Princeton University - Nassau Herald Yearbook (Princeton, NJ)
- Class of 1895
Page 1 of 155
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 155 of the 1895 volume:
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IFFANY 1. WATCHES AND CHAINS 18-Karaz' Gala' Hunfzhg Case or Open-Face Wafches .' Mea'z'I,1m Szee, upwardfram . .. Large . . Dhazhg Waichesfor College Sporfs In ' .5'z'erj171gSI7uer Cases, upwardfrom I8-Karaz' Gala' 1' WATCH CHAINS. Szhgle Chaim, I4-Kf. Gold, from IK ' lf KA If li Double ff 14 f- ff ll if il ll ,ll- VesfR179b0ns ana' Fabs wffh Gola' Maunfzhgs, upwardfrom . . 365 75 35 25 8 12 12 I5 8 Cut h sizes d styles of Watches Chain t UP Q Al th Tff y B1 Bk I t 8' p fth J Iyt i TIFFANY SI Co. UNION SQUARE NEW YORK. 5 0 t l Q RDBERT a. momvsou 5 co., Black or Blue Clays Pattern of Worsted Coat and Vest, with Pair Fancy Trousers to order, S3o.oo. ' Business Suits, to, order, S25.oo. Our 86.50 Trousers are sold by all Tailors. at SI0.00. AILGRSfW WELL-OUT GARMENTS PHILADELPHIA-S. W. Chestnut and Eleventh Streets. I NEW YORK-S. W. Broadway and Twenty-Seventh Street. L ROBERT J. TI'l0MPSON 81. GD., Chestnut and Eleventh Sts. 1 CLUB-MEN RE generally credited for Wearing Clothes made by Fashionable Tailors, In view of this, the under- signed begs to suggest that it would be well to pay particular attention to the present mode of Evening Dress, also the acl- junct, better known as Tuxedo Dinner and Club Coat. There 'being such a marked change within the past twelve months regarding the alteration of lines, bending curves, and quite noticeable for their great length, that the garments pre- viously macle are to-day almost obsolete. C0-'rect JOHN J. KENNEDY, FZSMOUS- 292 Fifth Ave. The English H KENNEL Cont, which Mr. Kennedy is the creator of in America, embodies more style and grace in its lines than any other top coat. 2 FALCON 81 KEATINGQ LIGHT ROADSTERS. HIGHEST GRADE WHEELS. 5100 M 5100 HFEE H Hf , f Lght t d M t D bl Made. Weight IQ t 2 P d A FULL LINE OF ' CYCLING GQQDS Always on hand. Repairing a specialty. V MALTBY Ja ROBLEYQ No. I Park Place, A New York. 3 I ASHLA, D HOUSE, 'Fourth Avenue and 24th Street, NEW YORK CITY. Among the many first-class Hotels surrounding Madison Square, the ASHLAND is the most centrally located, both for business purposes and pleasure. The elevated roads, large fashionable retail stores, and theatres, are in the close vicinity, The fourth Avenue cars pass the door, running from the Brooklyn Bridge to Central Park 5 they also pass the Grand Central Depot, which is ten minutes' ride from Hotel. The cross-town cars, on 23d Street, carry pas- sengers to all railroad depots, and steamboat landings at the East and North Rivers. During the past year extensive alterations have been made, several adjoining houses have been annexeid, affording a larger number of very desirable rooms, and -an Otis electric elevator has beena de . 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. TERLAES: Rooms, with Board, 822.50 and 83.00 per day. Rooms, without Board, 331.00 and upwards. ' Breakfast, 75 Cents. Lunch, 50 Cents. Dinner, 75 Cents. H. H. BROCKWAY, Proprietor. I t -uf fs! , . lit ,',.., 7f.r',Q r I ' x sesrnsfsfk .1 C25 ' 2X W fun: Mmow The graduates and students of Princeton are 'fully acquainted with the merits and advantages of having their Tailoring orders placed with W. H. DIXON, I7 SO11'tl1 Ninth Street, ' PHILADELPHIA, opposite Post Ofxice. 4 PORTER as COATES, Booksellers and Importers, 1326 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. Our customers will ind at our new store a carefully selected stock of standard and miscellaneous books, handsome gift books, the largest collection in America of rare and choice books, original editions and extra-illustrated books in fine bindings. All books at lowest prices. . . . A FINE STATIONERY DEPARTMENT. . . . Elegantly Engraved Invitations, Fine Note Papers, Programmes, Menu Cards, Guest Cards, Monograms and Address Dies. PORTER Ja COATES, PHILADELPHIA. , NEW Yom CITY. i STQKTEVANT l'lousE, BROADWAY AND 29TH STREET. , HENRY J. BANG, l7R'0l'RlETOK. AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN VLAN. A 5 I A LARGE ASSORTMENT or FINE CUSTOM OUTING SHIRTS AT Low PRICES. SHIRTS A SPECIALTY. I-:EIInsx3, GENTS' FINE FU NISHING J OD L 28 Park Place, New York City. 4-PLY COLLARS E. Sa W. 100. EACH. COLLARS AND CUFFS. COACHING TRIP ABROAD. A European Tour, England, France, Switzerland Cover San Gotthard Pass, etc.j, Rhine, embracing 2. full Week's coaching tour from Oxford to Isle of Wight. ONLY 35300 FOR 51 DAYS. Shorter time for 3200. Address HONEYMAN'S PRIVATE TOURS, PACHQBROS, Plainfield, N. J. Gollege fbfmotograpflers, 935 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. PRAHQE..:glgl-liABPISfEME.:N.T.g.E A CAMBRIDGE, MASS. NEW HAVEN, CoNN. OCEAN Gnovzi, N. J. Loma BRANCH, N. J. PRINCETON, N. J. 6 THE WABASH R iLRo o ' - .. - .. 41' l ' ' Minnaixroi. ' Ummm ' I hd, sf! , . , J. , .. . ,, . J m dots X EMI Ulm- ,, I ,' me-1 City f Qs! . M 1 N N. I ,gi . w en. 5 oumss I i ,. im:mJ Ami, Y C Fonda' Lu 4 ,R,,.,, I S , H .PL J .T.l. .T L ' II -' . 'W We il. itll 9. up ee. ' - - - - if et . Q - 1- o - ' 1 Wi e- x Q,a e111Q.uwx-4 we if - .. 4- 6 i 1 w e Q ' ' ai . ' . 4 Q 6 X 0 f ' Cnlulnbil y. ' a C 2 X9 . so new as Q, A 36 NIM , M ' .K , O ,fi eb f ly' rise ,foie ws! is ' gait? m'5i5 s'a. e'i f O . , . r i gs .s , .I - t....o.s ' sf gangs- f,,.. + :fj,eis'5,? iiagfiii . f:,,t,'ggl':f, O H 'fi O 6 . es' 'Sa '5'i'vso+9 3 355-5' 'o9,'isl'lf Wo' ' ' - '-, ' QW M Q 0 - D 09.035 f3,Q,1vfz 4 '15, - 9 Coum vs X.. . , .- . ,eva fgvvg qe S 'MEP ' 0' 1431 5Piii3's:4' ' rl 017596290 Mfr- 126941 D ggi? ,jg An-if... ' au 135:47 . 2262- 'eoov -'tub . ,L 5x5f.3i5'CSg'5ssf 5 owe, 'YM Tx Qi 1 fl . X :Kok cg'e'f oefgb N -5 Q X 'f'f'v, W4 D' 4911 I i 1 VT 'Y 'P ,, 5- I O Q gf 'fav-,F-v,, , h I .fm 57 gif mfkv Z-P'-49' L...a.siw 1- . . 'isdH. gg spin.. sa - - i - 'V 'lx I S S O QU R I cf... K E N PB , J' .ci 1 A D more as., cwluno. ,, , Forms an important link with all lines from the East to all points West, Northwest and Southwest. The Only Through Sleeping Car Line from New York and Boston to St. Louis Sis yia NIAGARA FALLS. Ei? Leave New York, Grand Central Station, daily, 6 P. M. Leave Boston, Fitchburg R. R. Station, daily, 3 P. M. All MEALS SERVED IN DINING CARS. Through Sleeping Cars from New York and Boston to Chicago. Leave New York, Westshore R. R., daily, 5 P. M, and 8 P. M. 5 leave Boston, Fitch. R. R. Station, daily, 3 P. M. Itis the most direct line between the following points: Toledo or Detroit and St. Louis and Kansas City, Detroit and Chicago, Chicago and St. Louis, St, Louis and Kansas City and Omaha. Solid Vestibuled Trains, Unsurpassed Dining Cars, Reclining Chair Cars fSeats Freej on all through trains. All transfers in St. Louis, for Kansas City, Omaha, St. Joseph, Denver, Colorado Springs, Texas, Mexico and California points, made in the New Union Depot at that point. For further information in regard to rates, etc., apply to H. B. MCCLELLAN, i CHAS. NI. HAYS, C. S. CRANE Gen'l Eastern Agent, V.-P. and Gen'l Manager. Gen. Pass. 81 Ticket Agt,, 409 Broadway, New York. St. Louis, Mo. 8 . NX ff? Y-x ! R3'i'T:.M on-M.,.-... ' Q ,I -. , 1 T. ,e. -' .QW 5 . ,Tj .. mg. .,, ' , . I :fi .' if 44. sv ! 74:24. - '1 . ' . f fl vw :gf I v DAILY TRAINS T0 DENVER, PUEBLOA-' AND COLORADO SPRINGS. ,CHOICE oF'f Rou'rEs. THROUGH SLEEPERS. DINING Q CARS. CHAIR CARS FREE. Leave Chici1Qo'every night at 6.00 P. M. via.'Kansas City. Leave Chicago every night at 10.00 P. M. via. Omaha. ONLY ONE DAY OUT. For rates or information write to W. J. LEAHY, Pass. Agt. Middle Dist., 111 South Ninth streets, -Philadelphia, Pa. W. H. TRUESDALE, Vice-P1-est. and Gen'1 Mangr., Chicago, I11. 511110. SEBASTIAN, General Passenger Agent, Chicago, Ill. O have everything right-to that high performance ' we reach. But what is high performance in the clothing business? lsn't it to clothe you so that the thought of propriety in your clothes is never absent? That the goodness' of the cloth, the fashion, the fitting- ness are parts of one artistic whole? In other words, proper that you never have to waste a minute's thought on your clothes? i Such Suits We make and sell. We coulcln't make them of mean stuffs. The only thing we can do is to make the prices as attractive as the clothes. That's what we mean by-everything right. V VVANAMAKER 81 BROVVN, Sixth and Market, . Philadelphia. 3510 to S52 5-fairly tells the prices. I Ui 2 2 u-1- Z ' M z V -I Us 52 Z in a'- 5 Km U Q 5 A L,-15 35550 3 E 'z G ,ng 7:3 F Q 5- Q Ko M35 A I I- 2 3 Y-I-If U, EEA' me 9 4 4: O13 Q 52 1 -as 0 Ze 'U va? Ln ff-D E I-1-15 'Z . Q U 4 2 g-3 VIP. Q 5 3 P-it via ,S .Qi +2 PZ 3 fc 4 2' 4 E3 5222 cu sg - sane 15 'D CD P-fb' E553 m 2 3 I5 Oc! 1 co I- I D- ug 52216 CD 3 Q I- '55 u-2 :vi pd 4 E, anus IE m f-1 5 L' 535 H E .2 D' 5 gs CJ an : : 7 ANIDE LRG TE SOUTH, SOUTHWEST AND WEST Is via the Beautiful, Fast, New Steamships of the ' 1 A , L ,. .,-...-.- ,mg -fm ,Q . , I ' I vusw GF UPPER SALOON ON AN o. D. STEAMER: X OLD DOIIINIQN LINE AND UONNECTING RAILRDADS. THROUGH TICKETS, AND BAGGAGE CHECKED T0 ALL POINTS. I For full information as to rates of fare, schedules, 8Lc.. address, I Old. Dominion Steamship Company, W. L. Guillaudeu, V. P. 84 T. M. Pier 26, N. R., New Y0rk- 10 bight-Weig fat AWPOOIGHS I . I Made by Sk i1fu1 Tailors into Choice, Well-Shaped Clothing , THE NEW, THING IN CASSIMERE, CHEVIOT, HOMESPUN AND PLAIN AND FANCY WORSTED SUITS. EXCELLENT VALUES IN ,SUITS FROM S10 UPWARDS. I .ll-XIIIJE REZEWE EEINE, Chestnut Str9et-916'-918-920-922--Philadelphia. 1 1 i ' . SOUTHERN RAILVV'AY HXPIEDMONT AIR LINE. The Great National Highway of Travel BETWEEN NORTH do SOUTH With its connection from SHORTEST AND QUICKEST ROUTE. The only route operating Solid Pullman Vestibuled Limited Trains from New York to XJTEE SCDT.T'I'IEE.LZ No 37.-The People's Washington and Southwestern Vestibuled Limited is operated over this route, carrying Pullman Drawing-room Sleep- ing Cars from New York to Atlanta, New Orleans, Birmingham, Memphis, Savannah, Jacksonville, Tampa, Washington to Chat- tanooga via Asheville and Bot Springs and Knoxville to Chatta- nooga and Nashville. Parlor Cars Columbia to Augusta. Coach New York to Washington and Washington to Jacksonville via Charlotte. Dining Car serves all meals between New York and New Orleans. 35.-Pullman Drawing-room Sleeping Cars New York to Atlanta and Mont- gomery, Savannah, Jacksonville and Charlotte, Augusta, Atlanta to Memphis. Coaches on the train. For further information call on or address R. D. CARPEN'rERg General Agent, 271 Broadway, New York, ALEX. S. THWEATT, Eastern Passenger Agent, 271 Broadway, New York. W. H. GREEN, General Superintendent, Washington, D. C. J. M. CULP, Traffic Manager, Washington, D. C. W. A. TURK, General Passen- ger Agent, Washington, D. C. N EW YEI RKTEI EEIETEIN A THE STEAIVIERS PURITAN, PILGHIM, PLYMOUTH AND PROVIDENCE OF THE FALL RIVER -LI p E, The great business and pleasure route between New York and Boston, are the four leading steamboats of the world, and are conceded to be the largest, handsomest and most perfectly equipped vessels of their class ever constructed. They steer by steam, are lighted throughout by electricity, and in all details of equipment more than meet all of the demands of first-class travel, their service being most desirable from every standpoint of business and pleasure. Twoof this famous quartette among steamboats are in service holidays, Sun- days and weekdays throughout the year. A splendid Orchestra is attached to each boat Whenever in commission 3 concerts being given in the grand saloon every evening. Steamers leave New York, from Pier 28 North River, foot of Murray Street, Week-days and Sundays, at 5:30 11. M, Returning, Pullman vesti- buled trains leave Boston, from Park Square Station, New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad, Week-days at 6:00 P. M., Sundays at 7:00 P. M., con- necting with boats leaving Fall River eighty t80j minutes later. 1:2 Ziiuihersitpfuf the Gitp nf New York. MEDICAL DEPARTMENT. FIFTY-FIFTH YEAR, 1895-'96- SPECIAL ANNOUNCEIVI ENT. The Session of 1 895-'96 will begin Wednesday, October 2, 1 895. Attention is called to the fact that the cirriculum has recently been entirely remodeleclland greatly improved. ' I It now consists of a three years' graded course, divided as follows: 1512 Year.-Lectures and recitations from text-books on Anatomy, Physiology and Chemis- try. Dissection and Laboratory work in Histology, Materia Medica and Chemistry. 211 Year -Lectures on Surgical and Regional Anatomy Experimental Physiology, Experi- mental Chemistry, Physics and Hygiene, and Materia Meclica, Recitations from text-books on Pathological Anatomy, Practice of Medicine, Surgery, Materia Medica, Obstetrics and Demonstrations on the Manikin. Laboratory work in Pathologyg Clinics In Bellevue Hos- pital and the College Building, on Medicine, Surgery and Gynaacology, and Practical Clinical work in Sections in Medicine and Surgery. 311 Year -Lectures on Practice of Medicine, Surgery, Obstetrics, Gynzcology, Therapeu- tics and Pathology, with Autopsies. Beside teaching in small classes in the 'Wards of Bellevue Hospital on Medicine, Surgery and Gynxcology. Clinics Bellevue Hospital, and the College Building on Medicine, Surgery and Gynzecoiogy. f SPECIAL CLINICS. OPH'I'HALnIoI.oc.v. L.-uzvxcotocv. PEDIATRICS. VENEREAL Diseases. O'roLoGv. ORTHOPKEDY. SKIN DISEASES. Nenvous Diseases. Examinations are held at the close of each year. ,The marks received for pronciency In practical work in the Laboratory, Dissecting Room, etc., are added to the final examination marks In each corresponding subject. FACULTY OF MEDICINE. REV. H. M. M,recRAcIcI3N, D.D., L clmmzzw-. cHAs. INSLEE PARDEE, M.D., - D.-fm. Professors. W. H. THOLISON, M.D. Gao. Wotsev, M.D. E. D. FISHER, M.D. W. M. POLK, M.D. H. P. Loomis, M.D. C. S. BULL, M.D. L. W, STIMSON, M.D. STEPHEN SMITH, M.D. H. G. PIFFARD, M.D. R. W. WITTHAUS, M.D. A. E. MACDONAXLD, M.D. J. E. Wnvrens, M.D. W1u.G.THoMrsoN, M.D. J. C. EDGAR, M.D. Clinical Professors. P. A. Momzow, M.D. A. M. PHELPS, M.D. C. G. COAKLEY, M.D. E. LE FEVRE, M.D. Adjunct Professors. C. E. Qumiw, M.D. JOHN B. KNAPP, M.D. F. W. Gwvcn, M.D. ' JUSTIN L. BARNES, M.D. IVIN SICKELS, M.D. IRVING S. HAYNES, M.D. The College possesses a corps of 64 Professors and Instructors in its various departments, and in addition to well-equipped Laboratories and a Dispensary where zo,ooo visits are annua.Lly paid, it offers to students exceptional facilities for practical instruction at the bedside in Belle- vue Hospital, which is directly opposite the College buildings. ' FEES. For course of Lectures..... .Sr5o.oo Matriculation............... .... ................ 5.oo Demonstrators Pee, Including material for dissection. . . . . . 1o.oo Final ltxamination Fee .... .. 3o.oo For further jzzrzficulaafs and chculzzrs, address fha Dean, Prof. CHAS. INSLEE PARDEE, lVI.D., University Medical College, 410 East 26th St., New York City. ' I3 - ,f,,,.,,f 7,1 f ' www 2Q,ri,zM,rpH , , 1t5Hxitfi,M,Q ,,,, We are introducing this goods to America. It's made by Garnett Sz Sons, Leeds, the best Serge makers in England. Heretofore their Serges have been so high cost no clothier dared touch them. . T They are Alizarine dyed-that means no fading, no glaz- ing, and, most important of all, no wearing white. When we told Garnettsuthat we wanted 1,800 yards they opened their eyes, never had an order like that before-and so the quantity made the price. A :Sal qjg wxtmmrsw ' I 7 L PLAIN LINED, 51250. lE.O.THOMPSON, Tailor, Clothier, Importer. 1338 Chestnut St., Philadelphia. 245 Broadway, New York. BGOKS eoucm. If you want a book, no matter when or where published, call at our store. We have, without exception, the largest collection of Old Books in America, all arranged in Departments. Any person having the time to spare is perfectly Welcome to call and examine our stock of two to three hundred thousand volumes, without feeling under the slightest obligations to purchase. Send for our clearance catalogue, containing an illustrated description of our store. No stamp required. X LIUERYUE OLD BOOK STORE, NO. 9 SOUTH NINTH STREET, . PHILADELPHIA. fFirst Store below Market Street.J 14 - v fx ' L THE NASSAU HERALD CLASS OF'95 ' OF PRINCETON UNIVERSITY. NIHWBER XXXL EDITORS PN P JSO WWVB N'r WJ 0 NY A D NY. Class-DRY, June moth, 1895. G. S. RQBINSQN XL Ge.. PRINCETSN HNIVERSITY PRESS PRINCETON, N. J. I SALUTAMUS. T0 THE CLASS OF '95 AND ITS MANY FRIENDS THIS LITTLE VOLUME ' IS MosT CORDIALLY DEDICATED. IF IN YEARS TO comm IT RECALLS THOSE DAYS OF MADNESS ON THE CAMPUS OF DEAR OLD PRINCETON, THE IBELOVED ASSOCIATIONS AND HAPPY COMRADESHIP, ITS WILL BE DONE. MAY IT PROVE A SOUVENIH OF THE JOYOUS LIFE AT OUR ALMA MATER. ANDREW PARKER NEVIN, Pa. WILLIAM BEVERIDGE, N. Y. JAMES STONER CRAWFORD, Pa. ARTHUR DUNN, N. Y. WILLIAM HAMILTON MCCOLL, DUTY N an-is-Qbdwf-an WE DESIRE TO EXPRESS OUR OBLIGATION TO ' MR. FRANKLIN B. MORSE '95, -FOR THE DESIGN OF THE COVER. ,-ac-y-Eqvgpllghin-1-gag THE Emmons J CLASS APPOINTMENTS.. CHRISTY PAYNE, Pa., . President A.'C. IMBRIE, N. Y., . . Secretary T. G. TRENOHARD, Md., . .Master of Ceremonies H. E. WHITE, N. Y., . . Class Orator W. M. URBAN, Pa., . Class Poet W. H. BUTLER, N. Y., . . Ivy O1-atoa' J. F. WEISS, Pa., . Historian J. H. THATCHER, Mo., . . . Prophef F. B. MORSE, N. Y., . Presentation Orazfov' H. O. BROWN, Pa., . . . Censov' J. S. FRAME, Y., . IVaslL'ingto1V.s Birthclay Orator B. L. HIRSHFIELD, O. ,.... . Class Debater BGISSGI11 HZPUIA QOI9Il9J.fiQ.Q. P. A. NEVIN, Pa. J. S. CRAWFORD, Pa. W. W. BEVERIDGE, N. Y. W. H. MAOOOLL, N. Y. ARTHUR DUNN, N. Y. glass QOIQIQJTJCZZ. L. F. PEASE, N. Y. A. R. TEAL, N. Y. R. Z. HORTZLER, Mass. L. C. WOODRUEE, Conn. Qvxzngoricrl Qorgrgiffzz. F. W. LEWIS, Kan. V. K. IRVINE, Pa. D. M. F. WEEKS, N. Y. D. F. PLATT, N. Y. CLARENCE PORTER, N. Y. QIQISSSEZQY QOIQQJHZG. ,J. S. OTTO, N. Y. A. R. TELL, N. J. A. F. HOLLY, N. Y. K. TAYLOR, N. J. W. D. WARD, N. Y. H. A. COLBY, N. Y. W. B. COOKE, W. Va. J. S. BUNTING, Pa. 'G. WHITE, Pa. L. F. PEASE, Pa. J. BLAIR, Pa. R. D. HATCH, N. Y. H. A. MONULTY, N. J. T. S. HUNTINGTON, O. E. MUNN, N. J. J. W. DEOKER, Pa. J. C. HARDING, I11. R. A. INCH, D. C. W. J. BAIRD, Pa. D. R. JAMES, N. Y. ESTABLISHED ISIS BRooKs BRGTHERS Broadway, cor. 22d Street, . . New York City, Elothing and Furnishing Goods READY MADE AND MADE TO MEASURE. SPECIALTIES FOR SPRING AND SUMMER, 1895 A READY MADE. iKnickerbocker Suits with Fancy Suitings of Scotch I fancy Scotch Hose and Highland Mixtures and Homespuns. Gaiters. Red Coats, Caps Vicunas and rough faced and Gloves for Golnng 4 Cheviots for semi-dress. f'Riding jackets, Breeches Evening and Tuxedo Dress and Leggins. Cotton Suits in the proper materials. Breeches for summer Wear. Also Eton Suits. 'livery and Coachmen's Light weight Iverness, furnishings. Breakfast Cape Coats for evening Jackets and Dressing Gowns. dress, Covert Coats with silk, wool or serge linings. fancy Vestings of Cashmere, Flannels and Serges, Marseilles, Linen and Ducks, white and fancy, for single and double breasted, Tennis, Yachting, etc. Heavy white and brown Linen Duck Trousers. In speaking of our general stock we beg to remind our 'customers that every article of clothing sold by us is of our -own manufacture-that many of the cloths used are of con- .iined patterns, and that all striking designs are limited to small fquantities. Our Furnishing Department embraces about everything -in that line, including seasonable novelties. We have also a carefully selected stock of Luncheon Baskets, Holster Cases, Flasks, Riding Whips, and Crops, Dog Canes, Golf Clubs and Balls. Catalogue, samples and rules for self-measurement sent 'on rapplication. 22 WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY ORATION. 'GEORGE VVASI-IINGTON'S INNATE ANTIPATHY TO THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA ANALOGICALLY DEDUCED FROM THE AESTHETIC, ANALYTIC AND DIALECTIC TRANSCENDENTALISM OF KANT. BY JOHN S. FRAME. ELL! I'm simply scared to death! For Hecweofs sake, Chris, get up and Zeacl another cheer for me 5 DO soME- THINGI VVill the Mandolin Club play another selection while I collect my scattered senses? Never mind, I remember now. ' 4' The war must go on, we must fight it through, and if the ' war must go on, why put off longer the Declaration of Inde- Upendence ? Stormed at by shot and shell boldly they rode, and well, into the jaws of death, into the gates of - No, 'that word didn't come into my speech! Let me see- Oh, yes. Now Ilm off. Ladies and Gentlemen: QThis last, by courtesy, includes Johnny Poe, who is With us to-dayj, Beloved Brothers of the Faculty, Adored Sisters of H Womenls Rights, Honorable Gen- tlemen of -the Princeton Police Force, for I understand the Force is here in his new uniform to prevent Willie Belden reading any -of his ,jokes while I am talking, and-and Friends. I almost forgot friends. I put that in on Kid Cressonis account. Kid says that what he wants is not acquaintances, but friends, friends 'who will go down into their pockets to help you when you're in need of assistance, and as that has been Kid's chronic condition .since the Penn game, it keeps him hustling to find them. My dear friends, doubtless you have heard that history re- peats itself, or as Burn Urban would say, the chronicles of this 24 THE QNASSA U HERALD. mundane sphere progress in cycles. The author of 'C Pathology of Literary Taste has a little eccentricity of speaking in words of ten syllables each and trusting that he is of course under- stood. But that little confidence game of yours, Bum, has long since been exploded, and like Flemming's doll, is found to be stuffed with sawdust, as Gail Dray will vouch for confidence games in general. Gail, ever since he entered college, has had a most insane desire to speculate, which waxed so strong within him, due doubtless to his very unusual luck in matching pen- nies, playing marbles for keeps and other games involving risk, that he felt he must either visit the Stock Exchange or bust! By the way he did both. As he neared the corner of Wall and Broad streets his self-sufficiency began to wane and oh I how he did wish for Hsome one to advise him. Fortune always pro- tects children and fools, and sure enough there was the very man Gail had been looking for. He was a mild-looking man, with a long bluish-black moustache, colerie blue eye, features somewhat Cassian, clad in a pair of large artillery checked trous- ers-the kind Bert Lukens used to play tennis in last fall, with a sort of dollar-bill-ious expression. Gail approached and in- troduced himself as a friend of Dan Platt's, thinking that as Dan lived somewhere between Englewood and Princeton, every- body in New York at least, must know him, unless he had greatly misused his one talent of talking about himself and from third to seventh best girl. Dan's friend didnlt know him, however, which Gail put down to the stranger's credit, but the latter on learning the situation kindly agreed to invest Gail's money for him in the Cordage Trust. The sequel is but too well known. Of course the Cordage Trust had to expire and now, ever since he took the stranger's note, Gail has plunged into the wildest excesses, trying at the same time to make Poller Ross cut chapel once every month, he is only equalled by Lu- ther Cary I-Ioos who was but last week seen gazing at a cigar- ette with diabolical intent depicted on every feature. But to return. I was about to say that history repeats itself, and con- sequently I may be pardoned for using an expression which every class since Pop Pease, the oldest living undergraduate, .entered college, has appropriated as indigenous to itself. In the words of Ray Carter, on one of his weekly jags in which he s WASHING TONUS' BIRTHDA Y ORA TION. 25 takes a fiendish delight in trying to steal the tracts distributed through Dod and Brown every Saturday afternoon, This is a rnost.s'lubr'us tcashunf' That is to say, it will be ifthe Heavenly twins, Hays and Hencken, will kindly rise and allow me to in- troduce them to the rest of the class. You see, kind friends, up to this, the second half of their Senior year, they have never had an opportunity of meeting their class-mates, and as Dick Hatch felt hurt that he couldnit take every one by the hand, I have done this for his especial benefit. For a time we feared that joy would not be unconfined, but that was when we thought we'd have to listen to Baron De Half Pint I-Iirshiield and his satellites debate and, horror of horrors! not have had our own Chris on the stand, to look refined and intellectual and regale the audience with that little Glee Club smile of his, in fact make the whole affair a success socially. Now, Chris, you're not smiling, and you promised faithfully that you would if I would not talk about the time you went to Philadelphia to visit Chappie Biddle and tried to smoke a cigar with young ladies in the room and finally had to excuse yourself to get your pipe. Come, lilrnber up, moisten the 'eye and brighten the lip, raise your chin a little, so, now, then, part those ruby lips of yours gradually until your pearly teeth show. And there you have it. A girl in Buffalo said Chris was just a perfect dear, so theref' but he's such an awful little dirt. Is Dunn, the 'f social success, with us to-day? Oh, yes, there he is., Now, Arthur, don't lose that debonair air of yours in this late stage of the game and have that batch of Vacuous Vagueness laughing at you, as he Suttonly will ! I was simply about to say, my dearly beloved, that Dunn in his more philan- thropic moods occasionally goes into Society. The way it started was that Dunn was taken on the Mandolin Club last Fall and consequently took in the Christmas trip with those other Glee 'Club satellites, J ack, the huggerf' Crawford and Kid Carroll, who has a funny solo to sing, and on his first appearance sent a girl into hysterics by the expression of his face. For days, even weeks, Dunn7s usually placid brow was strewn with creases. How to open a conversation was the subject over which he pondered, to the exclusion of lectures, written recitations, Sut- ton and Willie Belden. He consulted such authorities as 26 THE NASSAU HERALD. Lord Chesterfield, H Ollie Parker, Bill Nye and Bradner. He heard that Bradner alone was responsible for the bright and shining figure Curly Nelson is cutting in society. And it is but too true. Youire laughing now, Curlsf' but how grateful you were in Freshman year to learn that when you made your first call you should always be accompanied by your mother or aunt, how indispensable was the family album to the development of that deeper and more lasting affection of which you were in quest, and how at the final lesson, when Brad. entered more into detail and clasping you in his arms dictated the burning Words of love you craved, your gratitude knew no bounds!! The result of Arthur's conference was a phrase at once bright and witty. As it is not copyrighted I will give you the benefit of Dunn's experience. I havejust had my hair cut so as not to be mistaken for a foot-ball player or a musician, flike Ben Butler, for instance, who in Freshman year tried for first tenor on the 'Varsity and second bass on the Freshman Clubs, and when he failed in both said it was because he did not have a pullfl That remark of Dunnis was never-failing. At teas, dinners, receptions and concerts, where Arthur, when not on the stage, could generally be found very near it, in the aisle on both knees before a certain young ladyg at introduction, departure or during lagging conversation that speech did yeoman's service. But I must hasten on, omitting how you went to Bob '7 Rob- ertson's relations in Denver, introduced yourself, accepted an unproffered invitation to visit them, and then proceeded to have a quiet little illness, leaving at your departure your kindest thanks together with the doctor's bills. If the ushers will kindly eject that indigo shirt which is turning the ears of my audience away from mel Oh, I beg pardon, never mind. It's only Al. Corwin, who forgot to take off his blouse along with his overalls. But let us turn to our subject proper, George Washington's innate antipathy to the University of Pennsylvania analogically deduced from the aes- thetic, analytic and dialectic transcendentalism of Kant. Far transcending the comparatively narrow limits of Physiological and even Psychological Evolution, Dialectic Evolution contem- plates existence as a whole, finding the Philosophy of Being ,rin an evolution of existence, whose predetermined order is held to WASHINGTONES BIRTHDAY ORATION, 27 be according to the logical relations of the forms of the under- standing or general notions nam ed Categories. Applying Skinny Seymouris patent Whig Hall method of debate adapted by him- self for the class-room, with the accuracy with which Bert Lukens discovered that by his class photos his head would be just twelve inches long while the breadth of his shoulders was but eight inches, and getting Charlie Candee to reduce it to its lowest terms, as he does every other topic of conversation he enters, translated it reads: Never imagine yourself to be otherwise than what you might appear to others. It what you were or might have been was not otherwise than what it should have been, it would appear to them to have been otherwise. And you will agree with me that surely this must be so. This is the same method by which Freddy Pool in a recent dissertation proved that the fIncome Tax was a necessary adjunct to the carpet cleaning business' For the in-come tacks never come -out till the carpet is cleaned? Now, inasmuch as conclusions reached introspectively may be tested by extreme observations, it will be fitting, at least better fitting than Bone Harvey's golf trousers, to consider VVashington's life a batch, and if in my illustrations I appear somewhat personal remember that every real thought on every real subject knocks the wind out of some- body or otherf' ' It was afternoon, in fact the afternoon of the Yale-Harvard game. To quote from that pot-pourri of would-be literary pro- ductions, The Lit., in which Joe Bunting plays such a conspicu- ous part, Joe's chief function is to insert at the head of the edi- torials 'fAll Lit. subscriptions are now payable at the office, 1 North Reunion Hall. Make out checks to Joseph S. Bunting? This last is literature of the lightest type. Observe the 'Words- worthian passion 'in that ff Make out checksf' As I remarked, it was afternoon. A keen biting wind swept the humid atmos- phere, carrying with it a suspicion of snow and swaying the leafless branches of the distant goal posts. The grand stands were a study in blue and crimson, and Billy Neill was there, too. Billy, the far-darter, holding with his right hand that of a charming maiden some forty summers old, whose name, by the way, he did not know, and while she was content. to drink to him only with her eyes, Billy sought something more substan- 28 THE NASSAU HERALD. tial in the line of her escort's bottle, with whom he had taken pains to strike up an acquaintance before the game began. Was. that kind, ,Billy ? lVas it rnanly, was it thoughtful? Over to the left along with the team sat those two tons of soil, I mean sons of toil, Beef VVheeler and Gus Holly-Gus for a wonder was perfectly quiet, doubtless because it was in foot-ball season and there were no doors to be broken in, while just beyond sat Dougal7' 'Ward thoughtfully expanding his chest by the Bi- nomial theorem to Xu, and Frank Morse, his artist's soul beam- ing in his eyes. Frank only lives for Art. So far he has elected Art. 4 for three years and on the remaining ,days of the week, when not locked up in the Tiger ofiice cribbing a few jokes from St. Nicholas, Ybutlzs' Companion and the Lit., he runs up to New York to pose as C. D. Gibson's society woman. But hark! far, far up the stretch extending in front of the grand stand come, in dulcet tones, the mysterious words '54, I am coming, phew! while a iigure in the distance could be seen approaching, sur- mounted by a halo of exquisite brilliancy which ever and anon disappeared only to reappear with added lustre. The mysteri- ous apparition drew nigher and nigher bearing in the impressi- ble an intricate mosaic winding in and out in sinuous curves, but it was not until the grand stand was reached that f'Perk. Cfor it was hej disclosed his identity by calling out: Well, here I am, large and square, Pride of Princetonj' and Son of Old Nassauf' and 4' I want a program. I want a programf' Billy Neill consciously dropped the hand he'd been holding and looked to see where Perkf' got that halo, as he had a cigarette he wanted a light, but on application of the field glass it turned out to be that Yellow Aster,'l Phil. Walker, who was following in Perks' wake with his hat off. The schoolboyls own poet, Henry Buck-the-Tiger Master, has rendered the episode immor- tal by taking it as the scene of one of his poems. I will merely quote the verse regarding the halo: . I U It dazzled the Full Back, ' U Just starting to punt, H For it shone like a headlight - U With Perkins in front. Phil donlt like the expression Yellow Aster, but much prefers the appellation- sunfish, in fact he even went so far, to clinch the WAS.HINGTON'S BIRTHDAY ORATION. 29 title, as to spend several hours. lying on his back, before a cer- tain young ladies' Finishing School where he had some friends, kicking his heels in the snow and singing I'm a little sunfish over and over again until scared away by the dogf Now, Sport Porter is not so easily disconcerted as that! Sport was taken ill one night the summer after Freshman year in Elberon, and .had to be carried home by his friends in a fainting condition. As his supporters reached a house where Sport, when in better health, was accustomed to call, a dog ran out in a consternation producing way, but Sport reassured them. Don't be scared, fellesh, he knows my footsteps. I say, Sport, have you brought your two Sophomore friends with you to say, for the sake of your friends present, What a shame! Sport is such a nice fellow! EH? While I rest my voice I'd like to call on Mother l' Brady to relate how he and some chosen companions, whose names I will omit, owing to my feeble health, hired a cab for the sake of seeing the sights on the Bowery. I-Iow the driver's price was too exorbitant and Mother in the argument that followed lost his hat and his breath at the same time, trying, as Mother says, to catch the scoundrel. The scene changes. .It was night. I've kept a few blanks here to be filled in with some more of that Lit. rot H about the wind, snow, etc. It was the night of the 22d of February, 1873, when Henry Augustus McNulty stepped into the Arena and said 4' I have come, but don't hit me. I've got a certificate of Dick I-Iatchis granting me permission to live, grow up and grad- uate with '953' You see, kind friends, at what an early date Dick was acting in the capacity he now holds of nurse to 795. I voice the sentiment of the class, Dick, when I thank you for that loving care and tender interest you have bestowed upon our unworthy selves. I started out to speak of Washington, but it really doesn't make very much difference. George and Bishop are such perfect' parallels, in complexion, height- George was 6 feet 3 inches and weighed about 200 pounds-life and character, and now Spider says that if he could only die of an oedematous affection of the wind-pipe the days following would be for him replete with pleasure. According to the Encyclopaedia Britannica and Bill Sloane George Washington's ancestry goes back no further than his 30 THE NFISSAU HERALD. grandfather, in contradistinction We would mention that little anarchist and revolutionist, Ahern ! 7' Flemming, who can trace his most distinctly to his great-greatgrandfather, the Devil, of Whom he speaks with great frequency and fervor. As a result. of Flem's Mephistopheliau ancestry he is most fond of Society and consequently most neat. Flem recently marked his cuffs so as to know the individuals constituting a pair. He marked them 1, ditto, 2, ditto, etc. We regret to say that Soc. Huston is as far from neatness as Chappy Biddle from I Group. When Soc. came to college in that black sweater and corduroy trousers of his, which he Wears to this day, he brought with him a box of soap containing three cakes, which Soc. has planned to last until the day of his nuptials, one during his college course, one for the Seminary, the third to be laid up against the period of courtship, but it was only another instance of manls frailty in effecting his resolutions, for it was but just last December that Soc., though it broke his heart to do so, started in on his second cake of soap. To return. Flem. as a figurehead in society is only equalled by his room-mate Bobby Inch. Bobby attended a picnic in lVashington last summer and after luncheon, games Were the prescribed order of events. One of the -girls in the party was taken aside, blindfolded, and on being led back again, kissed by the chaperone. and told to guess who kissed her. but interrupting the interrogation she broke out: Oh, thatis Bobby Inch. Anyone could pick him out of a hundred. Flem., on the other hand, took a girl to a ball Who, he affirmed, was dead stuck on him. NoW,'7 says Flem., relating his experience, HI determined that When We reached the next lamp-post Ild kiss her, but before I knew it the carriage rolled by one when I was unprepared, so I got ready for the next one, but do you believe it, when We reached it I lost my nerve 5 and hang itl every time just as We'd come to a lamp-post I'd lose my nervefl Oh, Fleml I forgot all about that offer of yours. Flem. promised that if I'd tell that on Skinv Stone held set up a dinner at the Inn, or if I didn't mention it at all a Welsh rarebit would be my por- tion. So if those chronic note-takers, Mike Furness and Tommy Slidell, will change that to Skin I'll be much obligated. I see .I ess. James is getting in a few headlines for the Alumni Prfincetonicm. Fatty, dear friends, never loses an opportunity or WASHINGTON'S BIRTIIDAY ORATION 31 r a cent, either, if he can help it. Jess. intends to commit matri- mony in the very near future and is consequently chasing his ducats now to hasten that festive occasion. Jess., Flem., Bobby Inch, Lady l' Nelson, Cow 3' Nevin and Freddyn Poole used to have weekly W'elsh rarebits with an assessment of five cents per capita, but Jess. invariably handed over but four, with one exception, when he refused to pay a cent because there was no beer in it. IVhy, in Freshman year Hank Bissell borrowed a two-cent stamp of Jess. Last month Jess. asked Hank to 4' pay upj' and for lack of a stamp accepted three cents, the extra penny to pay for the trouble of going to the post office. That's right, Jess., take care of the pennies and your children will take care of the dollars. Youlre not alone in your thrift, though. There's Lea Kennedy, who now wears a muzzle when he goes into society, by order of the town committee for the prevention of cruelty to society. Lea objects to having any one ask him for the time of day, as he has figured out that a watch spring costs two dollars and you can open a watch only three thousand one hundred and fifty-seven times before the spring wears out, consequently every time he is asked to do so it costs him about one-fifteenth of a cent, in round numbers' I sec Sammy Curtis is beginning to look a little conscious. Yes, Little Billeefl you're pretty bad. Little Billee goes down to the club every day with one cigarette, one cigar and one pipeiul of tobacco, so that if anyone should ask him for any one of the above forms of the weed he has just one. Now, Irish '7 Hamilton, if he were to have a package of cigarettes-he hasn't, he never has in fact, but for the sake of the illustration suppose he were to have a package with six cigarettes in it-heid smoke one himself and with the-other five held regale- Irish Hamilton. It was the morning after one of those rarebits of Flemls that Lady Nelson turned up as white as a sheet. VVhat7s the matter, Lady? Freddy Poole asked. I've got the 'morning gags,' '7 said Lady. The what? The morning gags,'l Lady repeated, it's an unquenchable thirst for liquor when I wake up in the morning, and it's the last stage before delirium tremensf' George's early life was consumed with hunting, Hshing, after- noon teas and reading. In this we have cause to rejoice and patwours-elves on the head in that these potent factors in George's 32 THE N.4SSAU HERALD. early life have not been consigned to innocuous desuetude by '95. Knox Taylor is a hunter, bad and bold. He started out not long ago for anything at all, large or small. Knox describes the incident graphically: 'CI had gone but a hundred ,paces into the wood when I beheld right before me inthe path, all crouched ready to spring at my throat, its green bloodshot eyes dilating with malevolence, the largest Wildcat I had ever seen. I stopped and like a dream there flashed upon me the grief of my parents should anything happen to me. That unpaid laundry bill at Princeton. Duty alone prompted, urged me to flee. I fled and was safe at last, having distanced the now infuriated beast. The next morning Knox went out into the yard onlyto find that the infuriated beast 7' had followed him at a distance and taken up its headquarters there. But it no longer retained its power to terrify Knox, for it proved to be the family cat. Oh, Knox! And to think that you gave that wash bill as an excuse for fear! Don't you know Harvey Koehler better than that? ,Don't you know that if your funeral .notice were to appear in the paper to-morrow Harvey would send that bill home by the afternoon mail? Yes, I-Iarvey, you know you were just cut out for a three gilt balls 7' establishment. Why, when Cow Nevin came back last fall after the summer vacation Harvey walked up with outstretched hand. Hello, 'Cow,' how are you? Glad to ,see you back. Say, old man, can you pay me that 37.43 due on your last year's wash bill ? George fished as well, but we have every reason to believe that even fish stories were distasteful to him. Chubby Lewis, on the contrary, to counteract this one-sided development in the Father of his Country,'7 does not fish, but oh, how transcend- ent he is in the other. I-Ie baffles description! But, Chubby, when a man sows fish stories he don't reap mince pie. Chubby himself has been the victim of a base deception. Frank Morse and Kid Carrol were the perpetrators. They went into Chubby's room one day while he was out. Frank chewed some soap and Kid looked at himself in the glass until Chubby's step was heard at the door. Frank then proceeded to frothat the mouth while Kid, asia necessary result of looking in the glass, went into violent convulsions, and between them they had Chubby tossing imaginary snakes into the fire for three-quarters of an WASHINGTOZWS BIRTHDAY ORATION. 33 hour. John Harding Qwith Cowden between the John and the Hardingj represents the afternoon tea side of VVashingt0n's youth. The other afternoon, Exam. being over, John wished to take in an afternoon tea in New York, but lacking the necessary car fare donned his frock coat and spent the afternoon in his room with his silk hat in one hand and a cup of tea he had made in the other. We affirmed that Washington was well read, I repeat it with all the emphasis at my command, he was! but I must confess that there are others. No one denies that Sister Farris and Fuzzy Crawford are well read, in fact, despite their protestations to the contrary, they spend their whole time at it. Sister says he can't stand these unjust accusations any longer, and he and Fuzzy are going to form an anti-polle-r's league, for says he, I always take fifteen minutes off after every meal, and Fuzz-well, Fuzzy don't poll on Sunday, but he gets up at one Monday morning to make up lost time? Then there's Kid Carrol, who claims to have read Conan Doyle's Scarlet Letterf' and lastly there's that hypochondriac medicine chest, Henry Canby, who has red hair. This early training had a ten- dency to bring George into a closer communion with nature and in this he has ardent disciples in Pop Fry, Smiles Bailey and Bobby '7 Robertson. Such is their devotion that at springis approach, when the new-born leaflets thrust their tiny headlets from the shootlets and all nature smiles as broadly as Smiles habitually does, and disports herself in gay abandon, they, too, join in and laugh, and shout, and gambol on the green, yea, even the 4' star greenf' but when last year the roulette ceased to reciprocate Smiles, insinuating smirks they all with one accord took a drop. Dave Speer, on the contrary, is not so fickle in his attentions. Dave adores the stately in nature, the stately lily, the stately sunflower, but above all, when last fall he was caught eavesdropping at an Evelyn dance, the stately tree where he was kept for two mortal hours while below the faithful dog his vigils kept. Speaking of vigils, I suppose, will remind Fitzie Speer of those Vigils he kept at Colorado Springs last Christmas. It was one of those warm nights inside which lend a particularly exhilarating iniiuence to small talk. The smoker was in full swing when Fitz discovered that the con- versation was becoming entirely too giddy and intoxicating for him and he was overmastered by the inclination to sever his 34 THE NASSAU HERALD. connection with his immediate surroundings and meditate by himself. He started for the dressing room but through some inadvertence reached the cellar, where the janitor found him next morning enjoying the sleep of the just. Fitzy, was that polite to leave without saying good-bye to your hosts! You never find Jimmie Blair leaving without saying good-bye to everyone. In Columbus Jimmie met one of those girls that Jimmy Decker is always losing his heart to at every conceiv- able turn. Jimmy held her hand in both of his, unmindful that Billy Baird was also waiting to say good-night. Good- bye, said Jimmy, tgood-bye, dearf' then he delicately stood upon his toes and kissed her chin, the highest pointrhe could reach. Such politeness is only equalled by Tommy Pierson, though on one occasion, for want of a young lady, Jimmy politely accepted a bull terrier and on bended knees feelingly kissed its head, nose- and ear, murmuring, the while Nicepup. Come to Princeton, pup, and, welll show you fi good time. Good-bye, pup, good- byefi Tommy, on the other hand, sat on the stairs one whole evening with his arm arounfd a young lady ther sauce being busy on the Entertainment Conimitteej, and when the timerfor departure came assisted her into her carriage, boosted the fiance in, then put his head in the window and kissed her good-bye. You observe, kind friends, how I blush to relate this deca- dence of 5' good form, and it is with the utmost hesitancy that I hurriedly pass over a few incidents demanding correction to engage in more gratifying fields of labor. We are indeed thank- ful to have Charlie Condit still with us, who in Freshman year, during a session of Clio Hall, prayed that the Lord would 4' bless our enemies, I mean our friends, across the way in Whig.7' Stillihe is the one bright andshining exception., Even some of the'Westiern girls noticed the change and one remarked that tttliat nice Mr. John Garrett wasnlt as nice as he used to be. That was when John put five dollars in his hat and then held it upside down over his head, why I don't know. Pati' Mur- phy 'was even sung about, to the tune of 't His Golden Hair was Hanging down His Backfi We will give but one verse : Pat, Pat, he never was like that, 1 When he left college he was shy. But alas I and alackl He came back With a naughty little twinkle in his eye, 1 And her golden hair was hanging down his back. WASIIINGTONHS' BIRTHDAY ORATION. 35 You will find the other Verses printed in the program, as Pat said he would be an usher if it wasn't. There, Andy Imbre - bit.'7 Finally, there's Chippy Teal, commonly known as Duckief' The third day Duck was in college and the Cannon Rush came off, and all ,95 was out in force yelling something that sounded like Push like Pennj' Duck was found back of Witherspoon trying to stuff' his Derby into his vest pocket, softly murmuring, 4' Push like everything, push like everythingf, Later, in Sophomore year, when he had finished singing at Cow Nevins', the plaster fell. That was too much, and now ever since Duck has traveled surely and swiftly the rapid road to dyspepsia. He drinks three kinds of soda Water, eats Princeton candy, chews pepsin tutti-frutti and has even threatened to in- dulge in Art Sherman's Curiosf, Aside from these excesses he carries on extensive correspondence with some Barnard Col- lege girls who write to know 'C if they may not come down to see him at Princeton. They have heard him sing and would so like to meet the owner of that perfect love of ct voice. For further particulars apply to Cow Nevin. Cow is the man who craved the pleasure of taking a walk with a young lady. Told her to meet him at a certain part of the railroad track at a cer- tain hour. Cow turned up some time later and found a note from Marguerite saying she did not care to wait more than an hour for him. But forifear you may not recognize him I will just read a little card he generally carries with him: 'K My name is A. P. Nevin 5 address, Princeton, N. J., I was born April 6, 1875, at Ridley Park, Del. Co., Pa. My weight was 174 pounds on August 1, 18945 height, five feet, nine inches, number of my bank book, Cnot filled out for obvious reasonsj 5 size of hat, 755 of cuffs, 11, hosiery, 10, gloves, 'Yi-5 collar, 1555 shoes, S, and other measurements too numerous to mention. Tradition reports that George Washington served in Brad- dock's campaign and recklessly exposed himselfto Indian bullets, but, I hear some one say, the Indians are no longer what they once weref' In reply I would ask, do you know .Iohn Thacher? Evidently not, and yet who does not know of that thrilling incident which occurred in 'L Cap and Gown H? WVho, I say, who? When John, just to enliven and complicate mat- tres, shot a fellow-Clubite with a blank cartridge, and Knox 86 THE NASSA U HERALD. Taylor, forgetting home and wash bill Cwhich was still unpaidj, grasped and nearly annihilated the C' boy assassin. How deeds of bravery were nearly as numerous as Harry Brown's love affairs, in which the girl always turns out to be married, after Harry has gone to the trouble of getting a round white spot of dust on each knee? Yes, some ran-for water, others held John at risk of life and limb, but Eddie McCormack comes in for the greatest praise. Where was Eddie? Standing by idle? No, sir! Even before the fatal shot was fired, he had vanished, and not until after the cruel wound had been sought and theinscrip- tions Rats! the beers are on y0'Lt 77 was found beneath the victim's coat and Duck Teal had allowed himself to be led from his re- treat behind the door, could Eddie be found. Found, I say, for he had not left the post of duty-fou nd standing on the divan in the pool room, his body flattened against the wall, ex- posed to view and protecting with his life as much of the wall paper as he could cover. Such bravery, transcending even that of Freddy Norris, who at dead of night exposed that Venus form clad in but a robe d'nuit to the bitter cold of Witherspoolfs fire-escape to avoid the bullets from Harry Godfreyis new re- volver he was firing out the window, recalls Dick Egbertls acthof heroism. There was a wom an in the case. She had fallen through the ice while skating. With pale determined face Dick removed his coat. Did he jump in ? No, more heroic still, he stood on the bank and waved it frantically up and down, calling out f'I'l1 save you! I'll save you l while another man pulled her out of the water. But let us pass from these harrowing scenes of peril, and as is fitting in the spring time lightly turn to scenes of love. Broth- erly love! such as exists between DeForest and Leeds, who all the years they have roomed together have never failed to kiss each other good-night on retiring, sisterly love, such as Johnny Weiss always receives in return for his amorous effusions. Johnny really feels very badly about it and was recently over- heard to exclaim while standing before a certain picture on his mantelpiece, with hands clasped, Oh, Nan, Nan! why donlt you Write to me, if only a sisterly letter ? '7 Love which prompts Walt Moses to spend at least one day a week in Princeton and write letters to his enamored forty-eight pages long, which he WASHING-TON'S BIRTHDAY ORATION1 37' finds cheaper to send by express. The love Andy Imbrie writes about. Oh, Andy, that man over there with legs extending from beneath his necktie to the ground simply revels in it, gets bidsr to Evelyn and all that sort of thing. He wrote a story for the Lit. not long ago, and when it had been expurgated of all its sentiment by that stern board, bursting into tears Andy cried out, Oh do, please do make their eyes meet in soulful unison. Love which caused Skinny Seymour to take a maiden out to dinner, help himself and allow her to sit by and watch him, he was so in love with her. But cheer up! it is an acknowledged fact that .'Washington fell in love with and married a widow. I thought that would fetch Pop Pease. Widows always did have a peculiar fascination for Pop, even the summer before he came to college, while he was in Denver for his health. It was at the station that Pop saw a slender figure in widow's weeds sobbing pathetically over a rough box on the platform. When they boarded the train and Pop saw how disconsolate she was the milk of human kindness and sympathy welled up within him, especially as she was young and pretty. He went up and sat down in the same seat with her. You seem sad, said Pop.. Yesfi said the widow. I sympathize with you, said Pop, Why, have you recently lost your wife? said the widow. Oh, no, rejoined Pop, 'LI am not old enough to marry, but when I see such charming women as yourself I am tempted to take the irrevocable stepf' With that she threw both those tapering arms around Pop's neck and swore before thelwhole car that sheid always remain constant to him. In some haste Pop left the train at Colorado Springs, and though he had his pocketbook full to overflowing with nothingness, put up at the Brown Palace Hotel, took a suite of rooms and waited for his father to ind him out and send him-some money. This is the same hotel of which Hal McCormack, who was arrested in Cleveland as a crook, said the manager didnft know how to run. a hotel. Hal managed the Glee Club this year and attained such distinction in the art that at present he is threatened with a slight tumefaction of the head-if it continues to grow worse we fear a quiet funeral without 'flowers will be the result. Hal, however, has not always been so fortunate. He and Ray Gar- rett were both gone on a Baltimore girl who was visiting in New York and both went to call on her, unfortunately, the same '38 THE NASSAU HERALD. night. She was to return South the next day and Hal made an -appointment to meet her at the train and come as far as Prince- ton with her. But malediction and confusion l when he reached the train there was Ray in the seat with her and he was obliged to take one two seats ahead. At the Junction Hal shifted around uneasily and finally asked if he might not go on to Philadelphia with her. Ray continued to keep his seat and Hal completed thejourney two seats ahead, and, what was most humiliating, was compelled to return on the next train, leaving Ray to see her off. As a manager Stan. McCormack is much better than brother Hal. When Stan. invited Walt. Lord to visit him at his older brotherls house he whispered in Walt's ear, H You can do anything you blame please, lWalt, except get drunkf' and, do you believe it, Walt didnit. Walt can adapt himself to circum- stances surprisingly wellg so can John Thacher, especially if the circumstances happen to be in the form of a pretty girl. John on his Way across the pond this Christmas he meta French girl on the steamer. He parley vousld 7' with her with such success that after the first day she simply handed over her purse to John and he paid her expenses Cas well as his ownj from it all the way from Liverpool to London. H Now, 4' Fatty Philips, you neednit look so hurt because I haven't you yet. I know you've been doing foolish things ever since you came to college just to have a volume or two devoted to you and have people think you're popular, but I can't spend the time on you. However, you are an A 1 musician, you and Bill Sloane. These two musical eccentriques, dear friends, hold what they call sanger tests in their apartments in South .Ed- Wards: Fat has a Wonderful ear and one night after Bill had finished whistling Swim out, O7Grady, Fat with tears in his voice exclaimed, Oh, Bill, I just love that 'Bringing in the Sheaves'. They do sound something alike when Bill whistles them. Bill claims that he can change the key oftener than any man in college.. I didn't believe him until one night after his twenty-first birthday dinner at the Inn Bill changed the key six times and then wouldn't have gotten into his room if his room- mate hadn't been there before him. But, fellow-sufferers, you must be greatly fatigued after fol-. WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY ORATION. 39. lowing me so patiently through firstly, secondly, thirdly up to sixthly, lastly and finally, so I will hasten through my conclu- sions as rapidly as possible, omitting how Arch Seaver broke fourteen globes at class elections trying to do the giant swing 7' on the chandeliers 5 how in Freshman year Runt Dexter spent a whole afternoon skating on the tennis courts, which happened to be flooded, and, thinking it was Margerum's pond, wondered Why none of Princeton's elite came to join himg how 4' Gor- don Fisher's call terminated or whether John Garrett has got- ten it yet. I would be as lost as Eddie Munn at Ten Sleep Lake ,last summer, where he managed to lose himself whenever he wandered ten feet from camp, if I should try to relate how Hugh Hodge amuses himself throwing nickels at the Junior Prom girls, or how Harry Shaw sends pictures of his room to -every New York paper that will print his name beneath, Stu- dent Harry E. Shaw, '95.7' Time simply does not admit, and as I see Walt Libbey is beginning to master that episode of Chris and the cigar CI couldn't leave lValt until the glittering sheen of one witticism had cast its rays on your befogged intellectj, I'll spurt down the homestretch of this speech like Jess James hurdling, when Paifer, the championship hurdler, asked a by- stander why that man used hurdles in the mile walkf Doggie Trenchard, I see, is hugging himself to think that he has escaped notice, but I have purposely saved you, Doggie, to propitiate my audience by showing them that We have one bright and shining light in this class, one hero! And he is a hero, as his life of himself written for 4' The Young Sport's Library W will show. I have a letter here from the publishers: YOUNG Sronrs PUB. Co., .- 19 Beekman St., N. Y. November 1, 1894. P. O. Box 2058. MP.. THOMAS G. TRENcHARD,,EsQ. Dear Sir :- The story of your life on the gridiron, as you entitle it, has been received and approved. In style it is fully equal to the generality of our stories and will prove very entertaining to the public. Enclosed please find a check for five dollars, the price We usually pay for such stories. - Very respectfully, - YOUNG Sroacrs PUB. Co. Here' it is Cholding up a yellow-covered dime novelj. You may infer its literary worth from the cover. Here is D0ggie's 40 THE NASSA U HERALD. picture and underneath We read: Get your picture in the Young Sports' Library. It costs nothing. Send us your photo- graph and be known as a young sport, Upon perusal the book informs the indulgent reader how Doggie in Lawrenceville first, later in Princeton, has always figured conspicuously as aihero and in both places won every football game that someone else didnlt lose. Worcls fail me. CMelodramaticallyj Behold the man ! My task is not ended, yet I cease, for to portray the idiosyn- cracies of such men as Porkie Brooks, Fly Snatcher Bluffah and Flatterahf' Jake Otto, Howard Colby and Billy Baird would require volumes, even libraries, and I cheerfully hand them over to the Cannon exercises' more versatile liars. To those of you who have come from near and far to learn many wonderful and as yet unpublished traits in the character of IVashington I can only say I am sorry to disappoint you. To those of you who disapprove of the ungloved handling of Washington's name I assert that to do that name justice would tax to the utmost the seer's wisdom and the poet's pen, of which I modestly con- fess I possess neither. But with every 'patriotic American, with every loyal Princetonian, with each and every member of the glorious Class of '95, I raise my voice to its highest pitch in everlasting praise of the Immortal George, first in war, first in peace and first in the hearts of his countrymen. FIN IS. CLASS DAY OFFICERS. SAL UTA TORX 41 SALUTATORY. BY THOMAS G. TRENCHARD. ADIES AND GENTLEMEN-VVe are assembled here to-day to witness those closing exercises and ceremonies which for scores of years have marked the culmination in the course of every graduating class. History teaches us, and already we feel too keenly that there are few associations so precious, or so fondly remembered as those which cluster about our dear Alma Mater. It is here that our intellectual life begins and develops, here thatthe boyhood .days ripen into manls estate, here, also that friendships are formed, those friendships which are so sweet and endearing in their nature, that we would have them remain with us throughout time and eternity. i I We have reached the topmost round of the ladder and can now look oil' into the vast world beyond. There trials and troubles, joys and sorrows await us, and in our struggle for an honorable and useful place among our fellow men, the recollec- tions of the happy days spent here will ever be an inspiration, spurring us on to victory. It is then in those hours of trial and suffering that the remembrance of the glad and happy days at Princeton, the memory of those same endearing friendships will be most precious. It is then that our courage willbe renewed and we shall take a fresh start in the struggle for a true and noble life. To-day is the end of our boyhood. To-morrow We must be men. To-morrow life with all of its stern and practical realities must begin. Let us be ready for it when it comes, but do not let its proximity mar the full enjoyment of the few re- maining hours of our boyhood. Now when around the Cannon our orators indulge in good-natured sarcasm, as they reveal 42 THE NASSAU HERALD. the amusing side of our life 5 if perchance you do not under- stand their allusions and the cause of our merriment, be patient and remember that it is all of meaning to us. And now, my dear friends, it is my privilege to offer you a most cordial. and hearty Welcome in the name of the Class of '95. CLASS ORA TION. 43 CLASS ORATION. TI-IE HIGHER IDEAL. BY H. E. VVHITE. i UCCESS and failure 5 the one has crowned the brows of the V world's heroesxand made their names ring down through the ages as inspirations to posterity .5 the other is but the broken-hearted cry of those who have striven and fought, bravely it may be, but in vain. To some success has come like 'the sudden lightning, and raised 'them at a bound to fame and honor, butto the many it is but the reward of years of waiting and striving, of self-discipline and restraint. i To such, self-mastery is the secret of success. Few have con- fidence in a man who is distrustful of himself. VVould he 'inspire respect he must show himself able to meet the crises of life and conquer in the struggle. Let a man cease to understand himseli and fail to recognize his own capabilities, or, still more, his weaknesses, and he becomes unfitted to deal with the ques- tions which meet him at every turn. And yet such self-mastery is not conceit. This is but the extreme of a noble virtue. Rather is it the strength of humility, which recognizes its own limitations, for knowledge is proud that it hath learned so much 5 wisdom is humble that it knows no more. There is one thought prominent in the mind of every one of us to-day, as we stand upon the threshold of our life in the world. In one form or another we are each asking ourselves the question: What shall I make of my life? What has the future in store for me ? It may be that some of us have dreams destined only to grow 44 THE NASSAU HERALD. dimmer and dimmer as the years pass by, bringing but the drudgery of the working world, until at length We know that they were ideas too high for realization. V But what is it which makes life worth living but the golden hopes toward which we resolutely set our faces, despite every discouragement and failure? Wihat, also, is it which brightens the dark avenue ofthe future, and beckons us ever onward to something higher, something nobler? Unhappy the man Who has no ideals. Some, it may be, are looking into the future with merely per- sonal ambition. Wealth, distinction, political power, are the goals of their hopes, and Firm in the doctrine of the 'tsurvival of the Eittestfi they are prepared to strive for self, and self alone. Life is a struggle they say. This is an age of haste. ' The rush of business, the pursuit of wealth, the search for power, leave little time for what the world calls sentimentalism and hero- worship. Practice, not theory, rules our daily life, and woe to him who forgets that which hetowes himself Is this the aim and purpose which we would Wish to bear, away with us? Is the Golden Rule an impossible theory? Is self-seeking the only avenue to success? ls it selilcontrol which teaches us to sub- merge our whole better nature, and make it obedient to the behests of personal ambition? In short, are self-seeking and self-mastery synonymous? Sooner or later the man who goes forth with no motives but such as these, no love for his fellow-men, no respect for the rights of others, will return in disappointment and despair, for either his dreams will have betrayed him, and all that made life worth living will be gone, when he realizes the futility of his vain efforts, or else from the summit of one ambition satisfied he will look down upon the steep hillside of his ascent, and, counting the cost of it all, can only in the frenzied search for greater perils to surmount, some new world to conquer, a more precious offering to the god of selt forget his lost youth, his friend- less life, his hardened heart. No, such an ambition cannot be ours. There is something higher, something nobler than all thisp The ambition for wealth andpower is not wrong in' itself, they are only the natural hope of every man in this age, when Wealth means prosperity and power, therespect and love of CLASS ORATION. 45 one's fellows. It is only as the motives become supreme, only as we subordinate the higher to them, when they are more to us than ought beside do they become base and unworthy. When they are the crown of an honest endeavor to benefit the World about us, when they follow or even accompany the idea that society is more than the individual, that duty to one's neighbor is more than service to one's self, they are supreme rewards indeed. ' . Let a man but set out with the idea that the friendship and love of those about him is more than their admiration and fear, and before he is aware of it the power and influence have come when least expected, the proof of his devotion to the higher ideal of life. Here, then, is an aim to which we may press forward : to desire influence, that we may have the more power for good, wealth that we may benefit our fellow-men 5 to live, in short, that we may add at least something to what is noble and true in the world. No aim is wrong if our acts are inspired by such motives as these. We need fear no task as too great for -our powers, nor rregard any duty as too small to bear its place in our system of living. ' But all this is a truism, you say,-no one would to-day deny such a statement. Ah, if this be so, hypocrisy is not rare in the world. Guard yourself, you who so thoughtlessly assent, that you appreciate the responsibility of your words. This is the problem of life which faces us: How shall we gain power over ourselves ? How shall we obtain this self- mastery? How shall we find it? It is ours already, else have we failed to derive the best which our college life makes possible for us. If we carry nothing away with us afterour years of study but a mass of dry facts 5 if we have gained nothing of character, undergone no process of development, by means of which we are 'enabled to take a broader view of life, we have but utilized one branch of the training afforded here. Step by step we have been led on, until to-day we realize that as we have progressed we have been slowly acquiring that firm- ness and decision of character, and gaining that self-poise which makes the college man the power that he is in active life in the 46 THE NASSA-U HERALD. world. The least function of education is to cram a brain to the point of somnolence by a surfeit of facts. Better a single idea and a power of deduction, which will lead the thought on to greater truths, than a mind in which is stored illimitable knowl- edge, and has no power to use what it possesses. This is what our education has done for us, and we are about to take our places in the world thus equipped, to use the power thus gained for the service of our fellow-men if we will. We may be false to our better self and debase our higher nature, but the power is ours, to use for good or ill. ' And the battle awaits us. Never were there more vital ques- tions, more momentous issues to be decided than at present, and upon the shoulders of the young men of the land will soon rest the burden of the struggle. The child of to-day is the man of' to-morrow, and but a step will carry wus into' the world to wield our influence among our fellow-men. A Those of us who have undergone such training as will make us, whether we will or no, leaders among men in the world can- not escape the fact that a great responsibility rests with us. We- have not gone through these years of discipline and training merely for selfish aims and ends. The very fact of the time spent here, the essence and idea of such an institution as Princeton is to train men for their life in the world and fit them to become truer citizens and better able to benefit their fellow-men. Are we fitted for this task, and so able to honor our Alma Mater? Nowhere is the influence of the college man more needed than in the political life of to-day. The disgrace of ring rule and partisan control which is such a terrible menace to our American institutions can be directly attributed to the apathy and indiiiference of the educated portion of our citizens to-day. Men who have developed themselves along the lines just indicated are still unwilling to enter the political arena. They know that the struggle will be long and bitter. The giant cor- ruption will not resign his hold of our land' until compelled to do so. Such ideas as high-souled devotion to an ideal of purity in life are not popular to-day, and men prefer to hide these vir- tues, rather than to carry them into politics and expose them to- the scoffs and sneers of those who are morally unable to appre- ciate their efforts for purity and reform. We, as we go into CLASS ORA TI O N. 47 the world should feel that our duty drives us into active life, carrying with us our ideals and aims. We must purify politics not by standing afar off and bewailing the shame and disgrace which has fallen upon our nation, but gird ourselves for the fight and enter the lists to purify by coming into conflict with and vanquishing the enemy. If we do not feel our responsibility and bear our share in the heat and fire of the battle, let us not for- get that we are but hypocrites if we complain of the stain upon our national honor. The disgrace of failure rests upon us and upon us alone. These are the thoughts I would leave with you to-day. The time grows short. Almost before we are aware of the passing hours we shall have no more part, as undergraduates, in the scenes and surroundings which have become so dear to us. We shall drift apart, one hither and another thither, never again to be united. ' Twice already has our little band been broken and two have been called away wh en for them the battle of life had but just commenced-but their memories are with us to-day as we come to the close of our course. Even death cannot break asunder the bonds of our companionship. Four years of acquaintance and daily intercourse have given us such friendships as are impossible elsewhere. Can we break all at once these ties which have united us so firmly ? Is it possible that we could go forth into the world feeling no sympathy and affection for those who have shared our years of discipline and study? No 5 such ties cannot ruthlessly be shattered. Let us feel as we part that even though divided by distance immeasurable we are still one in our sympathies, united in the purpose of bearing an honorable part in the struggle of life, en- nobling the smallest act by the spirit in which it is done and resolved to quit ourselves like men in the tight. We are equipped, the trumpet has sounded, calling us from rest and quiet to the dangers and toil of battle. Let us go forth a band of educated broad minded men, united in one grand pur- pose for life. So doing we need fear nothing for the final tri- umph. This above all,-to thine own self be true 5 And it must follow, as the night the day, Thou canst not then be false to any man. 458 THE NASSAU HERALD. IVY ORATION. BY W. H. BUTLER. N these sacred steps where so many happy dreamy care- less hours have been spent it would almost seem sacri- legious to employ the measured periods of the formal oration. However suitable for yonder stately rostrum, they would sound strangely out of harmony beneath these elms where our thoughts have ever been free to wander in sober recollec- tion and bright anticipation. And so to-day, as we plant this ivy which through many summers' heat and winters' frosts shall keep alive the memory of those about to leave this academic retreat, it is but natural that we should turn our memories back. This is the day which four years ago we hardly dared dream of. Gne by one have we seen these later ivies planted and cling more firmly to the protecting walls of this grand old hall. And when we sympathetically observed the planting of the last, we began to realize faintly what this feeling inadequately called sentiment by those who have never felt its power, really meant. But it is to-day that it strikes us with that tremendous force which humbles the separations of our younger days, but which in spite of a tinge of melancholy, is bright with hope and inspires us to nobler efforts. Commencement ! How strangely inappropriate does it sound to those who are so closely bound to Princeton and all she stands for, that to sunder the ties means the close of a most precious period. How all that is within us cries out at the prospect of the termination of associations which a brief four years has strengthened into powerful forces: And yet how true it is that this season marks the formal beginning not only of new careers, but of new hopes, motives and purposes. E. M ITT nl M CO DAY ASS CL IVY ORA TI ON 49 And 'it is Awith the same honest enthusiasm, vwilling. hands .and earnest desires' to succeed that characterized 'our freshman days, that We as alumni should take up the new duties. of life that await us. We are apt to forget the obligations whichthe peculiar 'privileges enjoyed here have imposed upon us. For whether Wewill or no, our position in the world cannot be thie same as it would have been had this prelimi ary training been lacking. 'There are problems facing that busy troubled world whichrcan onlyibe-solved by men whose, breadth of view and sincerity of-purpose -put to shame they narrow aims of self-seek- ers. So wi'th- a full sense ofappreciation, let us assume the responsibilities 'of teachers in the world's school. i , . X. f It is 3.-dlfHCl1li3 task to analyze the elements which have com- bined to make' life here so fascinating. Princeton's subtle charm was thrown about us and willingly did 'we submit to the spell. But unlike -the visionary trance of the dreamer, real Wonders have resulted. We have dreamed our dreams, aye, and. some are brightand rosy yet, and some have already fad-ed. But -our hands have not been idle, and -We go out clad in an .armor untried by' us, but which has served many others in the battle of life and served them well. . Within sight of the world's activity, its noise and bustle have been only as the .booming of breakers on the distantshore. In .the World., yet not .of it, may beetruly said of .our life here. .But in a few days we will be breasting for the first time those break- ers that have shipwrecked many a mariner... Then. must the scoifers at college-bred men learn that our training has notbeen that of the monastic recluse. Though these walks may be worn by the tread of many feet, it has been the energetic tread of those who after worshipping here at Wisdom's Shrine have gone out with a breadth of view, a loftiness of aim, an appreciation of whatsoever things are true, lovely and of good report, that has entered the world of. narrow sympathies and stunted specializa- tions as a breath of pure air, healthful and invigorating. I Ideal as this life of ours may seem, there are elements almost Spartan in their severity which have been assimilated. One cannot remain in the atmosphere surrounding those noble mar- ble halls and sacred chapel, that historic cannon and yonder church yardwhich whispers of past struggles and victories, with- r 50 THE NASSAU HERALD. out unconsciously becoming seized by the spirit of devotion to some fixed principle which like the pole star guides its followers to safe harbors. Cling to these principles of devotion, of duty, of a manly honor coupled with a spirit of toleration which our Alma Mater has gently but firmly taught us, and the windsof misfortune, persecution and ridicule may blow their hardest. But in all our efforts we know that we are not alone. That bond of sympathy which has helped to win struggles on athletic fields, however far it may be stretched, can never be broken. Before many hours shall have passed, good-byes will be said, in many cases separations will be final, but wherever our various courses shall be directed, we have with us the comforting assur- ance that the friendships formed here are eternal. Happy is the house that shelters a friend,'7 cried the philosopher. Thrice happier is the heart that in the experiences of college life, has transformed the mystic forces of congeniality into friendship's hooks of steel. And when in after years we return to sing our songs, and talk over the old days, however false our fireside dreams may have proven, however fickle fame and fortune may have been, all will be forgotten in the strength of the hand shake which defies the attacks of time and circumstance. ' So, following a time honored custom, we plant this ivy 3 sym- bol of friendship 5 teaching us lessons of patience and endurance. And as its full strength can only be gained by clinging to this grand old Hall, so must we remain true to the principles of Old Nassau and to its class of '95. CLASS POEM. I CLASS PCJEQM. WILBUR. , M. URBAN. HAPPY he, whose tearless eyes can claim A vision, never-dying, of that band For whom upon the brows of Helicon, The rosy-tinged, the shining sacred mount, The triple Graces wreath the myrtle crown And lead for aye the joyous dance along. Ye sacred Nine, how can I plead thy name, When from thy glory, for a space, my eyes Are turned, distraught by all the gathered glow Of four sweet, shining years of fellowship That flood my soul with golden memories o'er. And yet, methinks, these waves of memory That surge from out the ever-lengthening past Are beating at the feet of thy high hill, From oif its shining crest receive their light, And with thy music beat in unison. So as I raise my eyes above the tears Of these last lingering days and solemnznights, Grant that I see again thy shining face And gain some sweet enforcement in my song. ,I. There is a' sullen sameness in the--How, The ever-restless stream that bears us on, Nor yet will grant us space to rest awhile Beside the sacred pillar and the shrine That we love best. Yea, e'en our household gods, The ashes of our fathers know no rest- For on the morrow seek they other climes And other hearths that we must build anew. So sadly spake, at close of eventide, The heart of one who withlthe morning light THE NASSAU HERALD. L Must bid the shores of Attica farewell, A wanderer by Fate, whose cruel might, Clad in the garb of nature's sternest laws, Hath pressed upon the City's suifering heart And bids her send her sorrowing children forth. The careless waves are leaping in the sun, The soulless ship is eager to be gone, Charmed by the destined kisses, fickle loves, Of multifarious seas. But in the town All silent are the streets, as in a dream, Forgetful of delights. The pomp, the glitter and the sacred rite, The sacrifice that stains the altar stones, And all the tender ministries and tears X That like a yearning mother round her child, The city in her desolation pours- 0 vain are these to break the spell of woe That turns the lightsome morning into gloorn. But now is heard the sound of lute and song, As from the Prytaneum's sacred walls, In solemn, stately dance, the chorus fares- Virgins of noble birth, in snow-white lawn, All garlanded with flowers rare and sweet, That rise to glad the heart of Mother Earth, Whose virgin daughter, Hestia the pure, The Goddess of the City's glowing hearth, They celebrate in choice dance and song 5 And hoary priests, whose every thought and deed To Athens and her gods are consecrate, Clad in the livery of the golden sun, And in their Vestal robes of purest white. A hush of veneration stills the throng, For lo, from out the Ternple's brazen doors, Yea, from the inmost of the holy place, Appears the Goddess' best beloved high priest. Within his hands he bears the kindled torch, Wliose holy light had lighted Hestia's face, And in the name of Athens thus he speaks : Ye men of' Athens, children of our love, Ye fare into a dark, barbarian land, For Fate hath spoken it. O keep the light Of our fair Attic Star before your eyes Nor let its glow be dimmed. Into the dark And shadowy unknown, your household gods Must seek them other hearths and rest at length CLASS POEM. Beside strange seas. But as this sacred torch Shall give them light anew, O let it be Symbol perpetual of our mystic love I So in the early days of Athens' pride Did her beloved colonists go forth, With such a benediction in their hearts, And with her altar fires in their hands. II. O dear companions, Sons of Old Nassau, O happy sharers of this transitory dream, Amid these sacred halls, these sunny walks That we had thought unending, think ye The soul whose life for four long, blissful years, We drew with every careless daily breath, Through all the deeps of her unning heart Thrills not with sorrow, feels no parting pang, As forth into the vast unknown we go? And can we fear that she, whose glorious name Hath called to life the smouldering iiames that glowed Amid the ashes of our duller days, And bade us build our fires to the skies, Is but the fancy of a youthful dream That soon must pass away? It cannot be. Nay but the myriad voices of the past, The myriad voices of her present sons In one grand swell of adoration prove Her love immortal. Hear we not the strain That rises from the ancient storied Hall? For lo, from out the heavy oaken doors, Between the brazen Lions' silent guard, Amid the gentle murmuring of the Elms, That whisper with the trembling Ivy leaves Memorial dirges, even now may we Behold, beyond all knowledge, wonderful Beyond all knowing, passing beautiful The glorious concourse of her noble sons. And if we see them not, 'tis that our eyes Are holden of the bonds of cruel doubt 3 If to their message sweet our ears are dulled, Vain were it then to stir our sodden sleep Or seek an entrance to our prisoned souls. It is the same sweet message year by year, The same sweet voice that such enforcement yields THE NASSAU HERALD. 'Our lonely hearts, and bids them cheerily 'Go forth, rejoicing in the kindled light 'That in our souls displays the Holy Grail . .And bids us rest the search nor daynor night. 'The last sad, solemn rites will soon be oler, With which our Alma Mater sends us forth Upon a long, eventful argosy. The morrow's morn a scholar's garland brings, 'To-morrow eve we drain the Loving Cup, But as we drink, O shall we not fulfill The mystic symbol of the circling bowl And drink communion that shall never end, A fellowship that knows not days nor nights But 'timeless-as unaging ns-the soul V In whose maternal love we are as one ? Yea, each must build the shrine of his own heart, And cherish there his sacred household gods, The friendships of the present and the days That bring us blessing in the years to come. But let us not forget as brothers all Our mystic union in the common search For truth and goodness, holiness and peace, The common light that in each heart doth shine, Enkindled at the same beloved shrine- And may that light in each of us increase. V PR ESEN TA TI ON ORA TI ON 55 PRESENTATION ORATION. FRANKLIN B. MORSE. ' A ADIES AND GENTLEMEN, and that includes Gerard Herrick for he's a perfect lady--er-gentleman, you see gathered before you a shower of individuals which it has pleased my predecessors to. speak of as Hwhited sepulchresf' worms Who have not the energy to turn, and various other pet names of the same sort. -But far be it from meyto indulge in any such epithets. 'For the past three months I have sought in vain for an appellationlvvhich Would suitably define this conglomerated .assortment of--, here is Where the Word I Want should come in. But you have them here before you. Supply the missing Word yourselves. Right here I Want to tell Harvey Koehler that this is not a missing Word 'contest so there is positively no money prize for any answers received. Harvey Koehler With Harold McCormick are probably the hottest stuff business man- agers that ever set foot on Princeton soil. 1 Harvey rolls in the Wealth accumulated in his dealings with the Trenton Steam laundry. He is free to admit that he thinks the laundry bus- iness is one of the most lucrative a man can get mixed up in. He told NAssA'U HERALD '7 Dunn that since he started in on his career he managed to keep himself in' White shirts and as for collars and cuffs-Why he had them to burn. There is a rumor afloat that .Harvey has the most complete collection of college men's autographs ever compiled. All he Wants now is one of Flemrning's ditto marked cuffs. Then there is Harold McCormick, ah, that's another story- here, here-What's Sport Porter looking so superficial about? 'Oh yes, I remember now. Sport l' said that no matter what 56 THE NASSAU HERALD. I told about him- it was a gol darned lie? So just now when I said something about another story Sport probably meant to convey to any of his out of town friends the idea 3 there, you. see, they're all yarns ! 4' That's all right Sport, there are stories and stories-and by the way I would like to say to any of Sport's friend saround here that if they overhear any underclassmen sitting in their' neighborhood making such remarks as: 'L Oh, that's an awful, lie to tell about such a man as Porter, H Phew, imagine sucha gentlemanly fellow as 5' Sport '7 doing such athingf' etc., etc., that- Sport has had his colts rehearsing in private and has been otherwise making arrangements to turn off any ugly truths which I may deem necessary to divulge. But to return-will Harold McCormick please saunter for-' ward ? Here he is, ladies and gentlemen, Harold McCormick, of Chicago, U. S., and Princeton University, class of '95. The- typical manager, the embodiment of all managerial require-A ments. The man who is inundated, overwhelmed with com- munications from all parts of the country. Communications from all the leading hotel managers begging him as the greatest- boon that had ever been granted to give them just one little point on how to manage. He did favor the Waldorf hotel with a few precious pointers I believe-it must be so, for look at the- Waldorf to-day, one ofthe most, if not the most-well it must be the most ably conducted money-making hostelries in thee world. And why? There stands the living answer. Harold I know that you don't have a moment in which to frivol and that- you want to get all this over just as soon as possible-what? There is no use of my telling people of your abilities for whol doesn't know Harold McCormick ? That's so, I should have known that. Well, I won't keep you Waiting any longer, but-V before you go, I have been requested by the members of the- Grlee, Banjo and Mandolin clubs to ask if you would please- redeem these meal checks which they had no opportunity to- use on the last Western trip. But we must pass on from the sterner realities of life at such a time as this and bathe in the sunshine of the more frivolous side. It's so much more pleasant to speak of moonlight walks, drives and boating parties, and all the sentimentalities, idealismsn PRESEN TA TI ON ORA TI ON. 57' and romances which go to make up one's existence, rather than the more prosaic and practical aspects of which we all more than reap our share. Of course disagreeable things haunt our memories just as much as the agreeable ones, but we like to call up the latter and by their power try to drive out the more sordid ones. A Take Hard y Crawford, for example. VVill he ever forget that drive he took away out in the west over that rough stony road ?' Will he ever forget how that carriage rocked and bumped about as it slipped into and twisted out of the great deep ruts or jolted against some huge rock hidden under the loose soil ? Will he ever forget that fair feminine form sitting close beside him on the seat with no one but himself to save her from being ruth- lessly thrown out of the carriage in its wild tossings? Will he ever forget how he rose to the occasion and putting both arms about her assured her that he was there and that if it were pre-- destined that she should be thrown out, he would tumble with her and she need have nothing to fear? And will he ever forget how as she clung close to him, her head beating a tattoo on the lapel of his coat to the time of the jolting carriage, how she- looked up into his face-feeling secure in his care-and said, Oh, Mr. Crawford, how strong, how brave you are. Youlre not at all afraid? No, answered Hardy, not a bit, and just about that time Hardy noticed the vehicle was going more smoothly thanit had been, so he kicked the driver from behind and immediately the carriage was once again in the rough and unbroken half of the road. f Then there is Clare Hamilton. Will he ever forget that hot sweltering June day when he boarded the 12.13 train for New York and found only one vacant seat and that on the sunny side of the car? 'How he placed himself in the seat nearest the aisle and put his hat box and dress suit case on the seat nearest the window and then hoped to goodness no one would sit next to him? Then the dear middle-aged old lady with the Indian shawl who got in at New Brunswick and who immediately cast her eye upon the only vacant seat in the car-the one next to the sweltering Clare ? Will he ever forget how he sank down into his seat and pretended not to notice the 225 pounds of wo- manhood who was making straight for him ? How she routed 58 THE NASSAU HERALD. him out-he with his hat box and dress suit case-and then told him in her pleasantest manner that to sit next to that window with the hot sun beating against it' would be sure to ,give her the most terrible headache? Will he ever forget how she dain- tily filled up three-quarters of the seat and how he-with -his hat box and dress suit ease-occupied the remaining quarter near the window with the hot sun beating down upon it? How she started the conversation with him? How she said 'fYoung' 7 man, I've seen you before to-day? A How he got a drink of water seven times for her before he reached Jersey City? How she clung to him! all the way across the ferry? I-Iow he bought an elevated' railway ticket for her and rode all the way up to Thirty-third street with her while her periodic' Young'man, Iive seen you before to-day jingled merrily in his ears? ,Will he ever forget the relief he felt when he thought that at last -he could escape from her clutches when he told her he was going to the Imperial Hotel, and the awful relapse that suddenly overcame him when in reply she warbled: UI like you, young' man. I know 'I've seen you before to-day. I'm going with you, young man! Then came the mad flight down the steps of the elevated station as he madela dash for liberty with hat 'box in one hand and dress suit casein the other, knocking down police- men, women and children in his mad flight, while in his- wake, fiying like a harpy, the old lady crying out Stop, young man, I've seen you before to-dayi' ? Ah, no, heill never forget that, and, C' Clarefl I don't believe shelll ever forget those rosy cheeks and that flowing moustache. Never! never!! never!!! I would that I were able to :describe these two' incidents as I should like to, but it passes the limits of my -poor, pen. If they had only been handled by some of the literateurs which we have now among us how splendidly they could have been workedvup, Yes, there's John Thaeher, and Andy 77 Imbrie, and Tommy Atkins? Whitejbut why mention these names-they were on your tongues' ends without ai shadow of a doubt, butthere is one name which I think never entered your minds. What I am about to say will be a revelation to you all. ' There is among us a man whose rare genius has been born to blush unseen. A man who through his own modesty is depriving the world of some of the most beautiful pen pictures ever wrought out in the mind of man. - . PRESENTA TI ON ORA TION. 59 Will the Toad Schumacher please approach the rostrunn ? Come, you glittering aurora borealis, you resplendent ray of beatiiic brilliancy. Q i ' Ladies and Gentlemen, Arthur W. Schumacher, of California, the unearthed idealist and romanticist. Nicknamed the Toad, but unquestionabiy resembling much more an ironing board, Cas a young girl at one of the dances remarkedj. This delicate and beautiful bit of descriptive Writing I managed to get out of his room one day While he was out playing with Baldy Hroos, 1' Curly Nelson, Texas Cresson and others. Listen: 77 CHAPTER 1. - V ' . The last long lingering rays ofthe sinking sun, whose glowing discs now rested tranquilly on the limpid bosom of the western sea,,bathed the sur- rounding sky with that iiaming warmth and brilliance, common only to a tropical sunset. i V . Far, far behind the lofty Sierras thickly studded with weatherbeaten and dwarfed pines caught his glint and dipped their jagged peaks in the glowing glimmering light. At the same time away down below the deep dark purple greenish black shadows of evening were already shrouding the foot-hills and creeping drowsily, dreamily upwards. 'i - i I ' The little snatch of translucent water which could be discerned through the glistening wall of the rocky cliffs ofthe canyon was tranquil-motion- less-asleep. Not a ripple marked the perfect evenness of its somnarnbulistic serenity. ' i - I 5 , .1 A Standing out in bold relief against this glowing iiery background of re- splendent water huge gnarled and knotty oaks of centuries 'stretched their lean, long, moss-covered and twisted branches skyward. The solemn breath- less silence of evening was over all the wild weird scene-a silence broken only by the- song of the mocking bird, the chirp of the linnet and the cricket, the rustling of bats' wings and the 'clattering of horse's hoofs on the muffled sands. Suddenly the horse shot into view from behind a cactus which was growing precariously hard by. V , ' It was a small sinewy sorrel colored mustang which showed almost ,un- mistakable signs of having had a- long and tedious journey. Its sides heaved and fell with every breath and foam reeked from its mouth, falling in torrents and iiecking its panting chest, Itwas terribly blown. ' ' ' ' ' It hardly needed a second glance to see that the. well-nigh exhaustedani-' mal had a rider on its back. Strange and incongruous though the horse had been amid the sleepy grandeuriof 'the scene the rider was even more remark- able. He was ayoung man of not more than twenty, while his long face and manner denoted tremendous nervous strength, while his brown eyes, now lulled by the beauty of the scene, showed under their kindliness much deter- i 60 THE NASSA U HERALD. mination. Under a too prominent nose his mouth, thin and tightly shut, completed the glossary to his character. I CHAPTER II. , 'A Bessie I Bessie! called Mrs. Oifmeyer, as she stood on the low massive shady verandah which was trellised with grape vines' so as to almost hide from view the picturesque white homestead, while one hand rested slightly on a large wooden pillar, the other shading her eyes from the last lingering' rays of the sinking sun, whose glowing disc rested tranquilly in the western- sea and painted with the iiaming vivid crimson hues the azure and cloudless heavens. ' 1 Here I am, dearest mamma, answered a soft low but clear silvery voice, while at the same time the form of a young girl loomed up out of the strawberry patch where she had been gathering the modest evening meal.. She was attired in a tight-fitting riding dress short enough to show to advan-- tage a pair of well-rounded ankles coquettishly clad in brown boots to match her dress and her nifty broad-brimmed straw hat. Her sweet presence lent an immediate life aud color to the dull monoton- oue scene. ' H Here comes a stranger and it a'n1an, cried Mrs. Oifmeyer, as our hero reined in his horse in front ef the verandah. A shade of sadness tlitted across Bessiels face. . Well, Arthur, everybody seems to appreciate you and see in you the great genius that you are. Take this looking glass and get away in the back row, where no one can see you, and take at good long lingering fond look at yourself Oh,I have an announcement to make which I very nearly forgot. Caddy Arnold asked me to say that he intends hav-- ing a composite photograph of himself, Toad U Schumacher, Fatty H Phillips and Knocker Stone taken Very shortly, and that they will be on sale at Rosels. L'Short Cheer 'l Park was to have been included in the group, but the rest of the crowd boycotted him because he didn't wear golf trousers. Cow 7' Nevin will please not include this news item in his next letter' to the University Oourier. Now, if Caddy has no more announcements to make we will proceed. I will not, however, allude to such painful inci- dents as all of L' Willie Belden's love and chess affairs-in fact he asked me particularly not to do so. Nor of how Willie Logan Went home three days before an execution took place PRESEN TA TI ON ORA TION 61 which he wanted to be sure to be on time to see, and how at the last moment his father locked him in his room, and Willief' to his infinite disgust, was right in it. I will 'pass over Raszke Furnajieff and Bob Francis and what came of his aspirations 'to become a base ball umpire-not to mention Willie Bever- idgels Cbrother to Jimj broken bones, dislocated joints, falling hair and any other old malady you can happen to think of. 'These would fill too sad a chapter. But rather let us feast our eyes on something real nice. Something too sweet for anything -too utterly um-m. A pair of ancient Adonises in modern garb. The fashion plates of Princeton-faultless, immaculate. The best dressed men in college-the leaders of the styles.. I .see John Bone and Teddy Norris squirming uneasily in their .seats. No, I shan't bother you, John, for I know you've been troubled enough lately about that class book, and as for, Teddyf' he's worried to death for fear the Editor's Table for next year won't maintain the high standard itlheld this year. But if John Harding and K' Beau Brill J' Slidell will please come forward in the latest and most approved style of Walk, so that we can all have a chance to get a good look at them, it would be greatly appreciated. There they are ladies and gentlemen. Are they not the per- fect dreams I have hinted them to be. QThere's that effervescent joker again! No, Willie Belden, I don't mean night-mares and if you dont keep quiet I'll tell all about those love and chess affairsj Feast your eyes upon them. Bavishing brunette types. Sym- phonies in raven hair. Like master-pieces of the artistls brush brought to life and just stepped from the canvas. Tommy never could stand anything for any length of time so before he com- mences to get on that reproachful, soul-piercing look which tears one's very heart-chords, Illl let him go. Tommy 7' remarked once as he looked at the picture' of a giraffe: Oh, what a neck and not having to wear a collar never to appreciate it,'7 then he lapsed into silence and deep thought for a space and was inconsolable. Ilve got a collar here for you Tom which I know will make your little heart go pit-a-pat, and that graceful neck of yours yearn and crane for it. Take it and remember that ypu're wearing your collars entirely too low for looks now. 62 THE NASSAU HERALD. But you stay, here, John. Donit you know that standing up is the best thing in the World to keep those creases in your trousers. You never thought of that ? Well, aren't you glad I kept you standing? John, do you remember the time you were in Baltimore with the Glee club and escorted a young lady home after theconcert? You've forgotten ? Well, it's my duty then to remind you. As I said, you escorted this girl home, after having ,in your characteristic way disposed of her father and mother and little sister. XVhen you reached the house, they had all been there for some little time. You didn't want to walk too fast for fear your moustache would be disarranged? Ch, come now, that doesn't go. Anyway, you remember now I guess, how you sat down with the family in the parlor and chatted-and chatted. And all this time clocks in the neighborhood still kept running. Don't you remember first of all, small sister went up stairs, and you chatted, then father sneaked quietly out of the room, and you chatted, then mother quietly excused herself for an indefinite period, and you chatted-and-chatted and chatted, and then suddenly from up stairs came a voice, Mr. Harding, is your watch going, I should like to know the right time ?7' And then you took out your watch and answered innocently. Yes sir, I think it's right, mine says 3.25.7' 4' Thank youf' came from up stairs, Mr. Harding, won't you stay to breakfast ?'7 John thanked them kindly, but said he thought it was about time for him to go and that he had enjoyed the evening im- mensely. Enjoyed the evening. Come here, John. I-Iang that forever around your neck and always keep that alarm set for midnight. That's a fairly res- pectable hour to be reminded that some people sleep. I was going to run in a story on Svengali 7, Curtis here, about his Jewish characteristics, but he begged so hard,.saying that if I did some people who didn't know him might think he really was mean, that I haVen't the heart to do it. So let us go on toward the West, that part of the country owned by f'Cice1y Burns, R. Clay '95 , Sure Shotu Cresson and Ben Hirshfield, not to mention the McCormicks and H Kid '7 Carroll, who own Illinois. i Some of the members of ,95 seem to have a decided prefer- PRESEN TA TI ON ORA TI ON. 63 ence for the West as a stage setting. This world, however, isn't so big when it comes to a chronicler getting his facts. Now, there's Pop Pease. It is hardly to be supposed that he ever thought that the story of how he met and tried to Woo a faire laydie would ever get so far as the prosaic East. It did, how- ever. Good gracious I It isn't to be supposed that a man who can sing the Mule Song as Pop can isntt going to be known throughout the land, leave alone being heard. It happened this way: Pop 7' met a girl after his own heart and after having talked to her on the relative aspects of being a superb singer as allied to trying for the 7Varsity.foo,tball team, incidentally lead- ing up to the time he started to grow a beard, he finally thought he had her where he wanted her. It wasnlt his fault, however, that he didn't and that things failed to hitch properly, but at any rate he asked her tor just one little kiss. Then what did she say, Pop ? Well, she just turned her pretty head around, and instead of getting the kiss which 't Pop thought was corn- ing too easy 77 she gently' murmured that she didnlt kiss buffa- loes. Speaking of beards, Pop 'P and John Garrett had a monopoly on them until Burn Urban, poet and philosopher, stepped up and said he didn't believe in monopolies and imme- diately joined one. Bum's 'l beard donlt out much ice, but if John Garrett Will kindly spread that growth of his before the wind and then sail peacefully into sight it would be awfully nice. John is one of a batch of geologists who went West to hunt up specimens. They all came back and reported having had a most successful trip. They found-that the whiskey was of a Very poor quality, and that beer, although good, was terribly high priced. John had a little bit of a white horse he used to ride when out on his researches-and thereby hangs a tale. It was an impressive sight to see John astride the diminutive beast who stood in his stocking feet just thirteen hands high, or about as big as Henry Augustus McNulty. J ohnls feet trailed along the ground on either side, so when the pony would lag from ex- haustion John Would help it along by pushing, beside occasion- ally jabbing it in the side with the one spur he used. Well, somehow the pony always lagged Clike Sock Huston, who by an impartial vote of the class is probably the laziest man that ever struck the townD and consequently John had to do a great deal -64 THE NASSAU HERALD., of pushing and jabbing. It was after a particularly hot and long hunt one day that John found the specimen he was after, and after tying his horse to a telegraph pole in front of the building went in to get cooled off. John was much pleased with his discovery, how long he staid in there I couldn't discover, but when he came out, a most pathetic picture was revealed. There stood the little white horse Qno higher than Henry Augus- tus McNultyj leaning against the telegraph pole fast asleep. Here, John, take this horse with you, but promise to treat it kindly, .and try in future to get something more your own size. WVell, What's wrong, Andy W? Have I been sinning in that I have been pointing a moral or am I verging too much toward 'that jaundicecl style which you disapproved of in 'L Ships that Pass in the Night? Andy I' is one of those smooth-bore, all tobacco, non-nico- vtine, brainy men of the class, book critic on the Nassau Ifit., 'prestidigitateur of deep thoughts and juggler plenipotentiary of final decisions. There are no two ways about it, 'iAndy, youill have to come up here. VValter Libbey Won't give us a rest until -you do, and the first thing you know John Weiss and dlioco- motive Park will be leading cheers which will make you un- comfortably conspicuous. A As I said, 4'Andy has been for the past year critic on the Nassau Lit. It needed but one number of the magazine to ,appear before HAndy'sW reputation was established. Publishers from all parts of the country sent their latest publications to him to be reviewed. Andy 7' took it all modestly-especially 'the books-it was a mighty cheap way of adding to his library. Well, Andy all through the year had been reviewing such books as Rhythm and Harmony in Poetry and Music, The Philosophy of Fictionfi The Use of Lifef' The Sphere of the Statef U Cicero and the Fall of the Roman Republic. A few of them had a phenomenal sale-those Andy approved of 3 more of them sank into oblivion. Andy didn't approve of them. What Andy said went. Listen to his decision on the realistic novel: Do not understand me to deny the right of the realist to a legitimate -place in literature. The point I am trying to make is this : Admitting that -the objects of interest in a story are and always will be the objects of interest PRESENTA TI ON ORA TI ON 65 in life, and aware of the fact that as long as there are people who will read the realistic novel, the realistic novel is bound to exist 5 that, in other words, it is at present a recognized department of fiction-putting aside all this, I say, as irrelevant to the question at issue, we may yet assume that inasmuch as the realistic novel cannot be judged according to any aesthetic standard, it is not the highest type of novel, because it is in no sense a work of art. Then came the '4 most unkindest out of all? It wasn't the notice from Brill Bros. saying that they had just imported a stock of extra large sized socks for him. 1' Andy H didn't mind that, for big feet were a sure sign of a good understanding, but it came in the shape of a book fromi one of the leading New York publishing companies called 'L Bow lVow and Mew Mew. Here is one ofthe passagec: Bow Wow was a dear little dog and Mew Mew was the cutest little ca.t imaginable. They were Very nice when apart but when they caught sight of one another they would quarrel. Bow WVow would bark and Mew Mew would show her little claws and stiffen out her fur, and they be- haved very much like some naughty, quarrelsome little children often do. What was the use of life, the philosophy of fiction? Andy '7 was unmanned, crushed, broken hearted. Cheer up, my boy. I've got some books here for you to review. W'hat's past is past-be yourself again. Hello, K' Porky, are you there? Why, I couldnit see you at all. h Pork is the little fellow who went out walking with a lovely girl. This happened out W'est. I-Ie had never been in- troduced to her, but that's what U Porky H said he liked about some of the Westerii girls he met, they made you feel so much at home. Nobody seems to know anything about that walk as no one saw Pork until he came back to camp, and then he got confidential with Irish i' Hamilton. Irish, by the way, is the man who went to coach the base ball team of a deaf and dumb asylum, and got ,mad and gave up the job because, he said he'd yell like a fool for a man to run from first to second and the darn fruit would stand like a dummy and never moved' Well, Pork began to expatiate on the girl's many virtues and on her beauty, and Irish 'i took it all in with the most intense interest. 4' Finallyfl went on Porkyfl do you know, ' Irishj I just couldn't resist kissing that girl. I fought against it, but it was of no use, and so I suddenly stole one, just as youlve seen 66 THE NASSAU HERALD. me steal second base so oftenfjust as quick as a flash. 'Irishf' do you know I don't believe that girl had ever been kissed by a fellow before, because just as soon as I had done it she burst out crying. I J ack Frame will probably put on an injured look when I tell about that little boating experience of his. He said that it all happened to some other fellow, but there is no telling to what lengths fellows will go just before the Presentation Oration is Written. Jach started for New Haven by boat on a line of steamers which he had never patronized before but on which the fare was exceedingly low. I've forgotten who went with him, but at all events they told J ack that held have to go to bed with his life preserver on, that being the result of the extremely low fare, and the company were very strict about enforcing the rule and penalized any infringement by fine. J ack went to bed that night after strapping one of the life preservers about his waist. Needless to say he didn't sleep much and thought it one of the most barbarous customs he'd ever heard of However, he wasn't going to take the thing off with the chance of being fined if found without it. Day broke at last and Jack felt that to get out of that instrument of torture would be an infinite relief. Just then a colored porter knocked on the cabin door. Jack rushed across the cabin and threw it open and stood with his life preserver still on over his night shirt, shaking his fist in the porterls face and yelling: You thought y0u'd catch me with it off and fine me, did yer? VVell, I fooled yer, gol durn yer, and next time I ride on this durned line of boats I'll-I'll walk! Now if Walter Lord will please start the class to singingthat unique little ditty of his entitled W'eary, Weary lValker, we might have the only original 'f Gold Fish 'l amble up to the time of itsjinspiriting air. Phil 7' went up to Springfield last fall to see the iYale-Har- vard foot-ball game, and, quoting his own words, had a most elegant W time. It was on his way to the grounds that some local photographer caught sight of him and Wanted to take a picture of him. This photographer was more or less of an in- ventor and he had made a process which photographed colors, except that red always took green, and in Phil he found a most elegant subject to further establish his theory. The photo- PRESEN TA TI ON ORA TI ON. 67 grapher told Phil of his intentions and proceeded to take the picture. Just as he was about to expose the plate a sudden look of horror came over Phil's face. H What! red take green? then suddenlyjamniing his hat down on his head he made a break. It was a terrible blow to his nerves, so he went over to a cafe, his hands shaking from the shock as he thought of what he had just escaped. Bartender, he gasped, give me a cocktail, quick. Bartender, give me a whiskey while I wait. As I said, Phil had a most elegant time, and after the game he started back to the depot to board the train for hom e. 'L Phil was glad that it was train time, for he had run pretty well through his supply of the long green, which at its best had been rather short. He got in a parlor car and sank into a big chair that was vacant just to show that he appreciated a good thing. Everything went on smoothly, the conductor had passed by without taking up Phil's ticket, which Phil appreci- ated. Somebody had left some lunch on a chair, and as N Phil didn't want the stuff to go to waste he ate it and appreciated it. Oh, t'Phil is a most appreciative fellow. Well, it got to be pretty nearly time to reach his destination, so when the con- ductor came through again Phil asked him how long it would be before they got to New York. New York ! Say, young feller, we'll be in Boston in a few minutes. L' Phil jabbed his hands into his trousers pockets, but nothing jingled but his keys, which seemed to mock him. But let us draw the veil. He 'found the ticket which had not been collected on the way up and as it could be used either way-he appreciated it. Here, Phil, which one are you going to take? Now don't make a mistake. Now the best all 'round man, the best all 'round athlete and the most awkward man in the class, respectively, Ward and Dongle, and 4' Dongle Wa1'd will please tumble up here, and at the same time bring up Dog Trenchard, the Quogue sea lion, Gus Holly, the class beauty, Harry Brown, the Tren- ton pilgrim, Knox Taylor, the ladies' Valentine, and Beef Vlfheeler, the Jamestown hard man and mermaid. There they are, ladies and gentlemen, and for a few brief moments we will sport in their midst, for after all they are but human. Now, if 68 l THE NASSAU HERALD. any of you get ugly I want to tell you beforehand that I've got Bill Lawrence, the Princeton police force, awaiting my call, not to mention John Degnan. This frail, delicate little creature is Gus.' You all know Grusf' Heis the man that's been so worried all the fall about his health. I shanlt go into detail, for you've all undoubtedly read about him in all the daily papers. Here, 'K Gusf' is a new lining for the afflicted part of your anatomy, but take better care of this than you did of the old one. c'Doggie, I'm much obliged to you for this history of your life. I enjoyed it immensely. 'H 7 Come here, 4' Douglef' VVhen you get any more letters from unknown girls saying that they feel as if they already knew you after having seen you on the base ball or foot ball field, and at the same time ask you please to send them a Princeton cata- logue, don't do it, for all they want is a letter from you, and how do you know what kind of a person you're writing to. I've got a practical lesson to teach you. Herels a picture of the last girl you sent a catalogue to. Be more careful in future. Here, Harry, use this next time instead of your hat, and as for Cupid Taylor, what could be more appropriate than this bow and arrows ? - I hope everyone will ask Harry and Knox the significance of their presents. I-Iarry's has to do with-a Trenton affair, andas for Knox, make him show you avalentine he received. , Now, don't look so hurt, Beef. I wouldn't forget you for the world. Ladies and gentlemen, you no doubt notice the dis- parity of hair on this individual's head. It is the result of his numerous admirers begging him for a lock of his hair, and he is too good natured to refuse the request. Here, i'Bee12 take this hair mattress and despoil it rather than mutilate your own pre- cious locks. I My dear boys, we have struggled side by side and we have won and lost on the gridiron's mimic field of war. We have taken. our victories becomingly and the sharp pangs of defeat we have suffered in manly fashion. And now that we are about to part, to explore unknown fields, where the sterner duties of real life must be met, may your victories be many times multi- pliedg but should defeat be your lot may that defeat be but an PRESENTA TION ORA TION. 69 incentive to spur you on to conquer in the end. Dear class- mates, such also is my hope and wish for you, and if there is aught that I have said or left unsaid that rankles in your breasts, would that I had never spoken. God bless you. Farewell. .- 70 THE NASSAU HERALD. t CENSOR'S SPEECH. H. O. BROWN. ADIES AND GENTLEMEN, MEMBERS or THE CLAss or 795 :- The one chosen to bring to the bar of justice these slan- derous offenders, Wishes to greet you on this, both the happiest and unhappiest of our college days. We look back over these four years with tear-bedimmed sight, and not only condone gladly all our faults and follies, but on this, our day of parting, are eager to forget all differences, all disagreements, all prejudices, all feelings of ill Will. We are about to sever the staunch and perfect bond of unity, greater and stronger than Which, no class Was ever held, and does it not seem almost ironical and incredible that on such a day, when our hearts are beating tumultuously as We realize the end is rapidly approach- ing, does it not seem strange, I say, that there are among us those Who, with an ever-increasing uncharitableness, have endea- vored to please and delight you, not with simple faults or pecu- liarities of character or weaknesses of nature, but following the dictates of their own misty imagination, should hold up for laughter and boisterous humor the reputations and characters -of those who had implicit faith and trust in them. But as a relief to all who have been hard hit, and as an understanding to those not directly connected, it behooves me to explain that 'many of the mal apropos stories, and not a few of the incidents, Were simply an exaggerated form of the truth as it might have been. But on the other hand, I cannot refrain from impressing you with the fact that all the criminals it is my duty to deal With, are to be confronted with nothing but What is real Simon- pure, and unvarnished tales. In fact, the time allotted to me is so brief, and the number of offenders so few, that it would be CENSORUS' SPEECH 71 unfair to them and unjust to myself, if I were to deal with other than the very essence of truthful facts. So, then, as a medium of justice, the class chose me as Censor to summon before them these most unfortunate offenders, whose modesty forbids them to speak of themselves. Oh pardon me everybody, did I say modesty? Will John Fox Weiss gra- ciously, gracefully and smilingly swagger up here? Do you know, Johnny, that in thinking of your career, it seems you only have one fault, and in 'that you have met with such suc- cess it can hardly be so characterized. But no one can deny: to use an expressive colloquialism, that you have been a most successful boot-licker. Socially and politically, both practically and theoretically, you have boot-licked the Faculty, fthe Seniors, the Juniors, the Sophomores, the Freshmen, and have made a few strides in some of the preparatory --schools. But you have been kindly endowed with a genial manner, an ever-present good humor, and last, but by no means least, the confidence of knowing in the most politic mann er just -how, when and where to use these very admirable qualities. And this brings to mind a little incident which happened on one of the Glee Club trips. In fact, everything of any consequence .to Johnny took place on one or the other of those famous trips. But this scene was laid in Chicage, where Johnny met a young lady whom he held to be the prettiest and most attractive in the room, and as usual he started right in at 4' the pace that kills,l7 and when the evening ended, to say the case was love at first sight, that is on J ohnnyls side, would be putting it mildly. A few Weeks intervened, and the curtain arose on the second scene, at a dance in Harrisburg, and when our hero entered the ball- .room the first person he saw was the young lady from Chicago, and Johnny, with his usual debonair manner, hastened to her and greeting her most effusively addressed the girl by her chris- tian name, when she, with an air, as Johnny later remarked, .that caused the perspiration on his forehead to form little icicles, drew herself up and with the greatest dignity answered, Miss -, Mr. Weiss.'7 After a few moments of thunderstruck hesi- -tation, during which the icicles from his forehead fell upon the loutstretched fingers, Johnny, turning sadly away, murmured: This is the first and only time that any girl, after one even- 72 THE NASSA U HERALD. ing's acquaintance, refused me the use of her first name. And. lest too many of the girls become enamored of that smile which you never fail to tell us wins you first place, it would be well that you now take a seat in some not too prominent position,. and on your way lead a cheer or two. r It was also on the same annual trip that the different clubs were more fully written up than usual, and for many days no one understood how it happened that the reporters seemed to have a personal acquaintance with our fair Johnny. But it was- learned in New Orleans that he, always wide awake for such opportunities, never failed, no difference what the unreasonable- hour was, to seek the reportorial office of the most prominent newspaper in the city, and from one of the editions I clip the following: Mr. J. F. VVeiss, of the Banjo and Mandolin Clubs, comes from I-Iarrisburg, Pa. He is a very prominent young man- of that place, and entered Princeton in 1891. He is an athlete' and football player of some note, but has not ' yet' succeeded in. making the 'Varsity eleven. Speaking of football, wonder will Gibson's living picture step- forth? Well, Frank, they have all seen you, and as everybody knows you, I won't indulge in a lengthy tirade. But it is only proper and itting that you are publicly told, the class of '95 Wish it known they acknowledge you the best after-dinner speaker par excellence, and it remains for me to speak of the occasion of your debut. It was last year, when the New York Alumni had with them at their yearly dinner the members of' the foot-ball team. At the conclusion of an elaborate and sump- tuous affair, Frank was called upon for a speech. In his usual formal way he stated how happy and delighted he was to be present. After some introductory remarks, elegant and appro- priate, he started on the humorous vein and related a series of' short stories, somewhat after the style of Lit. gossipf Following fifteen or twenty minutes of these pleasantries, he then began a lengthy episode which, if it had ever been finished, would prob- ably have filled completely one edition of the Lit. But Frank, unfortunately, lost the thread, and while stumbling around to find it, the toast-master quietly approached Beef Wheeler' and begged him to cautiously get near enough to Frank to whis- per f' stop, as there were a few others to speak before morning. CENSORHS' SPEECH 73 To this day Frank declares his fame would have been assured if he could have finished that story, and now you can slide back to your seat and think out the tune of Little Fisher Maiden. But let me beg of you not to practice it as muchas you did the night Keg Neill, Perkins and yourself stood at Thirty-fifth street and Broadway. Frank had told the boys that he wished to take them to call on a girl that evening, but her address had entirely slipped his memory. Yet he thought it was between VV est Fortieth and West Fiftieth streets, and a certain number, and if they would whistle Little Fisher Maiden in front of this number on each street, when they found her residence the girl would come to the window. So after considerable time spent striking the tune they began their tour. The start was at For- tieth street, and with Frank in the advance the three Went plodding along whistling this well-known tune on each street. Finally, after walking fourteen Weary squares, and making four- teen more Weary attempts at the tune, they found the street and up went the window with a bang, and here our three faithful but tired friends, Taffy, The Laird and Little Billee, found their Trilby. V Will George VVashington's exponent aesthetically and analyti- cally approach the rostrum, if ,he can do so more dignifiedly than when he sometimes enters Murray Hall? Jack, I might tell a great many good things on you, but the major portion would hardly be creditable in View of the fact that you intend entering the Seminary next year. But I must point you out as a Hrst group man in Economics. It is well known you don't believe in carrying paper money because the green stains your pockets, and as for silver, that wears out the lining. But the next time you invite a young lady to a ball game it Would be Well to get tickets in advance rather than to offer the lame ex- cuse when you reached the grounds that you had forgotten both tickets and money in your exciting preparations. Of course the charming and obliging girl came to your rescue with her pocket- book. But now, Jack, don't you think you could cut down iinal expenses and return that little loan? You may now resume your seat. But speaking of obligations, 1' Skinny Seymour asked me to quietly arouse your memory by stating that the trousers he loaned you the 22d of February had not been returned. 74 THE NASSAU HERALD. And now We reach the last of those who have played havoc this afternoon with the mirthful side of your natures. And the severest grind to inflict upon John the Prophet is to not call him before this seat of cold and calm justice. For he is so much at home in posing, and never so happy aswhen striking an atti- tude. As members of the Dramatic Club, he and Roxy Agnus were always at war as to which could leave the stage with the greatest dramatic effect. During the season of '95 and '96 John will be open to engagements for heavy parts in any respectable company, but his specialty is portraying villainous characters, and as a villain he has many of the elements at his command for enticing the innocent and unsuspecting. He is a finished ventriloquist of no mean order, dabbles in mesmerism and has acknowledged using hypnotic iniluence on more than one occasion. But those trusting natures fall victims to his splendid personality, and in many of his travels, a Za his hasty European trip during the last holiday vacation, he is found enjoying aol Zibimm the purse of some unwary stranger. The last of the cynicisms has been pronounced, and in uttering this assurance I glance around and note the many expressions of relief. Yes, we have thrown out shells right and left to-day, but always with the hope that if they exploded nothing would result but a scratch wound. And if any think that the grinds and hits have been too direct, let it only serve to point out to them that we know each otherls peculiarities and characteristics so well that in the future it will be a means of strengthening the tie which has held us so firmly during our four happy years together. PROPHECK 75 PROPHE CY. JOHN HAMILTON THACHER. ADIES AND GENTLEMEN:-If you will pardon the digres- sion for a moment, I will perform a few incantations which Phil Walker and Perk have assured me are the indispen- sable adjuncts of a prophecy, and which are the only true pre- ventatives of dryness in discourse. CSign of the Qlowertecl bottlej. Your prophet has not the faintest conception of the true mean- ing of this peculiar conjuration, nor has he any idea Whatever of how it Works. His informants said that it Worked like a charm. They added, moreover, that it was really the only effec- tive method of producing visions. I regret to say, however, that it has proved hopelessly inadequate in his case and that he is compelled to come before you to-day with an abject confession of his unvvorthiness to fill the office you have intrusted to him. It is related that When the mantle of Elijah fell upon Elisha the people cried all With one voice: Heavens! what a misfit! So is it with the feeble, uninspired amateur you have selected to occupy the creased trousers and three-button waistcoat of your prophetic dress-suit. No sooner had I donned this mantle of divination than Tommy Slidell, who is the very essence of pro- priety in all matters of dress, Went into an alarming convulsion at the mere sight of it. In despair, I consulted Pop Pease, choosing such language as would afford the least opportunity for a villainous pun. 'f Pop, the papers say you are our oldest living undergraduate. You must be Wise. K' Aye, sir, responded Pop, conversant with the poets, I have a pretty Witf' Then, I prithee, by thy beard, tell me some augury of the future. I 76 THE NASSAU HERALD. Nay, I know naught of augurs, quoth he, except that they are dreadful bores. Tears came to the Prophet's eyes. It is 'pathetic to see a strong man helpless in the coils of a deadly vice. It happened shortly afterward, one winter evening, while the wind was roaring and the rain was beating fiercely down, that I was seated before the dying embers of my fire, listening to the ghostly fingers of the elms tapping softly at my window. I was startled by a noise at one side of the room. I looked and turned sick. A ghastlyrdeath's head on the wall of the room, with staring eyeless sockets and grinning jaws, had suddenly-con- tinued to keep silent, just as it had done from the day I picked it up in a field near the canal. That was not what made me turn ill. There in the doorway stood the tall form of Andrew Clark Imbrie, bearing in his hand a ponderous tome which he wanted to get somebody to review for him. I took the book as he left, and glancing it over, found that it was on the subject of Theosophy. It contained a great many curious, interesting and breezy pieces of information. It said, among other things- several' other things, in fact, that: The essence of that which is, bears a certain indefinite relation to the Unconscious Psychic. From this self-evident truth it goes on to deduce the fact that man is normally made up of three elements-Nerve, a Corporeal Body and an Astral Body. Some men, like Harvey Koehler, it went on to say, are made up entirely of nerve. But the ordinary unembellished homo is iurnished with a Body Corporeal and a Body Astral. Now it seems that if you are a true believer, and have paid the full price of admission, you can sometimes acquire skill in the art of projecting this Astral Body out into the illimitable confines of space. If this is so, I reflected, why would not one learn with much practice to project his Astral Body in Time as well? It was at least worth the experiment. For some months I got out every fine day and practised back of Brown Hall, with admirable perseverance. It required an unlimited amount of patience, as one's-Astral Body is scarcely more material in nature than a draft from a dark, dank, musty cavern, and is therefore constituted very carelessly for projecting purposes. However, my patience was rewarded. I became in time so dextrous that'I could hit within a few yearsfof any PR OPH ECK 77' 1 point in time at which I aimed. The excursions into the future taken in this way, afforded me great amusement andedifica- tion. Imagine wha.t it must be, for instance, to be able to 'project yourself far enough down the vista of time to see Kid Carroll receiving a dip! But, gentlemen, lest some of you may be tempted to imitation by the picture of the future which your Prophet will present, he feels it his duty to warn you of the dire results of a careless manipulation of your Astral Bodies. That none of you may try an ill-advised leap into the dark abyssmal chasm -of the yet-to-come, I will merely mention the fact that as a re- sult of a miscalculation on one occasion, I found myself pro- ,jected below into, the gloomy realms of Tartarus. It is not necessary for me to relate the details of this harrowing experi- -ence. It is sudicient to say, that I shall always wear in my memory the vivid recollection of Dan Platt struggling for a place in Charon's boat and threatening to swamp it from the mere weight of his intellect. I shudder also, whenever I recall Kid 'Cresson in the desolate halls and empty realms of Pluto, teach- ing the Judge Minos how to shake the . urn and bring out four .aces every time, of Doggie Trenchard on the gloomy plains of the Phlegethon, coaching up Cwsar and Napoleon on the latest and most destructive form of interference. Such mistakes, I am glad to say, were unusual. Having, therefore, observed the future of this class from so many standpoints, I feel that I may assume for you the capacity -of a historian, and in order that you may place the most im- plicit confidence in my chronicle, I will proceed to inform you that Soc Huston has become an abject slave to the vice of over- work 3 that his indefatigable energy and tireless exertion threaten to bring him to an early grave. This is given merely as a pre- face, in order to lend an air of verity to all that is to follow. There is one towering Hgure that looms up above all others over the barren waste of years that have elapsed since the pre- historic days of the early N ineties. Need I say that the greatness that was not born with nor thrust upon Richard Hatch, was honestly and laboriously achieved by him? Dick began life as a physician, having discovered in college that ivy possesses won- derful medicinal properties, being a sure cure for a misanthropic 78 THE NASSAU IIERALD. spirit. He believed also that if used as a nerve tonic it would ultimately give the patient an extraordinary pull. His investi- gations were not, however, altogether satisfactory, owing prob- ably to the fact that he went against all medical precedent and practised on himself. After some years of study he decided to give up medicine in order to make use of those talentsnin wire- pulling which he had so lavishly displayed at college. His success in politics was almost instantaneous. With one bound the Tammany Tiger sprang into life at Richardls touch. Behold! if it said, 'i under this leader will come a new hey- day of prosperity and wide-openness. It is an inspiring sight, on warm spring evenings, to see the young chieftain in the Four- teenth street Wigwam, addressing his braves ! Passing iiuently from one dialect to another, touching on every chord that vibrates with popular iavor, he concludes each evening with a superb harangue on Locksley Hallfi This last feature has been worked in on every occasion since the great leaderis child- hood, so that the Tammany braves have come to regard it now as a kind of sacred fetich. Andy lmbrie, continued in after-life, his chosen vocation of grinding out book reviews, by the ream. He has, however, by the invention of a.n ingenious system of his own, reduced the labor to a minimum. No longer does he iind it necessary to chew the cud of meditation over the books that come to him. He merely takes down one of his patent, adaptable, self-adjusting reviews and tacks it under the title, something like the following being the result: Review 480. Series B. This little book is surely all the author meant it to be. There is a sense of completeness and shall we say-finish, about it? We may as well call it finish, There is a wonderful amount of color in some of its passages and its cover. However, there is a sense of something lacking aboutits first chapter. One knows instinctively after reading it, that there are other chapters to follow. On the whole, we have no hesitation in affirming that this work is the pro- duction of the writer whose work it is, and who produced it. From the press of Shaw, Conrow ciz Co. has come a little Vol- ume to Andy for review, which has caused him a great deal of anxiety, as it does not seem to be entirely adapted to his system. It is entitled: PROPIJECY. 79 THE HANDY SPOQNER. on A GUIDE 'ro Goon GAMES WITH GIRLS. BY JOHN Fox Wmss. The author shows an admirable depth of research as well as the results of a conscientious investigation 5 also a tolerable degree of self-confidence. Some of the chapters are entitled: Encircling the waist after twenty minutes ' acquaintance. A study in tete-a-tetesf' f'Scientif1c osculationfl How to remain unphased though called down. The preface informs the reader that the system is adapted for indoor or outdoor use, parlor or kitchen. That for gentlemen of the blonde, curly-haired type ot' beauty it has been found abso- lutely infallible. V In the marts of trade there is no more prominent figure to- day than Harvey Koehler. For a time his business- enterprise was allowed to hide itself under a bushel in the management of a laundry in a summer hotel. At length, by a judicious reduc- tion of his employees' wages to starvation rates he was able to purchase the entire hotel. This he has been conducting with such success that it is said that the burglars who broke into it by mistake a few nights ago, refused to touch anything out of pro- fessional courtesy. Of course you remember Frederick Albert Norris, the 'absent- minded sprinter. The tall aquiline Apollo who used to go to bed with his glasses on. In a it of extreme absent-mindedness Freddie fell in love. All fancy sick was he and full of sighs. Three times he was on the point of proposing, and each time a fit of abstraction came upon him and delayed the crucial ques- tion. For a while he let concealment feed on his damask cheek. But before the stage of green and yellow melancholy set in he decided to propose by a letter. This he Wrote carefully and co- herently, until he came to the passage where he declared: H I have examined my affections and ind that you are their only goal, under Which he inadvertently signed the pledge: U During this examination I have neither given nor received assistance. ' FREDERICK A. NORRIS. Frank Morse scarcely knew what profession to espouse. He 80 THE NASSAU HERALD. had been connected with about everything in college, except the Committee on Morals and Discipline, and he left that alone on account of his limited acquaintance with the subject. As he didn't get a degree in college he decided at last to go wh ere he could get ten or twelve degrees-below zero, and so joined Eddie Munn in a relief expedition to the North Pole in search of a lost Freshman. The latest mail contains the cards for Frank's wed- ding to a charming Esquimaux belle whom he has Wooed and won with choice selections from the Ifit. Gossip. Eddie Munn has consented to act as best man on condition that he does not have to kiss the bride. Speaking of the frozen North, reminds me of the coolness that has sprung up between Runt Hodge and Porky Brooks. They have both risen to positions of commanding eminence. Porky, now a round doughty burgher, has achieved the pinnacle of his ambition and become Mayor of Scranton. Runtf' by a singu- lar coincidence, has achieved a similar distinction as Mayor of W'ilkesbarre,'and between the two the fiercest dogs of war are ever on the slip. Mayor Brooks rises in the Scranton council chamber to the full dignity of his five feet two, and states that Wilkesbarre is nothing more than a decayed suburb of Scranton, and that its mayor isnit large enough for a Liliputian show, Meanwhile Mayor Hodge, in the adjoining municipality, takes occasion to inform the upper house of Wilkesbarre in a genial way, that he hopes the Scranton mayor's shadow may never grow less, as there is more shadow than mayor now. These petty bickerings so disgusted Jimmy Decker,that he left his native burg forever and started out in quest of a Panacea for broken hearts. Jimmy had a heart broken by fourteen dif- ferent girls on the Grlee Club trip, and he felt that if science had a remedy for a fractured cardiac he ought to sample it. He consulted Diz Pierson for directions. ' Hast thou ever found a calamity in life that falls on human nature with a more sickening thud than a disappointment in love? I hast, ' answered Tom. What ? A score of disappointments. This from the prize-fusser of '95 I I leave you to imagine the pathos of the scene. 4 7 77 v PROPHECY. - 81 Skinny Seymour has also met with reverses in Cupid's lists. He had been handicapped at the outset by a discouraging ex- perience at Mt. Holly, where he was left standing alone in the middle of the ball-roomfloor, by a lady who insisted on having her dancing and hugging separately. Taking heart, however, from the encouragement of Lovelace Shaw and the rest of the Ogontzserenaders, he essayed another trial at Towanda, N. Y. With insidious guile he introduced himself into the community as an earnest revivalist, and conducted a series of private meet- ings for the benefit of one fair backslider. 'When at length he believed that he had induced in her a change of heart, he ended the services one day by gently taking her hand' and asking per- ,mission to become her spiritual advisor for life. She said that if that was necessary for her salvation she preferred to remain unregenerate. . Woolie Lewis, hearing of this unfortunate affair, discarded Theology as a profession and turned his attention to speculat- ing inland in Oklahoma. He says that his prospects depend on a future state. Doc. Love, Teddie Huntington and Pat Murphy gave tbeir minds for the first few years after college to the refining influ- ences of foreign travel. On the voyage across Pat spent most of his time in literary work, contributing extensively to the Atlantic, while his two companions made a thorough study of the French Gothic interior of their stateroom. No sooner had they set foot on perfidious Albionls shore, than Doc. insisted on Weez- ing around to see the Queen and giving her a 'K game of talk. His companions urged him to wait until they had broken the news of his arrival to her. Drawing an examination pad from his inside pocket he penned the following brief but trenchant note: DEAR Cousm VIC.-We have came. Will polish up my tan shoes and drop in on you in a day or so. Meanwhile Pat had telegraphed King Humbert that if he wanted to see a star historical impersonation by a strong com- pany, let him trot out his Alps and watch them get crossed. He added also the suggestion that the Roman Forum, which was reported to be very much out of repair, might be made as good 82 ' THE .M4SSAU HERALD. as new with a few barrels of Murphy Varnish. Teddie Hunt- ington had rung up the Rothschilds, and telephoned them that if they Wanted some bed-rock advice on the financial situation, that the President of the Princeton Track Association would let them examine his stock at reduced rates. If I could parte Finmcaise une pau, he said, t' Ild run across the Channel and take a fall out of the Panama combine. But as it is, I suppose I'l1 have to content myself with putting these Britishers on a sound silver basis and then selling them a few thousand shares in the Columbus ck Hocking Valleyf' Avast crowd gathered in Hyde Park to receive the distin- guished visitors, and were treated to an impassioned address by Doc. Love on the evils of apathy in International Track Ath- letics. His eloquence mounted to sublime- heights, and when he closed with that touching little sentiment, e ' H We're out for blood, We're out for gorefi the vivas of the crowd rent great holes in the London fog. From that day their tour became a grand triumphal march. Trafalgar Square was adorned with a life size statue of Doo. Love, in the attitude of The Sprinterf' Teddy Huntington, for his services was dubbed a knight, but I regret to say that at the banquet given in honor of the occasion, conducted himself so unbecoiningly that Pat and Doc. had to take a knight off. It grieves nie to turn from a picture of such bright festivity and look upon a scene of gloom and sorrow that is being enacted in a princely mansion on Fifth Avenue. Harding Crawford is there, handsome, dashing as ever, punctilious in dress, the very mould of fashion, as of yore But stay 5 his head is bowed in grief. His only son is speaking. I Yes, father, I have a terrible confession to make. Yester- day I committed a forgery, and to-day awarrant has been issued for my arrest! H Alas, my sonf' replies the stricken father, man is born to trouble as the sparks Hy upward. The next thing I know you will be wearing a high hat with a sack coat. The light of Bum Urbanls genius has illurnined the whole twentieth century. The subtle beauty of his poetry arises from PROPIIECY. 83 its perfect clearness andintelligibility. See him now as he paces back and forth in his sanctum, measuring off the floor in hex- ameter feet and repeating over the first verses of his latest mas- terpiece: . Since from its earthly mould the Human burst A con-created and perpetual thirst To the realms deiform hath borne us on. A fire by God's hands kindled at the first. These are the free-born spirits of the sky, And though their feet lie tangled up with rye, Before Love's might the morrow quickly sped Shall be the ever golden by-and-by. And thou, fair Face, that with my fancies troup, Thou sweetest pearl from out a wondrous group, Thou mayd'st me love the beauty of our race, How mournful 'tis that Love has flew the coop. Thou man of God, 0 surely thou canst tell The riddle of this dream 5 thou canst dispel - The shadows of this gloom, canst point the way That leadsito where none ask me Wot t'ell ? Harold McCormick devoted much time and attention to the field of original research in Chemistry. For a long time it Was his earnest endeavor to discover such an antidote as would en- able him to toss off a corrosive sublirnate cocktail before each meal, with perfect impunity. He was unsuccessful, however, and found that he would be obliged to limit himself, as in his Senior year at college, to an occasional drink of sublimate from the pitcher in which the bandages for his brother's ankle had been soaked. Walter Lord, as could readily have becn predicted in college, became an eminent divine. After three quiet, meditative years in the Seminary he took charge of a little flock in Mahonka- chunk, Mexico. In the midst of all the rush and hurry of his pastoral duties he still remembers the friendships of his col- lege days. One can 'ask for no more touching picture to-day, than on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, as the sin kingsun throws its slanting rays through the windows, lighting the dim interior of the cross-roads church and gilding its tiny spire, to see Wal- ter at the head of his little congregation, leading them in that grand oldlhymn: 84 THE NASSA U HERALD. There goes Phil Walker, He is a. corker. Head like a suuflsh. Who told you so? And here, the Prophet's Astral Body seems to have contracted a severe cold from loitering around in the draughty portions of inter-stellar space, for the prophetic vision has become so clouded that it is almost impossible to distinguish the different scenes before it. Sometimes Dray and Bottles Sherman appear in partnership, conducting a farm on which their attention is devoted exclu- sively to raising prunes and Kumyss. Once a year, at harvest- time, when the bending bushes are laden With the juicy stewed prunes, and the trees are heavily burdened with the ripe, luscious bottles of Kumyss, they gather a bushel of each and send them to their pastor-Condit, as a part of his 3600 salary. And then again, I seem to see Leeds, -bringing the Whole aris- tocracy of Stamford, Conn., down to New York in a steam launch to attend the performance at Kosterls. Sometimes a procession headed by Schumy. and Sport Porter, seems to wend its Way toward Cuba, the land of bull fights and strange, mys- terious drinks. In this procession, too, is Sammy Curtis, gen- erous, open-hearted as ever, distributing box after box of cigars to the .multitude along the Way, strewing cigarettes like roses in their path g just behind, toddles Jimmy Hayes, cheering all those about him with his genial smile, and optimistic comments, no longer as of yore, railing on Lady Fortune in good, set terms. Dimmer and dimmer grows the prophetic picture, and as my Astral Body sways on the boundary of Chaos, I seem to be in the presence of the pearly gates, with St. Peter looking down upon the applicants as they approach. First comes one of smiling countenance Whom I recognize as Cherub Wells. The guardian of the gate examines merely his face and lets him in Without conditions. Next, comes a round and portly figure none other than the shade of Parker Nevin. Your occupation? asks the keeper. I lived a life devoted to benevolence, says Parker. I made PROPHECY. 85 the world happy with my pungent witticisms, my scintillating jibes-my mirth-provoking jests, which I published in comic papers. Just so. Step into the elevator. Thank you. When does it go up? H It does'nt go up. It goes down. Saddened by this event, I Watched with interest the approach of another classmate. A Stop ! said the Saint, what is that under your arm ? Only the Earth. I L U - Oh come in Harold, with a bow of apology I might have known by your walk, that you owned it. Then came Babe Bunting, Billy Baird and many others who, being from Philadelphia, had taken a year to detect the fact that they were dead, all craving permission of St. Peter to spend their week-days in Paradise, and to take the 9.08 every Saturday back to John Wanamakerls Heaven. Then all faded away. , But across that desert waste of time above the very music of the spheres I heard the echo of a still small voice saying: If you fellowslll Chicj keep quiet, John Garrett'l1 open up the bar! ' 86 THE NASSAU HERALD. PRESIDENT'S ADDRESS. i A CHRISTY PAYNE. LASSMATES :--To-day from friend to friend, companion to companion, room-mate to room-mate, comes the unspoken and dreaded thought, You and I have but a few hours left i to share the last priceless privileges of our four years together-hours .from which the memories of battles fought side by side, victories' won in study and field, mutual disappoint- ments endured, or hopes of future renown, cannot remove the .' aching sense of sorrow ' which lies in the present time when we must partf' , Our 'eyes are dimmed with a starting tear when we are con- fronted with this necessity of leaving old scenes and old friends. We have been forming our characters in the beloved associations of academic training, and with every step in our upward pro- gress, with every new trait developed, with every fault overcome, with every study that has broadened our field of knowledge, with every struggle to attain the Christian ideals of the heart and mind, we remember some classmate's example, his assistance, his influence, his face and form inseparably bound up in memory with the daily development of our better selves. So closely entwined in brotherhood have our fellowships be! come, that we cannot look on to the future save through a gloomy cloud that darkens the lustre of our hopes-the cloud of regret that is cast over us by this separation, with the cloud of fear for what Providence has in store for us-we need all the courage and all the determination of our natures, all the steady observation and insight of our training,,after passing through the sacred and tender farewells of this week, to face the new circum- stances into which we are to be transferred and to meet the responsibilities which will be demanded of us, far sterner than , PRESIDENTUS ADDRESS. 87 those lightly borne in our younger years. Yet if .we hope in the future to know the true nature of the men we are to meet, to reach the secrets of new friendships, to attack persistently the problems and hardships before us, to be always loyal to our em- ployments, our principles and our Maker, we must remember and be grateful to the friendship of the men who have so known our thoughts, appreciated our virtues and loved us with the bright countenance of honor crowned in our Alma Mater. With what reverential praise and tender feelings we speak that sacred name as she breathes her farewell blessings upon us! We' can never forget how her hand ever directed our wandering steps. toward the high place of knowledge and held up before us the purer purposes of life while she drew about us a charmed circle of the best friends a man can have. Grenerosity such has that can only be acknowledged by a constant remembrance which shall magnify in word and deed the high honor of her famej , fVVhile we, who have attained the very end .of a successful course, are saying a sad good-bye to college and to each other, let us remember those who surrendered earthly hopes and friends when the stream of life was just flowing into broader and deeper channels, when thevista opened up before with sunlit prospects and the world was hard to leave. To us Providence has granted a longer life, that with deeper reverence and gratitude we may ohfer a loving tribute.. to those who have already answered the call of the Father to an earlier separation. So let us bring all back' in memory to-day, that the roll call of the class may be complete in spirit, if not in sound-that silence may mean, Gone a little way before but not forgotten. W As a class we have listened for the last time to the tones of the bell in Old Nassau, but through ,the future years of our life there shall ring in our hearts the sweet but sad tones of a memory bell, telling again and again the story of our four years in Prince- ton, brought to a close in these last parting moments. Whether We have followed or failed to hear the wise counsels of our kindly guide in the past, may we, when We each one take a Hower from this wreath emblematic of our affectionate unity, commit ourf selves earnestly and heartily to a noble life-work which shall promise an eternal reunion to the Class of Ninety-Five. '95 CLASS ODE. Words by Louxs C. Woomumf, Music by Rox.uN Z. Hmrrznnn. I- - ' I II Ii- I--I I - . I- ' I I- -II 1- 5---I -I Qi- -I-,I--1: S391 13553935321 'QQISIZSI' A221333 ' I. While be - neath the elms we lin - ger, Sad to leave our cool-ing shade, 2. Thro' four mer - ry ,years of glad- ness We have reached the welcome day: 3. Pleas - ant friendships, long and last - ing, That are formed with-in these elms, 4. Class-mates, as a-round the can - non VVe must leave our sad fare-well. ' -9- -0- -0- .-+---. - --L+ P .. . - Q5 IPIEJQY'-5551315-f5E33Z5521,5E5 -9 , - ,. - ,, -II L, L,- .. - I' I- I' I' mp-1-1 - -L+ -1- -1- -1 :I-fvieff-i111-4:3-ifzg-5FUE1gI1- 'f-iivpiilvji jimi 5 ' -5- d -6- -6- -0- -5-. 5 I I 0 Let us hymn to Al-ma Ma - ter, Strains with mem - o - ries in - laid. Now the fu - ture lies be - fore us ln a dim, un -cer-tain Way. Thro' the years will e'er be cher-ishecl,Tho we live in dis-tant realms. Raise your voic - es in the cho - rus, All your loy al feel-ings tell. I--- ste ' L.. I ,Q ,I 3 I 11.22-I: -Q- '-'-,.i,!: E-QVIEEEZIZE Itiigijijg QSEEIEIEQI ssl'- I I I I ' i I -I :F I :I QL T'I,L5I:3,I:QI: :ITL- -'IT :- Iv:-E ITIQ12lTL- gIlLi '0.lQU-UQIESF' -sf-5'-F T0 -gg 0-L ' -9 With a true and loy-al spir - it, Let us all u-nit: ed singg But life's long and clouded vis - ta Will be cheered as sea-sons pass, Let not thoughts of com-ing strug-gles Mar the pres - ence of the lxourg Tho' no more we dwell to - geth - er, When with for - tune stern we strive, ' -0- -5- ' -0- -0- -0- QT-I'-3 4: itil ....-:gr:fSL fig? lg!-i'EQE,fE: Q- . . -- -L .R -5 . If-few-I-E wr--L 5-I7-I:- -:I:iI:-.I-wI:gleI:,,lI:-tiEg-1,l!1-.':E:r:: 'H' I 'Q eoliglgjjg- -.54 'i'IE-gIi1I-.W-I'I.-:- gall as-2-Qenzm d 3 5:I:fi-L-2-W-'H ,-'- lerulli- '-'em -5-L Let the free, me-lo-dious ech - oes Make the old 'l'ri-:1n- gle ring. When fond mem-'ries bring be - fore us Vis - ions of our p1rt- ccl class. Part - ing is a sad-den'd sweetness, Min - glecl with a won-drous pow'r. Ev - cry year we'll love thee bet - ter, Dear old class of Nine-ty - liive. -A I9 A-Q-Q -9 ,I rs-, H7-1 . Pzghi -I2-Zire-211-HQ-eeEEE:c:: T- I li 'J I I I I9 I2IW'? - IF'L':9-Ii'II'-'I'- I I ' CLASS N OTI CE. 89 ,QS CLASS NOTICE. All those who have at any time been members of the Class of '95, either for a part or the Whole of the course, will greatly fa- cilitate the compilation of the annual record by notifying the Secretary immediately in regard to any change of residence or occupation, of engagement or marriage, etc. ANDREW C. IMBRIE, CLASS SECRETARY. 32 West 17th Street, New York City. IN MEMORIAIVI. Euerhzerf i1Blnnign1nBJ:gBBr,g12n, DIED JULY 22, I893. Ghmarh 301131112 Ezngjnn, DIED Aucus'r s, 1894. .f Earrg IEJZBHIBQ Cllnhh, DIED NOVEMBER 2l, l894. F QI? ' QQESEQTQQJ STATISTICS 92 THE NASSAU HERALD. EHMIG. D fU3H 5. OF'9 SS LH G OFTHE EMBERS -M EX M E 5, U5 ES 5 Q a E Q S ... 'B . I.. I 833 e 3 3 D Na- . v - o 2 FEE . Eg 1.? . . Q. 5323 2 ia gag 2 5 as .E .E P1 KD U1 . 6 OIOOUJCNICSIOTCOCVJCNYHCXIQIYPIQIODODNQIOICVDOIOIOGCNI 9091 99????9??999999????9??99 'WWNW SEESEEESSEEESEEEESESESEE Q W H Pi Q ' .. . .. 3 .. .........H.....--.. H Q.....p-c.E,Pi...gg..qi-..!Hgj.'-5 Z . -.. pq js.:'n-,n.,..p-lj.:-Z-T, EI '.,'51...zT '-3.,,.-had J E'7' :',i'N'5'Z'1'fPZ0:-:'hP-4,5-- 2 HwHEwQwzh-f- rwzs-hwngg H 52550-Efif5Sa55.i25SEiEr :51a:gg:EQw6-E3zgmg3gggU gbbglogvgg Sr-420,54 -cr: +27-' Any' F-cz C9539-.Q 3::o..-'54,,.,,2oE::49.aw5GP EdiE5:885w2Ex3'mE52?SdvE H - M ooomm4ommzeomm5Aowamm?5w Q .'. .. ... . . 2 . I A .u.q.- Q l:? I'L-'nd '-If -.- gg..h.6'l'...,.rn...Qrq. ,gtg-. ,Q4n.4g,..3!:mfgL-.P-ao.: .3-Q,, ::.-,509-...-FB4m mi W659m:Q4,-m:5NWfgi: , -35 -,.g-A-mm5'.d,Qm4 nvosm Q-wg, umm -m Q- . zip OSw-245--Q-AW wicca ada E15 ,j5f1:1g,QQ,Q'g5Z',.v3'm'm'xE2.s ,LQPTQSEQ or-4:-.wr-.Em 'xmd.J 'F '-'UCDUQCD EQQQSQOZESQESZZSSEQQEONQ ' I-4 Q I-1 ' 44mmmmmmoooQQmQmmmmAASES ' EX-MEMBERS OF THE OLASS OF '95-ACADEMIC. D-2 Q4-1 O D 43 5 T5 E' O -... A -2 . . . 5 2 3 3 13 3 E l :H :H .2 .15 f15'15 us.2,,3 60 as Mus Zuma u32.1j4i'-2 an Ciiqmf-'m G m Gm mmm rn Q mmqq an --1--' usda: .,- cv --al ,Dona cu FQ qpqgo .E .2.2p.1.EE.E -,gf .E 'SE 5.5.5 .E gg .E.E'4.1 m mgm B us ,gm mmm- w Q Emp, gs -:sos QE, :4 Qs :ss :s .no an 2EZm+1r:Q ,gm P51 am Enom on E mend: p-'I1-11-1CQl'41-'r-Cr 4SQCql-lr-ll-1r lr-ll-l1 lI-l!-l I-lv-41-ll-'ll-4r'4r'4F'lF4'-4l'l!-1 9'S':??9'9'9'95?'??9'??9'?9'E Q5 ??S'H?E'59'E ?959'?S .6......l.... .. Tr- l-P-I.'oga.. -.- .,5Z'5-8,-.N ... zz. :ww ,- fa-Fw T f biz- fg'?D4E's,d T4 '51 ,,dJ.... I Z71 :-p,1O05i2K. F7 ' y-47 ' ,, QWQZZEDS - 'U-5 Ep-1 -bo '-Z-EOM -:U P00 ,mira - -52 ,-:Ziff-if-if, - Z 3 Q--g5g,'2H sie ED -SUBSES -sOa Os:2-5-E::1S-- 1iwO:JSo'24' O2 gnf..+,7g.ggFg:P'43?+-ojqog' an . gdgwwgmgnggwg 'E..1Qg1J:'se:Egc:g2 g'6n-15214, 32 1:92 55.52 'ggg vog---...S'E'Ensa:2o,q,..,E43,,.Q'5' G2L1'EI,-CIUOg,.:1go.a0:3 cbmmdomomzazmmomaqmo- zgmcL+zAmc.mmzm .ffl fffff5....m . . . x.. pq . r-1. - -.. . - ' r-'Shir- S gI'f-1'IrFgqf 4l QL-T,,:1lw':'. C5f'Z'Q .Jdrffi dry 141 815 ldamgmgcgmqa 'E9'fpi5v-S EEp-iz .- D rm , . F.,-...m lg-v. I'-.m. ,Egan .rw3mPb3335E'j'im.E3 mmmpiwivgmkqng ' -'-1, ...,':: N+2 ,.,- -as- M - m-gg 355534: 5333355-5:5 gqcqygaq-,-gg,,-sag .,2c:2v,i,,fv.c1Q,-'S 3'E,BO::3388 CDS-71: QEEQOSEP -------1odO'5',fgQodG3,qa bbosiof-.aoS.r1,CI.-4.-448 12EE1zmmmmaf:mmffmab??B? fummmrraoooocwn THE NASSAU HERALD. ell 1-2 P4 fa, fs P' E A New York Citv, . '91 '93 Member of '96. sy , , 1 192 New . Am . Pr . . . . 1V a I . . . '91 '82 ng Vicksburg, ' , . . . '91 '92 Business. y, , . . '91 '94 i Williamsport, Pa., . . .x '91 '92 Business. Denver, Col ,. . . . . '91 '92 Business. New York City, . . . '91 '92 Business. Chillicothe, O.,. . . '91 '93 Business. . . . d C Wilkes-Barre, Pa., . . '91 '93 Business. .5 o o fs 71 gW CI TQ U Miami-IE 5' O V7.5 Pu co MM 'E' 5 ,Il O .... 4:65514 rn -H rm .- 7 me-1eip'f'E i'5'aow N .i-5,,, d,-j .. U' .- r-4 EG:-T ,Q :ax giozfggjlgvn an NW .,.. Psa O E an 5 Ddeimwmhb STA TISTIOS. 95 SUMMARY. COURSE OF STUDY. Academic. . ............. . . 151 Scientiic. . . . 30 Engineering. . . . 18 Specials .... . 16 Total ...... . . 215 Entered Class in 1891. . H H H ' it Cl ll I I ff If H1894. . Whig. . . 97 Clio. . . . 59 Neither ..... . . . 9 Philadelphism Society . . - 99 St. Pau1's Society. . . - 21 Neither ....... - 95 Born in 1865. . . - 1 U 1866. . . - 0 -f ff 1867.. . - 2 ff H1868.. . - 2 ff -I 1869 .. . - 3 H H1870.. . - 5 H H1871.. . - 14 H ff 1s72.. . . 44 ff H ma.. . - 77 ff H1874... .. .... .. - 42 U 1875 . . . ............. . - 9 ' Favorite Year, 1873. Maximum Age' at Graduation . . ' . . 29 yrs. 6 mos. 22 days. 96 THE NASSA U HERALD. Minimum 4' 4' H - . 19 yrs. 7 mos. 11 days Average H ..... 21 yrs. 2 mos. Maximum Weight . . ....... 92-16 lbs. Minimum H . . . . . 120 lbs. Average A .... . . 148175 lbs. Maximum Chest Measure . . . . . 46 ins Minimum U U . . . . 32 ins Average ff . . . .382 ins Maximum Height . . . . . 6 ft. 3 ins Minimum 4' . . . . 5 ft. 4 ins Average 4' ................. . . 5 ft. 85 ins INTENDED OCCUPATIONS. Law . . . ........... - . . . . . 50 Business. . . . 41 Medicine . . . 25 Theology . . . 25 Engineering . . . 23 Teaching . . 7 Architect . . 1 Chemistry . . 1 Journalism . . 1 Undecided . . ................. . 41 , RELIGIOUS DENOMINATION. Presbyterians ................... . . 130 Episcopalians . . . 30 Methodists . .... . 10 Oongregationalists . . 4 Baptists ..... 4 Dutch Reform . . 4 Lutherans. - . 3 Quaker .... 1 N on-Sectarian . . ,.,.,, , 29 POLITICS. Republicans . . ...... . . 121 Democrats . . . , 41 Independents . . , 17 Prohibitionists . . 2 Populist . . . . ........ . . . . 1 FAVORITE SPORTS. Foot-ball . . . . . 43 Fishing . . . 4 ijff 1 T x ,Wg 2 51 T P 1 1 G l V' -ff I . il , 'I ii ,. ki STA TIS TI CS. Base-ball. . . Tennis . .' .' Shooting . . Riding . . . Swimming . Boating . .' Skating. . . Golf .... LaCrosse . . Scott. .I . . Dickens- .D .- Shakespeare Eliot.. . . Crawford. .I .E Lytton. . . Thackeray. . Doyle .H . . .D Hawthorne . Gunther. . . Longfellow. Dumas. . . Tennyson . Cooper. . Irving. . Norris. . . Blackmore. Emerson. . Wallace. . Reade . . Riley.. . . Haggard. . Hardy. . . Balzac. . . Stephenson. Ouida.. . . History . E. Literature . Mathematics Philosophy. Law .... Biology . . . 39 Cycling . . . 24 Track . . . . 12 Boxing . . . 8 Whist . . . . . 7 Gymnastics. . . 7 Miarbles . . . . 4 Cricket . . . 3 Wzrllcing . . . . . 2 Hockey . . . . FAVORITE AUTHOR. . . . 26 Bronte. . . . 14 Harte . . . 14 Kipling . . . 13 Ross. . . . 13 Carlisle. . . . 11 Taine. . . . 11 Moses. . ., 7 Stocker . . 6 Hunt . . . 5 Holmes . .- . , 5 Bumrner. . . 3 Page . . . 2 Davis . . . 2 Meyer. . . . 2 Rossetti . . . . 2 Calderwood . . . 2 Evans. . . . 2 Wynian. . . 2 Huston . . . 2 Twain. . , 1 Shelley . . . 1 Ibsen . . . 1 Rankin . . . 1 Hope . . . 1 Byron. . . .... 1 Wister . . FAVORITE STUDY. .... 26 Bridges .. . 17 fEsthetics. . . 16 English . . . 15 Sociology. . . 13 Nature.. . . 10 Palaeontology 98 THE NASSAU' HERALD. Art . . ..... . 7 Anglo Saxon. . . Political Economy . . 7 Philology . . . Astronomy ..... . 6 Logic .... Latin- . . . . . . 6 German. . . . . Bible . . . . 6 Theism . . . . . Language . . . 5 Modern Language Physics ,... . 4 Natural History . Finance ..... . 4 Engineering . . Natural Science. . . . 3 Classics . . . . Political Science . . . 3 Hebrew . . . . Chemistry ..... 3 Architecture. . . Greek ....... . . 3 Anatomy . -. Evidence Christianity, . . . 2 Physiology. . . Fiction. ...... . . . - 2 Pedagogics. . . Blue . . . Brown . . Gray . Pink . . Brown. . Black . . eg... sg... sg... 7.. 71... 14 . 1. 1495. 15 5... 51... 6... eg... 7... 75... 8... COLOR OF EYES. . . 71 Green. . . 56 Black . . . 40 Hazel . . COLOR OF HAIR.. . . . 138 Blonde . . . . . 30 Red. . . SIZE OF HAT. . . 2 . 4 . 30 . 58 38 SIZE OF 11 . 42 65 SIZE . . 4 7 . 23 . 26 . 29 . 32 . 27 OF 75 72 71-... 73... COLLAR. 155... 16. l65.. SHOES. 35 9 . 95 10 105 . . 11 . STA TISTICS. 99 Handsomest Man in Class . . Most Popular Man in Class. Best All-Round Man in Class . . . Best Foot-Ball Player .... Best Base-Ball Player. . . Best All-Round Athlete . . Most Awkward Man in Class Finest Moustache in Class . Worst Poller in Class .... Laziest Man in Class. . . . . . Gus Holly . . Jake Otto Dougal Ward . Frank Morse . . Jake Otto Dougal 'Ward Dougal Ward John Harding . Sister Faris . Soc. Huston Favorite Preacher-Dr. Purves. Favorite Female Christian Name-Trilby, Maud, Helen. Favorite Songs-H Old Nassau and ff Orange and Black. Favorite Hymn- Ein Feste Burg. Favorite Electives-History of Philosophy, History, Law. Favorite Plays of Shakespeare-'L Hamlet and 4' Merchant of Venice. Predominant Reasons for Preferring Princeton- Best College, Demo- cratic Spirit, ff Hereditary, The Halls. Play Cards. ....... ..... . . 186 Play Billiards . . . . 153 Smoke . .... . . 129 Chew ....... . . 2 Dance . ....... . . 161 Opposed to Dancing. . . 17 Go to Theatre ...... . . 178 Opposed to Theatre-Going. . . . . 18 Favorite Actor ...... - - . JGEGTSOH Favorite Actress ...... . . Ada Rehan Summoned before Faculty . . . . . - 56 Sent Home. ........ . . 11 Conditioned ....... - - 103 Have Pawned Articles . . - - 47 Sent to Cranbury . . . . - 2 Pollers ...... - 55 Loafers . . . - - 22 Both ..... - - 49 Neither ..... - 42 Defective Sight. . . - - 64 Use Glasses 1 .... . . 55- Defective Hearing . . - 7 With Beard . ., . . - 4 With Moustache , . . - - 53 Now Engaged. . - - 18 100 THE NA SSA U HERALD. Ever Engaged . . . 29 Rejected. . . . . 17 FAVORITE STYLE OF BEAUTY. Brunette. . . .................. . 96 Blonde . . . 67 Members of Athletic Teams . . . 34 Members of Social Clubs ................. . 74 Athletic Prizes Taken. ......... ' ......... . . 70 Favor lnter-Collegiate Games with University of Pennsylvania . . . 38 Literary Prizes Taken . .................. . 70 Favor Compulsory Chapel . .... ' ' .......... . . 111 Favor Increase of Cuts for Seniors . . . . 171 Favor Co-Education ....... . . . . 1 Favor Woma11's Suffrage . . . . . , . . 22 Favorite Newspaper .... . . N Y. Tribune Favorite Magazine. ..... .... C' entwry Favor Student Government . . . . . 171 Favor Fraternities at Princeton . . . . 20 Members of Fraternities. .... . 19 FAVORITE CLASS OF READING. Fiction' ..... . . 112 History ...... . 20 Historical Novels. . . 11 Miscellaneous . . . . 11 Poetry. ..... . 7 Science . .U . 3 Sociology . . , 3 Phimsophy.. . . 2 Biography. . . . 1 Magazines. . . . 1 Newspapers . . , 1 Classics . . . , 1 Religious , . .............. . 1 AVERAGE EXPENDITURES. ' Freshman Year ......... , 5,5629 10 Sophomore Year. . . , 684 61 Junior Year , , , I 781 37 Senior Year . . 811 00 STA TISTICS. 101 MAXIMUM EXPENDITURES. Freshman Year Sophomore Year . . . ' Junior Year. . Senior Year. . MINIMUM EXPENDITURES. Freshman Year. ........ . . . .,.. . . Sophomore Year Junior Year . . . Senior Year . .... . Favorite Instruments-Banjo, Piano, 'Cello, Organ, M Average Hour Retiring Average Hour Rising. Agerage Number of Girl Correspondents . . Write Poetry . . . Been Published . . . . . Support Themselves Wholly . . Support Themselves Partially ,.......... Ever Engaged in Religious Work Outside of College. . Have Read Bible Through . ........... . Members of any other College ........... Sing ............ Bass. . . Tenor . . Baritone. . Soprano. . . Any Part . . . . I .S1,400 00 ' . . 2,000 00 3,300 00 3,500 00 . 3200 . 100 . 150 . 200 00 00 00 00 andolin, Violin. 20 46 ......11: ..7: 2 50 . '15 18 24 53 65 . 21 . 111 38 21 6 1 11 THE NASSAU HERALD. MISCELLANEOUS STATISTICS. OFFICERS OF '95. ' Freshman Year. President-J. P. Poe. Vice-President-A. L. Wheeler. Secretary and Treasurer-H. M. Anderson. J. S. Otto. Historian-G. A. Hall. Sophomore Y ear. . President-T. G. Trenchard. Vice-President-L. F. Pease. , Secretary and Treasurer-T. S. Huntington. Historians-J. F. Weiss. X D. A. Brown: Junior Year. President-J. Blair. N Vice-President-H. A. Colby. Secretary-R. A. Inch. Treasurer-T. S. Huntington. Historian-J, F. Weiss. Senior Year. President-C. Payne. Secretary-A. C. Imbrie. Historian-J. F. Weiss. Junior Orator Appointments. WHIG- H CLIO. A. C. Imbrie. W, H, Butler E. M. Norris. J, C, Caton, STA. TI S TI CS. ' 103 W. M. Urban. H. E. White. WHIG. W. F. Burns. A. Hayes, J r J. W. Park. HALL PRIZE MEN FROM Junior Orator Medals. lst. H. E. White. 2d. R. H. Carter. 3d. A. C. Imbrie 4th. W. H. Butler. McLean Prize. B. L. Hirshfield. Washingion's Birthday Debaters. Freshman Year-D, M, Weeks. Sophomore Year-W. D. Ward. Junior Year-W. H. Butler. Senior Year-B. L. Hirshfield. Washington's Birthday Orators. Freshman Year-J. H. Thacher. Sophomore Year-R. E. Ross. Junior Year-W. M. Urban. Senior Year-J. S. Frame. Iqynde Debate Appointments. WHIG HALL. Q Freshman Y ear. Essays-W. M. Urban. Speaking-lst. A. Dunn. 2d. C. L. Candee Class Debate-H. E. White. Sophomore Year. Oratory-lst. E. M. Norris. 2d. J. H, Thacher. '95 R. H. Carter. B. L. Hirshfield CLIO. S. L. Haynes. B. L. Hirshfield F. M. Lewis. THE NASSA U HERALD. Essays-A. C. Imbrie. ' Class Debate-W. M. Urban. HARVARD DEBATERS W. H. Butler. J. W. Park. H. C. White. YALE DEBATERS. W. F. Burns.- B. L. Hirshlield. Junior Year: Essays-lst. P. G. Huston. 2d. T. Ross. Debate-lst. A. R. We11s.' Qd, J. J. Hurst. Extempore Speaking-lst. U. L. Candee. Zd. J. J. Hurst. Senior Year. Oratory-lst. W. F. Burns. Qd. A. Dunn. ' General Debate-W. R. Cook. Extempore Speaking-A. O. Imbrie. CLIO HALL. Freshman Year. Essays-lst. W. W. Beveridge. 2d. J. R. Flemming. Speaking-lst. C. L. Fiske. 2d. R. H. Carter. Sophomore Year. Oratory-lst. F. C. McO1ave. 2d. R. H. Carter. Essays-lst. N. B. Harrison. 2d. R. H. Carter, Debate-lst. B. L. Hirshfleld- 2d. V. H. Lukens. STA TISTICS. 105 Junior Year. Essays-lst. C. B. Condit. F. W. Lewis. Class Debate-lst. B. L. Hirshfield. 2cl. V. H. Lukens. Divisional Debate-B. L. Hirshfielcl. General Debate- Extempore Speaking-S. L. Haynes. Senior Year. Oratory-lst. F. W. Lewis. 2d. V. H. Lukens. Divisional Debate-F. W. Lewis. General Debate-F. W. Lewis. Essays-lst. B. L. Hirshiield. 2d. A. P. Nevin. BAIRD PRIZE-MEN. Baird Prize-A. C. Imbrie. Prize in Oratory--W. H. Lukens. Prize in Delivery-W. H. Butler. Prizes in Disputation--lst. J. W. Park. Zd. A. Hayes, Jr. APPOINTMENTS FOR BAIRD CONTESTS. For Baird Prize-W. H. Butler, R. D. Hatch, B. L. Hirshield, A. C Imbrie, E. M. Norris, A. R. Wells. ' For Oratory-R. H. Carter, J. T. Faris, A. Hayes, Jr., V. H. Lukens H. A. McNulty, R. E. Ross, D. M. F. Weeks. FIRST-HONOR SCHOLARS. Freshman Year-A. R. Wells. Junior Year-J. T. Faris. SOPHOMORE SPECIAL HONORS. Latin-Christy Payne, D. F. Platt. ' Mathematics-H. D. Carpenter, C. Payne, D. F. Platt, W. D. Ward Modern Languages-E. H. Hoos. THE NASSA U HERALD. D. F. Platt, H. M. Bergen, J. H. Bowman, F. C. Bradner, W. H. Butler, H. D. Carpente B.. H. Carter, W. B. Cooke, ' C. E. Dechant, J. S. Frame, E. D. Hardin, rv N. B. Harrison, H. M. Canby, 1J.T. Faris, D. F. Platt, H. M. Bergen, F. C. Bradner, W. H. Butler, H. D. Carpenter, R, H. Carter, W. B. Cooke, W. R. Darby, C. E. Dechant, N. B. Harrison, R. D. Hatch, F. de H. Janvier, GENERAL HONORS. FRESHMAN YEAR. First Group. A. Second Group. B. Wells. R. D. Hatch, F. D. Janvier, W. G-. Libby, S. R. McCormick, H. A. McNulty, X J. S. Newbold,. C. Payne, J. Polcar, W. M. Urban, H. E. White. School of Science. SOPHOMORE YEAR. First Group. E. S. La Fetra. W. D. Ward, 1 A. R. Wells. Second Group. V, H. Lukens, S. R. McCormick H. A. McNulty, J. S. Newbold, C. Payne, X J. Polcar, R. E. Ross, H. E. Shaw, E. T. Stewart, W. M. Urban. 9 ' STA TISTIOS. 107 School 0. A. Parker, R. W. Gibbs, H. D. Carpenter, J. T. Faris, R. D. Hatch, F. C. Bradner, W. H. Butler, A. S. Cook, W W. B. Cook, J. F. Crawford, J. S. Crawford, W. R. Darby, D. W. Dezrter, J. R. Flemming, C. S. Foster, R. P. Harris, N. B. Harrison, A. Hayes, E. H. Hoos, F. de H. Janvier, IQ. Kennedy, R. L. Kennedy, F. W. Lewis, of Science - B. S. H. M. Canby, C. E. Course. JUNIOR YEAR. First Group. Second Group. Course. E. S. La Fetra. C. A. Poole. D. F. Platt J. C. Sloane, W. D. Ward. V. H. Lukens, S. R. McCormick, H. A. McNulty, J. S. Newbold, E. M. Norris, E. R. Othernan, J. W.. Park, C. Payne, R. E. Ross, W. I. Seymour, ' A. M. Sherman, J. C. Smith, E. T. Stewart, W. M. Urban, F. C. Van Sellar, D. MJF. Weeks, A. R. Wells. School of Science-B. S. Course. 0. A. Parker, E. S. La Fetra, 02 E. Course. C. A. Poole. SENIOR YEAR.. R. NV. Bailey, H. M. Canby. The announcement for General Excellence too late for publication. 108 THE NASSA U HERALD. COMMENCEMENT APPOINTMENTS. , Valedictorian-R. D. Hatch. Latin Salutatory-W. D. Ward. English Salutatory-D, F. Platt. MISCELLANEOUS PRIZE-MEN. Sophomore Mathematical Prize-W. D. Ward. Francis Biddle Essay Prize-W. M. Urban. Sophomore English Prize-A. C. Imbrie. Dickinson Prize-J. F. Crawford. Wanamaker English Prize-H. A. McNulty. Class of 170 English Prize-Anglo-Saxon, H. B. Muster. English Lit- erature,-J. T. Faris, . Special Prize in Histology-R. L. Wadhams. X ' Nassau Lit. Editors. J. H. Thacher, Managing Editor, J. Bunting, Treasurer, E. M. Norris, A. C. Imbrie, F. B. Morse, H. E. White, W. M. Urban. Pfrincetonian Editors from '95. W. H. Butler, Managing Editor, C. H. Bissell, V. K. Irvine, Asso- ciate Managers, D. R. James, Jr., Business Manager, W. B. Cooke, T. S. Huntington, F. C. Speer. Nassau Heralrl Editors. Aa P. Nevin, W. H. Beveridge, J. S. Crawford, A. Dunn, W. H. MCCLJll. Brio-a-Bvctc Editors. G. A. Brown, H. W. Garrett, Jno. W. Garrett, T. S. Huntington, S. R. McCormick, Walter Moses, Arthur Schumacher, F. C. Speer. Tennis Association Ojicers from 295. Freshman Year-H. F, McCormick, Director. J Sophomore Year-H. A. Colby, Secretary, H. F. McCormick, Treas- urer. Junior Year-G. P. Herrick, President., Ojicers of Track Association from '95, Junior Year-T. S. Huntington, Treasurer. ,Senior Year-T. S. Huntington, Manager, D. R. James, Captain. STA TISTIUS. CALEDONIAN GAMES. WINNERS OF PRIZES FROM '95. June Zlth, 1892. 5-Mi1e Run-Gray, second. 1-Mile Run-Koehler, second. 120-Yard Hurdle-Ldrd, third. High Jump-E. McCormick, third. 16-Pound Shot-Wheeler, third. Hammer-Wheeler, flrstg Taylor, second. .Izme,10tl1,, 1893. 100-Yard Dash-McNulty, first. Q,-Mile Run--Gray, Hrst. 1-Mile Run-Leggate, third. ' 220-Yard Hurdle-James, secondg Johnson, third 220-Yard Dash-McNulty, second. Pole Vault-Offut, second. Hammer-Taylor, Iirst. 16-Pound Shot+Tay1or, third. June 2, 1894. 100-Yard Dash-McNulty, second. High Jump-North, third. 16-Pound Shot-Taylor, seoondg Phillips, third. 880-Yard Run-Love, third. 1-Mile Run-Caton, Hrst: 1-Mile Walk-Sinead, second. 120-Yard Hurdle-Lord, first. 220-Yard Hurdle-James, second. Hammer.-Taylor, first. May 6, 1895. 100-Yard Dash-McNulty, third. 120-Yard Hurdle-Lord, second. 220- Yard Dash-McNulty, third. 220-Yard Hurdle-James, firstg Johnson, second. 1-Mile Walk-Smead, second. 5-Mile Run-Love, third. 16-Ib. Hammer-Taylor, second. X 110 THE NAS U HERALD. SA 16-Tb. Shot-Craig, third. Pole Vault-Kellernmn, third. High J urnp--North, third. Broad Jump-Craig, third. FEL LO-VVSHI?S.'X' Chancellor Green Fellow in Mental Science - A Fellow in Classical Literature- J. S. K. Fellow in Mathematics- ' Boudinot Fellow in Modern Langnages - Boudinot Fellow in History- Clafss of 1860 Fellow in Experimental Science - Special Fellowship in English. il' Announced too late for publication. Members of Mott Haoerz Tenmfrom 295. James, Capt., Catou, McNulty, Kumler, Love, Smead er, Taylor, Craig, Thacher. '95 Freshman Foot-ball Team. Bunting, Trenchard, H. Hodge, J. Reynolds, Pease, McFarlane, Beveridge Fulper, Morse, Munn, James, Capt. '95 Men on 'Varsity Foot-ball Teams. ' , Koehler, Wheel: Trenchard, Captain, Wheeler, Holly, Ward, Brown, Taylor, Poe, Flint, Morse. CLASS BASE-BALL TEAMS, Freshman Year. Snyder, p., Bissel, c., Otto, lb., Captain, Payne, c. f.g Blair, l. f.5' Davis, r. f. 3 Francis, s. s. 3 Gould, 2b. 5 Trenchztrd, 3b. Sophomore Year. Irvine, p., Bissel, c., Otto, lb., Brooks, Zb., Payne, s. s., Francis, 3db. 5 Trenchard, c. f. 5 Davis, r. f. 5 Blair, l. f. STATISTICS. 111 Junior Year. -Barr, p.5 Bissel, c. 5 Otto, lb. 5 Brooks, Capt., 2b., Payne, s. s.g Ward 3b.g Blair, 1. f. 3 Neill, c. f, 5 Trenchard, r. f. Senior Year. Barr, p., Bissel, c., Otto, lb., Brooks, Capt., 2b.g Payne, s. s Bd., Blair, 1. f., Trenchard, c. f. 9 Neill, r. f. 'Varsity Base-ball Men from 795. Payne, Otto, Ward, Brooks, Blair, Bissel, Trenchard. Treasurer and Manager of Base-ball Association-C. H. Bissel. Treasurer and Manager of Foot-ball Association-E. Munn. '95 Men on University Glee Club. A. R. Teal, Leader, J. C. Harding, C. L. Candee, H. L. Crawford, G. W. Garrett, W. G. Baird, T. H. Pierson, L. F. Pease, C. Payne, F. Murphy, Harold F. McCormick, Manager. '95 Men on University Banjo Club. J. W. Decker, Leader, B. L. North, J. W. Lord, F. C. Speer, R. Clay, A. S. Andrews, S. R. McCormick, C. V. Carrol, J. F. Weiss. '95 Men on University Mandolin Club. R. Clay, Leader, W. H. Roberts, D, Speer, R. L. North, G. White, J. F. Weiss, J. W. Decker. '95 Freshman Glee Club. L. F. Pease, . . . Leader- H, H, Brady, , . Business Manager. Ward THE NASSAU HERALD. TENORS. C. L. Candee, T. H. Pierson, J . W. Garrett, W. L. Sawyer, C. L. Hamilton, C. L. Fisk, H. L.-Crawford. Bnssns, A. R. Teal, R. L. North, H. Koehler, R. Z. Hartzler, X L. F. Pease, H. McCormick. Freshman Banjo Club. E. J. Foulke ,... Leader. BANJOURINES. A ' E. J. Foulke, W. Lord, J. W. Decker, W. H. Morse, FIRST BANJO. O. R. Bill. M. K. Elmer, S. R. McCormick W. H. Snyder, M emb A. R. Teal, H. W. Koehler, L. F. Pease, Beveridge Bradner, Butler, Conrow, Cramer, Crawford, H. L. Darby, Egbert, 1 SECOND BANJOS. V E. R. Otheman. MANDOLIN. F. R. Bacon. GUITARS. W. H. Roberts, J. S. Crawford. ers of College Choir from '95. . . . Teapher. . Assistant Leader. . . Organist. Hamilton, Murphy, Harding, North, Hartzler, Otheman, Haynes, Otto, Herrick , Payne, Hodge, Pierson, Huntington, Robertson, Inch, Shaw, STATISTICS. 113 Fisher, LaFetra., Sherman, Fiske, - , Lane, I ' Waldo, Frame, Mcoormick, H., White, Furnajieff, M0001-mick, S., Wynlan. V .Members of Triangle Club from ' President,--Franklin B. Morse. Manager-A. F. Holly. Agens, ' Frame, ' Thaoher, Smith, Carroll, Teal, Inch, ' John Garrett, Robertson, Franklin Murphy, Pierson, 1 Baird, Walker, Otheman, Pease. C. L. 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I7 1-1 o v :ii 1. 1. :1 f Q 5-lU.O.U.UUU.U,OQQQ Q Q Q I-ilkl ' Lu vi VA lay, 'Rhodes . . .. . ...... . . B 'S Mexico, Mo. . .. . . .... . 8 S. W. . . jan 19, '75 40 160 6 Law .... Epis. . Dem.. . . . Shooting .. . .... . . . . . . Law . . . . . Henry. nlby, Howard Augustus ..... B S 3 E. 6oth St., New York ........ . 2 M. D.. . May 10, '73 40 150 5- SM .., ..... Bapt . Rep. . . . . Shooting .. . Wyman .... . ....... . .. . Howard. ondit, Cha.rles'Beach ..... . . A. . West Crange, N. -I ...... ......... 1 1 N. Ed. . june 7, '72 36 129 5- 3 Min .... Pres. . Rep-... C. Boating . . . Crawford.. . . P,l1ilosophy..Chappie, Charl onrow Lester Morris. . . . . A. . 225 Willow Av., Long Branch, N. -I. 9 M. D . . . Dec. 31, '72 37 168 5-1o Min. .1 . Pres. . Rep. . W. Foot Ball . Evans. . . . . . Philosophy.. Les, Lonny. ooke, William Brown .. . . A.. l, heeling, W. Va. ...... ...... , . .. 12 N. M. R. May 18, '73 38 155 5-11 Min .... Pres. . Dem . W. Foot Ball . Shakespeare . History . .. Billy. ook, Albert Swuik ..... . . A. . Cgreelncastle, Pa ...... . 13 S. Ed... jan. 12, '73 381 150 5-11 Law .. Lutli.. Dem.. C. Base Ball .. Scott. . .... . Economics . Coolcy. '- i am.....A.. ' . . ........... 1 ' - .. .. .... ' 1 1?zi'ig,nS:f1i::e'd G.c ...... ' . . A. . 'lP.ii kiEuMv1ii'.Ij ..... , . . 11 E W .... Ii, 'gi 6 u .... . . W. Hunting . . . .. . . Siidiology. . . Pop ramer, Alfred jr.. . . A. . Cramer Hi l, N. J.. . .. . .. 1 S. VV ..... ...... - .... 3 5 140 5- 7' Med .... Bapt.. Rep. . C. lfootlzlall . . Hugo . . . . .Biology .. . Ai. rawford, Harden Lake . .. . . B S 11 W. 57th St.,.New York. .. . 4W.M.W. Sept. 26, '72 37 139 5- 9M Arch. . . Pres ........ . . Tennis. . . . . .: .... . . . . Art . . . .. . . . Hardy. rawford, ohn Forsyth . . . . . A.. Damascus, Syr1a ........ . . ............ Nov. 16, '71 32X 120 5- 5M leach. . Pres ...... C. Riding .. . . Dickens ...... Logic . . . . . . Fuzzy. rawford, ames Stoner ...... A. . Arch Spring, Pa ....... . 20 N. E. .. May 24, '72 35 135 5- 8 Law . . Pres.. Rep. . C. Tennis . . . Crawford. .. Law . . . . . . . jimmy. n nbfllarles Clement, jr.. ST Ante? go, germs? . 11 . . blglay 23, '7336iM136 5- 3 Law . . Epis. . Rep. C. Hunting . . Scott . . Qstrfznoniy.. Kid, Cross. rtis, areton... .... ..... 1 '.53r .t., ew or .. . 5 . an. 4 '72. ..145 5- .... .. .. . at1..... rby, Walter Raines . . .. . ., A. . Plainfield, N. j. ......... .. . 3 S. M. R. july 14: '74 39 140 5-mM E E. . . Pres. . . . . C. Shooting . . Longfellow. . . Math . .. .. . Darb. chant, Charles Ernest. .. . . A. Catawissa, Pa ...... .... ..... ..... 6 li I . D.. . May 6, '68 37 1.48 5-114'l'each. . Ref... Rep.. C. Skating .... Lytton ...... Physics . . . . Deck. Esker., Jap-iles Wzilndsor .... . . lg gixguletfeiistgn Ave., Scranton, Pa.. . 15 Qrug. xo, '74 . . . 167 6 Med .... Pres.. Rep.. W. Boxing ..... Longfellow . Chemistry.. Emmy. e 'orest, owar ...... . .l . 22 ' . 66t.1 t., New York ......... 17 7. . . 1 ov. 2, '72 . . . . .. . . . . . .... . ........... ...,..... C alderwood . . Ev. ofCh'st. ef. exter, Daniel Weaver . . . . A. . 1o3 Main St., Elmira, Y. . . 1o S. R .... Mor 12, '72 38 156 5- 5 Min . . g . Rep . W. Fishing .... Scott. ....... Philosophy.. Runt. ley, Ralph Seltzer . .. . . A.. 1528 Fairmount Ave. Philadelphia. 7 E. B... . Dec. 13, '72 37 162 6 Law . . Meth. Dem. . - - Foot Ball .. Scott. . .. . . . Literature .. Dutch. in, guston ..... . . . 5J8,W. Sltzfte St., Trenton, N. J. . . 1o LVXE. . . gily 30, '74 3.4, 145 6 yllgaw .. Pres. lgep . . . . Tennis .... grawford .... ligterature .. Dick. ae rustin o .. aa1a, z1 ....... 1 .... .. .. 1 .' .. ct. 6' .. .154 5-112 ns .... ....'en1..... ...... cott.. istor oy,'Gail Ayers .... . . B S Beach Hotel, Chicago, Ill ...... . 5 lE.M.W. jan. xo: 'Q 35 125 5- 7 Bus .... . lilpis.. Rep. . W. Riding ..... Hawthorne.. . Histog .... Rabbit. nn, Arthur ..... . . . . A. . .... . .. ...... . ....... . . . . rc N. ..... Mar. 7, '73 34? 126 5- SZ Law . . Pres. Rep. . W. Foot Ball .. Dickens .... . Philosophy.. Art, Donnie. gbert, Ernest Dick .... . . A. . Franklin, Pa ............ ..... . 3 lil. B.. . . jan. 31, '74 gg 144 5- SZ Bus .... Pres. Dem .'W. Base Ball .. Crawford ..... A stronomy.. Dick, Eggy. gbcrt, Victor Edgar. . . . B S633 S. Ncgley St., Pittsburg .. . q N. E. . . Oct. 4, '73 . . . 123 5- 7 . .... Pres. Rep. . . Base Ball . . Haggard . . . . Art . . . . . . . Willie. mer, Macomb Kean . . . . . . B S liritlgeton, N. -I .... ' ......... . 4 N. M.R. luly 18, '7334 137 5- SM Med .... Pres.. Rep. . W. Tennis ..... Crawford ..... Biology .... Mike. ving, Edward Hilts. . . . . A. . Blairsville, Pa. . . . . . . . 19 S. YV. . . fept. 1, '72 36 1.18 5- 7 Med. . . Pres. Rep. . W. Base Ball .. Riley.. . . . . . . Astronomy.. Buck. ris, John 'l.'homson ......... A. . 29 Lytle St., Pittsburg . . . . 3 S. E .... jan. 23, '71 37 158 5- SK M11 .... Pres. . R1-p. . C. Bicycling . . Emerson ..... History .... Sister, Poller. rries, Richard Milburn ..... A. Florida, N. Y ........., . 3 E. B .... Sept. 10, '73 35 130 5- 72' Law .. Pres. . Rep . C. Foot Ball . . Hugo . . . . . . Math ..... . . Dick. her, Gordon ........... . . A. . Swissvale, Pa. ............. . 11 N. W .... Nov. 2, '73 38 156 5- SZ Law . . . Pres. Rep. . C. Foot Ball ........... . . History .... Mike, Gord. k, Charles Leon. .... .. . . A. . Hartford, Conn. .... . . . .... . 18 S. M. R. Dec. 22, '68 34 135 5- on Min. . . Cong. Rep.. C. ....... ..... E liot... . . . Latin . . . . . . Fiscus. emming, james Ralston .... A.. Hotel St. Remo, New York .. . . 33 U. H. . . Sept. 11, '74 34 132 5- 8 Law Pres.. DL111.. C. ............ ........ . . . Law . . .. . . Flem. ostcr, Curtis Smiley ......... A. . East Brady, Pa. .... ........ . 29 N. Ed. . jan 26, '74 3824 140 5- SSM Med .... Pres. Rep. . W. Base Ball . Eliot. . .... . Fiction .... -Iimmic. mme, john Selby. . ...... .. . A. . 42 Fourth St , Troy, N. Y. .... . 3 S. D .... Mor. 29, '72 38M 155 6 Min .... Pres. . Rep. . W. Base Ball . Thackeray . . . Literature. . jack. n1ncis,RobinWilliamCummins A.. 61 Mound St., Cincinnati, O... . 7 N. VV. . . jon. ro, '71 39Z159Z 5- QZ Med. . . Pres. . Rep. . W. Foot Ball . Scott. . . . .... Math.. . . . . . Bob. ry, jesse Howard . ......... B S Rochester, Pa. . ........ . . . . . . 1 S. R .... Dec 24, '72 37 150 5- 855 Bus ..... Bapt. Rep. . W- Base Ball . . Hugo .... . . . German . . . Pop. urnajieFl', Demeter Nicola . . . A. . Bansko, Rarlogue, Macedonia . . . 11 N. ..... Oct. 9, '69 40 158 5- S Min .... Pres. . Rep. W. Cricket . .. Stalker... . . Theism . . . . Furney. 1:x:nZ3s,I'1il1eo:lzrfvILo?s.iEi ...... E S71rSL33,1sgtSt.BPhiladelphia.. . 71 U. H. ....... ,.. .... ..... .... ...... r , ora 1 1r1 ge .. 11 1 ., a 1111ore ..... ............ 1 ig. 1, 73 41 2 1 o - 1 .1 us .... res.. em.. .. mo mg .. u1 a .... ...... .... . . . ay. arrett, John Work ....... . . B S 11 South St., Baltimore ....... ............ ll far. 1 ' 2 6 130 5-11 Bus .... Pres. . Dem.. W. Shootin 1 . . . .............. Mod. Lan . Professor. reen, joseph Douglas . . . . C FL 721 Lodi St., Syracuse, N. Y. . . . 15 S. D. . . Feb. 4138 150 5-10 C. E . . Pres. Rep . W. Tennis . . Hawthorne. . Math.. . Dougie. ager, Wilfried Matehin. .. . . A . . East Orange, N. J. ...... . . .. . 3 U. H. . . Sept. 13, 73 .go 155 5- 9Z5Bus. .. Pres. . Rep. . W. Yachting . . Scott ...... .. . Law . . . . . . Hage. nmilton, ,Clarence Mitchell . A. . 135 Madison Ave., Ne v York . . . 4 U. H. . . . . . . . '73 38 167 5- 9 lBus. .. Pres. . .... . YV. Yachting . Thackeray . . . . . . .. . . . Large. amilton, Charles Lee. . .. . . B S93 Fifth Ave., Pittsburg .... . . . . F. W. B .... 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Q E 24 :xox v-hm we-1-1 1-114 O1 m ln . m4114144 44444444 I-rl L11 LD 4 44 44 U2 QQ 44 was Gawvtiirop TI n, er Welton ..... n, Wilbur rsllal ........ ell O 'U v1.1: c: 3. 1-I E... :JE bb GJ 1. 112 G .. o .tl E 11 1: me :.- E 3 11.51 ' O .11 '-4 'E O .ac 1: 3. ...1. ..1. 1:22 W- ova DQQS Q 5 1 U M OS: .E':: 'U .U 1 si 1 io 2 E2 M 1 a-2 11120 ,Em ' of-111. 4-' 5 E K Lv Q 51 3 Q M 1 5,6 51 CH 1- :R 5 EE .1:. I3-1 1: Qi 314. V1 .1 U 4: 1. 1. -5, EE can .5 n E ui G G' o E o mini mn as OQm?f 3. 1. 1: 0 II1' E . 111 E A --1 '3 f HBV' TS E E 1-1 Q1 E : 11: D1 Arthur Leddie .1 1.1 o 3 EC eeler, .C 41 J bb 1. 2' K5 M 1. 1. 0 1: o D4 -O O 41 E2 .E .E ward Erskine Ho Ex QU H... at 211 CED 1: .CU 9.2 314 o - '12 f-C '15 .O 12 1.1: 'UO 2'-1 Ms 3: VZ EE 1-lg A Him C112 51:1 332: ','I',..-1-1 if of 4-'1 3-. E: UE 12 5 1-rg E 1: 'U 'Pm 3 mSAEQ.5wm v ---mfg BHHHDD3333333333333333333 .E :bb 2.5 Sm ..-1 G ZS 'C 0. :J 1.2 .- 024473. o 11124 'Jon NW!!! E'C'C .on :ax NN United States Government and other desirable V Securities for Investors. All Stocks and Bonds listed in the New York Stock Exchange bought and sold on commission for cash. HARVEY F1514 81 SoNs, 1 No: 28 NassauStreet, New York. V Q M4 K1 :QT X, use 19 W BROADWAY ,in f , F f? ' t',,.. 5535? 0.5. f 1 if fi 7:55:11 I 7-574351, fb i:-3152 , 1-.--11 1, , X ,msn leaf? 1 HOFFMAN HOUSE lbrqqggmiifgt ALBEMAR LE HOTEL. . cupyrlgmea Yot?MANs'o Style and Q,uality'Unequalled. Riding and Hunting Hats, Riding Cropsr Umbrellas, Walklng Sticks. 11Q7 and 1109 Broadway, near 241311, St. 158 Broadway, near Llberty St. L. J. ANDREWS, Authorized Agent for Princeton ' 120 ' RICHMOND STRAIGHTII CUT N0. I v CIGARETTES. . CIGARETTE SMOKERS, who are willing to pay a little more than the price charged for the ordinary , will find THIS BRAND superior to all others. These Cigarettes are made from the brightest, most delicately flavored and highest cost Gold Leaf grown in Virginia. This is the Old and Original Brand of Straight Cut Cigarettes, and b h b ' h VV was roug tout yusmt eyea1'1875.,BE ARE OF IMITATIONS and observe that the firm ALLEN 81 C-INTER, E The American Tobacco Company, Success Manufacturer, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA A MORSE BU RTIS, , Qlformerly with the late James O. Morseg Cofdwzciozf jbff Suppfzes fm' Me Army, Navy cmd Pzzihk fnsizlufzbns. -ALSO DEALER Ilfl WIIIIUGHT-IIIUN PIPE AND BOILEII TUBES, CAST-IRDN WATER AND DRAIN PIPE. Dealer in all kinds of Brass and Iron Fitt- ings for Steam, Gas and Wate1', Ammonia Fittings, Coils and Ice Machine Supplies. Steam and Water Gau- ges, Steam Traps, Gate Valves, Radia- tors, Tanners' Coils, Railroad and Mill Sup- plies, Rubber Hose. GAS AND STEAM FITTERS' TOOLS AND PLUMBERS' GOODS. 52 JOHN STREET, NEW YORK, 157-vis, Siioiis +I- -I4 I -1' ms HURQISIQIQGS, 41 CORTLANDT ST., it NEW YORK. WILLIAM E. GILBERT, WEDDINGS PARTIES ,V I A SPECIALTY ' 19 West State St., Trenton, N. J. Personal attention is given by MR. GILBERT to furnishing of DVeddz'1zgs and Primztf and S0ez'a!EnZe7'mi1z mefzfs, Where an elegant table is desired. ' 122 SHEAKER w GIBB5. FIRST-CLAJJ. TAn.oRf. I I I0 WALNUT ST. I7I'IILADELI'I'IIA. WEIRQFIEQT IVHTTHNG1 AND FAIR WIRHQEJ. THE HORSMAN SPECIAL I ' NEW FOR 1895. . ' -as X E f I Il J I:E:EEfE:fl::E:E::iggglliiiifg Im lluliiifgbt LElfl'llhlv E .. ....... ........... . ., 5 F I K. 5?-EllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWWrf ..-.... . IXQ3::::::::::::::::::::-5, F '-vll Ill ll ll' -v E22 'i '- - qmgqlz. N .iglgl--Nl-lgglgiiigsggx .,,., , ,' 1 L 'A lx X . ' -. 4 ' 1 J' lllll I lg 'D . -I ' 5 5' , , 1.5 , ' 7 p 'IJII I l lljl i 1 E' - ,1. .:l'ri,x 2 :' ily: z a .'E'llllI llllllllll n . ' ',,4'If,, .Q,',?I'M,-i ,GQIIIIII Ill l lllllllllllfgl , ,.,- ffl-'--F-1'-f - ' - - - QfiiiE.......5E5iiE555555555539I ' E. A - Q 0 5 u l I 'liiaif-55:52-if ' D 0 . 5' PATENT WRAPPED RACKET. Pat. in U.S. Sc Great Britain, Oct. 18th, 1892. It will last longer than any other muzzle. ITS ADVANTAGES: It cannot be split by a hafrol clv-einen ball. It cannot be split by being hit on the grounl. E. I. HORSMAN, 34-1 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. E'Send stampfor Catalogue. 123 I 1 ix. 1 1 vi li ot'-'F 11 ' ' 3 V -1 . 3 ik-'fx ' 'X' 1' Q1 ,h,kis4-1+wQs A- ' ' .f ' a. . m w1a1lLQj, I A T, . NLT . - 'I . ' 3 - ' 'A 1 ti :Ji --t'?t1'- miW31r' 1' QV , ,pki 1,1211 I l E 1-' I F' . I m g .' ' imc w 're fi 1 iz rf ' ' lil 1 1.1-'el' lllli .pa e sa gqggilqg ew 1 I . .. lf ,gtga,jgi!,, E! , 1- hm!-Hd - - Y l,l,!.fEU.2,,,,ai,wm' Y -'- f1 'f i - ,,.,. jL 521-f'. ..n.1u .ftiiil-E Q Te' ffif ,'?Fxt'4'l4 '5?T .- 751- ' if ' ,,,, g l W-as -de.. .-e.,.e.---:W-4 HAHNEMANN MEDICAL LOLLEGVE, ' ' . , PHILADELPHIA. 'I Will open September 29th, 1895, and close early-in May, 1896. A full 1 four-years! graded course obligatory. College graduates in Arts and Sciences , who, during their Collegiate Course, studied Biology, Botany, Zoology, V Q Inorganic,Chemistry, Anatomy and Physiology are admitted the second ' J year without an entrance examination. 1 Unequalled Clinical Facilities. 1 , The graduating class have the best possible clinical or bed-side teaching 1 in small classes, where they are taught to examine patients, use instruments ' .Q W of diagnosis, prescribe medicine and perform operations under the direction gs H of the clinical teachers. ' N' The teachings are broad and liberal, embracing everything essential to pf a thoroughly educated modern physician. 1' The College 'and Hospital Buildings and Laboratories are new and fully , equipped in every detail. - ' , I For announcement address -If J A. R. THOMAS, M.D., Dean Hahnemann College. -,Q-f JOHN E. JAMES, M.D., Regisml-, 1521 Arch street. I 124 ,gi I 1 tif. . A 1 1 5,1 .3 17 1 - . V 311 li if The llvawlnlfd Shoe iemto PHILADELPHIA-1224 Market Street, 826' Chestnut Street, under Con- tinental' Hotel. -.A T NEW YORK-Broadway and Fourteenth Street, Union Squareg Broad- way and Twelfth Streetg Broadway and Cortlandt Street. V V OUNG .ME'N'S SHOES b IN UP TO DATE STYLES . AND SI-IAPES AT MOST REASONABLE PRICES VVILLIAM G. SCHOELL, - A 131 SOUTH TENTI-I ST., ESTABLISHED 1868. A PHILADELPHIA. T he Horace Partridge Ce., 335 WASHINGTON ST., BOSTON, lVIASSJ - COLLEGE ATHLETIC SUPPLIES. 'Official Outiitters to Princeton University Base Ball Association, Season ,Q5. Mr, J. H. CRAWFORD, our authorized agent at Princeton. All orders given him will have our most careful and prompt attention. . A125 5 ,Q , iii , , S CAMERON 62, H ., TTS .ffi.57 . . , , 'V 'ff if Q' . ' ' fi? A A 'O 5' 7 . , i A mcnmoun VA , I . - Ms ez ' 'R ,,g, is Received the.Only Reward for Ciga- ' ,ff 1:5 -X-4. , -.. xggug gi, ' V, 'ff 3 fl 'lair 3 K N Eggs-sh!! x by wx' A el X sex H- fit I--isis L. :Tlclbvg ', - . RHS? -5 'ig 'f 55. ' :1vMi.sS-39-1 :Jr :-1 -- .' 5 5 lyk ' P-:Tir 1 if 1 O1 -' IVV ss fffflihx fy rettes, and Highest Award for Cut Plug, Mixtures, and Fine Smoking . Tobacco, at the Wor1d's Columbian ' - Exposition, Chicago, 1898. CIGARETTES.-Cameron's Gold Medal Straight Cut and Richmond Club, Paper and Favorite All Tobacco Cigarettes. FINE SMOKING MIXTURES.-Catac, Richmond Club, C. H. Y. P. Intercollegiate and Golden Square Cut. X FINE CUTS, GRANULXTED AND PLUG CUT.-Purity, Golden Square, Virginia Curley Cut, Raleigh, and Cameron Light Pressed. Prices as Reasonable as possible on all our Goods. Send for Terms and Price Lists. . 1- Pi'2iw :..-?1.'?i-1:M1:rJ- im.-a-iff-.::,O,Av::fs1 r - - .Rafi I '-QT':vi i , 4 -E'-kg?-,-, ', R J. A MUCH-NEEDED REFORM. f l g,g.,.',,,,..f,-,..,,W ........ - ' 'O .l..V.7 V HEALTHFUL, DORABLE, COMFORTABLE. Popular for Full Dress Wear. They do not Crease the Shirt Bosom. For Negligee Costume 9' OUT OF SIGHT. , No dragging on shoulders. On sale by all first-class dealers or sent by mail on receipt of price, 5Oc., 75c., 31.00, 31.50 and 32.00, post-paid. State height and Weight. ' ' . SGIENTIFIG SUSPENDER COMPANY, CLINLD, BUFFALO, N. 126 EW YORK LAW SCHOOL, ' NEW YORK CITY. Day School, 120 Broadway. Evening School, Cooper Union. ,Now in the fourth year of its existence. Largest law school in the United States east of Michigan. Number of students for the past year, 1893-94, 503. Of this number 203 were college graduates, viz.: of Yale'42, of Princeton 37, of Columbia 19, of the New York City College 16, of Amherst 9, of Harvard 8, of Rutgers 7, etc. The Professors were associates of Prof. Theodore W. Dwight as teachers of law, and follow the Dwight Method of legal instruction. Degree of LL.B given after two years' course. Graduate course now established. Tuition fee, Sroo. Annual session begins October Ist of each year. For catalogues, information, etc., address , GEORGE CHASE, Dean. ' I W i C, A Joi-in - - , T! , .A - AP P I-W ligwi ' SQ! .A -milf ' I '- P gf LA- r 15 ' A245725 S Mira! F 'fp l a- . 35 5 - ---eff - 219 Walnut st., X ' HQ fu- ' ' V PlPeSRePmdf PHILADELPHIA, PA. 5 A M96TSCh8UmS Iinporter and Manufacturer of Color Set. I E V E V xuvosrte or A ' , 5 , eueusu wlosmcos, 5 . J? ASA? Pouches, BF I. 2t,g1N ! X.X' if? mes, atc. '51,Q?'f:Zf'f ifQ' ' FE, K . ,., ' ' f ,'f.,, 'w X . A E , Every pipe guarai A Akpffg ,X . A Pfliih t f 'Y:.3.g 4, x .llA anteed to give f f..A:.,.?trcf 'f 44 aFx . 'Rf --A27 1 - AMPA' Satisfaction-' av sf ' ' 127 BELLEVUE EUSPLTLL MEDICAL EULLEEE. CITY OF NEW YORK. SESSIONS OF 1 895-96. The REGULAR SESSION begins on Monday, September 23, 1895, and con- tinues for twenty-six weeks. During this session, in addition to the regular didactic lectures, two or three hours are daily allotecl to clinical instruction. Attendance upon three regular courses of lectures is required for graduation. The examinations of other accredited Medical Colleges in the elementary 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 23, 1896, and continues until the middle -of June. , The CARNEGIE LABORATORY is open' during the collegiate year, for in- struction in microscopical 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 requirementst for graduation and other information, address Prof. AUSTIN FLINT, Secretary, Bellevue Hospital Medical College, foot of East 26th Street, New York City. ' THOMAS C. HILL 81. SON. BAKERY. GSONSFERGTIOSNERYiAN'DlQUNUH1'PARtL0R D .No. rr North Broad St., Trenton,.N. J. An old-established, reliable place, founded in 1860. Weddings-, Lunch- eons, Dinners and Receptions provided with every table requisite. Salads, Oysters, Croquettes, Boned Turkey, Terrapin, J ellied Meats, Decoratged Sal- mon, Larded Game, Truflied Dishes, Crabs, Bouillon, Coffee and -Chocolate, Ice Cream and Ices, Frozen Fruits, Sherbets, Ornamental Cake, fJellies, Gharlottes, Pastry, Spun Sugar, Fruit, Confectionery, Bonbons, Candelabra, Silverware, Table Cloths and Napkins, Dishes,- Camp Chairs, Waiters, Cooks, Musicians, Flowers, Coaches, etc.,, etc, Thoroughly equipped for inest work. Complete arrangements for out-of-town orders. Telephone. . J. F. , IQ Joi-iN sr., NEW Yon-K. , Eadges,Meda1s,EraterniLyand SunieLySEtL1ems . EXCLUSIVE ATTENTION GIVEN T0 ' ' THEFINEST GRADES OF GOLD. SILVER AND JEWELED WORK. Designs and Estimates on Application. A L L N L A V i 128 'Ir FINEST LINE' OF +o- BRIAR PIPES '-'PE-C-0 IN THE WORLD. 0-'ZH'-44'-' OUR SPECIAL BRIAR PIPES .... . . . . NEVER GET STRONG. BROOMALL 81 WQGAN, 4 and 7 South Thirteenth St., Philadelphia. One Block from Pennsylvania and Reading Depots. ll HEN YOU VISIT NEW YORK CITY STOP AT THE GRAND UNION HOTEL, FOURTH AVENUE 'AND FORTY-SECOND STREET QOPPOSITE GRAND CENTRAL DEPOTQ YOU WILL FIND IT CONVEN- IENT, COMFORTABLE, AND MODERATE IN PRICE. EUROPEAN PLAN. ROOMS .57 A DAY AND UPWARD. 129 U PDEGROVE 81 LETTS, PROPRIETORS H THE A.LHAMBRA.. ' 23 and 25 N. Warren St.,!Trenton, N. J. Restaurant, Sample Room ee. Billiard Parlor VV ALL 'PAPERS JOHN F. GARWOOD. 8 WEST STATE ST., TRENTON, N. J. ANTEDI-EVERY SIVIOHKER To send 'T two-cent stamps to help pay postage, packmg, 8zc., and We will mail sample box of our Non-Nrootine Midget Cigars- Only one box to one address. Address LANDrs 8: Co., Shippensburg, Pa. JOHN K. BROWN, MANUFACTURER AND DEALER IN '- Beers AN: SHQES . IO34 MARKET STREET, PHILADELPHIA. ADJOINING BINGHAM HOUSE. . C D Full Line of the Latest Style of Russet and Patent.Leather Shoes. Special Attention to Custom Work. EEHEEMEEHUENE TEACHERS' AGENCY, 3Oldest and Best Known in the U. S. Established 1855. 3 East 14th Street, . - . New York. EKINDERGARTEN J. W. SGHERMERHORN 62 GO., 3 E. 14TH ST., NEW YORK. 3 130 - I . . r .l . 1 I A H' jx 'lf'5Ilifiilsllf-1:11:18-W5 I i ,Q ,,,'1 'I flMEIE .fISl 'S SECIEIS OF THE LATEST DESIGNS, AT MODERATE PRICES. WILLIAM ARNOLD., 240 Fifth Avenue, New York. SANDFORD 8c SANDFORD, MERCHANT TAILURS AND IMPURTBRS, ' 16 West 23d Street, New York. COPPOSITE FIFTH AVENUE HOTEL.j Branch Office and Sample Room 136 .Nrzsmzz SZ., Opposife Afzzssnzz Hall. FIELDER 81 ZAPF, Fireln uranoe Agent , 'I QQJREPRESENTINGQLL.. The Ha,rtford.Fire Insurance Co. The Sun Insurance Oiiice. The Phoenix Insurance Co. The London and Lancashire. The Continental Fire Insurance Co. The Phoenix Assurance of London. The Standard of Trenton. The Manchester ofEngland. The Agricultural Insurance Co. Great Care Taken in all Insurance The W estchester Insurance Co. Matters. The Queen of America.. 11-1- J. VV. FIELDER., Jr., Representing Fielder, Beekman dw Co., Lumber, Coal and Mason Supplies. THE MU TUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO., of .New York, Capital 5l87,000,000. Investment Policies 9. Specialty. Real Estate Bought, Sold and Rented. ' ' VV. C. CJ- ZAPF, Job Printing and Engraying. Pianos and Organs Tuned and Repaired. Orders for Music and Musical Instruments Proinptly Filled. Oiiice, .87L Nassau Street, Princeton, N. J. 4 131 Tbugbee 8 !ll3uIIer,' Men's Tailors and Specialists in Hunting, Rid- ing, Yachting, Shooting and Outing Costumes. Importers of Confined Styles of Woollens Se- lected Personally in Europe, and of Materials Specially Adapted to our Climate. Eepartment for llgoung flben. With following prices: p Black Coats and Waistcoats, 3830 and upwards. Fancy Suitings, - - 330 alld UPWa1'dS- Trousers, - - 310 and upwards. 103541037 GDCEFIILII Sf. lpbilabelpbia. I-ID'W'.Z-S.RIl EYIILE MFE-. IIEI., CAGENTS FOR THE CLEVELANDJ I7 East Front Street, Trenton, N. J. Our prices are lower than New York or Philadelphia. Repairing a Specialty. UNIVER ITY OF VIRGIA lA. SUMMER LAW LECTURES. fQNine weeklyj begin 27th June, 1895, and end 28th August. Have proved of signal use,-lst, to students who design to pursue their studies at this or other Law Schoolsg 2nd, to those who propose to read privately, and 341, to practitioners who have not had the advantage of systematic instruc- tion. For circular apply QP. O. University of Va., Charlottesville, Vag to JOHN B. MINOR, Professor Common and Stat. Law, or to RALEIGH C. MINOR, Instructor in Law. Reference: A. P. NEVIN, '95. i ALESMEN WANTED 'ro SELL NON-NICOTINE MIDGET CIGARS. .Salary or commission. Good side line. Samples free. Address : LANDIS 8z CO., Shippensburg, Pa.. 132 ' . .I-Iustun, Ashmead, Wilsun En. LLIMITEDJ Invitations and Programmes, Steel Plate Annual Illustrations. Menus, Fraternity and Class Stationery, Visiting Cards, Wedcling Invita- tions, Monograms and Address Dies for Stationery. Special Designs and Samples Cheerfully Furnished. 1022 WALNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA.. F. L. BLLILL-S, AGENT, 40 S. EDWARDS HALL. IT'S QUITE TRUE THAT, 4,r- Zwfqis' Cljlvllygej' ARE b66ZZlf4fZLf!jf77ZfZlZ76', z'fz5lef2z!Qf zioszlgizefd, HA VE chcznzcfevg good form, 60772-f07'Zl6Zf2f6' jii, and Mai elzzsiw gzzolily STYLE, ' so ofiozz Zocfzzbzg in oz'!ze7'wz'se preiry good woffe. A OSBORN, IIO8 WALNUT ST., PHILADELPHIA, WI G AND ARIISTIU IVIAKE-UP For Dramatic, Burlesque, Operatic and all Other Performances. GLUTH 85 COYLE, 1i'111'i 73 E. 13th St.-New York-QOW. 27th St New YORK CITY. Ilth ST., THREE DOORS VVEST OF BROADWAY. Special Rates to Students. 50c., 75c., and Sl per night. Quiet and select. 133 SROBERT STOLL, GOLD, SILVER 62 BRONZE NIEDALS- AZ RADGES IQ JOHN STREET, NEW YORK. ' W. W. BEVERIDGE, PRINCETON, AGENT. L- IEE- JOIEINSCN, METROPOLITAN DPICORATOR, N0. ll SOUTH WARREN ST., TRENTON, N. J. Flags, Buntings, Japanese Goods, Flowers and Plants. Porehes En- closed with Canvas and Canopy for NVecldings and Parties. we 1101230311111 121711111013 IN UNIVERSITY HALL Is beyond the peradventure of a doubt the best in Princeton. Having had thirteen years' experience in the art, I am prepared to give satisfaction to the most fasticlious. Students' Trade 2, Specialty. FRED. BIALLAS, Artist. 0--i.b-4:-4-- OPEIVTVIOAY AND NIGHT. P-P2-4?-0 OPPOSITE PENNSYLVANIA PASSENGER DEPOT, South Clinton Street, Trenton, N.j. Established 1867. DON I' FORGET THAT Established 1867, ADAM G. DOHM FINEST LUNCH ROOM AND RESTAURANT Specz'a!Zy-Brmci, Calefs, Ice Cfeam, ez'c.,fo1' Clubs. 134 ix N , The Jefferson Nledicel College OF PHILADELPHIA. Four yQfL1'S'Of graded instruction are required of candidates presenting themselves for the degree of M.D. The instruction consists of didactic lec- tures, amply supplemented by laboratory work and clinical teaching at the bedside and in the dispensaiies. I I GRADUATES IN ARTS AND SCIENCE Who have had instruc- tion in Anatomy, Physiology, Physics and Chemistry are admitted to the SECOND-YEAR CLASS UNDER CONDITIONS. . The Annual Announcement will be sent on application to J. W. HCLLAND, lVl.D., Dean. DON'T EXPERIMENT. GET THE BEST IN THE FIRST PLACE. ,rx 1 ez -F. E . . is ef - h e ?'!x'iCAZx,. DoUBLE-FEED 16 Kt- ' Gow PEN M uniein Ns.-.le g D Triclium Points. FULLY WARRANTED The embodiment of the highest r inventiveskill. Fulfils the most ' exacting requirement. Worlis like il charm, and is always ready. Buy one to- dey. It is a. paying investment. Thousands EX of them used by students. We have an agent in ' your College. Ask him to show you the CENTURY. Cir- I I culars free. WANTED-Students to act as local agents for the sale ol Lliis pen in their schools. ,Liberal commission given. 15 Nassau Street. 1 ' Tl1e'iCentu1'y Pen Co., Whitewater, WIS. 135 . h 1 Rx- N i I fl I I f A A N . . Lili!! ffl, S N KW , -c X sm E ' L M l X - iii 9 'L X. xx.. . af, . A .y I .-ht iq ,xt ,P uit LW? 1 f I VX' Q' ,N B W ,p2':A I ' -ff I., WN: ' I 7 f f are bk - XM! V, Htl' 1 1 You Havent Wings but- You can fly qalm Bicycle ' osty if you ride a Victor Weighing 19 pounds, 15 ounces., The lightest Weight' high-grade bicycle on the market. Try it. . Weight reduced by accurate tests made by the wonderful Victor Dynarnometer. OVERMAN WHEEL CO. Makers of Victor Bicycles. . Boston. New York. Detroit. Denver. PACIFIC COAST: San Francisco. Los An geles. . Portland. f ff X LEYRON E. LAVAKE, SUccEssoR TO T. W. LAVAKE Sz SON, ' 7EVVELER AND OPTICIAN' AND ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES. 72 Nassau Street, Princeton, N. J. CHARLES P. ZAZALLI, FINE CONFECTIONERY AND FRUITS, LOWNEY'S AND TENNEYKS, CHOCOLATES AND BONBONS. N0.l28 NASSAU STREET, Opposite Dickinson Hell, Princeton, N. J. Pure Fruit Juices only used at the Fountain. Milk Shakes and Egg Phosphates. Hot and Cold Soda.. - I AM PREPARED TO BUY SECOND-HAND CLOTHING AND FURNITURE FOR CASH. Orders by Mail Promptly Attended To. P. RILEY, Witherspoon St., Princeton, N. J. :E:IC3:E1.A.:EJ:ID EJQVVLANE, Stfndents' Text 130065, Lawn Tennis Goods, Artists' Materials. Carmine. Princetonia. NO. 76 NASSAU STREET MARSH af. BURKE, DRUGGISTS AND APOTHECARIES -'--AND DEALERS IN-- Perfumery, Lamps and Lamp Fixtures, Fancy Ar- - ticles, Window and Picture Glass, , Looking-Glass Plates, etc, Prescriptions Carefully Compouncled. The continued Patronage of Students and the public generally solicited. MARSH 85 BUR.KE, Next Door to Postoiiice. 137 'VV1 IEE. LYONS, Choice Groceries 84 Provisions FINE FRUIT A SPECIALTY. 108 NASSAU ST., PRINCETON, N. J. WILLIAM C. VANDEWATER, . AND HOUSE-FURNISHING GOODS, LAMPS, GLASSWARE, TOILET' SETS, In fact everything necessary for furnishing Students' Rooms. CARIVIINA PRINCETONIA, THE UNIVERSITY SONG BOOK. For sale at HENRY RUNY'AN'S BOOK STORE, 54 NASSAU STREET, Princeton, N. J,, Nassau Hotel Block. . J'.A.IlMlII-IIS EJ- DRAKE, SUccEssoR TO GEORGE THOMPSON, BOOK BINDING, FINE STATIONERY, Ci-J-1 1CJJ:bC3-J-I I Il-' ICE-C3-J-11163, Shaving and Hair Cutting Artistically Done. No. 104 NASSAU STREET, Next door to Princeton House, Opposite Coilefre Library D 1 ' , A. A. WAITE 80 SON, MILLINERYQN FURNISHING GUIJDS I 70 Nassau St., Princeton, N. J., 138 'ff 5 N 2 ?g wa qi QHEg gg -3 Q ns fnigwi. I QV? 4, C3Lq.L,4E-Q10 Warm Y-Y E57 my '-W 4.'71'7E7 Marky Rzazff .Izzy n ONE MAN'S LAST IS ANOTHER MANS LIMPJ' . RUSSET and BLACK, for Men, Women and Children. INEXPENSIVE. CAN STAND HARD KNOCKS. S1xth Avenue and Twenty th1rd St., A D E R, ' 132 and 134 Fulton srleet. N. Y. W . P. MCGIBBON. JR.. 70 S. E., PIHNCETON AGENT, ED. 'Rmorsmre S suv-ug, FOR BICYCLES. 1.-Cleans :L Bicycle-Chain, Frzune, Wheels and Niclzeled Parts-111 I0 minutes. 'nuvpg 2-Prevents sweat of the han d, water and salt air from rust- ing t-he nickel and steel. 3-Lubricates Chain and Bearings. lt will. non gum, collect z l'T'l. ci ca 'G' c: c: 2 D. dust, nor soil the clothing. is CU FIC? Sr? EQ. SCJ H3 Wm CT' 24 E4 .Q Qs FC F71 IP Z Us at PT' EQ V GO QF EFI 3 58 :s ,Q no E. 'IW 'Ik .,,,:.,,. in we ,,G'H'KOS E ,, For Princeton, Yale, 'ae-1- Twavi-'Wi' TH A '+ F b v1 r ca E b J X74 E FB ' 2 If F' P-4 we 6 file Go F I 1 'J 'T' Rutgers, City of NeW,York AND OTHER COLLEGES ARE -FURNISHED BY C.. H. KOSTER, 5 Park Place, N. Y. NUFF CED. W. I.- HANKINS, E REGISTERED DRUGGIST, 86 NASSAU STREET, PRINCETON, N. J. O ' RED DRUGGIST, ooo' REEEEEEAU and MERCER STS. IEE EREFHVI HND SUDFX WATER F'llFx'LEIFx'S. PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY PRE PARE D, 139 A. S. LEIGH, S. H. BLACKWELL, President. Cashier, Eiivst .Neitienerl Bemlg, 88 HHSSHU STREET, QDirectly opposite Nassau I-Iall,j ACCOUNTS OF STUDENTS A SPECIALTY. COLLEGIANS' FOOTWEAR. S3 BUYS A HAND-SEWED RUSSIA CALF OR PATENT 7 . LEATHER SHOE, LATEST STYLE, AT , KELTY S., 90 NASSAU STREET , BASE BALL AND BICYCLE SHOES. WILLIAM Wg MEEST-ION, Upholstering 89 G-enere.1 Furniture Repairing JOHNS ALLEY, PRINCETON, N. J. PICTURES AND FURNITURE CAREFULLY PACKED. ANTIQUE FURNITURE REPAIRED, FRENCH POLISHED. Windoiv Shades furnished and put up. Chairs re-bottomed. Mattresses made over. Window Seats a specialty. All work first-class and orders. promptly attended to VV. V- SCUJDJDLIIQ. ocmilg tggroceriee Q' revisions University Place and Nassau St., PRINCETON, N. J. FINE GROCERIES AT LOW PRICES JOHN E. MURRAY. B500-operative Clubs will do well to purchase their GROCERIES here. 98 Nassau Street, Princeton, N. J. 140 WHEN rn NEED or BICYCLES, Lawn Tennis, Croquets, Base Balls. FISHING TACKLE, Rifles and Pistols, SPORTING GOODS in gen- eral, also Cutlery and Housetilrnishings, call upon Trerrtorr Hardware Compan No. 13 E. State St. and No. 20 E. Front St., Trenton. CLAYTON Ja CALHOUN, VIENNA CAPE, No Spirituous, Vinous or Malt Liquors Sold or Served. Ice Cold Soda. 'Water with Pure Fruit Syrups served throughout the year. Also Ice Cream. A ine line of Lowney's Confectionery, awarded Hrst prize at the World's Columbian Exposition, 1893, kept constantly on hand. DPPUSITE GULLEGE, 84 NASSAU ST. WILLIAM L. BRINER, ' 1Graduate N. Y. College of Pl1armacy.J Druggist and Pharmacist, 44 NASSAU ST., PRINCETON, N. J. -JOHN G. DURNER. G. M. DURNER. DURNER 8c DURNER, 'CLASSICAL HAIR GUTTERS. 112 NASSAU ST. AND 62 NASSAU ST., PRINCETON. PIPES TOBACCO S cmssrrss 8a orc-Ass. A 114 NASSAU STREET, PRINCETON, N. J. Trunks, 32 up, Suit Cases, 355 upg Satchels, 51.70 up, Grips, go cents upg Telescope Cases, So cents upg Straps, etc., at DEY'S, I32 Nassau Street. ' 141 ATI-EIIRTY-FIFTH ANNUAL STATEMENT OF THE Equitable Life Assurance Society OF THE UNITED STATES, For .the Year Ending December 31st, 1894. ASS ETS. Bonds and Mortgages, .... , ............ ' . 826,342,841 16 Real Estate, including Equitable buildings and purchases under foreclosure of mortgages, ........... 24,322,723 46 United States Stocks, State Stocks, City Stocks and other in- vestments, . . . . . ......... , ..... , 107,619,636 52 Loans secured by Bonds and Stocks Cmarket value S9,449,,241j 55,663,500 00 Real Estate outside of the State of New York. including pur- chases under foreclosure and office buildings, ..... 15,090,524 81 Cash in hand and in transit Qsince received and investedj . . 2,287,140 05 Interest and Rents due and accrued, ........ 527,200 00 First year's Premiums due and unreported, less cost of col- lection, . . . . . ' .... ......... 5 43,837 00 Renewal Premiums due and unreported, less cost of collection 645,391 00 Deferred First Year's Premiums, less cost of collection, . . . 259,618 O0 Deferred Renewal Premiums, less cost of collection, .... 1,741,898 00 Assets December 31st, 1894, . . . U . K ...... . . . . S185,044,310,06 W'e hereby certify, that after a personal examination of the sccrrities and accounts described in the foregoing statement for the year 1894, we find the same to be true and correct as stated. The stocks and bonds in the above statement are valued at the market price Decemg ber 31, 1894. THOMAS D. JORDAN, CauzpL'roZZe1'. FRANCIS W. JACKSON, i1miz't0r: LIABILITIES. Reserve on all existing policies calculated on a 45 standard, and all other liabilities, . .,........... 31-47,564,507 21 Undivided Surplus on a 41, standard, . ......... 37,479,802g Surplus, 35fZ, standard, ....... . . 827,258,764 '85 1 hereby certify to the correctness of the above calculation of the reserve and surplus. Dividends will be declared, as heretofore, on a basis of a 4 per cent. standard. J. G. VAN CISE, fiXSZ3'f!l7lffIL'fMd7j!. INCOME. 7 Premium Receipts, . ..... . ........ 4 . . . 336,038,931 09 Cash Received for Interest, Rents and Dividends ..... 7,630,795 42 Income, . 1 .....,.............. 843,669,726 51 DISBURSEMENTS. 1 Death Claims, ........... , .. . . 311,036,679 71 Matured and Discounted Endowments, . . . 952,054 66 Annuities, .............. . 385.811 98 Surrender Values, . .......... . 3,468,351 04 Matured Tontine Values, ..... . 1,490,721 00 Dividends Paid to Policy-Holders, ..... 2,139,734 58 A Paid Policy-Holders, ................ 819,473,352 97 All other payments: Commissions, Taxes, Salaries, Adver- - A- ---- '- tising and General Expenses, ....... A .... . . 17,953,130 96 Disbursements, . ......... ..... - . . . . 3'p27,426,483i3 , AS S U R A N C E . 1 Outstanding Assurance December 31st, 1894, . ' ...... 893,556,733 00 In the above Statement of Outstanding Assurance, Instalment Policies issued during '1894, and previous thereto, have been reduced to their conunuted value. Total Amount of New Assurance Applied for in 1894, . . . 9256,552,736 00 Amount Declined, .............. . .... 39,436,748 .00 New Assurance Written in 1894, ............ 8217,115,988 O0 EISE LE Jg, K I NC, Managers New Jersey Agency. S , J ,, K IIN Q,General Agent. 142 H , A-q . A THAT YOU CAN BUY IN TEENTON, WITHOUT PAYING FANCY PRICES EOE THEM? Williams, Qorth road St., ' , E sELLs THEM. DOBBINS an LARGE, Ce H EE? EIS H IE SEAL -'Fi H E A 2 if celeb 61:9 efcgw Q,Gso ODX9 Yyoumaiusf Celebrated Hats a Specialty. OUTING CAPS. E SOFT HATS. AND DRESS SUIT CASES. 25 EGM? gtate gtreet, Egllgrenton, rinczeton Home rg Eeotccurccnt OPPOSITE COLLEGE LIBRARY. ' MEALS AT ALL HOURS. LODGING 50 CENTS A NIGHT. ' V ALSO GOOD STABLING. Gr. A.. DOI-IIXI, Proprietor. flour ate clorner. - Is it a Dunlap? Students, as a rule, like to be Well dressedg like to wear stylish hats. Tl1ere's a U some- thing about the Spring Dunlap that puts it at the head of the hat parade. It is considered THE thing to wear one. All the go in Trenton 5 would be in Princeton if the fellows once saw it, Everybody Who is anybody ought to get a Dunlap. Sold only by 33 goat goats Qtreet, Egrenton, . 1.43 GX-NAS . WDONNEM K1 GB . ., BUTCHERS, 141 WEST STREET, T NEW YQRK. Y ET CALL, LAN DT. 144 L BUTLER 51 BAUER, EUTTEE, CHEESE HND EGGS 122, 123, IZQ, 130 and 268 Washington Market, NEW YORK. Fancy Elgin and Philadelphia Creameries a Specialty. TELEPHONE CALL 1977 CORTLANDT. IT ISA WELL-KNOWN FACT JAMES EVERARD'S A CANAADA NIALT LAGER5 BEER IS PURE, WHOLESOME, AND AN EXGEEDINGLY PLEASANT BEVERAGE. E If you doubt it, call on Manager Bave, of the Princeton Inn, and be convinced. - ' , 145 JOHN V. QDEY, DEALER IN R DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, UNDERWEAR, HOSIERY, G-LOVES, Etc. N O. 122 Nassau Street. Opposite College Library. PRINCETON SOUVENTR ROOKS C At R. H. ROSE 85 SON 'S. H B. BAYLES SU CO., DEALERS IN GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, FLOUR 455 FEED. A 124 NASSAU STREET. J R. SLAYBACK dz SON, Corner Canal and Dickinson Streets, l CHOICE GROCERIES And Dealers in Carbonative Beverages, Fruits, Imported and Domestic Cigars. NASSAU PHARMACY, I ' ARTHUR SCHWARTZ, Phe. Corner Nassau and Witherspoon Sts. The Leading Pharmacy in Town. TIGER BILLIARD PARLOR, GEORGE BENHAM, Propr. - 126 NASSAU STREET. EHAS. H. A. ZAPF, 118 NASSAU STREET, GENERAL BARGAIN STORE, FIRE WORKS, CROCK-ERY, TIN And Willow Ware, High Grade Oil and Cutlery, Cigars and Tobacco. ' f 1 FRED FEU RING, MERCHANT TAILOR, 110 Nassau Street, Opposite College Library, Princeton, AN.'J. 146 K EE 5 .oo 5. RUSSET, CALF OR PATENT LEATHQER. Eg 1 'Tisn't fair to class our five-dollar shoes I with the ordinary sort. They are made by .X If the same shoemakers who make our highest- priced-it keeps them busy 'tween times. STEIGERWALT, 4 I 1 015 Chestnut St., y PHILADELPHIA. W. JOHN BON-E, I N. E., Princeton, Agt. THOMPSONS BAKERY, CONFECTIONERY Q AND ICE CREAM PARLGRS. 120 Nassau St., Princeton, N. J. Special Prices to Clubs. G. 0. SKIRM, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in TOBACCO -AND OIGARS. ' ' ' ' as it is t e arges Special prices to clubs. Call and see my lme of P1pes, h 1 t s occ in Princeton. 68 NASSAU STREET. LADIES' AND GENTLEMEITS CLOTHING Cleaned, Dyed, Ezpairzd or Altered HOW TO REACH US.-'Phone 530. Our Wagon ea s a TIHCG o d 'll' t t g tt ll y S d Weekly. Send us postal an We W1 ms rue our a en oca on ou. .en work to our odice, or leave work or orders at Nassau Pharmacy. X.L.G.R., 150- EAST STATE STREET, TRENTON N. J. Full Dress Suits to Hire. S, ER, 147 ?Or Mari and Boyle, I HAND KNIT Hccmbb col gwecttero lack, Navy, Wl1itei2GarEeQ and Gray, for f t oys up 0 Inc S1Z,6S, A I 31.50. xg For IVlen,t all Sizes, 32.00. 355333 IEEE Made to special measure, in the best manner, of excellent quality material. W'rite for catalogue and samples to gtrembrielge: Q QlQtEier, WILLIIIIVI IVI. LEIGI-I, I CLOTHING, MENS FEIRNISEING GGQBS, NQTJ GNS. I Y 643: NE155 EIU JTREET, WIRHINIQETQN, INL, J., ..,.., -....---f'--'Lf'.i.....-..g --AL..- .':,- - ----. ' --- ..---- N- . -... ----...x ....?....,-f- n .-- H .... ..lN.,i.-5.- i'i..,-.. hu -.: ff.z:: ,..-,a,.:-.....--.lL::.:::-:. .. : m::EEE-::::' 5::::: ::.-1i::.-.::53::. ' :f:: M Za ?-if f-' M - 1Mf W - Xb U IQLQIWI.. 24 ,,,,. :EJVAJE J .IE .-- 1 -, SEI 1 ll M. Exvafm ?.w1,QT9g2.,2?EE.,,g L E. xiii- .qfii sw SN S X NN Nw :Q-XE , is Q i f -- , EN, dizr- - - . , -T. ...M . 2: ..,.,.T-. ----- Q-- -'wx v - -2, Y, .. ,.4:.-1.-.-::1.::..--N A' C JOH PATTERSO 8zCO TAILORS IMPCRTERS Nos. 25 and 27 West 26th St., 4149 New York olaias - of- 13555 - zelifiog - . ,' q11,Z.19GSSm. Flmm . IBEW ' 120 ' G!l2IKi1DQ,J. ' YPGQ - 4511925 ' R- ' QPURZ, ' BGISSQIH ' GSTFZZT, EPiT.jCGLT01D, ' B. ' J. - ' lglaiilfl - 3599. ' 7 . 150
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