Ohio College of Dental Surgery - Alethian Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH)
- Class of 1903
Page 1 of 147
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 147 of the 1903 volume:
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he lGthl21I1 A True Reeord Qf the Trials and Triumphs of the Students of Ohio College of Dental Surgery Department of the University of Cincinnati .SCL IQO2-O3 I VOLUME II. f lux '5' 'mr , -x k f,3fg, f if, fa g ' 2 . -1 --Q Shu, .I 'Ii' , ? V 'm'nu. I Qi W E23 -l 1 PRINTERS l.- ,i-11 COHEN G. COMP CINCINNATI ANY ?L? ENGFIAVEFIS , Q1 - li I I ima 532-g -,-,. , 4.-a fe: in If ur Svmpbomg - QL f x 'I'O live content with sniall means, to seek elegance rather than luxury, and refinement rather than fashion 3 to be worthy, not respectable 3 and wealthy, not rich. ............... . . To study hard, think quietly, talk gently, act frankly, to listen to stars and birds, to babes and sages, with open heart, to bear all cheerfully, do all bravely, await occa- sion, hurry never, in a Word, to let the spiritual, unbicl- den ancl unconscious grow up through the conunon. This is to be my symphony. ........... . WILLIAM HENRY CHANNING O JJ nv,-f WW' second number of THE ALif:TH1AN is now completed and we too, like the editors of the first number, present it to our readers with feelings of anxiety mingling with those of pride Fully aware of the dangers and pit-falls that lay in our path, we took up this work with a determination to succeed. In how much we have succeeded, we leave you, dear reader, to be the judge. If this volume serves to brighten one hour of a gloomy day, or to lighten the sorrows of one saddened heart, we will consider that our time and labors have been well spent. These labors are now over and we have accomplished our hope, but, nevertheless, happy as we are that we have succeeded,iit is with feelings akin to those felt atgfparting with an old and valued friend that we pen these prefatory lines, which mark the completion of our task. Be kind, gentle reader, in your judgments, remembering that the Work has been a new one to most of us, and that we have done our best. Originality can not be claimed for a production of this character, notwithstanding the labor and thought bestowed upon it. We wish to express our thanks to all those who have in any way assisted us, and in an especial manner to Doctor H. A. Smith, Doctor Frank Burger, and Doctor Jeremiah D. Gordon. THE EDITORS. 7 4 l '1 J-ll IT lll Editor-in-Chief, - - - H. E. DAVIS . .25 .29 Literary Editors : PAUL CASSIDY, YC. E. HUTCHINSON A. J. HIBSCHDIAN, A JAMES E. E. MORRISON. .al .29 Business Editors: W. F. O'DoNNELL, .29 .29 Managing Editors: G. M. BACHELOR .29 .95 Art Editors: E. J. LANG. ii Deceased . S R. F. HALE, E. B. TIZZARD J. H. RARDON C. V. POLLOCIQ. 3' Deceased. E. B. TIZZARD. J. E. E. MORRISON. G. M. BACHELOR. C. V. POLLOCK. W. F. O'DONNELL. R. F. HALE. H. E. DAVIS. A. j. HIBSCHMAN E. j. LANG. PAUL CASSIDY. j. H. RARDON. 4: C. E. HUTCHINSON. 9 THE UNIVERSITY BUILDINGS, 1900, Iz l ,. L1 ! 5, S HANNA CHEMICAL HANNA HALL MCMICKEN CUNNINGHAM VAN LABORATORY 1896 HALL HALL womvuzx x896 1895 1899 LIBRARY 1900 IO pyyigiypyyiyiya ezasgageggggs?-Siegigsgsgegegigigeggkq x 0 DR. JAMES TAYLOR, FOUNDER OF THE COLLEGE, . QW W W WH am-- N W 1 M Mqxw N . v,.,v H., :.A 1 -Eqi,, .,,:: ,:'f.-....,1E fzf Qn::1g: -frv -::--,:- eea: A1.'a',:-f::.:'. -:-,-.,....:1.f.51QfQif:: V L' W . 1 , , ' N V' ji3'f'f'E fziigjijlf? :: NM . ' SQ L ' ,,.V,.,L HW , N Q ll Fix i .v fp W 11 eg. yr ' ' L ,- ' N, X. -gnu . .!. ,, M ' ' M ! .'m1MlU X' 11, '5M11rmWf 1 WW --vfv uv'If VIN A f .- ' x Q 'F' U y+llHMww5WfW1f M F N- -:mph 1, w 1f 7 W P . W i W W' , pm N Uldpr W rt m r 3 Q um fl f + W ri 1 F f ' HWM V V114 .L mms mn COLLE 4 , .ml aw sl? tl 'IMI 1 , j'L ' 1 ' GEO 'HW mJ:m l gggi.zu M l m V fl W' ff ff rg! mlm Tig ' M 2w '1 1' f ' , 1 ,Fl W M EFEW f K 5-M N1 W lWM 3ful iw 'fr' M M 1-1 E L f U ' Q UN W'!'I W Viv 3 , Lv L Q, 1 L 1:2 1, f 'IQ . Mm mi M- -H, ' I F ' M' l 51','?a!,,wW!Ny:-w Llf' Egwyil W ' NW ,u Ig f E W ML ,W- Y 51 TUMWW ,Ju H WW ,ru-.Q WW E - Nif -I ' 5059 Ml M f?f W 2if EW 1 - Mgu w h . H, 3535353 ! : wvw gl wr- ,,,:,B .F V 15 1s.,:i1 :I ,,.. mmm' 'Sf K 1 :. J- , R UEW L - - f ,, ,,,! -'ff' W r '4 1' W WWW Wu. 'W W W 092. ' .'Qgg22ggg4gg14:2g?i,6.- -ggggegegf-H--2 -1- -2-2-H-ag: - N-i-S.-S-S-'S.-'i-E-m- '-S-i-i-'Q-miQfwfgfEfQ?E?Efi'S-we II X Cgllege Qf i CHE ohio couege of Dental Surgery was established in Cincinnati in 1845, largely through the efforts of the late Dr. James Taylor, its nrst President. Founded at Dental Department ofthe U . .t f Ci Cinmti that time it became the pioneer of Dentistry 1'l1VCI'Sl y O D in the West and was the second College of FOUNDED 1845 i Dentistry established in the World. Early in its history the College erected its own building on College Street, which it occupied continuously for nearly half a century, sending out, each year, men who became pioneers and teachers of Dentistry in this and other countries. It has conferred the Degree in Dentistry upon nearly three thousand persons. In 1895 it was decided that the College had outgrown its old quarters, and the school was moved to its present building on Central Avenue and Court Street. In 1888 the College was affiliated with the University of Cincinnati, assuming, in addition to its old name, that of the Dental Department of the University of Cincinnati. The College is co-educational, having in 1865 conferred the degree upon the first woman graduated in Dentistry. The College is situated in the center of a densely peopled city, drawing from a population of more than half a million people for its clinical material. The clinics are made a feature of the College teaching, and the careful supervision which they have received for many years, gives an iniirmary practice not surpassed anywhere in the country, The building occupies a prominent corner, ninety by one hundred feet, in a city of the nrst class, to which a large student population is attracted each year by the reputation of its professional schools. The Ohio Dental College shares in this good reputation and in the preparations and accommodations which are made for these students. The building, with improvements that are made from year to year, is found especially well adapted for teaching purposes, and the College takes rank among the first modern Dental Educational Institutions. I2 COL LEGE OAL R Q 57,5 IQO2 SEPTEMBER 8, Morzday, Opening of the Fall Clinical Course. OCTOBER 7, T uesday, Academic year begins. Registration of Students. Opening Lectures of the Winter Session. NOY7EB'lBER 27, Thursday, Thanksgiving Day, a holiday. DECEMBER 16, Tuesday, Mid-Term Examinations begin. CHRISTMAS RECESS from December 20, IQO2, to January 5, 1903. 1903 JANUARY 5, Morzday, Lectures resume, 8:30 a. m. Second half year begins. APRIL 23, T hursday, Final Examinations begin. APRIL 30, Thursday, Examination of Clinical Work for prizes. MAY 2, Saiurday, Examination Returns announced to Senior class. MAY 6. Wedrzesday, Faculty Supper to Graduating Class. MAY 7, Thursday, Alumni Association Meeting, IO a. rn., Taylor Hall. Coni- niencement at Robinsonis Theater, 8 p. ni. MAX' 8, Friday, Opening of the Spring Clinical Course. - SEPTEMBER 7, Morzday, Opening of the Fall Clinical Course. 13 Board of Trustees of the hio ollege of Dental Surgery OFFICERS. D. W. CLANCEY, M. D., D. D. S., 'VICE-PRESIDENT. C. I. KEELY, D. D. S., SECRETARY. H. T. SMITH, D. D. S., TREASURER. MEMBERS. JAMES 1. TAYLOR, D. D. S., - - W. -STORER How, D. D. S.. H. A. SMITH, D. D. S.. - - c. 1. KEELY, D. D. S., J. W. CLANCEY, D. D. S., - - D. XCHARLES WELCH, D. D. S., - - H. T. SMITH, D. D. S., - - WDECEASI-:D I4 S. CASSIDY, D. D. S., - - Cor. 7th and Elm Streets - - Philadelphia, Pa. - No. 116 Garfield Place - - Hamilton, Ohio - - Covington, Kentucky Cor. 7th and john Streets - - - Wilniington, Ohio - - No. 116 Garfield Place N, ff' dm THE FACULTY wtf ,gjg T5 M i The Faculty HENRY A. SMITH, A. M., D. D. S., DEAN. A M., Miami University, Oxford, Ohiog D.D.S., Ohio College of Dental Surgery, 1858 5 President Amer- ican Dental Association, 1882 5 President Nation- al Association of Dental Faculties, 1894 5 Demon- strator Operative and Prosthetic Dentistry, Ohio College of Dental Surgery, 18605 Professor of Operative Dentistry and Special Pathology, Ohio College of Dental Surgery, 1879. JAMES S CASSIDY, A M , M D., D. D. S. CYRUS MANSFIELD NVRIGHT, A. M., D. . A M., St. Xavier's College, Cincinnati, 18935 M. D., B. S., Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, 18605 A. M- Washiiigtoii University, Hospital fnow the Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeonsj, Baltimore, 1871 5 D. D. S., Ohio College of Dental Surgery, 18695 EX-President Mississippi Valley Dental Association, EX-President Kentucky State Den- tal Association 5 Ex-President Odontological So- ciety of Cincinnati 5 Chairman for five years of the Section of Materia Medica and Therapeutics, American Dental Association 5 Professor of Chem- istry, Ohio College of Dental Surgery, 1872, Professor of Chemistry and Materia Medica, Ohio College of Dental Surgery, 1878. Present Presi- dent Kentucky State Dental Association. Qhonoraryj, Miami University, 18925 D. D.S., Ohio College of Dental Surgery, 1867 5 one of the five founders of the American Dental Society of Europe, at the Rigi, Switzerland, 18735 honor- ary member of the New York Odontological Society, 18765 EX-President Ohio State Dental Society 5 EX-President Mississippi Dental Society5 EX-President Cincinnati Dental Society5 Profes- sor of Mechanical Dentistry and Metallurgy Ohio College of Dental Surgery, 1870 to 1872- Professor of General Pathology and Physiology Ohio College of Dental Surgery, 1884. 1 1 1 f-z.......s.... C. M. WRIGHT, A. M., D. D. S. WM. KNIGHT, M. D., D, D. S. H H. T. SMITH, D. D. S , Skcffflary, J. S. CASSIDY, A. M., M. D., D. D. S. SMITI-I, A. M., D. D. S., Dean, GRANT MOLYNEAUX, D. D. S T. I. WAY, D. D. S., Sznjzerzhlmdelzl. 17 The WILLIAM KNIGHT, M. D., D.D.s. M D., Medical College of Ohio, 18765 D. D. S., Ohio College of Dental Surgery, 18875 Demonstrator of Anatomy, Ohio College of Dental Surgery, 1884-87 5 member American Medical Association5 member Ohio State Medical Association 5 member of Cincinnati Academy of Medicine 5 Professor of Anatomy and Oral Surgery, Ohio College of Den- tal Surgery, 1887. HENRY TOMLINSON SMITH, D. D. S. Graduated NVoodward High School, Cincinnati, 1885: D. D. S., Ohio College of Dental Surgery, 1888 5 Demonstrator of Analytical Chemistry, 1890-975 Secretary of Faculty, 1890-1902 5 Professor of Clinical Operative Dentistry, 1895-1902 5 member of National, State, and local Dental Societies. Faculty GRANT MOLYNEAUX, D. D. S. D. D S., Ohio College of Dental Surgery, 1883 5 Dem- onstrator of Prosthetic Dentistry, Ohio College of Dental Surgery, under Professor F. Bell, 18835 Demonstrator of Anatomy, Ohio College of Den- tal Surgery, under Dr. Knight, 18845 Secretary of Ohio State Board of Dental Examiners, 1892, Ex-President Cincinnati Odontological Society5 EX-President Ohio State Dental Society5 Ex- President Mississippi Valley Dental Society 5 Pro- fessor of Prosthetic Dentistry, Ohio College of Dental Surgery, 1887. T. IRVINC1 VVAY, D. D. S. D. D. S , Ohio College of Dental Surgery, 18945 Dem- onstrator of Operative Dentistry, Ohio College of Dental Surgery, 1894-955 appointed Superinten- dent of Clinic, Ohio College of Dental Surgery, 18965 Professor of Dental Technics, Ohio Col- lege of Dental Surgery, 1899. SPECIAL LECTURERS. C. I. KEELY, D.D.S., Hamilton, O. Lecturer on Ortlioclontia. 7 L. E. CUSTER, B.s., D.D.s., , Dayton, O. Lecturer on Dental Electricity. 19 O. L. CAMERON, M.D, II NV. Ninth Street. Instructor in Bacteriology :gif Q ' ' i . Q ggei., DEMO NSI RATO RS , gAI,g .i. 5 ' 4333 65-f-f f f f 51- 5'f?flvI---jg ' i1'4'- xf.'h-.Sasiwf f---- um:-.-.-: .-::: -.-1. --.-. - 1fn:-:-:-L-1-'.-::-A.. - --.-: 1:1-.-sm '.-.-.- :v.-. -rzzv . .-,-.-.- 1-. f,-.- .:,:: . .-:: I OF THE Clinical and Laboratory Departments T, I. VVAY, D. D. S., H. E. CASVVELL, D. D. S., SUPERINTENDENT OF OLINIOS AND OF INSTRUCTION IN OPERA- W DEMONSTRATOR OF PROSTHETIC DEM-,S-I-RY, TIVE TEOI-INICS. E. A. MEHAFFDY, D. D. S., H- C- MATDACR, D- D- S-Y DEMONSTRATOR OF CROWN AND BRIDGE-WORK AND OPERATIVE CONSULTING ORAL SURGEON CINCINNATI HOSPITAL. DEMON DENTISTRY. STRATOR OF ANATOMY. FRANK BURGER, D- D- S-I DAVID STERN, B. S., D. D. S., DEMONSTRATOR OF ORTI-IODONTIA AND INSTRUCTOR IN EXTRAC- ' .HON OF TEETH- DEMONSTRATOR OF ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY. A- N- KEARBY, D- D. S., W. O. HULICK, D. D. S., DEMONSTRATOR OF OPERATNE DENDSTRY' DEMONSTRATOR OF PORCELAIN DENTAL ART. .D. GORDON, D. D. S., J A. G. ROSE, D. D. S., DEMONSTRATOR OF PROSTHETIC DENTISTRY AND INSTRUCTOR IN PROSTHETIC TECHNICSA CURATOR OF MUSEUM AND LIBRARIAN. 20 1 W. O. HULICK, D. D. S. DAVID STERN, B. A. N. KEARBY, D. D. S. H. C. MATLACK, j. D. GORDON, D. D. 5. 21 s., D. D. s. E. A. Mm-mway, D. D. s. H. E. cAsw1aLL, D D. D. s. FRANK BURGER, D. D. s. ectoloqy HARLES EDGAR HUTCHINSON of Welch West Vlfglllla d1ed at the C111c1n11at1 Pres Q b3te1'1a11 Hosp1tal Tuesday 111O1'1l1I10' at 7 o clock Marcl1 1otl1 1903 from typl1o1d P11El.l11101112l He was a natwe of Lester Rale1gh Count3 West Vlfglllla Where l1e was born May 3rd 1872 H15 earl1er l1fe was spent 111 f2l1'll11110' He I'6CC1V6Cll11S CdLlC3tlO11 111 tl1e d1str1ct schools succeechng at tl1e ave of seventeen 111 pass1n0f a teacher s 6X2i111l1121t1Ol1 Wl11ch pursu1t l1e followed several years teach111g 111 Rale1gl1 Fay ette and Mercer COl11llI16S He attended the Concord State Normal School at Athens West V1rg1n1a from uh1cl1 he graduated 111 June 1900 Was 111arr1ed soon after to Mlss Bla11che Cool. a 1ne111ber of the same Parl.ersburg West Vlfglllla where he began l11s chosen profess1o11 and lll the fall of the same year l1e entered the Oh1o College of Dental Surgery He was a 111e111ber of the Co11cord Lodge No 48 A If a11d A M at Athens West V11 0111121 The PS1 Omega Frater111ty The C0!1JLl0'1l1111 C011-1L11lCtlO1l Club a L1terary Ed1tor of tl1e Aletl11a11 a Me111ber a11d H1stor1a11 of the class of 1903 He 15 SllI'VlVCCl by h1s lOV11lg' vufe daughter Mlldred a11d son Charles Edgar Was b11r1ed111 Mt Ol1ve Cemetery Parkersburg West X7lTCflll121 H E D Q 1 1 1 Q' O 1 , S . b, l 1 1 1 - ' . , Y: 1 ' N 7 y n , , Y . . D. . . . . 1 - 1 C 1 zz, ' 1 . , ' I ' y ' , . y C , . . . , J . , . . .N 7, 5 class. In the surnm-er of 1900, l1e e11tered the office of his brother, Dr. L. W. Hutchinson, of , l 5 . . . y V . V I , u x , . , . A. I ., . , . . ' a 1 3 Q C, Q S l . .1 .Q I . 7- , 1 D , 5 O 0 , , D, . g . . . . 22 f s 5 ' , J Q ff N Classes f n L Ode to Class of ,og -Q i , l If 5 ,1 i N . i l I ill lf bi , M If p f H cf Q N , l A . t Q 5' YVe came from far and distant lands At making teeth to try our hands. It took some time our choice to make, To which profession we should takeg Few and many We talked about, But dreams are dremp't, the pipe is out. To get along content with fame Instead of chink, was why we came. ,Twas Wise for some this choice we inadeg But others have too much essayed. The die is cast! O, joy! The bliss! That now at last we are dentists. Commencement night half full of gin, Vtfith faces bright We'll sit and grin, Not thinking what's in store for usg We mzlghzt be some important cuss Say -in about ten years from now, We may be following a plow! Excuse me, please, for writing so, For I ani smoking bad tobacco. A 24 f.H.R Colors .- Old Gold and Purple. UECEASED - gf 'ax 1-: ' I - s CD1 fr lil Flower: Al1lG1'lCa1l Beauty. Xlfoifo .' We Strive to CoI1queI Ye!! .- Who are, who are, who are we? 'We are, we are, we are the P-e-o-p-l-e, O-C-D-S, IQO3. Ojiceffsx D. L. SINGLETON, President. G. M. BACHELOR, , Sergeauts-at-ArII1S, C. H, SCHOTT, Vice-President. R. R. PETERS. F, H. WILLIAMS, Treasurer. PAUL CASSIDY, Class Orator. MISS IENNIE JENKINS, Secretary E HIITCI-IINSON, Class Historian, E. V.. BURNS, Athletic Representative. 25 GEORGE MARION BACHELORQ FRED. ISAAC JACKSON, M1cH1GAN. Entered college in IQOO. Member of Conjugiuin Conjunction Clubg Foot Ball Teanig Alpha Omicron Club Vice-Presi- dent, 1901. Sargent-at-Arnis, IQO2 and IQO3. Editorial Staff, IQO2 and 1903. Nature goes her own way, and all that to us seems an exception is really according to order rl' Q' vt! GOTTLIEB BEROSET, I WAUSEON, OHIO. Entered college in 1899. Re-entered in 1903. Meniber of 4' A X Fraternity. The difficulty is not so great to die for a friend as to find a friend worth dying for. Nl' 129 'S DODD BEST, B. S. MILLERSBURG, KENTUCKY. Entered college in IQOO. Member 9 S2 Fraternity. The noblest mind the 'best' contentment has. 26 JEDDIE DELBERT BECKER, ANGOLA, INDIANA. Entered college in 1900. Member of Alpha Oinieron Club. Slowly and modestly the great in all things is developeclf' S? S? '-2' GEORGE PETER BICHLER, JERRY C111LL1coTHE, OHIO. Entered college, 1900. Member of CO11jllglL1111 Conjunction Club. Member Alpha Omicron Club. They are never alone that are accompanied with noble thoughts. 'Q' Q9 'lg EMERY BLOSSER, HICKSVILLE, O111o. Entered college, 1900. V The sun-shine of life is made up of little beams that are bright all the time. 27 x wg?-'S CHARLES ALBERT BROWN, DAYTON, GHIO. Entered College in I9oo. Member of 9 S2 Fraternity. An effort made for the happiness of others, lifts us above ourselves. Q9 vt! 'S HARVEY THOMAS BROWN, ANGOLA, INDIANA. Entered College in Igoo. Member of Conjugiuin Conjunc- tion Club. Meinber of Alpha Oniicron Club. The measure of life is not length, but honesty. NS ' 129 N8 ANDREW XUALL BOYD, CAMBRIDGE, OHIO. Entered College in 1899. Re-entered in I902. Men of the noblest disposition think themselves happiest when others share their happiness with them. 28 EWING VAN HORN BURNS, TROY, OHIO. Entered College in I9o2. Member of Foot-Ball Club. Mem- ber of 4' S2 Fraternity. Dental Students, Representative in the Athletic Council of the University of Cincinnati. Our greatest glory consists not in never falling, but in rising every time we fall. Q9 wt' '-2' ROBERT CLAYTON CAMERON, JEWELL, OHIO. Entered College in IQOI. Member of Conjugium Conjunction Club. Member of 4' SZ Fraternity. Such charms by nature you possess, 'twere folly not to like you. 1? Q9 22? GARFIELD CANON, STONEBORO, PENNSYLVANIA. Entered College in Iooe. Member 9 S2 Fraternity. Member of Baseball Team, 1903. In every thing he did, he put his Whole heart and soul. 29 L1 ,I .... . .QW V. PAUL CASSIDY, B, A., , C0v1NG'1'0N, KY. Entered College in IQOO. Member 4' 52 Fraternity. Ifresident 1 Class, 1900. Staff Alethian, 1902. Literary Editor Alethian, 1903. Class Orator, 1903. 'Persuasive speech, and more persuasive sighs 3 Silence that spoke, and eloquence of eyes 4' Q' '-2' FORDYCE HERMAN CHAPMAN, SPENCER, WEST YVIRGINIA. Entered college in 1900. Meniber 1,0 S2 Fraternity. Member of Band, 1901-02. He is always in haste, but never in a hurry. wt' Q' QP WILLIA M EDWARD CHESTER, C111LL1c0T11E, 01110. Enter ed college in 1900. Member of Alpha Oinicron Club. He does well, acts nobly 3 angels can do no n10re.'l 30 EDWARD HARVEY CLARKSON, JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA. Entered college in IQOO. Member 4' S2 Fraternity. I 'Wl1OSG inborn worth his acts CO1111l1G11Cl, Of gentle heart, to every one a friend. fl' wt? wt? GEORGE EVANS COLLINS, FLEMINGSBURG, KENTIICKV. Entered college in IQOO. Member 99 S3 Fraternity. Member of Mandolin Club. Y Studious to please yet not ?lSll2l1116Cl when he fails '-F Q9 S GILBERT ELLSWORTH CGNROY, DETROIT, ILLINOIS. Entered college in IQOO. Member of Mandolin Club. Member Alpha Qmicron Club. True as the needle to. the pole, or as the dial to the sun 'l SI ELLERY CHANNING COX, CINCINNATI, 01110. Entered college in 1900. The best prophet of his future is his past. '-P Q? Q' JAMES OGDEN CRUTCHER, WINCHESTER, KENTUCKY. Entered College in 1900. Whose yesterdays look backwards with a smile. 4' '-P rl' HENRY ELMER DAVIS, BLOOMINGTON, ILLINOIS. Entered College in 1895. Re-entered in 1897. Re-entered l11.IQO2. Member 4' Sl Fraternity. Meniber of Conjugiuin Conjunction Club. Editor-in-Chief of Alethian, 1903. Wise to resolve and patient to perform 32 EDGAR HORACE EBERLE, CHILLICOTHE, OHIO. Entered College in IQOO. Member Of Alpha Ornicron Club One of the mildest manners and the gentlest heart. 18 Q9 Q! ABRAHAM EISENMAN, CINCINNATI, OHIO. Entered College in IQOO. He had talents equal to his business, and aspired no higher Q9 Q' if BERT JEFFERSON EDWARDS, NAPOLEON, OHIO. Entered College in 1902. Toil, says the proverb, is the sire Of fame. 33 Iv' 9 I Zia if , :jf .1 1 il fi I 4 -1 1 JULIUS BANTLIN ELLISON, WEST UNION, OHIO. Entered college in 1901. Member 9 -Q .Fraternity. Member of Base Ball Club 1901-02 and IQO2-03. He lives twice who can at once employ The present well, and e'en the past enjoy. X? wt? '-2' EDWARD BLOOS ESHMAN, CINCINNATI, OH10. Entered college in 1900. Member of Alpha Oniicron Club. He is 0118 who is always enjoying the luxury of doing good l' 'fl' '-P Q9 GEORGE STANLEY EVANS, DELAWARE, OHIO. Entered college in 1900. Member of W A X Fraternity. Diligence ever increaseth the fruit of toil. 34 3, iii I i I 3 1 I,- lf? If V.. ig ,,. if 'e ,. ROBERT EDVVARD FISHBACK, PINE GROVE, KENTITCICY. E11tered college in IQOO. Member 4' S! Fraternity. He dare do all that may become a man g who dares do more, is none ' Q' wt? H29 BRUCE DAVID FLAUGHER, CINCINNATI, OHIO. Entered college in IQOI. Member df 52 Fraternity. A fair exterior is a sure, though silent, recommendation Sl' Q' Q9 HARRY CHARLES FRAYER, ST. PAUL, MINNESOTA. Entered college in IQOO. Member W A A' Fraternity. Mem ber O. C. D. S. Band, I9OI-O2-O3. A little nonsense now and then, is relished by the wisest men. 35 JOHN CARSON GOW, ' WHEELING, WEST VIRGINIA. Entered College, IQOO. Member df Q Fraternity. Excellence is not matured in a day, and the cost of it is an Old storyf' Q9 wt? Q9 HENRY IRVING GRIMES, PITTSFIELD, ILLINOIS. Entered College, IQOO. Member df S2 Fraternity. Member of Conjugium Conjunetion Club. Kindness is the golden chain by which society is bound togetherf' 1? Q9 S? AGUSTUS RAYMOMD HAMMERLE, HAMILTON, OHIO. Entered College, I902. Member W A fl' Fraternity. The truly generous is the truly wise. 36 WILBER ELLIS HOFFHINES, ASHVILLE, OHIO. Entered College, IQOI. Member of CO11jLlglU111 Conjunction Club. He has a heart with room for every joy. '49 '-S' Q9 JOHN RANDOLPH HOFFMAN, BELLEFONTAINE, 01-IIO. Entered College, 1901. The gentle mind by gentle deeds is knownf, 129 SS' Q9 XVILLIAM ARTHUR HOLTZ, - GREENSPRING, QHIO. Entered College, 1901. Me1nber 4' Q Fraternity. The most manifest sign of wisdom is continued Cl'1C61'f1ll116SS.U 37 1.2. ' ...NA .- --f, 1: .f,, .-Nwsti-.-1-w 13: M fww 5 9 I ! 1 i i i 5 5 -i s P 1... .l 15' 'I , . i 1 E if l . XCHARLES EDGAR HUTCHINSON, PARKERSBURG, WEST V1RG1N1A. Entered college in 1900. Member df SZ Fraternity. Member of Conjugium Conj.unction Club. Literary editor Alethian, 1903. Historian of Class 1903. Ile was noble in every thought and every cleefl Nl' 12? Q9 JANE DELSWORTH JENKINS, IR0NT0N, OHIO. Entered college in 1900. Secretary of Class IQOI-O2-O3. A clock serves to point out the hours, and sweet woman to make us forget themf' Q9 Q9 Q9 ARTHUR GARFIELD JOHNSON, . CALDVVELL, OH10. Entered college in 1901. Member 9 Q Fraternity. The more we do, the more We can dog the more busy we are, the more leisure we have EEQDECEASED 38 L og i RALPH KIMMEL KEMPER, A CHURCHVILLE, WES'L' VIRGINIAX, Entered college in IQOO. Member Alpha Omicron Club. M 1' An honest man is able to speak for himself, when a knave is not. I '-F Q' Q9 b FRANK LEIGHTON KINNISON, HURRICANE, WEST VIRGINIA. Entered college in IQOI. dv . . . An 111VCStII16I1t 111 knowledge always pays the best interest. Q9 Q9 'S CHARLES FREDERICK KIRKLAND, B. C. S. HUDSON, INDIANA. Entered college in IQOO. Member Alpha Omicron Club Member Mandolin Club. The feeling of gratitude has all the ardor of passion in noble heartsf EDWARD JOHN LANG, CINCINNATI, OH1o. Entered College, 1900. Member Q A fl' Fraternity. Member Mandolin Club. Member Football Club. Art Editor of Alethian, 1903. To me more dear, congenial to my heart, One native charm, than all the gloss of art? Q? 18 rl? A BENNIE ALBERT LONG, KNOX, PENNSYLVANIA. Entered College, 1900. Member 4' S2 Fraternity. The friends thou hast, and their adoption tried, Grapple them to thy soul with hooks of steel. Q9 '-P'-Z9 MARION LOWER, NEW ALEXANDER, OH10. Entered College, IQO2. Member Alpha Omicron. Club. Man is a thinking being, whether he will or no 3 all he can do is to turn his thoughts the best way. 40 CHARLES HERBERT MCCALL, PORTSMOUTH, OHIO. Entered College, 1901. Member fl' -92 Fraternity. The 'best portion of a 1I1Ell1,S life-his little, nameless, unremembered acts Of kindness and of love. Q9 fl' Q9 HUGH CLARR MCCLELLAND, I GOSHEN, OHIO. Entered College, 1901. Member W A A' Fraternity. Member Mandolin Club. Member Baseball Club. Humor, warm and all embracing as the sunshine, bathes in a genial and abiding light. Q' HS SS FRANK AYRES MOCULLOUGH, TROY, OHIO. Entered College, 1902. We grant, although he had much wit, He was very shy of nsing it. 41 THOMAS WILLIAM MQFADDEN, NEW VIENNA, OHI0. Entered college in 1900. Member Base Ball Club. Member Foot Ball Club. ' Life that is spent in giving pleasure, The gauge of time can never measure. Q' 18 QP ABRAM BULLARD MCKAGUE, TEESWATER, ON'IjARI0, CANADA. Entered college in 1900. To know that which before us lies in daily life is the prime wisdom. Q? Q9 18 ' GAVIN WILLIAM MQMILLAN, B. A., MORNING SUN, OHIO. Entered College in 1901. Member 0 A .l' Fraternity. The greatest ends of life are best gained by him who in all his con- duct is animated by love. ' 42 1 1 I I 4 I 1 . 5, ,J f , yy!! I GEORGE LEROY MALLETT, DEFIANCE, QHIO. Entered college in 1900. Member il' S2 Fraternity. U The most manifest Sign of wisdom iS continued cheerfulness Q' 11' Q' ROBERT GUY MORRIS, OLNEY, ILLINOIS. Entered college in 1900. VVhen a man has not a good reason for doing a thing, he has one good reason for letting it alone Q9 Q9 Q' BALDWIN MORROW, , RIVER FALLS, WISCONSIN. Entered college in IQOI. Member W A --Y Fraternity. - Politeness has been well deiined as benevolence in Small things. ' 43 2 , , .. . 5 . ,,,---' ' Pi 'Q if ' .. IIILC' 'Iii 'W'-f'.'fif 'ff rea, '-QM-I 9 HARRY JOSEPH MORLIDGE, A NEWPORT, KENTUCKY. Entered college in 1900. Member 4' S2 Fraternity. UA friend received with thumps upon the backf' if Q9 wi! ARTHUR CLARENCE MUSGRAVE, M. D., TOLEDO, OHIO. Entered college in 1901. Member Q A A' Fraternity. Member Alpha Omicron Club. Member Conjugium Conjunetion Club. When firmness is sufficient, rashness is unnecessary. Q9 Q? if ' GEORGE N ERISH, CINCINNATI, OHIO. Entered college in IQOI. Member W A A' Fraternity. Member Mandolin Club. Member Alpha Omicron Club. In head replete with thoughts of other meng VVisdom in minds at- tentive to their own. A 44 WILLIAM FRANCIS ODONNELL, CINCINNATI, 0HI0. Entered college in 1900. Member Base Ball Club. President junior Class 1902. Business Editor of Alethian I903. What Time hath scanted men in hair, he giveth them in Wit. Q9 Q7 rl' ROSCOE ETHWOLD PEELE, B. S., WILMINGTON, OHIO. Entered college in 1901. Member Q A fl' Fraternity. He who reigns within himself, and rules passions, desires and fears is more than a king. QP vi' Q9 RUSSEL RAY PETERS, LANCASTER, OHIO. Entered college in 1900. Like the sun's reiiection glowing, He makes every heart tl1r0b blissfully. 45 il fi ia El 1 1 .., ROBERT ERNST PLATH, ALBANX', M1NNEsoTA. Entered college in 18985 re-entered 1901. Member 41 A A' Fraternity. Member Alpha Omicron Club E Who mixed reason with pleasure, And wisdom with mirth 5 If he had any faults, l1e left us in doubt Q! QP wt? EVERETTE HUNTER PRICE, LYNN, INDIANA. Entered college in 1900. Member df S2 Fraternity. Member Mandolin Club. To those who know thee not, no words can paint 3 And those who know thee, know all words are faint NP Q9 129 JOHN EVERETTE PRICE, PARKERSBERG, WEST VIRGINIA. Entered college in IQOO. Member Mandolin Club. Member Base Ball Club. lf there is a virtue in the World at which we should always aim, it is cheerfulness 46 Z JAMES HARRY RARDON, CINCINNATI, OI-IIo. Entered college in IQOO. Member fP I4 .Y Fraternity. Meni- ber Foot Ball Club. Managing Editor Alethian, IQO3. If solid happiness We prize, Within our breast this jewel lies, And they are fools who roam. wt' S8 Q? ARCHIE JITE ROSE, KNOX, PENNSYLVANIA. Entered college in Igoo. Meinber df SZ Fraternity. Member of Band. If a man has a right to be proud of anything, it is of a good action done as it ought to be. Q 1 Q HARRY ELBERT RUDMAN, RAVENSXVOOD, NVEST YTIRGINIA. Entered college in IQOO. - His heart was one of those which most CHZUIIOLII' ns,-wax to receive, and marble to retain. 47 I l I 7 rf X I nl 1 HARRY MALTBY ROGERS, TROY, OHIO. Entered college in IQO2. Member df 9 Fraternity. Silence is deep as Eternity g speech is shallow as Time, wt? Q? wk? FRANK GEORGE SANDKER. CINCINNATI, OHIO. Entered college in 1901. NO pleasure is comparable to the standing upon the vantage-ground of truth. Q Q9 Q9 Y? WILLIS FRENCH SANFORD, . ALLIANCE, OHIO. Entered college in 1900. A flickering ray of sunshine 48 CARLOS HENRY SCHOTT, HARRISON, OHIO. 1 Entered college in 1900. Member W H X Fraternity. Member of Band. Vice-President class 1903. The true hero is the great Wise man ,of duty. Nl' Q9 Nl? JOHN WILSON SHAFEER, HAIVIILTON, INDIANA. Entered college in 1900. Member of Alpha Omicron Club. Promise is most given when the least is said. Q9 N29 28' DICKSON LEE SINGLETON, BEAVER, PENNSYLVANIA. Entered college in 1901. Member W A X Fraternity. Presi- dent class 1903. A Nothing can make avrnan truly great but being truly good. 49 ORVIS SINGMASTER, Q WASHINGTON, IOVVA. Entered college in 1900. Member Q S? Fraternity. Vice- President of Class, 1900. Great thoughts, great feelings came to him, Like instincts, unawaresf' 4 H29 vi? JAY WALTER STROH, B. C. S, FREMONT, INDIANA. E11tered college in 1900. Member of Band. Member of Base Ball Club, IQOI-O2. He could songs conceive and well inditef' vi' 129 '49 ALLEN DENNIS SULLIVAN, COVINGTON, KENTUCKY. Entered college in 1901. Member W A X Fraternity. Me1n- ber Conjugium Conjunction Club. The heart to conceive. the understanding to direct, the hand to execute 50 WILLIE ILDO TATE, K0K0M0, INDIANA. Entered college in 1902. Happy am I 5 from care I'm free ! Why ar'n't they all contented like me? if Q' WF SIDNEY RAPER TEASDALE, BATAv1A, 01110. Entered college in 1901. Member Q A X Fraternity. It is the mind that makes the man, and our vigor is in our immortal soul. Q? Q9 Q' ALVIN VERDEN WATKINS, DEMANCE, O1110. Entered college in 1900. Member 4' S2 Fraternity. It is not the number of facts he knows, but how much of 21 fact he is himself, that proves the man. 51 r i se: ff g Ja I NATHA N MARION WEST, H1LLSBoRo, OH1o. Entered college in 1900. Member Mandolin Club. He possessed a peculiar talent of producing effect in whatever he said or did, 12' Q9 12' FRED HERBERT WILLIAMS, RAY W GALLIPOLTSy OHIO. Entered college in 1900. Member fp A X Fraternity. Member Band. Vice-President Class 1902. Treasurer Class 1903. A man who makes no noise over a good deed, but passes on to anothei as a vine to bear grapes again in season. xv Q? wt? Q' OLFE, LANCASTER, OH1o. Entered college in 1901. Happy, who in his life can gently steer From grave to light, from pleasant to severe. 52 71 , xgh w f .1 'fs-'Ju' f Q1 K ., ' va?-4 rj fu rw 1-:miie ' S ,F 4 v 924 -:fat-,ts 'I aral . L 5' 6' .-,n., :5. A 4 - 4-' Q21- Here's to the night of co1n1nencen1e11t With all its sorrows and joys 5 Our hearts are full of contentment That the goal is reached at last, The object of our energies In the three years that have past. Three years-'tis a day 5 in the end Something has been accomplished If We have only made a friend. Our hearts are Hlled with sorrow That these glad hours with our classmates, Shall be dead and gone to-morrow. It's novv good bye to everyone, The past is gone, our life's begun. . J. H. R. ss TI-IE FINISI-I TVVO-STEP. Respectfully dedicated to the Class of '03 O. C. D. S. C. E. WISECUP. '04. Tenlpo di lnnreia. P . I: I I I .-.---I-L -ff-11.1 I: V- i.5'Z':i-pigtfigik:q1,.JT73:EQfTiQ..qjQ .-Q -'H'-U-0' W 150'-0-Qjg ,tijfi-gi' 'jE. 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I Z-I 'I' ,jg 'gf ,-'gn 5-gr Ln- r If IE 9-5 uj:t47 -SEI 'Z-E Li E297 Eg- , v , iii a 'O' 'O' -O- fi I -Q--' r ,, r - - - E 4 , ,, +-ff----- - . . . 4441.- UM I:-'T LZSIIQ'-' Ii- isis-I ' 'IF' E53 E? E?-4'-wi s 5 I V' . ' --1 -3- 1 ff- i J 4 H-an ' a--- -l--xJ- -I7 F4- -4-A' , -I I - -Jfrt -I F - -4,461 -I I fa IIL,-'ig-.Lf..l'EI,:g5Ii!1tE!.,TE . :Ti.i9tE:Ig','3g2:, 1 T :li E?v Iitliilf Iii 1-A-4. A-4-A-I 134-4- 5---Q! 515- SZ! 5-5-U 51.-I ning- rn-q r-j A-:He-4 rsugz. ,In-'vig-9--To-l fl- 'igl 5 J L:-'E 51 ,-If E 534113 e-f ff? 5 La'-EE-EQFQF: ? ' If! ' W Class yell may be omitted. Iz 5 - - , II I - I i R T -5 f EI? J J-. A J' IA J-II? J -JSI?-7-J-1-A !.EQLa--a-J-T-E41-2-A-2'--' 3-S-fn I-5 Whoare, who are, who are we, We are, we are, we are the p - e - 0 - p - 1- e, O. C. D. S. nine-teenthree. A i'D ' - ' -'- ' - I: 'I ' ' 4-1 . if 9 Q I I I , I E I E- --L, - li -0- -0- -0- -0- l7 --9:41-'I::':4T-:HI Q.. L 1-.I ', p - -4: In 4r.47:'it: ! 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I.. -Q- -Pr - A --15:21---l Tiki '-I- 1 ' - af-E-ij-QQII I -Li-eifg--EIQI-1I-E-----1-wg-f--1-11 --W I---?lI+-I-ag,a1-2fI5?-j- I--W' .Q Zip 1 + 1+ -QE'-:iii ISL-f-1 -- g'gX KPWNQN 'D 5, :Q iw? . ,, ...,. ., .::..,.,,. . 1 .,,,- ,- - A: 'x l an -1 1- - :-'f xailj I W' HAT perplexities and doubts torment the mind of a class historian, no one that has not had the tagk can appreciate. What to say and what to leave unsaid, are appalling questions, but how to say nescio quid is one before which all adjec- tives must fall back abashed, and admit this in- adequacy to express its bewildering and madden- ing qualities. The history of the class of IQO3 of the Ohio Dental College has been very much like the other classes, which have preceded us, hence the history should be writ- ten just as the history, of the other classes, i. e., there should be, first, announcement of the fact that the members of this class are better than any one else, and they are bet- ter, as records will show, and why they are better 5 and second, some account of what these superior beings have to do and what they have done in the past three years. And also, Student's Dream This last is put in to give an idea of how much a grad- uate remembers of what he has learnedQ?j, and as it has hitherto almost invariably had a prominent position accorded it, the present historian has not the courage to omit it. It has only been three years since this class left their happy homes to come to this seat of learning, the O. C D. S., to be developed into professional men as we have been, and we are of a profession today that ranks at the top, and each one of us should be proud that we have a D. D. S. to our names, and doubly proud that the Ohio College of Den- tal Surgery has conferred it upon us. We entered College as freshmen, and began our work by attending all the lectures that could be crowded into a space of about four hours each morning. And then the technical work was something wonderful I The demonstra- tors soon found out the ability of this class, and they there- fore made them perform more work than has ever been known of any class that has gone before. I say, we began by attending lectures, and found that our previous idea of study was one utterly erroneous- One may elsewhere have put an hour or two on a lecture and kept up with his class, but when he begins to put from three to five hours on a lecture and going to class sits with a heart beating fast for fear of being called on in a lecture, he begins to realize what the word study can mean. This is more forcibly impressed upon his mind if he has to answer a question, and forgetting the name of some nerve or artery makes a slight mis-stepg for he then gets hauled over the coals in such a style, that all he has so care- fully gotten up slips from his memory, and to the next Q, su question he most probably answers, I do not know, sn. But why picture the feelings we all know so well. On arriving at College we all made resolutions and set ourselves many rules of study, so as to do a certain amount of study each day and get a certain amount of sleep We found during the first week that this does not work, for after a hard night's study, we sought our not over-co1nfort- able bed when the hours were growing large again, and are just beginning to dream of the home we will not see again for so long-Bang ! W'hir-r-r ! And We have jumped out of bed, frightened about six different colors and looking for the ire engine every minute- But it was only an alarm clock. After a hasty toilet, and coffee and rolls, we get to lecture just after the Professor has called the roll. And there we sit and listen for an hour trying to keep our eyes open and appear interested, atleast. When the time came for examinations that year, we were all there, armed to the teeth and ready for the fray, and whenever one of our number was in distress, the signal only had to be given when there would be any number of his fellow-students right by his side to help him and bear him bravely over the rough places. 'We fought a hard fight in those examinations, but we came out each and every one victorious, and received our certificate entitling us to come back the next fall, if we could raise one hundred dollars by hard toil in the five months' vacation. Our junior year was one of mostly pleasure, We all felt so elated at getting out of the laboratory into the clinics that we took things easy, and went right to operating just as though we had had five years' experience. But we sat on the benches most of the time waiting for Dr. Way to ask us if we would like to work for a patient a short time, and if it didn't suit, it was allright. All we had to say was, I donlt believe I care about working todayft and then you could resume your seat and keep it. Well, we did keep it most of the year, without any Demonstrator bothering us at all , I cannot leave out the pleasure that we enjoyed by being compelled to take the analytical chemistry course, for it was there we met and learned to know that great chem- ist, Dr. David Stern, and also to know and appreciate the value of his assistant, Dr. Plath. It was there where we were baptized, because, I think each one was initiated into that course by a drench of water from a water bottle A The fires and their immediate extinction are worthy of notice g if any combustible material was accidentally ig- nited, there only had to be one call for the fire-department, for it was right there, and immediately there were ten or fifteen streams from the water bottles centered on the fire, and after it was put out, Frayer got the rest of the water in the bottle. It seemed as though Prayer was the recipient of all the water that was not used in the tests, and he was also the incendiary of all fires, which occurred there. We were in that department just long enough to learn to love Dr. Stern, when our course was finished and we had to break the ties that so hrmly bound us to him. And we know he will not find such ire-fighters and natural-born chemists for many a day. The junior year was the banner year for our Society- Menf' they had the swellest young ladies of Cincinnati. During the Freshmen year, and being so busy then, we did not have time to do society justice by lending our presence. S0 we made up for all lost time during the junior year. And to hear some of them relate the swell entertain- ments and receptions given in their honor, was wonderful. When this class graduates and is scattered, I don't know what society in Cincinnati, Covington and Newport will do, because it had to depend upon the Senior class for three years for its society men. And I am afraid the juniors will not be able to fill the vacancies left open by our departure g they can never at- tain to that height of seniority which this class has risen to and which is required. That third year which is called the Senior 'year was spent principally in trying to be dignified, and a more dignified set of Seniors would be hard to ind. It was also in this year that we spent so much of our time in Class Meetings, and had such heated discussions, hats, etc. And I wish to say one word of commendation on the order that was always kept in these meetings, there was never the least bit of feeling shown during the whole number of meetingsg all worked together for the good of the class. The Senior year had almost passed and not one of our number had succumbed toldisease, when on the morning of the tenth of March, it was learned that our fellow-student C. E. Hutchinson, had died at seven o'clock that day, from that dread disease, typhoid fever. Not one of our class could have been taken that his presence would have been missed more than his, and we lose in him a faithful student and a dear friend, as he was a friend to every man in College. He was a man who loved his work, and no doubt if he had lived, would have climbed to the top of our profession. And I feel my incapability of doing this subject jus- tice, because, after he was taken sick, I was asked to write this history in his stead, and I feel that he could have treated this chapter better than your humble servant. But we must pass on to look at the prospects of this benefit to huinanityg and some will stay here in their na- classg the Wonderful achievements they will make in Den- tive State, to carry on the Work that their fathers and fore- tistry. fathers have been doing for many years. When we leave the halls of our Alma Mater this May, It is a great work that each one of us has to do, and no some of us will go to the far West to help build up and ad- class was ever better prepared to do it than the class of Vance our profession in that growing and Wonderful country. 1903 of the Ohio College of Dental Surgery. Some will go to the North and some to the sunny I. D. BEST. South, where they will be a credit to their profession and a C73 M, lex we 1, v V452 LX-Jim Q... 'i wi l' W - -I egg'-9,39 1 I .. .wi E511 'H' i 3 K e N9 ' i'i ,num A, juss! M -N Ssf -:: -rn 1 X, llii X ' .ruff 'if . - az' , xi IIUHIAQUW 59 Colors .- White and Green. Flower .- White Rose. G. H. O. ?Uf 3-5 Mafia .- We have started, to Hnish Ye!! .- Ye!! .- Richman ! Poornian I Lobster ! Stiff ! Pull 'em out, yank e'n1 out, One a-zip ! two a-zip I Three a-zip-a-zani ! ' We are the class What's the diff. Toothache ! Toothache ! Blood and gore ! Who dont give a- Hobblel Gobhlel Rip ! Rip I Roar! O. - C - D. - S., 1904. O. -- C. -D. -S, 1904. Officers .- B. LOYVRY, President. C. V. POLLOCK, Treasurer, L. SCOTT, Vice-President. A. S. DEVORE, Sergeant-at-Arms E. IMIG, Secretary, C. M. GEARHART, Athletic Representative. D. F. ELLISON, Historian. 60 V ,6I' if-A .SAGE ' 2.1.7 Z f Y W , ..- . .,'hEF'2- fri Y .ii 4,,.. , ,L-::f1T55m --- 12- f g , .. FEET? ff, ' ' L JU 1oR HISTORY :L '-'- -4-W ,gee-Y ff-Tan. .A '-:se H '.. x . . ,-- f 2,7 ,.!f -, I H Y i - ,gal gr - T ji 4- .rl '1 ::- ff ,Q W , 1904- NE of the most eventful meetings that has ever been held in the history of the O. C- X D. S. convened October 5th, 1901. Then f M , ' was born the class of 1904. g . During the first part of our second year's seinester we assembled on October 24th, IQO2, and elected G. B. Lowry as class president. He, with his special diplomatic powers and executive ability and with the aid of the other class ofiicers, who always worked in unison, has inade our ineetings ineniorable in the ininds of all. None the less honor and credit is due to our worthy and faithful staff of editors who have put forth their best and undivided efforts to have the ALETIIIAN rank with the productions of the best literary colleges. At the beginning of our college career we formulated and laid the principles of our future greatness, and were praiseworthily nained T he United Class 5 such was be- stowed upon us by Dr. Taylor, who weighs his thoughts as the goldsniith weighs his gold. We practiced the theory, 'tunited we stand, divided we fall, hence our naine K' The United Class. It is not the historian's aini to prevaricate, exaggerate, or insinuate anything of which the Junior Class is in every way worthy, and in enumerating soineiof the merits of this illustrious class the Freshy inay not realize alllthat is amply due the meritorious Junior, because the dark curtain still hangs before hiin unlifted. Neither do the Seniors, with all their air of seniority, realize the iinportance and greatness of this class which is attracting world-Wide attention, and naught but respect for the Seniors causes the educational 62 journals and periodicals to with-hold from publication the J'unior's rapid advancement and achievements in modern science, as well as in Dental Pathology, Materia Medica, and Therapeutics. Oh, Seniors ! How sweet a thing it is to wear a crown. These are but a few of the thousand achievements of the Junior class we care to enumerate. Our object is to give briefly and honestly a few hints taken at random, so that it will lead the reader to a fuller recognition of the peerless worth of this redoubtable class about which he has heard so much, and whose success they have so surely and securely builded. Its deeds and precepts stand out so vividly in the history of the past that they are written indelibly in the minds of men, so that their glory is almost immortal. They really need no historian g neither do they need a poet to sing their praises 5 nor a moralist to rapturously extol their vir- tues. We do not mean that we have not these distinguished personages, for this class has ever been noted for its in- spired poets, profound thinkers, and philanthropists, and has, time and again, elicited earnest expressions of genuine respect because of its exalted character. This present junior Class is the only class within the history of this institution, which by their unerring zeal and magnetism, by their unceasing labor for the right and for suffering humanity, have unconsciously, and yet surely en- hanced the Freshman, so that he is constantly walking in our footsteps and promulgating our glory. Nay, the Senior does not look upon us as an unorganizecl mass of protoplasm as formerly, but they have learned to love, honor and re- spect us. They ask our advice, they bow in humble subju- gation to our wants. No previous Junior Class has ever swayed such an influence among its fellow students. More marvelous still, it has found the Way CT. 1.2 that will lead us to the D. D. S. plain where the field of vision is as un- limited and unbounded as space itself, and Where the paths of glory lead but to the grave. Invincible as this class has been in its college career, it is prone to acknowledge it has lessons to learn, tasks to do, difficulties to overcome. VVe disdain the ridiculous and up- hold that which is beautiful and sublime, and from this sub- limity justice demands we enroll our names on integrity's banner. In possessing this meekness and modesty, we pos- sess the power of true greatness, and the same meekness and modesty which at present deters this class from utter- ing, through its historian, the astounding truths about its existence, which are not characteristic of the other classes, characterizes its entire career. We have a deep realization of the past two years 5 we remember the pleasures and the sorrows 3 we came as strangers to a strange land and are now a band of friends, true and tried. As we have another eventful 'year before us, may we be able to meet not only our own needs but to lend a helping hand g may each one feel within himself that he is soon to be cast upon life's stormy sea, where the angry billows rise and fall. Then let us build well g Hx each spar and sail, anchor well thy hopes, because at yonder port Success awaits us. ' Dorm F. ELLisoN. 1 64 Bachelor, C. D., Beatty, E. R., Boggs, R. C., Bradshaw, C. A., . Bowlby, C. H., . . . Chapin, B. F., . Michigan Pennsylvania . Kentucky . . . Ohio . . . Ohio . . Indiana Christensen, Edgar, W .4 X, Minnesota Clark, QI. F., . . . . Ohio Clark, S. M., . Kentucky Conkle, F. B., c, SZ, .... Ohio Crawford, C. R., 9 53, .... Ohio Devore, A. S., West Virginia Douglas, Theodore, . . . Indiana Dysart, I. E., . . . Ohio Diamond, W. B., . Kentucky Eckstein, Gustav ..... Ohio Eisman, G. I., West Virginia Ellison, D. F., 4' 9 ,... Indiana Emery, C. B., 4' 53, .... Ohio Falknor, F. L., W A X, , Qhio Fenner, Calvin, jr., . . . Ohio Gilles, R. R., 9 9, . . Indiana Goodman, D. K., . . . . Ohio Gordon, I. W., 4' A X. . . Ohio Gregg, V. M., . . . Ohio Grimes, I. A., . Kentucky Glass, A, O., . . . Ohio Gearhart, C. M,, - Ohio unior Class Roll G1-ifmh, D. D, . . Hale, H. L., 41 A X, . Hale, R. F., W H fl, Humphrey, F. A., . Hadley, E. E., . Harris, R. E., . Herr, W. D., . . Hibschman, A. I., 49 .4 Hill, O. C., . . . Hoge, K. M., 9 53, . . Illinois . . Ohio . . Ohio . . Ohio . . Iowa . . Indiana . Kentucky X, . . Ohio W'est Virginia . . . .Ohio D Holbrook, H. H., c, -Q ,... Ohio Holmes, Harold, df SZ, . Pennsylvania Holt, C. P , 4' 53, . . Michigan Howard, J. H., . '. Missouri Huii, Miss S. L., . . Kentucky Huhn, L. S., Q' 53, . Pennsylvania Hunt, V. W., W .4 -V, .... Ohio Imig, O. E., 9 52, . . Wisconsin Kearby, J. G , . . . . Texas Knemoeller, W. F., Q, 53, . . . Ohio Lloyd, D. J., ...... Ohio Lowery, G. B., df SZ, . . . Ohio Morton, F. E , W 14 -V, . . Indiana Motch, Henry, . . . Kentucky Moyer, I. H., . Ohio Neill, J. A., . . . . Ohio Outcalt, W. F , . . . Ohio Peek, c. A., af se, . 65 . . New York Pfouts, O. B. ,..... Ohio Phillips, P. K., 9 S? ,.... Ohio Pollock, C. V., . Pennsylvania Pollitt, C. L., . . . Illinois :KRObinson, M. E., . . Ohio Rush, E. D., . . . Ohio Scott, H. L., 4' 53. . . . Ohio Scott, I. M,, cl' S2 . . . Ohio Scott, S. M., ...... Ohio Shai, J. P., . . West Virginia Shurtz, W. A., . . . . Ohio Shriner, V. R., . . . . Ohio Snodgrass, S. R., 41.4 X, . . . Ohio Srofe, C. E, . . . . . Ohio Stamper, R. C., . Kentucky Smith, E. B., . . . . Ohio Tinsley, R. H., . '. Kentucky Van Osdol, R. C., . . Indiana W'alker, E S., 4' 9 Pennsylvania Waltoii, G, O., W A X, . Kentucky Waltoii, S. G. ,... - . . Ohio WD. M. Weber, ...... Ohio Whallon, Miss Catharine, . . Ohio VVhittaker, I-I. F.,.. Watson, Harry, Whitney, H. S., YVillia1ns, I. M., XfVisecup, C. E., fftPartial, . . Canada . . Ohio . . . Ohio . Kentucky . . . Ohio N n X 'i1Es',l1',mvF:?Nkt, X -Y M -21 I-Qaed a Colors : Red and Wliite. Flower : Red Carnation. 1110.170 : Nemini prosperatias est major quam sibi conatus Ye!! : Calomel, Arsenic, Blood and Pus I 'What the Hiis the matter with ns? 'XVe are in it g strictly alive. O. - C. - D. - S- I9o5. i Ojjifefs : EDXVIN B. TIZZARD, President. CI-IARLES D. M. VVRIGI-IT, Treasurer. XVILLIAM T. WALLACE, Vice-President. L- G. SHAKELQY, Sergeants-at-Arms. CORA B. DAVIES, Secretary, E. V. M. THOMPSON, GUY W. HITLRR, Athletic Representative. T. J. K.NOLL, Historian 66 67 isa I 97 FRE THM HI TTORY J L Of the Class of IQOS, O. C. D. S. 4, ,Sv 'L Behold, ilze co7zgzaering hero comes ! H iN the Sth of October, 1902, a Freshman Class, was i organized in Taylor Hall. Nomination and elections l followed, and soon the class was i11 the hands of able r? l officers. But no sooner was the organization complete than trouble began to brew. Everything seemed to take on X a warlike aspect- even the atmosphere. junior and I Freshman passed in the corridors, glared, and stiffened their sinews, each ready for the brunt of battle. It came during a quiet meeting on October 17th-quiet as the silence that precedes a storm. The class was called to order in Taylor Hall, and had just begun business when a terrible crash came against one of the doors. The juniors had made one of their famous onslaughts. But it proved their lfVaterloo. After a sharp, quick struggle. they were vanquished, thereby establishing the independence and re- spect of this class. Thus our little craft was set adrift in the sea of Student Life, headed for the port of Seniordom As we all know, the life of a Freshman is not a bed of roses, he has his trials and tribulations. He must be able, by the way, to answer all questions fBlack's Anatomyjg to prevent himself from straying into the Operative Clinic via the front door, and, should he succeed in entering as per directions, he is only to remain long enough to receive his letters from home, if any, after which he is to immediately confine himself to the noises of the Prosthetic Laboratory. These are only some of the hardships to which a Freshie is subjected Space will not permit the depiction of all the obstacles that confront him Still it seems that all are satisfied with their lot, even the ladies fGod bless themj, who are among the hardest and most earnest workers of the class. During the subsequent meetings of the class, everything of benefit to its members was discussed, and when Thanksgiving came around, an old custom was carried out, in which james and George, the janitors, were the recipients of two fine turkeys, much to their gratification. At about this time the mid-term examination loomed up before us. a seemingly insurmountable obstacle, and much uneasiness was manifested throughout the class, Then it was that our corps of Diplomats distinguished themselves, and, after their verdict, everybody was fixed for the Exam., and the fear of the much dreaded ' Flunk was dispelled. At the last report, it was learned that everybody passed, despite the fact that we studied dili- gently CPD. It is to be wished that we emerge from the next un- scathed. As we near the finis of our Freshman history, it is'with the hope that the incidents of this year will ever remain fresh i11 the mind of every Freshie, and when we are far away from our Alma Mater, may we look back with fondest recollections of the class that conquered. F. J. KN OLL. Allen, C. A., , Bailey, J. C., . Best, W. G., . . Bible, A. E., . . Blake, A. S., W .4 -I Bones, I. R., . . Browne, I. F., . Buchannon, F.. O., Burdette, W. W., Burns, E. W., . Bussey, F. I., . J Callahan, Grace W., . Carey, D. E., 4' .4 . Carey, H. M., 4' rl Cassill, O. E., . Cavagna, C. A , . ti4Cheeseman, O. M. Conner, H. K., . y Crocker, G. K., 4' -4 Dancer, G. W., . Davies, Cora B., . Davidson, W. H., Davis, A. A., . Donaldson, O. D., Dupuy, F. G., Eshman, B. P., . Espey, H. S., Jr., Foster, V. W , . t Garst, H. L., . Y, . . A , . . . . Colorado . Michigan Massachusetts . .Indiana . . Ohio . Texas . Ohio . . Ohio West Virginia . . Ohio . Ohio . Ohio Ohio Ohio , Michigan . Ohio . Ohio Ohio . . Indiana . . . .Indiana . Ohio . Ohio . Ohio . Ohio . Ohio . Ohio . . Indiana . Montana . Ohio Freshman Class Roll. d4Garst, I R , . Graham, H. C., . Griiitith, I. I., . Haag, Flora N., , . Hamilton, S. F., . Harper, O. O., 4' rl Al, Harshbarger, H G., Henes, E. L., . . Hitler, G. L., 4' -4 .l', Hopkins, I. C., 9 53, Hudson, J. E., . Huff, L. I , . . Huffman, H. C., Hull, R. R., . . . Hurlburt, J. M., . Hynes, H. H., W fl X, Jenner, C. P., . . Knoll, F. I., Ir., 4' 44 .l, . Kline, M. G. 4' -4 X, . Ohio . Ohio . Illinois . Ohio Kentucky Kentucky . Ohio . Ohio . Ohio . Ohio Tennessee Michigan . Ohio . Ohio . Ohio . Ohio . Illinois Kentucky . Ohio Linciconie, A. E , . West Virginia Littleton, G. C., . . . Ohio 'ffMcAdoo, H. L., . . . Ohio McKibben, F. I. ,... Kentucky Miller, H., . . . . Ohio 'kMills, C. H , . . . Indiana Morrell, O. M , ..... Ohio Morrison, I. E. E., 9 52, . . Ohio Mount, W., gf' SZ, . West Virginia Musgrave, C. A., .... Ohio 69 dfOrr, Emma, .... Kentucky Osborn, H. C., . . 'West Virginia Potts, I. E., ...... Ohio Rice, H. C., 'P fl .Y . . . Illinois Robbins, L. A., . . . . Indiana Robinson, W. E , 4' . . Indiana Rockwell, W. H., . . Ohio YRodgers, W, F., . . . Ohio Rogers, R. S. ,..... Ohio Shakely, S. F., 9 32, . Pennsylvania '?Shanzenbaher, O. H., . . Ohio Sites, I. A., ...... Ohio Smallridge, H. H., . West Virginia Smith, W. G. ,..... Ohio Taylor, V. S., . . . Ohio Thompson, E. V. M., . , . Ohio Tizzard, E. B., 4' .4 .Y . . Ohio Towers, O. J. ,... . Ohio Voorhees, L. V., 9 SZ, . . . Ohio Wallace, W. G., 4' A .l . . Ohio Wal1e11,A. F., . . Watts, NV., . . West, W. E., . . WVest Virginia West Virginia Ontario, Can. Williams, P. H., . . Kentcky Wilsoii, H B., . . . New York Withrow, G. B., . . . Indiana Woodyard, L. D., . West Virginia W'right, C. D. M., 4' 53, . . Ohio 'i5Partial Student. ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF THE - OHIO COLLEGE OE DENTAL SURGERY. H. C .MATLACK, '87, Cincinnati, O Secretary-Treasurer: DR. H. T. SMITH, '88, Cincinnati, O. I. VV. Huffman, '99 C. S. Archer, '81. .. L G Singleton, '98 R. T. Vteldon, '7o . S. B. Cook, 'Sr ..,.. C. M. Doss, '86, . .. G. A. Chapman, '92 V. N. jones, YQO.. .. W. L. Conkey, '85 . B. E. Burger '84, .. H. D. Ross, '61 .. .. I. XV. McAbbe, 'QI . Geo W Field, '67, Alexis Bert and, '82 XVilhel1r1 Herbst, '87 E A. Galbreath, '80 H. E Highlands '79 .... C T. Terry, '72 ,... A. Katayama. '9O.. . J. R. Price, ,QI ..... Miss H Tcherniac, ' F. M. McCarty, '9l. W S. Burke, '52 .. I Sanger, '79 ....,. G. W. Sparrock, '80 P. Knowlton, '47, . . H. H Winn, '65 . .. Qbfficeraa : President: DR FRANK SAGE, '75, Cincinnati, O. gud ViCe.P1-esidentg DR, Ist Vice'-President: DR. ARTHUR G. ROSE, '79, Cincinnati, O. gjonorarg glint-igrzaihentat Alabama .... G. XV. T. Shepherd, '68 Fort Payne. Oklahoma ........ Arizona .... G. H. Mosher, Y74 .,.... Globe. Oregon ,,,-,,, Arkansas. . . T. Y. Cooper, '8l. . ...,. Little Rock. Pennsylvania , . . California ..... L. L. Dunbar, '74 ....... San Francisco. South Carolina ,,,, Colorado . ....... F. A. Dille, '97. .... Greeley. Tennessee . . . . . Connecticut ..... . L. D. Monks, '92 ....... New Haven. Texas. ...... . District of Columbia ..... F. D Rice, '82 ..... Washington. IVashingt0n.. . . , Florida ..... .... . A. E. Lyn1an, '66 ...... Melbourne. West Virginia ..... Georgia. . . . A B. Binns, '98 ..., Columbus. VVisconsin . . . . Idaho ..... U C. Purdunl, '93 .,..... Nampa. XVyon1ing .... Illinois .... ..... I V. V. B Ames, '80 Chicago. Canada -,,.., A h I Indiana ........ S. E Harryrnan, ,7I Lawrenceburg. N. W, Territories' U Indian Territory . . . I. M. Bronaugh, '99 ..... Purcell. England - A - V - - Iowa .,,.,,, ,.,, D D. Cornell, ,QI ....... Knoxville. France --'v Kansas ,,.,,..,, T. F. Daven ort, '56, Em oria. 1 , Kentucky .... . . .G M. XVilliz?n1s . ...,.... Maiisville. 516313113 K ' ' ' Louisiana .... . . .G I. Frederichs, '55. New Orleans. S aiu' ' ' ' ' ' Maryland ..... .. XV G. Bradford, '92 Baltimore. P. ' ' Massachusetts. . . E. S. Bowen, '81 ....... Shelburne Fall. Swltzellaud' ' ' ' Michigan. ..... A. G. Herr, '90 . ....... Polt Huron. Japan l' ' ' Minnesota .... I. C Corcoran, '86 . . .St Paul Cape Colour. Afmca Mississippi... . T. O. Payne, '69 ........ Vicksburg. NO W?'Y' ------ - - - - - Missouri . . . W. L Whipple '94. ..... St. Louis. Ecuador- S- America Montana. .... . . Sarah H Harris, '83. . . Butte 'Veg Illdies - . - - - - - - Nebraska . ......... T. C. Kern, '75 ......... Lincoln. Phi1iPPi11SS-- --.. . . . . New Hampshire. . . I E Nichols, '90 ....... Rochester. Bfalil, S. A11161'iCa . . New York .....,. Geo S. Allan, '61 ....... New York. Chili, S America . . . North Dakota ..., C. L. Rose, '90 .......... Fargo. China ,,,,, ,,,,, Ohio ...... ..... B . A. Satterthwait, '46 Dayton. India .... . R H. Langdale '02 99 Lexington. Portland. Beaver. Greenville Chattanooga. Bryan Colfax. Sistersville. Appleton. Encampment Quebec Calgary. London Paris. Bremen. Nice Madrid. Zurich Yokohama Capetown Christiana. Quito. Porto Rico. Manila Rio Janeiro. Santiago , Hong-Kong. Calcutta. S The ff FRATS. ff, fff 945 71 11551 wmega jfratermtv ' uw'f ' I I '- '- Q Paul Cassidy, VV. A. Holtz, A. V. Watkiiis, I. B. Ellison, B. D. Flaugher, E. H. Clarkson, A. G. johnson, A. I. Rose, R. C. Cameron, R. R. Gillis, C. R. Crawford, Harold Holmes, E. S. VValker, I. M. Scott, G. B. Lowery, W. E. Robinson, C. D. Wriglit, ESTABLISHED 1892. R H O O H A P T E R . ROLL. 1903. G. E. Collins, Garheld Canon, E. V. Burns, H. I. Grimes, Orvis Singmaster, R. E. Fishback, H. J. Morlidge, F. H. Chapman, B. A. Long, 1904. C. B. Emery, C. A. Peek, H. L. Scott, H. H. Holbrook, Lloyd Huhn, O. E. Imig, 1905. john C. Hopkins, L. Vaughn Voorhies, james E. E. Morrison, 72 XC. E. Hutchinson G. L. Mallet, H. E. Davis, E. H. Price, C. A. Brown, Isaac D. Best, H. M. Rogers, C. H. McCall. I. C. Gow. T11 Deceased. K. M. Hoge, D. T. Ellison, F. B. Conkle, P. K. Phillips, C. P. Holt, W. F. Knemoeller. Will Mount, S. I. Shakely. Q.-,.,:. - . 'r U, 11 l :KL ,551 -. ' v . 'id -g -:K-, -- - ff r, , MLA 1 G-9 Lowcnv, Q 75 ALPHA - BETA - - GAMMA - DELTA - EPSILON ZETA - - ETA - SOTA - - - KAPPA - - LAMBDA - - - MU--- NU- Xi- OMICROM PI - - - Roll of Chapters. Baltimore College of Dental Surgery. New York College of Dental Surgery. Pennsylvania College of Dental Surgery. Tuft's Dental College, Boston, Mass. Western Reserve University, Cleveland, O. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. Philadelphia Dental College. Northwestern University, Chicago, Ill. Chicago College of Dental Surgery. University of Minnesota, Minneapolis. University of Denver, Denver, Col. Pittsburg Dental College, Pittsburg, Pa. Milwaukee fWis.J Medical College, Dental Department. Louisville College of Dental Surgery. Baltimore Medical College, Dental Depart- ment. ' BETA SIGMA - RI-IO - SIGMA, - TAU - - UPSILON - PHI - CHI PSI - OMEGA - - - BETA ALPHA BETA YAMMA BETA DELTA - Alumni Chapters. New York Alumni Chapter, - - Duquesne Alumni Chapter, Minnesota Alumni Chapter, Chicago Alumni Chapter, Boston Alumni Chapter, - Philadelphia Alumni Chapter, - College of Physicians and Surgeons Dental Department, San Francisco, Cal. - Ohio College of Dental Surgery, Cincinnati. - Medico Chirurgical College, Dental Depart ment, Philadelphia. - Atlanta Dental College, Atlanta, Ga. - University of .Southern California, Dental Department, Los Angeles. - University of Maryland, Baltimore. - North Pacific Dental College, Portland, Ore. - Ohio Medical University, Dental Depart- ment, Columbus, O. - Indiana Dental College, Indianapolis, Ind. - University of Illinois, Chicago, Ill. - Columbian University, Washington, D. C. - University of California, San Francisco, Cal. New York City. Pittsburg, Pa. Minneapolis, Minn. Chicago, Ill. Boston, Mass. Philadelphia, Pa. E A---- - - - - '-:wif 4.-. 3. H . IV I I 4 I ' r K ,P nm bl Eli n a Q: m A - f 4' - A - g--J-1-:--:,--:-:-:--C.-.f- S. R. Teasdale, A. D. Sullivan, D. L. Singleton, R. E. Peele, G. VV. McMillan, G. S. Evans, H. L. Hale, V. W. Hunt, E. A. Christensen, f E. B. Tizzard, M. G. Kline, W. G. Wallace, H. M. Carey, 132111 Qlihapter, ESTABLISHED ---- - - - 1896 ROLL l903 F. H. Williams, A. R. Hamnierle, H. B. Morrow, H. C. Prayer, Geo. Nerisli, I. H. Rardon, ROLL I904 S. P. Snodgrass, I. W. Gordon, R. F. Hale, A. J. Hibscliman ROLL I905 D. E. Carey, O. O. Harper, F. I. Knoll, Ir. H. H. Hynes, .. 77 ... H. C. McClelland, G. Beroset, E. Plath, I. Lang, C. Musgrave, H. Schott. L. Fallcnor, E. Morton, O. 'Walton L. Hitler. K. Crocker, C. Rice, S. Blake. 78 79 alifaifif EAL GOAT IlAImRS can Xi Psi Phi. , Beta Theta Pi. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Tate, 'o3. Gearhart, 'o4. Weber, 704. 'Rardon, 'o3. Hitler, ,o5. Crocker, 'o5. Sanford, 'o3. Kappa Alpha. Phi Delta Theta. Best, '03, Vorhees, 305. FAMOUS, THOUGH A DENTIST. Whereas, mavgf persons are so u1zfo1z'u1zaz'e as lo lose iheiff Fore- Teeth by Accident and othervvife, to their great Detriment, not only in Looks, but Speaking both in Public and Private: This is to inform all such, that they may have them re-placed with artiiicial Ones, that looks as well as the Natural 8: anfvver the End of Speak- ing to all Intents, by Pau! Revere, Goldfmith, near the Head of Dr. Clarkels W'harf, Boftonf' The Boston Gazette, Dec. 19, 1768. 1801 S! .4 ff . N . J- ' V, Q ff? Q fa 5111753 ff LAR 1 .fin f L Q' 5 .V ' ,I L- ', r., -1. X ' , , A, - - J 'Af . 'B' I -za A A A A i 1 .L,,i,1 -LAWLAV- ,Av--:Y -H, -- 41 3 IL. 4,14 ff 1 v-lruf- v vv in lx ggbfgl f 'ff ' X Weiff f Ng 'iw y TEE ' W AV 'KX A2212 F31-21? :-5551:-MV M G , f 1 CGMBW EU S H OWS sf' A mv HA aw. . ' - ' W .u3z1l1Effs5i ' Q J ' vg-I '-,-Ij.l.l.1.h'1-'L V 0.6.0561 . P' 2 5 -f-7 - ,A AQ -, :- ii , 1. 39' , df' - -. I 5 ir. if 3 -is i - ' - -if Y ' ' 4 'S 'L X - - . - . 1 ,b f , if 5' .. f X J r ffl? S 81 S X' W 51-.. ANCD 54,51 lux OFFICERS C. E. XVISECUP, . . . President. I C. D. M. WRIGHT, Vice-President. C. H. SCHOTT, Sec. and Treas. T. H. XVILLIAMS, . . Librarian. A. I. Rosia .... Leader. DR. XV. S. LOCKE, Musical Director. IXKIEIXKIBERS Locke, Van Osdol, YVisecup, Rose, Williams, Stroh, Wright, , Crawford, Andre, Harris, Deer, Williams, Rogers, Emery, Best, Frayer, Hopkins, Schott. 52 C I. R. S. ROGERS. 4. C. B. EMERY. 7. L. ANDRE. IO. A. j. ROSE. Ig. R. C. VAN OSDOL. IK1. R. li. HARRIS. 2.. H. C. PRAYER. 5. C. E. VVISECUP. S. j. W. STROH. II. C. D. M. WRIGHT, I4. DR. VV. 5. LOCKE. 17. C. R. CRAWFORD 3. J. C. HOPKINS. 6. 1. M. WILLIAMS. 9. DR. C. T. DEER. I7.. W. G. BEST. 15. F. H. VVILLIAMS. IS. C. H. 5CHO'I l'. 33 pri Q-n 'V' x..-ff W' g .Quik el L-2-.7 I 'I Vrana We v V? ,,.f Ce:- E, , f x PS' r .' . M O f A. 0 ima ' f 455 5' 4, . lj EQ: I' 142' '!'3 1Z1Qf71I 'I K - 1 ' .- :bftk i' . X f' I .T 1 J 'JJ -fa-'E' : Z When a Freshman 84 Arrives Home. MANDOLIN CLUB. 1 I- L23 all M ,EEE- - -EEE' l3ggjQ5.'5afmQVi.'1 ? fd f F' ' rliiiilfgjgx -4--1 1:5-3.5111 M V- 1 W Q H -52 1 1 f ' 4' X-jflia M f -,J fa n f u 1 n : ' 1 C1 df 5 f .l ' ' If F 'sq I K gl L MU 5. ff, 'r -I NX m .l. I .A- .2 in L .' X 'xx ' ,' I ' . xt X. 1 X--Rx. 'll 5 1' 1 - , I ,, NT: 'TL TM gli! HI- .,IL,'1f QQ WVQ , ,f fi'ELr1fyu ,lfmm MIT ,+s1n.ua3. m?M4 a 4wfJ rm M - 1 I f., .' 'A - . - - , 'fxlfjl ma, ,rlliuli ' A WPI J. '. !'i 1 ,'. U W' 'Vlf!I, W'll. 'fPfV'17l?PFW-. f 'J I U5-'1 ., 'W Qui: . , W ff fW'4i 3 !f'f' ffkfafww W JU ' 5 A .' A ll ,z All H 1 ,ll .I .fini J If I l Ll rl ,I X fu 'ff'fVf X ff L I -f ' 1:PfMf4,a,- M -A W . fllxj-M- . H X 4 iw 1WI14.' f,fwgQ!lR1? iU: fn'H'f .'JMilifill1lliLlmiililtllsi,A?'2+l'4?i ' ,mhz by X 1 '4 fi i. f ' ' 'fE'T'L 2 ' I 1 Wtulq 1 Q H jIf,f,5wvff MM Um pw fd ,,1f1m,,Af QW' 1',,,flW1. H I 1 J. ! - '- X if ' f 1 I '1- .r5fli'.i,lfH'L .,,'1Q?I,li.,xllIl ':4' I ' l i amh I ,IE xl I N . h I f e i' 11 I ' si 157 fl-gf---E 34 + 'r11x - -iggffyl-:. , V, - ag . 'AY' - . 3+ : , ? ...Q ' -Ji.:- ' - f ' , s ffi 21 f4fief if - if : -Lirf ... W ,-b -- fifi? il rf 35 HMYDOH U B ' I q for -- fn.- f I' 1 I v-f- Y. E . - T IIIIIP G51 F- ,M A fp, , Z L :L 45' -. 4 . Q - OFFICERS: G. NERISH, . . . President C. P. HOLT, . TrGaSuffi-11 A. E. BIBLE, . xYlCG-P1'SSlClG1l'Ed N. E. WEST, . Musical Director' E. I. LANG, . . Secretary E. H. PRICE, . . . LGHCTC1' MEMBERS: VIOLIN. G. E. Conroy. BJANDOLINS. GUITARS. E. H. Price. C. P. Holt. G. Nerish. E J. Lang. N. E. West. - . I. E. Sites. G. E. Collins. R. S. Rogers. V. S. Taylor. A E. Bible. S6 N. M. VVEST. 4. G. E. CONROY. 7. j. M. HURLBURT. lo. E. j. LANG. 13. R. S. ROGIxRb j. A. SITES. 5. C. P. HOLT. S. C. H. BOLBY. II. A. E, BIBLE. 14. C. P. ,IISNN 3 j. PRICE. 6. V. S. TAYLOR. 9. E. H. PRICE. I7.. G. Ii. COLLINS. lg. GEO. NHRIHII S7 at 1 I .gd MCCLELLAN DANCER, O' DONNELL, - OUTCALT, VAN OSDOL uselball MEMBERS F. HALE, ..... Manager. POSITIONS . Catcher. ELLISON, Pitcher. MILLER, . . Short. CAREY, , First Base. PRICE ,. . Second Base MCFADDEN, lggi Third Base Outfleld I. j. B. ELLISON. 4. W. F. OUTCALT. 7. G. VV. DANCER. IO. H. MILLER. 2. T. W. MCFADDEN. 5. R. C. VAN OSDOL. S. H. C. MCCLELLAN. II. VV. F. O'DONN 3. J. E. PRICE. 6. D. E. CAREY. 9. R. F. HALE. 89 .r xjkax I, X if xlx J. .Inky 'I 4 . W f .I may W W Q1 G. J. H. RARDON, G. M. GEARHART 0. SINGMASTER, R. G. MORRIS, . G. D. BACHELOR, M. BACHELOR, Manager. E. V. BURNS, Captain. CI-IAS. CAVAGNA . . OFFICERS. POSITIONS. Len End 1. HITLER, Left Tackle Left Guard E J. LANG, . Center T. VV. MCFADDEN. Right Guard G. CANON, I. HUFF, . . Full Back L TEAM Right Tackle Right End Quarter Back , Left Half Right Half 1. o. SLNGMASTEP.. 4. J. HQRARDON. 7. v. BURNS. 10. 1. 1-UTLER, 12. U. M. GHARHAR' 1. J. HUFF. q. cs. M. BACHELOR. s. G. CANON. 11. E. J. LANG. 13. C. ln. BACHELOR 3. CHAS. CAVANA. 6. R. G. Mokkxs. 9. T. W. MCFADDEN. QI Ohio, Indiana, Kentuckiy, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Illinois, . Michigan, Minnesota, . Canada, . Missouri, . Total, Summary of Students. BY CLASSES. Seniors, Juniors, . Freshmen, . Total, . S 1 83 . 86 260 B Y . 144 26 . 25 18 . IO 9 6 3 3 2 STATES. New York, ' 2 XfVlSCO11Sl11, . 2 Texas, . 2 Iowa, . 2 Montana, . 2 Colorado, . 1 Tennessee, 1 Florida, . 1 Massachusetts, . 1 260 92 Q 'iii 'Xg 'Xx ER, -x -1. 'XX-NXXC5 X is X J 'ED 93 .NN . - N. .R xl' ,sg ' Kg. ' ' . XT- .. ' . 46 Y' X I .Ellpba wmmon Quig Gllub. 4 X r . :Hi t vf T . X , . 'x ,, UID ..-2 . . X .y' ' Q I x 'iff 4' H, ,. . 44 fy C C' it MOTTO: In the cultivation of intellect, there is but one best time-Now OFFICERS. E. H. Eberlee, Secretary. A. C. Musgrave, M. D., Chairman C. F. Kirkland, Sergeant-at-Arms. lN4ElXfIBERS. G. P. Bickler, G. M. Bachelor, I. D. Becker, W. E. Chester, E. H. Eberlee, C. F. Kirkland, R. K. Kemper, J. W. Shaffer, M. M. Lower, A. C. Musgrave, 94- R. E. Plath, H. T. Brown, George Nerish E. B. Eshman, G. E. Conroy. fb! Grimes, ? 1 .45 ,, g 1? , Bradshaw, - Peek, - Cameron, Rose, - Bachelor, C. D. Bachelor, G. M. Bichler, G. P. Bradshaw, C A. Brown, H. T. Cameron, R. C. Chapin, B. F. Davis, H. E. Dancer, G. W. Douglas, Teddie Burger, Dr. Frank. Kearby, Dr. A. Tate, W. I. Kirkland, C. F, me ii' referrer Y Z THE' CONJUGIUM CONJUNCTION CLUB. 50?-f When man is young and love's the game, Then who would not be it? 'Tis better to have loved and won Than to get the icy mitt MOTTO: WVe recommend Me11en's Food and Malted Milk. OFFICERS : Imperial Progenitor. - Vice Progenitor. Conjugial Disburser. Royal Scion Recorder. Nuptial Prophet. B. A. Long, G. W. Dancer, P. K. Phillips Geo. Eckstein W. W. Watts, ACTIVE IVI EMBERS : N. Dysart,I E. Eckstine, G. Eshmen, P. P. Grimes, H. I. Hamilton, S. F. Hoffhines, W. E. Holt, C. P. PFHutchinson, C. E. Knemoeller, W. F. Lincicome, A. E. 5fiDeceased. ELIGIBLES : Edwards, B, I. Whallon, Catherine. Huff, Lucy. Canon, Garneld. 96 - Connubial Advisor, Sr - Connubial Advisor, Jr - Matrimonial Promulgator Hymenial Doctorate Long, B. A. Lowery, G. B. Musgrave, A. C. Peek, C. A. Phillips, P. K. Rose, A. I. Smith, E. B. Sullivan, A. Watts, W. D. Weiscup, C. E. jenkins, Ja n Flaugher, B. Scott, J. M. Callahan, M e. D. iss. Spousal Guard nl' life .WMV I I , f' f V sl ff I ,glM.,'hlI1 vi . I f . I 'N 1 ,V !E'!:i,. v'7 I ,N MZ' , :4'!7f4 '1 g! 'W ,ZX t'ml1nW ' l' if ' V iw' f' f' N X ' , iff 52, 5,44 fw ww J 2 gif , ff- 51' A - ,AfV 1l'W f W II,'l5gENiS4 r Vg' .QA I gf! ! Nik L, , 5 1 . wi' ,I ll ,J Lk 'lf' X M21 'X , l ?iWH 'JW' 4'9 QQ Q ,SN IV! W W + 1 fx af ' '21, M Ev :AFM A -- H vb ll 'N IVLL 1 1 S54-.IE'E.'Ei'E-E'.-E'.-EV ' -1 ' 1 'M 'Il ,V 114 g Y- Sze.-u'.-..-.':.vau:f me A W W I Mig W. , , JM- . - any '4 ' lnuf f ! ,,Q XX X A W l nf + iff ' M - m9E?f -,W Milf ' i- EiflflIE1'i 1?:sff'. i-RX N. Q Z V e, VW Ef f af f 11, xf ff, 1? J I 'HA Q ff x 1 , ' M. ' . if ,Lv 1 if ff ,, ff. fff ffffWf fff' f ', X 4 KW!!! .114 rf'-'IL f'fQ'j7'Z7A'ff , Zgffffwf' if fWff,fw1 QB- 7' f La 97 FOR THE ELIGI BLES. . I had avfearful pain within my breast 3 I thought, indeed, my time had come to die g My steps were slow, and listless grew my thoughts, About the only thing I did was-sigh. I called upon a doctor, learned and wise, To see how he would diagnose the C2186 Q He pulled my tongue out almost by the roots, And punched and turned and twist ed my poor face. He poked me in the sides and in the back g He whacked me on the head, then pulled me 'round The pain within your breast, he slowly said, 'K Is aggravated trouble of the heart, Caused by a--well, now, let me see ! Caused by a pointed, poisoned dart. Both the auricle and ventricle are pierced 5 The semi-lunar valves are cut in two. That shot was by an expert, thatls a fact, ' Wee Danny, must have had it in for you. His treatment? lTwas enjoyable and sweet, Quite unlike the other medicines H I've took 5 And placed his head upon my aching chest, Go thou too, son, and get yourself a wife, To hear, he gravely said, the heart-beat's sound. And thank your stars you saw this in this book. The Conjugizmz Conjzmrizbn Club A FRESI-iMAN'S FIRST DAY. n NOT far from Gull Lake, Indiana, stands an humble home of fair proportions, with a goodly number of fertile acres surrounding it. Inhabiting this rural abode are Mr. and Mrs. Steele and their only son, Tom, a bright and industrious boy of twenty summers, innocent, unsuspecting and frank. A boy with undeveloped talents, for the country school , ,... . dents and great men-Ohio. Dr Wilcox, by the way and much to his credit, was an alumnus of the Ohio College of Dental Surgery, of Cincinnati, and, unlike many selnsh people, believed in sharing a good thing with his fellow lTl2llI. Thus it came about that Tom Steel was advised of the possibilities of the dental profession. near by affords very few advantages. - Dr. Wilcox had taken a great interest As every lad has that inborn desire to ir,'A ' in the young man, and never ceased urging see the world, so Tom, as he gathered the him to enter the study of denistry. abundant harvest of the prosperous year of 1 . r ft 1902, is inspired with the ambition to con- Vg! 5, i The sun shone bright on this Septema quer worlds. I iq, I V ...I ber day as Farmer Steel beamed with de- Although he has nearly reached his - lighted satisfaction on his granaries, Slled majority, his sight seeing has been limited r, pi, if il i with the golden grain, his lofts bursting to a few score miles, surrounding his birth G -' h'- i A with the sweet scented hay, his cellars place. Every summer his life had been ' p groaning with ripened fruit, and his heart brightened by the advent of numerous ish- t swelled with pride, as he gazed on his son, ing parties, come to Gull ,Lake to angle for who was cutting corn at his side, and he the finny tribe, which so abundantlyinhabit - mused, with a self-confident air, I will this quiet sheet of silvery water. soon give Tom the management of the Among the annual visitors and one for 5-, '- farm and I will retire. whom Tom always furnished a goodly sup- , Very different thoughts were coursing ply of lively minnows, was one Dr. Wi!coX,' through the fertile brain of our young hero. a dentist of much note, who came from one As he gave a desperate slash with his knife of the many flourishing cities of that State it' at a blade of corn, he remarked, with rather which has furnished so many of our Presi- I 'Emi UHSUSPMHE and Fmk- more energy than was necessary : 99 I will do it. Farmer Steele looked up with a surprised air, thinking probably Tom had read his inmost thoughts and would accept his proposition as overseer of the numerous' acres. U You will do what ? asked the old man. I will study dentistry, said his son, almost panting as he spoke. Study dentistry, why, who ever put such a foolish idea in your head? Dr. Wilcox, I suppose. Well, you can chase these notions from your young cranium just as fast as possible, for I have decided to turn over the farm to you. No, father, I am going out into the world and make a name for myself, and have chosen dentistry as my profes- sion. Tut ! tut ! child, you could never pull a tooth. Well, I am going to make a trial. I will be twenty- one next week, and then I can use my own pleasure. Dr. Wilcox has told me of a hue college in Cincinnati which opens on the seventh of October, and I am going to enter then. Boy, I can not spare you from the farm. These vast acres will be yours some day, and then you will not need to labor so hard. Another thing, mother will be so lone- some without you. At this a shade came over the boy's face, but he soon regained his determined air and said no more. That evening as the two sat at their frugal meal, Mrs. Steele said 1 Tom, what causes you to be so quiet? You do not seein to be in your usual happy spirits to-night. H Mother, exclaimed Mr. Steele, Tom has a very foolish notion in his head. He wishes to go down to that big city of Cincinnati and study tooth pul1en'. It is absurd. He would get lost the first day. Why, I stopped there for two days when I came back from the war, and I came near losing myself then, and Cincinnati is a whole lot bigger now. Do you know, John, replied his wife, I believe we are making a mistake in keeping Tom from making some- thing of himself. You know my father was a physician, and I always wanted Tom to be a professional man. Tom looked up with a ray of hope in his face, but his father said : No, Tom, you will go without my consent if you go. I am getting old and some one must stay and farm this landf 4' You can sell the farm, replied Tom, demurely. You have plenty to live on and send me to school alsog but if you will not do this much for me after I have strug- gled for you in the hot sun and the deep snow, then I will put myself through. Nothing more was said until that night, when old Mr. and Mrs. Steele retired to their room, then the good mother took her helpmate by the arm and said: John, I wish you would permit Tom to go to school. He has been a good boy 5 he has toiled early and late, he has been a dutiful son. You know you always regretted not having had an opportunity to procure a better education. 4' Have I not hundreds of acres about me and a good fat bank account? If that is not good enough for him he must help himself. I will never give him one cent? aie sie ' J IOO ocfroiasn 6TH, 3 o'cLoc1: A. M. Breakfast being served unusually early in the Steele home in order to help Tom catch the early morning train from the village. Tom is full of determination, while Mr. Steele remains irm, in that he will not assist him in a financial way. Toni has a little money which he has saved from his small earnings, and Mrs. Steele, bathed in tears, slips a well-iilled purse in his hand as he leaves the house. it if fff if The train for Cincinnati is about to depart. Mr. Steele takes his son by the hand and with a lump in his throat asks him if he will not reconsider and return home with him, but Tom sturdily refuses. He boards the train, the conductor is heard to call all aboard, the bell is rung, the steam hisses, the lever is applied and Tom Steele is on his way to a new world, as it were. He sinks down in the soft cushions. His oppor- tunities to ride on the cars have been very few, and the sensation is rather a pleasing one. As the great train rolls along its course his thoughts revert to home and mother, and he awakes with a start. '4What have I done? Am I doing right to leave the folks all alone? ' His musings are suddenly brought to a close by a stop at a thriving little city, where several students board the train. Tom overhears one of them mention the Ohio Dental College and makes brave to ask the young gentle- man if he is studying dentistry. Why, yes, replied the jovial and 'friendly looking fellow. 4' I am a senior this year. A mighty hne school it is, too. Do you know some one who attends there ? IOI No, said Tom, I am thinking of going there my- self. U Oh, indeed, are you ? responded the happy student as he unconsciously viewed his new friend's awkward ap pearance in a new hand-me-down several sizes his junior It is a great study. I hope you will like it. With this Tom resumed his seat. A well-'nlled lunch basket helped to while away the long, journey, and, to- gether with watching the passengers as they got on and off the train and speculating as to how many were going to Cincinnati to study dentistry, he at last reached the Grand Central Station in the Queen City. Tom dismounted, tired and dazed by such a display of electricity and deafened by the thunder of the inrushing trains. He knew not whither to turn. He remembered Dr. Wilcox had told him the 'first thing to do was to repair to the Dean's otiice and matriculate, but what that was he knew not Once more the worthy senior was approached and asked if he would be kind enough to direct the way to the Dean's. Why, sure, take this car to Fountain Square, then get a transfer to Vine Street and get off at Garfield Place. Never having experienced a ride on an electric car be- fore and very uneasy for fear he would be carried past the desired destination, Tom at each stop would inquire of the conductor if this was Fountain Square? After many inquiries, the conductor, in stentorian tones, called out, Fountain Square. ' Tom was Hrst to alight, a huge telescope in one hand and still clinging to the lunch basket with the other. If I the noise and bustle of the Grand Central were mind losing, what must have been his sensation when he alighted at the corner of Fifth and Walnut? Cars coming from all directions, on one side the great Post Oliice, looming up dark and gloomy 5 just across the street a structure in pro- gress of building, which, the young man thought to him- self, must surely reach the skyg and, to the left, a great tall lady, with water flowing from her hands. ' Is she preparing for a bath, mused Tom, and from whence does she procure that -muddy water? She certainly would not bathe in that dirty stuff. But when he beheld several gentlemen step up and ask the tall lady for a drink, she continued to throw that dirty liquid at them, and they actually imbibed of it. Together with great strings of cars, the imagined he could hear the tinkling of the bells in the wind- ing lanes, which led down to the woods, past his childhood hoine. He pictured the lowing herds as they slowly wended their way up from the green pasture. The fowls were perch- ing themselves on the picket fence for the night, the horses quenched their parched throats at the fountain. The wicket gate opened, and a sad, but sweet-faced woman, carrying a shining milk pail, crossed the stable yard, and close behind her, followed a man, his whitened locks peer- ing out from a huge straw hat. His face wore a shade of sorrow- Get out of the road or you will be run over, shouted an angry policeman, as he grabbed Tom by the shoulder. What are you standing here for ? Move on, I say ? Oh! I thought I was out in the pasture noise, the continuous stream of people, 5 ' i if 5 9 -3 sign' lot, groaned the young man, as he shook Tom gazed about in a sort of dream. He B Q f himself and realized that he was standing finally pulled himself together and asked an v 'F ish l:jL2.i.p, before a spanking team of bays, which splendidly groomed gentleman standing 1, vj , ' ' . . ' came near crushing him to the ground. neap, whose funeral procession was pass- 2 h Say, mister, can you tell me where in . I ' :YQ ffk, ' t e Dean lives ? gThe man addressed nudged his compan- A Dean of what ?i' querried the great ion and with a signihcent wink, pointed . man with the brass buttons. with his forefinger to his brain, as much if? I don't know what he .is dean of, but as to say, The wheels are a little loose, I ai' L 'l ,- ,gig 7 ,,.- i I want to find a place to matriculatef, 5511955-H , 7 To what school do ou wish to o, By this time the aspiring young dental- i I young man ? y g student had forgotten which car he was I xg ' Why, to the Ohio College of Dental next to take, for he had expected to End in Q 3 ' Surgery. only one car awaiting his arrival. 4 ' I' Well, here, get on this Vine Street The sun was beginning to wane, and Tom 'L When he aliglxted :md W alnut. at the comer of Fifth Car and get off at Garfield Place. lim- With this advice the policeman pushed him on a car and told the conductor to let the young back-woodseman off at the monument. When Garfield Place was reached the conductor assisted the frightened boy off with his baggage. As Tom stood gazing wildly about him, the first object that met his sight was a great huge horse, bearing a monster man, about to leap madly oif a well carved rock. Tom was badly frightened, and, thinking the man would receive serious injury, he cried out with all his might : Stop! stop! don't let that horse jump off there or you will be killedfl But, much to his surprise, the horse jumped not, and the great man calmly retained his seat. The sight of the Bowers, although a little frost bitten, the quietness of the place, as compared with Fountain Square, had rather a calming influence on our young hero's nerves, and he began to look about him for the Dean. Gazing ahead he beheld a great giant-like man with arms raised and a manuscript in one hand. 'K There he is, said Tom, that is the Dean. Rush- ing quickly forward he addressed the greathgure: Are you the Dean ? but no response. Are you the Dean? shouted the nervous young man. That is only a statue of the great Garfieldf' suggested a kind looking old lady who was passing. Are you look- ing for Dean Smith? He lives over there in that white stone building with the large windows. Tom gathered up his baggage, still clinging desperately to his lunch basket, and soon presented himself at the ofiice of H. A. Smith, . H. T. Smith, Dentists' The door was opened by a demure miss of probably six- teen summers. Is this the Dean P asked Tom, with a troubled look. I thought it was a manf' At this a great shout of laughter greeted his ear, and, peering inside, he beheld a great room with costly rugs, old paintings and massive furniture, completely filled with young men, looking rather strange and uneasy. Having experienced so many trials and tribulations in one day this proved to be the last straw, and he comepletely lost control of his nerves, and, at the same time, the grip on his lunch basket, which fell to the floor with a crash, and out rolled sweet cakes of all sizes and dimensions, from a mouse to an elephant, thick slices of home-made bread, jellies, pies, pickles, etc. No, I am not the Dean, replied the young lady, but please have a chair and he will see you shortly. What name, please ? j Thomas Abraham Steele, almost groaned the young man, as he sank down into the soft cushions of a great leather chair. One by one the names were called, and, after a few moments consultation in the private oflice of the great Dean, each passed out into the glowing dusk, feeling happy and light-hearted, and with a very much lighter wallet in his inside waistcoat pocket. At last the kind young lady appeared at the door and said: Mr. Steele, you are nextll . Tom, shaking from head to toe, and visibly very much agitated, presented himself at the door of the private sanc- tum of the greatest man in the world, so thought Tom. IO3 Mr. Steele, you wish to enter our Dental College, I sup- pose, said a kind-looking man of rather small stature, and with hair slightly tinged with silver. W-h-y, y-y-e-s, s-s i-r,', stammered Toni, but I wanted to see the Deanf' I am the Dean. UO-hl I thought he was a great big man, and Tom remembered the pictures he had painted in his mind, as he lay awake nights, thinking of a great, stalwart, statue-like man, probably sitting on a throne, and possibly with a crown on his head. What education have you had ?', 4' Why, I have studied geography, arithmetic, grammar and history. Have you attended high school? No, sir. U Well, we will see to that later. You wish to matricu- late, of course, and pay your full tuition. It will only be fIO5. I thought I would only pay the hrst quarter now, demurely replied Tom. Very well. Of course, it is always well to pay all at first, as it saves any future trouble. Turning to another young lady of seventeen summers, anyway, Please write Mr. Steele a receipt for 325 and a matriculation card for ing. After advising Tom how to reach the college, he bade him good bye, telling him his next quarter would be due December ist. I At last, after many inquiries, and with an aching head and sore feet, the college was reached. Little did he realize what novv lay before him, for, not having had the pleasure of meeting the Superintendent, he was yet in ignorance of the soul-searching glances he was soon to undergo. - The hour being late, not many students lingered in the spacious QD hallways, excepting a few new arrivals who had not as yet learned that in order to become a good student one must absent himself from the college just as much as he deems necessary, and with flushed cheeks and hated breath, rush madly in just before roll call, then to have Dr. Way come up and ask, how you enjoyed the matinee ? Havingimet a Freshie on the marble OD stairs, who, feeling the first pangs of homesickness, was attempting to render all possible assistance to a fellow class man, in order to forget his own troubles, volunteered to conduct his new found friend before the imposing presence of the all- powerful Dr. Way. Dr. Way, in blood curdling tones: Good evening, sir. Good evening, said Mr. Tom, in a voice with a visible quiver. You have seen the Dean ?', Yes, sir. You have paid your tuition PM Yes, sir. He seemed quite anxious about money matters. I supposed the Dean was rich? Tom was positive the Superintendent could tell him what constituted his noon-day meal on the day before yes- terday, for such piercing glances he had not been per- mitted to enjoy before. 104 Here is a list of books and instruments with which you will please provide yourself, and report in the morning, at which time come to me and I will assign your locker. Have you a room PM No, sir, replied Tom, still feeling as though he was an object on which two powerful searchliglits had been leveled. Gunther, have you a roommate as yet P inquired Dr. Way of the young man who had so kindly ushered our young hero before his almighty presence. x . No, sirf' Will you take Steele for your bed-fellow P Yes, sir, will be glad to, for I am getting pretty lone- some. Thus it was that Torn Steel was installed in the great Ohio College of Dental Surgery. A More may be learned of him, his first impressions, struggles, failures and successes in the Alethian of 1904. JAMES E. E. MORRISON. ,Y .1 105 e ap ,ef Dental 0ffice andit va ta es. i . c THIS office has been arranged for special comfort and convenience, and, on arrival, each patient will be asked how they like the situation, and if they say the oHice ought to have been nearer the Post Office, the location will be immediately changed. You are particularly requested not to use the door mat, as we wish to accumulate soil inside. Wlieii you have an engagement with the dentist, always be on hand at least half an hour ahead of time, and, upon entering the office, totally ignore the office girl Cif there be oneb and make your way to the dentist as soon as possible. If he is working at the chair, you may enter imme- diately upon any topic of conversation you wish, and just to show that there is no ill-feeling, step around in front of the operator and patient, that you may observe every detail of the operation. This will prove that you are on intimate terms with the dentist, and, to further avoid any show of formality, call the dentist 'Docf Recall all the cases of blood poisoning and lockjaw of which you ever heard Qand of some you never heardb which were the direct results of dental operations. This will help the patient to bear up. VVhen your turn comes, begin by telling the dentist -1 106 how sensitive your teeth are, and then, while he works, keep up a continual groaning. This will lead him to think that you are being hurt and he will, in consequence, do less excavating-perhaps. Always keep one hand resting on the arm of the opera- tor, that you may be able to immediately stop him in case he should ' hit the nerve., During the short intervals of time when the dentist is not working on your teeth, recount all the strange phe- nomena regarding your ancestors' teeth, he is sure to be surprised at hearing that your grandfather had 'a double row all aroundf If the dentist is temporarily absent, sit on the desk, pick your teeth with the gold pen and read the letters- more may be found in the right hand drawer. If you see any spittoons, please expectorate on the carpet, as the former are only for ornament. Children will be welcomed Cwith deliglitb and are requested to bring hoop sticks and hockeys to bang the carved furniture, especially provided for that purpose, and peg tops to spin on the velvet carpet. They will be allowed to make themselves as disagreeable as the fondest mother can desire. The dentist will always be happy to hear that some other office is 'the best place to get teeth filled.' Never pay a dentist cash. Wait at least a year and see if the work tstays ing' if it does, well and good, but if it does not, go to some other dentist and work the saine game, and so on aa' Z.7VZ7ZZ'fZU7Z. Should your dentist have the audacity to send you a bill, quit hini at once. Patients ordering plates should insist on having small, white teeth, as a great inany dentists try to harmonize the color of the teeth with the hair, eyes and complexion and lose sight of the fact that your own teeth were small and white. 4' If, after wearing a plate three days you can not eat corn from the cob, return it To test a plate crack hickory 11uts with it. Special attention given to patients who can give infor- mation as to ' how things are done in C Yewrupf And to the end that you do not get huinbugged, read this over before consulting a dentist, H. E. D. yu f Q XG 2' 1 Z 4' v 4 ' 5 '3 W N X 1 A A 5 - E iw XXX Z N W::qyf'iil'. V HQ.. IO7 BUMBELSI-IAUFERSTEIN, THE DENTIST. CAS TOLD BY HIMSELFH. I VILL oxpose mine thinking a few minutes so dot I a conversationing can take. De quextion dot revolfes idself in der hed dot a new demonstrationer vos skuiliciend bei der Collich, Should it dot dey vill hafe him can not de quextion answered maybe vos. I don't know vot de solution of id vill vos. Maybe ve vill vait und vatch. Yes? I yust hadt a conversationings mit mine oldt friendt und collich chump, Dr. H. A. Do vas a successful docior von must hafe batience, batients. Der reason dot I say batience, batients dwice iss pecause you mnsd have batients und also batience, yet. Now, do made dot berfectly blain oxblicid, I vill oxblain der vyfore dot vey are not alike von anodder Ven dey are, are dey? Do been der doctor you musd hafe batients und still you musd hafe batience. Some batients you ged und odder batience you niusd hafe do ged der batients. ' Some batients hafe not ba- SChH1itd, Hrld 116 SGYS Cl0f he - , tience, so how can ve oxbect vill sawed aboud id. I offered eg Xf., . do been batient mit der ba- such suggestionationings vot tients? vonld been do some disadvan- fc 1, xl My vife's name iss Ba- tage if he could use id, bud he , Q , tience. She hen-becks n1e. tanked me enibarrassings und 4' D I am a successful doctor. I says dot he vould ask, Yes, X hafe enough of Batience. I after awhile, maybe xy In ' hobe dot I hafe berfectly made Dot shows vot grate friendts V f dot blain. Yes ? ve are side bei von anodder. Y . - -421, - A xii g De odder day I hadt a ba- De dwo of us both are vone. E x W it tient und vos making crowns Den he oxcused rnine bres- N K l 5- ,, it for a king, und Ven I ence avay from him und he lx -P- ' .l ' M Z pud dem on he vos aching. vent do look bie a batients. '4 'I' - '- F- ' Den he ask me for a drink IOS ' uud I gife him a beucil und baper und Iedt him draw a bucket of watter. He den asked me, If a tooth is ready to crown vy is a 1amppost? I redurned der rebly dot if streed cars run ub und down Vine Street dot dou'd hinder me, does it P I-Ie commenced do oxblode hot air do der effect dot I had better vatch a leedle oud ore he vould vistle me voue on der face. I dolt him aboud a bridge and he seys dot axium, Douid come do a bridge before you can'd cross id ore you mite step in der holes in der votter. I tauked him excusiflly for der axium und he made his departure by wenting avay. A. I. HIBSCHMAN. Q QD C-3055 2: 'QP' sa If -lg' WMV 7 IOQ I. A sweet little baby brother Had come to live with Flo, And she' wanted it brought to That it rniffht eat and grow. A Prize Poem. II. It must wait for a while said grandma In answer to her 'pleag the table, '4 For a little thing that hasn't teeth Can't eat like you and me. llI. Why, hasn't it got teeth, grandma? Asked Flo in great surprise g Oh, my, but isn't it funny? No teeth, but nose and eyes 23 IV. V. 4' I guess, after thinking gravely, That afternoon to a corner, They must have been forgot g With paper and pen and ink Can't they buy him some like grandpa's? Went Flo, saying, Don't talk to me, I'd like to know why not. If you do you'll 'sturb my think. VI. VII. VIII I'm writing a letter, grandma, At last the letter was finished, Said little Flo to her grandma To send away tonight, A wonderful thing to see, To see if it's right you know An' 'cause it's very 'portant, And directed to God in heaven And here is the letter written I want to get it right. Please read it over to me. To God, by little Flo. IX. Dear God 1 The baby you brought us That's why I'm writing this letter, Is awful nice and sweet, A purpose to let you know g But, 'cause you forgot his toofies Please come and nnish the baby, The poor little thing can't eat. That's all. From little Flo. Unknown. IIO ffsgi-'ggws re f- 1- far far Us ways of Eentists Q.. 1 I GQ E29 - 1 'HQJW OLD your head well back. Open the mouth a little wider and keep the tongue down. Now, tell me when it hurtsf' and the dentist thrusts a crowbar into an aching, sensitive molar. The bar threatens to come out at the top of the head and you yell Not a weak little protest, but a great wide open, full lunged yell that has all your heart in its execution. The dentist chuckles with evident amusement as you climb back in the chair, and he asks: Did it hurt ? After such an experience don't be too harsh in your self criticism. Be slow to make the decision that the yell came because of a lack of grit, even if the dentist did volunteer the infor- mation that his last patient stood it like a major. Dentists are a somewhat peculiar lot, and they draw some rather rough comparisons sometimes. But when it's all over and they are caught in a confidential mood, they will say that teeth differ just as widely as do indi- viduals. The dentist will explain that one set of teeth may be so constituted that the drilling, pounding and chipping donit get to the nerves so disastrously, while in another person the first touch of steel on the dentine causes excruciating agony. ' , Ability to bear physical agony, of other varieties, and without complaint, does not apply when the work of the dentist comes in for its consideration. There is an III atmosphere that is peculiar to the operating room of the dentist. The little swing table, with its alcohol lamp, and numerous shining and minute instruments of torture exert a certain fascination, when the patient is once in the big pneumatic cushioned chair, but with the foot power lathe they also succeed in throwing about the dentist's workshop an environment that is instrumental in the ruining of more than one good tooth from neglect. The very smell of the dentist's acids and potions is suffi- cient in some cases to create nausea, and rather than brave the revolting atmosphere that imagination builds about the domicile of the dentist, for persons with sensi- tive teeth, they allow teeth to pass from bad to worse, until extraction becomes a necessity. Most of the dentists ind plenty of human targets for the drill and forceps. The profession is an interesting one, and the average dentist is likewise a student of human nature and a philosopher. The dentist can usually make a pretty diagnosis of a patient's character, after he has dug into the dentine of a tooth and approached to a point not very far removed from the nerve. Let him work for a few hours with the implements necessary to the filling process, and he can give a pretty accurate history of the past and forecast of the future of his subject. Some of them will maintain a steady shield. They will deal out neighborhood gossip and pour their domestic troubles into the willing ear of the dentist. Wlieii he wishes to express surprise, or satisfaction, or anger, he usually fails to use his tongue, which is not rubber restricted, but makes the expression felt through the agency of his instruments. A little dig at just the right point acts as a first-class punctuation to a patient's tiresome sentence and the dentist can make exclamation points and pauses and periods that are not found in the type case by the judicious prods of his in- struments. If a dentist's patient has the smallest kind of an in- quisitive bump in his make up, it is bound to assert itself in a pronounced degree when he gets into the chair. He wants to know what each tool is called, what it is used for, how much it costs and how long it wears, and even insists on examining it carefully before it is used. He paws over the drills and chisels on the table and inquires about the contents of the battle. He is bound to reach out and finger with the mechanism of the automatically sprinkled cuspidor. i The gas generator is another unfailing mark for the attentions of the inquisitive patient and dentists say that many persons with grit and'nerve enough to sit down and have a tooth extracted without the use of anaes- thetics, will call for an administration of gas just to see what it's like. If they happen to come direct to the dentist's from the breakfast or dinner table, as they often do, the experience is one that they seldom care to duplicate. The so-called laughing gas has a deteri- II2 orating effect upon a partly digested meal which is not unlike a well developed case of seasickness. The title given the vapor administered by dentists is in many cases not appropriate 'LLaughing gas it certainly is on some occasions, and the patient, while the block of wood holds open their jaws and even While the dentist is feeling among the roots of the tooth with the prongs of his forceps, will tear out peal after peal of laughter that would be a credit to the inmates of certain institutions Laughing gas H certainly brings out the disposition of the patient, and it sometimes exposes a low moral condition. It is not unusual for a well bred ap- pearing woman, wearing tasteful and expensive clothing, to yell out oath after oath, when she is under the in- fluence of the gas. Others scream and a good majority groan in a manner that strikes terror to the.heart of the patients gathered in the waiting room for their call to the inquisition. Gas, however, is not so generally used as of old. Hypodermic injections of the other and more modern forms of anaesthetics are coming into general adoption, These are purely local applications and are not intended The nerves in the to render the patient unconscious. vicinity of the tooth to be pulled are deadened by the action of the chemical and the pain is greatly minimized. Dentists all agree that there are no two persons alike in the matter of extracting teeth. They claim that most of the patients are more frightened than hurt and that the anticipation of the event of the loss of a tooth is more terrible than the actual ordeal. Often the patients yell the moment the dentist reaches for his forceps In such cases he adopts a surprised air and assures the patient that he is not ready to commence. They quiet down and he starts what he asserts is an examination of the tooth. Suddenly the calm of the patient resolves into an agency of real suffering, surprise and anger. The forceps sink under the tooth and the tooth comes out, accompanied by a magnificent yell. Some persons grab the dentist's arm, and not a few try to bite his hand, an operation which is often successful. Then there is the local patient, who calmly designates the tooth, opens his or her mouth and sits still. They grasp the arms of the chair, tighten the neck muscles and when the pull comes it is met with a resistance that 7t means just as near a painless extraction as it is possible to produce without gas. The filling of teeth, however, furnishes the real test, if the patient happens to have some sensitive teeth. Every turn of the drill seems to sink to the very nerve centers. The drills get heated and the agony increases. It apparently grows bigger with each turn. Wlieii his subject sits back in the chair and bears the wear and tear of the drill upon teeth the doctor knows only too well are in the sensitive class, without complaint, he is given in full measure the respect and admiration of the dentist, who knows just how it feels, even if he donlt seem to appreciate the extent of his and his instruments, ability to torture. El XX-, 1 c.,s,wgaJ!- THX! I fe 'Gi 'sy II3 .. THE DENTIST .. Wlio opens your mouth like a mammoth cave And plows your gums with a barrel stave And prods your tongue when it won't behave? The dentist. YVho stuffs your mouth with a bitter rag And stops your wind with a rubber gag And straps your head like a vicious nag? The dentist. XV ho finds decays where your teeth are sound And probes you deep in his glee to wound And leaps for joy when the nerve is found ? Tl1e dentist. VVho runs his drills with a wicked glee And shoves as none can shove but he And smiles as bland as a bad Chinee ' The dentist. W'ho twists your teeth in an iron pry And carves your gums like a steak to fry And grinds you up till you nearly die? The dentist. l , 1 II x Wlio loves to look on his forceps cold And grins as the cursed things take hold And jerks in a way that can't be told? The dentist. Wlio lays before you a hundred steels Vfith hooks and points that the patient feels At one brief glance from head to heels? The dentist. Who drops you down in his easy chair- To relieve your mind talks in an easy air- Then stabs you quick till it raises your hair? The dentist. VVho loves to have your free good will Before he feels brave to present his bill, The amount of which will surely kill? The dentist. Is There Anything Funny in That? What makes people laugh? lTis a mystery great g To solve it we struggle in vain. We see the new Junior coine out with his case And his engine-that demon of pain. It's his very first patient, that's easy to see, And the very sanie chair where our irst patient sat. As we watch his queer movements we all shake with glee. Is there anything funny in that? I By an unlucky turn, or a twist, or a jerk, All his instruinents fly to the floor. The poor, luckless student bends down on his knees, And the boys whistle, laugh, and they roar. Our kind Superintendent comes ,round to the chair 7 And gives him a call-down' both flippant and pat : And now think it over and tell me, I pray, Is there anything funny in that? 115 Soine friendly young student, more kind than discreet, At roll-call discovers his 1'OO11l-111?1tEZ'S not there g He gets in a crowd, and in sepulchral tones, When the naine's called answers solemnly Here I Then our Doctor Way, who's as keen as he's kind, Picks out that boy and sits on hiin flat : While the rest of the fellows stand round him and laugh Is there anything funny in that? -PAUL CAssrDv. f is of qua-A f 4 aa f spill for I Wing? is l . is f ?Xi 'itubiumsn anb Eoctors. A 5' FT s51f': r ' 5 4 f V f 4, 77 - -l..,,,. I X .1 6 X , - . af I- - DELLA, our Southern importation, was at her duties when I went into the kitchen. A married friend, living in New York, had invited our cook to pay her a visit. She accosted me with a shake of her woolly head, so says a writer in Harpers Magazine, who goes on to tell how the conversation proceeded : Miss Rufe, w'ile alivin, in Noo Yawk, Mafy she wants ah should go to a doctah 'bout mah teef. 4' Well, Della, said I, why not? You've been planning to have them pulledf, Suddenly a gloomy look came over her black face, and she said : 'A Ah don' know 3 ah don' know. Ye see, Miss Rufe, theyls doctahs 'n they's studiums. Ah might git in a studiums office? A studium ?', I repeated. Yes'm. Donchy knows ye has to be a studium 'fore ye kin be a doctah ? Oh I I assented. ' An, ye cain't tell 'em Look jes' like doctahs, acts jes' like doctahs, got bottles lround, 'n' chairs, 'n' 116 'YQ tables, jes' like doctahs. But, Miss Rufe -in a burst of horror- ef theyls studiunis they kills ye Oh, no ! I feebly grasped. Yes'm. Wliy, Miss Rufe, they has to kill someone or less they cain't be a doctah. They has to kill some- one, shuahf, Oh, no ! I foolishly insisted. Wliy, no 5 if they did, Della, they would be hanged Not down t' ma home, not down t' ,Gusta,', said she. 'Less they kills someone they cain't be a doctah, she insisted. I was dumb I had no powers of persuasion, no argu- ments that could convince her that she was wrong. ar zz: as Looking backward through the years of our college career, We are more than convinced that the old darkey was right. The great number of patients we have each of us half killed more than makes up for the essential one which she said we must kill, 'Lessin they cain't be doctorsf, -Editors' Note. ASTS fb! auf' E W Y N. Z ,, M-A f WM!-L+. X ai, fn fffff-M M, 5' 'Q KJ, ,Z g ,.f-fi 117 I . I D I. A J R F. S. J. X7 R. J. O R B 4QqS4ZQ5i53 94EQm .1 mga? V Embryonic Faculty. - . D. GRIFFITH, N. U. T., G. O. P. and I. C. E., - - Dean J. GRIFFITH, A, P. A., ---------- Secretary . C. MUSGRAVE, S. S S.. - Professor of Anatomy and Oral Surgery B. ELL1SoN, P. D. Q., . E. PLATH, A. P. E., - L. KINNISON, B. A. D., M. ScoTT, 1. T., - - DR. t'BONWILLl' LLOYD ED RUSH, X. Y. Z., - W' R. K. M E R. D STROH,P.U.PA - SHRINER, H. O. G. KEMrDR,P.L o., HURLBURT,E z.vq CASSELL,TIIl B. l PETERS,K.U.Tq FLAUonDR,H2oU DR. J. E. BOYD, N. G., A. J. RoSE, B. U. D., - - MISS SARAH LUCY HUFF, MRS. coRA B. DAYIES. - , A. L. C., Professor of Physiology and General Pathology - - Professor of Chemistry and Materia Medica Professor of Prosthetic Dentistry and Metallurgy - - - - - Superintendent of Clinic - Deinonstrator of Crown and Bridge Work Assistant Deinonstrator of Crown and Bridge Worlz - Deinonstrator of Orthodontia and Extracting - V Demonstrators of Operative Dentistry - Demonstrators of Prosthetic Dentistry - Deinonstrator of Anatomy and Dissecting - Deinonstrator of Analytical Chemistry Demons-trator of Porcelain Dental Art - - - - - Librarian - Secretary of Operative Department - Secretary of Prosthetic Department 118 , . .V -. Y.--..-3-ca-c-1-:h f -g fx-'rz1i3.gQ,-,e 9-Q-o--Y---Q-f--.:-1-:-Q .. . he f' Students' Soclal menu. fl 9 Ol X if Q ! N -rar - .W 1 1' ygifw ' .f ' f - win is W? I A sa J f ' ' :FRU .N - ,, . , 51: T4- 1-H ' it : 5 2: ' ' F -. c-:--:-:-:--:-:-cs-Q-:-:-1-1-1-:--3-C-:--: 2 1.:' . . ' :L:i 5'qi:5 Baked. Robert Edwin Fishback, 'o3. Clyde Marshall Gearhart, '04- Roasts. Ray Wolfe, '03. Kenworthy M. Hoge, '04. Peter Hendrick Phillips, 'o4. Porterhouse Steak. James Harry Rardon, 'o3. Cold Meat. Augustus Raymond Hammerle, Potatoes. Charles A. Br0wn, 03. Willis French Sanford, 'o3.. Pudding. Jessie Maurice Scott, lo4. ll Relishes. Oliver Charles Hill, '04. Wines. Isaac Dodd Best, log. Beer. Harry Maltby Rogers, '03, Gustav Eckstein, '04, Cider. Pleasant Hardin Williams, '03, Bread. Homer Thomas Brown, '03. ' Harry Clayton Graham, '05, Robert M. Corrlelison Baggs, '04 Coffee. Clarence Ellsworth Wisecup, O4 ' Extras. Owen Cheesernan, 'O5. Sidney Raper Teasdale, '03, Table Decorations. Archie jite Rose, '03, ODDITIES AND NOVELTIES. Our bad habits are merely those things we enjoy which other people do not. x' The poor benighted Hindoo, He does the best he kindo 3 He sticks to his caste from first to last, And for pants he makes his skindo. N A TALE OF THE TIME BEFORE HOLIDAYS. Editor: Whatls the matter, Si?,' Si Cameron: Matter? I'm mad clean through. Herefs brown sugar gone up half a cent jest as I'm gettin' ready to get marriedfl 'F Schott, 03, the Child Specialistf' said: I have had no kids this year. 1? NO ONE KILLED. During the election of class orator it was a plain case of Cassidy Schott Sullivan. g Q' Stroh 1 Where are you going the Fourth? . x' . SOMETHING DEAD. Dr. Mehaffery : f' What do you have here PM Griffith : Canft you see that's a dead tooth. Dr. W'ay C examines the root canals of the same tooth with a broachjg, Griffith : Be careful there 5 that one root is sensi- tive. 120 ' A SWELL BLOW-OUT. , McFaddin, after treating a blind abscess, filled the root canal and inserted a gold filling. Unfortunately the filling came out and the patient returned. Mac told the patient that probablysome of the gas was left in the root and consequently the filling was blown out. if Frayer : The man with the goods. vt! ADVICE TO 4' FRESHIEX' Freshmen are requested to be polite and courteous to their instructors and to bow with much dignity to the secretaries, seniors and juniors. Q! The question of silk hats to Boyd is his exposed pulp, and you don't want to touch it. R' A PIPE. Ever since the fellow members of the Nicotine Club were home during the holidays many of them received pipes as Christmas giftsg but we have heard since then that they are meer-shams. Can you give me some advice about spanking a child ?', -Long. Never spank a child ,on a full stomach. Turn him over. -Editors. Q' There are men who can take one glass and stop-pro- vided you treat first. ODDITIES AND NOVELTIES. Do you think that it is likely to be a cool summer? Kindly state why, where and when, also what for. -Peters. QF LOST, STRAYED OR STOLEN. The Wolfe has lost his sheepskin coat. Some heartless wretch filched it from him while he was in pro- found slumber in the Freshman Technic Room. Oh! shame l is M. Williaziis Qdissectingj : Gee, Doctor I Here are some more of those little yellow blood veins. vt' A SWELL BACK-STOP. Miss Huff has joined the College Base Ball Club as backstop. She is making a hit with the players. I vi' What makes our teeth to decay And gums to shrink away? It is as Dr. H. A. doth say, Taw Da Raw Da, food debris, Q debrayuj. vb' A PICTURE. On our back garden fence there is a painting of an upright figure. One arm is raised, the thumb of the hand points towards the nose and the fingers are ex- tended. Can any one tell me what this painting is meant to represent and who the artist is? -Schott. I2I DURING QUIZ HoURs.' Prof. Wriglit . Give difference between secretion and excretion. Bachelor, 04: Secretion is to secrete and excretion is to eXcrete. ve' Dr Cassidy : Mr. Hill, what is iron called just after it has come from the ire ? H Hill : Hog-Iron. Q9 Dr. Way : What becomes of the roots of the decidu- ous teeth? H ' Freshman: They evaporate. . Q' F. L. Falknor was chosen unanimously for President of the Cheerful Liars Club. mf Did you ever notice how nice that overcoat of Gilles, always looks? Some of the rest of us ought to put a coat stretcher in our lockers vt' EXAMINATION. Hammerle, O3 fafter making one specimen of Bacter- iologyj: Doctor, on what are you going to examine us ? Dr. Cameron Csolemnlyb : Why! Bacteriology. Oddities and Novelties. -i Griffith Clireshmanj: Doctor, I Wants a prattical casef' 1? If I refuse to be vaccinated after being exposed to smallpox, can I be sent to jail? If so, do you think I would break out there ?'l -Frayer. 'F OVERHEARD IN DISSECTING ROOM. , Dr. Matlack : VVhat are you doing?'l Freshman : Skinning the neck. ve' Dr. Matlack : Did you get all the integument off? Falknor 1 Sure ! I cut the integument and skin both off together. v8 Wliat's a man to do when the cavity drops out? -O' Donnell. I ONE GOLD FILLING. Chapin tafter putting in his iirst gold lillingj: I just wanted to get one gold filling to see how it is done and now I know. I am going home to-morrow. nf Can any reader inform me where I can get my head examined ? A -Shriner, O4- X22 A MODEL- Griflith, O4 : Dr. Way don't have to give me patients. The girls find out that I don't chew, smoke or drink or have any bad habits and they just come to me. H! Kearby claims he can recognize the hand-writing on a telegram. if Ask Long how he enjoyed the patrol ride. w? VVhat medicine do you advise me to take? I have a case of mumps on my hands. -ML1SgT3Vei 03- vt' as WE KNOW THEM. Dick Singleton Abe Eisenman. Gus U Hainmerle. Ben Long. L' Mac Fadden. Sid Teasdale. Sit' Cameron. Jerrie Blosser. King Dodo Scott. Doc Hill. Skinny Falknor. Pat Rardon. Kearby Qvvhen Dr. Molyneaux turns on the light in the stereopticonj : Everybody shut their eyes so as to make it dark enough in here to see the pictures? VVANTED 'WANTED VVANTED NVANTED W'ANTED VVANTED WANTED WANTED VVANTED WANTED WANTED VVANTED WANTED WANTED WANTED WANTED Alethian Want Column. -A job the Seniors. -An elevator that will lift us above reproach- Editors. -Fishback's formula for Flux. --Larger hats-Freshmen. -Subscribers for the Alethian-Business Ed- itors. A -Books for the library. -A pony-well broken. -Patients with patience. -To know what Musgrave said when he made his nomination speech. -A Xmas present like Chapin '04 received. More towels in the clinic. -More protoplasm. -Frayer's new note book. -McCall, when Ellison was not with him. -Borrowed instruments never returned. -A curling iron for Clarkson's mustache. 123 Some Things that Could Not be Helped A heavy weight Senior- Singleton. A Senior that's all right, if his name is 'Q Dennis. A Senior who does not fancy our class colors- Brown. A Senior a married man and a Bachelorf' l A flower of a Senior- Rose. A Senior A Senior A Senior A Senior A Senior that was never half- Schott. who slipped on a banana Peele who is comfortable yet- Burns who has a- Fishbackf' who is always- Best. A Senior who is a hungry- Wolfel' A Senior that is a big gun -'C Canon. A good Senior, though his name is- Paul A Senior who guarantees his work to last- Long A Senior whose price is always-H Lower. Handy Things to Have About Your Baily flasks. Emery t' disks. Gold Mallet. 'Watts metal. Zink Potts. Diamond disks. Rolling Mills. t'Schott machine. Whit1iey flasks. Water Glassf' West 'l Window. Upholstered Tate.l' Evans clamps. Morris chair. Long H bite teeth. Lower impression tray. Davidson Dental Dam. Dental Office. 'A Harpersw ivory blocks. Greggsm plastic instruments. 'A Robinsonsu collar pliers. Brownsy' heroic chisels. Bibleu on the center table. Best 'J equipment in the city. A good 'L Hunt for cavities. A little Shaffer to open the door. Well Mountfedjll articulators. Littleton of coal in the W'ooclyard Rose on the cabinet. Rush of patients. Plenty of Careysf' Good f'Holtl' of forceps Goodman at the chair. Good for business to be a Shriner.H Dystartj on the walls, Morrison's seamless crown outfit. Bachelor in charge of office. H Davisl' cloth strips. Christen-son to Work on. Hopkins nerve canal reamer. Herrw for office girl. W'atkins sectional head rest. Begin Price, 124 NOTED MEN. Hevzry frwbzg grime-s, 03. Bery'amz'1z Franklin Chapin, 04. Hefzry Clay osborne, 05. Rosroe C07lklZ'7Zg stamper, 04. Gayfela' canon, 03. Arthur g. johnson, 03. allen d. Sullzauan, 03. Holmes j. harshburger, 04. Ear! r. beattie, 04. Ear! W. burns, 05. Bzndelie wilburn watson, 05. fordiee Herman Chapman, 03. harold Lee meadoo, 05. Walter Byron diamond, 04. bert fcyjfersan edwards, 03. simeon Gran! Walton, 04. george Siazzley Waus, 03. kenworthy flfavzqfiela' hoge, 04. horace Hamz'Z!o7z smallridge, 05. earl William Burns, 03. allen Dennis sullivan, 03. Rob Roy gilles, 04. Q r25 44 GOT THE MAKlN'S. At early dawn if you arise, And go upon the street, You are accosted with surprise By a friend you chance to meet. A small paper in his hand, And great pain he is taking To fold it up with manners grand, And asks you for The Malcinlsf' His vifants they are now supplied g Upon his heel he turns And walks away with manly stride, The cigarette it smokes and burns. -A J. HIBSCI-11x-IAN z i i 6 L 4 1 A C f 4 A C c 1 1 1 1 4 f FAVORITE SoNGs RECEIVED. O, Promise Mef' - Canon Only Me, - - - - ' MOYTIS Absence Makes the Heart Grow Fonderf' - - - - - - - Mrs. Reynolds Under the Bamboo Tree, Flaugher and Miss Vlfhallon The Maiden with the Dreamy Eyes, - - Susie It You and I Were Young Again, - - Eckstein I Donlt Care What Happens to Me Now,'l - - - - - Seniors after Final Exams. I'1n Looking for a Lady, ---- Prayer just a Sweet, Sweet Dream, - ' Lucy Huff My Sweetheart Sue, ----- Canon I've Got a Gal for Every Day in the Week, - - - - - - - - Falknor If I Only Had a Dollah of My Own, - Bowlby You Ain't No Actor, - - - Tizzard Melancholy Mose, - - V- - Rockwell Please Go 'VVay and Let Me Sleep, Hadley I W'ants to Be the Leading Ladyf' Mrs. Davies Mr. Volunteer, - - - - Diamond ' Buttinl In,l' - Hurlburt Ain't Dat a Shamej' - S M. Scott LittlelBlaclc Me, - Jimmie Moyer 1 126 xc ci ri cr it ic it ci cc ci cs if in fx Li :L nc LL L. it Patsy Was a Bad, Bad Boy, - - Pat Rardon I Hates to Get Up Early in the Mom, Gearhart Back to the 'Woodsf' ---- - Shurtz I'rn Tired, - - - - Hugh Holbrook O W'hat a Lovely Dreamfl - Miss Callahan Across the Bridgefl - - - - Pollitt A Man's Best Friend is His W'ife,'l Hoffhines Baby's Lock of Golden Hairf' - - Snodgrass The Brave Sentinelfl ---- Bill Devore Dance on Forever, - Johnny Price and Weber Hunt I Have Troubles of My Own, Don't Tell Me Yours, - - - - - - - - Dr. Way Little Tin Soldier, - - - - 'Wisecup Nobody Left on the Old Farm, McMillan Something a Girl Can Do, - Doc Hill Under Two Flags, - - Vlfhittier My Heart's To-Night in Texas, - Kearby The Village Blacksniithf' ---- Chapin NVhile Kate and I Were Coming Thro' the Ryefl - - - - - - - - - Flaugher The Moth and the Flame, - - Canon and Susie They Were on Their Honeymoon, Long and Cameron Better Known As- Some Freshmen Bones-The heavy tradegian. Wilsoii-Tlie heavy nian. Kline-Tubby and Miss Huff's brother. Miller -Johnny Applesauce. Smith-A second George Ade. VVoodyard-Alladin with his wonderful lamp. Huff -The leader of the chorus. Hynes-The ladies' inan. Connor-A bad actor. Burdett -- Toothpick Bill. Foster-The nian who knows a horse. Shakely -Tizzarcl' s rival. Burns -The best nian in dissecting. Morrison -The reporter. Wallace-'lllie man with the good taste goblets. Rice -The cute inan. Hurlbert-The windy inan. Musgrave -The inan who is no photographer. Rockwell-The innocent nian, or Clarkson's victini. Brown-The strong nian, Cavagana-The best shot with a piece of plaster. Mrs. Hoag-The prize winner. Mrs. Davies-VVho knows how it should be clone. Miss Callahan Only one that can play house Thoinpson and Shakely-The twins. - Tizzard-The orator and deinonstrator for Miss Calla- han. 127 Eshnian-The inan who thinks the roots of diciduous teeth evaporate. Bible-A good fellow. Best -Anything but a fool. Robinson-The authority on night owl cars. Willianis -The schoohnaster. Bussey-'I Boozeyf' Towers-The inan who knows w VVright-The Freshman poet. Morrell-Diamond Dick. Cassell-Daffy. Blake v Scrubby. Hitler-Tacks. Crocker - Bertha. Dancer-Star of base ball teani. Taylor- Huinptuni. U W'ithrow-A pool shark. Grifhth -H Pradical Case. U Davidson - Munips. Knoll-The banker. Harper-The huinan clothes pin. Littleton-The cigar inaker. Bailey -The dissecting 'K pony. Robbins The nian who enjoys riding. Harshburger-The pride of Cumniinsvillef' Sites-The pet of the class. McKihben--The inoneyecl man. here the head belongs. BOOKS RECEIVED. DID YOU EVER SEE In His Steps, Miss jenkins, og Best of All, - Bible, 05 Masonry, Shriner, O4 In Memoriam, - - Bones, 05 Crown and Bridge System, - Evans, O3 Anthracite, - - Singleton, O3 Fulton's Steamboat - Hudson, 05 From Ball Room to Hell, - - Dancer, 05 Base Ball Rules, ----- Dia1HO11d, O4 Prisoners of Hope, - Freshman before Examination Les Miserables, - Freshman after examination To Have and to Hold, - - - Cahill's Ambition The Spenders, ----- Peters Hill The Crisis, - Seniors Awaiting Examination Returns One Little Maid, ------ Susie Dry Am I, - - - Davis Neighbors in Cumminsville, OlDonnell Lower Cleft Palates, - - Rudman XVl1at's in a Name, - Best 128 Grimes grimy? Huff huffy? R. F. Hale miss a ball game? An -Alethian like this one ? A dental student without a pony? The college museum? Cahill at the college? A man like Kearby? He can tell who a telegram is from by the writing on the envelope. A class, as a whole, that was strictly honest? Such line new operating chairs? Brown, when he wasntt talking about the doings of the Indiana Legislature? A body of students who were more liberal with their ideas C at examination timej than dental students? Long short? The expression on a student's face when told that he was running his engine backwards? Stolen instruments returned except in the Freshman class ? A deciduous bicuspid like the one Foster extracted? The Freshmen twins when they were not together? Hoffman, the morning after, when he was so absent minded as to forget to comb his hair? PERVERTED PRGVERBS A rolling stone gathers no moss, 'tis true, but it stops when it Ends a hole it can fill. .0 The man who said: H Twinkle, twinkle, little star, had the satisfaction of seeing them twinkle. So also had the man who said: Roll on thou dark blue ocean, roll I But how very disappointed must he have been who said: Backward! Turn backward, oh Time, in your flight. ' 0 Music may be the universal language, but it will always be Greek to some people. .0 Never forget that the under dog sometimes has the best hold. 0 A womanls worst fault is her inclination to believe everything men tell her. .0 Itls a short lane that does not turn once too often. .0 There are plenty of people you can improve your mind a lot by not associating with. 0 A man can always get a woman to have him by acting like he thought she wouldn't. .0 Some come to college to gain wisdom, while others come to lose their wisdomtteethj. I29 If some men were to lose their reputation they would be lucky. .2 To name a cigar after an actress doesn't make it draw any better. 0 Men set up the drinks, and the drinks upset the men. 2 A minister practices' what he preaches when he re- hearses his sermons. 0 The fellow who wears squeaking shoes has no music in his sole. .0 Some men resemble the bottom number of fractions- the bigger they appear the less they really are. 0 Wheii a wise man makes a mistake it teaches him something. ' .0 . Knocking a chip off the other fellow's shoulder does not necessarily mean that the knocker wants to fight. It may mean that he lacks ordinary discretion. OUR CONTEMPORARIES. HOW HE YVON HER. Ice Cream he bought his darling, And she ate and ate and ate 5 Till at last her heart she gave him, To make room for one more plate. -Harvard Lampoou. 18 'TVVOULD BE MORE UNEASY VVITHOUT IT Uneasy lies the tooth that wears a crown. -Cornell Wfidow. Q' THE VVAY OF THE TRANSGRESSOR. The way of the transgressor is hard-but not always on the transgressor. -Princeton Tiger. nf 'TWOULD TAKE A BETTER ONE. L' I'll beat your face? A Yer cantt do it wid yours. -Harvard Lampoon, 16' A STRONG CASE. g Possession, backed by a strong arm and a hefty boot, is usually ten points better than the law. -Pennsylvania Punch Bowl. ve' LITTLE GEORGE. Little George, precocious bunch, Took his skates right after lunch, Started out, the ice to try- IVhich he did-but here we sigh. As he cut a figure eight, Ice refused to bear his weight g Now he dwells where skates will melt, Telling dead ones how it felt. -Pennsylvania Punch Bowl. 130 IN ITHACA A miss is as good as a mile-for really it's only a dif- ference in the number of laps, anyway. -Cornell W'idow. iS THE DANGER OF BEING POLITE. She : Your step suits mine beautifully. He : How lucky 1 Especially as I dance so badly? -Harvard Lampoon. Q' CONTINUED IN OUR NEXT. Y Dinwit: 't Say, our backbones are like serial stories, aren't they ? Prove it Dinwit : 'L Continued in our necks -Harvard Lampoon. ve! NOTHING IN IT. . Shall I brain him ? cried a hazer g and the victimls courage fell. You can't, it is a freshman. just hit him on the head. -Sphinx. Q9 SONG OF THE AUTOMOBILIST. My cup is overflowing, I've joy in life's brief span 5 At last I have run 'over A mounted policeman. -Punch Bowl. vb' ON THE NILE. The monkey lost his hold and fell into the crocodile's waiting jaws. Even then his wits did not desert him. I just dropped in for dinner, he said, with an en- gaging smlle. -Yale Record. PICTURES. WORD Three smart young men and three nice girls, All lovers true as steel g Decided in a friendly way To spend the day awheel. They started in the early morn, And nothing seemed aniiss 5 And when they reached the leafy lanes They in like rode twos this. They wandered by the verdant dale, Beside the rippling rill 5 The sun shone brightly all the while, They heard the song-birdls trill. They sped through many a woodland glade, The world was full of bliss g And when they rested in the shade They sat in twos like this. The sun went down and evening canie, A lot too soon, they saidg Too long they tarried on the way, The clouds grew black oterhead. ' Down dashed the rain I They hoineward flew 'Till one unlucky miss Slipped sideways-Crash ! Great Scott ! The lot Wereallniixednplikethis. 131 A PULL. I. Before I married Mary Ann, The corset was a mystery, But now each day she turns to me, And I behold, oh, hully gee ! That something surely is amiss, D Because the strings look just like this. II. Catch hold, she tells nieg I obey 5 I grasp the laces in each hand. Now pull, she says, with all yo And I begin that strenuous light, 'Till she rewards me with a kiss. as Us OJ, Q Q, 66 8 6 df, 6 .vt O .49 4 Q Z' We it ur might, Smart Set, ----- PERIODICALS RECEIVED. THE WEAR'E5- Our Dumb Animals, -'-- Flora Hoag, 05 W01nan's Home Companion, - - - Johnson, O3 Outlook, ---- Windows of the Library - Senior Class Musical Times, Compressed Air, The Sportsman, War Cry, - Weeklies, - Lower Corridor Between Classes - - - - Potts, 05 - - V. W. Hunt, O4 - Canon, O3 - Ora Harper, 05 S8 '49 '8 EXTRACTING ROOM. Enter young street Arab. I want this 'ere tooth yankedf' Very well, young manf' replied a Freshman in his most entrancing manner. L' Take this operating chair, please. It will afford you no great pain, I am certain After a goodly number of futile attempts to extract a second inferior molar, the demonstrator was called upon to render assistance. H 'K That 'ere was a bum student that had hold of 'em pinchersf, cried the dirty urchin, between a How of tears and a stream of blood. 132 Willie Willie Willie Willie Willie Willie A. Holtz, 03. E, Chester, 03. F. Knemoeller, D. Herr, 04. Mount, 05 F. Rodgers, 05. Willie F. O'Donnell, 0 04. 3. Willie G. Wallace, 05. Willie H. Rockwell, 05 Willie I. Tate, f-03. Willie G. Best, 05. Willie G. Smith, 05. Willie Burns, 05. VVillie McMillan, 05. Willie F. Outcalt, 04. 129 rl' Q9 Nellie ate fruit cake, Nellie ate jelly, Nellie went home With a pain in her- Don't get excited, Don't be misled, Nellie went home W'ith a pain in her head. vi' THEN. In days long ago Cin the six- ties, you knowD when gf r-a n d in a went walking she always held her skirts so! Q! Q9 NOW . W'hat would she s a y, i f s li e saw girls to-day, with skirts clutched so tightly that they all lo o lc this way? AN ESSAY, An Operatic Travesty, A boy was compelled by his teacher to write an essay on the mouth for the school discipline, and this was what he said : Your mouth is the front door of your face 3 it is the aperture to the cold storage of your anatomy. Some mouths look like peaches and creamg some look like a hole in a brick wall to admit a new door or window. The mouth is the crimson aisle of your liver, it is patriotism's fountain, and the tool-chest for pie With- out a mouth the politician would be a wanderer on the face of the earth and go down in an unhonored grave. It is the gr0cer's friend, the orator's pride and the dentist's hope. It puts some men on the rostrum and some in jail. It is the temptation's lunch courter when attached to a man Without it married life would be like a summer dream, and a dude would lose his attrac- tion. if ' ONE WAY. She had a short-sleeved gown and he thought he had not seen such beautiful arms, but she seemed ill at ease, and finally said : I was vaccinated the other day and it took beautifully, but I could almost scream, it hurt so. He gazed at her faultless arms in astonishment, and asked : Why, where were you vaccinated ? H K' In Milwaukee, she said with a smile, and the young man fell off his chair. I ITS DR. WAY, To the Tune of Mr. Dooly. Words by A J. Hibschman. Music by I. XV. Stroh. At Court and Central Ave therels a dental college line, I think it is among the first that ever came down the line g At the head of this institution there's a man seen day by day, And he's Johnny on the spot, sure it's the eminent Dr. Way. CHORUS. It's Dr. Way-ay, hels come to stay-ay, He's the man that delivers the goods and draws his pay g He's so emphatic and systematic, It's Dr. Way-a-ay-a-ay-a-ay-a-ay. if RULES OF TAYLOR HALL. 1. If you wish the janitor, just wring a towel. 2. If the room gets too warm, just look out of the Window and see the ire escape. 3. Don't blow out the gas. 4. If you want some writing paper and can't find same in the library, try the wall paper. - 5. If you love music, listen to the Dago in the alley. IDEAL ROOM-MATES. I. D. Best and Bible, A E, J. R. Bones and Fishback, R. E. CLASS OFFICERS- F. J. Knoll and Hill, O. C. D- L' 5,NGLE,,-ON,,,,CSidem, H. E. Rudman and Goodman, D. K. C- H- SC'-10'l IN Vic:-Prfsidfnf, C B. Emery and Sandker, F. G. MISS J' D' JENKIg5:efSTi3I'AN15, ,ma um Williaiii Mount - Peele, R. E- B. A. Long - Schott, C. H, INVITATION COMMITTEE. A. O. Glass - Potts, J. E. F' G' BEROSET' N B. A. LONG, V. XV. Hunt - Diamond, VV. B. ix-I. c. I-xnxx, Q! DR. SINGMASTER DENTIST Regulating Teeth 131 W. Ninth Street, a specialty CINCINNATI Ask ROSE. I G. S. EVA NS H. C. a A. C. MUSGRAVE, M. D., PICTURE COMMITTEE. MCCLELLA ND, C. H. SCHOTT, CLASS ORATOR. PAUL CASSIDY. NO FLOWERS ? R. E. PLA'l H H. VVILLIAMS TABLE OF PAGE A Prize Poem, . . 1 IO Advertisements, . 1 39 Alpha Omicron Club, . . 94 Alumni Association, . 70 A Toast ,... . 53 A Freshman's First Day, . QQ Board of Editors, . . S Board of Trustees, . . I4 Base Ball Club, .... . S8 Bumbelshauferstein, The De11tist, IOS Clubs, ..... . Q3 College Calendar, . . 1 3 Conjugium Conjunction Club, . 96 Clinic Views, . . . 64 Demonstrators ,.... . 20 Dental Oflice and Its Advantages, IO6 Dental jokes, .' . . . 143 Embryonic Faculty, . 1 1 S Foot Ball Club, . . QO Freshman Class, 66 Freshman History, . 68 Freshman Roll, . 69 Finis, ...... . 1 38 Goat Hairs ,..... 80 Is There Anything Funny in That? . . II 5 junior Class, ..... 60 junior History, . 62 Junior Roll, 65 I CONTENTS. Mandolin Club, . . . Necrology ,... Ohio College of Dental Surgery O C. D. S. Band, . . Our Contemporaries, . Oddities and Novelties, . Ode to Class '03, . Our Symphony, Preface, . . Psi Omega Fraternity, Psi Omega Roll, . . Phi Alpha Chi Fraternity, Phi Alpha Chi Roll, . Roasts, . . . Senior Class, . Senior History, . Special Lectures, . . Summary of Students, . Students' Social MGHL1, . Studiums H a11d Doctors, The Opening, . . The Faculty, The jay Club, . The Dentist, . . The Finish Two Step, . The Fratsf' . . . University of Cincinnati, Ways of Dentists, . 35 PAGE S6 22 I2 82 IBO 120 24 3 7 72 76 78 77 117 23 56 19 Q2 119 116 5 I5 147 114 54 71 IO 111 1 Qmwfvwfxxo GxML3'.mv'?-gwlfuxvwvu guy, Marin xQ5LLw..kw, ,Q,MeL, MMR LEOKKMMJ fvvi3iaw,IaxQ3.-QJXoVQJJCfQnfx.!.Q4fx59. Q 1X,fwm ww NW4 I mmm gggmw ,Xmas MMM ww, Mm QlfwL, afgig EMM Qammqm Jigga! Qwwwl FINIS 138 X? Email? 5 lil ! me ADVERTISEMENTS. 3 D . ig ? fjilf Leg g, X' t - W1 2 2 ' 5 5 .Q ,, - F' if ' X f V V 2 gtg- E earnestly request all STUDENTS to examine carefully the following advertisements, as We believe they will find it to their advantage. The firms represented are all of Well-known business integrity and have shown much interest in the success of THE ALETHIAN Direct 'your patronage accordingly. ' EDITORS. 39 Ideal Emery 9!9E?!...fi.'f.'19E are-,V , P ii ei i f f i i I i i xg WW - ammninininxunri 1,5 , m 4 i i i is i Q i ii Yf C U .T i i LC i' l H gm t i , 'ii i if ijgig 1, i Wi iii F it i iii J ir . iii :JSI Price, 51.50. SCJME CDF GUR SPECIALTIES, ----- Gem ----- Pulp-Canal ...Cone-Journal Lathe Head.., Cleansers E ezn ah if P Q T 22215 ..r.r.,.ee -i , . Tc ' .!, wi ll 2, A A Qi 5 5- . 'E i ii f 1 :ii fii ,r:r1e, .e,eZ: 5 f ni 5, E, 4- nit ,RH ' ,il Us-my f A.nuui.Ar-.Rffii lhyx E , AIX, im Y ,- E I 3 2 -11--:: mg, ..,..,n.. .--:11 -,-.,, , ,.,,,.. ,Z 4 7 I 3 E LEFT HAND CHUCK5. . GHT HAND CHUCKS. E Price, Complete, 58.50. Without Chuck, 56.50. Extra Chucks, 25 Cents. X E ' A Remedy for Abscessed Teeth, Foul Root-Canals S ff , An Ideal Root-Canal Filling, Mummifying Paste. W E gigugealgflggg'su-Soigigiegrggxg Price, Per Package, 51.25. Price Per Package ' 50 Cents. S gl A C 35, 37 and 39 W. Fifth St. P H If G am . . Crocker 84 . . ef 55 140 A ROAST. I. II, III. Dissecting this year in the college kitchen, On the very first evening this class was late, Their subject 'twas Lucy, with only five toes, I will tell you about if you will listen g They surely thought they had met their fate g A fair-haired damsel and so the tale goes g A special class, all Freshmen, you could tell, With a call from Matlack and a roast from the rest, She was one hundred six, as fair as a queen, From their looks and features and actions as well. They calmly decided to do- their best. Lovely and handsome as any sixteen. IV. V, Now these little darlings of the special class, Kline was the pride and pick of the flock, Met with many obstacles thrown in their path 3 Clad in his raimant-along white frock g But nevertheless they offered one prayer, I-le would whisper love in old Lucy's ear, And went to work on their hill o' fare. As though he had known her for many a year. , VI. VII. VIII. But Hines was a pippin and would often whine, Then Tizzard, the old scout for Pawnee Bill, Smith was amazed and puzzled and perplexed, He was afraid of Lucy as if ,twere strychnine Q Dr. Knightis assistant in administering the pill, Wondered what the dence he was going to find next And with a hearty laugh he was sure to land, Would stew and fret about the dissecting prize, How a woman li-ke Lucy, with her tale of woes, You cover her up, boys, I've washed my hands They're off, he'd declare, then calmly look wise Could succeed in walking with only Hve toes IX. Then Woodyard would sigh, and with a rub-a-dum dum Would slash away on his little kettle drum g With a look at Hines would say all in rhyme Were you sick last night or out for a good time? H XI. Now these little darlings. if I were they, I'd go to my mamma's and there I'd stay: For you are too young to he out alone, A Talk to your girlies over the phone I4I X. One more 'twas Wright, with his shining spot, Had his fingers dabbling in the pot 5 Rather stuck on himself, but 111OSt awful bum, Gets most hilarious when it moves de fumb. XII. These lines have a moral, I suppose you know, Keep out of all specials if you want a show 3 XVork speaks for itself, all are not blind, Do your duty faithfully, donit get behind. C. D. M. VV. Milton y Franken y ..,Presc1'iption Pliarrnacist.. H all Pharmacy Pm' Drugs We furnish Dentist Supplies Best Quality at Best Price, ' S VV. Cor. TCISPIWODC Wesfi Eighth and Central Ave. 675' Cincinnati, O. Aff mf' bf your Zaifor, FRED. H, onderheide MERCHANT - TAILOR . N.W.C0r.Ninth 8r,J0hn Streets, Cincinnati. Telephone, West 1374X, I 142 DE TAL SUPPLIES Gold, Burs, Dental Chairs, Laboratory Instruments, Rubber, Disks, Dental Brackets, Operative Instruments, Rubber Dam Strips, Dental Tables, Crown and Bridge Outfit, Brushes--Soft and Stitl, Base Plate, Dental Engines, Anesthetics, Cements, Cotton, Dental Cabinets, Amalgam, Pluggers, Floss Silk, Dental Benches, Teeth, and in fact everything used bythe up-to-date Dentist. Give us a trial and be convinced that We have the RIGHT GOODS at the LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES. 679e western Surgical ana Dental Supply Zo. 638 Race Street, Cincinnati, O. Good - Clothes llilIIIInIIIIllllllllllullllllllllllllllll Elllillllllllllllllllll O other large clothing manufacturers are able to give the same personal attention to every detail of the making of suits that We can give. We know What the internal construction of our suits is because we make gveryfhing in our own factory. That is a greater advantage than the public at large may stop long enough to consider, but to us it means the absolute knowledge of what goes into the hidden details of making a suit of clothes or an over- COHL When we guanznfee a garment we know fha! iz' zs Yllgflll. Browning, Ring sr 0. Srr'niE,1ir,8ffTtTifran: W'hat are the last teeth to coine ?'l asked a school teacher of her class in physiology. False teeth, rnun1,'l replied a boy who had just wakened on the last seat. Q! Pa's got a new set of teeth, said the small boy to his bachelor uncle. ' That so? Wl1at's he going to do with the old ones? ff-- 'G Dunno ! Guess they'll have 'em cut down an' make me wear 'emf' uf He made for her a golden crown, Yet loved her not at all forsooth 5 He was her dentist, and the crown He made for her went on her tooth. uf Dr. Way and Eslnnan can not agree on one subject. Eshnian contends that deciduous teeth evaporate, while Dr. Way persists that they absorb. Who is correct? Q? Hale, while doing some workin clinic superintended by Dr. Way, accidentally trod on the professor's foot. Dr. Way to Hale: 'fYou needn't niind dwelling on that point. Q' So much for this, gentlemen. -Dr. K-night. mf Wanted-Regulating appliances for the full solclers. -junior Class. QF Hadley, the nian who never siniles. DENTAL I Jonas. Patient: 'tDoctor, you have a very fine collection of books in your office. Which books do you like best ? Dentist : The bank book and pocket book. Q! Say, doctor, will you take a squint at this tooth? -Diamond. if 4' Doctor, will you conie and see if I have this tooth stuffed right ? -Peek. vb' Although you have a dentist in the same office with you, I see that you go to another to have your teeth filled. That is very true, replied the physician. I cut a felon out of his finger, after telling hini to look pleasant and not niind the trifling pain-so I would rather not give him the chance to get back at l11C.U Q' My love for youj, he wrote, is so deep, so vast, so powerful, I can not express it. Why donlt you send it by freight P she wrote back. And then it was all off. vt? Professor Cto his lady pupil, who is behaving rather obstreperouslyj : I'd rather have a dozen college boys than one girl Pretty Scholar, deinurely 1 So would I, professor. I if Ping 1 I wonder who originated the fG11l211'lC, that it's the unexpected that always happens Pong : 'I The weather man. R. P. ELLSMITH. I 2 . 'Y Y H v Also enlargements from small and faded pictures, Finished in Water Color and Sepia. 'fine PDOIGQYGDDIC 124 w. Fourth sf. QGround Floor. J P0l'Il'diIS Cincinnati. Hlinvf ygaur clgsi Restoring old en- D o o rame a ' i gravings 62 paint- ',- ings a specialty. ,X.,x,li,I L .f.- lf, I N Nmafl n. ii. H., X ,Ni ' 1, -, s f ffy, f 'Gill f 0 ' by a, I . 1 Q1 I 7 Ikummmg I Eirt Eealer .yy '- I 1 L. 1: , I QT xxx-S Ari-H fir! , -, , 7I4 Race Street F'a ',?.?,,23:',,S, CINCINNATI. I Pressing, Altering and Repairing of Men's Clothes Neatly Done. '31 'Skis ' , 'I t,I Our Dry Cleaning is the finest that can be done. FENTON'S Dry Cleaning We remove the stains with all pains and return to you the remains. indbilyheingt ,sta is men ci - f.z, 1, Z zgfgiigfra Cincinnati, 0. Let our wagon call for your work, Phone Main, 4577. Fox Se Garhart, SPECIALTY CO. Indianapolis, Ind. Manufacturers of 3. mon GRADE l, Ii. xAlloys ,ff 5.' -X- -I' 1' gi-Ze... A. D. SULLIVAN, O. C. D. S , Agent. THIS WILL FOOL YOU. A farmer residing near Kansas City, Mo., who had read too inuch Populistic literature and grown to distrust all banking institutions, went to town one day and drew all his money, amounting to ,SS2,727.44, from the bank Where he had been depositing. He took it home with him, and when darkness had fallen he hid the money under the hay in his barn loft and went to bed. The next morning while feeding the horses, he bethought himself of his 52,727.44 and climbed up into the loft for the purpose of feasting his eyes upon all that Wealth. He threw back the hay under which he had hidden it. The money was there. .06 ANSWERED. Doctor, said the dentis't temporary victim, ere the latter placed a rubber conversation suppressor in his mouth, 4' have you found in your experience that people chew more on one side of the mouth than the other ? Yes, replied the dentist. How interesting 1 And which side is it that is most used ? The insidef' replied the dentist. And he proceeded to finish the damming job. I ottefs Architects and Builders of ...HOMES FOR THE FEET... 32, 34 8: 36 W. Fifth Street, Between Vine and Race Sts. '.3l'I,U'.?Sl FLORAL COMPANY, January ..,. Snowdrop February , , 4 ,Primrose March ,..., Violet April , . . ....... Daisy May ,,,, ,,,, H awthorne June , , , , , ,Honeysuckle July . ,,,, ,,,,,, W aterlily August ......., Poppy September. . .... Morning-glory October ,,,,,,, ,,,,, , ,Hops November Chrysanthemum December ,,.,,A,, Holly 8l3 65,000 Square Feet of Glass. Careful attention given to all Express, Mail and other Or- ders . , .. .... ..,.... , . .' Telephone Main, 962. Elm Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. The New arvard and Dental Cabinet. aw! 677e Harvard Chair Co. Canton, 0. J. H. SHIELDS, Gen'I Agent, Bloomington, Ind. Cincinnati Gold and Silver Refining C0 f ,- , pi? . 52:1 ' .- ' A+ is l NO. 523 Elm St. swowswswscwwsssefaszaaswswez Cincinnati, Ohio 1 65112 Q-luhert Qmarhe Qbampang, will, find our Medical Book Students Department fll zx d com- Denial Smporters, illrinievaei, Qinbevsg uhhehers Booksellers and Eiatiouzri. u n plete, with all standard works on Dentistry, and all the leading Text Books in use both here and elsewhere. Office Supplies ofall kinds. Printing of every description, Engraving, e c, C Orders will have our best attention, Correspondence invited. Catalogue of any of our numerous departments gratis on application. 31 to 35 615115-t gouvtlj gmt. Qliimzinnuti. FINDLAY STEWART Successou TO N, E. SMITH, I .. barmacxst.. Drugs of best quality only. Special rates to students. NSU N. W. core. COURT AND MQUND STREETS Delbert Becker, Emery Blosser, Ggden Crutcher Bantlin Ellison, Francis Clark, Eli Dysart, Walton Gordon, Robison Bones, Clinton Bailey, Franklin Brown, The Jay Club. 1903. J. Carson Gow, I. Randolph Hoffman, I. Dodsworth jenkins, I. Athol Neill, 1904. I. Hunter Howard, J. Gallatin Kearby, I. Horace Moyer, 1905. I. Junior Griffith, I. Echols Hudson, J. Erwin Edwards Morrison, T47 Everette Price, Harry Rardon, Willson Shaffer Walter Stroh. Maurice Scott, Park Shai. Everette Potts, . Albert Sites. 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