and true, Ever Victory unto the Worthy Is the motto we all hold in view. There's a bond that no parting can sever, There's a tie we can never release, ll Ninety-one is our watchword forever Until time and eternity cease. Then, Hurrah ! for our class and our motto, For the colors we all love so well, And Hurrah ! for our dear Alma Mater, Let her praises the glad echoes swell. CLASS DAY SPEAKERS. 1 E. lf.. Miss E. S. Miss Miss Miss J. W. Miss Miss FL1N'1' ................ ........ O rator. G. E. S'1'AN'l'ON ..... .... E ssayist MOUL'1'ON, l Amee JONES, ... . . . Historians LULU FRAZYER, l M. A. WEsTco'r'r. .... . . .Poet WRIGHT, 2' g Editors of IRMA ALFORD, . . . . Class M.E.McCoRD,l' ' ' l Paper PROP PR0F.fF,1EwETT. OnmRL1N COLLEGE H1-O-I-ll. 41 PROFESSOR A. H. CURRIER. Professor Albert Henry Currier was born in Skowhe- gan, Maine, November 15, 1837. Preparcd for col- lege at Bloomfield Academy, entered Bowden college in 1853, graduating in 1857. Taught one year in the High schools of Chicago, was in a business house in New York city one year. Graduated from Andover Theological Seminary in 18623 was minister in Ash- land, Massachusetts, for 216 years, then called the Cen- tral church of Lynne, Lwhere he remained from 1865- 1881. Became Professor of Homiletics and Pastoral Theology in Oberlin Theological Seminary in 1881. He is the author of The Life of C. L. Goodell, D.D., and was one of the originators of the series of Mon- day Club Sermons, to which he has already contrib- uted 37 sermons. On November 26, 1862, he married Miss Ellen Bart- lett of Harmony, Maine. PROFESSOR A. A.. WRIGHT. Professor Albert Allen Wright was born in Oberlin, April 27, 1846. Educated at Oberlin,graduating from the college in 1865 and from the Theological Seminary in 1870. Graduated from the Columbia College School of Mines in 1875. Taught in the Cleveland Institute from 1865-1867, was Professor of Natural Sciences in Berea College, Kentucky, from 1870 to 18735 was ap- pointed Professor of Theology and Natural History in Oberlin College in 1874-. Traveled in Europe one year, 1884-5. Married Mary L. Bedortha of Saratoga, New York, September 23, 1874. 42 OBERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. PROFESSOR FENELON B. RICE. Professor F. B. Rice was born in 1841, in Green, Ohio. He received his education principally in the Hillsdale, Michigan, school and college. He studied music in Boston, Massachusetts, and in Leipsic, Ger- many. In 1869 he came to Oberlin as Director of the Oberlin Conservatory of Music. He spent two years in Europe, from '67-'69, one year in '86 and one year in '89. He was married in 18635 was brought up in the Freewill Baptist church. The union of the conserva- to1'y and college is due to Professor Rice. MRS. A. A. F. JOHNSTON. Mrs. Johnston, formerly Miss Field, was born in Lafayette, Medina county, O., February 5, 1837, re- ceived her education entirely at Oberlin, graduating from the literary course in 1856 at the age of 19. She taught at Mossy Creek, Tenn., two years, and was then married to James M. Johnston, August 17, 1859. She afterwards taught in Orwell, O., and Albany, O., and went to Kingsman, O., in 1862, as principal of Kingsman Academy. From 1865 to 1868 she was principal of the ladies department at North Scituate, R. I. In 1868, Mrs. Johnston went to Germany, studied there two years, and in 1870 took up her work in Oberlin College as principal ofthe ladies department. Since 1870, Mrs. Johnston has been abroad three times. In 1.890 she was appointed to the professorship of Mediaeval History in Oberlin College, being thus the tirst woman who ever held a professorship in aco- educational college. Mrs. Johnston was raised in the Free Will Baptist Church. OBEiu.1N COLLEGE H1-O-HI. 43 PROFESSOR F. F. JEWETT. Professor Frank Fanning jewett was born at New- ton, Mass., January 8, 1844. Fitted for college in the Free Academy at Norwich, Conn. Entering Yale College in September, 1866, he graduated from the Academieal Department in 1870. On graduation, he was made instructor ol physics and chemistry in the Norwich Academy. At the expiration of two years, leave of absence was granted him to allow ol' his tak- ing a special course in chemistry and mineralogy at the Sheffield Scientific School of Yale College. At the close of another year's teaching in the academy, he went abroad and studied at the University of Gottenzen, Germany. A few months after returning to this coun- try, he was employed as private assistant to Dr. Wolcott Gibbs of Harvard University, and, while in this position, on recommendation of President Porter of Yale College, he was appointed for a period of three years Professor of Chemistry in the Government Uni- versity at Tokio, Japan. After completing this period of engagement, he remained, by invitation of the president of the unversity, and served an additional term of eight months. In July of 1880, he married Fannie Gulick, eldest daughter of Dr. L. H. Gulick, at that time living at Yokohama, japan, and returned to the United States in August of the same year. On arriving at San Francisco, on his homeward journey, he received a letter requesting him to take the chair of Chemistry and Mineralogy i11 Oberlin College. He ac- cepted the request and still fills that position. 44 OIIERLIN COLLEGE HI-O71-II. CLASS OF '92, SOPHOMORES. .lf I 1 ,Z ti QI ' S ' l l' J' 'L' M0'l 1'0: lu lr:lnu5z'a 001 siruyiu. COLORS: Pink and Tan. YELL: Rah-rah-rah, Rah-rah-roo, Oberlin, Oberlin '92! President ......... Vice-President ...... Secretary ......... Treasurer ..... Presxdent ...... OFFICERS. CLASSICAL. A. WILDER. .......MISS LUCY CROSS. S. BOUGHTON. P. CHILD. LITERARY. MARY PLUMB. Secretary and Treasurer ..... ....... M ISS JENNIE BEATTY OBERI.IN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. 45 CLASS HISTORY. The Sophomore class began to be born about 18644. Since then whippings, canes, hand-bills, secret session programmes and mortar boards have been borne by the class, so that we now bear the reputation of being the meekest and least dangerous class in college. The first of' us came in 1884 and joined the Junior Prep. class. The march upward to college life was made with few losses on the way. Our ball nine beat '91 in the Middle Prep. year, and some of '92 got the swell head. Their heads have continued to swell ever since, but we fear that the ball nine can never repeat the dose. In the Senior Prep. year the light and glory of our class joined us, making us known to all as a rising and enterprising unit. We still have the canes we got then, and they were very serviceable in the late disturbances. From a hand bill got out by the Juniors, we see that they still have the tobacco plugs which they ordered to eclipse '92's canes. Ifthey had bought plugs of tobacco instead of tobacco plugs, there would not be even a tag left now. In the Freshman year we began to be somebody. Groans over the Greek. Latin and mathematics, of which we had a liberal dose, daily were heard from everyone. We worried through the year as best we could, hoping for ease the next year. Qur base ball nine, after a bad beginning and many experiments, took a spurt and gained second place. We came together as Soph's, happy because we could take electives. Some immediately elected French, but dropped it like a pig of lead. They said it was Power-ful hard. The classicals started Greek Testament in Bible class. 46 ORERLIN Cottisczm I-I1-O-Hi. After a year ofthat, no one blames the Greeks for being heathens-. All of us 'would have been the same under the circumstances. ' Thanksgiving was well utilized by '92. The party, held at Prof. Wright's, on Elm street, was most enjoy- able. The chief attractions were Mr. and Mrs. Micaw- ber and the genial attendant with tliepfinger bowl. A communication came from the young ladies a' few days after-Waals, thanking the boys for carrying chairs, dis- posing of cake, squeezing lemons. etc. One fellow objected to the etc., but was silenced by the statement that the young ladies l1adn't. So the fall term wentby. In vacation the Soph's had a party every other even- ing, and sometimes one in between. When the distance home was not long enough to suit a couple, it is said they got lost and wandered overhalfthe town without kno Wing i t. - V ' In the middle of the win ter term, plans were proposed for a class decoration. After a long conflict, mortar boards won. But a11 enemy was in the camp, or rather in the attic. The juniors got out a Plug Hat hand-bill, and a lively contest at the distribution of these after chapel resulted in favor of the Soph's. Next morning the Freshmen got out their verbatim report of the meeting received from the attic. Then there was war. That night a scrap between Soph's and Freshmen in Peters' Hall basement resulted in favor of a Senior Prep., while the windiest Freshman of them all evapo- rated through a 10-12 windy pane. Freshmen and Soph's organized and did regular police duty for weeks. The Freshmen arnbushed for an empty trunk which Soph's were seen carrying. McLanchlan was exempted from police duty by '92 because he couldn't hide at night. All at once the Soph's quieted down and began to look for a missing mortar board. They very soon found it, but could not get it, as it perambulated the OHERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. 47 streets only by day light. There was talk of a habeas corpus act or a writ of replevin, but a dark night answered the purpose just as well. How the mortar board was rescued by one Soph, and how the rest chased him, and how some innocent town fellows came near being arrested for theft, ought to be celebrated in heroic meet her ton a dark night.j We Soph's were jubilant, 'because we had come out of the mortar-board conflict with honor, ifnot with glory. ' In the winter term, Hulett and MCL8L1ClllH1l took turns coming to class with one or two black eyes and acatacornered nose. This is why McLauchlan was disqualified Field Day for slugging, he looked so wicked. 4 Asjunior Ex. approached, 'various members of the Faculty lectured us on good behayior. It seems the Faculty thought that we had been abused so much that we surely must break forth this time. But we did not. Patience is our strong point. Lately, when a skull and crossbones was painted on the Freshman fireplace screen, every one laid it to the Soph's. We are waiting for some Freshman to confess and exonerate us, although it is not likely. '93 is so disreputable that it takes for its motto Tffllffll wkflv, which, being interpreted, means we conquer by ponies. In Field Day we fell behind in number ofpointsg though Currier and Wells did as much for us as any one could hope for. The relay team lost, and would be willing to lose again if they would get such an enjoyable social from it. The base ball nine lost a game to '93, and tied with the Seniors. We know certainly now that '92 can't play ball. The class day of '92 this year will show what we can do if we have halfa chance. One last word: If any member of '92 is caught bur- glarizing or robbing a bank this summer, let him go, he is only getting money enough to pay his subscrip- tion to the Y. M. C. A. building. 48 OBERLIN Col.I.EGL: I-Ii-O-I-Il. SOPHONORE CLASS. Carlton Aylard ,,,,.. A. A. Church ........ XV. N. Crafts ...... A. II. Currier ........ I-I. W. Damon .,,,,. F, A. Donaldson ...... C. II. Ewing ......... l'. W. Goldshury ...... W. F. Grosvenor ...... NV. 'l'. Holmes ....... G. A. lflulett ......... W, J, Hutchins ........ A. M. Hyde .......... A, M. Ingraham .... N. C. Kingsbury ,.,,,, ........Brunswick, O ......Cadillac, Mich ,,.,,,,Anniston, Ala .........Oberlin, O ....... Kirtland, O ................Seville, O South Dayton, N. Y .MinneapoIis, Minn .............Cl1icago, Ill .......Montclair, N. Y ..........Russell, Kans .....Los Angelus, Cal .........New Lyme, O ,,,,West Andover, O ...I'Iailey, Idaho Ter C. C. Kirkpatrick. .... .. ..... 'l'iSkilWn, Ill J. L. Love ........ G, P. Martin .... W. L. Martin ..... M. E. Meriam .... Albert Moser .... James Pettit .... P. M. Pond .... F. B. Ryder .... D, P. Simpson .... J. C. Teeters .... F. A. Wilder .... S. R, NVilliams .... li. E. Wilson .... C. E. Yetman ...... Lucy A. Cross ....... Bertha F. Fairchild ..... Mary M. Farnsworth ..... josephene B. Mitchell .... Mary L. Partridge .... .......................... .. . . Ashville, N. C ,. . .Mt. Vernon, O . . Kansas City, Mo. . . . . .RandoIph, O ...........Lima,O ... Minneapolis, Minn .........Oberlin, O . . .Andover, Mass . . .Cleveland, O. .. . . .Auburn, Ind . . . .Monroe, Mich .. . Kalgan, China . . . .Austin, Texas . . . . .Claridon, O . . . . .I5lyria, O . . . . .Oberlin, O . ...... Oberlin, O . . . . Philadelphia, Pa .. . . Longwood, Fla PHILOSOPHICAL COURSE. C. S. Banker. ..................... ...... .......... M o reland, N. Y E. S. Boughton. . ....Victor, N. Y. o 4 OBERLIN COLLEGEH C. E. Briggs ..... H. R. Chapman .... S. P. Child ...... S. L. Colby.. . . B. Dudley.. . . J. P. Gram ..... Paul Guard.. . . . C. W. Hoyle ..... Blake Kellogg ..... C. C. Kirtland.. . . . W. C. Lea ........ M. R. Marshall .... Wm. McLauchian .... W. U. Parks ....... C. F. Ralston .... E. G. Randal... . . C. A. Squire ..... A. B. Wood .......... . . Flora L. Blackstone ..... Charlotte M. Chainberlin .... .. Caroline E. Chittenden. . Edith C. Cowley ....... Mary T. Currier .... Agnes Dickson ..... Mary Francis ..... Sarah M. Gillett. . . . Grace E. Jones .... . Pauline E. Lane .... Emily Langell .... Clara H. Little ...... Jennette E. Marsh ..... Maude L. Mason ..... Mary F. McLaury ...... Estella M. McMillan .... Annis Mead ......... . Minnie C. Mitchell .... Lucy H. Morley ..... Cora H. Swift ,... Ruth E. Swiler .... Agnes E. Warner ....... Harrie E. Brooke .. . . Cora A. Burns ......... Willie M. Chambers ..... Hattie M. Cobb ....... 1-O-H 1. 49 . . . .Calumet, Michigan . . . . . . ..Oberlin, Ohio .. . . Neponset, Illinois . . . . ..Oberlin, Ohio . . . . . . .Henrietta, Ohio . . . Gnadenhutten, Ohio ......Cleves, Ohio . . . . Martin's Ferry, Ohio Spo .. . . . . .Oberlin, Ohio . . . . Pueblo, Colorado . . . . Brecksville, Ohio . . . . . . Painesville, Ohio . . Ravenswood, Illinois Crystal Falls, Michigan .. ...... Oberlin, Ohio .. . . Prescott, Arizona . . . . . . ..Oberlin, Ohio .. . . .Sycamore, Illinois . . . .Oak Park, Illinois . .... Sharon, Vermont . .. ...... Oberlin, Ohio kane Falls, Washington ................Oberlin, Ohio . ..,. Wellington, Ohio . . . . I'adcly's Run, Ohio .. . . . . .Oberlin, Ohio .. ..Des Moines, Iowa . .. . .Oak Park, Illinois ...... . .Clevelancl, Ohio ..janesville, Wisconsin . . ..... . . . Bristol, Wisconsin . . . . . . . . .Oberlin, Ohio North Korlright, New York . , ............... Oberlin, Ohio . .... Oberlin, Ohio .. ..Oberlin, Ohio . . . .Mentor, Ohio . .. . . . ,Oberlin, Ohio . . ..Delavan, Wisconsin .. .... New York City LITERARY COURSE. Jennie M. Beatty .... ...................... Philadelphia, Pennsylvania .. . . . . .El Paso, Texas . . . . . . . . . Elgin, Illinois . . . .Oberlin, Ohio . . . .Oberlin, Ohio 5o OHERLIN COLLEGE Ht-O-HI. Emma F. Dodge ..... Rhoda Dunlap ..... Winifred Frusher ..... Ethel Garrison ..... 'Georgia M. Gray ..... . Louie A. Hall ....... . Jennie M. Higinbotham .... Jennie A. Howe ......... Jensine M. Jensen .... Louie M. Johnson. .. Eugenia J. Kincaid .... Addie Knapp ........ Mabel I, Loomis ..... Lucy C. Messer .... Mary B. Morrison .... Josephine Paige .... Addie Phillips .... Mary Plumb ..... Mary I. Pinneo .... Agnes T. Proctor .... julia B. Seymour Gertrude H. Sizer .... Mary L. Sizer ..... Laura C. Smith .... Nellie L. Smith .... Emma H. Stone .... .Anna E. Teeters ...., ........Akron, Ohio .West Newton, Ohio Perrysburg, Ohio . . .Vernon, Michigan . . . . .Oberlin, Ohio . . . . . . .Oberlin, Ohio . . . . .Victor, New York . . . . .CIeveland, Ohio . . . . .Oberlin, Ohio . . . . .Kenton, Ohio .. . . . Elgin, Illinois .. . . . . . Munson, Ohio . .. . . Wyoming, Iowa . . . . Washington, D. C. . . . . . . . Findlay, Ohio .. . . ,. . . . .Oberlin, Ohio . . . East Cleveland, Ohio .. . . . . . .Ober1in, Ohio . ..... Dayton, Ohio . . . . . .Fremont, Ohio . . . . . . . Rootstown, Ohio Marinette, Wisconsin Marinette, Wisconsin New Britain, Connecticut . . . . . . .Auburn, New York . . . . .Talmadge, Ohio . . . . Auburn, Indiana i r wx 2510544 I . OIIIERLIN Col.LEc:r: I-li-O-Eli. SI CLASS STATISTICS, '92. Number of students in the class during the year. . .. ...14-6 Number now in actual attendance. ............. . ...109 Gentlemen ...... .... ....... . . .50 Ladies ........ . . . .59 Classicals .... .......... 3 5 Literaries ..... .... 3 2 Philosophieals ...... 4-2. The class is bounded by childhood in thc person of Walter Crafts, ,aged eighteen years, five months and three days: by old age in the person of W. C. Lea, who is twenty-eight years, two months and 13 days old. Average age of gentlemen... . ......just 22 years. Average age of ladies ...................... just 20.5 years. The heaviest man in the class, F. N. Williams, weighs 195 pounds. The lightest man in the class, J. P. Gram, weighs 125 pounds. Average weight of gentlemen ....... ........... 1 54 pounds. Average weight of ladies ............. . .... 124: pounds. The class Goliath, C. E. Yetman, measures 6 feet 214 inches from the sole of his feet to the top oi' his head. The class shorty is John Lorenzo Love, who measures 5 feet 5 inches. Average height of the gentlemen .... .... 5 feet 10 inches. Average height of the ladies .............. 5 feet 4-W inches. 53 per cent. 4-7 per cent. 70 per cent. 35 per cent. 66 per cent. 34- per cent. 70 per cent. 11 per cent. -L per cent. of the class ha.ve clark hair. of the class have light hair. of the class have light complexion, 30 per cent. dark. of the class wear glasses, 65 per cent. do not. of the class have light eyes- of the class have dark eyes. of the class are Congrcgationalists. of the class are Methodists. of the class are Baptists. 52 OHERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-l-ll. 5 pcr cent. of the class are Presbyterians. 4- per cent. of the class members of no chu1'ch. Rest scattered. 59.4 per cent. are Republicans. 10 per cent. are Mugwumps. 26 per cent. are Prohibitionists. 5.6 per cent. are Democrats. Twelve gentlemen of '92 expect to sell books this summer. Six gentlemen of the class expect eventually to enter the ministry, three the law, four to be teachers, four to be doctors, one a business man. The rest are undecided. The class has been in Oberlin, 3.1 years. you H.xNosom:s'r MAN IN cmss. mu Mosr POPULAR IN c1.Ass. Ewing gets ........ . . .22 votes. Hutchins gets .......... 38 votes. Wilder gets 13 Wilder gets 13 Wood gets 12 Wood gets 5 Grosvenor gets 2 Crafts gets 2 ' Boughton gets 2 G. P. Martin 4 Rest scattering. Rest scattering. ron HANDSOMEST IN contract. Mosr vovumu IN com.:-:or-:. R. A. Millikan gets ..... 12 votes. Van Horn gets ......... 18 votes. F. Wilder gets 4- 7 Wilson gets 5 Wood gets 4- C. B. Firestone gets LL Whitcomb gets -1' R. A. Millikan gets 3 ' Metcalf' gets 3 Metcalf gets 2 Ed. Abbott gets 2 Hutchins gets. 2 Siddall gets 2 Wilder gets 2 ' Kimball gets 1 H. Sumner gets 1 Rest scattering. Rest scattering. OIIERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. SOPHOMORE CLASS SONG Oh, the braggart Sophomore 5 He can bawl and he can roarg He can boast about base ball, But he cannot playzat all. At the bat he is .ro poorg Of a Fly he's never sureg Every hour he makes some break, But for blow, he takes the cake. And he always flunks in class 5 At exam's he cannot pass 3 What then meaneth all this blow? Why, an empty head, you know. Oh, conceited Sophomore, Strange you haven't learned before That you make the whole world tiredg Ought long since to have been fired. Great to talk, worthless to do, Is the class of ninety-two. What, then, is a Sophomore P Lots ofmouth, but nothing more. THE BARD OI ,92 CLASS DAY. 1'1zOc:nAM. Oration ..... .............. N V. F. GROSVENOR. Essay. . . . .... HARRIE E. BROOKE. Poem ....... . . . MARX' T. CURRIER. g .......... E. G. RANDALL. History. . . . ......... WM. MCLAUCHLAN. K .. . .... -losr:11H1NE B. MITCHELL., Artists .. . ........... A. H, CURRIER. ... . LOUIE A. HAI.I,. 54 OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-H1. PROFESSOR HENRY C. KING. Professor Henry Churchill King was lJO1'11 i11 Hills- dale, Michigan, September 18, 1858. He studied in the Hillsdale schools and college until the winterof '77, when he came to Oberlin and entered the Sophomore year, second term, graduated lrom the classical course in '79, went immediately into the Seminary, from which he graduated in '82, then took two years post graduate study in philosophy and mathematics at Harvard, receiving the degree of A. M. there in '84, He was a tutor of mathematics here in '81 and '82, was elected to the chair which-he now holds, Associate Pro- fessor ofMathematics, in '84, Professor King was brought up in the Congrega- tional churchg was married to Julia M. Coates of Brecksville, Ohio, July 7, '82. PROFESSOR H. H. POWERS. Professor Harry H. Powers was born August 7,1859, in Hebron, Wis.g entered the University of Wisconsin, at Madison,in 18785 graduated in'82g engaged in bus- iness from '82-'85, In '85 he returned to Madison and taught German in the University till '86. In '86 he went to Paris, and, upon his return to this country, in '88, he became Professor of the French Language and Literature in Oberlin College. He was brought up in the Methodist Church, and was a member of that church from '73-'7 8. One of the features of Professor Powers' work, since he came to Oberlin, has been his Sunday morning Bible class, organized in the fall of '88. It has had an average attendance this year of about one hundred and thirty. .. ,,...--.. , E '3 PROP H.H 4 E in l ifkof. ya. Hpmlmof , PROF.W.C1.FRO.5T OIEERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. 57 PROFESSOR W. B. CHAMBERLAIN. Professor William Benton Chamberlain was born in Gustavus, Trumbull County, Ohio, September 1, 184-7. Attended the Kingsville academy in '67 and '68, taught in Springfield, Pennsylvania, from '68-70, came to Ober- lin in '70, graduated from the classical course in '75, studied vocal music in Philadelphia from '76-'78, grad- uated from the seminary in '81, taught singing in Oberlin Conservatory of Music from '78-'83, he was appointed instructor in elocution in '81 3 elected to his present chair, Professor of Elocution in Oberlin College and Seminary and Ass't. Professor of Rhetoric, in '84-. He was brought up in the Congregational and Presby- terian cliurehes. Was married to Emma E. Peck of Oberlin, August 6, '75. PROFESSOR CHARLES HARRIS. Prolessor Charles Harris was born at Albion, Illinois, November 19, 1859. He received his higher education at the Indiana State University, from which he received the degree of A.B. in '79. He taught in the public schools from '69-'81, and in '81 went to Vincennes, In- diana, to teach the modern languages. In '83 he en- tered tlie University of Leipsic, where he studied till '86, receiving his A.M. and Ph.D. there. From '86 to '88 he was professor of the modern languages in the South- ern State Normal at Carbondale, Illinois, and in '88 entered the Oberlin college faculty as Professor of the German Language and Literature. Professor Harris was brought up in the Episcopal church, of which he is still a member. PROFESSOR WM. G. FROST. Professor William Goodell Frost was born at LeRoy, New York, July 2, 1854-. Prepared for college at Mil- 58 OHERIJN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. ton, Wisconsin, began his college course at Beloitg took the last three years at Oberlin, graduating in 1876. Graduated from the Theological Seminary in 1879g studied at Andover and .Harvard one yearg be- came Professor of Greek at Oberlin in 1879g ran for Lieutenant-Governor on the Prohibition ticket in 1885, helping in drafting the Platform and controlling to a great extent the campaign for that year. It is a signifi- cant fact that the vote was raised from 11,000 to 28,- 000. He left the party thinking it impossible for a Prohibition party to succeed which devoted so much attention to woman suflrage. He was instrumental in securing the new library building and the 850,000 for Peters' Hall. In 1889 he was invited to the Presidency of Berea College, Kentucky, this being the fourth invi- tation of the kind which he had received during the year. He is the author of a Greek Primer which is being largely introduced in other schools. Married Louise F. Raney, August 10, 1876. OHERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. CLASS OF '95 FRESHMEN ' wfrfwfi ' mx.. IWW? . X .- fx f A- . w ai if f, f ,, 1.9 M' C- . f1Klf QI , ' Q 1 if M27 ,121 -M 1- yi' f 6513.4 QM ' pl ,J ,, Jn ' ' W 5 gall' I AM , ,,1,v:f54 l . fi 4 l .-rin-J t. , 1,129+ 9 ,1 . 'f . ff f':.,i12'ffff-W , ,. L . W ff i. fp -vm I J ,Lil f 4 f-', .921 214' A i i 1, ,UQ-iff' -.'- ff 'A-' fr' i ff X' ' 'N VWQWM AQ-if '- A 4, 151 912 f 'ffWY6', Wy 1-H.-.-.4.,-..w if -Q A. f im mf yr X f-EZQ 1 V X- 1, ,fi 1 G I, I 'ii MOTTO: rrowlu wzflu. COLORS: Golden Brown and Robin's Egg Blue. YELL: Ninety-three ah EL y6 op il zain do dah 750-VCU ua-zrlv, Mar-oo. Mar-oo. OFFICERS. President ............................. T. W. MACGREGOR. Vice-President ............... Miss M. C. L. MELLEN. Secretary .................. ................. J . J. WALTERS. Treasurer ...................... ....... H . N. STOUGH. Captain Base'Ball Nine .............. CARL KINSLEY. Captain Foot Ball Eleven ....... ....... I . W. RAIN. 60 OHILRLIN CoI,1.EGlc HI-O-HI. 'Q55 HISTORY. We, the freshies, come from Africa, Asia, Europe and America, and one of us from Cincinnati. None of us are real pretty or uncommon bright, but our class is all-round superior, and we are nice. steady boys and girls. We are young yet, you knowg ours is the only class that, as the Bible says, has no marrying nor giv- ing in marriage. We all get our lessons every day. Professor Hall thinks us the most poetical Horace class he ever had in his clutches. We write English and Latin poetry equally well f?iJ, but we don't memorize Horace's sonnets so well as we might if we had time to fall in love ourselves. They ought to make the juniors learn them. YVe have had to listen to theheart- rending rhymes of some conditioned soph's. May they be sent to Orcus to torment the souls of the doomed. One time Professor Frost proved that all of us have five hours a day to do nothing in. They were airaid we would get home-sick, so each ofour professors went to work to help us 'fill an hour or two of that timeg and then the catechism was changed so as to read: Q. What is the first duty of a freshman? A. A freshman's first duty is to attend rhetoricals and enjoy them Pnrever. We don't claim to be very good in athletics. One of our boys is the tennis champion, and a certain other one is pretty good on a bike, and we have a fellow they call an inter-sub-super-gyrator, which means a pedestrian. We played base ball some, but didn't beat OBERLIN CoLI.1cGE H1-O-HI. 61 anybody but the soph's, so we can't brag much. You see we ClO11,lIl1E1VC much time to practice, because we have mustaches to attend to. One boy has a beard, eight have mustaehesg and Hfteen are pane barbatosf' Some of them go to the barber's during chapel to buy hair invigorator. The freshmen like pie. Professor King is our general directory. He says we mustn't go out after ten o'clock, but the boys say we must go down town and get some pie, 'cause we like it. Then the professor gives them lots of x, more than any class ever had before. He oughtn't to do it, 'cause that kind is very indigestible, and it has made some of the boys and girls nearly sick. One of the girls gives lemon pies to boys to get them to come to prayer- meeting. Papa always comes now, so the average attendance is pretty good-97.56. Our class like each other mity wellg we have had lots of partiesg our professors like us too, so we have had suppers at Professor King's and Professor Martini. The soph's talked Bob Burdette to death, so the freshmen got in the front row in the gallery and encouraged him lots. YVe didn't like mortar-boards, so we built a fire-place and had a jolly party. The faculty was there, and we warmed things up. We sung an ode. 62 OBERLIN COLLEGE Hi-O-HI. FRESHMAN CLASS. B. C. Baunignrdner .. . .. ........... ..... . ,. .. T. B. Bridgman... C. H. Browning... William Clark ,.., O. C. Clifford .... I'I. C. Cowles .... H. S. Culver ..... E, D. Durand ..... C. F. Dutton, jr ..... Eugene Fairchild.. . Geo. Gill .......... L. N. Grosvenor.... P. A. Gulick. .... . . W. V. Gulick. . C. H. Harwood. .. A. S. Hawkes ..... G. W. Hinman .,,. B. M. Hogen .... T. T. Holway ,... j. W. Holway ..... N. Hyde ...... j. W.j. R.johnston. H. M. jones ...... Carl Kmsley ...... O. -I. Leuthi ....... M. E. Marsh ...... T. W. MacGregor -I. W. McGregor... H. L. McLaury... D. D. Minor ..... C. H. Nims .... F. E. Parks .... F. C. Peck ..... J. W. Rain. ..... . L. L. Redick .... G. C. Reed .... T. H. Rhodes .... C. W. Savage .... H. W. Stough ..... CLASSICAL COURSE. . . . . .Manistee, Michigan . . . Natal, South Africa . . . .Wakema.n, Ohio .. . . . . . Paddy's Run, Ohio ..Wadsworth, Ohio .. . . .Kennsington, Connecticut . . . . . . . . Manistee, Michigan .. . . . Huron, Dakota . . . . .Cleveland, Ohio ...... .Oberlin, Ohio ....Monroeville, Ohio .. .... Chicago, Illinois .. . . . . . . .Shanghai, China . .Los Angeles, California ........Orange, California ....Salt Lake City, Utah . . . .Washington, D. C. . . .Cleveland, Ohio . ..Chicago, illinois .. . ..Chicngo, Illinois ....New Lyme, Ohio ....Cincinnati, Ohio . . .Chester, Ohio . . ..Washington, D. C. . ...Gn.1denhutten, Ohio .. ..Baraboo, Wisconsin .. . ...... Toledo, Ohio .Wellsville, Ohio ..North Kortright, New York . ......... ..Oberlin, Ohio . . . Lexington, Michigan . . . . . .Warren, Ohio . . . .AItay, New Vork . . . . . . . . Learcy, Arkansas ..............Mansiield, Ohio . ...Weeping Water. Nebraska . . . . . . .. . . Toulon, Illinois . . . . Churchville, New York ...........Bryan, Ohio OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-I-l I. 63 -I. j. Walters .... H. M. Wells .... li. M. Wescott .... F. N. Williams .... Hattie D. Birch. Harriet L. Blake .... Bessie A. Brown ..... 'jane A. Browne ..... Helen I. Clark.. julia W. Fairchild ...... Ermina R. Gates .......... Anginette B. Hemingway .... .... 'Susan F. Hinman ....... Martha P. Little ........ Antoinette P. Metcalf .... .. Inez Michener ......... Martha H. Miller .... Mary K. Otis. ..... .. Mary N. Reid ......... Birdie M. Reifsnider. .... . . Etta M. 'l'erry ........ EttaM.Wright... ............ ......... PHILOSOPHICAL COURSE. H. S. Bigelow ..... .................................. L. H. Bacon ....... ....- F. M. Blanchard. .... VG. F. Cahill ...... . C. H. M. H. Cutcheon I.. S. Day ...... J. T. Ellis ....... E. B. Fairfield . AI. L. Glass .... H. S. Gray ...... C. R. Howland. M. H. Iameson. Abel Kimball ...... Blake McDowell H. E. Mitchell .... B. 1. Moore. A. I. Morse .... Ryan. C. L. Smith ..... L. A. M. D. Smith ....... D. C. Spaulding I'. E. Tenney ....... W. W. Thompson ..... -C. S. Wood ......... H. H. Zimmerman .... 'Iennie J. Bower... . . . Liberia, Africa Pittsfield. Massachusetts ... . .Oberlin, Ohio . .Panama, New York .Hannibal, Missouri Union City, Michigan . . . . .Genesee, Illinois . .Washington, D. C ...BuFfalo, New York . . . . . . .Oberlin, Ohio .. . . . .Cortland. Ohio .Oak Park, Illinois .Washington, D. C. Janesville, Wisconsin ........Elyria, Ohio .. . . .Chicago. Illinois ...Cedar Falls, Iowa. . . .. Prescott, Arizona .......Warren, Ohio ...Oak Park, Illinois Springfield, Illinois ,.......Oberlin, Ohio . . . . . Cleveland, Ohio Lake Breeze, Ohio . . .Barre, Vermont Cushing .... . . . .... . . .Oberlin, Ohio . ........ Elyria, Ohio . . Manistee, Michigan .........Elyria, Ohio .......Oberlin, Ohio ..Manistee, Michigan Batavia, New York .... . . .Oberlin, Ohio ....-lefferson, Ohio . . . .Oberlin, Ohio . .... Madison, .....Medina, Ohio Ohio . . . . . .Oberlin, Ohio . . . .Bellevue, Ohio . . . . . . .Piqua, Ohio . . ..La Grange, Ohio . . ..Chardon, Ohio ......Oberlin, Ohio .....Brilliant, Ohio . . . .Oberlin, Ohio . . . . . . .Oberlin, Ohio . . . .Cz-irdington, Ohio . . . . .Oberlin, Ohio 64 OBERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. Mrs. Addn. E. Breed. Grace Ii. Churchill .... Nettie E. Close ..... Edith M. Cole ........ Clara E. Commons. . Marie E. Cooper .... Lucy L. Davidson, . . Clara S. Davis .... . Margaret N. Doane ..... Catherine B. Ely. . . Harriet B. Esterly. . . Ethel Gillis ......... Milly S. Gillis ..... Stella M. Hagne .... Ida M. Hicks .,..... julia. A. Hotchkiss .... . Florence Humphrey. Ella M. Huston .... Cornie N.-Iohnson.. N. E. jones ........ Carrie Kelso ...... Mabel R. Kinney .... Kate Marcy ....... Maria. N. McVay .... Marguerite C. Mellen .... Margaret E. Mouat .... Lilly M. Ringland , . Alice E. Rivers .... Letitia A. Scott ..... Laura E. Shurtleff. . . Sadie A. Snedeker ..... Lilla I . Spelman .... Edith B. Sumner .... 'I'heresa Webber .... Mattie M. Wilson. . . Mary R. Abbott ..... Fannie E. Alexander. Ella M. Allen ....... Ellen H. Bicknell .... Mina Borden. ..... .. Carrie L. Bray ...... Florence M. Bunker. Abbie R. Candee .... Rosalie O. Clifford .... Grace Erwin ...... Mary E. Finley .... Gertrude Foster ..... Clara I. Hart ...... Emma li Hurt .. . . . . . .Coldwater, Michigan . . . . .Topeka, Kansas . . . . .. . . .Oberlin, Ohio . . . ..... Oberlin, Ohio . . . . .Winr:hester, Indiana . . . . . . . . . .Grinell, Iowa . . . . .Monticello, Iowa . . . ..Kayoto, japan . . . . . Cleveland, Ohio . . . . . .Morrison, Illinois .. . . .Columbiana. Ohio . . . . . . .Bryan, Ohio . . ,.Kinsman, Ohio . . . . .Auburn, Indiana . .... Oberlin. Ohio .. . . . . .Sylvania. Ohio . . . . .Lansing, Michigan .. . . . . .Oberlin, Ohio .. . . . . . ...Oberlin, Ohio . . . . .Lansing, Michigan . . . . . . . Bellevue, Iowa . . , . . ,.Denver, Colorado . . . . . . Manistee, Michigan .. . . Vankton, South Dakota ... . . . .Natal, South Africa . . . . Ianesville, Wisconsin . . . . . . . Kasson, Minnesota ...............Oberlin, Ohio . . . ..Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ...............Oberlin,Ohio . . . . . . .Oberlin, Ohio .. . . . ...Cleveland, Ohio . . .-Tolland, Connecticut . . . . . . . . . . .Kinsman, Ohio Bradford, Pennsylvania LITERARY COURSE. Huntington, Vlest Virginia .... . . . . . . . Helena, Arkansas . . . . . . . . . Boston. Massachusetts .. . . . Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands . . . . . . . . . . ..Dundee, Illinois .. . ..Kenosha, 'Wisconsin .....Woodstock, Illinois ... . . . . . .'I'oledo. Ohio . . . . .Wadsworth, Ohio . . Bourbon, Indiana .Oberlin, Ohio . . . . . .Brecksville, Ohio . . . .Lysander, New York . . . .Lysander, New York OBERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-Hr. 65 Ida F. Hayden ..... Alice Hayden ... Louise A. Hill... . Della M. Hill ...... Helen A. Huestis. .. Maude Knapp ..... Gertrude C. Marsh.. Jennie C. Mason. . .. Sarah Matson .... Alice M. McElvain ..... Mamie A. Miller ..... Franc C. Morrill .... Huldah Nelson ,... Blanche L. Rice, .... Nellie Russell. . . .. Elizabeth Saeger .... Jean Lyons ........ Georgietta Hooker. . Elnora A. Williams Libbie A. Reed ..... H Winifred Winslow .... 'i 5 . . . . . . . . . . .Madison, Ohio . . . Medford, Massachusetts ... . .. Berlin Heights, Ohio ... . .Berlin Heights, Ohio ..Rodman, New York . ...Brooklyn, New York ........Oberlin, Ohio . . . . . . . ...Buffalo, New York .. . ...Lysander, New York Conltersville, Pennsylvania . ........ . Mexico City, Mexico ,.,.Menominee, Michigan .. . . . Providence, Illinois .. ........ Sullivan, Ohio .........-.....Hart, Michigan .Saegertown, Pennsylvania . . . . . . . .Marion, Indiana .New Britian, Connecticut .............Oberlm, Ohio ..........I-Iart, Michigan . . . . Hinsdale, Massachusetts 66 OBERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-H1. CLASS STATISTICS, 995. Number of students in the class during the year ..... ..... ..... .... 2 2 9 .Number now in actual attendance ........ ........ . . . .... 158 Gentlemen ................ 7o Ladies ...... . . . . . . .88 Classicals ................. 61 Philosophical .... .... 6 2 Literaries ........ ..,......... 3 5 Of this 229 members for the year, 88 come from Ohio, 24 from Illinois I3 from New York, I2 from Michigan, 5 from Massachusetts, 5 from Pennsylvania, 5 from Washington, D. C., 4 from Wisconsin, I5 from States west of the Mississippi, 7 from New England, 4 from foreign -countries, 1 from Tennessee, 1 from Florida. Oldest man in the class, F. Peck, is 29 years old. The class babe, Eugene Fairchild, is I7 years old going on 18. Average age of gentlemen, 21 years. Average age of ladies, 20 years. Heaviest man in ,93, M. E. Marsh, weighs 180 pounds. Lightest man in '93, Geo. Reed, weighs 124 pounds. Average weight of gentlemen, I44 pounds. Average weight of ladies, 122 pounds. 'The class bean-pole, E. M. Westcott, is 6 feet 12 inches high. The class tad-pole, Geo. Reed, is 5 feet 32 inches. Average height of gentlemen, 5 feet 82 inches. Average heighth of ladies, 5 feet 3 inches. 52 per cent. of the class have light hair, 48 per cent. dark. 602 per cent. of the class have light eyes, 392 per cent. dark. 652 per cent. of the class have light complexion, 342 per cent. dark, 22 per cent. wear glasses, 78 per cent. do not. 70 per cent. belong to the Congregational church, 8 per cent. belong to no church. IOM per cent. belong to the Presbyterian church, 22 per cent. belong to the Baptist. 5 per cent. belong to the Methodist church, 22 per cent. belong to the Episcopal. OHERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. 67 70 per. cent. of ,93 is Republican, 23 per cent. Prohibitionist, 35 per cent. Democrat, 35 per cent. Indedendent. 55 per cent. of the gentlemen prefer the sciences, 45 per cent. the lan- guages. 25 per cent. of the ladies prefer the scienes, 75 per cent. the languages. FOR HANDSOMEST MAN IN CLASS, Tracy MacGregor gets 40 votes. Blanchard gets 3 votes. Fred Savage gets I3 votes. Rest scattering. FOR HANDSOMEST IN COLLEGE P. I-I. Metcalf gets 15. Whitcomb gets 4. T. MacGregor ff II. Kimball 2 R. A. Millikan f' 3. Siddall A. Wood U 4. 1 Ewing U 2 Rest scattering. FOR MOST POPULAR IN CLASS. Tracy MacGregor, 44. 9. F. Savage. ...... . Van Horn .... . . . . 10. H. Sumner ....... . 9 Wilson .... . . .... 7. Hutchins .... . .: 7. Stough ....... I-logen .... Rest scattering. IN COLLEGE, R. A. Millikan Metcalf ,... .. . F. Savage ..... Rest scattering OuaxaLtN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. THE FRESHNANS LAMENT What can a poor Freshman do? Entertainments not a few, Socials, concerts, serenades, With the charming First Year maids, Claim our time as all their own. Yet, Alas! We've got to bone Over Prof King's Analyt, Over what old Horace writ, Till our eyes are red and sore, Like two balls of fiery gore. Professors tell us that two hours Is enough g but, by the powers, If their lessons don't take four Then may Freshmen be no more. Now in all this maddening whirl Where, Oh where, comes in the girl? How can Freshmen reconcile Study with the First Year's smile? How, Oh how, can Freshmen find Time to love and time to grind? How can he find time for hall When he's got Professor Hall P How can he at tennis play When King put down a fiunk next day? How can he find time for courtin' When he's under C. B. Martin ? What, O what, can Freshmen do P Sure, he must his birthday rue. THE HJEREMIAH' or 93 PM . ' PRcF.EfE.MART1n. ' AQ ' I L . V E, E. 1. , , PROP. 'W.rn6mA5f ffivnq- Ef i? Ei's- , L 5rfPf4 9FO-wbriiilivi-L OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. 71 PROFESSOR L. B. HALL. Lyman Bronson Hall was born in Richmond, Va., August 10, 1852. His parents brought him to Oberlin in 1855. He received both his elementary and college education in Oberlin, graduating from the classical course in 1872. Aftergraduation he went to Harva1'd, and received his B.D. from the Harvard Divinity School in 1877. In 1878 he graduated from the Oberlin Theo- logical Seminary, and in the same year began teaching Latin and Greek in the preparatory department. In 1888 he was made professor of the Latin language and literature in Oberlin College. He studied Latin in Berlin one year, in 1888 and 1889. Professor Hall was raised in the Congregational Church, was married August 21, 1878, to Ada E. Hitchcock of Perrysburg, Ohio. PROFESSOR W. I. THOMAS. Professor William Isaac Thomas was born at Leba- non, Va., August 13, 1863. He was educated at the University of Tennessee, from which he graduated in 18844. Alter graduation he continued post-graduate studies in the same institution, taking the degree of A.M. in 1886 and Ph. D. in 1887. He was professor of English and modern languages in the University of Tennessee from 1887 to 1888. In 1888 he went to Europe, where he studied a year and a half, returning to this country in the fall of 1889 to occupy the chair of English literature in Oberlin College. 72 OB12R1.1N COLLEGE HI-O-Hi. PROFESSOR G. W. ANDREWS. Prolessor George Whitefield Andrews was born January 19, 1861, in Wayne, Ashtabula county, Ohio. He received his education in Oberlin, graduating from the Conservatory of Music in 1879. From 1879 to 1882 he taught in Meadville, Pa., and Toledo, O. In 1882 he began teaching in the Oberlin Conservatory of Music. He went to Europe in 1884. and studied organ, piano and composition in Leipsic with Papper- itz and Jadassohn, in Munic with Rheinberger, and in Paris with Guilmant. In 1886 he returned to Oberlin, and again entered the Conservatory as instructor in organ and composition. He was married July3, 1888, to Miss Hattie A. Clark, class of '85, Oberlin College. PROFESSOR J. F. PECK. Professor John Fisher Peck was born in VVest Bloom- field, N. Y., on the twenty-ninth of November, 1853. Came to Oberlin with his parents in 1862, at the age of nine years, received both elementary and college edu- cation here, graduating from the classical course in 1875. Taught Greek and Latin in Cleveland in the East High school from 1875 to 1880, returned to Oberlin in 1880, and studied in the Seminary for three years, teaching Greek and Latin in the preparatory department at the same timeg was tutor in these branches until 1886, when he was made assistant principal of the preparatory department. He was brought up in the Congregational Church, married Emily Ewing of Pine Valley, N. Y., june 29, 1879. OHERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. 73 PROFESSOR C. B. MARTIN. Professor Charles Beebe Martin was born in Cairo, Egypt, May 7, 1857, his father being a missionary in that country. He was brought to this country in 1858, lived in Peru, Ill., for live years, coming to Oberlin in 18675 .received his elementary and college education here, graduating from the classical course in 1876, and from the seminary in 18813 was tutor of Latin and Greek from 1882 to 1885. Then studied one year in Berlin, was appointed assistant professor of Latin and Greek in 18873 returned to Berlin for another year in 18879 resumed work in Oberlin in the fall of 18885 was appointed to his present chair of associate professor of Latin and Greek in 1890. Pro- fessor Martin was brought up in the Congregational Church. He was married in the summer of 1887 to Miss Helen J. White of the class of '87 O. C. fs 1' 74 OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-Hi. SUMMARY OF CLASSES. Ohio has ...... .......... S zo 1 Pennsylvania. ...... . . 74 Illinois .................. 176 i Iowa ..... ............. 4 3 Michigan .... . . . uo New England States. . .. 63 New York .... . .. 86 i States west ofthe Missouri 99 Wisconsin ............... 37 i Southern States ..... .... 8 4 Indiana ................. 32 i Foreign countries ....... S3 These countries are: Bohemia, British Columbia, Bul- garia, China, England, Germany, Hawaiian Islands, Holland, japan, Mexico, Micronesia, Natal, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Quebec, Scotland, Sweden, Turkey, Wales. ' Out of the 589 students in the College Department, there are in the Classical course ................................. 207 Philosophical course .... . . ..177 Literary course. ..... . . .. ..x59 Select college studies ..... ......................... 4 6 90 per cent. of the Senior class belong to literary societies, So per cent. of the Junior class, 40 per cent. of the Sophomore class, I5 per cent. of the Freshman class. The average weight of the Oberlin College student fgentle- manj is ISIM pounds. The average weight of the Oberlin College student Qladyj is 122.7 lbs. 58 per cent. are Republicans. 25 per cent. are Prohibitionists. 4 3-xo per cent. are Democrats. The remainder Independents. The average height of the Oberlin College student Qgentle- manj is 5 ft. 9 in. The average height of the Oberlin College student Cladyj is 5 ft. 3.8 in. The tallest man in college is Jameson, height .... 6 ft. 2M in. The shortest man in college is Arnold, height .... 5 ft. 35 in. OBERLIN COLLEGE Hr-O-Hr. 75 The heaviest man in college is Williams, '92, weight. . 195 lbs. The lightest man in college is Reed, '93, weight ...... I24 lbs. 71M per cent. of the students are Congregationalists. 5 3-Io per cent. are Methodists. 4 3-Io per cent. are Presbyterians. 5 per cent. are Baptists. 3 per cent. are Episcopalians. 30 per cent. wear glasses regularly or at times. Omitting the scattering vote, which was very large, the vote on the most popular man in college was as follows ' Van Horn ............. 52 Harry Sumner ........, I7 Wilson ..... .... 2 3 R. A. Millikan .... . . .12 Metcalf ....... ..... 2 o E. H. Abott ..... ... 8 Hutchins .............. 19 Kimball ............... 8 C. B. Firestone ......... 18 3 Vote on handsomest man in college, omitting the large scattering vote : R. A. Millikan ......... 36 Tracy MacGregor ...... Xl Homer Kimball ........ 34 Chas. Ewing.. ..... . . . 8 P. H. Metcalf .... .... 3 o jameson. ........ . . . 6 A. B. Wood ........... 1 I Ben Siddall .... . .. 5 Harry Whitcomb ....... IO Frank Wilder .... . . . 5 6 76 OBERLIN CoL1.1zcsE H1-O-HI. THE SEMINARY. 'mvlw ,fini 'F fl MN V K' 1,7 K'-V E ,, '0,. ' 1 Z ' A X ' 112 N. , ,Mya fax 1 Mis- 'f 1 X51 -wh ! f l iii' if ' qi lt V311 fi 1 W TE 'l'f fV'i1, :' ,. fl iffjf, p QMWZ X -w , N I , . f 1 , 5 -is 1 K ' f ' 3, fl' A i 4,3513 If 1111 1 L-f l 7 Ulfqx lglyl' 7- l 7 N ff -. , l GJTllEClf u, THE THEOLOGUES, GYMNASIUM.-REQUIRED SEVEN DAYS EACH WEEK. I have been requested to open the volume of history of the Seminary for the past year, and note the things therein recorded, which may be of interest to the readers of the HI-O-HI. . The impression gained from a rapid review of the year is, that it has been a good one, and that our de- partment has had its full share of the success of the college. The attendance has bee11 larger than ever OBERLIN CoLL1zor: H1-O-Hx. 77 before, there has been advance in scholarship also, as well as in membership. It has been the special aim of our instructors to cultivate, along with scholarship, a deeper spiritual feeling, and if our weekly prayer-meet- ings may serve as a criterion, this aim has been secured. But a greater advance has been made socially than in any other direction, and theologues of a generation or two ago would hardly recognize the Seminary, it has grown so sociable. Leaving this general summary and looking more at details, I find several important events recorded by Clio's pen. In intimate connection with most of these great events stands the name of Samekh Aleph, our literary society. She has acted an important role in the drama of theological life this year, especially in the social act. The Thanksgiving party was supported by all the students, and was a grand success. But aside from this, and the reception given by the senior class to our missionaries, all other social gatherings in the building have originated with Samekh Aleph. A re- ception was tendered the members of the Rhetorical class, which gave us, early in the year, an opportunity to get acquainted with one another. Another festive occasion I find under-scored by the Muse, is the social given to the gentlemen of '90, O. C., Monday evening, june 2. About thirty of '9O's men responded to the invitation, and came with leaden hearts and lagging steps, thinking they were going among a lot of gumps, and understanding well that a gathering within cloister walls meant-no girls ! Gradually they were led to forget this sad fact, in a measure at least, until the Chancey Depew of the class responded to the toast, The Women of '9O, when sobs were heard from all the seniors. ' These co-education men made quite a revelation to us poor monks. It seems we had been living all the 78 OHERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. year close to windows back of which fair faces did in- habit, but this had never reached our attention until these seniors came over with their Savoyard Quartette. They so drew out our next door neighbors that even holy theologues were made cognizant of their ex- istence. One of the greatest events of the year was the Slaughter of the Innocents, a terrible battle be- tween Seminary and Seniors, fought upon the park where the trees stand thickest. As it has ever been since time began, the truth was triumphant, and we were victorious to the tune of 365 to 275 faccording to our scorej. It was a bloody charge, and all nature seemed to hold her breath as she awaited the result. The stars peeped out from behind the curtain of day and were so terrified some of them dropped into soldiers' eyes, in conjunction with snowballs from the opposite side. Behind a dozen trees the snow was dyed crimson. Ever and anon the hoarse voice of some senior might be heard, just before he hurled his missile, crying score, and then all would join in on the class yell of Rackety-whack, Fall back-'90. The battle was doubtful for a time, it would l1ave puzzled any umpire to tell which had it, the fajeyes or nofejse. But star-lit eyes were tenderly covered and gay-colored noses grasped, a mighty dash was made and the day was won, and the heavens reverbrated with the triumphant tones of 'Rah, 'ral1, 'rahg 'rah, 'rah all. Oberlin Theologues, Council Hall. The above is another sign of advancement in the Seminary. If you ask me to Tell you all about the war And what they snow-balled each other for, I can only reply, OBERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-I-11. 79 It was the Theologues Who put the Seniors to route, But what they plugged each other for I could not well make out. But everybody said It was a famous victory. The senior social and this iight have done much to draw College and Seminary closer together. May there be many returns of both events. The Seminary has become famous away from home this year, over the application to the Cleveland Con- ference for a license to preach by a lady student. The refusal to grant the license, it must beiremembered, came from the Conference and not from the Seminary, and the Conference is the party to be praised or blamed. New England theologians were once much exercised over the so-called taste and exercise controversy. We have had a contest somewhat similar, known as the collar controversy, in which it was discussed as to which department wore the worst soiled collars, Seminary or College. A war of words and many in- -dignant thoughts were aroused, but we regret that we .are compelled to state that, unlike Paul, our side did but beat the air, for it has lately developed that the controversalist on the other side was only--a woman. The year has been noted for its great deliberative gatherings, the joint debate between Samekh Aleph and the Rhetorical class, in which the society once more showed evidence of her gilt-edge character, and the two mock councils have given opportunity for play of wit and effusions of surplus knowledge of parlia- mentary law and ecclesiastical lore. I cannot close this rapid and desultory review of the year without noticing the intensely interesting, sug- gestive and profitable series of talks given us by Dr. Stimson of St. Louis. His visit was the red-letter event if do OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-1-11. of the year, and his earnest evangelical spirit will not fail of its influence over us. I had reached the Hnis of the volume, and was about to close the history with a tear in my eye, when I saw an addenda wherein was recorded the marriage of one of my classmates, Sunday, june 8. Dame Rumor asserts that before the HI-O-HI appears two more of the graduating class will widely depart from the standard of the new theological catalogue. These are sad thoughts. and they call another tear to my eye to keep the first one company, and in these two lach- rymal globules is reflected the vision of nine mis-spent years in Oberlin, and the sight leads me to feel that co- education is a failure. My feelings bid me cease, and so, kind reader, adieu. ' D. O1amaL1N CoLL1zc412 I-11-O-HI. 81 PREPARATORY DEPART MENT. -ste ' , I rf--445 .bx N 1 , ,X N V i af.:-f'g'-N wzsaezffff-Q r- ib - , -Quan' e25 4 Ui I .fl ' u- -T - , K - K l , .-f i5i, ' V A Fl- ' A 'Ng PREPDOM, That which is now a senseless thing, Sheltered by prepdom's watchful wing, Will sometime, if no ill betide, Which sends him back to mama's side, Become a real live college man, Able to think, to do, to plan, Able to read, to speak, to write, Able to make a call at night. Able to use head, arm and leg, In short, he'll be no more an egg. O yes ! some day the egg will hatch 5 Some day the prep will toe the scratch 5 Some day he'll break his tiny shell, And bid his prepdom days farewell. And oh ! what pride will swell his heart, 4 When preplet from his nest shall part ! And on what joyous wing he'll soar, When he shall be a prep no more ! But wait, dear preplet, you must grow, Before your heart this joy can know. 6 82 OBERLIN COLLEGE I-lI-O-HI. PREP OFFICERS. SENIOl2 PREP CLASS. President.........................C. E. CARTER. Vice-President .... . . .MISS KITTIE C. GLASS. Secretary. . . . . . . . ........ M. J. NORTON. Treasurer ..... . . . . .J. L. DOORNHEIM. B. B. Capt ..................... H. E. WHl'l'COMli. MIDDLE PREP CLASS. President............ ........ DT. RIDINGS. Vice-President. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ELIZAl1F.'1'H STANDISH. Secretary and Treasurer .... . ..... .CHAS. SUMNER. B.H.Capt................. ....... CHAS. SUMNER. JUNIOR MIDDLE CLASS. President..........................C. H. ADAMS. Vice-President .... .... W . F. LYON. Secretary ..... .. . . . F. A. IRELAND. Treasurer .... ...... 1 T. P. LOOMIS. B. B. Capt. . . ................. A. W. SHERRILL. JUNIOR PREP cI.Ass. President.. . . . . . . . ........ . . . . . . . .TRACY I-IA'rcH. Secretary and Treasurer. . . . .... . . . . . .C. H. BEER. Anything like accurate statistics from prepdom were found to be impossible. 4 The following men, however, received votes for the most popular man in their respective classes: Wheeler .................. 26 ' Van Zandt... . .. . 3 Sumner... .... I8 Seney...... 2 Mattson .................. 5 FOR HANDSOMEST MAN IN CLASS. Whitcomb gets.. . . . .28 votes l Pearl gets. . . . . 3 votes H C I li Carter . ' p Truesda . .. 2 Waugh 4 lRogers 2 FOR MOST POPULAR MAN IN COLLEGE. Van Horn received 7 votes from prepdom. Wilson received 8 votes from prepdom. Kimball received 3 voles from prepdom. Hutchins received 2 votes from prepdom. FOR HANDSOMEST MAN IN COLLEGE. R. A. Millikan gets 16 from prepdom. Callendar gets 4 from prepdom. Metcalf gets 4 from prepdom. Gurney gets 2 from prepdom. Prentiss gets 4 from prepdom. OmzR1.xN LOLLEGE HI-0-HI. THE CONSERVATORY OP M ' M J fa ' '1 Jiff y Nw, Jicfv' ,T X, K 9l4hI , f , V n A ,J v' f'X.' 4 f' ' W U W fig ff f ,E ' K ' gl! YES' , ITA Q ',,' , ' ' A 4.',,..f' I ,jvc I I , ' f, ENB-'f ' - , .1 f ff. f y r rl X RA Q ff wk f 1 , f RA' XX 4- ---- f -N NEW - SICK. S4 OUERLIN CoI.L1cu1L H1-O-Hx. CONSERVATORY ORCHES- TRA. C. P. DOOLITTLE, CONDUCTOR. IST VIOLIN. J. A. Demuth, Theo. Tenney, Miss A. Cady, H. E. Goodsell, Miss S. F. Keyes, 15. H. Clark, Miss Maud Tucker, A. N. Gayman. 2ND v1oL1N. G. C. Doolittle, Miss E. M. Borden, Miss Kate Watson, J. A. White, Miss Agness Warner, M. A. Snyder, Miss Minnie Thayer, Miss Helen Hoskins, Miss Mabel Cobb. v1o1.A. ' Fred Ingersoll, E. H. Clark. 'cELLo. F. E. Regal, W. E. Knapp. 1-'LU'1'Es. Albert Ellis, J. W. Holton. CLARINET. S. B. Dudley. HORN. Theo. Breck. The attendance in the Conservatory has been 595 this year, 51 more than ever before. The following distinguished artists have appeared before Oberlin audiences : january 8, Mr. Frederic Archer. March 14, 15, 18 and 19, Madame Anna Steiniger-Clark. June 17, Miss Emma Cranch. CCJLLEGE ORGANIZATIONS 86 OHERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. ALPHA ZETA soc1ETY. IW lf! X it ll wi ff, I - ! 1 -s til r A QR ' , AN? ,' ' l mm! EM BLEM. Founded 1869. Morro : SONG. Let the gold lie in the mountain, And the silver in the mine 5 We seek truth, old Alpha Zeta, And our motto shall be thine. .-lbj 195109 ZQTOQIISIJ CHORUS : Hail ! all hail! then, Alpha Zeta, Sound her chorus loud and long 3 Let .-I-bf-195:-au ZW-T05-IIIEIJ Be the watch-word of our song. In the days that are before us, Far away, on sea or land, Heart to heart we'll join the chorus Of her true and trusted band.-CHO. 37 OBERLIN COLLEGE Hi-O-HI. ALPHA ZETA. MEMBERS. IN FACULTY. Lyman B. Hall, '72, H. C. King, '79, john F. Peck, '75, A. S. Root, '84, C. B. Martin, '76, W. E. Chamberlain, 'S8. UNDERGRADUATES. '90. Osmer Abbott, T. P. Berle, E. H. Harper, R. E. Loveland, A. F. Millikan, J. J. Heckman. E. H. Abbott, T. L. Hopkins, R. A. Milliknn. W. N. Crafts, C. E. Briggs, S. P. Child, A. H. Currier, J. P, Gram, P. L. Guard, J. W. Crook, P. G. Knowlton, G. B. Laird, C. I-I. Olds, '91. I. C. Chase, L. W. Hatch, ,92. W. T. Holmes, W. J. Hutchins, J. L. Love, M, R. Marshall, G. P. Martin, M. E. Meriam, G. S. Addams, '93. C. B. Baumgardner, W. V. Gulick, H. S. Culver W. -I. R. Johnson, J. R L F. F. F. R. A C F E F M. Ackley, W. Firestone, J. Leuthi, B. Mason, J. Van Horn. W. Griihths, T. Miller, Moser, C. Kirkpatrick, A. Wilder, E. Wilson, N. Williams. E. M. VVestcott. ALPHA ZETTA, SPECIAL QUARTERLY. Music ........................... ....................... 1 lflolus Club Essay-Ideals and Life .......... . . . . .... P. G. Knowlton Oration-The Savage in Man .... ...... I . W. Crook Violin Solo .................... .... F . H. Ingersoll Oration-A Modern Tenclency ..... ...... . . . ..... I.. J. Leuthi Solo ............................................ Antoinette Iversen Debate-Nationalization of Industries w. Our Present Industrial System ..... Aff., E. H. Harper, neg., G. B. Laird Music ......................... ......................... ll iolus Club OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-H1. PHI KAPPA Pl SOCIETY. -Q 42 I Q1 Ah' A : 'if I' v-,l gf.. XZ! ff f' giiinv ff f iffy , N 12' 3 1 x A I f -I, 1 I I , jf 0 . i' ' f, 7iEr,73iq ,,A, F gf ,' 'Q ' my 77' I ,l plz ,ff fr ' fir ff, N. ,. f H . . M, ' ' 2' X 'X I f I: 4 YF J ',,,,,? -r . ,Q Q. nf? , H-. - .... Aa '- ' ff' li MIILEM. Founded 1839. ,,--4-:. MOTTOI WMM mi rrlnozomj PHI KAPPA PI SONG. Bi' Rlav. P. 5 And now we'll sing a song boys, ' v To the old und last adicu. Then raise our merry voices hig In chorus to the new 5 The old must pass away, boys Let no regrets be heard, 5 h, ', Bovn, '60 0. C. In friendship we'll he true, boys, 'll be brave. ht the battle of the right In progress we XVe'll fig And win an honored grave: For truth we'll cr'c he loyal 3 c we'll he free, And thus do honor to the name From malic So long as something better comes, And Progress is the word. Of our Phi Kappa Pi. Cuonus- Hurrah, hurrah, we'll have ajubilee, Hurrah, hurrah, for old Phi Kappa Pi. Ring out the watehworcl o'er land and sea, ' ' ' Pi. Friendship a nd Progress in Phi kappa v OHERLIN COLLEGE I-I1-O-HI. 89 MEMBERS. IN FACULTY. A. A. Wlright, '65, NV. G. Grost, '76. W. 15. Chamberlain,'75, J. H, Fairchild, '38, J. M. Ellis, '51, UNDERGRADUATES '90. A. Arnold, W. A, Dick, A. M, Gibbons, F. A. Cushing, H. N. Kimball G. A. Wilbur, W. J. Beach, E. E. Flint, G. W. Mead, G. D. Wilder, C. Aylard, F. W. Grosvenor, P. M. Pond, l-I. M. Wells, H. S. Bigelow, F. E. Parks, G. H. Booth, G. C. Doolittle, J. D. Gibb, E. M. Fairchild, Roy Sexton, P, H. Metcalf. '91. W. E. Byrnes, A. L. Grein, G. E. Plumb, R. Wilkinson. ,92. E. S. Boughton, A. M. Hyde. E. G. Randal, A. B. Wood. '93. L. N. Grosvenor, T. H. Rhodes, PHI KAPPA QUARTERLY, JUNE Oration-- A Hero of Failure ..... , .... Essay-- A Day at Princeton ......... Music. W. M. Bennett, W. B. Crittenden, R. W. Hayes, C. E. Johnson, W. A. Sackett, C. B. Firestone, F. W. Gurney, G. B. Siddall, P. W. Goldsbury, L. M. McCormick, C. E. Yetman, G. WV, Hillman, B. M. Hogan. 241. 1890. Frederick H. Cushing ... . . .Geo. C. Doolittle. Oration- The Great Lawgiver .............. ...... G eo. A. Wilbur Debate-Res. That the Bible should not be read in the Public Schools ............. ...AiT., Alfred Arnold. Neg., Geo. Booth Music. Farewell Address of the Seniors ...... .. .... W. B. Crittenden Reply ................. .............. ..... . . E. E. Flint Music. go OBERLIN COLLEGE Hx-O-HI. ,- ii l LEE' i H.: ..' - Q 1 , . , PHI DELTA SUCIETY. will ji 'ill' , L.. -5- ,. -- ,1- -:..... , R ...., - zfvzfg-ga C-3 X..-J EMHLEM. Fovxman, 1839. Morro-Wzlqi .luilsz-roy MEMBERS. IN FACULTY. james Monroe, '46, G. Frederick Wright,'59, Elisha Grav, '64, C. G. Fairchild, '66, E. I. Bosworth, '83, John Leadii1gl1am,'83 Frederick Anderegg, '85. UNDERGRADUATES. '90. E. W. Clark, G. C. jameson, C. A. Kofoid, C. T. LaCost, T. D. Morley, F. A. Olds, B. D. Savage, ' I-1. T. Williams, W. H. Wilson. OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. QI '91. W. L. Beard, Theo. Breck, G. S. Callendar, John Carter, J. W. Eldred, D. C. Grover, A. P. Howland G. A. Lawrence, J. H. Mcco.-d, A. A. Church, J. M. Hyde, William Clark, W. F. Ireland, S. C. Mastick, F. A. Sumner, j. W. Wright. '92. H. W. Damon, A. M. Ingraham, S. R. Williams. '93. H. C. Cowles, C. R. Howland. W. L. Judkins, J. B. McCord, H. T. West, G. A. Hulett, William McLauchlan, L. L. Redick, SPECIAL QUARTERLY PROGRAMME. Music-Bzu'ca1'olle, ------- F, Faolo Tosti. Savoyard Quartette. Essay-The Other Side of the Question, - H. T. Williams. Oration-Constantinople, ---- W. H. Wilson. Music-Fantasie Impromptu, - - - - Chopin, Op. 66. Miss Helen Hoskins. Debate-The Brazilian Revolution was not justifiable, - - - Ali-E. W. Clark. Neg.-G. C. jameson. Music-Good Night, -------- Buck. Savoyard Quartette. Decision of judges. OBERLIN COLLEGE HI--O-HI. L. L. S. SOCIETY. -QSM ,W 0, t A rf 1-1 'rv Yi :fl ff i f A L QNX I NW A f N 4 it I Qpxxff .. l :llllllfyi ' 4 Q! hae Xl-Im 5322! r i fl i i Iqvjffi x L gli . ll - av If X rzM1i1.m1. FOUNDED IN 1846. L1'rER.-14: LABORUM SOLAMEN L. L. S. SONG. With happy hearts and voices, all, L. L. S. we sing to thee, While soft the evening shadows fall, L. L. S. we sing to thee. And as once more we gather here, Within these walls to us so dear, God's blessing on our work to call, L. L. S. we sing to thee, Long life and joy and happiness, L. 1... S., dear L. L. S., And may thy members ne'er grow less, L. L. S., dear L. L. S., May sunshine be around thy way, Increasing to the perfect day, And this with love and earnestness, L. L. S., dear L. L. S. Oh, may we each learn lessons here, L. L. S. we sing to thee, That still shall serve us many a year, L. L. S. we sing to thee, Not here alone: where e'er we rove, May we the Work uf letters love, The watchword this our hearts to cheer, L. L. S. we sing to thee. OBERLIN CoLL1f:G1a H1-O-I-Ii. 93 LADIES, LITERARY SOCIETY. Minnie B. Beard, Frances H. Catlin, .lennie A. Kump, Grace S. F. Mellen, Harriet L. Price, Lillie B. Banschbach, Alice I. jones, Mary B. Salford, Carrie T. Memmott, Edith C. Cowley, Emily J. Langell, Louie A. Ilall, MEMBERS. '90. Susan R. Bird, Edith M. Clarke, Marian Martin, Mary C. Miller, '91, Judith A. Carter, Mary E. McCord, Gertrude W. Stanle Hattie May. '92. Grace E. jones, Harrie E. Brooke, Helen Kinney, '93. Y, Emma II. Stone. Harriet G. Blaine, Ida A. Green, Lillian V. Sears, Edith A. Olds, Cornelia M. johnson, Annis Mead, Mary A. Westcott, Maud Mason, Lucy A. Cross, Julia E. McMillan. SPECIAL QUARTERLY PROGRAM. Music-In thy Dreams ...... ............................... .................. D u dley Buck George B. Siddall. Essay--A Metaphysical Siesta ...................... ........ M innie B. Beard Oration-Bismarck .............................. ...... ....... M a ry C. Miller Music-Air from Carmen ........................ ........... ....................... I 3 ijet May C. Powell, Oration-Potential Power ..... . .................................... Frances H. Catlin Debate-A'e.rolm:a', That the Nations Should Interfere with Russia's Penal System. Af, Annis Mead. Neg., Jennie A. Kump. Music-Barcarolle .............................................. ........... 1 . P11010 TOSti Savoyard Quartette. 94 O1zERL1N COLLEGE H1-O-HI. AELIOIAN SOCIETY. . if l ,,.l...-- . ' .if . . . . W- 1 Q i f 1 lx R 'K 'S -V X'-fv xl 1 ' r- ' . ni nfl jj' lp A ll ff,-f .Q l . f fm- ' - s 1 v f Qi i 'lZ'5w I-'Z iilww'- -i'i lf'. ,,4 ,L i 7' fr X 'iw-- ff'-ll ii ef 1 hyfi i 'I !!ff 0f E I' li ,ff-1 2,24 1 . M Z I 4' f, if. li, fl v.yEw.4 U 'ff' f K-23 .,,1v, fad. 07, .M .Q 1 it v 1 1: , l at K , f f V'f 'f5flz. ' Z1 3 fi ,ffl ' ,,-Q ff fx L,,,,...... il A A A 4155.3 L 'U SF L 'FSM S-. I Emiitnzm. FOUNDED, 1856. MEMBERS. CLASS OF '9O. Blanche A. Anderson, Lilla E. Appleton, May Bullard, Janette Corbin, Nevada V. Davis, Carrie G. Durgin, Anna A. Ford, Ella M. Moll, Flora B. Phelps, Bertha T. Harrington, Grace F. Harrison, Annie A. Mannington, Alice B. Ring, Eloise Steele, Stella M. Townsend, Anna S. Arnold, May B. Burge, Temple F. Garfield, Hattie A. Peck, Nellie M. Sumner, Bessie A. Brown, Clara Little, Caroline S. Shaw, Mary E. Taylor, Katherine M. Upp, CLASS OF '91. Irma Alford, Maude Cleghorn, Cornelia M. Johnson Carrie E. Silliman, Sarah Waite. CLASS OF '92 Mary Francis, Lucy H. Morley. '93. Kate Cleverdon. Bessie Spitzer, Anna E. Town, Carrie P. Winter. Cora A. Burns, Jennie M. Doren, Ella Marsh, Grace E. Stanton, Jennie M. Higinbotham, OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. 95 r SOCIETY SONG. We come A'2Lxo1AN, with praises and love, Thy daughters to-day and forever, All close to the throb of thy mother-heart bound, By fetters that time cannot sever. Thy past, ACLIOIAN, is locked in thy breast, Thy present is ling'ring beside thee. Thy future is coming, and others must tell What pleasures or pain may betide thee. Then a health to the past, for the past is thine own, With a sorrowful throb in its gladness, For the voices of those who will praise thee no more Are echoing round thee in sadness. And a song to thy present, thy present is here, With its strains of united rejoicing, . That may hint at the.welcome, the pleasure, the love, That the hearts of thy daughters are voicing. And a pledge to thy future, the hours to come, With faith in its gracious fulfilling, For we trust the renewals of vigor and life That every new year is instilling. The past and the present, together we come, Thy daughters to-day and forever, All close to the throb of thy mother-heart bound, By fetters that time cannot sever. SPECIAL QUARTERLY PROGRAMME. Oration--More Light ............................... Anna E. Town Music-O, Harp Immortal ...... ..... .... ........ G o t mod Miss Peck. Essay-The Principle of Suliicient Reason .... ......... E lla M. Moll Oration-Schiller's Wallelistein ............ .... B lanche Anderson Music-Indian Bell Song. .. .. ...,.......................... Delibes Miss Tuckerman. Debate-Resalwd, That the Government Should Own and Control the Railroads. Af., Vada V. Davis. Neg., Carrie P. Winter. Music-Bedouin Love Song.. .............................. Pinsuti Savoyarcl Quartette. 96 QHERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. ACME AND CADNEA SOCIETIES. UNION ANNUAL. PROGRAMY. Oration--Social Reform ...... ............. .... V . O. Boyer c Oration-Want vs. Plenty ....... .............. .... M . j. Norton rz Essay-Education the Safeguard ol' the Nation .... .... I . M. Waugh zz Essay-A Sabbath in the Country ............. . .. F. N. Spindler c Music. ................... ....................... S avoyard Quartette Debate ...... ....... P opular Vote for President uv. the Present System. AH., W. B. Wheeler, r. Neg., S. F. Bernauer, a. C. L. Stoker, c. E. S. Pearl, zz, Music ..... . . ............ . . . ....... .Savoyard Quartette OIIERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. I Q7 THE UNION LIBRARY ASSO- R. A MILLIKAN .... JENNIE M. DOREN HATTIE MAY ....... GEO. B. SIDDALL ....... ....... E. E. FLINT ......... CIATION President ........ ....H--.-U .......Vice-President. Recording Secretary. Corresponding Secretary. ..........................Treasurer. PROF. H. C. IQING, I -I. W. CROOK, R. T. MILLER, G. A. LAWRENCE. l- Book Committee. Mrss C. T. MEMMOTT, U. L. A. entertainments have been as follows: October 22, Joseph Cook. November 1.2, Schubert Quartette. November 29, Mrs. Scott Siddons. February 28, Miss Amelia Edwards. March 21, Max O'Rel1. THE REVIEW. Established in '74. EDITORS EOR COLLEGE YEAR 390 and '91. I. C. CHASE ........ ... . . . .Editor-in-Chief C. B. FIRESTONE .......... .................. ....... Associate Editor F. A. WILDER ........ G. S. CALLENDAR ...... ...... W. T. HOLMES .......... ...... 7 .........junior Editor Financial Manager Assistant Manager 98 OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-I-II. GRATORICAL ASSOCIATION I-'INST PLACE ORATOR FOR ,QL OFFICERS. R. A. NIILLIKAN ............................ ............ P resident. JENNIE DOREN ........ .............. ....... V i ce-President. F. A. SUMNER, ................ ........ T reasurer. A. B. WOOD ....................... ...... S ecretary. C. B. FIRESTONE, W lx' E. H. ABBOTT, fl Z G. S. CALLENDAR, fb .J , F. W. GURNEY, W If Omtols' I. C. CHASE, .QI Z G. A. LAXVRENCE, W J GRACE E. STANTON,l ELLA MARSH, ,Essayists. DAISY SAFFORD. OBERLIN COLLEGE I-I1-O-HI. 99 Y. M. C. A. WM. F. HOLMES .......... ..... ..... P 1 -esident TRACY MACGREOOR ........ ..................... V ice-President A. B. WOOD .................. ....... C Orresponding Secretary WALTER F. CRAFTS ........ ......................... T reasurer H. T. WEST .................. ........ I Qecording Secretary G. P. MARTIN ......... ....... A ssistant Treasurer MISSIGNARY VOLUNTEER BAND. GEORGE C. DOOLITTLE ........... President for '89 and '90. WM. IRELAND ........................ President for '90 and '91. G' P' MARTIN-1 ......... ............. X Vork Committee. H. S. ROSS, I loo OIIERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. MUSICAL UNIGN. JW' .17 4 fig! wi - P N -- NPG. ' WZ n !!.H 'iW-E-'K S. 4 fWV XM'1', f . wer ' ' f .4112 'Qi '2L1 ','f5 ' ' 15 , 'iff 'ff . 1 ,,',:1'f'E f1 .I ' P ff N 'A A Si, Zigi . 5 Q' fa' If fr ffffff' . 1.31 M riff Q61 '.f9'.ngf-W ni..-i' ifvX'Mi Q ri of , .ff 1 ,ou gig, L. ,N i5'fQQ1ii6'r'fG,i'? ' may Qi? QQ ,j 1' ff' , . 'ff 1. 'S Her. .eiwlllirgsiv 44? 9555.55 . Q-1' f f'- -QSM. .. ,f15i ,,, a5f- if-. -Jr 'g'f- T ataiqagff . ' Til , - ,,-, ............ -v-- ,... ni:--1 Prof. GEO. W. ANDREXVS, Director. HO1N'IER N. IQIMBALL. P. H. METCIXLF ...... C. H. EWING .... HENRY PARSONS ......................................... .... RESIDENT E. J. GOODRICH. OFFICERS. President -..Secretary .......TreaSurer. Librarian MEMBERS OF BOARD. E. P. JOHNSON. OBERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. 103 SAVOYARD QUARTETTE. P. H. METCALF .......... ....... F irst Tenor HOMER N. KIMBALL ...... ...... S econd Tenor Gno. C. JAMESON ........ ......... F irst Bass A. B. SPEAR .,...... ..... S econd Bass THE WANDERING SAVOYARDS. Far from our native land, Gui' sunny, bright Savoy, We sing to you our songs Of happiness and joy, And play our sweetest tunes 3 Oh, listen to the strains That waft us back on fancy's wing To Savoy's sunny plains ! x These are the very best And we can do no more, So help us on our way, For we are very poor 3 These are our songs and tunes g Oh listen to the strains That waft us back on fancy's wings To Savoy's sunny plains ! ro OBERLIN CoL1.Ems H1-O-I-Il. 4 + ARIEL QUARTETTE. '-'Qi n' L ' . If?I'i-fimfwf - , ,,.1F,m - , V -1 ,f L-fy . gn e airmgif 3 g ,- 34' 3: 7, 'E 3' Rial' w -ii f c JL? .nik fiiii-ff3 T .ri-1, ...- -. 1 rf f ror 3 gg, V: . .lI.n2Lf? s5f ,E-ri ..- . .L , ff zlw 551- A 1 A A' ZJ?EfM '? . 1 1. 1- up .,. auf -- . - . ia-I ' 1. V If Y EJIWA 7-74 Lj tis v -.. .W -Am 'A 'Mi 794:23-. on W rfffrfawf vs .... ,f I R! ...JP A. . .V - ,f-ff' '-- offffffw if 5 ,5 - jf-nj La 5.5 LXCW -W S E . ff: A -- , L-ff 1, -lf' A-i...LQ:if 'Af ' Ng ' - 1- -.-asia' CHAS. C. KIRKPATRICK ......... ........ F irst Tenor AARON H. CURRIER .......... ....... S econd Tenor ALBERT A. CHURCH ........ .......... F irst Bass CHAS. H. Ewmo ......................................... Second Bass X. Y. Z. QUARTETTE. HERBERT HARROUN ..................................... First Tenor LENARD W. HATCH ......... ........ S econd Tenor WM. G. MEADE ............. .......... F irst Bass Louis J. FORD ........ ....... S econd Bass OBERUN COLLEGE H1--O-HI. TO NANDOLIN CLUB. W ' -rf -4- . J 445: ziggy, 4, M, ,I . Jfj! I' lf' fl- -lf' G. ff ff 1 A- of .- gmac? A' ,aff . - I-, V . jgkxb b s' .. A Q Z' 7 Q 137' '5 ,b ,Vx W . ,, ff I ...M 7 , jf, j ,rf .- -A V A ff ,.., :mr 'il-.. fflcgigg' 'ffl 'l'1'.vl'Ef 'h ' .. ' f-+.- - '- -Ql-1-5. O. C. VAN ZANDT, R. B. McCoy, F. H. INGERSOLL, H. D. CLARK, QUINCY SAGE. 1 o6 OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. AEOLUS CLUB. ' nnuw.. . 1 f. V rj. Hffa N 1 ' ' 'K ' w . ' .ff V N? NA 46 'fpx xw wltlfxuxwwlllf 1 , lm xx R ff IX X B i V B L, Z, ' , j f fu 6 Q A, f f 1 .1 2 XJ: If f V hm u 1 ll fi lly 1 5 K I M M .: Mil -N ,A -1 ,,....i- mx J Qk- Q WX - 11 - 1 I xx WL f ixx f XJ In L 16,1 , f N X ii ,TR MN gl! ., I7 1, Wim. Nj I? 1' if i--4 'figf' ,114 ' . W . W, f .V i. 53i.f1,.xf' if' I ' 14' 1 f ,,,,.,- - THEO. BRECK ....... ....... F 11'St B A. M. HYDE ...... ....... S econd B L. D. CHAFER ....... ................ S. B. DUDLEY ..... HARLAN DUDLEY .... .... ........ 11 Cornet b Cornet .......A1to ...... Baritone Tuba OBERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. ro SECRET SOCIETIES. f Af. f -5 W 5' E 4 42 z 'f4 1'5f'f, -vi 4' 9' 3 ' H ,Q , ' '.,i'f,f, -'T Q Y 1 Eff. it 1 -1-. 15' f A 'f'.3i?'k'fff2 a 'f f N' r ' 94 i PM l . 1 i f l, if ff-ff ff' -ll fi 'ff iliik xi ' Z f I 1 l lfifnv 5, , I 'VI I ' lt L tri nf I . A V'V ffm, ,iafgg y fggw W 74' 4 E1'E i2 7 '2 l' E ' J 4' C if Mfg, N, if T llf , 'EEE ff -v vii Wg, - 77 , yzae.-.4-5 Wiiiiiyi ' ge 1 Q- 'P Q 19IfnA,ffflA' .1 fi' xy, r. ,4ggZE.5f,,.1' 'gf if ' E E . .-ffi'Egf1s f1W gf' ' S s' A fm SNOKERS' CLUB. y EF' f ! ,f if? 1 l A ' ff 'l dliflf fl. its l ff , ,ii-i,L5Z:g., Q' ' C-2... - -Q Nvll N I, ' FFP MOTTO. SMOKEO, SMELLARE, DISCOVERAVI, EXPULSUM. Members of this society, being extremely modest, have requested names and degrees should not be published, that their 7 loS OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-I-ll. EUCHRE CLUB. All the members of this society hold the office of secret-ary. MEMBERS. G. S. Never will tell, F. B. Afraid to be known, C. E. Ashamed of himself, F. A. Sneak. BACHlil.OR'S CLUB. -av r, gi ' I 'Q if X 3 Q 07 , H . -f ' . , 7 X ,f I . '7 4' I A .. if - ,ll ' tzdffwzff . f it ' ff ff-I V I nniyflfli If , If ,aff f 4 Xp ff., I , A X ,weak filf' lid- I '- I I 1. f' f 'M li' f'.,7 ff! frqifiw. V '-.' ' ggi!-- X fl! Q? 5, ff na., X Wit? E -Cd- zq' I Y ff? Wqg wxx ' YH R if Ef fafislw X .vi Dx i :gi f 1 I f 4- J? 1 Plate made direct from photograph of members. FOUNDER AND PRESIDENT. Sam Partridge. A MEMBERS. C. B. Firestone, E. H. Abbott, G. S. Addams, joel McCord. OBERLIZN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. 109 TRAVELING lVIEN'S ASSO- CIATICJN. QU ' . , y -11.41 5 ,X .N . Z f If ff A ff? fl' nf ff I mfmff w I i l . ,mf ,, If I I M if' X ' W tiff V 0 I 0 i' ' - . l N . - -R , 1 QU W iii X 1 if , M A ,frie- ff 'fly f 'Lrg 1125!-C. MANAGERS. G. S. Callendar, R. T. Miller, A. M. Hyde C. E. Yetman. MEMBERS. Millikan, Van Horn, Wilder, '91, Wilder, '92, Kingsbury, Rider, Heckman, Moulton, Ralston, Raine, Grein, West, Beard, Solandt, Johnston, '93, Plumb, Grover, V Bacon, Jamison, Williams, Childs, Blanchard, Lea, '92, Eldred, Bennett, Love, And many more. no OBERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. EATING CLUB. -1:1 gr fa E-T J- E L ::-'- 5 - A -1--- . V 1 LY -5 . O - fr? f -:lr-L, ' . 'L..1-- 4- . I W3 R- Six. - IU C 859 Pfzvr- MQ' AML LA - ,.. HOMER KIAIBALL, President. CLARK FIRESTONE, Vice-President. FRED. NIASON, JOEL MCCORD, C. E. BLOMGREN, R. E. SCOTT, GEO. ADDAMS, Sec'y and Treas MEMBERS. O. C. VAN ZANDT, E. H. ABBOTT, R. T. MILLER, ALLEN SENEY, E. S. BOUGHTON A. MOSER, FRED. SAVAGE, H. WHITCOLIB. OBERL1N COLLEGE H1-O-Hx. III DUDE CLUB. vm WL, a Q 0 A If JCL' It wow' 'I' 153. .1 '11 '- U r' .x,, , 1l,,',fl , 4 A ff. R 15. fm M1 V Q4 A lh,Jl'mQ,'Ll' ze, N I A, , 4 +L LSA ak Lf H. -x x- ,.53L,,y L fm f A ,. Ja Q U A fe F5 5 lx H W 5 M i. w L A f k M K Q 'U ago AL 1? ,553 A ' OFFICERS. CULL RYDER, President. HARRY WHITCOMB, Vice-President. N. C. KINGSBURY, Secretary. PAT. GLASS, FRANK TENNEY, ABE IQIMBALL, C. C. BRACKIN, E. C. PARTRIDGE, S. C. MASTICK, Treasurer MEMBERS. . F. BEVERSTOCK, CHARLIE OLDS, SHORTY BYRNES, VANCE JACKSON, GEO. MEAD. 112 OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. SGCIETY OF ASSOCIATED KICKERS. f -v , 5-,.f'.1gp,.. H ,gb-'rf f e f 1 f f 1' f f f! 4' 1 ff f 'iv' N- X ' - ' wi. - A . fm: Q ' 4-ig, ei,Q4? pf9uff 4, . :fe ww A gf -q 1- - :i-g Hi:!',- 'V Q - -x,. KJ' X fyj jf' 4! X 215 Ziff - - Y..- 1 .-.... f. ,- - 3-4-7 ,, -.4gf,:uu-g-1-N , ,, . - Q54 ig...--.. 4M -., i. f ---- Y- ,-V 3 ..-,.. gg-: ' 'fe OFFICERS. President, I .... THEODORE PROTAS BERLE. Vice-President, . CHAS. KIRKPATRICK. Secretary ,.... A. P. HOXVLAND Treasurer, .... C. T. LA COST. Gen'1 Manager, J. H. MCCORD. OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. II SOCIETY FOR THE PRGMO TION OF OBESITY. . ' , X5 Xvs m ff? l N Rl I x 4' 'W X'f4m , ,i fy' XA XV. Mpx 4' H IE! 'I ' 'V ' . ?' S f : , f' :Wy 7. R V - ' - if - . X E ' E - - - ,I fi 'f y E- f 2 FRED. MASON Y F. N. WILLIAMS, F. N. SPINDLER, HOMER KIMBALL, C. E. BLOMGREN R. E. LOVELAND, W. L. BEARD, W. P. DoE. HONORARY MEMBER A. S. Roo'r. 8 114 OBERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-Hz. PHOTOGRAPHERS' CLUB. .A 5 1,f7,,::Kjcg:'LQ.,:f- 51. A 1 I !.,, fo ,Of E Q41 H- - , My ' :fm S ::- -I-'rx-: ' -if 1- 4' 'v -' XXVH if .. :4 Q lfzwy ' Q5 ,-2:- ,,.. .g.,, . w E. w ,fb - ,Mil -Ez.-'21, O '-- ,,4.,j N, A .::- --' J .f v wu hwrfiff- xl h I, X . 'Vw 'w'r, X Q-,: JI? if gffggg.. -:-. ' .gli .il .. 'L i if 1 -'- -Q..-Evi O 1 --gig 5 , S va- , AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHY IN OBERLIN COLLEGE. MEMBERS. MCCORBIICK, MISS WARNER, GROSVENOR, 793, MISS SEVERANCE, HOLBIES CBILLYJ, WILSON, '90, WHITCOMB, JONES, REFIE, SAVAGE, '93. OBERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. 1 I5 ATHLETICS. llmi i . I- 'QV' ra I 'I If - , -.W ,fl 1 X Af' 5 ' N , . f fcff lr m e 1 I Al ff 1 Fw ,I 7 K J H 4 J 4 1X H 3' M W 'W . 'gif-le' ' 0 OFFICERS OF THE ASSOCIATION. President ................ Vice-President ....... Secretary ......... Treasurer ........ ............ -nu.. E. H. ABBOTT. G. H. HULETT. C. B. FIRESTONE. W. N. CRAFTS. II 6 O1n21zL1N COLLEGE H1-O-HI. 19I '94 ,93 294 90 792 U IVERSITY NINE. Howland, c. 'QI McCord, 3rd b. Van Zandt, s. s. '92 Ewing, Zlld b. jameson, 1st b. '93 Culver, c. f, Sumner, p. Addams, r. f, Hulett, 1. f. QI Grein, 92 Grosvenor, Substitutes '93 Kinsley, Howland, captain. ! Games played-5. '89. October 19, Oberlin vs. Adelbert, 8-3. '90. May 24, Ann Arbor w. Oberlin, 7-6. May 30, Oberlin w. Adelbert, 5-I. june 7, Oberlin w. Ann Arbor, I3-II. june 14, Ann Arbor vs. Oberlin, S-5. Williams, p. Addams, 2l'lC'l b. La Cost, s. s. Arnold, r. f. Millikan, c. f. Howland, c. Breck, s. s. McCord, 3rd b. Wilder, p. Wright, c. f. VVilliams, r. f. Hulett, 1st b. Grosvenor, c. Ewing, 2nd b. Sperry, s. s. CLASS NINES. '90, Carruthers, 3rd b. Fairchild, l. f. Crittenden, c. Booth, Ist b. Williams, captain. '91. Grein, lst b. Hatch, 2nd b. Flint. l. f. Firestone, r. f. Howland, captain. '92. - McLaL1chlan, c, f. Moser, l. f. Ralston, 3rd b. Simpson, p. and captain. Y , , W A 1 OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-I-I1. II '93. Kinsley, 3rd b. and captain. Reed, r. f. Smith, c. Clark, Ist b. Gulick, s. s. Culver, 2nd b. jameson, p. Savage, c. f. Howland, 1. f. CLASS GAMES-'89-'90. '91 w. '90 ....., 25-2 ,QO vs. '93 ...... 19-15 '92 w. '93 ...... 10-4 '91 vs. '90 ...... 28-19 '91 ws. '93 ...... 11-11 '93 w. '92 ,.,... 6-2 '91 w. '93 ...... 7-6 '90 vs. '92 .... 6-6 '92 vs. '90 ...... 7-5 'go vs. '92 ...... 6-6 ,QI w. '92 ...... 18-14 '90 w. '92 ...... 8-6 '90 w. '93 ..... 1o-1o ,QI ru. '93 ...... 16-5 '90 won 2 games, lost 3. ,QI won 5 games, lost 0. ,Q2 won 2 games, lost 2. '93 won 1 game, lost 4. '91 champions for year '89-'90, ,A 411511. 'lfln 1' . BQQZIQ- . K' 4 : 'XL 3. , p l . ' 4010 I 4 X f w ill J 6 CX 55531, ' 'ffl' rf '31, .. ' ff . '05, W., K ,Q JIU, r,-Q f. . 4 q I Q X541 , , - ' K ' . - K , ,Eli ,1 ll .,-54.,,lll X 1 - ':-- lg UNIVERSITY CATCHER. 120 OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. FOOT BALL. If Mi ligjygifj gin lllir Mg'Ill'1y,4llj ff 'Iliff 9 'tl FZ? fqis. A, iv! 'bf 1 A gf, . 4fff?lil'?vj W' ' IQ gg ' 'QSM Je! ' jigs: f f I.Q,'xxfXl, if s Iiflihwgi firjlzh ' ii 'A wg 'QQ V X iff 4 'Zip Xi ' X9 , fgkyt -F4 f S ffm Q 'E I I ,Q g1,J.,'5.ffZq53, . f. rl' I I iff 1' X 'f,1f7',, 55912 H, n ,f,,- ff,-.54-3431.-, U. .. , V .ff 1 V 'Y fZI'.:7.'4,,Qfy'f2:s4 ,g,- ., '11 M24 .M . Zz .f: ':'.gL'v54,ia,, ,ffl if ,' nf ' w vv 1 V .,, .,-- ...riff , '-1:-.-1-cf ff. . z ' 1 gn- .J-Al ,if , . ,ru .1 ,...,44g, V-:cw 4.13-c.1i.f:4.,. , '-2' 5 I '-nw 1' ' gf g -ff' w.: '-C 31 .g.gc'?:f',:..5rg.g.5.f.,:.-7 . , !??5..,.W,,,-4' . f vig? .51 i I Q siiifiyz-fgijgiia, r-15,-it L 7 5 ml .-ii.-:.1'y -J X.-2 . A . - i-?if::f ?1f-X?'. i6?:sT'- ,r'.f,'4i?',fj f, , + .',f V nqlzkifl I . 3 :'gga'Il:b.3i:iEfZ.f.g ' - ' .'v.-3.4.-'w V 4. .L -i M '. ,. - ' 5 4-, '- -'B1r? -:- E. :y fl I il'?.dfJ 1Q'ffV'ii.2hf'81 - '15 L-'-f1fP'f: fix C:'??-5'3f:?3-'L.4-1 'f I ' M 4 I -r ---1.77 . ,ff-r f afff'..,.:' e-- NY' l , C ' if ' '- ' . ,'r.,g..1.f 3.91.5 'fewg , 1, f , ' - g ' 153Yr,.Qi+ X -' lr..-:-1'.f-f....g- .. .V '- wi A ff ..' ' . l. l '.-Hr.. 1'e...n. fm' .-,:g,c-,U-, .f I y 95 1' - , -I 11:1-..lI-any A ,.'3-1: .'if3u-5,-51:51. i rf , ' -,ae fl 1 S' 112,355 l il -lllgiiii VJJIVP i if 'fJ'Y,i ly If' ' ' A I . f ....I i!fJi1ii'lg5' 'w 1 fag.:-JF- ,z1 ' 1 ' 1- ' ' '-- '1.'?f.:'5:'-,-f Q ,.i if',.7l1zw1 ' l M V Q P. V .52 I Wi' ,l ' 4'Q.'.li1ii- 1: ' lr! --27i'4514E,- A ' 1 1, X :- '11 ,f , .Wv zf-bf ,J 'gf fav.. I ix A., N Jw.--. , 7 , ,. If if f x.-. ww.. w .arf . N ,C f ,, ,'f9,5,.'.,:-45 .fwvqgfk 1,1 . , L, X 0 .4 ,lf,7,A3,.ix.',af.., ..- '- '.f.'?7i'.f1f, f -X ' -- ' ' Q sf mf' 4,-tw '1-. '- -. wwvy If H R C-4. 1 ' - Alf' 7119.gkfgzzzgev-2-1-,.q-,-,, 1 1 l r . S - ,4 sws--:+?i--'lz'. 'Zff X. il. gl., ,f ly, . ,W -, fa.. .-ff,-..w-if v .- , xx , Q ., --. , 514 -X 11' 5-,i .. ',, 5. ' 'ii' 'f l5 '3c7. r YL,-. '41 , gi.. -'-s!f:a'H- iv M ffl:cfT:5a1':':f-a':f'1..lf 'Q' ,ff J' l- M5 ff'iv'W'QM'f-f2p111fE'f',,3+'f ' if-MZ' S 1 f ' 1 'f ..4. ' ' :.Hn':'l 2'-. .-,-.gIf:'f' in rf.. of :.q--kv. . ,. mai..---p...-'f.:g-2 ' f -lr., ' ll., f?j5i2'.i-i':j.,'i3i:'f 'f: --w:..a.:,g.:i ...Q-ah f ' I CLASS TEAMS. '90 sEN1oRs. Cushing, 1. Morley, c. r. La Cost, q. b Bennett, h. Crittenden, Wilson, f. b., captain. Mason and Munson, subs. '91 JUNIORS. Olds, Charles, r. e. Loveland, l. e. Sexton, r. t. Edwards, l. t. Abbott, r. g. Q. b.. h. b. Plumb, r. e. Sumner, l. g. Howland, l. e. Beard, c. r. Wilder, r. t. McCord, I-I., q. b, Wright, l. t. Lawrence, h. b. McCord, J. B., r. g. Masticlc, h. b., captain. Flint, f. b. Griffiths and Grein, subs. '92. soPHs. Simpson, r. e., Boughton, c. r., Moser, 1. e., Sperry, q. b., Wilder, r. t., Rider, h. b., Ewing, 1. t., Grosvenor, h. b., Aylard, r. g., McLauchlan, f. b., Kirkpatrick, l. g., . Hulett, captain. Williams and Morley, subs. O BERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-I-11. Savage, r. e., Wood, 1. e., Stough, r. t., I-Iolway, T. T., Hawkes, r. g., November I2, cc 16, il 23, li 23, December 4, Champi '93, FRESHMEN. U I-Iolwny, J. W., 1. Bridgman, c. r., Pzmrks, q. b., l. t., Kinsley, h. b., Rhodes, 11. b., Rain, f. b., captain. Ellis and Ryan, subs. CLASS GAMES. Seniors ...... 0 3 Juniors ...... 24 Sophomores. . 145 Freshmen .... 0 Juniors ...... 6 3 Freshmen .... o Seniors ...... 0 g Sophomores . . 23 juniors ...... og Sophomores . . 0 onship tied between Juniors and Sophs. !,'Nou W1 I ,f in A1 1. W! aff'-,ah I! f ll ff f' N f' .C BN ! . ,-1 W Y 'I w ' Y wf'.'Q30'x, I Y -- - X W ig: K. W -n Yi Q.g'x,':.,-.'5f'f' . ' ' ,I is-QV 5 X . al I riff X f x V 1' 'I 1' M 'raw' ' ,ff Q Ma , MZ Uri ,-4-,'-:-.-.... -- 5-' x ' N 3 .-yes, . a x l V -.-L -W , I2I I22 OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. OBERLIN BICYCLE CLUB. fab ' 4 'en 'J A1-1:1 i AQ f OA ' Z 1' 4 ' 4'-' , J .X I N YMX x fr I ' QK WSIA ,ly I I 4 ,J , xr-4.2 I A 1 CC mil f xx CSX X X fgye AS Q W OFFICERS. Presldent ............... ..... Vice-President .... Secretary and Treasmer First Lieutenant ............ ........ N. GROSVENOR H. CUSHING H. TENNEY C. MASTICK Captam ..................... ..... .BLAKE MCDOWELL Second Lleutenant ......... .................. J OHN GLASS Color Bearer .............. W. SAVAGE Bugler .................... .......... T HEO. BRECK Advance Agents ' C. BRACKIN ........BER'r JOHNSON OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. 12-5 P TENNIS ASSUCIATION. R fa I . , U4 f f w 175 W 'm,22 i ff 1 f ff ' f ff ' Q LGI' .lx fi l .sxmlif I .QZQQQI I -129 - ' if 5, 73' '4iw1 '. ---'.-:sl ' ,f ' .. I TW g--..-:::---- l fj ww . la2Esgss.-za-'ass f if ,gr Wggh 'fgffgy-'4' '.-, X I :!lF.l.1E.. , 1: f4ff'f,?Q -- ,':,.-f,,., ' f .J 1' as .fi-aff: A LOVE SET. OFFICERS. L. W. HATCH ..... ...................................... President. CARL KINSLEY ....... ........ S ecretary and Treasurer. GENTLEMENKS GYMNASIUM . R. A. MILLIKAN .............................. Director. CLASS LEADERS. C. W. Savage, E. H. Abbott, Wm. T. Holmes, Glenn Plumb, G. P. Martin, W. J. Hutchins, A. F. Millikan, Fred Bridgrnan, A. Moser. , V 4 4 1 fx- A , , ,Q F 'X 1.15 11 f ET . A I Z f 4 1 W --'A gums M , 1' 'J Up. , ,Q-ff 4 176, QQ 1 ' V f 'f- Y Y 3 ,-'if ,7 ll xi ii f J LL 'LA X -Li wg-I . H, Y t:..Ak it -,. f Q li., 5:4 G. .+ - m n 1 ....-Z-'.:: ' 'ff -- - - - ' -F g xgiag. Y - 'I KE- ' ,,, - , , - v , , N- ' -,Q :1. '::4E'4f , Q V :if - -we 5 , f f wi' ,,-:ff E: , gy is 1 4 3 6713-. - Q 1: 5 Qglff f-ff 1 f S52 ,, lff- - wi - 5 TZ: -.z. --- gf - 2 1 ii 25 Q Y' -gig QS -'F' E E ', Jw 47- M 7. 54' E WN '- . 'LQ' 'f' 41 J ?- fr fcff-T IT 415, , 'il , ' if EFS gg? 6: ' mg a' '-A ga f f ' :' .4 f ' X 3 ire? .55 Q .ff W -'T T ,.afJ y1., - if'- a-'dl R july li ' :--fx ' -'H+-?,,: T' '-' -' f .,,-2 .gf -F.. 1' 'Q 'WG cmu OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. 127 FIELD DAY. MAY 26, 1890. 1oo yards dash, IOQ sec ...... .. 220 yards dash, 245 sec ........ 440 yards run, 57,2 sec ............. Z mile ru11, 2 min., 23 sec ....... . 1 mile run, 5 min., 23g sec .......... . 1 mile walk, 9 min., 8g sec .............. Z mile bicycle race, I min., 7E sec. . 2 mile bicycle race, 7 min., 3713 sec ,.,... . K mile safety bicycle race, 462 sec ....... Hurdle race, 120 yards, IQZ sec...... Potatoe race, IS yards ......................... Three legged race, loo yards, 13g sec ....... Class relay race, 8 men, M mile., I min,, 4I Standing broad jump, 9 feet, 85 in .......... Running broad jump, I8 feet, 45 in ........ Running high jump, 5 feet, 6 in ............. Standing high kick, 6 feet, II in ...... Running high kick, 8 feet, I in ....... Putting I6 lb shot, 32 feet, 6 in ..... Throwing 16lb hammer, 68 feet ...... Pole vault, Sfeet, I0in........... ..... Standing hop-step-and-jump, 28 feet, 9 in ........ ........ Running hop step-and-jump, 41 feet, I0 in ...... Throwing base ball distance, 325 feet, 2 in Boxing, middle weight ............................. Throwing base ball at mark ,,,,,,. Sack race ............................ Orange rush ............................................. Tug-of-war, College vs. Preparatory, 50 me ............ ' ...... W. B. Crittenden, A. Ryan, E. Plumb, W. Eldred, B. Laird, Holway, W. Savage, C. Mastick, .........Ellenburger. W. Wright, .......VV. B. Crittenden, F. I. Carruthers, A. D, Edwards, if Sec ...... Freshman team. W. B. Crittenden, M. Gibbons, I-I. Currier, R. . Firestone, S. Pearl, W. Wright, . Wright, W. Wright: T. W. Johnson, H. Currier, W. Sherrill, Mott, McLauchlan, W. Wright, W. Lyon, nl ollege won by 5 feet in 40 x90 '94 991 991 191 '93 '93 ,9, -91 190 990 190 .90 .90 192 190 '94 991 991 !9I '95 792 '95 '94 292 191 '95 SCC. 128 OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. THE CHAMPION ATHLETES OF THE COLLEGE. First ....... ........... I . W. Wright, 'gr Second ............ W. B. Crittenden, '90 Third ................... A. H.Currier, '92 RECORDS. EVENT. WORLD. WORLD. AMERICAN. Professional. Amateur. Intercollegiate. 100-yard dash, 914 seconds, 220-yard dash, 21 4-5 seconds, 440-yard dash, 48 3-5 seconds, Half-mile run, 1 min. 53W secs. 1-mile run, 4 min. 12M secs. 1-mile walk, 6 min. 23 secs. 120-yard hurdle, ........................ 2-mile bicycle race 5 min. 11 secs. Run'ghighjurnp,5 ft. 11 in. Run'gbroad 21 ft. GW in. Pole vault, 10 ft. 10M in.- Thro'g hammer, 107 ft. 1 in. Putting shot, 44 ft. 51,4 in. 10 seconds, 10 seconds. 21 3-5 seconds, 22 seconds. 47M seconds. 50 seconds. 1 min. 54 3-5 secs 2 min. 1-5 sec. 4min. 18 2-5 secs 4 min. 29 4-5 secs 6min. 29 3-5 secs 7 min. 1 second. 16 seconds, ' 16 4-5 seconds. 5min. 21 3-5 secs 6 min 4-5 sec. 5 ft. 11M inches. 22 ft. 6 inches. 10 ft. 5M inches. 98 ft. 6 inches. 40 ft. 914 inches. 381 ft. 2M inches 6 ft. 4 inches, 23 ft. 3 inches, 11 ft. Slhin. 108 ft. 3 in. 44- ft. 10V2 in. Trow'g base ball. .......................... ....................... . a O1us1u.1N f'l0l.l,.liGl2 H1-O-HI. 129 PHRE OLOGICAL QBERUN. yE1y?Ii'ftTlo F7HM17es5 1 1 if 4 lliiiif 17011 2:7 '20 s 1 M421 JIS , YDEALITY f-.bs L, V N2 fl RQQZQ9 I 221 ii figs V Q6 'Z 'Glu 'ef' l M .lg Aa ' Q45 L bill 5 af . N Sf? S 'ME 1 S9 s .-,,, Bw 77 63. fr Wen 2' V me E '3 P J MM 4117 44, Q M Ei' ., 4 fa - 1 I Wkgsmg MW 'if Ze 3 my M75 'fe lf r 'W 25' .1-az' 1 . or S .1157 fl lgwie GTQW 4? F A' ,V ll I-neg! qu 1, rl 5 4 f - I 1 B .' - l ,vi f I M' X I 'N I ff ll! . M4 1 V 1. N. C. Kingsbury, T. D. Morley, J. II. McCord, Theo. Breck, Walter Crafts, Billy Meade, G. Addams. 2. Yetmzm. 4. La Cost, Siddall, O. Abbott, Carruthers. 5. Sackett and jameson. 6. Currier, Berle, Barnett, Teeters. 7. Laird. 8. Ralston, Whitcomb, Fairchild, Hinman, Grosvenor, Boughton. 9. R. T. Miller. 11. Abbott, E. H. 12. Moulton, Olds, C. H., johnson, C. E. 13. Cook. Martin, G. P. 14. The girls. 15. The Faculty. 16. McCormick, Holway. 17. Carrie Shaw, Miss Phelps, Tracy MacGregor, Doolittle. 18. The Seniors. 19. The girls again, 20. Homer Kimball, Gurney, Abe Kimball. 21. C. B. Firestone, Plumb, Dutton. 22. Jameson, ,QI 3 VanI-Iorn. 23. R. R. McCoy, Seney, Mead, C. N., etc. 24. George Mead, Len Hatch. 25, Howland. 26. All of us. 27. Hutchins, Ewing. 29. Miss McCord, McLauchlan. 32, Miss Carter. 33. Loveland, Miss Breckenridge. 34, R. S. Pearl, jameson, '9O. 35. Laird, Harper, and the rest of the girls. 36. Williams, T. N. 38. Callendar. 39. Shilling, Millikan, A, F. 40. Flint. 41. G. A. Lawrence, R. T. Miller, Mastick, C. B. Firestone. 42. The Profs. 9 130 OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-H1. JUNIOR EXHIBITIO . re.. t ,ff l Wo . ffl ' 'i 'fl5ll ...,-......H,,,,, iv: We , 1 lf fn A ' flllfi. -we re-we-l lf 'r XI' ll 'Q 2... Q l,'ll.gi ntl ' -- 11.1 rl '. ,,, 5 X if-'my' - ' It ,' v. ' lm '1 ----..,..... ,ck ff . I . , I. ,.-A le- -. . gif: 'T' W . - P 35... L K-Q -:kms , fflff 04. THE NIGHT BEFORE THE EX. PROGRAM. Organ Voluntary--Torchlight March--Guilmant. .... Geo. W. Andrews Invocation. A Decade of Misrule .................... E. H. Abbott, Shelby, Iowa Seneca. ..... ...... ................... T h eo. Breck, Brecksville, Ohio Music-My Dearest Heart-Sullivan .................... G. B. Sicldall The Real Need ...................... Mary B. SatTord, Madison, Ohio An Exponent of the Twentieth Century .... G. W. Mead, Norwalk, Ohio Der Deutsche in America ........ Carrie T. Memmot, Worcester, Mass. Music ar3E?,sal'vE Rafi' Q Conservatory String Quartette Debate-Rvsolwd, That the Negro should not have been enfranchised. Aff.-G. S. Callendar, Neg.-R. A. Millikan, I-Iart's Grove, Ohio. Wichita, Kas. lllfffpy f2flQ2 llivplwgu ....... ...... .... F . W. Gurney, Dover, Dal. fThe Sea God's Assault on the Ecldystone Light-house.J Miss jean A Gilbert, G. B. Siddall. The Toilet and the Dreamer ........ C. B. Firestone, New Lisbon, Ohio Poem-Thistle Down ................... Cornelia M. Johnson, Oberlin Class Song. Music-Duet-Behold the Hilltops ........... OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-Hi. 131 CGNNENCENE T. Salutamus.................. The Type of the Ideal Church ..... The Things that Remain ..... . The Policy of Peace ...... Successful Failures ...... A Real Call ............... A Plea for Investigation ..... An American Institution .......... The Foreigners and the Flag ....... ...... The Hope of the New Republic ...... . The Man ot' Thought the Man ot' Power ..... History in Eden. .....,................... . Our Martyr Spy ............ ...... .... A Growing Tendency of American Life. A Word for George Elliot ............. The Logic of Missions ..... The White Man Question ..... The Shield of Achilles .... . . . The Self-Supporting Student .... Antigony .................... Democracy in College ......... Is Adam's Occupation Gone? .... A New Continent .............. Pro Patria ................... Caste ......... ............... Intellectual Character ............ The Growth of Our Constitution .... The Scholar in Medicine ..,..... A Universal Language ......... The Teacher ................. Pilgrims of Today ............. The Heroic in Every-day Life ...... The impossibility of Omniscience .... The Endless Search for Knowledge ..... A Forgotten Hero. .. ..,... . ..... .. . . . The College Man's Place in the World. .. . Hints and Glimpses ..... .... . . . H. W. Grady ..... ...... A Hero of the Civil War. . . A Plea for the Nihilists .. . Windows . ............... . Transmitted Tendencies .... . . . . . The New Alumnus to the Old ..... The Tyranny of Fashion. . .... Blanche A. Anderson . . . . . . .Osmer Abbott . james M. Ackley . ......Alfred Arnold . . . Harriet G. Blaine . .. W. M. Bennett P. Berle H. Booth ....Nevada V. Davis W. Clark . . . .W. B. Crittenden . . . .Carrie G. Durgin .. F. H. Cushing A. Dick Anna A. Mannington . .... G. C. Doolittle .. . . .E. M. Fairchild ........Mary Marks ... . .R. W. Firestone . .. .Marian Martin ......john D. Gibb . . . . . .A. M. Gibbons . Grace S. F. Mellen E. H. Harper W. Hayes . . . .Mary C. Miller G. R. jackson . . . .G. C. jameson .. . . C. E. jolmson G. Knowlton A. Kofoid B. Laird . . . .Louise C. Pond . . . . .L. j. Luethi . . ..R. E. Loveland .. B. Mason . . . .Caroline S. Shaw .Stella M. Townsend .. .. . . ..F. D. Morley H. Olds . . .Carrie P. Winter . . . . .W. A. Sackett . . . .F. j. Van Horn . . . Clara L. Ziegler 132 OISEIQLIN COLLEGE H1-O- Hi. The Dishonest Doubter. .. Valedictory ............,......... The Preservation of Our Forests .... Death n Condition of Growth ..... The Australian Ballot System.. . Silence .......................... Catholocism in Bohemia To-day For Value Received I promise to Pa y The Rise of Free Cities .......,.... . A Child of Nature ....... Reform of the jury ...... Graham Bread and Salt ..... What We Don't Like ......... Future Center ol' Civilization .... Harmonies.................. Stonewall jackson ............. The Spirit of Modern Criticism. Misapplied Philanthropy ........ The City of St. Augustine. . . . . The Need of the Working Man ..... The Intellectual Life ......... ,. . In Unseen Ways ...... Our Day .............. ....... Wanted g A Situation ...... . .. Something Too Much of This, Oberlin Weather ............... The Divine in Human Nature... The Loneliness of Genius .,... A Friend of Our Childhood .... Mistaken Callings ...... V ..... A Wrong Attitude ............ The Poetry of the Civil War .... john Wyckliffe .... ........ How Shall We Spell ....... Word Pictures ..,........ . . . Raphael in His Madonnas ..... Abbeys of the British Isles ..... Nationality and Unit ..... Agnosticism .... ...... A Literary Need ..... Hamlet, III. 4 ..... . . . . H. T. Williams . H. Wilson . . . .G. S. Addams .... .Lilla E. Appleton . . . . .F.I . Carruthers .. ..Francis I-I. Catlin . . . . . . . .A. D. Edwards ......janette E. Corbin . .... H. N. Kimball .. . . .Anna A. Ford T. LaCost . . . .Ida A. Greene F. Millilcan ...............F.A.Olds . .Bertha T. Harrington . ....... B. D. Savage ....Ella M. Moll . . . .Roy Sexton ......Alicc B. Ring . Mary E. Taylor A. Wilbur .. ...Anna E. Town . . . . .Susan R. Bird .... .May Bullard . . . . . . .Miss Champ .. ...... Sarah j. Evans . . . .Grace F. Harrison . . .... ..... B lanche E. Hay Josephine I-I. Hegeman . . Helen L. Hildrup . ......... Ada King . . . .Iennie A. Kump . . . . . .Miss Leavitte . . ...Lillie A. Lee ....Edith A. Olds . . . ...Flora B. Phelps . . . . . Harriet L. Price . . . .Lillian V. Sears . .p .... Clara E. Smith . ..Katherine M. Upp . . . . .. Eloise Steele OHERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-Hr. 133 Sept. Sept. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Nov Nov Nov Dec. Dec. Dec. jan. jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. THURSDAY LECTURES. XltJ1,I4nx-Klluxiwkmli I P l5llk'r.ai1f:5'f li' .K 'li x lk . XF' :Il f--- x ,z... -:FTE-Qbgcqni! 3 f E M111 Hillel! If f 7 7 1 '89-'90, ' The Power of Fixed and Expectant Atten- tion on the Mind and Body, . .,...... Prof, J. M. Ellis tm' ci if . Q . JW, N KX .I I! 'Tig A L ff f?i' xlflt-iv ,AN ll!! J 1 ,. -- ' STEM J f .gf T 1 -A '- ' ffl' 1 - ll '- fl' lm -,,,.k' 1fQ1-7 fd X . -Q 'ii 2 ' x XX Truthfulness. ....................... Pres. J. H. Fairchild The Naval Academy at Annapolis, .... Prof. F. H. Foster Experiences in the U. S. Navy, ........... Capt. Fentress . . . . . Prof. G. F. Wright Scholarship and Methods of Study, ...Prof. Wm. G. Frost A Trip to Louisiana .................. Pres. J. H. Fairchild The National Councilat Worcester, Mass., Prof. F. H. Foster The German Gymnasium .................. Prof. L. B. Hall The College as a Preserver of Ideality ............ Rev. J. A. Williamson, Cleveland Adulteration of Intoxicating Liquors ...... Prof. F. F. Jewett Nampa Image ......... . .......... The Messiah .........,................ Prof. G. F. Wright . . . . .Prof. H. C. King . . . . Prof. C. B. Martin . . . . . Prof. A. H. Currier . . . . Prof. H. H, Powers Secret Societies ........... The Student's Reading ..... John Knox ................ Some Problems of To-day .... Tobacco ..... . . . ............ . ..... ......... D r. Sperry Conditions of Mental Growth ....... Instructor E. H. Stanley I34 Mch. Mch. Mch. Mch. Apr. Apr. May May May May May June June I9 GBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. 6. Left-handed People ......... Prof. T. L. Nelson, Delaware, O 13. Savonarola .......... ...................... B ishop Leonard 20. Some Historical Fallacies ..... ..., P rof. W. T. Thomas 27. Lessing .................... ....... P rof. Chas. Harris 17. The Prophet Jeremiah .............. Prof. W. G. Ballantine 24. A Trip to Florida ...................... Prof. A. A. Wright I. The Bible as a Contributor to a Liberal Education ....................... Prof. E. I. Bosworth 8. ' The Value of X in the Equation of Life ................ .......,. D r. Stimpson, St. Louis I5. The Art of Printing Before the Inven- tion of Movable Types, .......... Librarian A. S. Root 22. Missions in India ................... A .... ' ...... Dr, Phillips 29. Missions in Turkey ............. Dr. Herrick, Constantinople 12. Impartial Politics .................... Prof. C. H. Churchill . Consular Experiences in Rio Janeiro. . . . . . . Professor Monroe SENIOR PREPARATORY EXHIBITION. PROGRAMME. I-Iannibal's Oath ............................. Charles E. Carter, Tallmadge, O. The Mission of Discontent ...... ......... M ary E. Tenney, Oberlin, O. Fan the Flame ................... ............ A ndrew E. Fenn, Tallmadge, O. Music. I A Modern Hero ................. ............. G eorge M. jones, Allegheny, Pa. Keyboard and Bellows ............. Katharine A. Sackett, Tallmadge, O. Sir Philip Sidney .................. Charles W. McCandless, Meadville, Pa. Music. I A Conqueror of Aclversity ............... J ustin M. Waugh, Mansfield, O. One Feature of the Millenium .............. Antoinette Beard, Oberlin, O. Rum on the Congo ........................... Wayne B. Wheeler, Sharon, Pa. Music. OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-l-Tr. 135 STATISTICS OF EXPENSES. YEAR. Freshman. Soph. junior. Senior. S250 S259 S2941 S320 EXPENSES OF SEVERAL CLASSES FOR THE WHOLE COURSE. Class. Lowest Ex. Highest Ex. Average. 1876 ...... ........ S 900 .......... ........ S 2,100 ........ ........ S 1,300 1879 ...... ..... 7 00 ........ ..... 1 ,4-70 ........ ..... 1 ,047 1880 ...... 500 ..... 2,500 ........ .... . 1,201 1881 ...... ..... 1884- ....................... 1887 ....................... 600 900 ........................ 600 ........................ These arc the only classes which have published reports of suf- ficient fullness to be reliable. 1,061 1,250 1,300 1,800........ 2,000. ................... . 3,000 ..................... . EARNINGS OF STUDENTS, Including those of the vacations, but not those of students who have intermitted their studies for the purpose of earning money. Number who report a definite sum ........................ 202 Highest sum reported .............. .......... .......... ....... S 7 0 O Total amount reported for the last year ........ .... 2 0,105 I IVIENORIAM. 9 7, f Wi, 'M - 45' f -f an 1 i Y ,Ik-Arfz'-k:j'. ! 'YN , ,: 19 .gi f 'Z N17 ' ' fliffwijy ' 1'- flxef, will rlle 'W ' '49 711 ,,i1'.fW ,O 1 V Vee. i L This page is in thoughtful remembrance of those of our dear classmates who are no longer with us, but have met with the dire misfortune of being fired. 136 OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. OBERLlN'S FIRST FIELD DAY Should you ask me why this tumult, This confusion and this tramping, Of a thousand coupled students, Teachers, old folks, children, peildlers, Northward as the bank defaulters Journey when their deeds are published? I should answer, I should tell you, Join the noisy crowd and follow, join the busy throng that gathers From the shop, the store, the kitchen, From the furrow and the forest, From the home, conservatory, Kindergarden, seminary g Farmers, ministers, professors, Pretty girls and homely lovers, Students, dudes fboth male and femalel, Artisans and cooks and jockies, Children, by the score and hundreds, Black and white, and whole and crippled, Big and little, all are mingled In the motley throng that gathers Like an army of crusaders. Follow up the throng of pilgrims, Stay not in your room to labor, Stay not in your room to sulier Headache for the want of fresh air, Stay not back to sweat and swelter Over tasks that know no ending, Over books and exercises, Over dismal apprehensions Of the morrow's Hunks and failures, For such cares and apprehensions Wear' the heart and waste the bodyg Throw a ide your student mantle, Throw aside your books and papers, Throw aside your thoughts of failure, Of your fluuks and your professors, Follow up the throng of students, journeying, likethe black birds, northward. OBERUN COLLEGE I-I1-O-Hi. I. Turn with them into the ball ground, For to-day we hold the contests That shall rival in their glory All the games of ancient Hellas. This is why the students throng so, This is why the old folks turn out, This is why the small boys gather, This is why the shop and school-house Is deserted for the ball ground,- An armistice universal Is proclaimed in all departments. All may come and see the races, But no flunker or barbarian May take part in any contest. Blow, ye breezes cool and soothing, Backward roll, ye clouds of heaven 5 Shine, O Helios, and drink up All the water from the puddles, That the young men without hindrance, May compete in all the contests And adorn themselves with glory. Smile, O heaven, on the assembly, Long before the day is ended Ye shall rend with shouts of triumph, Lifted by a thousand voices. See the acrobats advancing Like a band ofgladiators Eager for the coming onset. All the prcticing is done now And the time has come for action, All the walking and the running, All the cycling and the vaulting, All the hopping and the Jumping All the boxing and the kicking, All the rushing and the tugging, All the throwing shot and hammers, All the dieting and boasting. Rubbing arnicavand fish-oil Will be tested now in earnest. Tell us not of old Alpheus, ' On whose shores the templed Altis Echoed back the shouts of triumph That arose from the spectators As their favorite- contestants Bore away the palm of glory. I OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-Ht. Speak not ofthe Cretan runner, Of Ergoteles the victor In the foot race by Alpheus, We can match him with our Senior, Who can spin around the race course Like another winged Hermes, And our victor in the foot race Is the victor in the class-room. He can read the classics authors With the best of ancient athletes. Talk not of the ancient mule-car, Of Agesias the driver, Nor of Hiero the rider, Of the storm-swift saddle horses. Talk about our modern wheel-men, Who can skim around the race course With such speed that as they circle Wheelmen with their wheels seem blended Into streaks of frightened lightning. See that Senior, tall and handsome, With mustache curving backward Like thehorns of Texan cattle, Solemn as a country parson, Gentle as a summer zypher, With a smile upon his vissage, With a twinkle in his left eye That betokens deep intention Soon to work a modern wonder. He's the kicker, the high kicker, He can kick the lofty lintel, He can kick his own plug hat off, He can kick across the clash-board Like a sorrel mule indignant 5 See his gentle face transforming, See him clench his teeth and digits, See his eyes bulge from their sockets, As he lifts his toes in mid air, Like a rocket starting skyward. Tell us not in mournful numbers Ol' the heroes of old Hellas. Tell us not of old Achilles, Tell us not of old Ulysses, Tell us not of Agamemnon, Tencer, Patrochus, nor Ajax, Who their spears of weight enormous OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. I Hurled among the ranks of Trojans, Who their battle axes buried In the brains of mighty chieftains. Tell us rather of our strong men Who can hurl the hammer from them Like the bolt of ancient Vulcan, Hurled by Zeus from high Olympus. Think no more of ancient Hellas, Think no more of Grecian glory, Of the olive, pine and laurel That adorned the happy victors At the games by old Alpheus. Rather sing the worthy praises Of the young men by old Plumb Creek, Who can mingle brain with muscle, And thus win a double glory. Sing, O Muse, a song of triumph For the victors at the field day, Sing of Wright and Plumb and Mastick Sing of Crittenden and Currier, Sing of Borican and Gibbons, Sing of Eldred, Laird and I-Iolway, Sing of all the worthy champions, Who, by patient, weary practice, Crowned their heads with lasting glory. Sing, O Muse, a song of triumph, Sing the song our hearts would utter Could they voice their deepest feeling. Sing a song that long shall linger In the hearts of these contestants, When the flowers of youth are faded, When the fruits of life are garnered, When the snows of age fall thickly, That no summer sun can banish, - Let thy song steal gently o'er them Like an evening benediction 5 Let it bring fresh hope and courage With the thought of early triumphs. v 1 o UBERLIN COLLEGE I-It-O-HI. THE ELECTRIC GIRL. There came to our village a maiden named Lena, With a contour like Hebe's, a cheek of verbena. In showery April she came, evolutedg She left us, she went, she's gone, she has scooted. The strength of ten men was not equal to Lena's. fAgain, I must trot out the old rhyme-verbenasj. She could call down the lightnings by flopping her ears, And the sound of her voice was the chime of the spheres. We each got a ticket and went out to see her, With mingled emotions of wonder and fear. As she shot o'er the platform, a-breaking umbrellas And lifting up arm-chairs held down by twelve fellows. One studious Junior, by angels called Joel, She charmed back to infancy hungry of soul. When she found on Our George a pair of girl's socks, Agreed with some others that Lena was foxie. Our athlete, a captive, was led! by Delilah, Arrayed in a night-cap, to bow and to smile a Benevolent smile on those hearts grim and fiinty, That only responded with cries of McGintyl Ryder strove with the strength of an engine, or more so, But succumbed, overpowered by the might of her torsog And then father Henry arose, pale and solemn, But sat down again on his old spinal column. She left us, she scooted, as I think I was saying, In the gold of the meadows the farmers are haying. Shall we e'er gaze again on those cheeks of verbena? Art gone, and forever, our own Evelina? Chorus: O Evelina, softly. h is OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-H 1. I4I THE JU IOR EXHIBITIO . It was the eve of May S. Not a star was visible, the moon is shut out by that deep bank of clouds, and the flickering street-lamps make a dismal attempt to enlighten humanity, but hist! Whence advance so stealthily thosejuniors, and wherefore lie in an ambush those sophs behind the ash pile? Is conspira.cy abroad, or son1e terrible tragedy to be enacted? The plot thickens. The half dozen muscular forms enter the domicile on the scene of action, when one of the foremost addressed himself to their C011- federate, who has admitted them, half-past eight, and not a soph stirring, except Cull Ryder carousing at the pie shop. It is well, exclaimed the host. Then addressing them all loudly in a stage whisper, he mutters, Fellow conspirators, the time is now ripe to make our sneak to the church, saying which he dis- appeared, followed by the injunction from two or three impatient throats of Git a move on you, Joel, etc. Through the windows of the sitting-room the hondsome Joe could be seen, rolling up a large cloth affair, bearing only this motto, '91 g his face wreathed in smiles as he loquaciously observed to Mrs. Bunce, We are far too many for those foxy and diabolical sophs 3 then retires with the bundle to his apartment, addressing the assemblage thus, Everything is ready, so turn down the lights, boys, and let us vamoose, but be careful and stand close about me, for if Teeters or Billy Holmes should catch us going around tl1e school-house, our names would be trowsers. s We're good for the scrubs, gurgles H. P. Howlandicus, adding parenthetically, Has anyone in de gang any eating tobaccog I mean chewing gum. ' Despite their trepidation, they arrive unmolested at the church, where all becomes a paroxysm of delight, singing and other demon- strations of glee celebrate the success of their undertaking. But they do not yet allow themselves restg their faithful spies, stationed on the adjacent corner, guard well the spot. Addie Lawrence, i11 front of Professor Thomas, whiles away the lonely hours while on duty by whistling Carrie, my own true loved' one, wait till I graduate. And thus the night wore on a pace. Dawn proved as inauspicious as the evening had shown itself. All nature seemed homesick, the rain was downcast, and as the melancholy breezes meandered mournfully through the festive fringe adorning the flag, it soughed out its bitter wail, bemoaning the direful cireun1stances and so on, ad infinitum, ad libitum. f But no longer will we harrow your sou by recalling the gloom I42 OBERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-Hi. that hung about the Second Church steeple. Let us proceed with a delineation of the service. To the measured strains of the church callioppe, in filed the haughtyjuniors, like McGinty, dressed in their best Sunday clothes. The iirst performer, a well-red young man, had a rotten subiect, it being a decayed misrule, followed by a conglomeration of Latin expressions, which were gathered by our hero in connection with his musical career while teaching the town band. G. B. Siddal's rendition of his most expensive heart would have drawn tears to the eyes of a potatoe or a sawhorse, especially if it had been made of weeping willow, or say, pine. The next piece was the real knead, or how to be well bread. The costume, one on which no flies congregated, was made ex- pressly forthe occasion, and consisted of a delicate cream-colored cheese-cloth bodice, with beautiful pecock-yellow swandown ruffling, a vest and skirt trimmed with ric-rac to match. The next orator made a good speechg his delivery would not have been a success for a baseball pitcher. His gestures were a little flighty at times. The Yetman oration was in German, to disguise its real meaning, as it really was a hot Prohibition speech, and ernphazised the fact that beer gardens were pleasant places to spent Sunday afternoon. The piece was not so brief as the writer. More music from the string band iso called because they never make' a cordl was followed by the debaters, who, like the field-day pugilists, though savage in appearance, were harmless. Neither of them suffered as much as the audience. The debate was about colored people voting twice in the same ward, and strange as it may seem, colored people were mentioned at one or two other places in the programme. The Greek orator stood six feet three inches in his stockings, six feet one inch in bare feet. Gurney is good as far as he goes, and makes a success at everything except passing bills at chapel. Now, music recuperated the audience sufliciently to undergo Mr. Firestone's remarks on the toilet and the dreamer. The metrical rhythm ofthe poem was followed by the rapturous eadences of the class song, which re-echoed from gallery to gallery, and was wafted hither and thither till all was again composed. ec- ee ae ac- ae -x- The people steal kindly away, the flag is hauled in, the sanctity of the church is restored, and what more can be said. The juniors had bee11 exhibited. OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-Hr 1 N, TRIBUTE T0 OBERLIN S HIGH STANDING KICKER Old boy! here's my hand. All hail the high kicker! I feel quite unmanned, Old boy! herels my hand. You don't understand? Well, perhaps I'm in liquor. Old boy! here's my hand. All hail the high kicker! My heart overllowed When you laid out the tenor That kick, how I glowed! My heart overflowed And proudly I strode, Though shy my demeanor. My heart overflowed When you laid out the tenor That wild rush o-f limb Like on-coming chaos ! Ah! supple and slim, That wild rush of limb, And feet, vast and dim, Descended to slay us. That wild rush of limb Like on-coming chaos! Some men achieve fame, -Come, let's have a soda- While you were born game. Some men achieve fame, But you can lay claim To a kick with a Coda. Some men achieve fame, Come, let's have a soda. 1 OHERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-l-lt ANN ARBOR VS. OBERLI GAME I., MAY 24, 1890. Come ye weary, book-worm students, Leave your desks and take your best girls Gather on the base ball campus, Fill the granrlstand, throng the race course For to-clay the contest opens With all-conquering Ann Arbor. Buy a score card of the small boy, Teach your girl the signs and wonders That denote that this man fanned out, That one made a ball: or base hit, This one mutied a fly in center, That one caught a daisy cutter. Now the players take their places, Now the noisy hum is silenced. And the restless throng of students Stretch their necks to see the first act. Sumner takes the box and pitches- Pitches wonderous conic sections, Double-geared and double-jointed, Tortuous and so deceptive That Ann Arbor fiunks and fiounders Like a Freshman in the class room. Howland stands behind the batter, Little Alfred on his tip-toes Peers across the catcher's shoulders To determine with precision When a man is safe or put out. Now the longed-for word is given, Now the pitcher lifts his right hand, Holds the ball awhile in mid-air, Holds the breath of all the students, Holds the eyes of each spectator For one long and anxious moment, Then the ball comes whizzing, twisting Wriggling, squirming, curving, curling, Anywhere but where the batter Hopes, but hopes in vain, to End it 3 Round the bat it passes scathless, Lodges in the hands of Howland, And the batter beats the breezes OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. With a look of disappointment, While the crowd within the grand stand Rends the air with acclamations. One by one the batters fan out. One by one the nines defeated. Take the field without a record. Sumner now comes to the rescue, Swings his bat as 1-Iomer's chieftain Swung his ax among the Trojans, Lifts the ball high into mid-air, Lifts it out beyond the diamond, Out beyond the grassy border, Out beyond the last spectator, Out beyond two wire fencesg And the batter, fleet and nimble, Circles round the dusty diamond Followed by the lusty clamors Of a thousand wild spectators, As the shooting star is followed By a long, bright trail of glory. Here the luck and glory pauses Till another inning's ended. In the fourth the two contestants Tie the 1'ecord, share the glory. Then Ann Arbor presses forward, Wins the game and sounds her war whoop, Bids farewell to her opponents, Lights her pipe and sails off homeward. GAME II.,jUNE 7, 1890. Harp of the west! that long hast hung On th' historic elm, come down, rome down! Ye fitful breezes from over the lake The notes ofthe silent lyre awake. Let the students and citizens all turn out And hear the speeches and yell and shouty Let the Ere-bell ring and the fish horn blow, Let the crowd go wild, and the hackmen too, For our 'Varsity team is crowned with fame, And we'll honor th' occasion with noise and flame 5 Let the horse-fiddles groan, and the big bonfire Shoot up like a tall and beautiful spire. As the livid flames shoot skyward, As the clouds of smoke roll heavenward, As the sparks with stars are mingled, Spelling GLORY HALLELUJAH! I0 I 146 OBERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. On the blue expanse above us, Let the heavens repeat our praises Of the victors at Ann Arhor 3 Let the soft winds breathe a. requiem Over Michigan defeated. Ann Arbor, halt ! your spell is broke, Let your peace-pipes and cigars Fold you in its clouds of smokeg Let your bruises and your scars Tell of games you cannot win, Unless the umpire cheats like sin 5 For the game is our's to-day, And we bear the palm away. GAME III., JUNE 141, 1890. Fill again the stand and race-course, To-day will be decided, By the last games of the series, Who shall bear away the glory And the pennant of the great west. Michigan has come to win it- Win it one way or the other 3 And the home nine full of courage, Comes to take its honest chances. Once again our own men lead off, And all- conquering Ann Arbor Trembles for the fatal issue. But the powers above, whose fiat None on earth can change or gainsay, Have decreed that great Ann Arbor Shall still wear the crown of gloryg And our modest boys, submissive, To the Fates irrevocable, Yield the penant to the strangers, Send them to their homes rejoicing, Where their class-mates wait their coming, At the hearth-stone of the club house With a rousing, deaf'ning chorus U of M, rah-rah, rah-rah, U of M, rah-rah, rah-rah I-Iur-rah, Hur-rah, Michigan, Michigan, rah-rah-rah. O1u:RL1N COLLEGE H1-O-H1. 147 EAVESDROPP G. junior fto third year as they start home from class partyj.- Well, Miss S., our junior exercise was pretty largely ' race pr0blem,' wasn't it. Miss S.- Yes, but we won't havezany race problem goinghome, will we ? C. B. Firestone fin fine hotel, at Springfield, running smack into a large niirrorj.- Gosh! Oh! ! beg pardon sir, havn't I met you before somewhere P Applause. Blushes and sheep's eyes. fActual occurence.j Mr. M., 'go fto Miss H.j.- May I have the pleasure iof being your escort to L. L. S. special quarterly. Miss H.- Well, I don't know, Mr. M. This is the fourth time you have asked me out this term, and you know I'm engaged. I'll go and ask the girls and see what they think about it. Riddle.-Who was benefited 'most by Professor Frost's lecture on scholarshipn? Ans.-Harry Williams. John Ellis falter having been run over by the band wagon on June 9, as they lifted him carefully into a hack to take him home, in the midst of his groansy.- Is this Lee's hack. One of the boys.--Yes: Ellis.- Then take me out. Passage in Cinna, 2nd French: fe vom ne yuz7lepa.v, Szzlgneur, Puzlvyue man nmour gagncra rc point. Translation by Miss 1: I will not leave you, Senior, till my Love has gained this point. A GREIN-D. Scene, Talcott Hall. Mr. 1 to Miss -.-U May I accompany you to the j'r. Ex. party, Miss -. Miss 1.- Thank you, I am very sorry, but I have an escort already. Mr. 1 fa little confusedj.-Oh, well never mind, you needn't be sorry about it. I didn't care anything WE wo DER l about it anyway. Q11 When Booth will stop growing. fzj When Arnold will begin. Qgl Why the Freshmen wanted to disfigure Peter's H all by building that monstrous tomb under the clock. . i4l What has become ofthe College Senate. 148 OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. Q55 When Berle's corduroys will wear out. Q65 Why Sperry didn't wear his mortar-board the week after they appeared. Ui Why the Soph's can't play ball. QSJ Why McLaughlan was horn handsome. lgj Why Hulett wasn't. QIOJ Why we can't beat Ann Arbor. Qui Whether Adelbert ever owned a ball player. U21 How many Seniors are U fixed. U31 Who will take the contest nextyear. 114, Why Oberlin can't play tennis this year. fI5j I-low soon ye editors ofthe I-Ii-O-Hi will have to leave town. WHAT WE WOULD DO IF WE WERE GlRLS.E The question is not one to be answered with the usual senioric ex- temporanity. We endeavor to apprehend the delicacy of the situation. Before us rises a sea of faces, rosy with expectancy and carmine, all eagerly intent upon the lines which are to form the criterion of their future misconduct, and a great crushing sense of responsibility, akin to that experienced by a newly-organized senior preparation lays its heavy hand upon our brave but anxious heart. What would we do if we were a girl? Not, what if we were a town girl, or a college girl, or a horrid girl, or a ftgoody, goody girl, or a ff slick girl, or a sweet girl, or a great girl, or a dear girl, or some other l'ellow's girl, but only, what if we were a girl? or what if we were only a girl? If we were agirl we would immediately draw up and present to our- self resolutions expressing sincere sympathy in what would be our mis- fortune, not our fault, and a determination to do all in our power to ameliorate our sad condition. We would then proceed to grow up and chew gum. Between chews, we would speak French for recreation. It is this continual grind without relnxalzim which, according to the ablest medical authorities, is destroying the health of so many of our best-looking girls. We would also learn to cook some of the simple dishes, such as baked potatoes, cucumber pickles and ice cream. We would then be prepared to go away to a co-education school to finish our education. Immediately after joining, we would have a picture taken of ourself in some excruciating attitude, with our front teeth especially prominent. OBERLIN COLLEGE' H1-O-HI. 1 49 NVe would then go up-town and proceed to take the literary course. As a supplement to this, we would mail seven letters every Monday morn- ing, all 'tto our ma. But we would spend most of our strength in studying how best to conduct ourselves toward the inferior sex. We would seldom come down for breakfast or supper, but would have our meals brought up. This would establish our reputation as a light eater. When we went out to parties with another girl, we would accept an escort for the home trip, without stopping to consult her. This would establish a reputation for quickwitedness. On meeting a gentleman of short acquaintance, we would acknowledge our recognition by gently winking both eyes at the sidewalk. This would establish a reputation for modesty. We would refrain, so far as possible, from talking slang before the boys, as boys, especially those under twenty-Eve years, are so imitative. This would establish a reputation forbself-control. By a continuation in the above, we would gradually develop into a fourth year. When we become a fourth year, we would be a blonde, as blonde goes best with graduation dresses. During this last year of our course we would devote ourselves exclusively to one gentleman, and as soon as we perceived him aware ot' our attention and intentions, we would remark that we always did despise a flirt, and declare that we thought it a shame that women are not allowed to propose. About the beginning of the spring term we would confide the result of these observations to ten or a dozen of our most intimate friends, sworn to maintain eternal silence, and finally at commencement or im- mediately after, our graduating dress would do duty a second time, and we would cease to be a girl. A. OBSERVER. 4 150 OBERLIN COLLEGE I-II-O-Hr. WHAT WE WO LD DG IF WE W IWERE BOYS. What would we do if we were boys? How often have we pondered over this subject! How often have we blamed the fate that made us girls! Why couldn't we have been the strong and sturdy oak instead of the weak and clinging vine? Throughout our childhood we deliberated on this injustice, and only recently, since we came to college, have we decided just what we would have done had matters been reversed. Now, we know that if we had been born boys instead of girls, we would have gone to college, a co-educational one like this, where, amid the softening influences of ladies' society, we could learn to carry a silk hat and wear a cane. We would have come before we were out of the grammar department, before we knew a verb from a stick of wood. We would not come to take a course, but just to get refined and polished. We would take easy studies like base ball and tennisg for it makes little dillerence what one studies, Greek or chapel prayers, either one will give college discipline. So, if we were boys, we would take chapel when convenient, and when we had a new hat or new suit to show off. Now, if there is any one thing we would do, it would be, dress in styleg so that the girls would admire and the boys envy our clothes. If our fathers were rich, we would make a hole in their purse, if not, we would run on their credit. Our clothes should be swell, no matter if the cloth would howl in the dark. Conspicuous, startling, ambitious neckties should encircle our neck, and our collars should border our ears. And bangs! What if the girls do wear bangs? If we were boys we would not let the girls monopolize so becoming a fashion. It is a free country, and boys are just as well fitted, physically and mentally, to wear bangs, as girlslare. But if we absol- utely couldn't wear bangs, if our hair didn't run that way, we would raise a moustache and burnsides, or advertize a scrubbing brush all over our chins.- It adds dignity, covers up blushes when one flushes, and gives the boys something to pet when embarrassed. If we were boys and were depending on someone else's support in this college, we would take in all entertainmentsg we would squander eight or ten dollars in trying to get a first choice of seatsg we would run up a bill at the florist's fwhich we'd never remember to payj in order that our girl might wear a young green-house on the front of her gown. All the tone girls we would take to the concerts where we could UBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. ISI make a large show, while the ordinary, every-day, get-your-lesson kind of girls we would reserve for quarterlies and Saturday night calls. All this adds, in our mind, to a boy's popularity. The last thing we would think of would be rules-that is, the last thing before going home. If we belonged to a college like this, we would smoke up the Stove, chew tobacco in the night, and play cards and drink beer on the sly. The girls where we boarded would never suspect if we ate lrzkx and soaked in cologne. The more larks we could have the more sport it would be. Of course, we'cl be horribly shocked when requested to leave on account of these innocent pranks. Then we would try humble pie, looking meek, and promise reform. And if that failed to save us, no one should know it, for we would stay till the end of the term, and then go home on account of our eyes. This college course has been thoroughly triedg its popularity is firmly established, but, alas! it is only a boy's course, The girls are ex- cluded, and it's only with tearful and anxious eyes that we watch those who have tried it, go home. We feel the injustice When we look at these youths. We know we are wronged, And just how to right it We can not quite see. But if we had been boys In a college like this, What similar boys you would see. ONE or THE GIRLS. 'Z 152 OBERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. SENIOR. Senior Class. How blessings brighten as they take their flight. O. Abbott. A self'-made man, and worships his Creator. Savage. Give thy thoughts no tongue. f Arnold. U Perhaps he'll grow. Berle.. He loved not wisely but too well. Mason. My only books were woman's looks, And fol1y's all they've taught me. Charles Olds. Be not righteous over much. Miss Davis. Love seldom haunts the breast where learning lies. Morley. A little learning is a dangerous thing. Kimball. He was a man of an unbounded stomach. Miss Shaw. How sweetly innocent she seemed Luethi. Full well they laughed with COUNTERFEITED glee At all his jokes, for many a joke had he. Miss Winter. A progeny of learning. Bennett. A stoic of the woods, a man without a tear. Kofoid. Grave authors say and witty poets sing That happy wedlock is a glorious thing. Addams. Ever amorous and fond and billing. Miss Taylor. The Frenchman's darling. Cushing. He mouths a sentence as curs mouth a bone. Cedric Johnson. 4' I-Ie was the mildest-mannered man that ever scuttled ship or cut a throat. Van Horn. Upon what meat doth this our Caesar feed, that he is grown so great ! Ross Firestone. U What shall I do to be forever known? Knowlton. On with the dance, let joy be unconfined. Miss Miller. Condensed almost to abruptnessf' La Cost and McCord, J. H. The devil finds some mischief still for idle hands to do. XVilbttr. H 'Tis better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all. Williams. For my voice, I have lost it all with holleiing and sing- ing of anthems. Doolittle. H I am Sir Oracle, and when I ope my lips let no dog bark. Laird. t' Faith! thou hast some crotchets in thy head now. All the fourth years. Why don't the men propose, mamma? Why don't the men propose P Fairchild. I the heir of all the ages. Miss Moll. Man, false man, smiling, destructive man! SI U H OBERI,lN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. 153 UN IOR. Romanta Miller. I am too handsome for a man, I ought to have been a woman. Gurney. 'f It is not my fault that I was born tired. Chase, H If you don't understand it, Professor, just remain after class a moment and I will explain. i Moulton. H Full many a flower is born to blush unseen and'waste its sweetness on the desert air. McCord, J. H. H Had sighed to many, though he loved but one. I-Iatch. just at the age t'wixt boy and youthfl Miss Sumner. In virtues nothing earthly could surpass her. Mastick. U On their own merits modest men are dumb. I-lowland. As headstrong as an allegory on the banks of the Nile.' Jameson. Even the hairs of my head are all numbered. Clark Firestone. U I-Ie sings in notes by distance made more sweet. Geo. Mead. A fine puss-gentleman that's all perfume. Lawrence. Man wants but little here below, nor wants that little long. ' Millikan, R. A. God made him, therefore, let him pass for a man, Byrnes. Tearfully wise he shakes his empty head, And deals out empires as he deals out thread. Miss Memmott. Brevity is the soul of wit. Morgan. 'f Fair tresses man's imperial race ensnare, And beauty draws us with a single hair. Plumb. A man so various that he seems to be, Not one, but all mankind's epitomeg Stiff in opinions, always in the wrong, Was everything by starts and nothing long, But in the course of one revolving moon, Was chyniist, fiddler, statesman and butloon. McCord, J. B. Truly I would the gods had made thee musical. Eldred. And still they gazed, and still their wonder grew, That one small head could ca1'ry all he knew. Callendar. I'll tell you what, boys! Lord Meredith hadn't seen ' Hidden Treasures ' when he said : ' Man can live without books.' It is one of the necessities of life. 154 OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. SOPHOMORE. Sophomores. Ye are the people, and wisdom shall die with you. Dave Simpson. He could smile and smile and be a villain still. Randall. Oh, for a forty parson power! Kirkpatrick. 4' Well, by dad, I'lI bet you a dollar. Ryder. Ma, I want to be a dude. Hutchins. His heart was one which most enamours usg Wax to receive, but marble to retain. Miss Langell, The devil hath not in all his quivers choice, An arrow for the heart like a sweet voice. Teeters. Lord of himself-that heritage of woe! Miss Higinbotham. Phoebus! What a name! Al, Church. His wit invites you by his looks to come, But when you knock it never is at home. Moser. And the loucl laugh that spoke the vacant mind. Wilder. Of manners gentleg of affection mildg In wit a mang simplicity a child. Kingsbury. Lightly from fair to fair he flew, And loved to plead, lament and sue. Ralston. What rage for fame attends both great and small, Better be damned than mentioned not at all. Miss Jones. Fashioned so slenderly, young, and so fair. Miss Smith. I know it is a sin For me to sit and grin. Crafts. Man delights me not, nor woman either. McCormick. The glass of fashion and the mould of form. Pond. The only wretched are the wise, fhow miserable I amj. Love. They never taste who always drink 3 Q They always talk who never think. Holmes. H I awoke one morning and found myself famous. Miss Mitchell. And if she will, she will, you may depend on'tg And if she won't, she won't, so there's an end on't.' McLaughlin. Nobody ever accused him of straining at a gnat, but he could easily swallow a camel. Currier. U A man who underrates himself. OHERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. 155 FRESHNA . Freshman Class. H Tarry at Jericho until your beards be grown. Grosvenor. Some beard, some learning and alittle sense. Fred Savage. I swear, in faith, it is a pretty boy. Johnston. U So sweet the blush of bashfulness, E'en pity scarce could make it less. Tenney. Oh, happy years! Once more, who would not be a boy. Ellis. 'Tis pleasant, sure, to see one's name in print. Miss Churchill. And ne'er did Grecian chizel trace A nymph, a naiad or a grace Of finer form or lovelier face. MacGregor. My foot is on my native heath and my name is Mac Gregor. Kinsley. Smitten with the mighty pleasure to be seen. Fredie Dutton. U Beautiful as sweet, and young as beautiful, And soft as young, and gay as soft, And innocent as gay. john Glass. U Pleased with a rattle, tickled with a straw. Browning. Female correspondents solicited. Hinman. Deep versed in books and shallow in himself. Miss McVey. Woman's at best a contradiction still. Cowles. Then he will talk, good gods, how he will talkul Dornheim. He hath a lean and hungry look. Fairchild. Oh, I could play the woman with mine eyes And the braggart with my tongue. Guard. His bark is worse than his bite. Howland. He multiplyeth words without knowledge. jameson. Nose ! nose! nose! Where did you get that red, red nose. 156 OBERLIN COLLEGE I-li-O-I-I1. PREPS. Preps. f' Their heads sometimes. so little that there is no room for witg sometimes so long that there is no wit for so much room. Tenny. Pal I want to be tough! Whitcomb. Vain! very vain I Brackin. Studious of ease -fbut not of booksj, Spindler. Surely destined to be great. McCoy. That bold, bad man. Van Zandt. If, as they say, he has some wit, He's very shy of using it.', Jones. Thy name is legionf' Paene Preps. The world knows nothing of its greatest men. Fenn. A good boy. Would make a good hero of a Sunday-school book. Carter. Now, really, ain't I handsome? Seney. Come! brace up satan, and don't get behind me. Mead. Go to the ant, thou sluggartlf' CONSERVATORY. Hark! from the tombs I heard a doleful sound. Van Meter. Thou wilt scarce be a man before thy mother. Miss Prescott. The women pardoned all except her face. Frank Regal. HI can play the fiddle with my left hind leg. Sizer Sisters. And both were young and one was beautiful. Holton. H 'Tis the last rose of summer, left blooming alone. Miss Tuckerman. I do but sing because I must, And pipe but as the linets sing. Maude Knapp, U Standing with reluctant feet, Where t-he brook and river meet. Miss Danielson. 4' She walks in beauty like the night Of cloudless skies and stary climes, And all that's best of dark and bright Meet in her aspect and her eyes. Miss Gilbert. If to her share some female errors fall, Look on her face and you'll forget them all. Miss Dowling. U Her stature tallg I hate a dumpy woman. Miss Cobb. Be to her virtues very kind, 1 But to her faults a little blind. Pettit. U Oh the time I've lost in wooing. Packard. The words of his mouth were smoother than butter. OBERIJN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. 1 Qif C w.f'2,,3'N-f1'1V, - V .L ' gg V. gf' 4 -'HSLTLILE A A L EE 5 5 V- ,fy M .wr lllll If r lv' , 1 , G' M Va , ' ' 'f vi ' WV. W11. Qw4, QL X 65 jlfzg Lg, 'nf' A Y ! X lu ' 5 -.H DW, WP E L. . f q- fri, 1 ', ' Ing f , ' , E , ,L ,. Sxisuazga-.ml 1ffs,f,al f i-H-:ws L A 5 631'-fgglf-ff-1' , L., ,pi 4 A Wk 1'-:E ,pg V, E, ,.p, Wu? I fun' , Ha px A, 22:11 V L, ---, , vw w L L ll: 'H L l . fi 1 lm- vlll. . 5 E- lglil . -A-f Mmm I ,L f Lg H-wav r lxby, 'v BALDWIN COTTAGE. Cost nearly ....................................... vIi25,000. Donor. Mr. E. I. Baldwin of Cleveland. ' ' TALCOTT HALL. Cost ...... .......................................... S 4-5,000 gfmve S20 O00 ali illffli H L I ' - -l Mm- ilu! KWH '- , -'TP ,- li' L 503511 00 M 'ffl' l rw Afwmfiil L H Hf 2 ffl my - HHH L- 1 V 515 ml .,. , , eg .lg ' 'uzrmrv' -'mu-'lx Mlq- 'l 1:'r'r1l'1juu'a,,, ll 'Q 2? Mr. james Talcott of New York I . Nm M! P ,.XMu'rJ N' ,.'. :Jil E!-fkixk ' 4 rx- ., ul fp lzgl lx A I Ja 1 X ' x 'X lln aim nu Wm ll ll V K I l lll. L HJ In COUNCIL HALL. 158 OBERLIN CQLLEGE H1-O-HI. 'F' 1 2 is QIMH: 0 ..Q-..1lza:lln,. T5 f . Q .. .Alf I . lQ.lll , M ll: jwgrm zgfgdllmlllllllg I- -l i i i 2 Q .Li I lliii 1? 'f Q :q afll ilnz F . 5 ls! -- 1., 4'-:every ...4 n. re, . .'f-lrri'um .gar,.5.ga13'-. i,,LgiQm'fpA I .l1'l'f!' PETERS HALL. Cost unfurnished .................................................................. 370,000 Extreme dimensions, 130 by 14-2 feet. Donors Capt. Alva Bradley of Cleveland ........ ................. S 20,000 Mr. R. G. Peters of Manistec, Michigan ............. 350,000 L+ 'g ' Q if ff' , if u.L '41 . + . L, ' J w'i'E,lif52'9i . 4-2,17 . Q fi ik -.4., -,1 ll. I .H , 1:3 .il X, A lard ? .X , th K- ll ls'-. ,Sy ., L - r lu,--IC,-7' .-1 -.N -5315, -' 1' ' Q Lg :ag-2 ll 1.l1f,1s, .1 f.- lf. ...fr 1- 't ,'.,4 i i fp-CZ: 5 ZF- 5- .: :R , 5' . 7.5 ' 5' A-L5 X' xp 1 - 1 A 'lf ximf 'ft Wai: T' 11 in 'I ' 1J '4:' AL - 1: fri? 2:'? , ' ' ' 1 f gfiifiw if Illfpgf V--li ilg . IH!Q7 1. -. . .7 f- m-f.'-f- f-' A - K ,.f-: 5 , 1 IIIIILH Bllllnni 'iw 'i. WARNER HALL. Cost Kas it now stands uncompletedj ................................... S70,000. Donor-Dr. and Mrs. Lucien C. Warner of New York. Extreme dimensions Kwhen completedj 150 by 120 feet. OBERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. 1 THISTLE-DOW . ', fPoem read at junior Ex,j Lonely and still, in my idle boat, A summer sunset found me afloat 3 The sun-god, hot from his toil, was now Attempting to cool his burning brow On the breast of the tide, and the bashful sea Was blushing with pleasure rosily, ' To have, for a moment, again at her side, Him who had chosen her as his bride. The waves whisper softly, as onward they glide, For, out from the shore, a warm wind blew, Blew-and blowing, brought on its tide A thistle-down, drifting, a moment in view, Wafted, a stranger from over the sands, It seems to be just within reach of the waves, But is held aloft from their outstretched hands By an airy spirit that rescues and saves. So wandering, hither and thither blown, Like a run-away bit of the white sea foam, Seemingly purposeless and alone, It is fated, it may be, to find a home Inqthe fruitful earth, or drop to rest On the foam-touched billows' wavering crest, Yet anywhere, everywhere, still it shall be Fulfilling its rightful destiny. The sun, now soothed by his love's caresses, Drops his head and is hid by her tresses, Leaving no trace but at golden light, But the thistle-down, passing me, left in its flight A fancy, and turning, with thoughtful oar, I slowly draw near to the darkening shore, While katydid voices from over the sea, Disputing each other, keep calling to me. t6o OBERLIN COLLEGE H1-O-HI. Alone on the plain of the tranquil deep, Where all things living seemed hushed in sleep, The stillness, the loneliness of the place Inspire me with awe at the vastness of space. Half frightened, I think what that love must be, Which governs the world, and yet stoops to me 5 Like thee, O wandering thistle-down sprite, We are come from the past's unsearchable night. We, too, are but travellers over the deep, Who live--and then sink-in eternity's sleep 3 Like thine, our exterior, though it be fair, ls as nothing, except as it serves us to bear The life-germ, the soul, that though hid from our e Is the part which alone to new life shall arise From its sleep in the earth, to appear in like form, Though in glorified beauty and vigor reborn. As thou art an alien to sky and to sea, So strangers to earth and to heaven are we g We, too, by intangible forces are driven, But the One who to Nature her secrets has given, Is directing us all to a definite end, He makes no mistakes, to His will all must bend, Who measures the earth with a span, and yet guides The wandering thistle-down over the tides. My boat strikes the beach with a. murmuring swish, Like the whisper of some half-hesitant wish, The light-house opens its watchful eye To greet the first star in the pale evening sky, While up, with the smoke of the drift-wocdfire, Like a column ofincense, rising higher, Went forth the camper's evening hymn, And Hoated far out on the waters dim. CQRNELIA M. Jo yes, HNSON OIEERLIN COLLEGE HI-O-HI. . 'N-r 4 'iftwwzxx G m ' YT V .. YQ -.4 4' V k ' ..-.. ..-ff! XX . f' H7,ffjf779Z Q 41 . H. I' f , .Ng 5 ''Z'W4ffWKQi,a4,2spfff 1 M W- fy, Zvffi? A IM 'V ' 11114 I WHXW 4'W,A1',g 'fZ4v5ffg::1: Y.S f.6f:f ,ff WZAW 1Gpl.3,2fk ,.?.fJ.' . USL' 1 x 'FaiWf' '?Ef' ffi7' V1' A ' 15' 7 A W' AM X f I iff HN H!ffQf?Q5k! ' ,1- I W XX THE MAN YVHO SPONGED IIIS HI-O- 1 Q13 N ' H Mai: el LN , ,V if? .1 i W gf ' I f ,rp f I I I Ni, - M1 f 0 ..-f MM , if JE LH ff 'sVi'Ww 1 U ply abwvis , ,V 4 Z3 1 cl xg ' ' Fm gun 1 ' '35 .24 ,X I , 1 ' I ffl- I I f V 2, ' lx Q 7 2 l + ' 1 , -'-' , 1 - L-1 ,gf f 732-is ,L X-E THE SAME MAN LATER. HI. W 'M H , I, JK ..A- fir'-S735-: --' 161 162 OBERLINI COLLEGE I-I1-O-HI. ,,..-1... 4 ,-Q -'-- -Mgd F- J, -- f 4-....-f --s.:,,.,,.q-5-,.H....-- L-Z-f-- -' X, .... Q ,, m W- 9, .4 lf, Q 4, N -rig: ,Y l k ff- 1- X ll X if l -- UY? Ili A 1 -,, H M 'pq ll ' , ,QQ I v' I :- zzz I l an f' A, l ' .-4 ' j AM 'T' .- -f -,rev ' '- l s wr ite-f ai- :gfiiifii -E' A - QQ ' :.. Wa e- he of - - 4:24 - f . ... -mv r - 4 -Jr- F- ..,.. ' ' l-L-T ' ri I ff ':::3j J ' . uf -57'-733----4'-5 25 Jffk-2 :rg-'-:TT i 5 ' ' 5 But, dear reader, don't stop here. The sweetest morsel has been reserved to the last, and will be found in the pages which follow. The calendar of the year's events is at the tops and bottoms of the pages, and you will learn from the body of what follows where to go to have all your wants supplied. You will learn who patronize the students and whom the students patronize. Plunge in again. 'f- STUDENTS 'I TRAVELING OVER THE Nzbke! Zazzle! WILL SECURE THE Lowes! Razfes, Besz' A660142 modafzbfzs, amd Fas! Tzqe. . . ..,...........,,......,.,. NSY? ..,....,,..........,........... --'EFQHQ Fareiie F09 THE ROUND TRIP JULY 3r0' ana' 4th, Good to and including July 7th, 1890. L. WILLIAMS, B. F. HQRNER, General Manager. General Passenger Agent. CITY TICKET OFFICE. 224- Bank Street, - Cleveland, O. Eroppings iLeft DQ jfatlwr time. Sept. 17.-Term begins. Great day for Oberlin. VV. J. R. johnson enters the Freshman class. Ol ' Sept. I8-Another notable clay. Billy Bennett orders a Senior plug. 0UR.:.SHlRTS.-:--r- 255 If you would have those that fit nicely and wear we1l,1cave bww 1 your order with THE W. B. DAVIS CO., 241 Superior St., CLEVELAND, OHIO. MENS' FURNISHERS. SHIRT MAKERS. L. T. Whitney Sy Soq, x . . L xii. -er Glothiers and Ngr1Qailors.4e- L ' 'I' ' , , C:.1rE'?s,Oil-Iosgiiy caO1?1TrS iALXVAYS TIIE LATEST STYLES IN- 1-IATS AND CAPS. on I HAVE FOR COMMENCEMENT PRESENTS the Finest Collection of ,Q V . I . affOl3L1f1fLQfo XC ggwefeovv mwep ever shown in town, and at Popular Prices. SOME ELEGANT SETS OF BOOKS OF POPULAR AUTHORS. OXFORD AND BAGSTER BIBLES. GIFT BOOKS OF ALL KINDS. SEQEESM U S I 035255 I announce also to the public that till the close of the term I am giving a special low discount on Music and Ilplsic Books. Tennis Rackets and Base Ball Goods at lowest possible prices. Specialiie Discou nts 25? to 25? Clu bs. A. G. COMINGS, 16 WEST COLLEGE STREET. Sept. Ig.-Everything fairly under way. Enrollment a hundred more than ever beforeg I7I3 students in all depzlrtmen ts. QIIID Sept. 20.--Choir examinations. Numberless broken hearts and blighted hopes., Sept. 21.-Y. M. C. A. social. 6 O OTHER Life Policies as liberal cost as little money, no others as cheap give as much for the money, as those of HE RAVELERS OF HARTFORD, CONN. Best either for Family Protection or In- vestment ofSavings. Non-forfeitable. world- wide, lowest cash rate. cwv JW, Hartmann if Bro.'s a 81 a Reinhard, inzxwlial MANUFRCTURERS OF a a' F I N E1 l M Ugsiqbrl an in lllfzpl emi' 'aff Qvl I . and Strings. ' I !a ll lla 1,1 ni R MANDOLINS, ' X i l lwlwynnnnl W, rjflpzv ,H ZITHERS, +14 -r rl l V1oLINs 311 .-. l. ,N and BANJOS. Best grades only at reasonable prices. Every instrument of our own make is warranted for H . ve years. Repairing of an y description Skill- fully doqe. We also import in large quantities, Violins Cellos B Strings, etc of thel , , asses, Flutes, -, nest European manuthcture, and sell such goods at astonishing low prices, New illust . rated catalogue for 1890 is just completed, and will . be sent free on application. Office and store, 225 POYVERY, pity. Branch salesroom, 23 Union Square. Manufactory 314--316 E. 75th St., N. Y. Se pt. 25.-Base ball season be ' . gms. Joel Mc. discovers what hc was sent to Oberlin for, viz.: to play third base. CVD Sept. 29.-Red lett er day in the history of Miller's club-chicken for dinner. rQq1fiC?Xn 'PAYS rl-'e,nQi,s RAQRQT, A 53fI. i!: 'iiiiilliziig ii. fl SWE-1:fI'IIIf:S:I::I:: :5F IS -!I.'1-llllll M - Yllll , ' JF, is u Ill-EQEI! ll II' ':, lllizpnl I 2 1, ll' :.lIll' Quan: -7 I- -V I I lrllill! l'n,nulI-S 5 I :lltlxlluillllqlli l I I 3 .-I::::f.,:I:,:1:f::.:'::'::::..:I:'w'1 ., 'mI i-I'i--'-'-'-II1-'-1-'M -Il - - I-G! X 5 W ' - S--H . wm ' , 3QIE,:iT'FE:'EY:'EQE'E:EETfEf:I'f ' Trl I -. 259225-,,L.L,,:V ,,.224g.711E-f.1?if G Mil :I 1 ll :II ' :lil ' ' I ' f'W ' '--:'J:::::u - pd::l? 'n 'I'- -1::4qpluiu,l:,i:,ll,:7:,ullg'P' 32...-I-I I-, -A -.-I-.,:z:,:E,:I--Ir ,I:E4.,.J-,:::I:I::--19.5 1, !':': 1Q2F AMERIQQN TAIP 'mm' an , 1, I H ,:EI fl'?' I mm ll: I l:lr:Hi-m-I-I-I . -V' SUPERIOR IN POINTS OF STRENGTH, BALAEQ3, STRING- . ' ING, AND PINISH. EXPERT ENGLISH STRINGING, 37.00. PRIZE STRINGING, 35.50. TOURNAMENT qEng1iSh5 STRINGING, S600 OUR NEW STANDARD RACKET, GOOD QUALITY, RED AND WHITE STRINGING, GUARANTEED, ONLY 33.00, ' EASILY WORTH :s4.00. COMPLETE ILLUSTRATED TENNIS CATALOGUE SENT ON APPLICATION. SPORTING AND ATHELETIC GOODS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. Horace Partridge 84 ILO. 497 Washington St ., - - BOSTON. Ivo PURCHASE TICKETS .1-iii SME OHTET THROUEIEIGFEIXR LINE EAST AND wEs'r. UNEQUALED FOR FINE TRAIN EQUIP- MENT, SPEED, COMFORT, SAFETY. Tourists Favorite Route TO LAKE SIDE. LITTLE MOUNTAINS, CHAUTAUQUA, NIAGARA FALLS, MONTREAL, QUEBEC, PORTLAND, Me. WHITE MOUNTAINS, BAR HARBOR, PETOSKEY, MACKINAC, sT. PAUL, DULUTH, DENVER, Yellowstone Park and Pacific Coast Resorts. it Through Sleeping Gars ez? CHICAGO, NEW YORK, BOSTON. Only line to New York without transfer of any kind. Send to General Passenger and Ticket Agent, Cleve- land, O., for free copy of folder entitled, Summer Ex- cursions to the Mountains, Lakes and Sepshox-e. Bc sure your tickets read vin. Lake Shore and Michigan Southern R'y, P.P.WRIGHT, A.J.SMITH. Gen'l Supt. Gen'l Pass. and Ticket Agt. CLEVELAND, O. Oct. I.-Homer Kimball goes to Marietta to visit an old friend. fvui Oct. 2.-Contest speakers begin a series of Hunks, which continues till the eleventh. 15+i9oN,s A NlfNlf xg k9QAClQ! X QQ Q41 lxllifmw, fl-mwl5l5lT 118 Jllairg Sweet, H f Glbevlin. - N,-., e XA fe,- Sencl us orders for pictures of Faculty aqcl College Buildings. ,X A, Brornide Copies rnade 1:0 aqy , size. . vxfs.f-s.fxJx.,x.,x,-V-vi 1 H Gall alzd Eur Wevlz. F H Qvmj NV eeee A ,Q ,, , , L ,. Sgqngaq 8: Smith, 174 ,Superior treef, -fsfxf---FPEVEIJAND, -HEADQUARTERS FOR- ennis, icycle and fx ine Footwear enerally. Special Attention to Mail Orders. ,ilk Oct. II.--Oratorial contest. Two bran new orators out of the six. Pan dies. Van gets there. OX? ... Oct. 16.-Laird goes into training for the mile run Held-day. awww W C WMM was If you ere unable to pay Cleveland a Visit Write for Samples And self measurements for Suits and Trousers made to order ON SHORT NOTICE. er You Save S5 to 810 or More. + -Tnosn THAT HAVE TRIED- Superijrg Street, Will frankly admit these facts. Perfect Satisfaction Guaranteed. Made-up Clothing for Men, Boys and Children. For Reliable Quality, Latest Style and Greatest Variety at Reek ottem. glalriees You can at all times depend upon the Old Reliable Cleveland Clothier, JACUB Sll:fllNll:El.D 242 to 246 Superior St. Wlvlail orders will have our prompt attention. Elegant variety and complete line of Gents' Fur- Q11-ishing Goods and Hats. ml-E UUUU QXD H. STRAUS, QBERLIN, 0 Ebe Gllothier, C flbercbant Gailor 1- HND - Gents' jfurnisber. Straw Hats, Ties, Collars and Cuffs, Summer Under wear. Large stock of all kinds of Hosiery, and fine stock of Summer Coats and Vests. Respectfully, H. STRAUS. 'v G0 TO J. F. Harm0n's Drug Store FINE TQILEZT A RTKZLES CHOICE PERFUMERY AND FRESH c0NFEcT10NERY. -ALSO- Ice Cream Soda Water, Whipped Cream Soda, Milk Shake, Fruit Soda Phosphates, Ginger Ale, Apollinaris Water and other Ice Cold Drinks, at Qo. 15 lllest Uollege Street. Oct. 19.-Elections for oratorial contest. Firestone Abbott, Callendar, Gurney, Chase and Lawrence happy., CXO Oct. 22.-First U. joseph Cook. Oct. 23.-Billy Ireland says a naughty word. L. A. entertainment of the season THE QMIQ pleaning, Pyeing and Repairing CLOTHING CO., I30 ST. CLAIR STREET, - CLEVELAND, 0. Directly opposite Cleveland Theatre. All orders from the country promptly attended to and express charges remitted. First class work guaranteed in every branch of the busmess. N. B. Work turned out at one day's notice if desired. NI. LEVEY J. V. D.xvENv0R'r, Manager. L. LEVEY, Superintendent. II. A. LEVEY, Assistant Superintendent. l l 35, CO., Prop'rs. GYMNASIUM, 'ATHLE IIC AND Bicycle Outllts. The Touring -Quia-L All-wool Hexible and most comfortable cap made. Visor, easiest M--y xH0ward A. Smith 81 Go., Oration Hall, Newark, ALJ. BICYCLES 5 aqcl if SUPPLIES. Encyclopedia of Cyclists Wants and catalogue ot' general sup- plies sent free. Qxnj Everything in the Music Line Can he procured nt the most reasonable prices from THEIJOHNQHURCH co. CINCINNATI, OHIO, Sheet Music, Music Books. Violins, Guitars, Banjos, Flutes, Mandolins, Cornets, Drums, Etc., and Strings for All Musical Instruments. Send for Illustrated Czntzmlogue oi' the EVERETT P ifwos, UNliXCliI.I.IED in ull the rcquisitcs of A FIRST-91555 PIANO! Gufwzinteed for 7 years. Manufactured by the Everett Piano Co., Albany and Wzinchzun Sts., Boston, Mass. THE OHN HURCH o., FINCINNATI, GENEIQAL F'1XC'FORS. Oct. 24.-Billy rcpents and takes un emclic. Oct. 16.-SClllOl 501J1l. ball gZllllC. Lu Cost surprises everybody by lmnging on to El Hy. . fXlllD Oct. 30.-A. Z. society laughs at one ofLuetl1i's jokes. Nov. I.-Foot-ball season- begins. Jamie McCord learns what he was made for. i-,Y-Aiii-4! 5 - j S 'eq . :: iv iv 'rv - -Q E ERMAN SONN IAG -awk-ii-if F3 i ri WMUMMMM mama fluff- , Ig 55253141-5:13-agjg?-1,:siiif-i:s'P.:s'afs'5lis- X IMPORTER AND MANUFACTURER OF u ical ligsiiiumenis, '12 Eaiilfi Qlaee, Between Broadvvay St Chu1'c11 Sis. NEMV-YORK. Ifirpe I'QaQdo1irgs 8: Banjos a Specialty, l890.'-f'-- ' '-'5l890. Good Music Never Wears Out. Choice Sacred Solos, 34- Hue songs ................................. 561.00 Choice Sacred Solos, for low voicc,-1-0 songs .................... Song Classics, Soprano and Tenor, 50 songs .................. Song Classics, low voice, -L7 songs .............................,.... Maud V. 1Vhite's Album, taste- ful songs ................,............ 551.00 Sullivan's Vocal Alinnn, a mas- 1.00 ter's work .......................... 1.00 Popular Song Collection, 37 1.00 good songs ......................... 1.00 Good Old Songs we used to 1.00 sing, 115 songs .................. 1.00 Classic Baritone and Bass College Songs, 150,000 sold ..... .50 Songs ................................. 1.00 College Songs for Banjo, for Classic Tenor Songs, 36 songs. 1.00 Guitar,each ........................ 1.00 Choice Vocal Duets, thc very Rhymes and Tunes: Osgood. best .................................... 1.00 Sweet home music .............. 1.00 Everett's Album of Songs, good selections ................... 1.00 INSTRUMENTAL. Piano Classics, Vol. 1, 44- pcs..bS1.00 Piano Classics, Vol. 2, 31 pcs.. Classical Pianist, 4.2 pieces ...... 1.00 Popular Piano Collection, 27 pieces .................................. The above are all superior books. Popular Dance Music collec- tion .................................... 81.00 1.00 Young People's Classics, 52 easy pieces .......................... 1.00 1.00 Any book mailed for retail price. ' Oliver Ditson Co., Boston. C. II. DITSON X CO., 867 Broadway, New York. fXIVD f exif ai orsforcls eidfhosphate Prepared according to t11e directions of Prof. E. N. Hoksronn. This preparation is a brain food. It increases the capacity for mental labor, and acts as a general tonic and vitalizer. It rests the tired brain, and imparts thereto new life and energy. Dr. D. P. McClure, Rantoul, Ill., says: Very beneficial to strengthen the intellect. Dr. O. C. Stout, Syracuse, N. Y., says: I gave it to one patient who was unable to transact the most ordinary business, because l1is brain was 'tired and con- fused' upon the least mental exertion. Immediate benefit, and ultimate recovery followed. Dr. Chas. T. Mitchell, Canandaigua, N. Y., says: I recommend it asa restorative in all eases where the ner vous system has been reduced below the normal standard by overwork, as found in brain workers, professional men, teachers,- students, etc. Dr. F. W. Lytle, Lebanon, Ill., says: I have personally used it with marked advantage when overworked, and the nervous system much depressed. Dr. E. W. Robertson, Cleveland, O., says: Can cordially recommend it as a brain and nerve tonic. Descriptive pamphlet free on application to Rumford Chemical Works, 1'1'0vidence, R. I. Beware of Substitutes and lmitations. CAUTION:-Be sure the word I-Iorsfoi-d's is printed on the label. All others are spurious. Never sold in bulk. Nov. 2.-Carl Sherrill resigns from tl1e presidency of the flisthetic. Ass. E. H. Abbott elected to fill the vacancy. lxvj Nov. 6.-Ewing looks intelligent. Nov. 7.-Ewing looks natural again. Nov. 11.-Schubert quartette. ' E. 84 tl.'T'.l5,ql'l1oi7l84 Qo.,'5tplxB1'oAf5W?l!, i-Manufacturers and Importers of- ALL THE LATESI' INQUVELFIAE5 Ilplpotograplyic Apparatus aryo Supplies. 2leDetective 2-le and El? View El? Camerasile In Great Variety. ANTHONY'S CLIMAX FILMS Reduce weight and space to a minimum. Fourteen cloz. films weigh less than one dozen glass plates. AMATEUR OUTFITS FROM 37.50 UPWARDS. L its , -yi '-ZWJE -vi sf- 1 M. llalbt at MANllFAC'l'URll'RS OF GRAND, l.lPRlGHT AND SQUARE Pismo : fortesg For over Fifty Years before the public, these instruments have, by their excellence, attained an unpurchased pre-eminence, which establishes them as UNEQUALEU in Gone, Goucly, 'workmanship ago Duralailitxq. zliy'-livery instrument fully warranted for 5 years.-'Um WAREROOMS: Baltimore-22 and 24- E. Brftimore St. New York-14-8 Fifth Avenue. Washington-817 Pennsylvania Ave. QXVIJ ff' AT THE 88-92 EUCLID AVENUE, CLEVELAND. OHIO. I I I5 to I9 Lafayette Avenue, DETROIT, MICH., and at p I -U f I I f K 0 M f Corner Pearl and Church Sta., BUFFALO, N. Y. Scholarships good in eitl1er school. Intereommunieoxion of Business and Short-hand correspondence by and between the students ofthe cliherent schools of this chain of Colleges. Special Summer term during june, July and August. No vacations. College in session live days and four evenings per week, the entire year. Elegant, cool rooms, well ventilated and handsomely equipped. All the English and Commercial branches taught by expert teachers. Short, practical courses in Book-keeping and Shorthand, a specialty for the three summer months. Our night school presents excellent advantages for ladies and gentlemen whose early education has been neglected. Lile scholarships in the Business. English or Short-hand departments, 375.00 until Sept, 1, after that time 38100.00 each. Send for a College journal and a catalogue, free. IVI. J. CA-I-CN, PRES., 90 EUCLID AVE. Nov. 19.-Mastic chosen captain of 'Varsity foot-ball eleven in place of Ryder who resigns. CXVIID Nov. 27.-Homer Kimball goes to Marietta to visit an old friend GLC Q15 N fails? 5393583 f:76N fc16N Jlk Jlk ECLIPSE -MONTAUK-SEABRIGHT SPECIAL- and CASINO RACKETS for 1890 are unsurpassed Send for Tennis Catalogue. Special Rates tr H., v Eu ents el? Sleeving: Will always find profitable employment selling our line of Books, Bibles and Albums. We make a specialty of school work. Students who have worked for us during the last few years have, nine times out of ten, succeeded. BECAUSE, we thoroughly drill and prepare our men for success. FOR PARTICULARS, Address, THE AMERICAN PUBLISHING CO., 7, 8, 9 and 10 Lithograph Building. - - Cleveland, Ohio. fxvnil You Iiiiiiilfnind EDUCATED for successful business, taught how to get 9. Living, make Money, and become enterprising, useful citizens. POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y. on the I-I d. tl Ecfstyzgns Qocleqlel only institution devoted to this S1JOC?!l.l1gfJl,COill? sisso e eiooso ' combining Theory and Practice byanovel and original s ste Business of training, and giving ACTUAL daily experience in Megeham dising, Banking, and every variety of Ofiiec Xvork. No student can take this course and remain ignorant of actual business transactions of daily occurrence as conducted in the great exchanges of New York and London. ' ' the best field for educated Phonography and Typewrlfmg y.,....,.....i.... S....1...t.,,.i.h- ing to become shorthand amanuenses are thoroughly drilled in correspond- ence. Students desiring to become general verbatim reporters are taken through all grades, finishing on lectures delivered in the college: in no other school in this country is this opportunity offered. ' for Business, Drawing and ornamental work. An art Penmanshlp indispensable for teachers. readily learned, and when acquired earns good pay. These schools, embracing six departments, are in charge of eight professors and five assistant instructors. IEASTMAN has been well styled THE BUSINESS UNIVERSITY OF AAIERICA. It is the Oldest and most practical Commercial School and the largest and most popular Private School in this country. Refers to patrons in every State. YOUNG NIEN and Boys starting in life for themselves or assuming the business of a father or relative, and wanting the best preparation to assure successg YQUNG LAIHES desiring to qualify themselves for good positions, and to make themselves independent for life in a short time at a very moderate expense: PARENTS AND GUARDIANS wanting their sons to be useful, pros- perous citizens, and their daughters pre- pared for the accidents oflife and made self-supporting: ACADEMIC AND COLLEGE GRADUATES flesifinsfl Df1!0fi'20lf111,d profitable finish to their theoretical and unavailing education 5 A DISATJPOINTED YOUNG AND MIDDLE-AGED MEN V110 HFC L- up--LYYYY Y,,, 7 - tied tocon- scrvative families, or places unsuited to their ambitions and abilities, or who desire to change their course oflife, byseeking places and business more satisfactory and remunerativc, will find TIIE NEW, short, practical course of study here most invaluable. There are no vacations. Applicants enter any day with equal advantage. Board and tuition tees more reasonable than in any other FIRST-CLASS school. Address for catalogue giving special information, EASTMAN CGLLEGE, Clement C. Gaines, PN-s't, POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y Nov. 27.-Mfs. Seo!! Sidflozzs. Nov. 28.-Tildl1iCSgiVillg. Laird and .Knowlton exe- cute a walti at midnight in Peter's hall. Qxixj Dec. I.-Sunday. Anse Howland decides to wear a white shirt. THE BOSTON, NEW YORK, CHICAGO, AND LOS ANGELES TEACHERS' AGENCIES. EVERETT 0. FISK 81. CD., Proprietors. 7 Tremont Place, 6 Clinton Place, 106-8 Wabash Ave., 28 S. Spring St., Hos'roN. Nl-:w YORK. Cmcnco. Los ANGELES. We have filled 78 College positions, -1-36 Academy and Private School positions, 4-15 public High School positions, and 7-1-8 Grammar and Prinlrwy positions. More than halfthesc positions have been filled during the last two years. Send to the respective Agencies for 100-page Manual. Effflb d?'.. IEYIF??l..f.9...9EI.I..?' Gardrpefs Drug Store, -and sec their- Elegarit .Assortrnent of Perfurnesl Novelties in Toilet and Fancy Goods, and their CHOICE PURE AND FRESH CANDIES. EBSTER'S UNABBIDGED DICTIONARY. THE BEST INVESTMENT For the Family, the School, the Professional or Private Library. WEBSTER' I A Uuanmz,-5 'J 115543 I' 0l6'7'l0M40 f 175'5U.' Has been for years Stand- ard Authority in the Gov't Printing Office and the U. S. Supreme Court. 'll I It is highly recommended --- -- ' - l-- 1i1l by 38 State Sup'ts of Schools Besides mnny other valuable feanurcs, this work contains and the leading Colleg-9 A Dictionary of the English Language gzgfggnfs of the U- S- ml Nearly all of the School Books published in this country are based upon Webster, as attested by the leading School Book Pub- witb 118,000 Words and 3000 Engravings, I A Dictionary of Biography giving facts about nearly 10,000 Noted Persons, A Dictionary of Geography locating and briefly describing 25,000 Places, A Dictionary of Fiction inner.. found only in Wehsfei-'s Unabridged, All in One Book. It has 3000 more Words and nearly 2000 more En- Webster excels in SYNONYMS, which are appropriately grnvinsi than any vflwr American Dictionary. found in tho body of the work. FOR SALE BY ALL BOOKSELLERS.. Illustrated Pamphlet of Specimen Pages, Testimonials, kc., will be sent prepaid upon application. Published by G. 85 C. MERRIAM Sz CO., Springileld, Mass. fxxi Ny PJ. 19. JOMNSONS Students' il?DrySl?Goods2l?Store, NO. 6 WEST COLLEGE ST., OBERLIN. -Au Elegant Line of- Dress Goods, Silks, Gloves, Hosiery, Corsets, Laces, Handkerchiefs. Ribbons, Fans and Parasols. Where they all go for College and Class Colors in Ribbons. Will open in the New Cloak Room curly this Fall. Amagnificent line of Ladies', Misses' and Children's CLOAKS. -TRY IT FOR om: YEAR. 'I ' , 3 ls true only ot the 5 A I m BS WHEEL llIEfl'S cuzsrre, 'i I F ' an illustrated monthly mag- ff, uzlne devoted to the grand- ' ' 'c, est, healthiest, most manly '-'Illia' . sport in the world,-cycllng. jlr-le you a Vlywlmsrz? Whether you are or not you are sure to be lnter- ested ln our paper. You can't help lt. Its sketches, poems and storles are interesting to all. They are pure and healthful ln their tone. They breathe oi een tlelds and shady lanes. and are a constant igliisplrer of a love ot nature. To convlnce you that our paper ls all we claim torltln every partlculnrlf you w ll send your name and address we will send you a sample copy free Then lt you want to try lt tor a year, as you surely will, lt wlll cost you on y 50 oents. Cheap Enough, lsn't It? LIBERAL COMMISSIONS T0 CLUB RAISEBS. Address the Publisher:- BEN L. DARROW, INDIANAPOLISQ IND. FN ig' 11 45 ini 'i 2 -, ' - 1 -' 2-'Z ' ' f Dec. 3.-Osmer Abbott gets his whiskers trimmed. Oh, happy day! ' QXKIQ Dec. 6. -Fairchild begins training in the gym. for ,Varsity pitcher. With pride we publish the following letter from Rev. J. N. Frad- enburgh, D.D., Pastor ol' the M. E. Church, Warren, Pa.: 4 WARREN, PA., March 6, 1590. MR. E. T. I-IAZELTINE, Proprietor Piso's Cure for Consumption. DEAR SIR :-Hitherto it has been my unbroken custom to recom- mend no patent medicines. For the first time in my life I depart from this custom to speak an unsolicited word in praise of your valuable medicine. I have found it of great benefit in the treatment ofabronchial cough which has been my constant companion for many vears. This has been complicated with asthmatic and eatarrhal affcctations which at times have made it very distressing. The Piso's Cure has fitted my ease better than any other similar medicine which I have tried. I find it also valuable for the voice, and for the speedy relief of a new cold when taken promptly. Q I have used, with good results, your Piso's Remedy for Catarrh, in connection with the Cure for Consumption. I do not know as you desire any commendations for your valu- able medicines, but am sure you will excuse this unsolicited com- munication. Very faithfully, J. N. FRADENBURGH. fXXIlD J. ARMURUSTER. KIESER, C. IQOESTER. City Bggkbinding Magazine and J oh Work of all Descriptions. Blank Book Manufacturers. Estimates Cheerfully Given. Our Bookhindery is one of the best established in this emuitry. We have the facilities and are able to do the best of all kinds of work, from Pamph- lets to finest Gilt bound books. 1ifi?4ST'3Eif?9?z .... Fiiifx..f:f?.X'f...ffFZ9l?E:...M94i???l...!f99ffEz...!:filff?EK..E99ffiz f?.??.Fi.,.f!H...fi9f?fif...f?i?9.F?!lf1r...EHWF?Hffiiiil..Wifi..Ef?.fi?f?P.?Ff?.CfLY:. Alt Reasonable Brisas. SEE SAMPLES OF OUR WORK IN U. L. A. LIBRARY. If you have books of any kind for binding, please send to us for terms, or call at our Bindery for illf0l'mLLtl0I1. Forest if Gity if Bookbiqdiqg if GOITQPHIQY, . l45 sr. on.AuR ST., c1.EvEu.AND, o. - Jon H.Ri'-1313Ri- '- XV ian fj3igofrLcas.aa1f2QEa, 'vhfizgsf' 211 Sbpefiof Slnfqqlf, CLEVELAND, - OHIO. V Lf-Lf-xfx,-X,.N,N-,,,x,. BX P?Air3,si'Zxi5inQ QAYQ We Gel' Tltgqlfe. BGB' Special Rates to Students. Dec. 13.-MOSt of the Faculty appear at Thursday lecture. Dec. 20.-The Messiah. fxxmj Dec. 22.-Winter vacation beings- General stampede for home. 45 Did You Ever Wear O11-e 'li'- ....0F...- p'Brian's TI A T S ? E 7 If not, Why not? CYBRIAN, ,TI-IE I-IATTEFQ, l03 SENECA ST., CLEVELAND, O. 705EPE GILLOTTS STEEL PENS. THE MOST PERFECT OF PENS. FOR ARTISTIC USE in Fine Drawings, Nos. 659 fThe celebrated Crowquillj, 290 and 291. FOR FINE VVRITING, Nos. 3o3, 6o4, and Ladiesl 170. FOR BROAD NVRITING, Nos. 294, 389, and Stub Point, 849. FOR GENERAL WRITING, Nos. 404, 332, 390, and 604. .IOSEPH GILLOTT 6:-' SONS, 91 john Srreet, M JC HENRY HOE, Sole Agent. fXXlVD URCESTEIPS DIGTIDNARY The highest authority known as to the use of the English Ianguagef' 7- 8 7 A '., 31--I . -cf: 3, --P1 irajsm. 3 19- ., f t 'mr 'th f' :lg,s-213'---7 n- , - A 41,4 ..,,-..N?',fj,., '- .h 'Ad f 'Q . ,-.-,,f,.f.4g.4-' ,L Y ,. ,, .--,- ,. With or without Denllon'l Patent Index. The Standard of the Leading Publishers, Magazines, and News- papers. The Dictionary of the Scholar for Spelllng, Pronunciation, and Accuracy In Dehnition. .-.- Send for large Circular to the Publishers, . J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA. H 1 QQQQEWMMQR H' it -H 0 W 1 --- t..ff 941-1 it -.'. C,':,,,i' 45' That you can get your EYES FITTED in Oberlin, with the finest Glasses for all difiiculties, cheaper and better than in the larger cities. E.H.MQLTER, Graduate Optician. Dec. 23.-Oberlin, as usual in vacation, goes wild with excitement. The revelry, hilarity and debauchery con- tinue for two weeks. Qxxvj Dec. 25.-CIll'IStlT12lS, as usual. Dec. 28.-Sopliomores all busily engaged in making up fall te1'm's work. Gberlirz Glgineseflaunelry 27W s. MAIN smear. 5957532 MN . SIE -.25qlvgf.- Prices the lowest and all work guar- anteed to suit. Goods called for and delivered when desired. .. A... l BUSINESS EDUOATION. ATTEND THE Of Kentucky University, LEXINGTON, KY. . IV. Corner MAIN and UPPER Streets. opposite Cnurt llollse. WI LBUR R. SMITH, Pnzsunswr. UU' Cheapest, lleut. und lllghest Honored College. E. W. 61 W, R. Smith. nlllcern of this Cnlll-ce. received the Gold llednl null lllphmm of Honor nt W'0rltI'u Exposition, for Svntcm nf Book-Kevplllg, lnulmllnz Generlll IIIIIIIIOII Edueutlon. Nenrlr IUDO students ln nttnwlnnm- the pmt yi-nr. from lm Suites and Fm-elgn Countries. 10.000 Graduates in Ilunlneu. lil Tunchcrn employed. Busluena Cnurne ennulsu of Book-keeping. flmslnuss Arlthmetlc, Penmnnshlp. Commercial Law, Meruhaudlslnyz. Hnnklmz. Jolnt Stock, Mnnufnoturlnz, Lectures, Business Pruetlce. Mernnntlle Correnpr-Ind:-lice. 1-lc. Unit oflfull Bunlneu Conn-ne, lvmludinz THIN ll- 9U I0'H '3' und Rnsnl In n nlce fnmlly. nhmitbl00. Short-llnml. Type- Wrltlllg and Telegrnphy are npeelnltlenx hnvc npeeln. teachers nml roomn, and can he txxken nlone or with the Tlixslnemx Course. Special department for Lndles. Lady Prlunlunl umplnvefl. 011-'Merchnnvl' Special Course of Rook-Keeping, 510. Uzfllusl- ness Arithmetic und Penmnnuhlpwhan tnken nlone,S5 permnnlh. College open dny and nlzht. Students received on r-mu' nnv ments. OT Arranpzements can he mmle with llullrnml Unm- nnleu for n chemp dnllr pus tn nttenfl this Collorr-, N0 vm-lg. f n fx v ful cj-' v I u 1 llln. Enter nnvl. rn nn ec -mncnau , or c ren nr uddrell WILBUIE R. SMITH. l'rr-fl. Lexington, K! C. ECKERT, The Tailor, .-52,-gp... Dealer in Gent's Furnishing Goods, Hn.ts,. Caps, Etc. Fine Neckwear xt Specialty. Corner of MAIN and WEST COLLEGE. N -ea-+ 21. D: QUIQK, +ve- Eipeff Repbrireif oi' Fline WAl'eI'ze,s Eine Ciloelggs. -s2v'sf'-- OBERLIN, - - OIVIIO., Firge Groceries, Jlk- FRUITS AND CIINNED GO0DS.' Oysters from Aug. 15 to May 15 Daily. NIUNSON.. Barnum 8i Godley, RED FRONT STORE. Stoves, Hardware, Tinware, Paints, Glass, Etc. Jobbing and Repairing Promptly Attend., ed to. I5 and I7 South Main,OBERLIN, OHIO. fXXVI7 ODD WAYS OF ADVERTISING. We once heard a man shouting at the top of his voice, corns cured without pain. He had solid comfort to sell. We saw a chap with a swarm of bees hanging on his ears and nose, spouting and gesticulating with mouth and hands full of live bees. We heard another fellow yelling, Stay right where 'you're at, in order to make people come to him, and they came. Imagine the advertising ability of the blind man who goes about chanting, Buy a nice hot Christian of a poor blind biscuit. We have seen two coons with shining tile hats and glistening canes with display ads 'l printed on their high standing collars, waltzing up and down the avenue. Now we don't want to be odd or funny, but we do want to- be lrulhful, which is just about as hard. Besides, don't everybody know how cheap we sell everything in our line. So keep in mind, if you've a boy, we've got guns and lishing tackle and knives g if agirl, we've got hair-curlers andfissorsg if a dude, we've shovels, pick-axes and spades 5 if a man, wefve got ladders, smoke-stacks andjdumb-bells 3 if a farmer, we've gotl ag. implements and binders twinegif' a happy m0l2l161', we've got such loves of baby caps 3 if an unhappy mother, we've got the wonderful New Process Gasoline Stove. Ifyou are dry or thirsty or hot, we put in the city water works quick, cheap and reliable. Yours, ' CARTER sf HUGKINS, No. ro So. Main. Jan. I. Holmes reforms and quits calling on the girls. January 2. Holmes concludes it's no use. The ladies must have Hofljmes. fxxvuj .TUHN HASTINGS, IDSEPH TBIPP, UHAS. S. LAWRENCE. 1're.r. 6' Trear. Vu: Pres. 6-' Sfrrztary. Cru. fllgzmgtr. ILLUSTRAUVE AND ADVERTISING u RPeasEs ,A......m.....y,.x'1111.,A: -7..,.s' W I -1111,-1' 7 6 ikpfxnm PILACEQ ?NEiW YORK:- QBERLINA IVILJSIOAL UNION. OMMENCEMENT ONCERT, A GIVEN TVVO NIGHTS, I - 5 FRIDAY, JUNE 27, '90, WEDNESDAY, .JULY 2, '9o. At 7:30 P. M., at the FIRST Cl-IURCI-I. Aria- I know that my Redeemer liveth, - Handel. MRS. BISHOP. GERMAN REQUIEM, - - - Brahms. Chorus, Soprano and Baritone Solos. Aria- Praise the Redeemer's Goodness, Bee-tho V811. MRS. BISHOP. A very large and finely drilled chorus. Soprano Solo- Md. GENEVRA JOHNSTON BISHOP of Chicago. Baritone Solos- Mr. HOWARD M. YOST of Cleveland. Tickets for first concert 35 and 50 cents 5 For Second concert, 50 and 75 cents. January 6. ' Winter term begins. Abbott resolves not to cut classes more than four times a week. QXXIXD January 7. Twenty-seven Freshmen find themselves conditioned on trig. . CCDNRAD IVI IZER, Egpert jfitter. Te vcstiam tam pulchro vestitu ut omncs formam tuzzm 117il'CI7tl1I'. ' ' 42 Euclid Axfelqlue, Gary give iqfornyatiog on? aqvl Subject Kegaroiqg Dress for Mag. 'Tele-phone 2 385. TIVIE STUDENTS' SEOON D-HAN D BOOKSTORE. The largest and most complete assm'tn1ent of SCHOOL AND COLLEGE TEXT BUUKS, second-haml, in the State. Orders by mail promptly filled. OBERLIN COLLEGE SOUVENIRS ALBUDI, Twelve pages long, containing all the new College buildings: price 35 cents. Two thousand sold. Aclclress, J. 0. MGLAUGHLIIV, Oberlin, 0. Stands at the head in Business Education, Stenography, Type-Writ ing and Pcnmanship Departments. For circulars address, McKEE 84, HENDERSON, OBERLIN, OHIO fxxxj l3l?ol'o21'2tpl'25 Ano All lginog of l?o1'l'1'Ail'5. Over NI. G. Dick'S Store. North. lVIair1 St., H - OBERLIN,O. 122 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland. IQ 'At thc Gallery in Oberlin on Mondays. STUDENTS CAN MAKE BIG NIGNEIY DURING THE COMING VACATION BY SELLING EEF 6Hilh1fvn's lpirlfuriul Bihlv. FOR TERMS AND OTHER PARTICULARS, ADDRESS The Williams Pulyliglqiqg QQ., CLEVELAND, O. january 13. Universal amazement and excitement Abbott has kept his resolve for one week. Cxxxij january 15. Edwards tells of one of his experiences in Europe. A In order to avoid repetition in our chronicle we insert here, ditto for the remaining days in the year. A New Souveqior of Cberliq. I have recently published a NEW SOUVENIR OF OBERLIN. It contains Thirty Pictures of the College Buildings, Churches, Public Buildings and Business Blocks, reproduced from photographs by the Fry process: , Council Hall, Baldwin College, Peter's Hall, Laboratoryfremovedy, Warner Hall, Soldiers' Monument, Talcott Hall, ' First Cong. Church, Sturges Hall, Second Cong. Church, V French Hall, Baptist Church, Society Hall, First M. E. Church, Cabinet Hall, Episcopal Church, Tappan Hall fremovedj . Union School Building, Ladies' Hall Qburnedb, Town Hall, Interior of Peter's Hall, Straus Block, Spear Library, Goodrich Block, College Chapel, Carpenters' Block, Interior of College Chapel, The Historic Elm. Also, the residences of Ex-Presidents Mahan, Finney and Fairchild. 9 i ' This Souvenir gives a picture of the Oberlin of to- day, with all her new College Buildings. Every student, every alumnus, every citizen and friend of Oberlin ought to possess a copy. Size 4, x 5 inches, and nicely bound. Price 50 cents. Sent postpaid on receipt of price. E. J. GOODRICH, PUBLISHER, Oberlin, Ohio. Qxxxxil Dl'0lJlJillQ8 left DQ jf8flJ6I3 Uilile. CONTINUED. jan. 17. Moulton blushes. Later-so does Berle. jan. 19. Friday. Clark Firestone reads the story of Bruce and the spider, is inspired with new hope, rushes down town, tries choir examination-passes-bliss. jan. 20. He begins taking vocal. . jan. 22. Mrs. Camp's roomers all leave. Neighbors threaten her with prosecution for keeping a nuisance. Feb. 11. Bob Burdette lectures and makes the Fresh- men foolish. Feb. 12. Six o'cloclc IRM.: Harper resolves to take a girl -to Amelia Edward's lecture. ' Feb. I2. Seven-thirty o'cloclc :'- Harper decides not to. Feb. 22. Gibbons Hunks in Psych. Carruthers don't. Feb-. 28. Laird defines true heroism as refusal to pay athletic tax. March 3, McCord and La Cost have their annual room- cleaning. March 7. Geo. Mead resolves to be an athlete. - March 9. .Loveland begins practicing for putting the shot, on Field day. i March 15. Loveland still practicingf I March 27. Lovelandthinks his chances first-class. April 7. Spring term begins.. Wilder tries to have some whiskers. April 25. Leland Powers. Everybody pleased. May 1. Ball season begins. Glenn Plumb concludes that he can play ball. . May 7, Glenn Plumb changespliis mind. May 9. junior Ex. The negro problem touched upon. - May 20. Fairchild fans somebody. May 26. Field Day. Jamie McCord enters forthe mile run. May 27. jamie comes in on the home stretch. june 7. Northern Oratorical League formed. june 17. Great improvement in Callendar. Mustache gone. june 26. Hi-O-Hi appears. ase ohool of pplied oience, CLEYELAN D, OHIO. This Scientific School offers thorough training in the. following regular courses: CIVIL ENGINEERING, . MECHANICAL ENGINEERING, MINING ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING, Pmrsics, and CHEMISTRYQ The courses of study are thoroughly practical and special attention is paid to work in the field, shops and laboratories. The graduates are in demand, and have no difiiculty in securing engagements. i , 5300.00 PRIZES. Five prizes of 3300.00 each will be given on entrance examination. Information concerning these examina- tions will be sent on application. For Catalogues, or for special information, A Address CADY STALEY, President..
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