Southwestern College - Moundbuilder Yearbook (Winfield, KS)
- Class of 1905
Page 1 of 149
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 149 of the 1905 volume:
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457 .f Southwestern HN ws if f -' 11331 Qwlvv Ir? C1 -v E f 4 we aw L - PUBUSHED UNDER THEIMRECHON OF THE STUDENTS OF SOUTHWEST KANSAS COLLEGE -5-I N-- VOLUME ONE MCMV VN DR. GEORGE Fox Cook: Un Gknxge gffmc Qlnuk, 1311. qH17EBihB1If,D1f jauilghrzsi Qftzxnszxs 4111111232 ani: frufzssnr nf Qmaikzmaiics ihis hunk is xzspnzifullg itzitiruieh ' SOUTHWEST IQANSAS COLLEGE Cmvvting m O make this book a complete and accurate record of the various activ- 1t1es at Southwest Kansas College veg? during the past year has been our aim. We Wish to express our thanks to all who have assisted us in getting out this annual, but especially are We indebted to the contributors to the art and liter- ary clepartments. Finally, we desire to beg the indulgence of those who may have been the targets for the shafts of the humoiist, re- minding them that they are better off than those who were not noticed at all.. The Editors THE SOUTHNVESTERN BOARD E51-ELLE STROTHER T. C. MAXXVELL ET:-lm. S1x11TH L. D. Mooma H. S. BAKER W. D. VoN SCHRILTZ F. L. GILSON Enarh nf 1 hitnrn Eflz'fw'-z'1z- C11 IU' . T. C. M A X W E L L A .Y.YI7!'Z-Clfl' .EIfl'fl1!'.V ESTELLE STROTHER X-VARREN D. XLON SCHRILTZ HTHEL SMITH LUCIUS D. MOORE F. L. GILSON f31fxz'17rs.v Mn img cv' HARRY BAKER 9 Q REV. A. O. EBRIGHT REV. E. C. BEACH S. J. NEER REV. W. H. REV. A. O. EERIGHT REV. W. T. SCOTT S. I. NEER . REV. A. A. PARKER . H. J. WINSLOW . REV. W. V. BURNS . C. T. FRANKS . GEO. W. IQANAVEL . HON. J. D. BOTKiN O. A. BOYLE . REV. E. A. HOYT JAMES ALLISON . T. E. HINSHAW, M. D. 1. A. FELT . . F. M. HARTLEV . HON. E. R. BURKHOLDER REV. E. C. BEACH REV. W. H. ROSE . WM. MCCARTY . W. C. ROBINSON W. R. MAXWELL . I. M. KNAPP . . REV. A. W. CUMMINGS Corporation Officers of The Board Trustees TERM EXPIRES 1905 TERM EXPIRES 1906 TERM EXPIRES 1907 I0 l If . President . Vice President Secretary Treasurer Winfield . Winfield VViniie1d Wichita . Dalton Dodge City Winfield Sedwick Caldwell VVichita Wichita . Wichita Winfield . Winfield Winheld Guthrie, Okla. Newton . McPherson . Galva Winfield Cheney . Wichita Winfield fffavx .I A . f- o , ,,,, M., 'M x W! X f' Q1 X1 K N! 3- lnxifg r f, W! Cx '57 I-1 r X f X 5 va X x , 'A -vc, . .5 H R ' Q ' G'Q.CT'jw f li W WW FM I I rw' K f A ' px sa, If Q X N W Aff lx x , V ,M X Ad i X 5 Eight X QQ ! I I 4 '42 2 ' A sf X 'M QV X 1 ef f 2 Q, OW my , 1 X f?z'ef1:i X CX X ff , ' J- jf? x 'M X NX I I W 1 rx A Ig fr I N Il, bl-I A I 5' Z! ' xx N 0 o 4, ff +1 f M N f 0, X ff f 1 . , '77 H 1 y f, H ww A X . 1 ' Q1 fl .N ' I. f 'N m l j I ,fy ,F APAA. V um R X N W N F X X X4 N NL N ' .. ... ,I 1 HY- ' K , I X H Wi? sz - Ae .1 f f 5323, a N I dm, I N W II Faculty GEORGE FOX COOK President, and Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy Graduate in Law, Ohio State Bar, 18863 A. B., Baker University, 18953 Ph. D., Philander Smith College, 18963 Professor of Latin and Greek, Little Rock University, 1893-94, Professor of Mathematics, Philander Smith College, 1894-953 Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy, Southwest Kansas College, 1895-3 Graduate Student, University of Chicago, IQOO'O3, President of Southwest Kansas College, 1903-. ROBERT BALDWIN DUNLEVY Professor of Science B. L., University of Wisconsin, 18933 Superintendent of Public Schools, Mc-ntello, Nvis., 1893-4. Graduate Student, Colorado College, fSumnierl 18943 University of Chicago, fSummerj 1895-18973 Professor of Natural Science, Southwest Kansas College. 1895-. LEROY T. WEEKS Professor of English, and Dean of the Academy' A. B., Cornell College, 18833 A. M., Cornell, 18863 Ph. D., Denver University, 19033 Acting President of Interstate College, Texarkana, Arkansas, 1892-33 Acting President of Little Rock University, 1893-43 Student at the University of Chicago, 1895-6-73 Reader in the Bodleian Library, Oxford, England, 18993 Professor of English in Southwest Kansas College, 1897-. MRS. LEROY T. WEEKS Assistant in English Ph. B., Cornell College 18983 A. M., Baker University, 18983 Student in the University of Chicago, 1896-73 Professor of German in Baker University, 1893-18943 Assistant in English in Southwest Kansas College, 1897-. BURCHARD W. DEBUSK Professor of Philosophy and Education B. Sc., Danville College, 18983 A. B., Danville College, 18993 A. B., Indiana University, 19043 Graduate Student, University of Indiana, 19043 Professor of Philosophy and Education, Southwest Kansas College, IQO4-. CARRIE PUTNAM HERNDON Principal of the Normal Department, and Professor of History and Pedagogy Graduate, Illinois State Normal University, 18933 Teacher in Morgan Park, Chicago, 1893- 953 Superintendent Morgan Park Schools, 1895-973 Ph. B., Chicago University, 19003 Graduate Student in University of Chicago, 1900-013 Critic Teacher, Chicago Normal, IQOI-O2, Professor of History and Pedagogy, Southwest Kansas College, 1902-. JOHN JACOB THIEL Professor of German and French A. B., Iowa College tGrinnelll, 19003 Graduate Student, Chicago University, 1900-013 Summers, 1902 and 19033 Instructor in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, High School, 1901-023 Pro- fessor of German and French, Southwest Kansas College, IQO2-. SHERMAN CAMPBELL Professor of Greek and Latin Languages and Literatures A. B., Harvard University, 18993 A. M., Harvard University, 19033 Instructor in Greek and Latin, Hudson River Institute, Claverock, N. Y., 1899-19013 Instructor in Greek and Latin, Norwalk University School, Norwalk, Conn., 1901-023 Graduate Student, Yale University, 1901-023 Graduate Student, Harvard University, 1902-19033 Professor of Greek and Latin, Southwest Kansas College, IQO3-. FRANKLIN LEONARD GILSON Director of School of Oratory Cornell College, 1894-53 Ph. B., Upper Iowa University, 18993 B. O., Cumnock School of Oratory, 19003 Director of School of Oratory, Southwest Kansas College, IQOI-. IZ L. T. WEEKS R. B. DIINLEVX' CARRIE P. HERNDON J. J. T1-HEI. F. L. G1Ls0N MRS. L. T. WEEKS. SHERMAN CAMPHELI B. W. DEBUSK JOHN F. PHILLIPS Principal of the School of Business Training A. B., Southwest Kansas College, 1902. Assistant in Business School, 1901-02, Principal of Business School, 1902-. ARCHIBALD OLMSTEAD Director of Conservatory of Music and Professor of Piano-Forte Director of Winfield School of Music, 1888-90, Organist and Accompanist, St. Thomas E is l C1 ' ' ' ' ' p copa iurch, Washington, D. C,, I8QO-IQO2, Director of Winfield School of Music, IQ02- O33 Director, Southwest Kansas College School of Music, IQO3. CAROLYN WILLIAMS Instructor in Voice Culture Pupil of Madame Novello Davies, London, England, I898-IQOIQ Soloist in Royal Welsh Ladies' Choir, IQOO-OI, Instructor in Voice Culture, Southwest Kansas College, 1903-. SYDNEY G. STARK Instructor in Violin JANE YOUNG Instructor in Piano-Forte, Harmony, and Musical History Graduate Illinois Conservatory of Music, IQOIQ Pupil of Dr. 1. Wootton. LAURA E. MCDOLE Instructor in Piano-Forte Conservatory of Music, University of South Dakota, 1894-99' Wisconsin College of Music 8 1 Q9-IQOZQ Instructor in Southwest Kansas College School of Music, 1903-. i W. H. CAMAN Instructor in Wind Instruments EFFIE LYNN Instructor in Drawing BERTON C, DUBOIS Instructor in Latin LILLIAN GETTY Instructor in Stenography and Typevvriting WALTER E. PHILLIPS Assistant in Business School FRED E. CLAPP Assistant in Business School GRACE EDMONDSON Assistant in Business School I. GEORGE KRAFT Assistant in Stenography and Typewriting EVA C. BAXTER Assistant in Stenography E. E. ANDERSON Penmanship 14 CAROLYN VVILLIAMS A. OLMSTEAD LAURA MCDOLE L1l.1.1AN GETTY G. SIDNEY STARK JANE YOUNG J. F. PHILLIPS - MZ F' 6 fi nv X! ,X Q K 1, V . Z' X 'f' - X :Qi 'Sf , H I 17' ggi 'ff - swf , ff 1 X L f W 5 f f!951 f wif , , , if ' . i.'f5Z'f'9i73fi:Z'-, '5 ff, N ' 1 fx X LL- -4'4,.. Q we may' . I ' f - Pi - 2 fivf f xx 1 I, .QQ A Q .V - 4- alf:..fg.,' ,, X X f W! fa' fazJ2Z?ff X X f v V ig 'f 19,15-3173 7' if 1,1525-,.,,5 ' ' X N ,fm - 625 ZW 'NX 'gn-M X 74 f .ff f '4 i 7- n f- F'?79i5'? 4522? MW 555 f X X ,17 'f ksilzsabuigiffi ' 5 .gf 'piggy-11:2 .ji':' , px,-x f f 7 X 4'- Y' Vx H 14? 4 5 1 A .. f 11 - J - f 'fl 1 I V' Q 1 rflx ul 'Q-'I 4? OX 'll ,' , K ff. g u .A Ai ,794 Vx ,- I jf N Q . - . 1 nf ' f I :r'l' 1 H 'vi '5 W 1 , 4 fm. fx Z f I fffffi rf W NSHA 2 , ' 4 5 f A jf:-?? 9'd5p jf ' Ns? X' ' ' '22-'G'- H A f ' x ILM! f -ix ,1 I .iff ' ,ff , -2 ' V 2. I7 Class of I905 ESTELLE STROTHER, E II fin Winfield Classical. President Senior Class: Secretary Oratorical Associaliong Literary Editor Collegiang Associate Editor Southwest- ern. ' ' Tis true she's very much inclined l T0 joke and talk With all mankind. PEARL B. LOVE, Athens Winfield Philosophical. Secretary Senior Classg President Temperance Oratorical Association. But Love is blind and so cannot see The pretty follies he himself commits. RALPH A. FELTON, Delphi Hydro, Okla. Classical. President Oratorical Associationg Manager Football Teamg Treasurer Senior Class. He is the very pink of courtesy. 18 RILEY E. MORGAN, Delphi Chattanooga, Tenn. Classical. Athletic Editor Collegianf Manager Baseball Teamg Presi- dent Delphi. Oh! What a plague is love! sa ADA MCCLl41LLAN, 2 II if Winfield Classical. Secretary Sigma Pi Phi. Sometimes a violent laughter screwed her face. GEORGE J. KRAFT, Athens Winfield Philosophical. Instructor in Stenography. Who studies night and day. WARREN D. VoN SCHRILTZ, Athens Coldwater Philosophical. President State Oratorical Associtiong Associate Editor Southwesterng Captain Baseball Team. I have no ambition to see a goodlier man. I9 WILBUR E. BROADIE, Athens Winfield Philosophical. Representative State Oratorical Contest. Greater men than I have lived, but I doubt it. ANNA ELIZABETH BELL, Belles Lettres Winfield Philosophical. Vice-President Oratorical Associationg President Lettres. I love not man the less but nature more. 9 WILLIAM J. WEBER, Athens Winheld Philosophical. Speaker Athens. ':Do not saw the air too much with your hand. fAnother argument against co-education.l IIARRY HUSTON, Delphi Winfield Classical. Captain Football Team. He catches flies and pigskinsf' Belles 71 20 1 Winfield Grand Opera House CDate withheld for fear of the police.J The Senior Stock Company ln All Sorts of Scandalous Stunts MISS ESTELLE STROTHER, B. O. Formerly with the Mexican Mustang Liniment Company, Supported by a Superb Squad of Stars. In Particular by RILEY HOE-CAKE MORGAN Who, in spite of general request, will sing his old favorite, The Watermelon Way, also his latest, I Cannot Take a Snow Bath There. WILLIAM -I. WEBER Manager and Bill Poster of the Company will come out between acts and Sing Oh Baby-Minef, WILBUR E. BROADIE, B. O. AND ANNIE ELIZABETH BELL fAlso Baltimore Oysterl In an entirely new interpretation of Romeo and Juliet. ADA MCCLELLAN In the Girl With the Auburn Hair and Teasing. RALPH ALNUN FELTON M Acrobat, Contortionist, Clog Dancer, Tight Wire Walker, Ladder Climber, Juggler, Magician, who has performed before all the crowned heads in Europe, dressed in his new suit of red tights, will show how he won the pole vault at Lake Geneva. GEORGE YABI KRAFT The Little Midget Past Grand Master in Jin-Iitsu will wrestle with his pupil Harry Fitzsimmons Huston, late of Tisdale Athletic Club. Positively the last appearance of A WARREN D. VON SCHRILTZ Before his departure for foreign lands, His little sketches, My Little Filopena Babe and The Parting, the latter introducing How Can I Leave Theef' are alone worth the price of admis- sion. QSeebeloW.j PEARL L. LOVE just escaped from Ten Nights in a Bar Room assisted by rapidly moving pictures, will Uncap Hell. Admission 5 cents. A pretty souvenir given away with each ticket. NOTE. This attraction personally guaranteed by E. B. Byers. 21 X Senior Directory Name Age General Appearance Favorite Occupation Future Occupation ANNIE BELL P Devoted Dreaming W. C. T. U. Lecturer W. E. BROADIE 25 Wise Lifting the Black Man's Burden Ward-I'Ieeler R. A. FELTON I3 Vain Holding the 'Phone 1 Patent Medicine Peddler HARRY HUSTON 20 Sporty Throwing Balls Proprietor of Billiard Parlor I. G. KRAFT 22 Dainty Going to Lecture Course Attractions Postmaster at Hackney LOVE 22 Fierce Temperance Orating Bartender R. E. MORGAN 27 Hungry Eating Waiter in a Restaurant ADA MCCLELLAN I2 Lovable A Secret Hard to tell ESTELLE STROTHER ro Loving Not to be told A Contented Wife VON SCHRILTZ 25 Winning Courting Taming Cannibals WEBER 40 Married ' Croaking Advance Agent for Barnum SL Bailey 44, Q X , J 5 ' ., .QM I f 1 f if f L' f: VM , v if 7- M 1 f fy V ' xx 1' f , KX Z W f M f ' W' X if ffwvvr ' Jill lil-I K X ' ? . 1, N . 'W N fi v 4 .J V 'Z X N 1 ff n xg my X I x-- mix: u ,. V X lx' qv 4.4 .,3yf'W'1I U '-QW wh- , X A BM ,fax-'f Nv ' ' 'wa-X xx W f 'f 'ff 52ixr if1 vW f .5- fX ff ff 14 dnl' X T1 , X A A ' R pix X ' X N ,fl W H fu'!Z'j,,,,,n:1i,N, KEN. f + f v 1 'UWVWJI5 Sfi.m :u1x,, !,' XF1' 1, N-1-.slffx-4 5 'L ' -3? T '0' ,1, x Y 3:5 ' U .1 Effff' ZW- - E 0 ,,' - 3 H I lfrn. Jff' 'Z 64 ' ' 51: ff X ,fina- X wwf ff fb - X4 Ngf , f - .4 1 at ' I-Z , , ' 17 if f c: ' ' X 23 l l Lucius D. MooRE GEORGE INIICDERNIOTT Pre:z'n'mzl Secretary J ' r Class Colors NILE GREEN AND WHITE. Yell LET'ER RIP! LET'ER ROARl LET7ER Go, ONCE MORE! - RAZZLE DAZZLEE RAZZLE Dix! WE7RE THE CLASS or 1906! The Tale of Ought-Six A Lf., - HE class of greenhorns that met as Freshmen in 1901-oz elected T. C. I Q Maxwell president after a close and exciting contest. As Maxwell V 15.6 V Aj thought he could be the whole works himself, no other officers were K chosen. It was in the spring of this year, that green paint was so 5 profusely daubed on the walks and rocks over College Hill. And it ' was about the same time, that four of us braved the maledictions of the faculty and hanged a prep from the steeple. The next fall Maxwell was again given the office of president to keep him from sulking. With the exception of one class party, nothing unusual took place. This year the class of '06 are much in evidence. To begin with, Moore was made president, McDermott, secretary and treasurer, Dubois, prime minister, King, chaplaing Parrish, general fac-totumg and Maxwell, court fool. The Salic law excludes girls from holding oflice until the senior year. Several parties have al- 24 ready been heldg our yell was the first heard in chapel, while we came out in our caps and gowns the same day the seniors tried to show off by their puerile bur- lesques on the faculty. ' Thus for three years we have climbed the steep hill of fame, bearing in a fitting manner, the arrogance of the upper classmen, the deference of the under classmen, and enduring with the composure of the Stoics, the intolerable brightness of the faculty, as we communed with them face to face. HHumility is the badge of all our tribe. The vicissitudes of time and circumstances have broken and disor- ganized our serried ranks, as we passed through the trying ordeal of term exams., but we have never been entirely hors de combat. The march begun in the fall of 1901 has been interrupted by desertions and strengthened by accessions, but now we stand forth a living testimony that the Httest survive. Marriage, that last infirmity of noble minds, got in its nefarious work on but one poor sinner, but he has borne himself well under the added responsibilities of supporting a family while in school. The strong stress of circumstances has cer- tainly brought out all the nobility in this man. He has written poetry that brought down the envious execrations of the foremost poetaster of Kansas. This man, who is none other than the present grand and glorious Poet Laureate at Athens, also has the distinction of being the only preacher in his class, at least the only one who is now working at his trade. Among others who have attained less and done less good than King is Bert McMillen, a man exceeding well Htted by nature, training, antecedents, and pro- clivities to become the social favorite of S. K. C., yet he absolutely refuses to use his advantages for his own private benent. Bert did not decline when two pieces of cake were offered him at the last junior party. After writing of commonplace things how pleasant it is to turn to the pride of the Juniors and the despair of the amorously inclined Sophomores, the paragon of beauty, wit, excellence, learning. and grace, Mary Bell. This year at Christmas time Mary shook the scrubby Sophs and joined the crowd. She said that she picked us as winners two years ago and began studying extra hard to catch up. In leaving her classmates she also bade her old beaus good-bye. Then there is a certain man with an eye that betokens the craft of Ulysses, M. W. Parrish. As a devotee of the Hsmooth and oily art, as a craftsman in cunning and forethought, and as a possessor of common sense he is easily supreme. He never sees anyone doing something mean but what he is at once Hlled with a desire to go one better in iniquity. His father sent him to college in order to abate this evil propensity. G. H. Broyles is the one gifted mortal who can get pleasure out of misfortune. The microbes of Uennui thrive luxuriously in his system? By satisfying their rapacious appetite with an inordinate self-love he manages to be happy. Did he not have an indulgent father, a loving mother, and a sympathetic sister, he would come to perplexing grief. :'None knows him but to love him, None names him but to praise. The most delectable jewel in Southwestern is Thomas Carlyle Maxwell. In him are combined the highest measure of brilliant and well developed intellectuality, and a sweetness of disposition passing the ideal of saintliness. It is seldom that such native goodness is combined with such precocious wit and understanding. Yet all is not told, for this paragon of virtue and wisdom is just now Hin florem 25 2etatem, but scarcely out of his knee trousers. But even now such opaque sub- stances as Bowneism, DeBuskism, and Dubois's conceit are transparent fallacies to him. Like all great men he has a few faults such as credulity, bashfulness, constitu- tional laziness, a loving disposition, and a desire to write poetry and sing. L. D. Moore is a plain harmless boy not worth mentioning. George McDermott is a youth of fine feeling and sympathetic instincts, of mas- sive and well trained intellect. A prodigious memory, a flaming wit, and an entire disregard for the eternal fitness of his speech mark the outline of this most extraor- dinary character. From babyhood, when he pleased his mother and disgusted his father by quoting: Quodsi me lyricis natibus inseris, Sublime feriam vertice sidera, until he graduated from high school at the milky age of fifteen, he has followed in the paths of prescient lore marked out by Hugo. Grotius, and Baruch Spinoza. At ten he delivered a philippic against the enemies of Henry VIII. Eight years later he brought ridicule to the class by writing some stuff entitled HAmbition and HSonnet of a Bachelor, No. ut' which he had thebrass to call poetry. This verit- able prodigy is much sought after by the sweet faced daughters of joy at all recep- tions and banquets. Bert Dubois is problematical if not enigmatical. His raising will account for some of his oddities, but it is left to genius to explain the others. This man gave little promise to his enemies of what he would in a short time be. A Western Kansas ranch is not usually an incubator for poets and beau-brummels. The Par- cae certainly surprised people. He made his debut early in 1903, when he quietly took his place beside Browning and others, who write verses that no one can under- stand. Prof. Weeks after laboring all night long gave it up in despair and asked Bert what he was trying to say. When this indigestible product of mentality be- came known over College Hill, Dubois was taken up by the elite of S. K. C., and became the conhdant andfriend of all the married women. But Mirabile dictul all this adolation did not make a solipsistic idealist of him, for he gladly condescended to lead the Grand March at the Iunior Ball this year. In giving the salient characteristics of Josephine Bell no improvement can be made on the following clipping from Duboisls HGirls I Have lVlet : It is well that one of such gracious loveliness should be discussed negatively. To be sure, she cannot be accused of being square. Her sweetness of temperament, her charitable ways cannot but fail to attract Professors, et cetera ....... Her hair falls gently over her lofty brow like that of the meekest Puritan damsel ....... Her lips are gently parted, around which play with fairy tread the most fascinating of smiles. Her chin is a warning to suitors. It is truly masterful ....... Helen of Troy ....... beside Joe. Of Elsie Rupp, Chicago and Baker both have said: HPost se longo intervallo omnes relinquitf' Of well trained and exact scholarship, caring little for the vain pomp and glory that affect this sterile promontory, she possesses in full heaped and rounded measure all the splendid qualifications that go to make the ideal Junior co-ed girl. dl 26 : , ' 5 -9? .f -' 'T -, ' fx f 4 ' - f . '12 -'W J-4-.' X r ' f - N X . Y ,I 1. Lhf . ' V, ' ,, -x, -- M:- qzzz-f'1 'ff4-ffy ' ffsifgf' ,W '- xv--A WI, 1f:f:z:1:Lff ' - J' .. f iff A ., : Ni . -W, 4:Q5gfFf?771 ,nf VII ' A afifqigg' 655' Las? 1L3'3'i'g7,' wif Q2f'WA'5,aE:1pd24- . N Phgif . N 'ah ...- J A ,,5Q,., ,fl A,-pt,-,,.g.15,,, A Xsg k ,M , f 7' ' pf: QQ? 5' Z .., fN'T-'-.,-.,- :a':gQ ff 471' 91641-!.' 321 f' '::w.3l1f','aQ72.' ff- Y' ' WEE Q -. :ffmwmf Y nsriwfgmq-f - -.. LA - Wg- 11 1 -,g5:A:155'f L Giga X f ' 41- -3 43 ff-iw -5-A - 1 - f f'-111 1 HH f , L .f . Qfh!-,flu - - - -- -- f 'f , ff - - K J4..1Z.!'X.'iA-'lfq , r L , ' --If-ri, - WSW' - ,rj Q, Qgflwgy: fra, A -ff f, X 1:-., 73, iw, 5 I t , Qi I lf ,f i.gff2,:::, ,,1g,, 9 p. v 'xW 444' -Y - M 1 ,gy 5 'D Nq r ' L47 - .- -va: 4, , A-. X W 'Wai . ' - girly 5' ' IW' ' 1 P 71 A?f - -i U '-'Y -W i 1 I JH A '.-1 . gif .. '0. 1 ,nfff Eli jg , 1' ' 5, 1 ,! -A N-61'-,fgnw fm E - ff: I if X' , V XM 5.4147 ' - 1' ' w in f A N K Ml' .- Hh'.:lLC ,. A -qi: l f- ,fifl-4 5+ 'W f ,firegzlggfz , ,FA I . ,aiu J , ' ' - v fl 1:---'f ,I , ' -. Q Q W H f .fb ' 1 -14 A ' -V gy aim? ' - '1i'5'f5,ffZ5.:f11.i'-. - a - 5 f ,rf'.w' . - -., ' , ' M, H--9. f,z2, 9w2f5i?'f3 . k ' 5 : . MM F' 'WTSEAPT 72'flj7?WZW'5L 9' , 'J X 51, -f 4- i f ' E' ' , 1 S- f ' ' , lf 147 1 ' ' , Wg' ' ffvf Ai? f iff , f ' 7 Y' z - - X v w ,- 4 2 f L - I L ' ,, .- Q: di f-:M , lx f - ' ' l 4' f -'ix Q v' ' .,f - - -' X., ,,,...-f X gi! - f . - 5 Z ,.- ......-- 'f-T..- WF ? 27 CHARLES D. WHITWAM EVA ROSECRANS HARRV BAKER Ouviz Bukcnrusr. Treasurer P1'e:1'de1zt Secretary If'1'ce-Pn'rz'dent Sophomores Colors SORREL AND DRAB. H Sophomore History HE girls in the Sophomore class outnumber the boys. Doubtless, that is the reason we are called Hthe jolliest class in all the school. The Freshman year was a continual round of new experiences. We then had much to learn, and many were the pitfallslset for our unwary feet. That we all escaped alive is a cause for continual thanksgiving. But with the advent of our Sophomore year came a conndence before unknown. With Rosecrans for President and Baker for class Fool, things were sure to hum. Our President is indeed HRosy in more ways than one. Many times in the darkness the Ere from her brilliant head struck terror to the hearts of our foes. Gur motto has been, HSomething doin. Our Hl'St serious blunder, CFO1' even we, Htell it not in Gath, have made blundersj was in holding out the olive Cbranch not Burchtiell to the Freshies. Inviting them to our President's home, we did our best to entertain with games and toys, but it all proved to be merelylcasting pearls before swine, and no return reception was ever given. 28 Certainly no one will ever forget our boat ride on the classic waters CU of the Walnut that moonlight night in October. That the boats were stolen by some Freshmen while lunch was being eaten, thus compelling us to walk back in the moonlight, but gave an added interest to the occasion. Then, who of us can forget those semi-monthly gatherings at our Presidentls home? Surely there was never known another class President such as ours. Courageous, resourceful, daring, and ingenious, an ideal parliamentarian, with great inventive powers for the new and original in methods of entertainment and plans for outwitting the Faculty, ably seconded by her committee, Marshall, Andrus, Crump and Wells, she so planned that the memory of these occasions will ever be stored away among the fond recollections of the blissful past. Such yells! Such fun! Such games! Such songs! Such frolics! Surely the like was never seen before. HFren'zied Sophomores indeed were we. Twice our watchful foes attempted a raid upon the Uviandsn prepared by our Fair ones for the inner man. Each time they were discovered by our Sentinel HOld Sharp Eyes CF. Torrance! and compelled to retire baffled and defeated. In these contests Sling 'em Hard tCrumpD and HCuter CHottenD wrought magnificently. Recently one has been missed from our meetings-Our Bell. She was loved- certainly by one of us, but she is gone,-deserted to the juniors. We now have a vacant chair which by order of our class poet CBoehmeU is draped in crimson. She was loved but now fhlllf have her, We Shall hear her laugh no moreg We had trusted to retain her, Now our hearts are sad and sore. And now with a confidence in ourselves that we are equal to all emergencies, superior to all our foes, with a scholarship and learning as yet unsurpassed, and a feeling that we are wiser than we have been or shall be again, we pass on to the Uuntrodden mysteries of the year before us. NOTES: I. See Santazog Book 3, Line 4. H 2. Xantugg Oration on Men, Line 92. 3. See Stark: Principles of Rhetoric. Chap. 6, for use of these words. 29 On the Profs At the head stands a smart Ph. D. Who demonstrates that X equals Z. He's a walk that is queer, But the hallway you clear, If that man hastening towards you, you see Wefve a Prof. with a gorgeous Van Dyke, Who is sometimes a regular pike, But the Greek's his long suit, And with Latin to boot, We are sure there is nowhere his like. There's a fellow who oft tries in vain To punch sciences into some braiug If your skull is too thick, Well, you'd better move quick, For hels likely to simply raise cain. 'l'here's a lady round whom you feel shy, And you squirm like a thirty-cent guy, As she makes your heart quake And your noodle to ache, VVhen in history to bluff her you try. Our professor in English is strong, In chapel hels sure great at songg And it's always a cinch That he won't budge an inch, If he cannot be proved in the wrong. 30 fs W ff i 5132-21, L-5592? 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'- -, - - .,,:J,,f, v 1 - ff f I-erfifia-fir. 4155, .1 I , s 35-iv f:9f22'51'! 2' , I ff I A X ,, HK ':???'f I,7 A ' X 27? -'X' ,ff l -fi-1if P4j,f'-.epwff-'11 4? , -v ' -S 1 J- -2 . ,-J,1f,. .glfzf 4, 1 - , , f f V X ' - 3 -'fps-FQ' ,.,' I I ., ' W ' .,55'Afj:Z::5ifg 5.'5 1' I x -61611,-.h , I - - ff- A gf TEX ' 'f --A- , , ., f M M . ff' NN X - - - ' , -2-fl - ,',,Ju,f,,-lg-M . , . X , - 'f31,.1,1az: . , - ff if .4 XX- - If Fl, x J f-. 1.:..,-ggfiyz -.fa '11-af ffi' ,me-P' -2 . - j' 2 ' 4' . - W4 F X M'-'fzgff 42599 -iff? , , 4 --- X K 27 I j.l.f.-,-512' ' 1 S-.L N I ,,, . I 1 1 f ' 2- f Q g , '- x ' , 1. , p .E X, f If - .,., - .v-- f X X' 4:1-T5 -7 Q K1 ll! , , ,- ' T , 1 X - . . - - ,,.-.-,,,v If in- , N A-t,Zi.v if . ,r f , , , ,,,, R N' vi i X N ,x- ' , . T-b',:, 4- . J. -2 1 -- 1 -Q 32 . '--- fy' .f 4 9 ' L X5 -wtf ' ,, -Y vi' 2 9. X M7 5 31 i ETHE1. SMITH LULU PURUY ALVA SNYDER 586 1' 122' CW .V Pres-1'a'r'nf Vz'ce-Prem-z'z!ent Freshmen You BELAC! ZELACl ZEN! ABORAC! Zoimc! ZEN! FRESH AND GREEN AND ROUGH, WE ARE JUST THE STUFF! FRESHMENI ! ! Freshmen Character Sketches as ,-f! , E are proud of our record. No member of our class is either married or has been. We are the only class that can make such a boast. Q g There are but a few choice spirits in any age, take what era you may. A Fifry years hence, when historians and thinkers look back on rho most illustrious half-century in the annals of time, they will speak in veneration of members of the Freshman class of 1905 as the choice of the choicest. Have you been so favored as to meet them? If you have, you will know them. Things are not always what they seem, an old saying, yet true. There is often a great deal in a small place. Our Mathematician exemplifies this. One would hardly think that his scalp, whose outward covering is already approaching zero as a limit, overlaid a most delicately constructed mathematical core. From this he 32 leisurely draws finely constructed apparatus for finding the co-tangent, secant, sine, etc., of angles that have been a fortnight in infinity. He goes further. He can even give the correct measurement of the whiskers of the man in the moon thirteen and one-sixteenth seconds after the latter has shaved. Our handsome young doctor is an athlete. His practice, as yet, is somewhat limited, being confined mostly to restoring mangled themes to a life-like appearance, after the Prof. has bloodied them, to sewing up frightful gashes, torn in the foot- ball boys' trousersg to amputate her broken promises, and to giving reviving anti- dotes to those who have taken in too much Trig. Our little Poetess-Musician delights to delve into the mysterious. Venus and her son are much concerned with this member of our class. She also holds an inti- mate friendship with the twin brother of Diana, who wears the laurel and plays the lyre. Flora, the wife of Zephyrus is not a stranger to her, nor does she exclude Athene and Fortuna from the inner circle of her delights. Mathematics looms up before her as a dread monster with horrible Visage. She flies to Apollo who lures it away. Our chaplain is one of those recluse sort of men. If you want him, you may always End him in meditation. He is humility personified, a good Hensample to the flock. He seemeth to envy not, and His not puffed up. Philosophy is to him like air to a bird. Do you know him? Another of our class has been playfully called someone's little ice-berg, not because of any coolness of manner, however. Her name is neither cold nor froze. She is a recent but not a large addition to our class. Whenever any of the Profs. criticise, it is amusing to watch that peculiar pucker that gathers around her rosy mouth. What she is, is comprehensible, but who she may be, lies shrouded in obscurity too deep for human philosophy. Along the corridors may often be found a jolly, good-naturecl Freshie. If you End him in supreme bliss, it will be in the presence of some fair one. Now, it's hard to censure him because he does not like Trig, the lingo of Latin or German, or any of that sort of thing. It would not surprise me at all to hear some day that he is at the head of a shoe-manufacturing establishment, and that he is the innovator of all the fancy patterns in up-to-date foot-wear. A maiden of queenly bearing and majestic manner is she. Impressive with the Hgladness and grace of her nature, she is reserved, sympathetic, and sincere, and a favorite among the girls. Stanch and firm in her convictions and devotedly loyal to the Belle Lettres Society, she is held in highest esteem and respect by both 33 faculty and students. A few, who are not slow in recognizing her value, bend in adoration before her, among them a penny-Professor. In all external grace you have some part, But you like none, none you, for constant heart. Our Hnut brown maiden is a demure lassie with a Winsome grace, and brown eyes that light up wonderfully when she smiles. Woe betide the luckless youth who falls under their magic spell. A great singer she would be-one who could sway men's hearts with the irresistible power of sweet singing. But at present these aspirations are close hid away, safe from profane eyes, in the inner chamber of her soul. She now wrestles with appalling and wearying problems, such as Latin constructions, Darwin's Theory of Evolution, and cos 3x-l-cos 7x-l'cos 15x:4cos 4X cos 5X cos 6x. He is finely built, tall, broad-shouldered, and has noble features. A country lad and proud of it. He will become great. Old Abe did. All honor and praise due him, he outshines the rest of us now. He loves examinations, Prof. Weeks, and the Athenian Society. Thafs all. He has an enviable way of looking over the little things of life in his optimistic manner. She is a mystery, indeed she is. Who can understand her? Withal a noble- hearted girl with many traits that all should covet, but so queer, so odd. She does excellent work everywhere. She has a method of elocuting peculiar to herself. That comic twitchxof her head means emphasis. Her sixteenth birthday is past. She has long since been a loyal Belle. I 4 Y xg - ' 1 I :lt -1'-. . . Na Hz.- E7 '53 I I ll I :I ' I - 111, w -vllU 5 - X 6 g E 733' P' I ,. ,og 5 5 i f L' .5 ,ff x as i' :Q f Z .y-,ak ,.,: f 1 E: ' 1 l f f g ,fi QU x3-'1', 54 X f -lk, A ggi I NX if-K 4-tw AE JN 1 my mf 9552915 . W 1 2 J . l gp iii' qw Mg x Z.,- ,iw 4 ff KN I-JL' H-xn- 'law ful 5 ,fR,, KS LRG L, av xv-F SX f 'Q SK I X A ', T.,z ,. V 1. 1 ! 'ft 'P fx IAN XI V lx ' Z fx 'Lfgf fx 05 ,I 'E S lr. . X X in fl' lx ' , E E I 11 K U K I F Hn, K ,L - f?vk' T'1 QQ '59 0 W 5 ' F KN si: 1 X K- 1 6, uf I w W P x y F. u f C dal : ' X' A-:nam fm 2 f - ng! rg X X - x , 5: ' n 2 EI' 2 N I sl 'mi 'lg . I ,g, F V- . Q . 1 1 4 S? - 1 I xp . f,,.vI Q yN . ' I I ba- V A i 'Q I 1 B N P x ' I2- ! 0 I' 0 h QP? sh .. ,, X 'A 'f' As Q, ,Q 'F ig ' ve ' f L ':',.1Z7 f y . r - fgigi J' S32 4 N 3 - 11- 1'-:I 5358 5 . ' .,., ' You -X A 1' .57 M? A w 1' .2 , 'ff ' '-N' f' 5 ,uf f I f fu wif' ' mx I' -I -- I f .45 , Q A , - H 1 f-'f:... I ,I T. I. ' Y ' ' Eb ' 5 , I X' f X I gg.-'f-Q,-lf' K -Z I f 4 .1 - f I , f ' N., X ,. . 1 19' yr' ,-- kg E CSS Q I ' Q A p f fl v- I I A P E f f L S 5' f I I V 6 m JJ 'LA vflzxgllxs X - - + L EP HISTORYQ2- 35 Academy YELL. Hippetyehi and hippety-hus! The College men better not monkey with us. VVe tie them in bundles, and toss them around, Where, like other rubbish, they cumber the ground. Up in the basement, and down in the attic, weeping and wailing in chorus ecstatic, the 'Cademy kids, for the Kidemy cadsl may often be heard in the glare of the moon, or even at mid-day by dark of the noon, bawling, and calling their mams and their dads. That's what the Freshmen are hooting and tooting, while Sophos and Juniors and Seniors are rooting like rooters when Brannon is hitting the line, or Huston is humbling the gray Quaker Nine. Speakin' of their cumbering the ground, d'ye mind the Charge of the Light Brigade, the last time the Preps put up their colors? The Odysseus of the Acad- emy spun it out on the distatf of Athene, Qnot Athensl and wove it on the loom of Arachne. Here it is: Caesar do Bflfo Prepefzre. HCollege man came incaute into Prep's bailiwick: escense ex equo, broncho, pede enormeg prep smashit nosum ad extremum, soc et tuum like fury, O temporal Omores! O Susan stop your foolin'. Refenr Zfl.7' Cfreshmanl, Sophzlvffz, CSophomore--'a Hpretender to learning D juniores, seniores, tearum hair, pounderat carcass et putaheadonim! Csee Homer's Iliad, book XXII, HAnother Argument. -D Prep cingit duas Iuniores, Cgets a cinch on 'emj sic semper skedaddleissimus quid quod damnum. Prep misit Collegianes sub jugum. Quum pax restorata est, Prep escense in Collegium, respondit professori, HScio bene quid tu requirisf' dum Collegianes respondunt, HNO11 paratusf' Well, well, welll there is much food for reflection in the goings and Cummings of this same Prep department. They have a Head, but, if-well, there are Reazins why one better say that in French, or the whole department might Hunt you down and put a Head on you. And say, Millsap, Millsap? While he's a prep we call him Mz'l!-sap, and when he gets to be a Freshman, we will call him Mill-mp. n Con amore omnibus, A. PREP. Preps' A, B, C Book is for Thing is for Brown Anderson's it Who each evening at dusk In the way of brains Patiently waits He's decidedly unit. For Professor DeBusk. C is for Cnvit is for Dungan Most pious in the land Whose tongue is so loose Who walks College Street That right-minded people Open Bible in hand. Declare him a goose. 36 I Wm , i 57A-'ff 7W ' .W 'V 'rfyf 1 71' ,Vi ' fm I '47 J V , z ff 1. i.f1'vQNw 7 W 1 V X i f Um vw, ., Ti f - - x x G Q5 . .,.V mn w ww , + Z li asf . .. 'xc fl' 1fg X Q 5i f f A 'f I' ,, , A 1:1 vw 5 ? iLg' v w 'H 'Y-Ms 'i 'ji J . 37 Normal is usually customary for one who is speaking or writing on a subject in which he is laboring or which is dear to his heart, to claim that it is the most important of anything that can engage one's attention. So in order to be original, if for no other reason, we will not say that concerning the Normal Department of S. K. C. But we do claim that it fills a very large place in the col- lege, and that the work for which it stands-that of educating the youth of our public schools and training them to be future citizens of our country-is second to none. The Normal is not the largest department of the college, but remember, that quality is always desired in preference to quantity, so that, though limited in num- ber. a mighty influence may be wielded by the ones who, as they struggle through the perplexing yet inspiringghistory and philosophy of education, are now deciding upon the best methods and plans of school government. Even though the number is small it may be interesting to notice something of the progress made since the work first began. The oldest record we have gives one graduate for the year 1891-2. The next two years there were none at all. The entire number of graduates up to and including 1902-3 is twenty-three. Last year there were six who completed the course and this year there are eight of us in the senior class. Of course there is no question but that there will be eight graduates. The Department has been accredited by the State Board of Education, and a state certificate is received upon passing an examination in the five professional branches. Professor Wilkinson's examinations now have no terror for us, for we have his own text and are giving it very careful and considerate attention. In addition to this a Teacher's Bureau of Information has been established, so that any one wishing knowledge in regard to a desirable position will do well to consult the agency. If any one wishes to secure a teacher he will make no mistake in getting one from the class of '05 or even 'o6. Such questions as how to keep good order and control the children correctly do not trouble us in the least. Have we not decided all of these things already. We feel safe in saying that plans and ideas never be- fore heard of will be put into execution in some of our school rooms. Who knows but what a new epoch in educational affairs will be brought about by some one of our number. Even if this does not come to pass, we trust that some boy or girl may receive encouragement and inspiration, or get a glimpse of life's real meaning, because we have passed this way. Do you think we have only a small Parcell of knowledge? No, indeed. We have a Benjamin Franklin in our number, who like his predecessor, and the Husser Schoolmaster of old, has set us an excellent example of patience and perseverance in well-doing so that although our work has sometimes been attended by Payne, we 38 are well Learned in French as a result. Besides all this, some of us are fair CPD as a Lily and merry as Mary can be. Bureau of Information of the Normal Department of lege. Established for the benefit of our graduates and of All questions cheerfully answered. Address: Carrie'P. Normal Department, S. K. C., Winfield, Kansas. BERT DUBOIS---You have chosen the wrong profession. hair you should be a violinist. FRANK WIRT-A six weeks' diet of Scott's Emulsion and Southwest Kansas Col- country school boards. Herndon, Principal of For a heavy head of Alfalfarine might plump you up so that you would make a better appearance before school boards. W. H. LEAPQNED, Bacon Ridge, Ark.--As we understand it, you told your pupils that the earth was always moving, and since then the whole town has been seasick. The only thing to do, so far as we know, is to tell them that there is alcohol in their bread-dough and let them forget their troubles. CLYDE FRENCH-Although there is no law against it, it is not the best policy for a male teacher to keep company with one of his pupils. scholars probably enjoy the exhibition, yet you would be taking girl. Miss PARCELL-TO remove paper wads from the ceiling of get a new ceiling. . LILIAN WALSH-It is indeed a perplexing situation when one While the other advantage of the your schoolroom of your boys per- sists in winking at you, especially when you like him pretty well and he is a son of the district treasurer. Keep your heart under control so that the blood will not rush to your face, and the -rest of your pupils will not catch on. Miss MAUDSLEY-Ministers generally do take more interest in the school than do other patrons, and we see nothing unusual in the weekly visits of your pastor. Even the fact that he is unmarried should not embarrass you. VINA PAYNE1VVC have no spiritualist in connection with the Bureau, and con- sequently cannot tell from the enclosed lock of hair whether you will be successful in your love affair or not. STELLA-We are sorry to say that Whitwam has not remained constant. There's a fellow whom all give a glance Not to see him, no ghost of a chance For you give him the dough Or to class you don't go For you always must pay in advance. 39 li I It t K aataaaa -+L.. art aat Last night asI lay dreaming, . I saw a vision bright: The business guys of S. K. C., Had, in a single night, Attaiued to high positions, And those of greatest trustg While all the guys of other schools Had either died or bust. And, behold, I saw in my dream many wonderful things, for, inasmuch as the Business Students of S. K. C. were unusually brilliant, they had risen to exalted positions. And as I looked about in the world I saw many familiar faces. Isaw Wert who had become head bookkeeper in one of the largest commercial concerns inthe country, and now had to buy trial balances by the dollarls instead of by the nickel's worth as he used to do when attending S. K. C. I likewise saw Potwin, who had become a Commercial Law -yer, and whose head had so developed thereby that the doctor had prescribed Physical Culture, not to reduce his head but to strengthen his understanding. There was Beach, who had retired from the Presidency in order to accept a position on the Kel- logg Base Ball Team. Lorton had also become a rising man in the business world, and had joined the basket ball team of C-, having improved so much as a player, that instead of taking one step before throwing 3. goal, he took two, and before long hoped to be able to take three without making a fonlg but, as he conhded to me, his greatest regret was, that when he had a Goal in view, another fellow stepped in and cnt him out. He, however, had not entirely given up hope yet. Lorton had resigned his position in a bank in order to accept the offer of the above basket ball team because plugs were not so much in demand in basket ball as in a bank. The bank position was given to Hugg this name was not known at the timel, Who, at his recommendation, said he was a good worker fwhen he workedrl, never was known to be out until three o'clock the next morning fonly once in a whilel, and in general would be a headlight to any business. Plnmer and Purcell had formed a partnership to sell gas for profit, by which Plumer was to furnish it and Purcell to sell it. They were expecting to dissolve partnership as soon as Purcell didn't like the business. I saw Glen--etc. who was recently married. I also saw the Gates Sisters Knot of rnercyl, who were conducting a millinery store. Coley, the black sheep, Kehl, the snake charmerg Miss Hawkins, the Belle, all had their places in the commercial world. There was J. Smith, alias W. E. P--, who as an instructor in S. K. C. trird to cheat the Actual Business people out of their money. I also saw Covalt, who had at one time been leader of a band of brawny cowboys, whose large herds once occupied the corner lots of Winfield. He had afterwards been connected with the hot air gang so often seen on the streets. He was now holding a position in a Business College, that he might not get to a place where the air was any hotter. The students of Mr. Anderson became such good writers that they cut out the writing and con- hned their penmanship to flourishes. And as I looked, my eyes seemed to grow dim, and the scene gradually faded from sight, until it was no longer visible. Then I realized that it was all a dream. 40 THE LIBRARY THE LABORATORY . 41 XJ O11 'ff' 5 .. ,fir ill Wlozli, T-, 41 ,Q-K J, W ' fi '31 f if ' 'A Q.1ff4 f 1 , -.- Q, J 'uzfy X I5 K f ' y w 1 -'T ql..,:,:4 ,,,','.' 4 f T' ff? J 1 23' 3 'vw ff 1? W! 1 1, 11,11 111 11 11 1 .1 41 1 1 1' 1 1 1 ,, 111 11 'W ,f III, 1 ,M I 1 1 11 ' 11' 1f 11 1111. ff 71 11 5 1- 1111 11 1111 1 1 1 1 '1 HH f I WL11 11 X 1 1 1 1 1311! ff M 1 1 1111 ff 1'1 f f . ..'!'l 1' TX 111 f 11111I' N W 11 A 1 11 X 1 X Q X 21 ' 1 'if iff 1 1 . :W 1312217 ' -4yl HF 7 1 ' . f 1 I 1 ' 42 4'1 1 ff XXX , X X T -V -7 , I W! 1 02- ,, - f ki ' f1- .. I - -fx an 7 1: 1 1 .Q W 1 , 1' X NN If - , ' W C I , , Eg f g.. 9 M L 0 H I - iw, 2 5' E ag ,I X , 43 GRADUATING RECITAL' GRADUATING RECITAL Annabelle Donohue, Contralto Maude Loie Painter, Soprano Assisted by Assisted by . . . . . Archibald Olmstead Pianist Mrs. Della Phillips Smock, Vlollnlst ' PROGRAM PROGRAM I . , , i Roses in june .... . Gerzmfr Aria-My Heart at thy Sweet Voice . Sf. .Sanus Allah . . . Chadwz-fk Faust Fantasie ...., . Szznzsatz' Stolen Wqngs I A 4 1,y1-Neby In Hfwen Y. i- from Sea Pictures , I . Elgin' L0V6'S UFCCUHZ . : - - - H177-WWZ Sea Slumber bow: l , , Andante and Variations . . . Huydzz Ronde , - - 1 - - - ' Rgzzlfl' Recitzitive and Aria-Ah, For e Lui . . Verdz' My Desire .... lVL z117zs Der 1-mum Beloved it is Mom I . . . . Aylfward lquehlingsgefuehl . - R,,b,',,-vfeZ',, Ungarisch Rhapsodie, Op. 43 . . Hamer Lied March from Tannhuuser Lydgilff-L7-XZf Absence .... . Berlaiz 'Vous dansez, Marquise , . LL 7Ilflf7'k' Endymion . . , . Lehmann GRADUATING RECITAL Dora Wiltberger, Piano GRADUATING RECITAL Assisted by Lottie Wright, Piano Ralph Felton, Reader A55i5ted by PROGRAM Sonata OD-9 ..., The Doctor's last Journey . . Song Without Words A . . Prelude and Fugue, C Minor Nocturne Op-37, No. 2 . . . Kreisleriano, No, I and 2 . . . Mary Go and Call the Cattle Home l, Supposin' l ' Valse in E ...... The Old Man and .lim I Prior LO Miss Bell's Appearing l Concerto Op-69 ,... . fllozn rf In n HlfLa ren illwz dulxsolz 11 . Ba rlz . C71 0,6162 . Sch 71 um n Tl . K in gt! L' y ,lim-zA'n1u.t-k 1' . Riluy . flfllw' Carolyn Williams, Soprano PROGRAM nhlonients Musical, at flat . Scherzino ..,. Kreislerizina, No. 5 . . . Shadow Song lDihonorai . . Ou the Beautiful Blue Danube . Purapharse for Piano by Rosenmunde .,... Etude in Cl , . VVoodlzincl Mndrignl . Concerto D . . GRADUATING RECITAL Mabel Baird, Piano Assisted by Franklin Gilson, Reader PROGRAM Sonola OD-31 . . The Man NVith On G avotte Maid of the Ganges . Serenata Prelude C Minor . Sonny's Chnstenm' . Concerto A Minor . . . Beefh ofwz e Talentv lFrom Harper's Magazinel . , . P1 a 1116 zz Vg . !l7endz'1',r.rof1lL-Lllrzz' . . illuszkvrlusfez' . . Na .rch Ill zz in qff . lt'm'h Il-7L'E1zery Stun ri . . . . Grieg . Sch uber! . Pa rlerefzuskz' Sch uma 71 71 . . fllvyerbsur . . . Sira ns: Sch uette . . C1112 llzinu de R7l!'1'I1Sf?7.7l . Ba H1311 zllezlzielssoh iz TvPEwR1T1NG Room PROFESSOR OLMSTEAD'S STUDIO b 45 OO Ladies' Glee Club CAROLYN VVILLIAMS MABEI, BAIRD ANNABELLE DONAHUE QUEEN GATEWOOD OLIVE HOLMAN BESSIE POWERS MAUDE PAINTER RHODA BROYVN IVA EVANS EDITH HOWARD DAISY MUNSON EVA PRICE LORETTA STRINI-IOUR l The Band JAMES GROXVE . Leader Cornets B. W. DE BUSK CHAS. W. PIAUN SIMS N. SMITH HARRY H. HUSTON JOE O. YEAGER HARRX' Mc DOLE WASMUTH M. PARRISH Clarinets HARRY B. GLENDENNING HARRY W. HOAK ' Altos CLYDE F, FRENCH EMERY I. HUNT PEARL L. LOVE Melophone EVERARD PIINSHAW Bass ORREN E. HUNT CLAUDE VAN HOOK Drums LEWIS L. LIOTTON IVAN NICHOLS 1 'H X 'EL 1 If f ,. yi 3 . ' R2 Wx f , P' 1. , X 1. ,qf x 55.59 f f f L' : Vf?-R I-' ffl' N X , S ' X -fm: , Han. U 2 - :T A 'Mix ,.4 '43 .4 XX N Y' -'uf-:ix .T f- ix-QEWL ,'.: A. !- A - Xk,...i , Ni1:: W--' 1, -ing rx X 7 i - i P H K -L 'Il T - 2'-1 Lx - , R X gg: R ,. m f : 1 R R R A ,L 48 Ch YI' 'x ilrQ, ll. r .,. fl G. MARY BELL PAUL BENTE JOHN COLT GRACE CONRAD JOHN DIRKS WAYNE DUNCAN FLORENCE GATEXVOOD JUSTIN PIINSHAW BERT I1OLLINGSWORTH ETTA JOHNSON MAUD JORDAN DUARD KEASLING Orchestra SYDNEY STARR . . IUIRECTOR ARTHUR IQINDIG CHARLES MOORE EARL PALMER ANNA PARKER ORA RINDOM l3I2UI.AH Swim R. L. SCHYVANTIS NICPIOLAS SNYDER BLANCH SCHMIDT A. G. STEVENS GEORGE TOOMS L1-:O UNRUH ep! 'X R A 'Lis' A M S r' 'Ti' F, t h ik Our pianist fine music doth play AS to lessons, his pupils all say That no idea yOu've got If he be there or not Vet lost lessons come out when you pay. 50 1 , ,,, The Music Rack LOTTII3 VVRIG1-IT- The Last Rose OfSLl1I1IUCl'.H MR. MAXVXVELL-it We're Sadflest When You Sing. ARTIE GILSTRAP-UA Man's a Man for a' That. MYIiTl,E STURTZ- There's Z1 Hole in the Bottom of the Sea. RUTH BROWN- Where He Leads I'll Follow. RHODA BR0VVN1HI Sigh for a Change. MAB121. BAIRD- Maybe ETHEI. SMITH- Could You Be True to Eyes of Blue? EDITH HOWARD-5'I'm Wearing my Heart Away for Youf' GRIN HUNT- The World Contains hutOne. MR. BUCK-L'Annie Laura. MR. KRAFT- Let Me Always Sing. EVA PRICE- Who'll Be the Next? WINNIE ITIERPICH HC0I'1'lC Back ro me, Sweetheart. LULU DAUBER gLI?l1l Sad, My Heart is Heavy. LENA COCHRAN-Ulf I'd Only Known. AVIS HINSHAW'i:IH the Baggage Coach Ahead. FLoss1E LyONS14iCOHK Me. IOSEPHINE BELL1gcWalt.ll IVA EVANS- Rock-a-Bye Baby. MR. CUMMINGS- Cease. Vain Man, thy Fond Pursuit. HARRY BAKER- Good Night, Beloved. MARGARET EBRIGHT- There's Nobody just Like You. HARRY I-IUSTON- Mm-guerite.'7 GEORGE BROYLES- We Won't Go Home 'Till Morning. HARRY HOAKfg'Honey, Will You Miss Me VVhen I'm Gone. R. E. MORGAN- Canit Live on Love.', WILLIAM WEBER- Under the Anheuser Busch. Miss MCDOLE-f'When the Lights are Turned Way Down Low. BERT DUBOIS-'Tve Grown So Used to You. ESTIELLE STROTHILR-'lBest Little Girl in the Wide, Wide World GEORGE KRAFT'-iiwhen I'm Big Like Papa. MAUD ANDRUS- I've Grown So Used to You. L. D. MOORE- I'll Be All Smiles To-night. 52 . I k ,x K l 1 x X x 53-EXE, Wx S My 1 ' If I Mfr! AJ Z!! ff! JT? fffx?- Charley's Aunt Given by the Delphian Literary Society of S. K. C. College Chapel, May 6, 8:30 p. m. UNDER TI-IE DIRECTION OF PROF. F. L. GILSON. Persons Represented JACK CIIESNEY J CHARLES WYCIQIIAM l l . SIR FRANCIS CI-IESNEV, tJack's Fatherj . LORD FANCOURT BABBERLY C Babbs J . OLD SI'E'I I'ICUE QA college authorityl AMY SPliTTlGUE Cl-Iis nieeej A. KITTY VERDUM QHis warcll . DONNA LUCIA DlALVADOIiEZ ELLA DELCHEY fHer protegel BRASSET, College Servant Students 5 ' ' The Merchant of Venice MR. MAXXVEI.L MR. MORGAN MR. SEVERANCE RALPH FELTON MR. ROSE MISS COOLEY MISS GETTY - MISS SHUYLER MISS WATIQINS CARL FELTON Given by the Pupils of the S. K. C. School of Oratory College Chapel, Winfield, May 22, 1903. And Opera House, Arkansas City, May 28, 1903. Persons Represented ANTONIO, the Merchant of Venice . . . BASSANIO, His Friend . SOLANIO, SALAIUNO, Friends to Antonio and Bassztnio . GRATIANO, LORENZO, in Love with Jessict . SHYLOCK, a Jew . . . LAIINCELOT GOEBO, Servant to Shyloek OLD GOBBO, Father to Launcelot . . DUIiE OF VENICE . PORTIA, a Rich Heiress NERISSA, Her Companion JESSICA, Daughter to Shylock 54 FRANKLIN L. GILSON RALPH A. FELTO-N WILBER A. BROADIE WARREN VON SCI-IRILTZ . THOS. C. MAXWELL . JESSE E. ROSE . LOUIS ALLEN . VAN K. BRUNER CYRUS W. SEVERANCE ROBERT R. HAMILTON ESTELLE C. STROTHER MABEI. SI-IUYLER ADA WOLF CHARLEV:- This is my Aunt from Brazil Graduating Recital MAUDE EVALYN COOLEY College Chapel, Tuesday Evening, May l7, l904, 8:30 0'clock. Piano Solo-Hllustling of Spring g'Mrs. Ripleyis Tripi' . Violin Solo-t'Polonaise tal Rock Me to Sleep . tbl When the World Busts Through ici Filler Fights . . PROGRAM Miss EDITH MEYERS Miss Coouzv Miss MA'r'rnQ SANVYER Miss CUULEY Vocal Solo- Come where the Lindens Bloom . . Mercedes Act HI Scene HI I Piano Solo- Love Song . When Angry, Count a Hundred MRS. FRANK SIVIQRD M iss CooLi3Y Miss Enrrn M1cvr:Rs Miss Cooucv AND MR. F12LToN Graduating Recital ANNIE BELL College Chapel, Wednesday Evening, May I8. PROGRAM Piano Solo- March of the Dwarfs . . Miss ORA PTIQLMICK The Violin Case . . . Miss BELL Vocal Solo-- Vilanelle ..... Miss ELHTH Hownnn tal 'ajinf' from 'iMrs. Wiggs, of the Cabbage Patch , tbl The Yale-Harvard Boat Race . . Miss BELL Piano Solo- Etude is E Flat . . Miss ORA PTELMICK Farce--- The Gibson Play Act I-The VVidow's Reception Room. The VVidow is wooed. Act II-A Sanatorium in the Country. The Widow is won. CAST OF CHARACTERS The Widow, Elinor Cary . ' The Authoress, Arabella Babbles . Mr. Slocum . . . Sin dizzg Hamlin Gnrlazza' PVeinz'1z1c'.rkz' i A kerz Riley Fiela' Burk flewzseft Grieg Brzlvme . De! Aymz lfqgmz- Riff . H1 I Z lfubmslefn Miss BELL Miss SHUYLER MR. WELLS M. Villonville The Snitors MR. YEAGER Mr. Poor . . MR. PARRISH Mr. Ashburton l . . MR. MCDERNIOTT The Lawyer, Kate Hood The Doctor, Dr. Bottles . The Maid, Rosine . The Lover, Freddie Marshall 56 Miss WHITE . MR. GILSON Miss COOLEY MR. BRUNER Graduating Recital MABEL SHUYLER College Chapel,Ax Tuesday Evening, May 24, 1004. PROGRAM ' The Lost Word . . . . MISS SHUVLER Vocal Solo'- A Song of Sleep . . . MR. JESSE RosE HFl'2.I'l.CCSC2.,S Love Affair . MISS SHUYLER Piano Solo- To the Springll . . . MISS LENA BRADLEY If I Were King MISS SHIIYLER Vocal Solo- The Hour MR. JESSE RosE Cal 'Tickaninny Lullaby . tbl My Sweet Brown Gal tel De Ole Holn Owl MISS bHUY1.ER The Lotos Eaters ..... Miss SHUYLER Pantomimed by MISSES AHLIsoRN, I-IALES ANII SISVIERANCIC Graduating Recital MABEL WHITE College Chapel, Tuesday Evening, Ma PROGRAM MISS DELLA BRovLEs Piano Solo- Madrilena,' Scene in a Sleeping Car MISS VVHITE Vocal Solo- Vilanelle . . . MISS EDITH LIONVARD King -lohnm-Act IV, Scene I . . . MISS WHITE Violin Solo- Humoresque . . . HARIQY CLARK fab The Widow Magee fbi f'Platonic Love . QCD HA Coquette Conqneredw MISS WHITE Vocal Solo- The Banclolerow . . . MR. ARTHUR SMITH joint Ownership in Spain . . . . MISS WHITE My Lord in Livery y Io, 1904. . Van Dyke Lora' IZIEINQ' S07llB7'5L'f Wigg'z'1zI' Grieg Illr Carfhy . PVi!!eby . Boyle . Dzmbn 1' Cracks!! If l6'lZ7Q'J01L IVa fha' . 110100115 Da! A gun ShzzkAjJI,'II1'Ir Abauiflivzg Fink .fl 72012 . Dmzba 1' .S'!u1z1't Bl'0wlZ Performed before Sorosis at the home of Mrs. George F. Cook, Nov. 19, l903. CAST Lorrl Thirlmere . Hopkins . S piggot . Sibyl Amberly . Rose . . Laura . Robert . 57 MR. MAXWELL . MR. FELTON MR. GILSON . MISS COOLEY MISS WOLF . MISS SHUYLER JOHN Coox w 1 E 1A M A z3jHl, I 59 Southwest Kansas College Athletic Association President Secretary . Treasurer Captain Manager . Assistant Manager Manager . Assistant Manager Captain . Manager . Assistant Manager Captain Manager Manager . Manager Manager . Manager Faculty Committee I. J. THIEL, L. T. WEEKS, I. F. PHILLIPS Officers Football Department Season of 1904 Smsmz Qf IQO5 Baseball Department Season 0f1904 . JOHN F. PHILLIPS 'FI-Ios. C. MAXNVELL HOMER L. GLECKLER HARRY HUSTON RALPH A. FELTON LLOYD BRANNON . FRED H. CLAPP GEORGE H. BROYLES . R. E. MORGAN . NVARREN D. VON SCHRILTZ Season of 1905 Track and Field Department Smsmz af1904 Season of 1905 Tennis Department Basket Ball Department 60 RALPH A. FELTON W. D. VON SCI-IRILTZ . R, E. MORGAN 1. RAYMOND SHIDLER GEORGE H. BROYLE5 . BERT DUBOIS . DON L. MULLEN First Base Second Base Third Base Short Stop Right Field Center Field Left Field Pitcher Catcher Base Ball Season of 1904 Manager W. D. VON SCI-IRILTZ Captain R. E. MORGAN . R. E. MORGAN . W. D. VON SCHRILTZ K. M. MCCLUGGACSE . . W. F. PAYNE . W. B. OLIVERSON . CARL FELTON PIAROLD EBRIGI-IT CARROLL BEAMAN OBA TORRANCE PIARLEY FRENCH IRA BEACH Schedule S. K. C. 6 WELLINGTON . I2 S. K. C. . . 6 FRIENDS UNIVERSITY 9 S. K. C. 3 FAIRMOUNT . . I2 S. K. C. . . 3 WASHBURN 5 S. K. C. 3 CHILLOCCO . . 9 S. K. C. . . 5 TONKAWA . 8 S. K. C. 6 WELLINGTON . . z S. K. C. . . 4 BAKER . 8 S. K. C. 2 WASHBURN . . 1 61 Base Ball in S. K. C. 'ij' I-IE season of Igor in reality marks our formal entrance into inter- collegiate athletics. Although we had played a few games with Fair- 'NEI' 'if 'if' mount and Friends University of Wichita, there was no effort made to keep within the bounds of amateur sport, if a particular player were not eligible to play on a college team, it made no difference, ' the question of eligibility had never presented itself, and there were reasons for thisg prior to this time most of our games were played with local teams from nearby towns and there could be no rules of eligibility gov- erning such games. But during this season our team met the representatives from Washburn, College of Emporia, Friends, Fairmount, and Cooper, thus taking our place among the colleges of the state. But this season brought out some serious defects in college athletics, and every one recognized the necessity of a code of rules governing all inter-collegiate games. ln consequence of this need, representatives of the different colleges met at Topeka in March, 1902, for the purpose of formulating such a code. Our college adopted these rules, and since that time we have governed ourselves by them in their amend- ed forms as they have been changed from time to time. But we have failed in four cases to live up to the spirit of these laws. However, there is a constantly grow- ing sentiment in S. K. C. in favor of clean athletics, andthe professional athlete who seeks a place on any of our teams meets with a frown of disapproval. The day has passed when S. K. C. can afford to break faith with any sister college on the athletic field. Theoretically, the purpose of college base ball is to prepare and develop men physically and give them vigorous bodies to aid them in their mental pursuitsg practically the aim of it is to win the game. Both of these are well and good in themselves, but the nrst is too often engulfed in the second. The desire to defeat our opponent too often leads us to play men who are not eligible to play, and when we permit such, it is not amateur but professional ball. During the four seasons we have met nearly all the teams of the state and our record has been very creditable, indeed. In IQOI we lost only one game out of all we played, while we made the enviable record the following season of winning every game. This is something no other college team in the state has succeeded in doing, and a record which no team could be expected to maintain. The last two seasons have witnessed reverses to our team which come to all alike. However, our team had the honor of playing and winning probably'the best amateur game on record in the state, when we won a I5-inning game from Fairmount by the score of I to o. Space does not permit of further specihc instances, but sufhce it to say that these four years have given us a reputation that commands respect on the diamond. 62 , f THE CHAMPiONS, 1902 . BROOKS HOLNIES PAVNE FERGUSON POPE VoN SCHRILTZ BQWMAN, Manager JACOBS, Coach MORGAN ROSECRANS I-Ius'roN ' DURHAM IOO yard dash 220 yard dash . 440 yard . Half-mile run . Mile run . 120 yard hurdles 220 yard hurdles Pole Vault . Shot Put . Hammer throw High jump . Broad jump . Track and Field Records MCCLURE, 1904 MCCLURE, 1904 SCHABBINGER, 1904 SCHABBINGER, 1904 SCHABBINGER, 1904 R. F1-:LT0N, IQO4 R. FELTON, 1904 R. FELTON, 1904 FRED CLAP11, 1904 BRANNON, 1904 HUSTON, 1901 ROBINSON, 1902 Members of Teams 1904 BEACH C. FELTON BRANNON H0AK - BROYLES HUsToN C1,A1'P MULLEN EBRIGHT MCCLURE R. FELTON MCCLUGGAGE S. K. C. - Friends University Meet April zo, 1004 . IOM seconds 25 seconds . 56 Z seconds 2 minutes I3 seconds 5 minutes 3 seconds . . IQ seconds . 30 seconds 9 feet 1 1 inches 33 feet 2 inches . 97 feet . 5 feet 8 inches 21 feet 1 inch SHIDLER, Manager SCHABBINGER F. TORRANCE O. TORRANCE S. K. C. 50 . . FRIENDS UNIVERSITY 58 Annual Home Meet Wednesday, June I, l904, 2-00 p. m. GOLD MEDAL ..... CARL SCHABBINGER SILVER MEDAI, RALPH FELTON 64 l I 1 iz - x U3 KD X W I. 1. THIEL RALPH FELTON l1ARRY HUSTON , Center Right Guard Left Guard . Right Tackle Left Tackle . Right End Left End Quarter . Right Half . Left Half Full Back Schedule '04 .KC Sept. 2615. , ,. O Oct. I-S. K. C. 6 Oct. IZ- K. tj, O Oct. I5-S. K. C. O Oct. 17-S. K. C. O Nov. 5-S. K. C, 22 Nov. 7-S. K. C. O Nov. 1215. K. C. 9 Nov. I9-S. K. C. I7 Nov. 24-S. K. C. 24 Football Team Coach ' Manager . Captain Team . ERNEST NICHOLS R. E. MORGAN HOMER L. GLECRLRR -S R. L. CORRIE l IVAN NICHOLS BEN WOODDELI. F RED CLAPP . GEORGE BROYLES j l1ARRY HOAK l CARL FELTON RALPH FELTON VVTLBUR BROADIE HIXRRX' HUSTON ROY :NICHOLS LLOYD BRANNON 'QR Winheld .... O h XY F' VVellington . . . O ' If ' 0 4 Wellington . . . I2 7 Lamont .... 5 X l V -av ,Q Tonkawa. .... 5 K I Lamont .... O no I Friends' University II , A FI-iends7 University 0 i Wellington . . . 5 Alva Normal . . I7 Q l KX X -gy anlfn R Nl 66 1 IN 0 I Center Right Guard Left Guard Right Tackle Left Tackle Right End Left End Quarter Right Half Left Half . Full Back Substitutes The Scrubs COACH . . HARRY l'IUs1'ON D 1-2 CLAUDE VAN HOOK RIZUBIZN REAZIN . l'IARRY OSBORNE HARRY P.J'rTER ROY Liocir ARVAL LURTON . AMBROSL5 XVICLLS Pmv l'lIEAD, Captain . RAY I-IOEL CARROLL VVOOD l'.lAROLD Eisniom' . DON HIULLEN ROYKIPP Ou SHOOP 7 J Never scored upon. A - 4, sxxln, Fi iii There's Z1 fellow with hair black as Who in football is much above par Aber er ist keiu Narr As we all know-nicht wahr? ll apprerid le francais a' snvoir. 68 tar 9 CX KD i Forwards S Basket Ball Manager DON MULLEN Captain DEPEW HEAD DEPEW HEAD RALPH FELTON Center . . DoN MULLEN Guards . Schedule S. K. C. 7 UDALL . S. K. C. II S. K. C. 30 VVINFIELD Y. M. C. A. S. K. C. 45 S. K. C. 27 ATLANTA .... S. K. C. I3 WVICHITA Y. M. C. A. . S. K. C. 9 S. K. C. IO FRIENDS UNIVERSITY . We've a Prof. Who's 21 terrible Hirtg lf theI'e's no girl around he looks hurfg In chapel he poses, In company he dozes, And in class room he's just as inert. 70 U DALL . .... . ATLANTA ..... WICHITA HIGH SCHOOL, Roy HAREOD HARRY OSBORNE 1 Q 71 F'o1'wa1'cls Center Gurlrds Girls' Basket Ball Schedule . 2 Udall . . . . 3. VVClll1'1gIO11 . . . . 2 Udall . . . . 9 Wellington . , 2 STELLA VVELLS MABLE RICHARDS FLORENCE THOMAS JOSICPHINE BELL lWAUDE MARSHALL CLARA RANDALL PEARL BARNI-IILL . zo . 2 . II . I 7 : we v ' A 5, 9? 9 Gw Q if 4 f V .,,, 7 p 647 W ' fm-1:9 E .e fm 6'oow v 'TW 1 00165 Z1 1 X Q I, aofylfllfag Q S J C? Ls fCgDwa 4 -'wig JN: fv ?ga ,lg-QA A X, f- ,yy W ' . X353 UXV Ev d U 4 Q a si U UW . f X . wi' I , , s ff 5 ' In g :Vq xg svl T :. . q .' , an H w 2 Rf' L I v7 Athens Members in Faculty PRES. GIEORGE F. COOK, Ph. D. PROE. I. F. PHILLIPS, A. B. PROE. L. T. WEEKS, Ph. D. PROI-'. j. I. THIEL, A, B. PROF. R. B. DUNLFZVY, B. L. PROE. G. S. STARR Active Members ELMER E. ANDERSON RAY ALLEN IRA BEACH VVILBUR BROADIE C. C. BAYLESS G. H. CAVIT FRED I-I. CLAPP I. F. CORRIE I-I. W. CUMMINGS BERT DUBOIS F. H. EBRIGHT ICO. EVIQRTSON C. F. FRENCH J. G. FRENCH A. C. FEL'T H. V. GICORGIS G. A. GIBSON J. W. GILLOCIQ ' -I. L. GLASS H. L. GLECIQLER LETQOY HAXIQROD C. W. HAIIN RAY HOEL W. E. HUGO E. I. HUNT O. HUNT G. H. IQIEHL A. R. KING C. E. IQING G. A. KRAFT j. G. IQRAFT W. I-I. LEARNED WILLIAM LI'1 l'L1i JAMES LORTON P. L. LOVE P. L. MAUDSLEY GEORGE MCDERMOTT HARRY NICDOLIS W. B. MCMILLEN j'. E. MILLSAIJ B. E. POE M. W. PARRISH ROY PATTERSON J. L. RENNER SNS SMITH A. L. SNYDER . A. G. STEVENS JACOB SHUP FRED TORRANCE OBA TORRANCE D. W. VON SCHRILTZ S. P. VVALLINGFORD L. M. XVELLS W. A. XVELLS CAROL WOOD I. O. YEAGER Colors CRIMSON 76 N IN lx X Belles Lettres Members in Faculty MRS. L. T, VVEEKS, M. A, MISS LAURA IWCDOLE Active Members IVIAUDE ANDRUS ANNIE BELL IOSEPHINE BELL .lWARY BELL OLIVE BURCIYIRIEI, RUTI-I BROXVN MISS CA ROLYN YVILLIAMS LILLIAN KENNEDY GRACE LOGAN RUBY lXfARTINDALE BTAUDE MARSHALL DIARY lVlAUDSl.EY LULU PURDY RIIODA BROWN MA RGARET PEAEE MII.LIE BOEHME SADIE BRANNON MABI,E BAIRD PEARL BARNHILL NINA DALTON ERAIA FELT RUTH PHII.O EIVA ROSECRANS CLARA RANDALL- BONNIE RIED ELSIE RLYPL7 IVA S1-IANV CLEO GIIISON llflYR'l'LE SMITH ALICE IJAVVKINS LILLY HOLMES ADA HERR AVIS HINSHANK' ARILLA PIOAGLAND MABEL SHUYLER LORETTA STEINHOUR NIERTIE STURLFZ FLORENCE THOMAS LIIULIAN WALSH MINNIE IRWIN LOTTIE W-RIGHT MINNIE JONES EDNA WHITE MAUDE KENNEDY IQATIE WOOD Colors GOLD AND WHITE 80 ,II ,Ja III. .fl M Y i Delphi Members in Faculty SHERMAN CAMIJBELL, M. A. B. W. DEBUSR, B. A. F. L. GILSON, Ph. B. ARCHIBALD OLMSTEAD, Mus. B. GUY ASTLE CURRY BELL H. S. BAKER GEO. BROYLES JACOB CORL C. D. HEAD G. HAMMOND J. M. I-IOOVER C. -TENVELL J. D. IQEASLING IVAN NICHOLS Active Members W. A. ARCHER GEO. BENEEIELD IRA BERNSTORF BERT BENEFIELD H. L. CANFIELD E. F. BUCK L. BRANNON G. I. BERRIE LESLIE CRUMP G. F. COFFELT E. DIINGAN J. A. DIRICS A. M. ECHTERNACH H. D. FRAZIER. O. C. FELTON R. A. FELTON ARTHUR FRANZ DEAN PIERLOCKER LOUIS HOTTEN RAY LIGGIT LUCIUS MOORE R. E. MORGAN W. E. MYER ERNEST NICHOLS EARNEST PHILLIPS R. B. ROSEBERRY JOE SHOOP C. D. WHITWAM D. P. HOTTEN HARRY HUSTON ORVAL HALES IRA JOHNSON ROY .KIPP HARRX' HOAR EVERARD HINSPIANV J. HUNTER H. J. HEATON J. B. IARED ARTHUR IQINDIG T. C. MAXWELL D. L. IVIULLEN V. E. MILLER CLYDE MCFEATERS 1 ROY NICHOLS E. E. NEWMAN H. E. POTTER REUBEN REASON L. G. UNRUH C. B. VVOODDELL Colors ORANGE AND BLACK S4 WALTER PARKER WILLIAM POTWIN ROY SAVAGE CLAUDE VANHOOR F. B. WERT In OO .Ti nf ' '21-, af :Ex 5-ig '23 fl- 54: vw: r f f L 0 ,,fx-., ' , 1 I- , i Sigma Pi Phi Members in the Faculty CARRIE P. HERNDCJN, Ph. B. Active Members MAY BEACH MARY COLE RUBY BEACH CLYDE COOLEY MARIE BRODERSON ANNA DODGE ANNA BELLE DONAHUE DELLA ECIIESS GRACE EDMONDSON MARGARET EIIRIGI-IT ELSIE PIOLIDAY MARY PIUNTER ADA HILTON ANGIE KNOX ANNA LEARNED FLOSSIIE LYONS GLADYS IWARTINDALIS PEARL SAVAGE ESTELLE STROTHER IVA EVANS MARGARET'1'A FORD ARTIE GILSTRAP CORA GREFQNNXVADE ESTELLE IRA ADA MCCLELLAN IESSIE NEER ANNA PARKER STELLA PARKER CQEORGIE VAN HOOK NELI. VVILLIAMS Colors DOLLIE GRAY OLIVE HOLMAN WINNIE HERPICH ADA HILTON FAYE JACOBUS EDNA JOHNSON MAUDE IQIDVVELI. EMERALD GREEN AND WHITE. 88 RHODA PILNNINGFON MARY PENNINGTON MABLE RICHARDS ELSIE SHAW ANNA WALKER JENNIE WALKER GRACE WILLIAMS Ox OO l Oratorical Association Officers of State Association President W. D. VON SCI-IRIIJIZ, Southwest KansasIColiege Secretary . . . GLENN HAIGH,' Ottawa. University Officers of Local Association President . Vice-President . Secretary and Treasurer . Program Local Contest, College Chapel, Thursday Evening, Jan. ' 'Forget-Me-Not ..... FLOSSIE Lvorfs Oration . . . GEORGE CRAFT Uration . . . G. A. GIBSON Oration . . . RAY lflNG For all Eternity .... EDITH l'lOWVARD, Violin Obligato by PEAIQL L. LOVE Oration . . Oration RALI-H FELTQN , Qi Oration . . . WILBUR E. 'BROADIE Pickani1my Lullaby MABEL SHUYLER Decision of Judges First, W. T. Scott Prize Second, Faculty Prize . Third . . Q0 RALPH FELTON . ANNIE BELL . ESTELLE STROTHER 30, 1905. . Ilflzrbelh The End is Not Yet 4'The Power of Convictionu ujapan, the Schoolmaster of the Ol'lCI1C,7 . . J1f!Zl'hL'7'0IZi G. S. STAIQIQ. Capital and Labor Reconciledw HArnerican Diplomacy in the Orient The White Man's Burden Boyle W. E, BROADIE . RALPH FELTON GEORGE A. GIBSON RQBERT PIAMILTON, '03 Athens 91' LOUIS ALLEN, '04 Athens Twenty-Second Annual Contest Kansas Inter-Collegiate Oratorical Association Friday, March 3, 1905, The Toler Auditorium, Wichita Judges Thought and Composition . . Chair of Rhetoric, Nebraska Universitv . . . . University of Cincinnati PROF. M. M. FOGG . PRES. C. W. DABNEY PROF. E. T. TOWNE Chair of History, Carleton College, Northfield, Minn. Delivery CI-IANCELLOR FRANK STRONG . HON. F. L. WILLIAMS . I'TON. A. C. MITC1-IELL . . Lawrence, Kansas Clay Center, Kansas . Lawrence, Kansas Program VOCAL SOLO- The Shadow Song from Dinorah . . . Illeyerbecr Miss CARQLYN VVILLIAMS, Southwest Kansas College INVOCATION LUDWIG IQATTERFELD . . . VVashburn College, Topeka . . 4'The Struggle for Liberty CLIFFORD A. COLE . . . . The Plight of the Last Despotismn Fairmount College, Wfichita Why the United States is a VVorld Power Ottawa University, Ottawa CHARLES J. HILKEV ...... College of Emporia, Emporia ELIZABETH S. STANNARD . . . - Our South American Policyu FIVE PART SONG1HSCI'Cl'121d6i' ..... fvflllllll-7ZgE7' t0b!z1ga!o QV JlJz'.r,t Afliffllllj Fairmount College Woman's Glee Club A . The YNhite Man's Burdenw Southwest Kansas College, VVinfIelcl The Message of Daniel Webster WILBUR E. BROADII-3 ELMI-LR A. RILEY . . . . . Baker University, Baldwin TIERMAN L. ROHDE .... t'AggI-essive Russia Midland College, Atchison W, GRAVES .... The Mission of Democracy Kansas Wesleyan University ' MUSIC- Good Nighti' . Campus Quartette, Ottawa University - Decision of Judges First WVILBUR E. BROADIE, Southwest Kansas College Second LUDNVIG liA'l. l'ERFlELD, Washburn University Third . ELMER A. RILEY, Baker University Q2 . . . . . . Parks WILBUR E. BROADIE, '05 Athens 93 YEAR 1898 1899 1900 1901 IQO2 1903 1904 S. K. C.'s Record in the Kansas State YEAR 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897 1898 1399 1900 IQOI 1902 1903 1904 1905 Oratorical Contests REFRIESENTATIVIC E. T. BARRET CHAS. A. RH E11. j. W. VVETZEL . . D. D. IJOAGLAND . . CHAS. W. NIEYER . R. L. GEORGE . C1-IAS. W. IVIEYER . . JESSE C. FISHER . LOUIS ALLEN . Lows ALLEN ROBER'l' R. HAM1L'1'0N . . ROBERT R. I-IA1w11L'r0N . LOU1S ALLEN W1L1sUR E. BROADIIZ S. K. C.-Fairmount Intercollegiate Debates REPRESENTATIVES WILLIS COLE, MADELINIW2 SOUTHARD, G. W. MEREOVFI-1 W. I. WEBER, ELLA MALONE, RORT. ROMIG . OSCAR HU11D1.Es'rON, EDNVARD BURNI-IAM, CLARICE HALES ROBT. HAIVIILTCJN, lK'fYRTLE ROSE, W. J. VVICBER . W. T. WARD, W11.EUR BROADIE, R. J. FERGUSON . LOUIS ALLEN, R. E. MORGAN, OSCAR IIUDDLESON . RALPH FELTON, C, D. W1-11'rwAM, L. R. HOEE . 94 RANK 6111 51h ISI Sth 4th 5th 3d 2d 5111 3d 3d 4th 2d ISE WINNERS S. K. C. Fairrnount S. K. C. S. K. C. F3.i1'1'1lOL'lT11Q Fairmount S. K. C. RALPH FELTON C. D. Wnrrwniu L. R. HOFF Deljhz' Delphi Athens Seventh Annual Debate Between Southwest Kansas College and Fairmount College Wichita, Friday, April 3, noon Question: Resolved, That combinations of capital, commonly called trusts, are detiimentsil to public Welfare. Amrmative, Fairmount. Negative S. K. C. Decision in favor of the negative. Markings of the Judges Y l VVINFIELD FAIRMOUNT ff. m 5 iii z Milligan . . I 5 ro 6 2 3 Conway . . I 4 S 6 5 2 Hill . . 5 6 I4 4 2 I lnter-Society Debate Mr. Robert Hamilton, '03, has offered a silver cup as a trophy for an annual debate bein een Athens and Delphi. The winner of the first debate holds the cup until defeated, and the victor in three succes- sive contests retains the trophv permanently. Question for lirst debate, spring of IQO5: Resolved, That employers are justified in refusing recogni- tion to labor unions. Affirmative, Athens, represented by W. E. BnoAD1rf, W. D. VoN SCHRILTZ and GEORGE McDnRw1o'r'r. Negative, Delphi, represented by RALPH FELTON, R. E. MORGAN, C. D. WHITWAM. 95 Young Men's Christian Association Cabinet President . . . . W. A. WELLS Vice-President . . C. T. FRENCH Secretary I'IAROLD EBRIGHT Treasurer LLOYD BIQANNON Chairmen of Committees Bible Study .... D. M. VoN Sci-IRILTZ Religious Meetings . , RALPH FELTON Membership . . HAROLD EBRIGHT Missionary R. E. MORGAN Social . B. G. WOODDELL 96 President Young Women's Christian Association Vice- President Secretary . Treasurer Devotional Missionary Social . Intercollegiate Good Cheer Bible Study Cabinet Committee Chairmen 97 MABEL SI-IUYLER LIJTTIE WRIGHT OLIVE BURCHFIEL EDNA WI-IITE . LULU PURDY . MARY MAUDSLEX' -IENNIE WALKER EVA ROSECRANS PEARL BARNHILL A STELLA PARKER Student Volunteers Leader Secretary . . E. E. ANDERSON GRACE EDMONDSON HAROLD EBRIGHT D. P. I-IOTTON CLARICE I-IALES Graduates 0 A. A. PARKER, 797 JESSIE C. FISHER, 'oo W. A. REVIS, 'o4 ALVA SNYDER . . RALPH FELTON :HARRY MCDOLE EDITI-I RANDALL W. D. VON SCHRILTZ W. A. WELIIS IQATIE WOODS RAY KING fS. K. C. in the Foreign Field BARODA, INDIA POONA, INDIA LUCKNOW, INDIA 98 City Y. M. C. A. The city Young Men's Christian Association deserves mention among the in- stitutions that make the life of a student more pleasant and profitable. A place to go 'and meet some of the fellows when down town has been supplied since the Association opened its new building about two years ago. That the students have availed themselves of their opportunities is evidenced by the fact that the College gymnasium class has always been the largest. The building is a two-story cutstone structure, located at the corner of Church Street and Tenth Avenue. It was built during the summer of 1902 and dedicated Feb. Ist, 1903. The lower story is part basement and contains the bowling alleys, baths, lockers, etc. On the main fioor is the gymnasium, also used for the meet- ings for men on Sunday afternoon, and the free reading room, with nearly fifty first class periodicals. Here also are the parlor and the offices, the public oflice, and the private office of the general secretary. The world today is crying out for young men who are efficient. This means a well-trained head on a stout body that will stand a little hard work, while within it beats an honest cheerful heart. The Young lVlen's Christian Association attempts to co-operate with the college in supplying this need. Here the young man may build up his body and keep it clean, and at the same time associate himself with other strong young fellows who are fitting themselves to stay in the race of life. Every young man needs to learn how to meet and get along with his fellowsg how to give and how to take without doing too much of either. The student who does not identify himself with such a movement fails to make the best use of his opportunities. 99 Temperance Oratorical Association President . . PEARL Lovi Secretary . CLYDE FRENCH Tteasureiz . RAY KIN G Republican Club President . . . . W. E. BRO.-XDIL Secretary and Treasurex' RALPH FELTON U. and I. Club President . . B -- - T D M B - - S Vice President E H - L S -1- H Secretary . R. E. M - R - AN Assistant Secretary E '1' e L - 12 ST - 0 - HE - Treasurer . F. L. G - L - ON Assistant Treasuiter L L - P e RD - M-RL- S-R-61' Committee on Trztnsportation MA - D A - DR - s D-P-W H--D Committee on Entertainment lAv-s H-N-H-W E. F. B - C - Committee on Mtlsic . LA - RA MCD - L - IOO Publications The Southwest Kansas CONFERENCE MESSENGER Published Monthly by SOUTHWEST KANSAS COLLEGE Editor, Church Departinetxt, REV. VV. V. BURNS Editor, Educational Department, DR. G. F. COOK SOUTHWEST KANSAS COLLEGE Bulletin of Information Published six times 11 year by SOUTHWEST KANSAS COLLEGE THE HANDBOOK Issued Annually by thc Young lVlen's and Young Women's Christian Associations IOI v-4 O N PUBLISHED MONTHLY BY Tl-IE Board of Publication of S. K. C. E1iz'Z07'-z'1z- Cklifif-' . Asfoczdfe Ea'z'!r17'.' BERT. DUBOIS, '06 T. C. MAXWELL, '06 ESTELLE STROTHER, '05 Literary LULU PURDY, ,O7, Christian Ass'ns HARRY BAKER, IO1, l, L C l ALVA SNYDER, '08, Literary Societies OLIVE BURCHFIEL, '07, 1 0 2' R. MoRGAN, '05 Arhieucs AVIS HINSHAVV, '08, Music Editor l-I. W. CUMMINGS, Business lX'lun:xger TL'7'7IlX.' One Year lAcademic,H 500. Single Copies, - . - IO Cents No anonymous communications inserted. Any inforinntion regnrdimg Alumni or Colleges will be gladly received. Address all communications to THE CO1-,LEGI AN, ENTERED AS SECOND CLASS NIATTER AT THE Pos'roxfF1cE AT XVINFIELU, KANSAS. -ttt fffi X. 14-9'? f.M . IO3 ATHENS-BELLES LETTR ES HALL DELPPII-SIGMA P1 PHI HALL 104 W ' X2 u x A A45 f q M E25 I 1 fff f W N , QM MI N M W I J A A X Ll ' 4?ff2 X fi Wise 105 f1.,f01If5rwlse Va ff W, C363 EE El DEW! o ll: MMIZ0 o rs s . .t 'll ring fix V, i 1 wifi, i Q e e F l X 7 r5' nAIL t. till, hi M. H. ' if it li 5 0 f Natl' ' ff is X A 51:5 fl I . ,F X .- .-g t 1 f e H. 54,1 -fp N if :V h 'li tiff! aa f Qx 106 Feb. 15.-Dr. D. M. Fisk of Washburn College lectures on Does Three- story Larnin' Pay? Feb. 18.-Hon. E. VV. Hochspeaks in chapel. Feb. 22.-See May 15111. Feb. 22.+AIl161lS public in chapel. Feb. 29.-Alton Packard on Chautau- qua lecture course. March I.1M1'. H. T.'l'rice entertains several Hill people with an automo- bile party. March 7.-Belles Lettres Annual Ban- quet. Gilson breaks his Wrist and stays at home. March Io.-Music Faculty entertain the other Profs. at dinner. March II.-State Oratorical Contest at Topeka. Allen wins second place. Rev. G. A. Kraft wond ers if Cremo breakfast food is made in Topeka. March I2.-Celebration on the Hill. March IS.--Isabelle Irving in HThe Crisisf' plays to a packed house. All College Hill pack in the balcony. MEl1'Cll 28.-Byron King. March 29.4Dubois and Maxwe 1 l entertain the Sophoniores. March 31.-COIICSIT by Faculties of Music and Oratory in the chapel. are XVe have one man who's much like a girl, Down his forehead there should grow a curl, But in acting hels great,- There you see his true state, Anfl his readings put your head in a whirl. Nlay Day Programme Given by the Belles Lettres Literary Society Monday Evening, May 2nd THE GOLD AND WHITE O sing of the gold and white O sing for the gold and white! The hues of the primrose liower O Sing for the Belles who were That blooms on the plain and height The gold that is true as light, To usher the evening hour. The white that is true as prayer. O sing for the Belles, O sing! O Sing for our S. K. C. Gold, purple and white, O bring And mingle them loyally. MRS. L. T. WEEKS. Reading .-.. A May Morning ANNA BELL :'In May Time . P . B . Dzzdftgf Burk xl-IODA ROWN Madrilena . . . . . PVVIIIAU' DELLA BROYLIZS ' The Masque of May A 3 It ..... J. -A ' ' , Written by Mrs. L. T. WEEKS ACT T: Hecate and Polliffiis put the ground where May ceremonies are to take place, under an evil spell. fi? ACT H: Titania and Qberon, 'King and Queen of the Fairies, are disposed to remove the evil spell. They send for Psyche, a mortal maid, and finding her worthy, they disenchant the ground. ACT III. The human element as parents, brothers and lover hallow the place by their presence, they depart and the maidens of the May come to crown their queen and to wind the May pole. HECATE POLLUTUS TITANIA OBICRON . PUCK . QUEEN MAI? HYMENA PSYCHE y . . EEA Fairies GODEREY 1 CI-IRISTABEL Y FRA l . l P RERE Y I-Ieralc s HAROLD, the lover Sentinels . Maids of Honor . The One Who Crown QUEEN OF THE MAY RUTH BROWN LULU PURDY Guardians s the Queen CASTE ACT I: ACT H: ACT III: CHORUS CLARA RANDALL FLORENCE THOMAS ' IOSEPHINE BELL LILLIAN KENNEDY GERTRUDE HANKINS IVA SHAW ITENRIETTA SEVERANCE . RALPH FELTON EVA ROSECRANS BERT DUBOIS . DEPEW PIEAD . MABEL SHUYLER EDITH RANDALL ALTA HUSTON AVIS HINSHAW MAUD WINDSLOW T. C. MAXYVIELL LA VENA WELLS CARL SHABINLLER VAN KELLY BRUNER . . JESSE ROSE SADIE BRANNON ADA HERR EDNA WHITE NORA HORNBARGISR . MABEL HALES TVIARGARET AHLBORN MARY BELL BTILLIE GILL OLIVE BURCHEIEL ETHEL CANN R tlqf 'l l X f 1 7 V- illil in 9 ll rw ' it t, h .,,i,.'f 'Mn 11,2 lift ll i 'i iff: I.-' M717 It lil ll XX ,I .l 1 U f it, t lnliiixl X l A ll .. 4f'R.lq. A 1 . X , e, l X , X XX Xxxx 33 xxx 444, X 1 ' 1 .,. - R .. V , .D .EEST C5 . . Q' - ,, -winwr, T fri .Oh :. 6 E' ,l --l 9 'l'-ll ' I W IK 'xt 1 x ff A X Q what f lf I' LJ. -i'f lfl Eff! 1 f' fjff MAY- ' 7 X 7 W, e '?-1... f-Aa. . f - . - , : - X f .1 . 1 91 ,ffff K 9 1 Z 'E 'ji 'L uf ,fins til , Pdf- ffm r. 7. X PCW ' .4 108 -I X f ll I l 4 I ll, ei Pr x 1 All f lil' 'I 1 glllliiy R 1' 1 lhlllifx X ' f NI April I4.'M31'iU11 Cook supported hy Leroy Titus Weeks, John jacob Thiel and others appearsin 'The Iarley Wfax Worksf' April IS.iMl'S. Herndon entertains the Normalites. April 22.-Athens and Belles Lettres public. April 24.--Preliminary contest for meet with Friends. May 3.fFaculty 9-Preachers 6. May 4.--Prof. and Mrs. Enyart entertain at a fad party. May 6.-The Delphians put on Cha1'ley's Aunt. May 7.-A small crowd spends an'after- noon in search of Pastime Park. Wlood- side boys entertain their friends. ' May Io.-Faculty I7iPl'CZ'lCl1Cl'S 24. May 15.-Miss Della E, Phillips an- nounces that she has been Mrs. Smock since Feb. 22. May 23.-Dr. and Mrs. Cook entertain the seniors. May 24.'ItlDiOl'S entertain the Seniors at Pastiine Park. May 27.iAlllCT'llZ1l1 Oratorical Contest. May 28.+Brady Elocutionary Contest. First place, Ralph Felton, second, Maude Cooley. May 29.-2:30 p. m. Annua1LoveFeast. 8:09 p. in. Baccalaureate Sermon by Rev. D. M. Vetter, D. li. V May 31.-8:00 p. ni. Annual address liefore the Literary Societies, Rev. VV. 'l'. Scott, D. D. 10:00 p. ui., annual banquets of the Athenian and Delphian societies. June 1.-9:00 a. ni., annual meeting of the Board of Trustees. 2:00 p. in., annual Field Day. 8:00 p. ni., annual Recital, schools of music and oratory. june 2.-2:00 p. ni. Inauguration of President George Fox Cook, Ph. D. 4:00 p. rn., reception at the president's house. 723013. ni., eighteenth annual commencement. Address hy Rev. Matt Hughes D. D. of Kansas City. 10:30 p. ni., Inaugural-Alunini banquet. I Solitude O Solitude! VVhen shades of night close round, When flaming banners of the sun are furled, And slower throhs the pulse of weary world Till lulled to rest in silence, vast, profound, Vlfhat comfort then in one brief hour with thee! Thy perfect peace brings to the hurdened breast In soul-inspiring loveg unbounded rest, The spirit of man awakes to life, is free. Alone! And yet, across transcending space, The thoughts of man conceived in love may roll Nor needing speech, nor knowing time or place. Uniting mind with mind and soul with soul. Each life attuned in full antiphony Is part of the immortal harmony. IDA MARGARET A1-rLrsoRN. Blood Counts Said Backhay Smithers to Ike Mosessohn 'LM3' gwandfahtherds fZ'tWillS1'H said he, Saw the gvveat Deciahwntiou wilten and signed, Itis hlood, bah love, that counts, you see! Said Ike Mosessohn in a haughty reply, Vim of my andzestors, zir said he, HZzrw the Decalog signed on old Sinai's top. Blood gounts, zir, Iknow, in me! IO9 1 7 Inauguration of President George Fox Cook, Ph. D. Thursday Afternoon, June 2, l904. Two o'clock, Grace Methodist Episcopal Church. PROGRAM Presiding Officer-REV. W. T. SCOTT, of Board of Trustees. Voluntary-Cavatinn ........ Roy Mus. DELLA PHILLIPS SMOCK, PROP. ARCHIBALD OLMSTEAD. . Invocation ....... REV. A. W. CUMMINGS Inaugural Hymn ....... CONGREGATION We think thy thoughts, O mighty God! Thy thoughts that thrill through space afar,- That hold in place each twinkling star, And permeate the teeming sod. We think thy thoughts and live thy life: Our souls are fathered by thine own,- And high as is thy holy throne, So high we mount from sin and strife. We live thy life and love thy love: The tendrils of our souls entwine Our fellowmen as love divine Entwines and draws us all above. We think, and live, and love, and grow Like thee, in ever bright'ning ways. We are God-kind,-and all our days Are in his hands who made us so. -LEROY T. WEEKS. Greetings- From the City . . . MAYOR W. O. JOHNSON From the County . Snpt. of Schools, IJENRIETTA V. RACE From the Public Schools .... SUPT. J. W. SPINDLER Music ......... Selerlca' COLLEGE lNlALE QUARTETTE The Inaugural Address ..... GEORGE FOX COOK Solo-VVith Verdure Clad ....... ffIIj'f!7Z Miss CAROLYN W1LL1AMs Addresses- For the Trustees MR. -I. M. ICNAPP For the Faculty . - DR- L- T- VVEEK5 For the Alumni . REV. A. A. PARKER For the Students . . REV. W. T. WARD Music , , . COLLEGE MALE QUARTETTE IIO T1-113 PRESIDENT'S HOUSE INTERIOR PR EsIDb:NT's HOUSE III I9 A lt 1 'W l . ' 'V 1 ' fi' ' 4' i ff..:LK', X4 - ---ei M 1 Ks .. 2 , ,FIM I fi.. , f l, nt ., Mm j j . - V76 'ill 'il Jil .f to f MTE ig SQ?--n . li' s lut. f .fzfllizi X 'Q-5 f we 6.5 WW!! i 1 lf I - I X ff pl lf ! if 2 vas' ' 1' - 14 i ll, , X fm 1 'ii Z1 - .1 EQ?-7-ll 4 an Q 9:3 S W Vxi ff, ' V Y' ' , I 4 , .Xt - I! ,fl 'Sb I i 4 N J . -fir ' . i X E ,MH , f r. F fl W., ffl , 1 ll! fl ' fit - 1, E , , 1 r , 1 - .U ' L- I .a i i X II2 Sept. I2.TIi!1lPl1 F. and Ethel S. get off at the junction. ' Sept. I3.-Filll term opens. Sept. 15.-Reception to new students at First M . E. church. Sept. 20.-Reception at Grace church. Sept. 3o.iAthenian At Home. Oct. 3.-Miss Getty and Mr. Phillips entertai n the faculty at 21 fish party. Oct. 5.-Grand tournament of knights on the chapel platform. After the cessa- tion of James hostilities Prof. Thiel reads I. I2 ff. Several girls raid a watermelon patch. ' Oct. 6.-Bert Dubois makes ft date for the lecture course number. 11:00 p. rn., Maxwell climbs in at the window. Oct. 8.-Senior taffy pull at Miss Mc- Clellan' Oct. Io.- s. Sophomores receive the Freshies. Oct. II.-Republican Club organized. Oct. 17.-Dubois entertains the Juniors. Oct. 18.-Prof. Gilson leads chapel. Oct. 24.-Morgan buys a white vest. Oct. 25.-Head gets called down by Weber. There's a lady who has a fine voiceg just to hear her makes each one rejoiceg She can make ffoo- oo eves Q 1 That To some c would cop a grand prize,Q people this makes her most hoice. ll i ll t ii lfe?Q'F?s' li ' T7 llxrl ii R f llll ll ,ff- r fy! f A- -If lf, f l i 7 ' 5-' U !! frm o . H 1. UL, o m '-L -' ' C C - . .V-ff 42,3 fgi, It I- F ff 'SQ - -we .PA N0-gem :MW lll',, , ryfl Ill ff ff if f 71 fwjwux AMW!! 'fl ' I ll mlm 'iL'll flf i W i ,lf t fx Z I I 4 'X lx Elm XD! -l f if la ., .7 A-A X cv? gt I 511:-yr iV r Egg '37 n t x N l W 11014 Jlq. U' II3 Nov. 5.-Thiel, Campbell and the other bachelors entertain their more fortu- nate brothers of the faculty at dinner. Nov. 7.-Head gets notice No. I. Nov. IO.'-'IiJlll7OlS sells his lecture course ticket. Nov. 15.-I-lead gets notice No. 2. Nov. I6.-Morgan comes out in his white vest. Moore getsa hair cut. Nov. ICj.'NOV6H1lJC1'COllSglHl'1 comes out. Sigma Pi Phi reception. Nov. 24.-Prof. Campbell takes Prof. Dubusc to hear Companari. Dec. 2.-Athens, 5,-Delphi, 5. Dec. 7.-Prof. NVeeks leads a hot chapel service. See Nov. 19, and consult C. E. King, Prof. Campbell, et al. Dec. 12.-Dubois buys another lecture course ticket. Dec. 13.-Baker imports a girl. See Dec. I2 for reason. Dec. 1546.-Even the seniors getusome 3's. is for Edmondson Locked in so late, She cried for an hour For fear supper 'ld he late. A Parody ,L I ,-.',4x4Mf . V ' fi' ,A 1' - ffm: L- 'L t' . .1'r9r.3, ,' : . if ' - 2 I . lv.y,.e-la . . .lf ,, -,-J.-. .. It . X - iw ft: f1f-av. v f-pl-I, 1 1 .rv-1 ,f,.,'.4t:,i H . If , .5 F- A rm - ' 5, ' . Q. . ' f .arf-'cps' tin Y . . 'J la- - , 1 fr w ill . f AGZJIH2- - -f 1 ' 1 P .12 Down to cle ole creek, sure I'se gwine, Once on my skates, den I goes a-flyin', Wid all de crowd talkin' 'bout how I kin skate, But I'se got de company of de one I cares to take. So I spen's my evenin' slidin' on de ice, Lak a dream 0' fairies, it all seem so nice! Sweeter dan an eveuin' shet up in my room, Where de lamp was making all de light an' not de big bright moon. When de cold wind is blowin' in cle trees An' de ice is hard as it kin freeze, I don' go a-studyin' all de while I jes cut classes by de pile. 'Case I knows when tomorrow rolls 'round I won't care a smidgeon for Professor's frown. Let the Latin go to Guinea, let de music play itself, I'se not gwine ter stay at home by myself. --mf we 23 2- -1 Den I takes my skates off actin' like de res'. Needn't say a word to me. Tired? Well, I guess. Does I need to study or to let her go? No I'se gwine straight to bed, where all good children go. MABEL SHUVLER. Lottie has a pleasant look. Why, do you suppose? 'Cause she pictures in her mind Jes' e' rose Sweet june days are now at hand Gone are winter snows, Lottie has, all for her own Jes' e' rose , Q S I i :L A A 1 r 7' 'ig -T 3- .. i g ez.-4.433 N ,ln .-V X 3 I fel 1 - is ' f' M i z , ' f J fnagfrvy 1 I 'Pla'-B , ,v ' .6 ,g.' N 1 i Y-l'4C,,.1 f' 'C 442 X N 1 ig : - - N N X - 4'N ii x I ss, 2 ' 0 JA ,Uf Y yi I N 'T 9. . ,gl ,,: 'ff I ' V 'L 1 . of XZ . ZZ JA . I .li- isre-.f .14 Wu. ,W ifi 45 4iri4 w ill! il X, 231- H1 it Jiii?-'P Dl5'C'1PLffv F2291 Z ,, :ff -f-'N 'i FJ A I . , J .A B23 'T f,.,,. f A .ug , . ,r ' Iii 2' i 'f 5-iii' M -:Q Gif: F? Y M551 if . mi 7 it xr: Rig. 1 i.,5-:N1t:9-fxftli-f 'r.li?'-il Fhfifif f - ' ' g iflililiiflli Li f -A fi ' E :iif EE-Q ' I 1-7-'Q-N 7:-L-1'5 f ' Is... 5 - 1 7 IIS Jan. 8.-Moore and Echternach visit the spiritualist. Jan. Q.1MCOl'l'1 Sociall' given by the Y. M. and Y. W's. Rough House. Jan. IO.-Professor Gilson leads Chapel again. -Ian. II.-SBlliOI' sleigh ride. jan. IZ'lVlOl'g2'tl'llZ1l4CS his first snow bath. Ian. 13.--Dr. Cook pronounces an invec- tive upon the Corn Social. jan. 19.-Serrott and Miss Andrus have an accident upon one of their daily buggy rides. jan. 23.-Sigma Pi Phi initiation. jan. 24.--Dubois learns to skate. jan. 259-I'Il1SlOl'l and Miss McClellan change coats in chapel. -lan. 29.-Snider has an interview with Hales. Jan. 30.-juniors entertained hy Miss Rupp and Misses jo and Mary Bell. jan. 3I.4Faculty hymn hook gets lostg Sing No. 1. Feb. 2.'-'SCI1iOl'S wear their caps and gowns. juniors also, Feb. 4.-Dubois and Gilson give a chaf- -ing dish party. Baker and Miss H.- monopolize each other. Feb I4-Fire at the Hale's House. Thiel mops the floor while Debusk calls the fire department. V Feb. 17.-Professor Campbell lays down the law to the Methodists. As You Like It. -several Methodists go. ,Twas at the Sigma Social, The boy was George MCD- And striving to be nice, he said, Now what might your name be? The maid was new in college, And with her eyes downcast, She queried, hesitatingly, Do you mean first or last? Life in Death I I had thought that in this desert path A rlower would grow for meg For the hot, hot sand Of this dead land, And the toiling sun In his weary run Is like the blast of a burning wrath Upon my path and me. II I had prayed long ago that a star would shine In this dark night for meg And there came one Like a distant sun Whose golden light Drove back the night. ' My soul grew sick at its swift decline, For it fell all blood in a macldened sea. III But I'll toil on in this burning way Till my life like a Hower blows, And Illl grope on With a dream of dawn Till my soul is the light Of this black night. O, God! I will love fate's sunless day With its pain, its blood, its woes. Just My Way When Father Temps comes down the s With snowy locks and halting feet, He only nods, but as we meet, I touch my hat. Then Mrs. Ames afar I spy A friendly look in her bright eye, I smile, and as I pass her by, I tip my hat. Now dainty Mae usnrps my view, A dream of beauty sweet and true, She smiles on me, then I tell you L. A. treet, eillit The Old Fishin' Hole Oh, the times we ust to see Down at our old fishin' hole, In the days 'at ust to be ,For old Time hed tuck his toll. 'Member when we'd run away Some er old dad-burned dog-day, Sneak across the paster land- Triclc we got from our hired hand. Lawzyl I could hardly wait ,Till I got my line unwound, Ileel a cruw-dad's tail for bait, Er to cut a good long sound Saplin' poleg er after that Take my old broad-brimmed straw ha 'Nd go down the criclc to seine Minnies-pants rolled up like a crane. 'Member how I'd sit till night Pole in hand and line slack Waitin' for the fish to bite, Clean fergittin' to go back, Cattails growin' cross thecrick, VVaves zt-tryin' to play a trick Coaxini at my cork to bob XVish't Ils at my same old job. - R. A A Bite We together fishing, Sat, by waters swishing. Little cared the fishes,- Nor for them, my wishes. We together roaming, VVent home in the gloaming, Crossed the plank-bridge slowly, Wfhere I murmured lowly, W7llat if I were ClI'OXVI1lllg?H Said she, lightly frowningg No more would I ever Fish in this deep river. Why? And I, elated, Fond reply awaited,- Saw those dimples pncker: I might catch a sucker. W. A. Revts. Ss-NN A Xl t 4 , 2 s uhm, Z 0 gif' T-'fi-L, fiesta The Last Serve They had just Hnished their last set. The June sun, buta few hours high in the West, was scarcely more bright than the glowing face of the bareheaded girl as she tripped over the grass swinging her racket, now and then with a more vigorous stroke beheading an aged dandelion, whose white hair had withstood the May winds. In contrast to hers the countenance of the Senior was sober. He sauntered along, his racket under one arm, his hands jammed into the pockets of his trousers and cap pushed back, letting his dark hair hang over eyes that were turned toward the ground. They turned into a well-worn path, which interrupted the long stretch ofgreen. The Senior now looked up and saw the large stone building some distance ahead. Well, old Mater, he said, half seriously, HI guess I soon will have seen you the last time for awhile. But in your mind's eye? she said. inquiringly. HForever. Then after a pause he added, HHow l do love her. mls that forever too P she asked. HNot only forever, but fonder. In absence love can live on thoughts, you know, he answered. HBut thoughts are not the only food-at least for some loves. Perhaps not. Nor absence does not always increase the value of the beloved. 'll-low about the 'kisses by hopeless fancy feigned? he asked. But when the fancy is not hopeless ? They had come to a little foot bridge which lay across the creek at the foot of the upper campus. They stopped and bent over the railing, gazing at the little stream flowing beneath. i'Why do people like to look at the water? she asked. HBecause it seems alive like those violets in the shade of that bank, or that butterfly sailing above them? 'iOr like the monkeys in the park. HNow Mabel, don't be mean, he remonstrated. During the silence which followed the Senior saw the past four years drift down the stream along with the stray leaves and bits of debris. Now he was undergoing the experiences peculiar to Freshmeng then came his initiation in to the frat,-parties, receptions, one condition in Latin-Livy was easy, but he was right-half that fall. He was a lunior when he niet Mabel' One ofthe cloth-covered balls splashed into the water below sending ripple after ripple out to the banks on either side, and his reverie took another channel. How much of a ripple would he cause when he made his big splash after com- mencement tomorrow? Commencement-She was also looking intently at the watery perhaps she, too, was thinking of ripples. HTo1norrow,,' he said turning half around. HTomorrow, he repeated, Uwe part? She still seemed interested in the water. He continued, H land if We do meet again, -why, we shall smile. ' Sche looked up and said, H Alf we do meet again, we'll smile indeed. If not-' H Hlgf not? it was his turn now. 'Tis true this parting was well made,' she replied. Both looked at the water again. Finally he broke in impatiently, HBut whatis the use? HOf what? she asked. Of pargof playing Cassius and Brutus? 'iThere's no use, she said. Our College lThe Conference Visitor Takes a Trip to Winfield and Makes the Following Reportl ? 1 ,Q MONG the many inducements held forth in the catalogue to persuade ' l g the young people to enter S. K. C. are the following: the Q. situation and buildings of the Collegeg its equipments in the way of a mio. fa library, museum and laboratories, a very proficient and attractive T2 faculty, a well organized athletic association, and the literary 'X societies. Such promising conditions lure many young men and women to this College. On arriving in Winfield, they are surprised to find that instead of being in the city, the Collegeis situated on a very secluded hilltop something less than four miles in the country, and is reached by means of electrified mule, observation cars, stove- heated, which will carry passengers to any desired point of destination, providing they pay the driver a nickel and wait in Craig's book-store while the electricity is being turned on. After a long drawn out ride through beautiful suburban districts, College Hill is reached, and here stands the College, towering and majestic, a very imposing structure as compared with the hollowness within. The stone steps leading up to the front entrance show marked evidence of destruction, for they have been hacked and broken by boys gathering rocks to throw at the faculty during chapel. The interior of the building is fairly comfort- able on a warm day, but when winterls blasts sweep around the corner, the only warm place to be found is on top of the boilerin the furnace room, and at times even there it is a severe drawing on the imagination to notice any marked rise in temper- ature. The elevators are individual ones and some are going up and down at all times of the day, to the great annoyance of the faculty. The library is a veritable hubbub of flying paper-wads, books, and pocket knives, moving mysteriously to the accompaniment of innumerable talking machines, in the midst of which, at regular intervals, the librarian, by vociferous poundings on the desk with his brass-edged ruler, makes frantic attempts to restore order, but to no avail. The hallway is even worse, having been transformed into a bowling alley, where the thundering of the huge ball awakens echoes in the farthermost recesses of the building and frightens the drowsy pigeons from their nests in the belfry. On the lower floor is the great museum, in which is a very fine collection of old jaw bones, ribs, chicken skulls, rabbit and cat skeletons, and a pile of rocks, gravel and gumbo from the Flint Hills. The shelves are filled with bottles of snakes, bugs, lizards and other dead things kept in pickle for the annual banquet of the alumni. This department serves the combined purpose of bone yard, dump pile, and canning factory. The air in this room and in the laboratory is so dense, that the students are compelled to line up in the hallway and to push from the rear in order to force an entrance. Next in order of encounter is the faculty. HYe gods and little fishes! When hath not conscience warned you to flee from the evil of your ways? Would that time and space were sufncient to fully portray the character of each member of this august body, but just a word for each must suffice. - The president, Dr. Cook, moves about in a 'imysterious way, his wonders to perform. Calm and serene, he glides from place to place, like a guardian angel, scattering oil on troubled waters. 118 Prof. Weeks! that combination of the sublime and the tempestuousl One moment soaring majestically among the sun-kissed stars of the mysterious distance, the next, turning abruptly upon a thoughtless offender, and pouring down upon him torrents of wrath, or as a severer punishment, reading an hour or so from his collection of original poems. Prof. Campbell presents a very striking personality, being commonly known as the HHarvard Goat. While he in company with a lady friend was climbing a mountain in Colorado last summer, his friend Nannie became so exhausted that she could climb no higher. Our dear professor picked her up as tenderly as a bear would a calf and carried her to the top. They rode down on the cog-road. Prof. DeBusk is a poser as is seen daily in chapel when he hitches up the leg of his trousers, ducks his head till his chin rests affectionately on his diminutive four-in-hand, and then peers out over his spectacles at the vast number of young men and women whom he hopes to enlighten by his future text on psychology. Prof. Dunlevy, Head of the Science Department, habitually wears a benign and sympathetic expression very becoming to one whose business it is to handle the dead. He is ever kind and gentle, a living example of the power of self control. The jolliest professor, Thiel, whose name is properly spelled T-h-i-e-f, is an escaped convict of the state penitentiary of Arkansas, to which he was sentenced for a term of ten years. But at the end of six years, the jailer became so tired of trying to feed him that one night he purposely left the door of Mr. 'l'hiel's cage unbarred and told him to depart, never to return. The character of Mrs. Herndon is best portrayed by her methods i.n the class room, which is marked off by chalk lines, to be followed at the peril of grades. The position of pupils when sitting is as follows: The spinal column in a line parallel to the perpendicular erected from the seat, with a freedom of movement of two inches on either sideg hands clasped and resting on the desk, so that a line drawn from the end of the nose to the point where the thumbs cross will produce an angle of 45 degrees, feet firmly set on the iioor, heels touching, and toes point- ing toward the northeast and northwest corners of the room, respectively. 74 per cent. of Mrs. Herndonis pupils are afflicted with a spinal meningitis as a result of the severe nervous strain. The Business Department under the wise management of Prof. Phillips is exalted above all other departments of the college, and is fast training the students to surmount obstacles, and to push on, for there is still room at the top. The Music Department is in charge of Eve of the best looking members of the faculty choir. Their students manipulate on the second floor, and the sounds which come from the practice room vary from that of a three-year-old with a stick and a tin pan, to the bumping of barrels down a stairway, interspersed at irregular inter- vals bv varied demonstrations of the chorus of Ere whistles, chasing up and down the scale like two kittens at play in a tree. The music that Uhath charms to soothe the savage breastf' has not yet been introduced into S. K. C. Classes in oratory descend into the lower regions where the mighty Gilson rules with iron hand. His victims, subjected to the most cruel torture, can be heard moaning and groaning, in terrible agony of body, mind and soul, and then as if with a last summoning of courage for the final issue, they send forth such suffering laden cries that it is with difficulty Prof. Dunlevy restrains his pupils from going to their aid. Prof. Gilson evidently believes that orators are made perfect only through suffering. II9 Athletics! that word which strikes terror to the mother's heart and leaves a sense of goneness in the father's pocket-book! It is a mighty word in S. K. C. Every new student is urged to pay one dollar and become a member of the associ- ation. , But it is a well known fact that it is not for the student's improvement but for his money that this is urged. The boys play football, get limbs broken, eyes put out, hair pulled off, necks disjointed or irretrievably stretched, but of course they are exempt from recitation Then the manager of the football team gets up in chapel and tells how much they were in arrears in the gate receipts at the last game, at the same time thrusting his hand down into his pocket in that characteristic way of his, and there fondling affectionately the dollars he has reserved for his own private use, especially for tickets to operas and band concerts. The development, the girls who play basketball receive, is analogous to that of some apples seen hanging on the treesg they become toughened and sunburned, they lose their sweetness and are henceforth wrinkled and sour. As to the Literary Societies, they are but bubbles floating about in the college atmosphere, presenting a shining exterior on special occasions, when there is noth- ing to do but wear ribbon, serve punch or give yells. Their hollowness is shown in their meetings when their literary programs consist of several numbers of which the following original poem is a perfect type: Athens had a little dog, a cat was Delphi's pet Athens' dog was named Kerbog, Kitty's name was let. let feared 'Bog, 'Bog shunned -let And so they lived and are living yet. What might not be the product of such organizations? After nine long, weary months, the student packs his grip and embarks for home, a day, which in after years, is the only bright spot in the picture of college life. K. W. A Triolet I declared it was blue And he vowed it was violet It began o'er the hue I declared it was blueg A trifle? 'tis true But we parted-again never melg I declared it was blue And he vowed it was violet. E. S. 120 Thy outstretched form. The oaks seem dead. Dutch Creek Can e'er forget, though we be old. When rambling slow we robbed thy trees Of tapestries of red and gold, October sun and autumn breeze Had brought from Cathay's hidden vaultsg Or, seeing boughs more richly fraught,- For distance hid the trifling faults A closer view might show, and what Was gorgeous, seemed more gorgeous yet,- To cross the treacherous dam we tried, But missed the trembling stone, and wet Our feet-so near the other side? v December's chilling breath has spread A mantle thick and cold above Yet, gztily baud in hand, my love And I with strokes so even, glide 'Neath stars that pierce the branches clarkg Or, resting silent side by side, Where friendly bough droops low, We mark The merry skaters hovering near I The flickering Fire of brush, the same As buzzing insects oft appear In summer round the lantern's flame. The dog-tooth violet dehes The dying winter's angry biteg The March-wind warmed 'neath southern skies Returns to heal the Northland's blight. Can day of rest be better spent Than by thy side? Where hymns from throats Unseen- to sweet accompaniment Of running waters' gentle notes Played pianissimo upon The stony keys-peal forth in praise From trees awakened by the dawn Of slumber-breaking Springg while rays Of vernal sunlight melt the rocks Where sit my friend and I, apart From other men, and each unlocks The door to inmost soul and heart. Who Cares? The warm wind kisses the Rose of May, So darling! She turns not away nor says him nay, Who's caring? For buds will blow and winds must go, If he comes not back who'll know, who'll know That shels lain caressed on the Wind's warm breast? If he dares, who cares? The bold Waves kisses the Lily's mouth, S0 darling! Though she knows he's fleeing away to the South, Who's caring? For buds will blow and streams must How, I-Ie will never come back. Who'll know, who'll know That she lay so fair on his bosom bare? If he dares, who cares? My love, he kisses me while he may, 50 darling! I turn not away nor say him nay, Who's caring? For lips will glow and my Love must go, As the Wind and the Wave. Who'll know, who'll know That I reeled with bliss 'neath my Love's warm kiss? If he dares, who cares? Hxxrrnz I'IORNER LOUTHAN. is for Florence A Reply The Warm wind kisses the Rose of May, And his passionate breath, Smothers her face, for she says not nay, But Passion is death, And he blights with its heat her rosy face, Her petals are torn in his eager embrace, So she dies as he flies. The bold Wave kisses the I.ily's lips, And his moist lips press His fervent love, as he hastily sips, The sweets of her soul, but his fond caress Besmirches her features, so virgin white, And soils her virtue with Passion's blight, Yet he'll go to her woe. My love is fain to kiss me today, But he goes ere long, So I tlll'I1 me away and say him nay, Nor heed to his song, Lest my heart be torn and my mind be tost By the joy that had gone, the love I had lost, And I grieve at his leave. Le Envoi So I wait for the love that is strong, I wait for the love that is true, For the love that endures as long, As the sea and the sky be blue. RAYMOND S1-HDLER. is for Green- Miss Thomas, you know, Of the Prep. it is said Who lived in the south His hands and his feet And never saw snow. Are ever his dread. I22 Ego et Cook lWith apologies to I-Ioch der Kaisernl The Faculty of S. K. C. Are Hoi Polloi, it seems to me Plebeians they, except it be Ego et Cook. Of culture, Greelds the avatar With Latin not behind it far. The only ones who have this are Ego et Cook. DeBusk seemed nice when first we met, But now he is not in our set, There are but two within it yet, Ego et Cook. And Thiel is lacking in linesse And his Germanic words express To us, chaotic nothingness, Ego et Cook. Prof. Dunlevy is good at quiz, But stylish clothing is not hisg The only well-dressed here is Ego.fet Cook. And Gilsou he is such a cuss His elocution is all fuss, In Culture he's not up with us. Ego et Cook. So when to heaven goes S. K. C.- To this youlll surely all agree-- Far, far above you all will be Ego et Cook. L. D. M. 'ilu other words if I am created especially for heaven. PROF. DEBUSC. That remains to he proved. I23 lt l .f -.,-- 1 A T ll? 5 J -,zz -,211 fl We X f 'fire f f'l'YlffV'bq7' Effljiyh or A fclcfr-OFF is for Head- VVitl1 nonsense It's Hlled, There's plenty of room, His brains have been spilled. Hepatica Hepatica, loved nursling of the Spring, The fairest liloweret of the wooded hills, You heard the Easter music of the rills, And Woke from VVinterls sleep Christ's praise to sing, But, lacking voice your Hight of song to wing, You speak the joy your laden heart that lills, In these chaste tlowersg more sweet than sound that thrills. F. L. G. is for Ikes- The Preppies so smart To see their inammas Tomorrow should start. Q ll X X I , f'Sff 1 HL X f m ,bs E xx I Z i -.L D' Wlumuul l X 54 , '47 Maia , , , A, ..., . . Sie ff K-.-,V K !.i,,a143: I 5 ,SEG I- ,i.'g'iM- X C15 5 715 , ' 1'1 , W Ml 95.5 . 4 'W' ,fn -1 'i fat' li' ,.. A-- Memories Iust a lonely autumn leaf, Trembling in the wind Speaks memories of joy and grief. Sweet memories entwined About the heart- Do not depart Dear memories, sweet memories! The minor strains of childhood's days, The wildest notes of fear, Are now melodious roundelays Full sweet to n1emory's ear. Life's discord all Makes sweet the call Of memories, fond memories! May Heaven grant, should I grow old, And hearts grow void of cheer, Youth's hours of gold, not to withhold From memory's eager ear. Theyire gone, I know, But let them grow In memories, hlest memories! LOUIS ALLEN. is for Keasling With his cute little grin, All the while plotting Chasing the Muse I've scoured the hills, the vales I've swept, And into darkest dens I've crept, On autumn leaves I've watched the hues, By laughing rills I've sought the muse, And listened, listened, if by chance, I'd hear a sound or catch a glance, To lift me into realms sublime, Where other poets had to climb, But like all dupes of time and space, I found it was a fruitless chase, For oft I marked his sleeping place, To End he'd left nought but a trace. But, boys, I think I have him now, If you donit raise too big a row, For here he's crouched behind my chair, By Grabg-I'll catch him hy the hair, And hold him close to my left ear, Then write you all I see or hear! But, no, the rascal's gone once more, His composition must he poor, For there heis squeezing through a crackg His trousers, shirt, and vest grow slack, His cob-web shoe strings go co-whack, Ten to one he'll ne'er come back. I Ci-tAni.iss E. IQING. A Kiss 'Twas shyly given me, By laughing girl, With dimpled blushing cheeks and teeth of pearl, A handsome fee for teasing plea. 'Twas not sought in vain, A coy delay, A modest pause, a light coquettish nay, One moment's gain to Cupid's reign. Altho 't was jest I wig, 'T was nectar sweet, The dew of rosy love and joy complete, That kindly kiss, that bit of bliss. Some maiden to win. fi. R. SHIDLER. M 124 W T25 1 E 1 K 1 Q l A Double-Barreled Joke had an unfortunate u ay of looking green and a very fortunate way of making good use of this green look B5 ron Kinsfold had a xery D ' fortunate way of looking dignified and distinguished, and a very unfor- tunate way of making a fool of himself by carrying his dignity to the point of being PUD SAXBY was a Freshman from the Hshort-grass country. He o ' ' ' , - pompous. He was a Sophomore, and was cursed with a double portion of contempt for Freshmen. One day Spud was leaning against a tree, watching a game of tennis between Maxwell and Dubois, two evenly matched Iuniors. Spud was a 'iVillage Hampden in tennis, and was carefully noting and enjoying all the points of the game going on before him. All at once someone slapped him on the back a little over-familiarly, Saying, H'I'hat's a nice game. HIS it? asked Spud innocently, making a mental note of what the rhetorics say about over-working the word nice. Is it? mocked the Sophomore, HI should just say so, and Max. is a rattler. HI haven't noticed anything rattling-not till just now. HYou will hear something rattle pretty soon, if you don't look out, I'm not used to taking lip from a Freshmanf, UWell, I'm not thinking of giving you any of my lip, drawled Spud, HI'm saving it all up for the pretty girls out where I came from. HI imagine they'll appreciate it. Where dir! you come from anyhow? Why, from home, direct from home. I-Iow did they come to let vou get so far away? HI'm plagued if I see how you knew I was so far away. But I'll tell you, con- fidentially, what it was that moved the Saxby family to let me come, they heard that you were here. Just then three Dormitory girls came by, and Byron attached his- pomplosity to them, calling back to Spud, I'll see you later, placing special emphasis on you. Maybe notg I never stay up late, and the green Freshman was immediately reabsorbed in the tennis game. . Byron gradually becameso enraged at this fatally green Freshman, who had so much method in his madness, that he asked as a special favor, to be detailed to bring in a Freshman at their next Sophomore banquet. He would 'see to it that while the Sophomores were sucking blue-points, turtle-soup, canvas-back, and what not, down their Epicurean throats, Spud Saxby should sit by pulling away at a nursing bottle. But Saxby was a born detective, and before the night of the banquet he was in their most secret councils, and knew all their secrets even down to who was to serve the banquet, and that it was to be in the S. K. C. Business Rooms over the Post Office. X I26 H I I l I One of Spud's windows opened on the roof of a porch. In his closet was a scuttle leading to the roof, over which spread the branches of an elm that grew near the house. On the night of the banquet, Spud had six lusty Freshmen in the secret, and ready to help him when the Sophomores should make their advance. About eleven o'clock Spud turned his light low, as if getting ready for bedg in about ten minutes he blew it out, and immediately climbed into the attic. The three Sophs who came to capture Spud were game, but about midnight seven Freshmen were guarding them, out in Island Park, where they were strapped, like great pappooses, each with his back to a tree, Byron off by himself. Spud sent his six allies back to the house to keep the rest of the Sophs from getting on the track, when they should discover the kidnapping. As soon as they were gone Spud told the two Sophomores how he had been ferreting out Byron's doings. Among other things discovered was the fact that some of Kinsford's grades were spurious, and that he really was not a Sophomore at all. Spud then agreed to let these two go, if they would help to take Byron Kinsford, bound as he was, over to the banquet. Here they were admittedg and when astonishment had subsided a little, a committee was appointed, and a hurried trial resulted in revealing the fact that whereas Byron Kinsford had been masquerading as a Sophomore when he was none, Spud Saxby was a full-fledged Sophomore bearing the proper credentials from the registrar. HI hardly know how to apologize properly to these two Sophomores who were in company with this Scalawag, said Saxby, Hbut, as the Dutchman said in his prayer to the Almighty, 'If you'll forgive me this time, I'll never ask another favor of you as long as I live.' Byron Kinsford has insulted me many a time and oft. I presume you can see that he has insulted the whole Sophomore class. I present hirn as the fool for the occasion. In the twinkling of an eye, the forty boys were marching around the tables with Spud Saxby somewhere on the top of their husky shoulders, while they sang: Whah 'll de Freshman go, When cle great day come, Wid de rollin' ob de trumpet, An' de bangin' ob cle drumb? O de Whole blame mess VVill be kotched out late, Anl Hn' no latch On de golden gate. Meanwhile Byron Kinsford sat by pulling at a big nursing bottle. I27 Epitaphs JOSEPH SHOOP He averaged well for the community The One VVho Knoelced on the Girlsl Basket Ball Picture The Good Die Young. RUTH BROWN M-:Lhinks I hear her soft whispers yet. QLihrarinu.l GEORGE MCDERMO-lvl' He was a LUCIUS D. MOORE Harvard Ph. D., we have no fears for the futuie Cholcccl on ri quotation from Sophocles. LESLIE CRUNIP His Q?l laugh haunts us still. R. E. IVIORGAN Slarvecl to death. JACOB MILES CORL He has done what he could. S Q, Q 54 9? m.,.,.,.,.,, h S 1 V . . l EDITUR F ANNUAL ,-f Z.. ifi Y - Hlff JJ? 'iii' Q , -i f - 128 ' THEY KNOW A CGI-l:EC'5 HILL rr tbat they can get 1 f School 'Books 'ill Age A nefw and second hand ,-cf, , - -t if ' 1--S NJ ,j.,, E:-as1aQgjg,??1 5l5'x':5fE E1' -'L-ies --w-- L Aigggm A , r Tablets ff if Note Books ' E '- Fruits TT ':' O 5 Candies and Groceries Af HO TTO CBR OS, Three Specials Headquarters for COLLEGE 'TEXT BOOKS T W e E A S T NI A N K O D A K S 1 lllll- llyl and Exclusive Agent for 1 T gi-ii! ' SPAULDING SPORTING GOODS .- Ti-if - iiifitftn.. T.::::::r1,e::E::5iI5i.'i9 EiiniiiiiliilifIH'lll l ' This is the place STATE AT THE OLD CORNER BOOK STORE SCHOOL BOOK Telephone 37 C DEPOSITORY l I EYES TESTED FREE by a Graduate Optician Satisfaction Guaranteed BROWN P R UC C91 Catering to Students' Trade our Specialty If the Inest is not too good for you CALL ON US BOOKS STATIONERY MUSIC and MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS ART SUPPLIES BASEBALL and FOOTBALL GOODS COLLEGE TEXT-BOOKS S. J. NEER H I22 East Ninth Ave. The Cyclone WI NF I ELD'S Spot Cash and One Price HOUSE JUST A I-IINT Of a few items that we can save you money on. 4-ply Linen Collars . .09 Ladies or Gents. 3 pairs Fast Black I-Iose .25 Ladies or Cuents. A Full Line of Ladies' and C-ents' Furnishings Stationery, School Supplies, and Toilet Soap FORM GOOD HABITS and Iet one of them be that of going to The Cyclone for everything. THOS. ELLIOTT Sr CO. MEL MARTIN, Manager MBE Steam Laundry Comer Ninth Avenue and Manning Street Telephone I 4 Q GEO. E. DUBLER PROPRIETOR O. E. HUNT, College I-IiII Agent 0 i, 4 . lVIartin's Big Shoe Store Where you aIways IincI shoes that are Yuhqr right in price, quality and workmanship STUDENTS... 5 xi - 2223133 I Are invited to inspect our specialty ,I 'A --. ,U Iines for which we have the excIu- I -..... jrvehiigncy. Latest styles aIways I.. WALTER MARTIN PROPRIETOR ' Are You Insured? f f PEATH I EEELTH I SICKNESS ACCIDENT YOUR HOUSE AGAINST FIRE I LIGHTNING HORSE L CYCLONES If not, the proper place to have this attended to is with P. I-I. ALBRIGI-IT 81 CO. I I9 EAST NINTH AVENUE WINFIELD, KANSAS HIGHLAND PARK SANITARIUM A Private Hospital and lnvalids' Home The building is a beautiful two-story frame, with every modern convenience. It is beautifully situated in the northeast part of Wintield, Kansas, on College Hill, an eminence overlooking the entire city. It is heated throughout with hot water and no expense has been spared to make it a comfortable home for patients. It is one mile from the business center, and away from the noise and dust of the city and is always cool and salubrious in summer. It is open to all classes of cases except contagious diseases. The operating room, which is entirely modern, is completely furnished with the latest and best surgical and antiseptic appliances, and is free to all physicians and surgeons, and only the most competent graduate nurses are in charge. The Superintendent in charge, Miss L. A. Wells, is a graduate of The Illinois Training School for Nurses, of Chicago, and has had ample experience in hospital Work. The cuisine is liberal, and is all home cooking. Patients are provided with every delicacy of the season. The furnishing is modern, complete and up-to-date in every respect, and no pains are spared to make it a HOME for the patients. The patients are met at all trains when requested. For terms and further information, address the Superintendent, MISS L. A. WELLS, Highland Park Sanitarium, Winfield, Kansas C. M. HOLCOMB, M. D., Chief Surgeon Our Library Table Cutting Out BERToN CLIFFORD DuBois Mr. Dubois at the earnest solicitation of his friends, according to his preface, has at last given us in detail the true account of his many scoops. Not only is the book valuable from a literary and a his- torical point of view, but it will serve as an excellent manual for those wishing to become proficient in the art of beating other fellows' time. Soul Sonnets of a Theologue ' ERNr:sT FERGUSON BUCK With a smile on our lips we took it up: with tears in our eves we laid it down. Every octave utters the music of the heartg each sestette sings of love. Little Angels in the Home HENRY W. CUMMINGS Dedicated to the senior class and appealing to everyone who loves children, this effort of Mr. Cummings will no doubt be one of the hits of the season. The rnost beautiful parental tenderness and the sublimest of human emotions are here revealed, yet with a reserve which makes us wonder if there is not more to tell. Am I lt? CLYDE MCFEATERS Answered in the affirmative. His demonstration is as clear as Bowne's chapter on The World Ground As Intelligent. And such conhdencel Who can withstand it? No one, unless he knows McFeaters. A Reserved For Further Notice Jokes and Breaks of R. E. Morgang unexpurgatecl, with notes and vocabulary. Edited by H. S. Baker. Students' Handbook on Social Etiquetteg L. D. Moore. Little journeys on the Laundry Wagon, Bennie Wooddell. Seen From the Street-Car Window, Chauncey Depew Head. In the Clutch of the Lionls Paw, A. M. Echternach. Contributions Unavailable Offices I Have Held, R. A. Felton. Love in the Pulpit and School, Charles Dahomey Whitwam. How I Laugh, Leslie M. Crump. Borden P. Bowne vs. Omar Khayyam, L. D. Moore. How I Proposed, Rev. E. E. Anderson. 135 3lCl'1Cf ClE1l:C Neatest Up-to-date.Place in the City. Regular Dinners, Chili and Tamales Oysters and lce Cream in Season Special Dinners a Specialty REPORT TO THE COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY conneusen . of the Condition of THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF WINFIELD, KANSAS Af the close of Business, January I I, 1905 Resources Liabilities Loans and Discounts . . fS505,QQ7.3I Capital Stock ---- 35100000-00 O hd f Surplus Fund . . 20,000.00 Ve' fa is -'-- 237907713 Undtvtded Profits . . . 41,777.40 U. S. Bonds to Secure Circulation IO0,000.00 Circulation ..... IO0,000.00 Banking House and Fixtures . . 29,000.00 - ' DEPOSITS Cash and Sight Exchange . . 302,591.82 Elillighgites ' . ' 56225353253 699,718.86 if96I,4Q6.26 SQ6I,4Q6.Z6 The above statement is correct. E. W. BOLINGER, Cashier. DIRECTORS W. C. ROBINSON GRANT STAFFORD E. W. BOLINGER. J. M. IDONLEY Guo. G. GARY We have unequalletl facilities for handling your bank' account and solicit your business with the assurance that we will cheerfully meet all your requirements so long as consistent with prudent and con- servative banking. J. S. Seirnears Everything in l-louse Furnishing Can be gotten for Cash or on Easy Payments We furnish everything hut the housewife Sporting Goods of all kinds. Telephone Number 27l 80i North Main GEO. I-I. DRESSER Photographer Ninth Avenue One block west of Main Street Ground floor We can make you any style of Work known to the profession. OUR MOTTO: Not how cheap but how goodi' LARGE PORTRAITS one of our specialties. Also Platinum in Black, White and Sepia, Mounted in Arr Folders: Students are especially invited to call at our Studio. We guarantee to please you. X Our Prices Are Always Consistent with Style and Ogality Dressers Studio Notice the Photo Work of this Annual LET US SUPPLY YOUR WANTS I 0 qu , I IT S A I OUR SESSEISZINEETIESSIPEQTIES AND 6. I IN EVERY DETAIL an mm-TRID Our Prices are Right Always at Your Service WA. ' 9 5 I ALLYUU NEED TU KNOW I ABUUTA SUIT ELI YOUNGI-IEIIVI CLOTHING CO. L. R. IVIOCLE Winiield Bakery .IEWEI-ER AND Confectionery and OPTOIWZTRIST Ice Cream Parlor 41. I L. D. HOLTKE, Proprietor Diamonds, Jewelry and I-Ianci-Painted China OPTICAL WORK A SPECIALTY ICE CREAM AND CAKE SERVED AT ANY TIME SPECIAL PRICES TO - - - STUDENTS - - - Electric Pans Always Running Phone 287 : : 903 Main Street New Phone I49 : : 920 Main Street GO TO ' ' . . A Famous Place gi P.1Lloes repairing tlmt's strictly ilrs t , eople nr ying ru ans up- S 'iingxno a Inotsoul ill I Leather th lx Like iron II I k Invisible g I B A S H Q P Good repairing of all Irinds as neat aslca b And people keep coming where work is t p N l I l F Sl SI UNDER 'rms w1NF1E1.n NANONAL nfxmc College Trade solicited FORTHE BEST OFSERVICE I- P- IVIILLIC-AN IVEST QTH AVENUE Hot Baths and Hot Bath Rooms 0 p ace can attract ike I ie unions moe i You come to College And of course you want to know where there is a good place to do your trading. You prefer the store that will treat you right by selling you good reliable goods at the most reasonable prices. If you find such a place you step in, You sta a while And if you are pleased with the clerks. the goods, prices, etc., etc., you will go back again. Now we want you to come into our store. We will treat you right. It makes no diiference whether or not you are the brightest or best look- ing student in school. In fact if You flunk At the end of every term we will treat you the same as far as our business relations are concerned. The truth of the whole matter is we want your trade, and we are always anxious for you to come here first before you buy. We carry everything in fine wearing apparel for young men and women. Young man, if you once wear an Alfred Benjamin suit, you will take no other afterward. Let us it you out and when You go home Your folks wonlt know you and your best girl will be so pleased that she will come back to school with you. DON'T FORGET US BRADY BROS 84 CO. QWHERE QUALITY ooUNTs5 Diamond ..Watches Clocks . Jewelry . Cut Glass . Silverware . Optical Goods , s.g,y, Best Goods-Lowest Prices- Largest Stock X T A, W Latest Styles- All Goods Marked ln wef i--L Pl ' F' 3, . waiting , aln lgures I fl eeeeeefe' J5511' . A tm 'i fit- awww. S I t F 50 ini i , aw Q v,2:.e.1,.: ,eees Citi geeeee 'whip v . 'v' igw ,- ' to 5400.00 'rf 5-'mai-4 -.4 ' frff' 250 Watches to Select From Enismxzemfb-P e SL00 to 560.00 My Optical Department 1 SQ ls up-to-date. lam a graduate W JEWEL? of one of the leading optical col- in leges of the country, and am 'lfsp v ii f prepared to fit your eyes correctly. If you are troubled with headache or nervousness, call in and i 'l - - V '- .. let me examine your eyes. EXAMINATION 6. 16 . a Jw 3 6 , . FREE. I guarantee a correction. - 1l1IkllI,x .lIIIluII.e ll I ll i OUR SPEClAl.'l'lES 4 e F ine Watch Work, Diamond Setting and Fitting Glasses D R E W W I L S O iifpilnalniiitiiei JEWELER AND OPTICIAN' Winfigld,,Kan5a5 Me'1'sR1Z25Zhl5'.i.CSZZiZ R. V. HERPICH Siligiiiliid Gloves Trunks and Valises Pants. MERCHANT TAILOR f ill X x ell ff llfws W rw ' ri . - - il F arms and City Homes for Sale. Also Vacant Lots in all parts of the city. Reference: Cowley County National Bank. G. C. J E N S E N IXZWETEY Nirlrifridfiiiaiofise KYGER U. L. MEANS F U R NIT U R E EVERYTHING MUSICAL C 0 M P A N Y Pianos . Organs . Mandolins . Violins FURNITURE AND UNDERTAKING Banios Q Guitars - We solicit your orders and guarantee Furniture St0rC, 921 Main Street Genuine Musical Quality and Undertaking Rooms, I0l4 Main Street the Lowest Prices Wholesale ancl Retail .Office and Yards Dealer in all lcincls W0 O0 J 210 East Ninth Street of Coal . Both Phones 71 THE COAL MAN WID EY'S PHOTOGRAPHIC STUDIO Is known and recommended as one of the best places in the state to get Photos made in the following finishes PLATINO-CARBON COLODIO-CARBON PLATINUM CEPIA-PLATINUM IVORYTYPE CRAYON WATER COLOR PASTEL OIL The price of cabinets is from two to eight dollars per dozen, grade governing price. You should see us before coming to any conclusion. Our prices for sitting from life for large pictures are reasonable. This grade is freehand work, no camera being used. They are sketched from life. Good Accommodations Central Location SIS Main Street WINFIELD, KANSAS DR. E. G. THOMPSON Q DENTIST Gold and Porcelain a Specialty OFFICE HOURS 8 30 a. 12:00 m 1.30 p. m 5:00 p. Phone 33 Over Tricefs Shoe Store C A. Marfin CDenfisf cRooms 21 and 22 Fufler CBuiId'ing I. N. HARTER The fDruggisf Fountain Pens Siafionery Toilef aqrficles Dr, F. M VWImer Praciice Lirniiea' EYEH, EAR NOSE THROA T ' Uffice Rooms 2 and 3 Thompson Block css: ETF Hours: 9zL I2 :: 21 5 CD, ,ji C01-TFEY PHYSICIAN AND 0 S URGEON Office, Ferguson Block DR. T. T. HINSHAW Physician and Surgeon Office in Residence Norfh of Lutheran College School of Qrator C?-D CGD g m- Ig A 4 H654 l ...OF... Southwest Kansas College Franklin L. Gilson, Ph. B., B. O. :::: Director Course includes instruction in Oratory, Elocution, English and Physical Culture. ..... . Graduates Admitted to Senior Class in the Cum- nock School of Oratory. ...... . Rootis Shoe l-louse ls the place Where the prices and quality are always right, their styles are thoroughly UP-TO-DATE They particularly desire to call your atten- tion to their 'SPRING LINE OF FOOTWEAR The Oxfordls this season are elegant in de- sign. Russet, Chocklate and Patent Leather take the lead. STUDENTS Will always be cordially welcomed at our store. ROOT'S GUARANTEE MEANS QUALITY' The Religious Meetings Committee of the Y. M. C. A. are The Bulletin Board WANTED.-Someone to preach for me Sunday, so that I can attend the joint meeting of the Y. M. and Y. W's. W1-IITWAM. All first preps will meet me in the office this afternoon to con- sult about their grades from other schools. As long as I am here, there will be 21 more systematic way of doing these things than 19 020 . o 0.006 O gx O Q 0 3 cz OA 5 W0 heretofore. SHERMAN CAMPREL1.. . 5:1125 5 , ' + G5 FOR SALE.-A pair of skates. . BERT DuBois. x g G QQ Q, Tickets to see me take my snow bath tomorrow morning will be on sale at the librarian's desk, immediately after chapel. R. E. MORGAN. Q 'QQ 9,44 , QQ 091,59 O OXYOX O O o CJ 'OX requested to meet at one o'clock. R. A. F., Chairman. The band will meet at 7 o'clock to-night in the chapel. PEARL LovE. 1 A meeting of the oratorical association is called for 12:45 in the l 0 ' o ff: OX 2 ' it A 5 r f O ' , X P ' C Q' i S 6 III o A E om oi l PC? GX , O S A t X . t tp :fda fel X el l k I tb X i l I mathematics room. R. A. FELTON, President. I xg X i C.,-EAM-,S,, HALL EASE WANTED:-Something to eat. MORGAN. CINCINNATI, OHIO, jan. 26, 1905. -i DR. GEO. Fox Cooit, Ph, D., B N S fr , xg- Winfield, Kansas. 1 E DEAR SIR:- tll l Would you please recommend to us some young man, L '-P5 ministerial student preferred, who would be Willing to act as l C-1'-,I -, 5 agent for our Cereal Product fRicl1 old, mellow, ripel in Z, E your institution. Yours Respectfully, I l Box 704. l- If ' The football team will meet at D1'SSSS1',S Studio at 2:30 to , Q get their pictures taken. Bring your suits. 1 I ' X RALPH FELTON, Manager. ' I I, ,X I would like to have a full attendance in my theism class tomorrow, as I have prepared a very interesting lecture on the l l f 4 L'Antinomy between Omniscience and Free-Will. X , . Xfff I B. W. DEBUSK. lil I wish the person who stole my garters last Fall, would I return them as I shall need them as soon as the baseball sea- S F QW! son opens up. R. E. M. X 1 X ff X l LOST:-Somewhere between Dutch Creek and College Hill, 1 ' ' 2. ben. Low P. WANTED:-A new lot of big words. L. D. M. QS- A Southwest Kansas College Music Department ARCHIBALD OLMSTEAD, Director Special advantages to students wishing to study music according to methods used in leading conservatories of this Country and Europe FREE CLASS IN MUSICAL HISTORY AND ORCHESTRA INSTRUCTION UNEXCELLED IN THE WEST Branches Taught PIANO VOICE VIOLIN CELLO GUITAR MANDOLIN BAND INSTRUMENTS CBI? 'TWIUQ' D0 Y0l!play? 4- The man that hath no music in himself nor is mov d with the concord of sw sounds, is fit for treason, sirategems and spoils Shakcspnwf We Say S0 To Tl1Ht7S why We carry everything in Musical Instruments, Music Goods, Etc. We Carr PIANOS AND ORGANS, STANDARD MAKES. STRINGED AND BAND INSTRUMENTS. SHEET MUSIC. MUSIC BOOKS OF ALL KINDS. SCI1IRMER'S LI ' BRARY. McKINLEYS LIBRARY, ETC. Write us and We Will mail to you our catalogue. All orders promptly filled Students, You Are Always Welcome STARK BROS. MUSIC CO. U DERWOOD ai uunnwoon Stereographers to Their Majesties King Edward VII and Queen Alexandria by command. Official Stereographers to President McKinley and President Roosevelt on all of their important trips. Manufacturers of stereosoopes and stereographs for the United States Government. We have by far the best collection of Views of the Worlds Fair and the Russian-Japanese War. Students desiring pleasant and profitable Work Will please see G. B. Wooddell and F. H. Ebright OR WRITE UNDERWOOD 8: UNDERWOOD NEW YORK LONDON OTTAWA, KANSAS TORONTO, CANADA SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. BOMBAY, INDIA MANILA, P. I. Suits Made to Order from 5512.50 up Pants Made to Order from 53.50 up H' R' Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing Merchant Tailor 215 East 9th Avenue a Specialw i .F. UBER CG. FOR LADIES- The Dorothy Dodd shoes for spring are the most satisfactory, because of their fit and Wear They cost 53.00. Specials 50 cents more FoR MEN- D We have the new tans and black in Vici and heavier grades 32.00 to 55.00 a Pair 9 AI- S aqrfisfic Lettering, cDesigning CASH SYSTEM ana' CPen 'D1'a'ZDing U Is a Money Saver to Purchasers of ' Clothing Hats Shoes Furnishing Goods ORIENTAL PRESS WL .E+ D 't f ur 't' 'f'td t 'r , 1 Onmaliaffdgftfgfkf2:e:if1iy.' v7fitenlf :fission Tesfgnef of Cvfs, Leffef-Heads, Patents, 20 per cent. discount to Methodists. Trade-Marks, Efc. This o4nnual confairzs 21. 22, 31. as Caron Block some of Silr. Hanlen's fwork. Phone 498 Winfield, Kansas P. O. Box 214 Sp eci al In vita tio n If You Want a First-Class BATHS, Hot or Cold Shave or Haircut stop at Q to 205 East Ninth College Students S' A' Denning Building TONSORIAL PARLORS 'TX x fxx X 5 f Q--Q ' . .X 1 F6 ' v ' I ' I 1 V U V , YY? Q fo 'I 3 2 A fx V 'ml Q' 1 0 ' U -...Q ,..-' ' vu E I ' .Lis A ' 57 AVI? -c5 TxTC ' 1 5 - -in AN ILLUSTR ATI W AN EXPLANATION Smith's business is saving the soles of your feet, Making repairs that are lasting and neat, Infhis line of work they cannot be beat They use the best leather, they use the besttcare, yHere is a shop that will please in repair. ' Bring us your repairing and we will do it promptly and neatly Fine sewecl work and Welt-tacking for Ladies' and Gents' shoes a specialty LI K SMITH is for Learned- Although he is wise, He falls on the ice . And blackens his eyes. On the Front Steps in the Moonlight. Miss McClellan lafter a long silencej Of what are you thinking? The other one. Of same thing you are. Miss MCC. Ii you do I'll slap you. is for Nichols Who carried the ball For eighty-five yards From the Quakers, last Fall. Miss T. HI don't see why I have to pay to see the football games when Miss Edmondson gets her quarter-back. MRS. HERNDON. All great people havetrou- bles don't they? GEORGE. Yes ma'am, I have. is for Parker Who talketh so fast Our only hope is That long he'll not last. PROF. DE BUSK fat the telephonelz- Say, Central, our house is atire, won't you tell the Ere department to come up. And say, central, won't you please tell them-to come right away? 151 y y Ja T G- E O Gr Y W E T E- RN is li A S AS T H e wel MODRE TAKES l'v0lSif.N. A QU'l'TvRE is for McFeaters Who kills all the skeaters', He talks them to death-w This loquacious McFeaters. ETHEL PURDY ftranslatingj - Et le chien Remua la Queue-and the dog did its part. MRS. HERNDON: Do you know anything about the King James Version, Miss Annie? THE SENioR: I guess -- not. is for Orren- His last name is Hunt, And baritone solos Alone are his stunt. We always try to please our customers This is probably why our business is steadily increas- ing. At any rate it is and the only reason for it that we know, is that all through the season we give our custom- ers just what they want, at prices consistent with quality of goods with special pains in iittingg and as they buy our goods and are pleased with them they tell their friends and they come to buy of us. Why don't you try us also? It is our endeavor to please so well that if you are once a customer always a customerw and if you begin with us you will stay. GUI' Trimmed Hat Department Is one of the leading features of our business. We put into every hat the same care we devote to every detail of our business. We have the newest styles and the best materials in Ready-to-Wear, Ready-to-Trim, Semi- Trimmed and Untrimmedg the leading styles of the season. BROWN SISTERS He Riket Zieety Spice ! ! ! Why Not Buy Your Shoes of TRICE ? ?'? I-le carries one of the largest and most complete lines in Southern Kansas. Youire as Welcome at this store as you are at home. : : 1 : : Q l He Sells Shoes Q EOF MGH For Women The Famous The HU1tfai' W.L. Douglas 33.50 Shoe. 553.50 shoe ' Always ii rs t The Ralston . , Health in quality and SB 4 s h o e 5753719 T1-na TRICE SHOE STORE ' The Dr. Reed Cushion '- The Moore Shafer 954 S016 355 Shoe REMEMBER Shoe, a top Notcher We Give Special f - 1 N The Fellow Craft lnducements to O1 Crebsy Wear 33-50 Shoe College Trade A fancy line of fine And a Very strong line . Slippers in lmtent and of 32,00 and 32,50 Comyfcagagllgd Get kid leathers are al- Shoes Ways in stock THE TRICE SHOE STORE Roclocker M BIKES Photos an Rates For Students Southwest Kansas College WINFIELD . KANSAS -'52 .431-' vg t gf DEPARTMENTS: College of Liberal Arts, Academy ,Normal Department, School of Business Training Music Department, School of Oratory 1l A complete review course in the common branches, designed especially for teachers, is offered for the spring term of each year. Tl The Business and Music Schools occupy commodious apartments in the business por- tion of the city, in addition to the large rooms in the college building. l Wi The laboratories. are thoroughly equipped and afford unusual facilities for high grade Work. WT College Hill is a most desirable home for students. Its moral and educational iniiuences are unsurpassed. Tl For catalogue and full particulars address GEORGE F. COOK, PRESIDENT Winfield Siearn Laundry CIeanIiness is not a matter of Instinctg it is a matter of ecIucat1on, ancI, I1I-ce aII other great things, must he cultivated. LET US AID YOU IN ITS CULTIVATION ili-. 1 We Give Special Affeniion to Siudenzus Work We thank you for past favors and desire to solicit your future patronage G, B, WOODDELL Ageni on College Ifll I At Kerr's Ladies' Tailored Suiis . Ladies' Tailored Skiris Shirf Waisis and Sfzirf Waisf Suiis Efveryilning in Noiions p Fancy Collars Ribbons, Gl0'bes Laces, Eic. I I sims I I Black Silks in all the popular weaves, and the newest designs in Fancy SiIIcs for the Shirt Waist Suits Ladies' Furnishings EAST NINTH AVENUE H fs Aboui Time For 04 gxfefw Suii Lei us sho'I29 you our fine line of samples and fake your measure for one 'AMW E. 5 BUCK STUDENT CTAIL OR CLEANING AND PRESSING AT REASONABLE :PRICES HASTINGS 65 F ULKERSON Ellakers and fDesigners Of Correci Mllinery 207 East Ninth Abe. 9 'KJ IGH grade illustrations are a matter of , great importance in the making of a college .IX annual. In order to have them appear to 3: - Q the best advantage it is necessary to have a perfect arrangement and display of type. That each college annual produced shall he distinctively original and attractive is an unvarying requirement that neces- sitates the constant creation of new' methods of treat- ment in both the artistic and mechanical departments. The George Banta Press is perfectly equipped to do a superior grade of college annual, catalogue, station- ery and fraternity printing. : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : GEORGE . BANTA . PUBLISHING . COMPANY I65- I 67 . MAIN . STREET . MENASI-IA . WISCONSIN PEG- ULAR PRICE 331.50 YOU , SAVE 50+ WRITE DAY
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