Purdue University - Debris Yearbook (West Lafayette, IN)

 - Class of 1902

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Purdue University - Debris Yearbook (West Lafayette, IN) online collection, 1902 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 324 of the 1902 volume:

FORT VWY !E ALLEN CO., IND, G£Ay IIIIIIHilli.liliJ Iilii.lij |i,|,, ,1,1 il 3 183301721 8907 Gc ' 11.2 P97DA 1902 Purdue University. ... Debris TURDUE DEBRIS ' VOL. XIV 3« ny th ' urU nthXEAK BOOK if PURDUE UNIVERSITY- ubUsheJbt} « SENIOR CLASS 80V2270 t.a., 657160 ORION LAWRENCE FOSTER OEORliE ARTHUR SMITH Associate Editors Hu Marvin Haukis William P. Johnson Ad-OertUing Managers Alva Earnest Klmmek Thomas Henkv Ci.karv Literary Editors Raymond LeValle Nelsoi John C. Huffman F ' rances Mary UeFrees Ralph W. Ingersoll William Aitkenhead Art Editors •■-DITH Ev, :lmer E, MRS. FOWLER A NOBLE TVI ' E OF GOOD HEROIC WOMANHOOD. - LONGFELLOW GREETING ' 7ITH malice toward none and with best wishes for all, we present this — the 1902 Debris — to the faculty, the students, the alumni, and the friends of Purdue University. It represents not the staff, not the senior class, not the student-body, but Purdue ; and is all for the glory of the Old Gold and Black. The traditions, the aims, the life of the students are here portrayed, and, as we trust, faith- fully and to the honor of Her. And for the alumni and students our hope is, that this volume will prove one of the ties that will bind us still closer to each other and to our Almii Mater. CONTENTS Dedication Greeting . . . Purdue University Purdue Spirit In Memorium University Calendar , Trustees and Officers President Stone . Faculty .... Other Officers . Special Lecturers . Graduate Students . Class of 1902 . Senior Class Junior Class . . . Sophomore Class Freshman Class . Athletic . Fraternal Societies and Clubs . Literary Societies . Technical Societies . Literary .... Jokes . 9 ' 3 18 . 21 22 • 23 24 • 25 43 ■ 44 45 . 49 83 ■ 92 96 . 100 105 ■ 127 145 . 167 177 . 187 243 pffpmifr rrit r - s an age of industrial progress. On every hand is heard the whirr of machinery and seen the products of skill and training. Those men who arc achieving the greatest success are not the captains of war but the captains of industry. It is a period of fierce competition where every energy is taxed to the utmost, where only the strongest and best equipped can obtain recognition and success. To fit men for this struggle, to give them the requisite training, Purdue University was established. The graduates of Purdue are found, not in the pulpit, not on the bench, but in the great centers of industry; wherever construction and production are in progress, there are found the men of Purdue lending their trained minds and skilled hands to the work in progress. To enable these men to withstand the competition which they must meet and win success in the struggle, the best possible in equipment and instruction has been provided. As a result of years of effort and progress i ' urdue, to-day, stands unexcelled by any of the technical schools of the land in equipment and means of training. Her laboratories and shops are 13 gji BB ' 1111- justly celebrated tluoughout the t clini il ill in 1 lu r m tin t rs in in. n I I inie m 1 r n un in technical work. Over a dozen buildings, each adajded to the use for which it was designed, house the laboratories and equipment. These buildings are grouped about a thirty-acre campus, which is laid out according to the best art of the landscape gardener. Trees, shrubs, walks, fountains and buildings, all combine to form one of the most beautiful campuses in the West. Here men are equipped for work along six various lines of industry: Mechanical, Civil and Electrical Engineering, Applied Science, Agriculture and Pharmacy. In Mechanical Hall, the largest building on the campus, we find a varied assortment of valuable and interesting machinery and equipment. The beginners in engineering are here placed at work on the lathes, benches and in the foundry, where, by actual experience, they acquire the fundamental principles of the work they are taking up. When they have mastered these principles they are assigned to work of greater importance and intricacy, for all of which the most up-to-date equipment is provided. Here is found the great locomotive, Schnechtady No. 2, mounted in such a manner as to make possible tests of every description pertaining to locomotive engineering. In addition to this locomotive, there are in this laboratory a one hundred horse-power Harris-Corliss triple expansion engine, designed and constructed especially for the University; a thirty-five horse- power Buckeye straight line engine; a Baldwin compound locomotive and a ten horse-power iJcLaval stcaiu Uubuio. Allogcthui there aic m the Ubutdlui), lull) blcaiu c) lindcrb, aggicgating over fifteen hundred horse-power. The Master Car-Builders ' Association has deposited here a brake shoe testing machine and an air-brake testing rack having a complete air-brake equipment for a train of one hundred freight cars. Apparatus for work in hydraulics, machines for testing strength of materials, pumps and, in brief, machinery found in none but the best machine shops of the country are housed here. Railroad and manufacturing companies have shown their appre- ciation of the work done at Purdue by placing at the University valuable pieces of machinery and also using it as a testing laboratory. Hardly a week passes but that some work of this kind is sent in and the students are thus given exceptional opportunities for observation and practice. Upon entering the beautiful Electrical Building we find ourselves amid machinery of every kind known and operated in the electrical world. Immediately that a machine becomes out of date it is replaced by one of recent build and make. Here are found a large number of gener- ators, the largest of which, a fifty kilo-watts alternator is used not only for experirnental work but also for the incandescent lighting of the buildings of the University. Two complete street-car motors are mounted in the laboratory for the purpose of study, power being supplied by means of a direct current generator. Nearly every form of American transformer is found in the trans- former rack. A switch board containing more than four hundred terminals occupies the center of the room and by the use of a German silver resistance and a large lamp board, any resistance from a small traction ot an ohm u to toity liiousand uiims can be obtainetl. A comiilctc tciejiiionc system is in operation between the various buildings of the University, thus giving the students every opportunity to study this important branch of electrical vifork. That the importance of the work done in electricity at Purdue is recognized is shown by the fact that the National Fllectric Light Association has fitted up at considerable expense a photometric laboratory devoted to the solving of questions of great importance to the electrical world. The Civil Engineering Department is second to none in thoroughness and quality of equipment. Only the finest and latest makes of instruments are used. The students in this department receive practical training from the very beginning in s urveying, railroad location and maintenance, construction work, etc. The entrance of many of the students in civil engineering into practical work before they have finished their college course speaks volumes for the thoroughness of their training and the proficiency of their instructors. In the Science Department we find the greatest variation in the course of study. Owing to the elective system prevailing here a student may follow any one of si.x courses. These courses, which include Technical Chemistry, Sanitary Science, Industrial Art, Pre-Medical, General Science and Biology, overlap the engineering courses in many studies, as in mathematics, languages, physics, etc. While the equipment is naturally not so interesting and striking as that of the engineering dcjiartmenls, it is of the best kind and ]uality throughout. In the museum are found 16 many collections of value and renown vvliich have been presented to the deparlnient by the collectors. The original research work done in this department has many times attracted favorable mention and considerable notice from those in no way connected with the University. Separated by a roadway from the main campus are the Experiment Station and Farm Build- ings. On the one hundred and si.-cty acres of land com[)osing the farm and in the model farm buildings are carried on experiments of vast importance to the agricultural and stock raising interests of the state. Realizing the importance to the country of trained men in this line of work instruction is given in every branch of agriculture and men are turned out who can utilize the forces of nature to their fullest extent. In response to the urgent need for trained pharmacists the School of Pharmacy was opened at Purdue. Although the course embraces but two years, the graduates from it are full) ' e()uippcd to enter any position open in th is line of work. The high positions now filled by the graduates of the School of Pharmacy speak volumes for the completeness and thoroughness of the work done in this department. Thus do the students receive their training, and in every line of activity into which they have entered, the graduates of Purdue have shown by their skillfulness and by the positions they have merited that this training fitted them in the very best manner possible for the com|)etition of active life. — R. L. N. P URDU D E B R I 1 9 O H U U LITV is the measure of a man ' s obligation. This thought, from the mind of A Charles G. Finney, at one time president of Oberlin College, is an excellent expres- .ion of that which, for half a century, has been denominated The Oberlin Idea. The above quotation is suggestive of that spirit which permeates our own university life, and which, if not officially recognized as The Purdue Spirit, might with pro- priety be so designated. We refer to the spirit comprehended by the word loyalt The student of the old eastern college who has as his inheritance a century has learned to regard as counterfeit all that has not been tried by age, askance at one who dared to declare that a healthy, well-defined college spirit could prevail in an institution so young as our own. Yet we ask, Why not? Unless the marvellously rapid development of Purdue University can be explained on some other hypothesis than the fidelity of her founders to the cause which they espoused, we cannot but regard it as natural and consistent that this spirit of loyalty which dominated in the past should continue to live and grow, and thus early mature in a university spirit. Let us then reflect, briefly, upon Purdue ' s past and present in relation to the idea represented by our theme. In these latter days when men of vast fortune are distributing their wealth for the betterment of humanity, it is not unusual for a philanthropist, whose ambition it is to found a college, to con- centrate so many millions upon the project that a great university, adorned with magnificent architecture and possessing complete equipment for elaborate courses tradition, and who would doubtless look reared in a period of time so short that the spectacle partakes more of an illusion than a reality. There is truly cause for rejoicing that in our day educational enterprises of such carried into successful operation; yet we cannot but compare which obtained during Purdue ' s early struggles. magnitude are being projected and such favorable conditions with those Purdue University was not born in poverty and squalor; she had her inception in wise states- manshi|i, government appropriation and individual philanthropy, the history of which is too well known by those who will read this to justify a careful review, yet never in the life of Purdue were the purposes of her founders limited to such as could be accomplished easily with the means at PURDUE hand, but always their aspirations were for larger work and a recognition from the skeptical com- DEBRIS monwealth that technical education in Indiana was a necessity. I 9 O 2 None of us can appreciate the courage and fortitude of these noble men who were attempting to demonstrate with such limited resources the worthiness of the cause they represented. We can only be aware of the outcome of the struggle and infer from the same the caliber of those who wrought from that condition Purdue ' s present greatness. It is impossible to contemplate this period of Purdue ' s development without associating with it the life and labors of one who was most actively engaged in this work and whose kind word and hearty cordiality are the cherished recollection of at least one-half of the students in attend- ance to-day. When ' 02 entered Purdue, Dr. Smart was in the west, heroically battling for health and strength, but when a prolonged stay indicated that he would not improve and that physical decline was certain, who of us will ever forget his return to Purdue, and even in the last hours of life his unrelaxed endeavor for us ? Truly Dr. Smart was a most noble exemplar of this spirit of loyalty. In view of such unswerving fidelity to a cause, it seems but natural that from it there should breathe forth a spirit among Purdue students which should forbid the toleration of anything less than loyalty to Purdue and all she represents. It is our chief glory that thus early there has settled over Purdue this healthful, vitalizing atmosphere of loyalty which bespeaks substantial growth and renders the future ' s aspect auspicious. — R. I. I901 Entrance examinatinns begin Monday, September 15 Examination of delinquents, Tuesday, September 10 First term begins Wednesday, September 1 1, 10:15 . Thanlisgiving holiday, Thursday, November 28. First term ends Friday, December 20. 12 m. I902 Examination of delinquents, Saturday, January 4, g Second term begins Monday, January 6, 10:15 A. m. Winter course in Agriculture begins Tuesday, Janu Second term ends Saturday, March 29, 12:30 i ' . M. Third term begins Monday, March 31. 8:15 A M. Examination for Freshman class, Monday, June 9, Third term ends Tuesday, June 10, 12:30 1-. M. Commencement day, Wednesday, June 1 1. Summer Vacation Entrance examinations begin Monday, September i Examination of delinquents, Tuesday, September c First semester begins Wednesday, September 10, It Thanksgiving holiday, Thursday, November 27. Christmas holiday begins Friday, December lo. 11 1903 Christmas holiday ends Monday, January 5, 10:15 A. M. Winter course in Agriculture begins Tuesday, January 6. First semester ends Saturday, January 31, 12:30 p. M. Second semester begins Monday, February, 2, 8:15 A. M. Examination for Freshman class, Monday, June 8, 9 A. M. Second semester ends Tuesday, June 9, 12:30 P. M. Commencement day, Wednesday, June 10. Xru steCsS and Of f ic ers TUt-. ILLIWI bTUVRT Wll HAM A B NKb of the -Board LaFavettt Greei field Fort Wayne Officers of Turdtie X ni-Versity WiNTHROP Ellsworth Stonk, Ph. U. . President Stanley Coulter, Ph. D. . . . Secretary Alfred Monroe Kenyon, A. M. . Registrar Go-Oerning Council Dr. Stone, Professors Goss, Latta, Green, McRae, Coulter, Golden, Matthews, Waldo, Muran, Evans. Davies, Pence, Fhiegel Sianding CommiUees [LETICS COLLEtiE PUBLICATIO Profess.. rs Coulter, Mille Stanley Coulter, Ph. D., Professor of Biology and Director of the BiologicE A. B., Hanover College. 1871; A. M., 1874; Ph- D., 1888; Beta Thcta Fi; Graduate Stud Harvard University ; Studied at Pasteur Institute, Paris, and University of Bonn ; did Res baria of the Jardin des Plantes, Soutli Kensington Museum and Kew Botanical Gardens High School, 1873-80; Professor of Science, Coates College, 1885-87; Profi Instructor in Botany in Summer School University of Wisconsin. l8gi, ; 1805 ; President, Indiana Academy of Science, i8g6 ; Fellow In same ; Fello ' Laboratory. [, Wabash College an d Research Work in the Her- dens ; Principal, Logansport Biology, Purdue, since 1887 ; inona Summer School since rican Association for the Ad- Science of Na JOSEI ' H C Es Arthur, D. Sc, Professor of Vegetable Physiology and Pathology, l otanist Indiana Experiment Station. B.S., Iowa Agricultural College, 1872 ; M. S., 1877; D. Sc, Cornell, 1886; Sigma Xi at Iowa Agricultural College, 1877-7S; Instructor in Botany, Un any, Summer School of University of Minnesota, position since 1887; Member Philadelphia Acade Academy of Natural Sciences, Associ; ; Demonstrator in Biology Wisconsin, 1879-81 ; Lecturer in Bot- 2 ; Botanist, New York Experiment Station, 18S4-S7 ; present ■ of Natural Science, Indiana Academy of Science, Minnesota jnale des Botanistes, Society for the Promotion of Agricultural Science, ' American Carnation Society, Botanical Society of America, American Association for the Advancement of Science. Percy Norton Evans, Ph. D., Professor of Chemistry and Director of the Chemical Laboratory. B. S.. McGill University, i8go; Assistant in Chemistry, McGill University ; Student, University of Leipsic, underProfessorE. Von Meyer. 1891-93 ; Ph. D.. 1893; Honorary Fellow. Clark University. 1893-94; Chemical Laboratory, Wesleyan University, 1894-95 : Instructor in Chemistry, Pu ersity. 1893-94; Assistant 1895-96 ; Associate Professc ; present position J Fello Indiana Academy of Scieii Katherine Eliza Golden, M. S., Assistant Professor in Biology. Graduate State Normal School, Salem, Mass., 1886 ; B. S., Purdue, i8qo ; M. S., Purdue, 1892 ; Assistant Bota- nist, Indiana Experiment Station, 1890-93 ; Instructor in Biology, Purdue 1893 ; present position since 190I ; Fellow, Indiana Academy of Science ; Fellow American Association for the Advancement of Science ; Fellow of National Science Club ; Member of Staff of St. Elizabeth Hospital Training School for Nurses. ViLLL M Henry Test, M. S., Instructor in Cliemistry. B. S., Purdue, 1892; M.S., 1893. Severance Burrage, B. S., Instructor in Sanitary Science. B. S., Mass. Inst. Tech., 1892; Assistant in Biology, Mass. Inst. Tech., 1892-93; Assistant Biologist, Massachu- setts State Board of Health and Lecturer on Microscopical Examination of Drinking Waters, Mass. Inst. Tech., 1893-95 ; present position since 1895 ; Delta Kappa Epsilun ; Member American Public Health Association, Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education, American Society of Naturalists, Indiana Academy of Science, Indi- ana Engineers ' Society ; Honorary Member Tippecanoe County Medical Association; author, with H.T. Bailey, of School Sanitation and Decoration; Lecturer on Sanitation and Hygiene, St. Elizabeth Hospital Training School for Nurses and Indiana State Soldier ' s Home Hospital Training School for Nurses. James Harvey Ransom, Ph. D., Instructor in Chemistry. B. S., Wabash College, 1890 ; A. M., 1893; Tutor, Wabash College. 1890-91 ; Assistant in Chemistry and Miner- alogy, 189193; Professor of Chemistry an d Physiology, Chicago Manual Training School, 1893-97; Graduate Student, University of Chicago, 1897-99 ; Ph. D., Chicago, 1899 ; Lecture Assistant, University of Chicago, 1897-00; Instructor in Chemistry, Purdue, since 1900 ; Instructor in Chemistry in the Chautauqua ( N. Y.) Summer School, 19C1 ; Member der Deutschen Chemisclien Gesellchaft, 1S95-99, Indiana Academy of Science and American Chem- ical Society. Edward Mahin, B. S., Assistant in Chemistry. B. S., Purdue, igoi ; Student Assistant in Chemistry, igoo-oi ; Tau Beta Pi. P LI R D tJ h DEBRIS 1902 William Cakkdll Latta, M. S., Professor of A n ' iculture; Agriculturalist, Indiana Experiment Station. B. S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1S77 ; M. S., 18S2 ; ForemaTi, Horticultural Department, Michigan Agri- cultural College, 1S80; Assistant, Agricultural Department, 1S81 ; Superintendent, Indiana Farmers ' Institute since 1889. Charles Sumner Plumb, B. S., Professor of Animal Intiustry and Director of Experiment Station. Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1882 ; Associate Editor, Rural New Yorker, 1883-84 ; First .Assistant, New York Experiment Station, 1884-87 ; Professor ,,f . Krirnllurc, I ' niversitv of Tennessee, and Assistant Director, Tennessee Experiment Station. 1887-qo ; Edit-T .iml I ' ulili-lin .i( A. ii. u ' lm.il Si ic n. e. ' ols, 1-1 ' ; Sr. r. tarv and Treasurer of Society for the Promotion of .A ii. iHiiirii S ' I. IK . , 1::,,:,,,,; I ' lliw. A. A. A. S. ; l ' i.-.i.!. nt, Indiana State Dairy Association, i8yi-c)6 and 1902 ; I ' ri -.idriit, Annrii IN i lii i.ii Shn |. Si ' iiit ; .- i crei.uA . Imli.in.i Wunl ( ■rowers ' Association; .Author of Biographicil Directory nf American . gri ultural Scientists, iSSij, pp. too; Indian Corn Culture, 1895, pp. 247. IKS Tkoop, M. S., Professor of Horticulture and Entomology and Horticulturalist, Indiana Experiment Station. H. S., Michigan Agricultural College, 187S ; M. 8.. 18S2 ; Assistant in Botany and Horticulture, Michigan Agricultural College, 1880-83; Member, A. A . A. S. ; Vice President. American Forestry Congress; Meinher, American Pomolugical Society ; and .State Entomologist. IIenkv Augustus Hustun, A. M., A. C. Professor of Agricultural Chemistry; Stale Chemist of Indiana and Chemist, Indiana Experiment Station. A. B., Bowdoin, i87g ; A. M., 18S2 ; A. C. Pur.lue, 1882 ; Zeta Psi ; Assistant, Chemistry and Plivsics, B(.wd..iii, iSyg-So ; Teacher of Science, LaFayittc Hinli School, 1880-82; Principal, 1882-S4 ; Pr.jfcssor of piiysics, Purdue, 1884-88 ; Acting State Chemist, 18S) S; ; l ' n.„K m .1 tlie Association Official Agricultural Chemists, i8g4-g5 ; Fel- low, A. A. A. S. ; Member, American Clu niicil .Society. D E B R -REDERICK Symes Johnsto.n, B. S., Associate Professor of Agriculture; Associate Agriculturalist. B. S., Ohio State University, 18.30 ; Kappa SigTna ; Assistant Professor of Agriculture, New Harnpshire College, i8 ).;-oi ; Associate Agriculturalist, New Hampshire -State K.xperimeiU Station, 1899-01 ; Present Position since September, igoi. Robert Alex.xnukk Ck.xk;, D. V. M., Instructor in Veterinary Science and A.ssistant State Veter- inarian. D. V. M., Iowa State Collegt, 18.37 ; Assistant Veterirjariaii, I..wa State C.ilege ; Member of Veterinary Me.li cal Society ; A. V. M. A. IIuBEKT livERETT V. N NoKMAN, B. S., Instructor in Dairying and Dairyman, Indiana K. |)eriineut Station. B. S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1S97 ; Assistant in Dairying, Michigan Agricultural College, 1894-95 : Lecturer, Michigan Farmers ' Institutes, 1896; Assistant in Dairying and Farm Superinlemlcnt. Pmduc University, 18.38-01 ; Secretary, Indiana State Dairy Association, 1898-02. Albert Nash Hume, B. S., Assistant in Agriculture and Assistant Agriculturalist, Indiana E, - periment Station. B. S., Purdue University, T900 ; Uairym.m atid Poullryuiau, N..rtli Louisiana Experiment Station. RuFus Ch. ncey Ourecht, B. S., Assistant in Animal Industry. B. S., Iowa State College 1.301 ; Present Position since .September, n, ■Alex, ni)er Archie.m.h Rice, Lecturer on ♦Deceased January 19, 1902. P 11 K D 1902 w ttSO-J. | P(:535PF M EPM3rT-rC ' S- | ARENCE Abiathar VValdo, A. M., Ph. U., Head Professor of Mathematic A. B., Wesleyaii University, 1S75 : A. M., 1 Seminary, 1S75-76; Professor of Ma.lif niaiirs . Matliematics and Registrar at W ' ' ■ :; ' ■ ' - Cniiegiate Institute, 1881-82 ; Stno ■ 1 : ' 1 r I use Poiyteclinic Institute, iS;Sv-i , l ' i-.l. i College Association, 1S91 ; Fellmv of Americai ana Academy of Science, i8q5 ; Treasurer of Society for Pi of North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary School nals ; author of Descriptive Geometry. ' s and Naiur 1 Science at Drew Kema giate Instil ite. 1876-77 ; Instructor cs and Vir I ' ri-sident, Hackettsto 1. I882-S,; ' n.fcssor of Mathemati 78 ; Professor of Mathematic ,d Latin, Hackettstown Col Si ; Professor of Mathema iilies of Leipsic and Munic .f .Mathematics, De Pauw University, 1801-95 ; President, Indiana Association for the Advancement of Science. 1804 ; President, Indi- of Engineering Education, 1899-00 ; Member contributed many articles to Mathematical Jour- Mo.sES Cobb Steven.s, A. M., Professor of Higher Mathematics. A. M., Earlham College, 1882 ; Professor of Mathematics, Havcrford College, 1858-62 High School, 1867-76; present position since 1883. Member, Indiana College Association emy of Science; Life Member. National Educational Association; Member of America contributed many articles to Mathematical Journals. Tho.mas Greene Alford, A. M., Professor of Mathematics. A. B., Indiana University, 1871 ; A. M. in Pedagogy, Indian a Ur 1871-74 ; Student, Indiana Normal School, 1874-75 ; Prinrip:)!. Prii-r.m University, 1877-79; Principal, Washington High S. 1 ' 1 ; Su] Principal, High -School No. 2, Indianapolis, 18S4-S , - : : ,_ I n I ' rofessor of Mathematics, Purdue, 1892 ; Phi Kapi a 1 -1 , m iii 1 1 ,ic iversity. 18SS ; Teacher in District Schools, in High SchoMl. 1875-77; Professor, Vincennes .(.■riniciident of Schools, ' evay, Ind., 1881-84 ; K ' ipal. Indi.iiiapolis Public Schools, 1889-92 ; lers ' Association since 1875. Erastus Test, A. M., M. D., Professor of Mathematics. M. D., University of Michigan. 1868; M.S.. Earlham. 18S6 ; Professor of Botany and Chemistry, Earlham. 1S65-72 ; Professor of Chemistry, Wiili.imette College, 1S76 ; Principal. Raisin Valley Seminary; Patron, Central Academy. Plainfield, Ind. P U R D U Alfred Monkoe Kenyon, A. M., Associate Professor of Mathematics and Registrar of the Uiii- D K B R I versity. I 9 O A. B., Hiram College, Hiram, Ohio, 1894; Teacher in High School, Wellington, Ohio, 1894-96; Graduate Student, Western Reserve University and Case School of Applied Science, Cleveland, Ohio, 1896-157 ; Graduate Student, University Scholar in Mathematics, Harvard University, 1807-98; Degree of A. M.; Instructor in Math- ematics, Purdue, 1898; Associate Professor of Mathematics, iqoi ; Registrar, 1900 ; Member American Mathematical Society. VViNFKED HoRTON- OsBORNE, A. B., Instructor in Mathematics. A. B., Harvard, 1897; Instructor in Mathematics, Purdue, 1899. J. COB Westlund, Ph. D , Instructor in Mathematics. Graduate of the Gymnasium of Orebro, Sweden, 1885 ; Student at the Universities of Upsala and Stockholm. 18S5-87; Yale University, 1S04 95 ; 1S36-98; Ph. D., Yale, 1898; Professor of Mathematics and Physics, Bethany College, Lindsberg, Kan., i88q-g6; Instructor in Mathematics, Yale, 1896-00; Purdue, 1900; Member of Ainerican Mathematical Society ; Deutsche Mathematiker Vereingung ; Indiana Academy of Science ; author of Outlines of Logic and contributor to various Mathematical and Scientitic Journals. VV.VLTER D.AVis L.ambert, A. M., Instructor in Mathematics. A. B., Harvard, 1900 ; A. M., Harvard, 1901 ; Instructor, Purdue, iqoi. IMA M.iNT. McRak, a. M., Professor of KducatL-d M lirookville College. Bn.okvill ' Principal, Marion High Scliool, 1S83-87 ; pres Member State Teachers ' Association. n(liana;. . M., W.iosler; position since 1SS7 ; Mc ncipal, Muncio High ,Scli. s I ' ' kan(IS iMoKAN, A. B., Ph. D., Professor of History and Political Economy. . . 1;., liiivcisity of Michigan, 18S7 ; Aihnitted to the Micliigan l!ar, 1SS7; -Superintendent ot ,Srho,,ls, •er. Minnesota, 1887-92 ; Graduate .Student, Johns Hopkins, i8g2-q5 ; Ph. U., Johns Hopkins, 1805 ; I ' eld Sell. ;) in History in l8q4 and Fellowship, i8q4-q5 ; Member Phi Beta Kappa : American Historical Association ; lUted many articles to historical, economic and educational magazines. , Anna Vr , I ' rofessor of Industrial Art. Studied in Cinrinii.iti Art Academy, Art Students ' League of Nc-w York and with Willi.ini H. Fry. m: lX vu:s, Ph ench, Bridgewater 1885-95 ; Ph. IX, 1 Eknst J. Fluegel, Ph. D., Professor of German. Graduate of the University f B iSSq I r f ss f I t ( t-k ( I H t Irs Gymnasium, 1889-90; Pli. D Ln c si f 1 i tl I | | Languages, Boston School . f LanguigLs 1 1 IMl si I I I I mi Languages, Tiifts College, Miss iSq; jb I I Technical German Reader ; rr | 1 i 1 tl K 1 I Marv Do, n, B. L., M. S., Instructor in English Literature. B. S., Pur.liie, iS.,i ; li. L., Larlham Colk-Ke ' iSc,3 ; M. S., I ' unl.ie, 1892; Gr.,duate Stmleni Cornell i8,,vo. Fellowship in English, C.rnell, 1894 95 ; Principal, Hesper Acaden.y, 1805.06 ; present position since iXofi. ' ' ' Nellie Phillips S. mson-, Instructor in Wood Carving. .Studied in Art .Students ' League ol New urk.Cincinn.iii Art A.. ninny and Ac.ideniy.il I ' lue Arts, .Siena. Ii.il, John IIeis.s, A. M., In.structor in German. A. P.., Harvard, 189J ; A. M., H.irvard, igoo; I ' rincipal. P.raillor.l ( ' i 1 Hi.di S. hool iSo- 04 ' Suidou I -i x ' i University, 1894-95 : Instructor in .Modern Langu.ages, Colgate .Acaden.y,i8o5-o6 ; InstruVior in .Modern I m.on ' .-e ' Leals University School, 1896-98 ; present position since looo. C.XROMNE K. SiiOEM.XKKK, M. S., Instructor in English. H. S., Purdue, 1S8S ; M. S., Purdue, 1889; present position since looo. lunyiN VV.. LTER Kemmereu, a. H., Instructor in Economics and History. A. li., Wesleyan, i8gg ; 1899-00 Scholar I-:iect in iCconomics and .Sociology, Coluinliia Lhiixersiiy apii.iint ment resigned; 1899-01, University Fellow in Ec.m.Mnics and Finance, C.rnel ' l University suninie ' r of 1 01 AssistauttoChief Expert on Trusts and in.lustriai Coml.inations, United Slates Industnar Connnissi,,,, • Dell Kappa Epsiloii, Phi Beta Kajipa. CvRL Aliifki- Kk.mm , . . .M., Instni.-t,,r m Ccrnian. Gradno- ,ll„iM. 1 . , mn.isiun., I S.,: ; ,s, n.leu, :„ Neuchalel, 1893: A. B., Eureka College, 1895 I A.M., 1S07 Instructor .n i.ern,.,,, .u..l Heneh, Eurek., Clle -e. ..S95-96; Instructor in German French uu] Snndsh Si mnn , College, Alnlene. Tex., 1896-97 ; Instrucfu- in Latin and Greek, Wilsm, College, Iowa, 1S97-08 ■ Gr ' adu at ' e ' studem UniverMty of Marburg, 1898-99; la.iversity of Lousame, 1S99-00; Instructor in Modern L.i ' ncoKe- ' es Michi-u Milit.iry . ' Vcademy, 1900-01 : present |josition since moi. •■■ ■«. ' j,. ,M ] 1 I I i I Ui Kk Gnss I I S liolLssoi of J i)(.iiniLi.til 1 n ' incLiiii_, Iul Dltii ot tliL Schools ot Ln ineciin M S W alnsli iSSb Instrucun in Meclnnic Arto 1 urdiic i ' !7Q S 1 rofessoi of Pricticnl Meclnnic; 1S83 qo cs 1 if L pcnnicntil I nginciring since iSgo Uein i Lngineenng Schools since 1000 Menilicr of tlK riciiiS ciet MtchaninlLnginnrq and of the Council mtiirin X- iti fill h inruncnt of Sc ciuc I iic,incLiinK rduciti n In 1 1 -- Ass ( nil n (01 the Ad M isicr Mcclnnics, Associ iti r ulhri ,1 1 encli W ik in W d As- Ki 1« i LI Wii I MM ki i Ki( k H ii A M C F I ' lotcssoi Ot nllLd Mechanics nMitiEK M h Assocntc I ' ioti.ss 1 1 M I irdiL iS,q M E iSq7 Assist lilt 111 I i S So., I resent 1 sition since iS,) 1 hi 1) ji 1 ll„ SoeletN 11 mccrintr S Iiistri s lis ni WiiLivM FoRsvi-HE, Associate Professor ol Car and Locomotive Design. Suhlci.tat Dickms.,,, s,.,mM,rN „„1 ii ih,- I ' mIv t, , hn 11,,, ,| I ' l,,! „i, I, ,|„ , . ,,|, i|,e IV-nnsylvanl.T Rail- way mUMu, ,„„,„„v „ 1, , , -, ,, ..,., , M„„, M,,|.,„„ , , „ ,,,,,. ,1 E„gi„eer „f the ,„ ' ,- ' NU-..„nl,,„ ,,l M ,,. I, , „„| M„| ,.,,, „,l,crn facific Kailw.,v, IhQh-q,,; . U, iMiii, ,1 1 n,i,i,, i l,,rll„ T, i,i,s; h ini , ( , . ,1 e,.., l ,,,, ,h , |.k ., ,,l |„„ii,,„, mi„ , l,,ol. P U R I:) LI E Ci.ARENXE IIovF.v RoiiERTSoN, M. E., Assistant Professor ol Steam En rineerin.r ' ' ' ' ' ' ' D. S., South Dak„ta Agricultural Cnllesc .89,?; IS. M. E., I ' uulue, ,S,,s; M. li .ri8„6- T.m u-t , Piu- Mc-, 1, ,uh ,1 ' 9 O 2 Engmc-enng Socic-t, ; |.ini,.r Mcniher „r thcAuicricai, SociLt ..f Mcehanical Euniueers. KnwARn EiLswoRni Rkvnoi.ds, M. E , Instructor in Ensrineerin ' Laljoratory. B. M. F... i,S,,4; M. E., iS,,!;: Assistant in Ek ' ct Lr.uELLVN V. I.UDV, iM. E., Instructor in Eni ' ineerintr Laboratorv. Beniamin Charles Wai.henm ier, H. S., Instructor in Mechanical Drawing. Kappa I ' si. ' . • . 1. .i.H,ni .. . n. ui , . RmiERT Rusk IIarkixs, i I. E., Assistant in Meclianical Drauin-. Gra,laate „( ()hi„ State Uuiversity, .900 ; Kappa Signia. 657160 Mark Dana Strout, Assistant in Engineering- Laboratory. Assistant Superintendent EaFayctte Car Works, 1887-88: Assistant SuperiiiUn.lent ln,liaiiap„lis Car i.SSy-go; present position since l8i)0. Gii.iiERT Amos Young, B. S., Assistant in Engineerinn- Laboratory. A.ri ' uh;; m!ll ' X4T ' r ' ' irV ' i ' !l; l cha;geof W„.,,U„Kl Inn, Departments, S.,u„, Mu-HAEL losi-H. GuLUKN, M. E., Profcssor of Practical Mechanics. . „• c . , ,ss,- Instructor in Sl.nps, .883-go ; Present Position since iSgo; Meinhc-i of Indiana Ac.iaeniy c ' . j _. , Society or Mechanical Engineers : Franklin Ins.itnte ; Manual ■rrannnK I enchers A.soc.uiu,, o . , ... ,,f Nav.il . rcliitects and Mecha W ' li . i M I ' vvsoN TUKNKK, AssislaiU Professor of Practical Mechanics. ,rul„,le ,.f School of Mechanic Arts. Mass. Inst. Tech.; Member of the .Sociel l.;n,„u ' en„, K.lucation ; American Society of Mechanicl Engineers. IxMi-s Dxvii. lloFivM.XN, M. E.. Assistant Professor of Practical Mechanics in ■ ' ' Apprentice Machinist, . 2-86; 11. M. E.. Purdue. iSoo; M. E., f ' ' ' , iS,;o-o.: present position since lyo, ; Tau P.eta Pi; lunior Member of the Amencan Wood Shop. Wood Work, Pur Society of Mechai riiA PiKK.K Jamison. P.. M. E.. Instructor m Mechanical Drawing. i,„„.„,„u ,1, lAumd ■ ' ' : ' ' ' ■■ ' l,r ' ' in ' ' •. ' .r ' eslM B. K. E., ruidue, 1.100; Assistant in Macliii William McEwkn Nvl, H. S., Assistant in Shop VViLlJAM II. IliiLMi ' .s, Assisl;iiU in I ' Dunil Fniiiidry and Machine Co., Chicago. P tl R D H E D I ' , H R I S I (; O 2 C.I Wnrks. An Alexani.kk Massi-v Wilson, R. M. K., Assistant in Mechanical Diawinu li. M. E., I ' urdnc, i,,0L jiiMN IIlnkv Chandler, Assistant in Practical Mechanics. EuimL-rly with Chandler iV Taylor and Alias Engine Works, Inil RnwAKP Nicholas, Assistant in Vnv c Ru.iiil Formerly with .Sand Creek Mining Co. and I ' ark technic, i8g6-iQ00 ; ]ireseni | osition since njoi. r-e Work, Uose Poly |.;m. G(iLl.si;nKour,H, I I. K., Professor of Klcctrical Engineering and Director of llie IClcctrical Laboratory. M. I ' ' .., Cumuli University, iSq2; Bela TliL-ta I ' i ; Electrical Kirjim er. ( ..linn C..., S. r,.i.i. .i.. I ' .u. i::.,- ' ; m Imnjeof Eltctrieal Knsiiieering Department, Arkansas Universit , i:--,;, (..n iiUii,- tH- n... r, 1 .j.v,,,, 11,,,,,. lliiminatin;;- Co., iSi,5-.-,6: Professor . if Electrical ErRineerin.- sin,-,- i: ' , ' . , l.,nl, . ..I Am. ii.m InMii.n. ' ..I 1 I.. - ' i.-.ii iMi-iiK-ers ; InstiUile ..f I ' I- . til. ..1 Fi.. ' ;... .■.■- -.1 |-|il.,I.iii.I , 1 ...•.;,:!n ln-i i:.:. . S ;■, |..i ili. ! ' ..t nd t.. Engineer luiwi.N S. Im-kky, H. S., Professor of Physics. Cnuhiateo! Cornell University, iSS,, ; I ' n.fessorol NatMr.,1 Science, Kalannu...o College, K.ii.una t iSS,,.,i; C.raduale Student, Cornell University, iS.)i. i3 ; Fellow in I ' hysics, ii ;2-iy. FelL.w in I ' liysi ll..|.lsins University, iS.:)3-94 ; Graduate -Student, Royal Universily, U| sala, Sue.!, ii, i: .,:.;-. , Instruct..! ir University of Wisconsin, 18155-99; Professor of I ' liysics, Purihie University, i. ' 1 . : A.iili roi x iri..us pape: . i|..[lly on subjects in Eight and Electricity, in various lutropean and Americ.in . 1. i.tiii. J..iirn-ils. CuAKiJcs f ' mi.o Matthews, M. E-, Ph. D., Associate Professor of p:ieclrical f ngineerino:. Si. |..lnisbury Academy, 18.S7 ; M. E., Cornell Universily, iS )2 ; Ph. IX, i. i ; Sigma Xi. ; Aulhoi ..; ,l,. eu p.ipers on i)hysical and electroicclmical subjects, and joint author of i«.. te,Mdiu..ks ..Ji Physics ; 9 o Ji.iiN Walter Estuklink, H. S., Iiistniclor in !• Ft. Wayne CuIIl-hc Kl. Wayne, In.l.. lS,,.i ; I;. S, ment, 1898-02; Mcnihci- .Simula Nu Kialciniiy, I ' au I Electrical Engineers. i T[ w Llovd Everett Klm:, 15. .S., Instructor in Physics. D e B K I 1!. S., Turdue, iS.)7; wiili Western C.as Custruction C. .uj.l Kl. W.iyne Kkctrie O-., i.S.,S since IS. , : Tau Ueta l i. Cii. RLEs M, K(ju;s Smiiii, B. S., Instructor in I ' hysics. 1;. S.. Inivii-iu ,.l Wisconsin. i8,,6; (;raduatc Student, University uf Wiscnnsin, 1897.18 ; I ' niverMtv ul Wi-. .ii-n,, 1897-98; Instn.ctor in Physics, University Wisc.nsin, 1S99-00; Stu. Muiiieii, Ceiin.iiiy, [.wuoi; Present Pi.silion since .September, 1901; Memlier of tlie .. .sir physical Sueietyut America. J. MF.s C. Kr.i.SAV, 1). S., Instructor in Telephonic I ' ' ,ni;inccriiio. Engineeis ; wiih I 1 W ■ ••, ■ I ., . :• , : .- j , .1 ,,110,1. i ,,.,; W , Telepli.me ExcImi, ., •■.: ' , .. , ' : ::,. t.Ir.tih.il I i.-m Ch.wmnc. Rice Dooi.kv, H. S., Assistant in Electrical ] P.. S., Purdue, 1901 ; Tau Beta Pi ; Phi Kappa Psi. L.WRE.N D.M.E NuKi.sTKUM, H. S., Assistant in I ' hysics. a S., Purdue, Kjoi. Ai.ERKi. F. VVei-CH, H. .S., Assistant in I ' hysics. VVii.i.i M iJAvm ri:Ni;i-;, C. E., Professor o( Civil Eni,rinccring. U.S., University (.f Illinois, i8S6 ; C. F.., 1895; Tau Beta Pi; Instruct.ir in Illiniiis, 1892-93; Assistant Professor, 1S93-9S; Associate Professor, 1898-99 ; Prod 1899; Assistant City Engineer, Culiimbns, 1884 ; Filled following positions: 1886-92. will Santa Fe R. R.- Assistant Engineer, Road Master, Division Engineer ,.[ Maiiiii n.nir , I ' .nginecr ; Member of American Society of Civil Engineers, Western Railway (I iil ' , Iniiin and Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education ; Author of Staiid-I ' ipc A.rxl. various articles in technical periodicals and society reports. GiccJKdK p:i,i.swnRTH VV, nscHE. A. H., C. E., Assistant Professor of Civil Engi A. i;., W -.1.111 Mm ' 111,1 C., l.r_r. 189T; C. E., Cornell University, 1805; Graduate i.s.H ., ' ' ■. Willi I : I i- : M.Liyland Steel Co., 1892-93; with Union Bridge Co., Mi,,nln,,,| 1; :i. : 1 : i. ! 11 ■ I ' owcr Co., First Regiment United -Slates Voluntei Engineering. University of Civil Engineering, Purdue, New York City To ktur .Si.-., snixK, H. .S., Instructor in .Sanitaiy Enginecrino;. V, i;niversitv ol llliu.iis, iSoS ; With United Slates Engineers on Topogia; of Mississippi River. 1805-97; Assistant in Theoretical and Applied Mechi Tau Ikta Pi ; Meiiiher of Illinois Society of Civil Engineers ; Purdue, since 1 (INK AldP.KociM, li. S.. . ssistant in Civil Eno-incL-ring. HE - 1 IMhh hhK i i ' ' uui M P HI AR M A € ' Y Aktiilik I.awkench Gkeen-, I ' ll. C, M. 1)., I ' h. I)., Dean aiul rrolcssor ol ClRniistry Pharmacy. Ph. C, University ol Michio;;m, t8S2; M. I)., [iidiana ML-.licMl Cllcf;.-, iXr,,; I ' ll. IJ., Kralikliii Q Julius Vili.i, m Stukmf.k, Ph. G., I ' rofes.sor of Pharmacy. Ph. (,., Purdue, iSqi; Chairman ..f the Commiiti.- ,.n I ' harmacy of tlic Indi.in.i Pli.umaceiitic Delegate to the Coriventiun fur the revision of the l ' . S. Phannacopixia. GiKiKnE Si ' iTZER, Ph. G., Lecturer on Operative Pharmac Ph. (;., Purdue, iSKq. P,EXJAMIX M. RTIN H( Ph.(;., Purdue, i; WllMAM I ' .. Hl.M.ER, Ph. G., Instniclor in Materia Mi G., Assistant m Chemistry. pil of F. IV-MSi.-, Micliigaii Niinn il Ci Will. G.urtiicy, New York Mrs. Irla Norton, Detroit Conscrv ami Miss Lena Little, llostoi JEANNKTIK L. SMI 111 rnpilufA. K.Vial,of LaFay A. Kelso, of Cliicaf;o, IV-oiia C.)nserv. iVIiss Neally Stevens, Mr. M.ix Led Miss Flora ' M. Ihinlei, o( In.liai RTllA sriM.- AY AN. Lil BLANCIIK ANNIS MILLER, Assistant Lilirariaii ALEVES, Captain U. S. A., Professor of Military Science anc CHAKLES T. FREEMAN, Physical Director PIERRE VAN LANDEGHEM, Landscape Gardener MARY IRWIN, President ' s Secretary LUCRETIA liOGGS, M, S., Clerk in the President ' s Office M. S., Purdue, igo2 AGNES CASI ' .V, Stenographer, Electrical Department ILLIA MACOX ' ERN, Stenographer, Engineering Dcpartnie ALICE ISEERS, Stenographer, Agricultural Department NELLIE TRACY, Stenographer, Experiment Station ; m.in V. I;iiti,i-r, Indiaiiapiili . Sucidlcigital I ' roblems (4 lectures) A. H. Saiun. New York I ' rcitcctive Cnatmgs for Metal Surfaces I). W, Mkai., Cl.ic.igo . .S.ime Notes on Bumping Machinery K, P.. Mii,i.EH, ChicagM . ) ' ' ■ ' Development of a Telephone Industry ini an Engineering .Standpoint L. A. Fkrcuson, Chicag.i The I) evelo|inient of Modern Central Stations H.C. VANNlEK.Chicagi. . . Cast Iron Car Wheels Alex. Galbraith, Janesvillc, Wis. Horses H. P. Miller, Sunbury, O. Sheep O. E. Braofute, Cedarville, 0. . Cattle H.F. McMahan, Faiific-ki.Ind. . Science an.l Practice T. E. Oiui, I ' ittshurg. I ' a. . . Poultry W. ]!. Andeks.in, Otwdl, Iiiil. . Swine Miss Laura G. Dav, Manlmttaii, K an. . Donu-slK- I ' A ' ononlv C. M. HoHiiS, Bridgeport, Ind. . . Horticnltine 1. J. W. liiLLlNGSLY, !iidi,inap..lis . Uu.siness Metho.Is ■A,. .4. kiCE, LaFavcti,- Rural Law C. M. Bright Rural Law -L GRADUATE .STUDENTS 4. Candidates _for Ad-Vanced Decrees CUKA Mav Caulkins, 1). S., igoo. — M. S. VV. Lal ' ayt Hisi..ryaiKlLilcralii.v Will AM Allen Drake, B. S., iSgg.— .! . .S ' . l.aFay Physics C L RLES DucAS, 15. S., igoo.— J . ;. Indian:i|.olis Mech mical Enginc-eriiiv; Percivai Elliot Kansler, B. S., igoi.— A. h. W. LaK Electrical Eiigintxrins GUSTA WiLiiELMiNA Felbaum, B. S., iSgg.— i! . .v. Da Cerman Literature E ClIKlS INE Felhaum, a. B.,Uiuiiaiui University ).—.] . .S Misturyand English Makv I ' LiiKENCE Hiller, B. S., igo I .— J . .V. LaFay LitLiature, Fermentation and I ' .nglish Al ERT Nash Hume, B. S., igoo. — M. S. riymout Agriculture, Bacteriology and German Fi lUA Jane I.utz, B. S, 1884.— . i . LaFayettc Literature and History I.Vl.LX Caroline Marks, B. S., igoi.— .! . .V. LaFayc History. Literature and . ' rl RKNLII 1 invAKh Trucksess, B. .S., kjoo. M. S. . La 9 o Graduate SiudenU J ot in ' Residence _f or 190I-J902 Df.xtek Cr-AKK BuEix, H. S., 1899.—;) . E. Chicago, 111. PURDUE Mechanical ICnginoenng 13 E l j ] S I ' ,UGKNF. Sherman Cooper, B. S., 1S97. — Jl . E. Crown Point Mcchniilcal Knyinecring Charles E;d vard Howe, B. S., 1S96.— J . ;. Wabash Mechanical F.iigineerin.i; KuwAKi. liiNGHAM KiRK, B. S., 1894.— . A. Jacksonville, 111. Georgiana Lindlev, B. S., 1901. — M.S. NoblesviUe IvrHKi. LiNWOiiD MiiNTiiciMEKY, B. .S., i90l.--yl . 5. .South Bend History Edmond Orchard, B. S., 1899. — M. E. I)a3-ton, Ohio Meclianical EiiginecriTig RouERT Eagle Peck, B. S., 1S99.— J . E. Cincinnati, Ohio Mechanical Engineering Albert Sutton Richey, B. S., 1894. — E. :. Anderson Electrical Engineering Claude Riddle, B. S., 1899. — I . .S ' . St. Cloud, Minn. Science Giles Emmet Ru ' Lev, B. S., 1899.— i ' .-V Racine, Wis. JAMES Samuel Shortle, B. S., iSSS.— :) . ,S. Chicaoo, 111. History Richard Stanley Twells, B. S., 1900. — yl . 5 ' . Harlan, Iowa P ' rank Lemnaku Woi.ee, B. S., 1899. — C. A. Toledo, Ohio J ot Candidaies _for Degrees IIakvev Mili:s Aitt.i.man (liuliana State Nornialj 1901. — Angola M.m,K,l -IVaming ,. , Mary Kimtii Hkown, 15. S., 1901 .— LaFaycttc DEBRIS Claude Henrv Cunss (Iiuliana Stale Normal) 1901. — Holman Ada Ai.wiiDA 1- kkv, I!. S., 1 Sqi .— LaFayette I ' Hii.ii ' GEORor, IIauss, I ' h. (i., 1901. — liKliaiia|iolis Eeeie Mabel Keieikk, 1!. S., 1901 .—W. La Fayette CiL Ki.ES Manfull Leedham (Indiana State Normal) 1901. — Terre Ilaiit Manual Traininjj Elizabeth Leaminc. Meigs, H. S., 1901. — LaFayette LitL-ratiirc- and lli(.l..i;y Charline McRae Mitchell, AL S., 1S9G.— VV. LaFayette In.lustiial Alt Maky Weakly Royse, I!. S., iSq .— W. LaFayette John Jacciu Schcienhoi.tz, I ' Il G., 1901. — Rliotlt, Germany AL KTHA Dicks Stevens, M. S., 1S9S.— V. LaFayette Ki-.iiili Henrietta Emily Stmy, I ' ,. S.. i Sq:;. — LaFayette 9 o Graduate tudeni-t in X ndergraduaie Courses Hkkman Ci,aui.k Bkkkv. A. H. ( Indiana University ) iSg;.— ' . .V. Wii.i. Clyde Campuell, I ' h. H. ( Union College) igoo. — B. S. 1902 Leun Walk DiN.sMuKE, A. IS. ( Indiana University | I 894.— ■ ' ■ -V. Fred Eugene Dod ;e, H. S. (S. D. Agricultural College) 1900.— ' . Stuakt Stkicki.and Mookr 1-:de (Bath College) 1901.— A ' . .S ' . Tsuni Hagiu, M. !•:. ( Imperial Tokio University ).— 5. .S ' . IdiiN IIenkv Mavsiii.ks, A.m. ( Lebanon Valley College) 1900.— ' . -S: James Rav Thomas, A. B. 1901.— . ' . i ' . SiiEiLV Di.;,;s Watts, U.S. ( Butler College) go .—D.S. RADUATES IN MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Killiride, Scotland. IWAKI) I.l-I ' : AN ' DI ' -.KSOX, An.lv, CI HUCll C. lil.Al K :T, IVrk, C.ciU ' v.i (G.nrrcU-Uml.-rSlmrk; JOHN rUTNAM COOK. I. I ' . AU.nl M., s n. S. in M,,lK,nic.,l KriKiiiecring. SmMl ' rli ,V V ' !s ' l ' ' : ' ' ' ■• ' -■ ' ■ ■ ' , -■ EITrct, ..„ the ' .i EDWAKI) I), IS, ■• B. S. in MltImmi,,,! I . Tau lift.. I ' i. l,.l,„r. ICIinnscsofCiit off.C. Ill MAKN ' IN IIAUKIS. HiiK-y. J.icksnn, Tl- MuulnlinClnl, ' ,. ' .-■ ,, 02 Assnciatc Editor ' 02 Debri n ' . ' Hng S t;; .s,;,ni,, Alplm Kpsilon; U. N. A. Fhcsis- An lHvcsii ;.iii.iii ( the Effect nf Clianges iHrGinii.ivssi..ii 1,11 iFr- I ' erlMnii.ince ni a Sini| le Cr s; Mechanical Engi- uf Cut-off, Clearance liss Engine. I.I SLIE HU.XTAl ' .LE, Mux, Comiers ille, hid. ]-.. S. ill Mechanical Engineering. Ir,si,]riu N ' . M. C. A.; Mechanical Engineering Sn ciety: Track Team; 1 , ' , „, Hi 1 Infill-. .in,l lhuiri,M..ns , the ' acuum in the ghl and Taper Stacks •Kitty, 1) LAMDTT, M..tt.- ill, West LaFa FRED LEAKY, B. S. in Mccliai.ical EnginLx-rii.g. Mechanical Engineering Snciety. Us nVcruae ' l MniiTi ' i ' m ' ,Is ' F.Rl ' . ' ' ' EVERETT A. LEWMAN, •■jaw, West Union. In K. S. in Mechanical Engineering. Mechanical Engineering .Snciety; Western Railway C Thesis; An Experimental Study o| Cylinder Perfoi Schenectady No. 2, Under Different Steam Pressnres. ' EDWIN M. MAY, Little M.iy. M..se, B. S. in iMechanical Engineering. Mechanical Engineering Society. Thesis: A Series nf Tests on a i2-h..rse-i« mine the Effect, on its Performance, of Cha and of Time of k ' niti.m. IIARKY C. MAY, Big May, Still., Covington Ky I!. .S. in Mechanical Engineering. Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; niechanical Engineering Society. Thesis: An Investigation of the Effect of Changes of Cut-off, Clear and Compression on the Performance of a Simple Corliss Engine. J. C. McGR. B. S. in Mr. I Thesis: I -, Effect 2, of Es ■ Stacks haustX,. zlesof • IN I.KSLII-: NKSIilTT, Johni.v, lUrl.sl, Ii.il . in Meclianical EnKmccring. sis: Cilihralion ot Olscii Torsional Tcsliii- Ma lEonOKK WALTKK NKWllUKN, Moses. .Smx, 1 I,,m,,s1..i,, 111. S. ill Mechanical Engineering. chanical Engineering Suciet ; Tail Beta I ' i : Class F. wthal I Te.im, ' oX . ' ,,, -01 ; Track Team, •.,.,. esis: An Investigation of the Effect of Different Lulnicants in Ai; ikc Triple Valves. . M. N V. I ' KCKH.VM, Doe, Chicago, III, S. in i Ieclianical Engineering. eClub, ' oi- ' o2. esis: ••Commercial Test of i:;5-horse-ijo ver Whitlield luigii MES DEAL PICKARD, liiii, D.inville, Va. S. in Mechanical Engineering. chanical Engineering Society; Class I ' .« tl)all Teaiii, ' .)(;; Class I ' icli iler of Loclniumf sdlei ' i ' ecia. ' iy ■n 2, Using ' cimiJ Petroleuin as Fuel ' ' 54 AKLKS IIAKWIN I ' DKll-.K, ImH W .,yiir S. in MfCli.Miical Klr nirL-rini;. l)L-li.i Thcl.i; MmiuIcHu Chil), oi -V.j; ' Wm 1! KM, lUivnnr I Klkii..i„ ,is r, OSCAR C. STKIN, Ikcy, Aii(lt-rs..ii, R. S. in Mcclianical Kn-ineerinn. University Clcc Cluli, ' nii- ' oo- ' oo. Tliesis; A Slndv ..f tlu- I ' .r.HM.niic I ' t-if. the Centr,,! I ' cwer Station ..f llic liiicn 1 AMI ' :S SI1I-;[,1A ' TATM. FRANK li. TIMBEKLAKE, ■ ' Timniie.- L.iK.nctte, In. B. S. in Meclumical Engineering. Sigma Chi; Class Fuotliall Team, ' .(S- ' i,,, • ' oo. Thesis: Design ..f a Macliinc fur tlie Stud ..I Mat. KL K I ' LKIC -: Brake shne Tests, luvlviiiK the I ' se ..f the Master Car lUiilde iatiun 15nike-slioe TestinR Maeliiiie. rilMNV WAYNE VESTAL. Fat,- Ehv 1, Iml. S. i„ Mecha.iical EngineciiiiK. ■chai.ical Engineering .S..ciety; Class F..othall Teai cstern Railway Club. esis: nrake-shiK- Te.sts, I)iv..hing the Cse .if the Ma Vssociati.Mi Brake-shoe Testing M,achine. ndolinChib. nee of .Scheiiect.icly N.i, 2, Under ' . NKI) J. WIIKELI ' .k, ■■Criiur.il, Crnwii B. S. in Mecliaiiical Engineering. Mechanical Engineering [Society; Tan Reta Thesis: A Study of the .Shock-resisting Pi Castings. MALCOLM B. S. in Meeh Phi Ka Thesis: WHITE. Nii Uevel-imient of the Type o( Came RADUATES IN C IVI L ENGINEERING U(.ll AKMSl-RdNc;, Culy, Wl.it.- Plains, N. ,.; Sucioty Vice-rrisidc.a Civil EuKiiK-rnl Captain Class liascl.all Tcan., oc riiesis; •• Mesigii i.f Scwa. ' ;c-disi Plaiiifiekl, Intl. icL-l ' ivsidL-ut Class, ' oo; rdue Alldetic Association, ll.di.nia Kefornl Schuul at HKKMAN CL.AUDE liKKKY, I ' n.ksscr, New .Vuuusla, Ind. B. S. in Civil Knsineerin.i, ' . llUklON A. IlKKrENSllA V,-l li. .S. in Civil KnginceriuK. Civil Engiiieeiin. Society; T.ni llct MananL-r of C. E. Anmial, ■01-02 A. O. I), n. Thesis: Investigation of Ke-cnlorced Concrc .IIAULE.S CARROLL I ' .OYER, ■•Cub, ' ,. S. in Civil Engiiieerinu. :ivil I ' .ngincerins Society. I ' lesident, ' 02 fhesis: •■Union 1 )cpot and Tr.ick elev.iti n Class r.aseljall Tea WALTER BUKHLl Civil Engineering Society; K. ALLYN liULLOCK, B. S, in Civil Engince Civil Engineering Sue Tliesis: The Causes ball Team, ' ., C.E. Annual Thesis: In GEORGE H. C()OK, llij B. S. in Civil EngineeriT]g. Civil Engineering Suciety. Thesis: Hydrographic h EDWARD N. DASH 1 ELL, Dash,- I ' arsun, In. I B. S. in Civil Engineering. Civil Engineering Society; Phi Kappa Psi. Thesis : Economics of Railway Grades and Curves AKDURFF, Stirrup, Morocco, hid. A i:..ni|Mr.itive Siiidy of IWiilgu .SpcciHcitions and a Design IN V. IIINSMDKK. jicrry ' s Pal, Hloomi I KngiiiecriTiK Society. sis; The Hydrugrapl.y of llie W.ihasii K. r... ' l uiiky, I ' nii of Ke-ciiforccd Colic re tt . ill Civil Engineering. 1 Engineering Society. sis; .V Comparative Study MERTON K. KEEFE, 0 ' Keefe, Vest LaFayett B. S. ill Civil Engineering. Civil Engineering Society; Member tif Purdue Hand. Thesis: ■ ' Tlieurv m( ke-unforccd G.iicrete witli Kxi.e .- LVA E. KEMMER, Sliiirty, !• B. S. ill Civil Engineering. President Civil Engineering Society, Advertising Manager of ' 02 Debris. Thesis: Theory of Re-enforced Ci lue Athletic As; WALTER H. LANE, Nosey, W.ir H.irse, B. S. in Civil Engineering. Civil Engineering Society; Class Fo.ithall Te;i Thesis: Design of Water-supply System lor ANTHONY MAISCHAIDKK, T..nv, B. S. hi Civil Engineering. Civil Engineering Society; Sigma . lph: Thesis : Coefficients of Expansion of FkEI) T. MAK TIN, Windy, Richmond, hid. IS. S. ill Civil Knginecriiig. Civil Engineering Society. Thesi. ' !: Design of Water supply System (ur West I.aFaye GKOKCK W. MEGKKW, Mac, Sergeant. (-.alvcstcm, Tc IS. S. in Civil Engineering. Thesis: Union Dei.nt and Track-elevali.m rrojert fur !. .S. in Civil Engineering. ' i ' il I ' ' .ngineeriiig Society; Sigma Alpha Epsil IlKsis: Railroads, Yards and Terminals. . NK DI ' DI.EV KIDEIUJT, Bony, Dnds, roh-d,., Ohio. :relary Civil Engineering .Society, ' oi; Tan !!cta Pi; Class I ' .asehall csis: Investig.itinn h.r a Hydraulic Power plant at l.al ' a y.-lte. Ind. J.; S.MITH, Manistee, Mich. I. tv; liiisiness Manager ' 02 Debris; Assistant M;i , r) ' 00; Treasurer Athletic Association, ' oo- ' oi; iL;r,nU-at-Arms, ' oo- ' oi; Sigma Nu; I ' . N. A. GRADUATES IN ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING CLARF.NCK EOCAK ADAM. ' AUSTIN LLF.WKLLVX liERCER, I!. S. in Klecliical Knsiiieei ins. Thesis: Disign ..f a -;o-K.-W. rio-( WILLIAM THOMAS BEKKSHIKI P.. S. in Electrical Engineering. Tau Beta Pi; P. A. A.; Treasurer c. I !• list. ' -nntch. Keaclins, Pa ME1;RILL ASA ( . l B. S. in Eleriru. _ Sii ina Nil ; f. N. ., Thesis: •■pli..t.ii,Kii„ ;iui,,c City. I UC;USTUS DAVIS, KM I ICngineering. ioll)all Team, ' oo- ' oi. I ICnergy Losses in Armature n, Krc iiieucy and Magnetic WARD in B, S. in Ek- Thesis: ( llni..nTrac i.rl y, LaF.,y, Test (if ilic Ci FRED CHARLES HANKER, Hank,- - Monki B. S. m Electrical Engineering. Tail Beta I ' i ; Electrical EnRineerin ; Society. . D llol-FT, •■Tow-IKj loflheLni..!, I, t of Class, ' yS- ' gg. the Rolling stock of iTKliana. CALEB HOLLINGSWORTH, -HolK, Purdue F, A. M. Thesis: Commei Efficiency Test of lli JOHN CLEMENT HUFFMAN, J:,ck. ' ' Huff, Milford, Ind. B. S in Electrical Engineering. Tau Beta Pi; Irving Literary .Society President o-- ■ Annuals Literary Editor ,i ] .}.„ : i lass Football, V) - ' oo ; A. O. D. ' 1) ' bergeam-at-Arni-, h ' -: I, ., k Team ' o ;s.M 1. ■ ' !•.. ill, W. Lnssts ..( Carbon, (.ia|.l ) LAN1) M. |;K.hiM. M,, liARRET MiiKKIS MKK K 1 1,1„ •• 1 lysteiesis. K.ii.ih, S|«ikaiiL-. W:isli. CLiss Fuoth.ill Team TLlaj- l;..sil,.ill IV.ini : Uaj.,1, ,A il.r ,„, Tliosis : The Appliiaiioii ..I . l,,i,,i- | ' ,,«rr i.. Maihim l,„,ls. .MEK I.AWKENCK (IGI.E. Augie. Slui RAl.lTl AI.I KEI Electrical Eunineerinu ' : Thesis: Commercial Eciulpniemuf the Eniur Mana-eror Minuet CI CLARENCE ERLE REll), Clai ROLAND liORMAN RENNER. Ca lis. in i:ie.lri.al Enuiiuerinu. Emcrs..i,,n I 1, , H S,,. Miv, rresident LOUIS MII.ION .AIM ' , ■■Zip|., B. S. in Kl.cliical En,i„ccri„g. Tau lieu I ' l; Minuet Cluh; Ekt riicsis : Cuinmercial El ' ficicnc) GRADUATES IN S C I E N C E Litcr.iry F.ait..r Ddiris; Luc, AM SLIiri ' Dow, hi.liaii.i|.Mlis, In. I IRIIIN LAW iiuTii i-; AL ' (;ui;i-M, Tliesis: - Mc AKGAKKT FKANXi:S 1 1 AVWOi )1 ), West Lm I ' hilaletlicaii Socicly. Thesis: Al)Soi-iiliui TI••.I,LI■. MAKSIIAI.L, W INGLKTON K. M ITCl IKI.L, Mitch, L.t [«1 Vice-Preside rhesis: Analysis of Snullieni Indiana and We KDWARl) Mri:i.l,i:k, Ed,lic, .S.iuih Bend, Ind. ' I ' .iu liela I ' i; Clioniical Society; Pre-Medical Society. Thesis: Adsn,i,u,,n ..( Dissolved Substances. KA ■MON I.I- . VAI.L1-: NMLSOX, Lowell, Ind. i;. S. in Science. Carlyle; Literary Kdin.r Debris StalT; Editor-in Cli Muim.., non An -r Some Methods foi thi r r n)N SCHDKIKLD, ni[l, Sclio, Madison, I iiion; Pre-Medical Society; Class Science Pi Miis Phi Delta Theta. he .Minienlary Canal and Accessory Organs. MAKV JOSKPHINK THoMl ' SON, I„,l- ivctlL, hid. li.S. in Science. Pliihilctl.can Socielv. JOHN V11..SUN VAX NArTA, J,ick, Van, LaFayeUc, Inil. IS. S. in Science. Athletic Association; Pre-Medical Society; Kappa Sigma. Thesis: Description of Chromogenic liacteria Separated Innii V, ■ V:i EAkL F.Ih;. K VnUNC, ISn . Deak, ■■ Vcnigenr . iidersun, In,l. B. S. in Science. Treasurer iif Class, gS-qQ; Treasurer., f V. M. C. . ., ' oi - ' o ; Manager Fi hall Banquet, ' oo; Advertising Ivliior I . | ukui, oi -ii:; Irving Socii Chemical Society; Pre-Medical Sn, i. t ; .Xil.hii, . ss,„;i,in,,n; Phi Kappa : Thesis: Physiological Effects ..Ui riain 1 ..mis ..I i;. cicise. GRADUATES IN AGRICULT U RE is; V. M. C. A. GRADUATES IN PHARMACY HKl MAN r.KIZI nrn DKSCIILEK FKK( WII.IJAM NKW rii.G. w II. I. I.AM riikisri.vN iki-.i ' : llMnn,u:Lilti.;al .SuciLlv; I ' re-ML-ili. Lvninille, Iiul. iL-Ak-i1ir,Tl Suciel . . , ■■Mails. I.lavilk. In.l. ..it ' ly; Cl.isj, Hasub.ill; I ' le-Me GEORGE HEN ' KV Plii Dllt.l 11. Ll JAMl ' .r, Ml Lid 1 1 1 JOSI.I ' II A. KARIiE: )V i;. KKRLP ity; Prt-Medic;i ■r).m... Sl..rkw. ' l ' io(. Orange Cr HERMAN SANUL: Ph. c;. Class FoMtlxill; Class Society. AKCIEMKO.S V Ph. (;. Class Fonthall; PI Nt ;li, ' Jocko, Franktor ocic-ty; Prc-Mcdica ' o:; Pi-f-Mfdic RALPH McMASTP ' .K .STORMdM Ph. G. Punlue liand, ■oo- ' oi- ' o2: Pharmaceut JAMES HOWARD ■rAVI.(.)R, jii AKKV l,() VI-;i,l, WII.T.-I ' eck, Portia Aco.nipiish wliat th.mc Gii.OKs: OM Cc.id and Peacock Vki.l: kip. Kali, Bazoo! Zip, Zaw, Purdue! We yell Naiiglitytwo ! Wha.who, wi a! Offii Ml!. AlTKKNIlI .1 Miss liAKKU Ml;. Iloi.i,iN(isw Miss I)kKui-i;s Mr. HuXiAKLE Mr. Ci.F.AKV ' irc-l ' rcs: Treasiirer HISTORY O F THE SENIOR CLASS nl class of ' 02 first made its a[)pearaii . in September, 189S, that tli thieshold of University life. This was the largest 1 to that time, ever entered these halls of learning and lany of bright young faces in their lofty seats in tl that the illci that had, over the Iclt ccr- was this J a class of et eiioneous, for the class began early to distinguish itscll. In the usual tank scrap with the Soiihomorcs, though perhaps unsuccess- in the first trial, we persevered until ' 02 shone forth in splendor from the c, attesting the glory of the class for the remainder of the year. In athletics I MIL- of our number carried off the championship cup for indoor gymnastics. We were justly proud of this, and so, to celebrate it, we displayed a banner of d old gold from the top of the (lagstaff. lin of us will forget the morning in chapel, when the exercises w ere interru| ind p.iper sacks were blown up and burst? We were sternly eyed by t il to remain after chapel was over. Of course we were s( uldcd roundU, I bjccl had been to make others notice u.s, and it had n-c .icrninpli lKd. rcslinian year deserves notice. The .So|)homores, lulhiwing cmr cxanip jf night their banner on the flagstaff. When our eyes iiehcld il m tlu- inaniinousin decidingthat such things should not be. The .SiipiiDnuucs h.u ailed the flag to the top, where it seemed to defy an3 ' one to icuioxc es solved the problem by climbing the swaving ])ole and setting fue to the With what delight climbing th watched it burn until nothin dc of In athletics, besides gymnastics, we had n .•ived the vice-])residcncy of the Athletic Aj jgnized by malcing one of our number trea? ore conferred on a .Sophomore class. The standard set in our early years has bee: le on increasing in wisdom and stature and ii ry shines forth in the .Sophomore class ; tlu is of ' 01. Ma) ' they all live long and prospi Now, as we are about to leave the Universi h itli the determination to make our lives blackened string showc he f, hall team and on the .Sophomores our grc.it detic Association, an thron facult wc have reflected d of the ire ever looking forward to the time when ' round Purdue, Softly falls the warm spring sunshine, gently wave the grasses new — .Y- i). When, with college tasks completed, we are free to choose our way — Each one in his chosen station, he his genius may display ; But, with bright anticipations of the future ' s bounteous store, Ever mingle thoughts of sadness ; classmates then we see no more; Classmates who so faithful labored, side by side, the four years through Till they reached the heights of wisdom in Our Class Of V U R D U E n E 1! R I S 1902 In this age of growth and action, ' mid the hurry and the strife Of this busy world of ours, circumstances of our life Which at present seem important, and demand our thought to-day, With to-morrow ' s duties vanish, and from memory pass away; D E 1 But if ever in the future, in some distant land or state, We sliculd have the glorious fortune there to meet an old classmate. We would talk of things remembered by us all at Old Purdue, Things that cannot be forgotten by Our Class Of When, as meek and verdant Freshmen, we proposed to hold our own In the great gymnasium contest, Sophs did in derision groan; But when Henley stretched the Sophomore upon the old gym fie And Lynch ' s splendid tumbling added points unto the score. Our spirits rose abounding and our souls within us burned. And with impatient longings we for further conquests yearned, So with paper bags in Chapel we made a great ado, And received a first-rate scolding, did Our Class Of We had often heard of Physics, and of troubles great in store. And our brave hearts quailed within us when our Freshman year was o ' er, But in autumn days we rallied; valiant Sophomores then were all Wrestling- with the monster Physics, and some of us did fall; Then with wonder overflowing, we, like Sheba ' s queen of old, All declared with perfect concord, that the half had not been told; For with Ampere, Ohm and Huygens ever more perplexed we grew, Until we wished we were not in That Class Of After each vacation ended we returned with vigor new, Feeling- glad that it was over ; and a love for our Purdue Gradually took root and flourished ; in our Junior year we tried More than ever her to honor ; for we felt that she relied p li k d u e On her faithful Junior students to uphold her cherished name, ,j j |; i .s So, by careful, faithful study, tasks were mastered as they came, Problems solved and essays written ; for could we but get a clue We would get an answer someway, in Our Class Of ' 02 For, with honest, brave endeavor, ever searching for the truth. Hearts grow strong with noble purpose, and the hopefulness of youth Crushes those immediate troubles which at present seem so real. And anticipates the treasures which the future will reveal; So as Seniors ever hopeful, gaining knowledge day by day. We have all an obligation, which we only can repay By living lives consistent with the spirit of Purdue — This is the highest privilege of The Class Of ' 02 Soon, when we shall be disbanded, there ' ll be nothing more to tell But the pleasant recollections of the class we loved so well; Then upon life ' s troublous waters we will hold our rudder true. Which was given by careful training in our class at Old Purdue. Safely ' mid the shoals and eddies, with that rudder true and tried. We, with watchfulness and caution, our storm-beaten bark shall guide. And when the storms blow hardest, it our courage will renew To recall that we were members of The Class Of ' 02 — W. AlTKENHEAD. 87 A 1-1 1 Ll ' , over a year a,,o tl,c ticket office at the entrance to our atl.letic field was a Inmble i V iow. un,,amtedlour-by-eight building, not at all commensurate in appearance with tbe rcmaM,der of the field. V.s.tors attending any of the many games on Stuart Field were liable to get a false nnpress.on of the interest taken by students in athletics, simply because the first object wh.eh came under their notice was the unattractive and uncared-for ti ket office S de horn other CO leges would laugh at the .luusv structure, advising that it be propped up, , Pu.due student was unable to reply to the,r jeers unless he had visited I. U. ' s JJi field Seeing the need of an attractive building to adorn the entrance to the athletic field the Cltss of 03 lev.ed an assessment and collected money for the purpose of erecting a buildin Artistic designs were adopted and the present building erected. As a result of the gift of this class the student can now point with pride to the ticket n.vilio,, and can conduct a visitor through Stuart Field knowing that he need be ashamed of nothin ' on the ■ J ' ' ' ' °f ' ' y ' ft t ' l - University and believes that ' k fills ' a The Class of ' 02 long-fe C.iuins; Mn liiicliu! V:ihi)o! (I. K. M.N Ella I!. Giio. H. HISTORY OF THE SENIOR PHARMACY CLASS few manifested itself during trospect, seems to have pas II of lyoo a number of individuals, wliu had chosen to prepare themselves ■ the noble [.rofession uf pharmacy, entered the class of ' 02 at Turdue. le beginning the members easily adapted themselves to the environment jlleye life and surmounted the obstacles which presented themselves in due time. a permanent organization was made in the class and no entire year, which now, as we with verc able to duly a|)preciate them. y SPryJ f ' - - pleasant vacation the majority of the class returnc.l to tile ■■fount of knowledge, several, thro ' misfortune and utiier circumstances over which they being unable to re enter, the due course of time we reorganized the Pharmaceutical Society and conducted it the same as had our predecessors, and all members of the class were |)rogressing when alas! a dreaded pestilence appeared in our midst, necessitating the withdrawal of four of our cherished companions, with whom the whole class .sympathized in their misfortune. As the holidays drew near and the realization of the limited time we had to spend at college dawned upon us, with one accord we decided to leave some substantial memento in token of the appreciation of the class to the faculty. As an outcome of this noble desire, the most noble that any class has manifested in the history of the .School of IMiarmacy, the office has been remodeled and httcd in such an elegant and artistic manner as rellects credit upon the class of ' 02. After the holidays most of the class were at their posts ready for the beginning of the finish. The work- seemed to grow continually iiardcr, but, as ever, we were eijual to the occasion aiul after the final examinations for our diplomas, of which we arc justly proud, we feel that we have done justice to ourselves and reflected credit upon the faculty and the University. And now, as we go forth to battle with the realities of life, we feel that our past two ' ears spent in the accjuirenient of knowledge and experience will help (|ualify us for our strmr.r|c for existence and a place among the fittest. — Hl.STOKIAX. D E H 1 I 9 O Cdl.nKs: Criniso,, and while Vi-ll: Hickclly, HnckLlty ! I ' riilc ..f the FMCuily I NnuKhtv thiXT, auf;hi Q HISTORY O F THE JUNIOR CLASS c AkLVL E has said in his essay on History: Universal history consists of the bio-raphies of heroes. So the history of this class consists of the bi..-i:,|,hics of the men and women of which it is composed. Interestinj, aiiM 1 ■.tnu lut as this would be, in the small ainount of space allotteil to tlie ,y y lunio, s 111 this Debris, this is impossible. rcc MMis h,i c passed since we, the members of Naurrhty-threc, first  crossL d tlu- raiiipiis and entered the doors of Purdue. Our Freshman year was 1 , a yea, of I.r.jiimiii-s, and here was laid the foundation of a class that in (piality l,w pass, s aiiN 1 hat has preceded it. The beginning made in this year showed ut uli It inatriial our rl.iss was composed. Our Sophomore year was full of ..,Zm haid ■Jil. an.l |il. asui. , the latter the result of difficulties overcome. This hard ' .vurl. i.l|icd u- lo lie. Miic what we now are — a class known for its intelligence. Altll,ai-h III, n - Ill,-Illl,el remain. |-i,„n ill ovel the Great Lakus to t leCulf. A Look ' tlir .1. ss records o ol students, a - eater numb r iit all Wo k and no pi lectual work ha been Carrie is, well reprcsc, :ed in the f these being an has so long enpi e.l loi |Hll, Since all all. our number ha a been . hosei ball team, and o the Allllel Into overs li e some ram seeminglv all is Junior -y .ir, .an Cook, an hdectri bii:;ht and event which eal, die.l Fe during all this ear ami wa over for the past ye.irs str.iight A men. ining, still a goodly number yet intic to the Pacific, and from the seventeen states arc represented, e impossible to find a better set I into the athletic field. Our class in the |): olball, baseb.dl, track team and basketball, under the leadership of such captains the athletics h.is been alily maintained. s have bet II so well conducted, it is not Slir I lie managers of the Hand, the Mandolin an : Association for the coming year, nust fall, into every life some sorrow must i ay some sadness comes. A very sorrowful will never be forgotten by the members h ' ebruary the twenty-seventh. He had played on e of Purdue ' s most e.irnest players, intli II his work. The Inniors ha e lost one of iSt loyal students, tlie world lias lost one of he past, with hope «e look forward to the f energy dis|)lr resent year h the captaii reputation u yed in intcl- ' ts been, and of each of hich Purdue prising to nt d Glee Club tc that from the Basket- event ' took of our class on the Basl their verv b. class where place in our Harry V. etball team ■ctive could st members, P U I D E Yi-i.l. : Aliaiilhi STORY OF THE JUNIOR PHARMACY CLASS ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' 1 ' t 111 ' ' ' i ulicn -imon the n unci ii iil cl i to 1 tl I hccs uis tliL new chss in Iliirnnc tint ot o, 1 itc cnthi. Ijil II 1 11 h 1 not chmpcn the iidoi of tIiLs _ new clisbmcn 1 lom ill o ci II il uith itpicscntUivcs fiom Illinois Miclii m -ind Gcoir,, tliL li I II 1 V th tuo ciis of stidv uulthL|ossibilitiLsot tliLlucntiLth cent n ic tl cm notliin is sm ill uid insi nificint is bid wcithci whs to 1 c consi ki 1 s flist tliLN stcipcd into the hills ol the IhiimiC) Iniildin, Ufuic thcni 1 1 iv d of 30 n men V th hi ht) ind li tic il mitn these i c 1 11 ri 1 iieis At hst th-it moment lon lool cd kr hid uuvtd «hui i Sen li I I e ind cnjo the pivile es jt his | osition ImmediUeI tl t most I n le |iicst toi the Jun 01 jell wis mule ind when the is il he] ot h m iitiele u is mide evident a le pest of Jiuuois ii| stms « is then tue 1 effective ml s( on the diss wis tor its fust time 111 the jl 1 Itet lero.m f th min chssmen of foiiiiei eiis lool ino downfnm the wills il e | lessi )ns IS the) hid i ed into the month d the ciniei i the 1 leti e ictcd Horn the Iiofessois some woids ot w s lom weie listene 1 1 I I cnconnjfc the stidio IS tendencies uul leteimimtions ci ill n Hist the s. ISb ClllllOt w IS si u et th le w 1 leh cull in fe SOI Gieen it I t tin 1 weie I il iintters t i iinzit dm in 1 1 t m| 111 1 ents e ill be mi le This | 1 n 1 11 I 1 th I 1 s wh n htei the I 1 t I1V 1 lit then w llin ness tL Im itu 1 t ter in sseit on ot 1 hcl cf lie it win hue the 1 t ite 1 iti m 1 th e iie coni t h t lb the I e ice Im I O ite 1 n inbel h l e 1 II hi c to woil f( 1 then fiist ic istei of in 1 in 1 with new ml modem iirm ements thewoil hi be ( tint well 1 e iin IS hilf done 1 iLs J m 1 1 111 1 t Excelsior Blue ami wlii Mr HISTORY OF THE SOPHOMORE CLASS rly two years since first vc landed in LaFayette and turned our (I the University which w e have since learned to love so well. Before -n iiere a week we came to realize more or less clearly that there were joiind us one to another: that we had come together, that we would ; the race together, tliat we would graduate together; in short, that we were class of ' 04. Since that time these ties have been greatly strengthened and more clearly defined ; our energies have been bent together in many enter- prises ; and now, since half of our four years has passed into history, it is with a 1 ' IccIihl; ol pndc that vc louk back upon our achievements as a class. fcMI I ' -IImwiiil; the Liur,ililc ru tom at Purdue, our first class endeavor was to V5 Y7 adiii n the t.ink with oiii ntuiicrals. After one or two attempts we succeeded in placing them on that historic landmark, where we jirotccted them till the time came when by custom the space belonged to another class. Our attention was early turned to athletics, and in the fall of 1900 we had eleven men on the varsity squad, three of whom won the University P. At the same time our class team won, if not the championship, at least the wholesome respect of the other class teams. In the spring of 1 90 1 we furnished several members of the baseball squad, and a number to the track team. In the local field meet the relay race was won by the ' 04 team. In the dual, triangular and state meets our men contributed in large measure to whatever success Purdue enjoyed. Early in the spring there appeared one morning on fences, posts and trees, a lurid, scurrilous and insulting poster vilifying our class. Popular opinion ascribed its authorship to the class of ' 03. We showed our resentment in a very effective manner, and the day when the Freshmen came down from the galler_ - will long be remembered. When school opened in the fall of 190 1 there ap|)eared a vast horde of verdant individuals, calling themselves the class of ' 05. The duty of initiating them into the strenuous life of college fell to us. How we twice brought them back to town from the tank in shackled procession; how they knelt on the public scpiare and lustily gave nine ' rahs for the Sophomores ; and how we labored in the big scrap against odds of two to one, gradually accumulating a great heap of bound Freshmen, only to cut them loose at what came so near being a serious ending of the fray, are doubtless still fresh in the memories of both classes. This year we had eighteen men, or one-half tlie S(|uad, at these won P ' s. Next of the school. Our victory 1 their team utterly- failing to succumbed to defeat at our ha captain is a ' 04 man. Our class team i_ ver the too-confident Juniors caused i nake connections with our sj-oal. Tin -i)all practice. Six of won the championship isidcrable satisfaction, lois Sojjhomores also PURDUE D K H R I S 1002 PURDUE DEBRIS 1902 Tint Uhlctics has the support of members of the class who are not active athletes is shown by the live ' lv interest taken in the club-house project : and by the fact that the class of ' 04 has as many members of the Athletic Association as any two other classes. It was the latter circum- stance that led to the election of a Sophomore as president of the association. Our efforts have not been confined to athletics and class contests. We have furnished mem- bers of the band, the musical clubs, the literary societies ; in fact, we have an active representa- tion in every department of university activity. In conclusion, let us hope that this excellent record m but as an incentive to still hii her and greater achievements by the class of 04. c, not as class of theme for boasting, -HiST.IKI ANOTHER HISTOR.Y OF THE SOPHOMOR.E CLASS ;CF associations have much to do in establishing character and reputation we ' the Class of 1904, upon this theory, take great prominence and lay claim: to superiority over others. While the river is not classed magnitude or magniiicence, it contributes to its greatnes: uto? lays just claims to prominence. The pewee attracts attention by associating with the eagle; the mouse becomes at once an object nt ,m,: ance if permitted to play at will with the lion. The moon illuminators as they are, wisely retire upon the api oach of the - can boast of their usefulness and importance. Thi mouse, the moon and the stars are all essentially uscf everything for some useful purpose. And eadi is rd much by their own acts, but because of then p. ,1, elu superiors, and in this particular the :las ..I m | . l.nnis that it is a valuable servant that kiu ' us his master that recognizes the superiority of those in aiit ' subject that recognizes the divine right of kings, and in this respe ' ' E?::: S: !°yeara new class enters Purdue, and each class, tilled with the pro,.er class spirit nan ally clains superiority over all others. This is necessary and proper. All contestants ti; ace oMife should show a disposition to excel, but it is a wise man_ vvho recognizes ,n the ' ' ' ,, yields to his abler contestant and is content with second place u,vin.r notice and consideration of his leader. There was but one Washington, .;;.:,„; hut those second in comman.l to those great leaders were, to a certain ith the ocean, in md as a contrib- Dn by nport- and stars, 1, vet thev the pewee, the uisc Goil created honored — not so -eful association with their inis great honor. It is said ster, a magnificent soldier ity over him and a faithful also, the Class of 1904 lays ace of jperior ability extent respected and beloved by the pubUc at large by their recoKn.zed fealty to and association with those world s idols. The Class of 1904 was no different from other classes in entering Purdue It was the lartrest class and immediately became associated with the best class— the Class of 1903 And under its tutelage and management became second only to its illustrious predecessor. At times it is true P ' « D U E like willful children we became imbibed with the idea of going it alone, so to speak and DEBRIS wandering into forbidden paths. But our preceptors kept us in proper line and within the bounds I O o 2 of decorum. For instance, when we for a moment swelled up with our own conceit, placed our numbers upon the tank, 03, in a spirit of loving kindness, took them down and painted their own instead, in a manner demonstrating to us that a pewee had no business in the eagle ' s nest, nor tlie mouse to assume the importance of the lion, nor the stars to attempt to outshine the sun lo show us that they had no animosity towards us, they took us over to the city and set up the dnnks at the artesian well, and we, in a spirit of appreciation, accepted their kind hospitality. Ihe beautiful and impressive spiritual lesson, that - he whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth was again administered to us in a football game, when we again, in our verdant condition, mistook our great numbers and size for strength, wisdom and science. And, as an appreciation of our love for them and as a further recognition for their divine right to preeminence, we stood vi.ril all of Ihanksgiving night m the year 1901 lest their slumbers be disturbed by prowling members of the common herd V e were criticised for not adopting and crucifying the atmosphere with a class yell m our Freshman year, but at the proper time they supplied us with one to suit our taste and condition, as follows: Beu! Ik-e: n.iml.l,- Bcl- ! Humptv |)uni| ' t , 1i(. r- We ' Twinkle, Twinklr Link. Star We Are Freslinun, S,, - .Vre ' ' Thus, thev associated us with the busy bee in all of its lu.Kuriant sweetness and classed us among the constellations of heaven. Was there ever a class so complimented as we of ' 04 Was there ever a class so magnanimous as the Class of ' 03 ? These early lessons have been beneficial to us through all of our university life and our future greatness will be attributed to our associations and intimate relations with the greatest class that ever entered I ' urdue. Truth has its own reward. We might boast of our grea ' tness but we prefer the truth, knowing that it is mighty and will prevail. We believe that we are a great class and we believe that it is a part of greatness to be truthful and give merit where merit is due ■ that IS, to the Class of 1903— that class who, by their kindly teaching, their precept, their example and their condescension in generous association, have made us second to no other class that has ever entered the university. We yield only to those who were born to com|uer. Bv .. hiNlOK. Yell: Zolliwicker-Zulu ! lioo— Bum Baw ! Naughty-five ! Naiighty-fiv Offic Oka W. Hekkless . President F. B. Smith . . . . . . Vice-I ' rcsid Bessie Hunter . Secretary C. O ' Brien .... . . Treasurer H. K. Wells Historian HISTORY OF THE FRESHMAN CLASS ■l 1 ulioad station anywhere. A rope-bound trunk at one side, .uitment of freshly darned socks and clean handkerchiefs, a _d up in blue ribbon along with a picture, some other unim- cluthinsj-, and down beneath all, in the back left-hand corner, a im this a group consisting of father, mother, sister, and perhaps _ iiiL 1 LttLi th m a sister. A train whistled, drew pufifing into the station, li. 1 n i with oui hero, leaving behind a trail of smoke and sorrow. The n 1 1 I ) s hid begun. rill, hist I lit of the journey his spirits fell as he thought of all he had left le neared LaFayette he began to feel the inspiration of the name uidue Any terror he might have felt upon his arrival was soon dispelled b the kindness of the Y, M. C. , . bovs, who [)iloted him about in search of whcie tci h his head If it had remained the size it had been before he left home It mi..,ht have been i burden but fortunately its bulk liad been decreased by the sight of the college buildings and the well-meant, gratuitous advice of appreciative upperclassmen, who did not neglect in the least degree their share in his welcome. He wondered how they spotted him, for he had tried to assume his wisest air and jauntiest manner. N.B. He learned three months later, when the Shorthorns arrived, whose verdant freshness brightened the campus, dull with bare- branched trees and dead grass. Having gotten our characteristic Freshman upon the ground, we shall assume that more of him have arrived meanwhile, and shall allow him to lose himself in the Four Huiulrcil, the cream of the generation, who gathered from all over the world, one might say, to form the I ' rcshnian class. This class has been exceptional, even from the beginning. What a welcome it received from Y. M. C.A., upperclassmen, landlady and Faculty, for not content with the welcome thus far extended individually to the newly arrived, our worthy Professors arranged for a formal reception in chapel, addressed by the President, who gave stores of good advice, which were pronijjtly forgotten for t he most part. Dr. Coulter also kindly advised, Bathe often and have your sweaters washed. The crowded chapel was tangible evidence of the truth of the President ' s announcement, given amid cheering, The present Freshman class is the biggest and best in the history of the University. Having thus plunged into university life, the class began to make history for itself. The first object pointed out to the Freshmen was the tank with the objectionable figures on top. It was explained to them that these must be removed, that the whole community depended upon them to remove this eyesore, which disfigured the landscape. For such an active body it was not U R D U E I E B R I S 9 O 2 PURDUE DEBRIS possible to allow the view to be marred very loiij -; consei|ucntly, the entire colle,L;e was made glad o ne morning by the sight of new and artistic decorations on the tank which satislied the feelings of all who had the best welfare of Purdue at heart. They were not permitted to remain there long, however, for every locality, even a college town with its refined, intellectual standards, con- tains some few vandals who mar and destroy. But ' 05 knows no failure. The .Sophomores, for we give them credit of being a worthy foe, and besides it is wrong to twit them about their infe- 902 riority, because they cannot help it, were also up and doing, and, because they had been initiated in the probabilities and possibilities of tank scraps, turned out a larger crowd than the Freshies. Result XXXX !!??, but why lacerate our feelings by calling up the black past? Many Freshmen confidently asserted that one was equal to two Sophs. Doubtless they were right, but they went down to the odds of three to one. Finally after a couple of insignificant skirmishes, in which only a very small per cent of the Freshmen participated, which really can not be considered as class scraps, came the great scrap. The Scrap, which will go down in history as the worst ever. Both sides, realizing that this was to be the final effort, endeavored to raise the largest pos- sible crowd. The opposing forces were about equal in number, so many that it looked like two regiments going into battle. Nothing on earth could describe the scene after ten rounds of fight- ing. The Sophomores had unfairly bribed the waterworks engineer to overflow the tank, but they were compelled to suffer as well as the F reshmen. For one hour a furious combat took place in the mud and water in the field. The So])hs proposed a truce, which was granted, both sides acknowledging that the Freshmen had the better of the struggle. Having shown what it could do in the way of physical prowes s the class settled down to make strides in learning and the A ' s which were carried home at the end of the first term indi- cated that there is a superabundance of brains in the one-time reviled and des|)ised l ' reshnien. It is reported that at the Christmas faculty meeting, the President spent a large |)ortion of the time in congratulating the assembled Professors upon the fact that among all the Freshman classes there never were so few flunks as had been assigned to the class of IQ05. If the historian were to reason forward, basing his conclusion upon the short, but eventful, past, his assertions would seem incredible. No one can deny that a still more glorious future awaits this already famous class. Some day, when it is noted the country over, the upperclass- mcn, that now are, ' will be sorry they have looked down upon it, and they should be warned to make it no harder for the class of ' oq to forgive theni than it is. — HlSTOKI.XN. ANOTHER ACCOUNT OF THE FRESHMAN CLASS Zolllwi II. .u. Naughi P U R D U F, D F li R I S 1902 History ' iCIATED with September ro, igoi, will be rcmenibcicd what tiuiicd out to . ■ the most important event in the history of our most pusillanimous class, mielv, its formation. After the individuals who were to compose the class had made their way from he various railway stations to Purdue, escaping the ravages of the browsing cow tiid the dog-catcher through the kindness of the V. M. C. A. boys (who must all .c members of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals) we all Mthered in front of the Main Huikling. Our interest in the university was at Mice manifested by the number of a|}plications for campus tickets, but we were cd to understand that as soon as wc had matriculated we would not require tickets. Hir first duty, then, was to matriculate. We all lined up in the office. Many of IS had dif culty in convincing the inquisitors that we had reached the required age of sixteen. Some were fortunate enough to have their mammas still with them to vouch for them, while others had to go to Dr. Coulter for him to estimate their ages by examining their teeth. These ordeals satisfactorily passed, we jiaid our tuition and breakage deposit (which left us broke) and oozed into existence as the ' 05 class. On the first day of school, according to directions, we all attended chapel, and the g.iUery was crowded with an aggregation the like of which had never before been seen. Upon our first a|)pearance we were greeted by the yells of the upper classmen, but we sat in stolid silence, acting upon the famous motto of Napoleon, that Children should be seen and not heard. This motto, which was adopted by a unanimous vote of silence, has since become a cardinal principle of our class. We were verv glad when chapel was over so we could get out on the grass, where we would be (]uite incons|iicuous. The Juiiiurs suon informed us tliat we were ex|iecled to put our number on the tank. As we had not had a chiss-meeting we were not sure what our number was, but thought it was about 316. However, we were informed that it was ' 05. Early one evening we wended our way to the tank, PURDUE but we found there had been some mistake, as the Sophs were there, too. They were very nice D E B R 1 vS about it, however, and, after a little physical suasion, equipped us all with hempen bracelets and, 1902 for fear we would not see the sights, escorted us about the citj-. We were so delighted with their attentions that we involuntarily broke away from our firmly established muteness and on bendetl knees gave nine rousing cheers for the Sophomores. Ever since this display of interest in us which the Sophs manifested we have always tried to be friendly to them. At times they have slighted us somewhat, especially when they gave a ban(]uet without sending us invitations. We were inclined to be vexed, but Dr. Stone persuaded us it was only an oversight, so we all went down on the levee on the night of the banquet to see them off. We were a trifle late, however, as most of them had already gone; but we take this means of expressing our hearty indorsement of the Sophomore banquet; in fact our president favored the project from the very first. From the above it appears that our class has many commendable traits. In addition to these we would like to mention the studious habits and docility for which our class is pre-eminent. In fact President Stone spent the greater part of an hour at one of the faculty meetings congratulating the faculty on the fact that he had never before had a class so easy to handle or that would stand so long without hitching. — Hv , Sophomore. A T H L E T ASSOCIATION OFFICERS P U R D U D F B R I I 9 O Officers L. M. Grant. ' 04 Pre J. D. MiNCH, ' 04 Vic H. L. Hekrick, oi Sec F. C. HiiHN, ' oi Tre •Board of Director ..f. Hust.m . T, Jon. K, •.;. Uiilr Minch, 03 Finance Committee Insignia Board who sha ■ ., this day when, in young America, tlic love of conquest is brought out ' W each succeeding year, as evidenced by the increased rivalry between modern high schools in the athletic games which but a short time ago found only in the larger Universities, we may well ex]ject to find the prospective Freshman on bidding adieu to this small beginning, to . f turn his eyes toward such institutions as foster and encourage the games he has early learned to love, and which he already knows do so much to JJ break the monotony of what would otherwise be a daily grind. He thus selects with greatest care that seat of learning at which he is to spend the most important four years of his life. The athletics of Purdue are what the student makes them. Mis money and his interest make them go, and almost wholly in the spirit with which he gives these is the story of the athletic success tolil. His be chosen from the student body as officers of the athletic associations, who, vote s; with the faculty members, see to the best interests of the association for that year. The Board of Control has been superseded by the Insignia Board, which decides the wearers of the P, under the advisement of the captain of that branch of athletics in which the honors were won. There is a complete change in the management and coaches for the coming year. In Mr. Freeman, whose able work as instructor in the gym and whose interest in athletics in general have won the admiration of all, the athletic association feels that it has found a sincere and trusty worker and one who is highly capable of conducting the affairs of the associat ion to a move fitting close, especially in the financial aspect, than it has been brought for the several years past. The football season was not as successful as might have been desired. With all but three of the old men back, the team for the coming season bids fair to be a successful one under the new coach, Mr. Best, who comes to us with the highest recommendations of his fellow coaches from the eastern schools. The baseball team made a very excellent showing again last spring, winning from the largest colleges of the West. This year finds the team crip]jled by the loss of last year ' s pitcher, but with material in the Freshman class, however, which is making a creditable showing to Coach Friel, so that we may look forward to another season of victories for Purdue on the diamond. I ' U R ]: U E DEBRIS 1902 The track team of the spring of HjOl struggled out of the comparative oblivion of previous years and, while not winning first place in the state field meet, finished a close second, with a wide gulf intervening between the next in order. Members of the team broke state records, the climax PURDUE of the team ' s success being reached when Capt. Endsley beat all comers in the pole vault at the DEBRIS Pan-American games. 1 ( O 2 In the second year of its existence the basketball team showed its superiority over all state contestants, and, not finding contestants worthy of their mettle in college circles, overstepped all conventionalities, playing athletic associations and Y. M. C. A. teams on the trip through the South, returning with such a creditable record as is rarely made even by the oldest teams. In closing, a word must be said of the college spirit that prevails at Purdue; that unconquer- able, nevcr-die doggedness of every man, be he on Varsity or bleacher, that asserts itself from the beginning to the very end of the struggle, at once impresses anyone foreign to Purdue with her loyalty and wins from contesting colleges the voluntary praise and acknowledgement of the real and true college spirit that exists here at Purdue. And better yet is it to know that this loyalty is increasing with that rapid pace with which Purdue herself is growing; a fact most pleasing to any alumnus, who, coming back, experiences that completest of satisfactions in knowing that his Alma Mater has the loyalty in her supporters that he knew when he was here years before. Si 1 1 A. p. Jamis. ii C. H. Robertson J. W. Esterline J. M. Davidson V. T. IV-rksliiiv Chas 1 J. F. : Football J. W. Cornell E. F. Mills A. H. Barnes H. G. Leslie G. C. McCan W. E. Kussel J. B. Knapp W. A. Jolins. O. Hcrkless L. E. Endsic) O. Klipsch J.F. G. Millei W. E. Miller TracK. Team J. B. Corns E. B. Hcnely long as the sumiuation of the games at the season ' s close is the rule for ludging, a hard-luck stor) ' , however well backed up, cannot hope to meet with lavor. The showing of the season just past, however, was far better than the cold figures are willing to convey. Failing again to land the state champion- ship because — there is but one cause — Notre Dame had a better team, there is no blame to be placed. The coaches put forth their every effort and the team u a man, from the very beginning, worked hard and long and [)layed with that ■ pirit that even in the face of certain defeat will not down, more noticeable this vcar than before, for the team of 1 90 1 showed itself not a first half eleven, so painfully apparent in the last two years, but proved its staying qualities by putting up its fiercest play during the latter part of the game. The true grit that makes Purdue Purdue is well shown by the hearty support the different classes are preparing to give athletics by already soliciting funds from their hat, with the greater part of the old men back again, we have good license to look iiorc fitting close for the varsity of ig02. Schedule for I902 Franklin at LaFayet Chicago at Chicago. Illinois at Champaij; Wisconsin at LaFav Northwestern at Evai Case at LaFayette. Indiana at LaFayette. N ' ntrr Dame at LaFax F O O 9 1 1. V. KsTEKLiNK. Manager V. G. Highland, Trainer Oiachcs: A. 1 ' . Jamison 95 Hallikt, Princci.Mi Varsity Ceiiur W.T. nKRiesHiKK Ki-ht Guard J. F. G. Miller, Capt. Leit Guard Fricd RiebiiL Ki ht Tackle A. D. Smith Led Tackle .... . . . J. M. Davidson Right End ... F. C. Hohn Left End O, Hi- KKLES.S Quarter G. C. McCan.n Full H. G. Leslie Full F. V. Berky Kisihi Hall 1. V. Cornell Kigl.t Half E. F. Mills LeIt Half W. E. KussEi. Left Half I. IS. KxAi ' i- PURDUE DEBRIS 1902 R. C. Mcintosh V. G. McManus H. H. Arnold L. W. Porter Frankl Wabas Chicag DePau t901 -Record 28 Northwestei the team of last spriiiL; all feel justly proud. Having the advantaye of a coach only at the beginning of | iactice, the team put up an excellent game throughout the season. This year offers better inducements for tlic men to vvorlc, the services of Coach h ' riel having been obtained for the season. The loss of Captain Hronson as a pitcher, it was feared, could o?ily in part be replaced by the material available. Among the new men, however, comes the material that promises to fully replace him. It is the opinion of this year ' s Captain, and also of the other members of last year ' s team, that the prospects for a successful season liavc never had a brighter outlook, and the year promises to close with n lietter reccjrd than ever before. P U R D I D E B R I 9 o Catcher . Pitcher . First Base Second Hase Third Base Short Stop Right Field Center Field Left Field 1902 Baseball Teams Varsity Coo IDK, Leslik McKef. KuBV, C Cohen Gaetji-: Cdknei. Hakdv I ' AI, Second Tean Jones Hl-FFM.A Schedule for 1902 5-Cnlver at I.aKayette I902 Baseball Sga P U R D U n E B l I I 9 o AIN the honors of state championship rest with our doughty defenders of Uaslcetball honors thu-ing the second-year of the team ' s existence in Purdue. Confident of tlie team ' s ability under Captain Reiman, Manager Curd sought a broader field of work than that offered by the intercollegiate contests of the INTiddle West and planned an extended trip into the South as lar as Birmingham. Not finding enough worthy contestants in the colleges ,ilone, the team took on games with the ablest of the Athletic Association and Y. M. C. A. teams along the route, and while not having an unbroken record of victories as during its first year, the team returned with colors flying and a record to its credit seldom cpialed by even the veteran teams of the older schools. The high-water mark of the season ' s success was reached when the team defeated Yale ' s trained and tested warriors by a score that does much to show to the student body that we do have at Purdue a basketball team that does not belong to the mediocre. It is only too true that outside of the few basketball enthusiasts who come in contact with the players, there has not been a full understanding of the real ability of the team. While in general the state championship was considered a foregone conclusion, it needed the added test of ' foemen of extraordinary worth to prove to the student body that our basketball team stands head and shoulders above its competitors in its ability in the game. It must be granted that such excellent results can only be obtained by the best of training. With Reiman elected captain for another year and the team all back witli the exception of little Cook, the prosi.ects for next year arc decidedly bright. All this and the fact that during both of its seasons the team has proven its ability to be self-supporting, though the youngest in our college games, is ample proof of its worthines tic Assoc to be taken undc ich it u I ' ing of the has no BASKETBALL TEAM H. V. Keima ll.W. CoK 19 2 P LI K U U E n K ]! R I S 1902 W. N. MOOKK . S. -. 11. MiLLKK A. ( ' ,. Caldwell I902 •Kecord 1)l-c. 18 Nashville A. C. . . . 6 I ' urdu Dec. 28 Hinilinghain A. C. A. 1 , Dec. 30 r.innii,Khain A. C, A. lo Tunlii J.,,. ' 2 Nashville A. C. A. Chattanooga A. C, A, M Purdu J.„. 3 Chattanooga A. C. A, 16 Pnrdu Jan. 4 Cincinnati Y. M. C. A 4 ' ) Ja ,. 25 Butler . Purdii Feb. 7 Indiana State Normal ]y Purdu Feb. 15 Indiana . s Purdu Feb. ig Butler ■i Purdu March 7 In.iiana . 5 Purdu April S Yale Punlti 1902. -BasKelball Tean M rack team of last spring showed itself one ol due records wore broken and new State marl team, as a whole, was very satisfactory, and the splendid work of Cixpt ongest in the University. The creditable work uf ' .ndsley in the high htirdles, high jump and pole vault placed Purdue ' s records, ■ At mH ' h ' eady good in these events, ahead of many of the best schools of the East or HH I West. Endsley ' s victory over all competitors at the games of the Pan-American UpHBIBi l xposition was the crowning point of the season ' s successes. Although handicapped by an abundance of new material, the track team proved itself worthy of far better su[)port than has been given it. The accoutre- ments of the other Varsity teams are furnished by the Athletic Association, while the aspirant for track honors is obliged to pay for his own. Certainly a team that has made such an excellent showing merits decidedly more cncourage- 1 it has received heretofore. advantage of having both the training and coaching under a single management is at once apparent, and the objectionable cross-pulling is entirely avoided; so that this year ' s team, while feeling the loss of last year ' s men, also feels that the efficiency of training offered by Mr. Freeman is going to bring out even a better all-around team than of any year before. The work of the old men is showing up exceptionally well, especiall)- that of Captain Corns. With the added good showing of the new men, who are easily getting into good track condition due to high school work, the prospects of the track team for IQ02, for which forty men are trying, are not for a fair showing but that by the season ' s close more records will stand to its credit. The P U R D ir E DEBRIS 1902 1901 TRACK TEAM I ' U R ]J U K D E li K 1 S 1902 W. J. HlGHLAN |. V. ESTEKLl L. 1£. Endsky, 01 L, V. Huxiai)lc, 1. F. ;. Miliar, o ]. h. Corns. ' 03 A. Lf vcy, ' 03 A. 1). Sniltli. 03 W. !■:. MillLT 03 I. I. Kii-1, , ' 04 M. 11. tM|,,u-s, 04 1901 TracK Tear PURDUE DEBRIS 1902 EVENT KECll 100 Yard Dasli 10 se 220 Yard Uash 22i S 440 Yard Kun 5 2 s S80 Yard Run 2:07: I Mile K.in 4:43 120 Hurdles 161 s 220 Hurdles 265 s 16 Pound Shot 3Q ft. 16 Pound Hainnie r 100 f Discus 05 (t. HiKh Jump 5 ft- Broad Jump 22 ft. Pole ' ault 11 ft. HOLDER H. C. Buslmia. E. E. Jones ' . K. K. Cassidy Green .per 1803 Robertson i8q6 Corns IQOO Endsley iqoi C.jrns IQOO M P U R D U F, DEBRIS A sound body lies at of the gymnasium and al medical examination and body may be located and prove harmful. Physical proved by experience that IN comparatively recent years the truth of this statement, made nearly cnty-five centuries ag ' o, has been brought home to us in a practical manner. v all institutions of learning which strive to give the truest education do all they can to develop that self-respect which comes from scrupulous care and training of the body, and in many of our larger colleges physical education, or a certain amount of muscular work, is made compulsory. ' i mnasiums are provided and a system of work planned which gives the indent the maximum amount of work in the minimum of time. The first purjiose of the gymnasium is to improve the general physical condition of the students and officers of the University, and thus to raise the standard of athletics by providing better material from which to select men ami teams. The value of the gymnasium in athletics is particularly noticeable this season in the superior work of our track men, most of whom have been in active training since the first of the year. Heretofore, through lack of harmony between the athletic and gymnastic departments of the University, those men who worked hardest to [jerfect themselves in the gymnasium were when they went to the track. Under the new regime, both athletics and ame head and its greater advantage is very apparent, the foundation of all that goes to make life a success. Each member candidates for the athletic teams are subjected to a rigid physical and strength test that any defects or weaknesses in the vital organs of the remedied by proi er exercise before being put to any strain that might ixercise cannot cure all the ills of the body as if by magic, but it is rational physical exercise is a great boon to the average man or woman. Our gymnasium record astonishing. The past interest bv the student body and th ' how tlozens of cases that go to prove this, some of them being truly eason has been a most successful one as regards attendance and general demands for this branch of education have outgrown the present accommodations. We need a better equi|)ped, better heated, better ventilated and more roomy gyiniiasium that this much need many where now it benefits but few. beneficial work may be of greater P U ] D V D E li R I I 9 o T better accommodations and more consideration should be given the croes of the gridiron, track and diamond has long been felt by the indent body. The first etfurts to improve the existing conditions were !i;ide by the classes of ' 03 ami ' 04, the former pledging itself for a ' onation of SlOOO to be paid before June, 1903, and the latter for Si 500 11 be paid April, ig02, the f inds to be used, when aided by like donations rom other classes, in the erection of a clubhouse. These offers have been followed up b} ' a similar promise from the i leshman class of four hundred, which has made an assessment of S5.00 Li member, jjayments of which, like in other classes, may be made in i tallments. all to be in by November, 1903. Tile pKin is hi build a structure of briclc or stone whose appearance ;:,ill be III l,e i.in- uiih thai of the Other buildings of the campus. This ..uililing IS lit have a laiue reading-room in which may be found the better athletic periodicals, where those of athletic bent may come to read and discuss the games during the season. There are also to be study-rooms, training table and baths for the athletic members of the various teams. The building is to be so constructed as to admit of later additions being made to accommodate the members and substitutes of all the different teams for the whole school year, the ap|)ointnieiits to be made on athletic merit. To hasten the success of this worthy enterprise, aid will be solicited from the Alumni. It is also the intention of the Senior class, which as Juniors already made its donation, to turn over to the clubhouse committee all money cleared on the sale of the ' 02 Debris. The benefits to be derived from this plan are many. Expenses will be lessened for the men who give their valuable time and their services to glorify their school. They will be in the con- stant care of the coach and trainer, so that the lax training of many when rooming outside will not only be done away with but the outside inlluence, which often causes training to be broken, will be removed. And again, the men living in tliis athletic atmosphere that prevails at training table and read- ing-room, will more fully untlcrstaml tlie real interest the student body has in their welfare as the fellows drop) in during spare moments to discuss the reigning theme, and will also better apjire- ciale the meaning of a well-trained athlete. [FK T[ERMA[1 j! 1 ' II K D Li K D E B I I S 1902 G M A C H OKKicrAI. Organ: Sigma Clii Quarterly Sixi Oii.dUS: Light Blue ami (lold Fi.o ' ' Roll of Chapters Miami University Centre College (lliK. Wcsleyaii University Dartmuuth College Cclumbian University Kentucky State College Washington and Lee University Cettysburg College Tulane University Hanover College Lehigh University Hampdeii-Sidney College Northwestern University Albion College University of Kansas Hobart College Leland Stanford, Jr., University University of Nebraska West Virginia University ' anderbilt University Ohio State University University of Michigan Columbia University University of Indiana Cornell I ' niversity University of Mississippi Illinois Wesleyan University University of Virginia Purdue University University of Chicago DePauw University University of California Hiitler University Missouri State University Ueiiison University University of Texas r.u.kiiell University University of Cincinnati Kandolph-Macon College University of rennsylvania Massachusetts Institute of Technology University of Southern California Dickinson College University of Wisconsin Pennsylvania State College University of Illinois T eUa Delia Chapter ESTABI.ISHKI.. 1S75 Fraires in l rfcc Charles Almus .M. rstelh,r, Ph. H. Col. K. P. De Hart Geo. F. Jamison Chas. Sumner Downing Franklin C. Brockenbrough Edwin M. Davidson, Ph. D., M. D. Vm. K. Eldridge Wni. K.Cot James Henry Wells, IS. M. E. Clarence Severson Robt. Rice Wm. Edward Beach, Ph. B. Clarence Madison Bivens, B. S. Samuel N. Snoddy Alva Owen Reser fnith, LL.B. Henry Heath ' iii ' Fratrcs in nii)ersitate Hugh Andress Wilber Fiske Severson, Wm. Kirkpatrick S. R. Jackson Wm. iMurdock Robt. Van Zant Wm. Stair Walters, D. . ton, B. S., LL.B. 02. Robt. Enos Adreon Frank Biggs Tiniherlake ■03 Th.imas M. Andrew John Wm. Graham J. G. VanWinkle ■o-t Marvin H. Coppes Kobt. Frazier Highee Ale Ma ■05 xander Julian Chinn Carl Bradlaugh Wo. rtin Leroy Pcirce Chester Talbot Had .d worth ley •Pojl-Craduate ' m ' P U R D U D E B R i 190: G M A Chapter ' Roll ■DUtricI I ■DUtricI II University ..( Maine Swarthmore Colleiie I ' .mvili.in College Pennsylvania State College Cnversily „[ Vermont University of Pennsylvania lirovvn University lincknell University Cornell IJnivcrsity Vashington and [cfferson C( New Hampshire Colletje Lehigh University University of Marvlan.l Columbian University lii.kinson College ■DUlrici I V DUlrici V WolTord CollcRe Cnmberlancl University Mercer University -an lerbilt University (k ' orgia SclionI of •rechnol,,i;y Umversityof Tennessee University of Georgia Southwestern Presbyterian U University of Alatrama University of the South Alaliania Polvtccliiiic Instilule S(Hitliwestern 15aptist Univei liethel College Kentucky State C.llege ■DUirict VII Disirict VIII William Jewell College Ohio State University Missouri State University Purdue University University of Nebraska Wabash College University of Denver University of Indiana District III District VI Millsaps College Centenary College Tulane University uth« Unii ity of District IX H hWfUhh Chi Chapter Fraires in X rbe Fratrcs in Faculiate Fraires in X ni-Verjilalc 02 J. Lyml.m ' an Na Hanv Fuller i H.irrvSc.u M.usha Luc L..ckw,.(,d l Tsise Richanl Jesse Williams •.Icrirk H.i William Canlrier MoM.i Iknry Mclver .rheil Al.iyslus Thixtf Tliculiiie Uatlield Murr fWS N U P U K D U E D K 1! K I S 1902 Chapter Roll l.Jl ■well Colli .gC Vh ivL-rs Kaiis ■ IK sily lese .r K I Sell :,.,1 ( Tccl Nu rtll ; -■.. rg ia Ag, ivL-l-sitv ( Al; Wasliiugtoii and Lee Alal.aina I ' niytecl U.iivcrsitv of N..rth Carolina Universily ot N„nh Alabama A. and M. ISelI.el O ,,,,il, miversiiv Colorado State School „IP issouri State l- ' - ' ' iKl ' Universily Ml. CnionC.llege '  ♦, ' ! J? t f - Befa J ela Chapter fralres in Vrbe Geo,- - F. l ' l,i||i,.s Fralre in FacuUale i-l ' l-. M.I ' . 1. W. l ' ;Mrllllu-, I ' ,.l ' I-. rratrcs in X ni-dcrsitatc ■03 04 ■05 . ' Muii,i; Chni,,,, r,. i-: -.: 1 h..n .IS l;. Keiiii . Krilrx J.iscpl, l;, Kn.,p|, . 1.1 i- l.-ills |l, W.il.li.in , ' . ' ' .IS K. l.:oac I. i.i.ii.;an . Il.nllrx l.iM- I-. PrLk k..|,,Tl K. „,lU-,ljiC I ..l,„ J. Unttingl imi t P H D E L T T H E T 1 ' URDU I-: D K B K I S 1902 KniN,.,.; ESTABI.ISIIKD AT PUKDI ' K, MAKCH I7, l8g3 Yell: R:ih I R:ih ! Rah! Alpha Pro-Vince h livi ■rsity of X ' eriiioiit Ai llllc nlu ' m College .ollcge Unnv n II. (,ii nil II 11 imeisitv I I IIOI 1 Lu llcge t,n Im Li,nersii IISI L imersity 1.1 1 1 Mtti College Pe I 1 W mij,! iniiStitLC. Iltgt V ol leliiisNh mil III 1 ki lis 1 1 Culk),L Lc III li I Bela Pro-Vine h IIM rsit ' ) of liullill m i.lpli MiconCollegt .1 ind Uc I nu , of North Ciiolii Chapter ' Roll Gamma Pro-dince Delta Pro-Vince Stale Univcrs School .,1 Ap ersity of Ciucii Haiio ' l)c I ' i I ' lir.hi eta Pro-Vince Nortl Lwestern University University of Chicago Knox College I unil .ani liiivorsitv I ' liivt rsilv .il Illinois I iiixi rsilv o[ Wisconsin fiiivi •isitv ol Minnesota Iowa Wesleyan Universit Univi ;rsity of Iowa minster College Wash ington University Univ. •rsity of Kansas Eta Pro-Vince iilane University niversity of Texas Theta Pro-Vince Indiana Theta Chapter Fralcr in facultatc Dr. (n„. F. Kei, J. I ' . Jnhnson VVilliani F. Stihv Roy V:illacL- Kul)ert S. Mill.T Wiirreri E. AK.oi E. Slierrv in V n 03 . Miller artholoniev , ' . Wilsun .. Russell ■V M. Bowser :. P. Wood I J. W; Fr Samuel C ,. Clifford George U. Middlei Edwin H. AlKree Benjamin B. Minoi Charles S. Raul. irrv C. W.nrei neon W Milki 1 Vaile Walt J ot Affiliated Howard W. Irwin, ' 03 iuy M. Guthrie, ' 03 L.iurence Ehrmann, ' o.| Lawrence V. Niklaus, ' MA ALPHA EPSILON D E R R 1 9 O Massa( rluisetts L ' liiver Harvai rd I ' niv Tro-Oince Seta CnriK-ll I ' iiivi Coliiniliia Uni iversity liiickncll llni St. Stepli. i-ii ' s College AllcRl.cir vL o liege Oickinsoi iCo liege Si-ma Alpha Kpsih.n! Ro of Chapters ■Pro-Vince Alpha ■ (.( Tecliiiuloijv Unsi.Di Lniversitv Worcester Polytecli •Pro-Vince Gamma Prot ince 7 clu HinVersity of Virgniia I ' liiversitvof Micliig ' ProiJincc Efp ilon Tro-Oince e the South . Baptist L Alabama inverM ' y ytechnic I nstilule Pro-Vince Theta .oilisial, la State Utiiver Iiil -sk-y Cc ' ndiana Beta Chapter fratrcj in ni- Jcrjitate ■02 Anthony M.iisrh.ii.ln Ha i,y Latlton Mav ,-n.an Ernst Kim; 03 Mnllr.n KuSCMU AI.iv.u I.Muis Constance Knhiatt l .y F.dward Clisl.y AlliL-rt W.ilil MrlU ' lilv In _-iknn:k Carl llul ■ Williaiii Skiiikl rrisun la-iny Ka Ernest Kubert Coiiro) William Hart Patters. P H KAPPA P S PURDUE DEBRIS I (9 O 2 C.LoKs: I ' ink aii.i Lav Hi ' li, ] -h, Hi ri.i Kai.|.a I ' si n,i ' K,n |,a ' I ' SI Wasl.il.Kt.m-JdYcTS.mC.lkt,. Alk-Slienv Gillegc P.iirkm-iri ' nivcTsitv Crtlvsl.iirsO.llcKC Chapter Tioll DUlrict II Dutiii uitli Culli.i I KuiiUnnusii mlicrstL..llLKL L. riRll Uiiiiersit) Syracuse Unueisity Columbia Unnersit) L, lu ' atL I iiuersitv 1 K. kiMl I ' . iMLililn, Insti District III ■District IV All,.r.l, M. A. Alf..i,l, M. A. Indiana Delta Chapter fratrej in X rbc Fratre-t in Facultate Fratrej in X ni-Oerjitatc B, C. WaMemiiaiL-r. M. K. L. K. Eiulsley, I!. S. in M M.ushall !!. II ■04 C. DuHavcii f C. McCatm Edward Evciclt Duhi Rav El.kr Ada. luiiiis C. Kirl. ' Ai-tluir K. lira. Gat« S3 ( „w University insylvania Cnlltge Iniversity of Virgini; Allegheny Cullegc Hanover College lege of tilt llinois Wesleyan Uiiiv, Columbia College Wabash College Roanoke College Knox College Aell College Tuiversity University r ' Roll Washing Wtslev onpden- .aFayettc College Wittenberg ol Wiseoi .ilege nond College iversity of Minnesota ' niversity of Tennessee Worcester I ' olyteehnic Johns Hopkins Univ New York Univen   . .HV,S , ' i Lamda Iota Chapter Fratrcs in rbc Fralrcj in l rj AlbL-n Li-.is H.i Kaviiujiul llowi l.ix- W.irl.iM- I ' crk P LI K D I! i: D F. KRIS 1902 Roll of Chapters Ai iiiA i F I ' KNNSM.VANIA, I.cliigli I liiivcTsily. KMUiicicd 1S85 Ali ' HA of Michican, Michig iii State Agricultural Cnllegc, Fi.ui Alpha of Indiana, Purdue University, Founded 1S93 Alpha of New JrcKSicY, Stevens Institute of Technology, F ound Alpha of Illinois, University of Illinois, Founded i8q7 Alpha of Wisconsin, University of Wisconsin, Founded iSgg Alpha of Ohio, Case School of Applied Science, Founded iqoo Alpha of New York, Cokniibia University, Founded 1902 Alpha of Kentucky, University of Kentucky, Founded 1902 Alpha of Indiana Brothers in the City N. J. Vh T. W. Nc H. C. Ma ' Brothers in the Faculty Ll.iy.l E. Kill!; Charles V. Seastune Alfred F. Welsh lames U. Hoffman Clarence H. Kuhertscni AnietS. Mcllronm hers in the X ni-Versity. 1902 V. A- A. Kathgicbku: . . schats.njei.stf.u: . a. liii-li M. ll,.rris Merrill A. Cal[ Harry Kiillur Viii. Hugh C. Hlackivi Allurt V. Mcll.-i Commilleej Committee General ykjjociar, j,i J; • ■■ ' I Vice-1 ' residcr Local Associations Larayette Indianapolis J. C. Hali.auu . . . I ' lesidL-i.t |mi. S. W KKiin Olla C. Peteksox . . Vice-1 ' resideiii i-. Kati. Wkniv. Tittsbtirj: C. K. Midi. I.I T,.N . . . I ' r.rsi.lui.l I ' AUi. CiL ns ' icr ri-i-si,lciit i:. M. I IMS . . . ... SLM-rci.iiv 11. W. iMrKl.NNi . . . Tr.Msart.-r Im;|.|.i-kick koi:ii. I ' a-si.lrnt AN A(.N):K Al.l.lNI, . . .Si-. ILl.HV ¥ va A. vM ui rSHiSir Officers I ' rcsiileiit ' ici-I ' rcsi.l TiLMSuivr 1 1 ign Mission C. IH II. A P.AK1-: Lesi.ii- HrxT, Prof. C. II. R jXd ' Oisory ' Committee Ladies ' Au xiliary Mus. .s Mrs. J. Offii Ui-UMCK Nelson ' . .Secretary Hkssi. M. Hunter . . Treasurer Members ULrnicc II. Raker liereliice Silherlic Frances M. DcFrecs r.tta I ' carl Corliin Fli abeth K. Hawkins Klliel M.-Sjialdin Daisy Alf;er Hale Bernice Nelson Hesse Kudilcr Lyia V. i Iarsliall 11. Ma H..nier Bcsse M. Hunter F. B. Wilkerson, ' . I ' . W. Dirlmni, ' 02 A. V.i;,usg, ' o, The Mi in Lie t 11. Ucrth.ilci H. r.lack G. C. McCaii O. 1 ' . Tcrrv S. Clifford Tl mimins CHuhBi) mm ■fill __. ff 1 Micki aivClixloJ Offu Cakl Einvi: V. R D. Smiti I liUKKK KeNOVI ' K. E. Woodruff H. A. Hutchins George A. STiiith L. H arrinijtori V. H. I ' attcrsoM L. F. Cloisturh..! I. I-:. Fisliur W. K. Keiinvcr E.lwii. Burrige V. E. Glass A THE a ' iiil (illlll MM 1 Mwy Ryyy ■•- sJaROILKRK Mkkt]N(,: Wlif.i iliL ' L; V. 1, Hk(.iui- S. Milk-r, ' OS F. H. Huston, ' 04 V. K. Eldeii, ' 05 ( . C. Fry, ' o O. 1 ' . Turry, ' o;, (I 1903 DEBRIS ■S taJif IMO.N 1I(I,MI-.H W i;. vi-.l( IHN CORTNEU WiLKlNS k ' lLLIAM CaNTRILL CUU Ieinrich Uietkich ESSE LouiNti Ruby . DWAKU KKAN ' CIS MiLI,? Ijiisiness Manager Ass ' t Business Manage Adiertising Editor Ass ' t Advertising Edit Art Staff Anna Marie Wurs William Laidlaw Emma A. Cunnin; James lilaine Jam Homer lUiclitel Jci John Harry Ploeli Madf; Alplu igs Crane oisen The Purdue Ejurponent vv. ll.ISI „a, UKKKLV UURIN,, THI. Cnl.L.IIK Kavmii iSD L. Ni-LSON, 02, Ci.rlyle. E.lil.M-.iii-Chie llDKSF, Y M . L N H, ' 02, liusiiiL-ss Maingtr J„HN N 1. L •,MMMii I . ' u;, A-j t.i.it r.usiiicss M,lll Karl I ,,i ;,.. ' ..-, A.U.rli-iii.i; Kditor I ' HI. MI Ki III k, .,i. (..iilvK, An ICililor Fkan, Hi lii I-. ' . 2. I ' liilalrilie.iii, Chief ol L. A. L. ' A1. Tl KSO|, Irvin-. L..ial Editor JcmnC . W il.KiNs, ■.. . 1 nK, ..iiian, Lncal E.lit.T w. lN.,1 k:mm.i. o:. laiicrsoiiian. Chief of GLEE AND MANDOLIN CLUBS J. B. BAKTH..UU1 F.W JUbSC.N H. lioUGh ITdN Charles S. K.aui George H. J£cki Mandolin Club ,KUl S, I.INI.NKK, 1)11 First Mandolins Srcond Mandolins H. M. Harris .ac Haiiscuni G. H. EckhoiiSL- CI). I ' l.iK-r F. S. Ueneen K. V. I ' .iUvariis 1 ' . K. Pansier AdvertisiiiK M.i CIcc Club Miss iMii.i.siah.ii, Directur O. A. ISurrv Georse R. 1 ' , C A. Ncal J.M.Clark L. K. IVc.kliani 1!. B. Milner C. II, r,.avsu-a l II, A, Ccok id Mandolin Club -; li R 1 9 o V. E. BiXLiLU President H. Deitrich Business iVIanage Kckliaiis, S.ilo Co I. A. liarucs , SdIu Cornet 1. ( .. Crane, Solo Cornet K V Brews ter, First lib Con F 1- M . Fond Carm I, First lib Cornet in, Second Bb Ci 1 ' (• lIulTn n, riiird Bb Cor Secretary and Treasurer Member illianis, S. 1.. Clarinet B. B. Milner, Piccoh tlirie, Sol Clarinet A. L. Burridge, Ball luliani, V -St r.li Clarinet |. H. Sniitli, Solo Al ckso,,, M SI l;li ClariiiLi K. H. Davis, Second ■efe, Sen d lib Clarinei G. A. Vonnt;, Barito yton, ■I ' ln, 1 111. (_ l.iiiNet V. E, Bixler, Bariti ,y, I ' icrol R. M. Storniount, B: ne F. M. Minch, Fb Tuba le H. Erwin, Fb Tuba E. W. Koont . BBb Bass jone A. B. Cohen, Trap Drunnner ihone F. H. Miller, Bass Drum C. A.Ynung. Drun.Majur PURDUE BAND MINSTRELS URDU ]■ ) F. li R I S (; O 2 K,,v ,,,.c j Second ' iulin I- ' IJ TaYI (IK Bass II. R.Willi A.MS First Clarinet K. Brewster . Trombone W. 1.. ECKHOUSE Cornet MiLNFR . Flute Auk C-ohn Drums l-KANK c;. TnlJl Program Pianist Tart ■• IheOl.l Home Place, by Mrs. Ed Taylor, iitfihKUtor M A. Call intioduccd by .... O. A. Berry •• Under the Shade of tlie Shelterins, ' Palms Knii.mi -.N ■ K.igers 1 Male lo Cet Up Early in tlie Morning, I ' eck ;.nnrs, Leslie, Vinceiil . Tambus Pari II (_II(IU1 ' Acrobatic Feats by Messrs. Freeman (Director i( 1 1 ' .. rrv liartlinlciiifw Sa nil. ■rsoTi , Kitli-iilse, r,. Purdue ( .vmnasium), |. Black, Lewis, Slallard, chii iiidt. Kiiby. Black- Black, Dexter, Lynch, P.dmcr. 11, Mill, li, K. ' l . irrilir ouk, Bachlfu- Burles(iu - ... J. Black and P.ilmer LiM h.i, |;,iii,,M , lii„,r, Musical .Ski-tch . X ' iucenl .ind 1 l.irris A Siililk-ri.f Lnve Am 1 , KiUri.lKe Fancy Bicycle Kidin _; .11. i;. King ri.iy in VuurOwii ISack Miiich Tellins Man ' Ejcecuti-Oe Staff for the Minstrels Musical Director Business Manager .(■ram-: ' . .. ' . ' . ' . ' Advciti.s ' in-; ' Managers Property Man Accompanist h ' RAV Finance Committee fi ' ff 1! t ;■! t ' Tf 1  f h ) 1 1 A. o.  . 2). lUs: llrll-liiL- and Absence of l-isihl 1-1...H : u: W.iler Lilv M.iTT..; Clcnliness is NcNt h JUIKiE HeUKLESS . Dude Keid Zeke MCQ.NNEI.I. llAl ' I ' V Mll.LEK . Off icers . Master c.f Ceremonies Keeper of Keconls . Keeper of Bnnistoiie Gu.ir.li.uiot Cues Guardian Hounds Jordan rIood-Gate Attendants ■■ Ki.r T.i ior ■■Sissv AJ.nns Poke H.ilnian Shark Small Keepers of the HUlorical Scroll ■ ' ■t r ■■ I ' licle J. .sir ' ll.nu.nli ■Brander Instigaior-t •• Scorcher Cun.iius Cold Wau-r Mitchell MaKer r.if C.un.ih.Mi r of the Wonderful Sal-Oc Uncle nillv Wilson Siwash Co,,k Trumpeter Sulphur Wheelers Sox Lo,lcr Keepers of the Ejcpeditors St ' niV.y Je ' kins ;;rn . ' :!:.. ' ■i,;;;I. ;:;_ Men Tbers SmoKe Wheeler D . R. W7 I ' ur.luc Doniiiloiy was the first building erected of the many that now dot the ( ' aniiius. . l the opening of the University in I 873 it was used as a general purpose luuUlin It contained sonic classrooms, a room for a museum, rooms for students and roo ' ms in which some of the professors and their families lived. When other buildinu-s were erected, the classrooms, museum and professors ' families gave place u, studcits The Uonnitory has always been a popular place with students. Away from the dust at„l noise of the streets, cool in summeV. well warmed in winter, and well ventilated, no other place .rave a student a better opportunity for study. If he struck a hard problem some other student n the buildin r could help him solve it. If he were homesick some one was near to cheer h.m up, and if a turn o f ..ood luck came to bin, in the shape of a barrel of apples, there were plenty to share his joy. .S„n; l- •.mou..- the most prominent of Purdue ' s Alumni had their college home in the Men s Dornnt.HV Vwi Russ Richards of University of Nebr.aska and I ' aul Anderson of University ol Kcnluckv ' were among these. George Ade roomed there for a time, and John T. McCutcheon was a fre.uienl visitoi vnd used the walls and curtains on which to display his artistic imagination. It ' was not possible to have so large a building full of boys and no pranks occur. A class supper in one of the rooms was disturbed by having the re|,ast over-seasoned by a cpiantity of red pepper which somehow dropped mysteriously through the ceiling. .Splintered doors and broken chairs .. ,ve evidence the next morning of phvsic.al activity on the j.art of more than one student. Good V. M. C. . . boys, sedate enough on Sun.lays, found pleasure and excitement in drilling a hole d of some snoring student, and, at the witching he :nd upon the face of the sleeper. Oc , itch, late at night to find his room stacked, the bed being generally at the bottom of the pile. A former captain ot the football team came home from a starring tour to find Van ' s wagon in his room. The horse had considerately been left in the stable. Only once or twice did this horse |.lay degenerate into hazing. . ■■■ ,il tl • divs spriit there l a Inl ure time when they . in senile idle or riio years of igoo :uid 1901 were uneventful in the history of the Dormitoiy. The pal iuul love for the Ancient Order of Dormitory Devils seemed to have become c.xlimt breasts of those who should have held it as the most sacred emblem of brotherly love anil iml ence. Just so much as America is for jXmericans the Dormitory is for Devils. |)atriotic spirit was so nearly extinguished that they allowed foreigners to come and go at w even aided in secreting them when The greybcarded Custodian made his ])criodical roi inspection. This behavior being found out, it was decided by The Powers, from whose there is no a|)peal, that they should be exiled and that a new generation should enter the I ' n Land. Great discontent and indignation prevailed among the exiles. The) ' determined to the newcomers and lay waste their homes, and accordingly laid plans for Hallowe ' en. Tin two spies to find out and report the strength of the garrison, but the spies were discovered, made good his escape by his wonderful speed. The other was cajitured and sentencetl baptized into the new faith, but by a iirodigious leap cleared the banisters while inaledictioi water were poured ii[ion him. One of the spies carried back the rci)urt th.il the Dnrm was full of giant football nu could not be taken. lUit the other said they were easy and could be dri eii out with ,1 s brave hearts. So they rallied their forces, but when one of the newly chosen Hand turnetl and brought them news of the terrible wcajjons of defense to be employed, they were c hearted, and their ranks melted away into the darkness. .Some time later one of the spie; by stealth to visit his kinsman, but the ever-watchful Demons captured him, and to remi traces of unbelief, he was baptized three times in the Jordan. lie was then disrobed ant adv for the sacrifice Wl dy ipon th. hovered above as a cloud. Many of tin outer world wandered in, saw the error o their ways, and were ba| tized in the cool am sparkling waters of the Jordan. liut th- multitude stood afar off, for they had hear- rumors of the coldness and i)urity of tin water. Vague mysteries floated in the atmo.s phcre around the Dorm. Helated traveler whispered fearfully that little drops of wate had fallen like thunderbolts from a clear sk ' 902 uhcii thcv vciiliin. ' .! too near. ISiil ol late an atniusiilicrc iil nnrcst pervades the Duini. Woixl has -one ' lorth that the ■ ' Powers that Decree have ].lanne l to remodel the L,Mand old building and change it from a life center to a set of dead classrooms, where weary students sleep through 1 ' I ' l I ' I ' i; interminalile lectures and recitations. .Strange footsteps arc heard in its halls at the dead hours D E n 1 I s of the night, and solitary and smothered moans. It is the .spirit of the Ancient Dorm Devil, who 1902 comes forth from his secret recess to iew his old abode, so soon to be destroyed, and to lament its fate. And one or two students retiuning to their lodgings at a late hour, have seen on the rool of the Dorm the figure of his Majesty, dindy outlined against the sKy, as he takes a last sad loolc .It his principality, which is soon to lie his no more. Ki:il ' KI N ..I TIIK MisroKICAL Sckl.M,. Williin the atmosphere of mvsterv that surrounds the Old Dorm, we Dorm Devils lived in uirp, Wl readv to aid a brother. We alwa s tried to do our dut -. and we live in the happy consciousness of a work well done in keeping up the traditions of the Old I ' kice. Vc are proud and happy to be the last, but not least, of all the Devils that it has sheltered. Although the Old Dorm is soon to be only a memory, it is a memory that we are grateful to possess. It is one that will alwavs stand out as the brightest star in the firmament of the past. I ' .irewell, Old Dorm! May the restless guardian spirits that people thy dark recesses still abide with tliee .md cheer thy lonely hours. Farewell! A. O. D. D. LITERARY SOCIETIES IrnJing Literary Society Officers Coi. jKs: A . President H. A. Berthold Treasurer J. David MiNCH Critic on Ihe Riglv A. [. Crane Critic on tlie Left C. P. J..V . . Marshal Honorary Members A. 1. Crane A. V. Gregg C. I ' . Joy A. V. Walti I. M. C Z IRVING ANNUAL PROGRAM 1 ' V K D U E D li i; R I S 1902 VlOT.l i MAL ' KU K Till. Ml ml I ' ulilic cIlHiiioi T1..N How ■The New Ln;;l,UHl C. P. Joy Mr. G F. LiiKlner . I. I. Lainmctlce |. •■. G. Miller li s M Millspan-h n.l Mn .re) A. J. Crane I . Silbcrbers Mr. G F. Lindner . 1. I avi.l l Iinch li K M MillsiMu.;, ' !. PHILALETHEAN ANNUAL PROGRAM MCMC iMl.cl S|,.ll.lil|., iMPI.KSCNATInN Lnis V,l-C ( IKATK .N Tlu; AlllCI 1( ail K. ' V. .1 111 i. .n . . . Fram-es IH-Kiccs Misic OiiaitcttL Mary Tli. ■inpv..i,, I ' .t-SM ' Iluiil.r, Mar (nu-st. l-l.arnii- (laU ' S ■•Tlic Kc ' vival ..1 lliu Cilonial Clial-arlcr ill Mmli rn !■ kI iui, iar.aii.r SillRi-I.ep, Sti.kv Carrie MuMaK Mrsic (;_uarlL-in Stiirv Kdith Tuhias % ' ' N    '   ' . Carlyle Literary. Society Officers 11. G. Raschbaci V. C. Starkev H. P. KlEFFIiK W. S, Hali. . C. H. SSIAUT ' ice Prcsideii .Secretary Treasurer Critic on Ri l 02 V. S. I1..W C. W. Kiv ■ K.iuts A. 1.. Kitne.lue V. K. Muell. ' . O ' f L.y. ki ' rhv ' 11. P. Kieifer CAR.LYLE ANNUAL PROGRAM !• U R D LI F. D E B R I S 1902 Carlyle S ' u ord hM ' MM Emersonian Literary Society . W. Ixoi-i U.S. Bro v . 1!. MlLL.l C. A. Keli. M. L. Fiscii I. C. VlLKl •OS . M.(;wii, , W. Il.nl Kriiw.iit W. Kinii EMERSONIAN ANNUAL PROGRAM U R D U E E ii R I S 902 cai Ar 1nvocatio Piano Soi.( Greeting Essay— P) Oration— Our Typi Vocal Solo Story— Theory vs. 1 Recitation- Sockc Violin Solo Poem— Tlie Casllc o Sketch— An Unt-xp Vocal Solo The Kecita VlOI.IN Kcv. H. L. Kinciig Miss M,il)U- Morrisuii K. W. IngLrsuU . J.C. Maniuis J. C. Wilkins MissDcrtha Ruigley K. n. Rctiner . H. O. Gurnian Eredcrirk Ingcrs,.ll V. M. Hinesley Win. Aitkeiihead . Miss Ri.lgley . R. W. Ingersoll I.. U. McBruoni MECHANICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY A. .. Kittukih;].; . Trcasu Goxleming Coti ncil Program Committee . r. funk, Cliaini .S Miller I. M. ,al j. II. • ' 11. c. r.i.iikuiii . 1. kii.iiip I ' infhll ' Members in Faculty I ' r.il. .1. K.S. Millrr II. K.,l.rrls..ii C.A. V.iiniu 1.1). M.U. Strom A.I ' Senior Members H.ilfnian J. unison II. .XilkcnlKM.I V . , ,lrr.i,, 1.. . li,lris.iii i- :n.ck K,I. D.ivis FiL.I Leaiy l..-slic Hiixl.il.lc K. A. Lcwman Tsut.i llaoio K. M. Mav 11. M. Harris H.C. Mav A. L. Kitirc.I-e J. H. Maysilks Junior Members T. W. • las. I ' nka Clias 1). 1 U. 1. khc-i J. S. Tatni ll l.lil ' l ' .l Inn. Fink Chas. KIdiiscIuniilt V. C). lassnaclit K. IS. Laiit;lincr II. W. Irwin Irio M. LaniniL-dru riias. I ' . Joray NV. N. Moore Sophomore Members |. V. I ' innL- I. 11. Flocl 1). Kan.loi FI. Slcindo M,. iul.rs.m I ' ,. .Xir usliru- as. N. liui-ks . W. lU-nK -r P. ' . Oisi-rens J.M. Clark l;. V. r.ilslan.l w. w. r,r W. C. II. o D.Hi . U Ki Honorary Member W. Wsl.ii . I. Wliiekr . W. Winans Freshmen Members Tost-Graduate Members CIVIL ENGINEER ING SOCIETY Board of E-diiors for Annual Members in the Faculty H.Curey. ' . ' . V. Ikaii. . Ass ' t F Ass ' t I- . Ass ' t V li. A. Beitinsl.aw T. H. Cleary C. C. Buver A. E. Ken.mur H. C. r.crrv K. v.. Dun, ' C. KImuIi F. F. Marli H. Aniistr. M. K. Kerfr (.. A. .SlLlilll W. P.i.ehl.T (). H. (A.nk I . 1). ki.l.M, V. H. Lane E.N.I )ascli V. I,. Eckhoiis,. Ni.I.ir Uicc I.e. Wilkin L. D. Iliuwi, F. H.; liller K. K King A. E. Loder W. M. Neptune A.T. Dorian,! W. F. Cellar R. !■:. Woodn J. R. Casely 1. W. Krnst W. C. Bonehi Freshmen V.W. Macv H. C.O.sand A. B. Cohen W. E. M Fred Mn H 1 Mitch L K .Marsh 1- C L Wall.. ELECTRICAL SOCIETY 1) E H l I s 1902 I), M. Lynch, K. U. SiLVFR, W. T. Sm.. i.i„ C. A. Davis, . OffU CHEMICAL SOCIETY VV. H. Test Jas. H. Kaiis..iii 02 V. S. Duw K. W. Parks K. L. Nelson KraiiU Harslia E. E. Vuuiil; Kdwanl Miiiil 1902 AGRICULTURAL S O C E T Y Cdl.iiKs: Ciiui .ui.l ll|,l Gold Officers L. M. KiSHER President i;. L. SiNiOLL, ' ice-Presidcnt K. Lamh Treasurer I ' NA li. TURLIiV Secretary F. Ekijiu Critic on Kiffht MAKiiAHKT A.Ckf.cjc; Critic On Left C. V. Ely Sergeant-at-Arms Members 02 03 K. P. Randcil C. Ph. Voile G. T. Kauch PHARMACEUTICAL SOCIETY I). M. JnNES, A.J. KSIABK.II.K, Mrs. ];i,i,a LiviN.ivro . ' ici-1 ' resulcnl )lii.s n (,. A. I.uias On.i McCarlv I. s. 11. I Kuckcr nan W. Sa. . K:il(ks A. A. MiR.il)Lit, A. r Sr.itt ' ( . K..li.ii Drra Maltlirw Cli,i Irs Sliulli .. Kciiiii ImIhi W. M. ' isLT K.ill h M. St., Ill C. KlnK . . r.. MH.;,-.lf lam s Il.TavI, Lcu-.u-k K. V. Mill.r H.n- V I.. Wilt Honorary Members PR E-MEDICAL SOCIETY 1 ' u R D u r DEBRIS 1902 V, r. -SCHDF O. p. Teurv, E. H. Myers Vice-President j. U . .IT. Nalt.i A. W. GreRs E. Mueller li. E. Cronkhite F. Harshaw, Jr. I). K. Lucas K. L. Nelson W. H. H. Moore I. Schoenholtz E. A. North P. G. Hauss K. V. Duncan S. R. Mitchell 0. C. Hawortli E. E. Young M. I.. Fisher W. P. Scliolield O.P.Terry V. S. Dnw Sophomores Freshmen G. U. Ilerry M 1 llinit E. H. Myers F. II. t cio],er C. A. Jump J. 1). Collins Fharmacijtj O.F. Ferrer i . F. Ke,-,1 I). W. Fosler S. W. D.ivis K. Kerlin 1 ). k. .M.mliew J.H.Taylor ( ). P.. I,ew.,rk D.M.Jones S. Gnl.lsmilh Honorary Member • 1 w BY EVALEEN STEIN ONG the lane I idly pass, Unheeding where the footpath goes, And loiter through the ripe, wild grass. That down the open roadway grows In feathery, tall tufts that rise In filmy tangles, misty-wise; The grass that when the southwind blows Shines out and shows Shot through with silver lights and rose, And tiny gold and violet seeds That quiver off each gleaming stem And powder all the wayside weeds And like a glory cover them. With eager palms I gently press Soft sheaves of it against my lips In sheer delight ! and so caress And fondle with light finger tips, And watch its beauty while the bright Clear spears of light Pierce through its slender blades and smite Their rose and purple, till my sight Is dazzled with its loveliness. In verdant nets, along the way, The tendrils of a wild-grape vine Through elder thickets intertwine; And, poising lightly on a spray Of fruited bramble stems, where shine Close clustering berries, red as wine, A little thistle-bird, still gay In April ' s yellow plumage, clings With airy grace,— and slowly swings, And lifts his wings In dainty, drowsy flutterings; They flicker like bright flakes of gold. And fan his body, small and slim. While lovingly the winds enfold And summer ' s heart broods over him. The sky is softer than the blue Of cornflower buds beneath the dew; And down below Upon the marshy meadow swales The bindweed weaves its rosy veils Where thick the blowing rushes grow Among the tasseled reeds and rue; And up between the mossy rails It lightly climbs, and clambers through The growing corn, and barley, too, And winds the fallow weeds and trails Across the creek where cowslips grew. O lavish stems, that fondly fling Close clasp about the earth, and cling In wreaths of fragrant flowering Ev ' n as ye do To that dear soil wherefrom ye spring. So does my love cleave thereunto ! And so my full heart-blossoms bind The bright midsummer fields and find Sweet fellowships with everything! K ' ' A m 1 1 f ' r p ' ' y ' ? .;« D E B R I S 1902 pA or.vj THOUGHTS ON ROUNDABOUT PLACES ill l; ' ooiI thiiii rs that which vc, perhaps, ap|jrcciatc least is the privilej c of all out-doors. The kinds of open-air recreation available in this locality are unlimited. Fish- ing is excellent in all our streams and there is good sliooting in the timbered hills and river bottoms. Boating on the Wabash and lower Wildcat is good. It is also ilelightfully exhilarating on the Tippecanoe when going down-stream, but to fight one ' s way up-stream against those long, swift, rocky rapids is another |)roposition. In winter, skaters throng on the reservoir, while the lower Wildcat, the Erie canal, and the Wabash afford s|)lendid opportunities for long-distance skating. In s])ring and autumn students often take lung walks in the invigorating (.pen air of the wooded hills north of the iiniversitv, or explore the man)- little ravines and ramifications ol Happ)- Hollow. For beauty and variety of scenery there is no spot in the state or Central West that can compare with this region. The Wabash, Tippecanoe, Wildcat, Wea, and Flint Creek are as delightful waterways as were ever dreamed of by devotees of rod, gun, or camera. Innumer- able crystal springs bubble up from the foot of evei hill, and in every ravine and gorge is a wild, runaw, brook. A stranger recently from his home in the heart ol the Rockies, when first seeing Happy Hollow and the Soldier ' s Ravine, was heard to exclaim that their wild- ness made him think he was at home. Another, who had seen all Colorado and much of the West, after camping on the Tippecanoe, said that for beauty and wildness it rivaled the mountain streams. In history and romance, in poetry, song, and art, the Wea, Tippecanoe, and especially the Wabash, are famous and familiar to every The Wabash, the largest stream in the state, winds i i i i its way through a picturesque and fertile valley in great, sweeping cui ls The maL,nihcLnt blulls rising sometimes directly from the water ' s edge, tower high abo c the ii ci is it in the piide of their strength they challenged the mighty rebellious torrents thit sometimes rise and sucep around those stately bends, endeavoring in the fury of their rush to destroy the restraining banks which control and direct their course. Even when in its gentlest mood the broad, unruffled expanse often covers a hidden strength that surprises one attempting to row against it. The current that sweeps along the base of bluffs and divides at the head of islands, rushing down their sides as if angry at anything which dare interrupt it, is a force which demands the supreme strength of the oarsman. It is a fickle, restless stream, constantly changing its channel, now building great sand bars and soon tearing them down again. Hut, after all, it is a peaceful, even gentle, stream when compared with the others. It is even so 9 o z pc icclul that at times the guarding- blulTs dare recede a little way from the water ' s edge and allow a delightfully picturesque and shady river-road to creep along between the base of the bluffs and the river. The bluffs are usually densely wooded. Tall sycamores, growing at the water ' s edge, with their white and mottled trunks and branches, stand in pleasing contrast against a somber background of oaks and elms. All unite their branches to form a high, arched canopy through which stray sunbeams sometimes penetrate and throw straggling lights across the shaded drive below. The absence of fences and things artificial lends an added charm of wildness and freedom to the scene. On one side is a great rive r, flowing serenely, majestically; on the other side a virgin forest, tall, stately, dark, imposing. Scarcely a sound breaks the stillness. Solitude reigns supreme save for the hermit thrush ' s note and the cardinal ' s song. This famous river-road, passing north through the village, follows the river for three miles until it is forced to ascend part way up the bluff, which now rises abruptly from the water ' s edge. The road then coiitiuues tIi ii this Ili race to Tecumseh ' s frail i rustic ] ii I where a remnant of the tiail ot the re it Indian chief is vet to be seen The blnffs to the left alon , the road have often been cut thious h by deep ravines, in the bottom ot which iisuall flows a little brook, tumblin and spl ish ing over the rocky bed ot its course The largest and most com])licitcd of these ravines is known is lla| |n Hollow. A rough w i on ro id enters the hollow and after a little ua) divides send ing I branch up the lough gulhed hill side It IS a steep and ciooked ti ul seldom used sa e b f irmeis who hue no nthei outlet H(n e ei when it has itt i lit it affords a magnificent panoramic view of all LaFayette and the Wabash vallev. A smaller, but more beautiful, hollow i- the Soldier ' s Ravine — long, crooked, with cr steep and densely wooded sides. ' ' ' ' - t il spiiiiLjs of purest, coldest water are ruiist.intly breaking out from under some rock or gravelly bank and mingling with the vivacious little brook. At all seasons this is the home of innumerable wild flowers and ferns, and is the shaded retreat of many rare birds. Returning to our river-road, which we left at the Trail, it is found to have [Kirted company with the river and now lollows a chain of hills which unite to form 1 U R D U D E IJ I 1 I 9 O the second terrace. We are no longer in the shade of overhanging branches but in the open country, with partly wooded hills on our left and undulating meadows and grain fields on our right. We could con- tinue on this road into the Tijipe- canoc country but if, for the present, we turn off and investigate an inviting-looking drive to our right, we shall find that it finally leads us back to the Wabash which we Lioss on the quaint old ferry boat, t. continue our course in what is a southern direction we shall tl enter the city, but if, just be- coming to the town, we turn to ktt we shall strike the Wildcat md b) 1 series of farm lanes soon me ui on a picturesque drive along iliL old tow i)ath of the ancient Erie t in il This quaint drive is bordered on either side with sycamores, haw- thorns, willows and honey -locusts. . fter crossing the canal we enter the old covered wooden bridge over the Wildcat just above the big dam. Continuing our drive over what is known .is the famous Wildcat Loop wr sh.iU recross the Wildcat further up-struaiu. The sccneiy ii lis that of the Wabash river-road. The Wildcat is a rapid stream which has cut a deep gorge thiougli tlie terraces of the eastern Ijank ot the Wabasli, into which it flows sliortly above the Wabash feirj. It is the best near-by fishing grouu for black bass. One may find ..joo angling in the Wabash but must jo either above or below the cits i liltle way. Having rccrosscd the il 1 ii our road now leads us back into lli city. To see the Wea and Flint eieel one must take the south ri cr imd on the east side. It is only about four miles to the Wea by eithei ot three routes. The Wea runs thiouijh a partly wooded valley and is i miniature Tippecanoe. One heais the constant murmuring of splashing and laughing waters as they play over long series of rocky rapids, broken here and there by deep, shaded pools of clear water denizened by gamy but warj ' bass. Flint creek-, which Hows into the Wabash just above Goose island— a P H R D I D E B R 1 9 O 9 o lew miles beluw llic mouth ol the Wea— is much like the Wea, but is smaller, less ra|Md. and more shaded. No one is here long until he hears of the fame of the Tippecanoe and, havini; ' once seen the stream, it will never be forgotten. y n excursion to the Tippecanoe river is one of the most delightful outings imaginable. In the first place, the route is as picturestjue and varied as one could well conceive. We follow our famous north river-road along the Wabash, past the Trail, and on northward instead of turning to our right as when going to the Wabash ferr - and the Wildcat. At ever)- bend in the road some change of scene is encountered and we are constantly speculating on what will apjiear around the nc. t curve. Our road is always turning, going up hill and down, over brook and creek, through sunshine and shadow of field and forest. Indeed, one charm of our roads is their crookedness. t)n a partly wooded hillside to our left is a great shelf of projecting rock on which, according to tradition, the Prophet stood and viewed the progress of the battle of Tip|iecanoe. where many brave warriors bled and died as the white men and the red men strove for the supremacy of the land. After ]jassing through the village of Battle Ground our route leads us to the .Springborough bridge, but long before reaching this we are treated to several tantalizing glimpses of the river through its heavily wooiled banks. Our road comes out on the crest of a long, high bridge overlooking a little valley. Down below and on the far side of this little valley is the little country postofTice of : B R 1 9 o p ir R D H K D E li R I S 1902 our horses and ourselves with the |.ringburoiioh. 1 lere we relrcsl waters of the favorite spring. Just around the curve we come in sight of our Mecca, a broad expanse of hurrying, flashing rapids, spanned by four or five long, graceful arches. The murmur of many moving waters is music in the air. The river at this point is wide, shallow, rocky, and very swift. .Some distance above the bridge it glides gracefully around a great curve and then the rapids begin. For half a mile there is a racing of clear, limpid waters, a splashing over boulders, a gurgling laughter while dodging great masses ol granite that break through the surface everj ' where as if striviiiL: to stop the playful waters in their mad rush. Helow the bridgf, at the foot of the long rapid, lies a deep, dark pool, denizened b}- innumerable black bass that dash out into the rapids at every suspicion of prey. Gamy warriors — these water rovers! Tliis clear, cold, swift, rocky stream is the itleal home of our favorite game fish. How often in midsummer we have waded in those waters, waist-deep or more, with rod and reel and allowed the stron ' j current to carry our bait down stream, or have cast a fly lightly on dancing riffles near some big rock, behind which lurked a watchful bass. Then to the challenge responds a silvery flash. a tug, a tightening of the silken strand, a sensation ascending one ' s arm like an electric shock, the whirr of the reel mingling with the music of the water, and the contest is begun! A little distance below the big pool at the foot of the long rapid, the river breaks up into several channels as it makes its way through a group of islands. After crossing the bridge r find a bewitching driveway closely following the river bani. almost as lar as the islaiuls. Great sprcadinjj- oaks shade tliis winding trail, and with the blue ' [ ' - HHifli Ps 3 . ' grass banks of the river make H K 1 s B BK Bitki iftttitMo , one continuous, delightful pic- nic ground. I ' crhaps the most charming feature of the Tippecanoe is its islands. All are beautifulh ' wooded with oi)en spots here and there carpeted with blue grass. In the freshness of spring they are clothed in brilliant emerald green, garnished with masses of showy dog-wood and red-bud. In autumn the islands arc .ill gold and olive, tinged with patches of crimson, ruby, and various shades of brown — all blended and reflected in the ripples and pools flecked with floating autumn leaves. With reluctance we leave this spot for our homeward drive. We return by the river-bank- trail to the bridge but instead of recrossing the bridge we turn east for about half a mile, then south for perhaps two miles, where we again come to the Tippecanoe. This time it is nearer its junction with the Wabash and displays fewer long rapids, but the wooded islands and banks are still present in all their tangled wildness. From the steep, high bank at the roadside flows the big spring. Here all travelers, both man and beast, stop to drink of the waters noted for their clear- ness and coldness. After crossing the Tippecanoe our road leads through woods and meadows. .iround hills and across creeks, until we reach Battle Ground where we return by the Wabash river- road over which we came. Few mortals, however, are content to leave the Tijjpecanoe after a few hours ' visit. There is an infatuating charm in the islands, the eddying pools and rushing rapids, the wooded banks and shaded paths, that impels one to stay and sec the river in all its varying moods. Picture a sunset supper on a large, flat rock at the water ' s edge with the rapids all around. The brighter lights of the day are softened into evening ' s gray, as the setting sun nears the hazy horizon. A great blue heron flaps slowly ami leisurely overhead. The evening clouds are illumined with richest gold, and tinged here and there with orange and crimson. A little later lavender unci purple appear and, niintjlinn ' with the crimson and gold, spread all over the vaulted heavens. The lurid lights of the heavens above are mirrored and mingled in the moving waters below. The crest of every rippling wave is capped with purple and gold. The drops of spark- ling spray are all the hues of the rainbow. The flecks of foam are like drops of blood lloating on pools of inky blackness. Then the gold melts aua and the red md [lurple and gia) lemun The led shoots its last, long, vvaveiing ra) s across the heaxcns, touchmg and tinging the Alllv margins of floating clouds Then the red is gone, only a little ]iuiple lemains in the west, all else IS the ia of apjiroaching night i le aware, the pur]jle is blended into gray id the night has fallen. There is an im- ■cssive silence everywhere. The birds e hushed, the sounds of the day have ised In the stillness the murmur of L waters is clearer and grows louder, he night becomes darker and darker. Ill illy the silence is broken by the timid ite of a frog somewhere in the sedges at K water ' s edge. This is repeated from loss the water and in a short time the u s are croaking all around. A deep so- iious bass blends with the soprano ' s trill 1(1 dl unite to swell the chorus. During a mpui u) ' lull in the concert there comes 1 us on the cool night air from across the ileis the weird crv of the great horned P U R D U K I) 1-: li R I S 1902 THE OAK-SHADED Tl owl, Ihc straiiL c bird ul the nij hl wliich haunts the wild, slKided retreats of dense woods. A feeling almost of loneliness conies over us. The sky in the cast becomes l 1 ' ' ' ■ ' a little lighter. The clouds begin to change their form E H K I .s and the moon, breaking through their silvery lining, y O 2 shcdb I flood of soft light over everything The suspicion ot loneliness is dispellnl The beautiful iiver which we h i e studied at middi at sunset and in the darkness of ii ht we now en]o in the iJlor of moonlight When we iiise to o the wateis gurgling about our Ul U SI It seem to l)e lau hint; as thej whisper us a cheeiN good- n I r h t T ii e 11 In the le light we di sb dL but guish the cottontails, mere prosaic rab- ight very elfs that play along the road- si 1l and phantom-like, hurry into the nearby thickets at ui approach. Wh ere in the daytime the golden sunshine ilted through the branches of overhanging trees, our road I now mottled with flakes of silver. There is a softness in the lights and a hazy indistinctness in the shadows 1 he tir IS delightfully sweet and fresh. There is an un bioken stillness everywhere. The wood thrush and the e lulinal are in slumber. Suddenly there floats out on thi balm night air the sweet, tender notes of the whippoor will s song and one almost forgets that he is still on earth .M( kUH I 1 iiLU tint bonictliini; was needed to complete the great ' ,tem ot the Uiii else aiid he entered Pnrdne with the confident lef that he wib to supply the missing- mechanisms as rapidly as woild could Ejrow accustomed to them. He had not worn a s numbei on his cap tor more than two weeks, however, before he icLth atlmitted to himself that he had been dreaming dreams, u IS I 1 Kslimin no more, no less, and he was seventeen. IK w lb jnst leainmo how tu -cll Bully for old Purdue at the tball games when he saw her. She sat on the tally-ho with the ed Juniors and Sophomores, and he was a lowly Freshman on the achers. He forgot to jell when Purdue kicked goal and dashing f-backs made fifty-yard end runs without his encouragement. He ., the tan jacket and the little brown mittens that waved an old- g guiltily. , gain he ventured a look from Miss Divinity. He it ol desecration. That night he . ' oice said ; Poor fellow ! He saw onl) ' the girl in the brown ha gold and black pennant loyally. Once she looked at him and he turned his face away, flus glance in her direction, only to be caught red-handed by anot was obliged to lean against a post, so overwhelming was the w dreamed that a tally-ho ran over him, and, as he died, a swe was so brave ! He saw her at other games and he saw her at the theater. No goddess was ever so beautiful as she, no human so divine. lUit, tr ' as he woulil, Rockwell could not meet her. .She was not in his set, and he was too diffident to push himself forward. In those Freshman days he saw and worshiped and — almost llunked. The Sophomore _vear found him back early and with determination in his soul. He lived only to meet her and his heart danced with anticipation. Again the football games, again the theater, even the church, but — he got no nearer than before. Fate denied him, and once more, after long months of secret worship, hungry glances (more often returned than otherwise, for he jking .less the final ex.iniiiititions so illy ijicparecl tliat it took all suninicr to work off the comlitioiis that threatened to keep him out of the junior class. A Junior, proud and arrogant, was he, and he left his home in the aue-stricken little country town early in September, foresworn to meet, woo and win the i;irl of erstwhile brown. How could she escape a Junior ? Hut day after day, night after night, he cursed the ill-luck that crept specter-like between him and the fair one who lived across the river. Twice he sat beside her in the theater, his arm brushing against hers, her merry laughter in his ringing ears; he sat near her at church, cheered with her at the games, stood up i n the street cars that she might be seated, but there came not the coveted introduction. And so he came to the .Senior 3 ' car without meeting her. When he w ' as elected to read an abstract of thesis on Commencement Day, he went about it with the hopeless, despairing resignation of one who expects to give U]j the fight in the last, glorious ditch. He was confident she would be in the tent on the great June day and she would hear his voice at least. The L)ig day came and he was to go out into the world without meeting her, alter four long years of waiting and endeavor. There was no manlier fellow on the platform than Rockwell, nu handsomer lad in the big pavilion. She sat near the platform and a dozen times he caught her looking at him. His heart leaped triumphantly when she drop|)ed her lovely eyes in confusion that grew with repetition. He talked about bolts and bars and the durabilit - of things that did not appeal to her pretty ears, and he talked directly to her. .She heard every word and the little |)ucker on her brow ' told him that she was trying to understand. Then came the rainstorm and the drenching. When the crowd began to scamper for the main building, Rockwell climbed down from the platform with desperation in his eye. A luclcy, but selfish, [irofessor monopolized an uplifted umbrella, while Miss Divinity was vainly trying to |irotert her hat and gown. Rockwell, the graclu.ite, uncerciuonionsh ' relie cd the professor of his umbrella and rushed to her side. ••Thank you, Mr. Rockwell, she fiuttered. •• Selfish old jay, gasped Rockwell, reeling with juv. -( Itiglit to have seen you . wlul, isn ' t it : •• Dreadful. My hat is ruined. ••Is it wet? •• Soaking. Long pause, • ' Vou had a splendid thesis, Mr. Rockwell. 1 enjoyetl it so much, Awfully good of you, he lloundercd. Longer ])ause than belore, with the | atter uf rain sounding like lauglitcr. ■• VVl-11, you arc throut;h, .ucn ' t you r Arc you j rlad ? she .iskcd. Tlirough what? I ' ve just begun — I mean, oh, ' es — through school, of course. Iiave to go to work now. Vou have a jiosition waiting ? she said, and he detected something hke regret in licr Ve — cs, he answered, thickly. lie was to become a draughtsman. I thought you might come back for post-work. She was looking at the rivulet coursed near her feet. The umbrella wobbled nervousl)-. You don ' t care for parties and i and — girls, do you ? The boys say ■ou are awful studious. Da — hang the boys, muttered Rockwell. Just then one of her girl friends rushe and coolly crowded under the umbrella . The ra ' n was making him vcr - [lopular. .So you two have met at last. cried the newcomer, gavly. I ' or three years she ' ; crazy to meet you, Mr. I ' iockwell. ' Oh, oh, oh I cried the other girl, in deep confusion. Ivockwell staggered, opened liis and — gasped. He remembered afterward that his arm unconsciously pressed a little closer sleeve of a certain shirt-waist. .She ' s crazy afio i you, added the new arrival. And now you are going away. Isn ' t it Rockwell swallowed laboriously. After a look at the flushed face beside him and flitting glance from her embarrassed eyes to spur him on, he said, tranquilly: I ' m coming back to take post-work next year. Post work in — in what? asked Miss Divinity, a heart-thump after each worti and the middle of the sentence. ()h, I tlon ' t know ; but I ' m not going to stop at my bachelor degree. THE M U S O F THE PINES BY WALTER M. HINESLEY )NE of Nature ' s voices fill me With a feeling- deep, sub- lime, As the weird, mysterious singing Of the wind among the pines. In a language more than human. In an eloquence unbound; They but voice life ' s whole, strange story. Long and wide, deep, profound ; Speaking, voicing, Peace and hope and joy and grief and love; Softly whispering. Whispering when their swaying branches When the breeze is softly stirring. And the pines are murmuring low, Then they speak in whispering accents, Of things greater than we know. When the air is soft and tranquil. All is quiet ' neath the skies. They converse in love ' s sweet language. Which makes earth a paradise; Dreaming, seeming, Like some happy lovers free and gay; Loving, living, A life that is joyous all the day. When the air is still and sultry. And the wind has ceased to play. And the sun is shining brightly Through the long, still summer day, Then the hushed and sleeping swallows Silent rest, and give no sign That they ever heard the music In the branches of the pine; Standing, waiting. Waiting for the cooling evening breeze. Silent, sleeping. Stand the heated, quiet, drooping trees. When the falling rain is dampening House and field and tree and leaf, Then the pine trees speak so sadly, Of a soul that ' s filled with grief. Of a heart that ' s overburdened. Near to breaking with the strain. And the symbol of their sadness Is embodied in the rain ; Weeping, seeping. Falling through the dripping branches slow; Seeping, weeping. Murmuring, s ighing, moaning, whispering low. When the evening twilight gathers, And the wind has sunk to rest. And the day ' s last beam has faded From the sky out in the west. Then the lonely pine tree ' s branches Seem to mourn and grieve and sigh For the wind ' s return to teach them Some faint, weird, strange melody; Sighing, dying. Sinking like a weary soul to rest ; Dying, sighing. Sighing for that quiet peace so blest. There is something in their language That I do not understand. And I seem to hear strange voices From a far-off distant land; Yet with yearning heart I listen. Listen as a little child Hears some strange old legend told it, Listens quiet, listens mild; Listening, hearkening. Grave and gay and sad and solemn lines; Murmured, whispered. Woven in the music of the pines. THE PASSING OF THE DORM QN, By GEORGE ADE. With Drawings by JOHN McCUTCHEON :tion of the canii)us |);vnorania has chaiiucd but slightly since th remarkable days of the early eij hties. On a certain June niorniiij;- in new century I came out of the main building and started north toward the belo iox which grew into my affections under the homely appellation of the don riiere it squatted in the bland sunshine, as rectangular and bare and unlovely liien it first towered above me like a forbidding fortress and said to the trenuil shman, Leave hope behind — ye who enter here. Without putting the imagination to violent effort, I could well l)elie e t nineteen intervening years had been a troubled dream — that the MinkiuL ' v dows under the caves looked out from George McCoy ' s eagle nest — that the room be belonged to Ratliff and Fankboner. If good old Eli Hoober had put his heail out of ihe u window on the second floor and waved me a welcome, I should not have been surjirised. Tnsti lively I made a detour so as to avoid a ducking. It was the same old dorm, dozing peacefully in the warmth ,ind giving no outward sign the deviltry that lurked within. Beyond was the same bushy wall of evergreens, almost hid the sequestered Military Hall. For one brief moment the illusion lasted. Then I glanced to right and saw a colony of turreted brick buildings where there should have been a loneso stretch of farm land and I awoke, resuming the character of Rip Van Winkle — a heart-sick w derer engulfed in the unsympathetic newness of things in general. But the worst was yet to come. I entered the south hallway and found a trim and insol disjjlay of bright woodwork, a blinding whiteness of walls and the soft hush of class-room respt .djility. No cheerful whoo]) came floating through any brolcen transom. I listened in vain one glad chorus of Sweet Violets, . nnie Rooney, or White Violets, ' It that Wings. A chill came over mi sepulchre of departed youth. Once outside, there to remain forever, I could not resist the tci tat ion to take a final look at that corner room on the ground floor. .St delusion of fancy told me that I should see a battered table strewn v i| hs on tl it dLCieni ' nut to look back. The ' ■dorm uutc iiathctic ubil d, i.crhaps, cith ' buniiiL; at iiial cs and waiul Anderson or Richards tilted back jniatics with glassy eye and dishevel saw r thai sulticicntly tiresome and meaningless to dealing with large enterj. rises and marc 1 ilttiing platoons. The dorm is now a sub-departnu I 11 ill acti ' ities. the hub of the instituti two hundred, and of these one hund Seniors, fonrteen Juniors, twenty .Sophs er gene scences igiments of polisl lei 1 and da rec ; moved t( J doubt, for thcv an t. In 1883 it was the headquarters 11. The total enrollment was hardl}- ;d were preps. An even dozen and a total of forty Freshmen for he 3 ' ear, of whom a scant thirty lasted the nine months — think of it you serried hosts! In numbers as well as in other respects, the co eds held even with the men. There were erhaps fifty men in the regular college classes. A minority of these lived in LaFayette, mak- ng a toilsome journey across the old levee and up Chaunccy Hill every morning, for there were I ' .i liollev cars and coaches in those days. Therefore, as one ma} ' readily calculate, the dorm was large enough to house the men students who did not live in the city. Seniois, luniors, Sophs, Freshmen and Preps — we hived together in the dorm. Only a iiandful of aristocrats asiiired to the private lodgings and the jiretentious Sj-a-week- )uarding places of Chauncey. It was a small family, with a chastening amount of poverty, impartially distributed. The conditions should have been favorable to democratic harmony, and yet never was I house more bitterly divided against itself. The dorm was a seething cauldron of college ])olitics. Between the Irving faction and the Carlyle faction played a line of lire, and no man could find comfort in remaining neutral. Each new-comer was pulled iiid hauled until he fell into one camp or the other, and once he he had allied himself. Ills partisanship became Corsican and the large feud became his private (|uarrel. Looking back at the strife, after a lapse of cooling years, 1 find it difficult tu 21S uhich battle, cicnt r The doim ' was ai sciitLd and fivi. oi bi Carl ' Ii lallied when tioublc was im| duiing the week of the annu; the L icl cause ol so much cuutcnti lies in the fight and neither side hac v cie hateful to the opposition. in which the gioiy of humiliating ewaid for any exertion. was an Irving stronghold althougl 11. Tlicie were no taiigi- ileclared for any irinciplcs was merely a Kilkenny he other ]iarty was sufli- ooms were th nding. The entertainment was divided into living and Carlyle factio evoted escoits and the Carh les fiom the turn about in pioviding buggy tides, lla|) Carlylcs were repre- ; war-camps to which the city men fighting spirit touched high mark s in April. Even the I ' hilalethean ns. The Irving girls had their eit) and the ' doim ' took faithful j Hollow ' exeuisions ind othei frugal amusements foi the giils v ho woie then badg In later days, as we old settlers aie told b) each succeeding cop ' j clubs and organizations have niulti[jlied until eaeh mm is diawn into s other men and groups of men, that he is cajoled auas tiom naiiou m fraternities, the athletic teams, the musica the like work together to give a metiopol tan variety to college life; but twent eai ago our little world was half Irving an half Carlyle. Class battles were unknown The monthly magazine was in e.visteiice uul IIk two parties fought unceasingly foi editoiiil control. We had no athletic associ itu n and the only football game w ' e knew « is a scramble for an old-fashioned lublni sphere. In baseball we held our own with other local teams because we were foi tun ite in having good pitchers. Shrews ' Millei of West Virginia, was the Ruby of his d i and contributed largely to our scant glou The contributi alls. ol the like, was raised by subscription in the And now wc hear of a student fund of S6,ooo to back the Association ies, a volunteer ball team, a little band of Y. M. C. A. workers mcctinti Scientific .Society meeting once a month in room 3, now princelv j;enerosity Three literary soc 1 Wednesday evening in Chapel and ■ office of the secret;: uine the university ' Tht sub- a dark so on, year b of the faculty — these were v ' manner. Not until 18S7 was first annual apjieared in 18S9. ; in 1S.S5. In iSgo there was the first i ar — now a glee club, next year a tr; team — the curriculum spreading like a prairie fire and t that the accumulated changes are bewilderi The experiences of a college career, founded largely on tradition and precedent noiiu.il mIkioI, jioiiiuL ' its way in a new Grec to those f :he results of our primitive struggles to here any attempt at field games or Class lie Greek letter societies came out of the •termined effort to play real football. And k team, then a band, then a basketball e students coming in swarms, 110 wonder if a former generation. iho routine work of the class-room, are In the c.irly period, Purdue was a kind of raw : . h ' ruui the classic groves of Crawfordsville, icastle, liloomington, Hanover and Irvington hoots of contempt for our humble little machine As if turning-lathes and foundries and forges J do with a college education ! The final term of contempt with which we nissed was: A little agri- :ollege up at LaFayette. Thus wc received small encouragement from other colleges and what we learned, we learned for our- selves or by distant absor|ition. T h e sler was still on tl honored customs, to put tlie color of sentiment into our collei e life, we had i We were sixty or scvent}- coltish young- men from farms and country towns, le; a sort of unregulated and semi-barbarous existence in a huge rabbit-warren. In addition to being denied a seat at intercollegiate councils we were shul ding 1 the rather exclusive a long-legged boy, I :ial life of LaLayette. The .ical I ' l out lue student :ly arrived from the green fields, who wore a military uiiform during his waking hours. He expected to hear derisive chuckles behind lim when he walked along Main street and every time he climbed Chauncey Hill, he ,yas prepared to dodge a brick bat. I remember that in my Freshman year we had mly one man in the dorm who owned a dress suit and went calling on young allies in the city. Had it not been for his immense ])ersonal popularity and his ibility to curve a ball, no doubt he would have been tarred and feathered. AH the foregoing is intended to emphasize the fact that we of the dorm were a marooned colony, pretty well shut ofi from the rest of the world. To be sure, we went to an occasional show in the city and some of the ])iously disposed had been seen at church entertain- ments, but the old dorm was the chosen scene of our labors and recreations. According to the annual catalogue we were under the watchful eye of professors and subject to inspection at any moment, but this mentorship had no terrors except for the nevvly arrived. y t irregular intervals the gentle, apologetic and not-to-bc-mistaken professional rap was heard at the door and the guardian of our moral welfare came in to say his kindly good evening and possibly to call attention to this or that regulation, which we, in our mad pursuit for knowledge had temporarily disregarded. ExcejJt during these embarrasing qviarter-hours, I am afraid that we did about as we pleased and we pleased to live in a happy-go-lucky, careless and unmethodical way. Our whole existence in tlie dorm was a revolt against feminine supervision, from which we had sLiffered so long. We proved exclusively, by experiment, that there is no necessity of mak- K ing a bed oflener than once a weelc, antl that the room swept ever As ' i ' «Jg| Saturday morning is just as presentable, after being swejit, as i s ve|Jt every da) ' . It seems that the p.uupered collegian of to-day asjiires to a ••den — an a|)artment with rugs on the lloor and ]iillowetl seats in front of the windows, and easy chairs disposed |jictures(|uely about a shim (able, to sa ' nothing of the ' ■ ' ■ ' P wo rooms were carpeted. The 111:111 wlio owned a lounge was seen ly. He who had a rocking chair was deeply envied. Hare walls and floors, plain chairs and tables, a scatter! odors of ])ipe-snioke and escaping steam commiiigled, a z man in negligee tilted back, with his feet on the table— thes the word dorm. And although those were the golden days of youth and the fellows with whom I dwelt seems to me to have been of a nobler and more generous ipiality IJKin any 1 can ever know again — perhaps it is just as well tliat the clorm is passing and that student life is taking on a more civilized aspect. We had a good time in our little community and accumulated a fund of stories which will enliven reunions for years to come, and yet, 1 fear that our four years in the dorm did not give us a very large schooling in those graces and little gentilities ol manner which count for so much in the making of one ' s ig of books and apparel, the warm nc-bound trunk, a lone gas jet, and a wilciy were a ieeable to the situation but the - did not hel|i to e(|ui|i a i I think it just as well that woman ' s kind but retaining grasp should the boisterous collegian. Otherwise he may wander so far from her s can find his way back. This outcome would be calamity indeed. VISIT O F THE SNOW PRINCE P U R D U D E B R I I 9 O All tcntatcs arc more tyrannical or cajjricious llian I lis Majesty llie Snow I ' rince. 15oon companion lie is to his hoary uncle, King Winter — to whom he pays fleeting visits ever and anon, h ' rom time immemorial he has been called an old man with hoar locl s, but never have man ' s eyes been more blinded to signs ul outli — how could age be confounded with the pranks he plays :ind the ever-changeful moods so natural to himr Indeed, he is (|uite3 ' 0ung — a mere ho out for a ie« of the orld! Far, far in the Northland stand the luiicts and spires il his father ' s palaces. Here reigns, uilh (Ks|. otic sua -, the mighty Ice King, father of the Prinec. and il is ,,nl - occasionally reckl couth s p. ,ach When once the ])alace gates are closed behind hini, howe cr. His Majesty, gay and benign or turbulent and stormy, as caprice directs. nic, ere he starts upon his journey from the Cit ' of Ice, great saddle-bags he fills with plunder from his father ' s court. These he fastens to the wings of his magic gray mantle, which liears him safely through the air whither he wills to go. Moods he has in countless mimbers; sometimes the shrill music of his elfin horn is borne to our ears by winds fierce and strong, and the Prince, as he soars by far o ' erheatl, hurls tin ' ice javelins spitefully into the very face of King Winter — and all the world. This time when he started from home the saddle-bags were filled with chips from the chisels of his father ' s sculptors as they carved f.mtastic icebergs. Again he gathers fleece from about the great looms, where are woven his f.ither ' s erTuine robes of state. With bags fairly bursting with this downs ' whiteness out he starts for a frolic to the -Southland. ' Twas in such a mood he came soaring 1) - one inglit in early March. Scarce had the shades of evening fallen over our College tuuers ere his gray mantle was seen descending Ironi the North. Mildly he came, at peace with himself and all the worlil. lie might ha e ipus. eye caught the many evergreens aiid windinL; ' hedges of our beloved playfiil and here was a splendid jjlacc to do a bit of artistic decoration, all his own wa -, which conlil not even be surpassed by his fair cousin, the Princess Spring. Little did he dream of the artistic ability at his command — play and amusement were his only motives. First a delicate mottled background was carelessly thrown in, filling the hollows in the grass, but leaving all the tiny blades and miniature hillocks their soft, sagey winter-green. With a light puff from his horn he sent the white fleece into just the crevico which looked bare and dark-, changing them into tiny beds of s|iarkli[ig jewels. The sanu gems were piled in countless numbers about all the sharp corners of the buildings — first in than ever came from brush or |iencil, and iieuple iji their ignorance said hear the mad wi A corner finished or a curve nicely rounded, a short journey upward was taken to try eltect il It met with appio al 1 new (|uaitLi leceivcd attention but il not the woil wis destiosed b one heaitN bl 1st fiom the hoin I mill) the lound woil wis finished m lest tiUn 1 oised in niidiii His M ijesty Mewed the lesult with the s itist ation ot eipie }Outh over its own elfoits Ihe hedges fountains towels and peal etl loofs next c it( h ese IhesL lie quid 1 .., unished w ith iiband iu boidei and pinn lele ol eimiiu loi iln the aitist IS anxious to ha e done with these and be_,in the led ] ut ol the w )il -deel the gIoi ot oui campus hei pines and eediis Heiehi I in I mh lunsiite— toi the heav diil _i n In b iii h len I th msc 1 c | il to his I ui| 1 I htU aie the touched I outh find t In h ni i his stole ot fltece exh iiislLd— this IS not the hist stop on hi Weill it 1.1 1 eaut3 s sale th it he mu t ue In ' •■ « ngi l ' ja« 5«WL Mj ' ' V I ' • ' -- ' ■-- foi the elleetpiodueed, USUI i Wi ' pi e I niji 1 iden with ,le It missesol snow Some ' . S ' U. ( 11 11 lI t uehed except lUst at the tip ot euh J j ' • jS J • HJ ' aJ ' j ' K . twi wheietnT) npi ight c mdles sw a them dow in I eui e so slight jet so giaceful as to t: the whole tiee X.., iin each leaf bl ide is co e L lin nd_,e ol white leuin_ the boidt % i ivii ilark-green, an effect whicli oiil Itli its beauty when closely iiispectt ills forth increasing admiration the touches o d, but uhi Grou|js of trees are suddenly changed into round, fairy palaces with Chinese roofs, showing painted tiles where fairy elves sport in gardens of white :ind green. The very last of the artist ' s store is tossed with a flourish over the stone |)Osts and wrought-iron gates of the entrance, making tlicm fitting ])Ortals to the fairy-land. Once more the Prince rises high o ' erhead, and so well pleased is the proud Master that, although it is high time for Aurora, with rosy shafts of dawn- light to bring joy and gladness to the earth, he still lingers and covers all the sky with misty gray. All day he stays, for sweet unto his ears are the excl.iniations of delight from the streams of stu- dents passing to and fro. Not until night has cut off the didl light which jienetrated his mantle does he turn his face northward and with a fare- well note from his horn start on the homeward jijuniey. Still he lingers in the northern sky until the .Sun-God rides proudly up over the city to meet ami conquer this I ' rince of Gray. Well does the playful youth know how soon all his work will be ilrstroyed when once his protecting mantle is taken (rum it. (.)ne last, lingering look he casts over his shoulder to behold our campus-garden shining in d.izzlin ' f radiance — a thousand times more beautiful SOME CHILDISH FANCIES By WALTER M. HINESLEY Some surging fancies oft ' arise and glide Through my youthful brain, like the flowing tide; Like its ebbing waves, as they rise and fall. An idle splashing on a crumbling wall — For they nothing mean, and I know not why Of their coming hence or their passing by; They sing but little in their low refrain, The childish fancies of a youthful brain. These fancies, happy as they sometimes seem. Would make life pleasant as a morning dream; Make all flow smoothly in a rhythmic rhyme, Like a babbling brook in the summer-time. With the trees and grass and flowers all free. And for everyone and for all to be; Would increase pleasure and would banish pain, These childish fancies of an idle brain. I ' d love all people, have a few love me Who now care nothing, and who do not see Through my happy mood as I sing the song That helps some other on his way along; I would lighten up all their cares with good. And I ' d plant a rose in the solitude; But my thoughts, I fear, as I weave this strain. Are childish fancies of a youthful brain. n E I ' d have truth triumph, and all error fail; Have wisdom potent, and no wrong prevail; Give all men freedom, and right all their wrongs; Let each one enjoy what to him belongs; ' ' I ' d have earth Heaven, have it shine with light Of love and justice, and of truth and right; ' But, I ask myself now, are these thoughts sane? Or childish fancies of an idle brain? I would live happy in a quiet home, Where I ' d be content and not care to roam. With a few good friends all my life to cheer. And a heart so true that I ' d hold most dear; With these I would live so that men might say: He made life brighter when he passed this way; Yet all this, I fear, is an idle dream, A childish fancy of a youthful brain. [t PKotoffrapKer ly Orion Lawxence Foster ord, that conjurer 1 1 laic visiuns, the associate of fond mem- ories, the theme of poets and the inspiration or the despair of artists, a thing of magiCj that will be as potent in ages to come as in years that are past— as long as a soul lives in the heart of mankind. The same companionable moon that smiled on our mother earth (or cycles of time unknown is yet her faithful comrade and still sheds the same soft, silvery rays over the same old earth and transforms long nights of dismal darkness into fleeting moments of delightful romance. Ever since the birth of Art the moonlight scene has been an inspiration to every nature-loving artist. There is nothing strange in that even toilers with the camera should be tempted to dare grasp and retain these rarest expressions of nature by means of a cherished and chosen art, for we are sometimes told that Photography is perhaps beginning to merit and receive the distinction of be- ing an art— an art peculiar unto itself, an art whose future is yet untold. It is only recently and rarely, too, perchance, that real works of art are beginning to be created through the medium of the lens. How often we stole quietly away, long after the last lin- gering ray of day had blended into evening, and ' like a thief in the night sought to approach and carry away the image of the sleeping fajCft, f- Nature ! Then in the dimly ruby-red illumined den of the studio, where we sought to gloat over our spoitSj we discovered that the result would be but a glaring snow-white disk in a vast fi.eld of inky blackness. Little had we reckoned that this gentle glimmering scene could be so elusive; yet again and again we strove vainly for its cap- ture. Finally when we had secured the profile of a hill, the outline of a tree, and a reflection in the water, we discovered so many fleeting mo- nientg.had hurried by while we waited for the im- pression, that those pale-illumined and shadowy- - outlined clouds, specter-like, had glided ' beyond the €eld of vision and no coveted clew remained; while the moon, itself, shyly seeking to retire, had crept part way across the heavens, leaving an impr.e.ssion on the plate in the camera and later on the tablets of memory that is more beautiful to be for- gotten than to be remem-. , ,btred. Nothing was ours bu ' failure and despair. Nature had appealed to Fate and Fortune and our verdict was thus: Unto you, who style your- THE DARKEST CLOUD HAS A SILVER LI N ING I T DRIFTING w JHilMOON RISES brush, selves artists, is given the ' ' sunlight and the ' landscape with its lights and shadows and varying moods, but until light is unto you as moist clay to the sculp- tor, and until your lens, like the painter ' s but a medium of expression, until then is the night and moon- light with its accumulated ages of memories and traditions held sacred and inviolable. There ' s an ancient maxim, long tried and proven, Know Thyself. But there needs be an etching on the ground glass of every camera which reads, Know Thyself and Nature, too. Then it is that truth is found and with truth for a guide we discover things in newer relations. The apparently widely contrasted become as one— the impossible the probable. The uninitiated see only tfc conjurer ' s chari % (j,_ and the wizard ' s wand. There is jugglery in the lens when for one brief instant Si brilliant midday is transformed into blackest midnight— when a bright sunny morn- ing is changed into a softly moonlit evening— when the setting sun becomes the rising moon! While we confess that our night scenes with their poetic titles are usually made in the prosaic light of day, we shall strive to have the end jus- tify the means, for we are a clan which is beginning to adopt the creed, We bel in Art for Art ' s sake alone feS? THREE NIGHTS AT THE LADIES ' HALL •RAxcEs M. DeFkees riiOUGH owls are wise birds, learned ' in many languages and sciences, they do not spend all their time poring over books — far from it. As I was an Owl niNsclf for four years I know whereof I speak, and can prove the truth of mv statement by telling how some of our nights were spent. I had been in sciiool scarcely a week and w,i iini ilmiougidv initiated into the w,i s of the Hall. Another Freshman and ni Ncil x crc [juzzling over geometry one night about half-past ten, when the dour xii,l,Kiil (jpened a few inches, two eyes appeared at the opening and a voice ai.l: ■ Ar ' n ' t you most starved ? l- ' rcshnien one week out from home are al ,L s hiiii-ix and we said so vehe- mently. Come on then — don ' t you make a r.ickct! and the pair of eyes and their possessor proceeded to initiate us into the delights of a raid on the kitchen. This was in the days of no locks, mind -ou : they are all gone — the days, I mean, not the locks. We closed our doe way along the hall and down two llig ' hts of steps — with terror at each creaking step or noisy stair- room we were comp;irati cly safe. ■■They have they have. It ' s tlie fashion to hide things here, Init I mean tu fiiiil Here our guide lighted a tiny candle .md proceeded on her e-xplMni of the dim circle cast about her — the weird light coloring fantastic. i blackness — felt our Freshman, at least, quaking ' 1. Once inside the waiting- inic (landy apples — 1 know III il I die in the attempt I 1-. u c following at the edge her tall figure, long braid of hair and trailing garments. In these we recognized, for the first time, one of the lunior girls. .Some pie was quickly unearthed and more quickly devoured. Apples, however, we would have. The kitchen ransacked fruitlessly, we entered the back room where provisions are kept — searched through baskets, boxes and barrels galore, but with no results. ' ■Well there ' s one inore place left, said our guide, and she started down a flight of steps apparently into the very jaws of blackness. It seemed cool, and we thought we must be descending into the cellar to meet fresh terrors. • ' Don ' t get scared— this is oni - the brick-room ; be carcfid -this is the bottom step, whispered she of the candle. Ill like those we made coming down the we ' ll show them- here, get into tha even : With this she jumped into below the top of the barrel. The Uau ' s. ■n — what ' s that — as di It ' s those horrid Smiths- ; corner, both of you — crouch do a barrel and blew out the candle steixs came nearer and we could ou: hiding-place, and we were lost when once our guide jumped from the ba t was only two more raiders. Our t noi.ses were heard — very ev thi ;ind il ik the ■ ' 11 catch us— ire to breathe 1 ,- h ■r he.i 1 disappeared ' L n .1 le.isl two ]iersons ; with liuht • Nell came shining ! Vou rascaf! bined effort s soon proved I ' icshmcri arc not the ciiilv |icu|)lc wlio j;ct luinu;rv aliout ten uVlocl ami iiotliiiij, ' is more |u,|Milar than a spread. l.auia ' Monroe had been honic ' aml returned with several suspieions-look- ing packages, which she luirriei-llv earried to her own room on the third floor. We were not taken wholly by surprise, therefore, when a gentle tap at our doors at nine-thirty announced lh.it a least was ' ready. k ' .ach (Jwl received as a X-nias gift, not long ago, a small dcl ' ft-blue plate, cup .uid s.uicer ; these are aU ,i -s iiMMuded iu her invitations. Laura ' s room, like her own sell, is duMt - ,iiid Imi IU, ,ind th.il iii-ht the siudx-tal.lr uas tr.msforined by a beautiful white cloth upon which were -roupcd plates .,| clucl.ru ,alad, picl:le-, olives, wafers imd cake galore. (.)ur hostess presiil.il ,it the serviUL; ' table, while her next-dotir neighbor, who was in the secret, look our cups to the ne t room -letmniu- with them filled with hot chocolate heaped with whipped cream. Twelve ( uls in a iie.l built fur one may be lliou-hl to be very crowded. I ' erched on window- se.it, floor cusliioiis. , ,jt and chairs, howe er. we were .dl |iiite comfortable and stories were told, college sunns gi eu. and a general good time enjinid until a Kite hour. lUit, from the general no one would have recognized in i eu. and a general good time enjinid ii )carance ul tlie i luls and the character of the enteila the fierce or cunning raiders we arc too often painted. 1 U R D I D E 15 R I 9 o The Faculty often plans opposite sides c.mtested in by Miss N. on .i tin hum tli, getting the pillow uver tin u iiri e. ' h mi ' jhl be well to s; is— once Miss O. gave us a pillow fight. ' I ' wt d hi-h in the air by Miss O. at a signal givei and had caught a bad cold there. ' The sid. ored the points and their best man won the jt succeed in getting in any team work what to the -extension of one of the opponent A bell then called us to the colate to our hearts ' content s piay 1, whc ddition, had Mothe d on welsh rarebit JOHN CALLICOTT. ON P E R. D E W STUDENTS Ivll ' .NDS, I is i;lad to sec d;it so many of you has aggregated yourselves lieah ou this grand Septeiiibah cvciiiu ' fo ' to listen to niah sermon. Sunday, a week ago, you renienil)ah, I tole youall that to-day I would prove beyond dc shadder « I a doubt dat de world will come to its end on Tuesday ueek. Vou reculleck dat y 4i i ' I ll4 ' ■ ' ' ■ •i, ' - - ' ' ' iL. explain to your minds de reason why de world did not come to a end y flCfcr V liiestlay a fortnight back like I prophesied it wouKI. , — Now, bretherin, if you will sense me to-day, I won ' t say nothin ' at all about whv dc r7 B world , , ,- come to its end Last Tuesd.ay, but I will gi y I on I ' ertlcw students, because in a riuhl short time de I ' erdew boys will once agane be in Gk Let uie say to begin with, uiah Iriemis, that 1 is he.irtily in ' es sah. 1 was borned and raised in slavery, and when old Abe . jc I was so ignerant dat I didn ' t know de lell.di . from .a pig track. No sa II you; I kin read, rite, spell and flggah, . nd d.ifs enulT fer enny niggah. we, as citizens of L ■shi thep,,.l,,sw. ircfulU- to what 1 is about to .proclaim. Did it e ,di li.ippen to occur lu youah minds d.it if it asn ' t fo ' ,le Terdew .students over on yon.l.di side ol de Wabash dat bisness on .lis side of d. bli.ih uould be mightv slim for about twelve month out of the yeah? Did youall evali me.lil.ite storckce|i;ihs in LaFayettc what ain ' t ;, ' 0t sense enuff to sec which side of ile bread lias not de bnttah on it, and who doesn ' t seem to realize dat if it wasn ' t lo ' de I ' erdew boys dey wouldn ' t be no buttah on cithah side. No sah. Secondly, brctherin. We, as citizens of LaFayctte has some way or ' nother got ile I ' erdew stmlents to think that we is against dcin first, last, and all de time. Now what has put dat notion into their heads ? Well, I will tell youall. It is de policemen of dis city and nothin ' else. Yes sah. iMieiuls, I is ashamed of de scandlous mannah in which de police force of LaFayettc has treated de Fcrdcw boys. .Speakin ' .ibout p ' oliremen. ou know dey is a .s.iyin ' dat if you talks about de debbil he will sholy ,ip|ic.di. Well, biethetin, jest look over yondah at that big cop standin ' in front of de I ' .altimo ' Clothin ' .Stoah. jest look at him a-standin ' dere a-swingin ' his club like he was a drum majah in a brass baml. Friends, it is jest sech speciments of white trash as dat what has drove the Perdew students away from ouah al fection. ' es sah. Is youall aware that policemen, as a class, h.asn ' t got many brains ? Well it ' s a fact. Ouah most learned doctors what have looked with their own eyes into the inside of millions of dead corspos tell us dat most cojis hasn ' t got no brains at all. and dat those what has got some, dey is too small to be seen e. cept with de help of •a most powerful telescope. Now, bretherin, I might go on this yere way fo ' a hour or mo ' but jest about a ininute ago as I was a-rollin ' my eyeball around I saw ' vSrh- a Supmt he gel .•nt II en ison a-comin ' tlown do street u|i yondah and bef( ■ah, let me wind up this yere sermon 1) - simpb P9 ROYAL ORDER OF BASEMENT SISTERS P 11 R D U E D E H R I S 1902 Continuous Performance Tragedy, Comedy, I-iglit ' Ipcra aiul ' aii hours: 2 130 Til I 130 1 ' . M. (Saturdays and Suiulays exce|jtod) DRAMATIS I ' KRSON.E 1 Includes all lavorcd Daughters who dine in the Sanctum Sancturum (Soulluvest Ba ment) — All wearers of the olive seed. Specialities occasionally introduced hy outsiders. Solo (High C) charactI ' :r LSTIC I ' i-: ;rformanck ••Till ' KAl, 1.1 NG Act I ■ Tiii : AX •■ See Sii ne. r.asem .■d l,y loud idden .Silei ent Mademoiselle Tl ••Tale of the Ka shrieks . Dr. hdlsworth ' s Office ] ov erhead Act II . UnknouT 1 In dividu: ••The . x II.is Misses Thomi Ri.i;. u ( LmbanassniciU ) I ' ORCKIl Smile Ri:lii:vki. Slsi ' Knsi V. RMX(; WOKI.S t; •cry of Dr. Su ■Twas a Moiis. Act IV Dr. Stone My the Coni|.any Dr. StoiiL- : ' vervbotl ' Dr. Stone PURDUE D E H K I S U ' CONCILIATION Chapel o er, the irls make a rusli lor the basement, and in their endeavor to reprodnce tlie )-l .,1 th. niMiiuiij. ,irr ,i. ndiiitalK ' I ? | overheard. Di. KUsvvorlh thnnip.s on the floor, but a.iiiiihl: I iiiilirid. d uiMiid a step is heard on the stairs. There is a general scramble to iindei t.ilile, eh. ills, inside loekers; but they are cau-ht in the act by Miss Irwin— otherwise anas Molly —who, wearini;- the expression of one who feels in her . I came, 1 saw, I comiuered, exclaims in sepulchral tones: The Has Fallen ! Dr. Stone wants to see you in the office. (ireatesl r, .nsti rii.ilioii prevails. A fired sentiment ensues, and Consteru.iti.in iio-a exists iii another . piarter. The stern Doctor is at loss ■re to be-in, or wh.it to sav to the row ul l.liishinir cheeks and hang- heads, lie picl.-x up papers, shuts up desk; l,i s down papiers and opens k; wiggles in chair. hinally, woman ' s tact comes to the Doctor ' s rescue. Miss Green explains, Doctor — ' twas a mouse ! And verily as it hath II written, that Sunshine I ollows Storm, the Doctor smiles, for like :r men, who know the ways of women, he knew she must be |)ardoned thing— .aye!— should it even raise the roof— if a mouse be the offender. it SUNDAY MORNING SOLILOQUY 1 — 1 r — i i -4y O order hash or not, that is the question : Whether ' tis better for man to suffer The pains and terrors of outrageous hunger, Or to take hash with all its mysteries, And by one great gulp to end it. To eat, perchance to dream, ay, there ' s the rub ! For in that sleep what dreams may c ome Of hair of cooks, of cats,— my stomach quails ; Of shingle nails, of tin tomato cans ; Of bones of fishes ' tails and fins ; Of skins of apples and potato peels. The choice of hash or nothing puzzles the will, And makes us rather bear the hunger that we Than fly to evils that we know not of. Thus does this element make cowards of us all. M ATIRE ' S my weapon, but I ' m too discreet II run amuck and tilt at all I meet. Tell me not in mournful numbers That the student ought to pole; That the man will flunk who slumbers, When the chapel bell doth toll. lit recitations, and not sorrows, Is our destined end or way; t to lie that each to-morrow Finds our cuts less than to-day. Lite is long, our course is fleeting, Knowledge is our end in view; Let us then, fair maidens meeting. Learn to know them, love them, too. In the college field of battle. In its turmoils and its strife, Be not like dumb, driven cattle Be an invalid, full of life. Think not of your distant troubles, Examinations are not here ; Professors ' threats are empty bubbles We can safely drink our beer. Lives of great men all remind us. We can have a good time now; Ten years hence you can find us With a family and a cow. Let us then lie still and sleeping. Reckless of the chapel bell. Midnight watch with poker keeping. College stories let us tell. B. N O N The toad-frog ' sings in the azure sky, The mud-turtle howls on the hill; The jay-bird flies from the mad horsefly, And the woodchuck sports in the rill. The violet blooms in the midnight breeze, The buttercup flies to its nest; The gooseberry warbles in the sycamore trees. And the sunflower sits in the west. The old mill-wheel is silent and still, As it thunders in mad revolution; And nothing is heard but the butternut ' s thri As it sings for the blind institution. The cucumbers dance in the vine-clad air, The horseradish trots to its stall; The beet blushes red as he tears his hair. And the onion ' s teardrops fall. The catnip squalls on the fence at night. The cockroach crows for the dawn; The toadstool hops in the dim twilight, And the cowslips upon the lawn. The bootjack brays through his mildewed snout. The flour-barrel blooms in the dell; And if any man knows what I ' m talking about, I wish very much he ' d tell. O maiden, with thy soft blue eyes And pretty, curly head ; The radiance that thy winsome smile Doth round about thee shed - Is a brighter light for me Than made by Electricity. So, though a Senior in that branch, My life would be a blight, Had I no right to look to thee To be my leading light. To Frances My name is A. M. Wilson, I think that you are nice : You are a girl that any man Would want to look at twice. I was the Editor-in-Chief, Of the naughty-one Debris, A splendid book, the most of which Was due, you know to me. And now I am a Faculty scrub, It is a dirty shame ; But I will climb the ladder fast And find both name and fame. So I tell you that the best day ' s work yOUTVG MAN DREAM ■am nn ' ulit butt been built, i-y, that IS n.LjIU. I sh,,iil,l hi:, I,, li,i c Mr. II. C. May take five men self in the nurtli room, and become responsible lor keepinj; ' the fire out of that r Davidson, you will take five men and see that the fire does not get into the south roL Ncwburn with two men will look after the stairs and hallway. The rest of you mav paper and write down at least five conclusions to be derived from this fire, manner of bur I will be in my office the rest of the day and you may report to me there as soon as finished the problem before you. Please take your places at once. V of I.;iI ' ' :i cUl- has niaiiv attractions, usLialI - must in cvidcnLC on a 1 Satuida - cvcniii; . Ilowuvcr, it is not to the city ' s attractions, but to tificial and natural advantages, we wish to call attention. First in order of im]Jortance is the police force. We trust that the ng [lublic will not s is|)ect us of working for a stand-in b) ' placing ' the ce force before the street-car system in imjiortance, for that is farthest n our intentions. We rank the police first because the}- move you along er than will a street car. No one who has observed the herculean build hese guardians of the law and seen the ease and thoroughness with ch they hustle dii that e Freshmen along, can doubt for a mi jolice force is very efficient — as efficient as ]51ooniington ' s at any rate. Not the least in [wint of efficiency is the citizen-policeman, liluebeard. The number of sprinters that he has developed among the students is wonderful certainly deserves the thanks of all loyal I ' mdue men for his constant efforts along this line. il lowing very close to the police force in importance is the street car system. I!y a wonder- process the wheels of the cars on this line have been llattened, and the passenger is thus 1 to secure an up-and-down motion as well as a forward one. It is said by eminent jihy- that such a jolting is good for the health, and the street car company is thus proven a pub- jfactor. Another evidence of thonghtfulness on the part of the conipanj- is shown by their ing gear on the ig til J passengers is inijiossible ■ill at once appreciate this idvantagc of LaFayette many are those yet to gr thus producing such a ilin from the wheels that conver sa- ; nyone who has listened to some kinils of street-car kindness on the part of the company, is the W.ibash bridge. Many are the students who have aduate, who hold the bridge in most affectionate remem- IIow oft ' have we, while doing a ten amiliar outline of that bridge, and how •liluebeard a close second, only thus Main street, strained our cyi m- thanksgivings when we reac le run safely can tell. It it Caught, fined, and working his line woiiKl he the history ol tlie stiulcnt, l.nt, as it is, tlic 1hh1-c nilcrlcrcs aiul the sliuieiu is saved. Loii- live the bridg ' c. I ' xonomy in city adminislratiun is a IhiiiL; ' tu l)e desired, ami ecuiiomv is eertainlv the )iile in the strcet-liL hting service of LaFayette. The lights are rnn on tlie phm tliat lhe - are ant needed I ' ( ' K 1 ' I on moonlight nights and that on rainy and dark nights no one will be on the streets. Conse D K 1! R (|nently they arc kept going only when the eity wants to make a show of herself, which is about I 9 O once a week. We should not forget to mention here the gas. Many and many a time ha e we seen students looking lovingly in the stove door at a tiny llaine that each moment threatened to llieker out. No one who has not tenderly watched such a flame can appreciate the fond memories recalled by the word, gas. The Lal ' ayette Gas Company is a big thing, and it should be, for it gets a great deal for nothing. It is otu- earnest hope that the supply of gas will not be wanting in the world to come, for we could not bear to see the members of the company shivering in that of the telci)hone service, the intricacy of Xorth l.ahayelle streets, and many more advantages, all of which help to make Lal ' ' ayetle the greatest city in . merica. KRAUSE ' S GERMAN CLASS . h ' NMOR Science Class lessor for the first li uhcthcr this is the i in.i the I ' rolc: . l. ' i„,i ■al ul nhMiiiii- thai 1;. I.I, ciiiic ii|. when tlic coin was nip|ied ips tile 111, I hiiiii. Ill the luraiiwhilc ■■ liminie |amison the class with his ImiiIcv I ' eler collection oI jokes, for which thankful when he is Dun ' ne. At S: 14:56 a trim, athletic fii ure . ' .ichablc garments swin-s r,i| ilill aroiuKl the corner of the Main Kuildmi;; a iju-nacious mustache and the (jcnnui -ooseste|i serve to identify ■him, and with a cry of Ilere he comes ' . ' the ch... scatters, all but ISridge, -[Ei|= ' f ' ' • ' ' ' X ' cn, and his eves, tra ' velin- on J ' Tidi e speed, had just ali.i,dUed upon J -Tt ' • ' ■■ the i ' rofcssor when lie was beside him and it was too late for escape. The f — . V — J Professor tosses asiile his -obl-tipped Monopol, and the two ascend in state isly up and clowi .11 IS IMllcd .Old line, uill b,- Mr. Il.nr - Dietrich, llie man frou llalv. We aveu ' t nu K lies in about dll ' l h.ur 111,! .■ tii -i. t It. ' ou s. oiiipletiii- 111 filled . u.iu-emenls d h.ive been ; bettei excuse in fi iseball, Wrv well, .Mr. Rubv: I lil like I ' did Kiebel if voii don ' Al this point farrie ' Richard ,l,ice. Me.inwhile the I ' roic . 1ms .subMde.l says: ■•(„„,d moriiin-. Car Miss merest in athletics, onl lis in and demurelv slops proceeilin-s till she lias founc uniniin- (iood Moruiu-, Carrie, and alter the e.scite I am so uiad I saw lluil inaTiimhlcWhiskL-ya.l. in tlic Slaii ' lanl, and 1 kiiuu if that coinlMnaliuii isn ' t -cnjil nothing- is, sol acted upun tin- ad ic,-, ' And m.u. ' Adi. i u Ijisl wic cine IMunie, so klein, so sch. ' ni. ' The I ' roFcssorbcinL;- in tlu- halnl .n cxi ni inn m- one of these fits semi-occasionally lias bnt h ' ltle attention paid to him unlii here, uns ami .alls npon Moore. Yon, v. W. H. II. X, , M,„Me, the m.m with the led necktie. Are von the lidln- ' Moore who pi. in-, iM.ketl.all. ' X ' .m ' re not: Well yon on-ht to he. as bi,-; and linsky .as yon are. K li K Yon h.iven ' t aii e riis,, siip|)i -sr n , .n i ecite. Moore makes a fanltless recitation to ' the comment, 1 9 O ••Moore, if yon ueicn ' l s-, lm„m1 I ' d ihmk yon. ■•Mr. Schohcid. udl v.u. reciter ( lldl is a riii-er from onr estimable predecesscns and attends when he feels lik; il. 1 ' ■ Prof. Krause. I .im lui.ible to recit,- this nnirmn-; yon see, there was a comic opera ni town That ' s all rieiit, I ' .ill. ■-a ' l.■ ( Ix I „iw ..m ,,,omid at the (. ' hop llonse alterward, and and sent you home, and well, nevertheless, 1 just called on yon to see if yon had time to stndy after you got home. ■■As the tow-headed -cntlem.m from the vicinity cf the North I ' ole has exhausted all his excuses |)rcviousl -, strange as it may seem, I believe we can get a blid ' f, anyway, out of him. Without a word of objection Olseii starts in ami recites and the Professor is staggered. After he is done the Professor warns him. Say, ' Ole, ' I ' ve got a weak heart and have only been marrietl since Christmas, and 1 know my wife don ' t want to lie a widow; so [ilease, the next time, give me a high sign so that 1 may be prepared. The room meanwhile has -rown .v. 1 iir,,,tinLd v warm and limmic lamison takes off his coat and sits there in a closely tillnvj i.a,. . Ihr | ,, , ,|, s., ,,- s, .s hnn. ■■What ' s the matter, j.LmiMiii, ,iic .iu I . .,iriii It-, two bad yon arc inconvenienced this way. Next time we will have m.mm ,| ,„ li-lits l.,i y..:,, lint il this .st.ite of affairs obtains at this season of the year I blush to think of next June. Fry then ' recites and gets rattled and stumbles, to frei|nent tulmonitions to wake up and comments as to the rottenness of it. lint soon they rim ticross a word which can be tr.iced back. through cognate and stem, to Mii-iiiLl S.mskrit. The Professor proceeds to work off one of his etymological S]iasms, fiilU ' illii-tr,itrd by gymntistics and gutturals. Why, look at sonic ol mu km r-,t common words and trace their origin. Take the name Smith, for example. A Iuml ' , tunc ,i-. ,1 m.ni - pun mimic I ' ipc dii ' .mc .iIkmU the sun and they called them Sun Myths, ,ind hn.ilU thr man .il-., u.is .MJI.d s,,,, M il,. p,,,t that was too long, and elided letters c ' hangcd it fi.ini.Sua .Mvlh t... uiii th, t.. Smith. , ll this talk of Smith Man- ufacturing Co. being the origin is l.uillv etymology;! don ' t believe it. At this point the liell rings and the class files out to the tunc of -51 A PHYSIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY RECITATION il ' ESSOR STURMER has just finished one of his recitations and gone to the ' liarmacy building. There is Iiurryiug to and fro in the old annex ; muttered his[)erings and silent working. The blinds are drawn and guards are stationed t the windows. The old horse which has enabled main- ,l sUkU nt to get a ctter idea of the workings of the inner horse is |iiillcd iiMuihl m a suitable iisition. y large rope is placed around his neck, secuicU la .itiidl, and the ther end tied to the door. The workers fall back into llicu seals i) ercoiue by he great physical strain. The guards duck from their |)Ositious at the window, ith the whispered exclamation: Prof. Green is coming. There arc signs of a struggle at the door. The knoli is turned and twisted iolently, and there arc indications that great strength is iM.ing exerted to open sc moves a few inches, permitting the door lu Ik (i|,riKcl that far. A head of blade 1 an .pp. ars through the open hnally I V .nd ke beard, and the prin At this cri ical juncture two little boy recogn zes the n at once and their from tl c k lob. while Ovie k oks appi :lg, then two sparkling, bright c cs, a no ipal pan of Prof. Green has made its a tire seen to leave their seats and hurr - Im itention. Advancing to the door Gcoigit )vinglyon. Georgic siieaks : Mr. Prof e. ' md rop did not do this at all. It was the work of these obnoxious boys here. Theoretically spetiking. i1 is simply an amplification of the |)athological deterioration of the finer sensibilities, in othei words anti-evolution. Ma -be you don ' t know what that metins, but I can use huge wortls. ant that is what Darwin says, and I know all that iJarwin knew- tmd more, too, because 1 ctin enuncititt the momentous theory that these fellows, instead of coming from the monkey, have degeneratCL to the monkey state. Vou know. Professor, 1 would not do anything like this. Ovie ;ind 1 ouldn ' t. Vou know that the time all these mean Seniors cut your beautiful Physiologica Chemistry class, and only five good boys stayed, that I was the main one of the five Having thus delivered himself, and receiving a gentle pat on the head, Georgie and Ovit returned to their chairs feeling that they had no further fears of that Physiological test. IMu class is then sent out to run and pla) ' for a while before beginning the recitation The little boys have a big time playing all sorts of games, and till goes well till Jess nm.- into l- ' uzzy, when the latter proceeds to put his finger nail under the epidermis of the former aiK leaves his mark but takes a long strip of Jess ' s fair cuticle. When lesse realizes what ha; happened, blood rushes to his eye and he proceeds to go .after Imizzv, who makes his escape int. the side room. hurther proceedings are cut short by the gentle voire of Prof. Green railing lli class to recittiliun. The Professor says : ■■Well, you litive had n ood time out duors: now, -.i wc have a son- ,„• tuo before we beyin work ' Geo,-i. an.l Ovie immecliatelv strike u,. • ' The Holy City. tlie tune pitche.l to suit themselves. .Sander and Kardes siny ' llei-hle, Ileii hlo, in a way to brinj;- down the house. The class sinus the class soiio- The Sono ' of the .Shirts, after which it is time for dictation. In the first fifteen minutes fifty words are dictated and Scott kicks because the Professor is dictating so fast he can ' t keep up Durinn- this time ' ' ' ' ' ' McRoberts asks nine questions. On the tenth one, asked concerning somcthino- tha? came up D E H R I three weeks belore, the Professor .says: Well Mack, you ' ve been a little bit behind ever since 1 n O we began this work, I guess you can go. Take your little book and go home. (Mxit Mack.) All goes off .puetly lor the ne.xt five minutes when an unusually loud snore grates on the .sensitive ears of tlie tender classmen. Prol. Green ' s eagle eve singles out the right party. It is Sander sleeping, as usual. ' ■Kardes ( Joe h.mtk.ns to be awake this time), wake Sander up Sander you ran go. We don ' t want sleepy heads in this class. Sol, who has been pulling his nei-h ' bor ' s ' ' ' ■ ' ' ' ' ' ill Ibe act and sent home with the command: Return not till I°bid vou ' hitz and .Mill,,, .,,r ne.vt caught in the act of trading chalk across tlie room and are told that their ronni ,s nune desirable than their company. They go home with the injunction : Cume back when I bid ye. The dictation proceeds without further interruption. During the recitation man - important theories are evolved chief among which are the following: If wood could be digested by the hen, llie egg. instead ol being covered by a thin, friable shell, would have a firm wooden covering, w iiLli uoiild lie very .idvaiitagcous. If the keratin were digested in the stomach there miglit be ; ' - ' ■ ' ' i- ' I ' -I ' ls ot Lielurkuhn getting finger nails on them. The ptomaines in limbur .er I ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' -■ ■ ■ liundred and forty-nine limes as large as those in cream chee se. ' ' tartar on your teeth you must keep your mouth shut, so that the carbon ' ' ' ' 11 = ' ' ■ ' tl e- carbonates and phosphates of the saliva, i ie,i vuii. this is a big story, this Phvsiological Chemistrv said ' the Professor as he dis- missed the class. The sed.ite Seniors wondered a little bit. ducked their heads and started for their rooms. KCTURE ON DYNAMO DESIGN P LF li D 1 D E IS R 1 9 o riiNTlON to i, i;-ciulcnici .a| on the lest ((iuKlie calls the loll.) A. lams, l.riitleineii, 1 was ,lisa| i| .ointed to e ha.l a-l. i.la - un annatiire react- tierslaii.l the siil.]. et I think we had juiul tu-(lav; hut iielore we begin I to vmi a lettei- which I have just entleniau to wIkjiii I ix-fer completed jte that most of you I ice, and since so lew of yon se •Iter have another test over the ant to spend a few nioiiieiils ii received from one ol our ura.lu.ite ills course here last June and is rere the consult iug tii-ineer for the Niagara lalls I ' owcr Company. ou remember I spoke to you the other day about What is it, Mr. King? Kixn: H.dnre vou take up this matter I ' d like to .isk when you ' re going :,. rx|.laiii that i:, Al ' h ' . formuki like you said you winild. Seems like to me ■ I .uxn ' t eelting an thing at all out of ' this subject. l ' ' or my part, I ' m sick and Wli, Mr KiiiL tlw class uh d Ilk. hotlixcd up on LiOLliii ' :; ■• Kin.;; I don ' t know cimm, (,, : I see. Are there aiiv other g.-iitlcu to h.ive me l;o over the matter , cv - ' ( lA ' ervoiie (.niiur. ' : Mr. Wilson, you seem anxious to s.i Wilson: I simplv wanted to s,iy that 1 neve that l ' ,. M. v. formula. Coinii. : Well, gentlemen, I think- perhaps we had better run through the thing once a aiic. .and il voii will excuse me lor a moment I will |ust step into my office and get some chalk. ( Goldie steps into the office and gets a horse. ) (lentlemen, there are a ciuiple of m.ilters which 1 would like to discuss with vou for a mo- ment belore we take up Mr. King ' s .|ueslion. hirsl. 1 want to ,isk as a favor th.il ' each one of a,ii uive me his reason lor choosing the elcctnc,,: - ' Tlease don ' t regaid this lightly, but do the lu ' st vou can anvwav. Mr. W.k ;..rl the ball rollim; b telling us. Wll so Air. . .lam AVell, 1 wa ., lilllr l.ctir, ih.in Mr. Wilson. ,.l,,,,,.,d uoik — I got hold ol •The Life ol l ' :di- ,o well 1 h.id .ilw.ivs w..rked with tools ,a good c Icnew that I was atiiiker .ind he tol.l me about what ,1 (inc course in electrical engineering they luul at Purdue and— well that ' s all I know abuiil it 1 -uess. (iol.nii-.: Very good Mr. Adams. A ' ,vre, Mi, r.ill, In us luai li..iu vnu Caii.: ••Well, let ' s sec. Oh, ves ' I ,1- , M, ,1 1,, i.,L,. il,. .Kvlnr.d mu, s,- because 1 thnu-ht that a man of superior ability wouhl .. ,,■,■,,:,,„ ,,1 ,|m,, 1..., ,„ Ih.it 11,1,1 ih,,u in any ol the others. ' ' ' ' ' (-joi.nii,;: I am more than ' . r.ii hksI ,iI ih,si , |.i , ssi, ,m ' , Ii ,,u ,j, nl l,iu,ii; they sini|)l - ' ' ' ' ' ■ ' ' conipeis nie to postpone a furthei ,li ;i mn ,,1 lli ■ subie, 1 iiiilil ,,im ii, i i, , ii,iii,,n for a ion- time I ' have lelt .amstr.nne.l I., spe.ik lo ' vou ' , ' n .!• ,n,VT, ' . ' , ' ,,, ' , ' , ' , d o , ' !, ' ' ,1 ' , ' ' ' , ' l ' , , ' , ' ' , ,m ' ■ weeks 1 have L)cen cmsuleiin the adv;„d.Mblv of in.iu ,,, ,,| , ml: Hi, Ii-m,,, • -t, „, , , i,. u .tud examinations. A ' ,, ■, when we h.ue.i l. l, h. ,w m,in ol ,,u ' u..uld Id e to h,u e me unle the vou -entlemen under a solemn oilh i,,,i i,, , li,-,it I llerkshne ' s h,iud drops) nor help an ' one else to che.it? What ' s the trouble. Ml. l ' „ , 1 dm .■ ' : l ' .|,.KKsniK|,:: ••I ' d jusl as soon promise not to cheat mj-self, but I hate to a ree not to help Goron:; ••Well, i entlemen, since you are not a unit on this (|uestiou, probablv we had until our ne.xt lecture, when I will l,d.. up I he ,l,s, u,si, m , ,l ll,,l. M h , , |Mest,,,u. i ( Lis, nses to go.) Just one moment, gcntleui, Ml ' 1 r,-, , ' i .si a 1,11, i !■ , ,l,r, lo.mth, .mi| „. nut. 11,1,111 , ,1 the (ieneral Electric Compan - s.o, Imm I li.il Ih. ' x , ,ni 11 .■ .,n, ,1 Ini l,,,|,li,,| -i.idii.il, •-. n, -..t Imiein their armature winding dep.iilui. Ill I li, ' sii|„i ml, ,1,1,111 „i s|li,il lli,. i,,ii,i.il 11,, in, ( ..mp.nn- likes our men so well th.at lli, h.n ,■ , 1, ,.i, 1, ,1 ,ii ,■ t li, m ,111 , ,11, 1 . ,i 1 i , , m, p, 1 li,,,,, msl, ,ul ol U , , n,„,; ,w ' , ,;,■ ,S ' ;6,- ,. ' ,■ ' o , ' W n .} i ' ' A 60-MINUTE LECTURE IN LOCOMOTIVE ENGINEERING Milcc conic a few business L ' GII HOUSE for five minutes before Prof. Forsyth arri m, disturbed by tlic noise, frowns on tlie class and subn I ' ipositions, tlien departs as Prof. Forsyth enters. Pkof. F. proceeds to call the roll; after this is finished, he consults his 1 lies with great deliberation and finally breaks the death-like silence: V I was savin ' .; at the last recitation that P nglLsh locomotives arc neater H B -l ini:; th.in . uierican — ]iause two minutes for consullini;- notes — Oh, — P ;i, -but since lS6o, the increase in the (short pause) size and number of b urines built (long- pause) has been considerable. Rocky goes into a Rip R an Winkle trance. T., o. Pkof. F. — continuiuL; ' : The boiler jjressure has increased from lOO lbs, Im 210 lbs., and depends niion how tight the safety valve is closed. Rocky ' lores lieavils , others join in the chorus. Pkoi-. I ' ' .: I ' he tractive power has increased. •PArMAx: ' ■ We can ' t hear what you ' re saving. -continues: Iron rails were used up to 1S76. Vincent burns a conple of rubber bands to purify the atmosphere. We will now see some modern foreign engines. Will someboc ■■ Daw ])nnctures Rocky ' s analc.niy with ; I ' Koi, ' I ' .: ■• Mr. lilackwel ' l, stick in the first s lilackwell monkeys with the lantern. Pkoi-. l ' .: ' •t ' an ' t you make that a little cle:n Class: (iet a new man. You couldn ' t worl lilackwell finally shows a picture of a moving 1 Cook: Professor, ain ' t that train on the wro Continnii I lr. luler ' ■■ Looks like it might be in Scotland. sh frames, part of tlu the journal l ' . I AlTKENHE.l 1 ' kof. F.: ■■ Next. ' Blackwell puts slide in upside down. Pkof. F.: This shows the American and Kngli; Johnny Bull Ede: What do you call that Prof. F.: I don ' t know, do you? Next. Blackwell puts in another slide which has the words, Volume of i cylinder — Simple, oi Prof. F. steps into the rays of the lantern and word Sim ' W appears on the bald spot on hi; ad. Newburn and Lewman stop their side show of shadow pictures and chicken fights to joii the chorus of the class — Ain ' t it so, and etc. Pkof. F.: Time is up; you can go. Fxeunt Umnes, Singing: Tell me, Mr. Forsyth, are there any more at home like you? PURDUE D E H R I S 1902 THE PHARMACY I N RHYME D E H K 1 9 O NCE there was a Sturmer man, Who was grouchy, gruff and bold. And all the puny Juniors thought He treated them quite cold; For all the grades that they could make, Try just as hard as they would. Their papers bore those dreadful marks Which always meant no good. The Juniors growled and called him down, But could not bring him to bay. For those red scratches on their sheets Were put on there to stay; But when those Juniors older grew That Sturmer ceased his pesters; He seemed to change, like Bourbon barreled. And mellowed with many esters. Now those men, in Senior robes, Think he ' s the only teacher, And the fatted hen is killed for him The same as for the preacher; And when we meet him on the street We ' ll lift our hats and say: Our debt to you is very great; You helped us on our way. Among the teachers we have known B. M. Hoak is bold Who stops the boys from warbUng sweet Their melodies of old; No sooner had he stopped their tune, i ' u u u u e They piled his room up high E B r i s With water tanks and slop jars rank, 1902 And everything that was nigh. He opened the door and took a squint; His face grew pale and thin; He shook his fist and tore his hair At this original sin; When he returned his face had changed And wore its usual grin; His apology began to roll Like cotton from a gin. Now all the Seniors are satisfied And feel a victory clear, And hope it won ' t occur again As long as he is here; And, when we hold the next concert. We ' ll remember, with kind thought. Professor Hoak and Pharmacy Halls And the mighty works they ' ve wrought. But when the boys get frisky-like. And eleca and smart, And tamper with Professor Green, He always shoots a dart; At first he strokes his billy goat, Then snaps his large eyes black. Then states his sentence, shrill and keen: For sixty days stay out. And, too, that Pill Prof. from below Is also getting tight; And, when the boys are not on time, ,. y R D u V. He growls about it right, |, j5 R , And says we should not laugh and play In lab ' ratory work; ' 902 jj. Ij p.jjg g g _jj j.g There ' ll be no time to shirk. The last is Bixler, witty man, Who tries to run a bluff On Senior boys in upper lab., But finds they ' re thicker stuff; Sing? No! Wear hats? No! Not while he ' s around. Because —Why, don ' t you understand? He ' s a new Professor in town. And if you ' d take a peek at him Crossing the campus ground. With golden specs and broad-brimm ' d hat. You ' d think him heavenly bound; But, in his lab ' ratory work, You ' ll find he knows his lines; Finding albumen and sucrose Made impressions upon our minds. But when old April rolls around And all have gained the shore, We ' ll thank Dame Fortune and the Profs. For those dark days of yore. KENTUCKY STUDENTS SCIENCE HALL )N ot ' stiKlcnts from a Kentuck - Cullet;e,on an ins[icctiun tri|j to ruidiie, escorted through Science Hall by Dr. Kaum, A. H., M. S., M. D., D. 1)., lo, by the aid of one pair of spectacles on top of his head and another .: nose, succeeds in pointing out and describing objects of special interest uitc (il ( )rganic Chemistry F.ab they receive an invig- li l-aniido-azo-benzene-sulphonic acid, after whicli they Lab. Here they inspect the large special library for consists of three government reports, two books and a vssays. Coming to the big pet snakes in their cages, Dr. train exjicrt snake charmers thMi Im lady snake charmers s, uc llic best in the world. 1 I Lcit Behind Me. iniens saying: These rocks ne pile. Next leading his ; explains, That walrus was route to the North Pole for the LaFayette Street pole and never come back again — but alas! La- orange tree in the large tub the Doctor iiuLdi It is s ' eral years old, it has bloomed on but I ,(iiil ,!j.LiiM lien liurragetook the fatal step. It is [ill |i,iialiii tn lilooniing a third time. Wonder why? hcgcol,.L;i ■orked on purchased from a Florida Coon for It day in Africa. These trophies of ir considerably with noted and win- ' s hanging on the wall Dr. Baum by Mr. Coulter single-handed, in a onah and iiointini ' to P H R 15 U F, DEBRIS 1902 ) WOOD CARVERS ,5 .LEAGUE % Turn DiCiiiv Homc-MaKcrs ■ ilk, f(,r iIk- weddiiiK ' l-iy Honorary Member Loafers I ' LATlnmr: lie as slow as ymi can. .nua iiKiiilxr wh.i.l.ics DiTiivs (iF Mi.MiiKRs: Answer tclenlionc ; aiisw rc.r Ixiiis calk.i .Inwi, .Inor liell ; keqi watch ..f windows ; repeat all joke Members Murirl Altonl Kstelle Marshall Lu, V Snyder MarKaret Haywood May (HiLSt Mads ' e Ridgly Anna Tlionipson ' mun live sontli of the Oluo h ' lv, Lvnching. and must imdcrstaiid Tiinfi Leaders H.M. Harris 1 li HiTc Ills ' ; |u ■ ' ■■ ' ™e . . Demons 1.. M ZaiI ' . Autliori a ' i ' chinn ' Com pour X.C.Thixton 1 H Bakbee Wiidc S. Y. Sweeney . Dispenser of t- Superio C. N. UlIRKS Cotton I ' Authority on Lingo ;ncrof the ' Mint Ikds Dew Drop Distiller trator of Niggerology emy of V)ee-p Wading ity on Duel Etir|uette ' ellow Fever Refnsee iderof I- ' roc; Powivrs C.irn Jnicv l)vsl,,.v.r m Wild and Woolly We t Club Bad Men of the Grand ToUi -WoUi at Stcingsprings ' Corn Te aj Ttanjicr CoUi Tunchc Border Bandit-t Cyclone Sellers Vurdue Ga-y and Electric Light Co. Main G:is rhyxiat..i C ' ras Tank 100,000 culiic del Air lilast Traiistormcr High Tension Current Poly Phase Alternator Automatic Pilow-nut . 300 H. P. Arc Lamp 5,000 Candle Power das Lam , ' „ Candle Power, Low Cradc Gas Engine, 367 Explosions Continuous Current, 1,000 An ' ,i Candle P..wer Incandesce r,as Main, 40 cu. ft. per Sec 1-,.,- W.ll.Si.nniv rnlin.ited irgasso rtowth, L-niselves ont-cla VViNDV Martin Haul Fkistok Hill Goeddel : ' ORT Wilson ROE. Wilson F. Kassnaciit KS Harshaw . y. V. Ede The year had gloomily begun For Willie Weeks, a poor man ' s 1 u K D II E DEBRIS 1902 He was beset with bill and dun, And he had very little Mon. ' This cash, he said, won ' t pay my dues; ' I ' ve nothing here but ones and Tues. ' A bright thought struck him and he said, ' The rich Miss Goldbrick I will Wed. But when he paid his court to her. She lisped, but firmly said, No, Thur ' Alas! he said, then I must die! T ' m done! I ' ll drown, I ' ll burn, I ' ll They found his gloves, and coat, and hat. The coroner upon them Sat. P U R I) I D E H U I 9 O Wli.us the matter will, old Hirkety, rickety, rickety, ri till I ' urdue is out of sight ! Kip, rail, whang I Zip, zah, bang I King a-ling-a-hiiw wow I Ching-a-ling-a-chow-cho King-a-ling-a Purdue ! Wah ! Who ' . Wah ! N I N April 3— Pharmics graduate. April 5—  eslinian-Si.ph, scrap i S March 22-Coal she. March 24— Iiispectic ,ldsb,.rnuKhi.iterfe PURDUE DEBRIS 1902 W B April 23-26 — Annuals. April 27— Minnesota, 13; Purdue, q. Mav 3-Ballooii ascension, Notre Dame, 25; Purdu May 4— Local Tracli meet. V«,-o STn tzu, ' M EUGENE DIETZBEN C0,.1k t : ;, CHICAGO NEW YORK if DESCRIPTION OF CEIWI UNION PIVOT JOINT, ETC. The )t Joint as illustrated and de- nproved form of a pivot joint. s will be readily seen, are quite scribed below is an The advantages, essential, as: 1. The weight of the fork ' • F has been perceptibly reduced. . The danger of spreading and sometimes of break- ing the arms of the fork while applying too much tension has been eliminated by the screw bolt. ••A-B.- 3. The durability of the joint has been greatly in- creased by its larger bearing surfaces and by the steel bolt, A-B. The c.in.struetion not only gives the instrument a neat and clean appearance, but also much simplifies the act of applying the desired tension. Tlie steel bolt or screw ■ ' A passes through the entire head and ■w B. ' ' The conical-shaped parts of A and B form the pivot points hich are securely held by lock nuts C and C. The figure E 1 disc that acts as an anti-friction bearing for heads ■• X and ■■Y. Students ■■(. ' A ' Books Stationery Pictures Frames Sporting Goods Draughting Instruments FOR ALL BOOKS AND SUPPLIES JAOUES 334 Main St. R. L. JaqUes ' Book store It Pays ■tluL-, q; Nebr.isk:i, •due, 8; Indiana, 5. May 6-Mike scraps on the leve MavS- Uormdug poisoned. i lAV 10— Loyal Legion at Purdii PURDUE DEBRIS 1902 May 22— Seniors, 20; Faculty, 10. Prof, Matthews { the action ol a mule. May 23-Fisk Jul.ilee Singers in Chapel. SOLE AGENTS FOR KEUFFEL ESSER CO. ' S Paragon Draining Instruments Superior to all others in construction, Jinisti, material, dtira- hility and everything else which goes to make up quality EACH INSTRUMENT STAMPED ••PARAGON HE II ' ARRANT THE INSTRUMENTS TO LAST A LIFETIME UNDER PROPER CARE AND TO PERMANENT! }■ RETAIN THEIR PERFECT ACTION WK ALWAYS CARRY IN STOCK ALL THE COLLEGE TEXT- BOOKS, SPECIAL NOTE-BOOKS, AND FILLERS USED AT THE UNIVERSITY. SPALDING BASEBALLS, FOOTBALLS, AND GYMNASIUM GOODS, SWEATERS, TRACK UNIFORMS, ETC., AT LOWEST PRICES. WE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF FINE CARD AND PROCiRAMME ENGRAVINCJ KIMMEL HERBERT J i I.U., 28; I.S. N., 8. May 27-Purdue, 22; Wabash, 2. May 2S-PiirdLie, 15; DePamv, 5. June 4— Endsley wins Pole June 5— ' 01 Debris comes out. -Qy m. ' i s== Junk 8-Punlue, 4; Illin..is,o. Jink lo-Faci.lty -aiiu-. Mike wears wliite diicl 1 Junk 12-Conimencenient Day. Are You Going to Study Medicine? -I rr ' f ' ' r ' 11 ' ;■■ ' •■■•■• -.,.. ? ' i Tivenly-fourth ' ■ ' X ' ' JZ ' ' ' i ' _ ' ' S TV - ' ?; i;; Reorganized Tear ' : ' r ' IP I - ' n ---r -i -1 ■ , ■■o ' idSk - J- m- I HIT ■ ' - I ' ■ ' «• ' Central College of Physicians 6 Surgeons INIHANArOI.IS. INDIANA 25,000 Square Feet Floor Space — More than Half Devoted to Laboratories Twenty-five Professoi ' S and Twenty-five Demonstrators and Lecturers. Member Association American Medical Colleges. A Clinical and Laboratorv School of Medicine. Four Years Course. Credit for University Degree. Send for Booklet describing our New Building, and also for our CatalogLie, to JOHN I ' . liAKNIIII.I,, M. 1)., Sfd-etarv, - .M4-,S Newton I ' laypool I ' .UI-., 1 nilLinapiilis, Ind. ALLISON . L X i:i,l„ A.M., NLl)., Ile.in. ' A 12-Football jirac Tank doings. September 14— Dr. Stone asks Keniier to tell his Freslimai friend, Dostal ' 02, not to smoke on the campus. {DU ' V Sei ' Temher ig— President McKinley ' s Fy September 21— Pickard smokes a cigar. •05 01. Tank. THE MEDICAL COLLEGE OF INDIANA DEPARTMENT OF AIKDICINE IJNirERSlTr OF MDI. NJPOL S F A C U L T Y - Professor of Diseases of ihe John N. Hiiktv, Fhar. D., M.D.. Leclu Medicine, nis Professor of Diseases of ) ' , Professor of liastru-Intest Professor of Bacleriology For information, address the Secretary, GEORGE J. COOK, M.D., 224 N. Meridian Street, Indianapolis, Ind.; IIENIW JAMESON, M.D., Dean, Newton Claypool Eldg., Indianapolis, hid. t ' Sei-tembkk 2j C.iniival iK-gins. SeitembivR 25 A new Law discovered: one goldsborough. One ■ . ' ' lthew= - ,; j Freshman meeting in Cl.apei. SEi ' TEMiiEK 26— liolibie Wilier wakes C. D. V Steam Kngine Design. SEriEMKER 2S— Tank scrap; eight hurt; ' 04 on T. Septeup.ek 2i) Siiphsand Freshies make up slee ' Tank functiuu. iiOi Octiiber 2— Class yells galore. October 3— Tau I ' .eia Pi Spikes api October 5-1 ' unlue, 4?; October 6— Brown Stree ])- ' r , ' •••■•■■ Sept mbe Oct OBER I r.overuor Durhi 1 speak in C apel. Oct ober 2— I ' urdne, 5 Chica g . 5- Oct mER g— Purdue, i r. Del Fresh Tien?o° ( )ct ,BER liurhank ling in Chapel fori nade Freshman yel U. game, leader. ( ) i IBER 26-1. U., 13 ( ?); Pur due, 6. Oct .HI.R 28-Genung? urt in nachin sh(.)p (1(1 IBER 30-Merril th nks. Scenic and Scientifc Photography CAMPUS PICTURKS, VIF.WS ABOUT LAFAYETTK SCENERY OF T H F. M I D D L E W E S T SPECIAL EOUIPMEN ' I FOR PHOTOGRAPHING MACHINETrY and scientific APPARATUS PHOTOGRAPHS O F P E ANTS, A N 1 M A E S AND ALL BIOLOGICAL SUBJECTS FOR Scientific Illustrating a Specialty O. L. FOSTER L A I ' A ' I-, r T E N D I A N A BURFORD K I N E CATALOCUI K V O R K A SPECIALTY S ' lKI ' HEN LANK FOLGER 1 80 Broadway, New York It ' iitchcs, Diamonds, Jewflry, Cluh and College Pins and Rimrs, Gold cmd Silver Medals. Samuel Harris Co. Machinists ' and Manufacturers ' TOOLS and SUPPLIES WRIGHT, KAY c CO. NOVEMBKR l6— 1 November iS-S OcTdiiEK 31 -Hallow ' een. NiiVEMBEK 2— Purdue, 22; Case, o. NdVEMBEK 7— ' 03 y rb()r Day. KovE ]HEKl)- ' otre Dame. 12; Pur November 21— Camelliack engine November 22— J, P. Cocik srucs to 1 The general ELECTRIC COMPANY ' S Thomson Recording Wattmeters Arc constructed for direct or alternating current circLiits, - ' and tor all classes of service, y The pol -phase instrument will meter on a single dial. All kinds of polyphase loads balanced or unbalanced. General Office: SCHENECTADY, N. Y. Cl.ieag.. Office, MonaJi.ock Building. S.iles Officer in all large cities. THE SWAN SELE-FILLING FOUNTAIN PEN P R I N C I P L E S , C O M B IT S T I C) N Palenled July ,. .S05; Aiis . iQo. Can be tilled without disturbing a line of thought. The perfection ot a How. MABIE, TODD c BARD 130 Fulton St., Nkw ' oKK Sold by W. J. SNODDY, Druggist and Stationer, 412 Reserve Sq., LaFayette Ind. II ill NciVf;iUBER 27— Mrs. Fowler gives Sf o,ooi November 2S Northwestern, 10; I ' urdii Thanksgiving Day. November 2., -The day after. December j — I ' a].a . itkciihead smokes a ciga December q — Foutliall han(iucl. .CEMBER 10 Jn,l Ha Igenaki v: ■CEMBER 13 -GK Ke. ■e Clilli ' , VW Irwin CCEMBEK M-G.- eds dance MANHATTAN TYPEWRITER MODEL ' A « mmr HAVE YOU s E 1 : n rr ? — iM ---  ' WE 1IA E THEM y LI- BEATEN $50 CHEAPER THAN AN ■ OIIIEK BECAUSE NOT CONNEL ' IEI) WITH ANY TKl ST WE SELL AND RENT AEI. L KES SECOND-HANI) 1 ' . S . W E B S T 1 R C O 1 x MA 1)1 SOX ST K K K T , C II I C A CC HiNEA The Photographer Corner Sixth and C.olunibia Streets Official I ' ortrait I ' hotographer to 1902 DEBRIS L A 1 A Y ] ' , T r E INDIANA I :u Decembkk -0 President Stniie ' s .iiir H.iwt.. Help I ' lirdu ac.itio,i begins. i . January S-Dr. Coulter wears a Freshman cap. Short Horns arrive. First Lesson: Sketch a HOTEL LAHR STOCKER BROTHERS, Proprietors ONE OF THE LEADING HOTELS IN INDIANA. FIRST-CLASS IN ALL ITS APPOINTMENTS. . . . LARGE OFFICE AND PUBLIC ROOMS ESPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR LARGE GATHERINGS AND CONVENTIONS - RATES $2.50 TO $4.00 PER DAY LAFAYETTE N D I A N A THE SATTLER SONS CO. FINE TAILORING Hotel Lahr LAFAYETTE, INDIANA The KACHLEIN RISING CO. JEWELERS Watches, Diamonds. Jewelry SPECTACLES Purdue Pins Purdue Spoons 33b MAIN STREET LAFAYETTE, INDIANA The Hogan Johnson Drug Go. D E Kodaks, Cameras, Printing Paper, Printing Frames. Plates of all sizes, etc.. Artists ' Materials, Brushes, Water Colors, China Paints :; :: :: 410 Main Street LaFayette, m( JANUAKV 23-03 Tan lie January 2q Harris ,„ (_ jANUAKV 1 1 -Cross-country run. January 14-FIag reiilaccd. January 15— Glee Club sings PnnUio January 17- Farmers ' Institute JANUAKY 21 — Howard Kvie in Chapel, Thinks Purdue stude February i— Fox hunt. FiiBRUAKY 3— Seniors take up Poly-con, February 5— iVIoran speaks in Chapel. February 7-03 Debris .Staff elected. -Ircliibcild f Co. s Toggery Shop Is fast gaining a State reputation as THE COLLEGE BOYS ' SHOP lo-the-futiii-e lines of MKN ' S FURNISHINGS AND HATS FOR YOUNG MEN AND MEN ALWAYS YOUNG us a call and we will , iate more fully the GiiRRiTT A. Archibald Co. 3S K. Vashiiii;lon Si. INDIANAI OUS, INI). The Cleveland College of Physicians and Surgeons .Medual l.)e])aituient of the Ohio Wesley.i University. J. C. McGEE, M.D., Si- The Reser e Loan Life Insurance Company to 48 Ing. li.s Bi J.L.L.WVAV.M.Ii. ,1 I ,,,,(.. M. M. Crabill 1,11,1 iiii Science, Skill, Experience, ami Honesty ATLAS ENGINKS AND 1 O I L E R S Atlas Engine Works ' ' iniu n ' ' ' A STARR PIANO ' : ' :: ' ' :ji = = = == of good lasle ; it is seen a wornoiit .Starr Piano, and they have been in tne THE STARR PIANO CO. M.. NUF. CTURKKS Feekuakv 15— Purdue, 32; I. U., S. February 17— Harshaw flunks. February ig— I ' urtlue, 71; Butler, 24. Ms mm February 2o-l .ker February 22 Wash Phillip Company Photographers SPECIAL LOW PRICES TO STUDENTS BEST WORK IN THE CITY 62:; M iin Street, Ldluiycttt-, ludhina ()Webuy 9 O school-books % ywrpaycash___ .f O RAI ' P KLEIN ' v ;m Cigars Tobaccos Sundries, Smoker ' Artiil,-,, Etc. Filth an,l M.,i.. Str.«.. LAFAVKI ' TE, IN ' I). Morgan Brothers GROCERS HIGH-GRADE GOODS FIRST-CLASS SER ]CE L A F A 1 K T I Indiana ' ' Jtimisoii ' s Cafe and Rcstaurafit FINE 1 A I L O R I N G MEALS, LUNCH, SHORT ORDERS I ' LRIi iwrR ' ) ' N- ' SPRINi; I ' |-. S T U n E N T S LaFavi ite, Ind. NIKRMANN THE TAILOR February 25— Re|iublican Primary. Stude February 27— Death of H. G, Cook. March 7— Purdue, 71; I. U., 28. March S— Xii Goldsborough. all ' s for Little Goldie. great boy. — Goldsborough. PURDUE DEBRIS I 002 March 2-Matliematical shark in March 5-Triangular Meet at No Notre Dame, 67; Purd March 2-First baseball line up. March 5 -Inspection Trip. March 26— Final : March 27— North ' Harsh RUGER ' S Fancy Bakers, Grocers and Confectioners ■Phones ' ' . ' ■S : ' No. 255 JVallace Bros, Co. PLUMBING, STEAM AND HOT WATER HEATING Telkphones 28 Fourth and Ferry A Gentleman ' ' s Store DR. GEORGE F. KEIPER •:ye, ear, nose and thkoat GUS WHITINGER THE METROPOLITAN BARBER SHOP C I G A R S MAGAZINES 408 Main St Corner State and Pi WE.ST SIDE ;h 30— Easter hui April 2- Vindv Mj THE BURT-TKRRY STATIONERY COMPANY 532 MAIN STREET FINE SIATIONERY DRAWING INSTRUMENTS DRAWING SUPPLIES Watkr.man ' s Ideal Fountain Pkns We have them all beat a ' mile Our patterns our superior workmanship Our Prices, Our Line, speak for themselves Come in and see CLOTHIERS and FURNISHERS JJ2-n4 West Side Square LaFayette Telephone-ioSy LaFayette Telephone-ioSj KRON BLOCK O. M. NISLEY, DENTIST : : ; : WEST LAFAYETTE, LND. LONGER LIFE (?; ;«; ;■ LINEN American Steam Laundry, LaP ' ayette, Ind. A Good Advertisement is our Suit Few Wofds and I ' lcnly ol Reason - One that will Convince Von oi its Truth. Further, Low Rent, Low Expense, Low Prices, for HIGH QUALITY GOODS Eyes Tested Free. Diamonds, Watches, Jewelery, Clocks, Silver Watches, Etc. PHILBIN, in the basement, 405 Main St. GAVAN Fine Tailorinq o -AFAYETTE S. M. AIKEN Fine Custom Tailoring at Ready- Made Prices ROOM 6, BEHM BLOCK, Cor. 4th and l- ' erry, LaF ayette, Ind. THE acme of perfection has been DoUqlas ' and Burt Pack- reached in Ready-to-Wear Gar- ' ments in the widely-advertised arcP S ShoCS $3-, Sj-SO, $4. H awes ' Hats. JVilson Bros. H., S. M. Custom-Tailored Suits and Top Coats. F ew are so good — none are better. Only guaranteed fabrics are used, and the height of style and fashion is outlined in their Clothing. Models of Suits at $1 2, $15, $18, $20, $22, S25. Furnishings. Suit Cases., Bags and Trunks. Eitablhhed iSjO BALTIMORE CLOTHING HOUSE MAIN AXD FOURTH JONES BROWN When you want your pictures and diplomas framed don ' t forget that we matce PIC- TUf-IE Ff AMtNG a specialty— in all lat- est styles of moulding — at cheapest prices. 62- Main Street For ICES, ICE CREAM, FRAPPE and PUNCHES of all kinds, go to WEIGELES S24 Main Street ACHESON BROTHERS White Anchor Laundry Carson ' s Postoffice Pharmacy W E S -f I, . V A V srything Kresh and I ' p to Date Vonnegut Hardware Co. KmhThon Vss;, ' , . ' ' ' I ndiaiiapolis, Ind. liL ' ILDEKS ' , CABINET MISCKl.LAN Ki )U.S HAkDWARl- MACHINERY, TOOLS, AM) MILL SUPPLIES COMPLETE MEAT M ARK L I ( iLTFITS lENTS FOR Brown Sharp Mfi;. Co., Manu- Cincinnati Sliapers. r School Books ( Z_ in a hurry G And at Nijw York prices, singly m))]] girl in ttie remotest ' hamlet or any (g| teacher or otncial anywhere, and g I Delivery prepaid @ New York Clt U PATENTS ; WHEN PATEHT H.B.WILLSON CO Translations Dictionaries Completely Parsed Caesar, Completely Scanned and Parsed Ae- neid, Book I. s, V. I;.a. , ' A„g:„t,,„oo. HINDS NOBLE, Publishers, 4-5-f-I2-I3-I4Cooper Institute, N.Y- City. Sc ' ioctotilis of all fun shfs al .;„■ sto- ,: FIVE INTI Kl STIXI, I()I rs IN YOL ' R F.Wl ? VERNON CLOTHING CO. Civen Away Free Gei THE BLICKENSDERFER ELECTRIC, $125.00 The Blick No. 5 only $35.00 A niachiiie forthe liomt ind the stu.i and Tor all business purijoses a pn tical, low-priced typewriter, the niiin ber and nber writing, interchangeable type fur dil ferent styles of writing, portable Weight, No. 5, 6 pound ' ; weighi No. 7, 8 pounds. Excellent mam | nj| folder and direct printer and inker I ' BLICKENSDERFER MFG. CO The Blick No. 7 only $50.00 The Hlickensderfer Electric Type- writer is operated by an electric motor. I ' riiitinK, Automatic Word Spacing, Aut ' imatic Line Spaci f., Automatic Ketuiii of Carriage, Automatic Tabu- lating, Automatic Ruling and Under- scoring, Automatic Lock Mechanism at End of Line, Automatic Increase of Power for Manifolding, Unlimited .Speed, Perfect Ease and Convenience in Operating, Interchangeable Car- riage Rolls, Any Length, Great Strength and Durability. INDIANAPOLIS ! UNn the Blickensderfer Typewriter tisfactory indeed. Best n truly, [Signed] E. B. SMITH. PiBDUE UNivERStT ' , March 26, ' 02. ' Isi ' en ' ' edTV. wAliTER ESTERLINE. 1 Signed) EDWIN E. REYNOLDS. ™ ' WESTON Vo ' n Voltmeters Ammeters Our iii-lri ,m;, u ' ACCURA Weston Elecl WAVERLY F TE and RELIABLE rical Instrument Co. ARK, NEWARK, N. J. JENA LABORATORY GLASS EIMER AMEND MAXUFACTl ' KEK AMiIMl ' ORTEKSoF Chemicals and Chemical Apparatus 205, 207, 209, 211 Third Avenue, Corner iStli St. NEW YORK Fine t Bohemian and German Glassware, Royal Berlin ami Meissen Porcelain, Purest Hammered Platinum, Bal- aiues and ' eights, Zeiss Microscopes and Bacteriologi- cal , pparatus. Chemically Pure Acids and A.ssay Goods. The Colonial Pen Company ' ACTI ' RIiRS ;T CRADIi Ol ' FOUNTAIN PENS skilk- IIK best equipped factorv in the world, MR. AUGUST EBERSf KIN, conceded to have brought c an any other man. The hue of Dewey Perfect Self-Filling FountSLi ese pens have been sent out to all parts of the globe, an ur oney refunded. Never has one asked for refuiid up to date, quires no ink tiller, has no threaded joints to soil fingers, t ■ver sweats nor blots from the heat of the hand, it writes the ■us, will write as perfectly with one drop of ink as when f ■ars. Can be replaced with new one at the nominal cost ol black, mottled, and mounted, i6-karat gold pens; prices from $1.5 wanted, which can be exchanged for any other pen, larger or small your money. This pen is named for EDSON E. DEWEY, President t more perfecti( Pens is perfect, as the name implies. Thousands of onditional guarantee with each pen If not satisfactory Its advantages over all others: Dewey ' s Self-Filling ver runs over in filling because filled by vacuum process, iistant it touches the paper. Unlike all other fountain 1, contains pure gum rubber reservoir, warranted for two Nothing but the highest grade of hard rubber in to 1 6.00. Send for catalogue and mail price of pen nd when we fail to satisfy, cheerfully refund Treasurer of THE COLONIAL PEN COMPANY 38 Bromfielo Street, BOSTON WEBSTERS INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY INTERNATIONAL I NEW EDITION. DICTIONARY i 25,000 PhTas rili. T. HARRIS, Ph.D., LL.D., United States New Pities Throughout. Rich Bindings. 2364 Pages 5000 Illustr ations ..i;:, ,;; ' )r;r :, : ■; : : :-v;;.,:.-:;;v.t;. --- ' ' ' • ' -Webs,. : ' : : ' ' ' ' ' !:: ' : r., ' „ ' ;j :::7 ' ' College Students Can Buv Musical Instruments and Music and get llic benefit of ,,ur Cut Rate Prices — Catalogues b ' ree Civing Trices ..n all Musiral G..n,ls Fine Leather Music Rolls Hanjos, X ' iolins, Guitars Folding Music Stand; Mandolins, Cornets, Clarionets Fnll descri,,tive catalogues free-mention make yon prefer French Harps — Best Makes Strings for all Instruments PIANOS PIANOS CARLIN £f LENNOX Mi-ntwii this AA. in applying for prices. I N DI AN Al ' Ol.IS, IN ' DIANA 298 The Wabash Line F.Mr.c th,- Fhg Through Pullman Palace WE MAINTAIN A HIGH STANDARD Peerless .|., „ ,, |„, 1 ' - 11 1 1 -1 IMIMS Dining Cars Sleepers I.KIKM,, K - -.M A A N, ' v, ' ' ;A ' ,i. M ' W iiRLhA.NS |IKN l-,K Vestibuled Elei ant Wabash Buffet Parlor Cars i;m riMni;i- i, I Ksrox SEATII,! ' : UlS AN ' CF.LES Reclining Chair Cars (seats free) J. RAMSEY, Jr. Pres. and GenemI Man ager. Ccii. C. S. CRANK, ' .i-s, .iimI li. k.t Agent M. Louis, Mu. H. V. Asst. Gen. P P. TAYLOR, ss. and Ticket Agent. THOS. FOLLEN, Passenger Agent, Office, 5oq Main .Street, Lohr House Block I.al- ' avette, Ind. Big Four Route ' ' I ' HL Line to the East, U ' est and Northivest. Tt ' wns unsurpassed. Rates as loiv as the lowest. SPEED SAFETr COMFORT The Cle eland, Cincinnati, Chicacro (Sc St. Louis Railway The Favorite Route to CHICAGO, LOIUSVILLE, CINCINNATI, NEW YORK, CLEVELAND, BOSTON, CRAWFORUSNTLLE, and all TERRE HAUTE, Easteri INDIANAPOLLS, Di ' cct Connectio is  ui(lc in CENTRAL OHIO UNION QUEEN CRESCENT STATION LOUISVILLE A: CINCINNATI NASHVILLE with trains of the ROUTES CHESAPEAKE avoiding all transfe For Ttckels to any part of the eountry, call on or address WARREN J. LYNCH, Gen. Pass, and Ticket AiieiU, W . I ' . DEPPE, Asst. Gen. Pa THE NEW FRENCH LICK SPRINGS HOTEL QPF.X all the year. Modern in every detail. All outside rooms, thoroughly furnished and steam lieateil. I ' hito Spring, the greatest mineral water on earth. Excellent train service from Indianapolis, (innnnati, Louisville and St. Louis. Through sleeper every night from Chicago, via Monon Route. Ask FRANK ]. REED, G. P. A. MoN ' ON Route, Chicago. MONON ROUTE ;- Trains Daily h ' u;r„ CHICAGO, INDIANAPOLIS, CINCINNATI, LA FAYETTE, BLOOMINGTON J ' c Trains Daily l ci7C ' ,;-i, CHICAGO, WEST BADEN SPRINGS, FRENCH LICK SPRINGS, LOUISVILLE Kir 7h ' . . ' •Af.Ai ; ' SI. : :. ClK 2. iftcsit)C )arc66 R. R. DONNELLEY SONS CO 141-155 PLYMOUTH PLACE, CHICAGO ' ii Vi . ,— -, ■ ' - ir w . ..._ lit iasit PRINTERS, BINDERS AND ENGRAVERS E I, E P H O N F. S H A R R I S O N - j; 50 Occupying a tire- proof building t ' ull of the most modern m;ichinery, and turning out work of the liighest character 0 time. This Annual is a specimen of the output of this Press. About Engravings Notice the superior quality ot the Halftones and Etch- ings in this book. They were all engraved by Rogers Wells Engravers and Printers 521-531 Wabash Avenue Chicago Rcrc ends this book the 1902 Debris Published by the Senior Class, purdue dniversity


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Purdue University - Debris Yearbook (West Lafayette, IN) online collection, 1899 Edition, Page 1

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Purdue University - Debris Yearbook (West Lafayette, IN) online collection, 1900 Edition, Page 1

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Purdue University - Debris Yearbook (West Lafayette, IN) online collection, 1901 Edition, Page 1

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Purdue University - Debris Yearbook (West Lafayette, IN) online collection, 1903 Edition, Page 1

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Purdue University - Debris Yearbook (West Lafayette, IN) online collection, 1905 Edition, Page 1

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