Princeton University - Nassau Herald Yearbook (Princeton, NJ)

 - Class of 1882

Page 1 of 77

 

Princeton University - Nassau Herald Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) online collection, 1882 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 77 of the 1882 volume:

:Established 15-Eli RA DEL, BAREMORE 81 BILLI G, ZQ flfkzzkigni L6Z7'Z6, A6Z,7fQ6LI 58 Nassazz Sai., e - n 'i Sb. Andrews jSt.1 Eolioozjn. Circus, 1 ' nDlf4M0lV0 JE s i We oH'er superior advantages tolnpurchasers of -thejabove-goods. We' are continually receiving fresh invoices, and make at I A ' specialty of 'fine E' j ' U iSing1e iS1'smes and iMeteh.ed i ,Our Manufacturing Department is on the premises, and under cuz supervision. ' ' ' - ' , Goods sent on approval to a.11' parts of the country on ' receipt of satisfactoryfreferences. ., ., 4 . W , , n W , Q , X'x '0g721 N 2 E 9 cg g m V 'Li- .' E ' s ' -955-1-1E GQLD MEDAL5- QTCW jg 'JIQQARIS Q EXPQ SVNQN B IB 78 A WAS AWARDED T0 A ' Q ' ' ' mi. ' I 'fx ff- S rom -EXCELLENCE lpfw ' Q' 'TFTF ' . Q X Ji L -EEN 541-1:29 -QW -,f,,,rrn-1 E - rAv o R Q TAEQ- NU M Q E Bs- SOSH 332 4-o4,'l '70 SSI WITHQEE 'Q GILZUTTIS' UNIX?--zS'7'Yzff.9-,S1010 'B -All -DEALERS S-.,g', Q Q-. 'Q Q- THROUG HQUT -THEZQVQJQ RLD--Q 184f4. -A D - ' 1882 A - ZW my QW . I QD ll X 059 MERCJHANT TAILORING A H 'A 4' - - -AND- g Clothing' Es1Eah IishQent. , It is a well-linovvig faht izhat buf' chfthing is madepf the best materials . and -workmanship, and our stock is now full P . ' I and complete. Ladzks' Habzis amd Offergcwmefzis A SPEGIALTY. ' Our Stock of FINE PIBGE GUUDS Gannnt'be Surpassei B ' Assembbf Buzhlmgs, Tenfh and Uhesfnuf Sfreefs, A PHELADELEDEQIILL 4 nf,- - ..- f 'JY wg.. 41 fx ' . . ,, ng -sg , A 5. 5. f' ... N , ,C-fy A - ., . 'an , W-M., SF divx '+ s. 1 .. gx 71.-A lx - an -- - ' 'Her 1 '?:. f..g,,girf,fg gg., -3- Q2-' A' Y' onds. The policy of the Government in making successive calls of bonds for redemption will render it necessary for many holders to reinvest, during the coming year, money now lying in safes and vaults in the form of old issues of bonds, which have ceased, or will soon cease, to bear interest. Government Bonds can be obtained at our oifice in any amount, at market rates, with no charge for corn- mission. . 1 . an ki n g. We receive deposit accounts of parties in good standing 3 satisfactory references required from those not already known. Interest allowed at 3 per cent. per annum on average monthly balances of 331,000 or over. No ,interest on accounts averaging less than 3l,000. p rtocks. We do a general commission business in Stocks and Bonds dealt in at the New York Stock Exchange, and other sound securities. 4 Especial attention given to orders by Mail and Tele- graph from Banks, Bankers, and other institutions, and from investors out of the city. 4 Our Memoranda of Government Bonds for 1882, containing valuable information on .many subjects, can be obtained by all desiring to make investments, or to consult its pages for any purpose. ' EISK at HATCH, 5 Nassau Street, N ew York.. Pffmooion can boast :gf ifs many aiiffaoizofzs in classic ana' kisiomo z'1z1feVesz's, gram! ozllas, coglogos, oampas ana'g7fa1za' avenues, and zs celeoffaioof zooufla'-zoio,'e,' ami Tffomfoa can we!! ooasf ff iis marry ativfaofiofzs, foffomoszf among Mom oozozg Zhefamoas and jasfb oeleoffafea' 761061731 ami Aff! Palace qi Mossvfs. Cook Cf fagaos, on Siaie Szfffeei, Moy having the mos! Complezfe ana' Bos! Sziook mf Gems ami Yewels, Wafofzos and Sfe1fZmg' SZ:!UE7'V Goods, in fha Sfaie. fi is a Ilfaseam cy' Yofeasavfos, oma' a Vomiezooas gf all poffsofzs ff a1f!z'sz'z'o iasles, and is woffihy qfyoam atiefziiofz. Pafzfonfzoa' by fhe following Europeans and Americans: Lord Ernest Carrington, Count Alvord de la. Grendare Judges Butler and Kirpatrick. AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN PLAN. WEST END NDTEL leading Europeans Huiel nf Philadelphia. PASSENGER AND BAGGAGE ELEVATOR SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN T0 EUROPEAN TOURISTS. F. MAGDONALD, Proprietor. Pr1va.te Carriages in Livery at the Service of our Patrons OPERA ..........--,el 'sas isiinvinsm t EW.. . -em.. M- '.......i.. . OPERA N T., I I I I NI IWMN I! N ' N IIIINNIII i lI f GLASSES GLASSES jf ,ln I-ll. li w , I .,5-,MN px frm -as SUPERIOR .Spectacles cm Eye- Glasses, WITH LENSES ADAPTED, T0 CORRECT ALL DEFECTS UF SIGHT. Spy Glasses, Field Glasses, Telescopes, Microscopes, Magic Lanterns and Stereopticons, Thermometers, 'Barom- eters, Drawing Instruments and Drawing Ma.- terials, Philosophical and Chemical ' Instruments. Our Priced and Illustrated Catalogue will be published in five parts, any or all of which will be mailed on application. , Part 1st-Mathematical Instruments. 174 pages. Contains list and prices of Draw- Part 2d- ing Instruments, Drawing Materials, Pocket Compasses, Surveying Com - passes. Engineers' Transits and Levels, Surveying Chains, 'Wipe Meas- Mesh Pocket Rules, and Books Relating to Drawing, Engineering, and ec anics. Optical Instruments. 188 pages. Contains list and prices of Spectacles, Eye-Glasses, Lenses, Spy Glasses, Telescopes, Opera and Field Glasses, Graphoscopes, Stereoscopes, Cameras Cbsc11ra,Csmeras Lucida, Micro- scopes, Microscopic Preparations, and Books on Opticsrand Microscopy. Part 3d-Magic Lanterns and Slides. 112 pages. Contains list and prices ofMagic Part 4th Part 5th 4 l Lanterns for Toys, for Public and Private Exhibitions, Sciopticons, Stere- opticons, Scientific Lanterns, and accessory apparatus to be used with them, Magic Lantern Slides, both colored and uncolored. -Physical Instruments. 193 pages. 'Contains list and prices of Instruments to illustrate Lectures in every department of Physics and Chemical Sci- ence, Air Pumps, Electric Machines, Galvanic Batteries, Barometers, Thermometers, liain Gauges, Globes, Spectroscopes, Auzoux's Anatom- ical Models, and Books relating to Scientific Subjects. -Meteorological Instruments. Contains list and prices of Thermometers, Mercurial and Aneroid Barometers, Hygrometers, Anemometers, Ruin Gauges, Wind Gauges, Tide Gauges, Current Meters, Pyrometers, Hydrom- eters, Salinometers, Vacuumeters, Water Gauges, Miners' Safety Lamps, Pressure and Vacuum Gauges, and all Instruments for Measuring Steam, Air, Gas or Water. JAMES W. QUEE 81 CO., MATHEMATICAL, UPTIEAI. AND PIIILEEEPNITAL INSTRUMENT MAKERS. 924 CHESTNUT ST., PHILADELPHIA.- THE NESSEUE EEEELD ' NUMBER XVIII. PUBL SHED BY THE CLASS GF 1882, A PRINCETON COLLEGE. Class Day, Zllofzday, fame IQ, 1882. TRENTON N J M C M Q B J P 1882 TI-IE NASSAU HERALD NUMBER XVIII. 1 EDITORIAL COMMITTEE. M K ELMER N J., ' A E MILLS N J G P PIERSON N. J., R. H. WEST, PA CLASS DAUY ORATORS. Master of Ceremonies, - MORGAN EDGAR, New York. - Class Orator, - - - GEORGE LORD DAY, New York. Class Poet, - E. D. WARFIELD, Kentucky. Memorial Orator, - - W. E. BEATTIE, South Carolina Ivy Orator, - HOWVARD BRYANT, Maryland. Presentation Orator, - - E. B. CRITOHLOW, Utah. Class Historian, - W. Gr. SUTPHEN, New Jersey. Prophet, - - JOHN WILSON, New Jersey. Class President, - JOHN G. HIBBEN, Illinois. CL!-6lSS.DAY COMMITTEE. E. S. HUGHES, N. C., Cha.irma.n. B. S. CHAMBERLIN, N. Y. OGDEN RAFFERTY, N. J. E. EH. ERNST, Ky. W. M. SHAW, Ky. C. E. HARRxs, N. J. W. P. TOLHR, N. J. PAUL HEMPHILL, S. C. GEO. WESTERVELT, N. Y. S. E. HURIN, O. C. WITHINGTON, N. Y, U. H. MOCARTER, N. J. J. M. WOODRUFF, N. J. Salutatnrg dtlress. BY THE MASTER OF CEREMONIES, MORGAN EDGAR, N. Y. In years to come, when looking back over our College life, the memories of Class Day will always be among our most pleasant recollections. Success is ever attractive, and this day celebrates our suc- cess after a fouryears' endeavor. But, now that the goal is Won, We realize how enjoyable has been the race, how hard will be the separation from our companions. We have all made Warm friends at Princeton, and the more We have learned to appreciate each other the harder is the parting. And, since now our time together is so short, our com- mon life almost a thing of the past, we fully estimate the value of the years spent at Old Nassau, Which, like bless- ings, brighten as they take their flight. The future is uncertain, but Whatever it may have in store tbr us, We shall always feel that many of our happiest mo- ments have been passed here. No Wonder, then,.that the eye grows dim while looking over the familiar scenes We are so soon to leave, and that the hand trembles when greet- ing those to Whom We must in a short time say farewell. The present at least is our own, let us not permit it to be saddened by anticipations of the future. To-day We will look only on the bright side of the pic- ture, to-day We will forget our approaching separation and strive to make our last hours together as pleasant as possi- ble. 6 TIIE NASSAU HERALD. To you, dear friends, Without Whose ,presence our Class Day would be incomplete, we extend a hearty Welcome. To you We look for sympathy and encouragement in these the last scenes of our College course, and for you We hope the day will be one of uninterrupted pleasure. Our occupation here has been essentially one of prepara- tion, and the time has novv come for this preparation to be put to the test. We all have sins of omission to repent, and many feel that they might have reaped greater profit from their op- portunities, but noneof us will ever regret the training We have here received. Faithful perseverance and earnest work are factors which help largely to form the basis of all success. These qualities We have been trying to acquire, and Whatever they can accomplish, this the Class of '82 hopes to achieve, and 'where they are needed, there to per- form their work. i ' Again, in the name of the graduating class, I Welcome you to the exercises of our Glass Day. QHE NASSA U IIERA LD. 7 'Glass Oratinn. GEORGE LORD DAY, NEW YORK. CLASSMATES 1-There is a deep significance in the word class, if one could but grasp it. It appears in the words class-feeling, classfwork, class-associations. These words are founded upon a deep principle in our nature, that principle which causes man to look to fellow-man for help in time of difficulty, and for counsel in time of perplexity. To us young students, who are simply waiting for the final ceremonies before bidding a last farewell to the place which has known us so long, the word Class-Day is full of meaning. It speaks of class-memories, of four years which have glided by very happily, of friendships which have grown very dear. It tells us that we are a class, a band of men who have labored together, have had common aspirations, and have feared common evils. It tells us that to-day is our day, a day sacred in our memories' to the class of which we have been members. To-day, feelings of friendship and fellowship should be unrestrainedg to-day all animosities should be laid aside. Let us, before we part, realize, for one short day, how much is implied in the relation of classmates. It is my hope that the Class Oration may accomplish two things: that it may revive a few thoughts of the past, and may suggest a few thoughts of the future. I should be false to my convictions, if I should attempt to pursuade you or myself that to all of us the thought of leav- ing our Alma Mater is -a painful one. I should be equally 5. 8 THE NASSAU IIERALD. false if I should hint that our love for one another and for the institution of which we are soolii to be graduates, is so strong as to blind us to all defects. I should be but a poor exponent of the sentiments which crowd into our hearts to- day, if I should connne your thoughts to thepast, with all its painful and pleasant memories. Iiet us acknowledge that We are glad that the preparatory steps in our lives have been taken. Let us admit that neither Old Nassau, our class- mates, nor ourselves, are what we might wish them. Let us realize that the future is vastly more important than the past. We shall thus be saved from maudlin sentimentalism, While We open our hearts to all manly emotions. And liow varied 'are these emotions which crowd upon us! what a strange mixture of pleasure and regret do they occasion. It is pleasant to remember long spring evenings spent beneath the elms of the campus, to tune our ears once more to the old college songs, to live over in memory, those bursts of wild enthusiasm with Which we have welcomed college victories. What can be a source of truer pleasure than the memory of our friendships? Yet, as we look over the past, many of us are filled with regret that We did not realize, until the time of departure and of parting was at hand, how much nobility, how large capacities for true friendship, existed in the breasts of our classmates. Many of us, in the early years of our course, formed acquaintances, pleasant acquaintances, but wanting the marks of friendship. It was not until near the end that We discovered the real sympathy, the com- munity of tastes and aims which binds us together. And this We have realized only in time to make it all the harder to say farewell. Four years is a short time in which to find all the good that there is in a friend. Yet, short as some of our friendships have been, how very pleasant have they proved? A college friendship is one of the closest ties which can bind men together. What can draw men into closer sympathy than to lay in common their plans for the future, in common to build their air-castles, in common to pass through those gray mists of despondency which settle THE NASSAU HERALD. 9 down over parts of every young man's path, darkening his outlook and awakening the startling question, H Wliat am I good for? If, then, some of our friendships have been made late, if they have been formed only in time to be severed, let us concentrate into this one day, this day which we are to spend'together, this day of our Class, some of that sympathy and fellowship which should have brightened our whole course. Another source of regret which is present in the minds of many of us, I may almost say of all of us, is a sense of lost opportunities. This is an old, old story, but as we look back over four years which have been taken from our lease of life, and ask ourselves, 'f What has been accomplished in these years? we realize what is the value of oppor- tunities far more vividly than when our college course was a thing of the future. What one of us can say that from these four years have been reaped all the golden fruits with which they were laden? Even those who have used' time most conscienciously must despise the motives which have been their spur. Too often petty ambition, or the force of habit, has swallowed up all nobler incentives. How little have we known of the love of truth, for truth's own sake? How our minds have been warped by old pre- judices and preconceived ideas, which have effectually shut out fuller and higher truths. On the other hand, there are few Whose careers at college have been blanks, marked by no acquisitions made, by no honest efforts put forth. The aims which we proposed to ourselves when we came here were so diverse that no two can be judged by the same standard of success. There are many things which can be learned here, many things which are far more important and practically useful than scholarly attainments. It is, therefore, impossible for any one man to judge of the suc- cess or failure of his classmates. Each one stands or falls before the bar of his own conscience. There is one sad memory which I cannot pass over in silence, although to revive it is like tearing open a Wound 10 THE NASSA U HERALD. a freshly healed. It is the memory of a spring-time, two years ago, where three, who had been counted in our num- ber, who had lived among us,who had gained our affections, died, one of them in our very midst. Shall we ever, could we ever forget that fatal morning in June, when the news fell on us with a suddenness which made it appalling, that Montague Ely was dead? My classmates, it is right that we should remember those scenes, those experiences, which were the saddest that our class has passed through. The frightful stillness which reigned, the awful forebodin gs which were fully realized before that day had passed, are vividly impressed upon our memories. Let us not attempt to stifle such remembrances, for they may teach us a healthful lesson. They teach us that a class which has passed through such experiences is bound close together by that past in which all its members have a share. It might be possible for other classes. to forget their unity. It should be impos- sible for us. Common bereavements form a closer tie than common prosperity. Classmates, let us keep this thought present with us to-day, and in it may unpleasant memories be lost. But our thoughts should not dwell on the past alone. We shall miss the significance of the day unless we recognize its close connection with the future. There is no time when young men attract so much attention in society at large as when they are-to use the orthodox phrase-going forth. The papers are full of their doings, their friends sit by and watch in admiration and expectancy, and as for the young men themselves-why, they feel as if they were prize calves at a cattle-show, whose chief duty is to look equal to the occasion. Such, my classmates, is our situation to-day. We seem to be attracting much attention, and I, for my part, am not ready to say that attention could be better bestowed. But there is- one thing which we cannot forget without making a fatal mistake. The interest which we excite is not due to any past attainments or achievements of ours, but simply to the grand potentiality which centres in a N TIIE NASSAU HERALD. 11 hundred young men just ready to begin work. Let us, therefore, turn to our friends and say: As you watch us to-day planting our ivy 5' as you listen to our Class History, as you see us passing through the fiery ordeal ofthe Presen- tation Oration, do-not suppose that these are meaningless ceremonies, do not, for a moment, believe that we are liv- ing altogether in the past. The night before the attack upon the Redan, a small bodyiof Scotch higlanders started the well- known air of H Annie Lowrief, and in a few moments every Scot in the army hadjoined in that song of his native land. The true grandeur of that moment lay not in the beauty of the air, nor in the memories of the Scottish hills which it awakened, but in the fact that the thought of old Scotland and of their ,homes gave those Highlanders courage and strength for the battle on the morrow. This college has been our home, to its walls many old associations cling. But to- day, as we revive these associations, as we linger once more in our familiar haunts, as we sing our parting ode, our thoughts are looking towards the future, and in these exer- cise we hope to find some of the strength and courage which may be needed so soon. Though the parting of friends may be hard, yet we would not linger longer. There is a call to us from without these academic halls, and we Would not be found sleeping when work is to be done. If you can find in our Class-Day some of the meaning which it conveys to us, you will not look upon our exercises with mere curiosity. And, my classmates, what word of encouragement can we say to one another before the last farewell? If our class associations have taught us anything, they must have taught us the old, old story of the brotherhood to man, that the success of one means the advancement of all 5 that the fail- ure of any is a drag upon the rest. Let us broaden and deepen those feelings of fellowship and comity which we have here learned to entertain towards our fellow'-collegians, until they grow into a large and true philanthropy. Who that goes from this place cannot echo that sentiment which i 12 THE NASSAU IIERALD. the nineteenth century is growing more and more to under- stand- I have felt with my race, I am one with my kind 7 Let us then, in all that awaits us, be true to these facts, true to our manhood, true to ourselves, true to Old Nassau. I would not preach to you an abstract morality-a scheme theoretically perfect, but practically worthless. It is a plain fact of experience that life becomes happier, more satisfac- tory, more enjoyable, the more thoroughly we identify and bring ourselves into harrnony with the struggles, the suc- cesses, and the failures of the great mass of our kind. It is only then that we realize what is the true glory of humanity -the true nobleness of our own nature. With some such thoughts as these, let us spend the few hours which remain to us. And when the farewell shall have been spoken, when the class shall have ceased to exist as such, let us be strong in our hopes for the future, rather than sad over memories of the past. THE NASSAU IIERALD. 13 Sling: Qratinn. HOWARD BRYANT, MD. CLASSMATES :-For four years the tide of life has borne us on through our joyous college days at Nassau Hall. N ow the refiuent wave is reached, and the ideal life of the student is soon to be merged into that of the practical man of the world. Will you not, therefore, pardon your fellow- student of to-day if he ventures to confess to you some of thefthrobbings of the heart and the impulses of the mind that this occasion inspires? More than a generation ago Emerson wasplaughed at for his transcendentalism when he advised every young man to hitch his wagon to a star. But when, a few days since, he was taken to his burial, all men did homage to a life which had embodied his striking phrase. It means that life should not be spent in paltry works which serve our pot and bag alone, but in the path of the celestial circuits where we can harness evil agents, the powers of darkness, and force them to serve against their will the ends of wisdom, virtue, and love. To-morrow will offer to each of us a future, and with it come our successes or our defeats. Our occupations will each have their es- pecial moral characteristics, their peculiar temptations, and their peculiar influences. We are now upon the threshold of- life, and, gathering up our energies, let us resolve to follow the good, ashamed to lie, to live beyond our means, to court our false superiors, to 2 14 THE NASSAU HERALD. deceive our honest inferiors, or to yield to the applause and fascinations of might without right, power propped by in- justice, unsustained by honor. If our theater of life be in gorgeous palaces, whose stately columns, representing the wealth and art of the day, shall in an hour become a mass of worthless ruins, or in broad acres loaded with rich grain, which shall, by a single evolution of nature, be changed into a desolate waste, or whatever individual or national calamities shall come, may our principles be such that they will give to us in our adversity strength by which to re- build our fallen fortunes. But if we would overcome circumstances and wrest the prizes from unwilling fortune, we must labor with uncon- querable diligence. We, who are to be the future trades- men, artisans, merchants, lawyers, and divines, in order to be honest, temperate, and happy, must labor in our youth. All habits gather by unseen degrees, As brooks make rivers, rivers run to seas. Early form habits marked by diligence,Iselfiabnegation, and moderation. Grreat is the man who never rests upon the mountain top while yet a peak remains unclimbed. But for what end are we toiling? What motives are lead- ing us on? To what goal are we bending our steps ? Is our ambition simply to gain an honorable position and the prizes of life, or are We struggling, with heroic efforts, for the performance of high and noble deeds, that we may aid and uplift suffering humanity, that we may be wise and just in whatever occupations we undertake, and thus leave an example and an influence that shall live after us of which our country may well be proud? . All may not become great. If we go back through the ages and recall the military chieftains and heroes, the master minds in art, science and literature, and the great political diplomatists, the creators of kingdoms and empires, we shall count them all but drops amidst the unceasing roll and rush of the unresting sea of the millions of human beings that THE NASSAU HERALD. 15 have lived and died. Let us, therefore, content ourselves with life as we find it. Let us not neglect an honest oppor- tunity to gain worldly honors. Above all things, let us be true to our individual being. ,How many lives have been lost for want of the-unerring compass which -it supplies! How many a brilliant genius has drifted into shallows or been wrecked by hidden rocks, because of a refusal to be guided by the pole star of truth, which never misleads, for, be assured, our failures in life are nearly always the result of our own errors. Whether the result shall be victory or defeat depends upon our moral courage, our purity of soul, our heroism of heart, and last, but not least, 4' the rarity of Christian charityf' Classmates, we are now about to plant the ivy, which is emblematic of our existence as a Class. During four years of college life friendships have been formed that will know no breaking. What lessons of independence, patience, and self-reliance, gives to us the 'C Ivy green that 'creepeth over ruins old! The little ivy plant, as it mantels and canopies the picturesque towers of fallen castles, or trails over some lonely tomb, in a varied language, speaks of the spirit of the past, telling, perhaps, the story of a once great, but now forgotten people, or, solve for us the mys- teries of the shadowy unknown 5 or records how brave men, in ancient times, wreathed the ivy into garlands, and gave them as a national reward for heroic virtues upon the battle-Held. May it be no less expressive or historic when you, my classmates, after many years, near the close of the last fight in the battle of life, with eye undimmed and mental powers unabatedf' return again to Nassau Hall and claim, as your rewcwcl, a garland, wreathed by our Alma Maier, from the ivies we have planted upon many a yester- day, and the heart's'enduring fellowships of to-day. 16 THE NASSAU HERALD. Fllifresentatiuit Gratten. E. B. CRITCHLOW. Geniuthj' some one has said, 4' and the World are an- tagonithticf' Founded as this principle is on the universal, necessary, and intuitive ideas of the human mind, it can neither be affirmed nor denied Without intellectual suicide. Its explanation lies in the fact that, in geniuses, those quali- ties of mind and heart most calculated to Win our esteem are too often like Peck Pierson's moustache, beneath the surface, potential rather than actual. On the contrary, what seem to be virtues are oftentimes vices in disguise, and your true man of genius sails through the World under false colors. g It is my humble duty, ladies and gentlemen, to point out the devil-upment of character, to differentiate for you this promiscuous mass of genius before me, and to place each individual of this remarkable Class before the World in his own proper light. Lest my characterization should be faulty, after the manner of Billy Sutphen and some other drama- tists, Ihave prepared a few presents Wherewithal to make my meaning clear. , I proceed then, Without further delay, to fill up THE FAMILY CIRCLE. Will Mr. Pop Dunlap and Miss Dolly Doland please lock arms and Walk this Way? And Dad Wheeler and Mother A THE NASSA U HERALD. 17 Sherwood will take the grand stand here -on' the right. Our standing-room has been engaged by the Sister Quar- tette. As Leary has probably found out by this time, there are just four of them. I take pleasure in introducing Miss Polly Hallock, Miss Bridget Flick, Miss Sallie Larkin and Miss P. Ranney. f Pop is getting pale, so I hasten to remark that he started out as a candidate for the Seminary, but early succumbed to the world, the Hesh, and Judas Rowe. Pop is a hard student and the proprietor of a full line of transes. He generally succeeds in getting them to ap degree of tineness said to be microscopic, without in the least impairing their legibiiity. He and Fatty Reiber are so industrious that they have frequently been known to write out papers on science and religion several days in advance. Their method of procedure is more scientific than religious, but it does yank the tall grade. Pop, your frugality is even more worthy of notice than your immorality. The tenacity with which you have clung to that one little necktie' all through your course, has won the admiration of your classmates. You have remained with it like B. Harris with his ulster, or Dave Magie with a condition. You are going from us now, Pop, and we wish you to wear this out into the wide, wide, as a token of our esteem. If you find it too wide you can trim it down, as you used to do with the trans leaf, you know. ' Miss Doland is our blushing co-ed. from Oberlin. You may now retire, Dolly, and chew the bitter gum of reflec- tion. Here's a whole box of it for you. If Bish Wallace will throw out that quid of tobacco you may share it with him. Dad, I called you up some time ago in order to have you here on time. You-are everything but a sooner. You are the proprietor of the largest heart and the most elastic con- science in Princeton, outside the Faculty. You may be counted on to reform just about once a term, and stay so while you are telling about it. You are entirely too inno- 18 THE NASSAU HERALD. . cent for this world. I suppose that call of yours on Prof Orris was actuated by the best of motives, but some of the questions you asked were in very bad form. You knew, for instance, that only people with very strong breath use chloride of lime internally. And, as for the Pro- fessor's having a wrestling match with Matt Goldie, you should have known that there is no such thing as the Greece- Scotch style of wrestling. Modesty should have prevented you from interrogating the Professor as to the style of dress in which he took his exercise, and he was quite right in giving a non-conimittal answer. ' - Your answer to the ILIERALD questions were quite satisfac- tory, excepting that as to your expenditure. You should have stated that it was 3700 for this year, if billiards were included, 351,000 Your failing is obvious, and I hope you will use this safe remedy for it. This is Mother Sherwood, from Saratoga. The venerable dame is quite active for her age, and on any clear day may be seen taking her youngest hopeful, Master Chopin Beetho- ven Mozart Harris, out for a wa-lk. She's not talkative, but tor elegant latinity, when .she does remark, cannot be sur- passed. It has long been noticed that in conversation, which is an etlbrt to her, Mother invariably swallows the short words and spits out the long ones. I have noticed that her back hair is somewhat refractory, and have pro- cured a comb for it. . Miss Polly Hallock, the next object of scrutiny, is the sweet singer of Steubenville. She occupies the front seat in the synagogue, and sings by ear and main strength. For social standing, not even that gay butterfly, Ward Cheney Peabody, can surpass her. Polly, you shouldn't have allowed your circle of acquaintance to grow so large. You should have narrowed it down, as Nance has done. Then, too, you have taken advantage of your sex, in a way that cannot be defended. After meeting several young ladies at Jininiie's reception, you thought it the proper thing to call on thern. And of course, after calling once, you were THE NASSAU HERALD. 19 bound not to cut them dead. But you shouldn't have given the scheme away to Charlie Darlington, as you did, when you told him that Dr. Schanck's was a good place to be acquainted at, and as you had made a New Year's call there, you guessed you'd go again. You have a good voice, Polly, and certainly tried hard ,to get on the Grlee Club, but Dwight was jealous of you. In recognition, however, of your valuable musical services in the Chapel, the Faculty have voted you this collection of sacred music. Please retire, and sing yourself dead away. Welcome Joseph Lyddon Flick, otherwise known as Bridget, who has probably been posing before you all this time, is from Willcesbarre. She made her debut, singing Over the Garden Wall,'J at Pennington Fem. Sem. Her next appearance was on the platform in Trenton, in com- pany with another young lady. She was enthusiastically received by an elderly gentleman, attired in a number nine boot and a heavy cane. She now holds the responsible position of Business Editor, euphonious for advertising agent, of Tom Clarke's Tiger. We1'e it not immodest, I should like to call ,attention to that portion of the lady's anatomy which is said to be a perfect poem. Even Jim Banister can hardly rival Bridget's magnificent calf. You've led a useful life here in college, Bridget, and, like others of the same name, have cheerfully done a great dealjof dirty work for the class. Take this, to enable you to keep till the triennial. Sister Ranney was kept on the quartette for the same' reason that Rankie was kept on The Princetonicm.-she can't do any harm. Miss R. wo-uld have enjoyed her course, had she known just when to expect a Trustees' meeting. On account of the uncertainty attaching to this event, she has been known to stay away from the billiard hall whole days ata time. Pen, you will please take this, and tune it up in unison with Polly's fog-horn. Miss Sallie Larkin, of Sing Sing, has risen from the dead- level of mediocrity to be the first base of our organization, and 20 THE NASSAU HERALD. I is noted for the size of her feet. They are so large that she has to put her B. B. suit on over her head, or have the pants sewed on as Hungry Ike Goloknath did for his chapel stage. Ike, however, scored on Sal by Wearing the ace of spades on the back of his Sunday coat. Sallie hasnlt those habits of neatness that should characterize a female of her age. In fact,'Sal, you're as far from godliness as you are from the honor roll. Last Christmas when you were home you remarked that those two woolen shirts your folks sent you itted nicely enough, and you had worn them all the term, and it was a pity they wouldn't wash, as they were beginning to need it. This Spring too, while you were oii' on the tour, Charlie Denby received your wash, which con- sisted of a handkerchief, a collar, a pair of cuffs and a pair of socks. To it was pinned this note: MR. J. LARKIN, Present: DEAR SUR.-i havent had a shurt of yures in the Washin fur several weaks. By this time you must be gettin durty. MAMA SMITH. I was unable to procure celluloid clothing for you, Sallie, so please take this. Bick says its the kind he uses when he uses any. We should like now to see our ' s BOLD BAD INCENDIARY, Mr. George De Forest Lord Day. George, your character in the eyes of the Faculty, is above reproach, except for a few chapel disorder marks. It is my painful duty to unmask your hypocrisy. You are eager and gifted, but your ideas of building fires are as vague as Lou Scudder's Fresh. year siders. Sam Benton could tell us all about it, but he is so modest, he doesn't like to appear in public. I have secured the oil-can you borrowed from Tommy Peebles at dead of night, which I hope you'll return to him. The THE NASSAU HERALD. 21 Committee on Morals and Discipline will please take charge of Mr. Day while I request the company of OUR MASHERS. They are Mr. D. Elmendorf, of the irm of Pach Sz Bros., Mr. Eddy Ernst, the Jack of the Diamond, and J. Grier Hibben, the Peoria Masher. Any slight embarrass- ment on the part of Mr. Elrnendorf may be explained by the fact that his appearance on this occasion is wholly unexpected to himselfl Dwight, you were a masher from the very irst when you mashed up the front campus on the night of our Preliminary Cane Spree. The only trouble was, you forgot to tell Loney how you had rowed for years with Courtney on Hemlock Lake. But you go too far in your mashes. It's always whole scalp, or no count. Now, there's Allan Percy and dear little Cortlandtg both of them are dead gone on you, but you never let on. You treat them worse than Billy Sutphen does the Senator. Allan took seven pictures of your handsomeg and distin- guished self, and but one of Ed. Simons. As for Charlie, he is never so happy as when carrying your camera about the campus, or supplying the picturesque for your views. You are his little tin god, and it is rumored that you allow him to say his prayers to you. Only the other day, he told a young lady out in town that Dwight runs everything here in College, you know. But as leader of Crlee Club, you shine like Peck Pierson in a prayer meeting. When- ever you go otf on a trip, it takes at least a week for you to recover. HAH broken up, ,you know, 'tAudience perfectly wild, Most elegant reception. You must have a formid- able scalp list by this time, for there was invariably a fresh one after every raid. But when Il Trovatoren was on the bills, you were the bright particular star, and mashed at long range. It used to make the whole Crlee Club smile, and Uzal McCarter too, to see how that solo of yours brought down the house. Your supreme love for truth, and total lack of imagination unfitted you for becoming a popular 22 THE NASSAU HERALD. . historian, so the job of telling the customary lies on the fellows was given to the present encumbrance. I have pro- cured a copy of the scurrilous publication for you, and have carefully marked the chapter and verse that gives Potter away so cold. But misfortunes, like base hits off our pitcher, never come single, and I'm new compelled to introduce Eddy, who is probably bored at not having been mentioned first. Ed knows hens not as handsome as Heins Welles, especially with his head shaved. I-Ie had this done, I'm told, in self-defence, to keep the girls from doting on him. ' I call particular attention to the development of the neck. In comparison with that of our Master of Ceremonies, it seems to be less abnormal, and shows a high degree of cultivation. He isn't easily bored. This was evident, when, after the Brown boys had pounded him for fifteen base hits, with a total of twenty- one, he said he didn't take much credit for the defeat. But Ed., how about the day Jim Banister beat you so badly at lawn tennis, and then told you it was hard luck, Eddy ? I believe you were bored that day. You may now describe the ftdown and out, and take this with you to practice up for Jim. John Grier has outlived his mashing days, and now deliv- ers lectures on matters of etiquette and decorum to young ladies frivolcusly inclined. In this he is as successful as Horace Emmons in his celebrated minstrel joke about the young men's intellects, or as Sleepy Wilson in an argument with the General. You will pardon me, Doc, for relating that thrilling adventure of yours in the Library, but I do so for the beneit of the unvvary. I suppose youuwere wander- ing about frantically, striving to unravel the mysteries ofthe alcoves. You were about to give vent to your feelings in a mild cuss-word, and so made a preparatory spit, which, as luck would have it, went straight through the floor, and landed on Freddy's head. No one can help admiring your presence of mind, in stowing yourself away in one of the empty shelves. Freddy came up and hunted for you, but W THE NASSAU HERALD. 23 came to the conclusion that you had been misplaced by one' of the assistants. So you escaped, but in order to prevent such a catastrophe in the future, take this useful article of furniture. Darius Greene spits only when he smokes cigar- ettes, and you will do well to follow his example. Our LITERARY sAMsoNs will now please take the floor. Ethelbert Dudley W,2.l'flGld and Williaiii Gilbert Sutphen. Doc, you have an awful tongue, and the worst of it is, you can't keep it quiet. By giving away the Lit. prizemen, you developed more of the latent profanity in Judge's guileless nature than the grading system ever did. You can talk longer and say less. than George Day in a political speech. You are pretty conscien- tious, and won't read what Jack Bryan calls sexual litera- ture, on Sunday. But it was stretching -things a little, to say that you read Addison, and the other classical writers, every day of your life. U Don't you think tho, Doc ? You are as great an authority on Kentucky short-horns as Ike Taylor is on billiards. Your story in the Princezfonicm, entitled 'tLeft, wasnlt nearly so good as you thought it, and you found yourself in that very predicament when your uncle said it was the poorest thing he ever saw. It was almost equal to Trotter Woods' terrible adventure with the angle- worms. Just take this magniicent pin set with salires. Is this a Tiger I see before me? Billy, we have listened this afternoon to your 4' inarticulate wailing with a great deal of interest. You are a peculiar boy, but not half as peculiar as you would like to be. You are one ofthose who sit up late and smoke borrowed cigarettes and take a glass of plain soda in the morning to clear the head, you know. A sort of universal genius, just crowded to death with lite- rary work, with just a moment to sit down and scribble off a number of the Tiger, or a play for the Whig Hall Theat- ricals. But you shouldn't loaf around all next day telling about how much you have to do, and how you don't do it. 24 THE NASSAU HERALD. - Then, too, you like to be mysterious. No one could ever see why you used to comb your hair as Nance I-Iallock does, unless you were writing poetry. Then for several days at a time you would walk the streets, speaking to no one, ex- cept to borrow a cigarette in an absent sort of a way. Your managementof the finances of the Lit. was not as success- ful as that of the Lit. supper, though you couldn't get Mr. Martinelli to leave the dress suits of the waiters for your benefit, and Mr. Sturtevant wouldntt let you have the night-key. ' But the crowning mystery of all was your great, un- spoken Chapel stage on The Fair Crod's Return. Who the said Fair God was, or why or when he was to return, no one could ever find out. I have solved the mystery, however, and I think you'll find he will return as often as you press this spring. In view ofthe slight benefit certain members of the Class have derived from their course, the Faculty has kindly voted them drawbacks on the fee for diplomas. These have been appropriated, as is usual in such cases, by the Treasurer to the purchase of I A FEW SUITABLE PRESENTS, which I shall now distribute. They are for Scrute Ruther- furd, Jeremiah Clinton Cromer, Phoebus Hemphill, Alf Mills, .Ieems Monroe Banister, E. Ross Jackman, Billy Baker, Walter Acker, Senator Cr. D. Browne, Abe S. Bick- ham, Darius Greene, and Burt Chamberlin. It will be seen from the mixed character of this assemblage, that in award- ing these honors no regard whatever has been had to moral character or family connections. Scrute, I suppose, hasn't forgotten the oral he had with the intellectual Princeton damsel down at a reception of the stalwart Greek Electives. He felt more than ever like answering 'C not prepared, especially when she struck ethics and psychology. She might as well have . THE NASSAU HERALD. 25 tried to get half a dollar out of him. He got on well enough, however, until she asked his opinion of the theory of 'tunconscious mental cerebrationf' The celerity with which the subject was shifted to more familiar ground must have been a fearful .strain on the primary laws of associa- tion. The next thing he asked was whether she had seen Jumbo yet. Scrut will take this little book. The author he has doubtless met. He holds receptions frequently in the large room next the College oflices. I'll get Freddie Burt to Hx up an appendix on the relation of Psychology to the Pachydermata when he returns from the Expedition. Jeremiah, your motto is, '4 I should smile. We have watched your course with interest, because we feared Bones would be the death of you. Your temperament ,is entirely too mercurial for this vale of tears, so you will please take this, which contains one of Potteids famous Clla Pods, and commit suicide by reading it through rapidly. Phoebus wants that little pistol he exhibited up at Hobp- ken in Fresh. year. Any Yale man present may make themselves perfectly sate by turning the right cheek. Alf Mills got the bulge on the rest of us by coming on to College with a recommendation to Eckard P. Budd in his pocket. This accounts for his success. He is the disciple of Capt. Cuttle, and always makes a note, whether he Ends it or not. He will please take this, and note down the ,remainder of this lecture. 1 Jim, I suppose you still hanker for toughness. Take this package of cubebs and toughen yourself at your leisure. Following the example ofa prominent periodicalin the ease of Crillott's ad., the editors of the NASSAU HERALD have insert- ed just here an ad. of E. O. Thompson. This style, half a dol- lar. Jack, you will find the latest styles fully exhibited in this. Walter, dear, you are growing, growing old. Your raven locks are getting grey, and I don't wonder, after the terrible experiences of Fresh. year. I have a new style of French crib for you-warranted to get there every time. t'Pud Fine will explain it to you. 26 THE NASSAU HERALD. Now, Mrl. Baker, and what do I hold ? Billy said that was mean in Brackett to tell Billy Magic to take Baker's head, if he wanted a perfect vacuum to perform the pendu- lum experiment in. At least Billy Magic told the Black Scudder so. He never was strong physically, and needs this box of condition powders. Senator Browne is the man who tried to work in palpita- tion of the heart as an excuse for absenting himself from our daily orisons, conducted at the Witching hour of 8.15. It hurried him so to, get up and take a clean shave after eight o'clock. But it vvouldn't Work so long as Bones is in loco. Being a good, steady man, Senator, I recommend you to attach these to your chin and apply for the position of Curator. They match your delicate ginger mustache very well, and will look as natural as Edgar in Flick's clothes. Bick will copper this brush for his beaver, which is prob- ably now over at Pete's. It will save 'the sleeve of his ulster, and will last a long time if he doesn't brush his hat indus- triously the wrong way, as he did the night aftervthe Yale game. t Darius, you will please poll down this B. B. Guide, and not go about asking if the short-stop plays behind the batter, and Who those men are on the corners. Your ignorance is as dense as George Day7s, who asked why that man was hollering '4 one, two, three, out. He even asked Johnnie Chetwood when to applaud. Ghimby, the Pessimist, will share this box of his favorite confections with Beef Williams. Technically, they are called Sour-balls. Harry Terhune, the Sage of Matawan, will now advance and grasp the sheep-skin While he has the opportunity. The Dip. I have for you is all in proper form, and is in English for your beneiit. The only slip you made in the final exam- inations, according to Prof Peebles, was in stating that the diameter of the earth was ninety-five million miles. At that rate it would be over a hundred thousand miles to Trenton, and you know you can make it in an hour, any day. But . TH E NASSAU IIERALD. 27 you were not stuck so badly as Jack Shober, who told Young to get his longitude at sea by setting upva transit and watching for the planets. Your diploma, as I have it here, reads as follows : , OFFICE on so Guaranteed. THE Pnnnrns LHERARY BUREAU, Special disconntlto Athletes. MAY 19TH, 1882- This is to certify that Henry Stafford Terhune, of Cheesequake, has passed the necessary examinations and copied the requisite number of essays, as prescribed by the curriculum of this institution. T. PEEBLES, Prez. Take it, Harry, and success attend you. . Will Morgan Edgar step this way? You see, I love you well enough to call you Morgan. Take these, and give one to Taylor Bryan, to use the next time you interview a pole-kitten out for an airing. I And, Professor,just send up our SCIENTISTS. These are the Insatiate Orew : Asst. Prof., Bishop L. Wal- lace, and Jimmy Rafferty, B. B. I thought so-me of putting in here the Rev. Dr. Toler, who probably knows more about snakes than any other man in the class. He first discovered that snakes were the only mammals found in Australia, and not elsewhere. But, on the whole, his average is too low. Henry, you are our I-Iossteologist. I know you can't see anything funny in the simple act of getting up at five A. M. and gathering those bones from the cellar of the new Chapel. The only funny thing about it was, that after you had spent several hours in wiping them off clean, and spread them out in your room, it took Prof. Hill only about two seconds to say that they were the bones of an old work- horse. Just cast your educated eye over this, while I remark upon Leary. ' Leary has a smile like one of Jim Rafferty's overthrovvs. You think it is never going to stop. He elected Biology this year, according to the formula for Senior electives. Elected Osborn, because he had to. The very first day the class went in, Dr. Osborn requested Mr. Wallace to act as N 28 THE Nassau HERALD. ' demonstrator. Whereupon Mr. Wallace smiled one of his own capacious smiles, and straigbtway made himself useful by holding sponges, bringing warm Water, taking care of instruments, etc. His enthusiasm being aroused, Leary polled as he had never polled before. He must have spent two or three hours on the next recitation, and, when it came, flunked dead on the very first question. Since that he has had a hard year of it. Leary, here are some ofthe snaps you failed to get-H a sample of which I hold in my hand. Jimmy, I believe you take Biology also. When Osborn asked you to sketch the brain of a frog you gave him a tol- erably correct drawing of the under jaw. But your princi- pal claim to distinction is your vigorous handling of the English language. When the ,pitcher of the Philadelphias hit a batter the second or third time, it would have made Granny weep to hear you expostulate. The captain said it was unintentional, and everybody knew he didnit have no such record. You spoke right up and said you did n t know nothin about his record, and you didn't care nothin about it, but you werenit going to have no suchpitchin as that. From all accounts, I think you rather got the better of the professional gentleman in the forcible expression of opinion. Such are the advantages of an academic education. You arenit much in the artistic line, James, not much, You re- member hearing Prof. Weir lecture on Cimabue and Raphael. The next day you asked who that 'C Jimmy Radcliff was that the lecturer mentioned so much. And when Prof Norton gave the nine that reception up at Cambridge, a week or so ago, you suggested that it might be a good idea to ask him to repeat a little of the lecture on the Parthenieum. You ought to emulate the example of Bill Schenck, that lovely little back-stop. He took a P.G'r. to stuff birds, and this year succeeded in stufling two. Next year he will stuff one and graduate. Meanwhile, take these Lectures on the Art of Discourse which I have secured for you at great ex- pense, they contain several points with which you will do well to familiarize yourself. J ' TIIE NASSAU HERALD. 29 I should not be doing my duty if I failed to notice Mr. Erving Eenno Chapin, of Boston. Any disturbance at the mention of this gentleman's name will receive particular consideration. Chippy tried for '81 and was rejected, not, however, on account of his age. It didnit kill him, and he lived to organize the Class of '82 and have himself elected first president, as he has fully stated in the autograph al- bums. Chippy was younger then than he is now, and more sprightlyg I don't know his age, for he has never given it away, even on the matriculationbook. It is variously esti- mated from 28 to 35, but is as uncertain as in Palaeontology. He doesn't remember that he is getting aged and decrepit, but runs and tires himself at lacrosse just as he did years ago. The horrid boys have not the least respect for age, but run right in ahead of him and take the ball. Chip, you should reserve yourself for other ields, where you shine without a rival. On account of your age and experience, and eminent respectability, you are always selected to lead the German, though you do hate it so, as you once told Henry Welles. Whatever you do it's always in good form. Even in Fresh. year you used to leave your card when you called on the fellows. In the course of a long and eventful life you have collected scores of German favors, to say noth-b ing of many which were stolen from you. Please add this to the number. Miss Nancy Hallock has been so long and favorably known in Princeton and Stony Brook society that she needs no introduction from me. .She is known even to the farthest confines of Witherspoon street, for when the Gar- field club tookthat trip to Hightstown, a buxom Ethiopian lass in the rear wagon was heard to exclaim, as she caught sight of those ahead, Well, if there 'aint Hallock! Ar- range your hair, Nance, and trip forward for your last per- spire before your admiring classmates. I Like all great poets, she wears her hair long, and medi- tates. For some good reason she doesn't wear it banged 3 30 THE NASSAU HERALD. when her picture is taken, but manages to get in her ring every time. She was an aesthete before Oscar Wilde, and used to spend her vacations lecturing on the Gospel of Beauty. All this was before she and Ike I Taylor began boxing together, and ruined Peabody's peace of mind by entering Mt. Lucas society. Considering her sex, Nance's poems are altogether too amatory. Ed. Hughes had a col- lection of them, principally the laments of disconsolate maidens, but she very judiciously called them in. Her first attempt, was an effort to make us believe that My Lilian was with the mermaids down under the sea. But it is too thin, Nance. There are no such fish in Stony Brook, and, besides, mermaidens don't write double-weight letters every day. I don't see why you should go mermaid-hunting on Sunday night. Henry Prentiss has you spotted for absence from prayer meeting every week this year but one, and that evening it rained pitchforks. It rattled the fellows so to see you come in and take a back seat that they almost came down. Your fondness for the ladies was shown when Deacon White had to hold you in your seat going through the tunnel near Pittsburgh. The young lady to whom you were talking, didn't know you as well as the Deacon did. But as a literary critic you are quite unapproachable. Your Lit. Prize Quotations would have guaranteed a big dividend for that publication had not Stedman threatened to come down on it for an infringement of copyright. James Russell Lowell declared that it was all right about his standing four-square to every wind that blew, and he didn't give a cent for the 'HERALD,S opinion, anyhow, but he wasn't going to have all his poems quoted in one little essay. As for the chapel stage, Quae Enimv may yank the 350, but there was no necessity for your telling McWilliams you felt as though it were already in your pocket. In spite of all this glory, there are times when your little soul feels down-cast and yearns. It was on such an occasion that you told Gruyer you did so adore Michael Angelo. U Sometimes, when I think of Michael, I yearn for fierce THE NASSA U HERALD. 31 strength. Probably, if you are not strong, it's because you have always boarded at your own club. I am unable to prescribe for your case, so I've gotten you a pair ot' good scissors for sermonizing work. Ed. Rankin, the Hungry Scientif, deserves a passing notice. As a famine raiser, he is second only to Bill Schenck on a B. B. tour. He eats so much that it makes him poor to carry it around. All last year he was so ema- ciated, that the only work he could do on the Princetonicm was to draw his dividend. This he accomplished without assistance. I have for you, Ed., a ticket to the Alumni Dinner, not transferable, though this is an unnessary cau- tion in your case. It calls for double courses throughout, and three kinds of desert. Retire and peruse these bills of fare. It is time I were drawing this shameful exhibition to a close, or I might go on to speak of Apollo Yard, the man who thought his picture didn't do him justice, or of Burt Winton, who sat ten times for his, or of little Charlie Denby, the boy who sings the Italian salad, and attends the President's receptions in a woolen shirt and a tennis racquet, or of Tom Clarke, the handsomeprogenitor of the Tiger,- or of Deacon White, who says the only thing he remembers about Butler's Analogy is the story of the watch, or of Bobby Clark, who knows when it's time to be kissed and put to bed, or of Dave Magic, the short man, of whom Bick once said, If you want a good big mass-meeting of the col- lege, with everybody there, just give it out that Dave is going to pay his debts , or of Ed. Simons, the man who has such' a start of the restof us, or of Paul Martin, the just man made perfect. . But I pass these celebrities by to speak of David Walker Woods, better known as Hello-o Trottawoodsf' I can recommend him, ladies and gentlemen, as a safe and capa- ble swimming master. Lessons given on terra tirma, or, as the Deacon would say, on terra cotta, if desired. Trotter could beat Henry Welles swimming around the floor of his 32 THE NASSAU HERALD. room, but got left when they adjourned to the canal. But Trotter does excel as a delegate to a Y. M. C. A. conven- tion. He was sent up to Easton by the Philadelphian Society, and his report of the affair, if I remember rightly, was about as follows: U Well, fellows, I haven't much to say. We went there, and were met at the depot by some ladies, who escorted us to the church, where a cold collation was spread for us. We did justice to this, I assure you. We then adjourned to a short business meeting, where there were refreshmehts, and then to dinner. In the evening, we had another cold collation at another church, I don't know just where. In fact, my most distinct remembrance is of the things we had to eat, and I thank the Society very much for sending me. Trotter, I had prepared a little cold lunch for you, but Rankie ate it up. You'll have to take this pre- server and tie it to the next fellow you teach to swim, so as to keep within life-saving distance of him. . Ladies and gentlemen, the great moral show is over, or will be as soon as Sam Lloyd has proposed three cheers for something or other. I have endeavored, in my poor way, to point out some ot' the eccentricities of real genius. I have endeavored to pat humble merit approvingly on the back, and to reprobate vice in words as strong as the occa- sion will permit. Now, that you know what we are, I doubt not you are anxious to know what we will be, so I yield to the Prophet, hoping that, one and all you, will 4 Be to our failings just alittle blind, And to your humble servant very kind. ,THE NASSAU HERALD. -33 , 16-ilass lffrnpheogz. JOHN WILSON, NEW JERSEY. LADIES AND GENTLEMEN :-Last term as soon as your Prophet considered his calling and election reasonably sure, he addressed a respectful note to the Faculty, requesting that he be allowed permission to look over the Books of Fate. Thereupon that august body had a meeting. With- out bread or water, for three days and nights they deliber- ated upon the proposition-as to its bearing on the past, the present, and the future. At length, after an uncommonly free fight, the whole affair was referred to a select committee, who considered, a couple of months, and then handed over your Prophet to the tender mercies of the Librarian. Upon mak- ing his request known at-the library, the little gentleman whose intimacy with the books has somewhat impaired his good rnanners,in his most approved style swept up the floor with your Prophet, and then walked him Spanish into the ,82 Memorial alcove, where among the rich and rare volumes that line the shelves, he looked in Vain for the Books of Fate, but in their place he found a note, and the note was signed by Charlie Lindsley, and the notesaid that he had taken the books in order to consult about the probable color of his moustache,and that as soon as this appeared, which would be in a very few days, he would return the books. Knowing that it was a hopeless matter to wait for any such consum- mation, your Prophet determined no longer to seek the books, but to do like Trotter Woocls at the Soph. reception, when no one would dance with him, that is-to go it alone. Accordingly your Prophet leaned back in his chair, shut his eyes and soon the great future crowded upon' his enrap- 34 THE NASSAU HERALD. tured vision. He saw the world, as it were a shining ball, and men and women like little insects crawled about upon its surface, and he observed that all the big bugs had '82 marked on their backs, and he knew that they were Prince- ton '82, because they were also the handsome bugs, and such favorites with the lady-bugs. And he observed all their ac- tions, and he will tell what they didg and if he shall have interpreted the future pleasingly to any one, he will be con- tent to share the fate of all true prophets in their own country, or rather to be like Sallie Larkin in her gymnasium suit- that is, without much Qhjon 'er. It is conventional and right always iirst to speak of the ladies, and leading our brilliant bevy, of course come our darlings, Nancy and Polly Hallock. These young ladies with one dip. between them went skipping out into the world, each holding on to one end of the diploma. ,Polly took chapel optional, and an after-dinner course in tooth- picks in front of the Mansion House. Consequently, although his moral character was Aunexceptionable, the Faculty really could not give him a degree. Having gone as lar as Railroad avenue, Nancy and Polly met Charles Barton Monroe Harris and Allan Percy Gluyer walking arm-in-arm! and measuring the Princeton pavements in hexameter feet. Wliithei' go ye, fair maids ?'7 quoth Percy. 4' Into the wide, wide world, to do and darej, made answer Nancy. We would thy comrades be, said Percy. - Burns the fire ofpoesy in your souls ?,' inquired Nance. It do I it do ll' said B. and Percy in chorus. Then follow fast with us upon our path. Percy and B. joined in behind, Nance all the time throw- ing oft' little gems of poetry, while Polly explained their meaning, acting as a kind of Boswell to Nancy's Johnson. Nancy remarked that this procession reminded him of a four- line verse, and Polly explained that it was because they were Iwo coupleis that rhymed. Presently they all came to . THE NASSA U HERALD. 35 the canal, and Percy Guyer, while intent on 4' mashing a fairy who appeared on a passing canal boat, slipped and fell into the water. Nance was about to iish him out when sud- denly he was stung by a bee. 4' Ah I said Nancy, ff an in- spiration has struck me-a beautiful simile has seized upon my brain. Hold on to the bottom, Percy, while I gather this priceless jewel ere it be lost. A sweet sonnet struggles in me for utterance, suggested by this' bee sting-so is it always with the true poet. Listen- I journeyed once along the canalls fair shore, When lo! I chanced on Cupid wandering byg He spied me ere I was in time to fly, And running up, he challenged me, before I spoke a. word, to run with him a race Upon the mule-path. I said I had not run Since with the Hare and Houndsg but he, with laughing face, Replied, ' E'en so, then let us race in fun- I'll give the start! We ran, and I did beatg , But then the rascal seeing me so fleet, And he so far behind, drew out his bow And hitrne square behind. And when . The treacherous little imp had fixed me so, I vowed to never race with Love again. Now as to getting Percy out, continued Nancy. 'HI fear it is too late, at any rate if we pull him out, it will spoil a beautiful memorial ode which I have in my mind. And so the three continued on to the Junction, stopping on the way only to address a poem to a knot-hole in a fence- rail. The knot-hole stood it as long as it could, and when it could not hold itself any longer, climbed down and ran away. When they got to the Junction, the other two said that they were tired of B., and shipped him on a cattle car bound for New York. B. reached the city, and there they took him for some kind of a new variety from the West, and put the specimen on exhibition in Central Park. Nance and Polly arrived in Ohio safely, and Nancy started a newspaper devoted to poetry and 'C the Gospel of Beauty. Polly worked the printing-press and wrote letters of congratulation signed by Wliittier, Tennyson, and all the poets, upon every fresh eifort of Nancy's versatile pen. 36 THE NASSAU HERALD. After the ladies come the old folks, and who more worthy of notice than Erving Fenno Chapin ? Fenno did not sur- vive long after leaving College. He passed away at the green old age of seventy-six. He never married-he really could not concentrate his affections. He spent his time telling credulous people of that 33,000 position he left in order to come to College. He continued as always, to keep track of the thermometer, and of his own various ailments. He had also some thousands of little society anecdotes, which he would rehearse to every one whom he could induce to listen. In order not to forget his stories he wrote them all out in a little book, which he would carry round with him, and from it would occasionally refresh his memory when conversation ran low. He omitted from this book however, all mention ofthe time John Hibben stood him on his head in the corner of his room, and various other episodes of his College life. Fenno conceived the idea of going into literature. He started a poem, a novel and a biography all at once, but ran. them into one and called the book My Stolen German Favors, or, the Relic of 2,000 Parties. He sent a copy to Dr. McCosh, and Jimmy immediately had Chapin elected into the Society for the Pursuit of Original Research. ' Chapin had been a member of this society on his own ac- count, While in College. In his old age he would want a companion in his original research, and would write to Andie Barrett or to Wilcox notes like the following: DEAR ANDIE:-Please come and stay with me to-night and pursue original research. I will do all the research if you will only come. Yours, CHAPE. Andie did not usually go. I A The immediate cause of Chapin's departure was mortifi- cation-which set in after he had worn his six-o'clock suit to an eight-o'clock dinner. In his confusion and embarass- ment he actually passed the sherry and drank only ten glasses of champagne, when the supply was unlimited. W THE NASSA U' HERALD. 37 The blow was topo much. Andie Barrett was chief mourner, and on Chapey's tomb he had inscribed this simple story- ' , I' T1-is Goon Du: YOUNG. Tim OBsox.E'rE FENNOJ' Pop Dunlap is no chicken either, and although he is a mar- ried man, the Faculty decided to- strain a point and make him a Bachelor of Arts. A description of the scene which took place in the Dun- lap household when Pop came home triumphantly bearing his diploma, may be of interest here. I take it from Pop's autobiography. Attention is called to the purity and sinn- plicity of the style into which Pop has poured as it were, his own fresh nature. Here it is- When I reached home bearing my sheep-skin under my arm, and although it was June, still wearing my seal-skin hat in which I always looked so well, I found my wife and the children awaiting me at the front gate. My wife ran to meet me and throwing her arms about my neck, said, U Oh, John! I am so glad that you have returned. The children gathered around me, and little Johnnie, espying the sheep-skin under my arm, said, Papa, what is that ? I replied with pardonable pride, and as I trust, without a blush, John, my son, that is the degree for which I have been working all these years. At this the precocious child said, Papa, isn't it pretty? but I didn't think they would give you one. I kissed the boy and we all returned to the house, my wife all the while talking and telling the many little plans which she had laid out for the future. We had a happy supper that night. Ah, how Well I remember it. It was heaven I ll But let us draw the veil upon this hallowed scene of do mestic happiness. The autobiography is strictly truthful, for it goes on to relate how embarrassed Pop was to get rid of his transes when his trunk came home, and how when it was being unpacked, little Johnnie who had begun to study Latin, would ask what all those funny looking books were, and 38 THE NASSAU HERALD. how Pop in sheer deperation, had to bury all his transes in the garden, and how little Johnnie dug them up, and the neighbors thought there had been a re-discovery of the lost books of Mormon in the Dunlap back-yard, and so much fuss was made about the matter that Pop tinally had to ex- plain. There were many other things in that autobiogra- phy which Father Time forbids me to narrate. After the old folks we may as well take. a look at that breezy young thing, Pennington Ranney. Pen became a teacher in a girls' school, but the girls always would kiss him and rutile his hair, and then when the lady principal accused the bad girls of stealing cake or jam, or anything, Pen had a way of blushing so that every one would look at him, and of course, the bold bad girls would say that the blushing Pennington was guilty. Then they took to calling him Pen, and then Penny, and then Half-penny, because the mean things said he wasn't worth a cent. Pen just couldn't stand it. Beef Williams used to come to see him sometimes, and call him 4' Lizzie, and that used to break him all up. Davie Magic, hard nut, drop- ped in occasionally, and threatened to ruin the character of the institution. So that Lizzie at last got the tt grand bounce, and went off and started a school ot' her own, and then of course, all the girls cried dreadfully, and wanted to go ott' with Lizzie, and so Lizzie's school was a great suc- cess. ' . ' Uzal Haggarty McCarter, all his life lived on canary-bird seeds, for the purpose of improving his voice. He never got it quite to that degree of perfection which he desired. Wilcox, as Guyot says ofthe North American Continent, gradually rose to a maximum of swell. He then applied for the position of head-keeper in the Philadelphia Asylum, because, as he said, he wanted to be near Billy. Senator Browne became engaged in the temperance move- ment, that is to say, he exerted himself manfully to put down the liquor. He was successful. The Senator said that it always put spirits into him to address a full audience. THE NASSAU IJERALD. 39 Scrute Rutherfnrd, too-poor fellow-the same immacu- late, lily-white sense of honor followed him through all his days, and hindered him in everything he undertook He was the most particular man in the world, and once twenty years after graduating, meeting Harry Terhune, he refused to speak to him because he remembered having seen Ter- hune helping George Day in a Math. examination in Fresh. year. Scrute was just that way in everything, all occupa- tions in lite were too gross, too debasing for him. He used to turn an honest penny sometimes by exhibiting some wonderful sleight-of-hand tricks, which he had learned in college. One of his most famous, but least popular was, in a large company, to borrow a quarter or half dollar of any man in the room, and warrant that the man would never see it again. . Manyi little boys and girls, I have no doubt, would like to know what became of our little Warfield. He continued his alleged metaphysical studies until at last, he was believed to be an embodied thought. Indeed, it is said that if Kant had seen Warield before he wrote his H Kritique of Pure Reason, he would have dropped on Reason and written on Wa1'iield. Many philosophers held that he was the long- sought logical nexus between Cause and Eliectg but Dr. McCosh having closely examined the matter, said that there was no Cause for such a belief, and if there was, where was the Effect? Warfield, as usual, considered himself sat on, and devoted the rest of his life to solving the old problem, Which is the butt end of the goat ? ' Billy Scudder spent several years consulting railway guides, before he could make up his mind where to take his wedding tour. When he reached a conclusion, his girl had also concluded to take a tour with another fellow, but Billy did not mind that a bit. As he remarked to a friend, he had twice as good a time by taking the same trip twice himself , Bill Toler was the most accomplished man in the class. He could order any known drink in eleven diferent lan- 40 THE NASSAU HERALD. guages.. When William stepped into Mr. Robert K. Clark's magnificent Newark dry goods establishment one day, twenty years after graduating, his old friend came forward and Without recognizing him, said, What will you have, sir? A far-away look came into William's eye. The old, sub- tle inter-communication of spirits seemed to be resumed as Bill gently murmured, Whiskey straight. Bob started, looked intently, and threw his arms around his old friend's neck. I As the country newspapers say, A good time was had that night. ' Bishop Leslie Wallace, as he had always expected, went into the coal business. He drove a coal-cart around the streets of Philadelphia. With a short stub pipe in his mouth, and his sweet smile circling around it, he was wont to parade the thoroughfares. That smile became historic. It would move the most obstinate mule, and, when Mr. Johnnymaker passing by one day, saw Bish exercising his wonderful power on a balky horse, hetook in the latent possibilities of 'that smile, and hired Bishop at a thousand dollars a week to stand in front of his establishment and smile. The people flocked in thousands to see it, and busi- ness was never so brisk. One day Bob Waddell came by, and seeing Bish, mentioned egg-partyi' to him, where- upon Bish's face took on such a smile that people came by hundreds of thousands to see this new wonder. Then Mr. Johnnymaker hired Bob to stand in front of Bish, and say Uegg-party to him occasionally, so as to preserve that smile. These two, together, thus made- MrfJohnny1naker's fortune. Afterwards, Bob and Bish, together, made a tour of the world. They put up at all the celebrated hotels, in- cluding the Webb House, and Bish smiled before all the crowned heads of Europe, as well as through the bottoms of a great many beer glasses. George Pierson and McWilliams became missionaries. It is said that when the Fijis had plucked George and con- sumed a large part of him, a dreadful mortality set in. It TIIE NASSAU HERALD. 41 was thought that the flavor of certain of George's bald- headed jokes still lingered about him, and that they were doubly fatal to the misguided heathen. V McWilliams tried another tack. He started a Baptist church in the Desert of Sahara, but the water supply was insufficient, and so Mack returned home 4' clean gone dis- couraged. He hnished his career by running a soda foun- tain in his native town. It is said that of all the ladies in that village soda became the exclusive drink. Notwithstanding Jack Bryan's early exertions to get the class cup, that prize was walked away with by WVard Pea- body, who dressed Davie Magic up in long clothes and palmed him oft as his own three-months-old infant. He kept him quiet by inserting the cork of a beer bottle in his mouth. The committee of the Faculty appointed to sit on the child reported that he seemed healthy, but uncommonly depraved. ' Sam Benton became stage-struck--chapel stage. He used to sit up nights with 5' The State of Religion and Govern- ment in the Country. In fact, he extracted all the religion and government from his nature and incorporated them in a great speech, which alas! though born, was never deliv- ered. It was so heavy that Sam could never retain it, and he passed ott' the stage without any one's ever finding out what that speech really contained. Pete Bryant, in common with Mr. Cowper, believed that the noisy man is alway in the right. He usually shrieked at the top of his voice, and became, in consequence, a shin-' ing light at the Denton bar. His children were none of them red-headed, and consequently he did not have to kill them, as he had always threatened. There is a school in art which believes that beauty can be absorbed from surrounding objects. E. Boss Jackman man- aged to survive the fatigue of graduating, and was hired by a man who held this theory, to come and stay in a youngladies' seminary, not to improve Jackman, but that Jack, being around all the time, the girls might grow beautiful from just 42 THE NASSAU HERALD. looking at him. Jack's vocation was to pose on a pedestal in the front parlor. The flies attacking him, he was protected by a glass case. This business, like all others, was too fatigu- ing for the young gentleman, so, with one of those looks of ininite disgust, he climbed down and out one morning, and no one ever saw him more. It was thought for some time that he had been translated, but a better theory was, that he had met Johnny Shober, as he also disappeared at about the same time. This last theory was borne out by the finding of one eyeglass, one chewed ear, and one black eye near the Seminary, His last words, as far as known, were : I will not apologize. n Charlie Harris organized the Society for the Protection of Runts in the U. S. Taylor Bryan, Pete Bryant, Bob Clark and all the boys belonged, but just because they would not let Charlie run the thing, and have all the cham- pagne, Charlie went oft' and got up the Sawed-oft' Club, of which he was the sole member. Paul Hemphill studied law. Paul was often invisible to his clients in the morning, but his excessive politeness always atoned for this by causing him to see them double in the evening., Another curious habit of Paul's was that of going to bed with his boots on. It was very unhealthy, and left him with his head all swelled up in the morning. He grieved over this habit dreadfully, until finally a happy thought enabled him to cure himself. He resolved always to Wear shoes. Growing tired of his business, Paul started on a grand mashing tour of the World. His errant affections, however, were finally captured by 'C Yours for Health, Mrs. Lydia E. Prinkem, of Lynn, Mass., and for many years Paul's picture figured underneath her's in all the newspapers of the land. I A Welcome Flick was once engaged to a young lady, but Morgan Edgar thought that she was too good for him, and Wouldn't let him marry her. Charlie Denby said that in his opinion, an insult had been offered to Mr. Flick. Dad Wheeler Went into the sheep-raising, business in Q THE NASSAU HERALD. 43 Colorado. He said he was going to have a sheep-skin, if he had to raise it himself .lim Banister was famous throughout life as a wit. A collection of his mots was published, and in it I noticed many that crisp and terse, are already famous as having come from his lips. Here are a few selected from the Prince- ton Period .- Hard Luck Eddy, Acker's Fresh. H Baker's Fresh. And so on down the class roll, omitting Banister. Everybody's Fresh. Notice the epigrammatic form of this Cork up. Here is another, which we all know, spoken by James through the nose: 't Sat on. Another, the authenticity of which is doubted, as a foot-note states, is this-it seems to me to savor of the Hemphillian school of wit, as well as to require the soft Southern accent: 'K Why is Potter like the Roman god, Janus?', And the answer is, 't Because he is iow- headedf' A conclusive and convincing proof of its spurious character is the knowledge of the classics which it shows. Here is one of the after-college period, which shows the ripe expression and deep reflection of later years: 4' There is more of the fiiture than what there is of the present. The following, in imitation of Bacon, shows the longing ofa sensitive, and perhaps wounded spirit, as well as of an empty interior: NA full stomach maketh a fat witg but, alas! the converse of this is not true. There were many others in this book, but time forbids me to give any more. And, now, last comes Harry Terhune. His motto always Was: f'Be virtuous and you will be happy, hut you won't have such a good time. In college he always held with the poet, that 't Honors and fame from no condition rise. It was always his boast, therefore, that he never received a condition. Under the circumstances, he considered himself 44 TIJE NASSAU HERALD. open to all the honors. Harry entered politics and became a great orator. The greatest effort of his life began with those words, which most Clio Hall men will remember, and which brought a smile 'even to Dr. Dufiield's face, they were spoken with a quaver of the voice and an upward roll of the eye: 'Men may laugh at the idea of Retributive J usticef' Harry ran for Mayor of Cheesequake, N. J. He was not elected, but polled a large vote-the only thing he was ever known to poll. And now the shadows lengthen, and although there are many other men with brilliant futures in this class, the time is at hand for the parting words. Your Prophet, besides seeing the future of all his classmates, gazed uponwhat was in store for the College of New Jersey. He saw her halls crowded with students, and wise .men taught in her- class-rooms. New rules had been made, for only the Faculty were compelled to attend recitations and chapel, and they were of course, very mad about it and kicked, and said that they were all over twenty-one years old, and ought to be allowed to do as they pleased. What broke their hearts, however, was that they were not allowed to have meetings without permission from the students. They said that it seemed like it was no pleasure at all to be a member of the Faculty unless you could have a meeting. They were burdened with examinations, and were always getting conditions, and were shipped for shenanegagging, and were the most miserable creatures under the sun. And your'Prophet saw the great world, rushing onward through space, and the College of New Jersey was on top, and on her highest pinnacle, balanced on one foot, stood Petie Rowe, clad like Apollo Belvedere, in a straw hat and spurs. In his hand he waved the championship pennant, and as your Prophet gazed in awe, he heard a faint U Hoo-ror, and U all was lost, lost, lost in eternal light. TZHE NASSAU HERALD. 45 ElfTresirlsnt's giildress. JOHN GRIER HIBBEN, ILLINOIS. At last the hour has come, so long anticipated, so long to be remembered, when we who so oft have assembled together, now meet to part. We turn with one accord to glance in retrospective view over the happy days that we have spent together. The past rises before us as a dream. Memories crowd upon memories, and we are lost in the maze of recollections through which we wander. The four years which appeared to stretch so far, far into the future, now seem to us but as so many days. We see the Class of '82 gathering together for the hrst time, the last good-byes of friends at home, a mother's God-bless-you still lingering in our ears. We are 'tstrangers in a strange land I Soon these scenes grow familiar, we become a part of this busy college world. A common bond of sympathy makes us brothers, a friendship grows with the passing days, such as is found only within college walls. The plodding hours of toil, the restful hours of recreation, the sunny days of joy, the shadowed days of sorrow, all these pass in quick review before our minds. Again we are strolling over the familiar paths, again we are visiting our favorite haunts, again we are singing the old songs, again we are assembling to wit- ness some exciting contest, again we swell the lusty cheers 4' in praiseof Old Nassau upon the field of a well-earned victory. Again the happy vacation hours come back, when, with glad faces, we homeward turn and loving welcomes await the absent college boys, With each succeeding return to these scenes there has been a renewed pleasure, the bonds of friendship have been more strongly cemented. 4 46 THE NASSAU IIERALD. And now our task has been completed, our ,course is fin- ished, our record has been made. Soon we pass from these halcyon days, so full of sentiment and poetry, to the prosaic realities of life, fettered with its anxieties and busy cares, The nearness of the parting hour presses upon our heartsg the roll has been called for the last timeg the resounding tones from the bell-tower of old North have called us to duty for the last time, for-the last time the cry of '82 has re-echoed through these halls. All nature seems in har- mony vvith this parting scene. The beauties of an infant suminer-time surround us, significant of the happy days of the past, and the bright prospects of our young manhood. These historic buildings which have been ours for so long, look doivn upon us, and While they remind us of the many advantages our Alma Mater has bestowed upon us, and our consequent responsibilities, they seem to pronounce their mute benediction upon our heads. This beautiful wreath, unbroken, complete in its unity, is a it emblem of a united classg but as now the bonds which have bound us together, are to be severed, We pass the wreath from man to man, and as each takes from it a flower, the broken ring shall speak of our separation. For those Who are not with us, because the Lord hath called them hence, We lay the first flowers, as an offering upon memory's altar. Now, though We vvend our separate Ways, the recollection of our four years of happy association Will ever .linger with us, and, amidst the busy turmoil of life, will be to us a refreshing boon, like that sparkling draught borne to the vvearied exile King from Bethlehenfs Well, that he had loved in childhood. Imperishable indeed, are these memories! For there are voices of the Past, Links ofa broken chain, Wings that can bear us back to times Which cannot come again. Yet, God forbid that we should lose The echoes that remain. I I I '82 CLASS ODE. Ii I ,R- G- HALLOCK- '82- .. D. L. ELMENDORF. '82, I A N ' IL -- - TZ- 'I' II - Li -N :N 2' T: . I EEE-dzzx il J -15- :Q 5 3 Egg qi:-15 5 iii -f --1--as-T-1 .s , ' - - - - ff W I I I 1. Let these last hours know - ly glad - ness, Sing eve - ry thoughtt of I . -pd : . 'O' I 9-l, f -, - E - f -I IE i E--- I Eb-G E LE E il F' E E EE . f----5 S 5 ' I I I I I D IJ I- I- I Iz:IZ.Q1....:g.-i-g : --4- ---l:gei:i 1- I 1---I44 . ' I Iih 1-,Jig--ZJ---:fI:.h +5-j-- 4-4'--7I--w--3-i- --i 1-,Q-.a-I2g-,,- -,--- it .g,,..:LT1: :jIj2::iviIi:- I I EIU U 4 0 N., -0 an-22 -4- Ip. I ' grief :LQ wily, Ban - ish all our pain and sad - ness, I I 4 ,-Q -,im - i -4- -0- -L . I3 s93-b 42--i-4E,gw, -g,.-I!.-tt,-,Ein::I:ZiI':I::: . r '5-b5'3'--3---5: TEIIIII-fzigig: ziiigi-.fi-':: I , - - -Ni - -, g 'Q ' -,- -J I I. II-.- I f I I- 'I I I I I- ' I CHORUS. I . - ff lg - - if -Ir , .ii Ai- I-XJ 5- I I - -h- -.J-....l,.-.I,il, Ig I 5:55-.,2IL.g-L.-QIL5.,I!I if: :!,g,gtg: :pig Zizipiipziifi - - X111---v'-lx-,ww '- -'fd iii: :QI :I::iIgi:ri:g2- On this our bright and na - tal day. Our hearts are strong, Yet fs f-x 'v' 'Q' -L , ..T--9-'p-1-1-ll--L --?- -I'?---7-- -EL -'-4-J' .t- I I9.ZI1'5,ig T 1, fi T g IIE gig-F':3:ETgiI: r I ItIz I: 4- -,V 2 ! 'IQ: :Ii f :F : zf- :F Lhjf-1 F I wif! I Vp Q ' I V V I I' D I - .. - -wg -- .. I - - ' , I :I--iI j-T-? 5 -1 3--HZEIZJ .N Q -' 'iii'- T!I-J i-1151-1 'S 2 ...Iwi ij, .j,--.J , I' f +4 ff I' II fp 'L H51 3 ' tears are full - ing, For Olll' Friend-ships, tried and true, But though the F1 IT . I I -- . f Iii' T-' 5: 5- 'Z' If II' rf 2' :Q-'-P I W? f 1 F F355 S--:E :Im-E-5-312 -L E II- - - -V .t- --I --, I-I, -1 B N A A I' 'l255----.-Q: 3:1 :J :j - I :II- 1 3 QW- fl gl.. , . I IiQ1iIi1'T'i'- 'l 'Qi1-4iI'II-I f - 'ti:'I J 2 Z-I' i .1 -'-4--5:g--1i-- if-1 F---f ' lv' ' ' I 4 world for us is call mg, Still we'll cheer for E1gh - ty - two. 'I ' ' -0- -0- 1. I 1 5, 'fxt , -It -P- 4- ' f, gr- - I Ii' :I - - I -f -C I: - ,- . .QEQQI5 E -L? I2 I Ig' IIE Q -. CFL? ff ' 'Eff - I 7 V V ' - ' I I'-,IT 5 IF- -3 I- , ' L L :- 2 For old Naissau our hearts are burning, With loving praise we speak her name g Thoufh from hor long-lov'd side We're turning, We still joy in Nnsszufs fame. Crm.-Our liezirts are strong, Abc. I I I 3 But while this cl:1y's bright hours are flying, Once more together. boys, we stand 5 While every voice and heart replying, Clasp once more ench loving lmnrl. CHO. -Our hearts are strong, dsc. THE NASSAU HERALD. Glass EHR111. ETHELBERT D. WARFIELD, KENTUCKY. ' The Sum1ner's eve, soft-smiling, dropt still-voiced Upon the world. The deep, sonorous sea, That beat the pebbly beach, its roaring ceased, A And but a murmur of its rolling tide Was borne upon the breeze. I, on the shore, Reclined, and watched the laughing waters play, And as the waves came sweeping from the deep, With strength grown great, I saw far out to sea, One lift its head, whose sparkling crest the sun, In parting, flashed with rain-bow tints. On, on- It swept with dazzling front and smote the beach, And, surging, crept inevitably on- High up the shore. It rolled, it broke-was lost- The sparkling drops that made the wondrous whole Forever sundered in their fate, or hid Again, amid old ocean's mighty surge, Or drunk by burning sands, or the last rays The sinking sun poured, golden, on the beach. I turned me thence and sought the lambent sheen, Flung back to earth from oceans of the sky: There, hanging crimson bright, a massy heap Of clouds in richest tints was clothed. The change On change that swept athwart its breast, each seemed To blaze a grander Hame, till ere its light Had fled, the parched breeze drank up its life And swept it from the skies. The sun gone down, Grey-footed gloaming gently spread her veil O'er land and sea and sky, and lol against Its hanging hem, a flight of wild fowl rose, Clear limned and sharp, and fled to sea with swift, Far-reaching flight-black hung as hangs a cloud With thunder laden, for a. moment's space- THE NASSA U HERALD. Then parting, vanished, leaving naught to tell The story of their swiftly-passing iiight. And as I looked my heart was caught with thoughts Of an expected day--this day-when all The bands of equal hopes, and aims, and joys, That long had made us one-so like the bands Of that fair table round, which, ages gone, Was the great model of high chivalry- Were to be broken. Then the darkness fell. But the light Summer's breeze still softly wooed, And the sonorous beat of the full tide, And one by one the stars came trooping out, Till, like a swarm of fire-flies prisoned fast In a great circling net, they spread from pole To zenith, zenith on to pole. And there It seemed that the proud wave that swept to shore, In all the beauty of its rain-bow hues- That broke into such wondrous wealth of spray- But sank all shattered, parted, never more To meet in rythmic march on any shore, The crimson brightness of the sunset cloud Wiped rudely from the sky 5 the iiight of fowl That fled so fair to sea-that one and all Were types of our fair class on this, its last, Best day. We come from myriad homes-spread far And wide. The happy ties that bind us, are, Alas! but transitory, now, at last, Their destiny fulfilled, they fall from these, The hands that found them garlands, never chains. Into the world we take our varied ways, No more to gather in these well-known halls- No more a perfect, an unbroken band, We grasp the hands of those we love so well, With clasp which, loosened, ne'er can be reknit. Then as this day is last and best, And as the parting comes ere long, O, classmatesl for a moment rest, Before you sing your parting song- Before you launch upon yon lake, That lies a burnished mirror bright, Whose gleaming shores unknown, awake Mysterious longing and delight- TIIE NASSAU IIERALD. Or list to fame's sweet siren song, That rises deep, melodious, strong. This day, with all its joys, the past Claims as its own-and memory Lifts high time's veil, that we may cast A lingering glance, in harmony, O'er all the many happy days . That we have passed at Old Nassau, Where we havejoined to sing her praise, Or. shouted loud her glad hurrah I The last fair jeweled link to-day, We weld before we pass away. Not all our days have been so bright, Some who were of us are no more, Their mem'ry sheds a softer light, And we would fain go o'er and oler The page whereon their names are writ, And mark it as the gold'nest page, Round which a halo seems to Hit, That storm, nor grief, nor time can age, And find in its eternal youth A gleam of great, immortal truth. Each joy, each sorrow closer drew The golden bands that made us one, And bound each heart in friendship true, Till now, at last, ourjourney done, The bursting bands seem closer -far, For one short moment ere they part. The past is ours, naught can it mar- Whate'er the future may impart, The brightest days, the gladdest cheer, Gave Old Nassau, our mother dear. Class of 1882.4-egtastistios. IG -.1 ,- .1- si ' 9: - 2 2 . U5 ,,, NAME. g Cruz Annnsss. Rnsinzncs. Room. BIRTHDAY. II E 5 5 E E Fnixnualrrzs. . 8 . s 5 5 Ei A JWalter H. Acker ...... ...... A ...... 1 33 E St., N. W ..... Washington, D. C ......... 15 S. M. R. H .......... Oct. 11, 1859... 147. .... 5-SM.. Law ...... None Dem Clio... YW1ll1am B. Baker. ...... A ...... 1610 Summer St ............ Philadelphia, Pa .......... 7 S. M. R. H ............ Feb. 10, 1859.. 158 ..... -83. Bus ...... Rpis.. Dem None. Billie, Bake. -flames B. Banisten.: .... .. A ...... 206 Roseville Ave .... ..... N ewark, N. J ........ ....... 1 N. R. H ............... Nov. 13, 1860.. 155 ..... -7 ..... Bus ..,... M. E.. Rep. Clio... Jimmy, Jeems Monroe. ,Andrew L. Bari-ett..4 ...... lA ...... ............................ N ewton, N. J ............... 5 S. R. H ................. .July 6, 1860 167 ..... -9 ..... 5Med ..... Pres..,Rep. Whig.lAndy. yWilliam E. Beattie.: ...... A ...... ............................ G reenville, S. C. ........... 9 S. R. H ................. 'Sept 25,1S59.. 147 ..... 8 ..... gBus ...... yEpis.. Dem Clio...,Jim, Will, Bill. Samuel H. Benton .......... A ...... ........ . ............ . San Jose, Cal .......... ..... M rs. Benton's ........ ..................... ......... ...... . 1 L aw ...... Epis.. .... ..... W hig.,Sam. vAbe S. Bickham .............. S ...... Water St ........ Dayton, O ........ ............ 1 8 S. E ........ ............ A ug. 28, 18604165 ..... -HZ M'g Bap... Rep... None.,Bick. John M. Boggs ............... A ...... .. ....................... New Athens, O ............ Mr. Zapfls ........ ...... F' eb. 7, 1857....l55 ..... -8y,..lTheol Pres.. Rep... Clio... Boggsie. sfGeorge D. Browne.: ....... A ...... ............................ H amclen, N. Y .............. 13 S. M. R. H .......... July 9,185S...l160 ..... -8M..:Law ...... Pres.. Rep... None.,Senator. John H. Bryan ............... A ...... 2654 Locust St., .... St. Louis, Mo ......... 5 E. M. W. H .......... Dec.25,1858..l166 ..... ........ - Med ...... Epis.. Dem., None ,Jack. P. Taylor Bryan .......... A ...... 2654 Locust St ...... St. Louis, lilo ......... ...... 5 E. M. W. H .......... Oct. 30,1861... 152 ..... -7 ..... Law ...... Epis.. DBm..lWl11g.! gliloward Bryant ........... A ...... 5 Front St ........... ........ D enton, Md ................. 11 N. M. R. EI ......... July 21, 1861... 145 ..... -6 ..... Law ...... Epis.. Dem.. C1io...1Pete. lfAlfred F. Burt ................ A ...... 1203'Walnut St ............. Philadelphia, Pa .......... 20 N. W ........ ..... ..... N o v. 19, 1860 157. .... -11... Und. ..... Epis.. Rep... Whig.1Fred. Malcolm Campbell ........ A ...... 259 W. 42d St ........ New York City ...... ...... 1 0 N. W .......... ...... 1 Dec. 5, 1860-.. 138 ..... -5. .... Und ...... Pres.. Rep. Whig. Cam. ifBurton S. Chamberlin ..... A ...... I713 Park Place ............. Elmira. N. Y ................ 16 S. E. H ....... ...... A pril30,1860.,150.. 9 ..... Law ...... M. E.. Dem.. Whig. Burt,.Chimby. IQYVIDK F. Chapin ............ A ...... 944 Kennard St ............ Cleveland, Ohio ........... 4 N. R. H ............... Aug. 3, 1850 .... N137 ..... -720 Und ...... Epis.. Rep... Whig.yChape, Chipcpy, John Chetwood, Jr ......... A ...... .................................... O akland, Cal ..... ........... 2 4 S. E. H ....... ........ A pril 28,1859..:135 ..... -7 ..... Law ...,.. Epis.. Rep... Wh1g.1The Count, het. ,.1fRobert K. Clark .............. A ...... 149 Mt. Pleasant Ave... Newark, N. J ............... Geo. Golclie's ......... Aug. 8, 1860... 150 ..... -751 Law ...... Epis.. Rep... None. Bob. ,fThomas S. Clarke ...,...... S ...... Oakland .................. . .... Pittsburg, Pa. ............... 8 W. W. H ........ April 25,1S60.. 160 ..... ...... U nd ...... Pres.. Rep... Whig. Tom, Tommie. Henry C1'ew .... . ...... ......... A ...... ............................. ..... W i l mington, Ohio ....... 18 N. W ..... ...... June 4,1859... 134 ..... -SZ.. C. Frien Rep... Clio... Henry, Croire, Ohio. YEdwnrd B. Critchlow ...... A ...... ...................... S alt Lake City, U .,....... 16 S. E ............ ...... O ct. 2,1858 ..... 150 ..... -10... Law ...... Pres.. Rep.. Clio... Critch, Ed. Jeremiah C. Cromer ....... A ...... ......................... M iddletown, Ind... ...... Mr. Zapf's. ........ . .... Feb. 20,1858.. 138 ..... -8 ..... 'l'heol Luth. Rep... Whig. Cromere. Charles F. Darlington ..... A ...... 602 High St .......... Newark, 'N. J ........ 24 N ........ .... ............ N Q v. 1, 1860... 158 ..... ...... L aw ...... Pres.. Rep... Whig Charlie. nfGeorge Lord Day ............ A ...... 21 W. 51st St ........ New York City ............ 14 W. W. H ............ Feb. 10, 1861.. 150 ..... -'I ..... Sci ........ Pres.. Rep... Whig Q --VCharles Denby, Jr ........... A ..... 809 2d St ............... Evansville, Ind ..... ....... 1 0 N. E. ......... ...... N ov. 14, 1861.. 140 ..... -65.. Law ...... Epis.. Dem Whig. Charlie. J. Blair Doland ......... ...... A . .... 56 Liberty St ....... Wellington, O ........ ...... C arpenter's ........... . May 15,1S61... 185 ..... ...... L aw ...... Cong. Dem Clio... Dolly, Mike. John Dunlap .................. A ...... ..................... .... C o hansey, N. .... ,. 3 N ................ ...... J an. 28, 1856. 195 ..... -HM Theol Pres.. Dem Clio... Pop. Morgan Edgar ................ A ...... .................................... N ew York City ............ 5 S. W .................... Aug. 23, 1861.. 155 ..... -10... Bus ...... Epis.. Rep. None. Ed, Professor. '-,fDwxgl1t L. Elmendorf. .... A ...... . ............................. Cranford, N. J ....... ..... . 8 S. R. H ........ ......... M ar. 13, 1859 146 ..... -10? Und ...... Pres.. Rep. Clio... VMatt ew K. Elmer ......... A ...... 137 W. Commerce St Bridgeton, N. J ............ 8 N. M. R. H.... ....... Sept. 20,1S59.. 141 ..... -106 Med ..... Pres.. Rep. Whig. Matt. Horace H. Emmons ....... Spec. .................................... Princeton, N. J ............ Adm'l Emmons' ..... Jan. 22, 1861... 145 ..... -8 ..... Und ...... Epis.. Rep... None. -- Edward H. Ernst ......... A ...... 40 E. 3d St .................... Covington, Ky ............ 9 N. W. ...... ............ N ov. 26, 1860.. 165 ..... 5-11... Bus ...... Pres.. Rep... Whig. Ed, Ned. fFletcher. -r Welcome J. L. Flick ...... A ...... 231 S. Main St ....... Wilkes Barre, Pa ......... 5 S. W .................... Oct. 29, 1858... 149 ..... 5-8 ..... Law ...... Pres.. Rep... Whig. Flicker,Bennie,Bridget, Charles V. Gabriel ......... . A ...... .... .... . ................ P l ymouth, Pa ............... 35 S. E. H ...... ...... J an.21, 1859... 142 ..... 5-8 ..... lLaw ...... None Rep... Clio... Gabe. Henry Goloknath ..... George F. Greene ..... Allan P. Guyer .......... er rd B F Halloc G a . . k Robert G. Hallock .... Barton M. Harris ...... Charles E. Harris ..... Paul Hemphill ......... John G. Hibben .............. William C. Howell .... Edward S. Hughes... Silas E. Hurin .......... Edgar R. Jackman... George G. Larcombe John Larkin ............ Charles A. Lindsley. Samuel Lloyd ........... David Magis, Jr ........ Clark H. lliarshall ..... Paul Martin ........ ...... Uzal H. McCarter .... 1 ....... James A. McWilliams ..... Charles R. Milford ......... Alfred E. Mills ...... ......... Charles W. Parker ......... Ward C. Peabody ,........... Thomas Peebles ............. George P. Pierson .......... Theodore Potter ............ wlienry S. Prentiss. Ogden ltafferty. .... . John J. Ralston .............. Edward S. Rankin ........... Pennington Ranney ....... Aaron E. Reiber ........ ..... Francis F. Root ......... os B Rone R s . ' .. ............ .. Livingston Rutherfurd.. Lewis R. Scudder ........... William W. Scudder, Jr.. William M. Shaw ............ William B. Sherwood ..... John B. Shober ............... William G. Sutphen ..... George Y. Taylor ............ Isaac N. Taylor .............. S ec. 1? ..... ?'?'LJ?' u u me ease ?' F' E' E' P F' E' F' F' :neges-5-:bf-:far-ar-afvwgzv5:55:45-5-5-:fa-5-:bass-5-page La Belle Ave.. ..... ..... La Belle Ave .... . ........ .. 39 McCulloch St ........... 207 Perry st ...... ........ 6 N. 5th st ........... ......... 645 W. 6th st., ourti ..... 140 Harris St ........ . ....... Cor. High and Main Sts 54 Washington St ......... 160 Market St ........ . ...... 532 Jefferson Ave ......... 1044,Broad St... ........... . 3566 Broad St ................. i97 Sandusky St ...... .... . . I926 North Broad St ...... 1 57 E. 61st St .................. X751 High st. ...... 721 Pearl St ........ . 45 Hamilton St .... ....... 568 High St ....... 1325 Scott St ........ . .... . 1311 Spruce St ........ ...... 10 W. Union St ............ 1150 North Ave. ........... .. Jallun der City, India... Albany, N. Y ..... ....... Philadelphia, Pa ......... Steubenville,O ......... Steubenville, O ......... Baltimore, Md .......... Belvidere, N. J ......... Chester, S. C .... Peoria, Ill ........ ,.. Keokuk, Ia ..... .... ... Newborn, N. C ........ Wyomin , O ....... ....... Bath, N. 1-I ........... ....... Savannah, Ga. ..... ........ . Sing Sing, N. Y ......... Orange, N. J .............. Orange, N. J ............. Paterson, N. J .....,..... Dayton, Pa ..... .......... Elizabeth. N. J ..... Newark, N. J ............ Circleville, N. Y ........... Attica, Incl . ....... . ......... Morristown, N. J., ....... Newark, N. J ...... ..... Princeton, N. J ....... .. Allegheny, Pa ........... Elizabeth, N. J ..... .. . Glendale, Ohio ......... New York City ....... .. Flemington, N.J ...... II McV1lle, Pa ...... . ....... . Newark, N. J ............ Elizabeth, N. J ............ Butler, Pa ...... . ........... .. New Haven, Conn ........ Strasburg,Pa ............... Newark, N. J ............ Glastonbury, Conn ...... Glastonbury, Conn ...... Covington. Ky ...... . ..... Ballston, N. Y .............. Philadel hia Pa Morristown, N. J ......... Burlington, J. ........ . Allegheny City, Pa ...... Miss Hagemanls Miss Lockhard's Mr. Guyer's ....... 18N .... . .... . .,..... ...... 18N ....,.... ... 36S.E.H ....... . 11 E. W. H.. ..... ...... 1S. M. R.. H. ..... .. 17 N.W .......... ..... 2N. W.. ..... . . 5 S. R. H ..... 110 S. E. H ...... 10 W. W. H ...... ...... 12 S. E ........... ......... 8 E. M. W. H ......... 25 N. E. H.... ....... 5 N. W ........ 7 W. W. H.. .... 27 N ............... ..... 13 N. W .................. 9 N. M. R. H. ..... .... . hs s. M. R. H ..... 9 N. E. ..,........... .... . . 12 N. M. R, H .... .... 8 S. R. H ................. Prof. Peabody's ..... 37 S. E. H ............... 13 N. W .................. 22 N. E. H ..,..... ...... 13 W. W. H. ......... . 1 W. M. W. H.. .... 27 N.. .................. .. 5N.R.H ........... 12 N. E. H ....... ...... 2 N. M. R. H ...... ..... 26 N ....................... 14 N. M. R. 5N.M..R.H ........... 25N .............. .... . 25 N... ............ 19 W. W. H ...... ...... 29 S. E. H ....... . 3 N. R. H .... . 9 S. M. R. H ...... .. 16 S.E ............ ..... 6E.W.H ....... ...- lDec. 6,1862.. June 5,185S... Oct. 24,18G0.. Jan. 28, 1856. Nov. 9,1857... May 28, 1655 May 12, 1860. F'eb.12, 1860. April 19,1861 May 15, 1861 Jan.16,1S63. Dec. 22, 1858 July 24, 1s50 May 26, 1861. lJuly 15,1S62... April 30 1859 Aug. 4, 1860.1 July 31,1861. July 20. 1861. April 21,1862.. July 5, 1861 'June 10, 1856- Jan. 4, 1862 ..... July 22,1858 oct. 22, 1862.1 April 29,1863 Mar. 18, 1857 Jan. 15. 1861... Nov. 29 1861. July 0, 1859 April 12,1860 May 19, 1857. Mar. 6, 1561... May 7. 1662 .... April 9,1863. M ay 26, 1862. Jan. 17. 1861. Aug. 24, 1861 Dec. 22, 1861. Oct. 27, 1860 Sept. 27,1s60.. Nov. 3, 1861... I140 ..... 140 ..... 156 150 130 154 150 ..... 170 ..... 155 ..... 163 ..... 190 --... 145 ..... 155..,., 130 ..... 181 --.. . 140 ..... 142 ..... 136... 160 ..... 151 ..... 172 ..... 160 ..... 174 ..... 134 ..... 160 ..... 110 ..... 159 ..... 162 ..,, , 138 ..... 134 ..... 156 ..... 144 ..... 130 ,... . 135 .-... 182 130 ..... 110 ..... 155 ..... 145 ..... 136 ..... 149 ..... 170 ..... Aug. 28, 1s50..g140 Ma f 11 1861 125 5 May 1S:1S62. July 7,1859... 181 148 6-11... 5-11 5-10M 5-10... 5-55- 6 ........ 3-M.. 5-ui.. 5-10 2 5-IOQ 5-s ..... 5-10 5-s ..... 5-1 ..... 5-10... 5-s ..... 5-7 ..... 5-10... 5-9 ..... 6 ........ 6-ZX.. 5-05- 5-5.. 6-IM.. 5-7 ..... ,Und ,... 5-10M 5-11 5-8 ..... 5-s ..... - 2, 5.42- 5-rg.. 5-0 ..... 5-10 5-5 ..... 6 ........ 5-0 ..... 5-M.. 5-6 ..... 6 ........ 5-sg.. 5-7 ..... 5-wg 5-11... Theol... Und.. None Whig. Theol... Pres.. Rep... Clio... 'Law ...... Pres.. Rep... Clio... Theol... Pres.. Rep... Clio... Theol... Pres.. Rep... Clio... Teach.. Pres.. Dem. Clio..- Law ....... ......... D em. Clio... Law... .. Pres.. Dem.. Clio... Und ..... Pres.. Rep... Whig. Law ...... Pres.. Rep... Clio... Bus .... Epis.. Dem.. Whig Law ..... Pres.. Rep... Clio... Law. ..... Epis.. Dem.. None Med .... Epis.. Dem. None Law ...... Epis.. None None Law ..... Pres.. Rep... Clio.,. Med ..... Pres..lRep... Whig. iMed ..... Pres..'Rep...,None Theol... U. P...1Rep...1Whig. Bus .... Pres.. Rep...fClio... Bus .... Pres.. Rep...lWhig. -Theol... Pres.. 1 ....... Clio... QLaw ..... None I.R... Whig. IUnd .... ,Epis.. Rep... Clio... Law ..... lEpis,. Rep... Clio... Pres.. Rep... Clio... iUnd .... R. P.. None Whig. Theol... Pres.. Rep... Clio... Und .... Pres.. Rep ..., Clio... Mec. E. Pres.. Rep ...' Whig. Med Pres.. Dem..,Whig. Theol... U. P... Rep...'Whig. C. E ..... fPres.. Rep... Clio... Bus ...... Pres.. Rep...lClio...! Law ..... Luth. Dem.. Whig! Med ..... ,Press Rep... Clio... Med .... Pres.. Dem..lWl1ig. Und ..... Epis.. Rep... None Theol... Cong. Rep... Clio... Theol...lCong. Rep... Cli9...l Law. .... Bap .. Rep ..., Clio... M'g Pres.. Rep...lClio... Med ..... 5Epis.. Rep... None .Iourn...1Pres.. Rep...lWhig. Med. .... Pres.. Rep... Clio... Bus ...... Pres.. Rep... Whig. Darius. Polly. l'2Esthele Oscar Wilde, Nance B, Beethoven Mozart. Chubby. Phoebus. Doep . Ed, Huj us. Silas. Jack. G, Gum, Tommie. ' Jack, Sal. Charlie. Sam. Dave. Tommie, Jimmy. Paul. Mac. Mac. Fatty, Milly. Alf. Millsie. Charlie. Pewee. Peck, Puck, Georgie. Blondy. Henry. Harry. .lim, O'Rourke. Jimmie, Jay. Ed, Rank, Rankie. Penn. Jack, Sluffy, Fat. Governor, Doc. Pete, Baron, Judas. Scrute. Black Scudder. White Scudder. Billy. Mother. Shobe, Jack, Beede. Billy, Signor Stephane. Judge. Isaac. CLASS OF 1882.-Siczizkfzks C07ZfZ'7ZZLE6lI. T. Wall, fu? 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R 5 Y E Ew'B E gwm w N , QEEP m9w - p WSOP B v-55 : 7 ' 'rg 'F Sw?-of 3 . - msc - 3:31 m, SS THE NASSAU HERALD Number in Class- Academic ......... . . . Scientific ...... ......... Civil Engineering... Special .................. Total ........ Suzmmazryt Entered Class in 1878 ........ 1879 ,....... ' 1880 ........ U 1881 ........ Total ........ C11os ...... . ..... .. Whigs ....... Neither ..., ............ 1 ...... Philadelphian Society ....... St. 1?a,u1's Society ....... In 1850 was born ...... 1856 were born. .... u 1857 as ac is 1858 as zz an 1859 ,xc u u 1860 cs : ca 1861 cc cz ac 1862 sz Ac cz 1863 as as ...U--.. .............-............. ................-...U-f... Favored Year, 1861 In January were born......... .... February H March H U Ac April cc A H May I H ll H I H H H h A 54 y THE NASSAU HERALD. if H ll September ' 3 October ' 8 'f November ......,................. ....... . .. 10 December ...................................... 9 Favored Month, July. Class Birthday ........ ........ . ....................................... S ept. 25, 1859 Aggregate Age ........ ................. 2 ,242 years, 13 days Average Age. ............ ....... 2 2 years, 8 mos., 25.3 days Aggregate Weight ....... ......... ................... 1 4 ,894 lbs. Average Weight ..... .. ........ 1505 lbs. Aggregate Height ..... ...... 5 72 ft.- 8 in. Average Height ............. ................... 5 ft. 921- in. Average Chest Measure ...... .............. . ......... ' ...385 in. Maximum Age ............... ...... 3 1 yrs., 9 mos., 16 days. Minimum Age .......... ....... 1 9 yrs., 1 mo., 21 days. Maximum Weight ....... ......... .... ............. 1 9 5 lbs. Minimum Weight ........ ......... 1 10 lbs. Maximum Height ......... ....... 6 ft. 3 in. Minimum Height .............. ..... 5 ft. 451 in. Maximum Chest Measure ...... ...... 4 4 in. Minimum Chest Measure ...... ....... 3 2 in. Pollers-.. ...................... 57 Loafers ...... ...... ..... 2 4 Both at times ..... .... 1 8 Card Players ....... .... 6 4 Billiard Players ...... .... 5 2 Smokers ........... .... 4 4 Chewers ....... .... 2 Y Drinkers ...... .... ..... . 23 Theatre-goers .................... .... 7 5 Summoned before Faculty ....... .... 2 5 Sent Home ......................... .. .. 9 Engaged ...... .......................... ......... ....... 5 Average Expenditure in Senior Year ........... ....... 3 690 OCCUPATIONS. Law .............. . ............................. .... 3 3 Theology ....... ........................... .... 1 3 Medicine ....... 13 Business ........................ -.-- 1 2 Civil Engineering ...... ...... ---- 3 Mechanical Engineering ....... ---- 2 Mining Engineering .......... .... 2 Journalism .. 2 Teaching..,. .. Science...... .. THE NASSAU HERALD Undecided ...... ..... . .......... . .... . . DENOMINATIONS Presbyterian .... .... ................ , ....... Episcopal ...... Methodist .... ....... Congregational ...... Baptist ............... Lutheran ...... United Presbyterian ...... . Reformed Presbyterian ...... Friends ..... . .. None .... .. .. Republicans.. Democrats .... Independent Independent None... .... New Jerseyi.. Pennsylvania. New YorK..., Ohio .....,...... California .... Republicans POLITICS un... ..............-.-....... REPRESENTATION Connecticut ..... Indiana ...... .. Kentucky ..... Maryland ..... Missouri ....... South Carolina ............ District of Columbia ...... . Georgia, .... Illinois ..,.................. India ............... IoWa.... ....... .. .... . Massachusetts ......... New Hampshire ....... North Carolina ..,... Utah ....... ...... EX-MEMBERS OF THE CLASS OF 1882. 'Cf oi 93 . ao NAME. ADDRESS. 453 22,1 A li PRESENT EMPLOYMENT. Ei 3 E. N. Black, Jr ..... Kingsessing P. O., Philadelphia ............ Sept., '78 June, '79 Farming. E. P. Budd. .......... Mt. Holly, N. J ............................ ..,.. ' ' '78 Dec., '79 Law. W. E. Collis ......... Chester, N. J ...................................... '78 Mar., '81 Business, Cooper Iron Mining Co. F. D. Cooley ..... .... S t. Paul, Minn ..................................,. - '78 June, '79 Passenger Dept., C., S. P., M. and O. R. R. F. M. Cornwall ..... Barnard and Liberty Sts., Savannah, Ga. Jan., '79 Dec., '79 Cotton Business. Wm. D. Craig ....... Plainfield, N. J .... ............................... S ept,., '78 May, '81 Medicine. K. De Renne ........ if 178 ' H. W. Dunning .... Kingston, Pa ........... . '78 June, '79 Law. NM. R. Ely .......... '79 J. B. Fine ............ Great Barrington, Mass ....... '78 April, '81 Teaching, Sedgewick Institute. H. B. Gayley ........ Norristown, Pa V... ............ ' ' '79 May, '80 Civil Engineering, P. R. R. ' T. A. Gill ........ Esopus, N.Y ...... L ........ '78 Oct., '80 Entered '83, Princeton, Sept., '81, H. H. Gray .......... Pittsburg, Pa ....................... ........... ' ' '79 Nov., '79 E. B. Grier ...... Birmingham, Pa ................................ ' '79 April, '80 Medicine, University of Pa. T. B. Guerin ......... 47 Clinton Avenue, Newark, N. J ........ U '78 Dec., '79 Business, Drug Store. J..S. Hillhouse ..... Calhoun, Ga ..... ............................ ' ' '78 June, '80 Theological Seminary, Princeton, N. J. 'I' N. H. Kingsley... H '79 T. A. Lathrop ...... 41 Broadway, New York ...... '78 Dec., '79 Broker. P. D. Lauman ...... '78 Dec., '79 Agent for Theatrical Troupe. W. Leisenring ...... Sandy Run, Pa ................. ..... ' ' '78 June, '79 Mining, Ass'tSupt.M.S.Kemmerer 85 Co. F. A. Libbey.... ..... 47 Park Avenue, New York ...... .. ., 'i -- '78 June, '79,Entered '83, Princeton. ' J. C. Life ........ ..... M cEwensvi1le, Pa ................... .... ' '78 Oct., '80lEntered '83, Princeton, Sept., '8l. G. W. Lowder ...... '78 June, '79 J. E. Maxwell ...... Millersburg, O ........ .... Jan., '79 June, '79 Entered '84, Princeton, Sept., '8l. 99 'CFIVHQTH' LZ VSSVAZ HILL W. J. Montgomery English Turn P. O., La ......... S Walter Murphy .... 111 South Forty-second St.,Ph I cl l h F. M. Porch ......... Bridgeton, N. J ................... E. S. Simons ......... 613 Sansom St., Philadelphia Frank Simpson .... Orange, N. J ...... ...... .......... IG. B. Stanchiield J. J. Surnmerill ..... Pennsgrove, Salem Co., N. J.. Q A. M. Terriberry.. S. B. Van Stone .... Peapack, Somerset Co., N. J.. M. J. White ......... 143 East Twenty-sixth St., Ne E. L. Yaeger ...... .. Denver, Col .... .............. ..... . R. S. Yard ............ Washington, N. J ................ F. B. Young ......... 1058 Broad St., Newark ....... 'K Died May 26th, 1880. 1' Died September 10th, 1880. ji Died June 9th,1880. QDied April 18th, 1880. 58 THE NASSAU HERALD. lqtiienellexleune Statizstirze. CLASS ORGANIZAT1ON. President-John G. Hibben. Secretary-Geo1'ge Y. Taylor. CLASS CREWS-FRESHMAN YEAR. ' W. E. Beattie, Bow, T. A..Gill, 25 P. Hemphill, 35 S. H. Benton, 45 H. D. Wilcox, 55 J. H. Bryan, Stroke, Capt. ' SOPHOMORE YEAR. S. H. Benton, Bowg P. T. Bryan, 25 A. M. Terriberry, 35 J. Larkin, 45 T. A. Gill, 55 J. H. Bryan, Stroke, Capt. CLASS NINES-FRESHLIAN YEAR. Summerill, H., Potter, P., Toler, A.5 Budd, 13.5 De Renne, 0.5 Raf- ferty, s. 5 Emmons, L. 5 Guerin. M. 5 Cooley, R. THIRD TERM-FRESHMAN YEAR. Toler, H. QCa.pt.j5 Potter, P., Larkin, A.5 Budd, 12.5 C. E. Harris, 0.5 Rafferty, s.5 Ely, L., Emmons, M.5 Guerin, R. SOPHOMORE YEAR. Toler, R. fCa.pt.j5 Potter, P.5 Budd, A.5 Winton, B., C. E. Harris, 0.5 Rafferty, s.5 Ely, L.5 Emmons, M.5 Guerin, R. JUNIOR YEAR. V To1er,H.5 Ernst, P., Winton, A.5 Rafferty, 13.5 C. E. Harris, c. QCapt.j5 Larkin, s.5 Emmons, L.5 Banney, M,5 Potter, R. SENIOR YEAR. Toler, H.5 Ernst, P., Winton, A.5 Rafferty, B. 5 C. E. Harris, 0. ,QCa.pt.j5 Larkin, s.5 Warfield, L.5 Magie, M., Potter, R. E - THE NASSAU HERALD. 59 CLASS FOOT-BALL TEAM-SOPHOMORE YEAR. Forwards-T. Bryan, Gill, Terriberry, Burt fCa.pt.l, Benton, R. K. Clark. Half-Backs-Wilson, Ely, Chetwood. Backs-Wallace, C. E. Harris. SOPHOMORE RECEPTION COMMITTEE. Shober, Burt, Hibben, Edgar, Simons, Welles, Ely, R. K. Clark, C. E. Harris, Beattie, Toler, Westervelt, Chapin fChairma.nj. WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY ORATO RS. Freshman Year-J. A. McWilliams. Sophomore Year--R. K1 Clerk Junior Yeare-H. Bryant. Senior Year-W. J. L. Flick. HALL PRIZEMEN OF '82. Cuo. ' WHIG. FRESHMAN SPEAKING. ' J. A. McWilliams, lst. Geo. Westervelt, lst. A. M. Terriberry, 2d. R. K. Clark, Zd. U n SOPHOMORE ORATIONS. J. A. McWilliams, Ist. A T. Peebles, lst. G. F. Greene, Zd. G. L. Day, 2d. , SOPHOMORE Essufs. G. F. Greene, lst. ' R. C. Hallock, 2d. JUNIOR OEAT1oNs. W. E. Beattie. A. F. Burt. G. F. Greene. G. L. Day, 3d. R. C. Hallock. J. G. Hibben, 4th, J. A. McWilliams, lst. ' T. Peebles, 2d. MacLean Prizeman-G. F. Greene. EXTEMPORE DEBATE. . COMPETITIVE DEBATE. b H, Crew, 2d, I. G. L. Day, lst. II. T. Peebles, lst. l III. J. G. Hibben, lst. IV. E. D. Warfield, lst. SENIOR ESSAYS. COMPETITIVE ESSAYS. R. C. Hallock, lst. G. L. Day' 155- T. Potter, 2d. 60 THE NASSAU HERALD. SENIOR ESSAYS. COMPETITIVE ESSAYS. ' SENIOR osuons. H. Crew, lst. C. R. Milford, lst. W. W. Scudder, Jr., Zd. J. Chetwood, Jr., 2d. LYNDE DEBATERS. . H. Crew. J. C. Cromer. 'L. R. scudder. G. L. Day. G. Y. Taylor. T. Peebles. ' LIT. PRIZEMEN. W. G. Sutphen, QTwoj. G. F. Greene. R, C. Hallock, KTWOJQ J. Chetwood, Jr. G. Y. Taylor. G. L. Day. BRIO-JS-BRAC EDITORS. E. B. Critchlow, Chairman. A. F. Burt. J. A. McWilliams. P. Hemphill. H. H.lWelles, Jr. J. G. Hibben. John Wilson. EDITORS OF THE NASSAU LITERARY MAGAZINE. G. F. Greene. T. Potter. W. G. Sutphen. R. C. Hallock. W. W. Scudcler, Jr. E. D. Wariield. G' L' Day' Managing Editors. G. Y. Taylor, 36-D5nSgEg,:gnlReSignedl' E Treasurers. PRINCETONIAN EDITORS FROM '82. B. S. Chamberlin. ' E. S. Rankin. E. B. Critohlow. J. Wilson fResignedl. E. S. Hughes. D. W. Woods, Jr. W. Murphy fResignedj. E. B. Critchlow, fResignedl H. H' Welles, Jr. ' Managing Editors. Treasurer, B. G. Winton. EDITORS OF THE PRINCETON TIGER. T. S. Clarke, '82 fManager of Art Departmental. W. C. Sutphen, '82 QManager of Lit. Departmental. H. W. Hall, '83. W. J. L. Flick, Business Manager. 1880 CAMPAIGN NOMINEES FROM '82. Rep.-Vice Pres., G. L. Day. Dem.-Vice Pres., P. Hemphill' THE NASSAU HERALD. 61 COLLEGE PRIZEMEN. Freshman, First-Honor, G. L. Day. Sophomore, G. L. Day. Second J. G. Hibben. Third G. Y. Taylor. Mathematical, J. G. Hibben. Junior, First Honor, G. L. Day. Dickinson Prize, T. Potter. Latin Salutatory, G. L. Day. English Salutatory, G. Y. Taylor. Valedictorian, J. G. Hibben. COLLEGE GLEE CLUB. D. L. Elmendorf, '82, Leader. C. Denby, Jr., '82, Business Manager. First Tenors, J. T. Haxall, '83, G. R. Fleming, 83, W. C. Hill, '84. Second Tenors, J. B. Shober, '82, U. H. McCarter, '82, T. A. C. Baker, '83. I First Bassos, E. H. Ernst, '82, J. S. Harlan, '83, A. E. Clerihew, '85. Second Bassos, R. F. Shanklin, '83, F. R. Wadleigh, '83, E. L. Bradley, '84. Accompanist, C. I. Young. INSTRUMENTAL CLUB. C. W. Parker, '82, Leader. E. J. White, '82, Business Manager. First Violins, C. W. Parker, '82, W. Chester, '84. second Violins, R. W. spear, '83, W. F. Reynoids, '84. J. Larkin, '82, Bass. C. E. Spahr, P. C., Flute. E. J. White, '82, Clarinet. W. L. Nassau, '84, Piano. W. W. Conner, '85, Cornet. UNIVERSITY BASE-BALL NlNE.' Sohenck, '80, H., Ernst, '82, P., Larkin, '82, A., Rafferty, '82, B. QCapt.j, Harlan, '83, C., A. Wilson, '83, s., Clark, '85, L., Wadleigh, '83, M., C. E. Harris, '82, R. UNIVERSITY FOOT-BALL TEAM. Forwards-Stone, '83, Benton, '82, J. Bryan, '82, Riggs, '83, Hax- all, '83, T. Bryan, '82, fCapt.j Half-Backs-Baker, '83, Peace, '83, Burt, '82, Backs-Harlan,.'83, Shaw, P. C. UNIVERSITY CREW. Baker, '83, Bow, Jennison, '83, 2d,- Bird, '85, 3d, Howell, '83, Stroke. T. B. PEDDIE 81 Co., TIILINIQS, IIAIISES, TRIIIIELING BI-IGS, LADIES' SATUIIELS, Ice., NEWARK, N. :r'., -AND AT OUR- New YUM? Sczfesffoam, 77 Chambeffs SZ. STYLE, STABILITY AND LOW PRICES. ' SAMUEL BUDDL IYIOSIIQII, GLOIIEII -A ?A N D? SHIRT MIIICERS WLAWN TENNIS SUITSQH Q A SPECIALTY. IIIII BROADWAY, NEW Yom f E. A, N EWELL, MEN'S OUTFITTER, 859 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, One door above 17th St. O ND BLACK S arfs and Handkerch f 1 L t t N 1 G1 Canes and Umbrellas, St d Sl B tt az SZ DRESS SHIRTS TO MEASURE. P.E.x.CIEi. , Qeeeeege eWJJee e em JJlJefe , 941 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. BRANCH ESTABLEHMENTS: Gannbridge, Mass. New Haven, Uonn. Long Branch, IV. J. Prlncefon, IV. J. KJDD M FG. CO., 425 6in Avenue, Bef. 25171 di 26171 Sfreefs, KFETX7 YQEIQ. ' Base Bell Feet Bell, Bieyele, Eriekei, Lawn Tennis Beating SUITS. J. MARSHALL 85 BALL, Gleehieee, eee, eee, eu Breen street, Newark, N. J. ee een ee Newark Ave., Jersey City, N. J. 209 and 211 Mein St., Pateeee11,N. J. can CARJWJNA 7057 OUT! Fifth Edition, Enlarged and Revised, of CARMINA 'PRfNCETONIA. - A Collection of the Students' Songs of Princeton College by a Committee f th Cl s f 1882, Mnssns. Ennmunoiw, Pmznzn AND Eimsm. ELEGANTLY BOUND IN CLOTH AND GILT. PRICE, 31.50. 3301115 to any address, on receipt of price, by the publishers, MARTIN R. DENNIS Su CO., Newark, N J DOUGHTY 8L PEDERSON, Mmmmmemc e, mmelfiee mel meemaellmm, 23 MAIDEN LANE, NEW YORK. Repairing and Adjusting Fine Watches a. Specialty. 'VVAITE gl SDN, u PRINCETON N 7-f., MILLINERY Ami Fzzfnzkkzhg Goods. WM, McCLENAHAJV, El lie emi mm lleeeeg Y. M. c. AssoclATloN BUILDING, 235. St- :SZ 41th. Jive., NEW YORIC 6, TAILOR AND HABIT MAKER fo! Somh Tkzkfeenfh Sfffeei, CFrom POOLE'S, London.l MARSH, BURKE C96 COX, NEXT DOOR TO THE. POST OFFICE, DHUGGISTS AMD AEQTHEQAHEES, Perfumery, Lamps and La.mpllE'D1Z::1IrZI: ifixancy Articles, Window and Picture Glass, Looking-Glass Plates, Enameled Glass, Sac. SOJDA. V77 ALTER. Cl ar and Sparkling, Colder than the Coldest. All the Cholcest Syrups ' S PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY COMPOUNDED. Th ' ntinued patronage of students and the public generally is re p tf lly solicited. ' y - ra J- - J f YL. 9 GFULEQISSQ PRllVOE70!V LIVEHVRSTABLE. HORSES TAKEN ON LIVERYQ Lzlglzzf WMKOYZS ami Coaches to Le! cz! All Hours. fr. W. Lnvnxz, PRACTICAL WATCHMAKER AND OPTICIAN, Nearly Opposite Old Residence of Pres. McCosh, Nassau Street, Princeton, N. .T. THOS. C. HILL, CATEREIR, CONFECTIONEIR AND BAKER 11 G-reene Street., Trenton, INF. J'- DINING ROOMS ATTACHED. WM. L. HANKINS, . Dmggrlst. Soda. 'iX7'e.te:c a.:L::.6l. Segars A. SPECIALTY. NASSAU STREET, PRINCETON, N. J. VALENTINE ARNI-IEITER, V Nassau Sfreef, 'Pr1'ncef0n. IV. J. Constantly on hand, a. large assortment of FRENCH AND GERMAN OLOTHS, CASSIMERES, 850. Which will be made up in the best style. GEORGE THOMPSON, Q ., 1 .r ' OPP. THE COLLEGE, PRINCETON, N. J. A11 k d of Book Binding done with Neatness and Despatch. OLD BOOKS REBOUND to Look as Good as New. A FULL SUPPLY OF STUDENTS' NOTE BOOKS CONS'I'AN'l'LY ON HAND. .H Qc... Em, AHTISTIIIM HMH-CUTTING HENRY RUNYAN, ' Books, Stationery, Clocks, Watches, Jew- elry, Spectacles. Eye-Glasses, Picture , Frames, Bans. Balls, and ' Fancy Goods. I 0pp.D M y N St PRINCETON, N. J. WM. M. LEIIGH. Ulellzzrg, Gerls' Fezrmshzrg Goods AND NOTIONS, Nassau Hotel Building, Princetoh, N. J. ELIJAH LEIGH. A. D. COOK. LEIGH Sz COOK, WHULESALE ANU HHTAILGHUQEHS, 'NASSAU HOTEL BUILDING, PRINC ETC BT, N. T. 'Q A. TER1-IUNE, -DEALER IN- llals and Gaps, Beers and Sheesg Trunks, Traveling Bags, Umbrellas, de., NASSAU STREET, PRIN CETON. NASSAU HQTEL, PRINCETON, N. 1. A. D. COOK, Proprieto MO N N. NINN IIIN., TAYLOR OPERA HOUSE, TRENTON, N. J., GIINTLIINIENIS FINE FIIIINISIIINGS, etwlzsaieemil nrfwr g, Qremmmrr -AND- I SAELOQJNQ I MEALS AT ALL HOURS. Parties supplied with everythipg necessary to make an Enter- tainment complete. Prices moderate. F. 0. BQRDEN, ' MANSION HOUSE. 9 .3 - 65 99 35 E. Sfafe Sfreef, Tlfenfon, J., I HARDWARE, H EATERS, I MLNHTELS, STOYESQ I Pfumbmg, Gas and Siem F1'ff17'1g. LAR GES7f FINEST NOBIBIEST STOCK OF S S IN THE CITY. A Fine Assortment of DUNLAP MACKINAWS. Am, PRINCETON COLLEGE BANDS 'EOTTEL THE EATTEE .33 East State Street, Trenton, N. J. h Pffmfevfs Mike Nassazz Hefafci. O D E P E E 4 P D .zD7fZ'7Zf and Pvfospeff' Mawrellish E Eigley, BUCK ANDJUB 16. EAST STATE STREET, TRENTON, N. J. OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, V PROAEPTLY EEZECZTTEID. SEND EOR SAMPLES AND ESTIMATES. , , , , . , Q . p ' D 3 - This Sprinkling of ,Warm and cool together--hot and ooldfsometimes-is 'Nature's Way of 'getting from YVinter to Summerj and from Summer 'back again to Winter, ' y , e . W ' , Life is put together in the same Way. We pass fromlstage to stage by leaps and stumbles, by ups and dovvnsg e It is a Way having all the looks of acoidentg butvvho 'knows by what Wisdom and good Will it is guided? ' 4 y y :j i l -r A If every day brought us knowledge of the next, 'Would We providebetter for it ?. Do We indeed look out for the most certain things before us? Do not hope. and fear Cbothiof themalways mixed with un- yve Wait, dumb, for the ineyitablef? Q V ' ' . 1. Butfclothesjcool the heat and Warm the cold. P We have it in -our power, simply by clothes, to make ia steady :servant of the ineonstant iweatlierg, Clothes are not ,happiness and prosperityj but they make pleasureand' industry possibleg they make' the hours longerg and moreof them in a day, eandibring sweeter resjtQat'nightQ f Who knows' but shifting-heatsf and fitful fears are alike bestowed to -develop eapaeityxfor clothes? , ' f , ' -1 y V Ate all events, this is to remind youthat the best place to buy Clothing, either ready-made or made to order, is sau- i i ,I e u . ' mar Wauausrrsfa a eo s, Nos. 818 and 8:20 Chestnut Street, 'i p W ia rms ieinxerrra., W 'certaintyj urge us this Way and that every day, While


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Princeton University - Nassau Herald Yearbook (Princeton, NJ) online collection, 1880 Edition, Page 1

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