Princeton University - Nassau Herald Yearbook (Princeton, NJ)
- Class of 1894
Page 1 of 156
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 156 of the 1894 volume:
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2 A ,Q-fi' EXXoi?3i,?xSr2iimw Z2 ix X f eekvzss wi,-SX :E -225 l , kiiiiiiifggsgigg:gi5q5,:2Eg-2222 -XMAS in iiyfxabyiggtx 'QED' X-,?i-5 is .I ff- 'Q ig . X -I A W ii - x S E sq 6 y ll in iliiiii xx, on , i eliiliiiliii-i, X E 5 :EX il, H1416 A ef k N S X S 'X L. , 'W i Qxx SN S ef X we E S- E324 -. xx we X E N 5 QQ W- N S QNX if Xi -Q wg '- x 5 MEN SN 2 XSS ix,bCA? ,', 'EN R Q S S 5 V75 X f. 615413:-:Q?:' '77' iei -sq' ,Q ' Xi SE X A ' ,- ,Tri YA CXYVNX X N Q N X b i . l ' ' ' xi f lfm l, ' will Jill' 5 if ,e -, , e- -, A, - .f.Aq,-,-- I v sf M . Wx X f 1 - 1 --- X N if IF-I Q f - X f e m M wx wqfil lf f-1-HH,-QMA-Whx' E D Ui ill 4-.86 RBRUG'S GOLDEN SCEPTRE. EP FP We Want YOU no 1513 GOLDEN QCEPTRE If a -all fhe talk in the World Willk not con- vin ce as quickly as a, trial that it is almost perfection. XVe will send on recelpt of 10c. ai sample to any address SURBRUG, l59 FULTON ST., NEW YORK CITY. Prices GOLDEN SCEPTRE: llb.,-351-30iM1b-f Mie. Postage paid. Send for paimphleb of our goods g1VlIlg lists of dealers who handle them. I 4-er1-'11-,mag rophies 4 FOR e College en. See Plate. 1. Messrs. TIFFANYSL Cofs recent products include the i Harvard-Yale Track Athletic Cup. Cornell University 'G ff Lawrenceville School U 4' Walter 03111111 Football ff Cornell University 4' ff t pIl1lJ61'COll6g'i2lt9 Chess ff Cornell University Baseball ff As most of these designs entered into open com- petition With many others, the unanimous votes ofthe leading Universities proclaim them as examples of the highest types of American Art-metal work. iflany 85 o. pUnion Square, lXlew York. j I 1,915 f sf: 7 A 3 - ,i ' 4 ff f' w 'ff' . 1 K 4 la 'X l f I, Ax f 5 A ' , L , , ' - ' ' ' Y?-121 r Ab . 1-1' I X' 1 ,. K 4 1. cf' -I V' .-1? -LE.- 1 ' W fi C ' X pf AAZ' LT 1 - HIGH-CLASS TAILORING ZQ2 Fifth Avenue, QBETNVEEN THE HOLLAND AN1v W.XI.1 mlil'. NEW YORK. FDR D132IVINC 2 The Ke1111e1', Eilflll linux QU411 A SPECIALTY. .. :Ti A -l..:- '- , 71. -rrrgurrursrrrrzr..---.-- .--- -- .- in n - . ' H- ':CQ'G's's s'Cx 'iii'is'Ci6S's'x ii's'CfCCs ' sim. 'hi .- 2s.x.a.-- .-.--..-..-nfs. .-.:..m-1 -Ce-xar.- -S':::w:' X '.m '-'S ' ' I's l'x f'N !'A ' Illia Mill- HW' - ...- :jggf ' 1 .1 T1 7TT?1,:m- , ssxsQxx:sssQss.-- . -,.. 4--D '- --fre.-. ::.. 5 '-29:1 -N '-..,.-:Q A 'AD E X .. I W 1,1 . z:-3-sf-jx Ii, ,fl -77 I ., N gif,,f ' gl , NSN ml : fi-l-L :ii b U -Ae: -'12 -' N N A M N mm NSS X E - itil? GW: Y: Y Y I 'Z X 'l 99359. cg' ' - QQXXXXX-4, i X 3'-iii Q Q N 'JL' :!l':nl ' V- f .gil - 5155352-nf VE: ,'-,4 7 D H JL 5' 5 ' g A A-.f: E: :iz 53? N ' V w ers-111 , ff Nix N xf:.l:-- L- --- - r -f-Nw: --x X N N ff?-Lrg - .fn Av 3.1 . xl I X, ,, 1,-N47 Jcbhu Pattergfm 55 GQ and IMPQRTER NGS. Q5 and Q W. 261311 street, EW YORK4 I I 5 HLAND HOUSE, 5 . if Fourth Avenue ,and 24th Street, NEW YORK OITK pl M Ci' s uqlre the ASHLAND is the Among the many first-class Hotels surrounding a ison q , d d I, rr , most centrally located, both for business purposes and pleasure. The elevate roa s, Use 1 - ' ' F h A enue cars pa-s A 4 fashionable retail stores and theatres, are in the close vicinity. The ourt V A ' j - - h G nd Central i the door, running from. the Brooklyn Bridge to Central Park , they also pass tse ra ag- E Depot, which is ten minutes ride from Hotel. The cross-town cars, on 23d treet, carry p. . sengers to all railroad depots, and steamboat landings at the Eastancl North Rivers. During the past year extensive alterations have been made, several adjoining' houses have beerl annexed, affording a larger number of very desirable rooms, and an Otis electric elevator has been added. A One ofthe chief attractions of the ASHLAND is its Restaurant, which is first-class and second to none in the city. The house being on the American and European plans, guests have the choice of rooms with or without board. l1. 3 i PRICES : 5 1 Rooms, with Board, 82.50 and 83.00 per day. , Rooms, without Board, 81.00 and upwards. Breakfast, '75 Cents. Lunch, 50 Cents. Dinner, 81.00. H. H. BROCKWAY, Proprietor. . i Q N X vw f f f 244.41-j rss-'-eg' x., .rsgzgsshx N, .' QK?::?,- ' ' I - TRADE MARK The graduates and students of Princeton are fully acquainted with the merits and advantages of liavin-Y their Tailoring orders placed with W H DIXON , ' ll..-X17l'fl.l'lll.X. opposite Post Office I7 South Ninth Street i ra Nu HATS UMBRELLAS SHOES SHIRTS A SPECIALTY HESS SMITH MFG CO FINE CUSTOM ' 9 Llrnishing Goods, 28 PARK .PLZ-XCE, New York City. GENTS' E.6oW. FINE NECKWEAR. COLLARS AND CUFFS sf A MATT EI A A ,L 'EURYEEVFAN ,, ,.oQ!J7SE,, roadway and zgth. Sweet. 113151385 BANG, Bgoprietor IIEEFQI-.VLE133LQ'1iL'I1 E'UBO?ELXl?T- PLAN .E'5.,Q'!!!!-!!Q MEM ONLY A STEP . ---FROM-i- Q Both stations to the largest Clothing and Furnishing Goods house in the city. A.C. YATES 81. C0., 73fh and Ohesfnui Sis., Pl71'!0da'fl:fa ACH Ros. Qoffege l5Ro'log1mPfKoPs. Broadway, N EW? YO R K. Branch ES'daD.bJii,Sr1+m mexnfsNr: CAMBRIDGE, Mfxss. Nliw 1l,xx'1-rx, voxxs GCEAN GROVE, N- ,IQ LUNG 1:14.-xxvu, N, ul 1'Rl NCTlC'l'ON, N. -I. The Alps. The Rhineea. caaeThe Battle-Field Route- 1 gn 251 ' - ?:e:l245f-,sr-' gf' S-bi, ,... . vm,-.fry Mc. . if f Qfafsirrz. 1- . fiiirfz: , -:iz-'--Pfgx img: ,. ,, Afyfhvg- '-g , q f ,-3-2 1, f -.1 ' ?f1' 4fh75,'5Z -392 lf 777i 742 4 -' if K zz, ,,,, ...im , ,,f..4,f4 M- W 1 ,lf . f . , -. 4' QW .ai 1--'1 W W: -:HW ?' ,hi ..- jflsissf-' , -- 'V ' WMYWA '94 IQ 'i W7 .-'oh' 9: IJ.,-' HRX -523 e g - - ,445 if if ff Q3 i- - , -e w-vfftf H f-1-wi 31' '- 1. er . Y f' ,, 5320- 1- CQ 'A :Eiga -' ' : E ,1l fjQ 5Z5l 15,1 -iii mg-011 -- rg N me .,'e:,fl-..:iE.-- ,..f ,l ' ff 5121 .f,1 4t' rf 1z.-ei' 5-4 V .. fr .' - ,vel fl-'-I - .2 Mi n' 'fm Q? -Li :. t he 6a f2:5 ZJ. 4zZ .. We- , 3 5' -W, '1 rniev ' wg, ff,-1 ?ffg 7,avy , ' - LZ..-jr My , -. , ,V 1 ..-'I.v.,: ig MLEEEF-?ILg:1EEEf- ' , ,,.., ' -1-' 9 7?.l'f'fL'iL'7 K 5- 71:5 'il 3 . fi iw! f ltlle ftfi tfa :5-5:3 of' the ffl-Iera1d would respectfully call 4 5. -the .students of the -University sto the A advertlsements, Whlchrepresent-the ,most alla best?-equipped lines ln the country W in hesapeake and Ohio Route Of unusual interest and unsurpassed in physical condition and equipment. lt passes through more grand and beautiful scenery, near more great battle-fields, and over more historic ground, than any other railway line in America. THE AMOUS F. F. . IMITED, Running between New York, Cincinnati and Louisville, via Plrilaclelphia, Balti- more and Wfashington, is a solid, vestibuled, electric-lighted, steam-heated, Pullman-built train, with through dining-car, a marvel of elegance and complete- ness, conceded to be without a rival, even in this day of railway perfection. The F. F. V. leaves New York, via Pennsylvania Railroad, daily, at 5:00 P. M. The Cincinnati and St. Louis Special at 8:00, week-days. For tickets, baggage checks, Pullman-car reservations, or information, apply to Com Jan f's oflices 062 and I ez' Broadwav, New York or oftices Penns lvania l 3 v .J J J . v Railroad, or any coupon ticket office in New England or the XVest. H. W. FULLER, FRANK MCCUNNELL, General Passenger Agent, PBSSGDQSI' Agent. lVashington, D. C. 362 Broadway, New York. ff- T5 ',., V Af? 11 ' '. FJ.. M . A A Wg A i , X 0 1 : ' Q I ' , A ' Ai. D W Q, yi V' ' .'i6..QW?f fwfmk f' f 0 i if -Qs .. n -,i,, O ' . 'mljf' SH .W Z fa-!2W A-G-f XWIW' 4 141, f 2,32 ,-. . .. Z X- Q g Z VV N .A ff :A-Ii , 'fl' -W 1. , 1 , ' 'bg UH l fm Zi lhiyi t I M L -,tin , VKX' . 'm fr' - lm I 'tm ' x eya-J: '57-a '74 tl Ol' 6 ' ab' f ' 4 - 'N O. f . . . . , E 4 ' ,. X .1 .Y gfgdr-1-wi... fi . . , J . v ' -4 my , ,a-.1p.y'5f'.f',, nf' y ' ' ' - - 4 ' A fa. 'ww Q ' f e2MQ?ffs',5i3w-.,3. A A ' , ff, 1::f:5'ffi4,- ' .1 -- '.-l's'f4Z? -- 1 . A , ,--+..e,1.fe A . P.-1. .v 72r- . 'fi' A 3 . A AW .-,P-... a.. l 1 , f . ,-k,37qtgggg34.g.'J: J ' JZ ' , -QTf,?3gf?rv i:y?5Q'lf2 ,f 1 A - 3-.4-,,-.j'-LQ 1.1,-I , V, g f.. ying: vig:-N51 Wk . 93-M- f3,1 4. E -WZ59ff:Y: ' ' f - M - rr.. .3'1f',w.'.gf2 '- V r- A ef f 't,:.5:.fC5:g,,.,.,,3.1. , 4 A S' - -1gf:fe :'f'- Ulf:-fu A ' ,J . f if 1 WM'-' 'ff' -, - A A A .2 -.1 ,lguffi-. at Q mSCz1f-i.f'fh'1-Q1 A 'L F 359'f1ntiX'rfi 'E E?f,7 Jiffy .qvn s.1,!g,.. ug. , IJ' ' Q' JT.-, -,sm , , , ' ggi.:-.Z.gLz . ,, A , , , H -.s..Agiwy.,s4,L,+.., 4 A . . A I , 'f2',,,il f!',,,j I A. , U ' , h - . J' 'f.f:g-immniz-,!f. . V A f 4, J -Lzmw, 14 ,sf A , ' W I ., M..-HQ. -...A.L..........................,. ,Hd Lew.-..:Q.g',LmM A- - W ff ' .C. YATES 8L CO., 73171 and Ohesinuz' Sis., Pl11'fade!ph1'a ACH ROS. Qoffege 129 oTog1Qf9xpRe1vS, Bmadwa, EVV YORK. Branch Es11iz1,bE!ish.meQmis CAMBRIDGE, MASS. . NEXV HAVEN. CONN. OCEAN GROVE, N. LONG BRANCH, N. tl. PRINCETON, N. J. The Alps. The Rhinecfee.. i ...eThe Battle-Field Route- - --1 5-N? 55,5--26 ,gs Q -f 'A 5 IX? cQ,,.fE:f-:Ze - fiiisifzr: 1 5:5:4'- q-1-xnusrd ,., 43, ,Vg , f ,AI ' If 1Vr','1, --v' , -. .V xfe N ee., 'SHE'-IE'- E :12j e,f' 7f e. i7f,w:e' 54 , 3 Ze ':':--1-Q.- . ee 'Le-we it F M' 3. ,:eff1leFig'sf,Qife.-.!!,, igj 22:1 Aj 2 ' ffzfffe, -, uns:-11. . 'l' ' . . 2 'Lf' Vg 5, 4.7, f?,.?'.:i.5:L'Z!! J - .-2 H 3 ge V1 9 'l 'i+vL'?i fy, -e - .' 'Q Y 2 lille .'-feeffe e ---- -A , fe l ,135 l 5, -. 'i 1? : L- A Nj.,-',1:r ' f .,- ',f7 ' clfrs.-iq.. -Q .1 il .fe W3 'Q 4. -- .' I -in 1375: , t vLfa:11s:,-:.:1'-:-A e- e YW :EE ff? J-L' ff . A -- f '1 V' I M I ' V , 4 1 jf.: ,V we-.4-,gi . . ,E Mm ' 1 E Ve-L '- 431- ' 1 4 ef SEE ' 1142.5 m l 's 's ' ' e ,. gf gi -', lf' ,,,L',!g- , . Ll :L .Q 5 lie . .ess . ,.--9421: 'Ymr V ,- .- . -1-,zz i Z - I -. .. .h ,. ee , . A f --e-A24 -. -..- F ,, , fe ,-- ff - , ?? .5f3lI ?l '- f ig'4 lEllZ'li':i' Pi -Vi' C 1.3 ' Q i le, X 5:25 5 'ii' . . 4 ' '- ,sf ,: 2i'fe --'V 'W Vi- f N- :L:fe:t-. ,4ff- iz- ?-'ff - - it N ' ' g ee. . ' - Reese' sf' ee-95,4 f- F ,-154 T' If ..:2 f' f . ,fe . L 'F , . , , . . v I a- RAVELLERS XVI-IO co1xTEMiL,x1E ooisc Xiiesr OR SOUTH XVILL FIND 'rue Chesapeake end Ohio Route Of unusual interest and unsurpassed in physical condition and equipment. It passes through more grand and beautiful scenery, near more great battle-lields, and over more historic ground, than any other railway line in America. HE FAMOUS F. F. . IMITED, Running between New York, Cincinnati and Louisville, via l'hiladelphia, Balti- more and NVashington, is a solid, vestibuled, electric-lighted, steam-heated, Pullman-built train, with through dining-car, a marvel of elegance and complete- ness, conceded to be without a rival, even in this day of railway perfection. T116 F. F. V. leaves New York, via Pennsylvania Railroad, daily, at 5:00 P. M. The Cincinnati and St. Louis Special at Szoo, week-days. For tickets, baggage checks, Pullman-car reservations, or information, apply to Company's offices, 362 and I323 Broadway, New York, or oflices Pennsylvania Railroad, or any coupon ticket ofiice in New England or the XVest. H. W. FULLER, FRANK MCCONNELL, General Passenger Agent, Passenger Agent., NVashington, D. C. 362 Broadway, New York. g,N,,,5N,ug The BEST Route A A I-TC' I5 stream, ' 464, - qi ity, fp 44' ACIFIC COAST U 402, ,,,g,0,,,iAvV uc.E'r SOUND u y . y -oR- I Cities in the Great, TOrthWest IS VIA THE --I UNIUN PACIFIC? The Overland f?0u1'e, FROM EITHER Kansas City, Leavenworth, St. Joseph, Council Bluffs, Omaha or Sioux City. A The Great Merits of this line are Pullman Palace Sleep- ing Cars, Pullman Dining Gars, Pullman Colonist Sleepers, Elegant Day Coaches, Union Depots, Fast Time, Pintsoh Light, Steam I-Ieat. PULLMAN CDINING CARS -Are run daily betvveen Council Blutifs and Denver, Council Bluffs and Portland and San Francisco, Kansas City and Denver. PULLMAN CoLoN1sT SLEEPERS Run on the UNION PACIFIC are almost equal for comfort and convenience to the FirstfClass Pullman Sleeper. For more complete information relative to this line, time of trains, pinnplmlets descriptive of the country traversed, SLC., Sac., call on your nearest ticket agent, any agent of this system, or address S. H. H.CLARK, E. DICKINSON, E. L. LONIAX, President, Gen'l Manager, Gcn'l Pass. and 'lliclael Agl , OIVIAHA, NEBRASKA, -OR- Fl. TEN BROECK, Gcn'l .EllSlCl'll Agl., 287 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. ,L X if f t. I Q i-S1 fi 'x 1 U3 I f 1 , t ft F ti, -, , , . , ga. N.w. Fc , The Through Car Route BETWEEN CHICAGO AND . ST. PAUL, MINNEAPOLIS, Duluth, Ashland, Des Moines, Council Bluffs, Sioux City, OMAHA, DENVER, PORTLAND, SAN FRANCISCO, Los ANGELES, AND PRINCIPAL CITIES OF THE West and Northwest. SOLID VESTIBULED TRAINS, PALACE SLEEPING CARS, BUFFET SDIOKING AND LIBRARY CARS, FREE RECLINING CHAIR CARS, SUPERB DINING CARS Are features of the Perfect Service afforded patrons of the Chicago 81 North- estern Ry. 423 Broadway, New York City. 5 State Street, Boston, Mass. II2 South Fourth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. W. H. NEWIVIAN, J. IVLWHITNIAN, W. A.THRALL, 3d Vice Pres't Gcn'l Manager. Gcn'l Pass. and Ticket Agt. OLD DOMINIGN LIN E. 1 The New Steel Screw Sieamships, AMESTGVVN y YQRKTQWN, Leave New York+- i Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, Arriving at Old Point Comfort, Newport News and Norfolk the following day, immediately after breakfast. Additional Ships, Monday and Wednesday. DELIGHTFUL ROUTE TO GO HOME BY. e Sfaiereoms Secured a Monfh in Advance. T k t cl Staterooms for sale at General Offices of Company, Pier 26 Uoot ol A Q N X l Beach Street , ew fora. W. L. GUILLAUDEU. Vice President and Traific Manag -1.-A-LPICTURESQUEE ehigh alle Ra lroad I DOUBLE TRACK. STONE BALLAST. -VIA- NIAGABA FALLS. New YORK, PHILADELPHIA, BALTIMORE, WASHINGTON, -AND-- Easton, Bethlehem, Allentown, Mauoh Chunk, Pottsville, Shamokin, Ashland, Shenandoah, Mahanoy City, Hazleton, Glen Summit, Wilkesbarre, Pittston, Scranton, Montrose, Towanda, Waverly, Elmira, Owego, Auburn, Ithaca, Geneva, ROCHESTER, BUFFALO and the WEST, THROUGH THE I-3EAU'l'Il UL Lehigh,Wyoming and Susquehannalfalleys. A SOLID VESTIISULE TRAIN SERVICE BETXVEEN NEW YORK, PHILADELPHIA AND CHICAGO. The equipment of these trains contains all the latest appliances for c'omII-'om' AND CONVENIENCE. Dining Cars attaclied at convenient intervals, Conducted on the European plan. The cuisine and service :Ire unsurpassed. PULLMAN BUFI-'I-LT, SLEEPING Ann P.xRLoR CARS on all through trains. The picturesque Lehigh Valley Route is in all things up to the most cxact ing requirements of hrst-class travel. STATIONS! NEXV YORK CITY-Foot of Cortlandt and Dvsbrosses Streets. BROOKLYN-Brooklyn Annex. foot of Fulton Street. CHAS. S. LEE, A. XV. NONNEMACHER. Gen'I Pass. Agent, Ass't Gen'I Pass. .-Xgt.. PHIL.-x., PA. SOUTH HETIILFHFAI, PA. WM. Ii. SMITH. Gcn'I Eastern Pass. Agt.. 235 IiII'o1itIwny, Nnw X'ORK CITY. s i X 1 1 , -L-mf-Ju-Q-P wah b cfggggfi .. 1 L CHAMPIONS, 1893 THE SS HERALD ' 0 CLASS GF 794 X Princeton University. CGiM 1 B NUMBER XXX. EDITORS: PPER, Pa. A. I. BHLLI-1R,O. X H. H. CONDIT, N. J. G. YILSON, XI t .... Q.,.. - Class-Day, June nth, 1894. ZHIS BOOK is ot speoiin kj S EX., en of GD1finting exeonteof by THE JOHN L MURPHY PU LISHING co. The otnftbition of the Gbifoloifietoifs hots been to keep i tt that otppeiftetins to the bnsi: etbiettst of the nge in ot -,ness enot, Oni any Zine of Gjifinting, etnei to the otoooifnptishinent of that oinf etini is for neottness, otnifotbitity otnot oheetfoness. ifesonifoes in these 1f6Sf66iS otife snpeifioif to those of other establishment in JV ew jfeifsey. Estiinettes for efoeiy oiesoifigbtion of woifh in ow' fifeety gifoen on otloptioettion. S b STATE GAZETTE ESTABLISHED 1 792 Wnbtisheot ototity otnet weekly, eine! oiifontote Ez town in N ew ei soy T BEST FOR ADVERTISERS. BEST FOR Tl-Ili FIRRSII 55710, f0i Speczmm C0lI51.' -IN L Mullm' I Telephone 7 5. , T 1 TL Q A .5 , 5 5 'V r S i 4 -Q X 5 ? Za, 4 if r 4 i H 5 3 5 Yo' , 5 5 T E 3 'V , Vina-'A-4,1-q,T.,., V4 r, ,..-. A V 5 9 I 5 I G 7 Min ,, F, . 13. SALUTAMUS. TO THE CLASS OF '94 AND ALL NVHO ARE INTERESTED IN THE XVELFARE OF HOLD NASSAU y 'rms VOLUME IS ur'Mm.y DEDu'A'1'ED. IN AFTER YEARS, MAY yrs PAGES HELP Us 'ro UBANISH CARE AND SADNESM AND T0 REOALL OUR 1-11sTO1uO CAMPUS AND THE MANY HAPPY DAYS AND HOURS SPICNT DENEAT11 THE CLASSIC SHADES OF PR1Nf'E'rON. CHARLICS GRANT HUPPISR, PA. HARRY HOBART VONIWIT, N. J. GUY WILSON, MONT. ALICXANDICH- JAY MILLER, O. 1 . Y s 4 I F N f , -1 ,, 'v QI Ea 1 'L fx E5 WE DESIRE TO EXPRESS OUR OBLIGATION TO MR. FRANKLIN B. MORSE, '95, FOR THE DESIGN OF THE COVER. 1 THE EDITORS Siaffycaleig 1 CLASS APPOINTMENTS. J. MON. THOMPSON, N. Y., . Presz'cZeIn zf WV. A. SEXTON, Long Island, N. Y., . . Secretary C. S. MACKENZIE, N. Y., . . Dfaster Qf C6T87720'72 Z.ES J. R. SXVAIN, N. J., . . Class Orator E. J. RUSSELTJ, N. J., Class Poet J. S. CAMPBELL, Pa., L-y Orafor E. P. JACK, Ill., . Hz'slo1'z'a'1z J. H. TURNER, Ia., . . Prophe! L. I. REICHNER, Pa., . Presentczfion Orator J. R. BLAKE, N. J., . . . . Ckvvsor M'CREADY SYKES, N. J., Wc1.Qhz'-nglorz.'s Birlhrlay Oraifn- DONALD MCCOLL, N. Y., . . . Class Dcbntcr .BCISSGIL1 ISJQFQIICZI. C. G. HOPPER, Pa. A. J. MILL1-111, O. H. H. CONDIT, N. J. G. XYILSUN, Mont. Glass Qorgrgifiec. J. FICNTRESS JH. Ill. P. P. BLISS N. Y. A. IC. HOIIBIES N. .I. 7 7 7 J LBVSCIIDCDPTGI QOIIJIIDTTTQQ. T. F. ILIUMPIIRICY, N. J. M. H. SIOAIID, N. Y. R. K. I'O1:'rSEH, 151. Qlcrssflgcry Gcaxljrmjiffec. W. L. BICCAULEY, N. Y. C. H. DICTLVAIN, Pu. D. M. BALL11-:'I', Pa. A. D. JENNY, N. Y. -G. H. FOI:SY'I'H, Ill. K. GEOINQE, N. Y. G. M. luCCAMPBI'ZI'.L, Jn., O. T. D. CORRY, Ky. C. B. WOIIDEN, N. J. J. Mc-G. XYHITE, Pa. A. R. CIIAIIBI-:1:LAIN, Y. J. M. BRODNAX, Tenn. J. H. BAILEY, N. Y. H. MCCLENAIIAN, Md. J. GIBSON, N. Y. ESTABLISHED 18 I 8. BRCDQKS BRQTHERS, lothing and urnishing oods FOR MEN AND BOYS, READY MADE AND MADE TO MEASURE. MM In the Department for Clothing to order will be found, in addition to a full line of seasonable goods,-P all the year round weights in all qualities, with a wide range of price, thereby giving the fullest opportunity' for selection. The particular care exercised by us in the cut, manu- facture and novelty of pattern in our Men'S Ready Made Stock, is also extended to our Clothing fOI' Boys and Children, and guarantees exclusive- style and the best of value at no higher prices than are frequently asked for garments made in large' wholesale lots and of inferior workmanship. Our Furnishing Goods embrace a most complete assortment of articles in that line for Boys as well as Meng Underwear, Hosiery, Gloves, and Neckwear in original shapes and colorings 'imported by us from leading London manufacturers-also Lounging jack- ets, Waterproof Coats, etc. In this Department we have added a new line oi leather and wicker goods, including Luncheon Baskets, Holster Cases, Sheffield Plate Flasks, Riding Vlfhips, Crops, Dog Canes and Golf Sticks. Catalogue, Samples and Rules for Self-Measure- ment sent on application. VVASHINGTONS BIRTHDAY ORATION. THE STRAINED RELATIONS OF GEORGE XVASHINGTON AND LILIUOKOLANI, VIEWVED FROM THE STANDPOINT OF CONTEMPORARY HISTORY. 1 BY M' CREADY svKi:s. H, FELLOWS, keep quiet-how can a man speak in all this racket? You won't keep quiet? Well, now, I have Pat Lindsay's crazy brother here, that being Pat's playful and affectionate title for this little pistol which I hold in my hand, and we'll see whether we are to have quiet here or not. Hands up, Chip Mackenzie, two can play at that game. George Forsyth, where do you think you are? Sit down, and don't make yourself so conspicuous. Don't cry Seize the mur- derer! that won't go here. The last time that you and Jerry Mc- Cauley were in a position like this you could call on Knox Taylor for help, but that game is up. jerry, we all know that the only reason that you tried for the 'Varsity was that you hoped by travel- ing with the team to see what the inside of a sleeping-car was like 5 now, if you don't suppress that unseemly disturbance in your im- mediate vicinity you will be given an opportunity to take a long, cold ride in a refrigerator car. Seize the murderer! cried George Forsyth, as he saw the revolver leveled at Dick Hatton's devoted head. Seize the murderer! cried jerry McCauley, diving beneath the table. Then George walked over to Dick's prostrate form, tore open his coat to see if his heart were still beat- ing, and then on a placard on his breast he read these cruel words: 'fRats3 the drinks are on you. The drinks will be on you, George Forsyth, if you don't put your hands up quick-way up high. We're going to have quiet here, or know the reason why. 24 THE NASSAU HERALD. Ladies and gentlemen, you see that this is a very difficult audi- ence to address. George Forsyth doesn't understand anything abOUf firearms-oh, there you go again. This is really unkind, oh, fel- lows, Sellishness in the struggle for existence is pardonable, but selfishness in the struggle for empty honours, is inexcus--- observe the narcotic effect. A single line from the cynical pen of Pharisee Murray will quiet even this crowd, and you can match a para- graph of his against two columns of Billy Spruance's stately .Prz'm'e- z'0nz'an editorials on the apathy of the Freshmen, and give Billy a big handicap into the bargain-though Billy would probably decline the latter, on the ground that he is already sufficiently handicapped by that insufferable Catgut McCord. Well, as we were saying-perhaps we weren't saying it, but it's true nevertheless-this is a most intense, large, line, salubrious and, as Pat would say, amost auspi'sh's ca'shn. We should begin in the dignified and proper manner that befits it, and have only been prevented by the really disgraceful behavior of the Seniors. I trust that you understand this, and will therefore pardon this informal opening 5 with your permission, I will -now endeavour to remedy this defect, and so if Sandy McGaiiin will push his halo a little further back-yes, that is about right-and if 'Bill Leggatt will put that bottle under the seat, and if Sister Linnard will remove that intelligent expression and just look natural, we will begin. -ah! MR. PRESIDENT, LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, GENTLELAIEN OF THE FACULTY-excuse all these details, but you know it's customary to begin in this way, and we mustn't ignore these old customs, although we need not become so excited over them as that howling little anar- chist, Dick Hatton, who likes nothing so well as to gather a crowd of Sophomores under the Faculty windows, and yell - with the Faculty, and lead a cheer for the devil, its funny, Dick, but the Faculty does seem to live through it, somehow. Dick was down in Washington this winter, and thought that' he had made a great impression on a beautiful girl when one evening he held her hand in his, or both her hands in both of his for three-quarters of an hour. Dick thought that he -was a three-time winner with no one to divvy with, but when he called again the next morning she camo down stairs with both hands in a sling. WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY ORATION. 25 But, to return, MR. PRESIDENT, LADIES AND GENTLEBIEN 'GENTLEMEN OF THE FACULTY, GENTLEMEN OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES, GENTLEMEN OF THE PRINCETONIAN BOARD AND GENTLE- .MEN BY THE PRINCETONIAN BORED-Ellld I think these two divisions will include the entire class-SISTERS or THE UNDERGRADUATES' one and all, I salute you with the kiss of peace. We sincerely regret that the inclement weather should be so out -of keeping with the spirit of the occasion, but you know Shorty 7 J .Kennedy has just returned from a visit to Cranbury, and he is re- sponsible for the snow. Now, let's be real nice and retrospective. Let our fancy glide lightly over the days that once have been, as softly as the Anheuser- Busch trickles down the capacious throat of Gsc Jeffreys, and more accurately, let us hope, than the base-ball shoots from the supple 'fingers of jack Van Nortrick, while the umpire repeats the monoto- nous refrain of Four balls, take your base. You have undoubtedly observed, from the eloquent orations of 'the preceding speakers, that history moves in cycles. Far, far back in the vistas of antiquity, Alexander the Great looms as the colossal 'figure of his time. History rested a batch 5 then she took a brace .and Julius Caesar came upon the earth, fourteen hundred years passed away, and Martin Luther appeared and cried, I am here I Between Martin Luther and the immortal George there lies an in- terval of but three centuries, and from George Washington to Tom Bailey is only a little over a hundred years. Only a hundred years, and behold how altered ! In that century 'that lies behind us, how different is the retrospect I Then there was no Shorty Kennedy sliding bases around the cannon, in evening fclothes. Then there was no Tommy Carlisle to lead the singing in the Class prayer-meetings. Then the farmer could sleep in peace, 'for there was no Ed Hammett to steal his chickens. In those days the guileless little Seminole could eat his ice- cream in calm, for there was no Brig Young to intercept the bearer on his way across the campus. The chance wanderer might often have looked upon the little saplings that were to become our tallest 'elms and never suspect that upon their capacious boughs would afterwards repose the supple form of Frank Riggs, who is so fond of sleeping in the tree-tops. Then there was no Marshall Bullitt to ,run after the professors and talk familiarly with them and make 26 THE NAssAU HERALD. them feel nice and quite at home, and, worst of all, there WHS no Pharisee Murray to write those cruel, biting, stinging, QUODI' mous letters that he was ashamed to sign with his name, HOT CTY ln those virtuous, unctuous, sanctified tones, Oh, LOTCL I thank Thee that I am not as other Seniors are, nor even as this De Wolf Hopper. ' I Yes, all is changed. So was the world changed when George Washington came upon the scene one hundred and sixty-seven years ago. The first thing George did was to send atelegram to his father, saying that he was doing well, and would he please send him six boxes of Mellin's Infant Food and one of Ferris' Heavenly Hams. George was a precocious youth5 he made important dis- coveries in electricity, and is said to have invented pajamas. H6 grew rapidly and at four was as tall as Benny Everitt. All the people in Fairfax county looked up to him 5 he was monarch of all he surveyed, and he surveyed everything, from a ten-acre lot to a Virginia kitchen. I He was Commander of the Continental forces,and with the help of some of John Dickinson's ancestors he established American independence. He was twice President of the United States and died at Mount Vernon, at the age of seventy-two, honoured and beloved of all the world. Such was George. I shall not lead you in the paths of romance by attempting to draw a parallel between George Washington and any such ephe- meral youths as Dutch Wintringer, Funny Gibson, Whangdoodle- Corry, Imperturbable Pete, Wooden Indian Morrison, Provisional Waterhouse, Free-Wool Robinson or Windy Allen 5 neither shall I expose the domestic complications of Pop Alexander, Grandpa Kiesling and Mamma Shultis 5 nor disturb the airy femininity of pretty Annie Lowrie, ,nor rescue from the peaceful sleep of oblivion Horses Pratt, Califf of Bagdad, or Smiles McLeish 5 let us avoid too close an investigation of the career of Jud Bailey 5 I have too much regard for Jud to tell you why he is no longer invited to call by his New Brunswick friends 5 not for the world would I have you know that Jud actually went to call on some friends in that town at a time when, under the malign infiuence of Malcolm Goodridge, he was unable to find 'the door-bell, nor how, after he entered the house, he spent halfan hour in sitting on the fioor and trying to induce a china dog to come and sit in his lap, whistling to it and WASHINGTOINVS BIRTHDAY ORATION. 27 calling Come here, Fido, until Malcolm got him out of that house, where he will never, never call again, nor shall we investi- gate the causes of Malcolm Goodridge's constant visits to Balti- more, nor speculate as to what Lou Reichner's friends would have done if they had got him in the van, I will refrain from mention- ing how Carl Roebling was arrested in Trenton for pasting procs. on his own father's warehouse, nor will I give the man away who- hired his disreputable friends to yell under Carl's window during his birthday celebration, for that false man says that if I tell on him he'll give it to me on Presentation, and I will not hurt the feelings of Skinny McWilliams by telling how, when he entered a horse car last Thanksgiving a kind stranger arose and said that he would be one of five to give the gentleman a seat. Over all this let us draw a veil, not the veil of tears, but such a veil as any sensible girl will wear who goes out walking with that gay Lothario, Frank Carter, for, as one of Frank's acquaintances remarked to Muck Holmes, it isn't pleasant to be kissed all the time, George Washington never surrendered, he might die every now and then, but he never surrendered, but our George-Clytie George-ignominiously surrendered to Lord Cornwallis at the first call to arms. And it was just about that hour of night that the blood of George Weems Williams froze in his veins, as from the dreadful silence of the cemetery there came the awful cry, Ole, Gfeorge, you 1z'z'fz'n't keep your promise .f ' Yes, I did, said George, and no one knows to this day whether George really kept his promise or not Thackeray has an account in The Virginiansn of how George Washington once fought a duel, or was all ready to fight one, when Providence intervened and called the fight off. Providence doesn't always intervene so opportunely, or she would have made Pie Bur- rill Jenkins wear that ,94 sweater of his when he went to the Infirmary with varioloid and had to have all his clothes burned. But you can't down Pie by a little thing like that, nor keep him from visiting his four hundred fair friends, Hitting like a butterfly from Vassar tb WVellesley and then to Smith, and so on around. Pie appeared in the sanctum of the Iflfclfcsley rlfagafzizze one day last winter and announced that he was come to represent the Lfi. ,- that the Lit. wanted to cultivate friendly relations with the other college l -28 THE NASSAU HERALD. magazines, and that his department would like to embrace as many 'exchanges as possible, but for obvious reasons they declined. It was this year that Pie had his final break with Eiffel Tower, -due to the fact that Pie insisted on entering the mile walk, thus des- troying Eiffel's sole opportunity of becoming famous. The broken- hearted Eiffel spurned Ienk from beneath his feet and then Jenk 'began to run with Schopenhauer McCaque, the pensive pessimist of Omaha, known on his native heath as Alkali George. McCaque -was the leader of that gang that hazed Sceleratus Davis in Junior jyear. Daveis, next to Freak Lockwood, the leader of Russell's Comedians, but he has a little dignity left, and this was so hurt that ever since then he has spent most of his Sundays at home. They do say that Dave is engaged, and he has certainly been buying the greatest amount of sentimental literature at the library He has ordered 4' The Lover's Lexicon, a Hand-Book for Novelists, Play- iWrights, Philosophers and Minor Poets, but Especially the Enam- -oured, and considerable fiction, includin 4' Love's Youn Dream, ' ' 3 8 and A Mad Passion 5 or, Dying to be Kissed. Speaking of Davis, does anyone know how he and Brodnax came to room together? The combination is almost as incongruous as Murray Brush and Mud Archer, although it is said that Mud has 'brought suit against Skinny Kinney for alienating Murray's affec- tions. But Davis and Brodnax-Dave so quiet and unassuming, always shrinking in the background, and Broady one of those born 'leaders of men. I had the pleasure of spending the Easter vaca- 'tion in Broady's company last year, down on a Virginia plantation, where we took a short trip together. It was just before the prelimi- nary J. O. contest, and Broady was hurling his anathemas at the 'spirit of American pensions. One night he went out in the lane to practice 5 he thought he was alone, but as it happened there was an --old colored auntie coming to her house. Suddenly we were startled by her appearance in the room, her face pale with fright and her -eyes rolling in herlhead. Oh, Miss Alice, dere's sumnn' dread- ful. I wuz comin' along de lane, when suddenly dere appeared wot I t'ot was de Angel Gabriel. He was aflingin' his arms about his head and shoutin' powerful loud 3 at first I done siis 'crazy shu nuff, den I t'ot he must be Gabriel, but den he come acloserand I done see he was jiss dat white man, Massa Brodnaxf' Al Chamberlain, can't you sit quiet? Don't think that 1' pect he was Ill WASHINGTONS BIRTHDAY ORATION. 29 going to get off your great impersonation of Dives and Lazarus. I don't want this audience to melt away, but you can have this plat- form all to yourself to-night, though I warn you there'll be a counter-attraction, for if there are any alumni in town-and Al Constable was expected to-day-if there are any alumni here Lou Reichner will be busy bootlicking them until some one asks him to sing the animal song. But, Al, in the meantime suppose you stick out your chest and show our friends how nice you look. f'I'm a little quail on toast. We all know you're a little quail, Al, and you have a great big chest, and you're a real nice, cute little quail, but that's no reason why you should quail before the glance of this audience. There! I have wandered way off from where I began. We were speaking about duels-not the Dual League, of blessed mem- ory, but the duel as developed by Crazy Van Cise. Van used to be a good paying member of Whig Hall but when the silver-tongued McGaffin came back to college in Clio Hall to do battle against Whig's champion, the brass-lunged Ed Loughlin- Hello, Tom Bailey! -Van became sour-balled and dropped out. But one day last fall he thought he would go in again and look around. There was to be an initiation shortly, and he wanted to see the goat. Well, as it happened, jim Campbell was right there, so of course he didn't have to look far for the goat. He heard a noise behind him - A-a-a,''-goat-fashion--and he turned and beheld Jim. jim told him that he was no longer a member of Whig Hall and would have to get out. Oh, go away, you Harlem goat, replied Van, do you know who I am? I am Edwin Basil Courtlandt Garrison Van Cise. I am descended from Kings and jukes, the blood of the Tudors and Plantagenets courses through me veins. Hence, you goat, you kid, you snipe-hunter, you CAM. This was more than .lim could stand, though he can be Cam enough under ordinary circum- stances, and he kicked Van out. Van procured the services of Mud Archer as second, and challenged jim, and insisted on fighting it out. Tom Bailey said afterwards that if he had been here that fight would have been stopped in the beginning, but Tom was away in Washington, looking after the repeal of the Sherman act. The tight was to a finish, without gloves, and came off back of the School of Science. Both men seemed nervous and danced around for a minute without doing much, until Van drew first blood with a neat right- 130 THE' NASSAU HERALD. thander on j'im's cheek. jim returned this with a straight left-hand jab on Van's nose, and soon after time was called. Seven rounds had been fought, and Cam's wind .seemed to be giving him, Sl0W1Y bflf -surely, the advantage. In the eighth round both men came up smil- ing, and Jim planted a clean left undercut on Van's jaw. Then Van displayed a constellation and one or two variable stars before Iim'S left orb. jim broke away and tantalized Van into making a lead- By this time Van was getting pretty groggyg Jim landed him one -on the breast, then banged him in the forehead, knocking his head backward, and played battledoor and shuttlecock with his cheeks, put his right clean and hard on Van's breast and would have half murdered the poor aristocrat if a messenger boy hadn't run up to 'Mud Archer just then with a telegram from Tom Bailey, saying that 'the nght must stop. ' Van got out of the hospital in a couple of weeks, took a catalogue and sent a challenge to every tenth man in the class. He still 'desires to wipe off that old score with Cam. Here is the letter 'which he has sent to Deacon Armstrong 5 he sent it to Armie 'because Armie rooms with Cam. Have I your permission, Van, to -read your letter? Yes? Thank you. I ' H WEDNESDAY, November, 1893. DEAR ARMSTRONG-I wish you to inform your principal that none of the blows, 'the effects of which I have been suffering, were fair blows. The blows that interfered with my seeing and guarding were unprepared for and muckerish. The one that knocked me out was from behind, unseen, and .deliberately aimed at an insulted and blinded man, I have talked With Archer, and shall arrange a Hght a little more forma! Man .last-seconds two each, time called at each down, 8zc. My seconds probably will be Archer and Harvey Young, if Mr. Cameron attempts any foul tactics he :never will leave that field without crutches. y , Please consider this a challenge, and let me hear from you before long. t Remaining deeply yourfdebtor for your kindness after the fight QU, I am . Sincerely yours, - ' A l ED. VAN C1sE, Jn. Will the tall lady who smiled at the handsome young man with 'the dark eyelashes, Sixth Avenue Elevated, near Eighteenth street, 'communicate with 2o.West Witherspoon, Princeton, New jersey? '5 Varsity Thaw is still waiting for an answer to that personal Ol' his in the Sunday Herald and in the meantime the Big Four enioy lifc .as best they may. 'Varsity Thaw, Punk Sabine, Woodpecker llgb- I F i IIS... 7fH?'2T7'F sf WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY ORATION. 31 inson and Slob Siebeneck are never seen apart. Life is to them a constant round of pleasure. They play pool, go the theatre and all the games, and Thaw he pays the freight. Pete Balliett is a great man, and a centre of observation and renown, but you would weep if you knew what a walking adver- tisement Bally had become, if you knew that half the saloons in 'Trenton advertised,themselves as PATRONIZED BY MR. BALLIETT, OF PRINCETON. Their latest beverage being also known as the Balliett Cocktail. But I see that you are thinking of Manhattan Field, where Jim Blake put so much head in his play. jim looked so nice and hand- some in his muddy suit and his little gray cap, that after the game not only all the coaches and all the alumni and the girls on the grand stand, but even the plaster casts were stuck on his shape. Pop Inslee appeared in the Lif. sanctum the other day with a poem which he had written under the inspiration of Shorty Ken- nedy's thrilling narrative of a fire at Pittsburgh. The structure of the poem is a dead crib from H The Wreck of the Gyascutus, but you know Pop is new at the craft. It runs thus: SAVED FROM A FIERY GRAVE, OR, ROl'l'l-CLIMIIING 1iX'I'RAORDIN.-XRY. Ywis is Me fait' Ma! was fold' fo me 131' Ma! lozzg'-!t'gQgcfz', fflllkl' Ai.'lIlIc'zl,j', , c r f , Yb mc and iz fzvftwz' Mu! fuzzy ll,l'1'lI,4'I.ll,'T firsr Q S One c Z'c'll1.Il5 af Dt7A'll1,.V, Iill Swzfvr llwr. 'Twas in the midst of llittslinrgh town, One evening last July, 'llllCl'C stood a hnilding on the square, lilexcn stories high. Above the stillness of the night There rose the awful cry e Of tire! tire! the lrinlitful shout 3 Re-echoed to the sky. Eleven stories of lurid tlame! It was an awliul scene, And yet the boys were not on hand XYho run with the machine. THE NAssAU HERALD. A window opened and-ye gods! l'X.WO11121.I1,S face did show, Nine stories up above the ground, The very type of woe I N0 help from heaven nor from earth, But hold ! a manly voice- Throw down the rope, I'll rescue you That made her heart rejoice. She casts the rope, he grasps it tight, He scalesthe building tall, The crowd grows dizzy, sick at heart, And fearful lest he fall. He's reached the top, he grasps her formg He throws one glance around- Alas 1 he had unknown his task, She weighed zoo lb. Hold tight, my fairy, trust to me And we will safely land? And call me liar, but he held That woman' with one hand. In one hand those 200 lb., The other grasps the rope, Ye gods! the crowds all stood aghast, t Perplexed betwixt fear and hope. Hand over hand, he clainbers down, Straight toward the ground below, But Eve feet more- Stand off, he cries, And falls upon the snow. 'Tain't much of a job to talk about, But it's a ticklish thing to see, - And suthin' to do, if I say it, too, For that brave young man was me. Sack is llze lale Zlzal was fold to me, By llzal long-legged, lanky Klfnneflzf Ana' I envy lke nerve qt a man like Ikof, For, unless Skorzy was lalking tkrozzgk his How a lzzzfnan being zyfflcsk and bono Coula' wz'z'lz one kand, ana' one alone, Climb down a rope, kann' over kaml, fs more lkan I realbf can 2ma'e1's1fa11a' ,' Bn! wkaz' Skorzy says muszf be fka zfzwfk, Ana' so I require no j9n'1'kur j57'01i'f1 For ke ain'l like some fyf fha sfmlfs sl knoro, Ana' ke never lies, oxnyszf in snow. Ac? NVASHINGTONS BIRTHDAY ORATIGN. 33 George Washington couldn't tell a lie, not even if it were pointed out to him, and to this day Bottle White can't tell rye whiskey when he tastes it. Last year Jack kept a bottle of whiskey in -his room for medicinal purposes-I believe he had a cold-and every night he would prepare boiling-hot lemonade, half whiskey. One night Oyster Patty and jim Blake entered his room, and with the assist- ance of Long-Legged Blue Jeans Dickey, Bottle's periidious room- mate, they emptied out the whiskey and tilled the bottle with stale coffee. I say filled the bottle, meaning the whiskey bottle, but in a few days it was all absorbed by the other bottle, that is Bottle White, who thought that his whiskey had become unusually fine and mellow, and when it was gone he was grieved to find that he could get no more .like it. Bottle got along very well with his coffee and water until the night of the foot-ball celebration, when he had a festive gathering in his room. Bottle insisted on reciting 0utside of De1monico's Window, and could only find relief by leaning out of the window and crying Come into the garden, Maud, Maud, Maud, Come into the garden, Maud. Bottle, I own that this isn't exactly fair, but you know February comes before june, and this is a case where the early bird catches the worm. At the close of George's second administration he was earnestly requested to serve again, but he declined the honour, and when George said No, he meant it. George was more easily satished than those aspiring youths, jim Swain and Ed. Russell, whose insa- tiable ambition can only be gratified by two elections to the same office, elected once, their vaulting ambition and silver-plated con- science gave them no relief until they had resigned and been unani- mously elected over again. May I forestall the festivities of Commencement week, and quote one delicious stanza from Ed Russell's Class Poem? 0ur officers should all resign: That wicked combine scheme XVill follow them into their graves, It haunts me when I dream. Those other men are wholly bad, They aren't like me and Swain, IH' have a conscience, yes we have, But' we gc! Marc jus! M: Janie. C 34 y THE NAssAU HERALD. And now I come to that far-famed organization, that COllOC2UZiOH of histrionic and musical talent, that rare symposium which afforded shelter at once to the dramatic genius of a Brick Turner and 'the musical powers of a Grier, to that scintillating galaxy of gSD1US, that great, never-to-be-forgotten, how-can-you-beat-it paragon Of companies, the Montrose quartette. One day Bottle White was sitting in his room with jim Blake and Long-Legged Blue jeans Dickey when the postman's step was heard in the hall, and a postal-card came through the door. It was for Bottle, and it was an invitation from the Christian Workers of the Montrose Methodist Church, asking Mr. White and a few selected friends of certified character to come over to Montrose the following week and take part in an entertainment to be given there. Bottle thought the post-mark looked a little ragged and blurred, but he .didn't mind that. Blue Jeans Dickey, the Machiavelli of '94, went onreading very composedly and said nothing. Bottle imme- diately enlisted jim Blake's services. Jim's eyes grew big as saucers when he thought of the ice cream and the pretty little country girls Ejim won't speak to a girl over iifteen- Un, my! Bottle! Are we in it? Can a duck swim? 'i' Bottle and Jim now started out to drum up. recruits. King Grier wassecured for his voice 5 Bob jack got in on his face, and Brick Turner was put in as a general utility man. Boneless Ham Ferris remained with the company for some time. Ferris always insists that he wasn't in it, but the fact is that Ferris was a very enthusiastic worker in the plan, until he found that it involved buying a two-cent stamp to reply to the invitation, and then he backed out. Dear me 1 how those boys did practice. jim Blake used to bring the whole disreputable gang around to our room every night, he purchased a Carmirza Prz'1zcez'0rzz'a, and Bottle swallowed innumer- able cough dropsg Brick Turner bought a collar, and rehearsed Little Willie twenty times a day, even neglecting his studies on that account., At last the eventful day arrived. The quartette and their assist- ants cut recitations all that day, and at seven o'clock they were ready to start. The night was foggy and misty, the ground was muddy and there was a suspicion of rain, but they were going to walk, they thought it might hurt the feelings of the Montrose people if they put on too much style and drove, so they walkt-tl, WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY ORATION. 35 The road was long and dark, and it was damp, but they didn't mind that, for was there not to be at its end the brilliantly-lighted room, and the applause of the people, and the music, and cider for Brick, and all that? Come on, fellows, merrily shouted Bottle, as he drew his left leg out of six inches of jersey mud, a couple of miles out on Witherspoon street. Won't we have fun? 5' chirped jim Blake, pulling a piece of barbed wire outrof his ear. They didn't mind the cold, for all they had to do was to put their hands on fBrick's head, and then they'd be real nice and warm again. And they told stories on the road, and guyed each other, and said how funny it was that a fellow like jim Blake shouldn't care any- thing about girls, and how Bottle White had remarked in his progress through New York that all the girls wore blushes, and how Brick Turner had bluffed his way into college and gone to the ex- aminers in Omaha and asked for a Sophomore examination paper, knowing perfectly that they didn't have any, and how he had made such a row about not being able to take his Sophomore exams that they let him in Freshman without any examination, and how nervy Brick was anyway, and tough, and then they said what a pity it was that Bob Jack was throwing himself away and becoming so lazy and shiftless that he was good for nothing, and what a responsi- bility King Grier had on his shoulders, and all that, and then jim Blake would say that he shouldn't call Bob a responsibility so much as an elephant, and all that, and at last they reached Montrose. They inquired for the Methodist church, and now learned that there was no Methodist church in Montrose, but that there was a Union Sunday-school, having its headquarters in the district school-house. Thither they went. Some kind of a meeting was evi- dently in progress. They knocked at the door, and presently a big farmer came out. Send for the Superintendent, said Bottle, drawing his crowd up in array, and tell him, he continued, with a lofty air, tell him the quartette have arrove. I be the Superintendent, young man, who be you P H lVe're--we're-why, we're the quartette-the Princeton Quar- tette, don't you know-you asked to come and sing some songs and make funny speeches, you know. I don't know nothin' 'bout that, replied the Superintendent' 3 but we aint heard nothin' of no songs nor friv'lous speeches. 36 THE NASSAU HERALD. There's a special revival service goin' on here, with four evangelists and a Baptist exhorter, and we don't want no tramps, see ? ,They saw, they fled, and then it all flashed across them that re- membered how Dickey and Herb Fisher and Buck Ewing had been whispering together. This is some of Dickey's work, said Bottle. lie zwfofe Zhaz' posfal. We'll murder him. It was an evil hour for Blue Jeans when that crowd started back for Prince- ton. They arrived at ten o'clock--and what they did to Dickey I shudder to relate. They pulled him out of bed, and Bottle took hold of his head, and Bob Jack took one foot, and Brick took the other foot, and jim Blake took his shoulders, and oh, horrors! Dickeyiused to be only so high-but they pulled him and they stretched him, and they drew his legs way out, and they pulled his head that far from his body, and A ff for further information Use you 1 own imagination, And imagine what the Dickey-birdey saidf' Such was the Montrose quartette. Those boys have never quite recovered., Brick was so sour-balled on Princeton that he coached the Rutgers team. Bottle began to write stories forthe Lz'z'. jim Blake took to foot-ball in desperation, and as for Bob Jack-well, Bob swore he never woulddo another bit of work in his life-and he never has. 4 George Washingtonhad no children 3 desiring no prouder honour than to be called the father of his country. If he had had any I am sure he would have seen that they were properly brought up, and would undoubtedly have sent his boys to Princeton. It would have been a rather severe strain on the parental purse if George had had to employ as many tutors for his boys as Benny Benson does to get through one written recitation. Benny, why didn't you employ Cartwright to tutor you in that funny song that you tried to sing with the Glee Club? If you sang that way on the trip in junior year no wonder the cabmen assaulted you in St. Louis. What lovelytfloral decorations! To whose forethought are we indebted for this? Well, well, welll H lzere l.S7Z,1fj27fI7I Dz'ffl'z'rz- 507275 famzbf free ! How is that for roots? just see, it runs wmv back to 1850, and up here it goes otT into a vast, expimsivc nothingness--that's john. WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY ORATION. 37 I hope you will all be here this afternoon and see I-Iiatus Thomp son wriggling all by himself on t f op o a pyramid of acrobats. Of course, there's not Very much to wriggle, after all's said and done, but Tommy means well. At this point we pause. This represents Charley Rugh. After such a pause let us follow the example of our patron saint, the Princet T' ' on iger, who always has claws at the end of his paws and devote a few clauses to those paper muslin sports, Mac Mitchell - and Sister Linnard. These gentle little boys have somehow or h ot er acquired the ambition to 'be distinguished as dead-game sports. I Nobody knows what started them in this idea, but regularly three times a week they tramp upstairs in University, take positions at opposite ends of the hall, and at a given signal they begin: Hello, George Linnard ! Hello, Mac Mitchell! How're you feeling, old man P Pretty rocky. Guess I'll have to swear off. If you ask Jim Connor why he doesn't keep them quiet, jim laughs and says: Why, some water trickled on them from the water-cooler as they went upstairs, and now they think they're jagged. George and Mac err in painting themselves blacker than they are. ,Not so with Bill Liggett. Bill is very much worried about Class Day. He says that he's afraid that tha 'me a whiskey bottle or a beer keg, or something like that, that will -queer me with my folks. t man Reichner will give There seems to be considerable disturbance over there on the benches, connected with that love-smitten youth -Iim Fentress. who never can speak quietly, but bawls everything he has to say. Well, Jim, suppose we have a short cheer for Wellesley, I was coming home with Jim from the U. P. game last fall g we were on the Owl, .and Jim was just dozing, a darkey came through the train, drunk, and making himself offensive all around. Above the roar of the train you could catch .Iim's half-somnolent soliloquy: .Tim Fen- tress, you're a fool, here you are, with a nigger carrying on, and you've gone and left your razor at home. When jim was in London a cockney acquaintance asked him : Ah, Mr. Fentress, I don't understand your system of land tenures. Do you 'ave the 38 THE NASSAU HERALD. hentail in your country. No, said jim, we don't have the ' ' ' ' l out of hentail, but we have-the morning cocktail, and its p um 7 sigh-t. ' I And now let me call your attention to a sterner picture 5 to the frowning features of that godly trio, Hell-Fire MacDowell, Wrath- of-God MacColl and Brimstone McGafHn. MacDowell has learnt all that's worth learning here and doesn't go to lectures any more. MacColl is our crack debater, and signalized his entrance into ,94 in hurling out his thunders in the Yale debate. You'll have a chance to hear him to-night. But as for Sandy McGaffm-alas! that it should fall upon me to show you what lies within that fair exterior, behind that pale, thoughtful face with those .yz'rz'!ueZ features and the high, ascetic brow. But the truth must be told-Sandy has been seen in ez lheezlre .f It was ,the night of last Thanksgiving Day, and it happened in this wise: Bottle White and Waldo Cherry picked Sandy up in the Hoffman House and asked him to come for a walk. Bottle had a pull with the manager of the Fourteenth Street The- ater, who boarded at Bottle's hotel last summer, and he took the crowd in behind the scenes.. He introduced Sandy to various members of the company, and Sandy was having a very nice time and wondering what kind of a place it was. He didn't understand it all, andwas very much puzzled at the scene about him. Sud- denly theawful truth flashed across his mind. He was in a z'!zeczz're.' Boys, he cried, 'e' do youmeanto say that that tall, intellectual- looking man that I was talking to is an ACTOR! That lady that you' introdued me to an ACTRESS ! I in a theatre ! Oh, shades of John Calvin and Donald MacColl, let me out of this.', Learn well your lesson, Sandy, and don't let them ever en-Theiss you so again. Now that time Sandy was the victim of circumstances, but what explanation has he- to offer of his atrocious conduct at Fort Henry ? Sandy was up there on a missionary tour one summer, with -that disreputable Bliss Quartette, or, as the Plaintield papers call it, the Muck Holmes Quartette. There were a great many farmers there with their wives and daughters, for a farmers' audience is the only kind of audience that can appreciate the Bliss Quartette. Dne night Sandy came out on the hotel verandah and there in the moonlight I was Muck Holmes teaching a farmer's daughter to conjugate the vet-tt to love. But when Sandy came out one of the girls stole softly up to him and said Oh, Mr. McGafiin, you are so kind, so good, WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY ORATION. 39 and I want your sympathy. f'There, there, my dear, said Mac, with that pastorly, comforting air, don't cry, put your head on my shoulder and tell me all about it. And he repeated that per- formance with four different girls. Uh Sandy, Sandy, how could you trifle with their affections in that way? Now you have stated to your friends, and spread it around the campus, that if the speaker on this occasion said aught of you that was not exactly true you would rise in meeting and give him the lie in his throat. So now I pause, and adjure you that if I have spoken a single word that is not strictly true to the letter, to rise in your seat and brand me as a second Lou Reichner. It was the night of that same Thanksgiving Day that jenney was locked up for riotous conduct. Ienney gave his name as Alex. T. Johnson, a divinity student at the Trenton Normal School, but the judge was on to him, and it would have gone hard with him if David Paul Burleigh Curley Wurley Conkling hadn't been on hand to bail him out. The next cell to Jenney's was, according to the Poffcc Grzseffc, occupied by QI. E. Patterson, but that is evidently a misprint for E. J. Patterson, known on the campus as Auspicious Pat. Pat passed the night in a wretched cell, sitting on the bed, trying to touch the floor with both feet, monotonously proclaiming all night long that he was a poet and wrote for the C'rz'f1'r, that Bottle White's father was a minister, and that it was a most auspi'sh's 'cash'n. George once cut down a cherry tree. George has been blamed for this, but it you knew what Hamilton College had inflicted on us you would rather blame George for not having extirpated the whole Cherry tribe, root and branch. Every year Cherry announces regu- larly in the Pfl.!1L'6f01ll.0!1, in large type, that he has matriculated at Hamilton, and will not return here, and just as regularly the Ham- ilton Faculty ejects him thence. Cherry's last break, when he was home, settled that point for good. Waldo was in his native wilds last vacation, pursuing a farmer's life, and dressed in that wild, incoherent fashion that he has so often described in that charming series of autobiographical sketches in the Lff. He was driving a pair of mules along a dusty country road, when he met a farmer from the county town. Mornin', stranger, said the farmer. H Mornin', replied Cherry, and so they became acquainted. You 40 THE NASSAU HERALD. say you be from these parts, said the farmer, after a fCW Pl3YfU1 sallies on Waldo's part 5 what craft be you a foller1n', YOUUE! man? . Oh, I ain't follerin' any particular craft, replied the author of California Blinky, with that long, lazy drawl of hisi ff I'm just a college student and literary man, when I get through college I'm goin' to study theology and be a minister of the gospel, but just now I'm drivin' these d-d mules. Whitney would be grieved if I did not expatiate upon the life, public services and sacrifices of Lou Reichner, the young man with the hard heart. Whit says Lou is the only man he ever really loved 3 that bores Lou awfullyg Lou, what are you going to give Chip McCampbell on Class Day, in exchange for that hat? Reichner was in lVIarjoram's ten-acre lot one day, picking violets in company with some of that low crowd of his, Sister Linnard, Har- lequin Hopper, CarlRoebling and Osc Jeffreys. Linnard had been showing the crowd how far he had waded out for those pond-lilies, when suddenly Old Man'Marjoram appeared coming after the tres- passers with blopd in his 'eye and a knife in his hand. Save me, fellows, save me, cried Lou, making a break for the road. He crossed the, fence in a flying leap, and started for Princeton. Lou never stopped to think of his friends or whether they were safe, but flew along the road, his hair doing its best to stream in the wind and the perspiration playing hare and hounds down his forehead. f'Help, help! he shouted, pounding along the road 5 and such was his momentum that he couldn't stop, and finally ran into Chip McCampbell near Evelyn, where Mac was teaching at that time. H Mac, he gasped, 4' they're after me. Let's change hats. Lou is like the foolish ostrich that believes itself concealed when its head is hid 5 as if any hat that was ever built could disguise that classical face, thatlimped eye or that dulcet Ionian accent, the accents of the voice that first uttered that plaintive cry: I 1 mi, xai, xai, x N T xac fren dec ,asv ouya. Shortly after that Lou was arraigned on his eighty-lirst cliurgu of disorder, and the long-cherished dream of Reichncr Hall liulcil away as faded our prestige in lacrosse when Irish lXfliCl.Llllllll4lll was put in command. If you had been in Dol1ni's last night you wuulil A A v-ku.no.duQu. W ...',.-fa,-uu- P- 41 f' him. , af WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY ORATION. 41 have seen Lou pathetically retailing his woes in the ear of a kindly siphon. But, as Paul Tulane Buckelew, the Jamesburg Squire, once remarked to Iud Bailey, in a burst of confidence that carried everything before it, This sporting life isn't what it's cracked up to be. Billy Meredith didn't realize that when he went out at Marquand's at three o'clock in the morning to pluck roses. It was very dark, and he pricked his hands on the thorns, and the poor boy caught his death of cold, but the most crushing part of it came when he presented the roses the next morning, and she said How nice of you, Mr. Meredith, how lovely they are, and see, there's a little dew on them. Not a dollar, cried Billy, HI picked those roses myself. Last fall Billy took to foot-ball, introducing his great criss-cross, a brilliant play which resulted in an immediate touchdown for the other side. Billy told me in january last that if I wanted to get up any nice little points to roast him on, all I had to do was to examine the iles ofthe New York and London papers. I did so, and would like to read you a few extracts from the Afmf York Herald of February Ist, 1891, describing our ohicers of Freshman Year. WVilliam I . Meredith, of New York City, is the Chairman of the tiomnrittee Kon Athletiesj, and it is said by his classmates that what he dot-sn't know about athletics is not worth knowing. l or tive years previous to entering l'rinceton he was a member of the tiroton Ilreparatory School 'l'cam, and immediately upon entering college was given a place in the Second 'Varsity eleven. ln addition to foot-ball he has been identilied by his class as a ball player and track athlete. In consequence of failing health he has been compelled to leave college. much to the regret of his Classmates, who have been looking to him to win for them several honors on the athletic field. But the cat came back. And here is a brilliant novel with Alphabet Conkling as the hero : David 1'. B. Conkling was unanimously elected llistorian. In the line of athletics he has done some hurdle-jumping, but none since entering college, having devoted himself exclusively to his college work, in which. in point of scholarship, he ranks among the best men of his class. The same article contains this remarkable account of Tom Bailey: 'l'homas I . llailey possesses a gentlcness and kindness in his manner which soon made him popular among his classmates. iii . lil' ,al - . 9 Il il ' sl :E l . 42 THE NASSAU HERALD. il il .9 fi L fi i And then- G rm in his everyday ZW. Ha is a Quiet and znzasszmzing young 772 Il fl V That reporter was iired. George Washington was an excellent marksman, and so ought A George Swain to be, inasmuch as he is Captain of the Gun Club. George went on the geological expedition last summer, and an- nounced his arrival in camp by shooting at a rabbit about twelve yards away. He frescoed the landscape in a big circle all around T' the rabbit, but the rabbit sat bolt, upright and told George that. it was a cold day when he got left, and guyed him,and asked him v L G' ' d l's ankle just before the Mott Haven f why he always spraine ii . i ames In despair George called on Widdie Smith, when the iff' If g . l rabbit saw Widdie he thought it was Cash,and promptly fell on ,Q ' the ban. r It's so difficult to .get accurate information about the ways of - some of our men. Now, there's Larry Denise. I met an old, lank resident of Omaha the other day, andasked him what kind of a ani' ' reputation Larry bore down- there. Oh, that kid, Denise, he l said, shifting his suspenders, his family's a good one, but, as for i Larry, that boy ain't good for nothin' but tennis and girls. f Let us glance for a moment at that all-around athlete, Zz'!1feratew', poller and sport, Teddy Humphrey., See that Hump? Or, as the D V elevated railroad signs have it : -J 2 1 5 l Dear girls, don't blush, s i But have you tried l . l Those patent hooks, i With Humps inside ? l 5 They. got Teddy and Charley Hoge to go over to the Phila- Q 3 i -s delphian meeting one night. Now, Charley Hoge is as straight ni X. l .lip , x ' chap as thereis in college, and as fm- Teddy, if they-cis 3 mm, i 3 1 1 against whom no one has ever dared lift a word of reproach, a man i Q Y . A who h . . A ' - - - - W as never said an unkind word of another in his hie, that man ,l ll r 1 is Teddy Hump. And yet they had the duddcity to begin to Sing, as he entered the room: l e ff .' i The wandering sheep has HOW 1-Crm-,md Q is , i The leprous sinnerls homo nquin, V Flin - - . f e T - i g OPCU lhe gates ol Ilcaivcn wide, I And let the erring brother in, I l 7 r ,, .D s .Ai 2 If l if Ez if ,, gl E 1,1 + 1.s ag 'gg ill, Q , ' .. V H' 1-Qs.---. Y . ,. ,A L12...'..i v...,I,.. gr i V . . g .-.HM -..u..L,... ,,v,s, AH, -1 A WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY ORATION. r1.3 In this connection our thoughts naturally recur to Fake-Dignity Allen, with his marvelous array of pipes. Allen was presented with one hundred dollars last Christmas with which to purchase a watch. He went to Mr. Isaacstein, an enterprising dealer on the Bowery, and succeeded in jewing him down to eighty-seven dollars, and Yorke expended the balance on a couple of meerschaum pipes. This was enterprising on Yorke's part, but he hasn't half an eye to the main chance when compared with Boneless-Ham Ferris. Ferris was acting as manager for the Consolidated Base Ball Team, and in the course of his meanderings among his friends in the Bowery, he picked up a job lot of damaged seventy-five-cent balls, which he promptly secured, charging them to the team at the rate of a dollar and a quarter wholesale. George Washington would have tired a man for a thing like that, but Ferris is too fresh to be fired. Are Frank and Harry Riggs in this festive crowd? How those boys love one another! These, ladies and gentlemen, are the Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde of '94, separated in the flesh. They look alike, they talk alike and they dress alike, but they are really as different as Ed Russell and Rabbit Kennedy. The only way you can tell them apart is by their eyes, as the young lady in Baltimore said to Frank, You look like Harry, but I think you're Frank, because your eyes are so devilish. On another occasion Frank went out on the verandah to look for a fair friend of his, against the dark background of the sky he saw upon the balustrade the form of his faithless brother, and he was not alone. There was Frank's little friend with her head on Harry's shoulder, murmuring sweet nothings in his ear and protesting by yon pale moon that she would never desert her Fwankum-Wankums.'' It was rather hard on little Fwankum-Wankums to watch all this from a distance. but he says he's going to get even by personating Harry at the golden gate and getting St. Peter to let him into heaven on the strength of Harry's career at Yale. And now, if the Mandolin Club, or whatever it is, will play a little soft music, and if some one will draw the curtains a little closer, and if our friends will be very, very quiet, I will speak, though falteringly and half afraid, of him whose noble presence adds such dignity to the class 3 of him without whom Princeton will never be quite the same, of him whose Nestor-like voice is ever heard in our councils, of him who so skillfully guided our class 44 THE NASSAU HERALD. through the tortuous maze of Freshman year, of .him who has kePt Teddy Humphrey from going to the dogs, of him' who 11215 Served as the model and beau :deal of Eddie Laughlin for the last four years, of that natural ruler and born leader of men, Tom Bailey. Oh, weak and pitiful English language, why dost 'E110'-1 fail me now? You ask, H What is it that has made him great? IS if that loftiness of demeanor, that calm, cold, merciless smile P- Oh l the serpent of that smile? No. Is it ambition? For Reichner says Tom is ambitious. I speak not to disprove what Reichner says. -for anything that Reichner says is sufticiently disproved by the fact of his saying it- V - But here I am to speak what I do know. Tom, excuse this airy persiflage 5 the occasion allows me to make a little fun at your expense, to wear the cap and bells, and Strut my little hour upon the stage, And then be seen no more. i But, Tom, privately aside, we recognize how nobly you led the class through Freshman year, when our way was very rough and it needed a strong hand and a clear head. And it is because you have served us fairly and wellfthat now, as the time of parting draws near, we venture to have our playful fling. What I am going to tell you now happened a long time ago. Tom is very fond of amateur theatricals, and somehow it always happens that he plays the lion's part. If the play be Hamlet, Tom is the Prince, if they are performing The Queen's Lace Handkerchief, Tom is the handkerchief. Well, when Tom was a little boy, only five years old, and no bigger than Jim Scrimgeour, he and his little friends were having a reproduction of the Garden of Eden. Tom's father came to the doorway, and what was his sur- prise to find that Tom had no part. A little friend of Tom's was playing the 1'5!e of Adam and a even the Serpent, that part bein take b little girl was Eve 5 Tom wasn't g n y another friend. Tom was evidently sour-balled on the whole affair 3 he was standing at the other side of the room, his arms folded and his face wearing fa D P . WASHINGTONS BIRTHDAY ORATION. 45 terrible frown. Why, Tommy, said his father, naturally sur- prised, aren't you in this? Have you no part? Oh, yeth, thir, said Tom, with that modest lisp that hasn't quite abandoned him yet, Oh, yeth, thir-I'm God. Has John Neely come in yet? Then it must be nearly time to bring these random remarks to a close. John has taken a brace lately, and is trying hard for last year's base-ball team. Classmates, the future is before us, the future with its trials, its disappointments and its joys. Behind us is all that has made us great. Behind us is the strength and backbone of the scrub, behind us is the foot-ball championship, and the faithful work that made it ours. Behind us is the pride and glory of 'Ninety-fou- Oh, Mac! I beg your pardon, I didn't realize that you were behind us. Well, Mac, I won't take back anything I said. How nice of you to have sat all through this long performance and never to have complained or looked bored. Observe his atti- tude-isn't he fine? Mac says a great deal depends on attitude. He says that when you go into a foot-ball conference or anything of that sort, you've half won the battle if you know how to sit properly. You must cross your feet, he says, and rest one hand carelessly on your lap, so, and then control your eyes and lips so that you fmt smile and no more, droop the corners of your lips and cast your eyes just a little down, and then quietly, but perfectly naturally, smile. But why should I attempt to describe him when Shakespeare has done it so well, as if his keen, prophetic insight had run slap bang into the nineteenth century: 1' See what a grace was seated on that browg IIyperion's curls 1 Those curls are great. Ilyperion'S curlsg the front of -love himself. An eye like Mars, to threaten and command. A station like the herald Mercury. New-lighted on a lleaven-kissing hill. A combination and a form indeed. XYhere every god did seem to set his seal, To give the world assurance of a man. g 1 46 THE NASSAU HERALD. Oh, boys, if only his Uncle Jim could see him now. SRL young feller, where yer goin' wid dem toys? Perhaps it's juSt 35 well that his Uncle Jim shouldn't be present all the time. Look at him, before the passing moment has forever slipped away, 0116 19-St, lingering look, and then tell me, do you wonder that they repealed the undergraduate rule? My task is done. But the thought still mounts, as I survey that great and glorious name. For when George Washington came upon the earth to smite the hearts of tyrants and make brunettes turn pale, the heavens were nlled with portents and the hand of destiny stood still. George took a free ride on the wings of time, and slung great batches of civilization over a smiling land, the morning stars sang together, and with the brush of fame George swept the heavens, he lathered the face of the morning star, and shaved off the whiskers of the Pleiades 3 he dipped his fingers in the primeval chaos, and girded his loins with the procession of the equinoxesg he seized the tail of the British lion and twisted it into a thousand kinks, while the unicorn howled and gnashed his teeth with rage, and the American eagle flapped his wings and screamed, Ha ! ha! He bathed his brow in the aurora borealis, while through the silent halls of eternity the Angel of Death came flippity-flop, until now, in the words of the immortal Artemus, the earthrevolves on its axletree once in twenty-four hours, subject to the Constitution of the United States. Such was George Washington. Honour and glory be his forever- more ! I dip into the future, far as human eye can see, and the coming years are unrolled before my gaze. In fancy I see us, gath- ered in the festivities of class reunion 5 I see Frank and ,Harry, still lovingly holding hands, I see Tom Bailey, smiling a benediction upon all around, and over all I see our glorious chief, Mac Thompson, with his faithful tribes still gathered about him 3 he is sitting astride of the weather-vane on top of the belfry of Nassau Hall, his Hype- rion curls ilapping in the wind and his face wearing a proud and happy Smllei Wl?OOping it up for ,Q4, waving a Princeton banner in the sky, and crying in the accents of joy: H Us and George Vgrash, ington, now and forever, one and inseparable ! SALUTATORY. 47 SALUTATGRY. -i BY CHARLES S. MACKENZIE. ADIES AND GENTLEMEN-The Class of '94, in forsaking the old platform from which the voices of so many of its predecessors have rung in greeting and farewell, is proud to Welcome you to the inauguration of this ,beautiful edifice with its exercises to-day. And while we enjoy the comforts of its spacious floors and galleries, let us not forget that it is due to the generosity of such patriotic and loyal admirers as those who have given us this magnificent building able to reach the lofty height from w Scarcely four years ago the Cla Freshmen, first assembled under t elms of Old Nassau, to-day, though yet bound together by the inseparab for the last time and bid you all a h Through the labyrinth of four hand in hand, through our own li that Princeton's star has been hich it now so gloriously shines. ss of '94, as strangers and as fiie shade of the time-honored somewhat reduced in numbers, e tie of friendship, we assemble earty welcome. fong years we have journeyed ttle world, forming friendships never to be forgotten, sharing impartially our comrades' joys and sorrows. To-day we have reached the door that leads into the larger and sterner world. Beyond it are avenues running in every direction, each leading to a different goal, and before another sun has gone to rest behind the western hills, some of our number will have passed through the lonely portal and begun their life-long journey. At the door we see friend shaking hand with friend, bidding him a fond good-bye--alas only too often for the last time. The rocky road for some the feet may tear. For others it may he both smooth and fair, llut whatso'er the road or smooth or steep. l.et each the other in fond memory keep. i F L i . li' ll tl. v Z ,r I I' . in bp ,. K 3, l . 6 l. Y, l L. 0 I. H l 4 n i -- ji f. it 3 j. Q, l - is i. i X, r I ,. ,. . i i L k F 3 v A 6 fnv-ygqp. eq.: -'HRA 4':.41'3'V o l 1 l z I 6 48 THE NASSAU HERALD. The step is made, their road is chosen. and they disappear forever into 'the engulling world beyond, there to meet the joys and SOIIOWS in store for them, and make new friends. Returning from this sad picture of parting and farewell We still find ourselves the same happy, joyous Class of '94, H Around the cannon this afternoon, dear friends, We ask the honor of your presence, there to listen to our chosen representatives as they draw bright pictures of our college life and satirize with kindly jest our exploits and our follies experienced during the companion- ship of undergraduate life. . But as jest and satire pass around our merry circle, first touching lightly in its passage some one of our number and then with unre- lenting hand fasteningon another of our beloved classmates, let us all join in unrestrained mirth, remembering that it is all done with- out the slightest malice and that the loyalty of class and college domi- nates our every word and action. But pause--our joy must even here be stopped by sorrow and regret. Three of our number are not here to join with us and bid their comrades adieu. They have left our happy band, and in obedience to the Master's call, have pre- ceded us on the road that leads to the impenetrable future, and until fate shall check our name from the roll-call of the living, We can only visit them with loving recollections of the past. T Such is the panorama which we have prepared, and to you, kind friends, who have come to join with us in our parting exercises, as the representative of the Class of 794 I bid you all a hearty wel- come. 1 l 'r'f 'f'g-f---------.--..-.-.. ..., ,... ,MW 1. 1 1 :- f I i J , 1 Q . -g, , zgw, 7141: :Af Y' A- v - --4.9440 4.,.f-QR--v.....1., -, ,.,..,. .... -- .U .,,., . , , V . .-o-qw -'-- 4 . I 1 Z 1 A v --,..4.. -..,..., - f , W ,, .. , . .,..:..-.....g.-.....n....,.a. .- .4-....., ...N ...,,H-- --,.. ....,- ML.- -,,,- ...,, ' f.,..........-b.... . .......,.,........- ..,-.X-.-.1-.4-.,-.,.. ' - tr: -1'-- ---f - - -,.., . .- . - .... . .U..-.i.....-,- . -.---M- ,..-.-- ---... -W-rf .,,....Yt,,....,,w.,,.,,. . -r J .,,.- ,.. .,.,..-.-- up f 'X wqxg Am QQ '9 vi If FTE 1 '3 li ALEXANDER HALL- Lv -uu:.4w-N ..,.a-'.b-- -. - Q l I , cu-iss oRAr1oN. 49, CLASS QRATION. - BY JAMES R. SXVAIN, N. J. N EDUCATION is the better revelation of the man. It is the atmosphere of truth, penetrating the mind, which is man, awakening its dormant faculties into a con- sciousness, which is life, quickening its throbbing impulses into a growth, which is power, and unfolding as a llower its fragrance of beauty and form to that divine light, which is everlast- ing spirit. A The more harmonious proportions of an educated mind are at once the symmetry of a life heightened and deepened and broad- ened-the growing realization of the riches of a world in which man finds himself, the depth of whose sea is still unfathomed, the breadth of Whose horizon is still undetermined, and the height of Whose summit is still unscaled. The chiefest intellectual virtue of the student is submission. The surrender of his private subjectivity to those principles of truth which are universal and fundamental and which constitute his true self and the world as an object of knowledge. He is the incarnation of great recognized truths, 'his force unaccounted for by general laws, his life responsibly determined by his own will, his mind full of the presence of history, which is the memory of humanityg his duty a conscious share in the progress of mankind' He lives in the whole past and the whole future. From the narrowness of a single life and age his mind is widened to know the great truths which- underlie all ages and all lives, in whose name the great battles of human progress have been fought, and into whose meaning have been gathered the concentual and consecutive endeavors of count- less generations. Henceforth he moves in a wider orbit, borne forward in the car of Olympus, with Truth and Virtue as his steeds, little heeding the storms and tempests that burst about him while he is safe within. D 50 THE NASSAU HERALD. Our education can be no exception. Here on this hilltop, apart as the favored disciples of learning, we have seen truth transfigured before us. We to-day shall go down from our mount of vision, but, nevertheless, as larger and bolder men, with. minds iIaSPi.fed by the revealed greatness of their Lord, with a better .realisation of the purpose which life involves and with a high enthusiasm born of participation in the true historic spirit, to evangel to the world that truth in which all men are free. ' History tells us that the leading republican governments of the world have represented two great. ideas: the one, the doctrine of the Athenian democracy, that the individual existed for the state 5 the other, the ultimatum of American democracy, that the state exists for the individual. Both have given Caesar's place to educa- tion, moral and religious. The former, however, suppressed the corporate life of man to the ideal of the state, left him no ideal within himself, and the advancement of the individual was quickly lost sight of in the madistrivings of men for possession and power. Democracy drifted back on an ebbing tide into a tyranny under whose subjection all the responsibilities of life were submerged and society became a restless, trackless sea. The latter found its begin- nings, in modern times, in the Teutonic principle of the absolute worth of the individual. It iirst awoke to a consciousness of its strength in the morning light of the Renaissance in the fifteenth cen- tury. Phoenix-like it triumphantly re-asserted itself amid the ashes of the martyrs of the -Reformation era-proclaiming the almost for- gotten truths of the individuality of conscienceand the right of inde- pendent judgment. Having in the end removed the two Great bar- , p p , o riers which hindered the human mind in its conquering march toward freedom, the despotism of the king and the tyranny of the church, it laid the foundations of those permanent institutions which have made England almost a republic and America the abiding-place of liberty-a society which conserves th h' l ment of individual life. This principle, like the one voice of many centuries, is ours to be realized to-day. As 'we listen to its soul-swelling cry we be- fiome ,Greekf Roman: TCWOH, king, martyr and statesmen alike. loaesar s trust in his fortunes, Cromwell's ff providence H N-IPC, ! gg ' H , Li leon Z .deSt1nY -bCCOme our fortune, our providence and our estiny. We fasten the failures and the fortunes e 1g1CSiI possible develop- of the CLASS ORATION. 51 past to some reality in the secret experience of ourselves and our race Each fact, each political movement is eloquent with n1ean- 1ng to us We may see the open v1ces of the t1mes W1thout heat 111 the barrlcade and Wlld war cry of the French RCVOlUl1OD, vs l11ch car r1ed the 1nd1v1dual to the exlreme pos1t1on of freedom from h1s soclal relat1ons We may catch the needed 1nsp1rat1on for the hour ID the brave struggles for 1ndependence 1wh1ch Prmceton so nobly represents He1r to tl1e h1stor1c expenence of all the affes, ne max not non turn tra1tor to our trust The record of that long Journex, tl1e story of the stages of 1ts progress, the secret of 1ts l11dden 1113 stery, are full of hope and solemmzed w1th lessons of moral accounta blllty Henceforth the 21Cl11CVCI'1lCI1l.S of hurnamty are CO1lSC1Ol.1Sly one In all 'Ll11I'1gS tl1e true c1t1zen 18 part1c1pat1n0f 111 the common energy, 15 enter1ng upon and addmg to an lDCllV1Cll1'1l lIlllLI'll'1llCC Nat1onal s1n IS 1nd1v1dual s1n N2ltlOllZll I'lglllCOl.1SI1CSS IS 111d1x ulual nghteousness We freely assert our r1gl1ts or luxe none XX e frankly occupy our pr1v1leges or they are lost lh1s, too, 1s le law of nature Tl1e world globes 1tself 1n '1 drop of cl t IS the pI'11'lC1plC of l1fe and NVFIUCI1 11'lClCl1lJl5 by the l1and ot God o11 the heart of every man Lach IS an e11t1re e111blem of lmman hte, of 1ts good and 1ll, 1ts trmls, 1ts enem1es, 1ts course and 1ts end and each one must somehow tCCOl1lI1lOLl'1lC tl1e whole 111111 and rec1te hls destmy Thus cxen1pl1hed 1t IS tl1e lm of sotml hte Henceforth tl1e lIlCllV1ClLl'1l eusts 111 5OClLty and socletx 111 tl1e llllll Vldllal, and m1n1s111oretl1'1n QOWLllllllL,llt and 111d1x1d11al1tx mole than 11at1o11'1l greatness Man IS tl1e lTllCI'OCOSIll of tl1e xx o1l1l Ithas p'trt1c11la1s1ffn1tlc tnce to 11s, llOXXCXCl as educated 111en ' 1 o one can so u11de1stf111d tl1e p11x1le e and duty of socml lll'll'tl'lGOCl to day as he who, llllOllQll COlllllllllllOll mth the meat men and g1eat tl1o11ffl1ts of tl1e past, has been brought l1e 1rt to l1ef11t mth the plan and etl11c of lnstory In 15lOpOIllOl'l to lns adx rneement l1e1s capa ble of g1eate1 1cspons1b1l1t1es 1nd IS altorded larger ODDOIUIINIICS 111 tl1e 1DI'Ol1ll1lCllL spl1e1es ot l1fe to dnect the '1ct1ve restless sp111t of h1s we He 1ep1ese11ts 1de'1s that me x1t1llx con11ected Vsllll tl1e llIgllCI l1fe ofmen He 1exeals to tl1e111tl1e perfect fICCClOl1l of tl1e1r m1ss1on and thscloses to tl1en1 the po1t1o11 ot tl1e moral pmpose 111 h1sto1y wl11cl1 lS tllellb to d IX 'I l1e door of our l'l'1l11OllZ1l l1fe SXXIUUS w1de to an Cl'lllQlllLllCCl PllllOtlNl1l lt looks to tl1e scl1ola1 to take ,Q i. . 5 1 5. 1 '. 11 ', T 1' -Q ...Q-, 1 l l l .4 52 THE NASSAU HERALD. the platform for principle, not men alone, to call upon the powers- of reason and intelligence, to dispe charlatans have conjured up by constant repetition of such phrases as people's money, Hprotection of the working classes, the, poor man's government, to show that the loss and dishonesty of repudiation is as great whether we call it theft, re-adjustment, re-hypothecation or coin some new word which shall not grate on the over-delicate ears of sentimental and tender-hearted legislators. It looks to us to convince men that the Utopia of communistic ravings is an impossibility, that individual rights of property form the very foundation and corner-stone of modern civilization, that without it our boasted culture must crumble and fall. f Education, in short, fortifies democracy, and it thus happens that a nation's healing lies not in the storm nor in the whirlwind, but in that voice which prophesies a wider and a wiser humanity. For as by ignorance alone men are blinded to truth and justice, so by education alone shall the soul of the nation's life be saved. Ex- claims the great historian Michelet, iWhat is the first principle of politics? Education. What is the second? Education. The third? Education. D i And I like to think of our American colleges as holding the watch-towers of our nation: that nowhere in the development of this country is more deeply engraven her unconquerable love of freedom than in their constitutions and history: that each is a brotherhood bound together by the noble bond of learning, a stand- ing and a living protest against the domination of selfishness and' lies that Warp men from the living truth. i What, then, is l?rinceton's relation to American patriotism? Are not the names of ive of her cherishedsons forever written beneath the immortal Declaration in behalf of freedom and its posterity? Hear you not the solemn marble of that old graveyard yonder speak the names of Dickinson, of Burr, of Witherspoon and of Edwards, and read that they counted it their highest honor to serve their country and their country's God? Aye, can you not yet hear the thunder of the American guns turned in the hour of victory upon Old North College, and stand in imaginatign in the Sacred presence of those men who rejoiced to see falsehood and oppres- sion driven into exile from its walls? Speaks longer that British cannon with its iron lips forever sealed beneath the soil of yonder l the clouds which political i CLASS oRAT1oN. 53 quadrangle? And is it not typical of Princeton's love for manhood and honor that she holds the portrait of the peerless Washington above the heads of those who first cross the threshold of the college world? Aye, let the name of Nassau itself be a watchword in lib- erty's name, and the orange ribbon on our diplomas be the cord that binds us to the love of truth. Thus and always through her call for earnest individuality has Princeton inspired her sons to courageous persistence as pioneers of intellectual and social reform. In see- tional dispute and political quarrel, through struggles of patriotic resistance 'to injustice and amid the fires of civil strife has Princeton adapted herself in each succeeding period to the wants and call of the age. It has sent out year by year, generation after generation, in the higher and humbler paths of educated life to serve and adorn their country and mankind. This mission, fellow-classmates, is our mission to-day. It is told of the young Italian Correggio that as he walked through the galleries of his native city, adorned with the world's art treasures, the genius of the masters spoke to his soul and with responsive thrill he exclaimed: HI, too, am an artist. As we pass in review that exalted company of l'rinceton's Hdead but sceptered sovereigns who rule our spirits from their urns, as we go forth to mingle with the noble host of living, her loyal and lus- trous sons, we may likewise exelaim, we, too, are Princeton men. The world likewise shall he another name for mn- opportunity. Planted upon the eternal principles of thought and action, which alone are adamant, permeated by the faith in the invisible pur- pose which they involve, inspired hy examples of heroic seltlsacri- iice, of patient effort and splendid achievement, we may approach our appointed tasks to-day with the conception that they will give us of the organic nation not as final but as mediative, its aim the realization ofpolitical justice: rational freedom. the end ofpoliti- cal development. And in the midst of political corruption and jeers at political pietismf' though crowned with the twisted band of thorns and again called upon to he crucified. let us still maintain a political holiness and a sacred individuality. There can be no penalty to wisdom and to virtue. They add and multiply the world. The natural products of the earth vary with its latitudes and every elime has its growth, yet there is but one soil, on which national 54 THE NASSAU HERALD. prosperity and greatness may flourish, and that is the soil of justice and truth. Here, then, so long as Princeton is true to itself let our col- lege stand like a Pharos on a sea-girt rock, and let us to-day as we cut our moorings from beneath its guardian care and set sail, tossed Forward, backward, backward, forward in the immeasurable sea, Swayed by vaster ebbs and flows than can be known to you or me, still keep. our eye lixed upon that light of truth and righteousness which here shines, alike through zephyr and tempest, far out over the waters. And when the storms of life do come, let us say with Seneca's pilot, O, Neptune, you may save me if you will, you may sink me if you will, but whatever happens, I will keep my rudder true. - ivv oRAT1oN. 55 If IVY ORATION. - JAMES S. CAMPBELL, PA. - ---..-- O-DAY the shadows of H Old North cast their benediction over another departing class. Our turn has come to speak a simple farewell to the mother of our four happiest years. A niche in this old wall already bears our class-stone, and the rugged wall will soon be green by the ivy we shall plant. One more sun shall we behold rising over Nassau with the feeling that we are here at home. Only once more in the gathering twilight may-we sit, as Seniors, on these old steps and sing our glees. Yes! we have ended the life with our Alma Mater, we have- breathed its air of seclusion 5 we have felt its stirring pulsa- tions in our hearts for the last time as undergraduates 3 and now, reluctant to go, we come here to speak a few simple, heartfelt words of farewell to old Princeton, and our days' spent within her walls.. If we were to tell the story of our life here among these old elms for the four years of our course, it would fall on strange ears as a simple, commonplace tale, colored only by imagination, but to us it is as the still water running deep, hiding in its secret depths those things which give it charm to us, and lend it great significance. To be sure, every advance we may make, every step ahead that may be taken, is simply another link in the chain of life wrought out by each of us, connecting the future with the past, but the link we have been welding here will ever bear aluster peculiar to itself, and remain for years to come the very brightest spot in all our memory. As we look back now we can see how much in these four years we have deepened and strengthened our conceptions of life and its problems 3 how our eyes have been trained to catch the increasing light which has disclosed itself to us as we have journeyed along. Earnestly have we been pointed to the great, white star of truth, and thither have our steps and aspirations been continually directed. And now, with faith newly purged, with the fire of youth trimmed H -ffl L 16 i, 56 THE NASSAU HERALD. n 2 anew, we stand on the threshold of a past life, our eyes bent on the nl future, and our ears already catching the noises of a greatenworld. - fgv Naturally, at such a time, we are most deeply impressed 'W1th the worth of that we leave behind, and the new difhculties to be battled with. To many of us the path ahead, which we shall fOlloW, is hidden in deep shadow and blurred by dim vision.. For some not the least, faint glimmer of light points out the direction of future activity 5 and we all hesitate somewhat in taking the next step for fear it shall be the wrong one. But knit together by the bonds of college friendship, sweetest, strongest, never to be forgotten, we turn once more and, from these old steps so bathed in recollections, glance again over the past. ' I' For four years we have been almost imperceptibly gliding along in such happy company, fairly forgetting that the smoothly-flowing stream on which we have been drifting, was widening, and its current flowing faster. And although it has been but fourbrief years that we have journeyed so, the beauty of the border land will never be fl ff Never did sun more beautifully steep In his Hrst splendor valley, rock, or hill, Ne'er saw I, never felt, a calm so deep 3' The river glideth at his own sweet will. Life means more to us for having wended our way through this beautiful valley, bathed in the warm light of friendship, breathing an air of seclusion-a very world in itself. y We have tried in leisure moments of reflection to pierce the intervening veil, and picture prospects that will spread before us farther down the course, when the quiet stream shall have widened into the ocean of life, and there will be no jumping ashore when once fairly launched in it. Yet we cannot help but feel as we go, that if in after- years the fondest dreams 'of our college days are realized, there will arise in memory the days of auld lang syne, passed beneath the elms, and the feel- ing will possess us, that the hours passed with happy prospects in view were even more pleasing than those crowned with fruition. . 'As we go hence we shall carry with us the remembrance of gather- 5 ings on Winter evenings about the fire of some college room, or of groups under these elms in the soft twilight, or of walks about this old place when confidence drew sympathetic natures together, and there was silently carried far into our hearts the real, true meaning forgotten : t - ' 1 ivv oRAT1oN. 57 of a true friend. O, the divinity of true friendship! How deeply we feel it now, as even on the eve of our departure, one place in the ranks is made vacant, one who had journeyed thus far with us has fallen on the way just this side the goal. But what a record he has left behind! His sterling qualities, his nobility of character, his perfect integrity demanded the admiration of all, and bound those of us who knew him best most closely to him. We shall miss him and mourn for him, but the remembrance of his friendship will ever remain sweet. Yes, our friendships formed here will ever live, ever influence and inspire us. Through them we shall recollect in after years the ten- der ties binding us to Old Nassau and the scenes of long ago. We shall recall the evening songs as we gathered on these steps, as the shadows stretched themselves along beneath the elms, andthe green earth and golden light blending into a veil hid from us the world of possible activity. T A , But that veil is even now being withdrawn 3 we are about to launch forth for ourselves, carrying with .us a power to tell for better or worse, to lift up or to pull down, to aid and spmpathize, or tobadd to the heartlessness of selhsh ambition of which the world is all too full. The college man's place is a large one, and responsibility is ever the attendant of power. We go forth having learned from old Princeton the best lesson she could teach us, the first lesson of a true citizen-totbe democratic in sympathy and feeling, to be loyal in friendship, to 4 be large-hearted, liberal and charitable. The deeds and words which have stamped this lesson indelibly upon our minds will never lose their power or influence. It is in order that all these incidents and scenes of four years may be kept green to our memory, that we plant this ivy to vine in all its tendriled strength over the walls of Old, North. Here, amid the barrenness of winter and the bloom of summer it will recall by the tracery of its green curtain our scenes of good fellow- ship, the happiest, freest days of our lives. To these we bid a last farewell. 53 THE NASSAU HERALD. PRESENTATIQN ORATIQN. ,l--i L. IRVING REICHNER, PA. Dum frangere postes non pudet, Et rixas inseruissejuvatf'-TIB., I., 74. ADIES AND GENTLEMEN, FELLows AND A FEW OTHERS- To quote from jim Campbell's oration of this morning- The busy hum of the campus is stilled, the lofty academic elms are murmuring softly as they sway in the summer breeze. It is a scene of blissful tranquillity. All nature in solemn silence respects John Degnan as he busies himself with his tiny gold- fish. john is so happy, for the time is growing short inwhich Frank Riggs can steal his helmet and badge, and soon De Wolf Hopper will be far away among the heathen, spending his time more profitably than in giving kegs of beer on Old North steps. To-night will be heard throughout our classic shades the shouts and jeers of T HE NASSAU HERALD angels as they count up their ill-got gains and plan trips to Europe and other expensive places. . Sall Condit can't go with them, because he took his share of the proiits in trade. That magnificent suit of all-wool, non-shrinkable overalls he wears to-day represents the half-page advertisement of a prominent cloth- ing iirm, while the beautiful Alpine sunset on Jay Miller's nose is the commercial equivalent for Scud's business card on page 132. But to return to the task. We are looking to-day uponia mighty class, a batch of intellect evolved to its highest pitch, a large chunk of beauty and manly grace. You who are strangers little know of the worm of suspicion that feeds upon those damask cheeks, and the finger of retribution that is drawing lines across those expansive poller foreheads, unexplored till now save by the festive green eye- shade. It is my sad duty to uncloak these young lives and sport among these many whited sepulchres. Before I begin, De Wolf Hopper would like to announce that there is no truth in the report that hewas mixed up in that affair in Edwards in Sophomore year, PRESENTATION ORATION. 59 when Connor Akin came so near to leaving us. Hopper says he left early in the game, as he had to help Brig Young pull down the scaffolding around Dod Hall. We might start things rolling by following the oldrule and calling up the most representative man in the class-not you, Nixon. Oh, I beg your pardon. You were only going to call for a short hobble-gobble, were you? If you had offered me the prettiest Princeton pin that ever was seen things might have been different, but in the words of Eddie Laughlin, the effervescent horse-player, 'f Hello, To-o-m Bailey. WVill King Bailey kindly strut within the range of our humble vision ? This gem sprang into prominence during the iirst blush of collegiate existence in the following weird and self-assertive way: The class- with the exception of Willie Meredith, who had already entered '95-had bunched up in Marquand Chapel to receive a shower of welcomes from the Faculty and Broadnax. The President had finished his address, a lull ensued as solemn and impressive as the face of McCartney in his happiest mood. Suddenly the silence was broken by a voice from the crowd, rotund and oratorical, its measured periods floated up to the arching roof. All turned to look 3 there stood a man among men with bulging chest and haughty glance, his proud lips curling contemptuously as he launched forth the words that were to direct our awe-struck minds. H Fellows, I am here. This remark not seeming to produce the desired effect, was repeated. I am here, I say, and I rejoice to see you all. Come to Qld Chapel at the close of these exercises and we will elect our president. I need not tell you how to vote. .There are men who are fated by an unerring destiny to be leaders in the nation. I am such a man. I have the requisite bearing and polish. Copies of my speech on the 'Norm of the Eternal Ego' are for sale by Horace Nixon, who has them neatly bound in orange and black- with 794 in six-inch letters on the front page, and real I4-karat gold clasps. Read these and ponder. Boys, you need a president who can represent you before the public, one acquainted with the par- liamentary world. No poller like Broadnax, no real lady like Georgie Swain, but a man who could excel even Mac Thompson in blufling the Faculty on athletic matters and one who could naturally assert himself on any and all occasions. Come, shirk not your duty, be true to Old Nassau. I am done. Having inflated his chest from three to eight times consecutively and tossed aside the . I I I L r I v i r F I r l t 1 1 1 L l i l I l i i i i 1 i 1 1 5 i I l 1 x in 4 i P l 2 I l 2 5 5 i 1 4 1 I L 4 4 ! l Z V l if .p H I 1 e 1 1 J 1 1 if' l 1 i r 6 60 THE NASSAU HERALD. matted locks that clustered around his finely-chiseled temple of mighty thought, Thomas, the far-darter, sat down. Hardly could we restrain our enthusiasm, now wrought-to its highest pitch. Out we rushed in one mad throng, tumbling over Opiate Neeley, who was asleep in the aisle, and crushing little jimmy Bathgate into ob- scurity, from which he has never since arisen. The class at that time lacked but two of its number, one was the hyper-intellectual and literary tank, Mac Sykes, who was down among the junk shops of New York buying orange and black bunting in preparation for his descent on us in Sophomore year, and the other was the notori- ous politician and all-round wire-puller, De Wolf Hopper, who was engaged in making a combine with the Proctors to keep the Sophs from hazing him. But even without these two the earth seemed to jog along, and when Tom was elected, we were charmed with our choice. He stood as he stands now-cheeks flushed, of haughty mien and piercing eye, calmly surveying the multitude 'who had chosen him king of the roost. I I I Tom, your time is precious, so we. won't -keep' you waiting. Here is a little balloon whistle you might like to have. r Iniiate it carefully and there you have Freshman year, that tuneful squeak represents oratory pure and simple. ' I We run along to Senior year, and, presto-+where are we at? ' Now, if some one will keep a strict lookout onVan Cise and see that he don't draw a gun, it might be profitable to probe into his literary career. Van is one of those sad-eyed, mysterious men who live on poetry and three meals per day. g This year he reached his climax when he sent his poem to the Lif., with the following note: Sykes, Cherry and small Patterson-Greeting: I send you a small fragment of erotic poetry which I dashed off in Spanish class. Print it at once, or I'll blow your office through the roof. ' A FIRST sPAsM. U i 1 . Her head reclined with easy grace Upon the bosom of me shirt, - - And long I gazed upon' her face- Marguerite, you saucy Hirt I SECOND FIT. . For she was 'andsome, that she were, So fair, blue-eyed and plump, Ah, dearest one, you know I am Your dashing, darkfeyed chump. PRESENTATION ORATION. 61 FINAL coNvULs1oN. And as through life we gaily llit, 'Like giddy little mice, NVelll read my pome in the Lif., Signed, Courtlaudt B. Van Cise. The board would have printed it, only Hopper fixedup another combine with the Prz'fzfezt0fzz'cm and Tiger and kept it out. ' Since we have reviewed some of the literary lights of the class, let us look at some of our heavy calibre, smooth bore, brainy men. Princeton has always been noted for its philosophy. Whether this is due to the patient research of Yorke Allen in that line is a trifle uncertain in some quarters, but anyone would have awarded him the palm for deep thinking had they heard the following conversation which he sprang on his boon companion, Malcolm Lloyd: My dear boy, the future is before you. This will seem singular to you at first, but when I explain it to you, you will at once see that if it were anywhere else it would seem out of place and unhappy. Youwill readily see that Providence has so wisely ordered things that not only in the economy of nature does the uncertain subse- quently follow closely upon the already-forgotten previously, but the hazy and obscure past was at one time the unborn germ of the dim and incandescent directly, embosomed inthe great unknown finally, and shrouded in the prismatic colors of the boundless ultimately. Try to impress this never-dying truth upon your mind: Whatever we do not do at once or at some time in the future, unless someone else does it, will in all human probability remain undone. Malcolm nodded wise-ly,'and soon the pair were busily engaged in the discussion of the momentous question, Whither are we drifting, and if so, to what extent? totally forgetful of the time when Malcolm let the blanket fall in the Sturtevant House and so scared Georgie Linnard that his heart has been as weak as his head ever since. We turn from the serious to the frivolous side of life. Have we Willie Meredith with us to-day? I hear Gin and Gum Buckelew with his inevitable U Right, rooster I so we'll have Willie amble right up. Never mind if they do call you Cush. Nobody could notice it to-day. Don't look foolish, but stand up straight and look as handsome as you really are. T I This is a fine young man, but he has an oily and untruthful 1 62 THE NAssAU HERALD. tongue. One day Willie confided to Fruit Van Duyn, in an un- guarded and unprovoked burst of talkativeness, that he was very fond of hunting the succulent snipe. ' ' . H Many a time, said Will, have I on dark and wintry nights, taken a gunny sack and laid up alongside a country fence waiting for 'em to run along the fence and jump into the bag, and when they are once in, you know what to do, don't you Van, old boy? - Van said yes, yes, and Willie, in his childlike way, with gurgles of bubbling insane laughter very much like the coy, maidenly giggle that Ernie Haas has brought to such a state of perfection, led Van forth and left him back of Witherspoon for four hours until Van's feet were frostbitten and his heart was choked with rancor. Mean- while, Willie was lolling in his luxurious apartments full of the milk of human kindness and other indigestible concoctions, toast- ing his cush feet in front of the Ere and listening to some of Black McCune's stories of how the Pennsylvania farmers delight to mow it down in harvest time. After the snipe hunt was all over, Will had the nerve to persist that birds couldbe bagged that way. T hat's so, too, said Willie, for Shorty,Kennedy tried it down injersey only this year, but he just tunneled a hole in the snow and watched for 'em to come, and when they did come, they rushed into the bag so blamed sudden-like that the bottom came out and it didn't count him nawthin. Beware, Meredith, the town authorities are after you and Gaddy Drake for that cremation you took part in down in your room in Dod. Pimple Pitcairn didn't send those presents to you for your own use but to give to Ward McAllister, who needs them very badly. Take this rattle, Will, and may its merry jingle bring back recollections of your foolish, foolish life. Run away now, and let Shorty come up and get this snow shovel to help him along in his earthly progress. Never mind, Short, even if your dignity is a trilie hurt 3 you'll get over it. Willie Meredith is a very funny boy, but may we all be delivered from humorists of the MacMitchell school of comedy. Big Mag, or the Princeton fashion-plate, as he pleasant little way of making known room, first, he selects his inoffensive behind him with a lope that reminds Skirt dance, Of 'Che Corkscrew curves of Elliptical Van Nortwick, at batting practice when he is pitching to the 'Varsity in the absence is commonly known, has a his presence in a crowded victim and slyly creeps up one of Bill Tower doing a PRESENTATIGN ORATION. 63 of Si. Mitch then jabs you several well-directed pokes in your floating ribs and smashes your hat down over your eyes until you look as incongruous as the town marshal in his holiday helmet, or Reddy Turner in his store clothes. All these antics he performs with nicety and despatch interspersed with chuckles of innocent mirth. This performance is rarely if ever varied, and the only time one is safe from his vicious and misguided at-tacks is when Mitch is going to see his Mildred and endeavor to explain the umbrella affair, and why he sat so long on those cold, cold steps waiting for George Linnard's furtive whistle to warn him that his time was up. Speaking of Georgie, now is the time to see this paragon of beauty. Don't get sour, Wilkins and Jenneyg I don't think he can touch you on looks. This study in pink and white, one afternoon, beneath the smiling skies, arrayed in a razzle-dazzle shirt and a purple puff tie, went calling far out amid rural scenes. Where the brook with gentle throbbing, So softly ebbs and flows, And amid the grass so verdant , Clumps of sweet margerum grow. And the fair one, ah, she had promised to be his and his heart was oh, so happy, and he chirped a little song to a wild-eyed and moth- eaten rabbit that skurried across his path. The girl met him by chance and they walked together through the wood. How sym- bolic of their future bliss 1 I When, suddenly spying some flowers far out in the marsh, she bethought herself totest his vaunted love. H Get me those lilies, Georgie, dear, and I will be yours, Cyn cried, in accents wild. Nothing daunted, George whistled a bar or so of One-eyed Reilly and rushed in, but alas, why is mud so muddy and water so wet? Bedraggled and woe-begone he returned, but without the flowers. And then they parted for keeps. The girl soon fell in love with Tommy Bowes and Ernest Keigwin, while Georgie was kissed only the following week by a girl who was most thirteen years old, in a Pullman car en route to Philadelphia. Take these blossoms and try to square yourself, but never sign any more letters Ever yours forever. Your heart is too weak now 5 you remember you had to quit the life on that account. Now don't blush, because nothing has been said that you can't explain away. Bye, bye. 2 l 64 THE NASSAU HERALD. It now becomes my pleasant duty to inform the class and the public at large that Hopper denies that he filled the keyholes of the chapel doors with plaster of paris, although he says he saw who did it and thinks it was a real mean trick. However that may be, the Pittsburg contingent with us to-day will be overjoyed to hear that Hunk Cherry is still in college and is holding .up his end despite the depressing effect the rest of the dissipated Liz' Board have upon him. Waldo is a great ball-tosser, and when in good form cannot be touched by even Homerun Mackenzie. Well, Cherry had been giving the Pittsburg people a jolly that he played on the 'Varsity, and that the parsimonious Humphrey didn't give him a monogram blazer because it would cut 'Varsity Peter out of one, and that would never do. To prove his strange tale of prowess,'the local cranks secured Waldo a place in right field on their peerless team. The scene opens with Hunk skillfully draped in orange and black, wearing Souvenir Spoon NiXon's everlasting ,Q4 sweater that he wore when he had his face taken in the Freshman Class picture, under the feeble impression that he was being perpetuated as a member of Whig Hall. Thus accoutred he took his place. Soon a long Hy came to right fleld. Hunk girded up his loins and ex- tended-I think he calls them--his hands, and the ball descended. He's got it, he's got it, cried Waldo's admirers, and so he had. He got it somewhere between the bridge of his classicnose and his dimpled chin, but Waldo says he isn't sure to this day, for his face still hurts him all over., . ' Pity is a divine gift, so we won't tell how Pop Bissell went out to make a call in Washington and was continually requested to 'fsit down and keep quiet, that's a dear boy. But passing on we come to a relic of the SkinnyRankin era. Come up, jitney Williams, you high- rolling tidal-wave, and give an account of your wanderings around New Haven and other large towns. This is the most curious specimen of a Maryland terrapin we have. Gawdge went up to New Haven in Sophomore year to see the game with the Yaleses. The day was wet, and ,before the game Gawdge was a trifle damp. About the fifth inning, as Princeton was going to the bat, a timid, trembling figure was seen resolving itself out of the mist around left field. It was only Gawdge. He was kindly coaching the Yale iielders and telling them how to play the game, not that he knew, but he was just talking to keep from going to sleep. Having been rudely PRES lCN'.l'A'l' ION O RA'l'l,ON. 65 repulsed, he walked slowly and sedately around the Held murmur- ing some quotations he had seen on bock signs. Nearer and nearer he came, until he reached the grand-stand, when he stopped, waved his tlag frantically, and called loudly 1 Ha, boys ! ha, boys! A girl in the stand asked her escort who Mr. Haboys was, but the answer was lost in the terrihc din that Gawdge was making. Here it is, the identical flag. Keep it, lad, but don't get any more Rutgers men full on sea-water and sand, or they'll all stop going to the shore this summer. I won't ask you to make any jbrozzzzke, because you've been weighed and found wanting inthat line. How different from that man is Long Charlie Poller Robin- son, who has always tied with Dead Easy Coleman in catch-as- catch-can irregular Greek verb juggling. Charlie is a merry sight in the class-room. Let him once ferret out even the suspicion of a joke in a professor's remark, and he stamps loudly on the floor and fairly shouts with laughter mingled with cries of good l fine! excellent I Sze. Coleman and Havens, the other aspirants to the fellowship, soon got on to his game and they began to vie with Charlie in the most discordant peals of joy until the classfroom was made a perfect pandernonium by these three misguided pollers. just here, Hopper would like to make a statement. Although it is true that he was summoned before the discipline committee for disorderly conduct, yet he clearly proved to them -that he was only shamming and having a little practical joke, hence all rumors are groundless and false. Q Will some one 'start Grinning Grandin up here P How's the track to-day-think you'll be able to give us an exhibition of fancy riding on the bike? Why, Grinnin, you're as big a farce as that muscular trio of mile walkers, Paul Squirrel jenkins, Pratt of dog biscuit fame and Mac Sykes, the fire-water orator and comic songster. But iyou've trained hard enough and had your picture taken often enough to get a medal. There is a genuine leather, double-rolled, brass- studded medal with a large, square brilliant in the centre, clon't show it to any of the Dyer editors or they'll think it was given you for your 07'ZlQ'Z'7ZCZf drawings that were always accepted by Lie and Tmflz just before the Egger came out each month. Take it back to Tidioute and try to make it last for at least one lap in your life race. All these athletes are very peculiar. There's Irish McClenahan, for instance. One time he went up to Bergen Point on a lacrosse E 9. 's l I I, 'Q i E F X, 2, lk I P I 5 ,P li I! ,S 1 5 i ,P i I , B ,, A 4 ! - I E 3 l S 3 4 3 if + 4 v L r i ., 1. 1 l i il 3. lil ...1-rg x-.1.,4..u4g:4nm.- i e -. l 3 I I 66 I THE NASSAU HERALD. team. During the game Irish had been looking wistfully at a beau- tiful unknown girl in the stand. As soon as he could, he called to a small boy who was sitting near and inquired who the girl was, in the following conversation: f'Say, kid, who's that girl in the red hat? Me sister, replied the boy. Irish thought for a long time, and then said: I'll give you a nickel to introduce me. Got you, said the boy. The nickel was paid over, and Irish picked up his coat and stick and turned to go, but horrors I the boy had skipped, and Irish gave a discordant, grating laugh that dropped the thermometer ten degrees, and felt as lonely as a ham sandwich at a Jewish picnic. If it had been I-Ioxie Clark, he would have pursued the boy around the world--not for the introduction, but the nickel. Hoxie is so thrifty, that whenever a professor happens to be out of town and misses a lecture, I-Iox marches over to the college offices and demands a rebate on his tuition bill. Come forward, Hoxie, and take this squeezer 5 it costs you nothing. Try it on a silver dollar until you can get eleven ten-cent, pieces out of it. It won't take long for anyone with your talents. Rusty Wailes is just the other extreme. We all know of your exploits, Rusty. It seems that Rusty won a prize in Clio I-Iall, and, wishing to cele- brate, invited Bee Shultis, Bob Lewis, Califf of Bagdad, Winnie Kennedy, Hindoo Morrison, Popsy Kellogg, Pa Kiesling and little Vacuum Thompson to help get away with a keg of bock beer which Wailes had secreted in Potter's woods. All went well until the beer got in its deadly work 5 then Bob Lewis embraced I-Iindoo Morrison, and assured him that he would never refer again' to that bath-tub story of how Hindoo tried in vain to stop up the waste-pipe. Thislittle reconciliation scene so affected Bee Shultis that he howled out some plaintive ditty about fi My Cousin Nellie, while Califf of Bagdad and Winnie Kennedy drew a social blank together behind an old stone wall. We can never judge such people by appearances. Why, who would dream of Bill Sexton being athletic any more than one could believe that Flies Rogers was intellectual? Yet Bill has played foot-ball, when he couldn't get out of it. One time Willie was playing end rush on a scrub team captained by Red Turner, a prominent Rutgers alumnus and foot- ball coach. I-Iis opponent was a small, consumptive youth of eleven years about the size of Dick Hatton or Jim Scrimgeour, and during the excitement of the game took Will's pale, religious face for a . L I., 1 n 1 X, I l 1 4 Y 1 l i. L 1--r I' F I P.RESLlN'l'A'lf'.lON ORA'l'cIlUN. 67 punching bag and so enraged Will that he threw off live or six sweaters he was wearing to give himself an athletic, Skinny McWilliams build, and after making several passes at the open air, exclaimed in wrathful tones, If you fellows want to play a rough game, I'm with you to the last punch, After the fracas that ensued Os Jeffreys was discovered behind a lonely fence applying raw oysters and chunks of cold pig iron to Bill's eye, which was fast closing for the night. Os was right in his element, for our dear little country- man always had an attachment for eye-openers. Bill's head, next day, was larger than Tommy Creigh's just before he made the Con- solidated, while his voice had all the skin scraped off until it sounded like Clity George telling the campus that Hhis love was up in the window. i A rolling stone gathers no moss, hence the cleanly-shaven face of that bon vivant and whirlwind sport, Jud Bailey, who is the sole lessee of one of the most penetrating minds in college. Come here, Iuddy, and tell us how you manage, when times are hard, to keep the wolf from the door. One evening Jud had donned his new clothes and polished up some superb Cape May diamonds bor- rowed from Bill Liggettg kissed his room-mate, Country- Sport Buckelew, good-bye, tried to shake Malcolm Goodridge, and betook himself to the home of the insidious Martini and the innocu- ous egg-flip. After promenading Broadway for some hours and having succeeded in well establishing the fact that Princeton's finest sporting extra was in the burgh, he turned up a cross street Where a huge poster bore the announcement: Sacred concert, for one night only. 'fl guess I'l,l sight it, said Ind, and in he went. At the ticket ofhce he asked for a front-row seat, and when the man said Money, please, Jud thought he had been insulted. In order to assert his young manhood he thrust his head through the opening in the front of the box-office, and, putting on a John's alley tone of voice, said: What did yer say, young feller? The man, in reply, said nothing, but proceeded to give Jud ani imitation of the gentle summer rain pattering on an unprotected tin roof. After some minutes Jud tired of having the gentleman's knuckles run the scales up and down his mobile features and tried to remove his head into the open air, but, alas for the effects of a Walk on Broadway, popular homage, combined with joy at being free from Malcolm, had so enlarged Jud's bump of self-esteem that 63 THE NAssAU HERALD. he could not get out. He tugged and pulled while the crowd kept guying and joking him. Affairs were coming to ia head, SO WHS the t Ge car enter and with the aid of a derrick and a monkey- S ao ,c P 7 wrench one side of the building was removed and our game little Princetonian was free. It taught him a great lesson, and to this day he shudders at advertisements in the daily press ofopenings for pushing young men. You've got the box-office, Jud, now keep it in good shape. Speaking of shapes, every- one has heard of the tailor's delight--chubby, little Quail Cham- berlain. No doubt you've seen his picture in some of the class teams. There was a great deal of trouble about getting Al in those pictures. Some of the team said.they'd be shot before they were photographed with a man who queered the whole picture by letting his eyes come out perfectly white on the negative, but these men were overruled by the rest, who said Al must be in it, as he always was in such good form. Good form reminds one of our typical society men, Alphabet Conkling and Cherokee Inslee. Cherokee blew the following fanciful remark into Archie Pepper's ear one day: 'f Oh, Pep, why am I so bashful with girls? It ain't so bad to sit and stare at them, but I never know what to do with my hands or where to putmy feet. How different it is with Conk. As soon as he hears that there are fair arrivals in town, he hastens to his room and puts on his baggiest Prince of Wales Knicker- bockers, with those horse-blanket stockings, and flits up and down Nassau street, a living illustration of a body suspended in space. Conk is very prominent, but not so much so as his dearest friends and boon companions, the Riggs twins. These men are really so much before the public that they would feel more at home up here than down among the rest of the class 3 so they'd better come right up. We'll placard them 4? Exhibit A, Frank, Exhibit B, Harry, so you can spot them at once. These boys have been always together. They were both arrested in Sophomore year, and taken before the Mayor for trespassing and destroying property on the campus of a near-by girls' seminary. - It cost jack Bushnell and the rest of the crowd as much money as Varsity T haw spends in one night to get the star witness for the prosecution to leave town until the affair blew over. Harry accused Frank, and Frank thinks it was Harry who did it, but however that may be, they both made up their differences in an art lecture one day. lit seems 1-lun, 115 soon llx15l NIAFION 0lxAl1ON IS thc cliss 100111 NN Lb d1111t11td foi the stcicopticon exhibition, solt, tooin 1 sounds wut l1e nd, then the sound of 1 kiss, and wl1en tl1e lights weie suddenly tuined up, Frftnk a11d Haiiy were discovered with then 1llllLlQ lovingly c11sped together lhis 111c1de11t fuinished N 111 Lise with 111 inspiration, 1nd 11e tossed off tl1e following O11 tl1e spui ot the moment and tl1e back of 111s visiting card D111 and Cl1C'1ly was tl1e 100111 rlhe lect111e was all abo11t 'ut And tl1e l'1nte111 s glow from out the 100111 Stiucl te1ro1 to Frankiels hefut 1Vhen of '1 sudden tl1e lamp bur11ed h1gl1 And as it sputteied and gasped Each 0116 saw with 'L melting eye 'l hat the11 l1a11ds were Hrinly clasped Frankie and Harry you ie both over sex e11 Take this lesson well to hefut, Though man be lonely eve11 111 heaven He should nevel mix love w1tl1 art The love you feel for each other Should you1 better nature chaste11 Xncl never try your best to botl1e1 'lhftt co7y saloon at the Pasin You re a pretty pair to go down to see tl1e old man and then throw all 111s furniture a11d bric a brac into the canal Why, tl1e next morning 11e spent as much as two hours trying to fish Mrs Cleveland s portrait from under an old canal boat, and his family are suffering from nervous prostration, brought on by fright at your wild antics You ought to be ashan1ed to pour beer into areal rosewood piano just becftuse you d1d11 t like tl1e tone Go back to your seats and repent at your leisure We have bee11 gently going over tl1e uppei strata of our glorious class Now for a tour among t11e darker ledges of petrified genius Won t Charlie Rugh and Smiles McLe1sh lock arms and sau11ter up? Well, Charlie, lots of pretty ladies 011 tl1e campus to day, eh? As for you, Mac, wheie is you1 usual iegalia? Wl1o of us can eve1 for get last Thanksgiving Day, w11en we saw Smiles equipped witl1 a 1eal Brill Bros' brown stor111 coat, a s11i11i11g silk hat, a genui11e Cheviot shirt fastened to his agile frame by a huge solitaire stud screwed nrmly into l1is breast bone? Theie he stood, asmall cigar butt clenched firmly in his teet11, l1is elbows resting ligl1tly on tl1e 1 I 3 1 ....... , uI.1.L..... ....,, I 1 1 V i i i i i 4 ,C ,l li i i r 'i i i i i i L I 7Q THE NAssAU HERALD. two one-dollar bills twined 8 , , . . . between his jewel-bedecked lingers. With airy Pefslflage he Cfled 111 maho any bar of the Hoffman House, 3, husky voice- ff Here you be, five to four, eight to two, cigarettes ' nd no offers to to ci ars place your bets while the wheel moves, a 3 1 drink refused. The Yale men were bluffed for keeps, they had never seen anything like it before. Here in Princeton, every time M U t draft Press-Club johnson and he wheeze over to Dohm's ac ge s a , and call for wine. When the waiter comes in, they purchase a pint of thirty-eight-cent claret, drink half of it, and go out to tear up the campus and get a sporty reputation. But Charlie isn't like that, and he said at the class elections that he would lick Smiles if he didn't take care of himself. Charlie, if you are going to go in for licking anybody, taketthis boot and it may help you some, and you, Smiles, may have this diploma, it is a real paper-sport certifi- cate, and as such you will always revere it. See how the words Dead-Game Sport Hash and sparkle in the sun. It's all yours, too. just think how great it feels to be real tough! It is but a few inches space between the sporting column and the tragedy notices in the morning papers, so it is but a step from Smiles McLeith to Dean' Murray. Come, Dean, let's have a look at you. Here is a blossom that only blooms at a great crisis in public affairs. This is the author of The Power of the Press, or, Tracked to Their Doom. Dean's style is unmistakably the product of a fevered and restless mind, pampered and fed on yellow- back novels and dynamite cocktails. Cast your eyes over these dime novels, I think you'll like them. Let's see, the tirst chapter starts off, Knifed by a quondam friend, or how Honest Johnny bartered his birthright. Uh, its full of those red-hot anurvliistic sentiments, and its mental heat may serve you instead of the A'1'ffl fffflwlg ?6Wf07' -570716 that you asked Santa Claus to bring you. lt' You keep 011 Writing such articles, you may in time heroine us great an editor as Willie Spruance used to be hcforc he got his mental capacities twisted in that folding-bed in Philadelphia. Hopper would like to say just here that hc wus not voitiicvtcrl with the wh l ' - -. ,. . o esale disappearance of chickens that took plat-Q on some ut the nei l ' . ' - . . glbormg 16311118 last Kill. lt is ustoiiisluug how these iuuo- Cent bOyS are always suspected I Will - Jack Willie hancgllsomest man in the class upproru-li? Sit down. 111'1SZlI1 V f- ... . . , . Mousle 1'015Yll1, y01l're not in it git all. ionic, O PR ES l.CN'.l'ATlON ORATION. 71 joe-imy, show yourself to the people. This young man was calling one evening, not upon the cook, as Chip McCampbell did in Omaha, but upon a fair one whom Jen fancied he had fascinated at the Prom. While he sat and gazed longingly at her, a horrible doubt arose in his mind, My dear Miss --, try not to like me too much, won't you? f'What? q was the reply of the aston- ished girl, as she moved closer to hear more distinctly, but Jen mis- took her object, and, drawing back quickly, exclaimed: You can't kiss me, for I've got my fingers crossed. That remark ended the interview. Take this mirror, jen, and when you look at it remember you are the handsomest of '94's sons, a veritable king of hearts. ' There was some excuse for Ienny to get fooled, but there is ab- solutely none for Black Rat lVlcCune. Black is very fond of theatres, so one night he went to Phil Daly's to see the play, and during the course of the evening enjoyed himself very much. The supper table was spread and our comrade sat down and ate heartily. As he arose from the table a man approached and said: I beg pardon, but we are making up a purse to pay for this supper, your share will be about two dollarsf' Black paid it over like a little man, and doesn't believe to this day that he was ileeced. In connection with playing' cards. Chip McCampbell went up one day to New York with Bennie Johnson, and before' they left for home had a social game of hearts, to while away the time. They had no table, so they used the first thing that came to their hand, which happened to be a worn-out, old trunk. As they threw down the cards on its bald and polished surface, Bennie accused Chip of hiding the cards inside the trunk and thus delaying the game. The party ended up in a general fight and a shower-bath, and Chip carrie back to Princeton to get under the benign influence of Hopper, who says Chip would be all right if he always had him to direct him through life. . By an impartial vote of the class, Tommy Bowes is probably our laziest man, but Carl Roebling is a close second. Carl is essentially a springtime blossom. Mayis his favorite month in the year, for then he can go down to Bordentown and succeed in getting chased off the school grounds and put out of every hotel in the place. At college he spends his time in composing parodies on all the popular songs, which he bellows forth at night until the dormitory rocks and ' 1 72 Tl-IE NASSAU HERALD. the soul of Tommy Riggs comes in from the far West and joins him in sweet communion. Une day Carl bought a beautiful pair of white stockings, which thrilled his soul with delight and excited such envy in the hearts of Balliet and jesse Snook that they were stolen from him before the week was out. Here, Carl, is the identi- cal stocking you purchased the night you landed in the Trenton jail. Keep it very carefully. Why, what has Santa Claus put in it? A dictionary and book on etiquette forjohnson? I-Ie'd better come up and receive it at once. Bennie is from Chicago, but he never mentions it. The only thing that interests him is the fair sex. How he does crush their hearts I Said Bennie one time: I think l've got awfully fascinating eyes, don't you? And Fm begin- ning to learn how to use them on girls with great fatality. If Bennie would only stop using such expressions as off1n and hisin, and referring to Princeton's foot-ball tlower as a tfcrin- santhemum, he might be able to make a more picturesque and tell- ing effect. Ben, use this pronouncing dictionary to help you, and try not to break every girl's heart when you first meet her. Billy Liggett don't have to take such precautions. Do you remember that night at the Carmencita ball P' How inspiring you must have looked, with a cigar in one hand, a bottle of sassafras water in the other, whispering sweet nothings into the misty air. Tom Bowes says it was the sight of your flaming red-flannel face that scared that man to death, but Short Kennedy affirms that the man had heart trouble and dropped dead when he overheard Frank Riggs say that he intended to spend his 51.18 if it took him all night! What would you like for a present? Why, you look as agitated as jim Fentress does when anyone talks of photograph collections. Probably you feel as nervous as Flies Rodger did last fall when he couldn't go to the Penn. game because brutality in athletics tlustered him terribly. Take this little pig, and if anyone says, C' Get up and give her a seat, you tell them to Stay where they gee-whiz are, see ! ' Now that we are leaving Qld Nassau we have but few things to regret. But, Kentucky, thou State of blue grass and line horses, home of Tom COTTY and Pat Lindsay, why are you so sour on your sister, New jersey? Must we be condemned to receive such exports as Winnie Kennedy? Must our fair soil be trodden down by the feet of the erstwh1le'rabb1tP Winnie had never seen New York l'R,lCS.l'1N',l'ATION ORATION. 73 until this year, and thought he would like to get some experience in that worldly city. No sooner had he landed at Cortlandt street than the city was at once overclouded with atmospheric mint julips, and the Hoffman House hung out a transparency inscribed, Man- hattan's greeting to Kentucky's favored son, our Winnie has arrived with his potsherd, and it's on the house. Highly pleased with his reception, Rabbit strayed around amid showers of re- freshment and free lunch, and Hnally decided to woo sweet slumber at his favorite Hotel Creighton. After disrobing for the night, Winnie, who is always careful in matters of dress, folded up his trousers and, that they might not lose their crease over night, de- posited them under the bureau, which he had always 'heard the bucolic McCauley speak of as the clothes-press, so he was sure it would have the desired effect on the trousers. Sleep came at last, and Winnie passed the night in dreamland, surrounded by visions of Gus Bowne, Pat Killoran, Adam Dohm, Billy Liggett and Alex- ander McGafIin. When Aurora splashed the east with Vermilion hues left over from the vintage of the night before, until it looked like the peach-blow complexion of Charlie Worden, the boy musical wonder, Winnie arose and in the flood of glorious sun- light brushed the cobwebs from his overworked memory and tried to recollect where he had put those Plymouth Rocks. A bril Qiant idea flashed into his little dohm of thought, I have been robbed and what will the fellows say? How can I face my com- rades? I amgdisgraced, but, Revenge 1 And with one long wail of despondency, he rushed out. Down the stairs, pushing guests and bell- boys to right and left until he brought up with a resounding bang against the office desk. Before he had time to speak the porters rushed forward and surrounded him with hat-racks, umbrella stands, dress-suit cases, and finally, when the wall was completed, Winnie assuming a dignified attitude such as it was, for his massive head was the only part of him in sight, thus addressed the wide-eyed and open-mouthed help: I have been robbed ! Oh, if Billy Liggett was only here he wouldn't shy me. Then his harangue 'became disjointed and wandering and finally the clerk managed to quiet him sufficiently to send him up to his room, encased in a roll of car- pet, a miniature likeness of Fred -Smith QIIIQ, and reposing in the freight elevator a Za George Williams at Spring Lake. A search was made and the trousers soon appeared. One of the men also Q. l I ,l r I r r I l i ir i I L L r i r r l 2 r 74 THE NAssAU I-IERALD.' found Winnie's vest jammed tightly into the water pitcher, where he had put it, as he carefully explained, to keep people from looking into the room, while the basin he had placed under the gas jet to catch the gas if it should leak out during the night. Winnie, here is a small edition of those trousers to remind. you of your first trip to a great city. f At last Hopper has confessed. He admits that last spring, in company with Tom Bowes and Brig Young, he stole a ride to New York and back on a freight train, so that he might be able to see the Brooklyn Handicap, as Erdman had given him a tip on a horse named India Rubber, and Hop thought he'd risk a few cents on its winning in the stretch. This is a substitute train for you to use on your next trip out to see the poor heathen Indians, this summer. We turn with light hearts from this dark picture to a cluster of brilliants of the first water. Will Scotty Mac Thompson, Pete Balliet, jim Blake, jerry McCauley and Fred Allen rise and march forward in time to the music? This year Princeton attained the highest honors in foot-ball, and these are some of the steps by which she mounted up to her glory. Although this quintet are devotees of the pig-skin, they are just like the rest of the class. There's Mac, in Sophomore year traded hats with Shep Homans so that he might get a pull with the association. Pete is fond of fast driving, but his friends say they wouldn't have that pair of Milford ponies he owns at any price. jim is sentimental, and when he sees a girl eating candy always expresses the wildest craving to be that H tiny little piece that she is just touching to her ruby lips. jerry is a confirmed agriculturist and Coxeyite, while Fred's friends have all built cyclone pits around their houses, in which to take refuge from the wind when Fred gets to talking about Brother 'Yorke and other entrancing topics. Boys, I have nothing material to give you. 'Ninety-four will always cherish your names among those of her most honored sons. You have all worked hard for her, and without you the Princeton banner would lack that single word, Championsf' which is now so proudly rampant. My task is ended. These words have been written in the spirit of good fellowship and kindly feeling. If there has been aught of sting left behind, my work has been in vain. Let us look forward to a future as rosy as the head of our Prophet, and with hopeful voices echotthe sentiment of the gladiator of old, H011 world, we who are about to labor, salute thee ! Puolviei iscv. 7 5 PROPHECY. -lit, BY J. 'I-I. TURNER, IA. RETHREN, AND ALSO MY DEAR SISTERS CI address you thus familiarly, ladies, only to make Malcolm Goodrich feel more at home, for every girl he ever met has within five minutes promised faithfully to be his sisterj--Ladies and Gentlemen, and in this last term we will, for sweet charity's sake, even include Cleindintz-for which we humbly beg the audi- ence'S pardon. Lend Willie Rogers your ears that he may hear all the flattering remarks that we shall make of him. When the burden of a Prophet's power fell on me, yea, fell on me with a dull thud like the dropping of Teddy Loughin's countenance when T. Humphry don't care to take a walk, it was not by journeying to Delphi and making inquiry of the oracle. If I had been disposed to ask questions I would have dropped a hint to Garrulous Luding- ton, the dainty bud culled from the fertile stockyards of Omaha-ha, and I would have been overwhelmed with a seething torrent of promiscuous tid-bits of information. Neither did mine eyes direct their glances towards the hard, ex- pressionless face of the' great Sphinx. Had I sought such sources of inspiration I would have risked my orbs on the mullet-faced, bullet-proof, built-for-pie, sure-cure-for-insomnia physiognorny of my rural friend Perkins. Nor did I Search the empyrean vaults with any degree of success, for everything heavenly so smacked of one member of our class that had I followed the dictates of the stars this work would have been chiefly a biography of Sandy McAf1n-a highly edifying sub- ject indeed, but somewhat out of place in a composition which must needs ,treat of the lives of such men as Chit Williams, a promising youth, Jack Bushnell, and that real live sport, Sal Condit. 76 THE NASSAU HERALD. By no such simple means did I gain ,the favor of the gods, that they show me the mysteries of the great unknown. , Not without much solicitude and anguish of spirit, when in the dead of night the twinkling starlets left alone to woo unseen the canal dogfish swelled with pride, like the swelling of VVintringer's head, I had taken myself with uncertain steps to the black and mystical woods, the dreaded haunts of guzzled spirits long departed, which Pop Alexander-like rise gaunt and gnarled- from the foot of our classic campus, and there with my face to the ground-as I have often seen Runt Kennedy and Billy Ligget in those self-same' woods at the self-same hour-had poured out my ills, not till then did the reluc- tant gods unbosom to me their hidden secrets. Then a strange calm crept over me, and nature seemed hushed in a weird silence, like unto Sill's when reciting, and I felt the subtle workings of an inspiration infuse me--you will see the same symptoms in lim Blake's palpitating knees and moss-covered voice as to-day he for the hrst time arises to speak in public-and the elements were hurled together and mixed in a strange and wondrous camomma, like the mingling of the ideas of lim Fentriss and Crazy Bullitt. And I heard the rushing of many waters, sounding like the death gurgle in Murray Brush's throat, and bearing on their foamy crests the story of one or another of my classmates. And the four winds turned back in their courses to whisper how the ,good boys lived great and noble lives, and at last liitted away to the realms of the blest, or perchance they paused to tear and lash themselves, pro- claiming in discordant and soul-harrowing tones the awful fate of him who polled not. And it all had a reality as vivid as the pseudo dignity of Tom Bailey. A ' A happy home-like scene first burst upon my delighted vision-a scene warm with peace and satisfaction, like iRobinson's self-com- placency. A little dark-haired man is seated in a large arm chair. A heavenly light shines in his eyes, and a proud, joyful smile plays about his face as he awkwardly jostles something to and fro in his arms. Say, girls, would you believe it? It is Tommy Carlisle, and he .holds the class-boy in his arms-so familiarly, and isn't embarrassed at all. But that was not the only one, oh dear, no. The next actor on this weird stage is I-Ioxie Clark. You remem- ber Hoxien? The dignified man. Of course he was dignified. It didn't cost anything, and besides it paid. He could: then take l l, l 2 8 1 r I -.qq-....s.f......,.,...,....,,,. , ,.,,4,..,,, x Wg , l'RO,l'l'el,lCCY. 77 longer steps in his walking and thus save sole leather. He who wanted the class to sing Old, Nassau all the time to save the wear on his hat, who spent all his time in his room in order to get his 1noney's worth out of the rent. Yes, I know you remember Hoxie. Why, you could no more forget him than you could get rid of Ward McAllister when he has made up his mind to make you a friendly little call. The culmination of earthly bliss was reached by Hoxie when at last he found a method whereby he might be a great blessing to himself and incidentally to the world. And now, old and weasened, he sits all day long in a dim garret turning back the hands of his watch to save time. g ' The next scene was of such grandeur as to stupefy the senses and make one feel as bewildered and lost as Pop Insley looks. Yet it showed that zeal and virtue in the nothingness of human affairs is rewarded in the next world. It was an imperial chamber of Hades. Asbestos curtains of royal purplehung around in luxurious folds, even' as the layers of adipose tissue on the person of Skinny McWilliams. The walls and floor and every article of furniture being composed of living fire, threw out a light and heat as intense as Brodnax's love for the last girl he met. Four beings were present in this chamber, counting a little cherub of darkness which hovered above the central ligure, gently waving a-palm leaf fan. Two of these beings, clothed gaudily in pink flames of the latest style, were doing abeyance to their lord, who, with a cynical and satisfied smile, sat on his throne of lava and ruled the department. These two I recognized as Annanias and Saphira. Bowing low, they cried Oh, Liar and Prince of Liars, We are your humble disciples. All honor to Bill Sykes, the King of Liars. With a calm serenity like that of Billy Spruance while writing editorials on moral conduct, Sykes greeted me with a very plausi- ble story of how he had swum the Styx alone and then by way of amusement had tied a tin can to the tail of Cerberus, which resulted in a triangular athletic league between the three heads of that noted individual, which he likened unto the rather loose connection between the districts of All Van Nortwick, who is divided into three parts, legs, mouth and nose, and the greatest of these is the nose. I told Bill that I had heard that the reason that he had left the mundane sphere was because of excessive internal application of rf l. I i ' 1 if il I 4 4 gi ll v li Q. l f LL 53 la 1 i i 1 i , 1 K f v I 1 , i I I l l I l l I u i . I I i ,. 1 il l I 1 v l I i I I 2 l I 5 4 I I. l F I 1. I 78 THE NASSAU HERALD. shoe blacking licked from our Professors' boots. Bill denied it at once and then I knew that he had come to his death in this Way. The cherub I had noticed was only Willy Meredith, chosen, not on account of any particular ability, but he was so handsome, you know, and they needed something to offset the personal appearance of King Sykes, who is as uncomely as Reichner. All the time I was there Willy was calling across the gulf to Lazarus Woodruff to send Qiim over some nectar with a stick in it, and Lazarus signaled back for the loan of a little ire to light a cigarette which Dud Whitney Qiad just borrowed for him. I seemed to be in the wild woods of Maryland, and was accosted by a tall man of fierce aspect, whose personal appearance strongly suggested that it had been many generations since any of his ancestors had been what might be called handsome. His glassy, deep-set eyes roamed wildly as he furtively approached me and asked in plaintive tones: Have you seen Frank? No, I said. Then go away, bad man. I am afraid that you are that Benny Benson, he replied. I left the poor demented creature and wandered on. Soon I met what I supposed to be the same man. He was singing in doleful cadence, 'CI believe it, for my brother told me so. With the same sorrowful voice he.asked: Have you seen Harry? Then I knew that the Riggs boys had committed some great crime. For what punishment greater than separation, except the ,loss of the boot-lick which Brother Jess left them and which gave them the onlyprestige they ever had? The energetic careers of Perk jack and Frank McCune then loomed up before me with a pathos as painful as the sight of P. jenkins in running clothes. They had heard of a place somewhere, not in New jersey, where nature. provided all things for her chil- dren and cigarettes already lighted grew in profusion. In a moment of enthusiasm they started to discover this bower-decked Eden, and after bravely overcoming many foes in the shape of board bills and chicken roosts they arrived safe but tired. Poor deluded boys! It was true that luscious fruits grew in abund- ance. Sparkling wines bubbled forth from the springs and fig- leaves, unassisted, Wove themselves into fashions approved even by Popsey Kellogg. But it all had to be gathered, and it was done on the Utopia plan, death bein.g the penalty for shirking. The old ennui came over them. Alas, Frank could not work his PROP!-l ICCY. i 79 bluff, and llerk, strange as it may seem, had no pull. So, clasped iu each other's fond embrace, they were dropped gently into the sea. The troubled waves closed over them and in deference to the dear boys' feelings they became calm and peaceful and never moved again. lf I were to tell you the story of Windy Allen Iwould. take it from the lips of lViudy--with brother York first substitute. Windy Allen I When was his fame not noised abroad? Alas, only when Windy ceased to breathe. Why, he had an enormous reputation- coinposed chiefly of airy nothingness, like lVIcIllwain's underwear or Erdman's knowledge of the world. But oh, the eternal fitness of things I There was a long and disastrous drought in the far West. No propitious winds came tocarry them the rain clouds which, in New Jersey, hung thick and heavy as Hunk Cherry's jokes. At last in desperation they sent for Windy. No sooner had he arrived than hurricanes and tornadoes blotted out the landscape, but Windy stood calm and imperturbable amid it all, telling how lze used to play foot-ball. But in a moment of inadvertency he stopped to caress that good right arm of his. It was a fatal pause. The pent-up gas having no outlet for one brief instant, gathered and exploded. Windy was sent in all directions. And as they pieces grew smaller and smaller and finally faded away in the distance the echoes still whispered, H They made a mistake in not putting me on that team. I would not have appeared on the field the next year for a million. And as I listened to those words, bearing on, their accents the sure doom of Princeton's foot-ball fame, an awful fantastic shower began to fall. No grateful, cooling drops sank into the thirsty earth like jersey lightning into Iud Bailey's system. The air was black with small, queer characters. These letters fell in torrents, and while I watched them the silvery tones of a familiar voice rang out, A sweatah is so wery wulgah, don't you know. And then I knew that Bot White had slipped into some polite society unawares and was trying to make an impression by dropping his Rs Torn Bowes, Muck Young and Ed I-Iammet then appeared. From their conversation I gathered that Father McColl, Mother Keigwin and Brother McDowell had kindly given them their tickets to the blessed regions because they themselves had a cinch on an entrance anyway. So our friends swaggered in, and after proceeding to a pawnbroker's shop owned and managed by Horace F. Nixon '94, they bought some second-hand crowns. So TI-IE NASSAU HERALD. Tl l commenced to pass the time of day with Muck Homes, iey t ren who, in an old blue sweater, was leading the choir. But soon Ed s ' h h 'd glittering eye ixed itselfon the pearly gates which t ey ua just entered. Agilely he mounted them and called for paint. With the same artistic touch as of yore he rapidly sketched ln orange and black a 794 as huge andround as Stomach Akms' face, ' l B wn and while Tom and Muck slipped up behind Angel Gabrie ro y and then told Father Abraham adorned his wings in the same way, - to take off his hat. Oh, sad, sad thought! The police force was either more efficient than were the old college proctors or else the boys had lost their cunning. Their fall was awful. For nine full d th fell through space and at last reached bottom--and Ossy ays ey Jeffery, who needn't have been down below, but he thought that unless he went there people would say he Wasn't sporty after all, and what would Mag Mitchell think of him then ?i Then I saw a sight such as is seldom inflicted upon the lot of man to behold. Two figures approached. Long, gaunt and shambling, they were alike in their ugliness as they awkwardly gyrated their clumsy carcasses toward me. They wore an expression of child- like trust each in the other as they ambled peacefully hand in hand. J When I perceived they were no other than good old Bill Tower and Lou Reichner, I turned my head and wept. -Either one would have been enough. Why, oh, why had the fates decreed that I should see them both at once. But Providence was not all unkind, for soon these Heavenly Twins went on their way, leaving my sore eyes to heal again. And I wept for joy. A About the next scene the mystic vista of the future seemed a far- reaching plane--a boundless waste like unto Patterson's mind. No speck, even so large as Kant Kinny, appeared in view. Finally by borrowing six pairs of glasses from Concave McMillan, and a lorg- nette from Pauline Conkling, the beardless lady, I succeeded in piercing the veil, and lo, a Duke stood before me. I was as sure that it was a Duke as Teddy Humphry is sure that he is a fine all- around man, for a lion rampant was engraved on his collar-button and he wore a gorgeous coat-of-arms made up from a cast-off gar- ment of Califf of Bagdad, while a banner waved over him, bearing in blazing script the legend H How Great Van Spring Poet Van Band Wagon Van Cise, Duke of I-Iarlem and Leige Lord of Ferris the Cliff Dweller. My foot is on my .native heath. Down with they I 2 E ! E x i 4 -. F3 it' if L ix Q, N 5 s 5 F i I i F '1 T I ..-.iQ CLASS DAY COMMITTEE ig...-:El PROPHECY. 81 Campbells, wow ! Anticipating a horrible struggle, I turned away sick at heart. But just then Geo. Forsyth, with wonderful heroism, cried out, There shall be no murder done ! Then he gallantly rushed away and courageously found jerry McCauley, whom he bravely asked to separate them. Oh, noble youth I Then I seemed to perceive beside me an individual whose face seemed familiar, yet whose hollow cheeks and cadaverous hgure I could not place. In a stricken voice he wailed, Don't you know me, old man? Clytie, Clytie, George ! I cried in sad astonishment. He burst into tears, Yes, I have come to this, and he pointed to the room to let in his waistcoat and the trowsers, which hung like a Mother Hubbard on a bean-pole or a Sam Dickey. She would marry me, he exclaimed, I didn't want her, but, but you know I never could bear to see a sweet young thing in tears, and when she put her arms around me, that is, partly around me, and called me Karl and said she loved me because my blue eye reminded her of her iirst husband, my brown eye of her second, my general contour of her third, who couldn't see his feet ?' --a sob like a Watertown gurgle burst from him, and he departed, singing in sad, sweet strains, Roll, Wrinkle, roll. It was with intense interest that the Prophet traced the shining career of Mac Thompson, the most popular man in his class. You know he can't help being popular. just comes natural, like with Chas. Rugh. No office in the gift of Tammany Hopper and Mart Quay Pepper was too great for Mac. From the topmost height of fame he looked down and sighed for more to conquer. So Dewolf and Pep decided to make him King of the Sandwich Isles. There he became so popular that the natives desiring closer relations with him, determined to make him chief factor in a feast they were pre- paring. They had just served up Quail Chamberlain on toast. All day and night they boiled Mac. Oh I sobbed Liliuokolani, as she nibbled a drumstick, and to think. how handsome he would have been were it not for that face n and that form. Truly, lVIac's popularity had ruined him. Alec jenny's reputation as a business manager proved 'fatal for his chances of bliss in the next world. When after a very success- ful life here he reached the shrouded mysteries of the nebulous universe he found that his fame had preceded him. His Satanic Majesty believed that jen would make a splendid manager of the F 82 THE NASSAU HERALD. Demons Theatrical Co., which was then playing the Bl2LCk Crook to crowded audiences composed of elite devils and Carl Roebling, and would engage Pat Lindsey to dance the ballet and pose as the Blonde Beauty from Killarney, while St. 'Varsity Peter. wanted him to keep Grier and Petrie from crawling under the fence. But a compromise was effected, Satan agreeing to take Pete Balliet as a coal heaver and Stiff Beck to put in the electrical works, on Charon's pleasure yacht. And Peter took Chas. Worden and Sport Kenly to lead the Harp and Psaltery Clubs, and Papa Kiesling to reason with Cherry about returning to St. Paul nQErdrnanj his crown which Hunk had borrowed to wear at the Neophites' Prom. Poor jen was left uncalled for, and at last accounts he was sitting on a cold rock midway between Gehenna and Paradise, wishing that he were Borneo Roberts. . Yes, Gib, I'll speak of you now. I haven't forgotten how ear- nestly you requested me to mention your name in the prophecy and please do it in connection with some of the sporty boys. Well, Gib, I prayed the gods that they would show me your future. Look then, said they. I looked and saw nothing. H Nay, I cried, I see nothing but a blank. 'fYes, spoke the gods, that's it. That's Gibson. The rest of the class passed by in quivck succession. ' First, Jimmy Bathgate, now grown to the stature of afair-sized boy, was enthusiastically rooting for Mud Archer, Geo. Swain, Mike Fisher and a few others, but they, ungrateful wretches, did not even give him honorable mention. Following closely was Dean Murray, a Professor of' Ethics, and he was hurling deadly philipp-ics at Ed Russell and Jim Swain, who deftly caught the poisoned missiles on their spotless shield, Con- science, and passed them on to some unfortunate individuals who were not thus protected. Then passed along two' diminutive cigar signs, which looked strangely like Runt Akin and Pete Portzer. They were standing in front of a familiar drug store, and on each was the inscription Candid criticism on female attire given to every lady who passes. I Saw a World's Beauty show. The entries were jack Wilkins, john Dickinson and Cholly Hoge. jack said that he had his opinion about who was prettiest. john said that he wouldn't be insulted lw being matched against that Hoge. That left Cholly without 21 coni- Pnopnncv. 83 petitor. Lewis, Hatton and McCampbell were chosen judges because never having had a chance in the beauty line themselves they were unbiased. They promptly decided to give Cholly the booby prize and hold the first prize over until sometime when Cy Heath should enter. I ' Irish McClenahan procured a position on a Maryland farm, where he now shovels to his heart's content, and Else Kenyon still stands by and asks questions . Essick commenced lecturing as a dry humorist. Indeed, that quality was in such preponderance that on his first attempt he was choked. He was about to lose his life by calling in Dr. T. A. Jenkins, Head Physician to Hungry Golden's Livery Barns, when he was wafted away in a dust storm and Went to join his dear friend Herb Fisher for sympathy. L Tom Creigh signed as pitcher on the Gmaha base-ball nine. He was soon asked to resign, but vowed not to do so until he had won a game for his team. I At sixty-three years of age he was still pitching. Bill Liggett ran a dyeing factory. The only color he could pro- duce was scarlet, but he did that cheaply, as he merely had to extract the blushes from his nose. And Chip McKenzie, Princeton's Pride l The fates indeed treated him with unusual tenderness. Throughout all his life his trusty friend, little twenty-two calibre Thompson, followed faith- fully at his heels, bearing the brunt of all battles and gladly sacri- ficing himself that he might strew roses in the pathway of his lord and protector. Thus in solemn procession passed the whole class-- all but one. And for him I waited with the dogged patience of a Poller Wailes. After many weary hours Rip Van Winkle Neely stepped proudly by. I spoke to him, but he said he could not stop, as he was on the staff of the H Chicago Somnambulistf' and had to write an editorial for the last month's issue. Now, my dear friends, I must leave some of you in ignorance of your futures, not because they were not shown to me, but because they seemed so improbable that it would sound more natural could you hear them from the lips of a more cheerful liar than myself, and so for the remainder I will refer you to Shorty Kennedy, champion liar of Pittsburg and the Alleghenies. 34 THE NASSAU HERALD. 3 cENsoR,s sPEEcH. P , JAMES ROBERT BLAKE, N. J. ,-li-s--I IND FRIENDS-To you I am announced as suitor to your mercy from my beloved class for this most sad display. y But not unconscious of your weary glance, the poet s verse shall be revised, for who comes last must needs make haste unless he would rehearse to empty pews. Th-us much of encour- know full well that when hat slender thread, which in its mesh has drawn us closer than the world can ever know, will then be burst beyond the whole world's power to mend, and then-FAREWELL. But one last service it is my privilege to perform-to expose these hypocrites and slanderers who have not only told us of our faults but have taken great liberty in the invention of new ones for the amusement of Tommy Carlisle and the other children. Oh, if I were not myself one of those same incompetent nominees, how I would wade into them! just think what possibilities there are in a case like Reddy Turner's. He's the one who brought ready wit to be considered the lowest form of humor. Here, Willie-Oh, that donft make any difference, I could see, as of course you couldn't, that people were not tired of looking at you, though to be honest they were tired of listening to those visions so thick you could cut them with a knife, and yet of such uncertain mould that you madeisome mistakes of identification yourself. In truth, Brick's head is not of such stuff as dreams are made of, unless it be night-mares. On the other hand, there is nothing really wrong with it. That is an entirely erroneous idea, derived from a purely superficial view of the subject. However, we can't afford to look into the matter any further. We confess him unique, but he is eminently natural, and not, I agement, butto you, 'DEAR FELLOWS, you I cease to speak, t ' can assure you, gotten up for the occasion. No--my life on it--he is not an imposture. The roses in his cheeks ne'er grow dim, and CENSOR'S SPEECH. 85 I will guarantee him not to shrink nor fade if ordinary care be used in washing. Dumb beasts are fascinated, I should say petrified, by his glance, and at home on the ranch he used to break bronchos by mesmerism, or something of the kind. One day in Freshman year Willie was strolling in a field down by Stony brook. Some cattle were feeding along the bank, and at sight of them fond memories of the home ranch Hooked into Willie's brain-location marked in the original by deep red coloring-and he 'thought it would be 'just the finest thing to show how he could ride a wild steer. He stole up quietly behind the unsuspecting brute, then vaulted suddenly on its back. But alas, he had forgotten the secret of his power. He should have approached in full view. We caught only one glimpse of the flying heels and streaming tail, and Willie was gone. We hastily followed to the next bend of the stream, and here met Red crawling out of the creek covered with mud and slime, two black water snakes writhing in one hand and a large snapper in the other. Where's your mount ? I ventured. Oh, I let him go to get these for Lud. It was just this limitless adaptabilityto circum- stances which brought Brick here at the start. He applied to enter Soph., but as they had no papers prepared he said he would enter Fresh. without exams., so as not to inconvenience the examiners. Oh, wily Willie, and with a face so innocent, angelic! Well, you may go. No, oh, no 3 I almost forgot your best trick-excuse me one moment. Will Mr. Sykes kindly prepare to present himself ? Now, Red, show us your pins. He's a regular human pincushion. Did you ever see anything like it? He can do it any time if he will. Well, then sing one of your foot-ball songs. ff And we'll rally 'round Witherspoon, Dod, Brown, Reunion and Edwards, boys, We'll rally once again, shouting the battle cry of championship, championship. Bob, come and give us that humping accompaniment you com- posed for it. Well, Brick, if you will be disagreeable, you can go. iOh, Bob, you lazy scoundrel! stand up and let us see your cringing, scrawny form. It's all Bob jack's fault, it's all Bob jack's fault, has been the echo of every disaster which has visited our class. You were faithful in little, but not in much. When you had nothing to do you did it well, in fact you put your 86 'THE NASSAU HERALD- whole soul into it, but when, in View of your C21P3b1l1tY In thls dlrec' tion, you were invested with responsibility, made Manager' HIS' torian how did you fuliill your duties? Shamefully. EVC1'YthlDg . ' t uin com lete with which you have been connected has come o r 7 .P . 7 disastrous. See the Nassau Lz'z'. u 1 ment for five hundred dollars damages, for Whlflhi llhflugh moral Y you alone were responsible, yet legally all must suffer. If you WSIS half Qa man you would step forward and pay that five hundred your- self. And still you stand regardless of even the sunken eyes and withered cheeks of your associates. Just turn and look at Squab Patterson, doesn't it ill your soul with remorse? Well, I suppose he is partly to blame himself, for Papaftold him to keep clear of the Zlzkt. at the start. However, that doesn't excuse you. Think what friends you were before. Remember the night when Pat set you all up to oysters, and you made an oyster stew with sweetened con- densed milk. Oh, how rich in friendship was the hour! Say, Bob, why didn't you wear your base-ball suit to-day? It is so becoming. If you had asked Conk to helptyou with the padding it would have been all right, and would prevent a repetition of your experience in the ball game at Peddie. One of the girls, who was endowed with phenomenal eyesight, when she saw him, burst into peals of laughter, crying, Only see Mr, jack's legs ! The others looked in vain. He seemed to float in air, but of course, he didn't really. He never makes those -remarkable aerial flights for which Lou Richner is noted. The log of these voyages is to be found in the Faculty-room, as that is the harbor where Lou always puts in, but perhaps you would prefer to hea.r his own account. Wheeze along here, Lou. Don't be bashful. We will detain you a moment. Kind sir, do let us have your incomparable rCHd1f1011 Of that original Greek prose composition 'f Kai, Kari. Kaif' -its editors to-day under indict- Well, of course, if you don't want to-but it is a real disappoint- ment to those who know your ,ability-all who rooni in University and doubtless many of their friends have heard of you. for YOU-l' fame has spread afar, Lou. Cr, Com Phillie for a generation, anyway. Even Bill Sykes-O, l hog your d B'll ' . . 5 ' par on, 1 , I must have skipped a page. I wouldnt uitciunmiillv put you, behind Reichner after all ton' B' thd . ' l - , . too S In fly 'Wellf 1fY011 'fake lt lllfll Wally you nuglu stuuil up don t th . p . Ink your contrasting types ol heauuy will siillvr by 9, Cheer up. it won't reach you said about him lust Wgisliiiug- ig. N'I:n fri .raw 4. 6 i is 51' A, y fi U I E CENSOR'S SPEECH. 87 comparison. Yes, even Bill appreciates Lou's songs. They some- times sit together whole evenings giving alternate productions, Bill speaking Under Delmonico's Window with a depth of feel- ing bred of three years' insolvency. Then, after wild huzzas by Lou, they have a silent duet with gurgling accompaniment-applause by both-then Lou's latest variety production, while Bill coaches him on expressive gestures and graceful attitudes. You know Lou is the most awkward man inthe class, while Bill has studied Delsarte under Bottle White for two years. Mr. White is to continue instruction in this branch and those interested may refer to the advertising sheets of the HERALD. Lou was not really so awkward until Bill got hold of him, but Lou had unbounded confidence in Bill and the greatest deference for his judgment, so when Bill said, It should be thus, Lou simply replied, It shall be thus. It is not strange then that, having but one judgment between them, and that of hardly ample dimensions for one, they have grown as like as the two Dromios without improvement on either side. Well, Lou, I see those slender sprouts are bending with the strain, for unlike Bill's they do not each incline to support the other-so you may sit. . ' This, friends, is the author of Some Reasons for the Further and Complete Subjugation' of Woman. I have no apologies to make for him except that I think he will repent it some day. Very likely he will wish then he had spent his time discovering means for rather than reasons for But, Bill, you have been most ungrateful to Lou-him to whom you owe so much. Who was the first friend you met when you arrived so fresh and green a Sophomore? Who made you his care by day and night, took you to receptions, initiated you into the customs of this noble institution? Who more freely, in that day of humiliation, when all the campus laughed at Saucy Sykes, introduced you to his friends? I-Ie saw the budding genius where all the rest saw but a freak. How dared you after all call him Ananias? You dare not tell? I know then without thanks, but to your lack of wit. Bill saw this day when all the past would be laid open as a book, when he would be exposed as he was seen before he became renowned as prize-winner, orator, debater, poet and walker. Oh, there was a sight to see when Bill, having clear outsped Dan Pratt, was striding down the home stretch neck and neck with the 88 THE NASSAU HERALD. heavenly twin. Bill, muttering curses through his hard-set teeth, his fingers gripped close upon his thumbs, wild-eyed, ears streaming in the wind, nose well in advance and beckoning wildly. Loud rang the cheers f' Bill wins, but no, he crossed the line second and sank exhausted and disconsolate. Harry and Frank, at Lou's sug- gestion, tried to console him, but 'twas no use, his mighty heart was burst. H Oh, why, oh, why have I been brought to this? I never failed of first before. , When Bill became great--he was always noted--he fondly wished that some of his earlier notoriety might not survive, but it was not until he received the Washington's Birthday appointment that he could form a plan. Then, relating carefully his own misadventures, he ascribed his own part in them to jenkins, Nixon, Kiesling, Pop Alexander, Szc. Then again he smiled a smile beatihc and serene as he murmured, Oh, my soul, thou hast disrepute of many years laid upon others. Eat, drink and be merry. Thus it was you dared to call Lou Ananias, lest you should bear its sting. Yes, you, sir, ff lie like Reichner, and much the worse, as it was you I believe who taught him first to lie. Deny it? How then was the Lif. held back two weeks that you might trumpet above H The Voice of the Sea, that it was the Baird Prize Poem ? You lied 3 Squab Patterson told me so, and if you were half the man that Edward Basil Cortlandt Garrison Stuyvesant Van Cise is, you would shoot young Pinfeathers on sight. C' It would be honorable if he has wronged you, but he has not, and even if you, like Van, had Hthe blood of knights and kings coursing through your veins, your very conscience would unnerve your hand. Go beg Lou's pardon on your knees, and swear that you will be his counsel in every case before the courts within a year without fee. You stand amazed, then stand. H Kind friends, dear fellows, farewell. X Will Shorty Kennedy pronounce the benediction? PRESIDENTS ADDRESS. 89 PRESIDENTS ADDRESS. ..i, . . J. MAC N. THOMPSON, N. Y. ELLOW-CLASSMATES-The four years of our college life are almost spent 5 in another day we shall find ourselves beyond these walls which for years have been the scenes of I the gladdest tide of our lives, and which will ever be the Mecca toward which our hearts will instinctively turn in after-life, whether joy or sorrow be our lot. Every tree, every stone on this dear old campus has its untold story for one or another of us, awakening in our minds the thoughts of all that is past and bringing us to the realization that the time has come when the careless, happy joys of our undergraduate days are to become history-history to which we can ever turn for solace and comfort, when the memory of the days spent under the old elms will come gently and soothingly into troubled minds. As the shadows lie upon the grass before Old North and make the sunshine all the sweeter for their cooling shade, so these remem- brances will come into the heat and strife of life, rendering it the more lovely for their subtle presence. It is natural that on such an occasion as this we should feel that the world has in store for us muchthat will prove hard to bear, and yet, I think, it only deepens the sorrow of parting to dwell on what of trouble and sadness we may hereafter encounter. We have Hnished our preparation for our life work, now it is our duty to put into action all the forces which have tended to mould our characters into stronger, sterner form, let us remember, my classmates, t'hat by virtue of all the advantages which it has been our fortune to enjoy, by so much have we a greater responsi- bility upon us that we should attain success which will be worthy of all these rich franchises. Let us keep ever fresh in our memory the ties that bind us so strongly that we may never swerve from doing the right fearlessly, go THE NASSAU HERALD that no cloud may come over our honor, and that the name and fame of Princeton may be rendered stronger and brighter because we have cherished ever pure and strong in our hearts the love toward our Alma Mater. Though never again will we meet as strong in numbers as we do to-day, let us hope that in after life, when some of us return to take up the thread of college life where we left it, that our spirit will be as strong as ever, though the numbers be less, and that the love for Princeton and everything that is of Princeton may never waver nor grow lax. - Classmates, let us look forward to the coming years with true appreciation of our responsibility, and with assurance that we are rendered stronger and better able to meet life by reason of these four years which we have spent together, learning the lessons. of life, of men and motives, successes and defeats, honor and duty. Hardly a month gone we learned of the death of one of our noblest characters 5 weak in body but patient throughout a life of suffering, yet strong in the true spirit whose' influence all of us' have surely felt and whose memory must ever spur us on to lead a life so true and good as he daily manifested in our midst. Three of our classmates have passed away, and as I pluck these flowers in loving commemoration, I feel that their sweet fragrance and unsullied bloom tell more plainly than words the story of the lives that were taken from us, and speak to all the tender remem- brances which linger in ourhearts of our classmates who have gone to a purer and higher life. ' Q V 94 CLASS ODE : I '24 Glass 95.6. Music by P. P. Buss, Pa. L Words by Jas. FENTRESS, Jr., lll. 455515 J 1 E Jf I 5? 5 3' 1 Q f -gc lift -a al ,L .1 .L v 5 1. Our voi - ees swell to - geth - er at the end, In 2. As each heart eoh -oes all the four YGMS D2lS15 We 3. Let not the vvhispwing elmsf soft shad - ovvs make ' One 4. We soon must leave the dear olcl eol - lege ground, The 1a , 0 0 . js -ls -lk' -lb' 'li P4 P , P Qi Q55-k a E M W M W io -e 5 f io 5:2 fl P 7 t -L J 5 :J t 6 v to 9 ge o- - 2 l ll P- P g as N e l . . F og Q 2 QP- 5 2 0 ' . 5 by 6 - Q-. ' . I - CW -3- E Al ma Ma - ter's praise all prais - es bleudg feel that now our time has come at last 5 V Se I1lOl',S heart 'in si - lent sad - ness aeheg Cam pus calls We love V shall cease to souudg u . Q Q 'S' F 62525 5 o 5 P Q I Q Pe l tp e e .I a we ew lo f 'a L. li Q 1 V 9 li a 4 - ttt- t t t g J 525 4 F J f . E nfl' I .J rl EJ Q 51 e Q . 5 , e ww 5 if 0 X Our joys, our cares and sor - rows all are one, Our col - lege friend - ships ev - er shall re - main Hush sor - roW's voice with glees that ex N er ring, We leave the sha - dy ehns with all their joys, . 'P' g ' - -9- - 312- I-5- gg 62525 l E ml e E ligi a Q V f f e t V V V e I .I e P - .ei 1 li fbi, 5 lp 5 E E rd 5 Q or V P I if 9 L' For time do - clares our short four years are done. When we have gone to bring us back a - gain. Mirth rules the day, for Nine - ty - four We sing. The Se - nior sing - ing and the, groups of boys if iii as if at t to r ses are Q, V a b 9 if ol Elf --if . E P C C 1- 'D It I 1 V M V V V I '35 The afternoon of college life fast fades' f , Into the evening with its deep'ning shadesg Our college days in memories We'll store, A health to Nassau Hall and Ninety-four. J X . 6'Three cheers, my boys, for all the honors Won, For victories past, and all our class has doneg May thoughts of friendship draw us closer still, So three times three for four years and ,good will.. N W YORK LAW CHOOL, 120 Broadway, ' EQUITABLE BUILDING, NEW YORK CITY. Largest Law School in the United States, outside of Michigan. Incorporated in June 1891. First session opened October lst, 1891. Number of students during first year, 3813 during second year, 508. Cf this latter number, 36 were graduates of Yale, 30 of Princeton, 17 of Columbia, 9 of Harvard, 9 of the New York City College, kc. The Pro- fessors were associates of Professor Theodore W. Dwight in Columbia College Law School until his retirernent therefrom, in J une, 1891, and follow the DWIGHT METHOD of legal instruction. Degree of LLB. given after two years' course. Post-graduate course now established. Tuition fee, 8100. Next session opens Cctober lst, 1894. ' I ' FOR CATALOGUIIS, 1NroRMAI'IoN, ae., ADDRESS enoiaen CHASE, Dean. I I I I I I I I r I I IIE K-, I Aliifiijgk I zifili- .' --rqiizrfzl. I I fi 45. :S Mk F ' 5 III If ,III ,ILS 'Ii II If I ,4, ':II 'n :Q I I I I Il II 'I JI V: II I Qi If '. . II 'Q I '1 I I . I gl . I I :I I I fI II II II iI 'I I, I: Ili I, ,1 I. II' 4, IV! I IN MEMORIAM. illiam all Q7 nglish, DIED NOVEMBER 14TH, 1890. Iwrlfzs 4 111111213 C5 nllfzr, DIED SUMMER OF 1892. i Zahn fl, msdmzh, DIEDV MAY 3D, 1894. , qwmav--wwf :fp Lx f s N f QSQBQKQQV STATI TI - aj 5? ,-gg,,.., 'Wwe CLASS CP 1894 STATISTICS. O .- ,- -1 ,- f .- ,- ,- - ,.. '- n n it ............... .'f!'llCll'1IlfC. Sp ,....... ...... . Nyifwiol Hiursf. Min ............. 'llini.wlry. .lour ............ Iom'nnli.wn. A - , 7 . . 3. S ............ lfCll67'fll Scif HPC. 'l'0:lCll ......... 7i1lf'l1il:!l. MMI ........... .llf flfcim . C ....... ...... f 'lio, ABLREVIAVI IUN5 ll C. E ...... Civil fD'IIflfll6C7'. Bus ............ lltu-l'1l7.v.9, A rch ......... .'fl'f'hffI'l'f. XX' ..... ..... llllliy. E. E ........... Ju'lect1'if'aL Hnflinccr. 3- . l Z U2 . E . I lN.xMn. l Q5 nlcsrimxclc. 'lZIll'l'IUr.KY 3 2 i sl-on'r. .u rnon. wrt' nv. 12131 1 l.l.tnl' s Q A ' ' U F i +2 'E 2- E 5 at E .2 O EE .2 H ' .Q 'S 3 s Q L U 5 5 E Q. Cl c-. JZ Akin, Connor .Tones ................ C 32 W. 7th St., Columbia, Tenn ......... 2 XV ..... Oct. 6, '68,35 132 5- 6' C. E .... l'rt-s..,lJt-in.. XX' Base-bull llyron ........... 'Sl5lt'llf'4' ....... Pop, Iiunt. Akln, Henry Leland.. ............ A 214 S. 30th St., Omaha, Neb. ............ 25 D Aug. 25, '72l37f'.,' 170 5-10,' Law... l'nit..fRep... XX' Foot-ball Eliot ............ ',1'Zs. Crit. .... ,.lim, l'lleasir', S Alexander, John Harvey ....... A Benton, Tenn ................. .......... ..... 4 2 E June 7, '65 ...... 160 6 Min ..... 1'rc-s..iDem.. XX' Tc,-nnis.... 'l'c-mlyson. .... 'Pllilosophy' Pop. Allen, Frederick Warner ........ B South Orange, N. J.. ................. 9 M June 1, '74, ...... 160 5-11 141. E .... Epis.. QRQ-p... C.. Foot-hall ............ ........ I ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, X Vinfly, Allen, Yorke.. ........................ A South Orange, N. J ..................... 9 L. M Feb. 27, '7338 150 5- 9,17 Law .... I-Jpis.. Rep... C.. Foot-ball Longtlellow...'Mt-t:t.......... - Archer, Franklin Morse ......... A 319 Cooper St., Camden, N. J. ......... 5 R ...... Nov. 27, '7336 150 6 Law .... Meth.lRep... XX' Sailing ....... Eliot ...... ...... I .aw ,,,,,.,.,.. Mnfl, Armstrong, Williani Park, Jr A Selma, Ala ....................................... 11 E ...... Jan. 10, '74 3715 153 5- 9 Min ..... Pres.. 1Dem.. XX' Tennis ....... Tennyson ..... l'hiIosophy Army, Hztmstr Bailey, Judson Hooker ........... A 118 Lancaster St., Albany, N. Y 5 B ....... -- '71 37 150 5-103 Bus .... Bap... lRep... XX' Base-hall collins .......... lAstron ...... Jnrl, llook, Spo Bailey, Thomas Fisher ............ A Huntingdon, Pa ......... ..................... 6 R- ........ Nov. 15, '71 39 160 5-11,1 Law .... Pres.. Dem.. C.. Base-ball ..................... Roni. Law. Kilnr. Balliet, David Milton ............. . Sp Lehigliton, Pa ............................... 47 U ............ Aug. 24, 69 45 188 5-10,' IC. E .... Epis.. Rep... .... Foot-bull Cooper ........ ,Idler-t ......... Bally. Bathgate, James Edward, Jr.. C 254 Roseville Ave., Newark, N. J. 6 N. D ........ lMay 19, '73 36 130 'G Bus Pres..lRep... C.. Tennis ........ Slinkt-spoan English ...... 'Tnli, .Inmnif-. Beck, Harold Maclinight ....... E G61'1118.11tOXX'1l,'P3- ..... ............ ......... 6 X V. B ....... Dec. 4, '73 -39 168 5- 9? E. E .... Epis..iRep... C.. Boating ...... Wzillzurc ...... Vllysifcs ..... ,Big Feet. Benson, Alexander ................. A 2107 XValnut St., Philadelphia, Pa... 7 N. D ........ June 23, '73i42 160 5- 6,12 Law .... Epis...Rcp... XX' Billiards Ouida ......... T l'f'lll'll ....... Bonny. Bissell, John Livingston ......... A 1218 Douglas St., Sioux City, lu ..... 49 U ........... . -- '71 42 170 5-105 Law .... Pres..lRep... Foot-ball ......... ......... .................. . T ohn L., liis. Blake, James Robert .............. A 88 N. 6th St., Newark, N. J... ....... 2 E. M. XV May 17, '71 38 165 5- 83 Bus Prcs..iR-ep... C.. Footfball XVallace ...... ............ ...... ' . Tim, Capt. Bliss, Philip Paul .................... A... Philadelphia, Pa ........................... 9 XV. B ....... Nov 25, '72 36 145 5- S Music. ........ lRep... C.. Base-ball Horace ....... Latin. ........ ll'eep. Bogart, Richard VValker, Jr... C E 412 N. Broadway, Yonkers, N. Y. 12 S. M. R... Nov 9, '71 39 158,15 5- 824 C. Pres.. Rep... C.. Skating ..... Scott ....... . , ............ ..... 1 lick, Bogus. Bowes, Thomas Hamilton ..... C 1516 Baltimore St., Baltimore, Md 7 S. E. B. .... Mar. 17, 72 41 175 5-11 Gent ......... Pro.. C.. Foot-ball Kant .......... 31echanics.,Bokes. Broadnax, James Maclin A Mason, Tenn ................................. 17 N. E ........ Aug. 20, '67l40 156 5- Min .... Pres..,Dem.. XV Base-ball Scott ........... English ..... lllrofly, llrod, Jenn. Brown, Gabriel Scott .............. C Angels, Pa .................................... 32 N. E. D.. Nov. 10, '70'3735 173 6- 3 C. Pres.. Rep... XV Foot-ball Scott ........... . Bridges ..... Gabe, Brownie. Browning, XVebster E ............. A... San Francisco, Cal ........................ 38 S. F.. D .... Apr. 14, '68 ...... 180 5-10 Min ..... Pres.. Rep... XV .................. Dickens ........ Latin ......... Brownie. Brush, Murray Peabody ......... A 599 E. Broad St., Columbus, O ...... 5 N. R ........ Apr. 17, '72 42 183 5-113 Teach Meth Rep... XX' Foot-ball Eliot ............. French ...... 1Peabod. Buckelew, Frederick Le tnuel.fSp.. J amesburg, N. J ........ .................. 5 XV. B ....... Nov. 4, '72 35 150 5-11,15 Bus .. Pres.. Rep. XV Tennis ....... Thackeray .... Astron ...... 5Squire, Buck. Bullitt, William Marshall ...... Sp 1207 Second St., Louisville, Ky ...... 15 N. E ........ Mar. 4, '73 ...... 133 5- 954 .......... ........ . .IDGID XX' Tennis ....... . Huxley... ..... Philosophy La Grande Bullitte. Burnett, James Brown, Jr ...... C E 16 Chestnut St., Newark, N. J ...... 2 XV. XVL ..... July 23, '72 38 148 5- 8 C. E .... Pres.. Rep... C.. Base-ball Dickens .... .... B ridges ..... J immy. Bushnell, John Ludlow ..... ...... A 394 E. High St., Springfield, O ...... 8 W. B ....... Feb. 15, '72 37 130 5- 7 Bus .... Epis lR.ep... XV Foot-ball Dickens ....... . Art ............. Bush. Califf, Alden Mathews ......... .. A East Smithfield, Pa .................... .. 2 N. E ........ Jan. 29, '66 3855 150 5- 834 Teach Pres IRep. C .... Fishing . Tennyson ..... ,Gcol ........... Califf of Bagdad. Campbell, James Shaw ........... A Sewickley, Pa ................................ 11 N. E ..... ... Dec. 8, '71 38 153 6 Law .... Pres.. Rep. XV Tennis ...... Dickens.. ..... lLaW ........... Cam, Harlem Goat Carlisle, Theodore Melville ..... A 284 Liberty St., Newburgh, N. Y... 15 M. D. ....... Aug. 20, '73 3554 130 5- 631 Min... Pres.. Ind... C.. Tennis ...... Hawthorne Philosophy,Tommy. Carter, Benjamin Franklin ..... A 21 Park St., Montclair, N. J .......... 9 S. E.. ....... Sept. 4, '73 37 l152 5-115. .......... Pres Rep... C.. Tennis ...... Crawford.. French ...... Cart, Colonel. nw-eww ,- . J -------H -1- -..- . .. -. 1 A . . . wr.. .. .. , . , , U. ., , H L . . . , C . . , . ,,,, ,,.. - , V J , H QM -E K p 'rl' '-?.t ' ' s A-4-all 6 '11 nee-ff Cartwright, Charles Merritt.. Chamberlain, Albert Roe ...... Cherry, Cummings Walio ..... Church, James Austin, Jr. Clark, Snyder Hoxie ........... .. Clinedinst, Samuel Harry ..... Cochran, A. Patterson Linn.. O o P-4 cn E 20 F C-1 99 E cn U2 C2 SD H 'CS cn D rf- cu 3-1 f-4 FY . be Condit, Harry Hobart ............ 8 Corry, Thomas Douglas ......... Creigh, Thomas ...................... Curran, Samuel Hair ...... .... Dahlgren, Ulric. ............. Davis, Albert Thomas ........... Day, Horace .......................... Denise, Larimore Conover ..... Dice, Seth Delmer ......... ....... Dickey, George Vernon. ........ Dickey, Samuel ...................... Dickinson, John Moore ......... .Z Edwards, George Dickson' ...... Elmer, Waller Gray ............... Erdman, Paul .................... .... Essick, Edwin Platt ................ Everitt, Benjamin Howard .... Ewing, Boyd Ross .................. Fentress, James, Jr ................. Ferris Walter Rockwood Fisherf, Herbert Hersehe1.fffifI Fisher, Howard Shreve .......... Floyd, William ...................... Forsyth, George Howard... Fox, Grant Colfax .................. Frame, Cleveland.. .............. .. Fraser, Herbert Jefferson ...... French, Charles Edward ........ I George, Karl .......................... Gibson, James, Jr ................... Goodridge, Malcolm .............. Grandin, William James, Jr.. Grant, NVilliam Edward ........ Grier,'Wyllys King ................ Gunster, Walter Eugene ........ Haas, Ernest Durnett ............ Halsey, Edmund Drake ........ Hatton, Richard .................... Havens, Charles Sumner ....... Hayes, Andrew Williamson.. Heath, Howard ..................... . High, Alfred High... ......... 304 Wood St., Pittsburg, Pa 134 Lincoln Place, Brooklyn, N X 3501 Pine St., St Louis, Mo ........... Calwell, O .................................... . Vtfaynesville, O ..... ........................... Chester, N . Y .................................... O 301 S. Limestone St., Springfield, Goshen, N. Y ................................. Troy Hills, N. J .................... ......... Covington, Ky .............................. 2411 Capital Ave., Omaha, N eb ..... 4059 Lake Ave., Chicago, Ill ...... .. 322 Monmouth St., Trenton, N. J.. 65 S. Maple Ave., East Orange, N. Plymouth, Pa ................................ 1901 Dodge St., Omaha, Neb ........ .. l44.E. Main St., Xenia, O ......... .. Fairfield, Ia ....... ............................ Oxford, Pa ........ ....................... . .. 479 XV. State St., Trenton, N. J... .. Amberson Ave., Pittsburg, Pa ...... 46 W. State St., Trenton, N. J ....... 61 South St., Morristown, N. J ...... Hawthorne Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Jamesburg, N. J ........................... Blairsville, Pa .......... ..... .............. 118 Pine St., Chicago, lll ............... 242 Lenox Ave., New York City... 122 4th St., Peoria, lll .................... Swissvale, Pa .............................. .. 117 E. 25th St., New York City...... 14 Ritchie Place, Chicago, Ill ........ Waylaiid, N. Y. ........... ............... . . 1917 Federal st., Philadelphia, Peff 226 Quincy St., Brooklyn, N. Y ..... 40 Church St., Amsterdam, N. Y. 116 Main St., Watertowvri, N. Y. 5 W. Broadway, Salem, N. Y ........ 63 Jamaica Ave., Flushing, N. Y.. 1 Jefferson St., Tidioute, Pa .......... Summit, N. J. .............. ................ . . 617 Moss Ave., Peoria, Ill. ............ . 402 Jefferson Ave., Scranton, Pa... Philadelphia, Pa ........................... Rockaway, N. J ............................ 2013 Hillyer St., Washington, D. C Washington St., Toms River, N. J Allegheny, Pa ............. ................. Trenton, N. J., Box 293 ................. Reading, Pa ......... ............. . . 22 N. E ........ Nov. 2 S. E. B .... . June 9 S. E ...... 14 S.D ......... 1 M. D ........ 10 S. Ed ....... M. U ........ 25 S. Ed ....... 9E. B. 10 E. B.. .... .. 4 S. W. B... 7E. W ....... 9 S. E. B .... . 17 N. E ........ 28 S. Ed ....... 4 S. XV. B.. 17 U ...... ..... 109 H.. ........ .. 11 E. W ....... 1W. M. 6S.W. 4S. M. 2 S. D ......... 10 S. E. B ..... 12 N. Ed .... .. 34 S. Ed. .... . 3 W. M. W. 7 S. W. B... 11 N. M. R... 11N. WV ...... . 11 N. E.. 7E.B ......... 11 S. D ......... 36 S. Ed ....... 7 E.B ..... .... 3 S. W. B... 13 N. IVI. R... 1 E. M. W.. 7 111. D ..... 11 W. W ...... 8E. B. ...... .. 9 N. B ........ 8 S. E.B ..... 13 W. W ...... 16 S. E ......... 8N. B ........ 9E. B ......... 46 B. S ......... 13 LI. D ....... 240 Nassau S W. B... R... May Nov. Oct. Mar. Dec. Mar. May Aug. July Dec. July Feb. June Aug. May Nov. June Oct. Mar. July Dec. Nov. Jan. Jan. Feb. July Aug. Dec. July July Oct. Dec. June June Feb. Oct. Aug. Nov. Nov. rlug. June Nov. Feb. June Dec. June 12, 28, 17, 28, 27, 31, 7 , 22, 15, 8, 23, 27, 23, 23, 7, 7, 12, 27, 28, 3, 10, 9, 28 7 11, 12, 22, 15, 25, 2, 6, 18, 22, 20, 13, 21, 16, 28, 16, 23, 6, 4, 18, 14, 30, 6, 14, 26, 8, '69 171 773 174 '69 771 772 172 771 772 173 172 771 172 172 772 172 '65 172 172 773 173 '73 '70 173 770 771 '69 '68 771 771 171 '68 '68 172 '70 '73 172 272 171 774 171 '69 172 171 '72 '65 '64 '71 771 ......l148 42 155 38 37 375 36 36 40 385 38 385 37 395 36 35 39 38 . 38 38 36 335 355 35 37 39 35 355 445 38 39 415 35 355 39 355 38 335 180 150 156 149 135 142 155 157 158 146 135 154 123 149 145 170 143 167 17 0 135 146 137 130 140 144 130 135 137 152 140 145 138 138 186 139V 175 162 134 135 146 138 133 146 135 140 147 170 105 -7 - 5 -10 55 -10 75 7 5 -11 -1054 -10 - 85 4234 -11 - 7M - 35 -105 - 8 15 85 8 45 8 -115 -9 95 -8 -9 -10 394 6 8 95 9 9 5 95 9 5-10 5 9 35 8 8 8 8 7 85 Jour .... Med .... Min. Law... Bus Law.... Min. 13159 Law.... Bus Med .... Min. Min. Min. iiiiiif Min. Law .... Med .... Min ..... Min. Law.... Law.... Min. Min. Bus .... Bus Law.... Min. C. E ..... Bus .... Bus .... Law .... Med .... Bus .... Bus .... Bus .... Law .... Law .... C. E ..... Jour .... Teach Min ..... Bus .... Law.... Epis.. Meth Pres 663352 Epis.. Pres Pres Pres Pres Pres Pres Pres Bap. Pres Pres Pres Pres Pres Epis Pres Pres Pres.. Pres Pres Pres.. Pres.. Pres.. Pres Epis Pres 15116521 iiteiif Pres.. Pres Epis.. Pres.. Pres.. Pres.. Pres.. Pres.. Pres.. Epis.. Bap. Pres.. Bap... Refi... .- u n .5 u Rep...' Rep... Dem.. Rep Rep: Reps.. 1465 ' Rep Dem.. Rep... Rep... Rep... Rep Rep... Rep... Rep... Dem.. Rep... Dem.. Rep... Re p... Rep... iiieiil Rep Dem.. Rep... Ind... Rep Rep... Rep... Rep Rep... Rep... Rep... Dem.. Re p... Rep... Rep... Rep... Rep... Dem.. Rep 33 CD ,TK 2 Rep Rep 'JJ cb 'F' . Q iii-S1111 Foot-ballg. .. Foot-ball ... Foot-ball Base-ball .... Base-ball ... Whist ........ Swimming Football ... Foot-ball ... Base-ball ... Base-ball ... Sailing ....... Base-ball ... Foot-ball ... -Base-ball . .. Foot-ball ... Loafing ..... Swimming Base-ball ... Tennis ....... Fishin g .. Tennis ....... Wrestling.. Base-ball.. Gunning .... Yachting... Base-ball ... Tennis ....... Tennis ....... Gunning... Base-bell Tennis .... Tennis . Footfbe.ii . Foot-ball Base-ball Cycling ...... Base-ball ... Tennis ....... 1 Foot-ball Tennis. .... . Fishing. Foot-ball ... Tennis ...... Base-ball .... Football ... Foot-ball ... Hawthorne Dickens ........ Ei. Dickens ........ Tennyson ..... Eliot ............. Longfellow Bronte .......... Scott ...... ...... Thackerayg. .. Shakespeare. Anderson .... . Dickens ....... Dickens ........ Dickens ..... Tennyson .. Eliot ............ Thackeray Bulwer ......... Eliot ............ Crawford ..... Eliot ............. Shakespeare Dickens ........ Scott. ......... . Shakespeare. Tennyson ..... Hawthorne Irving ........... Dickens ........ Hugo ............ Thacker ay ... Scott ............. Hugo ...... . ..... Hugo .... ........ Crawford ..... Irving ........... Aldrich .. Dickens ........ Thackeray .... Doyle ........... Dickens ........ King ............. Horace ......... Milton ....... Shakespeare: Pol. Econ.. Astron ...... History .... . Lit ............ German .... Philosophy 9511645539 Latin ......... Es. Crit..... German Math. ..... .... N . Sci. ....... . Language .. Philosophy Biology .... . Lit... ....... Psy ....... .... Philosophy iL',.i'4+'III1IIIIII 1531135631151 Ethics ....... Lit ............. Law .......... Science ...... l5if6.'.'.1IIIIIIIII Finance .. IES. Crit Philosophy Graphics .... History ...... Lit. .......... . ZES. Crit ..... Morp ......... Art ............ Lit ............. Pol. Econ.. Politics ..... 1Es. Crit .... Bridges ...... Classics ...... Theism ..... Surveying.. Cart, Carty. Quail, Al, Bah. Huncli. Schneider. Cline. Linn. Dead Easy, Poller Sal. Tom. Tom. Curly. Doggy. Davy, Dave. Daisy. Dennis, Larrie. Shake-it-u p . Dicker. Dick . Dicker. Eddie, Dick. Hink. Ethics. Benny, Runt. Buck. Eccentric, Jim. Sheeny. Mike. Mike, Frizzy. Billy. J oblots. Grover. Pop. Frenche, Charlie. Clytae. Jim, Gibbie. Goody, Mac. Grinning. Billy. Greasy. Gunny. Ernie. Ned, Cap. HHPPY- M1111, Maui. Cy, Shy T -511. 'w - ..-aq-- 'W .U v- -qw ...A H--a-:U-5-m.:i,,h,,, N..q.N ' 'IA !wM h L' C' -0-Q-Q. 'u-..i. - A V -Dvvsnn-Q 5 ,Qt gf Y - rf:-rv-f-1------1 -- 5.-.....--..,.,.,, W, rr- - -5 5- -- ,P . A .FA . -A-A - - - r,Ww V -A t -Q - 1-:lp-3 f .4-...A-A..- 0-Queefi ,ts . NAME. .4 .v .. Q. -1 P -. Al l'l1Hl1. H'l'i'IPY. VA31 1 l.lA11l'l'l ICH. Ho-ge, Charles Courtenay ........ Holmes, Alfred E iward ......... Holt, Charles Lorin. ............... . Hopper, Charles Grant .......... .. Howland, Fred Bartlett. Humphrey, Theodore Fiieiid' 1 nslee, Harry VVilson .... .......... Jack, Robert Bonner ............ .. J ack, Robert Perkins ............ .. J effery, Oscar Wilde ............... Jenkins, Paul Burrill ........ ...... Jenkins, Thomas Addison ...... J enney, Alexander Davis ....... Johnston, William James ...... Jones, Joseph William Lester Keigwi n, Ernest Farwell ........ Kellogg, Frank Leonard ......... Kenly, Franklin Corning ........ Kennedy, John Miller ............ Kennedy, Winfield Scott, Jr... Kenyon, James Henry ........... Kiesling, James Wellington... Kinney, Samuel Wardwell .... . Kip, Herbert Zabriskie ........... Laughlin, Edward Reed ......... Lewis, Robert Wilson ............. Liggett, William Gamble ........ Lindsey, Daniel Weisiger, Jr.. Linnard, George Brown .......... Lloyd, Malcolm ................ ..... Lockwood, Stephen Timothy. Low, Joseph Tomkins, Jr ....... Lovvrie, Walter .................. ' ...... Ludington, Paul Hagins ...,..... MacCol1, Donald ..................... Mackenzie, Charles Stephens.. 7 1 CLASS OF 1894 S'l'A'I'IS'1 ICS-CoNT1N11s11. 35- . 4.1 Q4 - E 5 5 U1 Z J 2 fo-1 1. -, ,. IUIUBI IN .. . 71 I - -. . 3 111-.s1n11.Nc11.. CULLWW mul HIDAX :E .2 S5 in 141 om. o : C' if ii 5 C C' O CJ 5 1-4 9-1 CI 11-4 CD B S 1 Arlington Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. 48 U ............. Mar. 14, '72 37 158 5- 735 Law .... Pres.. Ind... XV Foot-ball A 338 E. 5th St., Plain1ield,N. J ........... ' 13 N. XV ...... Nov. 20, '71 ...... 163 5-1035 Bus .... Pres.. Rep... C .... Tl'l'llliS....... C E 105 E. 29tl1 St., N. Y .............. ............ X V. U ....... Feb. 22, '72 36 150 5-11 .......... ......... ......... . .... 1 1 idinu ..... .. A... Philadelphia, Pa ..................... .. 5 Ed ....... June 30, '69 39 144 5- 8 Min ..... Pres.. Rep... C .... Foot-hall.. C E 47 Brown St., Tit-usville, Pa ....... 16 N. E ........ Jan. 23, '73 36 167 5-1135 Bus .... Pres.. Rep... ...... Lacrosse A... South Orange, N. J ........................... 6 N. R. .... Jan. 22, '73 3935 172 6- 35 ........... Pres.. Rep... XV Baseballs.. C E 50 Spruce St., Newark, N. J ............ 15 N. XV ....... Don't. kn'w 38 165 5-1035 C. E ..... Pres.. Rep... ...... ............ . A 424 W. Broad St., Hazleton, Pa. .... 20 S. E ...... Sept. 27, '72 38 170 6- 35 Min ..... Pres.. Rep... XX' Foot-ball A... 462 N. Monroe St., Peoria, 111 ........ 9 N. R .... Sept. 30, '72 37 156 5-1051 Law .... Pres.. Rep... XV Base-ball.. A... XVashingt -n, N. J ............................. 6 N. M. R... J1111e 7, '72 36 134 5- 831 Law .... Meth Rep... XV Base-ball.. A... 612 7th St., Sioux City, Ia. ............. 13 N. D ........ Aug. 25, '72 36 157 5-1034 Min ..... Pres.. Rep... C.. Foot-ball A 271 Jeiierson Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y 13 N. XV ....... May 30, '72 35 130 ......... Med .... Pres.. Rep... C.. Sailing....... A.4. 719 Lodi St., Syracuse, N. Y ............. 10 E. XV ....... Mar. 10, '73 41 160 5-10 Law .... Unit.. Dem.. XV 'Tennis ..... .. A... 224 W. 4th St., Cincinnati, O ......... 28 N. Ed ...... Feb. 16, '70 43 171 5-1135 Med .... Pres.. Rep... W Boxing....... A... 55 'Walnut St., East, Orange, N. J.. 19 S. XV ........ July 34, '73 37 140 5- 8 ........... Pres.. ......... C.. .......... A XVilmington, Del ........................... 8 S. Ed ....... Mar. 9, '74 40 201 5-11M Min ..... Pres.. Rep... W Tennis... EE 424 XVillian1 St., East Orange, N. J 5 M. D ........ Oct. 22, '71 39 136 5- 7 E. E .... Epis.. Dem .... Foot-ball C E 372 La Salle Ave , Chicago, Ill ..... 27 M. D ........ Oct. 11, '72 37 139 5-1035 ........... Pres.. Rep... XV Tennis.... A... Wilkins Ave., Pittsburg, Pa ......... B. U ......... Dec. 8, '71 40 185 6- 435 Law .... Pres.. Dem W ........... A 535 Garrard St., Covington, Ky ..... 2 S. XV. B June 17, '71 34 119 5- 6 Law .... ........ . Rep... XV iCroquet... B S 468 Penn Ave., Waverly, N. Y ...... 15 S. E ......... July 9, '72 39 f5 146 5- 7 Med .... Pres.. Dem C.. Hunting A 1540 Centre Ave., Reading, Pa ...... 1 N. Ed ...... ............. .... ...... ........ ......... ........... ......... D e m C . . .......... . . A... 210 W. Embargo St., Rome, N. Y. 9 S. D ....... July 26, '73 ...... 117 5- 4 Teach Pres.. Rep... XV Foot-balll... A ...'191 Kennard St., Cleveland, O ...... 17 W ............ Jan. 25, '74 35351138 5-10 Teach Pres.. Rep... W Base-ball.... A... Ellsworth Ave., Pittsburg, Pa ...... 14 S. W ........ Nov. 6, '70 ...... 120 5- 9 ........... Pres.. Rep. XV ........... A... 19th and Glisau St., Portland, Ore... .7 N. E. ..... .. Dec. 5, '72 ...... 157 6 Med .... Epis.. Rep... ,W A 5823 Walnut St., Pittsburg, Pa . .... 9 XV. XV ...... Sept. 5, '72 3835 150 5- 7 Law .... ......... R ep. XV Tennis A Frankfort, Ky ........... . .... . .............. 11 M. D ..... Dec. 24, '71 36 145 6 .... ..... E pis.. Dem.. W Hunting A... 1735 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa ..... H. U ........ July 27, '73 39 154 5-112 Bus .... Pres.. Rep. XV Foot-ball A... 329 S. 17th St., Philadelphia, Pa .... 9 E. XV. ...... Jan. 16, '74 40 156 5- 95 Law .... Epis.. Rep. W ........... A 98 Downing St., Buffalo, N. Y ...... S. U ......... Jan. 7, '74 37 155 5-10M Law .... Pres.. Dem W Base-ball.... B S 18 E. 40th St., New York ............... 9 S. E. B.. May 25, '73 4135 177 6- 2 Med .... .Epis.. Rep... .... Hunting A... Warriors Mark, Pa ....................... 17 S. W.. ...... Dec. 31, '72 35 140 6- Min ..... Pres.. Rep... C.. Base-ball A... 3201 Farnam St., Omaha, Neb ...... 25 M. D ........ Oct. 24, '72 3535 148 5- 8 Med .... ......... R ep... W Foot-ball A... Caledonia, N. Y ......................... .. 20 N. Ed ...... July 12, '68 . ..... 145 5- 8 Min. .... Pres.. Rep... C.. ase- al 181 Halsey St Brooklyn, N. Y.... 9 XV. M. XV. May 9 5-107 ......... Itvricit- ......... 31-1111 .......... Ilankin ...... Elini .......... CI'1iXX'i'l1I'li 'l'l1:1r1ker8.y sL5E,'iiQf1fII1f T1 1 ack eray tfrawford H aw tl 1 or1 1 Eliot .......... Hunt .......... BI'OXX'lli1lIg. .... 'fliackerayi I'I2lXX'tilOI'l10... ......-.......... Gordon ...... Scott ............. Dante ............ Hardy ......... eiiiii-'r5f2ilIIIII ii'5iii.35f.II1II11 Hugo ..... ...... Irving ......... Thackeray Cooper. ....... . Scott ............. Crawford ...... Hugo ............ Scott ............. f,it11'll'l1lll Pol. Er-on. iEii1E11s'1'. .111I Geodesy ..... J I istory ..... 12'1.'1'1'::..3,31a,1 Lit ............ Lit ............ Law... ....... . Philosophy P11i1osopl1y P11i1osop11y ........-......... .................. Ethics ........ Sciences .... . ...........-...... IJlt ............ Pol. Eco11.. Meta ......... Morp ......... Greek ........ Math ...... H ist ........ ... Meta .......... Physics N. Sci ..... Philosophy Hist ........... L Philosophy it ............ Hogcs. Oliver, lfllvif. 'Fake tirah. D11 XXioli', Hop Specs, 1111111413: 'l'1-ci, H1111111. Po11,f'11r1rok1-c' P011 T ul IIS 1 .1Qf.'. 7 Bob. Os, .Te1T, Sf-1111. Jenks. iIiiIlk,Tf1l1l. Jen. llarreii. Rr-lsel. Keg, 'l'11b. Pop, Dyke. Cornie. Shorty. Rabbit, XV. Elsie, Jlirn. XX'11r11.5 s l-'1'i1-11d Grandpa. Turp,Ski11ny. Skip, Rudyard. Teddy. Bob. Bill, Rusty. Pat. G. Belva, Freak. Joe, Jo-Jo. Annie. Lud. ILf3.C. Chip. .bulb 4-anvil McAllister, Girard Lindsley... McBride, Clifford .................... McCague, George Stewart ...... McCan1pbell,G.Merriw' th' r,J r McCartney, XVilliam Hoge ...... McCaulay, XVilliam Lloyd. .... McClenahan, Howard ............ McCord, John Davidson ......... McCune, Frank Armstrong .... McGaiTin, Alexander .............. A A A A A A EE A... A... A... Mcllwain, Charles Howard .... A B S McKinney, William Smith ..... McLeish, John Lewin ............. A McMillan, Henry Lyndon ...... B S McWilliams, Shirrell Norton. Meredith, William Farragut... Miller, Alexander Jay .......... .. Mitchell, James McCormick... Morrison, Charles Frederick.. Murray, John Albert .............. N eely, John Crosby ................ Nixon, Horace Franklin ......... Patterson, Edward James ...... Paulmier, Frederick Clark ..... Pepper, Archibald McDowell. Perkins, Thomas Jefferson ..... Petrie, Edward Charles. .......... Portser, Robert Kay .......... .... . .. Pratt, Daniel .......................... L Priest, George Madison ........... g ............ Riggs, Firancis Graham ........... Riggs, Henry Griffith .... .......... . .. Rogers, Will Spoor .................. Robbins, Edward Rutledge ..... Roberts, ErnestPercival... .... . Robinson, Charles Alexander Rugh, Charles. ....................... .H Russell, Edward Johnson ....... Sabine, Philip Shieffelin ......... Schrimgeour, James Hastings Sexton, William Alfred .......... Sheldon, Henry Mandlebert... Shultis, Frank Clarence ......... Sicard, Montgomery Hunt Siebeneck, Henry King .......... A... Sill, Herbert Fowler ..............., Sp.. Smith,Frederick HofT'man,III'A Smythe, Frank Clinton .,......... IC E A A A A A A A A A B S A A A A A A Richner Louis Irvin A... A A EE A 1A A A A A A A A A B S Spruance, William Corbet, J r.gE E, Rondout, N. Y ................... ............. 437 N.Delaware St.,Indianapolis,Ind 936 N. 24th St., Omaha, N eb, ............ Middletown, Ohio ...................... , ..... Mercer, Pa ........................... ........... Stanley, N. Y ................................... 301 First St., Port Deposit, Md.. .... 217 Alleghany Ave., Alleghany, Pa.. 5526 5th Ave., Pittsburg, Pa .... .. ..... .. 21 Belgravia Ave., Belfast, Ireland.. Saltsburg, Pa .................................... El Paso, Ill .............................. ........ 209 Fairfax Ave., Cincinnati, O ........ 40 Bayard Ave., Princeton, N . J ...... 277 Linwood Ave., Buffalo, N. Y ..... 11 W. 12th St., New York City ......... 406 N.Mad River St. ,Bellefontaine,O 268 North St., Buffalo, N. Y ............. Jhilam, India ................................... New York City ....... ............... ...... 2619 Indiana Ave., Chicago, Ill ..... 24 Evergreen Ave., XVoodbury, N. J. 927 Central Ave., Plainfield, N. J.... Madison, N. J ................................... Sardis, Miss ................. .................... Germantown, Pa ...................... .... 319 E. 6th St., Plainfield, N. J .......... Greenburg, Pa ........................ - ......... 324 E. Fayette St., Syracuse, N. Y... Henderson, Ky ...... .................. ....... 2230 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa ...... 814 Cathedral St., Baltimore, Md ..... 814 Cathedral St., Baltimore, Md ..... 334 S. 37th St., Omaha, Neb .............. North Branch, N. J .......... ............... Harbor Island, Bahamas, W. I ........ West Hebron, N. Y ......................... Greensburg, Pa ........... ..................... I5 University Place, Princeton, N. J. 960 Madison Ave., New York City... 73 Macon St., Brooklyn, N. Y ......... NVest New Brighton, S. I., N. Y ...... Newark Valley, N. Y ...................... Pittsford, N. Y ................................. Portsmouth, N. H .......................... 62 Beach St., Alleghany City, Pa ..... 324 Belleville Ave., Newark, N. J... 32l'Mt. Prospect Ave., Newark,N. J . 1923 Wallace St., Philadelphia, Pa... 1211 Delaware Av.,NVilmington, Del. 20 S. YV.. 1 N. VV. 13 N. D.. 15 N. D.. 14 S. Ed. 6 S. E. 2 YV. M. 19 S. A. U.. 15 N. M. 6S.E.B ..... 14 M. D.. 9 N. M. 12 N. W. 18 M. D.. 111. U. 18 W. XV 13 N ...... 4 M. D.. 13 S. D... 19 N. XV 15 S. lM. 5 E. VV. 12 E. B.. 6 W. B. 5 N. Ed 8 M. D.. 11 N ...... 20 S. VV.. 46U .......... 7 VV. M. 7 W. M. 5 N. D.. 28 S. Ed. 26 N. Ed 35 S. Ed. 8 N. M. 5 S. NV. K. U.. 5 S. NV. 14 S. 4 S. Ed. 14 N. Ed 10 N. E . D. U.. 21 M. D.. 7S.E ...... B 9 S. W. 5 M. D.. 13 July Mar. Oct. Feb. July Oct. Sept July Feb. Mar. Dec. Feb. Sept. Mar. Apr. Sept. Sept. Aug. Nov. May Apr. N ov. May Apr. Aug. Sept. Set p . Sept. Jan. July Nov. Nov. Apr. Dec. Dec. Feb. Oct. July Dec. Apr. Dec. May May Sept. Mar. Sept. Nov. Sept. 20, 18, 11, 28, 6, 19, 12, 23, 15, 15, 12, 17, 14, 17, 29, 29, 61 71 14, 26, 16, 22, 17, 23, 51 41 21, 28, 25, 14, 29, 29, 71 5, 8, 22, 27, 31, 9, 15, 31, 12, 16, 19, 71 14, 9, 26, 972 174 772 '69 172 172 772 172 172 '70 171 771 171 773 171 172 172 '73 771 '68 172 171 772 '73 D70 173 772 171 771 373 971 772 172 '72 '70 '70 171 771 171 773 173 '73 771 '65 772 '73 772 '72 '73 '73 35 37 38 39 40 34 5 38 41 37 37 M 37 36 38 39 39 39 34 33 38 4 1 405' 40 40 32 37 C 36 355 35 36 37 36 37 39 39 37 41M 138 152 121 154 165 189 172 171 178 136 147 143 130 142 199 170 150 173 160 150 172 148 137 135 125 165 169 152 139 138 131 200 195 165 17 0 150 135 140 145 142 145 145 145 155 140 155 185 140 178 'Eng .... lEpis.. Min ..... Min ..... Bus .... Teach Med .... E. E .... Law .... Bus .... Min ..... Law .... Bus .... Med Chencif Bus Bus .... Law .... i1ii'1IfIf LAWIIII Law .... Teach Law.... Law.... Law... Med... Teach Bus Med... Teach Teach Law... Min .... Med... Law... Med... Teach Min .... Med... Law... Chem: 6 Pres.. Pres.. Pres.. Pres.. Pres.. Meth Pres. Pres. Pres. lPres. Pres. Pres. Epis. Cong. Epis Pres. Pres. Pres. Pres.. Cong. Pres.. Pres.. Pres.. Epis.. Pres.. Pres.. Pres.. Pres.. Pres.. Pres.. Epis.. Epis.. Pres.. Ref... Meth Pres.. Luth. Pres.. Cong. Pres.. Cong. Pres.. Pres.. Epis.. Pres.. Pres.. Meth Pres.. Rep... Rep... Rep... Rep... Dem.. Ind... Rep... Rep... Rep... Ind... Rep... Re p... Rep... Rep Rep. Dem.. Rep. Iiiiifff Dem Rep... Rep... Rep... Rep... Dem Rep... Rep... Dem.. Dem.. Dem.. Rep... Dem.. Dem.. Rep... Rep... Dem.. Rep... Rep... Rep... Rep... Rep... Rep... Rep... Rep... Rep... Rep... Rep... Riding ....... 'Scott ..... ..... ........'Shakespeare Footfball... ..... ... ..... Riding ....... Hugo ........... Whist ....... Eliot ............ Foot-ball Lytton ..... Foot-ball Thackeray .. Foot-ball... Cooper ...... Footfball... Lytton ..... Foot-ball MacDonald... Foot-ball... Tennyson Footfball ................ Foot-ball ... Shakespeare. Tennis ....... , Dickens ..... .. Foot-ball Blackmore.... Foot-ball Scott ......... Tennis ....... Eliot ............ Swimming .................... Foot-ball... Eliot ......... Tennis ....... Scott ...... ..... Foot-ball ... Thackeray... Tennis ....... Darwin ......... Base-ball... Wallace .... Foot-ball .. . Footfball .. . Foot-ball . . . Walking .... Foot-ball . .. Foot-ball ... Footfball ... Football ... Foot-ball ... Base-ball ... whisp ........ Tennis ....... . Base-ball . .. Base-ball ... Foot-ball ... Base-ball Tennis ....... Riding ...... Foot-ball ... Footfball ... Base-ball ... Footfball ... Tennis. ...... , Dickens ....... Scott ........... Eliot ........... Dumas ......... Scott. .......... . Hugo ........... 13ifiQii6i1.'.'.11I1III Dickens ..... Addison ........ Dickens.. Browning ..... Shakespeare. Tennyson .... Gunter ......... Dickens ..... Thackeray ... Thackeray ... Bulwer .......... Lytton ......... Thackeray ... Eliot ............. ...-......nn-...... Eliot ............. Irving ........ Hist ........... Language... IES. Crit .... Sci. da Rel.. Philosophy Biology ...... Science. .... . Law .......... Ethics ........ Theology... History ...... Lit ............. Chem ......... Lit ............. Finance .... Hist ........... Hist ........... Math ......... Law .......... Lit ............. Biology ..... Philosophy Pol. Sci ...... History ...... Math .......... Biology ..... Eng ............ Greek .. Art ............ History ..... Math .......... Math .......... Sci. da Rel.. Philosophy Latin ...... Philosophy ijitliljlliillill Morp ......... Philosophy Philosophy Biology Law ........... Chem . ..... . 13312-1'.2EIIl'.IIII Ward. Mac. Mac. Chip. Lord. Jerry, Mac. l rish Dago. Mac, Muck. Mac, Black Rat Mac, Sandy. Mac. Pretty, Tacksy. Smiles. Mac. Fat, Skinny. Billy, Admiral. Jay Bird. Mac. Stanley. Dean. Nick. Pat. Freddie, Paul. Pep, Foxy. Si, Tommy. Pete. Port, Keg. Horses. Judas, Priestns. Lou, Shyster. Bull. Ragsey, Hatchet Jimmie, Roge. Boby. ' Borneo. Robby, Boby. Ed, Rus. Dock, Sab. Jimmy. Billy. Shelly. Mamma. Saccus, Monty. Siebie. Dorey. Widow. Willie, Winfield -nr--V .A ,, --nzvf Y, 'HY' Q-a CLASS OF 1894 STATISTICS-CoN'riNUsn. rl. . 'U 2 5 NMUC' E ' m S1m NCE' m Tm W 3. . .S .E I si'on'r. ,-.i rnoic. s'ri'm'. I-'AMIl.IAlll'1'1l s Q, A 1 4 1 1- E 0:2 2 E C5 Z. Z' 'fi .29 'cb 2 9 II .2 3 2 5' 'E E 5 E gf, O U 7 'FI Cu Q Lt CD - - . - ,- .. - . . . Swain, George Randall ....... .... E E Newark, N. J ............. ................ 6 N. D.. .... Jan. 7, '72 37 146 5 83.1 E. E .... Pres.. Rep... C ..., Truc-k ...,. Lytton ......... lfllt-ct.. . .... Swine. Swain, James Ramsey ............ 'A... Allentown, N. J ............................ 15 N. Ed ..... Sept. 8, '72 3634 155 5 8 Min ..... Pres.. Pro .... C.. ............... Sll1lkt!SIN'fll'tl.'llllllil .......... Jim, Swt-gen. Swan, Robert Otis ................... A... Oyster Bay, Long Island, N. Y ..... 4 S. E. B .... Aug. 27, '71 ...... 143 5 10 Bus .... Pres.. Rep... XV Sailing .... Scott ............. llistory . .... Duck. Sykes, Benjamin W.M'Cready A... Scotch Plains, N. J ........................... 2 E. M. XV. Dec. 25, '69 36 142 5-1135 Law .... Epis.. Dem.. C.. .... ........... ' l'l1:uekt-ray flis. Crit Bill. Thaw, Edward ......... .............. A Pittsburg, Pa ....................... ............ 2 0 XV. XV ..... Jan. 1, '73 363-5 156 6- Law .... Pres.. Rep... ..... Billiards lingo ............ A rt ............ Varsity. Thompson, Frank Forrester... A... Milroy, Pa ....................................... 27 S. Ed ..... Nov. 16. '70 3835 161 5 115 E. E .... Pres.. Rep... C.. Tennis .... 'l'liackeray ...'Physics Friar. Thompson, Henry SoiTe ......... A... 47 E. 67th St., New York City .......... 9 XV. M. XV Aug. 10, '73 34 125 5- 635 Bus .... Pres.. Pro... C.. Foot-ball ..................... .................. I 'l'omm y. Thompson, J . MacNaughton.. A... 53 Lake Ave., Albany, N. Y ............ 4 E. B ........ Nov. 17, '72 39 190 6- 135 Law .... Cong.IRep... XV Foot-hall 'Vhackerziy llistory ...... gScotty, Mac. Tooker, Frederick Jagger ....... A... 28 Evergreen Pl.,East. Orange, N. 17 S. E ....... Dec. 20, '71 38 159 5- 9 Min .... Pres.. Rep... C.. Foot-hall Dickens.. ..... English ...... I'l'ook, Truce-r. Tower, William Hogarth ........ A 340 Clinton St., Brooklyn, N. Y ....... 3 XV. B ....... Feb. 1, '71 36 160 6- 35 Min .... Pres.. Rep... W Tennis .... Scott ............. ............ ..... 1 1 Iiill-l. Turner, John Harold .............. A... Corning, Iowa ............................... B. XV. B.. Mar. 17, '73 ...... ........ . . ...... ........... ......... R e p... W Tops ....... ..................... E cononiy .. Red, Brick. Van Cise, Edwin Courtlandt.. B S Summit, N. J ......................... . ..... 7 XV. B ...... Oct. 6, '73 39 168 6- 35 ........... Pres.. Dem.. XV ............... Hughes ..... Psych ..... Doc, Duke. Van Duyn, Edward Sequin ..... B S'427 S. Salina St., Syracuse, N. Y... 13 U ............ Aug. 20, '72 37 150 5- 7 35 Med .... Pres.. Rep... Foot-ball llugo .......... Physics ..... Snipe. Van Horson, Nathan Fred'k.. A... Mount Vernon, N. Y ....................... 17 S. E ........ June 3, '72 35 136 5- 935 ........... Pres.. Rep... W ......... ..... ..................... ....... . .......... H o r ses. Van Nortwick, John ...... ......... ' ,Sp.. Batavia, Ill ................................ .. 8 W. B ...... Nov. 30, '70 42 160 5- 9 Bus .... Epis.. Rep... .... Base-hall Scott ........... History ..... Van. - Van Vleit, John Jewell .......... Sp.. Goshen,N. Y ................................ 26 M. D .... Sept. 15, '71 37 170 6- 35 C. E .... Epis.. Rep... .... Foot-ball Thackeray. Math.. ...... Jack, Johnny. Voorhees, John Leslie ............ B S 52 Grove St., Amsterdam, N. Y .. 3 S. XV. B... Nov. 25, '70 ...... 158 5-105 Bus Pres.. Rep... C.. Lacrosse. Tennyson ..... Math ......... Jack, Senator. XVadsworth, Arthur Holland. A... XVarsaw, N. Y .............................. 4 S. Ed ..... .. June 25, '72 3835 156 6 Teach Pres.. Rep... C.. Base-ball Eliot ............. Embry ...... . XVafl, Bum. Wailes, George Handy ............ A ...,Salisbury, Md ........... ................... 8 S. Ed. ..... Aug. 22, '66 3535 137 5- 935 Min .... Pres.. Dem.. C.. Skating ...... Thackeray . Philosophy Poller. Walton, David Shove ............. A... 64 Munn Ave., East Orange, N. J. 12 M. D ........ -- '72 39 150 5- 935 ........... Pres.. Rep... C.. Foot-ball Scott ............. Ilis. Crit...,.. -- Waterhouse, Ernest Coniston A...lHonolulu, Hawaiian Islands ........ 2 N. E ........ Nov. 16, '71 36 35 152 5- 95 Med .... Cong. Rep... C.. Foot-ball Dickens ....... . Biology ..... XiVater. Watson, Charles Roger ..... ...... A ...'Cairo, Egypt .... . ............................. 32 S. Ed ....... July 17, '73 3834 163 5- 9 Min ..... Pres.. Rep... C.. Foot-ball Ruskin .......... Philosophy XVat. Whitaker, James Long .... . ...... C E 514 N. 4th St., Philadelphia, Pa .... C. E. B .... Nov. 15, '72 38 175 6- 2 Bus .... Epis.. Rep... C.. Foot-ball Eliot ............. Mech ......... J irn. White, John McGill ................ A... Germantown, Pa ........................... 9 S. XV ........ Dec. 9, '71 3735 157 5- 9 Jour .... Pres.. Rep... W Foot-ball Bulwer ........ English ...... Bottle. Whitney, George Dudley ........ Sp.. Glassboro, N. J ........... .................. 1 4 W. XV ...... Mar. 22, '72 34 135 5 535 ........... Epis.. Rep. XV Base-ball Davis ........... French . .... Dud, XV hit. Wilkins, John Franklin ......... A... 1709 Mass. Ave. Washington, D. C... 10 N. R ........ Dec. 6, '72 42 185 6 Jour... Pres.. Dem XV Foot-ball King ........... .................. X Vilkie. Willard, Dwight Daniel .......... C E 1601 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa... 12 N. E ........ Feb. 2, '73 ...... 160 5-11 ........... Pres.. Rep. W Foot-ball Hawthorne English Doc. Williams, George Howard ...... A California, Mo ............................... 9 S. M. R .... Dec. 1, '71 38 173 5- 95 Law .... Pres.. Ind... XV Foot-ball Mac-auley .... History ..... Billy. Williams, George Weems ....... A... 407 Lanvale St., Baltimore, Md ..... 19 M. D ..... June 25, '74 36 152 5-105 Law .... Epis.. Dem.. W Croquet ...... Thackeray. Finances... Git. Wilson, Guy ............................ A Fort Missoula, Mont ..................... 2 S. M. R... Nov. 19, '73 35 146 5-1035 Bus .... Pres.. Rep... C.. Base-ball Dickens ...... History ..... Billy, Willie. Wintringer, George Clarence.. EE 223 N. High St., Steubenville, O .... 2 W. M. W. Mar. 29, '73 40 158 5- 8 E. E .... Pres.. ........ C.. Foot-ball Holmes ....... Science ...... Dutch. Woodruff, Albert Martin ........ A 38 S. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. .... 12 N. XV ....... Oct. 24, '72 36 155 5-10 Bus .... Cong. Rep. XV .................. Dickens ........ JES.. Crit ..... XVoodie. Woodruff, William Ring ......... A Elizabeth, N. J.. ........ ......... ........ 9 E . B ......... Dec. 29, '71 38 140 5- 8 Teach Pres.. Rep... C.. Tennis. ...... Calderwood .. Greek ........ Lazarus, Billy. Worden, Charles Beatty. ....... A... I0 Nassau St., Princeton, N. J ......... .............. ...... A p r. 26, '74 33 128 5- 85 Bus Pres.. Rep... C.. Foot-ball Eliot ............. !Eng .... Chas. Yarrow, Sidney Radwell ........ A 7 Congress St., Lowell, Mass ......... 17 S. M. R... Feb. 11, '66 ...... 145 5-10 Min .... Cong. lnd... C.. ..... ........... H awthorne... Sociol ........ Shylock, Rabbi Young, Harvey Wade ............ 'A... Matawan, N. J ......................... 3 N. D ........ May 27, '73 395 157 5-115 Law .... 'Pres.. Rep... C .... Base-ball Scott ............. 'Ethics ........ Brig. Harv. 0 14. -,,' W,-My .... . . '- 'frfrf 4' .- afffff Qfrvz-4!!'!'r:--ff?'!j. - -!'-1---- - EX-MEMBERS OF THE CLASS OF '94.- ,,. . ox NAME. PRESENT ADDRESS. '8 OCCUPATION E3 'E I-T-l Andrews, E. E., Pittsburgh, Pa., . 790 Business. Baird, E. W., . Marion, Pa., ,QI Student in Cornell Baldwin, C., . Baltimore, Md., ,QO Business. Baldwin, E. H., Newark, N. I., . 790 Student in P. and S Bartels, A. C., . Ann Arbor, Mich., '92 Studying Law. Beck, J., . . . Minneapolis, Minn., ,QO Medicine. Black, C. V., . Toledo, O., . . 790 Journalism Blair, D., . . Indiana, Pa., . 790 Student in Wash. and eff Bonner, R. E., New York City, . '90 Business. Braislin, I . ll., ...... ,QO Brannon, E. A., Weston, W. Va., '91 Studying Law. Bridges, J. M., . Carlisle, Pa., . 790 Gentleman of Leisure Bri ht, G. H., . Reading Pa., A 790 Business. Brigkerhoff, G M Springlield, Ill., '90 Business. Brodie, A. K., . Detroit, Mich., . ,QO Business. Brown, I. S., . ....,.. ,QO Caldwell, G. W., San Antonio, Tex., '90 Business. Clark, W. M., . Peoria, Ill , . . . 790 Business. Collins, H. F., . Colorado, . . -790 Business. Constable, A., . Elkton, Md., . . . 790 Law. Coppell, A., . . ........ 790 Daire, F. W., . New Brunswick, N. I , . '90 journalism. Doty, W. K., . Chicago, Ill., .... ,QO Business. Dowkontt, G. H., New York City, . ,QO Studying Medicine EX-MEMBERS GF TIIE CLASS GF '94-CoN'1'1:wr31v. -+ Pt NAME. 1'REs141N'1' AUIJRFSS. E bg oCcU1'A'rl0N. U ... E 'EJ I-Ll 1-1 Downes, R., Philadelphia, Pa., Q0 '92 Student in P. Sem. Drake, G., . Yalaha, Fla., . . Q0 Q3 Business. Duff, P., . . Brooklyn, N. Y., . 90 Q2 Dunbar, ---, . . Philadelphia, Pa., Q0 QI Student in U. of l' Dusenberry, F. M., . New York City, Q0 QI 'C' English, WV. H., . ...... QO Evans, F., . . Elkton, Md., . QI Q2 Studying Law. Falkinhurgh, P. A , . Wfashington, . Q0 QI Business. Farnum, G. L., . Media, Pa., . . '90 '93 Traveling. Fisk, W. W., . Cheshire, Mass., 9 '90 '93 Traveling. Foster, H., . . Union Springs, Ala., . '92 '93 Business. ii Fuller, C. D., . . ...... '90 Goldthwaite, C. D., . ...... '90 '91 Griffey, I. F., . . Pittsburgh, Pa., . '90 'QI Business. Hammett, E. WV., . Germantown, Pa., '90 '93 Member of '95. Harlowe, E., . . . Goshen, N. Y., . 'QI '92 Member of '95. Henderson, F. S., . . Media, Pa., .... '90 '91 Business. Hitchman, J. D., . Mount Pleasant, Pa., . '90 'QI Business. Hooven, C., . Hamilton, O., . . '90 '91 Business. Howe, F., . . . Princeton, N. I., '90 'QI Business. Howland, H. A., . Statesville, N. C., . . '90 '92 Business. johnson, E. F., Michigan City, Ind., . '90 '92 Member of '95. johnson, O. C., . San Antonio, Tex., '90 '91 Business. 'go '91 Kearney, C. H., . 'F Deceased. 1 q - . - . ' v-4 Z0 HI-ll. SSVN HV 'IVHEIH 'ci Kinney, W. B., . Knight, H. S., . . Kohler, J. F., . . L'Massena, A. B., Mandeville, J. A., Maurice, A. H., . McCullagh, A. T., McCullough, R. H., . McDowell, J., . . McDowell, R. J., . McLeod, H. C., . McMillan, H. D., Mitchell, G. A., it Murdock, john, North, A. M., . Noyes, H. D., . Oliver, E. C., . Patterson, C. F., Pitcairn, R. C., Ramsdell, E. S., Ramsdell, R. R. Rankin, B. K., Read, W. J., . Richardson, H., Riggs, T., . . Roebling, C. G., Robinson, J., Schmidt, A. T., Sloane, C., . Smith, E. S., . Spooner, W. M., Streit, R. A., . 5 Stevenson, B. E., . . 'if Deceased. Newark, N. J., Newark., Newark,,N. J., NEw'v51-1. City, Wyoming, Pa., Chicago, Ill., Brooklyn, N. Y., . Detroit, Mich., Buffalo, N. Y., Philadelphia, Kingston, N. Springfield, ll Pa., . Y.. 1., Harrisburgh , Pa. Germantown, Germantown, Pa Pa., . Nashville, Tenn. Vicksburg, Miss. Bucuda, Wash., Trenton, N. I Academia, Pa Columbus, O -s -9 Beaver Falls, ,Pa Denver, Col., Hudson, VVis., Summit, N. J Chillicothe, O , . -1 ., . ' '93 791 791 791 791 791 792 791 '93 791 792 '93 792 193 Q2 792 792 79I 292 92 93 792 791 792 '93 792 '93 792 792 791 791 Z93 93 Studying Law. Business. Studying Law. Y. M. C. A. Secretary. Business. Business. Business. Business. Business. Member of ,Q3. Banking. Studying Medicine. Student in U. of P. Business. Business. Business. ' Member of '95, Member of '95. Business. Member of '95. Business. Student in Univ. of VVis, Business. journalism. SHEIEIIAIEIIAVXIEI .HO I-II-ll 'ID SSV :IO ..t76l n-4 O U-3 MLNIISEIQS OI TI-IIE CLASS OI-' '94,-CON'I'lNlll-ZIP. O NAMI PRliSl'1N'I' ADDRESS. -5- now C1 CU v-I OCCU llA'I'ION. Albany, N. Y., New York City, , f 0 , 1 1 - . , f o . a 0 . Butler, N. J , Philadelphia, Pa., . Baltimore, Md., Washington, D. Newark, N, J., Greensburg, Pa., 792 792 792 79I 791 792 792 '93 792 792 791 Student in Columbia Teaclming. Member of '95, Business. Studying Medicine. Business. Columbia College. Studying Law. ' :annals vip-In SUMMARY. 105 SUMMARY. COURSE OF STUDY. Academic . . , , I49, Scientific , 32 Electrical . 7 Specials I4 Total . 202 Entered Class in 1890 169 as cc cc ISQI I9 4' ff 1892 IO C6 C Cf 4 Whigs 100 Clios 85 Neither I7 Philadelphian Society 88 St. Pau1's Society I3 Neither . . 101 Born in 1864 1 ff ff 1865 4 ff 1866 3 1867 1 f 1868 7 ff 1869 8 ff 1870 I3 f ff 1871 45 ff 1872 64 ff 1873 43 1874 . . . II Favored Year, 1872. Maximum Age at Graduation . 29 yrs. I I mos. 28 days. Minimum . IQ yrs. 6 mos. IS days. Average . 22 yrs. 6 mos. Maximum Weight . - . 201 HDS- THE NASSAU HERALD. 106 Minimum NVeight U7 lbs' Average . I56? lbs' Maximum Chest Measure 445 ins' Minimum 32 ins' Average f' 38M ins' Maximum Height 6 ft. 423135 Minimum 'i 5 ft' 4 TBS' Avemge .. . 5 ft. 85 ins, INTENDED OCCUPATION. Law . .... 44 Theology ' 37 Business . 33 Medicine , IS Teaching . 12 Electrical Engineering 9' Civil Engineering 3 journalism , 4 Chemistry 2 Music . I Undecided ..... 34 RELIGIOUS DENOMINATION. Presbyterians ,,,,, 1 30 Episcopalians , 30 Congregationalists 9 Methodists . 7 Baptists , 4 Dutch Reformed 2 Unitarians 2 Lutherans , I Non-Sectarian I 7 POLITICS. Republicans , . 144 Democrats , ,6 Independents O8 Prohibitionists O People's Party . I FAvoR1TE sPoRT. Eoobga? - 7 I Skating , f, W ass-U al A37 Lacrosse , Tennis , - 32 Billiards SUMMARY. IO7 Sailing 5 Track 2 Hunting . 5 Croquet , 2 Riding 4 Boxing I XVliist 3 W1'estli1ig I Fishing 3 Cycling I Swnnniing 3 Tops . I FAVORITE AUTHOR. Dickens , 22 King 1 Scott 21 Reade . I Eliot . . 20 Rankin I Thackeray IQ Hardy . I Tennyson 9 Kant I Hugo 9 Huxley , I Lytton . 8 Bronte I Crawford , 7 MacDonald I Hawthorne 6 Blackmore 4 I Irving ' 4 Darwin . I VVallace . 3 Calderwood I Cooper 3 Holmes . . I Horace . 2 Byron I Longfellow 2 Ruskin . I Browning 2 Hughes I Collins I Dumas . I Ouida . I Addison I Anderson I Gunter . I Gordon . I Davis I Dante I I Macaulay I Aldrich , , I Milton I Doyle . I FAVORITE STUDY. Philosophy' , 24 Physics . 3 Literature 2 I Electricity 3 History . . I 5 German . 3 Biology I I Political Science 3 PEsthetic Criticism . IO Greek . 3 Mathematics 9 Bridges . 3 Law , 9 Astronomy 2 Sciences 7 Science and Religion 2 Art , 5 Chemistry 2 Political Economy 4 Surveying ' I Latin , . 4 Graphics I Ethics 4 Geodesy I 108 THE NASSAU HERALD. Classics . . Psychology I Finance Geology I Mechanics . Theology I Metaphysics . Theism I French . . Sociology I Play Cards . . - 155 Play Billiards . 127 Smoke . 98 Chew . . 29 Dance . . - 126 Opposed to Dancing 36 Go to Theatre , . 173 Opposed to Theatre-going . I7 Favorite Actor . Henry Irving Favorite Actress . Ada Reba-I1 Summoned before Faculty ' ' . 56 Sent Home . . K 9 Conditioned , ' 98 Received Pensums . 30 Ilave Pawned Articles 41 Sent to Cranbury 2 Pollers . 52 Loafers 30 Neither . , 122 Defective Sight S4 Use Glasses 53 Defective Hearing 8 VVith Beard 2 With Moustache 43 Engaged , , 23 FAVORITE STYLE OF BEAUTY. Brunette . . , . I33 Blonde , , ' 47 Members of Athletic Teams , I2 Members of Clubs, exclusive of Eating Clubs 68 Athletic Prizes Taken , , D 127 Literary Prizes Taken , 69 Favor Intercollegiate Debate D 190 Favor Compulsory Chapel , 88 Favor Increase of Cuts for Seniors . 189 Favor Co-education , , 29 Favor VVoman's SuiTrage , I9 K . SUMMARY. IOQ Favorite Newspaper . N K T ribune Favorite Magazine ,,,,, Cmmfy Favor Student Government ,,,, 128 Favor Playing Championship Games in College Towns 68 Favor of Fraternities at Princeton . . , 32 t I 2 4490- Hr ' -vcr- Nlenibers of Fraternities , 1 5 FAVORITE CLASS OF READING. Fiction ...... . 1 I7 History ' I5 Philosophy 9 Poetry . . 8 Historical Novels . , 6 Science . 4 Biography . 3 Magazines 1 Newspapers , ' ,,,,,, 1 Predominant Reasons for Preferring Princeton- Best College, Demo- cratic Spirit, 4' Championship of '89. V, , Favorite Female Christian Names-Alice, Mary, Helen. Favorite Preacher-Dr. Purves. ' ' Favorite Professor-Prof. Hibben. - Favorite Songs- Old Nassau and Orange and Black. Favorite Hymn- Lead, Kindly Light. Favorite Electives-History of Philosophy, 2Esthetic Criticism, Law. Favorite Plays of Shakespeare- Hamlet and Othello. FAVORITE LIGHT. Electric . . . . . 86 Lamp . 32 Gas . 29 Sing . 123 Bass . 44 Tenor . I9 Baritone . - I I Soprano ...... 6 Any Part ....... . 43 Favorite Instruments-Piano, Guitar, Banjo, Mandolin. Write Poetry ...... - 35 Been Published ..... 21 Ever Engaged in Religious Work Outside of College . 5 3 IIO THE NASSAU HERALD. Have Read Bible Through . Support Themselves XYholly Average Hour Retiring , , Average Hour Rising . . . Average Number of Girl Correspondents Members of Any Other College . . Senior Year junior Year , Sophomore Year Freshman Year Senior Year Junior Year . Sophomore Year Freshman Year Senior Year junior Year . Sophomore Year Freshman Year Blue Brown Gray Hazel Brown . Black 14 I4Z , 15 155 - AVERAGE EX PENDITURES MAXIMUM EXPENDITURES. MINIMUM EXPENDITURES. COLOR OF EYES. . 80 Green 47 White . 3 3 Black 1 6 COLOR OF HAIR. ' . 145 Blonde i, , 32 Red ' SIZE OF COLLAR. . I3 16 48 16g , . 65 I7 7 5 I 69 I2 10:48 7224 3 19 3822 752 730 682 33,000 2,000 2,000 2,ooo 8200 2oo loo ' 1250 .15 1 . I .15 5 .16 4 . I J SUMMARY. III SIZE Olf' HAT. . I 75 . 36 ffl - 4 M - 9 0275 . 24 72 . 5 7 64 754 - 1 7,?S - 53 SIZE OF SHOES. 5 . 7 SZ - I7 55 - 3 9 - 13 6 . I9 95 . 8 62 I4 IO . 2 7 . 34 IOM . 3 72 . 35 II V. 3 8 . 30 Handsomest Man in Class Most Popular Man in Class Best All-around Man in Class Best Foot-ball Player , Best Base-ball Player Best All-around Athlete . WVorst Poller in the Class Finest Moustache in Class Most Awkard Man in Class Laziest Man in Class . Aleck Jenny Mac Thompson George Forsyth . . Balliet Chip Mackenzie jerry Macauley De 'Wolf Hopper Black Rat McCune Lou Reichner . Tom Bowes X 1 THE NASSAU HERALD. MISCELLANEOUS STATISTICS OFFICERS OF '94. .Fresh man Kfcz r. President-T. F. Bailey, Vice President-R. Ramsdell, Secretary and Treasurer--H. D. McMillan, I-Iistorian-D. P. B. Conkling. Soplzomore Poor. President-R. Ramsdell, Vice President-A. D. jenney, Secretary and Treasurer-W. G. Wilson, Historian-D. P. B. Conkling. junior War. President-1, M. Broadnax, Vice President-C. S. McKenzie, ' Secretary-W. L. McCau1y, Treasurer-R. R. Ramsdell, Historians-D. P. B. Conkling, R. P. Jack, T. F. Bailey. I Senior War. President-J. MCN. Thompson, Secretary-W. A. Sexton, Historian-R. P. Jack. junior Oroior Appoz'm'menz's. VVHIG. CLIO. I. M. Broadnax, GLS, Mccague, H' H- Fisher, Donald McColl, 13- F- Keigwin, Alex. Mcoamn, E' R- Laughlin, McCready Sykes. n 5 r E 5 S 5: l Z i 1 2 l y 4 Z qi, 'Q 1 l E l I .Q U 1 . j . 34 1? 4 I 3 l 4 l 2 in ,, E L I MISCELLANEOUS STATISTICS. ,I I ,Lmior 01'czz'o1' Illedazdv. Ist. -Alex. McGafHn, zd. Donald McColl, 3d. E. F. Keigwin, 4th. H. H. Fisher. PV?zshz'ngl'on's Bi1'z'hdo,11 Dehafers. Freshman Y ear-I. MacDowell, Sophomore Year-J. M. Broadnax, junior Year-John Murdock, Senior Year-Donald McColl. Washz'ng!on7s Birthday Orafors. Freshman Year-T. F. Bailey, Sophomore Year--E. R. Laughlin, junior Year-G. H. Forsyth, Senior Year-MCC. Sykes. Lynde Debate Appoinimenis. WHIG. CLIO. I. S. Campbell, Donald McColl, G. C. Fox, MCC. Sykes, Keigwin, C. R. Watson. , , . ALTERN.A.TEs,. ' Alex. Miller, . Yorke Allen. HALL PRIZE-MEN FROM 794. WI-IIG HALL. Freshman War. Flssays-Ist. G. H. Forsyth. zd. G. C. Fox. Speaking--Ist. E. R. Laughlin. 2d. E. P. Essick. General Debate--G. Fox. Sophomore Year. Oratory-John Murdock. Essays--I. D. McCord. Class Debate-john Murdock. General Debate-S. Dickey. II II THE NASSAU HERALD. fzmior l'2wzr. Essays-Paul Erdman. Debate-H. F. Nixon. Extempore Speaking-Ist. M. Broadnax. zd. Samuel Dickey. Senior Ylfar. French Debate-J. S. Campbell. General Debate-tl. M. Broadnax. Extempore Speaking-Ist. Samuel Dickey. Honorable Mention-Keigwin and Campbell. CLIO HALL. Freskwzavz War. Essays-Ist. I. McDowell. zd. -I. XV. L. Jones. Speaking-Ist. C. Gi Hopper. zd. E. I. Russell. . Sophomore Hoff. if 'u H Oratory-Ist. I. R. Swain. , zd. S. R. Yarrow. Essays-Ist. MCC. Sykes. 2d. C. Frame. i junior Year. X Essays-Ist. A. T. Davis. A A zd. E. R. Robbins. - .l l. Class Debate-Donald MacColl. i 1 Divisional Debate-C. R. Watson. . General Debate-MCC. Sykes. ff I Senior Year. Oratory-Ist. C. R. Watson. 5 zd. C. A. Robinson. Divisional Debate-Walter Lovvrie. General Debate-Ist. McC. Sykes. zd. A. T. Davis. 'A' Essays-Ist. G. S. McCague. zd. C. A. Robinson. MISCELLANEOUS STATISTICS. I IS BAIRD PRIZE-MEN. Baird Prize-Alex. MCGaffin. Prize in Oratory-MCC. Sykes. Prize in Delivery-E. R. Laughlin. Prizes in Disputation-Ist. Donald MacColl, ' 2d. C. R. Watson. APPOINTMENTS FOR BAIRD CONTESTS. . For Baird Prize--A. T. Davis, S. W. Kinney, G. S. MCCague, D. MacColl A. MCGafhn, R, Swain, MCC. Sykes. For Oratory-C. M. Cartwright, A. T. Davis, E. F. Keigwin, S. W. Kinney E. R. Laughlin, G. S. MCCague, D. MacColl, A. McGaffin, E. Patterson, IH M. Sheldon, R. Swain, MCCready Sykes. i FIRST-HONOR SCHOLARS. Freshman Year-A. T. Davis. Junior Year-A tie between Paul Erdman and C. A. Robinson. SOPHOMORE SPECIAL HONORS. Laiinfj. C. Coleman, Ir., Paul Erdman, C. S. Havens, G. S. MCCague, C A. Robinson, E. J. Russell, G. H. Wailes. ' Greek-J. C. Coleman, jr., C. S. Havens, H. Z. Kip, G. H. Wailes, C. R Watson. , I A Mafhefzzatics-A. M Califh C. M. Cartwright, Sam Dickey, W. G. Grier G. S. McAllister, john Murdock, E. R. Robbins, R. Swain. ' French-B. F. Carter, A. T. Davis, G. M. Priest. JUNIOR SPECIAL HONORS. ' Mania! Philosophy-J. W. L. jones, G. S. MCCague, W. H. McCartney, A MCGaHin, E. Russell, MCC. Sykes. Classics-I. C. Coleman, jr., C. S. Havens, C, A. Robinson, H. M. Sheldon, G. H. Wailes, W. R. Woodruff. ' Modern Languages-M. P. Brush, G. M. Priest. - English-A. T. Davis, W. Kinney. Mafhewzalics and jVfa!hemaz'z'caZ Sciences--S. T. Lockwood, G. L. McAllister. Natura! Saience-Ulric Dahlgren. GENERAL HONORS. FRESHMAN YEAR. Fin! Group. A, T, Davis, Paul Erdman, C. A. Robinson. II THE NASSAU HERALD. XV. P. Armstrong, M. P. Brush, A. M. Calitl, B. F. Carter, C. M. Cartwright I. C. Coleman, 'lll1O!1lI15 Creigh, 1, C Denise, tl, D. Edwards, li. ll. liveritt, Karl George, tl. ll. Forsyth, G. VV. Caldwell, G. S. Brown, A. T. Davis, Paul Erdman, VV. P. Armstrong M. P. Brush, A. M. Califf, B. F. Carter, C. M. Cartwright, J. C. Coleman, jr L. C. Denise, G. D. Edwards, B. F. Everitt, VVilliam Floyd, Karl George, C. S. Havens, 3 Suoozzfl' Grozp. School :yt Scionae. 4. 5. 6. SOPH OMORE YEAR . Firsz' Group. Seoona' Group. C. S. Havens, Walter Lowrie, john Murdock, H. F. Nixon, E. I. Patterson, E. R. Robbins, E. J. Russell, H. M, Sheldon, B. Van Benthuysen, G. H. 'Wailes, C. R. Wfatson. R. VV. Bogart, jr., H. McClenahan, E. S. Van Duyn. C. A. Robinson, G. H. Wailes. G. L. McAllister, G. S. McCague, Alex. McGaffin, john Murdock, H. F. Nixon, E. J. Patterson, G, M. Priest, E. R. Robbins, E. J. Russell, H. M. Sheldon, J. R. Swain, B. Van Benthuysen, R. P. jack, C. R.. Watson, H- Z- Kip, W. R. Woodruff. Sclzool of Science-B. S. Course. G. H. Forsyth, 2. E. S. Van Duyn. C. E. Course. G. S. Brown, 2. C. L. Holt, 3. J. B. Bennett, Jr MISCELLANEOUS STATISTICS. M. P. Brush, C. M. Cartwright, J. C. Coleman, .lr A. T. Davis, G. D. Edwards,- Paul Erdman, NV. P. Armstrong, T. F. Bailey, A. M. Califf, B. F. Carter, Thomas Creigh, Ulric Dahlgren, Horace Day, L. C. Denise, Sam Dickey, B. H. Everitt, Wm. Floyd, Karl George, Clif. McBride, WV. H. McCartney, Donald MacColl, Alex. McGatlin, C. H. Mcllwaine, A. Miller, I M. Mitchell, john Murdock, E. Patterson, E. C. Petrie, Daniel Pratt, P bl UNION YEAR. Firsz' Crazy Sammi Group. II C. S. Havens, G. McCague, C. A. Robinson, H. M. Sheldon, McCready Sykes, G. H. Wailes. G. M. Priest, W. K. Grier, W. E. Gunster, T. F. Humphrey, R. P. lack, J. W. L. Jones, Keigwin, I. VV. Kiesling, S. W. Kinney, H. Z. Kip, S. T. Lockwood, 'G. L. McAllister, E. R. Robbins, E. I. Russell, I. R, Swain, R. O. Swan, Edward Thaw, F. F. Thompson, A, H. Wadswo1'tli, C. R. VVatson, Guy Vtfilson, WV. R. WVoodruff. Sfkool of Science-B. S. Course. G. H. Forsyth. C. E. Course. G. S. Brown. SENIOR YEAR. The announcements for General Excellence too late for publication. 113 THE NASSAU HERALD. COM MENCEMENT APPOINTMENTS. Valedictorian--Alex. McGafHn. Latin Salutatory-Chas. A. Robinson. English Salutatory-Paul Erdman. MISCELLANEOUS PRIZE-MEN. Sophomore Mathematical Prize-E. R. Robbins. Francis Biddle Essay Prize-McCready Sykes. Sophomore English Prize-A. T. Davis. Dickinson Prize--J. W. L. jones. Wanamaker English Prize-A. T. Davis. ' Class of '70 English Prizes-Anglo-Saxon, G. S. McCagueg Engtislz Litera- ture, S. W. Kinney. . Barnard VVhite Prize-McCready Sykes. - Nassan Lit. ditors. , McCready Sykes, Managing Editor 5 C. Waldo Cherry, Geo. H. Forsyth Theo. F. Humphrey, P. B. jenkins, E. I. Patterson 5 R. P. Jack, Treasurer. Princetonian Editors from '94. Q VV. C. Spruance, jr., Managing Editor, H. S. Fisher, Business Manager, F. M. Archer, J. E. Bathgate, jr., J. F entress, J. D. McCord, J. C.' Neely, F Wilkins. - Nassau Herald Editors. - Henry H. Condit, Chas. G. Hopper, A. I. Miller, Guy Wilson. Brio-a-Brac A E ditors. I. H. Bailey, F. T. Bailey, W. I. Grandin, Ir., T. F. Humphrey, F. C. Paul mier, T. J. Perkins, M. H. Sicard, M. Sykes, I. M. Thompson. ' A Tennis Association Ojicers from '94, Sophomore Year-I. C. Neely, Director. junior Year-J. C. Neely, Secretary. Senior Year-W. Floyd, President, I Ojicers q' Track Association from '94. P junior Year-C. H. Mcfllwaine, Treasurer. Senior Year-C. H. Mcllwaine, President, G. R. Swain, Captain. l i 7 W . i I i I 1 1 1. 0 9 . .- ff , N 1, 7, . Y Q' X1 493 . I -' .5 5 , ' - Q-,: X --- 'X Q V , .X - , . ., Q X ' ' xx P .iw f.. X,', l V: ,. -x . x wi is filx K 'S ' xv . - 2. -A :,. '-', 1 It Q A' Fx' , i 5 ,Yf N. 'i' Q -3. vga .:..',' Ffhgf fTffE3ff fQ ' Q i QMf5??cvsf X 5 5 is3Egf.Mfi Qi , X ,, X 6 ' 'Ll ' X' - -WN-x,.., .gv f-ff' . -. AHXKVUUIYXLLlUHYfUflVYTk5H9 A1uLv1'C CUP F ' . . , BASEBALL. , ,.-A .HW E11--Q .- ' lNTERjCDL CQR .4 .X J K1 New xx x'X4-fi!! X-'Fx X NK' H AL S.. XirwLs.fsM. Y N R Xksi NEA .., -4.-54 -4 x-.a i-' i 9 1 9 ,e 4 F L QQ... Y ,,....,..g1-V-..-.. vi .4 , . MISCELLANEOUS STATISTICS. IIQ fIfk'lIlbt,'7'.V of filo!! ffkwen Y 7271712 fom '94, Swain, G-randin, Sill, Mctlampbell, Allen, Ramsdell, VVintringer. Ifff?l727267'S of Pvfizes in Im'ereoZZeg2'az'e Games. May 9th, ISQI-G. R, Swain, third in Ioo-yard dash. May 28th, 1892-E. R. Ramsdell, second in the running broad jump. ,Q4I Freshman Foo!-ba!! Team. Chamberlain, McKenzie, H. Riggs, Meredith, Farnum, Thompson,- F. Riggs, . Dusenberry, Duff, I. Poe, Drake, 794 Men on ' Vezrsizy Foot-ba!! T eams. Balliet, Blake, McCauIy, Vincent. CLASS BASE-QBALL TEAMS. Freelzman Ifeezr. Drake, p., Humphrey, C., Young, Ib., Andrews, 2b.5 Duff, s. s.5 Neeley, gb., Ramsdell, 1. f., Capt. Mackenzie, c. f., Sicard, r. f. ' Sophomore Year. Drake, p., Humphrey, c., Young, Ib., Andrews, 2b. 3 Ramsdell, 3b., Duff, s.,s.g Mackenzie, 1. f., Wright, c. f., Sicard, r. f. junior Year. Drake, p., Humphrey, c., Young, Ib., Lindsay, 2b.5 Creigh,s. s., Neeley, 3b.g Mackenzie, 1. f., Forsyth, r. f., Sicard, c. f. - Senior' Way. Mackenzie, Capt., s. s., Lindsay, c.5 King, 2b., Creigh, 1. f., Drake, c. f., Ferris, r. f. 3 Young, Ib., Neeley, 3b. 5 Van Nortwick, p. ' Varszkjf Base-bo!! Men from 'Q4z. Mackenzie, Captain 5 W1'ight, Ramsdell, Drake, Forsyth. Treasurer and Manager of Base-ball Association-T. F. Humphrey. Treasurer and Manager of Foot-ball Association-J. MCN. Thompson. 120 THE NASSAU HERALD: '94 .flfwz an U7z1 zfe1'sz'zj1 Glec' Clllb- X M Woocl1'uff, Alex. llenson, 1 . . P . C. s. Mfickemie, G. M. McCan1pbC1l. A. E. Holmes, T- F- BQHCY' Alex. D. Jenney, Business Manager. A ,Q,,l .ilkn on IblZ'7Jc'7'.S'?'I11' Bzzryb Club. lf. C. Kenley, Leader, E- Hfl1'10W, R. D. Smith. ,951 .flknf on lf3ZiUE7'.S'Z'1Uf Ilfandolin Club. Cf. B. XYorden, Leader, H-I Befik, ul. Van Nortwick, F. MCCune, Scott McLenal1an, J. C. Neely. 794 Freshman Glec Club. R. MacDowell, . . . Leader. J. H. Bailey, C. C. Iloge, C. D. Goldthwaite, R. UI. MacDowell, P. P. Bliss, T. F. Bailey, G. M. McC:1mpbell, A. E. Holmes, R. L. Sheldon, . TENORS. BASS ES. Business Manager. C. H. Mcllwaine, S. N. McWillian1s, L. I. Reichner. J. C. Neely, A. M. North, E F. M. McCune. Menzbers Q' College Choir from ,94. Bailey, Day, McCampbe1l. Benson, Fentress, MacCol1, Blake, Frame, Mcllvvaine, BHSS, George, Neely, I Broadnax, Haas, Rogers, Bu1'1'1Ctt. Jones, Sicard, Cherry, Keigwin, Tower, Conkling, Lovvrie, Williams. ijllleuzbers M Dramatic Association from ,94. F- S' M' McWilliams. - - . . President. . T' F' Bailey, M- Lloyd, A A. R. Chamberlain, H. Fisher, M. Thompson, y D. P. B. Conkling, C' S- Mackenzie, T. Riggs, jr., A. M. yvoodrufr, F. G. Riggs, A. Benson, C. C. Hoge, W- S- Rogers, L G- R. Swain, L. I. Reichner. MCC. Sykes, MISCELLANEOUS STATISTICS. IZI LTALEDONIAN GAMES. XVINNERS OF PRIZES FROM '94. june 6z'k, 1891. Ioo-Yard Dash-Swain, third. 220-Yard Dash-Swain, third. I -Mile Run -Brodie, third. I-Mile 'Walk -XVittake1', third. Izo-Y ard Hurdle-Lloyd, second. 2-Mile Bicycle-Brinkerhoff, second. High Jump-Sill, first. Broad .lump-Ramsdell, firstg Sill, third. Pole Vault-G. L. Farnum, Hrst, H. F. Sill, second. I6-Pound Shot-G. L. Farnum, second, G. Mackenzie, third. A june Ilfh, 1892. IOO-Yard Dash-Swain, second. 2-Mile Bicycle-Grandin, first. 440-Yard Dash-McCampbell, second. 220-Yard Hurdle-Johnson, second. 220-Yard Dash-Swain, second. Pole Vault-Sill, first. Running High Jump-Sill, Hrst. Running Broad jump-Sill, second. , june 1016, 1893. Ioo-Yard Dash-Allen, second, Swain, third. 220-Yard Dash- Swain, third. 440-Yard Dash-McCampbell, second. 880-Yard Run-Wintringer, second. I-Mile Run-Wintringer, second. I-Mile Walk-Pratt, third. I2O-Yafd Hurdle-Lloyd, second. h Running Broad Jump-Allen, first. Hammer Throwing-Balliet, second. june 9111, 1894. Too late for publication. - FELLOVVSHIPSW ' Chancellor Green Fellow in Mental Science- Fellow in Classical Literature- J. S. K. Fellow in Mathematics- Boudinot Fellow in Modern Languages- Boudinot Fellow in History- Class of I86O Fellow in Experimental Science- . Special Fellowship in English- 'tAnnounced too late for publication. iriited States Government and other desirable Securities for HVGSUD1' S. x All Stocks and Bonds listed on the New York Q, Stock Exchange bought and sold on commission for cash. u arvey Fisk Sons No. 28 Nassau Street, U New York. G3n1S.ss Tlormse. lljose xziyljo beuiie eil eujuy ilin3e been njerrglaers of llje Qlcfss of gill, eillgev for ct penal or lflje xzilljole of llge course, Svecrlly 'Fcteililcffe 'llje conjpilerlioig of lbe engljuerl reeerel by Jgeli: iying llge Seerelcxxvy injnjedierlely in regqervel le QUQQT clymijsge ef resiczleigce er oecupcrliolj, of eijgetgenjeljl, or ngemr-iiersge, Qc.. W. A. SEXTON, CLASS SECRETARY, PWS! .New ,B7'ZlQ'flZ'07l, Slaien Island, N K MORSE BURTIS, I Qliormerly with the late james O. Morse,j ' Contracftor for Supplies for the Army, Navy and Public Institutions. ALSO, DEALER IN WRDUGHT-IRON PIPE AND BDILER TUBES, CAST-IRDN WATER AND DRAIN PIPE. Dealer in all kinds of Brass Steam and Water Gauges, and Iron Fittings for Steam, Steam Traps, Gate Valves, Gas and Water, Ammonia Radiators, Tanners' Coils, Fittings, Coils and Ice' Ma- Railroad and Mill Supplies, Chine Supplies. Rubber Hose. Gas and Steam Filters' Tools and Plumbers' Goods, 52 JOHN STREET, NEW YORK. metropolis haw School 9' o If 'ru 11' CITY OF NEIVV YORK. ABNER C. THOMAS, LL.D., Dean. Incorporated by the Regents of the University of the State of New York. Course extends over three school years, leading to degree of LLB. Students Fitted for practice in any part of the United States. FALL TLHNI BEGINS UELUHLH LsL,1H94. Profi CLARENCE D. ASHLEY, 207 BROADWAY, New YORK. WILLIAM L. EILBLHL. WEDDINGS AND PARTIES A SPECIALTY, L I L I 19 WEST STATE STREET, Trenton, N. J. Personal attention is given by lVIr. GILBERT to the furnishing of Weafdz'1zgs and Pefzrfaie and Social E1zfe1fz'az'1zmem's, Where an elegant table is desired. HEARER GIBB Tazzfom 1 3 L 9 Wyomle VS, IIIO WALNUT STREET, Philadelphia. Qmzlzhjv, Gam' W0Vk omni Paz? Prices. 1 n E 99 ' Z.: .la E fy' hy X 5 R M W 1 The Cnnninnninl nnl llinnnninl Clnnninln. QWEEKLY, now in its 56th V01U.Ir1e.J -laffhe Investors' Supplement. Clii-lnnnlhlyj The iHand-book of Railroad Securities. lSnn1i-nnnun.l.j The Financial Review. flillllllilll , . THE BEST PRACTICAL WORKS ON PoL1T1eAL ECGNOMY, BUSINESS and INVESTMENTS. I WILLIAM B. DANATQ co., Publishers, 102 William St. A NEW YORK CITY. Athletes, Cyclists, Baseball and Footballists use ANTI-STIFF to render their joints and tendons supple and flexible. II F U! -lil fl! III pun 211 eqqffue S s go poo Auoo ' eq Him 1108 p n fselosnmleqq oqug Hem qngj ANTI-STI F is a. Marvelous Prepaiiation. Quick in its action, clean. and pleasant to use. H I' .QW llll in W f as if .1 ::T - i -QL lox!! , I my ei-s- was W I 5 I3 . ' ' . ' ' F! fn f 12 . .. F.-, 1, 0 , .1 19, ........ ...r-Q--,-f - .,. 1 : '--- 9611- QNX ' :- 5,2 '--f 'ilxls Z A A ink?-xtwseissi 1 9 ,,.g:,:1lg,of 1 iggrf eg, I- . fl 'QW U W Qaff Affllflff' 'ff 9 'segqxedolg Suicmlnmgqg E ES 'Tl we in o 9 zo 9 O3 U1 9 5 22-I :Ti 2.5 22 S9 H5 Qc: v-s F? HN go sqm 2? gc' aw: Q? U7 3? 25' ca. ff: '13 F: 575 v-. r- -I UI 'G C 1 e-v :- -1 UQ O O 'J Pl ...4 V7 ,-se18 94.a,.A,, SPRING- - SIIIVIIVIEZIL We invite your inspection of our Foreign and Domestic Invoices. The choicest and best selected line of Suitings, Trousers and Spring Overcoatings that We have ever shown. Ross at MURNIN, High-Grade Merchant Tailors, E 828 Walnut Si., Philadelphia, Pa P. S.-Our method of Spot Cash i buying enables us to give bottom prices. ' BUILT BY THE ALUNINI. - p The Princeton Inn, PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY. A charming resort, situated in a Wooded park of seven acres in the midst of the beautiful university town 5 heated throughout with steam and open wood Hres. ARTHUR BAVE, Manager. Special Rates for Guests staying by the Week. The store that gives the biggest and truest dollar's Worth is the one most Willing to take it back-every time. We expect our Clothing, Shoes, Hats and Furnishings to suit you, and more than that, if they don7t, send 'em right back and get your money. That's what our store is for. You know all about our Clothing, of course. 'Our Furnishings, I-Iatsand Shoes are ofthe same sort--the best We know how to get,'and at as low prices as honest goods can be sold for. R ROGERS, PEET 81 CO., - NEW YORK. THREE Prince. i BROADWAY Wa1'ren. STORES. 32d St. ' ,W--1'-TLTQT X -:A . , g' ' . X X f . 1 - QQNX N - f 1i'fE?:'.1E ' :Rm , X v f: J.'.! I: X 4 g:5:::..... 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'f:- A, V fzgfv pf '5:gfgfg:5gq-r'::--'-- 1, . .4:-:2-:-:- '-1:4-'f-'Lf'.f 41' 1-'-:ci-:-11 N--'-'Z fa- fz-z- 'f,:X ,i, -,1 'Gb 'S 5327 -gigfgrfgl-:iglgt-3:5525:Q..-' y - .1 ',:-:-1-.aw-,f.-.'-1w'-'-t+.'.'-'4-?-:f- , 'eriaff' -- 41-::-:L-14:--I-:I-:I- k1 .ZiyiaE222i55255g3gizi32?:151' M ,xii -1' ,. X gf if i fi ,Q El' rf B ll 6191 X f X ' BEST 'f 'lH'f?u1m W'f'? sssecrcu J l I R Q , 170 S awres rsfamgn 4-fm, if 'i- f 'fri1kf5rf5. . A , N x' 5 I Q! X . W. 'i 5 A xv f -..-.fro ffgffgfffgffrf f f ff- 5 f t- ' ff ' f f 1 4 .-ff' K ' 'ff ' , W,.fU f, WlF,:E25f f' 'f V ,f ' 'i'75 'f7l' N560 15ffiQEEi??:i? .115if3aia::g2f5g- -----1----,,, A ' 1 , A ,f 1' 'W' '-'Hffg figif'-fff'-1: Eeeflffggiiiia . A ' ,f nt 5 tl .V 3 .WM :1ia212z2:2:2 . -'2.ff fx H------...- X . I I5 -A 1w:3t1. '-r::5:reg -EEES?J.?Eg533 :ef ,.,:....A .l4E1 ,!g,-..f1-,Ml I A, -. .-----M il , I I, ' ...E I- 1:3 Eff?- zgifg-' 3931925 - ' -wfbgr ' ' 'p' 'Hp f lg I ' ,ll 11 I: ,423 7::'::::f' 1:2 1.2. .5-vt.: . ,154 -Alu, ,Hg I-L . ::..sg:g.- In ',I - .A K llwt-,QM 4,4535 '5 .1 'IV W--g'.l 'fA -.'., ' : ul 41161, IPS ', .' ' I5 -I-C-:I-,. '- A ' Y- fag, ' I 7 W 1 -,- 'l- '1' 'XJ - .. -inf ' ' F R '11 EZEI.. f -Y 1. '. -I-' ,.,315.135131:.E'12-ffifri? iii? f 'T-'164' ' A P ,E -' ' ' Jlfhw' Tiii2i2?:?,e ' 1,1 ' 2 1' 1 W 5 1 f.4i,?f?53iEE?1 ' 'll' ' - i ' ' wg - x r , , 4. Uv.. .A .-T Iqtb L E I X m 3 W 1 ' 'T ffifff . , . .. --'.'.:T.':::::::,-::1?11- . , 1 qi-3,-3.-ff' ' ''-''fiffrggrzfifiaff.:51E2f3'i'E1FE'f1fff3xgf-,2-H.: .,,V,V ' Tl-IE PRIDE OF T:-Hz I-louslzl-ioLD. -I I BELLEVUE HOSPITAL MEDICAL COLLEGE, CITY OF NEW YORK. SESSIONS OF 1894-95. . The REGULAR SESSION begins on Monday, September 24th, 1894, and continues fpr twlflenty- s six weeks. During this session, in addition to the regular didactic lectures, two or t ree our are daily allotted to clinical instruction. Attendance upon three regular courses oflectures is required for graduation. The examinations of other accredited Medical Colleges In the ele- mentary branches are accepted by this College. . The SPRING SESSION consists of ,daily recitations, clinical lectures and exercises and didactic lectures on special subjects. This session begins March 25th, 1895, and continues until the middle of June. . . The CARNEGIE LABORATORY is open during the collegiate year for instruction in micro- scopical examinations of urine, practical demonstrations in medical and surgical pathology, and lessons in normal histology and in pathology, including bacteriology. For the annual Circular, giving requirements for graduation and other information, address Prof. AUSTIN FLINT, Secretary, Bellevue Hospital Medical College, foot of East 26th Street, New York City. THOS. C. HILLKL SON, Bakery, Confectionery end. Lunch Parlor, NO. II N..Broad Street, Trenton, N. J. AN OLD-ESTABLISHED, RELIABLE PLACE. FOUNDED 1860. WVeddings, Luncheons, Dinners and Receptions provided with every table requisite. Salads, Oysters, Croquettes, Boned Turkey, Terrapin, Jellied Meats, Decorated Salmon, Larded Game, Truffled Dishes, Crabs, Bouillon, Coffee and Chocolate, Ice Cream and Ices, Frozen Fruits, Sherbets, Ornamental Cake, Jellies, Charlottes, Pastry, Spun Sugar, Fruit, Confectionery, Bonbons, Candelabra, Silverware, Table Cloths andrNapkins, Dishes, Camp Chairs, Waiters, Cooks, Musicians, Flowers, Coaches, Src., 8zc. Thoroughly equipped for finest work. Complete arrangements for out-of-town orders. Telephone connection. I , it ALWAYS RELIABLE! ALWAYS RELIABLE! Tlge Trenton Steeng Laundry Has for years been doing Work for University men -of Princeton, and, under the present management, is giving, the best of satisfaction. The work is ' called for each ,Monday and delivered on Friday. y p OUR PRICES ARE THE LOWEST. We respectfully solicitiyour patronage. f P.. :-I. BLAKELY at co., Prrprirrrrr. J. F. NE MA , 19 John St., New York, Edclges, nqleddlsjlifrnternitg and 'ocieig mlwlpmg, EXCLUSIVE ATTENTION GIVEN TO The Fines! Grades of Gold, Silver and Jeweled Work. Designs and Estimates on application. NONE PROFIT FROM MAKER T0 WEARER3' The Clinnlcard En H KORRECT SHAPE SHOES, y esign their own models and originate the own speclal styles and shapes. Special inducements Ojereo' to COLLEGE TRADE. e invite particular attention to our new I 5s PATENT LEATHER BOOT, E 5s GALE LEATHER BOOT, . 58 RUSSIA LEATHER BOOT, 1 ' Made on the Korrectu Razor-toe mode Boot gll0P3! 223 Eiiiidixiglrj2g?Tlgei,rli1El31l2i:eitreet, Ninn Yorln Gity. 2EQCBCi9QCfEC3i9QC59Ci9C-i9QQQCi9QCi9Ci9Q'2ifi: O Q-Er , . 0 Qr years time ,' in two years they are tgu Q often completely transformed. Every traveler recognizes this fact. The Wu in Hotels inay change greathf in one Grand Union Hotel. 1 18 'SID 'Q gy 1Sb Qr Qu r Qu tgr Wa 'Q Fourth -Ave., 41st and 42d Sts. 'il 1 ' ' Opposite Grand Central Depot, MJ 'S' nas been steadil iin roveof ttitrin 'Q' A J' X 45, the last a'eeaa'e anti! it stands to- ag, Q, a'ay as the leading ftZ77tZ'h! ana' 45, Q' tonrist note! of 1noa'erate cost in the it 1 i city ofNezo- :lf07'k.fvafwxfsfvvsfxxAAfv i wr 3 Elevated R. R. and horse cars to all parts Qr , of the city. Central location-right in 4 the centre of the theatre and shopping l district. Baggage to and from 42d St. I l depot free. Every attention to comfort. 4 Qa Rooms 51.00 per day and upwards. Q Q' ' Q FORD at COMPANY, Proprietors. 4 EKQQQQQDQQQDQCQQQDQQQCQCQQE5 UPDEGROVE az LETTS, PROPRIETORS. Thea A111arr1bra. 23 and 25 N. Warren St., Trenton, N. I. Restaurant, Sample Room and Billiard Parlor. O ESTABLISHED 1835. INconPonATso 1873. WILLIAM H. GRIFFITH 81 CO., BILLIARD AND POOL TABLES. I6 4thaAve., below 8th St., NEW YORK. ESTABLISHED 1849. ESTABLISHED 1349- xr1CToR F. iv1oNN112R, i-FI-IE TRENTON DYER, . IIS NORTH WARREN STREET, TRENTON, N. J. Gents' Suits Dyed, Cleaned and Repairccl Equal to New. All kim-mls NY.a:':..mi .E in Entire Satisfaction. rDyeing Prices, Suits, 51.50, Ovcrcouts, 51.15. L,'lr.miii,g lkiisis. 4 51.253 Overcoats, 51.25. ehermerhorn's Teachers' Agency, Oldest and best known in U. 5. Eslablislicml 13554, 3 EAST I4'1'1r1 S'l'RlilC'l'. Niaw Ymiiq. SUPPLIES. 1. w. seHEnMEnHonN 8. co., 3 E. mm si.. New vonx. The Fislg Teachers' Agencies, Xxrlth otlices inulloston, New York, Chicago, Toronto, Portland fOregonj, and Los Angeles, otter superior advantages to College graduates who are available for College, Private School or Public School positions. 4,841 POSITIONS FILLED C985 in 18931, at salaries aggregating 83,241-415290, CROCKER 85 PRATT, New York M2l113fg'81'S, 70 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK. I S- TAT- ROBERTS, A Alanis Ouzjfzizteff, 835 BBOAIJ STREET, NEWARK, N- J-, Makes a Specialty of NEGLIGEE. si-HRTS. 31.50 For lit, quality and designs. .. -, ,..-:-... .. ... -... 1- -- - - 7 I 926 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA, PA. Eine Spaniel Raise in Siuimnisl Gilbert's Photographs of Groups cannot be excelled. lwiogiiapiwv. 37 UNION SQUARE A .l a ' 4 . 'Typ i-f-.' Aigig. 'ii Special Rates to Students in Clubs of ten or more. Photos of all the leading Celebrities, Theatrical, Literary, Political, Src., at retail. FRANK sunk, nm.,.rw1s1,i,,a Eleliea-ie lsigaig, Importer Qglaligiijg lihiarlegras, AND Qooel Qocalgs, i, GuStOHl And personal supervision, should ' make a successful entertainment. t .Hn p' Mltker, W' F' DAY 8' BRO' 23 w. zsd STREET, i GATERERS, HHH Broad Street, Newark, N. J., NWI YOFK, .' Have all these requisites. A.djOiI1i11g' 51311 AVG. Hotel. HOWARD CYCLE MFG. CO., l i p 77 Eusi Fronf Siifeef, Trenfon, IV. J. Our prices are lower than Philadelphia or New York. Repairing 3 Specialty, JOHN A. DONOVAN 8a co., l is ibhiladelplriit. Finest Assortment of' French Briar and Meerschaum l IFES. lllalmndn Mixture. lllavnndu Mixture. 3 'Q .nf i 1 Q A 3 5 i i Y f , N, 1 V 1' I Ag ll ,..,.,.,.- mf 1 2 'J A 3 i I 5 -5 Ei, it 9 4 ff 3. Huston, Ashmead, Smith Co., 4L1MffED,i . ENoRAvERs AND STAT1oNERs, 1o22 VValnut Street, I Philadelphia. INVITATIONS AND PROGRAMS FOR 4 -'SIS-'S27-'SKS' COMMENCEMENTS, RECEPTIONS, BALLS AND WEDDINGS. CLASS AND'CLUB STATIONERY. STEEL ENGRAVED ILLUSTRA- TIONS FoR ANNUALS. VISITING CARDS. T it munh fs trftxgigl Etgtrrttiti i',, ,gf Cigarette Smokers who are willing to pay a little more than the .X '-. A' price charged for the ordinary trade cigarettes, will find THIS BRAND superior to all others. sim- . X S, + X XX E Qt N N Qs--' ' . Q ' fig - is yy X X 'N X if 'f S ff XV , w iw, 46,1 X5 xii X 5' 1 My wx -4 ,-:ff is - 11 'Q T.-gf' L X 'NX n I x xmla. J 1 M 4 I xx S x XJ3vT5 X 'V X QS Xtkgx X xx 73 X Y X N3 may SK K ,W . . - The Rlehmond Stralght Cut No. 1 Cigarettes Wil S 5 ' are made from the brightest, most delicately Havored and highest cost: GOLD LEAF grown in Virginia. 'lhis is the Old and Original brand of Straight Cut Cigarettes, and was brought out by us in the year 1875. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS and observe that the Hrm's name as below is printed on every package. ALLEN' .AND GINTEB, The American Tobacco Co., Successor, MANUFACTURER, RICHMOND, VA- f Styles and Quality Unequalled. HO713fIO2Z3.ff,f58 elebrated Hats. Lewis Andrews, Authorized Agent for Princeton. WILLIA M. LEIGH, LOH , Men's Furnishing Goods, Nowxows, No. 64 Nassau Street, PRINCETON, N. J. We Madonna! 906106 I IN UNIVERSITY HALL Is, beyond the peradventure of a doubt, Me best in Pz'z'1zfff0f1 Having had thirteen years' experience in the art, I ani . I prepared to give satisfaction to the most fastidious. STUDENTS' ITRADE A' SPECIALTY. f I I FRED. BIALLAS, Artist. Es s 867. , DON'T FQRGET THAT 12s1'Aii1-1sixirn1S . ADAM Gr. DUI-I IVI HAS THE Finest - lnnnh-Hnnm- and Q Hesinurnni - in - Prinnninn. 'NASSAU STREET, opposite First Presbyterian Church. SPECIALTY--BYCEICI, Cakes, Ice Cream, for Clube WILLIAM CNYANDEWATER, H ei rdwva ro Iinoosmantonmisxliinfo ceooiis IXCKDDEDS7 GfiQISSXZS?QIl?Qp, SQLTS, In fact everything necessary for furnishing Students' Rooms. , CARIVIINA PRINCETONIA! THE UNIVERSITY SONG BOOK. FOR SALE AT Henry Runyon's Book Store, 57 Nassau St.,'P1'inoeton, N. J. - Nassau Hotel Block. JAWIES R. DRAKE, t Successor to George Thompson, I Book Binding, Fine Stationery POCKET KNIVES, WALL PAPERS, NOTE HOOKS, sc., Opposite Main Entrance to College. GEORGE EG-G-EB.5, ' Skawing mm' H6127 Cm'fz'1fzg A1fz'zls'z'z'6az!Qf Done NO. 104 NASSAU STREET, I Next door to Princeton House. I Opposite College Library. II. II. IIIIIIITI2 at SON, Millinery and Furnishing Goods, A '70 NASSAU STREET, PRINCETON, N- J- W. H. LYON S, CHOICE GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS, 110 Nassau Street, Princeton, N. J. 72 I Q L LEWIS J. ANDREVVS, . Succzsson TO C. A. Tam-iuNE, I llOGS,I13fSzuNlCknpS, tNO.'.4.6 NASSAU STREET, I ANI PREPARED RTO BUY , A Second-hand Clothing and Second-hand Furniture FCE. C..f:'s.SI-I. ORDERS BY MAIL PROMPTLEY ATTENDED To. P. RILEY, WITHERSPOON ST., PRINCETON, N. J. RIGIECAQRD RQWLAND, Students' Text Books, Lawn Tennis Gooels, Artists' Materials - tzsro. '76 NASSAU STREET. CARMINA PRINCETONIA. MARSH a BURKE, Druggmts and potheeaues, AND DEALERS IN Perfumery, Lamps and Lamp Fixtures, Fancy Articles, Window and f N Piotur-e Glass, Looking-Glass Plates, See. ' PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY COMPOUNDED. The continued patronage of Students and Q v a o 1 i , the public generally 1S respectfully srohclted. Next Door to the Post Office' ' i . MYRON E. LZXYZXKE, ' SuooEssoR TO T. W. LAVAKE 84, SON, ' JEWELER AND Giwnisinm, 72 Nassau Sireef, PRINCETON, N, J, A- S- LEIGIQI. s. H. BLACKWELL, Presuleut, Cashier. First ational ank, '88 NAssAU STREET, fDirectly opposite Nassau Hallj i Accounts of Students a Specialty. . THE ORANGE AND T1-IE BLACK Banners, Flags, Badges, Monograms, Src., 8zc., in the most original, attractive and unique designs, may be obtained at O 62 NASSAU ST., Second Floor, PRINCETON. A. C. VAN ZANDT. WILLIAM W. MERSHON, Upholstering and General Furniture Repairing, JOHNS ALLEY, PRINCETON, N. J. Pictures and Furniture carefully packed. Book-Cases and Tables made to order. Pictures framed. Mats for pictures and large stock of Picture Moulding constantly on hand. Window Shades furnished and put up. Chairs rezbottomed. Mattresses made over. VVincloW Seats a specialty. All work first-class and orders promptly attended to. N W. v. scUDDER, FAFZZZETLY Q 7, .Z'lly-1,011 -. Gj ',,, ,V ' f I J .nmeemed and WOUZMOYZ5, University Place and Na sau Street, PRINCETON, N. J. FINE GROCERIES Arrow PRICES. JOHN E. MURRAY. EECO-Operative Clubs will do well to purchase their GROCERIES here. 98 Nassau Street, Princeton, N. J. A INEXPENSIVE. A A ,Russet and Black, . -f - FOR MEN, WOISIXEN AND is NONE A C STI-Ii1Lli1ITd Kriocks , rfewfefr so If LIMPI' an an - A I. E x A N IJ E R, 'Zf' ii 6th Ave. and 23:1 St., ilfi Af f ' - ' g 132 M134 Fumn se. oRTER ee OATES, Publishers, Boolgsellers end lmporoers, l326 'CHESTNUT ST., PHILADELPHIA. Our customers will End at our new store a carefully selected stock of stan-dard and miscellaneous books, handsome gift books, the largest collection in America of rare and choice books, origi- nal editions and extradllustrated books in fine bindings. ALL 'BOOKS AT LOWEST PRICES. A FINE STATIONERY DEPARTMENT. FINE NOTE PAPERS, PROGRAMMES, MENU CARDS, GUEST CARDS, MONOGRAMS AND ADDRESS DIES. b PoRTER sf ooATEs, PH I I.ADEI.PI-I IA. L. I-LAINIIQINS. Regisleieeeli Eellggisl, 86 NASSAU' STREET, PRINCETON, N. J. CREGISTERED IJBUGGIST ' 9 Cor. Nassau and Mercer Streets. 'Ice Crearn. and Scala 'NX723ItS31' Parlors. PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY PREPARED. 7 pam Bl E N' S S I-I 0 E 5 Cf the Latest Designs, at Moderate Prices. WILLIAM I ARNOLD, . i F I ly ,gi if p,r' gg, 4 I I Llsneu 1550 240 Fifth Avenue, New York. . Dittmar, Bearer 85 tNayIor, 19 N. NINTI-I sTEEE'I, A PHILADELPHIA. Qiullege mul ifratermzitg Statinwzrg, ENGRAVING AND PRINTING. MAKERS OF Invitations, Programmes, Menus, Visiting Cards, SLC. H SAMPLES AND PRICES UPON APPLICATION. WILLIAM L. BRINER, fGraduate N. Y. College of Pharrr1acy,j . IJl:i.IIG-G-IST AND PIIABIYIACIST, 44, Nassau Street, Princeton, N. GEO. ef. DURNER, I dblzxssizal gait Cwttnr, 112 NASSAU svn:-:ps-r, PRINCETON, N. J. .JESSE SNOOK, Pipes, Tobacco, Cigarettes and Cigars, 117 NASSAU STREET, PRINCETON, N. J. E Trunks, jfz up, Suit Cases, 35 up, Satchels, fI.7O L1 3 Grips, go cents up, Telescope Cases, So cents up, SIJraps, Sze., at DEY'S, 132 Nassau Street. THIRTY-FOURTH ANNUAL STATEMENT 0F THE quitahle Life Assurance Society OF THE UNITED STATES, For the Year ending December 31st, 1893. ASS ETS. Bonds and Mortgages .....,....... Q... ......., . ..... ..................... - 322,808,916 74 Real Estate, including the Equitable buildings and purchases under foreclosure of mortgages ............. ......,. ......... 2 3,928,724 53 United States Stocks, State Stocks, City Stocks and other 1nveStmentS..... ..... ..... 89,253,593 42 Loans secured by Bonds and Stocks tmarket value, 39,449,241j, 6,934,463 33 Real Estate outside the State of New York, including pur- , chases under foreclosure .... ................. . ...................,. ' 14,396,857 64 Cash in bank and in transit fsince received and investedj .... .. 5,294,463 13 Interest and Rents due and accrued, Deferred Premiums and other Securities ....... I ................... . . ........ ............. ' ..... 6 ,439,378 11 Total Assets, December 31st, 1893... ............,........ Q ........... 3169,056,396 90 We hereby, certify, that, after a personal 'examination of the Securities and accounts de- scribed in the foregoing Statement, we find the same to be true and correct as stated. t W THOMAS D. JORDAN, Compzfroller. FRANCIS W. JACKSON, Audztor. ' I LIABILITIES. Reserve on all existing Policies Q4 per cent. standardl, and I all other liabilities .... ................. .............................. 3 1 36,689,646 57 Total Undivided Surplus Q4 per cent. standardl, including Special Reserve of 32,500,000 towards establishment of a 33 per cent. valuation... .......... 4 ...... .... . . ..................... 32,366,750 33 sie9,o56,396 90 We certify to the correctness of the above calculation of the reserveand surplus. From this surplus the usual dividends will be made. - GEO. W. PHILLIPS, J. G. VAN CISE, Actuaries. A ' INCOME.. Premiums ...... ' ......... ....... . .. ..... l ............. . . ............ 335,537,369 59 Interest, Rents, dzc .... .................. ........... . .... ' 6,485,235 96 , , A 342,022,605 55 , t I ' DISBURSEMENTS. Claims by Death and Matured Endowments. ....... ......... ...... 3 1 0,761,402 80 Dividends, Surrender Values, Annuities ,, and Discounted Endowments ......... n ................................................. 6,888,912 63 Total Paid Policy-Holders . .................... ..... . .................. 3 17,650,315 43 Commissions, Advertising, Postage and Exchange. ...... . 4,615,745 29 General Expenses, State, County and City Taxes. ..... 3,089,438 08 Q I 325,355,498 80 New Assurance written in 1893. .............................. ......'3205,280,22T-00 Total Outstanding Assurance ................... ' ........................ 932,532,577 00 I I 0 HENRY B. HYDE, President. - JAMES W. ALEXANDER-, Vice President. JOHN C. EISELE, Manager New Jersey Agency, Q 784 Broad Street, Newark, N. J. - SAMUEL J. ZKING, Geu'1Agt. ELMER E. DEV, Resident Agt., Princeton, N. 1. .lol-IN s. JEWELL, Pure Drugs and Chemicals, SUDA WATER, CAIVDY AIVD OIGAHS. PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY PREPARED- STUDENTS' TRADE A SPECIALTY. 1 120 Nassau Street, P1-incetgn, N, DOBBINSE at LARGE, .,....QHATTERS.at.. BLAYLO'CK :Sen BLINN DEBBIES. Yeuman's Celebrated Hats A SPECIALTYQ - OUTING CAPS. SOFT HATS BUST STKE STPZZT7 WPZQTCZJIDJ E. CJ. CHARLES P. zAzzALl, Fiue Confeetionery and Fruits. AGENT ron HUYL1-:nfs CHOCOLATES. No. 128 Nassau Street, Prineeten, N. J. Pure Fruit Juices only used at the Fountain. A Milk Shakes and Egg Phosphates. Hot and Cold Sod -v5G0 T04fg ' HOTTEL, Tee 1-IATTER, FOR YOUR Umbrellas, Canes, Dun1ap's I-Iats, and especially A ' STRAVV HATS . WVith the ORA.NG-E AND THE BLACK bands, in the latest styles ' 33 East State Street,ATrenton, N. 1. ,lt III' II Cha . QIDGDH ll 86 Co., I I I I ug, I I I I I I I I I I I I ,I, IR I I ' I I utchc:rs, 141 EST STREET, I T YORK. I I I I TELEPHONE CALL, I 0 I 6 ortlandt. own s Fm RACT lt' 5' ll wi ll l' T Ulm lx11.C'UIA1x DAILY EXERCISE mtl Il t In L.UIlll5L,.HL,Ll to cjleslst Hom Work beewuse of SURE NUSLI 'l S xr ou llllllty Liter, CKC1'C1S111b A THOROUGHLY lxUl th MUSLLI S mth PONDS EXTR A .. A ACT By 1tS uit, V vu 'um nude QUILIR Tnd ACTI A f or WFLLING IS prevented and you wlll XNAQIITP li ' t1e DANGER of TAKINGCOLD on gomg out 'Ififll' exereislu ' XVe hfu e 1 bool full of testrmomals from themost famous 'lthletes to uote tl q Tem IS superfluous Almost everyone 1n tl'111'lll1 ' uses 1t but don t expect some cheap subst1tute for P0 ' NTD S EXTRA4 T to do what the en g . ume a1ft1c1e W11l for X ou w111 surely be d1sappo1nted A A - ' 'W J o KW S K 4 X x m E I J 3 , s l ' X X 1i.1 4 - - c . 1 1 ts 1 Y Q ' X . . CT R 4 1-A , I . , L 4 , 1 Q KX N1 N aka I. 7 . Q H ' , K A T . X 5, S f C VE, and ALL SORR- 8 1 N if i 'N N , NTss,sTTTENEss, s - , K x x rw NS' g. 1 . f T Q ' ' K N NN - 0 . e 3 . . Z. . Q S . I 3 , , , F., . . . .. I v , iv v A . MANUFACTURED oNLv BY POND'S EXTRACT CG., 've FIFTH AVENUE., A NEW YORK- 1MPoRTED PATENT -LEATHER AND RUSSIA LEATHER A A jgfcmcl ies Q3 Shares. SAMPLES IN PRINCETON WITITI E. G. CROWDIS, 2 S. EDWARDS. J. P. TWADDELL, 1210 and 1212 Market Street, P'I-IILADEILIEI-IEA. ,fx ! s
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