Ohio State University - Makio Yearbook (Columbus, OH)

 - Class of 1892

Page 1 of 195

 

Ohio State University - Makio Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1892 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 195 of the 1892 volume:

COLUM US GGY CQ. .x Qcpl l,1lvlF2l.JS,A 0'-HO, ' MANUFACTURERS OF ALL STYLES OF O , , ...., -.. A ' Q I I I I I ' 3c:Z.!,5.Dg.!ZY t SHELF ' . ' 'ly xmmxull nnllunllluL,L,g0 , I I 5 I? 'i fiigi Q 35 O A ALITIES, AAAO , A Z,T,'lllll5.L 4 xxxxxxxxuwxw J ' Q LIBRARY OF ' A 1 A. TIIIIHIH THE OHIO STQE-5-ORICAL Y A A K MBNA fx NWN 1 I Gm OF ' A ff f . fllllm - A IK 'lj M: ,, - gfffxx , .W S X W 'X jx 7 j ' 'sx I X V X X XX if X Af ff ' X I ' ' D Q 11- V X -! XX' -11---,.-'..--.-...-.....---- J., ' - . NO. 160. 'fCLlMAX CABLE BUCKBOARD, FOUR PASSENGER. TWO SEATS. We name Our new style Cable 13llCkb0iLl'l1 H10 Climax Cable, as wv Iwhcvc it reaches the pinnacle of Buckbozmrd ambition. It is thc only iriple Buckboard made with fwo large seats. The front seat 33 x 17,55 iuchcs, buck sont 34 x IT ', inchcs. mr.m11'c- ment taken insicic mzczfw' the cushion. . . JH' WRITE FOR CATALOGUE. 11 X ,Do gon want strictly ljigly Lift plgotograplpg? - 4 Sf you bo, ,visit Ebel timbers of Dbotograpbg. +f? v ' g1f'M'f' T T -' fl far-X 'ff 'ff' f at 3 l lff..ftS.t fi it ,i ,uw I ,...f-n... .... . .. Y...i...4 ........ . .......... ..- 5's:1i.i 1531 f' iii ' ill T uit it 'ff iff ay! afdl- I t - 'N WI . 0 4 l 2,3 Hilti 'E . -.f...wE-. 3 .mi '-'-1 f' 'I .ff L-I lei ff 72 fi E Q, - 3 3- E i TTS l. .,-Wil - Twin' ili lllll,l1llg' fllll liltyl gglt li iylylili ll' llLlmlilllliltTmltl'tlllll,lW fk GENERAL PARLORS wmfilfes ART GALLERY fwffffffe27,.,M- y 106 SOUTH HIGH STREET. . l-lighest Award overall Photograpners for the Best Portrait Photography at Boston and Washington, D. C. National Photograpners' Asso- ciation of Arnerioa. I . With our New Ground Glass Skylight we positively nave better facilities for large groups and cabinet Pnotos. I T WE GIVE SPECIAL RATES T0 STUDENTS. 7 wan Ohio State U niversity. I DEPARTMENTS OF INSTRUCTION. 14. Latin Language and Literature 1. Agriculture , ' Mathematics and Astronomy 2. Agricultural Chemistrl' ' 15' 3. Anatomy and Physiology P 4. Botany ' 16. Mechanical Engineering 17. Military Science and Tactics 5. Chenqistry , 18. Mining and Metallurgy 6. Civil Engineering 19- Philfmficy 7. Drawing 20. Philosophy 8. English Literature 21. Physics and Electrical Engineering 9. Geology and Paleontology 22. Rhetoric 10. 'German Language and Literature 23. Romance Languages and Literatures 11. Greek Language and Literature 24. Veterinary Medicine 12. History and Political Science 25. Zoology and Entomology 13. Horticulture L 2. COURSES OF STUDY. 1. Arts ' 8. Civil Engineering 2. Latin Course in Philosophy 9. Mining Engineering 3. Modern Language Course in Philos- 10. Short Course of Mining Q2 yearsl ophy - 11. Mechanical Engineering 4. Science 12. Electrical Engineering 5. Agriculture 13. Pharmacy 6. Short Course in Agriculture Q2 yearsl 14. VeterinaryMedicine 7. Horticulture and Forestry. 3. SCHOOLS. 1. Arts and Pl1ilOSOplly 4, El1g'il1eQl'iI'lg' 2- SCiC11C6 g - 5. Pharmacy 3- Agriculture 6. VCl6l'lI1fll'j' Medicine ll. THE PROFESSIONAL SCHOOL-LAW. The Undergraduate Course covers two full college years. from Sop- tember to .Tuneg and a Graduate Course for one your is oiTei-ml. Annual Tulflon, 91t360.00, payable in advance. The classes meet in the Court House. l Ill.. THE PFIEPARATORY SCHOOL. 1. For the General College Course there is ai IJI'Cl7ilI'1ll0l'y tkiiu-SQ 01 'CWD Yea1'S. the first of which will be discontinueil ut the eml of the present year. 2. For the Technical College Course tlim-Q ig -, pu. , U. It rx. Q ,urs '- - - - ll Q 0 h x 0 of about one year. CATALOGUES wn.L BE SENT ON APPLICATION. ang'5 ngorial arlorg FINEST AND BEST IN THE CITY. PHIL. LANG, PROPRIETOR. X Vx AX 'WX ,-X,-:XV ,.-Y' f 1 e EXCLUSIVELY RETAIL. 37 NORTH HIGH ST. HOSTER BLOCK. , I Best Accommodatxons and If K H O BestTab1e of any Lcgcal Hotel. ' 'I rr. H -eeeee re ew- -. -,mp -' , .. ff 'A - UL ' I , 1 ' g H . 'f . 'Q g if? I,.5F!EMIII,,i I..I. ..,. 15' e, f . f 'IL ' , .gif-'reg ' -' I n Q Q . A :mr 553 ek. I- f f ? - 12 233 1 13. I . I I II ' H I 3.5 1 K ' ,. ' I-, I 4 2' Y f F f--11 jg? . 4. 1 V' A' in-.L Yer if 1I r4' ,gm ee -.fr - :f:Qf5'? ,IIIIII ' r g. ee fe ' ', 'H , -g. '- f', , , ' - PJ far?-Eye.-H-ief - , ' eee e e- fi fg - ' e grieve ' ' ' i wi ' I -4 if TRAVELERS' HEADQUARTERS. NORTH OF WON DEPOTJ H. KAUFFMAN, Proprietor. COLUMBUS, O. Anni- I, .-Diilptuynr, ri., 1'- llL.EE, T Su rveying Instru mzij t-a, Mathematical Instruments AND Architects' and Engineers' Supplies and Stationery, 82 NORTH HIGH STREET. THE ON'-It ,ELQQLQQQE Y X T- -Q-,iQ-G XL,, L f , .IN CENIRAL OHIO WHICH CARRIES A FULL LINE OF THE U niI1er5iE,i,j IeXi31ncI Iikference ookg AQH+SMYTHE, Nos. 41 AND 43 SOUTH HIGH ST., XVe cull Special X eutiou to our carefully selected line of Books Suitable for Q'5rc1b11aIi11g Drcscnts jlftixzzspvifde. .' ..--i- , .-...-- l .Xxx X XXX X , X x Egg Q'Q.fif3f si f + x ax. is THE IVXAKICD NW 71 .. X I l E'f?1ilNiikl1i3'1 TH Ei FRATERN ITIES HT' Filfi OH IO STATE UN IVERSITQ COLUMBUS 1892 I ffl 0 , I X X K L XX xx X Nx - xx. x X X .. Xxbv , , if N' SY . 'Q -N H1793 X an , X ,- gf fs ,fi 1Mffri:rJAYJX ,- ,X f Q, fxflx X 'X ' ff A3 f3i1: 31l3ia A If -b ,,2:-, Zj j XX MIK H xg q jf, xx xxx In X, i ff f 1- ff! FIX' LX., R b ' N4 NF x 00 f, ' I ,UN NK M w X MxxNx A-ff, j g f y N fr,,YiN5N1+ e75Z ' ffifff' f'f ff' 1 1 REFACZE QQQ O000 00 000000000 00000 0000 000 0000000 0 0000000 00000 00 0000000 0000 00000 000000. Ssss sssssss Ss Sass sssss sss sssssssss ssssss SSSSSS SSSS S SSSSSSS SSSS Sssss sssss. U11 1111111111 L1 1111111111 11111111 1111 11111111111111 llllllll 111111 111111111111 1111 1111111111 11111111111111 111111 1111111111 llllllll 1111111111 111111 11111111111111 1111111111 11111111 1111 1111111111. M111111111 111111111 111111111 111111111111111 111111111 111111111111111 111111111111 111111111 111111111111111 111 111111111 lllllllllllllll. A21212121 212121212121 212121 Zlilililll 212121212121 ll 2121212121 llililil 2121212121 21212121 212121 21212121212121. Kk kkkkkk kkk kkkli kklc klckkkk 12121212 Ii kk kkkkklck. 11111111111 111 111111 111111 111111111111111 11 11111 11111111111 11111 11111111 11111111111 11111. 0000 000 00000 0 0000 000 001111 11011 01111001111 ID 00000 00 000000 0 0000 00000 000. 3101113 l'QS17CCt1Tl111f'. T1115 B0.-11111 111 E111'1'01cs. X - N -an- , ix - 'X J X !! J stiff? 'N W Cn w as EDIQATIQN CD is 9 X f W ulf? This book is respectfully dedicated to DR. EDWARD J. ORToN, our lwlm-od ex-President, Whose services in hchzdf of the Ohio State Uiiivwsity haw rendered his name inscpzxruhlc froui its history. Tm-: i':Ul'FUNS. Q . ,.... . .,-.,...,,.,..,,.. A ,xl f':Q4-::4c1u.:..af.L -n ' T ' ,. - .nanni- ' 57 CW! ft. v K 2 . -n E 1 , Q2 'i I 1 N b 'Fr pf 'J '4 If ...:- 5 . ss, I1 1 'E xl' A QA, ,L 'H X . . B07-MRD OF- EDITORS V - 1 N .-Fjfffjxlil 3 N. un. xv fm-E Y x 'fb 1' A . C. S k'UWi-Qi.l., cb K qi E mw' 1-:. WlI.1.l.XMS, 1 lE'X PZ. NI. ill.-1-1M,. ' iq, A G 1 11. 11. 1-'-wxxm-xv. , ,X Q, l W. 1.. nR.xx'1-as, . . ,B Q, H V 'YIIPZRPZSPZ 1.1-ZNTK. . . . .K K 11 1 OFFICERS i i l wst'Y R. wII.r,t.xMS. H. H. FORNEY, 1 Pa ras: m- NT TREASURER. M. BI,uuM, C. W. HARPER, SEL Rr 1 xxx ARTIST L 3. E 1 s 1 3 X580 ZS qi ,f F 4 ' CHARLES C. MILLER, - DAVID M. MASSIE, ---- RUTHERFORD B. HAYES, LUCIUS B. WING, ..... . . THOMAS J. GODFREY, . .. . . Sandusky . . . . Chillicothe . . . Fremont . . .Celina . Newark . . JOHN B. SCI-IUELLER, . . .Co1umbus. . ROSS J. ALEXANDER, . . . Bridgeport OFFICERS OF THE BOARD THOMAS J. GODFREY, . DAVID M. MASSIE, . ALEXIS copiiz ,.... . FRED. W. PRENTISS, . . COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD EXECUTWVE FARM L. B. WING, R. B. HAYES, J. B. SCHUELLER, R. J. ALEXANDER. T. J. GODFREY. L. B. WING. TERM EXPIRES . May 13, 1892 4' 1893 1894 1895 H 1896 1897 'C 1898 President. Vice President. Secretary. Treasurer. FINANCE J. GODFREY. M. MASSIE. C. MILLER. B- W L A . QQ UN' cozvwx-v, 5715, the E 6 N , rw- 's tr 'tr M A i NJ-jtgf, XXYAJ Qi XX .Q V INSTFIUCTORS AND OFFICERS v '5 G' ,um sv M N 117 u 1' I 'Urs xl W Q ' the ' K' GW... .Y ,, ff X I qi? 'X r 1 fe fin: . 5 2 -2 5 5 B- ? 2 .A 5 S E p -0 B A fi ,fi 5' n 72' 'z :L . w K N . CX j, 1 Q :FN Ir rf f . ' If f S, f 1 X l V ll'l- l REV. XVILLIAM H. SCOTT, M. A., LL. D., University Grounds PRESIDENT, and Professor of Philosophy. EDXVARD ORTON. PH. D., LL. D., 100 Twentieth Street Professor of Geology. SIDNEY A. NORTON, PH. D. LL. D., 363 East Town Street A Professor of General and Applied Chemistry. NORTON S. TOYVNSHEND, M. D., University Grounds Professor Emerftzzs of Agriculture. STILLMAN YV. ROBINSON, C. E., 1353 Highland Street Professor of Mechanical Engineering. NATHANIEL W. LORD, E. M., 1175 Highland Street ' Professor of Mining and Metallurgy. SAMUEL C. DERBY, M. A., 93 Fifteenth Avenue Professor of the Latin Language and Literature. WILLIAM R. LAZENBY, M. Aer., University Grounds ' Professor of Horticulture. Jos1AH R. SMITH, M. A., 46 North Third Street Professor of the Greek Language and Literature. HENRY A. WEBER, PH. D., 1342 Forsyth Street Professor of Agricultural Chemistry. BENJAMIN F. THOMAS, PH. D., ' University Grounds Professor of Physics. ' GEORGE W. KNIGHT, PH. D., University Grounds , Professor of History and Political Science. HENRY .T. DETMERS, M. V. D., 35 King Avenue Professor of Veterinary Surgery. R. DANIEL BOHANNAN, B. se., C. E., E. M., ' Sixteenth and Indianola. Avenues Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy, 7 .ly . ijt -- A' -f vrf ln-.. .R .A . .I .I - A W KELLICOTT PH. D., 1332 Highland Street DAVID S. 1 ' Professor of Zool0gY and Entomology' C NEWTON BROWN C E, 1343 Forsyth Street . 2 ' ' Professor of Civil Engineering. ERNST A EGGERS 644 Franklin Avenue 4 7 Professor of the German Language and Literature. ALBERT M' BLEILE, M- D., 30 Clark PlL1C6 Professor of Anatomy and Physiology. ON 2d Lieut lst Artillery, U. S. A.. EUGENE T. WILS , - 281 East Broad Street Professor of Military Science and Tactics. WILLIAM A, KELLERMAN, PH. D., 37 East Eighth Avenue f d Forestry. A Professor of Botany an THOMAS F. HUNT, B. sc., 101 King Avwilf Professor of Agriculture. GEORGE B. KAUFFMAN, B. SC., 66 N. Twenty-first Street Associate Professor of Pliariuacy. P . D., 1330 l U1'ay1l1C SXYCUI REV. JAMES CHALMERS, H Associate Professor Oi' I-'nglislm l.iu-rgiiurv. BENJAMIN L. BOVVEN, PH. D., ZUS l-Inst Suu- Si1'CL'i Associate Professor of the Romance lmxigiinigcs :uid l.i1r-atrium-s. JOSEPH V. DENNY, B. A., Sixteenth :md lmliuuolgi .Xvcuizcs Associate Professor of Rliuioric. MARSHALL J. YVILLIAMS, 'llll lfgist lliwnui Strom . DEAN ofthe Law School. :uid l.uclurc.' on I'ln-ruling :md l':... sec.. GEORGE K- NASH, B- A-. 43 ,lvilci'sui1 .Xvcimt l.cvlurcr on Torts. DAVID F- PUGH. 13:0 11isi.:.....z su..- Lcclurcr on l-Iquily .Inii'ispi'1iilf-inc, 1- N- ABERNETHY. ' t'1f.i1.w1:1. Lecturer un IX1-irtg.ngt-s :mu-l Lu us, DAVID K. WATSON, 13. A., LI.. li.. me i-:M 'ix-M sw.-.J lu-vtiiu-i' ou kliiiirawxr, JAMES H. COLLINS, .Af 1J.X,,,g.h,,, Vxxvmu. Lecturer on Appellatejurisdiction:mal l cmlcr:ill'iq..411,-,..,,,,q V, .X JH , K . A Q ,. ORLANDO W. ALDRICH. i.1..u,, 1i,r,im 1... MMM 1l,x,M51.'x E L DEWITT 13 A.,mhm ' 'M' 1--1--ui. ' I I' ' N-ll liust lalx'.uT5f'gx 1-Ccturcr Ou Hills :xml Nui,-t .,,,,q , ,,,,,, M I xx J. PAUL JONES, iz. A., H., 1. .Y R ' -wi - XX 'T Lecturer Ou Municipal k'ui-lim-Q,U,,,,. ,mil xx XE t Ib. X I 1 THOMAS J. KEATINQQ. 11. A.. mu' i . i- C., I-1'4'llllt'l -in I xi.!.i,,, I tx .. I 4 l E W... ,-.....,A.-.-f--up-.... EIXIBIITT TUAIPKINS, 148 Lcxillgioll Avenue Lecturer nu Agency, Purlucrsliip, uuml Ncrlitutl .Iurisprlulcucc. CYRUS IIULING, 13. A., 092 Oak Ftreet Lecturer ou Criminal I.:1w. RUTHERFORD H. PLATT, B. A., LL. B., 414 East Broad Street Lecturer ou Plezuliug and Pructicc. JACOB A. MCEIVEN, LL. B., 1782 East Town Street Lecturer ou Insurance Law. BENJAMIN IVOODBURY, B. A., 92,Jefi'ersou Avenue Lecturer on Elementary Lzlw. . IV. F. HUNTER, Lecturer on Sales and Bailmcuts. HORACE L. IVILGUS, M. SC., S1 West Frainbes Avenue lustructor in Elementary Law, and Secretary of the Faculty of the Law School. FLORIZEL SMITH. B. A., 970 East Town Street judge of Moot Courts. GEORGE IV. MCCOARD, M. A., 60 West Fourth Avenue Assistant Professor of Mathematics. FREDERICK NV. SPERR, E. M., 1461 Worthington Street ' Assistant Professor of Mining Engineering. JOSEPH N. BRADFORD, M. E., 61 West Eighth Avenue Assistant Professor of Drawing. JOSEPH T. WHITNEY, Sixteenth and Indianola Avenues Assistant Professor of Physics. REV. GEORGE P. COLER, B. A., Sixteenth and Indianola Avenues Assistant Professor of Philosophy. FREDERIC KEFFER, E. M., 64 West Ninth Avenue Assistant in Chemistry. OLIVE B. JONES, Fifteenth and Indianola Avenues Assistant Librarian. CHARLES VV. MESLOH, B. A., 13485 North High Street Assistant in German. JOSEPH R. TAYLOR, B. A., '72 West Third Avenue Assistant in Drawing, WILLIAM F. LAVERY, D. V. M., University Grounds Assistant in Veterinary Medicine. ALVIN D. HAINES, ' 34 Gill Street Assistant in Mechanical Laboratory. CHARLES L. ARNOLD, B. sc., 1627 North High street Assistant in Nlathematics. 9 r CHARLES B. MORRE Y, B, A., 60 West Fourth Avenue Assistant in Latin and Physiology. CLAIR A. DYE, G. PH.. 135 King Avenue Assistant in General Chemistry. LLOYD M. BLOOMFIEL D, B. AGR., 186 West Ninth Avenue Assistant in Agricultural Chemistry. WILLIAM C. WERNER, FRANK J. COMBS, University Grounds Assistant in Botany. ' 1173 Franklin Avenue XI ch nical Laboratory. Assistant in .f e EDWARD A. KEMMLER, C. E., Assistant in Civil Engineering. WILBUR LI. SIEBERT, M. A., H' t r and Political Science. Assistant in IS o y Assistant i JAMES E. BOYD, B. SC. HARVEY A. SURFACE, B. SC., 895 South High Street 299 South Front Street 1492 North High Street HENRY C. LORD, B. se., n Mathematics and Astronomy. 152 XVest Eighth Avenue 7 Assistant in Physics. .Assistant in Geology. JOSEPH C. MACAULIFFE, M. D., Assistant in Frcnvh. 1596 Pg North High Street 85 North lrligh 'Strut MARTHA M- YOUNG. 580 Exist Broad Strut Assistant in French. OTHER OFFICERS PPOFESSOR GEORGE VV. KNIGHT. . . . Scci'ct:ii'x' of the I-'atcnltx 'PROFESSOR SAMUEL C, DERBY- , , ,ybvn 1 ,M M in PROFESSOR WILLIAM R, OLIVE B. JoNEs, . BERTHA soofmy. . WILLIAM WEIINEIQ, . LAZENUY, . . Siipciiiitcmh 'nt -I1 K-ix-nn .Nssxst mul l 'liixiiw Q lx1ix's'xlx'1llis Kilt l iv I WILLIAM MCCRACKEN.. , l -Ig X x hu PROFESSORS ORTON, THOMAS, KELLICOT ASSOCIATE PKOFESSORS BOWEN AND D Arts and Philosophy PRESIDENT SCOTT, Clzezirnzazz. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR BOWEN, Secretavy PROFPSSORS ORTON, NORTON, DERBY, SMITH KNIGHT, EGGERS, ASSOLI.-XTE PROFESSORS CHALMERS AND DENNY School of Science X:r 1 X XII ' Xxxxkf lfff x 4 xxx fl, my f , . xx X IZ, Ni xxx 1i,,- cz -..- 5 Xxxo 1 I , X i 'f ,,f ff- , I if ' 'N 5 U! QQ f ' , 3 Qd: Mfffil fa 1,7 Cx N X 11 'E.y ,1f'fl 'pf , If EG If ll O! I 1 4 X f X1-jx Q , LQ 4 ' I ' - x X fl .1 ' .3-:fjwjf II X - f ,- Z, - I xxx I eng. Ill Elf 2- X m ' ' nil :' fl., -' D - .,5If V Q- 7 f, .. ..- . -- 'H' :I R .. PRESIDENT SCOTT, Clzairman. PROFESSOR BOHANNAN, Secrefaafy. 11 T, BLEILE ENNY Engineering E Q f' I XZ fx? -gd ' HQ, ,ii -gr!J:a ll!5'll!l ff ' ill L , el-. - ,, Q , ig f' l hWQ !c. ,MJ rf f QffZJ M 1 .Lf:MMQ.,5fi-,2??ig25 , . . 2 Q KAL ', ' f E' ,.z1m T T T gf' , .,, Ink ----e . f 4 5 I f X LIZ' 'fx 1 I1 'H' ' H, nu ,, l ' -7 r ,f ' 1 I , rw b . 'gif W ex W f ' fm ,111 ,,,, m l- wfmki . ,.. ..-I fi -'. 3 ' ffff -5- f , I Y VW .. ' J 5, ,., - -' H f ' v. - - 5-3-figvwfww ..c, ,f .um N K f E f aff -A i- W 1 PRESIDENT SCOTT, Chairmaaz. PROFESSOR THOMAS, Sec1'ezfa1g1. PROFESSORS ROBINSON, LORD, BOHANNAN, BROWN, AND ' EGGERS. Agriou ltu re X , fb fm X .. 44 l y f . V -Q. Q,O Q X: we ,, x ' 1 X 7-L 1- iw. It ' I Q , ' ,f mv, fws'1A'm - 2:23215 li -1: ', ,- ,- J ,D yV'figp'i- jg! -- NN-Q '-- -f1.:.f,.- -'X .. f.,,, . ' ,XX we S gg P fffIf'H'- N - -:..,Q:4,.::.Q-1-.A UJJYH X-::,5-mff1,b . - . , , .- ',X',f-94'-ff' -.JT-'if 1...f4 ' - .. , 4W-iiQuf.ff'-wU'b-1.g..,.S.-.W We.----f -- .van 'A PRESIDENT SCOTT, Clm1'1'111az1. PROFESSOR LAZENBY, S f-4- 1-,-idly, PROEESSORS TOWNSHEND, ROBINSON. NVEIHCR. DETINIERS KELLICOTT, BLEILE, KELLERMAN, AND HUNT. 12 Veterinary Medicine fm xx 253.5 gg . T ' --f O 1 - ' wi: fa- fm? X fig' - I ,7 x ESQ. ' R Q -if-221' ., S115 W E Q 7- o , ',, ,gay uw- .ff V- S +15 flu ff ' Magi 511 Mm, j X xx .:::.::: T 1- , , 4 - ', ff- 52232 ll Aj ,ff 'r 1 -Q E m!1 .j w lf, Q U HMN XTZ IWV, nh' . . .ad -NX... ---- 'f' if 3531? ' Q E N I 'g g 'X A r' PRESIDENT SCOTT, Clzairmazz. PROFESSOR DETMERS, Secreiafgf. PROFESSORS TOWNSHEND, WEBER, BLEILE, KELLERMAN AND ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR KAUFFMAN. A 'Pharmacy f 1 . MQ, Qi -2 1, . QM, J, gmifeeezif ,eff-2, .1-,S ' f if , ff, T ff 5: 1 ,I X ff! D D1 -IPL , -SL 1 -'- si..,y, ZQ .- I - X W'X...xx.f X' PRESIDENT SCOTT, Chairman. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR KAUFFMAN, Secretary. PROFESSORS NORTON, TOWNSHEND, BLEILE, AND KEL- LERMAN. 13 1 '11 t H033 A I x J PROFESSORS ,VI PPE? FN: HORAOE L. WILOUS, wmfafy. A .. , I-' ' h fr 1 .. O- 'W'-'5 1 .- Q0 , 1- lizzie!! --Mann X lliiiigil ' ...Wnneggn G W Z 'x .,h' Q f ' O .ww I, X X ,Ill ff! xvqwr -1 ' xl N- yr q,li,anQlQ,.gi ff x W01' ff S ,Z 4' mga, 2: l ' cg Q O ff: iiiiiiislqyhi 'N'::2I:z2f2:5,- Sun, sis uillgflrg hheiaiiizllesiiiam. Y E9 QQ' ?Y - ga V V341 if! is h 5 7 , O . , 'E Nusa PRESIDENT SCOTT, C71a1'r111a11.f'.1'-Qffi,-111, ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR DENNY, .N1w'r1'afjr. DERBY, THOMAS, KNIGHT, BOHANNA WILSON, AND KELLERMAN. 14 gk..- 1 .,..-- E G G li W NJ J qj . -, 3 ffinf- ' X Z gf if tk Q FQ f 'ij:A-FK J PK 2,22 W W 1- -152 N ,Jig T3 N 'X ' F x . if ' e ' lx W lf9jN S3V3hb '1', K . 'Q Q 'K ic q I O23 f, .- ,Q fx 'Q QNX K ff K-' If X , ' Sf N . f ig, - Q 5 K . ET A I Q' Sk ' xmg ' 'I .. bf i! lol ' ' 'N N X X, QF' D ' ' fx , A X -ff ,x 5' Q 2 5j:? I is 'A I I 'X 'C ' -'R'- '3-53 -,.K 21 -'3'+i,g:'i X- --NX I '. ming, Mix, ,- :J Ax,..lZaJ W, w I1 1 1 i 1 vm, tg 311419- 1 Nflv' 1 . 1 it RW emma Glfa Omicron 'Dzutzron Chapter ESTABUSHED MARCH 251878 FRATRES IN FACULTATE C- NEWTON BROWN, GEO. B. KAUFFMAN. F. W. SPERR, W. B. VIETS. FRATRES IN ooLn.ecano '93 A. AMOS SERVA, ARTHUR W. '1uxYLoR. '94 s EDWARD W. CUNNINGHAM. M. T. XVESTUN. D. XV. DAVIDSON. '95 GUX T. IVIEEK. KVM. IC. SARXWIR. SANFORD B. BELDEN. ICDXVARD L. I'I'I.XSI'1. A. NENVTON XVILCOX, IIICRMAN II. XX'HI.l . I THADDEITS C. DUNLAP. '96 V NIORTIMER XY. I,AXYIQY'1NCE CLARENCE XV. XX ITHOF 1 . X LAW SCHOOL CI-IAS. XVARREN. A. L. ANDREXVS. 17 CH AS. STUl'1 1 P1R -all-J ' 3?tf:5f!i7Tf'iEfTH f h U ' 1 'Wt'F12-tf.f:4.:2rriI-I1-'Z1'2f2ffirzsrruzfi s. Qui alba ella FO.UNDED AT WASHINGTON AND JEFFERS Pi Iota . - - Iota Mu . - - Nu Deuteron . - Upsilon .... Omega . - - Nu Epsilon . - Theta Psi . . Kappa Nu . . Alpha . . . Beta . . . Delta . . Xi ....... Pi ........ Epsilon Deuteron . Sigma Deuteron . Beta Chi . ' .... Gamma Phi . . Beta Mu . . Epsilon .... Omicron .... Beta Deuteron . . Delta Deuteron . . Zeta Deuteron . . Rho Chi .... Eta ....... Sigma ...... Theta Deuteron . Lambda Deuteron Omicron Deuteron Rho Deuteron . . Alpha Phi .... Zeta .... Lambda . Tau ...... Psi ....... Alpha Deuteron . . Gamma Deuteron Mu Sigma . . . Nu ....... Kappa Tau . . Pi Deuteron . Zeta Phi . . . Delta Xi .... Lambda Sigma . ON COLLEGE,1848 COLORS: Royal Purple ' MM- ACTIVE CHAPTERS . . . , . . . Worcester Polytechnic Institute. . . Mass. Institute of Technology. Yale University. College City of New York. Columbia College. University of the City of N. Y. Colgate University. Cornell University. Washington and Jefferson. University of Pennsylvania. Bucknell University. 'Pennsylvania College. . . Allegheny College. Muhlenberg College. . . Lafayette College. Lehigh University. Pennsylvania State College. .Iohns Hopkins University. University of North Carolina. University of Virginia. . . Roanoke College. Hampden-Sidney College. . Washington and Lee University. . . Richmond College. . . Marietta College. . . Wittenberg College. . Ohio Wesleyan University. . . Denison University. . Ohio State University. . . Wooster University. . . University of lNIichigan. . . . Indiana State University. . . DePauw University. .. . Hanover College. . . Vifabash College. . . Illinois VVesleyan University. . . Knox College. . . University of Minnesota. . . Bethel College. . . University of Tennessee. . . University of Kansas. . . VV111. Jewell College. . . University of California. . Leland Stanford, Jr., University GRADUATE CHAPTERS Delta .... Chattanooga, Tenn. Epsilon . . . . Columbus, O Zeta ' Kfuisas CNY, MO- Eid -.-. . . Cleveland. O Theta .... Williamsport, Pa. Delta Club . . . New York City SOuthern Alumni Association .... Baltimore, lNlarvland. 13 . W- , ,Blu amma ella WSTOVQ - xg THE Fraternity of Phi Gamma Delta was founded at Q ' Jefferson College, May, 1848. As 111a11y of the students were from the South, the first efforts at fraternity extension were naturally in that direction, but in a few years the names of several leading colleges of the Northern States could be found on its chapter roll. The war blotted out several of the Southern Chapters, and while some of these have never been revived, the diamond is Well represented at the most prominent insitutions of the South. - By a policy of conservative extension Phi Gamma Delta has provided a home for herself in forty-seven of the Colleges and Universities, from Massachusetts to California, and as far South as Tennessee. Seven graduate chapters have also been established. Catalogues of the fraternity were issued in 1864, 1865, 1870, and 18783 another and very complete one is nearly ready for publication. The first song book appeared at Easton, Pa., in 1886, and will be followed by another in a fevv months. The Phi Gamma Delta Quarterly, published forthe fra- ternity, by F. C. Howe, at Baltimore, Md., takes rank with the leading fraternity publications. General conventions are held each year. The last one, on Cctober 26 and 28, 1892, at Philadelphia, was one of the most enthusiastic and largely attended in fraternity history. 19 a 1 The executive government is vested in the Grand Chapter at New York City. For convenience of administration the fraternity is divided into sections, of which the Ohio chapters ' ' f M' hi an form the fourth. and that of the University o ic g The section holds annual conventions and a section flower and fraternity yell have been adopted. ' ' t t the Omicron Deuteron is the pioneer fraternity chap er a Ohio State University. Through the efforts of Oliver H. students at the Ohio Wes- Perry and W. Angus Dunn, former leyan University and members of Theta Deuteron, a charter ' l was secured, and on May 5, 1878, Omicron Deuteron was du y installed on the roll of Phi Gamma Delta. During the fourteen years of its existence, the chapter has f whom many have obtained graduated thirty-eight men, o enviable reputations in the professions and in the fields of science, journalism, and politics. Connected with Omicron Deuteron and in room 3 D hers, is, Epsilon 'Graduate Chapter, among whose members are found not a few of the prominent young men of Columbus. s ad'oinin0' xijx X 1 -u-X y ' x r - I C0 6 A wvx X 20 g?o?Q:ii:5'I'?i'15f31'?5'G'?'5'+'f 1 f '37 V f'.:L:1ff.vZ' ,w.-11... 41- 'ff llfv'lrr1,l'h1'lu My X an 5 X D A fkppa KNUIMNS2 f.cIC'r'IIrfc'l' ami l'l'nk Delta Chapter of Ohio ESTABLISHED MAY 15.1880 FRATRES IN FACULTATE ur-:O. W. MQUOARD, J. V. DENNY. ACTIVE MEMBERS '92 PEROY MARTIN, PEARL N. JONES. '93 CHARLES S. POWELL. '94 CHAS. W. HELLENBERGER, FRANK CASEY? CHARLES L. MQILVAINE, CHAUNCEY N. MOORE, EDWARD O. MARTIN. E A '95 HARRY HAVER HATOHER, HAREORD STEWART, HOBART BEATTY, LEE R. STEWART. GEO. L. APPEL? IRVING S. BRETZF9 '96 HARVEY M. OHENEY, GEO. R. LOVE. CLYDE S. BARTHOLOMEW. LAW SCHOOL EDWARD D. HOWARD. ,,1i.,4-1- 4' Left College. Z1 1852 1853 1855 1855 1859 1860 1869 1888 1869 1880 1881 1887 1853 1855 1856 1890 1880 1868 1857 1857 1860 1866 1871 1880 1865 1869 1870 1864 1892 1876 1875 1881 1867 1888 1876 1881 1892 u hi ima Rai FOUNDED AT WASHINGTON AND JEFFERSON, 1852 CoLoRs: Lavender and Pink ACTIVE CHAPTERS FIRST DISTRICT .Pennsylvania Alpha . . . Pennsylvania Beta ---. . Pennsylvania Gamma . . Pennsylvania Epsilon - - .Pennsylvania Zeta ...- . Pennsylvania Eta ..-' . . . Pennsylvania Theta . - - . Pennsylvania Kappa . . . . New York Alpha . . . . . New York Beta . . . - . . . New York Delta . . - - New York Gamma ...- Jefferson College. . Allegheny College. Bucknell University. Pennsylvania College. Dickinson College. Franklin and Marshall College. Lafayette College. Swarthmore College. Cornell University. Syracuse University. Hobart College. Columbia. SECOND DISTRICT . Virginia Alpha ...... .Virginia Beta . . . . . . Virginia Gamma ..... . West Virginia Alpha . . . Maryland Alpha ..... . Dist. of Columbia Alpha . . . South Carolina Alpha . Mississippi Alpha .... University of Virginia. Washington and Lee University Hampden-.Sidney College. University of West Virginia. Johns Hopkins University. Columbian University. University of South Carolina. University of Mississippi. THIRD DISTRICT . Ohio Alpha ...... . Ohio Beta . . . . Ohio Gamma . . . . . Ohio Delta . . . . . .Indiana Alpha . . ' . . . Indiana Beta . . . . . .Indiana Gamma . . . Ohio Wesleyan University. Wittenberg College. Wooster University. Ohio State University. DePauw University. Indiana State University. Wabash College. FOURTH DISTRICT . . .Illinois Alpha . . . . . . .Illinois Beta . . . Michigan Alpha . .'Wisconsin Alpha . . . . . .Wisconsin Gamma . . . . .Iowa Alpha. . . . . . . . Minnesota Beta , . . .Kansas Alpha . . . . . California Alpha . . . . . California Beta . . . . Northwestern University. Chicago University. University of Michigan. University of YVisconsin. Beloit College. University of Iowa. University of Minnesota University of Kansas. University of the Puciiic. Leland Stanford. .Tr.. University ALUMNI CHAPTERS New York City. Chicago. Philaclelpliia. Cinqimmti, Qlm-Qllmd Springfield. - Pittsburgh. lXlinne:1.polis. St. Paul. Kansas City. Columbus. i H11 that fbi 4 , ww HE Phi Kappa Psi fraternity was loumleil in Feb- Qgi 2 ruarv, 1852. at Jellerson College, Waslnington, Pa., V bv Charles P. T. Moore and W. ll. Iyetternlan. Ill lS53 .llulge hloore L'IltL'l'L'll tlle lzlw school of the University ol' Yirginia, and there established the iirst branch of Phi Kappa Psi. Virginia Alpha. Before the war opened the fraternity was almost wholly confined to Southern institutions, and at its breaking out nearly all the Southern Chapters became extinct. From 1865 to the present time the order has grown rapidly, always exercising a certain degree of conservatism, however, and never endeavoring to establish a Chapter whose existence would be a burden upon the general fraternity. There are at present thirty-tive active Chapters in the Order, which cover a territory extending from the Atlantic to the Pacilic, and from the great lakes on the north to Louis- iana on the south. The total membership is 5,UOO, and those in actual attendance number about 600. The question of Chapter houses has constantly been agitated, and at present eleven Chapters enjoy the privileges of a home fraternity iireside. National Conventions- Grand Arch Councils are held every two years, the one for 1892 being held in Cincinnati, and New York City being the next place of meeting in 1894. History of Ohio Delta-Primarily the Ohio Alpha Chap- ter of the Phi Kappa Psi at Delaware, Ohio, is responsible for the organization of Ohio Delta. Notable efforts directed toward the establishment of the latter were made in the early history of the College, at a period when Greek letter societies at the State University 23 3,gi-33455044 were conspicuous mainly through the fact of their non- existence. as made in the winter of 1877-7 8, The .first decided move w but owing to unforseen difficulties it was not until the holi- th t an thing definite was accomplished. It days of '78-9 a y as on a cold winter's night during the time mentioned that W . ' ' rne ed from Ohio's capital city to the seat of the nine men Jou y Ohio Wesleyan University, and were there accorded an oppor- . . . . . f U t,, tunity to exhibit their artistic skill in the matter o goa locomotion. iThese nine individuals, namely, George C. Mesher, M. E. Nutting, J. S.'Humphrey, Parl C. Robinson, Herman Hubbard, H. B. Dahl, vv. H. ciaaffyhoimaa, Charles ' ' th words initiated M. Wing and George W. Dun, were in o er ' Al ha with the understanding that they would be into Ohio p , transferred to the supposed-to-be-budding Ohio Delta. Obstacles of considerable moment were encountered, but l h k no C. L. Van Cleve and his conferrees of Ohio A p a new ent and finally on May 4, 1880, were granted a discouragem , charter, constituting the Ohio Delta Chapter of Phi Kappa Psi, to be located at the Ohio State University. The fraternity numbers among its prominent members: E -G rnor J. B. Foraker, of Ohio, Judge M. L.VBuchwalter, X ove of Cincinnati, E. P. C. Lewis, Minister to Portugal, Boyd Winchester, Minister to Switzerland, Geo. A. Jenks, eX-Solici- tor General, Judge John W. Phillips, of Tennessee, Prof. John W. White, of Harvard, Hon. John Beatty, of Columbus, Hon. L. J. Critchfield, Edgar F. Smith, of the University of Pennsylvania, S. A. Ort, President of Wittenberg College, and Robert Lowry, the well known musical composer. The convention of 1890 adopted a fraternity yell: 4 'SI-Iigh, high, high! Phi Kappa Psi! Live ever, die never! Phi Kappa Psi! The official organ of the fraternity is The Shield of Phi Kappa Psi, published monthly during the college year, and under the able editorship of C. L. Van Cleve. I 5 I! . ,. j:5'T ,J . W ' a i N I f 5 N i 2 R 1 2 9 1 R Q 3 Q Q K ' Q .3 1 Q f, S ff f 5 .. if , 3 5 S 5 5 3' 2 if Q ? Y' 3 I K 1 n 1 1 4 w 1 w I r I w W 1 E 3 1 A I 1 3 2 I , i L E. l 1 2 Y 1 ' I I W .N L Tw w ,X . lx wx ,r' 1 I i I i 1 IQ! 1 12 I Y 4 fl EE fi l 5 ml ,i I L... . E-K V,-N Q1 :ii Y v -Q 1 ...- . ., .. :...... A . ,,-,-. ,.,. ,, ..-,.......Y.-....,Y Y ,, J ...Q ,, - - 'I ' 1 ii -4, A- 5' w 1'5- 'fk-'fy-,iz +1531 fd A n t Aj, fig X- M . - ,. .-,,,,. X,-. I 5 ....... -. N. P -E A. - Jn., we r- P - H Y ,f.- Q 3 taagsfrwf. 4 Y '.'. ' W 1. ' A. 2 -- ' X f 55121 .f A 1 ' fix? 1 - . f ,- A' ' , f- -1 . ' - '- H - v ' 'A if ' , . i' f-: , , 1 ' ff -Y X75 ,gg fp fn.. ,ff ' , A V .' ' . ff 1f'i f ' -S- 1. M ,Ib .,,,. rg. 1,11 .111-cleft-, IU I 'v 1' xgmu hi Alpha Gamma Chapttf asrauusv-wo IN mn. um: FRATRES IN FACULTATE 11 R. xxzvrsux, namzr -.f.-,-'mar rw FFRATRES IN COLLEGIO '92 D, T013 RUY, I,HNIN1Q E! mvtfivki-ii' wax. 1,4 xlzxxxxs '94 Gm' R. w11.r.1.xMs, vsr.xRr,rf1-S wr rwxvw WlI.I.I.X?-I nc. II.XZI'1I.'I'INE-1. '95 5 RICHART T. ELLIS. .x. rr -nr,r,raN. RAYMOND KRIFMM, I,T'TEII'1I-C 'rn-1r.r.xS. ROY YQDER. F. M. r,.,.-m1rAm-.m 'l '96 I CHAXRLFIS L. XV1 me 111. SPECIAL PEARL M. GRIFI4'I'I'H, 1fR.xNR r,. rzxzxrqx LAW SCHOOL FRANK H. lR9AI,Pl. ,Xl IQ' R,-.W,,.iQ, 51315 G FOUNDED AT MIAMI UNIVERSITY, 1855 Alpha . Beta . . Gamma . . Zeta . . Eta . . Theta . . Kappa . . Lambda . . . Mu .... Xi.. . . . Omicron . . Rho . . . . Tau . . . Chi . . Psi ...... Omega .... Gamma Gamma Delta Delta . . Delta Chi . . . Zeta Zeta . . Zeta Psi . . . Theta Theta . Sigma Sigma . Alpha Beta . . Alpha Gamma Alpha Delta . Alph Jxlllll Alph Alph Alpll Allah Alpll Alpli Aillil Alllil Alph xxljlil Aillil Alph .Nipll lxillil lxznplm .Nlplla .Xillil t' Epsilon Zeta . . Theta . . lulil . . Lamlnla Nu... Xi... lillllt'l'Ull l'i Rho, . Signals: . ilpsiiull 'l':m . l'hi , , lki. . iiillljiil. . Kznlipal. zxillilil. . Ili. COLORS: H1116 and Cola' CHAPTER ROLL . . . . - Miami University. . . VVooster University. . . Ohio 'Wesleyan University. . . VVashington and Lee University . . University of Mississippi. . . Pennsylvania College. . . Bucknell University. . . Indiana State University. . . Denison University. . . DePauw University. . . Dickinson College. . . Butler University. . . Roanoke College. . . Hanover College. . . University of Virginia. . . Northwestern University. . . Randolph-Macon College. . . Purdue University. . . Vifabash College. . . Center College. . . University of Cincinnati. . . University of Michigan. . . Hampden-Sidney College. . . University of California. . . Ohio State University. . . Stevenk Institute of Technology . . University of Nebraska. . . lieloit College. . . Mass. Institute of Technology. . . Illinois lYesleyz1n University. . . llniversiiy of XYiseonsin. . . University of Texas. . llniversity of Kamsas. . Tulaune llniversity. . . .Nllmioil College. . . Lehigh llniversity. . . iilliN'l'l'Niiy ol' iNiillllCNOill. . . llnix'er'y of Southern KxiliifOl'llill . . llniversilx' of North k'au'olina. . .Cornell i'nix'ersity. , . , . . X ainilerlnll 1 mx'ersi1x'. , . , . . l,i-luml htanloril. .li1,l niversxtx' , . . . . . i3lllY1'l'NliX ul lllxnois. llolv.u'1t'ollege. l'ennsylx'Qini.i State College. 3 Nh jigma Qi 'lshstorg i 3 HE Sigma Chi fraternity was founded at Miami rg E5 University, in 1855, and since that time has never departed from the traditions of its birth. The founders were young men whose ideas of fraternity life caused them to become protestants against the prevailing system, and they revolted for the purpose of organizing another fraternity. They inscribed on the corner stone of Sigma Chi: Small chapter membership and closer union along the lines of true fraternal feeling and mutual friend- shipf' In fact, they sought to introduce into college life. as near as possible, the ties that bind the family circle, and by the purity of motives, the quality of men, the reality of its fraternity, and the sterling worth of its principles, has this object been attained, until the banner of the white cross now floats in triumph over fifty-seven colleges. This ruling idea of brotherly love and the higher fellow- ship of man which had been so forcibly impressed on the fraternity, has passed through the severe test of a great civil strife and emerged stronger and more brilliant. The war which burst upon the country in '61, sowing the seeds of dis- cord. disunion, and dissolution among all organizations ol' men, found Sigma Chi with six Northern and four Southern chapters which never faltered in their loyalty and devotion to each other. During the war the badge of the fraternity. by mutual understanding, was worn on the cap by all soldier members. It is impossible here to recount tl1e deeds of youthful valor and heroism, the pathetic, the friendly and often-thrilling meetings between the blue and gray xvearers of the white cross. It was toward the close of the yvar. when the situation 21 k d dark for the South that St. John Dixon, organized in loo C a the confederate army of the Tennessee, the now famous Con- stantine Chapter of the fraternity, for the purpose of ensuring the safe return to their homes of enough able young men to k f reorganization in the South. take up the wor o The progress of Sigma Chi since the war has been steady and successful. A ' ' l t histor I 1890 the fraternity ,published the most comp e e U y T1 . and catalogue of its members that has been published by any ' t ' s a brief sketch of each member, and fraternity. It con ain' photo engravings of all institutions in which chapters are located. A ' l h G mma The initial movement of the founding of A p a a Chapter owes its origin to Mr. Edmund Smith, of the Gamma. ched successively Edward Dowsett, Jesse C. Mar- He approa S uardt Henry K Terry, and George R. Twiss, asking them fl , - -to join with him in an attempt to plant the standard of his fraternity at Columbus. These four, together wi a . , E itman and Frank Miller, on February 8, 1882, sent in a as , petition through Gamma Chapter for a charter from Sigma Chi. As the petition was not acted upon until the middle of . . . 1 . or March the initiation could not take place until the fol owing . 7 month. In the meantime arrangements had been made by the Ga Chapterf - These plans we th J mes O Ballard John C. mma at Delaware to receive and initiate the new re carried out to the letter, and on Satur- da April 21, 1882, the above seven men were initiated into Y, A the Sigma Chi fraternity, forming the Alpha Gamma Chapter h th' d secret order to enter the Chio State and being t e U ir University. Q N The Chapter has been an energetic one ever since its birth, and its members who have gone out into active lift d't their Clit wter, and loyal in are now reflecting cre 1 upon I1 their devotion to Sigma Chi. 28 lx k. . i I VJ' Zfx .E Q. 'gr 1 iff? , is F . ,874 '- , ,.6. Q , .. z.,,... -ff ...nw 'wr-,.. RH Delia 'LEM Ohio Zeta Cihapter ESTABLISHED 1883 Lo! ous , lmmurox llf 811. FRATFIES IN FACULTATE R D BOHANNAN Vx NI NILI'IIIhs1lX CX RUS HULINC1 I NINII I I IHXII 1xIXs C I ' , S: .'ll'f r11l lllllf .Al:'11r' .5 PI .'f 1: l'. '7ff ' ' 1 I1 - 1 Q ' 'Z ,S .' V. . Q QPY, 7 '1 F 117471 Pi ', v v Q . , lk A 4 A . . .I I MI x LAW SCHOOL FFIATRES IN COLLEGIO '93 EDWARD M. BLOOM. FRED. W. MATI-HAS, IGTELLIS TRIMBEL SI-IAXV. 'IEDNVIN R. THOMAS, NLT. M. BUTLER, DAVID A. PENCE, THEODORE LINDENBERG. ST. CLAIR AI,I'lXANITI'2R. XYAI,'I'I'lR U. IIARRIS. 'X'SAMUI'1I, MORRISON. '94 HARRY R. I U'XYI,ICIQ. CHARLES H A R KE K I .XRIXI'1Ix JOHN DUDLICY DI'NIl.XM. XVILLIAM C. KENDALL. EDYVARD FRANCIS. '95 FRED. ISAAC ASKENV, LOYVRY F. SATER. H. M. STRONG, AUSTIN G. BALDXYIN. I-IORATIO J. FORGY, SPECIAL NATHAN L. BURNER. 4'In Law School. 09 -I-Left College. zations hold their annual meeting and banquet, and all active chapters have exercises in honor of the alumni of the frater- nity. Twenty-four cities, from New York to San Francisco, have chartered alumni organizations. National conventions are held bi-ennially, the next to be held at Syracuse, N. Y., Thanksgiving week, 1893. The sixth edition of the Catalogue is in press, to be issued December next. The fraternity jour- nal, THE SCROLL, a bi-monthly, edited in Columbus, Ohio, by Dr. J. E. Brown, is in its XVII volume. Among the names of the most prominent alumni, are Prest. Benjamin Harrison, ex-P. M. General, ex-Secly of the Interior, U. S. Senator N. F. Vilas, U. S. Senators Blackburn and Allen, E. H. Conger, U. S. Minister to Brazil, J. W. Foster, ex-Minister to Russia and to Spain, now Secretary of State, Rev. David Swing, and Eugene Field, the poet humorist. Ohio Zeta-The tirst mention of Ohio State University in the records of Phi Delta Theta, is in the minutes of the National convention at Richmond, Va., October, 1892, when the Ohio chapters recommended the institution as worthy of a Phi Delta Theta charter, and secured the appointment of a committee from O. W. U. chapter to look after the application of the same. In September, 1882, Harry A. Kahler had entered the O. S. U. Through .I. E. Brown, of O. VV. U., Kahler associated with himself J. C. Munger, W. F. Daggett, and later C. A. VVinter. By authority obtained from the general fraternity, these men were initiated by the O. VV. U. chapter, April 27, 1883. VVhen college re-opened in September. Daggett did not return, but it was found that .l. E. Randall and C. P. Bonner, O. VV. U. Phis, and C. D. Thomas. a Buch- tel pledged man, had entered the University. Thomas was initiated at Buehtel by granted authority, and, on October 7. the chapter was formally instituted by the President of the Province. The ehapter has been prosperous from the begin- ning, its roll showing at this time 1,3 names on its member- ship list. The elass of l887 contained its tirst graduates, but the positions ol' the following of its alumni testify to the good record ol' the ehapter: Y. .l. Emery, Professor of Latin at the O. S. U.: VV. F. Hunt, Principal of Barnard School. St' Paul? VVni. McPherson, Assistant Professor ot' Cheniistrf. O. S. U., H. A. Kahler, Southwestern Manager Middlesex Loan and Banking' Co-3 Mark Francis, llrolessor ot' Al0lC1'illlll'dl Surgery in Texas State University: .l. tleo. Bloom. Assistant Ellllnieer Maintenance ol' NVax' on the li. N O. and S. NY. R. R., S. IQ. Bennett, l'rol'essor ot' Yeterinarx' Snrgerx' in A. N M. College ol' 1'iC11lllk'litYQ C. l'. Bonner, lliv. linginieer on N. SL W. R. R. X M ,,t 4 'R.II.ILXSSIA9R WF. H. REEVES. M. XVHITACRE, G REU CHAPTER ROLL '92 E. NV. SCHUELLER XV. FRANKLIN. '93 WR. F. FOSTER. '94 HH. S. TALBOT J. W. HOWARD. '95 ' C. W. DAVIS, G- L- GUGLE, O. P. MINSHALL, J- W. SELLEW, W. J. KAPPES. SPECIAL Left College. H. H. FORNEY. 33 7 other. In 1865 they began to hear of each other. A corres pondence immediately sprang up, which developed the fact that their objects of establishment were essentially the same. So, after negotiations and a few concessions by both orders, they were united in 1874, forming the Chi Phi fraternity of to-day. The orders were established for the same object and the same principles were embodied in their constitutions. And it may be proper to add that Chi Phi is the college fraternity which has had a European Chapter. The chapter at the University of Edinburg was established by some Americans who were pursuing their studies at that institution. only American After the consolidation in 1874, the division into orders rapidly disappeared, and the government of the fraternity at large vested in a Grand Lodge, whose members are elected b Y the delegates at the National Convention, which meets each T . . . . hanksgiving week. By strictly adhering to the early estab- lished policy of not creating chapters in small colleges, nor encouraging feeble ones, Chi Phi has to-day a list of strong, e best institutions of the healthy chapters, founded in th country. Alumni chapters have been established in New York, Philadelphia, Atlanta, Baltimore,Washington, Chicago. Boston, and Louisville. Iota chapter was established November 9th, 1883. at the Ohio State University, and the following account of its estab- lish t A ' ' men appeared in the Ohio State Journal of the 10th: At the last convention of the Chi Phi fraternity, Iota chapter Was r t d ' g an e a charter at the O. S. U., and the establishment took place yesterday. The affair was kept perfectly secret. and this announcement will be in the nature of 1 surprise t w 1 R . L the Greek letter fraternities of the college. Last eveninv' 1 ban uet 0' f 5 x q was gn en at the Park Hotel to the new members. and visitors. The banquet was quite extensive. and after the good things of life had been stowed away the table was 'I an X1 x L ITM and toasts were drunk 111 honor of Iota. At 1 -X NI the ' b'l Ju 1 ant fratres disbanded. The boys are to be congratulated upon the class of students who are the charter members of Iota chapter, and if the success of last nights banquet is to be a prophesy of their future, nothing but success can await them. SU 1 ANSI . 1 .J DREIQX, PPIXLA, if 2 s. : i 3 s 1 1 1 L L ks , -uzfnfi-, ,- . , '1'1 ,Am . ,. - , Q xv, .,.-W: ... , - in 3 a 3 X I B 5 3 2 if 5 J- l Eta ,UTQTQ Theta 'Delta Chapter ESTABLISHED DECEMBER 16, 1885 CHAPTER ROSE: C'llffIfZl'f7l6' Ilfwfmoi FRATRES IN FACULTATE D. S. ISZELLICOTT, GEO. P. COLER, W. H. SIEBERT. ACTIVE MEMBERS '92 P. PL.-XTTER EXVANS, HERBERT LINCOLN JOHNSTON, SAMUEL CHARLES IQERSHAXV, JAMES ROWE TOMLINSON, EDWARD BANCROFT MCCARTER, FRANK BOYNTON ELDRIDGE. '93 CHARLES ROBERT HAMILTON. WILLIAM LUCIUS GRAXVES, '94 . WYATT GIARFIELD PLANTZ, ALEXANDER HOUSTON JONES. '95 CHARLES THONIAS HERBERT, DAVID ARTHUR CARSON, ROBERT DALE MCCARTER, JR., ROY EVERETT LAYTON. I '96 CHARLES FRED. SHANE, JOHN FRED. LOEHR, J. PORTER CAMPBELL, WALTER VICTOR TITUS LANDIS SPECIAL - ERNEST KENT COULTER. LAW DEPARTMENT IRA S. CRAWFORD, D. E. DANIELS, CARL G. DONEY, R. J. MAUCK. 37 ' 'i zfaiff . 8 gpg, Nt.. - ,.. wr 7 1 31. i ' 1839 .... 1841 ..... ---- eta 'meta i Alpha . ........ . Beta .......... Beta Kappa .... 1841 .... 1842 .... ..... G amma ...... 1842 ..... .... E psilon .... 1843 .... ----- 1845 .... -.--- 1845 .... .---- 1815 .... 1845 .... ..... 1847. 1850. 1850. 1853. 1853. 1854. 1860. 1861. 1866. 1867. 1868. 1868. 1869. 1870. 1872. 1872. 1873. 1873. 1873. 1874. 1874. 1875. 1875. 1876. 1878. 1879 .... . . . 1879 . 1879 . 1879 .... 1880.... 1881 .... 1881 ..... 1882 ..... 1 884 1885 ..... . . . 1886 1888 ..... 1888 1888 1888 1889 1889 1889 1889 1890 1890 1890 1890 ..... .. 1891 1891 Eta ........ Delta ..... Pi .......... Lambda .... Tau ...... Kappa . . . Zeta ...... Omicron . . . Theta .... . Iota .... Mu ......... Phi ....,...... Psi ............ Alpha Beta ..... .... Alpha Gamma .... .... Alpha Delta Alpha Epsilon .... .... .Alpha Eta .... .Alpha Kappa. . Richmond College. .Alpha Lambda .Alpha Nu ..... .Xi ............. .Alpha Pi ...... .Rho ........... .Alpha Sigma. .Beta Delta .... .Sigma ...... .. .Beta Zeta ..... .Upsilon ..... .Alpha Chi .... .Beta Alpha... .Omega ...... .Beta Eta ...... .Beta Beta ..... .Beta Theta ... .Nu .- .......... . .Alpha Alpha. .Beta Iota .... . Beta Lambda. .Theta Delta .. .Beta Omicron .Alpha Upsilon ..... .... .Alpha Xi ......... .... .Alpha Zeta... Al h L Tau . p 2 . ..... .. .Alpha Omega ,... .... Miami. Adelbert. Ohio University. Washington-jefferson College. Center College. Harvard University. De Pauw University. Indiana University Universig' of Michigan. Wabash 'ollege. Brown University. Hampden-Sidney College. University of Virginia. Ohio Wesleyan University. Hanover College. Cumberland University. Beloit College. Bethany College. lowa State University. Wittenberg College. Westminster College. Iowa Wesleyaii University. Denison University. .University of Wooster. .University of Kansas. .Randolph-Macon College. .University of Wiscoii in. .Northwestern U. iversity. .Dickinson College. .Cornell University. .Stevens lnstitute of Technology. .St. Lawrence University. .Boston University. .johns Hopkins University. .Kenyon College. .University of California. .Maine State College. .University of Mississippi. .Colgate University. .Union College. .Columbia College. .Amherst College. .Vanderbilt University. .Ohio State University. .University of Texas. .Pennsylvania State Colley e. .Knox College. .University of Denver. ..University of Nebraska. .Dartmouth College. Beta Epsilon ..... . .... Syracuse University. Eta Beta ..... Beta Pi ...... Mu Epsilon... Beta Nu ..... ..Zeta Psi ..Beta Chi... ..Phi Chi ..... . Phi Alpha ..... . . . .Davidson College. University of North Carolina. University of lNliniir-sota. NVesley:1n University. . .University of Cincinnati. ..University of blissotii i. ..l.chig'li University. ..Yalc University. ALUMNI CHAPTERS Providence. R. I., Louisville. Kyy., I'itt.slinrgrli, Pa.. Newark, ON New York, N. Y., WVhceling, V . Va., Boston. Mass.. llniltiinorc, Nd.. Cleveland, O., Richmonll. Va., Cincinnati. O.. liigivt-on, U., Denver, Col., San Francisco, Cal., lndianapolis. lntl.. Cliicago. llls.. Kansas City, Mo., Washington, D. C., Oxnalia. Nalin ' 1.oiix-eiixxmrili, Kas, Akron: 01110, Pliiladclpliia. lla. 38 U T 1 1 I up-1 i 1 l i Q l . . 2 l I r l i 41 1 E 2 l. 1 l 1 i v x i 1 l 1 in 1 5 ,......-W-, I l F il :- Jeb Eta 'meta i igtorg ETA THETA PI the iirst Western fraternrty, orrg- 1nated rn 1839 at old Mramr Unrversrty, the foundrng ' place of Phl Delta Theta and Sigma Chr The organ1zat1on was effected by John Rerly Knox, 40 1n close association vvrth Samuel Taylor Marshall, 39, Davrd Lrnton, '39, James G Smrth, 40, Henry Hardrn, '40, John Holt Dun- can, '40, Mrchael C Ryan, 40 and 'Thomas' B Gordon, 41 Twrce durrng rts lrfetrme a unron has been brought about vvrth other fraternrtres-vvrth Alpha Srgma Chr rn 1879, and w1th the Mystrcal Seven IH 1889 In each rnstance the alumnr of the unrtrng socrety have been recerved rnto full fellovvshrp At present the fraternrty numbers srxty one actrve chapters vvrth a membershrp of seven thousand drstrrbuted over the Unrted States rn nrne d1str1cts each of vvhrch 1S presrded over by a Drstrrct chref The executrve authorrty rests Wrth a commrttee of three consrstrng of the General Secretary, the Alumnr Secretary and the General Treasurer, vvhrle the cor porate power 1S vested rn a Board of Trustees, rncludrng frfteen members, mne of whom must be resrdents of C1nc1nnat1 The catalogue of the fraternrty was first publrshed rn 1855 at Prttsburg and subsequent edrtrons were rssued rn 1859 1870 1882 vvrth a supplement rn 1886, vvhrle a further edrtron 1S now 1n press The song book has appeared rn srx edrtrons srnce 1865 The journal of the fraternrty, called THE BETA THETA P1 was first rssued December 15th 1872 and has appeared contrnuously srnce It 1S a monthly and 1S publrshed at Crncrnnatr 39 ' ' ,-331:-:a:u5:,:m'i1i1,+i-4 -f 7 The conventions are held in August of every year, at Wooglin-on-Chautauqua, where the fraternity owns a large club house and grounds. The Fifty-third General Conven- tion assembled there, August 3d to August 9th, 1892. The Ohio State University Chapter-The Theta Delta of Beta Theta Pi was formed from the Phi Alpha, a local society whose pin was ai monogram of the letters composing the name, and whose colors were crimson and white. Theta Delta made its appearance December 16, 1885, the initiation being made by the Ohio Wesleyan Chapter, to whom a dispensation for the purpose had been granted. The charter members were: William Reed Pomerene, Denver John Mackey, Charles Herbert Hirst, Edward Cyrus Benedict, Charles Vernon Pleuk- harp, Elmer Ellsworth Paine, Clayton Williams DeLamatre, Wilby Grimes Hyde, Wilbur Henry Siebert, Wallace Clement Sabine, Herbert Taylor Stephens, Henry Julian Woodworth, Frank Milton Raymund, Gains Glenn Atkins, Julius Floto, and Charles Edward Skinner. The present chapter numbers thirteen and occupies an eleven room brick chapter house on the University grounds. .3 .. 5 .N .af , G..-'w-ci, kat, Sis ,vwqi . Jgl' 'rx' I NV 1 ,,7v 1 N1 i If wi.ml'9', E, b Qmngmurn. ,qu -,iqwg ,pp 11.1 ' JM Vflxl, K AE HL' '. . .1lvalnL'il:.v5i1Iif'if-x.. Nfl -nw , wi Y ,J il lm! , lllillmwll ,'H'fEimF.ii'.. , , .Q ' QE. -IU gn if my fi if 1 E 1 i j I I w 4 ,. ' P ,Q .4 , fl 4 9 i i I I4I 5 1 5 . l I 531 , , ,A T w i lg. J I K 2 Y I !, IE.fwnvvaw----ffriw-'-' 'W' ' ' ,...-v-.... J . 5Y f. . M, , L -, ' i KY3 f ' . ' 1 . 5'?f ,' 7 7i.,5 ' f' : ,255 iw. ,ggf - K ,gr-5: 72 Bi -'ix .4 :,:g!gs-I 'VW' ' ' 1-X Vw, Y . t . Y Ag Z 3 , V -- - X 'Q , L - i , KY Q ., , D1TCf1'll ,.P2LLZcZ1. 1 7 1 I l 1 P 5 i S . x 1 N 1 O 'Q .5- -pn MPM Mppa amma 'Beta Nu Chapter- ' ESTABLISHED OCTOBER 12, 1888 ACTIVE MEMBERS '92 CHARLOTTE CLAYPOOLE, KATHERINE KRAUSS, CHRISTINE HOUSTON, MIGNON TALBOT, CARRIE WRIGHT. '93 CORA CLEVELAND GALE, THERESA L. LENTZ, ALICE LOUISE MERRILL, MARY BLAKISTON. I '94 CLARA BYERS, MARY LOUISE HULL, GERTRUDE STOWELL KELLICOTT, MAUDE VIRGINIA SMITH. '95 GEORGIETTA FISHER, FANNY FERN HOWARD, EDITH TWISS. '96 BESSIE S. CLAYPOOLE, ZOA BALDWIN, . MABLE LISLE MARY SCOTT. POST-GRADUATE A CHARLOTTE LAKE CLAYPOOLE. 41 1882 1881 1883 1883 1890 1891 1888 1877 1876 1890 1888 1882 1881 1872 1875 1878 1875 1882 1873 1880 1882 1875 1884 1883 1892 JIQPPG Kappa emma FOUNDED OCTOBER 13,1870 COLORS: Liglzzf and Dark Blue ACTWVE CHAPTERS Phil. . Beta Beta , Beta Tau . . Psi ..... Beta Alpha . Beta V Epsilon Gamma Rho Lambda . . Beta Gamma Beta Delta . Beta Nu . . Xi . . . Kappa . . ALPHA PROVINCE . . . . . . Boston University. . . St. Lawrence University. . . Syracuse University. . . Cornell University. . . . University of. Pennsylvania. . . . . Barnard College. . . . Allegheny College. BETA PROVINCE ' . . . . . . Buchtel College. . . . . Wooster University. . . University of Michigan. . . Ohio State University. . . Adrian College. . . . . . . Hillsdale College. GAMMA PROVINCE Delta .' . Iota , Mu . . Eta. . . Upsilon. . Epsilon. . Chi ..... Beta Zeta . . Theta . . . Sigma . . Omega . . Beta Eta . . . . . . .Indiana University. . . DePauw University. . . Butler University. . . lVisconsin University. . . Northwestern University. . . . . . . Illinois IVesleyau University DELTA PROVINCE . . . . . . Minnesota University. . . Iowa University. . . Nlissouri University. . . Nebraska. llnivcrsity. . . Kansas llniycrsity. . . Lclznul Stamford. Jr., llnivoux N 42 . - t'i 45-f' s 2' --f -...H-..i --W-, -...,, ., -. ..-. :xi -, ji Mmm Mppa emma ,..-i.-- . .HE Kappa Kappa Gamma Fraternity was founded on the 13th by Anna Willits, Minnie Stewart, Jennie Boyd. and Louise of October, 1870, at Monmouth College, Monmouth. Illinois. Bennett. Anti-fraternity laws compelled Alpha Chapter to give up its char- ter in 18783 but by this time twelve Chapters had been established. Those Chapters established during the last few years have been in t of Pennsylvania, Barnard College. such universities as the Universi y the University of Michigan, and Le now on the roll are in co-educational land Stanford University, and all institutions. The first convention of the fraternity was held with Alpha Uhapter at Monmouth in 1871, the executive power resting with that t'hapter. Since 1878 the conventions have been held bi-ennially. In 1Hs1 the governinent of the fraternity, which up to that tiine had been vested in one Chapter, was changed and a Grand Council of four inenibers was elected to act as an executive body between conventions. and :ls H11il'et's of the convention. In 1890 a fifth ollicer was added tut11t't'olli1i.'i1. The 'tirst grand President was 'Fade Iflartsutl, now Mrs. J. 11. Kuhns, through whose etlorts mainly. the fraternity XVAN ei-nverted from a groupof Chapters. eaeh working for itself. to one united whole. The Constitution was revised during' this adniinistr.iti--n .ind .ull-pied essentially as it stands to-day. Since 1882 the tiraternity has been represented by .ll111.t1'1l'1'i1' nov. called the Key, edited by 1,1l1li11.l111t'1'. .X song b--Q-lf 1Y.ls111l1ViiN11t'l under the direction ot Phi Vliaptei' in 1f4f4'l. .ind t'-ir tw-i 8-11 i'-il' ssi-.-1 years what was known as the 1i.ipp.i liainnia li,i1enil.ir Vs'.lNl'41Z11I111 li l'or1H8'lby Phi t'hapter and for 14111 by lleta Nu. The eatalogue ot' the l'r.iternity iltls been published nite --nee, ltitltl, but an appendix is issued each year by the Hranil Se-ir'--t.ix'5. :Xt the 1912 eonvention. held in 11ll1i.1ll.lt1Ui1s1i1i' sz'wvi111i1f'g'1'v'v' in .i instituted and eleven nieinbers iiiitiated. The serend eiv'g':'ee1i.iiig-' z the jfrlzr-fl'f'-1'1's pendant to the t'r.iternitv b.n1e'e. The zeiibx' is its pi.--. and scarlet its eolor. In iXpril.1S'l1. Kappa Kappa tiannna made .i t'oz'w.ird s - .X her invitation the various wonieufs tr.iternitie.s :net .it llnsf w' Phi Chapter to hold a Pan-llellenie t'onventi-in. Pei':i:.ine::' fit chosen there were Lucy livelyn XYie'ht. of 1i.ipp.i li.ipni1L.i:nm.z. Pre dent: Margaret Smith. of K.ipp.i .Xlpha 'I'het.i. Vive Pres?-1 -2. lininia liarper 'l'ni'nei'. ot' Pi lieta Phi. Seeret.iz'y. Un the 12th of October.1589.1ieta Nu t'lt.ipte:'. of liaoini Kap tianiina. was established at the Ohio State Vuiversity by lleiie 52.14 4.1 -Y-V W 7 I 1 of Lambda, and Cora Rigby of Phi, with six charter members: Alberta D. Garber and Alla Berta Rickey, of '89, and Fannie E. Ban- croft, Alice H. Moodie, Carrie A. Pocock, and Ellen B. Talbot, of i9O. Being the first woman's fraternity in the University, it was viewed with considerable interest, and its reception by professors and students was all that could have been wished. From that time Beta Nu has grown until she has now a membership of thirty-three. She has had representation in the Inter-Fraternity Alliance and on the MAKIO Board from the first, and has suffered with the others the yearly debt of the latter. Outside of its social life not much can be told about a Chapter of a secret society, but of this we have had our share. Receptions have been given each year by the Chapter in honor of her graduating mem- bers, usually in June. To these the friends of Kappa Kappa Gamma in college have been invited, invitations being issued to members of every fraternity represented. ' Other informal receptions, at which no men were present, have brightened Beta Nu's short life, such as taify pullings and anniversary celebrations. The Chapter has been visited several times by Kappas from a dis- tance. When Mrs. Julia Ward Howe and Mrs. Mary A. Livermore lectured at Columbus their Kappa sisters had the opportunity of meet- ing them, and several times the Chapter has been entertained in honor of members from Lambda and Phi. Beta Nu has accepted invitations from Lambda and Gamma, each visit showing more clearly what fraternity means. All her eiorts to entertain in return have proved all but unsuccessful. Of fraternity conventions we have had the chance of attending two. The first resulted in the renting and furnishing of a Chapter hall in the fall of '90, the advantages of which were felt even before Iota Chapter. of Chi Phi, kindly offered the use of their piano for the year. This meant much to us, as our song books unfortunately were printed without music. At the convention held this last summer two members of the Chapter took the examinations for the second degree, and were initiated into that degree. In February, 1892, the Grand Council of the fraternity held its session with Beta Nu, and a general Pan-Hellenic reception was given, to which all fraternity men in the University were invited. Theta Delta Chapter of Beta Theta Pi gave an informal reception to the Kappas during the session. Last spring term brought with it a, change for Kappa Kappa Gamma. Alpha Gamma Chapter, of Kappa Alpha Theta. was estab- lished with eight charter members. and gave a very delightful Pan- Hellenic. Their reception into the fraternity circles of the University was cordial, and their appearance especially welcome to Kappa Kappa Gamma, who had been looking forward to the establishment of a second woman's fraternity here. The work opened this fall with twelve active members in Beta Nu. and good prospects for the year. Early in the term a party was given at which all took the opportunity of becoming better acquainted with some of the new girls. , But Kllpba initiations-a delightful one was held on All Hal- IOWCCUS and Kappa spreads are where lieta Nu has enjoyed and gained the most, and all who have the privilege of enjoying them are more than thankful that they know what it is to have a regular Kappa 1n1e.' . 44, ' l 1 Y i 3 I 1 I 3 I i ' W ,. Y 1, i ri W, H V ' A wi N . 4 y N R 1 A I YW, ew 22 A V GH-fi ,Q HB5 8 fl, if I sr 5 iglba 0 CHAPTER ROLL XVALTER J. SEARS. LORIN B. SEARS. 'A. XVILEY EVANS. HARRY J. VVALKER, HARRY ECI-IAS. G. BEUMLER, SHERMAN E. BURKE HARRY P. JUNK. 1 '93 , RAY S. BLINN. '94 HARRY M. STANBERY, R. EDWIN SAFFQRD, RT. BENTON GIBSON, T. STEPHENSON. '95 QPHORACE V. BRUCE, RAYMOND F. FLETCHER WALTER C. ASTON. '96 I. BARRY ALGER. A gg KH 45 tl COLORS: Black, Wlzi!6,a1zd Old Gala! THE CHAPTER ROLL IS AS FOLLOWS: Alpha . . Beta . . - Delta . . - Lambda. . Tau . . . - Psi . Theta. . Iota. . . Upsilon . . Phi .... Beta Phi. . . Beta Theta. . Zeta . . . Sigma. . . . Omicron . . . Beta Oniicron Beta Beta . . Delta Theta . Beta Nu . . . Beta Zeta . . Beta Eta. . Beta Iota . Nu.. Rho ..... Chi ...., . Beta Gamma Beta Delta. . Beta Epsilon Beta Chi .- . . Beta Phi . Beta Pho . Pi . .... . Beta Alpha . Eta. .. Kappa... Mu Xi.. DIVISION I. Virginia Military Institute . . . University of Virginia. . . . . South Carolina College .,.. Washington and Lee ...-. South Carolina Military Acad'y University of North Carolina . DIVISION II. . University of Alabama . . . . Howard College ..--- - . University of Texas . . . . . University of Louisiana . . . . Tulane University . ...-- - . Alabama A. and M. College . . DIVISION III. . Central University . . . . . .Vanderbilt University . . . . Bethel College . ..... . . University of the South . . . . De Pauw University . . . . . Lombard University . . . . Ohio State University . . . . .Purdue University . . . . . . University of Indiana . . . . Mt. Union College . . . . . DIVISION IV. . University of Kansas . . . . University of Missouri . . . . . Cornell College ..... . . Missouri Valley College . . . . Drake University ....... , Upper Iowa University . . . . . . Leland Stanford, Jr. University . . University Of California. . . I . Winfield College . ...... . DIVISION V. . Lehigh University. . . . . . Yale University ..... . DIVISION VI. . Mercer University . . . . . . North Georgia College . . . . University of Georgia . . . - Emory College . . . THE BETA NU CHAPTER. Lexington. Charlottsville. Columbia. Lexington. Charleston. Chapel Hill. University P. O. East Lake, Ala. Austin. Baton Rouge. New Orleans. Auburn. Richmond. Ky. Nashville. Tenn. Russellville. Ky. Sewanee. Tenn. Greencastle. Ind Galesbnrg. Ill. Columbus. LaFayette. Ind. IBIOOIIIIIIQJCOII. Alliance. Ohio. Lawrence. Columbia. Mt. Vernon. Ia. Marsliull. Des Moines. Ia. Fayette. Menlo Ii'a1rk. Cul Berkeley. Iviillielxl. Kats. lietlilelieni. Pal. New I1nyen.t'onn Macon. Gai. IIQIIIIUIICQRI. AIIICIIN. KIXI'Ul'1I.liQI. Q 1 The Beta N:ll.LiII2LllIL3I'!XN'llS estzllvlislierl Mary 22. lH l. Ivy XYnlter I nears, 93. wlioxioinecl tlie'l'r:n.1erni1y while tulximg his Iiiresllniain yr u at the University of Kansas. A I 'IM F 1 ,,. I f.,!!.l5iah1f 'Sigma G Higtorg S 3 HE Sigma Nu Fraternity was founded at the .Vir- TQ ES ginia Military Institute, in 1869. came into living as the result of factional troubles among the students. One of the parties to the strife has since become the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. What thus was perhaps an undignified beginning has proved to be a very significant one, since it gave birth to what have become fraternity organ- izations of national proportions Sigma Nu soon spread itself throughout the South enter ing the principal colleges The enmities between the North and South were still strong and a firm determination to keep the fraternity within the limits of the Southland became and continued for many years the policy of Sigma Nu But in time the sectional feeling, which was the cause of lt was overcome, and for the last ten years its advancement into the North and West has been very rapid Its progress during the last two years has been exceedingly gratifying the fact that within this period 1t has established twelve new chapters 1S a most flattering showing for the youngest of the Greek letter fraternities The colors of the fraternity are black white and old gold T he fraternity flag is composed of these colors, upon the r S ' A l 2, ' 7 . 7 , 7 n 1 . . . 3 . . . . I 7 . 7 V I 7 7 ' 47 X A..- i I 1 A AA , ww 'V,,- ,- g,:f4.,.V1y,' A- V .y' v gvgjg ff-'ff'f'f f 'i SR. -M A M A ml- black union of which is worded the fraternity badge in white. The fraternity flower is the white rose. The yell is: I-Ii! Rickety YVhopty Doo! Wl1Ht'S the matter with Sigma Nu! Hullabaloo! Terragakoo! Ausgezeichnetl Sigma Nu! Besides the quadrennial catalogue the fraternity publishes the -bi-monthly DELTA, the editor of which is and has been for many years, Hon. Grant W. Harrington, of Hiawatha, Kan. I 12 ff ,' IU E. 2,4 ,y ,k r V N 1 ffl ' , f as ,Sift 1' r. ' '-Kvyifhaywi X lj wfffiif QM - -ny 1 gf gli! ffr wt -f'4w,1qi1'fl,I . if 'gllfnlfrl' .ft -f. 4 M A ' ,N - , y- F' ll fzjagg. 'REQ'-E I P 'A 48 V 9 if un ud- X ,,A..n. vt.: v,1ua',wr-'- 3:-a 41-r -vw-' A-.. NWFP. 1 Aff .f ' km.: v .. . wa . fr A. , fllwffrl f'!1llrr mpha all ega 'Beta Omega of Ohio ESTABLISHED MAY 6 1892 FRATRES IN COLLEGIO L XRNII X THOBIPSO X S T IJ I R XNIX F NIURREX I URL E L GIBBb I DW IN H PORTER IRNI XX THONIPSON N, N 1 I N I ERNST EVANS GEORGE D PFARCE E B PEDLOW' G H MOFFITT REED H GAME 'VIORGAN E WILLIAMS FRED MUNDHTNK Edffifggm.-l.:.f'fQi1'L-:fi ',.'.' JJ.: ?z'24i.1'L.. ' W X' , ...Wm , A I 'Vw ,,,.,, .. A , in Alpha Epsilon Beta Beta . . Beta Delta . . Alpha Omega Alpha Beta . . Alpha Theta . Alpha Zeta . . Beta Iota . . Beta Nu . . . Beta Alpha . . Beta Epsilon . Alpha Mu . . Beta Lambda Beta Kappa . Beta Omicron Beta Upsilon . Alpha Kappa Alpha Lambda Alpha Omicron Beta Theta . . Alpha Delta .- Alpha Eta . . Alpha Chi . . Alpha iMu . . Alpha Psi . . Beta Eta. . Beta Nu . Beta Rho . . .. Alpha Iota . . Beta Chi . . Alpha Rho . . Tau ..... Alpha Upsilon Beta Xi . . . Alpha Phi . . Omega . . . Alpha Tau . . Lambda . . Beta Tau. . Beta Pi . . . Beta Zeta . . Beta . . Delta. . -. . Epsilon . . . Beta Sigma . Beta Tau. . . Beta Omega . mpha 30 mega FOUNDED AT RICHMOND, 1865 COLORS: Gold and Wlziie ACTIVE CHAPTERS . A. 81 M. College, Auburn, Ala. . Southern University, Greensboro, Ala. . University of Ala., Tuscaloosa. . University of Florida, Lake City. . University of Ga., Athens. . Emory College, Oxford, Ga. . Mercer University, Macon, Ga. . School of Technology, Atlanta, Ga. . M. 8z A. College, Milledgeville, Ga. . Simpson College, Indiana, Ind. . Tulane University, New Orleans, La. . Adrian College, Adrian Mich. . University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. . Hillsdale College, Hillsdale, Mich. . Albion College, Albion, Mich. it . State College, Orono, Maine. . Stevens Institute, Hoboken, N. J. . Columbia College, New York City. . St. Lawrence University,'Canton, N. Y. . Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y. . University of N. C., Chapel Hill. . Mebone, N. C. . Trinity College, N. C. . Mt. Union College, Mt. Union, Ohio. . Wittenberg College, Springield, Ohio. . Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware. . University of Wooster, Ohio. . Marietta College, Marietta, Ohio. . Muhlenburg College, Allentown, Pa. . Heavenford College, Pa. . Lehigh University, So. Bethlehem, Pa. . University of Pa., Philadelphia. . Pennsylvania College, Gettysburg, Pa. . Charleston College, Charleston, S. C. . University of S. C., Columbia. . University of the South, Sewanee, Tenn. . S. Presbyterian University, Clarksville, Tenn. . Cumberland College, Lebanon, Tenn. . S. W. Baptist College, Jackson. Tenn. . Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn. . University of Vermont, Burlington. . p Wasliiiigtoii and Lee Univ., Lexington. Va. . University of Virginia, Va. . Roanoke College, Salem. Va. . Hampden-Siclney College. Va. . Leland Stanford, Jr., University, California. . Ohio State University, Columbus. 50 T -0 5 L mphalac mega WSTOVQ . T HIS order was establrshed twenty-seven years ago at Richmond V1T0'111ld At that trme all Greek- letter fr1ternit1es had ceased to eX1st 1n the South and there see1ned to be nothrng in common between the sec- tions that had so lately met on the field of battle Some of the leading fratermtres attempted about th1s t11ne to refrain a foothold in the South bytestabllshrng chapters at the.V1r- 0'1n1a M1l1tar5 Instltute whlch was temporarlly located at R1chmond but none of therr projects were dest1ned to be so successful as was that of the three young men who were rnsplred to belreve that the trme was r1pe for a new fraternrty whose purpose should be the re un1t1ng of the two sect1ons whose pr1nc1ples should be l1m1ted by no sectronal prej udrce but should be as broad and cathol1c as humanlty ltself Wrth such a purpose and such pr1nc1ples Alpha Tau Omega could not fall to be successful durlng the reconstructron perrod, and on account of the progressrve pohcy of the socrety 1t has ga1ned 1n popular1ty up to the present tlme The fraternrty was founded by Rev Ot1s A Glvebrook D D of Ellzabeth N .T Alfred Marshall deceased, and Judge Ersklne M Ross of the Cal1forn1a Supreme Court Alpha Tau Gmega has done much 1n recent tunes to pop ularlze the Pan Hellenlc ldea, through the column of 1ts N r R c 5 f a ' . 1 ' 1 vc ' C L a C . c 7 , b 7 7 5 . . .. 7 . . . D 7 J 3 . 1 ' -O . I V 7 . . . ' T ' . . . .c4 , . ., 7 3 -7 7 X , , i . . - , ' . , . , i . ,':::f1,1: ,QQ eff. '.., g 7, .4 4 official organ, the PALM, a quarterly, edited by its High Coun- cil. The chief executive power is at present vested in E. J. ent of Instruction at Sandusky, Shrives, A. M., Superintend Ohio. The fraternity is governe y , and according to thelavvs enacted by the d b the High Council, composed of five members Congress which assembles biennially. The territory occupied by the fraternity is divided into provinces, Whose chapters hold conventions annually. Ohio Beta Omega Chapter Was formally established on the at the Ohio -State University, being the- forty-seventh chapter of the 6th of May, A. D. 1892, and represented the fraternity fraternity. The following men were its ch C. A. Thompson, E. Evans, Charles Murphy, George Gibbs, A. OS. J. Eylar, Geo. Pearce, Ed. Pedlovv, Geo. Moffitt, A. G. Buxton, Morgan Williams, F. E. Murrey. 52 arter members: D 3 l S v w A Y 1 s I 1 l 0 'F ii 9 3 . il w f 3 X A! s w 1 1 . 41 nv.:d.ovu.A 4, .- 3,1 ' N11-gy. ' 1 H' ak .Q 'H is .gl ,q .Eg . ,- X. Q55 of '92 COLORS: Gulf! and 1lfl'Z'c'. MOTTO: Ill' rum! Sl'fllzIf!'rHli. YF! I ' fI'n!v!u'r1. Pmecv MAIITIN. RCJMICC3 O. KI-Zrsme, GrI'1ORGIC D. Plcfxlzcrc, WII.LIAM L. QEVANS, W. H. BAKER, - L. W. GNISWOLII, IIQVINIC DUNOIIN, Q55 of '98 COLORS: IVIJNI' um! finial. 1 f'!'c'5!'zfz'l.'f. l'l.f'r' f'l'f'S. 1fr'l!f. .N'1'r'l'f'fcll'x', - - 7'1'rmn1v'r. .l1'fw2' NIH' flrfllur. f'111':'f'1'.v'fx' flux' llnmw. .N'f'1'g'f'f111f-f.'.'-. Irv: -. . -.,.J.-f,-AJ,,4,,r1r,,1:, MOTTO: - l7.'.n'rr!:nr, ,I ,Lf f Fm-tn. D. l'.x'1 1'I':IcsuN. I'I1'fRll1Cli'l' U. SQO'r'r. LOUISIQ MI-:1mII.I.. SIMON G. S'1'u1c1-inc. LOUISE III-imclcla. J. H. COI7IIs.xI'I.'I'. - Lovlsl-t I'Il'fKRICK. . I' -Il K. ' 9 - ,,'AI'.f.'aF1'Jif D 'V 1 - life' I l'1'5!afr'li4 - .N'ffn'fm'1 - - ,lr:!5F1'!'f'7 ,lrfwr fhm' flnzfur i':'f'1'5.'..'I' ffm' fln1f'm . 1 - !f'f.Hr'7..l'f .ja..1:fgfg- 'Q'V 2 I. ff vw-'L-uw ww- .WIT Q55 Of' ll COLORS: Solar Spectrum J. W. HOWARD, - Presz'a'ent.' H. T. STEPI-INSON, - - Wee Preszaenl. MISS EDITH BELL, - - Secretary. H. O. VVILLIAMS, - Treasarer. LORIN B. SEARS, - Uaroersily Day Orazfor. MISS EDITH COORINS, - - - - Hz'sZorz'an. Q55 of '9 COLORS: Maroon and Straw YELL: Razzle, dazzle, sis' boom all! H. H. GRAHAM, MISS A. SIMPSON, MISS MAUD FLYNN, A. P. GILLEN, - GEO. S. APPEL, C. T. HERBERT, 95, 95, 95-' Rah, Rah, Rah! 54 P1'esz'o'e11f. - UFC Prf's1'z1'e11f. Svr1'e1'f11jv. - - T1'ms111w'. - .AlI'170l' Um' Urafor. Flass Day flI'cIfU1'. Q' V- I ! 5 1 I i X I I I ! I I 4 i E I i I i l 1 I ! I c A I I 4 5 I O.. 5 1 1 5 I I 2 i i I . 5 X i -J' Q55 OF '96 YELL: Wlzoopala, wlzoopala, ala bazix! 96, 96 f MOTTO: Begun, but noi ended A C. F. SHANE, ------- Preszkiem' MISS ESTHER STAFFORD, ---- Wee Preszkiemf MISS EVA NEEDLES, ------ Secretary M. E. VVILLIAMS, ------- Treasurer C W F ORD, Arbor Day Oraior lass of 97 COLORS Lavender ana' Cream F L TRAVIS Pfeszdeni MISS MCLAUGHLIN Vkce Preszdem' MISS MOREHEAD Secretary J R TANNER Treasure? 55 ..f 1l!.t5n-:dau Q u , ' ---- -I - I . A ' ' , '--- - O ' . 7 - - ' ' I 1 Q . 7 - - - - I- I- M. A. SMITH, - F. D. PATTERSION, W. M. HENDERSON, L. R. PUGH, - - S. B. STORER, - L. F. VOKE, - W. A. CASTLE, - C. M. CROOKS, W. PHELPS, - G. E. HAYWARD, - E. C. MARTIN, - W. M. RAY, - C. A. RADCLTFEE, I. L. DUNGAN, J. H. BONE, H. W. BACKHAUS, K. F. POSTLE, - H. R. POSTLE, C. A. BRUCE, - 5 . oriop EFEFQVQ 0ciETQ FALL TERM - President. - V2'ce President. - - T1'easu7'e7'. - Recordzbzg Secrezfaviv. C01'9'esj501zdz'1zg Secrezfaqu WINTER TERM - - Crz'z'z'c. - Sezfgeam'-ai-Arms. - P765Z.d671.f. - Vifce Presz'de1zz'. - R6C07'dl.7lg' S6CI'6fd73'. Corresp0fzdz'ng Sccretavy. SPRING TERM - - CI'Z-fI'C. - Sezgcam'-az'-T-lrnzs. - PI'6'SI.df'7If T566 PI'FS1'!i6lIf - - TI't'tISIlI'c'7' .Rl'fl?I'li1.11g' Svfwffzzjx' - C10I'1'c Sj5l7IllI7I'IIxQ' Sf'rrffar1' S8 - Sf'11g'f'f1111'-az'---1rms IOWDIDQ WSI QIIQ OCIEFQ k 01,01 sz fn' amz' 11,11- 5 . I . W 7 . ' I I' A I fr. Xvl'fl,l,' A'1'p, rip, Vtlflf Pink mm' 2'UfI1'l'1'f II I ' ' P g gl! ECIQIQIX IQOBINSON, EJDITH BELL. - HANIIIET R.-XNIQIN, CORA GALE. - BIARY HULL. - 'nn fx DI'02'l 1II.NMfQ? Ou! 0f51' 'z . FALL TERM ' GEIITIIIIDE IQELLICOTT, - Fx.-XNNY IHOXV.-XRD, NIIGNON TALBOT, ETTIA NVEBEII, ANNA MORREY, MAUD FLYNN, LUCY ALLEN, - LOUISE HEIIRICK, EDITH BELL, - LOUISE HERIQICK, .SARAH COOLEY, FANNY IHONVARD, ECKKA ROBINSON EDITH COCKINS, 7 WINTER TERM SPRING TERM 57 - Prcsidefzl. - V766 Prcsfdevzi. - Secreiaay. - 7b'easu1'e7'. M01zz'i07'. - C1'z'L'z'c. Jlluszical Dz'7'ect09'. - Pvfesiclent. Wice P1'esz'denzf. - Secretary. ' Treaszwvr. - M 01zz'Z01'. - C1'z'1fz'c. - Presidevzi. T566 P1'esz'denZ. - Secrezfary. Tvfeczsurer. M 0 72 iio 1' Crz'Zz'c L rzilorical ggocigiiion INTER-STATE OFFICERS S. S. Hl l'L'l'llNSLTN, lVesley11n University, lllooniington, Ill., f,l't'.Yl.Ifl'llf T. J. So.-xlciqs. State University. Minneapolis ..... lililxt' l'n'.v1'1l1'11l CHJXS. E. XVINTIQR, lVesleyzin University. Nelwaslca . .S'1'1 ,1' 11111 STATE ASSOCIATION XV, J. ORY. Mt. Union College . . . R. C. SIMON, Wittenberg College. ...... . Ii.-X'l'l-IERINE E. lNIORll.-XRT. Ohio State University XV. L. H.'XlQIJIN, Buehtel College. ....... . LOCAL ASSOCIATION D. TOD Rox' .... ............. E. W. SCHUELLER. . . Miss COR.-X GALE . . HERBERT SCOTT . . ......... . . STATE CONTEST GEO. H. GEYER, Ohio lVesleyan University. . Q Optin1isn1 of History. L. F. LX'B.-XRGER, Buchtel College ....... A '4Transformation and Imaginati H. L. JOHNSTON. Ohio State University .... The Unity of Man. PEARL MCVAY, Ohio University ........ Ofl. The Slavery of Cmsarismf' A LOCAL CONTEST H. L. JOHNSTON . .....,.... . Unity of Man. ALBERT S. J. EYLAR .............. 5'EvolutiOn of the Masses. P. M. GRIFFITH. . ........... . . 6' Labor and Capital. W. J. SEARS . . ......... .. 59 I. I. f 7'l'1'1I.s' . . f,I'l'5I'lfl'Ilf l.l'1' l'1'1'x1'1!1'11f . . .S'1'1'1'1'f1Ilj1' . 71l'l'l7.i1ll'l'I'. . . f1l't'Nl-llllfllf 1'1'1' f',I'l'.TI.lI'6'7lf . .S'1'1'1'1ff17111f . Y'1'1.'11s111'1'1' . Firsi Saw Il fi T11 ird F0 Il ffl: . 1 I.7'Sf Sera 71 cz' 771 ird F0 Il rflz Pla rf' Plan' Plan' Plan' Pla fc Pla rv Place' Plafe XX X'-N mx RQ? '1 . T 4 'LF XXX 2 ' ' 7 R I iiT3q?51H f . L, 16,1 I .. X14 5 E Q17 -' TH if ls . 55531100 and E. W. CU NNINGHAM, Second Lieutenant and Leader. T. E. FRENCH, - D J. N. JAMES, W. F. DICK, - E. B. PALMER, G. R. LOVE, - B. T. WIGHT, C. M. Ross, - R. S. BLINN, W. S. MEREIL T. K. LEWIS, L, C. C. CONNELL, W. C. SHARRIS E. C. MA1Q'lxIN , .- 9 First Ser0'czu1t and Drum Major. E11 Cornet. Eff Cornet. - Eff Clarinet. BFI Curuct. - Ri: Tcuor. Solo QXHO. First iff, Alto. - Hzwitoxmc. - Tuba Hass Uruum 'lxvnux' Urum - KXXIIITRKTS A 2, N WN I I 1 Q Ali x 9' ' 't TMS 4 f F A . , I - ' I gl fl. N v' ' A . 3 ' X We , 4552 ' X . W fx I ,.. ff U ' . X - ' 'Irma ' . K ll, mtl H A 4' 1 -uxmsmw, ,,, M, ' ' , C O VQFSTFQ Nme V CHAMPIONS 1:-392 4. ERNEST EVANS, MANAGE12. GEORGE D. PEARCE, Capiaivz, - Catcher L. C. ERNST, - First Base C. H. SHAW, - - , Second Base E. C. MAIQTIN, , Pitcher and Short Stop ROY YODER, - - Third Base JOHN DANIELS, - Pitcher and Short Stop. ED. VVACSTAFF, Left Field PEARL M. GRIFFIT1-I, - Center Field. 'h CLARENCE W1-rrrrromi, - Rig-ht Find A- P- GILLEN, - - Second Base und Substitute 64 ub- I 5 W4-f I I I I I 0- I I . I 5 E i I I I I I I I I 9 I 3 I s. A- I I I I -. 4 0 ICR . rg' I+ 5 1 51,1 F I Q If P .,-E? XIX? I-41 4 .X X t Lf- . I X Y I 64.1 L ' II- ! i '- f ' I A J . I - I 5 1 - I ef f X, W,-Ifff nf O Tu- I f,'I'1 Q 5 NA 'Qs '-V-1 -, .. ANRYYQ-im? ' .U sfxrxyyl , H 5. PQIIIEFIQ SSOCIEIPIOD E- C- MARTIN, - Pffeszdeni. G. D. PEARCEI - Wee Presicievzl. F. E. MURRAY, - - - - - ,sigcyfgfayiyn BOARD OF DIRECTORS H- L JOHNSTON, ' .' - - - Ckczirmczrz. C. S. POWELL, - Seereiczry cmd Treasurer. C. W. DAVIS, F. I. ASKEW, A. P. MINSHALL, PROF. LAZENBY, V A. S. J, EYLAR. O. S. U. ATHLETIC STOCK ASSOCIATION INCORPORATED UNDER THE LAWS OF OHIO. CAPITAL S'roc.K. S2,000. SHARES 81.00 EAOI-I. PROF. BENJ. F. THOMAS, - - Presidefzt. H. L. JOHNSTON, - ' - - Seeremry. C. S. POWELL, ----- - - Treasurer. OHIO INTERCOLLEGIATE' ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION ROBT J. WATSON, Kenyon, ---- Presz'ciem'. E. B. PEDLOW, Ohio State University, - Wee Presz'de1zZ. .,i,l?, Denison, - - - - LgFCI'6L'd7j'. 63 I 1 v 7'-N WG f f Q 7 by 5, ,nf , , 7 A ,Y fYf'ff'f,!H'f,, , ,, ,W,M V TWV! f 'fy f Vi f , f ' , ffrfdf, , , fy ' ' C f , ,, f w,,,,,ffwg'7,, , , fffff7'fgff ,fm V if ,X Zh, ,WM 'ff M, 'Y X Z I , , 7 ,ff , , , 7 ' 'Jax mo, ' f 4 647 , , ff ff, , ., 'W 7 f ZW M'f 'f ' 127,124 fw7f fw'f 1 f X fm ff 1 , f ,ff 1,3 X71 7' ! f X I , X ra any ' 2 ,fd wif 1 ' --fn ' L A-,,,,,,,..,...-f-f' wil 3 . 1 Aw I k I E , , . L i X , , lr, E. V 1 1 3 1 L i 1. V 1 E l P , 1 K . A3 EH ...Q 1 W E1 JQ --e. .r-55699-fe ninnllh-fidlilmil 4.1 I I I ,iw I- ollege eagae Games INDIVIDUAL AVERAGES UI - M P in- v-T--vwwlwrm' IAQ I VI' I I H MVN 8.66. 1: 45:-9138155 - 28182 'EL Eff 5 8 f.: see 7 91 e- ei' ss: - . WI SIA7 - shew... 2b 6 9 I 5 301 5 I 0 .321 .833 . ' I Q I I Pear-ee ....... e I 8 1 4 I I 96i 2 3 .106 .980 Yoder... Sb 8 I 7 33 6 9 .213 .818 . , , : I Errrer .. 1b I 8 I 5 I 33I 94 4 5 2 .152 .960 Daniels.. .ee I 8I 7 29' 30. 3 8 .242 .900 P I I I I Gritiith . cf I 7 . 7 I 291 7 3 6 I 4 .242 .572 Martin .... . ee.p , 8 . 6 I 30, 34' 8 6 I10 .200 .765 E I I 1 I Wageraif If I 8 I 5 I 29 6I 1 6 4 .173 .833 1 1 . i Withefr ...... rf j 8 I 4 I 29 14I 2 2 i 5 .138 .857 . 1 I I I Gruen ....... I 2b,cfi 3 I 1 141 1 3 I 0 .100 .929 I I . Plvcn-sans' RECORD w 42 S - QI,-4 458,43 greg .EIMS '53 2 122 mg 24: gag 51813 wee 2825 NAME 5 325 E5 EEO 93.523 U ea gi fs U1 F-'Og 4:75 111541 15: Marun .. .... 2 12 4 15 70 .171 2 .5 Dan1e1e. 6 30 20 52 214 .140 1 .5 I , I I I . ,. .. - ,.., .,...,- ,..-.,, . N, 65 Wk N953 fm, bf Pav-1. ' -6, ,ff x wi X jm- 3 1. I V i , V - f,1Ze,! , Z. - 47 '- if '97 'Q7f.15- j -:L f.. , ,- , 1 flg 4. flff A .Q -.N i I ! 1 ! 1 E 1 x 1 Foo? all'-kigce Games '91 O. S. U., 6. At Columbus, November 11th, , Adelbert, 50 ' O. S. U., 0, At Gambier, November 14th, . Kenyon, 26. 0. S. U., At Columbus, November 28th, Denison, 4. S O. S. U., 6. At Akron, December 51211, . . xl Buchtel, 0. ll I 68 .DX G Xjf 1 ff SX X ll Q. ll 4 I Vx' 1' Z' Q 7 Q ff -' V 1 .' LA 55 I' -ca fl 1 f fl . ' ' . I I. 47 . . ... . X:.', 5-Z L14 Utxr I - Q 1 ff ' l 5 ,f - - , .Q ffffi' ' , v 1'- .-, , Jwg ' .-. - v '.?'. 1 Q- ' N .,, .Q lv '1 4: . ' wi ,' r, f fp, 5 .lol J Q 5 7 ' QZ2nJ0'5t t R Va YSTFQ Eleven 18Qi-92 CHMQLES W. FOULK, Jlfafzager. RICHART T. ELLIS, Capiaiaz. P. BI. LIXQULN. - - J. S. HIN1-2. - - H. H. RICHARDSON. L. C. Eaxsim - C. S. POWELL. - Crhxm-zxcrt WITHOFT. R. E. Hmmm. - Right Guard - Left Guard - Right .Tackle - Left Tackle - Center - Right End - Left End Quarter Back A Right Half Back Left Half Back - Full Back SU BSTITUTES Gian. D. P1-QARCE. - .-X. H. KENNEDY. .-X. P. GrLLEx. 1.?.Sr.rr'1'H. - - J. J. NV.-XLSH, W. N. ZCRFLUH, FRANK HAAS, M. W. LAWRENCE, R. W. DUNLAP, F. D. PATTERSON. 67 E X 1 empis ssociififm ,-,,..1- TEAM Singles, C. H. FARBER. TW. H. CONEY. Doubles, ' lW. E. Jlixxlxs. STATE TOURNAMENT qi XVQ11 5 sets. Singles, - I' LOST l SCI. qi Won 2 sets. Doubles, 'T Lust 2 SClS. qi First in Slllg'lt'S. O. S. U., I' Sl-cmni in duulwlcs. O. S. U. holds Cl1zu11pim1sl1ip in 1111c1'-k'ullvg'in1c .Xsso ciation. 70 QU' eg? hro 'riite Unxversffg thletlc ecordg 1 ucoun 5 'V 5 se 10 5 8 bee 94 bec 10 ft 5 111 18 ft 00 ft 43 ft 5 It 4 ft 9 it 8 It 34 ft 11 111 I1 ft 8 111 56 4 5 sec 5 111111 91 sec 14 1 5 bee 157 ft 19 1 .5 xec 33 ft 1 111111 495 sec Dxnwr INNLR DArE 50 yards dash 100 3 ardb dash 990 X uds dash Standms b1oad Jump Runnmb b1oad3u111p St mdmb hop step and Jump RllH11lllb hop step a11d Jump RIIIIIIIH hmbhjump btanclm hlbh Jump Pole, X ault Hxbh 11C1xf1l1tC11, Puttmb 16 lb shot Th1ou111b 161b ha111111e1 Oual ter 1111le run M1le ruu Three leo 6 ed race Drop foot ball l mck Huldle 1 Lee 110 hurdlcsy Throw mb base ball One 111116 b1c3 cle Cbafetx J Hobart Beatty I' VV Rane C XV XV1thoft XV S Scott Hobart Peatt XV S Scott Hobart Beatty F NI Ploom XV S Scott XX Landacre YK S Scott XX I Laxers XV F Lax crx C, XX XX 1tl1oft Rox X Nlxerv P NI Lmcoln L L, Dru t X P Broueou Hobart Bcattx L C, Ern t A N French F1e1d Daw State I'1e1d Dax I'1eld Dax f I Q5 f '-S- V -aaa rm-.aa1ifnuwN.'1:-, - 2-'eirsb ' f' - . A 'ozs..: - me ' 2-J '- l D' Papdjo mam ,-,,-.-- e CO2-'l I lose the restg ' es have brought before their view- Am I not blest?- A lass, While there in classg I dream. What would you do? Professor says, 'C Tak My ey And so Her cheeks out-blush the peony With richest redg Her lips out-bloom the strawberry With sweetness spreadg Alas! With her in class, To dream Were not base treachery. Her eyes the hazel put at naught A With shining browng Her smiles like quivering moonbeams caught When falling down. A pass, When she's in class, ' Were nothing to a look I got. s Still there's a sadness in my dream Almost despair, That not for me is she, the cream Of all tl12Lll,S fair. Alas! I sit in class, 8 And must content myself to dream. Picon. l. l,.xi1m llvxipxx Oakville, Live Oak County, Texas. .4 PROP- Eooiciisz When I said I would die an lmteln dlfl not think I should live till I were married. r-q I- . -Y-.iaa:nva,bw5,,.,It-.ywgyg--1:3:.yjz,,g.,i.if ..: ,. - ., ,4., ..,,,, Q. , Ivkliio Efli'Co1'S fm-if The editors sat in their sanctum, T Letting their lessons rip, Racking their ,brains for an item, And stealing all they could clip. ' The editors sat in their class-room, As if getting over a drunk, Their phiz was clouded with awful gloom For they had made a total Hunk. The editors sat in their sanctum, And hit themselves in the eye, And swore they'd enough of the business. They would quit the MAKIO or die. T And this is the reason, dear reader. If our faces you no longer see, It is the Faculty's fault we're not with you, For we were given the polite G. B. HUGH FULLERTON: He will lie, sir, with such voluhility that you would think truth were a fool. Miss BERTHA LAMME: The most peerless piece of earth, I think. That e'er the sun shone bright on. R. T. ELLIS: ' A good leg will full, ai strzxiglit lmcli will stoop, a black beard will turn white, il curled pate will grow bald. SAM Moieii1soN : Faith, I have been ll truamt in the law: ' And never yet could framie my will to it, And, tlierefore, lirzune the lzmw unto my will. T4 6 'I l l faux Tlldentg mention STOP ' Students who are anmous to 30111 a frat Wrll do Well to h E obtun entry blanl s from the Srgma Nu Srofma Alp a PS1 lon or Alpha Tau Omega fraternrtres and duly regrster themselx es H J Walker has on hand a lot of dr1ll excuses Wh1ch he IS Wrlllng to sell cheap Srnce removrng my beard I have a quantrty of curled han' sultable for stuffing charrs or mattresses H A SURFACE Gentlemen havlng large feet should 22 call upon Mr Kappes and eXam1ne h1s method of reducing the srze of tracks by uslng Napoleon oles Lzve Sfock Ccmwzlh Re moved Messrs E1SGHb3Ch and Askew re pectfully SOl1C1t pa uw tronage 1n the removal of l1ve stock Work carefully done N satrsfactlon guaranteed QA H A SURFACE And 1n h1s braln VVl'11Cl1 1S as dry as the remarnder b1scu1t After a voyage he hath strange places cramm d -Vvllh observatlon, the Whrch he vents In mangled forms 73 O H D H I . ' I - L Q . . .- C U 4 c 7 by c 5 7 n N 'X' +5 A ' O O - V . , 0 0 40 - C A 1 X ec- as . . 51, I' V 'N . 1 A 1 'x X ,Z , - 'X 'Fl . A ' T ' 1 ' N S . X Q ll v x I q i X ' '. I XL , p t , I 1. 9: dr ss U I . t n - 5 1 1 -Y y A , ,A 1 , v V i, ..- - . . ...iv 05551, ,-- S - , ' 1,.HN-Y. a 3 ' p I ' ' , fp -s..s 7 . . 7 . . . , , . ' l 7 3 a ' .L I , c ,Lg 'f u-TF' ',:'3f7Wlf??5m' F: f ...iii .,,... A Q 1 V I, i i ll 'i I K r 1 2 1 f he cm 0 1 -.- , i , i E There was once a young gallant named Guglc. Y ' Who gave a big toot on his buglfi, Q And ran off to the rush ' Expecting to crush - ' . 1 3 i About half of the Sophs, oh, hovi crud. But his brave spirit dropped when he came to the spot Where the push was the. thickest and the blows were most 4 hotg T Q . Yet he pulled one coat tail, Q Then back he did sail g Q To thefgirls that stood gathered about. E . I 4 And if the brave story he told of the fray. ' ' i T Of the blows that he dealt and the wonderful vvay' j I That he used up the Soph 5 i And as victor came oit, y t . T 5 Were true, he alone was Mr man of Mr day. ii 5 ' M r I l l INNIS: Ca tain! thou abominable cheater. uri thou not I P , Q s ashamed to be called captain? If captains were oi' my mind. 5 i they would truncheon you out for taking their imuies upon I v u E E 5 you before you have earned them. X ou xi eziptzim. you slave? ig' 5 for what? A captain! These villains will make the word captain odious. y LORIN SEARS: g Taffeta phrases, silken terms precise. ' Q Three pil'd hyperboles, spziree :itll-etgiiiuu, Q I Figures pedantieal, these summer ilies ? I E Have blown me full of ning-got wi,-111g,1i,.11, it I x . ' ' 'ei ' .W. V. VIE1S. Because l will not do them the xvroiig . v mlstfust fmyi I Wlu C10 1113'SClf the right to Illisiiusi ii--ue. and i the line is, for the which I uiaiy gui the nm-I-t 1 Wm MM. A T it batchelor. ! 76 1 1 5 I , ,. :ig -X S, ii f 4 nr- inc P. M. GRIFFITH: How tartly that gentleman looks! I can never see him but I am heart-burned an hour after. CHEMICAL LAB. MASTER BROOK, there was the rankest und of villainous smells that ever offended nostril. compo POP-UP-KNIGHT: Why he stalks up and down like a pea- cock, a stride and a stand, ruminated, like a hostess that hath no arithmetic but her brain to set down her reckoning, bites his lips with a politic regard, as who should say, there Were Wit in his head, and 'twould out. ' 1 I 1 1 X . -5 . I I I lil all p rl A Q ,m if ' . ,idffx I y'. fn , ny f P l V ,vc J . 1 'i I 1 P l H 'W l . -ll lt I .i. my , t BRIGGS! There is a small choice in rotten apples. U BAREBONES BAKER: Dos't thou think because thou art virtuous there shall be no more cakes and ale? PROF. C. N. BROWN: Lofty and sour to them that lovtd him not, But to those men that sought him, sweet as summer. 75, KA Q . ,:i-viii? S , ,Jiff r Q i Q I 4 I 5 1 . i f 1 4 1 r w w 1 i 1 v 1 r I v 1 3 f 1 x i r I I 1 , V s I S 1 CQ 4 5' V 5 .f .UE W Oh. luvc mv. xv-'1 - W Iwuit the omni And 1111 thu Lair xx 5. K VVith pcrfuxm-. v...i1U VVl1c1'c xnxmfll And s11uv.'-whiud :XI1L1SmI!1gA-Edfcix 1 Mzikc xxuwdlgizzdx Uh. luvc mc, -m. wi ' The 31115 df-xi W- gxllli. 1HlIC11Lci..T 5.4 .Af X M S0112 5-ULJIZIN fun ..L. Vvllifll mall-N U3 ' II11uI1L'1,X' lzfnzw M I A1111 liw1'1ai11gg 1 Q HU1 itilv xxhrw ,K ' CHI. INN 1111, ' 1 IwN'vV--h.11nw -fX'Nl'lA11111',121.. . X1'u111ni 1111 xx . TTN11 un 11 -11,41 l'1li1m'1i1j111qV,H3V X 1ll1v'H 211.531 lxnil JH 1111 1'xw1L. Al. fl Bur ll THEY WE 9 E - Pima! y . 00 room.-n.,,.. N Ol' C :fu 0 :I :I 4' cw Q: r ey.. ,tvs i, Rutan will join a frat. - Farber can't play tennis. Tod Roy does not Wear pants. The Dorm is the only place to live. The Delta Taus are the only people. World's Fair will be open on Sunday. .Toe Walsh has joined the Y. M. C. A. Lieut Wilson does not smoke cigarettes Prof Knight Would rather be right than President Miss Merrill has lost twenty pounds since commencement Bricky Evans, alias Gus, will manage a base ball team in Cuba next year The battalion band was mistaken for the Barracks band on Prize Drill Day That ex assistant Prof Whitney has accepted the presi dency of a kindergarten in Siberia The MAKIO editors ought to have been tarred and feath ered for not getting the book out in the Spring BAT'rAL1oN A sort of vagabonds rascals and runavvays A scene of Bretaofnes and base lackey peasants Whom their o ercloyed country vomits forth N L BURNER For it comes to pass oft that a terrible oath, with a svvaggering accent sharply tvvancfed off gives manhood more approbation than even proof itself would have earned him . . . . . Q . . . . . . . . . ' ' :pc 77 ' . 0 n ' I . - . .. . - . . . . . . . , L , . D 7 7 . 7 - . . . f I . s 0 9 . 7 D 7 . .K ncieot rt l r We nf , fy: ' x' -: I 1 . , ,V V I' :!Xx r. lu 4 1 i . I ,5 Class assembles. and waits aunt -usly. V 7 Professor puts his head out of his lien. 'V W and S2LX7Sg I xvill julll Illu ClL1rS in HIM: N. . X 1 ' , . i f moment-Y' Retires 'Ulf slliulie L1 eiuzirl 5. Ten minutes ater le euierges. ami Q , , lr, iq Says, The class will please exeuse Elle 4- f just three minutes. as l must gm to rhe- Q-' I l . . . Q ' Q' 1, telephonep' Ten minutes more join L' V ' , I , V ,A il, I the mnumerable earavaii. Proiessor ,gh I returns, takes his seal. calls the roll. 1' ' f' l i - 1 - X ,ul I ?f-gi ky abstracts himself. Slltlnlclllf' rises Lino m y D K3 L' 0 , looks out of the wimlovc. Ihr-ii rt-sears I-'le F f RZ himself. and occupies title-eu minutes lv L S2 With a lively resume of the preuediizg' WA Q gf three lectures. Says. Ar this Irwin! l Q1 am obliged to cut the lecture iii iw--. X5 E, L., t . . .. V1 as I am clue at ar comimtiee ixiet-ting. kv ' j ' '11 K XE M?i' AI- Hamilton l rotessor. will von A r s n a . ' 'g,,.L.Q.... please tithe this petition with you to 'xvg , the eoiilmltteef ,i ,x , .. lee. ' A -- i Professor Ah, hem. Mr. llgizma- C r' jb l-l-.f '-' tOll, this is zi uouuniiret- dovvxi lwXX'HfU Owing to the severe eilort incident lo me 1lI'x'1'Qi'l'.illUI1UlA the lectures, the course in .-Xucient .-Xrt will not he ouereti in 1892--93. Prof. Speer-- These specimens. ex-iillr-im-ii. .1i'vizizxx'4islieti because they come from the .N'n1'1Qm'. Miushall Cllookiug' at eollege song luiok XX'h.n xlups 'audantel mean in this nmsic1 ' French ---- Amie llamte is the mmm- .iq 11,, x.,,H.,N- course. Her brother wrote gi poem K-gill,-,1 W, - hm H So Pftmst IV. Oh, love me, sweet! and love me true. Old tune 1S fleetlng, day by day, And love can never brook delay, When years at most are all too few And l1fe some love 1S lncomplete Though you may thlnk 1t strange Caprlce 4 I come and kneelmg at your feet I bag my trousers at the knees '- rf--x 1 'iii gs 53 Zi P if P! USIICPJT BUNNEQ 14 -iwf 6-x I7 leap CLASS OF 92 Let lt go abroad to a d1stant country let 1t go to some country where 1t 1S not known Don t let 1t go to the devll, where 1t IS known 7 7 7 . . . 7 7 7 X gl HILL J S! - 7 7 -73 f. -4 i A y f ,Sain 3 ' t . 9 4 U 7 :rs if s ' I C. 73:23 Wiiw , IQ X . EE n fi 'rr 7 gg in a 5 41 f , MIEN' T2 9 'T7 Y ggunra-1. -- ' Q ' , t :Il 1','. n j A' TT 77? -'N Q . 1 of-r LL! L9 V it A . ., fd 'X Q' 7 . ' ' ' - ' 7 A ' D 0 7 ' 79 l Q ,s,o A aflv' , l A 'He Night Mud f The night wind sleeps: The Junior inortarhoards are safe- Ly stowed, and all is done Till time to spring thein, and the scht-ine Is known to Seniors none. The night Wind dreainsg A wicked Watchman wags his jaw: A Senior has a thought: - The Junior scheme reveals itself is 1 . ,I To one more than it ought. f fi i The night Wind stirsg A Whispered Word, a wicked wink.-N L I n What if the Juniors knew ' Their darling scheme was now the jest Of sinful Seniors, two? 2' 3 i 1 The night wind whines: 2 A Senior speeds, Il door-bell rings. f Another form we seeg Alas! the flzorfur-boards az'-zmnff, , I The Seniors number three. 2 L The night wind growlsz An upstairs room, a downstairs run. A sally out the door. A jolly, joky quarter-inile. P The heads of Seniors four. The night wind llmvlsg A man to guard and three In N-lm-1, From lJ2lSOI11L'Ill unto towerg A Stupid XVIllL'illllill1. with no 1 a h-nigh! Of thieves :it such un lmur. S2 .fiiskubvi 0 The Idgle of lvkchaoics My theme it is a strange one, My poetry is worseg p My reader must be patient To read this rambling verse, And learn about the fair one That attends our mechanics class, W For not in all the college Will be found a fairer lass. She looks into 4' Old Bobbie's 7, face Insuch a wistful way A That he himself gets rattled, And has nothing more to say About those awful formulae Which oft distress us sog For he only murmurs, 'C If not, why not?,' V His head it is bent low Over the book before him Then he glances from left to right And looking at our Idyle Calls upon her to recite Hardly has the word been spoken Than Major Palmer with a snort Begins the recitation And the maiden stops right short She looks intently at the floor While the handsome Major falters And the class bursts in a roar Our Idyle smiled and took her seat The Major felt quite small Forgetting all he wished to say He simply said That s all WELDAY And he had been a dog that should have howled b d thus they would have hanged him and I pray God his a voice bode no mischief 7 7 ' 7 ' ' J. 7 7 ' 1 7 t t , 4 7 . . 7 . . v 7 ' ' cc 7 77 7 . -,-.....- 04 . . . , 7 . ' f 'l121. ' VC ' . ' . 'IHC 935 Alexander- Mother has lost her pet, sister, her toy. Beck - Little things are great to a small man. Bone-A name at which the very dogs would bark. Brown, A. H- He thought as a sage, but felt as a man. Conrsaali-A born Writer, what a splendid car for carry- ing a pen. Codie Gale -Would that my horse had the speed of my lady's tongue. Gibbs-A man of good parts, if we count it by bulk. A man of some depth, as shown by his feet. .Ha1ni!Zon, C. R.- I-Ie shapes his life more to the whim of private conceit than to the known rule of common consent. Jfarris -What shadows we, are what shadows we pursue. , Hayward - Love thrives not well in the lap of philosophy. Henderson, B. Wi- Prompt at whist and prayer meeting. Lonise fferrick---So wise, so young, 'they say, ne'er live long. ' - Bessie Hoel- She hath a natural wise sincerity, a simple truthfulness. ' jenkins, W H, jenkins, Wf G.--Though the same in name. ye gods how otherwise they differ! fnnis-I am just as happy as if I had good sense. fones, S.- Something peculiar and strange. Billie-fer-I was never happy until I gave up trying to be a great man Cnamely, steward of dormitoryb. Berzfka Lanime- A compendium of universal knowledge. Levering, 0. D.- Silent, but none the less wonderful. Mackey- He tells us strange tales of other places CWooster, etc.j jllazfkias-His very foot has inusic in it, as he comes up the stair. 84 ' f -- 1.-- . A..-. , .,., .. .. f,.H,...,.,-,,. banana Y The night-Wind raves, A Horton key, a dark lamp s ray, Some boxes 1n a p1le, Three Senrors on a srlent march, Half trptoes and half sm1le The mght wmd bawls, A Watchman gomg on h1s rounds, A Senlor there to see, A hurrled bustle toward the street, The Senlors number three The mght Wmd crres, A half hour's Walt, a drstant cab Rolls darkly 1nto vrew, And soon 1S filled and on the street Left standlng Senlors two The mght Wmd moans, Some J un1ors and a legal search, Some Warrants for arrest CPD Some Semors, coal o1l, br1ll1ant blaze, Each mortar board mor! es! The nrght Wmd dres I of UW l M u V mm rm WlimvclrQsuflrmfsfsfsaalewfm M I 1 Et - r' K f LI 15 I tw fggzl 4 rllilllilmllllltlcllo 4 Ja. -II-ra bl 'i3 w'ivlnmu'f Y WL I I ' ,, lm lWq umxumulvmummmmmxut L Z ll' Qy 4 L Q ig: The Departure ks I -r . 7s 1 J ' ' 3 ..,,,.......... ,h gh lrlr., r- . ' ' fr-':. A w, -1- A h,,i,gg1?.Wl,I Zim' MMIII 0.4 im' W I ..vlaV Hr. I I, ,lm ' f5fi'g3.Qifl, ,fffr1E',,.5'.',F ' illlifffflf,I,!, u 1Q'l 1. W 1 'i llr I ' J Z U ... T-?-.5 -m,.,. , m ie..-----I 5,6 .... ,... QQ B A: M .- ' . - V 1 ' -- Wlv5r:6.'reE a i-iw , - . W M . . 1 E ff? l5 .lI l .:.W'wr'F l'lVfn'fJ.ffbIj'5,l',Ql fllEwill i fi'b.:':.11'L',f1,lwf5 ' Wi-Q !f5'.ln'.ffIq':'.iua!'1'l1r.l5lg flHWHQFl 5lf'5 --R vftlilllf lim a MFIIMQIIQI.1t,l,: I. . ,Fl5,:lglI'l'I'j.,1.Gv:g:i. rt ...Aiguggpw IjwlmlimwgFr1p.I.mrl N ff lY ff..'f5'Ti'm::ufg'1ff5,512W 1 E '3 ': IH'JlA lr XS v-L-.we 1 ll'1 ' lii 'f We xi-2 A - , -J -Nl r v, -' L , G . .f . A- - X-' r!1'l'Zl3, . , ,,.,,. r,, 7-ggi!! ! , f ,1llL- -,-.,.,....':g!,....,..T' N. II - F Eu A will -1- LH ff f T A me A , ff ., f A V -lf Iglff' inf, .Q-2.1-.Q-,-4--.rg-L , 'TQ fl. ?T7 '-Siiigfft -F13 ' .1, . ' f'n '43 T ' .a1,Wfnsf1,. 'WJ '1,g,'1P'l '- -152-W: I ' ' .M ' . ll 'gf 'H M I Ytllllfillllll UI luun. H.4.!n f l - l -zu 1 j , gv ., Ag'I ll . I 'Il'Hiv'l l mil IW ' 1 'P'- ' ,I 'Iv - 'L 8:11 1 -if -,j'g,'iV'3I5I1llw fn51'5f5li,l, A V A 'HI'-'5'f5 --'W lt.. -f zwpwwf- 7 ',r.:11:r,MJ, E.: . ,1 I, . J I Z- . VIVA' f1llll'l'lflIl1l h A , , .- ,g.','w4 HQ! , ' -, 1 lH V' 'lf'-'lllf' ' l '4 ' gl W ' M f li'J A J' f 9 '7fl' i't i5 iITQl4'.Tl-EFT :-V?'i'5- , it ,fggi ' L-f S'-'i ' 'if-2 if - 1,2:ZT-2 rx? 83 1 zs.'1:,, , , 5 .. '- ' H A.-J '- ,,.,, :,:.,,Ag 3 A 5 yr: .:,-,135 5,-tw 3: .:y::,.Qi: ..- ,, . - 'gaugygcy--.4L1-f-v--1xf1es:.: -...g..-.w 1 X I J 1. .Rf gf? -w w A g lf' ' fj + - fa-Q' 4341. . ff i i 1 ' l ' L dv ', 1 'Q Mi K X ! lllllllllllllllllllillll -lllltlllillllullmnlul mmm HILE engaged in translat- ing a quantity of Egyptian manuscripts, the authorities of the British Museum came upon what is probably the most remark- able Work discovered Within the present century. It is a matter of regret that it is a fragment only, but this has been secured, and now appears for the first time in the MAKIO. AMENEMHAT, A TRAGEDY. ml- 1 , I 1 1 1 1 BY PSAMMI Os BORNES. I ...- i A boat ji Afloat Amid the shimmering shadows of the Nileg Once in a While The mosquito-laden breeze Sighed among the bulrushesg l All was out of sight, f For it was night. f No sound was heard, No Word, Save when there pulsed into the silent ear of night A The tintinnabulation Of a gentle osculation, Which no doubt caused palpitation liTl11'GC lines gonel. How sweet it were thus ever to seem Gliding down life's sunny stream D Disturbed only by the hollow bOOll'l-lil-1'1l-1'H Of the nocturnal bullfi-og! 86 I 3 1 J-far' Lozuee Jlferrzll- , YVho sees a soul in such a body set, Might love the treasure for the cabinetf' K Jlfiller, F C.-Appearances are deceitful. AvCZZlk67'Z:ll6 Jlforhmvf-Thy talk is the sweet extract of all speech, and holds onels ear in blissful revery. M0r1'z's01z --I like the girls, but nothing better. - - ,, .. T.--. ---- .... ..,, r- ,-,-- .1 64 ' 1.F'lB1:i!d Moyer--No interpretation known, sages are silent. Myers--Let no such man be trusted. Palmer, WI KP- Stuck on himself, and has no competi- tors. - Paftefsovz, F D.-- Nothing is more opulent than the imagination of a beggar. Pugh, L. R. Wf--'Tis strange to see how he will sit and look, and brood, and think. Ray -Wiser in his own conceits than ten men who could give a reason. A Rz'chardso1z-Welcome thine-a mighty athlete have we here Rohznsoh O poor man how pale and wan he looks Rzeztmz Living, being at present his only occupation Scott Father and mother were both fine ladies Sears W f Intoxicated with the exuberance of his own verbosity Serva The loud laugh that spoke the vacant mind Shepherd Going through college for conscience sake Siorer She p1t1ed him and he loved her Yaylov Nothing left but conceit Tmfnevf Better be damned than not to be mentioned at a Vorhees The gods made you unlike all others chaffless W00d6ZL77Z6 Short and sweet Cole Capproaching Prof Weber with a beftkerj Profes sor, I would like to have some alimony Murray to Prof Kellicot I insist that the skull of a man will hold 1 610 beans for I have had some experience 85 . WW 7 C n W O ' .L Q . . . X , I O -I. '- W E C . 0 - . . , U . .-- , ' ' . . 1' . ' ll. ' ' a 7 ' '-W O ' ' C 4 u C W - ' ' 3 1 . ---. 6 C . . ' . ' 77 7 7 ' 'I I I L I I I I I I I ,I I. I I I Er 'I II I I if II 'I I I I I I I II I 'I I I 'I I! Q I I I . I I K I I I I I . I I I I. i. I I I I I I I I I I A I I I I I I I I I re oc ware Ilia? Prexy has resigned? Whitney is gone forever? Horix has sworn off on poker? Mr. Kelley is a German by birth? The new museum is a hummer? Prof. Knight has stopped smoking coffin nails? Mr. Siebert and .Tack Stone sleep on their trousers to crease them? Bobbie stops his Watch at night to keep it from Wearing out? Seth Hayes graduated? Prof. Morrey is engaged? The 792 MAKIO is the best yet. FULLERTON: For nothing canst damnation add to thee. EGGERS: Hail, wedded love! Mysterious law, true source of human olfspring. MISS HOEL: Her voice Was ever soft, gentle, and low: an excellent thing in woman. PREXY: He was a man, take him for all in all. I shall not look upon his like again. Prof. Bohannon to ,Toe Taylor -- Say, Joe, Miss K- is a mighty fine girl, but lordy ain't she small. B01-IANNON: A merrier mam, within the meaning of becom- ing mirth, I never spent an ll0lll'iS talk withal. SEARS, W. J.: Men who undertake cousideraiblc things oven 1n a regular way, ought to give us ground to presume ability. S8 nlllaez-aided! Anon or about that time ' ,The deep, rich, dulcet voice of the youth said, H I'd jest like to ast you one questiong Dearest, I love thee! Wilt marry me, sweet?,' She wilted not, but gasped, And convulsively clasped Her hygienic, dress reform girdle. Oh, Amenemhat, this is so sudden! I Indeed, papa would not approve, To you I'll be a sister. Then he kister little No. 8 sandal, And saying, HAn' thou wilt have me not, my little Body is a-weary of this great world, ' He gazed upon the river. Shade of Osiris, how cold it looks! But as he spoke, on either side The jaws of alligators wide Protruded from the foaming tide, IIA-.nd although only a week before he had had eight teeth filled with goldj With a hollow mocking laugh He leaped and died But when those alligators took 1n Amenemhat They bit off more than they could chew And pretty soon the biler busted II-Iere endeth the papyrusj S C KERSHAW And this same half fac d fellow shadow give me this man he presents no mark to the enemy the foeman may with as great aim level at the edge of a pen knife WALTER SEARS The empty vessel makes the greatest sound MESLOH You taught me language and my profit on t is I know how to curse The red plague rid you for learning me your language 7 a ' H 3 . ' - 7 . . . , 3 5 . 7 ' ' 7 I 3 87. M, at V ' i W, ' :UNM-f l' If - f 1 otxce M r 'Q wvff 'f Z MMM!-Z I CON PROF. WEBER'S BULLETIN BOARDJ bg, X I I - w ' Lf 1 During the visit of the Legislature, X- I. f 'A-4 the following rules must be observed: lst. Graham will please remain out of the laboratory. The Legislators might think we are running a kinder- garten. Zd. Styer will bathe in salt water the preceding evening, to remove freshness. . 3d. Walsh will' insert new seat in pantaloons, and avoid customary attitude on stool. I 4th.. Burke will wear subdued clothes, so as not to be heard above the conversation of the visitors. 5th. Ellis need not entertain the visitors. I am capable of doing that. ' 6th. If Madden wants a pass, he will stay away. T Prof. Weber -H Mr. Lawrence, what are the physical prop- erties of I-LS? Mr. L.-'flt is a colorless gas of a pleasant odorf' Prof.W.-'4Yes, ,colorless gas and smells about as pleasant as rotten eggs. Well, go on, Fatty. Clark says Junk is authority on pumpkins, hayseed, and potatoes, Mathias, on speeding, Eylar, on old rye, Bricky Evans, on Hfratsv, Mahar, on currant society events, Patter- son, on poker, Griswold, on chasing, Kid Martin. on physi- ology. AT TI-IE FIRST BALL GAME. Miss Simp- Docs that little bow-limbcd follow Qpoiuting to Wag.j play fourth base? Miss Twiss- No, of course not, he plays quarter buck. 90 o We emember er? She came among us suddenly, in the month of January, . A 1 A . 1 NVhen the Weather Clike herself, we foundj was charming y contrary, She was tall and fair and willowy, and she stole our hearts away, This breezy, fascinating maid from West Virgin-i-a. She conversed at an alarming rate and was inclined to be' Built upon the plan of the superlative. degree, ' And at iirst some of our college girls Were startled, so they say, By the diction of this pretty maid from West Virgin-i-a. She was 'oll , and We liked her, and it gave us inward pain J Y When she told us that at O. S. U. she would no more remain, And although the college was 'just grand, ' she really could not stay, I So she Went home--alas!-the maid from West Virgin-i-a. -glm,-Zlf 1Z.iliaiX ' V an .limi 'X if tg X Sql , ff If f 'I W g Carmiew Thompson's customary attitude in History Class 89 ,VM ' -'17,--gif., f 1 . Q-V - JL-'ff 7,4-23.7, . 3 -,I-3,f.f 1'.4., , We rliagedg Darkness had settled over all, in fact, it had been settling for some time, and that the operation had finally been fin- ished was a relief to every one. The campus was deserted, or at least apparently so. A deep silence pervaded every thing, not a sound was heard except the gentle ripple of the spring as it llowed noiselessly along through the sewer, or now and then the grunt of one of Detmerls pigs as it tossed about on its bed of hay dream- ing of H ChOlGI'8,l1,, and H pacteeriaf' Away 'over toward High Street the electric lights twinkled and shone like so many brilliant stars, and gave evidence that the city itself was not far distant. To the south lay the dormitory, outlined against the bright sky, illuminated by the lights of the town. Rising as it did from its dark surroundings, it appeared like a giant locomotive with the tower, upon which Sears made the effort of his life, as a smoke-stack. The lights in the many win- dows showed that not a few of the students were engaged in earnest study. What a night it was to be sure. The night watchman sleeping on the tennis court, the grim old building, the dark shadows cast by the trees, all made up a picture which even .T oe Taylor would have attempted to paint. But stay! Wliat is that harsh, grating sound which stirs the noisy stillness? The watchman turns uneasily, rolls over. and falls again into a troubled doze. It is nothing: only the mercury rising in one of Bakers therinometers, or perhaps son1e sleepy owl has been disturbed during his lonely vigil in the pine tree, for the watchman goes on sleeping. But the sound is repeated, and this time draws nearer. and now stage whispers break upon the atmosphere, and our sleeping friend awakens with a start. Hastily rising, he takes out his 'iield-glasses and scans the horizon, starting suddenly on seeing any 'l':uniliar object. But his attention suddenly becomes tixed. and with breath- Q2 .F!imrzui'm?i rick and Wrph H A , ,,,....-- Bricky roomed with alittle boy Whose hair was white as tow, ' ' And everywhere that Bricky went, A Why Murph was seen to go. He followed him to Schraeder's one night, To see how Brick played pool, And when he got into a fight, Old Bricky said H D-n fool! Hart Schraeder simply turned him out, But Murphy lingered near, i And loafed quite patiently about, Till Bricky drank his beer. Now what makes Murph love Bricky so 'P The people did inquire Well Murph loves Brick you know Because Bricky builds the fire J G M S KINNER GRATIANO speaks an infinite deal of nothing more than any man in all Venice His reasons are t o rains of wheat hid in two bushels of chaff You as w g shall seek all day ere you find them and when you have found them they are not worth the search Miss GERTRUDE OWEN By Jupiter an angel' or if not An earthly paragonl GUGLE But manhood is melted into courtesies GEO valor into compliment and men are turned into tongue and trim ones too He is now as valiant as Hercules that only tells a he and swears to it . , . ' 7 7 I ,....-...- 7 V ' 7 7 ' 7 A 7 - . : , V 7 a 91 IV .Qjifcilia She sat there as the summer twilight grew, And slid her taper fingers o'er the keysg I leaned back listening to the harmonies That her soft touches from l the ivory drewg My thoughts from her to St. Cecilia flew, And so I told her, but she only smiled, And turning played a mel- ody so wild That thrills of sweetest pain my heart went through. The silent twilight into evening crept, Melting the figure of my saint in gloom, But still her fingers o'er the keyboard swept, D Filling with music all the shadowy room. A double power, was hers, for with strange art She played, too, on the tense strings of my heart. --..,,, A. nothing but prate to me of the wildness of his youth and the Turnbull Street, and every third H. KENNEDY: This same 'starved justice hath done feats he hath done about word a lie. NED MCCARTERZ' And like a politician ou seem to see the things thou dost not. y 94 P85111 less expectation he crouches down and hides himself behind the tennis net. Two figures approach from t e 1 A ent Station Walking slowly, with heads bowed together, II1 c . they seein to be engaged in deep conversation. The watch- ' ' d tices man observes more closely the approaching forms, an no that one of the figures resembles that of a woman. Instantly . . . .nts all his courage returns, and quickly jumping up, he poi D his .dark lantern at them, shouting at the same time, with a ' ' ste sort of baritone staccato voice, that if they come one p farther they will be one step nearer., ' ' b d f trans- The couple stop in their tracks, and large ea s o h u on the forehead of the N. W., and fall to h d'rcction of the Experi- piration gat er p to the- ground with a dull, sickening thud, when he discovers before him two of the members of the Dorm Dramatic Club rehearsing their parts in the famous play, '4Blackie and If' or, Who Ducked the Night Watchman? ' Turning quickly about, the N. W. let his wrinkled fore- ' the d f ll into his hands with a groan, and fled from hea a grounds. During the course of which flight he fell over the ' t and four of Mr Kelly's barb wires, never stopping tennis ne . until he was safely ensconced in the presidentls office, with a Springfield rifle in one hand and a picture primer in the other. D Fift chumps to keep up a continual gabble, ANTE - y din and roar in the library, also to make all the nec- ? , essary cow-paths on the campus. Only persons of experience need apply to A JAMES KELLY or LIBRARY COUNCIL. to hit Prof. Kellerman in the neck with P. S.-Some one ri e ersimmon or a juicy copy of his book the next time d 3' P P t Miss Jones about some books ordere he chews the rag o from his dealer in Germany, and which did not come by cable If he again terrifies Miss .Tones and disturbs ninety-nine ' 7 H ' ' Committee will take students, 'tK1d Pearce s Viligence action. Take Warning. I 93 ' A 7'7 '7T5'f? !f:ff',Qf '.', ,, 5 Bong of rhe IVQRH1 Board So 111erci'l'111 ll Makio Board Did never before exist. To nobody second. each one is reckoned A true p11i1z111t11ropist. , lt is our very huinane endeavor To make to some extent Each grave professor a ru11ning river Ui' 11:1r1111ess 111erri111ent. Our object 1111 sublime 1Ve shall achieve i11 ti111e, To make the punishinent tit the crime, The punis11n1ent tit t11e crime. 1 And make each teacher pent Unwillingly represent A source of innocent merriment, Of innocent merriment. There's Henry Lord, the astronomy teacher, The 111atl1e111atical bore, We'll dig 11im a 11ole in the depths of the earth, And let him for Vulcan explore. 1 And Knight, before whose Wrath We all In abject terror kneel, Shall be made to wear a neck a mile long, And a collar of Bessemer steel. Mr. Arnold, who thinks the Profs? influence here As to morals is growing dim, I Shall be sent to preach in the Cannibal lslesg KNO fear of their eating kimlj We'll rig a see-saw for Prof. Sperr, To elevate and depress hi1n, VVhile Surface fires fossils at his head, Oh, Wouldn't that be refreshing! 96 Q JQl 2-vi' ectllre de la fllifermodgpamicgy . Class wanders aimlesslyin, and adjust themselves upon the various boards and stools which serve for seats. Professor comes in ive minutes late, and 'takestwenty minutes explaining how it happened. Takes from out of his clothes a small note-book which hitherto he has,had con- cealed in the inner pocket of his vest. Is about .to call the roll, when Bud Alexander answers 4' here before his name is called, whereupon the professor looks up in manner some- what resembling that of a startled fawn, and says 'tAleXan- der? At this Bud gets mad and won't answer again, and is Consequently marked absent. , ' A After roll call, the professor goes to his desk. and spends some minutes in collecting together some small scraps of paper Chis lecture notesb. After some minutes spent in this manner, he goes to the 'board and writes an unintelligible formula. The class all industriously copy the aforesaid.. The professor stops when he has left off writing, looks at board, then at class, swings glasses in one hand, and lingers chalk in other. After some minutes he quickly erases all he has written, at which Bud again gets mad, and Kilheffer, who has been asleep, wakes up, and Major Palmer snorts la solo cz Za mezzo-sojbrcmo in four-four time. Then Brown, the only married man in the class, explains to the professor whatts wrong, and after some more copying by the class, which is as quickly erased, the gong sounds, everybody sighs a groan of relief, and another lecture has passed into history. Talbot-'4Say, Schueller, I would like to run a supply store in heavenf' Schueller-HGet out, you sissy, you would have more customers in the other placef' Miss Flynn wanted to know if J oe Walsh was a French man. 95 . , -,rg fn? 3?.:A,Ek:Z,T.k-...L . A p ,A In . . . i,'.: '1'f1 '. 1 Ci, ,, .,:- gy SZ 5 .. Y ?PF:'l'E1-H-F+'Jl - Iondies Escape ' to the sewer to scrap with the lwfgbi-QSSUI' Speer goes over . contractor, and leaves Linn to take charge of the Algebra Class. Linn seats himself behind the proressor's desk and trem- blingly awaits the entrance of the gang. Most of the class have assembled by the time the hour is iifteen niinntes gone, when a great hurrah from the outside announces that there are more to come. linter Brown, Herron, and Eddie Webb. Linn, With quak- ing voiee, asks Brown if he would be so kind as to put the fourteenth example on the board. 'He consents to do so, while Webb seats himself by the open window, and expec- torates quantity and qualityl' out in the desert air. Brown having iinished his example, commences to explain, U .,',1,i'g637 .X l . I e . Webb dexterously shifts his cud fr ou're a liar. it Brown, nothing daunted, continues, 442.941 -y : 223' Again VVebb exclaims, HI say, youlre a liar. Brown, becoming angered, makes for the tow-headed youth, but Professor Speer luckily appears and prevents the killing. om his left to his right cheek, and exclaims, HY Order No. 17 I-IEADQUARrERs or O. S. U. BATrAL1oN, February 16, 1892. Cadets 9SPGCi2L11y the basement gang, Will notice the fol- lowing, and proiit thereby: lst. Abscence does not spell absence. Zd. Abscent does not spell absent. Sd. College is right, 'not collidge. Take Warning by the above. EUGENE T. WILSON, Ist Lieuzf. Iszf Art. 98 llllscnw Each day the devil 'l shall bring HB. Lucy's H book, And say, in tones of terror: In other words--that is to say, Herels a typographical error. While Eggers shall live to see, alas ! In PreXy's honored chair, Not his own dear self, but Georgie Knight, A Who will Elden's collars wear. Prof. Thomas his own machine shall grease, And Bunker his place shall take, While the wood-carving class shall of Chalmers' head A Corinthian capital make. Our object all sublime, We shall achieve in time, To make the punishment iit the crime, The punishment it the crime. And make each teacher pent - Unwillmgly represent A source of innocent merriment Of innocent merriment C A RAYMOND I-Ie does smile his face into more lines than are in the new map, with the augmentation of West Indies G JOHNSTON I cannot hide what I am I must be sad when I have cause and smile at no man s jests, eat when I have stomach, and wait for no man s leisure sleep when I am drowsy, and tend to no man s business laugh when I am merry and claw no man in his humor SETI-I I-IAYES 92 Do you set down your name in the scroll of youth that are written down old with all the char acters of age? I-Iave you not a moist eye? a dry hand? 1 yellow cheek? a decreasing leg? Is not your voice broken? our wind short, your chin double your wit single? and Y every part about you blasted with antiquity? And will you yet call yourself young? 7 . , . t r 7 o 7 a . ' 7 ' 3 , . 9 . ' , . 7 - o Q L - 7 ' P' 91 A f T' -?fp!::1'i,. '11 'i f' -' 1 . , -.1-.4 .- --- : 'L ',k ' :ig '..-r::L5,.4:,, :Wh A 33-. . ,, 1. L . - A V .-5 Wi F1 up 'X , Prof. Detmers had a Berkshire hog f.ff'? lVith bristles Covered o'er, L , fp, Nfl-Ie dosed it with his medicine N E gi X, Y And gave the key to Mauer. - l Y? S Y-,ff MC 1 I Some students thought they'd play X si., y ll f a joke, -M V So to the pen they Went, X X Ne'er thinking that to take a pig - Would cause a sad event. .-, '-' .2 They took it up into the Dorm, s And into Pedlow's room, - 1 Then waited ,til a dismal hour, ! w - 1 l Concealed within the gloom. cg Klggggvs ly' 1 tall 2 When Ped stalked into his room, THE,PIG I Where everything was dim, . ,N A Pomijgx He saw the pig, set up a yell, - l Then tired it with a vim. ' N l , It wandered all about the halls, Not knowing Where to go, And would have been there to this day If 'twere not for Noble J oe. He took the thing up in his arms, Twas a skinny little runt, And marched with it down all the stairs, To the cadence of its grunt. 100 .F'!5:mi' Idea Oh for an 1dea' the ed1tor sard 7 In h1s hands he pamfully dropped hrs head And thought and pondered and thought 111 va1n For nothmg appeared to h1s'fevered bra1n And he thought of the book to come out so soon Pronounced hnnself to be almost a loon Then he held h1s head and an oath he swore Got up from h1s cha1r and paced the floor But a change came over h1s gu1less face And he sat once more and Wlth rnatchless grace Took a pen 1n h1s hand and Wrote th1s verse Then rang for a porter and called for a hearse In 1 QU 151-5 f 474' Z! f Ali 91 The average room 1n the North End for 310 00 PROP THOMAS Lord Lord how subject we old men are to th1s V106 of lylng 64 ' 77 ' ' 7 ' 1 7 7 7 7 3 7 7 ' 7 7 I Y, ,gig Jr- ' K' W. . - S T' I W lr l dll: -- 5 , Y- wi: I . E V A 1 y . K- - l A-- ' '-T - ,f 'N -K E . 55' l 11 . f ' tl , Q I I f 'L -ANXX , 0 -'L---'-'-' n' Ykxxtuluu ?i i X! T: T ,f ff CoXxm-xv. ,fly - . ff! ' .1 X- f' l':.'.L- I , ' X at WMM--la , 'A 1, 7 I, f gf A n 1 ,-.f,g,'f,fffffn - 3 a a 99 ' ' ' ' V yrp' .:' It . ' ..7n?3'b' ' ' . .':If:1J,i.,-' J 1 ngwerg to orregpondenls 112,-Sf 17,-fra, ,- Yes. you are right. Hayes Hall was named in honor of Seth Hayes. Yes, Seth was a senior in 'SS No, he is not related to Coney. f:iz'UllL c' If:1lg'!f.- Bliss Phelps must know you, or you must have a letter ol' introduction before you will be allowed to call. lt is not in good form to talk of yourself and your fzunily before strangers. .llizrvs Yes. Gillen lilled his stockings with sawdust before the foot-ball picture was taken. lf. 72'11 !1'1'ovr,l' !:'!!1's.- XVe think it looks more aristocratic to sign your name as you did in your letter. We recommend I'eek's Dream of Lily Buds for removing redness from nose. but know of nothing to reduce the size. Prof. Weber is feeling very proud at his success with the engineers in his lab. If the amount of work done is in pro- portion to the apparatus used up, wonders have been accom- plished. Some of the boys even become so expert that they could earry away four feet of gas hose or a wash-bottle and never know it. Many have since started laboratories at home in order to continue their chemical research. Prof. Bohannon Cto class in Calculusj --HI did not assign any lesson purposely. If you Work under a task master, you will not be worth a counterfeit confederate dollar? It is reported that the capillarity of the Murray Club is something astounding. Mcllvaine says he prefers fried hair to boiled. Miss Bell Cwatching drillj- Just look at Billy Hazeltine take Oli his head and scratch his hat. 102 ' b When safe once 1nore on mother earth For Joy the piggy squealed, .fvfflvp s , X 3,47 ,az Then broke for open iields 7.f7f' p Now Detmers thinks the pig is lost, But this is not the fact, if ,, ' And wandered near the dorm awhile, f . JUQQ:-Zvi' For young Prof. Lord, with telescope, - Has done a wondrous act. A While making observations, sg? In search of the great bearj' J He found, to his astonishment, That Detmers' pig was there. fiffif ff JD There was a star for every foot, ' One each for tail and snout, X , ', And several others, extra ones, i , Scattered recklessly about Now as the pig was very light He perhaps had blown away And after reaching such a heifr t j Decided there to stay K! 'Z- d nks dat pig be starved to die U The 'fDoc was heard to say, Oh no said Lord, he s dining now Upon the milky way No doubt the pig is happy now, And perhaps 1S better off Than in the Doctor s hospital Und fressen von ein trough MISS GEORGIA FISHER Tis beauty truly blent, whose red and white Nature s own sweet and cunning hand laid on 5 5 M I K 1 1 1 ah I , . . is . -7- CCI ' ' , 77 . 46 477 ' cc 1 ' ' 1 1 . A ' 77 0 7 ' 7 . 4 : 1 ' , C ' 1 ' ' 5 U 101 A , V, 11,3 - ' A-M. -. A-gf ',j'LfS.:5 if ' -' 'ku'gQ,T5 --,....L A ' U , , .. -wx f S' ' xvnix 1 Nxt: g xx' f f ' I i ,, ui 'if vi .1 ,-- f ' .4 ' ,W c .-- H-Ja .ff 5 1 Lf: ffgvjv . , A. -ggi-. Ihe 1 e 655011 2 I 1 Llewffili ' X l. A '35 ' x , -. -- fl . ' gaxi-f: -Hi . Do not think the Dorm is on 'flaw i tire. Don't, for an instant, im- XX 5 , . . . . i lim agine that another poor victim 1S f a, ', l l 1 1 L , . 9 liilhil 'H if fi destined for the pump. Don't tool 4 ,LM 4 l , . . , flllalfl 3 ilk f Yourself with the idea that a C2111- U tglull, alll. didatc lor ts uyaic is cing am- . pered with. Don't think that the H . I l JI occupant of room 26 has gone l 5 ' . . . .1 I lil! mad, or that he 1S practicing jill l ,lim for the oratorical contest. Dear l ' reader, do not, on any account, ,J deceive yourself with the above, is Y, . ,.,., l .u . . in- or any s11n1lar ideas. Oh, nog nothing- of the sort. You are entirely wrong. For all this turmoil and pyroteehnical display is of weekly occurrence, it is only Sears getting out his Bible lesson. ' lVILI.I.-XMS, H. O.: A chapter of accidents. STRONG: Absence makes the heart grow fonder. XVHITNEY: How instinct varies in the groveling swine. And what room is this?', sh east end of the fourth iloor corridor. 4'This, he answered, is Alcyone Hall. It is used mainly as a dancing room for non-members of the society. It is kept in excellent order by the Sergeant-at-Arms, Sammy Osborn, who fills the oflice bl H a y. e always gives the key to anybody who asks for it sees that there is paper all over the Hoor, that the chairs are- in the most artistic disorder, invites the whole French class i t h ' ' ' n o t e hall to eat lunch, and is never around when h ' - e 1S wanted. He is so eflicient that the society has given him the oiiice for three successive termsfl ' e asks, as they paused at the 104 Q Gr Nkjor ,..1...-- Have you heard of handsome Walter? Walter Palmer is his nameg He's a great and mighty Warrior, Striving hard for martial fame. He knows it ally and you can't tell him Of fact or iiotion not a mite. For if he does not chance to know it, Well, then of course it is not right. Of all men hels the most conceited That I think I ever saw, And when he drills our good Battalion, No Word but his is law. ,l lf- iznozii. 'I fix f at ' Wir X Familiar scenes on Registration Day 103 A The Force 0 whit .lf1'.f. Club' rushing into Professor L'oler's study and inter- rupting his ineilitationzai th-or'ge! George! a lump of coal has fallen ont of the grate and set llre to the carpet, and it's lilaximg' awax' np! Shall I turn in the llre alarm, or do you think yon can pnt it ont? , l'1'nf.',Q,eif1' lnfrr iahstraeteillyis--e W'ell, now, my dear, I iliin't think we hail hetter decide on that too hastily. VVe,ll leave that till the next recitation. and think about it mean- while. I will look up the l'L'iiCl'L'llCCS on the subject, and you can think about it, and may he it will be elear to your mind lux' that time. 'IXIMIC Second watch of the 1ll0l'llillg.1'. Selixl-2 V l'riifesso1' Denny's recitation l'OO1l1. Q 1 ms'r I,lll'fNUM.'A- I.. Diablo Sater. S1-:comm 1'111-ixorxi.-U M. Horatio Linn. Tumi: P111-ixom. Ang. E. Addison. gXSSlS'l'AN'l'-- Professor D. Sl'l'liS --A The Class. .elsif We will now take up Fig-4 .Si f1Illll'!i' i Don't you think, Professor, that the differ- ence hetween anaeoluthon and epanorthosis is -- YW1'1'11'ltwe I think Mr. Linn has a wrong idea, there is no dillerenee between me--- CWUIYIS qf.S'njvrse-- O yes there is! I .Alss'le-- XVell, gentlemen, I am myself compelled to sayl- Yhirn' Ii Cwho is afraid of being leftj -- Pardon me, Pro- fessor, but any one can see that - FWS! amz' Second 19's -- I will bet on it. Snjnc fI0r1'.i'-- Let me hold the stakes. A557-- Just a little more order, please. Professor Chal- mer's face hurts him, this morning, and the noise may make it worse. If you Want to sustain your opinions, however, p per person to have charge of the remember that I am the ro luere. While everybody is talking at the top of his voice the bell rings and the curtain falls. 7 106 1 IIIQ Hazeltme Iogaxwr One d1re and fearful thought Comes to me o er and o er Than I ever have been before ' ' Nearer the tlme when the flunk I Stares me hopelessly 1n the face I'm nearer those finals to-day, to-day, Nearer the t1me When the plug I possess Goes at a Nancy Hanks pace Nearer the time when the Prof at the desk Seems a despot, threat'n1ng and gr11n, Nearer the t1me when my chances to pass Are deucedly, uncomfortably sl1m I Nearer the time When the v1s1ons of home Are not as they were once so br1ght For I th1nk how I may go there and stay Then Wlth me t1s surely all n1ght Be st1ll sad heart' reflect a m1nute You may to some extent be 1n 11: Ho there my nag speed on your m1ss1on And try and chase for me a cond1t1on WILLARD Woon Why should a man whose blood 1S Warm W1th1n S1t l1ke h1s grandslre cut 1n alabaster? Sleep when he wakes and creep 1nto Jaund1ce By be1ng peeV1sh'? SAMMY GSBORN Thou art bought and sold among those of any wlt l1ke a barbarlan slave PLATT EVANS If crrcumstances lead me I W1ll ind Where W1ckedness 1S h1d CASTI E Are h1s wlts safe? Is he not l10'ht of bra1n'? 105 7 7 . 7 . , . . 7 ' 7 5 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 ' 7 I 7 . 7 ' ' T I I . - 1 Q 4 I ' D ' IEEFMHSOHI-iX3miDingQdel5 bgenlfrom rill Qucefion, Young man, I understand you were absent from drill lust week? l Answer. Yes, Slf- O, Xvllllt was the matter? A. Had ll crippled knee. Q. How did you get it? ,v A. Fell down stairs. Q. XVere you going up stairs or down stairs When you fell? A. Up stairs. Q. IVhere were you going? A. To IL recitation. Q. VVhat in? A. In German. - Q. Are your parents living? A. Yes, sir. Q. Are they German? A. No, sir. f Q. By the way, did you have a doctor for your knee? A. Yes, sir. Q. VVho was it? I A. Dr. Warner. L Lfcnf. W--All right, you are excused. Well, What's the? matter with the next man? A. Please, sir, had a toothache. . What in? . In my tooth, sir. Q. Where is your tooth? A. At the dentist's, sir. Q. Open your mouth and let me see. CStudent opens I xamines and :finds one tooth Qmissingy. All rlght, you may go, but next time when you Write your excuse say toothache instead of teethache. . Q A mouth and Lieut. e l 108 Flbami ramdjecret A little bird is whispering Of Denney And Jennie. - Oh, what a theme for Muse to sing Just J 6111116 And Denney All 111 the summerls torrid heat, It says, they very oft d1d meet, And moments spent in converse sweet, But, oh' to none th1stale repeat Of Denney And .Tenme A -,iiil A compos1te photograph of X F Fowler Askew and Kellenberger xi K CQ' ll if it ij K, GBA xl let What they are supposed to do What they do PERCY MARTIN What rank me Wlth the barbarous mu titudel -ci- ' I F . - 'f f F31 Q 1 a - f if H WHL X 'Q 'ef ' gl - -'f f X I K Nm: 1. 1 . ' A - ,X Xiftr- ii f , 1 N f 1.-' G: 'AT KN lllllfuh, 'Z 4 l , . o y X-E p , I Lx Q qt I - -Q- t ' rl RP 0 : , ' A ' 107 1 ' re d rdlh 3 r'1a A A PM Bain? c I. . , M G IS .U By J. Viisiivrus D1f.NNx, PHE HPOH1 IN DIS U E ,1,--..-. The mantel in my bacl1C101' C1911 I've turned into a shrine, And there Ilve placed her photograph, That patron saint of mine. And daily as I pass it by, I lowly bow the knee In reverence to my lady fair, My saint so dear to me. And in my inmost heart I've set To her another shrine, lVhereon the flames of my true love Forever more shall shine. N. B.-The above was found in the aforesaid Joseph Vesuvius Dcuuy's room, and presented to one of the editors. PRESIDENT W. H. SCOTT: If I am traduc'd by tongues which neither know my faculties nor person, yet will be the chronicles of my doing, let me say, ,tis but the fate of place, and the rough brake that virtue must go through. Weemust not stint our necessary actions in the fear to cope malicious censures which ever, as ravenous iishes, do a vessel follow that is new trimm'd, but benefit no further than vainly long- ing, what we oft do best, by sick interpreters Qonce weak onesj is not ours, or not allowe'd. Pieor. R. D. BOHANNON: I once did hold it, as our statists do, A baseness to write fair, and labour'd much HOW to forget that learning. . 110 ljvzrf. IV. lVell, xvho's the next victim on the list? Cln1'4'f. Here. sir. I V ljczzf. llf llfhy, man, what kind of an excuse do you call that? You have every other Word spelled Wrong, and your English is something terrible. We1'e you at college on the day of your absence? rx. No, Slf. Q. You attended no recitations? A. No, sir. Q. lVhat was the matter with you?, A. Had a severe attack of the grippe including a head- ache and a bealed ear. i Q. All right, you are excused. And thus they come and go. The amount' of sickness at our beloved institution is something awful to contemplate. It worse than the famine in Russia. During this year there Were 796 absentees from drill, for the following causes : Sprained knee, 275 grandmother died, 425 aunt died, 163 mother-in-law died, 1 Qthis man was excused for rest of yearjg headache, 342, broken leg, 93 bunion, 595 cramp in stomach, Sq grippe, 4865 neuralgia, 875 rheumatism, 155 sore throat, 363 bad cold, 525 boils, 193 hurt in foot-ball, 243 bealed ear, 13 crippled knee, 1. pw! O. Alanson .lawbreaker Hercules! Phoebus! what a name! .TOE WALSH: ' The devil speed him! No man's pie is freed From his ambitious finger. Booties: ' 4 I'd rather be a kitten and cry Hmew W Than be one of these same mitre ballad-mongers. SEARS, W. J.: ' Not Hercules ' Could have knocked out his brains, for he had none. 109 ' 54:5 :- ' 7- Q s liut lu return to the game: At nine oclock the crowd A--' 1,C.f'iii to assemble, and in a short time the P N, 1. . ., , grandstancl and field and all neighboring 'il fences were covered with an enthusiastic, u Q is shouting audience. P r l ' The faculty being in good trim, no prac- fg-n,' I tice of any note was indulged in. Promptly 5' if ' at 0:48 Umpire Peggy Martin shouted n tones, and with a groan from the Play hall. in steutoria e game began. -'rand stand and a squeak from Detnier's pig, t 1 I' h Lucy B. was the first man to the bat, and with a sort of smile II In Frfzzzmfs he stepped called for a high ball. Pitcher Morrey took a to the plate, tipped a wink to the Umpire, and drink of spring water and sent the ball spin- y ning across the plate with the speed of a green - ' line car going away from you when you Want A y x lp ' ' N x . R to catch it. Lucy glanced dis- l 'P X mag 126 dainfully, with a sort of a O-you-can't-fool-me I R !.g v grin lingering about his whiskers, at the I pitcher, and let the ball go by, and the umpire lalnmw' K , ' called 'fOne strike. All Wasexcitement now. 15,10 A - Prof. Weber in the grand stand stood up, ' 42, 5- ' and with open mouth and watchful eye was a circus in himself. f'Knock the cover off her, shouted Bobby, and the next ball that came to the plate was a foul tip. Lucy's eye stayed with him, and he got to first on balls, stole second, and then by a beautiful effort stole home, , JP! . - ji' making the first run. One ' 'Ay A more run was made and then -1 the Seniors came to the bat. -:--L - X: They thought they had a cinch, and man- yff aged to get nine runs, but their sport was ff-ff-sfgsnot to last long, for it was not until the fourth that they made more than one run an inning. V The game was one string of excitements from beginning 10 end, and When finally ended the score was 18 to 19 in favor 112 Ijfaccltg all ame T was on the morning of May 7- one of those cool, calm, and irridescent spring days, when the sun pours down splendiferent rays, threatening to bleach your whisk- ers, if you have any, and make your nose Q64 look as if you had been working off some of 'I 'ff if x Lieut. Wilsonls extra drills in the middle Jxfi' of June. But it was a day to be remem- llwftlmxilxl' bered in the history of the college. Long before sunrise the boys at the fxlllql . 1 dorm had arisen, and by special arrange- 4 ' 'W ment prayers were held before breakfast instead of after. 'T X fx fx Mr. Kelly donned his new spring trousers, if which in shape and appearance threatened X i ll i I 'l I to surpass those of our friend Bricky. He was at the ball grounds two-hours before X Q breakfast, and as the inevitable small boy gg, - had not yet taken his usual position on the fence, he occupied his spare moments by knocking off of it a few stray flies and electric light bugs which had probably been out late and lost themselves on the way home. , As we before mentioned, this was indeed 'L M 4 a famous day, for did not the Alpha n Tauls appear in all the splendor of red, white and blue and carmine. Thompson, f J -W our genial ticket-seller, dorm steward and il-W N their founder, celebrates the event by appear- ing in an immaculate shirt front, but minus the usual collar and necktie, thus introducing a beautiful new custom,', which unfortunately has not been very popular. Z? 111 FACULTY RECORD Laxvcrx' Catcher . . - -0- S- U- ' ' ' ' ' Mom-1' Pitcher . . o. s. U. . . . . . Bowen First base . Miss Phelps' Thoums Second base Michigan ...'. Chalmers . . .Third base Michigan- ' ' ' smith. short Stop A111he1'S'f - ' Iicllicgtt Right field. Syracuse . . Lazenhy, Captain . Center Held . . . Cornell . . Bradford ..... Left field .--- O- S- U I - SUBSTITUTES Professor Bohannon . . . . . . .1889 . . . .1890 School .... 1860 .,. . . 1869 . . .1842 . . 1830 . .1812 . .1865 . .1880 ...J52 Professor Eggers . . . .Hanover . . . . . . H69 Professor Derby . . . .Harvard . . . ---- Unknown Weber , . . Spitzbergen . . . . Before the Hood PHYSICIANS IN ATTEDANCE Mr. Kelley, Prof. Bleile, Doc. Detmers. BULLETIN BOARD POSTER ATTRACTION PI-IENOMENAL UNEQUALDED 9 LAZENBYS LALLAH LAMBASTERS , vs. SMELTZ,S SENIOR SLUGGERS SENIORS TEAM Hoss Doctor Murray . . . . . Lillie Alsdorf. . . XK7OI113.I1 Hater Martin .... VVindy Gus Evans, Captain . . Mary Anderson Smith . . . Ah There Goodell . . . Ham Richardson .... Kicker Griswold ..... Leftenant Coloniel Evans ........ ' . Center field . . Pitcher . First base Second base . Third base . Short stop . Left iield . . Catcher . Right field WHITNEY1 Let him go to a distant countryg let hirn go to a place where he is not knowng don't let him go to the devil where he is known. 6 114 ef U10 S01li01'S- Every body seemed to believe the Faculty ought to have had it for superior playing. SCORE BY INNINGS, 1 2 3 4' 5 6 A 7 Total Faculty . 2 1 3 4 4 2 2 18 Seniors . . . . 9 1 1 4 1 2 1e+ 19 ftlue 111111 out when xx inning iun was made. NOTES. S , 'The two Dromios, Thomas and Bradford. wa -:- 6 K Professor Knight was too 'sick to play, ' so consoled himself by acting as' park police- ! i man. I Smith's coaching was out of sight. Even f' -'SS -if NA' when it was so still you could have heard a gum-drop, Jo's falsetto could be N heard above the stillness shouting Go it, Lucy! Slide, ah! Youlve got to go. Lavery's slide from third to home was a ui T sight never before seen or heard of. A 4.31 YN During practice Chalmers and Smith made is desperate efforts to catch a fly, the former me 1 succeeding, and with a sort of We-are-the- people grin they both took of their caps to N the audience and shook hands. 1 The attempt of the Seniors to coach during 1 ' 'T the last inning was a deep and dreary failure. The grand razzle-dazzle three ring circus . o q Q act of Thomas and Smith with Richard's fly - X Was a feature of the game. Neither of them ,V caught it. V Bradford's sliding and Prof. Kellicott's gl base running were sights never to be for- gotten. 113 570110-To show th mg the lass of '94 QYDC 'FO The .lJ'f11'X'M1z1S-To plily fOOl1 bilu' -lffss Hr!!-To make tally and smoke cigarettes. L7'!!f'1'--To hunt free lunches. ' -llfss Coclvlzs--To bring out the Diary. Umm'-Tlie Lord only knows and he won't tell. Ou-:. z'11-So there would be a Sophomore class. C N11111z.1'11g'MI111-To be a frat. man. Dfzrfs, C. U511.-To regain his capillary growth by using ic Eggers remedy. - fjllllhlllll-Til study prep. physics. I limsf-To play first base. l'211'6rr-To show .people how to play tennis. fbsfvz'-To eat boarding house hash. . libfffl'-To explain the mysteries of the VJ. A. Club. !'b:u!cr-Because society needed him. IfM'1'l'1'11s-To find an excuse for living. lln:mm'HBecause it needed a wise man. .llfss fin!!-To keep Windy Bill company. jams-'llo represent Texas. fl2'!ff,ffbl11:8.Cl'iTO chase 4 ffznzzrss-Not known. Ln'-To ride ponies. .lAIFf'I1l'-TO escape Wooster. .Mzrshuff-To run the college. .lhwrlfv-To establish the Wahoo? fJflIllf.?'+TO learn, Rllfllll-T63 be an amateur detective. A .Skars L. 13.-To deliver his speech on Robert Emmet. .S7lIl16Cl'l11'fTO drink H 0 Oi. .S7Cj5bClIS071iTO show niy frat. pin, e crease in his pantaloong, 113 ilsn-mlfiw Iflfd FF eal1en'5 Qate One day outside the heavenly gate Lord Stood disconsolate, And looking in he saw a place Adorned with beauty and with grace, A field Where wondrous flowers grew, Thro, which the birds of Eden flew, , Where, by sweet brooklets in the Shade, The Souls of' whilom mortals playkl. Then Lord asked, XVhat place is l this? The answer came. The realms ol' bliss Wliieli man calls Heaven and set-lee to win. , Lord asked, Can I comm- in? And then St. Peter, at the gate. ,X Replied, Not now: -x'ou'll have to wait To-day is Sunday, and, you know, The gates are shut that day below. How long' will Slllltiilj' l:ist'. ' aslqtwl lu- The saint replied, l'1tei'i1:ill-vi X K-NN. X N Ii V , V. Him 'into . Q Q NWCAVI ' . M fi 2 4 ,jill Hfllzfil l l ,ff -,X 1 A l l l I o il: I ' - sg, l tl 'Xlt X , , ,fl .ree -6-l D L . k L l 141A'l l'Y lhxwicl-:Nei-:: U that he wen- 11-in down an ass! Hut. ministers. renieiulwz 1l..i: l .1. . -f 11. ' though it be not writteii down. Yet S-ful. T , ' s ZLSS. F111-in Iilfl-ll-'l-flQZ X tlx l'l ' In tattered weeds. with eYvi'N -1 1MH . ' - Ctliiillg' ol' simples. lllVQlQ'l'U www -1 2 1 ti file fi! Sharp misery had XVUl'll ilill - ll.: t m PQ mypeal Tojid WRITTEN BY MISS M. E. B. Oh, wise corrector, whoe'er thou art, Be kind, be just, be good of heart, You see how much I do not know, Yet I have studied, indeed 'tis so. C?j Hot days and nights have been consumed And thy shade has before me lumed, Still this sad failure is my fate, And I cannot it abate. My work till now I have enjoyed, But if I ever am decoyed ' In taking up such another study I'll own and confess to being nobody. To your kind heart I now appeal, My sorrow indeed is very real, Yet why should I, a girl in school, As to take chemistry be such a fool. - THE REPLY, BY SID. Miss B--l, I know ,tis very sad, And a pass from me would make you glad But a pass to you I cannot give For reasons which you may now receive? You did not study during the term, Nor did you try this chemistry to learn. You trusted to old lists to get you through And you had enough for any two. When ill my Lab. you smoked cigarettes, And with the boys made many bets Poetic License. S 118 Y11.f'1 wf To 1'1111 ll li1'c1'sx' stable, l'iff'fffff'1'c' To lw Llllltlllg' s111z11't 111011. H'-'Yf7f f1f1-'-f- 1' f - I 7. E To grin and grow fat, llifsf' So it would have ll giant, ll211111'Xmz11'1z1'feeTo show the O. S. U. people 3, molecular lIlOIlStI'0SlfX. L11ff1'11be---,Bcca11sc others came. ,g V J .1 Wy' ff Kellicott at the age of sixteen, V' Ziff P53 1 0 19 1 lgl l Miss SIMPSON hangs up a wish bone over the gab-room door and Waits three1 minutesg a knock, enter a seven foot living skeleton selling cheap photographs.-Tableau. PROP. EGGERs: -Mb- That old miracle, love at ilirst sight, Needs no explanationsg the heart reads aright Its destiny sometimes. ' BENJAMIN LUCY BOWEN: Seldom he smilesg and smiles in such a sort As if he mocked himself and scorned his spirit ' That could be moved to smile at anything. SURFACE: Submissive fall his princely feet before him. BURKE: The soul of this man is his clothes. 117 :i'?3T?21 .1 , -'2Qf'f1f7:55fi 1' :5'1kiQf'1'f1T5 - litter from GUYS, illld WQPIQ x Ecliiors M fllczkio: I send you this letter to be 'put Eglin in the MAKro. I want the new ,X students to know who I am, and , , the old ones to think of MY great- ness. , W -I9 I understand oratory better than X any one else. Even when I was A: N W a prep. I knew all about oratori- X , . V . cal affairs, now that I am a col- lege man, I know more than Hon. Ingalls or Chauncey Depew, for it was only a few weeks ago in MY speech on the Y. M. C. A. that I calibrated souls with a Heals bladderf, I love to hear MYSELF talk because I am the only orator in college. I also have a dignified bearing, and I have often told IYIYSELF that I am the handsomest man in college, not excepting Prof. Denny. MY opinion is, that the college eouldn't do without ME. On any special occasion, such as oratorical contests, field- day receptions, and literar ' t come to the front. y socie y anniversaries, it is I who I verily believe that if- I cises would fail. I think the Board of Trustees should offer ME a position after I graduate Q?j, for if they don't keep ME here, the Oratorical and Athletic Associations, not to say anything of the Literary Societies and Glee Club, will sink into oblivion, whereas, if the Trustees would create a Chair of Oratory and ask ME to ill it, the eiforts of the college would be far-reaching and its success assured. I 'When the Legislature visited the.University last March, lt grieved ME greatly that Gov. McKinley received more attention th I an I. I also regret that the Faculty did not ask ME to welcome them i ' N n one of MY witty addresses. 190 I -4 did not appear and talk the exer 'l'h.yl you eouhl hieh iuueh higher than they -. 1 .Xuil perhaps you tried wheu I was away. So. HOW. iu view ol' these iuournful ifactsg liuoyyiug' that you have my patience taxed, liuowiug' that trouble to me you did bring, Ulu-mislry you must take again next spring. Phelps takes ll picture of the Metallurgical Laboratory. The uext day he eoules in with ll streak of blue. air in his trniu zuul says: Say, Billy Evans, your face spoiled that picture yesterday. Evans XYll1Lt'S that? Phelps Your face moved. . g F. XY. Blatliias falls off his stool in convulsionsj Evans W-t Say. Phelps, did all of my face move, or only part of it? gp Roy is here carried out on a platinum dish.j MISS MOOREHEAD IN HISTORY EXAMINATION. Vainly she racked her cranial store, Seeking to find historic lore, History repeats itself, said sheg Oh, now repeat thyself to mef' Idioms of 1:30 Mathamatics: Loofbourrow, Logarimthg Kuschke, Xekal's toyg Gairt, Tetag MHC, C011V9I1f10115 ITC' land, Cosn. -- THE COMMANDANUYS COMMANDS. I-I-h-a-h--hmrs. H-h-o-d-r--HIIIS. I-I-h-h-h-d-h--hh--11611 H ae ne h 13 ii- 0 appoint a villigence com Kid Pearce said, f'We ought 'C ' 57 mittee to ind out Who the spy 1S- 119 , ui. ,vw-Ylsqv vig-.ups '- In eterminatilfe ineralogy Pffgfl Lord Cgiving instructions how to use a blow i 'P P955 NEVHHS, dopjt blow so hard, just take it easy. So ........ - 1uSt bloyv along, and think about the election What d . o you want, Phelps?', Phcfjbsf UI want some Boraxf' P1-ff ,- Flynn, what's wrong over there?,' Bamev .' Professor, I want some borax, too. P1-of Cwith his hands to his mouth, trumpet wisej: Als- dorf! Oh, Mr. Alsdorf! Borax for two. Jones, what are you trying to do there. Now, that is not the way to 'hold your blow-pipe. Take it between your thumb and little linger beneath and iirst three fingers above. So. ........ . Now, I want you men to distinctly understand that when I tell you to do a thing I want you to do it just as I tell you to do it. Dont-clier-know? If you think you can do it better than I can, I d f' ' o not xx ant you in here. See?,' I Therets a youth Falconer by name, The gods would not try him to tame, He tries hard to be tou h EI , But lacks sand enough, This youth Falconer by name. ' M. A. Smith, translating Soph. French, meets the follow- ing passage : G'ra1zds cizezwc Que 'vous je ciozlf. After due flCl1lJCI'2LflO11, he exclaims, Great gods, what have I done to You? In H prepdom there's a fellow named Castle, Who with Latin and Greek tries to wrestle, Althou h g not a Hprofeshj, l He tries to be fresh, Th1s wonderful young man named Castle. Prof VVeb I Wh 9 ' Cf has changed Mr. HoriX's name to Mr. Horse. J'- 122 l wish more students were MY equal, then I could converse with H10111 Without lowering lX4Ix'Sif3L1f intellectually. l have lcuruetl to be as dignified as Prof. Eggers, and now l congratulate MYS1-51.1f that he and I look like twins. l know l can graduate this year, but I will take things easy iu order to give the University the benefit of another year of Mx' attendance. l have the honor, gentlemen, to subscribe MYSELF, WALTEIQ .I . SEARS. EDITOFVS REPLY TO THE ABOVE. Mk. XY. Ji. SEARS: Sir--Yours received and filed. U It is our opinion the col- lege can get along without you, and we express the sentiment of the student body. Y t 1 ' Ours ru y' MAKIO EDITORS. WHO? Her face was fair as fair could be, Her eyes were a deepdark blue, Her hair was long and wavy and light, She was the pride of the O. S. U. The way Dunlap sees it in Chemical Laboratory: T. C. Dunlap, Professor, H. A. Weber. Assistant, G. M. Bloom- field, Beaker Washer, J. G. Boyd, Occasional Visitor, Beach, a Muflied Furnace Cbetrayed by his'hairQ, R. B. lVIcCarter, Improved 'Water Squirt, R. Ten Broeck Ellis, Gas Generator, E. H. French, Citric Acid Lemonade Fiend. ' Therels a young fellow named Clum, ' Who thinks that in Greek he is some, But when he's marked low He says, I don't know VVhat the reason for that is, by gum! Prof. XVeber is going to make Mr. Ward his 2LSSiS'f2lU'f 'fhiS Year. Mr. W. is a brainy youth. He told Professor that H20 was a mixture of H and O. - 121 Miha 'IEC Omega ffmgw- Saturday morning, lVIay 7, 1892- Pfclfz' - Dorm VC1'IlI1d3f- n.,.M,,,5..F01-ty students reading one Sfaie journal. fflllllil' Thonzns- Mahar, do you belong to the new frat?,' .lhzhur-- No, sir, I am a non-frat man, but Bud Alexan der belongs to the new onef' ' .llvznzbzhzzff-4' D-n such a fratg it is not even as good as Sears' combination. If they had drawn slips of paper with a Dorm manls name on each. one, they could not have picked out a worse gang. It is an aggregation of freaks. QBud Alexander nearly bursts. His nose turns two shades darker with the great strain on his face.j jcrziv Ifbwlcz'- I hear 'Dutchl was roped in. Dzzfrb Erzzszf-H I admit I was fooled, but it was a dirty, mean trick. A couple of fellows whom I had met before came down from Akron last night, and I began entertaining them. I set 'em up all the time, but nary a time would the Y set me up. I spent 34.58 on them, be-Jesus, and then they shook meg said they came down to see the college. I knew what they wanted, and didn't care 'whether they asked me to go in their frat or not. After I blew in my little 34.58, they said they had to go to the depot to meet a friend, and, of course, I took it all in. They went to the Germania Hotel kept bv P' t Fl ' b a annigan, and there started the new frat. I clon't give a Q. I can lick the whole R frat. 4Here Dutch , g over to consult Dr. Ritzhaupt, who prescribes a certain decoc- tion of l ma t and hops, calculated to soothe his outraof d . . be dignity. He returns, but still feels sore.j -Cf07'1'6 Clire-eater and disciple of Ingersollj -t'Never mind Dutch I h , . ave applied for a charter from D. K. E. The charter members are Kelly, Vvlashing-ton Toygrnsend, E1senbauch,.Ierr L k Y US , Rutan, and myself. VVe have black- 124 can no longer contain himself so he oes ,U'n!nmZ rmcgenior To ig Teedg hc! vr'V1 - HHRVG' 231 . Q, ,, 1. I y 1 53 wi QQ? 'HIL . . ' in Tix . N l Q!!! Vigfifgli A W elf My T Farewell! a long farewell to all my ponies! This is the state of man: when heis a Prep XVith pangs of conscience and tormenting fears He tries his doubtful luck with the assistants. To-morrow comes, and he has bolder grown, For now he mounts his grasshopper for Sid, But if hels wise he tries it not with Eggers, There sure will come a frost --a killing frost, And nip him in the bud. And so it goes- Bohannan, Smith, and Benny, Chalmers, Knight, But he who'll horse for Derby is a brute! Once more, farewell, my steeds! Y'have served me long, And oft have pulled me from beyond my depth. Greek, Physics, Mathematics, and the rest, Adieu! 'Tis sad to part, yet it must be. Go now, to those more worthy than myself. -Vvith all, methinks it is a fearful risk: If one succeeds, 'tis well, but if he falls, . . , He falls, like Lucifer, never to rise again. French says he thinks the prettiest song out is, HI Was Seeing My Nellie Home? 123 PQ Incident of the '9ll:'95 Rgsh Magister ex Boston Conspicit the fray, A zephyrus ludens His hat blows away. Puellae, behold it! y Rident with delight, Sequiturque inagister, Mirabilis sight. The hat goes celere, It's too awfully bad, Puellae beatae, But magistere est mad. Cum it finally pauses- Malus hat-is quite calm, Sed Boston niagister goes the engine house, puts his caput in the ash barrel, and in a low, intense, whiskered, Bunker Hill Out to the rear of 7 Q 3 almost terrifying don't-yer-know-whisper, said 6cDELlIHl,7 i V !! 5 R .- '-.l . u.l- Jig -J , g g e -f , ,, .. fffflu 1 X X -uh - I In winter Prof. Kellicott brings his dinner, leaves his keys LU 1115 TOOH1, and lets the spring lock fasten him out. He is unff ' ' Cry and thinks hard, with this result. 126 bulleil Nlgiliar because his feet are too large, but may take him in as ri missing' lillk between the Alpha Taus and our- SClX'CS.N K l,i1'1Cli.Y steers XXa1gst:1lli away for a little walk and rushes him. Seeing this. liillheller turns green with envy.j Iiliz' l'21.f'mm'1' Where are your colors, Eylar?,' .l. S. j. Xzfrfizrs Uh, they are up in the stove. I 'tore the lla-as ii things otl. I just went in because the crowd Wanted me. I ilirhft eare ll durn. It's nothing. They had a ban- quet down town. Rnd and I came up to the Dorm to eat. CHARTER MEMBERS. i Ego Gabbing Evans, No Good Buxton, After Sissu J. Eylar, Good Dam Pearce, Cadaverous Tipsy Murphy, Mighty Mawed Williams, Going Hellvvard Moffet. Miss OWENS : Beautiful in form and feature, Lovely as the day, Can there be so fair a creature Formed of common clay? CBY request-6 GUERIN: Conspicuous by his absence. STEYVART : I was born to other things. BROVVN : Much may be said on both sides. Miss B.-XSSELLZ Lets meet, and either do or die. NORTON : Begin to patch up thine old body for Heaven. . L.-XZENBX' : Thyselfi no more deceive, thy youth hath Hed- HORIX: I am a gatherer and disposer of other men's stuff. ,111- SMITH: For my vgige, I have lost it with hollooing and singing of anthems. 125 ample Eages of aniern The Lantern PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY OF THE COLLEGE YEAR B w-ird nt' Editors elected by Alcyone, Horton and Browning Literary Societies of the QIXQQLKQ-110 Universit . Alumni Editor chosen by the Alumni Assoclatlon. BOARD OF EDITORS l li. D. Mooiw, Horton, ............ . . EdiiQ1f-in-Cfzief W. J. SEARS, Ixlcyone, , . . . . . . Assoczaie Edzior. E' M. BLOOM, Alcyone, , , , ...... Busmess Jllczrzager. V- D- P-iT'1'E'NS0N' Horton' J- . . . Assisia1z2fBusz'1zess Manag'e1's. I-2. SCllUl'fI.L1'fR, Alcyone, S M,x1'n V. SMITH, Browning, . . ....... LZ'Zl6'7'lZ7fj' Erliior. Hifuu Sco'1 r, Horton, J. G. M. SIQINNER, Alcyone, 1-jnrru COCKINS, Browning, 1- . . .Local and Persona! .Ediz'07's. Lurlslc HISIQIQICIC, Browning, I WM. R.-xv, Horton, I C. 13. lNIo1m13Y, ......... . .... AZum1ziEdQz1f01'. Muzxox 'fAI,llOT, Browning, . . ...... Exchange Eciiior. lim CR.-KXVFORD, JR., ......,.. . Law School C07'7'6Sp07Zd67Zf. 'l'l-:luis-2il.'25 per year if paid before December lstg after December 1st5iS1.50. Subscriptions should be left with the Business Manager. Subscribers should notify the Business Manager of any change of address The members of ull departments of the University are requested to contribute. Address :ill communications to THE LANTERN, U. S. U., Columbus. Ohio. This pnrngrznph marked with a cross indicates that your subscription,'rBl.50, Please remit to the Business Manager immediately. is due. Wie were too busy to get outa LANTERN last Week. PROFESSOR CHALMERS is doing a good Work for the versity by lecturing at different points. Uni- Wis are in receipt of some elegant taffy, left on our desk by the Gab Room girls. Thanks, girls, call again. W1-3 noticed Mr. Kelly cutting grass one day last Week. Mr. kelly is also doing a great work for the University. S'rLYDEN'rs who have not paid their LANTERN dues should do so at once. Remember it .t , cos s money to get out this sheet. XVE have some more d' ' I e itorials on hand, but will save them for next Week. Look out, they are Hcorkersf' 128 Br NL-XKIO BOARD RULES Fon CORRESPONDENTS l. Persons desiring to test character-reading by handwriting, should send at least ten lines of original composition in the subject's handwriting and signed by an assumed name, under which the reply will be given. T 2. All letters must be marked Graphology in the right hand upper corner. and addressed Makio Board. 3. Every letter must be accompanied by a three dollar bill as an evidence of good faith. ' .il- Luqv B. : This subject suggests a quiet, inoffensive indi- vidual, not liable to be stirred up or easily aroused by any thing extraordinaryg excessively polite and slow in speech and action' manners rather cold and impassive, affections 7 limited, save in few instances where passion and devotion have been aroused. Bobbie: This study shows marked originality and a mind of no common orderg an impressionless, nervous tempera- ment with some wit, but no marked degree of refinement discernible. Bunker: The handwriting indicates one of foreign birth, shful and easily embar- d of a sneaking disposition, of quick, nervous temperament: ba rassedg very little self-esteem an iven to sarcasm and witty C195 h interested in the opposite sex, and uch devoted to one of them. tober lst will appear very impassionate, much g remarks. He is very muc at one time was very m All communications received ,after Oc in Vol. XIII of the MAKIO. , 127 ff-1 it 01-up iaD0 'IHGWPEPS NI ATHI xs - - - Clczssicczle. 1 . I a . TIIIS PHENOM QDIEMERD, ' ' Dzseffdmzfe' Cr1'I1'FITH - - - Senizmentale. X ' 7 . HARROLD, - - - - Exrerczses. QBUD 37 .. ASKEW , , - - Muszcale. 7 DICK ELLIS, , - Conversazzofzale. FOWLER L A Za Cmzcerie, 7 .. KELLENBERGER, l College Band- UBANT112 THOMAS, - - EWCGZZUWH- , HDUTCHH ERNST, - - Lain de Za Pczlre. Mlxkro EXCUSED, - - - ' ' MSE? 0516- Its nice to be an editor, And Write for other folks, And rack your brain and tear your hair, And make for them some jokes. ' 'Tis better still when your Work is done And everything is o'er, To have some one put down this book And pronounce it quite a bore. i . Ernst- Say, Devore, if you fail on this examination, what are you going to do? Devore- Drop out and study for the ministry--get through, get drunk, and settle down. ' .- Stanly Pugh to the Commandant-QGS-s-say, Lieutenant, I d-d-did nineteen extra d-d-drills last t-t-term, and I was present every time. I g-go to say I-I-h-h-h-h-here, and b-before I can say it, that d-d-d-darn Sergeant m-marks m-m-me absent. 130 Locals and Personals l'rol'esso1' KxllllllllCl'S has been olffol-Cd thc Pregideuc of Gartielll l lllX'Cl'Sll'X' at Wichita, Kansas 'Phig ig .1 5361001 ' 1 1. estalwlishell and iuaiulaiuell liv the Christian Cl1urCh-the Church ol wlueli l'rol'essor Chalmers is a rneniber From 'Ln ' 4 ' C old catalogue in our possession we count 5 assistants and lllifll students in the institution three ear 5 professors and . 1 - ' i - - - ' - - . . I L y S ago. l iolrssoi L haluiels pielers to Stay Where he is at the head ol' our llepartnieut ol' English. i N Prolessor Chalmers delivers the opening lecture of the Lroton lecture course lf rulay Evening. The second lecture of the course will be by llr. Gladden, also of this city. On Sat- urday Professor Chalmers is to address a Union,Teache1-S Association for Madison. Pickaway and Fayette counties at Mt. Sterling. He has already more than twenty lecture engagements for the present season in different parts of the state. Professor Chalmers lectured. at the Cardingtoni Opera House last Saturday. He will lecture to-morrow evening at Dublin. under the auspices of the High School at that place. Prof. Chalmers gave the Easter address at Third Avenue M. E. Church Sunday morning. He also lectured again at Xllorthington Saturday evening, and gave an address before the Franklin County Teachers' Association Saturday forenoon. Prof. Chalmers gave the address at the Epvvorth League mass meeting at North Columbus M. E. Church last Sunday evening. A number of University students attended. Prof. Chalmers occupied the pulpit at Broad St. M. E. Church Monday evening. The Shakespeare class did no Work Tuesday afternoon. Prof. Chalmers was absent, preaching a funeral sermon. Prof. Chalmers and Rev. Andrew Chalmers attended the the Y. M. C. A. Friday evening. Prof. Chalmers has already received invitations to deliver the annual addresses at twelve high school commencements this spring. He gave one at Dublin High School Commence- ment last evening. Prof. Chalmers gives the annual high school commence- ment address at Hanover this evening. Prof. Chalmers lectures tvvdevenings this Week-111 the high school lecture courses at Hilliards and at Basil. 129 'muse ICC QED ants ,if- Brickey though! he had a date ,ge-A with Delaware early in the ball sea- son, immediately orders the wildest wooliest pair of trousers on .I ew street, and then- 'fSay, Wag, did you see the s-s-sample of my trousers? I-I-I wonder if my tailor can get those trousers done in time? S-s-say, won't we be swell up at Delaware when I spring my new pants, etc., etc., etc. But He lost his chance, Granted to few, A I , P To wear 'those pants A Of ice cream hue. t Those Easter pants I j , Did loudly glare, A But they were doomed R To miss Delaware. K WALKER: A deed without a name. WALSH: W Being drunk, I am inholiday humor. GOODELL: I would give all my fame for a pail of ale. KAPPES: For this relief much thanks go. THOMAS: None but himself can be his parallel. MARSHALL! Eternal sunshine settles on his head. 132 3 s f f 'fl 31 ' '-N QQ Vllli NIXKIU iitlgllfllf Y-ix' f - 1 i - . . ., - N .mp .ff l Wills ilu past ytai, ill-natured N w -' A . . X 1 V . SQNL ,- l'K'e HN ll-Ht taken occasion, not only I l 'l lll.l'- but also in the Lmzicm, to up Hmke slautlerous remarks concerning the ff' fllilllvl choir. As I am managing the 7' x . . X ' , 1 - 1 -V lf! saint. I laltt this tllilltllltllllly to refute Lf' all such hhels. The choir is composed of the tiniest musical talent in the University, but the mags of the great unwashed cannot appreciate good music when they hear it. Only consider at moment. Boggess sings iirst tclpwr. and lkoggess is a member ol' the Dorm Quartet! What more do you want? For second tenors, we have C. R. Hamil- ton. whose swan song is waited for with anxiety, also W. J. Sears. Some seem to have forgotten the latter, but I know that the mere mention ol' his name is sufficient to induce respect and admiration! George Victor Clum possesses an intense. soulful. 'Fhornville tirst bass, which pulses through the chapel like the song' ol' the bull frog over his native reservoir. Scott and Gritlith usually complete the aggrega- tion. but llritlith is sometimes, though, I may say, rarely, absent. I have seen audiences in tears during solos by these gentlemen. It is with becoming modesty that I say it, but I mvself sometimes assist when Boggess only is present, singing all the other parts at once. I have not much of a voice now, but once had. It has gone with most of my hair. I trust that this public announcement will cause the ces- sation of the above mentioned unpleasant allusions. Very truly, y Jos1AH R. SMITH. ALEx.xNDi2R: The bed has become such a luxury to me that I would not exchange it for all the thrones of the World. Sarrono: Ever absent. ever 11625, Still I see thee, still I hear, Yet I cannot reach thee, deal'- 131 HE following beau 1 t'ful duet was sung before the Geolog Class, January 22, 13923 l - Bczsso. Prior. SP-ERR, - Prior. SUR FACE, - - - - - 71672071 ALLEGRO, Prj Surface. 4'And in the earliest times, From the face of the deep Only this diminutive portion Of the glorious North American continent 'Projected above the Waters. PRESTO, Phi Slbefr. 'fNot so! Not so! . Lo, before that time The Whole continent Was dry land, And then it Went down, With a Wave-like motion, 1 Into the ocean? LEGATO Prof Prof Prof Prof. -- DUO, Pri Sfefr and Pnj Smjface. Surface: U It is not so Written In the books of the sages? Sperr: ' But so it was done In primeval ages. H Surface Qcrescendoj: 'It may have been so, But we can not be certain. Sperr Qfortej: Lo, thus it Went up And thus it Went down. Prof. Surface Cstaccatoj: 6 ' - . CYGS, 111 your opinion - 134 row in class. l'xLl1'l30l' stalking across the floor like a Wooden- legged 111a11. E1 1 l x ll haf The .giofg mfr his , 1 J1'1.f.'lg'ff'f The College Band. Talking along the front l'11f'1'1' Rlltllll. Prize lights in his class. Lggf fs lf Iuuks 111 1tt1t.1t1o11. To be saluted by students down town. 1 1 lf .llwfmz XYl1lSPCl'i11g', chewing gum, and tipping chairs. Q5 livffzmif lQCiCI'C1lCCS to his whiskers. Clean collars. The chapel choir. ' 1 bsllllifh Class rushes. To have his classes assemble too it proniptly. To have a good smoke interrupted by the chapel I bell. 1 fu' Y2q1'f01'-1-- To spot the girls C?j. Mining students in l drawing. Tennis. Sherman Hoss-hossy-hoss Guss llfould make such a blanky blank fuss by If he didn't get through, 51 That the profs. in a stew if 'Would pass him to keep from a fuss. 'I Prof. Siebert-H Mr. Green, will you tell me What a coro- ner is? - x I1 Green-- A coroner is a man Who examines people after they are dead to see if they are alivef' Professor falls off his chair, and class think a coroner is if fi' needed. -- .5 il TO OUR MARRIED PROFS. i He who courts and goes away, May live to court another day, T' But he Who Weds and courts girls still, May get to court against his Will. y, FRENCH, A. N.: A homogenous man is a man without a home. T 133 ff I A pp ' ti Qf g x P-fa 'fSay, Farber, howls tennis at O. S. U.? Oh, tennis is all right, if we only had somebody besides myself to play. The trouble is, I have no one good enough to practice with, and I can't keep in trim. If it had not been for me, tennis would not be anywhere at O. S. U. I was elected Manager of the Tennis Club by the Board of Directors, and I am running things. Last year when I went to Cincinnati, I nearly won the State tourna- ment, in fact, I only had to beat three other fellows and the cup would have been mine. Pshaw, the great trouble is, I don't get enough practice. I can beat anybody around here, and, therefore, when I go away I am too confident. I am on the Executive Committee of the State Association, and I tried to get the tournament at Columbus this year, but the town was not big enough. , Next year, if the Board of Directors will let me play sin- gle and doubles both, I think I can win the championship. But I must be going as I want to play a little before supper, and I see some fellows just starting, so I must chase them away? i AT Y. M. C. A. RECEPTION, ' Miss G-l-: 'fAh, Mr. Freshman, you remind me of an old friend who used to attend college. 0 F5-'?ShiG! Perhaps it was my father. I-Ie graduated here 111 '7 . ' 136 l'1'oli. Sport gsl'o1'zg11u10jg Lo, here I zuu kiugg llchold you my class, :Xlul do uot X011 togrgh thgnl That I aiu au --J' Cuouus, Class. Sic 'C1l1i Sic 'em Sic 'em. CrRAND FINALE. Stampede. Found on the Walk Cnc Monday Morning MY DEAR M--: They have initiated me at last. To be candid, for a while I thought I would be left, but you know hard rushing will accomplish almost anything. I suppose I could have gotten to be a frat man some other way, for you know that nowa- days when a fellow can't get into a fraternity all he has to do is to get three on four other fellows in like circumstances and ask for a charter from A T Q or 2 A E, or some such organiza- tion. But I am glad I was so persevering. Donlt you think the supply room is a nice place to rush men in? The fellows get a man in there and shut the door, and thenit don't make any difference how many people want to buy anything, they can't bother at all. Have to wait till we get ready, you know. I'll see you soon, and tell you more. Yours, VV--LL H--RD. There's a Junior by the name of Rutan, Who's a poor excuse for a man, He runs with the fast, And don't come out last, , This speedy and sleepy Rutall- LIEUT. WILSON Cto Company C25 If I had ffl Ph0'f0gf3fPh Of this company, I would label it ignorance. 135 gr West oixpter fa.,--- I 1 msg Ka: 753'-P ff- ga . f s s y x Q Sigue- Adjutant's Office. y1,,,,6-Febmary 29, 1892, Erksteen minutes to gresane. Lieutenant Wilson enters, feeling in a good humor, with a Good morning, gentlemen. Joe VValsh is sitting in a chair, with feet at an angle of 60 degrees, Adjutant ditto. .Toe has just replenished his feverish taste with a large chew of t'0ld Judge. A faint odor of the fragrant fruit of the Italian Dago pervades the atmosphere, and as the. Commandant enters a cold, damp smell meets his sight. 1 Mr. Walsh remove that tobacco- from your chin, sit up straight, and make out an extra drill list for to-day. I understand that the Lantern Board does not exactly approve of the manner in which I run things, so I shall have to do a little stirring up I see. Put on every body who has been absent for the last two years, and if they do not report, have them ducked in the lake and reported to President pro fem. Knight. A Mr. Powell, I do wish you would not eat bannanas around this office, if there is anything I hate it is bannanas. Since I shaved off my whiskerlets last week my throat has been very tender, and what with smoking cigarettes and smelling stale bannana skins I am in a pretty bad fix. By the way, were there any excuses handed in for absences last week? Well, I would just like to know who teaches English in this place. Here's one man spells college with a ai. Well, that man's not excused. Here's another who says he was excused by Major Palmer. Now that's a pretty kettle of fish. I would like to know who is running 138 l fll'f8CC' . 'N ln- 0 0 H .- ' ' 4 'll I X CLK l oo '04, I X Ol ,y .. 1 719 . Q ' l. . E Q pf, .l 'l'he ielmtlxyosnllxwls dived down deep, While the huge lleinoezlurus roared, 'llhe lll!lCl'.YX hoppell, the :u'el1aeopteryX Hopped, .Xml the lhlomollont owned himself Hoored. 'llhe pterollnelylus winked one eye, .Xml the IllCg'1ll2lthCI'lLl11'1 run, The valve-lvenr g'rowled. The mustollon howled When they saw Surface come. fIUl.I5l-fN3l.XN : A horse! :L horse! a chip for a horse! Cruxss ol-' IS: Hell is empty, and all the devils are here. D.xx'Is: Comb down his hair. Look! Look! It stands upright. N. G. Brxroxz An atheist's laugh's a poor exchange for Deity' offended. PROP. XV. TJ:XZI :NBX': A fellow of iniinite jest, of most excellent fancy. REEVEs: I am all the daughters of my father's house, and all the brothers. too. Wnxrxrev: A nxed ligure for the hand of scorn to point his slow. unmoving linger at 137 :V--41 '17 .XX- '. '.-g.Q-'SQ, '-:,'gg.- -' 1, f i. 'J' Q 1 . ., g T ,,,,,. Q Y SC-P5 if ' '57 5525 , x f--.ln 1-5 P'--' - 'J gf' I li r, - '- -- -. ,'9.'.-X J..-. .. . ,Q aw K. I , .. .-fffff. ,G 5 'fffii ' ' ' .fi pi 'f :3'?'i'i , ' 'A s- -351,4 ',iggf4fj..Qllp,.2'. ' ' 'A' Q-ffffjii 2 . .. , Q ,i f ' S- WE f -l i 1 . is K 'g'- , 4, ni' 5Q','1' - ,i, ig'.T'1QgQ'7-lf-2 - 1' Xffl l f , ,tx hr 1' ' . . ',.-.,'1,Z,, 1 1 9 3-X. 3 if :gf L1-:' X Z I or ,. - f yas, e ,nj y 'A ,J X' 1 I,,. ' 'ia '4 ' , . L 'I ,? 1 -. . L' X14 V ' ' , :-Q., 2' I , X X ll 'A we fe-we-5 -i l, 1 . ' ,. 11- I-is?'7'7'Ff-SW'- 'W' ' ' ii sm- .- i a f., 1.4 ,Z - .vw 'Ti ' -' '5 iv ' n P 12: '-Tr QW? . ...Q I . ,pf ., My vq ,. . 1, . - -a ..-Q,-'ggfv' r- ,Aff fl - ' fi , Y ssl? ' :ii wi .., i F: VT' x They say that Prof. Eggers was taken for the Prince of Wales while abroad last summer. XVI-IY THE DORM PORCH TUMBLED. Last spring the boys at the Dorm had so many light suits that the place was in a continual uproar. One bright day in early May they all assembled on the Dorm piazza in order to give them an airing. A The combined forces of Askew in light tan, Patterson in tan, Bricky in ice cream pants, Sears in flesh colored tights, and Banty Thomas in a dress suit and straw hat, was too much for the porch and it gave away the whole scheme, and Woodruft, the carpenter, working nine hours a day took two weeks to repair it. There's a gentleman, Coursault by name, Who aspires to oratorical fame, We hope helll get there, If he does have red hair, And win the O. S. U. a great name. Professor in Ethics, after stating a point and illustrating at some length-4'Well, Mr. Shepherd, what do you think of that?,' . Shepherd-HThe idea is a good one, Professor, but your illustration is poorf' 140 this lnittalion, anyway. .lust tell the handsome Major I should like to see hini, and l will let him understand that I ani the one who has hold ol the cold end of the poker, and not he. l see one excuse here addressed to Lieut. Kilbourneg just give that nian live extra drills and reduce him to ranks, and he will lind ont that there has been a change here. '-,lust look over the rest of these papers, and tell Mr. livans he may liave charge of the battalion to-day. I don't feel very well, so will not be back till to-morrow. Good day, gentlemen. As soon as the Lieutenant disappears, Joe lights his brier yy-goal, while Charlie Powell resumes his attacks upon a bannana. which, during the Commandantls visit, he has had carefully concealed under his vest. Xext morning the whole battalion is assembled for extra drill: and so endeth the tirst lesson. A rnazy and magical dance, A. witchingly beautiful glance From the eyes of Miss Fisher, As sweet as you'd wish 'er, With poor Penuckle Plentz all's up. Prof. Bleilie, in the tinal examination in Physiology, asked. lVhat is the Psycho-Physical Law?,, . . Mr. M--ri. the ball player, wrote in answer, EXe1'C1S6 the physical body and let the soul take care of itselff' This bright youth was tlunked, which pr0VGS that the Profs. neither appreciate nor foster ge111L1S- Lawrence Randolph Whetzel Pugh Has name enough for any two, It makes him wet WVith honest sweat To carry it the summer through' P OF. QRTON. His life was gentle, and the elements so R . ll th mixed in him that Nature might stand UP and Say to a 6 world, This :vas cz HZCHZ., 139 Q ijt A . Qi Nr S J 2 mflwiisl A 5,1 , Y E---ir-'14-,2ff First appearance of the Dorm Quartette. Griffith is under the stage trying to reach a low note. Prof. Weber at the Kappa Alpha Theta reception-t'Ah, Miss Kellieott, is that a fraternity pin you are Wearing? Have you a chapter here? I thought the Thetas Were the iirst young ladies, fraternity to enter here! Miss Kellicott faints, but is restored by means of a lemon ice. Askew --4' There goes our friend, the Doctor. Xlfaggy--'t VVhat of it? Who is he?-only a Prof. Paddy?-- Shoot! What are you? Wag.-- I am a base ball player. Jerry Fowler steps into a restaurant and calls for a dozen half-fry. The waiter asks, FtAnything else? Jerry replies, Yes, bread and butter for two. 'Q 'H' 1 ew man in istory asks Siebert, Hwho is that girl wear- ing glasses who runs this class? MESLOHS ul hi? 111111 EL C0HP1e of o11CeS. 142 .-X. ll. lil-:Nm-tlwz Go shake your ours, Gmsoxz llluslwll like the waves of hell K,xvv.x .Xl.l'll.X 'lilIlC'l'.XZ A hwy of fair Women K g .I . .R v Q , . 5 N W X xi X b1LX 13505. .X luttlt-licaclcd, flat-eared knave, S1-:1.1.oE: I am not now That which I have been. BIAKIO EmToRs: IVQ never dare to write as funny as we CZIII. PREXY, in Chapel: God bless you. Fve nothing to tell You. .l. . ' C. A. PHELPS: Marry, sir, sometimes he is a kind of Puritan. LEE GIESY: Ah, happy years once more, who Would not be a boy? A. P. GILLEN: I had rather than forty shillings I had such a leg. PROP. D. S. KELLICOTT: Beard Was never the true stand- ard of brains. i I HERBEIQT SCOTT: His nose Was as sharp as a pen and he babbled of green fields. ALANSON HERCULES: Why, man, he doth bestride the narrow World like a Colossus. . FRANK EXIANSZ Wine loved I deeply, dice dearly, and in Woman out-paramour'd the Turk. I. L.-XIRD DUNGAN: Often the cock loft is empty in those Whom nature hath built many stories high. M. VV. LAWRENCE: I am not tall enough to 'DCC01119 the function Wellg nor lean enough to be thought H g00d 'Student' 141 ,l ill .ll 'l If ll l V, l l 4 1 I l il fl ll I l , l 5 : Q! li ., ,...N...,....., ll 4 U the Boards IQ? 6615011 W. -. . i..o.,' 1 Q -, N - ll' VX I w, 0 'J' ' -'S ,x 'fi 11 , QQ., x ': 2 A ' X 1,11 i v i rg glad! l I i,,akl,QH1 ll 1lyl:f.lfm,. A Parlor Match, - - - ' ' 'SWEHJEZC1 Aunt Bridgetls Baby, It ' 'MISS Flynn The Fast Mail, - - ' BIHY Kelldell Kidnaped, - - - ' ' ' Those Caps The Dazzler, - - - - Miss Bassell Spider and Fly, - Ritzhaupt and Dutch Ernst Hoss and Hoss, - - - Plantz and Hamilton The Hustler, - A - - - Miss Cockins Qld .T ed Prouty, - - - Lusk Midnight Alarm, ---- The Watchman's Scare After Dark, - - - J ones and Martin behind '92ls Stone Dr. Bill, - - - - Wm. A. Lavery, M. V. D. The Rivals, - ' ----- Farber and Jenkins Othello and Desdemona, - - - Coney and Miss Bell OWED TO BACKHAUS. Who hath the lofty Bill Nye brow? Heinrich, mein Heinrich! Who hath the gait sedate and slovv? Heinrich! Whose pants are baggy at the knees? Who readeth Greek like Sophocles? Who loveth Well good beer und cheese? Heinrich, mein leedle Heinrich! 144 Scliucllcr insists that he is like a dead dog becaugg his pants are clicckcd. x'Ti-.lwlll H fs ' - - lu wi iiuuou says an asymptote 1S a tangent in sight whose point of tzuigciicv is out of sight Bud Alexander and Fred Mathias play Cf Rr-,meg and Juliet ou the Dorm veranda. Wliigh is Romeo and which is Juliet? Miss Basscll. after a certain O. S. U. man has called- O. yes, he's real nice, but, Maudie, he'd have to go on wheels to keep up with me. Dr. Townsend--- Mn Holdermann, what is an expecto- rant? Holdermann - 6' Something you expect. 3' Prof. Bohannon- Beckie, do you catch 'on to that formula? X Beckie- No, Professorg I donltfl Prof. B.-HAH right, just monkey with it a little longerf' TO MR. PLANTZ. 'We know that 'tthis is a sad, sad, Worldjf And a H hossy World Withalg S But coulcinli you smile one Ziizfle smile When you speak to the girls in the hall. The following beautiful and touching tale Was left out of the Senior Biographies by mistake: ' ttMamma, dearest, said little Ralphie, UI Wish a lion uld eat me 'l g'WhV Ralphie Goodell, said the mother, Wo . d I as she fondly pushed back the golden ringlets and gazed into bl of her precocious twenty-year old, H Why the limpid ue eyes do you Wish that, my dear? H'Cause 'twouldbc SHCT1. 21 g00d joke on the lion. Fd be in heavenf, Q?j 145 He'd think he had me inside of him, and ' ' Q TT- O ' Q f 55555515 2 jf ' A In K Vff ig.-:sas S ----: . 'ai Z-24 . ff Z ii W ' if f Prof. Detmers on the war path. 'fPlease notice the Stac- cato movement of the Doc's whiskersfl At the last Field Day Reception Miss Merriss and Billy K. were gliding through the hazy waltz, when Billy stepped on a match, which went off with a crack. Miss M. tried to break the O. S. U. high jump record. On being asked what was the matter, the Coy damsel replied, H Pm so timid. Q, This was written during the spring term, but our fight- ing editor will draw swords with Mr. Macy, if necessary.j AT THE DENISON GAME. T Miss Talbott-'4Mr. Hassler, you should play ball, you would make a magnificent player. Mr. Robt. Hassler- Do you think so? Why? Miss T. Qlooking at his feetj-t'You could cover iirst base so well. Martha Moses, when accused of being infatuated with Dick Ellis, said, 'tNo, indeed, it is only a motherly feeling which I have for poor Dick. But Richard was not satisfied with this relationship, so determined that Mattie should be a sister to him. i V COPIED FROM THE GAB ROOM WALL. Running high kick -- Charlotte Claypoole, 8 feet 2 inches. Standing broad jump- Maude Smith, 7 feet, Esther Staf- ford, 6 feet 7 inches. A Harry Hatcher, in comparing frat enrollment- Let's see. The Kappa Alpha Thetas must have at least twelve men? 4 146 . Prof. Bleile Mr. Mcllvaine, did you ever see any albu- men? hulac.-ep Yp.siIProfessorg I have seen it in an egg. l rot. . 0 ax e you seen it when it was coagulated?,' Mac. is. studious, whereupon the Professor asks: Were you never in the kitchen? Mac.-M Yes, Professor. . g 7 Prof. B.- lVhat were you doing there if you did not See anything? You must have had your eye on the cook. .MZORRISON R.LXYI -' ' A ' ' Up! up! my friend, and quit your books, Or surely you'll grow double, ,D y 9 Up! up! my friend, and clear your looks, a WVhy all this toil and trouble, After Prof. Color had taken .the ethics 'class to the public kindergarten, he announced that the class would nextvvisit Miss Phelps' kindergarten school. Dunham and Eldredge blushed so violently at the idea that the temperature of the room was raised several degrees. ' I. LAIRD DUNGAN: Such as I am all true lovers are, unstaid and skittish in all motions else, save in the constant image of the creature that is beloved. A ' Miss MORHARTQ g - . ' ' A The iirste virtue, childe, if thou Wilt lerne, Is to restreine and kepen 'CO11ge- f A. A. BECK: Not 'yet old enotiglh 3' malls UQOT 'Young enough for a boy, as a squash is before 'tis a peakod, or a codling when 'tis almost an apple. ' I ' 3 SAMMY OSBORN: There are heads, sometimesso little that there is Wit for s - - l A ' is no no room for Wit, sometimes so long that there o much room. '- 147 OULD 6' I BEKVIAKDT NEWARK, N. J. BUILDERS or High Class AUTOMATIC MACH E TOOLS .i-i--.1-- .1 --AS USED BY- HIJOUBLE TRIPLE QUICK STROKE SIIAPER, U, S, Government, Universities 16, 20, 24, 20 and 32 stroke. ' Caipulale of giving from 50 to 100 76 more strokes per Ininute over any other make now on the market. Firms ofthe World. Railroad Shops, and Best i gk 1' .wwwq-g, 51 -, E ,N ,I W L I 1 - T I I1 I Q : if I3Ii '5A' II, I ' 15- : 'I' Q I Iii ' H Iii 1 IIT 53 QI ' wi T F? 1 W -I+ I EQ ,TWT I: M' I1 X Ii if ,E Ii . ' ' A - 'In' 5' 5' I.- Q 'mf f F T' :.ffEF1- ,-, ITT liliwgw l -f . 1 ,Im I,,.I' -' .- i'IQ:I+ IIZZ Pg 'EIT' IIE.: H-I-if-ff I af- - -..!I1IIT-II III r 1 -'I ,.,',iIi,, If, If I Q Qliili EBERHARDT'S ' PA EBl:RHARDT'S TENT ENTIRELY AUTO. GEAR CUTTER, PATENT STANDARD IJRILL PRESS F01' EIS i ' M t ' . - ' C NC 0 Ol' and all kmds of Geaxs. 20, 32, 37, 43, 45, -18, and 52 stroke. II XICIIX S I' IN III IIIII: IIII IIIIIIEKIS IIII I'l'IL'lltlXVlI0I1CVC1'Il11'LtlC , ' 1 Ll IUC. l.I I'III Ii Ii. 'I'IIIIxI sg 'I' ' A X lxtIIIII't-, U Wmnu. mul - tlu t'IIiIIIv 'IIN III-IIN IIIIIsic. I - , A I , 111 thy Ytlllll. I-'Icxxn Ifx xxx: SIIIIIIIIMTS IIIISIII-III-g think when the beuq IIIII-'H IIIWII' 'lllw XY'lLx'lI IIIIIIN voice th It In ,cl tl ' ' 5 ' I 2 1 y ' '16 Wl'1lS- pcrtug XY1IItl, llllll IIIII IIALIII luuglt that spoke the vztcztut mind. lQI'ssI2I,I. INIIIIIIX: llc LllllL will to Iwcl go sobcr, l IIIIs with thc Icztf Still in October. KIIVIBALI. 54 MATH EWS, IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF ?h0I:ogfaIvI1I9 NISEQLTIII-I CHEMICALS. LENSES AND APPARATUS. Amateur Outfits a Specialty. I Pfiffi 3 IQEWIFWIIZEP WE FURNISHED THE EQUIPMENT FOR THE ' I I, S, U, SCHOOL OF PHOTOGRAPHY. on NORTH HIGH STREET, GOLUMBUS, QHIO. DIZFU'-TFH VZIIILDING I I I TW I I I I I 'I I I I I I QI ,, I I I I I I - I I I I I I I I I I III QI III I 'I 'I -I I 'I I I I I I II II I I I I I I I II II II II II II II gl II III III JI II TI 'I 'I I I I I . I I I II II I II II 5. 8a r-1. BERGE, ' G man Porcelain, Best Bohemian Chemical Glassware and er C. P. Chemicals and Reagents, Crucihles and Assayers' and Chemisisi Supplies of all kinds. ' 4 . 95 John and 30 Gold Sts-, NEW YORK. V S. C. KERSHAW: If he were opened and you find so much blood in his liver as will clog the foot of a flea, Illl eat the rest of the anatomy. . J. G. 8a S. BRCDWN, CP-SH, 33995355 lVleoi and Xfegeiolole lVlonKei S. W. Cor. Fifth Avenue and Highland. - TELEPHONE 1253. COLLJ IVI BUS, O. E. C. WALKER: All nature Wears one universal grin. liii-l MISS GERTRUDE OWEN: She moves a goddess, and she looks a queen. e. J. K1-me, 5I?irf uno Llnbermear llilalier, IVIENBS FUFINISHEFI. N . U DERWEIZEFEOV NECKWEAR, UMBRELLAS, HOSIERY ES, CANES. PAJAMAS. NO' 7 South High Street. eouumeus. C-HlO. En. M.-x1Q'111N: I would I had bestowed that time ' 1 , Q ' . L 1 111 tie tongues that I haw 111 lc11c111g', dancing, and bear baiting. R. C11,1.19x': 'Flmsc wits that think they have th d i ee every ottcu prove tools: and I, that am sure I lack thee may pass . ' 7 for 11 XVISC lllllll. Special Prices to Students. 5 ifj Q 1 - jj js it ' - 11 '11' flirt? f i 1 Q' 39' I ---- -rg, 9 4 ,..,,yt . A .' s f? ffffwfm 5557055 .3404 V6-XVUA' df fv'f5h'.5'7f CSL L,'Af75LL5' UHIQ' Teeth Extracted without Pain at all hours eff the dag and night JAMES H. MCGREGOR: My foot is on my native heath, and my name is McGregor. C. WC FOULK: Methinks sometimes I have no more Wit than a Christian or an ordinary man has. I ISEQDQDMSAEII at eea merchant Cffailors, EIMER 54 AM EN D, CI-IEIXEICALS. y SOLE AGENTS FOR F. Sartorius' Balances, Schmidt SL Haensch's Palariscopes, Zeiss' Microscopes, Lautenschlaegefs Bacterioscopical Apparatus, Sclileicher 81 Schullls Chemically 4 p A Pure Filter Papers, Desmoutis, Lemaire i 8: Co.'s Pure Hammered Plati- num Ware, etc., etc. 205-211 THIRD AVE., . NEW YORK. ARNOLD: I love to teach the little boys, i Who 're dumb as dumb can beg Mein lieber Gott! they live I know, But Why I cannot see. I I ERNEST EVANS! By my troth, Sir'Toby, you must come in earlier, o' nights, your cousin, my lady, takes great exception to your ill hours. A G1-so. BOBB ae SONS, QRCCSRS1 CLUB EQUIPMENT A SPECIALTY. 32 EAST MAIN STREET, Telephone No. 45. COLUMBUS 'O 3 f W- IV' H WV'- ilN T I l would 'twere bed time and all Well Bliss l':lNl'llll Ili-21,l,: ' llcl. VCI-Y t-Unvns HFC .Emil-Cr frm. s ' 1 1 rllllllll smiles ol' other maidens are wivi. iaixtaistiaailviiziq, ' A 1-- --- EDC lvkrchani' Iail rm . Military Specialty. Ten Per Cent. given on Citizen's Clothes, to'Stu- dents Only. A PERFECT FIT GUARANTEED. Instructions given in all the latest Dances. The Regular Term of School opens in September. Adult classes Monday and Friday eveningsg Childrenfs classes. Saturday afternoons. Instructions given in Fancy Dancingg also private lessons. WELLS' POST HALL, 975 SOUTH HIGH STREET. PROP. S. C. DERBY: Sir, I praise the Lord for you, and so may my parishionersg for their sons are Well tutored by you, and their daughters profit very greatly under youg you are a good member of the commonwealth. 1 C. M. Ross: . 1 -' 0- u more a rovmff gg liiivllhe by v A y sau 14 he Hrs RDY THE LEADING .rl mangas -nun.,-1 74, ve, -za Main sn., EY CCOLUMEUS, O. AGENTS FOR THE ' F RA N K LIN l.LL5..-..EN IBLW H EATlLQllB, THE ONLY GENUINE. PROP. VV. R. LAZENBY: y Full well they laughed with counterfeited glee. At all his jokes, for many a joke had he. 1Vl, L. TULLOSS. QENTLEHEN! No. 1143 N. High St., 'iG'o To? University Headquarters for D' E I LLIAMSP Drugs and Medicines' THB GlOl1hlIlQ RGHOVEIIOF, --i--- TO HAVE SUNDRIESJ YouC1sg1aezE.'if:af2.a2s:2f.3a,?dDyed Cigars, Cigarettes and Soda Water. Q1 NQRTH HIGH STREET- F. C. ALSDORF-Thy modesty is a candle to thy merit. ....,.,..T 'm -x :f-H, Tx. X .- Sit xxiw I-lui' Vxniitli, 'i Iliitli, am' llilfll iLlI1OtlCl'ZLlLClQgQ XX'li.il's iii-we. lit' is iii love. Now, mztrk me Well 'lllivlx IIVN vl' lowwl. lvul att lirst sight they loved. THE FI. C. LILLEY 6' C2 Military as College Uniforms, Equipments, 8ic IN ALL THEIFI DETAIL. MDRTAR BOARDS AND GOWNS. FLAGS AND BANNERS. Scnd for Quocatlons and Samples of Materials. THE PI. C. LILLEY Sf Q2 E:'5iLE9L'S.5E53iL5!E4 COLUMBUS, 0 I'CideDl'S, ....,,,... .,.. A We kirully solicit your patronage. Our stnr-14 is g-.mtl und our prices are reasonable. NORTH SIDE PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST l N. HIGH NEAR THIRD AVE., COLUMBUS, 0. E K A A 5.lj5I,fli ,I l ' Z -423 or 8 sf MP1 N E 3X rf HOUSE U H21 Cmsimii Street. Philfxdilplm' College Invitations. Menus. PFOQFGWIDCS' L Class 85 Fraternity 5tst1onU'Y'D'plOgn:5 S I Steel Plate lllustrations for Annuals. 6 QC- j . , ' I d . Weddinfl 85 Reception lnvitaLions,Visiting Cari We are Hezlclquarters for Bicycles 7 and Bicycle Supplies. A' ' in ml-. I f CLEVELAND n ' -1 BURNS' BIGYGLE GU. ll it X Y' . 27 3 A it ll ! ,f 19 EAST SPRING ST. ff! IKODAIKS and il full line 0fS1m- dries crln be furnished at Evans' Bicycle Agency, 19E. Spring St. J. H. BONE: He's a soldier tit to stand by Caesar and give directions. , A H. BRAUN, SONS Kc CO.. HEADQUARTERS FOR Drums, Chemicals, Surgical Instruments TRUSSES, SUPPORTERS, ELASTIC STOCKINGS, ETC. WHOLESALE AND RETAHH AT THE OLD REUABLE STAND. 24 North High Street, Columbus, Ohio. O. S. U. BAND: Music hath charms to soothe the savage breast, To soften rocks, or bend a knotted oak. MAIL BICYCLELD HANDSOMEST SAFETY MADE. IMPROVEMENTS OVER ANY OTHER. SEND FOR CATALOGUE AND LIST OF SECOND HANDS. MANUFACTURERS, VVLVI- READ 8a SONS, 107 Washington Street, 3051-QN, MASS' rl-llc' 'IiQll,llTllXlll2IEill'lIDQI' O., n Wholesale Druggisfg - Y Office and Snlesrooms, 263 to 269 North 'Front St A CQl elYlIVlE3L jS, CD- I I r zu-lNl:ll-,HL 1lyy',ylu.,.tulltqt , XX l l 'lx Sl. ylllll l'm'Klll. N. 'lxfglglgsi , LIA13?txgE,??E?AiX5PLIES 'L -- dm-1-+A ,.., ,.,.,,,X., ,,M,, Mmm: rv K Y V V V v Y Krvgr - I 5 , i FJ. H. -I-I 5 oo., Trunks Traveling Bags Ella 1 7 ' Salesroom, 40 North High Street, Telephone No. 497, COLUMBUS? OHIO' nnff-5 I-IICEI-I CEPQAIDED itrmfxfx- PIFINCDS Consisting of the best manufacture in the -country, and are recommended by the best Arzfzsis Zlzrougfzouz' the World. Our Parlors are the iinest' in the State. No trouble to show goods. A11 are invited to call, Whether they wish to purchase or not. PRICES REASONABLE AND TERMS EASY. mi H+ BALDWIN cg, coi 20 EAST BROAD STREET, G. W. EARLY, MANAGER. A CODUIYIBUS, OHIO. ef' x , I , .Q J 3 Q N MA APS? Q, ,J . 'T . r Q c s I V-C-V' 5 't F K rxlpll-Q Nm 'xii Q N' fi J-,. 1 X Sf -t T sf' ' x lg ,mf ff. 'JOHN STHEE m:wYoRK IN Tl-IE GIVEN. The glwriwus davs of open doors-all ' M J Qmtsxde IS srrulmg welcome-here's health and jwv all unccmhned-The cycler sees CN-'CI'f.itl.'ltT1Q 'f'l1Q'S where everythmg 1s-as f the heights of ex- tree as freed4m1--' rom hilnraterl happiness he cannot tall-f1'o1n htiiulvtllfllfitil Safety. All J.l fLlI C-iwlumbias free on applica- miwm tw :my Columbia agent, or sent li' f r tw-w 2 cent stamps Pope l11,'U1x 1 fr 1 - . Mfg. Cf 1.. 221 Columbus Ave.,Boston. .M t ORG-Amuzgeo 1866- I U f ' I I 00 Q, I yr Comi- l ANDIN TEIIRQUGH INSPEQTIONSI --ANI::-- ' Insurance against loss or damage to property and loss of life and injury to persons Caused by STEAM BOILER EXPLOSIGNS f J- M- ALLEN, PRESIDENT. W. BL FRANKLIN, VICE PRES'T. J' B' PIERCE, SECRETARY- F. B. ALLEN, SECOND VICE PRES'T, t The Problem Solved -22'-fg22:'ie Every person who appreciates the value of money, employs the utmost care to obtain a just equivalent when obliged to part with it for the requirements, of life. In- this age of Hpostersf' and handbills and artistic methods of advertising, it is oftimes a per- plexing problem to determine the Best Route between certain points. Now if Travelers will follow our guidance and suggestions you will always inquire for tickets over THE POPULAR!! .NIBUCKEYE Ro TE Between the cities of COLUMBUS and CHICAGO, Toledo, Detroit and Ohio River points. By so doing your aim will be achieved, as you will save hours in time in making the journey, which to the traveling public means money, and thus the problem is solved. To the VVORLD,S FAIR IN 1893 This line will .be the most popular, as PULLNIAN PALACE SLEEPING CARS run between Columbus and Chicago every night in the year, which to the student and the mechanic is a great saving, as it affords the comforts of a good night's rest and avoids the the loss of a day for pleasure or business. PARLOR CARS on ALL TRAINS to TOLEDO. For Tickets and Sleeping Car Berths, write to Agent C. H. V. Sz T. R'y, Gen. Ticket Office, or call at City Ticket Office. L W. BUGKIVIASTER. W. I-I. FISHER, City Pass. and Ticket Agt., G. P. 8: T. A., Chittenden Hotel. 31 Deshler Block A COLUMBUS, oH1o. 1 A 'f F 1 5 9 I 1 . i I l 1 A , 0 , V I 1 v A 1 1 1 1 1 i v 5 . - F i I 1 . v. E N ,H , J


Suggestions in the Ohio State University - Makio Yearbook (Columbus, OH) collection:

Ohio State University - Makio Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1889 Edition, Page 1

1889

Ohio State University - Makio Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1890 Edition, Page 1

1890

Ohio State University - Makio Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1891 Edition, Page 1

1891

Ohio State University - Makio Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1894 Edition, Page 1

1894

Ohio State University - Makio Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1896 Edition, Page 1

1896

Ohio State University - Makio Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1897 Edition, Page 1

1897


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