Ohio State University - Makio Yearbook (Columbus, OH)
- Class of 1905
Page 1 of 410
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 410 of the 1905 volume:
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5 ,S 933e89iP'0-Q,6o Qgqrq-Qswfwfsoedwq 5-Podyqyoda ' an sq, E evwpxwwseesa, A I mg 31,49 sy4SQob,SQNo xQOfo :A f i . f A ff' I 1 Board of Editors h liclitor-in-Chief ..... ' .,... john A. Smith, Alpha Tau Gmega Associate Editor .... .... VN 'illiam H. Tipton, Delta Tau Delta Treasurer .......... ....... X ferne Dwight Howard, Chi Phi Business Manager ........... ............. O . C. Ingalls, Horton Assistant Business Manager .... ...Frank Hagenbuch, Beta Theta Pi Literary Editors Pi Beta Phi ......... ..... IN liss Laura Deatrich Kappa Alpha Theta .... ...... 1X iiss Alice Marsh Philomathean ........ .... M iss Sada Harbarger Phi Gamma Delta .... ...Mr. Jesse D. Iams Board of Publication Joseph E. Kewley, Alcyone .........,.............. ........ P resident Miss Marcella Macke, A A A ..... ..... V ice President Emerson S. Poston, Townshend .... ........ S ecretarv Representatives 4: I' A, jesse D. lams. 41 K NIl,VV2iliE5 Cl Bell. E X, Herbert M. Myers. X QS, Verne Dwight Howard. 4: A 6, james Prendergast, B 0 II, Frank Hagenbuch. K K F, Ethel Woodbury. E N, Adolf O. Theobald. K A 6, Alice Marsh. Alcyone, Joseph E. Kewley. Horton, O. C. Ingalls. Browning, Katherine Huntington. EUA E, Enid C. McElroy. 41A 4, Servetus W. Ogan. A Y, Stanley F. Rankin. II B cp, Laura Deatrich. A T A, William H. Tipton. K F., Ralph W. I-Ioyer. A A A, Marcella Macke. A E, James E. McClintoch. A T Q, john A. Smith. Philomathean, Sada Harbarger Athenean, W. A. Beyer. Townshend, E. S. Poston, 4 5 4 4 '61 :Nam :WT ,., ,f e be ,Q ,gf ea, : J' . 4, My Q? M W- ' I f fqiikfis Wfgfgi - X X ff? 'Q-XQ X ' mix. Ill. X 1' 'K X 1 - ,eff Q Q . O' xr J lfg ffx X 'HEL 1 -dw X W Q 'I , ggfwm Z: Nfffff -' SQ Q Q ?952x'! NN i N HLEJ 'wsmihffil -fr Ju, ' , ' H X ' Ani .I - N' xv ldkkffil l I, L l 1 X k I7 4, x 1.:'Lrn K MK 15 ' 'lf!l 13' f. Z5iff 'f?f 'K ' - le I-,p f ,Q FQ 516. 4 1 , 'iNV2 ? . f M , f 1 +- y f 'gl si ff s -' f, , f -'Q 1 1, L, 'N ' Aff Qfkh fww 1-5, jf! N .W 'MGT my dim XE. K? YK X X XZ, W ' , GD .A 'T' ' W Q' Ga ff, G 5, ' f X '2?pt .2 gm db S Y R NN If N' f X ifxf x ' Xfwffif - K , X ,Vxrr XX xx mx Y ' I XX ' vwin wma af M-amy Cgfgm, W 'LL YW N-WF75 Kiir us mimi 122 'rms ww ow cmief. vim Un Iluzrph Hillirrn Evntnrg Eruxu nf thx' Olnllrgr nf Arm anh lghilnnnphg, am hmu-at muh iuupiriug trau'hrr.a tartful anh frirnhlg mam, muh a tirrlrma urrnnnt nf Ihr Biininrruitg. Efhiu hunk in af- frrtinuntrly hrhiratrh bg hia frirnha---Ehr Siuhrniu Paul Jones ...... Oscar T. Corson. Davicl M. Massic. .. John T. Mack. . . F. A. Dcrthiclc. . . Guy VV. Mallon. nl. McLain Smith Board of Trustees-1904-1905 Term Expires. . .. Columbus ... .... May 13, vv vv . . . COTUIHTJLIS . . . . . Chillicothe .. . . . Sanclusky . .. ... Mantua ..... l' . . . Cincinnati . . ......TJZ'Q'lIOll............. Officers of the Board Paul -I oncs. ............................. l 1'csiclcnt. Guy NV. Mfallon .... . . Yicc i,I'L'SitlClll. Carl Steely. ,.... .. Sccrctary. L. li. Kicscwcttci' .... ................. ' l'1'oas111'c-r. Committees of the Board Executive. I. McLain Smith. Paul Jones. Guy XV. Mallon. john T. Mack. Farni. .l:ll'lZlllL'C. I. McLain Smith. IJ. M. Massiv. john T. Mack. Oscar T. CiO1'SUll. Paul jones. Guy TV. Mallon. Faculty and Courses of .Study Oscar T. C01's0n. F. A. Dc1'1l1icl4. 8 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 TQIO 1911 v Ohio State University Founded 1873 Presidents Dr. Edward Orton ..................... Rev. Dr. Walter Quincy Scott ..... Rev. Dr. Williaxii Henry Scott ..... Dr. James Hulmc Canfield .... Dr. William Oxley Thompson. .. Piofwer Scarlet Carnzltion. Colors Scarlet and Gray. Yell VVal1oo! W'al1oo! Rip, Zip, Bazoo! I yell, I yell For G. S. U. 10 1873 1881 1883 1895 1899 1881 1883 1395 1899 , . X 2 X X K - 'xl N ,XY z V. 1 v' 'ga fx lf? Q7 V' j 2:4 2 1 if f Nh' N4 Y.: xx 'HE ff ff! ,f Ol Z9 xx x N S I X Xf I V- ' f:'f ' 1. 1 W - V, V an ld ' -ww. ,. if f 4,1f f:f+M 'X W 'flgga XX ,II ,ny x4'f9ff ...Q-511-ga , 'ff' 1 Wx If .y ' ja' fy, 1,4 gi. am , 'I , f' ,' , Hx -W A iff L-1 f f Tx f f f Yflfifgza. , ' f Aziz' N 1 in-.55 , , 'Q 'V 0 ,V Q... I, , VVILLIAM OXLEY THOMPSON, D. D., LL. D PRESIDENT MW? .ymilffx G 1, ' Qsf:ff P Max A r Y xxx X 2 ' f 2 , I Lal I V RQ. ' if 2 f Q 's Lv' X. W --..-,A1 , ' fXgXQ L,0 2 X -T ' 45535.-mp! . College of Arts, Philosophy ana' Science WILLIAM OXLEY THOMPSON, D. D., LL. D. PRESIDENT. JOSEPH VILLIERS DENNEY, B. A., DEAN. ALFRED DODGE COLE, M. A., S1zc1u2TARY. SIDNEY AUGUSTUS NORTON, PH. D. Emeritus Professor of Chemistry. GEORGE WELLS KNIGHT, P1-1. D. Professor of American History and Political Science. ALLEN CAMPBELL BARROVVS, A. M., D. D. Professor of English. ROSSER DANIEL BOHANNAN, B. SC., C. E., M. E. Professor of Mathematics. BENJAMIN LESTER BOXVEN. Pu. D. Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures. HENRY CURXVEN LORD, ll. SC. Professor of Astronomy ancl Director of Emerson McMillen Observator5 JOHN ADAMS BOXVNOCKER, D. SC. Professor of Inorganic Geology. CHARLES SMITH PROSSER. M. Sc. Professor of Geology. ALIEIERT MARTIN llLElLE, M. D. Professor of Anatomy ancl Physiology. XVlLl..l.XM HENRY SCOTT, LL. D. Professor of Pliilosopliy. XNILIRLTR HENRY SIEHERT. M. A. Professor of European I-Iistory. JOSIAH RENICK SMITI-I, M. A. Professor of Greek Language and Literature. 19 BENJAMIN FRANKLIN THOMAS, P1-LD. Professor of Physics. SAMUEL CARROLL DERBY, M. A. Professor of Latin. ALFRED DODGE COLE, M. A. Professor of Physics. JOSEPH VILLIERS DENNEY, B. A. , Professor of English. WILLIAM MCPHERSON, PH. D. Professor of Chemistry. LEWIS ADDISON RHODES, PH. D. Professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures. CAPTAIN GEORGE L. CONVERSE, U. S. A. fRetireclJ Professor of Military Science and Tactics. DON CARLOS HUDDLESON, Director of Physical Education for Men. MAUD WINIFRED MARTIN, B. SC. Director of Physical Education for VVomen. GEORGE VV. MCCOARD, M. A. Associate Professor of Mathematics. JAMES E. BOYD, M. S. Associate Professor of Mathematics. JOSEPH RUSSEL TAYLOR, M. A.i Associate Professor of English. JAMES S. I-IINE, B. SC. Associate Professor of Zoology and Entomology. CHARLES B. MORREY, B. A., M. D. Professor in Bacteriology. JOHN H. SCHAFFNER, M. Sc. Associate Professor of Botany. WILLIAM E. HENDERSON, PH. D. ' Associate Professor of Chemistry. 20 ARTHUR W. HODGMAN, PH. D. Associate Professor of Classical Languages. FRANCIS L. LANDACRE, B. A. Associate Professor in Zoology and Entomology .DAVID R. MAJOR, PH. D. Professor of Education. CHARLES A. BRUCE, B. A. Associate Professor of Romance Languages. WALLACE S. ELDEN, PH. D. Associate Professor of Classical Languages. CHARLES W. FOULK, B. A. Associate Professor in Chemistry. GEORGE H. MCKNIGHT. PH. D. ' Assistant Professor of English. KARL DALE SWARTZEL, M. Sc. Assistant Professor of Mathematics. JAMES E. HAGERTY, PH. D. Professor of Economics and Sociology. EDGAR S. INGRAHAM, PH. D. Assistant Professor of Romance Languages. CHARLES L. ARNOLD, M. SC. Assistant Professor in Mathematics. WILLIAM L. GRAVES, M. A. Assistant Professor of English. THOMAS HARVEY HAINES, PH. D. Assistant Professor of Philosophy. TIARVEY W. KUHN, PH. D. Assistant Professor of Mathematics. R. F. EARHART, PH. D. Assistant Professor of Physics. EDWIN F. CODDINGTON, PH. D. Assistant Professor of Mathematics. 21 ALONZO H. TUTTLE, M. A. Assistant Professor of American History and Political Science ARTHUR ERNEST DAVIES, PH. D. Instructor in Philosophy. MELVIN DRESBACH, B. Sc. Instructor in Anatomy and Physiology. BERTHOLD A. EISENLOHR, PH. B. Instructor in German. HENRY RUSSEL SPENCER, B. A. Instructor in American History and Political Science. EDGAR HOLMES MCNEAL, PH. D. Instructor in European History. DON CARLOS HUDDLESON, G. PH. Instructor in Physical Education. S. E. RASOR, M. A. Instructor in Mathematics. M. B. HAMMOND, P1-1. D. Assistant Professor of Economics and Sociology. KATHERINE EMILY ANDREWS, B. A. Instructor in Chemistry. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN MAAG, M. SC. Assistant in Astronomy. RAYMOND JESSE SEYMOUR, B. SC. Assistant in Anatomy and Physiology. CILNTON GEORGE STEWART, B. A. Assistant in Chemistry. HOWARD R. WATKINS, B. A. Assistant in Chemistry. H. D. AYERSMM. A. Assistant in Physics. HARLAN H. YORK, B. SC. Assistant in Botany. 22 MARY D. JAMES, B. PH. Assistant in Romance Languages. ROSALIE T. JAMES, B. A. Fellow in Romance Languages. MARY MALLOY, B. Pu. Fellow in English. CLINTON GEORGE STEWART, B. Fellow in Chemistry. J. WARREN SMITH, M. sc. Lecturer in Meterology. DI. W. KNOTE, Fellow in Chemistry. JAMES ANDERSON BEER, B. SC Fellow in Anatomy and Physiology. GERTRUDE DIACKSON, B. A. Fellow in Rhetoric. MINA J. WEAVER, B. PH. Fellow in English. F. M. SURFACE, B. SC. Fellow in Zoology and Entomology. WILLIAM C. MILLS, M. SC Curator of Archeology Museum. MARY MCKINLEY, B. A. Fellow in Botany. H. A. GLEASON, B. A. Fellow in Botany. CLARENCE C. VOGT, B. A . Fellow in Chemistry. R. O. BUSEY, B. A. I Fellow in German. I. E. REALQB. A. Fellow in German. 23 A College of Engineering I WILLIAM OXLEY THOMPSON, A. M., D. D., LL. D. PR1zs1n1sN'1'. ' EDWARD ORTON, JR., E. M., DEAN. Professor and Director of the Department of Clay Working and Ceramics. FRANK EDWIN SANBORN,B. S., S1sCR12'r.xRY. Professor and Director of the Department of Industrial Arts. Professors -STILLMAN W. ROBINSON, C. E., D. Sc. A Emeritus Professor of Mechanical Engineering. SIDNEY AUGUSTUS NORTON, PH. D.,LL. D. Emeritus Professor of Chemistry. ROSSER DANIEL BOHANNAN, B. SC., C. E.. E. M. Professor of Mathematics. JOSEPH NELSON BRADFORD, M. E. Professor of Architecture and Drawing. FRANCIS CAREY CALDWELL, A. B., M. E. Professor of Electrical Engineering. ALFRED DODGE COLE, A. B., A. M. Professor of Physics. JOSEPH VILLIERS DENNEY, A. B. Professor of English. EMBURY ASBURY HITCHCOCK, M. E. Professor of Experimental Engineering. HENRY CURWEN LORD, B. SC. Professor of Astronomy and Director of the Emerson McMillen Observatory A NATHANIEL WRIGHT LORD, E. M. Professor of Mineralogy and Metallurgy, Director of the School of Mines. 'WILLIAM THOMAS MAGRUDER, M. E. Professor of Mechanical Engineering. CHARLES SMITH PROSSER, B. S., M. S. Professor of Geology. 24 FRANK ARNOLD RAY, E. M. Professor of Mine Engineering. CHRISTOPHER ELIAS SHERMAN, C. E. Professor of Civil Engineering. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN THOMAS, B. Sc., M. Sc., PH. Professor of Physics. ALBERT HENRY HELLER, C. E. Professor of Civil Engineering. LEWIS ADDISON RHODES, PH. D. Professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures. BENJAMIN LESTER BOWEN, PH. D. Professor of Romance Languages. WILLIAM MCPHERSON, Ju., D. Sc., Pu. D. Professor of Chemistry. JOHN ADAMS BOWNOCKER, D. Sc. Professor of Inorganic Geology. JAMES ELLSWORTH BOYD, M. Sc. Associate Professor of Mathematics. CHARLES WILLIAM FOULK, B. A. Associate Professor of Chemistry. THOMAS EWING FRENCH, M. E. Associate Professor of Architecture and Drawing. WILLIAM EDWARDS HENDERSON, PH. D. Associate Professor of Chemistry. GEORGE WASHINGTON MCCOARD, M. A. Associate Professor of Mathematics. FRANK HARVEY ENO, B. SC., C. E. Associate Professor of Civil Engineering. CHARLES A. BRUCE, B. A. Associate Professor of Romance Languages. WILLIAM ABNER KNIGHT, M. E. Assistant Professor of Machine Shop Practice. 25 . D HARRY WALDO KUHN, B. SC., PH. D. Assistant Professor of Mathematics. ALLEN COGGESHALL, M. E, Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering ROBERT F. EARHART, PH. D. Assistant Professor of Physics. KARL DALE SWARTZEL, M. Sc. Assistant Professor of Mathematics. WILLIAM LUCIUS GRAVES. M. A. Assistant Professor of English. GEORGE H. MCKNIGI-IT, PH. D. Assistant Professor of English. JAMES EDWARD HAGERTY, PH. D. Professor of Economics. I-IORACE JUDD, M. Sc. Assistant Professor Experimental Engineering JOSEPH HENRY VOSSKUEHLER, M. E Assistant Professor in Drawing. EDWIN F. CODDINGTON, PH. D. Assistant Professor of Mathematics. THOMAS KENYON LEWIS, B. SC. Assistant Professor in Drawing. A. V. BLEININGER, B. SC. Instructor in Ceramics. CHARLES PHILIP CROWE, Instructor in Forging. SILAS MARTIN, ' Assistant Professor in Drawing. S E. RASOR, B. Sc., M. A. Instructor in Mathematics. 26 RALPH ROGERS, Instructor in Drawing. WILLIAM HENRY RENCK, Instructor in Pattern Making and Founding. EDWARD EVERETT SOMMERMEIR, G. PH. Instructor in Metallurgy and Mineralogy. J. S. TIDBALL, Instructor in Drawing. H. DIETRICK BRUNING, C. E. Instructor in Civil Engineering. THUAR MAN HALLOWAY, Assistant in Mechanical Engineering. D. J. Demorest, Assistant in Metallurgy. RAY C. PURDY, Assistant in Ceramics. H. D. AYRES, M. A. Assistant in Physics. I. S. RIDDLE, E. E. Fellow in Electrical Engineering. S. BYRON WILLIAMS, Student Assistant in Drawing. College 'of Agriculture VVILLIAM OXLEY THOMPSON, D. D., LL. D PRESIDENT. HOMER CHARLES PRICE, M. Sc. DEAN. WILLIAM RANE LAZENBY, M. AGR. SECRETARY. HENRY ADAM WEBER, PH. D. Professor of Agricultural Chemistry. 27 WILLIAM RANE LAZENBY, M. AGR. Professor of Horticulture and Forestry. JOHN WRIGHT DELQKER, B. AGR. Professor of Dairying. MINNIE AVA NELLIE STONER, B Sc Professor of Domestic Science. CHARLES SUMNER PLUMB, B. Sc. Professor of Animal Husbandry. BENJAMIN L. BOWEN, PH. D. Professor of Romance Languages. DAVID STUART WHITE, D. V. M. Professor of Veterinary Medicine. ALBERT MARTIN BLEILE, M. D. Professor of Anatomy and Physiology. JOHN ADAMS BOWNOCKER, D. Sc. Professor of Inorganic Geology. JOSEPH VILLIERS DENNEY, B. A, Professor of English. WILLIAM ASHBROOK KELLERMAN, PH D Professor of Botany. LEWIS ADDISON RHODES, PH. D. Professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures ROSSER DANIEL BOHANNAN, B. Sc., C. E., M E Professor of Mathematics. JOSEPH NELSON BRADFORD, M. E. Professor of Architecture and Drawing. GEORGE WELLS KNIGHT, PH. D. Professor of American History and Political Science HERBERT OSBORN, M. Sc. Professor of Zoology and Entomology. FRANK EDWIN SANBORN, S. B. Professor and Director of Department of Industrial Arts 28 MAY SECREST, B. Sc. Associate Professor of Domestic Art. JAMES STEWART HINE, B. Sc. Associate Professor of Zoology and Entomology. ALFRED VIVIAN, PH. G. Associate Professor of Agricultural Chemistry. GEORGE VV. MCCOARD, M. A. Associate Professor of Mathematics. CHARLES BRADFIELD MORREY, B. A., M. Professor of Bacteriology. JOHN H. SCHAFNER, M. A., M. S. Associate Professor of Botany. CHARLES A. BRUCE, A. B. Associate Professor of Romance Languages. FRANCIS LEROY LANDACRE, B. A. Associate Professor of Zoology and Entomology. EDGAR S. INGRAHAM, PH. D. Assistant Professor of Romance Languages. ALBERT EARL VINSON, B. C. Assistant Professor of Agricultural Chemistry. JAMES E. I-IAGERTY, P1-I. D. Professor of Economics and Sociology. ARTHUR G. MCCALL, Assistant Professor of Agronomy. VERNON H. DAVIS, B. sc., M. s. qAgf.5 D Assistant Professor of Horticulture and Forestry. DELBERT ALONZO CROWNER, B. Sc. Instructor in Butter Making. RUDOLPH HIRSCH, B. Sc. Instructor in Agricultural Chemistry. FRANK RUHLEN, B. Sc. Instructor in Zootechny. 29 MELVIN DRESBACH, M. SC. Instructor in Anatomy and Physiology. E. E. GUTHRIE, Instructor in Butter Making. BURT BIDWELL I-IERRICK, Instructor in Cheese Making. C. W. BAUMAN. Assistant in Butter Making. . College of Pharmacy WILLIAM OXLEY THOMPSON. D. D., LL. D., PRESIDFINT GEORGE IEUCHER KAUFFMAN, P1l.x1zM. D., DEAN WILLIAM MCPI-IERSON, PH. D., Slscmc'rARY. SIDNEY AUGUSTUS NORTON, PH. D., LL. D Emeritus Professor of Chemistry. XNIILLIAM MCPHERSON, Pu. D. Professor of Chemistry. GEORGE ISLYCHER KAUFFMAN, Plmkm. D. Professor of Pliarmacy. A .-XLIIERT MARTIN HLEILE, M. D. Professor of Anatomy anfl Physiology. ALFRED DODGE COLE, M. A. Professor of Physics. JOHN ADANIS IIOVVNOCKER, D. Sv. Professor of Inorganic Geology. JOSEPH VILLIERS DENNEY, ll. A. Professor of English. NATHANIEL WRIGHT LORD, M. E. Professor of Mineralogy and Metallurgy. NVILLIAM ASI-IBROOK KELLERMAN, P1-1. D Professor of Botany. 30 SAMUEL CARROLL DERBY, A. M. Professor of Latin. ROSSER DANIEL BOHANNAN, B. Sc., C. E., M Professor of Mathematics. LEWIS ADDISON RHODES, PH. D. Professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN THOMAS, PH. D. Professor of Physics. HENRY ADAM WEBER, PH. D. Professor of Agricultural Chemistry. GEORGE WASHINGTON MCCOARD, M. A. Associate Professor of Mathematics. CHARLES BRADFIELD MORREY, M. D. Associate Professor of Bacteriology. CHARLES WILLIAM IFOULK, B. A. Associate Professor of CIICIIIISIQYY. WILLIAM EDXVARDS HENDERSON, PH. D. Associate I-'rofessor of Chemistry. FRANCIS LEROY LANDACRE, B. A. Associate Professor of Zoology anal Entomology. JOHN H. SHAFFNER, M. S. Associate Professor Botany. JAMES STEVVART I-IINE, Il. Associate Professor of Zoology and Entomology. CLAIR ALBERT DYE, G.'P11.xim. I'11. D. Assistant Professor of Pharmacy. MELVIN DRESBACH. B. SC. Instructor in Anatomy and Physiology. CLINTON GEORGE STEVVART, B. A. Assistant in Chemistry. 31' College of Veterinary Medicine WILLIAM OXLEY THOMPSON, D. D., LL. D., PRESIDLNT DAVID STUART WHITE, D. V. M., DEAN. HENRY ADAM WEBER, PH. D. Professor of Agricultural Chemistry. ALBERT MARTIN BLEILE, M. D. Professor of Anatomy and Physiology. WILLIAM ASI-IIJROOK KELLERMAN, PH. Professor of Botany. I-IOMER CHARLES PRICE, B. Sc. Professor of Hygiene and Dietetics. GEORGE IE. KAUFFMAN, Il. SC. Y Professor of Pharmacy. DAVID STUART WHITE, D. V. M. Professor of Veterinary Medicine. SEPTIMUS SISSON, V. S. Professor of Comparative Anatomy. JOHN WVRIGHT DECKER, If!.iAcQ:1:. Professor of Dairying. CHARLES SUMNER PLUMI3, IE. SC. Professor of Animal Husbanclry. ALFRED VIVIAN, PU. G. Associate Professor of Agricultural Chemistry. D. I-I. UDALL, D. V. M. Associate Professor of Veterinary Medicine. CHARLES IIRADITIELD MORREY, M. D. ' Professor of liaettriology. OSCAR V. BRUMLEY, V. S. Associate Professor of Veterinary Medicine. I. MCILVVAINE PHILLIPS. D. V. M. Assistant Professor of Veterinary Medicine. 32 D College of Lafw NVILLIAM OXLEY THOMPSON, D. D., LL. D., P1u2s1olLN'1' J. H. OUTHWAITE. Professor of Law and Dean of the College of Law. WILLIAM HERllERT PAGE, lll. A., LL. M. Professor of Law and Secretary of College of Law. EDGAR BENTON KINKEAD. Professor of Law. i GEORGE WELLS KNIGHT, PII. D. Professor of-American History, Political Science and Law. EMILIUS OVTATT RANDALL, B. Pu., LL. M. Supreme Court Reporter and Professor of Law. JOHN ALLEN SHAUCK, LL. D. judge of Supreme Court and Professor of Law. GEORGE WASHINGTON RIGHTMIRE, M. A. Professor of Law. GILBERT H. STEWART. Professor of Law. SMITH BENNETT. Professor of Law. WADE H. ELLIS. Professor of Law. EDMUND DILLON. Professor of Law. J. F. IBUTLER. Professor of Law. Library Couricil XVlLLlAM OXLEY THOMPSON, C1lAlR1x1.xN. President of the University. 33 A C OLIVE JONES, SECRET.-mv. University Librarian. HOMER PRICE. Dean of the College of Agriculture. JOSEPH VILLIERS DENNEY. an of the College of Arts, Philosopliy and Science EDXVARD ORTON, JR. Dean of the College of Engineering. J. I-I. OUTHWAITE. Dean of the College of Law. GEORGE BEECHER KAUFFMAN. Dean of the College of Pliarznacy. DAVID S. WHITE. Dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine. Library Staff OLIVE JONES. Librarian. GERTRUDE S. KELLICOTT. Assistant Librarian. MAUDE D. JEFFREY. Reference Librarian. MARTHA HARTFORD, HARRIET N. TOWNSHEND, .Assistants. MAX D. MORTON. Library Fellow. 34 SEPTIMUS SISSON. JOSEPH V. DENNEY, ALLEN C. BARROWS, CHARLES B. MORREV, JOSEPH R. TAYLOR, DAVID R. MAJOR, JAMES E. HAGERTY, WILLIAM I.. GRAVES. GEORGE H. MCKNIGHT, MERRITT F. MILLER, HENRY DIETRICI-I BRUNING, THOMAS K. LEWIS, JOSEPH H. VOSKUEHLER, MARY MALLOY, Changes in Files- 1904-1905 Professor of Veterinary Medicine Professor of Compaiative Anatomy Professor of Rhetoric and English Lxnguage Professor of English Professor of English Literature Professor of English Asiociate Professor of Bacteriology Professor of Bacteriology .Associate Professor of English I..IlCl'1tlll'C Associate Professor of English Associate Professor Professor of Education of Education Assistant Profcspor of Economics and Sociology Professor of Economics and Sociology Assistant Professor of Rhetoric and English Language Assistant Professor of English Assistant Professor of Rhetoric and English Language Assistant Professor of English Instructor in Agronomy Professor of Agronomy Instructor in Civil Engineering Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering Instructor in Architecture and Drawing Assistant Professor of Architecture and Drawing Instructor in Architecture anzl Drawing Assistant Professor of Architecture and Drawing Fellow in Rhetoric and English Language Fellow in English 35- Changes 1904-1905 RESIGNED. Professor Thomas F. Hunt, Professor Christopher P. Linhart, Associate Clara Maud Berryman, Associate Professor Theodore C, Smith, Associate Cornelia P. Souther, Assistant Professor Thomas ll. Dickinson, Assistant Merritt F. Miller, Instructor Frank Ruhlen, Assistant Claude B. Guittard, Professor Professor Professor Assistant W. R. Judson, Assistant Otto E. Jennings, Assistant W. L. Davies, Assistant Roy S. King, Fellow Frank I-I. Meisse, Fellow John C. Cone. APPOINTMENTS. GILBERT H. STEWART. Professor of Law. ARTHUR GILLETT M'CALL, Assistant Professor of Agronomy. ROY S. KING, Assistant in Mechanical Engineering. CYRUS ALAN MELICK. Assistant in Civil Engineering. THURMAN WELFORIJ HOLLOWAY, Assistant in Mechanical Engineering. H. A. GLEASON, Fellow in Botany. MARY M'KINLEY, Fellow in Botany. CLARENCE C. VOGT, Fellow in Chemistry. JOHN SCOTT RIDDLE, Fellow in Electrical Engineering. MIMA J. VVEAVER, Fellow in English. GERTRUDE S. JACKSON, Fellow in English. .FRANK M. SURFACE, Fellow in Zoology and Entomology. 36 I william 'forest BIIIIIQI' David Z. Welling fred. Hamer I 31:1 illllvmnriam William Forrest Hunter When VVilliam Forest Hunter became Dean of the College of Law, in 1893, he had already made a record as a soldier, lawyer and citizen, such as is given to but few to excel. lint, with the assumption of his duties as Dean, began what he always regarded as the most useful, honorable and important part of his career. At that time the College of Law numbered less than sixty students, was insufficiently accommodated in rooms at the Franklin County court house, and might not unfairly be said to be still in the experimental stages. The enthusiasm and devotion of judge Hunter, the co-operation of the faculty, and the loyal sup- port of the student body, rapidly built up the College until, at the time of his death, its attendance had more than tripled and the College was provided with a magnificent building on the College campus. Even more marked than its material gains was the increase in the efficiency of the college in the quantity and quality of the work done, and in the standard of entrance requirements. At the time of his death the College of which he was the head had become, largely by his own efforts, the largest and strongest law school in Ohio. During the last few months of his life, judge l-lunter's health for the first time interferred with the regularity of his work at the College of Law. He sufn fered more discomfort from the thought that he was not able to give the College of Law the necessary care and attention than he did from the disease itself. The slightest apparent improvement was to him a sufhcient excuse for braving the raw cold of a belated spring, in the effort to take un his work again. lf he had thought more of himself, and less of his work, his life might have been spared. Even as he lay dying, in the delirium of fever, his thoughts were always with his Collegeg his anxiety, that his inability to attend to his work might cause some harm to the institution which was so dear to him. lt needed not the general grief at his death to show that he was equally dear to the College and to the University. lt will always be among the honors and glories of the Ohio State University that it was served so long and so zealously by such a man as William Forest Hunter. 39 ir. ' .... '. lip A. ll.. cf .J H33 1 .f V X xl . 'k if -N SP1 -ff, X 4 ' Q ,- C 4'ffb' H- H V1-' 1- -QL, Ci-x,.s-1,-3. -,QZ , S7 ., N - f H-, I '. F1 . ,f -., 'HH ff f N X X ' ,, , , , , 6 f X wav 3' 6 fx 4 NP If ig L .. ,, .- -- iillnql fm I Q X Vx y E., ! i l y 4 f ' r- ' .fri ff-S c. C 'N x. ' ---1-fn-T -r A l 3 j, i irffgcggx XHX K j L , 'i V! il ' l . -f'.?,ff Q .R r' xl im 'sbinlf l' x i . ii.iLfi,fL,f' fx! .. i s . D mlflml l f ff- s9-f l ii Seniors i Colors: Crimson and Wliite. Presiclcnt ....... Vice-President . . . Secretary ...... Treasurer .......... Ye ll : Umbacootchee, Hooba-ki, O. S. U., Nineteen-live. Officers Sergeant-at-Arms .... ....................... Class Orator .......... ...................... Pipe of Peace Orator .... Ivy Orator ............ Prophet ..., Poet ...... Historian. . . Class Day 0fHcers 40 Stanley F. Rankin . . . . . Frank DeLay .. .Opal l.. Tillman ....R. D. Crout .. .F. E. Connell C. Davis .....S. N. Sumner Osmcr. C. Ingalls ..litl1el VVoodbury . . . .Lydia Phillips . . . .Clara Postlc i Msfory of the Senior Class I-Iere we are at last! And what a happy lot of Seniors we arc, too. In reality, we have been a long time on the way, but to us it seems, oh! so short. The memory of these four years will be a -source of pleasure when we are gone. Need you ask why? Nog this question you can answer for yourselves. However wc,, like our predecessors have had our difficulties to overcome. No doubt we all remember the first exam. we ever took. U, how hard we did work. We were almost scared to death. llut we came out of it alive. and did beautifully, too-the faculty will tell you that. Now that this first great barrier was passed we went on our way rejoicing. The professors always took an interest in us, for we won their hearts from the very beginning. And the President, too, took such a personal interest in us that he gavc us permission to go home at the end of the first term for a rest. Some had worked so hard they never did get rested, so never came back. This we regretted very much, hut we still have a goodly ntnnber left. History? Yes, we have a history, but where shall l begin? What more need I do than mention a few names? Rankin, Myers, Raymond. Patterson, Hare, Shotwell, VVeist, Laylin, DeLay, Smith-these names speak for them- selves 1- and there are many, many more that might be placed in this list. l'm not going to say that naughty-live is the best class that has ever gone through this University talthough we may think itj, hut we do feel that we have done our share to honor O. S. U. Of course, you havcn't forgotten that we won the cane in both our Freshman and Sophomore years, and that we did excellent work on the gridiron. Stanley Rankin covered himself with honor on the debating team. and what hasn't Sox Raymond done in the athletic line? Wliat would we have donc without him? You all know what a line Glee Club U. S. U. has. VVho has made it what it is? Russell llare, of course. The girls of the Senior class have not been idle.' either. Quite a large num- ber of them sangiin the Coilege'Chorus, organized in IQOZ, and many of them have done faithful work in the Girls' Cilee Club, to say nothing of their excellent work in the class room. Socially, too, we have done all sorts of stunts, Our informals have always been a success, but the one this year was very fittingly the most delightful of them all. VVe showed you last year what we could do in a formal way. XVe felt very proud of ourselves after the junior prom. 41 During our college career many new features have been added to the Uni- versity, Four new buildings have been erected. Page Hall, Brown Hall, and the Physics and Veterinary Buildings. The O. S. U. cafe was abandoned, in favor ol the Deanery, and this year the girls of the basket-ball team took an important step when they decided to play other colleges, and they have been winners, too. llut, to return to ourselves. Wie have decided to wear caps and gowns the whole month of june. You didn't think we would come to this so soon, did. you? XVell, we didn't either, but you know we often surprise our own selves. After such a step, 1 think the caps are here to stay, and who can say we didn't do our part to establish this time-honored custom. And now that we are Seniors, and have climbed to the top of the ladder of knowledge. we must leave our Alma Mater, perhaps only to learn that we are not so wise as we thought ourselves to be. llut this we do know: W'hen we have left these dear old halls, Upon our graduation, Another throng' shall sing our song, Of noble adoration: The memory of our college life Shall never fade, no never: XYe'll all be true to the 0. S. U., And the Scarlet and Gray forever. CLARA PUS'l'Lli, Historian. , Karl M. NVuy, li. M. Youngstown, O. Mary F. Hollister, B. A. G2lllOI1, O. Thomas H. Armstrong. B. A. Bellaire, O. Alice K. Spitler, B. Sc. CDom SCJ Dayton, O. A A A Mabel C. ROLlCllllllgll, B. A. Columbus, O. A A A Loulu B. 'l'llOllI1J50l1, B. Sc CDom. Sc.D Georgetown. A A A f Y W Mutthcw T., liiggcr, L. L. B. V Tifiiul, O. ROIHIIHHCZIII Club. Provident Hunter. A T Q: ws I Ucrmun XV. Conracl, M. E. K ' Troy, O. J fl' K 'l' X 4 Y .. W SKQWN. W 4 Clmrlcs H, Bzwiunlmrock, C. E. Wsf X w Mark Clmpczc IIUUSLHI1, Ti, A. X Urbzum, O. X Rnymrmrl NV. Ponce, . : . Columbus, O. X: j . . . . f Q A 4 . Columbus, O. up W1 WJ E. C. Colton, IS. Sc. ClTm't.j , Elyria, O. - A 19 is-Q A x , 8, A ,fl x , 1 v Will , LI1 W t. la 75 . 6 HY - A ,wily Yfff' l .Vx I iam XV. llaelcney, Dayton, O. arles R. llepner, li Valley Crossing. Al E E Sara I':l'llXVI'l, ll. A Columbus, O. WY yff V E., ' Stanley F. Rankin, B. A. 'efuuf XX Colnmlmns, O. 'V ' A President Senim' Class, ln .x liclitor-in-Cllief, l.antern lfltlfl. gn: Varsity llelmting Tealn l903. Ilnrtull. V' !' Qt1 YH 'V F 0 XV. B. Marquarclt, M. E. Dayton, O. Foot Ball lfllli-lllill. Basket Hall 19415. ' Track 1903. V O A Arthur Clifton XVolfe, M. IE. Mt. Vernon, O. ww xr. 'llv' W' x .r it A 'aff 'nt VNIQLI W l eg V . fll 'r X fu' I 'S my-f H - 9 Q Y 6- Clmrllcs A. Cniss, C. lf. XV7lSllll1gt0l1. Kenneth Pr. NV:n'cl, C. ll. Pnincsvillc, O. Herman G. Wcinlzmcl. M. E Springliclrl, O. mlm ml: lewis Clmrlcs Cox, B. A. Xenia, O. Gy1nn Aide. 1' mlm Florence M. Metcalf, B. A. Columbus, Ohio. 1, C. NVl1itc, B. Sc, fAgr.j Lebanon, O. rl'OWllSllClKl. A Z Charles A. Miner, B. Sc. Clflorl. :Incl FJ Bristolvillc, O. 'l.'OWllSllCl1Cl. XfVilliam H. Kcmpton, M. in E. E. V 'l'l'lll1l7lC, O. A1 EE Edward H. Tcnny, M, E. Oberlin, O. liarlc P. I-lagvmcycr, C. E. Norwforl, O. Junior Class Pre-sicldnt. Alcyonc. Harry l.. llopc, N. F. in lf. T Paint, O. A l E ll A T S2 S. Bryon wVllllZ1l11S Jr., M. F. IE. li. Dayton, O. Student Assistant in llrnxving A I E ll A T S2 Clyde B. Ashe-r, C. IE. Lmiflmi, O. Mandolin Club. A 'I' .pwis NV. Clnllnlx, M. C. ' C. Mnntcrcv, Cul. Mznmgcr Tennis Association. A I E E Hugh J. Mczlns, B. A. Columbus, O. lnclcnt Assistant in Pllysiolog Cnptuin Cmnpuny B. K Z2 Edwin H. Ptlucgcr, ll. C. Diclcricli, B. Pikclon, O. Alcyonc. A T A Cflllllllilllrl, O. is Linnc Stricklcr, I Cnlnnibus, O. Browning. C I l.ycli:1 Anna Phillips, B. Columbus, O. Class Poet. Girls' Glec Clulv. ' Browning. ' l-larolcl L. Buclcl, B. A. Pcrrysvillc, O. Wake C. Bell, C. E. Dorchester, Mass. rl: xl! ' 7 X fwncc A. Dzmn, R, A Columlmus, O. li A 0 urge P. llzilm, Ll.. Nzipnlurm, O. lk, A. CO. UQ '03 mlm A elm Daisy lincon, Ti. A. Clilllllllllli 0. Pliiloiiiatlicziii. - 1 A ' lx V I'-QW Howard M. Newton, D. V. Ashvillc, O. Veterinary Society. Evan P. Bone, M. E. in li. Cincinnzxti, O. A I E E R. I. Carver, D. V. M. Lcipsic. Varsity Foot Ball Team Veterinary Society. llavicl ll. Clark, B Shamlon, O. Font Hall 'l'c:1m V O A Mabel S, Holt, B. Columbus, O. l-:xlccpa1'k, O. ' iam H. lfzlgle. C l w. .5 lf WWW N tty llcrbcrt M. Kline, Ll.. R. l llsxylon, 0. Q.. ' x 22 A E f l 5 A , -l l-' 'ZNM Q1 Y ' ' -1 'Al' ' Nuln K. FFOIIIINC, li. Sc. fDom ' . SCJ gi F ' Riclmmoml. lml. X ,Jim Xpw ,vf'f Ohlllfl L. lllg'Illl5, B. A. Camp Chase. O. Nliw, lx'l2ll11lQL'l' of lVl:1kio 1905. K. lvy Orntm' Senior Class. 'X . 'l l Associntu liclilor, l.:mtcrn. ' Rx A X + aw X 5 ol' . , 5 X ,mf ll Francis lXl. Craft, M. E. in E. E. 1 ' Columbus, O. ' A I E E W , iff- . , XX 9 ' 5? . .X Carl Rigclon, M. FI. rx WHl3!lli0l1L'l'Zl, O. . , 4 tif W. Q 5 Robert lf. Oliver, D. V. M. Cl1illicutl1c, O, Foot llnll Squad. V O A . 'g. lv, 'X if X Xl I 4. xl :lllk ' ll ,,, W5 H ww 3. xh Q C. B. Young, H. A. Columbus, O. Mrs. Birdie North Bryzml, B. A. Sl. Pxiris, O. C. Ia. i'iZ1l11l!1Ollli, li. li. Wheeling, VV. Vu. fo FI. D. Hartingcr, NiiIi1iiL'DOI'1, O A X F, E, T.zmci:1I1l, F. Plain City, O. :ink ' .2 ', . .. Dilip II ra Jackson, O. X fl' F 1 L...-at F 1 um . . -1 , - ,. L N. 1211111111 li. 'lllll'l1Cl', ll. A. Col11111bus, O. Hugh J. Bzmlicr, C. li, 111 Arch. Dayton, O. JOllll A. Smith, ll. A. A1'c:11111111, O. lg 1ll lmm 0-l A'lIll11lgCl' of Foot z -1 ' Editor-111-Cllicf of Makin 'H5. VOA ATS! Willi: 'i .K -lf 6' 'i 1111 ll. P:1l111c1', B. L. fAgl'. 'l'l1111'stc111, O. 'l'mv11sl1c111l. A Z Clara VV. Posllc, ll. A. Col11111l111s, O. Girls' Cllcu Clulm. Senior Class 1'listo1'iz111. ll B 'll E. ln, lJllWlLl', B. A. XVz1sl1i11gto11 C, H. All1CIlZl02lll. Y. M. C. A. NV, Philip Van Ness, Law. lVlCCll2llllCSlJlll'gI, O. EA E Goo. li. llzugguulmuclx, Ll... B Urluum, O, li. Ph, 'lli'l. li el ll' -If A fl- Frzluk ll, llm'ulwclc, Law. NVilli:uuspurt, O. H unter. ,lnlm M. I-Im-sh, B. A. Cluvclzmcl, O. Prcsinln-111 Prollilmiliuu Club, 1903 lfllli. Sluclunt Ass'l. iu Chemistry, 1904 10415. H. H. llzulullcm. li. Sc. CAg1'.j Glculurml, O. Tuwusllcncl. Prolxilnilinm Club. Hclcu li. Roberts, li. A. Columbus, O. lirowuing. Joseph E. luucu, li. l Berluud, Ruuumuia. AIEE llswortll Ogden, M. li, in Cu Columbus, O. Todd A. NViug:u'd, ll. E. Columbus, O. AIEE I lf 4, llvllllillll li. Scnlock, B. A McCfmuelsville, O. Alfred L. l-luwiugluu, E Xenia. O. A I H E Ora F. Metz, E. E. Suuuucrsidc, O. A I li E A ,xv ' bl Louis G, Robinson, M. IC. I Cilldllllilli, O. - li 0 ll I' S A .f 5? In IK , X V' W Lewis O. Lukc, C. E. K' .' Richwuorl, O. IB . f X Y 5 W Francis N'ViIlmcr Dickcy, H. A. i. Cliutulwillc, O. X '15 Glcc Club, Horton. Fx ww' Miclmcl F. Currzm, C, li, Corning, O, X f Left 'l':xckIc, Font Bull 'l'cum. N W K V O A E 1 l I -. f Q Robert Gilclcrslccvc Paterson, 13. W A. Culumlms: O. Q Mzumgcr Iiuskut H:1l1'l'cum, U4- 'l,h5, ll Captain Ruse Hull 'll-11111, WHS. ' A K V O A A 'l' A Cllurlcs S. Drug Allu-ns, O. Hunter. gun, Law. X -1 ., Lx Q lax NVilmcr P. Newton, l.z1w Lowell, O. ' Earnest D. XVilliums, N. lf. Martins Furry, O. Rudo L. Frommc, ll. Sc. m Hort. Ricllmoncl, lml. Strollers. Mzmrlolin Clulm. A 1' R ' Carlos L. MclVl:lslcr, C. If. Columbus, O. 1' fl-, A '17 sz William A. Marlin. B. Sc. Agr. Kenton, O. A 1' R ' Prcsirlcnt Au'ric11l1urul Society, l llll-l ' l 905. Mumlmur O. S. U. Judging Tuzuu. Chustcr Lilcnu Foster, li, Sc. in Agr. Lomlon, O. A Z' K :J ,I lit x Oscar Kuenzel, M. li. New Bremen, O. J l' james ll. Hurt, D. V. M Erie, Pa. V. S. Toronto, Canada. Veterinary Society. Arthur R. Wylie, M. E. Reynoldsburg, O. Alcyone. Fred L. WVest, ll, Sc. in Agr. lilrmomittglmttrg, O. litlitor of Afzrieultural Student i A Z Oscar M. Sullivan, B. A. Columbus. O. English Club. Political Science Club. Aleyone. Wfalter Straight Stewart, li, M. Klanningtun, XV. Va. i Q 3 vi. l ,. . it I Z 'N 1 no i n 1: y , if b ,wnibvx . v S X N 1 X Earl Bixler, B. A. Mt, Gilead, O. Atllenaean. Guy B. Bebout, C. E. NVheeling, W. Va. President Freshman Class, 1902. Senior Social Committee. Ferrancl Seymour Merrill, C. E . Cincinnati, O. I' fl? ,v i Q William R. Work, M. E. in E. E. X ' ' Springlielrl, O. q l 1-Q B. A. rvviiiwiicl-gp wuz. 42 L siclent A. l. li. lf. KO. S. U. 4' it Branelib l V ,Ax B G TI .gl N 1 l. X. i ,J A W I . LN Irnemt Fleclilerjolizmn, B. A. ' Wasliinvton. 'f' Horton. ' N v X George H. Weaver, M, E. St. Louisville. x l 5 I s Y y AV.: ' . N 4 I C 17 I Y d A 'I XP' f Cf. .wr .. r N I N l S . . XVlll fa ,V ' 5' lx . X. so X, 'h A X 4 Y V Ricllzlrd XV. Robinson, C. Gallon, O. Ilcrlxcrt M. M ycrs, B. A. gt Altkdllilllil, O. Flclitm' Makio 'O-1. I X J. llcntlcy Small, E. M. Columbus, O. B911 ll. R. Walker, M. I' Hartwell, O. Foot Hull, 'lql'IlCli To V. O. A. liugcuc A. Miller, M. Alcrmm, O. iam A, Grave, ll. V. Columbus, O. Veterinary Socicty. VVilhur Ti. Lullon, Law. Ashtalmla. H unter. John T. Clark, B. A. Louisvillv, Ky. joseph H. Kinfllc, B. A. Cv:11tl'uvilIc, O. cb lx :lx S. IJ, Cooper, M. TC. in F. E. Youngstown, O. Mnsrms Club. Rulmcrt H. Cllllllillgllillll Jr., M. E Columbus, O. BIZUIQILICI' Track Team. V O A 'D 1' A ' ff Howard E. Smith, U. V. M , Columbus, O. Vclcrimwy Society. K 'af L 1 W .rf H4476 V VV. . Q4 11 M M ' ily? x 4 .din A H. R. NVilliams, B. A. Urbana, O. B 1' 'D J. Stockton Raymond, B. A. Columbus, O. Captain Base Ball Team, 1904. Manager Base Ball Team, 1906. Basket Ball Team. V. O. A. A T A Locke H. Burnham, E. E. Columbus, O. A. I. E. E. 1' fl' l.ogz1n NV. Marshall, Law Sidney, O. Hunter. Xsa Everett NVard, B. A., LL Marietta, O. Hunter. A X N. NV. Rockey, B. A. Columbus, O. English Club. M Y N . Vfilliztm Howarfl Titmtmt, B, A. Caldwell, O. Associate lfclitor M:tl:i0, l!l0.'1 A T .X Lloyd G. Owen, H, A. Magnetic Springs, 0. Aleyone. John V. Dagzmltztrclt, l.:uv. Piqua, U. Hunter. President Tlmrmull Club- Snmuel N. Summer, B. A Shelby, O. Pipe of Peace Orator. Strollers. Jessie F, Stephens, B. A Columbus, O. VVilIiam A. Nye, B. A. Zanesville, O. Track Team, Manager Track Strollers: V. O. A. A T A i 5 FW Curl -I. Smith, N. ll. North llrozulwzty, O. 1 if ' f-t 1 ' XZ lxzttlivrinc lmltmtmgtmt, li, A. gl , Colttmhus, O. 5 l Browning. i il ix V 33 N f 14 if 4 Kzttlicriitc Pottctx B, .-X, ,B Columhtis, O. 1 , N ll ll 'l' t t ,FJ I N yflgfy :if -G, X. I O Mary Bcrry, ll. .' Pct-hlcs. O. llltilontzttltcati, .-Xhcl Vztil Sltotwcll, l.l ll Mztrctigo, O. Cliztirmzttt Scttior Social Commit- tcc. Ft l'lm'to1t. Z1 X 'ccl ll, Nulstm. C. l' North Olmsted, O. K ffl vii: b i ' L f' if:3 PAF. W. I ,W Afrigfafck-ith - Clauclt Custu Rose M D 'X if ' Fmul: Ross Ctulfourl B V IXI'll1'lgCl C ltc Club YC' I, A y 2 R. Sm ut M V N X l l' 5- Q. 5 X ' . I ' . Emcrsnu Scott Postou, B. Sc 9 Mgrfl Logan, 0. 'l'0u'usltcurl. Mancloliu Club. Agricultural Society. A l' R I, J. Comlit, B. Sc. iu Hurt. jersey, O. l'lm'ticult'uraI Club. Jzuucs Vernon Hyatt, li. Sc tAgr.l Augusta, O, l Q x C J IC, R, Minus, .-Xqr., ll, Sc. l,iH4ll, 'l'HWllSllL'llll. Y, Al. C, A. ll0I'llk'lllllll'Ill Club. ircy ll. Nlclliiigcg . E. IC. li. .'Xl'CillllIlI1, O. A 'l' A l. l'.. l'iimcy. ll. Sc. lu Agr. Ccclaiwillc, U. Townslicnil. Niels Rl. Pctursmi, B, 1 Stciilmciwillc, O. Political Sciciicc Chili A T A Sumucl Morris, B, A lilmnninglmrg, O, ' 71 4 ' 'zu'riiigum, Cnluiiilms, O. lfnglisli Clulm. Pliilrmmpliicul Cluli. -A 'll S3 iXVuusl0I'.l 'IsI'lUl'llflS Bccr, B. Sc. lCl1L'lll.f :Xsl1l:u1d, O. Rllylllflllll Edgar Rusk, H. A. Columbus, O. x um, H, A. llarulcl K. Shaw: Columbus, O. A 'l' A 'gc Curl Vcluuu u, N. E, lN'l:u'tius Ferry. v Nusuus Club. C F- uwigm NVilsou xxu-au, ra. Sc ,K X 5 UXSU'-7 1' mm, 0. I Prcsirlcut Y. M. C. A., ltllr-1-5. 4- - Q, ,- 1 3' bf ' ' V, David Luyliu, M. E. Norwalk, O. Q ' Mzulcloliu Club. Fu . Q K z: .4515 F ,D 'W pg . AWK Paul D. Mock, B. A. Columbus, O. Captain Co. lf. 'l' l' A Tlmtnas Charles Davis, LL. East Greenville, O. llcbnting 'l'c:un, l9fl4. Humor. -It A Q, A X Bztrucsvillc, O. A I E E B. Cnlcb Hobbs, M. E. in lf. F Russell Ingham Huw, ll. A. Marysvillc. Uircctnr nf Glue Club. 2 A E Curl N. Knopf, M. E. in li. E Cnlumbus, 0. A l E li l rcclcriclc llictz Cnckins. B. :X Cnlumbus O. CllL'lIIlC1ll Society. C? Clara Naomi Campbell, B. Sc. QDUII1. SCJ Columbus, O. L C mrroll O arirm Nichols, B. A. Cliillicotlle, O. ll li fl' Albm Jgwlli, C. E Greenville, O. A T Sl 15. R. I-lumm -11, 1.l., M. ' Sgr Debating Tczuu. ii vi 9 4.1 R Seniors Amuos M. HARRIS, 13. M., Columbus, O. CARL H. IAIAXV'l'I'lURNE.,C. CZ1llllJl'ltlQ'C, O. E. X. l'. LILLIAN Vluilll, ll. A.. Columbus, il. STANLEY 'l'. SCOIVIIILD, ll. A.. Columlnur., il. K. E. 'llilwlalllol ALl'Rl.uD 5l'IXl'., ll. A Columbus, U. Major llnltalion. -lUSlil'l'l AI..l Rl2D S'l'lYER, ll. Dc Graff. G. W. SHAFTER, M. li. IN li. Columbus. O. A. I. E. E. llliSSll.E VVAGNER. ll.. A., Columbus, U. ' lll'lllOl'l'lZlll1CZlll. XV. L. 1'llEl'l'MAN. LAW. New Bremen. A. 1. LALl:ll l-lllllllb. M. L. IN lL. li.. A llarucsvillc. A. I. E. E. JESSE DORSIEY lAlNlS. ll. A Sl1c1'lclausvillc, Pu. - 43. P. A. DANIEL O. JONES, LL. ll., jackson, U. 4,. A. fp.: E. A. E. FRIED C. JEANNOT, M. IE.. - Columbus, O. E. X. -v F. li. LAYMAN, M. E. IN Civ., Youngstown. O. x. 4,. USS P. MARSTIELLIER, D. V. Republic, O. 70 M , 11. L. MCLAUQ1-IL1N, LAW, Aclcna. J. li. MARTIN, LL. ll., Columbus, O. X. 4,. MARHQN NICHOLS, ll. A., Chillicothe, O. 11. B. 41. ALVIN C. l5UNNIET'I', LL. Il.. Columbus, U. 45. A. 0.: 41. A. 4, l-I. li. CULIEIERTSCJN, LAW. Milan, U. 1-I.liA'l'l--l K. COLIE, LL. ll.. Columbus, CJ. jUSEI'l-l D. DAVIS, ll. A., Columbus, O. VERNON A. DENNIS, D. V. M. XVZUISCOII, U. DEAN FLOVVIERS, E. M.. Columbus, O. A. D. 1fl'l'ZCilZRALD, D. V. M.. Old Fort, O. ADA M. FREIZMAN, ll. A.. Cliillicotlic, O. LEONARD VV. CUSS, D. V. M.. liclinburg. O. l3lER'.l' W. GEARl'lAR'l', LAW, l Columbus, O. NVM. ll. CIQIECJU, LAW, Columbus, O. CHARLES l'. UU'l'lslWAl'l'li. LL. l Columbus, U. X. 41. l2'l'HliL VVUOlJ'l.lERRY, Il. A.. Columbus, O. - K. K. F. -P L. J. LEIET, LL. ll., Columbus, KJ. 71 Advanced Degrees Doctor of Philosophy Lumina Colton Riddle. Master of Arts Mary Louise Arnold, B. A. l. be joseph Frzmklin Clevenger, l . Ray Durzuul Cront, ll. A ll. Ph Mello xVllSUll Glass, ll. A llertliolml August liisenlohr. . XValclo Roy Libolcl, 13. A. Yelorus Martz, U. A. Mary Aloysia Molloy, ll. l'l1. Max De Los Morton, ll. Ph. Frank Macy Surface, U. A. Harlem Harvey York, ll. Sc. Master of .Science in 'Domestic Sc Mary Faye Hill, ll, Sc. Master of Laws linlmunrl Ray l-lummell. 72 ience . If fl ill h E 14? V l 1765 ' fvfrff, unllll' A- l wa,- fflf AW' ffl , l .llflllllh , fig ','l'l' Mlm AE l :lx l1ll'.I' ' Q I 'Mx ' ' QQ! 5 Af'4 1 M ,Q f W . a 1QL '-Q 'x ll' THE-YTOH-NOT W QA' J Slcink! Slczmk! Slcillega Joseph Edward Kewlcy.. Alice Arnold Thacker, .. Mary Eula Mcliilmcy. .. W'illiam Gerard Wfatson. '06 Colors: Purple and Gold. Yell : xVZ1ll0Ol NVal1oo! 'o6! 'o6! U. S. U. Officers loo! ........President ....J........Vice President Mary Adelaide De Camp. .. Theodore Haines Folger. 73 ........Secretary . . . . . . .Treasurer .........Historian Sergeant-at-Arms . Iisfory of the junior Class It is a very great thing to be a junior. Anyone who has ever seen us will readily admit the Major Premise. llut it is only those who have been the Real Thing- and have survived - who truly understand. Therefore, let the Sopho- more be humbled. Let him tremble at the Prospect of the Future with its Snares and Disillutions, let him bite the Dust and save his Money, let him hoard up Credits and with future Generations learn of Us what a Junior Class can do. ' Our past has never handicapped us. lt was eminently satisfactory-if not to our Instructors, at least to Ourselves. XIVC never fear being misunderstood and never waste Time thinking of our Failures. We began by fixing firmly in Mind what seemed to us worth while, and then proceeded with Violence of Direction to give a junior Prom. according to Up-to-Date llusiness Methods. lt was the Success of the Year. VVe gave Less for more Money than any Store in Columbus and filed a Petition for llankruptcy. ln Religious Matters We have been spared the Necessity of Choice. Unan- imously we believe in lfaptism and prefer Emersion to Sprinkling as being more orthodox as well as more sanitary. VVherever Two or More have been gathered together in College Affairs One at least has been a junior, and Our Members have distinguished Themselves in all Directions, reflecting Honor and Dishonor impartially upon the VVhole, the main Object being to keep Ourselves before the Public. ln Philanthropy we have organized the Co-op and inaugurated the System of Discount Cards in order to make it possible for the Seniors to rent Caps and Gowns for the Month of june and graduate in a creditable Manner. The Success of the various literary and Athletic Organizations of the University is due to the Talents and the untiring Efforts of the juniors. We hold the Quarter Mile Track Record of the State, and among Us know all the llirds and lleasts of Ohio. Some of us have been initiated into the Mysteries of the Light Fantastic at Rader's, some have preferred Greek Letters, and others have starred in local Play I-Iouses or Play Grounds. Early in the Year Dr. Scott and Professor Denney, on behalf of the Faculty. gave us valuable Hints on how to keep in College. lt was a Comfort to know that We were appreciated, and We have felt diFferently about Our VVork ever sincel No Junior Class ever before 'had such glorious Prospects for its Senior Year. Have not the Ags. brought back the Golden Calf and set it up as a perpetual Inspiration to us? Is the Legislature not waiting until Our Senior Year to grant Ohio State the nnxst magnificent Appropriation it ever had and thus immortalize Us? And with Our Accumulated Wealth are NVe not going to leave a University Club House as a perpetual Memorial of the Class of 'o6? I-Ils'roRmN. 74 s J 'WV WI' l c Z Qulllgfjly fl' 'R l lg . l 1 1 'I li- ' ' 'l Ly, fluff? l 'V ,G , . ...... 15' l1n,li'B'l l gk L. lf. Clcllrcs. .. li, Tlmomas.. Irma Lcilmlcl A. G. llocscl J. IV. Tlmnms Marie Clark Colors: NVl1itc and Lirccn. Yell: One-0-sec, Two-0-sec, 'l'llCli-O-SCC, 'l'l11'cc! llzlllalmu, Cruel:-0-lo, 'l'u1'n-21-lmrcu! Spccn, Spine, M,llSCZllll1C, 1907, Mighty lfinc! OffYcers .. ...Nice . . . Scrgczm 75 f . ....... Vrcsiclcllt l'1'usiclcnt Sccx'cta1'y lil'C21Slll'L'l' t-:lt-Arlns l l istorlzm History of the Sophomore Class The class of 1907 is the product of sixty centuries. lt was not thrown together 'mid the confusion of chaos. It has been carefully selected from the best of the ages. It is a class that will go down in history as a class of integrity. In its earliest days it would rather suffer defeat through honesty and lose the cane rush than stoop to conquer the' class of 1906 through the use of a canus telescopusf' In the first conflict the upper classmen evidently realized the quality of men with whom they had to deal, and, knowing that no trick would be possible in a football game, had it called off. However, when the baseball season rolled around they were compelled to take their medicine, and take it they certainly did, for the plucky freshmen scored a glorious victory. The autumn of IQO4 found the plucky freshmen again congregated on the campus green. Through the marvelous processes of evolution common to early college life they are now familiarly known as Sophs. They had reached a second degree of development, and were daily watched by the college students, who curiously sought to know how they would deal with the weighty problems of their second year at O. S. U. - Behold how marvelously changed are the freshies of '03. Their verdancy has disappeared. Viewed from any point of the compass they had changed. Gigantic in stature, rich in wisdom, strong in gray matter, they still possessed their characteristic spirit-that of doing the square thing in the square way. The battle of this, their second rush, centered not about a cane invisible, for S0phs and Freshies fought for a large thing, for a cane that could be seen, and the men of '07, though opposed by an enemy numbering almost two to one and fighting against all odds--conquered-and carried the treasured prize to its goal. 'Twas then the class of '07 marconigrammed to all the world a victory in open, honest warfare. T This class was destined to achieve. Should one attempt to mention all its brilliant triumphs far more time and room would be needed than is available. In the class-room, on the athletic field, in social circle, the Sophomore of to-day, the graduate of 1907, is the brilliant scholar. the victorious athlete, the popular companion. Can more be said? The class of 1907 may justly be proud of its record. And the future? In the past and in the present lies the seed to bear fruit in the future. HISTORIAN. . 76 'RQ iw-51 J. O. Spaulding. H. Ruclig ....... Hazel M. Coberly H. Gintz ....... Luella Case .... S. S. Hart .... Colors: Green. Officers 7 7 ..........Presiclent . . . . .Vice President .. .. . ...Secretary . . . . . . . .Treasurer . . . . . . . . . .Historian . . . .Sergeant-at-Arms Freshman Class History We started out with the enviable reputation of being the best class ever admitted to the U - and the only bard part about this was the jealous way in which the upper classmen gazed at us on every side. Compassion is one of our most striking characteristics. - Of course, after a teasing struggle, we let the Sophs have the cane, it was their last chance at it, .you know, and we simply eouldn't bring ourselves to the level ot' the juniors, who made them lose it the first time. 'l'bere's that com- passion again. ' liut we beat them soundly at football. just to show them that we could. They say the Sophs wept real tears: but such a little victory couldn't mean much to us. . llut the crowning event, so far as social atifairs are concerned, was the Freshman dance. lt was a real marvel. Among the many things that our class can be thanked for are these: The great athletes we put into the field, and our assistance in the dramatic and glee clubs: the inauguration of the system of compulsory exams. in all branches: setting the Sophs to work decorating the walks and retoucbing the buildings: the custom of going late to class: the effort to reduce campus work to a minimum. Our class meetings were features, and the excitement was augmented by stirring operatic selections. No class ever fell down-stairs more or up-stairs less: no class ever went so spasmodically to convocation, or more 'regularly staid awayg no class ever entered more solemnly upon their Freshman year, or departed from it more joyously. And so, with all the grace and dignity of our present Seniors, whose brave efforts to be as nearly like us as possible should receive conunendation, we beg leave to retire. Hts'1'olu,xN.. 78 i Alcyone Founded 1874. Motto: Fabri liabricando Fimns. Colors: Old Gold and Gray. Officers Eugene R. Augspurger .... ..... ...... I J resident Gscar M. Sullivan ..... . . .Vice-President Harold R. lVilliams .... ...... S eeretary Gilbert L. Fuller ..... ........... T reasurer Alva jay Hill ........ ............... C ensor Lloyd Gamble Owen .... .... ll flaster of Programs Carl D. Shoemaker .... .... S ergeant-at-Arms The Alcyone Literary Society lfVith the close of the year Alcyone will have completed her thirty-first year of activity and usefulness. For some years it has been the aim and purpose of the society not only to develop men proficient in debate, oratory and kindred literary work, but to give some attention to that very important element of success--the social side of life. And during the year this general policy has been carried out by giving, in addition to the regular literary meetings, several receptions to the ladies' literary societies of the University. As usual, Alcyone's men demonstrated their ability to debate. Of the eight men chosen to represent the University this year two were of Alcyone. Although the society suffered somewhat from the general depression of work in the literary societies which pervaded the University, the interest of its members for the good of the society and for their mutual good has not flagged, and the future of Alcyone bids fair to be as great and useful as her past. 81 . Horton Founded 1875. Motto: Per Augusta ad Augusta. Officers O. C. Ingalls ..... ...... President F. O. Williamson. . . . . .Vice-President Guy Shipps ...... ...... S ecretary F. W. Dickey... .......... Treasurer S. F. Rankin .. ................. Critic Harry Kohn ........ .... ll flaster of Programs Hugh Huntington . . . . . .Sergeant-at-Arms History Literary activity has taken a slump. Horton has been seriously affected by it, and has accomplished far less than in any preceding year. Students have less time on Friday evenings than they used to have. Five or six years ago the literary society was an important factor in college politics. Today such power is lacking. There may be, as it is claimed, a slump in such functions, which will soon die out, and renewed activity will again mark the ascendancy of the literary society. 83 ' -A Lois Strickler .... Nelly Ely ....... Katharine Gress .... Edith Dick ........ F lorencc Shelton ..... Jeanette MacGregor. . Ly dia Morrow ...... . Katharine Huntington .... Bertha Schneider ....... Grace Stewart .... Beatrice Sheets .... Francis Barrows .... Lydia Morrow .... Grace Freeman .... Brofwning Founded, 1883. Colors : Pink and White. Yell: Rah, Rah, Rah ! Pink and Wfhitel Where is Browning? Out of sight? Officers, I 904- '05 First Semester. Second Semester. 85 .. .. . . .President . . .Vice-President . . . . . .Secretary . . . . . . .Treasurer ...........Critic . M. of Programs Sergeant-at-Arms . . . . . . .President . . .Vice-President . . . . . .Secretary . . . . . . .Treasurer ...........Critic . M. of Programs Sergeant-at-Arms First Semester. Edna McC1eary ...... Philomathean -Motto: Vestiga Nulla Retrorium. Flower: Golden Rod. OffyC8fS ... President. . . . .. Elizabeth Lawrence ...... Vice-President . . . Bessie Wagner .... Iva Ernstberger. . . Etta Sharp ....... Secretary...... Treasurer.....:.. . . Sergeant-at-Arms. . . . Second Semester. ..Bessie Wagner Grace McDonald Floribel Schubert . . . .Daisy Bacon .Edna McCleary In spite of the fact that literary societies at O. S. U. are said to be on the decline and already dead, we can say with certainty that Philomathean is neither. Our literary society l1as shown more enthusiasm this year than has been manifested for several years back. The meetings throughout the year have all been well attended, and a great deal of interest has been taken in the work by the members. Our roll has been increased by the addition of quite a number of new girls, who, with their various talents, dififerent ideas and fresh enthusiasm, have stirred us up and aroused a new interest. And everything is working finely. Gur officers have done their work well, and deserve much credit for their courage and perseverance and to them is duemuch of Philois success this year We will loose some of our members by graduation, but we know they won't forget their old society and will be always ready to help it along and say a good word for Philo. 87 Townshend Founded, 1893. Motto: By Striving We Triumph. Colors: Old Gold and Purple. Fall Term. I. C. 'White .... T. P. White .... R. C. Donegliue N. E. Shaw .... G . C. Long ..... A. L. Burgess. . . ... Officers President ....... Vice-President. . . Secretary ....... Treasurer ....... Critic .............. Sergeant'-at-Arms .... Winter Term. ... .L. M. Smith H. C. Ramsower . . . D. Ward E. Woods L. VVest . . . .E E. Finney VV. H. Palmer. . W. E. Shaw .... E. C. Rickey. . . S. D. Henkle ..... Spring Term. H. H. Hamilton .... .... Mr. Hill ....... S9 . . . . . . . .President . . .Vice-President . . . . . . . .Secretary . . . . . . .Treasurer ...........Critic Sergeanteat-Arms. Athenaean Founded, 1897. Incorporated, 1899. Motto: Invenian veam aut faciam. Color: Crimson. Yell : Razzle-dazzle ! Hobble-gobble! Sis! Boom! Bah! Athenaean, Athenaean I Rah! Rah! Rah! Officers R. M. Lucas .... ..... ,....... P r esident E. E. Dowler .. ...Vice-President E. L. Mahaffey ..... ..... S ecretary C. W. Rudis ..... ......... T reasurer S. I. Mauchly . . ............... Critic I. P. Pratt ..... ...Master of Programs J. H. Kindle. . . .... Sergeant-at-Arms In spite of the general lack of interest in literary work at the University, the Athenaean Literary Society has manifested during the year an increased activity along all lines. Founded on broad, democratic principles, the Society has instilled into its members a spirit of genuine fraternity fellowship and sociability. lt is the hope of all the members that the years to come may be as beneficial to Athen- :ean as the one just closed. 91 ' 1 1 1. S. jones .... O. -I. Boesel ..... Wm. Hazelbeck Wm. L. Heitnien ..... F. NV. Krehbiel ..... F. H. Hornbeck .... R. L. McLaughlin J. E. Strayer A. H. Miller Ira G. Gorham. . . O. I. Boesel .... At. H. Miller .... F. A. Crowley. . . F. C. Nesbitt ....... J. D. lVitlig0tt.. H. A. Fries ........ F. M. Thompson F. W. Postle H. C. Sherman A. H. Miller .... A. WV. Geisinger. T. A. Jenkins. .. J. A. Frederick ..... A. R. Carpenter. . Heath K. Cole ..... J. E. Aleshirel J. T. Beem .... I. Brinkerhoff Hunter Literary Society Founded December, 1896. Motto: Lex est rex. Colors: Dark Blue and Wfhite. Yell: Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Hunter Law! Hunter Law! Rah ! Rah ! Rah! Officers, I 904-05 Fall Term. Winter Term. . . . . . . .President . . . .Vice-President . .......... Secretary ..............Treasurer . . .Prosecuting Attorney . . . . .Sergeant-at-Arms .....................-Iuclges Makio Representative, 1904-05 .....................................President Spring Term. 93 . . . .Vice-President ..............Secretary ...............Treasurer . . . . .Prosecuting Attorney . . . . . .Sergeant-at-Arms ...........Judges . . . . . . . . .President . . . .Vice-President ............Secretary .............Treasurer . . . . .Prosecuting Attorney . . . . . .Sergeant-at-Arms ...........Judges FDATEDL Zlkatrrnitiez anh Snrnritiva arramgeh in nrhrr nf 'fs fnuuhing nf Glhaptrrn at Hampden-Sidney. VVilliam Jewell. Phi Gamma Delta i Founded at Washington and feffer-son College in 1848 Acti-ve Chapters University of Maine. College City of N. Y. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Columbia. NVorcester Polytechnic' Institute. N. Y. University. Brown. Colgate. Dartmouth. Cornell. Amherst. Union. Trinity. Syracuse. Yale. University of Pennsylvania Lafayette. Wooster. Lehigh. Adelbert. johns Hopkins. Denison. Bucknell. Wittenberg. Gettysburg. Ohio State University. University of Texas. Illinois Wesleyan. Ohio VVesleyan University. University of Michigan. Knox. Indiana. University of Illinois. DePauw. University of lrVisconsin. Hanover. University of Missouri. Wabash. Chicago University. Purdue. University of Virginia. University of Tennessee. Pennsylvania State. Bethel. Roanoke. Alabama. University of 'Kansas University of Nebraska. University of California. University of XrVashington. Leland Stanford University. Washington and Lee. Richmond. Vllashington and Jefferson. Allegheny. Alumni Chapters Indianapolis. Ind.g Chattanooga, Tenn.: Columbus, Ohiog Kansas City, Mo. Cleveland, Ohiog Williamsport, Pa.: Spokane, Wash.: Chicago, Ill.: Dayton Ohio: San Francisco, Cal.: New Haven, Conn.: New York Cityg Pittsburg, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa.g Brooklyn, N. Y.: Albany, N. Y.g Denver, Col.g Minneapolis Minn.: St. Louis. Mo.: Toledo, Ohio: Cincinnati. Ohiog Bloomington, Ill. NVheeling, W. Va.: Baltimore, Md..g VVashington, D. C.g Richmond, Va.g Roa- noke, Va.g Harvard College. ' 97 Phi Gamma Delta Color: Royal Purple. Flower: Heliotrope Omicron Deuteron Chapter. Established March 25, 1878. Fratres in Facultate George Beecher Kauffman, Edward Orton, jr., Frank Arnold Ray Charles Smith Prosser, Alan Coggeshall. Post Graduate Edgar Hare johnson. Alva Kendall Overturf. Seniors Jesse Dorsey Iams, Robert Henry Cunningham, jr., Paul Deady Meek Mark Chapeze Houston. juniors Frank Eichelberger, Chester Perkins Calleher. Sophomores Orlando Carpenter Miller, Carl Montgomery Baldwin. Robert Lawrence Eichel- berger, Shirley Townshend Wfing. Freshmen Rodnev Harris Reese, , Charles Taylor Sheldon, Wfarren Daniel Rounsavell, Henry Richard Talmage, Thomas Carroll Hoover, Jr., Samuel Howard Campbell, Philip Duncan VVilson, XVilliam Harrison Dickinson, Glenn Roy Trumbull. 99 D 1852 1853 1855 1855 1859 1860 1869 1888 1895 1869 I88O 1889 1896 1896 1895 1896 1902 1853 1855 T357 1880 1890 1901 T904 Phi Kappa Psi Founded ai Washingion and Iefferson College, 1852 Pennsylvania Alpha Peensylvania Beta .. Pennsylvania Gamma Penirsylvania Epsilon Pennsylvania Zeta .. Pennsylvania Eta . . . Pennsylvania Theta . Pennsylvania Kappa Pennsylvania Iota .. New York Alpha .. New York Beta .... New York Gamma . New York Epsilon . New York Zeta .... Massachusetts Alpha New Hampshire Alpha . . . . . . Rhode Island Alpha Virginia Alpha .... Virginia Beta ..... Mississippi Alpha .. Maryland Alpha .. VVest Virginia Alpha Tennessee Delta Texas Alpha .... Active Chapters Firsi Disirici XVashington and Jefferson College Allegheny College. Bucknell College. Gettysburg College. . . . Dickinson College. Franklin and Marshall College. Lafayette College. ' Swarthmore College. University of Pennsylvania Second Disirici Cornell University. Syracuse University. Columbia University. Colgate University. Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute. Amherst College. Dartmouth College. Brown University. Third Disirici ..... . . .. Universitv of Virginia. VVashington and Lee University. . . . .University of Mississippi. Johns Hopkins University. ..- .-. . . . . .. . University of NVest Virginia. Vanderbilt University, . . . . . .. University of Texas. 100 K 1 860 1 866 Ohio Alpha .... Ohio Beta . .. Fourih Dislricf . . . . . . . . . . Ohio Wlesleyan University. . . . Wittenberg College. 1880 Ohio Delta . . . .. . . . Ohio State University. 1865 Indiana Alpha .. DePauw University. 1869 Indiana Beta . . . . . . Indiana State University. 1901 Indiana Delta . . . . . . Purdue University. 1864 Illinois Alpha . . . . . . Northwestern University. 1892 Illinois Beta .... University of Chicago. 1876 Michigan Alpha University of Michigan. IQO4 Illinois Delta .. . .. University of Illinois. 1875 1881 Wisconsin Alpha Wiscoiisiii Gamma Fifllz Dislricl u .. . . . . .. University of Wisconsin. .. . Beloit College. 1887 Iowa Alpha .... University of Iowa. 1888 Minnesota Beta . .. . University of Minnesota. 1876 Kansas Alpha University of Kansas. 1.895 Nebraska Alpha . University of Nebraska, 1892 California Beta . Leland Stanford, Ir.. University. 1899 California Gamma University of California. Alumni Associaiions Anderson, Boston, llucyrus, Buffalo, Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Colum- bus, Denver, Indianapolis, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Meadville, Minneapolis, Newark, New York City, Omaha, Philaclelpliia, Pittsburg, Portland, Salt Lake City, San Francisco, Seattle, Springfield, Toledo, Washington, Baltimore, johns- town, Duluth, Easton. ' I Alumni Clubs Harvard . .. .... Cambridge, Mass 101 '? ix' A A n tl. V. Denney, Fred H. Kirtley. Gilbert H. Carmack. Richard L. Logan. Merit ll. Cheney. H. Horton Hampton, Arthur E. Mayer, Phi Kappi Psi Colors: Lavender and Pink. Flower: Sweet Pea. Delta Chapter of Ohio. Established May 15, 1880. Frafres in Facultaie G. W. MeCoard. I L. A. Rhoades. 1905 Wakeman C. Bell. 1906 James E. Randall. 1907 llenjaniin M. johnson Dick F. Newman. 1908 james C. Miller, Paul Miller, Frank H. Riddle. 103 1864 1863 1864 1859 1867 1887 1891 1875 1866 1 860 1855 1373 1855 1868 1882 1876 1882 1893 T895 1858 1859 1865 1871 1875 1869 1882 1883 1884 A Sigma Chi Founded at Miami Unifversity, lane 28, 1855 Epsilon . . Theta . . . Kappa ..... Omicron .... P111 ........ Alpha Rho' . . . Alpha Chi .... Phi Phi .... Zeta .. Psi . . . Alpha . . . Beta ..... Gamma ...... Mu ........... Alpha Gamma . Zeta Zeta ...... Zeta Psi ...... Lambda Lambda Mu Mu ....... Lambda . . Xi Rho. ' I f f f. Chi ........ Delta Delta . .. Omega ..... Alpha Zeta .... Alpha Iota .... Alpha Lambda . Acfifve Chapters First Profvince . . . . . . . . . Columbian University. . . Pennsylvania College. .. Bucknell University. .. Dickinson College. . . Lafayette College. . . Lehigh University. . . Pennsylvania State College. . . . . . . . . . . University of Pennsylvania. Second Profvince . . . . . . . . . . . Washington and Lee University ... . . . . . . University of Virginia. Third Profvince . . . . . . . . . . . Miami University. . . University of XVooster. .. Ohio Wesleyan University. . . . . Denison University, .. .. Ohio State University. . . Ce11tre College of Kentucky. . . University of Ci11cinnati. .. State College of Kentucky. . . .... ....... X 'Vest Virginia University. Fourth Profvince . . . . . . . . . . . Indiana University. . . . . DePauw University. . . Butler College. . . Hanover College. . . Purdue University. Fifth Frofvince Northwestern University. . . . . . . . . Beloit College. . . . . illinois Wesleyan University. . . . . . . University of Xvisconsin. 104 1886 Alpha Pi ....... . .. Albion College. 1888 Alpha Sigma . .. University of Minnesota. 1877 Theta Theta .... University of Michigan. 1881 Kappa Kappa University of Illinois. 1897 Omicron Omicron .......... University of Chicago. Sixth Profvince 1883 Alpha Epsilon .. .......... University of Nebraska. 1882 Alpha Eta ..... University of Iowa. 1884 Alpha Xi .... . .. University of Kansas. 1896 Xi Xi ..... University of the State of Missouri. 1903 Tau Tau .. ......... 1 VVashington University. Seivenfh Frofvince 1857 Eta ........... ........... U niversity of Mississippi. 1884 Alpha Nu ...... . .. University of Texas. 1886 Alpha Omicron . Tulane University. 1891 Alpha Psi ..... ........... X fanclerbilt University. Eighfh Profvince 1886 Alpha Beta .... .......... U niversity of California. 1889 Alpha Upsilon .. .. University of Southern California. 1891 Alpha Omega .. . Leland Stanford Junior University. 1903 Upsilon Upsilon ........... University of VVashington. Ninth Profvlnce 1892 Alpha Alpha .. .......... Hobert College, 1882 Alpha Theta . . . . . . Massachusetts Institute Technology. 1890 Alpha Phi . . . . . . Cornell University. 1893 Eta Eta . .. . .. Dartmouth College. 1894 Nu Nu .... .. . Columbia University. 1902 Rho Rho . . . . . . . . University of Maine. Alumni Chapters Chicago, lfloston, Baltimore, Louisville, Cincinnati, Columbus, Atlanta, Den- ver, Indianapolis, Detroit, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Milwaukee, Nashville, New Orleans, New York, Peoria, Philaclelphia, Pittsburg, St. Louis, St. Paul, Minne- apolis, San Francisco, Springfield, Illinois, VVashington. Alumni Associations State of Washington. Wfestern New York. 105 'V QF' fijx'-'I' R06eWS'l!Tf,4 if'!THORN'EA',!f'f..L57r,'?,,? -4 J N iw,-JHXQ CjAm...N'f-jg-Jjj g.t 1 f- H4.,,N . x ,nw 'J ' fn i 4 Q wfA1ff+wfQ--mw1v'T-FL-ff , - 1 X J 'Y'-Llv '-WJITVZ 'M jxfll '27 If -w- ANDJQ 1 I, f xr V J . fy rw v rx , f -4 - -1- ' . 1 .A -r- 4 -. 1- ,Rf 4.1 F- f-f - f- N- , .-R I., V' ff A N' SILTY: Li 5, ..,- ,ifffffliff 5f1'ff'WFLLf !WC1?'!v Ef' WWE ' , 'J g W. E. Henderson, Carl H. Hawthorne, Fred C. Jealmot. Thomas B. Foster, Harry T. Frost, Fred S. Campbell, F. Harold Crew, J. Edgar Butler. George O. Ellstrom, Roger K. McCartney, Szyma Chi Colors: 'lllue and Old Gold. Flower: VVhite Rose. Alpha Gamma Chapter. Founded, 1882. Fratres in Faculfafe ' Ralph Rogers. 1905 Herbert M. Myers, Abel V. Shotwell 1906 D. D. Stuart, Walter A. Holloway Earl B. XfVatt. 1907 VVilliam H. Dittoe, Harry R. Drackctt, Paul M. Souder. 1908 Fred M. Secrest. Henry W. Vaughn, Wfilbur M. Marriott, James M. McGhee. 107 Phi 'Delta Theta Actifve Chapters of the 'Phi Delta Theta McGill University, Corby College, Dartmouth College, University of Vermont, Williams College, Amherst College, Brown University, Cornell University, Union University, Columbia University, Syracuse University, Lafayette College, Pennsylvania College, Washington and jefferson College, Allegheny College, Dickinson College, University of Pennsylvania, Lehigh University, University of Virginia, Randolph-Macon College, Washington and Lee University, University of North Carolina, Central University, Kentucky State College, Vanderbilt University, University of the South, University of Georgia, Emory College, Mercer University, Georgia School of Teclinology, University of Alabama, Alabama Polytechnic Institute, Miami University, Ohio Vtfesleyan University, Pennsylvania State, Ohio University. Ohio State University. Case School of Anolied Science University of Cincinnati. University of Michigan. Indiana University. Wabash College. Butler College. Franklin College. Hanover College. DePauw University. Purdue University. Northwestern University. University of Chicago. . Knox College. Lombard College. , University of Illinois. University of VVisconsin. University of Minnesota. . Iowa VVesleyan University. University of Iowa. University of Missouri. Westminster College. VVashington University. University of Kansas. University of Nebraska. University of Colorado. University of Mississippi, Tulane University. University of Texas. Southwestern University. University of California. Stanford University. University of W ashington. Alumni Clubs of Phi Delta Theta Boston, Mass. Harvard University. Providence, R. I. Syracuse, N. Y. Baltimore, Md. Philadelphia, Pa. Richmond, Va. Nashville, Tenn. Atlanta, Ga. Montgomery, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. New Orleans, La. Akron, O. Columbus, O. Toledo, O. Detroit, Mich. Indianapolis, Ind. Chicago, lll. Q Bloomington, Ill. La Crosse. Wis. Melnasha, Wis. St. Paul, Minn. St. Louis, Mo. Denver, Col. Austin, Tex. Portland, Ore. Seattle, VVash. Salt Lake City, Utah Oklahoma City, O. T New York, N. Y, Schenectady, N. Y. Pittsburg, Pa. VVashington, D. C. Louisville, Ky. Columbus, Ga. Macon, Ga. Selma, Ala. Mobile, Ala. Cincinnati, O. Cleveland, O. Athens, O. Hamilton, O. Franklin, lnd. Crawfordsville, Ind. Galesburg, Ill. Peoria, Ill Milwaukee, Wis. Minneapolis, Minn. Kansas City, Mo. Omaha, Neb. Meridian, Miss. San Francisco, Cal. Spokane, W'ash. Los Angeles, Cal. Phi Telfa Theta Colors: Argent and Azure. Flower: XlVl'lltC Caimtion R. D. Bohannon, Perry Fulton Todd, Ernest VV. Figlestahler, NVilliam S. Brown, George F. Schlesinger, George B. Cross, William B, Morris, Leo VViltz Fleming, Ohio Zeta Chapter. Established October 6, 1883. Exatres in Facultate 1905 Alvin Cook Bonnett. 1906 Edwin Raynolds. 1907 Benson F. VVadclell. 1908 Charles W. Bretlaml. 111 VVilliam McPherson. James Pendergast, Frank Huling. Edward G. Gibson, James P. XVood. Lewis H. Shoemaker Clyde C. Schinek. Raymond Grant, Aipha . Beta .... Gamma Delta . Epsilon Zeta .. Eta . . . Theta . Iota .... Lambda Mu Nu . . . Xi ..., Omicron Rho . . . Sigma . . . Phi .... Psi Chi . . Chi Phi Founded at Princeton, 1824 Roll of Chapters .. . . . . . . . . . . . University of Virginia. . . . . Massachuetts Institute Technology . . . . Emory College. . . . . Rutgus College. . . . Hampden-Sidney College. . . . . Franklin and Marshall College. . . . University of Georgia. . . . . Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. . . . . Ghio State University. . . . University of California. . . . Stenvens Institute of Technology . . . University of Texas, . , . Cornell University. Sheffield Scientific School. Yale University. . . . Lafayette College. . . . Wofford College. . . . Amherst College. . . . Lehigh University, . . . Dartmouth College. 113 Charles P. Guthwaite, F. Ewing Martin, Frank E. Layman, Charles L Schnuerer, Chi Phi Colors: Scarlet and Blue. Iota Chapter. Established November IO, Frater in Facultate J. A. Bownoeker. Fourth Year Third Year Carl G. Holmes. Second Year Morgan C. Milne. 115 1883. Frank Delay, Louis Boyer XVilliams Edward Byrne. Dwight Howard, 1838 1841 1841 1842 1842 1845 1845 1845 1845 1847 1850 1850 1853 1353 1860 1861 1866 1867 1868 1868 1869 1872 1872 1873 1873 1874 1874 1375 1875 1876 1878 1879 1879 1879 1879 1880 1881 1881 1882 1884 1885 Alpha ..... Beta ........ Beta Kappa . . Gamma ...... Epsilon .... Delta .... Pi Lambda . Tau ..,, Kappa .. Zeta ....... Omicrou .. Theta . . . Iota .... Chi ....... Psi ......... Alpha Beta .. Alpha Gamma Alpha Delta . Alpha Epsilon Alpha Eta . . . Alpha Lambda Alpha Nu . .. Alpha Pi .... Rho ......... Alpha Sigma . Beta Delta . . . Sigma ...... Beta Zeta .... Upsilon . . . Alpha Chi . .. Beta Alpha .. Omega ...... Beta Gamma . Beta Eta .... Beta Theta . . . Nu ......... Alpha Alpha . Beta Iota .... Beta Lambda . Theta Delta . . 'Beta Theta Pi I Founded at Miami Unifverslfy, 1839 Active Chapters Miami University. VVestern Reserve. Ol1io University. NVashington and Jefferson. Center College. DePauw University. Indiana University. University of Michigan, Wabash College. Brow11 U11iversity. Hampden Sidney College. University of Virginia. Ohio Wesleyan University. Hanover College. Beloit College. Bethany College. Iowa State University. Wittenberg College. Wfestminster College. Iowa Wesleyan University. Denison University. University of Wooster. University of Kansas. University of WVisconsin. Northwestern University. Dickinson College. Cornell University. Stevens Institute of Techno St. Lawrence University. Boston University, Johns Hopkins University. Kenyon Collee. University of California. Rutgers College. Mai11e State College. Colgate University. Union College. Columbia College. Amherst College. Vanderbilt University, Ohio State University. logy 1 886 Beta Omicron University of Texas. 1888 Alpha Epsilon Pennsylvania State College. 1888 Alpha Pi ...... . . . Knox College. 1888 Alpha Zeta . . . . . . University of Denver. 1888 Alpha Tau .... . . . University of Nebraska. 1889 Alpha Omega Dartmouth College. 1889 Beta Epsilon .... . . . Syracuse University. 1889 Phi Alpha ..... . .. Davidson College. 1889 Eta Beta .... University of North Carolina 1890 Beta Pi ....... . . . University of Minnesota. 1890 Mu Epsilon . . . . . . XVesleyan University. 1890 Beta Nu ..... University of Cincinnati. 1890 Zeta Psi University of Missouri. 1891 Beta Chi .... Lehigh University. 1891 Phi Chi ....... . . . Y ale University. 1893 Lambda Rho ..... .. . Chicago University, 1894 Lambda Sigma Leland Stanford University. 1896 Phi ............ . . . University of Pennsylvania. 1900 Beta Sigma .. llowdoin College. 1900 Beta Psi .... University of West Virginia. IQOO Beta Tau .... University of Colorado. 1901 Alpha Iota . . . Washington University. 1901 Beta Omega .... . .. Washington State University 1903 Beta Mu ....... . . .. . Purdue University. 1905 Lambda Kappa Case School of Applied Science Alumni Chapters Aiken, S. C., Akron, O., Asheville, N. C.g Athens, O., Austin, Tex.g Balti- more, Md., Boston, Mass., Buffalo, N. Y., Cambridge, Mass.: Charleston W. Va., Chicago, Ill., Cincinnati, O.3 Cleveland, O.: Columbus, O.g Dallas, Tex. Dayton, O., Denver, Col., Des Moines, Ia., Detroit, Mich., Galesburg, Ill., Haml ilton, O., Hartford, Conn., Indianapolis, Ind., Kansas City, Mo., Los Angeles Cal., Louisville, Ky., Memphis, Tenn., Miami County, O.g Milwaukee, Wis. Minneapolis, Minn.g Nashville, Tenn.g New Haven, Conn.g New York, N. Y. On1aha, Neb.g Philadelphia, Pa., Pittsburg, Pa.g Portland, Me., Providence R. I., Richmond, Va. 3 St. Louis, Mo., San Antonio, Tex., San Francisco, Cal. Schenectady, N. Y., Seattle, Wasl1.g Sioux City, Ia.3 Springfield, O.3 Syracuse N. Y., Terre Haute, Ind.g Toledo, O.g Waco, Tex.g Washington, D. C., Wheel- ing, W. Va.g Zanesville, O. 117 3 J 2 I NV. T. Magruder, A. D. Cole, George E. Hagenbuch, George I-I. Booth, Frank Hagenbuch, Heber H. Stephenson, Joseph T. Crane, Evan I. Herbert, John E. Marshall, Charles I. Kurtz, Curtis Sohl William R. Work, Stanley J. Crew, Reuben S. Iapp, Beta 'Theta Pi Colors: Pink and Blue. Chapter Rose: Catherine Mermet. Theta Delta Chapter. Established December 16, 1885. Fratres in Facultate W. L. Graves, W. H. Siebert. 1905 J. Bently Small, Louis G. Robinson. 1906 Frederick D. lrValthour Vance E. Taylor, Herman F. Loechler, . Paul C. Pocoek. 1907 Paul F. Chamberlain, Frank Henry Vogel. 1908 Roy A. Hauer, Gregory Rogers. Fratres in Collegio L. A. Grigsby, john C. Fouts, Clarence C. Vogt, John M. Knote. 119 Phi ........ Beta Epsilon Psi ........ .sn Beta Tau . . . Beta Alpha Beta Iota .. Gamma Rho Lambda .... Beta Gamma . Beta Nu .... Beta Delta .. Xi Kappa . . . Delta . . . Iota .... Mu ........ Eta .......... Beta Lambda Upsilon .- ...... Epsilon .... Chi ........ Beta Zeta . . . Theta ..... Sigma . . . Omega . . Pi Baa' iii' Beta Eta .... Beta Mu ...... Beta Omicroi 'l Kappa Kappa Gamma Founded October 13, 1870 Active Chapters Alpha Profvince Boston University. .. . Barnard College. . . . Cornell University. . . . Syracuse University. . . . University of Pennsylvania. . . . . . . . . . . . Swathmore College. . . . . . . . . . . . . Allegheny College. Bela .Profvince Buehtel College. . . . . . . . . . . . Wfooster University. .. . Ohio State University. . .. University of Michigan. .. . . . . . . . . .. Adrian College. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Hillsdale College. Gamma Profvince . . . . . . . . . . . . . Indiana State University. DePauw University. . . . Butler College. . . . University of Wfisconsin. . . . University of Illinois. . . . . . . . . . . . Northwestern University. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . lllinois XVesleyan University. Della Frofvince . ............ University of Minnesota. Iowa State University. Missouri State University. . . . Nebraska State University. . .. Kansas State University. University of California. . . . University of Texas. . . . Leland Stanford Ir. University. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. University of Colorado. Tulane University. Alumnae Associations Bostong Canton, N. Y. 3 New Yorkg Philaclelphiag Columbus 3 Bloomington Gwen Castle 3 Denver 5 Minneapolisg Kansas Cityg Merchantville, N. 1.5 Syracuse Pittsburghg Clevelandg Akrong Adriang Woosterg Detroitg Indianapolisg Chi cagog Madison: St. Louisg Lincolng Lawrenceg San Francisco. 121 Kappa Kappa Gamma Colors: Light and Dark Blue. Beta Nu Chapter. Established October 12, 1888. ' Posz' Craduafe Edna Stuart Pratt. Fourth Year Ethyl Bertha Woodbury, Clara Marie Follett. Third Year Ethel Eugenia Bowman, Florence C. Covert, Ruth Potter Hopwoocl. Second Year Ruth Sherman, Hortense Brown. First Year Lillian Elma Pope, Imogene H. McClees, Elizabeth O'Kane Mary D. McPherson, Maybelle Agnes Bradley. Special Nell Malloy. 123 Sgyma Nu Colors: Black, VVhite and Old Gold. Fraternity Flower: Wfhite Rose. First Difvision Pi, Lehigh University ....................... Beta Sigma, University of Vermont ........... Gamma Delta, Stevens Institute of Technology. Gamma Epsilon, Lafayette College ............ Gamma Theta, Cornell University ............. Second Difuision Beta University of Virginia .................. Lambda, VVashington and Lee University .... Omicron, Bethel College ................. Sigma, Vanderbilt University .......... Psi, University of North Carolina ......... Gamma Iota, State College of Kentucky ....... Third Difvision Mu, University of Georgia .................. Theta, University of Alabama .......... Iota, Howard College ................... Kappa, N. Georgia Agricultural College .... Eta, Mercer University ................... Xi, Emery College .......................... Beta Theta, Alabama Polytechnic Institution... Gamma Alpha, Georgia School of Technology. . Fourth Dzfvision Epsilon, Bethany College .................... Beta Beta, DePauw University .... Beta Nu, Ohio State University ..... Beta Zeta, Purdue University ...... Beta Eta, University of Indiana ........... Beta Iota, Mt. Union College .............. Beta Upsilon, Rose Polytechnic Institution .... 124 Bethlehem, Pa. Burlington, Vt, Hoboken, N. J. Easton, Pa. Ithaca, N. Y. Virginia. Lexington, Va. Russellville, Ky. Nashville, Tenn. Chapel Hill, N. C Lexington, Ky. Athens, Ga. Tuscaloosa, Ala. East Lake, Ala. Dahlonega, Ga. Macon, Ga, Oxford, Ga. Auburn, Ala. Atlanta, Ga. Bethany, W. Va. Greencastle, Ind. Columbus, O. Lafayette, Ind. Bloomington, Ind Alliance, O. Terre Haute, Ind. Fifth Difvision Delta Theta, Lombard University .............. Gamma Gamma, Albion College ......... Gamma Beta, Northwestern University ..... Gamma Lambda, University of lfVisconsin .... Gamma Mu, University of Illinois ......... Gamma Nu, University of Michigan .......... Beta Mu, University of Iowa. . Nu, Kansas State University. . Rho, Missouri State University .........-.-..- Slzih Division .te-venflz Difvision --........-..... Beta Xi, WVilliam Jewell College .... Gamma XI, State School of Mines ............. Upsilon, University of Texas. . Eighih Difvision Phi, Louisiana State University. ............ . Beta Phi, Tulane University.. Ninth Division Gamma Eta, State School of Mines ............ Gamma Kappa, University of Colorado ......... Tenth Division Gamma Chi, University of Wasliiiigton ......... Gamma Zeta, University of Oregon ..... ........... Beta Chi, Leland Stanford, jr., Elefvenfh Difvision University .......... Beta Psi, University of California .................. Galesburg, Ill. Albion, Mich. Evanston, Ill. Madison, Wis. Champaign, Ill. Ann Arbor, Mich Iowa City. Lawrence, Kan. Columbus, Mo. Liberty, Mo. Rolla, Mo. Austin, Tex. Baton Rouge, La New Orleans, La. Golden, Col. Boulder, Col. Seattle, Wash. Eugene, Ore. Stanford, Cal. Berkeley, Cal. Alumni Chapters Birmington, Ala.g San Francisco, Cal., Atlanta, Ga., Chicago, Ill., Indian apolis, Ind., Louisville, Ky., Shelbyville, Ky.3 Boston, Mass., Kansas City Mo New York City, Charlotte, N. C.: Columbus, O., Cleveland, O., Dallas, Teac 125 2 .'f-eff! Pj f fi Q. -I? 5 wk ffsy . 'An , :51 1 27 1 nf-AF. ,xv , N 5-iiff' D. H. Udall, Adolph O. Theobahl, Robert C. Schroth, Ir., E. R. Kryder, L. F. Castoe, Murray Hoffman, L. D. Mathews, Sigma Na Beta Nu Chapter. May, 18941. Fratres in Facalfafe C. E. Sherman. 1905 Harry S. Pettitt. I 906 I 907 William M. Matthews. 1908 li, D. Roebuck. 127 H. H. York, Ralph F. Rarey, james S. Arter, D. E. Wertz. C. F. Meese, Henry Miller, Albert E. Lincls ey Kappa Alpha Theta Active Chapters - Alpha District Iota, Cornell University .................... Lambda, University of Ve1'mont .... .. . Chi, Syracuse University ................. Alpha Beta, Swarthmore College ............ 'J Alpha Delta, NVoman's College of Laltimore .... . . . Alpha Epsilon, Brown University ............ .. . Alpha Zeta, Barnard College ................. .. . Bela District Alpha, DePauw University .................. . . . Beta, Indiana State University .... .. Epsilon, Wooster University .... .. . Eta, University of Michigan .... Mu, Allegheny College .............. . . . Pi, Albion College .................... Alpha Gamma, Ohio State University .... Alpha Eta, Vanderbilt University ............. .. . Delta District Delta, University of Illinois ................. Kappa, University of Kansas .... .. Rho, University of Nebraska .... .. . Tau, Northwestern University ..... . . . Upsilon, University of Minnesota. . . . . . Psi, University of Wisconsin .................. . . . Gamma Distric! Phi, Stanford University ..................... . Omega, University of California .................. . I Alumnae Chapters Ithaca, N. Y. Burlington, Vt. Syracuse, N. Y. Swarthmore, Pa. Baltimore, Md. Providence, R. I. New York. Greencastle, Ind. Bloomington, Ind. Wooster, Ohio. Ann Arbor, Mich. Meadville, Pa. Albion, Mich. Columbus, Ohio. Nashville, Tenn. Champaign, Ill. Lawrence, Kas, Lincoln, Neb. Evanston, Ill. Minneapolis, Minn. Madison, Wis. Stanford University, Cal. Berkeley, ,Cal. Gamma Alumnae, New York City: Eta Alumnae, Burlington, Va., Alpha Alumnae, Greencastle, lncl.g Epsilon Alumnae, Columbus, O.g Zeta Alumnae, Indianapolis, Ind., Mu Alumnze, Cleveland, O.g Kappa Alumnae, Pittsburg, Pa.: Lambda Alumnae, Athens, O.g Nu Alumnae, Wooster, O., Beta Alumnae, Minne- apolis, Minn., Delta Alumnze, Chicago, Ill., Xi Alumnae, Kansas City, Mo., Iota Alumnze, Los Angeles, Cal. 129 , . ,-..,,, ,, H-, ---. ,, 5 , I . Kappa Gamma i Theta Colors: Black and Gold. Flower: Black and Gold Pansy Alpha Gamma Chapter. Established May 24, 1892. Catherine Andrews. 1905 Grace Dann. 1906 Alice Thacker, Alice Marsh, 1907 Edith jackson, Helen B. Hunt. 1903 Hortense Baker, Eugenie Rounsavell, 13l Margaret Mauk, Mignon Poste. Frances Paterson Susan Siebert, Ruth Davis. aqlpha :Tau Omega Alabama Alpha Epsilon .... Alabama Beta Beta ...... Alabama Beta Delta ..... Georgia Alpha Beta ..... Georgia Alpha Theta .... Georgia Beta Zeta .... Georgia Beta Iota ..... Florida Alpha Omega .... California Gamma Iota ..... Colorado Gamma Lambda. .. Louisiana Beta Epsilon. .... Texas Gamma Eta ....... Illinois Gamma Chi .... Illinois Gamma Zeta ..... Indiana Gamma Gamma .... Indiana Gamma Omicron. . . . Michigan Alpha Mu ...... Michigan Beta Kappa .... Michigan Beta Lambda .... Michigan Beta Omicron .... Nebraska Gamma Theta .... Kansas Gamma Mu ........ Minnesota Gamma Mu ..... . . Maine Beta Upsilon ........ Maine Gamma Alpha ....... Massachusetts Gamma Beta Rhode Island Gamma Delta .... Vermont Beta Zeta ......... Chapters First Profvince ' . . . . . . . . . . . . Alabama Polytechnic Institute . . . Southern University. .. . University of Alabama. . . . University of Georgia. . . . Emory College. . . . Mercer University. . . ........ School of Technology. . . . . . . . . . . . . University of Florida. Second Profvince . . . . . . . . . . . . University of California. . . . University of Colorado. . . . . . . . . . . . . Tulane University. . . . . . . . . . . . . University of Texas. Third Profvince .. . . . . . . . . .. University of Chicago. University of Illinois. Rose Polytechnic Institute. .. . Purdue University. .. . Adrian College. . . . Hillsdale College. . . . University of Michigan. Albion College. . . . University of Nebraska. . . . . . . University of Kansas. . . . . . . . . . . . . University of Minnesota. Fourth Province .. . . . . . . . . .. University of Maine. . . . Colby College. . . . Tufts College. . . . . . . . Brown Universityf . . . . . . . . University of Vermont. 182 New York Alpha Omieron. . New York Lambda ........ New York Beta Theta .... Pennsylvania Alpha Pi .... Pennsylvania . -lpha Iota. . . Pennsylvania Alpha Upsilon .... .. Pennsylvania Tau ......... Pennsylvania Alpha Rho. .. North Carolina Alpha Delta North Carolina Xi ......... South Carolina Beta Xi .... Virginia Delta .......... Ohio Alpha Mu .... Ohio Alpha Psi .... Ohio Beta Eta .... Ohio Beta Mu ...... Ohio Beta Omega ..... Fifth Frofuince St. Lawrence University. Columbia University. Cornell University. Vlfashington and Jefferson College Muhlenberg College. Pennsylvania College. University of Pennsylvania. Lehigh University. Sixth Profvince University of North Carolina Trinity College. College of Charlestown. University of Virginia. Sefvenfh Profvince Union College. lhfittenberg College. XVesleyan University. Wfooster University. Ohio State University. Ohio Gamma Kappa .... .............. X Vestern Reserve University. Eighth Province Tennessee Alpha Tau .... ............. S . XV. Pres. University. Tennessee Beta Pi. . . .. Vanderbilt University. Tennessee Beta Tau .... . . S. NV. Baptist University. Tennessee Omega . . . ..... .... . . University of the South. Tennessee Psi ..... ............... . .. University of Tennessee. Alumni Associations Allentownf Pa.: Birmingham, Ala.: Boston, Mass.: Chicago, Ill.g Cleveland. O.g Dallas, Tex.: Dayton, O.: District of Columbia. VVashington, D. C.g Georgia. Ga.: Louisville, Ky.g New York, N. Y.: Pittsburg. Pa.g Tennessee, Jackson, Tenn.: Texas, Dallas, Tex.: Manila. Philippine Islands: University Club, Ann Arbor, Mich.g Atlanta, Georgia: California, San Francisco, Cal.: Colorado, Den- ver, Colorado. A lf-33 .Alpha Tau Omega. Colors: Olrl Golcl angl Sky Blue. bl. H. Vosskueliler. Servitus W. Ogan, G. C. Oblinger, Jr.. J. Albert Jacobi, Carlos L. McMasters, J. Tom Hollman. Edwin A. Stevenson. William Ohio Beta Omega Chapter. Established 1892. Fratres in Facultafe G. W. Rightniire. 1905 Harry L. Hope. S. Byron Willialuis. Jr. Iolin A. Smith. XfVCnclell VI. Cltafbn. 1906 Frederick VV. Greeter 1907 ' Brant M. Duncan, Stanley G. Zcmer. 1908 Robert S. Van Atta, Harry G. Allen T. Mapel. Robert F. McAlister. 135 Sigma Alpha Epsilon Actifve Members Prowin ce Alpha University of Maine, Boston University. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard University. Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Profvince Beta Cornell University, Dickinson College. Columbia University, Pennsylvania State College. St. Stephens College, Bucknell University. Allegheny College, Gettysburg College, University of Pennsylvania, ' Pro-vince Gamma University of Virginia, Davidson College. Wlasliington and Lee University, VVofford College. University of North Carolina, George Washington University Profvince Delia University of Michigan, Purdue University. Adrian College, Northwestern University. Mt. Union College. University of Illinois. Qhio Wleselyan University, University of Chicago. University of Cincinnati, University of Minnesota. Franklin College, University of VVisconsin. Case School of Applied Science. . Profvince Epsilon University of Georgia, Georgia School of Technology Mercer University, Southern University. Emory College, University of Alabama. Alabama Polytechnic Institute. Profvince Zeia University of Missouri, University of Nebraska. Wasliiiigtoii University, University of Arkansas. University of Kansas, University of Iowa. 136 ' Profvince Eta University of Coloraclo, Denver University, University of California, Colorado School of Mines. Leland Stanford jr. University. Prafvince Theta Louisiana State University, Tulane University, University of Mississippi. University of Texas. Pro-'vince Iota Central University, Bethel College, Kentucky State College, Southwestern Presbyterian University, Cumberland University, Vanderbilt University. University of Tennessee. University of the South. Southwestern Baptist University. Alumni Associations Adrian, Mich.: Alliance, O. : Americus, Ga., Atlanta, Ga.: Augusta, Ga., Bir- niinghain, Ala., Boston, Mass., Chattanooga, Tenn., Chicago, Ill.: Cincinnati, O., Cleveland, O., Dayton, O., Denver, Colo.: Detroit, Mich.: Florence, Ala., Indianapolis, Incl., Jackson, Miss., Kansas City, Mo., Knoxville, Tenn.: Little Rock, Ark., Los Angeles, Cal., Macon, Ga., Madison, XVis., Memphis, Tenn., New Orleans, La., New York City, Philadelphia, Pa., Pittsburg, Pa., San Fran- cisco, Cal., Savannah, Ga., St. Louisl Mo., Talladega, Ala.: VVashington, D. C.: Vlfashington, Ga.: VVilmington, N. C., Wiorcester, Mass. Dan jones, W. Philip Van Ness. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Frater in Facultafe Karl William E. Evans, jr.. Isaac S. Cook, jr., Clarence M. Foss, Robert E. Heekin, Louis I. Hegelbeinier, Henry I. Fisher, james P. Hudson, VValter H. Mytinger, Fred A. Caskey, Mark E. Denny, George L. Reagle, D. Swartzel 1905 b Herbert M. Kline. Russell I. Hare. I 906 james F. Lincoln, Fred C. McCleary, joseph E. Kenley, Herbert S. VVarwick I 907 john G. Belknap, .Harry T. Belknap, Glen G. McElroy. I 908 Donald R. Acklin, Frank C. Maurer, NVilliam H. Artz, Peter P. liloli. .139 Alpha . . . Beta .... Gamma . . . Delta . . . Epsilon . . . Zeta .... Eta . . . Theta . . . Iota . . . Kappa . . . Lambda Mu ..... Nu Xi ........ Omicron . . . Pi ...... Rho . . Sigma . . . Tau ..... Upsilon . . . Phi ..... Chi .......... Psi ............ Epsilon Epsilon Theta Na Epsilon Founded at Wesleyan Uniiersily. 1870 Chartered Chapters . W'esleyan University. .......- -ff . . . Syracuse University. . . . Union College. .. . Cornell University. . . . Rochester University. . . . University of California. . . . Colgate University, . . . Kenyon College. .. . Aclelbert College. . . . Hamilton College. . . . Rensellaer Polytechnic Institute. . . . Stevens Institute of Technology. . . . Lafayette College. . . . Amherst College. . . . Allegheny College. Pennsylvania State College. . . . University of Pennsylvania. . . . . 7 Y .. Universlty of the City of New . . . Wooster University. . . . University of Michigan. . . . Rutgers College. . . . Dartmouth College. . . . Ohio State University. . . . Case School of Applied Science. '1-11 OT ESUQIDHHSHHQG1 fum US?Q ll Q N0 EQ OOTHSUQMLQS Z-HHH Ztw8u5x-. D 3 !i8zt. Z3C?Q1Qi5IN5 O2-Qb. Alvin C. Bonnet... . . Edward G. Byrne .... Wendell W. Chafiin.. . Frederick W. Greter ..... Frank Huling ....... Fred C. Jeannot ..... Gates C. Obliuger ..... Charles PL Outhwaitc. . . . James Prendergast. . . Edvsfin W. Reynolds. .. Theta Nu Epsilon Colors: Green and Black. Psi Chapter. Established 1893. A Active Members 'l2xo. Honorary Members 143 Ozyu. l' lQja gf. K4 i2 H Lo. j8zOta 1711. .. .Phi Delta Theta ..........Chi Phi Alpha Tau Omega Alpha Tau Omega . .Phi Delta Theta .. . . . . .Sigma Chi Alpha Tau Omega ,..........Chi Phi . .Phi Delta Theta . . . .Phi Delta Theta Phi Delta Phi Founded at Unifversify of Michigan Chapter' Roll Kent, Law Department, University of Michigan ......... Benjamin, College of Law, Illinois Wesleyan University.. Booth, Northwestern University Law School ............. Story, School of.Law, Columbia University .....,........ Cooley, St. Louis Law School, Washington University ..... Pomeroy, Hastings College of Law, University of California Marshall, Law School of Columbian University ........... Jay. Albany Law School, Union University ...... Webster, Boston University School of Law ........ Hamilton, Law Department, Cincinnati University ..... Gibson, Department of Law, University of Pennsylvania. . . Choate, Harvard University Law School .............. Waite, Yale University Law School ............... Field, Department of Law, New York University .... Conkling, School of Law, Cornell University .......... Tiecleman, Law Department, University of Missouri. .. Minor, Law Department, University of Virginia .' ...... Dillon, Department of Law, University of Minnesota. . . Daniels, Buffalo University Law School ............ Chase, School ot Law, University of Oregon ....... Harlan, College of Law, University of VVisconsin .... Swan, Law Department, Ohio State University ....... McClain, Law Department, State University of Iowa. . . Lincoln, College of Law, University of Nebraska ...... Osgoode, Law School of Upper Canada ................. Fuller, Chicago-Kent College of Law, Lake Forest Univer'y Miller, Law Department, Leland Stanford Jr. University. . . Green, School of Law, University of Kansas ............ Comstock, College of Law, Syracuse University .... ..... Dwight, New York Law School ................ . . . Foster, School of Law, indiana University ......... . . Ranney, Western Reserve University Law School .... . . . Langdell, College of Law, University of Illinois .... .. Brewer, School of Law, University of Denver .... . . . Douglas. Law School, University of Chicago. . . . . . 145 ..- ... Ann Arbor, Mich. Bloomington, Ill. Chicago, Ill. New York City. St. Louis, Mo. San Francisco, Cal Washington, D. C. Albany, N. Y. Boston, Mass. Cincinnati, Ohio. Philadelphia. Cambridge, Mass. New Haven, Conn New York City. ithaca, N. Y. Columbia, Mo. Charlottesville, Va. Minneapolis. Buffalo. N. Y. Portland, Oregon. Madison, Wis. Columbus, Ohio. Iowa City. Lincoln, Neb. Toronto, Ont. Chicago, Ill. Palo Alto, Cal. Lawrence, Kansas. Syracuse, N. Y. New York City. Bloomington, Ind. Cleveland, Ohio. Champaign, Ill. Denver, Col. Chicago, Ill. Phi Delta Phi Colors: Garnet and Blue. Swan Chapter. Established April 28, 1893. Fratres in Facultate Judge john A. Shauclc, Edgar ll. Kinkead, E. O. Randall George XV. Knight. lfVillian1 Herbert Page. Third Year A. C. Bonnet, George E. Hagenbuch, George P. Hahn. Servetus W. Ogan, Clarence D. 'Laylin, Chas. R. Reed, Robert E. Heekin, Stanley Crew. Branton M. Duncan, F. E. Martin, Daniel C. jones, Gates C. Oblinger, Jr., james P. VVood. Second Year Geo. H. Booth, Frank I-Iuling, Sherman ll. Randall, First Year L. J. Hegelheimer. 147 Ralph F. Rarey Pi Beta Phi Founded al Monmouth College, Monmouth. a4cti've Chapters Alpha Profvince Vermont Alpha, Middleburg College .... Vermont Beta, University of Vermont. . . Columbia Alpha, Columbia University ..... Pennsylvania Alpha, Swarthmore College. . . I-'ennsylvania Beta. Bucknell University... Pennsylvania Gamma, Dickinson College... Ohio Alpha, University of Ohio .......... Ohio Beta, Ohio State University ....... New York Alpha, Syracuse University. . .. New York Beta, Bernard College ......... Massachusetts Alpha, Boston University. . . . Maryland Alpha, XVoman's College ....... BefaP ro-'vince Illinois Beta. Lombard University ....... Illinois Delta, Knox College ............. Illinois Epsilon, Northwestern University... Illinois Zeta, Illinois State University .... Indiana Alpha. Franklin College ....... Indiana Beta, University of Indiana .......... Indiana Gamma, University of Indianapolis .... Michigan Alpha, Hillsdale College ......... Michigan Beta, University of Michigan. .. Gamma Pro-vince Iowa Alpha, Iowa VVesleyan University .... Iowa Beta, Simpson College ............. Iowa Zeta, University of Iowa ............ Wisconsin Alpha, University of VVisconsin .... Missouri Alpha, University of Missouri .... 148 Ill., April 28 1867 Middleburg. Burlington. VVashington, Swarthmore. Bucknell. Carlisle. Athens. Columbus. Syracuse. New York. Boston. Baltimore. Galesburg. Galesburg. Evanston. Champaign. Franklin. J Indianapolis. Hillsdale. Ann Arbor. Mt. Pleasant. Inclianola. Iowa City. Madison. Columbia. Bloomington. D Delta Province Louisiana Alpha, Tulane University ........... Kansas Alpha, University of Kansas .... Nebraska Beta, University of Nebraska .... Colorado Alpha, University of Colorado .... Colorado lleta, Denver University ........ California Beta, University of California .... Texas Alpha, University of Texas ........ Alumnae Chapters New Orleans Lawrence. I incoln. Boulder. Denver. Berkeley. Austin. Washington, D. C.: Detroit, Mich.: Ashland, VVis.: Kansas City Wo J Franklin, Ind.: Los Angeles, Cal.: Chicago, III.: 1-'hilaclelphia, Penn.: Laltunore Md.: Indianola, Iowa: Syracuse, N. Y.: Lincoln, Neb.: Des' Moines, Iona Boston, Mass.: Topeka, Kansas: Columbus, Ohio: Mt. Pleasant, Iowa: Lau renee Kansas. F' lx ., A ! X .4 h- 'J 149 . . , F f Q???v?e?5? Pi cBeta Ph: Colors: VVine and Silver Blue. i Flower: NrVhite Carnation Ohio lleta Chapter. Established April 5. 1894. Post Graduate Gertrude Jackson. 1905 Lflara Postle. Fannie Mitzenberg, Marion Nichols. Katherine Potter, 1906 Katherine Bancroft, Martha jones, Helen Robinson. Laura Deatrick, 1907 Vera McAlpine, Eva Barnhill, Mary Jennings. 1908 Grace Bradford, Margaret Wilsoii, Margaret Wilcox Elizabeth Bancroft, Mae Scott. . 151 Lambda . . Pi ......... Phi ......... Beta Epislon Beta Theta .. Beta Iota .. Beta Xi ..... Gamma Eta . . . Gamma Iota . . . Omicron ..... Beta Gamma Beta Eta ..... Beta Kappa . .. Beta Pi .... Beta Rho .. Beta Tau .... Beta Epsilon Beta Omega . . . Gamma Alpha Gamma Beta Gamma Theta Beta .. Delta . . . Epsilon . . . Zeta .... Kappa .... Mu ..... Chi ........ Beta Alpha . . . Beta Beta . . Telta Tau Delta Actifve Chapters Southern Difvision .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vanderbilt University. .. University of Mississippi. . . XVashington and Lee University. . . Emory College. .. University of the South. .. University of Virginia. .. Tulane University. . . Columbian University. .. . . . . . . . . . .. University of Texas. Western Difvision . . . . . . . . . . . . . University of Iowa. .. University of Wisconsin. .. University of Minnesota. .. University of Colorado. . . Northwestern University. .. Leland Stanford Ir. University. . . University of Nebraska. . . University of Illinois. . . University of California. .. University of Chicago. . . Armour Institute of Technology ... . . . . . . . . . . Baker University. No rthern Difvision . .. ........... Ohio University. . . University of Michigan. .. Albion College. . . Adelbert College. . . Hillsdale College. .. Ohio VVesleyan University. . . Kenyon College. . . Indiana University. . . . . . . . DePauw University. 152 A Beta Zeta . . . Beta Phi .... Beta Psi ..... Gamma Delta . . Alpha . . . Gamma . . . Rho ...,. Upsilon ..... Omega ....... Beta Lambda . . Beta Mu ..... Beta Nu ...... Beta Chi ...... Gamma Gamma Gamma Epsilon Gamma Zeta beta Omicron . . . .. . llutler College. Ohio State University. . . . Wfabash College. Wfest Virginia University. Eastern Difvision . . . . . . . . . . . . . Allegheny College. . . . Washington and jefferson College . . . Stevens Institute of Technology. .. . Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. . . . University of l'ennsylvania. . . . Lehigh University. . . . Tufts College. . . . Massachusetts lnst. of Tcclmology . . . Cornell University. . . . Brown University. . . Dartmouth College. . . . Columbia LllllVCI'Sltj'. . . . Wesleyan University. ' Alumni Chapters Chicago, Philadelphia, Minneapolis, Atlanta, New York, Milwaukee, Cleve- land, Toledo, Cincinnati, Indianapolis, Pittsburg, St. Louis, Boston, Omaha. Association, Far East, San Francisco. 153 Frank R. Guilford. Aubrey H. Mellingcr. VV111. A. Nye, I. Stockton Raymond, Norval H. Cobb, David D. Crumrine, Qllie Gibsen, Lyman R. Haller, Charles P. Cooper, Delta Tau Delta Colors: Purple, White and Gold. Beta Phi Chapter. Established IS94. Geo. R. 1905 Robert G. Paterson, Harold K. Shawan, William H. Tipton, Niels M. Petersen, 1906 Schoedinger, I 907 Jr. Jay G. Keiser Donald P. Johnston, Hartley H. Kinney, james M. Rothwell, VVni. P. Earle, Jr. Albert Piper, 1908 Geo. T. Peer, Stephen Sheldon, Wm. bl. McGraw. XVIII. P. Tracy. 155 Psi ......... Alpha Rho .... Beta Kappa . . . Alpha Lambda Beta Alpha .... Gamma Epsilon Gamma Zeta .. Alpha Kappa . . Pi ........... Alpha Delta . . . Alpha Epsilon . Alpha Phi .... Beta Delta .. Beta Iota .. . Beta Pi ....... Alpha Alpha .. Alpha Eta .... Zeta ..... Eta .... Nu ...... Upsilon ..... Beta Beta . . . Delta ......... Eta Prime .... Alpha Mu ..... Beta Upsilon .. Mu .......... Alpha Nu . . . .Alpha Beta . .. Alpha Tau .... Beta Lambda . . Beta ......... Beta Eta .... Theta . . . Kappa . . . Lambda . . . Phi .... Kappa Szyma Founded at Unifversify of Virginia, 1867 Chapter Roll Distric! I ..-...--...... Dislricf II ' ' ' ' 'bigfafi ' liz ' ' 'bkgfiia ' iif Distric! V ...........- .......... l56 University of Maine. Bowdoin College. New Hampshire College. University of Vermont. Brown University. Dartmouth College. New York. Cornell University. Swarthmore College. Pennsylvania State College. University of Pennsylvania. Bucknell University. VVashington and Jefferson College Lehigh University. Dickinson College. - University of Maryland. Columbian University. University of Virginia. Randolph Macon College. VVilliam and Mary College. Hampden Sidney College. Richard College. Dewidson College. Trinity College. University of North Carolina. North Carolina A. and M. College. VV ashington and Lee University. Wofford College. Mercer University. Georgia School of Technology. University of Georgia. University of Alabama. Alabama Polytechnic Institute. Cumberland University. Vanderbilt Universityb University of Tennessee. Southwestern Pres. University. Omega ...... Alpha Theta .. Beta Nu ..... Alpha Upsilon . Gamma ...... Sigma ....... Iota .... Tau . . . Xi Alpha Omega . Beta Gamma .. Beta Sigma .. Beta Chi .... Alpha Psi .... Beta Tau ..... Beta Omicron . Beta Omega . .. Gamma Gamma Alpha Sigma .. Beta Phi ..... Chi ........ Alpha Pi .... Beta Theta Alpha Gamma . Alpha Chi .... Alpha Zeta .... Beta Epsilon .. Beta Mu ..... Beta Rho .... Gamma Beta . . DISTRICT IX Beta Zeta ..... Beta Xi ......, Beta Psi ...... Gamma Alpha . Distric! VI ... .......--.. Dish-ict V11 ..- ... .-. ... ... Distric! V1 II Distric! IX ... University of South. Southwestern Baptist University Kentucky State College. Millsaps College. Louisiana State University. Tulane University. Southwestern University. University of Texas. University of Arkansas. William Jewell College. Missouri State University. Washington University. Missouri School of Mines. University of Nebraska. Baker University. University of Denver. Colorado College. Colorado School of Mines. Ohio State University. Case School of Applied Science. Purdue University. Wabash College. University of Indiana. University of Illionois. Lake Forest University. University of Michigan. University of Wisconsin. University of Minnesota. University of Iowa. University of Chicago. Leland Stanford jr. University. University of California. University of Washington. University of Oregon. Alumni Cbapfefs Boston: Danville, Va.: Waco, Tex.: Washington, D. C.: Norfolk, Va.: At lanta. Ga.: Yazoo City, Miss.: Pittsburg: Philadelphia: New York: New Orleans Chicago: Indianapolis: St. Louis: Pine Bluff, Ark.: Ruston, La.: Memphis Tenn.: Buffalo: San Francisco: Denver: Louisville: Concord. N. C.: Ithaca N. Y.: Fort Smith, Ark.: Los Angeles: Little Rock, Ark.: Lynchburg, Va. 157 Y Kappa Sigma Colors: Red, Wliite, Green. Alpha Sigma Chapter. Established March 22, 1895. Fratres in Facultate Francis L. Landacre. Vernon H. Davis Fourth Year Glenn C. Foster, Hugh J. Means, David T. Laylin Stanley T. Scofield. Walter C. Metz. Third' Year Ralph VV. I-Ioyer, Sherman Randall, Earl G. Swan, Walter A. Florence, Ted V. Ireland, Wilbur W. Lawrence. Robert VV. Laylin, W. Roy Hagerman, Robert C. Reed, Clarence F. Eberly, Luke V. Zartman. Clarence D. Laylin. Second Year Franklin P. VVelling, NVilliam G. Oglesby First Year Neil C. Gates, Major VV. Gates. 159 Delta Delta Delta Founded at Boston University, 1888 Active Chapters Alpha Profvince Alpha . Beta... ....... Eta . . . Omicron . . . . . Sigma . Xi .... Rho ... Tau ... Psi... ...... .. .. Boston University. St. Lawrence University. University of Vermont. Syracuse University. Wesleyan University. VVoman's College of Baltimore Barnard College. Bushnell. University of Pennsylvania. Beta Profvince Gamma Epsilon Zeta . . . Mu .... Nu ...... .... Epsilon chi .... . .Ziff Adrian College. Knox College. University of Cincinnati. University of Wisconsin. Ohio State University. Northwestern University. University of Mississippi. Gamma Profvince Delta .... ............ Theta . . Kappa . .... Lambda Pi l'ln .. oqlliances Simpson College. University of Minnesota. University of Nebraska. Baker University. University of California. University of lowa. Alpha, Boston, Mass.: Beta, Canton, N. Y.: Gamma, Adrian, Mich.: Delta Inclianola, Iowa: Epsilon, Galesburg, Ill.: Zfifil. Cincinnati, Ohio: Eta, Burlington Vt.: Theta. Minneapolis, Minn.: Omicron. Syracuse, N. Y.: Sigma. Middletown Conn. 161 'F gigs, -X- .f . EJ ,S , 3-. LF, 'Ewa -f Mx, fe- . 53: fiiww vi A, ' 5. . 15. iff' , iw 'fr , ,. . aff. QW fi 23:4 ,iq -AF gh' 1 ,aj 3' 351' 34 f :, gf .ur . f Q ff, JN Z5 -55? .3551 f Eff MJ affaf A f 1. 5: -i .gli , ,-s 1 -Q 4231? xv- - , 2, iff? 1.9-' '--vi. fb, . 9. - Na.-' Q Delta Delta Delta Colors: Silver, Gold and Blue. Flower: Pansy Nu Chapter. Established March 30, 1896. 1905 Mabel Rodebaugli, Alice Spitler, Loula Thompson, , Vivien Watt. 1906 Emilie Gorrell, ' Edna Kellerman, Marcella Maclcc. Grace Maerlcer. 1907 Mary llrandon. 1908 Lydia Hanley. .Xiinoc Roof. Pos! Graduates Clara Hudson. Mima lfVcav0r. 162 Morrow . . . Cornell . . . Keclzie .... Granite . . . Morrill . . . Bessey .... Massey ..... Townshend Minnesota Alpha Zeta Founded at Ohio .Slate Unifuer-sity january 10, 1898 Chapter Roll ' -..........v ...- .. .... A 165 Illinois Agricultural College. Cornell University. Michigan Agricultural College. New Hampshire State College. Pennsylvania State College. Nebraska State College. North Carolina Agricult'l College Ohio State University. St. Anthony's Park. x. Alpha Zeta Colors: Mode and Sky Blue. Homer C. Price, john W. Decker, Charles S. Plumb, Established Jan. IO, 1898. Frafres in Facultafe 'William R. Lazenby, Alfred Vivian, VVilliam C. Mills, Vernon H. Davis. 1905 C. Glen Foster, Fred L. XVest, james C. NVhite Thomas L. VVl'ICClC1', VVilliam H. Palmer. Q 1906 Norman E. Shaw, james E. McClintock, William H. Pew, Thomas B. Foster, Leland E. Call, Harry C. Ramsower. ' 1907 Ray C. Doneghuc, joseph H. Gourley, George A. Crabb, John C. McNutt. 1908 Henry W. Vaughan, Ferman E. Bear, 167 WVilliam H. Dilatush, William D. Waite. Cornell .... New York .. Minnesota . . . Michigan . . . Dickinson . . . Northwestern Chicago-Kent Buffalo ..... Osgoocle Hall Syracuse .... Union ........ West Virginia Ohio State ...... New York La WV .-.. Chicago ........ cDelta Chi Founded al Cornell Unifversify Chapter Roll . . . . . . . . . . . . Cornell University. . . . . New York University. . . . . University of Minnesota. University of Michigan. . .. . Dickinson University. . . . . Northwestern University. Chicago-Kent Law School . . . . University of Buiialo. . . . . Osgoode Hall, Canada. . . . . Syracuse University. ' . . . . Union College. . . . . University of lVest Virginii . . .. Ohio State University. .. . . New York Law School. . . . . University of Chicago. Georgetown . .. .... Georgetown University. Pennsylvania .... .... U niversity of Pennsylvania A Alumni Chapters New York City. Chicago .... 169 Telfa Chi Ohio State Chapter. Established May 30, 1902. Colgrgg Garnet and Buff, Flower: White Carnation J. E. D. Hartinger, Asa E. Warel, Frank S. Carpenter, William G. McKitterick. Gilbert L. Fuller, llorace L. Small, 1 905 1906 :liFI'CClllZIll T. Eaglcson, Thomas C. Davis. Joseph E. Kewley, Thomas M. Montgomery, Ross W. Cheek, Albert H. Miller. 1907 George H. Lewis, Sholto M. Douglas, Charl john lil. Harshman, Osmer C. Ingalls 1908 :lil!VltllCll'ZUV11 from college. james K. Kewley. 171 CQ H. jones Delta Upilson Founded at Williams, 1834 Active Chapters Williams College, Union College, Hamilton College, Amherst College, Adelbert College, Colby College, Rochester University, Middlebury College, Bowdoin College, Rutgers College, Brown University, Colgate College, University of New York, Cornell University, Marietta College, Syracuse University, University of Michigan, Northwestern University, l-larvard University, University of lrVisconsin, Lafayette College, Columbia University, Lehigh University, Tufts College, DePauw University, Pennsylvania Universcity University of Minnesota, Massachusetts Institute of Technologv Swarthmore College, Leland Stanford Jr. University University of California, McGill University, ' University of Nebraska, University of Toronto, 'University of Chicago, Ohio State University. Alumni Clubs Delta Upsilon Club, of New York. Chicago Delta Upsilon Club. New England Delta Upsilon Club. Minnesota Alumni Association. Buffalo Delta Upsilon Club. Peninsular Delta Upsilon Club. Omaha Delta Upsilon Club. Colorado Delta Upsilon Club. .Chesapeake Delta Upsilon Club. Duluth-Superior Delta Upsilon Club. Delta Upsilon Club of Philadelphia. Delta Upsilon Club of Maine. Albany District Association of Delta Upsilon. California Delta Upsilon Club. Milwaukee Delta Upsilon Club. Delta Upsilon Club of Harvard Graduate Schools. Pittsburg Alumni Association. Delta Upsilon Alumni Association of Cleveland. 173 w A Delta Upsilon Ohio State Chap ter. Founded, 1904. Colors: Old Gold and Peacock Blue. Fratres in Facultate Vtfilliam A. Kellerman. VVallace S. Elden, Edgar ll. Kinkead, Edgar S. Ingraham, Rudolph Hirsch. John R. Chamberlain Post Graduate Carl P. Leibold, Seniors Stanley F.-Rankin, Clyde lql. Asher. Fred C. Nesbitt, juniors George H. Morse. Howard P. Zeller, llenjamin T. Brooks, ' ' james R. Marker. Wfilliam ll. l'ew. Oscar Kuenzell, Mathew L. lligger. Clifford I. Salt, Trevor l-5. Simon, Harold L. Croy, - T. Haines Folger. Sophomores Harold H. Talbott, Henry E. Surface. Harley Dennis, Edgar C. Hirst. ' 1 Arthur W. Durr. Freshmen Herbert J. Schory, r Eugene C. Waters. 175 Russel I-Hurt, J. Park Calderwood. j. A. Bownocker. .. A. D. Cole .....,. Septimus Sisson . .. Nathaniel Wright Lord, Henry Adam Weber, Rosser David Bohannan, A William Ashbrook Kellerman Edward Orton, jr., William McPherson, David Stuart White, Frank Edwin Sanborn, jolm Wright Decker, Francis Carey Caldwell, john Adams Bownocker, Minnie Ava Nellie Stoner, Albert Henry Heller, George Washington McCoard, james Ellsworth Boyd, Thomas Ewing French, Charles Bradfield Morrey, Francis Leroy Landacre, Alfred Vivian, Karl Dale Swartzel, William Abner Knight, Vernon H. Davis, Edwin F. Coddington, A. V. Bleiminger, Edward Everett Sommermeir, Melvin Dresbach, W'illiam C. Mills, R. F. Earhart, H. C. Price, james Anderson Beer, A. L. Stewart, j. S. Riddle, Glenn S. Burrell, R. H. Rice, C. W. Foulk, john Hoffhine, Sigma Xi . . . . .Vice President Actfbe Members C. S. Mead, Ralph Demorest, F. M. Surface, William Rane Lazenby, lflenjamin Franklin Thomas, Albert Martin Bleile, George Beecher Kauffman, William Thomas Magruder, joseph Nelson Bradford, Herbert Osborn, Frank Arnold Ray. Embury Ashbury Hitchcock, Charles Smith Prosser, Alfred Dodge Cole, Christopher Elias Sherman, Charles Sumner Plumb, William Edward Henderson, Septimus Sisson, john H. Schalfner, james Stewart I-line, Frank Harvey Eno, Clair Albert Dye, Fred A. Fish, Harry Waldo Kuhn, Horace judd, joseph Henry Vosskuehler, S. E. Rasor, Merritt Finley Miller. Louis Bryant Tuckerman, jr Catherine Emily Andrews, C. F. Kettering, Max Morse, john Anderson Wilkinson, Modesto Quiroga, Phillips Thomas, A j. G. Sanders. 176 Phi Beta Kappa Society ,Professor S. C. Derby Professors I. R. Smith W. E. Henderson ..... G. H. McKnight .... S. A. Norton, Derby, J. R. Smith, A C lflarrows, ll. L. Bowen, F. C. S. C. Caldwell, Adelbert, Allegheny, Amherst, Boston Bowdoin, Brown, California, Chicago, Cincinnati, Colby, Colgate, Colorado, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, DePauw, Dickinson, Hamilton Harvard, Haverford, Hobart, Founded 1776 Place : Williams and Mary College Ofhcers of Local Chapter , A. Founded 1904 ef iigflljlylg ' ' ' ' U Charter Members W. H. Page. A. D. Cole. A. XV. Hodgman, XV. E. Henderson, W. S. Elden. C-. H. Melinight, List of Chapters Iowa, . johns Hopkins, Kansas, Kenyon, Lafayette, Leland Stanford, Marietta, Middlebury, Minnesota, Missouri, , Mt. Holyoke, Nebraska, New York City College, New York University, North Carolina, Northwestern, Ohio State, Pennsylvania, Princeton, Rochester, Rutgers, 177 .. . . . . .President . . .Vice-Presidents . . . . . . .Secretary . . .Treasurer T. C. Smith, T. H. Haines, ll. R. Spencer, li. S. lngraham, L. ll. Tuekerman, L. A. Grigsby. Smith, St. Lawrence, Swarthmore, Syracuse, Texas, Trinity, Tufts, Union, Vanderbilt, Vassar, Vermont, XVabash, NVellesley, VVesleyan, XVilliam and Mary, Wlilliams, NVisconsin, Womans College fBalti- morej, Yale. Membership of Ohio Epsilon of Phi Beta Kappa 1878 1883 1 884 1885 1886 1 887 1888 1889 1890 1891 1 892 1393 1395 1896 T897 1898 1905 President W. O. Thompson Professor W. H. Scott Professor G. VV. Knight Professor -T. V. Denney Alumni A. B. Townshend, O. L. Fassig, 1899 H. L. Wilgus, E. E. Sparks, Annie W. Sabine-Siebert, 1900 C. F. Scott, 1901 VV. C. Sabine, Wm. McPherson, I. R. Taylor, G. G. Atkins, 1902 W. H. Siebert, F. L. O. VVadsworth, C. P. Sigerfoos, 1903 Ellen li. Talbot, C. G. Doney, F. C. VV00d, Mignon Talbot, VV. L. Graves, C. A. Bruce, G. W. Rightmire, 1904 H. T. Stephenson, L. T, VVillia111s, A. C. Nutt, F. C. Doan, Ivy Kellerman, Seniors W. F, Gephart, Mary Hollister, Jesse D. lams, Katherine Porter, 178 VV. E. Kellieott, Dorothy Canfield, W. W. Richardson J. W. Young, C. VV. Gayman, Alice G. Derby, Velorus Martz, F. O. Miller, Edith C, Rees, D. C. jones, Mary A. Molloy, Bessie B, .Taylor, Susan E. Garinan, L. B. Mitchell, W. K. Martin, Max XV, Morse, Max D. Morton, Martha E. Sproat, Miina tl. VVeave1', NV. ll. Coekley. R. H. Demorest, C. D. Laylin, Nellie F. Sheets. Laura A. Tressel. Stanley F. Rankin W. E. Sealock, Lois L. Strickler, O. M. Sullivan. Elnml Svnririivn Harold R. NVilliams. George J. Medberry, Cyrus K. Rockhold, Thomas A. Berry, Cecil C. Ashton, 'Beta Gamma Ph: Founded November 17, 1900. Colors: Cream and Cardinal. Flower: Cream Carnation. 1905 Oren J. Anderson. 1906 Carl D. Miller, Ralph C. Chaney, William G. Watson 1907 Frederick NV. Postle. 1908 Charles A. Powers. Special Albert H. Beltram Seth XV. Paine. 181 5 Lewis C. Cox, Charles R. Hall, Carlos L. McMaster, Victor J. Hultquist, Howard P. Zeller, Gamma Phi Prater in Facultate Dr. D. C. Huclcllcson. Seniors Carl H. Hawthorne. Ianiors Ernest C. Ramsey. Sophomores Harvey VV. Linharclt. Freshmen Orin Arhogust. 183 Ferrand S. Merrill, Carl L. Knopf, Locke H. Burnham Harold L. Croy, Elmer S. Bolton, Phi Kappa Phi Established February, IQO3. Colors: Brown and Maize. Flower: Pink Carnation A 1905 Joseph H. Kindlc, Hermon G. Weinland, Herman W. Conrad. 1906 Hupert P. Smith, Lewis B. Case. 1907 John D. Inskcep, Benjamin M. Leonard, Fred B. Hagaman. Abner R. Knight. john Thomas. 185 L Alpba Gamma Rho Established October I5, 1904. Colors: Laurel and Olcl Rose. Rnclo L. 17 roninw. Burton L. West. George T. Snyder, J. Oscar Williams. Seniors l nL-rson S. Poston. funio rs Sopfzomores 187 Flower: Pink Rose William A. Martin, Francis L. Allen, Robert C. E. Wallace. Erasiinns J. Kitchen. f ,y Wmmmmm wmnm ' lf?f fia i Q? f - ' ,' 'F' il-.W-,.'!f 'EQ 5452? .f h F fjfll .f., P . 5 v1!lll x w . .. ly j FV .-fff.. -WH MENU Qs Q Wmsmmmmmmmmxm WIILU mkfw W 1-.m mm M., uri,-57 Hn. '.......n IEN-lEDNF-Y1QI 1I li- 07 Political Science Club Organized 1882 Officers DI. ll. Harshman .... .. ............... President N. M. Peterson. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Secretary and Treasurer This cluh was organized for the purpose of discussing questions of political and social science. Professors and stucfents in the departments of American History, Political Science, Economics and Sociology are included in its mem- bership. The meetings are- held the third VVednesday evening of each month throughout the College year. ' There has been no falling off this year in the high standard of worlc done hy the club. ln fact, under the new scheme of meeting but once a month there has been an increased interest, as also an increased attendance. A Members Dr. Knight, Mr Hahn, Mr Tipton, Dr. Hagerty. Mr Laylin, Mr Peterson, Prof. Tuttle, Mr. Shoemaker, Mfr liuller, Prof. Miller, Mr H. Huntington, Mr Cromer, Mr. Spencer, Mr li-Iarshman, Mr Myers, Mr. Rrinkerhoiii, Mr. Ortman, Mr Nye, Miss Glass. Mr Smith, Mr Summers Gephardt, Mr Banker, Mr Sealock, Mr. Beyer, Mr Rush, Mr Wilcox, Mr. Dieterich, Mr Dickey, Mr Shipps. Miss l-liuntington, Mr Overturf. 191 AO. S. U. Wasonic Club Officers C. S. Druggau. .. ........... ......... P res1deut C. J. Knisely. . . ......... Vice Presxclent F. B. Hadley ..... .................. .... S e cretary Treasurer Adfvisory Board C. S. Druggau, VV. R. Lazenby. Prof. C. S. Plumb, Prof. W. R. Lazenby, Prof. B. A. Eiscnlohr, Prof. S. E. Sanborn, Prof. J. A. Bowuocker, F. H. Baruerjk E. E. Boden, VV. D. Chester, E. D. Coberly, S. D. Cooper, A. De Fossit, C. S. Druggan, li. C. Earlhard, F. B. Hadley, F. W. Hugger, 'F Deceased. Members 192 C. Steeb, D. D. jones, C. Knisely, F. C. Long, J. H. McManus. S. J. Mauchley, E. A. Miller. E. H. Ortman, C. D. Shoemaker, S. H. Shawllan, C. E. Steeb, J. F. Thomas, G. C. Veumuu, W. G. Van Meter A. D. Wells, T. A. Wingarcl., O. C. Ingalls, Der. Deutsche Verein Organized 1903. Officers C. WL Park ....... ......... ....... P 1 'esident Mary E. Molloy ..... .... V ice-President Elizabeth Matthews .... .......... S ecretary VV. L. Heitman ...... ............. T reasurer Florence E. Shelton .... .... R Iaster of Programs Dr. Viles .......... ............. C ritic J. N. Frank ............................................. Sergeant-at-Arms Although the German Club is only in the second year of its organization, it has become an important factor with those who are desirous of familiarizing themselves with spoken and written German. -Witli a view to affording the members an opportunity of hearing the language correctly spoken, and of giving them actual practice, the programs include lectures by members of the faculty and other persons, readings and papers by members of the club, and conversation directed in groups by those who speak the language Huently. The Verein has many friends who have enjoyed the frequent receptions given during the year. The society aims efficiently to supplement the work of the German Depart- ment. Honorary Members Dr. Rhoads, Dr. Viles, Prof. Eisenlohr, Actifve Members A. G. Boesel, E. R. Augspurger, Celia Schanfarber, Florence Shelton, Estella Feldman, Ethel Fisher, J. N. Frank, Sada Harbarger, Irma Leibold, Elizabeth Matthews. 193 Prof. Vosskueliler, Mr. Beal, Mr. Busey, C. VV. Park, Eloise Gilbert, Mary E. Molloy, Mary Kelley, Nola Fromme, VV. L. Heitman, C. VV. Reeder, VV. L. lleyer, Mary Dc Camp, R. L. Tavenner. The Philosophical Society Officers T. I-I. Haines .... ........ 1 Jresiclent 17. L. Lanclacre .... . . .Vice-President F. M. Surface .... ..... 'l 'reasurer A. E. Davies. . . ........ . . . . . , . .Secretary Ezecuiifve Commifiee T. H. Haines, NV. H. Scott, C. VV. Llioullc, A. E. Davies. C. ll. Morrey. The l.'hilosophical Society of Ohio State University is an association of scholars of all departments of the University and of the community. The society purposes to furnish help in the solution of life's larger problems. The meetings are helcl bi-weekly, and any one sufficiently interestcrl in the problems of philosophy is eligible to membership. 194 Oscar M. Sullivan. Mary Kelley .... N. VV. Rockey .... Sacla A. Harbargar Anna Roe ....... Edward Barrows. . Mary Molloy .... I. V .Denney. English Club Officers Firsf Semesfer Secorid Semesfer Execufifve Commitlee ...............Prcsiclent Secretary and Treasurer . . . .Master of Programs . . .Presirlent .Secretary . . . .1X'laster of liill'OQ1'E1lNS .. . . . . . . . . .Treasurer A. C. liarrows. The English Club 0f the Ohio State University was forniecl in February, IQOO. The object of the elub is the encouragement of interest in the English language and literature. During' the year IQO4-O5 the English Club has been very prosperous. The meetings have been well attenclecl and the programs have 5 . . . been varied and interesting. lil? Q Ohio State Debate and Oratory Council Carl D. Shomaker .... .................. ........ I J resident Sada Harbargar . . . . Vice-President Dr. I. E. Hagerty .... ...... T reasurer I-I. B. Cromer ...... ........... ..... S e cretary Debate at 0. S. U Rev. C. G. Doney, Chairman. Question Resolved, That the Present Tendency of the United States to Rapidly Increase the Navy Should Be Continued. ' A Affirmative. Negative. Westerii Reserve. O. S. U. L. E. Souers. T. F. Sherman. Geo. A. Waclclle. Jas. K. Kewley. E. T. Lippincott. J. L. Downing. judges Hon. Edward Kibler, Newark, U. ' Hon. John -I. Adams, Zanesville, O. Hon. Geo. Scienie, Toledo, O. Decision- Affirmative, lg Negative, 2. The other team was made up of A. J. l-lill, C. S. Druggan and I. F. Ander- son, who were to meet West Virginia. Owing to West Virginia's inability to dictate as to the judges that event was called off. 197 1 ,-W I-Iardcastlef .,.. Hastings ..... Tony Lumpkin .... PROGRAM. The Strollers Present Dr. Goldsmith's . She Stoops to Conquer Or, The Mistakes of One Mght A Comedy, in Five Acts. Under Direction of Mr. Frederic Harold. Cast of Characters .......J.G.McFaddin 'Kimball Edward Armbruster Landlord ....... ........... VX f. A. Nye D1S'g01'Y T . . . . .R. L. Fromme Slang j Roger l ..... D. R. Ackiin Ie-remy 25313111 .. ..... G. A. VVasl1burn Thomas Q 4 Bearwood 5 ..... .... E . C. Andrews Mrs. Hardcastle ..... .... M iss Edna Pratt Miss Neville ........ ..... B fliss Eva Barnliill Miss Hardcastle ..... .................,... .... lX T iss Mignon Poste Polly ............ ...................,.... ..... B f liss Edna Dugan Synopsis of Scenes ACT l. Scene l.-A Chamber in an Old-lfasliioncd House. Scene ll.- Three Pigeons Tavern. ACT II. Scene I.-A Room in Hardcast1e's House. ACT HI. Scenc I.-A Room in lelardcastlcs House. ACT IV. Scene I.-A Room in Hardcastle's House. ACT V. Scene l.-A Room in Ha1'clcastle's House. Scene H.-The Rack of the Garden. Scene Ill.-A Room in T'I2I1'ClC21StlC,S House. 199 lGreat Southern Theater, April 20, 19055 The Strollers or The Ohio State University Present Charles Dicken's Success, Incog A Farcial Comedy in Three Acts, Under Direction of Mr. Charles Boyle. Cast Tom Stanhope, alias jack Darling .......... .... B lr. Brandon Evans QI-Iis father's heir.j l Gen. Rufus Stanhope ................ .... . . .Miz J. G. McFaddin QA martyr to dyspepsiaj Dick Winters ................ W Ai KA missing lmsbamm , . I .... . . .lXlr. S. N. Summers Harry Wiiiters ............... F Twins Ai . . . .... Mr. Ollie Gibsen CA missing lover.j j L Dr. Siegfried Hartman ........................ ..... lN flr. A. J. Hill fln charge of the sanitarium.j A Ned Moreland ......................... ..... ll lr. C. E. Kimball C111 love with Miss Howardj V A Matthew ................................ .... B lr. R. Lf 'Fromme QAII attendant at the sanitarium.j Lowrey ................................. ..... lX lr. F. D. Fromme QAnother attendantj Kate Armitage ....................... .... ll liss Mignon Poste Q Miss Howard's. companion.j Mrs. Dick Winters .................... ..... ll liss Florence Wfelling Cln Search of her husbandj I Miss Mollie Summers .... ' ....... 'LQ .... .... lX liss' Clara Ruth Roberts C111 search of her lover.j ' Isabelle Howard .................. .... ll 'liss Eva Barnhill CA11 heiress.j A ' ' ' 200. Synopsis ACT I. Parlor of the Seaview Hotel. ACT II. Same as Aet I. 5 ' . ACT III. A A Reception Room in Hartman Sanitarium. ' Time: The present. ' Stroller Staff Mignon Poste ..... ................ Lyman R. Haller ..... Wm. A. Nye ....... Charles E. Boyle .... Paul Netli ....... R. L. Fromme .... H. IqJ'Sl'l3.NV8.I'l .... gg-.ai Q A-ol, 2017 . . . .President . . . . .Manager . . . . . .Treasurer . . . . . . .Stage Director . . . . . . .Stage Manager Master of Properties . . . . .Advertising Agent M. L. Bigger. .. G. L. Fuller ....... C. D. Shoemaker T. M. jones .... O. S. U Republican Club Thurman Club J. V. Dagenharclt ..... ................. XV. E. Heitnian. . B. I. Wolf ...... B. S. Johnson .... T. F. Counel .... Iohn M. Harsh. L. M. Smith ..... R. A. Young. .. T. F. Hamilton .... H. H. Hamilton... 0. S. U Prohibition Club 202 . . . . . .President . . .Vice-President . . . . . . .Secretary . . . .Treasurer . . . . . . .President . . .Vice-President . . . . . . .Secretary . . . . . . .Treasurer Sergeant at-Arms . . . . . .President . . .Vice-President . . . . . . .Secretary . . . . . . .Treasurer Sergeant-at-Arms O. S. U. Veterinary Liferary Sociefy VV boss .... A Imler ...... N Hwekett ..... NV C lllie .... L. P. Hart. H. M. Newton, I. H. Burl, llenj. Stucler. S. Rigclon. XV. A. Grace. F. T. Carr, C. l . Hart, J. P. Schmidt, 1-I. M. Newton, H. E. Smith. V. A. Dexmis, H. E. 1'inke1'trm, S. Bittle. C. C. Soekmzul. R. J. Carver. R. I . KIZ11'STIC1lCl' H. XV. Riley. G. M. Potter. G. A. Pfaffman, F. B. Hrulley. Presiding OffYcers . . . ......... President . . . . . . . . . . .Vice-President . . . .Secretary and Treasurer Ezecuiifve Commiffee K. P. Marstellar. Program Commiffee 5. M. Buck. Members 203 lf. I . j. . . . . . . . .Se1'geant-at-Arms ll. Hadley, A. Tmler, M. Buck, XV. E. Trone., S. Youngberg, H. H. Sparhawk. H. C. ii. IL. L. A. H . F C. ll. G. XV . If. H . XV. Miller, I . HOlltl'2lQ'C1', 1 Tangemzm, C. Limbzmugh, M. Steekel, McConnell, F. Skeels, J. Calph, A. Sarmiento, Kline, H. Beasly, A. Iirown, P. B2lI'l1llZ11't, W'. Little. O. AS. U1 Branch Of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers.. Officers I W. R. Work ....... .......... ......... - . '. .President S. B. Williams, Jr .... ..... S ecretary-Treasurer F. M. Craft 1 O. F. Metz Q .... . .... .. .... ..... V ice-Presidents H. L. Hope J This society, organized in October of 1902, as the result of an educational movement on the part of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, has fos- tered a lively interest in the current thought in the electrical field. Meetings are held semi-monthly, at which the papers of the American Institute are read and dis- cussed, as well as original p2l1JCl'S by the members. The society has an enthusiatstic membership, and promises to increase in interest and usefulness. Prof. F. C. Caldwell, F. A. Fish, A. Coggeshall. A. L. Harrington, I. S. Riddle. C. P. Leibold, W. H. Kempton, G. M. Cameron, H. L. Bostater, F. S. Sessions, M. C. Hunter, C. F. Kettering, J. W. Gwynn, E. M. Gorrell, E. VV. Benedict. I. G. Campbell. I. E. Powell, F. B. Pelton, A W. A. Schertz, T. Sill, W. W. Hackney, C. F.Sloctermayer, Members T. D. Crocker, F. E. Crocks, H. S. Beach. A. L. Stewart, R. Fether, L. S. 'McGarey, C. Hokks, P. M. Gault. C. R. Hepncr, C. L. Knopf, H. L. Hope, R. H. Minus, F. E. Beutler, S. B. VVilliams, Jr.. VV. R. Work, L. W. Chubb, R. Stokely, T. A. Wingard, j. Iancu, G. N. Shapter, S. W. Wilson. L. H. Burnham. 204 M. J. Lawreneem C. E. Hammond, S. D. Cooper. H. E. Dyche, J. H. Little, W. C. Ricketts, A. H. Mellinger E. B. Rickardy P. C. Morey, ' E. P. Bone, A. MGQZ, V '. F. M.,Craft,'i ' R. L. See, 'A ' F. F. Shelclrick, C. P. Galnieha-,Q A. W. Ray, A A ' O. G. Shafer, A. T. Grener, H. H.,Lucas, J. W. .Hepner, C. R. Beall. The Young Women's Christian Association Grganized 1900. Officers 1903-1904. 1904-1905. President ....... . . . Florence Covert, Mary Taylor. Vice-President .... .... A lary Taylor, Cora Roberts. Secretary ........ . . . . . Lillian Pegg, Eugenia Rounsarell. T1'easurer .................... Mabel Rodebaugh, Ruth Sherman. General Secretary ...................,...... Cornelia Powell Committee Chairman 1903-1904. 1904-1905. Bible Study .... Membership ..... Missionary ........ Religious Meetings. . . . Finance ........... Social .......... Intercollegiate . . . Calendar ....... -. Rooms ............ Twilight Concerts ..... Music ............ State Convention ..... Extension ......... New Girls .... Elizabeth Lawrence, . . . Mary Taylor, .. . Annie Lanman, . . . Clara Postle, .. . Mabel Rodebaugh, . . . Jeanette Eaton, .. . Mildred Wheeler, . . . Edna Pratt, . . . Enid McElroy, . . . Louise Arnold, . . . Cora Roberts, Agnes Smiley. I - Cora Roberts. Mildred Wl1eele1'. Mrs. Mary Fawcett Ruth Sherman. Adelia Scatterday. Elizabeth Bancroft. lfleatrice Sheets. Helen Roe. Harriet Glass. Edith Dick. Emilie Gorrell. Florence Covert. Mary Brandon. Advisory Board' Mrs. Clara F. Milligan ...................... Mrs. VVilliam Oxley Thompson. Mrs. George Beecher Kauttinan, Mrs. Wfilliam P. Guild, Mrs. Alfred Dodge Cole. Meetings. Tuesday, at 12120. Membership, 215. 205 Mrs Mrs Mrs. Mrs. . .Chairman Charles A. Bruce. Xhfilbur H. Siebert Homer Price. john NV. Decker. 'F' Q The Young Men's Christian Association Crganized 1883. Association Hall, 136 Wfest Tenth President ...... Vice-President . . . Secretary ......... Treasurer ........... Assistant ,Treasurer ..... Officers 1904-1905. . .. D. VV. VVeist, J. C. VVl1ite, . . . G. A. Gibson, XV. H. Palmer, H. N. Massey, General Secretary ..... ..... C . C. I-Iatheld, Committee Chairman ' IQO4-IQO5. i.XfiCl'l1lJCl'SllilD . . . . . li. B. Henry, Bible Study ..... Missionary ...... Religious Meetings . Finances ........ Social . . . Prof. A. D. Cole, Mr. G. S. Marshall, Prof. Eno, . . . G. 1.3. Thonias. ... I. C. White, J. P. Pratt. XV. I-l. Palmer, .. .. A. NV. Durr, Board of Trustees Pres. W. O. 'lfhompson 'Miz Foster Copeland. Rev. C. G. Doney. E. D. I-Toll. 207 Avenue. 1905-1906. G. ll. Thomas. C. XV. Reeder, VV. R, I'IZlg'C1'l1lZ11l C. H. Parsons. C. C. Hatfield. 1905-1906. '.l'. P. Wfhite. li. ll. l'lenry. H, N. Massey. H. D. Smith. J. P. Pratt. XV. A. Yeagle. Prof. NV. Decker Clarence D. Laylin, Geo. U. riiilOlllZlS, Pharmaceutical Society President .............. Vice President . ......... . Officers Fall Term. Engleken .... . C. Van Cleve. . Winter Term. . . . . .F. Lawler . . . .C. Patton Secretary and Treasurer ....... McClintock .... . . .P. E. Roscoe Master of Programs ..... T. Huffman .... .... G . I-I. Eaton Members j. S. Belknap, VV. McNair, H. Balles, C. Patton, C. McClintock, .E. Engelken, G. H. Eaton, li. C. Davies, I. P. Drew, A. T. Huffman, A. J. Hegele, F. Lawler, P. E. Roscoe, H. C. Sohn, YV. H. Staltler, E. Spease, P. C. Van Cleve, E. Ii. Walters, L. WV. Funk. WV. S. Salladay, .I-I. NN. McMaster, C. M. McClure. This association was organized in lgoo for the purpose of bringing the students of the Pharmacy Department into closer relationship with each other and for the purpose of the discussion and review of subjects pertaining to their work. Meetings are held every Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock during the college year. Visitors are always welcome. 209 s. O. S Ceramic Society I 904-o 5 . Object: The Discussion of Topics of Interest to the Ceramic Engineer. Frank E. Layman .... Ellsworth Ogden ..... Frank H. Riddle .... H. F. Staley, C. G. Holmes. J. L. S. Kendrick, H. Ashley, s. P E. VV. Raynolds, C. H. Kerr. G. H. Brown. N. G. Pitzer, J. D. VVhitmer, A. T. Malin, ll 'l' '. . lVlontg'omery, Officers . Members M. C. Gates, 211 . . . . . . . . . .President . . . . . . . .Vice-President . . .... Secretarye-Treasurer N. H. Gates, C. P. Oudin, Jr., E. Markeson, Geo. Greener, Geo. P. Fackt, H. H. Hine, G. W. Shoemaker, S. E. Wa1'cl, Edward Orton, Jr., M. li., A. V. lflleininger, R. S.. R. C. Purdy. O. S. U1 Chemical Society Organized 1893 Officers First Semester. Second Semester. I. M. Harsh ..... .... l f'rcsident ..... ...... ' Thomas Beer A. C. Fieldner. . . .... Vice President ..... .... H . E. Surface F. W. Sperr ..... .... S ecretary ...... .... V V. A. Sperry A. I. Anderson .... ....... ' I'reasurer ...... .... l -3. T. Brooks L. B. Case .................. Sergeant-at-Arms .................. L. B. Case The meetings of this Association are held on the first Tuesday of each month, the membership being thrown open to all persons interested in Chemistry. Wfhile the primary object is educational, the social side is not overlooked, giving greater stability to the organization. 213 Biological Club Officers il. S. Hume .... .. ...... President 1.. C. Riddle .,.. . ........... Vice-President F. M. Surface ................ . , . . . . . . . .Secretary and Treasurer This organization meets every two weeks, for discussion of Biological Topics. At regular intervals the club presents public lectures, which are open to all and are of popular interest. Wheaton Club Officers ul. G. Hine. .. ....,..... ............... P resident Z. P Metcalf ....................................... Secretary and Treasurer The Wheaton Club was organized in 1896, for the purpose of making sys- tematic study of bird life. Meetings are held monthly, in the Biological Build- ing, and all interested are invited to attend. QI4 w,,4 ,w,,,,...q. ,.-. ,. . ,A e , , ' X 224:M2141-esff'-.zQ+:Hf, A' BL. 1 Q Y ' mP?w' Alumni Association Officers for 1904-1905 Paul M. Lincoln, '92, Pittsburg ..................... ............ l ,'resiclent Vifilliam Renick Dunlap, '95, Kingston. . . .... First Vice-President Ellen ll. Talbot, '90, Berlin, Germany .... .... S eeond Vice-I-'resident Francis L. Lndacre, '95, Columbus .... .............. S ecretary James E. Boyd, '91, Columbus ........ .... T reasnrer W'n1. H. Page, '92, Columbus ............ ..... C 'Jrator Wfallace C. Sabine, '86, Cambridge, Mass ............ .... . -Xlternate Committee on Necrology Carl G. Doney, '91, Columbus ........... . ......... . . .Term expires 1905 E. S. T. Sehaub, '85, Columbus... .. 1906 Edith D. Coekins, '94, Columbus ......................... ' 1907 Ohio State University Association of New York H. E. Payne, '87 ..........,..................................... President 256 llroadway. A. E. Sellenings, '96 ...... , ........................... .... S eeretary IO2'EZISt Thirty-first street. Geo. N. Cole, '91 .... .......................... .... ' l 'reasurer 265 lfiroadway. Council Arthur B. Townshend, '78 .... ........ E. VV. Harvey, '96 ........... .............................. Ohio State University Association of Cleveland john F. Cunningham, '96 ............,........................... l resident 366 Maree street. George Smart ........................................ Secretary-Treasurer Ohio State University Alumni Association of Northwestern Ohio L. VV. Morgan, Toledo ........................................... President J. E. Ladd, Toledo ..........,. .... ............ X ' ice-President Gales Abel Raymond, Toledo .... ....... .... S e cretary and Treasurer 2lG Chicago Ohio State University Club Lucius A. Hine, '88 ............................................ Charles VV. Sliephercl, 'oo .... C. G. Atkins ...... . ...................................... . . . . Pittsburg Ohio State University Club Presiclent Rresiclent james G. Skinner .......... . . .Vice- . Secretary ii1'CZ1S1l rer C. F. Scott, '85 ................................................ iY1l'CSiCiCl'lt J. XV. Howard, '95 .,.... ...... X lice-I'resirlent Roger D. DeXVolf, ,Ol .................................. Secretary-Treasurer The Ohio State University Association of Washington, D. C. C. F. Marvin, '83 ............................................... T'resiclcnt XN. R. Beattie, 'Q4 ..... .............. S ecretary A. F. McCall, 'oo ........... 1 ........................ Lantern Correspondent The Ohio State University Club of Chillicothe, Ohio XX ilby G. Hyde. '87 .......,........................,.,... . ........ Prcsiclent Dr. XV. S. Scott ..... ..... X 'ice:I'resident Homer Jordan .... . ...... Secretary Lyle S. Evans, 'OI ,..................................... ......... 'I 'reasurer Cincinnati Ohio State University Association Dr. Horace XVhitac1'c, '91, Cincinnati ............................ I'resiclent 'iTilCOCi01'C E. Bock, '01, Hamilton ,....... ........... X 'ice-Prcsiclent Norman Rushton ....................... . ....... Secretary and Tl'CZ'lSL11'C1' Dayton Ohio State University Association E. Cillaims, '88 ......................................... .... I resident R. E. McClure, 'oo .... .... S ecretary 217 SENIOR CLASS OF MINING ENGINE1-:RING Qlnllvgv Ignhliraiinnn -. 'i ' f i . ffl ' 4 fT WM V Leaf' L3 I www RWE T' I7 TWV . LM f lL5 W4 fam., 1. www Msg Sim www' 59 -J i N - -5' - . J, ' iii W F l l -by -f' ,Q ' 1'3 -K ---- l i904-1905. Vnblislierl by the Students. Editor in Chief Gilbert L. Fuller, '06, Associate Editor il. H. llarslnnan, '07, Osmer C. Ingalls, 'o5. Society Editors Miss Emilie Correll, 'O6. Staff of Reporters ll. ll. Cromer, 'O7. Miss Mary Taylor, '06, J. Nl. Rotlnvell, 'o7. Miss Cornelia Powell, 'o2. G. ll. Lewis, 'o7. Alumni Correspondent Professor Charles A-X. llruce. Business Wanager George H. Morse, 'O6. Assistant Business Manager Burton L. Wfest, 'O7. Board of Control Gilbert I-. linller .... ...................... ..... P 1 'esiclent Carl D. Slioemalcer .... ...... ................ ..... S e c retary George H. Morse .... .......................... .... ' l 'reasnru' l'rofcssor V. Denny. Professor A. D. Cole. 223 The Agricultural Student A Monthly Magazine Devoted to Agricultural Education. Officers Editor ......... H. ........... .... I fred L. VVest Advisory Editor .... ....... f Xlfred Vivian Business Manager. .. ....... .... V 'ernon H. Davis Staff J. C. VVl1ite, XV. H. Palmer, E. S. Postong L. E. Call, C. D. Hyatt, H. C. Ramsowcr. 224 The Ohio Naturalist A journal devoted more especially to the natural history of Ohio. The official organ of the Biological Club of the Ohio State University and of the Ohio State Academy of Science. Published monthly during the academic year, from November to june C8 numbersj. Price f pI.OO per year, payable in advance. To foreign countries, 31.25. Single copies, I5 cents. Editor-in-Chief .... X. . .... . . . . ..... john H. Schaffner Business Manager .... ................. V .. ...... james S. Hine Associate Editors F. L. Landacre, Zoology. W. C. Mills, Archaeology, Harlan H. York, Botany, james G. Sanders, Ornithology, J. A. Flownocker, Geology, john N. Frank, Ecology. Advisory Boara' Prof. W. A. Kellerman. Prof. Herbert Osborn. A Prof. Charles S. Prosser. T1-112 Oulo N.x'rU1mLls'r is owned and controlled by the Biological Club of the Ohio State University. 225 l'1w1 a1L.Onn.4mzA-rroru: in z S...,1'xi'.l Laid- Girls' Glee Club Director .... . . .Cora Ruth Roberts 1 iesident ...,...... . . .Ethel Bowman Business Manager. .. ....... Mignon Postc Secretary ....... .. . . . . .Lydia Ann Phillips I ibrarian ...... . . .Loula Thompson Accompanist .... . . .Hortensc llalcer FIRST SOPRANO. Ethel Bowman, '06, Francis Barrows, '07, Edith Dick, '07, Harriet Eastman, '08. Alice Marsh, '06, SECOND Eva llarnhill, '07, Helen Hunt, '07, Grace Dann, '05, - Clair Postle, '05, Loula Tliompson, '0 5, Clara Hudson, '02, Zona Parrish, '06, Helen Smith, '06, Francis Quinn, '08, Eugenia Ronsevall, '0 Helen Hessong, '08, Urith Tuller, '08, Emily Hollister, '08. SOPRANU. Jeannette Eaton, '07, Lydia Phillips, '05, Adelaide Fulton, '07. FIRST ALTO. 7 Elizabeth Shields, '07, lilertha Schneider, '08, Katherine Gress, '06, Mignon Poste, '06. SECO ND A LTO. Mary Taylor, '06, Susan Siebert, '08, Nell Malloy, '07, Ruth Grant, '04, Vivian Watt, '05, 229 .lflorence VVelling', '06 Sada Harbarger, '06, Floribel Shubert, '08, Grace Huston, '07, Hazel Coherly, 'o8. ! X u Glee Club Director .... .......... R ussel I. Hare, '05 Secretary ..... .... C harles Wells Reeder, '06 Accompanist .... ........ J ohn Lynas, '07 Manager ..... ............... l frank R. Guilford, '05 rinsr 'r1sNo1es. Q' F. M6655 '03, Frank Dwight Paul, '07, Walter Henry Mytinger, '07 Litle S. Bowers, '07, George Adam Gibson, '07 M. F. Laird, 'o8. Ollie M. Gibson, 'O7 siscoxo 'r13No1es. Francis XV. Dickey, '05, George Oliver Ellstrom, '08, Charles VVells Reeder, '06, Albert George Boesel, '07, Frederick D. VValthour, '06 Stanley Thompson Scofield, '05 rinsr nixssos. Robert H. Cunningham, '05 Paul Miller, '08, Jas. Martin Rothwell, '07, Ralph O. Merrill, '06, Rodney Harris Reese, '07, Robert VV. Laylin, '08. Richard D. Logan, '07 SECOND BASS, Divid D. Crumrine, '07, Charles Murdock Peters, '08, Robert C. Shroth, '06, Verne Dwight Howard, '07, john Oscar Williams, '07, R. VV. Hoyer, '06, Mandolin Club 4 Clarence D. Laylin, '06 ................... ...,. L eader 1fnzs'r MANDOLINS. Mark C. Houston, '05, H. Stephenson, 06, Rudo. L. Fromme, '05, XV. ,l3.5Galliher, '08, Frank Huling, '06, I. G. Belknap, '07, N. L. Hawkins, '07, H SECOND MANDOLINS. N. l. Sloane, '07, Roy 'l,lrenh0lts, '07, lfl. T. Waddell, '07, L. A. Shultz, '07, Carl Davidson, '08. G Ll l'I'.'X RS. D. T. Laylin, '05, H. T. Belknap, '07, E. S. Poston, '05, W. P. Tracy, 'o8. 231 FRANCIS w. Second T DICKEY EIIOI' wAl,T1f:R H. MYTINGER First Tenor RUSSICLI I HA R lf' Second Bass JOHN C. LYNAS ROBERT H. CUNNINGHAM Accompanist First Bass Twilight Concerts October 28.--Miss Alice E. Crane and Elizabeth '.l.xllO111PSOll Wilsoii. December 2.-M1'S. I. F. Pletch, Miss Nora F. Wilsoii and Mr. Cecil Fanuinff tw February 3.-M rs. Cll1'lStlZl.1'l Born and Robert Erkhardt. March 24.--l.Vli1'S. H. C. Lord, Mrs. Edward E. Fisher and Miss Edith Bratton ' April 28.-Mrs. Harrie B. Hutchinson, Miss Ethel Keating and Mr Beucliuger. 233 mo L 7 1 Xf 4 ,X f , , 'l ,nmfnu , 7. ., Mfr. X l ff X Qi f 7 'I Xl ww X M NX, Q 1!4lXHMIIfw 1 1X.w X, XXX, We XXX' UU V :X W' ff' W X XXX X JMX! I XXIM XX,! ,X rm I W - X XJ. L P , X 1 X X lllql Xf,X.,X, ,,,X ,X X XX XX, 'f X XX ,Xf ' f!U,Xf!W X mm .M QQXl M H WM! xfxy 1' ,I X jf X AX, 1 ' , , uw -X X my 'W ' ' :,, K W X X- , - ' fry 5 X' q' X'ugh g4- I f ,667 X N 'XX X X X XX XX C' XA I Xxx 43 F Q ,kfmfldznix ' XXX :' ,Xa Xu 'H X XXXXXW' XX.X wil' NW WW J X UN X Mx XXXXX ' W , 31' Nm YM Y X X X ,V ,XX ,X Xl .X 'f X4 We Nl N ,ZX- fwvjm Mzcx ' f, ,M YW' ,My '47 'Zi-:W , - 24? AL! fl V XI '. I! X A WX . . f 1, if Ziwzz., du'- Battalion Officers George L. Converse... .......... .... C onnnandant Staff F, C. Nesbitt, Major. f J. A. Stiver, Major. a4c6utants O. A. Maurer, A. XV. Durr. Sergeant Wajors B. F. jackson, F. li. Smith, Quartermasters I. tl. Thomas, j. il. Graham. Second Lieutenant of Band C. C. Rose. Second Lieutenant of Signal Corps D. Y. Geddes. Unassigned Second Lieutenants .I. E. Marshall. C. W. Mooney, j. C. Gay, H. H. Harsh, E. E. Moore, A. R. Knight. Color Sergeants A. L. Smith, ' Co. A Captain, R. D. Crout, First Lieutenant, A. H. Hingle. Second Lieutenant, Hugh Houston, Co. B I Captain, H. ul. Means. First Lieutenant, Fred Ilerry. Second Lieutenant, Shreve Clark. Co. C Captain, Fred Hugger. First Lieutenant, C. VV. Hengst. Second Lieutenant, G. B. Southwar cl. F. D. ,Heckathorn. Co, D Captain, Irving Gard. First Lieutenant, D. P. johnson. Second Lieutenant, F.. J. Herbert. Co. E Captain, P. D. Meek. First Lieutenant, J. Hoffman. Second Lieutenant, G. F. Morgan Co. F Captain, C. R. Hall. First Lieutenant, C. T. Park. Second Lieutenant, C. R. Cooper. 'J lx. D. Crout ..... Company 04 ............l,apta111 A. H. Hingle l'll'Sf Lieutenant l-'lugh Houston ...... ..... S econcl Lieutenant. Sergeants. Corporals. F. A. Mooney, lf. C. Hirst. C. G. Anclerson. C. A. Powers. C. G. Anderson, C. E. Arhogast. D. Baker, W. D. Bee, C. D.llossert, W. J. lloesel, A. Cl. .li-loesel, VV. li. llurnett, john Czernilc, S. E. Collison, H. E. Cowles, C, P. Cooper, E. C. Cook, E. A. Cook, J. T. Crane. W. I. Davis, I. F. Davis, H. I. Dennis. H. L. Eicher, C. S. Fisher, C. F.. Fortney, F. D. Froninie, A. D. Fry, G. VV. Gale, F.. J. Gilbert, Edwin Griffith. H. VV. Greiner. F.. Holsema, Il. L. Holsenia, Otis W. Harrocl, XYl1eclon l'la1'riman, Fred llills, B Alhert H, Hinlcle, E. C. Hirst, l ra O. Hitt, N. N. Hoherg. I. R. Hornhrook, XV. R. lelornherger Henry Hyman, 'l. lf. Johnson, L. L. Koeper. Harry liohn, Al. I. lioza, lf. F. Lantz, R. XV. Leeper, E. Lewis, C. E. Long, H. I. Lucas. B. A. lX lZ1g'1'CW, A. T. Malin. jerry ul. NfVarcl. XY. F. lXflartin, I. R. Miller, QI. Milroy, . lll. Milne. A. R. Moist, H. C. Moore, D. A. Moulton. H. 12. Nolcl. G. H. Ohmart, 239 v ll. H. Ollom, C. XV. Park, C. H. Parsons, F. D. Phillips, C. V. Potter, W. T. Powell, C. A. Powers, J, F. Probst, C. K. Roclchold, ul. A. Sauernian. I., li. Sehraidt, Garclner Sherburne C. L. Shipps, A. T. Slcecls, VValter Smith, D. P. Snodgrass, J. C. Snyder, Fl. Steinin, J. D. Sticlcle, C. VV. Snyder, J. R. Tanner, Arnisteacl Waight, S. P. VVard. I. R. Watt, F. P. Welling, T. O. White, J, O. Williams, W. S. VVilliams, K. VV. VVonnell, N. E. W'oocls. gag.. Q.. 40. ' 'V K' 'QQQFWJ gg-, ,h '-ip. - iaiixiz' pai- P. I. Markley, Company 'B H. Means ..... ......... C aptain Frecl Berry ..... . . .First Lieutenant Shreve Clark .... Sergeants. - .--. Twitchell. -. -. Mahaffy. C. C. Baltzley, A. H. Barnes, E. S. Berger, E. C. Blosser, S. S. Bower, F. S, Bonham, H. Bolles, P. F.. Borehers R. M. Borror, G. C. Brown, C. Brashear, W. A. Brown, W. S. Brown, R. Brenholtz, R. J. Carver, J. Colph, L. B. Case, W. D. Chester, R. C. Collison, J. M. Crabhs, L. S. Collins, C. M. Davis, W. B. Davis, B. S. Donley, V. M. Dupuy, J. E. Engleken, W. S. Farley, L. J. Farquar, E Second Lieutenant Corporals. W. B. Davis, G. P. Foerster. Fleclclerjolizmn, G. B. Foerster, H. L. Frost, R. J. Fromnie, L. C. Gatewood, -. --, Gatewoofl, lf. l. Gibson, - Ii. A. Greenamyer, Geo. C. Greene, B. Griffin, H. M. Hart, R. S. Heise, S. Hessenauer, J. D. Inskeep, J, H, johnson, E. D. May, bl. P. Metcalf, W. T. Miller, VV. IZ. Mongey, A. I. Perlfler, A. Piper, C. K. Prohst, E. C. Richey, C. Rietz, J. S. Rowe, Geo, Schillinger, G. F. Sehlessinge B. Sehonherger, C L. B. B. H G R. D. Keel, S. Kielholtz, H. Kinney, Leonard, W. Linhart, C. Long, G. MeGarrough, I. G. McBeth, J. E. McDonald, XV. M. Mattliews, R. R. Marstetter, P. D. Maltzel, E. L. Mahaffy, 241 C. L. Schnuerer, B. Sehwendt, ll. Shade, S. ll. Shawhan, F. 12. Smith, Sgt F. D, Smith, D. R, South, A. L. Sperry, A. G. Sweitzer, S. B. Thomas, Sg O. E. VVertz, VV. B. Vlfallaee. Geo. Washburne, J. G. wise. M. A. Ankele, C. O. Arbogast, A. C. Atkinson, F.S. Benham, A. Bond, J. W. Bossarcl, W. D. Briggs, H. E. Brubaker, C. Brumbaugh, W. H. Borker, Glenn Calland, S. Carmack, R. E. Claypoole, Ray Cole, C. P. Cooper, R. C. Cooper, R. W. Cory, H. A. Cowgill, A .D. Crites, C. L. Crooks, L. A. Dagger, L. C. Daniel, A. E. Davis, B. C. Davis, E. R. Davis, W. H. Dilatush O. M. Dock, W. J. Dyer, G. L, Eiselstein, E. M. Elliott, M. B. Evans, Earnest Evans, Ferd Ford, E. M. Frost, N, H, Gates, Company C I. W. Winchet. M3 V7 IP 5 more I Q fl U3 Q, 2935 tfijvicrq 5,3553 F03 gn? w '- E-:Z O14 -Z ., . FD . QI :ggi W no ' 951: . -, . . if-Nj En:i ' ' an 0-I H 5 83- -. 5-g' L25 Q CC- S . 2 Q20 y. 5:13 SWE. 1-PE-:S I4 . H. Hamilton, S. Hammond, H. B. Hill, W. H. Horn, O. Johnson, C. J. Kienzle, U . S. Kramer, Felix Kuenzle, L. M. Krieg, H. B. Lantz, W. B. Leighninger, R. E. Linville, A. McC0nnel, H. McMaster, WOOF2 viii, E92 yr- vm B. Merrell, . F. Miller, J. R. Miller, D, M. Moore, J. B. Nordhold, C. P. Gudin, A. B. Phillips, C. E. Poole, G. M. Potter, A. S. Rea, R. S. Richards, A. B, Seasons, I. H. Shaw, ' Earl Shirk, G. W. Shoemaker, D. P. Snodgrass, G. H. Stuckey, J. A. White, ,ua-v Irving Gard. . . D. P. Johnston .... E. J. Herbert.. Sergeants. W. L. Artz, R. E. Athey, J. W. Augsberger, H. Bartler, . W. Beasley, M. G C. F. Boutrayer, P. E. Borchers, C. W. Bretland, H. D. Bruce, L. Burkey, . J. Burt, P. F. Chamberlain, G. V. Clow, I C. Cribbs, . Critclmfield, G. V. Cross, C, Davidson, W. H. Eldridge, W. L. Elser, M, Erlanger, G. Elstrom, C. K. Fisher, H. L. F lory, G. H. Forger, C. W. Finney, I. R H C. H. Gamertsfclder, E. D. Gamerlsfelder, C. C. Grant, G. A, Gibson, H. C. Gwvnne, O. R. Hastings, C. A. Hall, W. R. Hagerman, O. Hopkins, F1 F. R. Hagaman, C. I. Kurtz, C. A, Knuth, Company D . . .............................. Captain . . . . . .First Lieutenant . . . . . . .Second Lieutenant Corporals. W. H. Zorn. 245 W. E. Ringwald. A. P. Woodbury, J. F. Lincoln, R. VV. Laylin, G. P. Lawrence, R. F. McDowell, XV. lX'lcGraW, P. Miller, W. li. Morris, F. A. Norwood, H. M. Olds, 1-l.. N. Packard, N. L. Palmer, VV. E. Ringwald, G. L. Rogers, P. L. Rothrock, W. D. Rounsavell, R, H. Rhotehamel, R. 12. Ruble, lil. T. Shilling, R. D. Scott, E. C. Slater, C. IE. Simmers, H. C. Shaw, L. H. Shoemaker, A. L. Sounhalter, W, L. Slate, VV. D. Turnbull, VV. P. Tracy, R. L. Tavenner, VV. W. Violet. VV. D. VVaite, H. N. Watt, li. C. Waters, R. C. Walden, VV. ll. lfVilkinson, l-l. P. Woodbury, C. F. Wehr, I. A. Zink, Company E P. D. Meek ..... ....... ........... C a ptain I. T. Hoffman .... ..... I iirst Lieutenant G. F. Morgan ..... ............. S econd Lieutenant Scrgeants. Corporals. J. C. Gatewood. D. F. Coyner, VV. K. Burnell, S. D. Williams. Frank 0. Agner, Scott Hartman, L. Hill. Ora A. Allen, Harry Allen, A. Andrews, F. Anderson, I, F. Barker, li. Raughman, C. Bartlett, F. Rarnhart, F. E. Bear, D. R. Born, Stanley Brown, D Raymond brown, D. F. Coyner, F. L. Carr, H. Campbell, A. Chavois, C. Claypole, C. E. Corkwell, UF! . C. Dallinger, . F.. Davis, W. E. Davis, L. G. Darrow, J. R. Dunsford, W. P. Earle, lil. Edington, J. L. Edmonds, L. B. Elliott, C. M. Ewing, W. L. Fox, J. K. Gardner, G. W. Gillie. V. H. Graff, R. L. Greenslade Ross Hazlett, L. Hazlett, J Wm. A. Yeagle. 247 N. H. Hine, Wilbert Howell, E. J, Kenney, H. D. Kneisely, C. G. Koontz, F.. J. Kuet, VV. lil. Lemmon, H. Little G. R. Love, H. Miller, J. C. Miller, I. S. McKenney, H. Mitchell, G. D. Morris, C Nusbaum. H. Newcomb. R. R. Penn, Ray R. Parrett. George Pew, Arthur Potter, W. J, Roberts, R. W. Rodgers, A K. L. Rothermund, H. R. Scott, I. R. Schopp, George Tangeman, F. A. Tennant, H. W. Vaughn, R. E. Vennum, F. S. Virella, J. S. Wittenmyer, Chas. Whims, E. D. Williams, Chester Woodbury, pf-'vu V gffigs ,pa 2 .4-1 4-4 ,, ,, tri! -aft .-41 uf , .Af L...,- Company F C. R. Hall ..... ........... C aptain C. T. Park... .... First Lieutenant C. R. Cooper. .. ........... Second Lieutenant Sergeants. Corporals. W. S. Harriman, O. li. Ogner, D. M. Baker. A. M.. Berg. 0. B. Agner 1. Alexander, H. G. Allen, I. B. Black, P. L. Beebe, A. W. Berg, P. P. Poli, W. K, Booth, C. V. Bucher, J. E. Butler, L. H. Chenewetli, M. B. Cheney, J. R. Conard, H. A. Coulson, C. A. Crow, J. E. Crooks, B. W. Dennis, E. R. Dike, I. H. Doerres, O. F. Doughlas, K. W. Dicks, C. T. Evans, C. B. Freeman, F. W, Funk, G. W. Gray, H. A. Gintz, R. H. Greegor, T. L. Harford, H. F. Hawley, H. A. Henry, A. H. Heitmann, H. S. Kuerr, H. W. Kline, C. F.. Kimball, I. K. Kennedy, A. McConnell, C. ll. McQuigg, E. L. McCrate, J. A. McKee, H. D. Metcalf, F, J. Murray, F. C. Maurer, I. Thurman Milar, H, H. Myers, R. E. Miller, F. 12. Nicding, G. L. Reagle, Chas. Rothman, E. li. Royer, P. E. Roscoe, R. A. Ramsey, C. F. Sattler, S. H. Schachtel, H. VV. Schauiler, V W. F. Schephlin, H. A. Schwab, H. E. Shoemaker, B. S. Silver, H. H. Sparhawk, J. W. Spaulding, H. P. Starbird, C. C. Stewart, C. R. St. Clair, F. B. Shuler, F., H. Stone, W. O. Trone, . R. Van Duzeu, ffl C. I. West. G. W'. VVolfe, R. C. Wright, S. Youugberg, T. Zollinger. 249 , adn,-M I WT vm-In , X. Au 1 --. -,W-- .5 Gustav Brucler C. C. Rose .... A. J. Morrison. .. F. D. Banks, H. C. Bartholomew, J. P.Calclerwoocl, J. E. Copp, A. H. Dollison, L. A. Daerr, G. B. Ebright, H. H Ewing, G. P. Fackt, A. J. Hegele, C. M. Hall. H. H. Hamilton, VV. W. Hackney, Band 251 . ........ Instructor . . . . .Second Lieutenant . . . . .First Sergeant J. H. Kindle, C. E. Kimball, C. S. Hart, R. H. Minns, W. G. Mullin, L. D. McMaster, C. L. Mcloy, M. li. McChristie, J. Ti. Shaw, . A. A. Straub, H. R. Talmage, E. B. Walter, E. A. Zeliring. Signal Corps E. T. Montgomery ..... .... S ergeant 4 E. O. Faukhauser .... . . .Sergeant D. Y. Gcclcles ...... .. ....... Corporal W. fI'. Abbott, Ii. T. Morton, E. M. Allen, G. G. Mcllroy, VV. M. Lhubb, W. A. Spitzer, R. W. Hall, C. C. SllCI'l'iCk, J. M, Kirlqmatrick, C. S. Stephenson, XV. VV. Lawrence, S. T. Wing, Trumpet Corps Murray l'I0f:f11lZll1 . .... ................ S ergeant A. IQ. Lindsay, D. P. Lane, C. F. Meese, R. F. McAlister, C. M, Foss, A. E. Stevenson, M. E. Gates. 252 ,w,,,,.:,,,,.,,-,,.,,,jQ.,4-.,,-. .. 65' WYWQ A Q , A Qc' xlib v b SQ Cls 'SN' Wx? VG? '? f 1' I K, f W m 3 X N W 4fy!y4pD0nQ wr Q4 I vw: X C X7 fi LAKE CMJM! gf f u vi' K Arm f N0 X aff 's ' X Q ww A, J' ffl! , 4? 3 Z Quay f W rfmsfoo Hg cffrcffffwmff A '11 v A UN N EM 7 K X My in ug x mill HW QM W P X 41-155 MQ nmnsou S co u aus 7 if mnnna SW me QHSTTA W CCDUIPHI' 04 Hllllnl : B wg ' F fnw - f w f' 35 x ,V ,A N I is. Qm l f, ,K my i , : C '98 'P X X , f' V , 5 ' - N ' 'M ' 1 X X Ln :XA X X XXX U A an x ,W X X, ,fff ,y M X Y 'gin 1 -1- Minis--79' X, ,,., V5-::,jji7f,, Xfidg f . w gtg: TV. X J fk?45QLc'S----6-0' L ff ' , , , 1 ' ,w:g:gaazzzeez::, ,1:'fp Q 3 Y f,'lf12cY5S:::i1f-N 'f3i- 1 if 4123 ' - ' ' hw , ' N J 'ewr' A W ' X K ' figff ' 7 , R Ki 0 CSLVL I .fi - f fl , ' I v , , ,rf-NX ' , ' N JI, :KS 42 Wu gg pf Q, , P 1 v ' HA X - A3gg.mfQ ' 'V Ag . L-7 'f .2 ',? ? '4r . ' W fif A ff 7 J' H L ff' X f . . 1 nl -' A 5: -'ie VI ' ' 'Q - f vw' , 6 far D J' V311 1' - K -A :ff uf' Z wr , Ao xv ,gf Max Q 5 va X ,f , . -A f - fv -1 t A ,-Nm ' WX - f . If .F M01 ! 5 . ., V 1 , ' N ' ' I X. 5 xml' 7 ' Ei 'Au I 17 unvkqh' , 'wr , Qfvldw 1 l Q . ' I ' Afhlpiifg 'illuhrr rnnhurt uf ?Knl1rrt 05. Iflatrrunu. 115: Gnrl ilingruhurlg. 'UE W. C. Mills, President Curl 1E.Stccb, Treasurer Prof. Vcrnrm II. Davis, Grzuluatc NIZll1ZLg'Cl'. l'mf. IK. l+'.'l'l1mnz1s, Prof. ll. Ci. Kzullfmau, I,l'lDf.,A. M. Hlcilc, l'1'ol'. C. 13, Morrcy. L M. Fuss, Football Managcr. R. C. Cunninglmm, 'Hack Team Manager L. ,HCgC1llCill1Cl', Baseball lX'IZ'tl1IlQ'C1', I-Iurold C. Croy, Secretary Vernon H. Davis, Graduate Manager COACH E. R. sW1m'1'LAND Cornell Some Famous Varsity O Members in Repose Top Row-Curran, Raymond, Smith, Ortman, Clark, Lloyd, Oliver. Middle Row -- Cunningham, Hoover, Chubb, Howard. Dunsford, Shannon, Yeagle, Schultz, XV est. Bottom Row - Marquardt, Felger, Hagenbuch, Paterson, Nye Hoyer, Croy. Varsity 0 Association Officers 1904-5 Robert G. Paterson .... ....................... . . . President Clarence M. Foss .... ................... .... V 1 ee President john A. Smith .... .... . . . . . . . . . . . . Seeretary T. H. Felger .... .......................... . . ........... Treasurer Executive Committee C. M. Foss, J. S. Raymond, R. H. Cunningham Acti-ve Members D. H. Clark, R. W. Hoyer, F. A. Cornell, I. F. Lincoln, H. L. Croy, Robert Marshall R. H. Cunningham, W. B. Marquarclt M. F. Curran, W. A. Nye, Frank DeLay, R. E, Oliver, J. R. Dunsford, E. H. Ortman, T. H. Fclger, R. G. Paterson, C. M. Foss, -I. S. Raymond, Wm. Gill, A. C. Schultz, Frank Hagenbuch, R. E. Heekin, L. J. Hegelheimer, R. S. Heise, C. F. johnson, C. R. Dunlap, C. H. Postle, j. W. Westwater, H. C. Howard, C I-3 Cornell, W.'1i J. L. . Coover, A. Connors, Sherman Fay, F. H. Shannon, Ci. VV. Rightmire, J. H. Pelton, nl. M. Kittie, R. E. Rightmire, jack Reed, S. N. Cook, J. w. McClarcn, I. C. Powell, V, H J. B. . Davis, Atkinson, bl. A. Smith, D. R. Walker, B. L. VVest, XV. A. Yeagle. Honorary Members 259 C. W. Hogue, G. W. Bellows, T. D. Crocker, XV. N. Elder, C. B. Hoover, il. F. Jackson, Walter Klie, J. R. Marker, R, D. McClure, D. B. Sayers, j. D. Thrower, C. St. J. Chubb, C. H. Case, XV. E. Davis, W. B. Gould, C. C. Huntington W. C. Jones, C. R. Diltz, C. E. Steeb, The Fall Sport 1904 Vafsffy 1904 s Texas Throwcr, Captain 'I'ubby Smith, Mmmxzcr Bo Foss, lvlunzliter Fat HOYCIN CuDU1iU 261 Sept. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov. Ohio State .... H uv U vv J! J! ii 33 J! il J! il Total ..... 'K Abroad. Scores for 1904 .. -1 .. 34 Otterbein .... . . 80 Miami ...... . . 46 Muskingum 24 Denison ..... . . 6 Michigan .... I6 Case ..... O Wlndiana . .. . . 0 'lllinois. .. 2 Oberlin . . . II Kenyon O Carlisle . . . ZIQ Total . Schedule for 1905 September 23 Otterbein 30 Heidelberg October 4 Muskingum 7 Wittenberg I4 Denison 2I DePauw 28 Case November 4 Kenyon II Michigan I8 Oberlin 25 Wooster 30 Indiana 262 o 0 o o 31 6 8 46 4 5 23 II3 Bunnieu Swnn, Half-buck Mother ' Clark. 'Fucklc ' Fat Diltz, Guard Rod WValkcr, Half-back Happy Rccmsnydcr, End Smooth Surface, 'Pucklc Rowdy Lawrence, Full-back Bob Oliver, Utility w-A., ' W- ,.g, YI' 1, 'Fcxns Throwcr, End Billy Mnrclunrdt. Full-buck .Vg 1 'J 4 Dr , ,V . jf, 'Nl A ll Jim Marker, Tackle Fat lloycr. Center 265 rw- ,. Hcinie Hcckin. End Sis Claggctt, Guard .- .J f , hx ' e f '31, x -.. .V 5 A' 'W lfa f if '.--,5 Wu' . ,. ,12,T , W, Jtsw. 539375 Gm A 55:5 RW ' 1 Fi Bo Foss, Quarter M TUUDY D'-1l1Sf0fd 1' ,B 4.4 .4 Wiz' 4 :Ju gQ,j,gqg.5zggfa.Q g 7-4 r kf'i'.k:-i ai' MICHIGAN GAME Left to Right- Manager Paterson, Foster, Raymond, Hegelheimer Marquardt, Smith, Felger. 1904 The Winter Game 1905 Championship of Ohio Louie Hegclheimcx Captain i'ICgCii1Cill'lC1' .. Raymond ......... Marquarclt ...... Foster ..... Smith .... Hegelheiiner Smith ..... Ma1'qua1'rlt . Poinfs Game. i,i,l11'CillC Reserve 1 Denison Reserve Indiana Total . Tommy Foster, Bob Paterson. Captain-elect MunaiZOF Line-up and Figures Pos. Gzunes. Goals Tino vn I3 34 . . .11 F. 13 46 . . . . c. I3 62 I3' 6 I3 4Q 13 197 Foul Goals 'l'l1row11. Missed. . . ...... ..... .... I 6 24 , , . . . So 64 , . 1 o Q7 88 Afwarded' fo F. S. U. by Officials ' No. Points. 2 1 ff 4 1 lO 269 jan. 7 Ohio State Ian. I2 jan. 21 ' ' Jan. 28 ' Feb. 4 ' Feb. 9 t' Feb. IO Feb. II ' ' Feb. 18 ' Feb. 20 t' Mch. 4 Mch. IO Mch. 18 ' Total .. i Abr0ad. Scores 1905 . 65 VVittenberg .. 8 . 25 NVisc0nsin . . . . . 22 . 26 Purdue . . Q . .. 23 . 27 Oberlin ........ . . 21 . 43 U. of Cincinnati. .. . 6 . 37 :tWooster ........ . . IQ . 39 :'1Western Reserve. . . . . 20 . 20 i'iOberli'n ....... . . 36 . . 34 ililienison . . . . . IQ . 25 Minnesota . . . . . 27 . . 06 Indiana .......... . . I2 . 58 NVestern Reserve . . . . . 13 . . 36 Denison ........ . . I7 .. 501 Total . . .. . 243 'Post Mortem Should any in the University entertain any doubts as to the propriety of placing CHAMPIONSHIP above the record, we quote from our most deter- mined and withal generous antagonist, which in itself must dispel any and all doubts as to their legitimate claim: HO. S. U. deserves the championship. They have a well balanced team, a team that plays together, and plays a clean, scientific game. Their record is a clean one so far as the state colleges are concerned, with the exception of the one defeat which she suffered on the Oberlin floor. Ohio State, beyond a doubt, must be recognized as the state champions. l EDWLN Fauviauf One remarkable feature of this season was the fact that not one man missed a game, nor even a part of one, and this no doubt 111 part accounts for the record made. 270 L!30Y17.T1'2 9' iffy ' Lefharleg' igoure Lgrloao f, , ' 1 4 1 1-.,.' 1905 The Fair Varsity I 905 Champions of the State From left to right-Misses. Smead. Harbarger, Reinhard. Krumm CCD, Shil- ling, McGregor, XVilson, Manager Paterson fstandin Summary of the Season X .1 Miss Nettie Krumm, Miss Frances G. Paterson, Captain Manager Ohio State. . . . . I2 Otterbcin ......... . . . . . . 5 . . . . I7 :':Marion High .... . 12 H . . I4 Marion High .... 2 i' . 5 QHO. Northern . . . I9 . . . 35 Central High. . . . 2 .. I3 O, N. 4 20 C.H.S...... 2 . . I2 il:NillSliillglllU . . . 9 . . 32 Muskingum .... 2 . . 33 VVilmington ..... 3 . . 20 Amazons .... 2 Total ..... .... 2 I3 Total .. 62 N' Abroad. Individual Records Gms. Field G. Foul G P. Miss Reel, l. . . 9 26 28 80 Krumni, r. f ..... . . II 48 IO IO6 Shilling, c ..... .. Il 1 .. 2 Smead, c ...... .. IO .. . . .. Harbarger, g . . I I . . . . . Wilson,-gf ..... .. 7 .. .. .. Leibold, f ... .. 2 8 - 3 IQ Gorrell, f. c .... . . 21- 2 2 6 Macgregor, g . . 25 . . , , , Reinhard, e .... . A . . . . . . Total ................. 85 43 213 Opponents- Field goals, 139 foul goals, 36g total points, 62. 1904 Spring Sports 1905 Base Ball Louic Hcgfelhcimer, Manager Bob Paterson, Captain Sox Raymond Asst Manager 1905 Schedule Apr. 8 Ohio State . . . ......... 7 East High . . . . Apr. I5 . . .... 5 Muskingum . . . Apr. 19 U . . . 21 Ottcrbcin . . . Apr. 22 .... 5 xfVittCl1bCI'g' .... Apr. 26 .... 8 WPC Pauw .... . Apr, 27 ,... 5 :I:Il1CiiZl1'IH .... Apr. 28 .... 1 DePauw ....... Apr. 29 .... 6 :kN0t1'e Dame .... May 3 ' .... 0 Denison ....... Nfay 6 ,,,. 2 Oberlin ........ May 12 ' ,... 4 VVcst Virginia. . . May I3 ,,,, 4 :Vlicnyon ...... . M ay I7 . . Wvstcrn Rcscrvc May IQ , Case ........,.. May 20 ' :':Dc'nison . . . . May 24 - :l:Woostcr . . . . . May 25 ' :11W. Reserve. . . . M ay 26 i :':Casc ......... M ay 27 ' , :ilfibcrlin . . . . May 30 ' Notre Dzunc .... june 3 ' Wooste1' .... June 10 U Kenyon . . f :V Almroacl. T 7 innings. 1904 The Varsity Nine I 904 Back Row-Manager Chubb: Bellows, ss.g Paterson. 2b.g Hagenbuch, out- fieldg Assistant Manager Hegelheimer. Middle Row-Gould, outfieldg Raymond QCD, Ib.: Ortman, c.g Felger, p.g Reibel, outfield Front Row - jackson, 3b.g NVest, c.g Heise, p. Apr. 23 Apr. 29 May 4 May 7 May I3 May 16 May 18 May IQ May 23 May 25 May 30 June I June 4 june 9 June IO June I2 june I5 Total 1904 Scores ana' Ohio State Jv J! J! P! il' Abroad. T IO innings. 1904 Captain Raymond . Paterson. Bellows . Jackson Gould . . ....... Heekin, Hagenbucli Reible . .......... Ortman, West .... Felger, Heise . . . - 3 - 3 - 7 - 7 - 4 . 2 - 5 - 4 - 9 - 4 - 7 - 9 - 5 . 6 4 79 Line-up .lst base .... 2nd has: S.. . 3d base f.. ...l.f.. f.. 277 0 Line-up iklienyon . . . . . 1 Tlndiana . . . . 5 illlberlin . . . . . I U. W, .. 9 Denison ...... . . 5 VV. Virginia ..... . . O Tlllinois ...... .. . 6 Notre Dame .... .... 1 lain Case ......... . . I WO. W. U. .... . . . 7 Oberlin ..... .... l lain Denison . . . . . I Kenyon . . . . 3 :'1Woostcr . . . 4 :kCase .... . . 2 Ohio . . . . 0 Illinois ..... . . . 5 Total .... . . 51 I 905 . . . . . . . .. Raymond Captain Pzltcrson Allen . . ..... Smith . . . . . . Talbot . . . . ll2Ig'CIllJl1Cll VVest Ortman, lihright . . . . Felgcr, Taggart, Abbot Afverages for 1904 I Bat. Fld. NAME Ga R 1B 2B 3B hr P c PO P 0 West ..... IO 10 I5 4 1 349 20 .931 jackson .... 16 I5 23 2 1 343 l7 .820 Gould . .. I5 I4 IQ 7 0 333 23 .989 Bellows I5 8 I3 1 1 250 27 .899 Raymond 16 IO I4 3 0 .237 177 1000 Heekin . . 9 5 8 0 0 222 I2 1000 Paterson . 15 6 I4 0 0 212 33 .905 F elger ..... 1 1 4 9 0 0 209 4 ,941 Hagenb11ch. 9 9 6 0 1 207 II , 8 57 Rieble ..... 6 3 4 0 0 167 4 .693 Ortman .... I4 4 - 8 1 0 163 104 .983 Heise ... 7 2 2 I 0 0 105, 1 .909 Pitcf1er's Records NAME - I Ga I WI L IPC I AvhlAvr IBB I SO Fld. Folger .... .... r 8 I 6 I 2 I.75OI 6.5I 2.6! IO ' 42 .941 He1se .. .... 7 I 4 I 3 I.57II-5 I 4.1 16- 54 .909 Q78 -152 Signal West ,., , , f.,. -L41 dgdhw ' 'W ,W Kid Allen Y l 279 Buck libright S.. ,,- I' rs' 'I' Rip Smith ' If in Tootlus Talbot 99 se' O-4 S., '-f'-1 ..,. Silent '1'ug1.:crt Curley Abbot 280 .1- - 65 , , IS 4 4 Y ry t V 1905 Track Team I 905 From left to right: Top row- Manager Cunningham. Petrie, Arundel, Skeels, Earl, Huntington, Cwcrwick. Second Row - Heekin, Miller, Greene. XVhite, Gillie. Dupuy, Cox, llfarde. Third Row - Rothwell, Barrows, Gill, XValker, Shipps. Capt. Yeagle, Hagaman, Thomas, Harding. Bottom Row - Parsons, Drackett. Cook, Rothrock Jones, Assistant Manager Harshman, Sheldon. 5 I 'O l '1 C5 , 'lfgl 2 i' 4 I l I F Croesus vYcuHle Bob Cunniuglmm, Mnnngcr Indoor Meets 1905 I7cb. I8 Clhio State ... .. 74. iltlcrbcin .. BTch.l8 H . .Qu --A- 52 CJbcrHn .. 'Fotal .... . .4126 'fotul .. Oafdoor Meets 1905 May 6, Ohio State ... ... III :!:XVillL'llIlCl'Q,' . . . . . . .. RWay 20 ... ,. 4qQCHjWHl ...... ..... B1ay26 H U Ihg Six Qu Cohunhus june 3 283 From left to riglmt-VX'l1ite. Rothwell, Jones, Heekin 40 yd. clash ............. 40 yd. low hurdles ....... 40 yd. high hurdles ...... Quarter mile ............ Half mile .... Mile run .... Two mile .... High Jump .... . . Pole vault ..... Shot put ...... Established Records Indoor Records C. H. Jones ........ . ....... 1905 V. B. Hagamanl lIQO5l . L. Connors S lIQO2S F. B. Hagaman .... ..... 1 905 R. E. Heekin .... ..... 1 905 W. A. Yeagle .... ..... I 905 W. A. Yeagle .... ..... 1 905 G. B. Thomas .... ..... I 905 W. E. Davis .... ..... 1 901 V. N. Dupuy ................... 1905 D. R. Walker. 1905 45,1 see. 55 sec. 52 sec. 532 see. 2:04 41402- 105452 5 ft. 7 in. 9 ft. 6 in. 37 feet Mile Relay-White, Rothwell, jones, Heekin, 1905, 3:45. :oo yd .... 220 yd .... 440 yd ...... 'Half mile .... QMIIG. ................ . 120 yd. hurdle Qhighj . .. 5220 yd. hurdle Qlowj . . . Running high jump ...... Running broad jump ..... Pole vault ............... Shot put ........ . . . Hammer throw. . . . . . . Discus throw. . . . . .... . . . Mile relay. . . Outdoor Records H. A. Hyman ........ ..... H. A. Hyman. W. E. Davis .... .... C. W. Hogue .... .... W. A. Yeagle. G. A. Robbins .... ..... J. L. A. Connors .... ..... P. S. Miller... W. E. Davis ....... .... W. B. Marquardt ..... ..... D. R. Walker. . J. F. Lincoln.. W. B. Marquardt ............... johnson, DeWolf, Kellog, Hyman. mWestern.lnteireolleigiate Record. QState Records. 285 1901 1901 .1900 -1903 1903 1897 1903 1901 . 1900 1903 1904 1903 1903 1901 IO sec. 223' see. SIE sec. 1 :58E 453433 I9 see. 27 sec. 5 ft. 95 in 20 ft. 3 in 9 ft. IO in. 37 ft. 6 in 98 ft. 3 in 98 ft. 4 in 3339 f X .4 f ' I 1 -'i Sins. 'Q V x 42 f . 55? Y w l .3 B-. .EQLLLV - L ,A Ai. 1 ' , ' . QM w M 1 , l .xy Y. F, .K- 'Ng-EM. Red Walker Jimmy Rothwell Speedy Jones Freddy Hagerman Heinle Hcekin O. S. U Track Team 100 Yard Dash- R. E. Heekin, P. L. Rothroek, C. H. jones, W. R. Howell. ll. A. Svhwah 120 Yard High Hurdles- F. B. Hagaman, H. Huntington, J. Downing. R. A. Hauer. 220 Yard Low Hurdles- F. B. Hageman, H. Huntington, J. Downing, R. A. Hauer. 220 Yard Dash- C. H. Jones. B. M. Duncan. 440 Yard Dash- R. E. Heekin, J. M. Rothwell, L. P. XVhite. Half Mile- Capt. W. A. Yeagle, ll. Gerwiek, S. P. VVard. Mile- Capt. W. A. Yeagle, H. R. Draekett, R. Gerwiek. G. l.. Shipps. Two Mile - G. B. Thomas, W. B. Marquardt. Pole Vault- V. N. Dupuy, C. M. Foss, - - Hnlguist, H. C. Green. High Jump- W. P. Earl, W. H. Mytinger, l. Cook. Broad Jump- D. R. Walker, I. Cook. Hammer Throw- G. W. Gillie, D. R. Walker, G. Tangeman. Discus - ' D. R. Walker, Capt. W. A. Yeafgle, Robinson CCivil lfngincerj, G. Tan- gClllal1. Shot Put- . F. BI Hagaman, D. R. VValkcr, G. XV. Gillie. Relay Team- R. E. Hcekin, T. P. White, C. H. Jones. J. M. Rothwell. 287 Prof. S. E. Rasor ..... Miss Emily Gorrell .... J. F. Vogclgesang ..... Warrington Chubb .. . Tennis Association Officers ...........President . . . . . . . . . .Vice-President Ezecutifve Commiltee Mark Houston. Golf Club Officers Prof. J. E. Hagerty .... Ca rl E. Steeb ........ Prof. F. L. Landacrc .... Committees Membership Dr. M. B. Hammond. Dr. Lisle. Mr. H. N. Cobb. Mr. Frank Hagenbuch. 288 Secretary-Treasurer ...........Manager .. . . . . . President . . ...... . . .Trcasurcr . . . .Master of Greens B GULOA Cupid and a Buttonhook IIARRY FRANKLIN H,xRia1NG1'oN, lt was at Baldy Brooks' wedding that Bob first met her. She was 1naid-of- honor, and he was best man. He began by falling in love with the way she wore her gown and carried her head, and then, on closer acquaintance, with the way she talked. She was arrow-straight and tall, with April eyes that beamed when she laughed. And her name, Bob loved to repeat it over and over again. It was Dorothy-Dorothy Wentworth. VVhen Baldy and his wife started on their honeymoon, and nothing was left of the wedding but withered flowers and cut glass, Bob suddenly became aware that he had been living ill a land of enchantment. Reluctantly, almost mourn- fully he packed his grip to come back to the drudgery of Calculus and Greek at the college on the hill. But he returned, blessed in the memory of a face and a name. 'When he wrote English notes, he found his pen scrawling Dorothy on some friendly-disposed hlotterg and, when he smoked, the little blue clouds from his meerschanm formed themselves into her featuresg and, when he dreamed, he dreamed of her. Bob wrote to Baldy for her address. tHe had forgotten to ask her where she lived.j It was Groveville, a town on the Big Three Railroad. Bob discovered on looking at the atlas. Then he marshaled all his courage and wrote her a letter. Dorothy answered it. I-Ie wrote another and another. Dainty little missives came from Groveville in reply. And one day he received her photograph, and was so beside himself with ecstasy that his fingers drummed a galloping hornpipe such as made the dishes on the table rattle with glee. Then he poured catsup into his coffee and finished by salting his oranges. All of which made the fel- lows at the club suspect he had taken leave of his wits. Later, they unearthed his secret, and from that day Bob's life was as troubled waters. But what cared Bob? I-Ie kept pegging away on his thesis, and wrote letters-many letters-to Dorothy, unmindful of jest and banter. One day Dorothy came to town to make a week's visit with her married sister, who lived on the Boulevard. It was the first time Bob had seen her since the wedding. He was happy-joyously happy-the happiest, and the luckiest of mor- tals as well. That evening he called on her, and just missed the last car to the city, and left his gloves. i V 290 tlrle had not worn gloves for months.j Bob had always been careless about such things as gloves and ties and--engagements. Yes, really. ln his junior year, this thoughtless young fellow had been known to make dates with two girls for the same concert. Of necessity he became politely ill, and two of his frater- nity brolzhers escorted the girls in his stead. One evening--not so very long ago-Bob happened to have an engagement with pretty Kitty Ormsby-old Doc. Ormsbyis daughter-and completely overlooked it until the next morning. It seems he was to have taken Kitty to hear Nlelba as Marguerite. The poor girl sat up half the night in her furs and hat, waiting for Bob to comeg but, of course, he never did. He told Kitty he thought it was a night laterg but Kitty has never quite forgiven him for the oversight. lt is almost unbelievable, but the boys still tell of how Bob once went to a swell fraternity formal in a variegated smok- ing jacket. Another time-when he was a Freshman and was not supposed to know much-he startled etfete college circles by going to the Glee Club concert with his hair in an uncombed tangle and without a necktie. Neckties? Bless you, a necktie lasted him for years, and they were the worst lot of strings you ever saw. Bob was glad of the excuse to go after his gloves the next night. He took Dorothy a box of Lowney's-and forgot all about it until time to go home. He had a capital time. Her brother-in-law was a phonograph enthusiast, and Bob and Dorothy danced to rollicking band marches and squeaky two-steps until the clock announced that if Bob did'nt want to wait for an owl-car he had best make his adieus. Bob's car carried him two squares beyond his stopping place that night, for the young fellow was thinking and-dreaming. And the dream? Ah! some of you who have strayed down campus paths in the budding-time of spring already knowg others of us will know, perhaps, some day. Why should I tear that rainbow fancy to pieces, as a ruthless hand dissects a violet? Two nights later Bob took Dorothy to Red Featherf, in a cab. As they were going down the aisle to their seats, Bob was so intent on looking at a funny little Dutchman sawing away at a violin in the orchestra, that he trod on Doro- thy's train, and-well, the whole audience pricked up its ears and Dorothy Hushed a rich crimson. Bob made profuse apologies, and after a while Dorothy smiled forgiveness. lf truth be told, it must be confessed that Bob saw very little of the opera that evening. The young fellow was thinking of the girl by his side in the gossamery fabric of white, cut low enough to display two gleaming shoulders and a slender throat. How beautiful she was! Bob felt his secret tugging at his heart-strings crying to be let out gi but he stifled its voice. He called on Dorothy once more before she went home. and thenthe letters began to come again-dear little letters that set his heart wildly a-throb. But the course of true love never did run smooth. Bob's dreams were rudely 29l awakened one morning by the receipt of a letter from his beloved. It was an angry note, hot with reproaehes. It seems that Cabby had come to Brother-in- law with a bill for cab fare, which, he said, Bob had refused to pay. Cabby wanted his money. Brother-in-law paid the bill, and told Dorothy. - That aroused all the vixen in her nature, and she accused Bob of a number of things. She won- dered if the theater seats had been paid for, or whether Brother-in-law had gen- erously drawn on his own bank account to appease an unreasoning ticket seller. Oh, it was a saucy little note, and it cut Bob to the quick. The young fellow had received the bill from the cab-barn, but had laid it away for safe keeping, and straightway forgotten all about it. He sat down and wrote an abject apology to Dorothy, and sent a crisp two-dollar bill to Brother-in-law. And Dorothy forgave. . It was a buttonhook-or rather the lack of one-that brought Bob to his knees. Don Cupid is a wily rascal, and occasionally makes us of other weapons than bows and quills to accomplish his ends. On the twelfth of February-Bob will never forget the date-a note came from Dorothy inviting him to be present at a Saint Valentine dance--an informal one-which the Merry Maidens intended to give their bachelor friends on the evening of the fourteenth. The postscript was irresistible in its appeal. You'll come, won't you F it said. 'fl want to repay you for your kindness to a little country girl, who did so want to see the sights of a big, big town. I'll meet you at the station, with my eoach-and- four, if you'll tell me on what train to expect you. D. VV. Of course, Bob would go. He was just dying to go, and the little minx kneix it all along. So our smitten young friend accepted with a great show of thanks. after a careful perusal of the time-table. He imagined his letter of acceptance politely impersonal, but Dorothy smiled when she received it--and was roguishly happy the rest of the day. ' VVhen a fellow is in love, the first thing he thinks about is his wardrobe. So with Bob. His love of Dorothy had brought needed reformation in his personal appearance. VVhen he went to call on her, he wore his prettiest ties Qimported from Parisi, and his snappiest suit. and patent leathers that glistened like bur- nished steel. Umph! That made him think. He must have a new pair of shoes. The others were in dreadful shape. A pair of button shoes, say. All the college boys wore button shoes, which was evidence that they were at the top- notch of fashion. Yes, he really must have a pair of button shoes. He had seen some beauties in a down-town show-window. He would investigate the next day. He did, and lugged a pair home that night with inward satisfaction. It was spit- ting snow outside when he came in. but he hardly noticed it. Bob set his alarm clock for six. His train was to leave at seven, arriving in Groveville some time in the afternoon. He tried three different times to read a 292 T story in a magazine. then tossed the thing across the room and piled into bed. At midnight he went to sleep. At six there was the faint whir-ar-r of an alarm clock for the fraction of a second, the feeble beat of the tapper, and then the clock ticked on as before. Bob had forgotten to wind the larm. Thirty minutes hurried by. Then, of a sudden, the bed clothes were tumbled in every direction, and Bob jumped out of bed, blink- ing and rubbing his eyes. n B-b-b-bugh, but it's cold. he mumbled, teeth chattering. 'bout time for that alarn. to-to-Great jupittf. if it isn't half after. XN'l1at the devil-- He wa- into his clothes in a jffy, working in maddish haste, his fingers numb with coli Then he made a dfvf- for the pair of new shoes, still in wrapping paper. lilllllllg' them on, he reached into the box for the hook. There was none there. Hob stared at the empty box in bewilderment. The seconds sped by. The clock ticked on demoniacally. Queer, he muttered, swear I saw that clerk put in a hook. I've just get to find a buttonhook, that's all there is to it. lf l don't make that train--- In a fever of excitement he jerked out the drawer of the table, and dumped the contents on the Hoor. There was nothing that looked like a buttonhookg not even a hair pin. He ransacked the bureau from top to bottom Cstrewing laundry and shirts in every part of the roomj: he even clambered under the bed. The clock ticked on. Merciful heavens! VVhat was he to do? llob made one more fractie effort to find even so much as a piece of wire or a collar-button fastener, anything with which to button his shoes: but his search was fruitless. There- upon he flung the clock savagely across the room, and dashed out the door at full tilt and down the stairs. There was only fifteen minutes to make his train. It had snowed furiously during the night, and the sidewalks and gutters were piled high with drifts. liob heard the wliang of a street car as it came speeding down the track. He knew he must catch that car if he were to reach the station in time for his train. I-le started on a dead run across the street, tripped on the curb and fell sprawling into a deep bank of snow, and emerged a moment later spluttering and white from head to foot. The street car was not a dozen yards away. Unmindful of everything but getting to the depot, Rob flew across the street and pulled himself aboard. Then the young fellow made a discovery that fairly made his gasp for breath. He had lost one of his shoes in the snow drift. One foot was encased only in a green sock with red stripes. The conductor and passengers were staring at him stupidly. Never in his whole life had Bob felt so embarrassed. This was a deuce of a pickleg but he must catch that train, come what might. Dorothy was waiting for him at Groveville, and Dorothy was worth more than whole dozens of button shoes. T The conductor had bawled All aboard, and the big driving wheels of the 25125 engine had just begun to move when Bob threw himself on board the train. He did not even have time to buy a ticket. His foot was sopping wet and icy cold, but the passengers had not noticed his sorry plight. Bob felt vastly relieved. He tried to button his other shoeg but the holes in the leather were so stiff that he could not push the buttons through. He managed to place his shoeless foot near the heating pipes, and soon felt the toes tingle with warmth. He paid his fare, and then looked out upon the whirling panorama of white. But his thoughts were far away. What would Dorothy think? She would laugh at him, of course. He had made an idiot of himself again, he was always making an idiot of himself. To think of coming to visit a girl, whom he hoped some day to call his Wife, in all but his stocking feet. Why had he been such an ass to come after he had lost his shoe. NVould he never learn anything? But Dorothy was waiting at the station. There was no retreating now. He fortified his heart with new courage. After a while he grew weary of that long, unbroken line of snow, and bought a funny paper of the train boy. The jokes were stale, and the pictures mere daubs of ink. After all, perhaps he might be able to elude Dorothy and buy a pair of shoes before making his presence known to her. The long hours loitered by with slow steps. Noon came. Bob had eaten no breakfast in the hurry of his flight, and was wolf-hungry. The train stopped at some small by-station for lunch. Bob did not dare leave the coach, but contented himself with oranges and bananas bought of the train boy. Oh! how miserable the young fellow felt at times. Often he cursed himself for a blitering blockhead, with the brains of a rag-doll, then he thought of Dorothy and his thoughts bounded into pleasanter channels. That journey to Groveville seemed very long and very short. Bob was eager to see Dorothy again-that was undeniable-but not in his present predicament. He grew impatient after a while. If the thing was to happen, let it happen as quickly as possible. To prolong the suspense was wormwood to his soul. At last, after an age of waiting, Bob heard his station called in a deep, stentorian voice. NVith four others, the young fellow climbed down the steps to the frozen ground of the station yard. lt was whistling cold. Bob felt that he must look like an escaped lunatic, for he felt the curious gaze of passengers and trainmen fixed upon him. Then he saw Dorothy, and forgot people and station-everything but his green hosiery with the red stripes. He made a clumsy attempt to hide himself behind some egg crates on the platform, that he might avoid her until he had made himself more presentable. But Dorothy had seen him and advanced, smil- ing, all in a great coat and furs, her cheeks aglow with color. 'Tm so glad you've some, she exclaimed, stretching out a daintily-gloved hand, then stopped, confused, her eyes fixed upon his shoeless foot. Bob flared u J beet-red, and beffan to stammer Jitifullv. I s l . 294 Dorothy caught the words buttonhook, lost shoef snow drift, and, with womanly intuition divinecl the rest. NVhereupon she shrieked with merriment. 0h! Oh! Oh-h-h! she laughed, struck with the ludicrousness of it all, you do look so funny, so unutterably killing--H The look on Bobis face made her pause. It was a look of deep, indescribable embarrassment, approaching almost suffering. A crowd of loafers were eyeing both of them from the plat- form, grinning broadly. ' Come with me, the girl said in another tone, the weather is cold and you'1l freeze out here. Don't mind them. They d0n,t know any better, the simple- tons. Come. Hardly knowing what he was doing, Bob followed Dorothy to a waiting car- riage and both climbed into the back seat. I-lome, George, the girl said to the driver. The whip cracked, and the horses wheeled into the road. Now tell me all about itf' Dorothy commandedg I beg your pardon for laughing at you, Papa says-here, cover your foot with this robe-that I always laugh even when I shouldn't. And maybe I do. But, no. you'r cold and uncom- fortable. NVe'll, wait for the story till we get home. But, but, stammered Bob, 'II intended to go to the hotel and-and-of course--that isiv , There isn't a hotel in the whole town that's Ht for even a drummer to stop at, interrupted Dorothy. you're going to be our guest. Mother would never think of you staying at a hotel-and--neither would I. So there. Don't say an- other word. I-I-I really-I'm very grateful for all your kindness,', began Bob lamely, but I haven't deserved any of it. I've made an infernal old fool of myself again-the infernalest old chump yet-just when I wanted to be most like other people. Hang it all, I don't care. l'm going to make another break, the most idiotic and the stupidest yet. I'm going to tell you why I came down here. I came here because I loved you, because I have always loved you, will always keep on loving you. I know you'll never want to look at me again, but I came down, here not so much for the dance as to ask you--to ask you to be my wifef' lt was a long speech for Bob. He stopped. breathless. She would laugh, of course. WVhat cared he? lf it were a break, it was the kind of break his heart gloried in. She would say that their friendship was at eu end, that he had done something that transgressed even her forgiveness, that he had taken unpardonable liberties. Yes, he would abide her anger, he would even take his dismissal with the smile of a Spartan, he would- Of a sudden lilob felt the soft touch of gloved fingers upon his sleeve. Look- 295 ing up, dazed, half hoping yet fearful, he found Do1'otl1y's CXCS-llflgllt and shin ing-lixed upon him, her lips 21-treinble and cheeks radiant. Your poor, blind old stupiclf, she whispered. The next moinent Bob's arms were around her, while George, being a dis creet driver, sat like Z1 Sphinx, mindful but silent. xii! 25113 All On Account of Frances BY GER'l'RUl'lli S. JACKSON. lt was all on account of Frances. It began in a joke and ended in--well, if any of us had foreseen what it was to mean to us, I am sure-but, as Marcia says, one must not say Kipling says, That is another storyf' And, to tell this one properly, I must I suppose begin with that rainy afternoon in November that Mar- -cia calls thc spinning of the web. Marcia, let me say in passing, is very liter- ary and will undoubtedly be a great novelist some day. Still, it is rather hard to have to stand a lot of her nonsense, and when one remonstrates with her to be told that it is only the idiosyncracy of genius. Louise told her that she had a great 'future before her, if she was not nabbed first by some institution for the suppres- sion of over-developed imaginationsg but as that was just after Marcia told us at .the breakfast table that she had seen Bob kiss Louise the night before, Louise's .statement might be considered biased, perhaps. But, anyway, we shall always remember that rainy afternoon in November. Betty came in from a class, and .slammed her books down on the table where Marcia was writing, scattering B'TZll'C1Z1'S papers all over the room, and that made Marcia cross, and when Betty raised up from bending over to pick up the papers she bumped her head on the 'table and that made her cross, and she said savagelv: Oh, plague your old papers, Marcia. There is something more important than they on hand- Have you and Dick made up again? .Felice asked. Betty looked at her -crossly, and snapped out, It's more important than a little thing like Dick, and then we all laughed, for Dick is half-back on the team, and certainly looks the part. Well, T don't care, Betty persisted. Laugh if you like. The Delta Psis are going to get Frances Gardner if we are not careful. Teddy told me that she has a cousin who is a Delta Psi, and that she has promised to get Frances for them. That really did look bad. lt would never do to let the Delta Psis get Frances. We had not lost a bid to them since Felice got Betty from them, and they just must not get Frances. But they certainly had a strong pull. Wfe talked it over and over, but could not see any way to counteract that cousin. Get Teddy to rush her hardf' Belle advised. ' I did suggest that, said-Betty, but Teddy said he would be hanged first. ihat the last time he rushed a girl for us she thought he was doing it on his own 297 account and that he nearly had a breach of promise suit. Why don't you get Bob to do it, Louise? Because Bob's time is fully occupied as it is, said Louise, frankly. H Any way, it won't do, unless Frances thinks a great deal of the man, and we- don't wish to be responsible for a romance, Belle remarked. Felice came out of her revery just then, saying, Belle is right about it. We don't want any foolishness. But if we could find some man on whose judgment Frances relies absolutely, and convince him that Alpha Chi is far superior to Delta Psi, the rest would be easy sailing. I would back that man against any cousin the Delta Psis could produce. 'So would I, if we could find him, agreed Louise. Then we were all quiet again until Kate came in from class and excited everybody by confirming Betty's. story and adding: And Jack says that Frances will go to Delta Psi sure if that cousin wants her to, unless Stuart Osborne should tell her not to. And who might Stuart Osborne be ? asked Felice. I-le might be our salvationf' retorted Kate. l'He is a town man, nearly' thirty, a fine lawyer, and a friend of Frances Gardner's father. jack says he is like a big brother to Frances and that if she were just crazy about the Delta Psis. she would turn them down for us if Stuart Osborne told her to. f l'hat is easy, then, said Felice, in a relieved tone. Go after Stuart Osborne. It is three months until pledge day. But it is not so easy as all that, said Kate. He is nearly thirty, I tell you, and Jack says that when it comes to girls Stuart Osborne is the most indifferent man that ever lived. No girl ever makes the slightest impression on him. Felice's eyes had the worst little sparkle in them as she said, So much the better. VVe need not have any scruples about imposing on youth and innocence, and if what jack says about girls is true I am-I think I should like to meet Stuart Osborne. It is a case for missionary work. 4 W'ell, I don't choose to be the missionary, said Kate. Nor I, said Belle- and Louise. Let's draw cuts, said Betty. Oh, cried Felice, you sound like an anarchist's plot. 'lniirm of purpose 2' she swept to her feet-tragically, give me the daggersf' And, with a dramatic' Hourish, she exclaimed, Ladies, I have the honor to introduce Felice Ballard, one time college junior, now official beau-snatcher for Alpha Chi. The plan seemed toiwork beautifully, for Stuart Osborne called at the house' quite frequently after Jack brought him for the First time. I-Ie seemed to like all of the girls, and Felice especially. But we are used to that. It is always the way. Felice has more men friends than any girl I ever knew, and it does not spoil her a' bit. She is just the same sweet, happy-go-lucky Felice, in spite of it all. Now, 298 if Marcia were in her place-well, I would not be responsible, that's all. But Felice is not a bit romantic nor conficling. I was her room-mate for a whole year and she never told me a thing about Teddy proposing and, when I asked her why, she said that it was not what she would call romantic-it had become chronic. VVell, if I knew that a man were in love with me, I should think it romantic, I told her. But she called me a silly little Freshman and said that I would not think it romantic if I flunked chemistry the next day. And then, another time, she came into the room and found me crying over Elaine,i' and when I asked her if she did not think it was awful, she said Yes, that with her temperament Elaine might have made her fortune as a yellow journalist, if she had only had a very little common sense, that it was awful to let such talent go to waste. That made me mighty cross, for I think Elaine was grand. I like that lily maid of Astolet business, and where it says she looked up and loved him with that love which was her doom. I always cry over that. Marcia made me awfully tired about Felice and Stuart Osborne. She was eternally trying to get up a romance. I told her that it was impossible, that Stuart Osborne was twenty-eight-Frances told me that-and that Felice was only twenty, and that she was utterly deficient in the romantic tendency, but Marcia said I would see. Marcia is downright pig- headed some times. VVe pledged Frances in April, but Felice began to act queer long.before that, so it may have been that she was worried about Frances. She seemed to have something on her mind. I told her that one day and she said she hoped she had and laughed, and that was all the satisfaction I got. After that she was more like herself, except sometimes when she seemed to forget, and then she would be absent-minded and her eyes looked sad. One night at the dinner table everybody was laughing and talking but Felice, she was staring at her plate and did not seem to hear anything. Felice, wake up. said lletty. I have spoken to you three times now. and-- That makes the second olive you have put into your coffee, declared Louise. Somebody give her the sugar, for goodness sake! Meditation is all very well in its way, but when it comes to substituting olives for sugar it is time for your friends to interfere. Felice looked up confusedly, I-I was-I wonder-that taking of Port Arthur was wonderful, wasnlt it? Marcia and I discussed it afterward. I could not understand it at all, but Marcia said she did. I know she was just trying to be smart. She likes to think she is very intuitive and knows everything before it happens, and then says, I could have told you so, I felt it comingg I knew it. But you girls always laugh at intuitions. It makes us awfully cross, for it is mighty exasperating to have some grand glorious news met by Marcia's t'That just confirms my intuitions. l , 299 knew it, somehow all along. The day Louise told us about her engagement Marcia said, I have known it for a long time. and Louise squelched her good and properly by saying, That is more than Bob or I did. We did not know it until last evening. My, but I was glad. Then Betty laughed right out and said, Marcia, won't you intuit and see what fortunate man I am to make happy FH But Marcia had her soulful mood on, and didn't pay any attention. About a month after that, I heard something that I was nearly crazy to tell Marcia, but I would not because she had acted so smart about the other. Felice had gone to the Charity ball with Stuart Osborne, and I was going to sit up and wait tor her to come home because I wanted to hear all about it. But I got tired and sleepy, so I went to bed and left the light and tire burning. I must have been asleep a long time, when I thought I heard Felice moving around in the room. Theu,I thought it might be a burglar, so I kept still and pretended to be asleep. Pretty soon I heard the clock strike two, and Felice gave a little sigh and came -over and sat down in the little chair before the dressing-table. She looked at her- self a moment and then she leaned over and buried her face on her arms. I knew something was wrong and I knew, too, that Felice thought I was asleep, so I listened. It was wrong I know, but I love Felice and I wanted to find out what the trouble was. She raised her head by and by, and pushed her hair back and looked at herself in the glass real hard for a long time and then laughed a little low laugh that was more like a sob than anything else, as she said, still looking at her reflection, I always knew you would do something of the kind. It is what I have always feared. You were pre-ordained to make a mess of things. It is all your own fault, too. XVhy did you ever meet him? If you had not, you would have probably married Teddy eventually and would have been happy, but now- Felice Ballard, I am ashamed of you-you are as silly as 'Elaine' herself. Then she walked over to the Morris chair and sat there, looking into the fire. Her pale- yellow gown .and white shoulders made a striking contrast to the dark-brown cush- ions, and, with the firelight playing over her face and hair, she looked like a Christy picture. I wanted to put my arms around her and cry, but somehow I did not think I had better. It was not what Marcia would call the psychological niomentf' I guess. I finally fell asleep and when I awoke up at half past five Felice was still sitting there, looking into the fire. She frightened me, and I called to her. She was wide awake, for she did not start a bit, and she said. Yes, dearie, in a minute. Go to sleep. I will tell you all about it in the morningf' But it is morning now, I told her, It's half-past five. I just looked at hiy watch. Yes, she said, and then I went to sleep again. I did not tell Marcia, but it certainly did puzzle me. Felice never acted queer again, and after a while I began to think I had dreamed it all. Then Marcia fell in love with the leading man at the Colonial. and that was so interesting that I 300 forgot all about Felice. Marcia went to the matinee every Tuesday-cut lit to do it, too, and when I told her she would Hunk she murmured something about a soul's yearning' being of more importance than a few sordid grades. She always wore a black picture hat and her black velvet suit, and had three American beau- ties-they cost her a dollar a piece-pinned near her heart, and always sat in the first box on the right. I feel girls, she said, that some day he will notice me: I cannot tell--you would not understand, but I know, I know that some day he- will look straight at me. I feel it intuitively. I always dress the same, you know-he likes black-and he may notice these roses. Oh, if he would only look to-day! If he would only see the roses. They may attract his attention, who can Say? If you want to attract his attention, why don't you wear a pair of horns P Betty suggested. They would not be half as expensive, and would be far more effectivef' Goodness, but Marcia was cross! She told Betty she was a fool, and Betty retorted that when she saw how some wise people acted she was content to be one, and Marcia said that came from The Prisoner of Zendaf' and Betty said it was. not her fault if Anthony I-Iope happened to think of it first, and goodness only knows what they might have said next if Kate had not told Marcia that it was a quarter of two and that she would be late to the matinee. Two or three weeks before the Senior Prom., Frances told us that Stuart Osborne had been appointed United States minister to some South American country-I did not catch the name for I was watching Felice-and that he was to leave September, and none of us were to tell because it was a secret. Felice said, How fine! and went on reading as if nothing had happened. So I knew she did not cate. Marcia said, when I told her, that it was convincing proof, that it was just like her and Algernon Van Austin Montague-that is the leading man-that he loved her madly, and that the reason he never looked at her was that he was afraid his eyes would betray the secret of his heart, if he glanced her way. I tried to figure it out on that basis, but I could not. It made me think of that crazy old aunt in L.es Femmes Savantesf' I was trying to tell Marcia about it in French class, when Morrison saw us talking and called on Marcia and she was. all excited and translated unique Elle fancy daughter, and then got perfectly furious at me because everybody laughed. llut about Felice-I was back in the library studying one night when Stuart Usborne came to see her. She was not expecting him, and Bridget left him in the parlor and went to tell her. The doors were open, but he could not see me, so I went on with my work. I suppose I should have gone in and entertained him until lfelice came, and I would have loved to-he is so big and grand-but my collar was off and my face was dirty-it always is when I use a fountain pen-and ZLUI I am only seventeen, and he is twenty-eight and I would have been scared to death. Felice is twenty, and that is different, anyway. I never saw the man she could not talk to. She came in pretty soon and I heard them laughing and talking, and they seemed to be having the best kind of a time. just imagine having a good time with a man twenty-eight years old. After a while I heard him say, Felice. I came here to tell you something to-night. Felice laughed and said, Yes, 1 know. Frances told me. She could not keep it any longer, but you must not tell her that I told. Frances P he said, I don't understand. How could Frances know ? Why, you told her didnlt you ? Felice asked. Then you should have heard Stuart Osborne laugh. Oh, he said, that was about the South Amer- ican-'we1l, it has something to do with what I want to ask you. I have not fully decided that yet. I don't know whether to go or not. Why, how can you hesitate P Felice interrupted. It is the chance of a lifetime, isn't it? Think what it means. 'That is just it, he said. I have thought, and that is why-it means four years of exile, unless-Felice, little girl, it all depends upon you-it is a lot to ask-in XV ell, I did not Wait to hear any more. I don't know what Marcia would have called it, but I deemed it the psychological moment for me to make myself scarce, so I tiptoed out through the dining room door, and, of course, in my hurry. fell up stairs and made enough noise to wake the dead, but Felice and Stuart never even noticed it, so it made no difference after all. They were married in September, and are in South America now. We miss Felice terribly this year. She was the best rusher we ever had, and if we had ever dreamed that getting Frances was going to make us lose Felice a whole year before she graduated, I am sure the Delta Psis might have had Frances for the asking. Not that we are disappointed in her-goodness. no-but it was on account of her that we lost Felice. vw 1 ui i.. 4, sf 1f '?tg,':l7f f ,-A! xxi X wg f ' 'QR N. 655:41 , fx' Nw .X ws!!! - f -'N A X N X-X ..-1 4 M, 'lj x g Kb - :Q M .ff f 4:71 4 mv ,I 473 N gf- K X if f N' ll. Yx .. XY? x 'ffl K v If xg K x J N N XF. X xxx QR xx X w The Gamuz' of True Lowe Over the keys her fingers stray In paths of melody sweet. Binding my sol in fetters of song A captive thrall at her feet. I hear her play, lVhite arms agleam, blue eyes abeam Vtfith star-lit rc. Then in a faltering' tremolo I plead: Oh, marry mi. La! in her lip's disdainful curl My Lacly's answer si. I hear her say: You have no do., Mamma says- so Fa fa! Good day. H.-XRRY FR.xNkr.lN H Toast to Our Alma Mater 'Tis said within the brilliant banquet hall, NVith noble knights and lovely ladies there, NVhen each knight pledged his fairest of the fair, And each with stately grandeur, proud and tall, XVould rise and with his lordly voice would call On heaven to bless his love, with haughty air, .-X page arose. No other can compare VVith one, my lady mother. More than all I love her, and to her my pledge shall be. And may the heart that gives it ever true And faithful stand, with honor for its goal. I feel today, if it were given to me To pledge my fairest fair, or if to you, XVe'd pledge our Alma Mater, heart and soul. 30-1 ARRINGTON The Second Topical y MAR V TAYLOR Gee, girls, look me over and see if l'm all right! I came up in the crowd- edest car-I wanted to get a cab, but I couldnit see the price. Get next to the foxy new dress of Louise's. She thinks she'll make a hit, doesn't she ? What comes first, for heaven's sake, and what's the lirst encore? Say, please don't anybody walk on my skirt any more than she can help- this is the fifth time itis happened. Oh, there's Dicky out there with some down- town girl--when does his roast come ?', So went the talk on the evening of the glee club concert, in the crowded little dressing rooms behind the stage. The girls, brimming over with excite- ment, discussed themselves, the songs and the people in the audience. Stella bit her lips and smoothed her gloves absently, only half realizing the chatter around her. From the other side of the curtain came the hum of the expectant audience, and her heart sank as she thought of the crowded house. If she could only be called away or get sick-but no, nothing like that ever happened for her. VVhy had she ever consented to sing this topical. anyway- why could she not have contented herself with simply singing with the rest of the chorus? And what a triumph of foolishness to sing a roast on a man in whose class she was, and about whom she was dippy, as everyone knew. Cf course, it was an honor to sing a solo, and she had had an enchanting vision, when she had consented to this. of a lovely girl Cshe mocked herself. almost bitterly now as she thought of itj in a liuffy white dress, singing to a smiling. admiring audience: but now- Say, kid, but you're looking blue! Have a perfectly good throat pastile and cheer up. Getting fussed about your topical? XVell, you'd better be. I saw him out there, he's in the fifth row, with a regular dude of a girl. ' ln the fifth row! And she had her orders to sing right to him. And those words-how could she ever remember them-they were so mean, too- Our pretty and witty Dick Hurst - wouldn't he be hot at being called pretty?- Has taste that is simply the worst. And she liked his taste-he wore cute ties, anyway. His vivid tan shoes would give you the blues,- in the lake we would 5, 305 like them emersedf' Now, wasn't that the limit? Of course, his shoes were rather bright, but his feet were so nice and small that it didn't matter. Oh, she simply couldn't sing it. Travel along, babe, came a voice behind her, and she started, to see that they were going on for their first song. It was a relief to have something doing, anyway. The first chorus was over in a minute, it seemed: there was hardly time to get oneis breath. The audience was enthusiastic. and the girls, whispering and pushing, hurried back to the first encore. Stella watched the girl painfully who came forward to sing. How well she did it! She wasn't a bit fussed, and how the people clapped! If only she had had that song she could have done so much better. It was time for the second chorus and her song was the encore. She couldn't sing. She glanced hastily down to the fifth row: yes, he was there, looking so happy and interested. How different he would look in a few minutes. The girl next to her gave her a little push, and she realized that the song was over and they were leaving the stage. She had a last forlorn hope that perhaps the people wouldn't care for an encore to this, but the persistent clapping crushed this. They were going out again, the girls laughing and paying no attention to her. Her mind was concentrated upon the starting of her-song- she didn't see how she was going to make her voice strike the right note. Suppose it would be a lot too high. She fixed her eyes in the neighborhood of the fifth row, but saw no particular faces-only a blur. As an expectant hush fell upon the audience and the familiar accompaniment began, the girl next squeezed her hand and whispered Cheer up. She was furious at the interruptiong she had wanted even that second of time to think and not to be talked to. ln her indig- nation she almost forgot to begin. The orchestra played the until ready phrase once again and she really started. How odd her voice sounded. But that was the right tune and she wasn't forgetting the words. The mist before her eyes faded and the faces became distinct. How foolish they all looked leaning forward that way and staring at her with open inouthsg and when she came to the telling phrase which she had rehearsed so carefully, they were all silent for a moment, and then began to laugh in a most senseless fashion, fairly drowning the last words of her solo. She stepped back, the girls sang the chorus through with laughter and emphasis, and they were off again. Stella was immediately surrounded. Bully Stell! You wercn't a bit fussed were you? And you nervy kid, singing right at him that way! XVasn't he the reddest? But he laughed a lot. Her spirits began to rise -maybe he wasn't so mad, after all - and it surely had been a success. She even laughed and got dramatic with the rest of the 306 girls in the remaining songs, and there was a hint of swagger in thc way she congratulated the rest of the girls who had solos. But when it was all over and they were talking to the pcople-- for the audience was in no hurry to leave- her heart sank as she saw the abused Dicky', coming up. Me for the tall timbers, she I'I'11.1l'l11L11'Cfl, trying to hide behind the other girls, I don't Want to die yet awhile. Hut there was no escaping, for he came straight to her and held out his hand. Oh, joy! she had never shaken hands with him before. You aren't mad? she stammcred. Honest, I just had to sing it, and I didn't write it, anyway. . Of course, l'm mad,', he declared, with a severity that the smile in his eyes belied., I came up, young lady, to ask if I might come out to your house soon to settle with you. May IPD VV hen the date was made and he had gone she turned and threw her arms ecstatically around the girl next to her, but this is all she said: i'You dear thing! Your dress is too sweet- don't you want to go home now ? N xl 5 ... 7 Sis' l Illia 5359 W 'url 'iiisfii' .wg x V 307 A Campus Ia'le' ' She sat on the couch in the gab-room, Her Latin was not half done, She glanced at the clock before her -- lf was almost half-past one. Aft-er all, she thought to herself, Does studying hard really pay? And tlnfii, with a smile, lt was just this time when I met him yesterday. The gal:-room's so hot and stuffy That I cannot do a thing, I know I'd fell loads better If I'd walk down to the spring. I've only tlunked twice so far this term, And hir book went shut with a slam, And down from a hook on the side of the Came luer coat and her jaunty tam, Over she marched to the looking-glass And out from a tiny bag Came the queerest thing you ever saw- A lace-ruffled powder rag. First she daubed her nose and chin. Then smeared it all aroundg Put each little friz in exactly its place, And.out she went with a bound. He sat in the library digging, ' Whenhe happened to glance at the clock- No use in my cramming this stuff any more, Vvvllffll my head is a regular block. 'Twas yesterday l met her, at exactly this same time I wonder where she is right now- lf I knew, I'd give a dime. I am actually so thirsty that I cannot even think, I could get this Math. lots better If I only had a drink. Hang went the Math. book and out went the boy, And on went his coat and his hat- Gee VVhilikensl Glad I wore this coat to-day-- It donlt make me look quite so fat. Next hour she was called on in Latin, And she saw a huge zero put clown. I-le made a straight Hunk with his problem in And the Prof. gave him such a black frown. Did they grieve? Well, I rather guess not- A smile seemed glued tight on each face- They'd been roaming around o'er the campus, Jynd they had a most terrible Hcasef' wall 309 ! Math, A. ES My Friends, the Students of O. S. U. BY JAMES KELLY. - Often times across the campus I have looked with love and pride, Over its slopes of grassy velvet and its lawns so smooth and wide, Where the students like to gather and the children skip and play, And purest air of heaven through the branches seems to stray. Day by day upon campus, and with loving care I've wrought, I have learned to know your faces. meeting each with pleasant thought I have hoped for each a future bright, with deeds both good and great, Noble men and noble women, honorsito our school and state. VVhen at last my work is ended and my daily toil is o'er, Wfhen your words of kindly greeting on my ears shall fall no more, You who love Ohio's jewel fairest in her coronet, NVill you think of Old Friend Kelly with a feeling of regret. From ,QS Makio. 311 'f, 1 , X x fl ,-, IU - '-N ' 1 F fl- 1. , X ' ny..- !.- .. .. x 'ses-EM A f ,., . ll 4 HQ' 5 PM 1 V W T XFX X-'A W NW W N X, X, -I FCTKASAV HZA X V W T 'FAA I lf , ' M - all ,fx H W A 'lk M--wi' iw K KX 4' Q Q 22 ' ' A M Z lm- im lf' 7 'W W' H ' x 223 Ls .f pm M X fx f 2 M , X 2 ' 1 ww f N V' V 3 1 I 7 ' I 'I 5' 'iff Wwff 'ls g X vx, Agiiylajg A ,f , W I ' 1, '!' ' 223, N , V xsxg gi, r f A tiki A V 1, 143 f N Vgvcl a w xi H I I luv, -Ljipwby its i w , -v:x,::,x WL Q V ix l W VV , 4 X - ', N 7,1 S- If V N ik ' fx . ' ii V Za. 'QW' 'LQK ., - fff,, -2-e Lfd f kk ,1L ..,AN3x:QlyeN f wwf? S- -5?-rx, NX' f74,,,x ,,, .45 , , vb, .A M , -V E gli ,ig ALJ Ly 11 M A '- - ..,. , 'v 1- '57 - w , S4 gy ,533-l-A7395 W . v QQT-agony? H 4 QObQlQ'5bGll'LLlQ'TlQYQQ'm JE , 7, X N In the Days of the Empzre N ! X I X 5 ,Q 1. And it came to pass that the mat- inee girls of the Empire tired of their accustomed idols, and followed after f K strange gods. 2. And VVebster, the king, said: ,f QQ Lo, tho' .l' have no more real gods l f 1 f will get me some tin ones. ff p lrr I .21 .45 ' f .I Ag lux ' 1 '13 NX - Z. is T F ff , , ., .- . - .Q gf 3 N712 X '44 XX4.-Z: -3 N ff . af ff, 5.4 1 .fy 1 1' ' ' ' 1 'm:w'4j' f Q' f NX ' f,',y61 af ,l Af, f . 2-5' Wm, 3. And he called unto him Tngman, ls W l 1 n 1 :QT X , the sweet singer of the Oshtntes, and :X 1- - . . said: gf? i , 71' I! X . , 21.5 , U 4. Appear before me. O Minstrel, J- V , E - with eleven more of the fairest of thy iff V' 'J '7-rx' tribe, like thee in face and figure. NM! , ff 1' V l ,,ff'?'1y . i X ,,f ,. fi . 1 I ' Q W .. fi' mf f f . Q, p H., ,. 1 X X V 1 , , XR ' ll , Cl 'm 'x A 1 'ln ,' -'IX l 1 fr ., . 4 ,I Xxx' 1 wx ., ,g , I2 pkg.. X f 43EiQj-.125 Xt TY r Z 3. A XE p Q . X 5. And when they read this there X will be eleven sore heads in Oshu. W t ,,, 6. And the prince of the king's jg ff household commanded that there be set before the minstrels rich food, WWW l 7. .-X N D D R I N K, 8. That they might be fair to look 1.4 upon. f' F 9. And certain of the twelve pur- lx X T posed in their hearts that they would X , not ,defile themselves with these abom- 1 X . 1 inations. And they said: Io. Let our steins be disinfected and filled with cold water. 11. But the prince of the household made answer, and said: 12. The sacred vessels may not be defiled. Nevertheless take comfort, ye of little thirst, for Bob Schroth shall sit amongst youf' 13. And others of the minstrels desired to do well. 14. And they practiced their parts all afternoon and eveningg and rehearsed in the Neil House. 15. And they went into dilute solution, and had to be evaporated on trunks. 16. And Fat Hoyer stepped on his pipe. 17. And one of the eunuehs kidded him, saying: Thou fearest to smoke thy pipe. 18. And that act Fat took Adair. 19. Now, it befell that a certain historian of the Gentiles recorded these events. 20. And certain of the scribes and high priests of the Oshuites, by name Tuttle and Bruce, being of the strictest order of the Pharisees, were sorely angered at the minstrels. 21. And they wore out their hammers. For the historian wrote: See the O. S. U. Glee Club Drink Real Hosters at the Empire. 314 gs XQ sn Y x f'N f N 'KU iffy 5 If Q2 ll if , i ' W ,HWWAJ lflyhi Xl ,f nff.w m.k,iqf Xi-,xi 'i w'iiil1ii flilil i 'N i1iF:5fQ il,,.,ifuiliii.,fi,1l. n 4 ixxutix 4, i ii if '90 K Wim ill L A , lll i , V ,xi -- 1 , ,fs---,.A I , ,, I I . . .V-'G Dm I ll O, ho! little Prof. Hammond's come to our school to sta3 To scare the little boys and girls, and Hunk 'em every day , To walk across the f'campus. a truly farmer lout, And this goblin will git you if you don't watch out. 315 CDe Trouble Md Winnie Me an' Elll6lNVy'l1'S twins, but he never was no good, so the ol' man says he's goin' to send him to Delaware an' make a loidy of him. Dat was quite a school onct--'bout when the Sigs took in Pharaoh honorary. Me, I tends bar. I-Ie writes as he is livin' at the man perfessor's down there an' eatin' at Monnett. The other tellers is all trun out or struck. Last week 1ne an' me loidy fren' goes down to Delaware to see why they put de Reform school so near Monnett. We walks down th' street an' sees the tunny lookin' people, an' here comes a percesh. I sees th' guy in front is VVinnie, an' tries to dodge, but he has me piked. I-Ie's chaperoned by a broad-guage duenny with an odor of sanctity, an' has eight cops behin'. I-Ie's wearin' bloomer pants an' a go-t'-hell cap. He slings a bunch of moss-covered slang an' hands out a frosty paw an' calls me GV Scout. I-Ie takes his cubeb out of his mouth, an' spits out his chew of pcpsin an' starts to fall on my neck, but I repulses l'is advances. I-lence, shameless jade! says I. Back to th' rabbit warren. Do l look like a zoologist P So he wipes his glasses an' summons his escort of police- men an' executes a Russian advance. VVhen.he gets off a safe distance he says. way up in the treble clef, Dis ends our relations. XVho was th' blue-eyed acci- dent wit' th' cubeb breath P says me fren'. I-Inn? says I. I dunno. ls he crazy? says she. No, says I, they's Methodism in his madness. F. G. P. Willie found some dynamite, Gee! I wish that Sanborn might. ' Curiosity always pays, 'Twould rain Sanborn forty days. 316 M. X ,LW 'WXDD .M ',,,?Xg5. J WV ' 'jdglgrzitq 1317--fx , X '0 M51 4 , ff f W24N3far3HWT J! M XXX , ff' ' xl .f 'H ff if f 021 ug RWD 0 M ffm' X X LMI .. X ttll 7 'A AMA. A L-' IQ-AMA 1. 'MIX wl 111 V p A A X so Ducky fmodcstlyj-Please Judge, do you think thcy'lI over want mc be Dean? ' Shanck-Be Jaticnt, mv little man. You max' OTOW 11 1 to it. . 5 3-117 lr ' -sf ,5 xi . XM, .swf I Q f 1 f XX ff fm 1 if W 1 U W X l i Qu gig 1' lm' A 211924 K G M M ' , 4 w u E-af -1-' , r 3' E 7 Dear Dad : T have been at the O. S. U. two days now, and like it very much. Yesterday I reg1stered and would have subscribed for the Lantern, but a fellow told me that was a Freshman trick. To-day I saw Mr. Thompson and Mr. Summer. Mr. Thompson is bigger, but Mr. Summer looks more impressive. He wears beautiful, golden-brown, broad-brimmed shoes and hat and wide calico britches, with spring beauties and cuffs on them, His coat doesn't fit him, but it's all the style and shows his slender, well-knit form to great advantage-at least, part of it. I bought some clothes just like his, and enclose the bill for 31448. But his curly locks are his chiefest glory, as that poet fellow said of Samanthy last summer. He's so modest he doesn't act proud of them a bit, and his landlady says he even wears a towel round his head nights to straighten them so he won't be too fasci- nating. The eloquentest pen cannot do him justice, so I enclose a picture of him that I found in a locket on Eighth avenue. ' Your affectionate son. Sims. 319 News Item 5 Q ,Z f' Q Ig. ,- . ,ff ,, in - '?' ff, ' -ffl eff- 4 ,ft WW? . Z lv K x Jw! , X 1 1' 'ai in r -'-f N x 'W f x .. Miss Edith Coekius will leave for ,J NVashington next Thursday to assist N . . . ff ,gggyt in determining the date and place of 'if . -, - QW 9 LX the National Louvention of her soror- Wfz , QL t , Kiss tml ity, Kappa lxappa Gamma. Aig xg '-WQYQ2, ' 'i -Ohio State ournal. e5:EE1:E?' HW - If v:, ' wg ED 'TH -1-ES111slEiEef1. mgffiili-' 7' M -T.i13 :1x 51 'i , g 'X e 'sail--Ii:-'f W' -1,-Y X- T151-f' V -, 15 X . 'lf lfb- ! - A youth named Butler came to town, - And soon went Sigma Chi. And with the co-eds came to have Great popularity. A co-ed told me how he won His way in the social whirlg XVith him you can have just as good A time as with a girlf' Ducky Page- Mir. Shoemaker. what is an arrest of judgment? Shoey Chlufiing as usualjl- XVell, professor, the weight of authority seems to hold that an arrest of judgment occurs when the judge has heen pinched before rendering the decision. 320 X, , ,. f-gg, 72 . i . --ii A ' ' qt -' - ' -L i- i ' nr' ,az ,gil-.. - so N. 2.-. V... c.- cii tiszsgi ,ja ' 15 H lEE54:'i'fE X , s 4- :QQQE ' -f - f Y . v I 0 A -v v iligdillfun ,I ' t, list' Q faicia.. - -4-7-f ---- '--' K r lttl- - -4aiiiilill PREFACE Who's VVho at O, S. Lf is the result of a persistent demand from the public and student body for a publication where concise and accurate information regard- ing those who are nlaking the history of the University can be obtained. The work is largely autobiographical, the data having been obtained from first hands in all save a few instances. lt may be objected that many names are missing: this result was inevitable among such a distinguished company: our standards were therefore necessarily high. It was the original intention to include the Faculty. llut most persistent solicitation'failed to elicit any response save from a few relatively unimportant individuals, such as Sanborn. Thomas and lngraham, who are members of that worthy body owing to some mistake. lfVe have therefore confined our attention to students only. VVithout claiming infallibility or inerrancy it is believed that this addition will be warmly welcomed by NLXKIO readers. 321 .-XCKLIN, pox.-xLD R. , This magnetic individual comes from Collinwood Avenue, Toledo, and shows it. He is famous as the Beau Brummel of the University, and is also a graceful equestrian. One bright day last fall. clad in a jauuty riding habit, he cantered across the campus, and a few minutes later was the happy wearer of a Sig Alph pledge pin. Donald has a saucy and sarcastic way of saying things, which has endeared him to a large circle of female acquaintances, to whose charm he is quite indifferent. Ilut his greatest pride is in his overcoats, of which he has seven. each especially made for him, with handsomely padded shoulders. Mr. .-Xcklin carries an annual pass and moves in Toledo's best society. BALDWIN, CARL l-IEINZ This was born somewhere, probably. He started to work in a bank, but soon found he was not sufficiently grounded in the rudiments of knowledge, so he came to State, which was a wise move. He is said to have gotten into Phi Gamma Delta because he is a brother- in-law of our rotund and replete gymnasium director. The Phi Gams thought that with such a pull they could cut out with credit our excellent but distasteful course in muscle erection. Mr. Baldwin is spare and thin, but is trying his best to gain weight. His doctor has. evidently prescribed open air recreation. and the mnnber of auto,' rides he takes shows that he is getting quite heavy. May, we suggest that Mr. Baldwin has said that his rain coat, which he modestly states he had made to order, cost more and is longer than any other one in the Univer- sity. Carl says he is going some day to be really a Baldwin CRANE, JOSEPH EDGTON Born in 1885, somewhere down South, and retaining proclivities to Southern negro dialect, he first became prominent here in 1904 as an end man in the minstrel show. Mr. Crane just lately had a managerial bee and came out calling for the support of his fellow students to make him manager of the Baseball team. Hut joe is a Beta. joe prides himself as being a society leader, and was a member of the Junior 'l'rom. Committee, getting to carry most of the palms into the Gymnasium. Mr. 'Crane prefers Hoster's. TCROY, HOVVARD LEE Born in Toledo and was wrong to leave that town, but came to State in 1903. l-Ie had a chainless wheel and was immediately pledge Phi Delt, but they soon regretted it and he was turned adrift. Not profiting by this wise move. poor Lambda Nu bit. 322 Croy was elected Secretary of the Athletic Board once. and managed to hold the office throughout his term. 1-le was taken into the V. Of A. one rainy evening when there were but a few at the meeting. Mr. Croy is not popular. DELAY, FRANK This Chi Phi, the last of a dying race, comes from jackson, Ohio. and is said to be under thirty years of age. This is denied by Pat Kelly, who asserts that they were both taken into Alcyone in the fall of '76, It was under the glimmer of the Lanterns rays that 7l'ubby first became visible, for he filched a position on the Board in IQOI. But, once in the calcium, he attracted lots of attention and became a reckless rake, ready to drink any old thing other peoples money would buy. It is currently reported, but not generally believed. that he did buy four beers at Bloomington in Nov., IQO4. But with a modesty becoming true sportsmanship Mr. DeLay has attempted rather unsuccessfully to stifie this renown. Tubby is a lawyer? ? ? DRUGGAN, CHARLES SLOBODA - Our big mouthed friend was born near Athens. He followed the plow until his Satanic Majesty suggested to him that he had brains. He believed it, and has not yet found out the truth. He came to Ohio State in IQO3 and entered politics. C. Sloboda came nearly being elected president of Hunter Law. Having no opposition, he made the second debating team. When West 'Virginia heard that he was a member of the team they immediately cancelled the engagement. He is slated for president of the Disappointed Office Seekers' Association. He is a fraternity brother of S. A. Headley. C. Slob. is not -always a gentleman. EICHELBERGER, FRANK Born in Urbana and reared there- to a certain extent. After helping some other fellows finish up the high school, he sought for larger and more bumps ,of knowledge. Ike wa11ted to go to X1V0oster, but his father, hearing of the pure water tl1at eternally bubbled from the University Spring, decided that State was the place for his son. Frank is a handsome fellow. and, being always neat in his personal appearance, was a winner with the ladies from the start. He is popular, in a way, with the fellows also. and has held the presidency of the Heaped Up Stein Club since entering the University. He has taken most of his work in chemistry, and is said to be very proficient in judging the contents of a bottle, even after the label has been lost. Ike is a fh F A, a smooth talker. and is always seen in the evenings in the company of his lJI'Otl'lCl' liooze. They are not twins. I x 1 52:1 FOSS. CLARENCE WILTON Born near Cincinnati, but l10t in the jewish section. Mr. Foss came to college in 1902, coming up to State because the U of Cincinnati was not very good in athletics that year. lt is said that he was a Sig Alph before he came to the University, but anyway he was as soon as he had made a couple of spec- tacular tackles over at the University Held. Bo made a hit in the minstrel show last year, surprising even himself. But his achievement here was as nothing compared with his generalship of the football phalanx on many a hotly contested field. He at one time hoped to be captain, but seeing it would be impossible, he took the next best, and, spreading the report that he was unable to learn the signals any more, he got himself elected manager. Ho is a member of the Y. O. A. and weighs 120. Mr. Foss is always short. FULLER, GILBERT ' ' This coming journalist was born in- l1OI'lSl'll0l.llll in 1882. He went to high school, most unnecessarily, before coming to O. S. U., in llQO2. Showing pro- clivities to jam wind while leading the rooting through a red funnel, -he was given the editorship of the Lantern. Mr. Fuller has thrown much light about the University this year with the Lantern, largely because he opposes the trust and will positively use no Standard Oil in the paper. Since taking the editorship and money of the paper, Gib ,has dressed very well, gone out frequently in the evening, and attended many O. S. Lf functions by getting tickets for press notices. Mr. Fuller is a Delta Chi and bald. GUILFORD, FRANK -ROSS Born at VVauseon. His father brought him down to the University in 1900. He began his rise by accepting a bid from Delta Tau Delta, the college office agency. Mr. Guilford got a guitar selling soap one summer, and learned to play it while running a brick yard. He came to college just after the Marysville exodus from the Mandolin and Guitar Club, and there being a dearth of material he got into the organization without much trouble. The very next year he was chosen manager after Billy XVoods got all he needed to graduate with, and giving a minstrel show paid off most of Billy's old debts. Mr. Guilford is engaged. HAGENBUCH, FRANK This ball-player journalist was born in Urbana, but does not tell it. He lived there in a half-hearted sort of a way until 1902, when he came to State. lt was 324 said that Mr. Hagenbuch was as good as a Beta before he came to college, since his brother belonged to that bunch. This was probably true. He was not much better than that anyway. Mr. Hagenbuch got to writing Citizen news through the trust his fraternity exercises on that paper's University reporting, and thus gets many an extra line of advertising on slack days. Mr. Hagenbuch played left Held on the 'Varsity when some one else didn't and got to go on a couple of trips. lt is also said that he is one of the ring-leaders in having the Beta house moved down on Highland Street. The object, as he stated it, was that it would not be so hard to Hunt as way up on lndianola. Mr. Hagenbuch giglcs, HARE, RUSSEL INGMAN Mr. Hare, whose back has so often greeted college audiences, comes from Marysville on the pike. This must not be held against him, as he rarely visits the old home. The early years of his life were spent in taking a course in music from a correspondence school, and, being ambitious to direct, he came to O. S. U. in the fall of 1900, where he has succeeded beyond our wildest expectation, and now appears frequently with a bat-on. He has a rich baritone voice, well modulated, and under perfect control. Mr. Hare wears a Sig Alph pin. and is said to belong to that fraternityj He uses a cowlick. HITADLEY, SANFORD A. M 1'. Headley was reared in Wall Street. I-Ie is still being reared. He started on his educational career at the Ohio University at Athens, but left there for some reason and came to State. Mr. Headley's particular forte is grafting, either city or local college politics. He is not ashamed of himself either, so it is said. 'l'hrough his reputation for ability in this line. he secured the management of the Co-Op. store. On coming to college, Sanford was the original long green. Mr. Headley is single. l-IUW.-XRD, lJWltil'l'l' ll. Horn in '83, probably in Columbus, lllr. Howard drew a common school edu- cation and is now assimilating a very common college education. Ile is well known from his feats ou the eleven, but is principally famous for originating that now well-known term of endearment- Kiddo. Dwight once dressed up and pretended he was an end-man in the minstrel show, but was not allowed to say anything. It is said that he got the place because of his somewhat Africanian characteristics. His success in this venture was decidedly more flattering than that achieved by a subsequent appearance in the Strollers 32 3 Mr. Howard is a Chi Phi because his brother was. VVe mean nothing by this statement. Mr. Howard prefers a Green River. HUYER, RALPH XVALDO Horn somewhere else, but soon came to Columbus, where he took an athletic course at North High. He entered the University in 1902, and was soon initiated Kappa Sig. He was chairman of the Junior Prom. Committee, and has been chosen cap- tain of the football team for 1905. It is said that Mr. Hoyer 'sings in the Glee Club. Ralph is large and popular, and appeared in the roll of a heavy gymnast at the Empire, in April of this year. Mr. Hoyer uses the middle part. IAMS, JESSE DORSEY 'This queer fellow is a Phi Gamma Delta, and were it not for this he would he relatively unimportant about the University. He comes from Pennsylvania, and is probably a Quaker. Mr. lams never did anything much. He was in a tennis meet with Phelps School once, but his hair got in his eyes. Dorsey is a much minded man, and his intellectuality is broad in scope and of a hig'h grade. He entered the engineering college, but changed to Arts for reasons of his own. Jesse is usually in a pensive mood, and is seldom jolly. He does not booze nearly as much as the other Phi Gamma fellows: in fact, it is said that he has never in all his life blown a foam. M r. lams uses the padded shoulder. K EXVLEY, JOSEPH EDGTON Born in Toledo, commonly called Frog Townf' After attempting to get the Lfniversity moved to his home town, Mr. Kewley found he must come to Columbus. He arrived here in IQOZ, expecting to spring into prominence imme- diately by going lleta. But he didn't. Joe has taken a great interest in oratory and debate, but they seem to have little interest for him. ln fact, Mr. Kewley has been a great success in nothing whatever except being a Freshman. The Sig Alphs pledged joe one day when he casually mentioned that he thought he would go into athletics. He is tall and slender, having dark hair and weighing 157. LAYLTN, CLARENCE This politicians son was born at Norwalk, but left there to come to Colum- bus. He entered the University, and is still taking law. lt is said that Mr. Lay- 326 lin's object in remaining is to get elected 1J1'CSlLlCllt of something. From succes- sive defeats to the presidency of different classes and organizations, he is com- monly called Prexy.i' Mr. Laylin belongs to that bunch which has a pin some- thing like the sign down at the oriental bath-room down at the Union National. His prominence is due in most part to the fact that from year to year he retains the leadership of the University Mandolin Club. He has two brothers who share his popularity. H Mr. Laylin is skinny. MYERS. HERBERT MERTON This little fellow was born in this country, about 1883. He came to college a country boy, in IQOI, and from this fact controlled the Ag vote, and got himself elected President of the Sophomore class in 1902. He was chairman of the 0. S. U. Graft Association 1902-1905, and since his election to that office has worn only tailor-made clothes. lt was rumored upon the arrival of Mr. Myers at the University that he would go Beta: but he wouldn't go. He is a Sigma Chi, Mr. Myers was editor of the '04 Mixklo, and is is said that he did very well with il. He takes a great interest in the politics of the school, and from the remu- neration he receives for his efforts one may easily judge the value of his services. Prexy got out the foot-ball program one year. and was admitted to all the games. Mr. Myers lies. NYE. WILLIAM AUGUSTUS. Born at Zanesville in 1884. He went Delta Tau upon his arrival at State in 1901, and was thus early threatened with obscurity. But by persistent effort he hammered down the barrier which beset his progress, and soon his name appeared in the society columns of the Lantern every week. He also dragged some of his fraternity brothers from obscurity, but none of them ever equalled his popularity. Bill was elected manager of the Track Team one season, but as the perform- ance of his duty interfered with some research work he was doing he promptly disbanded it. For this service he was made a member of the V. O. A. Mr. Nye believes there is something in a name, and has labored with assid- uity to become a humorist. To avoid any confusion which might arise he carefully labels the point of every effort. Hill chews Red Band. PATTERSON, ROUT. GUILDIERSLEEVE This Delta Tau was born in 1882 on the banks of the Scioto. where he spent his early boyhood swimming in Crystal Rock. He conceived the idea of going 327 to school for a livelihood, and entered O. S. U. 1901. Here he became prom- inent at once, his batting average recommending him strongly to the Varsity nine, and he has been cavorting in the vicinity of the second station ever since during season, and telling about it out of season. Being president of Y. O. A., he used this prestige to secure for himself the managership of the Basket Ball Team for two seasons. Spring of '05, there being no other candidate for baseball captaincy, Pat was unanimously chosen. Being a reporter for the State journal. his picture frequently appeared in this sheet. Bob chews. PEXV, WILLIAM HARPER VVas born in Youngstown in 1882. lflill was an industrious boy and made enough money to come to college and learn to be an engineer. lint the work in that college was too easy. lt is rumored that Hill has never had a con. But Bill was a poetic cuss and hankered after the green fields, the lowing herds and the buckling tomatoes. Bill used to be a Lambda Nu. It was through his efforts that the Lambda Nus secured their charter two years ago. He is a nice fellow and has such a graceful walk. Bill belongs to the Y. M. C. A. R.-XNKIN, STANLEY This sporting banker's son was born in the North End and grew up with it. The University took on a new epoch when be entered the college, but North High immediately went into a decline. Rankin entered the battalion and the Arts College, and rose to fame in both. He participated in an Alcyone political deal once, and was sentenced to do one term as editor of the Lantern. Q There being a lull in debate one year, Stan. made the team, but got ill before the debate. Stan. has always been a factor in college politics, and has been in many a combination: in fact, it is said, several for the same election, just to be sure of it. He was one of the prime movers in ridding the University forever of Lambda Nu. ln this fact lies his chief fame and basis for congratulation. Although he graduates in 1907, Stan got elected president of the class of 1905 because the office looked good in the petition for a charter. I-ie won out by seven votes, using the services of the Headley, Shoemaker and Shotwell agency. Mr. Rankin at one time hoped to be popular. R.-XREY, RALPH FORREST. Mr. Rarey was born in 1882, but does not show it. He entered kindergarten at an early age, is still striving to get an education in all branches ohfered in 3528 the University. He is now in the College of Law, but is seldom found at Page l-Iall. Mr. Rarey first became famous as a Sigma Nu, when they used to be pretty good. Since entering the UU he has missed but one college function -study. A Rip's last four suits have had coats split up the back, a record of which he is justly proud. At a dance he is always seen pirouetting about the center of the hall with a serious, business-like expression and his arm held in the latest style. He was chosen business manager of the Mixlclo because of his excellent commercial abilities. Mr. Rai-ey is a perfect gentleman. RAYMOND, JAMES STOCKTON. Born in the East End, but for a number of years has been appropriately residing at the State Hospital. He entered, the University 8 years ago, and thinks he will get through this year. He is a hard student, but seldom studies. During his free hours from the Hospital Sox has usually monkeyed around with baseball or basket ball. With heartless cruelty he beat out his best friend for captaincy of the baseball team in 1904, and George is now over East some- where with some other lietas. Mr. Raymond is known as the fickle fusser among a large circle of female acquaintztnccs, Sox being' able to entertain on a large scale, and frequently, was taken into D. 'l'. D. Mr. Raymond swears, now. RISK, RAYMOND EDGAR. This counterfeit sport hailed from Pataskala, near the head waters of the Licking, but soon outgrew the shrubbery of his native heath and removed to Columbus. Realizing fully that he was the real thing, he wished others to know it, so he came to State in search of an appreciative audience. His early efforts were directed in an assault upon college society and fraternities, and equal success has crowned both efforts. Mr. Rusk is tall, aHable and angular, with light, fluffy hair. His goat like propensities recommended him strongly to Phi Tappa Keg. of which he is an honorary member. Raymond smokes. 'SCHROTlrl, RORT. This dark young man came to the U from the South end with a large hunk of limburger in one hand and a stein in the other. After spending a yeai on the steps of the Main building he was ,taken by Sigma Nus just after term -exams. had badly depleted their ranks. Qliob's future was now assured. llc made 329 the glee club without a struggle and proved himself a good fellow on several occasions. Mr. Scliroth is a strong temperance worker, and the North End has him and his eo-workers, the Eich boys, to thank for recent local' option results. lilob always dresses in black and wears heavy concave glasses. SHOEMAKER, CARL DAYTD. Born in 1882 in Northwest Territory. Mr. Shoemaker received a high school education at Napoleon, Ohio, where he was famous as an orator. Even as a boy he showed great aptitude for making shrewd deals with tops and marbles among his playmates, giving great promise as a future politician and ward heeler. He came to college in the fall of '01, and here A T made one of its serious mistakes. By skillful manipulation he built up the strong machine which by an alliance with Headley, Myers' faction almost succeeded in electing Mr. Myers as President of the McKinley Club. Shoey prides himself upon his ability to change constitutions at will and to pull the wool over everybody's eyes. He is preparing for publication Deals l Have Made. with a dedication to his co- grafter, Abel Veil Shotwell. Shoey cusses. H S LTM MER, SAMUEL NATHAN. This well known character was born in 1883 and Shelby. After finishing the high school in his home town he came to State and thought he would finish it. Mr. Summer never did much except lead the rooting at the Oberlin game last year, but nevertheless has succeeded in getting himself generally known and talked about. He is very particular about his attire and frequently calls attention to his clothes. He makes the claim that he has worn more fancy vests to recita- tion than any other member of the class of 1905. As to the future, he thinks of starting a pawn shop after leaving college. Mr. Summer is not a Phi Gam. TH EC J ll.-XLD, ADOLPH OTTC J. Horn in the South end, and proud of it. He came to college seve1'al years ago as a freshman. He likes the University girls veryniuch, and has not decided just when he will graduate. Mr. Theobald is a Sigma Nu, and wears his pin. He takes a great interest in his high school fraternity, but does not seem to have much control Over the young fellows when they come to the University. The once thought of making the football team, but since that time has not. Mr. Theobald is popular. 330 Dean Outhfwaite Gibes Mid- Term in Criminal Law Now, gentlemen, this is going to be a little test. Please don't talk to each other. as it bothers the other fellow, and worries me. Criminal law is the main subject in this college, and I am going to take all the time I want. You may take one hour and forty minutes, but l expect some of you may finish in an hour and thirty-nine minutes. You' must ask me no questions. but before we begin let me explain the fourth question. lt reads, What is an Ex-Post-Faeto Law, or give an example? Now that question is divided into two parts: if you can't answer one. answer another. Now, the gentlemen on the right side of the house may rush up here and get their paper: now. the rest of you gentlemen. Questions are: I. Wfhat does the note say at the bottom of page 63? 2. XVhat do the Arkansas? statutes say as to a man's marrying his widow's sister? -- 3. Suppose 43 second-year law men. wickedly. and with awful intent. did feloniously agree not to attend Ducky Pages exam. in Real Property. ls this such a consipracy as would bring it under the Statute of Foauds? VVhat is the status of the other IO members who refused to sign the petition? 4. What is an ex-poste facto law? or, give an example. 5. VVhat does a learned jurist say about degrees of insanity? Full credit will be given if you give it exactly as it it is given in the book: one-half, if you give the substance of the rule. 6. Define liigamy at Common Law? Under the Ohio Statutes? 7. Relate the story about jurisdiction, which I told you at the first of the semester. The first man finished in' thirty minutes. The rest followed before the hour passed. The venerable jurist marked the time consumed by each person upon his examination paper. He probably intends to grade on speed. as well as intelligence. Dr. I-lagerty-XVhat has Diclcens written along the line of prison reform, Mr. Nye? Bill fasleep at the switehj-Novels, Professor. 331 ,. ll-b'li' ,W ':v:-' 131.7 Y- X., , ,fiflg 5,, lf:1, . rf - -' ,ff Q' ff: fx- ,-1, 1 ff' . ff -'ww f-ff ,1-4 ' 4 L, -A W fsrf X92 x , Ji U N ph, .... QyZ,,, 421 ' IL P M 1 Ak N- ' f777ffXQw ff-1? 4 WJ f ff! f f Wf QQ Q Sify., f ' L gift? 'T-D'l .,g YQ Vx ' J X iw xy f - ' 4 - . N 1' . 50' X M -. Vi, N E Q1 e if I ,Zn ' gf , x r y Ql xq ly w 4, H .K f' A N mf, GSW? fa W X -fig X 2 f-fail x':5 :N'6MwM.. w Qxlif AA4-V :f-,?.-:u xiLX I ,iqi-k!fVff1J A 2 N ,, ' ' Q'- .-' . f . f? + R ww K' N WH jf X fx N xp w X Q5 XXXJJBN X I5 f f X5 f TI-Ili '1'HETA'S PIPE -' ,fffb --H P' -:gy X Q rbfy, em q m u g f ,ml f Y iv-ff? f 1 in - ' .,-f f IX 3 A NZMJWL WHA I Z., ' , j I M :fig S , Sxggglmf .,,'-1fQfX ' V!! !lilI.,,,,f fri ENN 5 fflf-f w'! Um Mm1rLwMW !f ' ' v , . , ff ' J, ' N ' 'Nb F f,44LQ,..: ,a4 if . 1 - H . KI M ., s , mm' s A -,E W 4 .' A K' Pf' 'r 1 N PN nfww' 'Y ' M V 931, 27' V T .ku tg' W' Y V- -..-..-.. H W - V A ' wx yy Ifffm M ,I -4-, . .-1-- ' Y4J,!' J 1 1 I f Xzi- ! 'W '- ' Y si-HU ,W ' Xwx -.g4QL'.,,Ag-,-.4- ' Wy l U X EZ: X I Q I Ml, 41 a ff fa INV ff VAN mv Q , , . K 'dj ,,:,74 ', -' 5 f W Q f f IA 'Q XM. fl Lawn' E 'fy' ,, f 5 Y M 'V' ,-.. W K X is Auf' -' N ff 5 ' '12-I 1 ' ' W, XX ' New HO'-'55 N , . 1, 'me N , 535 F30 -,. J 1. ' -4 fffV.' ,ff -W lx , M? ,ff :fx A fm- N' - iff- , fa X ,YM ffqgggg A-' - I, H ' , g 3 fi? -001 RNNI' f, X x ,y X .ix Y 2 '4 i Fa X X. . I fki'f'i,iQx :ffili X 72' i ' K, 4, XKQXXX, W i' I 1 ! is W ' X if -U . lv r J i in f Z4 ff' 1 , ..,f, A if ff! f ', 1211! ' Unix gy xl ' 11,3 N4 ' ly 1 X f 11 ' ' ' f 77 Q1 6 If T X If . -. l ,J I 3 1.47 IMI? Q I 1 z 'tljgllff 1- 1 1, I4' 2 .V hz . 7 ,MQW 7A s 4 I X fizfff' -2-' 1142 W i I W ' I ll' . 5 -if f 2 t-If ff s 2 di Mffffyif' , 'r g 'ln f- 1 If 11,11 I - ' gf if ibm EQZWY' G i e i is e a W f ,D T 4 . ' f X A fn ,f ffffffa 43 3, fmx i Z 'ivfvzfal x :Z 14, , 'Q' E exif' Wflmllllln ' ,,,,, . I. 0 , f j x Mil I 1 I :Q- '5 I, 1 Q' v if lx ti ' f fl .'1rf1? '2'i il' 5' ' sa id RE' -.. - ' 'ff 'w.,, I' f ,,. Q.-. ' ,.:.. ,-- nl JU' ' 7 'ffwo of a Kind' Bunce-l spent all my money in France. Decker--It has no economic value, A certain lireshman in this school Longs for a letter dailyg Vtfhich note should run somewhat l'l W'on't V ice this 1 , ou come home l-Sill? Bailey. Ye 0 S. Said Marryin' Nichols to Russ, Down stairs and the front row for us. Tlut said Russell, We'll keep Where the prices are cheap. Or 'l'll stay on tl ' IC campus to fuss. CGalleryD G a' f 334 1 f v4 4, mm, X qglgfi f 4 - Q H L an 1, -5396 L . ff' 1' ' 'vfe' ' ' , f '- vifif, f- f 'V -7., f- f ' ,Q v f 1? 1 6 1'- X 'W Aff ', 4 ffffff ' , .f Q' f 4-7 1' ' .1!A2f-41 2 TH, 4' R- VA: X -- v- x V1 121,11 1,7 'rt ' ', A ,, 77 W ffw' cf . 1. ', fix' 5'c'QAAh',,'f,l 7 -'- .s'- ' E2 ,-Y l ' ' I ,f Y 'N 1 f' - TX 11 -1 f, .J f Z H 53M QNX f Z W M Z 'v, 1.mf if 5 f - Ms 'U 'W 'ln 1f'17w, I f ' X 'f-Q-if- f ' 1 gg-., 'Q I' Hg xc ,I 7 ,' A gl :Wy f f 1f24i'fu I'1' 'n v ' I 1, f ff V' ww! u, Iglfq, ml, f ,I M I - biiiiii-,I1uff. wfa::fff.,m1f,fuy f - if-f .1352 in vll. ' ll Lflyx llll 1,-QZIM' 5, V, Z ., '!AluHl.ia!!..'Qfly!0A'j' ,ff .r 4 , 'rkigiass gg-Q5L2'Z12,c lpn' I . ,f .4 ' ff- i11 -:2-' ' CHORUS:-Won't you come back? iFrvnhmrn'n Alphahrt f w FX xl-X 4 ...X QXW XB W X X '-,. 2 , 04, A 7 55 stands for Artie, Aesthetic, Astute, Apishly, Awkward, but Awfully Cute. stands for Campus-work, Cuts and Co-cd, Connection with these Causes Craze in the Head. stands for Bownocker, Boisterous and Bold, Brag'isl1ly, Boastful and Rig-headed, XVe'1'e told. stands for Doc VVhite, who Don't pay his Debts: Dumb but Discoursive, Dean of the Vets. 337 stands for Earhart, Electric, Elite, Ever, Exacting, Examples Concrete. stands for Gab-room. Gush, Giggle and Gas: Girls licrc Gaily Gossip, crc Going to Class. stands for Failure. Familiarly, I lnnlc, For Freshnian, whose rortunes in Folly are Sunlc. stands for Hostcrs, the Hun1bolclt's Hot Cheer. Hail it all Heartily- T!1at's thc Bf'c1'. ' 338 stands for Ingraliani. Idiot quite 3 Inane, Impatient. Impertinent Fright. stands for JOCX, Juvenile Joy 5 21 jovial, jocular, jubilant Boy. stands for Knight, Kingly and Kind, Kiddish, Keen and Knowing Combined. stands fox Lord, Lazy and 'Longg Lanky and Listless, a Lover of Song. 339 stands for McKnight, Mysterious, Moon-eyed 1 Morbid, Morose, Maladroit and Tongue-tied. stands for Olive, Old. Ubtuse and Odclg Ubstrepcrous, and Oh! so Ostensibly Shocl. stands for Nat, A Nosey and Neat: Nimble, Non-combatant, Naughty, but Sweet. stands for Prosser, Provoking Pert 1 Priggislm, Pretentious, a Pestcring Flirt. 340 ZITI stands for Kuhn, Quarrelsome Queer : a Querulous QllCI'1St and Qulte lnsmcere, stands for Sanborn, Shamelessly Spoony g Shallow, Sententious and Salve-sliuging Loony. 2111 stands for Rhoades, Roguish and Rude 1 a Restive. Rebellious, Ridiculous Dude. stands for Tuttle. Typical Tester: Tl'l0l'OI.1glllJCl'd Tezleher, and no Trifling Jester. 341 stands for Udall, Unruly, Unkind : Ungrateful, Unworthy, and Uppish combined. stands for VVi1l Graves, W'ondrously W ise, Whose Wisdom is Wasted in Writings Disguised. stands for Vosskiihlcr, Vested and Vain 3 Vincible, Vigcrous. and Very Inanc. stands for Xasperating Xcessive Xanms 3 Xciting, Xhausting, Xpelling the Crams.' 342 stands for Y. Mfs Yielding and Youthfulg Yodeling, Yawning, Yearning, and Truthful. stands for Ziebert, Zar of the Zoog he Zounds like a Zither when the Zephers ' Blow thro 343 . Sh 'ii' Le l 4:,5,,.,.--- .-L,,..--- ,v------YJ.,---.. Q'-WL.. ,fx 1 ' M' In , lf ,,1TE-- 1' ' Pr RW-,gr- l l .Wf-7,1 ,1, ij f 'X 'I' f I , x X, -L ,ff ,f Q I 'lv X 4 I --A-M-4 ,,,, ,fy 'w,?Q?',Q ' w ' ei EW w ww , 1-J cv, U' ' W 0 , ai 0 NUM ,fm Qs 4 ' -M y RM ,jf .g ,, , XL R 4g',fs.'f'.1z f X A VAM' 'l X . 417 5 MX 11' ,V jf N- fe Jw Mun - w -f! -- -rr.. .. A w ,,....,-,,4,.'1-2v:- A-Nw..- --f----.-V ,-,1.,,, aw' 'iff'-w-1-J Q .., ,ami vf ' YH 14' ,N d f -'fy 2 . 'F T I K W 'fw M' 'ff ..11'Pz1 I 'HAR fn' 11,4fLva1: mm -I ,, , I 'lj'-vuun.u,.f 'fri' J? q f ' . w 1- J- , ,x W 11 WW, 4.,43QW,', f- ' ' - S ' bs .,,i,,J1:,'QN A' ,ll 75 M!! --. ., ll X. 'M , .Cv Q 'vw' rv W Q. 'Q-Kfxt . FX :Qjfp 357 .X-,xi WZ fy XA? ' 7-'V' 'A 3- f ,d-V' Dwight l'1OXN'Zll'd kindly furnishes the 1X'I.XIilU with El few well pointed jokes rl OO ' ,- lgk . in TA6 . iff Q I X 4 Q63 I S wi Zia' 'af 'ff A - lu 1 H x ell' , Q 'E X ZW, iz! K2 Xxx few., .,.. Tr l H nh A ff' X 112:53 R V ,- x 'r 1, X X' 1x Sxklhff 5 Q 5 ,Sflffv In f 1 b'gffll'.,ll if ' ' to Ji A WV X' YEL W QT? l if K no J tldii 4. r pg elluvucl if YW - i 'E The above is a possible explanation for the sud Outcalt's Yellow Kid from American Journalism. 04 jew Definitions Sohld- What happened to the Betas. Paine - A necessary evil. Nye - Almost. Rankin - Drop two letters. Summer - l leasant, but short. Rip Cobb Hare Rusk --Another word for tear. - A product of the corn Held. - A peculiar looking animal with - A cinnamon covered product. long ears lfrost - An appropriate slang' expression. Salt-Good for a season. Rasor - Hollow-ground. Ag-gregation - A Z. Flunk-A disease of the eyes. Exam.-A cavalry skirmish. 345 den disappearance of Mr I cannot see why Mother Pratt Keeps talking every minuteg Why does her conversation run When there's no matter in it? The fashionable youth today To his united country's true 3 He wears a suit of rebel gray Upon a union-suit of blue. oq Bare Story A bashful young lady from Clyde Had a tumor removed from her side Can you bear it ? they said. As she blushed rosy red, My ma would object. she replied. Though Rhoades's jokes are fun, This paradox they draw: No matter how well done, They're always somewhat raw. There is a Professor Sanborn, Who causes so many to mourn 3 But it .will not be long Till our trouble is gone, He'll be sixty and get chloroform 346 I ,a I II' , f .re ff f, ,Jai QW: 1 fi N ff!,4f' ,VI M E AITW1, x ggi 9?1: L PL , ffgziyj, JM 7-LT: X wi? plw? 1 X521 'IQ ' , ' iif'.'Q-M' fffjif X411 K i 1 i if if ' . ff fi 0 i . , A f ,gr ' i , -5- i fl! ' 75' 1-f f 17 f X - :fig jycf . 1, I 1 an Q 3 il fm ,f f f E 5 --Q. i i gf! A M i ' ' 2 :W A X gh ff-N J I . ' V-124: ,i , 'I . 4' ,Q i I ml I A vu' 1 ' if 1 1 '--? js, f,..,E i 'V L ff! 'MZ' I ii' Z7 :N , Q A ., , 54 I ff' ii fl if :fri K X 1 1 1 X i L W f K N fi Z , fm 1 4 N -'jj ,ff7yc' .: f, r if , 5' IW 1,1 , I .i 'fi' 'iw 4' X4 i Qi ' ' 7 'fi I V 3: 'uf 5,1 ' A x GRLPNT 1 iid f f W 'Q A , , fit y fi IVV ff 'Lf' ,, ll, fi f f X X f fff'M'i'i ' mf f ,2 'H 7! F' ', Xia ' 7 N'- ' , i ,TP X' f I Bownocker- The High Street for mine. This is the kind of a show I cfm appreciate. Ingraham- Mc, too. Reminds me of old Madrid. :Y fi 1 ' l f' - , ff HS 1.4. ' -V., ' .. ff- X NEVER f . ' N 1 , 311 V- N' iii. K .1 ff I I f,.V ,!, .A'5 ICHXGR S ,f' T Q,-,Z AJ. if ,,,, 3 , M FOOT BB-7-L xi ily' ,i.i5,Lj''i?ii'i1,jv'N'-i.L: RECORD A j': '5 I ' ,A in 'S' I Wm uP ' U -I 'WST ul! If ff' Fx . ,I .. I . f . g , E mf EA J-gr ',1.4 I If I. fc, , H ? ' 5 jd I' I 5 I V ' 'ug 6' 1 A .vf 1 A WI Q, ,mf If Y I ' Q, 7 ' V Z ML . ' ' ' ' '-lj, ' I 1 , I X, ,A , , ATL' I, 'fflfl , - L f' ff H-.- 45 2 'ff mn' f ,fT.,.. U 1 A A 1 wff, fllirif-Ln 5 Q f ,,0Wf!'!?yg-pf , ' H lffff 'f77ff' I ' ' 0m ' J, N , ,i J ' ' 5 'v .......-....-..... F Q 'XX . hx Y X rfLzce11o.kf3o1lj'f,,,,... .xq -ik, ff lf .A x YV X 523 RecoRD ,!',,.f -A fi.. 5 1 . . 0 f M'fTjZ'lf- -f ,X - , ,. ,, :.:,: -L - --sw I' . -.... -..---LQA 7' . -if--ff -4.1: , 1 'LY-L f Y T -A -r W ,, --:Q-'X ,x 4P ' ' V f V255 I ,N 3 A , Q! ! ,, 4. N ' X Q ' is 953, F5 -'fx-5-1f':?:'i.?g -'X A V I. ., ,, B ,Zyl jul! - I .1 400 C , if , 92 I f 'W 3 ' Q' 2x f' 3 , X 'f ' 7 X .A fx ff ,, ff - 1 A 'L X f ,V WWW' ' X 4 - g f x 1 ,ff , f X. - . - f A ,,f'f'f , .51 fd f A If , ,, iii,-A 'X' - P 'I' ff!! ,f ,I Iv Y X ,IU Alfa? , .?5i : X lx f ' M lffiyk i!ildQ' il' V I' 1-. e ' 1-V I.--I-Q rr' . ' 0 Viv, t-N Q i V 3 'lla JZ X I lfor several years a movement for the 'I '-'wlkx qw 000 6 i i 0'-i i , . N Q l :-ww - ff--, erection of the1r own homes, on the part W A -,fikq2 Wt lQ I ' of the Greek letter fraternities. has been T 'll' H' ' all ' ' p alll . f. fl1l if. ,yr 'ri l taking form. The above isa front ele- r ' ' ' lil . . 0 Hlllllw l N . l I vat1on of a st fle of arclntecture ver l'l'l'U.l'.4r,sf:.. , , 5 Y -' F ry ,Tl 1 .- V much approved by several members of l i - A gf., A 9: W one of the prominent local org'anizations. I ' ,frui t utr,-. X .T . xv I, craft H fsbw X. tl 1,.i fp f l if f ls fill ,,f 'l!h',jlIllii 1 K 7 w ' W I ' . ki l i U on iylliluutl' an 1 'tg nun, s tg 1.1 ll . . ' l so , Nfl? 'f' ' If if T' Several Co-eds- How does it happen, Mr. Fromme, that you didn't take the part of the lead in 'lncog'?' U R. L. Fromme - VVell, it's just this way, girlsg ma is pretty careful with me, and when she got a squint at that part in the play she wouldn't allow me to run the risk of becoming infected with the kissing' bacillus. lf there had been some way of boiling the different smacks before using l would have taken the part, perhaps. Of course, l'm not casting' an special reflections on the fair sex members of the present 'Strollersf but it's just as Dr. Gladden says: 'VVe can't be too careful in accepting various giftsf H 3 49 i f W fa , f Zff xx ll l-.QS if . , f wwf 4 f 7 X E- ,, 91 1 f Q is wi MR' ,r'x W -N ,,,,--I AAAAX ,f 1 , UTI-IE COP ER S To Our Bachelor Profs. Of all the spoiled supercilious toffs. There are none that can equal our bachelor profs. They're asked out to dine in shocking degree, From Spencer and Tuttle to 'Little Billeef' One can't give a dance without asking them all, The fat and the thin ones, the short and the tallg And then they're reluctant. and never come early, And manners! Good heavens! So sulky and surly At times they're so troubled with too many dates. They have to regret on account of cab-ratesg For when you spend money on others, you know, You can't see Fi-li from the center front row. just now they all feel that they bow to so many. To meet one more girl they would not give a penny You see such a number are dying to meet them, It would take too much valuable time just to greet them And the strangest detail of this strange situation Is a fact which would not give these profs. much elation 'Tis not that the girls find these men so entrancing. But they must have some men for their escorts and dancing 351 .. M13 r .. , . 1 X I A ry I , -3 X I I ' ..-, .,,,.fN11f7lU'D'l 71 'lr a,..' . -'ffm , ,. .-. -Q 'li l'l llm:Q2f:n 'In I 'lik'-tr. ,,,. Q, i f ' Tx x I' .L W ,H Q N B -3 4 is fr, I I, 4' f WV f ' N ?'. ' X 1 ,.,1wl.n.w,,mywx.. 5f.QiNfil? Qfw9W4lWJui., 5 --- Y Y A f ' 11 fly? , , it xg 341 44 Wvkwwv Q1 f .f ,wlvmffvwdwf N!! Nil if-I3 -- I 9,3 Q9 , ,. LN ,fi ,..f4 ' U MM ! mmnudf wi it-fvilllfvllllltl ,WQL- mm! ,,,,, .Z 1 A 'Iu- Proverb - If at first you don't succeed, keep trying. Ingraham Qin Spanishj- Yes, when I was over in Spain, you know, I spent much of my- life there preparing for my profession. I attended the theatre pretty often. The funny part of it was that the performance only lasted an hour. The show would begin at 9 o'clock and last until lo, when the house would be cleared, and the show began anew. This lasted until I o'clock. And the most remarkable thing' was that I could get a seat in the very first row for T4 cents. Critchfield CA freshmanj- Wliat floor was that? 352 A iffair Bngvn 1 ZF f 1 ll, , , i A l l 4 rf rd tn fa X r 7 W5 Fl M.. , Qi.. 'l'here was zi young llut sit at the wheel Of her untoniolmile. Theta nznneal Sue, XVho simply hail nothing to clo Anal rifle all the people she knew. 4 .P Lil! ll 'l'here is 21 Soph l'i llhi nznnefl Laura, Who's verv inneh east clown with sorrow. flip ' .. I' llnt llnnny may earn ' if, Some clongh, and return. Cheer np, Lanm 1 think of to-morrow! 4,4 H ' KXWWI I ee 4 ' 'ff' l ,Q l , . 1 uv. Little lava is one of our llets, She smiles upon all, even Vets! livery time her recl ehapean Appears, the boys gap, Oh, Let's ramble, and she answers, l pl iff ,i N4 ff il l . ll li , ,'l.',l: 1 ll Lets. N lhcrc IS El co-ul, surnzum-ml luaton, Wllosc intellect has ours all lmcutcn' . X,-.,X'-'ji' SllllClKlL'l'lllglj', she ccmsigns j J Our inferior mimls K, To thc moh which has l'm'cl1czuls l'l'll'CZlllll'. I lfrl 'l'hcrc is at young' maiflcn namccl llc-len, Wfhn is awfully fxmcl of tcllin' Illllllll shc's travclccl in Franco, That sho makes thc Profs clancc, A ml her hcacl just lcccps on 21-swcllin'. J' ,X . A -A, J 1 ln thc lluzlncry we liml Miss X'Vclling', A Who this yczu' hacl taken to sulling' 4- :J Hot coffcc and huns, fliiffif 1 To poor llllllgfy ones: I V 3, 155. J K. W xl A X They say that hcl' bank z1ccou11t's swelling. N -I X I , L cz. A ge: , ,W 1 '1'11e1'e is 21 y011I1g' 11121ic1c11 1121111011 Mary, QSM '5 'f K X N1111o's 21s C1l'VL'1'Z111t1 hright 21s 11 fairy 2 1 2 111 1111 Z1 most rcacly wit, pf She writes 11121115' Il skit. 1' 1'1e1' 111'0111C1' 112111 hettel' he wary. : K' f'Tf7 7 4 lib. Dr. -1011118011 once wrote 21 Hue Die, .KM mfg. Hut 1 ?11'l 1,Zl11C1'SOl1'S makes his look sick, ,-5' fi gc' 1. lfm' hers, you must know, ,,1r1 V ' fJl11y'f1C211S with uZ1.1'g'O1'2 1 1t is CC1'tZ111'l1j' awfully slick. ' 1 I J 11 1 ,ix , E I ,V,1 11 121. 1 ,QNX ,Q :rx '- -' Mig Of Miss Rcmherls so 1lll1C11 has been s21i11, That we fearecl it 1111111111 quite turn her 11CZll1, l1ut we just 1v2111t to state '1'l121t she surely was great, 1111 the night when t11e Cilee C1l11J s11e1e21t1. 4-xr' 'l'here is a small 'l'hela namerl Mauk, Who ean easily win in a walk: A most lovable creature, I Ier face is a feature, Whieh causes no small hit of talk. 'l'here is a young maiden lll1ll'lL'tl .Xs a manager well can she boast: She's one of the Strollers, The eluh of high rollers- 'l'here is a young' girl they eall Woolly, Who said to the liappas, Uh, lloocly, My 'VVillie,' perchance, VVill come back for a dance, She saill that he wonlcl: yr-'S. ller fame far surpasses the most if rx , u X 32.94 l'os11', I l l l l 3-f-Jlllllljl Ni A Seance in Regard to an Incfianola Lot HERR Pkomcssfm R. O thou ineffable and far-seeing goddess, vouchsafe to me the humblest of thy de- votees the intent of the gods concerning the erection of an humhle dwelling. In former times ersrwhilel reared unto myself an habitation in which I deemed to spend the length of man's alloted days upon the earth, when lo, a pestilence did rise about my feet and drive me far without the land. Now in this place I do desire to 'stablish here my home and dwell in peace and harmony. O vatic soul of prescient inspiration, reveal to me the auspices propitious. ANNA EVA FAV Within the crystal's depth I sight the fatal rede, History doth itself repeat. ,ff-N 4' i-X. .gy .fx - -f 127. ,X X 5 f' .,, , N - ,. 'c?:ff.,-. X ,i , V. ,Ag-yf .f' If -1 ,, A IW 4 ig-X U, X , sb N' . ,virgin v. 5 . 7, tiff:-'TT' gt Q ,- ' ,H n f, 7 g- lQf,i1 , 'vq-I tljgg-, ' f 'QV-ff' ,il . y 4- P WM ' 44 VA .J if ' 'ttaccigggcg-.5:f.-,., . -Sglofni '1 li y l' T ' A, Twill N 4 if ill fi fi QF f A fl i f' ni .ML -X fx 15 't f 5N M '12p-W1 ,lil y W' f l I 'ill fl'fca-'ii ff 5 ' if - .-ffl, Infu if i it f iliialff ll! 5 7 f I, j I Wliffil lf' 1 - f it c c 'lltll X ii ' 47.-W' ' 'i i f i 'fg::::,.:tzi' 1 l l W i -HFTER' K fel V! I ,w if -'rua-atzcmm Z K lk lgyjl. hm, f NL? lx wk X S ill' 'Wk Z li -'Tv' sg jFLg' ', MR. C1-ms. s. DRUGGAN. Mr. Druggzm is the accomplished and vcrsatilc author of Drugga s nh lJZIl'llZlll1C1lt2ll'y rules and practice. This work' alone has macle the name D1 ug,g ui a houscholcl word. llis popularity nearly clcctcrl him president of lluntu l ux 3 times. The ahovc is Z1 favorite zxttituclc of his in his famous air splitting spctmltx He is not a Phi Delta Phi. f Q- 4 Cub I M ff 1. f' 'f ' I FJ ?lll gE l-.Tl f fall - .'V. lg C i I i l is , A Bl? Q., F? 4 DR. DON CARLOS HUDDLESON. The accompanying is a life-like portrait of Dr. Linhart's successor in a char- acteristic pose. The nimble young director is endeavoring to decide whether he shall vault upon the horse and ride away in reckless haste or repair to the locker room and saw off a few more Champion six levers. As If Appears fo Artie A fair young Maid was bold enough To speak to Artie shy: To tell him what the Girls' Glee Club Had sung with faces wry. Instead of thinking it a joke, In his own happy way His eyes bulged out like soft poached eggs And to her he did say: 'Tis carrying things too far, indeed, And then, besides, to me, The thing seems all quite senseless, For the point I cannot see. ' ' X I ' W 1 , . fffi N X I! 'Pj' 1 f , A W 9 Jig l X yff lx J Q I I 1 I ' E N K ,XJ XXX -Er I ,,, ' f W! gv wx X X., X ' X 7 3,1 K If H. X, XXX A , . Yilrxwrv ' J 4 i I i I' :9lIaggie Loyal to thc Cause of MQ E. Seniors X it . full L I cv Tu 41a'i.mm Frank llagenbuch -Helen Bennett Hunt. Sanford Alphonso lfleaclley-Clara U. liollct. Gilbert Harry Carmack-Alice Arnold Tliaclcer. Aclolph Otto 'l'hcobalc.l-Sarah Edith Jackson. Ilavicl Day Crtnurine A .Ralph VValclo Hoyer -Eva A. Harnhill. Verne Dwight Ilowarcl Earl G. Swan-Laura A. Deatrick. Ray Durant Crout- Mary Etta Sharp. - .Bartley Hoyt ,Kinney-Florence H. Hutchinson. Williatii A. llcycr-Aclelia E. Scatterclay. Burton L. West-Jttlia Meek. Philip D. VVilson--Elizabeth O'Kane. Hugh Means-Grace lflfricla Macrlcer. Norval llenry Cohh - lVlE11'g'Z1l'Gl hlauk. W'alter Metz - Martha Jones of X 41 foe Crane on tfie Plant Steps VVell, I don't care what you say about these girls not spooning-for my- self, I clon't put it by any of them. They're slick, and I aintfooling you a bitfl Warning to Sox YVhen telephoning, Sox, be sure you are talking to the right party. Some- times two girls who go by the same name have similar telephone numbers ll Sox - Hello, ----, can 1 come out to-night P -. Why, ye-es, doubtfully. Miss --- waits in vain for the aforesaid young man - while another girl with the same first name enjoys CPD his company, Miss De Camp Qgetting off the street-earl- 'l'his is the first time l have gotten off the street-ear that that eonduetor has not hugged me. Puss Potter to Clare Postle Cas the .Pi Phis are eating lunehj- Why, Clare, what funny looking cake! QTo the others.j She nearly killed her kid brother with some the other day- Laura Deatriek Qinterrupting and clutching Clare wildlyj- How did you make it, Clare P Ofverheard on the Car She -- Did you hear about Fat XVilson getting shot ?' He - Where? At Leaehman's ? She - No, silly, in the wrist! He - VVhere is that joint? And even the conductor groaned. 363 X . N l l -N S T X S XX S--X x K 1 f ' 1 ' . , I K ,Mf- Z- ,f X ,c X QQ 2 ,gc is X4 in b'li -'lem' Q ,W W J: if 3 SE f 1 l Z l3,,,X l X, w-W1 Mr ll llllrfl c rf rll llllll alll rllllll l , My x lf ll ... lllll M' . lllll mllll 'll lx lllll I X11 ll gzwi-'hx N ml. Union No. 43 of c The Arnalgamated Scrap and 'Plug Chefwers Prcsiclcnt Local Council ...,........ Secretary anal 'l'rcasurcr. . . Guardian of the Cuspiclor .... Tester of New Urancls ....... Freclic Cornell, lloozc lEicl1cllJcrgcr, Stan. Scofield, llill lflvans, l-lcinic Hcclcin, Hoo lfoss, llob Cunningham, 'l'l1c. 'l'l1eobalrl, Gco. llooth, Prexy Meyers, Hag .l'I2lg'Cl'IlJL1Cll, filly Fuller, Spiclcr Jzlpp, -lim P1'cnclc1'gast, 364 . . . . . . . . . . .lkc Eicllelbcrgcr . . . ....... 'llob Schrotll llcn johnson, Stan. Rankin, llrcw Locclllcr, lfuzz. Small, M nqsy M cGraw, llob Rcecl, l'ig'g'y Souclgr, Cap, Ogan, Dutch Schocmalccr, limb Patterson, Farmer Palmer, lluclgc Cllambcrlin, llivlc Logan, Glll Carmaclc. .loc Crane Tuck Crew ?iW- fi' 'TJ' , ' lf , qv A J ' 'il g 5 X, , , M 5- FF Q7 xx K SEQ I w X- M X x W K v11' ' K? :!!e01r' X- wx E ff 1 K -'x 'Mfflmrffi f- ,H H' tw ,f wAf -'WWVMZ 'L 4' ew Rf f 1 f f LM f N if . . .g l -gN:'t., T,'2 -pz,1WyWf f .HV ' f-iii WX A ' Lf K -4 3,ii1T:ij1.'L TM -'N' fi N f ff' Mg. g f' m 1 f f I 2 N :X Z ' K Q 'f ff - if 4 K f M' f :Q 7500 4 'Q .mo 7 7 if' 3 f rya K X 'N 4 xl R X E W us' F f Q Q f W 'X A L MXL, A 1nA'r's Trac DlGG!ST 1 4 W T GQASSHOPPEQ I f Nj r.vf.Q sans! N mg1gy my if +- YLMVV, --1 .562 MH 1 iff? ' ., Z! , M fn-' W ffnuw ,L 5 j, rom rryerpolfy. md, 'CHAMPION ' DELLQW5' 4M-10m 'ODEQ LIN4' Q -A-, ...,, .D ,....L..,: X -- --'-- -::44' - , -if ef'-5 aa, -.322 e D' fgQTifeief'-A-1iiTgZf'T+f'? '1 i- ,W gl .- il 1A,q Gig at 1 MU' 1 I fx Prof. Bill Dick, of the Astronomical Department, tho a constellation, but it proved to be a single star. Eva Said Eva to a non-frat sis, NVhom she scarcely even knew: How darling you do look to-day! Indeed, my dear, you do! Have you your French comp. written You know mine isn't hereg just let me borrow yours, now pet- Gh! My! That waist's too dear.', yet? There was a theologian named Fiddle, Who refused to accept his degreeg Said 'twas had enough to be Fiddle Without being Fiddle D. D. 366 ught he could see M 1' 'NT .- RE A-n.se'l YY' o,, 53325: W 03216 FH,-'5 Gnrm 9:55 bw THEN-1 W . v4 4. ' -, A A1 ggigfif, WU' P009 U25 .1 gx 'DMN I X 4 f' ' -f w '5 ' if ,X X Q E4 Q- ' '31 X I f. v- , ,,- 1- A0 X gag?-- x 3' L 1, 1 A 1 f-ZX ,.V - W ' ' 37 uf!! YA E , 'Qi 1 'VV' 71 OQQ' ,fl L, if K Il if J 4 'B IZ- ' iff ,V Q KW Yf 'f 'f f- -e- It -t in 113 ,J .S ev.. - K p P Y -v X N ,f I A' A- . fa q BLEACHERS qi! A ,wx V In uf .J J NX x, 4 I - . Ma I W 231, , ff X .. 9 X ,AI -nf' f I Y - ' ' al- - ,H , , S XA -f.g!fV' X 4 gq 'Lg , XXX . -I - f , f' ! X ' px, Af L ff 5, ,Q ly' 1 w 5E , f fa I ,C Wye X 3 fe? , ' ' . x fi' ,QQ Q x f, Q Stk ig ' 1 -5' 'F NX V' ft ,A Q om X x X . ,,-11,9 2-V575 w JN W J 5 f , ' kg yr Ydmwmig V xi'-lab ' The Kappa Circus It Is Said - That Shoey may go Phi Delta Phi. Frank Dickey wears asbestos The Lambda Nus now say: 'TQDTECIOPH Bill Dick went Beta --- Big?-agv-Ly. Prexy Myers got his Chesterfield on a football ad. Joe Taylor froze his ears lookggwfof-lnrcls too early. Prof. Hirsch did write that article, after all. The D. U.'s tried to butt into society. The Sigma Nus finally had to take Wertz. Tuttle will take the bar exam. some day. Foulk is carefully considering several proposals. Cole will succeed Thomas. Mathews still remembers Delaware. Case has a Payne. Vernon Davis has quit rushing Kate. Booze prefers Southern Beauties. Tuttle hopes to make a frat some day. VVoody is looking for another Holmes Hagerty is loyal to his color-green. Foulk wants to bet even money he will be married before October. Decker objects to Vets. bathing in Townshend Hall lest it taints his Cheese 368 ,f Now Iiowcxfs all 1'ig'l1t, ,llc's not such Z1 1-1'l fl1t .-Xml I toll you wc lila llim a pilc, VVG: have to have some VVho always look glum, To appreciate those who do smile When the D. U's Give Their Formal Doc Levison-Some Ag. society must be giving a formal to-night, for I just rented fourteen dress suits to a seedy-looking bunch. Prof. .Hitchcock-Eh! Mr. Cunningham, what is an endless chain? Bob-Why, Professor, I don't know, unless it is one with ends cut oil. Vlfhatls a neclctie? was asked by an Ag Of the Prof whom we call Hag, Oh, :L necktie is nothing ,llut a small hunch of stuffing, Covered outside by a rag. Horty-What degree are you working for, Woody? Woody Qwitli a far-off, contented lookj-Why, an M. R. S., Horty. 370 l.,r1urmuw2n7 if The Intrusion of Daddy The lights were blazing in the gym, Gay music filled the air, Queer looking people strolled about- All kinds and tribes were there. Behold the jaunty sailor boy, Sis Hopkins, Uncle Si, The clown, the dainty milking maid, Bo-peeps, with glances shy. And see the grand colonial dame, The dude, the yellow kid, See all these splendid looking sights, Then ask us what we did! The rules of this renowned affair Were very, strict, you knowg Before hand we 'had told the Profs That nonchof them could go. ' - I hear you- say, You were not fair, Or else Smith is a pet. Don't judge the co-eds till you know What circumstance they met. Indeed, we are not partial, So hear this sad, sweet tale Of how poor Smith, with face so long, Did with us plead and wail. Said he, I can't go way back home, I know I'll just be sick! Now don't you think in reasoning power That Smithie was quite slick? , ,M He knew our hearts were not of steel, And at such pleading tender He guessed arightly when he thought NVC could not but surrender. NVe felt an explanation duc To those whom we had slighted, And, since you see just how it was, We hope that all is righted. What we have told you now, believe! Indeed, it is no myth, And for the details 'of the Prom Go have a chat with Smith. 372 A.E.S w I fx , 1 . w w Q X X 'qi- 1 .Qi 1 ,. 5: N ' X 5, - I EX 'ff KX N523 A - ,t ww ,, X x X . i A , NO 5 , -zo, I lmxffsi. - A Suggestion flhv araitg Elhvairv 1bOt116 of IDRIIIOIIUIIC Elllb IDEIIIOCVUIC GoiobiiiiEVENiNoiiiU iii i W Have you used Bliukls Dope. 10 Applications guaranteed to convert any math con into a pass. Terms Unreasonable See PROF. ARNOLD 'Homin' The Strutters WE SKIN , our through l Q 5,-Q10 Hui PEOPLE I CM RW ' Piffiifiiffge 2 a Melodrama A Popular H u ig? Yefy Hlgh ll0llBfS .r CSO11g. I wnn an An-sm cast 9 By the authors of '- f Manager.. ,.... john Bownocker ! H U M '-'1D'-- .,.. l usll-il,.Hlzi:il13:l1elbe1'tEisenlohr 8 ' 0 Etc' Electrician .... ,--Benny Thomas INI E X T NAI E E IK Manager Harris of the Rose 8: Miller Co., will present Cribbing Through College With SPIJDDSY FQOLLOXAIAY As Leading Man PROF. HAINEJ, - - - 2 Musical Director Use the FOUR RENTS 7l1e SIEBEH7' AUTO SPARKER Eastman TROUSERS ---- 'l-ii' WARRANTED T0 WOHlf And Avoid A INQUHHE 1' D k R H, C, LQRD Be At I-'HUNT STEPS ar Oorn ASTRQLOGER Af 2 P' M- Program CAs'r or CHARACTERS Mad Aualams P ,,,. nrnon oste a Miss Flossie Fitz FZIIICS' A I KW FoLll.mgyi. Florence Welling --.M Bzvllill ' ' Biolu Vullen . ,, Vim lu ,. -, ..,.Coru Roberts Gym' . Gull' llilfler Pratt AT THE A W-f'f'ffT75ifti5.,',.1.i1i Atfklin Emperor William . Wx N e lab, . ., . ui. y Russelsnge ..... A. jfccs n Specialty 1 -. C, Dwight Howard Minstrels, Waiters, Pages, lite. CHORUS DONT Miss lt- 5tlllliiitil'Sl.fi..i.,l':fi'filli'1ifili52:,i2 T57 , 1 - . hrr Muyone . , , lzdltli Dick liru Nctte ,, . , ,,.RusseI Hare ANVIL CHORUS lst Bass Hummer Cllzlrley Bruce Ehe JBursar 2nd Buss Ham1mer,,I,ouny Tuttle Chem- Cards e C0-ed Prom ia A Classical High-Ball Pretty Girls - - - ' - - Startling Costumes ADMISSION - - - THROUGH THE SKYLIGHTS Sunny Gym. Physical Culture System . - Makes Weak Men Sound .Lt- -i STAN SCOFIELD Says:-The mere mention of your wonderful system makes me sound like a dyspeptic calliope. A PROMKNENT C0-ED Writes:-When I entered school I could scarcely keep up. Now I can swim fifty feet. For Further Testimonials, Address Glue College Girl PROGRAM--Cont. ' Gab-mum-a ACT I 1. Mediaeval Song Hit ,e.. 1---1-1 ....... . . . Miss Phoebe Q B N Sequel to the By Russ Hare, assisted by the I ' ' SI I F:::s'1r..G ' f Ce C I REDUGER Cowboy Girl lflflf five Gracelul Poses 'from Bite Jlllll 2. The O. S. U. Mandolin Club accompanied by Mr.CIarence I.ayIin in his justly famous Muscle Dance-Women and Children not admitted During the intermission the De- bate Team will speak. The This little wonder worker accounts for many of the miracles of the Bible. It makes the deaf hear and the dumb speak so they can be heard for , , M-I-L-E-S audience IS requested not to return tiII they ADDRESS have finished as they are F. W. not accustomed to talking before FATAL T0 The uneaneryu A C R o W D MALES II FIUHIS Grand Stand Stock .... Q9 lays mvmsuos IIEI WEIGHT REDUCED IN ONE NIGHT Seo Testimonials VERNON DAVIS-I used to be heavy but its all off now. Nothing y ls Lost Save Hour ---'S Patent Pneumatic Poker System Would be purchasers will me-et in the Neil house lobby at 8 p. m.-Pass word is FISH The WHEELY CURE For Excessive Thinking The course consists In frequent dances and occasional down-town parties. Your College work need not interfere with It too greatly. Thousands of DEEP THINKERS have been cured. Read what one says. BIL1, NYE Says:-I tried to break myself of this degrading habit for years without success till I tried your wonderful remedy-Now I am broke. AIR RESTORATIVE t. lt is pleasant s agility in dodging d all hair growers in the sing four bottles of your but my coat is frequently :I ri .1 2 'f SS ... rw o 5' 9 5 ES f? O UQ H 4 1 Z2 G 5 22 PU 11 - ., g 2. rv as E EQ 2 E- L I 3 Q fr - 2 S : I F1 'E 2 f I1 5 'Tc 2 I-gf 5 3 E' 2 5 n UQ E. : . W fl P I 5 2- CD 3 ci .T CD -s 4 -4 21 CD Q Cp Z :S 5' C2 -Q bald, TAS H your coa develop ently use After u me I Binh, nr 'ilinin JOIN THE THETAS WWE I N aa an ,US .',: M' R I Mu , 4 2 0 E4 ,gr N iss ue.. ......,.,. iss Poste 8 -5 as ,C H 2 'D I. B. Ruined.-.,, ,- Mr. Howard Q- I H if 3-' 25 Q I. Was Ruined ...,. Mr. Sllllllllel' 5: ' an 3 I. T- E 2 T r so 2 g Q' an Orchestra -,.- .,., ,.Anvil Chorus E ,E Q If :AQ go Led by Frederick Harold a 2 .B 3 za 4' 2 In - 5' Q 5,5 . . . 7 :I gb O 'E I. lt. The Tri Delts will give the pan- - gf 3 -5 if W 'E 3 tomine and shadow dance 2 e 5-ee -e -H ,eg 'ci I- 1 za e Uhr Bagn Tgfmlm PREVENTS E B Q coNs AND FLUNK t to Il st Y IIUN'T MISS THE ennnnne ADMISSION I.iIII THIS IIIIIIIIIIII IIIII It is good for one mag- nificent ache, frightful pain or terrifying twinge AT . . . . KiIer's New llyspeiie Soda Fountain Adults, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,Ql 50 Freshmen Qwith parentsj I no fwithout LI 25 AKIO EAT ARKET CHOICE CUTS AND ITUIISTS ' EVERYTHING FRESH Q Have you that tired feeling in l'lag's Lectures? Do you feel sick after watching Daddy Thomas? Does Hammond give you a pain? Do Davi:-s's Lectures leave your head in a whirl? Only the best matured and strongest minded can survive these things. Try the Nlakio Cinch Courses For Simpletons BISHOP'S Pkooszmvi---com Are You ACT H'C0 Troubled With , 3. Tl B: al' . d 'tl A WOMAN LAN ftlie Sr1UvbLO ,wlV 1ir.s Vilrd 1Nso1v1N1A ? SMOKE THEM go through the Corn Drill. During the intermission the und- T3-yu, ience will bf entertained hy l-lugenlmc i's ' 'roupe of 'l z' IA' .I' 7 40 W U, Hammond S native jungles. Hz ' rl l ' l f COLLEGE MAN'S liiliiinlimgliciltiiist tlllgyleltliirst One O'cIocks SMOKE F o R B 1, o o n W M I Are you ACT In Jee Gbe Dissatisfied 1, lt was not like this in the ll . ' our D. Y. TO e7'S Wlth Yourself? fsftxllllllllllyz-:OCklllS Sc Kappa Listen to l.Cll0l'llS:l In 2. The Girls Glee Club of 40 S 1' lV -, 'll' llg' H am mond i.I'1i11TC '1-Zlificwaoxgl' 'iii Jim . 'WVont You Fonalle Me Awhl'e.and with appropriate gestures. You Feel During the excitftnent the ,, - z 'll 1 1 'dl CONCElTt:D 5111325 jg mggfm' ' Y M llcker 7 scoii 5 fri Try - . CONVULSIUNS A foR.... REW Thomas THI UFTURINK Soverign WITH A , , UUE TASTE S0p0rlflC THO Gill LADIES Get The New Books SEE-H nvtPRuvE YOUR -W MADGE THE A STUDY IN SCARLETH F I Bess Thompson FRENZllfD FINANCE Mr. Swartzel's Summer Doc I'eV'S0n EXHIBITION School will develop you ROPE 0F THE L0fK 8 TO 4 so as to remove all cons. Doggie Huddleson DAILY 2' xl' 84 ll' .l H PROGRAM---t ont. PRESENT ACT III-Cont a 3. Q ' 'll d l f - ' ADULPH THEUBM-D QZYLHZQSS m'11,0'i'JiZf'.,.fJi Applicants For AND plitchers not admitted during t ns scene. , The whole will close with the IN Comic Opera I I ' Only those having at- This life-like skit is taken from tamed athletic honors the popular hysterical novel, need apply. Base Ball The College Professors' Club :md includes 111eHPfffefred.as we are nfnny of 'om' mfm nf' short in this department. PERFORMANCE goiiigdjlis silisiliiigiiimzlttltetiiiio1's EVERY NIGHT CAST MATINEE flrecrl . ,.,. , I Mfr.Frech 'l'CClCS,,, 'ro.-- Sunday- Monday, 1135- PHUTUGHAPH Tuesday, Wednesday. U y pl-0f: Thursday, Friday Ani , . c many others whose names and .... Saturday are household words. Sl70IW4Zll'f-QQTIEIIV SGIIJQ with Complete Directions For Sttreading. Its use has made its inventor famous and wealthy. After using for one month the shyest country hoy becomes A a Don Juan. TUTTLE'S PATENT GRINDER Three months use makes the sunniest disposition. DARK 8 MO0NEl' Copious References Compulsory X -gm, E, . GE Q gl ,ooo cp BM5, E AKNT D HER c FW C fl W The uhovu is rcprollucccl from a lJllOlQOQ'l'l1lJll of Prof. Vilas, who, while fitting himself for his 1Dl'OlTCSSlUll, clisguiscml himself as Capt. Kirlcl, zmcl scoured the Ger- man seas. X A ffyki ' v f X f W X5 X I , p fj, X JC-Q fs ,,1, fl, , R -iff ' Qf L iw Xxx ? 5 ff I ,,,, 'fix Q XJ . , .f , X, x K - X J' T T jj , M J , . q 1l .f X X , V W N K fffgkf' 7 if , f H H ,. fb sf ' ff K ' Y , !, ' T 5 X . J llf, k, 'I A 5 JM I, fy: lfwfff 7 A l, 4 .4 ,, ku' wail jf! 7 mf ,ff if XX Xu wif!!! 5 ' 2 Wg,1MMNwMi . ET, fl fl.: 'Rx 'jf wa fffZff4W f' Q, ff .N N f ff 12' f jk ww, f X , ii-gfj, X fr 1 ' 1' I '- by AMX' f 'i w X., v fl' 'I ' '7f1 X , K .sQNkMUf,f,14..,c,,.4fX w VV x . y W 5 X rg Rx 'fi . W if , X 1 NY 1 ff ix X f- -K F Y I! ,,.-- :I X 'Fi' 4 I 21 N5 Xl X Q 1 79 . - The Parfing Paine fl'l11'cc words, clear lROl1lCO, and goocl-night imlcccl. Good-11igl1t, good-night: 1lZ11'1Lil1Q' is such swcul sorrow That l shall say good-11ight till it bc 1l1O1'l'0W!U To Lily Who ne'er is missing from her place? Who always has a smiling face? Who unlocks lockers, gives us pins, And sews up rips 'fore gym. begins? Lily. Who never once has scolded us? Who cools us down when in a fuss? Who is't we could not do without, And whom all love beyond a doubt? Lily. Matthews-Say, lke, what does Shakespeare mean by the music of spheres. Ike-The clinking of the highballs. Prof Davis to His Secretary I have just come to the conclusion that a great many of those boys have elected I-Iort because they thought it would be a snap. I cannot find any questions in the lectures or text-book that are sufficiently difficult. Hand me that Encyclopedia Brittanica, will you? Young lady, seeing Jesse Dorsey at a baseball game, with his coat off: Why! what has Mr. Iams done with his shoulders ? Florence Welling: Ah, me! I've had my clay. 382 if ' J 4' ' ,f X, 1 - 4 pf RN ff ff Xi 47 f ff , 4441? ci' C , N.- U, .ij 4112. -::.3,, I. fV,' 'if f , ff , ,-if . ,L n Q -' 4 :Y-,ff N I ff, i id- lfrrf' , ' JN E, Y ffjlig, x X 'xxx Ar' ef' 2 KX 1, ffm, xx .X N 1. My f f 5, XX K3 f-my A,-4:-,ix-'Q' 113515 ', '11, , X N ,qjgmmmyz yy , A 4 ,-fl' J iig- -5 vig? 54,2 11- ygf- X '-X 4 QI, , -E'-Q fy vm Yr 1 .1 f ' f f x X X v iQ ,KS ff' .K- X ' 4 f -fa? T'-fn XX 4 ' S ,Q-.ww A fag n , fQ kwf'w 2 ' g.. 'f Syd! .,if?f--Lf '- Mig f f A' . , ,QR ' X - , , - .F-R512 , 1jJ,z,' 'X Mwffwf . .. .Tm gigwrgv, Q ,Ng 1.15 Q, W ' , , f MM f f f w 4 J' ' fl:-. JL A MS' f N u 'A xl f A -,1--vf' ' - iv if ,A 4- wn,. . ,,,',ffl! 4. ,N ,ii f V f A f 'MKKKC 1 kx X JUL- 'f '5- NAQ r - -14, A-X ::.gW,f,,5,,IIh,f,21f:-:Aufkg,af,.',hm ff N ,f . . X W - - -R ' -4' fQLf2f: l'fi1 - f. 4'f731 Nw X 'i - ' ' di --I fm , A ,frlf ' N ,x 1 on-P ,,.,. - --pq. 36 K' X '. .. -uf-' '-'1 2 . A ,..wA.s sf, 1 f 1: -5. -YA ' F , , :Yun Irv. I L ffw Sept Sept. Sept Sept Sept Sept Sept Sept Sept Sept Sept Sept Observation by a College Lad 1904-1905 Registration. The Greeks go forth like a raging lion seeking whom they may devour. Five new Thetas, four new Pi Phis, three new Kappas, and the end is not yet. The Faculty tries to conduct classes. Bill Dickinson decides that the Phi Gam pledge button is much prettier than the Beta. Everybody goes to chapel. First and last appearance of some. Delta Tau Delta starts the society whirl with a dance at the Insane Asylum. ' Dr. Thompson rejoices. The Sophomores won the Cane rush fairly and honorably. Football season opens. Ohio State, not to hurt Otterbein's feelings, only runs the score up to 34. Eva Barnhill contemplates revising the English grammar, some- thing like this: I dive, I dove, I have Dave. Gertrude Jackson takes her first class in Rhetoric. A freshman inquires of her, What professor will 'have charge of. this class ? Another new Kappa. Ohio State vs. Miami. The Kappas have another pledgling. All classes hold election-and all is well. - Nature holds her first weekly class. Those who answered to roll call were: Alice and tiillg Martha and Walterg Bess and Billg Eva and Daveg Meta and liillg Skirt and Soxg Tip and Graceg Ruth and Sunny jimg Edith and The. Each week the class grows larger. Gertrude Walsh offends Professor Bowen by translating unique fillc, unique daughter. 384 x Oct. I Oct. 5 Oct. 6 Oct. , 8 Oct. IO Oct. 1 I Oct. I2 Oct. I4 Oct. I5 Oct. 21 Oct. 22 Oct. 23 Oct. 28 Oct. 29 Oct. 30 Nov. 1 Nov. 5 Nov. 1 I Ohio State vs. Witteiiberg. Sig Alphs and Phi Delts initiate. Ohio State vs. Muskingum. Eva decides that she can be of service in the Beanery by looking after the Crums. O. S. U. defeats Denison by a score of 24 to 0. The Sophomores are just that unselfish that they allow the Fresh- men to win the football game. Pi Beta Phi initiates. The Sigma Chi and Sigma Nu goats are also given an airing. INIAKIO Board organizes. New members are chosen. Phi Gamma Delta entertains with an informal dance. Delta Delta Delta initiates. Beta Theta Pi initiation. Sigma Chi entertains with a dancing party for their initiates. Ohio State vs. Michigan, 6-31. Jackson, Marquardt, Swan and I-Ioyer make Yost tremble and I-Ieston's hair stand on end. Sig Alphs entertain with a I-Iallowelen party at their fraternity' house. Case football team goes home in tears, her rooters in beers,'l and' her Coach and Profs. in fears that Ohio State has won the cham- pionship. Kappa Alpha Theta initiation. Another new Kappa. Kappa Sigma entertains with a card party at the Sigma Nu house. Indiana vs. Ohio State. Heine Heekin goes up in smoke and Eddie Byrne makes use of Indiana fire-water. Sweetland does not approve of the spirits of two members of the football team. ' Kappas decide that they have looked over the Gab. room thoroughly and makeup their minds to settle down. Kappa Kappa Gamma initiation at last. Illinois vs. Ohio State, 46 to o Kappa Alpha Theta introduce their initiates to college society at the home of Mae Siebert. 385 Nov Nov. Nov Nov Nov Nov Dec. Dee. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. jan. Jan. Jan. vlan. jan. Jan. Jan. -Ian. Jan. Hoodoo day for Ohio State. The Fates were against us. Oberlin defeats us by a score of 4-2. Lambda Nu initiation. Kenyon goes home vanquished by a score of II-5. Kappa Kappa Gamma becomes a life member of the Butters-In Club. Too bad Susan Siebert isn't a Kappa. Pi Beta Phi reception for their freshmen at the home of Clara Schille. Phi Delta Phi ainuses the Co-eds. First Battalion Hop goes off with great social eclat. Delta Taus act as hosts. l Thanksgiving for the faithful service of our football team. Carlisle Indians go home with 22 scalps dangling at their belts. Kappa Sigma entertains with a formal at the U. C. T. Hall. Ohio's Best Center elected captain of the football team. Alpha Tau Omega informal dance. The fraternities, under the guidance of Delta Tau Delta, organize Hible classes. Men's Glee Club Concert is a great success. lvflxklo .Board has a meeting of its new members. T Vacation begins. Vacation ends. Hess O'Kane leases the darkest corner on the second floor for the remainder of the year. We miss those that are missing. joe Taylor takes the Glee Club's advice and cons half his students. just to show that there isn't any hard feeling joe removes the cons Strollers. No wonder She Stooped to Conquer, such a brevity of skirts. Edith Jackson is pledged Sigma Nu, and from now on takes her luncheons at the fraternity house. Ohio State vs. Wisconsin, 25-22. Basket ball. Betas entertain with a formal at the Columbus Country Club. The Betas, Kappa Sigs, Phi Gams and Phi Psis form an inter-fra- ternity bowling league. Three Kappas corral Harry Fisher and take him to the Empire. 386 jan. 18 jan. 20 jan. 21 -Ian. 24 jan. 27 jan. 28 jan. 3 1 Feb. 1 . Feb, 3. Feb. 4. Feb. 10. Feb. I 1 . Feb. 1 3. Feb. 14. Feb. 16. Feb. 17. Feb. 18. Feb. 20. Feb. 24-25 Feb. 25 Feb. 27 Feb. 28 March 2. March 3. Delta Delta Delta formal dance at the U. C. T. Hall. Phi Psi dance at the U. C. T. Hall. Ohio State vs. Purdue, 26-23. Sophomore Informal. Kappa Alpha Theta celebrates with a dinner party the 35th anni- versary of the founding of the fraternity. Ohio State vs. Oberlin, 27-21. Sigma Alpha Epsilon informal. Senior Informal. Phi Gamma Delta entertains with a dinner dance Club. Freshmen Informal. at the Country Pi Beta Phi Formal dance at the C. C. T. Hall. Ohio State vs. Cincinnati, 43-6. Sigma Nu formal at the Country Club. Ohio State vs. Oberlin. The Insane Asylum entertains the Glee Club. Jack Frost takes a great fancy to Hill Tracy. . Brew Loechler gets a Valentine from llrooklyn. Sigma Chi formal at the Columbus Country Club. joe Crane, on junior Social Committee, horrifies and shocks Annabel Schoedinger by mentioning, even mentioning. Talculn Powder. So rude of him. junior Prom. Puzzle: Wliicli was Alice Thacker and which Eva llarnhill? Crummie was not there, so the mystery goes unsolved. Gertrude and I-lovey still versed in the art of campus work, as of old. Ohio State vs. Minnesota. Delta Tau Delta entertains its Northern Division in Convention. Dr. llrown gives Phi Delta Theta a tonic to keep them going in society life. Kappa Kappa Gamma formal', at the Parsons. Ohio State vs. Denison. Charley Kurtz entertains tlte Hetas with an informal dance at his home 011 East Broad street. Co-ed Prom. A goodly sight to behold. Ask Josiah! 387 4 March March March March M arch March March March March March March March March March April April April April April April April April April April Indiana vs. Ghio State. Kappa Sigma informal dance at Pheir house. A Bunny is seen scurrying across the campus. Well, I Swan Alpha Taus give a card party at their house. Flossie decides to wear a placard labeled, He is getting along nicely. Delta Upsilon formal at the U. C. T. Hall. Dave and Eva decide that they will not be in the MJXICIO. Bill Nye and Mignon Poste form a trust to control the Strollers. The Nye-Theta combine is broken up. Mignon resigns from the Strollers. Mignon decides that the Strollers cannot succeed without her. Eva and Dave do not go walking. That makes it nice for Dwight Howard. A The Girls' Glee Club gives a grand and glorious concert. Prof. Bowen smiles and speaks to every one in the hall, and cannot say Bon, Bon often enough. The Pan-Hellenic sorority conference begins to do things. Exams begin. Kappa Sigma animal banquet at the Chittenden. ' -April 5. VVhat's going to happen? We have six days' vacation. TNE dance. The left ears of the Faculty burn with a fervor. Notice: Sox Raymond got a merit, and under Joe Taylor, too. All cons and '-Huiiksr' are forgotten, and everybody tries for a merit in campus work. VVhere, oh where are the Chi Phis? The Tri-Delts succeed in landing Cora Roberts. There is a rumor that Delta Gamma will soon be in our midst. Everybody comes in at II o'clock, wearing a violet. Fraternity Baseball League has its opening games. Ohio State vs. Muskingum. Somebody said that Sox Raymond had a well turned ankle. jim Rothwell adds that if Sox were a mon- key it would be a monkey wrenchf, Co-op. store opens. Out of this and the Senior Prom Abe Shot- well expects to make enough to pay the rent for the Sigma Chi house for six years. 388 April April April April April April April April May May May May May Iylay May May M ay M ay Xl av June 19 zo 22. 24 25 26 28 29 I 3 5 6 8 9 IO II I2 13 I5-I 20. Dr. Lyman Abbott runs in opposition to the campus and sunshiny weather. The Strollers. Would that it had been Incog 2 Ohio State vs. Wittenberg. Florence Hutchinson is pledged Pi Phi. Meta Klie visits our campus, therefore Bill is Nye. Ohio State vs. De Pauw. Pi Beta Phi celebrates her thirty-eighth anniversary. Second Bat. Hop. Ohio State vs. Notre Dame. They say Norval Cobb is running a Malik campaign, but it loolcs as if the mockery was on the other side. Denison vs. Ohio State. Kappa Alpha Theta formal- not at their fraternity house. Ohio State vs. Oberlin. The fraternity world is anxious as to the whereaboutsof Chi Phi. Dwight Howard takes it upon himself to see that the Chi Phis are represented in the Mrxiclo. Girls' Glee Club banquet. Delta Tau Delta entertains with a dinner dance. at the Columbus Country Club. Ohio State vs. West Virginia. , Women's Pan-I-Tellenic Association gives a banquet at the Lincoln. Ohio State vs. Kenyon. une 9. Susan Siebert can and will give you all the daily happenings between these dates, and, if anything has been omitted up to this time, Susan will gladly tell you what it is, whether personal or gen- eral in nature. Senior Prom. The moving finger writes: and having writ Moves on: nor all your piety nor wit Shall lure it back to cancel half a line. Nor all your tears wash out a word of it. 399 N4 .,. -r -wr- .1 , K ..- 'Q 5, - fy, 9 1, . ff, 3 -J, V ' I, j if X J-,,-1 7 -- f- . f U, ..., ,. 1 '1 f X I lf' , W ' fy' ,,: UVAA 44, . , M4 M 4 f ' o ' - W!! 'P ' an X N fx - -- -' o Lf1MfwwwXM4 RX 'Y flffwh-ff'!'I 1xC , 11,4 Q f 1135- vf f ' 7- ,-.---W-C' fl 5 I I X ,',l A ? xx fly M Wg - 1 . 1 .eo mm f 1 . M -,.-5'-2-1: 1 X bl A f -,- 10 f .Cx , ,V Q - 1, 1 x. 1,1 '- 1 .1 - J- W 22 1 ' x1 Ziff! A I 1, A! E JI -41,01 .I ,V .1 Ilfzl I mg., - ''x,I,15T,.,,,....I-il ' , 1 f M 'v A f ' 1 1 ff1iV1511111:14eZ, ' 1, I5 , 1, iihah f he 'I ' d E' 'ffff 1 7.1 41111191-1 93gf ..-um' ., 111 111: 1 f 1., ' 1'-11 ,X A' 1 ,,f ' 'V QPN, 'V ---1 !1'k-LTTE .m --1 Q XL ' ,yfz-Z7 1, . 5 ,J, K f 1 f? fix. 32 ,Ah Q NN fycaff 1- -1 , 1, I, -2 1' 1 Wwe-7 1 11111511314 N1 N-I X 1 0- 4-5, 1 :AM W 11 f f fl W16f11111.91MMQWS:ze-:-1mg-:-:.gf:q.g.fqz11megs..Jn, ,f ' A f ,' J Z1 '11 X - 1 1--fu +:l1f'-.: , he 11 of 1 , ' f , X --My Ml, o,,,-,0,v,-,o,.o,0.'.'.q,l,v.-,',.'.9G1'Jo, JL! X- . 13.1, Q 3 , - w'Q7f5.',:,Z39m?qS1,fifgiffvo X! 11, s 1. ff aus - 'f-1 1 V W I ' 1.14 ., 1 ' Wg, , 'f 'L 4 'N l X-f ,W K i 11 R 7' 1 V, :fix gig?-. xx Lib 74 5? ! g 'N agjwfv ff! 7 'W X ,, 1 IM g,X,,'b ,ff 'gg 1 I ,ff r 5 I' 1 , 1 J J A W K. X f 15:1 -. . ' If x X I R' fe , - 11 I 11: , 4 1- ' K ff ' X A ','ED- 9 X' XXV! I If . I S , X ff QQ-L . -5. . Dr. Iilcilic, ill addition to heing' a lJ1'Of0llINl student of z111z1to111y, has 211121111041 p1'oHcie11cy in bones other than those helonging' to thc 11111112111 f1'z1111e. One evening Dr. Iflligllt and Z1 few friends sought illStl'llCtiOI'l at his feet. .N copper zxhnost did his duty, hut z11'g'u111e11tz11ive skill deterred hi111. 2. X l , if X fl ' rg-THE Qi-2 ' 1' f f F X 7 o- o, F, 4 ' QL Q0 Q ' 3 x of o fd X ff ,ff 3 Q X ,1 ,gig ' ix 1, fffif 04:5 i J X H ' 49 o '1o m44z44f f Sf' , . A ' . o 1 QW f ff QA 'RW-XXQN f f f fi-affif f H .EfxYwgQ..,3LQ ,, 6 gg S , 11 , f - , , , -51:2-?x, V' T 4 2 a .x N MAC' U ,.Jnln.A W l ,sv .xx 'ZX f. 1 ' X X ' ' f 'A I X 1' I-fic . it W -,. f J D ' if 5-, 2 -15 JN Xcf E. 'Y jak ill' ,- f N, KZ L: A To 'fl X ge' f 'Q-2' ' UP ' 'mr ff. fix Vfu ' 1 diffs: -: ' Q -f of W rv 1- , 'Qfilakio Board fakes fo the -'woods bmitlfs Qtuntmits nf Eunttng, Gay and High, Fourth and Long, High and Euclid. Both Phones. Main Office, Gay and High 0pen to Students - - throughout the Year Smith it Summer Paris and iDaf0z'lz'0n North Fourth St. and Northwood Ave. 0pens may lst. Zloses 0ctober lst. WW? Correct Furnishings, Hats ILYKE... Ready - to - Wear Clothes Gull:NuF'uf'll'lfVII'Il'If'lI'Il'N'Il'll'll'll'll'IHhlll'laF'uY':NuHulluI'll'ul'hf'hl'lI'U'Il'il'l1'Nl'L POPULAR 'PRICES 3 4 n n n 5 ffI'muv'u4'uA'u1'u:Inm4'w'n'um'n'muvlummmmlmnl.H.II.II.4In4InI'ul'n'n'n'u'u'wu:- IF IT'S FROM LTKE YOU MAY DETEND lT'S RIGHT FRED S. LYKE 81 COMPANY 81 NORTH HIGH STREET Athletic Sportsmerjs Headquarters. :tl Base Gym. Suits Ball Athletic and Tennis X, Footwear i'f -L X sum.. 1-1 KW!! rrff f IU FEM EYFIYPHQNOF the Athlete or Sportsman. Make Our Store Your Home. We Sell Sporting Goods Only. lin!hlllhuiIll!!!!lllulllIlnl'lI'll'n The Columbus Sporting Goods Co. 267 North High St., Columbus, O. III. WnI'u'u'WuFVwlullullu'U'M'nlhihi!-IInlInl'ul'ul'uI'In u4'InIt-lml.v'u'n'u'n.'nlxm.u.n,p,,n,,l,,-,,q,u.u,tIIlIII0.4u.41Mn,,u5,ny,UQ.II-llull,gn,4n,,n.,-,,.,,nmann.. A stock offering almost limitless varieties from which to select. Prices as low as can be quoted on good quality. Visitors always Welcome. gi fQ.,,.ni'.-f44:Q1,.5fLffllf M-4-if -f , f - 4 v--41.5 '10 , 477 ' - , I .yr ,rx :ve Y ,I . af , f 1 , 4.9. 5 5 9 4 Q . Am - fl V SXQLAQQQ A-' . .4 ily, 7- If' u'mM'lf i gum, D T 1, l ll'-I E I 'i l - ...L ' ---- '-'- - Ro - 5 1' .-1: .,,V X V 'k -- ..,, ,, I i Y K V Cf-A . I - ,. Mfgl' W W f-A f ff Qcgiiiiiviff' f ,f 5'.r- , If 52, ATA X um 'u'Q1'-4'mu'uUmu-Q.in.'nuinunup1.11.11,an,nn,1u,n.nu,Iun.u.ll.ll.:l.nl,alu1. .a'.v'-om -.4-.1'Inuf'me.Ian1.-Q.Iq.u.n.-1allvi,n,va,fl,u,n.n,u,n,pu,,u,,-,,n McAllister, 142-146 N. High St., ohler 85 Co. Columbus, O. The Leadzkzg Jewelry Store of Columbus WE CARRY THE LARGEST AND BEST SELECTED STOCK IN CENTRAL OHIO BONNETS JEWELRY STORE, 77 N. HIGH ST., COLUMBUS. O. IV. E thank the K, 55?-iimfibx I ,ffillfsrf 51 g.i5,ifA' si fs- Students 4 N MJ- -5:35, n-xiuhg 1 ., 'W..FFh - l X . l yn n-.,:. Q -Lf75'5'.i,i5i155'u of fb C O 1110 S tate Univer- 1 1al1Ti'lll'l' ,w sity for th e i r X: ima-,dll -:. fq,guwgati2fp'- QgA2fx1.:f:f . w? 1aJg ,3ig1ggfg:s2ffrtJ' liberal patron- X age for the past year. We trust that all have been pleased, and that we may be remembered when Wanting duplicates from their negatives in the future. The Old Reliable i mf, ,I 'W -. . wwf! ,M Stale and 'B State and High Sts. , COLUMBUSD. High Str. V. VI. Scietttificztlly and Mechanically Perfect in Every Feature Have you ever wondered why Tubu- lars always excel for light running, clean skimming, perfection of cream, few repairs, small consumption of oil and great durability? Here ls the reason: Tubulars are the the only cream separators that conform-in all respects--to science and mechanics. There is nothlng hit and miss about Dairy Tubutars-every part and arrangement has reason a SIT IF YOU LIKE. The supply can is set waist low to fill easily. , The bowl is long and slender to obtain ZYCBYCSY centrifugal force with least speed gg The bowl is simple and light I0 be easy to handle 1 tn The bowl is hung relow its bearing '0 lW0ld t P heaviness Qllllatf f . l . 'rg gjzmtr. f 'Thr bowl is hung from a ball bearing to reduce , -,WJ ' r Ct Ott ' tulle' t ' l un it The bottom feed and top delivery are used to ln- , ,,,,,,qr l, , t crease capacity and reduce power, I r it lliliiiz i. - M , ii'4?ff,:' A discharge very close to the center of rotation is I illglll'llll:lig.l,ll,,,' lilly ! llt'1'H used to m tke smooth cream, H131 ffiwilwlflfgllixf hiftwlyw ini Wholly enclosed gears Insure perfect safety and l'l' ll'l '12l,1 l freed m from dirt. N Automatic oiling gives perfect lubrication with gl lmlgr L H Ilttte attention and no loss of oil -'et llyar-if Only perfect construction gives perfect satisfaction. H N 'Qiff lf you want perfect satisfaction insist on getting perfect -' construction. As we have teen making sepxtrat.-rs over twenty years, we ought to know what we are talking about and we say we believe a Tubular will give at least twice the satisfaction you can get out of on-ING THE DAIRY any other separator. Write for our handsome roo5 1-UBULAR catalog. ' The Sharples 'Separator Co.. West Chester, Pa. TORONTO, CAN. CHICAGO, ILL. R...-... ........ ee... . VII. See I. D. Srnith W QQ For fa.rfzz'0nqbly made garmentf. They posyess the map fum' clzaraqter deszfm'--by mllege mm. Q'S ?fa TWO STORES: 22 EAST SPRING ST.i:T:688 NORTH HIGH ST. VII 1 l 9 6 3 WHEREVER AND WI-IENEVER you may bein need of Valves, and desire Valves - of superior quality and reliability, go to your nearest dealer, and ask for the genuine. Q JENKINS BRGS. VdlU65l HE manufacture of Valves has been a specialty with Jenkins Bros. for over 35 years. Our constant aim has always been to maintain the highest standard of quality first, and after that the lowest possible prices. We guarantee every Valve we make, and always willingly and gladly replace any goods of our manufacture which may prove unsatisfactory in the service for which they were designed. The guarantee of quality- OU R TRADE MARK is stamped on every Valve we make. Jenkins Bros. N efw York Boston Pl1z'!adelphz'a Chicago London - ---.1--l--4.5 n:s'rAn.x.1sm:n 1867, The Union Cnimtral life Bus. Qin of Qlincinnati. JOHN M PATTISON, President. E.. P. MARSHALL S Greatest Jecurity. Lowest Cost to Policy Holders. 'II'll'Ol'il'll'IA'h'!l'h'lnFlu II l mpany ranks hrst ln these two most lmportant pamculars. It owns no stock t l ly all amount of bond '-Umted States b d but IKS rate of t realxz I y l gl l t i th rate low. It pay t insure in the U Central. 'lfllfhl'lf'll'II'll'hI'Il'lI'll The Great Policy Holders' Company. Assets, 844,000,000.00. - COAL Hocking IR-'aiZcI1IIJe1'Ita,s Use Pocahontas in Kaur Furnace MURRAY CITY CDAL CO. WHEELER BUILDING. 55 WEST BROAD ST Citizens Telephone 1435. X. JOIN THE COSOP :: Jpecial Prices to Members :: wF5'2. 'n5fM ' ly Rxxwnatw, . 'qw'2xw,t-wq,,,g-- piwigm Books and Stationery 5 t .QM - 5 PEW . aw Magazines j t t Men's Furnishings t V and Jboes t 'li gt Penants and Toilet it J Articles tx, Q sbt -'mgbz rf at , . . ,kv W Athletic Jupplzes , ----------- THE ------ University Co-operative Store J. A. HEADLEY. Jupt. 1547 North High Street XI. Established 1851. ' 204-211 Tlfdfl . Elmer E5 Amend, C0f.,8ff,Sf. 1622, M Importers and Manufacturers of V QE, . Qlhgmtcatgwang itirgmtg Chemical, Physical and Scientific Apparatus. Assay Goods. We Handle the Best of Everything Needed in the Laboratory. Sll:QL5 H C...,,a.Q.,fTL'1 E5 i jiT is a well-known fact that our garments possess more style and h h f tbl'h t ' th' business Wh mm snapt an t ose o any es a is men in is . t-n that is combined with an absolute fit and perfect workmanship, you I . ' have garments that mean trade-brmgers. HIGH STREET TAILORS. Smart Tailoring 166 NORTH HIGH ST. , W Wi, ,,,, ,WU N .- W Ve, W-- America 's M ost Complete Cigar Store, Barber Shop and Bath Establishment. PHIL. LANG, 37 NORTHCiIdig1HPhiiti6136Q Nothing But Soft W'ater Used. xii Machinery of Jeffrey Manufacture. ELEVATIN G. CONVEYING. POWER TRANSMIT TING 'ldillhlhl' COAL CUTTING, WASHING, HAULING, MINING, COMPLETE COAL TIPPLE EQUIPMENT. eg .CATA LOGUES FREE. COAL and ROCK DRILLING, EXCAVATING, SCREENING. COAL CRUSHING POWER HOUSE EQUIPMENT. ELECTRIC and Storage Battery LOCOMOTIVES. The JEFF? EJSMQEEEQSTURING 19E9lXL?11i,1E,X1L?S!21SHQE,1TQQf 9-59- lnguil! Every Student of Ohio, every reader of Markie knows-or ought to know that he can get no such assistance in out- tittingn himself as he can get from our A Book of Tools, an encyclo- pedia of Metal Workers' Tools, or Wood Workers' Tools, a com- pendium of Wood Workers' Tools. Either gladly sent on receipt of 25c. , The Chas. A. Strelinger Co, P. 0. Box ll, :: IJETRDIT, MICH. Zollege Gowns W Caps 5 . . ' The Zi i, . will Worliijltnship riff' fwlll ffffg wifi .t fffe ai if if fa f Mal ff Ig 49.57 Lowest X 'I ' X ' ' Prices. Silk 'facullv Gowns and lioods COX SONS 84 VINING 262 Fourth Avenue, NEW YORK. Goodman 84 Co. I48 N. High Street ORIGINA TORS OF 0ne Price Tailoring .First-Class Work af 'Prices Within the Reach of all. All goods marked in plain figures. One Price lo All. Suits S25 up. Crousers S6 up. GOODMAN Si CO., XIV. BUSY BEE CATERERS Teas, Dinners Weddings Receptions Luncbeons CBOTH PHONES 291 mam Store as-as lt. High Street. Dont' leave comfort, conven- ience and order ar home when vnu travel. Take them along by pack- ing your clothes in a Stallman Dresser Trunk A convenient trunk for :t slu- dent to have in his room Built like n dresser Everything you want when and where you want it. Keeps garments in perfect ' ' ' ' ki il condrtmn. Srmplrfies pac nz an unpacking. eliminates re-packing. Strongest. roomiesl. mor-I conven- ient trunk made and costs no more d t l S t C than the or mary sy c, en . 0. D privilege examination. Send two-cent stamp for booklet. STALLMAN. 31-33 West Spring St.. Columbus, 0 ELLIOTTS A RT GALLERY. Best Accommodations for Large Groups and all kinds of Fine Photography. Phone, Citizens 3015. No. III5 S. High St. COLUMBUS, OI-HQ. XV. f nw --1- fwv in .38-55 MARLIN Cartridge is con- ceded to be the most accurate, as well as the greatest game killer, ever used in a repeater. This size is now loaded with High Power Smokeless powder giving in- creased velocity, Batter trajectory and greater penetration. MARLIN repeaters have Special Smokeless Steel barrels much stronger and harder than the ordi- nar soft steel barrels y . Send 3 stamps for our no-page, unto-date arms and ammunition Catalog o. MARLIN FIREARMS CO. Nlw HAVEN, The he The hat that set.: the fashion. S500 5 The No hai at the prire has ever had S3 better quality or faxhian. K R AG, Dunlap Agency. 69 North High St lllillllllllllllll we Eire but jfittsrs as well as ilaattzw. XVI. 9 COTIQEIJL QQ LEONARD. 1 Ar.BA.NY, N. Y. Makers of tbe Caps, Gowns and Hoods I . N ioq0bio S'1ateUf1ifvcrsity Oberlin, Unifuersity of Cinfinnati, Unifversily ,W I 1 i of Pennsylfvama, Tale, Harfzfard, Princeton, Cornell, Mimzesom, . - X5 Nebraska,Sla11ford, Wellesley, Bryn Mafwr, Mount Holyoke and lbe others. CLASS CONTRACTS A Sl.'EUIAll1f'Y. RICI1 GOXVNS FOR TIJE PUIQPIT AND ISICNCII. The Kauffman-Lattimer Co. Front and Chestnut Sts., Columbus, O. Importers ann Eyohhing iliruggists. Fine Chemicals and Laboratory Supplies. STOP BORROWING. If you had a Fountain Pen in your pocket you would not he- obliged to borrow a poor scratchy steel pen when you wish to write. The Wat mam 5 FIII ' HTVNIN EN Is always ready and is indispensable to every business man. Sold everywhere. L. E. WATERMAN CO., 173 Broadway, New York. XVII. Starling Medical College Columbus, Ohio. The Fifty-Eighth Session of the Starling Medical College will begin September 14, IQOS, and continue twenty-six weeks. The hospitals of St. Francis, Mt. Carmel, St Anthony :ind the Lawrence Hospital for W . , ' omen are under control of members of the faculty, thus offering the best opportunities for clinical study, STARLING LCVING, M. D., LL. D., Dean. For Further Information. Address, CURTIS C. HOWARD, Registrar, Columbus, Ohio. XVIII be nlumhus ailtuap anh iight umpanp. The BEST EQUIPPED STREET RAILWAY in the Country. The High Street Car Line delivers passengers at the East entrance of the University Grounds. The Neil Avenue Car Line delivers passengers at the Southwest entrance. Visitors should not leave Columbus without seeing these beautiful grounds and buildings. You can take one car line in going tothe University andthe other in returning to the city, both of which merge on the principal business part of High Street. .M 1REmBIllhBIT .af also, that you should see the .famous OLENTANGY PARK, the most beautiful resort in the country. Only a few minutes' ride on High Street Line north. XlX NN S 86 KIEFER PHOTOGRAPHERS . PHONE 1720 199-201 S. High Street :: COLUMBUS, OHIO +0 ARE the leaders ini High Grade Artistic Photography in Central Ohio, having in 1900 received medal over all Columbus competitors for the Highest Grade Work. THE BEST GROUPS IN THIS EDITION OF THE MAKIO WERE MADE BY US. Having been entirely remodeled and refur- nished, our Studio is the best equipped and finest appointed in Central Ohio. 199-201 South High Street XX. ., K, X . Ae 2, if . iff , ,ff-r - 5 he - gr - tlwllliniillfi-'- 'Tmdi7lI!UI::i 'J wth . . if , i ' fn, .V, .HH-1z1f?t2s? tl! :. f , J , S A M- ,K 1. S--. ,.,.. L-i3,1t, :,':-4 .pu ' ' 4:-'--1-if-U 1'. .- , - ': '1 ' . . -5 ' f ' 5:riiili:f5Zi5'L'1:':'F.f . vts xl t t 1 u 0 0 Geo-nfo o.or3ala-an Blbibxn 5 2 W ' 'W ,,,..f A 3fk 'w 4- if -5 - - - ,sg - -5 We . - wasQ:.1'-1..:,2.f--is-ez . . . - . -.tu .-.'.1.,..g.g.g,g,:.gg:in. ake- own ebeaiinq Shotguns The notion that one must pay from Iifty dollars upwards in order to get a good shotgun has been pretty effectively dispelled since the advent of the Winchester Repeating Shotgun These guns are sold within reach of almost everybody s purse They are safe, strong, reliable and handy. When it comes to shooting qualities no gun made beats them They are made in zz and 16 gauge. Step into a gun store and examine one FREE: Send name and address an a postal card far our large illustrated catalogue. WINCHESTER FIEPEATING ARMS CO NEW HAVEN CONN THE NEW AND ENLARGED EDITION IS The Authority of the English-Speaking World The New Edition of English Biography, Geography, Fiction, etc., contains 25,000 New Words, etc. New Gcsztteer ofthe World with over 25,000 entries based on the lutcst census. New Biographical Dictionary wing brief facts about 10,000 noted persons. lCsliletI byXV.T. Harris,Ph.I?., ,I,.IJ.,Unitecl States Commissioner of l'fmlne:uion. New Plates. Rich Bindings. 2380Qll3flO1,Hf1CS. 5oooIllustratious. LET US SEND YOU FREE ff W A Test in Pronunciation. Illustrated pamphlet also Ircc. f WEBSTEWS G. a c. Mr.1uuAM co., Springfield, Mus. INTERNATIONAL - INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY ' DICTIONARY X K, IN ERNATIUNAL DICT XXI. ,Era ff' X f. 395 T' Lif':fsp , , .3 1 - 1',, 'z ' 'T - X Dr- l , L lf A X 1, ' l 1 W fr 4 lzllfj ff Q if 'Fwd my .- f ig: LK 3555, M 234. ,, . 25.9115 T K my ABACJAF, ' l'?f45fffl5?l7f9 fl uzusv For nearly forty years have been thc acknowledged standard for Col legcs Mxlxrary Schools and Acadc mics cvcrywhorc We mnlnlillll a high grade umform Thcy arc sold on thclr mcrlts They are guarnn reed to grvc perfect snfrsfactlon and are mhz: chcapcsr good umforms you can buy Wme for prrccs. We haw a :epararo :ara Iozuafar Oxford Goum:,arc. .5 l. TheM C LilIey53Co. 1 bfi COLUMBUS. OHIO S539 ,,...,N.,,.m.l . I I ,, ' '- A r ' - K l lr UNIFORMS K XXII. HATTERS FURNISHERS r E Y . wtr H. A. Morgan Co- 167 North High Street lbrrr E iii PENNANT MANUFACTURERS XXIII. ' lt pays best to patronize the E T best laundry, for it saves such a lot of Worry and friction. :tg-5 E It Wears on one's constitution -N :Q ' to find collars and cuffs with E ' - - 2 rough edges, and shirts crumpled ' ' all and soiled. Patronize us and learn the care, neatness and promptness of our service and you will say, it pays best. CA PITAL CITY LAUNDRY, BHONE 590. 35-37 N. Fourth Street. Opp. Masonic Temple nL . XXIV. f -Tf' 'T Ohio State University Is Organized with Six Colleges. Ghe College of Agriculture and Domestic Jclence Ghe College of Arts, Philosophy and Jcience Ghe College of Engineering Ghe College of Law 6'he College of Pharmacy and The College of Veterinary Medicine Open to all upon the same Terms. The facilities provided by the State bring to the Students opportunities unsurpassed elsewhere. Inci- dental fee i7gi18.00, except in the College of Law, where the fees are Sli60.0o. The teaching force for the coming year has been considerably increased, numbering more than ISO. The enrollment for the current year has been 1820. There are forty departments well equipped for work. The wide range of elective work offered enables the intelligent student to make the best use of his time i and energy. i Information and Catalogues freely given. l JIDDREJJ. PRESIDENT W. 0. Tll0lllPSON, COLUMBUS, - - omo L.,.g.J L- .. l A ...Y XXV. Uhr Ig Glhamplin litem Uhr Glhamplin Printing Qlnmpang CAPITAL 350,000.00 FOURTEEN PRESSES College Stationery H College Annuals L College Catalogs ll 74-'76 f8'8O E. GAY ST. COLUMBUS, OHIO FOR YOUR COLLEGE STATIONERY USE ONLY SWAN LINEN AND Buckeye Bond Damask THESE fine writing papers are on sale in Papeterie Boxes, Tablets, and pound packages with wallet flap envelopes to match at all the College Stationers. Insist on having them, for once used, always used. THE CENl1lllilELmllHl0 PAPER C0. lie COLUMBUJ, omo. khVIll THE STUDENTS' DRUGGIST That Good Soda, Utopian Chocolates, Cigars, Pipes, Tobaccos ICING ATVENUE. NIGAR NITCIL xxu.
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