Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) - Class of 1895 Page 1 of 316
Cover
Pages 6 - 7 Pages 10 - 11 Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9 Pages 12 - 13 Pages 16 - 17
Show Hide text for 1895 volume (OCR )
Text from Pages 1 - 316 of the 1895 volume: “
SAN JOSE (SAN HOSA V) CALIFORNIA HOTEL VENDOME THIS BEAUTIFUL HOTEL is situated in the “Garden City” of the Pacific Coast, in the wonderful Santa Clara Valley, fifty miles south from San Francisco and only eighteen miles from the great Stanford University, with frequent communication ; no less than twenty trains arrive and depart daily. The Vendome is the recognized headquarters for all tourists to the great Lick Observatory, as well as the favorite home and stopping-place of the Stanford students, their visiting parents and friends. Stages of the Mount Hamilton Stage Company, with their headquarters here fVendome), make daily trips to the Observatory. Special rates are accorded students by the hotel, as well as by the stage company, who desire to visit this point of great interest. In a word, the Vendome is a charming summer and winter resort, is modern, comfortable, homelike, and in every respect first class. Scad for Illustrated . . . SOUVENIR Geo. P. Snell, MANAGHR A Best Cigars at PAULSEN A WELLS, cor. Montgomery and Bosh Sts., San Francisco. ? ? ? MILLIONS ARE SPENT every year in advertising;. About 10 per cent advertise wisely,—90 per cent foolishly. Ever tried your hand at it? Two styles are given below: in your opinion, which is the better? 1. 2. When Wanting .. . BOOKS, Nnt c ’caP')f made, incomplete and poorly bound books. Rllt wholesome, well printed books at Reasonable Prices, REMEMBER that the Largest Stock of such Books is to be had at THE POPULAR BOOK STORE, 10 Post St., San Francisco. P. S. —We answer promptly any questions. Catalogue mailed free. We Sell Books. . . BARNUM said (and he was a large advertiser), “The Public Like to be Humbugged.” Perhaps the public were different then,—perhaps not. WE say (and we are large booksellers), “ In the Long Run Frauds Fail.” People are quick to learn that of Popular Books there are many editions,—some incomplete. We aim to keep the best editions and can advise you about others Questions promptly auswered by mail Intelligently. Bazaars and dry goods houses can’t do this; it’s not their busi-ness. addncss THE POPULAR BOOK STORE. 10 Post St.. S. F. N. B.—Perhaps you can do better. Try, and send us a copy. REMINGTON BICYCLES are appreciated by the intelligent, experienced and up-to-date wheelmen, as will be proven by the large number of them that are being ridden. Manufactured by REMINGTON ARMS CO. pacific coast depot, 418 420 MARKET ST., SAN FRANCISCO. STUDENTS’ HEADQUARTERS 00oo'S5o««. PAULSEN 4 WELLS, Prof. Totten’s Opinion. Professor Totten of Yale College is one of the most advanced thinkers, reasoners and Bible students of the age, and all of his scientific works are of the highest standard. On page 228, volume 7, of his work, entitled, “Our Race,” he writes as follows: “ But, thanks be to God, there is a remedy for such as be sick,—one single, simple remedy,—an instrument called the F lectropoise. We do not personally know the parties who control this instrument, but we do know of its value. We are neither agents nor are in auy way financially interested in the matter.” Pacific Coast Agency. WATSON CO., 124 MARKET STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. Palaee Hotel, SAN FRANCISCO. headquarters for University Students. PAULSEN 4 WELLS, CorD'r Slr ,s- Fine Cigars and Cigarettes THE BRIDGEPORT CYCLOMETER MODEL •‘A” registers i.exe miles and repeals, or can foe set lack to zero at Mill. Nickel finish with white celluloid faceplate and enlarged figure on dials. Cemented glass covers. Improved brackets and dogs For aO. rKand jo inch wheels. Weight, 6 ounces. I.ist. 5) oo. ♦ MODEL “ B 'ime as M lei ••A. with l ell which rings at every mile. Registers i.ooo miles and repeat , or can l e set back to zero at will. Indispensable to road riders who w ish to know h fast they can travel | er mile. I or 36. 38 and jo inch wheels. Weight. 7 ounces. I.ist. {3 50. MODEL “C registers 10,000 miles accurately and repeats. Recommended especially to wheelmen who take long tri|is or enter for club mileage records, and also to those who do not care to set the cyclometer lock to zero. This cycl -meter rei eats at the end of 10.000 miles. l;or . . 38 and inch wheels. Weight. o', ounces. List. $ .50. The Bridgeport Gun Implement Co. Agency. 617 Market St.. San Francisco. Cal. Eugene Korn the % Leading hatter, 720 MARKET ST., near Ketirny. Sole Agent it KNOX” CELEBRATED HATS, Hotel Cor. Sutter n t Jones Sts.r Parties desiring rooms without board will be accommodated. Terms Reasonable. (• Cuisine Unsurpassed. o. A . BREftftANr Proprietor. Convenient to Business Center and Theaters. Two Street Car Lines from the Ferries Pass the Hotel. Cooper JVIedieal College San Francisco California Corner of Sacramento and Webster Sts. FACULTY. I- C. LANK, A.M., M. D., M. R. C. S. Eno., LL. I)., I rofessor of Surgery and President of the College. C. N. ELLIN WOOD, M. I ., Pro feasor of Physiology. ' A I LI H 15AIIKAN, M. I)., Professor of Ophthalmology, Laryngolmgy and Otology. JOS. II. NV VITIK. M. D., LL. I)., F. R. M.S., Professor of Microscopy and Histotmgy. H KNin GIBBONS, JR., A. M., M. I)., Professor of Obstetrics ami Diseases of Women and Children. JOS. O. II IKS( ’IIFELDER, M.I)., Professor of Clinical Medicine. ( LINTON I SUING. M. D.. Professor of (lyaerology. W. I). JOHNSTON, M.I ., Professor of Chemistry and Toxicology. K. II. PLl’MMKR, A. Si., M.I)., M.ILC. S. Kn ., Professor of Anatomy. Cl I AS. II. STF.KLE, A. M., M. I)., Professor of Materia Medial and Therapeutics. C N. KLLI N VO 1), M.D., Acting Professor of Clinical Sorgery. ALBERT ABRAMS, M. I)., Professor of Pathology. A. M. GARDNER, M. D., Lecturer on Insanity and Medical Jurisprudence. HAS. E. FARNUM, M. D., .1 djunclto the Chair of Anatomy and Demonstrator of Anatomy. . F. HANSON. I ll. G., M.D., Adjunct to the Chair of Materia Mcdica and 'Therapeutics. W.M, FITCH CHENEY, B. L.f M. D., Adjunct to the Chair of Obstetrics and Diseases of Women and Children. A. Y. HOIS1IOLT, M.I)., Adjunct to the Chair of Physiology. ClIAS. M. FISHER, M. I)., Adjunct to the Chair of Microscopy and Histology. STANLEY STILLMAN, M. I)., Adjunct to the Chair of Surgery. KMMKT RIXFORD, B.S., M. D., Adjunct to the Chair of Surgery. Atten4anr i« mjaiml upon four recuUr courn of (return, r -glrioliiK June l t of each jur n l continuing • months; n l upon one abort roor e of lecture In the l «t year, N-cinniiix Kcl.ruary lit ami continuing three month.. For Annual Announcement. or other Information. a«Mrc the Secretary at the College. HENRY GIBBONS, Jr., M. !)., Dean. WM. FITCH CHENEY, M.I)., Secretary. GEO. W RYDER hid opticim. Students who visit San Jose can find an elegant stock of fine goods to suit all their wants. MY SPECIALTIES ARK AMERICAN WATCHES, DIAMONDS, SILVER NOVELTIES AND FINE JEWELRY. Kyes tested for compound defects, and lenses fitted for all defects of vision. Can refer you to several Stanford teachers and students wearing my glasses. Society Pins to order. 8 South First St., San Jose, Cal. JOHN A. ROEBLING’S SONS CO., MANurACTURCRS Of Wire, Insulated Wire, Wire Cloth and Netting, and Wire Rope. Works at TRENTON, N. J. Ciias Hobbling, President; P. W. Hobbling, Treasurer; W. A. Hobbling. Vice-President; H. I, Shippy. Secretary ; S. V. Mooney. Manager. 25 and 27 Fremont St., San Francisco, cal Artistic Hnlf-tonea an.I Lino Etchings of highest quality for oataloguo or souvenir work. Original designs for all purposes by skilled artists Samples of our fine worn in this book. VISIT OR WRITE US AT 523 MARKET STREET. SAN FRANCISCO. OPCN 5.30 A. M. TO 10 P. M. The Largest and Best Appointed Restaurant row Ladies ano Gentlemen in the City. The Wifson Dining Safoon 114 to 120 Post Street, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. AUG. E. DRUCKER £ CO., PROPRIETORS. THE WILSON, formerly the Alvin House, is over and connected with the Wilson Dining Saloon. Nicely furnished sunnv rooms at reasonable rates. Ladies and families from the interior will find this house thoroughly clean and renovated. R. HARRY KAVANAGH, Fine Custom Tailoring, Market Street, San Francisco. UNDER PALACE HOTEL. When Training, Drink . . . ALBION ALE OR PORTER EQUAL TO THE BEST IMPORTED . AT . HALF THE COST. BURNELL CO., AGENTS, 409 Battery St., San Francisco. @ W. A. SO H ROC K, MANUFACTURER of Iron Beds, Wire Mattresses, Hair Mattresses, Silk Floss Mattresses, 21 New Montgomery St. Children's Cribs, Invalid Goods. TENTS and all kinds of CAMP ooons to Rent. (Under Grand Hotel) San FRANCISCO, Cal. BARTLETT SPRINGS AND ENVIRONMENTS. Scientific TAILORING DEPARTMENT. Cutting. (]. J. MEYER, Cuttei. BICYCLE SUITS. TENNIS SUITS. • I high-grade clothing. THOS. E. KENT, OFFICE ANO SALESROOMS: BQ7 MISSION STREET, (Nenr Second. 1'pHtulrn.) SAN FRANCISCO. Latest Styles. SHIRT DEPARTMENT. CUFFS. COLLARS. UNDERWEAR. NIGHTSHIRTS. NEGLIGEE SHIRTS. PERCALE AND MADRAS SHIRTS. HIGH-GRADE WHITE SHIRTS. i 1, O University of California A epical Departrpeot. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. MARTIN KELLOGG, A. M., LL. D............................................President of the University G. A. SHURTLKFF, M. D..............Emeritus Professor of Mental Diseases and Medical Jurisprudence R. BEVERLY COI.K, A. M., M. I)., M. R. C. S. Eng.............Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology W. F. McNUTT, M. D., M. R. C. P. Edinburgh, etc. . Professor ol Principles and Practice of Medicine ROBERT A. McLKAN, M. D. (Dkan).............. . . Professor of Clinical and Operative Surgery W. K. TAYLOR, M. D.......................... . . Professor of Principles and Practice of Surgery A. I.. LENGFEI.D, M.D................... . . Professor of Materia Medica and Medical Chemistry BKNJ. R. SWAN. M.D............ G. II. POWERS. M.D. . . . .......................... WM. WATT KERR, A. M., M. B., C. M., Ediuburgh ARNOLD A. D’ANCONA, A.B., M.D. . . . I OUGLAS W. MONTGOMERY, Mb.. WASHINGTON DODGE, M.D....... JOHN M. WILLIAMSON, M.D J. W. ROBERTSON, A. B., M. I) JOHN C. SPENCER. A. B.. M. D. W. K. HOPKINS. M. D............. GKO. F. SI 11 ELS, M. D.. F. R. C. S. E., etc. . . . CHAS. A. VON HOFFMANN. M.D. . . . WM. J. HAWKINS. M. D................ WINSLOW ANDERSON, M.D. . . .Adjunct HENRY B. A. Kl'GKLKR. M.D........... WM. B. LKWITT, M.D.................. F. T. GREEN, Ph. G.............. . . . . J. II. BARBAT, M.D................. ...............Professor of Diseases of Children Professor of Ophthalmology and Otology ...................Professor of Clinical Medicine .......Professor of Physiology . . . Professor of Diseases of the Skin . . . Professor of Therapeutics .....................Professor of Anatomy Professor of Nervous and Mental Diseases . . . . Professor of Histology and Pathology Associate Professor of Ophthalmology and Otology I Associate Professor of Principles and Practice . . of Surgery and Lecturer on Hygiene and ( Medical Jurisprudence ............Adjunct to the Chair of Gynecology .........Adjunct to the Chair of Physiology to the Chair of Principles and Practice of Medicine . Adjunct to the Chair of Pathology and Histology Adjunct to the Chair of Diseases of Children ................Adjunct to the Chair of Chemistry . . . Demonstrator of Anatomy The session of 1805-96 will begin September 1st and continue eight mouths. During the terra all the branches of medicine and surgery are taught, didactically and clinically. Regular clinics are held three days in the week at the City and County Hospital, Polrero Avenue 1450 beds), where the Professors of the practical chairs have charge of wards and possess every advantage for the instruction of students. There is also an active clinic conducted three times a week at the College Dispensary, where a large number of patients are examined and treated before the classes. Didactic lectures are given daily by the Professors, and evening recitations are held three times a week. The Professors arc assisted by a full corps of Demonstrators, Assistants, and Dispensary Clinicians. The dissecting room is open throughout the entire year. Material is abundant and costs but little It will thus be seen that the course of instruction, which extends through eight months of the year, aims at the development of practical physicians nnd surgeons. The great advantages possessed by the Medical Department of the state University enable the Regents and Faculty to commend it in an especial manner to those seeking a complete nnd systematic knowledge of the medical profession. The lacilities for bedside study have been largely increased of late, and the student will find opportunities at his command which, for comprehensiveness, are nowhere surpassed. POUR YKARS' COURSE. In response to the general demand, both in and out of the profession, for a higher degree of proficiency in medical education, the Medical Department of the State University was one of the first 111 the United States to adopt the four years' term of study. No student can present himself tor final examination until he has attended faithfully four regular courses of lectures and clinics. Graduates of accredited literary and scientific colleges, and those that have completed two courses in the Natural Science Course of the University of California, or an equivalent in some other recognized I niversity, ate admitted to the second course without examination. KICKS. Matriculation Fee fnaid but once) . . Demonstrator's Ticket.................. Fee for each Course of Lectures ... Graduating Fee............................ For the annual announcement and catalogue giving regulations and other $ 5 «x ............ 10 00 .... 100 00 ................ 2S OO information, address U. A. McLKAN, M. ! .. 305 Keiirny S t.. Sun Krunclaco. Best Cigars at PAULSEN WELLS, cor. Montgomery and Bush Sts., San Francisco. LATEST Spring AND Summer STYLES. Razor Toe Bluchers and Bals, in Russia, Tan and Calf. 24 Geary Street, SAN FRANCISCO. What’s in a Name? This much : when that name is “Lucke,” and when it is stamped inside a boot or shoe, it is a guarantee of quality, of fit and style. “LUCKE’S” shoes lead the fashion. Hvery pattern the latest and a leader. FRIO P. PLACEMAN . ROBERT WIENIKE. WIENEKE PLACEMANS. Proprietors. The Leading Hotel in San Francisco, Cal. A NEW SIX-STORY FIRE-PROOF BRICK BUILDING conMiniiig c . handsomely fund,bed rooms, with All modern improv, incuts. CENTRALLY LOCATED. Rates from $1.25 to $2.00 per day. 32, 34 36 ELLIS STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. Long Distance Telephone 5358. FREE BUS. PAULSEN WELLS, Corn “c,loush S,r”,s Fine Cigars and Cigarettes. LOW TARIFF PRICES. LeCount Brothers, L“XT.'c7u.::° STATIO N E RS, 533 Market Street, opposite Sansome, San Francisco, Gal. AGENTS FOR Holland Fountain Pens, Hardmuth’s Koh-i-nor Pencils, Whiting’s Fine Papers and Papeterie, Enterprise Pens, College Note Books, Hurlbut Tablets, David’s Inks. School and College Stationery a Specialty. Forty Kinds of Cakes and Crackers. Sardines, Potted Meats, Deviled Ham, etc. Imported Figs, Dates and Nuts. Fresh Fruits and Berries in their Season. Olives, Pickles and Salad Dressings. The Best Butter and Freshest Eggs. Coffees and Teas that Cannot be Excelled. I iniid Hntoliels. Telescope m l Lunch Btmkets, Wliittp Itrooms, Shoe Inrushes, etc. (GLASSWARE, CROCKBKY ANI) TINWARE. G. C. TFjAXTER, --DEALER IN-- Choice and Fancy Groceries, PAL-O ALTO, CAL STUDENTS’ HEADQUARTERS aoooi:OKma. PAULSEN 4 WELLS, Co ZTS:ry 18A0. 1806. SOUTH WEST PACIFIC DEPARTMENT AGENCY M. B. STOKES, President. Cash Assets over ■:...............................$14,000,000 Insurance in Force over - - - • - - $62,000,000 Paid to Policy-holders over.......................$37,000,000 WRITE ALL FORMS OF POLICIES. Policies Incontestable. No Restrictions. Good Agents Wanted JOHN LANDERS Manager, s. W. Pacific Department, 240 Montgomery St.. San Francisco. All Western Athletes Know A. Q. SPALDING BROS. CABANNE, All Ride it! AT COASTING, where the bicycle without the aid of a rider shows its true worth, The Spalding has simply outdistanced all rivals, clearly demonstrating its perfect adjustments and bearings All wheelmen and athletes should see The Spalding before buying. Write for catalogue. California agents. COLUMBUS BUGGY CO., San Francisco ano Oakland. DEALERS THROUGHOUT THE STATE. Crack Players - Sportsmen. Bicyclists, Ball men pronounce Victor Athletic Qoods to he of the best material, made in the most satisfactory, playable way. To get the best results you should use them. OVERMAN WHEEL OO. Maker of Victor Bicycles. Pacific Coast Branch—Larkin and McAllister Sts.. San Francisco. Oakland Houae--66 San Pablo Ave. (opp. City Hall). Los Angeles House—Westminster Hotel Block. IF YOU HAVE'NT USED . . . Top Notch LAVORING t-XTRACTS . . . ASK YOUR GROCER FOR SAMPLE THEY ARE THE STRONGEST! PUREST! BEST! ♦ PREPARED ONLY BY SCOTT GILBERT 300, 302 Davis Street SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. H|prir|Cj aqd j|iirr|nr|er STYLES OF . . . BROKAW BROS. « ROGERS-PEET CO. or NEW YORK. Also the very latest Ainericfl s Best Tailors. HABERDASHERY AND HA TS SOLD ONLY BY ROOS BROS., Leading Clothiers, Furnishers and Hatters. 27, 29, 31, 33, 35. 37 Kearny Street, San Francisco. E. T. ALLEN CO., 416 MARKET ST, below Sansome, S. F., FURNISH------ Shoes, Leggings Tight?, Jerseys, Sweaters Caps FOR EVERY SI ()RT. F00T Rnllc LAWN TENNIS’ GUNS’ BASE DallS, FISHING TACKLE. ammer mit £3 F’ielsl, GOLD AND SILVER SMITHS., Why Send East? H V are Makers of Fraternity Pins and BaJfei. Fifes, Cano. Kings, etc. Designs and price-list on application. 118 Sutter Street, SAN FRANCISCO. Belmont School BELMONT, CALIFORNIA. V HIS School attempts to give such attention to moral, mental, and V$) physical culture as will meet the reasonable demands of the most earnest and thoughtful people. It is fully accredited at the Stanford University and the University of California in all the subjects of all the courses and in advanced subjects, and gives special attention to preparation for these Universities, but it will continue to offer thorough preparation for those Eastern Colleges and Technical Schools whose requirements for admission are most severe. The school could hardly be more delightfully or more advantageously situated. It is near enough to our great Universities to feel their stimulus but far enough away to escape the dangerous but inevitable boyish inclination to copy the objectionable instead of the ennobling features of college life. For Catalogue, address W. T. REID, A. M. (Harvard), Head Master. 1895 VOLUME II CORRECTIONS. On page 34, “ Jenners should read “ Jenness.” On page 145, “ Foil Law Club ” should read “ Coif Law Club.” ADDITIONS. Zeta Psi.—F. A. Schneider, ’98. Mandolin Club.—C. K. Field, ’95. ammer mitt? W Field, GOLD AND SILVER SMITHS, Why Send East? IIV are Maker of Fraternity Pint amt HaJget. Ptpe . Cane . Pin , etc. Deiigni an.l price-lut on application. 118 Sutter Street, SAN FRANCISCO. Belmont School BELMONT, CALIFORNIA. HIS School attempts to give such attention to moral, mental, and 4) physical culture as will meet the reasonable demands of the most earnest and thoughtful people. It is fully accredited at the Stanford University and the University of California in all th enhi tc r t ii 895 VOLUME II TO THE MEMORY OF LELAND STANFORD. 1 J SENATOR STANFORD. «• PRESS OP H. S CROCKER COMPANY SAN FRANCISCO 4 Z d it a d t e JvTjiov LELAND STANFORD J; UNIVERSITY A CARDINAL. Rab! Rab! Rab! Rab! Rab I Rab! Rab! Rab! Stanford! Board of Editors It. oditor-in-Ghiof. W. D. Ijrio’O's. Clssccialo Suitors. F . F. I ledsoe, A. A. CatI)Cart, Aiss Winnifred Harper, Aiss Saral) Comstock, W. J. Neidicr, H. H. Frown, Marr IFe nolds. Qrfjst. D. Fl y I3usincss flQanager. J. F- Fran[ eal)eimer. Senator £elanH Stanford. F BIOGRAPHY it must be said with regret that it is at best character, of one who in life has gained the affection and challenged the respect of his fellow-men. And this regret is heightened when biography, failing in this, as it too often does, becomes no more than a dull enumeration of facts from which all the animation and most of the meaning have departed. Fortunate indeed are those who, from a fund of personal recollection, can revivify the coldly recorded facts of a life history, for with them must always remain some of that life’s inspiration and magnetism. It is for this reason that the students who entered the University during the first two years of its existence must always be envied, for they were privileged to know Senator Stanford personally. I,ater comers, it is true, know him and will know him from the written word or the hewn marble ; they will gather impressions also from the Quadrangle’s architectural beauties, and, as Professor Newcomer so beautifully puts it, We venture, however, that the pioneer students will retain most vividly in their memories, associated somehow with the hazy autumn days of ’91, with brown hills, blue sky and inviting vineyards, with cool drives shaded by pine, eucalyptus, or walnut rich in russet coloring, the kindly presence of Iceland Stanford and the grave bow of recognition which made the boyish heart flutter so strangely and stirred the boyish ambition just a little deeper than anything else. Leland Stanford was born in Watervliet, eight miles from Albany, N. Y., on the 9th of March, 1824. His father, Josiah Stanford, a native of Massachusetts, was a successful farmer and railroad contractor. In 1848 the son was admitted to the bar, and began practice at Port Washington, Wis. In 1850 he married Jane Lathrop, the daughter of Dyer Lathrop of Albany. Two years later a fire, in which his valuable law library was destroyed, turned his footsteps toward the mining camps of the Golden State. From July 12, 1852, when he landed in San Francisco, down to 1861, when he became California’s war Governor, mercantile and mining enterprises on a steadily increasing scale claimed his attention. but a sorry attempt to preserve in memory the achievements, the preeminent personality, the strength and gentleness of “ marvel that the very stones disclose The spirit of their builder’s amplitude, And manhood’s deep repose.” 10 In the same year another honor was conferred upon him, that of the presidency of the Central Pacific Railroad, then recently incorporated for the purpose of building a railroad East across the Rockies. While men generally regarded Leland Stanford and his three associates in this enterprise as harebrained enthusiasts, while jealous rivals scoffed and hindered and capital hung timidly back, the four projectors of the road went quietly to work to do, risked their private fortunes in the venture, and persevered with indomitable energy until they achieved complete success. In May, 1869, Leland Stanford drove the last spike in the line of railroad connecting the Pacific and Atlantic oceans,—an act which, together with the close of the Civil War, has assured the permanent solidarity of the Union. One year previous to this event, on the 14th of May, 1868, a son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Stanford,—a boy whose brief life, stimulating the philanthropy of his parents, was destined to influence so profoundly for good the lives of thousands of others. These and the succeeding years, down to the time of his election as United States Senator in 1885, were busy ones for the great railroad president. All sorts of business projects claimed his attention ; and all sorts of charitable plans, of which the world at large knew nothing, proved that the heart of the multimillionaire, instead of becoming hardened in the race after wealth, was still large and generous as it had always been. On March 13, 1884, came the crushing blow of young Leland’s sudden death in Italy. The grief of the parents was all but inconsolable, yet how significant is the fact that “within the shadow of this great sorrow” were laid the foundations of the Leland Stanford Junior University. “ The children of California shall be my children,” said Leland Stanford, and by a single act of matchless philanthropy not only perpetuated but immortalized the name which Providence had decreed should not be perpetuated by children of his own. On the 1 st of October, 1891, the University threw open its doors to a hastening throng of eager students. Within less than two years from that time, in the stillness of the midnight hour,—on the night of June 20, 1893,—the news was flashed around the world that Leland Stanford, millionaire, captain of industry, statesman and philanthropist, was dead. “ O mighty soul that trampled sorrow down, Triumphant where the fallen are thickliest strewed, Received this greater than a laurel crown, Man’s deathless gratitude.” W. M. R. 11 George Slliott Kouxircl, PI|. D. EORGE ELLIOTT HOWARD was born in Saratoga, N. V.. October i, 1849. At an early age he moved West with his —U — 11— r parents and completed his elementary education in the common schools of Ohio and Illinois. He prepared for college at the Nebraska State Normal, and entered the University of Nebraska, where he received the degree of A. B. in 1876. As a student he distinguished himself in scholarship and athletics, and, in addition to routine work, performed the duties of assistant to the State Superintendent of Public Instruction from 1872 to 1876. The years 1876-78 were spent in Europe studying institutional history and Roman jurisprudence at the universities of Munich and Leipzig. The vacations were devoted to travel and supplementary study in Germany, Austria, Italy and Belgium. From 1879 until 1891 I)r. Howard occupied the Chair of History at the University of Nebraska. From 1885 until 1891, as Secretary of the State Historical Society, with meager resources at command, he collected for the Society a valuable library of 5,000 books and pamphlets, comprising many of the choicest sources of Colonial and Western history. Dr. Howard’s leading work is his “ Local Constitutional History,” in two volumes. Yol. I, “an Introduction to the Local Constitutional History of the United .States,” was published in 1889. Yol. II, now in preparation. “The Evolution of Municipal Institutions in American Cities,” will be completed as soon as Eastern libraries can be visited. ‘‘The Development of the King’s Peace and the English Local Peace Magistracy” is a valuable contribution to institutional literature and has been widely reviewed. A series of addresses on university questions, to be published in one volume, comprise, “The Evolution of the University,” “The State University in America,” “The West and the Public University,” and “The American University and the American Man.” A projected work, to appear this year, is entitled, “ Marriage and the Family : A Study of the Evolution of the Marriage Contract in England and the United States.” Dr. Howard is a devoted student of history and is eminently qualified for the duties of the classroom. He is a prodigious worker, an enthusiastic instructor, and an impressive lecturer. He commands the admiration of his students, inspires their zeal for work, and elicits their best efforts. H. H. Brown. 12 GEORGE ELLIOTT HOWARD, 'Ph. D. Thots photo. ftQemorial 0 le. (Read at the Founders' Day exercises, March 9, 1894.) O LIFE is lost, one says ; no man’s work dies I Utterly ; none that looks upon the skies I But leaves some record as secure as they From death and death’s decay. Lo, this is fate. Put forth thy strong hand where Men labor in Time’s garden-plot to-day : Eternity shall find the impress there. And haply this may be. But one says, Nay, there is naught that abides. Time is a wide, unfathomable sea ’Neatli whose recurrent tides Are swallowed up all things implacably. This rock-built earth whereof man makes his home Is less than the sea’s foam ; The galaxies of stars that seem to him Perdurable as time, like bubbles swim Upon its surface and like them will burst; Yea, time itself, that swallows up all these, Must yield in turn, the last lost as the first,— Must sink whence it arose, Flow backward whence it flows, Into eternity’s soundless, shoreless seas. What may be true? Is life less full or fair, Does deeper darkness gather o’er men’s eyes, Than when our fathers importuned the skies For light witliholden there ? The sun shines warm to-day as yesterday, The green grass fails not when the rains return, And ivy twines about the burial urn, And summer winds through leafless branches play. Hearken by day, by night, and thou inayst hear Ascending ever one unchanging tune, The voice of all earth’s choristers a-croon, The world-song low and clear. No age hath listened for this song in vain ; Though one voice dies another swells the strain, And Homer calls, and Shakespeare answers, Here ! And loss is balanced by unfailing gain. 14 Yet there is loss. The splendid perfumed rose That blooms to day within thy garden-close— Ah, like it is but is not yet the flower Thou wovest once in one fair maiden’s hair To she l its perfume and its splendor there And crown love's supreme hour. And though this rose as that be fair and sweet. Yea, though all rose-delights in this rose meet, Too well, too well thou knowest it hath no power Save in a mocking vision to recall Youth’s vanished festival. Ay, there is loss. Though rose return for rose, Somewhither each one goes Nor comes again in its own form and hue; And love that springs from dead love’s urned report Makes not the old joy new. Ah for this transitory human life, Where at the last all strivers cease from strife Aud over them and theirs is cast the spell Of death’s Irrevocable ! Where unto them that have so nobly striven For heaven’s best boon, behold what boon is given : A little time of hopes and joys aud fears, A little sound of music in their ears, A little light upon their eyes, and then Darkness again. Prayer shall avail not to avert this doom ; For man and all that man’s hand fashioueth Shall find within the wide domain of death An unremenibered tomb. But hold! The eyes of men, Made keen with penetrating through the veil Behind which matter hides it from our ken, Have found, past all doubt’s mockery to assail, An immortality within the clod, An essence that shall live unchallenged on Though the live light of sunlit heaven should fail And earth wait vainly for one darkling dawn,— Perchance incarnate God. Pent in the silent caverns of the earth, Scarce stirred since the world’s birth, Or brought where the rains nourish, the sun warms, To gather vigor of the sun and rains And pass through thousand Protean forms Of blade and blossom, stone and beast and tree And man’s supremacy, Through change unchanged this essence still remains. 5 The essence ? Are the forms abolished then ? Not so : these too abide, As in the ocean’s tide Abides forever the high curling crest, Though filled with all unrest And molding crestwise ever and again New waters gathered in its wanderings wide Upon the ocean’s breast. Nay, not the clod alone, The gross, dense matter whereof worlds are made, Hath life beyond this life of light and shade:— The form it clothes is deathless as God’s own And was not born to fade. What hand so cunning can destroy one line Of God’s deep-wrought design ? Shatter the dewdrop globed upon the grass : The fragile globule flies To thousand atomies; Yet each retains the outline of the mass, And sphered perfection lies. Or loose a feathered arrow from its place : Thy straightening bow forgets its bended grace ; But upward turn thine eye And mark against the sky Thy flying shaft the bow of beauty trace. The fair proportions of the Parthenon Untouched by time live on. The Colosseum’s springing arches spread Above thy reverent head. What though worlds perish ? Other worlds shall sweep Their paths appointed and their contours keep. What though men die? Espied or unespied, Somewhere their forms abide. Kor though thou tread from us where death unbars The way, withdrawing tliy dear face, and though We moan, Not here ! Not here ! somewhere, we know, In lines of light outstreaming past the stars, Thy living lineaments glow. 16 Death is but dissolution of life's bond. For soul and body strive a little space To run together in the equal race, Until oue calls and one does not respond, And death bids both give place. Body and soul go thenceforth each his way.- -Fair Helen was, but is no more, we say ; And yet we know that somewhere Helen’s dust Sleeps in the silent earth, Or wakes to flower-bright birth, Or panders still to man’s insatiate lust. And Helen’s beauty, like a bale-fire set On Skaian-portal, holds us spell-bound yet.— Beneath the pavement of Ravenna lies All that remains of him whose bitter fare Of alien bread sustained him to endure The apocalypse that blasts our weaker eyes, The human soul laid bare. All that remains? Nay, Giotto's penciled truth Hath given over to immortal youth, Unmarred by grief’s aud exile’s signature, Fresh with life’s morning-kiss, The clear, grave face that looked on Beatrice. Aud so he lives, dissevered soul and sense. Yet such dividual life were naught, But that each poet’s dower Gives him creative power To eke out nature’s poor incompetence And justify his hour. For his transcendent vision recombines, Refining still away What imperfections marked them for decay, The crumbling earth and fleshless pictured lines Of Giotto’s cunning. Yea, Divining half from what the live bauds wrought With impress large and strong, Aud half from what the living accents taught, He pieces out the whole,— Conjecturing the soul From the soul’s deeds, the singer from the song,— Till recreate, life’s laurel round his head, Lo, Dante’s self, immortal, perfected. 2 7 A poet’s dream ? Ay, so. Yet who shall say or know Rut to such supreme ends All nature’s travail tends? Matter in countless forms we see, Forms clothed in matter endlessly. Each combination lives What life its union gives Aud dies because its bonds imperfect be. Is it too strong a vision for men’s eyes, That struggle yet with tears, To see, beyond their day of doubts and fears, On some far highland of the future rise The crowning warrant of these laboring years ? For such will rise, be sure,— A creature fair and pure, A creature brave and bright, Mighty with God’s own might, Made perfect to endure : Wherein are met in marriage strong and sweet, That ever strive to meet, Body and soul, each for the other made, Each glad and unafraid, Merged in one essence final aud complete, Self-centered, fed with free and painless breath And clear of time aud ignorant of death. Upon the new world’s westward, seaward slope, Where eager eyes catch color from the dawn And flash back radiance of half-risen hope; Where life may drink at founts still unwithdrawn And breathe with respiration large and free,— A marvel springs to meet the morning. See, Between the great sea’s utmost iuland surge, Aud rising hills that shelter from the sea, In a glad laud whose seasons melt aud merge One into one and bring all wondrous things That sad lands wrest but from reluctant springs, All flower and fruitage of earth’s largess, stands This latest wonder, as divine as they, Albeit the fabric of weak human hands, Clay shaped by kindred clay. 18 The hills deny it not: dull red and gold Against their vivid verdure and the blue Of farther mountains rising fold on fold, Enrobed in haze of heaven’s diviner hue ; The valley takes, as one that takes his own, 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 multiplied. Oh, fair, surpassing fair, however viewed ! We marvel how the very stones disclose The spirit of their builder’s amplitude And manhood’s deep repose. Ah, there is something here More than these outlines clear,— Within this body some warm breath, Some life within this stony death ; For faith and hope have builded here their shrine And wait here for a sign That on some far horizon must appear : Hope that some watcher shall descry the goal Of all this cosmic travail, faith profound That knowledge does not tread one ceaseless round But climbs from star to star and pole to pole. Mark then what threescore years and ten may do; For threescore years and ten ago was born The child that into such large manhood grew As noon gets seldom promise of the morn. Ah that such manhood should be lost and leave Bowed hearts of men and women here to grieve Where most he wrought. Vet here is balm ; for lo, This same strong manhood taught us how to weave Joy of bereavement’s very woof of woe, Putting our manhood to the proof of tears Where-through hope’s rainbow shines across the years. O mighty soul that trampled sorrow down, Triumphant where the fallen are thickliest strewed, Received this greater than a laurel crown, Man’s deathless gratitude. 9 To-day we stand where thou caust stand no more As once thou stoodest,—stand and sadly gaze On all this relic of thee, till before Our grief finds words the grief is turned to praise. Ah, sore-tried heart that in its sorrow turned To one 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? Here, by thy steadfast creed That reach of human deed Is bounded but by God’s immense, Immensurable beneficence, And by this stone memorial of thy trust That man is more than dust, We consecrate us to the work of need. Here let us add our little to thy large, Till mortal clay, molded to perfect form And with the breath of God’s own life made warm, Shall stand, godlike and fair, on heaven’s bright marge. 20 Au honso G. Newcomer. FOUNDERS. LELAND STANFORD. JANE LATHROP STANFORD. BOARD of trustees. The Hon. Francis E. Spencer, Chairman...............San Jose. The Hon. Charles Goodali.......................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. I)r. 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. iTlie Hon. Stephen J. Field...................Washington, D. C. The Rev. Horatio Stebbins, I). 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. 21 Died June 21. 1893. f Resigned. Facultv. [Arranged in groups In the order of seniority of appointment.] DAVID STARR JORDAN, President of the University. J )' Xazmitt House, Scrra Air. M. S., Cornell University, 1872 ; M. I)., Indiana Medical College, 1875; Ph. D., Butler University, 1878; LL. D., Cornell University, 18S6. 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 Penikese, 1874 ; Teacher of Natural History, Indianapolis High School, 1874-75 ; Professor of Biology, Butler University, 1875-79; Assistant to the U. S. Fish 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. 'V r and 1' P Ithaca, N. Y. A. B., Vale, 1853; A. M., 1856; Ph. I)., University of Jena; LL.I) , Michigan, Cornell, and Yale; L. II. 1)., 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, 1S79-S1, to Russia since 1892. BENJAMIN HARRISON, Non-resident Professor of Constitutional Law. (J) J H Indianapolis, Ind. A. B. and LL. I)., Miami University; Brevet Brigadier-General, U. S. A., 1865. U. S. Senator from Indiana, 1881-87 ; 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. I)., 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. j y 2S Alvarado Row. B. S., Cornell University, 1S82; Ph. D., Indiana University, 1S85. Assistant Geologist, Imperial Geological Survey of Brazil, 1875-78; Special Botanist for Thomas A. Edison in South America, 1SS0-S1 ; Special Agent of the U. S. Department of Agriculture for Investigating C -tton 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, 18S7-92. 2 Absent during 1894-95. OLIVER PEEBLES JENKINS, Professor of Physiology and Histology. Cairo Cottage. A. B, Moore’s Hill College, 18S9; A. M., 1872; M.S., Indiana University, 1886; Ph.D., 1889. Professor of Natural Science, Moore’s Hill College, 1876-S2 ; Professor of Natural Science. Indiana State Normal School, 1883-86; Professor of Biology, De Pauw University, 1SS6-91. JOHN HENRY COMSTOCK. Professor of Entomology. J V 15 Salvatierra St. B S , Cornell University, 1874. Instructor in Entomology, Cornell University, 1873-77; Assistant Professor. 1877-82; U. S. Entomologist at Washington, 1S79-81 ; Professor of Entomology and General Invertebrate Zoology, Cornell University, since 1882. MELVILLE BEST ANDERSON, Professor of English Literature. ? Salvatierra St. A. M., Butler University, 1877. Professor of Modern Lauguages, Butler University, 1877-80; Professor of English Literature. Knox College, 18S1-S6; Professor of Literature and History. Purdue University, 1886-87 ‘ Professor of the English Language and Literature, University of Iowa, 1SS7-91. JOHN MAXSON STILLMAN, Professor of Inorganic and Theoretical Chemistry. Z 'V 2 Alvarado Row. Ph. B., University of California, 1874; Ph.D., 1885. Assistant in Chemistry, 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 Refilling Company, 1882-92. FERNANDO SANFORD, Professor of Physics. Palo Alto. B. S., Carthage College, 1879 ; M. S., 1882. Student. University of Berlin, 1886-88; Professor of Physical Science, Mt. Morris College, 1879-82; Superintendent of Schools, Ogle County, III., IS82-S6; instructor in Physics and Chemistry, Englewood High School. 1S8S-90 ; Professor of Physical Science, Lake Forest University, 1890-91. CHARLES DAVID MARX, Professor of Civil Engineering. H J X R lo Alto. B. C. E., Cornell University, 1878; C. E., Karlsruhe Polytechnicum, 1881. Instructor in Civil Engineering, Karlsruhe Polytechnicum, 18S0-81 ; U. S. Assistant Engineer, Missouri River Improvement, 1882-84; Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering. Cornell University, 18S4-90 ; Professor of Civil Engineering, University of Wisconsin, 1890-91. ERNEST MONDELL PEASE. Professor of the Latin Language and Literature. Alvarado Roiv. A. B., University of Colorado, 1882 ; A. M., 1885. Fellow in Johns Hopkins University, 1SS4-86; Student at Bonn, 1885, 1891 ; Instructor in Latin, Smith College, 1886; Professor of Latin, Bowdoin College, 1886-91. 25 CHARLES HENRY GILBERT. Professor of Zoology. Palo Alto. B. S., Butler University, 1879; M. S., Indiana University, 1882; Ph. 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. Fish Commission, 1880-91. DOUGLAS HOUGHTON CAMPBELL, Professor of Botany. Alvarado Row. Ph. M., University of Michigan, 1882 ; Ph. D., 1886. Teacher of Biology, Detroit High School, 1882-86; Student at Bonn, Tubingen, and Berlin, 1886-88; Professor of Botany, Indiana University, 1888-91. EARL BARNES, Professor of Education, and Secretary of the Fac- ulty- 12 Alvarado Ro7u. A. B., Indiana University, 1890; M. S., Cornell University, 1891. Student in History and Psychology, Cornell University, 1886-87, 1888- 89; Student in Pedagogics, University of Zurich, 1887-88; Professor of History, Indiana University, 1889-91. EDWIN HAMLIN WOODRUFF, Librarian. jj Alvarado Row. LL. B., Cornell University, 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. Q siivarado Row. A. B., Oberlin College, 1888; A. M., 1891 ; M. I)., College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York City, 1891. Director, Oberlin College Gymnasium, 1886-88. ALBERT WILLIAM SMITH, Professor of Mechanical Engineering. H J A Palo Alto. B. M. E., Cornell University, 1878; M. M. E., 1886. Machinist and Contractor with Brown Sharp Manufacturing Company, 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, 1886-87, Assistant Professor, 1S87-91 ; Professor of Machine Design, University of Wisconsin, 1891-92. EWALD FLUGEL, Professor of English Philology. Palo Alto. Ph. D., University of Leipzig, 1886. Student, Universities of Freiburg and Leipzig, 1882-88; Privat Docent, University of Leipzig, 1888-92. 26 CHARLES BENJAMIN WING, Professor of Structural Engineering. Palo Alto. 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; Ph. I)., University of Leipzig, 1891. Teacher in Washington (I). C.) High School, 1880-87; Assistant Professor of Psyc ology, Cornell University, 1891-92. LEANDER MILLER HOSKINS, Professor of Applied Mechanics. (p A Palo Alto. B. C. E. and B. S., University of Wisconsin, 1883 ; M. S., 1885 ; C. E., 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. ROBERT EDGAR ALLARDICE, Professor of Mathematics. jj 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., 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 V 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. AUGUSTUS TABER MURRAY, Professor of Greek. Palo Alto. A. B.. Haverford College, 1885 ; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1890. Fellow in Johns Hopkins University, 1887-88; Professor of Greek, Earl-ham College, 1888-90; Student, Universities of Leipzig and Berlin, 1890-91; Professor of Greek, Colorado College, 1S91-92. ALBERT PRUDEN CARMAN. Professor of Theoretical Physics. jj Alvarado Row. A. B., College of New Jersey, Princeton, 1883; A. M. and I). Sc., 1886. Fellow in Experimental Science, Princeton, 1883-84; 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.t University of Tubingen, 1882. Student, University of Leipzig, 1879-81; Instructor in German, Johns Hopkins University, 1885-S8; Editor Rclletristisches Journal, 1888-92. EDWARD ALSWORTH ROSS, Professor of Economic Theory and Finance. P 1' J 24 Alvarado Row. A. B., Coe College, 18S6; 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, 1S92-93. NATHAN ABBOTT, Professor of Law. V V 2j Salvalierra St. A. B., Vale University, 1876; LL. B., Boston University, 1880. 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; I). Sc., 1885. Assistant Electrician, United States Electric Lighting Company, Newark, N. J., 1885-88; Manager Insulated Wire Department, John A Roebling’s Sons’ Company, Trenton, N. J., 1888-92: Treasurer Germania Electric Company, Boston, Mass., 1892-93. JOHN ERNST MATZKE, Professor of the Romanic Languages. 2 Portola Air. A. B , Hope College. 1882; Ph. I)., Johns Hopkins, University, 1888. Professor of French, Bowdoin College, 1SS9 90; Professor of the Romance Languages, Indiana University, 1890-91 ; Associate in the Romance Languages, Johns Hopkins University, 1881-93. CHARLES NEWTON LITTLE, Professor of Mathematics. 6 . Uvarado Row. A. B., University of Nebraska. 1S79; Ph. D., Yale University, 1S85. Instructor in Mathematics and Civil Engineering, University of Nebraska, 1880-84; Associate Professor of Civil Engineering, 1885-90; Professor of Civil Engineering, 1890-93. 28 EDWARD HOWARD GRIGGS, Professor of Ethics. { Europe.) A. B.. Indiana University, 1889; A. M., 1890. Student, University of Berlin, 18S9-91 ; Instructor in English Literature, Indiana University, 1889-91; Professor of General Literature, 1891-93. GEORGE MANN RICHARDSON, Professor of Organic Chemistry. V )' S Alvarado Row. A. C., Lehigh University, 18S6 ; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University. 1890. Instructor in Quantitative Chemical Analysis, Lehigh University, 1888-89; Fellow in Chemistry, Johns Hopkins University, 1889-90; Instructor in Organic Chemistry, Lehigh University, 1890-91. WALTER MILLER, Professor of Archaeology. College Terrace. A. M., University of Michigan, 1S84. Student, University of Leipzig, 1884-85, 18S9-91 ; 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, 1888-1889; Senior. Royal Areluuolcgical Seminary, University of Leipzig, 1890- 91; Associate Professor of Greek, University of Missouri, 1891-92. WILLIAM HENRY HUDSON, 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. 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 IJuadilla (N. V.) Academy, 1874-79; Student, University of Gottingen, 1S79-S0; Principal of Delaware Academy (Delhi. N. V.), 1880 85; Instructor in German, Cornell University, 1885 91 ; Registrar, 1890-91. RUFUS LOT GREEN, Associate Professor of Mathematics. 3 Salvatierra SI. B. S., Indiana University, 1885; A. M., 1890. Instructor in Mathematics, Indiana University. 1S85-S6; Student, Johns Hopkins University, 1886-87; Professor of Pure Mathematics, Indiana University, 1887-93. WILLIAM JOSEPH HUSSEY, Professor of Astronomy. 20 Alvarado Row. B. S., University of Michigan, 1889. Assistant in the Nautical Almanac Office, Washington, D. C., 1889 ; Instructor in Mathematics. University of Michigan, 1889-91, Instructor in Astronomy and Acting Director of the Observatory, 1891-92. • Absent on leave, 1894-95. ARLEY BARTHLOW SHOW, Associate Professor of European Hist0Or- Palo Alto. A. B., Doane College, 1882 ; B. D., Andover Theological Seminary, 18S5 ; A. M., Doane College, 1892. Pastor Congregational Church, Waco, Neb., 1885-87; Professor of History and English Literature, Doane College, 1887-92. ORRIN LESLIE ELLIOTT, Secretary and Registrar. p If A' 24 Alvarado Row. Ph. B., Cornell University, 1885; 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. VERNON LYMAN KELLOGG, Associate Professor of Entomology. B. S., University of Kansas, 1889; M. S., 1892. 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 P t Salvalierra St. A. B., University of Toronto, 1883; A. M., 18S6. 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, 1S87-93; Classical Examiner in University of Toronto and Trinity University. BOLTON COIT BROWN, Associate Professor of Drawing and Painting. College Tetrace. B. P., Syracuse University, 1885; M. P., 18S9. Instructor in Freehand Drawing, Cornell University, 1885-88 ; 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. If II 5 Salvalierra St. A. M., Vanderbilt University, 18S6 ; Ph. D., University of Gottingen, 1S92. Assistant Geologist and Chemist, Arkansas Geological Survey, 1887-90. ALPHONSO GERALD NEWCOMER, Associate 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, 188 -91. 3° HENRY BURROWES LATHROP, Associate Professor of English. College Terrace. A. B., Harvard University, 18S9. Assistant Professor of English, Hobart College, 1889-90; Instructor in English, Harvard University, 1890-92. LIONEL REMOND LENOX, Associate Professor of Chemistry. Castro. Pit. B., Columbia College, 1S88. Assistant Chemist, Bethlehem Iron Co., 1887; Instructor in Chemistry, Lehigh University, 1888-91; Chemist, Ordnance Department, United States Navy, Washington, I). C., 1891-92. WILBUR WILSON THOBURN, Instructor in Ethics. Palo Alto. A. B., Alleghany College, 1881 ; A. M., 1884; Ph. I)., 1888. Teacher of Natural Science. Pennsylvania State Normal School, 1881-84; Professor of Geology and Botany, Illinois Wesleyan University, 1884-8S; Professor of Geology and Biology, University of the Pacific, 1888-91. MARY SHELDON BARNES, Assistant Professor of History. 12 Alvarado Row. A. B., University of Michigan, 1874. Teacher of Greek, Latin, and History, Oswego vN. Y.) Normal School, 1875-76; Professor of History, Wellesley College, 1S77-79. EMORY EVANS SMITH, Assistant Professor of Horticulture. Palo Alio. Editor California Florist and Gardener, 1888-89; Associate Editor Pacific Rural Press, 1889; Editor California Fruit Grower, 1890-92; Secretary California State Ploral Society, 1888-93; President Florists’ Club of California since 1891. SAMUEL JACQUES BRUN, Assistant Professor of French. College Terrace. B. £s S., Montpelier, France, 1876. French Master, Ackworth School, England, 1879-80; Instructor in French, Haverford College, 18S1-82; Instructor in French, Cornell University, 1882-86. JOHN ANTHONY MILLER, Assistant Professor of Mathematics. . Alvarado Row. A. B., Indiana University, 1890; A. M., Leland Stanford Junior University, 1893. Superintendent of Schools, Rockville, Ind., 1890-91. DAVID ELLSWORTH SPENCER, Assistant Professor of History. P A 8 Palo Alto. B. L., University of Wisconsin, 1887; A. M., Harvard University, 1891. Student in Law, University of Wisconsin, 1887-88. Instructor in Rhetoric, 18S8-S9, Instructor in History, 1889-90; Assistant in History, Harvard University, 1891-92; Acting Assistant Professor of History, University of Michigan, 1892-93. 31 • Absent on leave, 1894-95. ARTHUR BRIDGMAN CLARK, Assistant Professor of Drawing and Architectural Draughting. J T 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, 1889-92. ♦FRANK MACK McFARLAND, Assistant Professor of Histology. J K E {In Europe.) Ph. B., De Pauw University, 18S9; A. M., Leland Stanford Junior 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 Lasucn .‘Ire. A. B., Vassar College, 1S86. Teacher of Latin and German, Cascadilla School (Ithaca, X. Y.), 1SS6 -88; Student in German, Hanover and Berlin, 1888 89, University of Leipzig. 1889 90; Instructor in German, Cleveland College for Women, 1S90-91, 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. Ph. B., Cornell University. 1880; M. S., 1S82. Teacher of History, Washington (D. C.) High School, 1882-84; Teacher of History, Private School, Cincinnati, O., 18S4-86; Instructor in History and Economics, Wellesley College, 1886-90, Registrar and Secretary of Board of Examiners, 1889-90. MERRITT EUGENIC TAYLOR, Assistant Professor of Physics. Latiro Hall. B. S., Northwestern University, 1883 ; M. S., 1884. Assistant in Chemistry, Northwestern University, 1883-84, Instructor in Mathematics, 1S84-86 ; Student at Universities of Berlin, Zurich and Johns Hopkins, 1886-89; Electrician, Incandescent Lamp Company, Chicago, 1889-92. 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. 32 • Absent on leave, 1S91-95. JOHN CHARLES LOUNSRERY FISH, Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering. A TQ C. E., Cornell University, 1892. Instructor in Civil Engineering, Cornell University, 1.892-93. GEORGE KRIEHN, Assistant Professor of Social and Economic Histor '- I'alo Alto. A. B., William Jewell College, 18S7 ; Ph. D., University of Strassbnrg, 1892. Student in History and Art, Herlin, Freiburg, Zurich, Strassburg and Florence, 1887-92 ; Fellow by Courtesy, Johns Hopkins University, 1892-93, Instructor in History, 1893-94. STEWART WOODFORD YOUNG, Assistant Professor of Chemistry. A T H 2 Alvarado Row. B. S., Cornell University, 1S90. Assistant iu Chemistry, Cornell University, 1S90-91 ; Instructor in Chemistry, Swarthmore College, 1891-93. RORERT JUDSON ALEY, Acting Assistant Professor of Mathematics. l5 Alvarado Row. A. B., Indiana University, 1888; A. M., 1890. Instructor in Mathematics, Indiana University, 1887-88; Professor of Mathematics. Vincennes University, 1888-91 ; Professor of Mathematics, Indiana University, since 1891. WESTEL WOODBURY WILLOUGHBY, Acting Assistant Pro fessor of Political Science. . A V Alondra Hall. A. B., Johns Hopkins University, 1888; Ph. D., 1891. Fellow in History and Politics, Johns Hopkins University, 1890-91; Attorney-at-law, Washington, D. C., since 1892. CHARLES ELLWOOD COX, Instructor in Mathematics. College Park. A. B., Ilaverford College, 1880; A. M., Leland Stanford Junior University, 1893. Principal of Friends Academy, Le Grand, Iowa, 18S0-85 ; Professor of Mathematics, University of the Pacific, 18S6-91. HERMAN DE CLERCQ STEARNS, Instructor in Physics. Palo Alto. A. B., Leland Stanford Junior University, 1892 ; A. M., 1893. DANIEL WILLIAM MURPHY, Instructor in Physics. ( Europe.) A. B., Leland .Stanford Junior University, 1892; A. M., 1893. 33 Absent on leave, 189.1-95. CHARLES WILSON GREENE, Instructor in Physiology. 14 Alvarado Row. A. B., Lei and Stanford Junior University, 1892 ; A. M., 1893. MARGARET E. SCHALLENBERGER, Instructor in Education. 6 Salvaiicrra St. Graduate California State Normal School, San Jose, 1880. Teacher in State Normal School, San Jose, 1887-92, Principal of Training Department, 1892-93. WALTER ROBERT SHAW, Instructor in Botany. J T J Salvatierra St. A. B., Lelaud Stanford Junior University, 1892. CLELIA DUEL MOSHER, Instructor in Hygiene and Physical Training. K A Palo Alto. A. B., Leland Stanford Junior University, 1S93 ; A. M., 1894. HAROLD HEATH, Instructor in Histology. Jf Alvarado Row. A. B., Ohio Wesleyan University, 1893. Assistant in Biology, Ohio Wesleyan University, 1891-93 ; Professor of Natural Science, University of the Pacific, 1893-94. IRENE HARDY, Instructor in English. 19 Salvatierra St. A. B., Antioch College, 1885. Teacher of English and Latin, Preparatory School, Antioch College, 1874-76; Head of English Department and Teacher of Entomology, Oakland (Cal.) High School, 1877-83, Teacher of English, 1887-92. HENRY COFFINBERRY MEYERS, Instructor in Chemistry. Mariposa Hall. Ph. D., Strassburg, 1891 ; F. C. S., London, 1891. Consulting Chemist, Haskiu Wood Vulcanizing Co., New York, 1892-93. JESSICA S. VANCE, Instructor in English. San Jose. Ph. B., University of the Pacific. KARL G. RKNDTORFF, Instructor in German. Menlo Park. A. M., Leland Stanford Junior University, 1S94. Student, University of Gieseu, 1884-85, University of Kiel, 1885-91. CHARLES KELLEY JENNERS, Acting Instructor in Economics. II Lauro Halt. A. B., Lelaud Stanford Junior University, 1892; A. M., 1894. 34 Assistants. GEORGE ARCHIBALD CLARK, President’s Secretary. AT 14 Alvarado Row. B. L., University of Minnesota, 1891. ANNA LOUISA BROWN, Artist of the Hopkins Laboratory. 24 Alvarado Row. B. P., Syracuse University, 1S89. CLARK WILSON HETHERINGTON, Assistant in Physical Training:. PAH 11 Salvaticrra St. ORRISON VERT EATON. Assistant Registrar. (PAH Lauro Hall. MAUD MARCH, Assistant in Physical Training. Roble Hall. JOHN COPELAND KIRTLAND, Jr., Assistant in Latin. (p K r, P ll K Palo Alio. A. B., Hobart College, 1890; A.M., 1893. LUCIEN HOWARD GILMORE, Assistant in Physics. A. B., Leland Stanford Junior University, 1894. Palo Alio. GERTRUDE NORTH BROWN, Assistant in Education, in charge of the Kindergarten. 24 Alvarado Row. Graduate Philadelphia Training School for Kindergartners, 1891 ; Kin-dergartner, West Philadelphia Ethical Society, 1891-92; New York City Kindergarten Association, 1S92-93. JULIUS EMBRET PETERSON, Foreman of the Forge. College Terrace. EDWARD SOULE, Foreman of the Woodworking Shop. Palo Alto. JOHN KINLAY WIGHT, Curator of the Art Museum. P r A Mayfield. A. B., Leland Stanford Junior University, 1S93. 35 FLORA HARTLEY, Assistant Curator of the Zoological Museum. Palo Alto. RAY LYMAN WILBUR, Laboratory Assistant in Physiology. Encina Hall. CLARA STOLTKNBERG, Laboratory Assistant in Physiology. Robie Hall. FREDERICK JOHN TEGGART, way Library. Librarian of the Hopkins Rail- . Alvarado Row. A. B., Lelaud Stanford Junior University, 1894. CHARLES JAMISS NEWMAN, Library Assistant. Encina Hail. JOHN MASON ROSS, Library Assistant. J T J Evein a Hall. JACKSON ELI REYNOLDS, Library Assistant. 0 ’ J Mayfield. ALFRED FRANCIS WILLIAM SCHMIDT, Cataloguer. Encina Hall. LOUISE MAITLAND, Cataloguer. roSalvaticrra SI. PERCY ERWIN DAVIDSON, Cataloguer. - Adalanta Villa. Ceclurer. FREDERICK LOUIS OTTO ROEHRIG, Lecturer on Oriental Philology. Sa„ Francisc0' Pli. D., Leipzig; M. D., Paris. Assistant Professor of French, and Professor of Sanskrit and Modern Oriental Languages, Cornell University, 1S69-86. Other Officers. ELLEN FRANCES THOMPSON, Mistress of Roble Hall. Roble Hull. 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. Encina Hall. CHARLES F. MOORE, University Plumber. Menlo Park. CHARLES C. WALLEY, University Carpenter. Mayfield. M J. A. MARTIN, Forester. Palo Alto. Standing Committees. WAYS A D MEANS. Professors Stillman, Howard, Branner, Flugel, and Marx. STUDENTS' AFFAIRS. Professors Ross, Griffin, A. W. Smith, and Thoburn. ADMISSION OF STUDENTS. Professors Murray, E. Barnes, A. W. Smith, Hussey, and the Registrar. DOUBTFUL CASES. Professors Richardson, Gilbert, Murray, Griffin, and the Registrar. ENCINA AND ROBLE HALLS. Professors Marx, Stillman, and Wood. REGISTRATION OF STUDIES. Professors Gilbert, Wood, Green, Kellogg, and the Registrar. ENTRANCE REQUIREMENTS. Professors Sanford, Miller, Anderson, Goehel, and Jenkins. PETITIONS. Professors Wing, Allardice, and J. P. Smith. INTERCOLLEGIATE AFFAIRS. Professors Branner, Anderson, Matzke, Abbott, and Hudson. CHAPEL EXERCISES. Professors Miller, Show, and Thoburn. RECEPTIONS. Professors Matzke, Perrine, Carman, Goebel, and Campbell. PUBLICATIONS. Professors Howard, Flugf.l, Woodruff, Dudley, and Little. GRADUATION. Professors Pease, Warner, Little, A. W. Smith, and the Registrar. UNIVERSITY EXTENSION. Professors Hudson, Ross, and E. Barnes. SUMMER SCHOOL. Professors Barnes, Fairclough, and Stillman. PUBLIC EXERCISES. Professors Woodruff, Show, and Brown. RESOLUTIONS. Professors Flugel, Haskins, and Perrine. ATHLETICS. Professors Angell, Wood, and Richardson. HOPKINS LABORATORY. Professors Jenkins, Gilbert, and Dudley. Dear Quad, when these damsels are saddened and old, In far-away countries where climates are cold, A vision will come of thy shady arcades, Thy columns all sculptured and tall colonnades. Sweet memory will paint the dull, red-fluted tiles, The shadowy recess where the sun never smiles. Thy tropical foliage, the soft pampas plume, Banana and cactus and flowers bright with bloom, The blue sky Egyptian, the sunset’s rich tints, Or the white melting moonlight with silvery glints. Where’er they may wander, o’er mountain and sea, Their fond hearts will turn, loved Quadrangle, to thee. W. H. 39 Graduates Adams, Maxwell, St. George, IV. Va., A. B., Stanford University, 1895. Anderson, Frank M., Ashland, Or., A. B., Willamette University, 1S89. Applewhite, John Campbell, Corvallis, Or., B. S., Oregon State Agricultural College, 1889. Ballance, Virginia, Peoria, III., A. B., Elmira (N. Y.) College, 1894. Bell, Agnes, Carson City. Nev., A. B., University of Nevada, 1893. Bland, Henry Meade, College Park, Ph. I)., University of the Pacific. Boardtnan, Elizabeth Louise, Reno, Nev., A. B., Stanford University, 1893. Brown, Frederick Melvin, Brooklyn, N. V., A. B., Harvard University, 1889. Butler, Charles Edgar, Palo Alto, A. B., Harvard University. Clark, George Archibald, Palo Alio, B. L., University of Minnesota, 1891. Clark, Wellyin Brayton, Castorland, N. Y, A. B., Stanford University, 1893. Collins, Samuel Wilson, Graham, Mo.. A. B., Stanford University, 1895. Cox, Charles EUwood, College Park, A. B., Haverford College, 1880; A. M., Stanford Univ Cox, Herbert Every, Tulare. Ph. B., University of the Pacific, 1882. Cox, Lydia Shipley Bean, San Jose, A B., Penn College. Cramer, Frank, Appleton, I Vis., A. M., Stanford University, 1893. Cummings, Minnie, Houghton, S. Dak., B. S., Olivet College, 1S90. Chemistry'. Geology. Law. English. Romanic Lang. English. Latin. Electrical Eng. Economics. Latin. Mathematics. Physics. Mathematics. rrsitv, 1893. Education. English. Physiology. Physiology. 40 De Laguna. Bertha, Mayfield, Latin. A. B., Stanford University, 1894. Dodson, George Rowland, Alameda. Psychology. A. B., University of Missouri, 1887. Drake, Noah Fields, Cincinnati, Ark., Geology. C. E., Arkansas Industrial University, 18SS. Dunn, John Leander, Monmouth, Or., Chemical Eng. A. B , Oskaloosa College, 1881 ; A. M., 1884. Elmore. Jefferson, Mayfield, Latin. A. B., Stanford University, 1895. Girty, George Herbert, Cleveland, O., Geology. A. B., Yale University, 1892 ; Ph. I)., 1894. Grabill, Clarence Alfred, Red Oak, Iowa, German. A. B., Stanford University, 1894. Greene, Charles Wilson, Palo Alto, Physiology. A. B., Stanford University, 1892; A. M., 1893. Greer, Medorem William, Mayfield, English. B. S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Hall, Sarah Adelette, Palo Alto, History. A. B., University of the Pacific, 18S4; A. M., 1887. Heath, Harold, Palo Alto, Histology. A. B., Ohio Wesleyau University. Hoag, Ernest Bryant, Evanston, III., Physiology. A. B., Stanford University, 1895. Howard, Alice Frost, Palo Alto. History. Ph. B., University of Nebraska. Kirtland, John Copeland, Jr., Willow Creek, X. ¥., Latin. A. B., Hobart College, 1S90; A. M., 1893. Leavitt, Orpha Euphemia, Crete, Neb., History. A. B., Doane College, 1886. Lewers, Charles Ross, Frankiown, Nev., German. A. B., University of Nevada, 1S93. McClelland. David Thompson, Santa Cruz, History. A B., Washington and Jefferson College, 1879; A. M.. 18S3. Magee, Chester Lee, San Diego, Physiology. A. B., Stanford University, 1S95. 4i Martin, Anna Henrietta, Reno, Nev., History. A. B., University of Nevada, 1894. Means, John Harrison, Moorcfield, hid.. Geology. A. B., Indiana University ; A. M., Stanford University, 1892. Meek, Seth Eugene. Fayetteville, Ark., Zoology. B. S., Indiana University, 1884 : M S., 1886 ; Ph. D , 1891. Miller, Alfreds., Normal Square, Penn., Chemistry. A. M., Wichita University, 1890. Murray, Herbert, Rockland, Me., Chemistry. B. S., Maine State College, 1894. Myers, Henry Coffinberry, Cleveland, O., Drawing. Ph. D., Strassburg University, 1891. Newell, James Blair, Santa Clara College, Greek. A. B., Stanford University, 1894 Newsom, John Fletcher, Elizabethtown, hid.. Geology. A. B., Indiana University ; A. M., Stanford University, 1892. Nowell, John A., College Park, A B., Stanford University, 1893. Offield, Lorenzo Adolphus, Santa Clara, A. B., Stanford University, 1894. Otaki, Keiuasuke, Tokio, Japan, A. B., Stanford University, 1S94. Pleasants, Emma Shaw, Pottsville, Penn., B. S., Wellesley College, 1890. Polk, Mary, Bruceville, Ind., A. B., Stanford University, 1895. Rendtorff, Karl G., Puetz, Germany, A. M., Stanford University, 1S94. Rose, Walter Mai ins, Ontario, A. B., Stanford University, 1895. Rutter, Cloudsley, hong Pine, Areb., B. S., Doane College, 1892. Secrest, Emma, Randolph, Kan., B. S., Kansas State Agricultural College. Shaw, Edmund Jeremiah, Palo Alto, A. B., University of Michigan, 1 77. Shelley, Elsie Hjerlied, Berrycssa, A. B., Stanford University, 1S94. History. Greek. Zoology. Hygiene. Education. German. History. Zoology. English. Latin. Physiology. 42 Slayton, Helen Elizabeth, Stowe, Vt., Latin. A. B., Stanford University, 1894. Smith, Kathryne Janette, San Jose, English. Pb. B., University of the Pacific, 1888. Smith, Leigh Richmond, San Jose, Latin. A. M., Princeton College, 1875. Smith, Mary E. B. Roberts. Palo Alto, Sociology. Ph. B., Cornell University, 1880; M. S., 1882. Squire, John Adams, San Jose, Latin. A. B., Harvard University, 1884. Stowell, John Matron, Morrison, III., Zoology. A. B., Knox College, 1891. Terrell, Glanville, Louisa, Va., Latin. A. B., Stanford University, 1894. Textor, Lucy Elizabeth, Chicago, III., • History. A. B., University of Michigan, 1894. Vance, Jessica S., San Jose, English. Ph., B., University of the Pacific, 1887. Van Denburgh, John, Los Gatos, Zoology. A. B., Stanford University, 1894. Washburn, Jessica Thompson, San Jose, English. A. B., Stanford University, 1892. Wight, Edwin Buckminster, Palo Alio, German. A. B., Harvard University, 1857; A. M., Michigan University, i860. Wight, John Kinlay, Palo Alto, History. A. B., Stanford University, 1893. Wigle, Gilbert Griffin, Palo Alto, A. B., Stanford University, 1895. Wilkinson, Frank, Acampo, A. B., Stanford University, 1895. Young, Stewart Woodford, Palo Alto, B. S., Cornell University, 1890. Zion, Edwin Ray, Berkeley, A. B., Stanford University, 1894. History’. Civil Engineering. Chemistry. Economics. Zumwalt, Don John, College Park, Civil Engineering. A. B., Stanford University, 1895. 43 Once in the spring, not so many moons ago, Some athletic Stanford maidens felt inclined to take a row ; They organized a boat club, picked a captain and a crew, And then sat down and pondered what the next thing was to do, When suddenly the brilliant thought came to each Roble daughter That they must have some male co-eds to row them o’er the water. But the days passed by and found them in their customary plight, For when Stanford boys are wanted they are always out of sight! So they passed a resolution (as the modern womeu do) To vote the men a failure and paddle their own canoe ! W. H. 44 President . . . . Vice- President Secretary . . Treasurer . . Football Manager . Officers. .................L. J. Hinsdill. . . A. M. Cathcart. ... Clementine Tucker. ..............H. C. Hoover. .......................H. S. Hicks. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. ■895- Laura A. Trumho, J. T. Langford. 1896. J. P. Bernhard, G. F. Vandervber. 1897. 1898. J. A. Pauly. 45 H. C. Hazzard, R. K. Culver. Senior Gass. ’95 Zah! Zah ! Zeer! We’re Right here! ’95 95. Pioneer! Class Color: Silver. Officers. FIRST President..................... First Viee-President.......... Second Vice-President . . . Recording Secretary .... Corresponding Secretary . . . Treasurer .................... Football Manager . . . . Historian................... Sergcant-at-A rms........... SEMESTER. . . Dennis Searles. Miss B. L. Chapman. . . . C. J. Newman. . . A. L. Jones. . . J. F. Sheehan. . . A. G. Ruddbll. ... M. D. Grosh. .... E. M. Rea. . . J. J. Hoi.uster. second President..................... First Vice-President.......... Second Vice-President......... Recording Secretary........... Corresponding Secretary. . . . Treasurer..................... Sergcant-at-A rms . . Historian ... Baseball Manager Football Manager.............. SEMESTER. ..............J. T. Langford. ................C. J. Newman. ...........Miss A. L. Merritt. ...............J F. Sheehan. ...........Miss M. A. K1 DWELL. ................C. E. Durrell. ...............Dennis Searles. .............. Shirley Baker. .............W. E. Stuart. ..............F. E. Kessingkr. 47 Class of ’9§. [Students marked with an asterisk (•) graduated Christmas, 1S94.J Adams, Maxwell, St. George, IV. Va.. Chemistry. Allabach, Lucy. Des Moines. la.. English. K J H Vice-Pres. Class (2), (3); Hoa d of Control Daily I'alo Alto (4)1 Pres. Y. W. C. A. (3); Associate Kditor Stanford Quad, Vol. I (3). Ames, Elsa Lovina, Palo Alio. Drawing. Amesbury, Louise, Roekport, Me.. Drawing. Anderson, Frank M., Mayfield. Geology. Arnold, David Lafayette, Orange. Mathematics. 2’ X University of Southern California (1), (2); Vice-Pres. Y. M. C. A. (3), Pres. (4); Sec. Athletic Hoard (4); Trustee St. Guild (4). Babcock, Elizabeth Merrill, Palo Alio. Botany. Baker, Shirley, East Oakland. Civil Eng. Z r, 2’ 2' Glee Club (1), (2), (3), (4); Pres. (1), (2); Leader (1), (2), (3); Mandolin Club (2); Rand (2); Associate Kditor STANFORD QUAD, Vol. I (3I; Board of Control Daily Palo Alto (3); Associate Hditor Daily Palo Alio (4); Class Historian (3), )4); Class Baseball Team (4). Bancroft, George Jarvis, Denver. Mechanical Eng. 2' d .’ Pres. Boat Club (2); Track Manager (4). Barstow, Alfred, Jr., Z ' ; 2- 2‘ Oakland. English. Brim, Lucy May, Williams. Physiology. Brown, Walter Shirlaw, Slock Ion. Physiology. Buck, Rufus, Sea file. Mining Eng. Burke, Mary, Santa Cruz, English. Assistant Kditor Daily Palo Alio (2); Associate Kditor Sequoia (3). Burnell, Charles S. S., San Franeiseo. Economics. Sergeant-at-Arms Class (1); Class Council (3); Sec. (3). Burnett, Arthur Hardin, Tulare. Mechanical Eng. Varsity Football Team (3); Kncina Hall Com. (4). Buxton, Norman Geer. Johnstown, 0.t Zoology. A T Q Manager Stanford Quad, Vol. I. Caldwell, Winifred, Pasadena, Mathematics. K AH Calhoun, Scott, La Conner, Wash., Law. 2 Member Class Baseball Team (1), (2), (3), (4); Varsity (1), (2), (3); Athletic Team (2); Pacific Coast championship running high jump (2); Press Club (2), (3), (4); Assistant Editor Daily Palo Alio (2), Associate (3), Editor-in-Chief (4); Class Council (3); Athletic Board (2); Sec. Athletic Committee (3); Intercollegiate Athletic Committee (2); Students’ Congress. Champion, Louis Frederick, Oakland, Civil Eng. Chapman, Bertha, Oakland, English. A A • Chapman, Elizabeth, Oakland, English. A A' Collins, Samuel Wilson, Graham, Mo., Physics. Class Council, Treas. Associated Students (2); Athletic Board (2); Pres. Cooperative Association (2); Chairman Board of Control Daily Palo Alto (3); Manager Daily Palo Alto (3). Condit, Benson Clare, Riverside, Electrical Eng. Grinnell College (1). Conners, George Wilbert, Santa Rosa, Civil Eng. Copeland, Edwin Bingham, Monroe, J Vis., Botany. P ’ J University of Wisconsin (il, (2), (3). Cory, Harriett, San Jose, English. Cory. Henry Manning, r v, i’ i' Fresno, Chemistry. Cory, Sussanah, San Jose, English. Cox, Herbert E-, Santa Cruz, Education. Crothers, George Edward, wr, History. 2’.V Pres. Class (1); Class Council, Pres. Alpha (4); Bench and Bar. Crow, Evelyn Gladys, Art Jose, English. Crowell, Robinson, San Franeisco, Mechanical Eng. Treas. Electrical Engineering Club (4). Cummings, Minnie A. Houghton, S. Dak., Physiology. B. S., Olivet College, Mich. 4 49 Dart, Elbert R., Rock Island, ., Civil Eng. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (i); Pres. Civil Engineering Club (4). Doherty, William, Paterson, N. ., Law. (p J H Dole, Marion Foster, Riverside, Physiology. A J Donald, Robert L’Amy, Dundee, Scotland, Civil Eng. J 7 J, Pres. Students’Guild (2); Pres. Civil Engineering Club (3); Vice-Pres. Press Club (3); Director Sequoia (3); Associate and Editor-in-chief Daily Palo Alto (4). Downing, Paul Milton, Pleasanton, Civil Eng. X X Varsity Football Team (1), (2), (3), (4); Captain (4); Baseball Team (1); Pres. Electrical Engineering Club (4). Doyle, Edmund Miller, Dray, Frank R., Z r, 2’ 2; H N E Durrell, Carleton Edgar, Class Treas. (4). Eaton, Orrison Vert, Menlo Park, Sacramento, Pasadena, Mechanical Eng. Chemistry’. Chemical Eng. Economics. Franklin, Ind., (p J H Indiana University (1), (2); Manager Sequoia (3); Assistant Register (3)i (4); Jordan Essay Prize (4); Varsity Football Manager (4). Ellery, Nathaniel, Eureka, Sec. Civil Engineering Club (4). Elmore, Jefferson, Mayfield, Emery, Arthur Lowell, Ithaca, N. Y, (p I' J Cornell University (1), (2). Civil Eng. Latin. Chemistry. Farmer, Elmer Elsworth, Vacaville, Electrical Eng. Class Council; Pres. Electrical Engineering Society (4); Track Team (2), (3). Field, Charles Kellogg, Alameda, English. Z 7‘ Associate Editor Daily Palo Alio (1): Class Corresponding Secretary (2); Board of Directors Sequoia (3), Associate Eaitor (2), (3), (4); Associate Editor Stanford Quad, Vol. I (3); Glee Club (3), (4); Mandolin Club (4); Associate Editor Daily Palo Alto (4). Fitzgerald, James Joseph, Slock ton, Latin. Fogg, Frederick Seydel, Tacoma, German. A Y 50 San Jose, English. Ford, Georgiana, Mount Holyoke (i), (2). Foster, Benjamin Oliver, A T University of Utah (1); Washington, D. C., Library Association (3). Latin. Fraser, Alfred Parker, (p ’ J Class Council (4). Stockton, English. Fry, Donald Hume, Areata, Artist Stanford Quad, Vol. I (3). Mechanical Eng. Fyffe, Harriet, K A H Norwal, III., English. Gale, Edward Nuckols, Santa Rosa, German. Grosh, Milton David, San Francisco, Mechanical Eng. A 7'Li Class Football Team (i), (3); Varsity (1); Athletic Committee (2). Gunn, James Alexander, Jr., Kelseyville, English. Glee Club (1), (2), (3), (4I; Class Historian (3); Vice Pres. Euphronia (3); Daily Palo Alto (3); Pres. Euphronia (4). Guth, William W., San Francisco, History. V h V Hamilton, Ernest G., Riverside, Civil Eng. Vice-Pres. Republican Club (4); Sec. Civil Engineering Club (4); Treas. Stanford Sunday School (4). Hardin, Eli Boyer, South Warsaw, O., German. Buchtel College (1), (2), (3). Harrelson, William Hasting, Tulare, Civil Eng. 2’ N Varsity Baseball Team (1), (2), (3); Varsity Football Team (3), (4). Harter, Ralph Laban, San Jose, Civil Eng. Hartley, Flora, Yankee town, hid., Zoology. Harwood, Edward Charles, Ontario, Latin. A r Hayward, Ernest Chesney, Victoria, Electrical Eng. Vice-Pres. Electrical Engineering Club (4). Hazzard, William Clarence, Claquaio, Wash., History. (p A’ f Sergeant-at-Arms Class (1); Council (2); Executive Committee Republican Club (2), (3); Geological Society (3); Class Football Team (1), (2), (3), (4); Pres. Alpha (3); Manager Daily Palo Alto (3); Varsity Football Team (4). Sacramento, Herrick, Jane, Latin. Herrick, Kate, Sacramento, Latin. Associate Editor Stanford Quad, Vol. I (3). Hinsdill, Lester Jesse, Clarksburg, History. Pres. Class (3); Pres. Kuphronia (3); Associate Editor Stanford Quad, Vol. I (3); Pres. Student Body (4). Hoag, Ernest B., Chicago, Physiology. H H II Northwestern (1), (2); Zoological Club (3), (4); Assistant, Physical Laboratory (4). Hogg, Cora, Saratoga, Latin. Hollister, John James, X P, X 2, H X E Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1); Class Pres. (3); Sergeant-at-Arms (4). Hoover, Herbert C., Muscatine, «., Geology. Pres. Geological Club, Class Council. Athletic Board ; Treas. Class (3); Assistant, Geological Survey of Arkansas (3); Assistant, United States Geological Survey (4). Hughes, Charles Colfax, Redwood City, Economics. (P I' J Sec. Class (1); Executive Committee Student Body (3); Sequoia (2), (3). (4). Husband, Richard Wellington, Moorefield, Ont., Greek. Hyde, Walter S., San Francisco, Electrical Eng. Jack, Thomas Burrowes, Decatur, ., History. - R University of Michigan (1), (2), (3). Johnson, Ernest Huston, Sacramento, Economics. Jones. Albert, San Jose, Mathematics. Jones, Noble W., Salt Lake City, Zoology. University of Wisconsin (1), (2), (3). Jones, Maud B., Sacramento, Latin. Assistant Editor Daily Palo Alto (2). Kennedy, Martin Herbert, Denver, Law. J T J, 2’ 2 , H X E Class Council (2), (3); Varsity Football Team (2), (3), (4); Glee Club (2), (3). (4); Captain Ice Polo Team (3). Kessinger, Frederick Ernest, Rome, Ar. X, German. •E ) 2 2, H X E Hamilton College (1), (2); Chairman Junior Day Committee (i); Mandolin Club. 1 52 Kid well, Minna A., Kansas City, Mo., German. University of Kansas (i), (2); Treasurer Woman’s Athletic Association (4); Corresponding Secretary Class (4). Kimball, Edwin Boyce, Hayivards, Geology Class Council (1), (3): Pres. Geological Club (4). Kirkbride, Walter Harold, Redwood City, Civil Eng. Knox, Newton Booth, San Francisco, Mining Eng. Langford, James Terry, Lodi, Mechanical Eng. University Band (1), (2), (3), (4); Sergeant-at-Arms Class (2); Corre sponding Secretary (3): Secretary Electrical Engineering Club (3). (4); Baseball Manager, Class (4); Football Team, Class (4); President Class (4). Lay, Lucia, May, Rosedale, Wash., English. II B4 Lewis, Abraham, Jr., Gilroy, Cal., History. 7, lV Athletic medals (1); Varsity Baseball Team ), (2), (3); Assistant Editor Daily Palo Alto (2): Class Nine (1), '2), (3). (4); Captain (2); Varsity Football Team (3), (4); Class Team (3), (4); Vice-Pres. Student Body (3); Kditor-in-Chief Stanford Quad, Vol. I (3); Athletic Board (4); Intercollegiate Athletic Committee (4). Little, Emma Funke, Palo Alto, History. Longley, Mary Emily, Mountain View, Mathematics. Look, Samuel Miller, Prattsburg, N. V, Education. Lyle, Annie, San Francisco, English. McDaniels, John Henry, Tacoma, English. 1'N Mace, Lewis Sayre, San Jose, Physiology. Mackintosh, Kenneth, Seattle, English. PT J Magee, Chester, San Diego, Physiology. II H II Class Council (2): Chapel Organist (1), (2); Associate Editor Daily Palo Alto (2); String Quartette (3); Pres. Chess Club (3); Director Tennis Club (3); Mandolin Club (3), (4); Director Glee Club (4). Magee, E. De Los, San Diego, History. II H II Associate Editor Sequoia (1); Director Cooperative Association (2): Board of Control Daily Palo Alto (2); Treas. Class (2); Sec. Republican Club (2); Manager Cooperative Association (3); Pres. Alpha (3); Encina Hall Committee (3); Associate Editor Stanford Quad, Vol. I (3): Managing Editor Daily Palo Alto (4); Board of Trustees, Students’ Guild (4); Treas. (4); Intercollegiate Debate (4). 53 Manahan, Roland Harry, Pasadena, Electrical Engineering. Matthews, William Jay, Springfield, ., Economics. A 6 Illinois Wesleyan (i), (2); DePauw, (3). ♦Merrill, Samuel, Indianapolis, English. 1'X Merritt, Alberta, Woodland, English. A A' ’ ♦Miller, Alfred S., Normal Square, Penn., Chemistry. Morey, Maud Whitcomb, Chicago, Botany. University of Michigan (1), (2), (3). Morse, Arthur Wakefield, Odell, III., Economics. 0 V J Grand Prairie Seminary (1); De Pauw (2); Illinois Wesleyan (3). Morton, Oliver Perry, Palo Alto, Mathematics. Sec. Chess Club (4), Pres. (4). Nash, Katharine L-, Pasadena, Latin. K A H Associate Editor Sequoia (3), (4); Sec. Class (3). Newman, Charles James, Si. Helena, History. .Sec. Alpha (3); Assistant Daily Palo Alio (3); Attorney Alpha (4); Vice-Pres. Class (4); Class Council (4); Library Assistant (4). Nicholson, Francis John, O'Brien, Maurice William, Jr., Orcutt, William Warren, Athletic Team (2), (3). Osborne, Mary Myrtle, Packard, Mabel Blanche, A’ AH Victoria, Physiology. San Jose, Mechanical Engineering. Santa Paula, Civil Engineering. Warrensburg, Wis., English. San Diego, English. Palmer, Cora Saratoga, ♦Polk, Mary, Bruceville, Ind , A. B., Indiana University. Pomeroy, Thomas Henry, Osurgo, Or., Potter, Winifred White, Oakland, J T J Economics. Education. Mechanical Eng. English. Porter, D' Arcy A., Salinas, Civil Engineering. Latin. Rea, Edward Milton, Santa Clara College (1). San Jose, Reeves, Minnie, Seattle, Reeves, William H.,Jr., Seattle, Rielay, Luella, Oakland, German. Electrical Engineering. English. Rice, Archie Bermingham, Sa?iia Barbara, English. P I' J Pres. Associated Students (i); Athletic Board (i); Class Council (i); Associate Editor Daily Palo Alto (2); Pres. Class (2); Board of Control Daily Palo Alto (2); Associate Editor Stanford Quad, Vol. I. (3): Pres. (pro tent ) Associated Students (3); Managing Editor Daily Palo Alto (3), Editor in-Chief (3); Vice-Pres. St. Guild (4). Rose, Walter Malins, Ontario. History. IiV Clerk Congress (1); Alpha (1), (2), (3), (4); Library Assistant (1), (2), (3); Associate Editor Daily Palo Alto (2); Class Historian (2); Democratic Club (2); Associate Editor Sequoia (3); Editor in-Chief (3), Manager (4); Bench and Bar (4). Rosendale, Charles E. B., Pacific Grove, History. Ruddell, Almus Goar, San Jose, History. P A' V Treas. Class (2), (4); Sec. Republican Club (3). Russell, Tracy George, San Francisco, Physiology. 1 P J, 6 N Et II Varsity Baseball Team (1), (2), (3); Sergeant at-Arms Associated Students’ (2); Baseball Manager Class (2l; Sergeant-at-Arms Class (2); Baseball Team, Class (1), (2), (3), (4); Football Team, Class (3), (4); Second Eleven (3); Varsity (1), (2), (3), (4). Sandwick, Richard Lanning, Dryden, N. Y, Latin. Pres. New York Club (3). Schmidt, Alfred F. W., Turner, Or.t German. Schulte, William H. G., San Francisco, History. Uuiversityof California (1). Scofield, Norman Bishop, IVashington, a., Zoology. Searles, Dennis, Mojave, Chemical Engineering. Press. Class (4). Sheehan, John Francis, Jr., San Francisco, History. V V V V Class Historian (1); Rec. Sec. (1), (3), (4); Athletic Team (2); Varsity Baseball Team (1), (2), (3), Captain (3); Manager Class Football Team (2); C ass Baseball Team (1), (2), (3), (4), Captain (3); Associate Editor Daily Palo Alto (2); Athletic Committee; Vice-Pres. Boat Club (2). 10 55 Chemistry. Shepherd, Frank Irving, Kyle O., University of Michigan (i). Simmons, Samuel Ewer, Sacramento, Chemistry. Zr,HX E, 2 2’ Assistant Manager Daily Palo Alto (2); Orchestra (3); Glee Club (4). Sloan, James Edward, Mayfield, Greek. Smith, Lewis H., Fresno, Law. 2’;V Class Baseball Manager (1); Treas. Athletic Association (2); Treas. Y. M. C. A. (2); Delegate to the National Convention of College Republican Clubs (3); Pres. Republican Club (4). Soutlnvick, Edmund Carmel, Mayfield, Electrical Engineering. Stadtmiiller, Henrietta Louise, h AH San Francisco, English. Stafford, Walter Alfred, Santa Ana, Mathematics. Starks, Edward Chapin, Chicago, Ichthyology. Steffens, Lottie, Sacramento, English. Stinson, Maud E., A A ’ San Jose, English. Stowell, John M., Palo Alto, Zoology. Stratton. George Draper, J T J Riverside, Civil Engineering. Stuart, William E., San Francisco, Geology. Thaxter, Harry Clinton, Carson City, AW., Electrical Eng. Thompson, John West, Redwood City, Mechanical Eng. (p 1' J Sec. Tennis Club (3); Vice-Pres. Electrical Engineering Club (4). Trumbo, Laura, Columbus Grove, O., Physiology. II II P Worcester University (1). (2). Tucker. Hannah Adella, Ontario, Latin. Yostrovsky. Clara, San Jose, Education. White. Arthur Haiti, Live Oak, Varsity Baseball Team (2); Band (2), (3): Physiology’. Vice-Pres. Philolexian (4). White. Paul Helb, Sedalia, Mo., Mechanical Eng. J H Wigle, Britton Day, Palo Alto, History. Wigle, Elsie, Palo Alto, Botany. Wigle, Gilbert Griffin, Palo Alio History. Wilkinson, Frank, A camp0, Civil Engineering. University of California (i). Willard, Hattie M., San Jose, Education. Graduate, University of Michigan, 1877. Winship, Walter Edwin, 1'X San Diego, Mathematics. Wood, Jessie Palen, Palo Alto, English. K K r Woodburn, Nettie Eudora, San Diego, English. II B P Woodworth, G. Lyman, St. Louis, Mo., Electrical Eng. University of California (1). Woodward, Henry Thomas, San Diego, Physiology. University of California (1). Woolrich, Arthur G., San Francisco, Civil Engineering. Wootten, Frank Birens, Linden, History. Treas. Democratic Club (4). Wright, Samuel Vaughan, San Louis Obispo, History. Yoder, Minnie, Des Moines, la.. Chemistry. K A 6 Zumwalt, Don John, College Park, Civil Engineering. 57 I Junior Gass. ’96. Class Yell: Rah! Rah! Ruh ! Rah! Rah! Rix! MD, 3C, XC, Six. Class Color: Suae Green. Officers. FIRST SEMESTER. President................................... First Vice-President........................ Second Vice-President....................... Secretary................................... Treasurer................................... Historian................................... Football Manager............................ Baseball Manager............................ Sergeanl-al-Arms............................ . Miss M. Coombs. . . . T. A. Storey. . . . C. M. Cram. . . . J. M. Gates. Miss F. V. Brown. . . J. O. Watson. . . H. H. Brown. . J. P. Bernhard. SECOND SEMESTER. President................................... First Vice-President........................ Second Vice-President....................... Secretary................................... Treasurer................................... Historiaii.................................. Football Managet............................ Baseball Manager............................ Track Manager............................... George Toombs. M. L. Aufenger. . G. B. Wilson. Nei.i.o Johnson. F. W. Morrison. . . C. M. Cram. A. G. Kaufman. . N. B. Roper. H. B. Reynolds. Refer to p Kc 63. MDCCCXCVI. OU SEE, old man, its not the same As in the long ago. In Freshman days was there a thing We fellows didn’t know? But knowledge is a vanity, And vanities must flee ; I’d like to have it hack again, Just between you aud me. The Sophomore time was jolly, then We brandished walking sticks ; We rushed new men and Rah ! Rah ! Ruhed Rah ! Rixed ! for Ninety-six. We’ll never see those days again. The sound of “ Rah ! Rah ! Ruh ! ” Has lost something it used to have, But that’s l etween us two. The glory of these Junior days Is all too great for rhyme. And yet an autumn glory ’tis That threatens winter time. One more short year, and then farewell— Who knows when I’ll see you? I’d like to stop the clock a while, But that’s an nitre nous. Sarac. JUNIOR CLASS. Class of ’96 Aberdein, Carrie B., BOMB ADDRESS. Riverside, Cal., MAJOR SUBJECT. History- Albee, George B., Mayfield, Cal., Education. Aufenger, Milton L-, Denver, Colo., Law. Baldwin, George P. San Francisco, Cal., Mathematics. Ballard, Roy P., Seattle, Wash., History. Bean, Harry J., San Jose, Cal., Electrical Eng. Bernhard. Joseph P., Fresno, Cal., History. Bishop, Hal F., Alhambra, Cal., Physiology. Bledsoe, Benjamin F., San Bernardino, Cal., History. Bowman, Frances A., San Francisco, Cal., Greek. Boxmeyer, Charles H., Holden, Mo., Physiology. Briggs Francis E., Sacramento, Cal., Physiology. Briggs, William D., Sacramento, Cal., English. Brown, Florence V., San Jose, Cat., English. Brown, Hugh H., Steubenville, 0., Law. Brown, Will L-. Rincon, Cal., Civil Eng. Buchanan, Bertha, Santa Cruz, Cal., Education. Bullock, Bertram M., Eureka, Cal., History. Campbell, Robert W., San Francisco, Cal., History. Cathcart, Arthur M., Colorado Springs, Colo., History. Cochran, Guy H., Los Angeles, Cat., English. Colliver, John A., San Bernardino, Cal., Physiology. Comstock. Sarah, Kansas City, Mo., English. Coombs, Mabel. Marysville, Cal., French. Copeland, Harold T., Salem, Or., Electrical Eng. Corbert, Anita L-, Palo Alio, Cal., English. Cory, Harriet, San Jose, Cal., English. Cory, Mabel Hyde, Fresno, Cal., History. Cram, Charles M., Mt. Vernon, Me., English. 62 HOME ADDRESS. MAJOR SUBJECT. Cullinan, Joseph P., Santa Cruz, Cal., History. Davies, Rees 0., Neath, Pa., Law. Davis, Everett L-, San Jose, Cal., History. Davis, Grace, Carson, Nev., Botany. Doane, Rennie W., Pasadena, Cal., English. Eaves, Harriet R., Eugene, Or., Economics. Ely, Le Roy D.. Pasadena, Cal., English. Fife, Joseph P., • Pasadena, Cal., Economics. Fong, Walter U., San Francisco, Cal., Economics. Foster, Margaret, Washington, D. C., Greek. Frankenheimer, Julius B., Stockton, Cal., Chemistry. Gates, John McP., Hillsboro, Or., Physiology. Gilliam, Reuben F., Columbia, S. C., Law. Gilmore, Lucien H., Capron. III., Electrical Eng. Greenleaf, George R., San Francisco, Cal., Electrical Eng. Gregory, John M., Jr., Suisun, Cal., History. Hall, Myron D., Alamo, Cal., Mechanical ICng. Harris, Henry, Olympia, Physiology. Harper, Winnifred, Indianapolis, hid.. English. Hays, Alice N., San Diego, Cal., English. Hays, Eric B., San Luis Obispo, Cal., Civil Eng. Hazzard, George H., San Diego, Cal., English. Herrick, Jackman, Washington, D. C., Law. Hicks, Herbert S., Rockford, III., Law. Hill, Charles C., Pasadena, Cal., German. Hodgson, Casper W., Pasadena, Cal., Law. Holsclaw, Grace E., Gilroy, Cal., German. Hosiner, Alexander T., Tacoma, Wash., • German. Johnson, Nello De V., Oregon City, Or., P'nglish. Karasek, Matthew, Tacoma, Wash., Mechanical Eng. Kohler, Anna, St. Helena, Mont., Education. Labb£, Charles H., Portland, Or., History. • Refer to page 189. Laughlin, Homer, Jr., Laushe, Jay E., Leshy, Everett P., Libbey, William S., Lord, Frederick a C., McCord, William H., McGrew, John T., McGuire, William L-, McIntosh, James, McLaine, William L., McLaughlin, Hilda, Matthews, Frank C., Mead, Mabel, Miller, Charles, W., Mitchel, Edgar L-, Mitchell, Deane P., Mitchell, Fanny H., Morgan, Grace C., Moore, Thomas K., Morrison, Frank W., Murphy, Thomas J., Neidig, William J., Peery, Jennie J., Pierson, Charles J., Pitcher, Marie L-, Pollock, Alfred H., Raish, Ralph R., Ray, Charles, Reynolds, Harry B., Reynolds, Jackson E., Richards, Flora V., Rockhold, John E., Roper, Norman B., HOME ADDRESS. Fast Liverpool, O., Tacoma, Wash., Santa Ana, Cal., New Richmond, IVis., Virginia City, Nev., Farmer City, III., Honolulu, . ., Hanford, Cal., Palo Alto, Cal., San Francisco, Cal., Victoria, B. C, Salem, Or., Santa Cruz, Cal., Guthrie, G. T., Fowler, Cal., Ashtabula, O., Ashtabula, O., Ontario, Lima, O., Saxton's River, Vt., Riverside, Cal., Los Angeles, Cal., San Diego, Cal., Auburn, Neb., Tacoma, Wash. San Francisco, Cal., Marysville, Cal., Galt, Cal., Oakland, Cal., Oakland, Cal., College Park, Cal., Riverside, Cal., Santa Ana, Cat., MAJOR SUBJECT. Chemical Eng. History. Mechanical Eng. Phsycliology. French. Mechanical Eng. English. Law. Physics. Mechanical Eng. English. Economics. English. History. Education. Mining Eng. Drawing. Latin. Physiology. Latin. History. English. English. Zoology. English. Law’. English. History. Physiology. % History. Mathematics. Civil Eng. Electrical Eng. Roy, Roland F., Virginia City, Nev., Electrical Eng. Ruddell, Frank S., San Jose, Cal., History. Ryan, Jessie A., Stockton, Cat., German. Salisbury, Dallas M., Tacoma, Wash., Mechanical Eng. Schallenberger, Frances R., San Jose, Cat., Latin. Scott, George W., Watertown, Ar. Y., History. Scott, Leslie P., Honolulu, . I., History. Seale, Alvin, Fair mount, fnd., Zoology. Sheldon, Henry D., Santa Clara, Cat., History. Smith, Harlan C., Portland, Or., English. Smith, Harold K., San Francisco, Cat., Greek. Spalding, Alfred B., Atchison, Kas., Physiology. Steffens, Laura, Sacramento, Cal., English. Stoltenberg, Clara, Los Angeles, Cal., Education. Storey, Thomas A., Cold Hill, Alev., History. Taber, Walter C., Stockton, Cal., Chemistry. Thompson, Herbert C., Euge?ic, Or., Latin. Toombs, George, Modesto, Cal., Electrical Eng. Tucker, Clementine, Redlands, Cat., Latin. Vanderveer, George F., Grinnell, la.. History. Watson, James O., Portland, Or., Latin. Whiting, Lulu N., Mountain View, Cal., Latin. Wilbur, Ray L.. Riverside, Cal., Physiology. Williams, Thomas H., Jr., Denver, Col., Economics. Wilson, George B., Rialto, Cal., Economics. Wood, Alfred Iv, Palo Alto, Cal., Mechanical Eng. Wright, Charles F., San Luis Obispo, Cal., History. Wright, Annie L-, San Luis Obispo, Cal., Education. Younger, Charles B., Jr., Santa Cruz, Cal., English. 5 65 I CIhnn Yell: irzo ktil I'sSvrjKovTa, ’97, Rah ! Rah ! Rah ! Class Color: White. Officers. FIRST S fcC M HSTKK President.................................... First Vice-President......................... Second Vice-President ... ........... Secretary.................................... Treasurer.................................... Scrgeant-at- A mis........................... Football Manager............................. Baseball Manager............................. Historian.................................... . H. M. De Wolfe. . . J. H. Timmons. . Miss L. E. Ray. . . W. B. Wells. . . F. H. Walker. . . G. H. Roach. . . . R. C. Kirk. . A. W. Bumiller. . . . .J. M. Ross. SECOND SEMESTER. President........... ....................... First Vice-President........................ Second Vice-Pres iden t..................... Secretary................................... Treasurer................................... Historian................................... Serge a nt-at-Arms.......................... Football Manager............................ Baseball Manager............................ . C. A. Thomas. . J. F. Barnett. G. L. Williams. . Miss M. Lowe. H. P. Pearson. H. C. Hazzard. . . . . J. Rice. C. L. Thompson. . J. M. Whited. I Freshman Cluos Yell: Chee hee, chee hee, chee hah, hah, hah! ’98, ’98, Rah, rah, rah! CIusm Colore : Purple and White. President . . . . Vice-President . . Secretary . . . . Treasurer. . . . Historian . . . . Sergeant-at-A mis Paseball Manager Football Manager Officers. FIRST semester. .........................F. V. Keesling. .........................J. M. Switzer. ....................Miss S. A. McCray. ............................P. A. Adams. ....................Miss G. Mackintosh. ............................C. S. Dole. .........................G. C. Durham. ..................C. R. Frazier. President .... Vice-President . . Secretary .... Treasurer. . . . Historian .... Paseball Manager SECOND SEMESTER. .......................F. D. Allen. .......................V. P. Wright. ..................Miss M. E. Walter. .....................F. A. Schneider. ....................Ii. R. McBride. ..................G. C. Durham. 69 Obituary. HORACE LKADBKTTER, ’95. I)ie l August 24, 1894. ARMIN VICTOR KALENBORN, 96. Died September 10, 1894. PAUL SCHAFFER ELLIS, ’97-Died December 28, 1894. GEORGE MONTANVA LUCK. ’97. Died June 19, 1894. MRS. MARY FLORENCE PHELPS, sp. Died January 4, 1895. V 7° k 9n CQomoriam. OMRADES whom fate had willed so soon to die, Who, new bom, walk along a new world’s ways, As here you walked of old, on mandates high, Regret has filled our hearts for many days. At last you know the strange and ancient speech Of stars of morn and quiet even-glow, Whose distant murmur, far beyond the reach Of human ken, our own hearts sometimes know. We know not if across your souls there creep Shadows from out the past, but time endears Your friendship to our hearts, wherein we keep The memory of the old, unchangeful years. Howard Maslin Hula e. 71 A Freshman green, With air serene, A maid who smileth brightly ; A foolish grin, But lots of tin, A box of candy nightly. They riding go, Take in each show, He spends his ducats yellow ; The Senior smiles To sec her wiles And watch her work the fellow. Allowance gone, Papa “ dead on,” Quite sad is his demeanor ; He flunks in class And sees the lass Desert him for the Senior. W. H. 7 2 Drinking Song. (From Anacreon.) AND me the brimming goblet, boys, And let me drink—and drink my fill ; A health and wine to all the gods : I will be drunk to-night—I will! Alcmseou and Orestes swift Were forced the Furies’ hate to fiy ; They killed their mothers—so they say — Went mad—the both—why shouldn’t I ? And I’ve killed no one—fill the glass ! I never had the mind to kill; But I can drink the ruddy wine : I will be drunk—I say—I will! Old Herakles was mad l efore He took the Iphitian bow and slew His wife and all his little ones : But what care I ? I’ll be mad too ! And Ajax bold—he too was mad Before he thrust great Hector’s steel His very breast and corselet through : Mad drunk—I will—I want to feel ! No bow I need, no sharp-edged sword ; I’ll drink with wreathed brow until The cup and wine and I are one : I will be drunk—I will—I will. W. A. G. o Founded at University of New York, 1846. Phi . . . Zeta . . . . Delta . . Sigma . . . Chi . . . . Rho . . . . Kappa . . . Tau . . . . Xi........ Lambda . Beta . . . . Psi ... Iota Theta Xi Alpha . . . Alpha Psi . Nu........ Epsilon . . UPSI LON . . Eta . . . . Mu........ Chapter Roll. ...............University of New York. ...........Williams College. ...............Rutgers 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. ...............Leland Stanford Junior University. ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS. Chicago, 111. Washington, D. C. Cleveland, Ohio. New York City. Philadelphia, Penn. Boston, Mass. San Francisco, Cal. Color : White. Yell : Rah, Rah, Zeta ! Rah, Rah, Psi! Rah, Rah Rah, Rah ! Zeta Psi ! Northwestern Association of Zeta Psi Capital City Association of Zeta Psi . Zeta Psi Association.............. Zeta Psi Club..................... Metropolitan Chapter of Zeta Psi . . New England Association of Zeta Psi Pacific Association of Zeta Psi .... r • Thots photo. Mu Chapter, Established October 5, 1891. FRA TER IN FACUt.TATE. John Maxson Stillman, Ph. I). UNDERGRADUA TES. 895- Shirley Baker, Samuel Ewer Simmons, ♦Frank R. Dray, 1896. George Porter Baldwin, Robert Willis Campbell. 1897. Chester Ashleigh Thomas, f Paul Schaffer Ellis, John Spencer Lincoln, Harry Coburn Turner, Christopher Bismarck Diehl. 1898. Ralph Beatty Hubbard, George Clark Durham, Otis Buckminster Wight. George William Bush, Edward Cecil Skwall, Harry Stinson Si.adin, Abraham Lewis, Jr., Alfred Barstow, Jr., Charles Kellogg Field. Graduated January i, 1895. f Died December 28, JS94. o Founded at Miami University, 1848. Chapter Roll. 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 Zkta . . Pennsylvania Eta . . Colby University. Dartmouth College. University of Vermont. Williams College. Amherst College. Brown University. Cornell University. Union University. Columbia College. Syracuse University. Lafayette College. Gettysburg College. Washington and Jefferson College. Alleghany College. Dickinson College. University of Pennsylvania. Lehigh University. BETA PROVINCE. Virginia Alpha..........................Roanoke College. Virginia Beta............................University of Virginia. Virginia Gamma..........................Randolph-Macou College. Virginia Delta..........................Richmond College. Virginia Zkta........................ . . Washington and Lee University. North Carolina Beta ....................University of North Carolina. Kentucky Alpha..................... Centre College. Kentucky Delta..........................Central University. Georgia Alpha . Georgia Beta . . Georgia Gamma Tennessee alpha Tennessee Beta Alabama Alpha . Alabama Beta Alabama Gamma Mississippi Alpha Louisiana Alpha Texas Beta . . . Texas Gamma . . GAMMA PROVINCE. ................University of Georgia. ................Emory College. ................Mercer University. . . . .... Vanderbilt University. ................University of the South. ................University of Alabama. ................Alabama Italy technic Institute. . ............Southern University. DELTA PROVINCE. ................University of Mississippi. ................Tulane University of Louisiana. ................University of Texas. ................Southern University. 80 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 . . . Indiana Theta . . 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 Universtiy. 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! Kci! A! Phi! Della Theta!! Rah! Rah! Rah! 6 81 tot s photo. o California Beta Chapter, Established October 22, 1891. FRATRES .V FACULTA TE. Benjamin Harrison, LL. I)., Lkandkr Miller Hoskins, M. S., C. E., Vernon Lyman Kellogg, M. S., David Ellsworth Spencer, A. M., Harold Heath. GRADUATE. Mkdorem William Greer. UNDERGRADUA TES. 1895- Clark Wilson Hethbrington, Winfield Scott Smyth, Jr., William Doherty, Samuel Miller Look, Oris Vert Eaton, Louis Allen, Paul Hklb White, William Jay Matthews. 1896. Homer Laughlin, Jr., Joseph Paull Fife, Roy Page Bollard, Charles Caleb Hill, Caspar Wistar Hodgson. 1897. Francis Webster Lake, Edward James Green, Wilson Clark Prick. 83 o Founded at Washington and Jefferson College, 1852. GHaPter Roll. 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 I. ..............Washington and Jefferson College. ..............Alleghany College. ..............Bucknell University. ..............Pennsylvania College. . . ........Dickinson College. ..............Franklin and Marshall College. ..............Lafayette College. ............University of Pennsylvania. ..............Swartlmiore College. ..............Cornell University. ..............Syracuse University. ..............Columbia College. ..............Colgate University. ..............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. Ohio Alpha . . Ohio Beta . . Ohio Gamma . Ohio Delta . . Indiana Alpha Indiana Beta . Indiana Gamma DISTRICT III. ............Ohio Wesleyan University. ............Wittenberg College. ............Wooster University. ............Ohio University. ............De Pauw University. ............Indiana University. ............WabashCollege. 84 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. Pittsburg, Baltimore, Chicago, Portland, Or., New York, Washington, Minneapolis, Kansas City, Philadelphia, Springfield, O., Norwalk, O. Colors : Pink and Lavender. Yell : Hi. Hi. Hi! Phi Kappa Psi! Live forever, die never! Phi Kappa Psi! «5 California Beta Chapter, Established Noveaiber io, 1891. I RA TER IN FACUL TA TE. Westel Woodbury Wiu.ouohbv, Ph. I). GRADUATE. John Copeland Kirtland, Jr. UNDERGRADUA TES. 1895- Walter Harold Kirkbridk. William Clarence Hazzard, William Ford Blake, Almus Goar Ruddell, William Westly Guth, Herbert E. Cox. Rees Oliver Davies, 1896. Frank Stallo Ruddell. Harris Campbell Allen, Horace Craig Longnvkll, 1897. ♦Robert Clifford Kirk, Alfred Cookman Montgomery. Fred Morgan Ayer, 1898. William Chilton Maverick, William David Longwell, Benjamin Taswell Gillette. No longer iu the University o Fbi ©amroa Delta FOUNDED AT WASHINGTON AND JEFFERSON COLLEGE, 1848. Chapter Roll. SECTION I. Iota Mu.............................Massachusetts Institute of Technology Pi Iota.............................Worcester Polytechnic Institute. Alpha Chi...........................Amherst College. Chi.................................Union University. Mu Delta............................Yale University. Tau Alpha ... .................Trinity College. UPSILON.............................College of the City of New York. Omega...............................Columbia College. Mu Epsilon..........................University of the City of New York. Tiieta Psi..........................Colgate University. Kappa Mu............................Cornell University. SECTION II. Alpha...............................Washington and Jefferson College. Beta................................University of Pennsylvania. Delta...............................Bucknell University. Xl..................................Pennsylvania College. Pi..................................Alleghany College. Sigma Delta.........................Lafayette College. Beta Ciii...........................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 Lee University. Rho Chi.............................Richmond College. SECTION IV. Eta.................................Marietta College. Sigma...............................Wittenberg College. Theta Delta.........................Ohio Wesleyan University. Lambda Delta.........................Denison University. Omicron Delta........................Ohio University. Rho Delta............................Wooster University. Alpha Phi............................University of Michigan. SECTION V. Zeta.................................Indiana University. Lambda...............................De Pauw Univers ty. 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. Kappa Tau............................University of Tennessee. SECTION VIII. Pi Delta.............................University of Kansas. Zeta Phi.............................William Jewell College. SECTION IX. Alpha Sigma..........................Leland Stanford Junior University. Delta Xi.............................University of California. Color : Royal Purple. Yell: Rah, Rah, Phi Gam! Rah, Rah, Delia ! Rah, Rah, Rah, Rah! Phi Gamma Delta! o Lambda Sigma Chapter, Hstablished November 30, 1891. FRA TRES IN FACULTA TE. Edward A ls worth Ross, Pli. I)., Ai.phonso Gerald Nkwcomkr, A. M. GRADUATE. John Kini.ay Wight, 93. UNDERGRADUA TES. 1895. Tracy George Russkli., John West Thompson, •Edwin Chapin Ewell, Archie Bkrmingham Rick, Charles Colfax Hughes, Alfred Parker Fraser, Kenneth Mackintosh. 1896. John Tarn McGrew, William Laughlin McI.aink. Guy Hunt Cochran, Pranklin Vanderbilt Brooks, Harry Badger Reynolds, Jackson Eli Reynolds. 1897. ♦Arthur William Bi miller, John Bkrmingham Rice, Frank Harvey Walker, Fred Cameron Vincent, Francis Valentine Toldkrvy Lee, John F mkrson Marble. 1898. Philip Fanning Abbott, Roys Nelson Stroiin, Wilber Charles McNeil. 91 No longer in the University. o Founded at Virginia Military Institute, 1869. Chapel- Roll. 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. Upsilon........................................University of Texas. Beta Phi.......................................Tulane University. Beta Theta.....................................Alabama A. M. College. ZKTA...........................................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. Chi............................................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.......................................Leland Stanford Junior University. Beta Psi ......................................University of California. Beta Eta ......................................Indiana State University. Beta Lambda....................................Central College. Beta Iota.................................... Mount Union College. 92 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, Tex. Louisiana Alumni Association........................Baton Rouge, La. Iowa Alumni Association ............................Belle Plains, la. Missouri Alumni Association.........................Brookfield, Mo. Georgia Alumni Chapter..............................Athens, Ga. Atlanta Alumni Chapter..............................Atlanta, Ga. Indiana Alumni Association..........................Greeucastle, Ind. Kansas City Alumni Chapter..........................Kansas City, Mo. Birmingham Alumni Chapter...........................Bessemer, Ala. Colors : Black, White and Gold. Yell: Rah, Rah, Rah L. S. J. U.! Beta Chapter! Sigma Nu. 93 Thoh photo. o Beta Chi Chapter, Established 1891. GRADUATE. Walter Mai.ins Rose, January i, 1895. UNDERGRADUA TES. 1895. George Edward Crothers, Scott Calhoun, William Hastings Harrklson, Henry Manning Cory, Lewis Howell Smith, John Francis Sheehan, Jr. Paul Milton Downing, John Henry McDaniels, Thomas Burrowbs Jack. 1896. Alexander Townsend Hosmkr, Wynne Powers Harrington. 1897. Herbert Randall Straight, David Ewald Brown, Edward Hagkrman Arnold, Pierre Allaire, Benton Elkins Longwell. 1898. Francis Valentine Keesling, Frank Raymond Allyn Jr., Charles Hastings Nicbwonger. SPECIAL. Francis Joseph Jack. 95 o Founded at Miami University, 1855. Alpha .... Beta........ Gamma .... Epsilon . . . Zeta........ Eta......... Theta .... Kappa .... Lambda . . . Mu.......... Xi.......... Omicron . . . Rho......... Tau......... Chi......... Psi......... Omega .... Alpha Alpha . Gamma Gamma Delta Delta . Delta Chi . . Zeta Zeta . . Zeta Psi . . . Eta Eta.. . . Theta Theta . Kappa Kappa . Lambda Lambd Sigma Sigma . Alpha Beta . Alpha Gamma Alpha Delta . Alpha Epsilon Alpha Zeta . Alpha Theta . Alpha Iota . . Alpha Lambda Ghapter Roll. .............Miami University. .............University of Wooster. .............Ohio Wesleyan University. .............Columbian University. .............Washington and Lee University. .............Univerity of Mississippi. .............Gettysburg College. .............Bucknell University. .............Indiana State University. .............Denison University. .............De Pauw 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 Institute of Technology. .............University of Nebraska. .............Beloit College. .............Massachusetts Institute of Technology. .............Illinois Wesleyan University. .............University of Wisconsin. 96 Alpha Nu....................................University of Texas. Alpha Xi....................................University of Kansas. Alpha Omicrok ..............................Tulane University. Alpha Pi....................................Albion College. Alpha Rho.............................. .... Lehigh University. Alpha Sigma.................................University of Minnesota. Alpha Tau...................................University of North Carolina. Alpha Upsilon...............................University of Southern California. Alpha Phi...................................Cornell University. Alpha Chi...................................Pennsylvania State College. Alpha Psi...................................Vanderbilt University. Alpha Omega.................................Leland Stanford Junior University. Fraternity Colors: blue and Gold. 97 Thou photo. Alpha Omega Chapter, Founded December 19, 1891 UNDERGRADUA TES. 1895. Walter Edwin Winship, Samuel Merrill, Jr., John Edmundson Alexander, David Lafayette Arnold. 1896. William Baldwin Fletcher, Norman Brownell Roper. 1897. Albert Hutchinson Jarman, Harry Wheeler Morse, William Austin Strong. 1898. Percy Erwin Davidson. SPECIAL. James Aaron Pauly. No longer in the University. ASpba Tao Omn)@fa, Founded at Washington and Lee University, 1865. Chapter Roll. Alabama Alpha Epsilon . . . Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical College. Alabama Beta Beta.........................Southern University. Alabama Beta Delta .......................University of Alabama. California Beta Psi ......................Lelaiul 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. Illinois Gamma Zeta.......................Illinois State University. Indiana Gamma Gamma.......................Rose Polytechnic Institute. Louisiana Beta Upsii.on...................Tulane University. Massachusetts Gamma Beta..................Tufts College. Maine Beta Epsilon........................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 Nu.............................Mount Union College. Ohio Alpha Psi............•............. 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 Pensylvauia. Rhode Island Gamma Delta..................Brown University. South Carolina Alpha Theta................South Carolina University. South Carolina Beta Phi...................Wofford College. 100 South Carolina Beta Chi............ Tennessee Alpha Tau................ Tennessee Beta Pi.................. Tennessee Beta Tau................. Tennessee Lambda................... Tennessee Omf.ga................... Texas Gamma Epsilon................ Vermont Beta Zeta.................. Virginia Beta...................... Virginia Beta Sigma................ Virginia Delta .................... Virginia Epsilon . . . . •......... Charleston College. S. W. Presbyterian University. Vanderbilt University. S. W. Baptist University. Cumberland College. University of the South. Austin College. University of Vermont. Washington and Lee University. Hatnpden-Sidney College. University of Virginia. Roanoke College. ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS. Alabama Alumni Association..............................Birmingham, Ala. Pittsburg Alumni Association............................Pittsburg, Pa. Chicago Alumni Association..............................Chicago, 111. Cleveland Alumni Association............................Cleveland. O. District op Columbia Alumni Association.................Washington. New York Alumni Association.............................New York City. Ohio Alumni Association.................................Tiffin, O. Allentown Alumni Association............................Allentown, Pa. Springfield Alumni Association..........................Springfield, o. Colors: Sky Blue and Old Gold. Flower: White Tea Rose. Yell: Hip, Hurrah! Hip, Hurrah! Three cheers for Alpha Tau ! Hurrah ! Hurrah Hurrah ! loi Thors photo. Beta Psi Chapter, Established December 21, 1891. FRA TRES IS FA CUL TA TE. John Charles Lounsbery Fish, Stewart Woodford Young. UNDERGRADUA TES. 1895. Norman Geer Buxton, Thomas Kimball Code, Milton David Grosh. 1896. Herbert Stephen Hicks. 1897. William Alexander Graham, Fred Jost. Edward White Bannister, 1898. Jerome B. Painter. Founded at University of Alabama, 1856. o Chapter Roll. PROVINCE ALPHA. Massachusetts Beta Upsilon .... Boston University. Massachusetts Iota Tau ........Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Massachusetts Gamma............Harvard University. Massachusetts Dei.ta...........Worcester Polytechnic Institute. Connecticut Ai.pha.............Trinity College. PROVINCE BETA. New York Alpha.................Cornell University. Pennsylvania Omega.............Alleghany College. Pennsylvania Sigma Phi........Dickinson College. Pennsylvania Alpha Zeta........Pennsylvania State College. Pennsylvania Delta.............Pennsylvania College. Pennsylvania Zeta..............Bucknell University. PROVINCE GAMMA. Virginia Omicron ...................University of Virginia. Virginia Sigma......................Washington and Lee University. Virginia Pi.........................Emory and Henry College. North Carolina Xi...................University of North Carolina. North Carolina Theta............Davidson College. South Carolina Delta.............South Carolina College. South Carolina Phi...............Furman University. South Carolina Gamma.............Wofford College. Georgia Beta......................University of Georgia. Georgia Psi.......................Mercer University. Georgia Epsilon...................Emory College. Georgia Phi.......................Georgia School of Technology. Michigan Iota Beta Michigan Alpha . . Ohio Sigma......... Ohio Delta......... Ohio Epsilon . . . . Ohio Theta......... Indiana Alpha . . . Indiana Beta . . . . Illinois Psi Omega . PROVINCE DELTA. ...........University of Michigan. ...........Adrian College. ...........Mt. Union College. ...........Ohio Wesleyan University. ...........University of Cincinnati. ...........Ohio State University. ...........Franklin College. ...........Purdue University. ...........Northwestern University. 104 PROVINCE EPSILON. Kentucky Kai pa................ .... Central University. Kentucky Iota.......................Bethel College. Tennessee Zkta.................. . Southwestern Presbyterian University. Tennessee Lambda....................Cumberland University. Tennessee Nu........................Vanderbilt University. Tennessee Kappa.....................University of Tennessee. Tennessee Omega.....................University of the South. Tennessee Eta.......................Southwestern Baptist University. Alabama Mu..........................University of Alabama. Alabama Iota .......................Southern University. Alabama Alpha Mu....................Alabama A. and M. College. Mississippi Gamma...................University of Mississippi. PROVINCE ZETA. Iowa Sigma..........................Simpson College. Missouri Alpha......................University of Missouri. Missouri Beta.......................Washington University. Nebraska Lambda Pi..................University of Nebraska. PROVINCE ETA. Arkansas Alpha Upsilon..............University of Arkansas. Texas Rho...........................University of Texas. Colorado Chi........................University of Colorado. Colorado Zeta.......................University of Denver. California Alpha....................Leland Stanford Junior University. California Beta.....................University of California. ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS. Alliance, O., Chattanooga, Tenn., New York, Cincinnati, Augusta, Ga., Chicago, Pittsburg, Penn., Boston. Savannah, Ga., Kansas City, Mo., Atlanta, Ga., STATE ASSOCIATIONS. South Carolina, Ohio, Colorado. Colors : Purple and Gold. Flower : Violet. Yei.i.: Phi Alpha! Alien zee! Phi Alpha ! Alicazon ! Sigvia Alpha ! Sigma Aiph ! Sigma Alpha Epsilon ! 105 Thors photo. California alpha Chapter, Hstablished March 5, 1892 UN DERG R A DU A TES. 1895. ♦Claud E. Downing, George Jarvis Bancroft. 1896. Alfred Baker Spalding, Thomas IIenrv Williams, Harry Tyhrik Poindexter, Erastus Bartlett Webster 1897. Walter Marlette McIntosh, Louis Samuel Beedy. 1898. Harry Austin Dbvel, Rush Franklin Pickens, ♦John W. D. Dicks, Edward Lane Oakes, Eugene Young Sayer, Benjamin E. Snipes, Jr., John Martin Gai.t. No longer in the University. Delta Taa Ddt o FOUNDED AT BETHANY COLLEGE, i860. Chapter Roll. EASTERN DIVISION. BkTa Omicron.........................Cornell University. Beta Mu..............................Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Beta Lambda..........................Lehigh University. Sigma................................Williams College. Kho..................................Stevens Institute of Technology. Alpha................................Alleghany College. Upsilon..............................Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Gamma................................Washington and Jefferson College. Beta Mu..............................Tufts College. Tau..................................Franklin and Marshall College. SOUTHERN DIVISION. Beta Iota............................University of Virginia. Lambda...............................Vanderbilt University. Beta Xi..............................Tulaue University. Beta Delta ..........................University of Georgia. Beta Theta...........................University of the South. Pi...................................University of Mississippi. Beta Epsilon.........................Emory College. WESTERN DIVISION. Beta Eta.............................University of Minnesota. Beta Gamma...........................University of Wisconsin. Beta Pi..............................Northwestern University. Omicron..............................State University of Iowa. Beta Kappa...........................University of Colorado. Beta Rho.............................Leland Stanford Junior University. Beta Tau.............................University of Nebraska. Beta Upsii.on........................University of Illinois. NORTHERN DIVISION. Delta................................University of Michigan. Chi..................................Kenyon College. Beta Beta............................De Pauw University. Beta Phi.............................Ohio State University. Beta Zeta............................Butler University. 10S Beta Alpha..............................Indiana University. Beta Psi.............................. Wabash College. Mu......................................Ohio Wesleyan University. Beta....................................Ohio University. Hpsii.on................................Albion College. Iota....................................Michigan State College. Kappa...................................Hillsdale College. ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS. New York Alumni Chapter . . Chicago Alumni Chapter . . . Nashville Ai.umni Chapter . . Twin City Alumni Chapter . . Pittsburg Alumni Chapter. . . Nebraska Alumni Chapter . . Cleveland Alumni Chapter . . Detroit Alumni Chapter . . . Grand Rapids Alumni Chapter New Orleans Alumni Chapter Brooklyn, N. Y. Chicago, 111. Nashville, Tenn. Minneapolis, Minn. Pittsburg, Penn. Lincoln, Neb. Cleveland, O. Detroit, Mich. Grand Rapids. Mich. New Orleans, La. Colors: Purple, Old Gold and White. Flowers : Pansy, Viola Tricolor. 109 Thor photo. Delta Taca Delta0 Beta Rho Chapter, Established 1893. FRA TRF. IN FA CUL TA TE. Walter Robert Shaw, A. B. UNDERGRADUA FES. Martin Herbert Kennedy, !895- Robert L’Amy Donald, George Draper Stratton, Van Norman McGee, Wine red White Potter. Hugh Henry Brown, 1896. Thomas Kenney Moore John Mason Ross, James William Clark, 1897. Roderick Sammis Dart, Carroll Francis Eustis. George Burrows Taylor, 1898. George Horton Francis. No longer in the University. hi o Founded at Miami University, 1839. Chapter Roll. DISTRICT I. Eta........................................Harvard University. Kappa......................................Brown University. UPSILON....................................Boston University. Bkta Eta...................................Maine State College. Beta Iota..................................Amherst College. Alpha Omega................................Dartmouth College. Mu Epsilon.................................Wesleyan University. Phi Chi................................. Yale University. DISTRICT II. Bkta Gamma.................................Rutgers University. Sigma......................................Stevens Institute of Technology. Beta Delta.................................Cornell University. Beta Zkta..................................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...................... . ... lohns Hopkins University. Phi........................................University of Pennsylvania. Alpha Epsilon..............................Pennsylvania State College. Beta Chi...................................Lehigh University. DISTRICT IV. Zkta.......................................Hauipden-Sidney College. Eta Beta...................................University of North Carolina. Omicron................................. University of Virginia. Phi Alpha............................ .... Davidson College. Alpha Kappa................................Richmond College. Xi.........................................Raudolph-Macon College. DISTRICT V. Epsilon....................................Centre College. Mu.........................................Cumberland University. Beta Beta..................................University of Mississippi. Beta Lambda................................Vanderbilt University. Beta Omicron...............................University of Texas. 112 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.........................................Indiaua 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, A'ai, Phi! Beta, Theta, Pi ! IV-O-O-G-L-I-N ! IVoog-litt! Wooglin ! 113 4 — Thofs photo. STANFORD ASSOCIATION OF PL FRA TRF.S IN FACULTATE. James Perrin Smith, Charles Kelley Jenness. GRADUATES. John Flksher Newsom. Chester Lea Magee. UNDERGRADUA TES. 1895. Hr nest De Los Magee. 1896. Arthur French Poole, George Francis Vandkrveer, George Ravenscroft Green leak, George Hercules Hazzard, John Munford Gregory, Jr. 1897. Harry Conwkll Hazzard, William Wightman Price, Charles Crutchfield. 1898. Charles Sumner Dole, Nathaniel Allen Curlf., Charles Gordon Decker. 1 5 2 No longer in Ihe University. Founded at De Pauw University, 1870. Chapter Roll. 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...................................S wart li more College. Alpha Gamma..................................University of Ohio. 116 o Phi Chapter, Established at University of the Pacific, April 4, 1888. TRANSFERRED TO STANFORD. JANUARY l, 189a. RESIDENT GRADUATES, Mrs. Anna BotsfordComstock . Iota. Elsa Louise Amf.s......Chi. Mrs. Julia R. Gilbert.....Beta. Elizabeth Louise Boar dm an . . Phi. Mrs.HarrietGroteci.ossMarx.Iota. Anna Louisa Brown.....Iota. Mrs. Mary Robert Smith . . . Iota. Clelia Duel Mosher.....Psi. Mrs. Anna Paddock Wing . . . Iota. UNDERGRADUA TES. Lucy Allabach, Winifred Caldwell, Harriet J. Fyffk, 1895. Kate Louise Nash, Mabel Packard, Henrietta Louise Stadtmuli.er, Minnie Brooks Yoder. Martha Elizabeth Haven, Marie Louise Pitcher, Margaret Deming, Elsie May Hume, Edith Louise Hill, 1896. Leonora Shopbach, Winifred Webb. 1897. Edith Monica Jordan, Dora Estey Moody. 1898. Helen Plate Vinyard. SPECIAL. Ada Edwards. XI7 Founded at Monmouth College, 1870. Chapter Roll. ALPHA PROVINCE. pHI........................................Boston University. Beta Beta..................................St. Lawrence University. Beta Tau...................................Syracuse University. ...........................................Cornell University. Beta Alpha.................................University of Pennsylvania. Beta Epsilon...............................Barnard College. Gamma Rho..................................Alleghany College. Beta Iota..................................Swarthmore College. BETA PROVINCE. Lambda.....................................Buchtel College. Beta Gamma.................................Wooster University. BETA delta.................................University of Michigan. Beta Nu........................ ...........Ohio State University. ...........................................Adrian College. ...........................................Hillsdale College. GAMMA PROVINCE. Delta......................................Indiana University. .......................................... . De Pauw University. jylu .............................Butler College. j£TA ..................................University of Wisconsin. Upsilon .......................... . . . . Northwestern University. F.psii on .............................Illinois Wesleyan University. DELTA PROVINCE. ...........................................Minnesota University. Bkta Zuta . !!!!.!.........................Iowa University. Theta .....................................Missouri University. ...........................................Nebraska University. Omega......................................Kansas University. Beta Eta ..................................Leland Stanford Junior University. Colors : Light and Dark Blue. 118 Flower : Fleur de Lis. o Beta Eta Chapter, Founded June io, 1892. UNDERGRADUA TES. JBSSIK Palkn Wood, Bertha Louise Chapman, Bessie Morris Penniman, 1895- Maud Evangeline Stinson, Alberta Lois Merritt, Elizabeth Corinnk Chapman Mabel Brown Coombs, Pi.orknce Viu.iers Brown, 1896. Emma Louise Martin, Fanny Howe Mitchell, Mabel Hyde Cory, Clementine Tucker, Anna Henrietta Martin, Grace Evelyn Holtzclaw. Bertha Hyde Braly, Georgia Louise Gilmore, 1897. Ida Wehner, Elizabeth Madison Braly, Florence T. Gray, Blanche Mae Freeman. 1898. Gkrtrudk Martin 1 9 o Founded at Monmouth College, 1867. Chapter Roll. Vermont Alpha . . Columbia Alpha . . Pennsylvania Alpha Pennsylvania Beta Ohio Alpha . . . . Ohio Beta......... Indiana Alpha . . . Indiana Beta .... Michigan Alpha . . Michigan Beta . . . Wisconsin Alpha . . Louisiana Alpha . . ALPHA PROVINCE. ..............Middlebury College. ..............Columbian University. ..............Swarthmore College. ..............Lewisburg, Penn. ..............University of Ohio. ..............State University of Ohio. ..............Franklin College. ............University of Indiana. ..............Hillsdale College. ..............University of Michigan. ..............University of Wisconsin. ..............Tulane University. BETA PROVINCE. Illinois Beta..........................Lombard University. Illinois Delta.........................Knox College. Illinois Epsilon.......................Northwestern University. Iowa Alpha.............................Iowa Wesleyan University. GAMMA PROVINCE. Iowa Beta..............................Simpson College. Iowa Zeta..............................University of Iowa. Iowa Lambda............................I)es Moines, la. Minnesota Alpha........................University of Minnesota. DELTA PROVINCE. Colorado Alpha.........................University of Colorado. Colorado Beta .........................Denver University. Nebraska Beta..........................University of Nebraska. Kansas Alpha...........................University of Kansas. California Alpha.......................Leland Stanford Junior University. 120 California Alpha Chapter, Established September 13, 1893. UNDERGRADUA TES. 1895. Lucia May Lay, Laura Adella Trumbo, Mary Myrtle Osborne, Nettie Eudora Woodburn, Louise Amesbury. 1896. Alice Elizabeth Cragin. 1897. Mabel Lowe, Jennie June Peery, Anna Prances Weaver. 1898. Sue Elizabeth Houx, Grace Williams, Helen Webster Williams. SPECIAL. Dorothy Agnes L'Hote. 121 V- r Thors f hoto. Alpha Upjilojjo (LOCAL.) Hstarlished February 9, 1894. UNDERGRADUA TES. '895- Fred Sbydrll Fogg, Benjamin Oliver Foster, Edward Charles Harwood. Benjamin Franklin Bledsoe, Charles Wesley Miller, John McPherson Gates, 1896. William Dinsmork Briggs, Charles Ross Lewers, Arthur Martin Cathcart. 1897. William Pitt Gifford, Samuel Platt, Joseph Henry Timmons. 1898. Leigh Allan, Horace Fogg, Perl Vincent Gifford, Warren Hull, Charles Ronald Frazier. 123 r SKTAA KAI 'SNAKES HP OGTfonaios nat Tip o t t k r cj p. 01 AAEA OI. Alfred Barstow, Jr., ♦Louis Nathaniel Chase, Henry Manning Cory, ♦Frank R. Dray, John James Hollister, Martin Herbert Kennedy, Fred Ernest Kkssingkr, ♦Van Norman McGee, Tracy George Russell, John Francis Sheehan, Jr., Samuel Ewer Simmons, Lewis Howell Smith, Joseph ♦Thomas Sidney Watson, Henry Tyhrie Poindexter, Louis Allen, Winfield Scott Smythe, Guy Hunt Cochran, William Laughlin McLaine, Robert Willis Campbell, ♦Benjamin Stoddard, Jr. Hugh Henry Brown, John Tarn McGrew, Robert L’Amy Donald, ♦Edwin Chapin Ewell, Paull Fife. No longer in the University. SOPHOMORE FRATERNITY OF Hu EpflS® Founded at Wesleyan University. Chapter Roll. Alpha.........................................Wesleyan University. Beta..........................................Syracuse University. Gamma.........................................Union College. Delta.........................................Cornell University. Epsilon.......................................University of Rochester. Zeta .........................................University of California. Eta...........................................Madison University. Theta.........................................Kenyon College. Iota..........................................Adelbert College. Kappa.........................................Hamilton College. Lambda........................................Williams College. Kappa Second..................................Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Mu............................................Stevens Institute. Nu ...........................................Amherst College. Xi............................................Lafayette College. Omicron.......................................Rutgers College. Omega......................................... Leland Stanford Juuior University 126 Omega Chapter, Established 1894. HONOR ARY MEMBERS. 1895- Louis Allen, Frank R. Dray, J. Jamks Hoi«lister, Frederick Ernest Kkssincer, Martin Herbert Kennedy, Tracy George Russell, Samuel Ewer Simmons. 1896. Robert Willis Campbell, Rees Oliver Davies, John Tarn McGrew, William Laughi.in McLaine, Harry Tvhrie Poindexter. ACTIVE MEMBERS. - CLASS OF '9;. - Pe ? = $M i p«e -V — •[ 4 1 1 44 k H- ST. ! f 5- 8- M v c Q ; QII no K P % ?: — I, B ff JE tar % S y a 8 7. r R j ? N = X -r- V. ; 5 a + 4 M :: ? H 9 t C e + b I o a- w 1 ? V O K L M ?2 xhffinj BRNI, — 6 = I , ; ? JE l = v y :: K8 n G J v !, std M Yx x y z I) r C.e +, 9-I ? z M O — ? M C «[ 3 . K ! S t.w.l. A. Z 4 = N MSHC H I X = ? -r- M s a ; ! $ T = H p - M $ S J MopF. H ■ 'I' J D a b $ ? k L 5- 8- . No longer in t e University. Alpha Chapter, Established at Leland Stanford Junior University, May i, 1894. Margaret Foster, Evelyn Briggs, Agnes Bell, Agnes Ferguson, Zaidee Brown, GRADUATE. Bertha de Laguna, 1894. UNDERGRADUA TES. 1895- Marion Foster Dole. 1896. Florence Cushman, Louise Culver, F. Lilian Matson. 1897. Stella Rose. 1898. Lou Henry, Victoria Bateman, May Critchlow. No longer in the University. of Unorganized Fraternitieso DELTA KAPPA EPSILON. Horack Greeley Atwater, ’96. PS I UPS! LON. Frederick Ernest Kkssinger, ’95. CHI PHI. John James Hollister, ’95, Reuben Ferdinand Gilliam, ’96. DELTA GAMMA. Hannah a della Tucker, ’95, Florence Bertha Whittier, ’97. THETA DELTA CHI Morris Morrison, sp. GAMMA ETA KAPPA. Edwin Ray Zion, gr. 9 129 Oh! it was a dainty Roble maid that started for the Quad, A dainty Ruble maiden with her book. The sighing swains watched longingly and vainly for a nod. But the maiden never cast an upw ard look. The birds sang madrigals; The morn was merry May. “ O maiden neat, O maiden sweet. Why won’t you look my way? ! Oh! it was a Soohomoric swain more gallant than the rest, A gallant and a comely with his cane. O maiden fair, I prithee leave the lore and learning quest; C V Come stroll with me adown a merry lane. The birds sang madrigals ; The morn was merry May. Where posies blow, heynonino, They lingered by the' way. Oh! it was a fierce, unfeeling Prof, in dread dyspeptic mood, A Prof, who had forgotten all his youth. I’ll make an ex. most terrible.” quoth he. “ which shall include The whole semester’s sternest work forsooth.” The birds sung madrigals ; The morn was merry May. The maid and swain they crammed in vain: Heigho for Flunking bay! Sarac. Q. Storp of tfye (Jrboretum I HE arboretum was their favorite place. Every Tuesday and JL Thursday afternoon regularly they used to walk down there and wander over the shadowy winding roads until they grew tired. Then they would turn their way to the Mausoleum and sit down on the steps. The myrtle that grew in and out among the stones never wearied them. The sleepless sphinxes always interested them. So you see there was really no reason why they should “seek pastures new,” and they never did. The busses that drove the numerous visitors through the short, pretty roads that lie so thick in the arboretum and lead to the Mausoleum grew accustomed to them. And the horses used to neigh significantly and whisper to each other that it really wasn’t at all strange. If ever there was a place conducive to romance, the arboretum, with its soft, wooing breezes, and its fair, fragrant blossoms, was certainly the place. At first they used to talk of impersonal things,—the birds, the flowers, the shadows, the soft blue sky. These led imperceptibly to their favorite poets, their desires, their ambitions, their hopes for the future. Still more imperceptibly their lives began to be associated. Their wishes grew the same. They no longer rested on the steps in front of the Mausoleum, but went around to the other side that looks out upon the little burial ground. The months passed by, and the last week came. “Just one day more,” she said, “and then I shall go home. And next year, when I come back, you won’t be here.” They were both young, and their hearts should have been light, but somehow life seemed a heavy burden to bear. They must separate so soon. She could not stay for commencement because her mother was ill. “I want to see you graduate,” she said, softly; ‘‘but, you see, I have to go.” They weren’t either of them very talkative that day. The myrtle was as blue as ever, and the sphinxes were as stonily impassive, but there seemed to be a tinge of sadness over all. The little burying ground looked nearer than usual. And weren’t those clouds in the sky ? She arose finally after a long pause and said she must go, but he caught her hands and held her back. He had never done anything like it before, and she blushed and looked at him in bewildered embarrassment, but she did not draw them away. “ I don’t suppose I should speak,” he said rapidly ; “ but I can’t help it. I love you, love you dearly, and I must tell you so. I can’t let you go without it. I have tried to, but my heart cries out against it and will not be quiet. I’ll have to ask you to wait till I— but we’re both young, and isn’t love worth it ? Don’t say you won’t.” She smiled at him with a happier light in her eyes than he had seen there before that afternoon. “ No,” she said ; “ I am willing to wait.” The next day they separated. All that summer they wrote long letters and spoke tenderly of the dear arboretum. But before the year was over the letters were fewer. And when the summer months came round again some one else walked to the Mausoleum with her, and some one else told her that he loved her. And she? Well, doesn’t the poet say, ‘‘New loves are sweet as those that went before?” And isn’t the poet nearer truth than any one else on this worldly earth ? And he ? O, he doesn’t count, you know. K. D. H. 33 Thors photo GllpHa £iterar? Society Organized October, 1891. President . . Vice-President Secretary . . Treasurer . . OFFICERS, 1894-95-First Semester. . Samuel Platt. Nhllo Johnson. G. L. Williams. . . T. A. Storey. President . . Vice-President Secretary . . Treasurer . . Second Semester. G. E. Crothkrs. . E. O. Clayton. T. A. Storey. . F. B. Wooten. 1895. B. D. WlGLE. F. H. Wooten, E. Dk Los Magee, W. C. Daub. 1896. J. E. Lawshe, E. O. Clayton, Nello Johnson. 1897. I). H. Webster, Samuel Platt, J. H. Schlkiden, II. W. Packard. C. J. Newman, G. E. Crothkrs, S. W. Collins, H. H. Brown, T. A. Storey, R. J. O’Neil, G. L. Williams, J. M. Ross, M. Oskison, T. R. Griffin, MEMBERS. Graduate. G. G. WlGLE, ’94- Undergraduates. 1898. Special. H. P. Pearson. A. E. Peck, M. G. Wright. •37 Sup rortia £iterarp Society Organized January 14, 1893. OFFICERS, 1894-95-First Semester. President..........................................C. J. PiKRSON. Vice-President..................................R. L. Sandwich. Secretary-Treasurer..................................J. W. BELL. Second Semester. President........................................J. A. Gunn, Jr. Vice-President........................................J. W. Bell. Secretary-Treasurer..............................J. T. Bukcham. MEMBERS. L. J. Hinsdill, J. A. Gunn, Jr., W. H. G. Schulte, C. S. Burnell, 1895- W. S. Brown, R. L. Sandwich, S. Merrill, Jr., W. C. Taber. C. J. Pierson, J. A. Colliver, F. W. Morrison, a. M. Cathcart, C. H. Smith, 1896. H. D. Sheldon, M. A. Tucker, C. R. Lewkrs, F. C. Matthews, B. F. Bledsoe. W. I). Briggs. A. F. Foss, J. F. Barnett. R. A. Gibbs, W. H. Irwin, 1897. J. T. Burcham. j. w. Bell, Jos. Dixon, W. P. Gifford. C. W. Foy, 1898. E. Robinson, Jr., Warren Hull. 139 No longer in the University. Nestoricm Citeran? Society Organized September, 1894. OFFICERS, iS9f-95. First Semester. President...................................R. H. Wardall. Vice-President................................P. G. Nutting. Secretary.................................R. E. McDonnell. President . . . Vice-President Secretary . . . Second Semester. R. E. McDonnell. . C. H. Parckll. . F. I. Burcham. B. C. Condit, MEMBERS. 1895. W. H. Kirkbridk, F. Wilkinson. C. E. Condit, J. P. Cullinan, W. N. Fong, H. Harwood, 1896. C. F. Leithold, C. H. Parckll, H. C. Smith, W. H. Welch. 1897. F. I. Burcham, H. Macartney, R. E. McDonnell, P. G. Nutting, P. O. Simons, R. H. Wardall. E. W. Darling, J. H. Dempsey, H. L. Fisher, L. Haffey, 1898. F. Howard, W. B. Milward, J. H. Platt, W. A. Pritchard. 141 Plplolejrian £.iterarp Society. Organized November 17, 1894. OFFICERS, 1 $94-95. President First Semester. President Second Semester. Vice-President. . . . Secretary Treasurer P. A. Adams, H. F. Bishop, C. H. Camper, V. V. Clark, C. S. Dole, E. L. Farmer, MEMBERS. H. S. Hen ion, W. H. Irwin, F. V. Kehsling, J. Dillard, D. A. Lyon, J. A. Rice, W. D. Garey, E. H. Rothrock, C. H. Green leaf, J. M. Switzer, C. E. Haas, C. Walker, A. H. White. M3 I encfy anH ISar. MEMBERS. Paul R. Frost, L. J. Hinsdill, G. E. Crothers, A. Lewis, Jr., J. E. Reynolds, M. A. Folsom, Jackman Herrick, W. M. Rose, R. F. Gilliam, S. W. Charles. 144 A. Brant, B. L. Foil £au Club. Mills. N. H. Malcolm, K. O. Clayton, A. H. Jarman, F. W. Morrison, J. K. Applkwhite, G. B. Wilson, F. L. Huff. THIRD ANNUM. Sntercollegiate Debate. Stanford vs. Berkeley. Saturday Evening, April 20, 1895, at 8 o’clock, Metropolitan Temple, San Francisco. Question : The Initiative and Referendum in California. .Affirmative. Negative. Mr. Benjamin F. Blf.dsok, Mr. Burton M. Palmer, Mr. James W. Clarke, Mr. Martin C. Flaherty, Mr. E. Dk Los Magee, Mr. George W. McNorle, of I.eland Stanford Junior University. of the University of California. Decision : For the negative. 146 FIRST Garnot $5 ?Hal intercollegiate Debate. Stanford University Chapel, April 12, 1895. Question: Resolved, That Casimir-Perier was justified in resigning I he Presidency of Prance. Affirmative. Mr. SANDWICK, of Stanford. Mr. Lyskr, of Berkeley. Mr. Clarke, of Berkeley. Negative. Mr. Friend, of Berkeley. Mr. Sheldon, of Stanford. Mr. Harrington, of Stanford. Winner of the Medal: Mr. Sandwick. Stanford Press Club. Organized February 28, 1894. OFFICERS. President....................................William V. Guth, ’95. Vice-President...............................William J. Neidig, 96. Secretary-Treasurer ...........................Hugh H. Brown, ’96. MEMBERS. Walter M. Rose, gr., Archie B. Rice, ’95, William W. Guth, 95, Charles C. Hughes, '95, William J. Neidig, ’96, Benjamin F. Bledsoe, ’96. Sherril b. Osborne, ’97, Joe H. Scott Calhoun, ’95, John F. Sheehan, Jr., ’95, Robert L. Donald, 95, Charles K. Field, ’95, Hugh H. Brown, ’96, William D. Briggs, ’96, Howard M. Hulme, ’97, Timmons, ’97. r 14S Heard from Qfar. TWO Roble girls would cross the fields, But a fence impedes their way; Soon one is up and half climbed o’er, When—oh, alackaday !— A stifled scream : “What shall I do? A cycler toward us rides!” The answer quick : “Jump down at once! “ “I can’t; I’m on both sides!” 49 ►—1 1 • ’lovf'O'V The Sequoia. William W. Guth........................................Editor-in-Chief. Walter M. Rose...................................... Business Manager. ASSOCIA TE EDITORS. C. K. Fihi.d, H. H. Brown, Henrietta Stadtmullkr, Sarah Comstock. ASSISTANT EDITORS. W. C. Maverick, Katharine L. Nash, W. A. Graham, Winifred Webb. ASSISTANT liUS!NESS MANAGERS. C. E. Rosf.ndale, Della Trumbo, F. V. Keesling. HOARD OF DIRECTORS. E. H. Woodruff, Faculty, W. M. Rose, post-gr., Scott Calhoun, ’95, W. J. Nkidig, ’96, R. A. Gibbs, ’97. J- M. Switzer, ’98. P. R. Frost, sp. C. C. Hughes, E. M. Hulmb, 152 Daily Palo Alto First Semester. Editor-iii-Chief . . Managing Editor . Business Manager . . R. I,. Donald. . W. J. N HI DIG. . A. H. Pollock. ASSOC I A TE iPt TORS. B. F. Bledsok, C. F. Ei stis, Winnifred Harper, W. Bitti.e Wells, Joe H. Timmons. Editor-in.Chief . . Managing Editor . Business Manager . Assistant Manager Musical Critic Second Semester. Scott Calhoun. Joe H. Timmons. A. H. Pollock. R C. Kirk. Shirley Baker. ASSOCIA TE EDITORS. W. Biitle Wells, W. H. Irwin, Winnifred Harper, Sherrill B. Oshoknb, C. K. Field. ASSISTANTS. Grace A. Baker, G. H. Francis, J. R. Griffin, W. C. Price. HOARD OF CONIROI. Professor Miss Lucy Allabach. ’95, G. B. Wilson, '96, B. M. Palmer. ’97, C. R. Frazier, ’9s, Ross, Faculty, Shirley Baker, ’95. A. H. Pollock, ’96, F. W. Lake, ’97, C. S Dole, '9s. •53 The Stanford Quad. Published Annually by the Junior Class. Volume II. WILLIAM D. BRIGGS, Editor- in - Chief. SARAH COMSTOCK, BENJAMIN F. BLEDSOE, WINNIPRED HARPER, HUGH H. BROWN, ARTHUR M. CATHCART. WILLIAM J. NEIDIG. HARRY B. REYNOLDS, Associate Editors. ROY D. ELY, Artist. JULIUS B. F RANK E N HE IM ER, Business Manager. 54 VT7HE Persian youth, Tradition fondly says, Are educated, in their Persian way, To draw the bow straight, ride the horse, to he The truth in all they think and do and say. Tradition’s out of date, for note the change That come’s with empire’s star and westward ho Drawing in train the Persian and his truth, His horse and useless knowledge of the bow. The modern youth, in ethics far advanced, Prefers to lie instead of telling truth ; He substitutes for Persia’s warlike sport The cigarette more deadly, but—wise youth— •3E deems it well to copy from the East What proves a help in modern college course ; Like Persia’s youth he is in this respect: He couldn’t get along without his horse. So note the change, Tradition, and express Your approbation of the Western way ; Tell to the world your pleasure in the code And civilizing influence of to-day ; Rejoice that you may see til’ auspicious time When ancient thought and custom’s out of force, And youth, in higher, nobler, grander way, Are educated, in their college course, To lie, Smoke cigarettes, And ride a horse. W. A. G. ■ 55 Thors photo. Stanford felniuersit? !3anH. A. G. Kaufman . . . Musical Director. W. A. Knowles ......................................Piccolo. H. Harris, E. B Hoag, M. S. Wright..................Flute. H. I). Connick......................................Eb Clarinet. V. V. Clark, H. Bell...............................Solo Bb Clarinet. C. B. Pinkham, J. H. Wilson.........................First Clarinet. A. H. White.........................................Second Clarinet. F. D. Wills.........................................Eb Comet. R. V. Van Nordkn, G. B. Campbell, H. F. Dyer . . . . Solo Bb Comet. S. M. Platt, M. O’Brien............................First Cornet. C. H. Nicewonger................. .................Second Comet. W. H Harrelson.....................................Third Cornet. J. M. Gates, A. V. Shubert..........................F uegel Horn. N. B Scofield......................................French Horn. W. F. Young.........................................First Horn. L. J. Hinsdill......................................Second Horn. H. B. LangilLE.....................................Third Horn. R. A. Gibbs........................................Fourth Horn. J. A. Rice..........................................First Tenor. F. M. Carter....................... ... ..... Second Tenor. G. B. Wilson.......................................Third Tenor. A. G. Kaufman......................................Solo Trombone. E. E. Farmer, J. T. Langford.............. .........First Trombone. E. O. Clayton....................... ...............Second Trombone. G. A. Miller.......................................Solo Tenor. D. A. Porter ......................................Euphonium. H. M. Morse........................................Baritone. E. L. Reichenbach..................................Bb Bass. C. H. Kinsey....................................... Tuba. O. V. Eaton........................................BPb Bass. S. D. Rosenbaum, M. L. Anfenger....................Snare Drum. C. B. Rosen DALE...................................Bass Drum. ...........Drum Major. W. D. Timm . . 4 Thors photo. anHolin Club. William BiTTLE WELLS..............................President and Leader. William Alexander Graham .........................Business Manager. Thomas Kimball Code, Adolph Gustave Kaufman. .....................Executive Committee. Wilii.am Bittlb Wells, ) First Mandolins. William Bitti.e Wells, ’97, Thomas Kimball Code. ’95, Edward Cecil Sewall, ’98. Second Mandolins. William Alexander Graham, 97, Adolph Gustave Kaufman, ’96. Guitars. George Benton Wilson, 96, William David Longwell, ’98, Mark Sibley Porter, sp., Britton Day Wigle, ’95, William Lewis McGuire, ’96. Flute. Henry Harris, ’96. Cello. Chester Lea Magee, ’95. 161 A 11 Stanford felnbersit? Glee Club. Guy Cochran . G. I). Stratton B. I). WlGLE . . C. L. Magee . OFFICERS 1894-9$.. ....................President. ....................Secretary-Treasurer. . ..............Manager. ....................Director. First Tenor. Shirley Baker, M. H. Kennedy, J. A. Gunn, Jr. MEMBERS. Second Tenor. B. D. WlGLE, C. L. Magee, W. A. Knowles. First Bass. G. D. Stratton, C. E. Pinkham, P. F. Abbott. Second Bass. G. H. Cochran, S. K. Simmons, W. T. Young. 63 j Orchestra. H. D. Connick....................Director. Chas. B. Pinkham....................Manager. A. V. Schubert, P. F. Abbot, C. V. Anderson . . First Violins. F. L. Dudley, H. Klauber................................Second Violins. Geo. D. Stratton..................................Viola. C. J. Dudley, Dane Coolidge.......................Cello. G. B. Wilson.....................................Hass. W. B. Knowles ...................................Piccolo. A. F. Poole ......................................Flute. H. H. Bell, V. V. Clark.........................Clarinet. H. T. Dyer, R. V. Van Norden....................Cornel. N. B. Scofield ................................French Horn. A. G. Kaufman .... ......................Trombone. C. B. Pinkham.....................................Tympanii. S. Platt..........................................Piano. 164 Korror! LABORATORY girl with evil eye. We count our bones whenever she conies She notes our every breath And talks on life and death. We slink away with fearful bated sigh. Fly ! nigh. An animal will quiver in her grasp ; It waits to breathe its latest in her clasp. How it sighs ! How it sighs ! As by her hand it dies. Its parting exhalation is a rasp, A gasp. As by the lab. on tiptoe soft we creak, A deathly odor to our brain doth reek. Our senses pass away— We are naught but lifeless clay, Till our breath conies back again with wheezy squeak. Shriek ! ! Watch her face, a fiendish gloomy mask, As eagerly she toileth at her task. All alone, All alone, She’ll worry with a bone ; And the cat with pain crawls, crawls, within its casque. Moan ! C. I. A. 65 Pinafore Cast. ddmirat......... Capt. Corcoran . . JZa ph Back straw flick Head eye . . Boatswain .... 7 o t Bozvting . . Josephine....... Hebe . ... Little Buttercup Afidsh ip n ite Sergeant of Atarines . Gko. D. Stratton, 95. . M. H. Kennedy, 95. Shiri.f.y Raker, ’95. . S. E. Simmons, ’95. . P. F. Abbott, ’98. . Guy Cochran, '96. . Miss Willis, ’96. . Miss Main, ’98. . Miss Cowan, '96. . Master Bushnell. . Chester Thomas. ’97. Sisters, Cousins, s tunts, Sai ors, Marines, etc. 166 Musical Director Stage Manager . H. D. Connick, 97. F. G. Snyder, 97- (5 Komance oj- PriHe I HERE is nothing new under the moon. The stage setting for I this little drama would l e appropriate for many another romance. From the actor’s point, however, everything was so delightfully novel. Surely the morsel of pink and white girlhood in the hammock was lovelier than ever six-foot manhood looked down on before, thought he, and no other two ever had so many delicious little episodes, she was sure. Vet neither the moon nor their hopes were brighter than moonlight and hope have been throughout the long, long past. They were in that early stage of vague, sweet fancy, which is perhaps more charming than the later one of love definite and expressed. A swift flash from the diamond on her finger recalled him to earth. “ Miss Vernon,” he said, impetuously, “ when you air your pretty theories on altruism, do you ever consider those who are too proud to ask for sympathy, but who need it beyond all others? ” ” I don’t know that I quite understand. I)o you refer to the refined poor, those who have to work their way through college, for instance ? ” ‘‘I mean the people whose life is one long struggle to keep up appearances, whose pride compels them to live well by practicing many small economies which wear out their very life. Such men are taunted by the fellows for being ‘close,’ and can’t show favors to the girls—in short, the class to which I have the pleasure of belonging.” “Mr. Chadbourne, you are jesting.” ” I wish to heaven I were. My college days are ended ; I cannot return next year.” “Oh. Bennet, don’t say that. Surely your brilliant career is not over. You of all others shouldn’t miss your Senior year ; you’ve been so ambitious, and have made such a splendid record. What can have happened ? ” “ The old struggle against poverty which has finally worsted me.” “Can’t you borrow?” catching, woman-fashion, at the first solution thought of. 167 “No; I cannot! Do you think I’ve not revolved in my mind every possible plan ? I would do almost anything honorable in order to come, but it’s impossible, so don’t let us discuss it. You cannot realize how I dreaded to tell you.” “ Cannot I be of some use ? ’’ after a pause. “I’m not nearly so impractical as you think. Tell me your plans.” “ I have few plans, fewer ambitions, and no hope at all,” he replied, despondently; then, with tenderness, “but you are my little guardian angel and have helped me in ways you do not dream of.” “ I want to be of some practical assistance to keep you here—not right here'' blushing, “but in college. But you are so proud. You know ‘ By pride angels have fallen ere thy time.’ ” “But by pride men have risen, as I shall rise! You see,” bitterly, “ my father is amply able to supply the funds, but, not believing in higher education, he looks with contempt upon my ambitions, and we are forever at war. However, I bore you with personal affairs.” “ Indeed no. I’m complimented by your confidence ; you so seldom speak about yourself. Come, be a good boy ; promise that at least there shall be no pride ‘ ’twixt thee and me.’ ” What could he do? Once more he permitted himself to forget her wealth—and dream. :je There was a delightful professor at college, still young enough to remember his own youthful hardships and sympathize with unfortunate students. To him Vivian went, confided Mr. Chadbourne’s disappointment and her own determination to lend him the funds necessary for his vSenior year. Professor Roberts, after teazing Vivian about the philanthropy of aiding handsome young men, promised to induce Bennet to accept a loan as if from him, and to keep her part in it a profound secret. Bennet Chadbourne’s Senior year was even more brilliant than the preceding ones. Vivian Vernon had never in her inmost thoughts exacted any more devotion from him on account of the service she had rendered, but they spent many hours in sweet camaraderie. There had never been any conventional love-making. Mr. Chadbourne was too wise and too proud to ignore the financial barrier which ever stood between them. In a few days would occur the Senior Hop, the social event of the year. Vivian had refused several invitations to it without a clearly 168 defined reason, saying to herself at last, “You know that you are waiting for Bennet to invite you, but he won’t indulge in extravagances on borrowed money.” And so she made a sudden resolve to throw aside conventions. He was standing by the piano, and she played soft, straying chords. “ Will you do me a favor, Bennet ? ” “Anything.” “Then rescue me from a train of insipid admirers and take me to the dance. Now, don’t look so distressed. Pretend this once that it is leap year, and allow me to play escort.” He left her abruptly and walked back and forth, suddenly confronting her. “You women don’t know when you insult a man,’’ he said. “ Then you refuse ? ” she asked. “ Most certainly.” For a moment there was an audible stillness, then Vivian burst into tears. She also was proud, and to have such a delicate proposition coldly refused was too hard. “Don’t,” Bennet said, “don’t, dear.” He laid his hand gently on her head as she sobbed. “ My cursed poverty—and pride—have made too much trouble already. Here are you distressing your beautiful soul over my misfortune, while Rol erts, who forced money upon me, insisting that he could spare it, has illness and financial loss. Oh, it’s abominable to have spent another man’s money when he needs it himself.” “ Don’t worry ; he didn’t miss that,” Vivian cried, impetuously. “ How do you know? ” Then he paused, transfixed with horror at the idea which came like an electric shock. “ Vivian, it can’t be! Fate would not deal that blow—you did not—” “Oh, no, no !” “Vivian,” sternly, seizing both her hands, “did—you—lend— me—five hundred dollars ? ” “ Forgive me ! I couldn’t see your career ruined. No one knows.” “ know,” dropping her hands. “ Miss Vernon, you have made the barrier between us insurmountable ! ” It is two years since the unfortunate ending of Vivian’s little romance. In a far-off city a young lawyer is reading a letter. 169 “ By the by, dear Bennet,” it says, “since returning to our little friend that five hundred dollars and interest which you sent me, I’ve discovered something which will surprise you. You, like myself, believed her to be an heiress. Well, I find that her income was only nine hundred dollars a year, so you can see that when she Quixotically invested five hundred in a handsome young man she was reduced to a rigid economy which was new to her. I don’t know what your foolish pride may have induced you to do or to leave undone, but Vivian has not been the same girl since you left. I’ve just learned that through some investments she has lost what money she had, and, I believe, has accepted a position to teach next year.” Bennet read no further. A great weight was lifted from his heart, but was transferred to his conscience. He wondered if Vivian ever could forgive him for yielding to pride rather than to love on that last fateful evening. His stern self-discipline almost had crushed him, but how could a self-respecting man have done otherwise ? He was making a success of his profession now. He had not yet electrified the world, but there was time. Bennet Chadbourne took the next train to visit his old college. It was commencement season, and Vivian was to be graduated. Those of his friends who were still in college welcomed him enthusiastically and carried him off to a banquet at once. “This toast will be fine,” whispered Ralph Pixley, as at the other end of the long table Vivian arose, l eautiful and spirituellc. Bennet held his breath. He scarcely saw or heard. The past enthralled him. When was it—in by-gone eons—that he had known that lovely woman ? Applause and laughter continually told the brilliancy of her toast, but he could not comprehend. She did not see him until arter dinner, when dancing. She turned very white as he approached, but, with woman’s self-control, smiled in a conventional manner. Ah, yes; she had one waltz : certainly he might have it, and she glided off with a post-graduate who, said Pixley, was “awfully attentive.’’ The dance proved a great disappointment. In books, the first meeting after a separation is usually all the heart of the most romantic lover could wish. A conservatory of exotic plants is sure to be provided by the hostess, and the place is carefully avoided by all other dancers during the reconciliation. Not so in life. First meetings nearly always prove miserably disappointing. This time there was no escape from the crowded ballroom, and poor Bennet had to be content with Vivian’s promise that he might call next day. It was all over. He had told her everything about it,—his love, struggle and sufferings,—while she—well, why put it into words? There is no experience so novel and fascinating to the participants, and none so trite and commonplace to those who hear of it, as that of first love. “ And can you ever forgive my wretched pride, beloved ? ” “ It is the one characteristic in you that I admire above all others.” “ Once I vowed that by pride I would rise, and pride has brought me to the Delectable Heights.” Winnifred Harper. COMMITTER. Miss Coombs, g. B. Wh Miss Hays, g. George Toombs, W. A. Knowles, Jk., ♦SON, I Baldwin, H. H. Brown, Guy Cochran. Chairman. junior Da? Theatricals “CAT’S CRADLE.” A Farce in Three Scenes, by Sarah Comstock, '96. CAST. Phil Farnsworth, member of Pi Ute Fraternity ...... George P. Baldwin. Ted Stunning. Elmer and Fiat Brother...............J. Tarn McGrew. Josiah Rusty, who digs.............................H. H. Brown. Cardinal Farnsworth, Phil's Sister “ Cardie”........Laura Stephens. Polly Peach, her roommate.......................... Mabel Mead. Birdie Banker, of ’Frisco...........................Sarah Comstock. SCENES. I.—Library in Pi Ute louse. II.—Cardie's Room at Roble. III.—Bank of Lag unita. |b HI - .V.- nit ersiti? Snterclass TielH Da ?. G. J. Bancroft D. E. Brown April 26. 1895. Track Manager. Track Captain. COMMITTEE. Miss A. M. Colt, Mr. J. M. Ross, Mr. F. W. Lakh, Mr. W. M. McIntosh, C. A. Thomas, Chairman. COMMITTEE. F. V. Lake, W. A. Strong, Miss Wheeler, Miss Rose, J. M. Ross'Chairman. Do ou Know Ker ? HE’S the Profs delight in classes, ' - And in exes she surpasses All the other envious lasses, For she’s never known to flunk. In History she’s proficient, In Latin ne’er deficient,—-Hut her dancing’s quite sufficient To drive a man to drink. Buffalo. 179 founders’ Da?. The Children of California Shall Be My Children.—Iceland Stanford, 1S84. Leland Stanford Junior University. $)emorial $ ercises. MARCH 9, 1895, 7:30 P. M. PROGRAMME. Paper, “The Successor of the Established Church . Professor Paper, “Some Tendencies in Woman’s Education . Professor Hymn..................................Professor Earl Barnes. M. R. Smith. A. W. Smith. V 1 bo Memorial Day. Leland Stanford Junior University. MAY IS, 1894. PROGRAMME OP EXERCISES. 7:30 P. M. IN THE CHAPEL. Music................................Stanford Mandoi.in Club. “ Pen Pictures of Life in the Santa Clara Valley’ . Benjamin F. Bledsoe, ’96. “ Co-Education”......................Henrietta Stadtmuli.hr, ’95. Music. . ...........................Stanford String Quartette. “ American Materialism and the College Man” . Arthur M. Cathcart, ’96. 181 di ?il Sngineers’ Club. Organized 1893. Object: Mutual recreation in professional lines. President......... .... IVArcy Ai,an Portkr, 95. Vice-President...................... ... George Hf.rbrkt Herrold, ’96 Secretary-Treasurer.....................Ralph Laban Hartrr, ’95. HONORARY MEM HERS. Professor Chas. I). Marx. C. E , Professor Lkander m. Hoskins, C. K.. Professor Chas. B. Wing, C. K., Professor John C. L. Kish, C. E. ASSOCIATE MEMBERS. Claude Standish Downing, 95. Van Norman McGee, ’95, James Corbett White, ’96, Don John Zumwalt, 95, ACTIVE MEMBERS. Sink ley Baker, 95. Robert L’Amy Donald, ’95, Ernest G. Hamilton, '95, George Herbert Herroi.d, '96, Newton Booth Knox, ’95, IVArcy Alan Porter, ’95. Ei.bert Rifi.ey Dart, ’95. Nathaniel Kli.eky, ’95. Ralph Laban Harter. ’95. Walter Harold Kikkbride, ’95. Charles Henry Purcell, ’96, John Ellsworth Rock hold, ’96, George Draper Stratton, ’95. 1S2 President............................. Vice-President ....................... Secretary............................. Secretary Department Mammalogy . . Secretary Department Ornithology . . Secretary Department Herptology . . Secretary Department Batrachians . . Secretary Department Ichthyology . . Secretary Department Entomology . . Miss Flora Hartley. N. B. Scofiki.i). A. Skalk. J. O. Snydbr. N. G. Buxton. J. M. Stowell. C. W. Grkkn. Dr W. W. Thoburn. Professor V. L. Kellogg. G. B. Culver. R. W. Doank, Miss M. F. Dole. R. D. Ely, Dr. C. H. Gilbert. Mrs. C. H. Gilbert, A. W. Greeley, MEMBERS. J. A. Gunn, Jr., Professor H. J. Heath, Miss L. Henry, N. W. Jones, I)r. D. S. Jordan, C. L. Magee, C. J. Pierson, W. W. Price, Cloud Rutter, E. C. Starks, G. I.. Seward, Miss E. H. Shelley, John Van Denburg, T. M. Williams. •«3 M Science (Association. Organized January ii, 1894. OFFICE RS% fSQf 95. President.......................Professor O. P. Jenkins. Vice-President..................Professor D. H. Campbei.l. Secretary........................ Professor T. M. Richardson. PAPERS READ. Professor C. H. Gilbert—“ The Geographical Distribution of Fresh-water Fishes.” Mr. S. W. Young—” Theories Concerning the Cause of Activity in Carbon Compounds.” Professor F. Anghi.l—“ The Perception of Distance.” Professor J. C. Rranner—” Concerning the U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey.” PROFESSOR O. P. Jenkins—” Present Conceptions of the Contentsof the Cell.” Professor T. M. Richardson — ” Space Relations of the Atoms in the Molecule.” President D. S. Jordan—“ The Roblar Man from the Mincus.” PROFESSOR E. Barnes—” The Development of the Special Psychology of Childhood.” Professor J. P. Smith—” The Age of Auriferous States of the Sierra Nevada.” Professor F. Sanford—” A New Magnetic Phenomenon.” Professor V. L. Kellogg—“A Study in Specialization.” Professor T. D. Wood—” Adaptation of the Human Organization to Modern Life.” Professor W. R. Dudley “Geographical Distribution of Plants Having Filamentous Pollen.” Professor W. J. Hussey—” The Atmosphere of Mars.” Professor D. H. Campbell—” Relationships of the Pteridophytes.” Mr. H. D. Stearns—” The Radius of Gyration.” Philological (Association Organized September 16, 1892. OFFICERS, 1 94-95. President ........................ Professor E. M. Phase. Secretary.........................Pkofkssor J. E. Mat .kr. PAPERS READ. April 26, S94. Mr. C. M. Poor— Sliakspere in Germany in the Storm and Stress Period.” Mr. K. G. Rkndtorff—“ The M. H. G. Poet. Suchensinn.” May 24. Mr. W. E. Jenkins—“The Dramatic Monologue of Browning.” Professor E. Feuegek— Notes on Anglo-Saxon Paleography.” September 27. Professor J. C. Mat .kh - “ The Development in French of Latin Tonic 6 in Free Syllables.” October 25. Professor S. Symington—“The Folk lore of May-day in France.” November 22. Professor H. B. Lathrop—” Some Customs of the Inns of Court.” Professor E. Feu KG EL—” The First Stanford University ; ” “ Harrington’s Treatise on Playe.” December 20. Professor A. T. Murray—“ The Citizenship of Aristophanes.” Professor E. M. Pease—“ Note on Cicero, Fam. XX. 16, 1.” January 31, 1S95. Professor W. H. Hudson— Studies on Keats.” Professor J. E. Matzke—” An Unpublished O. Fr. Version of Laws attributed to William the Conqueror.” February 28. Professor W. MlEEKR—“ Pausanias and his Guide-book.” March 21. Professor E. M. Pease— The Greetings in the Correspoiulence of Cicero.” Professor E. Feukgee—' Skeat’s E lition of Chaucer.” i«5 eta C-ambda. Happy the Man Who Has T;oo t.egs to His Row.—Anon. President.......................... Vice-President ........................ Secretary-Treasurer.............. Pteiiged: ). B. ..........Chaki.ks M. Cram. ............G. H. Cochran. ..........K. L. Rkichbnbach. Fra nkhnhhimkr. 1S6 II K5 A R I.HS Ki,i, vood Cox. ’ 3- «IK I I.KA NOR R ISSKI.I., i LKI-I A. I LJKL MoSH KK, 93-hari-hs Wilson Grbkn, ’9 University Christian (Association President................................................Miss Cora Palmer. Vice-President...........................................B. M. Palmer. Secretary................................................Homer Laughlin. Treasnrcr................................................G. H. Cochran. 4 ftf St, e. a. President . President . . Vice-President Secretary . . Treasurer. . . First Semester. Second Semester. I). L. Arnold. VV. P. Gifford B. M. Palmer. Warren Hull. G. H. Roach. B . e. a. President...........................................Miss Alexandra Fay. Secretary...........' '...........................Miss Albert a Merritt. Corresponding Secretary ............................Miss Lillian Ray. Treasurer...........................................Miss Parnik Hamilton. Students’ Guild. President...............................................R. L. Donald. Secretary...............................................Miss E. Chapman. Treasurer...............................................E. D. MagBK. I Students’ Go--operatiue (Association. President........................................R. F. Gii.uam. Vice-President................................... J. A. Higgles. Secretary-Treasurer..............................R. L. Sandwich. Manager..........................................J. M. STOWELL. BOARD OF DIRECTORS. R. F. Gilliam, J. M. Ross, J. A. Higgles, F. L. Enti.br, R. L. Sandwich, Wm. Doherty, Professor C. H. Marx. .89 f icpcle Club President.......... Vice-President . . . Secretary-Treasurer . . Captain............... . J. M. Gregory, Jr. . C. F. Aaron. . M. L. An FENCER. . C. R. Frazier. Ch ?ss Club. President...................................................O. P. Morton. Vice-President.......................................... . T. A. Storey. Secretary-Treasurer........................ ... . F. L. Dl'i.i.EY. Slectrical Sngineering Club. President Secretary Treasurer E. E. Farmer. W. S. Hyde. R. Crowell. Onlp 'This- E expects without fail A bid to that dinner, And a money detail He expects without fail. So he hies for his mail With complacency inner : He expects without fail, A bid to that dinner. His postoffice box Is filled up this morning. With glee he unlocks His postoffice box. With some dun’s orthodox And a registrar’s warning, His postoffice box Is filled up this morning. II. L. S. 191 3 194 Athletic COMMITTEES ON ATHLETICS. Faculty Committee on Athletics. Professor Angell, Professor Richardson, Professor Wood. ATHL L. J. Hinsdill, Chairman, E. R. Zion, gr., O. V. Eaton, ’95, G. J. Bancroft, ’95, Miss Stella Rose, J. B. Frankenheimer, ’96, i TIC BOARD. J. E. Reynolds, ’96, Abe Lewis, Jr., ’95, H. Pomeroy, ’97, H. B. Dyer, ’97, E. H. Arnold, ’95, C. S. Dole, ’9s. TEAM MANAGEMENT AND CAPTAINS. Football Captain Football Manager Baseball Captain Baseball Manager Track Captain Track Manager . P. M. Downing, 95. H. S. Hicks, ’96. H. B. Dyer, ’97. E. R. Zion, gr. D. E. Brown, 97. G. J. Bancroft, 95. 95 KKNNIIlV IIA M 11 COCIIHAN I'M A N K « N UK I %l K K RPAI.IHNII IIIKINI |M.WNIH« MICKM CMTION 1891 : 14—io. 1892: 10—10. 1893: 6—6. 1894: 6—o. H. S. Hicks, Manager. P. M. Downing, Captain. WALTER CAMP, Coach. A B. Spalding, ’96........................Right End. P. M. Downing, ’95, Captain.............Right Tackle. ----------’96........................ Right Guard. W. C. Hazzard, ’95............................Center. C. M. Fickkrt, 97...............................Left Guard. G. H. Cochran, ’96.......................Left Tackle. S. W. Cotton, ’98.........................Left End. W. H. Harrelson, ’95....................Quarter-back. J. PL Reynolds, ’96..................Right Half-hack. J. B. Frankknhkimer, 96..............Left Half-back. M. H. Kennedy, ’95.........................Full-back. SUfiST Tl TES. T. K. Code, ’95, M. D. Hall, sp., C. A. Thomas, ’97, C. Dole, ’98, A. II. Burnett, ’95, W. II Soper, 98. •Refer to page 199. SCHEDULE OF GAMES. SEASON OF iS94. Stanford vs. Reliance Athletic Club . . . San Francisco Stanford vs. Santa Cruz..........Santa Cruz . Stanford vs. Reliance Athletic Club . . San Francisco Stanford vs. Sacramento Athletic Club. . Sacramento . Stanford vs. Reliance Athletic Club . . . Campus Stanford vs. University of California . . . San Francisco Stanford vs. University of Chicago. . . . San Francisco Stanford vs. University of Chicago. . . . Los Angeles . Stanford vs. Los Angeles Athletic Club . Los Angeles . CLASS GAMES. ’95 vs. ’97......................Campus . . . ’96 vs. ’98......................Campus . . 95 vs. ’98......................Campus . . . ’96 vs. ’95......................Campus . . . ’98 vs. Belmont School...........Campus . . . Stanford Freshmen Z’S. U. C. Freshmen . San Francisco ’96 and ’95 tie for championship. . Oct. 20 . . . 4-1S. . Oct. 27 . . 14—4- . Nov. 3 • • . 6-12. . Nov. 10 . . 6—0. . Nov. 14 . 20—0. . Nov. 29 . . 6—0. . Dec. 25 • ■ 4-24- . Dec. 29 . . 12—0. . Jan. 1 28—0. . . Oct. 1 . . 6—0. . . Oct. 3 • . 12—4. . . Oct. 6 . . 32—0. . . Oct. 17 • . 4—4- . . Nov 8 . . 44—6. . . Dec 8 . . 0—4. 19S Glass Teams. ’95 Team. M. H. Kennedy, Captain. M. I). Grosh, Manager. W. C. Hazzard, center; W. W. ORCUTT and A. H. Burnett, guards; E. H. Johnson and F. M. Watson, tackles; J. T. Sangford and G. J. Bancroft, ends; T. K. Codk and W. H. IIarrf.lson, quarter-backs; P. M. Downing and T. G. Russell, half-backs ; M. II. KENNEDY, full-back. ’96 Team. G. H. Cochran, Captain. J. O. Watson, Manager. ---------, center ; McDonald and W. Campbell, guards ; McIntosh and McCray, tackles; Spalding and Bunker, ends; Bernhard, quarter; J. B. Frankknheimer and J K. Reynolds, half-backs; G. H. Cochran, fullback. ’97 Team. R. C. Kirk, Manager. C. M. Fickkrt, Captain. E. H. Arnold, right end ; J. B. Rice, right tackle; F. M. Williams, right guard ; L. S. Beedy, center ; C. M. Fickert, captain, left guard ; E. G. ROBINSON, left tackle; H. R. Straight,- left end; W. M. McIntosh, quarter-back ; C. Thompson, right half-back ; C. A. Thomas, left half-back ; F. Snyder, fullback ; G. W. Bishop and A. B. Saunders, substitutes. ’98 Team. C. Frazier, Manager. C. S. Dole, Captain. Carle, center; Harrington and Dillard, guards; Leavitt and Cotton, tackles; Pauley and Hughes, ends ; Allyn, quarter-back ; Xicewonger and Carter, half-backs; C. S. Dole, captain, full-back; Frazier, Shepherd, Frost, Wagner, Jennings, Creed, Chickkring and Starr, substitutes. • Refer to page 211. HAMM It I.MON l.t'.WIH Ml It It II A N mci.aink vor«m ZION HVHM iiitk CAI IIOI’N Thors photo. riMcni } NORTHERN TOUR, SEASON OF 1894. H. J. Cox.....................Manager. J. F. Shkkhan, Jr...............Captain. C. W. Davey, ’96 ... . . . C. A. W. BrMILLER, 97 . . S. B. W. L. McLaink, ’96 . . . 1 H. T. Dyer, ’97 . . T. B. R. Weldon, ’97 . . . . • r A. Lewis, Jr., ’95 . . . . . S. S. G. A. Campbell, ’97 . . . j S. Calhoun, ’95 ... . . L. F. T. G. Russell, '95 . . ) F. B. J. F. Sheehan, ’95, capt . C. F. H. A. Walton, 95 . . j E. M. Rea, ’95 R F. Games played............................................22. Games won...............................................18. Games lost.............................................. 4- Points won by Stanford.................................263. Points won by opponents................................143. 201 Schedule of Games Played During Northern Tour. Stanford vs. Seattle Athletic Club..Seattle.........................June 2. 15—6. Stanford vs. Port Townsend......Port Townsend . . June 5. 10—9. Stanford vs. Y. M. C. A.......Seattle ...... June 7. iS—7. Stanford vs. Tacoma Athletic Club ... Tacoma .... June 9. iS—9. Stanford vs. Tacoma Athletic Club .... Tacoma . June 12. 6—3. Stanford vs. Seattle Athletic Club........Seattle. . . June 14. 3—5. Stanford vs. Tacoma Athletic Club . . . Tacoma....................June 16. 7—6. Stanford vs. Victoria..............Victoria.........................Juue 21. 8—7. Stanford vs. Seattle Athletic Club........Seattle ... . June 23. 10—o. Stanford vs. Vivienda...............Tacoma..........................June 26. 9—$• Stanford vs. Seattle Athletic Club..Seattle .... June 27. 9-10. Stanford vs. Spokane................Spokane.........................June 30. S-12. Stanford vs. Spokane .....................Spokane . . . .July 2. 13—8. Stanford vs. Spokane................Spokane.........................July 4 a. m. 5—6. Stanford vs. Spokane . . .................Spokane...................July 4 • M. 8—S. Stanford vs. Seattle Athletic Club..Seattle ..................July 7. 18—4. Stanford vs. Tacoma Athletic Club ... Tacoma . . . July 10. 22-13. Stanford vs. Multnomah Athletic Club . . Portland.July 14. 6—5. Stanford vs. Multnomah Athletic Club .Portland .... July 18. 21—9. Stanford vs. Portland Athletic Club . . Portland ...... July 19. 14—l. Stanford vs. Portland Athletic Club .... Portland.July 20. 20—5. Stanford vs. Multnomah Athletic Club Portland.July 21. 15—2. 202 i895- E. R. Zion...........................................Manager. H. T. Dyer...........................................Captain. T. G. Russell,’95, catcher; W. L. McLaine, ’96, pitcher; B. N. Young, 97, first ; H. T. Dyer, 97 (captain), second; A. Lewis, ’95, third; A. H. White, ’95. shortstop; W. H. Harrklson, ’95, left field ; J. F. Sheehan, ’95, center field; S. Calhoun, 95, right field. H. Pincus, C. Thompson, A. S. Jeffs, substitutes. SCHEDULE OF GAMES. SEASOX OF i$9f. Stanford vs. University of California . . .Campus . . . . 15-11. Stanford vs. University of California . . . Berkeley. . . 11—7. f SEASON OF 1895. Stanford vs. Olympic Athletic Club ... Campus . . Mar. 9. 4—9. Stanford vs. Reliance Athletic Club .... Campus . . . Mar. 16. 22—4. Stanford vs. University of California . . . Berkeley . . . .Apr. 6. 14—8. • Incomplete in Vol. I. of QUAD. f Incomplete. 203 Class Teams. ’95 Team. W. E. Stuart, Manager. E. M. Rea, Captain. T. G. Russell, catcher; K. M. Rea (captain), pitcher; P. M. Downing, first; J. F. Sheehan, second; A. H. White, third; Abe Lewis, shortstop; S. Calhoun, left; S. Baker, center; W. II. Harkelson, right. W. F. Blake. W. R. Stuart, substitutes. 96 Team. J. B. Roper, Manager. C. Ray, Captain. E. H. Sibley, catcher; F. S. Ruddel, pitcher; J. McIntosh, first; H. Campbell, second; F. W. Morrison, shortstop; C. Ray, third; N. D. Johnson, left ; H. H. Brown, center; H. B. Reynolds, right. A. T. Hosmer, substitute. ’97 Team. J. M. Whited, Manager. C. S. Thompson, Captaiu. C. S. Thompson (captaiu), catcher; H. T. Dyer, pitcher; B. N. Young, first; A. C. Montgomery, second; R. H. Spencer, shortstop; H. C. Hazzard, third; R. K. Culver, left; D. E. Brown, center; H. W. Packard, right. '98 Team. G. B. Durham, Manager. H. Pincus, Captain. A. S. Jeffs, catcher; H. Cope, pitcher; F. A. Schneider, first; G. W. Bush, second ; II. Pincus, shortstop; H. Klaubkr, third; C. S. Flemming, right; E. Stansbery, center; O. B. Wight, left. H. P. Hill, H. R. McBride, E. L. Farmer, substitutes. CLASS GAMES. 96 vs. ’97......................Campus......Feb. 9. 13-10. ’97 vs. ’98................. . Campus............Feb. 16. 13—6.. ’95 vs. 98 Campus . . . . Feb. 22. 24—9. ’96 vs. ’98......................Campus . . . . Feb. 27. 0-16. 95 vs. ’96 . . Campus ... . Mar. 2. 17-13. ’95 1's. ’97.....................Campus......Mar. 13. 18—4. ’95 Class winuers of interclass championship aud prize sweaters. 204 £j SHOT an arrow into the air; It fell to earth, I knew not where, Until the man on whom it fell Came round and gave me---------. Ye gods ! but it was horrible ! N. B. K. 205 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. D. L. Arnold, C. S. Dole. TOURNAMENTS. Spring Championships, 1894. T. S. Watson, ’95..............S. R. Durand, post-gr. . . . Doubles. A. W. Bumillkr, ’97...........................................Singles. Fall Championships, 1894. O. S. Richer, ’98.............F. A. Schneider. ’98.........Doubles. A. W. Bumiller, ’97........................................Singles. Spring Championships, 1895. O. S. Richer, ’98....................II. B. Packard, ’97.........Doubles. O. S. Richer, ’9s.............................................. Singles. 206 Intercollegiate, 1894. Sanborn, University of California. . . Beat............BumilLER, Stanford. Gage, University of California . . . .Beat.............Ellis, Stanford. Sanborn, | University of California. . Beat............j RAND I Stanford. Byxbik, ) J I Watson, Sanborn, University of Caliornia . . . Beat............Bumiller, Stanford. Ellis, Stanford.......................Beat.............Sanborn, U. C. Cochran, f Sanborn, ) TT „ Stanford..............Defaulted to .... V U. C. BUMILLER, t BYXBIE, Intercollegiate, 1895 (Incomplete). Magee, University of California. . Beat.............Pitcher, Stanford. Gage, University of California . . . .Beat .................Packard, Stanford. Gagk,H } University of California. Beal.....................{ p kard. ISUnford- 207 Traci (Athletics. SEASON OF iSgj. Track Captain—]. P. Bernhard. TEAM. J. P. Bernhard, P. S. Ei.i.is, W. A. Knowles, R. K. Culver, A. H. Jarman, J. A. Desimone, W. H. Osgood, A. C. Pillsbury, W. H. Husted, E. E. Farmer, G. B. Bancroft, D. H. Fry, D. E. Brown. G. B. Culver, M. D. Johnson, F. M. Watson, Geo. Toombs, E. M. Rea, W. W. Orcutt. 2oS SECOND ANNUAL INTERCOLLEGIATE FIELD DAY. HELD AT BERKELEY, APRIL 28, 1894. Scork : Berkeley, 90 ; Stanford, 36. Event. SCOKK. u. c. Stanford. 100 yards dash Scoggins. Hupp. Bernhard. 10 4. S I Half-mile run ...... Koch. Park hurst. Colt. 2:011. 9 O 220 yards hurdle Hoffman. Dyer. Chestnut. 27 . 9 O Two miles bicycle Jarman. PlLLSBURY. O’Connor. 6:25 . I 8 Mile walk Farmer. Holton. Bancroft. 8:02$. 3 6 440 yards dash Humphrey. Parkhurst. Hilrorn. 52!.. 9 0 Mile run Brown. Bancroft. Brock. 4:49 .- 4 5 220 yards dash Scoggins. Bernhard. Cross. 24 . 6 3 120 yards hurdle Dead heat bet. Hof fman and Dyer. North. 161. 9 0 Running broad jump WOOLSEY. North. Johnson. 22 ft. 8 1 Hammer throw Edgren. Watson. Silvester. 80 ft. in. 6 3 Pole vault Crane. Culver. Edgren. 9 ft. a1A I 8 Running high jump Patterson. Koch. Humphrey. 5 ft- 9 4 9 0 Shot put Edgren. Koch. Orcutt. 37 'A in- 8 1 Total 90 36 Bancroft. Cvlvkr. Col'KI.AND. Watson. Knowlk . IHji.k. HAZZAMD. FarMKH. llt'NIKK Caktkk. IMcknht. Okcutt . Toomiih. Brown. Hrhniiahii. Joiinhon. Kkvnoi.iw. I’m v Timm. ('•HKI.OK V. Kopkh, I'm a i I'M. TRACK TEAM, 1895. I). E. Brown, ’97, Captain. G. J. Bancroft, ’95. Manager. W. M. Huntkr, Coach. E. E. Farm hr, ’95, E. B. COPELAND, ’95, I). H. Fry, ’95, F. M. Watson, ’95, W. W. Orcutt, ’95, J. I Bernhard, ’96, W. A. Knowles, ’96, Geo. Toombs, ’96, G. H. Hazzard, '96, ‘----------, ’96. M. I). J J. M. Gregory, ’96, II. B. Reynolds, ’96, N. B. Roper, ’96, W. Timm, ’96, D. E. Brown, ’97, R. K. Culver, 97. C. M. Fickert, 97, F. M. Carter, ’9s, C. S. Dole, ’98, Chas. Frazier, ’98, NSON. ’9S. All rights reserved. BEST STANFORD RECORDS. Event. Record. Holder. ioo yards dash . . . . . 101 2 seconds ( C. C. Adams. 95. H. T. Woodward, 220 yards dash . . . . 23J seconds 440 yards dash . . . . . 52% seconds Half mile run . 2 minutes y 2 seconds. . . . . E. B. Copeland, ’95. One mile run . . . . . 4 minutes 36 seconds . . I). E. Brown, 97. 120 yards hurdle . . . . 17$ seconds . . . R. K. Culver, ’97- 220 yards hurdle . . . 29 seconds Two miles bicycle . . . 6 minutes 18 seconds . . . . W. J. Edwards, ’93. Runing broad jump . . . 21 feet 7 inches .... . . . M. I). Johnson, ’98. Running high jump. . . 5 feet 7 inches . . . S. Calhoun, ’95. Shot put . 35 feet 2x 2 inches . . . . . . F. M Watson, ’95. Hammer throw . . . . 92 feet . . . F. M. Watson, ’95. Pole vault ...... 9 feet 11 inches . . . E. W. Crank, ’95. Mile walk . 7 minutes 25? seconds. . . . . H. R. Timm, ’93. 212 Women’s (Jtljletic Association. BOARD OF DIRECTORS. Mrs. Albert W. Smith........................President Maud March, sp..............................Vice-President. Anita L. Corbkrt, ’96.......................Secretary. Minna A. KiDWELL, ’95.......................Treasurer. Clblia Duel Mosher, 93, Janet Rossitkr, ’96, Katherine Adams, ’98, F. Marion Dole. ’95, Stella Rose, ’97, Ada Edwards, sp. COMMITTEES. ARCHERY. Winnifred Harper, ’96.......................President Alma Patterson, ’96.........................Manager. Lucy Brim, 95, Londa Stebbins, sp. BASKET BALL. Adella Trumbo, ’95, Stella M. McCray, ’98, May E. Gates, ’98. BICYCLING Ellen F. Thompson............. Louise Brown, sp.............. Lillian Matson. '96........... Mary C. Ray, 96.............. Winnifred Harper, ’96......... Frances Schallenberger, ’96 . . . Mary C. Ray, ’96, BOATING. Grace I). Baker. ’97, Loren a Steuart, ’97, Hallir Hyde, 98. TENNIS. Florence Bolton, sp., Olive Williams, ’96, Anna H. Martin, ’96. President. Vice-President. Secretary. Captain. Lieutenant. Bugler. Lena Duckbr, ’98. 213 Picture in i e Cibrarp. • Quantum instar in ipso. Across the leaden mystery of death He gazes calmly forth ; the deep blue eyes, Their mortal glamour vanished with his breath, Have opened on the light of paradise. The endless chanting of the swinging spheres Comes welling upward through the starry aisles, And God’s own music trembles on his ears Until lie traces in the tears, the smiles, The joy, the grief, life’s sweet and bitter song, The Great Musician’s touch upon the siring, And knows the minor chords of pain and wrong Complete the symphony the ages sing, And feels, in all the sweetness of its tone, The edict must l e a p;ean, not a groan. W. H. Irwin. I. NX furry-purry Cecil, with your yel- ___low eyes that blink and shine, p—y you are a most magnificent Persian cat! “ Come, Cecil, lie in your mistress’ lap and purr to her while she opens her letters,” Irva Madison said. Irva was in her own luxurious room, and Cecil was becoming to her old-blue morning gown. ” Here is a scented, tinted letter, Cecil, its stamp stuck coquettishly cornerwise, and a splashy white seal on the back. Do you see the angular sprawls which address the letter ? They mean that the writer is Miss Mabel Kellogg, a young lady who attended Miss Folderol’s school with me before your day, Cecil. She is short, blue-eyed and tender ; she can play very nicely on her mamma’s Steinway, and all the books she ever reads are novels innumerable. She really is a very nice, loving little thing. I am fond of Mabel, but whenever I used to mention Rusk in to her she would screw up her dear little snub nose and dive into a novel. How I love to watch you clinch your beautiful padded fists and relax them, Cecil. You do it because you are so exquisitely comfortable. ” 4 My darlingest Irva,’ Mabel writes. You are going to sleep, Cecil ! That is not at all polite when I am reading you my private 215 correspondence. 4 My darlingest Irva, how have you been all this long time? It is an age since you have written to your Mabel, and she has been simply longing to hear from you. Have you forgotten me altogether? What good times we used to have at Miss Folderol’s, and do you remember the day when you bought a five-cent cigar down town on pretense of going for a spool of black cotton ? And you smoked the cigar in my room, you shocking thing, and Miss Folderol caught you at it. ‘‘‘Irva, dearest, I heard indirectly the other day that you are going to Blithe Beach for August. Jack Wyman is there, my Jack, you know, and of course you must meet him ; and oh, Irva, such a moustache ! He is staying at his aunt’s cottage and expects to be there until September, so you will have lots of time to get acquainted, and I want you to get very well acquainted ; for you are my old darling, and he is—you know what he is ! We shall be married in September, when we both return to the city, and, Irva, I am to have the most thrilling white moire ! Gigot sleeves and perhaps orange blossoms; they say the fad for them is being revived.’ ’’ At this point Irva began to skim. “ Gigot sleeves and orange blossoms are very tiresome in a letter. Don’t you think so, Cecil ? I wonder what mamma will decide upon for September, ’ she added, twirling a splendid diamond on her left third finger. “She has condescended to tell me that I am to carry a white-enameled prayer-book with a gold cross on the cover. I must take a peep into a prayer book before the tenth. One thing I know: I am to say, 41, X., take thee, M.’ 41, Irva, take thee, George.’ ” She was absently watching Cecil twitch his silky ears in a dream. “ 41, Irva, take thee, George;’— that doesn’t sound quite right. It’s George who is taking me ;—no, it’s mamma who is taking George. 41, mamma, take thee. George, and marry thee to my daughter, in order that my fiftieth birthday may see me in the best coupe that Bronson affords.’ Yes; that’s it, and then George replies, 41, George, am taken by thee, mamma, and at sixty-one am made buoyant by being married to the handsomest girl in Bronson society, whose parents are delighted to give her beauty in exchange for my millions.’ I am a beauty ; no one can doubt it,’’ she broke off; and putting down Cecil, who sniffed disgustedly at being disturbed, she went to the wee white and gold framed mirror which held her dainty image like a pastel. “ My lips are perfect and my straight hair is adorable. I always thought curly hair was unaristo-cratic. I never had a habit of fluffing mine as most straight-haired girls 216 do; my features are so fine that I can afford to let it turn back from the face in unbroken lines. I should like to kiss those blue veins under my eyes, but they always evade me. Oh! mamma, lucky woman that you are, you may thank your good angel that your only daughter came into the world with a Grecian nose and a faultless chin ; they mean a coupe to you, mamma, a green-cushioned coupe with a monogram on the door,—a lofty ambition, indeed,—green cushions and a monogram,—well worth living half a century to gratify, mamma. Sing your song of sixpence, Mr. George Abingdon Montgomery of New York. As for me------” The pastel vanished from its frame, and Cecil was restored to his place on the old-blue morning-gown. u You are too plump by far, Cecil, and so is Mabel. Do you, too, read novels innumerable? I am told that they are a fattening diet. You should reduce yourself immediately to one a week ; then perhaps your curves would grow perfect like mine. “As for me, I have never believed in love anyway, except my love for you, darling, purring Cecil. You are mine devotedly, and I yours till death do us part. The men I know are fops. There can’t be such a thing as loving a man. I never yet had the least little twinge of what is described as love. Men bore me dreadfully, but it isn’t worth while to oppose mamma in her skillful designs : it isn’t worth the trouble. In story-books girls fall in love ; in real life they are married. I might as well do what other girls do. It is a bore to marry, but it is a bore not to. I love only my tiger-skin and my rose-curtains and my books and my Cecil. Mr. Montgomery is a stupid old man who dotes foolishly on my face, but I think he won’t bother me much. At any rate, when he becomes too tiresome I can stroke you, and you will squint lovingly at me as always. Remember, Cecil mine.” 217 II. When Jack Wyman came to Blithe Beach everybody knew that he was engaged. “Mabel Kellogg is a nice little thing,” some one from Jack’s town reported ; “ pretty, too, and desperately in love with him. Jack was smitten with her prettiness and was engaged before he knew it, but as for deep feeling,—why, he doesn’t know what it means. These affairs where one cares more than the other are always unfortunate. Now, there was Miss Hutton------” Jack was nominally spending a month with his aunt at the cottage which she had taken for the summer, but young people and fun were at the hotel, and accordingly Jack was there from tennis in the morning to the hop at night. It had taken him exactly six hours to be hail fellow well met with every outing suit and to be privileged to raise his hat to every chiffon parasol on the beach. That was Jack Wyman. Almost every one liked him hugely, and as proof that he not only appeared to be, but actually was, the best kind of fellow, the few who did not like him cordially hated him. From the day he came to Blithe Beach until the day he left, he remained the favorite of the place. When Irva arrived at the hotel he called at Mabel’s request. “ I never saw a girl just like her,” he told himself. There was a spatter of wet leaves on the pane outside, but what did Jack Wyman care ? For there was a luxurious crackle in the gayly tiled fireplace within. There was a dreary little squeal in the wind, doubly dreary in that it was an August afternoon; but, again, what did Jack care? For he was measuring the length of his aunt’s plushy, pillowy lounge, and his slippers were in deliciously heedless proximity to his aunt’s favorite water-color on the wall before him. There were little pools forming all over the tennis court deeper and deeper every minute ; but, still again, what did Jack care ? He only told himself once more, “ I never saw a girl just like her. “ The men are all talking about her. They say, When she does play tennis she plays like a man, and when she does dance she dances like a nymph;’ but what the deuce makes her keep so to herself? By Jove, she’s gorgeous,—face of a Gibson woman; but a fellow hardly knows how to take her. “The girls are more non committal. 'Superb diamond, and she —wonderfully chic and beautiful, of course, but--’ “ For myself, I never saw a girl just like her, and yet I hear that she is going to marry for money as all of ’em do. I never saw a girl like her—like her. Jack Wyman, leave this lounge in a hurry, you 2 IS loafer, and get out your pen. You haven’t written to that little fiancee of yours for a week.” Irva Madison, at the hotel, was dressing for dinner. “Mr. Wyman is really the first interesting young man I have ever met,” she meditated. “Cecil, I wish I had brought you along to talk to.” III. “We’ve had such fun playing on the sand, mamma,” said Alphonso Abernathy, unbuttoning a very tiny russet shoe and emptying a little pile of sand on the rug of the hotel parlor. Alphonso Abernathy was always emptying sand on the rug. “Why, Alphonso!” mamma always said, and Alphonso always kept on emptying sand. “We’ve been playing with Miss Madison and Mr. Wyman,” Alphonso continued. “We’ve been p’aying wiv Miss Ma’sson and Mistah Wyman,” echoed Angelina Abernathy, and added a pile of sand from her own very tiny shoe to that from Alphonso’s. Angelina is Alphonso’s younger sister. Alphonso is six years old, and he thinks Angelina a well-meaning little creature. “ I play with Mr. Wyman’s watch sometimes, and Angelina plays with Miss Madison’s pretty ring,” said Alphonso. “A’phonso p’ays wiv Mistah Wyman’s wahts sometimes, an’ I p’ay wiv Miss Ma’sson’s pitty wing,” echoed Angelina. “ Miss Madison and Mr. Wyman must be often together,” remarked mamma. Mamma has a double chin. “ You seem always to play with Miss Madison and Mr. Wyman.” “Yes; we always play with Miss Madison and Mr. Wyman,” replied Alphonso, emptying his other shoe on the rug. “Yes; we a’ways p’ay wiv Miss Ma’sson and Mistah Wyman,’’ echoed Angelina, emptying her other shoe on the rug. Mamma did not say, “Why, Alphonso!” She seemed to have forgotten to say it. Long after Alphonso and Angelina had left the parlor that they might ask questions of the gardener, Mrs. Abernathy sat by the parlor 219 window with her embroidery. This parlor window opens on the veranda and is close to the front door ; so that, by leaving a discreet crack in the window, any one talking at the door can be distinctly heard. Not that Mrs. Abernathy ever thought of leaving a discreet crack in the window. She was embroidering with great diligence, but there happened to be a crack in the window which some one else had lett, and why should she trouble to close it? She had sunk down comfortably into her double chin. It was almost six o’clock when the last beach-strollers returned. Judging from the footsteps they were two, a man and a woman. There was still a discreet crack in the parlor window, and Mrs. Abernathy was still embroidering. “The summer is over now, and we are both to leave in different directions to-morrow evening,” Mrs Abernathy heard a masculine voice say. There was a crack in the window, and how could she help hearing ? She would not turn to see who those at the door were : of course not; that would be prying. The lace curtain was thick, and she could not be seen from the outside. “ You remember what we were reading this afternoon ? Each life unfulfilled, you see; It hangs still, patchy ar.d scrappy. We have not sighed deep, laugheu free, Starved, feasted, despaired,—been happy. “ You remember? ” A reluctant feminine “ yes ” crept in through the crack in the parlor window. Mrs. Abernathy was still embroidering. There was a long pause. Then the masculine voice again. “We go to-morrow evening. I shall come to-morrow afternoon to ask you once more the question which you have delayed answering. You say a promise is a promise ; but think of what it means to say, ‘each life unfulfilled.’ No; don’t answer now; I shall come to-morrow.” Another “yes” crept in through the crack in the window. Mrs. Abernathy was still embroidering with great diligence. 220 IV. The hot, heavy smell of sweet peas streamed in at the wide-open window from the flower-bed below. As Irva leaned from the sill she could see hollyhocks standing up gaunt and black in the night. Moonlight dripped through ghostly maple leaves and fell upon the impossible figures of the hotel bedroom carpet. She was not thinking of the moonlight. “A promise is a promise,” she said. She twirled Mr. George Abingdon Montgomery’s ring on her finger. It flashed like a firefly in the dark. “ A promise.” Her hair fell down her back, as she had loosened it that night for bed, but the bed was still untouched. A clock in some other part of the house clanged out two, but she did not notice. She only twirled the ring and repeated, “ A promise.” The clock clanged out again, three this time. The moonlight had ceased twinkling over the carpet, and a sick gray light suffused the sky. “ A promise.” A morning chill crept into the room, and she shivered. “ A promise.” When four o’clock came there was the twittering rustle of an awakening bird in the vine outside, and she could see to write. She pulled her table nearer the window and reached for a pen. “A promise.” ” My dear Mr. Wyman,” she wrote: ‘‘I have decided to leave on the morning train, that I may go as far as Crosby with a party from the hotel; so I am obliged to ask you to accept my good-by on paper. When you reach home be sure to give my love to your little fiancee. With best wishes for you both, I remain, sincerely, yours, Irva Madison.” “ A promise is a promise,” she said, and slept. At seven o’clock the hotel was awake. Trunks were being bumped downstairs, and babies were squalling, and mammas were scolding : summer was over. The hive where gay-coated bees had swarmed for three merry months was being swept out and left desolate. “Good-by, John ; thank you again for the basket of sweet peas; and, John, here is a note that I want left at the cottage for Mr. Wyman. Any time this morning will do, only l e sure that it does not reach him until the seven fifty has gone.” Irva left her note with the old gardener and joined Mrs. Abernathy in a carriage. 221 A little later the hotel people were bringing out pillows and shawls and settling themselves in Pullman sections. The Abernathy family was encamped, bag and baggage, opposite Irva. “ Mamma, why does Miss Madison sit so still and look so hard out of the window?” inquired Alphonso, tipping over a pitcher of condensed milk. “ Mamma, fy does Miss Ma’sson sit so still and look so hahd out of ze window?” inquired Angelina, wiping up the condensed milk with her new silk cap. “Tug, tug—each life—tug, tug—unfulfilled,” Irva heard the engine say. “After all, Mr. Montgomery is a stupid old man who is not capable of real love, and Mabel is an affectionate little thing, but one who would not suffer very deeply. Jack and I never believed in love such as Browning teaches until we knew each other. Jack says that to keep our promises now is to spoil all the lives concerned. But my decision is made, and it is irrevocable. ‘ Unfulfilled’—oh! perhaps— perhaps.” Tug, tug—on, on. Across the car Angelina was banging Alphonso’s red gun, and Alphonso was reproving her, and Mrs. Albernathy was saying, “ Why, Alphonso ! ” On, on. Sarah Comstock. 222 (Jt this Go'Sclifice She was a sweet co-ed, He was a big co-ed, Together they coo-ed, And finally co-wed. C. I. A. College Terms. 1‘ootha1.1. Bangs—Padlocks or constellations. 1;u nk—A certain phase of student life. Ai.GKBKA—Numbers and Lamentations. Junior Hop Committhk—Party strife. Pull—For push a patent substitution. BICYCLIST—An all around athlete. To Train—To move to amend the Constitution. Hurdi.k Rack—Maneuvers of the fleet. Library—A close observatory. QtJKBN—Strangely, what often leads to pawn. Kx—A nice short term for extempore. 1 1 RK—Where sundry vanished souls have gone. Hknkiktta L. Stadtmuli.kr. 223 UNIVERSITY PREACHERS, 1894-9$ I’KOF. W. W. Thoburn .... Rkv. G. B. Hatch......... Rev. Horatio Stebbins . . . Prof. W. W. Thoburn .... Rev. A. H. Briggs........ Rabbi G. A. Danziger .... Rev. J. B. Wakefiei.d...... Rev. W. P. Jordan........ Rev. R. F. Coyle......... Rev. I). A. Hayes........ Mr Charles Michkxkr . . David S. Jordan........ Prof. Ari.ey B Show........ Rev. H. R. Haweis........ Rev. J. H. Garnett ...... Mrs. Sarah B. Cooper . . . . Rev. J. k. McLean ....... Rev. E. R. Dillk........... Rev. R. F. Maclarkn . . . . Rev. E. J. Dupuv......... Rev. Arthur B. Smith . . . . Rev. Robert Mackenzie . . . Rev. Lila F. Sprague..... “ Witnessing for the Truth. ’ “ God’s Idea of Himself.” “ The True Rank of the Intellect.” “The Mission of Christ.” “ The Attractive Power of Calvary.” The Kingdom of Christ.” “ Duty.” ' The Secret Christian.” He Can Who Will.” “ Flint Faces aud Dough Faces.” “ The V. M. C. A. Movement.” ” The Story of the Innumerable Compinv ” “The Saving That Is By Sacrifice.” ” The Rationale of Prayer.” ” Immortality.” “Practical Christianity.” Bread of Life.” “The Building of a Man.” “ The Loftiest Ascent of Man.” ” Shame faced Christians. “ The Healing of the Nations. ” The Parable of the Sower.” “The Kingdom Within.” X 22 4 UNIVERSITY LECTURERS, 1894-95. Prof. M. B. Anderson........“Matthew Arnold.” Prof. S. J. Brun . . . “ Pierre Loti.” David S. Jordan . . . “The Fate of Issadoruni.’’ Alfred Holman Miss Eleanor Calhoun . . Prof. C. D. Walcott . . . . . . “ Readings from Shakespeare and Racine.” . . . “The Work of the United States Geological Survey.” Mrs. Chari.otte Perkins Stetson. 'An Ideal Newspaper.” Prof. Julius Goebel . . “ Geographic and Scientific Conceptions in Goethe's ‘Faust.’ Prof. B. C. Brown . . “ Art in Dress.” Walter Camp . . “ College Athletics.” Eli T. Sheppard . . “The War in Corea.” Prof. R. J. A by . . “ Daniel Kirkwood.” Prof. E. A. Ross . . “ Dollars and Darwinism.” David S. Jordan . “The Evolution of the Common Man.” Prof. J. E. Matzkr ... . . “The Birth of a Mystery. Prof. J. H. Comstock . . . Mrs. E. I Ewing . . “The Habits of Spiders. . . “The Missing Link in the Food Question. Prof. W. H. Hudson . . Prof. Earl Barnes . . . “ The Friendship of Books. . . “ The Schools and School System. B. G. Northrop . . “ Village Improvement.” Prof. E. II. Woodruff . . . . . “The English in Egypt. Prof. W. J. Hussey . . “Some Recent Comets.” David S. Jordan . . “Sinaloa. Prof. H. R. Fairclough . . . . “The Ancient and Modern Stage. 5 225 ’Olog?. I REGISTERED without condition, 'Pedagogy her life-mission : All my Freshman admiration fired, I worshiped Jane’s high mind; Listened to the words of learning From her lips, and, passion-burning, Heard her talk of art ami Emerson, of lifting up mankind. When the Glee Club sang I took her, Reckless went the precious lucre, And the pang of many a dun I bore to keep it up in style. Menlo roses are expensive, Menlo livery hills extensive, Hut I turned my cufls each Sabbath day with never-flinching smile. Till—’twas one night after lecture That I ventured the conjecture We might enjoy a moonlight stroll. “ Most admirable chance,” She exclaimed, ‘‘for analyzing And with care psychology zing This soulful reaching toward the unknown which night and moon enhance.” Then my wrath arose. “ By thunder, Now, confound it, don't I wonder How in name of all that’s sanctified she ever roped me in ! With her ’ologies pedantic She’s enough to drive one frantic, And in her cause—deuce take it—I’ve been laying out my tin ! ” Now no longer I’m misguided— ‘‘ Purposed calling, undecided.” Art and Emerson aren’t in it with Nell’s campus-flavored talk. Little thing like flunking, bless her, She’s too wise to let distress her, And she says, “ What jolly fun it is to take a moonlight walk ! ” Sarac. nipersit? Calendar. '894. Sept. 3 • . Monday Sept. 4-5 . . Tuesday-W Sept. 6 . Thursday Sept. 7 • . Friday . . Nov. 29 . . Thursday . Dec. 2 . Sunday . Dec. 21 . . 895- . Friday . . Jan. 7 • . Monday . Jan. 8 . . Tuesday . Jan. 9 • . Wednesday Feb. 22 . . Friday . . Mar. 9 • . Saturday . Mar. 23 • . Saturday . Mar. 3i • . Sunday May 14 . . Tuesday . May 24 . . Friday . . May 25 • . Saturdav . May 27 . . Monday . May 28 . . Tuesday . May 26 . . Sunday May 27 . . Monday . May 28 . . Tuesday . May 29 . . Wednesday Sept. 2 . . Monday . . Sept. 3 • . Tuesday Sept. 4 • . Wednesday Sept. 5 • . Thursday. Sept. 6 . . Friday . . Nov. 28 . . Thursday Dec. 1 . . Sunday 1 Dec. 20 . . Friday . . 1896. Jan. 6 . . Monday . May 27 • . Wednesday . Entrance Examinations begin. . Registration of Matriculated Students. . Registration of New Students. . Instruction begins. | Thanksgiving Recess. . First Semester ends. . Registration for Second Semester. . Instruction begins. . Midyear Conferring of Degrees. . Washington’s Birthday. . Founders’ Day. Mid-semester Recess. . Memorial Day. . Instruction ends. 1 Entrance Examinations at Palo Alto, Los Angeles, Portland (Or.), and other appointed places. . Baccalaureate Sermon. . Class Day. . Alumni Day. . Commencement. . 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. 227 Song. Air: “When Was a Hoy“ (J|N my Freshman clays My innocent young ways Were highly fascinating To all co-eds in waiting. I took the fair ones driving— My papa’s hank was thriving— The monthly tin I blew it in In my Freshman days. In my Freshman days I won most ample praise By football feats astounding, My fame abroad resounding. My hair was long and flowing, My youthful pride was glowing ; The learning sought I quite forgot In my Freshman days. In my Freshman days My innocent young ways Caught the Prof’s attention— Just how, I shall not mention. There came one cloudy morning A friendly little warning— Oh! pleasures dead, oh! glory fled, Of my Freshman days. 228 Sarac. Stanford I3o?s I know some students, by the way, Take care! They have a fascinating way, Beware! Trust them not; they’re fooling thee ! Confide they to you all they know, Take care! They flatter every girl just so, Beware ! Trust them not; they’re fooling thee ! When you’re conditioned in the spring, Take care ! You find man’s a deceitful thing, Beware ! Trust them not; they’re fooling thee ! For you they often swear to die, Take care ! But let the Junior Hop go by, Beware ! Trust them not; they’re fooling thee ! W. H. Grossing f ar. Crossing the bar I watch my treasure go; Let no repenting thought this parting mar, Although my month’s allowance leaves me so, Crossing the bar. All memory of debts be vanished far From this leave-taking; one more glass, I know, Will be a Lethe for the things that are. And in the soothing tide I put below' I’ll drown the thought of my respected pa, Who’d raise all Hades could he see my “dough ” Crossing the bar. Carolus Acer. 229 GYMNASIUM The most popular Family Resort, Except Alvarado Row, On The Campus. KANT HARDLEIGH, • • Lessee and Manager BRAND Benefit Performance! Tendered the '96 Annual by Imported Talent STANFORD UNIVERSITY Saturday Evening, February 16, 1895. MDN5TER BILL AND LITTLE BILL REFINED VAUDEVILLE Positively as Produced before the late CZA R of RUSSIA {shortly before his death,) and such august personages as EMPEROR WILLIAM, Ex-Queen LILIUKALANI and tho DUKE of MAYFIELD The Original Mandolinatas DANCING TOM, the Black Phenomenon THE KINS OF CLUBS Mme. Maccaroni, the Eccentric Danseuse SANDOW!! ♦ The Lyric Tenor, M. de LAI The Favorite Quadrangle Troubadours -N. O Mme. Calliope Gardinale, THE STANFORD MARTINGALE Monster Aggravation of European Beauties GRAND BALLET PARISIEN CORPSE DE BALLET: es. Jillie Marletti, Babette I Garlotta Headed by the World-Famous Hawaiian I’KCMIFKF. •KALEOKALIANIULUPALAKUAUMU TIitH Ladle arc I'nritallcd a« kICKLKH «a « by the X GROflT AND ONLY STANFORD SOCIALIST. K - ■ «■ ■■ :- • xxX+ +f:H XXSfr +« - Signor Rossignol, the Popular Barytone To Conclude With the Thrilling Mellowdranm THE SHADOWS OF A GREAT COLLEGE, DR ONE MEAL AND A BATH AT ENCINA Af Stanford University Saturday Evening. February 10th, 1K 5. POPULAR PRICES: Opera Chairs. Reserved. 35c. « General Admission, 25c Windoic Seats. • • 10c. Lockers, • • • 50c flQissed. mu ERF S something, something I seem to miss | As I stand by the waves this sunny weather. The little waves pucker their silky sheen And net the sun in glittering green Just as when we two watched them together. And yet there’s something I seem to miss. What can it be that I seem to miss ? Out where the far sea rises, meeting The dipping sky, sails Hash into sight. Then slip of a sudden into the night Just as they used. I’m still repeating, “What can it be that I seem to miss! ” '0 U-i' Gvk e. _ r vav Co a 'b c.V o c c'r It’s not your love for me that I miss; You write in the same true, happy-hearted Way that you used to talk when we Stood side by side as we watched the sea. Though time has been sliding away since we parted, It’s not your love for me that I miss. Perhaps it’s my love for you that I miss. Waves and sails and your love together All live on in the same old way, Not one whit changed since that other day Of that other year’s same sunny weather : Perhaps it’s my love for you that I miss. Sarac. 232 ISallad of a I oau. ‘ 9 H ! may I wear your colors?”. V- Quoth a knight of high degree, A degree conferred at Stanford, On his parchment writ, “A. B.” “On my bosom pin your colors, This the boon I fain would crave : Let them be my inspiration, Let me bear them to the grave.” ‘‘Yea, dear knight, put on my colors ; They will make you brave and bold:” And the lady’s eyes they sparkled, ‘‘Know you, they are blue and gold.” W. H. 233 (3 2?ric. BENEATH the lilac tree, With its breathing blooms of white, You waved a parting kiss to me In the deepening amber light. Your face is always near, Your tender eyes of brown. I see your form in dreams; I hear The whisper of your gown. Once more the lilac tree With twilight due is wet; But O, I would that you might be Alive to love me yet ! Edwin Maslin Hui.mk. 235 Hey Dny, way Dear Baby Koy.’tiHA terrible mystery Whence comes such learning in all kinds of history. Can it be one so youthful and sweet and precocious’ Will grow up to manhood severe or ferocious? C.o on, dear child, with your innocent joys; Don’t mind the joshes of envious boys. Who says aught against von is a real Ananias ; All love and respect you because you are pious. From this exalted position I find I can easily see Just what is the actual condition Of the tracks that run under me. My Profs once declared every minute That on railroads I captured the cake. I worked 'em for all there was in it. And now I am working the brake. THE VAUDEVILLES. The Vaudevilles ! What visions we saw there Shall live with us in many a wild nightmare. . The shapes that on that evening were displayed Were fearfully and wonderfully made. Oh ! dreadful satire on the co-ed fair That one among the audience should declare. “ Who would have thought it of the Koble maid!” KNOX. STRONG. My presence in this tarnished world The stains around should purify ; For this religious cause I bare My virgin shirt front and my tie. See me do my specialty. Changing clothes so rapidly. Don't be frightened, though you all Know these clothes must mean the fall. Is there any man alive With as many suits as five? Talk of Solomon for style: I've got it on him a mife ! Keep the secret that I tell: I’ve a pull with Raphael. J. K. REYNOLDS. Have you heard how Jack Reynolds of Library fame, Kicked out a young Freshman, not asking his name? To his shame its recorded (’tis meet we should scoff). From the shelves he ejected great Kellogg, the Prof.! TURNER. HILL. When I go into society I tell you I look swell. The secret of my beauty Would you know—why I look well In the holy hour of midnight, When no mortal man can see. I do my moustache in curl papers, While in my robe de nuit. Dost see this pin ? With it I’ll win An entree to swelldom, you bet. A mere cipher, I. Had not Zeta I’si Adopted its towheaded pet. WIGLE. Presiding genius of this happy place, I hold the balance in my subtle hand The stern serenity upon my face The rising lawyer fails to understand. 259 POLLOCK. The mysteries of my toilet Are wonderful to see : They're only equaled by the wheels Tliat whiz around in me. With my proxies in my pocket And my dicky on my breast. I’ll keep my eye on Alfred II., And leave to God the rest. ZION. HOOVER, COLLINS. We are the great triumvirate, The awful Trinity of Kate. On things scholastic or athletic We speak with utterance prophetic. This place, we Three, by love inspired. Have scientifically wired; And so (our motives all the best) When an election comes, with zest We press the buttons and do the rest. C. S. S. BURNELL. I swear by the old gray beaTd of the Prophet, Allah, il Allah ; And I swear by everything this side of Tophct, Allah, il Allah. Conventional things make me mightily tired, Allah, il Allah : That's why from the boarding houses all I am fired, Allah, il Allah. If the Board of Student Affairs doesn’t catch me unawares. I think I’ll worry through and capture my degree ; Then I’ll take my stories witty and transfer them to the city, And still keep up my practice before the bar, you sec. HAMILTON. By heaven I know ‘tis clothes that make the man ; So I will be a dude whene'er I can ; And though I hie me to my daily work. This solemn duty I shall never shirk ; For since grim Death some day must have his will, I swear I always will be dressed to kill ! 240 C K. PIBLD. O. Madame Calliope Cardinale. In that fetching rig you’re awfully swell. As Carolus Ager we feel your spell, And the Moody letters your merit tell. Your Junior farce will in memory dwell; Whate’er you do. you do that thing well. 3 Into the parish light of day My Grecian form I here display. When on the cinders I appear, If nny dainty maids are near. I hear them 'whisper, ' Without doubt 'Tis linked sweetness long drawn out! ” WW 1K.V r 1 Y« 1 HICKS. I am a shameless rascal; The truth I must confess. There is no use denvitig My varied wickedness. The girls who ride in the busses Tremblingly wish I'd take A seat in the lapse of ages Lest I repeat my break. A man of note is Connick ; His passion for the tonic Sol. fa. is surely chronic And sticks out in his hair. When he leads with voice harmonic His remarks are most ironic; But his love is all platonic. And the chorus must despair. BATON. A man of weight and solid worth. No one my standing can assail; For I have got this feeble earth Just where I want it.—by the tail! 16 241 Prop. Mosshack—“ It must be a quadruped. ' Prof. Cinch ’km— Yes; but why does it drag its tail on one side ?” Faculty. ' Some will hit hard and others soft ; Some will never hit at all; But, if ye take them as they’re meant. Lightly on you all they’ll fall.” Major Profs of the Board of Eds : 14 The kind of a man for you and me.” Smith, J. P.: “The forehead of a married man is more honorable than the bald brow of a bachelor.” Eathrop : “ A man may smile and smile and be a villain still.” 242 FLUGEL: “There was a chirping, cheery, old-school air in his appearance which was undeniably Dutch.” C. W. Green : “ And all men loved him for his modest grace. And comeliness of figure and of face.” Kellogg : “ Tush ! Tush ! Fear boys with bugs ! Seniors. M-ck-nt-sh : “ Tlaisir d’amour—chagrin d’amour,' it is all true, isn’t it ? S-P-R : “ Ah me ! He was a shameless wight, Sore given to revel and ungodly’glee.” D-wn-ng: “ No time to indulge.in soft emotions.” B-ck : “Sad visaged man, thy face unmask and smile.” 243 R-CK : “ Many a farewell word and sweet good-night on the doorstep.” W—DW-RD: “A great shooter—with his mouth.” M-ans, gr. : “Some may come and some may go, but I stay here forever.” B-k-r : ‘ A man of infinite jest.” C-RY, H.: ‘‘Very small, full of nervous energy, with tiny hands and feet.” Cr y : “ I know enough of myself to know I should make her a good husband.” M-i.c-m, sp.: “He that hath wife and children hath given hostages to Fortune; for they are impediments to great enterprises, either of virtue or mischief.” H-zz-rd : “ Haggard and hollow and wan.” Sm-TH-: “ I don’t care if I do ; you may give me the same, Louis—no sugar.” 244 P-rt-r, M. S. : “ Up all night and lying by all day, and leading a devil of a life.” G-nn : “ In his stream of talk there is no dam.” Wr-ght, S. V. : ‘‘ Where gottest thou that goose-look ? ” H-nnb: Jupiors. “ Grew more English every day, And that was a good thing.” Cr-m : “ I will not rank me with the barbarous multitude.” W-bst-r : “ Thou hast more hair on thy chin than Dobbin, my phill-liorse, has in his tail.” H-ll : “ A real pity she wasn’t a boy; she would have made such a jolly one.” R---CHKNB—CH : “ A lion among ladies is a dreadful thing.” C-mpb-li. : How long, Oh, Lord ! How long ! G-ll-am : “ He greeted the 11100a with demoniac laughter.” Po-nd-xT-r : ' Silent, but none the less wonderful.” Wo-ls-y : ' Faith, his hair is of good color, of excellent color.” 245 R-y: “ A noble youth with toil prodigious; His fault--he’s almost too religious.” M-rphy : “ High toued, educated, all the way from Paddy’s land.” B-ldw-n : McAllister is dead ! Worth is dead ! Long live Baldwin ! 5opbornores. McInt-sh : “ A windy, spouting Sophomore he.” Cl-rk : “ Asks no questions but the price of votes.” Archie’s Brother : “ Therefore set a glass of Rhenish wine on the contrary casket; for. if the devil is within and that temptation without. I know he will choose it.” Pe-rs -n, Don : “ It is hard to wive and thrive both in a year.” Fr-nc-s Val-nt-ne T-ld-vy L-e: “ My name extends to heaven itself and earth’s remotest ends.” Whit-d : “ His prayers he saith, this patient, holy man.” Dy-r : “ A Hercules at bat; an angel iu argument.” 240 Di-hl : “ And forty healths my brain will bear most stoutly.” L-kk : “ Oh, that offices were not derived corruptly ! ” H-lme : Oh, ye who have undistetnpered intellects, Observe the doctrine that conceals itself Beneath the veil of the mysterious verses!” D-ll-y : “ He was yoost a leetle poy not pigger as a doll.” I a. - P oTjop Fresbrnep. r-gg-ns: Ain’t very ornamental in general.” w-ll-ams: “And when he entered every goose Began to cackle like the deuce. The asses brayed at one another; ’Twas plain the creatures smelled a brother.” t-yl-or: “ Would shake hands with a king on his throne, and think it kindness to his majesty.” 247 m’br-de : “A hapless infant here I roam, Far from my dear maternal home.” irw-n : ” And such other fond and high imaginings to think himself all in all.” bry-11: . ‘‘They say you are a melancholy fellow.” schn-id-r : Still amorous and fond and billing, Like Phillip and Mary on a shilling.” g-lt: List to the thunder of his voice.” m’ne-l: “ Rehold the child, by Nature’s kindly law, Pleased with a rattle, tickled with a straw’.” 24S Co-eds. ‘ She seems to be saying too plainly. 'Admire me ! ” And I answer. ‘ Yes. madam, I do ; but you tire me.' ” “ I say that the clear old Quad is a gigantic spider web with some prettily colored spiders in it.” I. M Moody. Ai.i.-b-ch : ‘‘Come hither, little Freshman.” Whk-L-R : “Oh ! sir, she smiled, no doubt, Whene’er I passed her; but who passed Without much the same smile?” Lyl- : “ ’Tis my delight to pipe a simple song.” C-w-N: “ I have a tackle bold.” V-str-vsky : “ My quaint habits breed astonishment.” E-v-s: “Come, give him thy hand and be happy.” M-rr-tt: “Yet were her thoughts of him.” 249 St-ff-ns, ’96: “ There is not one of the parcel of wooers, but I dote on his very absence.” ST-DTM-LL-R: I had rather than forty shillings I had my l ook of songs and sonnets here.” D-vis : “ Beware of her fair locks, for she excels all women in the magic of her locks. ' McC-ll : “She tells you flatly what her mind is.” Jon-s : “ My eyes, my lord, can look as swift as yours.” H-RR-I.D : Is there not some one on this gusty day To hold my lady lest she blow away.” Miss Th-mps-n : ' By my troth, a pleasant, spirited lady.” ” Some of the Senior young ladies deserve great credit for their zealous work in the “ Experimental School.” They carry on “Child Studies” independently, drawing most of the material from the Class of ’98, and working chiefly with the masculine half of that illustrious class.”—Editorial, Daily Palo Alio, Feb. 15th. A iscellaoeou? Doubtful Cases: “ Weighed in the balance and found wanting.” Grind Editor : “ They’re after me.” Registration Day : “ Friend, let us pay the wonted fee.” Proroipept Person?. K- -FFM-N : “ Ve haf de pest college pand in de vorld vest of de Mississippi.” P-tt-rs-n : (Roble Gym dance)—” Introduce me to the combine.” St-r-y : “We frat men must stand together 251 I)r. J-rd-n’s hostler, after seeing the last act ok the Vaudevilles: “ Well, well! I didn’t think that o’ them Roble girls.” Pr-f. R-ss, in Economics VII.: “The demand for ornament precedes the demand for clothing. Note the Fiji who puts on a plug hat and carries a cane.” Wh-te, A. H., Reporting in Physiology : “ On this point I must differ from the rest of the authorities.” Pr-f. J-nk-ns, Evolution Lecture: “ At this stage of the game-.” At t k tr. four?J y T - 4- Qi _ 3 Chapel Hymnal: Toombs — TfU TfU TfU TfU TfU = 75- Cochran — nu TfU TfU TfU TfU — 54 Ifeiy Down with the aristocracy. (Supposed to have been Pollock’s score.) H-cks, outside the Law Class : ' I say. Judge ! [Seventeen men, simultaneously]: Helloa. W lls. '97 annual Campaign : ’ Let me tell you my qualifications. •98 Co-kd to P--l F-fk (Lairo Hai.l steps, 11:301 . m.): “ If you do that again I’ll go right upstairs.” W-BST-R, ’97, FROM HIS LIBRARY APPLICATION : “ I have a complete and comprehensive knowledge of all the literatures of the world.” Pr-f. Kr--hn: “The Rhine flew into the Baltic.” “The women had long flowing robes and long flowing arms.” “The cl.ass will lie examined a week from Thursday, on Friday, Feb. 8.” Miss Str-wbr do-: “Guten morgen, Wie Gates?” Little Hazel Green to Max Aley : ” Don’t get frisky.” Max : “ That’s what papa says to mamma when she gets mad.” Pr-f. Sym-ngt-n : ” Now you sees, in Corneille’s time, grammar was not a fixed thing like it is now.” T-rn-r. ” Yes, I’m fond of Hay sing.” McC-rm-ck, ’97: ” Walter McIntosh makes a better girl than some of the Robleites.” B-xmy-r : ” What d' say?” Pr-f. Green’s little daughter, riding on Ch-t M-g-e’s back : I’m riding my bicycle.” Ch-t : “ No; you’re riding a biped. I)o you know what a biped is ? I G. L. d. : ” Yes; isn’t it a donkey ? 253 Pr-f. Sym-N’GT-n : “ Miss Yoder, will you read on.” Miss Y. : ” Oui, madam.” Esc-ndit- : ” Four score ducats at a sitting.” W-TS-N, 96 : “ Got any champagne on ice? Gim’ me the ice.” H-rr-ck, K.: “ It is purely platonic, I assure you, purely platonic.” B-SH : ” I had a lovely picture of Cupid washing her face in a spring. 254 ©H ! build for me no marble pile Nor carve my name on burnished brass ; Let me but have a plain pine slab, And write thereon, “ Keep off the Grass.” Oh ! students dear, when I have gone Where time is measured not by hours, Add yet another line to this, In writing large, “ Don’t Pick the Flowers.” Another order let me give : When I have climbed the golden stairs, Upon this slab, in letters black, This legend write, Put Back Those Chairs.” And here, through all the passing years, When other memories are a blank, This monument shall e’er endure, “Charles Edward Hodges and Ilis Tank.” 255 Cecture Notes. y | OHN CALVIN has a very fine style ; ; I I d read you some, but it’s not worth while. - Your book may tell of the French Pleiade ; As we’ve not much time, I shall not add. These men wrote plays in a classic way, But I shan’t trouble you with that to-day. I’ll speak of Rousard when next we meet; He’s like—O, well, I’ll not repeat. It’s down in the book I show you here; It all meant something ; you see the idea. Now Montaigne, too, gained much renown. The date on the board you need not take down. Me comments with skill and quotes and so on ; You understand ; I need not go on. You can find an account of his life somewhere ; You see how it is; we might stop there. On Friday read on as far as you please ; We then have examination in these. Be prepared on all that we’ve gone through,— Lives, dates and quotations. That will do. 256 2. S. 3- Primer. A. is for Allardice, lanky and tall; B is for Burnell, of unlimited gall. C is for Cochran and Cowan and court; D is for Donald, a gay Scottish sport. E is for Eaves, who scares all the gallants, 's Donald Fry, who thinks he has talents. G is for Gilliam, whose girl makes him “ toe it;” H is for Herricks, who’re sure that they know it; I is for Irwin, an embryo poet. J is for Juniors, who now take the cake; K is for Kessenger, the Hamilton fake. L stauds for Love of Learning and Ladies; 31 is for Marriage, that’s heaven or hades. N is Newcomer, whose work is a joke; O is the lovers’ old ’95 oak; I is for Pollock, the boy lawyer bloke. Q queers the Annual Board without doubt; R is for Ruddell, who’s all Tuckered out. S is for Symington,—Baltimore swell ; T is for Taylor, the young Stanford belle. U ’s our University, the best on the Coast; V is the Vineyard with its demijohn host, w is our musical freak, Bittle Wells; X is Xasmin, where our President dwells. Y is Prof. Young—the less said the better ! 25 is for Zion, the boss office-getter. • 7 257 —i—: Vf 43 i —11 '-• fH j fPP 4 J1 rr Tri i ft, j — r t ■ - [' j. i ifi k —=d --J=3= —ty-: — ® or m 4eJ ,’iON- , 8 M - £ r-fT? - u—$ ■r Mb4 IrtiU '-V : =— -♦— :Sf 1'- - ■ 5—— c- — —4 «J- = §d m r ■' A u o .u - . AV CN X x PIONEERS OR PALO ALTO. i-FURNISHERS OF- EVERYTHING IN THE BUILDING LINE. MOST COMPLETE STOCK OF BUILDING MATERIALS IN SANTA CLARA COUNTY. Our excellent facilities enable us to meet all competition, anc ninety per cent of the magic growth of Palo Alto were materials from THE PIRKinSOn EOHIBER KHD H9R0IHHRE COlHPRHy, PALO ALTO, CAL. H. W OTTER. A. S. MANORUM MANGRUM Sc OTTER, Mantels, Grates, Tiles, Heaters, Gas and Electric Fixtures. Plumbing, (iasfitting, Jobbing, Galvanized Iron and Agate Ware, Pumps, Tin, Copper, Tin and Slate Roofing, Stoves, Ranges, Tinware, Galvanized Cornice Work. Pacific Coast Agents MAGEE FURNACE CO. PASTEUR FILTERS Rented or Sold Outright. MAIN STORE. BRANCH STORE: 79 to 85 East Santa Clara St., SAN JOSE. Cor University Ave. and Emerson St., PALO ALTO GEORGE GOODMAN, Schillinger’s Patent Sidewalk, Garden Walk. KeTcrcnte. I .claml Stanford Jr. University, I'alo Alto. PATENTEE AND MANUFACTURER Of A R TJ FTC IA L STONE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. 307 Montgomery St., Nevada Block. San Francisco. ESBERG. BACHMAN CO.. IMROnrCMB Of | eaf obacco, |s|aOana 0igars j eaf, S. E. Cor. California and Battery Sts., San Francisco, Cal. “LA ESTRELLA REV WEST LA HARMONIA ' HAND MADE RENOWN S CENTS CIGARS. Suit Everybody. try them. pine DRESS SHIRTS s, %• AND UNDERWEAR TO ORDER. SHIRTS. SI.00 EACH. L GOTTHEIM CO. MERCHANT TAILORS, EVENING POST BUILDING, Comer Kearny and Bush Sts., ROOM 4, - SAN FRANCISCO. CAL. SET THE BEST! Bolton Strong, 510, 512, 514 Montgomery St. San Francisco, Cal. Manufacturers of Printing Plates. Half-tones a Specialty. The Pictorial Weekly of the Pacific Coast. ESTABLISHED iere. it ,S BRIGHT AND READABLE. San Francisco, Cal. BEST - ' ADVERTISING MEDIUM. OUR SPECIALTY is prescribing and making glasses to correct Complicated Cases of Defective Vision. Skilled Opticians, with the latest appliances _ • , , — . known to science for testing the eyes, ena- fennilflOFB S iHipPOVGCl AUHphOnG FOR the deaf is manufactured bv us. and is sold on condition that money will be refunded if not satisfactory. blc us to give our patrons superior service. CKLIFORNIt OPTICAL CO., NOS. 317 AND 319 KEARNY ST., San Francisco. F. w. Stierman Co. PRICES REASONABLE GOODS DELIVERED FREE. University Avenue • • 9 Peddinq, Sheets, Pillow Slips, Book Shelves, Desks and Furniture of All Kmos. PALO ALTO Use “GOLD DUST” Smokeless Shot Gun Powder. FOR SALE EVERYWHERE. The ETNA of Hartford, Conn. % The largest distinctively fire and inland insurance company in the world. Its record shows the most careful underwriting of all leading American and foreign insurance companies doing business in the United States. Has paid the largest loss in a single conflagration of any insurance company in existence (Chicago, 1871, $3,782,600). A sound financial institution which commends itself to insurers generally, being just and prompt in all its dealings. Agencies in All the Principal Touins of the Coast. PACIFIC BRANCH OFFICE, 514 California Street, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. KflCONDITR COTTAOB. ENVIRONMENTS. STANKOMIt KRHIItKNCK. Pai.o Alto. Nkam I'mkni iiman'h I.akk Kl'CAl Vl'Tl AVtNI'K Use “GOLD DUST” Smokeless Shot Gun Powder. DRIFTED SNOW FLOUR Flas No Equal. MADE BY SPERRY FLOUR COMPANY, WM. G. ALEXANDER, Manager, 21 N. Fourth Street, SAN JOSE, CAL. A. c. Eaton Telephone 314 o. a. smith S7VUTH St EHTON PRINTERS PUBLISHERS nd BOOKBINDERS 173 WEST SANTA CLARA STREET, Mercury Building, SAN JOSE, CAL. • 9 E issue the largest number of periodicals of any house outside of San Francisco on the Coast, including ' The Santa Clara Magazine,” “Saturday Review,” “ Fanciers Monthly,” “Catholic Calendar,” “The True Life,” and “ The California Literary Series.” EVERY STYLE OF PRINTING EVERY STYLE OF BINDING EVERY STYLE OF ENGRAVING DONE AT REASONABLE RATES 0ur Estimate Subscription books. EXCLUSIVE RIGHTS. . QUICK SALES. LARGE PROFITS. AGENTS WANTED CVCNT COUNTY ON ▼ M C PaCIflC CO.IT FOR TERMS A NO TERRITORY WRITE THE KING PUBLISHING CO., 132 MARKET STREET. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. Use “GOLD DUST” Smokeless Shot Gun Powder. J. J. PFISTER 120 SUTTER STREET. ROOMS 21--24 KNITTING CO. % SAN RANC,sca • —“ ONLY HEADQUARTERS FOR- FOR LADIES J|u)eaters, gieycle aqd at iqcj ||uits • • • • • AMD GENTLEMEN. aseball, football, t eqqis aqd rael •• its. x WHOLESALE. ASK I:OR RETAIL. CATALOGUE. Quid if i i agi , prudenter agas, et respite finem. Bibo. Newman Ikenberg, PURE FOOD GROCERS. 1447 and 1449 POLK STREET. SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA. COUNTRY ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED. Use “ GOLD DUST ” Smokeless Shot Gun Powder AMERICAN STATESMEN BioKraphien of Men ConHpicuouM In the Political History of the United Stutes. -----® JOHN QUINCY ADAMS. By John T. Morse. Jr. ALEXANDER HAMILTON. By Henry Cabot I.odge. JOHN C. CALHOUN. By Dr. H. von Holst. ANDREW JACKSON. By Prof. Win. G. Sumner. JOHN RANDOLPH. By Henry Adams. JAMES MONROE. By Pres. D. C. Gilman. THOMAS JEFFERSON. By John T. Morse. Jr. DANIEL WEBSTER. By Henry Cabot Lodge. ALBERT GALLATIN. By John Austin Stevens. JAMES MADISON. By Sydney Howard Gay. JOHN ADAMS. By John T. Morse. Jr. JOHN MARSHALL. By Allan B. Magruder. SAMUEL ADAMS. By James K. Hosmer. THOMAS H. BENTON. By Theodore Roosevelt. HENRY CLAY. By Carl Schurz (two volumes). PATRICK HENRY. By Moses Coit Tyler. GOUVERNEUR MORRIS. By Theodore Roosevelt. MARTIN VAN BURF.N. By Edward M. Shepard. GEORGE WASHINGTON. By Henry Cabot Lodge (two volumes). BENJAMIN FRANKLIN. By JohnT. Morse, Jr. JOHN JAY. By George Pellew. LEWIS CASS. By A. C. McLaughlin. ABRAHAM LINCOLN. By John T. Morse, Jr. (two volumes, with portrait and map). Each Volume 16mo.. Gilt Top. $1.25; Half Morocco. $2 50. The series is doing an immense service to the reading public and to the cause of history in bringing forth adequate though brief records of the lives of eminent men of whom the general knowledge has become vague, erroneous, or traditional.”—New York Times. Prof. GoUlwin Smith, speaking; of the series of American Statesmen in The Nineteenth Century, says: ” It seems to us a very valuable series. It furnishes a history of American politics in the attractive and impressive form of biography.” For S ile l y nil IlooksellcrH. Sent, postpaid, on receipt of price by the publishers. HOlTiHTOX, MIFFLIN CO., Boston. Rest in Recreation. California Furniture Company (N P. COLE COJ 117-123 Geary Street, San Francisco. Why don’t you have a real “COA FORT COUCH ? ” Have you any idea of what a rattling amount of real rest you can get on it after a hard bit of athletic “work?” It don’t cost much to have one,—as little as $10.00, or, in plain Denim, as low as 57 00. If you are cramped for room in your quarters, you need a Chiffonier Shaving Stand. Lots of room. Lots of comforts. Use 41 GOLD DUST” Smokeless Shot Gun Powder. TAKE THE OVERLAND FLYER VIA UNION PACIFIC FAST MAIL ROUTE. DINING CAR LINE. PlCTO V 821 HOURS, San Francisco to Chicago, 821 HOURS 112! HOURS, San Francisco to New York, 112! HOURS THE ONLY TRAIN CARRYING Pullman Double Draining-room Sleeping Gars and Dining Gars, SAN FRANCISCO to CHICAGO, DAILY, WITHOUT CHANGE. ALL CARS LIGHTED BY PINTSCH GAS. UPHOLSTERED PULLMAN TOURIST CARS, SAN FRANCISCO to CHICAGO, Without Change, EVERY DAY IIM THE YEAR. D. W. HITCHCOCK, G. F. HERR General Agent Traveling Passenger Agent No 1 Montgomery Street, San Francisco Cal. Use “GOLD DUST Smokeless Shot Gun Powder. Non Quanti, sed Quantum Boni ex Pecunia. Telephone No. 5051. REGISTERED MYSELL ROLLINS, Stationery Manufacturers, Bookbinders and % Printers. 521 Clay Street, SAN FRANCISCO. We Print and Bind Anything. Dr. Plouf’S Rheumatism Cure. The only remedy known that Cures Rheumatism. SHIPPED TO ANY ADDRESS ON RECEIPT OF PRICE. . 3 bottles$5, 6 for S10. Send all orders to Dr. Ptoufs Rheumatism Cure, Rooms 24 and 38 Phelan Bldg., SAN FRANCISCO. DIXON’S $2.co HATS ARE THE BEST. — 2J7 KEARNY STREET, bet. Bush and Sutter Streets, San Francisco, Cal. ESTABLISH CO IN ISAS. SING FAT CO., Chinese and Japanese BAZAAR. The Only One-priced Store in Chinatown. Importers, Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Chinese and Japanese Fancy Goods. Silk Shawls, Handkerchiefs, and all kinds of Embroidered Goods. Porcelain, Bronzes, Curiosities, Ivory Goods, Lacquered Ware, etc. 614 DUPONT ST., SAN FRANCISCO. B«t. California and SacramtotsSts. Seit to St. Harr's Cathedral. P.O.Box 1650. All orders promptly attended to. Goods sent C. O. D. or on receipt of Postal Order. CORTICELLI Wash Silk Converted Into NOBBY TIES. EASILY MADE. Over twenty designs fully explained. Illustrated pamphlet free. Materials for the above work, also CORTICEI1L1I SPOOIi SILiK- Wash Filo, Embroidery or Crochet Silk in any form supplied by A. S. FERGUSON, --DfcALRK IN- Fancy tioods, Notions, etc. Beware of Imitators of Our Namo. PALO ALTO. CAL. IRlDIUn PHOTOGRAPHS. OUR NEW SPECIALTY. THE LATE8T ACHIEVEMENT IN THE ART. Photographs in Colors only $10 per dozen. THC FINEST tirtCTt EVEN MODUCEO IN PHOTOGRAPHY. 121 POST STREET, BCTWtCN KfARNV STRUT AND ORANT AVCNUC. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. SPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTS. Use GOLD DUST” Smokeless Shot Gun Powder. ♦♦• Which are Stylish I Which are Correct! Which are Popular! Which are Cheap! Which are Made for YOU! otsjo orjo Sommer Kaufmann, The Leaders of Fashion 28 Kearny St., San Francisco. The American Brewing Company OF ST. LOUIS, MO. The A. B.C. BOHEMIAN BEER is the Finest Beer Brewed To-day. It Is Pale and Sparkling, and Its Hop Aroma, Purity and Strength Cannot Be Excelled. ---- § --- HILBERT BROS., General Agents, SAX FRANCISCO, CAL. ioi, 103 Powell Street, Telephone South 171. Use “GOLD DUST ” Smokeless Shot Gun Powder. FOR . .. WRIGHT DITSON’S Lawn Tennis Goods, acknowledged the best in the market. w WE MAKE . .. UNIFORMS of All Kinds. GYMNASIUM and ATHLETIC GARMENTS. TRACK SUPPLIES and all kinds of SPORTING GOODS. | CLABROUGH, GOLCHER C0„ 605 MARKET STREET, Under Grand Hotel San Francisco, Cal. Use ‘‘GOLD DUST” Smokeless Shot Gun Powder. No Country in the World can produce such a splendid list of matchless attractions for those seeking Recreation, Rest, Health or Desirable Occupation as California. It is Nature’s Wonderland, made accessible and enjoyable by human genius. All its famous resorts and features of interest are reached over the lines of the Southern Pacific Company. The Yosemite, Mount Shasta, Castle Crags, Lake Tahoe, The Geysers, Santa Barbara, Santa Cruz, Paso Robles, The Big Trees, Del Monte, Pacific Grove, Santa Monica, Long Beach, Los Angeles and San Diego are located on or adjacent to the Southern Pacific Company’s lines. Travelers to California Have a Choice of SUNSET. + OGDEN, + SHASTA. Sunset.—From New Orleans through Texas, New Mexico and Arizona. The favorite winter route. Watch for announcement of next season’s SUNSET LIMITED. Ogden.—From Ogden, Utah, direct to San Francisco. The quickest and most direct line between the East and California. Dining-car service between Chicago and San Francisco. Shasta.—South from Portland, Or., to San Francisco, passing through the most picturesque scenery in the United States. Through trains via all three routes and equipped with all the latest appliances for safety, speed and comfort. See that your tickets read via the Southern Pacific Company. For maps, pamphlets descriptive of and general information regarding California, address T. H. GOODMAN, Gen. Passeuger Agent, San Francisco, Cal. W. G. NEIMYER, Geu. Western Agent, 230 Clark St., Chicago, III. E. HAWLEY, Asst. Gen. Traffic Manager, 343 Broadway, Nkw York, N. Y. S. F. B. MORSE, General Passenger Agent, New Orleans, La. Use “ GOLtD DUST” Smokeless Shot Gun Potxider. Collars Cuffs AND MARK SHIRTS. Sold By All Dealers. Send for One of Our souvenirs of Fashions. CLUETT, COON CO., 224 Bush Street, San Francisco. CRACKAJACKS RIDE UNIONS THE MOST NOTED WHEEL SOLD IN THE UNITED STATES. ALL LIGHT WEIGHTS. UNION CYCLES. STRONG LIGHT DURABLE AND HANDSOME. IN UNION THERE IS STRENGTH. HAVE YOU SEEN THE BARNES CYCLE? The frame connections are not visible. All the joints are “OUT OF SIGHT There are no clumsy clips, bolts, or nuts used to fasten the handle-bar and seat-post. Every superfluous protecting part has been ingeniously dispensed vvith. The construction is mechanically correct. CALL .A-IN'ID SEE XT—IT IS TIXIE LATEST. Hooker Co., 16 and 18 Drumm Street, San Francisco, Cal. Use “GOLiO DUST” Smokeless Shot Gun Pouiden. 12]4 fo Discount to College Men. H. Le BARON SMITH. The American Tailor. 323 Bush Street, ABOVE MONTGOMERY STREET. San Francisco, Cal. L. B Brandt. A. M. King. E 0 E 6 Street E1 R44y Street S w Fmir5 ci®sop C L CHOICE . WINES . LIQUORS . AND , CIGARS. Cafe Entrance I I Eddy St. Use “GOLD DUST” Smokeless Shot Gun Powder. $t niatthew s School FOR BOVS, SAN MATEO, CALIFORNIA. (Under Military Discipline.) --« K«-- A College and University Preparatory School of the Highest Grade. --♦ + --- Rev. Alfred Lee Brewer, D. D., Rector. HIM- ■ arrqacist • • alo • Ito •• Qispeqser of Reliable Qrucjs £urOeyor fcf falegaqt §tatioqery Heacquarters for KEUFFEL ESSER’S HIGH-GRADE INSTRUMENTS and all UNIVERSITY DRAWING AND ART SUPPLIES Reception. ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ Terrapin Stew, Tamales, Welch Rarebit, Egg Toast, and Oysters in all styles, our specialties. J. M. PARKER co., • • 206 • • • SUTTER ST. Use “ GOLD DUST ” Smokeless Shot Gun Powder THE ANGLO-CALIFORNIAN BUNK, N. E. Cor. Pine and Sansome Streets. Capital Authorized, $6,000,000 Paid Up, . . . $1,900,000 Subscribed, . . j,000,000 Reserve Fund, . 700,000 MEAD OFFICE: 18 AUSTIN FRIARS, LONDON, E. C. Agents at New York: J. W. SELIGMAN CO., 21 Broad St. The Bank transacts a general banking business, sells drafts, makes telegraphic transfers, and issues letters of credit available throughout the world. Sends bills for collection, loans money, buys and sells exchange and bullion. ION. STEIXH ART, P. N. LIUENTHAL, | Managers. P. O. BOX 2626. TELEPHONE 1466. DEPARTMENT OF THE PACIFIC STATES AND TERRITORIES OF THE Scottish Union and National Insurance Co. OP GREAT BRITAIN. This is one of the oldest and wealthiest companies in existence. Organized, 1824. Sir Walter Scott, 1st President of Company. Capital, $30,000,000. Assets in United Slates, $2,896,066. Snrplns in the United States, $1,591,023. Orient Insurance Company of 1 HARTFORD, COXN. Assets, Janaary 1, 1895, $2!05l,8 b Snrplns as resards Policy-Holders, $953,598. Net Snrplns, $453,593. W. J. CALLINGHAM, General Agent, 420 California St., San Francisco, Cal. Special Agents: Frank M. Avery, Leslie A. Wright, J. H. Morrow. Use “GOLD DUST” Smokeless Shot Gun Powder. PALO ALTO. SAN JOSE. LOS GATOS. “THE FAIR” THE PLACE OK A 'THOUSAND BARGAINS. GROCERIES, CROCKERY, TINWARE, AGATEWARE, STATIONERY, GENTS’ FURNISHINGS, TENNIS, BASEBALL AND FOOTBALL GOODS, AT “THE! FAIR.” pauo auto. W. K. VANDERSLIGE GO., JEWELERS. CLASS ANI) SOCIETY EMBLEMS. Designs and estimates given. STAMFORD PI MS ssr«-.rs 136 Sutter Street, San Francisco, Cal. max ii. shiBPses OPTICIAN THE CORRECTION OF imPBRFBCT SPECIAL ATTENTION SIGHT WITH SUITABLE Given to Filling SPECTACLES ftlY SPECIALTY Oculists’ Prescriptions CONSULTATION AND EXAMINATION FREE 139 Post Street San praneiseo, Cal. Room 19 Licbcs Building DUNHAM, CARRIGAN HAYDEN CO., de_alers_in model - MAKERS' TOOLS, MACHINE, MILL AND MINING SUPPLIES, IRON, STEEL, HARDWARE, ETC., ETC., 17 19 BEALE ST, SAN FRANCISCO. x. Use GOLD DUST Smokeless Shot Gun Powder. ™E B. friedlander Co. INCORPORATED FINE TAILORING. Clay Worsteds, Cheviots, Casslraeres, Tweeds, Piques, Beavers, etc., of the finest assortment always In stock. 1610 Market Street, St. Nicholas Hotel, San Francisco, Cal. Grennan Bros., fine tailoring at reasonable prices. ® ® ® S Merchant anors IS ELLIS STREET, near Mflrket, San Francisco, Cal. O. W. LaPEIRE SON, OCALCnS IN............ QpoGeries and pjardware, Wents’ Furnishing- Woods and Tobacco, MAIN STREET, MAYFIELD, CAL. Human Hcnckc William von Nonn. Von Ronn, Hencke Lorsbach, COMMISSION MERCHANTS DAIRY PRODUCE and PROVISIONS. 313 and 315 Front St., cor. Commercial, San Francisco. Cal. TCLCPHONC •••. John T io . M. R. Taylor. JOHN TAYLOR CO., IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN Assayers' Materials, Mine and Mill Supplies, Chemical Glassware. Also School and Philosophical Appara’us. UNION FOUNDRY BLOCK. HS Hr I SCrrrl. and 41 and 414 RI lo MrtH.SAK HUMIS'O. B. PARKINSON.............PRESIDENT. JOSEPH HUTCHINSON. . . V cb President. G. R. PARKINSON.............Cashier. « WE DO A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS. GLADDING McBEAN Sc CO. MANUFACTURERS ARCHITECTURAL TERRA COTTA HOLLOW TILE FIRE PROOFING SEWER AND CHIMNEY PIPE. PRESSED BRICK.DRAIN TILE.ETC. 1358 A 1360 MARKET STREET. S. F. MANUFACTORY AT LINCOLN CAL. ORR d slTKIHS, 123 and 125 Montgomery St. san francisco. IVIEirM'S FURNISHERS. __Specialties _ OUTING GOODS SHIRTS TO ORDER. AjfentH for I1R. JAKGER'S UNDERWEAR. The University Barber Shop, J. B. LARKIN, Proprietor. ■i Bnoina Hull. Billiard Hall . . . in Connection . . Agent for Athletic Goods and Students' General Supplies. STUDENTS. PATRONIZE YOUR PATRON. You always find E. K. THOITS’ ad in your papers. PALO ALTO SHOE STORE, PALO ALTO, CAL. Students' hair-cutting a Specialty. Red Star Laundry Office. PALO ALTO SHAVING PARLOR, Next to Parkinson's Hardware Store, Palo Alto. FIRST-CLASS WORK GUARANTEED. W. C. DIFANI, Proprictor. ML may be interested in ' the following Copperplate Engraving and 227, 229 Stamping in Colors. Post Street. s 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 methods best adapted to the subject, in any size, style or quality, anything in the line of Stationery, Printing, Lithographing, Bookbinding, Copperplate Engraving,— would be more reasonable in price, reliable in quality, and prompt in delivery, than a concern without equa 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 Volumes for '95 and '96 are samples of our work. Stationery, Printing, Lithographing, Bookbinding. 215, 217, 219 Bush Street. San Francisco, Cal. JOS. BIRKETT, WOOD and COAL YARD, --ANO DEALER IN- Flour, Orain, Feed and Hay. Thoroughly seasoned dry wood from $5.00 to $7.50 per cord. Special rates to parties laying in a winter supply. MAIN STREET, MAYFIELD, CAL. E=. C. OLSEN, Merchant Tailor. Always on hand the very latest styles of cloths. Suits from $25.00 up. Guarantee a perfect fit or no sale. 806 Market Street room 15, Phelan bimloino. San Francisco. PEOPLES MEAT MARKET, PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA Our wagons deliver meat at Palo Alto FARM IN X GO. and on the Campus daily PROPRIETORS STaTBOHERY C© ; SuccM,or‘. °ch.l,o« b=ach. 107 A oot£on7ery St.f Sao Francisco, Cal. H established 165 8. Opp. Occidental Hotel. PRATCRHITY WORK A SPECIALTY. WHITE HOUSE BILLIARD PA LO S. BILLIARDS, 5 cents per cue. POOL, ll 2 eents per cue. cigars. Cigarettes. tobaccos. Cor. Lytton Aye. and Ramona St., Soda, ice Cream, etc. PALO ALTO. Poodle Dog Restaurant, S.E. Cor. GRANT AVENUE and BUSH STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. Breakfast, lunch, Dinner, Supper, WEDDING AND THEATER PARTIES SUPPLIED IN THE VERY BEST STYLE AT SHORT NOTICE. Telephone 429. J. A. RETERS' SONS, PALO ALTO, CAL. Manufacturers of FINE . CANDIES . AND . ICE . CREAM. THOMAS S. WILLIAMS, Importing Tailor. Scotch and English woolens. 237 BUSH STREET, SAN FRANCISCO. UNDER OCCIDENTAL HOTEL. M. MEUSSDORFFER, HA TTER, Latest Styles in Hats for Spring and Summer. 135 MONTGOMERY ST., SAN FRANCISCO. Rcmovco from 113 Montgomery St. Some one must be paid for hauling every student’s trunk. Shall it be a Fellow Student? Some one must furnish wood and coal to the professors. Shall it be one who is making a hard Fight for a College Education? Answers to the above will receive prompt attention by BURTON STANHOPE, Palo Alto Feed, Fuel and Express Co. All Speak at Once. The Nevada Bank of San Francisco. Capital Paid up - - $$,000,000. Surplus and Undivided Profits, 641,871. NEW YORK CORRESPONDENTS: (AMERICAN EXCHANGE NATIONAL BANK. (IMPORTERS’ anoTRADERS NATIONAL BANK. LONDON BANKERS, UNION BANK OF LONDON, LIMITED. Letters of Credit Issued, available In all parts of the world. ISAIAS W. HELLMAN D. B. DAVIDSON President. JOHN F. BIGELOW - Vice-President. Cashier. GEO. GRANT - Assistant Cashier. John W. Mackay, Isaias W. Hellman, Robert Watt, DIRECTORS: James L. Flood, Henry F. Allen, Levi Strauss, Lewis Gerstle, C. DeGuigne, D. N. Walter. H. L. Dodge, John F. Bigelow, ACCEPT NO SUBSTITUTE. YOUR COSTUME for either indoor or street wear is not properly finished unless the sKirt ts protected by an “S. H. St M.” First Quality Bias Velveteen Skirt Binding. It will outwear the sKirt and save you the expense and trouble of frequent renewals. The Red fern Bias Corded Velvet is the richest and h ndsorqest SKirt Binding ever produced, and is adapted for the rqost elegant dresses. The Duxbak Rainproof is rqade frorq the finest velveteen, is showerproof, hygienic and durable. LooK for S. H. M. FIRST QUALITY on the label of every bolt of Bias Velveteen you buy. PALO ALTO TIMES, ............csrsrvsr” CNAS. F. GILMORE, Proprietor. Printed at the gate of the Stanford University. 52.00 A YBAR............ Job Printing. J. K. FLANNELLY, -- HKAI.KK IN- WOOD, COAL, HAY, GSRAIISI AND FEED. Best Goods at Lowest Prices. Free Delivery to All Parts of Town. HIGH STREET, PALO ALTO, CAL. J. TAUZY CO., .... importers of French and Spanish Books. G HOST STREET, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. students' Try PAL0 alto home bakery, ec peas ::c„. Strictly Home Iluliinu. Frenli Hreiul. I le micl Cuke. Made Dully. Special Order F romptly Attended to. BOSTON • BAKED . BEANS . AND . BROWN • BREAD . EVERY . SATURDAY. 0ST2 55 oos Ba 6259 1 - I
”
1894
1896
1897
1898
1899
1900
Find and Search Yearbooks Online Today!
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES
GENEALOGY ARCHIVE
REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.