Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ)

 - Class of 1906

Page 1 of 233

 

Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection, 1906 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 233 of the 1906 volume:

Come by daylight, Come by night: We take Photos andolph Studio George Street Oiiziiliff' i BRAND NEW STUNT . Photos or Groups Taken at Night or on Cl d D b th V' 1 t R And take 'emlright ou y' ays y e 10 e ay t3Y55i23 Studio open first four nights of each week from 7 to I0 o'clock 'Pl-ICJNEZ 229-UU DEERIN ce COMPANY Leading New Jersey College Tailors 817 AND 819 BROAD'STREET NEXJUARK, N. J. as eweseeersi Finest Cateringlbtablishment in New Jersey f eSUPg?g'E-CE SERXQICESQQET TABLE D'HOTE P 11130 A. M.'TO 2 P. M. 5230 P. M. TO8 P. M. Broiled Lobster. Rarebits, Eth. 1. TESTING INSTRUMENTS Of the most unodern and im roved atterns for Gas Com vanies, Cement Factories, Mining Conn anies, as P P s Calorimeiers, Pyrometers, Cement Testing Apparatus Assay and Analytical Balances Puresi Chemicals and Reagents Chemical Apparatus Complete Mining Cuiiits All thai's necessary for the Laboratory Sole Agents for Kahlbaums C. P. Chemicals and Reagents EIMER 8: AMEND A 205 to 211 Third Avenue, cor. of 18th Street, 2 : NEW YORK lnspecuon ofourextenswe shomfroows comHaHyinvMed E E DIETZEN CGM? . U IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF Drawing Material and Surveying Instruments New York: 119 W. 23d Street Chicago: 181 Monroe Street New Orleans: 145 Barronne Street ,San Francisco: 14 First Street REPRESENTED AT Humans cottzm-: sv c. A. Mona-is H lb-bfi me 1 'St :I r-' , , Progressive Farmers .. . . f - 1 1 f . : A k 1 - r - - . X N . - , X ' -,-.- ,N--f s...,,..--'-.-sv-,,-f-qf--:---f-q-f-- QM- '-- L... : ..'.i.. .... . x-Jg.4.,714,...-g -,-N5-f-ef--E : e-A l r - '- 'rf - 'r' ' '-.fr- ' -- 4 ' l 'A ' . it 'F-Q 3Fg,ii'f '9i3 -ffega-erm - Amir' .sew -rf 4 1 H - r -A.-. . ':.5:-rigr n ' 'i ' 1 . -- F1 . l 1, . .lvl .l Q t I Increased yield per acre of crops receiving Nitrate of Soda over those receiving none. have reported results of trials in feeding Nitrogen lnnnmoniatr-sl to growing crops. In each case re- portetl fieltls of the same size, side by side, were trezttetl exactly alike except that in each case one lieltl receivc:d a Top Dressing of llift i ' '5' r r 'IQ .' ,V ' ' -F1?ff' .f'i?' '- ' L A -' I . . -Z 1 -. . 5 -.,'5r:.. 1-- , ' riff , ar e A 9 252 .l 4- . -' -1 - ' we ..-- -- :gm -. ,, P er., A f-'35L,4..: '- -1 get I 79523 Wheat .,....... .. 19 bushels f. ffwgl, e . . f fl Datsun' 28 N o 'li' ?:3',:3jQi,'.I :sign fs Gorn ..... 24 M gem ' Barley ........... 20 J: :J '- e Potatoes.. ...... '76 ', 'Z 1 -, 31-gfy5?ggf.?r,-, Sweet Potatoes 87 ' tt: 1 wg e . - - 4-'-4. :uf - ,-a'- ' - .5 f-1.54-.rfqf . Hay .............. 4 880 pounds i-- 1 'f ' . ag- -A me -, ,',-.1,- r -4:11, ' H 5 - ,, . J -1 .11 Canzoni.. . M1423 ,, rr E TANDARD AMMONIATEJ ll? .-,,,f V5.+gg1fff- :fe Q- rs . , , A -, infra 97,-34552-1,. Qggiiwu subar ee .. while the other had none. The results lven tn f- P 'gi-'gfff i e'.'.-:alias--,.f:.r.r:rr CB-bb2'8'eS-- -4-- 23-200 , . g . 5. 'fifty-iff: Carrots. . .. . 546 bushels the table slnnv in each case the zucrrasrf received .ii:55QIf.Q5gff ggi, 011i011S ------- ---- 5 ,403 POUINIS ln- reason uf the use ol' Nitrate of Soda. i QLPK? J,f:l7f.3'5f?f1:i?. T111-'Y-1iPS '--- A ---' 3 Per cent A ' ' .- Strawberries... S16 quarts littlletins telling all almttt the trials, treatment and the 'msfe 151. Aspavrafgus '- '- 280 bunchys results, reszzlls that any lztrtnercan rlttplivate for himself, will be jf: E E Celery. . .. , .......- 1275-55 sent t'a1t1'1-I-.'1ffn'r' lu all interested. Send Post Card with your :iigiiflnfy Ei Tomatoes ' as ets name and foznplute atltlress with nantes of your chief Crops. 45 1--'ifiifig t fit ff 51 6 ' . 72,17 ff' Siegel. WILLIAM s. MYERS, Director, 12:16 John Street, New York. Ji 52? .sh Z - tr we 1. . ,, , ,- Ai-..-.,-s.N- , - N--. .., ffl? 545915-I fl ff' 1 ' - 5 1-1'-f T- 1,153-.f e1'r:7:Zi--' f7 'f-1. 'i ' ---fe-e-ffl. . z,f1fl5'ff:r1?,gfaslifnytft' tiff fl l rt ' tizfffl :fff 7l?af1-were 'sfifsir gre? fsfgfrfefi-egiiirgl zlfllbfif fiigi, 5:3 Y. H. 3:31 ,,-215273:5.LJ:j933,i,Z,if233552-in-.lui nl, Lg, -,T . s 3,1 gg eirifggfgjrgi-ijfigg6.1-ii,-5115..,, . -'- -'- Zoe- f --' - -'f',g,T1.1fJ.:.1-:- 1- -14.-Aa...-V----fr-4 ' - - ---jJQ,,...s-L.- if Q., . wif, f ,..-.-J,-----' rg--,j..,..j.,., -Q,,g:g:4:5..r--V-if 41...-1.1. Morrison Bl-ue rinting, Co. . BETHANY AND FRENCH STREETS S - . H15 Book 1 a -phone 234-1 New Brunswick, N. J. S a m P 1 e gf 0 u r F you haven't been out to see us, come and get d ts acquainted-French street car brings you,he1'e 5 many pro uc ask the conductor. If you are too busy to come, telephone 234-J and we'll send our representa- Menu Cards V tive. If you need printing of any description, donlt Pfogfams place your order until you make our acqualntance, Posters it-1,li4 r Ticketgtagonew N o order too large or none too small for our most Pamphlet Binding careful attention ' iii RUTCEFQS QCGLLECE RUTGERS SCIE TIFIC SCHOOL EXAIVIINATIONS FOR ADMISSION Friday an? Saturday, june 16th an? 17th, 1905 Monday ani? Tuesday, September 18th an? I9th, I905 THE CLASSICAL DEPA RTMENT LEADING TO THE DEGREE OF A.B. IS BROAD AND THORGUGH and hy a revision and enlargement of the curriculum, affords unusual facilities for Elective Courses throughout the junior and Senior years, in Latin, Greek, English, French, German, Higher Mathematics, Astronomy, History, Political Science, Philosophy, Physics, Chemistry and Biology. The Trustees of Rutgers College have recently established a four years' course of instruc- tion, known as a Latin Scientific Course, which leads to the degree of Bachelor of Letters CLitt,B.j. The general regulations affecting admission hy examination or hy certificate, as printed on pages 21-23, ofthe catalogue of Rutgers College for igoi-1905, will apply to this additional course of instruction. THE SCIENTIFIC DEPARTMENT Is 'rms Niaw Jiaasifx' S'r,x'r1s CoLi.1eoE ron 'rms BlCNlflfIT or AcR1cv1.'ri'RE AND 'ri-in il'll'2Cl'l.XNlC 4-XRTS. I There are six full courses, each leading to the first degree in science. I. A Course in Agriculture. 2 A Course Civil Engineering and Mechanics. 3 A Course Chemistry. 4 A Course Electricity. 5 A Course Biology. 6. A Course Clay-Working and Ceramics. ' For catalogues or for any information, address IRVING S. Ul'SON, Registrar. .JUSTIN SCOTYQ 1X P7'c'sz'a'e11z'. College Supplies 61 Speeialtymggu Bookseller an? I Stationer 380 George Street New BrunsWiCk,TN. J. T EVERY REEQUISITE FWOR TIRE' I ATHLETE OR GYNXNAST BASEBALL GOLF LACROSSE FOOTBALL TENNIS TRACK .SUPPLIES ARTHUR JOHNSON c9c CO. A e5 WEST PORTY-SECOND STREET NEAR SIXTH AVENUE, ---- NEVV YORK ATHLETIC WEAR OF EVERY KIND SWAN 61. TOMPKINS, REPRESENTATIVES Y. RUTGERS COLLEGE ,I UN E, I905 VOL. XXXV The carlet Letter Class L Qf 1906 -15?-?eI--if?-1152-15? ANNUAL PUBLICATION OF THE GREEK LETTER FRATERNITIES COMPILED BY THEIR REPRESENTATIVES 'A 1f3:???:,'P1r:-rg--'Af-' ff -,.---1-,5-v 1-fx-:N--it--LA?f-T 23.13 ...f -0- V ...-A-.f..- -Lag A--rl fi +1 , ,lL u w u I -1 Nw f 1 1 L ,X gy' ' A N, kt' 'I 'glqlw fb ' . . ,.g!'i', - . :T ' w Y Al 'ill , 'w r' 3,51- 'T-I., w .',q r-wh A N:-3?T'11 r fffgi ff M1 Q W? N5 W I Jiri- K-, ,, 1906 Q ww5 l SOL JUSTITIE ET OCCIDENTEM ILLUSTRA 1766-1905 W. X X X, . f x- ' 7, 1 . S . - 4 ,E I Q? A. I 15 J- 52 s' -df .- 1 ff 9 1 J 'A '1 f' U i I ev, r . AJ 'vV, riff 1 .n:'.., Wm: Yr ,v. 5. 'P 'LJ- , lf? ' r . 2. I .9 ai! Q 9 U ' uv 1. 'K J, u V 1 , .14 '. ,isp 1 J-'H' .. N ,. 7.6 '5 .! X3 .1 r I., Al Q f . ,Clk : ' 'Ez .:' PUS Nl C2111 Tl-IE 4. -eq 1 Y, 'S GREETIN G O us of the Class of 1906 the task-love's labor-has fallen of crystallizing between these covers the golden sunshine of to-day, the happy moments of our college life, scenes we would not forget, fondly recollective of friends from whom we soon must part, rain-bows to Waken after many years mayhaps the slumbering smile of some fast-fading memory. Uur task is done. The product-our record of hopes, aims and achievements-is yours. Deal with it kindly. Forgive where we have failed, Praise Where we have succeeded. In truth beneath the mirthful surface lies This graver aim, whate'er the future days May bring us, these shall be like sunny rays That heighten joys or brighten cloudy skiesf, 8 fmgwgy 624155 Samuel Ewing Smiley, Captain 15th U. S. Infantry AS prepared for college at South Jersey Institute, Bridgeton, N. 1.3 appointed cadet U. S. Military Academy, West Point, N. Y., from First Congressional District of New jersey July 1, 18813 graduated June 14, 1885 and appointed second lieutenant 8th U. S. Infantry 3 served in California, Arizona, Mexico, and Nebraska 1885-18883 Geromino Indian Campaign in Arizonia and Mexico 1886 3 professor of military science and tactics at Rutgers College 1888-1891 3 attended lectures Columbia College Law School and School of Political Science 1889- 1891 3 admitted to New York Bar in New York City 1891 3 served in Nebraska 1891-18923 at Fort Sheridan, Illinois, 1892-18963 promoted first lieutenant 15th U. S. Infantry April 25, 18923 adjutant first battalion 15th U. S. Infantry July 21, 18933 adjutant department of Missouri and Army riHe and Carbine competitions 18933 acting ordnance oflicer Fort Sheridan, Illinois, November 1, 18933 quartermaster15th U. S. Infantry November 13, 1893 3 quartermaster of U. S. troops in Chicago during railroad riots July 18943 L.I..B. Chicago College of Law, 18953 adjutant 15th U. S. Infantry July 16, 1896 3 served at Fort Bayard, New Mexico, Octo- ber 1896 to September 18973 resigned adjutancy of regiment and was at Infantry and Cavalry School, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, September 1, 1897 to outbreak of Spanish-American War3 at- tached to 20th U. S. Infantry and at Camp Cop- pinger, Mobile, Alabama, April 21 to May 28, 18983 chief ordnance officer and assistant com- missary of musters First Division, Fourth Army COFDSQ appointed aide-de-camp to General John C. Bates, June 3, 1898, and served on his staff until July 28, 19003 embarked at Mobile, Alabama, June 3, 1898 and joined General Shafter's expedition at Tampa Bay, Florida3 sailed from Tampa Bay, Florida June14,1898 for Santiago de Cuba3 landed at Daiquiri, Cuba, June 22, 18983 served on stafi of General John C. Bates as aide-de-camp and chief ordnance oflicer and sometimes as adjutant general of Bates, Independent Brigade and Third Division Fifth Army Corps through campaign terminating in surrender of Santiago de Cuba July 17, 18983 recommended for brevet commissions of Captain and Major U. S. Army for services at El Caney, July 1, 1898 and on succeeding days in front of Santiago de Cuba3 contracted yellow fever July 17, 1898, was sent to hospital and afterwards to the United States3 served on staff of General Bates at Macon, Georgia, where he commanded First Division, First Army Corps November and December 1898, and at Cienfuegas, Cuba, where he commanded Department of Santa Clara, January 3 to April 26,18993 promoted captain N f A XX N f W Z7 7 A H' X W W CT f,,fCW ,j , Y W vw N- I W fff ff' X f XXX KX XMXXN X rlfflf' , iff' A 17 fjff , X -. T TL -'-. I Inf ' .3 - I N! MW'fWHv'H!fCffV1'Jf1!WMf wf1f H KW ,. M. XL f '4f7 j ! 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QQ ff f f W j, 'ff I: X- -P wx A 'NW' . -'Aff Ng: Mv f , 'I ,1 , f f 4 f f I M., X Mp, ,ff YTWQX .' Q,,,'f'y' '?ffi'fQ2i:il'1 Jg,fg'f - 'ff ,,, ' T f ff W :iw , W .LYfX-lx WZQW V iff x I x , ,f f w4 QRw f f Vf H1 6 -fig-ng. . Vf if ff fm M1 1 ' f f -Q, if: f fff f- -V. 11 . ' . Y-H -,ffm V fp. A KW? I , ,fl A A-J,- m l, ful ' 1 -f-141 f - J 1 1 W r HW E - X ' 5 X 'W ff ' I, AMW ' ff.. '- QE, , I, N uflf ,r x, 'L ,M-4 1 X, ,f ww. 1 . as 'fa ,nfl ,, I , V ,., Q23 F Wai QQQXQEEQS Q ALPHA, BETA, GAMMA, DELTA, EPSILON, ETA, LAMBDA, NU, XI, OMICRON, PI, 1. Fraternitas Delta Phi. .nnnnulunnnnru IN COLLEGIO CONCORDIZE DEDICATO. INSTITUTA FUIT XIV KAL. DEC. ANNO MDCCCXXVII. unuunnnnuuaunl Qpsilon. COLLEGIO RUTGERSENSI. III NON. FEB. ANNO MDCCCXLV. uuuunnuunnuuunsu CHAPTER ROLL. Union College. Brown University. . New York University. . Columbia College. . Rutgers College. Universiiy of Pennsylvania. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute . Lehigh University. . johns Hopkins University. . Yale University. ' . Cornell University. IS xiii ff if '52 S' ,ff J- 'J' 1-L figs! ,gf K 53,5-A .-ff I W as , ,, M .lik I , I R' Y V' ,I ix, ,ki ' E ff A. 1 -x - .. 'fsf :Y -f.-.. .: W . .'f.: - 'I rf, Mp Af 'f 5us',',11 I '1.'.gp-,' , S f -- ii ACP, ..-C, .4 1333-' ' fL,1fif-lE'.v'-55.3 if3ff'f 'lf-1 E' TW' Xi'-2'5 - 1 if gf - Q1 yy , , f . -.Q fi L 4- 2 x f ' Delta Phi. :unsung-I nllnnnn SEIWPEIC UBIQ UE uuuuunuuumvmmnq C0701 TORS AUGVSTUS FLOYD, VVILLIAM I-I. TEN EYCR, D.D., TUNIS GARRET BERGEN, I LIIPLIN KEI.I,OGG, JOHN NEILSON CARPENDER JOHN NEILSON DOUWE D. XVILLI.-XMSON, PROF. HENRX' DUBOIS IVIULFORD, PH.D. PROF. CLARENCE L. SPEVERS, PH.B. mu-I-I-w.l.-ummm ' FRATRES IN URBE. LAURANCE PHILLIPS RUNYON JOHN WYCKOEF IVIETTLER, HENRY R. BALDXVIN, JR. JOHN EDWARD ELMENDORP, HENRX' H. STEVENS, CARPENDER, HENRY AUGVSTUS NEILSON, XVILLIAM H. S. DEM.-XREST, XVILLIAM REILEY, ROBERT ADR.-SIN, GEORGE V. N. B.-XLDXVIX, ROBERT COOK, FREDERIC W. PARKER, GEORGE JACOB JANEWA Y, ROBERT CARTER N'ICHOL.-KS, JOHN BAYARD KIRRPATRICIQ, JR. JONATHAN FRENCH SCOTT, DRURY FRATRES I Class CHARLES LEVERICH BRETT, GEORGE HAMELL COOK, ' Class VVILLIAM HARRIS BENEDICT, J HOWARD SPOONER GAP, ALTON P. SNVAN, CLEAVELAND PERRYQ54' FRANK TAINTOR C0RB1N,4 RICHARD COX RICE, R LM College. Class Class J. LIVINGSTON RUTGERS 1VIORGAN,PH.D. CHARLES BAYLIS LUDLOW, HENRX' H. JANEXVAY, ARRAII SCHUYLER CLARK, CLARKSON RUNVON, JR. RICHARD UDALL STRONG, JOHN NEILSON CARPENDER, JR. CHARLES TIEBOUT COWENHOVEN, JR. NICHOLAS NOEL WILLIAMSON, AUSTIN XVAKEMAN SCOTT, W. COOPER. N PRAESENTI. of '05 CHARLES SHEPHERD BACKUS,x' ARTHUR VAN VOORI-IEES SCHENCK. of '06 CLIFFORD STANLAUS BRINKERI-IOFE, HENRY DE LA BRUYERE CARPENDER? of '07 VINTON DOUGLAS TOMPKINS, LAVVRENCE ESSELSTYN. of '08 HERBERT LANGLI1 HARRIES, HAROLD FREDERICK HOVEY. I9 y Zeta Psi. FOUNDED AT Uxivrzrzsirv OF NEW Yoizli, 1846. CHAPTER ROLL. Pnl, . . New York University ZETFA, . Williams College DELTA, . . Rutgers College. SIGMA, . University of Pennsylvania CHI, . . Colby University EPSILON, Brown University KAPPA, . Tufts College TALI, . . Lafayette College UPsILoN, University of North Carolina XI, . . University of Michigan LAMBDA, Bowdoin College BETA, . University of Virginia PSI, Cornell University IOTA, . . University of California GAMMA, Syracuse University TI-IETA XI, University of Toronto ALPHA, Columbia College ALPHA Psi, . . McGill University NU, . Case School ofAppIicd Sciences ETA . . Yale University MU, . . Leland Stanford, Ir., University ALPHA BETA, . . . . University of Minnesota ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS. Paciiic Association ofZeta Psi . Northwestern Association ofZeta Psi Central Association of Zeta Psi, . Capitol Association ofZeta Psi, . Philadelphia Association ofZeta Psi, New England Association of Zeta Psi, Zeta Psi Club ,... 20 San Francisco, Cal Chicago, Ill Cleveland, O Washington, D. C Philadelphia, Pa Boston, Mass New York City mam? ff ,-,y,g':1 .5 L. Vg, na t ,- -fd-ff' --af - '-L , awe mn, -K ,- V M . -1. .L- 1rf - -Au -I .: M95' I 'FF' 11 Ht. J -1'?K?P?'r1-Zbiasausvg-Cenpa-.-.. . Zeta PSI. ' DELTA CIIAPTER. ESTABI.ISI'lEIJ18tl-8 RESIDENT M EMBERS. HON. JAMES H. VAN CLEEP, A, T HOWARD V. D. XYALDIION, A WILLIAM H. XYALDRON, A REV. JOHN H. RAVEN, A EDWARD H. XYALDRON, A HENIQX' G. COOKE, M. D., A j. BAYARD IQIRKPATRICK, A FREEMAN VVOODBRIDGE, fir- REV. ALAN D. CAMPBELL, A JOHN LAXYRENCE DURYEE, A l'lERBERT M. XYALTJRON, A TRUSTEES. JUDGE PIENRY W. BOOKSTAVER, CORTLAND PARKER, JR. J. BAYARD KIRIiI'A'I'RIcK, REV. .IOI-IN H. RAVEN, D.D. BENJAMIN CHANDLER SEARS. UNDERGRADUATES. Class of I905 ROBERT XVEEKS Conn, IRVING RUSSELL VALENTINE. Class of I906 YVINTON HADLEY XVILBER. Class of 1907 THOMAS DEAN Hf1LLIXN'ELL,IR. THEODORE RONEYN V.-XRICK. Class of 1908 RAYMOND NICNAIR GARDNER, CHRISTIAN IHEIDT, JR. MORGAN HAND, JR. OTTO REINER, ARTHUR CUNNINGHAM SYVIFT. 21 183+ 1852 1865 1880 1887 1896. W' Fraternity Of Delta Upsilon. FOUNDED AT WII.LIAIwIS COLLEGE, 183-L. ROLL OF CHAPTERS. WILLIAMS. 1838. UNION. 1847. HAAIII.TON. ROCHESTER. 1856. MIDDLEBUICY. 1857. BOWIIOIN. NEW YORK. 1869. CORNELL. 1870. MARIETTA. NORTI-IXVESTERN. 1885. WISCONSIN. 1885. LAFAYETTE. DE PAUW. 1888. PENNSYLVANIA. 1890. MINNESOTA. STANFORD. 1898. 'NEIlRASKA. 1898. MCGILL. 1847. 1858 1873 1885 1891 1899. AMHISRST. 1847. ADELIXERT. 1850. COLBY. RUTGERS. 1860. BROXVN. 1865. COLGATE. SYRACUSE. 1876. MICHIGAN. 1880. PIARYARIJ. COLUMBIA. 1885. LEHIGI-I. 1886. TUETS. TECHNOLOGY. 189-1-. SWARTHAIORE. 1896. CALIFORNIA TORONTO. 1900. CHICAGO. 1904. OI-IIO. I. 'I - --' .154 ...i J, i Delta Upsilon. RUTOERS CHARTER. ESTABLISHED 1858 TRUSTEES. B. H. SLEIGI-IT, PROE. EDWARD B. VOORHEES, JOHN PHILLIP STREET, REV. J. PRESTON SEARLE, D.D. LOUIS W. STOTESDURY, ARTHUR V. DEHART, FRANK O. MITTAO, JR. RESIDENT ALUMNI. JOHN P. STREET, WARREN R. SCHENCK, JACOII WYCKOEE, A. L. SMITH, M.D. REV. J. PRESTON SEARLE, D.D. PROF. ELIOT R. PAYSON, PI-I.D. PROF. ROBERT W. PRENTISS, M.Sc REGISTRAR 1RVING'S. URSON, A. M. PROP. EDXVARD B. VOORHEES, A.M., Sc. D. SPENCER C. DEYAN, PERCY VAN NUIS, BURTON HOTIXLING, RALI-H MORIQXS. UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS. Class of '05. PROE. C. STUART GAGER, PH.D. REV. ISAAC S. SCHENCK, LOUIS A. VOORHEES, SIMON BLOCKER, J. HOXX'ARD BRINCKERIIOFF, LOUIS BEVIER, 3D, TI-IOAIAS ALLEN DEYAN, HAROLD EDWARD GR EEN, RAYAIOND B. JOHNSON, H. MARSHALL FALES, GEORGE R. Class ARTHUR V. DEI-IART, CHARLES A. MORRIS, KOEHLEIZ. of '06. FRANK OTTO MITTAG, JR. JAMES E. MORRCJXXV, J. HARX'EY MURPHY, NIAURICE I. L. .KAIN, NORDURY C. MURRAY. Class of '07. HARI.AN BESSON, HARRY J. STOCKUM, RALPH P. DAYIES, REUBEN TI-IARP, JR. HOWARD S. GIES, WILLIAM H. WOODRUEE. Class of 'O8. THEODORE A. HAGERIAN, HERVEY S. DEGROODT, ROBERT A. LUFBURROXV, HAROLD R. SEGOINE, A. JOYCE KILMER, 23 PHI .......... TH ETA ...... XI ............ SIGMA ...... GAMMA ....... PSI .......... UPSILON ..... CHI ...... BETA ....... ETA ......... KAPPA ....... LAM BDA ,.... PI ............ IOTA ............... ALPHA ALPIIA ...,.. OMIeIcoN ........ EPsILoN. Rno ...... TAU ...... MU ............. NU ................. BETA PHI ....... PI-II CHI ..... .. Psi PHI ........... GAMMA PIII .... PSI OMEGA ..... BETA CIYII ....., DELTA CHI ..... ......Rutgers Fraternit of Denajiappa Epsilon. FOUNDED AT YALE, 184-4. , CHAPTER ROLL. Yale College ....... .....,................ Bowdoin ....,.. ......Colby ......Amherst........................ Vanderbilt University...... University of Alabama ...... Brown University ...........,... .Box 31, Yale Station, New Haven, Conn. 110, Brunswick, Me. ......Box 166, VVaterville Me. .. ...............,..... Box 109,Amherst, Mass. .......................................Nashville, Tenn. ......University P. O.. Tuscaloosa Co., Ala. 375, Providence, R. I. University of Mississippi .................. University P. O., Lafayette Co., Miss. University of North Carolina ....................,........ Box 172, Chapel Hill, N. C. University of Virginia ............... Miami University ..... ......Kenyon Dartmouth ............ .....University of Virginia, Va. Box 132, Oxford, O. ...........Box 337, Gambier, O. .....Box 4-78, Hanover, N. H. .......Central University.... Ky. Middlebury '... ................... .....................,.... B I ix 564, Middlebury, Vt. University of Michigan ....... ....... G O7 South State St., Ann Arbor, Mich. Williams ........................... .................... l Sox 27, Williamstown, Mass. ......Lafayette...... ......Hamilton...... Colgate ...................................... College ofthe City ofNew York ..... .......University of RoehesLer........... K. E. House, Easton, Pa. ......Loek Box S, Clinton, N. Y 1033, Hamilton, N. Y .4-S West 125th St., New York City Alexander St., Rochester, N. Y. College Ave., New Brunswick, N. bl. De Pauw University ..................... 307 East Seminary St., Green Castle, Incl Wesleyan University ................................ 332 High St., Middletown, Conn. Rensselaer PolytechnicInstitute ...... ....................... 1 2d St., Troy, N. Y. Aclelbert ......................................... ....... 2 O1 Adelbert St., Cleveland, O Cornell University ........ ....................................... I thaca, N. Y DELTA DELTA ........ University oi'Chieago ...... 'PHI GAMMA .... GAMMA BETA . THETA ZETA.. ALPHA CI-II .... .......Syraeuse University...... Columbia University. .... .. University of California ...... Woodlawn Ave., Chicago, Ill K. E. House, Syracuse, N. Y .......6OR West 113th St.,New York City ..........233O Telegraph Ave., Berkeley, Cal Trinity .....................................................,... 94- Vernon St., Hartford, Conn PHI EPSILON ......... University of Minnesota ......... . .,... 518 12th Ave., S. E. Minneapolis, Minn SIGMA TAU ..... TAU LAMBDA. ALPHA PHI ..... DELTA RZAPPA Boston Institute ofTeehnology .................. 215 Newbury St.. Boston. Mass Tulane University .......... ...... ....... University of Toronto ......... .. University of Pennsylvania ..... TAU ALPHA ............ McGill University ................. SIGMA RHo ..... DELTA PI ...... Leland Stanford Uni versity ..... ......University ofIllinois................... 24 Orleans, La ........59S Huron St., Toronto, Canada .......307 S. 39th St., Philadelphia, Pa ........20 Shuter St., Montreal, Canada ...................Stani'ord University, Cal .......4-O7 East Green St., Campaign, Ill mill Inu:mlulIlIW NuHwmW ,.-14,-. n X ir-'ff-f 1- '1' ' .lim ml! X II num , iff IIIINMIII, Jm'553l '1' n - 4' ' XCZLCZ 'CW WPG I'Ro1f. E. PROP. F. S. Sl-IUMXYAY, C. VAN DYRE Della Kappa Epsllon RESIDENT Y GPX I'RrJF. A. A. 'l'I'l'SXX'0RTH, CII X PROP. E. B. DAVIS, ll XX'u-1-1Asx H. l,EL'I'I', fb X Wl1.1.ARD P. YUURHEES, cl: X HON. CHARLES T. COXVEXl'lOYliX. fb X Plsll Cm CllAl l'ER, Es'rAR1,1sHr1J 1 ol Nl E M B ERS JOHN I-I LI5l'PI', 42 X 'l'1-xElmoRE B. BOORAEAI, fb X J. A. VAX NEST dv XV H. Y. M. DENNIS, fb X B. YAIL, dv X ROl'lER'l' A. COOKE, 42 X E1.1.m'r VAN CLEEF. dv X REV. E. B. JOYCE, db FREDERICK XYIXFIELD COXGER, THUAIAS S. BROCK, I' dv TRUSTEES XY11.1.1Ax1 H. l,EL'l'l' W11,1-ARn P. YOORHEES RICHARD T. GREENE LTNDERGRA DLTAT ES Class bf '05 FRANK N. JENNINQS GEORGE B. Ffllfll ALBERT L. S'r11.1.sxAN FRAXKLYN E. H01.s'rEN Class FREDERICK N. WA R DVVELL JOHN LOUIS BAKER FRANK R. VAN SANT MAX J. HENIA-IER SAMUEL R. TAVERNER 'X' Class Class ALBERT A. TAYLOR, JR. ELMER S. YVliAYER of '06 HARRY M. BROWN of '07 YVALTER F. R EINH EIAI ER RALP-H' D, VAN DUZER EDXVARD L. IQEENAX of '08 JOSEPH WATSON MESSLEIR ll AURELIUS TYIILFORD TRACY, JR. 44' Lefi College 25 415 NEW YORK CITY NEW ENGLAND NORTIIWESTERN DETROIT . PACIFIC COAST . XVASHINGTON . RIIOIJE IsLANn . BUFFALO IQENTFCKY CLEVELAND N O RTI-I W EST . EASTERN NEXV YORK . Roc I-I ESTER, . COXNECTICLV1' . MISSISSIPPI VALLEY CI-IATTANOOGA . VVESTERX MICIIIOAN . HARVARD . CENTRAL NEW YORK . INDIANA . . MOUNTAIN . . NYESTERN M AssACIfIt'sETTs XVISCONSIN . . CENTRAL TENNEsEE NIEMPHIS . TEXAS . . . STATE OF XYASHINGTON OIIIO VALLEY . . TnsCALOOsA Fraternity of Delta Kappa Epsilon ALUMNI CIIAPTERS Wells, 529 M 15 Williams Street, New York City . 202 Brattle St., Cambridge, Mass. 51-53 Metropolitan Block, Chicago, Ill. . . . . Detroit, Mich. Fargo 8: Co. Express, San Francisco, Cal. . 1604: 17th St., N. W., Washington . 18-L Waterman St., Providence, R. I. 316 Ellicott Square, Bulfalo, N. Y. . . . Lexington, Ky. S7 Public Square, Cleveland, Ohio . . Minneapolis, Minn. . 34-S Congress St., Troy, N. Y. 285 Alexander St., Rochester, N. Y. . . . Hartford, Conn 711 Security Bldg , St. Louis,'Mo. . . . Chattanooga, Tenn. ichigan Trust Bldg., Grand Rapids, Mich. . 11 Mellen St., Cambridge, Mass. . . . Syracuse, N. Y. . . Indianapolis, Ind. Mack Block, Denver, Col. . Springfield, Mass. . . Milwaukee, Wis. . 408 I'nion St., Nashville, Tenn. . Potter Bldg., Memphis, Tenn. . . . . Austin, Texas University of Washington, Seattle, Wash. . . The XYoodfo1'd, Covington, Ky. . . Tuscaloosa, Ala. 26 va J ri... fj N 4 -L 1 4. A I. P I-I A ........ . BETA ........... G,-nm A ...... .. DEIJIXA ...... EPsILox ....... ZETA ............ ETA ............. T1-1 ETA ........ . IoTA ............ LAMBDA ...... . M 1' .............. INL ....... XI ................ Omeizox ...... RHO ............. SIGMA .,........ Pm ...... ...... CH1 ...... ...... Psi ..... . ......... OMEGA ......... Cl'IAP'l'ER ROLL Iiniversity of Virginia ................... , ........... Fraternity of Chi Phi Fovxnrzn AT PRINCETON 1824- .....CharIottsville, Ya. Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology ..... f ............ Boston, Mass. Emory College ........................................... Rutgers College ........................ Hampden-Sidney College ............ Franklin and Marshall College ...... University of Georgia ...................,. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute ...... Ohio State University .................... University ofCalilornia ................. Stevens Institute of Technology ,... University of Texas ........................ ...... Cornell University .........................,.............. . Shellield Scientific School, Yale University ........ Lafayette College ........................................... Wofford College ....... Amherst College ......... Dartmouth College .......... Lehigh University ....................... .. Georgia Institute of Technology ...... 27 ..........,........Oxford, Ga. New Brunswick, N. J. Hampden-Sidney, Ya. ...........Lancaster, Pa. ........Athens, Ga. ............Troy, N. Y. .......Colun1bus, Ohio ........Berkeley, Cal. ......Hoboken, N. J. ..........Austin, Texas ..............Ithaca, N. Y. ....NeW Haven, Conn. I ................Easton, T a. Spartansburg, S. C. ..........An1herst, Mass. ..........I-Ianover, N. H. South Bethlehem, Pa. ...............Atlanta, Ga. Chi Phi DI-ELT.-A CHAPTER ESTABLISHED 1867 RESIDEN I' DR. SAMUEL LONG ALEXANDER M. PARKER JARIES BISHOP WILLIAM S. INIYERS MEMBERS GEORGE R. DESHLER CHARLES E. TINDELL W. FRANK PARKER XVILLARD P. CLARK ACTIVE MEMBERS Class of '05 JAMES HENRX' XYILLOCK XVILLIAM PAUL BIORTONE CLARENCE LOCKERSON SAIITHRP JOHN ELAIER PEARCE LOREN PEASE I-'LUAIAIER H.-XRRX' BAREMORE ANGUS FRANK BODO KURTZ . Class of '06 RAYMOND VVALTER ALLEN ALBERT WILLIAM HILL HAROLD DEPEXX4' Class of '07 RAX'hIOND PIERCE' XVILSON CLIFFORD DAVIDSON BIAYHEXX - Class PIARRY FRANK BREWER CLARENCE ARMINGER BINGHAIIPP CUNNINGSTON DRYSDALE BLACK ELM Collzjgc. of '08 CHARLES NIAXXVELL XV.-XRNER WI LLIAAI PERSONET SEDDON SCHUYLER LEONARD RUST 28 A wmuug mu Ira: . F BGIEI Thtitd Pi BETA GAMMA. ESTABLISHED 1871. Founder! as Me Alpha offlljrha 5'1Qgf11zzz Chz DR. PI-III.ETl'S T. POCKMAN CYRUS C. SMITH, B I' HOXVARD Y. BUTTLER, B I' GEORGE HILL, B I' CULLEN W. PARMELEE, B 1' PROP. VVILLIAM H. IQIRK, B A CHARLES E. PARKER, A N ARTHUR ITEADIFEN l'lOlVAT HAIIRX' WILLIAM NOBLE HOXVARD IRVING WHEAT DOUGLAS JUIISON FISHER RIPLEY W ATSON WILLIAM NASH NIACNEILL DANIEL SAFFORD NLM! College. RESIDENT MEMBERS , B I' GEORGE A. OSBORN, B I' GEORGE H BUTTLER, B I' XVILLIAM P. ALLEN, B 1' ALONZO RANSON, B I ORVILLE E. FISHER, B ,P WILLIAM L. KUEHNLE, B I WILLIAM H, GEIIIEL, B l' UNDERGRADUATES Class of '05 ALIIERT BRORAW SMITH Class of '06 DANIEL BARLOKV NIINER JOHN ROSS RTACNEILL Class of '07 ALEX XVILLIAM QUACRENIIOSS T . . JESUS MARIA GONZALEZ Class of '08 JAMES GRIEVEX' MORGAN GRAY SMITH STOCKTON CRANMER WILL YVISEMAN BERDAN HERMAN VANDERXVAART, JR. 29 . Fraternity of Beta Theta Pi FOUNIJEIJ AT NIIAMI UNIVIQRSITY, 1839 CIIAPTER ROLL DISTRICT I-Afezu Efzglzzna' BROWN-Kappa ........ BOSTON-Upsilon ......... MAINE-Beta Eta .......... AMHERST-Beta Iota .....,..,..... DVA RTM OUTI-I-Alpha O mega .. XYIESLEYAN-N111 Epsilon. ..... .. Pmvidence, R. I. Boston, Mass. Orono, Maine Amherst, Mass. ......Hanover, Mass. Middletown, Conn. C YALE-Plii Chi ....................... New Haven, Conn. BOXYDOIN-BCt21 Sigma ....................., ...... I Irunswick, Maine DISTRICT II-Afezu' York amz' NF?LfjU1'.l'E,l' RUTGERS-Beta Gamma .................. ...... N ew Brunswick, N. bl. CoRxIsLI.-Beta Delta ............ ....... I thaea, N. Y. STEVENS--Sigxna .................... ...... I -Ioboken, N. J. ST. Lfxxvnisxcxi-I-ieta Zeta ....... Canton, N. Y. COLGATE-Beta Theta ......... Hamilton, N. Y. UNION-Nu ......................... ...... S chenectady, N. Y. CoI.I'nIIsIA-Alplia Alpha .................... ....... N ew York, N. Y. SYRACVSE-Beta Epsilon ..................... ,...... S yracuse, N. Y. DISTRICT III-l'r'm1sylwmz'rz and flfIlJ'fl'f!IIItf WASIIIRGTUN Axim -IEFFERSON-l,iilIlllllZ1 ........ ...... I Yashington, Pa. Dlcxlxsox-Alpha Sigma. .......................... ...... C arlisle, Pa. JOHNS I-IoI'IiIxs-Alpha Chi ................................ ...... I ialtimore, Md. PIsNxsvI.vAxI,x-Phi ..................................................... Philadelphia, Pa. I4'IsNxsvI.v.xNI,x STATE COLLIEGE-Alplia Vpsilen ......... State College, Pa. LEHIGI-I-BCYEL Chi. ...................,.................,................ South Bethlehem, Pa. DISTRICT IV-ffpflffflll' 5621611 DI'Sf7'1.ffl Ifliljflilllill, .Norllz CilIl'0fI.7III Sozzlh C-'lI7'0fl'lItZ I-IAxII'DEN-SIIJNEI'-Zeta .................. .......................... I iampclen-Sidney, Ya. NORTIVI CAROLINA-Eta Beta ....... ...... C hapel Hill, N. C. VIRGINIA-OIIIICFOII .................................. ...... C halottesville, Ya. DAVIDSON-Phi Alpha ................................. ...... I Davidson College, DISTRICT Y-l?m11az'11cfer of Me Sozzllmrzz Slales CENTRAL-Epsilon ...................................... ...... I Danville, Ky. YANDIQRIIILT-Beta Alpha .......... Nashville, Tenn. TEXAS-Beta Omicron .................. ....... A ustin, Texas DISTRICT YI-Ohio and llfkxl 1',Zil'g'liIlfll MIAMI-Alpha ............................... ...... I Dxford, O. CINCINNATI-Beta Nu ........... Cincinnati, O. VVESTERN RESERVE-Beta ....... Cleveland, O. OHIO-Beta Kappa .............. Athens, O. OHIO WESLEYAN-Tlieta ...... CASE SCI-mor.-A K... Delaware, O. Cleveland, O. DISTRICT YI.-Ohio and 1175! Lflifgil-IIZ-ll'-CUII. BETHANY-Psi .......,.................................. ...... B ethany, W. Ya. W1'rTEx12Ro-.-Xlplia Gamma .....,, ...... S pringheld, Ohio DENISON-Alpha Eta ................. ...... I Granville, Ohio WOOSTER-Alpha Lambda ....... ...... X Vooster, Ohio Kxixvox-Beta Alpha ...,........ ..... G ambier, Ohio Oluo STATE-'IIllCfEl Delta ........ ...... C olumhus, Ohio WEsT VIRGINIA-Beta Psi ...... ...... N lorgantown, W. Ya. DISTRICT VII.-Illtflifllltf PL'Rm'E-Beta Mu ...... ...... I lurdue, Indiana DE PAVW-Delta ....... ...... L Ereencastle, Indiana INDIANA-I i ........... ...... B loomington, Indiana Wan.-xsH-Tau ............... ...,. ..............,.... C r awfordsville, Indiana HaxovER-Iota ........................................................... Hanover, Indiana DISTRICT YIII.-1ll1'rh1lg'l111, lflfzzais, II '1'.vm11s1'11, fzlafzz, flfl-7Zll6'5UflZ MICHIGAN-Lambda ...,......,...............,.........................i A nn Arbor, Michigan Kxox-Alpha Xi ......... ...... L Ealesburg, Illinois BE,Lo1T-Chi ....................................... ...... B eloit, 'Wisconsin I'x1vE1zs1'1'x' OF low.-x-Alpha Beta ......,. ...... I owa City, Iowa COIIICAGO-I1Z.l.1'l'll'JCl21 Rho .,................ ...... C hicago, Illinois Iowa ll'15sLErAx-Alplia Epsilon ....... ...... h flt. Pleasant, Iowa lliscoxsix-Alplia Pi ..........,............ ..,... A flaclison, ll'isconsin Noizfrnwesreax-Rlio ..... AIINNESOTA--Blitil Pi ..... . .Evanston, Illinois .St. Paul, Minnesota ILLINOIS-Siglilil Rho ...................,...................... ...... C hampaign, Illinois DISTRICT IX.-.fl1f'z's50z1rz', A'rzu.m.v, Co!0raa'U, Nezuzrlzz WEs'1'A11xsTER-Alplia Delta ............................ ....... I Tulton, Missouri KANSAS-Alpha Nu ....,.......... ....... L awrence, Kansas DENVER-Alpha Zeta ....... NE1sR.xsK.x--Alplia Tau ...... . MISSOURI-Zeta Phi ..,..,.. .......Denver, Colorado ..Lineoln, Nebraska .......Columbia, Missouri .Boulder, Colorado COLORADO--Beta Tau ................................................ . DISTRICT X.-C1dfUb7'1!Z'LZ, 4Ycfvm'z'a, O7'6'g'0lI, llfizsh z'1zg'z'on Berkeley, California CAL1FoxzN1A--Oniega ............................... . ....... .......... . .Stanford University, Cal. STANFORD--Alpha Sigma. .,................................ .... . . 'Wasi-IINGTON ST.-YI'E-BCJCEI. Omega ............................. i ALUMNI CHAPTERS Akron, Ohio Cleveland, Ohio Kansas City, Mo. Omaha, Nebraska Asheville, N. C. Columbus, Ohio Los Angeles. Cal. Philadelphia, Pa. Austin, Texas Dallas, Texas Louisville, Kentucky Pittsburg, Pa. Baltimore, Maryland Dayton, Ohio Memphis, 'Tennessee Portland, Maine Boston, Blass! Denver, Colorado Miami Co., Ohio Providence, R. I. Buffalo,New York Des Moines. Iowa Milwaukee, NYis. Richmond, Virginia Charleston, W. Va. Chicago, Illinois Cincinnati, Ohio Detroit, Michigan Galesburg, Illinois Hamilton, Ohio Indianapolis, Indi Minneapolis, Nlinn. St. Louis, Missouri Nashville, Tennessee San Antonia, Texas New York, New York San Francisco. Cal. ana Schenectady, N. Y. 3 1 V .Seattle, Washington Seattle, Washington Sioux City, Iowa Springneld, Ohio Svracuse, New York Terre I-Iaute, Indiana Toledo, Ohio 'Washington, D. C. Wheeling, W. Va. Zanesville, Ohio Fraternit of Chi Psi FOUNDED AT UNION COLLEGE, 1841 PI Union College, 1841 CHI Aniherst College, 1864 XI Stevens Institute, 1883 ACTIVE ALPHAS THETA-XVilliaI11s College, 1842 MU-Middlebury College, 1843 ALPHA-VVESLEYAN UNIv1cR5ITx', 1844 PHI-H2lI11l1t0l1 College, 1345 El'SILON-'UlllX'6TSl1j' of Michigan, 1845 PSI-COTIIGH University, 1869 TAI'-Wofford College, 1374 NU-University of Minnesota, 1874 IOTA-University of XVisconsin, 1878 ALPHA DELTA-University of Georgia, 1890 BETA DELTA-Leliigli University, 1894 NEW YORK CITY DETROIT . CHICAGO . SOUTH CAROLINA ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA XI- . NEW ENGLAND NORTHERN AND E ALIAI-IA RHO . 'XVASHINGTON . DIORTHXVEST . PHILADELPHIA WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA XVISCONSIN . GEORGIA DULUTH PORTLAND . CHI PSI CL U Is R110-RlltgCTS College, 1879 GAMMA DELTA-Stzlilforcl University. 1895 DELTA DELTA-University of California, 1896 EPSILON DELTA-Uiiiversity ofCl1icago, ISQS ALU M NI ASSOCIATIONS ASTNRN NEW YORK . 32 . New York City . Detroit, Mich. . Chicago, Ill. . Columbus, S. C. Middletown, Conn. . Hoboken, N. -I. . Boston, Mass. Sclienectacly, N. Y. New Bruiiswick, N. J. XV2ISl1lllgtOll, D. C. Minneapolis, Minn. Pliiladelplxia, Pu. . Pittsl'n1rg, Pa. Milwaukee, XYis. . Atlanta, Ga. XVest Duluth. Minn . Portland, Ore. . New York City Ihr NNI .Ph ilar, Alpha Rho of the Chi Psi .vagal f ,r A , ,..,-f-1,Z:c:f.19'?g A 3 .A ...J-V.-145-Ei?-21 --9':i1':-1 -:fl E-QQ:-,S,.E-:,.-. rg... - f:,y, H L RESIDENT MEMBERS ASI-IER ATKINSON, P -I. CLARENCE MILLER, P W. EDNVIN LTLORAXCE, P CHARLES R. BLUNT, P JOHN R. FERGUSON, fp NIARTIN L. SCHENCK, P JOHN H. GILLESIIIE, P H. W. VAN IXOEVENBURG GEORGE A. VIEHAIANN, P GEORGE W. NUTTMAN, P UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS Class of '05 CHARLES PARKER WILIIER DAVID TUVVNSENIJ MASON FRANCIS EDAIOND VVILBER FREDERICK RAMSAY MASON Class of .'06 GEORGE OAKLEY SMALLEY GEORGE GOUVERNEUR ASHWELL Class of '07 FRANCIS GRANGER LANG CHARLES BURHANS FINCHK' RUSSELL ELLSWORTH WATSON Class of '08 BENJAMIN MARSHALL MILLER WILBER THOMAS GOYVEN HORATIO SEYMORE LANG, jr. EUGENE SUYDAM BROKAXV -uw Cazzegg. tsl 33 Omega Pi Alpha Fm'xnEn -IANFARY 1, 1901 CHAPTER ROLL ALPHA ............. .College of City ofNew York BETA ....... ................................. C Ollllllbla GAMMA ....... ........................ P enusylvania DELTA ........ ........... L ehigh EPSILON ...... ....... R utgers ZETA .................................................. Cornell RUTGERS CHAPTER FOUNDED 1904 UNDERGRADUATES ' Class of '05 CHARLES CI-IAPPLE , DALE ROBERTS BENJAMIN SICKLES Class of '06 FRANK PRATT 101-lx M. STAHR Class of '07 RANDOLPH CRAEMER HARRIS -IEMISON LLOYD VVHEELER Class of '08 ALv1N Fox RODNEY VAN GILDER 34 br ' D- N .Q '45 ' ,7 any N. :gi f W ' :AKA Q' fin Q. ,QJIFWI I 11 I A' I 4f gw1av f'U1' W'm R,f .',-:- v - - ' L H V 'I w , Q' Q WHS a '. 4' ' ,. , , - ALPHA, . BETA, GAMMA, . DELTA, . EPSILON, . ZETA, ETA, THETA, . IOTA, KAPPA, . LAMBDA, . MU, NU, XI, . OMIcRoN,. PI, Rao, SIGMA, . TAU, . UI'sILoN PHI, . CHI, , . Psi, . OMEGA, . DELTA KAPPA, DELTA Rno, DELTA SIGMA, DELTA TAU, GAMMA XI, Theta u Epsilon SOPHOMORE SOCIETY FUUNIDED AT WEsLEvAN UxIvERsiTv, 1870 CHAPTER ROLL 35 Wesleyan University Syracuse University Union College Cornell University University of Rochester University of California Madison University Kenyon College Aclelbert College Hamilton College Renselaer Polytechnic Institute Stevens Institute' of Technology Lafayette College Amherst College Allegheny College Pennsylvania State College University of Pennsylvania New York University Wooster College University of Michigan Rutgers College Dartmouth College Ohio State University Swarthmore College Bowdoin College Northwestern University Kansas University Chicago University College of City of New York Theta u Epsilon PIII C1-1,x1 1'1s11. Es'1xx111.1s1-11211 1892 IIONORARY MEMBERS Class of '05 A1.B1s1z'r Lrsmms S'r11.L11,1x FRANK1- C1-1111114155 L1sv1s1c1c1-1 B1zE'1'T F1z1xxc1s Bono Ku1z'rz ' ' ' ' ' ' 4 ' 4 H, 11121. Com' IN E11w,x1z11 Hu1.s'r1ax EI-IENRX' DE LA BRL'vIs1z13 L,x1z1'11xD111z, Ex. 01-011143 sm 4 X ' u V X AIQTHUR Xnxx Yoo1x1411a1ss SC1-IEAC1 1'-Io11N HENRY XVYCKOFF, -IR. Class of '06 HOWARIJ SPOUNER GAY PIAIQRY M. Buowx E ' ' ' ' 4 4 F11f1J1zR1c1c NEXVTON XYARDXVELL CLIFFORD b'1u11xLAUs B1c1mK111zH4'11'1' 1 ACTIVE MEMBERS Dc1L?K6:4-TLXMP CO6XIIlOSZigU511iSZ B47a6c6I-Ixn174L GZ?g54-AQQBUL lVfK75xZ?59eO MnO41ICak6WQ WLQV College. 36 .L ,I yru 1 In W w 1,11 . . I 1 1 .Y .ff , FIV! 1'-r1I ,4i1,'1'L5::,1glr..3,w . nf . h. - 45:1 .. I7 '- 4 Y. A ' - V35 . .W z I if 1 Q- Tr, 1. 1 ,, -,r' , 1 ,1-ll' .1 V il, ,' A rf' 5, Lp jg.. .b E, E :Q fi. if 1'7 fr' Fir- -4' .7 V ' w :g I 1 ,. ,-: L ! ' F Dlrlrlrn, P91 HZ rw. VW' -fJ,:,g.. .3 .fi 'N ht. XJ -'m..'f':' 171' 1 15 1 fm? il.. , iz f Y 11 -.5 :A al! 1 -.'.L-3' .A LM P ' Q nf -1. -,Y ' 'h wx 5 , 'f.1'm'H. 1' : vu- ..,-mfr . u A w n w n Xf Ji: -1 Q w rw ,Q K V ii -fu ' 4 1 1, A gi ,yu 115 fl .,-H :E :ff '94 CE ig .1 ! .2 123 'i i ' 4 . .il Phi Beta Kappa AI,r'I'I.x OF NEW JERSEY Es'rAIsI,IsI-IEII PEIIIcU.xIu' 22, 1869 OFFICERS FOR 1904-1905 PRESIDENT ....................................................... R EV. j. H. RAVEN, D.D. VICE PRESIDENT ...............,.... ........ P ROE. E. B. VOORHEES RECORDING SECRETARY ..... ........ ........ A 1 R. F. F. THOMPSON CORRESPONDING SECRETARY ....., . ....., MR. C. W. PARMELEE TREASURER ..................... . ........ . ................. . ......... ..... P ROP. E. B. DAVIS INITIATES APRIL 1904-APRIL 1905 Class of '04 H. D. COOK M. S. LEY H. W. MOORE H. A. PLUSCH W. RISLEY Class of '05 H. F. PIOPPER C. A. MORRIS 37 Fraternity Conventions DELTA PHI Held at New York City, N. Y., March 30-31, April I, '05 DELEGATES A. V. SCHENCK, '05 C. L. BRETT, 05 H. S. GAY, '06 ZETA PSI . Held at Tufts College, Boston, Mass., january 5-7 DIE L E G A 'l' IES H. M. W.-ILDRON H. V. D. VV.-XLDRON DELTA UPSILON Held at Chicago, Ill., October 26, 27 and 28, 1904 DELEGATES CHARLES MoRRIs, to5 FRANK O. IVIITTAG, '06 DELTA KAPPA EPSILON Helfl at Chicago, Ill., November I7 and IS, 1904 DELEGATE ALBERT L. STILLM.-IN, '05 I CHI PHI Helrl at Lancaster, Pa., November 25-26, 1904 DELEGATES EELBIER J. PEARCE, '05 I'I.-XRRY B. ANGUS, '05 BETA TI-IETA PI Held at Meramec Highlands, Mo., july I9-20-21-22, 1904 DELEGATE A. B. SMITH CHI PSI Held at Boston, Mass., February 23-24-25 DELEGATISS D. T. MASON B. M. MILLER 38 Cap and Skull 4 SENIOR SECRET SOCIETY FOUNDED JANUARY 18, 1900 AT RUTGERS COLLEGE M EM BERS Class of 1905 ROBERT WEEKS COBB JOHN ELMER PEARCE DAVID TOWNSEND MASON ALBERT LEEDS STILLMAN FRANCIS EDMOND WILBER 41 Casque and Dagger JUNIOR SECRET SOCIETY FOUNDED NOVEMBER 15, 1901 AT RUTGERS COLLEGE MEMBERS Class of I906 GEORGE GOUVERNEUR ASHWELL WILLIAM HARRIS BENEDICT, JR. CLIFFORD STANLAUS BRINKERHOFF HARRY M. BROWN ALBERT WILLIAM HILL JOHN Ross MACNEILL OLIVER JAMES SCHOONMAKER FREDERICK NEWTON WARDWELL 42 b ' ' '-ff . ,. '5f,,y Serpent and Coffin FRESHMAN SECRET SOCIETY FOUNDED I, 1903 BY THE CLASS O FOUNDERS IN 1906. GEORGE GOUVERNEUR ASHWELL JOHN ROSS MACNEILI, VVILLIAIW HARRIS BENEDICT DANIEL BA RLOXV MINER CLIFFORD STANLAUS BRINKERHOFF OLIVER JAMES SCHOONMAKER HARRY M. BROXVN ARTHUR HEADIFEN HOWATT GEORGE OAKLEY SBIALLEY RUSSELL ELLSWORTH XVATSON MEMBERS IN 1907 CHARLES BURHANS FINCH FRANCIS GRANGER LANG JESUS MARIA GONZALEZ WALTER F. REINHEIMER THOMAS DEAN HALLOWELL ALTON P. SWAN IVIAXIBHLLIAN JOSEPH HEIXIDTER VALENTINE ROY'AL TUPIHER STOCKTON CRANMER DOUGLAS JUDSON FISHER RAYMOND MCNAIR GARDNER CHRISTIAN HEIDT, JR. HOXVARD IRVING WHEAT ACTIVE MEMBERS IN 1908 HAROLD FREDERICK HOVEY HORATIO SEYMORE LANG, JR. WILLIAM NASH MAC NEILL BENJAMIN IWIARSHALL IYIILLER AURELIUS IVIILFORD TRACY, JR. 45 F IQO6. X I I I-. Y QW ! A XI jf, v I fl! fy! : X ' J X E' JKO f xx WN N ' I A 3 I! X XI WH I I Dfw C!! ..f-jQQQQjfQ?jSE1gE Freshman Secfet Society FOUNDED MARCH 6, 1873 CHARLES LEVERICH BRETT ADOLI-H BR6GGER CHARLES ROBERT DUNCAN HAROLD HOOLEY FEBREV HOWARD SPOONER GAY LOUIS ARTHUR HEATH . WILLIAM RICHARD PIUGHES, JR. EDVVARD LOUIS IQEENAN HARVEX' CLIFFORD ROIEINS YVALTER FREDERICK ROEDER JAMES HERBERT SMITH 1905 ALBERT LEEDS STILLNIAN I906 NELSON SI-IEPPARD IVIOORE JOHN JOSEPH MLTLLIGAN JOHN MARIUS STAHR FREDERICK NEXVTON VV.-XRDXVELL 1907 FRANK SANFORD STIMSON VINTON DOUGLAS TOAIDIQINS RALPH D. YAN-DUZER FRANK A. VAN SAST THEODORE ROMEYN YARICIQ XYALTER HARRIS XVILSON WILLIAM SANDERSON XYOODRUFF ACTIVE MEMBERS. FI'Rr!,679Kfcl1OSB-9197g'1+ElKC1O3:- F12Pb5XYI-Ip17.9g43KSbO3,5? S,AgE,:-19,7fc1::8LTwSuqN,9817g K OwLpSft:bbl14fRpt:qts:BOSe. X3tuMFATS:R-I-!?75-Sprk. - 46 TRUSTEES EX OFFICIO HIS EXCELLENCY EDVVARD C. STOKES, . . CAMDEN Gozicrzzory Mc' Slalc ef A76ZUf67'SLf1f HON. WILLIAM S. GUMMERE, L.L.D. . . NEWARK Chz'Uffzzs!z'ce qf fha' Slaie of Afvw jersey HON. ROBERT H. MCCARTER, L.L.D. . . . TRENTON Aff07lZQJ. Gwzcm! of Mc Siaic QfNew jersey 1inninninnuinuunnnnnnuvn BY E LECTI ON Na11ze.f A ddffesses Austin Scott, PH.D., LL.D. Presz'a'm! Qff Me College Henry L. Janeway, Esq. Rev. Joachim Elmendorf, D.D. Samuel Sloan, Esq. Hon. Henry W. Bookstaver, LED. Robert F. Ballantine, Esq. David Bingham, Esq. Tunis G. Bergen, PH.D. Frederick Frelinghuysen, Esq. Hon. Jonathan Dixon, LL.D. James Neilson, Esq. Rev. Roderick Terry, D.D. Rev. Edward B. Coe, D.D., L.L.D. Rev. John B. Drury, D.D. Rev. James LeFevre, D.D. Frederick J. Collier, Esq. Paul Cook, Esq. :l:David Murray, PH.D., LL.D. Hon. Garret D. W. Vroorn, LL.D. J. Bayard Kirkpatrick, Esq. William H. Leupp, Esq. :kDeccas0d. New Brunswick New Brunswick . New York City The Winthrop New York City 26 Exchange Place New York City 24 East 64th St. Newark East Orange Brooklyn, N. Y. 101 Willow St. Newark Jersey City 479 Jersey Ave. New Brunswick New York City 169 Madison Ave. New York City 42 West 52d St. New Brunswick Somerville Hudson, N. Y. Troy, N. Y. New Brunswick Trenton New Brunswick New Brunswick 47 Dafa of E!ecz'z'0n Nov. 25 1890 April 8 1862 April 14 1869 June 20, 1871 June 20, 1876 June 20, 1876 March 7 1882 June 19 1883 June 16, 1885 June 22, 1886 June 22, 1886 June 22, 1886 Oct. 25 1887 Oct. 25 1887 June 16 1888 June 16, 1891 June 16, 1891 March 1 1892 June 21, 1892 June 21, 1892 June 18, 1895 Nailzcs . el 121 zz' 2'Us541i Dafa M Elrdfou Peter Donald, Esq. New York City June 15, 1897 99 Franklin St. Rev. VI. Preston Searle, D.D. New Brunswick june 21, 1898 Rev. William H. S. Demarest, D.D. New Brunswick March 7, 1899 William E. Wyckoff, Esq. Brooklyn, N. Y. ,lune 20, 1899 216 Montague St. john W. Herbert, Jr., Esq. Helmetta ,Iune 19, 1901 Hon. William H. Vredenburgh Freehold March 4, 1902 VVilliam S. Myers. E. C. 8. New Brunswick june 18, 1902 Hon. Poster M. Voorhees, LL.D. Elizabeth Oct. 28, 1902 ,Iames G. Cannon, Esq. New York City Oct. 28, 1902 14 Nassau St- Rev. james I. Vance, D.D. Newark March 3, 1903 27 1Vashington St. James B. Mahon, Esq. New York City March 3, 1903 59 1Vest 70th St. William H. Van Steenbergh, Esq. New York City ,Iune 17, 1903 10 VVall St. Hon. Alphonso T. Clearwater, LL.D. Kingston, N. Y. jan. 14, 1904 REV. WILLIAM H. S. DEMAREST, D.D. . . NEW BRUNSVVICK Se'f7'a'fary Q' Mc f7'06Z7'lf FREDERICK PRELINGHUYSEN, ESQ .... NEWARK Y h'as21n'r cf Me Boara' STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD THE PRESIDENT is ex-oHicio a member of all committees The member first named in each instance is chairman FINANCE-Messrs. Ballantine, Sloan, Erelinghuysen, Neilson, Leupp, INSTRUCTION AND DISCIPLINE-Messrs. Coe, Murray, Searle, Donald, Vance. COLLEGE EXPERIMENT STATION-The President, Messrs. Leupp, Book- staver, Neilson, Cook, Herbert. COLLEGE FARM-Messrs. Leupp, Bookstaver, Neilson, Cook, Herbert. PREPARATORY SCHOOL-Messrs. Demarest, janeway, Drury, XM urray, Collier. PROPERTIES-Messrs. Janeway, Ballantine, Kirkpatrick, Herbert, Mahon. LIBRARY-Messrs. Terry, :l:Murray, Bookstaver, Vroom, LeEevre. HONORARY DEGREES-Messrs. Bookstaver, Searle, Vroom, Bergen, Voorhees. TRUSTEES-Messrs. Drury, Demarest, Bookstaver, Wyckoff, Van Steenbergh. BENEFICIARY TRUSTS-Messrs. Searle, Elmendorf, Collier, Wyckolor, Clearwater. ADVISORY-The President, Messrs. Dixon, Erelinghuysen, Neilson, Coe. CERAMICS DEPARTMENT-Messrs. Leupp, Janeway, Kirkpatrick, Herbert, Myers. STATED MEETINGS OF TI-IE BOARD Last Tuesday in October, at 2 o'clock P. M. Second Thursday in January, at 2 o'Clock P. M. First Tuesday in March, at 2 oiclock P. M. Commencement Day, at 10.30 o'clock A. M. d4Defeased, 48 IN NXEIVXORIANX AVID MURRAY was born in Bovina, Delaware County, in 1830. A His parents Scotch people of the A old clan Murray came to America in 1818. Afterwards he prepared for College at the Delhi Aca- demy and the lrergusonville Academy, and entered the Sophomore Class of Union College, graduating in 1882 with honors. ln 1857, after five years in its Department of Mathematics, he was appointed principal of the Albany Academy, which under his charge, reached a high state of efiiciency. ln 1863 he was elected f' Professor of Mathemics and Astronomy in Rutgers College. ln 1873 Professor Murray Went to Japan, by the invitation of the Embassy, who visited Amer- ica about that time, as adviser to the Imperial Minis- ' ' ter of Education. His work consisted in aiding the Department of Education in establishing a system of education. He was able to see before his departure, this work in successful course of fulfillment. Profes- , ' sor Murray returned to America in 1875 and during A the Winter' of 1875-76 prepared and published an open letter to Congress and a pamphlet on the Japanese lndemnity. In 1879 when leaving the service of the Japanese Government, he received every mark of respect. and in recognition of his services, the Emperor decorated him with the Order of the Rising Sun. Immediately on his return to America in 1879 Professor Murray was invited to become secretary of the Board of Regents of the University of the State of New York and secretary and treasurer of the State Normal School. These positions he held until 1889 when ill health obliged him to resign them. Dr. Murray had been trustee of Union College and of the Albany Academy and was trustee of Rutgers College at the time of his death. He was one of the founders of the New Brunswick Historical Club, the DAVID MURR.AH', PH.D., L.L.D. Y. M. C. A., and the Rutgers College Chapter of the Phi Beta Kappa Society. ln 1863 the honorary degree of Ph.D. was conferred upon Dr. Murray by the University of the State of New York, in 1873 that of LED. by Rutgers College, and in 1874 by Union College. Professor lXflurray's old students from far and near have sent testimonials of love and honor to his memory, and gratitude for his influence upon their lives, speaking of him as a most impressive teacher and an inspiration towards all that was intellectual and progressive in good Work. He died from a serious affection of the heart on March 6, 1905. f4l 49 N MEMORIAM MRS. ANN VAN NEST BUSSING DIED JANUARY 8, 1905 AT THE AGE OF 94 A good friend to Rutgers College. The founder of tlie Bussing Prize in Extempore Speaking, and the donor of the stone porch and the refittings of Van Nest Hall. DO FACULTY' ' AUSTIN SCO'1v11 A.B. iYale, 18691, A.M. lUniv. Mich., 18701, Ph. D. lLeipsiC, 18731, LL.D llbrinceton, 1891.1 1JRES1DEN'11 Vooniiisiis l7l'Qf1?fA'Ul' rgfHz'.vl01ji' and I'u!z'!1'm! 5151-111111 24 Livingston Avenue FRANCIS CUYLER VAN DYCK A.B. fRutgei's, 18659, AM. CRutgei's, 18681, PILD. QUnion, 18881. DEAN f,1'Qf2'.YSU1' cy'Phy.t1'fx and li'.1'j1fr1'1mw!f1l flfc'fha11'z'c5 84 College Avenue EDXVARD ALBERT BOVVSER C. fRutgers, 18711, CE. fRutgers, 18715, LL.D fLafayette, 18811. Lvl7lFl'7-fIl.Y P1'Qf2:t.fc11' Qf!llaMc'11m1'1'f.t and k'1l'Q'Z.71C'Cl'I.11KQA CHARLES EDWARD HART A. B.CPrinceton, 18581, AM. CPrinceton, 18619, D.D. 1Rutgers,.18801. '1'lI'IIiI1I1URIi 1'1RIiI,IXGI'lL'YSIiN I'nJhv.vur1y'E!!11'4-5 and f1iZ 1'tf6IIl'6'.Y ffl hrzslzazzzli' 13.80 fRutge1's, 18681, M8 33 Livingston Avenue LOUIS BEVIER, JR. A.B. fRutgers, 18781, A.M. CR f 1 18811 Pl. A . f 1 utgbeis, , ID 'Johns Hopkins, 18811. .Pr0fe.txw' fy My Gl l.'L'A' l.lI11L1f'll!ZLQ'C and Lllfnzlzzrc. Bishop Place ALFRED ALEXANDER TITSVVORTH 13.80. fRutgers, 18771, lVI.Sc. fRutgers, 18801, CE. fRutgers, 18801. l'1'ry2f5s01' cy'Cz'zfz'! E11-g'zfzec1'1'11g' mm' Crizplzict 590 George Street JULIUS NELSON B.Sc. fUniv. VVis., 18811, MSC. fUniv. VVis., 18841, Ph.D. fJohns Hopkins, 18881- f 'rzykxso 1' Qf Bialogjf. Adelaide Avenue, Highland Park BYRON DAVID I-IALSTIQD B.Sc. fMich. Ag. Coll., 18711, lVI.Sc. flviich. Ag. Coll., 18741, S.D. Q1-Iarvard, 18781. lvrykssar of Holmzy and f1U7'lZiL'llfIfI!7'6' 121 Livingston A ve. JOHN BERNHARD SMITH D.Sc. lRutge1's, 18911. Pnykssor zyf En!0m0!U,Q'1f 157 College Avenue 1 52 -: .Y' EDVVARD BURN ETSI' VOORHEES A.B. CRutgers, 18811, A.M. lRutgers, 18841, D.SC. CUniv. Vt., 19001. l'1'qj?5501' Qf-Al,g'1'1'f'11l!1f1'e DI.l'l'f!U1' fyflhc' f1,g'1'1'c11ll1r1'az! Criffzjgf' E.l'f5fI'lAlllFlIf Slrzlioll ,S1Ilf7Cl1'I-1lfl'l1lfl'lIf Qfllze Collvgc Farm College Farm 'JOHN CHARLES VAN DYKIS L.H.D. lRutgers, 18891. lJl'lw,.V.S'C71 oflhf l'fI.5f0l11' cyfflrl Seminary Campus ROBERT VVOODWORTH PRENTISS B.Sc. fRutgers, 18781, M. Se. lRutgers,18811, f,l'0fBXS01' Qf!Pfzzlhm1zalz'f.s amz' Aslrofzomy Direrlol' 1U'!h6 Schfzncfa Obxerzfrzzfory 122 Bayard Street ELIOT ROBERTSON PAYSON A.B. lHamilton, 18691, A.M. fHamilton, 18721, Ph.D. CRutgers, 18921. Pl'Qf7Z'.fS07' cf Me H iszfory and Ar! of 7'efzch1'1zg'. Hamilton Street EDWARD LUTHER STEVENSON A.B. llfranklin, 18811, A.M. llfranklin, 18841, Ph. D. lHeiclelberg, 18901. Pmfesso 1' of flislaijf Hamilton Avenue HENRY BU BOIS MULFORD A.B. CRutgers, 18811, A.M. lRutgers, 18841, D.D. QUnion. 19031. Prcyfessor of the lifzglish LtZ7lg'7llZ,Q'E amz' L1'Ze1'aZ141fe, and l?m'g'e1'.t College Lccfzzrer 071 Me English Bible 51 Bayard Street WILLIAM HAMILTON KIRK A.B. Uohns Hopkins, 18931, Ph.D. ljohns Hopkins, 18951. Professor of lim Latin Lfzfzgfzage and Lzferaffzzre 84 Paterson Street SAM UEL EWING SM ILEY Captain 15th U. S. Infantry CU. S. Military Academy, 1885,1 LL.B. CChicago C of Law, 18951. Prokssm' of 1Tflz'Z1'1fzz1'y Sciefzfe zum' 111612.13 116 Hamilton Street JOHN VOLNEY LEWIS B.E. fUniv. North Carolina, 18911, S.B. QI-Iarvard, 18931. Pafqfessor of GIC0l0,Q'jf ann' MZ'1Z6l'H10gy 197 Somerset Street ao ollege EDVVIN BELL DAVIS B.L. lllartmouth, 18891. Przy2f550r cy' Roumzlfe l,IllIg'IltZKg6S 145 College Avenue f IRVINGESTRONG UPSON A.B. iRutgers, 18811, A.lV1. lRutgers, 18841. Librariazz and Reg1'.rl1'ar Secrflary offlle flzfzzflgf. 64 College Avenue CLARENCE LIVINGSTON SPEYER8 Pli.B. QColumbia, 18841. Asxafzhfe Prqfkfssur ty' C7l6'1ll1ASllj' 192 College Avenue VVILLIAIVI EUGENE BREAZEALE M M P. CFurman Univ., 18851, MSC. lRutgers, 18951. Adzbzg' xlssaczlzzffz P1'0j2'ss0r Of-11flZfhl'7IZtIIfl-K5 142 Hamilton Street EDVVARD'LIVING8TON BARBOUR 13.0. fNHflOl1Hl School of Elocution and Oratory, 18971, lVl.E. 1Same, 18981 lfzslrzrrfor in Rlzeloric and E1f0t'1ll1Z'01I 172 College Avenue FRED HERBERT DODGE A.B. fYale, 18841. fzzslrnclor in Physim! Tm 11117.11 0' Dizferior ofthe Gymzzzzsizmz 116 Hamilton Street RICHARD MORRIS BSC. CRutgers, 18991, lVI.Sc. fRutgers, 19021. Inszfrzzflor in 1llzzlhemez!z'cs amz' Graplzics CULLEN WARNER PARMELEE B.8c. CRutgers, 18961. lfzsirucior in Clzemistry liireclav' time Depzzrlmcfzzf afflay-2uf01'king' amz' Ce1'a1nzfS First Avenue, Highland Park ALBERT CHESTER DE REGT A.B. QHamilton, 19001, lVI.8c. CHamilton, 19041. lnsL'1'1zcz'01' in Chem isiry 79 Easton Avenue EUGENE HCWARD BABBITT A.B. QHarvarcl, 18861. ffzslvfzzfior in Germzzn Queen's College 54 FRANK FORRESTER THOMPSON AB. lPrinceton, 18945, AM. lPrinceton, 18951. lPrinceton, 18975. 1l1Sf1'lll'lLI1' in !I!c'fl1'1'cal Sfimrc 91 Bayard Street The names of the Faculty, after that of the President, are arranged in groups. The professors, according to seniority of appointment, the Librarian and Registrar, the asso- ciate professors and instructors, in the order of their respective appointments. ,-.1.i,- STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE FACULTY. The President is ex ollicio a member of all committees The member first named in each instance is chairman ALUMNI TNTERESTS-Professors Van Dyck, Prentiss, Mr. Parmelee. ATHLETICS-Professor Be'-fier, Mr. Dodge, Captain Smiley. CATALOGUE-Professors Davis, Breazeale, Mr. De Regt. CURRICULUM-Professors Kirk, Payson, Speyers. EMPLOYMENT OF STUDENTS-Professors Titsworth, Smith, Mr. Upson. GRADUATE DEGREES-Professors Van Dyck, Nelson, Mr. Thompson. GYMNASIUM-Professor Bevier, Mr. Dodge, Captain Smiley. LIBRARY--Mr. Upson, Professors Hart, Lewis. MUSIC-Professor Davis, Mr. Babbitt. RELATIONS TO PREPARATORY SCHOOLS-Professors Stevenson, Bevier, Payson. PRESS-Professors Voorhees, Davis, Mr. Barbour. OTHER OFFICERS JOHN EDWARD ELMENDORF, A.M. PH. B. Assistant to me T7'6!ZS7t7'67' 71 Albany Street GEORGE AUGUSTUS OSBORN, BSC. Assisiafzl in the Librfzry 296 George Street JACOB GOODALE LIPMAN, A.M., PHD. Assisirml in Agaficulfmfal Chemisiry The State Experiment Station GEORGE WINFIELD NUTTMAN, M.Sc. flssrszfazfzi in Biology 35 Mine Street WILLIAM SEYMOUR VALIANT Asszkiant in ilze Geological Zlluseum 132 New Street J A N ITO FIS CLARENCE A. DU BOIS CHEESEMAN FISHER ro8 Hamilton Street 22 Abeel Stl-get JOHN THOMAS FRANCIS R. COX 99 Easton AVC- 28 Bartlett Street 55 CALENDAR 1904 SEI rEN1nER19,20 Monday, 10 a. in., and Tuesday: SEI-TEM HER 2 1 OCTOBER 7, S OCTOBER 25 NOVEMRER 8 NovExiixER 10 NUVEMUER 23-28 DECEM RER 19-23 DISC. 23-J .x N. 9 J.xNI',xRY 9 J,xNt'xRY 12 JANUARY 26 FERRL',xRY 22 March 7 MAIQ. 29-APR11. APRIL 4-12 APR11, 12 MAY 17 May 22-25 IUNE 3 June 12-16 JUNE 16, 17 JUNE 18 JUNE 20 JUNE 21 JUNE 21-SEPT. 20 SEPTEM BER 18,19 SEPTEMBER 20 OCTOBER 6, 7 OCTOBER 31 NOVEMBER 7 NOVEMBER 10 Nov. 29-DEC 4 DECEMBER 18-22 DEC. 22-JAN. 8 JANLJARY 8 Examinations for admission. Examinations for removal oi'June conditions. Wednesday, 8.40 a. m. First term begins, rccitations. Friday, Saturday : Sloan Entrance Prize examinations. Tuesday, 211. m.: Stated Alcetingofthe Board ol'Trustees. Tuesday: Election Day. Thursday: Charter Day. Wednesday, 11 a. m.: Monday, S.-1-0 a. m.: Thanksgiv- ing recess. Monday-Friday: Examinations. First term ends. Friday-Monday: S.-l-0 a. m. : Christmas vacation. 1905 Monday, 8.-L0 a. m.: Second term begins, recitations. Tl1L1fStl2lj',21J. llhfsliltldtlAlCC1lI'lQOlxl.llLf Board ofTrustees Thursday: Day ol' prayer for Colleges. Wednesday: AV21Sllll1g'10l1lS Birthday. Tuesday, 2 p. m.: Stated Meeting of the Board of Trustees. Wednesday-Tuesday: Examinations: second term ends. Tuesday-Wednesday, 8.40 a. m. : Spring vacation. Wednesday, 8.40 a. m.: Third term begins, recitations. Wednesday: Exhibition Drill, 4 p. in. Monday-Thursday: Senior iinal examinations. Saturday, 9 a. n1.,: Competitive examinations in each County Courthouse of New Jersey for free scholar- ships in the State Agricultural College Qliutgers Scientific Schoolb . Monday-Friday: Examinations ofthree lower classes. Friday, 10 a. m. and Saturday: Examinations for admission. Sunday, 7.30 p. m.: Baccalaureate Sermon. Tuesday, S p. m.: Junior Exhibition. Wednesday z Stated Meeting' ofthe Board of Trustees, 10.30 a. ni. Annual Meeting ofthe Alumni, 10.30 a. rn. Address before the Alumni, 12.30 p'm. Alumni Dinner, 1.30 p. m. 130TxI ANNUAL CoMx1ENCEMEN'r, S p, in. Wednesday-Wednesday: Long vacation. Monday, 10 a. m. and Tuesday: Examinations for admission. Examinations for removal ot'June conditions. Wednesday, 8.40 a. m.: First term begins, recitations. Friday, Saturday: Sloan Entrance Prize examination. Tuesday, 2 p. m.: Stated Meeting ot' the Board of Trustees. Tuesday, Election Day. Friday: Charter Day. Wednesday, 11 a. in 3 Monday, 3.40 a. m. Thanksgiv- ing Recess. Monday-Friday: Examinations, first term ends. Friday-Monday: 8.40 a. m.: Christmas vacation. 1906 Monday, 8.40 a. rn.: Second term begins, recitations. .56 w K F Q w X ' l W' xy' PD liflla-,' fs' U5 T Qi ' - K, In xf' 1 fl All ' IMS W1-, - Q . SD 3 ' W 3 .N J 5 R F 1 Vg Ext N! ,il 2,2 5 ' . f i' A Q 5 'sff flx nqijstf :sr mf- ' S . - ,. - I 16,1 5 ' N f'M,5i ,S Histor of the Class of 190 When time who steals our xtrrs 'lXY'lY . Shall steal mn' pleasures too, The rncniory UIAUICPIIS1 will stay, And llnlfrnlrjuysi'e1ien'. -'l'imMixs Mnnizli -it-........ The duty of Senior Class Historian is NOK only one of retrospect but also one of prophesy. The end of four very happy years is upon us and we feel that we can say with absolute truthfulness: We have fought a good fight, we have finished our course, we have kept the faithff It is 110t our pur- pose to tell you gentle reader that we are the only really eighteen caratclass that everlounged around the Campus. The gist of the aforesaid remark has been told by every historian since the year 1766. We want to show you as impartially as possible, what we have done and what we are, our friends the Powers that Ben to the contrary notwithstanding when they say 'LThis is the worst class that ever came to Rutgers College. Nay more, we consider this testimony more in the light of a recommendation than of damning evidence against usg for it shows that although we have possibly not given sufficient attention to the Three R's -in fact we have incurred many more than -three-nevertheless we have studhiously shunned the MThree P's H Plugging, Pulling and Prostrat- ing, the use of which would have endeared us to our Profs, but have reacted as stumbling blocks to ourselves throughout our lives. We admit that we were a trifle perturbed when we filed into the Freshman seats on the eighteenth of September, 1901, but under a slight- ly ruff-led exterior brave hearts beat and high hopes were entertained. We were rather disap- pointed than relieved, when out of respect for the A. L. STILLMAN President then recent death of the late President McKinley the usual flag-rush was omitted. After a short, sharp and decisive battle with 1904 in the first rope-rush ever held on Neilson Field, we sent the following Well known but comprehensive report to our already large number of widder admirers: N We have met the enemy and they are ours. ln our first Autumn held meet we just couldn't lose with Jack Wyckoff Hying over the cinders and we had the satisfaction of giving 1904 a very tight run for her money in the Freshman football. Qur first class banquet was a great success and was held in New York. It was accompanied with all the dignity usually associated with Upper Class dinners. It was a case of asleep at the switch for the the Sophs when we all successfully boarded the P. R. R. train. For three years out of four we have won the relay championship, in fact in any department of track and field athletics we have never been sur- passed. Our base-ball record has been almost equally good. We have always furnished a large propor- tion of the Varsity men, and we will leave a great many vacancies on the diamond when we depart in June. To speak of our triumphs over 1904 in base-ball would really be rubbing it in to much, for that class, you will remember, distinguished itself by never scoring a run until the last game it played. f We point to the Summer Snow Storm with justified pride as a stunt involving technical skill and genius, originality and patience, not even equalled by the mythical cow in the bellfryn or the frozen clapperf' This took place in chapel commencement exercises of the '02 during the class of the Preparatory School. While the future Class of 1906 was spouting sublime things it knew nothing about, some one-peace be to his ever recurring memory-touched the button and the batteries did the rest Fond mothers, nice little girls, budding youth and frowning profs, saw to their chagrin their finished product enveloped in showers of confetti coming unrestrainedly from the roof, and heard-oh mirabile dictu-the peal of bells, such as even a New Brunswick fire Could not have awakened. Our Sophomore year was no less successful. After three tries at the Hag, each resulting in a vic- tory for 1905, the incoming verdants relinquished the battle-scarred emblem. Meanwhile good men and true fell bythe way- side. Three loyal 1905 supporters have died dur- ing the past four years. Uthers have succumbed to Breezitis,Davitis or general struckitis as the case may be. As Juniors we put away childish things, advised well, worked well, and fussed well, al- though only 43 remained of the original 72. Our first Upper Class banquet at VVikoff's was a rip snorter, and the Day of Prayer for Colleges which followed suffered from the lack of our noble presence. Charlie, from the Derrible Plains, with the aid of his noble cohorts, made the Prom. a ne plus ultra. Although still further depleted, we continued to advance in the knowledge and understanding of Profs, athletics and girls, until : When at last in Senior year Oh how wise they do appear Who have clung to Plucky Rutgers All the way. 1n future years we will be proud to look back on the fact that it was the Class of 1905 that was instrumental in the abolishing Class and College politics. VVe have always considered that it was the best thing for the Old College to have the men fully qualified for offices of trust and responsibility, filling such positions, and that personal prejudice was too petty for our consideration. VVe still have thirty-eight men whom we hope to graduate. VVe look back with pleasure on one of the most successful Cremations, that of The Five Dollar Act, ever given in the college and look forward toward a Senior Play, which we hope will make us still more illustrious. Are we glad to go? Parting from that which we love is never easy, and we love our Alma Mater. She has been a kind mother to us even if her hired nurses have been hard. VVith our de- parture ends our history as a class, but as individuals, we can show throughout life our loyalty to the Class of 1905, and through her to Dear Old Mother Rutgers, whom we shall always strive to love and honor as VVorkmen that need not to be ashamedf, 'Z Q .xx . Cxoclifjwe XYQALKQS YELL- Class Of 1905 Innnuununnv unlnnnnnnnuunun Rzzszlef Dazzle! lufobblc! Rffke! Racha! Rizfe! JKDIZIZ! Rah! Rzzigersf lV0Ilg'hlV1'-f'lZ'Z.'E., muuuuulnn Imnnunnnnuuuun A A Cobble! OFFICERS PRESIDENT ........... .. ...................... ...... A . L, STILLMAN VICE PRESIDENT ,.................... ..,........ D T. NIASON SECRETARY AND TREASURER ...... ........ H . C. MOREHOUSE PIISTORIAN ............,...................... .,....................... ....,....... C . LI BRETT ,A7IZ17l6.S' C 0 zz mes ltlesiden res 1? 007715 HARRY BAREMORE fYNGUS ......... . S Elizabeth ............ ....... C hi Phi House WELCOME WILLIAM BENDER ....... S Elizabeth ....... ................ E lizaheth SIMON BLOCKER .,...................... . C Chicago, Ill ...... ....... 2 4 Hertzog Hall CHARLES LEVERICH BRETT .......... . C Belleville ........... .......... D elta Phi House JAMES HONX'ARD BRIxCKERHOFF. ...... . C jersey City .......... ....... I lelta Upsilon House CHARLES WILLIAAI CHAPPEL ...... S Warsaw, N. Y ....... .......... 2 5 Hertzog Hall ROBERT WEEIcs CORD ............... S Newark .................. ......... Z eta Psi House GEORGE HAMELL COOK .,....... . C North Troy, N, Y ..... ....... D elta Phi House EDSON JOSEPH DAVIS .......,........ S New Market .......... .......,.. 1 6 Hertzog Hall ARTHUR VOORHEEs DEHART ....... S Raritan ............ ....... D elta Upsilon House GEORGE BERGEN FORD ............. S Allentown ......,.... ............ D . K. E. House jOHN GAUB ......................... S New Brunswick ..... ........ 1 34 Easton Avenue HARRY LLOYD HARRIS ........,.. S New Brunswick ..... ........ 3 59 George Street JOHN AUGUST HITZELBERG ........ . C Brooklyn, N. Y ...... ....... 2 O Hertzog Hall FRANK-LIN EDWARD HLULSTEN ...... S Broolilyn, N. Y. ...... D. K. E. House 59 1Va 711 KS C0 I1 rsos HEIQAIAN HERIPIUAIE l'lOl'PliR ...... . C FRANK NICI-IoLS -IENNINGS ....... C GEORGE RICIIARII ISIOEHLER ..... S FRANCIS Bono IQURTZ ............. S DAVID TOWNSENIJ NIASON ........ S FREDERICK RAA-ISAY M ASoN ....... S HARRY CRIJAI NIOREHOUSIS ...... C CI-IARLES ARTIAIIJR MCJRRIS ...... S joI'IN ELAIER PEARCE .......... S LOREN PEASE PLUAIAI ER, JR ...... S DALE CI-IARLES ROBERTS ........ S WILLIAM BOOTH Ro LI. ...................... S ARTHUR VAN VOORHEES SCIIENCK ..... C EUGENE WILLIAM SENG ..................... S BENJAMIN AUGUSTUS SICKLES ....... S ALIIERT BROKAXY SMITI-I ................ S MCLARENCE LOCKERSON SAIITIAI ....... S ALBERT LEEDS STILLMAN ............ C ALBERT AUGUSTUS TAYLOR. jr ...,. C IRVING RUSSELL VALENTINE ...... S DANIEL GEORGE VERXVEY ...... C ELMER SPANGLER XVEAVER ..... S CHARLES PARKER WILISIEIQ ..... C FRANCIS EDAIOND WILIIER ....... C JAMES HENICY VVILLOCK ..... L SLM College. 1 60 Res idon res Monsey, N. Y ...... Warsaw, N. Y ..... S0lllCl'YlllC ...... jersey City ..... Bound Brook ..,. Bound Brook .... Selkirk, N. Y ..... Higlltstown ...... Linden .......... Quinton .......... Basom, N. Y ..... Trenton ............... New Brunswick ...... New Brunswick. Coltsneck .......... Somerville ...... Trenton ........ Hoboken .,.... Allentown ......... Woodbridge ........ Rochester, N. Y. .... . Williamstown ..... New Brunswick. New Brunswick ....... Troy, N. Y, ...... .. Rooms .......21 Winants Hall .......D. K. E. House .................Somerville .......137 Winants Hall .........Chi Psi Lodge ...........Chi Psi Lodge .......24f Hertzog Hall .....De1ta Upsilon House ...........Chi Phi House ........Chi Phi House .....10 Winants Hall 2 High Street ..........Highland Park ....5O Easton Avenue i ....... 163 College Avenue Beta Theta Pi House ...........Chi Phi House K. E. House D. K. E. House .....Zeta Psi House .....41 Hertzog Hall .....137 Winants Hall ...........Bishop Place .....Bishop Place .....ClIi Phi House Histor ofthe Class of 1906 The hell ringsl .-J: ' ' The lights die out l The curtain rises on the third act of uThe Class of 1906 ll' Former acts, staged by other and ahler play- wrights, have de- picted our Hen- trancef' and our early acheive- ments on the ath- letic field, in the gymnasium and around the ban- quet table. J. R. MACNEILL President The third act discovers the same old class, its number decreased directly as the square ofthe time multiplied by Five, but still the same hero, entering upon the junior year, the best of all years. Say, do you remember our Freshman year? Do you recall the lirst couple weeks, how we learned to know New Brunswick under the direc- tion of our friends the Juniors? Doc Bissett's windows, all green and red? Do you remember how often our friends took us walking that way? Steve's-all lit up? Albany street-you know, down near the bridge-all ablaze! And our Freshman eyes and ears took it all in and won- dered. And sometimes did not our Freshman cheeks blush just a little? I-leigh, hol This is life to be sure! Students everywhere, a certain jaunty confident air distinguished gown from town. Consciously or unconsciously we aped the swagger, and we thought we were it. Remember? Then came the Sophomore year. Do you remember how big our heads were? You wore corduroys. You smoked a pipe and then, you knew you were it. Remember? Yet, after all we have watched the passing of these other years with silent pleasure, but the farewell to you, Junior year, will be fraught with genuine sadness. College days begin when we are Freshmen, but college life begins when we are juniors. As becomes conscientious 'Juniors we have shown the Freshmen the ropes, in various senses of the word, and have taught them to use them 5 and thus have lived over again u0ur salad days. We have cut gym-work and other under- class frivolities and have taken to c'fussing almost as a body. The poet must have been thinking of us when he wrote :- In the junior year a young 11131133 fancy Lightly turns to thoughts of love 5 And the boisterous, burly Soph Changes to a cooing dove. lf you donyt believe it watch H Mac U steal up the avenue H every Sunday afternoon at four, or hide behind the D. U. House and take a peep at Johnson's opera-hat as he dodges the eggs on the way to his carraige. CNOTE :--Rav says that so long as Fm lying l shall make it an automobile instead of carriage.J VVho knows so well as the Junior where the choicest arbutus grows? Who knows so well as he where the depths of the Highland Park gorges are the most beautiful? But the Junior year is not all a hed of roses. Oh! nol The Junior is the observed of all observers. He must attend Y. M. C. Av, he must serve on any and all Committees, must write soul- stirring Hfl.121l'gLll1lH2lI'IlClCS, must get up annuals and balls, and he throughout an inspiring example to his younger and more tender brethren. A few more weeks and the days of our -lunior life shall have been rolled up as a scroll and laid b forever. Alread ' thex' are fading into the inel- , h lowinf haze of memorv, into the nivstic Jurule of , . l the llast. Some day when the silver creeps into our hair and we reflect upon the days just past, from the thoughtful plain of judgment we may he able to sift the tares from the wheat. But the wheat, we feel,u'ill outweigh the Chaffthe gold the dross, the True, the lfulse, and our Junior year will stand out even then as the brightest of our lives. Casting all thought of conceit behind- Ilt-rc's to the best Class you'll ever find, The liest in muscle and heart and mind- lIe1'c's to Nineteen-Six. WEJL. .L- f':-.. :J L.. --,....... YEL L-ffoo-ra! lafoo-nz! Rzgg ZZUK R' zur! Rah ! Rah .' 1321 lgerx .No Hgh lj PRESIDENT ........... VICE PRESIDENT ..,.. SECRETARY .......... TREASURER ....... HISTORIAN. .... . Names EDXVARD l'lARKER ACTON ......... ADOLPH GEROASIUS AHRENS ....... RAYMOND VVALTER ALLEN ............... GEORGE GOUVERNEUR ASHXVELL ........ WILLIAM HARRIS BENEDICT, JR ....... LOUIS BEVIER. 3D ................................ CLIFFORD STANLAUS BRIXKERHOFF ......, ADOLPH BROGGER ...........................,... HARRY M. BROVVN ......... PERCY EDGAR BROWN ....... THOMAS HARX'EX' BRUCE .,...... DAVID ALEXANDER DECKER... GEORGE OSCAR DENNIS ,....... THOMAS ALAN DEvAN ....... HERVEY KINCH DOANE .......... CHARLES ROBERT DUNCAN ..... Jon LANGEORD EDWARDS ,....,. CHARLES JOB ELDRIDGE ............ HIARRY M ARSHALL FALES, JR ...... l'lAROLD l'lO0LEY FEBREY ......... HOWARD SPOONER GAY .,..... . LYA'lAN ABBOTT GEROW ...... HAROLD EDWARD GREEN ....... ARTHUR VAUGHN GREGORY ....... ALBERT WILLIAM HILL ....... C53 CldSS Of 1906 f-.S z,1'! YEL L-All-lllbff, fl,ll77Z6llI?, T1'I-Illbfg, Trallzblf, Zim, Zum, Zim, A,1I!g'l'7'S on the !?a1'1'!Iz11 Rzzlgezn Nozzghly-Szlr ! OFFICERS ..j. R. MAC NEILL E. GREEN W. ALLEN L. WILKINSON C011 rsex J6esz'de1zces Salem .....,... Elizabeth ...... M e dfo rd ...,............ New Brunswick ..... New Brunswick ..... New Brunswick .... . Brooklyn, N. Y ....,.. Perth Amboy .......I Warsaw, N. Y. ..... Woodbridge ........ Oceanic .................. M. 1. L. INLAIN Rooms 124: Winants Hall Elizabeth .......Chi Phi House 24 College Avenue ...88 Carroll Place .........BislIop Place ..Delta Phi House 102 Vlfinants Hall K. E. House ......124 Winants Hall ...9O Winants Hall Pine Bush, N. Y ..... ..,... 1 24 Winants Hall Eatontow n .........,. Ne W Brunswick ..... Plainield ........... Newark ...... Barnegat .......................... Williamsto Wn........ North Tonawancla .....lVlilltOwn Road .. ........ 131 Somerset Street .........13O Yllinants Hall Newark 130 Winants Hall 134 Winants Hall 1 Union Street Elizabeth ............................ ....... 1 O9 Winants Hall Bayonne ............,........... Washingtonville, N. Y ..... Brooklyn, N. Y ............. Rahway ............. Linden ........ ......Delta Phi House ...A-7 Hertzog Hall ....22 Hertzog Hall .136 Winants Hall Chi Phi House Ala me C0 ll V565 fi7L'5I.lft?lIl'C'X ARTHUR HEAIJIFEN PIOXYATT ...... ROY GORDON IIILAY ................. DAVID WILLIAM JENKINS ........... RAYMOND BERGUER JOHNSON ......... MAUIQICE IRYING LlNDRl'1'I'I.liAIN ..... JOHN ROSS MACNEILL ................... DANIEL BARLOVV BXIINER ...... FRANK OT'I'o 1VllTTAG, JR .... NELSON SHEPIIARD NIOORE .... JAMES EDNVIN IVIORROXY ..... JOHN JOSEPH NIULLIGAN ..... J. HARVEY lVlUR1 I'lY ......... . NORBURX' MURRAY ..........., HARRY XNILLIAM NOBLE ...... GEORGE PIENRY ROEIJER ..,.. CLARENCE GORDON ROLFE ..... NAHUAI DAVID SHORE ............. GEORGE OAKLEY SAIALLEY ...... JOHN MARILIS NlADISON STARI--I ....... . FREDERICK NEVVTON VVARDXYELL ..... . WINTON HAIJLEY XVILBER .................. THOMAS LAMBERT WILKINSON .............. LOUIS FREDERICK BAKER XIVOOLSTON ..... Rooms New Brunswick ..... ...... I leta Theta Pi House Farmingdale ....... . ..... 220 Suydam Street Mine Hill ...... ........ 4 7 Hertzog Hall Newark .................. ..... D elta Upsilon House Brooklyn, N. Y .... .. .... .. Catskill, N. Y ..... Park Ridge ........ Brirlgeton ....... SLlIl1l1llt............. Perth Amboy .,.... Paterson .... . ....... .. New Brunswick.. Catskill, N. Y ......... New Brunswick ..... New Brunswick.. Boston, Mass ..... Bound Brook .... Perth Amboy ...... Brooklyn, N. Y ...... Cranford ............ Riverside ...... Trenton ..... Philadelphia, Pa ...... ..... .Beta Theta Pi House ..Delta Upsilon House .Beta Theta Pi House ..Delta Upsilon House 30 Winants Hall ......Delta Upsilon House .....102 Winants Hall ........22 Hertzog Hall .204 Redmond Street Hertzog Hall ........Highland Park .....101 Bayard Street ...,....COllege Farm ......ClIi Psi Lodge .....Perth Amboy K. E. House ......Zeta Psi House .....97 Winants Hall 15 Winants Hall 1906 CLASS SONG AIR 5- fha' Qifizzg Taper. Come class of nineteen-six, as brothers, Letls blend our voices in a song, And make the welkin ring around us In joyous chorus loud and strong. We'll sing the exploits of the present, We'll sing the triumphs of the past, We'll sing success to every fellow Of nineteen-six from first to last. Dear Rutgers, we of nought-six greet thee, Kind, loving mother of us all, Hearing thy children's faintest whisper, Attending to their every call. Weave often stood beneath the shadow Of grey-walled Queen's dear to our hearts, We've felt the thrill of college spirit Her every ivied stone imparts. Fond mother, we of nought-six love thee, Thou'st been our guardian now for years, We love thy every nook and corner, And when we part 'twill be with tears. Though time rolls by and we are scattered Oier all our land from east to west, May we of nineteen-six remember Uur Alma Mater l Rutgers l Bestl Let's drink then, nineteen-six, together One glorious toast to all our band, We've stood for years shoulder to shoulderg For years to come so let us stand . And when at last we all are ferried One by one across the Styx, May we all then be reunited Forever l Rutgers nineteen six I - IN MEMORIAM WILLIAM FREDERICK DAVIDSON CLASS OF 1906 Born February 13, 1881 Died July 8, 1904 68 i.L gm,U.,,L,4 History of the f 'fT j,j,x Summary: Class organized ' September '23, 1903, victor- ' ious in the first Hag and rope ' rushes. First annual banquet Hg A held january 29, 'Olly class ,V:,V 'V,'.'r Z ii represented on all varsity ath- ii , ' a letic teams. , 'gl The class returned to their M college duties September '21, 1905. A few members did If I V,A: A not come back, consequently 1, the roll was reduced to fifty C. D. M HEW, names. Then followed a President period of double responsibility and care, for, beside the ordinary affairs, it was the time embracing the guardianship of the new wards of the class. As guardians, the class found it necessary to frame a code of rules defining their own privileges, and the obligations of certain others toward those privileges. The rules were beauti- fully printed and posted in conspicuous places. Transgression often caused embarassing conse- quences to offenders. The flag rush showed the sterling worth of that illustrious Class of 1907. The class worked under great disadvantages, owing to the superior number of their opponents, and to the fact that the rush was stopped before the Sophomores could take the Hag from their adversaries who had it at the start. Official count, however, showed that they had more hands upon the flag than the other side in proportion to number of contestants. The rope rush was another example of fear- lessness in the face of superior numbers. VVardrobe was disregarded when the class was again called Class of 1907 upon to maintain its honor. The rush was con- ducted according to new rules. Ropes enclosed the held and five Freshman were admitted to take care of every four Sophomores. Thirty minutes was given in which to do thisg every second was needed. lt is true that the difference in numbers was not as great as in former years, still it was enough to foretell defeat. The class considered it their duty to maintain orderabout the campus, and they were often obliged to eject disorderly Freshmen from Queens. Smok- ing of pipes was discouraged among Freshmen as being unhealthy and demoralizing for growing boys. Thoughtful admonition had caused our charges to conduct themselves calmly and sedate- lyg but our advice was scattered to the four winds of heaven on the day of the Firemen's par- ade. Then the Sophomores were chagrinned to see their clientes escorting the visiting bands to and from the railway station. Though this was a greater blunder in itself the uniform of those escorts, peach baskets for helmets and knicker- bockers, was entirely out of order. The second annual banquet was held January 11, 1905. It was an occasion enjoyed by all present. The witty introductions of toastmaster josh and HDietrich'sl' toast will long be re- membered and associated with the pleasant thoughts and reminiscences of the evening. The Freshmen held their banquet a few days later. Their banquet committee chairman did not attend owing to a pressing engagement. Later in the evening he was the guest of the Class of 1907 at a dinner held in his honor. Here he was not troubled with the arrangement of the menu as he 69 had been for the banquet which his class-mates meanwhile enjoyed. An inter-class relay race was run with the Class of 1906 on the night of the gymnastic meet with U. of P. The race was very exciting from start to finish. The men of the 1907 Class team were Wilixiert, Esselstyn, Keenan and Pollock, they won the race, the time being four minutes and eleven seconds. The team and their loyal classmates were confident of victory even if public judgment was against them. Inter-class Wrestling and cane-spree bouts were held and honors were unevenly divided, 12-6 in favor of 1906.J Several members of the class have made the gymnasium, track, baseball and football teams, one made the college relay team, which won second place in the intercollegiate meet at Phila- delphia. Outside of athletics the class is represented on the Glee and Chess Clubs g institutions which are as equally instrumental in adding to the renown and glory of Rutgers as other organizations. The history of the earlier years of all classes are, in the main, similar. It deals with rushes and individual contests. Some classes surpass others in ability, activity and victory. 1907 has been such a class, history shows it to have been un- usually successful in whatever it has undertaken. This chapter brings to a close the story of such events. Shall we say that in the future the class, leaving succeeding classes to iight out their own battles, will cease its rivalry with other classes-rivalry which is often brought about by custom-and rejoicing in acheivements of the past, follow triumphantly the example of that noble and illustrious Class of 1905 Which is about to leave Alma Mater to fight the battle of life. T' - : If i ifkx , ieaiigi . 70 PRESIDENT. ....... . Class of 1907 l'liLL-Zzjv, Zafu, Zfr, ZIYP, Zazu. Zc'z'z'11 ,' flaorzz, fx,ll4ffl?l'.S', 1907. OFFICERS VICE PRESIDENT ..... SECRETARY.. ...... TREASURER ...... PIISTORIAN ...... NU1l'l6.Y. CHARLES CHAMBERS ARMSTRONG ..... JOHN LOUIS BAKER .................. .... RALPIi LESTER BEACH ,.... HARLAN BESSON ........... ABRAHAM BLUM ...... HUGO BLUM ................... LIARRY FRANK BREVVER ..... RANDOLPH CREAMER ..... RALPH PRICE DAVIES ..... SOLOMON ESDERG ...... . ..... X' LAWRENCE ESSELSTYN ........ 1' CHARLES BURHANS FINCH ..... HOWARD SOMERvILLE GIES ..... J. M. GONZALES ........ ................... THOMAS DEAN l'lALLOXVELL, JR ...... LEXVIS ARTHUR HEATH .............. AJAX HEMMER, JR ........................ WILLIAM RICHARD HCUGI-IES, JR ...... l'IARRIS ALLISON JEMISON ................ ALBERT RITTENHOUSE JOHNSON, JR ..... EDWARD LOUIS IQEENAN .............. FREDERICK ADAM IQULLMAR ...... SLU? College C0 1: ries. S S S S S I C S S S C S S S S S S S S S S S C 71 lI'ef5z'f1'c'11fc5 South River ..... Tre Ixto 11 ......... East Ora II ge ..... Hoboken. ....... .. New Brunswick ..... ..... New Brunswick ...... ..... Elizabeth ......... Petersburg. . . .. New Brunswick Perth A111l3Oj'.... Claverack, N. Y ..... ..... Kingston, N. Y. Newark, N. J .... San Juan, P. R , XV. I ...... ..... ,Jersey City...... New Brunswick Newark ......... . .... .... . New B1'l'l1lSYV1Cli New Bruhswick. .... .,.. . Raven Rock ........ Somerville .. Jaruesburg ...... C. D. B'l'AYI'lEXY S. GIES ESSELSTYN A. HEATH B. WHEELER 13001115 South River D K E House 37 Hertzog Hall Delta Upsilou House 20 Church Street 20 Church Street Chi Phi House 220 Suydanx Street 151 Somerset Street Perth Amboy 151 Somerset Street Chi Psi Lodge 37 Hertzog Hall ..Beta Theta Pi House Zeta Psi House 342 George Street D. K. E. House 282 ReCl11IoIId Street I7 Codwise Avenue 2 High Street D. K. E. House 29 Hertzog Hall N zz 111 ex FRANCIS GRANOER LANG ..... GEGRGE ALLEN LEUKEI,...... HARRY AARON NIARMER .......... CLIFFORD DAVIDSON lVl'AYHEXY.. WALTER ERNEST NELSON ...... ALAN COLE PLUIIE .................... ALEX XVILLIAM QUACKENROSS WALTER FRANK REINHEIMER HARVEY CLIFFORD ROIIINS ...................... VVALTER FREDERICK LU DXYIG ROEDER ...... FREDERICK VVILSON SCOTT. .................. ISAAC VICTOR SLIFESTEIN ,.... JAMES HERBERT SMITH ...... FRANK SANFORD STIMSON ..... HARRX' JOHN STOCKUM ..... ROYAL ARTHUR STOUT ..... ALTON P. SXVAN ........... REUBEN THARI-, JR ............... VINTON DOUGLAS TOMPKINS... RALPH DECKER VAN DUZER... FRANK ROBERTSON VAN SANT ...... THEODORE ROZHEYN VARICIC ...... RUSSELL ELLSYVORTH XVATSON ...... HOWARD IRVING XVHEAT ......... LLOYD BLISS WHEELER ...... CARL VVILCOX YVILMURT ...... RAYMOND PERCY WILSON ..... WALTER HARRIS WILSON ...... WILLIAM SANDERSON XVOODRUFF ..... C0 141' wr lff'SI.lfl'l1t'fX Hornellsville, N. Y.... Eatontown . ........ .. Woodbine ...... Elmer ............ New Market ....... Cranford.. ............ New Brunswick.. XVarSaw, N. Y ..... Rooms Chi Psi Lodge SI Easton Avenue 140 Hamilton Street 2 High Street New Market Cranford ' 98 Albany Street D. K. E. House Roselle Roselle, .............. .. New Brunswicku... . New Brunswick ....... Woodbine .......... New Brunswick .... Linden ............ . Marlton ............. New Brunswick .... Brooklyn, N. Y .... Rahway ............... Trenton . ......... .. ...... Middletown, N. Y ...... ...... Newark ............... New Brunswick ..... New Brunswick ..... ...... Brooklyn, N. Y .... Bl1Ss, N. X ............. .... New Brunswick .... East Millstone .... Metuchen ...... Somerville Highland Park 2 Railroad Avenue 140 Hamilton Street 265 Handy Street Linden 221 Seaman Street 27 Codwise Avenue 12 'Winants Hall Rahway I2 Winants Hall D. K. E. House D. K. E. House 35 College Avenue I7 Harclenberg Street Beta Theta Pi House T25 Paterson Street III Carroll Place East Mi11StOIIe Metuchen Somerville 4 1 wmv - I I nu, Q' Q' 'wal W N rf W A4 ' Q fm' X Y g 5 Q' 05 mggeadnxh .,1 .1 Q -W 1 'ffi' jg -' .r' n 0 X'f'1,L. p:' 'X W ff Lal 'I 1?-'ri ' vii? E NTEQY W Q22 5 ml l?fr' 1W2f ffilgfiffl M Y gig Q1 .AU Lf. wi: xl SHT? Q :yi V ' ..,. ,A . ' ' I -e..,gyiPf' fi 1 - 'ff' 'q A Meng: 73 if 17 1 'sxfj-.1 n i - 1 ' ff 7 fl f f 9U':?'2's' s 1 ' 'fi V1 C Q5 .I f w 5 ? 'f 1 ,A 1 ,P.- 'zz A N ..- , 1, 1:-as 22:1 ut, ' V.v!. V M- ' +1 .J T59 fqsx S' pf S Qx f 5' ,ge Xwi if , pw Xxx' 1 g 9-:SERS 4, ,Q do ffo xr 7 Q up Us v AQ' ' '5- 3 2 PM ' l7r'M'rf Phi Yu . 2+ History of the Class of 1908 Lavish praise, fulsome eulogy, Hattering expressions V' poured in profusion one upon A 731 the other-shall the historian V4 fl of the Class of Nineteen , , Hundred Eight resort to these? i f ,j With such a theme, he does I l not need them. Let him in chronicle the deeds of his grip-Zi, class-from those who read iii .'-Z'f ii iiii 'ii': the record will come the '-1i words of praise for the D-J' FISHER achievements. President The college year had not yet opened when the Sophomores made the Qn acquaintance of the class of nineteen eight. the afternoon of Tuesday, September twentieth, a cannon-rush took place on 'the' campus, and the Freshmen won. ' On the evening of that day the Sophomores made ready to put their carefully prepared procla- mations before the public gaze. Sad it is that such zealous literary endeavour should have come to naught-but the men of nineteen eight felt it their duty to keep a rigid censorship. So they determined to destroy all copies of the document in question. They did so quite effectually, in spite of the Sophomoresl rather natural objections. When on the next morning the new students assembled in Kirkpatrick Chapel, it was found that their number was the largest of all recorded classes. After the exercises in chapel were over, the rival classes went to the field in Bleeker Place. Weary, inexperienced, unknown to each other, the men of nineteen eight entered the flag-rush determined to win-and when the struggle ceased, and the count was made, it was shown that they had fulfilled their resolve. The rope rush followed in a few days. The men of the entering class were by a new ruling deprived of the great numerical advantage usually given them, but they experienced little difficulty in tying up their opponents, and winning the rush. Soon the men of nineteen eight were seen working faithfully and skillfully on the gridiron. On Varsity and Scrub they played, and before long the Scarlet 'LR appeared on the breasts of two of them. The athletes of nineteen eight gave of their time and muscle to their Alma Mater, and gained such strength and ability that in the class football game the Sophomores were 73 ' evidently outplayed before the contest was called on account of darkness. The Fall meet, Where a nineteen eight man won the mile run, the basket- ball games, in which the victorious nineteen eight team brought new honour to the College on the Hill. The class banquet, which was enlivened by the enforced presence of two Sophomores-these the Historian but calls to the reader's mind. And in conclusion, he pledges to Rutgers College the constant devotion and unfailing service of the Class of Nineteen Hundred and Eight. Class of 1908 VELI,-Ricka, Rzzfka, Ricka, Rzzdccz, Ricka, Raclea, Rezgfhl Bow wow, Rulgers '08 OFFICERS PRESIDENT ................................ VICE PRESIDENT ...... SECRETARY ........... TREASURER ..... .......... HISTORIAN ............ ....... J, FISHER D. BLACK B. M. MILLER E. S. BROKAVV R. A. LUFUURROYV Names C' o u rses ROBERT GOLDSMITH ALLEN ....... EDWIN LEXVIS BAIER .................. THOMAS STANLEY BENSTEAD ..... WILL VVISEMAN BERDAN ............. CLARANCE ARBIINGER BINGHAM. CUNNINGSTON DRYSDALE BLACK HENRY BLANCHARD ........... 1 ....... HIARRY FRANK BREVVER ............. EUGENE SUYDAM BROKAW ......... CHARLES BLOOMEIELD CARMAN. FRANK TAINTOR CORIIIN, JR ...... STOCKTON CRANMER .................. HERXVEY STANTON DE GROODT... LINDSLEY DODD .......................... WARREN LIVINGSTON DU BOIS .... CHARLES ELLIOT ....................... HARRY SAMUEL FELLER ......... DOUGLAS JUDSON FISHER ...... ALVIN BARTHOLDI Fox. .......... RAYMOND MCNAIR GARDNER ...... MORRIS JAMES GLUCK ............. VVILBER THOMAS GOWEN ........... JAMES GRIEVE ...... . ......... ....... THEODORE AMERMAN HAGENIAN ........ MORGAN HAND, JR ...... . ........... HERBERT LANGLEY HARRIES ..... MORRIS HEDDEN .... . ........... . ....... CHRISTIAN HEIDT, JR ......... THORNTON MILLS HORLER ........ HAROLD FREDERICK HOYEY ...... NATHAN KAUFMAN ................,.... ELMER WILLIAMSON KENT ........ ALFRED JOYCE KILMER ........... ROBERT AUSTIN KLEIN ............... HORATIO SEYMOUR LANG, JR ...... GEORGE CONDE LAYVSING ....... Residences S Red Bank ................ S New Brunswick ....... S Arlington ............. S Paterson ......... S Elizabeth ........ S Montague ....... S Newton ........... Elizabeth .......... L S Bound Brook ....... S Rahway ............. S Oxford, N. Y. ..... C Rooms ......135 Winants Hall ........95 Albany Street ....163 College Avenue ......26 Hertzog Hall ......Chi Phi House .........Chi Phi House ......90 Winants Hall Chi Phi House ......Chi Psi Lodge ......................RahWay ...........Delta Phi House Somerville ....... ............... 1 4: Hertzog Hall Jersey City ...... . ...... Delta Upsilon House Somerville ....... ..................... S Omerville Tennent ............ ..................... T ennent Scotch Plains ........... ....... 1 63 College Avenue New Brunswick ....... ............ 1 99 Burnet Street Sayreville .............. ....... B eta Theta Pi House Perth Amboy ........ ................ P erth Amboy Weehawken ...... Perth Amboy Washington, D. Brooklyn, N. Y. Newark ............ New Brunswick S C S S S S S S S C S C S S C S S S S S C S S C 75 Jersey City ......... Albany, N. Y .... f Newark .............. Perth Amboy ........ High Fans, NI'Y.'fffff Ocean City ................. C ...... ...........Zeta Psi House ........Perth Amboy .........Chi Psi Lodge ......61 Winants Hall ......24 Hertzog Hall . ...... Zeta Psi House . .... .Delta Phi House .....87 Winants Hall ........Zeta Psi House Newark ........99 Winants Hall Ellzabeth ................ ......................... E lizabeth New Brunswick ....... Buffalo, N. Y ................ Hornellsville, N. Y ........ Richboro, Pa .............. .225 Townsend Street .. .147 College Avenue ........9O Winants Hall .....Chi Psi Lodge ........12 Hertzog Hall 1Vzz 711 es C011 rses EDXVARD HOWARD LAWSON ....... .. C HAIZRY LEYENSON .................. S ROBERT ALLEN LUFBURROXX' ..... S WILLIAM NASH MACNEILL ........ C ALFRED JOHN NTAIINKEN .............,. S CLIFFORD LEA MASON .........,............ S WILLIA M HENRY NICCORAIICK, JR ....... C BENJAMIN MIYRSI-IALL NIILLER ........... S JOHN YYILLIAM NTOFFETT ....... ........... S GEORGE YVASHINGTON NIULHERON ...... S IRVING LOVEJOY OWEN ...................... S CLARENCE LOUIE PFERSCH .. ......... S OTTO REINER ......................... S S SCHUYLER LEONARD RUST ..... S DANIEL SAFFORD ....................... S WILLIAAI PERSONET SEDDON ......, S PIAROLD RICHARD SEGOINE ............ S ALEXANDER BURTON SI-IUFELDT ..... S MORGAN GRAY SMITH ...,............. S MARTIN SOMERS STEELMAN ........ S RUDOLPH FREDERICK STEINKE ...... S ARTHUR CUNNINGHAM SWIFT ...... S RICHARD COX RICE ................ SAMUEL ROYCE TAVERNER ....... S ARCHIBALD TAYLOR ............... L WILLIAM TEITELBAUM ..............,. S CHARLES THIERS THOMPSON ...... L AURELIUS MILEORDTRACY, JR ....... L HORACE EDWARD TREAT ..,......... S ABRAHAM UREvITz .................... S HERMAN VANDERVVART, JR ....... C RODNEY VAN GILDER ...,.......... S RAFAEL SERAFIN VIDAL ......... S HARRY ARTHUR VOSBURGH ......... S CHARLES MAXWELL AVARNER ..... S RIPLEY WATSON .......................... C CLARENCE ALEXANDER WILIIUIQ ..... S GEORGE ROBERT YVILSON ............. S LLOYD RICHARD YVILSON .......... S THEODORE WYNIAN, JR .... .. S l?f.v1'dc11rcs Washi ngton, I J. C ..... Y YY oorlbine .................... Atlantic Highlands ...... Brooklyn, N. Y ...,...... Union Hill .............. Trenton .............. Perth ixlllbiby ...... Oxford, N. Y ...... Fords ....,........... Trenton ...........,...... Wyoming, N. Y ....... Hoboken ............. NcWark ............... New Brunswick.. .. New Brunswick ....,. Brooklyn, N. Y ....... Paterson ............ .. Point Pleasant ....... Kingston, N. Y. Catskill, N. Y ...... Ocean City ........ Elizabeth ................ Shrewsbury .,............ Ballston Spa. N. Y ...... Somerville .............. Hoboken ........ Plainfield .......... Hudson, N. Y ...... Freehold ................. West Hoboken ....... Hackensack ......... Petersburg ........... San Juan, P. R ....... Warsaw, N. Y ...... Elizabeth ........... Jersey City ............. Catskill, N. Y ............... .... Poughkeepsie, N. Y ..... Metuchen .................. Somerville ........... SPECIAL S NOT CANDHMTES N a 112 es C' 0 1: rses FRANK LOFLAND COSGROVE ...... .. S RALPH PRICE DAYIES ............. S EDXVARD BENEDICT KELLY ....... S JOSEPH WATSON MESSLER ....... S FRANK HERMYAN STOBAEUS. ...... S WILLIAM VALENTINE THOMAS ,,,.,,, C STIRLING VAN WINKLE ..,........,. S 76 TUDENTS FOR A D EGREE 16esz'cz'evzces Zanesville, O .......... New Brunswick ....... Elizabeth ................ Allentown ........... Newark ................... New York City ......... Rutherford ............. Rooms .....25 Division Street 36 Schurenian Street 113 Winants Hall .......Beta Theta Pi House .......17 Winants Hall ......,............Trenton 15 Winants Hall .......Chi Psi Lodge ....................Fords .....................Trenton .....5-L Hassart Street ..............,...HOl30k6H .................Newark ......82 Carroll Place 118 New Street .....11 Winants Hall ........29 Hertzog Hall .......113 Winants Hall .......43 Hertzog Hall .......4-5 Hertzog Hall Elizabeth .....Zeta Psi House K. E. House Somerville Hoboken ........College Farm ......2O Hertzog Hall ...........College Farm ......4-6 Dennis Street 12 Hertzog Hall 39 Hertzog Hall . 14-S Somerset Street 213 Hamilton Street Elizabeth Beta Theta Pi House ........39 Hertzog Hall U. House ..............Metuchen 17 Winants Hall Rooms ,.......81 Easton Avenue ..151 Somerset Street ........................Elizabeth K. E. House ........G2 Winants Hall ........37 Hertzog Hall Beta Theta Pi House I I M . 'I65 RUTGERS COLLEGE LEAGUE OF NEW JERSEY NEW BRUNSWICK, NEW JERSEY ORGANIZED JANUARY 15, IQO2 OFFICERS Presldent VIce-President WILLIAM S. MYERS, '89 CORNELIUS D. VREELAND, '91 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE - Chalrman Vlce-Chalrman JOHN W. HERBERT, '72 WILLIAM S. MYERS, '89 ERNEST H. RAPALJE, '00 EDWARD B. VOORHEES, '81 CORNELIUS D. VREELAND, '91 HENRY S. MARELLI, '97 Secretary-Treasurer ERNEST H. RAPALJE, 'oo J. BAYARD KIRKPATRICK, '66 CHARLES B. LUDLOW, '86 JOHN M. MILLS, '97 JOHN W. METTLER, '99 RUTHERFORD C. HAVEN, '02 The Association of the Alumni of Rutgers College ,,,,v.,.,,,vvvVvv.,-V-.fvswvv-A President. ...... ......... j OIYIN N. CARPENDER, '66. fHiJN. WILLIAM H. VREDENIIURGH, V. Pr .d t J REV. NVILLIAM E. GRIEEIS, '69, 'Ce es' CH S Hox. LOUIS H. SCI-IENCK, '74, HON. M. LINN BRUCE, '84-. Secretary ....... ...... X Y. EDXYIN FLORANCE, '85. Treasurer ......... ..... ...... IRVING S. llpsoN, '81. Orator Primarius ....... ......PRoE. EDWARD A. BOXVSER, LL.D. Orator Secundus ....... ...... P IIILIP M. BRETT, '92. Biographer .......... ...... ...... , 1 Alumni Trustee Nominating HENRY A' NEILSON' 73' Committee ................. . .... . .1 MYRON T. SCUDDER, '82. Chief Inspector of Election of Alumni Trustee .................... PROF. A. A.TITSXVORTH, C.E., '77. TRYING HOAGLAND, '90, Assistant Inspectors ............ .. HOWARD V. WALDRON ,93' Chairman of the Standin '59. , 68. REY. WILLIAM H. S. DEMAREST, D,D.,'83. REV. JOSEPH R. DURYEE, D.D., '74-. Committee ................. ..........,.,..... l PROF' LOUIS BEVIER' JR PH-DW '78' fJOHN N. CARPENDER, '66, President ex oliicio. W. EDWIN FLORANCE, '85, Secretary ex olicio. TRYING S. UPSON, '81, Treasurer ex officio. TERM EXPIRES. JACOB E. WARD, '75, june, 1905 THEODORE STRONG, '83, June, 1905 H. A SMITH, '87, june, 1905 X - O, - ' REV. OHN H. RAVEN, D.D., '91, une,1905 btandmb Commltteem 4 CHARLES BRADLEY, '76, lime, 1906 ' PROF. A. A. TITSWORTH, C.E., '77, june, 1906 REV. WILLIARI S. CRANMER, D.D., '82 june, 1906 MAURICE J. THOMPSON, '89, june, 1906 T1-IEODORE B. BOORAEM, '81, june, 1907 ROBERT B. LITVTELL, '95, june, 1907 CHARLES A. RUNK, '74, june, 1907 LREV. CLIFFORD P. CASE, 97, june, 1907 77 The Rutgers College Association of the City of New York uninnInnnunuInnunuiunl ORG.-XNIZEIJ 1892. INcoRPoR,ITED 1902 ANNUAL NIEETING MARCII 24, 1905 OFFICERS President ............ ........ L IEUT.-GUM. M. LINN BRUCE, '84- Vice President ........ .................... I QOIBERT E. FARLEY, '92 Treasurer ......... .. .......... CI-IAS. E. PATTISON, '84 Secretary ....... ......... D . W. I-IAGEMAN, '97 DIRECTORS For One Year XIVILLIAM S. MYERS, '89 PROF. LOUIS BEVIER, JR., '78 WAIIREN A. MAYOU, '90 For Two Years F. G. NIEYER, '84 PROF. EDYVARD B. VOORHEES, '81 78 1 The Battalion COMMANDANT CAPTAIN SAMUEL EWING SMILFY. 15th U. S. Infantry. FIELD AND STAFF Cadet Major-CHARLES A. MORRIS Cadet Captain and Adjutant-D. T. MASON. Cadet First Lieutenant Quartermaster and Commissary- DALE C. ROBERTS. COMPANY A Cadet Captain-F. HOLSTEIN Cadet First Lieutenant-VV. B. ROLL Cadet Second Lieutenant-Ii. VV. SENG Cadet First Sergeant-DOANE. Caffe! Scrgezrnix BENEDICT, AHRENS, BRowN. ' C'zz1I'UZ C01'f707'l?f.9 , HUGHES, SWAN, VVILSON COMPANY B Cadet Captain-A. V. DEHART Cadet First Lieutenant-1. R. VALENTINE Cadet Second Lieutenant-R. VV. COBB Cadet First Sergeant-BRINKERHOFF. Cade! Sergmzzls WARDWELL, MoRRoW, ' DECKER Cadezf Cwjnorzzls HEATH, F VAN DUZER, 5T1MsoN COMPANY C Cadet Captain-G. R. KOEHLER Cadet First Lieutenant-G. B. FORD Cadet Second Lieutenant-B. A. SICKLES Cadet First Sergeant-DEVAN. L61 - A S1 Gzafel .SL'l1Q'C'IZI1f5 ALLEN, ASHWELL, JENKINS Gzdcl Clllf 111'f :lx TOMPKINS, ROBINS, VVHEAT COMPANY D Cadet Captain-H. B. ANGUS Cadet First Lieutenant-E. KI. DAVIS Cadet Second Lieutenant-F. R. MASON Cadet First Sergeant-F. O. MITTAG. Crzrlf! .Scf'1Q'f'lI11f5 ACTON, HILL, EDWARDS. Cfzdcl C 0l17U1'!lfS HALLIWELL, MARMER, THARP. NON-COMMISSIONED STAFF Cadet Sergeant Major-H. M. FALES Cadet Quartermaster and Comrnissionary Sergeant4 T. I-I. BRUCE. Color Guard Cadet Color Sergeant-A. Brdgger. F ie!!! fWzc5z'5 Cadet Drum Major-J. E. PEARCE Cadet Chief Musician-A. B. SMITH Cadet Principal Musician-F. B. KURTZ Cadet Sergeant-N. S. M OORE. 82 Heroes in uniform, boys in blue, Sons of your fathers, here's to you l Noble and strong in battle's strife, Marching 'mid plugs of tobacco rife- Brass-buttoned heroes of drill, Spit l spit l Forward in Company, right by hie- l'Gimme a chaw, Brink l -awful l vile l Company 'renshiun l Dress up l-Rest l Here's where you see Cap. Smiley's best. Brass-buttoned heroes of drill, Spit l spit l Right by spittoolns, in columns of four- Pass me the ehewins-I need some more- Fire by squads at Morrisys shoes- Ready l Aim! Fire l Turn her loose l Brass--buttoned heroes of drill, Spit l Spit l ,.PcZz'rg7l 33 Rutgers College, l38th Commencement ORDER OF EXERCISES OVERTURE, Srradella . . . Flofow INVOCATION REVERIE, Forget . . . . Lazy HENRY DYER COOK ........ Millwood, N. Y Third Classical Honor- The lnliuence of Commercialismf' XM ARTIN LUTHER SCHENCK ..... New Brunswick, N. J Second Classical Honor- Looking Sidewisef' WILLIAM KENNETH FLANAGAN .... New Brunswick, N. J Oration-MA Debt of the Press. TWO STEP, H The Army and Navy . . . UNITIM- MARTIN LUTHER SCHENCK ..... New Brunswick, N. J Rhetorical Honor-U The Call of the Unknown. EMIL EISENHARDT FISCHER ...... Elizabeth, N. J Oration- The Tyranny of Public Opinionfl SONG, 'L From the VVizard of Oz . . . fl1'z'z'rbc!!. LOUIS WILLIAMSON CONOVER ..... New Brunswick, N. J First Classical Honor-H The Age of Business. RICHARD HEUSER ........ Matawan, N. J Third Scientific Honor-U Forces That Win. MARCH, H Vindicator ...... 136643- CHARLES WAGNER ........ Elizabeth, N. J Second Scientific Honor-U Contrasts in the Life of Napoleon. FREDERICK ALTON PRICE, JR ....... Elizabeth, N. J First Scientihc Honor-LlThe Philosophy of Absolutionf' BALLAD, 'lEyes of Blue. . . .... F2'S656?'- DEGREES CONFERRED PRIZES AWARDED INTERLUDE, 'L From Prince of Pilsen Efzgfafzder. DANIEL FREDERICK BURNETT .... . Newark, J Master's Oration-'L Justice. B E N E DICTI O N 2-INALE, The Y. M. C. Af ,.... , Brimer. Enfcusezz' an armani of cz'eZz'verz'fzg' ilzc Rheiovfimf Hofzor Orzziioiz, S4 DEGREES CONFERRED Dcgrfz' of Bavlzclol' of Arls Cr1117'C1'ra'a' UII Cazzdidafcs in Comxve ARTHUR LE GRAND BERGER CHARLES ROBERT BLUNT LOUIS WILLIAMSON CONOYER LIENRY DYER COOK JOHN NORRIS FIELD EMIL EISENHARDT FISCHER A.'V1l.I.I.XM IXTENNETI-I FLANAGAN AVILLI.-KM I'IOl3ART GIEBEL CHARLES NVILLIAM LAMBERT JOI-IN :ALEXANDER LINNETT MARTIN LUTHER SCI-IENCK WILLIAM IJENRY STEXVART, JR. LOUIS FREDERIC VVOLF Dcgrcc of Baclzelm' Of Scfclzce C GEORGE VVOLFE BAUER FRED LE ROY BROWN VVILLIAM JAMES DOUGLAS, JR. GARDNER SAM DRIVER STEPHEN CLIFTON GARRISON FREDERICK VVILLIAM GASTON GEORGE HENRY GOWEN RICHARD HEUSER ALFRED -ELLET HITCI-INER HARRY JAY HOWELL MILTON SHORTLIDGE LEY CHARLES BERNARD LIPMAN JOHN MELLOR RIDGVVAY FELL MOON HERIZERT VVILLS MOORE LEWIS IWAX Degree of .AfIU.S'If'677' ROBERT ANDERSON COOKE 'OO GEORGE W. GULICK 701 FRANK MAIQTIN PIUMMEL ,OI ALEXANDER FARREL JOHNSON ,OI 011fc1'1'0d an Cazzdidatcs in Course FRANK ADRAM MORRIS GEORGE .LXNDREVV MOUNI JOHN LRVTNG NELSON CHARLES FRANCIS OVNEILL HAROLD BLACKMAN OSBORN LIERMAN ARTHUR PLUSCH FREDERIC ALTON PRICE, JR. VVARNER RISLEY RERTRAM FROTHINGI-IAM SI-IIVLER VVHITELAXV REID STRYKER THOMAS EARL VAN VVINKLE FREDERICK GEORGE CARL VOLRERT CHARLES VVAGNER FRITZ CARL WITTIG FRANK CARRINGTON VVOODRUFF WELL YOU NG of Arts Corzfcrrcd CONRAD ORTON NIILLIKEN ,OI ALONZO RANSON ,OI VVILLIAM EWELL SIMPSON 'OI IiENRY SALMON VAN WVOERT ,OI Degrcc of Eafasilca' of Sfievzfc C01ZfC'7'7'8Cl JAMES EDWARD ASHMEAD '97 JOHN FRANCIS TINSLEY 'OO RAYMOND VAN ELXRSDALE CARPENTER yQ7 DANIEL FREDERICK BURNETT ,OI LORYDON MOTT RYNO '98 JAMES LLOYD GARAERANT ,OI WILLIAM PALMER PATTERSON ,OI Dfgrce of Baflzelor of Diz,'i1zify C0'7If!?7'7'Cli GEORGE WY GULICK H01101'd7'3l Degfces Cofzfcrrcd A.M. 'LLEXVIS CALDWELL VVOOLEY .............. ..... . .T1'Cl1fOf11, N. J. CE. GEORGE MCCLELLAN TAYLOR ............ ...Red Bank, N. J, D.D. RLEVEREND WILLIAM PIERSON MERRILL .... ..ChicagO, IH. D.D. REVEREND ALFRED HOWARD DEBIIAREST .... ..CatSkiII, N. Y. D.D. REVEREND ASHER ANDERSON .......... ,,B0StQn, M355. LL.D. RICHARD VLIET LINDABURY ........................ Newark, N. J. HONORS IN SPECIAL SUBJECTS In Latin .........,...... ............... .LOUIS VVILLIAMSON CONOVER In Greek ................... .... L OUIS W'ILLIAMSON CONOVER 111 MatlIe1I1atICS CC1z1SSica1J. .. ,.I'IENRY Dym C0011 In Mathematics CScieDtiEcJ . . . . . RICHARD HEUSER B'lll.lT.XRY lvl-IPAIRTMIENT. Cadets most distinguished in Military Science and Tactics whose nantes will he inserted in the United States Arniy Register for 1905: Cadet Captain .................... . ..lTRIil3ERll' .LXLTON PRICE, JR. Cadet Major . .,.......... ..'l'noxi.xs E.xRLE XLXN XYINKLE Cadet Second Lieutenant .................... fri!-IORGIE :XNDREXV Mot'NT Cadets who have shown special aptitude for Military Service and who will he so reported to the Adjutant-General U. S. :Xrniy and to the Adjutant- General of New Jersey: Cadet Captain ....... '. Cadet Major ............ . Cadet Second Lientenant. .. Cadet Captain ........................ Cadet ..FRl-EIJERIL' .AXLTON PRICE, JR. ..'l'HoM.xs EARLE XYAN XYiNRi.E ,.GEoRGE .XNDREW NIOFNT ..Jo1-IN BRIEN l3RowN First Lieutenant and .-Xdjntant ........ l'l.xROLu BL.xeRM.xN OSBORN PRIZES AWARDED SENIOR 1fR1zEs Snydani Prize for Composition .... ,... . .. Brodhead Classical Prize ...... .. Bradley Mathematical Prize, ............ . Appleton Memorial Prize in Moral Phi-S losophy ...... ...... , ................. . Bowser Engineering Thesis Prize ...... .. liussing Prizes for Extenipore Speaking.. Class Of 1976 Political Philosophy Prize.. Bradley Prize in Roman-Law ........,.... Luther Latlin Memorial Prizes in Meta-S physics ....,................ ........ ISI lad lsd CH.xRLEs YVAGNER Louis XA-'ILLTAMSON CONOVER 1'llt'H.Xl4D I-IEL'sER IAIENRY DYER Cooli Loris XMILLIAMSON CoNOvER W'.xRNER RPISLEY Ist ERHL .EISENHARDT FISCHER h'lAR'l'IN LUTHER ScHENc1q C 1-1 ARLES W AGN ER .Lotns XV1Li.I.misON CoNOrER ist HENRY TDYER Cool: 2d :XRTHUR LE GRAND BERGER Classical Prize in Logic... ..,.. J. . ...Lotus XNlLl.I.XMSON CONOVER J U NIOR PRIZE Ralph N. Perlee Junior Orator Prize ....... SIMON BLOCKER SOPHOMORE PRIZES Myron W. Smith Memorial Prizes fort ist NlAL'RlCl5 TRVING LINDRl'l'H KAIN Declamation .... ..... . ............ 2 2d l'lARRY XMILLI.-XM NOBLE Peter Spader Prizes in Modern His-S ist J. HARVEY RIURPI-IY tory ...........,................. lzd M.xuR1eE IRVING LINDRTTH Kam FRESH MAN PRIZES Tunis Quick English Graniinar and Spell- ing Prize ............................ GEORGE ALLEN LEUKEL Sloan Classical Entrance EX2l111'l112tfi01IgISt SOLOMON ES-BERG Prizes .............................. 22:1 GEORGE ALLEN LEUREL Barhour Prizes in Speaking. . ...fist R1NL1'H DECICER VAN DUZER l2d ALEX WVILLIAM QUACRENROSS GEN ERAL PRIZES Van Doren Mission Essay Prize .......... PIIENRY JOHN VX'X'ERBERG Van Vechten Prize for Essay On Eoireigui Missions ....... . ...............,. SIMON BLOCKER 86 utgers ollege Junior xhibition 'l'i'Es1J.xx' Eviixixcsg, JUNE 21S'r, 1904, EIGI'I'l' o'cr-oCK. T110 Robert F. Bullmzffzzv G'lj7l1llUSZ'1lllI. Overture- Poet and Peasant ........,... von Suppe INI 'O Cl! TION. Song- The Lost Chord .................. Sullivan TETIZRMAN HliliI'TLl1IlE T'TOI I'ER ................... Monaey, N. Y Democracy ancl Eclucation. Two-Step-''lflarney Iaegeru ........ . ........ Brittin C1-1.ixRLEs PARKER XNrI.uUR ................. New Brunswick, N. I Profit Sharing: A Solution of the Labor Problem. Schottische- The Song Bird ................ Minn RORER1' 'WEEKS Com: ............. ' ...,....... .... N ewark, N. I Our Merchant Marine, M arcli-'flmperativeu .......,............... Vifilks JAMES How.xRD BR1NKERHoEF ............ .... I ersey City, N. I America. Song'-From The Man From China ........ Iervine T'TARRY BAREMORE JLXNGUS ........................ Elizabeth, N. I Dangers That Threaten Our Nation. Rag Time- Kentucky Ephu ................. Clare WELCOME VVll,,LLXM BENDER. .4 ............... Elizabeth, N. I Marcus Alonzo Hanna. March- Prince of Pilsenu .............. Englancler .A.LBERT LEEDS S'r1LLMAN ................ .... I -Tobolcen, N. I ' The Yellow Peril. Militaire- General Hard Tack ..... .... B righani SIMON BLOCKER ...... .................... .... C I hicago, Ill The Small College. Selection-i'Piff, Pat, Pont ................ Ieronie APVARD OF THE RALPH N. PERLEE PRIZE. First Prize. . .' ....,................ Srrro-N BLOCKER Hozzorczblc Mmzfiozz. ............ RGIEIERTL' XNEEKS Corin I BENEDICTION. Galop- The Empire State ......... ..... U nger 87 1' + W 1, W 5 '.a.' Q, .M f 6945, I4 W 432' ' 41 5 Q ,fgr ,MM W av, aj , . tw F, , . v .1 ,ms Q ' . . ' X'.',' ' ,1--L - 11 '.: . . ' ,Il I.: , , f..-I -F 1 .5 ff - J X .4 4. A 1 - R I. ' 'ni ' Q v ' we -. PQ' . , vv ws- .AUM 5 , .u !H-. 1 f ., ,Q r .. fl! If 'f--, Q 6 ' ' Qi? ' A ,w c ,Mx M 76:3 , :pf r jfgv . QA 2 LH' 9 Rv: ,gc 1 -v V ,A v 'x 'Nh ,ww , J We r . 1' f H f' ' 11 11 , , 1 'YN' 4 ,J ' 4 . 'xl' ' x r . if , ' i 'E . 1 . Qs I ' N 3 L 1 l 5 A A fi f V ' ' A, :X 1 I A34 i 1 sf in ' 1- .43 - Q y f 3 i ni k X J . 1 YQ I fig j g -Y 5 gi Q gh? 2552 1 . icf 1-I av 'gl 2 - ' A Em ff ' 41 ' ' Wir :' ' -- fvif f ' f. ..ff!i 134 12 aa 11' Riel . V 'fig 13- W 1' , ' ,,,,. .V ,VV , VAVZ: ,i ',,,, KA X S, , 1 , , 5 - , Zf.' 7x151 'Ei' . . pg ': -4 ' .93ifI-. ',' . , ' A- N '. 4 ,1 'ff ,i'f- V,, 21-'Z '- ' L. ' ' . F . 3121: ' A :- '-ff? 1--H - 7 , 1:5-w .x-,ffl ---x - - f ,- -. 1-wi: - ' 5'-' :,.-1-V:,f,v-Lwizagifc vp. ' Q., 4' 'fy M- ,f12.1'- . -fr -l:'1.4:-m ., - f . 1 r 1. L-1 1 g Q .s,- - . k5Jf.xv -- J. I Y I' 'Q pf? ' ,H 1906 Sophomore Hop COMMITTEE F. N. WARDWELL, Chairman G G ASHWELL W. H BENEDICT, JR. D. A. DECKER A. W. HILL J. R. MACNEILL W. H. WILBER S9 I906 Junior Promenade COMMITTEE W. H- BENEDICT, JR., Chairman D. A. DECKER A. W. HILL J. R. IVIACNEILL G. O. SMALLEY F. N. WARDWELL W. H. WILBER go ff ,' ','1 , , I., , ,Mt ,I , f X , I if f fi! ' 4 1 ff M 'f , lvl , f :Cf , 1 , ,, ff ' , , -1 ' 7 .of X v' J I M iv 4.9 X .vm Xl Q50 U k 1 x . . , 5.1 5 1, W' x , , if- ' if 41-fig.. ' Sw '. Mg j.x,.V,v M. . ,.f V, . - . , ',-,. .w,':Tk,5A...-, .. ,A H, , ,.-.,: 4 f., - W ,ww X -, ,f - ',.fw,,Q3' 5 153 ' A if' A v, fn ' wx 5 , f I 1 GQ x Lg if ' Q4 .. 9 riff! I rm AXY W , 'N ' 6 W , yffm 09 W? 'fWwif5XNx W iz? , f '44 'ft N 3,95 4 I I si E5f,.,,q3gj,3 1 I' r, W4 H M g ' 1 sf fi, E x si! 1 KH I iii' 'iz V M' I . I ,Jil ggi? 4, .:1'f' f ' 4 ' V1 ff ,mug in X , 42,21 ' 1 fm X a 'I 5 xxuixkbx A I, , JA, M , 4' ' 'ki x 1 1 5,355 if 3 lg? KX tt 'ef 37 saw 4, ff 12 L is ' 1 X Q H X 143 ex, ' YQ, Y 1,, ul f 3 'x fx' 4' 'E I ! 1 4 Q 'X f,Sx',pf it f:: ?f' X. x v My .517 1, w At f i' f sn? g f 55 f. 'g , 4 Q' X ' K2 ' if '5 ' I Wpxd Y V, W- 4 .ef x I ft M 4- ' 'W' 6 9 3' 'Z 'f Jw' '54 -:N mx 1, '. 1'-N--V. .,',-, ,,..- ark:-x Q1- nf f K ,, - ',3,, 1 1 , t . ' v , ,V , ,,, N ,iss-M, gg: 1 I - 1-:um , r Afterthoughts of the Junior Prom. The Junior at last is the thing of the past The price was deucecl high. Great Scottl Some forty odd bills are already at hand That will have to be met by the first of May, and l'll get more bye and bye. Over pencil and pad I scratch my head Trying in vain to see just how to make both ends meet when my purse is bled dry. I tear my hair and curse at fate on account of my Too small annuity. ' f Economy's mine for the Springtime term, Here's an end to my rhyme. Hereis a good health to the mucker who brings me a dung If a fellow will live he must pay for his fun, And T had a glorious time.-M. 92 f 1 K l I J , fi le--. -- 7-Q f .fw 'fy L' ,'. '11, V Fw We. ' WX .-x. fx .N ' M N31 W , V3-w'wAL,9 x fr.: f 7 M M. JK Anais' J jgm, wif' W 1 ' has , YM. 1 VM f f?-i.q1.a:Q5.J5 ., N - Q .-- I 5' '-'iWi:',E' V f 9- I . .X,,. . x 7, 5, X f' if R f '4 5 . I 3 ,I S 1 ff!! , 1 K J . ' X 1 A ' jr, . 1 . ' V 11 - XPbaX I . f V .. A ' gig . Q Nw.. X , 6 Sophomore Hop Committee 1907 nllllllwlliu F. G. LANG T. D. HALLIWELL E. L. KEENAN R. THARP V. D. TOMPKINS H. I. WHEAT R. P. WILSON W. S. WOODRUFF 95 1906's Freshman Banquet I-IEIJD 1-MT ALIERICAN 1-IOUSLT, TllEN'l7ON, N. J JANUARX' 3, 1903 TOASTS TOKISI'IlIClSfC'1' .... .. .O I. Scllcmuxmxlilcm. Rutgers', ....... ..... . ..C. R. DLiNc.xN. Facu1ty . .. .... M. I. L.KrXIN. Ladies . . . . WV. H. XN7oon1aL'1fF Ath1etics . .. .... R. E. NV.x'1'soN. 'o5 ..... . . .F. N. W'.xu1m'151,1,. 'o6 . . ......... .... . X. V. Gklscsoky. COMMITTEE. Glioiema C. Di.JLJC.9E,, Cl1CIl.7'lI'IUll. D. B. Mmm. H. E. GREEN. G. G, A.S.llWELL. H. M. BROWN. 94 1906's Sophomore Banquet IEIEILIJ AT C+RAI-IA1N'I 8: l'IcC'ORBIlC'Ii'S, NEVV ISIZUNS JANUiXRY' 25, 100+ T O A S 'lf S VVICISZ 7TUll.YflIIll5fCl' ........ P. Y. R. Yan Arsdale Alma Mater ........................ M. I. L. lX.xrN. Youre the apple of my eye The Fussecl and Fnssers ........ U. I. Scr1ooNM.x14n1:. Un the Avenoof' The Faculty ........................ H. M. Nolsui. My son walk thou not in the way with thenr' The Discipliners ,................. F. N. hNAlilDNVliLL. Athletics ........................... HI hazecl the poor fresh so. The pride of a young man is his strength. .H. E. G1nz15N. The Scnmmy Crawlers .............. A. H. How.-x'r'r. 56-48 ....................... So green, so luriclly green. To the swift is the race. C. S. l3R.1NK1iRHo1fLf. 1906. .. ..... ' ......... ....,. D . B. MINER. So clear to our hearts. COMMITTEE. J. H. MURPHY, CIZUTZTIIZCIIL. L. F. VVooLsroN. G. G. AsHwrsr,L. bl. L. TEDXVARDS. I. R. MAC NEILL. 95 HEIJD I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1906's Junior Banquet AJP GRfXHALI X BIcCC,3RNIICfIi'S, NEJVV BIRUNSXVICIQ JANLTfXRX' 30, 1905 YVI-IA'l S TRUBURS for-LN R. M.xeNun,1., Dealer. No 'l'rumps. . ............ .. .R. B. -louxscm Alma Mater. Clubs. . . ........................ H. lel. lfizisiuix' Were all poor eritters.', Hearts ........... ....,..... X V. I-l. BliNliDlL l', -llc. But love will warm our hearts, whate'er beticlesf' A Pair of Iaelzs ................ F. N. X'V,XRIJXYlil.L I feel as if I were an outcast from the world. Spades ........................ H. M. Palais, IR. Peo Jle who 0'et lonesome realize what Joor 2:- companv they are' linave .............. ........... G . G. Asriwizu. Never suspecting what a noble creature he was meant to be-he never saw what a poor crea- ture he was. Diamonds. . . ....... . . .J. I. M ULLLUAN AAI9O6.7! Joker. 96 1906's Orators RAx'A1ox11 IS. Alfnlxsux, lXfIA1'R1c1s I. I.. Kms, Al. H,xkx'1aY Mu1z1'11Y, In the ordcx' ol' their M,xL'1z1c1s I. L. K,x1x, Hfuelu' W. No1s1.E, Hlixlzx' M. FAL1is, IR., Lows Blcvllilc, 311 I'1i1zcY E Brwwx, -I. H ARYEY M L'1z1'11x', Q 1 Q 15111 N141-3111101-'1-'. UQ Li1e1z1f:N. Prfsidcuf ....... L'YiCt'-IJ7'USI.dUllf .... SC'L'l'C'fCl7'y ....... T7'L'tlSIll'l'7'. . H 1.910 I I.fI7I. . . Fl? lf.S'fI17l.-I .V XY11.1.1,xx1 H. B1cx1s111c'1', I,u1'1s Blsvllsu, 311 H. M.x1zs1f1ALL FALLS, I'H1L11' VAX A1es11.x1.1' SU 17101110 R E z1ppoint111e11t z1cco1'ding R,wA1ox11 B. -IOIIXSUN, -I. I-Ifxlzvlax' ML'1e1'HY, T1-1m1,xs ALLEN DEVAN, j l 'NIOR T. ALLEN DEVAN, l'I14:N14Y M. F..xL1as, H.11c1ev NUUL15, 1QO6'S C.-I PTA lNb lfuoflmll. C. S. B1e1x141a1z11u1f1f, T. ALL1sx Dlzxtxx, XYILLIA 11 Woo111z1'1-'1f, to 111c1'iL. Lows BEv11a1c, Sd PERCY E. BRQWN. R.xYx1ux1J B. JOI-INSUN, KTAURICE 1. I.. Iifux. 123 Cj1eL1iN. Baseball. Q23 D. li. M1N151e IQO6'S OFFICERS. FR E SH M .fl N . ............. ...O. J. SC1-1c:oNM.x1412R . XM F. D.-xx'1n5oN ...D. B. M1N1514. . W. H. XNcmu111zLf1f1f. A. W . I'IILL SOPHOMORE. fJl'C'Sl.dC'lLf ....... ..........,..... . I . V. XLXN A1e51n.xL1-1 !f'1'cr-P1'v.v1'dc'11f .......... .. . H. li. Dcmxli. 5'cc1'zfffz1'y and Y-1'CCI.S'Il7'L'l'. . . . . . . . . .F. O. M1'1 1'.xc.9, VIR., f'fI.,S'f0l'fCZ7L .............. ............ . . R. G. lM1-.xx'. JUNIOR. P7'C'Sl'U?L'lZf ....... ......... . . I. R. N.l.XCNIilI-I.. If7'liCt -Pl'L'.YZdC'I!lJ'. . . . . . H. E. GREEN. SCCl'CfCI7'y ....... .. .R. 'W. rXLLIiN. T1'cc1s111'm' .... PlfXl'07'iU'1Z . . . C71 97 . T. L. NfV11.1i1Nsr1N. M. I. L. RAIN. Intercollegiate Debaters RUTGERS VS. LEHIGH. RUTGERS YS. UNION. WON nv RUTGERS. XVON lu' RU'mIaRs. Team : Team : SIMON BLOCKER, '05 SIMON BLOCKER. '05 WELCOME W. BENDER, 05 NVELCOME W. BENDER, '05 LOUIS BEVIER gn, 'c6 FRANCIS E. WILBER, '05 Alternate-FRANCIS WII.1lER, '05 Alternate-J. H,yRvIax'1XfIUR1-HY, '06 98 ...Q I .au .:., ,z ll Y X . '3 J -RHI? fqffx- . 3' A , - .4 , 'N I X -A4 xx f' W L! fx KEN Q V , x N' N . f- M by . V ww .1 4 'J h w -xl 5llE?:?:1-'L xi ' J 'Il ga '-'XJ'-Ti:-q..' 2 . .4 3 Q ,' X, df, - QQ- I I ', .,. if ff?-5 of JA L-g.'1 Q! 5' ,,..gz, -. ., ,2q.5q,:.1f ' g....,. ,Q L r My- . 4'Y5.G1L'b V34 . I .-.- SELF-GOVERNMENT BOARD. Pl'US1'tfc'llf .....,............... l:'1eo1f. F1c.xNc1s Cuxuglz Y. Vzte-P'1'vsiu'c'1zi'. . . .... C1'1.XRI.liS A. Mo 1z1:1s. SCCl'c'ftI1'j' ..... ...... I T1c.xNc1s, B. IiL'1c'fx. MEMBERS. Dann, F. C. VAN Dycli, ax officio. Class of '05. Vvlilfllhnlli W1 UuN1m14:1:. C1f1.xm,1is .-X. Manuals. Flu N Us B. Ii L'R'1'Z I'1.XRRY M. 131zoxx'N. Nomsuux' C. Mum .KLTON P. Sxx'A.N. 1-1.-xluu' F. BRl5XX'12R.' Cl ass C fuss Class Emllzla 5. W15.xx'u1:. of 'o6. Limoumsli H. Ro151.u151:. LLJLYIS lf. B. W'oo1,s'mN. of 'o7. VINTUN D. Tcmvlams. of '08 R. S. S'r13IN1415. 99 XN DYUQ A Toast to Alma Mater. JUNIOR BANQUET POEM As we look o'er this festive scene And note the plate so painfully clean, And here and there a glass, Each well-fed face with humor gleams. How like a game of cards it seems, This banquet of the class. As in five hundred so 'tis hereg Some of the cards do not appear And some are dropped, alas ! And as in shuffling here we mix Sections, frats and social cliques All in the Junior Class. But now the shuflling is done The witty dealer has begun For No Trumps fl will call The highest bid in any hand! The finest college in the land Is Rutgers, queen of all. And so, as I propose this toast, The name of her we love the most, My heart is filled with pride- lfor battles she has fought and won, lior all the things which she has done To spread her glory wide. So members of the junior Class Let's lift the crystal-brimming glass And drain it to her name: And may her glory ever lastg As it has been throughout the The lustre of her fame. past, For alma mater let us cheer, The college that from year to year Has always been the bestg And may this motto e'er be thine 2- Oh Sun of Justice, rise and shine Upon our glowing west! R. 13.1 IOO ATHL1-:Ties f ' H ,,f.'a'- jf. i ff? 'N X, . 5 -Q, ff X u. 7- N ,. wg g '-5 W- 1 fgq R' x FH 1' ' fl ' il k! - W X 1 iff- LM 'W . . - S X Y xr xy it fn.-E l,,!,.1-ful X k A X' . IA. si . A 1 .- ' . ' X X-X - if-:L IX ' LJ? :..-Z4N-.'5'i ': -i 1- ,, A f ?':?' :'qw'1 ' agsG-TCA W Rutgers College Athletic Association O F!7lC'1i RS. Pi't'Sl'tfL'lIf ......... ............. I Q. XY. Coma, '05. I''llfl'-Pl'U.Yl.lI7L'1l?' ..... Lf I'. XYll.1:1f:1e, '05. 5'cf1'cfa1'y ...... .. .. . ..... ....... C 1. Il. lfmum, '05. Tl'C'lI.YllI't'l' .... ...................... I 'limi Lotus l31f:x'112R. Ju. BOARD OF 7'Rl'ST1iIf5'. ' Faculty .1ff'IlII7L'l'5. P12011 E. R. lfwscmx. F. H. Douuri. P11011 A. A. TI'l'SWOR'l'IT. :ILVMNI MlZMBIZR.S'. Term Expires, 1906. Term Expires, 1905. .'Xs1112R A'1'141Ns0N, '85. 'Lows llmllilz, JR.. '78 C. XV. P.xRM121.1z12, '96, Treasurer. SCCl'Ci2ll'j'. VV. S. lXlY14:1cs. Term Expires, 1904. 'IQ N. C.x1c1'EN'1'121e, '66, P1'eside11t. A. H. C11Rs'1'121z, 94. BOARD OF MANAGERS. Fllfllffy Mvzlzbvzw. PROP. I. B. S1u1'r11, Pl'L'.fI-lfl'lIf'. Ex-O 65610 Mvlalbrrs. I. N. C.xRPEN'1'ER. '66. F. H. DCJIUCIIZ. PROP Lxdrwls B12x'1'12R, IR. R. WV. Colm, '05, Secretary zqflllllllll 1U0111I2c1's. J. 'KIRK1-.x'1'R1C1c, '66, P. M. BRIE'l l', '92. G. WY NI7'l l'M.'XN, '96. U1Ilf6'1'lQ'l'CIdIlUILC Mmzlnffrs. E. S. VV12.w13R, '05, . ,IQ I. MU1.1.1c:.-xN, 306. Secretary. WV. R. T1'1 1'1a1z, '07, lf: Left college. 102 Wearers of the HR. F, Fool-Ball, B, Basc'-Bzzllg G, Gy1111zas1'1zm,' T, Trac! 1. H. VVYCKOEE, JR., T. I. F. PEARCE, B. DALE ROBERTS, T. R. W. Conn, F. D. T. MASQTN, B. W. F. MOARTON, T. T. A. DEVAN, G. O. I. SCHOOTNMAKER, F. A. BROGGER. F. H. E. GREEN, F. Sz B. R. THARP, F. A. P. SWAN, T. I. L. BAKER, F. C. D. BLACK, F. D. I. FISITER, F. Class of 'O5. H. B. ANGLTS, F. G. B. FORD, B. F. S. VVEAVER, F. Sz B F. E. HO'LS'I'EN, F. C. P. VVILBER, G. G. R. TQOEHLER, F. Class of 'O6. ' C. S. BRINKERHOFF, F I. R. TVTLXCNEILTJ, F. N. BITURRAY, F. I. H. NTURPHY, F. Class of 'o7. F. R. VAN SANT, B. W. E. NELSQN, B. H. S. GIES, T. Class of '08 R. P. XAXATSON, F. W. N..MAcNE1LL, F. IO3 F00t Ball 1904 D. T. HIASON, Manage R. W. Conn, Captain V.-IRS! TQ' FO O 7'B.+1 LL. 1904. CfYf7fU1.7IV, R. VV. Coma, '05, Manager, D. T. NLXSON, '0:. flsszkfcrfzz'Mc111a4g'01',, D. Yi. RIINER, '06. Lcff End, C-QREEN, '06. Rigfzr Taclelc, W'.x'1's0 N, '08 Lvff Tackle, BR0cs0E1z, '06, RI.'Q'l7f End, NILTRRAY, '06. Left Guard, BLACK, '08 Qzmrfcr Bark, XNE.XVliR, '05. I Cmzfer, T1-MRP, ,O7. Lf'f1'Hz1Zf, I. R. lWA:XCNEAII.I., '06 Riglff Gzmrd, 'Ii0121 11-12R, '05. Riglzff Half, FISHER, '08, F1z!!Bm'!e,R. W7.C01:r: CCajv1'f.j, 'O5. SUBSTITUTES. I-I0Ls1'EN, '05. EXNGUS, '05. BAKIER, '07. SE001NE, '08, RICE, y08. STIQINKIQ, '08. VV. N. MACNIBILL, 08. 104 The 'Varsity Tearn, 1904 11. W. Coin: 11'I111l'2liill. 151115. Newark. N. J. Weight 158. height 5 tt. 11 in.. age 21. Preparetl at Newark High School. 'Varsity 1'ull back Soplionioro, .Iuuior and Senior years. IC. S. XVI-IAVliZlt. 111115, Willianistowu, N. J. Weight' 154. height 5 ft. 5 in.. age 211. l'repared at Williamstown Public School. Substitute center Sophomore year. 'Var- sity quarterback Junior and Senior year. ll. B. Axors. 151115. l-Elizabeth. N. J. Weight 1135, height 11 ft. 1, in. age 21. Prepared at Ilattin - lligh Sehool. Played guard Junior and Senior years. F. E. I'I111.S'I'111N. 111115. Brooklyn. N. Y. Weight 1-111, height ft. S in.. age 21. Prepared at Erasmus Hall High School. Left end and lett haltback Junior and Senior years. 11. Ii. Ko11:H1.1-:.1:. 151115. Somerville. N. J. Weight 1115, height 5 ft. 11 in., age 21. Prepared Somerville High School. Played right guard Junior and Senior years. A. BRGGGER. 101111, Perth Amboy. N. J. Weight 21111 height 6 ft, 1 in.. age 211. Prepared at Perth Amboy High Sc-hool. Played right guard ltqreslnnan year. left tackle Sophomore and Junior years. . H. E. GREEN. 191111, Brooklyn, N. Y. Weight 154, height 5 ft. 10 in., age 21. Prepared at Rutgers' Preparatory School. Played left tackle I1'resl1man yean. left end Sophomore and Junior years. J. R. M.xeN1111LL. 111013, Brooklyn. N. Y. Weight 1.45, height' 5 ft. 111 in.. age 21. Played substitute quarter- back Sophomore year. half hack Junior year. N. Militant, 10019, 'New Brunswick, N. J. Weight 148. height 6 ft. TIM! in., age 19. Prepared at Rutgers' Preparatory School. Played 'Varsity right end Sopho more and Junior year. 106 J. L. lkuctcii. 121117. Trenton. N. J. Weight 1-15. height 5 tt. Tin.. age 21. Prepared at Trenton lligh School. Played left halt' back Sophomore year. R. 'l'n.x111'. 151117. Hallway, N, J. Weight 1511. height 5 tt. in.. age 111. Prepared at Rahway High School. 'Varsity center Sophomore year. 11. D. l1I..x171i. 111118. Montague. N. J. Weight 187. height' 13 ft.. age 22. Prepared at 1-'ordhain College. Played 'Varsity left guard Freshman year. 11. J. FISHI-311. 151118. Sayreville. N. J. Weight 148. height 5 tt. 11 in.. age 18. Prepareifl at Rutgers' Preparatory School. 'Varsity half back Freslunan year. W. N. BI.kCNl11II.i'.. 1t111S. Brooklyn. N. Y. Weight 1NtS. I height 5 tt. T in.. age 1.1, Prepared at Brooklyn High School. Played 'Varsity end Freshman year. lt. 11. Rica. 151118. New Brunswick, N. J. Weight 1522. height 5 ft. Sim in.. age 18. Prepared at New Bruns- wick High School. Played substitute half back Fresh- man year. I-1. R. Suooixlc. 1908. Point Pleasant, N. J. Weight 143. height 5 tt. S in.. age 17. Prepared at Freehold High School. Played substitute quarter back Freshman year. R. F. STIGINKIQ1, 1908, Elizabeth, N. J. Weight 230, height 5 ft. 11. in., age 151. Prepared at Battin High School. Played substitute guard F'1'QSi111121I1 year. 11. Wfvrsox. 19118, Jersey City, N. J. Weight 184. height 11 tt., age 18. Prepared at Rutg:'.'ers' Preparatory School. 'Varsity tackle F1-esliman year. Average weight of team, 162. Average height of team, 5 ft. 111 in. Average age of team, 211. 11, J , V Rutgers Scrub Right End-JENNINGS, '05 Left 'End-WILBUR, '08 Right Tackle-ASHWELL, '06 Right Half Back-EDWARDS, '06g VAN DUZER, '07 Right Guard-VARICK, '07g BROKAW, '08 Left Half Back-GREGORY, '06 g LANG, '07 Center-DECKER. '06 Quarter Back-Coox, LCapt.J '05 Left GLl3l'd-WHEAT, '07 Full Back-ALLEN, '06 Left TRCKIE-WILBIER, '06 SUBSTITUTES. Quarter Back-Heidt, '05, Guard-SCOTT, '07 Tackle-MURPHY, '06 End-TAVERNER, 08 107 J. E. P12 Captain ASE BALL Season 1904 ARCH Cafbfaiu . . A. E. HITCHNER fWmzagrr . . J. N. FIELD Asxf. Xlfafzczgw' .... F. B. KURTZ i TEAM HITCHNER, '04, Catcher VAN SANT, '07, Pitcher MASON, '05, Pitcher GREEN, '06, First Base WEAVER, '05, Second Base PEARCE, '05, Short Stop FORD, '05, Third Base NELSON, '07, Left Field BROWN, '04, Center MASON, 05, Right Field SUBSTITUTES MooN, '04, HOLSTEN, A05, REINI-IEIMER, '07 108 F, B. K 1VI:111:xge 5 N -. ' . - 0 C 5 BR1IXKI Rl'IOl l , L 1L 1 4 1d'nq rack eam 'l Q 0 4 F R xmso x 1 Captain, C. S. BR1NK14:RHoFrf Manager, . . R. F. MOON ' MOON, '04 . High and Broad ,lump,,Shot and Hammer MORRIS, '04 . . . . Shot and Hammer VERWEY, '05 . . . . 440 yards Dash VVILBER, '05 . . . 120 and 220 yards Hurdle JENNINGS, '05 . . 120 yards Hurdle and High Jump IVIORTON, '05 ROBERTS, '05 BLOCKER ,05 SCI-IENCK,,05 . l. i. I. l. I. U Shotand Hammer BRINKERHOFF, '06, 100 and 220 yds. Dash am FALES, '06 . SCHOONMAKER, DEVAN, ,06 . DOANE, '06 HILL, '06 . SWAN, ,07 ESSELSTYN, '07 GIES, '07 . 10- 110 440 yards . Broad ,lump Tyvo-Mile Run One-Mile Run l 220 yds. Hurdles 880 yards Run . 100 yards Dash . Pole Vault 120 yards Hurdles 440 yards Dash and S80 yards Run One-Mile Run . Pole Vault '80- ' -tqanmk -'-1:21. . ,XX X C. P. WILBUR, Captain Gymnasium Team 1905 HORIZONTAL BJR. T. A. DEVAN, 'o6. H. S. Guis, '07, PARALLEL BARS. C. P. Wflplalzle, 'o5. S. CR.xNM131:. 'OS SIDE HORSE C. P. XN1L1a131z, 'O5. D. T. M.xsoN, 'o5. CL UB S W1 NG I N G . C P. Wlmslflz, 'o5. W. NN. Bumulslz, 05. J-VL YI N G RIN G S. T. A. D1EX':XN,, 'o6. H. Ii. GIQEEN, 'OO. TUMBLING. C. P. VVILUER, '05, A. VV. 1'IILL, 'o6. I12 R. VALENTINE, M Q85 E :zen ls. 100 yards Dash 120 yards Hurdle 220 yards Dash One Mile Run 220 yards Hurdle 440 yards Dash 880 yards Run Pole Vault Hammer Throw Broad Jump High Jump Shot Put 'Ti 11. 'if .1 4 -... .- fwv. A 'TM V Q-41.41. ara. RELAY TEFXNK H. M. Fales, A. P. Swan, Captain Brinkerhoff, D. Verwey nuuuununnn rnmuunuuunnnn C. C. N. Y. vs. Rutgers l THICK MBBl, NBllS0ll Field, May I4, uunnun:nnnnunnnuunununnn Fz'fsL'. Brinkerhoff, Rutgers Battell, C. C. N. Y. Swan, Rutgers Kennedy, C. C. N.Y. Battell, C. C. N. Y. Swan, Rutgers Hornridge, C. C. N.Y Gies, Rutgers M orton, Rutgers Hornridge, C. C. N.Y. Moon, Rutgers Sezf01zrI'. Battell, C. C. N. Y. Jennings, Rutgers Brinkerhoff, Rutgers Frank, C. C. N. Y. Brinkerhorli, Rutgers Hill, Rutgers Fales, Rutgers Devan, Rutgers Moon, Rutgers Evans, C. C. N. Y. F. A. Morris, Rutgers Referee-Prof. A. H. George. Starter-Terry Lyons. Timers-Dr. Bevier, Mr. Dodge. Track Judges-Mr. Thompson, Mr. DeRegt. Field Judges-Mr. Nuttman, Mr. Foertner. Clerk of Course-Mr. J. C. Miller. Announcer-Mr. C. F. O'Neill. Score-C. C. N. Y.. 423 Rutgers, 54. II 904 Pcljbrnlzavzcc 11 1-5 sec. 20 sec. 25 2-5 sec. 4 min. 59 3-5 sec. 31 4-5 sec. 55 4-5 sec. 2 min. 15 1-5 sec 9 ft. 6M in. 18 ft. 92 in. 5 ft. if in. 33 ft. 9 in. Ezfmlx. 100 yards Dash Broad Jump Half Mile High Hurdles Shot Put 220 yards Dash 220 Hurdles 440 yards Dash Two Mile Run One Mile Run 1 HAVERFORD vs. RUTGERS CZDLIZI Track c7Weef, Firszf. ' Brown, Haverford Brown, Haverford Tatnall, Haverford Brown, Haverford Moon, Rutgers Swan, Rutgers Brinkerhoff, Rutgers Swan, Rutgers Miller, Haverford Tatnall, Haverford Haverford, Way 7141, 1904 nnnmnuu Swofzd. Brinkerhoiqi, Rutgers Moon Ck Morton, Rut. Miller, Haverford VVilber, Rutgers Haverford Brinkerholf, Rutgers Brown, Haverford Tatnall, Haverford Roberts, Rutgers Morris, Haverford Peryformcuzz 6 10 4-5 sec. 21 ft. QM in. 2 min. 6 3-5 sec. 16 4-5 sec. 24 4-5 sec. 28 2-5 sec. 54 4-5 sec. 11 min. 35 sec. 4 min. 44 4-5 sec ff6l?!L'7f07'lf DVWL Zfzc' Pole Vhznli, Haifzffzar Thwzu' and H Referee-B. Johnson, Yale. Starter-G. Turner, U. of P. Score-Haverford. 70: Rutgers, 36 115 zzgh ftmzp, Q LAFAYETTE vs. RUTGERS Dual :Pack Meet, Neilson Field, May 21st, 1904 .Evcnla l9'1'rs1'. Sammi. f'w:f21fwfH1ff 100 yards Dash Brinkerhoff, Rutgers Colliton, Lafayette 10 4-5 sec- One Mile Run Percy, Lafayette Parsons, Lafayette 4 mln- 47 SSC- 220 yards Dash Colliton, Lafayette Brinkerhoff, Rutgers 24 SCC- 120 yards Hurdles Willver, Rutgers McPherson, Lafayette 18 SCC- 440 yards Dash Swan, Rutgers Wilsoii, Lafayette 220 yards Hurdles Brinkerhoff, Rutgers lVlcPherson, Lafayette 28 SGC, 880 yards Run High ,lump Shot Put Hammer Throw Pole Vault Broad Jump Swan, Rutgers Moon, Rutgers lVl0on, Rutgers Moon, Rutgers Lafayette Lafayette INTERSCHOLASWC Lafayette Gray, Lafayette Flad, Lafayette Schenek, Rutgers Lafayette Lafayette l RELAY RACES 1st Class-Woii by Erasmus Hall, 3 min. 39 1-5 sec. 2d Class-Won by Rutgers Prep., 3 min. 46 3-5 sec. 3d Class-Won by Passaic High, 3 min. 54 3-5 sec. Referee-Prof. A. H. George. Starter-Terry Lyons. Timers-Dr. Bevier, Mr. Dodge, Mr. J. Bayard Kirkpatrick. Judges at Finish-Dr. Van Dyck, Mr. A. P. Brokaw. Judges of Field Events-Prof. Davis, Mr. DeRegt- SQ-ore-Lafayette, 503 Rutgers, 46. H6 2 min. 9 sec. 5 fr. 2 3-8 in. 35 ft. K in. 105 ft. 10 in. 9 ft. 6M in. 20 ft. 5M in. GYMNASTIC CONTESTS GYIIINASTIC CONTESYQ IIIARCH 3, 1905. HAVISRFORD vs. RUTGERS Score: Haverford 24.2, Rutgers 23M. RELAY RACE. S0I'I10M0REs ws. FRESH MEN. Won by F1'eshme11. Time, 4 min. 7 sec. GYMNASTIC CONTEST, MARCH 11, 1905. UNIVERSITY OIF PENNSYLVANIA ws. RUTGEIIS. Score: U. of P. 22, Rutgers 26. RELAY RACE. SILNIORS ws. IUNIOIRS. VVO11 by Seuiofs. Time, 4 min. 7 sec. GYMNASTIC EXHIBITION, MARCH 18, 1905. South Betlzlefzem. LEHIG1-1 vs. RUTGERS. GYMNASTIC EXHIBITION, MARCH 25, 1905. COLUMBIA UNIXVERSITXL ws. RUTGERS. UNDER-CLASS CANE AND WRESTLING CONTESTS. Score-Tie. 1907 ........................ 4 ' 1908 .... ................... 4 judge-D. F. Burnett. AmI0u1Icer-H. B. Angus, '05 117 Track Events. 100 yards Dash 220 yards Dash 440 yards Dash 880 yards Dash Une lVlile Run TWO Mile Run 120 yards Hurdle 220 yards Hurdle Field Events. Sho: Put Hammer Throw Pole Vault High Jump Broad Jump Even is 20 yards Dash High Jump Fence Vault High Kick Rope Climb Shot Put One Mile Relay R UTGERS fx'l'c'01'zI'. 10hf sec. 24 sec. 53 3-5 sec.- 2 min. 1 1-5 sec. 4 min. 52 sec. 10 min. 48 4-5 sec. 16 2-5 sec. 27 sec. !CHf0ra'. 36 ft. 62 in. 105 ft. 10 in. 9 ft. 6M in. 5 ft. 5M in. 20 ft. 6 in. I NDCDCDR Remrd. 3 sec. 5 ft. 45 in. 6 ft. 112 in. 9 ft. 42 in. 7 2-5 sec. 37 ft. 10 in. 3 min. 56 sec. 118 RECORDS ff0la'c'1'. L. H. hletler, '93 W. T. lilmendorf, '02 Percy Van Nuis, '03 xl. H. VVyckol f, '05 Simon Blocker, '05 D. C. Roberts, '05 A. P. Brokaw, '00 xl. H. VVyckol'l:, '05 flvldwt F. Decker, '98 R. F. hfloon, '04 H. S. Gies, '07 R. F. Moon, '04 W. A. Fisher, '03 R ECCDRDS flolder. VV. T. Elmendorf, '02 J. W. Thompson, '99 C. A. Raney, '01 C. A. Raney, '01 J. C. Miller, '03 F. Decker, '98 f H. E. Kirk, '03 1 Percy Van Nuis, '03 AI. H. Wyckoff, '05 Charles Stevens, '02 Dzlle. May, 1893 M ay, 1899 May, 1903 May, 1903 May, 1902 M ay, 1903 May, 1899 May, 1903 Date. May, 1897 May, 1904 May, 1904 May, 1903 lVlay, 1901 Dflllg. March, 1900 lX4arch, 1899 March 1900 lVIarch 1901 March 1901 March 1898 March, 1900 Class? Athletics 1906 FOOTBALL TEAM Rlght E11d-Murray-Mulligan. Right Tackle-Murphy-Ashwell. Right Guard-jenkins-Wardwell. Right Half Back-Schoonmaker-Gregory. Left End-Woolstou. Leif Tackle-Brfigger. Left Guard-Edwards-Ahrens Left Half Back-Brinkerhofi Center-Devan-Decker, Quarter Back-MacNei11. Full Back-Green-Allen. GREEN, Capt. Soph. Year. 120 BRINKERHOFF, Capt. Fresh. Year 1906 BASE BALL TEANX Cajlfazbz Sophomore Year ..............., GREEN. C captain .F7'U.S'h1'I1CI7L Year' .... ,....... B RINKERHOEE. DUNCAN, Catcher. VVILKINSON, Pitcher. GREEN, First Base. MITTAG, Third Base. DENNIS, Second Base. BRINKERHOFF, Left Field, XNGGLSTON, Short Stop. GAY, Center Field. NIACNEILL, Third Base. JOHNSON, Right Field. NIINER, Catcher. SUBSTITUTES. NIOORE. DEVAN. VVARDVVELL. SCHGONMAKER. I2I l JOHNSON . MACNEILI. HILL .... M0,0RE .. .AI-IRENSI . FALES ......... VVARDVVELL BENEDICT MINER . . . ALLEN . . . 1906 TRACK TEAM .... 440 and 880 EKd.lDash. One Mile. Shot. Broad jump. Shot. 440 and 880 Yds. I Mile and High Jump. Hammer. Broad jump. Pole Vault. DOANE ....... BRINKERHO-FE , EDWARDS GREEN . KAIN .. IJEVAN ....... FEBREY BRDGGER M URPHY I22 I2O Yds. Hurdles. 100 Sz 220 Yds. Hurdles. 220 Yds. Dash. 440 Yds. Dash. 220 Yds. and 440 Pole Vault. 220 Yds. Hurdles. Hammer. Hammer. Dash and 920 Yds. Dash ff' 351, ag' x Cane and Uklreitling Tearns of 1906 WRESTLING. CANES. Light Weight-HECKER. Light W6fg'lZf-WOOLSTO'N, MACNEIEL. Welfefr Weight-MURRAY, ASHWELL W alter Weight-MITTAG. ' M iddle W L ig1'1-ll1.ASHXVELL, SCHOONMAKER. Middle W'c ig71wt-JOHNSON, EDWARDS. Heavy W eigh t-SCHOONMAKER. GREEN. H eavy Wefglzt-EDWARDS, VVILKINSON 1231 7 . .7 f ff? ff I' f ',,..-'- 1 f A -ff!--Y' -- A-A - 1 -W - 1' ,, A A' -- A . . L' '7 -f Y 1' ' A A l -QA A iff- AER !l X Z!--4, Hvvflh 5-., , .v -YY, 1, VI 1 ,, ff f -1, -- - ,.f- 27' - ,- . , ff -f Qill- 4? 'fl Y ,A ',mf'q 1 , X f if , ,-f--f:f:'Qi:---f'f- 1. ., f 1 ,',,?'1'fjii'1i- ' ff PAL, .f.f--,- K. f V A f , , , ,-,,..,L . ,,?jf 1 ,f , -- f-- . - X . ,Cf -Q42 A I ' -vf!?FAwVk Lo'Vs,f N1Q' AL , f 5 .- ,,. ?:'f,l1.L,-fi! .mihr ' b y xi W L J A A' ,,.,4A,.--, ff '- ' ' L, f A' ' , . 3 -' H 1 X A 1 7 -1-.: g ' ' , ,, I ,G ,- ' 3'-A' . --- , X 'PQ ,f ,f ff Q XV!Af9ff+-if2V734?f T'QffH7' AAf',Af5AAAA- Y ! Qf fy ,. Mi-Slrilx' -PLL K .-,A -J.. V 1 1 N ttf V v.,2Lk,..,':,.,.,:1-gp , . , - f --'A 'L I3-, f 'Lai ' A L .. gg-':w::qAvfei4g1,,Q V, , , 4-A ,-1'-JI 'A f wi f -,f X' , A' -Af Nr f '?'j3' X A K-N ff ' W fi, IHAFTJ1, ' 5 U11 ..'- 2 ,4 . ! X -,QQSJ-JE-3 f I QT? 1 Ll'v 1,1 inf!! li Y Qzffw fxxf ' ' AA , 'f H ' 5 '21 4' - AK?1fAf1 A' L' ' ' 9 A gf' 'HA' v :VW :fry f 4 X 4- ,' 1 U- J K Ag A - , ' ff f f l? A QA 4 ff ., , W 73? f n afzfu fb 2 - f A ' , , J A 1' 1 f, 1' , A ,f ,-A 11 .,3, ,.... . -U., fn, F , ' 2 A' ,A like fu 1. 4' A W ' -A135 -'I fa' 'AA' 'f - .d H ,ab 1 ,M ,-- , , - ' 57:1 , , JT? E' ,V Q.-7:2 ig .A W' , . ee ,gf -A a V - - 'isa ' A . f . ,v ,N . .. A :-159 U .T-E,-f- a,,+: ' AA V '1u f- BAA . ' -7 if Y ' !'-: 35? -. ,V Ai? -, Q- 72.1 UD, . f , A' ' :L Af',-- x ,-41 fuP5El'S'.2fPiP 'Ii Mi? . his , . x gm . -, 2 A' ..., A ' 4 - - .v.-., ig, ' 21 T 1ZA ' ...1f-m-- 'Q TL' is A ' 5254:-H gif' , gc?--A -f QT f1ff,f: A ,f Z A Q, Q-fig ' -f- Ci-f 1-V 6? i fT55 1'?W f .lf 7 ' asf - 96352 A , .N s Ek' 7, My 4 '9f- V ntgj--mf-3-g.1'ETZl545,3g:f3ii':j,Y-f ' '-?A7'f ' '-'24 cn' fu ' -:TNA - -f ' GLEE CLUB - L CCZCJICI'-GILORGI5 WY W ILM 01: Rcr1cz'e1'-M. L L. IQAIN. Accozfzpalzisi-R. E. XVATSON. Prcszdclzt-L. P. PLUMMER, JR. V1'cc'-P1'eside1zf-C. R. DUNCAN. Firsl Tenors- f G. W. WILMOT. T. XVYMAN, '08. Scc01zd Tenors- H. S. GAY, '06, A. QU.xc1c1zN1:oss, First Bassas- H. L. BEACH, ,O7. R. A. S'r0'UT, 'O7. Second Bassas- C. R. DL7NC.XN, 'o6. H. H. FEBREY, '06. 51151.11 ess 1Uc11zz1gc1'-J. H. RIURI IIE Hist01'1'u1z-H. L. BEACI-1. fl ll d1'1'0rs-A. V. DEH XRT H. S. Gu MEMBERS . A. V. D121-I.xNR'r, 'o5. L. P. PLUMMER, IR., H. L. ROEDEIQ, 'o6. 'O7. I. H. SM1'r1f1, 'o7. VV. BERDAN, 'o8. P. E. BROXVN, 'o6. LAWSING, 'o8. I, H. MU1z1'1-Iv, '06, W. N. T1-1oM.xs, Sp 126 ecial I 1 N 1 1 h October 24- ....... October 25.. October 31... October 31 ,......... November 18 .. November 30..., ..... December 1 GLEE CLUB ENGAGEMENTS December 26 ................ December 27. December 28. December 29. December 30. December 31 ........ November 22. ...... ....... .....Wooclbridge, N. J. January 18.. .......Newark, N J. ...............Raritan, N. I. January 27.. Paterson, N. J. Basking Ridge, N. J. January 31.. Arlington, N. J. Brooklyn, N. Y. February 16 Camden, N. J. .....................Gladstone, N. J. February 17...... ............Trenton, N J. ............Newark, N. J. February 21...... .................RoSeville, N. J. CGreek Playj Newark, N. J. March 2 ....... Port Richmond, S. I ..........Yonkers, N. Y March Pennington, N. J. .......Poughkeepsie, N. March 21...... .......New Durham, N. J. . Liberty, N. April Newark, N. J. Kingston, N. May Newark, N. J ........Catskill, N. June 10...... Asbury Park, N J. Hudson, N. Y. June......... .......COl1l1'llEI'1CCl1'l6llt Concert QUARTETTE .Perth Amboy, N. J. Januarv 19 .................. ....... N ewark, N. J. December 16 .....,.. ......... March 16 ...................................... New 128 .....Newton, N. J. Februa-ry ............Oradelle Glee Club Histor HE H famous Rutgers College Glee Club has the pleasure of announcing again to the students of Rutgers the completion of a successful season for the club, and we believe a season in which the name of Rutgers has been brought to the notice of some possibly new Fresh- men, and has been revived in the heart of some old Alumnus. The club found at the beginning of the season that in addition to the usual vacancies caused by graduation and other causes, the position of accom- panist, elocutionist and soloist were vacant. After some trials lV1r. Watsoii '07 was elected accom panist, Mr. Kain '06 elocutionist and Mr. J. Thomas '08 soloist. The other men elected to the club were as follows : H. H. Febrey ,06, H. S. Gay '06, R. A. Stout 07, H. Smith, 07, W. N. Thomas '08 and T. Wywan '0S. The fol- lowing substitutes were also elected A. Quackenn boss '07, G. W. Wilsoia '08, W. W. Berdan '03, Cv. C. Lawsing '08. Owing to the fact that Mr. Murphy, the manager, had been hustling during the summer, we found engagements close at hand, which necessitated hard steady work for the club for some time. Trial concerts were given at Wood- bridge, October 243 Raritan, October 25g Basking Ridge, October 28. At all these places we were greeted by appreciative audiences and pretty girls, fthere are various opinions among the members of the club as to which pleased us the most.l Our hrst regular concert was held in the Brooklyn M. C. A. October 31, which was not very well attended, owing to the fact that there were some C91 129 other attractions in Brooklyn that night, besides the Glee Club. One more trial concert was given at Gladstone November 18, which place, if any one is interested to know, is 'L somewhere in Jer-f seyfl VVe went by stages, not H easy stages. We advise any one else who might be tempted to fol- low our example to take the train. It will be better for their morals, and they will avoid the results attendant upon eating green apples at a late hour while on a stage ride. Among the concerts of which especial mention should be made are those which were given in Newark. Altogether we have been in Newark six times this season, once for the Greek play and once only the Quartette. On each occasion we were greeted by large and appreciate audiences, and we have received assurances that Newark will be glad to welcome us again. The Quartette gave a highly successful concert in Newton, iN. JJ High School on December 16. After missing two trains, we dressed in a seven by nine hall bed room in Hoboken, and arrived at Newton at 9.15 where a large audience patiently awaited us. After the concert a reception was held at which Kain won laurels by telling stories to an admiring au- dience of girls, whose ages ra 'ged from ten to lif- teen years. Murphy also gave us 'L a picture no artist could paint,'l as he danced with a little angel of about twelve. . The Christmas trip in New York State was one of the events of the year for the club. It has been several years since such a trip has been un- dertaken, and the success with which it was car- ried through is due entirely to the careful arrange- ments of Mr. Murphy. The whole week was crowded with interesting incidents. At Liberty We had the pleasure of meeting a bride and groom whom we endeavored to welcome in true Rutgers style, a proceeding which the groom did not seem to appreciate, much to our regret. VVe found many Alumni and friends of Rutgers wherever We stopped and were warmly welcomed every- where. At some of the towns receptions where held after the concert at which we had the pleas- ure of meeting a few of the H American beauties for which New York is famed. It is needless to say that these Hfussing expeditions were greatly appreciated by some of the members of the club. During the whole season Kain and Murphy en- deavoured to secure the position of L'fusser-in- chief, left vacant by Bert Shivler's graduation, but in vain. Kain may look poetic and Murphy angelic, but never again shall we see Bertie's magnetic smile and captivating wink. Among the new members of the club Mr. Watsoiu has proved himself an able accompanist and his piano solos have been highly appreciated everywhere. lVlr. Kain always makes a decided hit as elocutionist, possessing an excellent repertoire, he always suc- holding the undivided attention of the audience from first to last. Mr. Thomas has ably filled the position of soloist. His MOH? to Philadel- phia, is so realistic that whenever he sings it we all feel like leaving for that city at once. The club desires to take this opportunity to express its appreciation of the able leadership of Mr. VVilmot, whose untiring efforts have placed Rutgers Glee Club among the Hrst in the coun- try. A word of congratulation must also be given to Mr. Murphy for his efficient management of the club. At no time during the season has the club been under any inconvenieces through any fault of the manager. The club also wishes to express its thanks to the Undergraduates and Faculty of the college for their support during the past year, and to beg the continuance of the same in the future. The student body must remember that the club is H Rutgers Glee Club and repre- sents the college just as much as any of the athletic teams, and that its sole object is to Sing aloud to Alma Mater And keep the scarlet in the Van. ceeds in O 'f ' W ez? K S Classical Organization IVIO TTO:- Ami witch tlzz' world wilh noble 'gll07'S6'711!ZllS1L1lfJ.I, OFFICIALS THEREOF President .......... ...... G . H. CooK, '05 Treasurer ..... , .......... ....... L. B. IVVHEELER, '07 Vice President ..... ....... N . IVIURRAY, '06 judge at the Finish ...... ....... D R. AUSTIN SCOTT Secretary .......... .... . ..... ...... D . B. NIINER, '06 Timer ...... ....... .......... ......... M r . I. S. UPSON OFFICIAL BOOKIVIAKEFIS PROF. Louis BEVIER, CIP B K. PROF. W. H. KIRK, LP B K. PLUNGERS-Prof. E. B. Davis, Prof. Babbitt. HEA DLESS HESSIA NS. i 8ZcSSlZR2X478,AQNJ !l!g:444::OCWl HORSEMEN THERLOF-Curlers Lax! Charge-Lo1'd Brett 411 X 17 a l9X27 Z 184 ??? M W ll :9 a 2 Lord Cook, Lord Schenck, Lord Stillman, Lord C. P. Wil- I4 Vv X 2 a 2 N-3 ! I ! V7 fm-31 X 4 ber, Lord F. E. Wilber. UHLA:1VSjSir Brown, Sir Green, Sir johnson, Sir MacNeill Sir Miner, Sir Murray, Sir Noble. LAZVCERS-Squire Wheeler, Squire W. H. Woodruff. 'hThe vfefeffencc is lo Hinds ana' Noble, not la H. LV. Noble. ISI - RULES. 1. No bet of less than Eve dollars will be considered by the bookmakers. 2. No horsemau shall take off his mask until he has completed his Sophomore year. 3. K B du Keys shall shall be worn by all History electives. RUTGERS CLUB OF BOSTON Organized March 5, 1904 Meetings and Dinners Every So Often P76NgZ.fi6'll!TDR. T. M. STRONG, '68, 176 Huntington Avenue Sfffffflfjf-R. T. VREDENBURGH, '05, 184 Massachusetts Avenue S'1'14oNc':, '68 ZXNDIERSUN, ,7O. CH,fxmf1AN, '73, VR121J1f:N1:U1:cQn, '77. EDGAR, '82, Momus, '88 BISHOP, 'Q2. VVx'C.Ko1f1f, '92, WAY, JQ5. NKEIVX BERS TAPPING, 136. P1121e5oN, 'g6. Sllmlzelz, '99. Ecumz, '99, XNlJOI'JRUlfF, 'OO. BELL, 'OL XNILLIAMSON, '02, NEILSON, VO3. V 1uz19ENBURG11, '05 132 -9UTC',L, 4 C' L u In lam des ffaiscrs-A. XV. SCOTT Der Pqge zum dem fr'az'scr-I. S. UPSON DER REICHSTAG Kellermeister . . Assistant Kellermeister . Derl-Ierr Winehandlei' . Der Herr Bartender . Der CO3ChI113,11 von Wasser Wacfon . . Der Geliebte von Chips . Der Herr Sandwich Builder . Der Meister von Rough House Der Pipe Hitter . . Der Esser von Sauer Kraut Der Free Lunch Grafter Katzenj anlmers . . Z5 DAS SCHWEIN STILLMAN BRETT H. M. BROXVN GAY HITZELBERG MULLIGAN VAN SANT A. V. SCHENCK ASHWELL F. R. MASON F. G. LANG BROGGER, FEBREY SWIFT, STEINKE, GARDNER, VVYMAN I Civil Engineers, Club IWOTTO- Lucky is the Club Mat has 710 hI'Sl'07j'.', H. i-. Pres., . MASQN, D. T. fs! Vive Pres., . . MORRIS 2d Viee Pres., KURTZ 3d Vice Pres., ROBERTS SECW, . DUANE Trees., . GREGORY Hz's!07'z'a1z, . . HOXVATT Sergean!-af-Arvzs, . BR6GGER Ass'z' Sergeemz'-al-Arms, DECKER Axerrzan ,... GAY Wafer Carriers, BENQ C'arrz'ers Q Zlfaiehes, BR55ii1?33gii Loafer. . . . PRATT Ash' Loafer, . . WTLIQINSON Also ranfor Zhis offen- PLUMMER, ROLL, WEAVER ELDRIDGE, DUNCAN, MORROW 134 A ELECTRICAL CLUB OFFICERS P7'1'51.llI6Wl' ..... A. V. DE HART Vice Preddwzt , , ' H, H, FEBREY S6'67'6fd7:l' amz' Trrasvzrer VV. W. BENDER f2'2'51'w'1'wz .... H. M. FALES, JR MEMBERS CLASS OF 1905 H. B. ANGUS G. K. KOEHLER W. W. BENDER J. E. PEARCE A. V DEHART A. B. SMITH CLASS OF 1906 E. H. ACTON H. H. FEBREY A. G. AHRENS . A. W. HILL T. H. BRUCE, N. S. MOORE J. L. EDWARDS G. O. SMALLEY H. M. FALES, JR. W. H. WILBER L. F. B. WOOLSTON 136 l 1 N Electrical Club History HE Electrical Club takes great pleasure this year in recording an important ad- vance for the Electrical Department. This consists in bringing the purely electrical work more than a term earlier in the course, thus giving a corresponding time for work in advance of previ- ous classes. Such an arrangement was brought about by omitting minerology which is of com- paratively little value in either a general or an electrical education. We hope this forward step may soon be followed by others which will bring the Electrical Department to a still higher degree of efficiency. As an organization the Club has had a particu- larly active and noteworthy existence during the past year-having assembled for its picture with the accompanying result. However, since this was before the election of the Historian this im- portant date was irretrievably lost to History. The Club is comprised of the most industrious upper-classmen that are to be found. This state- ment applies more particularly to our exemplary Senior members who, by the utmost labor and unselfish toiling, have arrived at a method of pro- ducing minimum work in maximum time with maximum appearance of industry. But in the solution of this important labor problem they have been greatly hampered by the Juniors who, with their petitions for extra work, have been accused of spoiling Tompief' This brings us to a consideration of the Juniors in their daily haunt in Geological Hall. Let us I deal scientifically with this subject. In the front of the room stands the Generator which is responsi- ble for all the work. Around the room are the Receivers and the Line. The resistances of the different parts varies. There is Job who furnishes little resistance on account of his large cross sec- tion, and Woolie, about the same amount, on account of his length. Ahrens is a receiver of so great back pressure that he often imagines himself the Generator. Bruce is a part of the line of about the required dimensions, but not well insulated and frequently gets grounded. Moore has also the proper dimensions, though there seems to be con- siderable iron under the insulation. Acton is the receiver that expends the last per cent. of energy on noise, but when he stops it is high time to leave the building. There is one receiver that has the rest beat for noise, and that is Eeeb, but it's pleasant noise. Part of the line is quite likely to get struck by lightning in the case of storm : it is the part that goes over the Hill. Still the real danger point is Small e, which frequently represents a tremendous drop of volts delivered by the Generator at about 50,000 volts pressure. No lightning arrester is any good in this emergency. The one who has saved the line and receivers con- siderable Work is Birdie, for, after a leg-pulling investigation, he sent word from the repair shop that it was not safe to try to get too near the Generator for it was liable to Hash out at one. There is one part of the line that seems especially adapted by nature to be a Pole, and that is the HZ'Sf071ld n. 39 P2'0s1'dc1zt ............. V'14CC-Pl'L'SllClCllf ........ Sc'c2'cmry cmd Tl'FcIA'lll'Cl' H7'Sf0l'ltlI1 .,.... H 25' G UlZiL'l'lIfU'7' . Hod C.Ul'7'IL'l' Bolflc IVnslfc1' . .. A : Agriculture. B : Biologx C. XV. Cl'IAl'l'EL, A. H. L. LLXRRIS, A. F. H. JENNINGS, CcCh. 1. GAU13, Ch. F. R. lVI.xsON, Ch. F. E. I'lOLSTEN, Ch. R. W. ALLEN, A. L. BEX7llfR, 3rd CeCh. G. H. ROED1zR,l3. N. T. A. DEv.xN,B. I. J. lXLlULL1G.xN, Ch. P. E. BROWN, Ch. D. SHORE, A. R. DAVIES. T. R. VARICK. R. THORP13, IR., W. H. VVILSON. V. D. TOMPRINS. LAB. CLUB .. , . . . QF. E. HOLSTLN. I. R. Y.x1-13xT1NE. P. E. BROWN. . . .A. L. S'1'iLLM.xN. STOBIQAUS. XYI112.x'1'. .TOM1-RINS. C I Ceramics. Ch. : Chemistry. Ce : Classical Elective MEMBERS. Class of 'O5. A. Y. Y. SCI-IIQNCR, CeCh. E. Wl. SENG, Ch. B. A. SICKLIES, A. Class Class A. L. S'1'1LLM.xN, CcCh. I. R. Y.xLL:N'1'1N12, Ch. I. H. XNi1'.LOc1c, CeCh. of 'O6. H. D. XV. JENKINS, Ch. C. G. TQOLFE, Ch. F. 0. MITTAG, Ch. H. VXl.'NO1.:L12, Ce.l3. G. G. ZASHWELL, C. E. GREEN, COR. of 'O7. l. V. SLIFESTEIN, A. P. SWAN, H. I. XV1f112AT. F. STIMSON. H. C. RO'l3INS. Special-F. H. STOBAEUS. 140 Lab. Club History HE subtle chemist mixes in his pot, And deems full well just whz1the's got, Until Professor Speyers questions him. And then-alas, he finds he knows it not. To watch the vivesection of a frog. To cross in search of plants a muddy bog, To learn of sowing and of harvest home- Oh, happy Agricult and Biolog. The Lab Club is made of three sections-Ago, Biologs, and Chemicals-but the greatest of these are the Chemicals, as to number, noise and odor, But these three are one when it comes to raising Cain. As the Agricults have the biggist cinch, we'll begin with them. The Senior bunch is a winner- there's Charley Chappel, the American Chang, Ben Sickles, the Argumentative positivistg while Harris, the black sheep, brings up the rear, and the dickens of a time he has in doing it. The Junior Agricults are more numerous, and quite as interest- ing. Shore is a king-pin. He donlt look as if he knew much, but just get him to converse on the subject of women. Womeii-that's all. Roeder is undecided whether to become a farmer or a coon-shouter. Gosh, gunder, rickety blazes, I dinged near forgot to mention Allen. Outside the Classical but-ins, Noble, Green, Gerow, there's but one Biology-Devan. He deserves mention, not only on account of his magnificent solitude, but also his unique Way of doing work. Devan went to Putt the first day and said he didnlt know his lesson, but would pre- pare two the following day. The next day he told the Prof. he was still unprepared, but would bring in three the next day. This has been going on for some time, and Devan now owes 132 recitations. VVhat his plans are for exam week we don't know. I unnnunimin The Chemicals next-a great body. Why? Because they have a great leader, whom they love to distraction. Wliat man among you, who has ever heard the No, No, No, you can close upf, so quavering, so pleading, and withal so firm, could fail to love the sweet voiced commander. Holsten says, Q' Much as l love the girl, l love my 'fessor more, -in which delicious sentiment he is backed by Seng, Gaub and Valentine. Mason adds a qualified assent. The 1906 Chemical contingent is noted for one of the sweetest and most pathetic romances that ever graced a prosaic laboratory. How like Juliet is gentle, long-haired, silk-tongued Mary Rolfe-what a picturesque Romeo is slim, grace- ful, Pop jenkins. The story of their love and marriage is too heart-rending to be mentioned, here, but suflice it to say, that they were married, to the complete discomfiture of the heavy villain- one Percy Edgar Brown, and the cheers of the supes, Mittag, hflulligan, and Ashwell. l wish T could say they live happily, but alas, the supes lose no chance of mussing the bride's hair, and it was only yesterday that her Romeo kicked her severely in a fit of jealous raged: There are some Classical butt-ins, notably Louis Bevier, quiet and dignified Jenny, who raises the devil when nobody's looking, Willock, who raises the devil only when ,Fessor is looking, and Schenck, who raises the devil all the time. Down- stairs we lind Cookie, placid, peaceable Cookie, fast asleep in a lecture on Embryology, and, con' forming to Cookie's mood, I will e'en quit this worthless chronicle of a worthy bunch, and say Goop NIGHT. f:Peculiar place to be kicked. 43 Q Ceramics Club fWa.s'!cr offhc 1fVo1'K'5 , Pn'sz'dwzi and I Chfqf Xlifzza' 1Wz'.xcr -5' Asxi. Snjbf. , , Vife P7'6SZ'd67Zf and I Chief l9'z'1'e11za11 j Scrj' and Trcas., E N! C, R. fllozfldcr 3 C 19 orc Boy . OFFICERS . . NIR. C. VV. PARMELEE G. B. FORD . H. A. PLUSCH R. W. COBB G. G. ASHWELL R. F. DAv1Es S14j567'S CSeve1'al slimes that Cobbie U sends on errands? ROLL MR. C. W. PARMELEE G. B. FORD R. W. COBB G. G. ASHWELL R. F. DAVIES T45 Q s N f .9 Zeta P51 Tennls Club 9 l - t X fJ7'C'5l.dCllf . . W. H. W ILBER '- I'-I-LZ' P7'4's1'a'c'1ll . I. R. VALENTINE ag '5-EL X .S!'l'7't'f!l711' and y'l'L'6l.Wl7'C'7 . R. VV. COBB x fr 5 l SPRING TOURNAMENT , f - Q l CHAMPIONS Cx Singles-A. C, SWIFT Daublcs-'11 R. VARICK and W. H. WILBER MEMBERS Q LQ Class fy' I905 ' R. W. COBB I. R. VALENTINE Class qf 1906 W. H. WILBER Class q' 1907 I II T. R. VARICK T. D. HALLIWELL Class J 1908 A. C. SWIFT O. REINER I C. HVEIDT l R. MCN. GARDNER xv x 'A YI. ?'o9K 5Z'l,,,N ,A 9xx5fA4,,5,!. vim 146 5-515 G .. TIN' Az Q-Q 3,1235 ' i-laaervwl. A -L 'X 'Q 'X cn I X X .11 L. L O OI-IAPTER ROLL RUTGERS, 1895. NYILSON, 1895. BRYN MA1A'R, 1896. MISS BALDVVIN'S, 1896. VASSAR, 1897. MT. HOLYOIQE, 1898. WELLESLEY, 1901. ALUMNZHI ASSOCIATIONS NEXVARK. PHILADELPHIA. NEW YORK. ORANGE. O F JB' I C E R S Archon Megisios-C. RABIT INIORRIS. Deuferovz Archon Megislos-A. VOORHEES DEHART. Dzynper afPen5 and Slinger oflzzk-S. PETER BLOCKER. Clad zz Hoiel-R. BERGUER NIOHNSON. Clwregus-J. HOWARD BRINCKERHOFF. Guard of the Cofev'-F. OTTO MITTAG. Canszzliifzg Physician-T. ALLEN DEYAN Qex-ofiicioj Lord Hzg'!z Procuwfer of Viafzds-J. HARVEY MURPHY. Execzzlive Conzmiilee-C. RABIT MORRIS. A. VOORHEES DEHART, S. PETER BLOCKER. Heralds of My Inner Palace-EI. EDXYIN MORROW, H. MARSHALL FALES, N. CUSSER MURRAY, M. I. LINDRITH KAIN. I-IONORARX' MEMBERS - 'CIOCK BESSON R PLUGGER DAVIS. By fnilizzzfory Rzgflzf-H. EIGHT O . , O71 f37'0b6ZL'Z07I-LOUIS BEYIER 3d, HAROLD GREEN, HARRY STOCHUM, DICK SEGOINE, BOB LUFBURROXY. 147 DFAMATIC Cl.LJ E CFDHQIIO4 o P Lending Mun Leading Lady Hero . Heroine . Lover . Ballet llluster Villain . Soubrcttc: . Comerlizxn Monologist Soloist Victim . Chorus Girls Scene Shifter I I THR L . MONK . .IENNY . Ziaus PINK '1'oP MAX . SNITZ l4'R1'rz . FAT . ZEPHYR VPTLR MAYOR Tow HEAD . DUZER LOUIE, REINY THE OUTLAW --4 ' ---A f- - --'ali CHE PM 13 2. 4 3 1 , L ig ivf L A N '- 25:2 ' f ' ww wer 4 slime.-il. ' Walsh mea- all Qilub Chief Stirrer of ye Shiny Goo . . - . HERR SKIPPER Seah Chefs . . . CAP. KIDD, BUNNY, JOCKO The Super . NUTS BS., BL., DF., PDL., LF., lVlo., LLD., 3935? Heroic Masticators . , . . ETHAN and DAVID Overseer of the Pack . JOSH Lost Rabbit .4 . . SISTER Toasters . . RUBEN and the OLD MAN Collector of Cottontails . ' . . THE YANK Distributors . THE ANARCHIST and BANTY Trailer of ye Beast ...... SLEEPY JACK RABBITS PLUMMER, ANGUS, PEARCE, KURTZ, WILLOCK YOUNG RABBITS ALLEN, HILL, MAYHEW, WILSON BUNNJES - BLACK, SEDDON, RUST, WARNER, BREWER, BINGHAM. 149 B1-kid Thi-itil Pi DOFQ Club BLOODHOUND H. SMITH WHELP5' PUPS Pug-A. H. HOWATT Setter-H. I. WHEAT Coach Dog-D. B. MINER Fox Terrier-A. QUACKENBOSS Greyhound-H. W. NOBLE Black and Tan-J. M. GONZALES Collie-J. R. MACNEILL FUDGE HOUNDS Pointer-D. J. FISHER Bird Dog-W. S. BERDAN Grear Dane-R. WATSON Red Terrier-D. SAFFORD Dascllund-W. N. MACNEILL Lap Dog-S. CRANMER P07iZC7'd7ZZ-d7ZiH. VANDERWORT. 150 CHAS. NED TOWNY DUTCH SMALL ASHIE BUCK JOE PINCH BEN . KID BROKE WIB CHI P l IDIA CLUB CYIIEFS . . Big Chief Many Squaws Big Chief Fraicl of Fire Water Big Chief Hit the War Path . Big Chief Laughing Water . . Chief Rob a Cradle . . . Chief Cast a Bluff BRA VES ' . . Big Buck Bang the Box . . Little Chief Warm the Bench . . . Heap Much Sore Eye PAPPOOSES . . Swamp Root the Medicine Nlan . . . Pappoose Une Blanket . . . . Geaney Ha Ha Deerfoot Clong chase to VVeehawken Wigxifainsl 151 W Q3 A190 Q1 XKWUL ' U I 0 ' , 1 , KX . Q E K, I. I 3 IU 2 ,qlvj 21 , 'Ji-5245 if gf' i HOIEOES IN URBE '-' - IQIQVAS, '02 VAN' NUS, '03 IIo'rA1.1xG, '03 AIOHRIS, '03 11030155 IN eo1,1,1aG1o , ' rN . xl ra Cum Reguluritrite-FA1.IiS, '00. KAIN, 'O0. ff' Ad trains cutelumdum-Bassox, 'O7. IJ1ilS1mu1m'1', '08. TI1AlcP,OT. G11as,'07 ll Ad trollcgium 1'1,ISl1L1l'l'l-DEl'IAR'1', '05, KuE1xLE1z, '05 1h. Cum IJifHcultz1te-BR1xcKER1mxfF, '05. ML'R1'11x', '00, Sruclivxi, '07. Cum Aviclitatc-Dlixuxx, '06, I,L:1fnL'RR0w, '0S. Wmmimizulflf, '07. Cum altera sexa in occasio-Mulmls, '05. K1I,m1i1:,'0S. Cum ziltcra sexa trequeiite-GR15EN, '0G. I-I.xu1sA1,xx, 'OS Cum alterzi sexzl extremzi f1'6IlL1ClltC-.lUI'INSHN, '0G. Slinulxli, '08. Cum maximis peclis-BEYIIQIQ, 'OG. Ad collegium hustleudum-MITTAG, '00. Ad Grubbum 1'1.1Y1Ul.1Il1-l.VIURIUJXY, 'O6. Ad eollegium farmum l1Zl1'I1llLlll1-BLOCKER, '05, ALI homem to slcepem-MURRAY, '0G. Ad humem to ezlteiu-D,u'1s, '07, AMA LGAMATED INTERESTS Hilliard Sharks. Grub Gulpers. Tennis liiends. RAMBLES Cider Mill C25 Post Oflice C9029 Winants ltri-dzlilyj Landing B1'idgef13J Weston's Mills KID Up the Avenoo 423813 H.-l CA' lIII'lll'Ll' ny rgffrfml COLLEGE FARM Cinfiiiityj-The record this year is hold by BLUCKIQR, Cul- lege Farm KT timesjg time Lone weekj. 152 Rutgers Preparatory Selrool Alumni ol Rutgers Pres Z,dC'7ll ........ r.. OFFICERS Vice fJ7'6.S'Z'!2,6'llf .,...... Scmfeiazjf ........ T1'EdSlt7'67'. ...... A. V. DEHART -I. GAUR L. BEVIER H. BENEDICT F. O. MITTAG, AIR. C. C. ARMSTRONG L. A. HEATNH F. T. CORBIN, JR. D. J. FXSHER T. A. HAXGENIAN MEMBERS CLASS orf '05 F. E. AVILBER CLASS OF '06 H. E. GREEN T. A. DEVAN CLASS OF '07 F. A. IQULLMAR F. G. LANG CLASS orf '08 A. J. KILMER H. S. LANG B. M. MILLER 153 E. W1LrsER C. NIURRAY NYATSON E. GREEN V. SCIIENCR YVILBER gl. H. MURPHY N. C. MURRAY G O SMALLEY R A. STOUT T. R. VARICK S. RUST H. S. TAVERNER R. XVATSON College I MBV! X WISIQ Q! 'T IH 4ff1 r I . D .T 5 , N 1 1lmll?'! -X5 .g,l.lMlP f1 ElQ 2,,R I fi , N iff: . Q. r ' ' 951- -Nr ?1,Z1f.y., LS Tigffcfl If 4- 7 .... A ,'jIq,.,,! ,:.ILl,-. a'- ..f,5?E' 1,5 , :TL Milk I ...-5?'ZI 7W?V N M If ,I 1' J I 1. . .,I . gf A - -5 . I.. ,514 , , J . if In-'r I I . - - , ,, 'ZQiQI'if'Zf?'f7f' I 1 If I Ixiiqifff I - I..'!L,r1U JCW' . ' ' n ' 1- - wh, A 'f'7-1i+ , L.- H- -4 - V-H' 1-7 f .-,-,-:Y T i 2 Y-,Yf -+ 5 TT- T OFFICERS P7'csz'a'c1zz' . . . E. SENG Vim P7'FSZ.dE7Zf . R. E. VVATSON Secrfefafjlf A. QUACKENBOSS 7-7'66ZSZl7'f'7' . . . R. DAVIES HYEZIIBERS Class W' '05 A H. HARRIS E. SENG C1055 q' '06 R. ROEDER C. ROLFE Class gf '07 G. HUGHES W. NELSON -A. BLUM W. ROEDER A. QUACKENBOSS M. SCOTT R. WILSON H. BLUM R. DAVIES J. SMITH ' R. E. WATSON Class of '08 E. BAIER H. FELLER E ENT R. RICE . K 154 Newark High' School Club Presidenz' Vice Preszdeyzi Secreiafjf Treasznfeff R. B. JOHNSON M. HEMMER, JR. R. M. GARDNER OFFICERS MEMBERS Class of '05 R. W. COBB Class of '06 C. R. DUNCAN Class of ,07 F. R. VAN SANT Class of '08 OTTO REINER 155 W. COBB B. JOHNSON G. ASHWELL S. GIES G. G. ASHWELL H. sq GIES T. I-IOPPLER -.. ,...32,,. . ,.-..,.-., Battin High School Club Prcsidefzf , Vife P1'csz'de1z z' fxfxfxfxfxfxfxfx. OFFICERS Sfcrefary and Tfzfasfzrer , , I H z's!o7'z'a7z , H. B. ANGUS A. G. AHRENS XC. BINGHAM H. F. BREWER BLU? College IWEIIJBERS Class M yoj Class qf '06 Cfzzss gf '08 C. M. WARNER 156 H. B. ANGUS W. W. BENDER A. G. AHRENS H. F. BREWER W. W. BENDER H. H. FEBREY R. F. STIENKE N. KAUFMAN lllll 9 lv 1 Q' 4 'SW p 4 F ' mam X V X3 ig 'fl- rlil . 7 I gg?-px QT ll Ll HKS' Run:-'H-ry X-9 Q i - I l ? , 3.2. 5- x -A h ' A l . '-Lal: . 'U' iq. il Q 'E 7 ' K n A j fl Nw. if'-L. A ' .5512 fl ' ff f E:-Pr i f 3 i - V M. . - ,,1' ' 4,52 FROGGY BRETT-Fusser Optimus Maximus. COBB-He'Cl rather fuss than eat ffl D. T. M ASON-Endowed by nature to be a fusser. MONK-Fusses for what there is in it. ASHWELL-Knows how pretty Well. BENEDICT-A favorite with the ladies. I JOHNSON-His trousers soon bag at the knees J. R. MACNEILL-Children cry for me. BLOCKER-Wish I Was a lVIormon. MURPHY-Strangers for mine. AL. SWAN-Devoted to Widows. NIAX HEMMER-Unly a beginner. TOMPKINS-Not at all slow at the 57 game ESS CLUB x Presidenl ..... .. ....... H. S. GAY Secretary ....... J. STAHR ' ?3 8lZS2l7 67' .......................................... L. BEVIER, 3d ACTIVE MEMBERS ACTON DOOLITTLE MARMER BENDER DUNCAN MITTAG BENEDICT ESBERG STAHR BEYIER Fox TRACY BLUM GAY WILKINSON BROWN, P. E. GREGORY BESSON JENNINGS HONORARY MEMBERS DR. BEVIER DR. HART MR. GEORGE MR. RIEDEL ' MR. CHESTER MATCHES PLAYED Princeton 4f-Rutgers.2g U. of P. 5-Rutgers 1. Rutgers 42-N. Y. U. 35, Rutgers 4-Lehigh 4. The following made up the team against: PRINCETON U. OFR N X U. . LEHIGH BEYIER, DUNCAN. DUNCAN, ACTON. STAHR, DUNCAN. STAHR, BENEDICT. GAY, BENDER. BEv1ER. STAHR. GAY, ESRERO. BEYIER, STAHR. GAY, GAY DUNCAN. BEVIER. Ifffan. Lasl. P. C. Wfon. Losi. P. C. ACTON .... ..... O 1 .000 DUNCAN ....... 3M 22 .583 -BENDER ....... ..... 0 1 .OOO ESBERG ........ O 1 .000 BENEDICT ....... .. 0 1 .000 GAY ....... 2 4 .333 BEYIER ....... 2 4 .333 STAHR ....... 4 2 .666 158 5 f Quadrangle Prav id 011 Z .....,...... I'z'rc fi7'K'.S'I,dl71ll ..... .. T7'Cl7.T1!l'Cl' ........ jzzzzzwi' ............. S. ll. 7211 Ur ...... S. BLOCKER C. L. BR15'r'r R W, Colm G. H. Cqmc A. A. TAYLOR G. B. FORD OFFICERS MEMBERS CLASS UF '05 E. I-IoLs'rEx T. HORPER N. JENNINGS B. KURTZ C. ROBERTS B. ROLL C. A. NIORRIS CLASS OF '06 Club A. BRDGGER C. S. BRINIQERLIOFF H. I-I. FEDREY W. I-I. NICCORMICK AI. AI. LUULLIGAN A. Y. N. SCHENCK . B. Smrrl-1 . L. STI1.Lx1.xx . A. TAYLOR R. Y.xLEx1'1x1s . S. XVEAYER L HARRILS R QECOINE AH. ACTOR A. DECKER A. H. H0W.x'rT N. S. IVIOORE W. ALL12x li. IJo.xx1z R. B. ,lol-msox j. E. AIORROXX S. BRINKERHOFF I L. EDWARDS M. I. L. EDXYARDS -I. Ll. MLLLIC m BROGGER C A. ELDRIDGE J. R. NIACNEILL F. N. WXRIJXX LLL M BROWN H. I-I. FEBREY D. B. MIXER W. H. YVILBER A. Y. GREGORY F. O. NIl'1'TAG,-IR. L F. B. NYOOLSTON CLASS OF 'OT H, -I. S'mcRm1 ' H. Blzssox M QLJNVAI liz V. D. '1'oM1'1i1xs T. D. HALLLWELL 1 HEBINIER F. R.VAN SANT E. L, IQEENAN H. F. HOVEY W. F. RHEINHEIMER CLASS 011' '08 W. H. MACNEILL O. REXNER H. R. C. S. DEGRODDT M. GARDNER PIEIDT T. L. XYILKINSOX A. P. SXVAN R. D. VAN DUSER H. I. W1-HEAT R. A. LUFUURROXV W. H. MCCORMICK D. STAFFQRD A. C. SWIFT R. W.vrs0x T. WYMAN STOBEAUS MAHNREN HEDDEN HARD GRIEYE F. T. CORBIN 160 TARGUM EDITORS I904-IQOS PI'L'S2'.lll6'lIf ............................. ......., F RANCIS E. XVILBER, .S'ec1'cZmj1' mm' rl'C'tI.YIll'F7' ....... .............. A 'IAURICE I. L. KAIN, B1zsz'11cxs Illzzzzrzgef' ........... ...... V I. LIOXYARD BRINCKERHOFF, f1.S'.S'Z'SltI7If zllfzzzngez' ........ ............. G. GOLVERNEUR ASI-IWELL, FIRST 'I'ARc:I'M TERM :-September-DcceIIIber. SECOND TARGIJM TERM :-january-Mzly. EIIITORVIN-CI-IIEF, ...... .......................................... f ALBERT L. STILLAIAN, ASSOCIATE EDITORS : C. LEVERICIYI BRE'I I', '05 Clst and 2nd termsj SIMON BLOCKER, 05. FRANK B. IQURTZ, '05 ' ' VVILLIAM B. ROLL, '05 FRANCIS E, WILIIER, '05 MAURICE ISIAIN, '06 ' HARIQY M. BROXVN, '06 fglld term! H. NIARSHALL FALES, '06 42nd termj REPORTERS : I-I. M. BROXVN, '06 Clst termj I-I. E. GREEN, '06 I-I. M. FALES, '06 A H. EIOXVATT, '06 L. ESSELSTYN, '07 L. KEISNAN, '07 A. P. SYVAN, '07 R. CRE.-XMER, 07 11st and 2nd termj H. I. VVHEAT, '07 ' W. I-I. WO0IIRUFF,' 07 R M. GARDNER, '08 A. NI. K1LNIEI2,'O8 A. R. LUFIIURROW, '07 I-I. VANDERXVART, 08 162 X ...- Lg- - - Q Z ui Y I I gd Q f f f U' K Y . Ml , . , A . 4l , f A K WX ! 1 1 W 1 -Q ,X ' mw gL . Wm l.ll. fJ , f n . , gj !j.1piiK m lm AwQl.lll14M qu ' ' ' , ' 'V ! 1 Al. H'!,5,. ' VW ,X 'U M L f L X' ,V ,, C ' X y j -ffl! X' ' 5 , ,',' X A Q1-1 H K xfx ' I' W? g V X ' KL-airs. X Aff I I7 ASX K xlgf H M X' X 3224 -fi x Q!L , Z ,ii C- H , --- --1 OFFICERS Prcsz ffefzl ............ ......................... Vice P1'cs1'0'e1zi ..,..... C01're5p01m'i2zg Semfelaz 5 Recovfdivzg Secrefzzry .... .7N7'6'IZ.S'Z!7 67' ................. A 55119111115 T1'ecz.ww ez ...HARRY W. NOBLE, '06 ..............,.........XYILLIAM H. WQODRUFF, '07 ..........RANDOLPH CREAMER, '07 ..........I'IOVVARD S. Guia, '07 ..........CLIFFoRn D. MAYHEW '07 . ....... ......,...CHn,RLEs T. THQMPSON O8 I Y. M. C. A. MEMBERS CLASS OF 1905 SIMON BLOCKER J. HOWARD BRINCKERHOFF CI-IARLES W. CHAPIAEL ROIIERT W. COIIII HENRY HONNEGER CHARLES P. WILIIER FRANK N. JENNINGS ITARRY C. NIOREHOUSE ARTI-IUR Y. V. SCI-IENCK ALBERT T. STILLMAN DANIEL G. YERXVEY FRANCIS E. WILIIER CLASS OF 1906 R. W. ALLEN LOUIS BEVIER, 3d T. A. DEVAN PIERVEY K. DOANE J. T. EDWARDS CHARLES J. ELDRIDOE H. MARSHALL FALES H. S. GAY LYMAN A. GICROXV RAYMOND B. JOHNSON MAURICE I. L. KAIN JOHN R. NLACNEILL DANIEL S. IMINER J. HARVEY MURPHY JAMES E. NIORROXV IJARRY W. NOBLE W. V. THOMAS HAROLD E. GREEN ARTHUR H. HOWA'I I'. CLASS OF 1907 RANDOLPH CREAMER HOWARD S. GIES FRED A. KULLMAR R. THARP, JR. CHARLES N. DOOLIIVPLE L. ESSELSTYN CLIFFORD D. MAYHEW WILLIAAI H. YVOODRUFF CLASS OF 1908 EUGENE S.. BROKAXV RAYMOND GARDNER THEO. A. HAGEMAN WILLIAM N. MACNEILL HAROLD R. LEOOINE MARTIN SIEELMAN RODNEY VAN GILDER HERYEY S. DEGROODT JAMES GRIEVE NIORGAN HIAND, JR. BENJAMIN M. MILLER VVILLIAM P. SEDDON CHARLES T. THOMPSON RIPLEY WATSON CLARENCE A. WILRUR Q I LI TERAR Y FELLOWSHIP 0 him who in the love of self has ever ' Enshrouded his soul within profound conceit, And sought to gain Ten Talents for his Master From the single mortal soul charged to his care, By attainment,-mental, moral, physical : Who, Poler-like, meets only with his fellows By constraint of scheduled dates unehangeable, And ne'er seeks the fruits of blessed fellowship To broaden the small horizon of his life- Fair Rutgers bids him, I-lark l Ten talents may be Gained by him Who leads as many mortal souls From eternal condemnation. But he who Bears the sad humility of this work,- VVho soars alone shut up amidst histories Of past things pure, and the divine inspired word, Shall find one talent, Self, alone and sickened By deathly sweetness of an ideal musing. , E. H. L. 168 Q, V Fi ,V . X 1 h ,Q - ,TQ 51155 b - 1 2 'S . lv- V. 1 '. .41 A ' gh X X X K N 1 Q M Q l 1... Q , - Q1 f , Cf W-QW A 45 4' C X N... L.,5AF:....f. ., if-f-2-i X , 'N' Y . ' Tx., , N ' ,-- , H- ,N ,f . 1- V: I -. - '- 5 12351125 2 :w-:rw ,gnu x . , - -.:1-11,- 1-f E: ,gig 'yi 53 'ff if' 'QQ K 'um b b , i ggif xv X:f-'ave-E i W' ' ff QQ MWNEN MW EU f f4,v,- ,V ? 2 J Q M.. .V.., Y... V Z! A-121, 1 - Q . ,J :Q 5 h Y-W? ' ' 43' . I ' ii. ,' , ' 'tml :mi EEA-i x N N' tj wt if M F I- n A . jx f - ' -fgjgajg' -E .- t ' 'r' 1 . ' b lf, 1 ii I Tfgg m 4 x '-vy.1.- . - -- ,uxg5-A .W W J, ' J ff ff JQiX, y-P D S 5- . F ,Z , : x I- .i'F -'rf' Q? , m- in 6 ZQ3: QF I 1 Brothers innnunnn- T is not often that a Russian General is re- spected and admired by his men. The autocratic theory of Russian government is ten-fold more severe in army than in civil life, and the troops may be likened to, more, they liken themselves to a myriad of lambs in the hands of a handful of butchers. The Russian of birth is a hard task-master. He is not a man who can pity or sympathize with underlings. In his own sphere he is human, to those above his sphere he is a dog, to those below almost a god. Rules have their exceptions. General Stcnavitch was a striking exception to the general character of Russians in the Far East. Here was a man who was respectful to his superiors without being obse- quious, and stern to his inferiors without being domineering. His men adored him-they followed him anywhere. He had even many decorations from the Czar, and held many ribbons of honorary orders. On parade, as was customary, he wore them all. Over his heart, which might be considered the place of honor on a generalls uniform, was a very small decoration, a very small star-a blazing fir- mament of gold and jewels, quite unknown in Russian annals. Many officials had puzzled their heads over it. The general's well-known reticence had discouraged officious inquiries. The fact that he was happily married, and the decoration evi- dently was no love token, set aside sentimental considerations. The Czar alone knew what it was. He. had questioned the general to obtain assurance that it was not the badge of a native Nihilistic Society. The assurance had been satisfactory. No one ever forces the confidence of the Czar, so the general's secret was kept. Few had the opportunity of examining it close in Honor it-nnnuunn-nn at hand. Those who did described it variously. It was of gold, set with little pearls. There were three letters in the form of a monogram, two Ays and a T. A little silver serpent bound the golden monogram together. The serpent had emerald eyes. It was not expensive. It was mysterious, however, both in court and army circles, and the general suffered the mystery to remain. During the operations in the neighborhood of Port Arthur, in the early stages of the war, General Stenavitch had occasion to make an inspection of the workin fortification that was going on. A gang of coolies, working under the lash, were rapidly digging the trenches. The general looked down the line of sweating natives critically, in a casual manner. Then he stopped suddenly, and stroked his beard, nervously. Une ,of the coolies had caught his eye, and through the eyes of that man shone a spirit and mind-power far above the possi- bilities of any Korean native. General Stenavitch knew men-he knew all was not right. The fifth coolie in this trenchf' he said to his aides. Bring him to me.', The aides saluted and made haste to obey. The attention of the general's staff left the work about, and became fixed on the incident. Without a mark of emotion of any sort, the coolie threw down his spade, and walked with the aides before the general. General Stenavitch looked at the man closely, decided that the face had been darkened by stain. Some of the staff thought that the color was nat- ural. A search of the coolie was instituted. A paper was found, with the beginning of a plan of the Russian forts traced thereon. General Stena- vitch's opinion was vindicated. The man was a Japanese, skillfully colored. ' 170 A spy, said the general laconically, he must hang, of course, at once.', Orders were communicated to the guard, and a file of soldiers had a noosed rope over the cross bar of a telegraph pole in a few minutes time. The prisoner remained impassive. As the noose was placed about the spy's neck, the general spoke again, Has the prisoner anything to say FH Formerly it had been the custom to browbeat spies to tell of their comrades in their endeavor. General Stenavitch had long since given up the attempt as useless. They sometimes winced under torture, but never told. The general's last remark was not of this nature, it savored rather of the Westeriu civilization. The Jap straightened up, and looked the general full in the eye. Slowly, and with tremendous emphasis he uttered the following:- 'UAAEAQJOI TIMI-I 'AEI. Brothers in honor forever. The general's heart gave a great bound, as the words crossed the gulf of time, back to the father's smile, when he was a college man in free America. He walked over to the Jap, and scanned him closely. i Yonamaf' he cried. A smiling nod was the answer. The general's fist shot out. The grip, he cried, in English. The grip I These many years have I hungered for it. The four hands united. And I, said Yonama. I have hungered too. That hunger even made me cry out our secretmotto-there was nothing else to do. Forgotten was the war, the scenes about the national enmity. The staff stood aghast at the general's action. The pair were back again in college in America, when Yonama, a Senior, and Stenavitch, a Freshman, lived under the same roof, bound by the ties of Alpha Tau Alpha. 171 lt's enough, Brother Stenavitch, said Yona- ma, Now let the death come. ' . Death, there shall be no death for you, brother, said the Russian, attempting to release the noose. Yonama checked him. You must execute me-I was fairly caught, he said. My release would mean your disgrace. The officers on your staff know all of this, and I imagine some of them would be Willing to take your place. I do not care, said Stenavitch, The brother- hood, the life, heart to heart, soul to soul in far-off America is more to me than all the honors that have come to me in my own country. Execute a brother of that happy life? Neverl Alpha Tau Alpha is more to me than is the Czar. I prize my pins above his medals and orders. And I were unworthy of Alpha Tau Alphaf, said the japanese, If I suffered you to be disgraced that I might live. Give me the grip again, brother, and let the ropelf' I refuse to kill you,', said the Russian, im- petuously, as he again folded the ,Iap's hand in his. You give me but one alternativefy said Yonama, releasing his left hand. 'I Look- your men searched me carelessly, he produced a wicked looking, curved knife. IIThe hari-kari,', he said. Nol no ln cried the general. He was too late. His right hand still clasped in the Alpha Tau Alpha grip, his eyes still gazing into the general's, the smile growing more tender, he shoved the knife into his abdomen. Then, as he lay on the ground, writhing,ihe looked up at Stenavitch, and repeated again, in a low tone : H A5eqb?xoi Timmy 'Aff' When the general appeared in court circles again, the mystery of his strange decoration had deepened. liver after it was mounted on a bit of black ribbon. A. L. S. --f FOV SQKQ ! YYX5 0 km rinse! cvxx WuYxkS WNMXQ hwy, SXQQIV ,x 'Y Q KXRD Q14 Q-.QQ Q Vaci avg P C R5 V1NxixQxxoQ YY x HXA5.1:Sfi:??iiWK ,ESX ,ig I' 'IL xi ST :IH v a' . - gv 4 'M xK Q7 ffl! ' xl! ji , X Q ' ' V A Q , , - f s'X X' '9 1 ' I, R -A w- 95, 9 ' A I 1' fl gmawf 2. C' f A 'fl 2. f - H N 'fr V. ,II N , l, 6 E ' o XX I X rx f ,ff , KMA X mf 1 W - 1 ' ,-. ' I L09 -1-' Q1 , Q X f '9v I 1 ll . S up-' 0, 3. .. : - mg-0 t 5 I to X -: K FX I X I 4 'N X .5 9.3. V 43 ' I v 'JZ'- L 5, 11111 M '4' We 5 x 'H 1 'E 5 ,rin xl? X ,in 2 ! ' K RAI-my g 'ii X p 1 i 3 -M f gag ,cl 5 L H 1, su Ei- , we QQ ww , L5 fi S u m 7 X ' 7 Q 1 W kQ E3 ies? y 5? 1 u',f 'f' v C 5-5 K .231 Mfg' I S: f 1 44'- 6, X 5 641 HEROES OF THE ATIO GEORGE WASHINGTON: OR The Secret of the True Greatness HEN heroes' deeds of old are sung, ,Tis surely meet to instruct the young In what deserves their admiration, And what their reverent imitation. Else they may easily be misled And get false notions in their head, Mistaking, perhaps, the accidental, And so 'tis well to dwell upon The story of George Washington. Lend me, I pray, a kindly ear, While I rehearse his grand career, And introduce the same to you In the form of a paradox or two. As statesman he was great, because I-Ie never helped make any laws. As soldier he was out of sight Because he never won a fight. As orator he the record broke, Because he almost never spoke, Except to say, G' I want to know,', Or to remark, NI told you so. As churchman he was famous, too, Because he swore till the air was bl For the basal and the fundamental 9 UC, But his favorite swear-word was U by George l Still as a man it is that We Admire him unreservedlyg For here we see him at his best, I73 In silken tights and broidered vest, In lace and powdered periwig, And so forth-a consummate prig. A scene or two sketched briefly will Make these reflections plamer still. Of course you expect to hear fiom me About that hne, young cherry tree Which George cut down in early youth To show his reverence for the truth. You'll have to excuse me, for I Consider that whole yarn a lie, And hence am forced to pass it by 5 For this whole tale, come blame, come Is nothing if not wholly frank, And everything the least in doubt Is conscientiously stricken out. As soldier his long career began As soon as he became a man. Most we omit, for we shall gain From Braddock's Indian campaign A sample that will indicate His claim to be considered great. Braddock was learned in all the rules Of warfare that were taught in schools, But he had never fought with Hoods, Or savages in primeval woods, And so, before he ventured far In the wild, he called a council of war. thank They talked of this, they talked of that, Of what should trim a generals hat, And, when a stripe is to be sewed Upon one's trouser-legs a la mode, Which might be held the better way As insertion or as appliqueg Of whether they might hope to evade Swamp fever with tart lemonade, Or whether, when so far from home, 'Twere safer to indulge in rum. Now, George had sat in silence glum Without a solitary Word Until that syllable he heard, And then he promptly said, just so, As prophylactic, don't you know lu An hour later they went to hed In jovial mood, with noses red Against swamp fever fortihed And other ills of life beside. Now, this was well enough at home, Qne does as Romans do in Rome, And every English soldier knows What to expect from honest foes. No Christian is in shape to Hght Between the hours of ten at night And ten next day, even that's too soon g 'Tis better far to wait till noon. But savages do not dread the fever, And do not need a liquid lever To raise their drooping spirits, nor Do they care a rush for the rules of War. And so it chanced at break of day Some skulking savages came that way, And, hiding each behind a tree, Began to shoot most recklessly. Poor Braddock, Wakened by the noise, Rallied as best he could his boys, I And bravely did what man could do By all the rules of war he knew. He would have routed any foe That could be seen, or made to show Himself, but how, pray, could he rout A solitary, red-faced scout VVho here and there kept peeping out From behind a bush or clump of trees, And shooting at his enemies? Poor Braddock's head was still so large lt made, of course, a splendid targe For lndian arrows, and so he fell VVith most of his soldiers. George? Oh, well just how it chanced we cannot tell. The adage says, K' VVho runs away Will live to light another day. And sure it is that in the rear ' He did unhurt next day appear, Although his wig looked rather queer, As he remarked, H 'Twas a rum go, But then, in short, l told you so. As statesman a single scene will do. Be patient, and l'll soon be through. VVhen by his masterly defeats, And great stragetical retreats, Our George had Won the Revolution, A problem came up for solution, Namely, to draft the Constitution. Statesmen from all sides came together, And through the months of sultry weather That most august convention sat, Gravely debating this and that, Trying to Hnd where they were at. The hrst point was to organize, And, as you readily surmise, For chairman they chose by acclamation G. W., Father of the Nation. George smiled, and gave a sidelong glance At the fresh, crisp creases in his pants fDear me, Ilm wrong, pants were not yet 3 'Twas the fringe around each pantaletl. Rising, he bowed with courtly air, Smoothed his lace collar and took the chair. All through those sessions, stern and long, While strong men wrestled with the strong While Madison, Franklin, Hamilton, Debated hotly pro and con, And statesmen wrote with turn and twist Long creeds for each new Federalist, Gur George sat there, calm and serene, No storm upon his face was seen. n A few words now and then he spake In his brave struggle to keep awake. When some fierce orator was through, He would remark, I think so, too. When some plan clearly would not go, He sighed and said, HI told you sof' And when at last the document Was done, he had a glad assent, He had not read it, but all the same He solemnly signed his august name. I hasten now on to a time l Too grave, I fear, for my slight rhyme. Whom should the sovereign people choose For President? George had his views And had been slyly laying pipe For months, so, when the time was ripe, 'Twas found that every delegation Was pledged to the Father of the Nation. Hence, being the only candidate, Perhaps I do not need to state That all turned out as was expected g George was triumphantly elected. The thirtieth day of April came, And multitudes with loud acclaim 1 175 Assembled with the greatest unction, To see the new world-famous function. For let it here be clearly stated, George was to be inaugurated. lt would have been well worth your while lf you had only seen his style l No monarch from beyond the sea Was any stylisher than he. King George's lace and collarets, His silver buckles and pantalets Or even the powder on his phiz VVere not more 507717726 il fowl' than his. He wore a dainty powdered wig, All his accoutrements were trigg The presidential calves were cased In silken hose of faultless taste, As fine, I modestly opine, As those worn by Queen Caroline, The ribbon-bows that decked his knees, Arranged with studied grace and ease, Would certainly have made those pants The envy of the court of France. In short, he was from top to toe The pattern of the old-time beau, Which to describe in terms concise I d call a H bird of paradise. As George arose to do his stunt, The back rows cried out, L' Down in frontl So he, in doubt, with nervous frown, Reddened-and pulled his waistcoat down, Till Martha whispered in his ear: I' You re all right, now go on, my dear, He was fain to speak, but cheer on cheer Broke forth in acclamation loud From the enthussastic crowd. ii By Georgef, said he, in an aside, H VVere I not a proof against all pride, I might be puffed up by this show Of popular favor, donlt you know? At last, when silence was restored, He thus began and took the word- lk . . - . My fellow citizens, this occasion Is one for great congratulation. We stand here subject to the laws Of a new commonwealth fgreat applausel. The important functions of a state fHi, Martha, is my wig on straightfl Are now to be assumed by us Before the world Ctumultuous Applausej. In this experiment You've chosen me your president. At this the welkin rang, and so, 'Mid bows and scrapings, to and fro, And musketry salutes, to beat The band, G. W. took his seat. By George. said he, I told you so, A great occasion, don't you know. Now all young men, both small and great, lf you aspire to serve the state. And see your famous names writ high And large, as A156lf7'C5y5LZl7'l'zL', No matter if you have no brains, And stay out even when it rains 3 No matter if you can't orate, And hem and haw, and hesitateg No matter if you yea be nay, And if your night is of ten day, VVould you to greatness still aspire, Like VVashington,s, or even higher Then keep two things before your mind : Take care to have your shoes well shined l An oh, I beg, whate'er may chance, Look to the creases in your pants. Gi 9 I 76 f Pl'lE1l1llElSlTlElQOI'lE3 lfl D lVllI'lOl ROISSART was primarily a lover. How ingenious, how sentimental, may be seen. Lover of Reverie, lover of Reverence, he was also a lover of woman, and there's the tale in a nutshell. He had a soul like the chap who wrote the Reveries of a Bachelor, and it is safe to say that he never opened a book unless his dream spirit overcame all of his other emotions. Whenever Froissart peered into his Bible, which he daily did, he read that portion upon which his eyes first fell, and took that for a text upon which to muse until the morrow. This habit, meanwhile having gained a foothold upon his other loves, resulted in the following story. The woman in the case was Parthenia-petite, coy, extremely practical' and religious, a woman who was sufficiently well read so as not to give any man the shadow of the thought that he possessed her heart, and also. one whose tongue, occasionally sharp, had driven away more suiters than her inno- cent eyes had allured. Froissart, never angry with the least of creatures, had all smiles and dreams for the fair Parthenia. 4 Late one Sunday winter's eve, having trudged his two country miles homeward from his sweet- heartls dwelling, with light step and buoyant heart, he sat him down at his desk to write Miss Parthe- nia her hebdomedal letter, so that, receiving it on Monday, she might begin the week in proper manner. His brain was in a whirl. The memory of the last embrace still lingered upon his mind,-and his lips. So that, when he, absent-mindedly, took up the dictionary to discover if damsel were spelled with seven letters in inclusivel or not, the resemb- 178 lance of this book to his Bible threw him into the same mood as if he had taken up the latter volume. The first word he met would be his text for the evening. This, peradventure, was because in his dreams Froissart had always considered the dictionary, containing all knowledge of temporal things, of the same weight as the Bible, containing wisdom upon subjects of spiritual import. However poor phi- losophy, Froissart was no fool. The first word he set his eyes upon was Dark- ness, and beneath it, Darlizzg. VV'hat romantic juxtaposition of words for a dreamer to muse upon l the first a god, the second a goddess, each capable of being worshipped. ll D6Z7'1l ll, murmured he YO himself as he read the next word,-Latin, resar- cive, to darn. English, resockire, to darn socks- the work of a wife l A fair prophecy l Parthenia shall be my wifel But darn socks? Not shel Darn-it will never do for a text. He had, by this time, entirely forgotten his search for D4W2S6'f, and as he read the next words Dar! and DLI-fh, his right hand sympathetically pressed the left side of his diaphragm. Exclusively the weapon of Cupid, mused he. There is love somewhere between Parthenia and me if Cupid Dashes his Darts about here. But no. Evidently the environment of the last words were not sufliciently pleasing to Froissart, to put him in the frame of mind for the forming of a letter. They stood next to Daslard, and that meant Abe Lewis, who lived nearer Parthenia by a mile than her lover himself. And why, asked he of himself, should Dafa stand so near the word Dastard. Had Abe a date with Partheniafn Nay, more, the next word was Dalizv'-and he knew, alas, that the Dative expresses lnterest,- considering Abe, more interest than, to his bewil dered mind, Parthenia had ever seemed to take in him. Uazmi, Dazrzzzizyzg, Daznzllcss, Dczz1j5!11'2z,', read Froissart aloud. N Ah l thought he to him- self, 'lhere is a pretty dream. A fair textl hlyself, Froissart the French l A young Dauphin Daunt- lessly rescuing sweet Parthenia from the wiles of the pusillanimous Abe Lewis. If the environment of these words be O. K., l shall accept this text. Dawn, flair, Day-Lczbol'w', read he quickly, Oh,horro1-sl The inconsistency of his being a Dauphin and a Day-laborer at the same time. Plainly, never such a Day should Dawn. And then a benevolent god, as he sprinkled sand in his eyes, also sprinkled sugar on his brain, and his life became sweet and sweeter. As he dozed Off, the DLUUZQWZ' seemed to rise upon his nuptial date. l-le saw the Daly-l.2'U', white and pure as a virgin, which he had sent as a bridal gift to Par- thenia. l-le beheld the lady herself, Da2Sfl'1l,g' in her wedding linery. He saw the Deczfmz who customarily performed the marriage ceremony in that part of the country. At last he had married Parthenia, as he supposed, to live happily ever afterwards. 17 l3ut,loh horror of horrorsl O fate incompre- hensible l By what parity of reason should Dead stand there after Deacon? Froissart felt the cold- ness of Dfcllfl upon him. DKCHZ' IT1LlSt be his text. He must not sacriligeously ignore the Dead. From the Dead and Death too, as he mused, there seemed no escape. And so, even yet absent- mindedly believing he held a Bible in his hands, the seer of phantasms ceased to think of the deacon and Parthenia, and prepared to lie down with patriarchs of the infant world-with kings, the powerful of the earth,-the wise, the good, with fair forms and hoary seers of ages past, all in one mighty sepulchref' A cold clod of earth fell upon him as he was lowered seemingly into his grave. l-le gave astart, a yawn and a sigh, and looked up in the smiling eyes of his landlady, who nudging him sharply to wake him from his dreams, held up a letter from Parthenia. A It was ten o'clock on Monday morning. His fire had gone completely out, and there he lay, almost frozen stiff, his head buried between the pages of the dictionary. Although Jack Frost had, in his inimitable style, scribbled Parthenia's name on the window pane, Parthenia had received no hdonday morning letter, E, H. L. A FRESHMAN -poet opened the door And tookfia manuscript from his purse, Then said, with his eyes bent on the Hoot, it Can you use any of my blank verse F' The editor turned his disheveled head And uttered an awful curse. A Get out of here, you fool, he said : ul don't Want any of your -l verse. hd. E155 A SWEET young Vassar creature VVas dreaming in class one day, When she heard the stern-voiced teacher In terrible accents say : E U Youlre not listening as you ought to, Now what is the oblongata Fl' Rudely awakened the maiden heard Only the last terrihc word, Then like a summer rose she blushed, Answering in modest tones and hushed U Please, teacher, if you do I10t mind I'd rather wear the circular kindf' M B5 A SWEET-FACED mother, in maternal fun, While at her Work called her three-year-old son And taught him, While in pinafore and bib, The homely art of making up his crib. Some years passed by, the boy to college Went, lVl01'e upon pleasure than on study bent. But still his recitations all were glib- For his mother'd taught him to make his crib. M. 180 rd 4 ww 2. 9 1 -Qc if RK . M x 'F -I SI Kb -1 M., -- ff' .xdxl I iw' A' X v- '-- I, y. 1 5.-'. fy .fl 1,4 5 gg ,. f' ' A 1 XXX 'x I 4 . '- KN! ' xx - X' AX X w w f , hiih HN ' i, ' N U 1 ' X Nix wh J vi frf ' - .3573 XX 'Q H Q ,ff f A J ' .N ' ff N 1 CX J XXJES5 Lp? If I f f , ' f ff vmvxmxxb EX-Sri K. College Etiquette HENEVER you enter another mans room, do so, of course, without rap- ping, particularly if the man in question is not well acquainted with you. Expectorate freely and with abandon around the cuspidore, but never in it. This breaks the ice. ln appreciation of your host's ll make yourself at homef, spread yourself over his M orris chair and gracefully place your pedal extremities on his burnt- wood tarboret. Cast your eye around for tobacco which your friend may be keeping for his own private use, or cigars laid away as mementoes. lf you discover any, light upn at once, casting reflections at the same time upon the quality of the tobacco. This shows that you are a man of taste, and a connois- seur of the weed. lf ladies pass, throw up the window and Hll the air with Sophomoric cat-calls. Your host cannot resist the conclusion that you are a society man, and must envv the ease with which you appear in the society of the fair ones. When leaving, stand in the opens door for ten minutes, talking about the ubeastly cold. This 182 shows that you have great affection for your friend and hate to tear yourself awayg then slam the door and march off. ln the Library do not hesitate about reading over another man's shoulder. It is also the custom at present in the ultra fashionable world to sit on one magazine while perusing another, also to cut out any thing you Wallt. ln Chapel always call attention to the 'lbeastly singingf' then keep your own mouth shut. This shows that you have considerable knowledge of music, and a good ear. ln the Gymnasium never bother about a towel of your own. Open the hrst unlocked door and take the first clean towel you meet with. This shows that you are everybodyls friend and exceed- ingly democratic. On the street always greet prominent upper- classrnen by their nicknames, and if you are not well acquainted with them, slap them on the back. Always wear a sweater, or at best, a Hannel shirt to supper. This shows that you are of a humble disposition. Some Foreseen Epitaphs Here lies the body of Bobby Prentiss, As fair a Prof as God e'er sent us 3 He'd only one fault we could not pardon- He thought he was teaching a Kindergarten. E? May I say that under this stone is laid A history prof Who, shall I say, made A study of maps, and now I surmise He is making a map of Paradise. B Under these stones Lie the Soap-man's bones. An awful Cdl!-astrophe laid him low- At least the papers reported it so. If he got the deserts We Wish him, well, I guess be's teaching Dutch in-- Hoboken, the only stop in Hoboken. B Captain Smiley lies here- All except his ghost, Which, dressed in full array ls drilling the angelic host. 183 COMMENCEMENT WEEK OWED. lX'l y debts are legion and my assets nil, 'lihere's scarce a mail but brings me in a bill For clothes, from L-s K P-k-r, drat their souls, For clothes of which there's nothing left but holes. Ah l really mv condition is unfortunate- Nl y credit's gone-my creditors importunateg Nly friends have flown-that is, they will not loan g M y angered father threatens to disown. I tell my tailor ,tis way out of reason That clothes are Worn and paid for in one season 9 But all to no avail, they'll make me pay- No l No l-l'll stave them off 'til Judgment day.- 15' THE OWL Pray, what is the bird that's so magic in Hight, That brings back the students so late in the night, Or, leaving them, gives them a terrible fright? 'Tis the Owl. How black are its features l how bright is its eye l How very familiar its sharp, mournful cryl But oh l what a comfort to take a home fly On the Owl. fC'7'z'bbt-fi., 184 what Prominent People Say About the Scarlet Letter. JJ7'6SfKf9IL-f Il,OUSl'77FZt'- 'L Please send me two dozen more at once. l started to read one yesterday to an ofhce seeker from Maine and he fled immediately. f,?7'0'l'F7' Cfeuelfrltff- ul am thinking of selling my Princeton home and moving up to New Brunswick, where the Searle! Leilfr blooms. K'zz,7'0prLtlci11,- 'L Your funny poems made me laugh even in the face of defeatf' ,,7lfrt1'ie Cora? Z if- The .Srarlei Lefief' has my cSorrows of Satan' skinned to death. I like your Mr. Ashwell's picture. Say, is he a Socialist F VV'iZVZ.irt711, If6flf7'.S'ZL- V 'L If your ' grind' editor will report at my office during the coming week, l'll give him entire charge of my humorous Sunday Supplementf' E The Editor of the ..'J711c1'i.crwfz, .Men of .lefferzsn Se1-i,e.s- H Do you think that the Historian of the Class of 1907 could undertake the writing of a few biographies to complete my Series? He's the most cheerful liar I know. C6077 'ie JV'ctti01L- The highly moral tone of your Scarlez' Leila' is to be greatly commended. But tell me-does Mr. Moorehouse occasionally imbibe? His pho- tograph would suggest that such is the casef, 185 ff7Il,7N'7'07' ll i.77if1111.- Enclosed please ind seven ribbons of the 'Order of Di Dutchmenf with which it gives me the greatest pleasure to invest you as marks of my appreciation for your gift of a -Slf5l7'!5f I-diff. Please send me a new edition of the 'American Joke-lnterpreterf by the next mail. l End my 1900 edition very inadequate. Tim Fnczdzfy- U As tokens of our appreciation of the easy way in which you have treated our all-too-evident short comings, please accept the enclosed seven fb B K keys. Jffrry Rolfe- I write to inform you that I have already entered suit against the Sfflffgf fQ6l'2'6?' for defama- tion of character. l'm not that kind of a girl. The Pzzfblisizevns- Thank the Lord that blame Ashwell is at last out of our offices. We wonder how soon he'll PHV up- . Lymtm, Abbott Gerow- HYour insinuatione about my close-fistedncss are most base and unworthy. Eciz'z'01 s N016-The above was written on a postal card. Gay- U l'm 'glad to see that you were able to get out such a good Sfllffff LGUK7' without my helpf' T716 Etlizfors- U We're glad it's finishedf, 0 QE' ' ' 4.119 '-3 S..-i h h U, X Iwi' 1 'I -. x A r R -Q-, fxx .RA .1 K- E , K 1 , A . 'x N! , , ,Q X i Q . , , l N. XX Q 1 1- X- 4' Q . X x - 6 ', ' -q 1 XR ' 4 'fX ' ' 5 ' 'Q U1 ' - - x 12 - f' yi ' 5.-'1 . -nu ig- ?-?-' V , f -fx! U X E! - E- V7 1 if .A - Y-:X Ciy 3 N X s v I X XX-. Y Q55 N 4 - U XX. X 1 X W7 - .X 'X Q x 1 X5 w.' J 1 Xi 5 Chapel Attendance VVith a yawn the Freshmen awake And jump out of hed in a shake, Then, dressing with care, With minutes to spare, Reach chapel at half after eight. With a yawn the Soplfmores awake, Ere rising much leisure they take, Then, dressing in haste, With no time to was-te, Reach chapel at eight-thirty-eight. With a yawn the Juniors awake, But think they have made a mistake. So they turn themselves o'er, Sleep ten minutes more, .Reach chapel at eight-forty-eight. With a yawn the Seniors awake, And scare up a pain or an ache To keep them in bed An hour, 'tis said, Reach chapel one morn out of eight. aff? The love-sick Junior raised his eyes on high And saw the bright stars twinkling in the sky He sighed and softly said-H The stars above Are truly not so fair as you, my love. The maiden on his shoulder leaned her head, Gazed in his eyes, then tenderly she said, H My dear, the lovely moon, so full and bright Ts really not so full as you to-nightf, M. IS7 Foot Ball Captain-2 Views. The doughty captain takes his stand and leads his big eleven, Resolved to win a victory,-his one and only heaven, With forceful foot he'll slam the ball, With shoulder strong he'll ram the wall, He doesn't care a d-n at all, The game is his delight. Now see the doughty captain, in an atmosphere of gloom, Resolved to win a sheepskin-in Examination Room. Meeker than a lamb in stall- Cannot crib or cram at all, Repeat the blamed exam next Fall, Luckless, husky Wight. The kicker read the Letter to see the works there wroughtg The kicker read the Letter,,' but ne'era Letter boughtg He didn't like its contents, it's merits were too fewg But-he ne'er put in an article to show what he could do. Of all trite words of tongues or books of knowledges, The tritest are these,-H This is not other colleges. Our Agriculturist. Our Cops He rises with the rooster, A brave and valiant set ot men, To him all glory's U bosh gl' He merely Wants a booster Whose courage never Wavers when A small boy must be jugged again- Uur Cops l Of H Pig Of Hubbard Squash- Our Brunswick Cops l . . . . But when there's any work to do, Retiring with the setting sun, Our noble cops are very few, The whole squad fears a drunk or two. Our Cops l With hayseed or burdocks. Our Brunswick Cops l M He cares not for the clocks, Content, though matted be his hair A queer type of student there be, The queerest that ever you see g On Sunday his face Shines with heavenly grace, But on week-days he goes to the Di-. 188 lllLQ6I'S' M0lll6l 0056 llIll6S RIDE a cock-horse through the whole college course To see Mary Rolfe ride on a while horse. VVith a hook on her lap and notes on her cuff, She'll pass the exam., that's certain enough 15125 A HAIR upon my coat sleeve, Powder on my tie, Rouge upon my moustache- My mother wonders Why. RAB I HAD a little pony, A fine one for a cram, I lent him to a Freshman To ride a French exam. Q The Freshman wasn't foxy, The Freshman Wasnlt Wise, The poor helaborecl pony Attracted Dutehy's eyes g He Whipped him, he lashed him, He stuck his rider out, And now I guess my pony Has meanclered up the spout. BFE JOHNNY STAHR, Johnny Stahr, what do you do? Plug for ten spots to put me through. Johnny Stahr, Johnny Stahr, What'll you get? A fb B K key, you can bet. 189 BLOW, wind hlowg and go, mill, go. That the miller may grind his Com. That the baker may take it And into rolls make ir, And next month 'twill he served in the dorm. , 255 PUSSY CAT, Pussv Cat, you Come from what scenes? I come from the soap man, room number one, Queen's Pussy Cat, pussy Cat, what did you see? Qnly the soap-man scowling at me. IN MEMQRIAM Mandolin Club JUNE zo, 1904 190 Statistics of 1906 BY VCJTE. CDF CLASS Laziest man ............. ..... A IVRRAY Most knock-kneed ...... ............. A looRE Finest legs .............. .... I 3RIXIiIiRI-IOFF Hot air merchant ..... ........ S MALLEY Hungriest m an .... Thirstiest man ....... Biggest butter-in ...... ..,,.. .....EDn'ARDs r .xRDwEI.L CTieJ ACTUN-GREGORY N K ER I-I O F If Biggest tight wad .......,..............,..... BRI Greatest grind fun' nimousexeept his OVVH7-IENKINS 1. I Thinks he is ....... VVittiest man ..... l Thinks he is ..... l. l Fastest man ...... a Brightest man ........... .......... ..... . ...,.. . . .........KAlN UGREGURY ........KAlN ... I-I o wivrfr XVARDXYELL Thinks he is ......................................... GREGORY Most sourballccl man CTiej ACTON-BRINKERHOFF Easy mark ................................ .... ......,... A I XRENS Most likely bachelor ......... ..... IX QACNEILL Favorite cup candidate ..... ......, B ROWVN Best huilt by nature .......... ....... I 'IILL Biggest liar ........,........ ...... I QOEDER Best knocker ...... .... I 'IOVVATT Class baby ............,............................ ...... B ROGGER Man who has clone his class most good ....,. GREEN Most popular ............................,............ IVIACNEILL 111 B. K. candidate i.... ..... E TENKINS Handsomest .......,. ..... A SHXYELL Most lady like ....,.. ,....... R OLFE Most passionate ...... ..... E Dw.xRDs I-lomliest ................ Best athletic ...... Best fnsser ............ Living skeleton ...... F attest man ...... .IMLAY . ..... GREEN MAXCNEILL . ....... Do,ixE ERRINS Best business man ..... Gruenest man ....... Biggest leg puller ...,. . Quietest man ........ Hell raiser .......... Chestiest man ...... Best dressed ..... Biggest feet ...... Least known ..... Best soldier ...... Best speaker .... Shortest ....... . Dullest .....,........ Biggest iarmer.,... Best singer ...... . Worst singeiz... Best musician ........... Most open hearted... Best naturecl .....,..... Most religious ........ Most industrious ...... Greatest smoker ..... Biggest sponge ..... Faculty's favorite ..... Biggest chapel sloper Most bashful man .... Best rough house ...... Class goat ..........,. Strongest man .,... Average height ,........ hat measure .... waist.......... weight ....., 191 .....AsHwELL ......S'1'AHR F,xLEs .....DENx1s ...UMURRAY ............ASI-IYVELL PIARRY BROXYN ..............DOANE IMLAY DEVAN . ,............ Ixiux VVOOLSTON BENED1e'r ......ALLEN ......FEDREx' ......ACTOR ROLFE INJULLIGAN EDXVARDS NOBLE VVILKINSON MURRAY ........I'IILL ......PRATT ........Do.xxE ......EDWARDS BROGGER .....RoEDER .................DEYAx .5 feet 9 2-45 in. 1 ......QQ 1-5 ......14:6 2-3 The Seniors HARRY BAREMORE ANGUS- Elizabeth, N. J X 41 I never felt the kiss oflove, Nor inaiderfs hand in mine. WELCOME WILLIAM BENDER- . . Elizabeth, N. J Filled the air with barbarous dissonance. SIMON BLOCKER- Sify . Chicago, Ill. A T Then he will talk-Gods how he will talk. 192 CHARLES l,EvE1a1CH BRETT-M Frog, . Belleville, N I A 'll K KID G N lil Conccit in weakest bodies, strongest works, JAMES HOVVARD BRINCKERHOFF-H Brink, Jersey Ciry, N A T Built on the Moody and Saulkey plan. CHARLES WILLIAM CHAPPEL- Vlfarsaw, N. S2 II A He, above the rest In shape and gesture proudly eminent Stood like a tower. ROBERT VVEEKS COBB- Bob, . . Newark, N Z XII, Casque and Dagger, Cap and Skull. A good eater must be il good man. 193 GEORGE HOUSELL COOK- Cookief, North Troy, N. Y A '-P Liege of all loiterers and malcontents. EDSON JOSEPH DAVIS- . . New Nlarket, N. J I dou't care a fig for popularity myselfexcept with the faculty. ARTHUR VOORHEES DE HART Chick, Raritan, N. J A T Men ofa few words are the best men. GEORGE BERGEN FORD-H Fordief' A K E My hair a.in't as light 194 as Cobbie's. Allentown, N. J JOHN GAUIS- .... New Brunswick, N. J. He hath Hood unclcrstauclinw' 13 ID' HARRY LLOYD HARRIS- . . New BrunSWiCk, N. J Who can foretell, for what high cause, this Clarling ofthe gods was born. JOHN AUGUST HITZELBERG- . . Brooklyn, N. Y 4 M Z1 college coursezonc whole course. FRANKLYN EDWARD HOLSTEN-H Holstief' Brooklyn, N. Y A K 9 N E My only books are women's looks And folly's all thc-y've taught me. 195 HERMAN HERHUNE HOPPER- . . Monsey, N. Y My life is one damned, horrid grind. FRANK NICHOLS JENNINGS- . VVa1'saW, N. Y A K E There lies a deal of deviltry 'heath his mild exterior. GEORGE. RICHARD KOEHLER- . Somerville, N. J A T l'm from Somerville-that's all. FRANCIS BODO KURTZ- . . . Jersey Ciny, N. J X HIP 9 N E You can lead a man to a college, but you cannot make him think. 196 DAVID TOWNSEND MASON- Townyf, Bound Brook, N. J X XP, Casque and Dagger, Cap and Skull. -o With a smile that was child-like and bland. FREDERICK RAMSAY MASON- Dutch, Bound Brook, N. J X xv The 53rd card. HARRY CRUM MOREHOUSE- . . Selkirk, N. Y In his stream oftalk, there is no dam-n. CHARLES ARTHURl MORRIS-H Chawlief' Hightstown, N. J. A T So lean, sourfaced and so austere. 197 JOHN ELMER PEARCE- . . . Linden, X 119. Casque and Dagger, Cap and Skull. He-'S ai tough man, tough and devilish slly. LOREN PHASE PLUMMER, JR.- Quinton, N. l X fb I got that tired leeling' DALE CHARLES ROBERTS--N Dale, Bnrstnn, N. X S2 H A - Beauty is but skin deep. WILLIAM BOOTH ROLL- Billy, . . Trenton, N Gentlemen Ol'RL1tgC1'S, I am Wm. B. Roll, returning to Trenton. 198 N l ARTHUR VAN VOORHEES SCHENCK- Bullfl New Brunswick, N. J A Cb. 9 N E, Casquc and Dagger Not pretty, but massive. EUGENE WILLIAM SENG- . . New Brunswick, N. I Glum, gloomy and peculiar. BENJAMIN AUGUSTUS SICKLES- Coltsneck, N. I S2 II A This is the type, to' which, when it develops and grows whiskers, gold bricks are sold. ALBERT BROKAW SMITH-H Abiej' Somerville, N. J B 9 H One of those immortal names that are not born to die. T99 ALBERT LEEDS STILLMAN-U Monk, . Hoboken, N. J. A K E. K fb, 8 N E, Casque and Dz1gger,Cz1p and Skull U why is he so wildly beautiful. ALBERT AUGUSTUS TAYLOR, JR.- Schmitz, Allentown, N. ,I A K E V Back to the simple lik. IRVING RUSSELL VALENTINE- Val., VVoodbridge, N. J Z 41 A Sultan leads ajolly life. DANIEL GEORGE VERWEY- Dan, Roohesrer, N. Y A bearded pard. zoo ELMER SPANGLIER VVEAVER-H Pudding, Williamstown, N. J. ' A K E l suppose wlmtever is, is right. CHARLES PARKER WILBER- Chas, New Brunswick, N. J X XII But lx-'1Zll11L'l, he has Such awllxlly cute curls, and such pretty ankles amd -. FRANCIS EDMOND WILBER- Ned, New Brunswick, N. J X Xlf, Cap and Skull. Better as he is without roasting. JAMES HENRY WILLOCK- . Troy, N. Y X 119 In youth and beauty, wisdom is but rare. 201 1.41- -NAL l -.- i .. .- 4 -.h.- - , tl. Faculty DR. DEMAREST-Welcome. VAN DYCK-To every man a square deal, no more no less. DAVIS-Witli multitudenous C's encarnadine. And make the green ones sad. BARBOUR-One whom the music of his own vain tongue doth ravish like enchanting harmony. PRENTISS-Grinned horriblv, a ,ghastly smile. THOMPSON-A man may smile and smile, and be a villain. SMILEY-He was a very parfit, gentle knight. SCHENCK-The kindliest man. The .best conditioned and unwearied spirit in doing courtesies. SMITH-Tush, tush, fear men with bugs. UPSON-Though I am not splenetis or rash yet I have something in me dangerous. VAN DYKE-A good gray head which all men know. LEWIS-His bark was worse than his bite. DEREGT.-A friend in time of need. KIRK-Damn that boy, he's asleep again. NELSON- For every Condition a theory.'l HART-Sweet haven of peace and rest. BABBITT-He is more and worse than he ever called us. STEVENSON-There is, may I say, a vast deal of humbug about him. Me for the simple life, out with the strenuous l SPEYERS-His looks do argue him replete with modesty. TITSWORTH-There are but few such. PARMELEE-Sweet, dapper little man. BEVIER-That reminds me of a story. VOORHEES-A sturdy yoeman. H BRAZEALE-Either a bad conscience or a bad digestion. SELF-GOVERNMENT BOARD-The jury, passing on the prisoner's life may, in the sworn twelve have a thief or two guiltier than him they try. CHOIR-Straining harsh discord and unpleasing sharp. EXAMS., MATH., CAUTIONS, ETC.-All these woes shall serve for sweet discourse in our time to come. QUAD.-Confusion now hath made his masterpiece. 204 Juniors H Above the vulgar Hight of common s0uls.'7 VVARDWELL-Othellcfs occupation gone-clean politics. KAIN-I never heard such a drawling, affecting rogue. MURRAY-A woman is only a woman, but a good old pipe is a smoke. ASHWELL-By his walk shall ye know him. P. E, BROWN-A sweet angelic slip of a thing. FALES-Again arose that oft repeated cry, Professor, I really don't see why. IMLAY-Thus let me live, unseen, unknown. EDWARDS-His voice was ever soft, gentle and low. JOHNSON-Ah me, how many perils do enfold the righteous man, to make him GREEN-Give me another horse, bind up my wounds. ACTON-Tailors don't make the man, but they make much of the shoulders. GREGORY-There was one thing once, years ago, he would't explain. daily fall MACNEILL-Poor boy, he never is sure where the next meal is coming from. SCHOQNMAKER-Though lost to sight, yet dear to memory. BRINKERHOFF-Another R- and my father was a sb B K. here. NOBLE-Science covers a multitude of sins. DECKER-Set reverently at the feet of infancy. H. M. BROWN--Innocence and virgin modesty. JENKINS-The worst and hardest grind of them all. HILL-With his hammer, he out vies Thor. EX. 1906-Soon we,ll all go out to meet them. 205 ophon'1or'eS Retains the obtrusive freshness of last year without the virtuous innocence. KEENAN-l'se mighty wicked, l is. HEMMER-A devil may look respectable and wear good Clothes. VVHEAT-For sleep is such a treat, treat, treat. ARMSTRONG-Wlio is QUACKENBOSS-lsn't he cunning? VARICK-Night after night he sat and bleared his eyes with books. REINHEIMER-lt is a great plague to be so handsome a man. BEACH-Ever since folly has pleased, fools have been able to divert. ROEDER-Eternal grins bis emptiness betray. LEUKEL-And now hels Sunny jim. VAN DUZER-Ma give me a Cent, l want to be tough. VAN SANT-A babe-lusty and like to live. LANG-So welll go no more a-rowing so late into the night. WATSON-O my yes, l'm having a line time. JOHNSON-Sourballed and grouchy. SLIFRSTEIN -7 - . h , , 8: MARMER- is Bot were young, and one vias beautiful MAYHEW-The sturdy farmer is the backbone of the nation. GONZALES-She ain't no Chip. STOCKUM-O Wad some power the giftie gie us, to see ourselves as ithers see us 206 1 Ffreshrnerl O wearisome condition of humanity. MACCORMACK-Make the door fast on his freshness and it will out at the keyhole HARRIES-Why so pale and wan, fond lover, Prithee why so pale? WATSON-Never can get into the United States Senate. STOBEAUS-Compared to him, Moses was somewhat of a daredevil. STIENKE-Fat paunches have all lean pates. BROKAW-I know it is a sin for me to sit and grin. I HEIDT-Verily thou talkest large for one small man. LANG-The Lord only knowshow bad I am. WYMAN-Wants to try, but don't know how. TRACY-Surely, I will be wiser in a year. CRANMER-Nor knew fond youth it was himself he loved. VAN GILDER-The childhood shows the man, as morning shows the day. FISHER-Are you from South River? 207 f7'fff X ' 1 + -X ,. , f, - ,r I' - -, , V gqf vi 11 , I if :I y 1, I X TWV I M 2 6515 3f'6'4ff::E?irW'5?f ,fzi-H 'l f ' f' ' Cx' iff 5.41 1 'Aff' .ffffijgo '.I252'.,w1:'f' t-p w 1 V 1' ll 'ffl v!-52' W w 1. V U M .f ,,se4 H, J M Lg MP , HYiifflWU, M ' ' ' Wig , f m! ' ! '2f9 -LM + ' WY' W ' ,Affm ffl WW if 5' JV' ' J 1W1w'f l'S':V,H ' fl 1.1 f- M 111 I I vm ' V I Iwi 'Ill' ly xgm' sv ,A MN LU' ,J 5 3 Wynn' k ' 'Hg' m!. fl PM iv' I' ',l illlpy, gr! Q M if W 1 I , ml, L ,M WF .f' x N ln W x f v hl f r i 4 1 + X Y . 1 f f M, KW TQ f , Lay Y ,Q f wx W mms ij :ll .0 A , X 'Fig .-Q Q? , W K.. VX WA' X . f QD NOTE-S66 Adv. Supplement for fix QN . tm JAX Lv- W H513 X px QQ -. f Xi' XX . 1 X -'N .4-,Um f. 'T if W6 fs 'X , 11-:....s . i 1 I ..-:5 l '-'Q A. 8: P. Tea Co ...... Bissett, G. H ........ Blum ................. Brooks Bros .............. Cox Sons 8: 'Vining ...... Collier-Estate of .....,... Cottrell LQ Leonard ...... Dreka ...................... Deerin lk Co ........ Dietzen, Eugene. ,... ....... . Electric City Engraving Co ...... Elmer 81 Amend ................... Gaub, Wm ...................... Goddard, Stephen ...... ,....,. Graham Q lVIcCormick ..... Hagaman 8: Crater ........ Hinds K Noble ......,.,.... Hull 8: Rice ....... Harris, J. W ................. Hubbard. J. V ................... Harding K Mansfield ........ Hingher, Ed ................. Hughes' Laundry ........ Johnson, A. 8: Co ........ Kitchennieister .......... Morrison Sz Blue ...... McDede, Wm. J ...... Mansion House ...... Morrison, J. J ..... . Nitrate of Soda ...... Newman, J. F ........... Neverslip Mfg. Co ...,... Oehninger, J ............. ndex to Advertisers ......liack c .,......vin ...xii ..xvi .xvii over ...vii ...XX xviii ...xx .....ii ..xiv .....ii ...Xll ...xv ....vi .. .. i xiii ...xv ..xvi .xvii .xvii xviii ..xix .....v ..vii ....iii ...XV ...XX ....iii ..xiii ..xxi ...vii Plum, Matthias ...... Randolph .............. Reed, W. R ....... ....... . .. Rogers, Peet S: Co ........ Rust K Sons, Wm ...... Robinson's Market ....... Rutgers College ............ Rutgers Prep. School ...... Russell, C. XY ................ Schussler .................... Smith, E. O .....,...... .... ........... Salisbury, Jacobson K Co ....... Sayre K Fisher Co .............. .. Stillman, O. O ...... Stewart ............. Seng, Win. J ....... Schmidt, Val ...... Scheidig ..................................... Suydaln, P. H.. ...... ,...... .................. SCARLET LETTER Ccopies ofj ....... Tice, H. J ......................................... Tapken, B. U ..... Yan Dyk ............... Yensel, A. G ............... Yan Anglen, P. X olkert, L .................. Waterman, L. E ........ Wall, J. P .............. Waker Market ...... Welsh, P. M ....... Young, P. J ........ Zinnnerrnan, S ...... .... ....X Front cover .......viii ......xi ........xii ......iv YV ......xiX i ........vii .......viii ......xi xv ......Xvi .......Xviii ......xix ......xXi ......v1 ......Xvi ......Xi ......Xiii , ......xi ......xiii ......Xix .......Xviii ......xvi SEPT. 21 .- Our Alma Mater's Husband 'I introduces his wife to the Class of 1908. Graham 84 McCormick Caterers, Confectioners and Fancy Cake Bakers Ice Cream Manufacturers . OUR SPECIALTIES: Weddings, Banquets, Lunches and Receptions IOQ--lll CHURCH STREET NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. . SEPT. 27.-Harry Noble elected patron saint of the Freslinien Cby hiniselfj. I H, TICE Hagamanfi Crater The College Florist High Class Clothiers WHOLESALE an? RETAIL ana Furnishers Store: 390 George St., New Brunswick, N. I. 6 CHURCH STREET Greenhouses : Cranbury Turnpike. 9 ' Telephone 220-L. New 'Brunswick New Jersey OCT. 2.- Billy H Mac Neil is initiated into the mystery of his brothers meal ticket. vi OCT. 16.- Suu J. OEI-ININGER -DEA LHR IN- Beef, Lamb, Mutton Veal, Pork, Etc. , ,W , Smoked Meats a Specialty Cor. Stone and Wyckoff Streets New Brunswick, N. J. uuer House completed. l Wear Smith's Hats Hats Cleaned, Blocked, i Made to Order and Repairecl 15. o. smnzn E. 0. SMITH 8: o. P. Stuart I 19 Church St.. New Brunswick, N, J. Nov. 1.--L' Dutchy celebrates the liquid ating of the Summer House with a house-Warming. 'S- . 12-'sr College Gowns ya go Coos, I X wi, if ?f i . A Silk Faculty Gowns Pulpit Gowns and Choir Vestments Hoods. Cox, Sons G5 Vining 262 Fourth Ave., New York i E. KITCHENMEISTER FLORIST 73 ALBANY STREET GREENHOUSES: I 1 Floral Valley, Highlfillld Polk, N. J. Telephone Call 2184 College.Trade Solicitecl win? i i i is ii i Nov. o.- iPop 'i Jenkins ppiies for a divorce. WTl vii AN. 15.-D11 Schenck preaches from thetext : The tongue that saysrbncl Words shall utterly disappear S 8: J Tl'lG HEIT, 1LhEll1'S that ,, . . L 2 TALK TO Us ABOUT 44 lb L I Class Caps I AND 1 , l H ' L ' I College Headwear bOyfQfjQfthi'lg wd SALISBURY, JACOBSO Sc C0 Anywhere' Hats and Furs 552 .BROAD STREET, NEWARK, N J ROGERS, PEET aa CO. Dunlap Agency 258-842-1260 Broadway C3 Storesl We fill orders NEXV YORK by mail A 'i L : ' . -1 T - ..... . -. T O 1' i Kxilxnimllluwm-YA R ' ' 'L L its cgmr any-mm , -I Valen-pn know end the New Haven Umbra Q 9 says: '1he question of what in the 'world la - 5-A gwe zz frzemiis solved by , Q' SSNGS OF ALL THE COLLEGES H' l which is alike suitable for the Collegian of TI I I the past, for the student of the present, and I t- 1- for thclboy Corgirzb wgh hcinesg allso for tlig ii 0 mus'c- oving sister an Z1 e owfs est gir. . l fill the NEW xangs, zz!! the OLD songs, li 19. and Zh: sang: papulzzr al all the colleges: ,A I rz 'zuelfame KJ! in any hame any where. I Q , 351.511-BOOK.ST0RES. Music DEALERS.-51.50 I , HINDS 3 NOBLE. Publishers- 1 Ml 31-33-35 W. 15th sn., New York ony. - ' ! Schoolbooks of all publishers at one snare E i TFL-'l Y ii'-'a - .-5' i- ,. 9 I 9 P 9-F' .a -W 'V 5l-- f --T? I 1---'L Warclwell and Keenan wake up long enough to feel that their tongues are still intact, then roll over for another nap viii Agencies in New York, L. D. Tel. 91, New Brunswick Newark, Boston, Phila., Chicago, etc. SI-IYIIE gl FISHER CII. MANUFACTURERS OF Fancy ' K A ,, ,, Enamel ...r ,,-p, ,.,-,. I ' ff, S ,. J. F I , -fi-V-. , . ' .- wi-ji-If-f .,,g,Z ' , , '- x 5 ' us.. V AJ E A Yi . j V' A, I- ff.L:uex,f . In -- , :nt 8,9 ,-.W T ..,f 43? '- . .. -' 'nf .,1B4 ., 1. , 2, - .-:1,:a-1346, ff, R-cy ' -,.'. ,:L 1---.g.. , I , ' ,. SSS?- a .' f'cfi4 ' -H : -' ' ' ' 1 fee - - Q' Xe' ,. 'I- YE 'f?'?f'w f' 'M - ' :im iigyrii . SQL' N' I-'Q' -fa '1 'Y , 'wwf II 7. 'I-.,5ai24'f ff.. GNN-4-Wil I. 2: 4- , 11, N, . . Ummm! , ' --frm,-xf' ff Il Ilw A , 5-ITV WBLXEQ - i 1'i1 f4sx- 7 use 6' Y . , Th--Ji p',gif QQ: ...VAR - -Qc -T. s,y15i'c ',.,--,ff N' I -eee - of is-2 Sag -- f Q- . 'P'- w1J4Q?7iavi'? ..,fI- rc 3 -M1 IN THEIR RESPECTIVE KINDS AND SIZES Special Shape Brick for Arches and all Kinds of Moulded and Ground Special Work We make a specialty of Fire Places and Colonial Work, and at all times carry in stock a large stock of the different kinds of Brick Works at Sayreville, New Jersey ON RARITAN RIVER xx, NOV. I7.-U Monk issues his celebrated bull H against college vvidoxrllarticles. VUIVL J. IVXCDEDE LIVERY STABLES . ,-Q1' r 'H: ffvfp . .- K aa .. E - --1 'I . Sa 1 as 41444 .- 'frf wf . X I 'E I: -I 0 3 145 j YE 0 u- 4:4 . .955 sr Ms, -f -f . er.. . .- -T-:Mi ., rf. r tn 'D 'f .. P LLI .,, . - W.-Fa--.-.44-sax.-Q -Y ---' f - ,f .- 0 if rv lqrf I A o 4 , aa ..' f 2 0 1 wig X A 2 . saa-was x-.Ng -' ---x-rxrlw,-.-A ,XR Stabiesf-213 Staiolef:-63-70 Albany Street NOV. 22.-The Soap-Man opens his world 52115351 rnagaznre. Music by the Sweet Potato Orchestra. K Q MATTHIAS DLUM tl nuil l -1- 1 .AI Q Societ St3JtiOne1- and leave belnrrdyou at Y 4-.Gr morrrrmerrt yvirrtrre. -ifi 3 xl Wrlteyour name lbyllrrm- En raver of Dies from Class or Colle e 1 lt. M'SS'1QVe and many Gm g Pins g r ' the hearts j the tllrous-2 Y B c Address and Monogram Dres W1-h Q37 .Y ,tw an and Heraldic Devices s g al W an Quse 5' Artrstrc Styles rn Programme Inv1tat1ons r fii E and Orders of Dance r 3 , x. . . , -al h 152 11 - 1 F0 CLINTON AND BEAVER STREETS 1 r LEW C r r . . aterman 0 Newark, N- J - r l ta:.:.L1r:.c..'i:.'.:.Zr:.':.,,.,..,....a l I2 comm rm Lando? r075rJ,mer51.r1ummr :A DEC. 5.-First annual celebration ofthe Immortal Twenty. N. B.-Dr. Scott was not the guest ofhouor at this feed, as has been stated so ofteu. X DEC. 8.-Steve introduces a new machine, guaranteed to fleece even Harry Morehouse within a week. i The PRICE Tells and QUALITY WiI1S 7779 Leading DfUg2iSfS VAN DYW5 Wm Rust 8 Sens o Teas and Coffees W Peace Sffeef and Commerce Sf-were BEST TEAS fall kiudw 350- LB- George and Paterson Sts.lViehmann Bldg.j Usual 7oc. kind DUTCHJAVA coFFEE,2'rc. LB- v Usual 35c. kind JAMES NGK 8: CO. i Tilllilfd IIIII Library ill GBDTQB Slfelil Sl0fB i I5 Church St.. New Brunswick, N. J. i wr' Branch QfZfil43SQl,,W,.e,e 1 Agents for PowELL's CHOCOLATES DEC. 18.-Si Blocker makes his de-butt-inf, The light fantastic is just his style. 1879-ESTASEHED-1879 ll. 0.0.STILL1VlAN V Jeweler and Optieien Merchant... Diamonds ' i OOO I r Watches . i Ta lo Sterling Silver i El L 359 G-Eokcl-3 STREET 45 CHURCH STREET 5 NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. NEW BRUNSWICK NEW JERSEY DEC. 18.-Gerow receives a check for 3550 from home. - Yi Disc. zo.-Sends it back because he has no use for it. . r fhnnnsons .....1Viarket Fruits Vegetables Eggs Butter 99 CHURCH STREET NEW BRUNSWICK, NEW JERSEY TEL. 233-R Gund Huusekeepers ui New BfUIlSWlGk We are trying to conduct the best Tea, Coifee and Fancy Store in New Brunswick. We niean not only the biggest and handsoniest-but the cleanest and the best. We do not handle any- thing that we do not know is absolutely pure and unadulterated, nothing that we cannot conscien- tiously reconunend. We guarantee everything we sell and give you pronipt delivery and prices as cheap as any other house in the United States. Teas, Coffees an? Groceries TEAS--25, 30, 35, 40, 50. Fancy Crop Tea, 60c COFFEE--12, 15, 18. 20, 25. ,lava and Mocha, 35c New York Elgin C1'e:11ne1'y Butter. Sugars always at cost to our trade. Order goods by postal. We furnish postals FREE: ask ' f tl P t i e to at 1'Cl'l'lSE1'S Com Dare our Lil'lVEl' Ol' 16111. YCSCU S g V 11 1 'l 1 . 1 pnces with largest New York house. Get a catalogue. The Great Atligiic and PacificRTeaSGTompany DEC. 26.-Glee Club begins its Christinas trip. illiam Gaub C College Meats i Lunch Wagon Sausages i i W ARTHUR G. VENSEL, PI'0p. C011 EHSLOH Avg, and Pfggpgf St. 5 Paterson St., Rear Rust's Drug Store l i NEW BRUNSWICK N' J' i Finest Equipped Lunch Wagon Telephone can 211-w i in E116 S13Ei11G DEC. 28.- Libe1'tyl Liberty I how man crimes are committed in th name. xii Y Y JAN, 9.-Second Tellil begiili f VA lgfvffr gp- Uv JOH P.W LL Uniforms in Full Suits or Separate Trousers SPECIAL TERMS T0 STUDENTS UUALLJS Merchant Tailoring Establishment 11 5 CHURCH STREET Telephone 341-R-1. New Brunswick, N, J. The-:CClassigi1EorsC1neet 'i Bobby Prentiss. Gracie I L i9 'V Yi ,itil f folly ? C0 Weil? Y l q NN ig' rcfannnr 9 1,.. gan ...V ' nge , an f Q a n Q Q - -41 5 re Jmmsrnf NEWYORK 'Q reoeixres Allerrldzgll-lgdrieturnih ,QTFT the fold ESTABLlSHED 1876. HEAbQuAn'rERs Fon Fine Groceries ana Pure Food Products THE MOST COMPLETE STOCK IN THE CITY HIGHEST GRADES OF TEAS AND COFFEES THE FINEST OF CREAMERY BUTTER Honest Goods at Honest Prices Eiranzlaiinnn L1teral,5Uc. Inlerltnear,S1.50. 147vols l . . . g Etrhunarwn German, French. Italian, Spanish, Latin, Greek, 52.00, and 51.00. Completely Parsed Caesar, Book I. Has on each pngc inlerlinerlr trnnslntion. literal Lrunslatwn, and every xvorii crmzpletely parsed. Long vowels marked. 31.50. Completely Scanned-Parsecl Aeneid, I. 51.50. Q Completely Parsed Cicero, Oration I. S150- HrNDs sa NOBLE, P bl' h P, S, f 31-as-ss W.l5th st. uNeTv:I:rkcify , , i . Schlbk f zz bl'h an a 45, 47, 49 Hiram St., cor. Dennis St. i if 00 00 8 0 U pu m W or We . Telephone 67. A JAN. 13.-The Betas have their heads read. Buck Vlfheat declared th-e most induggns man in the bunch. xiii 1 W l IAN. 5o.--Besson acts as guest of honor at the Freshman banquet RUTGERS reparator E3chool For Boys HIS School is under the care of the Trus- . tees of Rutgers College, and prepares boys thoroughly for any college or scientific school. For all particulars address the Head- master. NEW BRUNSWICK, NEW JERSEY JAN. 19.-Prof. Geo HULL at RICE, DENTISTS 42 BAYARD STREET, One Door Below George Szfreel Formerly over National Bank, NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. On the American or European Plan. Cuzsiue Recheffcc. Bamgzzels az Specfalzgf. 101-107 ALBANY STREET, L. D. MAS, Prop. NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. mi jnikf 23.:HnOftE1Ti, ESTA13T,ISIrIED 745 X' EARS STEWARTS Hdberdd NCT MONARCH SHIRTS FOWNES GLOVES YOUNGNS HATS 1 1 1 1 1 29 CHURCH STREET rge leaves New Brunswick. 4 WM. J. SENG, p Fine Shoes, Slippers and Rubbers, Nos. 414 George St., and 48 Easton Ave.. NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. Cuslonz Work a .SAf76FI'tIlf,j', ff6'f7lZ1'l'I'11g' 1Vooz'l1' Done STEPHEN GODDARD The Hnesf Equipped Pool and Billiard Parlor' in the State Choice Brazzzfs of CZgll7',Y Foamy Ybbaffos Egypliazz and y1l!l'd'I-Sh Clgrzrffzflos Cor. GEORGE and WASHINGTON STREETS issues the famous 8.15 XV 9 Y W p i e.t7.iTln'ee New Brunswick Cops seen on the same night. G H BISS E T T EEEEEEEEE 'EEE Druggist ALSG AGENT FOR Huyler's Bon Bons and Chocolates GEORGE STREET J E Weeeree- .9 All Kinds oi Emblems Made to Order CHURCH and NEILSON STREETS, New Brunswick, N. J. IAN. 29.- Old Lady Queens puts on red op alentirrep stnmmt, MEAT MARKET, 340 George Street. Telephone Call 245-R. WOULD respectfully call your attention to the fact that we sell the finest quality of MEATS at the LOWEST PRICES. Our Meats are unexcelled in flavor and the expert manner in which they are cut and prepared for your table. Our ser- vice is prompt and obliging at all times. lmost earnestly solicit your patronage. en Works? Prexy has discovered the real Scarlet HARRI , A ..f...... Office and IE'es1'denre-359 GEORGE STREET. Second Floor. New Brunswick. N. J. EEE EOEEEEEE ZHVHVIEHIVIAN BARBER . A I Strops and Razors SHOP CLOSED ON SUNDAY PARKER-381 GEORGE ST,-BUILDING B I R l FEB. I-Btl11Ck dellV61'S l1iS fa111011S 111011OlOgL164 Ar1 hour in Char1ie's with my new Dress Suit Casef, vi FEB. 3.-johnson plays Goody Two Shoes in Chapel and loses one of them. JOHN V. HUBBARD Livery and I Boarding Stable Ziubbff' 7iKfffl?i3if?E12?f2??Q CANDPIES FURNISHED EOR WEDDINGS and RECEPTIDNS 21, 23, 25 BAYARD ST. 'PHONE 53-J. I 2 253.50 I Shoes and Oxfords ARE WINNERS lUfP- CTO- THE- MINUTEl HARDING Dc IVIANSEIELD Big Shoe House 9 PEACE STREET FEB. 7.- Buck W'atson freezes his fingers at Arlington, during the nmandolirr-accompanied perform ance of his famous Pass the Flowersf' O O QCA? CHARLES TAIVIDI GCP f9?EPif?HCE?f5PEPiCETQw'5Pif5PifEPifE?ifE?i.5Pi52i5Hf52iQP 'Iii -FEI' 1 'Iii ESTABLISHED 1878 452 BOOKSELLER AND 3 'Q STATIONER 'S B M, . College Stationery a Specialty 2 L' U S 3 '-iT ig o o 'Ig' ...MDEALER 1N...... 'lg' 'Iii' lVaZer1mm'.r and Paul E. W1'1'Z FOZl7lfHZ'7l P8l1S', gg 3 Ariisis' 1Vlate1f1'als, ClZfZ6I'j', Imaihef' Goody algal: v'I-yl'.l-Ilk'llI' .gg L'NGRAVING AT LOW PRICES E ig Headquarters for Spalding's Athletic and Sporting Goods 'gi T H A L' L' ! '15 376 GEORGE sr.. New Brunswick, N. J. aaaafaaaaafafqwawaaazaega FEB. 9.-Percy Brown goes into hysterics at hi S own diabolical nerve 'I in throwing water in the lab XV I dies ofShan1e :uid the fear of losing his cr: B K key. FEB. 13.-Pop. jenkins Hunks in Lewis. Almost 'TI-IE MOST OF THE BEST FOR A ' THE LEAST A E . Cottrell or Leonard A ALBANY N. Y. Alrzkfrs of D131 Goods, Fang' Goods ' Hoszeyjj, G,03,,,., ' o E runs, oowns and nooos Uizdgmngjgiy' Caafsfilzifsl Fyijappmis' E to Rutgers and the American Colleges ARPETS HWS mu A-If-Tgziaagsfi' and Universities from the C RUGQ, M LINOI-EUNIS, 1Ax'El2L1ltlC to the P21ClllC CURTAINS' 4 OIL CFOTHS' i Class Cofzfmds a Speoz'o!l1', Fine U orkma1zshz71 Roasofzaolo Prices Pl 'Il CDU RICH GOWNS FOR THE FULPIT AND BENCH 27 CHURCH ST. BUr.r.ETrN, SAMPLES, ETC., UPON REQUEST FMU A 1 A FEB. 16.-The Glee Club sthoclfe tlne people ofiagtiicfeig EDWARD HINGHER CAFE AND Lending Furniture House Repairing and Upholstering Window Shades Made to Order l35 ALBANY STREET il ?ll ANTIQUE FURNITURE EOR SALE LEONARD SCHEIDIG, fl Proprietor- II6-122 NEILSON STREET E EEHEEEEU EE4d 'Phone 202-W New Brunswick, N- ,I- EE J !fiEHEl3iEisi IQ.-Rgigi a fearful breiak in the Quad Song Service. xviii FEB. 24.-ILUITOI' Prom. , .i- -,?4-- f , ef- BUY Yooo GRDCERIES 3 P. M. WELSH T .. ..,. OF...... XYIIOLESALIQ AND RETAIL DI-IALER IX P. T Uld Gompany's Lehigh, Honey Brook T A and Plymouth Rod Ash Goal Opposite Soldiers' Monument Oldest House in the City. In business since 1Q Standard Goods at the Lowest Market Pr ces Bitunflinous and cannel Coal ARIEL CREAMERY THREE TIMES A WEEK Portland and Rogendale Cement Building Brick, Fire Brick, Fire Clay RC. Lath, Mortar, King-'s Windsor Plaster v Lime, Plaster Boards, Etc. ......OF THE BEST QUALITXM... ...We buy the best goods always and guarantee satisfaction... '1,'EIJE1?I-IQXE CIAIJIJ 247-3 'YS f'iEgS.26iTl1e FriesloineialtegiiicaiiesSout fork the airl E S SS SS EEE ,PEE STUDENTS AND STUDENTS' CLUBS H h 9 In all fairness should patronize ' those who patronize them, 2? SO REMEMBER THAT E? C. W. RUSSELL, S O.. FRENCH AND SCHUYLER so-S. LAUNDRY Can Supply You with the best h, ,h CARPETS CLEANED Of Le ig can -E ---8150-U 80 CHURCH STREET PRICES Prompi and Ejnrzeui. Sjicfrinl Rales for SL'1zzI'e1zz's. KINDLING AND CORD WUUD AT - - - MAR. 1.-101111 Stahr forgets to Wear his red sweater. xix , MAR. 4.- Boll Sclieuck breaks :BIO worth of test tubes. The W KER I ARKET KRETSCHMER G REILLEY, Props, ISIICCCSSOYS Lo C. J. Wakerb HIGH GRADE MEATS I Jon . ORRISON Groceries, Provisions, I Tea, Coffee, I Flour, Feed, Etc. Poultry and Garne E in Season I Special Rates to Clubs Ci Boarding Houses TTT' I FRENCH and JAMES STREETS 'Phfme 252-W ' 377 GEORGE STREET I W 'PHONE QB4-UU -4,,f E E , E , TW, , WWWLV , E ,M ,,,E,,,,,E,,,,,e,l-E MAR. 6.-Lehiglfs Debatin Team goes down before Rutgers. Estate of John Collier ICE and COAL Wholesale and Retail 215 BURNET ST. TELEPHONE 223-R fl DREKA Fine Stationery and Engraving House 1121 CDGSEHUT, SEFGSE Philadelphia COLLEGE INVITATIONS VISITING CARDS DANCE PROGRAMMES RECEPTION AND FRATERNITY MENUS WEDDING INVITATIONS ENGRAVINGS FOR ANNUALS MONOGRAM AND BOOK PLATES FRATERNITY STATIONERY HERALDRY 81 GENEALOGY COATS OF ARMS FOR FRAMING MAR. 6.+Rutgers wins its Scholarship Suit. XX MAR. 22.-Lewis't1'ie5 to I crack a joke. He'd best keep to stones -they are easier to crack. EEE., , ., WT , . E, .- , gwyxg de nsunance A Mal. ' E .W :- ' UU-- - wwwwej e O 12 S E S f-5 -2- 2. X , W 7 W , , E Q., W E f T R Y E- E Neverslip Shoes and Callas NEVERSLIP MANUFACTURING CIO., NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. NF C OF TH E SQARLETRLETTER SEND 51.50 TO G. G. ASHWELL, 24 COLLEGE AVENUE NEW BRUNSWICK, N. dl JUNE I.-HSCARLET LETTER comes out. The Board gets a leave of absence for two weeks.. xxi


Suggestions in the Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) collection:

Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection, 1900 Edition, Page 1

1900

Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection, 1904 Edition, Page 1

1904

Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection, 1905 Edition, Page 1

1905

Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 1

1907

Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

1911

Rutgers University - Scarlet Letter Yearbook (Newark, NJ) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918


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