Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA)

 - Class of 1894

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Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1894 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 330 of the 1894 volume:

WHEN YOUR COAT IS CETTINO RACCFD. AND YOUR PANTS ARE GETTING OLD, I WILL DIRECT YOU TO THE HOUSE WHERE HONEST GOODS ARE SOLD 70 THE CHICAGO C[lothing CO World Beaters For Overcoats. 34,36,38,40 KEARNY STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. SPORTSMEN’S EMPORIUM. WHOIIIUC AND RETAIL. R.- LIDDLE IMPOI I:.: IMPO GUNS, RIFLES, PISTOLS, Baacaall ano Bata. 8wcatcna. Hunting Coat . Pania. S«oct and Capa. Football ano Lawn Tcnni Goota. FINE FISHING RODS. Aitcoc ' Ccti apatco Taout ano Salmon Flic . Patcnt Tpolling Bait . Hooka and Linca. Powder, Shot, Cartridges, Cutlery, Fencing Foils, Masks, Gloves, Striking Bags. «- AOlt AGENT -9 FOREHAND ARMS CO. HAMMERLESS GUNS. W. C. SCOTT SONS. PARKER. COLTS. REMINGTON, GREENER. L. C. SMITH, and other make. of breech-loading .shotguns. SAMUEL L. PLATT, manager. | | Q MONTGOMERY STRfctT, Telephone 519. ' SAN FRANCISCO. CAL. JOHN W. CARMANY, The Gentlemen’s Outfitter, Importer of UNDERWEAR, HOSIERY, GLOVES, NECKDRESS, ETC. SHIRTS MADE TO ORDER. Students’ Patronage Solicited. 23 and 25 SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. Fine Photographs from paintings of the great galleries: portraits of eminent men and scenes in California. W. K. VICKERY, 224 Post Street. San Francisco. C. F. MARWEDEL, 58 First St., San Francisco, Cal. TELEPHONE 5042. TOOLS for AND SUPPLIES Metal Workers, Model Makers, Nickel Platers, Cycle Repairers. ' ❖ f' ' . rss'f. J J ' S' SS' ' Js-ss S + Look at the last page of this book 1 94 Tf)e Stanford Quad Volume I. prcs or H. S. CROCKCR COMPANY 1C I SCO LELAND 8TANFORD, JR. p N far-off Easterq laqds, by rqagic arts, 1 Aladdiq's woqdrous lamp and ring Iq olden tirqes were wont to bring Foqd wishes true for selfish hearts : So ruqs the tale. New fouqd, by harder, holier quest Thaq those of old, in sunny West Tfieir cl arm, so long uqused, uqscught, Is waked to rqagic power again, To bring to pass ttqe qoble thought Of tfjem wfic, grieving, loved their fellow-men. 4 TO THE HAPPY MEMORY OF LELAND STANFORD, JUNIOR, WHOSE EARLY DEATH OPENED FOR US AN AVENUE TO HIGHER LIFE, IN GRATITUDE AND REVERENCE WE DEDICATE THIS BOOK. 6 I - M« J L«c Ai abacH i klc. Ltwi) H. CH J£ M i Kate. 0 . H e n c Huo H. F a . O vWiX L£51'£• P J. H i H } D LL Si WiVA W J'SV N. C . JuXfoH « Owvwx-'C cx« aJVv e.ov 1 m m . t £ vn illiam e.. oar,t Ha R L E I C, H f. JoptR, A EDITORIAL. UST as our fathers and grandfathers in the days of ’49 carved kf out settlements with vigor and energy, to prepare the way for those that were to follow, so a body of students, in the days of ’91, broke the ground near Palo Alto to form a new settlement peculiar in itself; for it was to be a college settlement. The men of ’49 will pass down through the history of California with the noble epithet of Pioneer engraved with their memories. It has been the happy lot of the Class of ’95 to be so associated with the establishment of this institution as to be placed upon the records of the Leland Stanford Junior University as the class to receive first the benefit of a full four years’ course, and bear the proud name of Pioneer. By a singular coincidence, the three former classes having deemed themselves unable, on account of numbers, to undertake such an enterprise, there devolved upon this same class the pleasant though arduous task of publishing the first college annual. The publication fills a peculiar place in college life. It calls forth resources which no other college publication can affect. It combines in one volume a complete •record of University affairs, literary, social, and athletic, connected by the best artistic sense of the University. This publication has been christened The Stanford Quad (the plan on which the University is built). The name was chosen : firstly, because it is peculiar to this institution only ; secondly, for its snap and vigor,—a marked characteristic of the University ; thirdly, because in it is embodied the nucleus of the University settlement and sentiment,—the quadrangle. Of the phenomenal development and success of the University, in every endeavor, we shall say nothing more than to direct a careful perusal of the records given in this book. In publishing the first volume of The Stanford Quad, the editors have labored under many disadvantages, obvious to all. If we can but present a happy remembrance of the peculiar and unique incidents of the first years at Stanford, we may feel assured that the sympathetic nature of every' collegian will pardon the faults of this volume. 10 R bJ RsJfyl R bJ R b5 R b! R b! ii Iceland Hanford, Jr. E library door is thrown open, and a party of stylishly dressed tourists enters. A few steps inside the room; a glance round to gain a general impression; then with one accord the visitors advance to the most striking feature of the room,—a portrait on the east wall. Not one of the usual array of Doctors Dry-as-dust which such places reveal: but the picture of a boy, a beautiful child face, is inclosed in the massive gilt frame. “ Lki.and Stanford, Jr., Aged 15 Years. “ PAINTRD BY FBV.IX CHARY, PARIS.” is the simple inscription ; and the careless travelers pause reverently before the painting, for in those words they read the whole story. Sitting beside an old ruin on the far-away Mediterranean, his steady brown eyes gazing thoughtfully out on the blue water, did the boy see any vision of this great institution which, because of him, was to spring up a few years later in his native California ? Did he dream that his name would be on hundreds of lips? Did he fancy that his memory — alas, that the thought of him is only a memory! — would bring a flood of gratitude to hundreds of hearts ? Leland Stanford, Jr., was born at Sacramento, California, May 14, 1869. From his early youth he seems to have shown a desire for information, although he never attended any school beyond the kindergarten. His collections made while abroad and his interest in educational enterprises give evidence of this. It is told that one day his teacher showed the children some pebbles, explaining that the flat ones had probably lain in the bed of a stream and so been worn flat; whereas another which was round must have been rolled to become such a shape. The young Leland came home and reported the story in delight; from that day dates his investigating spirit. During his eleventh year he made a European collection, which is now placed in the Leland Stanford Junior Museum. One of his earliest 12 ambitions was to found a museum; and it is in view of this fact that the building bearing his name is held one of the most important of the whole University. In it is a room modeled exactly from his own room in the San Francisco home, and here we find his own collection. A recent article says, “ His taste for arms and trophies of war and the chase, at this period of his life, is apparent.” Weapons of all kinds reveal his tastes, as like those of many another bright boy of today. In addition to brilliant promises intellectually, young Leland possessed a remarkably generous and loving disposition. Unspoiled by wealth and by the advantages following in its train, he remained unaffected. ” Mamma, that is the best thing you ever did in your life,” he said one day when Mrs. Stanford entered upon the first of her now extensive charitable enterprises; and from that time on he was her constant co-worker, so far as a child could be, in her philanthropic labors. So for sixteen bright, happy years the boy, with his loving nature, more than rewarded the tender care of Mr. and Mrs. Stanford. And then — Senator Mitchell has said : 44 First came the remorseless reaper, and beneath the sunny skies of Italy, far away from home, snatched from loving parents the sole child, the idolized son on whom so many high hopes were centred, and, without request or consent, bore him away.” Just how much the University owes to the boy who died so young, it is hard to tell. Perhaps his desire some day to found such an institution was, in a measure, reflected from his father. At any rate the deed of foundation says: “Since the idea of establishing an institution of this kind for the benefit of mankind came directly and largely from our son and only child, Leland, and in the belief that if he had been spared to advise as to the disposition of our estate he would have advised the devotion of a large portion thereof to this purpose, we will that for all time to come the institution hereby founded shall bear his name, and shall be known as the Leland Stanford Junior University.” 3 S. C. David CSfarr Jordan, LL. D. M. S., Cornell University, 1872 ; M. D., Indiana Medical College, 1875 ; Ph. D., Butler University, 1878; LL. D., Cornell University, 1886. Instructor in Botany, Cornell University, 1871-72 ; Professor of Natural History, Lombard University, Illinois, 1872-73 ; Principal of the Appleton Collegiate Institute, Wisconsin, 1873-74 ; Student and afterward Lecturer on Marine Botany, Anderson School, at Penikese, 1874 ; Teacher of Natural History, Indianapolis, Ind., High School, 1874-75; lecturer on Zoology, Harvard Summer School, Cumberland Gap, 1875; Professor of Biology, Butler University, 1875-79; Naturalist of the Geological Surveys of Indiana and Ohio, 1877; Assistant to the U. S Fish Commission, 1877-91 ; Student of Ichthyology, British Museum, Museum d’Histoire Naturelle, etc., 1879-81 ; Professor of Zoology, Indiana University, 1879-85; Special Agent of the IT. S. Census Bureau, Investigating Marine Industries of Pacific Coast, 1880; lecturer on Comparative Anatomy, Indiana Medical College, 1885 ; President of Indiana University. 1885-91 ; President of Leland Stanford Junior University, 1891. Publications of Dr. Jordan : “A Manual of the Vertebrate Animals of the Northern U. S.;” “Science Sketches;” “A Synopsis of the Fishes of North America,” etc.; also contributor to current scientific literature. “As a teacher, Jordan makes the impression of weight, sincerity, and simplicity. He rests down confidently upon the subject, and makes that speak. He has the instinct attributed by Matthew Arnold to Wordsworth; he lets Nature speak through him ' with her own bare, sheer, penetrating power.’ Students say he is the simplest of lecturers. Others may seem more profound l eeause less lucid ; Jordan strikes for the centre. As an administrator, Jordan is a man of distinguished performance and splendid promise. In the course of six years he raised the state university of Indiana from a condition of obscurity and ineffectiveness to its present position in the front rank of Western colleges. His success was due largely to his policy of surrounding himself with a faculty of young, energetic, progressive men, and of keeping the university in touch with society at large. At Stanford University he has drawn a large number of diverse and energetic personalities into abiding harmony touching matters that pertain to educational salvation. Jordan’s favorite quotation is the saying of Ulrich von Hutten, ‘ Die Luft der Freiheit wcht ’ (‘ Freedom is in the air ’).”— Melville Best Anderson in Popular Science Monthly, Feb., 1894. DAVID 8TARR JORDAN,' LL. D. Tl)e Specialty stem in tt)e College Curriculum. DAVID STARR JORDAN. The American college was in the first place a transplanted scion from the universities of England. Its course of study for many generations, even until after the middle of this century, was essentially a course of mental gymnastics. Its three pedestals were Greek, Latin, Mathematics, and over these was laid a varnish of Ancient Philosophy. Everything in the course was fixed. No deviation from its requirements was allowed, either to meet the mental peculiarities of the student, or to prepare for the details of his active life. No form of original investigation was tolerated in this scheme, and no provision was made for any form of modern outlook. Some thirty years ago, the need for training in other subjects than those embraced in the traditional classical curriculum began to be keenly felt. Reluctantly the college authorities of the day gave way to it: first by the establishment of inferior courses (miscalled scientific, leading to inferior degrees), and afterward by the formation of patch-work courses containing a little — a very little — of everything that the public seemed to demand. The patchwork course is in vogue today in most of the smaller colleges. Its results are distinctly inferior to those of the classical course, it has in part supplanted. It gives not training, insight, nor inspiration. It renders thoroughness impossible. It violates every law of pedagogy in the interest of versatility. It makes men four-square to every wind that blows.” The reaction from the defects of the patchwork system led naturally to the elective system. You cannot in four years teach everything to every man. Either the college or the student must choose. In the long run the school must give what its students need or demand. The essential advantage of the elective system is its recognition of the law of self-activity. Unwilling work is never effective. Scholars cannot be made by either driving or coaxing. ‘‘The way to educate a man is to set him to work. The way to get him to work is to interest him. The way to interest him is to vitalize his task by relating it to some sort of reality.” In this way, “without losing their natural vivacity, boys become men, bringing to the serious work proper to men the spring and hopefulness of youth.” The great increase in the strength and usefulness of American colleges within the past twenty years is directly traceable to the vivifying influence of the element of consent in college work. The old •M. II. Audcruon. ideals have not risen in value. The freedom of the student to choose brings him capacity to choose. The willingness of the college to meet all sorts of intellectual needs calls to its walls all kinds and conditions of men to which it is capable of extending help. Its influence is felt in the demand for better teachers. Incompetent, narrow-minded, and fossilized men no longer find their victim in the student. Freedom to choose his teachers gives the student the opportunity to escape the bigot and the martinet. The essence of higher education lies in the character and influence of the teacher. The great teacher has freedom of development only when he is brought face to face with students who have come to him of their own accord. The teacher feels a tremendous incentive to good work when he deals with students who have sought him for love of him or for love of his chosen subject. A great teacher never fails to leave a great mark on every youth with whom he comes in contact. Only in freedom are great teachers possible. In the elective system as developed at Harvard and elsewhere, there is one element of weakness. Its system permits undue scattering. It allows the student to flit from one subject to another, acquiring versatility without real training. This defect the specialty system proposes to remedy. The student is allowed perfect freedom of choice, but he must choose one subject to be thorough in. In some one line, he must have knowledge of the most substantial kind. He must come to know the value of truth and how truth is separated from error. This thorough knowledge of some specialty gives him a base line by which all other attainments can be measured. There is no value in narrowness, but there is a great value in early specialization. It has the same value as early honesty—or early morality. It sets the habit of thoroughness, and of genuineness in intellectual processes. The critical time in the life of the student comes when he leaves the hot-bed of the university for the uninterested and unintellectual environment of the world. If he have not a definite intellectual purpose and a definite mission in life, he will do as the world does. He will renounce, with sorrow for it, his early visions, and the intellectual life will soon know him no more. The essential value of special knowledge is in its inspiration. Its impulse carries the student beyond this danger point. Once a scholar, always a scholar. Give him a message to speak to other men, and when he leaves your care you need fear for him not the world nor the flesh nor the devil. Founders. LELAND STANFORD. JANE LATHROP STANFORD. Boarb of trustees. The Hon. Francis E. Spencer, Chairman....................San Jose. The Hon. Charles Goodall..............................San Francisco. The Hon. Alfred L. Tubbs .............................San Francisco. Col. Charles F. Crocker...............................San Francisco. Mr. Timothy Hopkins...................................San Francisco. The Hon. Henry L. Dodge...............................San Francisco. Mr. Irving M. Scott...................................San Francisco. Dr. Harvey W. Harkness................................San Francisco. The Hon. Horace Davis .... San Francisco. The Hon. John Boggs.......................................Colusa. The Hon. T. B. McFarland..............................Sacramento. The Hon. Isaac S. Belcher.............................San Francisco. The Hon. George E. Gray...............................San Francisco. The Hon. Nathan W. Spaulding...........................Oakland. The Hon. William M. Stewart......................Virginia City, Nev. The Hon. Stephen J. Field.........................Washington, D. C. The Rev. Horatio Stebbins, D. D.......................San Francisco. Mr. Joseph D. Grant...................................San Francisco. Mr. S. F. Leib.............. ............................San Jose. Mr. Leon Sloss........................................San Francisco. Dr. Edward R. Taylor..................................San Francisco. Mr. Thomas Welton Stanford.....................Melbourne, Australia. Mr. Frank Miller....................................... Sacramento. Mr. Charles G. Lathrop................................San Francisco. Herbert C. Nash, Secretary. • Died Juue ai, 1893. 18 , 1881. ; U.S. sistant essor of Lge and 'ow. ns Hop-n Latin, 1. faculty. [Arranged In group in the order of seniority of appointment.J DAVID STARR JORDAN, President of the University. J )' Kazmin House, Serra Ave. M. S.t Cornell University, 1872; M. D.t Indiana Medical College, 1875; Ph. D., Butler University, 1878; LL. D., Cornell University, 1886. Instructor in Botany, Cornell University, 1871-72 ; Professor of Natural History. Lombard University, 1872-73; Principal of Appleton (Wis.) Collegiate Institute, 1873-74; Student and afterward Lecturer in Marine Botany, Anderson School, at Penikcse, 1874; Teacher of Natural History, Indianapolis High School, 1874-75; Professor of Biology, Butler University, 1875-79: Assistant to the U. S. Pish Commission, 1877-91 ; Professor of Zoology, Indiana University, 1879-85; President of Indiana University, 1885-91. ANDREW DICKSON WHITE, Non-resident Professor of European History. r r and 2’ P Ithaca, Ar. )'. A. B., Yale, 1853, A. M., 1856; Ph. I)., University of Jena; LL. I), Michigan, Cornell, and Yale; L. H. D., Columbia College. Student at Berlin and Paris. 1853-56 ; Attache of the American Legation at St. Petersburg, 1856; Professor of History and English Literature, University of Michigan, 1857-62; Member of the State Senate of New York, 1863-66; President of Cornell University and Professor of History, 1866-85 ; Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to the German Empire, 1879-81, to Russia since 1892. BENJAMIN HARRISON, Non-resident Professor of Constitutional Law. •PA H Indianapolis, Ind. A. B. and LL. I)., Miami University. Brevet Brigadier-General, U. S. A., 1865; U. S. Senator from Indiana, 1881-1887; President of the United States, 1889-93. GEORGE ELLIOTT HOWARD, Professor of History . 20 Alvarado Row. A. B., University of Nebraska, 1876, A. M., 1879, Ph. D., 1894. Student in History and Jurisprudence. Universities of Munich and Paris. 1876-78; Professor of History, University of Nebraska, 1879-91 ; Secretary of the Nebraska State Historical Society, 1885-91. JOHN CASPER BRANNER, Professor of Geology. AT 28 Alvarado Row. B. S., Cornell University, 1882; Ph. I)., Indiana University, 1885. Assistant Geologist, Imperial Theological Survey of Brazil, 1875-78 ; Special Botanist for Thomas A. Edison in South America, 1880-81 ; Special Agent of the U. S. Department of Agriculture for Investigating Cotton and the Insects affecting it in Brazil, 1882-83; Topographical Geologist of the Geological Survey of Pennsylvania, Anthracite District, 1883-85; Professor of Geology, University of Indiana, 1885-91; State Geologist of Arkansas, 1887-92. • Absent a United State Minister to Russia. 20 OLIVER PEEBLES JENKINS. Professor of Physiology and Histology. Cedro Cottage. A. B., Moore’s Hill College, 1869, A. M., 1872; M. S., Indiana University, 1886, Ph. I)., 1889. Professor of Natural Science, Moore’s Hill College, 1876-82 ; Professor of Natural Science, Indiana State Normal School, 1883-86; Professor of Biology, De Pauw University, 1886-91. ♦JOHN HENRY COMSTOCK, Professor of Entomology. J r B. S., Cornell University, 1874. Instructor in Entomology, Cornell University, 1873-77, Assistant Professor, 1877-82 ; U. S. Entomologist, at Washington, 1879-81 ; Professor of Entomology and General Invertebrate Zoology, Cornell University, since 1882. MELVILLE BEST ANDERSON, Professor of English Literature. 19 Salvatierra St. A. M., Butler University, 1877. Professor of Modern Languages, Butler University, 1877-80 ; Professor of English Literature, Knox College, 1881-86; Professor of Literature and History, Purdue University, 1886-87 ; Professor of the English Language and Literature, University of Iowa, 1887-91. JOHN MAXSON STILLMAN, Professor of Chemistry. Z V 2 Alvarado Row. Ph. B.t University of California, 1874, Ph. D., 1885. Assistant in Chem-istrv, University of California, 1873-75 ; Student in Chemistry, Strassburg and Wurzburg, 1875-76; Instructor in Organic and General Chemistry, University of California, 1876-82; Chemist of the Boston and American Sugar Refining Company, 1882-92. FERNANDO SANFORD, Professor of Physics. 8 Alvarado Row. B. S., Carthage College. 1879, M. S., 1882. Student, University of Berlin, 1886-88; Professor of Physical Science, Mount Morris College, 1879-82; Superintendent of Schools Ogle County, 111., 1882-86; Instructor in Physics and Chemistry, Englewood High School, 1888-90; Professor of Physical Science, Lake Forest University, 1890-91. CHARLES DAVID MARX, Professor of Civil Engineering. H J X Palo Alto. B. C. E., Cornell University, 1878; C. E., Karlsruhe Polytechnicum, 1881. Instructor in Civil Engineering, Karlsruhe Polytechnicum, 1880-81 ; U. S. Assistant Engineer, Missouri River Improvement, 1882-84; Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering, Cornell University, 1884-90; Professor of Civil Engineering, University of Wisconsin, 1890-91. ERNEST MONDELL PEASE, Professor of the Latin Language and Literature. 6 Alvarado Row. A. B., University of Colorado. 1882, A. M., 1885. Fellow in Johns Hopkins University, 1884-86; Student at Bonn, 1885-91 ; Instructor in Latin, Smith College, 1886; Professor of Latin, Bowdoin College, 1886-91. 21 • Absent on leave, 1893-94. CHARLES HENRY GILBERT, Professor of Zoology. 23 SalvatUrra St. B. S., Butler University, 1879; M. S., Indiana University, 1882, Pit. D., 1883. Assistant in Natural Sciences and Modern Languages, Indiana University, 1880-84: Professor of Natural History, University of Cincinnati, 1884-88; Professor of Zoology, Indiana University, 1888-91 ; Assistant to the U. S. Pish Commission, 1880-91. DOUGLAS HOUGHTON CAMPBELL, Professor of Botany. 33 Alvarado Row. I’h. M.t University of Michigan, 1882, I’ll. I)., 1886. Teacher of Biology, Detroit High School, 1S82-86; Student at Bonn, Tubingen, and Berlin, 1886-88: Professor of Botany, Indiana University, 1888-91. EARL BARNES, Professor of Education, and Secretary of the Faculty. t2 Alvarado Row. A. B., Indiana University, 1890; M. S., Cornell University, 1891. Student in History and Psychology, Cornell University, 1886-87, 18S8-89; Student in Pedagogics, University of Zurich, 1887-88: Professor of History, Indiana University, 1889-91. EDWIN HAMLIN WOODRUFF, Librarian. 33 Alvarado Row. LL. B., Cornell Universitv, 1888. Assistant, Astor Library, 1883-84 ; Chief Cataloguer, Cornell University Library, 1884 88; Instructor in English. Cornell University, 1888-90; Librarian of the Fiske Library, Florence, Italy, 1890-91. THOMAS DENISON WOOD, Professor of Physical Training and Hygiene. to Alvarado Row. A. B., Oberlin College. 1888, A M., 1S91 ; M. D., College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York City, 1891. Director, Oberlin College Gymnasium, 1886-88. ALBERT WILLIAM SMITH, Professor of Mechanical Engineering. H J X Palo Alto. B. M. E., Cornell University, 1878, M. M. E., 1886. Machinist and Contractor with Brown Sharp Mfg. Co., Providence, R. I., 1879-80; Machinist and Shop Foreman, Straight Line Engine Works. Syracuse, N. Y., 1880-83; Superintendent, Kingsford Foundry and Machine Works, Oswego, N. Y., 1883-86 ; Fellow in Mechanical Engineering, Cornell University, 1S86-87, Assistant Professor, 1887-91 1 Professor of Machine Design, University of Wisconsin, 1891-92. EWALD FLUGEL, Professor of English Philology. 2 Porlola Ave. Ph. D., University of Leipzig, 1886. Student, Universities of Freiburg and Leipzig, 1882-88; Privat Docent, University of Leipzig, 1888-92. 22 CHARLES BENJAMIN WING, Professor of Structural Engineering. Palo Alio. C. E., Cornell University, 1886. Fellow in Civil Engineering, Cornell University, 1886-87, Instructor, 1887-90, Assistant Professor, 1890-91 ; Professor of Bridge and Hydraulic Engineering, University of Wisconsin, 1891-92. FRANK ANGELL, Professor of Psychology. Palo Alto. B. S.. University of Vermont, 1878; Pli. D., University of Leipzig, 1891. Teacher in Washington (U. C.) High School, 1880-87 ; Assistant Professor of Psychology, Cornell University, 1891-92. LEANDER MILLER HOSKINS, Professor of Applied Mechanics. P J V Palo Alto. B. C. E. and B. S., University of Wisconsin, 1883, M. S., 1885, C. E.t 1887. Morgan Fellow in Mathematics, Harvard University, 1884-85; Instructor in Engineering, University of Wisconsin, 1885-89, Assistant Professor of Mechanics, 1889-91, Professor of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, 1891-92. ♦JOSEPH SHILLINGTON OYSTER, Professor of Military Science and Tactics. 3 Las urn Avr. Graduate United States Military Academy, West Point, 1874. Second Lieutenant, Fist Artillery, 1874; First Lieutenant, 1880. ROBERT EDGAR ALLARDICE, Professor of Mathematics. 33 Alvarado Row. A. M., University of Edinburgh, 1882. Baxter Scholar in Mathematics, University of Edinburgh, 1882-83, Drummond Scholar in Mathematics, 1883-84 ; Assistant Professor of Mathematics, University of Edinburgh, 1883-92. AMOS GRISWOLD WARNER, Professor of Economics and Social Science. Palo Alto. B. L.f University of Nebraska, 1885; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1888. General Agent, Charity Organization Society, Baltimore, 1887-89 ; Professor of Political Economy, University of Nebraska, 1889-91 ; Superintendent of Charities, Washington, D. C., 1891-93. WILLIAM RUSSELL DUDLEY, Professor of Botany. J r Lauro Hall. B. S., Cornell University, 1874, M. S., 1876. Student, Summer School. Penikese, 1874, Harvard University, 1876, Universities of Strassburg and Berlin, 1887-88; Instructor in Botany, Cornell University, 1872-76, Assistant Professor, 1876-92. 23 Resigned December. 1893. AUGUSTUS TABER MURRAY. Professor of Greek. Palo Alio. A. B., Haverford College. 1885 ; Ph. I).. Johns Hopkins University, 189a Fellow in Johns Hopkins University, 1S87-88; Professor of Greek. Earlham College. 1888-9 : Student, Universities of Leipzig and Berlin. 1893-91; Professor of Greek. Colorado College, 1891-92. ALBERT PRUDEN CARMAN, Professor of Theoretical Physics. jj Alvarado Raw. A. B.. College of New Jersey, Princeton. 188;. A. M- and D. Sc.. 18S6. Fellow in Experimental Science. Princeton. 18 3-84. Acting Instructor in Physics, 1884-85, Tutor in Mathematics, 1885-87 ; Student, University of Berlin. 1887-89 ; Professor of Physics and Applied Electricity, Purdue University, 1889-92. JULIUS GOEBEL. Professor of Germanic Literature and Philology. Menlo Park. Ph. D., University of Tubingen, 1S82. Student. University of Leipzig, 1879-81 ; Instructor in German. Johns Hopkins University, 1885-8$: Editor Belletristiiches Journal. 1SS8-92. EDWARD ALSWORTH ROSS, Professor of Economic Theory' and Finance. it I' J 24 Alvarado Row. A. B., Coe College, 1886; Ph. D.. Johns Hopkins University, 1891. Student, University of Berlin, 1888-89; Professor of Economics and Social Science. Indiana University, 1891-92; Associate Professor of Political Economy and Finance. Cornell University, 1892-93. NATHAN ABBOTT. Professor of Law. A. B., Yale University. 1876; LL. B., Boston University, 1SS0. Professor of Law, University of Michigan. 1S91-92; Professor of Law, Northwestern University, 1892-94. FREDERICK A. C. PERRINE, Professor of Electrical Engineering. Palo Alto. A. B., College of New Jersey, Princeton, 1883, A. M., 1SS6. D. Sc.. 18S5. Assistant Electrician, U. S. Electric Lighting Co., Newark, N. J., 1885-88 ; Manager Insulated Wire Dept., John A. Roebling’s Sons Co., Trenton. N. J., 1888-92 ; Treasurer, Germania Electric Co., Boston, Mass . 1892-93. JOHN ERNST MATZKE, Professor of the Romanic Languages. 2 Portola Ave. A. B., Hope College. 1882 ; Ph. I)., Johns Hopkins University. 1SS8. Professor of French. Bowdoin College, 1889-90; Professor of the Romance Languages, Indiana University, 1890-91 ; Associate in the Romance Languages, Johns Hopkins University, 1891-93. 24 « CHARLES NEWTON UTTLE, Professor of Mathematics. 6 Alvarado Row. A. B., University of Nebraska, 1879; Ph. D., Yale University, 1885. Instructor in Mathematics and Civil Engineering, University of Nebraska. 1880-84, Associate Professor of Civil Engineering, 1885-90, Professor of Civil Engineering, 1890-93. GEORGE MANN RICHARDSON, Associate Professor of Organic Chemistry. V 18 Alvarado Row. A. C., Lehigh University, 1886; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1890. Instructor in Quantitati%-e Chemical Analysis, Lehigh University, 1888- ); Fellow in Chemistry, Johns Hopkins University, 1889-90; Instructor in Organic Chemistry, Lehigh University, 1890-91. JAMES OWEN GRIFFIN, Associate Professor of German. J Y 32 Alvarado Row. Graduate of the Pennsylvania State Normal School, 1873; Teacher in Pennsylvania State Normal School, 1873-74; Principal, Unadilla (N. Y.) Academy, 1874-79; Student. University of Gottingen, 1879-80; Principal of Delaware Academy (Delhi, N. Y.), 1880-85; Instructor in German, Cornell University, 1885-91, Registrar, 1890-91. EDWARD HOWARD GRIGGS, Associate Professor of Ethics. J alo Alto. A. B., University of Indiana, 1889, A. M., 1890; Instructor in English Literature, University of Indiana, 1889-91, Professor of General Literature. 1892-93. WALTER MILLER, Associate Professor of Latin and Archaeology. College Terrace. A. M., University of Michigan, 1884. Student, University of Leipzig, 1884- 85, 1889-91; Member of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 1885-86; Instructor in Greek, University of Michigan, 1886-87, Instructor in Latin and Sanskrit. 1887-88, Acting Assistant Professor, 1888-89; Senior, Royal Archaeological Seminary, University of Leipzig. 1890- 91 ; Associate Professor of Greek, University of Missouri, 1891-92. ARLEY BARTH LOW SHOW’, Associate Professor of European History. Palo Alio. A. B., Doane College, 1882; B. I)., Andover Theological Seminary, 1885; A. M., Doane College, 1892. Pastor Congregational Church, Waco, Neb., 1885- 87; Professor of History and English Literature, Doane College, 1887-92. WILLIAM HENRY HUDSON, Associate Professor of English. 22 Alvarado Row. Assistant, Library of Sion College, London, 1885-86; Librarian. City Liberal Club, London, 1889-90; Cataloguer, President White Library, Cornell University, 1890-91 ; Assistant Librarian, Cornell University, 1891- 92. RUFUS LOT GREEN, Associate Professor of Mathematics. 3 Salvalierra St. R. S., Indiana University, 1885, A. M., 1890. Instructor in Mathematics, Indiana University, 1885-86; Student, Johns Hopkins University, 1886-87; Professor of Pure Mathematics, Indiana University, 1887-93. ORRIN LESLIE ELLIOTT, Secretary and Registrar. 24 Alvarado Row. Ph. B., Cornell University, 1885-86, Ph. D., 1890. Fellow in History and Political Science. Cornell University, 1885-86, Instructor in English, 1886-91, Assistant Registrar and President’s .Secretary, 1890-91. WILLIAM JOSEPH HUSSEY, Associate Professor of Astronomy. 20 Alvarado Row. B. S.. University of Michigan, 1889. Assistant in the Nautical Almanac Office, Washington, I). C., 1889; Instructor in Mathematics, University of Michigan. 1889-91 ; Instructor in Astronomy and Acting Director of the Observatory, 1891-92. ♦VERNON LYMAN KELLOGG, Associate Professor of Entomology. B. S., University of Kansas, 1889, M. S., 1S92. Instructor in Botany and Zoology, University of Kansas, 1888-89, Assistant Professor of Entomology, 1890-93. HENRY RUSHTON FAIRCLOUGH, Associate Professor of Greek and Latin. A J J 6 Salvalierra Si. A. B., University of Toronto, 1.883, A. M.. 1886. Fellow in Classics, University College, Toronto, 1883-84; Classical and English Master, Brock-ville High School, 1884-86; Graduate Scholar, Johns Hopkins University. 1886-87, Fellow, 1887; Lecturer in Greek and Ancient History, University College. Toronto, 1887-93; Classical Examiner in University of Toronto and Trinity University. BOLTON COIT BROWN, Associate Professor of Drawing and Paint- ing. College Terrace. B. P., Syracuse University, 1885, M. P.. 1889. Instructor in Freehand Drawing, Cornell University, 1885-8S; Principal, Fine Art Department, Government Art School, and Parkdale Art School, Toronto, 1889-90; Instructor in Art, Buchtel College, 1890-91. JAMES PERRIN SMITH, Associate Professor of Mineralogy and Paleontology. H H II 5 Salvalierra St. A. B., Wofford College, 1884; A. M.. Vanderbilt University, 1S86; Ph. D., University of Gottingen, 1892. Assistant Geologist and Chemist, Arkansas Geological Survey, 1887-90. • • Beginning September, 1894. MARY SHELDON BARNES, Assistant Professor of History. 12 Alvarado Row. A. B., University of Michigan. 1874. Teacher of Greek, Latin, and History, Oswego (N. Y.) Normal School, 1875-76; Professor of History, Wellesley College, 1877-79. EMORY EVANS SMITH, Assistant Professor of Horticulture. Palo Alto. Editor California Florist and Gardener% 1888-89; Associate Editor Pacific Rural Press, 1889 ; Editor California Fruit Grower, 1890-92; Secretary California State Floral Society. 1888-93; President Florists’ Club of California, since 1891. SAMUEL JACQUES BRUN, Assistant Professor of French. San Jose. B.-6s-S., Montpelier. France, 1876. French Master, Ackworth School, England. 1879-80; Instructor in French, Haverford College, 1881-82; Instructor in French, Cornell University, 1882-86. ALPHONSO GERALD NEWCOMER, Assistant Professor of English. P I' J Palo Alto. A. B., University of Michigan, 1887; A. M., Cornell University, 1888. Instructor in Latin and French, Knox College, 1889-91. HENRY BURROWES LATHROP, Assistant Professor of English. College Terrace. A. B , Harvard University, 1889. Assistant Professor of English, Hobart College, 1889-90; Instructor in English, Harvard University, 1890-92. t FREDERICK CONVERSE CLARK, Assistant Professor of Economics. J r A. B.. University of Michigan, 1887, A M., 188S, Ph. I)., 1891. Teacher of History and Economics, Ann Arbor High School, 1888-92. LIONEL REMOND LENOX, Assistant Professor of Chemistry. Castro. Ph B., Columbia College, 1888. Assistant Chemist. Bethlehem Iron Co , 1887; Instructor in Chemistry, Lehigh University, 1888-91 ; Chemist, Ordnance Department, U. S. N., Washington, I). C., 1891-92. JOHN ANTHONY MILLER, Assistant Professor of Mathematics. Alvarado Row. A. B., Indiana University, 1890; A. M., Lelaud Stanford Junior University, 1893. Superintendent of Schools, Rockville, Ind., 1890-91. • Absent on leave, 1893-94. f Resigned November. 1X9.1. DAVID ELLSWORTH SPENCER, Assistant Professor of History. P J H Palo Alto. B. L , University of Wisconsin, 1887: A. M., Harvard University, 1891. Student in Law, University of Wisconsin, 1887-88, Instructor in Rhetoric, 1888-89, Instructor in History, 1889-90; Assistant in History, Harvard University, 1891-92 ; Acting Assistant Professor of History, University of Michigan, 1892-93. ARTHUR BRIDGMAN CLARK, Assistant Professor of Drawing and Architectural Draughting. J )' College Terrace. B. Ar., Syracuse University, 1888, M. Ar., 1891. Director of Trades Schools and Instructor in Drawing, New York State Reformatory, Elmira, N. Y., 1888-89; Instructor in Architecture, Syracuse University, 1SS9-92. FRANK MACE McFARLAND, Assistant Professor of Histology. J K E Palo Alto. I‘h. B., De Pauw University, 1889; A. M., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1893; Assistant in Biology, De Pauw University, 1888-89; Professor of Biology, Olivet College, 1889-92. MARGARET M. WICKHAM, Assistant Professor of German. 3 Lasuen Ave. A. B., Vassar College, 1886. Teacher of Latin and German, Cascadilla School (Ithaca, N. Y.), 1886-88 ; Student in German, Hanover and Berlin, 1888-89; University of Leipzig, 1889-90; Instructor in German, Cleveland College for Women, 1890-91 ; Associate Professor, 1891-92. WILLIAM STUART SYMINGTON, Jr., Assistant Professor of Romanic Languages. A. B., Johns Hopkins University, 1891. University Scholar, Johns Hopkins University, 1891-92 ; Graduate Student and Assistant in French, 1892-94. ♦MARY ROBERTS SMITH, Assistant Professor of Social Science. Palo Alto. I’h. B., Cornell University, 1880; M. S., 1882. Teacher of History, Washington, D. C.. High School, 1882-84 ; Teacher of History, Private School, Cincinnati, O., 1884-86; Instructor in History aud Economics, Wellesley College, 1886-90; Registrar and Secretary of Board of Examiners, 1889-90. MERRITT EUGENE TAYLOR, Assistant Professor of Physics. Lauro Hall. B. S., Northwestern University, 1883, M. S., 1884. Assistant in Chemistry, Northwestern University, 1883-84, Instructor in Mathematics, 1884-86; Student at Universities of Berlin, Zurich, and Johns Hopkins, 1886-89; Electrician, Incandescent Lamp Co., Chicago. 1889-92. Beginning September, 1S94. GEORGE CLINTON PRICE, Assistant Professor of Zoology. J K E Palo Alto. B. S., De Pauw University, 1890. Student in Biology, Johns Hopkins University, 1890-92. JOHN CHARLES LOUNSBERY FIS'H, Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering. A T Q Encina Hall. C. K., Cornell University, 1892. Instructor in Civil Engineering, Cornell University, 1892-93. ELSA LOVINA AMES, Instructor in Drawing. K A Palo Alto. Student, College of Fine Arts, Syracuse University, 1888-91. CHARLES ELLWOOD COX, Instructor in Mathematics. College 'ark. A. B., Haverford College, 1880; A. M., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1893. Principal of Friends Academy, Lc Grand, Iowa, 1880-85 ; Professor of Mathematics, University of the Pacific, 1886-91. HERMAN DE CLERCQ STEARNS, Instructor in Physics. tt Salvatierra St. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1892, A. M., 1893. DANIEL WILLIAM MURPHY, Instructor in Physics. r6 Alvarado Row. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1892, A. M., 1893. CHARLES WILSON GREENE, Instructor in Physiology. Salvatierra St. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1892, A. M., 1893. WILBUR WILSON THOBURN, Instructor in Zoology, and Acting Curator of the Zoological Museum. Palo Alto. A. B., Allegheny College, 1881. A. M., 1884, Ph. D., 1888. Teacher of Natural Scieuce, Pennsylvania State Normal School, 1881-84; Professor of Geology and Botany, Illinois Wesleyan University, 1884-88; Professor of Geology and Biology, University of the Pacific, 1888-91. MARGARET E. SCHALLENBERGER. Instructor in Education. 6 Salvatierra St. Graduate California State Normal School, San Jose, 1880. Teacher in State Normal School, San Jose, 1887-92, Principal of Training Department, 1892-93. • Resigned December, 1893. 29 MARY STEVENS AYRES, Instructor in Physical Training. 10 Alvarado Row. Teacher of Gymnastics, Cazenovia (N. Y.) Seminary, 1883-85; Student, Wellesley College, 1887-92; Harvard University Summer School, 1893 WALTER ROBERT SHAW, Instructor in Botany. J 7’J Salvatierra St A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1892. STEWART WOODFORD YOUNG, Instructor in Chemistry. AT Q Palo Alto. B. S.f Cornell University, 1890. Assistant in Chemistry, Cornell University, 1890-91 ; Instructor in Chemistry, Swarthmore College, 1891-93. CLELIA DUEL MOSHER, Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Training. A' A H Palo Alto. A. B., Iceland Stanford Jr. University, 1893. LOUIS ALEXANDER BUCHANAN, Foreman of the Woodworking Shop. j Salvatierra St. M. E., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1S93. Instructor in Mechanical Drawing and Mathematics, Polytechnic Evening School. St. Louis, 1882-88; Draughtsman for the St. Louis Water Works Construction, 1887-S9; Foreman of Construction, N. O. Nelson Manufacturing Co., 1890-91. 30 assistants GEORGE ARCHIBALD CLARK, President’s Secretary and Teacher of Stenography. Palo Alio. B. L., University of Minnesota, 1891. WILLIS GRANT JOHNSON, Assistant Registrar. Salvalirrra St. A. B., Iceland Stanford Jr. University, 1892. Assistant in Entomology. Iceland Stanford Jr. University, 1S92-93. ANNA LOUISA BROWN, Artist of the Hopkins Laboratory. B. P., Syracuse University, 1889. 24 Alvarado Row. CLARK WILSON HETHERINGTON, Assistant in Physical Training. Salvatierra St. HENRY COFFINBERRY MYERS, Assistant in Chemistry. Mariposa Hall. Ph. D., Strassburg, 1891; F. C. S., London, 1891. Consulting Chemist, Haskiu Wood Vulcanizing Co., New York, 1892-93. CAMILLO OLIVETTI, Assistant in Electrical Engineering. C. E., University of Turin, 1891. Palo Alto. LOUIS CRAIG CORNISH, Assistant in Ethics. Palo Alto. KATHRYNE JANETTE SMITH, Assistant in English. Ph. B., University of the Pacific, 1888. Josr’ JESSICA S. VANCE, Assistant in English. San Jose. Ph. B., University of the Pacific, 1884. GENEVRA SISSON, Assistant in Education, in charge of the Kindergarten. 6 Salvatterra St. JULIUS EMBRET PETERSON, Foreman of the Forge. College Terrace. JOHN KINLAY WIGHT, Curator of the Art Museum. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1893. EDWIN CHAPIN EWELL, Library Assistant. Museum. Encina Hall. FREDERICK JOHN TEGGART. Library Assistant. Encina Hall. BENJAMIN OLIVER FOSTER. Library Assistant. Mariposa Hall. lecturers FREDERICK LOUIS OTTO ROEHRIG, Lecturer on Oriental Philology. San Francisco. Ph. D.. Leipzig; M. D.. Paris. Assistant Professor of French, and Professor of Sanskrit and Modern Oriental Languages, Cornell University, 1869-86. BARTON WARREN EVERMANN, Assistant in Special Investigations, Hopkins Laboratory. Washington, D. C. B. S., Indiana University, 1886, A. M., 1888. Ph. D., 1891. Professor of Biology, Indiana State Normal School, 1886-91 ; Assistant U. S. Fish Commission, in charge of Explorations of Rivers and Lakes, since 1891. ♦WESTBL WOODBURY WILLOUGHBY, Lecturer on Politics. Washington, D. C. A. B., Johns Hopkins University, 1888. Ph. D. 1891. Fellow in Politics, Johns Hopkins University, 1890-91 : Attomev-at-Law, Washington, I). C., since 1892. ©tber ©fficere. ELLEN FRANCES THOMPSON, Mistress of Roble Hall. Roble Hall. CHARLES EDWARD HODGES. Resident Architect. 22 Alvarado Row. ROBERT HENRY MOORE, Chief Engineer. Palo Alto. JOHN J. LEW IN, Electrician. Palo Alto. GEORGE ADDERSON, Overseer of Buildings. CHARLES F. MOORE, University Plumber. CHARLES C. WALLEY, University Carpenter. WILLIAM NORRIS NESBIT, Forester. Encina Hall. Menlo Park Mayfield. Palo Alto. Standing Committees WAYS AND MEANS. Professors Stillman, Howard, Brannkr, Warner, and A. W. Smith. STUDENTS’ AFFAIRS. Professors Marx, Griffin, and Murray. ADMISSION OF STUDENTS. Professors A. W. Smith, Murray, K. Barnes, and the Registrar. DOUBTFUL CASES. Professors Richardson. Little, and Marx. ENTRANCE REQUIREMENTS. Professors Sanford, Pease, Anderson, Gilbert, and Green. PETITIONS. Professors Wing, Hussey, and Fairclough. INTERCOLLEGIATE AFFAIRS. Professors Brannkr, Stillman, and Warner. CHAPEL EXERCISES. Professors Griffin, W. Miller, and Shaw. RECEPTIONS. Professors Allardicb, Oyster. Goebel. Campbell, and Perrine. PUBLICATIONS. Professors Howard, Dudley, Woodruff, Flugel, and Goebel. GRADUATION. Professors Pease, Matzke, Stillman, Hoskins, and the Registrar. UNIVERSITY EXTENSION. Professors Ross, K. Barnes, and Wood. SUMMER SCHOOL. Professors Green, Griggs, and W. Miller. PUBLIC EXERCISES. Professors Woodruff, A. W. Smith, and Hudson. RESOLUTIONS. Professors Anderson, Allardice, and Perrine. ATHLETICS. Professors Angei.l, Wood, and Richardson. MIDWINTER FAIR. Professors K. Barnes, Carman, and Brannkr. HOPKINS LABORATORY. Professors Jenkins, Gilbert. Dudley, and Campbell. .a ugh Hu Ballard, Photo. UNIVER8ITY FROM THE LAGUNITA. •J Alexander, Monroe Hamilton, Mayfield, Economics. A. B., University of the Pacific, 1881 ; S. T. B.. Boston University, 1891. Anderson, Frank M., Ashland, Or., Geology. A. B., Willamette University, 1889. Ashley, George Hall, Rochester, jV. Y, Geology. M. E.,'Cornell University, 1889; A. M., Stanford, 1892. Applewhite, John Campbell, Corvallis, Or., B. S., Oregon State Agricultural College, 1889. Averett, Andrew Edgar, San Jose, A. B., Stanford, 1894. Beckman, Frank William, Woodbridge, B. S., San Joaquin Valley College, 1893. Bell, Agnes, Carson City, Afcv., A. B., University of Nevada, 1893. Benzon, Oscar Magnus, Newell, wa, A. B., Augustana College; A. M., Stanford, 1893. Bland, Henry Meade, College Park, Ph. B. and Ph. D., University of the Pacific. Boardman, Elizabeth Louise, Reno, Nev., A. B., Stanford, 1893. Bridgman, Judd Noble, Manhattan, A 2«., B. S., Kansas State Agricultural College, 1891. Briggs, Stewart Daniel, College Park, A. B.f Stanford, 1892, A. M , 1893. • Deceased. Law. Economics. Law. Romanic Lang. German. English. Latin. Mechanical Eng. Physiology. 35 Buchanan. Richard Twells, Logansport, I nd., A. H., Stanford, 1S93. Butler, Charles Edgar, Palo Alto, A. R.f Harvard University. Clark, Arthur Bridgman, Mayfield, B. Ar , Syracuse University, I.SS8, M. Ar., 1891. Clark, George Archibald, Palo Alto, B. L., University of Minnesota, 1891. Clark, Welly n Bray ton, Caslorland, N. Y, A. B., Stanford, 1893. Cooke, Allyn Heald, Salem, 6b , A. B., Willamette University, 1890. Cox, Charles El wood, College Park, A. B., Haverford College, 1SS0; A. M., Stanford, 1893. Cox, Herbert Every, Pulare, Ph. B., University of the Pacific, 1882. Cox, Lydia Shipley Bean, San Jose, A. B., Penn College. Cummings, Minnie Ada, Houghton, S. Dak., B. S., Olivet College, 1890. Drake, Noah Fields, Cincinnati, Ark., C. E., Arkansas Industrial University, 1888. Dole, Sara Elizabeth, San Francisco, A. B., Smith College, 1886. Durand, Samuel Benjamin, Milwaukee, Wis., B. C. E., University of Wisconsin, 1891. Fitzpatrick, Alfred, Little River, A. B., Queen's University, Kingston, 1889. Foster, Frank Horton, Woodruff, nd., A. B., Indiana University, 1891 ; A. M., Stanford, 1S93. Fountain, Ethel, Santa Rosa, Ph. B., University of Michigan, 1891. Gatch, Grace, Seattle, Wash., A. B., University of Washington, 1893. Greene, Charles Wilson, Palo Alto, A. B., Stanford, 1892. A. M., 1S93. English. Economics. Drawing. Latin. Mathematics. Chemistry. Mathematics. Education. English. Physiology. Geology. Chemistry. Civil Eng. Economics. Mathematics. English. English. Physiology. English. Hall, Janies Fremont, Yankton, S. Dak., A. B., Yankton College, 1891. Hammond, Henry Powers, San Francisco, Physiology. A. B., Stanford, 1893. Hardy, Irene, Oakland, English. A. B., Antioch College. Hoag, Ernest Bryant, Evanston, III., Zoology. B. S., Northwestern University, 1892. Hodgin, John Simeon, Guilford College. N. C., Mathematics. B. S., Pacific University, 1891. Howard, Alice Frost, Palo Alto, History. Ph. B., University of Nebraska Jenkins, William Evans, Chicago, III., English. A. B., Indiana University, 1891. Jenness, Charles Kelley, West Epping, N. H., Social Science. A. B., Stanford, 1892. Johnson, Willis Grant, Palo Alto, Entomology. A. B., Stanford, 1S92. Joralemon, Eugene, Cazenovia, N. Y., Latin. A. B., Union College, 1877, A. M., 1880. Kirtland, John Copeland, Jr., Palo Alto, Latin. A. B., Hobart College, 1890, A. M., 1S93. Lewis, Anna Lena, Warrcnsburg, Mo., Latin. A. B., Stanford, 1894. Lewis, Ernest Dorman, Evansville, Ind., History . A. B., Stanford, 1892, A. M., 1S93. Mabury, Stella Blanche, San Jose, English. A. B., Vassar College, 1883. McFarland, Frank Mace, Palo Alto, Physiology. Pli. B., De Pauw University, 1SS9 ; A. M., Stanford, 1893. Marlow, William Alonzo, Terre Haute, Ind., Latin. A. B., Indiana University, 1891. Martin, Lillie J., San Francisco, Psychology. A. B., Vassar College, 1880. Means, John Harrison, Mooreficld, Ind., Geology. A. B., Indiana University; A. M., Stanford, 1892. Kokomo, Ind., Mathematics. Miller, George B., A. B., Stanford, 1893. Miller, Alfred S., A. M., Wichita University, Normal Square, Pa., 1890. Chemistry. Myers, Henry Coffinberry, Cleveland, 0., Pli. I)., Strassburg University, 1891. Drawing. Mosher, Clelia Duel, A. B , Stanford, 1893. Palo Alto, Physiology. Nowell, John A., A. B., Stanford, 1893. College Park, History'. Obenauer. Olga Theophany, A. B., Olivet College, 1888. Hast Saginaw, Mich., German. Olivetti, Camillo, C. E., University of Turin, Turin, Italy, 1891. Physics. Pleasants, Emma Shaw, Potlsville, Pa., B. S., Wellesley College, 1S90. English. Polk, Mary, A. B., Indiana University, Brucevillc, Ind., 1891. Ethics. Poor, Charles Marshall, Manchester, N. H., A. B., Brown University, 1893. German. Purdue, Albert Homer, A. B., Stanford, 1S93. YanhcctOiVn, Ind., Geology. Rendtorf, Karl G., University of Kiel. Puetz, Germany, German. Richardson, Owen Dale, A. B., Indiana University, Evansville, hid., 893- Ethics. Root, Robert Cromwell, Ontario, B. S., Guilford College, 1889. Economics. Rutter, Cloudsley, Long Pine, Neb., B. S., I)oane College, 1892. Zoology. Schmidt, John J., Kcalschula. Metz, 1881. Millbrae, German. Secrest, Emma, Randolph, Kan., B. S.. Kansas State Agricultural College, 1890. English. Shaw, Edmund Jeremiah. Palo Alto, Latin. A. B., University of Michigan, 1877. Shaw, Walter Robert, Palo Alto, A. B., Stanford, 1892. Shurter, Edwin Du Bois, Brook ton, N. Y, I'll. B., Cornell University, 1892. Slayton, Helen Elizabeth, Stowe, Vt., A. B., Stanford, 1894. Smith, Carl Sclnirz, Eugene, Or., A. B., Stanford, 1893. Smith, Kathryne Janette, San Jose, Ph. B , University of the Pacific, 1888. Smith, Leigh Richmond, San Jose, A. M., Princeton College, 1875. Smith, Mary E. B. Roberts, Palo Alto, Ph. B., Cornell University, 1S80, M. S., 1882. Squire, John Adams, Palo Alto, A. B., Harvanl University, 1884. Stearns, Herman De Clercq, Palo Alto, A. B., Stanford, 1892, A. M., 1893. Sterling, Mae Earle, Dixon, III., B. S., Northwestern University, 1888. Stowell, John Matson, Morrison, III., A. B., Knox College, 1891. Vance, Jessica S., San Jose, Ph. B., University of the Pacific, 1887. Velasco, Abelardo, San Francisco, A. B., University of the South, 1.892. Washburn, Jessica Thompson, San Jose, A. B., Stanford, 1892. Way, Charlotte M., Tempe, Arizona, B. S., Swarthmore College, 1888. Wight, Edwin Buckminster, Palo Alto, A. B., Harvard University ; A. M., University of Michigan. Wight, John Kinlay, Toronto, Canada, A. B., Stanford, 1893. Woollen, Maria, Indianapolis, Ind., A. B., Smith College, 1893. Botany. English. Latin. Law. English. Latin. Sociology. Latin. Physics. History. Zoology. English. Civil Eng. English. Chemistry. German. History. English. . 9 Akc auk. VIEWS IN THE QUADRANGLE. Nokth Bntkanik. COIKT OK yi'AD. WKJ.T HSTKAM K. liASl KNU. Officers 1891-92. President. . . . Vice-President Secretary . . . . Treasurer . . . Sergeant-at- A rms . C. E. Chadsey. . . C. S. Smith. Mattie Haven. Archie B. Rice. W. C. Hazzard. President. . . . Vice-President . Secretary .... 'Treasurer . . . Sergeant-at- Arms Officers 1892-93. ....................W. S. Webster. ...................W. B. Moulton. ...................Lucilb Eaves. ............ . . . S. W. Collins. ...................T. G. Russell. Officers 1893-94. President.................... ............ Vice-President............................ Secretary............................. Treasurer .... .................. Sergeant-at-A rms.......................... . . E. R. Zion. A. Lewis, Jr. C. C. Hughes. . L. N. Chase. . F. R. Dray. 41 O) o Senior Class. '91. Class Yell. Ha! ha! Ha! Wah! Whoo ! Whah ! 94. 94. Rah! Rah! Rah! CI ihh Colors: Drugs of Wlno and F ir l . President Officers 1891-92. First Semester. President .... Second Semester. President Officers 1892-93. First Semester. President .... Second Semester. President Officers 1893-94. First Semester. President Vice-President . . Secretary .... Second Semester. Treasurer............................R. H. Maynard. Serge ant-at-Arms...............Elsie H. Shelley. Historian.........................F A. Hadley. 43 ClaSS of '94.. Barnes. H. H., Newark, 0 0, Latin. J T J Ohio Wesleyan University (i), (2), (3). Bridgman, S. N., Manhattan, Kan., Mechanical Eng. Graduate of Kansas State Agricultural College, ’93. Brown, Geo. H., Riverside, Cal., English. University of the Pacific (1); Sec. class, first semester (2); Pres. Republican Club, ’93-’94; ’94 Sequoia Director (4); State Secretary College Republican Club (3). Cook, Melvin T., Coffeen, III., Botany. J )' De Pauw University (1), (2), (3). Cornish,- L- C., New Bedford, Mass., Ethics. Harvard University (1), (2), (3); Assistant in Ethics (4). Cotton, A. R., Jr., San Francisco, Cal., History. Class of ’95 (1), (2); Treas. Class of 95, second semester (1); Stanford tennis team (1); Associate Editor Daily Palo Alto, first semester (4); Pres, class, second semester (4). Crane, Albert, Zionsvilie, Ind., Economics. J V De Pauw University (1), (2). (3). Cri tell low, C. D., New Brighton, Penn., Physiology J T J University of Wooster (1), (2); Pres. Tennis Club, first semester (4); Hoard of Control Daily Palo Alto (4); Executive Committee of Associated Students (4). Cucldeback, A. W., Cornell University (1). Cuddebackville, N. Y., Civil Eng. Drake, R. M., 1' X Portland, Or., Civil Eng. Drake, W. F., Cincinnati, Ark., Geology. Graduate Arkansas Industrial University, ’93. Fife, C. A., Pasadena, Cal., Chemistry. tp J H University of Nebraska (1). 44 Gilmore, L. H., Capron, ., Mechanical Eng. Rose Polytechnic Institute (i); Sec. first Engineering Society, ’9i-’92- Grabell, C. A., Red Oak, German. Iowa College (i), (2), (3'. Hadley, F. H., Tulare, Cal., Physiology. A TU University of the Pacific (1); Vice-Pres. class, first semester (2); His- torian class, second semester (4). Hammel, J. C., Elberfield, Ind., Philosophy. J ' ’ J Indiana University (1). Holsclavv, F. Mabel, Gilroy, G ., Physiology . K A r Keating, J. A., Muskegon, Mich., Economics. University of Michigan (j); Associate Editor Daily Palo Alto, first semester (3); Sergeant-at-Arms class, first semester (4). Kiefer, H. A., Los Angeles, Cal., Physiology. University of California (1): Vice-Pres. class, first semester (4). Laguna, Bertha de, Oakland, Cal., Latin. Laguna, Laura de, Oakland, Cal., French. Luckey, G. N. A., Riverside, Cal., Education. Normal School at Valparaiso. Ind. (1), (2), (3). Mabury, Eugenia, San Jose, Cal., English. Maynard, R. E., Los Angeles, Cal., Mechanical Eng. 1' Rose Polytechnic Institute (1); Manager track athletics (2); track athletic team (3); winner 440 yards run first intercollegiate field-day (Pacific Coast intercoil, record, 52 sec.); Manager football team, ’93-’94- Monroe, W. S., Pasadena, Cal., Education. Non-resident Student at University of City of New York, and Illinois Wesleyan University (1), (2); Master of Encina Hall (3). Newell, J. B., Santa Clara, Cal., Greek. A V University of the Pacific (1); Sec. class, second semester (4). Nichols, Harriet, San Francisco, Cal., Latin. Offield, L. A., Santa Clara, Cal., Greek. University of the Pacific (1). Otaki, K., Tokio, Japan, Zoology. University of the Pacific (1); Pres. Japanese English Training Club, second semester (4). 45 Sox, C. E., Albany, Or., Economies. Monmouth College (i), (2): Pres. Y. M. C. A. (4); Vice-Pres. Chess Club, second semester (4). Teggert, F. J., San Diego, Cal., English. Trinity College, University of Dublin (t), (2); Assistant in Library, '93-’94. Terrell, Glanville, Nif omo, Cal., Latin. Class of ’95 (3). Thaxter, H. C., Palo Alio, Cal., Mechanical Eng. Rose Polytechnic Institute (1), (2). Trumbo, A. C., Columbus Grove, Ohio, Economics. J T J University of Wooster (1), (2); First inter-society debate, second semester (3); Associate Editor Daily Palo Alio, second semester (3): Edilor-in-Chief Daily Palo Alto. first semester (4); Press Club (4). Van Denburgh, John, Los Gatos, Cal., Zoology. University of the Pacific (1); Pres, class, second semester (2); Pres. Zoological Club (3). Warren, T. R., Los Angeles, Cal. Economics. J A’ E Wesleyan University and University of Southern California (1), (2); First inter-society debate (3); Glee Club (3), (4). Way, Charlotte M., Tempe, Ariz., Chemistry. II11 Wilson, J. F., Ml. Palatine, ., History. S X Illinois State Normal (1); winner first oratorical contest (2); Associate Editor Sequoia (2); Assistant and Associate Editor Daily Palo A Ho. first semester (3); Pres, class, second semester (3); Editor-in-Chief Daily Palo Alto, second semester (3); Board of Control Daily Palo Alto (3); Captain and right end football team (4); Chairman Athletic Board (4); Press Club (4). Wood, Nelle, Atlantic, Iowa, Economics. Young, P. A., Albany, Or., Economics. Monmouth College (1), (2). Zion, E. R., Berkeley, Cal., Economics. University of California (1); Associate Editor Sequoia (3), (4); business manager Daily Palo Alto, second semester (3); Pres. Associated Students (4). 45 I PIONEER OLA88 UNDER THE 06 OAK 1 Johnson. U 3 Applewhite. ) Champion. i 4 Gray. •7 5 Woodward. 18 6 Stark. «9 7 Ellery. 90 8 Hoover. • t 9 C rot her . N lu Look. 1 11 Eaton. 94 ta White. P. H. I) Bishop. 3 to rci 17 Trumbo. Mbs 18 Bancroft. cnnyson. « .Vood. Mb . 3 Downing. C. Roscndale. 37 Grove. 40 38 O'Brien. 41 39 Harvard. 4 0 Langford. 41 )t Nicholson. 44 « Downing. P. 45 3) Morton. 34 Wigle. B. D. 46 47 35 Smith. )6 Kimball. 48 49 37 Manahan. S° 38 Potter. 5 ) Kessingcr. F Wigle. G. G. S) Donald. Rice. J4 ss Stratton. Blake. Hollbtcr. Chase. p Farmer. Wootrkh. 57 Burnett. Harrelson. 5 Gunn. White. A. H. s Fraser. Porter. RuddelL 61 Soper. Collins. 6 Ewell. Haywards. 6l Magee. E- Hyde. 64 Hughev Crowell. «5 Newman. 68 lone . 69 Powell. jo Schulte. 71 Brown. ji DurrcIL 71 Stewart. 74 Fitxgerald. 75 uv.rwkk. 76 Ch. | tnan Mb B. 77 Stinton. Mb . 7« Herrick. Mb J. lone . Mim. ash. Mi . 8i Dole. Mb . 83 Hartley. Mb . 8) Stadtmuller. Milt. 84 Kelley. Mi . S Burke. Mb . Reere . Mi . 87 Chapman. Mi L 88 Herrick. Mi K. 89 Fry. 90 Hartmann. 91 Orosh. 99 Wooten. 9) Sear lev 94 Hopkin . 95 OrcutL 96 Magee. C. 3 McGee. Watson. 99 Rusacll. too Baretow. tot Sheehan, to Cuthltcrtson. to) Knot. 104 FrankcnSeld. 105 Lead better. 106_Woodworh. — Hamilton. ___Hlnwllll. 109 Burnell. 110 Kirkbride lit G rev If its Copeland, it) Baker. it4 Lewis. 115 Leithold. 116 Ditfgle . Tl)e Pioneers WEALTH of old tradition marks The other universities,— Stories of great men gone before; Hut no such things as these Could ever set our hearts aflame As that one year That gave our glorious class the name Of Pioneer. The college world was all l efore Us where to choose our place of rest: And Sophomore stock was low, and lived By sufferance at best. How all the other cries were shamed When, echoing clear, The arches of the Quad proclaimed The Pioneer ! Then with our war paint we profaned The dignity of ancient trees, And with our magic numeral awed The aborigines. In sundry ways we let them know That we were here. And just what deference they must show The Pioneer. ’ Twas then that in Eucina Hall The Roble maidens ate. And we, though Freshman hunger gnawed At us, were glad to wait; For, as they tripped along the hall, The fact was clear Each maiden had among us all Her Pioneer. We’ve watched two other classes through Their Freshman years since we were there, But somehow everything since then Has worn a different air ; No other days can be the same. None half so dear, As those that gave our class its name Of Pioneer. 50 C A ROM’S AC.KK. Pioneer OaTv ’95- Class Yell. Zah! Zah I Zeer! We’re right here I ’95. 95 Pioneer! CldHM Color: Sllvor. Officers 1691-92. First Semester. President.......................................Charles C. Adams. Second Semester. President..............................GEORGE C. Crothers. Officers 1892-93. First Semester. President..........................................Frank R. Dray. Second Semester. President..................................ARCHIE B. Rice. Officers 1893-94. First Semester. President......................................LESTER J. Hinsdill. Second Semester. President...................................John J. Hollister. First Vice-President........................W. A. Stafford. Second Vice-President .... L. Dorothy Steffens. Recording Secretary.............C. S. S. Burnell. Corresponding Secretary . . J. F. Sheehan, Jr. Sergeant-at-Arms . . . . L. J. Hinsdill. Historian............J. A. Gunn, Jr. •The first class that will complete the full four-year course. 51 Mi tor of Ninety-five. H E University granted the Bachelor degree in ’92 and ’93 (the Class of ’94 is looking forward with fear and trembling to the end of its course), but these graduates were only stepchildren whom accident had placed under the care of our Alma Mater. Ninety-five will go upon record as the first class—the Pioneers—of the University. On account of the unique position of the class, our history is that of the first years of the University. Here we need touch upon those matters only which are in a way personal to the class. There were no precedents to guide us when we came;—there was no University. We established the precedents; we broke the ground. When in future years the questions shall be asked : “ Who set the example of burning the midnight tallow in Kncina ?” “Who first decorated the tank ?’’ “ Who invented The Stanford Quad? the echo of the past will answer, “ ’95.” The quadrangle is ours by right of preemption—witness our signature in front of the chapel site. Owing to the fact that no classification of students according to year is made in the Registrar’s office, it is impossible to tell exactly how many of us there have l een at any given time. It is useless to ask the Registrar to tell anything he doesn’t know ; he cannot do it. Approximately we were 350 strong the first year. Since then our number will be found to have varied largely, according to the record of attendance at receptions or the lists of subscriptions to class assessments. We have never enrolled special students in our ranks or called upon lower classmen to aid us in class elections, though we have freely assisted ’94 in providing itself with officers. Owing, probably, to the prominence given to athletics, there has been little indulgence in “ college pranks’’ at Stanford, and ’95 has set the example of working off its superfluous energy in football, baseball, and on the track. On the first field-day ’95 took eleven gold 52 medals, seven of them going to C. C. Adams, the best all-round athlete the University has yet developed. Five of our men were on the eleven that defeated Berkeley. Ninety-five recognized its inexperience in literary matters during the first two years, and allowed the exotic upper classmen to hold the most responsible offices, such as the presidencies of the literary societies and the editorship of the University papers. We sent seniors to the intercollegiate debate, and otherwise endeavored to establish the custom of according to upper classmen the recognition they ought to deserve. We regret to see our successors departing from this precedent in some cases. Having practically no competitors the first year, we had none of the class contests with which we have been thrilled lately. The first class rush took place in ’93 between ’95 and ’96 over the possession of the water tank, on which occasion we successfully maintained our water rights. We had been less fortunate on the occasion of our class reception at Roble, when ’93, with “ malice, prepense and aforethought,” stole our lemonade. Be theirs the stigma of the theft, and ours the thirstful memory ! Over ’96 we have always maintained our prestige and instilled into their plastic minds a respect for talent and authority which has made them, in some respects, a model class. We beat them in baseball when they were Freshmen, tied them up, set them in rows, and walked round them that they might recognize in us their rightful superiors. In order to maintain our supremacy unimpeached we flogged them in football at the beginning of the present year. It was wholly due to our faultless generalship that the Freshmen subdued their oppressors in the rush of last February, bound them hand and foot, photographed their faces (at the expense of a camera), and hauled them, like captive criminals in Black Marias, to the wilds of Redwood City. Far different from that of ’96 has been our attitude toward the upper classmen, for after the lemonade incident referred to above we descended like the midnight coyote upon ’94, rightly judging them to be the instigators of the outrage, and paraded them in bonds before the taunting spectators. Thus we have ever labored to impress the fact of our presence upon the population of the University. We adopted mortar-boards in '91, deeming the useful and picturesqe shovel-crown the proper head-gear of the student; though, as in honor bound, we should have frowned upon their use by ’96. We have not indulged in “plugs” to any great extent because they are suggestive of the twilight-darkening bat; and, though the bat has wings, it lacks other characteristics to make its presence desirable in our elysian atmosphere. It thrives better in the darker and damper environment of Berkeley. Behind the most important student movements of the University has been the energy of ’95. From the time when we undertook to guide an errant flatcar from the campus into the (rail)way of rectitude that leads to San Jose, up to the organization of the Press Club, ’95 has shown itself equal to the exigencies of all occasions. Whatever there has been of social life at Stanford has been due to us. We have won the brightest smiles from Roble, and have always been foremost in everything that would tend to the prosperity of our Alma Mater and to the approximation to a proper ideal of university life. Lastly, before assuming the added dignities of our senior year, we have thought fit to place our deeds upon record for an example to our successors. No future class may have the honor of publishing the first Stanford Quad, but, as in other matters, they can travel in the path we have broken. We are the Pioneers. 54 Class of ’95. Alexander, J. E., Allabach, Lucy, Araesbury, Louise, Appelwhite, J. C., Baker, Shirley, Bancroft, G. J., Barstow, A., Jr., Blake, W. F., Brim, Lucy M., Bristol, Susie B., Brown, W. S., Buck, Harriet A., Buck, R., Burke, Mary, Burnell, C. S. S., Burnett, A. H., Buxton, N. G., Caldwell, Winifred, Calhoun, G., Calhoun, S., Campbell, H., Campbell, W. E., Chamberlin, W. P., Champion, L. F., Chapman, Bertha L., IIO.M K AODRhSS. San Jose, Cal., Des Moines, Iowa, Rockport, Me., Corvallis, Or., Oakland, Cal., Denver, Col., Oakland, Cal., Sanla Clara, Cal., Williams, Cal., Warsaw, N. Y, Slockton, Cal, Hillsdale, Cal., Sea I lie. Wash., Santa Cruz, Cal., San Franciseo, Cal., Tulare, Cal., Johnstoivn, O., Pasadena, Cal., La Conner, Wash., La Conner, Wash., College Park, Cal., College Park, Cal., Oakland, Cal., Oakland, Cal., Oakland, Cal., MAJOR SVBJKCT. Economics. English. Drawing. Law. Civil Engineering. Meehan. Engineering. English. Physiology. Physiology. English. Physiology. English. Meehan. Engineering. English. Economics. Meehan. Engineering. Zoology. Mathematics. Physiology. Law. Physiology. History. History. Civil Engineering. English. 55 HOMK ADDRKSS. MAJOR SUBJBCT. Chapman, Elizabeth C., Chase, L- N., Clark, Grace E., Code, T. K., Collins, S. W., Conners, G. W., Copeland, A., Cory, H. M., Cory, Mabel H., Cory, Susanna, Cox, H. J., Crane, E. W., Crothers, G. E., Crow, Evelyn G., Crowell, R., Culver, Julia L., Cuthbertson, G. W., Dart, E. R., Diggles, J. A., Dodson, S. M., Doherty, W., Dole, Marion F., Donald, R. L., Doty, F. C., Downing, C. S., Downing, P. M , Doyle, E. M., Dray, F. R., Durrell, C. E., Oakland, Cal. Riverside, Cal. San Jose, Cal., San Francisco, Cal., Graham, Me., Santa Rosa, Cal., San Diego, Cal., Fresno, Cal., Fresno, Cal., San Jose, Cal., Petaluma, Cal., Riverside, Cal., San Jose, Cal., San Jose, Cal., San Francisco, Cal., Palo Alto, Cal., Manchester, Rock Island, III., Ft. Jones, Cal., Santa Clara, Cal., Paterson, N. J., Riverside, Cal., Dundee, Scotland, Hastings, Neb., Pleasanton, Cal., Pleasanton, Cal., Menlo Park, Cal., Sacramento, Cat., Pasadena, Cal., English. English. Physiology. Meehan. Engineering. Physics. Civil Engineering. Mathematics. Chemistry. History. English. Chemistry. Meehan. Engineering. History. English. Meehan. Engineering. English. Electrical Engineering. Law. Civil Engineering. Economics. Law. Physiology. Civil Engineering. History. Civil Engineering. Civil Engineering. Meehan. Engineering. Chemistry. Civil Engineering. 56 HOME ADDRESS. MAJOR SUBJECT. Eaves, Lucile, Eckley, C. O., Elery, N., Emery, A. L., Entler, F. H., Ewell, E. C., Farmer, E. E-, Feniald, C. A., Field, C. K., Fitzgerald, J. J., Fogg, F. L., Folsom, M. A., Foster, B. O., Frankenfield, B. D., Fraser, A. P., Fry, D. H., Fyffe, Harriet J., Gale, E. N., Gardiner, G. M., Garretson, Sarah J., Grabill, C. A., Gray, H. P., Gregg, P. M., Grosh, M. D., Grove, E. D., Gunn, J. A., Jr., Guppy, Christine M., Guppy, Mabel F., Guth, W. W., Eugene, Or., Brandon, Ver., Eureka, Cal., Ithaca, N. Y., Chico, Cal., Sonoma, Cal., Vacaville, Cal., Santa Barbara, Cal., Alameda, Cal., Slock Ion, Cal., Tacoma, Wash., Edenvale, Cal., Salt Lake City, Utah, Los Angeles, Cal., Stockton, Cal., Vancouver, B. C., Bloomington, III., Santa Bosa, Cat., Carson, Nev., Pendleton, Ind., Red Oak, Iowa, Milwaukee, Wis., San Luis Obispo, Cal., San Francisco, Cal., Oakland, Cal., Kelseyville, Cal., San Jose, Cal., San Jose, Cal., San Francisco, Cal., History. Meehan. Engineering. Civil Engineering. Chemistry. Electrical Engineering. Social Science. Electrical Engineering. Physiology. English. Latin. German. Law. Greek. Electrical Engineering. English. Meehan. Engineering. English. German. Physiology. Mathematics. German. Meehan. Engineering. Law. Meehan. Engineering. Civil Engineering. English. Latin. Latin. History. 57 HOUR ADDRKSS. MAJOR SCBJKCT. Hamilton, E. G., Harrelson, W. H., Harter, R. L., Hartley, Flora, Hartmann, F. A., Harwood, H., Harwood, E. C., Hazzard, W. C., Herrick, Jane P., Herrick, Kate I)., Hetlierington, C. W. Hinsdill, L-J., Hogg, Cora E., Hollister, J. J., Holmes, Marion E-, Hoover, H. C., Hopkins, O. G., Hughes, C. C., Hughes, E. H., Hunt, H. E., Hyde, W. S., Jack, F. J., Johnson, E. H., Jones, A. L., Jones, Maud B., Kaetzel, C. P., Kessinger, F. E., Kidwell, Minna A., Kiefer, H. A., Riverside, Cal., Tulare, Cal., San Jose, Cal., Yankeetown, Ind., San Francisco, Cal., Louisville, Ky.% Victoria, B. C., Claquaio, Wash , Sacramento, Cal., Sacramento, Cal., San Diego, Cal., Clarksburg, Cal., Saratoga, Cal., Santa Barbara, Cal., San Jose, Cal., Springdale, Iowa, Sacramento, Cal., Reduood City, Cal., Brookville, hid., Santa Ana, Cal., San Francisco, Cal., Decatur, III., Sacramento, Cal., San Jose, Cal., Sacramento, Cal., San Luis Obispo, Cal., Rome, N. Y, Kansas City, Mo., Los Angeles, Cal., Civil Engineering. Civil Engineering. Civil Engineering. Zoology. German. Psychology. Electrical Engineering. History. Latin. Latin. Education. History. Latin. Mining Engineering. Mathematics. Geology. History. Social Science. Zoology. English. Meehan. Engineering. Horticulture. Economics. Mathematics. Latin. English. German. History. Physiology. 58 HOMK ADDRESS. MAJOR SUBJECT. Kimball, E. B., Haywards, Cal., Kirkbride, W. H., Redwood City, Cat., Kirkpatrick, Christine M.,San Jose, Cal., San Francisco, Cat., Nagoya, Japan, Knox, N. B., Kokubo, Sadanosuke, Langford, J. T., Langille, H. B., Laughlin, H., Jr., Leadbetter, H. M., Le it hold, C. F., Lewis, A., Jr., Longley, J. A., Longley, Mary E., Look, S. M., Lyle, Annie G., Lyman. E. R., Magee, C. L., Magee, K. D., Mackintosh, K., Manahan, R. H., Martin, Mary E., McCollum, Jennie F., McDaniels, J. H., McFarland, R. D., McGee, V. N., Merril, S., Jr., Merritt, Alberta L., Miller, S. B., Morton, O. P., Lodi, Cal., Hood River, Or., East Liverpool, Ohio, Stockton, Cal., Postvillc, Ioiva, Gilroy, Cal., Mountain View, Cal., Mountain View, Cal., PrattSbury, N. Y, San Francisco, Cal., College Park, Cal., San Diego, Cal., San Diego, Cal., Seattle, Wash., Pasadena, Cal., Buffalo, N. Y, Gcrvais, Or., Tacoma, Wash., San Jose, Cal., Bloomington, Ind., Indianapolis, Ind., Woodland, Cal., Kokona, Ind., San Francisco, Cal., Geology. Civil Engineering. Education. Civil Engineering. Greek. Meehan. Engineering. Meehan. Engineering. Cheni. Engineering. Civil Engineering. Physiology. History. History. Mathematics. Education. English. Chemistry. Physiology. History. English. Electrical Engineering. Romanic Languages. History. English. History. Civil Engineering. English. English. Mathematics. Mathematics. HOME ADDRESS. MAJOR SUBJECT. Moulton, Seba, Nash, Kate L-, Newman, C. J., Nicholson, F. J., O’Brien, M. W., Orcutt, W. W., Packard, Mabel B., Palmer, Cora M., Parcell, C. H., Parker, R. T., Pillsbury, E. S., Pinkham, C. B., Pomeroy, F. H., Porter, D. A.. Potter, W. W., Powell, A. E., Pressley, L. A., Quelle, J. A., Rea, E. M., Reeves, Minnie, Reilay, Luella M., Rice, A. B., Rose, W. M., Rosendale, C. E., Rossiter, Jeannette H., Roussel, Louise M., Ruddell, A. G., Russell, T. G., Rutan, H. E., New Whatcom, Wash. Pasadena, Cal., St. Helena, Cal., Victoria, B. C., San Jose, Cal., Santa Paula, Cal., San Diego, Cat., Saratoga, Gx ., Tampa, 7a., Lebanon, Auburn, Cal., Sacramento, Cal., Oswego, Or., Salinas, Cal., San Francisco, Cal., Stockton, Cal., Santa Posa, Cal., Long Island City, L. I. San Jose, Cat., Seattle, Wash., Oakland, Cal., Santa Barbara, Cal., Ontario, Cal., San Francisco, Cal., Sheridan, Mont., Ocean View, Cal., San Jose, Cat., San Francisco, Cal., Mcchanicsburg, Ohio, , English. English. History. Physiology. Meehan. Engineering. Civil Engineering. English. Economics. Civil Engineering. Physiology. Physiology. Physiology. Electrical Engineering. Civil Engineering. English. Civil Engineering. English. , Civil Engineering. Latin. German. English. English. History. History. German. English. History. Physiology. Romanic Languages. 60 HOME ADDRESS. MAJOR SUBJECT. Sand wick, R. L-, Sawyer, H., Schmidt, A. F., Schopbach, Leonora, Searles, D., Sheehan, J. F., Jr., Shepherd, F. I., Simmons, S. E., Sloan, J. E., Smith, A. A., Smith, L. H., Soper, H. F., Southwick, E. C., Stadtmuller, Henrietta Stafford, W. A., Steffens, L. Dorothy, Stinson, Maud E., Stratton, G. D., Stuart, W. E., Tennyson, H. A., Thomas, C. C., Thompson, J. V., Vostrovsky, Clara, Walton, H. A., Watson, F. M., Watson, T. S., White, A. H., White, P. H., Whittier, Ida C., Drydcn, N. Y, Menlo Park, Cal., Turner, Or., Pasadena, Cal., Mojave, Cal., San Francisco, Cal., Kyler, Ohio, Sacramcnlo, Cal., Mayfield, Cal., Astoria, Or., Fresno, Cal., San Francisco, Cal., Mayfield, Cal., , San Francisco, Cal., Santa Ana, Cal., Sacramento, Cal., San Jose, Cal., Riverside, Cal., San Francisco, Cal., San Jose, Cal., Pasadena, Cal., Redwood City, Cal., San Jose, Cal., Yuba City, Cal., San Jose, Cal., Spokane, Wash., Live Oak, Cal., Sedalia, Mo., Pocatelle, Idaho, Latin. Electrical Engineering. German. English. Chemical Engineering. History. Chemistry. Chemistry. Greek. History. Law. Physiology. Electrical Engineering. English. Mathematics. English. English. Civil Engineering. Geology. Meehan. Engineering. Electrical Engineering. Meehan. Engineering. Education. Physiology. Meehan. Engineering. Electrical Engineering. Physiology. Electrical Engineering. English. 61 ICOMK At I KKSS. MAJOR SUBJECT. Wigle, B. D., Wigle, Elsie A., Wigle, G. G., Williams, F. S., Winship, W. E-, Wood, Jessie P., Wood, O. B., Woodbum, Nettie E., Woodworth, G. L., Woodward, H. T., Wool rich, A. G., Wooten, F. B., Wright, S. V., Voder, Minnie B., Zumwalt, D. J., ♦Kennedy, M. H., Mayfield, Cal., Mayfield, Cal., Mayfield, Cal., Salem, Ohio, San Diego, Cal., Palo Alio, Cal., Cupertino, Cal., San Diego, Cal., Menlo Park, Cal., San Diego, Cal., San Franciseo, Cal., Linden, Cal., San Luis Obispo, Cal., Des Moines, Iowa, College Park, Cal., Denver, Colo., History. Botany. History. History. Mathematics. English. Meehan. Engineering. English. Electrical Engineering Physiology. Civil Engineering. History. History. Chemistry. Civil Engineering. Law. • Name received at registrar's office late, when annual had gone to print A Retrospect -4' EAR chum of mine, do you recall, When college had begun, The gladness of that glorious fall. And how we spent the “ in6n ” ? The days of cheer, the days of l)eer, The days of ’91. Dear maid of mine, do you recall When first my heart you won, There were no lights in Roble Hall, But, oh, such loads of fun ? The days of dark, the days of spark, The days of ’91. Dear Major Prof, do yon recall The night, at set of sun, We met, when each had made his haul Where vineyard pathways run ? The days of scrapes, the days of grapes, The days of ’91. Dear college, one more year, and all The four years’ thread is spun, And yet the follies I recall I would not have undone; Those days when youth came seeking truth, The days of ’91. Cakoi.us Agkr. 63 J Sophomore Class. ’96. CIubh Yell. Rah! Rah! Ruh! Rah 1 Rah! Rix ! MD, 3C, XC, Six. C1u m Color: Smro Green. Officer 1892-93. First Semester. President....................................William W. Guth. Second Semester. President.............................Henry D. Faxon. Officers 1893-94. First Semester. President................................Gborge F. Vanderveer. Second Semester. President.................................Joseph P. Bernhardt. First Viee-President.......................J. M. Gregory, Jr. Second Vice-President....................Mabel Coombs. Secretary...........................R. W. CAMPBELL. Treasurer........................R. L. Wilber. Scrgeant-at-Arms.................J. C. White. Historian ...................Mabel Mead. 65 c o) 0u3 33 Freeman Class. '97- ClfIMM V U. izrd K xi £ e r}Kuvra, ’97, Rah I Rah ! Rah ! Cluss Colors:------ Officers. First Semester. President......................................Arthur W. Bumili.hr. First Vice-President..........................Alice E. Wheeler. Second Vice-President...........................Grace Rood. Secretary ................................Grace Baker. Treasurer.............................C. A. Thomas. Sergeant-at-A rm s............C. M. Fickert. Football Manager . . . . H. C. Turner. Baseball Manager . . Roy Weldon. Historian . . . F. H. Walker. Second Semester. President...........................................John M. Ross. First Vice-President.............................F. H. Walker. Second Vice-President..........................F. W. Lake. Secretary...........................Alice E. Wheeler. Treasurer.............................Samuel Platt. Sergeant-at-Arms .... George McMillan. Football Manager . . . W. M. McIntosh. Baseball Manager . . . Roy Weldon. Historian . . Lillian L. Slatten. 3n flDemoriam. ROY MERRILL GILBERT, ’95. Died June 6, 1S92. RICHARD THEODORE ALBRECHT, ’95. Died September 19, 1S92. OSCAR MAGNUS BENZON, gr. Died October 14, 1893. JAMES ZACHARY MOORE, Jr., ’96. Died November 28, 1S93. HEBER CLINTON SPIGER, ’97-Died January 26, 1S94. LOUIS DONALD McLAINE, ’96. Died March 18, 1S94. 68 To Deatl). SILENTLY, softly, Come when you will— In nectarous noon Or exquisite eve, Or midst of the night when the musk-rose sleeps— As still as the scent Of a fragile flower. Silently, softly, Come when you will— When dark are the days ’Neath shadowy skies, And I am tired of the weary way— As still as the leaf That floats on a stream. Silently, softly, Come when you will, And over the Sea-Of-the-Silent-Spcll That shows no sail let us sail away To the distant shore That sends no sound. E. H. ESCONDITK CoTTAGK. ENVIRONMENTS. ••Palo alto. Stanford Kksidksck. NKAR •• I-'KHM OMAN I.AKfc- HUCALYm'S AVHNUK. In tl)e ©«ad. HERE is a path that few have trod, A little path within the Quad, O’er which the palms and bamboos nod. This path doth lead me on apace Where bending branches interlace Above a cosy, quiet place. It somehow just occurred to me That here, from interruption free, I’d get my Spencerology. There is a chair—two chairs, indeed : I really fail to see the need Of two when one comes here to read. I hear a step !—“ Excuse me, pray ” I wonder why he didn’t stay? What are two chairs for anyway ? 7 ■0 IN ORDER OF THEIR ESTABLISHMENT. Fovnled at University of New Vop , 1846. Chapter YtolL .....................University of New York. .....................William College. .....................Rutger College. .....................Princeton College. .....................University of Pennsylvania. ...................Colby University. .....................Harvard University. .....................Tufts College. .....................Lafayette College. .....................University of Michigan. .....................Bowdoin College. ...................University of Virginia. .....................Cornell University. .....................University of California. .....................University of Toronto. .....................Columbia College. .....................McGill University. .....................Case School of Applied Sciences. .....................Brown University. .....................University of North Carolina. ...................Yale University. .....................Lei and Stanford Junior University. ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS. Northwestern Association of Zf.ta Psi................Chicago, 111. Capita!. Citv Association op Zp.ta Psi...............Washington, D. C. Zf.ta Psi Association................................Cleveland, Ohio. Zf.ta Psi Club ......................................New York City. Metropolitan Chaptp.r of Zkta Psi....................Philadelphia, Pena. Nf.w Englano Association of Zf.ta Psi................Boston, Mass. Pacific Association op Zf.ta Psi.....................San Francisco, Cal. Color : White. YF.LL : Rah, Rah, Ztla ! Rah, Rah, Psi ! Rah, Rah! Rah, Rah! Zela Psi! Phi . . . Zkta . . I p.i.t A On ICR ox Sion a . . Chi . . . Rho Kappa . . Ta ; . . Xl . . . . Lamhos . Beta. . . Psi . . . Iota . . Thf.ta . . Alpha . . Alpha Psi Nr. . . . Epsilon . UPSI LON Eta . . . Mu . . . 74 . 'I •Cl L . - •fiS. o Mu Chapter, Established October 5, 1891 UNDERGRADUA TES. 1895- Shiri.ey Baker, George Beecher Champlin, Samuel Ewer Simmons, Cyrus Robinson Miller, Frank R. Dray, Charles Campbell Adams, David Spencer Unruh, ♦ Austin Kautz, Abraham Lewis, Jr., Alfred Barstow, Jr., Charles Kellogg Field. 1896. George Porter Baldwin, Robert Willis Campbell, ♦George Bowf.n De Long, Henry Darlington Faxon. 1897. ♦Chester Ashleigh Thomas, John Spencer Lincoln, Paul Schaffer Ki.lis, Harry Coburn Turner, Christopher Bismarck Diehl. SPECIAL. ♦Frank Lorenzo Cole, ♦ Victor Lyi.e Hatfield. •No longer iu the University. 75 0 Founded at Miami University, 1848. Chapter noil. ALPHA PROVINCE. Maine Alpha......... New Hampshire Alpha Vermont Alpha . . . Massachusetts Alpha Massachusetts Beta . Rhode Island Alpha . New York Alpha. . . New York Beta . . . New York Delta . . . New York Epsilon . . Pennsylvania Alpha . Pennsylvania Beta . Pennsylvania Gamma Pennsylvania Delta . Pennsylvania Epsilon Pennsylvania Zeta . Pennsylvania Eta . . BETA PROVINCE. Roanoke College. University of Virginia. Randolpti-Macon College. Richmond College. Washington and Lee University. University of North Carolina. Centre College. Central University. GAMMA PROVINCE. Georgia Alpha...............................University of Georgia. Georgia Beta................................Emory College. Georgia Gamma...............................Mercer University. Tennessee Alpha.............................Vanderbilt University. Tennessee Beta..............................University of the South. Alabama Alpha...............................University of Alabama. Alabama Beta................................Alabama Polytechnic Institute. Alabama Gamma...............................Southern University. DELTA PROVINCE. Mississippi Alpha...........................University of Mississippi. Louisiana Alpha.............................Tulane University of Louisiana. Texas Beta..................................University of Texas. Texas Gamma ... ....................Southern University. Virginia Alpha . . . Virginia Beta . . . . Virginia Gamma . . . Virginia Delta . . . Virginia Zeta . . . . North Carolina Beta Kentucky Alpha . . . Kentucky Delta . . . Colby University. Dartmouth College. University of Vermont. Williams College. Amherst College. Brown University. Cornell University. Union College. Columbia College. Syracuse University. Lafayette College. Gettysburg College. Washington and Jefferson College. Alleghany College. Dickinson College. University of Pennsylvania. Lehigh university. 76 EPSILON PROVINCE. Ohio Alpha . . . Ohio Beta .... Ohio Gamma . . Ohio Delta . Ohio Epsilon . . Ohio Zeta . . . Indiana Alpha . Indiana Beta . . Indiana Gamma . Indiana Delta . Indiana Epsilon Indiana Zeta . . Purdue Branch . Michigan Alpha Michigan Beta . Michigan Gamma Miami University. Ohio Wesleyan University. Ohio University. University of Wooster. Buchtel College. Ohio State University. Indiana University. Wabash College. Butler University. Franklin College. Hanover College. De Pauw University. Purdue University. University of Michigan. State College of Michigan. Hillsdale College. ZETA PROVINCE. Illinois Alpha................................Northwestern University. Illinois Delta........................... ... Knox College. Illinois Epsilon........................... Illinois Wesleyan University. Illinois Zeta.................................Lombard University. Illinois Eta............................ .... University of Illinois. Wisconsin Alpha...............................University of Wisconsin. Missouri Alpha................................University of Missouri. Missouri Beta.................................Westminster College. Missouri Gamma................................Washington University. Iowa Alpha....................................Iowa Wesleyan University. Iowa Beta.....................................State University of Iowa. Minnesota Alpha...............................University of Minnesota. Kansas Alpha..................................University of Kansas. Nebraska Alpha................................University of Nebraska. California Alpha..............................University of California. California Beta...............................Leland Stanford Junior University. ALUMNI CHAPTERS. Boston, Baltimore, Atlanta, Cincinnati, Franklin, Kansas City, Salt Lake City, New York, Washington, Nashville, Akron, Indianapolis, Minneapolis, San Francisco, Pittsburg, Richmond, Montgomery, Cleveland, Chicago, St. Paul, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Columbus, Ga., Selma, Ala., Louisville, Galesburg, Denver, Spokane. Colors : Argent and Azure. Flower : White Carnation. Yell: Rah! Rah! Rah! Phi ! Kei ! A ! Phi Delta Theta ! ! Rah ! Rah ! Rah ! 77 California Beta Chapter, Established October 22, 1891. GRADUATES. •Medorem William Greer, A. M., ’93, E. W. Mathews, Ernest Dorman Lewis, ’92, Charles Ernest Chadsby, ’92, Willis Grant Johnson, ’92, Wallace Somerville Faris, ’93. UNDERGRADUA TES. 1S94. Charles Andrew Fife, Francis Joseph Batchelder, William Brooks Moulton. 1895- ♦Day Luther Anderson, Harvey Bradstreet Small, Paul Hill White, Clark Wilson Hbtherington, William Doherty, Oris Vert Eaton, Winfield Scott Smythe, Jr., Herbert Spencer Stark, Samuel Miller Look. 1896. Charles Caleb Hill, Roy Page Ballard, Louis Allen. 1897. William Clark Price, Francis Webster Lake, Edward James Green. Joseph Pauli. Fife. Homer Laughlin, Jr., Caspar Wistar Hodgson, • No longer in the University. ✓ . o Founded at Washington and Jefferson College, 1852. Chapter iRoll. Pennsylvania Alpha . Pennsylvania Beta. . Pennsylvania Gamma Pennsylvania Epsilon Pennsylvania Zeta . . Pennsylvania Eta . . Pennsylvania Theta . Pennsylvania Iota . . Pennsylvania Kappa . New York Alpha . . . New York Beta . . . New York Gamma . . New York Epsilon . . New York Zeta. . . . DISTRICT . ............Washington and Jefferson College. ............Alleghany College. ............Bucknell University. ............Pennsylvania College. ............Dickinson College. ............Franklin and Marshall College. ............Lafayette College. ............University of Pennsylvania. ............Swathmore College. ..........Cornell University. ............Syracuse University. . .... Columbia College. ............Colgate College. ............Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute. DISTRICT II. Virginia Alpha............. Virginia Beta.............. Virginia Gamma............. West Virginia Alpha. . . . Maryland Alpha............. District of Columbia Alpha South Carolina Alpha . . . Mississippi Alpha......... University of Virginia. Washington and Lee University. Hampden-Sidney College. University of West Virginia. Johns Hopkins University. Columbian University. University of South Carolina. University of Mississippi. DISTRICT III. Ohio Alpha . . . . Ohio Beta........ Ohio Gamma. . . . Ohio Delta . . . . Indiana Alpha . . Indiana Beta . . . Indiana Gamma . . Ohio Wesleyan University. Wittenburg College. Wooster University. Ohio State University. De Pauw University. Indiana University. Wabash College. 79 DISTRICT IV. Illinois Alpha .............................Northwestern University. Michigan Alpha..............................University of Michigan. Wisconsin Gamma.............................Beloit College. Iowa Alpha..................................University of Iowa. Minnesota Beta..............................University of Minnesota. Kansas Alpha................................University of Kansas. California Beta.............................Leland Stanford Junior University. ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS. IMttsburg, Baltimore, Chicago, Portland, Or., New York, Washington, Minneapolis, Kansas City, Philadelphia, Springfield, Ohio, Norwalk, Ohio. Colors : Pink and Lavender. Yell : , Hi, Hi! Phi Kappa Psi! Live ever; die never! Phi Kappa tsi ! 0 So I I o California Beta Chapter, Established November io, 1891. GRADUA TES. Stuart Daniel Briggs, ’92, Richard Twells Buchanan, ’92, Robert Lyon Gruwku,, 93, Henry R. Timm, ’93, Virgil Chesley Richards, ’93, Leslie Moul Fred Grant Burrows, ’92. •Arthur Henry Barnhiskl, 93, •Ellsworth Lincoln Rich, 93, •Clarke Butler Whittier, ’93, •Olin Whitefield Marsh, ’93, p Burwell, ’93. UNDERGRADUA TES. 1893- •Howell Dew Melvin, Pember Stearns Castleman. •Raymond Charles Morgan, John Roger Beecher Tregloan. 1894. James Blair Newell. 1895. •John Mkllgren Lewis, Ernest Rice Hill, Walter Harold Kirkbride, William Clarence Hazzard, Harry Albert Walton, William Ford Blake, Almus Goar Ruddei.l, Willis Pekronet Chamberlain, William Westly Guth. 1896. William Leonard Tregea, Charles Belknap Henderson, Reece Oliver Davies, Frank Stali.o Ruddell. 1897. Theodore Robert Hofbr, Jr., Frederick William Buttleman, Harris Campbell Allen, Robert Clifford Kirk, •George Montanya Luce. • No longer in the University. 6 8l o Flh i Oamniinnia Delta Founded at Washington and Jefferson College, 1848. Chapter moll. section . Iota Mu...............................Massachusetts Institute of Technology'. Pi Iota...............................Worcester Polytechnic Institute. Nu Dki.ta.............................Yale University. Tau Alpha.............................Trinity College. UpSILON...............................College of the City of New York. Omega.................................Columbia College. Nu Epsilon............................University of the City of New York. Theta Psi.............................Colgate University. Kappa Nu..............................Cornell University. Chi...................................Union College. Alpha Chi.............................Amherst College. SECTION II. Alpha.................................Washington and Jefferson College. Beta .................................University of Pennsylvania. Delta ................................Bucknell University. Xi....................................Pennsylvania College. Pi....................................Alleghany College. Epsilon Delta .... ............Muhlenberg College. Sigma Delta...........................Lafayette College. Beta Chi..............................Lehigh University. Gamma Phi.............................Pennsylvania State College. SECTION III. Beta Mu...............................Johns Hopkins University. Epsilon...............................University of North Carolina. Omicron...............................University of Virginia. Beta Delta............................Roanoke College. Delta Delta...........................Hampden-Sidney College. Zeta Delta............................Washington and I c University. R110 Chi..............................Richmond College. SECTION IV. Eta...................................Marietta College. Sigma.................................Wittenberg College. Theta Delta...........................Ohio Wesleyan University. 82 Lambda Delta..........................Denison University. Omicron Delta.........................Ohio State University. Rho Delta.............................Wooster University. Alpha Phi.............................University of Michigan. SECTION V. Zeta..................................Indiana University. Lambda................................De Pauw University. Tau...................................Hanover College. Psi...................................Wabash College. Alpha Delta...........................Illinois Wesleyan University. Gamma Delta...........................Knox College. SECTION VI. Mu Sigma..............................University of Minnesota. Mu....................................University of Wisconsin. SECTION VII. Nu....................................Bethel College. Kappa Tau.............................University of Tennessee. SECTION VIII. Pi Delta..............................University of Kansas. ZBTA Phi..............................William Jewell College. SECTION IX. Delta Xi..............................University of California. Lambda Sigma..........................Leland Stanford JuniorJUniversity. GRADUATE CHAPTERS. Delta.................................Chattanooga, Tenn. Epsilon............................. . . Columbus, Ohio. Zeta..................................Kansas City, Mo. Eta...................................Cleveland, Ohio. Theta.................................Williamsport, Pa. Iota..................................Seattle, Wash. Kappa.................................Chicago, 111. Southern Alumni Association .... Baltimore, Md. Color : Royal Purple. YELL: Rah, Rah, Phi Gam ! Rah, Rah, Delta! Rah, Rah Rah, Rah Phi Gamma Delta ! Lambda Sigma Chapter, Established November 30, 1891. GRADUATE. John Kinlay Wight, 93. UND ERGRADUA TES. Tracy Georgh Russell, Thomas Sidnby Watson, Edwin Chapin Ewell, Charles Colfax Hughes, •Grant Calhoun, •John Emerson Marrle. 1895- Carl Clapp Thomas, John West Thompson, •Percy Howard O'Brien, Archie Bbrmingham Rice. •Percy Libby King, •John Knuckalls Metcalf, Alfred Parker Eraser. 1896. •Graham Elisha Babcock, t Louis Donald McLaine, John Tarn McGrf.w, Guy Hunt Cochran, Harry Badger Reynolds, William Laughlin McLaine. Franklin Vanderbilt Brooks, Jackson Eli Reynolds, •Edward Conde Hume Jonhs, •Frederick Willson Flint, Jr. 1897. Arthur William Bumii.lkr, Frank Harvey Walker, Willis Adelhf.rt Greenwood, Francis Valentine Tolderoy Lee John Bbrmingham Rich. SPECIAL. John William MacCormac. No longer in the University. ♦ Deceased. n.thn 'Ai m ► . igmrja Hu0 Founded at Virginia Military Institute, 1869. Chapter IRoll. Alpha..........................................Virginia Military Institute. Beta...........................................University of Virginia. Delta..........................................South Carolina College. Lambda.........................................Washington and Lee University. Tau............................................South Carolina Military Academy. Psi............................................University of North Carolina. Theta..........................................University of Alabama. Iota...........................................Howard College. UPS I LON......................................University of Texas. Beta Phi.......................................Tulane University. Beta Theta.....................................Alabama A. and M. College. Zbta...........................................Central University. Sigma..........................................Vanderbilt University. Omicron........................................Bethel College. Beta Omicron...................................University of the South. Beta Beta......................................De Pauw University. Delta Theta....................................Lombard University. Beta Nu........................................Ohio State University. Beta Zeta......................................Purdue University. Nu ............................................University of Kansas. Rho............................................University of Missouri. Cm.............................................Cornell College. Beta Gamma.....................................Missouri Valley College. Beta Delta.....................................Drake University. Beta Epsilon...................................Upper Iowa University. Eta............................................Mercer University. Kappa..........................................North Georgia College. Mu.............................................University of Georgia. Xi.............................................Emory College. Pi.............................................Lehigh University. Beta Alpha.....................................Yale University. Beta Chi.......................................Iceland Stanford Junior University. Beta Psi.......................................University of California. Beta Eta.......................................Indiana State University. Beta Lambda....................................Central College. 85 Brta Iota.....................................Mount Union College. Phi...........................................Louisiana State University. Beta Mu.......................... ............University of Iowa. Beta Pi.......................................University of Pennsylvania. Beta Xi.......................................William Jewell College. ALUMNI ORGANIZATIONS. Texas Alumni Association...............Dallas, Texas. Louisiana Alumni Association...........Baton Rouge, La. Iowa Ai.umni Association...............Belle Plains, la. Missouri Alumni Association............Brookfield, Mo. Georgia Alumni Chapter.................Athens, Ga. Atlanta Alumni Chapter.................Atlanta, Ga. Indiana Alumni Association...........• Greencastle, Ind. Kansas City Alumni Chapter ............Kansas City, Mo. Birmingham Ai.umni Chapter.............Bessemer, Ala. Colors : Black, White, and Gold. Yell: Rah! Rah! Rah! L. S. J. UJ lie la Chi Chapter! Sigma Nu ! 86 I I y I .....+ o igraja Wo Beta Chi Chapter, Established 1891. GRADUATES. ♦Carl Lank Clemans. •William Henry Crothkrs, 92, Thomas Graham Crothkrs, ’92, ♦William Leandkr Webster, ’93. UNDERGRADUA TES. 1894. James Pyffe Wilson, Rea Edwards Maynard. 1895- George Edward Crothkrs, Lewis Howki.l Smith, ♦Max Lee Rosen held. John Francis Sheehan, Jr., Scott Calhoun, Paul Milton Downing, William Hastings Harrk.lson, Walter Malins Rose. Henry Manning Cory, John Henry McDaniels. 1896. ♦Armin Victor Kalknborn, Alexander Townsend Hosmkr. 1897. Herbert Randall Straight, Roy Weldon, David Ewald Brown, Edward Hagkrman Arnold, Frank Monroe Gray, Pierre Allaire. SPECIAL. Francis Joseph Jack, Frank Channing Nash. • No longer in the University. Founded at Miami University, 1855. Alpha ......... Beta.......... Gamma ........ Epsilon........ Zkta........... Eta.......... Thkta ........ Kappa........ Lambda ........ Mu............ Xi . . Omicron . . . Rho........... Tau............ Chi........... Psi........... Omega.......... Alpha Alpha Gamma Gamma Delta Delta . . Delta Chi . . . Zkta Zeta . . . Zkta Psi Eta Eta . . . . Theta Theta . . Kappa Kappa . . Lambda Lambda Sigma Sigma . . Alpha Beta . . . Alpha Gamma Alpha Delta Alpha Epsilon . Alpha Zkta . . . Alpha Thkta . . Alpha Iota . . . Alpha Lambda . Alpha Nu Alpha Xi . . . . Alpha Omicron . Alpha Pi . . . . Alpha Rho . . . Alpha Sigma . . Alpha Tau . . . Alpha Upsilon . Alpha Phi . . . Alpha Chi . . . Alpha Psi . . . . Alpha Omkga . Chapter iRoll. ... . Miami University. .........University of Wooster. .........Ohio Wesleyan University. . . Columbian University. .........Washington and Lee University. .........University of Mississippi. .........Gettysburg College. .........Bucknell University. .........Indiana State University. .........Denison University. .........DePauw University. .........Dickinson College. . . . . Butler University. .........Roanoke College. .........Hanover College. . . . University of Virginia. .........Northwestern University. . . . . Hobart College. . . . Randolph-Macon College. .........Purdue University. .........Wabash College. .........Centre College. . University of Cincinnati. .........Dartmouth College. .........University of Michigan. .........University of Illinois. . . . Kentucky State College. .........Hampden-Sidney College. .........University of California. .........Ohio State University. .........Stevens Institue of Technology. . . . . University of Nebraska. .........Beloit College. .........Massachusetts Institute of Technology. .........Illinois Wesleyan University. ... University of Wisconsin. .........University of Texas. .........University of Kansas. .........Tulatic University. .........Albion College. .........Lehigh University. .........University of Minnesota. .........University of North Carolina. .........University of Southern California. .........Cornell University. .........Pennsylvania State College. .........Vanderbilt University. .........Leland Stanford Junior University. Fraternity Colors: Blue and Gold. . alpha Omega Chapter. Founded December 19, 1891. GRADUA TES. Isaac Vinton Busby, Samuel Benjamin Durand, Alpha Lambda. •Watson Nicholson, ’92, Albert James Brown, ’92, •Wilbur Jambs Edwards, ’93. UN DR RG RAD UA TES. 1894. Robkrt Morris Drakk. 1895. Walter Edwin Winship, John Edmundson Alexander, •Norman Lee Harris, Balfe Dr York Johnson, Howard Alfred Tennyson, Samuel Merrill, Jr., Delta Chi, David Lafayette Arnold, Alpha Upsiloti. 1896. •John Wilson Macrum, William Baldwin Fletcher, Jr., Rho. 1897. Samuel Edgar Johnson, Albert Hutchinson Jarman, Harry Wheeler Morse. SPECIAL. •Newell Macrum. • No longer in the University. T a o Founded at Washington and Lee University, 1865. Chapter IRoll. Alabama Alpha Epsilon . . . Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical College. Alabama Beta Beta.........................Southern University. Alabama Beta Delta........................University of Alabama. California Beta Psi.......................Leland Stanford Junior University. Georgia Alpha Beta........................University of Georgia. Georgia Alpha Theta.......................Emory College. Georgia Alpha Zeta........................Mercer University. Georgia Beta Iota.........................School of Technology. Louisiana Beta Epsilon....................Tulane University. Massachusetts Gamma Beta..................Tufts College. Maine Beta Upsilon........................State College. Maine Gamma Alpha.........................Colby University. Michigan Alpha Mu.........................Adrian College. Michigan Beta Kappa.......................Hillsdale College. Michigan Beta Lambda......................University of Michigan. Michigan Beta Omicron.....................Albion College. North Carolina Alpha Delta................University of North Carolina. North Carolina Alpha Chi..................Trinity College. New Jersey Alpha Kappa....................Stevens Institute of Technology. New York Alpha Omicron....................St Lawrence University. New York Beta Theta.......................Cornell University. Ohio Alpha Mu ............................Mount Union College. Ohio Alpha Ciii...........................Wittenberg College. Ohio Beta Eta.............................Ohio Wesleyan University. Ohio Beta Mu..............................Wooster University. Ohio Beta Rho.............................Marietta College. Ohio Beta Omega ..........................Ohio State University. Pennsylvania Alpha Iota...............Muhlenberg College. Pennsylvania Alpha Rho................Lehigh University. Pennsylvania Alpha Upsilon............Pennsylvania College. Pennsylvania Beta Chi.....................Haverford College. Pennsylvania Tau..........................University of Pennsylvania. South Carolina Alpha Theta................South Carolina University. South Carolina Beta Phi...................Wofford College. South Carolina Beta Chi...................Charleston College. Tennessee Alpha Tau.......................S. W. Presbyterian University. 90 Tennessee Beta Pi . Tennessee delta . . Tennessee Omega . . Vermont Beta Zeta Virginia Beta . . . Virginia Beta Sigma Virginia Dei.ta . . . Virginia Epsilon . . Vanderbilt University. Cumberland College. University of the South. University of Vermont. Washington and Lee University. Hampden-Sidney College. University of Virginia. Roanoke College. ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS. Alabama Alumni Association.....................Birmingham. Arkansas Alumni Association....................Little Rock. Chicago Alumni Association................... Chicago, 111. Cleveland Alumni Association...................Cleveland, O. District of Columbia Alumni Association .... Washington. New York Alumni Association....................New York City. Colors : Sky Blue and Old Gold. Flower : White Tea Rose. Yell: Hip, Hurrah! Hip, Hurrah! Three cheers for Alpha Tau ! Hurrah ! Hurrah ! Hurrah ! o ASplb Taa ©mrjega Beta Psi Chapter, Established December 21, 1891. UN DERG RA DU A TES. 1893 •Alfred Emil Dickey. 1894. M. Roy Thompson, Fred Harlan Hadley. 1895- Norman Geek Buxton, Thomas Kimball Code, •James Mitchell Barney. Frederick Adolph Hartmann, Milton David Gkosh. 1896. Charles Wesley Dayev, • George August Campbell. 1897. •Thomas Crawford Turner, Fred Jost. 92 No longer in the University. i Founded at the University of Alabama, 1856. Chapter ftoll. ALPHA PROVINCE. Massachusetts Beta Upsilon .... Boston University. Massachusetts Iota Tau...........Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Massachusetts Gamma..............Harvard University. Connecticut Alpha................Trinity College. BETA PROVINCE. New York Alpha .... .......Cornell University. Pennsylvania Omega...............Alleghany College. Pennsylvania Sigma Phi.........Dickinson College. Pknnsvlnania Alpha Zeta.........Pennsylvania State College. Pennsylvania Delta...............Pennsylvania College. GAMMA PROVINCE. Virginia Omicron . . . Virginia Sigma........ Virginia Pi (sub rasa) . . North Carolina Xi . . North Carolina Theta South Carolina Delta South Carolina Phi . . South Carolina Gamma South Carolina Mu . . Georgia Beta.......... Georgia Psi........... Georgia Epsilon . . . Georgia Phi........... University of Virginia. Washington and Lee University. Emory and Henry College. University of North Carolina. Davidson College. South Carolina College. Furman University. Wolford College. Erskine College. University of Georgia. Mercer University. Emory College. Georgia School of Technology. DELTA PROVINCE. Michigan Iota Beta..................University of Michigan. Michigan Alpha......................Adrian College. Ohio Sic.ma.........................Mount Union College. Ohio Delta..........................Ohio Wesleyan University. Ohio Epsilon . Ohio Theta Indiana Alpha Indiana Beta . University of Cincinnati. Ohio State University. Franklin College. Purdue University. EPSIL ON PRO VINCE. Kentucky Kappa......... Kentucky Iota........ Tennessee Zeta......... Tennessee Lambda .... Tennessee Nu........... Tennessee Kappa .... Tennessee Omega .... Tennessee F.ta......... Alabama Mu............. Alabama Iota........... Alabama Alpha Mu . . . Mississippi Theta {sub rasa) Central University. Bethel College. Southwestern Presbyterian University. Cumberland University. Vanderbilt University. University of Tennessee. University of the South. Southwestern Baptist University. University of Alabama. Southern University. Alabama Agri. and Meehan. College. Agricultural College. ZETA PROVINCE. Iowa Sigma............................Simpson College. Missouri Alpha........................University of Missouri. Missouri Beta.........................Washington University. Nebraska Lambda Pi....................University of Nebraska. ETA PROVINCE. Texas Riio................................University of Texas. Colorado Chi..............................University of Colorado. Colorado Zeta.............................University of Denver. California Alpha..........................Leland Stanford Junior University. ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS. Savannah, Ga., Chattanooga, Teun., Pittsburg, Pa., Atlanta, Ga., Alliance, Ohio, New York. STATE ASSOCIATIONS. South Carolina, Ohio, Colorado. Colors : Purple and Gold. Flower : Violet. Yell: Phi Alpha! Alicazu! Phi Alpha ! Alicazon ! Sigma Alpha ! Sigma Alph ! Sigma Alpha Epsilon ! 94 , I I I o California alpha Chapter, Established March 5, 1892. GRA'DUA TE. Horack Elbert Williams. ’92. UNDERGRADUA TES. 1892. John Shkrman Gifford. 1895- Henry Lank. King, James Rufus Edwards, Claude Standish Downing, Lawrence Adams Pressley, Harry James Cox, Ernest V. Badley, George Jarvis Bancroft, William Eugene Luman, William Henry V. Canfield. 1896. Alfred Baker Spalding, Henry Tyhrie Poindexter, Samuel Widby Belford, Thomas Henry Williams, Jr. 1897. Harvey E. Rockwell, Warren F. Geary, •John W. D. Dicks, Walter Marlett McIntosh, Alvin B. Daniels. 95 • No longer iu the University. Delta Taa Delta Founded at Bethany College, i860. Chapter IRoll. NORTHERN DIVISION. Beta....................................Ohio University. Delta...................................University of Michigan. Epsilon.................................Albion College. Zkta....................................Adalbert College. Eta..................................... Buchtel College. Theta...................................Bethany College. Iota....................................Michigan Agricultural College. Kappa...................................Hillsdale College. Mu......................................Ohio Wesleyan University. Phi.....................................Hanover College. Chi..................................... Kenyon College. Psi.....................................University of Wooster. Beta Alpha..............................Indiana University. Beta Beta...............................De Pauw University. Beta Zeta...............................Butler University. SOUTHERN DIVISION. Lambda..................................Vanderbilt University. Beta Delta..............................University of Georgia. Beta Theta..............................University of the South. Pi......................................University of Mississippi. Beta Epsilon............................Emory College. Beta Xi.................................Tulane University. Beta Iota...............................University of Virginia. EASTERN DIVISION. Alpha...................................Alleghany College. Nu......................................I afayette College. Sigma...................................Williams College. Ups 1 LON ..............................Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Beta Mu.................................Tufts College. Beta....................................Boston University. Gamma...................................Washington and Jefferson College. 9 Rho.....................................Stevens Institute of Technology. Tau.....................................Franklin and Marshall College. Beta Lambda.............................Lehigh University. Beta Nu.................................Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Beta Omicron. ... .............Cornell University. WESTERN DIVISION. Omicron.................................State University of Iowa. Xi......................................Simpson College. Omega...................................Iowa State College. Beta Eta................................University of Minnesota. Beta Kappa..............................University of Colorado. Beta Gamma..............................University of Wisconsin. Beta Pi.................................Northwestern University. Beta Rho................................Leland Stanford Junior University. ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS. New York Alumni Chapter.................................Brooklyn, N. Y. Chicago Alumni Chapter .................................Chicago, III. Nashville Alumni Chapter............................ . . Nashville, Tenn. Twin City Alumni Chapter................................Minneapolis, Minn. Pittsburg Alumni Chapter................................Pittsburg, Pa. Nebraska Alumni Chapter.................................Lincoln, Neb. Cleveland Alumni Chapter................................Cleveland, Ohio. Detroit Alumni Chapter..................................Detroit, Mich. Grand Rapids Alumni Chapter.............................Grand Rapids, Mich. Colors : Purple, Old Gold, and White. Flowers: Pansy, Viola Tricolor. o Beta Rho Chapter, Established august 30, 1893. GRADUA TES. Walter Robert Shaw, ’92, Murray Adrian Campbell, 93, •Lucian Ward Bannister, 93. UNDERGRADUA TES. Julius CjF.sar Hammel, 1894. Charles Dilworth Critchi.ow, Arthur Cook Trumbo, Edward Hickey Barnes. 1895. Martin Herbert Kennedy, Van Norman McGee, Robert L’Amy Donald, George Draper Stratton. 1896. Hugh Henry Brown. John Mason Ross, 1897. Roderick Sammis Dart. 98 • No longer in the University. I ! I Founded at Miami University, 1839. Chapter IRoll. district . Eta........................................Harvard University. Kappa .....................................Brown University. UPSILON ...................................Boston University. Bkta Eta...................................Maine State College. Bkta Iota .................................Amherst College. Alpha Ombga................................Dartmouth College. Mu Epsilon.................................Wesleyan University. Phi Chi....................................Yale University. DISTRICT II. Beta Gamma.................................Rutgers University. Sigma......................................Stevens Institute of Technology. Bkta Delta.................................Cornell University. Beta Zeta..................................St. Lawrence University. Beta Theta.................................Colgate University. Nu.........................................Union College. Alpha Alpha................................Columbia College. Beta Epsilon...............................Syracuse University. DISTRICT III. Alpha Sigma................................ Dickinson College. Alpha Chi..................................Johns Hopkins University. Phi........................................ University of Pennsylvania. Alpha Epsilon..............................Pennsylvania Slate College. Beta Chi...................................Lehigh University. DISTRICT IV. Zeta.......................................Hampton-Sidney College. P TA Beta..................................University of North Carolina. O MIC HON..................................University of Virginia. Phi Alpha..................................Davidson College. Alpha Kappa................................Richmond College. Xi.........................................Randolpli-Macon College. DISTRICT V. Epsilon....................................Centre College. Mu.........................................Cumberland University. Beta Beta..................................University of Mississippi. Beta Lambda................................Vanderbilt University. Beta Omicron...............................University of Texas. DISTRICT VI. Alpha.......................................Miami University. Beta Nu.....................................University of Cincinnati. Beta Kappa..................................Ohio State University. Beta........................................Western Reserve University. Gamma.......................................Washington and Jefferson College. Theta.......................................Ohio Wesleyan University. Psi.........................................Bethany College. Alpha Gamma.................................Wittenberg College. Alpha Eta...................................Denison University. Alpha Lambda................................Wooster University. Beta Alpha..................................Kenyon College. Theta Delta.................................Ohio University. DISTRICT VII. Delta.......................................De Pauw University. Pi........................................... Indiana University. Lambda......................................University of Michigan. Tau.........................................Wabash College. Iota........................................Hanover College. DISTRICT VIII. Alpha Xi....................................Knox College. Chi.........................................Beloit College. Alpha Beta..................................State University of Iowa. Alpha Epsilon...............................Iowa Wesleyan University. Alpha Pi....................................University of Wisconsin. Rho........................•................Northwestern University. Beta Pi.....................................University of Minnesota. DISTRICT IX. Alpha Delta.................................Westminster College. Alpha Mu....................................University of Kansas. Omega.......................................University of California. Alpha Zeta..................................Denver University. Alpha Tau...................................University of Nebraska. Zeta Phi....................................University of Missouri. COLORS: Pink and Blue. Flower : The Rose. Yell: Phi, Kai, Phil It eta. Theta, Pi! W-O-O-G-L-I-N ! IVuog-lin ! IVooglin 100 JJn-Avt foi)foH Association of Tb t Pi GRADUA TES. •John Fleshbr Newsom, a. M., ’92, Emmet Lee Richardson, A. M., ’92, Ernest Bryant Hoag, Owen Dale Richardson, J. H. Howard, James Freeman Jenness, ’92, Charles Kelley Jenness, '92, John Duvall Wallingford, ’92. UNDERGRADUA TES. 1893. 'John Clinton Capron. 1895. Ernest De Los Magee, Chester Lea Magee. 1896. Arthur French Poole, George Francis Vandervep.r, William W. Price. 1897. Douglas Sloane Watson. 101 • No longer in the University. Kappa A!plh a Tlbetao Founded at De Pauw University, 1870. Chapter IRoIl. Alpha.................................. . . . De Pauw University. Beta.................... ...................Indiana University. Delta.......................................Illinois Wesleyan University. Epsilon.....................................Wooster University. Iota........................................Cornell University. Kappa.......................................University of Kansas. Lambda......................................University of Vermont. Mu.......................................... Alleghany College. Nu..........................................Hanover College. Omicron.....................................University of Southern California. Pi..........................................Albion College. Tau ........................................Northwestern University. UPSILON.....................................University of Minnesota. Phi.........................................Leland Stanford Junior University. Chi.........................................Syracuse University. Psi.........................................University of Wisconsin. Omega.......................................University of California. Alpha Beta................................Swathmore College. Alpha Gamma...............................University of Ohio. Flower : Black Pansy, with yellow heart. 102 Colors : Black and Gold. -______Ik Phi Chapter, Established at University of the Pacific, April 4, 1888. (Transferred to Stanford January 1, 1S92.) GRADUA TES. •Edith Wilcox, ’92, Carrik Adeline Bean, ’93. UNDERGRADUA TES. 893- •Mattie Elizabeth Haven. 1894. Elsie Hjbrlbid Shelley. Clara Avery. 1895- Lucy Allabach. Clara Winifred Caldwell, Minnie Brooks Yoder, Kate Louise Nash. Henrietta Stadtmuli.hr, Mabel Blanche Packard, Seba Moulton, Harriet J. Fyffe, •Caroline Hornbrook Evans, •Katherine Florence Evans. 1896. •Dora Estby Moody, Leonora Schopbach, Marie Louise Pitcher, Nellie Eugenia McCaughan, Winifred Webb. 1897. Ada Edwards, Edith Monica Jordan, Florence Hulmr. SPECIAL. •Sarah Louise Kirby. • No longer in the University. Kappa Kappa Oamnimnia, FOUNDED AT MONMOUTH COLLEGE, 1870. Chapter Holt. ALPHA PROVINCE. Phi.......................................Boston University. Beta Beta.................................St. Lawrence University. Beta Tau..................................Syracuse University. Psi.......................................Cornell University. Beta Alpha................................University of Pennsylvania. Beta Epsilon..............................Barnard College. Gamma Rho.................................Alleghany College. Beta Iota . . . ..........................Swathmore College. BETA PROVINCE. Lambda....................................Buclitel College. Beta Gamma................................Wooster University. Beta Delta................................University of Michigan. Beta Nu...................................Ohio State University. Xi........................................Adrian College. Kappa.....................................Hillsdale College. GAMMA PROVINCE. Delta.....................................Indiana University. Iota......................................De Pauw University. Mu........................................Butler College. Eta.......................................University of Wisconsin. Upsilon...................................Northwestern University. Epsilon...................................Illinois Wesleyan University. DELTA PROVINCE. Chi.......................................Minnesota University. Beta Zeta.................................Iowa University. Theta.....................................Missouri University. Sigma.....................................Nebraska University. Omega.....................................Kansas University. Beta Eta..................................Leland Stanford Junior University. Colors : Light and Dark Blue. Flower : Fleur de Lis. 104 Iht V | •f.ilti. Beta Eta Chapter, Founded June io, 1892. UNDERGRADUA TES. 1894. Florence Mabel Holsclaw. 1895. •Harriet Augusta Buck, Maude Evangeline Stinson, Jessie Palkn Wood, Fanny Howe Mitchell, Mabel Brown Coombs, Florence Villikrs Brown, Winifred Mabel Paine, Bertha Louise Chapman, Alberta Lois Merritt, Elizabeth Corinnk Chapman, 1896. Mabel Hyde Cory, Agnes Irma Glover, Clementine Tucker, Grace Evelyn Holsclaw. 1897. Elizabeth Madison Braly, Bertha Hyde Brai.y, Blanche Mae Freeman. o Founded at Monmouth College, 1867. Chapter Holt. ALPHA PROl NCR. Vkrmont Alpha . . Pennsylvania Alpha Columbia Alpha . . Ohio Alpha .... Indiana Alpha . . . Michigan Alpha . . Michigan Beta . . Louisiana Alpha . . Indiana Beta .... . . Middleburv College. . . Swathmore College. . . Columbia College. . . Ohio University. . . Franklin College. . . Hillsdale College. . . University of Michigan. . . Tulane University. . . Indiana University. BETA PROVINCE. Illinois Beta . . . Illinois Delta . . Iowa Alpha .... Iowa Iota (Alumnae) Lombard University. Knox College. Iowa Wesleyan University Mount Pleasant, Iowa. GAMMA PROVINCE. Iowa Beta...............................Simpson College. Iowa Gamma..............................Iowa Agricultural College. Iowa Zeta...............................State University of Iowa. Minnesota Alpha...........................University of Minnesota. Iowa Lambda (Alumme)....................Des Moines, Iowa. DELTA PROVINCE. Colorado Alpha................................University of Colorado. Colorado Beta.................................University of Denver. Kansas Alpha..................................University of Kansas. California Alpha..............................Leland Stanford Junior University. Colors : Wine and Silver Blue. Flower : Carnation. 106 I I I I o California Alpha Chapter, Established September 13, 1893. GRADUATE. Anna Luna Lewis, January i, 1894. UNDERGRADUA TES. 1894. Harriett Augusta Nichols. Nettie Eudora Woodburn. 1895- Mary Myrtle Osborne, Lucia May Lay, 1896. Ruby Adai.ina Ordway, Jennie June Peery, Stella Mary Mayhugh. 1897. Mabel Lowe, Anna Frances Weaver, Mary Alice Matthews, Martha Nadine Hartshorn. SPECIAL. Frances Norris Rand. 107 [Local.] Established February 9, 1894. UNDERGRADUA TES. 1894. Mf.lvillk Thurston Cook (J V), Albert Crane (J T). 1895. Fred Seydkll Fogg, Edward Charles Harwood. 1896. Benjamin Franklin Bledsoe, John McPherson Gates, Charles Wesley Miller, Arthur Martin Cathcart. 1897. Wiluam Pitt Gifford, Joseph Henry Timmons, Samuel Platt. 2KTAA KAI 'INAKE2 UpOGTponaio s' k h l TIP O O' L K T Cj p. 01 AAEA OI. Ax ppe S Ba p 6 T cj . A ov i 5 Na 0 a v t e X Kac e. Ei pie Mavvivy X pie. 0 p av k P A prj. Eo a v v Ea pc e f 0 co rep. M a p t i 1 Ep 3 e pr KevveSce. Pp e S Ep 1 e r t KU , y e p Moppa v Ma Ef € 7 p 7} £ t e r ° P 7 6 r r e ) ) Eo a v v 0 p a v t $ E « e e y a o E apu pu u e ) Pep E l apu o v s A 0 V S 0 6 X ) E Oi l 6 Q 6 p a s E Si ce,EaT(roi I( 9 SOPHOMORE FRATERNITY OF Tlbeta Wo mpsiloi o HONORARY MEMBERS.—CLASS OF '95-Frank R. Dray, Martin Herbert Kennedy, Van Norman McGee, John James Hoi.ustkr, Tracy George Russell, Samuel Ewer Simmons, Frederick Ernest Kbssinger, Thomas Sidney Watson. ACTIVE MEMBERS.—CLASS OF '96. B ?! = ;.!!+, — T !! ::,:? R, : ! ? $ K ! — !!? = ;;!, .A ?:: = ?! 6 !!! :: = ! || = !?;:!? 4 M , X =? () ! ; D=?!-H T« ! ? = 9.7 , B ?!-t A?f? = 2 'fc fg I!-£-?! = () ??!!;;? 1 — 1 ? 0 = ( ) ?! x, + T ::?()! N : P — II -r- t-c K ? X -r- ?! 0 • X-j-?! ?:;.:, = ? !? = ! =? ,.;:!? T!oo ?!= , =? = !L? -r X.,!? 4i69. = «fctINT, f o.m.p x .B.P. = K C.K.L.J.I (P — 9.X. + C m k g || L . T. P. $ . X = ? enjber? of Unorganized Fraternities DELTA KAPPA El'S!LON. Cari, Schurz Smith, gr., Thomas Rawson Warren, ’94. Walter Olcott Smith, ’93. PS I UPS I LON. Lewis Nathaniel Chase, ’95, Frederick Ernest Kessingbr, ’95. THE TA DELTA CHI. Frank Carver Wolff, ’96. CHI PHI. •Charles Anselm Fernald, ’95, John James Hollister, ’95, •Allan Kay Wilson, ’95, Reuben Ferdinand Gilliam, '96. DELTA UPS LON. Melville Thurston Cook, ’94, Albert Crane, '94. DELTA GAMMA. Hannah Adella Tucker, ’96, Florence Bertha Whittier, ’97. • No longer in the University. Ill 3n (Demon? HOWARD MIDDKR. First dead of Stanford’s scholars! On this earth Your piercing vision read men's souls aright. Now, what there is to see lies to your sight Open, and you have seen the Hereafter’s worth. Here, we but riddle vainly in the dearth Of certain answer. Only this guess has might:— What though between us is the veil of night, After the night, the gradual dawn's sure birth. Leave we the futile question. This is clear,— The year sweeps round, some part of you remains Here in my heart; and so I try to send Back to the laud that knew us all that year, And holds you now, safe from its mists and rains,— Some word to tell my love for you my friend. PROFE8SOR W. H. MILLER. 8 {Tribute to Senator Stanford These stately, splendid, simple walls of stone, Broad for the sunlight’s blessing, low to keep Close fellowship with earth’s great heart alone ; Mute majesty of guardian towers, and sweep Of arcades gleaming afar in pillared pride, And beauty of binding arches multiplier!. Oh fair, surpassing fair, however viewed ! We marvel how these very stones disclose The spirit of their builder’s amplitude And manhood's deep repose. Ah sore tried heart that in its sorrow turned To otic that with its own heart’s anguish burned, And gathered strength to quench the sorrow’s fire ; Ah hands that faltered not when heart’s love yearned For some memorial of its dead desire ;— How are men taught that Death is not so strong But love may rescue something from his wrong! And thou, whose heart and hands so labored here, From whose dead hope a thousand living spring, What song but song of praise should reach thine ear As love’s high offering ? Profkssor A. G. Newcomer. i 14 8ENATOR STANFORD. -- _ — I UNIVERSITY BUILDING8. MAinuiLKl'M. Ml'SKUM. 1-nci.na Hall. Virw in ••Quad.” KOBLR GYMNAMHU. liN( IN A GYMNASIIM. Koiilk Hall. Invitation WHEN the sun goes down And the stars come out And the crickets begin to sing, Will you walk with me Down the woodland path And drink at the dusky spring? When the moon comes up And the zephyrs rise And rustle the leaves on trees, Will you drink with me From the fragrant cup, Quaffing deep to the liquid lees? When the moonbeam wreaths On your hair lie white, And your lashes are wet with dew, Will you watch with me For the mystic signs That tell when a love is true? With the glasses’ clink In the hands of sprites, When they drink the moonlight up, Will we quaff with smiles From the old tin mug And call it our loving-cup? Hail! will the sprites all cry, And with laughter faint Will fly when my shadow bends And we kiss, dear heart, For they cannot know We’re only Platonic friends. G. A. L. i«7 I ' Stanford Athletic Association. (Kstablishcd as a Committee of the Associated Students. December 6, 1892.) OFFICERS 1S92. Uknry Timm, Pres., F. L. Cole, Secy, H. A. Walton, R. H. Maynard, T. K. Code, E. R. Zion, Scott Calhoun, W. B. Moulton, E. C. Jones, W. L. McGuire, a. H. Barnhisel. ( )W. O. Smith. L. M. Whitehousk, C. S. Downing, C. W. Davby, F. R. Dray, H. J. Cox, J. F. Wilson, Pres. J. P. Bernhard, H. A. Walton, L. N. Chase, A. W. Bumillkr, OFFICERS 1S93. . A. Scott Calhoun, Secy. H. A. Walton, J. E. Reynolds, ( )W. B. Moulton, ( )A. H. Barnhisel, C. A. OFFICERS 1894. C. S. R. K. Culver, H. J. Cox, ( )C. A. Thomas, H. M. Leadbettkr, C. Trcmbo, IWs., (3)E. C. Jones. R. E. Maynard, ( )R. L. Gruwell, ( )G. B. Champlin, Fernai.d. Downing, Sec'y, W. L. McLaine, L. M. Whitehouse, (3)G. A. Campbell, G. McMillan. (i A previous association of a few mouths' standing was formed November 3, 1891. (3) Graduated. (3) Left College. 120 A CI)ang;e of Heart IK NEW he cut his classes, an l I’d heard him flunk in history, And how he dared say “ not prepared ” so often was a mystery. He’d sometimes cram for an exam., hut seldom knew a word in it. His parted hair grew long and fair; I thought lie looked absurd in it. I felt regret whene’er we met, and bowed with utmost gravity ; I didn’t dream he’d joined the team—I thought him all depravity. So when I found, at Haight Street ground, how great was his agility, I oped my eyes in marked surprise, amazed at his ability. He tackled hard, gained many a yard, place-kicked and charged successively ; He turned the edge of the flying wedge, and interfered aggressively ! He bucked the line ! I thought it fine, and shouted out excitedly ; He passed the ball behind them all! I saw the scheme delightedly. He slipped about the line without a thought of trip or fumbling, When to the din of tooting tin a crowd on him came tumbling. I felt a chill, my heart stood still, when those mean boys fell down on him ; His clothes were torn, his nose-cap gone, and streaks of black and brown on him He scored a touchdown then, and such a frenzy I did never see; It made the umpire’s whistle dumb, and overwhelmed the referee. Then when he punted out in front, though hoarse with loud admiring, I with delight yelled, “ He’s all right! ” for they were all inquiring. The game was won, and we'd l egun to cheer each man respectively ; We rah ! rah ! rahed ! and blew horns hard, and shook our flags effectively. His eyes shone bright, as left and right they called to him vivaciously : I my disdain recalled with pain, and waved my banner graciously. Now let him miss the German quiz, and fail to pass astronomy. To football lore what’s physics or political economy? To have him bow is rapture now, to l e o’erlooked adversity ; To catch his smile is worth the while attending University. H. L. S. 121 C. S. Downing. C. C. Adam . A. II. Rakniiisrl. S. I). Bkiug . E. !.. Rich. J. K. WllITTKMOKK. C. L Cl. KM AN . T. K. CODE. M. I). Ckosii. I M. Downing. C. II. HOGG. I March 19, 1892, Haight Street Grounds, San Francisco. L- s. J. u. Position. U. C. M. I). Ghosh, ’95 . Right end . .... A. H. MaU, 95- C. S. Downing, ’95 . Right tackle. .... Hknry Hay, ’94. C. C. Adams, 95 Right guard .... Alfred Dubbkrs, 93. A. H. Barnhisei., ’93 . Centre rush . . . . Joseph Pierce, ’95. S. D. Briggs, ’92 . Left guard . .... W. B. Waciihorst, ’95. E. L. Rich. ’93 . . J. II. White, ’91. C. H. Hogg, ’93 . . . . W. H. Henry, ’93. T. K. Codk, 95 . . Quarter . . . . G. R. Kennedy, ’95. I . M. Downing, ’95 ... G. H. Foulks, 93, Capl. J. R. WlIITTKMORK. ’92, Capl. . . . Left half . .... R. A. Sherman, ’95. C. L. Ci.kmans, gr . Full back . . . . . L. E. Hunt, ’93. SEASON'S GAMES, tSgt- 2. Stanford VS. Hopkins Academy.........Campus...........Jan. 30. 10-6. Stanford VS. Berkeley Gymnasium .... San Jose.........Feb. 6. 22-0. Stanford vs. Olympic Athletic Club . . . Campus....Feb. 13. 6-10. Stanford vs. University of California . . . San Francisco .... Mar. 19. 14-10. 23 Kknnkdy, Wilson. Bakniiiskl Walton. okcutt. Field Code. Downing, c. Hakkelson. BRIGGS. Fkankkniirimkk. Cociikan. WlllTBHOUSK. CLFMANS RICH. DOWNING. I . EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. F. L. Cole, G. B. Champlin, Mgr., R. E. Maynard. Walter Camp, Coach. VARSITY ELEVEN IN U. OF C. GAME. A’USHERS. A. H. Barnhisel, Centre. J. B. Frankknhkimkr, '96, Left end, Right end, J. F. Wilson, ’94, G. H. Cochran, ’96, Left tackle, Right tackle, E. L. Rich, ’93, S. I). Briggs, gr., Left guard, Right guard, I . M. Downing, ’95, T. K. Code, Quarter back, C. L. Clemans, gr., Left half, Capt., Right half, H. A. Wai.ton, ’95, M. H. Kennedy, '95, Full hack. SUBSTITUTES. W. W. Orcutt, ’95, L. M. Whitkhousr, ’96, E. C. Jones, ’96. W. H. Harrelson, ’95, C. L. Patterson, sp. SEASON'S GAMES, S92-93. Stanford vs. Oakland High School . . . . Campus . . Nov. 5. 14-0. Stanford vs. Olympic Athletic Club . . . Campus . Nov. 19. 20-5. Stanford vs. Olympic Athletic Club . . . San Francisco . . . . Dec. 3. 14-14. Stanford vs. University of California . . . San Francisco . . . . Dec. 17. 10-10. CLASS GAMES. ’96 vs. ’95 . Campus . . Oct. 22. 4-o. Second Eleven vs. Stockton High School . Stockton .... . . Nov. 24. 32-4- C. S. Downing, 95, J. Y. Field, ’96, UNIVERSITY BUILDINQ8. MAUSHLRUM. Encina IIalu. View in ••Quad.’’ K 1ii.H Gymnamum. I-.NCIKA GYMNASIUM. Kohi.r Hall. Invitation WHEN the sun goes down And the stars come out And the crickets begin to sing, Will you walk with me Down the woodland path And drink at the dusky spring ? When the moon comes up And the zephyrs rise And rustle the leaves on trees, Will you drink with me From the fragrant cup, Quaffing deep to the liquid lees? When the moonbeam wreaths On your hair lie white, And your lashes are wet with dew, Will you watch with me For the mystic signs That tell when a love is true? With the glasses’ clink In the hands of sprites, When they drink the moonlight up, Will we quaff with smiles From the old tin mug And call it our loving-cup? Hail! will the sprites all cry, And with laughter faint Will fly when my shadow bends And we kiss, dear heart, For they cannot know We’re only Platonic friends. G. A. L. Thomas. Wilson. I.RAiHiitrriiK. Walton, whitkiiousk. Bukmrtt. '93- EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. F. R. Dray, r. e. Maynard, Mgr., s. W. Collins. “ Pop’ Bliss, Coach. VARSITY ELEVEN IN U. OF C. GAME. Champions of the Pacific Coast. P. Downing, ’95, Centre, McMillan, ’97, Burnett, ’95, I eft guard. Right guard, Cochran, ’96, IhVrrf?son ’qs 1 Whitf.housk,’96, I.eft tackle. J Right tackle, C. Downing, ’95, Deft end, Harrklson, 95,1 Quarter hack, Frankkniikimf.r, ’96, Walton,’95, Wilson. ’94, Capt., Deft half back. Right half back, Right end, Kennedy, ’95, Full back. SU iSTI TOTES. Dkwis, 95, Dhadhkttkr, ’95, Rutan, gr., Harrhwon, ’95, Thomas, ’97, McDaink, ’96, Spalding, ’96, Hall, sp. SEA SOX'S GAMES, 1893-94. Stanford vs. Olympic Athletic Club . . . San Francisco .... Nov. 4. 46-0. Stanford vs. Reliance Athletic Club . . . San Jose...........Nov. 11. 54-0. Stanford vs. Olympic Athletic Club . . . San Francisco .... Nov.-i8. 24-11. Stanford vs. University of California. . . San Francisco .... Nov. 30. 6-6. Stanford vs. Reliance Athletic Club . . . San Francisco .... Dec. 16. 18-0. Stanford vs. Tacoma.....................Tacoma................Dec. 25. 48-0. Stanford vs. Port Townsend..............Port Townsend . . . Dec. 27. 50-0. Stan ford vs. Seattle...................Seattle..............Dec. 29. 40-0. Stanford vs. Multnomah Athletic Club . . Portland...........Jan. 894 18-0. } 127 Class Teams. 1893-94. ’95- Centre, Burnett ; Rijflit guard, Hazzard; Ixift guard. Orcutt ; Right tackle, Johnson; Left tackle, Russell; Right end. Roskndale. Lkadbhttkr ; Left end, C. Downing, Captain; Right half, Walton, Lewis, P. Downing; Left half, Hakrelson ; Quarter back, Code ; Pull back, Kennedy. ’96. Centre, Whitbhousb; Right guard, McDonnell; Left guard, McIntosh, Moore; Right tackle, McKay; Left tackle. Cochran; Right end, Bunker; Left end, Spalding; Right half, Frankbnheimkr, Captain; Left half, Andrade, Lunt; Quarterback, McLains; Full back, McGuire, Andrade. ’97- Centre, Thomas; Right guard, Rice; Left guard, Fickp.rt: Right tackle, Snyder; Left tackle, Straight; Right end, Jost; Left end, Arnold; Right half, DeWolf ; Left half, WELDON; Quarter back, MclNTOSH; Full back, Greenwood, Captain. CLASS GAM US. ’97 vs. St. Matthew’s Hall.........Campus . ’95 vs. ’96.......................Campus . ’95 vs. ’97.......................Campus . Scrub ’96 vs. Scrub ’95............Campus . ’96 vs. ’97.......................Campus . Second Eleven VS. Stockton........Stockton 95 Winner. . Sept. 21. 14-12. . Sept. 30. 22-0. . Oct. 6. 20-0. . Oct. 14. 6-o. . Oct. 14. 16-0. . Oct. 21. 22-6. 1 “The world stands aside to let any man pass who knows whither he is going. —htiident Jordan. 128 An Evening Thought. LOVE, if some evening, when the soft white mist Holds in embracing arms the weary world, And the last sunbeams all the peaks have kissed, And in sweet slumber all the flowers are furled, You should come to me, clad in Death’s dark grace, And gaze upon me with your tender eyes, And with a sad, sweet smile upon your face Should say, “ I bring thee peace the world denies,” Into the distant land I do not know, Into the darkness that I hope means light, I would, dear heart, with you most gladly go, And you should be my guardian through the night. E. H. ‘KvmniHs ‘KonavMvii •KOMJV3 'ailiKl«0)| 'KOSMHJJ niiKAH -mimvamih skvuv 3 ‘okinmou ’kkimoks ► ► M. L. ROSBNFELD.........................Manager. C. C. Adams.............................Captain. VARSITY J. F. Newsom, gr........C. J. C. Capron, ’93.......P. C. S. Downing, ’95 . . . xst B. A. Lewis, Jr., ’95 ... 2d B. C. C. Adams, ’95 .... 3d B. SEASON'S Stanford VS. San Jose (Professional ) . Stanford vs. University of California Stanford vs. St. Mary’s College . . Stanford vs. Santa Clara College . . Stanford vs. Santa Clara College . . Stanford vs. Reliance Athletic Club Stanford vs. University of California TEAM. J. Edwards, ’95.....S. S. T. G. Russell, ’95 . . _ S. Calhoun, ’95. • • • J K‘ ' J. F. Sheehan, Jr., ’95 . C. F. W. H. Harrelson, ’95 . L. F. GAMES. Campus 1-20. San Francisco . . . . April 23. 13-6. Campus . May 1. 7-10. Santa Clara . . . May 5. 10-8. Campus . May 12. 10-8. Campus . May 14. 6-12. San Jose . May 21. 7-8. CLASS GAMES. ’92 vs. Faculty....................Campus...........Nov. 14. 14-6. ’95 vs. Belmont School............Belmont...........Jan. 16. 14-12. KAY. Md.AI.NK KL'ViRI.I. DOWNING. KKA. Caymon. Campbkll. C.KOVK. CALHOI’N. WAI.ToM. 1‘AULRY. SlIRKHAN. IIAKKKLSON. Will I K. DAVKY. I.KVVIS. A V II. A. Walton, C. S. Downing. ’93- EXECUTIVE COMM TTEE. E. I). Grovk, Mgr., VARSITY TEAM. Champions 1893. W. II. Harrklson, ’95 . L. F. J. F. Siihhhan, Jr., ’95 . C. F. A. Lewis. Jr.. ’95 ... S. S. H. A. Walton, ’95, Copt. C. C. W. Davey, 96 ... . 2 1 B. C. Ray. 96...........3d B. G. A. Campbell, sp . . . . I . C. Pauley, '96 . . . ) E. M. Rea, 95 . . . . [ R. F. S. Calhoun, ’95 .... ) A. II. White, '95 ... ) T. G. Russell, '95 . . ist B. P. Downing, ’95 . . . ) W. L. McLaink, ’96 ... . P. SEASON'S GAMES. Stanford vs. Reliance Athletic Club . . . Campus ..............Feb. 22. 6-1 Stanford vs. St. Matthew’s Hall..........Campus................Feb. 25. 5-1 Stanford vs. Oakland (Professional ) .... Campus...............March 17. 6-7 Stanford vs. Santa Clara College . . . . Santa Clara.........March 23. 9-3 Stanford vs. St. Matthew’s Hall..........San Mateo.............April 4. 13-1 Stanford vs. University of California . . . San Francisco . . . .April 8. 12-6 Stanford VS. St. Matthew’s Hall..........San Mnteo . . . April 12. 24-1 Stanford vs. University of California . Oakland .... . April 15. io-6 Stanford vs. St. Matthew’s Hall..........San Mateo .... April 28. 26-1 Stanford vs. University of California . . San Jose.............April 29. 12-4 Stanford VS. Cal. Deaf and Dumb Asylum . San Jose..............May 6. 21-3 Stanford Pi. Olympic Maroons.............Campus................ May 13. 11-2 CLASS GAMES. •95 vs. ’93 . . ’96 vs. Faculty ’95 VS. ’96 . . ’95 vs. Belmont ’95 VS. 96 . . ’93 vs. Faculty Campus . Sept. 23- 22-0. Campus . . . . . . Sept. 24. 22-1. Campus . . . . . . Oct. 8. 16-2. Campus . . . . . . Oct. 21. 24-0. Campus . . . . May 18. 8-7. Campus . . . . . May 20. 28-17. ’95 Winner. KKA IH'RAND. l)OWNINb, 0. LlWIV Cox. CALMOt'N. WlLINlN. KAV. ItOWNINU, I . WALMN, SMKRIIAN. HARKMI AON. Ml I.AINU IU'MIIL K. IIAVKV wmm. I VRN EX ECU TIVE COMMITTEE. H. A. Walton, H. J. Cox, Mgr., L. M. Whitkhousk. VARSITY TEAM. . . . C. A. Lewis, Jr., ’95.S. S. ... I . W. H. IIakkelson. 95 . . . L. F. . 1st B. J. F. Sheehan, Jr.,’95 . Capl.,Q. F. . 2d B. S. Calhoun, ’95.....R. F. II. B. Dyer, ’97 .... 3d B. SUBSTITUTES. R. Weldon, ’97, C. Ray, ’96, E. M. Rea, ’95, C. S. Downing, ’ 95, A. H. White, ’95, S. B. Durand, gr. SE A SON’ S G A MES. (Series i ncomplete.) Stanford VS. St. Matthew’s Hall . . 20-6. Stanford vs. Santa Clara College . . . . San Francisco . . 15-6 Stanford vs. Olympic Athletic Club . . . Midwinter Fair . March 23. 25-2. Stanford VS. St. Ignatius College . . . . Midwinter Fair . . . March 31. '3-3- Stanford vs. University of California . ’. Campus . . April 7. i5-«i- Stanford vs. University of California . . Berkeley . . April 14. 11-7. CLASS GAMES. (Incomplete.) ’97 vs. University of the Pacific . . . Feb. 17. 10-6 ’97 VS. St. Matthew’s Hall . . April 4. 7-i- C. W. Davey, ’96 . . . W. L. McLaink, ’96 . H. A. Walton, ’95 . . A. W. BUMILLKR, ’97 . . DR. JORDAN AT THE BAT. Toombs. JIkowm. Timm. w. Hanckopt. Timm. II. Crank. Hazzard. McDonkll. Okcutt. Clark. LKAUBirrTKK. Pillsbuky. Fry. Fhrnald. Henderson. Calhoun. S. Farmer. Alexander Maynard. Woodward. Bahstow. Brown. Knowlks. Calhoun, G. Bernhard Edwards. Collivrr. . SHEEHAN. ’93- EXECUTIVE TRACK COMMITTEE. R. K. Maynard, Scott Calhoun, J. E. Reynolds. VARSITY ATHLETIC TEAM. 1803. C. A. Fkrnald, '95, Cap I., H. R. Timm, '93, E W. Crank, ’95. R. E. Maynard, ’94, H T. Woodward, ’95. J. I,. Bernhard, ’96, G. Calhoun, ’95, S. Calhoun, ’95. J. E. Alexander, '95, W. J. Edwards, '93, D. H. Fry, '95, I). E. Brown, ’96, G. II. IIazzard, '96, G. Toombs, ’96, W. W. Orcutt, '95, R. E. Me Don ell, '96, W. A. Knowles. Jr.. 96, A. Barstow, Jr., ’95, O. V. Clark. '94, W. L. Brown, ’95, E. E. Farmer, '95, H. M. Lkadbkttkr, ’95 E. S. Pillsbury, ’95. C. B. Henderson, ’96, J. F. Sheehan, Jr., '95, J. A. Coi.liver, ’96, W. I). Timm, '96, G. J. Bancroft, ’95. FIRST INTERCOLLEGIATE FIELD DAY BETWEEN UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AND STANFORD. Olympic Club Grounds, San Francisco, April 22, 1893. Kvhnt. 0 6 ■—v T. Winner. 100 yards dash...... 220 yards dash...... 440 yards dash....... 880 yards run........ One mile run......... One mile walk....... 120 yards hurdle ___ 220 yards hurdle .... Two-mile bicycle race. Running high jump.. Running broad jump. Pole vault........ . 16-pound hammer_____ 16-pound shot....... 8 4 8 8 3 9 9 8 9 6 9 9 8 1 5 1 1 6 9 1 3 ( Bernhard, S . .. ■ Woodward, S.. ( Solomons, U. C ( Mays, U. C.... Solomons, U. C. ( Woodward, S.. {Maynard, S_____ Parkhurst, U. C Hilborn, U. C.. { Phebv, U.C.... Koch, U. C .... ( Brown, S...... r Powell, U.C... • Bancroft, U. C . ( Brown, S...... ITiuim, S....... Blake, U. C .... Bancroft, S... ( Hoffman, U. C. ' Dean, U. C.... (Dyer, U.C. ... ( Miller, U.C... Dyer, U.C. ... ( Hoffman, U. C. {Edwards, S .. Alexander, S... Barstow. S.... ( Koch. U. C. ... Patterson, U. C. ( Calhoun, S____ j Woolsey, U. C.. Morse. U. C.... I Hoffman, U. C. ( Hoffman. U. C. « Crane, S...... ( Vandyke, U. C. f Hunt, U. C. ... Peart. U. C... (Sherman, U. C. (Hunt, U.C. ... • Shermau, U. C. I Peart. U. C. ... Total 1 9i 35 Record. Eastern Intercollegiate Record. 10$ sec. 10 sec. 24$ sec. 21} sec. 521 sec. 49 i sec. 2:05$ sec. i:574 sec. 4:51 sec. 4:29$ sec. 7:255 sec. 6:52} sec. 17} sec. 15$ sec. 28? sec. 25 J sec. 6:18 sec. 6:ooJ sec. 5 ft. 8 in. 6 ft. J in. 21 ft. 7 in. 22 ft. 11} in. 10 ft. 10 ft. in. S6 ft. 8 in. 107 ft. 7J in. 36 ft. 10 in. 40 ft 9I in. FIRST FIELD DAY OF L. S. J. U. ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION. Campus, May 28, 1892. H R. Timm, A THL E TIC COM MI TTEE. A. B. Rick. G. Event. Winners. 100 yards maiden........... 100 yards dash............. 220 yards dash............. 440 yards dash............. 880 yards dash............. One mile run............... One mile walk.............. 120 yards hurdle........... 220 yards hurdle........... Standing broad jump........ Standing hop. step, and jump Running broad jump......... Running hop, step, and jump Running high jump.......... Putting 16-lb. shot........ Throwing 16-lb. hammer . . . Pole vault................. Throwing league ball .... Mile relay race (four men) . . ( C. C. Adams, ’95 ... . ■j C. A. Fernald, 95 ( W. K. Stuart, ’95. ( C. C. Adams, ’95 ... • C. A. Fernald, ’95. ( G. Calhoun, ’95. ( G. Calhoun, ’95 . . . . W. E. Stuart, 95. R. E. Maynard, ’94 . . A. E. Dickey, ’93. C. B. Whittier, ’93. H. R. Timm, ’93 . . F. S. Pillsbury, '95. J. H. Wilson,’96. 1 A. H. Barnhisel, ’93 . . W. D. Elsinore, ’95. • H. R. Timm, ’93 .... G. J. Bancroft, ’95. (J. R. Whittemore, ’92 ■ J. F. Sheehan, Jr., ’95. I E. L. Rich, ’93. J. R. Whittemore, ’92 A. Lewis, Jr., ’95. I J. F. Sheehan, Jr., ’95. | C. C. Adams, ’95 ... . ' W. L. Brown, ’95. I L. M. Burwell, ’93. A. Lewis, Jr., 95 . . . . ( C. C. Adams, ’95 ... . • J. R Whittemore, ’92. ( S. Calhoun, 95. I S. Calhoun, ’95 ... . I M. J. Hidden, 95. • S. Calhoun, '95....... lj. R. Whittemore, ’92. f C. C. Adams, ’95 lj. R. Whittemore, ’92. 1 C. C. Adams, ’95 . . . . t P. M. Downing, ’95. « E. W. Crane, 95 ... . J. W. Macruui, ’95. ( C. C. Adams, ’95 ... ■j E. L. Rich, ’93. I J. C. Capron, ’93. f 93.................... I’95. B. ClIAMI'I.IN. Record. ...............10 sec. • .............io 4 sec. . ... 23 4 5 see. .............. 55 sec. . . . 2 min. i6 £ sec. . . . 5 min. 13 sec. . . . 7 min. 33V sec. ............18)i sec. ..............29 sec. . . . .9ft. 10J in. ..........30 ft. % in. . . . . 20 ft. in- . . . . 41 ft. 11 in. ...........5 ft. Vi in. • • • 34 ft. 2% in. ..........71 ft. 7 in. .............9 ft. 3 in. .......... 345 ft. 7 in. • 3 min- 55 sec. SUMMARY OF POINTS. Class of ’92...............19 Class of ’94 . Class of ’93......... .... 32 Class of ’95 . Won by ’95. 39 1 §est Stanford Record . Event. Record. Holder. 100 yards maiden . io sec . . C. C. Adams, ’95. 100 yards dash . 10$ sec . . C. C. Adams, ’95. 220 yards dash . 23$ sec 440 yards dash . 52 sec 880 yards run . 2 min. 16J sec. . . H. R. Timm, 93. One mile run . 4 min. 39 sec. . . . D. E. Brown, 97. 120 yards hurdle 220 yards hurdle Two-mile bicycle race ... . . W. J. Edwards, ’93. Standing broad jump . . C. C. Adams, ’95. Standing hop, step, and jump . . . 30 ft. in. . . . . . A. Lewis, Jr., ’95. Running hop, step, and jump . . .41 ft. 11J in. . . S. Calhoun, ’95. Running broad jump Running high jump . 5 ft. 7 in. . . . S. Calhoun, ’95. 16-lb. shot . 34 ft. 2 in. . . . . C. C. Adams, ’95. 16-lb. hammer . 71 ft. 7 in. . . . . C. C. Adams, ’95. Pole vault . . E. W. Crane, '95. Throwing league ball . 345 ft- 7 in- • • . . C. C. Adams, ’95. 140 §est Coast Amateur Records Event. Record. Holder. Club. 100 yards dash ...... 1 V. E. Schiffersteiu ( R. S. Haley . . . . O. A. C. 41 220 yards dash . 22 J sec. . . R. S. Haley . . . 4 440 yards dash . 50! sec. . . . • • 880 yards run . 2 min. 2I sec. f F. W. Koch . . . . U. C. i F. S. Pheby . . . One mile run . 4 min. 39 sec. . . I). E. Brown . . . L. S. J. One mile walk ...... . 6 min. 4SI sec. . . H. Coffin 0. A. C 120 yards hurdle 15] sec. . . . . . W. H. Henry . . . . U. C. 220 yards hurdle . 26 sec. . . . 44 Running high jump . . . . 3 ft. 9 in. . . . . R. V. Whiting . . 14 Running broad jump . . . . 23 ft. 2 in. . . . V. E. Schiffersteiu . O. A. C Pole vault . 10 ft. 41 in. . . . G. J. Hoffman . . . U. C. i6-lb. hammer (from stand) . 89 ft. 6 in. . . R. A. C 16-lb. shot . 38 ft. 7 in. . . O. A. C A'-'7 7 J m R - GOING EARLY TO AVOID THE RUSH. 141 •World’s amateur record. TOURNAMENTS. SPRING CHAMPIONSHIPS. M. W. Campbell, ’93; L. W. Bannister, ’93 . Doubles..........March 5. M. W. Campbell, ’93.....................Singles......... March 12. TOURNAMENT TOR SURE PE CUP. (Presented by George C. Shreve Co....San Francisco.) M. W. Campbell, ’93........................................May 21. FALL CHAMPIONSHIPS. Georce B. DeLong, ’96.......................Singles...............Oct. 29. M. W. Campbell, 93; L. W. Bannister, ’93 . Doubles................Nov 5. INTERCOM L EG I A TE TOURNAMENT. Stanford, 5, vs. University of California, 4, Played in Oakland. June 3, i«S92. Kaetzel, Stanford, beat....................Johnson, University of California. Cotton, Stanford, beat.....................Hewlitt, University of California. Potter, Stanford, beat...................................Gibbs, University of California. Colc.rove, Stanford, beat..................Haskins, University of California. Small, Stanford, beat.....................Leubf.rt, University of California. Sanborn, University of California, beat.................Campbell. Stanford. Rountree, University of California, l eat..............Bannister, Stanford. Gardner, University of California, beat.................Thompson, Stanford. Stringham, University of California, beat................Metcalf, Stanford. 142 © TOURNAMENTS. SPRING CHAMPIONSHIPS. G. B. DkLong, '96; L. N. Chase, ’95 . Doubles..................April 15. L. N. Chase, ’95....................Singles....................April 29. FALL CHAMPIONSHIPS. H. B. Packard, ’97; G. M. LUCK, ’97 . . Doubles.....Oct. 11. A. W. BUMJU.BR, ’97...........Singles...................Oct. 18. STANFORD TENNIS CLUB. ORGANIZED SEPTEMBER 8, 1893. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. S. B. Durand...........................President. A. R. Cotton, Jr..................Vice-President. J. W. Thompson...............Secretary-Treasurer. Alfred Barstow, Jr, A. W. Bumiu.hr, C. L. Mac.ee, O. P. Morton. MEMBERS. D. L. Arnold, A. R. Cotton, Jr., H. W. Morse, W. D. Briggs, B. C. Conditt, Dr. Meyers, A. W. Bumillkr, C. Copeland, O. P. Morton, R. W. Blivkn, S. B. Durand, C. L. Magee, E. V. Badley, Prof. Fairclough, H. Packard, A. Barstow, Jr., A. P. Eraser, D. M. Salisbury, G. II. Cochran, J. M. Gregory, Jr., S. E. Simmons, C. D. Cr itch low, H. C. Hazzard, I). Skarles, L. N. Chase, A. T. Hosmer, J. P. Sheehan, Jr., R. W. Campbell, C. P. Kaktzel, H. C. Turner, H. J. Cox, F. K. Kkssingkr, J. W. Thompson, H. M. Cory, G. M. Luck, G. F. Vandkvkkr, T. S. Watson. M3 Womens Athletic Association. OFFICERS. F. Mabel Holsclaw, ’94.........................President. Stella Rose, sp...........................Vice-President. F. Marion Dole, ’95............................Secretary. Ada Edwards, sp................................Treasurer. BOARD OF DIRECTORS. F. Mabel Holsclaw, ’94, Elsie Shelley, ’94, Flora Hartley, ’95, Nell Hill, ’96, Lena Polhemus, ’97, Florence Cushman, sp., Miss Ayres. M. A. Patterson, sp., Flora Hartley, ’95, COMMITTEES. ARCHERY. Agnes Bell, ’95, BASKET BALL. Alberta Merritt, ’95, Agnes Bowman, 96. Lucia Lay, ’95. Agnes Bowman, ’95, Marion Dole, ’95, Wynn Coman, ’97, BICYCLING. Winifred Paine, ’95, Mrs. Wood. BOATING. Alice Cowen, ’97, Lucy Allabacii, ’95. TENNIS. Alice A. Williams, ’96, Kate L. Nash, ’95. TRACK ATHLETICS. 10 45 Jane I atI)rop Stanford. 'L j Jf ANE LATHROP, daughter of Dyer Lathrop, a merchant Vl5 ° Albany. New York, was born in 1829. At the age of twenty-one she was married and left for the West. Two years later she accompanied her husband from their home in Wisconsin to California. In the years that followed, success crowned success in Leland Stanford’s career, and the fortunate husband and wife were blessed with one child. Mrs. Stanford has herself said that until her son was several years of age she lived what she considers “ a selfish life,” although we, who know her now, can hardly believe that such words could ever apply to her. She says that she was absorbed in her own home and never thought that there were those less fortunate to whom she might be a means of help. One day a young woman came to her soliciting aid for a poor children’s school, and Mrs. Stanford was so much pleased with her appearance that she not only gave her the desired funds but went to the school that afternoon. She took gifts for the children, and was so delighted at seeing the pleasure which it was within her power to give that she immediately determined to enter upon a charitable career. She began by founding kindergartens. She has endowed those of San Francisco with $100,000, the interest from which supports six schools. Not in California alone is her popularity widespread. Probably no woman in Washington has been more admired and liked in the capacity of hostess than was Mrs. Stanford during her life there as wife of a Senator. She instituted a series of unique entertainments : at a dinner to the pages every year she presented each guest with some pretty gift; and she was no less generous at her parties in honor of the messenger boys. She was also active in the charity organizations of Washington. In various parts of the country there are eight institutions for the education of young girls which owe their whole being to Mrs. Stanford. The great gift of her life was made when, after the death of her only child, she became co-founder with her husband of the Leland Stanford Junior University. A bereaved mother and wife, she has now entered upon the entire management of Mr. Stanford’s vast estate. This is a great undertaking, but her abilities are great. S. C. JANE LATHROP 8TANFORD. Ar. Timotl) Hopkins. HK gentleman who is the subject of this sketch needs no formal introduction to the readers of the Quad, so thoroughly has he identified himself already with the interests of Stanford University. Intimately associated in business with the late Senator Stanford, there was also, in spite of the disparity in years, a large measure of personal friendship in their relations. Recognizing in Mr. Hopkins’ culture, intellectuality and broadmindedness, traits that eminently fitted him for a share in a great educational project, Senator Stanford named him in the deed of gift as one of the trustees of the new University. Subsequent events have emphatically justified the choice. Within six months from its opening, Mr. Hopkins presented his valuable railroad library to the University; at the same time making provision for its future maintenance and increase, so ample as to justify the assertion that it is to be the largest collection of its kind in the world. The Hopkins Seaside Laboratory at Pacific Grove attests the liberality of Mr. Hopkins in another direction ; this, too, has been provided with financial resources which will insure for it increasing facilities and efficiency. Monterey Bay is rich in fauna and flora hitherto almost unknown to science, and offers exceptional advantages to the student desiring to do original work in biology. The Laboratory is modeled closely after the famous Zoological Station at Naples, Italy, climatic conditions being very similar. In conjunction with this Laboratory a biological department of the Hopkins Library has also been created, having at its disposal even ampler funds than the railroad department. While Stanford University will no doubt in the years to come be the recipient of many benefactions from men of liberal culture and wise philanthropy, Mr. Hopkins will always retain the distinction of being the first so to identify himself with the cause of higher education at Palo Alto. W. M. R. 14s MR. TIMOTHY HOPKINS. BABIES ON THE ROW. learnings. THE Roble maid from her window leaned. Oh, sentimental maid! Thrilled with the moonlight power, she leaned And longed for a serenade. The maiden sighed for a song unheard,— Oh, singular desire! Music new and as yet unheard, For songs that are old must tire. The Glee Club paused on its moonlit way. Oh, singers del onair! Hut the maid yearned on in the same sad way, For she heard “ A Rosebud Fair.” Carolus Agkk. 5 1 4 I wmM md u|H [ o-yi w, ) '4: fe .,, ■ yfe!. HfrU1 1 .ft'' - T' L “ V ,'3P1 V' % ■1 PW r«P • •4 i 4 Alpha Literary 3ocief . Organized October, 1891. President . . President . President . . Vice-President Secretary. Treasurer 1891- 92. .....................A. J. Brown. 1892- 93. ................L. W. Bannister. 1893- 94. . . K. Dk Los Magee. . . A. C. Trumbo. ............ . . C. J. Newman. .................Samuel Platt. A. C. Trumbo. MEMBERS. ’94. A. R. Cotton, Jr., T. S. Warren. E. Dk Los Magee, C. J. Newman, B. D. WlGI.E, G. G. Wigle, W. M. Rose, W. C. Hazzard, F. S. Fogg, M. A. Folsom. W. G. Young, T. A. Storey, Nkllo Johnson, ’96. H. H. Brown, E. O. Clayton, J. M. Gregory, Jr. ’97- G. M. Luck, R. L. Durham, J. M. Ross, W. Bittlk Wells, Geo. R. Hill, R. J. O’Neil, H. N. Dk Wolf, Samuel Platt. 55 I Eapfyronta OtferarQ sSoCietQ. Organized January 14, 1893. 1892- 93. Second Semester. President.......................................A. M. Cathcart. 1893- 94. First Semester. President..........................................L. J. Hinsdill. 1893-94 Second Semester. President...........................................B. F. BLEDSOE. Vice-President..................................J. A. Gunn, Jr. Secretary.......................................... W. C. Tabkr. Treasurer....................................................B. P. Stanhope. MEMBERS. J. V. Bell, A. T. Foss, S. Merrill, B. F. Bledsoe, B. 0. Foster, F. W. Morrison, W. D. Briggs. E. N. Gale, C. J. Pierson, W. S. Brown, J. A. Gunn, Jr., R. L. Sandwick, B. N. Bullock, L. J. Hinsdill, W. H. G. Schulte, J. L. Burcham, J. M. Hyde, B. P. Stanhope, A. M. Cathcart, M. A. Mansfield, J. M. Stevens, J. A. Colliver, F. C. Matthews, W. C. Taber, J. Y. Field, V. A. McGeorge, M. A. Tucker. 57 Lav and Debating 5ocietY- i John C. Applknvhitk.............................President. J. A. Hoshor....................................Secretary. P. R. Frost.....................................Treasurer. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. O. D. Richardson, H. S. Hicks, W. Charles. MEMBERS. Profkssor Woodruff, J. C. Applewhite, J. A. Hoshor, P. R. Frost, O. D. Richardson, H. S. Hicks, W. Charlks, W. Doherty, E. H. Johnson, R. F. Gilliam, J. Hkrrick, Miss Hill. Infer-3ociet Debate. March 7, 1893. Congress vs. Alpha. Question : Resolved, That the Hawaiian Islands should be annexed lo the United Stales. Affirmative. Negative. Congress. Alpha. W. P. Chamberlin, a. C. Trumbo, T. R. Warren. J. M. Rhodes. JUDGES. Professor Howard, Professor Swain, Professor Marx. DECISION. 158 Aflirmalive, 2. Negative, 1. 5tanford Press CUtl Organized February 28, 1894. OFFICERS. Carl S. Smith, ............................................President. Robert L. Donald, ’95.................................Vice-President. John F. Shbkhan, Jr., ’95....................Secretary-Treasurer. CHARTER MEMBERS. Richard T. Buchanan, gr., Carl S. Smith, gr., Jambs F. Wilson, 94, Arthur C. Trumbo, ’94, Willis P. Chamberlin, ’95, Walter M. Rose, ’95, Archie B. Rice, ’95, Scott Calhoun, ’95, John F. Sheehan, Jr., ’95, William W. Guth, ’95, Robert L. Donald, ’95, Charles C. Hughes, ’95, Hugh II. Brown, ’96, Will am J. Neidig, ’96. 59 FIRST ANNUAL Intercollegiate Debate. Odd Fellows Hall, San Francisco, April 22, 1893. Stanford vs. University of California. Question : Resolved, Thai the United States should annex Hawaii. PRESIDING OFFICER. Judge W. W. Morrow. W. W. Morrow, JUDGES OF DEB A TE. Samuel Knight, Jackson Hatch. Affirmative. University of California. Negative. Leland Stanford Junior University. C. A. Reynolds, C. H. Smith, L. M. Solomons, R. L. Gruwkll, A. H. Rarnhisbl, L. W. Bannister. Decision : Unanimous for the negative. SECOND ANNUAL Intercollegiate Debate. Metropolitan Temple, San Francisco, April 21, 1804. Stanford vs. University of California. Question : RESOLVED. That the national ownership and operation iof the railroads 0 the United States •would better subserve the interests of the people than does the present system of ownership and operation by private corporations. PRESIDING OF TICE R. Judge J. N. Skawku.. JUDGES OE DEBA TE. W. H. H. Hart, J. N. Skawell, Samuel Knight. Affirmative. Leland Stanford Junior University. A. M. Cathcart, W. Dohkrty, Miss C. M. Palmer, Decision: For Negative. University of California. M. V. Samup.ls, E. M. WOLF, E. Foltz. affirmative. 11 101 Deserted Long snowy reaches where no comfort lies, An empty view to vex my weary eyes, Vague traces of lost opportunities,— This is my fate. Chill signs of sweet things gone another way, Vain gazing of fixed eyes like those who pray And have not hope ; must I forever stay Thus desolate ? Kind eyes, compassionful, look into mine And tell their helpless wish ; it is a sign I am denied the very dregs of wine And falling crumbs. Then suddenly the weary time is past; I hear the steps that cannot come too fast: My parched lips move, and cry, “Thank God, at last The waiter comes! ” Carolus Agkr. t 1891-92. W. Nicholson, 92, Editors-in-Cliief.................. C. R. Whittier, ’93, ( M. W. Greer, gr. Kditor-in-Chief . Business Manager 1892-93. .........R. T. Buchanan, ’93. .........A. H. Barnhishl, ’93. Ivditors in-Chief . . Business Managers 1893-94. ( W. P. Chamberlin, ’95, ’ W. M. Rose, ’95. ( Edward Hughes, ’95, ' H. S. Hicks, ’96. ASSOCIATE EDITORS. O. I). Richardson. gr., Edward Hulmk, ’96, Alice Cowkn, 97. Eugenia B. Mabiry, ’94. Katk L. Nash, ’95, C. M. Cram, ’96, Sami f.i. Platt, ’97. H. H. Brown, ’96, K. R. Zion, ’94. C. C. Hughes, ’95, ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS. j. P. Fife, ’96, P. Mahf.l Holsci.aw, 94. Gho. II. Brown, ’94, H. II. Brown, ’96, BOARD OF DIRECTORS. R. I,. Donald, ’95. R. T. Buchanan, gr., H. C. Turnsr, 97, Prof. K. H. Woodruff. 164 VOL. 1. NO. 1 The PUBLISHED BI-WEEKLY BY The Associated Students -----OK— Lectures Our Faculty Book Review Miscellany Editorials Locals Athletics Social Column Organization - Prof. E. H. Gkiggs Evelyn Briggs H. D. Stearns Della F. Couse Flora Love Katherine F. Evans W. B. Moulton - M. W. Greer Mattie E. Haven E. DeLos Magee LELAND STANFORD JUNIOR UNIVERSITY. GeNTENTS. Truth and Knowledge Trials and Tribulations of an Amateur Photographer i65 Leltiml Stanford Jr. University, California. Established September 19, 1892. 1892. (J- C. Capron, ’93. ( Carl S. Smith, ’93. . . . Houghton Sawyer, ’95. 1892-93. Second Semester. Editor-in-Chief........................J. F. Wilson, ’94. Business Manager.......................E. R. Zion, ’94. Editors-in-Chief . Business Manager 1893-94-First Semes fee. Editor-in-Chief.......................A. C. Trumbo. ’94. Business Manager......................W. C. Hazzard, ’95. 1893-94. Second Semester. Editor-in-Chief........................A. B. Rice, ’95. Business Manager.......................S. W. Collins. ’95. ASSOCIATE EDITORS. Scott Calhoun, ’95. Robert L. Donald, ’95. B. F. Bledsoe, ’96, W. J. Neidig, ’96, J. H. Timmons, 97. ASSISTANTS. E. C. Harwood, ’95. Samuel Platt, ’97, C. P. Cutten, ’97, T. A. Storey, ’96, HOARD OF DIRECTORS. C. D. Critchloxv, ’94, C. V. Davey, 96. J. B. Frankenheimer, '96, S. W. Collins, ’95, Shirley Baker, ’95, Samuel Platt, ’97. G. H. Hazzard, ’96, Mabel Mead, ’96. J. F. Wilson, ’94, H. Pomeroy, ’97, The Daily Palo Alto. VOL. I. PALO ALTO. CAL.. MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 19. 1892. NO. I. I a.l Tv !'. U 1m. k bad brru Ira.mVf ...li Bl.ftklll ITUS. C E in ii. ih. -ir.il i'.i-l 1'K.ilil |l. ref Ve direct.-n J ll I'Miik IVk 1 — . ui (mvIicwI Sinijr U AiIm-h ir fus-lav ledum nh.ck • Isms —Ik 130 .M. keMIe “ --------—— Ik We 111 iMfte. w«-u •'•w•« n ... 4.M. CUm- - I— I -oi- Th« Ul It '• lie mml ten (ml Manat a ill bt rrt in. TV. indtal kllm ,m.i )- ly • '« « V |«W (aitenily at the 1 M ikalVapellhiewuk by IW llinl .Ouensllllrta Fall l «. —chi in brer i rkr Kstftnla. uk.sk «. .k...i k««e-IUrb.rtSr.'K t.''— h,0 “ ■ kun In alar Tw Uy tewing bat bn wth • |Aran a (man ,n l«| nut Ike I'lhtnilt (nl opens I. an || ,k,l','i lo U —lie sal Juns« tb |«m;itr nt4 pTl i 'ri. 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Is a llm 4r- trnanl .Intaerra a iktl lbs «e|sr. innnertl 'can ks fl.-V-J I Vs Ma.lsac. k««r kl our .u IM TVI. unaorr. TVs llopkiM Ks.l.sy Library. «- ..k«s iki. al iksir r.pr.« a. lU l u.is a ir • Isr J t r ilkklss i unl an.1 psv-..lol l ' Iks Library I KtpvU s -J«lsl. nfoot is r t a.l ksir sol baa alls Jsr.nt lie .uiamrr lau Marsh, i. 4—1 ly fr— .np ami anr sa.m wary — ikr Alhlriic Pull sarsIKUi Aliks nunl la Kitrrmdr numbtr. n— Jesf a tl—aal ,.4-! after I he Ina nssdr.1 help-kick tksy I' ------------------ - -------- of ike Smlksra California Aiuaieur mart, nllk at .any ears |.ivpsnS. pr| I14 m Tbrre hr. hose arms j ' ' na Alhlriic A-nrislaae !«.■ M«nf..rtl ‘ Nr ll.-pkiaa .i.|ml. Iku 11 .kill be ull ufbviMoN a mseuar and a J—I l .l Tt.mlay ....M. al ikr tali uf KS .SI laurels Whlsaaose ue ika u.-l tnnplslscull«iViii.T it. Viol 1 In Siraukscrr C anyr.1 o. .alcb aol j Prof, Seam, sin.l .lu.lrm. m in ike I.liyanl kurilr in I J. iku. ,n rbe .«M Aaioax lie s.ai.y li.. kokl ike ra.afall it p f|—ruuf irnca , ik NailKm ic. loibliiqc an I | r. iltul; k«ma k levnllnr llr rniM.1 Ae, tiara la ikal kats krea 1— — ika rampur. , (pctnl an ttrfaairali— uktek M lake tk. pi Ike r.innint kit al ju rseri.r-i stay ke mmttaietl Ike Aanalt • - - - Veuen aa ikr Malkeaaaikal aa.1 A a. t Uansf iOfcel rltnckr. I nfOatruo. tm-lWI, and ike I' k THC ALUM. ir— saic.l Ouk TVs .Iraea of ike Mltn.rl, uko p4 Ikr tptar.tr it. ncalule. al Isarge. hoik 4 tiirtas u_ . ,,_______ . -lub t lo ut;f4.n.ni ikr tr.el 4 our I..I krM. f li|nr l kit f..rner. Nr. Met. bat pled recaeilaud marred kmnslf nttk c'«'J tV«. trJIrsti-m 4 war mi hui.lrt-l A. J. aitiaal, rice Mr Couley. Cfnkrra, I sum aa.1 tikiw aru I., da fraduatr uurk kerb I Via lie n.rde iku yuarlrr ia 11 raiy ■SI alatalKU aa.1 trirnte af« a Al Ikr Iks ikaltsa lor Iks nas of .lul.nl. ia riati ks a ar tel back three yard, (is |V( tier mV .It (art or ot X Of Iks mark, aa.1 Ikm TVs Mat autakrr of U.A. in Iks d Tf««X couplstl uilk Iks ftrt Ikal Iks IcaeV , Libsary al pcteeol I Kiasr t4s ua. Ikrre yrnla U C-C Ikon tan.I incite IM • b l ifcottltj far ht u •• • rior I U nm ytu. • f oalli’ ab « •« hk« hstairs Iks sonit year Al lie, tala taoaolsrMinn Iks fast Ikal all liias of k race al Kitcnale Maynard ihsas kats beta urdtrnl uriih a .pscaal naa not .a ira.o.a TV u(h f tut It. Iks itamnJ.alr utility ia s Talker l.ykl aUWtw kuiU. ke it. nllk or aaolksr de|iarumai 4 ike l!ai-krr.rtr.-i'pnnsru. 4s IKS k4 r-ral ansV. a man n lure bsfcsr kwt. ____________ la Iks Inner past 4 Aa(w, MVim- Ai t A4«sr...e a Ike D IL Palst , ttnirnaptcn in Iks L'attrr.Hy ky ika ' Jiunaia 4 mkynlt of (raeral iBIsr. H. II It Iks tnttalrutaS its Ouk to Mm I Kilim— aal Men Hup liaaaal Vriw kars rrle'-e-l rsc.m.1 tsar 4 rfraduac 1 A H Thua.;— amlel l«tr .. rant. ea.lsrcU.-. at nsll m ad Sal-.nlat. front an Male-, ukrrr hr t as—I Halsab Tkn I'rtdraasu and ia Isatkittf. I a«i melon util ks h-ws.iy as at Sen Mint N M Weotnartl m lss.k . j • ,K U«k ia Ikr Ota Aojtlra llyl Hekat f I. Ilurl at hams in M -on idmi, .,4 Mi- CalW tSc.rlary, l ' • Aflrr Iks slsslkn M Hnnsy read K I. tUckartkana ia iat I'arla Ut a paper on tU mb n of -NrVorie tttral rooutk ‘ n..rl a llotoartcr TVeernu Laspiape. after nknk ks u.ll katr MsniaxaUiU (lab Mil h. UUl • a ladmcionkip ia Vaadrrktti |l|l rt olarly terry nsau.| TVumlay. from t.nuy |T « «■! . in Iks Muksmaln Bs.ld- C. H AAWy.d H Xenaaa and ‘ f Al tit Ikurulay sa-ei'ns Mr. A. II Waakn.n «m rlscvl IW I67 I Tf)e Stanford Qoad. Published Annually by the Junior Class. ABRAHAM LEWIS, JR.. Editor- in - C h ief. N. G. BUXTON. Business Manager. E. DE LOS MAGEE. ARCHIE B. RICE, Associate Editors. KATE DOROTHY HERRICK, Secretary. LESTER HINSDILL. LEWIS N. CHASE, Sta tis tics. A thie tics. SHIRLEY BAKER. DONALD H. FRY, Humorist. Artist. •This, the fin i volume, will be followed by mi annual publication edited by each succeediiiK Junior class. 168 -_____w Cncriish Club of 1591-92. Professor M. B. Anderson, Professor M. W. Sampson, Professor A. G. Newcomer, A. B. Thompson, M. W. Greer, R. T. Buchanan, J. W. MacCormac, J. V. Busby, Miss E. L. Dickinson, Miss Lucile Eaves, Miss Grace A. Luce, Miss Flora C. Love, Miss L. F. De Laguna, Miss H. L. Stadtmui.ler. Aerr -Cio-Roand of 1592-93. Miss G. A. Luce, Miss Kate Herrick, Miss Eugenia Maybury, Miss Sarah Kirby, W. P. Chamberlin, C. K. Field, R. T. Buchanan, C. M. Cram. Philosophical oociet . President .... Owen D. Richardson. Secretary.Miss Harriet Eaves. MEMBERS. Professor P'. H. Griggs, O. D. Richardson, Miss Harriet Eaves, Miss Mary Polk, L. C. Cornish, Mrs. I. A Miss Winifred Harper, Mrs. L. Maitland, Miss Mary Burke, Miss Mabel Mead, Miss Clara Vostrovsky, . Harper. 170 Congress Organized 1891. 1891-92. President of United .States....Professor Geo. E. Howard. First Semester. Speaker Clerk Second Semester. Speaker J. Clerk . . . W. M. Rose. 1892-93. President of United States First Semester. Speaker . , Clerk Second Semester. . . .J. Paul Fife. Speaker Clerk . E. H. Hughes. L. J. Hinsdill. before tl)c §all Jack : You should see, when those girls pass me by in the Quad, The amount of affection they put in a nod. I’ll wager, Joe, each one would jump at the chance To he taken by me to the Senior dance. Joe: Well, ask May or Emma, or one of the set, And just for the fun, Jack, I’ll take your bet. Belle: Jack is sweet to us all, yet I can’t help but see That Joe’s adoration’s accorded to me. Such a personal smile, such a soft, tender look He gave me to-day when he picked up my book ! He’ll ask me, of course, so I really can’t go To the Senior with Jack, though it’s mean to say no. Emma : I hear he asked Belle first, and then came to me; And I think he is horrid as horrid can be. Cousin Joe, wheu he asks me, won’t try such mean pranks ; So there, Master Jack, you’re declined, without thanks. May : Joe confessed that he’s not to take Belle, so I’m free To be privately sure he intends to ask me. He’ll be over to-night, he said. Now to send back A short note to Encina. I’m real sorry, Jack. ack : What ails all those girls, I should just like to know, With their “other arrangements”—three jilts in a row. But I’ll get the best of my friend Joseph yet; Grace lives in the city, but she’s in that set. Grace: Dear Jack, I feel sorry to answer you “ No,” But I was invited a week since by Joe. Some girl in your set will supply my place. My waltzes arc promised already. Yours, Grace. H. L. S. I h |e Prisoned Thmo it Cored,, tillfye-1 se it§ Jluttertn r, u as a Li y. 3 j uc n. izs , jr e.' avoay. C. C. Thomas. D. G. Stkattosc. w. t. Yovnc. II. P. Cray. t. k. vvarrrm. c. b. Pink ham. M. II. KkNNRDY. J. A. Gl'NN. SlflRLKY BAKKK. L. H. SMITH. C. II. Cot HRAN. C. I.. MAORR. II. J. Cox. II. Harris. L. N. Chasr. II. D. WIGLK. 1893- Shirley Baker .......................................President. H. J. Cox.............................................Manager. (Shirley Baker, Geo. D. Stratton, C. L. Magee. Geo. D. Stratton. Chas. B. Pink ham Guy H. Cochran . H. J. Cox....... Shirley Baker . . Musical Committee 1894. .........................President. .........................Secretary. .........................Treasurer. ...........................Manager. .........................Leader. {Shirley Baker, Geo. D. Stratton, C. L. Magee. First Tenor: Shirley Baker, J. A. Gunn, Jr., M. H. Kennedy. First Bass: Geo. D. Stratton, C. B. Pinkham. L. H. Smith, W. T. Young. Second Tenor: C. L. Magee, B. D. Wigle, H. P. Gray. Second Bass: Guy H. Cochran, H. J. Cox, T. S. Warren. GLEE STRING QUARTETTE. First Violin........C. C. Thomas. Viola..........Geo. D. Stratton. Second Violin . . . . L. N. Chase. Cello..........C. L. Magee. Accompanist, Henry Harris. CONCERTS. Stanford University, Chapel................................May 12, 1893. Sacramento, Congregational Church..........................May 25, 1893. Napa, Opera House..........................................May 26, 1893. Petaluma, Petaluma Theatre.................................May 27, 1893. Stockton, Yosemite Theatre...............................Oct. 21, 1893. Oakland, First Congregational Church......................Dec. 8, 1893. San Jose, Unitarian Church................................Dec. 15, 1893. Stanford University, Chapel...............................Mar. 2, 1894. 77 1 WOLM . Wills. K Al l MAN CoOK. rOKIKN. Tksi.ka. Leader....................................W. Bittlk WELLS. Treasurer.................................W. L. Trh.GKA. (W. Bittlk Wklls. Executive Committee.....................• Henry Harris. I W. L. Trkgha. First Mandolin : W. Bittlk Wells, T. K. Code. Second Mandolin: F. E. Kkssingkr, A. G. Kaufman. Flute: Henry Harris. Guitar: W. L. Trkgea, G. B. Wilson, F. C. Wolff, M. S. Porter. Cello: S. W. Young. ‘79 ■ v: '• Leader, Miss Louise Amksbury, Ethel Bishop, Lucy Brim, Mary Burke, Alice Cowbn, Mabel Cory. Bertha Chapman, Blanch Freeman, Alice Hays. Jane Herrick, Maud Jones, Griswold. Maud Kittridge, Ida Little, Gertrude Larish, Grace Morgan. Kate Nash, Frances Rand, Emma Rand, Minnie Reeves, Maude Stinson, Olive Williams. Winnifred Webb. 180 Organized November, 1893. Conductor: H. D. Connick. Piano: Samukj, Platt. First Violin: W. BiTTLE Wells, A. V. Schubert. Second Violin: W. A. Stafford, E. L. Rbichbnbach. Viola: R. K. Culver, Geo. D. Stratton. Cello: S. W. Young, C. L. Magee. Bass: Geo. B. Wilson. Flute: W. A. Knowles, Jr., E. B. Hoag. Clarinet: S. E. Simmons, J. H. Wilson. Cornet: H. F. Dyer, M. W. O’Brien. French Horn: N. B. Schofield. Trombone: A. G. Kaufman. Drums: Chas. B. Pinkham. 181 Leader: (1893) A. G. Kaufman, (1894) Geo. B. Wilson. Drum Major: C. A. Thomas. Solo Cornet: H. F. Dyer, M. W. O’Brien. First Cornel: S. Platt, T. S. Watson. Second Cornet: J. A. Gates, W. H. Harrklson. Eb Cornet: A. H. White. Piccolo: W. A. Knowles, Jr. Flute: Henry Harris. Solo Clarinet: S. K. Simmons. First Clarinet: J. H. Wilson. Second Clarinet: W. Bittle Wells. Fib Clarinet: H. D. Connick. First Alio: H. P. LANGILLE, L. J. HiNSDlLL. Second Alto: S. J. Jokisch. Third Alto: W. H. McCord. French Horn : N. B. Scofield. First Tenor: J. A. Rice. Second Tenor: E. E. Farmer. lib Pass: K. L. Reichenbach. Slide Trombone: E. James, A. G. Kaufman, J. M. Langford. Valve Trombone: E. O. Clayton. Pantone: H. W. Morse, I). A. Porter. Tuba: W. L. McGuire. Flugel Horn : G. W. Cuthbertson, G. B. Wilson. Snare Drum: C. B. PlNKHAM, M. L. ANFENCER. Pass Drum and Cymbals: Shirley Baker. 182 Faculty Au tcal Club Mrs. E. W. Phase, Miss Ellen Lowell, Miss Eletcher, Miss M. S. Avers, Professor II. Mrs. M. R. Smith, I)r. Campbell. Miss Merrick, Mrs. H. B. Lathrop, R. Eairclough. COS CURT. University, Chapel................Jan. 16, 1894. Cbapel Cboir. 1891- 92. Chorister......................................... K. L. Rich. Assistant Chorister............................Miss Clara Avery. Organist....................................................C. L. Magee. 1892- 93. Chorister and Organist......................................C. L. Magee. 1893- 94. Chorister................................. . . Mrs. M. R. Smith. Organist..................................MlSS Alice WHEELER. Tl e Song- of the Fresbmon. When first I came to school, fa. la. When first I came to school, I thought to live by rule, fa. la. I thought to live by rule. I thought to study night and day. To read untiringly, And from the girls to keep away— Alas! 'twas not to be. When they tripped into class, fa, la. When they tripped into class, I saw a bonny lass. fa. la, I saw a bonny lass With roguish eyes and flying curls. And when she smiled on me Forgotten were the other girls— Alas! she smiled on me. How can I choose but sigh, fa. la. How can I choose but sigh, That truant thought will fly. fa, la, That truant thought will fly ; And when I should be reading Greek. Improving precious time, I’m dreaming of her dimpled cheek, Alas ! and writing rhyme. I cannot keep my place, fa, la, I quite forgot my place, For thinking of her face, fa, la, For thinking of her face. Whichever way I cast my look Her laughing eyes I see ; They dance between me and my book — Alas ! she smiled on me. Snow Maiden. Tf)e Rivals HERE’S such a racket round my room ! The fellow under me Has frequent fits of doubt and gloom, In which condition he Upon a ’cello wails, as though It were the voice of one below Where souls in torment be. There is a poor asthmatic flute That wheezes on my left; If some fine day the cruel brute Should find himself bereft, The record angel. I dare think, Would write me up in colored ink And love me for the theft. A man who plays the cornet shrill Is quartered overhead; Its piercing voice is never still: I swear he plays in bed ; But when he tackles “ Robin Hood ” And plays it like a dirge, I would That one of us were dead. A singer dwells upon my right, Last, but by no means least, Who celebrates in song each night Some sweetheart now deceased ; And though his grief may be profound, His upper notes, it seems, would sound More musical if greased. What have I done that these should join To make my fortune worse? Is there no way, for love or coin, To rid me of the curse ? The brightest day that dawns for me Shall be the one on which I see The noisy flock disperse ; For though within my room alone For hours I have stayed And practiced on my big trombone, It’s time lost, I’m afraid ; The racket round my room is such I really cannot tell how much Improvement I have made. Carolus Agf.r. F ec eption Committee Qa r] S. Smil'h, Qh airman Wa) 1 i c ( S Fans RT Buchanan C° rn m i 11 € e r e.K essin cr CA O ! r m O n. X S. W d I 5 0 n VNo',man 1 G(6 Miss L.Doro f Steffen s Mi 5s Mar_y Burfcc W. M. R o s c r R. Dray J. James Hollisier 189 19° T fin D £r Rfr D by tl? CLASS to K )t CLASS COMMITTEE. W. L. TREGEA, W. H. KNOWLES, Jr., MABEL MEAD, LAURA STEFFENS. MABEL COOMBS. 191 192 The Co-ed 3ono . Air: Milkmaid’s Son . —Robin Hood. I. OH, the ideal co-ed is a thing of books, A creature of brain entirely ; With stooping shoulders and studious looks She digs all day and half the night. People say she’s wondrous bright, But her figure's an awful sight! Her thoughts arc deep in the classic past, She only thinks of “A. B.” at last; She’s fled this world and its masculine charms, And a refuge found in Minerva’s arms. II. Ah, the kind of co-ed that you describe Is a co-ed seen very rarely ; The real co-ed is a thing of grace, With dainty figure and winsome face. She walks and rides, goes boating too, Nor digs if there’s anything else to do. For her each month is a round of joy, A. B.” means nothing if not “A Boy.” And you and I must yield to her charms, And take the place of Minerva’s arms. Caroj.us Agkk 3 93 Society at Stanford. TX URING the first year, society at Stanford, like everything else, J was in a rather unsettled state. Until the latter part of the second semester, there were no large parties whatever, and very few small ones. An occasional reception, perhaps, like the Martha Washington, where boys in abundance were the chief attraction, perhaps heightened a little by girls in quaint costumes, with powdered hair, or a reception to the Faculty, where there was no chief attraction at all, but a most monotonous dullness, comprised the society events at first. Of course the Faculty had “evenings at home,” where the studious and intellectual congregated, but it seems incongruous to include the thoughtful atmosphere of the Row in frivolous society. There is a certain practice common at church socials and grammar-school exercises of keeping “the best for the last” on the programme. This practice, like many other old customs, leaves its impression on the rising generation, and frequently marks the great deeds of maturer age. Stanford proved no exception to the rule. Society reached its climax at the end of the year in the “ Phi Psi ” banquet at the Vfcndome ; the hop at the Adelante Villa, where staid professors, who had almost forgotten how to dance, and unsophisticated little maidens, who were just learning, skipped gaily about to the fascinating strains of the music ; and a hop at Roble Hall, which was really a transformed reception, being entirely unexpected. The second year began a new' chapter, and a very different chapter, headed by some such little rhyme as, “ Ho, then, for jollity, fun and frivolity.” There was a general air of gayety pervading even the receptions at Roble and at the Row. The afternoon teas which the professors’ wives gave to the Roble young ladies and the Kappa Alpha Theta “At Homes” were hailed with delight, and justly so. A new feature of the year was the Halloween parties,—one given by the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, in the music rooms of Roble, and a second given by another group of girls, not a sorority, in the diningroom. The games and decorations in both were very unique and ghostly. But “when music arose with its voluptuous swell,” and hops were no longer an unfulfilled dream but a delightful reality, then indeed Stanford felt the pulse of frivolity beating quick and fast. There were the charming parties given by the Phi Gamma Delta 94 Fraternity in their new home, where not only the love of merriment and dancing was gratified, but the love of the picturesque and the romantic, with the long bus, the short, bumpy drive, then the swinging lanterns, like fireflies, flitting about in the trees, and the hosts in their dress suits receiving on the alluring porch. Other fraternities were not behindhand. The “ Phi Psi, ’ the Sigma Alpha Epsilon and the Phi Delta Theta gave very enjoyable dances. The Kappa Kappa Gammas once more delighted their fortunate friends by a party given in Oakland at the Misses Chapman’s home, and, of course, all leading to the grand climax, the Zeta Psi Hop, given at the V6ndome, which was simply fascinating—in fact, to make use of manly slang, ' perfectly swell.” The Junior and Senior hops given at Encina Gymnasium were also complete successes. Alas ! that pleasure should be so shortlived. If life were only a perpetual Junior Hop, philosophers could never wonder again whether or no it were worth living. Interspersed among the hops were the card parties at Lauro Hall and at the “ Phi Psi ” House. At Roble there was a regular whist club, organized by a group of girls, slangily called “The Combination.” This whist club used to meet once every six weeks, and the art of silence was rapidly being brought to a state of perfection, when the second semester ended, and thus the second chapter closed. When, three months later, the third chapter began to be written, it seemed as if the actors had grown older and more demure. Mrs. Braly at the Row still received, and deserved great credit for it, as her “At Homes” were the one pleasure to be regularly anticipated, and never wrongly so. The hops and card parties were fewer and farther between. When they did come, they lacked something they had had the first year. The poetic nature might quote Wordsworth now, and explain the lack on a purely imaginative principle, but the practical nature says briefly, ” Boys.” The receptions alone existed, nay rather thrived and prospered, on burnt chocolate, High Teas,” and an overabundance of what the hops, according to the practical one aforementioned, lacked. At present the year draws rapidly to its close, but the great question of the Junior and Senior hops cannot yet be discussed. The chapter seems unfinished without them, but Edison has not yet placed before the public his patent on a reading-the-future instrument; so unfinished it must remain, for the society events stop here, perhaps “ to be continued in our next.” i95 K. D. H. • nt- Established in Alameda. Holy Srnohers. Past Grand Master .... Doctrine Monroe. Chief Lord of the Weed . Bunker Hill. Guardian of the Pouch . . Bill Neidig. Recorder of Cans......Son-of-a-Gunn, Jr. Collector of Putts....Boss Magee. Confirmed Fiends. R. “Golden Scepter” Ballard, C. “Climax” Fife, B. “Pet” Foster, E. “Straight Cut” Magee, C. “Pastime” Ray, “Mastiff” Sox, C. “Lone Jack” Thomas, “Little Corporal” Van Dknburg, P. “Plug Cut” White, P. “Admiral” Young. 196 Organized February 6, 1894. President...................Chester L. Magee. Vice-President.......................C. E. Sox. Secretary and Treasurer.....Oliver P. Morton. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. C. E. Sox, Oliver P. Morton, Chester L. Magee, Nello Johnson, G. F. Vandevber. MEMBERS. G. P. Baldwin, W. D. Briggs, F. V. Brooks, C. S. S. Burnell, C. J. Dudley, R. L. Durham, Nello Johnson, W. H. McCord, C. L. Magee, A. C. Montgomery, O. P. Morton, H. P. Pearson, C. E. Sox, T. A. Storey, G. F. Vandevber, D. S. Watson, G. E. Woodworth. 197 :n['• QIE 1CE CLOBW y Organized January ii, 1894. President . Professor F. Sanford. Vice-President................Professor O. P. Jenkins. Secretary.......................Professor W. J. Hussey. Professor Professor Professor Mr. L. A. Professor Professor Professor Professor Professor Professor Professor Professor Professor Professor MEMBERS. M. B. Anderson, Dr. D. S. Jordan, F. Angell, J. C. Branner, Buchanan, D. H. Campbell, A. P. Carman, W. R. Dudley, H. R. Pairclough, C. H. Gilbert, r. L. Green, C. W. Greene, E. II. Griggs, W. J. Hussey, O. P. Jenkins, Professor C. N. Little, Professor F. M. McFarland, Professor C. D. Marx, Professor J. A. Miller, Mr. D. W. Murphy, Professor F. A. C. Perrinr, Professor G. M. Richardson, Professor E. A. Ross, Professor F. Sanford, Professor J. P. Smith, Professor H. I). Stearns, Professor J. M. Stillman, Professor M. E. Taylor, I)r. Thos. D. Wood. PAPERS PRESENTED. Professor Fernando Sanford—“Some Speculations upon a Theory of Electricity.” Professor John M. Stillman — ‘‘Some Modern Tendencies of Chemical Science.” Professor J. P. Smith—“The Pacific Carboniferous Province.” Professor F. M. McFarland — ‘‘Some Studies in the Mechanics of Development.” Professor W. j. Hussey—“Some Projections Observed upon Mars.” 198 Organized 1893. OBJKCT—For mutual recreation in professional lines. HONORARY MEM HERS, Prohkssor Chas. D. Makx, C. E., Propbssor Lsandrr M. Hoskins, Professor Chas. B. Wing, C. E., Mr. J. C. L. Fish. OFFICERS. President............................. Van Norman McGkk, ’95. Vice-President......................George Draper Stratton, ’95. Secretary and Treasurer...................Nathaniel Ei.lkry, 95. MEMBERS. Shirley Baker, ’95. Robert I Amy Donald, ’95. Elbert Ripley Dart, ’95, Ernest G. Hamilton, 95, Newton Booth Knox, ’95, Walter Harold Kirkbridk, ’95, Horace Martin Leabbettbr, ’95, D’Arcy Alan Porter, 95, 199 'Olj President...............B. D. FrankenFIELD, 95. Vice-President...............P. M. Downing, ’95. Secretary....................J. T. Langford, ’95. Treasurer.................. L. H. Gilmore, ’94. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. H. C. Thaxter, ’94, A. H. Burnett, ’95, E. E. Farmer. ’95. MEMBERS. R. H. Manahan, ’95, E. W. Crane, ’95, E. C. Hayward, ’95, J. R. Thompson, ’95, A. R. Sawyer, 95, F. M. Watson, ’95, R. Crowell, ’95, D. H. Fry, ’95, M. W. O’Brien, ’95. G. L. Woodworth, ’95, W. S. Hyde, ’95, T. H. Pomeroy, 95. 200 n u Zoological Ctab. 1892- 93. President......................................J. Van Dbnburg. 1893- 94. President......................................J. M. STOWELL. Secretary.............................................A. Seki.k. Secretary Department Mammalogy......................W. W. Price. Secretary Department Ornithology......................J. M. Hyde. Secretary Department Herpetology.............J. Van Denburg. Secretary Department Ratracliians...................C. RUTTER. Secretary Department Ichthyology...........W. W. THOBURN. 5tadents' Cooperative Association. Organized 1891. 1891- 92. President........................... Manager............................. 1892- 93. President........................... Manager............................. 1893- 94- President .......................... Vice-President...................... Mauager and Secretary............... . . C. L. Clem has. . . . A. J. Brown. . . . A. J. Brown. . . . . E. L. Rich. . . S. W. Collins. . . P. L. Entlp.r. E. I)e Los Magee. Geo. H. Brow C. C. Thomas, C. J. Pierson, G. A. Luce, BOARD OF DIRECTORS. N, W. P. Chamberlin C. K. Jen ness, Prof. C. D. Marx, Prof. S. J. Brun, Dr. A. G. Warner. 201 Organized June 15, 1892. OFFICERS 1892-93. President.........................Charles Kellkv Jknnkss, ’92. Vice-President ...................Willis Grant Johnson, ’92. Secretary ...................Nancy Margaret Woodward, ’92. Treasurer......................... Alvah Beech Thompson, ’92. OFFICERS 1893-9,. President.........................Charles E. Cox, A. M., ’93. Vice-President....................Jessie E. Russell, A. M., ’93. Secretary.............................Clei.ia D. Mosher, ’93. Treasurer.............................Charles W. Greene, ’92. Republican Club. 1891- 92 President.............................. J. R. R. TregLOAN. Delegate to Ann Arbor Convention ........J. D. Wallingford. 1892- 93. President............... . ..............C. H. Hogg. Delegate to Louisville Convention..............A. J. Brown. 893-94. President........................... Vice-President .... Secretary............ ... Executive Committee................... Delegate to Syracuse Convention .... . . Geo. H. Brown. . . . . E. M. Rea. . . A. G. Ruddkll. 1 W. C. Hazzard. E. De Los Magee. . . . L. H. Smith. President . . . . Vice-President . . Secretary . . . . Treasurer . . . Democratic Club. 1892-93. ...... ......W. P. Chamberlin. . . . John C. Catron. .........W. M. Rose. .......................F. B. Wooten. 202 Uoung Aen’s Christian (Jssociation. 1891-92. President 1892-93. President 1893-94. President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer . . . . D. L. Arnold. ... W. P. Gifford. University Christian Association. 1891-92. President 1892-93. President 1893-94- President Vice-Presidents Secretary Treasurer ... C. C. Thomas. ( Winifred Webb. I Harriet Cory. . Paul H. White. loang Women's Christian OFFICERS. Association. 1893-94- President Vice-President . . Corresponding Secretary Treasurer . Winifred Webb. . . . Louise Culver. Kate Nash. . . Maud Kitridgk. A la Louvre I’VE left college and you’re still there. Spending money while I am saving ; But once in a while we two meet where The steps lead down from the city paving, And there we talk of the life each knows, The sun and wind of the college weather,— We three friends, while the evening goes, You and Pilsencr and I together. Pilsener’s a jolly, congenial chap, Surtiamed Schlitz, and found wherever They keep the best of this world on tap, Sparkling always, unpleasant never. And what if alike to all he be A l oon companion ? Who cares a feather So long as lie makes our number three,— You and Pilscner and I together. I went out into life last May,— Only a space, but it seems much longer; Change comes quick when one goes away. Pleasures weaken and cares grow stronger. And so, when chatting again are we, I doubt a little and wonder whether This means to you what it does to me,— You and Pilsener and I together. Carolus Acer. Uncertainty. OH, papa, dear, the Junior Hop Is coming after Easter, And may I have a satin gown, Or India silk, at least, sir? My daughter, ere this boon I grant, One small request I make thee : Name me the fond, devoted youth Who to this hop will take thee. Oh, papa, dear, I have not yet Received an invitation, But boys are boys, and most of us Now live iu expectation. M. B. J. A bonnet. A WINDING sheet, a dead march for the brave, A soul gone out to meet its God alone, A mother’s tears, a widow’s heartsick moan, A work unfinished. Corals shade his grave, And sea-moss shrouds him. In a kingly cave He lies. Nor hills more friendly locked in stone, Nor silk cocoons more soft, in May-time grown, before the summer frees the textile slave. O give me, Star, my rest beneath the sea ! There let me lie, and let the breakers roll, And hollow caves, like belfries wild and free, In palpitating peals my requiem toll ; But grant me first my work may finished l e— No unripe seed when death attacks the boll. W. J. N. 205 Memorial Da . Leland Stanford Junior University flDap 14, 1892. PROGRAMME OF EXERCISES. 7:30 P. M. IN TIIK CHAPEL. Music..........................................Quartette Club. “The Mission Days in California” . . President David Stakr Jordan. “The Mission Architecture” . . . Professor Mary Sheldon Barnes. Memorial Address...............Professor Edward Howard Griggs. Music.............................................Quartette Club. BENEDICTION. m a£ 14, 1893. PROGRAMME OF EXERCISES. 7:30 P. M. IN THE CHAPEL. INVOCATION. Music .... “Lift Thine Eyes” .... From the Elijah of Mendelssohn. Mrs. Pease, Mrs. Smith, and Miss Lowell. Essay..................................“The Arcadian Age in California.” Mr. E. Dr Los Magee. Music.......................“ Crucifix ...........................Faure. Professor Campbell. Memorial Address.........................“A Dream of the Renaissance.” Professor William H. Hudson. Music....................“The Lord is Risen”.....................Sullivan. Mrs. A. W. Smith. BENEDICTION. 206 The Children of California Shall Be My Children.—Leland Stanford, 1884. Leland Stanford Junior University. ftoemortal firerctees. FOUNDERS' DAY, MARCH 9, 1894. PROGRAMME. Music—“ Evening Prayer”.................Stanford String Quartette. Prayer..................................... . Professor A. B. Show. Memorial Ode............................Professor A. G. Newcomer. Address.......... ................Hon. Horace Davis, San Francisco. Music What are these that are arrayed ”............Mrs. A. W. Smith. Address....................Rt. Rev. Joseph J. Keane, Washington, D. C. Address..................... Hon. Benjamin Harrison, Indianapolis. Music— Our Days on Earth ”....................Stanford Glee Club. BENEDICTION. 207 Junior Day Exercises. APRIL 13, 1894. Under the ’95 Oak. Selection.................... Address of Welcome........... Response..................... Selection.................... Response .................... Selection.................... Response..................... Response..................... Dedication of the ’95 Oak . . ‘ OO A. M. ................ Stanford Band . W. A. Stafford, President of 95 A. R. Cotton, Jr., President of ’94 ..................Mandolin Club ..............B. F. Bledsoe, ’96 ................ Stanford Band . . . J. M. Ross, President of 97 ............L. J. Hinsdill, ’95 ...... Miss K. D. Herrick Theatricals. Encina Gymnasium. r.oo p. M. “H Change of Ixart.” A Society Drama In Three Scenes. By CHAS. K. FIELD. '95. CAST. Queen Urban, a college girl of the period Daisy Mkadowes, a fair outsider . . Mrs. Freeman, a modern mother....... Ruth Roble, Belle Walker, J College girls....... May Squeezer, ) Archie Freeman, a college man of today Bob Dasher, his chum................ Peter Saintly, an article of virtue . . Jack Potts, Dick I.usch, ■ College men......... Phil Upham, J ..........Maud B. Jones. ............Grace Davis. ........ Lucy Allabach. Bertha Chapman. . Mabel Packard. i Alberta Merritt. . . . Samuel E. Simmons. .........Shirley Baker . . . . Charles K. Field. 1M. H. Kennedy. George I). Stratton. Lewis N. Chase. SCENE : Archie Freeman’s room in the house of the Hi Phli fraternity. 1. Nig t. The Debauch. 2. Afternoon. The Reformation. 3. Evening. All’s Well that Ends Well. Mandolin Club Kindly Assists. Ye Bold, Bad Boyes (Junior Day, Friday, April 13, 1S94.) JUNIOR HOP GUYED. FOR THE BENEFIT OF DEBUTANTES. Guests are expected to change boots for pumps in the lobby. Zetas who chew tobacco will please bring a piece of physics lecture-room floor to spit on. None but fraternity men will be permitted to speak to the ladies. People with dirty hands will wear white kid gloves. Fijis whose laundry is held “ in hoc ” will appear in borrowed shirts. The Fididdles will conduct a prayer meeting on the balcony and return thanks for having a nose (Smythe’s) on the floor committee. The Fisighs will remove superfluous moss in the ante-room. The Sigma News will be furnished with spoons and mugs at the refreshment table, thus avoiding their customary feast of sword-swallowing and glasseating. J. G. Bancroft will give an imitation of the celebrated danse du derrierc, which he performs daily on the cinder track. Amorous Bovine Rats will be compelled to leave his Plymouth Rock Pants signs at home. At intervals the lights will be dipped for the benefit of V. Ninny McGiny. Guests will be permitted to gaze on the face of the chairman of the committee free of charge ; contrary to general impression it is a real face, imported from New York for the occasion. Guests having trunks at home need feel no uneasiness, as Colonel Jewhitakers Crackers Applesauce (assisted by the late Thunder and Lightning Pickier) 1 is performing his celebrated turkey-trot at the Mudwinter Fair. The barbs, having performed all manual labor for the occasion, will be permitted to occupy seats in the balcony while the animals perform on the floor. N. B.—Chlorine gas will be turned on at 1:00 a. m. sharp. (Signed) F. E. K. u 209 University Calendar 1893- Sept. 4 Monday. . Sept. 5 Tuesday ) Sept. 6 Wednesday ) Sept. 7 Thursday . Now 30 Thursday ) Dec. 3 Sunday ( Dec. 21 Thursday . 1894. Jan. 8 Monday . Jan. 9 Tuesday. Feb. 22 Thursday . Mar. 9 Friday . Mar. 23 Friday . . Mar. 24 Saturday | Apr. 1 Sunday ) Apr. 3 Friday . May 14 Monday . . May 23 Wednesday May 24 Thursday ) May 26 Saturday J May 27 Sunday . . May 28 Monday. . May 29 Tuesday. May 30 Wednesday Sept. 3 Moudav . . . Sept. 4 Tuesday | Sept. 5 Wednesday ) Sept. 6 Thursday . . Sept. 7 Friday . . . Nov. 24 Thursday ) Nov. 27 Sunday ) Dec. 21 Friday . 1895. Jan. 7 Monday . . May 29 Wednesday . . Entrance examinations begin. . Registration of matriculated students. ( Registration of new students, i Instruction begins. . Thanksgiving recess. . First semester ends. . Registration for second semester. . Instruction begins. . Washington’s Birthday. . Founders’ Day. . Midwinter Fair Day. . Easter recess. . Junior Day. . Memorial Day. . Instruction ends. f Entrance examinations at I’alo Alto ( and other appointed places. . Baccalaureate Sermon. . Class Day. . Alumni Day. Commencement. j Entrance examinations at Palo Alto ( begin. . Registration of matriculated students. . Registration of new students. . Instruction begins. . Thanksgiving recess. First semester ends. . Registration for second semester. . Commencement. 210 Statistics. Graduates ......................................................S4 Undergraduates : In Regular Staudiug................................ 499 In Partial Standing .... 151 — 650 Special Students............................................... 241 Total (men, 678; women, 297)............................ 975 IRcstoeitce. California . . . 576 Oregon . . . 60 Washington • ■ • 37 New York 3 Indiana . . . . . . . 28 Illinois . . . 26 Iowa ... .24 Ohio 18 Missouri .15 Nevada ... 14 Colorado . . . . 10 Pennsylvania 9 Kansas . . . 7 Wisconsin . . . 7 Montana ... .... 6 Arizona ... 5 District of Columbia . . . 5 Maine 5 Massachusetts • 5 Nebraska 5 Vermont .... • • 4 Idaho 3 Minnesota . . • • 3 New Hampshire 3 South Dakota .... 3 Utah 3 Kentucky Michigan .2 New Jersey .... 2 New Mexico ... ... 2 West Virginia .... .... 2 Arkansas .... 1 Florida Mississippi North Carolina . . . South Carolina . . . . 1 Tennessee . . 1 Texas ... 1 Virginia 1 Canada . . .14 Japan . 8 Hawaiian Islands . . 7 Brazil .... 3 Germany ... 3 Denmark Scotland . . 2 France . . 1 Ireland ... Italy .... 1 Mexico ... 1 Russia England 211 Hopkins Seaside D}aboratorY. Professors Jenkins and Gilbert, Directors. 5HE Hopkins Seaside Laboratory, founded by the liberality of Mr. Timothy Hopkins, of San Francisco, has been established as a branch of the biological work of the University, and holds its sessions during the summer months. The buildings are located at Pacific Grove, two miles west of Monterey, and stand on a low bluff immediately facing the sea. They consist of two-story structures capable of accommodating about eighty students, and contain four general laboratories, one lecture room, and six private rooms for special investigators. They are provided with aquaria and running water, and all necessary facilities for biological study. The library and apparatus of the University are available for use in the laboratory. During the present year the biological library has received a large number of valuable additions. SESSION OF 1893. Professors Jenkins and Gilbert. Assistant : Mkssks. McFarland, Prick and Shaw. A TTENDANTS. Howard Ayers, Ph. D., Director of the Lake Laboratory, Milwaukee, Wis. Mrs. Frona Alexander, Academy of Sciences, San Francisco. Evelyn Briggs, student in Chemistry, University. William Briggs, student in Chemistry, University. Stewart Daniel Briggs, A. M., graduate student in Physiology, University. Grant Calhoun, student in Physiology, University. C. I). CR ITCH Low. student in Physiology, University. Angelina Chambaud, Teacher in Santa Rosa Public Schools. Henry P. Hammond, student in Physiology, University. Henry Harris, student in Physiology, University. Ernest B. Hoag, B. S., graduate student in Zoology, University. Frf.d Hadley, student in Physiology, University. H. A. Kiefer, student in Physiology, University. Mary K. Kinney, Instructor in Physiology, State Normal School, San Jose. George W. Luckby. student in Education, University. F. Lillian Matson, student in Physiology, University. Frances L. O’Meara, Teacher in Santa Rosa Public Schools. Keinosuke Otaki, student in Zoology, University. Stella Rose, student in Physical Training, University. Norman B. Scofield, student in Zoology. University. C. W. Treat, A. M., Professor of Natural Science, Napa College, Napa. John Van Dexburgh, student in Zoology. University. Henry T. Woodward, student in Physiology, University. Margaret Wythe, Teachea in Orkland High School. 212 University Extension. LECTURES. 1. Evolution.—Six lectures in San Francisco; three lectures in Los Angeles; two lectures in San Jose. President Jordan. 2. Modern Poetry and Modern Thought.—Seven lectures in Oakland. Professor Hudson. 3. Literature and Life.—Three lectures in San Francisco. Professor Hudson. 4. Evolution in Relation to Religion and Society.—Three lectures in Santa Clara. Professor Hudson. 5. Studies on Children.—Four lectures and four conferences in Santa Rosa. Professor Barnes. 6. Psychology of Childhood.—Five lectures and five conferences in Oakland; three lectures and thee conferences in Stockton. Professor Barnes. 7. Masterpieces of Greek Sculpture.—Eight lectures in San Jose. Professor Walter Miller. 8. Ethics and Literature in the Public Schools.—Five lectures in Napa and in Red Bluff; three lectures in Yuba City. Professor Griggs. 9. The Labor Problem.—Three lectures in Oakland; eight lectures in San Jose. Professor Ross. 213 University Preachers, l $93-94.. Mrs. HennBRITTS Skelton, San Francisco— Living for Others. The Rev. T. H. B. Anderson, Fresno— Life and Immortality.” The Rev. Thos. Filben. San Francisco— The Gospel of Christ.” The Rev. Wm. Rader, Oakland— The Power of Christianity.” The Rev. Horatio Stbbhins, D. D., San Francisco— The Right and Necessity of Courage in Believing.” The Rev. Frank H. Foster. Pacific Theological Seminary— Hungering aud Thirsting after Righteousness.” The Rt. Rev. Wm. F. Nichols, D. D., San Francisco—Baccalaureate sermon. Professor W. W. Thoburn—(i) The First Question;” (2) Character through Struggle;” (3) Prayer.” The Rev. Geo. E. Walk, San Francisco— A Good Name. Professor John Dickinson, Pasadena— Thinking toward the Best. The Rev. Geo. B. Hatch, Berkeley— Worship. Professor M. S. Cross, University of the Pacific— Seeing the Invisible.” The Rev. N. H. G. Fife, Pasadena—“ Moral Heroism.” Professor Wm. E. Ritter, University of California—“Spiritual Truth and Moral Truth.” The Rev. J. Herndon Garnett, San Jose— The Nurture of the Inner Life. Mr. K. Lawrence HUNT, New York City— Thoroughly Furnished. The Rev. H. T. Briggs, Los Gatos— A Natural Question and a Reasonable Answer. The Rev. Gf.o. Wallace, San Mateo— Man’s Relation to God.” The Rev. Bp. Daniel A. Goouseli., D. D., San Francisco— The Testing of Christianity.” Professor Joseph Lk Conte, University of California— The Relation of the Church to Modern Scientific Thought.” Rabbi Jacoii Voorsanger, San Francisco— God the Anchor of Faith. The Rev. Edward B. Spalding, D. D., San Francisco—“The Secret of a Noble Life.” The Rev. Thos. F. Burnham, Vallejo— Service the True Aim of Life.” The Rev. M. C. Briggs, Petaluma— What is Man that Thou art Mindful of Him ? ” The Rev. Leslie W. Sprague, San Francisco—“The Essentials of Religion. The Rev. Arthur Crosby, Mount Tamalpais College— A Well-spent Life ” The Rev. M. L. Haines, D. D., Indianapolis, Ind.— The Law of the Manna. Mr. Herbert Miller, Stockton—“ Heaven.” The Rev. W. A. Brewer, San Mateo—Easter sermon. 214 University Lectares, 1593-9 . Professor Walter Miller—(i) Greece and the Greeks of Today;” (2) Johann Joachim Winckletnann.” Professor Melville B. Anderson—(i) James Russell Lowell;” (2) “ Poetry and Modern Life.” Professor Henry A. Todd— An old French Romance.” Professor Oliver P. Jenkins— The Origin of the Senses.” Dr. Frank B. Eaton, Portland, Or.— The Eye, from the Standpoint of the Physician and of the Patient. Mr. John T. Doyle, Menlo Park— Early Explorations in the Santa Clara Valley.” Professor Charles F. Kent, University of Chicago— The Study of the Bible.” Professor Earl Barnes—(1) Brother Jonathan;” (2) A Study of Children's Drawings.” Professor John Dickinson, Pasadena— Changes of a Half-Century.” Professors Warner, Howard and Ross— Hard Times.” Professor William H. Hudson— Science and Poetry.” Professor Edward A. Ross— The Need of Unsuccessful Men.” President David S. Jordan—(1) Evolution of the College Curriculum ; ” (2) Staudeth God Within the Shadow.” Professor Edward H. Griggs— The Ethics of Hamlet.” Professor F. A. C. Pkrrink— An Inside View of a College Settlement.” Professor Augustus T. Murray— Euripedes.” Professor Emory E. Smith— A Day in Africa.” The Rev. A. J. Frost, I). I)., Los Angeles— The Wonders of the Yosemitc.” Mr. John Vance Cheney, San Francisco— A Feast of the Gods.” Purnshotam Rao Telang, Bombay, India—“ Manners and Customs of India.” Prince S. Wolkonsky, Russia — (1) The Parliament of Religions;” (2) Impressions of America.” Mr. C. A. Stetefeldt, Oakland— Education.” Mr. B. S. Pague, San Francisco— Meteorology.” Miss Jane Addams, Chicago— The Hull House.” Mr. Charles W. Reed, San Francisco— The Municipal Government of San Francisco.” Mr. E. Knowlton, San Francisco— Oliver Wendell Holmes.” Miss Harriet Hosmer, Rome, Italy— The Treasures of the Vatican.” Miss Margaret Schallenbkrgf.r— Children’s Rights.” Professor B. Nagarkar, Bombay, India— Mental and Moral Traits of the Orient and the Occident.” Professor Fernando Sanford— Artificial Rain-making.” President F. W. Gunsaulus, Armour Institute, Chicago — Religion in Intellectual Life.” The RT. Rf.v. John J. Keane, Washington, D. C. — The Educational Outlook.” Professor Henry B. Lathrop— A Prince of Liars.” «5 T IS the north wind that blows apace, 1 And stings his frosly breath ! The sky is turned to a solid gray ; A lone pine bends in the gusty winds And creaks and tugs at its anchored roots, Trembling from trunk to ends ; Some weeds reluctant drag the ground, Tearing the wind with a whistling sound, Or roll and turn and tumble and bound : And the winged flakes join in the race, And whirl and wheel in eddies round Until they reach Elizabeth— The lost Elizabeth. Elizabeth was on her way Home from the wedding of a friend, Where she had played a bridesmaid’s part; Serene as any balmy day That spring or autumn time can lend Was this bright morn : so, with glad heart. She lightly tripped her homeward course, Unheeding the warm wind's gathering force. But what so sharp against her cheek ? She starts, aghast—long miles from home None better know than she the taste Of rising storm. The wind is bleak And raw, for o'er the prairie waste All unol structed does it drive, Thriving as mountain torrents thrive. 216 O woe to the tender-tinted rose When the wild blizzard tears and blows Down the mad millrace of storm ! ’Tis the north wind that blows, and blows, And quickens pulse, and breath, and pace ; ’Tis he that drives the graiti l snows, And steals the blood from out her face, And binds her temples warm ! She fights—bewildered—failing fast— Half turns and shrinks from the icy blast--Now save her, God, from harm ! The storm-imps laugh from the bitter gale, And howl at her their dismal tale. And hurl at her their bolts of hail, Until she sinks in piteous plight, Her cheeks benumbed, and hard, and while,— It is a freezing storm. Bright eyes before her strained gaze hover, Lighter than lightest snows that fall ; Her body neither feels nor weighs, But goes where’er her fancies call : Conscious of but a drowsy ease— Then conscious not at all. Blow, blow, Ye cold Alaska winds, Ye cannot freeze my lover ! My love lies warm in the drifted snow— Blow your ends to tatters, Ye chilling, dreary winds, Ye cannot have my lover! The fleecy bridal veil e’er shifts, And falls and lifts, and falls and lifts, While through her hair the white snow sifts, And pillows the frozen ground ; With garments hoar from winter’s store The bride the north wind covers o’er, And heaps caresses on the mound— The slender mound the snow whirls round— And it drifts, and drifts, and drifts. O warm the burdened, silent earth— The living, dying, changing earth— Life’s intricate domain ! The drifted snow has flowers below', But storms must beat and tempests blow And springtime come and dead things grow, Ere one unfolds again ! 217 EOPLE wonder why it was a tie. Some lay it to the Fates, others to the Stanford coach or the Berkeley mascot; the true story has never yet been told. Olive Vincey was visiting Stanford. She was a tall, supple girl, with hair like burnished gold, and eyes of a peculiar, variable blue. With her dazzling white skin and queenly figure, she seemed a statue animated by divine fire. Miss Vincey was versatile, brilliant, intense, though not without the melancholy common to youthful reformers, who despair of a wicked and refractory world. She was used to the homage of men: that nine-tenths of her masculine acquaintances should fall in love with her seemed natural,—a sort of requital to her for the task of existing. Though the Stanford youth all adored her, (despite her enthusiastic loyalty to Berkeley), her favorite was Harold Somerville, a senior in biology, hitherto considered unsusceptible, except to the wooing of science. He was a tall, dark, athletic young fellow, adored by girls, respected by his professors, and admired by all as the champion football player of the Coast. Into his love for Olive he threw the strength and fervor hitherto expended upon football—and fishes. From roseate dreams of the future, peopled with Synthloborhamphus wurmuzuzame, he awoke to the sweeter reality of woman—“a creature half human, half divine”—lovelier than a dre m of fame, and more fascinating than science. They had flirted at Coronado,—if flirting be strolling seaward.— discussing Browning, ranging from Darwin to dress reform, yet feeling an undercurrent of harmony which a few congenial souls know. But that was in summer, and now college life, with its exacting demands, claims them. As Harold stands by a variegated flower-bed in the quadrangle, this day before Thanksgiving, he is a complete stranger to her heart. Olive’s mocking eyes are on a geranium in her hand. The fact that Stanford’s most popular man has just declared his love seems not to disconcert her in the least. Throwing down the red geranium, she picks two blue and yellow blossoms. “ I came near deserting my colors,” she murmurs. “ Do not be flippant, dear,” he says; ‘‘answer my question.” A mischievous sparkle flashes from her eyes. “ Prove your love,” she challenges : “ I am yours, if- Berkeley wins to-morrow.” The championship game was to be the next day, and upon Somerville chiefly depended Stanford’s victory. Yesterday, he would have staked his life that his college might win ; to-day, he knew that his happiness depended upon Stanford’s losing. Hamlet’s struggles seemed puerile compared to his. All night his pride and honor struggled with his love. Excited visions passed before him in panoramic succession. He saw himself borne upon the boys’ shoulders, victorious, as Olive’s fair face faded away into cloud-wreaths and disappeared. Again, he was the happy recipient of her beaming smiles, while his Alma Mater cast him out-of-doors—in disgrace ! Though the heavens poured forth rainy invectives against football, the amphitheater was filled with a mass of moving cardinal, blue and yellow, resembling a titanic crazy-quilt, agitated by voluble pigmies. The rain poured, the crowd roared, and mammoth tin-horns slivered the air with their din. The coaches, containing the much-be-banged heroes, drove majestically around before the excited multitude. 219 Then began the game. Twenty-two mothers’ darlings rushed into the arena, in padded trousers, false noses and disordered hair, to begin their task of mutual mutilation. From a Berkeley tally-ho Olive viewed the game, with an expression of triumph, which became one of startled displeasure as it progressed. Never was such playing seen before. The men fought like tigers for every inch, while Somerville, with compressed lips and pallid face, played magnificently. It was Stanford pluck against Berkeley luck. The “ U. C’s M were ahead. Time was flying. The Stanfords, within a few feet of goal, were forced back by sheer strength. Suddenly, with head down, Somerville dashed through the line, striking men away with sledge-hammer blows. A Berkeleyan had flung himself upon him, but with one superhuman effort he plunged on and made a touch-down. The score was sixteen to sixteen. The crowd rose cn masse, and screams, hurrahs, and blasts from horns rent the air. Cardinal flashed. Old men danced upon rheumatic feet; small boys, mistaking each other for footballs, practiced kicking imaginary goals. One callow youth slapped his neighbor upon the shoulder, crying, “ Hurrah for Stanford,” and never knew it was the President of Berkeley. Soon the crowd was hushed, and every breath held, to see the goal kicked. As Somerville prepared to win the two points which would mean victory for his college, and defeat for his love, he cast at Olive one despairing glance. At first, Olive’s pride had been sorely hurt at Harold’s open defiance, but gradually admiration overcame vanity, and she felt ashamed of her foolish cruelty. As he looked appealingly at her, she leaned forward eagerly, with parted lips and sparkling eyes, and waved her flowers excitedly as a sign of encouragement. Alas, they were gold and blue ! ‘'She flaunts her colors,” he thought bitterly, and summoned all his force for one supreme effort to save his University. But the long mental and physical strain told upon his nerves; at the critical moment, they failed him ; he missed the goal, and time was called. 220 Thus, a glance of a maiden’s eyes defeated a man’s strong will, and marred the brilliant record of a great University. Christmas came. Olive was again visiting Stanford. She had not seen Harold since the game, but felt that he must despise her. He had secluded himself in desperation. However, he determined to make one last appeal to her. They were walking on the quadrangle by moonlight, and Harold’s most subtle arguments had been skillfully parried. “It was upon the condition that Stanford lost,” she insisted. “ But Berkeley did not lose,” declared he ; “ it was a tie.” Then he murmured something about a tenderer tie between Berkeley and Stanford,—and other things which need not l e chronicled. Olive ignominiously struck her colors,—lowered them to the height of a man’s shoulder. In hair, eyes and cheeks, the tints of the two Universities were harmoniously blended. And as her proud head rested against his heart, its rhythmic throbbing sounded something like this : Rah, rah, rah, Rah, rah, rah, Rah, rah, Stanford ! I 221 “ First ear at Stanford.” (A Panoramic Farce, being the first student theatricals.) PROLOGUE. “ ' PO judge from the jolly crowd I see, I Roble will get her library.” “ You think the audience fun ? Just wait Till the players begin to elaborate Your private adventures with skill and tact, And real life studies in person act; Just wait, I say ! ” “ Hush ! there’s the ring Of the prompter’s bell.” The play’s the thing. I. PIONEERING IN THE ROW. No rug, no dish, no bedding, No water and no light; No soap, of course no towels, No furniture in sight; No chimney and no cooking-stove, No hammer, hatchet, nails. No pictures, books, no music,— Ah, yes, the pussy wails ! No food but crackers : friends to tea, No ice, nowhere to go; But, oh, the fun that we did have, Pioneering in the Row. II. FIRST ARRIVALS AT ROBLE. We ate at Encina, We longed for the post, We scolded the bus-man For packages lost; We washed in a bucket, The hallways we’d roam, We foundtmt our room-mates, We cried to be home. Though the light should be better, The water be cleaner, We ‘ recalled our advantages,” For we ate at Encina ! 222 III. STUDY BY CANDLE-LIGHT. • Pesky Latin !” “ Hateful French !” How those candles sputter !” “ Let’s quit and tell characters “ First, crackers, jam and butter.” Here's fun, and truth, and variety ; (Boys, ain’t this a treat!) Grasshopper, banjo,—Rap ! rap ! rap ! Puff! Darkness reigns complete. IV. THE EARTHQUAKE AT ROBLK. Mercy ! Horrors! Am I waking? Swaying, shaking, Vases breaking! Wildly quaking Maids come flocking, Walls are rocking, Cries, all tremulo crescendo, Mistress comes—(diminuendo). “ You must be patient and put up With little inconveniences. Think what’s been done for you, my Remember your advantages!” V. encina’s first reception. Dripping, dripping, dark and dreary. Slipping, tripping, cold and skeerv, Homeward to the lights of Roble, Maiden helpeth maiden nobly. While upon the wind it groaneth, “It was from Encina’s first reception, We were coming home alone !” Fainter yet it waileth, moaneth. From Encina’s last reception, We are coming home alone!” INTERMEZZO. Fire ! Fire ! Clear the way !” “ We’ll all be burned, I’m certain !” “ Pray be seated,” says the hero. Pulling down the curtain. 223 VI. DANCING AS IT IS. Encina. Heavens ! what a funny sight, What a noise ! Nothing there but shirtsleeves white, Oh, poor boys! RobU. Hear you sound of merry waltzes Floating outward in the gloom ? Maiden efforts to be happy In a joyless, bovless room. VII. WHKN GRKBK MKKTS GRKKK. “ Gin a body meet a body Cornin’ thro’ the Quad, Gin a body see a body, Can’t a body nod ? Ilka lassie has her laddie, E’en tho seeking knowledge, Stanford girls are just like those In every other college.” Gin a body meet a body On the cement walk, Gin a body greet a body, Can’t she stop aud talk ? Sweeter far is conversation Iu the open air, Than on Fridays iu the parlor, When the matron’s there !” VIII. A MEETING OF THK FACULTY. Some power a naughty giftie hath to ithers gi’en, We see oursel’s, at last, as ithers us hae seen. EPILOGUE. A storm of loud applauding, A surging sea of shout! With tears within their laughing eyes, The merry throng goes out; A straggling program flutters, A far-off song one hears, At last,—well, even the lights go out, And the seats rise up in tiers. —H. L. S. 224 TI)e Evidence in tl)e Case of 1 r. Felmer, — — JHERE were five of them; there had been only four until Jimmy Fielder came in. The atmos- phere was hazy, and part of it had escaped into the corridor,—which may account for Jimmy’s visit, for he was a smoker himself. Bob’s “boudoir” was the typical Encina room, and its walls bore evidence to the habits of “ original research ” and industrious acquisition of the occupant. Over the stationary washstand was the legend, “ For Use in Case of Fire Only, ’’while the wardrobe was evidently “ For Sale in Subdivisions.” It was the usual Friday night crowd, and they were all in good spirits. The bowl on the table was nearly empty, but there was enough for Jimmy, and they stopped the game of cards and began to ” Well, Jimmy, tell us a story,” said the man with the eyeglasses, after an interval, as he reached for the can of tobacco. “A Stanford story of course,” added the man with the moustache, stretching himself upon the bed. “ Lathrop asked us to do that in English VIII,” responded Jimmy, “and I wrote something I heard about Jack Felmer. Do you remember him ?” ” Oh, yes,” said the senior; “ we hunted snaps together the first year, and I coached him in the science of billiards—smoked cigars at his expense the whole year. He was a great fellow for ponies—kept a regular stable.” “ Was he the man Gus used to write themes for? ” asked Bob. “The same.” “ Gus is always telling about him; he says he was good game.” “ He was the man that played the part of the ‘ unwelcome guest ’ at the Roble masquerade,” said the man with the eyeglasses. i 225 talk. “ How was that ? ” asked Jimmy. “Why, he went one evening to call on his girl, and no one came to answer his ring. Concluding that the hall-girl was taking a nap, he walked into the lobby, but found nobody in sight. He was of an optimistic disposition, however, and accustomed to overlook little cases of negligence, so he went upstairs and found that they were having some kind of a social event. A great many young ladies were flitting about in highly pleasing costumes, and a confusing number of strangely attired young gentlemen, none of whom he recognized, were likewise within range of his vision. He was looking for some one to announce him, when one of the strangers stepped up to him, stopped short, squealed like a scared mouse, and ran. There was a flutter of portieres, a rustle of drapery, and Mr. Felmer found himself in an environment of solitude and silence. He looked himself over to see if there was anything abnormal in his make-up, and finding nothing unusual, except his state of mind, was concluding that he had been treated to a vanishing phantasmagoria specially prepared for his benefit, when a matronly woman appeared from somewhere, and in a frosty voice, informed him that the young ladies were not at home,—which of course rendered his self-analysis still more difficult. He preceded the lady downstairs, however, and when he reached the walk the lock clicked behind him.” “ ‘ And he never came back any more,” hummed Bob. “ Let’s have the story, Jimmy.” “ All right,” said Jimmy, “here it is.” A Stanford Episode. Mr. Jack Felmer came from Chicago, and had the distinguished air peculiar to people from that city of fresh lake breezes. But pretty Jessie Mays had been reared in the salty climate of San Francisco, and as the blase Mr. Felmer was considered an extremely desirable acquisition, she soon had him at the end of a ribbon. He took her on 226 composite picnics to Searsville and to the baseball game in San Jose. In all his association with her and with other girls, he succeeded so perfectly in conveying the impression that he had never had a thought nor a dollar that his father, or some one else, had not given him, that he acquired greater popularity every day. He might, perhaps, have retained this popularity until the present, had it not been for a stringency in the stock market,—and his exhibition of bad form in taking Jessie Mays to Griffin’s for ice cream. It was on one of these occasions that they happened to be sitting near a couple of Roble girls. Mr. Felmer was not a brilliant talker, and the conversation flagged. Duriug a lull he heard something like this from the girls : “I know she’s awful poor, because she works so much, and she has only three dresses to her name.” “ Yes, and they say her father is awfully disreputable, and her mother isn’t much better.” 227 “You know she used to be a waitress in a restaurant where they sell beer, and the men talk perfectly dreadfuj in those places.” “Awful, isn’t it? and she’s so poky, too.” “ She studies though.” “ Oh, yes ; she’s a hard student.” “That damned her, didn’t it?” said Mr. Felmer, as they walked out of the saloon. “ What are you talking about now?” asked Miss Mays. “That girl that’s a hard student,’ and works so much, and has a what-d’ye-call-it father and so forth.” “What did?” “ Being a ‘ hard student.’ ” “ Why, no; poor child, she does work so hard, and now she thinks she’s got to leave because her money’s all gone and she can’t earn enough to pay her way.” “ Why don’t you lend her some then ? ” “The idea!” “ Who is she?” asked Felmer. “ Miss Blink.” “ Don’t know her.” “ Oh, no, very few do. She’s not in it at all. I feel awfully sorry for her, for she’ll have to go back to that horrid work, and she wants to be a teacher.” Now Mr. Felmer thought it exceedingly queer that any one should be so strangely situated. He knew that many men of his acquaintance were hard workers, but he looked upon them as the victims of an unpleasant habit or a kind of disease. Work, with the definite aim of attaining a future or getting away from a past, had never been contemplated for him. He could not think it out at all, so he called upon the gentleman whom he usually employed to do his thinking, and had it explained. A few days later, as little Miss Blink opened an envelope bearing the San Francisco postmark, and addressed to her in a strange 228 handwriting, she came upon a couple of banknotes. The accompanying letter stated that the writer, a middle-aged gentleman of means, who had become acquainted with her aspirations, and had no immediate object in life, begged the favor of furthering, in some measure, her efforts. Once a month during the remainder of the year Miss Blink received the same kind of a letter, with the same explanation. The next fall it was rumored among some of Mr. Felmer’s acquaintances that that gentleman had met with financial reverses. Anyway, there appeared among the “ quads” of the Daily Palo Alto, this item of news: Jack Felmer will not return this year. And in the same column was the following : Miss Blink will remain away this year. “ I know what Lathrop will say about that,” said Bob. “What?” “ ‘ Lacks movement; plot not sufficiently elaborated ; rewrite.’” “Well, if that’s all of the story,” said the senior, “let’s wake that—over there on the bed.” For the man with the moustache was asleep. “ No, hold on,” said Jimmy ; “ let’s paint him some whiskers.” And they did. 229 Innuendo. The gentle one who used to Ik The Mistress of Kncina Hall Was wildly startled once to see A bottle through her transom fall. Next day with trembling lips she told The story to a Prof., and said, A bottle that had once held beer Passed through my transom overhead ! ” A wily gleam illumed the eye Of this well-educated Prof.; He asked, “Which way ?” “Good gracious me The lady cried, and sidled off. KENNEDY. “,T«rn backward, turn backward, I O Time in thy flight! Your motion for Fancy is too speedy, quite. However, though late at the doors I may be. There's a little door downstairs that’s open for me. And the steward and I on the subject agree.” ISodalys. APPI.KWHITK. Great legal light of laundries, yet unmatched; (’.real elephant, with several trunks attached! MAYNARD. A col-fox full of slyc iniquitee That in this grove had woned yercs three.” WOOI.RICH. Please, mister, stop this cruel joke; I'm not a minor, let me smoke.” COCHRAN. Maiden, observe the grace of me,— My drooping head, my wondrous hair. Come out into the Quad and see Me do my fancy wheeling there. Upon my charms all girls agree; Your co-ed heart must conquered be. The beau in me shows everywhere, Legs not excepted,—so, beware ! 232 MURPHY. ' Behold me. scion of the Irish kings ; ‘One of the finest’ in the line, of course; Swell, happy head ! Think what pernicious things I now may do. since I am 'on the force.’” CAMPBELL. My ‘innards,’ so I often hear it said. Are fearfully and wonderfully made; And I myself must own my masticatory Apparatus is my chicfest glory. Upon my vest I think I’ll hang this sign : Continuous performance all the time.’ ” MONROE. ’ A wondrous freak am I, and wicked boys rejoice At the bigness of my beard and the sweetness of my voice. ZION. Hail. Anarchy ! to thee my vows I pay. Than I no braver, bloodier butcher walks; Hasten the time when farmers rule the day, And wipe the ground with them that cat with forks.” 33 WILSON. I like full well to pull upon the wire. And have my different irons in the fire cox. ••I wish it clearly understood My pants were rolled up purposely. Lest I should wet them In the flood Of sour I knew was soon to be ” RliA. Tom Williams is my model, and, of course, The noblest of all animals, the horse. When I nm exiled from the dear old stable I sport one in the class-room when I’m able. RU8SKLL. Here is a man who is easily chapped. He'd best buckle down or he'll find himself strapped.' KKATINO. “ A frank, confiding soul is one That should be hidden here; The man who will for office run Must drown his woe in beer ; I toasted once ‘the twenty-fifth man,’ HARRKLSON. Since when I plainly see, ” Although I'm but a shrimp in size. That one of my legs is longer than I'm a lobster big in my own eyes.” 11 rca, ’ ought to be.” 234 4 BROOKS. “Did Dr. Jordan get my telegram ? I didn't sec him when I left the train ; If he but knew what big bugs are my chums. He’d come and make an effort to explain. VAN DENBURGH. Hey. little blond-headed, pink winged Cupid, Actions like yours in a love-god are strange. Say. have you found that the old ways grow stupid What is the meaning of all this change ? MAGEE. M Now. Gladstone was a mighty politician. And thought hts ax ahead of a physician : So I. in stature small, but tall in gall, Shall emulate the strength of Tammany Hall, And any rivals shall severely catch it. When I begin to work my little hatchet.” CHIP RAY. “ Ye Gods ! this is the smoothest way to live, And get the greatest joy that life can give ; Aha ! with what a radiant redness glows The college color in my Grecian nose ! Give me the gentle, sweet, seductive night. Pull down the shades against the morning light, Until I cry (with Swinburne) about noon, ‘ Oh God. oh God, that day should be so soon ! ’ 235 POSTERS I-ooli art my Ifitmt, itt satis t bt m song. The Faculty. Faculty : “ I can easier teach twenty what were good to l e done than to he one of the twenty to follow my own teaching.” —Merchant of Venice. M. B. And-rs-n: “ It cracked and growled, and roared and howled, Like noises in a swound.” —Ancient Mariner. A. G. N- vc-m-r: ‘‘You write with an ease to show your breeding, But easy writing’s cursed hard reading.” —Sheridan. A. W. Sm-th : Mary, I must lienee to the barber ; My hair waxeth exceeding long.” —Romeo and Juliet. Fr-nk Ang-l: “ What’s in a name.” —Romeo and Juliet. Ew-rd Fl-g-l: I have been thinking, George, of changing my traveling dress.” —She Stoops to Conquer. 236 —Rabelais. F-sh : 141 am just going to leap into the dark. C. D. M-rx: 44 Though this may be play to you ' Tis death to us.” E. H. Gr-cgs: • That bright smile haunts me still.44 D. S. J-rd-n : 44 He said I was a fish-monger.” —L' Estrange. —Popular Song. —Hamlet. Graduate? apd Class of '94. F. W-LK-NS-N : ‘‘Tall, handsome, slender, but well knit.” —Shakespeare. J. V-nd-nb-gh: 44 Themes of innocence amuse him best.” —Byron. D-r-n : 44 Linked sweetness long drawn out.” —Milton. C. K. J-n-s : 44 He hears merry tales and smiles not; I feel he will prove the weeping philosopher when he grows old, being so full of unmannerdly sadness.44 —Merchant of Venice. J. K-t-n-g: “Say, old man. I’ve got a long pull with the faculty, Gad.” - 237 —Familiar Ad. J. C. H-mm-l: Chew Climax Plug. E. R. Z-N : “ He who holds no laws in awe.” —Byron. L-R- Ds L-g-na : ' With just enough of learning to misquote.” —Byron. C. S. Sm-th : A self-made man ? Yes ; and worships his creator. —Clapp. Class Of '95. W. C. H-zz-rd : “ Toadies and Gentlemen : You must remember that all large bodies move slowly.” —Hazzard. K. L. N-sh: ” Selected for discretion and devotion.” —Don Juan. M. H. K-nn-dy : ” He missed the pathway, he forgot the hours, And when he looked upon his watch again, He found how much old Time had l een a winner. —Don Juan. I). B. Fr-nk-ld : “ Laugh when I laugh ; I seek no other fame.” — Byron. C. K. H-TH-NG-N: ” Am I my brother’s keeper? —Bible. F-nk Dr-y : ” ’Tis better to have loved and lost, Than never to have loved at all.” —Tennyson. Ai,-r-d P-LL-k : ” Bury him in the corn field ’neath the green, green grass, With a straw in his mouth to let off the gas.” —Anon. C. S. S. B-n-ll: Awkward, embarras«ed, stiff, without the skill Of moving gracefully, or standing still, One leg, as if suspicious of his brother, Desirous seems to run away from t’other.” —Churchill. F. E. K-SS-NG-R : Be thou familiar but by no means vulgar.” —Hamlet. C. C. H gh s: Sigh no more, ladies, sigh no more.” —Shakespeare. Ed. R-a : ” He unlimbered his tongue and cursed like a bishop.” —English Bards and Scotch Reviewers. 238 —Byron. Sh-l-y B-k-r: “ I am the unhappy subject of these quarrels.” W. H. H-R-LS-N: A little scrubbed boy.” —Merchant of Venice. A. G. W-LR-CH : But just a pound of flesh.” —Merchant of Venice. G. W. Sc-tt: ' I think he bought his doublet in Italy, his round hose in France, his bonnet in Germany, and his behavior everywhere.” —Merchant of Venice. S. E. S-MM-NS: “The glass of fashion and the mould of form, the observed of all observers.” —Hamlet. E. D. Gr-vk : His watch he traded unseen, one day. And smoled a smile sublime ; For in the place of an empty case He won a large piece of time.” —Anon. F. A. (Ffrris) H-rtm-n: “ A moonstruck, silly lad, who lost his way.” —Byron. C. L. M-g-k: “Am I not a man and a brother?” —Byron. J-M-s L-ngf-rd: “ How pass your Sunday.” 239 H. F. S-p-r: “ Not Hercules could have kuocked out his brain, for he had none.” —Shakespeare. E. G. H-m-lt-n : “ Yes, sir; supper, sir: I begin to feel au appetite. I shall make sad work to-night in the larder, I promise you.” —Shakespeare. App-l-wh-te : ” My mind to me a kingdom is ; Such present joys therein I find That it excels all other bliss That earth affords or grows by kind.” —Dyer. J. J. H-ll-st-r : ” Good-by, proud world, I’m going home.” —Emerson. N-LL- W—d : It is not good that man should be alone.” —Bible. C. K. Fi-LD: I may tell all my boues.” —Bible. W. M. R-s- : “So, then, you have no turn for politics, I see.” —Goldsmith. O. M-rT-N : But what am I ? An infant.” —Tennyson. E. C. Ew-u,: “ Admire and sigh, and then succumb and bleed.” —elnon. W. E. St-rt: “ Blessed is the man who, having nothing to say, abstains from giving us wordy evidence of the fact.” —George Eliot. 240 V If Oa?? of '96. W. W. P-tt-r: All this of Pot and Potter; tell me, then, Who is the Potter, pray, and who the Pot ' E. L. R-ch-b-ch : A mighty man of muscle was he ; Yea, a man to be feared and obeyed. J. Y. F-LD: “ A bold, bad man.” R. W. Bl-v-n: A school-boy freak, unworthy of praise or blame.” C. M. Cr-m : He will answer to the purpose Easy things to understand.” —Omar Khay am. —Anon. —Byron. — Byron. —Byron. C. R-y: ” In reason he should never come to heaven ” R. W. C-mp-i.l : He studied steadily and grew apace.” G. H. C-chr-n: “ There is a world of meaning in his sidelong glance, For sometimes he looks upon his books.” Rd-rd H-lmk : ” A self-appointed critic.” —Byron. — Byron. —Don Juan. —Anon. R-y B-m-rd : Oh Mirth and Innocence, oh Milk and Water.” —Byron. Clas? of '97. CLA88 MOTTO: “ How green we are and fresh in this old world. —Byron. F. An-d-d- : Yet he was kind, or if severe in aught, The love he bore to learning was in fault.” —Anon. Ar-G-l T-m.- : “ If a thostle sing, he falls straight a-capering.” —Shakespeare. G. E. St-le: “And when false flowers of rhetoric thou wouldst cull.” —Byron. H. C. T-rn-r : “ And I, who know all things, fear nothing.” —Anon. Co-eds. “ The woman of a thousand summers back.”—Byion. L-li.- R-i.-y : ' How happy is the blameless vestal's lot! The world forgetting, by the world forgot.” —Pope. £Poo N§ A-ck C-W-N : “ Love seldom haunts the breast where learning lies.” —Pope. M-nn- R-v-s: ” Fie, I swear her color’s natural; I have seen it come and go.” —Sheridan. Gr-c- D-v-s: “ Red as a rose is she.” —Ancient Mariner. M-L Mk-d: ” It would l e spoke to.” —Hamlet. —Anon. “The Comb-n-ti-n United we stand, and seem powerful; Divided, we are as naught. N-LL- H-ll: God made her, and therefore let her pass for a man. —Merchant of Venice. A. N. H-ys : “ The lady doth protest too much, methinks. —Shakespeare. M-b-l P-ck-rd : A simple child that lightly draws its breath. — Wordsworth. I-rm- Gl-v-r : “ ’Tis good in every case, you know. To have two strings unto your bow. —Churchill. Gr-C- R-d : “ Look on l eauty and you shall see ’tis purchased by the weight.” —Merchant of Venice. Gr-c- B-k-r : So are those crisped, snakey, golden locks Which make such wanton gambols with the wind Upon supposed fairness often known To be the dowry of a second head. —Shakespeare. U-c-L E-vs: “ Then she will talk, Great Gods how she will talk. —Anon. W-n C-m-n : “ A man’s a man for a’ that. —Bums. W-nf-i) H-rp-r : Costly thy habit as thy purse can buy, But not expressed in fancy ; rich, not gaudy [?]. —Hamlet. M-I.L-E B-rk : “ She is a woman, therefore may be woo’d ; She is a woman, therefore may be won. —Shakespeare. Ann- L-lk : Eccentricity is not a proof of genius ... —Robert Browning. L-tt- St-ff-ns: She swore she longed at college, only longed ; All else was well, for he-society. —Tennyson. Euciua “ Dorm and Roble Dorm A railroad term recall; With precious freight they represent The long atid the short hall! W. H. A i$cellaoeou?. Add-rs-n : Bluff! Bluff! Bluff! With a voice like the lion's roar, You make us all tired ; When we once get you fired. May we see your sweet face nevermore ; Old man, may we see your sweet face nevermore. —Anon. S-GN-. N-. Fr-T- : “ No, sir ; I have long given that work over. Since our betters have hit upon the expedient of electing each other, there is no business for us. —She Stoops to Conquer. Roblf. Reception : The ice was here, the ice was there, The ice was all around. —Ancient Mariner. Roni.K Hall: I do stir about a good deal, that's certain. Half the differences of the parish are adjusted in this very parlor. —Shakespeare. “ Shapes that must undergo mortality.”—Byron. PR-F-SS-R R-SS, D-R-N, gr., B-NCR-PT, ’95, C-MPB-LL, '96, P-RY, ’97. Junior Hop Committee: “ I pray you, to the press I call, Why did Rice lead the Junior ball ? —Anon. Mrs. H-rp-r : As though a rose should shut and be a bud again. —Keats. The Glee Club Serenade : We tiptoed down the two-plank walk to serenade the girls ; Their lights went out, their heads hung out with frizzly uncombed curls. We sang to them like martingales that warble on yon hill; They had to stand it while we stayed, but 'twas a bitter pill. —Anon. Mrs. M-tl-nd: What cracker is this same that deafs our ear With this abundauce of superfluous breath. —Shakespeare. §erfyele ; M mn. If in the U. C. land you fare, Hark to the chilly Berkeley winds, Singing the hymn that follows prayer,— Blest be the tie that binds.” G. B. C. Tl)e Woes of tl)e “ 5opf).” When the Sophs have been “tied up” In two successive whirls, They let the Fresliie boys alone And try to rush the girls. They change the pugilistic art For that of tongue and pen. But in the balmy May they find Themselves tied up again ! jj Cutting. Air: “ Churning.”— Robin Hood. Cutting, cutting, cutting, every other day, Flunking, flunking, flunking, for you have to pay For the walks you take together In this balmy summer weather— Oh, the Sophomore is gayer than lie’s wise, sir ! Cramming, cramming, cramming, all the livelong day, Digging, digging, digging, till the dawning gray, For an “ex” in mathematics, Or a simple quiz in ethics— Oh, the sober senior’s wiser than lie’s gay, sir ! M. B. J. 45 v'rcv'ING Just as the clocks in Encina and Roble were striking twelve, a murmur as of conversation arose from the marble statues on the top of the stately museum. Before the last stroke had died away, the statues had stretched their arms hurriedly, yawned once or twice, and then stepped down ; for it is well known that from twelve to one every night statues are given their liberty. Plato ceased pondering on preexistence, and tore hastily down through their secret stairway to the first floor, closely followed by Herodotus, while Aristotle offered his stately friend Plutarch two to one on the result. When all had arrived at the main floor they quickened their steps and hurried to the large room on the right, as there issued wild clashings of glass, shouts of laughter, and the popping of corks. The room was well filled with a motley crowd of Greeks and Romans from 776 n. c. up to a more recent date, our museum being the rendezvous for all these midnight orgies. We will not concern ourselves with the crowd in general, but will follow the footsteps of our four and their two particular friends, Demosthenes and Thucydides. These six disappeared for a moment, and then reappeared and went slowly up the marble steps. Aristotle carried a large pan filled with Welsh-rarebit, Thucydides carried a number of champagne bottles, Demosthenes and Plutarch carried cheese, sandwiches, olives and a hot and wordy argument between them, while Herodotus carried a suspicious-looking black bottle, of which he seemed very fond. On reaching the head of the stairs, they climbed up on the broad marble slab and festooned themselves gracefully over it. They discussed the board bill at Encina, the dance Saturday night at Roble, the crops, the weather, religion and politics. 246 frLfcr Demosthenes, who was getting decidedly the better of Aristotle in their argument on the silver question and reform bill, was just rounding off his last sentence nicely and gesturing gracefully with an empty bottle when Aristotle exclaimed, in a crushing manner, “ Oh, I say, Demmy, old boy, take those olive seeds out of your mouth.” This historical allusion nettled Demosthenes. and he flung the empty bottle at Aristotle’s head. Aristotle dodged, and then ensued a wild and exciting rush up and down stairs, and the high jumps over the cabinets would have made our Stanford athletes blush for shame. Finally, as the chase grew cool, and the chaser and chased grew warm, it was resolved to call the event a draw. So our friends again assembled and finished the remains of the feast. As quart after quart of “ Mumm's Extra Dry ” vanished, the once dignified statues grew more and more hilarious. In fact, when the patient alarm clocks rang for 12:55, our four had the hardest kind of work getting back to their places on the roof. But you would all have had the deepest sympathy for Thucydides and Demosthenes if you could have seen them struggling to get back to their places in those huge clay jars. Thucydides got in after a good deal of trouble; but the last thing I saw before the clock tolled “one” was Demosthenes with his head poked rakishly over the edge of his jar, and I heard him call out in a thick voice, “Shay, Thucy (hie), bet you five to one on Paulsen’s white—hie—hie—horse. W. S. C. HAIL, STANFORD HAIL! Words by A. W. S. Music by M. R. 8.. 1893 I. Where the roll ing f x t hills riso tj t‘wards mountains high-or, Whereat eve tlie Coast Range lies, H 5- l In tho sun- set fire. r a • t •• ? r r S J Flushing deep and pa - ling; 4- t -i ii I HS I •' riai i Hero we raise our voi -cos hail-ing. Thee our Al - ma Ma ... - £ .tTr.£. ? . - r,-.— - r .■? § w j t- ti.z ter. Refrain From the foot hills to tho bay. It shall ring. As wo sing. It shall ring and f r.sF 5 m i Z T Z r r H «J3 j n float al-way; Hail, Stan-fort! hail! 't §f-it ? ?r Hail, Stan-ford hail! r r II 2.. Tender vistas ever new Through tho arches meet tho eyes. Where tho red rcxifs rim the blue Of the sun steeped skies. Flecked with cloudlets saiTing. Here we raise our voices hnilmg Thee our Aluia Mater. —Chokw. 3. When the moonlight bathed arcade Stands in evening calms. When tho light wind half afraid Whispers in tho j alms, Far off swelling, failing, 8tudent voices glad are hailing Thee our Alma Mater. —Chohus. To Our (Jlma Aater Air: “ My Last Cigar.'' I. AS LONG as sunlit roofs of red O’erhang thy long arcades, As long as blue skies overhead Span all thy colonnades. Thy Court with winter’s sun aflame, Or filled with summer’s haze, So long. O Stanford ! will thy name Call forth our songs of praise. Chorus : With one accord we’ll sing. With love our voices ring ; Let every breeze Sweet melodies Our Alma Mater bring. II. As long as liveoaks dot the plain And scatter o’er the hills. As long as meadows touched with rain The golden poppy fills, Or visions fair thy vistas frame Of mountain peaks and bays, So long, O Stanford ! will thy name Ring out in songs of praise. Chorus: III. As long as speech can tribute pay, Or streams to ocean run, Or love in human hearts hold sway, Or shadows own their sun, As long as youth will dream of fame. Or nights dream of the days, So long, O Stanford ! will thy name Re heard in sougs of praise. Chorus : 49 G. H. A. IMPORTING JEWELERS. MENTION STANFORD QUAD. Established 1849. ENGAGEMENT RINGS AND WATCHES. APPROVAL PACKAGES SENT ON REQUEST OF SECRETARY. •AAAAi A A 4AAAA j | ;ODAKS TO RENT TAKE ONE WITH YOU ON YOUR VACATION. ♦ I HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF KODAKS, DETECTIVE CAMERAS, REGULATION TRIPOD OUTFITS, in all sizes MAGIC LANTERNS and STEREOPTI-CONS TO RENT BY THE DAY, WEEK OR MONTH. rirrccN minutes' instruction will cnablc anvonc to manolc a kodak •UCCCSSrULLV. RE-LOADING, DEVELOPING, PRINTING. PHOTOGRAPHIC and MAGIC LANTERN OUTFITS of every description BOUGHT,SOLD. RENTED, EXCHANGED OR REPAIRED. T. P. ANDREWS, PHOTOGRAPHIC BROKERAGE. EVERYTHING pertaining to PHOTOGRAPHY. 109- MONTGOMERY STREET, opposite occidental hotel. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL TELEPHONE 1050. PANELS IN BRONZE DOORS or THE LELAND STANFORD JUNIOR MUSEUM. Co THIS GREAT COMPANY ' S OFFERS UNQUESTIONABLE INDEMNITY AGAINST LOSS BY FIRE DURING MORE THAN TWENTY-FIVE YEARS IT HAS PROMPTLY PAID ALL HONEST CLAIMS UNDER ITS POLICIES FOR LOSSES BY FIRE OR BY MAR NE DISASTER. Santa CUra Magazine. 8TANF0RD RE8IDENCE, PALO ALTO. BEAR IN MIND! NUMBER 19. Every Student Should Have One. ov« 50,000 INuDsVLY TESTIFY IN RECORDS AND RESULTS --THAT--- THE HIGH SPEED STANDARD TYPEWRITER STILL STANDS AT THE HEAD. Superior in Every Essential Point of Genuine Merit: — Simplicity. durability. Beauty or work. Speed, Alignment, EASE OF OPERATION. LOOK AT IT —COME IN AND TALK IT OVER BEFORE YOU BUY. YOU WILL SURELY BE CONVINCED BY INVESTIGATION. TERMS OF SALE ACCOMMODATING. Manufacturer's NUMBER IQ BLOCK, SAN FRANCISCO. SUPPLIES. EDISON MIMEOGRAPH DEPOT. PHONE S225. SET THE BEST! Bol rofi Strong, 430 Pine Street San Francisco. Manufacturers of Printing Plates. Half-tones a Specialty. BUSSES. HACKS. CARRIAGES, TWO ANI) THREE SKATERS. MEET ALT. TRAINS At Menlo park and Palo Alto to take parties to all points of interest on the campus and at the stock farm. Conveyances may be secured in advance by telegraph or telephone. Especial attention given to large tourist parties. Was never known to miss a train. Prices moderate, and uniform to all. J. W. PAULSEN. Proprietor, PALO ALTO, CAL JASPER WM. PAULSEN was born at Woodside. San Mateo County, on the 31st of December, 1870. His father was a thrifty farmer, and from the nature of Jasper’s early education one might have predicted for him a successful career. His early schooling was by no means neglected, and after a thorough course of study he graduated from Hester’s Academy at San Jose. Upon finishing his studies he accepted a position in the employ of Senator Lcland Stanford, where, in the charge of various Palo Alto thoroughbreds, he had the opportunity of bringing out his peculiar aptitude and developing an enviable reputation. When the Senator founded the university, Jasper conceived the idea of doinp what he could for humanity, and with a peculiar foresight established the Palo Alto and University Stables. No one on the campus is more popular in the estimation of professors ana students than is reliable Paulsen. Time and again various competitors, anxious to secure the student trade, have completely failed in their enterprise, and to-day his business is established on a firm basis. Tourists and visitors wishing a courteous driver, thoroughly acquainted with all points of interest at Palo Alto, should secure from a well-equipped stable one of Jasper Paulsen's rigs, and he will do the rest.—Srquoia. FOOTBALL! STANFORDS . OLYMPICS. COMPLETELY OUTFITTC D BV CLABROUGH, GOLCHER CO., 605 MARKET ST., GRIND HOTEL BLOCK, SAN FRANCISCO. WALTON AROUND LEFT END • • ALSO COLLEGE HEADQUARTERS FOR • BASEBALL, TENNIS, GYMNASIUM OUTING GOODS. Send for Cutologue to CLABROUGH, GOLCHER CO., 605 Market St., Grand Hotel Block, San Francisco, Cal. ©be flfrost Spacious anb j£lcqant ©allcrg on tbc ©oast. ©ur facilities for ©roup anb ©lub ©Qorh arc uncqualeb. H specialty mabe of ©ollcqc ©lass ‘CQorh. ■- BGDKS, PERIODICALS, V UNIVERSITY SUPPLIES WE KBBP a CCMPI.F.TR AND WF.LL-SKI.KCTKD STOCK OF IIIOII GRAOR GOODS AT CITY PRICES. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED IN VARIETY, PRICE AND QUALITY. WE ARE GOING TO SEE THOSE BARGAINS AT THE University Book Store, s“,.rD THE AVENUE, PALO ALTO, CAL. POPULAR PRICES OO TO GOHL BROS., Leading Hatters 226 KEARNY STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. BETWEEN SUTTER AND BUSH STS. C. Herrmann Co. THE HATTERS 328 Kearny St., Bet. Bush and Pine Sts., WE SWILL GIVE a YOU A BETTER hat or iliCc. CAPJ • «a FOR YOUR MONEY THAN ANY 8TORE IN THE CITY. CNTIRC BUILDING. THE ONLY Retailing Manufacturers ON THE Pacific Coast. Send for 11 ns I rated Catalogue. Mailed Free. Everything In the line of Hats and Caps Made to Order. FRED JANTZEN, IMPORTER AND DEALER IN . . . m : Groekery, French Ghina, Glassware, DINNER, TEA 2 TOILET • • • SETS. LAMPS in Large Variety. Table Cutlery and Plated Ware. PRICES SENT ON APPLICATION. 717 Market Street, San Francisco, Cal. POND’S EXTRACT. IF YOU WISH to take REGULAR DAILY EXERCISE, and not be compelled to A desist from work because of SORE MUSCLES, you must, after exercising, THOROUGHLY RUB the MUSCLES with POND’S EXTRACT. Bv its use you are made QUICK and ACTIVE, and ALL SORENESS, STIFFNESS, or SWELLING is prevented, and you will AVOID the DANGER of TAKING COLD on going out after exercising. We have a book full of testimonials from the most famous athletes ; to quote them is superfluous. Almost everyone in training uses it. But don’t expect some cheap substitute for POND’S EXTRACT to do what the genuine article will, for you will surely be disappointed. Manufactured only by POND’S EXTRACT CO., 76 FIFTNHE£vfSJ WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO. fi (5) (5 f® MODEL 1882 AND 1888. l— 6) (•) 6) 6) tlZZM ) ) 9) 0) “take down.” ) 9) •) 0) RIFLES OF ALL KIND8, SINGLE SHOT AND REPEATING. ALL CALIBER8, FOR At L PURPO8E8. REPEATING SHOTGUNS. AMMUNITION FOR ALL RIFLES, SMOTOUNS, REVOLVERS AND PISTOLS. All the Winchester Repeating Anns Co’s manufacture arc gcakantkkd. FOR 8ALE BY DEALER8 ONLY. THE ft i HILL TflRD V _ y i Popular PDoiograpners, 79 81 W. Santa Clara St., SAN JOSE. Also Branch Gallery at PALO ALTO. College Worn a Sp cl lty. Cillery open at Palo Alto on Tuesday . Thurvl « and Saturdays. Capital Stock, S100,000.00. ’94 '95 ’96 ’97 They II £o to “|?alo fllto harrnaey,” B. PARKINSON......................Pkbsidbnt. JOSEPH HUTCHINSON . . . Vice-Prksidk.nt. G. R. PARKINSON.....................CASHIER. WE DO A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS. FOR MEDICINES. Cigars. 8oda, Fine Stationery, Toilet Articles. Drawing Materials AND ARTISTS' SUPPLIES. k F. W. Slpan Go PRICES REASONABLE. GOODS DELIVERED FREE. University Avenue PALO ALTO. . Beddinq, Sheets, Pillow Slips, Book Shelves, Desks Furniture or All Kimds. T. AJvIvEN track O UTPITS Athletic Supplies. 416 MARKET ST., S. F. Sporting Goods, • Guns, Fishing Tackle, Suits and Uniforms. ..-FOOTBALL. HERCULES .f--f SSENSTNES NOTED FOR SIMPLICITY, STRENGTH, ECONOMY and Superior Workmanship in Every Detail. Stationary $ JVIarine Engines ■ • « , PALMER REY TYPE FOUNDRY, ---- 405, 407 Sassome Street, San Francisco. | istep to Ttys • 1 •f +!. ■f OUR PRICES ARE AS LOW AS, AND IN MOST •f INSTANCES LOWER THAN, ANY CLOTHING -F HOUSE IN THE STATE. •f RELIABLE QUALITIES. BEST VALUES. IN THINKING OVER YOUR WANTS, •F •f T0 Wo HOBSON C©o l lctbws, 'Y’af!©Fst { tteps ai?4 pumlslws, 40 to 64 W. Santa Clara Street, SAN JOSE, CAL. wiilooix: 4.FINE 0 SHOES 95 SOUTH FIRST ST., SAN JOSE, CAL. ( TA«USHtO ts a. W. K. Vanderslice Co., ©OLD AND SDLVEIRSn®THS 136 Sutter Street, San Francisco. TROPHIES AND MEDALS STANFORD COLLEGE PINS FOR ATHLETIC EVENTS. IN COLD AND SILVER DUNHAM, CARRIGAN HAYDEN CO., dealers in MODEL-MAKERS’ TOOLS, MACHINE, MILL AND MINING SUPPLIES, IRON, STEEL, HARDWARE, ETC., ETC., 17 19 BEALE ST, SAN FRANCISCO, 1 PINE dress shiRTs arT AMD UNDERWEAR TO ORDER. L SHIRTS, SI 00 EACH. L GOTTHEIM CO. MERCHANT TAILORS, ' : . . . : : : . •• .• •• : •• : : : : : : : : : : EVENING POST BUILDING, --ROOM 4.- Comer Kearny and Bush Sts. SAN FRAN SISCO. CAL. Official Photographer California Midwinter International Exposition, 1894. 121 Rost Street, Bet. Kearny Street and Grant Avenue, San Francisco, Cal. SPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTS. iit i KNIlJriNGCO. No. 120 SUTTER ST., ROOMS 21-24 San Francisco, Cal. ONLY HCADOUARTCRS YON STANFORD GYM. SUITS, ♦ ______________:--♦ SOCIETY 5 gMa $oo gall, urqcrs’ aqts, gose gall, §u)eater8, galling j|uita, racl §uits, fate. UNDERWEAR KNIT TO ORDER. Our Goods arc Positively Sold at Lower than Eastern Prices. Special Rates to Stanford Students. BADGES WITH a large stock of precious stones, personally selected in the European markets, they are in a’ position to produce finer work in a shorter space of time, and upon more desirable terms, than others who manufacture upon a smaller scale, and who arc obliged to purchase their materials from the importers of these goods. From our Stationery Department May be obtained Special Designs for Class SENO FOR ILLU9TRATC0 CATALOGUE. HENRY C. HBSRElili, Mops and Qermans. Reception ii John Street, New York. y ♦ ♦ EKsiflncr anoflftaftcr Society Badges, Fraternity Pins, Rings, Emblem Jewels, of every description. Medals----------TROPHIES for Pr,«„...lon, from original and artistic designs. W l ICM 'ou ant anything in above line. ntEN w||| esteem it a favor to submit special designs, with estimates, or answer inquiries, by mail. WE SEND design plates FRF.E upon request. 206 Sutter Street. - tfv •'iy «Sv J. i. PARKER CO. - mmm - OYSTER PARLORS. CIGARETTE SMOKERS who are willing 10 pay a little more than the prico charged for the ordinary trade Cigarettes will find the PET CICARETTES SUPERIOR TO ALL OTHERS. They are made from the very highest cost Gold Leaf grown in Virginia and arc tin equaled for their delicate aroma and rare fragrance and are absolutely without adulteration ot .r tfls. Allen i Gutter. Manufacturer . Richmond. Va Naturally, the Shirt is the shirt to wear Collars and Cuffs with. See Full Dress Shirts ready-to-wear, stamped on your collars and cuffs, and hold your outfitter for satisfactory results. (He holds us.) Collars and Cuffs to wear on them. Our new illustrated and descriptive CATALOGUE is now ready to mail. Write us for one;—they’re free. CLUETT, COON . CO., makers. Factories, Troy, N. Y. Geo. M. Wagner, manufacturer Genuine Meerschaum Pipes, Amber Goods and Walking Canes. ALL ARTICLE8 OF IVORY, PEARL, HORN, AMBER and MEERSCHAUM Manufactured and Repaired. ocali r in Domestic and Imported Cigars, Leaf and Plug Tobacco, FRENCH Briar Root Pipes, ETC. 306 KEARNY STREET, Near Bush, Second Door from Evening Post, COUNTRY ORDERS SOLICITED. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. W. J. SLOANE CO. CARPETS, RUGS, FURNITURE, UPHOLSTERY, WINDOW SHADES. Everything with which to furnish a house completely. 641-647 Market street, SAN FRANCISCO. Union Photo-Engraving company. (▼▼cniNO. poo INC CTCMINO ■A 033 MARKET STREET, ■ AN PRANCISCO. CALIFORNIA IS the place for HOMES. is best reached by the lines of the SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY. Is growing in fame and popularity more rapidly than any other portion of the American Continent, because of her vast and available resources. The numbers facing westward to become partakers of her rich bounties are increasing daily. Industrial, social and educational advantages equal to the best. All going to this favored 44 SUNSET” , ... r 1 •• ,1 , Via New Orleans and HI Paso. Family Kxcur- State will find It UTCatly to aiona semi-monthly; through from Cincinnati O J without change. their advantage to purchase tickets over one of the Three Great Routes of this company. 44 OGDEN 99 Via Ogden. Two train daily and Through Sleeper . Chicago to San Francisco. Through Dining Cars. 44 0TT 7T Om 7f 99 SHASTA Via Portland. Passing Mount Shasta. The Great Scenic Route of the Pacific Coast. Write to Any Agent of the Southern Pacific Company for the Latest and Most Reliable Publication on California, Entitled, “ California for Health, Pleasure and Profit.” E. HAWLEY. Asst. Gen. Traffic Mgr., 343 Broadway, New York, N. w. G. NEIMYER, Gen. Western Agent, 230 Clark St.. Y. Chicago, III. S. F. B. MORSE, Gen Passenger Agent, New Orleans, La. T. H. GOODMAN, Gen. Passenger Agent, San Francisco, Cal. THE FAMOU8 TOURIST ROUTE. Scenery of Matchless Grandeur. Our Sleeping Coaches are considered the Acme of Comfort. M. M THIS ROUTE IS BY FAR THE MOST ATTRACTIVE CROSSING THE AMERICAN CONTINENT. QCNCMAL INFORMATION ANO IkLUSTRATKO BOONS AMCT TO-5 STERN, General Passenger Agent, CHRONICLE BUILDING, San Francisco. THE A. LIETZ CO., Manufacturers of Scientific Instruments. 422 Sacramento Street. San Francisco, Cal. Directors: A. Lietz, C. Weinmans, K. T. Sciiild. Otto Von Gklokrn. C. E. Gkcnsky. illustrated Catalogue on Application. Mrs. Kate: S. Hart KEEPS THE ELMER + HOUSE, 314 BU8H 8T. Adjoining RUSS House), a QUIET. CLEAN, HOMELIKE PLACE 8an Francisco. ROOMS 50 CENTS TO $1.50 PER DAY. MAKK A SPECIALTY OF rmtr ei«w insihumcnti ro thc CIVIL. MININO, IRRIGATION. MTORAULIC. ANO MKCMANICAL Examinations. Adjustment •ml Repair Field and Ultiie S i|i lic kejrt in Stock. IITUUINIO IN NCW roan 1834. C8TABLIRMCO IN 8AN fflANCIICO 1898. J. O. 8ALA, Successor to John Roach, MANU'ACTUNCN Or Surveyors’, Nautical and Mathematical Instruments, 429 Montgomery street. s. w. Cor. Sacramcnto Sr.. San Francisco. Cal Instruments Examined. Repaired and Carefully Adjusted. Materials for Office Work Supplied. OR II d? il THINS, 123 and 125 Montgomery St SAN FRANCISCO. fviErsrs FURNISHERS. Speclikltifaj_ TENNIS GOODS. SHIRTS TO ORDER. AtcentH DK. JAEGER’S UNDERWEAR. Z rt Stationers Cngravcrs an6 IDriliters k Union Square _ THew Dork Gity iSUece AnnuAfj I The Grand Canon of the Colorado River 18 REACHED ONLY BY THE (ATLANTIC PACIFIC R. R.) It is Nature's Greatest Wonder I Awe Ip5pirin$ I Subliipe I 6,000 Feet Deep and from 12 to 18 Miles Wide. Send for Illustrated Book containing full description. W. A. BISSELL, General Passenger Agent, 59 Chronicle Building, San Francisco, Cal. THE SANTA CLARA MAGAZINE. A monthly Publication of western literature. Subscription $1.00 A YEAR. 10 CENTS A COPY. Carrie Stevens Walter, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR, SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA. KEEP THE BRAIN COOL --- BY WEARING ONE OF — PIXON'5 . A SELECT ASSORTMENT OF LATEST STYLES. 429 KEARNY ST., S. F. TELEPHONE 1401. IS Consulting Opticians Try US .! We can fill for Your Next f the Prescription Pair of Glasses. of any Oculist. We make a Specialty of Prescribing and Making Lenses to Order for Complicated Cases of. Defective Vision. STUDENTS,.take good care of your eyes, and assist them with glasses if necessary. CMiWOWM OPTXCMi CO., 3 7 3 9 Kearny Street, San Francisco, Cal. + THE PARKER GUN. SEND EOF CATALOGUE. Oldest Manufacturers of Breech-loading Shotguns in America. the STRONGEST SHOOTING m BEST GUN IDE. ASK YOUR DEALER FOR THEM. PARKER BROTHERS, makers, ■New York Salesroom: 97 CHAMBERS STREET. Meriden, Conn. H. Le Baron Smith, THE AMERICAN TAILiOR. First Premium at Mechanics' Fair, 1887. FINE TAILORING AT REASONABLE RATES. Genuine Hand-made and H nd-uuoven Homespun. Also Celebrated Hoi d Bates Homespun. SATISTACTION GUARANTEED. 323 BUSH STREET, - - - . - SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 12 per cent to college men. soic oirot or DEINHARD A CO. + HENKELL A CO. RHINE WINES. Grower and Dealer in California Wines. V I I T • 0 . Bovtll louoUto, laps Coealy, Cal. Agent: JOS SCHLITZ BREWING CO.. MlLWAUKCl. WISCONSIN Imtmtsr or PILSNER. BAMBERGER, CULMBACHER, THU RINGER. WURZBUROER. ZACHERL c------BEER.------- OTTO NOKMANN, Restaurant ant Ouster Rouse, ■Ho. 4lt 33usb street, Opp. J ciu California |fhcatFe. |aq ( raqcisco, gal. LE COUNT BROS., IMPORTING ano MANUFACTURING ST A Tl ONERS, 533 Market Street, San Francisco, Cal. 225 Front St., New York. BLANKBOOK MANUFACTURERS, PRINTERS and LITHOGRAPHERS. JOHN A. ROEBLING’S SONS CO., Wire, Insulated Wire, Wire Cloth and Netting, and Wire Rope. Works at TRENTON, N. J. Ciias. G. Rokiili.ng, President; F. V. Rosblikg, Treasurer; W. A Rokhling, Vice-President; H. I.. Shii-pv, Secretarj ; S. V. Moonky, Manager. 25 and 27 Fremont St.. San Francisco. Cal The University Barber Shop, J. B. LARKIN, Proprietor, «• Enolna Ho.ll Billiard Hall . . . in Connection . . Agent for Athletic Goods sod 5tudeots’ General Supplies. PHLO HLTO TI7V ES. S2.CX) a Year; $1.00 Six Months. Printed at PALO ALTO, CAL., at the gate of the STANFORD UNIVERSITY. CHAS F. GILMORE, ----- Editor and Proprietor. Agents for Cleveland Bicycles. Wheels to rent. Special Prices to Students. EINSTEIN SMALL, MAYFIELD and REDWOOD CITY, CALIFORNIA. Dry Goods, Clothing and Gents’ Furnishing Goods, Sweaters and Football Suits. Tennis and Running Shoes. G. W. LaPElRB SON, DCALCRt IN . gp©Gepies and f apdwape, Cents’ Furnishing Woods and Tobacco. MAIN STREET MAYFIELD CAL. THE Santa Fe Route. IS THE Favorite Line TO AND FROM the East OF ALL LELAND STANFORD JUNIOR UNIVERSITY Professors and Students. W. A. BISSELL, W. General Passenger Agent, 650 Market St., Chronicle Building. San Francisco. C l. F. WHITE, Passenger Traffic Manager, Monadnock Building, Chicago, III. r IEO P. PLAGCMANN. ROBERT WIENEKE. ____ _________ Golden West Hotel WIENEKE PLAGEMANN, Proprietors. The Leading Hotel —IN— San Francisco, Cal. $ A NEW SIX-STORY . . . FIRE-PROOF . . . BRICK BUILDING Containing 300 handsomely furnished rooms, with all modern improvements. % CENTRALLY LOCATED. Rates from $1.25 to $2.00 per Day. 32,34,36 Ellis Street, •------------5an Francisco, Cal. Long Distance Telephone 5358. G. M. POSTIGLIONE, Mercfiawt Taifor FIRST-CLASS WORKMANSHIP. PERFECT FIT GUARANTEED. REASONABLE PRICES. A NEW LINE OF OOOOS JUST RECEIVED. No. lOf SUTTER STREET, SAN FRANCISCO umokn rut lien. THOMAS MORFFEW, D. D. S. Statist, 702 Market Street, cor. Kearny, SAN FRANCISCO. “Seeing is Believing.” And to see “The Rochester” will impress this one truth—the best lamp on earth. You can also see illustrations and prices of many of these lamps by sending for our mail order catalogue. The Rochester Parlor Heater is a new oil heater for heating dining-rooms, bedrooms, ministers’ study-rooms, libraries, students’ rooms, nurseries, bathrooms, sewing-rooms, etc. Can be carried from room to room, and is perfectly clean and odorless. Address THE ROCHESTER LAMP CO., 42 Park Place. NEW YORK. SJ s 5S If « ; I a 2 a h 8IN0LE LAMPS AND 8IN0LE HEATERS 80LD. “The Rochester.” |.IUS 'OC'itW • !• «! wisr1- - u Where are you ng- ny PktXtv a aid To ROSENTHAL f£DER 5 i . SHE SAID TSr shoes That will ht t 5HOE5 THAT rfUlWtot WHOLESALE PRlCt a Our retail DepT. is CO vi eniemHr Filled up Afte w%. save you $0-70} OpCM EVEAIAO -OLU $ O’CLOCK SATURDAY’S K ROSENTHAL, FEDER CO., 581, 583 Market Street, near Second. SAN FRANCISCO.--------------------•--- Sw yif? SBM ker TRY GOLDEN SCEPTRE. A, theulk in world win not that it is nlmost PKRFKCTION. We will send on receipt of 10 cents a sample to an; x lb.. 5t-35; K lb.. 40 cents. Send for catalogue. M. BLASKOWKR CO., Pacific Montgomery Street, San Francisco, Cal. convince you so quickly as a trial pie to any address. Price, Coast Agents, 225 ANYTHING! Mysell Rollins, 521 CLAY STREET, 8AN FRANCISCO. WC ARC MANUFACTURERS FOR THE The Leading Rooming House io San Francisco. STOP When you arrive in San Francisco at the Hughes House, newly opened and fi rat-class, where cleanliness, sunny and well-ventilated rooms, excellent beds modern improvements and low rates are salient features. A sunny reading-room. fire escapes, gas and electric lights,electric call and return bells in each room. Centrally located, being convenient to the theaters, restaurants, principal street-car lines and the business district. Open all night. Rates 60c. per Day: $2 00 per Week Up. LEAOING COLLEGES AND SCHOOLS 214 THIRD ST., - Near Howard. OF THE STATE. At R. R. Depot take Third Street cars to corner Third and Howard. Special Attention given to Literature published on and relating to the Pacific Coast. THE LARGEST COLLECTION OF !i—TlBla Text Books, Maga- Miscellaneous Books and Magazines in California. b°ug“d' “HEALY’S OLD BOOK STORE 206 Powell St., Bet. Geary and OFarrell, P J. Healy. 8an Francisco. Cal A. A. DALY. Books John Taylor. H. R Taylor JOHN TAYLOR SCO., IMPORTERS ANI IIKAI.KKS IN For Public and Private Libraries Doxey Assayers’ Materials, Mine and Mill Supplies, Chemical Glassware. Also School and Philosophical Apparatus. CQrALTfl'ALL-TTll3-NC.,«vi Under Palace Hotel UNION FOUNDRY BLOCK, 3ClCf X-71Wy tN-ILttfl San Braneiseo. aa dni sirwi. ■• sit in sui,,. hi , tun krlmimu. R. W. EDWARDS, y IMPORTER OP Diamonds and Jewelry y Vr:.TTy 963 Broadway, OAKLAND, CAL. Schillinger’s 0 Patent Sidewalk, i Garden Walk. i Kcfcrcn e. Lrlind Stanford Jr. Umvcr ity. Palo Alto. GEORGE GOODMAN, RATKNTKC AND MANUFACTURER Of ARTIFICIAL STONE IN ALL ITS IRANCH C S , owes: 307 Montgomery St., Nevada Block. San Francisco. 9 ? ? Is it not obvious that a company, noted ■ for the magnitude of its business.—operating with complete facilities, in separate departments, under capable managements, every modern process of the “art preservative.” and prepared to make, by the method best adapted to the subject, in any size, style or quality, anything in the line of Stationery. Printing, Lithographing. Book- binding and Copperplate Engraving.—would be more reasonable in price, reliable in quality, and prompt in delivery, than a concern without equal facilities? We assert that it is, and that having one of the most extensive plants in the United States, and invariably giving the dollar's worth for the dollar paid, is why we have the largest trade, extending all over the Pacific Coast...................... The Stanford Quad is a sample of our work. . . H. S. CROCKER COMPANY, 219 Bush Street. an Francisco, Cal. Art 5tatiooers, Engravers an i Prioters. 215, 217, s ray’s Dining Rooms I). C GRA I, Proprietor. sj: Our building has been thoroughly renovated and refitted. The lower floor is fitted up as a First-class Restaurant, with every accessory, where patrons will be served with all the market affords, at prices consistent with good cuisine and proper attendance. The second floor contains special dining-rooms for Clubs, Societies and Theater Parties. Popular prices; centrally located. Stanford students’ patronage especially solicited. 636 Market St Opposite Palace Hotel, San Francisco, Cal. -O k jjott l3aiijo ? w ! l have the PACIFIC COAST AGENCY FOR THE SAME. LYON BANJOS WITH new patent finger board and improved idea on THE FIFTH STRING. L'ticfer JSanjos. S. S. Stewart JBaitjos. f HAZELTON PIANO A BEST. WASHBURN MANDOLINES, WASHBURN GUITARS. MARTIN GUITARS, COSTA RICA GUITARS. VOW CAM OCT ACC SHEET M USIC _ AT — ONE-HALF THE RETAIL PRICE. MAILED TO ANY ADDRESS. POSTAOE ONE CT. PER COPY EXTRA. ♦0 Chas. S. Eaton, 735 MARKET STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. THE PACIFIC Educational and School Supply Agency, FRED M. CAMPBELL, president and manager. SKILLS BUIL.DIMG, SAM TRAMCISCO. 'yr -it yr jt. -WNjfc- ur -j . arsip- -jr -J Or-- t 'jr o-qrsjft otNJO-o« s -Qr-wci qrsjfc -0f sJ0--0 s iP •Q vvav OfSJft. 1. Provides competent Teachers for all grades of Schools, College Professors, Institute Conductors, Kindergarten Instructors, Private Tutors, Governesses, and Specialists in all Departments of Instruction. 2. Fills orders promptly, and at the lowest market rates : Furniture, Books, Charts, Maps, Physical and Chemical Apparatus; Kindergarten, Calistheuic and School Appliances of every description. 3. For the convenience of its patrons remote from cities, conducts a Purchasing Department. 4. Upon application by parents or guardians, recommends to them, without charge, safe and desirable Private Schools and Seminaries. 5. Conducts a Lecture Bureau. From DAVID STARR JORDAN, President Inland Stanford Junior University: Mr. Fred M. Campbell has been for many years identified with the school work of this State, and has been prominent in the educational gatherings of the country. He is a man of high business ability, and seems to have every qualification necessary for success in the business enterprise in which he is about to engage. From MARTIN KELLOGG, President of the University of California : I have known Hon. Fred M. Campbell for many years ns teacher, school superintendent, and State Superintendent of Public Instruction. He was an excellent teacher and a very successful superintendent. He is an alert and vigorous business man, among the most efficient I have known. I regard him ns possessing the highest qualifications for success in the business enterprise he is now undertaking, and wish him the abundant success which his abilities deserve. Bkkkblbv, November 9, 1893. From PROF. JOSEPH LE CONTE, University of California : In the capacity of principal of the College Preparatory School. Mr. Fred M. Campbell was one of the first men I became acquainted with when I came to California nearly twenty-five years ago. Since that time I have known him ns teacher, as City Superintendent, and as State Superintendent. In every position he has shown marked ability. I know no man who combines in so eminent a degree thorough knowledge of school matters with great business capacity. I am quite sure he deserves and will achieve success in his new enterprise. SEND FOR CIRCULARS. Palo Alto, February 24, 1894. Bkrkelby, Cal., December 30, il


Suggestions in the Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) collection:

Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1895 Edition, Page 1

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Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1896 Edition, Page 1

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Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1897 Edition, Page 1

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Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1898 Edition, Page 1

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Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1899 Edition, Page 1

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Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1900 Edition, Page 1

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