Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA)

 - Class of 1904

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Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1904 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 418 of the 1904 volume:

£,u J JM ' : ■r - H The Stanford Quad Vol. X c.rc„c e PRI NXED BY THE STAN UEY-TAYUOR OOMF ANY SAN F RANCISCO Dedicated By the Class of 1904 to Charles Gardner Lathrop Treasurer of the Board of Trustees COPVRIQM- 1903, BV A. S. Heni-ev Isaac Russeli F=RI NXED B V ST A N 1_e: Y-TA Y UOR COf SArsJ F-RArvJCISCO Contents Dedication ......... When Stanford Becomes of Age, Dr. D. S. Jordan Traditions After 20 Years, Dr. O. L. Elliott . Faculty ......... Classes .......... University Days ....... Fraternities ......... Organizations ........ Musical Clubs ........ Publications ........ A Literary Retrospect, Prof. A. G. Ne co:mer Athletics . . . . . . . . . The Golden Age of Stanford Athletics, Dr. Frank Angeli Debating ......... Dramatics ........ The Dramatics OF Stanford, Will H. Irw in- Literary ......... The Passing of the Camp, Dane Coolidge The Founding of the Chaparral .... Excina Hall, Its Place in Stanford Life, Enerett W. Smith The Last Guest, Bristo v x ' -Vdams ..... College Occurrences ....... Joshes .......... 20 26 42 94 102 174 202 218 221 236 242 266 282 285 302 314 316 322 326 332 334 Stanford Quad 1904 A Stanford Hymn (lAIXST tlu ' ni.ulil, tlic skies disclose Their heaiily shadow- frau.s ht ; I roll! out the night, a star arose; Through sorrow, gleamed a thought. r.ut for the grief which sat hy death, And dreamed its dream alone. Our Alma ne ' er had felt (iod ' s hreath Turning to life the stone, — God ' s hreath of love, to purpose warm Transmuting- human loss ; Revealing life ' s ideal form To those beneath the cross. O Stanford, look unto the height! Athene-like, thy youth ! Led bv thy star, seek thou th might In time ' s advancing truth ! — Ainclia IV. TrucsdcJl. Foreword Stanford Quad 1904 lEN in tlie beginning A. Lewis, Jr., ' 95, made the first Quad lie ga e this explanation of its name : It was chosen, first, )ecanse it is peculiar to this institution only ; secondly, for its nap and vigor, — a marked characteristic of the University; thirdly, because in it is embodied the nucleus of the University ' ettlement and sentiment. — the Quadrangle. In the middle years, Chris Bradley, ' 99, who made the fifth Quad upon the fashion plate of the first, said at the conclusion of it : It is with a great pang of pleasure that we lay aside the iiisintiiienta opcris, the proof sheet, the blue pencil and paste stick. We now have time to sympathize with those who have gone before, and to pity those who shall come after. The public we can only tell to do what we know will be done. Take the book, that is, — buy it, look through it, or at least part of the way, and then come and arrange yourselves artistically upon our neck. It is our reward. We expect it of you. That was in ' 98. In these days the official custodians of the shears and pastepot, find so rich an inheritance of ideas from Lewis and Bradley and the other editors, that they feel that the day for originality in Quad making is over. Each book has had its predecessor for a model, and each editor according to his tastes has emphasized the art, or josh, or literary, or statistics features. Last year Mr. Renaud developed the art feature as far as it is practicable for an under- graduate body to carry it. The year before Miss McDougald ' s book contained a remarkable collection of literary productions. This year the Board has attempted no special development along any particular line. A careful examination of the year books of other colleges shows that in the larger and older institutions the annuals are mere records of the year ' s activities, consisting mostly of statistics and comparisons of present records with those of previous years. The literary competitions are left to the literary magazine, and the humorous record of pass- ing joshes is left to the college funny paper. The Sequoia and Chaparral are perhaps sufficiently well established now to eliminate the literary contests from future annuals, and to greatly restrict the josh field. In keeping with this idea the present editors have republished several of the most successful features of our college papers, and have developed the statistics until they give a complete record from the beginning to the present. The special articles of Dr. Jordan, Dr. Elliott, Dr. Angell, Prof. Newcomer, Will Irwin, 99, Everett Smith, ' 99, Bristow Adams, ' 01, and Dane Coolidge, ' 98, give us a comprehension of Stanford ' s early life, and the possibilities of its future, that cannot be gleaned from mere statistics. It seemed fitting that we who are commencing a second decade, should glance thus carefully over what has gone before. It makes for a better realization of the spirit of the place and a deeper love of the privilege of being here in the days of ' 04. That ' s our feeling in the matter. Those who are pleased will kindly thank the contributors. To others the Board will be at home in the tall timber behind Frenchman ' s Cave on alternate Januaries. Stanford Quad 1904 A Castle m Spain HERE stands a castle in the heart ofiSpain, Builded of stone, as if to stand for aye, With tile-roof red against the azure sky ; And skies are bluest in the heart of Spain. Castle so stately men build not again ; ' Neath its broad arches, in its patio fair. And through its cloisters, open everywhere, 1 wander as I will, m sun or rain. Its inmost secret unto me is known. For mine the castle is. Nor mine alone, — Tis thine, O Love, to have and hold alway ; Tis all the world ' s as well as mine and thine ; For whoso enters its broad gates shall say : I dwell wathin this castle ; it is mine. David Starr Jordan. Stanford Quad 1904 When Stanford Becomes of Age Synopsis of a Report of the Alumnus Trustee on the Conditions of the Lelana Stajford Junior University, June i, igi2. [tie present writer had the fortune to he a member of the Pioneer Class of Cornell University. Twenty-one years later it was his duty as a trustee elected by the alumni to prepare a report on the progress of the institution in that time. Stanford University, also, will some time reach the age of legal maturity. When it is twenty-one, doubtless some one of the old pioneers will be on its Board of Trus- tees and will write its history and future needs. The history of the first eleven years of our University, years of love and toil and hope and sacrifice, years of the growth of the Stanford spirit, we all know more or less well. Some day most of us will come to understand it better, but this is not the time nor the place to give the details •hich the world does not know. For the rest, let the Alumnus Trustee tell his story, which we shall here greatly abridge, cutting down his rhetorical periods to the bare recital of the salient facts, and omitting all his references — doubtless very kindly — to the individual persons concerned in the University development. Now for the report of the Alumnus Trustee of Stanford University in 1912: The Twentieth Century, ' he said, bids fair to be known as the era of University-building, as the Thirteenth Century long before was the era of Cathedral-building. Already the larger universities of Amer- ica are surpassing those of the Old World in beauty, in wealth, and in facilities for work. This arises in large degree from the spirit of demo- 13 Stanford cratic dirccliu ' ss. W ' halcveT is [o he done is done in the simplest, Ouad slraightest a . witlnuii waste of time or strength. The student pur- 1904 ' ' - ' ' I ' ll ' ' ] ' ■ ' ' -■• turning aside for something he does not want, nor swerving from his real aim through any bait of degree, nor tlie lure of any i)rize. The ideal of the old universities of England has been ]X ' rsonal eultiu ' e : that of the deep-rooted universities of Ger- uvAuv has been personal thoroughness; that of the American institu- tions has been personal effectiveness. To this end culture and thor- oughness are vitally essential, but only as means to the greater end of usefulness in life. And in personal helpfulness to the community, and in the happiness which springs from worthy activity, the phrase ' suc- cess in life ' as used by the founder of Stanford, finds its meaning. In the front rank of institutions essentially democratic, thor- oughlv effective, and therefore in line with the spirit of the times, fair- est of all in surroundings, wealthiest of all in money, and wealthiest in love and tears and in fragrant memories, Stanford University has increased its means for investigation without losing the spirit of roman- tic comradery and mutual helpfulness which so enriched its crude but glorious pioneer days. The Stanford spirit still survives within the circle of its minster chimes, and it is carried over the world wherever the Stanford feet may wander. The Stanford man is adequate for whatever the fates may give him to do. Already the political and social life of the Pacific Coast is undergoing a transformation. Where- ever the spoils system has ruled the Stanford man is on the other side. He counts as a moral influence and a physical power as opposed to bigotry, intolerance, vulgarity, venality or corruption. Wherever he is, he is a force that must be reckoned wnth, and the side he represents is alwavs that of wisdom, democracy, and freedom. Like teachers, like students, the professors at Stanford have been men of intellectual honesty, men of simple tastes, devoted to truth, devoted to their stu- dents, and equal to whatever they may undertake. They have been not ashamed to be teachers, men without longings to be anything else, men who have taken ' the vow of poverty ' which science has always demanded and who have taken it without regret, putting aside the showy things of life, for the sake of the ' things which abifle ' in the lives of men and in the truth of God. ' They were not only our teachers but our friends, ' as Agassiz once said of the men who had helped him most. And the spirit of the early days still remains with the Faculty 14 1904 of 1912. And why should it not? For the most typical men among the Stanford students of the pioneer days are now the most influential members of Quad the Stanford Faculty. Of all the early Stanford devices, the one which has proved most valuable is the arrangement now generally adopted by progressive insti- tutions, the system of ' Major Professor. ' The Stanford course of study is wholly elective, but the unchecked elective system early adopted at Harvard, was at Stanford from the first subject to a most wholesome modification. One subject must be chosen by each student as his Major Sub- ject, to be taken as a specialty throughout his college and university training. This was the basis of his profession, the backbone of his education. The senior professor in this subject then became his ' major professor ' or t ' .r officio adviser throughout his course, and his choice of elective studies must meet the approval of this professor. The student seeking easy studies without serious purpose cannot maintain the respect of his adviser and thus naturally drops out of the University. By this system, the student is given the widest freedom of choice without the risk of wasting time in wrong subjects, or under the wrong teachers, or in mere pursuit of pleasure. The teacher is stimulated by the pres- ence of earnest students who set the pace to all the others. At the same time all students aiming not at work but at social distinction are dropped from the race. From the first the standards of ' passing ' at Stanford, have been of the highest. The student who can not or will not do his work faithfully day by day has been at once sent away. By letting frivolous men go home, and go home at once, there has been each year less and less occasion for any other form of discipline. Students bent on training themselves to be useful have little occasion to break the laws of common decency. The men who are sent to college mav do this, but the men who go to college have something better on hand. The fees an idler pays never make good the mischief wrought by his influence. Some of our institutions have been slow to learn this lesson, and, in this fact, may be traced one cause of their relative decline in scholarship and influence. The era of building at Stanford, the ' Stone Age ' of its history, began with the year 1900. In 1902, the Great Church, ' The Stanford Minster, ' was finished, to be dedicated early in 1903. In 1903, the Outer Quadrangle, the far-ofif dream of the pioneer days was com- 15 Stanford ])k ' tc(l — lon ;- since a l)usy lii c uf art and science — and its many rooms Quad th(M-onohly e(iui])pcd. In the same year the Chemical Laboratory was 1904 linished, in its day one of the greatest in the country, but already too small for its multifarious activities. The excellent Gymnasium was completed in 1904, and the University Library, already crowded with its million well selected volumes, the Mecca of investigators from every part of the world, was occupied in 1906. The present Law Library of 40.000 volumes now occupies the building presented by Thomas Welton Stanford. This furnishes a more appropriate home for this great department than the old library of the beginning of the century. The Quadrangle of the Museum, completed in 1904, is now filled with valu- able material from all parts of the world. The native races of Western America and Polynesia are especially well represented. The most recent attraction is the large series of life-size models of the people from Bering Sea to Panama and Samoa in their own houses. Phonographs are attached in the doorways, repeating their daily conversation of these people and in their own tongues. The demand for proper preliminary training in the Department of Medicine has rendered necessary the construction of another build- ing similar in character to the Laboratory in Chemistry. In this build- ing, finished in 1907, the work in Physiology and related subjects is now carried on, the building formerly used for Physiology now being turned over to the Department of Botany. The first three years in the course in Medicine are now given in the buildings on the Campus. Clinical Medicine and those branches needing hospital facilities are cared for in the commodious hospital on the corner of X and California Streets in San Francisco. The physicians and surgeons in charge of this work are professors in the University, employed at generous sala- ries and giving their whole time and effort to the advancement of medi- cal education. The crowning feature of the work in Medicine is the generous endowment for advanced research, the work in this depart- ment being open only to graduates in Medicine. The remarkable results shown in the recent investigation of the contagious diseases of the tropical Pacific have already given the professors of this department a world-wide fame. Since the cessation of necessity for large expenditures in building, the Faculties in Philosophy, Ethics, Comparative Religions, Forestry, , Political Sciences, Archccologv, Pal?eontologv, Astronomv and Art have 16 been completed, and the following new departments have been one by Stanford one added to the Undergraduate College : Horticulture, Geography, Quad Architecture, Naval Engineering, Ethnology, and Palceography. Each 1904 of these is now well housed and properly equipped w ith apparatus and material for its work. ( )n the side of the languages, instruction is now provided in Semitics, in Scandanavian, and in the history and literature of our nearest neighbor, the Empire of Japan. With this great nation, so old and so new, Stanford University stands in the closest relations, and through Japan she already wields a large influence on the still older and still newer Empire of China. A form of research of the greatest practical value is found in the experimental farm of horticulture, where, under the direction of a master in this ancient art, a hundred students are busily engaged in the creation of new fruits, flowers, and grains bv the processes of hybridization and selection. The famous ' INIendelian Law, which attracted such attention ten years ago, has been put here to a thorough practical test. The additions to our knowledge of animal and plant life which have resulted from the experiments in the horticultural farm, the botanic garden, and the breeding insectary, have been notable among the discoveries of the century. Of great value, though attract- ing less attention, have been the explorations of the islands of the Pacific, with the discoveries in Ethnology, Geology, Botany, and Zool- ogy which have resulted from them. The work of advanced investigation has been from the first recog- nized as the highest function of the University. In its pioneer years, the institution stood in the front rank in this regard. During the unfor- tunate years of litigation, while hampered in many ways, with few books and scanty appliances, the pioneer professors gave the I niversity a most worthy reputation for scholarly research. This reputation has been amply sustained and nobly advanced under the most favorable conditions of the last decade. Since 1905, when the University began her own series of publications, with the great Chaucer Dictionary of Dr. Fliigel, no other educational institution in America has produced so worthy a series of monuments of scholarship as have been wrought at Stanford. The number of students is not greatly increased in the last ten years, for it has become the settled policy of this institution to undertake nothing which it can not do in the best possible way. Not many students 17 Stanford I ' l ' l- J ood ones, aiul of those never so many as to embarrass the finances Quad of the University. Tlie l nit ion is free ; the cost of Hving is kept as low 1904 as possible. The young- man or woman who pays his or her way by work k ises no social standing by the necessity for efifort. On the other hanck the one who struggles and succeeds is more highly esteemed than one who has never had to struggle. ' America means opportunity. ' Dem- ocracy means opportunity, and Stanford University holds its place as an institution most ty])ical of American Democracy. ' Free should the scholar be, free and brave, ' and from Stanford University has gone forth a generation of scholars. (The rest of this report referred to the eiTorts of different indi- viduals, the founders, and the workers of earlier and later years ; also to minor matters, such as investments, salaries, funds, etc. It is there- fore omitted.) David Starr Jordan. i8 Baccalaureate Hymn Stanford Quad 1904 Lo, now the fleets are gathered, the new spring breeze runs free, To-day the shore and love and song — to-morrow for the sea ; For the five wide oceans beckon and the winds of the trader blow ; The ghosts of your fate they beckon, and the voyagers gather and go. Thou Captain of the flying sails, thou Eye that seest far, Thou Pilot, though the long course run high as the picket-star, Thou who hast heard our murmurs as we faltered on the way, Grace yet again for all of these that sail the seas to-day. For the fool that never sought thee, for the fool that held apart, The fool that marred thine image, and the fool that shut his heart; Thou knowest, Lord, how weak we are, how low and poor our way. But guide their course in havens safe who sail the seas to-day. For Thou hast seen us, Captain, when we drank the wells of truth, When we called unto the Giver out of groping, sightless youth. When soul to soul we spoke alone, when the tides of life welled up, And sparkling clear the new, sweet wine rose brimming in the cup. Thine was the longing all divine that filled the least of these When from this sheltered cove he saw the course across the seas. And strong in youth the least of these rises and goes to-day, Sure, though he never knew Thee, that Thou guidest on the way. Song of the fide in the sliallozvs, and glint of the z ' aves in the sun. And the sail szcells out and the sea-birds cry, and the rest in the harbor is done. For the zcide, zvhite oceans beckon, and the zi ' inds of the trader blozi. ' , The gliosis of your fate they beckon — and it ' s time that the children go. —Will H. Irzcnii. 19 Stanford Quad 1904 iPTfTC Traditions After Twenty Years HE several thousand iM-cshmen of A. D. 1891 who were denied the good fortune of being admitted to Stanford University did not differ very much, considered as the raw material of human beings, from the luckv Four Hundred who were welcomed to the untrodden corri- dors and fascinating arcades of the Inner Quadrangle, and to the candle-lighted recesses of Encina and Roble, during those never-to-be-forgotten natal days. The applicants who knocked at the doors of Stanford, of JNIichigan, of Cornell, even of Harvard, ])resented essentially the same combination of awestruck, moonstruck, tongue-tied sensibilitv, of buov- ant optimism, of the pure wine of ambition, of self-reliance, of preter- natural sophistication. H there were dift ' erences these favored Stan- ford in the matter of general competency and practical equipment at the expense of rigid school training. Stanford Chemistry was certainly very like Harvard Chemistry, and there was at Palo Alto no speciallv trade-marked History, or Latin, or Engineering. But here likeness ceases. Not longer than a day or two was the Harvard Freshman permitted to remain under the delusion that the earth was his and he its center. Verv shortlv and verv devoutlv he must have come to wish for the blessed oblivion of not being remem- Stanford bered. His special enthusiasms were promptl}- suppressed. The Quad skip in his walk and the teeming fruitfulness of his l)rain, conditions 1904 which portended genius in his home circle, were now his undoing. By a rough but elTective treatment he was presently whipped and disci- plined into shape until he became boisterous or studious, enthusiastic or contemplative in the prescribed Harvard fashion. The faculty he found fixed in its orbit, not in the least disturbed by his appearance, not modified by his desires or ambitions or revolutionary ideas. The Uni- versity machinery appeared not to care a rap for anything he thought or did. It observed him and presently labeled him, and he sank or swam according to his degree of conformity to the Harvard standard. Behind the Harvard of 1891 were more than two hundred and fifty vears of history making and tradition making. All the momentum of this force was turned upon the Freshman, for his training, his develop- ment, his regeneration. The result was that he presently acquired the Harvard gait, the Harvard clothes, the Harvard attitude, the Harvard vocabulary, the Harvard learning, and in due course of time was graduated and went out into the world with the everywhere recogniz- able Harvard stamp upon him. For the Stanford Freshman there was no model to which he was predetermined to be conformed. It would be untrue to assume that there were not historical and traditional forces shaping and condition- ing the new university which had been laid oft ' on the Palo Alto Farm. The charter, the founders, the faculty, American university ideals — all these were such forces. But they were in the background. They were concretely undiscovered. Everywhere was a virgin soil. Every- thing had to be discovered ; everything newly formed. There was nothing that was not fluid, nothing that in its detail might not be dif- ferent, no problem for which a new solution might not be sought. The faculty was„ not fixed in any orbit. It had not laid down any precedents. There were no older students already fitted into academic grooves and ready to treat with supercilious scorn any fresh enthusiasm or innovat- ing idea. From college, from high school, from machine shop, from whatever outlving district the student came he was caught up into the intoxication of new beginnings. There were no college papers, no class organizations, no athletics, no musical clubs, no fraternities, no wearers of the Cardinal and no Cardinal to wear, no college heroes, no politicians nor poets nor litterateurs. Zion. Carolus Ager, Shirley Baker. Chappie — not one of these redoubtable names, shouted from the Stanford t M c)t Encina even, wcmld liave produced a single describable emotion. Quad ' ' 1 li ' relation to the et)inninnit life the student found no rules, no 1904 traditions, no apparent end to his tether. There were no guiding posts which gave the slightest clue to what might prove snap courses, to what instructors could be profitably worked, to any proper use of moonlight bathed arcades. iMrst of all then there was the universal and fascinating voyage of discovery, the engaging pursuit and discovery of one another ; of faculty by faculty, of student by student, of each by the other, of founders, of business ofifice, of Mayfield, of vineyard, of arboretum, of evenings on Alvarado Row, of Redwood, of Woodside, of Ham ' s and King ' s, ct al. The student had to study his major professor, to find his heaven-born poets, football heroes, funny end men, journalistic geniuses, statesmen, rulers — or, failing the search, to set to work to make some. An evening with the Barneses that first semester stirred emotions, exhilarations which the most elaborate social function of 1903 cannot even faintly suggest. These were true Bohemian days, and here only were the conditions and the atmosphere in which academic Bohemia could truly come to flower and fruitage. A trip to Woodside or La Honda had all the charm of scenery and pleasant company which it may exhibit in 1903, with that indefinably something more which belongs only to pioneer days. Here were no beaten paths ; it was as if no person had ever walked these ways before ; each expedition opened into fresh El Dorados and enchanted wonderlands. But there was another element far more important in creating the enchantment of morning time at Stanford. The real soil out of which grew and flourished so luxuriantly the Stanford and the Stanford spirit of pioneer days was the dominating personality of President Jordan. He was the Pied Piper of Stanford. In sunshine and cloud, whether plans prospered or came to naught, whatever betid, he piped on in that rollicking, generalizing, precedent-overturning, irresistiblv contagious, optimistic comradery which cast its inexpressible, ineradi- cable glamor over everything between foothills and bay. At that piping his faculty felt the spell, dropped their several pursuits, and hasted together from all quarters of the earth ; students followed him across deserts and mountains and flocked in from all the natural features of the Pacific Coast. At that piping the primitive conditions and inade- quate equipment of raw bcgimiings took on the transfigured hue of richness and unequaled opportunity. It was Professor Smith who found this ]n )ev in one of the da s we do not now hesitate to call dark 1904 Imniming- a lively tune adown the arcade. You seem to be happy? Stanford he ventured. Yes, was the reply; I can ' t think of anything to Quad worry about. Best of all we knozo him! sang and shouted the pioneers — and so sang and shouted not simply because of those in- scrutable confidences which he shared to all alike : they knew him, and in the knowing had come opportunity, expansion of soul, breadth of vision, days and days and days of glorious existence. It was the con- tagion of his personality communicated to and taken up with a will by faculty and students alike which enabled the Sequoia to exultantly record (jMarch 30, 1892) : The perfect sympathy of the faculty and students makes us a unit of strength in all our undertakings. In the long perspective of nearly three hundred years there doubt- less seems very little difference between one and another of Harvard ' s early decades. Possibly from the point of view of A. D. 2158 Stan- ford ' s first and second decades will blend in one indistinguishable period. Our vantage-ground is better. We know there will be a dif- ference, for the difference is already here. The fairest day can have but one sunrise. There can never be another Pioneer Class, or another pioneer period, in this or any university, like the pioneering that was at Stanford. There may be new quadrangles and new corridors with- out number, but never the same newness. Imagine a Sequoia of 1903 printing any Miss Evelyn Briggs ' s Entrance English paper with a special note from her major professor calling attention to the fact that such wit and brightness was written in less than an hour and absolutely without premeditation! Imagine any Stanford periodical of 191 1 print- ing an inane high-schoolicism like this (Sequoia, Dec. 9, 1891) : The many friends of J. F. Wilson were somewhat surprised lately at a sudden change in his physiognomy. Perhaps the barber can explain. Or this (Sequoia, Dec. 16, 1891) : It is suggested that Bancroft be asked how far it is to Redwood ! We shall never again be so self- conscious of our ability to give pointers to Harvard, or expand with such altruistic emotion at thought of the good we have done to poor old Berkeley ! When over-bubblous Encinaites let loose those historic freight cars on their journey toward layfield, or scurried about with midnight paint pots in pranks which can now be exaggeratingly and half-boast- ingly related, but which once it would have been embarrassing to dis- close, these were merely attempts to discover the length of tether. And though the tether was long, the last bit of slack of social privilege, of irresponsibility, of over-athletic, over-literary activity was finally taken 23 Stanford ' M ' - ' i - ' ' ' - ' ' pi ' occdcnis, of slaiulards, of rei ulations, of machinery, Quad witli all its cxliilaralini; ' , whistlini; ' winds of freedom, showed some un- 1904 expected results. Though entrance requirements were of irreproach- able character, few coidd he denied admission when there were twenty tlilYerent doors at which the special student mis ht knock. Thon, h one hundred and twenty hours were rigidly required by the august Council, what mattered this when almost any instructor could present the needv student — conn ' ade and fellow worker — with as much credit as the exigency or the importunity demanded ! What cause for commotion in the dro])ping of half a hundred students at the semester ' s end when five and fort} ' could count on being readmitted at the next semester ' s be- ginning ! Regulations, checks, even shortening of tethers were inevitable. The Stanford spirit and the Stanford activities of the second decade must be conditioned by these facts. There are already Stanford tra- ditions, Stanford grooves, Stanford shrines. Woe to the iconoclastic Freshman who sets out not to respect them ! These carry over into the new Stanford all that could be carried over of the best and stablest of the old. There is a larger Stanford already at our gates, with larger opportunities, better working conditions, greater steadiness, not less fine enthusiasms. When its ten years are up the second decade will be found to be not less fair or less noble than its immortal predecessor. O. L. Elliott. 24 Founders Stanford Quad LELAND STANFORD JANE LATHROP STANFORD Board of Trustees MR. TIMOTHY HOPKINS San Francisco THE HON. HORACE DAVIS San Francisco THE HON. THOMAS B. McFARLAND San Francisco THE HON. GEORGE E. GRAY San Francisco THE HON. NATHAN W. SPAULDING Oakland THE HON. WILLIAM M. STEWART Carson City, Nevada MR. JOSEPH D. GRANT San Francisco MR. SAMUEL F. LEIB San Jose MR. LEON SLOSS San Francisco THE HON. THOMAS WELTON STANFORD. . .Melbourne, Aus. MR. FRANK MILLER Sacramento MR. CHARLES G. LATHROP Stanford University MR. RUSSELL J. WILSON San Francisco THE HON. WHITELAW REID New York MR. GEORGE E. CROTHERS San Francisco Officers of the Board of Trustees MR. SAMUEL F. LEIB President MR. RUSSELL J. WILSON Vice-President MR. CHARLES G. LATHROP Treasurer MR. GEORGE E. CROTHERS Secretarv 1904 Died June 21, 1893 25 Stanford Quad 1904 DA ID STARR JORDAN, President of the University. M. S., Cornell University, 1872; M. D., Indiana Medical College, 1875; Ph. D., Butler University, 1878; LL. D., Cornell University, 1886; Johns Hopkins University, 1902. J Y ; 2 H JOHN CASPER BRANNER, Vice-President of the University, and Professor of Geology. B. S., Cornell University, 1882: Ph. D., Indiana University, 1885; LL. D.. University of Arkansas, 1897. J Y ; 2 E OLIVER PEEBLES JENKINS, Professor of Physiology and Histology. A. B., Moore ' s Hill College, 1869; A. M., 1872; M. S.. Indiana University, 1886; Ph. D., 1889. MELVILLE BEST ANDERSON, Professor of English Literature. A. M., Butler University, 1877; Professor of Modern Languages, Butler University, 1877-80. JOHN MAXSON STILLMAN, Professor of Chemistry. Ph. B., University of California, 1874; Ph. D., 1885. Z ; 2 H FERNANDO SANFORD, Professor of Physics. B. S., Carthage College, 1879; M. S., 1882. CHARLES DAVID MARX, Professor of Civil Engineering. B. C. E., Cornell University, 1878; C. E., Karlsruhe Polvtechnicum, 1881. ® J X; 2 H CHARLES HENRY GILBERT, Professor of Zoology. B. S., Butler University, 1879 ; M. S., Indiana University. 1882, Ph. D., 1883. DOUGLAS HOUGHTON CAMPBELL, Professor of Botany. Ph. M., University of Michigan, 1882; Ph. D., 1886. 2 S ALBERT WILLIAM SMITH, Professor of Mechanical Engineering. B. M. E., Cornell University, 1878; M. M. E., 1886. © J X EWALD FLiJGEL, Professor of English Philology. Ph. D., University of Leipzig, 1886. CHARLES BENJAMIN WING, Professor of Structural Engineer- C. E., Cornell University. 1886. 2 H 26 FRANK ANGELL, Professor of Psychology. o j j B. S., University of Vermont, 1878; Ph. D., University of Leipzig, 1891; - 1 L. H. D., University of Vermont, 1892. 2 H uad LEANDER MILLER HOSKINS, Professor of Applied Mathematics. 1904 B. C. E.. and B. S., University of Wisconsin, 1883 ; M. S., 1885; C. E., 1887. J ROBERT EDGAR ALLARDICE, Professor of ALithematics. A. M., University of Edinburg, 1882. 2 H WILLLA.M RUSSELL DUDLEY, Professor of Botany. B. S., Cornell University, 1874; M. S.. 1876. AY; 2H AUGUSTUS TABER MURRAY, Professor of Greek and Secretary of the Faculty. A. B., Haverford College, 1885 ; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1890. TL LIUS GOEBEL, Professor of Germanic Literature and Philology. Ph. D., University of Tubingen, 1882. NATHAN ABBOTT, Professor of Law. A. B., Yale University, 1877; LL. B., Boston University, 1893. Y JOHN ERNST MATZKE, Professor of Romanic Languages. A. B., Hope College, 1882; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1888. B K JAMES OWEN GRIFFIN, Professor of German. Graduate of the Pennsylvania State Normal School, 1873. J Y RUFUS LOT GREEN, Professor of Mathematics. B. S., Indiana University. 1885; A. M., 1890. ARLEY BARTHLOW SHOW, Professor of Medic val History. A. B., Doane College, 1882; Graduate, Andover Theological Seminary, 1885; A. M.. Doane College, 1892. ORRIN LESLIE ELLIOTT, Registrar. Ph. B., Cornell University, 1885 ; Ph. D., 1890. B K VERNON LYiAIAN KELLOGG, Professor of Entoinology. B. S., University of Kansas, 1889; M. S.. 1892. J 0; 2 H; B K JAAIES PERRIN SMITH, Professor of Mineralogy and Pale- ontology. A. ]M., Vanderbilt University, 1886; Ph. D., University of Gottingen, 1892. B n LIONEL REAIOND LENOX, Professor of Analytical Chemistry. Ph. B., Columbia College, 1888. HENRY RUSHTON FAIRCLOUGH, Professor of Latin. A. B., University of Toronto, 1883; A. M., 1886; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1896. A A f ; f) B K MAX FARRAND, Professor of History. A. B., Princeton University, 1892; A. M., 1893; Ph. D., 1896. Boudinot Fellow in Historv, Princeton Universitv, 1892-93. RICHARD HEBER NEWTON, Select Preacher to the University and Pastor of the Alemorial Church. University of Pennsylvania and Philadelphia Divinity School ; D. D., Union Theological Seminary. Absent on leave, 1902-03. 27 1904 Stanford ALPHONSO Gl-.RALl) FA ' C()AII-:R, Associate Professor of Quad English. A. B., University of Micliigan, 1887; A. M., Cornell University. 1888. FJ ARTHl ' R F.RTDGiMAN CLARK, Associate Professor of Drawing. B. Ar,, Syracuse University, 1888; M. An, 1891. J Y FRANK MACE McEARLAND, Associate Professor of Histology. Ph. B.. De Pauw University, i88g; A. M., Leland Stanford Ir. University, 1893 ; Ph. D., University of Wiirzburg. 1896. J K E GEORGE CLINTON PRICE, Associate Professor of Zoology. B. S., De Pauw University, 1890; Ph. D., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1897- K E JOHN CHARLES LOUNSBURY FISH, Associate Professor of Civil Engineering. C. E., Cornell University, 1892. A T 12 ; 2 H ELLWOOD P. CUBBERLEY, Associate Professor of Education. A. B., Indiana University, 1891 ; A. M., Columbia University, 1902. c J (?) MARY ROBERTS SMITH, Associate Professor of Social Science. Ph. B., Cornell University, 1880; M. S., 1882; Ph. D., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1896. K A ; B K GUIDO HUGO MARX, Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineer- ing. M. E., Cornell University, 1893. J Y ; 2 E CLYDE AUGUSTUS DUNIWAY, Associate Professor of History. A. B., Cornell University, 1892; A. M., Harvard Univcrsitv, 1894; Ph. D., 1897. B K GEORGE ARCHIBALD CLARK, Secretary to the University. B. L., University of Minnesota, 1891. J Y GEORGE JAMES PEIRCE, Associate Professor of Botany and Plant Physiology. B. S., Harvard University, 1890 ; Ph. D., University of Leipzig, 1894. HERMAN DE CLERCO STEARNS, Associate Professor of Physics. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1892; A. M., 1893. OLIVER MARTIN JOHNSTON, Associate Professor of Romanic Languages. A. B., Mississippi College, 1890; A. M., 1892; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1896. STEWART WOODFORD YOUNG, Associate Professor of Chemistry. B. S., Cornell University, 1890. A T O MELVIN GILBERT DODGE, Associate Lihrarian. A. B., Hamilton College, 1890; A. M., 1894. J Y JOHN FLESHER NEWSOM, Associate Professor of Mining and Metallurgy. A. B., Indiana University. 1891 ; A. M., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1893; Ph. D., 1901. B n Absent on leave, 1902 03. 28 1904 EPHRALAI DOUGLASS ADAAIS, Associate Professor of History. Stanford A. B., University of Michigan, 1887; Ph. D.. 1890. r 1 SIMON JAMES McLEAN, Associate Professor of Economics. A. B., University of Toronto, 1894 ; LL. B., 1895 ; A. M., Coknnbia Uni- versity, 1896; Ph. D., University of Chicago, 1897. HENRY WINCHESTER ROLFE, Associate Professor of Greek. A. B., Amherst College, 1880; A. M., 1885. DAVID CHARLES GARDNER, Chaplain of the University le- morial Church. Scholar, Lord Scudamore ' s School, Hereford, England ; Student under Farquhar McKerrow, Usk Grammar School, ] Ionmouthshire, England ; Graduate Church Divinity School of the Pacific, San Mateo, 1897 ; Curate St. James Mission, San Francisco, i8g8; Rector All Saints ' Church, Palo Alto, 1898- 1902. EDWARD CURTIS FRANKLIN, Associate Professor of Organic Chemistry. B. S., University of Kansas, 1888; M. S., 1890; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1894. HAROLD HEATH, Associate Professor of Zoology. A. B., Ohio Wesleyan University, i8g ; Ph. D., Universitv of Pennsvlvania, 1898. $ J GEORGE ABRAM MILLER, Associate Professor of .Mathematics. A. B., Muhlenberg College, 1887; Ph. D., Cumberland University, 1892. 2 H CHARLES HENRY RIEBER, Associate Professor of Philosophy. A. B., University of California, 1888; A. M., Harvard University, 1899; Ph. D., 1900. KARL G. RENDTORFF, Assistant Professor of German. A. M., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1894; Ph- D.. 1896. EDWIN DILLER STARBUCK, Assistant Professor of Educatioi A. B., Indiana University, 1890; A. k, Harvard University, 1895; Ph. D., Clark University, 1897. SAMUEL JACKSON BARNETT, Assistant Professor of Physics. A. B., Universitv of Denver. 1894: Ph. D., Cornell Universitv, 1898. 2H CHARLES ROSS LEWERS, Assistant Professor of Law. A. B., University of Nevada, 1893 ; A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1896; LL. B., Harvard University, 1899. J Y RAY LYMAN WILBUR, Assistant Professor of Physiology. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University. 1896; A. M., 1897; ' SI. D., Cooper Medical College, 1899. PIERRE JOSEPH FREIN. Assistant Professor of Romanic Lan- guages. A. B., Williams College, 1892; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1899. FREDERICK JOHN ROGERS, Assistant Professor of Physics. ' SI. S., Cornell University. 1891. 2 S LILLIE JANE MARTIN, Assistant Professor of Psychology. A. B., Vassar College, 1880. Beginning: August. 1903. 29 Stanford IIAXS FREni ' .KKK P.TJdTFia.DT, Assistant Professor of Mathe- Quad niatics. 1904 - ■. 1 ' .- I- ' l:in(l Stanford Jr. L ' liiversity, i8(X); Pii. U., University of Leipzig, i8y8. MARATHON MOXTROSE RAMSEY, Assistant Professor of Spanish. B. S., Colnniliian University, 1894; A. M., 1895. COLBERT SEARLES, Assistant Professor of Romanic Languages. A. B., Wesleyan University, 1895 ; Ph. D., University of Leipzig, 1899. RAYMOND MACDONALD ALDEN, Assistant Professor of Eng- lish Literature and Rhetoric. A. B., Lhiiversity of Pennsylvania, 1894; A. M. Harvard University, 1896; Ph. D., University of Pennsylvania, 1898. WTLLLAM ALPHA COOPER, Assistant Professor of German. A. B., Marietta College, 1892; A. M., 1897. J Y WTLLLAM FREEMAN SNOW, Assistant Professor of Hygiene. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1896; A. M., 1897; M. D., Cooper Medical College, 1900. ANDREW ALLEN BROWNE, Assistant Professor of Mechanic Arts, and Superintendent of Shops. Student, University of Michigan, 1888-90. FRANK GEORGE BAUM, Assistant Professor of Electrical En- gineering. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1898; E. E., 1899. GEORGE FREDERICK MADDOCK, Assistant Professor of Me- chanical Engineering. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1900. THOMAS ANDREW STOREY, Assistant Professor of Hygiene. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1896; A. M., 1900; Ph. D., I902.4 K JEFFERSON ELMORE, Assistant Professor of Latin. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1895; A. M., 1895; Ph. D., 1901. JOHN ELLWOOD BLAIR, Assistant Professor of Law. A. B., Mercersburg College, 1891 ; LL. B., Harvard University, 1898. JOHN OTTERBEIN SNYDER, Assistant Professor of Zoology. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1897; A. ?il., 1899. ROBERT ECKLES SWAIN, Assistant Professor of Chemistry. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1899; M. S., Yale University, 1901. DAVID SAMUEL SNEDDEN, Assistant Professor of Education. A. B., St. Vincent ' s College, Los Angeles, 1890; A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1897; A. M., Columbia University, 1901. -j-HARRY ALVIN MILLIS, Assistant Professor of Economics. A. B., Indiana University, 1895; A. M. 1896; Ph. D., University of Chicago, li; Absent on leave, 1902-03. t Beginning August, 1903. .30 1904 GEORGE LOFTUS NOYES, Assistant Professor of Drawing. Stanford Art Student, CoUorossi and Delacluse Academies, Paris. 1889-93. Ouad JOHN EZRA Mcdowell, Assistant Registrar. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1900. J JULIUS EM BRET PETERSON, Foreman of the Forge. EUGENE SOULE, Foreman of the Manual Training Shop. CLARA S. STOLTENBERG, Instructor in Physiology. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1896: A. i r., 1897. EDWIN CHAPIN STARKS, Curator in Zoology. SAMUEL SWAYZE SEWARD, Jr., Instructor in English. A. B., Columbia College, 1896; A. M., Columbia University. 1897. B K LEE EMERSON BASSETT, Instructor in Elocution. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1901. WILLIAM JONATHAN NEIDIG, Instructor in English. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1896. ALVIN JOSEPH COX, Instructor in Chemistry. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. Lhiiversity, 1901 ; A. M., 1902. [In Europe] CHARLES FREDERICK SCHMUTZLER, Instructor in German. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1898; A. M., 1899. EDWARD KIRBY PUTNAM, Instructor in English. A. B., Illinois College, 1891 ; A. M., Harvard University, 1899. JAMES TAYLOR BURCHAM, Instructor in Law. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1897; LL. B., 1901. HALCOTT CADWALADER MORENO, Instructor in Applied Mathematics. A. B., University of Georgia, 189.3; A. M., 1894; B. L.. 1896; Ph. D., Clark University, 1900. BENJA]yIIN OLIVER FOSTER, Instructor in Latin. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. Universitv, 1895 ; A. M., Harvard University. 1897; Ph. D., 1899. A Y ALBERT CONSER WHITAKER, Instructor in Economics. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1899; Ph. D., Columbia University. 1901. B n EDWIN BINGHAM COPELAND, Instructor in Bionomics. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. Universitv, 1895 ; Ph. D., University of Halle. 1896. EDWARD JOHN STANLEY, Foreman of the W oodworking Shop. JOSEPH GRANT BROWN, Instructor in Physics. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1901. CEPHAS DANIEL ALLIN, Instructor in Economics. A. B., University of Toronto, 1895; LL. B., 1889; A. jNL, Harvard Univer- sity, 1900. Absent on leave, 1902-03. 31 Stanford AXSTKL rill ' .K A I ' .l ' .kCKc ).Mi;iK LAWSON, Instructor in Botany. )uad 904 Qy J B. S,, L ' niviTsity of California. 1897; M. S., 1898; Ph. D., University of Chicago. 1901. ERNEST ' HITNEY AI.VRTIX, insiruclor in Latin. A. B.. Univcr.- ity of Cliicago, 1900; A. j I., Leland .Stanford Jr. University, 1 90 J. = =ROBERT E ' ANS SNODGRASS, Instructor in Entomology. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1901. GEORGE CRAM COOK, Instructor in English. A. B., University of Iowa, 1892; A. B., Harvard University, 1893. cj K GEORGE LUTHER CLARK, Instructor in Law. A. B., Kenj ' on College, 1896; LL. B., Indiana University, 1899. NEWTON CLEAVELAND, Instructor in Physiology. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1899. HALBERT WILLIAM CHAPPEL, Instructor in Hygiene. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1901. K 2 STELLA ROSE, Instructor in Hygiene. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1900. FLORENCE BOLTON, Instructor in Hygiene. JAMES BENNETT LIGGETT, Foreman of the Foundry. DORSEY ALFRED LYON, Instructor in Metallurgy. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1898; A. M., Harvard University, 1902. J Y WILLIAM ALBERT MANNING, Instructor in Alathematics. A. B., Willamette University, 1900; A. M., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1902. -HENRY LEWIS CANNON, Instructor in History. A B., Western Reserve University, 1893 ; Ph. D., University of Pennsyl- vania, 1898. -j-ANTHONY HENRY SUZZALLO, Instructor in Education. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1899; A. M., Columhia L niversity, 1902. SUSAN BROWN BRISTOL, Assistant to Registrar and Secretary of Committee on Recommendation of Teachers. WALTER CLARK, President ' s Stenographer. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1899. LE ROY ABRAMS, Assistant in Systematic Botany. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1899. ANTON JULIUS CARLSON, Assistant in Physiology. A. B., Angustana College, 1898; A. : I., 1899; Pli- L)., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1903. CLIFFORD GILMORE ALLEN, Assistant in Romanic Languages. A. B., Boston LIniversity 1900. Beginning August, 1903. t Absent on leave. 32 ADOLPH KARL vox NOE, Assistant in German. Stanford A. B., University of Chicago, 1900; Aliiturientenexamen, Graz (Austria), r 1 1893. CHLOE LESLEY STARKS, Assistant in Drawing. ' 904 RUBY GREEN BELL, Assistant in Entomology. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University. 1902. JOHN FLETCHER BYXBEE, Jr., Assistant in Civil Engineering. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1902. ADOLPH DANIEL EDWARD EL IER, Assistant in Systematic Botany. B. S.. Washington Agricultural College, 1S99. CHARLOTTE LABLE LORD, Assistant in History. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1902. WESLEY ROBERTSON LONG, Assistant in Romanic Languages. A. B., Boston University, 1902. ROBERT HUGHES GAITHER, Assistant in Mechanical Engineer- ing. JOSEPH JARNICK, Assistant in Latin. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1900; A. ' M., 1901. WALTER KENRICK FISHER, Assistant in Zoology. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1901. ARION SIEGFRIED KALENBORN, Assistant in Electrical En- gineering. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1903. JOHN PEARCE AIITCHELL, Assistant in Chemistry. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1903. J Y ELIAS OLAN JAMES, Assistant in English. A. B., Union Christian College, 1899; A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. Univer- sity, 1902. P. HJALMAR OLSSON-SEFFER, Assistant in Systematic Botany. Universities of Helsingfors and Upsala. TOM MARIE ALDERSON, Assistant in Law Library. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1902. CHARLES BRADLEY HUDSON, Assistant Artist of the Hopkins Laboratory. WILLIAM SACKSTON ATKINSON, Assistant Artist of the Hop- kins Laboratory. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1899. KAKO MORITA, Assistant Artist. Graduate in Art, Imperial L ' niversity of Tokyo. SEKKO SHINADA, Assistant Artist. FirGt Semester, 1902-03, 33 Stanford MARY WELLMAN, Artist in luitomology. Quad FLORENCE HUGHES, Cataloguer. 1904 LILLIAN PEARL GREEN, Library Assistant. A. B., Lclaiul Stanford Jr. University, i8(j8. K A ALICE NEWMAN HAYS, Library Assistant. A. B., Lcland Stanford Jr. University, 1 896. HARROLD TRADER, Library Assistant. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1902. EDWARD PLAYFAIR ANDERSON, Library Assistant. A. M., University of Michigan, 1879; Ph. D., 1886. MARY DRANGEE GRAEBE, Library Assistant. MARTHA ELIZABETH HAVEN, Library Assistant. A. B., Leland Sanford Jr. University, 1896. BELLE HEBER THOMPSON, Library Assistant. HARRY C. PETERSON, Curator of tbe Leland Stanford Junior Museum. LILLIAN EMELINE RAY, Mistress of Roble Hall. A. B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1897; A. M., 1901. CHARLES G. LATHROP, Treasurer of the University. HENRY M. COPELAND, Bookkeeper. A. C. LASSEN, Bookkeeper. SAMUEL H. RICH, Bookkeeper. B. P. SHARON, Stenographer. P. Q. ATKINSON, Custodian. CHARLES EDWARD HODGES, Resident Architect. VINCENT KROLOW, Draughtsman to the Architect. C. P. HUGHES, Chief Engineer. J. McGLYNN, Assistant Engineer. R. A. STEVENS, Electrician. GEORGE ADDERSON, Overseer of Buildings. E. R. EWELL, Custodian of Chemistry Building. CHARLES F. MOORE, University Plumber. M. H. DORGAN, University Plumber. CHARLES C. WALLEY, University Carpenter. Lecturer CHARLES REYNOLDS BROWN, ' Lecturer on Ethics. A. B.. University of Iowa, 1886; A. M., 1886; S. T. B., Boston University, School of Theology, 1889. 34 Stanford Quad 1904 Graduate Students Abrams, LeRoy, Iiiglczvood, A. B., Stanford, 1899; A. M., 1902. Alderman, Rupert Lewis, Santa Clara, A. B., Stanford, 1901. Alderson, Tom Marie, Mayficld, A. B., Stanford, 1902. Allen, Clififord Gilmore, Palo Alto, A. B., Boston University, 1900. Bailey, Forrest Cutter, San Jose, A. B., Stanford, 1901. Baker, Charles Fuller, St. Louis, Mo., B. S., Michigan Agricultural College, 1891. Barber, William Burton, Alameda, A. B., Stanford, 1902. Bartruff, Zoe Sara, Palo Alto, A. B., Stanford, 1900. Bell, Ruby Green, Palo Alto, A. B., Stanford, 1902. Bissell, Frank Anson, Palo Alto, A. B., Western Reserve, 1876; B. D., Yale, 1879 Borgquist, Alvin, Palo Alto, B. S., University of Utah, 1897. Bradford, Cora May, Palo Alto, A. B., Stanford, 1902. Brown, Joseph Grant. Palo Alto, A. B., Stanford, 1901. Burcham, John Samuel, Palo Alto, A. B., Stanford, 1902. Botany Law Law French English Zoology Geology English Zoology Philosophy Psychology Drawing Physics Zoology 35 Stanford Carlson. Anion Jnlins, (7 ' a .-, ' 7 ., I ' liysiology Quad A. i;., Au usiana Colk ' .-ic. iS j,S; A. Al., 1899; i ' li. D., 1904 Stanford, i(X)3. Case, Panl Julian Si. John. Jininiclshiiro;, Iowa, Gcol. and Min. I ' ll. I ' l., Iowa College, 1902. Chappel, Ilalherl William. Jhttcn ' ia, N. Y., Law A. 1)., Stanford, k oi . Clark, William Ottcrbein, ) ' ah 111., Geology and Min. A. r... I ' nion Christian College, 1899. Coe, Harrison Streeter, Palo Alto, Geology A. B., Stanford, 1903. Connell, John Harden, IVcllslntrg, W. J a., Law A. 1)., West A ' irginia University, 1901 Cooper, William Alpha, I ' alo Alto, German A. ] ' ,., Marietta College, 1892; A. M., 1897. Corbert, Anita Lawrence, Palo Alto, Economics A. B., Stanford, 1896. Cowan, John Francis, Los Aiigclcs, Physiology A. B., Stanford, 1902. Crabtree, David Montgomery, Palo Alto, Latin A. B., Kentucky L niversity, 1899. Critchlow, Florence Marian Tabor, Son Francisco, English Phil. A. B., Northwestern LTniversity, 1892; A. M., Stanford, 1903. Crow, Benjamin Stewart, .S ( ; Jose, Law A. B., Stanford, 1901. Cunning, Frank Ambrose, HolUstcr, Mechanical Eng. A. i!., Indiana LTniversity, 1899. Doane, Edgar Willis, Palo Alto, Civil Eng. B. S., Kansas State Agricultural College, 1901. Dorsey, Florence Eugenia, San Francisco, Entomology A. B., Stanford, 1899; A. M., 1902. Elmer, Adolph Daniel Edward, Palo Alto, Botany B. S., Washington Agricultural College, 1899. Fisher, Walter Kenrick, Palo Alto, Zoology A. B., Stanford, 1901. Fosdick, Archibald Morris, Palo Alto, Education A. B.. Stanford, 1902. Free, Arthur Monroe, Mountain Jlc7V, Law A. B., Stanford, 1901. Giles, Mabel F., San Jose, Gen. Botany B. L., Smith College, 1896. 36 Law Stanford Quad Romanic Lang. 1904 English Gray, Thomas Starr, Palo Alto, A. B., Stanford, 1900. Greenleaf, Charles Hunt, Palo Alto A. B., Stanford, 1898. Greyson, Jessie Alary, Clarcmont, B. L., Pomona College, 1902. Grinnell, Joseph, Palo Alto. Zoology A. B., Throop Polytechnic Institute, 1897; A. AI., Stanford, 1901. Harkins, Alary Santa Barbara, Mcnlo Park, French A. B., Stanford, 1902. Hayden, Thomas Edward, San Diego, Law A. B., Hamilton College, 1891 ; A. AL, 1893. Haynes, Diantha Alay, Coinptoii. Physiology A. B., Throop Polytechnic Institute, 1896. Heywood. Florence, Palo Alto, A. B., Stanford, 1902. Hirayama, Yasogoro, Tokyo, Japan, Imperial Agricultural College. Hoover, Theodore Jesse, Palo Alto, A. B., Stanford, 1901. Hope, Edward William, Shaftsbnrg, Eng., A. 1 ' )., L ' niversity Pennsylvania, 1902. Hopper, Alaximilian Duff, Del Rey, A. B., Stanford, 1903. James, Elias Olan, Mansfield, 111., A. B., L nion Christian College, 1899; A. B., Stanford, 1902. Jarnick, Joseph, Almond, JVis., A. B., Stanford, 1900; A. AL. 1901. Jones, Herbert Coffin, College Park, A. B., Stanford, 1902. Jordan, Edith Alonica. Palo Alto. A. B., Stanford, 1897. Kalenborn, Arion Siegfried, Tacoma, JJ ' ash., A. B., Stanford, 1903. Kimball. Florence Alabel, San Mateo. A. B., University California, 1902. Laws, Henry, San Franeiseo. C. E., University of Cincinnati, 1895. Lemonds, Effie, Palo Alto, A. B., Indiana University, 1899. English Entomology Geology Greek Physics English Latin Law History Elec. Eng. History Alathematics Eno-lish Phil. 37 Stanford Quad 1904 Long, Wesley Robertson, Boston, Mass., Romanic Lang. A. B., Boston University, 1902. Lord, Charlotte Mabel, F iIo Alto, History A. 15., Stanford, 1902. AlcCormick, Manson Fielding, Fresno, Law A. B., Stanford, 1902. Madscn, Peter, Oakland, German A. B., Stanford, 1903. ] Tanning, ' illiam Albert, Palo Alto, Mathematics A. B., Willamette L-niversity, 1900; A. AL, Stanford, 1902. Alarlin, Mary Viola, Woodland, German A. B., Stanford, 1902. Alartin, Percy Alvin, Los Angeles, French A. B., Stanford, 1902. Mitchell, John Pearce, Palo Alto, Chemistry A. B., Stanford, 1903. Mosher, Clelia Dnel, Palo Alto, Physiology A. B., Stanford, 1893; A. M., 1894; M. D., Johns Hopkins, 1900. Mourot, Louise Anna, Redzvood City, Romanic Lang. A. B., Stanford, 1902. Murgotten, Francis Clark, San Jose, Greek A. B., Stanford, 1901. Nath, Dorothea Elizabeth, Davenport, Iowa, German A. B., Iowa College, 1900. Newcomb, Mary Alice, Woodland, Physiology Ph. B., University Pacitic, 1889. Von Noe, Adolf Charles, Palo Alto, German A. B., University Chicago, 1900. Oakford, Benjamin Palmer, Palo Alto, Law A. B., Stanford, 1902. Olsson-Seffer, P. Hjalmar, Stockholm, Szveden, Sys. Botany University Helsingfors and ' Upsala. Palmer, Clayton Franklin, Stockbridge, Mass., Zoology B. S., Boston University, 1897. Palmer, Henrietta Raymer, Proz ' idence, R. ., English A. B., Bryn Mawr, 1893. Peck, Anne Earle, Mrs., Palo Alto, Romanic Lang. A. B., Stanford, 1898. Perry, Irvin David, Colt on. Education A. B., Stanford, 1903. 38 Phelps, Louise, Minneapolis, Minn., Philosophy Stanford A. B., University Minnesota, 1902. Quad Poor, Nina Foster, Belfast, Me., English 1904 A. B., Wellesley, 1900. Ralston, David, Mayiield, Economics A. B., University Pacific, 1902. Randolph, Flora Albertine, Palo Alto, Botany A. B., Wellesley College, 1902. Rice, Edward Walter, Oakland, Law A. B., Stanford, 1902. Rider, William Leslie, Palo Alto, History A. B., Stanford, 1902. Rouiller, Charles August, Paraje, N. Mexico, Chemistry A. B., Stanford, 1903. Ruddy, Charles Alfred, Seattle, Wash., Geology A. B., University of Washington, 1901. Ruth, Anna Frances, Pomona, Greek A. B., Stanford, 1902. Ryan, John Joseph, Gilroy, History A. B., Stanford, 1903. Schofield, Frank Grain, Dunkirk, Ind., English A. B., Ohio University, 1895; A- - 1897. Schwartz, Albert John, Dallas City, III., Mathematics A. B., Stanford, 1903. Shipley, Eugenie Marie, Palo Alto, Romanic Lang. A. B., Stanford, 1902. Sloan, William Henry, Palo Alto, Chemistry A. B., Stanford, 1903. Smith, Archibald Clarence, Menlo Park , Mathematics A. B., University Toronto, 1901. Snoddy, James Samuel, J illey City, N. D., English A. B., University Miss., 1883 ; A. M., University of Neb., 1898. Snyder, Cora Adelfa, Waterloo, Ind., Botanv A. B., Indiana University, 1896. Spaulding, Milo Herrick, Palo Alto, Zoologv A. B., Stanford, 1903. Stephens, Leroy Hamilton, San lose, Greek A. B., Stanford, 1902. Sterrett, Roger John, Pasadena, English A. B., Stanford, 1903. 39 Stanford Stevens, iM-ank Asbury, Palo Alto, Law Quad A. P)., Stanford, 1902. 1904 Stevens, jNTaiidc Frances, Palo Alto, History A. r ., Stanford, 1901. Suzzallo, Anthony Henry, San Jose, Education A. 15., Stanford, 1899. Swindells, Charles Jay, Palo .11 to, Law A. B., Stanford, 1902. Talbot, Earle, Sail Praucisco, Civil. Eng-. A. B., Stanford, T902. Thomas. Charles Wilbur, Jr., IVoodland, Greek A. B., Stanford, 1903. Thomas, Monroe Hardon, Palo Alto, Law A. B., Stanford, 1903. Thomson, Charles Alexander Pictorc, N. S., Greek A. B., Dalhousie College, 1900. Thurston, Alice Emeline, Rock ford, PL, Botany A. B., University of Michigan, 1901. Townsend, Vera, Polo Alto, German A. B., Stanford, 1901. Trader, Harrold, Palo Alto, Latin A. B., Stanford, 1902. Truesdell, Amelia Woodward, Mrs.,5 a Praucisco, English A. B., Stanford, 1903. Walker, Edna Rawlings, Mrs., Palo Alto, German A. B., Stanford, 1903. ' alker, Lon Cain, Palo Alto, Mathematics A. B., Stanford, 1900; A. M., 1902. Waxham, IMarjorie Evelyn, Palo Alto, English A. B., Wellesley College, 1898. Way, Alvah Bing, Redwood City, Education Ph. B., Ottawa University, 1897. Weiser, Charles William, Grand Junction, Colo., Law Ph. B., Colorado College, 1902. A ' illiams, Edwin Henry, Sau Jose, Law A. B., Stanford, 1902. Wood, Lee Axtell, San Diego, History A. B., Stanford, 1902. Wright, Charles Frederick, San Luis Obispo, Physics A. B., Stanford, 1896; A. M., 1897. Wright, George Henry Burwell, Redlauds, English A. B., Stanford, 1898. 40 CI asses Class Presidents ' 03 First Semester Roy O. Hadley Second Semester L. G. Moore ' 04 First Semester O. C. Spencer Second Semester C. R. Blodgett ' 05 First Semester F. G. Smith Second Semester J. P. DAvmsoN ' 06 First Semester R. Howard Second Semester G. G. Altnow Seni eniors Officers First Semester President R. O. Hadley -rr. T-, . , k R. E. Warfield Vice-r resident { _, CD. Hauverman Secretary Theresa May Wilbur Treasurer R. C. McComish Sergeant-at-Arms L. C. Hawley Second Semester President L. G. ] Ioore Vice-President H. P. Kuhn Secretary Chita Kraft Treasurer G. A. Scoville Sergeant-at-Arms R. O. Hadley Athletic Manager W. B. Lowenthal Orator C. Winans Historian T. E. Stephenson Reader of Class ' ill Thoreau Cronyn Yell: Rickety! Rackety! Zip! Boom! Ah! Naughty-three! Naughty-three! Rah! Rah! Rah! ♦Resigned. 45 Stanford Quad 1904 Stanford Senior Committees Quad 1 904 Senior Week CcMiiinillee Miss S. F. V.ikd C. X . Thomas, Jr. C. K. Si iDi.iA ' . ( i. Morrison R. O. Hadlev W. W. Copp X. C (iRii)i:R L. G. Moore, Chairman I ' inance Committee N. C. CiKn)i;K C. V. Thomas, Jr. W. W. Copp, Chairman Program Committee I. Anderson Miss A. R. Fay Miss L. N. Keniston E. I. Frisselle C. K. Studley, Chairman Farce Committee H. R. Johnson R. E. Renaud Miss A. ]]. Perrin C. W. Thomas, Jr. Miss S. F. Bird, Chairman Senior IJall Committee Miss E. A. Peckham Miss F. L. Aroues P. C. Harper M. H. Evans C. D. Hauverman G. Lutgerding W. W. Copp W. G. Morrison, Chairman Plate Committee J. H. Page Miss T. M. Wilbur ? Irs. L. K. Mathews W. L. Walker R. O. Hadley, Chairman Promenade Committee Miss E. F. Parsons Miss M. A. Horr Miss J. E. Evans Miss T. M. Wilp.ur Miss M. E. Hendrick P. P. Parker C. Naramore W. B. Barnhisel R. J. Keith J. G. Dehy C. J. Crary C. K. Studley F. O. Ellenwood C. W. Thomas, Jr., Chairman Encina Reception Committee ] Iiss C. Atherton Miss A. E. Arnold F. L. Hkss E. I. Thayer L. C. Hawley F. F. Gundrum T. E. Palmer N. C. Grider, Chairman 46 Senior Class, 1 903 ' iT Alden, Mary Estelle, Campbell, English ' 4 Allaire, Grace M., Palo Alto, German Anderson, Chloe Case, San Jose, English Member of Board of Directors of Woman ' s League (4). Anderson, Irving, Wallace, Idaho, Geology and J Iin. Atkinson, Harry Hunt, Salt Lake City, Utah, Law Z ; 2 2; ( ) J ; Gymnasium Club (2), (3), (4); Glee Club (3), (4); Mandolin Club (3), (4); Court of Abbott ' s Inn (4). Austin, Arthur O., Stockton, Electrical Eng. Balcomb. Ernest Elvvell, Palo Alto, Education Baldwin, Florence May. Palo Alto, English Barnhisel, Walter Benedict, San Jose, Law Z ; cfi J ct ; 2 2; Senior Society ; Court of Abbott ' s Inn; Class Football Team (i) ; Second Football Team (2) ; Varsity Football Team (3), (4); Athletic Committee (2); Sophomore Cotillion Committee ; Junior Prom Committee ; Senior Prom Committee. Barnett, Mary Amelia, Santa Rosa, Zoology Barton, George C, Palo Alto, History Beamer, Muriel Adelaide, Los Angeles, Latin J r. Beecher, Flora Belle, Santa Crnz, History History Club ; Saturday Night Club ; Secretary (4) ; Pres- ident (5). Bell. Jessie Frances, Palo Alto, Economics Bennett, Frank Waite. Phoenix, Aria., Law 2 X ; 2 2; -I ; Senior Society ; Bench and Bar ; Varsity Baseball ' 01 ; Track Team ' 98. ' 99; Chess Team ' 99; President Chess Club ' 00 ; Chairman Senior Reception Com- mittee ' 01 ; President Golf Club ' 01 ; Class Baseball Team ' 99. ' 00. Billings, W illiam E., Concord, Law Treasurer of Class (i) ; Secretary (i) ; Carnot Finals (4) ; Member of Nestoria Literary Society. 47 Stanford Quad 1904 Bird, Susan I ' ranccs, Jniiiiiing. English Stanford C.irls ' Glee Club (i), (2), (3); Treasurer (2); President (3): Member Sophomore CotiUion Committee (2) ; Mcml)er ■ I ' hi.t;- Ugly Committee (3) ; English Club (3), (4); ice-President (4); Roble Gymnasium Club (4) ; Chairman Senior Farce Committee (4) ; Member Senior Week Committee (4). Boalt, Gilbert Denison, Paleniio, Bouhvare, Alexander Stockton, Falu Uto, Brackett, Foster Ely, Bremner, Olney Edwin, Brown, Alice Mary, Brown, Audrey Ruth, Brown, Frederick Allen, Law Latin Latin Zoology Zoology Greek Physiology WasJiington, D. C, Santa Rosa, Florin, Sail Jose, Pasadena, Member of Baseball Team ' 00, ' 01, 02 ; Captain ' 03 ; Varsity Class Baseball Team (i), (2), (3), (4) ; Captain (3) ; Ath- letic Committee (4). Brown, Mabel Haughton, JVashington, D. C, English Assistant Editor Sequoia (2); Associate Editor (3), (4); Undergraduate Editor Stanford Ahnnnns (3) ; Associate Editor Stanford Quad, Vol. IX (3) ; Co-Editor-in-Chief Woman ' s Edition of Chaparral (3) ; Junior Prom Com- mittee (3) ; Member English Club (2), (3) ; Vice-President English Club (4) ; Executive Committee (4) ; Member Spanish Club (3), (4); Kssocxaie dxior I ntercoUegian (4). Bruce, Charlotte Elizabeth, JVazvona, Burcham, David, Palo Alto, Campbell, Henry Avery, Sausalito, 2 A E. Chambers, Genevieve, San Jose, K A 0; Prom Committee (3). Chandler, Mrs. Mary M., San Francisco, Chandler, Grace Lucinda, IMember of Girls ' Glee Club. Chapman, Mildred Pitkin, Charles, Shirley IMansfield, Cleary, Harriet Andrews, Clinton, Lynne Fox, B©n; ( J . Coe, Harrison Strecter, Palo Alto, Santa Paula, I ix ' erside, Palo Alto, San Diego, Salt Lake City Latin Mathematics Civil Eng. Romanic Lang. History English History English English Utah , Law Geolosfv 48 Coffey, Alexancler Ih-ainard, Seattle, Wash. Education Stanford Cooley, Arthur Edward, Clo-rcrdale. Law Quad AY; j)d j); Press Club; Euphronia Literary Society; Class 1904 Secretary ' 02 (i); Class Executive Committee ' 02 (2); Class President 02 (3) ; Alember ' 02 Senior Week and Promenade Committee ; Chairman Senior Program Com- mittee ; President Students ' Guild (3). Cooper, Kenneth Farra, Palo Alto, Civil Eng. 2 A E ; Freshman Team Football ( i ) ; Captain Class Team Football (2); Executive Committee (2); Varsity Football Team (3), (4); Class Athletic INIanager (3); Vice-President Class (3). Copp, William Whipple, Los Angeles, Chemistry Philolexian Literary Society ; Gymnasium Club ; A arsity Baseball (3) ; Class Team (3) ; Captain (2) ; Ball Com- mittee (4) ; Chairman Finance Committee (4). Cowden, David A an Clief, San Jose, Law Y; 22; (f J (fi-, Senior Society; Bench and Bar; Varsity Baseball Team (2), (3), (4); Captain (4). Crandall, Esther, Palo Alto, Greek Antigone Cast (3). Crary, Charles Judson, Boone. loiea, English T J ; Assistant Editor Daily Palo Alto (2) ; Associate Editor (3) ; ] Iember Philolexian (2), (3), (4) ; Vice-Pres- ident (3) ; ] Iember English Club (3), (4) ; Member Foil and Mask (3) ; President (4) ; Senior Prom Committee. Cronyn, Thoreau, Bernaniston, Mass., English K 2 ; Senior Club ; Press Club ; Assistant Editor Daily Palo Alto (i); Associate (i): Xews Editor (2); Man- aging Editor (3) ; Editor-in-Chief (4) ; Vice-President Euphronia (2) ; Secretary-Treasurer English Club (4) ; Class Will, ' 03. Davis, Delos Darwin, Mayfield. Botany Dodd, Robert Wm., San Franeiseo, Chemistry Assistant in Chemistry ; Member of Geological Society of Am erican Universities ; Stanford A ' oluntecrs. Dole, Alfred Rowell, Riz ' erside, Geologv B © IT ; Freshman Football Team ( i ) ; Varsity Football (2) ; Stanford Gymnasium Club : Geological Society Amer- ican Universities. 49 Stanford Quad 1904 History German Doran, Kathcrine May, Redlands, Downing-, Helen, Los Angeles, K K r. Ely, Helen Heath, Davenport, lozva, Latin Evans, Jane Elizabeth, Anaconda, Mont., Romanic Lang. K K T; Junior Prom Committee (3) ; Cap and Gown Com- mittee (4) ; Promenade Committee (4). Everett, Elizabeth A., Sutter, Education Member Saturday Night Club (2), (3), (4) ; Undergrad- uate Editor Alumnus, 1901 (3) ; President Saturday Night Club, 1903 (4) ; Member Debating League (4). Everett, Ralph Waldo, Sutter, History Nestoria Literary Society (i), (2), (3), (4); Secretary- Treasurer (2) ; Vice-President (3) ; President (4) ; Mem- ber History Club (4) ; Member Intersociety Debating Com- mittee (3). Paris, Margaret Summers, Sacramento. A . Fernald, Reginald Goodwin, Santa Barbara, J T J ; 2 2; Senior Society. Fields. Catherine Leota, San Jacinto, Eogg, Edward, Tacoma, Wash., 2N;0 ; Mandolin Club (i), (2). Foss, John Harrison, Palo Alto, Foster, Edith A., Ventura, Frisselle, Ralph Dennison, BakersHeld, 4®; Class Football Team (2), (3), (4) ; Pluc Frisselle, Samuel Parker, Bakersfield, 4 J® ' , Glee Club. Gaddis, Fletcher Eugene Allen, Saiita Rosa, Director and Vice-President of Encina Club (3). Garibaldi, Kathryne Elvira, Merced, President and Secretary and Treasurer of Girls ' Mandolin Club. Gildersleeve, Joseph Burt, Palo Alto, 2 A E; Treasurer Class (2) ; Member Sophomore Cotil- lion Committee (2) ; Assistant Football Manager (2) ; Man- ager Varsity Football Team (3) ; Manager Freshman Foot- ball Team (3) ; Manager Chaparral Board (2) ; Assistant Manager Chaparral (3) ; Member Training House Corpor- ation (3), (4), (5); [ember Intercollegiate Athletic Com- History Law English History Civil Eng. History Economics Ugly (3). Economics Flistory Latin Latin 50 mittee (3) ; Alember University Athletic Committee (3) ; Stanford Associate Editor Stanford Quad, Vol. VIII. (3) ; As- Quad sistant Editor Daily Palo Alto (2) ; Associate Editor (2) ; 1904 (3) ; Associate Editor Sequoia (5) ; Member English Club (5) ; Member Press Club (3), (4), (5) ; Chaparral Board (5). Giles, James Sweeny, Reno, Nev., Law Giorgio, Rocca, San Jose, Romanic Lang. Doctor of Jurisprudence (Royal University of Rome, Italy). Graves, Ethel Winona, Pasadena, Chemistry Greyson, Jessie Mary, Clareuwnt, English Member of Girls Glee Club. Grider, Noah C, Oakdale, Chemistry Class Baseball Team (i), (3); Manager Sequoia (3); Treasurer and Director Encina Club (4) : x ssistant in Chemistry (4) ; Member of Band (4) ; Finance Committee ; Senior ' eek Committee : Chairman Encina Reception Com- mittee (4). Gundrum, Fred Fretageot, Riverside, Physiology Class Baseball Team ( i ) ; Philolexian Literary Society ( i ) , (2), (3) ; Secretary (2) ; Class Treasurer (3) ; Varsity Track Team (3), (4 ; Encina Reception Committee (4) ; Executive Committee Students ' Guild (3) ; Treasurer (3). Hadley, Roy Overman, JVJiatcoui, Wash., English K 2; 2 2; Senior Club ; Press Club ; x ssistant Editor Daily Palo Alto (i); Associate {2); ] Ianaging Editor (3) ; Editor-in-Chief (3) ; President Euphronia (4) ; Inter- society Debating League Executive Committee (2), (3) ; English Club, Secretary-Treasurer (4) ; President (4) ; Junior Plug Ugly ' Committee (3) : Class President (4) ; Chairman ' 03 Plate Committee (4). Hall. Harold, San Francisco, lechanical Eng. J T J; Assistant Editor Daily Palo Alto (i) ; Associate (2). Hamilton. Thomas, San Diego, Economics J KE. Hardison, Augusta, Santa Paula, EngHsh Harper, Paul Coates, Seattle. JJ ' ash.. Geology Y; U. of Wash, (i), (2) ; Geological Society (4) ; Senior Ball Committee (4) : President Boat Club (41. 51 Stanford Harris, Abe I ' crry, .V( ; Jose, Law Quad ] [cnilxM- of ' 03 Del)aliiio Team; Mcinl)cr of Euphronia ; j9Q4 I ' usiness Manager of the Stanford Sequoia, (4). Hartncll, Ella Rachel, Haub, Hattie Dora Frances, Hawlcv, Lee Carroll, Varsity Track Team ( i ) Team (i), (2), (3), (4); Salinas, Santa J osa, Los Angeles, (2). (3), (4); English Physiology Education Class Track Captain Class Track Team (3) ; Sophomore Cotillion Committee ; Director Inn Club (4) ; Secretary Students ' Guild (3) ; Class Treasurer (3) ; Glee Club (2), (3), (4) ; Manager (4) ; Encina Reception Com- mittee (4) ; Sergeant-at-Arms (4) ; Athletic Committe (4) ; Executive Committee Glee Club (3). Hayes, Thomas Alonzo, Ashland, Ore., History Hendrick, ] Iary E., Los Angeles, English K A ©; Senior Prom Committee (4) ; Tennis Squad (4). Hensey, William Henry, San Francisco, English Hess, Erauk L., Palo Alto, Geology and Mining Vice-President Y. M. C. A. (i), (2) ; Secretary (2) ; Ad- visory Board (3), (4) ; Assistant Assaying (2), (3), (4); Member Geological Society American Universities (3), (4) ; Member Faculty Science Club (2), (3), (4) ; Vice-Presi- dent Students ' Guild (4) ; Senior Reception Committee (4). Hewlett, George. San Francisco, Hill, Edith Abigail, Red lands, AT. Hodge, Mary Ashnum, San Diego, Holden, Frances Cooke, Santa Ana, Holway, Ruliff S., San Jose, Hood, Frederick Donald, Palo Alto, Hopper, Leona ] Iay, Palo Alto, Hopper, Maximillian Duff, Del Rey, Horr, Marrion Augusta, Santa Clara, Member Roble Gymnasium Cluli (4) ; Senior Committee (4). -Howard, Blanche Louise, Chicago, III., Howard, Delle, Cloverdale, Member of Saturday Xight Club (i), (2), (3) Law German Physiology Education Geology Mechanical Eng. English Physics History Promenade English History Vice-Pres- 52 ideiit of Saturday Night Club (2) ; Secretary-Treasurer of Stanford Intersociety Debating League (3) ; Member of History Club Quad (4)- 1904 Howes, Lyman Joseph, Hughes, Robert James, Band (I), (2), (3), (4) Club Director (4). Hull, Angus Clifton, Los Angeles, English Merced, Electrical Eng. ; Orchestra (2), (4) ; Encina Aurora, I!!., Greek Philolexian (i), (2) ; President Philolexian (2), (3) ; Vice- President Y. M. C. A. Hyde, Lillian S., lbs. Ella, Jeffers, Granville B., Jennings, Robert, Johnson, Mae Louise, Jollyman, Josiah Pickard, History Physiology Education Chemistry Latin Electrical Ensf. Palo Alto, San Diego, Palo Aha, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, Cupertino, Assistant in Electrical Engineering Department (2), (3). Jones, V arren Worth, Mayfield. Mathematics Kalenborn, Arion Siegfried, Taconia. JVaslu, Electrical Eng. Assistant in E. E. Department (2), (3). Keith, Royden James. Cliicago, III., Law 2 A E; ( J ; Senior Club: Farce Committee (3) ; Ping §■1} ' ' (3) ; Leader ] Iandolin Club (2), (4) ; Prom Com- mittee (4): Associate Editor ' 03 Quad ; Court of Abbott ' s Inn; Farce Committee (4). Kelly, Virginia Mabel, Palo Alto, Phvsiologv Keniston, Lucia Nichols, Stockton, ] Iathematics Program Committee (4). Kimball, Elsie, Pair Oaks, Kimball, Rufus Hatch, Pasadena, J Y; Euphronia Literary Society (2), (3), (4) : ant Editor Daily Palo Alto (2) ; Associate (2), (3) Kimble, Mav G., Los Angeles. K K r. Knepper. Earl H., Los Angeles. B n. Koerber, Lillie Louise, San Jose, German Law Assist- Chemistrv Geology and ] Iin. German 53 Stanford Quad 1904 Kraft, Augusta Chita, San Die o, German Treasurer Girls ' Glee Club (i); President and Business Manager (2), (3) ; Leader (3) ; Spanish Club Executive Committee (2) ; Vice-President (2) ; President (3) ; Cap and Gown Committee (3) ; Assistant Daily Palo Alto (4) ; Class Secretary (4); French Club (3), (4). Iluhn, Harold Philip, Kansas City, Mo., Physiology B © 11; 2 2; L ' niversitv of Michigan (i) ; Track Team (2), (3), (4)- Kuma, Toshi-yasu, Tokyo, Japan, Education President of Japanese Students ' Association. Lauer, Ada Lucile, Win field, Iowa, German Leonard, Edw. M., Leonard, Law Liddle, Carrie Walker, Palo Alto, Psychology Lloyd, Edith. Ben Lomond, English Lodge, Elizabeth Leona, Long Beaeli, German Lowenthal, Wm. Baum, Lireruwre. Law Class Football (2); Class Baseball Team (i), (2), (3); Varsity Baseball Team (2), (3) ; Prom Committee (3) ; Class Athletic Manager (4). Lyons, Louis Spitz, San Franeisco, Economics Class Track Team (i), (2), (3), (4) ; Varsity Track Team (I), (2), (3), (4). McComish, Charles Davis, Indiana. Pa., English Euphronia (i), (2), (3), (4); Critic (3); Class Debating Team (2) ; Secretary Intercollegiate Debating Committee (2), (3), (4); English Club (2), (3), (4); Stanford Volunteers (i), (2); Farce Committee (3); Author 03 Plug Ugly ; Author 04 Plug Ugly ; Associate Editor Quad, Vol. IX. ; Author 1904 Junior F arce. McComish, Ralph Clinton, Indiana, Pa., Law Nestoria Debating Society (2), (3), (4); Executive Com- mittee Intersociety Debating League (3), (4); Assistant Daily Palo Alto (i), (2) ; Stanford Society of Volunteers; Class Treasurer (4). IcCracken, Mary Isabel. East Oakland. Physiology Student Assistant in Nature Study since 01 ; Assistant in Zoology (i) ; Hopkins ' Biological Laboratory, Summer Ses- sion, ' 02. 54 jVIcCroskey, Edith Irene ] IcElnay, Elsie, Aladsen, Peter, Maloy, Walter C, Euphronia (2), (3), (4) ; dent (3) ; President (4) Hollistcr, Mathematics Stanford Oakland, Physiology Quad Oakland, German 1904 San Jose, Economics Secretary-Treasurer, Vice-Presi- Chess Club (4) ; Intersociety Pine Indiana, Pcnn., Education Palo Alto, Latin Ddplios, Kan., Law Palo Alto, History History Club (4) ; Senior Plate Plain City, Utah, Chemistry Tokyo, Japan, Zoology Denver, Colo., Chemistry Santa Cm::, German Providence, R. I., Chemistry Debating Committee (4) ; Vice-President Class (i) ; Ugly (3); Debating Finals (2), (3). Alansfield, Edith, Alartin, Homer, Martinson, George, Mathews, Lois Kimball, J V; English Club (4) Committee (4). Maw, Charles Edward, Mayeda, Frank Kinichiro, Alerriam, Cyrus Lincoln, 2A E. Metzler, Anna, Mitchell, John Pearce, Y; Assistant in Chemistry (3), (4). Moore, Luman Gordon, Jr., Kinsman, Ohio, Physiology Band (i), (2), (3), (4); Class Baseball Team (i), (2), (3), (4) ; Class President (4). Morehead, Alma, Chico, Mathematics Morrison, William Gentry, Denver, Colo., Law 2 N; 2 2; ) J c ) ; Member of Court of Abbott ' s Inn ; Member Varsity Mandolin Club (i), (2), (3), (4); Man- ager Mandolin Club (4) ; Senior Week Committee (4) ; Chairman Ball Committee (4). Naramore, Chester, Campbell, Geology Freshman Football Team ; Captain Freshman Track Team ; Varsity Track Team (i), (2), (3), (4); Second Team Football (2); Class Team Football (i), (2), (3), (4); Class Team Track (i), (2), (3), (4) ; President Class (2) ; Athletic Committee (2), (4) ; Business Manager ' 03 Quad; Yell Leader (3); Geology Society (3), (4); President Geology Society (4) ; Encina Club Director (3) ; Chairman Encina Club Social Committee (3), (4) ; Vice- 55 Stanford President Stiuknt I ' -ody (4); Senior Hall Coiiimittec; Senior Quad Promenade Committee; Senior Club (4). J904 Page, Joseph Henry, Hoqniani, Wash., Law Nestoria Debating Society (i), (2), (3), (4); Secretary- Treasurer (2) ; X ce-President (3) : Executive Committee Debating League (3) ; President Debating League (4) ; Intercollegiate Finals (3) ; Intercollegiate Alternate (3) ; Carnot Finals (4) ; Chess Club (3), (4) ; Executive Com- mittee Chess Cltib (3) ; President Chess Club (4) ; Intercol- legiate Chess Team (3) ; Senior Plate Committee (4). Pahl, August Julius, Stockton, Electrical Eng. Palmer, Thomas Earle, Canon City, Colo., Law B H; ( 7 A; Mandolin Club (2), (3), (4); Court of Abbott ' s Inn (4). Parker. Paul Percy, Salinas, History J K E; Press Club (2), (3), (4) ; Associate Editor Quad (3) ; Associate Editor Daily Palo Alto (i), (2) ; Class Football (i), (2), (3), (4) ; Class Baseball (i), (2), (3), (4); Class Track (i), (2); Varsity Track (i); Varsity Baseball (2), (3), (4); Chairman Plug Ugly ; Chairman Sophomore Cotillion Committee ; Executive Com- mittee (3) ; Junior Day Committee. Parsons, Edith Ferris, San Jose, English Assistant Sequoia (3), (4) ; English Club (3), (4) ; Senior Promenade Committee (4). Peckham, Elizabeth A., WatsonviUe, Physiology Member of Board of Directors of Women ' s Athletic Associa- tion (3) ; President (3) ; Member of Executive Committee of Students ' Guild (3) ; Chairman Roble House Committee (4) ; President of Women ' s League (4) ; Chairman Cap and Gown Committee (4) ; Business Manager Women ' s Tennis Squad (4) ; Member Senior Ball Committee (4). Peckham, James Benjamin, San Jose, Law Percival, Harold Spencer, Corning, History Perry, Irvin David, Colton, Education Petersen, Mary Hulda, Fozvler, History Porter, Jennie Sarah, Great Falls, Mont., English Powers, Nelson C, Syracuse. N ' . Y., German Golf Club (Charter lember) (t), (2), (3), (4); Mandolin Club (3), (4), (5); Chess Club (I), (2), (3), (4), (5); 56 President (4) ; Vice-President (5) ; Executive Committee (4), (5); Intercollegiate Chess Team (4), (5); Captain Chess Team (4) ; Second Team (i) ; Class Champion (4) ; Antigone Chorus (4); Pirates of Penzance (4); Festival Choir (4), (5); General Choir (4), (5); Com- mencement Chorus ( I ) , ( 2 j , ( 3 ) ; Leader Spanish Farce Orchestra (5) ; Y. M. C. A. Associate Member (4) ; Active (5) ; Social Service Committee (5). Richards, Charles Maynard, Scvi Jose, Physiology J T J; Glee Club (i), (2). Richmond, Frank Adams, Rcdlaiids, Ritchie, Agnes S., Sf. Helena, Treasurer Girls ' Glee Club (2) ; Treasurer Girls ' Club (3) ; Business Manager Girls ' Glee Club (4). Rixon, Charlotte A., Los Angeles, Roberts, Milnora de Beelen, Palo Alto, Executive Committee of Spanish Club ; Girls ' Club ; Chess Club ; Secretary of Golf Club. Roseberry, Louis Heaton, Sf. Helena, President Philolexian Debating Society, 1900; Student Body Treasurer 1902-1903; Manager 1903. Ross, Hall Carlos, Belmont, Rouiller, Charles August, Paraje, AL M., Rowell, Edna E., Easton, Ryan, John J., Gilroy, A. B., (4); Nestoria Literary Society (i), (2), (3) Vice-President (2) ; History Club (4). Sawyer, Mrs. Frances Caroline San Jose, Zoology History Glee History German Mandolin Law Assistant C iaparral Law Chemistry Physiology History (4); Schanck, Francis Raber, Schwartz, Albert John, A. B. Shadburne, Wade Hampton, Spaulding, Alilo Herrick, Stack, William Joseph, Assistant Editor Sequoia Elsinore, Palo Alto, English Mechanical Eng. Mathematics San Praneiseo, Law Palo Alto, Zoology Santa Cnu:, Latin (i), (2); Associate Editor (3), (4); Band (i), (2), (3), (4); President (4); Eng- lish Club (2), (3), (4) ; French Club (4) ; Orchestra (4) ; Antigone (3); Stafi of Intercollegiau (4). Stanford Quad 1904 57 Stanford Quad 1904 Palo Alto, Sail I ' vaiicisco, San Jose, Los Angeles, Philosophy Chemistry Civil Eng. English San Jose, Romanic Languages Palo Alto, Chemistry Cleveland, Ohio, Latin Paso Robles, Redwood City, Palo Alto, Genoa, Ne7 ' ., Denver, Colo., (jcology and Min. Romanic Lang. Chemistry Law Chemistry Greek History Starl)nck, Mrs. Anna Dillcr, Strange. Uessie Miller, Shelley. Oswald I ' rocter SluM v(i()(l, I ' rances Marie, A. r.. Skinner. I ' Mwin llnnie, Sloan, William Henry, Smith, Corinne E., J r. Smith, I ' anl Lavendee, Smith, Stanley, Sohler, Frank Ernest, Assistant Chemistry. Si)ringmeyer, George, Stephens, Charles Thomas. 2 A E; Mandolin Club (i), (2). Stephenson. Ruth Millicent, Saeraniento A ). Stephenson, Terry Elmo, Orange, Assistant Daily Palo Alto (2) ; Associate (3) ; Managing Editor (4) ; Editor-in-Chief (4) ; Assistant Business Man- ager (4) ; Tennis Manager (3) ; Plug L gly (3) ; Vice- President Class (3) ; Assistant Sequoia (3) ; Associate Sequoia (4) ; Junior Farce Committee (3) ; Undergraduate Editor Alumnus (4) ; Press Club (3), (4) ; English Club (4) ; Chairman Quad Deficit Committee (4) ; Ez ' entng Post (3) ; Oakland Herald (4) ; Class Historian (4) ; Sen- ior Club (4). Sterrett, Roger J., Pasadena. English Euphronia Debating Society (i), (2), (3), (4); English Club (3), (4), (5) ; English Club Executive Committee (4), (5); Press Club (4), (5) ; Assistant Editor Sequoia (2); Associate Editor (3), (4). (5) ; Art Editor Quad (3) ; Author Senior Farce 1902 (4) ; Winner Intercollegiate Prize Story in the San Francisco Post (4) ; Author Class Will 1902 (4) ; Senior Program Committee; Senior Farce Com- mittee, and Senior Arbor Committee (4) ; Old English Play ( Knight of the Burning Pestle ) (5) ; Manager Univer- sity Exhibits, Los Angeles (1899), San Francisco (1901) ; Assistant to Secretary (2), (3), (4) ; Studio Assistant in Drawing (2). 58 Stillman, Cara, Palo Alto, English Stanford K A 0; Chairman of Tennis Committee of Women ' s Athletic Quad Association (i) ; Vice-President Women ' s League (4). 1904 Stillman, Nlinna, Palo Alto, Mathematics K A0. Suhr, Rebecca S., San Bernardino, Law Swickard, Andrew, East San Jose, Civil Eng. Swing, A ' illiam Walter, San Bernardino, Education Thayer, Edward Irving, Denver, Colo., Law 2AE; ( J ; MandoHn Club (i), (2), (3), (4); Manager (3) ; Euphronia Debating Society (4) ; Abbott ' s Inn Moot Court ; Senior Reception Committee (4) ; President of Musical Clubs (4). Thomas, Charles Wilbur, Jr., JJ oodland, Greek Assistant Encina Gymnasium (4); Gymnasiiun Club (3), (4) ; Secretary-Treasurer (4) ; President (4) ; Press Club (4) ; Sword and Sandals (4) ; Foil and Mask (4) : Plug Ugly (3) ; Farce Committee (3) ; Antigone (3) ; English Play (4) ; Assistant Editor Daily Palo Alto (3) ; Associate Editor (3), (4) ; News Editor (4) ; Senior Week Com- mittee (4) ; Finance Committee (4) ; Farce Committee (4) ; Chairman Prom Committee (4). Thomas, ] Ionroe Hardon, Palo Alto, Law Thompson, Andrew G., Needy, Ore., Law Nestoria Debating Society (3), (4) ; A ' ice-President (4) ; Intercollegiate Finals (3). Tompkins, Clara Alice, Paris. III.. Botany Truesdell, Amelia ' oodward, San Praucisco, English Turner. James Ernest. Kansas City, Mo., German J T J; Alember of Foil and Alask (4) ; Member of Chess Club (2), (4) ; Member of Tennis Club (4). Waite, Charles Edgar, Ri-c ' erside, Economics J ©; Press Club (3), (4). Walker, ] Irs. Edna Rawlings, Palo Alto, German Walker, Wm. Lester, Monrovia, Geology and ' Win. Walling, ' m. Benson, Erie, Pa., English k 2 Whitaker, William Franklin, Bahersfield. Civil Eng. Y; Glee Club (i), (2), (3) ; Manager (3) ; Sophomore Cotillion Committee (2). 59 Stanford Quad 1904 White, May ' 1 lon hton, McrccJ, Zoology Wilbur, Theresa May, Los Angeles, Mathematics rresideiit ' oinii;- Women ' s Christian Association (3), (4); l resident Women ' s League (3) ; Secretary 03 Class (4) ; Director Students ' Cuild (3) ; Secretary Women ' s Athletic Association (3) ; Senior Hat Committee (4) ; Senior Plate Committee (4); Senior Promenade Committee (4). Williams, Ansel Smith, Williams, William Alfred, Winans, Claude Ownliy, Wood, Ella Gertrude, Wooster, Charles Bassett, Worstell, Lawrence Evert, Young, Charles Newton, Zint, Harry Lee, Zschokke, Theodore Christian, Los Angeles, San Migncl, San Jose, Pasadena, Eden J ' ale, JJ ' allaee, hlalio, Pomona, Denver, Colo., Palo Alto, History Geology Law English Law Law Civil Engineering- Romanic Lang. History 60 Junior Class First Semester President O. C. Spencer Vice-President O. H. Ritter Secretary Pearl Bartlett Treasurer W. D. Patterson Sergeant-at-Arnis J. C. Taylor Athletic lana er F. S. Holman Officers Second Semester C. R. Blodgett W. E. ] IcWethy W. B. Chandler E. G. Brua O. C. Spencer H. L. Hamilton Junior Committees Prom Committee AJiss AI. R. E. Vorhes H. AL Lewis jNIiss L B. Henzel F. Roehr A. S. Henley, Chairman C. T. AFax waring Farce Committee Miss E. T- Brown C. L. Duncan F. W. Powell F. P. Wpiitaker AIiss I. A. ' RiGnT, Chairman Junior Day Committee O. E. Hyde V. E. Tritch L. P. Bansdach O. C. Spencer, Chairman Yell: Naiiglit-foiir, JJ ' c Roar! IV c Roar, Naug if-foiir! Stanford ! 6i Miss E. U. Hale W. B. Chandler F. H. Fowler F. S. H()l:man F. Dunn Stanford Quad 1904 Stanford Quad 1904 The first 326 representatives of the Nawtifore family came to the Palo Alto country late in August of the year 1900. It will thus be seen that they are not to be numl ered among the pioneers of the new land of Quad, but, as we shall show, form a body of solid citizens, many of whom have been and will yet be of distinguished service to the college public. They arrived in the settlement by many routes. Some had made the tedious overland pilgrimage from the far East ; others, from the North and the South, had braved the nauseating Pacific ; but all, arrived at the Golden Gate, came by the same shining path, past the High Tree, straight through the Big Arch to the Court of Palms. On September 13th, almost immediately after they had made out papers of naturalization, the strong organizing spirit always prominent in the family showed itself in a gathering for purposes of forming a govern- ment. Recent settlers in the regi on made some disturbance at this conclave, but law and order triumphed, and the Nawti fores thenceforth had executive officers and a code of laws. The chief magistrate elected at this time was F. Roehr Nawtifore. On the following da} ' the oratorical branch of the family formed into a league for practice in parliamentary debate. This early start, the first move of the sort ever made by immigrants in this place, augured well for the future eminence of the family in debate. It had been evident ever since the arrival of the family that certain of the newcomers were most proficient in games peculiar to the new land. The chief among these sports was a contest for an inflated pig- 62 skin, highly esteemed by the opposing sides. Aborigines from the Stanford mountain of Tamalpais, dwellers in the Hall of Peralta, and youths Quad from the near-by village school, all suffered defeat at the hands of the 1904 strong and agile Nawtifores. Finally in one great contest, on the 27th of October, 1900, they put to rout the new settlers of Berkeley Hills, across the bay from the Palo Alto country, giving them five times as good as they sent. The leader in this glorious victory was L. Bansbach Nawtifore, of the Germanic branch of the family, a most true and valiant member. Leagued with him were those Nawtifores commonly known as Hall, Clarke, Kennedy, Moore, Stanford, Young, Frederick- son, W. Taylor, Lunt, Lemmon, and McFadden, all loyal men and brave. Great surprise was occasioned by this victory, and the older residents, who had heretofore looked with some suspicion upon the immigrants, now began to treat them with a growing respect. To celebrate so great a victory, the populace was bidden to a fete on December 7th, and everybody made merry till morning ended the Glee. Late in January of 1901 the new settlers elected their second chief executive, this time Wood Nawtifore. During his administration several noteworthy events occurred. First, a precious cup was won at the Olympic races, by five fleet runners from the Palo Alto country, two of whom belonged to the already illustrious family. They were Sprague and J. Taylor Nawtifore. The next event was the winning of a championship hotly contested among the old settlers, but fairly won by an agile Nawtifore whose Christian name was Dunn. This feat, for which the prize was a belt of wondrous workmanship, he performed again the following year, to the great joy of the entire family. On jMarch 29th of this year, some residents who had settled in the Land of the High Tree two years before the great family, celebrated a day of games, feasting and dancing, with joy to all concerned. Although mere guests at this jubilee, the winners of honor in the games were Lewis the Big, Dunn, Sprague, Taylor, Henley, Preston, Nichols, Bubb, Lamb, and McFadden, all Nawtifores, many of whom were already in the public eye as influential and rising citizens. Lastly, on the 12th of April following, those silver-tongued mem- bers who had early formed their debating confederation gloriously triumphed over the uppish settlers of one year before, and, through Roehr, Wood, and Spencer Nawtifore, brought fresh laurels to the family tree. During the summer ensued a period of migration, and not until September 23d of that year, 1901, did the family formally meet once 63 Stanford more. Tlieir number was now much diminished ; some members, worn Quad out by the struook of the settler ' s Hfe, had returned home in weariness 1904 durino- the first year; others had failed to return for the second year of colonization ; but the stroni -est and fittest had survived. Thomas Nawtifore was made chief officer for one term. While the family had been journeyino- durin|t;- the summer months, a most irritating- company of newcomers had usurped many of the old haunts of the Nawtifores, and when these interlopers, after rej eated urgings from former inhabitants, showed a desire for organization, the family was forced to see that things were not made too easv in com- parison with the struggles which they themselves had been forced to undergo but one year since. The next excitement was purely political. Several members evidenced ambitions for holding the reins of government in the family. After a heated campaign, J. Taylor Nawtifore was placed in the seat of the mighty, and peace was restored, all feuds being healed by the great Cotillion spectacle which the family united in giving on Februarv 24, 1902. A month later, stout lads from the shire of Ukiah were sadly worsted in field games with many redoubtable scions of the house, among whom were Hamilton, Dunn. Hyde, Henley, Watson, Taylor, Holman, Grossman, Whitaker, and Luce Nawtifore. ( )n the i8th of April, three members of the debating branch of the house, Lewis the Big, Roehr, and Spencer Nawtifore, met the new settlers in a fair field, and excelled their best speakers in open argument. Soon afterwards the family resolved to issue a book of archives of its doughty deeds and those of other excellent habitues of the Court of Palms, choosing as main scribe L Russell Nawtifore, and as keeper of the purse strings, Henley Nawtifore. They, with many kin, both men and women, have labored full sore for the sake of their common name up to this very day. After another interval of migration, the chief magistrate elected was the eloquent Spencer Nawtifore, and there followed him his cousin, C. Blodgett Nawtifore. On October i th of 1902 the family adopted, rather than a coat-of-arms, an emblazoned hat as its symbol, and none dares wear it save these noble kinsmen. On the night when this emblem was adopted, much music was heard, fairy queens appeared, and a most wonderful pageant delighted the entire countryside. Soon after, Bansbach of the Germanic branch was chosen by all the inhabi- tants to lead their eleven strongest men against the eleven strongest citizens of the land across the bay, in a fierce struggle to take place in 64 November of 1903. This contest will, no doubt, redound to the glory of the house of Nawtifore, as when in the past this doughty son led on to victory. On February 13, 1903, the family was again honored by Lewis the Big, Roehr, and Ritter Nawtifore, who worthily contested for the Palo Alto folk in the matter of a golden medal which was finally taken across the water a short distance. It is understood, however, that this transaction was in the nature of a loan, and that the trinket will be returned in due time. On March 27th, the Nawtifore kith and kin had a day of festivity, Avith games galore, and a Promenade or characteristic dance, at night, which amazed the elders much by its complete success. Although the events above recorded represent the chief public services of the family of Nawtifore, many other members have been most useful and popular figures in the Land of the Big Arch. Some of these are writers of story, josh, or verse ; some are musicians, remem- bered even yet in A ' ancouver, maybe ; a few are artists, and delight the souls of many with their productions ; nearly all are members of societies for difl: erent objects ; and more than we could name are jolly good fellows, which nobody can deny. So, on the whole, here ' s to the good health of the Nawtifore family, and may their memory live long in the Land of the Big Tree, and especially in the Court of Palms, where in the future the name of Nawtifore will perchance be found abundantly in those tales beginning ff Onc pon Stanford Quad 1904 Alice Kimball Nawtifore. — ' ■Chaparral :l Audci- uu R ' . Balle, Miss S. M. Barnhouse, Miss M r.aiim, Miss M. H. Ashley, Miss F. J Bansbach, L. P. Barrett, R. W. Bean Mi ' ; ; T. L. Baker, C. H. Barkan, H. Bartlett, Miss P. M. Pesbe, G. H. Baldwin, Miss C. h. Barnett, R. G. BartTLtT, Miss M. M Beebe, Mi?« T.. Beggs, MiSh L. M. Boulware, Miss L. Bruckman, Miss G. H. Butterfield, H. G. Blake, W. H. Brown, Miss E. J. Bubb, B. C. Caldwell, A. A. Blodget, C. K Brown, H. C. Buriiai), Miss C M. Car , Miss I. L. Bootes, Miss B. B. Brua, E. G. Burnham.MissM.S Chandler, W B. V. 1 Davenport, MissN. C Downing, Miss M. Duval, E. H. I ' -irebaugli, C. L. Dawson, P. B. Duncan, C. L. Edgerly, Miss E. F p-oster. Miss E. H. Deal, W.G. Dunn, Miss A. L. Edwards, G. W. Foster, MissM.C De Witt, M. E. Dunn, W. F. Fifield, Miss E. M. Fowler. F. H. ;X- V) Freeman, Miss E. Fukukita, . Green, L. P. Gridley, Miss K. L. Hamilton, H. L. Hampson, A. A. Hatliwuv, Miss A. AT. Henley, A. S. GaiKUt, G. L. Guidery, Miss M. Harrenstein, Miss F. Henzel, Miss I. B. Hill, Miss B. F. Hoops, W. W. Hyde, O. E. Jones, A. Hohl, L. L. Hunter, T. B. Iriya, M. E. Kent, Miss A F Holmaii. 1 . S. Hurlbut, W. W. James, C. C. Kennedv, KT. F. Holt, Miss G. Hvatt, Miss T. Johnston, J. L. Kerr, Miss F. I, = ' 1 kimliill Iibs A W Kimball, Miss R. L. Kip. Miss K. R. Klaint, A. 1. 1 Laiiagan, . H. l.i.-wers. Miss E. Lewis, De L. Lewis, H. M. , 1 Levus, M. S. Lunt, J. C. Lyman, E. D. McFadden, R. J. 1 McGihray, A. B C McNaught, C. S. McNaught, H. C. McNee, A. E. F J ■ V v:o McWethy, VV. K. Mirsky, Miss M. M Moran, H. A ' I ' Neal, J.P. Manwaring, C. T. Montgomery, S. T Morin, W. J. Park, R. N. Maulsby, Miss L. A. Moore, Miss G. E. Nims, J. Park, Miss S. R. Miller, E. E. Moore, G. H. North, Miss H. K. Parkhurst. Miss M. A .IB r m m B sf r mm s ±2i|i ' « W M , . .1 ii- M i; RowHI. Miss B. C. Rusk, Miss H. Russell, I. r wilo, Hi. Schulz, I,. E. Scott, Miss A. L. Scoville, H. F Seibert, I). K. Sherry, R. H. Shields, H. Silvev, A. Smith, Miss G M. Smith, T.. E. Smith, Miss M. B. Soul6, Miss C. ( .s ' -- — • ■ ' i . Spencer, O. C. Swinerton, A. B. Thomson, W. H. Tucker, F. B. Sprague, M H. Sirassburger, L. Sweetman, Miss C. F. Taylor, J. C. Thomas, M. A. Thompson, C. S. Trader, Miss K. L. Traphagen, Miss K. E. Tritch, W. E. Van Dine, M. E. Van Norden, M. L. Vorhes, Miss M. E. Weller, Miss F. L. iley, D. C. Wolcott, O. G. ' eiinglon, H H. Waring. G. A. Wilson, A. M. Worstell.H.E. ocl) Miss B. M. Wheeler, H. D. Wilson, O. A. Wright, Miss E. M. Vocii, Miss E. C. Whitaker, F. P. Winder, C. B. Wright, Miss I. A. Young, W =H- Sophomore Class Officers First Semester President O. S. Lousley Vice-President F. G. Smith Secretary G. R. Stevens Treasurer P. W. Avery Sergeant-at-Arms J. Coleman Second Semester President J- P- Davidson Vice-President W. E. Crawford Secretary W. H. Dole Treasurer I. H. Sevier Athletic Manager R. C. Nissen Sergeant-at-Arms F. G. Smith Yell: Naiighty--fi-c ' e! Naughty-five! Rah! Rah! Rah! Naitgh ty-five ! Naugh ty-Uve ! Rah! Rah! Rah! Stanford! Stanford! NaugJity-five ! Naughty-five ! Rah! Rah! Rah! ' Stanford Quad 1904 Resigned. 91 Stanford Quad 1904 YyM f;,. Freshman Class Officers First Semester President R. Howard Vice-President P. B. Smith Secretary IMrs. G. Allen Treasurer P. P. Bliss Second Semester President J. E. Campbell Vice-President G. G. Altnow Secretary E. V. Henley Treasurer C. A. Bali, Sergeant-at-Arms R. Howard Athletic Tanager F. L. Turpin Yell: Rickety! Rackety! Red Ro! Rix! Rah! Rah! Stanford! Naughty-six! ♦Resigned. 92 A Lagunita Fancy — ' ' Chaparra University Days Stanford Quad 1904 Junior Day Program Thursday, March 26, 1903 ], junior Farce In the Chitches of the Baron Assembly Hall. 8 p. m. Friday, March 27, 1903 Interclass Field AJeet .... Oval, 10 A. M. Uaseball — Varsity t ' .y. Independents . . 3 P- M. Junior Prom Encina Club Room, 8 p. m. Stanford Founders ' Day— March 9, 1 903 Quad 1904 Memorial Church Services ] Iarch 8, 1903 Organ — Prelude •. Reincke Ave ?ilaria ' erdi Scripture Sentence Lord ' s Prayer Hymn Psalter— Psalm XXIV First Lesson- — Selections from the Book of Proverbs. Hymn Second Lesson — Revelations VH Prayers Sermon — A Type of American Manhood . . . . ' Rev. R. Heber Newton Hymn Prayer and Benediction Organ Postlude — Larghetto Franck Memorial Day— May 1 4, 1 902 Chapel, 8 :oo p. m. PROGRAM Song — The Winter Hath Not a Blossom (Reincke) • . Girls ' Glee Club Vocal Solo — When the Heart is Young .... Miss Agatha Cummings Selection — Tristesse Girls ' Mandolin Club Reading — Swing Low, Sweet Chariot .... Miss Agatha Cummings Violin Solo — Scene Decollete Edward H. Williams, ' 02 Address Professor B. E. Howard Selection — Hail. Stanford, Hail! Girls ' Glee Club 98 Dedication of Memorial Church Stanford Sunday, January 25, 1903 Juaci 1904 MORNING SERVICE — II a. m. Organ Prelude — ' ' Larghetto (Best) Arthur Scott Brook Organist Sentence The Rev. D. Charles Gardner Cliaplaiii Prayer The Rev. John Hemphill, D. D. Cak ' ary Presbyterian ChurcJi, San Francisco Hymn Nettleton Reading from the Psalter— Psalm 84 ... . The Rev. Bradford Leavitt Pastor of the First Unitarian Church, San Francisco Anthem — The Marvelous Work Behold Haydn First Lesson — Solomon ' s Prayer at the Dedication of the Temple (11 Chron- icles, Chapter 6) Rabbi Jacob Voorsanger Tcniph Emanuel, San Francisco Hymn Manoah Second Lesson — Selections from the New Testament . The Rev. C.R.Brown Pastor of the First Congregational Church, Oakland Prayer The Rev. E. R. Dille First Methodist Church, Oakland Anthem — And the Glory of the Lord Shall Be Revealed . . . . Handel Sermon The Rev. R. Heber Newton, D. D. Prayer of Dedication The Rev. R. Heber Newton Hymn Homburg Prayer The Rev. C. M. Hill Pastor of the Tenth Avenue Baptist Church, Oakland Benediction The Rev. R. C. Foute, D. D. Rector of Grace Church, San Francisco National Hymn Smith Organ Postlude — Memorial Alarch A. Scott Brook AFTERNOON SERVICE— 3 30 p. m. Organ Prelude — Consolation Mendelssohn Hymn Park Street Address The Rev. R. C. Foute, D. D. Organ — Grand Offertoire in D Minor Batiste Anthem — Achieved is the Glorious Work Haydn Address The Rev. D. Charles Gardner Contralto Solo — O Divine Redeemer Gounod Organ — Fantasie in C Minor Lemmens Address The Rev. F. W. Clampett, D. D. Trinity Churcli, San Francisco Hymn Belmont Prayers Benediction Hallelujah Chorus (Handel) Festival Choir 99 Stanford Laying of Gymnasium Corner-Stone Quad I QAj December ii, 1902 PROGRAM iMiisic — Hail, Stanford, Hail! Band Invocation Dr. R. lleber Newton Address President David Starr Jordan Master of Ceremonies Address Dr. Frank Angell C. ' iainuan faeully Cuiniiiiftee on Athleties History of Gj ' mnasium Charles W. Thomas, ' 03 Congratulatory Address Helen K. North, ' 04 President Roble Gyuiiiasiuin Club Raising of Flag Music — America Band Address Howard S. Lee, 03 Captain Football Team Address Frederick A. Brown, ' 03 Captain Baseball Team Address John C. JMcCaughern, ' 03 Captain Track Team Address Cleveland H. Baker, 04 Manager Tennis Team Address ... Royce R. Long, ' 05 President Stanford Gynmasittm Club Music — Referee Alarch Band Address Carl F. Dittmar, 03 President Associated Students Laying of Stone H. W. Chappel, ' 01 Benediction Rev. D. Charles Gardner Fraternities Stanford Quad 1904 Zeta Psi i Lasuen Street Phi Delta Theta 6 Lasuen Street Phi Kappa Psi 359 Emerson Street Phi Gamma Delta Sigma Nu ,5 Alvarado Street Sigma Chi ,0 Lasuen Street Alpha Tau Omega Sigma Alpha Epsilon 6 Salvatierra Street Delta Tau Delta 7 Lasuen Street Beta Theta Pi n Lasuen Street Chi Psi 12 Salvatierra Street Kappa Alpha Delta Upsilon S Salvatierra Street j-Sigma Rho Eta (Local) Phi Delta Phi Kappa Sigma 12a Lasuen Street Delta Kappa Epsilon 12I) Lasuen Street Theta Delta Chi ♦Charters revoked. fNo longer in existence. 105 Stanford Quad 1904 Zeta Psi Mu Chapter, Established October 5, 1H91 F rater in Facilitate J(iHi - Maxson Stillman Fratres in Universitate 1903 ALTER EEfv ' EDUT 1 ARNHISEL MoRACE Clarence Hubbard Harry Hunt Atkinson 1904 Cleveland Hall Baker Robert Nym Park Clarence Tryon Manwaring George Vance La wry Edgar Stillman Harry Edward Bush 1905 Hubert Harry Hall Ralph Edward Renaud Roy Chilton Leib Paul Rcckey Seymour Thomas Montgomery John Titus Cooper Harmon Storer Bonte Elisha Swift Torrance Andrew Hilliard Lett Stanley Guion Jewett Robert Arthur Williams Harry James Litt Charles Brewster Nims 106 Zeta Psi Founded at New York, June i, 184; Stanford Quad 1904 Chapter Roll Phi, New York University Zeta, Williams College Delta, Rutgers College Sigma, University of Pennsylvania Chi, Colby College Epsilon, Brov n University Kappa, Tufts College Tau, Lafayette College Upsilon, University of North Carolina Xi, University of Michigan Lambda, Bowdoin College Beta, University of Virginia Psi, Cornell University Iota, University of California Theta Xi, University of Toronto Alpha, Columbia University Alpha Psi, McGill University Nu, Case School of Applied Sciences Eta, Yale University ]Mu, Leland Stanford. Jr., LTniversity Alpha Beta, University of Minnesota Alumni Associations Northwestern Association of Zeta Psi, Chicago, 111. Capital City Association of Zeta Psi, Washington, D. Zeta Psi Association, Cleveland, Ohio Zeta Psi Club, New York City Metropolitan Chapter of Zeta Psi, Philadelphia, Pa. New England Chapter of Zeta Psi, Boston, Mass. Pacific Association of Zeta Psi, San Francisco, Cal. Color : White Yell: Rah! Rah! Zeta! Rah! Rah! Psi! Rah, Rah! Rah, Rah. Zeta Psi! 109 Stanford Quad 1904 Phi Delta Theta California Beta Chapter, Established October 22, 1891 Fratres in Facultate Vernon Lyman Kellogg, M. S. Harold Heath, A. B. Ellwood p. Cubberley, A. B. Halcott Cadwallader Moreno, A. B. John Ezra McDowell, A. B. Leander Mn.LER Hoskins, M. S., C. E. Fratres in Universitate Graduate Webster Guy Heinly, Knox, oi 1903 Charles Edgar Waite Edgar Augustus Behlow Ralph Dennison Frisselle George Herbert Clark Edward Irving Frisselle Samuel Parker Frisselle Theodore Willard Brotherton, Jr. 1904 Alfred Bingham Swinerton Emil Valentine Kehrlein, Jr. Oliver DuFrEsne Kehrlein William Ross Taylor Noel Swane Burge 190S Frank Ammon Kitching James L. nder Gamble George Edwin Gamble Lawrence Bogle John Peck Irish, Jr. 1906 Cloyd George Guyer George De Forest Barnett John Colbert George Ashmun Hodge Alphj Quebec Alpha, McGill University Maine Alpha, Colby College New Hampshire Alpha, Dartmouth College Vermont Alpha, University of Vermont Massachusetts Alpha, Williams College Massachusetts Beta, Amherst College Rhode Island Alpha, Brovyn University New York Alpha, Cornell University New York Beta, Union University Phi Delta Theta Founded at Miami University, 1848 Chapter Roll Province Stanford Quad 1904 New York Delta, Columbia University New York Epsilon, Syracuse University Pennsylvania Alpha, Lafayette College Pennsylvania Beta, Pennsylvania College Pennsylvania Gamma, Washington and Jeffer- son College Pennsylvania Delta, Allegheny College Pennsylvania p;psilon, Dickinson College Pennsylvania Zeta, University of Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Eta, Lehigh University Beta Province Virginia Beta, University of Virginia Virginia Gamma, Randolph-Macon College Virginia Zeta, Washington and Lee University North Carolina Beta, University of North Caro- Gamma Province Kentucky Alpha-Delta, Central University Kentucky Epsilon, Kentucky State College Tennessee Alpha, Vandeibilt University Tennessee Beta, University of the South Georgia Alpha, University of Georgia Georgia Beta, Emory College Georgia Gamma, Mercer University Georgia Delta, Georgia School of Technology Alabama Alpha, University of Alabama Alabama Beta, Alabama Polytechnic Institute Delta Province Ohio Alpha, Miami University Ohio Zeta, Ohio State University Ohio Beta, Ohio Wesleyan University Ohio Eta, Case School of Applied Science Ohio Gamma, Ohio University Ohio Theta, University of Cincinnati Michigan Alpha, University of Michigan Epsilon Province Indiana Alpha, Indiana University Indiana Delta, Franklin College Indiana Beta, Wabash College Indiana Epsilon, Hanover College Indiana Gamma, isutler College Indiana Zeta, DePauw University Indiana Theta, Purdue University. Zeta Province Illinois Alpha, Northwestern University Illinois Beta, University of Chicago Illinois Delta, Knox College Illinois Zeta. Lombard College Illinois Eta, University of Illinois Wisconsin Alpha, University of Wisconsin Minnesota Alpha, University of Minnesota Colorado Alpha, Iowa Alpha, Iowa Wesleyan University Iowa Beta, University of Iowa Missouri Alpha, University of Missouri Missouri Beta, Westminster College Missouri Gamma, Washington University Kansas Alpha, University of Kansas Nebraska Alpha, I ' niversity of Nebraska University of Colorado Eta Province Mississippi Alpha, University of Mississippi Texas Beta, University of Texas Louisiana Alpha, Tulane University of Louisiana Texas Gamma, Southwestern University Theta Province California Alpha, University of California Washington Alpha, University of Washington California Beta, Leland Stanford Junior University Boston, Mass. Harvard University Providence, R. I. New York, N. Y. Syracuse, N. Y. Schenectady, N. Y. Baltimore, Md. Pittsburg. Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Washington. D. C. Richmond, Va. Louisville, Ky. Nashville, Tenn. Columbus, Ga. Atlanta, Ga. Macon, Ga. Montgomery, Ala. Alumni Clubs Selma, . la. Birmingham, Ala. Mobile, Ala. New Orleans, La. Cincinnati, Ohio Akron, Ohio Cleveland, Ohio Columbus, Ohio Athens, Ohio Toledo, Ohio Hamilton, Ohio Detroit, Mich. P ' ranklin, Ind. Indianapolis, Ind. Crawfordsville, Ind. Chicago, 111. Galesburg, 111. LaCrosse, Wis. Milwaukee, Wis. Menasha, Wis. Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minn. Kansas City, Mo. St. I.ouis, Mo. Omaha, Neb. Denver, Col. Meridian, Miss. Austin, Texas Salt Lake City, Utah San Francisio, Cal. Los Angeles, Cal. Spokane, Wa.sh. Seattle, Wash. Stanford Quad 1904 Phi Kappa Psi California Beta Chapter, Established November lo, 1891 Fratres in Fa cilitate George Cram Cook, A. B. Thomas Andrew Storey Ph. D. Fratres in Universitate 1902 Keith Eli hue Wigle 1903 Jesse Douglas Carr Vn.DER Taylor 1904 Henry Herbert Yerington William Griffith Deal George Francis Sanborn Waldemar Young Karl Forsythe Kennedy 1905 Leroy Gore Dinwoodey Walter Hubert Evans Lynville Calder Riter Lee Foreman Lltcas John Graham Wood 1906 Doxey Robert Wilson Henry Riley ] Iadden . ...U W i li ildl 114 Phi Kappa Psi Founded at Washington and JefFerson College, 1852 Chapter Roll Stanford Quad 1904 Petitisylvaaia Alpha, Washington and Jefferson College Pennsylvania Beta, Allegheny College Pennsylvania Gamma, Bucknell University Pennsylvania Epsilon, Pennsylvania College Pennsylvania Zeta, Dickersou College Pennsylvania Eta, Franklin and Marshall Col- lege Pennsylvania Theta, Ivafayette College Pennsylvania Iota, University of Pennsylvania Pennsvlvania Kappa, Swartlunore College New York Alpha. Cornell University New York Beta, Syracuse University Neve York Gamma, Columbia University New York Epsilon, Colgate University New York Zeta, Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute Massachusetts Alpha, Amherst College Rhode Island Alpha, Brown University New Hampshire Alpha, Dartmouth College Virginia Alpha, University of Virginia Virginia Beta. ' Washington and Lee University West Virginia Alpha, University of West Virginia Maryland Alpha, Johns Hopkins University Mississippi Alpha, University of Mississippi Tennessee Delta, Vanderbilt University Ohio Alpha, Ohio Wesleyan University Ohio Beta, Wittenberg College Ohio Delta, Ohio State University Indiana Alpha, DePauw University Indiana Beta, Indiana State University Indiana Delta, Purdue University Illinois Alpha, Northwestern University Illinois Beta, University of Chicago Michigan Alpha, University of Michigan Wisconsin Alpha, University of Wisconsin Wisconsin Gamma, Beloit College Iowa Alpha, University of Iowa M innesota Beta, University of Minnesota Kansas Alpha, University of Kansas Nebraska Alpha, University of Nebraska California Beta, Leland Stanford Jr. University California Gamma. University of California Alumni Associations Philadelphia Newark Washington Bucyrus Anderson Minneapolis San Francisco Omaha Johnstown Pittsburg New York City Cleveland Indianapolis Chicago Denver Cincinnati Boston Salt Lake City Meadville Buffalo Springfield Toledo Kansas City Portland Columbus Seattle Uuluth Color? : Pink and Lavender Flower : Sweet Pea Yell: High: High! High! Phi Ka pa Psi! Life ever, die never! Phi Kapfa Psi! Stanford Quad 1904 Sigma Nu 5eta Chi Cliaptcr, Established November 17, iSgr Fratres in Universitate 1903 William Gentry [Morrison Edward Fogg Harold Davis AIortenson Howard Shields Lee Harry Lee Morrison Edward Augustus Smith, Jr. Cornelius D. Hauverman 1904 Hector Cowan McNaught Louis Philip Banseach Lewis Everett Fuller Alfred Aubert Hampson Alexander Beaton Carey AIcGilvray Otto Karl Grau Paul Albert Tarpey 190 = Leo Daniel Byrne David Dominick Tarpey Eugene Howard ] IcGibbon John Gibson Chenery 1906 John Hearne Hopkins Floyd Light Turpin 118 Sigma Nu Founded at Virginia Military Institute, 1864 Stanford Quad 1904 Chapter Roll Beta, University of Virginia Delta, University of South Carolina Zeta, Central University Eta, Mercer University Theta, University of Alabama Kappa, North Georgia A. and M. College Lambda, Washington and i,ee University Mu, University of Georgia Nu, University of Kansas Xi, Emory College Omicron, Bethel College Pi, Lehigh University Kho, Missouri State University Sigma, Vanderbilt University Upsilon. University of Texas Phi, Louisiaui State University Psi, University of North Carolina Beta Phi, Tulane University Beta Beta, DePauw University Beta Zeta, Purdue University Beta Theta, Alabama A. and M. College Beta Mu, University of Iowa Gamma Theta, Beta Nu, Ohio State University Beta Rho, University of Pennsylvania BetaXi, William Jewell College Beta Sigma, University cf Vermont Beta Chi, Stanford University Beta Psi, University of California Beta Tau. North Carolina College of A. and M. Beta Upsilon, Rose Polytechnic lust, of Arts. Delta Theta, Lombard University Gamma Gamma, Albion College Gamma Alpha, Georgia School of Technology Gamma Delta, Stevens Institute Gamma Beta, Northwestern University Gamma Epsilon, Lafayette College Gamma Chi, University of Washington Gamma Zeta, University of Oregon Gamma Kappa, Colorado State School of Mines. Gamma Lambda, University of Wisconsin Gamma Mu, Illinois State University Gamma Nu, University of Michigan Gamma Iota, Kentucky State University Gamma Kappa, Colorado State University Cornell Universitv Alumni Associations Dallas, Texas New Orleans, La. Belle Plains, la. Brookfield, Wis. New York City, N. V. Columbus, Ohio Chicago, 111. Shelbyville, Ky. St. Louis, Mo. Seattle, Wash. Athens, Ga. Atlanta, Ga. Charlotte, N. C. Bessemer, Ala. Louisville, Ky. Birmingham, Ala. ,San Francisco, Cal. Kansas City, Mo. Greencastle, Ind. Tacoraa, Wash. Colors : Black, White and Gold Flower: White Rose Yell: Rah! Rail! Rah! L. S. I. U.! Beta Chi Chapter! Sigma Nu! 121 Stanford Quad 1904 Sigma Chi Alpha Omega Chapter, Established December 19, 1891 Frater in Facilitate Charles Reynolds Bkown, A. B. Fratres in Universitate Graduates John Francis Cowan, A. B. Edward W. Hope 1903 Frank Waite Bennett Georce II. Lutgerding JcsEPH Adams AIiller 1904 Ralph Harrison Sherry Ludlow H. Van der Burgh W. Douglas Carter 1905 Manville Hewitt Sprague A. Bartlett Ross Henry Austin Daggett Rudolf C Bertheau Ross Stagg Carter Kenneth Tuttle ly ' ....Jfljjlj l ll ■ H ' i s liit. Bii. ' ' :• P IK ' i M i . B . V « K H| H L - x TrS K i c !l,l aM - 4L l l 5 HP3 nj ■i Sigma Chi Founded at Miami University, 1855 Stanford Quad 1904 Chapter Roll Alpha, Miatai University Beta, University of Wooster Gamma, The Ohio Weslej ' au University Epsilon, Columbian University Zeta, Washington and l,ee University Eta, the University of Mississippi Theta, Pennsylvania College Kappa, Bucknell University Lambda, Indiana University Mu, Denison University Xi, De Pauw University Omicron, Dickinson College Rho, Butler College Phi, Lafayette College Chi, Hanover College Psi. The University of Virginia Omega, The Northwestern Universit} ' Alpha Alpha, Hobart College Alpha Beta, The University of California Alpha Gamma, Ohio State University Alpha Eta, The State University of Iowa Alpha Epsilon, The University of Nebraska Alpha Zeta, Beloit College Alpha Theta, Mass. Institute of Technology Alpha Iota, The Illinois Wesleyan University Alpha Lamba, The University of Wisconsin Alpha Nu, The University of Texas Alpha Xi, the University of Kansas Alpha Omicron, Tulane University Alpha Pi, Albion College Alpha Rho, Lehigh University Alpha Sigma, The University of Minnesota Alpha Upsilon, The University ot S. California Alpha Phi, Cornell University Alpha Chi, Pennsylvania State College Alpha Psi, Vanderbilt University Alpha Omega, Leland Stanford Jr. University Delta Delta, Purdue Universitv Zeta Zeta, Centre College Zeta Psi, The Universitv of Cincinnati Eta Eta, Dartmouth College Theta Theta, The University of Michigan Kappa Kappa, The University of Illinois Lambda Lambda, Kentucky State College Mu Mu, West Virginia University Nu Nu, Columbia University- Xi Xi, The University of State of Missouri Omicron Omicron, The University of Chicago Rho Rho, The University of Maine Phi Phi, The University- of Pennsylvania New York Philadelphia Chicago Nashville Cincinnati Indianapolis Alumni Chapters New Orleans Milwaukee Boston Cohunbus St. Paul, Minnneapolis Washington Denver Kansas City Springfield, 111. San Francisco Alumni Associations Western New York State of Washington Colors : Blue and Gold Flower : Miite Rose 125 Stanford Quad 1904 Sigma Alpha Epsilon California Alpha Chapter, l ' ' ,stablished March 5, 1892 Fratres in Universitate 1902 CiiAULKs Thomas Stephens Kenneth Farra Cooper Cyrus Lincoln .Merkia.m IIarkv Avery Campbell Joseph Burt Gildersleeve 903 Royden James Keith Edward Irving Thayer Richard Emerson Warfield 1904 illiam Horton Blake William Harry Lanagan Edward Dean Lyman Edwin Whitman Prentice Orrin Allen Wilson Raymond G. Barnett 1 90s George Dean Lyman Harold Eaton Philip K. Funke Wesley Ellsworth Crothers Franklin Burris Goudy 1906 Herbert Compton Howard Gecrge Wade Mcintosh Dudley Daniel Sales Robert Dickson Pike Victor Michel Peltier Foye Cothrin 126 Sigma Alpha Epsilon Founded at University of Alabama, 1856 Stanford Quad 1904 Chapter Rol Maine Alpha, University of Maine Mass. Beta Upsilon, Boston University Mass. Iota Tan, Mass. Instit ute of Technology Mass. Gamma, Harvard University Mass. Delta, Worcester Polytechnic Institute N. Y. Alpha, Cornell University N. y. Mu, Columbia University N. Y. Sigma Phi, St. Stephen ' s College Pa. Omega, Allegheny College Pa. Sigma Phi, Dickinson College Pa. Alpha Zeta, Pennsylvania State College Pa. Zeta, Bucknell University Pa. Delta, Gettysburg College Pa. Theta, University of Pennsylvania Va. Omicron, University of ' irginia Va. Sigma, Washington and Lee University N. C. Xi, University of North Carolina N. C. Theta, Davidson College S. C. Gamma, Wofford College Ga. Beta, University of Georgia Ga. Psi, Mercer University Ga. Epsilon, Emory College Ga. Phi, Georgia School of Technology Mich. Iota Beta, University of Michigan Mich. Alpha, Adrian College Ohio Sigma, Mt. Union College Ohio Delta, Ohio Wesleyan University Ohio Epsilon, University of Cincinnati Ohio Theta, Ohio State University Ind. Alpha, Franklin College Ind. Beta, Purdue University Texas Rho, Un 111. Psi Omega Northwestern University III. Beta, University of Illinois Minn. Alpha, University of Minnesota Chicago Gamma Kho, University of Chicago Wi.scousin Alpha, University of Wisconsin Ky. Kappa, Central University Ky. Iota, Bethel College Ky. Epsilon, Kentucky State College Tenn. Zeta, Southwestern Presbyterian Uni- versity Tenu. Lambda, Cumberland University Teuu. Nu, Vanderbilt University Tenn. Kappa, University of Tennessee. Tenn. Omega, University of the South Tenn. Eta, Southwestern Baptist University Ala. Mu, University of Alabama Ala. Iota, Southern University Ala. Alpha Mu, Alabama Polytechnic Institute Mo. Alpha, University of Missouri Mo. Beta, Washington University Neb. Lambda Pi, University of Nebraska Ark. Alpha Upsilon, University of .-Arkansas Kas. Alpha, University of Kansas Col. Chi, University of ' Colorado Col. Lambda, Colorado School of Mines Col. Zeta, Denver University CaUf. Alpha, Leiaud Stanford Jr. university Calif. Beta, University of California La. Epsilon, Louisiana State University La. Tau Upsilon, Tulane University Miss. Gamma, University of Mississippi iversitv of Texas Alumni xA.ssociations Boston . tlanta Alliance, Ohio Chattanooga Kncxville New Orleans St. Louis Wilmington, N. C. Greenville, S. C. Florence, Ala. Americus, Ala. New York Augusta Cincinnati Jackson, Miss. Detroit Washington, D. C. Birmingham Louisville San Francisco Philadelphia Pittsburg Savannah Chicago Kansas City, Mo. Cleveland Worcester, Mass. Denver Macon, Ga. Memphis Talladrega, Ala. Colors : Ro3 al Purple and Old Gold Yell: Phi Alpha. AUcazce! Phi Alpha. Alicazoii! Sigma Alpha! Sigma Alpha. ' Sigjiia Alpha Epsilon! I2(J Stanford Quad 1904 Delta Tau Delta Beta Rho Chapter, Established August 13, 1893 Frater in Facilitate Ernest Whitney ] Iartin Fratres in Universitate 1902 John Kester Bonnell 1903 Reginald Goodwin Fernald Charles Mavnard Richards Clarence Stephen Crary Charles Judson Crary James Ernest Turner Frank Louis Slaker Harold Hall 1904 Hans Barkan Henry Crowell Scales 1905 IiNOR Correll Sherwood Clarence Burwell Eaton William James Galp.raith 1906 George Edward Morrissey Ernest Raymond May Paul Sibley Williams Arthur William Stevens John Frederic Cahoon 130 Delta Tau Delta Founded at Bethany College, 1859 Stanford Quad 1904 Chapter Roll Southern Division Lambda, Vanderbilt University ' Pi, University of Mississippi Phi, Washington and l,ee University Beta Xi, Tulane University Beta Epsilon, Emory College Beta Theta, University of the South Beta Iota, University of Virginia Western Division Omicron, University ot Iowa Beta Gamma, University of Wisconsin Beta Eta, University of Minnesota Beta Pi, Northwestern University- Beta Rho, Leland Stanford Jr. University Beta Tau, University of Nebraska Beta Upsilon, University of Illinois Beta Omega, University of California Gamma Alpha, University of Chicago Gamma Beta, Armour Institute of Technology Beta, Ohio University Delta, University of Michigan Epsilon, Albion College Zeta, Adelbert College Kappa, Hillsdale College Mu, Ohio Wesleyan University Northern Division Chi, Kenyon College Beta Alpha, Indiana University Beta Beta, DePauw University Beta Zeta, Butler College Beta Phi, Ohio State University Beta Psi, Wabash College Gamma Delta, University of West Virginia Eastern Division Alpha Allegheny College Gamma, Washington and Jefferson College Rho. Stevens Institute of Technology Upsilon, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Omega, University of Pennsylvania Beta Lambda, Lehigh University Gamma Zeta, Weslevan Universitv Beta Mu, Tufts CoUege Beta Nu, Massachusetts Institute of Technolog Beta Omicron, Cornell University Beta Chi, Brown University Gamma Gamma, Dartmouth College Gamma Epsilon, Columbia University Chicago New York Cincinnati San Francisco Philadelphia Alumni Chapters Milwaukee Indianapolis Boston Minneapolis Cleveland Pittsburg Omaha Evansville Atlanta Colors : Purple, Gold and White Flower : Pansy Veil: Rah! Rah! Rah! Delta Tau Delta! Rah! Rah! Delta Tau! Delta Tan Delta! 133 Stanford Quad 1904 Beta Theta Pi Lambda Sigma Chapter, Established 1895 Fratres in Facultate James Perrin Smith, Ph. D. Albert Conser Whitaker, Ph. D. John Flesher Newsom, Ph. D. Fratres in Universltate 1902 Frank R. Wheeler Alfred Rowell Dole Earl H. Knepper Ralph D. Emerson 1903 Lynne Fox Clinton Harold Philip Kuhn Norman Eliot Dole Thomas Earle Palmer Akch Perrin 1904 1 Iax Langdon Van Norden Frederick Prescott Whitaker De Lancey Lewis 1905 Wilfred Heinrich Dole Harry M. Jack Charles Bates Hopper Edward Pomeroy Wells ?ryant Mathews Azro Nathaniel Lewis, Jr. Roy Edgar Naftzger Edward Butler Rust John J. Sheehy 134 Beta Theta Pi Founded at Miami University, 1839 Stanford Quad 1904 Chapter Roll Kappa, Brown University Upsilon Boston University Beta Eta. Maine State College Beta Iota, Amherst College Alpha Omega, Dartmouth College Mu Epsilon, Wesleyan University Phi Chi, Yale University Beta Sigma, Bowdoin College Beta Gamma, Rutgers University Beta Delta, Cornell University Sigma, Stevens Institute of Technology Beta Zeta, St. Lawrence University Beta Theta, Colgate University Nu, Union College Alpha Alpha, Columbia College Beta Epsilon, Syracuse University Gamma, Washington and Jefferson College Alpha Sigma, Dickinson College Alpha Chi, Johns Hopkins University Phi, University of Pennsylvania Alpha Upsilon, Pennsylvania State College Beta Chi, Lehigh University Zeta, Hampden Sidney College Eta Beta, University ' of North Carolina Omicron, University of Virginia Phi Alpha, Davidi on University Epsilon, Central College Beta Lambda, Vanderbilt University Beta Omicron, University of Texas Alpha, Miami University Beta Nu, University of Cincinnati Beta, Western. Reserve University Beta Omega, Beta Kappa, Ohio University Theta, Ohio Wesleyan University Psi, Bethany University Alpha Gamma, Wittenberg College Alpha Eta, Denisou Universit} ' Alpha Lambda, Wooster University Beta Alpha, Kenyon College Theta Delta, Ohio State University Beta Psi, West Virginia I ' niversity Delta, DePauw University- Pi, Indiana Univer sity Tau, Wabash College Iota, Hanover College Lambda, University of Michigan Alpha Xi, Knox College Chi, Beloit College Alpha Beta. Iowa University Lambda Rho, Chicago University Alpha Epsilon, Iowa Vesl; yan Universitj- Alpha Pi, Wisconsin University Rho, Northwestern University Beta Pi. Minnesota University Sigma Rho. Illinois University Alpha Delta, Westminster College Alpha Iota, Washington Alpha Nu, Kansas University Alpha Zeta, Denver University Alpha Tau, Nebraska University Zeta Phi, Missouri University Beta Tau, Colorado University Omega, University of California Lambda Sigma, Leland Stanford Jr. University Washington State CCLORS : Flower : Pink and Blue The Rose Veil: Phi. Kai. Phi! Beta. Theta. Pi! Alpha. Omega, Lambda. Theta! Beta, Theta, Pi! 137 Stanford Quad 1904 Chi Psi Alpha Cjanima J)elta, l ' ' ,stab]ished April 24, 1895 Edgar Axton Jones Frater in Facilitate Coi.RERT SeARLES, Pll. D. Fratres in Universitate 1903 Howard Brookes Sharpe Reuben Fenton Howe 1904 Carl Shelry [cNaught Thomas Benton Hunter, Jr. Gordon William Edwards William Russell Cole 1905 Reginald Austin Fred Iinor Wilbur Benjamin Marshall Wotkyns John William Spellman William Rufus Scholfield Walter Edwin Trent 13S Chi Psi Founded at Union College, 1841 Stanford Quad 1904 Alpha Roll Pi, Union College Theta, Williams College AIu, Middlebnry College Alpha, Wesleyan University Phi, Hamilton College Epsilon, University of Michigan Chi, Amherst College Psi, Cornell University Tail, Wofiford College Gamma Delta, Leland Nu, University of Minnesota Iota, University of Wisconsin Rho, Rutgers College Xi, Stevens Institute of Technology Alpha Delta, University of Georgia Beta Delta, Lehigh University Delta Delta, University of California Epsilon Delta. University of Chicago Stanford, Jr., University Alumni Associations New York Boston Chicago Pittsburg Detroit } Iil vaukee r Iinneapolis Duhith Schenectady Washington. D. Los Angeles Atlanta. Ga. St. Louis Portland, Ore. Kansas City Des ] Ioines Colors : Purple and Gold Flower : Fleur de Lis 141 Stanford Quad 1904 Delta Upsilon Stanford Chapter, Established March 13, 1896 Fratres in Kacultate David Stakr Jokdax, LL. D. William Russell Dudley, M. S. James Owen Griffin John Henry Comstock, B. S. Arthur Bridgman Clark, M. A. GuiDo Hugo Marx, JNI. E. Charles Rcss Lewers, LL. B. Benjamin Oliver Foster, A. B. John Caspar Branner, Ph. D. George Archib. ld Clark, B. L. Melvin Gilbert Dodge, M. A. William Alpha Cooper, A. B. Dorsev Alfred Lyon, A. [. Fratres in Universitate Postgraduates Thomas Edward Hayden, Hamilton, 91 John Pearce jNIitchell, ' 02 Thomas Starr Gray, ' 00 1903 James Archer Fay Arthur Edward Cooley William Franklin Whitaker Paul Coates Harper Frederick Hall Fowler PIarold Bowen Jordan Hugh Anderson Mcran 1904 Clarence Harrison Crawford RuFus Hatch Kimball Henry Rol. nd Johnson David Van Clief Cowden Charles Ludwig Firebaugh Walter Williams Hoops Howard Milton Lewis 1905 Benjamin Cory Ledyard Fulton Lane I ' reeman Hedge Cushman Robert Breck Moran Eugene Barkley Favre Max John Bartell . lvin Joiner, Jr. 1906 Raymond Frederick West Paul Carroll Edwards 142 7 .j.- sr-7ti; ChisIgo L Delta Upsilon Stanford Quad Founded at Williams College, 1834 I V(J4 Chapter Roll Williams, Williams College Union, Union College Hamilton, Hamilton College Amherst, Amherst College Adelbert, Western Reserve University Colby, Colby University Rochester, University of Rochester Middlebury, Middlebury College Bowdoin, Bowdoin College Rutgers, Rutgers College Brown, Brown University Colgate, Colgate University New York, University of the City of New York Cornell, Cornell University Marietta, ? Iarietta College Syracuse, University of Syracuse Michigan, University of Michigan Northwestern, Northwestern University Harvard, Harvard University Wisconsin, University of Wisconsin Lafayette, Lafayette College Columl)ia, Columbia Lhiiversity Lehigh, Lehigh University Tufts, Tufts College De Pauw, De Pauw University Pennsylvania, University of Pennsylvania Minnesota. University of ] Iinnesota Technology, Massachusetts Listitute of Technology Swarthmore, Swarthmore College Stanford, Leland Stanford Junior University California, LTniversity of California McGill, McGill liniversity, ? Iontreal Nebraska, Liniversity of Nebraska Toronto, University of Toronto Chicago, University of Chicago 145 Stanford Quad 1904 Kappa Sigma Beta Zeta Chapter, Established May 19, 1889 Frater in Facultate Halbert William Chappel, A. B., 1901 Fratres in Universitate Graduate Forrest Cutter Bailey, A. B., 1901 1903 Thoreau Cronyn Orrin Arthur Harlan Roy Overman Hadley v illiam Kelly Roosevelt Lyman J. Howes Rudolph Herrmann Swartzkopf William Benson Walling 1904 Norman Collyer William Donald Patterson William W. Hurlbut Frank Roehr Grant Hathaway Moore Isaac Russell Harry Franklin Scoville 1905 Benjamin Clover Dey Chester Laidlaw Lyman Alexander Sheriffs Joel Nibley Hallett Edward Abend Harold Hunter Hurlbut 1906 Chester Boyce Allen Gilbert Lafayette Scoville PuTMAN Busk Smith Brice Loveland Trost 146 Kappa Sigma Founded at University of Virginia, 1867 Stanford Quad 1904 Chapter Roll Psi, University of Maine Alpha Rho, Bowdoin College Alpha lyanibda, University of Vermont Beta Alpha, Brown University Beta Kappa, New Hampshire College Alpha Alpha, University of Maryland Pi, Swarthmore College Alpha Delta, Pennsylvania State College Alpha Hta, Columbian University Alpha Hpsilon, University of Pennsylvania Alpha Kappa, Cornell University Alpha Phi, Bucknell University Beta Delta, Washington and Jefferson College Beta Iota, Ivehigh University Beta Pi, Dickinson College Delta, Davidson College Upsilou, Harapden-Sidney College Zeta, University of Virginia Eta, Kandolph-Macon College Nu, William and Mary College Beta Beta, Richmond College Eta Prime, Trinity College Alpha Mu, University of North Carolina Beta, University of Alabama Alpha Beta, Mercer University Alpha Nu, Wofford College Alpha Tan, Georgia School of Technology Beta Eta, Alabama Polvtechnic Institute Beta lyambda. University of Georgia Theta, Cumberland University Kappa, Vanderbilt University I ambda, University of Tennessee Phi, Southwestern Presbyterian University Omega. Universitv of the South Alpha Theta, Southwestern Baptist University Beta Nu, Kentucky State College Alpha Upsilon, Millsaps College Gamma, I,ouisiana State University Epsilon, Centenary College Iota, Southwestern University Sigma, Tulaue University Tan, University of Texas Xi, University of Arkansas Alpha Psi, Uiiiversit}- of Nebraska Alpha Omega, William Jewell College Beta Gamma, Missouri State University Beta Omicron, University of Denver Beta Sigma, Washingtoii University Chi, Purdue University Alpha Gamma, University of Illinois Alpha Zeta, University of Michigan Beta Theta, University of Indiana Alpha Pi, Wabash College Alpha Sigma, Ohio State University Alpha Chi, Lake Forest Univeisity Beta Epsilon, University of Wisconsin Beta Mu, University of Minnesota Beta Rho, University of Iowa Beta Zeta, Ueland Stanford Jr. University Beta Xi, University of California Colors : Scarlet, White and Emerald Green Flower : Lily-of-the-valley ] ' cll: Rail! Rail! Rah! Crescent and Star! Vive la! J ' izr la! Kafl ' a Sigma! 149 Stanford Quad 1904 Delta Kappa Epsilon Sigma Rho Chapter, Established February 8, 1902 Fratres in l ' acultate George Clinton Pkice, Ph. I). 1 ' k. k M.m k McFarland, Ph. B. IIexkv Winchester Rolfe, A. j [. Fratres in Universitate Graduate ITakrv James Edwards 1902 Earle Talbot Thomas Hamilton 1903 John Church Muir Harry Augustus Weihe H. Norman Snively Paul Percy Parker Bayard Everheart Nourse 1904 NoYES Latham Avery John Daniel Holman 1905 Arthur Willard Hooper Du Val Moore 1906 Alexander Harwick Leonard Coomees Hammond Edward Flanders Frank Carleton Preston L. Randolph Weinmann 150 ! ' ' OsKi wow-wo Vj AvisKi Avee- wee, Y O BerKeley ! ' Be good — if- ou can ' ' t be good, be careful ' ' ' ' — motto of the Ufiiversity of Cal ' iforn ' ta Pelican. The 1904. Blue and Gold d.sr ' ' i many draw- ings by professional artists, and is proud of it, so it says. We suppose the printers got the names of the artists on the accompanying pic- tures slightly mixed, but what ' s in a name any- how ? Another feature of the Blue and Gold is Howard Pyle ' s Captain Kidd, on page 127, carelessly signed by a Berkeley artist, but then, as we said, what ' s in a name? From page 63 of the Blue and Gold or 1904, by Jack Levy. The ducks missing in this picture were gath- ered up by us and will be found on page 142 of the ad. COMMENCEMENT From Life, June, 1902, by F. A. Lemon ' BOOL A BAWLA Ay DerKeley, California-Avo w ! From Harper ' ' s Bazar for November, 190 1 BAWLA BOOLA Ij . 1 J ' i U ■ Delta Kappa Epsilon Chapter Roll Stanford Quad 1904 Founded at Yale, 1844 Phi, Yale University Xi, Colby University Psi, University of Alabama Beta Alpha, University of North Carolina Bta, University of Virginia Pi, Dartmouth College Alpha Alpha, Middlebury College Epsilon, Williams College Tail, Hamilton College Rho, Lafayette College Phi Chi, Rutgers College Gamma Phi, Wesleyan University Beta Chi, Adelbert College Phi Gamma, Syracuse University Alpha Chi, Trinity College Delta Delta, University of Chicago Kappa, Miami University Sigma Tau, Mass. Institute of Technology Alpha Phi, University of Toronto Tau Alpha, McGill College Theta, Bowdcin College Sigma, Amherst College Upsilon, Brovyn University Chi, University of Mississippi Lambda, Kenyon College Iota, Central University Omicron, University o( Michigan Nu, College of City of New York Mu, Colgate University Beta Phi, University of Rochester Psi Phi, DePauw University Psi Omega, Rensselaer Polytechnic Delta Chi, Cornell University Gamma Beta, Columbia University Theta Zeta, University of California Gamma, Vanderbilt University Phi Epsilon, University of Minnesota Tau Lambda, Tulane University Delta Kappa, University of Pennsylvania Sigma Rho, Stanford University Alumni Associations New York Northwestern Pacific Coast Rhode Island Kentucky Northwest Rochester Mississippi Valley Western Michigan Central New York Rocky Mountain Wisconsin New England Detroit Washington Bufifalo Cleveland Eastern New York Connecticut Chattanooga Southern Harvard Indiana Western Massachusetts Central Tennessee Colors : Crimson. Azure and Gold Veil: Rah! Rah! Rah! D. K. E.! Rah ! Rah ! Rah ! D. K. E.! Rah! Rah! Rah! D. K. E.! Delta Kappa Epsilon, Rah ! Rah ! Rah ! 153 Stanford Quad 1904 Phi Delta Phi Miller Chapter P ' ratres in Facultate Nathan Abbott, LL.B., Y Ciiaki.es R. Lewers, LL. B., J Y James T. Burcham, LL. B. Fratres in Universitate Frank Waite Bennett, 2 X Charles Jay Swindells Frank Wilson Doan David Van Clief Cowden, J Y Herbert Coffin Jones Benjamin Palmer Oakford Arthur Edward Cooler-, J Y Graduates Halbert William Chappel , K 2 Rupert Lewis Alderman George Lull, Jr. Frank Asbury Stevens, A T O Thomas Marie Alderson Thomas S. Gray, J Y Thomas Edward Hayden , J Y 1903 Walter Benedict Barnhisel, Z Thomas Earle Palmer, B ® II Harry Hunt Atkinson, Z Edward Fogg, 2 N Lynne Fox Clinton, B © II William Gentry Morrison, 2 N George H. Lutgerding, 2 X Royden James Keith, 2 A E Clarence Harrison Crawford, J Y Gilbert Denison Boalt Edgar Axton Jones X ' ii- ' Reginald Goodwin Fernald, J T J Edward Irving Thayer, 2 A E 1904 Seymour Thomas Montgomery, Z De Lancey Lewis, B © II Alfred Aubert Hampson, 2 N Omar CoRwiisf Spencer Frank Roehr, K 2 Charles Ludwig Firebaugh, J Y 154 Phi Delta Phi Stanford Quad Chapter Roll ' 904 Kent, Law Department, University of Michigan Benjamin, Law Department, Illinois Wesleyan University Booth, Northwestern University Story, Columbia University Cooley, Washington University, St. Louis, ]Mo. Pomeroy, Hastings College of Law, San Francisco Marshall, Columbian University, Washington, D. C. Jay, Albany Law School, Union University. Albany, N. Y. Webster, Boston University Hamilton, University of Cincinnati Gibson, University of Penns3 1vania Choate, Harvard University Waite, Yale University Field, New York University Conkling, Cornell University Tiedeman, L niversit} ' of Missouri ] Iinor, U niversity of Mrginia Dillon, University of Minnesota Daniels, Buffalo Law School. Buffalo, N. Y. Chase, University of Oregon Harlan, University of Wisconsin Swan, Ohio State University McClain, Universitj of Iowa Lincoln, University of Nebraska Osgoode, Law School of L pper Canada, Toronto, Ontario Fuller, Lake Forest University Miller, Stanford University Green, University of Kansas Comstock, Syracuse University. Syracuse. N. Y. Dwight, New York Law School, New York Foster, University of Indiana Brewer. University of Denver 157 Stanford - ' Vm ' ' - ' ■Vm ' Quad 904 (i pdvK OvaiTe Btiierr 2 X Au t8 tt ' a.v KAt£ KarSci ' A Y lov KetrTf j BovveAA. ATA ' Pe ' yu ' aXS FuiSi ' tF epvaXS ATA Oi ' dXrep BeVe tKT JiapvureX Z 4 ' Kkapevae Appiaov K.pav( oph A Y Opuo-e KAapevfre Y 3,3ap8 Z  ! ' Appt YiT ' Atkivctoi Z Iwar](f A8ap,s Mt ' AAep 2 X OutAAiap, Fei ' Tpi Mdpptorov 2 N E6oiwp8 Aiyovcrri!? 2p,t , Ip. 2 N OvaASep-ap ' Yory I K Ei ' pt Ep Sepr ' Ycpivyrov $ K KAec Aat S AAA BaKCp Z ' Pd 3epr Nijp, Ilap r Z vp ' AAttavSr p BeaTOv Kape MKFt ' Ac pati 2 N Aou ' is (i i nr BdvajSax 2 N KapA 2xe ' A 3t M Nai yr X ©a)p,as BeVrov Yirep, Ip. X ifjLOvp 0wpas MovTy6p,£pt Z ' Pot Clvepixav ASAe K 2 XapAfS AiSouty J tp£ 3auy A Y Feopye At ' ryepou ' y 2 X 158  1 A ' r - 1 v -%, - 1 ; igte Hk I H - f . . , Li i( ■ 1 BIK i ' : ]r H u | ] gJ Evx ■ - . :,m H ■ J B il £ ' ' !%$$ ' ' - ' . ' - r; ' - ' I .. ' 1 IB BB F w .« ' to ;■ jV ' fw « A-w M ' ' T ' W BmJpBthBJB j .scjriM I ) i g A J2 J) ' ' .. ' ' p ' - rm mm ■ IH fe i _ ■ M aoiH % ' B ' • li B SENIOR SOCIETY MEMBERS Frank W ' aite Bennett John Kester Bonnell David Van Clief Cowden Reginald Goodwin Fernald Walter Benedict Barnhisel Sororities Stanford Quad 1904 Kappa Alpha Theta 15 Lasuen Street Kappa Kappa Gamma 12 Lasuen Street Pi Beta Phi tEpsilon Chi (Local) Delta Gamma 8 Lasuen Street Alpha Phi 17 Lasuen Street Pan Hellenic Association of Women Charter revoked. No longer in existence. i65 Stanford Quad 1904 Kappa Alpha Theta Phi Chapter, Established at University of Pacific, April 4, 1888 (Transferred to Stanford University, January, 1892) Sorores in Urbe Jfi.iA (iii.i ' .EKT. Beta IIakriet G. AIakx, Iota Anna P. Wing, Iota Addie p. Newsom, Beta Blanche McL Frein, Iota Martha Haven, Phi Gertrude Van Duxen Marx, Edith Basye Price, Alpha Lydia W. Bodley, Alpha Elsie Shelley Heath, Phi Pearle Green, Phi Eleanor W. Sissons, Rho Elizabeth G. Hughes, Beta Letitia Patterson, Phi Frances D. Patterson, Phi Florence Hughes, Beta Bertha Colt Rolfe, Iota Clelia Mosher, Psi Iota Marion Brown, Iota IMary Roberts Smith, Iota Helen Cubberly, Beta Helen Lathrop, Phi Florence Heywood, Phi Effie Lemon, Alpha Sorores in Universitate Alice L. Dickinson, Iota Minna Stillman Edith Jordan Mary E. Hendrick Genevieve Chambers Mabel Helen Baum Sara Reid Park Claire Soule 1903 1904 I?T!M,SH Cara Stillman Clara Stevenson Louise Van Uxem Frances Kerr Ethel Traphagen 1905 Cornelia Stevenson Mary I. Morton Barbara G. Hitt ] Iabel C. Ray Hazel Traphagen Lenore L. Williams Alice Meyer 1906 Carolyn Fowle Anne Williams Elsie Branner Jane Spalding Clara Smith Edith Miller 166 Kappa Alpha Theta Stanford Quad Founded at De Pauw University, 1870 IVU4 Chapter Roll Iota. Cornell University Lambda. University of ' ermont Mu, Allegheny College Chi, S Tacuse Universit} ' Alpha Beta. Swarthmore College Alpha Delta. Woman ' s College of Baltimore Alpha Zeta, Barnard College Alpha. De Pauw University Beta. University of Indiana Delta. University of Illinois Epsilon. Wooster University Eta. University of lichigan Kappa. University of Kansas Pi, Albion College Rho. University of Nebraska Tail. Northwestern Universitj ' Upsilon. University of linnesota Psi. University of Wisconsin Alpha Gamma. University of Ohio Phi. Stanford University Omega. Universitv of California Alumnas Associations Gamma, New York Delta. Illinois Eta. Vermont Epsilon, Ohio Alpha. Indiana Zeta. Indiana Beta. linnesota Iota. California Colors: Black and Gold Flower: Black and Yellow Pansy 167 Stanford Quad 1904 Kappa Kappa Gamma Beta Eta Chapter, Established June lo, 1892 Soro r in Urbe Mayme Ierkitt Wiiittakek Sorores in Universitate 1903 Jane Elizabeth Evans Jessie Elizabeth Barnard May G. Kimble Ida Belle Henzel Carrie Sappington 1904 1905 igo6 Anita Butler Perrin Zoe Portie Larkins Helen Downing Kate Louise Gridley Maria jMercedes de Luna Bertha Henzel Ruby Kimble Margaret Burk halter 168 Kappa Kappa Gamma Stanford Quad 1904 Founded at Monmouth College, 1870 Chapter Roll Phi, Boston University Beta Epsilon, Barnard College Psi, Cornell University Beta Tau, Syracuse University Beta Alpha, University of Pennsylvania Beta Iota, Swarthmore College Gamma Rho, Allegheny College Lambda, Buchtel College Beta Gamma, Wooster University Beta Nu, Ohio State University Beta Delta, University of Michigan Xi, Adrian College Kappa, Hillsdale College Delta, Indiana State University Iota, De Pauw University Mu, Butler College Eta, University of Wisconsin Beta Lambda, University of Illinois Upsilon, Northwestern University Epsilon, Illinois Wesleyan University Chi, University of Minnesota Beta Zeta, University of Iowa Theta, University of Missouri Sigma. University of Nebraska Omega, LTniversity of Kansas Beta Mu, University of Colorado Beta Xi, University of Texas Pi. University of California Beta Eta, Leland Stanford Junior LTniversity AlumntE Associations New York Boston Indianapolis Colors : Dark and Light Blue Flower : Fleur-de-lis 169 Stanford Quad 1904 Delta Gamma Upsilon Chapter, Established March 6, 1897 Sorores in Facilitate Lillian E. Ray Stella Rose Soror in Urbe Vivian Bailey Sorores in Universitate 1903 Lois Kimball Mathews Edith Abigail Hill Muriel Adelaide Beamer CoRiNNE E. Smith 1904 Alice Eugenia Arnold Amy Louise Dunn Mary Corbet Alice W. Kimball Anne Lockerby Scott Margaret B. Smith Ruth Laird Kimball 1905 Sadie Corbet Helen Lamson Hazel Florence Edwards Anna ICKERS Ione Candace Dille Gertrude B. Weaver Antonia Bansbach Julia Salter Boynton ] Iercile Winslow Susan Wilshire Carpenter Jessie Duff McGilvray Harriet Crittenden Severance 170 Delta Gamma Stanford Quad Founded at the University ot Mississippi, 1872 1904 Chapter Roll Alpha. ] [t. Vernon College Zeta, Albion College Eta. Buchtel College Kappa, University of Nebraska Psi, Woman ' s College of Baltimore Chi. Cornell University Phi. University of Colorado Tail. Uni ersity of Iowa Sigma, Northwestern University Xi, University of Michigan Lambda. University of Minnesota Omega. University of Wisconsin Theta, University of Indiana Rho, Syracuse University Upsilon. Leland Stanford Junior University Colors : Bronze. Pink and Blue Flower : Marechal Niel Rose ' 7 ' Stanford Quad 1904 Alpha Ph 1 Kappa Chapter Established Mav 20, 1 899 Sorores in Urbe Agnes Morely Cleveland, Theta Ethel Faulkner Copeland. Kappa jMartiia Smith Hyde, Beta Jessie McClellan, Alplia AFaky Tshhel Lockey, Kappa Sorores in Universitate 1903 Francisca Luisa Arques .Margaret Somers Faris Ruth Millicent Stephenson Clinton Edith Stone 1904 Bertha Burnham Bootes Frances Cornelia Harrenstein Christine Iary Burnap Mary Christine Foster May D ' Oyly Helen Louise Darby 1905 Katherine Foster Loeser Clarissa Ep.y Dorothy Abbott Florence Foy 1906 Ethel Blanche Hall Charlotte Elliott Mary Elizabeth Gregg Cardi.yn Edwards 172 Alpha Phi Stanford Quad Chapter Roll ' Founded at Syracuse University, 1872 Alpha, Syracuse University Beta, Northwestern University Gamma. De Paiuv University Delta, Cornell University Epsilon, University of Minnesota Zeta, Woman ' s College of Baltimore Eta, Boston University Theta, University of Michigan Iota, University of Wisconsin Kappa, Leland Stanford Junior University Lambda, University of California Alumnas Associations Chicago Central New York Boston Minnesota New York City Baltimore CuLORs : Bordeaux and Silver Flowers : Lily-of-the-valley and Forget-me-nots 73 Organizations Stanford Quad 1904 Associated Students Officers President C. F. Dittmar. 03 Vice-President C. Naramore. 03 Secretary J. G. Dehy, ' 03 Treasurer 11. J. Edwards. ' 01 B. E. NouRSE, 03 C. K. Studley, ' 03 Executive Committee H. L. Hamilton, ' 04 B. C. BuEB. ' 04 R. C. NissEN, ' 05 E. C. Beach, ' 05 Presidents 1891-92 C. E. Chadsey 1892-93 S. Webster 1893-94 E. R. ZioN 1894-95 L. J. IllXSDILL 1895-96 H. D. Sheldon 1896-97 .... Horace Pomeroy 1897-98 A. B. Morgan 1898-99 C. E. Schwartz i8sO-oo J. H. Cgverly 1900-01 .... Cecil M. Marrack 1901-02 . . AIaxson F. McCormick Treasurers 1891-92 A. B. Rice 1892-93 S. V. Collins 1893-94 L. N. Chase 1894-95 H. C. Hoover 1895-96 L. J. HiNSDILL 1896-97 . . . . E. V. lORRISON 1897-98 .... Horace Pomeroy 1898-99 C. ]M. Eickert 1899 00 O. C. Leiter ( H. H. Taylor. ' 00 1900-01 • ■ ■ ; J. T. Nourse, 01 igoi-02 . . . . H. J. Edwards, ' 01 177 Stanford Quad 1904 Y. M. C. A. Officers President Hekuekt F. Coolidge. 03 Vice-President Rovce R. Long, ' 05 Secretary Henry A. Halsev. ' 06 Treasurer F. E. Ulrich. ' 06 Advisory P)oard Dr. D. S. Jordan Hugh A. Moran, ' 04 Prof. Max Farrand Dr. R. H. Newton Dr. O. L. Elliott Prof. A. T. Murray Dr. R. M. Alden Mr. L. E. Bassett Geo. E. Crothers, ' 96 Y. W. C. A. Officers President Theresa May Wilbur Vice-President Edna Jeraldine Brown Recording Secretary Cecelia Atherton Corresponding Secretary Grace Holt Treasurer Jane Bean General Secretary Harriett H. Brown Committee Council Music, Mabel Barnhouse ; Bible Study, Gertrude Smith; Missionary. Helen Salisbury; Devotional, Laura Bailey; Social, Barbara Hitt; Inter- collegiate Relations, Grace Holt; Finance, Jane Bean ; Membership, Jeraldine Brown. Advisory Board Mrs. Mitchell Mrs. Johnston Mrs. Elliott Mrs. Murray Mrs. Matzke Miss Ray ] Irs. Gilbert, Chairman 178 Stanford Quad 1904 Women ' s League Officers President, Elizabeth A. Peckham Secretary, Cecelia Atherton Vice-President, Cara Stillman Treasurer. Mrs. J. C. Brannek The Women ' s League was organized January 14. 1902, to promote friendli- ness and co-operation among the women of the University. Monthly social meet- ings are held in Roble parlors, the aim being to have them perfectly informal, yet sufficiently attractive to make it worth while for the tired student and the busy woman to attend. Members come directly from the class-room or labor- atory to share a cup of tea and a fine musical number, to meet old friends and to find new ones. In addition to the social meetings the League has insti- tuted a series of monthly addresses on subjects of especial interest to women. The Students ' Guild Officers President J. S. Burcham, ' 02 Vice-President Frank Hess, ' 03 Secretary Miss K. R. Kip, ' 04 Treasurer Hans Barkan, ' 04 Miss Olga Tarbell, ' 04 Professor Fernando Sanford Dr. W. F. Snow The Students ' Guild was organized in the fall of 1894 to furnish aid to students in case of sickness. Until the present year the work was confined to lending money to sick students, and to keeping up dispensaries at Roble, Encina, and the Camp. Under the new organization recently efifected, membership will entitle a student to simple remedies or to a sick-room outfit, an equipment which will satisfactorily transform the ordinary room into a miniature hospital. Upon the recommendation of the resident physician a nurse will be provided and messen ger service supplied. A slight fee of fifty cents a semester is charged. The management of the Guild is in the hands of seven directors appointed by the Executive Committee of the Student Body. One of these directors must be the Resident Physician of the University and one a member of the Faculty, the other five being students. 1 79 Stanford Quad 1904 ,- , Sword and Sandals Organized 1893 Officers President . Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Cleveland H. Baker, ' 04 . Waldemar Young, 04 . Harry E. Bush, ' 05 Mem1)ers John K. Bonnell, ' 03 Ralph E. Renaud, ' 03 Chester Naramore, ' 03 Harry Johnson, 03 Charles W. Thomas, ' 03 Hans Barkan, ' 04 Cleveland Baker, ' 04 Fred Fowler, ' 04 Robert Anderson, ' 04 Waldemar Young, ' 04 Harry E. Bush, ' 05 Leo Byrne, ' 05 Ernest May, ' 06 180 Stanford Quad 1904 Press Club Officers President R. E. Renaud Vice-President P. P. Parker Secretary-Treasurer O. A. Wilson Toastmaster Isaac Russell Members Keith Wigle, ' 02 J. K. BoNNELL. ' 02 C. E. Waite, ' 02 R. O. Hadley, ' 03 A. E. CooLEV, 03 P. P. Parker. ' 03 Isaac Russell ' 04 Waldemar Young, F. W. Powell, ' 04 04 R. J. Sterrett, ' 02 J. B. Gilder sleeve, ' 02 Thoreau Crony n, ' 03 T. E. Stephenson, ' 03 R. E. Renaud, ' 03 C. W. Thomas, Jr., ' 03 O. A. Wilson, ' 04 A. A. Hampson, ' 04 B. C. Dey, ' 05 W. H. B. Fowler, ' 06 Jd i — if J. w f E -11 — - 2 9 ' ' nm s - — 1 - i ••r ' Z.rr:: - J- ' - Stanford Quad 1904 Foil and Mask Organized lanuary 22, 1902 Officers President Q J. Crary Secretary-Treasurer D. M. Reynolds Directors E. V. Kehrleii O. Du F. Kehrlein Honorary Member A. C. Von Noe Members 1903 C. W. Thomas, Jr. C. J. Crary R. E. Renaud 1904 Norman Collyer Fulton Lane E. J. Turner 1905 O. Du F. Kehrlein D. M. Reynolds E. V. Kehrlein W. J. Galbraith igo6 Richard Flanders Stanford Quad 1904 Chess Club Officers President J. H. Page, ' 03 Vice-President N. C. Powers, ' 03 J. H. Page, 03 N. C. Powers, ' 03 Executive Committee R. J. McFadden, ' 04 A. T. Parsons, ' 04 S. C. Haver, ' 05 N. C. Powers, ' 03 J. H. Page, ' 03 N. E. Dole, ' 03 M. S. Lewis, ' 04 R. J. McFadden, ' 04 A. T. Parsons, ' 04 J. E. Turner, 04 F. P. Whitaker, ' 04 Members C. E. Ellis, ' 05 R. S. Fuller, ' 05 O. Du F. Kehrlein, ' 05 S. C. Haver, ' 05 J. F. Cahoon, ' 06 J. L. Maloy, ' 06 L. J. Mayreis, ' 06 F. E. Ulrich, ' 06 184 Ui Qi 01 |i4Mii Officers T-, . , ( John K. Bonnell, ' 03 P- ' esident i Roy O. Hadley, ' 03 -,.„., ( Miss Mabel H. Brown, ' 03 ice-President -j j j guE F. Bird, ' 03 , f Roy O. Hadley, ' 03 Secretary-! reasiirer | Thoreau Cronyn, 03 Executive Committee : Iiss M. Brown ? Iiss A. W. Kimball AIiss B. Hitt ] Iiss S. Bird S. S. Seward J. K. Bonnell H. R. Johnson Isaac Russell R. O. Hadley Thoreau Cronyn R. J. Sterrett i Iembers Anderson, R. V. Fowler, W. H. B. Perrin, IMiss A. Bailey, ] Iiss V. Gildersleeve, J. B. Powell, F. W. Bird, iMiss Sue F. Goddard, C. B. Ray, Miss L. E. Bonnell, J. K. Green, Miss P. Renaud, R. E. Brown, H. C. Hadley. R. O. Reynolds D. I. Brown, Miss H. H. Harrenstein. Miss F. C. Russell Iswc Brown, Miss M. H. Havens, ]Miss M. Cr r.-n- tvttcc a T BuRNHAM, Miss M. S. Hays, Miss A. cqit, aiiss a. i.. Charles, Miss S. M. Hitt, Miss B. Spencer Miss E. Collyer, N. Johnson. H. R. Stack, W. J. CooLiDGE. H. F. Jordan, :Miss E. Stephenson, T. E. Crary. C. J. Kimball, Miss A. W. Sterrett, R. J. Cronyn, T. Kimball. Miss R. L. Traphagen, IMiss K. E. Culver, Miss L. McComish, C. D. Whitney. F. E. Earle, H. p. :vIathews. :Mrs. L. K. Wilson, O. A. Eby, Miss C. Needles, Miss E. A. Wright, Miss I. A. Fowler, F. H. Parsons, Miss E. F. Young, Waldemar Faculty Members E. K. Putnam S. S. Seward, Jr. AIrs. M. R. Smith R. ] I, Alden L. E. Bassett G. C. Cook W. J. Neidig a. G. Newcomer 185 Stanford Quad 1904 Stanford Quad 1904 Encina Club Founded February 28, 1898 Officers First Semester, 1902-1903 President CD. Hauverman, ' 03 Secretary A. A. Hampson, 04 Treasurer N. C. Grider. ' 03 Directors R. J. Hughes. 03 O. S. Louslev, ' 05 A. L. Trowbridge, ' 05 C. Kiser, 04 Second Semester President ' . C. K. Studlev, ' 03 Secretary E. G. Brua, ' 04 Treasurer G. C. Jacobs, ' 03 Directors G. A. ScoviLLE, ' 03 I. II. Sevier, 05 W. F. Dunn, ' 04 R. S. Hudson, ' 06 G. R. Stevens. ' 05 W. K. Sprott. ' 06 186 VI s o Yv Stanford Quad 1904 j O -?; ' j4y fc r: : M 1 W ii H H f r . vT H H H Bench and Bar Moot Court Graduate Court Rupert Lewis Alderman Tom Marie Alderson Frank Waite Bennett David Van Clief Cowden Frank Wilson Doan Herbert Coffin Jones George Lull, Jr. Benjamin Palmer Oakford Frederick Schneider Frank Asbury Stevens Oii leave of absence. 190 Stanford Quad 1904 Court of Abbott ' s Inn Undergraduate Court Walter Benedict Barnhisel RoYDEN James Keith Edward Irving Thayer George Martinson Thomas Earle Palmer Harry Hunt Atkinson William Gentry Morrison Howard Milton Lewis L. M. Sterling 191 Stanford Quad 1904 Gymnasium Club Organized 1901 Officers First Semester President R. R. Long, ' 05. Fecrclary-Treasnrer W. W. Copp, ' 03 Second Semester President C. W. Thomas, ' 03 Secretary-Treasurer Homer Martin, ' 03 Members H. Aticinson, 03 N. CoLLYER, ' 04 O. S. LousLEv, ' 05 E. C. Beach, ' 05 S. L. Davis, ' 03 R. R. Long, ' 05 J. Beach, ' 03 A. Dole, ' 03 M. Martin, 03 G. H. Beebe, ' 04 N. Dole, ' 03 W. O. North, ' 04 II. W. Chappel, ' 00 C. L. Duncan, ' 04 F. W. Snow, ' g6 W. W. Copp, ' 03 J. A. Fay, 03 C. W. Thomas, 03 G. Cromwell, ' 04 R. Hamilton, ' 03 F. P. Whitaker, ' 04 L. E. Harter, ' 02 Associate Member Dr. McCiiwan, U. of Penn. 192 Stanford Quad 1904 Encina Gymnasium Basket-ball Club Officers President and Captain Norman Ccillyer, ' 04 Secretary and Manager E. C. Beach, ' 05 First Team !K. C. Beach, 05 R. H. Gaither, ' 06 J. F. Cahoon, ' 06 (substitute) Center Norman Collyer, 04 [ W. R. Scholfield, ' 06 Guards J O. S. Lousley, ' 05 ( AT. M. Stearns, ' 06 (substitute) Second Team Forwards I J F- Cahoon, 06 ( R. V. Meikle, ' 06 Center M. M. Stearns, ' 06 !P. W. Avery, ' 05 A. G. Thompson, ' 03 A. D. Miller, 05 Schedule of League Games Vs. Played at Won in- Encina Bb. Club.. . . ' i ' ! . ' ! ■ ■ Oakland Y. M. C. A. San Francisco Y. M. C. A. Oakland Y. M. C. A. San Francisco Y. M. C. A. University of California I ' niversity of California Oakland, March 7 Encina Gym., March 14 Encina Gym., March 21 San Francisco, Mar. 30 Berkeley, April 3 Encina Gym., April 10 Oakland, 26-19 San FrancLsco 30-12 Encina Bb. Club, 31-21 San Francisco, 24-15 University of Cal., 11-9 University of Cal., 37-14 194 Stanford Quad 1904 Established January 20, 1902 Officers First Semester Fred H. Fowler, President Chita Kraft, Vice-President W. G. ScHULTE, Secretary and Treasurer Second Semester Chita Kraft, President Howell C. Brown, Vice-President Ella Ibs, Secretary and Treasurer Members Francesca Arques Grace Baker AIabel Brown Howell C. Brown Mrs. a. a. Browne Carlos Cortes S. L. Davis Homer P. Earle F. H. Fowler V. R. Garfias Ella Hartnell Inez Hyatt Jeannette Hayward Ella Ibs Chita Kraft M. de Luna Percy Martin Louise Mourot Mrs. M. M. Ramsey Milnora Roberts J. Seminario W. G. Schulte E. H. Skinner Stanley Smith Adela Wagner I. A. Wright Faculty C. G. Allen Prof. A. A. Browne Prof. P. J. Frein Prof. O. M. Johnston W. R. Long W. A. Manning E. W. IMartin Prof. J. E. } L tzke Prof. AL A I. Ramsey Prof. C. Searles 195 Stanford Quad 1904 Senior Club Frank Ancell Max Farkand Cleveland H. Baker Walter B. Barnhisel Frederick A. Brown Thoreau Cronvn Reginald G. Fernald Rov O. Hadley C. D. Hauverman Roy J. Keith Howard S. Lee John C. McCaughern Chester Naramore Terry E. Stephenson 3V_J1 IBMCZDr 2jj ; r g l[ 196 Stanford Quad 1904 Japanese Club Officers President T. Kuma Secretary and Treasurer ... T. Nakamura E. Iriya JosHiYASu Kuma JUROKU Fujii ElTARO IlJIMA Akira Igumi Hyozo Omori Shiyohachi Anjti kugoro ishizawa Iwahichi Kato Sakujiro Kuwabara Setshti Aniya Executive Committee V. FUKUKITA AI. SiNDO Postgraduate Yasugoro Hirayama 1903 Jame jNIori H. Omori Shintaro Tanaka 1904 Yasunosuke Fukukita jMatthew Etsutaro Iriya 1905 AIasashi Yoshimi Michitaro Sindo Taira Nakamura 1906 Jin Kanada Taiji Kawai Taizo Mitoma Yasoo Takes a ki Yasohiko Shibamiya YnsHiMASA Yafune yusuke uchida Tatsujiro Taoka Kohei Shimano Katsukichi Yasuda Hyosaku Utaka 197 Stanford Quad 1904 LL. B. Class of 1 903 Officers President Tom Marie Alderson Secretary-Treasurer Benjamin Palmer Oakford Historian Frank Wilson Doan Members Rupert Lewis Alderman, A. B., Stanford, ' oi. Tom Marie Alderson, A. B., University of Washijigton, ' 96; A. B., Stanford, ' 02. Halbert William Chappel, A. B., Stanford, ' 01. Frank Wilson Doan, Law Special. Arthur Monroe Free, A. B., Stanford, 01. Benjamin Palmer Oakford, A. B., Stanford, ' 02. Frank Asbury Stevens, A. B., Stanford, ' 02. Charles Jay Swindells, A. B., Stanford, ' 02. Monroe Hardox Thomas, A. B., Stanford, 02. 198 Stanford Quad 1904 The Stanford Boat Club Officers President P. C. Harper, ' 03 Vice-President J. M. Beach, ' 03 ' J ' reasurer-Manaojer Prof. A. W. Smith Executive Committee Prof. S. S. Seward, Jr. C. Naramore, ' 03 H. P. KuHN, ' 03 The Stanford Boat Club was organized Feliruary 25, 1903, for the purpose of ' ' promoting aquatic sports at Stanford. At the foot of the Emboradaro Road, about three miles from the new gym, there is a slough which, at the lowest tide, has a minimum width of fifty feet and a depth of twenty feet. The club proposes to build a 1)oathouse upon this slough about half a mile up from the Bay, and a four-oared barge has already. been chosen. Moreover, if they can be rented there will be placed upon Lagunita two pair- oared shells for training and interclass regattas. Money for the undertaking has been raised by the undergraduate membership dues, and by a canvass of the Palo Alto merchants, the faculty and the graduates. .Mrs. Stanford and Manager G. M. Lathrop have shown their approval of the effort by each giving two hundred and fiftj ' dollars. One hundred dollars was subscribed by Prof. A. W. Smith, the treasurer-manager. Prof. Smith, who is an old Cornell oarsman, will be the coach. The prospects are bright for an interclass regatta in lay. and an inter- collegiate match in November or December. The Stanford Law School Association Stanford Quad Officers 1904 James Taylor lUircham, LL. B., ' oi. President; Vice-Presidents. C. B. Whit- tier, 93; G. E. Crothers, ' 95; L. J. Hinsdale, ' 95; B. F. Bledsoe, ' 96; C. Diehl, ' 96, Al. A. Folsoni, ' 96, C. P. Kaetzel, ' 96. C. R. Levvers, ' 96, J. E. Reynolds, ' 96, G. W. Garrat. ' 97. W. P. Gifford, ' 97, C. S. Chandler. ' 99, E. L. Corbin, ' 99, C. S. Dole, ' 99, F. S. Fisher. 99, R. A. Leiter. ' 99. and C. G. Alurphy, 00; secre- tary-treasurer, B. P. Oakford. ' 02, LL. B.. ' 03; iiiciiibcrs of council for four-year term. S. W. Charles. ' 98. J. T. Nourse, oo, J. F. English, ' 01 ; for three-year term. H. R. Fry. ' 01. LL. B.. ' 02, T. Alderson. 02. LL. B., 03. F. A. Leib. ' 02; ' () ■ ti o-year term, C. I. Fickert. ' 98, L. L Susman. oi, F. W. Doan, LL. B., ' 03 ; ■() - one-year term, J. H. Coverly. ' 00. E. S. Page, oo, LL. B., ' 02, F. Karr, ' 02. The Stanford Law School Association was reorganized on February 5, 1903. after lying dormant for a period of seven years. Organized at first in 1895, the Association was short lived — existing actively but two years — because of the small enrollment in the law department and the insufficiency of the Law School itself. The aims of the Association are to further the interests of the Stanford Law School and to foster unity and good-fellowship among the students and alumni of the law department. A meeting of the organization will be held every year during the week preceding Commencement at which some man high in juristic circles will be invited to speak under the auspices of the Association. The Alumni Association Officers President L. J. Hindsdale, ' 95 First Vice-President W. J. Neidig, ' 96 Second Vice-President W. W. Kemp, ' 98 Secretary C. R. Lewers, ' 96 Executive Committee Iiss L. P. Green, 98 J. F. Burcham, ' 97 R. L. Wilbur, ' 96, Chairman The Ahunni Association was organized on June 15, 1892, with a membership roll of thirty-eight names, of which number twenty-seven men and two women had received the Bachelor ' s degree, and seven men and two women the degree of Master of Arts from the young Alma Mater. The Association ' s chief aim at present is to collect full information concerning the whereabouts and the present and past activities of the members, to be published in the form of a directory. A monthly bulletin. The Alumnus, which prints matters of current interest aliout the Liniversity and the graduates, is published by the Association, and an annual reunion and banquet is held on the campus during Commence- ment Week. Musical ? A- ' l , -;- ' ' i| :-•= ' % f i -M %V ' :: 1 - :iVIVi U ' iA ' ' • ' jfe;:iH: Mi .:..:.::... Itinerary of the Seventh Annual Tour of the Glee and Mandolin Clubs Dec. 12 — San Francisco. A flying trip for charity ' s sake. Dec. 19 — Sacramento. Had jMorrison receives a bouquet. Dec. 20 — Chico. Nothing doing for Doc. Our sleeper is sidetracked. Dec. 21 — Sunday at Redding. Bush spends the day with the folks. Dec. 22 — Redding. The afternoon dance. Bush receives a bouquet. Rain. Dec. 23 — Ashland. Snow fights and small pox en route. Our own sleeper again. Dec. 24 — Albany. ' Twas the night before Christmas, and all through the house, not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse. Dearing gets left. Dec. 25 — Salem. We visit the penitentiary and the asylum. Dec. 26 — Portland. Dress shirts w ashed at last. A full house. Dec. 27 — Oregon City. The Electric Hotel. The Odd Fellows ' dance. Casey Palmer misses the last car. Rain. Dec. 28 — Sunday at Portland. Reception at Rockey ' s. Dec. 29 — The Dalles. Up the Columbia. Upper classmen sleep on board. Dec. 30 — Vancouver. The 11:30 dance at Portland. Rain. Dec. 31 — Olympia. Introduction to the pan-roast. Jan. I — Tacoma. Reception but no dance. Jan. 2 — Port Townsend. Atkinson slides down the steps. Jan. 3 — Victoria. Harry Edw-ards pays the excess baggage charges. Jan. 4 — Sunday in Vancouver. Byrne takes a walk in the Park. Jan. 5 — Vancouver. Five o ' clock tea and hop after the show. Jan. 6 — Whatcom. Frosty weather. Bush spares no expense. Jan. 7 — Snohomish. Strike at the Everett Theater. The deluge. Jan. 8 — Seattle. The University dance. Fraternity reunions. Jan. 9-13 — On the Senator. Whitaker is indisposed. Byrne is not. Jan. 23 — Concert on the Campus. Old favorites. iNIarch 13 — Belmont. A co-educational trip. Stanford Quad 1904 don ' ' t care a Whit if I do dit 205 Stanford Quad 1904 Varsity Glee Club Leader Cleveland H. Baker, ' 04 Manager Lee Carroll Hawley, ' 03 L. C. HawleYj ' 03 First Tenor B. E. NouRSE, ' 03 H. L. Bearing, ' 06 B. P. Oakforu, 02 Arch Perrin, ' 04 B. R. Cocks, ' 04 Second Tenor H. F. Scoville, ' 04 First Bass H. H. Atkinson, ' 03 N. L. Avery, ' 04 F. P. Whitaker, ' 04 H. E. Bush, ' 05 Sonologist L. D. Byrne, ' 05 Accompanist Arch Perrin, ' 04 Second Bass C. II. Baker, ' 04 A. W. Hooper, ' 05 W. H. Lanagan, ' 04 B. M. WOTKYNS, ' 06 R. N. Park, ' 04 C. L. FiREBAUGH, ' 04 Soloist C. L. FiREBAUGH, ' 04 Stunts Bush and Baker 206 W W9W -m d : ,1 ' ' ' ■i.0 ' ' JIP 1 B ■Jjtl ■ 1 . . J • ,-. I II. - m ;u ■ : j - B r • r«l- f M 4g B ntlCl Iff. 1 uB ' HlHSli fi i JK; ' Hki:- ' ' - ' 9 kf . B V. nt ' 9 Hf jj H BtHB il ClL h ■w '  : i m ' jaiiii jm b r ' ■ 1 i tw P )i(i ' ' ' 5 ' l Mf .w . •■ 1 1 kT ! ■Ri 1 1904 Varsity Mandolin Club Loader ( J. Kkith, ' 03 - ' :i ' i:igtT V. (]. M OKKISON, 03 I- ' irst Maiiddlins R. T. Kkith, 03 J. E. KxAPi ' . 03 11. L. Morrison, 03 w. H. Lanagan, 04 Norman E. Dole. 03 Hans Barkan. 04 N. C. Powers, 03 A. B. Ross, ' 05 Second Mandolins J. Al. Beach, 03 H. C. Hubbard, 03 Norman Collyer, 04 lAl. L. Van Norden. 04 R. N. Park. 04 A. W. Hooper, 05 Gnitars E. I. Thayer, ' 03 W. G. Morrison, ' 03 T. E. Palmer, 03 Q. A. Scoville, ' 03 H. H. Atkinson, ' 03 H. S. Gay, ' 03 H. E. Bush, ' 05 H. B. Sharpe. 04 Cello D. P. Campbell, ' 04 208 Stanford Quad 1904 The Girls ' Glee Club Officers President Cecelia Atherton, ' 03 ( Edna Walker, ' 03 Secretary i P ' ' ' Woods, ' 05 } Mabel Barn house, ' 04 Treasurer ) ' Wilson, ' 05 ( Chita Kraft, ' 03 Leader S Chita Kraft, ' 03 } A Fay Ferrell, ex ' 99 Members First Soprano Cecelia Atherton, ' 03 Mabel Barnhouse, ' 04 Edna Walker, ' 03 Gertrude Beeger, ' 06 Beatrice Lessey, ' 04 Harriet Stillson, ' 06 Jeraldine Brown, ' 04 Josephine Herron, ' 06 Edna Wilson, ' 05 Harriet Olding, ' 06 Stella Sankey, ' 06 Data Rothrock, ' 06 Second Soprano Ethel Foster, ' 04 Edith Edgerly, 04 Helen Lewis, 05 Lela Beebe, ' 04 Bessie Hall, ' 06 First Alto Pansy Woods, ' 05 Jessie Greyson, ' 03 Cecil Raber, ' 05 Second Alto Inez Hyatt, ' 04 Grace Chandler, 03 Grace Bruckman, ' 04 Chita Kraft, ' 03 Jeanette Hayward, ' 05 Jennie Roller, ' 06 Rosemary Stoltz, ' 06 210 Stanford Quad 1904 i -. r Girls ' Mandolin Club Officers ' ' Claire Sweetman, ' 04 President Ethel Fifield, 04 Secretary-Treasurer Ella Ibs, ' 03 First Mandolins Claire Sweetman, ' 04 Minerva Nyhan, ' 05 Mabel Harris, ' 05 Mabel O ' Brien, ' 06 Second Mandolins Ella Ibs, 03 Josephine Herron 06 Ethel Henrich, ' 06 Guitars Audrey Brown, ' 03 Ethel Fifield, ' 04 Helen Whitehead, ' 04 Alice Richards, ' 05 212 Stanford Quad 1904 Officers President W. J. Stack, 03 Secretary-Treasurer I. Anderson, ' 03 Manager G. H. Beebe, ' 04 Leader M. H. Thorpe, ' 05 Members Cornets R. J. Hughes, ' 03 M. H. Thorpe, ' 05, Solo G. H. Beebe, ' 04 E. W. Martin L. W. Cutler, ' 06 Clarinets R. U. Fitting, ' 04 K. Tuttle, ' 06 W. G. Heinly, Gr. Piccolo G. A. ScoviLLE, ' 03 Trombones C. A. V. Fitzgerald, ' 04 R. H. Chapin, ' 05 B. C. BuBB, 04 A. R. Toothaker, ' 06 Altos W. J. Stack, ' 03, Solo A. K. Wiley, ' 06 N. C. Grider, ' 03 J. M. Miller, ' 06 E-flat Tubae W. K. Roosevelt, ' 03 C. W. Hatton, ' 03 J. J. Hayward, ' 06 Baritone L. G. Moore, ' 03 Drums I. Anderson, ' 03, Snare A. S. Kalenborn, ' 03, Bass 214 Stanford Quad 1904 Leader Arthur Scutt Brook l ' irst Violins G. A. ScoviLLE W. H. Campbell ] Iiss G. H. Bruckman C. E. Waite Dudley JMoulton F. E. Brackett Ahss K. R. Kip V. E. Stork John Hague A. W. Gordon R. U. Fitting I. H. Thorpe W. J. Stack B. C. BUBB Second Violins C. W. Weiser J. K. Branner G. F. McClelland C. C. James Viola Henry W. Fowler Cello M. M. Stearns Donble Bass Viol D. P. Campbell Flutes Clarinets Cornets Prof. FT. F. Blichfeldt K. TUTTLE F. W. Roller R. J. Hughes Horns C. V. FIatton Troml)ones C. A. V. Fitzgerald Piano Miss Chita Kraft ' 1 ynipani A. S. H ALLEY 216 Milpitas Brass Bugle Club Stanford Quad Motto: It is better to have arrived from Milpitas tliaii never to liave arri ed at all. Olover Peeliles Jenkins Leader D. N. Snedden Bass Drum Bill William Jay Neidig .... Torch Bearer David Starr Branner First Base Flute Melville Best Anderson Lute Arley Barthlow Show Harp Samule Swazie Seward Cello Adolph Karl von Noe German Horn French Horn O. Du I- ' unny Kehrlein Percy Martin Mouth Origan II. S. Percival W. H. Bradley Hugh A. Moran O. P. Dildock 1 yuipaiii E. K. Putnam G. G. Altnow A. R. Toothaker Jczc ' s-harp C. A. Klein Pipe Organ C. F. Dittmar De Lancelot Lewis J. A. ] lerrill Parker Frisselle Hand Organ E. A. Flanders D. A. hynn S. J. McLean Snare Drum K. !• . Kemiedy See De McComish L. H. Seargeant Frank Hess A. W. Gordon 217 1904 Publications Stanford Quad 1904 A LITERARY RETROSPECT HE journals of Stanford University have always ])ossessed, to an exceptional degree, color. The original red was a trifle raw, as befitted tiles not et weathered by sun and rain. There were even several glaring streaks of yellow, but they soon vanished. Then there was a drift to the other end of the spectrum. The very covers of the Sequoia became blue — the blue of twilight, the purple of February violets. But the brush out of Kipling ' s or somebody ' s paint-pot soon overlaid that, and the earlv tints were restored. This is not a mere fancy ; at any rate, beneath it there is the simple fact that there has always been a marked color of some sort — we might call it character, but we should mean the same thing. Journalism, like everything else in this miraculous institution, was born with wings and feet. The monthly Palo Alto, for. of, to, with, and by the students of L. S. J. U., was issued on the very day of the opening of the University and ran lightly through the nine numbers of the first year. Its editor and manager was Holbrook Blinn, who has lately been ])laying with Olga Nethersole ' s theatrical company in Lon- don. The paper was really remarkable for its size, its character, and its support. The first number sold 2,500 copies. True, that number con- sisted chiefly of University history ( !) and addresses. But there were also editorials, one containing a proposition to select White and Gold for Stanford Stanford colors, and there was one piece of pure literature. This Quad ' i Chant to the Angels in Roblcs (sic) Hall : 1904 Here ' s salute to the angels in bright Roblcs Hall — Hail, gentle frou-frous, delectable all ! Whom Heaven sent hither to hallow this dirt, With the hat-holding sight of the swish-tickle skirt ! :|: :i: :!c :|: :|c =;: Yet why did they roof in a far cloister-rafter you ? And why do they loof us in Almaden stone? The more you ' re decreed hence, tlilf more we are after you ; Isn ' t that credence which all maidens own? For you are the loveliest part of philosophy, The being of music, the whole soul of art ; Isn ' t all literature based on gynosophy — All that best portion which treats of the heart? So how could these shades remain classic at all Deprived of the ladies in bright Robles Hall? Then : Our Devotion ! ' hat an excellent notion ! W ' hat a dear inspiration — This co-education ! This is not particularly precocious — the inspiration fails, appar- ently, at just the critical moment — but some of the things that appeared in later numbers were. In fact, the monthly perished of precocity. It began to ape the grown-up journals of San Francisco, where of course it was printed. It published articles on subjects that youth was never yet known to deal with wisely, and then took the high ground of freedom of the press in self-defense. It grew ambitious and proposed a coalition with Berkeley to conduct a joint publication. And the ninth number was full of projects for the second year — which came to nothing. In fact, the monthly Palo Alfo was an affair of upper-classmen who were gathered from all sorts of schools, and while it had decided character and color, it was never fairly representative of Stanford. That qualification was reserved for a paper which began more modestly and grew into strength with the growing powers of the pioneer class. The Sequoia was started, as a bi-weekly, by the associated students December 9. 189T, two months after the opening of the University. Nicholson was editor and Whittier business manager. For the first Stanford year it showed a httle pale by the side of its swaggering rival. If you Quad have ever seen the official student organ of a small private or sectarian 1904 college, you know about what the early Sequoia was. In it we read of how the young ladies attending church at IMayfield Sunday evenings are becoming expert fence-climbers ; of how Cole says that engineers are a tough sort of a crowd anyway ; of how that little yellow dog supposed to belong to Doc Greer has been dubbed Cinch. You may smile, but it gives some of us a kind of home-sick feeling to read those little items now, or this other of how Senator and Mrs. Stanford with some friends visited several classes a few days ago. Remember, we w ere a comnumity of five or six hundred only. For literary matter, the first volume of the Sequoia was not a little dependent on the faculty. The first number opened with a char- acteristic article on Truth and Knowledge by Professor Griggs, now well known in the East as a public lecturer and writer. But imme- diately after it came a sketch by a student — a reproduction of one of the most original and creditable papers ever submitted here in the Entrance English Composition examinations. Could liss Evelyn Briggs, we asked ourselves, have come to the examination prepared, and then skilfully adapted the paper to the subject assigned, as Tenny- son adapted his prize poem on Timbuctoo ? But no ; an occasion chanced to arise and Miss Briggs repeated the feat, to still better results, as may be seen in the fourth number of the same volume, sol- emnly attested by the head of the English Department. Then the young lady registered in Chemistry and switched to Physiology and literature heard of her no more. Such were the beginnings. Number two opened with an essay on The Pleasure of Causation, which the President of the San Francisco State Normal today must smile to recall, though he need not feel ashamed. Doubtless the Sequoia for the first year was exceedingly heavy when it was not exceedingly light. But things soon changed. In the second year it was made a weekly, and by the establishment of the Daily it was enabled to restrict its newspaper function and declare more definitely for literature. And, said the editor, The tendency of modern literary talent is in the direction of short stories. The Christmas issue of that year (thirty-six pages of cuts and text) was a notable number. Indeed the contents, if printed today for the first time, would make a notable number of a magazine of wide general circulation. There were prose articles by Senator Stanford, President Jordan, Professor 223 Stanford ' ' iKS- - ' I ' l l W alter Cam]), ' riiere were Dr. Jordan ' s poem, Vive- Quad rols, I ' rofessor Smith ' s sons;-, llail! Stanford, Hail! and a transla- 1904 ' ' from lleine l)y Charles l ' ield, wlio was then on the staff. Lastly, thei ' e was Willis 1 . Chamherlin ' s prize story, An Exceptional Case. Here. ])erha])s. is the place to say that the short story as a literary form has never heen more thoroughly mastered by an undergraduate at Stanford than it was by Chamberlin. His work, if any, revealed something ' of the sharp and sure characterization, the psychologic sug- gestion, the restrained passion, the finished art even to the title, some- thing in short of all the French perfections of a Cuy de Maupassant. It was not rei)resentative undergraduate w ' ork, for the writer had a good many more years to his credit than the ordinary undergradtiate, and with them a mature grasp and a large outlook upon life. But behind all w-as his genuine native ability. Read An Exceptional Case ; or read His Last Station in a March nitmber of the same volume. You may be offended, even wounded, and there is no denying that the motive and title of this last story raise an internal tumult of expostulation, but the transfixing power of every word of the story remains, and if you read it once you will never forget it. Chamberlin did not graduate here, but went East, and died shortly afterwards. We like to think that with a kinder fate he might be sharing todav some of the honors of the late Frank Xorris, wdio likewise ten or twelve ears ago was winning early honors, at Berkeley. The Sequoia went on, gathering on its staff ' or among its con- tributors Archie Rice, Neidig, Hulme, Aliss Luce, Miss Comstock, Miss Ryan, Miss Webb, etc. Some of these speedily became classics and had the honor of having their respective manners neatly parodied in the first number of Volume Five ( Fragments after the Old Masters ). Then, to revert to our original ligure, succeeded the blue or violet stage. Volume Six went over to a i)urely literary character, ])ublishing stories, poems, and critiques first, last, and all the time. Even Andrew Lang, Stevenson, and Swinburne were freely levied upon. It made an admirable volume, but it called forth the natural complaint that the magazine represented no longer the associated stu- dents but only the literary tastes of its editor. Then followed the more genuinely student regime of Coolidge the elder, of Bristow Adams, Oskison, Bradley, the Irwins. Bowman, Outcalt, Story, Hartwell, Ster- rett. Miss Webster, and the generation of undergraduates for whom these lines are written and who would l)lush to read their names here. 224 In the fall of 92 the Daily was established, succeeding to the name Stanford of the defunct monthly. Its history has little to do with a literary review Quad like this, hut the part it has played in university journalism is beyond 1904 estimate, and the names of the men and women who have gone from its office to the large newspaper offices of San Francisco and other cities west and east have been frequently recorded. It is but simple truth to add that the Daily Palo Alto has been successful from the beginning, often under most trying circumstances, has pursued a straightforward business polic} ' , and j reserved always a temperate and dignified tone, shunning alike the extremes of puerility and sensationalism. j Iore- over, in its special Commencement numbers some university literature has found preservation. The Junior Quad was instituted by the Pioneer Class in 1894. In this annual the artistic talent of the University finds scope, and the various virtues of hrancis. Culver, Bristow Adams, lerle Johnson. Borough, Bowman, ] liss Holly, Sterrett, and the later illustrators are abundantly attested in the ten picturesque volumes. The average literary value of the annual has been far from commensurate. Of course parodies and the sort of vignettes in rhyme that go w ell with kodaks and other records in black and white are the staple verse productions, wh.ich, however clever they mav be, defy immortality. It is true, the Ql ' ao has encouraged the production of solid work as persistently as Oxford and Cambridge have done with their A ' cwdigafe and Scatoniaii foundations for prizes. But the Quad prizes have usu- ally gone, most reluctantl}-, to work inferior to that constantly pub- lished in the Sequoia, often by the same wTiters. Perhaps the endeavor to conform to certain assumed requirements hampers effort ; perhaps the stimulus comes too late in the school year, when creative energies are at a low ebl). A ' olume Eight, however, is conspicuous for literary merit. The prize productions in that number were both good — Whit- more ' s story with its half typical student humor and its more than half typical student ])()litics, and Renaud ' s strong double ballade of The Loveless : and liesides these there were Field ' s touching A erses to Barbara, lildred Stanford ' s graceful Serenade, and Bow-man ' s imaginative and haunting sonnet on Graduation. To find the equals of these four poems one must go back to Will Irwin ' s Ad Alumnos in A ' olume Five, and thence clear back to Neidig ' s Sonnet in olume One, which, however, was reprinted from the Sequoia. There are other media that might be literary ])ut are not. The Cliaparral has grown sturdy and withal rot over-thorny, yet the mel- Stanford anclioly lovers in our Forest of Ardcn ])refer to lian tlicir sonnets on Quad ' taller tree. It is not inconceivable that a literature .should l)e fostered 1904 ' stas e of Assembly Hall, where painted upperclassmen strut their hour; but spouting- volcanoes and tire-eating dragons may not be allowed to swell this record. Literature, indeed, is at best a large word with which to label the imaginative product of undergraduate years, however marked its character may be. It snatches fire freely from the altars of its worship. Of all literary influences in the past ten years, that of Kipling has been the strongest. The best poem submitted in the Quad coinpetition this year was a frank parody of The Recessional. Oskison was a disciple of the same writer. Even Chamberlin, ten years ago who must have received his earliest training in another school, fell under the Kipling spell, as his story, A Convincing Statement, (Sequoia, Vol. II.), shows. And Irwin ' s liaccalaureate Hymn (Sequoia, Sept. i6, 1898), and Ad Alumnos are overtones of the same powerful lyre. Both of these last, indeed, are among the finest poems thus inspired to be found anywhere, and deserve to live in our University annals for their intrinsic virtues. When a man puts so much feeling and imagination of his own into a poem, it little concerns us where he found the form. The more prosaic realists have also had their followers, chiefly, it would seem, among the women. j Iiss Webb ' s Henry ' s Boy (Sequoia, Vol. IV.), for instance, might pass for an early study by Aliss Wilkins or Ruth McEnerny Stuart — it matters little which, for it is mostly the fate oi writers in this kind to exhaust individual eft ' ort in pressing the button of the camera of their craft. The romantic influ- ences have been many, from Cervantes to Swinburne. Perhaps the romancer who has been imitated to best purpose is the fantastically human Stevenson. Yet the Stevenson quality is a delicate thing to trace, so compounded is it of a hundred simples. (Could the student have known this who tried to win credit in English Composition with stories bodily stolen?) At any rate, it insinuates itself so variously and elusively that one is seldom quite sure. In the one case here where it seems to come out most clear and strong, all talk of imitation is idle. For if anyone has been born to look at life through the glamor of Stevensonian glasses, that one would seem to be Larry Bowman. Finally, the life that does not come through books has always played a significant part here. The spirit of this new land, with its back to tradition, its face to the sea-faring sun, could not and should not be kept out of its literature. Real literature, unfortunately, has not 226 yet been made of it at Stanford, but the spirit is perceptible in nearly Stanford all that has been done ; moreover, some Californiana of real historical Quad and scientific value may be found scattered through our magazines. 1904 The national episode of the conflict in the Philippines touched us closely and some things like Hartwell ' s Vohmteer Vanities {Sequoia, Vol. A III.), have the genuine ring and are well worth reverting to. A few individual ventures have been made, mostly by graduates. The Four-Leaved Clover of Carolus Ager, whose modest claim to the University Laureateship there is still none to dispute, and the Stan- ford Stories of Field and Irwin are known to Stanford men and women everywhere. Neidig and Hulme have both published in the paper form that recks not of perpetuity. Wallace Irwin ' s volumes of humorous verse have both distinction and vogue. Binkley ' s recent House of Days is perhaps the most serious incursion yet made into that literature which holds of the larger human life, and eastern as well as western voices of authority have judicially pronounced it worthy. Of scattering productions — the selections from Stanford literature for Cap and Gown, for instance, or the stories, poems, and articles by Oskison, the Irwins, Neidig, Coolidge, Miss Wherry, Miss Chand- ler, etc., in The Century, Harpers, Popular Science Monthly, The Overland, The Youth ' s Companion, and a score of other papers — there is no space to speak. Nor can the contributions of the faculty to the rapidly growing bulk of our literature be brought into this survey. The question naturally arises, What of all this is permanent? Nothing perhaps, so far as the outside world is concerned. We trust that some of the names of those who now pass or have passed beneath our arches may yet rise into wide literary recognition, but if so, quite as likely as not it will prove to be a name that has escaped this present incomplete and fallible record. But for ourselves, w ' e think that at least several of our college songs, call them literature or not, will not die wuth the generation of their birth. For the rest — fugitive efforts of the exploring imagination, scattered on flying and perishable leaves — we can only cry after them, half with gladness and half with regret, in the words of that Ad Alumnos that should not perish, The mother sits beside the bay. The bay goes down to wed the sea, And gone are ye on every tide Wherever men and waters be. A. G. Newcomer. 227 Stanford Quad 1904 The Quad- Vol. X Editor Isaac Russell jNIanager A. S. Henley Associate Editors Alice W. Kimball Irene A. Wright Margaret B. Smith F. H. Fowler O. A. Wilson W. Young A. A. Hampson B. R. Cocks H. C. Brown W. F. Dunn Norman Collyer R. V. Anderson B. C. BUBE Quad Editors Editor Vol. I — A. Lewis, Jr., 95 Vol. 2 — W. D. Briggs. ' 96 Vol. 3 — E. M. Hulme, ' 97 Vol. 4 — F. V. Keesling, ' 98 Vol. 5 — C. Al. Bradley, ' 99 Vol. 6 — Wallace Irwin. ' 00 Vol. 7 — H. L. Langnecker, oi Vol. 8 — M. E. ]McDouGALD. ' 02 Vol. 9 — R. E. Renaud, 03 Business Manager N. G. Buxton, ' 95 T. B. Frankenheimer, ' 96 R. H. Spencer, ' 97 F. U. Ayer, ' 98 F. H. Greenebaum, ' 99 H. II. Taylor, ' 00 H. A. Friedman, ' 01 M. F. McCormtck, 02 C. Naramore, ' 03 228 W - _ ! H M J  •- X 1 1 ' .. . 1 H H BK Stanford Quad 1904 Chaparral Founded October 5, 1899 Editors President Business Manager Isaac Russell, ' 04 l. h. roseberry, 03 J. K. Bon NELL, ' 03 R. E. Renaud, ' 03 C. K. Studlev, ' 03 B. C . BuBB, ' 04 O. A. Wilson, 04 C. L. Lyman, ' 05 W. Young, ' 04 ] ' ol I Bristow Adams, Editor, ' 00 Larrey Bowman, ' 01 R. Keith Culver, ' go H. D. Walter, ' 01 E. W. Smith, ' 00 May Hurlburt, ' 02 Fletcher Wagner, ' 02 C. ] I. Bradley, ' 02 ] ' ol. II Bristow Adams, ' 00. Editor Larrey Bowman, ' 01 W. C. Francis, ' 03 J. K. Bonnell, ' 02 R. E. Renaud, ' 03 Vol. in R. E. Renaud, ' 03. Editor Isaac Russell, ' 04. Editor J. K. Bonnell, 02 F. B. Wagner, ' 02 C. K. Studley, ' 03 K. WiGLE, 03 F. A. Ford. 04 W. Young, ' 04 229 Stanford Quad 1904 The Stanford Sequoia Established December 9, 1891 Editors Editor ... Business Manager Waldemar Young, ' 04 . A. P. Harris, ' 03 Associate Editors J. K. BoNNELL, ' 02 R. E. Renaud, ' 03 H. F. COOLIDGE, ' 03 J. B. GiLDERSLEEVE, ' 03 T. E. Stephenson, ' 03 Mabel H. Brown, ' 03 R. J. Sterrett, ' 03 Isaac Russell, ' 04 Assistant Editors Edith F. Parsons, ' 03 Irene A. Wright, ' 04 F. H. Fowler, ' 04 Edna A. Needles, ' 05 D. M. Reynolds, ' 05 230 Editors of the Sequoia Vol. — W. Nicholson, 92: C. B. Whittier. ' 93; M. W. Greer, 94; W. B. .Moul- ton, ' 94; C. L. Clemens; C. E. Libenthal ; Flora Love, ' 94; E. D. Magee, ' 95; G. A. Clark; M. E. Haven, ' 93; J. F. Wilson, 94; W. P. Chamberlin, ' 95; A. J. Brown; P. S. Castleman, ' 93; K. F. Evans, ' 95; Grace A. Luce, ' 95. Fo . - ' — R. T. Buchanan, ' 93; A. H. Barnhisel, 93; F. J. Balbeldcr; .ALibel Holsclaw , ' 93; Eugenia Mabury, ' 94; C. Houghton, ' 94; E. R. Zion, ' 94; C. K. Field, ' 95; C. Hughes, ' 95; Margaret Foster, ' 96; W. W. Guth, ' 96; J. Herrick, ' 96; Grace A. Luce, 95. Vol. 3 — W. P. Chamberlin, ' 95; W. M. Rose, ' 95; E. Hughes, ' 95; H. S. Hicks, ' 96; O. D. Richardson, Gr. ; Kate L. Nash, ' 95; C. C. Hughes, ' 95; E. G. Mabury, ' 94; E. Hulme, ' 96; S. M. Cram, ' 96; H. H. Brown, ' 96; E. R. Zion, ' 94; Alice Cowen, ' 97; S. Piatt, ' 97. Vol. 4 — W. W. Guth, ' 95; W. M. Rose, ' 95; C. K. Field, ' 95; H. H. Brown, ' 96; Henrietta Stadtmuller, ' 95; Sarah Comstock, ' 96. Vol. 3 — W. J. Neidig. ' 96; John M. Switzer, ' 98; S. M. Cram, ' 96; Winifred Webb, ' 97; Mary L. Meyrick, ' 99. Vol. 6 — E. M. Hulme, ' 97; C. L Dillon, ' 99; G. B. Culver, ' 97; Jessie A. Ryan, ' 97; Blance M. Boring, ' 97; Merle Johnson, ' 97; L E. Outcalt, Gr. ; Dane Coolidge, ' 98; W. H. Irwin, ' 99; Mary C. Jack, ' 99; Margaret G. Hood, ' 98; J. M. Oskison, ' 98; Bristow Adams, ' 00. Vol. 7 — Dane Coolidge, ' 98; L. L Gregory, ' 00; G. B. Culver, ' 97; J. ' Si. Oski- son, ' 98; W. H. Irwin, ' 99; Blance M. Boring. ' 98. Vol. 8 — Bristow Adams, ' 00 ; F. Birtch, ' 02 ; Wallace A. Irwin, ' 00 ; Katherine Chandler, ' 00; E. W. Smith, ' 99; G. H. Yost, ' 99; R. K. Culver, ' 00; J. E. Wilson, ' 01 ; L. MacF. Bowman, ' 01 ; L. B. Everett, ' 01 ; William Erb, ' 01. Vol. 9 — R. W. Hartwell, ' 00; C. A. Whitmore, ' 02; C. G. Morris, ' 01; Bristow Adams, ' 00; G. H. Yost, ' 00; L. MacF. Bowman, ' 01; Laura B. Everett, ' 01 ; H. D. Walter, ' 01 ; J. E. Wilson, ' 01 ; Katherine A. Chandler, ' 00 ; C. L. Story, Gr. Vol. 10 — Laura B. Everett, ' 01; K. E. Wigle, ' 03; J. E. Wilson, ' 01; H. F. Coolidge. ' 03 ; H. D. Walter, ' 01 ; C. A. Whitmore, ' 02 ; Mildred Stanford, oi ; J. K. Bonnell, ' 02; R. E. Renaud. ' 03; R. J. Sterrett. 03. Vol. II — J. K. Bonnell. ' 02; N. C. Grider, 03; H. F. Coolidge, ' 03; R. E. Renaud, ' 03; Isaac Russell, 04; Edvth Ellerbeck. ' 02; L. F. Loofbourow, ' 02: R. J. Sterrett, ' 03; H. H. Webster. ' 02: M. H. Brown. ' 03. Stanford Quad 1904 The Day the ' oj i uad Came Out 231 Stanford Daily Palo Alto Quad 1904 Editors First Semester, Vol z i Kditor-iu-Chief - Thorkau Cronvn, ' 03 Managing Editor - T. E. Stephenson, ' 03 News Editor - - O. A. Wilson, ' 04 Associate Editors R. V. Anderson, ' 04 A. A. Hampson, ' 04 R. D. Fleming, ' 05 F. W.Powell, ' 01 C. W. Thomas, ' 03 O. Du F. Kehrlein, ' 05 Assistant Editors W. A. Paxton, ' 06 Chita Krakt, ' 03 Annette Elliott, ' 06 Irene A. Wright, ' 04 J. p;. Campbell, ' OG J. P. Harrington, ' 06 Business Manager - - J- A- Quelle Second Semester, Vol. 22 Editor-in-Chief - T. E Stephenson, ' 03 Managing Editor - O. A. Wilson, ' 04 News Editor - - C. W. Thomas, ' 03 Associate Editors A. A. Hampso j, ' 04 F. W. Powell, ' Oi O. Du F. Kehrlein, ' 05 B. C. Dey, ' 05 Assistant Editors W. A. Paxton, ' 06 W. H. Thompson, 05 C. R. Pierce, ' 06 Irene A. Wright, ' 04 Chita Kraft, ' 03 E. V. Henley, ' 06 W. H. B. Fowler, ' 06 J. E. Campbell, ' 06 Business Manager - - J. A. Quelle Fo . — Carl S. Smith, ' 93, Edilor-in-Chief ; Houghton Sawyer, ' 95, Business Manager ; H. C. Tildeu, ' 91; J. F. Sheehau, ' 95 ; W. M. Rose, ' 95; Henrietta Stadtmuller, ' 95; W. E. Stuart, ' 95 ; Miss M. Jones, ' 95 ; S. E. Simmons, ' 95. Fb . 2—]. F. Wilson, ' 91, Editor-in-Chief; E. R. Zion, ' 91, Business Manager; A. B. Rice, ' 95; Scott Calhoun, ' 95; E. D. Lewis. yol.j—. . C. Trumbo, ' 94, Editor-in-Chief; W. C. Hazzard, ' 95, Business Manager; Scott Calhoun, ' 95; H. H. Brown, ' 96; R. I . Donald, ' 95; C. M. Crane, ' 96. Vol. 4—X. B. Rice, ' 95, Editor-in-Chief; S. W. Collins, ' 95, Business Manager; Scott Calhoun, ' 95; B. F. Bledsoe, ' 1(6; Robert L. Donald, ' 95; W. J. Neidig, ' 96; J. H Timraons, ' 97. Vol. 5—K. L,. Donald, ' 95, Editor-in-Chief; A. H. Pollock, ' 95, Business Manager; B. F. Bledsoe, ' 96; C. F. Eustis, ' 97; Winnifred Harper, ' 96; W. B. Wells, ' 97; J. H. Tiramons, ' 97. Vol. (5— Scott Calhoun, ' 95, F;ditor-in-Chief; A. H. Pollock, ' 95, Business Manager; W. B. Wells, ' 97; W. H. Irwin, ' 99; Winnifred Harper, ' 96; S. B. Osborne, ' 97; C. K. Field, ' 95. Vol. 7— J. H. Timmons, ' 97, Editor-in-Chief; George B. Wilson, ' 96, Business Manager; W. H. Irwin, ' 99; C. P. Cutten, ' 98; Winnifred Harper, ' 96; W. C. McNeil, ' 98. Vol. ?— Sherrill B. Osborne; ' 97, Editor-in-Chief; Frank W. Morrison, ' 96, Business Manager; W. B. Wells, ' 97: J. R. Nourse, ' 97; W. C. McNeil, ' 98; C. E. Schwartz, ' 99; J. A. Tucker, ' 96. Ko . 9— W. H. Irwin, ' 99, Editor-in-Chief; J. T. Burcham, ' 97, Business Manager; J. R. Nourse, ' 97; Grace C. Gilman, ' 9S; C. M. Bradley, ' 01; C E. Schwartz, ' 99; O. C. Leiter, ' 99. Vol. 10— J. R. Nourse, ' 97, Editor-in-Chief; J. T. Burcham, ' 97, Business Manager; F. W. I.ake, ' 97; C. M. Bradley, ' 01; Rose Johnson, ' 99; R. E. Filcher, ' 99; O. C. I,eiter, ' 99. Vol. II— C. E. Schwartz, ' 99, Editor-in-Chief; F. S. Fisher, ' 98, Business Manager; Marion .Adams, ' 98; E. W. Smith, ' 99; B. E. Page, ' 99; G. H. Yost, ' 99; R. E. Filcher, ' 99; T. T. C. Gregory, ' 99; Erie Veuve, ' 99; C. F. Riddell, ' liU; J. T. Nourse, ' 00; Bristow Adams, ' 00; F. I,. Hall, ' 00; A. B. Lemmon, ' 01; G. E. Miller, ' 01. Vol. T2—0. C. I eiter, ' 99, Editor-in-Chief; F. S. Fi.sher, ' 98, Business Manager; Grace C. Gilman, ' 98; R. E. Filcher, ' 99; E. W. Smith, ' 99; B. E. Page, ' 99; C. P. Cutten, ' 99; T. T. C. Gregory, ' 99; Bristow Adams, ' 00 Vol. ?— C. P. Cutten, ' 99, Editor-in-Chief; E. E. Morgan, ' 00, Business Manager; C. E. Schwartz, ' 99; R. E. Filcher, ' 99; O. C. Leiter, ' 99; T. T. C. Gregory, ' 99; J. T. Nourse, ' 00; Bristow Adams, ' 00; Frank Adams, ' 00; R. O. Hadley, ' 03; W. M. Erb, ' 01. Vol. , — Everett W. Smith, ' 99, Editor-in-Chief; E. W. Smith, ' 99, Business Manager; Bristow Adams, ' 00; J. T. Nourse, ' 00; Frank Adams, ' 00; W. M. Erb, ' 01; R. O. Hadley, ' 03; F D Hamilton, ' 01. Vol. IS—]- T. Nourse, ' 00, Editor-in-Chief; H. E. Lougheed, ' 00, Business Manager; R. C. Victor, ' 00; F. D. Hamilton, ' 01; C. F. Riddell, ' 01; Frank Adams, ' 01; Richard Lockey, ' 01; F. H. Foster, ' 01; J. R, Hamilton, ' 01; Miss M. E. McDougald, ' 02. Vol. 7 5— R. C. Victor, ' 00, Editor-in Chief ; H. E. Lougheed, ' 00, Business Manager; W. M. Erb, ' 01; C. F. Riddell, ' 01; Frank Adams, ' 01; Richard Lockey, ' 02; F. H. Foster, ' 01; C. A. Whit- more, ' 02; G. W. Dryer, ' 02; J. B. Gildersleeve, ' 03; Thoreau Cro nyn, ' 03. Vol. 17— V. D. Hamilton, ' ol, Editor-in-Chief; J. G. DeForest, ' 02, Business Manager; W. M. Erb, ' 01; Thoreau Cronyn, ' 02; G. W. Dryer, ' 02; C. A. Whitmore, ' 02; Frank Hinman, ' 02; C. Pollard, ' 03; P. P. Parker, ' 03. Vol. ?— A. B. Lemmon, ' 01, Editor-in-Chief; A. J. Copp, Jr., ' 02, Business Manager; L- Ferrari, ' 01; R. O. Hadlev, ' 03; C. Pollard, ' 03; P. P. Parker, ' 03; R H. Kimball, ' 03; I. A. Zilisch, ' 03; H. M. Lewis, ' 04 Vol. 79— Frank Hinman, ' 02, Editor-in-Chief; T. E. Stephenson, ' 03; C. J. Crary, ' 03; R. H. Kim- ball. ' 03-. Watdemar Young, ' 04; O. A. Wilson, ' 04. Vol. 50— R. O. Hadlev, ' 03. Editor-in-Chief; T. E. Stephenson, ' 03; C. J. Crary, ' 03; R. H.Kimball, ' 03; W. Young, ' 04; R. V. Anderson, ' 04; O. A. Wilson, ' 04. 232 Stanford Quad 1904 The Stanford Alumnus FoL IV Chairman Dk. Ray Lyman Wilbur, ' 96 Editor E. B. Copeland, ' 95 Business Manager Charles F. Wright, ' 96 Editors A. B. Rice, ' 95 William H. Irwin, ' 99 Mary I. Lockey, ' 02 H. P. Earle, ' 05 R. O. Hadley, ' 03 Thoreau Cronyn, ' 03 Editors Managers Vol. II Vol. Ill C. E. Schwartz, ' 99 C. E. Schwartz, ' 99 Lillian E. Ray, ' 97 W. Hull, ' 99 W. Hull, 99 F. E. N angle, ' 03 Getting the Neivs Under Difficulties 234 J : - A [aid of nineteen hundred three, ff - ' - Resting here beneath the tree, — Seat ' s just big enough for two — Well, old man, it ' s up to you. — Fro)n the ' ' Chaparral. Athletics Now ' s the Time to Score Review, o the ATHLETICS Stanford Quad 1904 ] RE in Stanford we have seen an unbroken series of defeats during the last year. Still the supporters of the Cardinal may look back upon our contests with the State University with no feeling of re- gret. During the past few years Stanford has been fighting not only Berkeley but also a force within herself which is more powerful than the State University — the breaking of training rules. Confronted by such a powerful combination of oppo- nents the Cardinal has done well to win as many victories as she has. But last year saw the beginning of the death of this force and the beginning of the revival of the old Stanford spirit. The two men to whom most credit is due are Dr. Angell and Captain McCaughern of the Track Team. When Coach Swindells undertook the training of the baseball squad he had to deal with a mass of raw material. There were no star players and there seemed no possibility of even an average team. But Swindells set to work and instilled into the men team work and fighting spirit till he developed a team that, though it had but three wearers of the S, kept the baseball championship in doubt till the last play. The first game was played on our own campus and resulted in a victory for the State University by a score of 6 to 3. The game was a close one and was decided by the batting. Berkeley was fortunate in bunching her hits at critical points of the game. The second and final game of 239 Stanford the series was ]-)layed a week later on U. C ' s campus. This was the Quad tiercest and hardest fought j ame ever ])layed between the two univer- ]904 sities. After two hours and elevt-n inninos of good, consistent ball the L ' nivcrsit}- of California won by IJraly ' s hit over second, and the game ended with a score of 2 to i. Crawford played an excellent game at short and accepted ten chances without an error. Drown ' s throwing and Lowenthal ' s fielding were good, and Parker, though he allowed eight hits, kept them well scatteretl. The tennis went to Berkeley without Stanford winning a single set. In form and dash the Stanford men were the equal of Berkeley, l)ut the lack of good courts to practice on showed itself, and Stanford went down before the consistent playing of her opponents. Weihe lost to Hunt, 6-1, 6-T, ; Baker lost to McGavin, 6-3, 6-3 ; and in the doubles Weihe and Lieb lost to Hunt and Baker, 6-2, 6-3. The track season started with many l rilliant prospects for Stan- ford, but inclement weather and many serious mishaps to men who were looked on as sure point winners were Stanford ' s undoing. U. C. won by a score of 78 to 43 . The quarter and 220-yard dash went to Stanford and in the relay the Cardinal finished seventy yards ahead of Berkeley. In every event the Cardinal men showed up well and took places where least expected. Coast records were made in the 220-yard hurdles of 25 5 seconds by Cheek and Powell of U. C, and in the shot-put of 42 feet 85 inches by Plaw of U. C. Plaw also made an intercollegiate record of 153 feet 10 inches in the hammer throw. Though badly defeated as far as points go Stanford men left the field with a feeling of satisfaction. The team had shown itself made of the right material and that it had bright possibilities. It was made up of hard working, consistent performers who had faithfully and con- scientiously observed training rules and who had borne in mind the interests of their college and team mates as well as their own. To Dad Moulton praise is due that his men all finished and ran their race to the last. On Berkeley ' s campus the Freshman Football Team was defeated by a score of 12 to o. They were clearly outmatched and had to fight desperately to keep their opponents from running up a much larger score. Sprott ' s work at left tackle was particularly good. He had no difficulty in breaking through at any time, and his tackling was quick and sure. Captain IVIagee played a good game and several tiiues saved his team from being scored on by his long and accurately ]:)laced 240 punts. The Freshmen fought to the last and the g-ame was not U. C ' s till the whistle blew to end the game. The Varsity game resulted in a victory of i6 to o for the State University. However the score does not show how close was the con- test. Rarely are two teams more evenly matched. To Overall is due in a large measure the credit of the victory, for two of his field goals netted ten points for Berkeley. Neither team was able to advance the ball by bucks or runs and the whole game turned on the kicking, where Overalls accuracy proved Stanford ' s defeat. Sherman ' s one hundred Aard run to a touchdown with the interference of the entire Berkeley team was the finest play ever seen on a Western gridiron. Dole, at half, played a star game. He was in every play and when called on to carry the ball always advanced it. Clark, left end, never allowed a run around his end and time after time broke up the oppo- nent ' s play before it started. McGilvray, full back, Sprott, left tackle, and Bansbach, quarter, showed up well. Magee, who took Clark ' s place at left end, did some magnificent kicking, but the distance of one of his kicks was in a way responsible for Sherman ' s run. In perfect accord with the playing of the Stanford men in mole- skins was the rooting of the men on the bleachers. Throughout the game the team had their enthusiastic and unwavering support, and when it left the field the Stanford bleachers rose to a man and cheered it to the echo. On Thanksgiving Day the Varsity went to Salt Lake, and in a game played in the snow, defeated the University of Utah by a score of 35 to II. McGilvray was the especial star. He made two runs of 45 and 65 yards to touchdowns. The revival of the old Stanford spirit, ' ' shown in the attitude of the Student Body toward the teams and their training, points to victories for Stanford not in the next year alone but in years to come. C. W. Tiio rAS, ' 03. Stanford Quad 1904 241 Stanford Quad 1904 The Golden Age of Stanford Athletics 0 Y that Stanford athletic life, as measured by intercollegiate field meets, attained last spring to the youthful dignity of celebrating its decennium, our proneness to look back on the first three or four years of the University as the good old days of athletics, has become exceedingly prone — especially on the part of Alumni and pioneer members of the Faculty. If, however, the writer has a correct notion of the dis- tinguishing attributes of a Golden Age, the early Nineties deserve rather to be called the Golden Age of Stanford athletics than merely and negatively the good old days. Good old days usually mean days which are old because long past, and good because we don ' t know much about them which is bad — or indeed much about them at all. Their goodness is an festhetic goodness due to the per- spective of time. In the good old days of athletics at Oxford, the gentlemen cricketers wore a sober and dignified uniform of swallow-tail coats, long trousers and chimney-pot hats. Viewed through the perspective of time, this sort of thing has the elements of the picturesque, and so perhaps is good. But as regards the thoughts and emotional utterances of the young gentlemen of England, who had to wear this costume, the JMuse of History is silent or speaks symbolically in blanks. Now the characteristics of a Golden Age may be summed up in the term happy carelessness ; things come easily and go easily ; no thought is taken of the morrow ; sufficient unto the day is the good thereof. Each one does what 242 1904 he pleases when he pleases, and what he pleases usually displeases no one else. Stanford Fate itself is easy-going and might well be symbolized by a placid old chaperone, Quad near-sighted and of a somnolent disposition. The early days of Stanford athletics had many of these golden age charac- teristics : if any one wanted to form any kind of a club, dub it Stanford and play anybody, the Student Body made no objection and the Faculty Committees were silent. The Stanford Hockey Club had no official or bodily existence on the campus, but we learned from time to time through the papers that it had materialized in San Francisco. The Stanford Football Team was advertised to play a game with the Y. M. C. A. of San Jose and played it, though we had visible and tactual evidence that all of the Varsity and most of the second team were at that time on the Campus. As each of the participants in this affair received $io for playing at the game, the Faculty Committee on Athletics, con- sidering the age was becoming too pronouncedly golden, made inquiry into the amateur standing of this team with the result of bringing to light the only profes- sional football player ever graduated by the University. This professional was J Ir. Walter Rose who prepared the brief for the Stanford case in the late arbi- tration proceedings before the University Club. Mr. Rose is known at present in San Francisco chiefly as a young lawyer of much erudition and as editor of a legal magazine. In college he was known as an able student and as a zealous theorist in football from the standpoint of the side lines. The San Jose game was one of the few occasions on which Mr. Rose was allowed to carry his theories out into practice, and when, after the game, his fellow students suggested to him that he return the $io, he declined, saying that he preferred to go ringing down the grooves of Fame as Stanford ' s only professional football player : he thought the reputation cheap at the price. The managerial lot in those days was not a strenuous one; there was nothing of the keen desire to show a favorable balance which characterizes the manager of what we may term the Bessemer stage of our existence. Sometimes the mana- ger made a report and sometimes he made more commonly none. He was usually chosen more for good fellowship than for financial ability. From the finan- cial side this policy was not wholly a success, but I am not so sure it was wholly a failure, judged from the standpoint of the University ' s reputation. Mr. Greer Harrison of the Olympic Club tells me that the sharpest and hardest men the club has had to deal with have, in the long run, been the managers from the two Universities, and assuredly that is not the kind of a reputation a university should get at the hands of its representatives. The early Nineties were essentially the Golden Age of Stanford football : the football men had their own Intercollegiate Agreement beyond and above the general agreement ; they had their own brand of big S which neither Track nor Baseball might copy, and they had Walter Camp of blessed memory. Univer- sity sentiment at that time as regards training rules had not crystallized. When the catcher of the Varsity Nine danced till four o ' clock of the day on which he represented Stanford in tennis in the morning and baseball in the afternoon — both intercollegiate events — it was regarded as something in the nature of a joke. But the football men trained faithfully; in scholarship and social influence and character, the teams were above the average of the students, and if any promi- nent candidate to the gridiron showed a tendency to fall from grace, the team 243 tanford ' ' ' whole saw to it that lie was in the strai ln and narrow path ihat led to 1)ed at ten o ' clock. Quad 1904 I ' he writer still lias a ivi(l impression of the first Varsity haseball practice he saw on the Stanford Canipns. On the ground now occnpied by the Oval there were eight men togetlier with a hat and a ball. 1 he practice consisted in great part in batting the ball far ont into the standing wheat, and then sitting down while one man — always the same man — went and got it. On inqniry I found that the man who thus diligently retrieved the ball, was the captain. All this naturally enlarged my notion of the duties of a Varsity ball captain. Never- theless, it was easy to see in the few lirief intervals when the ball and the captain were not out in the wheat field, that the eight men were, in baseball parlance, a rapid aggregation. They were what Dad Moulton would call Naturals. They were also mostly ' 95 men so that in the Faculty-Senior game of that year, the Seniors played each man in every position from catcher to right field, and won the game witho ut effort. With the Class of ' 95 there passed out of college a ball nine with a very remarkable record in the matter of victories and no record at all in the matter of discipline and training. In the matter of training I cannot say there has been much improvement in baseball since those early days, though it is evident that there are forces now at work that before long will force base- ball into line with football and track in this respect. The Golden Age of Stanford ' s Track and Field athletes was the first year of the University and it was without alloy. In Stanford ' s first Field Day, any kind of an event was included in which any man thought he excelled. A run- ning and a standing hop, step and junip, a standing broad jump and throwing the baseball were included in this Field Day of May 28, 1892. The 16-pound hammer had only to pass over 71 feet 7 inches to win first place, and 5 feet and -inch was as high as the bar had to go to fully satisfy the winner of the high jump. But the Golden Age of Stanford track men was short ; in the first Meet with Berkeley the team was defeated by 91 to 35 and the next year 90 to 36. In these years the men trained on the Stock Farm Trotting Track — a long and dusty walk from Encina. From the end of the first year the path of the track men was more thickly strewn with thorns than cinders. With little support either financial or inoral from the Student Body, denied a big .S by the football men, doing in great part their own work of repairing and maintaining the track, they struggled along till in 1896 they tied the score with Berkeley — 56 to 56. The next year the tie was broken — as were most of the Stanford men — by Berkeley. Many a man bet that year who had never bet before and many a man bet that year who never bet again. We have now had ten track and field meets with the University of California and have never gotten farther than that tie of ' 96. There are several reasons for this, and among them is that Berkeley from the first has had an excellent method of developing track athletes. The work has gone on quietly and systematically without any artificial stimulation from crowded bleachers. In the last two years we have seen similar work going on at Stanford. A Field and Track victory — the first victory for Stanford — would seem an appropriate ceremony for Stan- ford ' s entrance into the second decade of Field Day with the University of California. Frank Angell. NoTE the proplietic powers of this . ' ngell — Ediloi-. 244 University Athletic Committees Student Committee D. V. COWDEN 02 F. A. Brown, ' 03 J. C. McCaughern, ' 03 L. C. Hawley, ' 03 H. S. Lee, ' 03 A. S. Henley, ' 04 J. C. Taylor, ' 04 T. McCaughern, ' 05 Faculty Committee Frank i NGELL George Mann Richardson Max Farrand GuiDO Hugo Marx Vernon Lyman Kellogg Stanford Quad 1904 Bruce Ball, ' 03, appointed to vacancy caused by absence of T. McCaughern, ' 05. yaiiglit [our, zi ' C roar, JJ ' c roar, naught four — Stanford! 245 J. C. McCaughern, Track Caprain ■ SK ■ ■ H 1 ' fli m sc s H H f H w ' ' ' .4 1 i lj 1 E. U. Moulton, Trainer C J. Swindells, Baseball Coach H. S. Lee, l ' ' ootball Captain F. A. Brown, Baseball Captain C. L. Clemens, Football Coach H. }. Edwards, Treas. and Man. Football Schedule, 1902 Date Score Opponent Score Place Sept. 27 Oct. 4 Oct. 11 Oct. i Nov. 1 Nov. S Nov. 27 Stanford ,r 12 IS 12 11 23 . 5 Reliance Alumni Reliance Nevada Reliance California Utah 5 5 16 11 Campus Campus Campus Campus Campus San Francisco Salt Lake Stanford Quad 1904 Summarj ' : Games won, G ; Game lost, 1. Stanford Football Team, Season of 1902 Coach - C. L. Clemens, ' 93 Assistant Coaches - - - i r- V at ' .nn i C. G. Murphy, ' 00 Captain - - - - H. S. Lee, ' 03 Manager ------ . H.J.Edwards, ' 01 T . 17 J (G. H. Clark Lett End i „, r. «t |W. P. Magee Left Tackle ------ . w. K. Sprott Left Guard - - - - - - - - H.S. Lee Center - - - CD. Hauvrrman Right Guard - . - - - . . vv. B. Barnhisel „. ,, ,, I R. J. McFadden Right Tackle . t I A. Dole Right End --------M.J Bartell Quarter Back ------- L. P. Bansbach T . , ,. ,, T, , fP. Tarpey Right Half Back - S i, . e IE. A. Smith Left Half Back -------- W. Dole Full Back ------ - A B. C. McGilvray Substitutes K. F. Kennedy J.J. Monzingo G. C. Jacobs W. R. Hamilton H. G. Butterfield K. F. Cooper H. Shields Mar. 1S92— Stai ford, 14 Dec. 1892— 10 1893— 6 1894— 6 1S95— 6 1896— •20 Interco llegiate Football Record University of Cal Cal., 10 1S97— St anford, ' 2S 10 1898— 6 1899- 1900— 5 6 1901- 1902— L ' niversitv of Cal. 247 L. F. Bansbach, ' 04 W. B. Barnhisel, ' 03 M. J. Bartell, ' 05 H. S. Lee, ' 03, Captain H. J. Edwards, ' 01, Manage G. H. Clark, ' 04 A. Dole, ' 03 W. Dole, ' 05 C. D. Hauverman, ' 03 W. B. Magee, ' 06 A. B. C. McGilvray, ' 04 R. J. McFadden, ' 04 E. A. Smith, ' 03 W. K. Sprott, ' 06 P. Tarpey, ' 05 HHHH 1 ' V ' ri ' ■-- 3  Stanford vs. California November 8, igoi Stanford Freshmen vs. California Freshmen Berkeley, October i8, lyoz Stanford vs. Reliance October II, 1901 Magee Kickino When Tubby Kicked a Goal Stanford Quad 1904 Baseball Schedule, 1 902 DATE SCORE 7 OPPONENT SCORE Jan. 25 Stanford Santa Clara 13 Feb. I 6 Alumni 5 Feb. 20 4 Santa Clara 6 Mar. 4 6 Belmont Mar. 5 San Jose I Mar. 13 Santa Clara 2 Mar. 15 II San Jose Normal 4 Mar- 19 6 Alumni 8 Mar. 20 9 San Jose Normal I Mar. 22 18 Olympic 7 Mar. 27 13 Belmont 7 Mar. 28 3 San Francisco 14 Mar. 29 3 Alumni 2 Apr. 2 4 San Francisco 5 Apr. 5 3 California 6 Apr. 10 8 Santa Clara 4 Apr. 12 I California Summary: Games lost, 9; games won S. Stanford Baseball Team, Season of 1902 Coach C. J. Swindells, Captain . . ' D. V. Cowden, -Alanager H. J. Edwards, Catcher A. B. C. .AIcGilvray, TT , ' i W. S. McFarland, } P. P. Parker, First Base W. H. Blake, Second Base . . . D. V. Cowden, Third Base . . . . ' W. W. Copp, Short Stop . C. II. Crawford, Left Field W. B. Lowenthal, Center Field F. A. Brown, w I . TT- 1 , R. B. Knight, Right Field r- a r l- ( L. Al. Kellogg, 252 01 ' 02 ' 01 ' 04 ' 05 ' 03 ' 04 ' 02 ' 03 ' 03 ' 03 ' 03 03 03 Stanford Quad 1904 TRACK Track Team 1902 Coach E. U. MouLTON Captain J. C. McCaughern, ' 03 Manager H. J. Edwards, ' 01 E. C. Beach, ' 05 O. E. Hyde, ' 04 J. M. Beach, ' 03 E. V. Kerhlein, ' 05 H. W. Bell, ' 05 E. A. Luce, ' 04 C. E. Burton, ' 04 L. S. Lyons, ' 03 E. M. Chadbourne, ' 02 J. C. McCaughern, ' 03 W. E. Crawford, ' 05 T. McCaughern, ' 05 W. A. Crossman, ' 04 R. P. McLaughlin, ' 02 W. F. Davis, ' 03 C. Naramore, ' 03 W. H. Dole, ' 05 T. E. Palmer, 03 W. F. Dunn, ' 04 P. P. Parker, ' 03 H. S. Gay, ' 03 E. A. Smith, ' 03 F. F. GuNDRUM, ' 03 A. B. Swinerton, ' 04 H. L. Hamilton, ' 04 D. Tarpey, ' 05 L. C. Hawley, ' 03 J. C. Taylor, ' 04 F. S. Holman, ' 04 A. M. Thomson, ' 03 C. E. Hyde, ' 05 A. B. Watson, ' 04 F. P. Whitaker, ' 04 1893 C. A. Fernakl. ' 95 1894 J. P. Bernhard, ' 96 189s D. E. Brown, ' 97 Track Captains 1896 Geo. Toombs. ' 96 1897 C. S. Dole, ' 98 1898 John Brunton, ' 99 1899 E. W. Smith, ' 99 1900 H. J. Boyd, ' 00 1901 A. B. Stewart, ' 01 254 Stanford Quad 1904 Tenth Annual Intercollegiate Field Day Stanford Campus, April 19, 1902 Event. RliCORD. First. Skcond. Third. Poi NTS. C. s. Mile run 4:43 2-5 Redewell, C. Holman. S. Gay, S. .T 4 lOO-yard dash 0:10t Abadie, C. Cadogan, C. Brown, C. 9 IJO-vai ' d liurdle No time taken Powell, Cheek, and Hanni an, all C, ran dead heat. y Hammei- throw 153 ft. 101. in. Flaw, C. Hartline, C. Albertson, C. 9 His;h jump 5 ft. 854 in. Cheek and Pow ell both U.C, tied Bell, S. 8 1 Shol put 42 ft. S! in. Plaw, C. Hyde, S. Fautz, C. (i 3 ■tin-yard dash 0:52 ' A Smith, S. Dunn, S. Crossman, S. 9 Hroad jump 21 ft. 9Hin. Hussey, C. Topham, C. Lyons, S. 8 1 Two-mile run )0;45 1-5 Tibbetts, C. Burton, S Westdahl, C. (•) 3 220-yard hurdle 0:25 3-5 Powell, C, and Cheek, C, tied for first. Taylor, S. S 1 220-yard dash Notime taken Hawlev, Luce, McCaughern, and Hamilton, all S.,tied u 9 Mile relay 3:.S2 2-5 Dunn, Watson, Dole, and Smith, S. 5 Half-mile run 2:041 Service, C. Thomson, S. Chadbourne, S. 5 4 Pole ault 10 ft. 7} in. Wilcox, C. Whittaker, S. Bell, S., Geary, C 5 ' 4 3H New Coast Ints ircoUegiate recoi d. tRecordtied. la ' A 43 ;4 Comparative Athletic Records American Collegiate. Coast Stanford Records. Event. Collegi- ate Record. Holder. Record. Record. Holder. lOO-yard dash 0:09 3-5 Dufify. Georgetown 0:10 0:9 4-5 Brunton, ' 99 220yard dash 0:21 1-5 Wefers, Georgetown 0:22 3-5 0:22 McCaughern ' 03 440-Yard dash 0.49 2-5 Long, Columbia 0:.51 0:51 2-5 E. A. Smith, ' 03 Half-mile run 1:53 2-5 Kilpatrick, Union 2:00 2-5 1:.59 2-5 Copeland, ' 95 Mile run 4:23 2-5 Orton, Penn. 4:37 2-5 4:.36 Brown, ' 97 Mile relay 3:21 2-5 Harvard 3:32 2-5 3:32 2-5 f Dunn, Watson, t Doleftnd Smith. 12n-yard hurdle 0:15 15 Kraenzlein, II. of P. 0:16 0:15 3-5 Morgan, ' 00 220yard hurdle 0:23 3-5 Kraenzlein, U. of P. 0:25 3-5 0:2(; 1-5 Reynolds ' 96 Broad jump 24 ft. 4 ' , in. Kraenzlein U. of P. 22 ft. 10 in. 21 ft. 7 in. Johnson, ' 97 Two-mile run 9:51 3-5 Grant, Peim. 10:45 1-5 11:10 Burton. ' 04 (Dole, ' 99 High jump 6 ft. 3 5-8 in. Sweeney, Chicago 5 ft. 10 in. 5 ft. 9% in. J Henley, ' 04 (Bell, ' 05 Shot put 44 ft Sy2 in. Beck, Vale 42 ft. Sy in. 41ft. 1114 in. Hyde, ' 04 Hammer throw 164 ft. 10 in. Dewitt, Princeton 153 ft. 101 in. 128 ft. Hazzard, ' 97 Pole vault 11 ft 8 in Gray, Penn. 11 ft. 7- ' :(in. 11 ft. 7?! in. Dole, ' 03 Mile walk fi:45 2.- Fetterman 7:09 4-5 7:09 4-5 Zschokke, ' 01 Mile walk no lo nger an Intert ollegiate event. 1S93 1894 1895 1896 1897 1898 1899 1900 1901 1902 Total. California, - - - 91 90 67 56 62 ■ 88 74 84 85 781 776 Stanford. - - - - ;-!5 36 45 56 49 38 43 M 3 43 H 411 2-r, Stanford Quad 1904 Tennis Season of 1902 INIanager T. E. Stephenson, 03 f Harry A. Wei he, ' 0. Singles .... 1 Clevel.vnd B.vkek, ' 04 Harry A. Wei he. ' o.S ■ ■ 1 Frank Leib, 02 Intercollegiate Tournament Saturday, April 19th, California Courts, San Francisco Singles Hunt, University of California, defeated Weihe, Stanford, 6-1. 6-2. MacGavin, University of California, defeated Baker, Stanford, 6-3, 6-3. Doubles Hunt and Baker, University of California, defeated Weihe and Leib, Stanford, 6-2, 6-3. Won by University of California. Record 1892 — Stanford 5; University of California 4 1S9S— Stanford ° ; Univers ty of Cal ifornia 5 1893 — Winner bv Default 1899- i; I 1S94— • I; University of California c lyoo — 2 ; I 1895— I; 5 1901 — ; 3 1S96— 5; I 1901 — 0; 5 1897— 3; 5 1905— O; 3 257 Stanford Quad 1904 Ji Schedule of 1902 Date Score Opponent Score 5 12 11 12 Sept. 20 Sept. 24 Sept. 27 Oct. 3 Oct. 9 Oct. 14 Oct. 18 Fre.shmen ; ) ( 18 6 St. Matthew ' s Palo Alto Belmont Berkeley High School Santa Clara Hoitt ' s California Summary : C;,Tmes won, z ; Games lost, J ; Games tied, 2. Freshman Team Captain W. P. Magee Manager H. J. Edwards f . . . W. R. SCHOFIELD I . . . L. J. Bounds L ft End .... . . . H. J. LiTT I ■ ' I . . . A. M. Porter Left Tackle W. K. Sprott Left Guard J. G. Chenery Center B. Bryan Right Guard F. R. Estes Right Tackle A. B. Cheadle Right End F. C. Preston Quarter Back L. W. Cutler Left Half W. P. Magee Right Half G. E. Morrissey Full Back A. T. Shine 1894 — Stanford, o 1895— o 1896 — 14 1897— 16 Freshman Football Record University of California, 4; 1899 — Stanford, 6 44; 1900— 5 4; 1901 — II 8 ; 1902 — o 21 ; 258 University of California, o Stanford Quad 1904 Interclass Field Day, March 28, 1902 EVKNT. First. Second. Third. Time. 100-yard dash Hamilton, ' 04 Hawley, ' 03 McCaughern, ' 05 0:10 2-5 220-vard dash Hamilton, ' 04 Hawley, ' 03 McGaughern, ' 05 0:23 4-)0-vard dash Smith, ' 03 Dunn, ' 04 Fowler, ' 04 = 0:51 2-5 8S0 yard run Thompson, ' 0,i Ghadbourne, ' 02 Swinerton, ' 04 2:03?i Mile run Holman, ' 04 Davis, ' 03 Gay, ' 03 5:03 4-5 I wo-mile run Burton, ' 04 McLaughlin, ' 02 Gundrum, ' 03 11:10 Mile relay Holman, Grossman, Taylor, and Watson, all ' 04 3-37 2-5 120-vard hurdle Kuhn, ' 03, Nara- more, ' 03 0:18 220 yard hurdle Tavlor, ' 04 Ivuhn, ' 03 Naramore, ' 03 0:26 2-5 Broad jump Naramore, ' 03 Bell, ' 05 Lyons, ' 03 20 ft. 6 in. High jump Henley, ' 04 Bell, ' 05 Palmer, ' 03 5 ft. 9 in. Pole vault Bell, ' 05 Whitaker, ' 04 Naramore, ' 03 9 ft. 6 in. Hanmier throw Van Sickle, ' 05 Grawford, ' 05 Finney. ' 05 lC6it. Shot put Hyde, ' 04 Crawford, ' 05 Hawley, ' 03 40 ft. 3 in. ♦Stanford record. Points : ' (M. 47; ' 03, 45: ' 05, 26; ' 02, 6. 1904 vs. Ukiah High School Won by 1904. Points— ' 114, (U; I ' . H. S., 47. Sec RE. Event. First. Shcond. Third. RtCORD. S. U. 100-yard dash 220-yard dash 440-yard dash Half-mile run Mile run Hagaiis, U. Hamilton, S. Dunn, S. Holman, S. G. Weller, U. Hamilton, S. Hagans, U. Grossman, S. Burns, U. Burton, S. Bubb, S. Luce, S. Watson, S. Wyckoff, U. Henley, U. 0:10 2-5 0:22 4-5 0:53 2:1.5 3 5 5:14 2-5 4 6 9 5 3 5 3 4 6 Broad jump High jump Pole vault Henley, S. Henley, S. f Henley, S. t Whitaker, S. fj. Weller, U. ( Hagans, U. Seawell, U. Thomas, U. Seawall, U. 21 ft. 2 in. 5 it. 9y2 in. 9 ft. 6 in. 5 5 8 4 4 1 12-lb Hammer throw 12-ft Shot put 120-yard hurdle 220-yard hurdle Briggs, U. Hyde S. J. Weller, U. Taylor, S. Hyde, S. Briggs, U. Tavlor, S. J. Weller, U. Henley, U. Thomas, V. Thomas. U. Thomas, U. 33 ft. 43 ft. 10 in. 0:17 0:26 2-5 3 5 3 5 6 4 6 4 Total, Record, 8 seconds. 61 47 Handicap Field Day, Campus, Nov. 22, 1902 Event. 1m RSI. Second. 75 vd. dash Dunn, ' 04 (2), Turpin, ' 06 (1) 150-yd. dash Hawley, ' 03 Holman, ' 04 (3) 300-yd. dash Dunn, ' 04 Singletary, ' 06 (15) 660-yd. dash Swinerton, ' 04 (10) A. M. Thomson, ' 03 1320-yd. run Gay, ' 03 Holman, ' 04 11 4 mile run Harper, ' 03 Gundrum, ' 03 High hurdle Naramore, ' 03 Barkan, ' 04 High jump Campbell, ' 06 (7 in.) Abbott, ' 06 Pole vault Whitaker, ' 04, J Beach, ' 03 N. Dole, ' 03, all tied Hammer throw Crawford, ' 05 Magee, ' 06 (10 ft.) Shot put O. E. Hyde, ' 04 Grawford, ' 05 (5 ft.) ( ) Figures in brackets indicate handicap. 260 Interclass Football Championship of 1902 not decided Teams Stanford Quad 1904 1903 1904 Left End f Lutgerding ( Nourse Clark Left Tackle Knight Shields Left Guard Hauvernian Merrill Center Right Guard Lee Jacobs Moore Riste Right Tackle Dole Kennedy Right End Scoville Butlerfield Quarter Back R. Hamilton Bansbach Right Hah ' Back Left Half Back Full Back Smith Naramore Parker Chandler Hamilton McGilvray 1905 Kehrlein f Doherty 1 Hyde i Irish Spencer Nissen Splivalo Stillman Wilbur Taylor Bartell Tarpey Dole Score Sophomores 11, Freshmen 6 Seniors 0, Juniors Interclass Basebal l Championship of 1903 won by Seniors Teams 1906 fScholfield t Flanders Sprott Chenery Shine Brant Cheadle ( Lewis j Porter 1 Webb Cutler ( Mcintosh Morrissey Magee Estes 1903 1904 1905 1906 Catcher Ball McGilvray Stillman Wylie Pitcher f Parker Roosevelt Tritch Bush Sales First Base Cowden Blake ( Gamble ( Moore Lewis Colbert Second Base Brown Baker Weinmann Shortstop Crawford Knapp Trowbridge Wirt Third Base Copp Frink Dudley ( Cunha 1 Williams Left Field Lowenthal Shields Carter JBurr 1 Howard Center Field Moore Wilson J Hopper 1 Birge Hudson Right Field Knight Strassburger Score Tarpey ( Campbell Trowbridge 1892— J. B. Whittemore, ' 92 1893— C. L. Clemans. ' 93, A. M. 1894— J. F.Wilson, ' 94 1895— P. M. Downing, ' 95 1892— C. C. Adams, ' 95 1893— H. A.Walton, ' 95 1894— J. F. Sheehan, Jr., ' 95 1895— H. T. Dyer, ' 97 Seniors 8, Juniors 1 Freshmen 12, Sophomores 3 Seniors 4, Freshmen 1 Football Captains 1896— G. H. Cochran, ' 96 1897— C. M. Fickert, ' 98 189S-S. W. Cotton, 98 1899— F. S. Fisher, ' 99 Baseball Captains 1896-W. L. McLaine, ' 96 1897— C. L. Thompson, ' 97 189S— H. E. Lougheed, ' 00 1899 -H. E. Lougheed, ' 00 1900— C. G. Murphy, ' 00 1901— R. S. Fisher, ' 02 1902— H. S. Lee, ' 03 1900-C. B. Strohn, ' 00 1901— H. J. Edwards, ' 01 1902— D. V. Cowden, ' 02 261 Stanford Quad 1904 arers 0 x:he srty p. Bansbach, ' 04 . ... Footljall Team, ' 00, ' 02 . B. Barnhisel, ' 03 . . . . Football Team, ' 01, ' 02 J. Bartell, ' 05 Football Team, ' 02 M. Beach, ' 03 Track Team, ' 01 W. Bell, ' 05 Track Team, ' 02 W. Bennett, ' 02 Baseball Team, ' 01 . H. Blake, ' 04 Baseball Team, ' 02 A. Brown, ' 02, Baseball Team, ' 00, ' 01, ' 02, ' 03, Capt ' 03 H. Clark, ' 04 Football Team, ' 01, ' 02 F. Cooper, ' 03 Football Team, ' 00, ' 01 W. W. Copp, ' 03 Baseball Team, ' 02 D. V. CowDEN, ' 02 Baseball Team, ' 00, ' 01, ' 02, Capt. ' 02 C. H. Crawford, ' 03 Baseball Team, ' 02 W. A. Crossman, ' 04 Track Team, ' 02 A. R. Dole, ■ ' 03 Football Team, ' 02 W. H. Dole, ' 05 Football Team, 02, Track Team, ' 02 N. Dole, ' 03 . Track Team, ' 01 W. F. Dunn, ' 04 Track Team, ' 02 H. J. Edwards, ' 01 Baseball Team, ' 99, ' 00, or, Capt ' oi H. S. Gay, ' 03 Track Team, ' 02 H. L. Hamilton, ' 04 Track Team, ' 01, ' 02 W. R. Hamilton, ' 02 Track Team, ' 00 L. E. Harter, ' 01 Track Team, ' 00 C. D. Hauverman, ' 03 Football Team, ' 01, ' 02 L. C. Hawley, ' 03 Track Team, ' 02 A. S. Henley, ' 04 Track Team ' 01 F. S. Holman, ' 04 Track Team, ' 02 O. E. Hyde, ' 04 Track Team, ' 01, ' 02 R. B. Knight, ' 03 Baseball Team, ' 02 H. S. Lee, ' 03 Footl)aH Team, ' 99, ' 00, ' 01, ' 02. Capt ' 02 H. M. Lewis, ' 04 Track Team, ' 01 W. B. LowENTHAL, ' 03 Baseball Team, ' oi, ' 02 L. S. Lyons, ' 03 Track Team, ' 01, ' 02 W. P. Magee, ' 06 Football Team, ' 02 J. C. McCaughern, ' 03 Track Team, ' 00, ' 02, Capt ' 02 R. J. IMcFadden, ' 04 Football Team, ' 00, ' 01, ' 02 A. B. McGiLVRAY, ' 04 Football Team, ' 02, Baseball Team, ' 02 C. Naramore, ' 03 Track Team, ' 00 P. P. Parker, ■ ' 03 Baseball Team, ' 01, ' 02, Track Team, ' 00 A. E. Preston, ' 04 Football Team, ' 01 W. K. Roosevelt, ' 03 Football Team, ' 01 E. A. Smith, ' 03 . . . Football Team, ' 99, ' 00. ' 02, Track Team, ' 00, ' 01, ' 02 W. K. Sprott, ' 06 Football Team, ' 02 C. J. Swindells, ' 01 Baseball Team, ' 98, ' 99, Coach, ' 02 P. A. Tarpey, ' 05 Football Team, ' 01, ' 02 A. M. Thomson, ' 03 Track Team, ' 02 H. A. Weihe, ' 03 Tennis Team, ' 00, ' 01 F. P. Whitaker, ' o4 Track Team, ' 02 262 nAM ' Athletic DnanRRSHRoaoaDDDDDDanDDDanDaaaDDogQqaooDOOoafi iimoaaaaDaaDaaaoaaaaaQQaaaaaaoaQdaaaaaaagaqogil nnnnQaamOaaanaaaaaaDaaaaaaaDQQaDQQQaaggapqg nnnaaDaDODaoaaaaaaQDqaoaaoaDDDooaanaaaaaaDDy ASSOCIATION Stanford Quad 1904 Officers President Cecelia Atherton Vice-President Edith Hill Secretary and Treasurer APary Cravens Board of Managers Ella Ibs, ' 03 Helen Salisbury, ' 05 Helen North, 04 Jane Spalding, ' 06 Faculty Mrs. Branner Miss Rose Committees Tennis ] Iiss M. Hodge, Miss E. Branner, ] Iiss M. Cravens Handball Miss E. Ibs, Miss G. Pitman, Miss H. North Basket-ball Miss H. Salisbury, Miss J. Spalding, Miss M. Mirsky 263 Stanford Quad 1904 Roble Gymnasium Club Organized November ii, igoz Officers President Helen Kate North Vice-President Edith A. Hill Secretary-Treasurer . . . Grace E. Moore ledical Examiner . . . Dr. Edith Matzke Members Cecelia F. Atherton Muriel A. Beamer LUELLA M. BrEMNER Jennie A. Comings Alice L. Dickinson Ethel M. Fifield Almira H. Guild Edith A. Hill Pearl M. Horn Marrion a. Horr Grace E. Moore Helen K. North Mabel C. Rav Stella Rose Vera Townsend May R. E. Vorhes Emma ' M. Wright Marjorie E. Waxham 264 Girls ' Tennis Club Mary Hodge, ' 03, Captain Elizabeth Peckham, ' 03, Manager Esther Crandall, ' 03 Elizabeth Lodge, ' 03 Ella Ibs, ' 03 INIiNNiE Mirsky, ' 04 AIary Foster, ' 05 Mabel Ray, ' 05 Katherine Loeser, ' 05 Georgia Pitman, ' 05 Dorothy Abbott, ' 06 Emma Hayward, ' 06 Stanford Quad 1904 Tennis Schedule Stanford vs. University of California Saturday, April iith, Roble Courts, Stantbrd University Stanford California ]Miss I. Hendrick, 03, beat Miss G. Wickson, 8-6, 6-1. Miss Mabel Ray, ' 03, beat Miss Weeks, 6-1, 6-t. Miss Mary Hodge, ' 03, lost to Miss E. Ratcliff, 0-6, 1-6. Won by Stanford. Stanford vs. Mills Saturday, March 7th, Roble Courts, Stanford University Stanford Mills Miss Mary Hodge, ' 03, 15, z-s. Miss Finley, 4. Miss i I. Hendrick, ' 03, 14. rs. Miss Lindstrom, 8. Miss Mabel Ray, ' 05, 13, I ' s. Miss G. Holmes, 3. Miss E. Lodge, ' 03, 7, vs. Miss Hodge, ii. Total— Stanford, 49; Mills College, 26. 265 Debating Review of the Year ' s Debating Stanford uad •OT often has Stanford ' s debating record appeared so discouraging when judged from the standpoint of victories won; but he who judges our development in debating wholly, or even in part, by the number of victories to our credit, will this year receive a most erroneous impression. We have not retrograded in debating; we have developed as never before. Our debating field has been broadened by the inauguration of an annual debate with the University of Washington. Our enthusiasm for debating has been greatly stimulated in consequence, as was shown by the large increase in the number of students contesting for places on the debating teams. These are the signs which point to the development in the future of even more powerful debaters than we have had in the past. In the Intercollegiate, Stanford was unfortunate in having by far the weaker side of the question to defend. Nevertheless the real explanation of our defeat lay in our lack of team work, and in our apparent quibbling with the question. Stanford debaters should learn from this defeat to in the future give any question, especially in the Intercollegiate, its reasonable interpretation, and then to advance, not three separate defenses, but one united, interwoven defense or attack. This year for the first time the Carnot Debate became an entirely extempo- raneous afi air. From the previously assigned field of the relation of the French railroads to the government of France, a question was chosen and given to the contestants only one hour before the debate began. To say that our repre- sentatives, H. M. Lewis, F. Roehr, and O. H. Ritter, acquitted themselves with credit under such trying circumstances is but stintingly bestowing merited praise. Last April, Stanford, for the first time, contested on the rostrum with a debating team from the University of Washington. Ours was a second team upholding the same weak side of the question on which our Intercollegiate Team had just met defeat. Owing to the unavoidable absence of one of the judges, and the disagreement of the other two, the decision was a tie. Thus we have the two universities passing through their first forensic contest with equal honors. The annual debate with Washington should by all means be continued for it can not help but greatly advance Stanford ' s interest in the States to the north. Stanford certainly has made great advancement in debating during the last year. May the policy of enlarging the debating field continue, until we debate not only with California and with Washington, but also with some of the leading Eastern universities. J- H. Page, 03. 1904 269 Stanford Quad 1904 Tenth Intercollegiate Debate Stanford University vs. University ot California, Metropolitan Temple, San Francisco, April 26, 1901 Question Resolved, That the Soutliern States should grant the suffrage to the negro in accordance w ith the spirit of the Fifteenth Amendment ; provided, that all question of the constitutionaHty of the negative ' s position be excluded. Affirmative : Max Thelen ) Walter Rothchild •- of U. C. Ralph S. Pierce Negative : Herbert C. Jones ) George W. Leistner ,- of Stanford Fl etcher B. Wagner Decision for the Affirmative Presiding Officer : David Starr Jordan Hon. M. C. Sloss Judges Hon. R. C. Harrison Hon. F. L. Murasky 270 Intercollegiate Debating Teams FIRST INTERCOI LEGIATE TEAM, 1893 R. L. Gruwell A. H. Barnhisel L- W. Bauuister Resolved, That the United States should annex Hawaii. SECOND INTERCOLLEGIATE TEAM, 1894 Arthur M. Cathcart William Doherty Miss Cora M. Palmer Resolved, That the National ownership and operation of the railroads of the United States would better subserve the interests of the people than ownership and operation by private corporations. It being conceded, first, that the change can be effected legally and constitutionally at a cost not to exceed six billion dollars, which is assumed to be a just and reasonable compensation; and, second, that all Government railroad officials and em ployees shall be appointed and promoted upon a basis of business efficiencj ' only. THIRD INTERCOLLEGIATE TEAM, 1895 Benjamin F. Bledsoe E. DeLos Magee Burton M. Palmer Resolved, That in California any legisla- tive enactment not deemed urgent shall be submitted to a vote of the citizens upon pe- tition of 5 per cent of the qualified voters, provided such petition I)e made within sixty days ; and, furthermore, that any measure proposed by a petition of 10 per cent of the voters shall be submitted to the people by the Legislature. FOURTH INTERCOLLEGIATE TEAM 1896 Arthur M. Cathcart John M. Ross Henry D. Sheldon Resolved, That United States Senators should be chosen by popular election. FIFTH INTERCOLLEGIATE TEAM, 1897 Arthur B. Morgan John M. Switger Miss L. L. Stebbins Resolved, That the members of the Cabi- net should have a seat and a voice in Con- gress. SIXTH INTERCOLLEGIATE TEAM, 1898 Samuel G. Bailie James Ferguson Andrew B. Morgan Resolved, That the system of unrestricted production of prison-made goods for sale in the open market, on the public account, is preferable, as a system of prison manage- ment, to that which is in operation in the State of New York. SEVENTH INTERCOLLKGIATE TEAM, 1899 James Ferguson John E. Springer Anthony H. Suzzallo Resolved, That the retention of the Philip- pines is contrary to the principles for which this Government should stand. EIGHTH INTERCOLLEGIATE TEAM, 1900 Miss . nna Graeme Eraser Cecil Mortimer Marrack John Elbert Springer John Francis English, Jr. Fletcher B. Wagner Resolved, That the guarantee of the Con- stitution should extend to all persons and territory under the permanent control of the United States, except to persons living in tribal relations. NINTH INTERCOLLEGIATE TEAM, 1901 Cecil Mortimer Marrack William Alfred Morris William Carr Morrow Resohrd, That the extinction of the Boer Republic is for the permanent interest of civilization. TENTH INTERCOLLEGIATE TEAM, 1902 Herbert C. Jones, ' 02 Geo. W. Leistner, ' 04 Fletcher B. Wagner, ' 02 Resolved, That the Southern States should grant the suffrage to the negro, in accordance with the spirit of the Fifteenth Amendment ; provided, that all question of the constitu- tionality of the negative ' s position be ex- cluded. Stanford Quad 1904 Intercollegiate Debates 1893— In favor of Stanford 1894— In favor of Stanford 1895 — In favor of University of California 1896 — In favor of University of California 1897— In favor of Stanford 1898 — In favor of University of California 1899— In favor of University of California 1900— In favor of Stanford 1901 — In favor of University of California 1902 — In favor of University of California 271 Stanford Quad 1904 Ninth Carnot Debate Assembly Hall, Stanford University, February 13, 1903 Qyestion Resolved, That it would be commercially and politically advantageous for the French government to abandon the territorial monopoly feature of its rail- way policy. Affirmative: 11. M. Lewis ] Negative: A. B. Weilek ) O. H. RiTTER y Stanford C. F. Stern V U. of C. Frank Roehr j Max Thelen ) Decision for Mr. Thelen David Starr Jordan, Chairman Judges Hon. Frank M. Angelotti Rt. Rev. Wm. Ford Nichols Vanderlyn Stow, Esq. 1895— Wynne P. Harrington Richard I . Saudwick Henry D. Sheldon Subject : Was Casimir-Perier justified in resigning the Presidency ? 1896— Fred S. Howard Elmer I. Miller Henry D. Sheldon Subj ect : Is a centralized form of govern- ment conducive to the stability of the French Republic? 1897— S. W. Charles A. B. Morgan Mrs. Margaret Hood Resol-c ' ed, That the French system of edu- cation is more conducive to the welfare of the French state than would be a system like that of the United States. 1898 — Andrew B. Morgan Anthony H. Suzzallo Miss Anna Strunskv Resolved, That, in the light of experience, further extension of the French colonial sys- tem would be impolitic. Carnot Debating Teams 1899— Carl T. Hayden John E. Springer Anthony H. Suzzallo Resolved, That it is for the interest of France to form a close alliance with Italy. 1900— John Francis English, Jr., ' 01 Cecil Mortimer Marrack, ' 01 John Elbert Springer, ' 00 « ' Resolved, That tiie ministers should be re- sponsible to the President alone. 1901 — John Francis English, Jr. Cecil Mortimer Marrack William Alfred Morris Resolzed, That the French administrative law is incompatible with the spirit of a demo- cratic republic. 1902— Edward W. Rice, ' 02 Fletcher B. Wagner, ' 02 Herbert C. Jones, ' 02 Resolved, That the President of the French Republic should be elected by direct vote of the people. 272 Stanford Quad 1904 First Washington Debate Held in Chapel, Stanford University, May 2, 1902 Question Resolved, That the Southern States should grant the suffrage to the negro in accordance with the spirit of the Fifteenth Amendment ; provided, that all question of the constitutionality of the negative ' s position be excluded. Affirmative : Howard A. Hanson Will T. Laube [- of U. of W. Donald McDonald j Negative : L. L. LooFBOLKow, ' 02 E. W. Rice, ' 02 I of Stanford O. H. RiTTER, ' 04 I Decision a tie Prof. B. E. Howard, Chairman Judges Hon. W. p. Lawlor ; Ir, E. B. Leading 273 Stanford Quad 1904 Euphronia Literary Society Organized January 14, 1893 Officers First Semester President W. C. Maloy, ' 03 Vice-President O. C. Spencer, ' 04 Secretary-Treasurer C. L. Firebaugh, ' 04 Assistant Secretary-Treasurer G. D. Boalt, ' 03 Sergeant-at-Arms M. F. McCormick, ' 02 (-j.jj.jp j M. F. McCormick, ' 02 I R. O. Hadlev, ' 03 Second Semester President R. O. Hadlev, ' 03 Vice-President A. S. Williams, 03 Secretary-Treasurer R. H. Kimball, ' 03 Assistant Secretary-Treasurer A. McQ. Dibble, 05 f W. C. Ialoy, ' 03 Sergeant-at-Arms - ,-tt- ' j C. L. riREBAUGH, 04 Historian R. H. Kimball, ' 03 Members S. L. Bacon, ' 03 W. L. Blair, ' 05 G. D. BoALT, ' 03 C. S. BucHER, ' 05 D. P. Campbell, ' 03 Jacob Coleman, ' 05 B. C. Dey, ' 05 A. McQ. Dibble, ' 05 W. F. Dunn, ' 04 C. L. Firebaugh, ' 04 C. B. GoDDARD, ' 04 R. O. Hadley, ' 03 A. P. Harris, ' 03 R. H. Kimball, ' 03 H. M. Lewis, ' 04 E. D. Lyman, ' 04 c. D. McCoMiSH, ' 03 M. F. McCormick, ' 02 W . C. Maloy, ' 03 H. A. Moran, ' 04 K. A. Richardson, ' 04 0. H. RiTTER, ' 04 P. L. RouRKE, ' 03 Isaac Russell, ' 04 E. E. So WELL. ' 03 0. C. Spencer, ' 04 H. A. Sprague, ' 04 G. W. Springmever, 03 E. J. Thayer, ' 03 W. H. Thomson, ' 04 M. H. Thorpe, ' 05 A. S. Williams, ' 03 Inactive list. 274 Stanford Quad 1904 Nestoria Literary Society Organized September, 1B94 Officers First Semester President R. W. Everett, ' 03 Vice-President C. W. Hatton, ' 03 Secretary-Treasurer P. D. Swing, 05 Sergeant-at-Arms . . J- H. Page, ' 03 Second Semester President T. M. Alderson, ' 02 Vice-President A. G. Thompson, ' 03 Secretary-Treasurer H. W. Strong, ' 05 Sergeant-at-Arms R. W. Everett, ' 03 Members T. M. Alderson, ' 02 R. K. Alcott, ' 05 W. E. Billings, ' 03 D. Burcham, ' 03 T. M. CoEN, ' 05 R. W. Everett, ' 03 O. Gibbons, ' 05 T. S. Gray, ' 01 J. T. Gordon, 05 C. W. Hatton, ' 03 W. W. Henley, ' 05 W. N. Hardwick, ' 05 M. S. Lewis, ' 04 R. C. AIcCoMisH, ' 03 Geo. Martinson, ' 03 J. H. Page, ' 03 E. W. Rice, ' 02 E. G. Riste, ' 04 J. J. Ryan, ' 03 C. R. Roberts, ' 05 F. Schneider, ' 03 P. D. Swing, ' 05 W. W. Swing, 03 H. W. Strong, ' 05 G. M. Thomas, ' 04 A. G. Thompson, ' 03 276 Stanford Quad 1904 Philolexian Literary Society Organized November 17, 1894 Officers First Semester President C. K. Studley Vice-President C. B. Wintler Secretary ' E. E. Miller Treasurer M. A. Thomas Sergeant-at-Arms W. W. Copp Second Semester President A. C. Hull Vice-President A. J. Klamt Secretary F. S. Holman Treasurer L. Gonsalves Sergeant-at-Arms C. K. Studley Members H. H. Chandler, ' 05 W. W. Copp, ' 03 C. J. Crary, ' 03 C. F. DiTTMAR, ' 03 L. Gonsalves, ' 05 A. A. Hampson, ' 04 L. E. Harter, ' 01 F. S. Holman, ' 04 A. C. Hull, ' 03 A. J. Klamt, ' 04 R. B. Knight, ' 03 R. R. Long, ' 05 O. S. LousLEY, ' 05 W. E. McWethey, ' 04 P. A. Martin, ' 03 E. E. Miller, ' 04 J. Mori, ' 03 L. H. Roseberry, ' 03 W. Ritchie, ' 04 C. K. Studley, ' 03 M. a. Thomas, 04 C. B. Wintler, ' 04 L. A. Wood, ' 03 278 Stanford Quad 1904 Freshman Debating Society Officers First Semester President J. L. Maloy Vice-President P. P. Bliss Secretary-Treasurer T. T. Anthony Sergeant-at-Arms T. G. McElroy Members G. G. Altnow H. Alvord C. A. Beardsley H. P. BiTTNER p. p. Bliss E. D. Carothers H. L. Deering H. M. Elmore T. P. Harrington E. V. Henley T. E. Hoover S. F. Jordan H. F. LOVELL T. G. McElroy J. L. Maloy E. R. May R. L. Milliken A. L. Neff J. Nibley W. A. Paxton P. B. Smith W. Wirt 280 1904 Saturday Night Club Stanford Quad Organized October 19, 1895 Officers First Semester President Iiss Luei.la Gary, ' 05 Vice-President Miss Elizabeth Everett, ' 03 Secretary-Treasurer Mrs. Maud Passmore, ' 04 Assistant Secretary-Treasurer Miss I. M. Peterson, ' 04 Second Semester President AIiss Elizabeth Everett, 03 Vice-President Mrs. Maud Passjiore, ' 04 Secretarj ' --Treasurer Miss Beulah Thomas, ' 04 Vice-Secretary-Treasurer j Iiss Grace Holt, ' 04 Committee for Debating League Miss Antoinette Knowles, ' 04 Mrs. Maud Pass more, ' 04 Miss Grace Holt, ' 04 Members JMiss Delle Howard, ' 02 Miss Grace Holt, ' 04 Miss R. S. Suhr, ' 03 Miss Irene Reynolds, ' 04 Miss Flora Beecher, ' 03 Miss Mary Cutter, ' 04 Miss Elizabeth Everett, ' 03 Mrs. Maud Passmore, ' 04 Miss Beulah Thomas, ' 04 Miss Luella Gary, ' 05 Miss Ida May Peterson, ' 04 Miss Data Rothrock, ' 06 Honorary Members Mrs. C. E. Rugh Mrs. Mevv Mrs. Little 281 Dramatics Stanford Quad 1904 TtjCodaS W Uli . T T SAN JOSE there was once held a Fiesta in which was a Stanford Day. This fact has nothing to do with dramatics at Stanford, except that it leads up to some- thing which a Yale man, one of the Fiesta managers, said to me. We asked the President of your Student Body to take the matter in hand, he said, and told him what we wanted. The President did not seem over- whelmed by the honor. He just said in an easy way, ' I guess we can fix it for you. ' He seemed so calm about it that we thought of dropping Stanford Da}-. A week later we sent up a man to investigate. We found every arrangement made. Stanford Day was mapped out from beginning to end, the Glee Club was rehearsing a special program, the track management had a man drumming up talent for a track meet. Stanford Day, without an ounce of effort on our part, was the most successful of the Fair. I have seen a great many colleges East and West, but that was a thing which no other college in the country would have done. In just that spirit the early day men of Stanford used to take hold of things; in that spirit w e took hold of Stanford dramatics. In the beginning, we had no theater, no stage, no one in all the Student Bodv who had ever been connected with the profession of acting — in fact, not even an amateur of experience. But just as the 93 Football Team learned a game which only half of the players had even seen and van- 28s Staniord ([uished cxi)cric ' iicc(l ri -als. so did our early day actors and actresses Quad learn ways and means in dramatics. 1904 The first performance held at Stanford was brought (jtf ' in the old Chapel. There was no scenery; for curtain there was only an old muslin slide. It was a lively little farce, nevertheless, and served to introduce Carolus Ager as a poet. But the University realized that this was primitive ; they cast about, therefore, and discovered the gym- nasium. Imagine, ye of the younger and more tenderly nurtured generation, the old, wooden gymnasium, now about to close its ten years of honor- able service, transformed over night into a theatre, with stage, flies, footlights, tormentors, orchestra chairs and galleries all complete. Just that miracle of transformation was necessary every time we gave a show in the old, golden days. At six o ' clock, the last gymnasium class was dismissed. At 6:oi a corps of student workmen began to take up the floor apparatus at the northern end. From its place of storage behind the building, they drew out a knock-down stage, made to be mounted on jacks. They pulled from the loft a ponderous drop curtain, and hung it on a girder rigged up with toil and profanity for the purpose. They brushed up the scenery and put it into temporary frames. From the baseball field they took down a section of the bleachers and set it up against the rear wall for a gallery. When the day of the performance broke and the manager came over before the dress rehearsal to look at the job, the electricians were wiring the last of the footlights and the common laborers were sealing the windows with building paper to give the proper matinee darkness. During morning dress rehearsal, all the spare chairs from the Quadrangle were brought in to make the orchestra seats. This done, the gymnasium was a complete theatre. It took a bit over one hundred dollars and a whole night of strenuous hustling to do it. In any other place, I verily be- lieve, it would have taken five times the money and twice the time. We were short on scenery. The college was poor in pocket, if rich in energy, and the crazy old stage ate up most of our profits. For a long time we had only the deck of H. M. S. Pinafore, a relic of our first opera, and the Banks of Lagunita, painted for the ' 96 Junior Farce. We had not one single interior. When such was needed we had to send the business manager junketing to San Francisco, that he might hire or borrow scenery of the eccentric size needed for our stage. I remember that, when we put on She Stoops to Conquer, we could afiford only one scene — the sixty dollars that we paid for the Eighteenth 286 1904 Century costumes ate up the rest. Now this served well enough for Stanford the interior of Mr. Hardcastle ' s house, for. by cutting a line here, and Quad inserting one there, we made it seem as though the whole action of the play had taken place in one room of the Hardcastle country seat. But when we came to the Inn scene, we were stumped. The very cream and essence of She Stoops to Concjuer is the meeting of the trav- elers with Tony Lumpkin at some place other than the Hardcastle house ; and no liberty that we could take with Goldsmith ' s text would get us out of the dilemma. Neither did it seem quite consistent with the spirit of the play to have them meet on the deck of H. M. S. Pina- fore, or on the Banks of Lagunita. lien all seemed lost, the business manager saved us. He reversed the interior scene which did service for the Hardcastle house, turning the rough, unpainted canvas and the pine frames toward the audience. Bv putting up a few pictures and signs and arranging some pasteboard furniture, we made it look like the paneled and undecorated walls of an English inn. It is true that the entrances opened the wrong way, and that a few of our actors got nervous and twisted the doors off in their haste, but even after the damages were paid, we came out ahead financially. Before that stage had been up a year, we had put on a performance of Pinafore. It was one of the first comic operas w ' ith both sexes represented in the cast ever given in any American university, and a mightily good amateur performance, even if the property moon did insist in rising and setting alternately all through the second act, to the great confusion of Sir Joseph Porter. The next year, there was a performance of Said Pasha. In the language of the country dramatic critic, the performers carried ofif their parts creditably. As for the rest — well. I must refer you to the files of vellow newspapers or to the reminiscences of some graduate. Look it up. It is interesting. The year after that, was She Stoops to Conquer, the first venture of the University in the classical play. In the ten vears of our Liniversity life, we have done pretty nearly everything in the dramatic line, from light farce to the excellent per- formance of Antigone. In the class shows we have had straight farces and comedies. We have staged two of the good, old English plays, a French farce, a Spanish comedy — original — a Greek tragedy, a Latin comedv. With one exception, we were the first University west of the Great River possessing the nerve and equipment for a successful ven- ture in Greek drama. The Knight of the Burning Pestle was an 287 Stanford uiulcrlakini; ' as tUiringly successful as the Antij oiK ' . W ' c have hatl Ouad some of the best extravaganzas ever thrown together in an)- American 1904 college. In Seven Dobbers Down we produced a burlesque that, for originality and go, was never equaled by any of the Eastern uni- versities. Stanford people do not realize how good it was. We have done all this in nine years — and for the greater part of that time hand- icapped by the old, inadequate college gym that cost a hundred dollars and a wild nieht cvcrv time it was made over into a theatre. They say that every well-organized Senior cries at least once dur- ing Commencement Week. A sage of my accjuaintance declares that he can read the character of the man by knowing the exact psychologi- cal moment in Commencement Week when the tears come. I hereby confess my owai psychological moment. The old gymnasium saw its last theatrical performance in the Senior show of ' 99. We ' 99 people graduated, indeed, in the new Assembly Hall, but it was not yet ready for use as a theatre. The show was done leaving the hall barren and confused and littered with torn programs. A man with whom I had done dramatics since my Sopho- more days stood with me and looked at the wreck. We were both a little shaken in nerve that day. He had been through a hard examina- tion for his degree, and I had held a three-hour can-we-afford-to-let- this-man-graduate conference with the faculty. Moreover, we had neither of us found time for luncheon, so busy had we been with the show. And he said to me : The last show in the gym, Will — and the last show for us. I wonder if they will have half as good a time in the Assembly Hall? And I said : They can ' t possibly, Dick. Sure they can ' t. With that, as vmexpectedly as you please, we both began to blub- ber like co-eds. W e told each other afterwards that it was the effect of the examination and the faculty scolding and hunger. We stick to it until this day, but you need not believe it. In both our hearts we know better. The old gym stage, had it held any moisture in its seasoned boards, would have cried too. It was a parting all round. I am not ashamed. Neither are you, Dick. They were honest tears. 288 And now a bit of preaching. There have been some mightily good Stanford original plays written and staged at Stanford. They say it takes a life- Quad time of experience to write a really successful play. I am willing to 1904 admit it, but some writers of the old Stanford generation came perilously near success, and that without knowing more than the first principles of playwriting. It is a pity if the College must lose these plays. They are worth keeping, partly because they reflect student life in the generation, partly for their own sake. The older colleges, with one or two or three hundred years behind them, would be reviving their own early farces if they only had the texts, which have been lost forever. Let us, who have written the Stanford class farces, send copies of our work to be filed away in the library, if the librarian will take them. I have two or three student plays of my own which I will cheerfully contribute to start the movement. The College may find use for them some day. I can look forward to the time, somewhere in the early twenty-first century, when a highly original class will hold a grand Costume Revival based on a Junior or Senior Farce of the 1895-1902 period. In the outlandish old costumes of the late Nineteenth Century, they will interpret the archaic thought and language of the period, while our grandsons, venerable alumni, will come down as the guests of tlicir grandsons to witness the show. Just speculate on which one of our College farces will best stand the test of time and seem the most worthy to be revived ! It is a shame none of us will be there in the flesh to see it. How- ever, if ghosts may go where they choose, I believe that certain among us will be present in spirit. Our unsubstantial bodies clad in the ridic- • ulous but quaint caps and sweaters of 1903, will sit on the edge of the galleries and josh one another as in the old days and make it mightily interesting for the fellow whose play has been chosen. There will be Charlie Field and Shirley Baker and Gloomy Baldwin and Charlie Dillon and Frank Riley and Jupiter Culver and Bozzie Bush and Billy Erb and Chris Bradley and Bristow and Larrey and Mick, and even a few gentle female ghosts, including a near relative by mar- riage of the present writer. What a time we will have ! I, for one, pledge my ghost to be there. Will Irwix, ' 99. 28g Stanford Quad 1904 T Senior Farce — The Rank Outsider _ Presented at Assembly Hall, Stanford University, •!V ' y May 2 2, 1902 Written by Roger J. Sterrett, ' 02 Staged under direction of Mrs. W. H. Irwin, ' 98 Cast of Characters Colonel Gibbs, tbe Rank Outsider, uncle of Pinckerly . Waldemar Young, ' 04 Bud Stoddard, knocker candidate for President, from Encina, E. V. Kebrlein, ' 05 Bert Pinckerly, Kappa Rbo Eresbman Leo Byrne, ' 05 Grafton Grab, reporter for tbe llxcoriat, r . . . . . . J. K. Bonnell, ' 02 i ' erry Poole J- I - Englisb, ' 01 I ' arro Ike R. J. Sterrett, ' 02 Harvey R. E. Warfield, 03 Battersea A. Perrin, ' 03 Kirkland C. L. Eirebaugb. 04 Edgerton H- Barkan, 04 Dickerson, Stoddard ' s roonnnate K. A. Ricbardson, 04 Katharine Tarelle, Senior Queen Miss Sue Porter, ' 05 Kitty Greene. Roble ingenue Miss Sue Bird, ' 03 Belle Tillyer Miss M. K. Gilman, ' 03 Aretbusa Boggs F- H. Eowler, ' 04 290 Beaumont and Fletcher ' s Comedy The Knight of the Burning Pestle Presented by The English Club of Stanford University Under the direction of Professor L. E. Bassett Assembly Hall, March 5 and 7, 1903 SUMMARY: The main part of the plot is that of a comedy represented to have been originally intended for production by an Elizabethan company, called The London Merchant. This is the story of an apprentice in love with his master ' s daughter, and his success in outwitting her father, who has accepted another suitor for her hand. The girl consents to ride w ' ith the more aristocratic suitor to Waltham forest, where Jasper, the apprentice, puts him to flight. But the angry father pursues in traditional fashion, and Jasper is worsted after a brilliant fight. His next movement is to pretend suicide and arrange to be carried by stratagem to the house of his lady. Meantime his ghost has taken the precau- tion to appear to the maiden ' s father and to frighten him into a frame of mind suited to the wishes of lovers. This is the main plot in outline; but it is altered and amended at the demand of the grocer and his wife in the audience, who insist that their own apprentice, Ralph, shall be taken into the cast and made to do great deeds in honor of grocers, and the title of the play is changed to suit. This part of the plot is an adaptation of the Don Quixote story, which had been published a few years earlier than this comedy. Stanford Quad 1904 jgi Stanford Dramatis Personae Quad rniloRuc hoy R. J. Stcrrelt 1 904 A citizen grocer R. V. Anderson His wife J. K. Bonnell Ralph, liis apprentice (tlie Kniglit of tlie Bnrnin. I ' stle), Prof. S. S. Seward, Jr. Tim I yonnger apprentices, scpiire and C TI. A. Halscy George j dwarf to the Knight ( E. V. Henley Ventnrewell, a London merchant W. J. Stack Luce, his daughter Miss M. K. Oilman Humphrey, suitor for the hand of Luce E. R. May Merrythought, a ne ' er-do-weel E. O. James Mistress Merrythought, his wife Miss F. L. Kerr Jasper, son of Merrythought, apprentice to Ventnrewell, lover of Luce C. W. Thomas Michael, young son of Merrythought C. E. Hannum Host of the Bell Inn O. H. Clarke Tapster P. Edwards Barher of Waltham CD. McComish A barber ' s patient | p g wards Messenger j Dancing boy Master Robert Stack Stage Bovs — D. M. Reynolds, R. O. Hadley, F. W. Powell. L Russell, T. Cronyn. Fiddlers — G. A. Scoville, F. E. Brackett, M. M. Stearns, C. E. Waite, V. E. Stork, D. P. Campbell. Gallants — Prof. R. M. Alden, Prof. C. B. Wing, N. Collyer, O. Du F. Kehrlein, Prof. A. A. Lawson, F. H. Fowler. Pages to Gallants — Master M. Carson, Master G. Trent. The musicians were under the direction of Mr. A. L. Scott Brook. The following committee had the presentation in charge : H. P. Earle, Chairman and Secretary ; Prof. L. E. Bassett, Rehearsals and Stage Direction ; Miss Ruth Laird Kimball, Costumes; H. R. Johnson, Scenery; R. O. Hadley, Press ; Prof. R. M. Alden and Prof. S. S. Seward, Jr., Advisory. The poster was the joint work of Mr. Johnson and Mr. Sterrett. 292 Stanford The Junior Farce — Class of ' 04 Quad 1904 Assembly Hall, Thursday Evening, March 26, 1903 In the Clutches of the Baron Written by C. I). iMcComish Cast of Characters Mrs. Garland, a vi(li) v living on the row INIiss Edyth Hale, ' 04 Evelyn, her daughter Miss Claire Soulc, 04 Margaret Miller, a dig, Evelyn ' s cousin .... Miss Margaret Smith, ' 04 Marie, the French maid from Mayfield Miss Ruth Seadler, ' 05 Grace Kingsley, who is making a collection . . . Miss G. Chambers, ' 03 „ .ir-nT 1 1 ' Elizabeth Yoch, ' 04 Rose rorest and Geraldme i ravers, her friends , j- -d 4.1 -iir 1 ( Miss Ruth Waterhouse, 00 His Royal Highness, Prince Kase Von Limburger . . . R. G. Barnett, ' 04 Baron Schlick Von Schwindle, his Secretary W. J. Stack, ' 03 Daniel Webtser Garland, Evelyn ' s uncle, from Aurory, Illinois, on a visit to California Wally Young, ' 04 Bill Swipes, who is after de swag L. H. Roseberry, ' 03 Harry Hilton, Stanford student Dudley Sales, ' 06 McSteven, Berkeley graduate and man-of-all-work , . P. B. Cunningham, ' 06 Sing, good Chinaboy E. V. Henley, ' 06 Bob Wilson, representing the 1). P. A L. A. Henley, ' 06 Busman, who belongs to the Union M. J. Weller, ' 06 Students. Guests at the Reception. 294 Stanford The Junior Plug Ugly Quad 1904 Presented on the Oval October i6, 1902 Written by C. 13. McComish Cast of Characters Badlingo, King of the Realm WaKIcniar Vdung Palimpsn, (irand ' izicr Cleveland Baker W ' dhackn]), Lord lligh Ivoyal Footstocd G. H. Moore Bellowout. Lord High Roj ' al Foghorn to the King . . . . R. J. McFaddcn Hunterup, Lord High Looker-after Snch Things J. C. Taylor Courtiers, Trumpeters, Attendants, etc. Perantia, Fairy Queen Norman Collyer Hunwaddy, High and Mighty Prophet L. P. Bansbach Chinso, Who Has Seen The King W. F. Dunn Clumbod r F. H. Fowler Bandar I Cripples in Mind and Body J F. S. Holman Gondog ) ( A. A. Hampson First Citizen O. A. Wilson Second Citizen B. R. Cocks Third Citizen Isaac Russell Turtlefoot, Imperial A. D. T. Messenger W. E. Tritch Bntt-In LI. F. Scoville Nobles, Citizens, Musicians. Freaks, etc. Plug Ugly Committee Alice Kimball, Norman Collyer, W. F. Dunn, O. A. Wilson, Waldemar Young, Cleveland Baker, Isaac Russell 2g6 Stanford Spanish Play Quad Roble Hall, October 15, 1902 Calderon Contra Ramsey Written by Miss I. A. Wright, ' 04 and F. H. Fowler, ' 04 Personas Clarita Miss Chita Kraft, 03 Lorenzo, etc Mr. F. H. Fowler, 04 Novio segun Calderon Hak Hones, Stanford ' 04 Mr. Waldemar Young, ' 04 Novio segun Ramsey Dona Concha Miss I. A. Wright, ' 04 La niuy lenguada Paco, su marido Mr. Ira Woods Aficionado a la nu ' isica Claudio Mr. Stanley Smith, ' 03 Portero decidor 2( Stanford Quad 1904 Sophomore Minstrel Show Presented at Assembly Hall, Stanford University, October 31, 190Z Program Part I llail, Stanford. Hail! Chorus Introduction of End Wen E. V. Kehrlein, ' 05, Interlocutor My Lady Hottentot O. K. Grau, 05 Rag-Time Life D. Reynolds, ' 05 Mobile Sandstep V. Wirt, ' 06 My Josephine H. R. Tracy, ' 04 Banjo Stunts H. D. Wheeler, ' 06 My Ebony Belle B. R. Cocks, ' 04 While Old Glory Waves C. L. Firebaugh. ' 04 End ; Icn C. W. ihomas, ' 03 O. Du F. Kehrlein, ' o; D. M. Reynolds, ' 05 H. R. 1 racy, 04 C. R. Blodget, ' 04 H. D. Wheeler, 06 Part II Midway Scene, direct from the Orient. Selections by the Stanford P)and Selection Mandolin Club Dialect Specialty L. D. Byrne, ' 05 Home From a Glee Club Trip Bush and Baker French Duel Kehrlein Brothers Swell Coon H. R. Tracy, ' 04 Tumbling Gym Club C. W. Thomas, ' 03 . ) O. Du F. Kehrlein, 05 - Barkers H. D. Tracy, ' 04 . ) 300 7 ' Z) ? Old Bridge do-ivn hy the Stock Farm The Island in Frenchman s Lake Literary Stanford Quad 1904 Jack Armstrong- :onscience and it lim, not often, it the most obtrusive one is usually lirou.Q ' ht under control Idv Sopho- more year. Armstrong was a Senior now ; be- sides, this conscience of his w as a bit of a luxury — a sort of spiritual small l)lack and cognac ; he indulged in it only on occasions. This night was decidedly an occasion. He was being reminded that some one knew that his promises were not alto- gether fulfilled. What the deuce does she expect me to do anyway? He leaned his elbows on the table and rested his head in his hands, while a letter stared up at him accusingly, bringing memories of a girl, — the Girl down South. The door banged, a step sounded in the hall, and his Freshman roommate entered. Hello, Slats. said the Senior, where from now ? The Freshman threw off his Tuxedo, drew on a smoking- jacket and drawled, as he lighted a cigarette, Just a little dinner-dance at the Psi house. 305 Stanford Amislroii;;- rcnuiiihrrcd lliat the (lirl down South (lcs[)ise(l ciga- Quad rettcs. Something ahout the Freshman, her hrother, made him think 1904 oi lier and he covertly sHd the letter he had been reading into a drawer. How are you getting on in }our work? I don ' t see as much of }ou now as I used to. ' Slats ' tlushed for a moment and then answered, almost too carelessly, All right, I guess. Why did you ask? The warning cards came out today. 1 know, said the other simply, I got one. The Senior ' s intruding conscience and that forgotten promise got in their work again. He had known that the boy was behind in his studies hut had ne cr cpiite anticipated this. What ' s the matter? he queried. Descrip, I guess. I flunked the last ex. The Senior had heard certain stories, so he continued insistently. How s your ' lab ' work ? All up in chemistry ? No, I ' m not, snapped the Freshman. He did not like to be questioned. All right, I ' 11 go over some of your descrip with you tomorrow and Sunday, if you like. ' Thanks, old man ! Hut I can ' t. There is a trip to King ' s Moun- tain planned for tomorrow with a crowd from the Psi house and Sunday INIiss Morelle and I are going for a drive. You ' ll have to cut out this queening if you intend to stay in col- lege. Max told me tonight that you hadn ' t been near the ' lab ' in weeks and Fve noticed myself that you ' ve been cutting Gym pretty regular of late. Well, you see No, I don ' t see, the Senior broke in. You ' ve burnt your wings badlv. He paused, filled and lighted his pipe, and then, prodded by the memory of a half reproachful sentence in, the letter he had just read, he went over to the Freshman and put his hand on the boy ' s shoulder. It flunked Pfob Nelson and it will flunk you. She ' s not worth it, old man. Cut it out ! The Freshman threw oif the detaining hand and with a queer assumption of dignity drew himself up very straight. I wish to hear no criticism of Miss Morelle. Besides, I fail to see what business it is of yours, anyway. 306 Then in great wrath, Freshman Reginald Van Crunt, sometimes Stanford known as Slats, stalked majestically from the room. Ouad The Senior whistled with surprise and resisted an ardent desire 1904 to have the Freshman tnbbed. Then a feeling arose within him of resentment against such girls as Helen JNIorelle. All for a girl who had already a sinister record of more than a half dozen men flunked, a girl that — . The Freshman was a fool ! What difference did it make ? Armstrong was not to blame. What if he had half way promised to look after the boy? From Reginald ' s jacket a paper had fluttered to the floor. Jack picked it up. As he supposed, it was a bill, this time from Bell ' s livery stable, and not a small one either. He knew that which the Girl down South had not told him — that it was somewhat of a struggle to make both ends meet and keep the boy in college. Here is a nice job for a Senior engineering major ! Duenna to a susceptible young Freshie in his teens and a society queen of three seasons, — well seasoned, egad ! Over on the window seat the Senior and the conscience and the briar pi])e planned it all out between them. After the third pipeful, Jack knocked the ashes out of the bowl with a quick, decided gesture. He walked into Billy Dolan ' s room. Dolan, who had returned ' from the Psi dance, lay, propped up in bed like a half shut jack-knife, just finishing the remains of a midnight raid on the pantry. Arm- strong was house manager, so Bill gulped down angel cake in a wav to bring tears to the eyes of Sing Sing, the cook, and looked up guiltily. Just in time, old man. Help yourself. Box from home. Con- founded Freshies got away with the rest, he sputtered with an efifusion of amiability and crumbs. Armstrong grinned encouraginglv and sat down on the end of the bed. What sort of a time did you have tonight? Dolan was relieved to rattle out an account of the Psi party and incidentally of the morrow ' s trip to King ' s. He rather liked to review his little social triumphs, especially before the anti-queening sauerballs in the fraternity like Jack, — Taking the lions for an airing thev termed it. The Senior li stened and ruminated on the angel cake. Don ' t suppose you could crowd me into your bus tomorrow, do you ? he ventured. You? The Junior sat up straight, his bulging eyes and mouth puckered into three O ' s of exclamation. You don ' t mean it? 307 Stanford Sure. Quad W ell- 1 H — • Why, (if course, if you want to. But we ' 11 have 1904 to ask another _L;irl for yon and it ' s a trille late, dnhionsly, this last. jack glanced toward the I ' si house where the upjier windows were still alii ht. Telephone, he said. Jack was a man of action. It is one of the fortuitous features of Stanford social economy that a well conducted college love ailair. after it has heen once started, can take care of itself without much looking after from the two persons romantically concerned. I ' he looking after will he attended to hy the chaperones, the rival sororities, the farce writers and the Quad editors. All the world loves a lover, hecause he is interesting; there are alwa} ' S a great man - things ahout him, — that he himself does not even know of. Armstrong- never gave the authors of social fiction an)- field for their talents. Before the week was over all the college could see for a truth that the famous foothall man who had resisted the charms of I- ' reshmen co-eds through four years, was a glittering spoil for Miss Morelle. Jack, as I said, was a man of action. He could sit a horse well and Helen looked uncommonly smart in a riding hahit — and she knew it. In the afternoons they rode, not every day, of course, — some da_ s it rained. Helen had spent several seasons at Catalina. He put a trim catamaran on the lake and she, very dainty in duck and blue, showed him the mysteries of navigation. Being a good swimmer he rescued her cjuite romantically. Then there was a tally-ho party when his cousin came down from r)Urlingame and the Kappa girls next door watched from liehind the curtains as the six-in-hand dashed up the gravelled driveway of the Psi house, with a jingling of harness and tooting of the coach horn. The Psi girls were exasperatingly jubilant. Every time Jack called, Helen took him out on the porch facing the Kappa house, which was vindictively feminine. Pudgy Billy Dolan ' s eyes settled into a prolonged bulge till they looked like Easter eggs. It was wunder- schon ! Then everybodv in society, having nothing left to the imagination, ]:)itied the Freshman. The latter, w ' ith commendable grit clung to the favors that Helen found time to extend, hut when she, beautiful and for- getful, gave his only dance at the Junior to a visiting Omega Tau from Berkelev, he pitied himself. No Freshman dies from a l)roken heart ; he comes nearer to it from a sour stomach. So Slats, after a few 308 ,.,. . x. ■ n ' l — ;aKw;% 5 ' f- - . ' i The Girl Down South Stanford nights of bibulous misogyny in the taverns of Mayfield and blue-grey Quad headaches, settled down again to his work, thoroughly scared and did it 1904 well, — having nothing else to do. As for the Senior, while he could not quite cease his attentions to Helen after he had driven Slats ' away, he performed his devoirs in an impersonal way and cut no classes for her company. For a girl of her iype, this was a new experience and it puzzled her. just before Senior Week came the ofifer from his uncle of a position in Washington and when he had finished the note of accept- ance he sat at his table for a long time trying to write a letter to the Girl down South, all about his plans for the future and to ask her — no matter what, — they ' re all alike when the time comes. At last, when it was finished, he smoked many pipes on his window ledge. It was on the night of the Senior Ball that the reply came. She had written simply, directly, just as he knew she would. He had never questioned her decisions and he did not now, but it hurt more than he cared to own, especially that half sentence about Helen. Somehow, he could n ' t help blaming Slats with that. I ' m sorry. Jack. I ' ve cried about it a little but that can ' t help. You won ' t blame me too much, will you? But it ' s ' No, Jack. ' They told me about you and Helen and I can ' t, — Maude. No postscript ; nothing but the few broken sentences. Armstrong read it in the smoking room after his return from the dance, and it was there that Billy Dolan found him. Coming up now? asked the Junior. The tall handsome form outlined against the window turned slowly and melted into the shadow of the curtain, while Dolan saw only where the moonlight shone across the glistening dress shirt and face, alike cold and blank — dead white. No, Billy. Don ' t wait for me if you ' re sleepy. I think I ' ll smoke a bit first. Armstrong threw himself on a couch. In the other room the Junior was playing the piano, softly so as not to disturb the sleepers overhead. He, too, was not coming back next year. Poor old Dad ' s about worn out. Seems badly cut up about having to go, he muttered. Then he cursed softly at Slats when the latter came home noisily from an Encina feed. Jack reflected bitterly. Just because that fool of a Christmas Freshman couldn ' t leave Helen Morelle alone— that was the cause 310 of it. He had been given no chance to explain. Bnt then, what could he have said? Outside, the last carriage had rattled down the Row, the doors of the sorority houses had closed upon the last escort on the steps. The moon, almost full, had set and in the east the morning star was paling, but the Senior lay, with his pipe, long since burned out, clasped in his listless fingers. Billy, chang- ing the music, played a waltz-song softly, and the Senior, as he fell asleep, had a vision of the Girl down South standing on the veranda in the moonlight, tall and willowy, her hair making a faint halo about her head, while beyond her, in the val- ley down below the mist rolled in like surf across the fragrant orange groves. Out into the warm living night pulsed the rhythmic, witching tones of the violins, tremulous with the sigh of love. The pipe slipped to the floor and the Junior, closing the piano, came over and shook him gently. Come, Jack, let ' s turn in. On the night of the Senior Prom we go back to the old Quad just once more, — to say good-bye. Un- der the arches, rows of little red lan- terns bob gaily, the lights dance in and out among the palms, and in the center of the esplanade the con- cert band is playing old waltzes and marches with a merry ring, till we choke at the memories of the four His face cold and blank — a dead white Stanford yaws lliat arc oc nc and the lanterns are blurred for iis. There will Quad never l)e a dearer place to Stanford hearts than the Quad, where we 1904 have known the best of it, — and the end of it. Armstrong- soon left the other fellows from liis house and wan- dered, watching the throng. Passively following the fate that had brought Helen Morelle into his life, he found himself inside the Psi booth. He sought her, with the calm courage of the man who has nothing to win and nothing to lose. He had always been the master and to the woman it meant more perhaps than she could have realized. Helen was strangely silent, and as they walked up and down the the long arcades he began to contrast her with the Girl down South. ] Iiss Morelle was more beautiful, with a stately, self-poised, superb grace. She was a classic, a pagan ; her ]nu ' e beauty was its own divin- ity. That is what the man thought, with an ache at the heart. Yet the little drama had been pleasant, even with the bitterness of the end, and he was half sorry to see the curtain fall. The music ceased, and reluctantly he started back with her to the booth. At the entrance she paused. How many more proms are there. Jack? Three. The girl looked quickly inside as though she were afraid of meet- ing some one. Ask me for them all. Jack, she pleaded. That makes one for each year. Freshman year is gone. She laughed a little nervously, and passed her arm through his, and, as they moved away, Slats, searching desperately, found them not, — neither then nor afterwards. Here and there the candles in the Japanese lanterns began to sputter and go out. A lantern tipped, blazed fitfully a moment and dropped, a charred shred, at their feet. It ' s just that way with us, isn ' t it. Jack? Helen touched the embers with her toe. We blaze here a moment and then — there was a little catch in her voice, — go out, you tonight and I next year. The musicians struck u]) the last piece — a medley of college airs, and the couple, like many another, paused to listen. The Senior stood idly watching the last of the lanterns flicker and die, while the girl, mute, wove her handkerchief in and out between her fingers. Suddenly the Senior clenched his hands. The band had swung into a college Avaltz- song and the promenaders were trying to sing it, but now and then a voice would break. Helen was singing too, and her sweet soprano, tremulous now, rang tender and soft under the spell of the old good- bye song. One, two, three, four! How many ]iromenades had 312 Helen given him? This was the one for Senior year and now was ahnost over. The tired mnsicians began to pack their instruments. The chimes in the chapel tower rang out, From arches low Where swallows fly, Before we go, Old Quad, Good-bye, then struck the hour of twelve. Senior year was gone. At the entrance of the booth they stopped. Good-night, Jack. Good-bye. Armstrong turned and walked slowly down the arcade. A blue star, veiled in purple mist, touched the redwoods of the western foot- hills. This was the end. All because a fool Freshman — From the booth Helen watched him go. And the girl knew that she, too, was alone. Stanford Quad 1904 . ■3 Stanford Quad 1904 BITS OF HISTORY The Passing of the Camp DAXl-: COOLIDGli The Universit} ' Cam]). Iniilt Ijefore the University itself and pass- ing away, belated, with the hnilding of the new University; existing by sufifrance year after year and tolerated then only under protest ; unsightly, and at times disorderly ; nevertheless filled so large a place in the life of Stanford and in the lives of her struggling sons that it will never be wholly forgotten. Erected as a lodging house for the workmen who built the old University it was quietly occupied by the more ])overty-stricken of that forceful, uncouth band, now known as the pioneers — men who came here in simple faith to share in the great gift. As the workmen vacated the Camp their places were taken bv the im]iecunious of Kncina and by new additious to that class of work- 314 ing students who finally gave to the Camp its place and function in the Stanford economy of the University. Ouad It was in recognition of the necessity for some such haven for poor 1904 and struggling students, whose welfare was always near to the hearts of the founders, that Senator Stanford allowed the bare whitewashed barracks to remain ; and it was through the continued solicitude of Airs. Stanford, in the face of many legitimate protests, that the Camp was not demolished until it lay within the very shadow of the Outer Quad- rangle. And when, in the end, the Camp was torn down, it was not in condemnation of the men who lived there nor of the idea that there should be such a place for such men : l ut that, in the upbuilding of the greater University, it was necessary to have the ground on vhich the old Camp stood. So it was torn down and the ground lies vacant, the working students are scattered, and another relic of the old days has passed. Of the men who lived in the Camp, much of praise and blame might be said. In any community, however democratic, there is always a stigma attached to poverty — or the crude and shabby associations of poverty — and at no time were the residents of the Camp wholly free from the feeling that, among more favored students, they were not accepted as equals. Rut this feeling never lessened their confidence nor turned them from the highest loyalty to their University. At the same time the working students were always conscious of the sympathy and respect of man} ' members of the faculty who, having worked their own way through college, unashamed, recognized in the struggling Camp man an ecpiality of spirit. But, deprived of social opportunity, it was Kvrk that characterized the Camp and the Camp man — and for those who do good work there is laid up a reward. With all their crudeness, and in spite of the necessity of earning their living day by day, the men of the Camp reaped success and recog- nition far out of proportion to their numbers. Even in the field of literature, incongruous as it may seem, the Camp was a source and a power. Six successive editors of the Sequoia were drawn from its humble doors; unnumbered editors of the Daily Palo Alto; and at the end of 1898 nine out of the eleven prizes then awarded by the Quad for the best poem and the best story had been won by men who at some time in their University course had lived within its walls. At last the old Camp was torn down, and all that was ugly and evil about it wiped away. If poets and true men have found shelter there and have come forth strong and good perhaps it was justified to the end. 31S Stanford Quad 1904 The Founding of the Chaparral BY ONE OF THE FOUNDERS ' HEN real authors are forced to personal mention against their wills, they say modesty forbids ' ; then straightwa}- repudiate Miss Modesty ' s mandates. The compiler of the following, who never had even a tlirtino- acquaintance with the lady, speaks out. The inimital)le Dr. Elliott, in Volume VIII, Stanford Quad, published by the junior Class of 1902, and ably edited by Miss McDougald, wrote an account of The First Decade of the University as it might appear to a History jMajor of 2501. This spoke feelingly of a future era when the big scrap-books in the Secretary ' s office, the private memoirs of Bristow Adams, and this particular volume of the Quad shall all alike have succumbed to the gnawing tooth of time. So far the gnawing tooth is going hungry for one of these treats ; the ■■ private memoirs have not been written. Procrastination will be averred by many ; yet the delay is solely to forestall the action of the gnawing tooth for as long a time as possible. Until the memoirs shall be written, those who are prolonging life in the hope of reading them, will find in the ensuing few but true pages, an advance note from the work to come. In the collegiate year 1898- 1899, two men, living in Room 81 Encina, edited the only two Stanford periodicals then in existence, Tlie Stanford Sequoia and Tlic Daily Palo Alto. Each was chief editor of his own and chief associate of his roommate ' s paper; and each took turns at editing and even reading the other editor ' s sheet. These men had common interests, ideas, tobacco, and in spite of what might appear prohibitory differences in size and shape, a common wardrobe. To follow up their list of affinities it must be acknowledged that they were — self supposedly — gifted with humor. But as Dane Coolidge says, Every man is sure he is a born humorist. Dane thinks he is yet. This vein of alleged humor had outcroppings in the Joshes of 316 Coolidge ' s Sequoia, following the intercollegiate Josh at a respectful, Stanford if not always respectable, distance. Quad Josh incontinently died the year before, though not in the odor of 1904 sanctity, after a mottled and a misspent life. Charley Field and Chris Bradley successively if not successfully conducted the Stanford end of this hybrid until it turned professional shortly before its demise. It was not an untimely death. Still, the magazine, in spite of its shortcomings, prepared the ground for better things to come. Numerous sporadic humors, which had previously broken out, ran their courses. But as the French say, Let us return to our muttons — in this case the inhabitants of Room 8i, Encina, Everett Smith, 99, and Bristow Adams, class not yet determined. Between Classes in the Sequoia, followed Coolidge ' s Joshes ; and the good things which went to waste in that — and out of it for want of room, — made the pair see the chance for a comic paper. Plans were perfected during psvchology hour, either in class or out, generally the latter, which resulted in a definite crystallization of ideas, and a cold flunk for each. Of course Dr. Angell, himself a humorist, would not have done it had he realized all. This crystallized idea, which how ever, was not crystalline clear, found expression in the Sequoia, Volume VIIT, No. 29 — the same issue which chronicled the coming debut of the now anticjue Aluuiuus. The future C iaparral was heralded as an irresponsible youngster, to be known as the Eucalyptus, following the prevailing style of tree nomenclature — the style that gives us the Palo Alto, Sequoia and Live Oak for publications, and the names of our dormitories,— Roble, Madrono and Encina. Eucalyptus is rather apt, since it will doubtless be a straggling formless thing of a more or less rank luxuriance, with leaves somewhat pointed. It will, too, be an exotic, borrowed from, though not following closely, the Harvard Lampoon, Cornell JVidozv, and Princeton Tiger. It will endeavor to record the fun of the University, rather than try to create. The paper will be profusely illus- trated . It will appear tri-weekly. In the Arcadian Echoes of the same Sequoia, Senior wrote : I am wondering what the Eucalyptus, which takes its place next year with the others of our journalistic arboretum, will be like. The size of its subscription list must depend upon the good-will of the students and its life, haply, might come to depend upon the good-will of the faculty. Although that was Smith ' s last year at college, he thought of com- ing back to edit this paper, and Adams was coming back if the faculty saw it that way. During the summer Smith straightened out the afl:airs 317 Stanford ■ ' ' ' ' ' ' ' I ' ly ' ' ' t - ' ' ' tin ' erring- course of a — let lis be charitable — Ouad business niisnianager. Adams made hay on the Stock Farm — while 1004 ' ' ■ shone hot as Sheol. Smith later came down to the pastoral life, and the roommates painted the barns and tanks of Mr. Covey ' s place. Hie ot ce building stands today a moimment to their efforts although no tablet tells the tale to tourists. During all this time they thought and talked comic paper. At the end of the summer Smith abandoned art for literature as she appears to a C iroiiiclc reporter; and Adams, with the gracious consent of his major professor, sought the shrine of ] Iinerva as exemplified by Encina and the Quad. Smith ' s new duties took him from the actual stress of the first issue, but he worked for advertising in the city and sent down copy. Larrey Bowman, the ablest all-round youth that ever pushed a pen or led a lead pencil, con- ceived the personified Chappie ' ' in a rough sketch from which .Vdams made the drawing which adorned the cover of the first volume. A few of the firsts can still be recalled. The first subscriber was Frank English, who would n ' t pay cash in advance. The first to tender his iron kopeck was Carl Hayden. and the editors were so glad to get it that they did not ask any questions. Professor Newcomer - — bless ' im — was the first member of the faculty to extend the glad hand, also enclosing the dollar ; and the first advertiser was Fisher, the hatter, who talked like a father, advised against the project, but finally on the solemn assurance that the paper would not be in the least like Josh, signed a contract. The editor bought three new hats there in as many d ays, out of his great joy. The joy was short-lived, but that will appear later. The first joke and cartoon showed a Freshman ' s introduction to essence de Searsville — There was a roomer afloat in Encina last night. It took with the rabble. The first verse was by May Hurlburt, as nice a little lady as ever wore a blue dress on a summer day, and the onlv woman who has made the Board. Larrey Bowman and Bristow Adams were announced as editors, but were later reinforced by Dick Culver, Tod S. Walter, Smith, Fletcher B. Wagner, and Miss Hurl- burt. The first editorials were not noteworthy save for the inauguration of the unalterable now that. One, however, told of the change of name, undertaken mainly to get a native rather than a transplanted growth. It recounted discarded ideas, including Eucalyptus, as medicinal and hard to take while every one was supposed to take the Chaparral. The name Poison Oak was discarded for the same reason — that some persons won ' t take it and are proud of the fact, while others 318 will not take it if they can avoid it. To snmmarize, — if }OU don ' t want Stanford the management to get lost in the Chaparral now is the time to Quad subscribe. 1904 The management did get lost. That first year was a bad one. That the paper lived at all was due to the fact that Mr. E. D. Taylor, of the Stanley-Taylor Company, was willing to lose money • — and he did. Finallv, after six intermittent issues, exemplifying a current joke on the tri-weeklv dates of publication, to the effect that the paper came out one w eek and tri-ed to come out again, the Chaparral was deeply in debt. But debts were not all. Nutty alias Examiner Hamilton told several persons that the editors in founding such a publication had stolen an idea he had formulated a whole year before. Yet even in spite of this thev had hopes. One night at a Press Club banquet when the time was ripe — likewise the members — or at least pretty mellow, the Chaparral Board got rid of a gold-brick by selling out to the Club for the amount of the paper ' s debts, — which the Press Club, however, did not pav. ' ' - ' Chris Bradley was elected editor and though his name appeared in very large capitals over a list of business managers as long as vour arm, the Chaparral died and was buried under debts that stood well into three figures. Next summer, between digging the cellar for the Alpha Phi house and grading the ground around the new postoffice, Adams surmised that, having had a year ' s experience, he could exhume Chappie ' s corpse ; rebreathe in it a living soul and make it worthy of student support, if he could find some one who could make the ghost walk; not Chappie ' s ghost, but the proverbial one which player-folks wot of. The right man was found in Norman Davis, late of Vanderbilt University. He was a hustler for the advertising ; for the first time Chappie was financiallv on his feet, however much he may have been off his head. During this vacation Adams boarded in Palo Alto with Ralph Renaud, the next year ' s editor. Here it was in Mrs. Holley ' s boarding house that the famous White Opal and Hard-Boiled Egg sonnet hoax was conceived and written, which redounded to the discomfort of the Sequoia, which printed the Opal end of it. and to the credit of the .1 Holxokc, which stole what some Eastern critics declared a new and notable sonnet definition. But that is part of another memoir. Here it was also that Renaud posed for the anatomical niceties of the new Chappie ' s figure, and Adams was the model for the most beau- tiful drawings of the clever Renaud. The two prepared enough It must be admitted that several members of the Press Club, as individuals, paid the assessment levied by the Club, and substantially aided in the final liquidation of the Chaparral debt. Stanford nialcrial lo earn tlirovi;;!! half of the year. ' J hc I ' .oard was a keen one; Quad Larrey, first and foremost to be depended ui)on • — the noblest Bowman 1904 ' ' licm all; Jaek Uonnell, seeond (jnly by an eyelash; Ralph Renaud ; Will b ' rancis. with (piaint jokes and drawinos ; Uristow Adams; and, later, Studley, Russell and I ' ord who earned jilaees through a thorough apprenticeship. Culver too, contributed of his best, and the second volume found l hap])ie, like Zoroaster and Zendavesta, the best in the business, bar none. ' ' ' Took turns iit . . . even reading the other editor ' s slict 320 Graduates by Request Wallace Irwin Stanford Quad 1904 HIS is no rhyme of commencement time When the faculty makes decree That the pure of heart shall be set apart By the mystical sign A. B. I sing to-night of a common wight On the campus of the West Mio makes things snort for an era short And graduates by request. The freshmen go in the green of the leaf, The sophomores in their gall, The juniors skip by the pink strip slip And tarry not for the fall — Where are the seniors, too blithe to last, The dearest, the beerest, the best ? Ah, they have been seen by the eyes of Green And are graduates by request. They go not out with a gladsome shout, But they go by ones and twos, And they go in pride, for they ' ve qualified In their major subject — Booze. They have felt the heel of the faculty spiel. They have been the Committee ' s guest. And they hit the ties in the merry guise Of graduates by request. So the freshman leaveth his fields of grass And the sophomore leaveth his beer. And the junior goeth where no man knoweth At any old time of the year. And the senior doth wait at the campus gate With a sob in his throbbing chest As he joins the innumerable host Of the graduates by request. — Chaparral ' 3 1 Stanford Encina Hall — Its Place in Stanford Life Quad 1904 By EvERiiir W. Smith, ' 99 i J-lE London Black and White recently contained a picture wliich was labeled Stanford University. It was a view of Encina Hall. The magazine stretched the truth just a trifle beyond the Encina enthusiast ' s most extravagant claims, but only a trifle ; and }et there is much that is true mixed with the Encina man ' s fond hyperbole. At least his statements are not, like Uncle John ' s tales for tourists, given with intent to deceive. In all sincerity the Encina man declares that the hall is the center of Stan- ford life and the source of college spirit and with such allowances for his enthusiasm as our own opinions permit, we agree. The Encina man speaks from his knowledge of life there and for those of us who have known that life his utmost hyperbole persists in seeming sane, try though we may to perceive the fallacy we know must exist. The informality and genuine democracy of life in the hall, the groups that gather now in one room, now in another, the underlying feeling of comradeship and common interests of it all will be remembered by some of us as the best we ever knew or could know. This life in the hall, more than at any other place at Stanford, resembles that of the smaller men ' s colleges, which in many ways is the ideal with its close and yet numerous friendships. This comprehensive companionship is the sort of thing that makes a college spirit. This sort of intimacy, the groups that gather in the evening to discuss the teams and their battles, the profs and their unpatriotic pitilessness, the last ex and the next, the last vacation and the next, all the definite and indefinite things that occupy a college man ' s thoughts are a large part of college life. But the hall ' s beneficent influence extends beyond the walls of Encina, for Encina is the common property of the whole college. Any danger that might exist through fraternities, little grouj s with their own interests and the disintegrating force that their inevitable rivalries must have, even the menace of disunion through the presence of the fraternity and non-fraternity elements with distinctions so clearly defined and with able and successful leaders in each, is made of less moment by the common meeting place where all gather as Stanford men with no other thought than that they are Stanford men. Even farther than this the hall goes, for here as in no other place Stanford men and women come 322 together a few times a year , at the class dances and at the Encina at Stanford homes ' ' — the most comprehensive social events of our life. The hall is Quad a constant antidote of any sort of disunion or lack of sympathy among 1904 -the students. Victories and defeats in contests with our opponents weld us together as no other agent can, but in times of peace when life flows quietly we need a place where we can gather merely for our own enjoyment with no thought of anybody outside our own fellowship. The history of Encina and of the changes and evolutions that have taken place there is interesting, but not to be gone into detail here. It is. indeed, almost a history of the University. From the time when the first migrations from its walls began, succeeding the days when it sheltered nearly all of Stanford, the heights to which the lighted windows on its floors rise at night have been a barometer which we watch closely to learn what there is in the weather for Stanford. The newspaper correspondent has been active at Stanford ever since the first stone was laid and his accoimts of events at the hall are entertaining reading for any who will take the trouble to look them up. It was to be expected that the college kicker should come into being promptly with the opening of the hall, and he did. In the columns of his paper for the very first issues after he began his activities are em- balmed the objections to things as they were which still occasionally do service in connection wnth things as they are. Naturally among the first wails were some concerning his food — that is characteristic. The history of Stanford ' s tribulations in this connection is one of many epochs. It was not long before the first regime passed out, to be suc- ceeded by a period during which the dining-room was closed. This was repeated many times before the final solution which gave to Encina the spacious assembly room it has now and the University Inn. In those days the patrons of the dining-room were like the Roman populace, responsible almost not at all for the management of affairs but fiercely obstreperous when displeased, and they were displeased often. Manager after manager had his little rule and passed out system after system, scheme after scheme was tried and failed. Then came the time when government was assumed by the populace. Republican government was instituted. The individual eaters became responsible for the success of the administra- tion and freemen voted for the rulers and their conduct regulated the price which they should pay for board. It ' s a far cry from the bread riots which sometimes precipitated the abdication of the dictator of old to the watchword of the present : Key down or you ' 11 drive away the transient guests ! 323 Stanford ' t ' interesting, in passing, to note lliat lMicin;i ' s first attempt at Quad social entertainment was a flat fizzle. It was planned to entertain the I 904 Roble girls, but the work of the Encina novices was not smooth. They made some mysterions mistake — the records are none too specific — the Roble girls were ofi ' endcd and, if the newspaper correspondent ' s veracity is to be admitted, went to Mayfield that night — to a church entertain- ment. Some girls did accept Encina ' s hospitality — and there is a hint that it was the inviting of these others that ofit ' ended the Roble girls — but with the chief intended guests away the evening was a failure. It is gratifying to note that the men soon tried again and this time succeeded and that Roble returned the courtesy graciously. The Encina man has developed wonderfully since those crude days ! Closely following the final closing of the dining room in the hall and the throwing open of the room it had occupied for an assembly hall, the Encina Club was formed for general control of hall matters. Under the auspices of this club the twice-a-year at homes of the Encina men have taken rank among the most enjoyable features of the life of the college. The Encina man does those things well now. In the memory of the Stanford old grad Encina holds a big and honored place. Eor every Stanford man Encina is the scene of many of the incidents of his life at the college that stick longest and most pleasantly in his mind, incidents gay and grave, roughhouses at night when the lights failed, impromptu stag dances before the digs began to study at night, solemn conclaves that turned into goodnatured free fights as such things do at college when the strain of being serious becomes too tense, and of jollifications in which a soberer note was struck that turned the trend of events to momentous conclusions. One such occas- ion, at least, some of us remember vividly. It was in the early days of the Spanish war. One night in the big club-room a crowd of Encina men was making merry fun out of grave matters as bo}s may, marching with shouldered billiard cues and performing impromptu evolutions across the smooth floor of the club-room. Ikey Switzer, a leader always, was their commander, giving orders which nobody ever heard before and maintaining a mock disci]iline with severe face. The fun had been running for some time when Switzer mounted a table and called his play soldiers to a halt. Then to his laughing college mates, who gathered about to hear wdiat new pranks he would propose, Switzer began : Fellows, we re having lots of fun over this thing, but I tell vou it ' s serious. The boys, seeing more pseudo-seriousness in store, clapped their hands and waited for the rest. But Switzer was not pseudo-serious ; he was in dead earnest, and gradually the truth dawned .324 upon them as Ikey proceeded. The smiles left their faces and there Stanford that night a movement took form out of the fun that gave to Stanford Quad the proudest possession of any college, her martyrs. Not long after that 1904 night the first regiment of California Volunteers marched from the transport decks to the Philippine shore and among them in Company K, with billiard cues displaced by steel barrels, were some of the bovs whom Ikey dr illed in Encina that night — and Corporal Switzer was there too. Most of them came back to us after their dutv was done, but some we saw for the last time when thev sailed awav. So the old grad ' s memory runs, and his tongue. If he were not taking space that belongs to others in printed pages nothing could stop him. I ve seen it tried. And in every old grad ' s that reminds me of the time when recurs the picture of Encina — Encina smiling in the sunshine of the days that were and are no more, Encina laughing with all her lights in the happy nights that are gone and — yes, Encina still and quiet with old Henry ' s lantern twinkling over toward the Quad and one lone man striving to scale the side of the outer wall, now chiseled so coldly smooth, to attain the bottom rung of the fire escape that used to reach down with a curve like a welcoming hand. Perhaps the old grad left the hall after a very brief sojourn but even so, printed in his plastic Ereshman mind, one jjicture remains — a group of homesick boys around a bare table, surrounded by four gleaming blank whitewashed walls, playing unhappy games of poker to keep the thoughts from revert- ing to the melancholy contrast between home and mother and college and the sophomore. lUit to the one who, when he reached the end of the year in which he ran the L ' niversity, sat with his roommate in the cheerful glow of more lights than Adderclaws would allow if he knew, with the bareness of the walls, which the half dozen photographs of the home folk made once so harshly insistent, swallowed up bv the clus- tered trophies of four years, to that man came the pleasantest mem- ories and the saddest, for when he pulled down the pictures and banners, the nose guard and the dance programs, the chaste facultv notices and the blatant poster for the last time, he knew that bv that overt act he cut himself ofT forever from the happy undergrad days. Encina was for him no more his own. Henceforth he must enter it as a visitor — he a guest, a stranger in these walls ! On the Quad and on the Row the pitiful comfort might be his that Freshmen might think him also a Freshman and a part of the place, but in Encina he would be an alien. Of Encina all that was left for his own would be the memorv. 325 Stanford Quad 1904 A Stanford Recessional (With apologies to R. K.) The ex is over, now at last Our stiffened lingers drop the pen ; We ' ll trust the future as the past, And never say it might have been. Though of our hours we know not yet. Let us forget, let us forget. On all they did or didn ' t do, On every cause and its effect, Brief explanation and review, We now need never more reflect; All beside which a plus is set Let us forget, let us forget. And when at last, the course full run, We hold that halo — bright A. B. — How much, think you of all we ' ve done Will still be known by you and me? Comrade in sorrows, do not fret. Let us forget, let us forget. The majors not on any card, The life we lived, the men we knew, The cherished rubbish that we guard. The long red roofs against the blue, — Through all the years l efore us yet We can ' t forget, we can ' t forget. E. F. P. ' The Last Guest Being Some Account of the Passing ot Encina Dining Room Stanford Quad 1904 IS said that backstairs gossip is the most interest- ing and important part of history, — particularly French. The diary of the average kitchen me- chanic at the court of the late Louis makes the modern publisher rich and as riches are much to l)e desired by the publishers of a Quad, the following is announced as a contribution to inner history as she is wrote: Of fundamental causes I do not speak; I know them not. Petitions and student demonstrations were above me. And as to whether it was corned-beef-and-cabbage or Hungarian goo- lash, I do not consider myself fully qualified to state, though I have my opinion on that much mooted Cjuestion. Local color for the subject is already well supplied by the Hebe, the Cofl:ee ]3oy, and other documents by the author of that master- piece among college stories. Yet a slight explanation of conditions may not be amiss. F. Hopkinson Smith says that there are four kinds of waiters, and two classes ; of the latter, one class is composed of omni- buses and the other of real waiters, so that the omnibus is not, strictly speaking, a waiter. Western usage has shortened the term to ' bus ; I was a bus. And a bus, as we all know, is a carryall. The routine of the bus in those days was as follows : Li the morning he filled water glasses, supplied coiTee, tea, milk, or cocoa, according to request, brought on the mush-and-milk, and carried off the dirty dishes. At luncheon he brought in the prunes and again carried off the debris. At the evening meal he furnished the beverage, the soup and the des- sert, taking care, with the latter to surreptitiously slide several orders along the coping behind the sideboard, for his own use later, and for one or two favored guests who got seconds when the bus was in good humor. When a bus got so he could carry five plates of soup in one hand and six glasses of water in the other, he might be promoted to the waiter ' s position if there was an opening. The waiter had the dignity of taking meat orders like this : beefsteak-lamb-chops-pork- chops-ham- ' n ' -eggs-bacon- ' n ' -eggs-hash- ' r-om ' let. He also did not have to get to Encina quite so early in the morning, for the bus supplied the coft ' ee-mush-and-milk and hot bread, which was generallv the first 327 1904 c. r J part and often the wliolc of the nl() nin • meal for manw The bus got Q 1 liis Ixiard. the waiter ]iis hoard and a few doHars to l)oot. Stanhope — sometimes referred to as StanIio])e-less — was the waiter at m - tal)le, that is, 1 was his l)ns. I ' .neina (hnint; room never made a hit as a (Hninj ; ' room, h ' or a clubroom for footl)aU ralhes it mit ht l)e said to l)e a howdins; sticcess, therefore we are . lad the dining- part has passed During , what proved It) l)e its last season as a snUc-a-nuiiii cr. the trrst semester of the ' 97-98 year Mr. and Mrs. Weaver tried to run it on a homelike basis. I speak from a narrow experience, being only a bus. The Weavers were nice jjeople, but eas -. Vov example, I ' .ill Irwin, clothed in white duck pants, a little l)rief authority and an air of im])ortance, drew down three meals per for punching meal tickets. He was a striking, not to say, a ])unching figure, as he stalked majestically about to waylay the few non-regulars, who had tickets. Not that he did not wear other clothes besides the duck pants. Of course he did, but I, only an under classman then, and impressionable, saw, in the white ducks, Bill ' s badge of office. Duniwa} ' ate at one table, I remember, but that is not the reason the feed-mill ceased to grind, as far as I know. At my table there sat, among other celebrities, G. Sporty Roberts or Rivets ; Kid English; Haslacher, the Rug : Jack Daggett, Daggett of Pasadena ; Fungus Branch Riley ; George Greasy Rees, and a lot of choice ones. This table was a popular one and noisy. It was a long one and the i:)resent billiard table, if it ' s there yet, stands on its site. Professor Duniway sat on the other side of the room, and the pool table desecrates that hallowed spot. I know my table was popular because Duniway complained that from where he sat it was stnMiglv borne in upon him that the expressions used l)y the Ihig and his messmates were often more forcible than elegant. Having these data in mind let us go ahead with the march of events. Some contend that corned-beef-and-cabbage caused the final catastrophe, but T think it was Hungarian goolash. You see, they were used to the former, inoculated, as it were, but the Hungarian goo, etc., was a stranger, and too much like hash to be awe-inspiring. Then the last pie was made with dried cherries, not seeded. It was remarked, ' Tis true. ' tis pitty, so the wdiole bunch lifted the lids of their pie segments, dosed them with catsup and Worcestershire, stuck toothpicks in them and sent them back to the ]iantry. They might have had iMxad pudding too, if they had wanted it. lUit the - struck for better grub and made a demon- stration in the lobbw lu ' ery man there had the digestive apparatus of a camel, but the TTunq-arian stuff was the last straw that broke the camel ' s back. During- the time the mob was gathering in the hall, Rilev came in to supper. He was very late as per usual. Mr. and Mrs. ' eaver had posted a sign to the effect that there would be no meals after that night. In the lobb - the Encina push portrayed the hoarse clamorings of a stage mob, but Riley was used to that. I had the honor of waiting on him, but this was before the Zetes plucked the star from the firmament and added it, a gem for their crown. Bill Irwin, hardly through with his goolash, could not withstand the witchery of the voice of the mob in the hall ; with a huge gulp of milk he dashed for the scene of action, think- ing ■■ what a chance to harangue the multitude. He had punched his last meal ticket, as far as I know. Riley ate on with that perfect sang- froid for which he was noted, blase to the end. Professor Duniway came from his condolences with Mrs. Weaver and spoke to Mr. Riley, referring lightly to Mr. C. D. Gibson ' s drawing recently published The Last Guest — the little god of love still at the anniversary wedding feast. Frank smiled benignantly, and yet with some sense of his im- portance in this epoch-marking event. While I stood by, only a bus, in my long w hite apron and short black coat, waiting to hand Mr. Riley his pitty-full piece of pie, thinking on the saying all things will come to him who only stands and waits, and knowing I was a part — even if small — of history. For here I stood serving that dear, sweet, cute little blue-jowled Cu])id of a Frank Branch Riley. Ah! he may have forgot- ten it : but I, — I never shall. Bristow Adams. Stanford Quad 1904 !Jj ' ng the ' oj hiaJ Stanford Quad 1904 The Development of the Y. M. C. A. IIE passing of the first decade makes it meet that the Stanford Young Men ' s Christian Association should, with other organizations, pause and view its progress in ihe light of the ten years just passed and the ten years that are opening out before us. The Association was fdundcd in the spring semester of the University ' s first year and until 1898 struggled feebly along, dividing the field with the Christian Association, the pioneer organization. Then the Christian Association sus- pended operations, leaving the Young Men ' s Christian Association full dominion. The work was now begun under the direction of a paid secretary; great things were expected, but the new leader failed to master the situation, and, after a year ' s unavailing service, departed, leaving the Association in a badly crippled condition. The fall of ' 99 and the spring of ' co was a time of recovery from the previous set-back; since then, thanks to the energy and persistence of Lloyd E. Harter and Hugh A. Moran, the Association, in a quiet, unobtrusive way, has been steadily forging ahead. From a membership of t, and a bible class of 5 men, it has attained its present status of 210 members, ten bible classes having a total enrollment of 92 men, the Student Labor Bureau, the nucleus of a missionary department, and a young, but vigorous, social service department. We do not deem it wise to indulge in a glorious prophecy of the progress of the coming decade; to suggest the possibilities will be sufficient. At Stanford we have numbers of vigorous, capable men, a prime requisite for a great work. The work is at our doors. By a system of rival boys ' clubs, the youngsters of the three adjoining towns could be converted into a model generation. The men of Stanford could teach them baseball, football, music, debating; could teach them to be gentlemen and good citizens- — some of them would become Stanford men, the kind that keep training rules. Our Japanese janitors, the Chinese and other foreigners of the surround- ing country could be instructed in reading and writing. Many of the working men of the adjoining towns lead hard, meager lives ; they could be brought together in reading-rooms and by means of lectures taught the knowledge of government and social science which the laboring classes so sorely need. The students, becoming interested in this sort of work during their college years, would become trained organizers, capable of working out the social problems of the communities in which they will settle. The work beginning at our door has no horizon. In this work for better citizenship, for brightening lives, there would be no occasion for division among Stanford men ; the Protestant, the Catholic, the Jew, the atheist and infidel can join forces and work out, shoulder to shoul- der, the true principles of helpfulness taught and lived by Jesus Christ. 330 Jniversity Occurren Stanford Quad 1904 Friday, April 1 8. Saturday, April 19. Saturday, April 19. Tuesday, April 22. Wedn ' day, April 23. Wedn ' day, April 23. Saturday, April 26. jMonday, April 28. Wedn ' day, April 30. Friday, May 2. Friday, May 16. Thursday, May 22. Friday, May 23. Friday, May 23. Saturday, May 24. Monday, JNIay 26. Monday, IMay 26. Tuesday, May 27. Tuesday, May 27. Wedn ' day, May 28. Wedn ' day, Sept. 3. Monday, Sept. 8. Friday, Sept. 12. Thursday, Sept. 25. Saturday, Sept. 27. Friday, Oct. 3- Saturday, Oct. 4. Wednesday, Oct. 15. Thursday, Oct. 16. Saturday, Oct. 18. Saturday, Friday, Saturday, Wedn ' day, Thursday, Saturday, Thursday, Thursday, Saturday, Saturday, Wedn ' day, Thursday, Thursday, Tuesday, Wedn ' day, Oct. 25. Oct. 31. Nov. I. Nov. 5. Nov. 6. Nov. 8. Nov. 20. Nov. 20. Nov. 22. Nov. 22. Nov. 26. Nov. 27. Nov. 27. Dec. g. Dec. 10. 1902 Freshman Sophomore Debate — Sophomores win. Intercollegiate Track ] leet — Won by U. C, 78 2 to 433 . California-Stanford Musical Clubs, Assembly Hall. J. C. McCaughern re-elected Varsity Track Captain. Howard S. Lee is elected Captain of 1902 Football Team. Antigone presented in Los Angeles. Intercollegiate Debate — • California wins. Mrs. Stanford banquets Alumni at Honolulu. Student Body elections. Stanford-Washington Debate — Tie. Elizabethan Carnival. A Rank Outsider — Senior Farce by Roger Sterrett. President and Mrs. Jordan At Home to Students. Alumni Smoker, ] Ienlo Park. Class Day. Faculty-Senior Baseball Game. Senior Ball. Alumni Da} ' . Senior Promenade Concert. Commencement Exercises in Assembly Hall. College opens. First Football Practice. Dr. Jordan addresses Freshmen. President Wheeler speaks in Assembly Hall. First Varsity Football Game — -Stanford, 12; Reliance, 0. Clemens chosen Head Coach. Whitelaw Reid and George E. Crothers, ' 95, appointed to Board of Trustees. Spanish Play, Roble Hall. Plug Ugly on the Oval. Intercollegiate Freshman Football Game — Stanford, ; California, 12. Football Game- — Stanford, 11; Nevada, 5. Sophomore } Iinstrels. Football Game — Stanford, 23 ; Reliance, 5. First University Assembly. Football Rally. Intercollegiate Football Game — Stanford, 0; California, 16. University Assembly. Dr. Jordan lectures on Samoa. Handicap Field Meet. Reception to Faculty at Roble. Royal Italian Band Concert. Football Game — Stanford. 35; Utah, 11. Football Game — Second Team, 32; Carters, 0. Student Rally to welcome Mrs. Stanford. University Assembly. 331 Stanford cdn ' day. Dec. lo Quad riuirsday, Dec. ii riuirsday, Dec. ii 1904 Aliiiiday, Jan. 5 Thursday, Jan. 8 Friday. Jan. g Tlun-sday, Jan. 15 Friday. Jan. 23 Saturday. Jan. 24 Sunda -. Jan. 25 Wetln ' day. Jan. 28 Wedn ' day, Feb. 4 Thur.sday, Feb. 5 Saturday, Feb. 7 Friday. Feb. 13 Saturday, Feb. 14 Wedn ' day. Felx 18 Thursday, Feb. 19 Saturday, Fel). 21 Saturday, Feb. 21 Wedn ' day, Feb. 25 Thursday. Feb. 26 Saturday, Fel). 28 Wed ' day. March 4 Thursday. iNIarcli 5 Saturday, Marcli 7 londay, Marcli 9 Saturday, Alarcii 10. Saturday, March 14 Saturday, March ijt Saturday, March 14 Saturday, March 21. Saturday, March 21. Thursday, March 26 Thursday, ] Iarch 26 Friday. larch 27. Friday. ] Iarch 27. Friday. iMarch 27. r. !•:. Stephenstin elected Editor of ■ ' Daily Palo Alto. Ciynuiasium Corner-stone laid. L. P. Bansbach elected Captain of 1903 Varsity P ' ootball Team. 1903 keiiislraliou begins. Booker ' ] . Washington speaks in Assembly I lall. Degrees conferred. I- ' irst Baseball Practice. Senior Election — Moore chosen President. Laying of ' 95 plate. Memorial Church Dedicated. L ' nixersit} ' Assemljly. Phi Delta Phi Initiation. Law School Association formed. Encina At Home. Carnot Debate — California wins. First Varsity Baseball Game — Stanford. 6; St. Mary ' s, 3. Boating Club organizes. Baseball Game — Stanford, 5; Santa Clara. 6. Track Meet — Freshmen, 66 ' ; Oakland. 45 ' ' . Baseball Game — Stanford. 2; Independents, 3. University Assembly. Girls ' Glee Club Concert. Baseball Game — Stanford. 0; Santa Clara, 3. Kilties Band Concert. Knight of Burning Pestle, Baseball Game — Stanford, 6: b ounders Day. Universit} ' Assembly. Congress of Religion. Baseball Game — Stanford, i Collegiate Alumnae Meet. Baseball Game — Stanford. 3; Independents, 4. Intercollegiate Debating Teams chosen. D. L Reynolds elected Editor of 1905 Quad. ' Junior Farce, In the Clutches of the Baron. Hall. Interclass Track Meet. Baseball Game — Stanford. 4; Independents, i. Junior Prom. Assembly Hall. Independents. Santa Clara. Independents, Election Day on the i iaJ ' ■IV here the Stanford spirit lingers and the lo-ve of Stanford dive s Laying Mosaic in the Memorial Chun i ' ■?  «lBei-r!!j I t- ' -- t ' .ft cT - S - ' ' - ' ' p ' The yjeres of Sandstone Shining in the Palo Alto Sun •iVhere Stanford People Lo-ve to StrolT Rose Garden oj the Old Camp Josh osnes One of those typical college men. Note ye hole which he stareth through ye envelope The Serpent ' s Tooth Stanford Quad He ' s on the Quad; they said, and glared at me. First from a distance, then they nearer came, And doffed their caps and grinned in fakish glee, And bowed and scraped and said, The Hall of Fame Should give you house-room for a decade free — Not e ' en the hangman hath so dread a name. Then felt I pompous — thus my head grew big — Of mighty power bragged I to the moon — My foes were puny — cared I not a fig For yon bold knocker or yon driv ' ling loon — I ' ll josh you — ha ! I cried, ' ' What though you dig, ril flunk vour self-conceit with vengeance soon I But friends I had not — nay, but only one— And him I worshipped, he was my tin-god — At him I poked no bitter, jeering fun — Nor sought to bend him ' neath my scourging-rod, But on the day the Fateful Book was done, He glared at me and froze me with a nod. ;■: :;i : : ■: :,: H« And when I asked him why he used a gun, He howled, You did not josh me in the Quad! M. H. B. 1904 . 39 Stanford Quad 1904 THE BLUFF J His Daily Spiel: Just -oii put uie in the Qt AU and 7 fix you! 340 THAT WAS CALLED Stanford Quad 1904 11 Wliy, they did n ' t e cn mention my name ! .141 Stanford Quad 1904 Some arc born joshes, otlicrs acJiicz ' c a josh, li ' hile some have joshes thrust jtpoii them. R. E. Renaud: O tell me, pretty maiden. Are there any more at home like you? — ' 03 Quad. C. W. Thomas, Jr. : It is in men, as in soils, where sometimes there is a vein of Gold, which the owner knows not of. — Szdft. Frank Bennett: Mislike me not for my complexion. The shadowed livery of the burnished sun. — Shakespeare. Miss Mary Oilman : Whose beauty did astonish the survey Of richest eyes, whose words all ears took captive. — Shakespeare. Barnhisel : With ' sterling ' stamped from head to foot. Dr. Jordan : Lofty to those that loved him not, But to those that sought him, sweet as summer. F. A. Brown : I am a maker of war, and not a maker of phrases. — Longfellozv. Prof. MacFarland : When I said I would die a bachelor, I did not think I should live till I were married. — Shakespeare. Miss Theresa Wilbur: She will outstrip all praise. And make it halt behind her. — Shakespeare. RoEHR : Listening senates hang upon thy tongue. — Thomson. 342 Miss Elsie Branner: Stanford This is the porcelain clay of human kind. — Drydcn. r i V uad D. M. Reynolds: 1904 Devise, wit ; write, pen ; for I am for whole volumes in folio. — Shakespeare. Editor of Intercollegian : My staff understands me. — Shakespeare. McCaughern : And swift-moving Mercury in him seemed personified. Miss Peckham : I have a heart with room for every joy. — Bailey. Prof. Cook : I was born to other things. — Tennyson. Sophomore Minstrels : Let us reserve our distress till the rising of the curtain. — Gohismith. Prof. Gilbert : A man busied about degrees, Condemning some to death, and some to exile. — Shakespeare. Firebaugh : No pains, sir; I take pleasure in singing, sir. — Shakespeare. Miss Caroline Edwards : As frank as rain On cherry-blossoms. — E. B. Brozcning. KuHN : It isn ' t that the boy is conceited exactly ; he only takes an interest in himself. — Bigelozv. O. E. Hyde: O, it is excellent To have a giant ' s strength ! — Sliakespeare. The Knight of the Burning Pestle : A hit, a very palpable hit ! — Shakespeare. The Grocer: Would you had all such wives, and all the world ! — Beanuiont and FleteJier. Miss Alice Hale: I never saw a sweeter maid, more quaint, more pleasing, nor more commendable. 343 Stanford - - I Dcnvkm.: Qi lli niidiiitilit nil c i(l(. ' ntl ' isn I liair-oil. — Biiiclozc. uad 1904 ' ' . Takpev : Are vc not l)rotIicrs? - ' i C 1 1111 - bo mail and ni;in sliould l)e ; But clay and clay differs in dignity. Whose dust is both alike. — Shakespeare. fiss Ruby Kimble: Of Nature ' s gil ' ts thou niaysl with lilies l)oast And with the half-1)lo vn rose. — SItakespeare. SwiNERTON : Where rolled tlie Ocean, there was his Home. — Byruii. Pkof. ] 1ui k. v : He is a scholar, and a ripe and good one; Exceeding wise, fair-spoken, and persuading. — Shakespeare. H ARRI NGTON : So wise, so young, they say, do ne ' er live long. — Shakespeare. B. KER . ND Bush : iwo hot sheeps, marry ! AIiss Id.a. Henzel : Happy art thou, as if every day thou hadst picked up a horse-shoe. — Longfello-iV. Magee : Came but to triumph and depart. Dad ] Ioulton : This swift business I must uneasy make, lest too light winning Make the prize light. — Shakespeare. Delta Tau Delta, Second Semester: What a falling off was there ! — Shakespeare. Prof. Snedden : Nowher so besy a man as he ther n ' as. And ' et he semed liesier than he was. — Cliaiteer. yiiss Alice Haves, ' o6: A woman will, or won ' t, depend on ' t ; If she will do ' t. she will, and there ' s an end on ' t. — Hill. GUIBY, Cannibal ' ; What dreadful Dole is here? — Shakesf eare. Savage; ) 344 Stanford Quad C. S. ]McNaught: The greatest of faults, I should say, is to be conscious of none. — Caiivlc. ' • Raleigh ' ] 1 904 Hank Swift as breathed stags, ay. fleeter than the roe. — Shakcs carc. Prof. Rieber : He knows what ' s wdiat ! and that ' s as high As metaphysic wit can fly. — Butler. English Play Cast (the day before) : Now shut up books ; no more whene ' er we choose May we hunt up our long-forgotten cues. But from the depths of our most inmost hearts We now must speak our well-perfected parts. — Bcaiiinout and Fletcher. Miss Fuwle : Fair is Fowle, and Fowle is fair. Carnot Debaters : ' And their appearance and their work was as it were a wheel in the middle of a wheel. — E::ek. I., i6. Christy : Cease, rude Boreas, blustering railer ! RoELE Gym Club : It is the first time that ever I heard breaking of ribs was sport for ladies. — Shakespeare. Bonnell: A merrier man, Within the limit of becoming mirth, I never spent an hour ' s talk withal. Prof. Starbuck : I had a thing to say — but let it go! — Shakespeare. Tubby Lee : Some are, and must be, greater than the rest. — Pope. Charley Waite: Without the smile from partial beauty won, O! wdiat were man? A world without a sun! — Campbell. Miss Burnham : Fair as the crowning rose of the whole wreath. — Byron. Dr. Duniway: I have that within which passeth Show. — Shakespeare. 345 Stanford Zeta Psi: Quad 1904 y y mistress showed nic tlieo and tliy dog and thy Bnsh. — Shakespeare. KiTCIIING : Come, grin on me, and I will think liiou sniilest. — Shakespeare. Mrs. Mathews: I ' m always so punctual as to be ahead of time. — Bigelozv. George Scoville : By ' r lady, he is a good musician. — Shakespeare. ToMJiY Hamilton : I have very poor and unhappy brains for drinking. — Shakespeare. Gay: How many weary steps. Are numbered in the travel of one mile? — Shakespeare. Miss Sue Bird: Wheresoe ' er you move, good luck shall fling her old shoe after. — Tennyson. Crothers : I am one that am nourished by my victuals, and would fain have meat. — Shakespeare. Glee Club: Sing it : ' tis no matter how it be in tune, so it make noise enough. — Shakespeare. C. E. Hodges : A living dog is better than a dead lion. - — Eeeles. IX., 4. Freshman Bounds: Brisk confidence still best with woman copes. — Byron. Miss Edyth Hale: My life is like a stroll upon the beach. — Thorean. Slaker : And in his calling, let him nothing call, But coach ! coach ! coach ! — Carey: Woman ' s League: To gabble garbled Garrulousness ere You lay the Cup and Saucer down and Go. — Omar Khayyam, Jr. Tank Taylor : Very like a whale. - — . ' i ' hakespeare. Our Kentucky Colonel, Knight : See where he stands, as boldly confident As if he had his full command about him. — Beaumont and Fleteher. 346 Arch Perrin : Stanford We are beholding to you For your sweet music. — Shakespeare. Uriah : The amateur strategy board. Prof. C. D. IMarx : A man ever in haste ; a great hatcher and larceder of business. AIiss Elizabeth Yoch : Grace is in all her steps. — Milton. Quelle: Awfully he stands, A sovereign quell. — Endyiiuon. Prof. Show : Busy as a moth over some rotten archive. Daily Palo Alto : Lord, Lord, how this world is given to lying ! — Shakespeare. E. V. Henley : I walk, methinks, On water, and ne ' er sink, I am so light. — Beaumont anti Fletcher. Jess Beach : Were silence golden, Ld be a millionaire. Miss Hazel Edwards : Thou wilt quarrel with a man for cracking nuts, having no other reason but because thou hast hazel eyes. — Shakespeare. Tom Hodge : O for ten years, that I may overwhelm Myself in poesy. — Keats. Zschokke: And how would you pronounce it? Dane Ccolidge: And if in my long- stay I have offended, I ask your pardon. Norman Dole : At one great bound O ' erleaps all bound, and sheer within. Lights on his feet. Dr. Flugel : With long poring, he is grown almost into a book. Westward Movement Class : Light is the task, wdien many share the toil. — Bryant. 347 Quad 1904 Stanford ' ' ■ I (111 ri ' HK ' niln. ' r an aimtliecary. And liiTcahiiuls he dwrlls, Quad 1904 Prof. A. B. Clakk, ) Prof. G. A. Clark, - : . pair of twins and a half. ' ' Prof. G. M. Ci.akk. F. W. I ' owKi.i : ■ ' I ' i.s not my talent to conceal my thonghts Or carry .Smiles and Simsliine in my face. — Addison. Van Norden : Cunning in music, — And the mathematics? — Sliakcspcarc. Miss Edith Miller : Modest and simple and sweet, the very type of Priscilla. — Loiigfcllo-L ' . Hans Barkan : She has struck the blow up to the hilt in my bosom, l)y Jupiter! — Goldsmith. Standi SH : Not to be laughe l al and scorned, 1)ecause he was little of stature. — TIic Courtship of Miles Staiidish. Saturday Night Cluii: She speaks, yet she says nothing; What of that? Shakespeare. Prof. Barnett : You liaAc a February face. So full of frost, of storm, and cloudiness. — Shakespeare. For the Unjoshed: [Many people are esteemed merely because they are not known. GUNDRUM : Why dost thou run so many mile about? — Shakespeare. Dr. Jenkins : ] Iuch learning hath made me mad. ] Iiss Mary Foster : The daintiest last, to make the end most sweet. — Shakespeare. Josh Editors : Come, children, let us shut up the box and the puppets, for our play is played out. — Thaekeray. 348 C - 04. 4r 5 , 4 -kX .- «- i ' I f- • ' . ' 4 I Satan finds some mischief still ' Stanford Quad 1904 Followinti ' Life ' s illustrious cxaui])lo. tlu ' Ql ' ad announces tlu- following contest : WHO ARE THEY? THEY ARE 1. Her Football Hero. 2. Her Matinee Idol. 3. The Man with Money. 4. Her Sailor Boy. 5. The Man Who Bores Her. 6. Her Frat-Sister ' s Brother. 7. Her Platonic Friend. 8. The Man Her Mother Wants Her to Marry. 9. Her Friend ' s Fiance. 10. Fler First Love. 11. Her Constant Caller. 12. Her Last Year ' s Flame. 13. Her Musical Friend. 14. The Man She Loves. The middle picture is a composite of the requisite number of Stanford girls. YOU WILL RECEIVE $5,000.00 if you can tell which is which, now known only to the Josh Editor of the Quad, who has marked each face with its proper number and placed the original picture in the vault of the Bank of Palo Alto, to be opened after the death of all parties concerned. The person who identifies the greatest number of the young men will then receive the prize. 350 Specimen Program ORGAN RECITAL 1. [March — ' Boombangeo Furioso 2. Xocturne — Dream of a W ' elshrabbit 3. Pop Goes the Weasel (147 variations) 4. Reverie — looning in the Arboretum 5. Sonata Sombrero a. Adagio sourballo b. Aloderato meandro c. Presto Hckitj ' chppo 6. A Real Percussion (Audience leaves here) 7. Improvisation . . A Running Brook Pipe Organist Stanford Quad 1904 A Long, Sad Tale New Stanford Song Air : Three Bhnd Mice f ' !i J. J Jij . I J- J llj . I J- Jr l j Poor Freshman prof, Poor Freshman prof, Poor Freshman prof, '  J- J JlJ . N- J J l J N- J 1 1 J. J J See how he runs I See how he runs ! See how he runs ! The rfCrrr i rJ ' J ' J nut B p F l C J ' J boys went to Roble to try tor the Glee, The prof came and asked where was Room 8 3 5 He D.C Co a LwnCif n u rfffic J ' J ' J ■ I 3 didn ' t know beans or Encina, you see Poor Freshman prof ! 351 Stanford AN ALPHABET OF PROFS === Quad A NOEI.L. 1904 J There ' s just one man around this place who does not count it a disgrace To give his chiss no work to do; he lets us use our note- books, too, In exes; yet why should he care? zve ' ve far more jokes than lectures there ! C D E r RANKER. This portly gentleman is best of all the profs, at merry jest; He let us all go home last fall and gave us nony ex at all; But he zvoidd Jlunk the whole blame class, if one should give him any sass ! OPELAND. We all agree that for his age he is extremely wise and sage; For not a soul of 2is would choose to stand in Doctor Jordan ' s shoes; And yet why must he needs retort zvith gibes so sharp, zcith words so short f UNIWAV. Oh, never yet has Stanford seen a smoother prof than he, I ween ; He dresses up in eloquence the gist of learned documents; Yet when he launches forth zve say, ' Shut note-books nozv, no facts today ! LMOTT. He greets with beatific smile the Freshman green and free from guile; He always cheerfully gives aid in case of credits lost or made; But oh ! when he is pleasantest, know then his axe is ground the best ! ARRAND. Doc Farrand, he is surely square; he ' s bound to have his exes fair; He treats the co-eds right, although they think he ' d rather have them go; But he zvill tell how they used to do at Princeto)i, back in ninetv two ! The Josh Editor has no apologies left to offer Mr. Gelett Burgess, as hers his its have been exhausted on authors of rejected MSS. 352 G - Stanford ILBERT. Quad Oh, Green and Gilbert are a pair who can ' t be beaten any- 1904 where ; There ' s none so quick to smell a rat or any little thing like that; And yet, both sad and strange to tell, the rats don ' t like them very well ! H OSKINS. J There ' s not a thing he doesn ' t know concerning pressure, head and flow; He talks Mechanics every day in quite a literary way; But one thing grieves his cultured heart: our exes are not xc ' orks of art ENKINS. We do not mind his fidgets much — his lectures, too, which beat the Dutch; We like his aimless wanderings, and coming back to look for things; But what is sadder still to state — his gestures come an hour too late ! n ELLOGG. L He ' d not be joshed, we ' re bound to say, did not his name begin with K ; A man who is as keen as he is seldom so exemplary ; Ojie thing about him, still, we vote most shocking — ' tis his office coat ! ENOX. This gentle prof is loved by all who answer to the chemists ' call; He patiently points out the way to those he holds within his sway ; But oh! his overzveening pride in those new labs can ' t be denied! M ARX, G. H. We cannot but respect the zeal he shows when lecturing on steel; Room 62 can barely hold his classes; yet I have been told They really do not care to go; they have to take the course, you knoiv. 353 Stanford ▼F. s() r. C uad f A wizard in the catclier ' s box, he ' s quite as keen at finding 1904 - rocks; And in the laboratory, too, lie ' s got it on the rest a few; But when it comes to lecturing — ivell, cMoroform ' s the proper thing I RICE. Although he is a Ph. D., he ' s modest as a man could be; He ' s big, and slow, and kind of heart; he always takes the ladies ' part; But yet he ' d rather cats dissect tha i go to football, I suspect ! F R S ENDTORFF. He couldn ' t for the life of him help putting lots of spice and vim Into that which, with might and main, he teaches o ' er and o ' er again ; Yet S7iappeth he one ' s head quite off, let one but ivhisper, sneeze, or cough ! MITH, A. W. We know his inclination leans towards rowing, poetry, and machines; And none among the profs there be so gentle and so kind as he; But— T RADER. Whene ' er you ask him for a book he ' ll always go and take a look. Although he knows that it is out. He ' s going to rise, I have no doubt. Yet though he rise a half a mile, we ' ll see his condescendi ig smile ! V ON NOE. How ca7i the Count be sweet and bland when not a soul can understand The things he says? His doggie, too, keeps fighting in the ■ public view. Although, to call him off, der Herr shouts loudly, ' ' Siccum, siccum there ! ' ' Prof. Smith revisedt this Quad — I. R. tMrs. Smith did it— A. W. S. 354 w ING. No ordinary tongue can sing the praises of Professor Wing; It isn ' t often that we find a teacher and a friend combined; But oh ! the shocking news we hear: his bridges stayid withoiit a pier ! Y OUNG. Among the profs there ' s not a wiz more keen than Stewart Woodford is; He thinks of molecules and gas we know not half enough to pass; But yet, how can his students know? he speaks so fast, he speaks so loiv ! Inn Club Regulations I. All meals lost through wilful absence may be made up on the last Saturday of each month. Excuses will be accepted by the head waiter in case of illness. II. Those who find the beefsteak tough are at liberty to file their teeth, but no complaints will be allowed. III. All members must wear Union labels when purchasing tickets. IV. If you don ' t see what you want, you don ' t get it. V. Tourists will please not carry away hot cakes as souvenirs. VI. The Ofiicial Kicker presenting the least number of complaints per week will be allowed one extra meal at the expense of the management. VII. At the opening of the meal-hours, each patron, whether he be study- ing, shaving, or sprinting on the track, will come instantly to the dining-room. VIII. Meals served while vou wait all day. Stanford Quad 1904 ' ' Not a Plug Ugly .3.=5.S S ' f° ' ' Limericks C uad 1904 There is a young fellow named Walling ' inhere is a man Lewis, D. L., Whose thinness is fairly appalling ; Who bows to the ground to a belle, His angles, alas! Yet this chap can diminish Cut his friends as they pass. That bow, to a finish, A circumstance really most galling! Till to a mere co-ed, — oh, well! A Foebel There is a professor named Goebel, Who owns a nice horse and a stoebel, And a large, roomy bus, VIlich, without any fuss, To hold all the children is oebel. There is a young man named Roy Hadley An F.ngiish instructor named Cook Who wears his face set very sadly, Grew heartily tired of his book. But why he appears For strangers would say, On the thin edge of tears As they met him each day. Is a question that puzzles us .badly! Is your book a cook-book, ] Ir. Cook: A young fellow — Cole was his name — Had a thirst for glory and fame. For the 05 Quad was too much of a dub. While not enough so for the Senior Club, But he made this Quad, all the same. Kronikle Kronyn, .Aly! First class fellow There was a young fellow named Nangle. ■.y, p Who was wont the King ' s English to mangle, Born so. Stayed .so. Just.sa ' To hear him debate -1-1., , Was a far worser fate Kronikle Kronyn, ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' § ' ' = ' ' ' ' ' Q flrangle. My! 356 Stanford Quad 1904 Some Day He ' ll Wander Back Again Ninety-Fiver : Can you tell a poor old man the whereabouts of an ivy- covered quadrangle, with a big live oak near it, where meadow larks sang most of the time? It used to be over against the l lue hills there, but now I can find it only in these two old books of mine. 357 . Stanford Quad 1904 The Bogie Quello Elto THE BOGIE QUELLO ELTO Published bv the: CoM HTTEE. RUFus Ever Green, Editor-in-Chief. C. H. Gh.lotine, Business Manager. SUPPRESSED. Quads — Will Irwin, a ' 98 holdover to ' 99, was on the campus for a wiiile today. He was fed at Encina last night, and about 8 o ' clock hit the ties. He expected to arrive in the city about sunrise. Come again, Will. — Reggie Fernald, ' 02, almost choked to death at dinner last night in the Delta Tau Delta house. He was eating chunks of stew with the roast beef basting threads still connecting the pieces. The careless cook has lost his job. — There are now 1,471 stu dents regis- tered in the university, a gain of 3 stu- dents over the same date last year. — Prof. Lewers was called for lustily, at the field day rally, for a speech on next year ' s prospects. He did not re- spond. When seen afterwards at the Delta Gamma House he said he guessed the prospects were all right, but he hadn ' t been keeping close track of athletics of late. At Home— Messrs. O. P. Dildock and Karl Richardson will be at home after January first. — Dr. Jordan lectured last week in Stiles Hall, Berkeley, on The Philoso- phy of Despair. The Blue and Gold calls it an appropriate title. So it is. Communication A PUBLIC LETTER TO A PUBLIC MAN Dear Dr. Braiuter: I was failing in my studies some time ago. One of my frat brothers told me to try your course in Geology, and Dr. Gil- bert prescribed a semester ' s vacation, un- less my condition rapidly improved. Since changing my major to geology I have had no trouble, and get lots of help in the house because most of the boys are geol- ogy majors too. I am very proud to have you for a fraternity brother, and will tell papa about you in my next letter home. Willie B. Goode, ' 06. Delta Upsilon House. Announcement Dr. David Starr Jordan will receive the josh editor informally in the president ' s office at four o ' clock. To meet Prof. R. L. Green. Petitions At the last committee meeting petitions were acted upon as follows: CoRBUSiER — Requesting credit for three semesters in absentia. Granted. Hauverman — Asking for senior stand- ing on the ground that he has worn a sombrero all year. Not granted. C. K. Studley — Requesting gym credit for pedestrian work in Co-education I. Granted. Klein — Asking for leave of absence on account of being too old to study. Granted. Fish Lines Say FLsh ! Why can ' t you be white- Fish and come off your perch-Fish, and stop trying to cod-Fish, and trying to make of me a sucker-Fish? Upon my sole-Fish, I ' m as good as gold-Fish, and would be as happy as a clam-Fish if you wouldn ' t watch me like a cat-Fish, gazing at me like a star Fish, and acting like the devil-Fish. I hear that your sun-Fish is a job-Fish, but that don ' t make you a whale-Fish, in fact you are a lobster-Fish; all you need is a shell-Fish, all because you ' re sell-Fish, and if you continue to treat me like a dog- Fish I ' ll lay you out with a sword-Fish and beat you to a jelly-Fish. — Exchange. THE BOGIE QUELLO ELTO Union Meeting The Office Holders Union met in En- cina Friday night to prepare for the April election, Pres. Naramore presiding. He stated that he had inherited the office from Nutter, than whom a more unscru- pulous politician had never bent wires in Stanford. For the benefit of the fresh- men members he explained that the Union is composed of men who are ambitious for office, and lack sufficient standing to stand on their own feet. It binds its members, (a) not to join any fraternity, (b) not to make political affiliations without the con- sent of the other members, (c) to support any member nominated for office, (d) to never put on paper anything concerning the organization. He explained that it was organized away back in ' 93 by H. C. Hoover, and ever since has maintained a balance of power in the Executive Com- mittee, and until the big flunk sho ving in December, 1900, had maintained an al- most uninterrupted monopoly on the treasurership. He hoped that the Union would make every eft ' ort to regain its lost prestige in the coming election, and con- tinue its work until it should be able to land some of its alumni members on the Board of Trustees. Reports of committees were called for: Everett Beach, a committee of one to ascertain means of getting the Daily Palo Allointo the hands of the Union, reported that after arduous work he had been un- able to find anyone connected with the Union with brains enough to edit it, and that none of them hated the paper enough to run for manager and thus destroy the only stable business organization it ever had. A flved, seconded, and carried, that Bro. Beach be instructed to run for manager of the Daily Palo Alto. The president appointed the following committees: Supervisor o Queening — C. Naramore. To Queen at Roble — Lousley, Nara- more, Pomeroy and Beach. To Queen at the Delta Gamma House — Nissen and Blodgett. To Queen at the Theta House — Blod- gett. To Queen at the Y. W. C. A. Club House — Sevier, Thomas, Naramore, Nis- sen, Blodgett and Hamilton. PHI DELTA THETA Sorority Annex Don ' t be a Stanford man. Join us and learn all the secrets of the Happy Queennig Ground. SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Marriage Bureau Nice marriages quickly result. No triflers allowed. For references consult Spreekels, Spauld- ing, Blake, Lanagan and Bancroft. T OST By the Zeta Psi Lodge A collection of idols and Gods of Worship- Now that they are gone whom shall we worship ? Finder will receive large reward. Substitutes gladly accepted. SIGMA NU Football Team Join us and play on the Varsity. Scrubs need not apply. PHI PSI Real Estate and Railroad Brokers The Earth for sale in small fenced lots. Pink trip slips furnished to all comers gratis. We put IT OVER Doc Elliott. He can ' t drop us of} the Campus, because we ' re never on it, see ? THE L. C. HAWLEY CLUB Sometimes Known as Theta Delta Chi Be a frat knocker and join us. Gundrum knocked ' em three years, but he accepted just the same. So did, most of us. T RY SANTA CLARA HEALTH FOODS Recommendations : W. J. Neidig says— ' Shredded IVheaf Bis- cuils are good for man and beast. I eat one every morning and feed two to Pegasus. For recommendation of Postiim Cereal see Dr. Farrand, who says — You are at perfect liberty to use my name in this coimection. L. E. Bassett says — For practice in enuncia- tion, articulate, three times a day, the following; Figgy-pi uney-grapey-nut , Postum-granose-peanut-but Shreddy wheatey-grainy-O, All these things will make you grow. A. Q. Newcomer says — Of course one cannot say definitely, but I think that had Thomas Carlyle lived at Battle Creek, Michigan, ' Sartor Resartus ' would never have been written. Of the derivation of the word fig-prune, Dr. Fliigel says: Fig undoubtedly comes origin- ally from the Latin ' figis, ' meaning dark-brown or ill-tasting, and ' prune ' comes from San Jose. Ralph Renaud says— I am still using the jokes obtained from the Chest Nuts Company five years ago for the largest number of box-labels, and consider them good for as much longer. They are the ' staff of life ' for Chappie ' s staff. Ha ! Ha ! Stanford Quad 1904 Stanford Quad 1904 Who Got the ' 03 Quad in the Hole? McGlLVRAY McGilvray ' s Dad will build a house To suit the Sigma Nus ; To pay the mortgage on the old They steadfastly refuse. To lose the same will be less sad Because, you see, McGilvray ' s Dad Declares the house is to the bad. The Sigma Nus were circumspect When they rushed the son of architect ! the St. Recluse The sonnetN that 1 write each day And pu])lish in the Squawler. — They are the work of Roger J, And heat all others holler. But so folks will not raise the deuce, I sign niv name as St. Recluse. Stanford Quad 1904 Roble Hall Free-tbr-all extravaganza in imitation stone, wliooped up regularly on four floors with no carpets As presented by the who.e push Overture — Pandemonium, to the well-known tune of the Anvil Chorus. Then enter from Busmen — Oh, mud knee-deep, without chorus of busmen z ' itli z . ' h!ps. Chorus of Fresh- men, dropping in on the scene. So we sing: Pa}- high ! Freshmen — Oh, mud knee-deep. So we weep : Oh, ni}- ! Busmen — Gee-haw and whoa ! Freshmen — From Paly ! Busmen — Ho ! Ho ! Read this here schedule ! Freshmen — Too high ! Busmen — Too low I Voices from behind Air: Ain ' t that a sh.amc? tlie scenes. Voices, as before. Ain ' t it a sin ! A nawful sin! Busmen — To take the Freshmen . . . Freshmen — And others . . . Both— IN! ! Do be a little decent And lower that fare ! Busmen — O, wot ' s it to us? Wot do we care? Exeunt busmen, i ' ith bags of gold. Freshmen — Broke! Broke! Broke! 361 Stanford Quad 1904 Echoes, from zi ' itli- E lifer tinth a rusli dead swell chorus of I ' rat Girls, each, after close inst ection, sc- lect ' uiii a Freslmian. Chorus of Roble heads appearing from the zviiidozi ' s. Voice of public opinion from every- zvhcre. Ilrokc! Broke! ? rokc! Freshmen and Eclioes — At the first of the niontli, all me! . ; ; Jolly Sophoinnrc. Frat Girls — When first they enter Stanford, To Rohle I I all we go. And straightway pick the beauties whom We take home to the Row ! . ; ' ' .■ C ' oo-i ioi) Ryes. Selected Freshmen — Just because we ' re transferred to the Row ! It makes a dreadful difference, don ' t you know ! We ' re in the social swim ! The frats have took us in ! Whereupon we ' re transferred to the Row ! Exeunt Frat Girls and Selected Freshmen. Air: Blonde Soubrette. Neglected Freshman — We wish we was home ! We do ! We do! We ' s sorry wc come ! Boo-hoo ! Boo-hoo ! Just because they can ' t live on the Row! Air: Dolly Grey. Cheer up, Freshmen, don ' t get grouchy ! Though it breaks your hearts, I know ! You ' ll get wise that all of Stanford Is not cornered on the Row ! Paiidcmoiiiuui 7 ' ifbiii Voice one. still zvithin. Juiice two, also zcithin. Voice three. Voice four. increases. Tooth nnii s shoot through the wiudo ' ws. Freshmen cower. I refuse to subscribe one cent until I SEE those magazines chained down ! These music rooms are a disgrace to the institution. No wonder we flee to the arboretum ! I don ' t see why I can ' t take my orange to my r(iom outside me just as well as inside! What CAN I do to stop the noise in this heater! ] I eater ? Heater ? ? ? HEATER ! ! ! ! ! Boo-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-ooo oo oo ! Smiiid of bells pierces the uproar. Mad slauipedc for the speaking lube. A caller! 362 Mad clamor. Fearsome shudder from the heater. J oice of the bell girl. Voices from above. I ' oicc of bcll-iiirl. First voice. Second voice. Dining-room hell foils. Indescribable tu- mult. One zi ' ild voice crying. Then general cho- rus of Robleites. Is he fat ? Is he thin? Tell him that we ' re out I We re in ! Any one of j ' ou will do ! Go on down ! It ' s up to you ! Enter very proper chorus of Roble z ' aiters. Everybody, thank- fully . Falling cadence, landing zvith a thud. J J ' a iters. One-half tliose pres- ent. Waiters Other half. All aboard ! Air: Upidee. Oh. thickh- fell the evening gloom, There filed into the dining-room. Those youths who deftly bear a tray, And softly, softly, softly say : Roast beef ! Roast lamb ! Air: Sz . ' eet Gcnezneve. Oh, Inns may come, and Inns go, too, But you stay with us, Roble goo ! Go-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o ! Roast beef ! Well done ! Roast lamb ! Yes, please ! Stanford Quad 1904 Ghostly chorus of Oh. our name it is legion! Baaa I Baa! ; Ioooooooooooo ! defunct creatures All in grand finale Ail Hail, Stanford, Hail! From the footbridge to the lake ! It shall sound all around As we say quite every day : Bring us roast beef ! Bring us roast lamb ! Dining-room doors close. Deafening din ad infinitum. 363 Stanford Quad 1904 Byrne Little he knows beyond his A B C- Except D E F G H I it be, Or J K L M N O P Q R And then S T U V W X Y Z. — Omar Khayyam, Jr. Blake Of all the clothes that walk the Quad You never could mistake Those corduroys so large and broad That hang on Billy Blake. Not even both his fists inside Can ill] those pockets deep and wide; To make them fit ' twould surely take, At least, quadruple Billy Blake! 364 ' f . v-V l ' - -M - :- ' Stanford Quad 1904 Johnson This Kindergarten, as you see, Draws pictures underneath the tree. For Httle children ne ' er were made To work out problems in the shade. They should instead, by means of art, Draw near to Mother Nature ' s heart. Come, little girls, come to my school, I make but just one single rule: — zvant no girls but zvhat arc siiiall: I zi. ' ant no little boys at all. Why do these Dekes thus slowly ride Upon this long flat car? They take a special train for home, Although it is not far. They pay no fare to Vandervoort, To Bracchi, nor to Bell ; It is because they save their cash To make their new house swell. 365 Reynolds This Panama Swig, an exotic Young freak with his poems erotic. Of juvenile goo, Showed the Sophomore crew He could knock the Phi Diddles narcotic. Kehrlein Just sec my organ, ain ' t it sweet? I play upon it with my feet. The glad-hand-organ, don ' t you know, Went out of style some time ago. Now, when I can no longer play, I take a Freshman, and I say, ' Get gay, I say. You kid Phi Did! An Editor I ' ll be, some dav ! 366 Stephenson To read the Pally you might not think That when I am writing a story I use human blood instead of ink, To make it sufficiently gory, And every so often a big black oath, (For the Squazclcr likes stories that way.) And I chuck in the thunder and light- ning both Till the devil and all ' s to pay ! Rexaud With apologies to the ' o3 Quad Little Rennie lost his pull, — Wonder how he lost it. Took it to the printer ' s shop And in a Quad he tossed it. This will always folks displease,- Thus he lost his drag on. And now the four sororities Won ' t ride in his small wagon. 367 KUHN He ' s a string on the rooters, You see, He can yank a yell out, Rapidly ; Know the reason ? We do. They like air that is blue ; And they like Kuhnie, too, They agree ! Studley How did the busy little grub Improve each shining minute? As President of Encina Club He now is strictly in it; Although the day be wet or dry, Dressed up so fine and nobly, He flutters by, This butterfly, And soars away to Roblc. 368 1 DiTTilAR ( 0«r Great Scenrer of Influence) I can corner the votes on election day With the utmost ease and facihty ; And I never neglect a chance to display My rare presidential ability. And every girl in ] Iadroho Hall, And every Roble resident ] Ia} ' adore my name, — But just the same, . I ' d rather be right than President. NOURSE The Nourses of Cork are a fighting stock. They study the law, but when things go wrong They don ' t give a hang for a verbal knock. For they know that the battle goes to the strong. They ' re agin the Pris ' dint, to certain knowledge, These Nourses, whenever they come to college. Stanford Quad 1904 369 Stanford Quad 1904 IIAUVER.MAN I knew a little man. And his name was Hauver ; While he lived in Encina Fie li ' e(l in clox ' er ; When he joined a frat, He joined all over. Stanford Quad 1904 A citizen, yea, and a grocer ' Where is the catiff wr-r-r-etch ? ' One of ye scopes As Others See Us ' The Knight of the Burning Pestle as sketched by jNIr. Julius Klein of the San Jose High School 37 f Stanford Quad 1904 FREE LIST Those Whom We Didn ' t Josh, and Why Dr. Jordan — Because we could n ' t aud would u t. Dr. Elliott — Because we hope to graduate next vear. Hodges — Just for a change. Our Major Profs — Because we were skeered to. Hampson - Henley cause they were on the Quad Board, — no other ( reason. Young ; DiTTMAR — Why not ? Berkeley — Because we did n ' t need to. JTr; For the benefit of the curious, the editors wish to announce that the correct numbers of the men ' s heads on the ' ■ ' ■M ' ho Are They page of this Department, are as follows, beginning at the top and going from left to right: — 7, 3, 12, 13, 9, 8, n, 2, 14, i, 5, 6, 10, 4. 374 May i6, 02 — Elizabethan Carnival. Rough-House Tommy saves the life of the Berkeley pig. Fire, Marine and Inland Insurance Home Office: 401 to 405 California Street May 20 — 1903 Quad appears. Renaud disappears. May 23 — Senior Class gives a smoker at Mcnlo Park, assisted l y Glee and Mandolin Clubs. Established in 1889 CONTINENTAL BUILDING AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF CALIFORNIA Autlioii .ed Capital, $20,000,000.00 raid ill Capital, 13,213,000.00 Profit and Reserve Fund, 2,509,236.50 Monthly Income Over 150,000 00 ITS PURPOSE IS To help its members to build homes ; also to make loans on improved property, the members giving first liens on their real estate as security. To help its stockholders to earn from lo to 12 per cent interest on their stock and allow them to open deposit accounts bearing interest at the rate of 5 per cent per annum on Ordinary deposits and 6 per cent per annum on Term deposits. Home Office : S. W. Corner California and Battery Streets, San Francisco, Cal. William Corbin, Secretary and General Manager Standard Optical Co. 217 Kearny Street San Francisco Stylish and up-to-date glasses at reasonable prices Uni-versity patronage solicited THE CALIFORNIA VIGORIT POWDER CO. Manufacturers of VIGORIT DYNAMITE, MINING BLASTING inPROVED STUMP AND DEWEY BLASTING VIGORIT LOW POWDER Dealers in CAPS AND FUSE Works Point Isabel Contra Costa County, Cat. OFFICE: 318 FRONT ST. Tel. Exchange 325 Sail FraflCiSCO July 21 — Berkeley Summer School. Stanford girls hold down North Hall steps. Sept. 3 — Mr. Adderson absent-mindedly posts copies of the Roble Regulations in Encina rooms. HEALD ' S i . BUSINESS COLLEGE Is a national, international, metropolitan and cosmopolitan institu- tion. Annual enrollment, 1,000; average dailv attendance, 500. There were represented in the student body last year 54 coun- ties of California, 19 States and Territories, and 9 Foreign Coun- tries. Over 600 calls annually at the College for its graduates. 20,000 graduates now successfully applying their knowledge. 30 teachers ; 70 typing machines. Open day and evening. Individual instruction. Write for illustrated catalog. Address: E. P. HEALD, President, 24 Post St., San Francisco ' mm!s . ' mi mmm; ,i§im mt :smm m mm If ' :-V Conveniences for our Patrons Parlors — Mezzanine floor, Fourth Street side — luxuriously furnished — supplied with tree writing materials, ' daily papers and periodicals. Emergency Hospital — Mezzanine tloor next to Parlor — for sudden cases of sickness — trained nurse in attendance during business hou ' s. Very necessary in a store visited bv many thousands dailv, and having a force of 1,000 to 2,000 people, according to the season Ladies ' Lavatories — Adjoining Parlor — Mezzanine floor, Fourth Street side. Telephones — Main floor, off Rotunda — four booths with double doors, insuring privacy — comfortable seats, long distance phones. City switch, 5c. Telegraph Office — Western Union — Mezzanine floor. Fifth Street side. Postoffice — Station O — issues money orders, sells stamps, etc Mezzanine floor, Fifth Street side. Information Bureau — Main floor, near elevator — parcels checked free — information about the store, places o amusement, car lines, steamers, trains, etc. Cafe — Serving breakfast, lunch and afternoon tea, and all kinds of light refreshments, oysters, etc. — in Rotunda. Barber Shop — Mezzanine floor, Fifth Street side. First class. Chiropodist — Dr. James Brown, — on second floor, adjoining Ladies ' Hairdressing Parlors. Ladies ' Hair Dressing and Ladies ' and Gentlemen ' s Manicuring Department — Second floor, west side. Children ' s Nursery — Children may be left in chirge of nurse while you shop. Mezzanine floor, adjoining Ladies ' Parlors. Superintendent ' s Office — Main floor at Jessie Street entrance. Applications for positions, complaints, etc., should be made at this office. The Efflporiuni, San Francisco Sept. Wheeler North appears in corduroys. Sept. 6 — Bliss, ' 06, works for the So]ilioniorcs on the ' 06 Class figures. The new power plant of the United Raih-oads of San Francisco is a striking example of central- ized power. It consists of large units generat- ing alternating current to be converted into direct current in sub-stations for railway purposes. The installation throughout is modern in all re- spects, and all apparatus is manufactured by the General Electric Company MAIN OFFICES: SCHENECTADY, NEW YORK San Francisco Office: Claus Spreckels Building HARTFORD THE TT A Fl T T7 T TA FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY Organized 1794 Assets, $13,443,560 Policyholders ' Surplus, 4,431,153 BELDEN PALACHE Managers Pacific Department Special Agents and Adjusters: J. J. AGARD J.J.DENNIS - t -v r C W.O.MORGAN JOHN M. HOLMES ' -i 1 ' -i LAMFORNIA OTREET 313 C. A. SCHALLENBERGER _J _J SAN FRANCISCO Sept. 7- — Edith Hale and Ruth Scadlcr arrive under escort. The queening season is on, full blast. Sept. 12 — Y. M. C. A. reception. Ilarter welcomes the Freshmen with Cliaparral puns. I a lr«l30 nls:ss JMorse « Oo« E IVOIP E S Operated by Gasoline, Distillate, Herosene, Crude Oil STANDARD HOISTS k ' 4U ' -|L f ' lev- A. -111.— ij COMPRESSORS t!mJ Mv f S ' R PUMPERS ' P UU 111. V , 1 MARINE ELECTRIC PORTABLE STEAM SIO : L£tjrl Gi: t«, JSarx I raLixoisoo Wm. F. Wilson Co. 328-330 STOCKTON ST. PLUMBING DRAINAGE VENTILATION HEATING Solid Porcelain and Porcelain Lined Baths Needle and Shower Baths Pedestal Closets Fancy Lavatories SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. Sept. 13 — The Delta Gamma ' s cook, Toy Gun, goes ofif before dinner. Sept. 15 — llarter announces tlial Rev. is here, and will be licre as soon as lie can tret here. STM1S)EIN1TS ' smr zmE, T yilMKCS, ETC CLOTmcii. 000 000 Emm dT r@sT TEI T© ©LLE t John Wieland Brewery SAN FRANCISCO The Largest Brewery on the Pacific Coast BREWERS AND BOTTLERS OF WIELAND ' S EXTRA PALE LAGER BEER Sept. 18 — Glee Club try-out held at Roble. A large attendance. Sept. 20 — Gay lends his Varsity sweater. FOUNDED 1864. The Bank of California San Francisco Capital $z,ooo,ooo.oo Surplus and undivided profits April I, 1903 - $4,292,163.58 WILLIAM ALVORD . . President CHARLES R. BISHOP . Vice-President FRANK B. ANDERSON . Vice-President IRVING F. MOULTON . . Cashier SAM H. DANIELS . . Asst. Cashier ALLEN M. CLAY . . . Secretary DIRECTORS WILLIAM ALVORD . . . President JAMES M. ALLEN . . Attorney at Law FRANK B. ANDERSON . Vice-President WILLIAM BABCOCK President, Parrott Co. CHARLES R. BISHOP . . Capitalists ANTOINE BOREL Ant. Borel Co. Bankers WARREN D. CLARK Williams, Dimond Co. GEO. E. GOODMAN . . . Banker ADAM GRANT . Murphy, Grant Co. e:DWARD W. HOPKINS . . Capitalist JOHN F.MERRILL, Holbrook, Merrill Stetson JACOB STERN Levi Strauss Co. Foreign and Domestic Exchange Bought and Sold Commercial and Travelers ' Letters of Credit Issued, Available in all parts of the world. Correspondence solicited Accounts invited Established isso n, 6ray §• Co. Undertakers 353-355-357 Sutter St. San f rancisco embalming a Specialty telephone main 43 Leading Fire Insurance Company of the World D OYAL I M I I MORRIS ESTATE J. J. iyiUI ni3, p INSURANCE Palo Alto, Cal. ROLLA V. WATT, Manager Pacific Department Royal Building San Francisco George Goodman Patentee and Manufacturer of Artificial Stone Sidewalk and Garden-walk a Specialty Sample of work can be seen at Stanford University OFFICE joy Montgomery Street SAN FRANCISCO Sept. 22 — Ground broken for new gym. Pie record broken at Inn. Ski ' T. 23 - - Dininiycrats or,u;mi o under dircciinn of N;inglc. D. N. E. Walter Co. INCORPORATED CARPETS Mattings, Linoleum, Oil Cloths, Upholstery Goods and Paper Hangings 529 and 531 Market Street HI francisco :alifornia W. W. Montague Co. Cooking Ranges and Complete Kitchen Outfits for Residences, Hotels, Restaurants, Clubhouses and Boarding-Houses. Heating Appa? atus for Residences, Churches, Halls, Schoolhouses and Public Buildings. Alaska Refrigerators Oak-grained, Solid Oak, Ash — White Enameled and Tile-lined, Opal — inside and outside, For Household, Restaurants, Grocers and Butchers. The Alaska will keep provisions longer and use less ice than any other Refrigerator in the market. Sole Agents for Sale of the Alaskd Refrigcrators San Francisco, Cal. Sept. 25 — Senior-Junior rough-house at Encina. Many corduroys spoiled. Sept. 2-:, — Pres. Benjy Ide speaks on English as she is spoke. IsAiAS W. Hellman, President John F. Bigelow, Vice-President I. W. Hellman, Jr., Second Vice-President George Grant, Cashier W. McGavin, Assistant Cashier The Nevada National Bank OF SAN FRANCISCO Capital Paid Up, .... 53,000,000.00 Surplus and Undivided Profits, 1,340,026.08 NEW YORK ' AMERICAN EXCHANGE NATIONAL BANK CORRESPONDENTS, UMPORTERS ' AND TRADERS ' NATIONAL BANK LONDON BANKERS, UNION BANK OF LONDON, LlMlTEU PARIS BANKERS, CREDIT LYONNAIS LETTERS OF CREDIT ISSUED, AVAIL.A.BLE IX ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD DIRECTORS : James L. Flood Henry F. Allen C. DeGuigne Lewis Gerstle Robert Watt Isaias W. Hellman William Haas Levi Strauss I. W. Hellman, Jr. F. W. Van Sicklen John F. Bigelow The Standard for Champagne Quality is POIVIIVIERY( :nS GRENO the world over Order Pommery and get the best JFhie procurable Give vour Guests the best there is to be had Sept. 26 — Football rally at Encina. Fleming, ' 05 contributes a stunt. Sept. 2S — Freshman cirl terms S. A. E. l)athrol)c parade perfectly disgusting. Dunham, Carrigan Hay den Co. IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS Shelf and Heavv Hardware, Iron, Steel, Pipe and Fittings, Water Works, Engineers, Mining and Electrical Supplies, Bicycles, Cutlery and Sporting Goods 17 to 23 Beale Street san francisco, cal. 18 to 24 Main Street BYRON JACKSON MACHINE WORKS 411 Market Street, San Francisco, Cal. MANUF.- CTURERS OF HIGH-GRADF. Centrifugal Pumps WE C. RRY A COMPLETE LINE OF Steam Engines and Boilers, Gasoline En- gines, Etc., Pipe, Shafting and Fittings HORIZONTAL CENTRIFUGAL PU.MP DIRECT CONNECTED TO MOTOR. EFFICIENCY 80 ; :BOOK::Bi]vr iivG ' hen properlv executed always adds to the value and appearance ot the contents. If you need any fine binding for art works, catalogues or books of anv description, consult us ; we can satisfy you. As to quality of work and cost, our experience has taught us how to give good work at a fair price SI ■= 2S3 FMrst street Se«n. F r n csiscso, C l. Sept. 28 — Evans and party catch poison oak. Sept. 30 — Rushing season ends. Three sororities weep on Miss Branner ' s front porch. The Greatest Assortment and Laro-est Stock on the Pacific Coast Indianapolis Furniture Co. Furniture and Carpets WHOLESALE AND RETAIL 750 Mission Street San Francisco, Cal. Telephone Main 5621 Del Monte Is three hours ' ride from San Francisco and a day ' s ride from Los Angeles over the famous picturesque Coast Line of the Southern Pacific. The country immediately surrounding Del Monte af- fords excellent hunting and fishing, while the hotel maintains facilities for all out- door and indoor pastimes ' Prain Service T g Dei Monte Express gives through service between San Fran- cisco and Del Monte daily, thus saving all delays and annoyances of transfers en route Oct. 2 — Freshies finally elect permanent officers. Oct. 5 — Parker Frisst ' llr pcrff)riiis liis fgg sliuit at tlic Delta Gamma House. IW I TAMALES, ENCHILADAS, CH ILI-CON-CARN E I W | L THE BEST 1ST MEDAL PARIS 1900 | L TAMALES, ENCHILADAS, CH ILI-CON-CARN E THE BEST 1ST MEDAL PARIS 1900 IXL PACI ING CO., Inc. 21 TENTH ST. S. F. CAL. Tel. SoutH 251 SUSSMAN, WORMSER COMPANY, I. ' X%%! ' h f, i:, ' ' Siolt SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA JOHN FINN METAL WOKHS San Francisco Babbitt Metals, Solders and Galvanizing 313-315 Howard St. LEVI STRAUSS Sr CO. Importers 10 to ' 4 Batter, Street SAN FRANCISCO, CAL, Drink Shasta Water and Shasta Ginger Ale llni ' on Pacific Salt Company, {yncoi- ?oi-afee ses) Oait T anufacturers 2 6 tScicramcnio Street, tSan ■Francisco, Ca , MURPHY GRANT CO. importers of staple and Fancy Dry Goods Cor. Sansome and Bush Streets, San Francisco Furnishing Goods and Notions The largest manufacturers of Safes and Vaults in tlie World. Telephone Main 5447 HEBRING=HALL=MARVIN=SAFE CO., 605 Market street, San Francisco, Cal. You are corjiallf infited to inspect this Beautiful Modern Hotel. The CALIFORNIA HOTEL Situated in the heart oi the City. Fitted up with the most modern and improved appliances ABSOLUTELY FIRE PROOF BUSH STREET NEAR KEARNY, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. R. H. WARFIELD CO., Proprietors. American or European Plan. AT ' C T JT T J7 CD ' ' ' Awnings, Bags and Bagging lyi Hi y I I J I j T j V O ly. covers. Canvas, 7 wines and Nets. . . 27 to 33 California St. SAN FRANCISCO For all classes r% l4-r TT r -f tm TT l% fr Mining and Flectric of Machinery JrtfLlOn IXyUlGr Uyil66LS Plants in Particular 10,000 WKeels Now Running Send for Catalog The Pelton Water Wheel Co, 127 MAIN ST., SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 143 LIBERTY ST., NEW YORK, N. Y. Solden West !Platm Works Electro Platers in Soidy Stiver, T t ' c cei, Copper, rass, £ c. SP atin SP cints ynsiat eci 03- 09 eaic tSi. San Francisco Oct. 7 — Mr. Davidson saves time and strength by speaking up the tube at Roble. Oct. 10 — Dr. Farrand rousts up college spirit at Berkeley. IT ' S FUNNY how so many men act They toil, and labor and strugle, AND NEVER for a moment think of rest, or recreation, or pleasure. AND HOW FOOLISH for those residing in this vicinity, when right at their door lies the playground, quickly and cheaply reached IF YOU WILL NOT occasionally give up the daily grind, DO NOT make your wife and children continually walk the treadmill ; AT LEAST give them a chance for a little change of air that will bring some color to their cheeks. PERHAPS then you will find time to visit them over Sunday, AND FORGET yourself as your children poke grass down your neck, and in your nose, and eyes, and ears, GET OUT once in a while and romp, BREAK AWAY and give your family a chance to get acquainted with you, AND CALL or write for ' VACATION, 1903, A little book issued by the California NortKwestern Railwray Company, giving Camping Locations, Hotels, Mineral Spring Resorts, and a long list of Country Homes, where board for the Summer can be secured at from 6.00 to $8.00 per week. Ticket Offices 650 Market St. (Chronicle Building) and Tiburon Ferry, Foot of Market St. General Office, Mutual Life Building, Sansome and California Streets, San Francisco. H. C. WHITING, Gen ' l Manager R. X. RYAN, Gfnl Pass. Agt. THOS.ELRICK. A.L.HANSEN. MARKET MfilRD STS. EXAMJNEff BU LD NG SAN FftANC SCO. CAL Oct. 13 — First josh poster of the year is perpetrated. Oct. 15 — W. J. Neidig says that the Delta Gammas can liavc him. iidt Ik ' ard from. D. G ' s JOSHUA HENDY MACHINE WORKS San Francisco, Cal., U. S A. ShaftiiiK, Pulleys, Boxes, Etc. Silver Mills and Appliances Silver Smelling Plants Sinking Pumps Stamp Mills and Appliances Office 38-44 Fremont Street Works, Bay and Kearn Streets Air Compressors Feed Water Heaters Ore Buckets Almagam Retorts Friction Hoisting Engines Ore Cars . rchiteotural Iron Work Geared Hoisting Plants Ore Concentrators Bucket Pumps Geared Pumping Plants Ore Crushers t ar Wheels Gold Mills and Appliances Ore Feeders _ . . Castings 01 every descript- Grinding and Amalgamating Pans Power Transmission Plants Steam Boilers ion (hght and heavy) Hoisting Engines Pulleys, Boxes, Hangers, Etc. Steam Engines Horse-Power Whims Retorts, Amalgam, Steam Pumps Hydraulic Derricks Reverberatory Roasting Furnaces Tramway Machinery Hydraulic Giants Revolving C)re-Drycrs Ventilating Machinery Hydraulic Gravel Elevators Rock Breakers Hydraulic Hoists Roller Mills, Centrifugal, Hydraulic Mining Plants Saw Mill Machinery Logging Engines Settlers Chloriiiation Works Copper Smelting Plants Cornish Pumps Derricks, Hydraulic, Direct .Acting Hoists Direct .Acting Pumps Drv Kilns Water Buckets Water Gates Water Jacket Smelting Furnaces Water Wheels, Etc. Contractors for complete Concentrating, Chlorination, Cyanide, Lixiviation on Smelting plants. A specialty made of Electricity for power and lighting purposes in all its branches. Chas. G. Roi-iii.lNG, President W. A. RoKHLiNG, X ' ice-President WORKS AT TRENTON, N. J. F. W. RoEHi.iNc;, Sec ' y and Treas. S. V. MoONEY, Manager John A. Roebling ' s Sons Co. MANLIKACTURERS OF Wire, Insulated Wire and Wire Rope NEW JERSEY WIRE CLOTH CO. Telephone Private Exchange 67 26 and 28 Beale Street )an rrancisco ,Cal, Forderer Cornice Works INCORPORATED-Directors : J. F. Forderer W. J. Rees W. J. De Gear J. F. Forderer, Jr. Geo. S. Forderer ' ARCHITECTURAL SHEET METAL WORKS Patent Ventilated Skylights TILE, SLATE AND METAL ROOFING Fire Proof Window Frames c ' Sashes Copper Zinc Ornaments 8 to 10 Natoma St. Bet. First. Fremont Sts. San Francisco. Jobbing promptly attended to Tel. Main 5772 Builders Exchange, Box 164 Oct. 16 — Athletic Committee sends its nltimatiim, Too Much Johnston. Oct. i6 — Plugs dedicated. ] Iany are wounded sore. Leading AMERICAN Companies NATIONAL FIRE INS. CO. OF HARTFORD, Conn. Capital, $1,000,000 Assets, $5,424,437.00 SPRINGFIELD f t o. OF SPRINGFIELD, Mass. Capital, |l2,ooo,ooo Assets, 15,898,887.43 Pacific Department, Havward Building, Cor. California and Montgomery, San Francisco. GEO. D. DORNIN, Manager. GEO. W. DORNIN, Ass ' t Manager. Wells, Fargo Company Bank SAN FRANCISCO Capital, Surplus Utidivided Profits July ji, igoi, . . . $ ,561,2 0.28 Dudley Evans, Homer S. King, H. VVadsworth, F. L. LU ' MAN, . Frank B. King, Acting President . . . Mana ger . . . Cashier . Asst. Cashier . Asst. Cashier Branches : New York ; Salt Lake, Utah ; Portland, Oregon Correspondents throughout the World GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS 7 ' RANSACTED 7T TT A NT ' CE making and V ULyV-« lN RLFRIGERATING MACHINES of any desired capacity. On the simplest and most economical system. Built by the VULCAN IRON WORKS 5an Francisco Cal., U. S. A. SEND FOR CATALOGUE. Main 1605. MAIN ST. IRON WORKS WM. DEACON, Proprietor. 131-135 Main St. San Francisco MARINE AND GENERAL MACHINERY. Oct. 18 — Freshman game. Berkeley wins, 12-0. Oct. ig — Dittninr, Stiulont r o(Iy President, visits the University. COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS 14th Street, between Mission and V.ilencia, SAN FRANCISCO MEDICINE. DENTISTRY. PHARMACY. FACLILTIES WINSLOW ANDKRSON, A. M., M. D., M. R.C.P.I,., I ' rof. Gytuecol, and Abdoin. Surg., President. W.M. FREHMAN SOUTHARD, A. M., M. D., Prof. Ophthal., Otol., Rhinol., lyaryugol., Treasurer. D. A. HODGIIEAU, .A. M., M, D., Prof. Obstet. ati«l Dis. of Children, Sccretarv. Dean of FacuUies. THOS. MORFFEW, D.D.S , ' Prof of Operat. Dent, and Dent. Hi.stol., President Dental Faculty CHAS. BOXTON, D. D. S., Prof, of Prosthetic Den- tistry IVIetallnrgv, Dean Dental Faculty. FRANK H. P.AVXK, . I. D., Prof. Hvg. c Dietet. GEORfrE ADAM, M. D., Prof. Therapeutics and Electro-Therapeutics. A. W. MORTON. A. B., M. D., Professor of Surgery and Clinical Surgery. J. F. DILLON, A. M. , M. D, Professor of Materia Medica, Pharmacologv and Therapeutics. A. P. WOODWARD. M. D, Prof. Dermatology. E. S. HOWARD, M. D., Professor of Genito Urinary Diseases and Demonstrator of Anatomy. CHAS. E. JONES, A. B., M. D., Professor of Inor- ganic Chemistry. A. C. BOTHE, A. M., M. D., Prof. Organ. Chem. F. F. KNORP, M. D., Prof, of Anatomy. H. D ' ARCY POWER, L. S. A. Eng., L. R. C. P. Ire- land, Prof of Prin. and Prac. of Medicine. J. H. FLINT. Ph.G. Phila., Supt. Dept. of Pharmacy. WM. J. JACKSON, Ph. G., M. D., Prof of Tlieory Practice of Pharmacy, Dean Pharmacy Faculty. BEVERLY L. HODGHEAD, B. L., Professor of Medical lurisprudence. F. W, HARRIS, M. D.. Prof Dis. Intestinal Tract. WILLIAM A. BRYANT, M. D., D. D. S., Professor of Oral Surgery. P. A. DUBOIS, Ph. G., Professor of Pharmacy. WALTER F. LEWIS, D. D. S., Prof Orthodontia. A. SCHLOSS, M. D.. Clinical Professor of Rhinol- ogy and Laryneology. REDMOND W. PAYNE, ' M. D., Chnical Professor of Ophthalmology and otology. GEO. CHILDS iviACDONALD, M. D., Bux. F. R. C. S. Ed., M. R. C. S. Eng. Lecturer on Surgery. GEORGE P. WINTERMUTE, M. D., Professor of Clinical Neurology. ALFRED W. PERRY, M. D., Professor Diseases of Digestiye Organs. CHAS. M. TROPPMANN, Ph. G., M. D., Prof Phar- macy. Act. Dean. Pharm. Faculty. CARROLL O. SOUTHARD, M. D , Prof Chemistry. J. P. JAEGLING, D. D. S., Clinical Professor of Crown and Bridge Work. Dr. J. S. KNOWLTON, Deni. of Pros. Dentistry and Continuous Gum Work. FRED W. I.UX, M. D., Prof. Physical Diagnosis. H. N. ROWELIv, M. D., Lecturer on Pediatrics. CLARK L. ABBOTT, M. S., M. D., Lec. on Physics. J. J.CROWLEY, Ph.G., M. D., Lecturer on Theo- retical and Applied Pharmacy. SOPHIE B. KOBICKE, M. D., Adj. to Chair of Gyn- tecology and Abdominal Surgery. LOLITA b ' day, M. D., Adj. to Chair Pediatrics. ROBERT E. O ' CONNELL. D. D. S., Adj . Prof, to Chair Operat. Dent, and Deni. Operat. Tech. CHAS. W. MILLS, M. D., D. D. S., Adj. to Chair of Dental Pathology and Therapeutics. THURLOW MILLER, M. D., Dem. of Anatomy. FRANCIS WILLIAMS, M. D., Asst. to Chair of Clin. Med. and Lecturer on Physiology. A. F. MERRIMAN, Jr., D. D. S., Dem. Oper. Dent. THOS. FLETCHER, D. D. S., I ecturer on Dental Chemistry and Metallurgy. J. A. EASON, D. D. S., Dem. Oper. Dentistry. F. H. ZUMWALT, Ph. G., L,ecturer on Botany, His- tology and Microscopy. JOHN M. STOWELL. A. M., M. D., Lee. on Pathol. FLORENCE POWER, M. D., Assistant to Chair of Gynascology and Abdominal Surgery. BERTHA WAGNER-STARK, M. D., Assistant to Chair Gytuecology and Abdominal Surgery. WILDER DWIGHTVm. D., Lect. on Phys. Diag. H. M. FREIMAN, M. D., Lect. on Pediatrics. W. E. POOLE. M. D., Asst. in Surgical Clinic. I OUIS GROSS, M. D., Clin. Lect. Gen. Urin. Dis. LOUIS P. DORAIS, Ph. G., M. n.. Adj. to Chair of Ophthal. , Otol., Rhinol. and Laryngol. B. N. DOW,M. D., Adjunct to Chair of Ophthal., Otology, Rhinologv and Laryngology. CARLO. WILSON, M. D., Asst. Chair of Histol. B. M. MARSHALL, M. D., Asst. Chair of Med. F. A. BELKNAP, M. D., Lect. on Hydro-Therapy. CHARLES W. DECKER, D. D. S., Lect. on Anest. and Extracting. E. L. PERRAULT, M. D., Clin. Lect. Proctology. E. R. BURGES, M. D., Lect. Osteol. Gen. Anat. ELIZABETH E. RICHARDSON, D. D. S., Lect. Care and Treat. Children ' s Teeth. MELVIN A SHADE, Ph. D., Adj. Chair Pharm. W. S. BEACH, D. D. S., Dem. of Micros. Tech. ANNA E. SWEET, M. D., Asst. Chair Clin. Med. J. W. K EY, D. D. S., M. D., Ph. G., Asst. Chair His. C.A.MORRIS, Ph.G., D. D. S., M, D., Adjunct to Chair of Materia Medica. E. W. WESTPH.AL, D. D.S,,Asst. Chair Orthodont J. H. SEYMOUR. M. D , Asst. Demonst. of Anat. F. C. KECK, M. D., Ph, G., Asst, Chair Mat. Med, LOUIS JACOBS, M, D., Ph. G., Asst, Inor. Chem. R. R, BULLOCK, M, D., Asst. Surg, Clin. W, It. HEINZMAN, M. D., As.st. Clin. Path. F. C. PIERSOL, M. D., Asst. to Derm. Clinic. C. W. KNOWLES. D. D. S., M. D., Dem. Oper. Tech. A. W. TAYLOR, D D. S.. Inst. Goer. Inst. Tech. W. A. WHELAN, D. D. S., Dem. Mech. Dent. S E. KNOWLES, M. D., D. D. S,, C. C. CONWELL, D, D S., R. W. MEEK, D. D. S., H. E. MINOR, D. D. S., M. E. CLARK, D. D S,, LUTHER A, TEAGUE. D. D. S., CORYDON B. ROOT, D. D. S,, M. D.. J. LORAN PEASE, D. D S., A M. BARKER, D. D. S., O. B. BURNS. D. D. S., G. S. BACKMAN, D. D. S.. O. A. HOOKER, D. D. S., D. H. LATIMER, D D. S., DR. MAX SICHEL. J. C. HENNESSY, D. D. S., V. P. ORELLA, D. D. S., T. E. MOORE, D. D. S.. T. S. STEALEY, D. D. S., F. R. STOKES, D. D. S., A. L. GIBSON, D. D. S., L. T. CRANZ, D. D. S., WILLIAM BURFIEND, D. D. S., Clinical Instructors in Operatiye and Prosthetic Dentistry. The medical departtnent conducts a continuous course of study, admitting students at the beginning of each quarter and holding its graduating exercises in May of each year. Attendance upon 12 quarters, extending oyer a period of 4.5 months, will be required for graduation. The full Dental course is a graded one extending over four years. The Pharmaceutical course is of two years duration Both the Medical and Den- tal courses may be pursued at the same time leading to the degrees of M. D. and D. D. S. Medical and Pharmaceutical courses may be taken at the same time leading to the degrees of M. D. and Ph. G. The matriculation fee for each department is $5. Lecture fees in the medical department, $30 per quar- ter; in the dental department, JlOi), and in the iiharmacentical department. ;75 for each course. For regulations concerning advanced standing and for further information address, D. A. HODGHEAD, M. D., Dean of the Faculties, 1025 Sutter Street, San Francisco, Cat. Oct. 24 — Spike Taylor runs from Roble rooters. Oct. 31 — Secret practice commences, and Encina rul)liers. COOPER MEDICAL COLLEGE Corner Sacramento and Webster Streets SAN FRANCISCO =ii?-%sa 7 A FACULTY C. X. Ellinwood, M. D., Professor of Physiology and President Adolph Barkan, M. D., Professor of Ophthalmology, Otology and Laryngology HENRY Gibbons, Jr., JI. A., M.D., Professor of Obstetrics and Diseases of Women and Children, and Dean. Jos. O. HiRSCHFELDER, M. D., Professor of Clinical Medicine Clinton Gushing, M. D., Emeritus Professor of Gynecology A. M. Gardner, M. D., Professor of Legal Medicine and Mental Diseases Stanley Stillman, M. D., Professor of Surgery Emmet Rixford, B. S., M. D., Professor of Surgery William Fitch Cheney, B. L., M. D., Professor of Principles and Practice of Medicine, and Secretary Wm. Ophuels, M. D., Professor of Pathology Geo. F. Hanson, Ph. G., M. D , Professor of Materia Medica and Therapeutics Geo. B. Somers, B. A., M. D., Professor of Gynecology Walter E. Garrey, Ph. D., Acting Professor of Physiology Albert H. Taylor, M D., Professor of Anatomy Attendance is required on four regular courses of lectures of eight months each. Each regular course of lectures begins August 15th. The standard of admission is graduation from accredited High Schools, Academies or Preparatory Schools or Matriculation Examination for admission to the University of California, Stanford or any other Univer- sity or College, whose standard of admission is equivalent. Announcement of the College will be mailed upon request. Address all communications to the Secretarj ' at the College. HENRY GIBBONS, Jr., M. D. Dean WILLIAM FITCH CHENEY, M. D., Secretary Oct. 31 — Sophomore linstrels. ' 05 evidently meant well, however. Nov. 3 — ' I ' hc Paily Pal infers from Dr. Jordan ' . hulictiii that the girls can sit where they dern please. St rv1c Fe Slcvtiorv - KTr -. Sc t Francijco. AvertfC o PttlrrwJ Califorr i % , ip?i 1 1 Iff Wi i I H •SsUl ai — i j w — MoKl Pottery MaKew. mi ! 1 LJ i 1 ?A n 1 1 11 i z: r-se Rfc= «fa B ' ' i nr Hotel Alvarcxdo, Alht- ' querque.. tf I VIM- S 1 v Vj; , mam JSKg B California Limited Traverses a land rich in romantic history and pleas- ant pictures. 3 days to Chicago An ideal train for those who seek the best. Send for a folder and de- scriptive booklet. 641 Market Street, San Francisco. Santa Fe Nov. 5 — First University assembly. Dittmar makes 500 enemies. Nov. 8 — Big game with U. C. — No josh. The Way Out Magnificent Limited Trains and Personally Conducted Excursions SHort Lines Scenic Lines A.11 Lines For Tickets and Berth Reservations apply to R. DANNEBERG, Agent PALO ALTO SoutKern Pacific PAUL SHOUP DIVISION TRAFFIC AGENT SAN JOSE Nov. 9. — Roble organizes a volunteer fire department. Nov. 15 — Eddie Fogg liccomes tliram Fogg. Official Jewelers FOR Fraternity Pipes Steins Match Boxes Rings and Link Buttons to Order Hammersmith Field GOLD AND SILVERSMITHS 36 Kearny Street, San Francisco Delta Kappa Epsilon Kappa Alpha Kappa Sigma Phi Gamma Delta Sigma Alpha Epsilon Zeta Psi Sigma Nu Alpha Phi Kappa Kappa Gamma Sigma Sigma Phi Sigma Delta UNITED ENGINEERING WORKS Builders and Repairers of Marine Machinery : : : of all kinds : : : 252-54-56 SPEAR ST. San Francisco California Nov. 16 — Dinner hour at the Inn conchides with a musical program. Nov. 23 — Senior and Junior pictures, followed by rough-house. More corduroys spoiled. Established l866 Incorporated Dec. 17, 1 897 California Fuse ff orks TRYME GUTTA PERCHA FUSE EVA ' S IMPROVED AND EAGLE FUSE Triple Taped : Double Taped Single Taped : Cement No. i Cement No. 2 : Hemp 18 California Street Rooms l and Telephone Main j2i San Francisco THE EBY MACHINERY CO. San Francisco, Cal., U. S. A. IfiB Builders of MODERN SAW MILLS, PLANING MILLS, BOX FACTORIES, DRY KILNS, and Dealers in ENGINES, BOILERS, SAWMILL, SHINGLE MILL and WOOD WORKING MACHINERY, DRY KILNS, LINK BELTING, LEATHER BELTING, ETC. We invite correspondence from parties contemplating the erection of SAW AMLLS or installation of DRY KILNS. Experienced millwrights and draughtsmen always at the service of our customers. Edward Brown Sons Capital 51,000,000. Assets §3 000,000. Surplus to Policy Holders $1,500,00(1. Hanover Fire 411-413 California Street Insurance Company OF NEW YORK San Francisco, CaU t 9 t ' PACIFIC COAST DEPARTMENT 423 California St., San Francisco, Cal. General Insurance Agents Cesar Bertheau, Manager Alfred R. Grim, Ass ' t Manager Svea Insurance Co. of Gothenburg American Fire Insurance Co. of Philadelphia Agricultural Insurance Co. of flew York The Delaware Insurance Co. of Philadelphia Capital 12,500,000 Surplus to Policy Holders 55,000,000 Assets 7,500,000 Established 1825 ti5 fc3 t5 The Aachen and Munich J. J. MORRIS Real Estate and Insurance Broker Resident Agent Palo Alto, Cal. Fire Insurance Co. OF Aachen, Germany Pacific Coast Department 423 California St., San Francisco, Cal. Nov. Delta Upsilon entertains His Giblets, the Crown Prince of Siam. Dec. 5 — Liquid air man talks hot air. P. N. KUSS CO. DEALERS IN Paints, Oils, Glass, Wall Paper, and Room Mouldings. Agency Patton Paint Go ' s Pure Liquid Paints and Colors M26 Clay St; 638-640 Mission St. Telephone Cedar zyi Telephone Main 1882 Oakland, Cal. San Francisco, Cal. i 26 Clay St. Telephone Cedar 271 Oakland, Cal. 640 Mission St. Telephone Main 1882 San Francisco, Cal. The Tellowstone Cigar Store SIG. CAHEN 22 Montgomery Street SAV FRANCISCO Sole Agent for ' ■ ' ■ Sorosis ' ' Cigar Phone Black Jjgo LOUIS DeROME, Manager Telephone Main 1271 Globe Brass and Bell Foundry Manufacturers of Bronze Statuary, Cemetery Work and Art Work Of EVERY DESCRIPTION Aluminum, Manganese and Phosphor Bronze, Copper, Gun Metal, Brass, Composition, Zinc and Babbitt Metal CASTINGS 126-128 MAIN ST. SAN TRANCISCO, CAL. Phone Main 5927 Established 1887 San Francisco Wood and Ivory Works C. RL F. HASS 95 Fremont St., Cor. Mission WOOD AND IVORY TURNING GENERAL WOOD WORK SPECIALTIES Hardwood Grille Work Raised Letters for Signs Bowling Alley Outfits Patterns and Models All Kinds of Balls of Hat and Cap Forms Lignum Vits and Ivory Oval Turning Tie Pacific piutual Lite iDSuraDcc OF CALIFORNIA Home Office : PACIFIC MUTUAL BUILDING SAN FRANCISCO Dec. 9 — Student Body calls on Mrs. Stanford. Reynolds to the refreshments. Dec. II — Corner-stone of new Gym is laid Finsst of Ssrvice ; Elaborately and Artistically Decorated ; Sweetest Music ; Best Lighted and Unquestionably the Most Perfectly Ventilated Establishment of its kind in San Francisco J. SEELEY, Manager 109-117 Mason Street, San Francisco, Cal. A. C. MORRISSON, Assistant Manager LP. DEQEN BELTING CO. MANUFACTURER OP ' LEATHER AND RAWHIDE BELTING AND LACE LEATHER lO -lOJ Mission Street Sa7i Fraficisco Telephone Main 562 Dynamo Belting a Specialty WM, S. SNOOK SON Contractors for Plumbing, Gas and Steam Fitting 554 CLAY STREET, Corner Montgomery Telephone 1699 SAN FRANCISCO Dec. 15 — Miss Helen Ely announces that they won ' t dare to put her in the Quad. J.w. I. ig03 — Busmen decide lo drag our jeans for t vo-l)il fares. TKe A.nglo-Californian BanK, (Limited) London Office, 18 Austin Priars. San Francisco Office, N. E. cor. Sansome and Pine Streets. Authorized Capital Stock . . $6.11U0,()0ll Paid in ;jtl ,. ' )00,000 Subscribed • . . . . 8,000,(100 Surplus and Undivided Profits . . 1,0(10,000 Keniaiuder Subject to Call Bills of Kxcliaiiije; Cmiiniercial and Travelers ' Letters of Credit Issued, Collections Made, find Stocks, Bonds and Uullion Bought and Sold on most favorable terms MANAGERS IN SAN FRANCISCO IGNATZ STEINHART P N. LILIENTHAL CALIFORNIA POWDER WORKS Manufacturers of Hercules Cannon, Mining and Sporting Powder Black and Smokeless Sliot Gun Cartridges Smokeless Sporting and Rifle Powder Works at Hercules and Santa Cruz ■ ' ; o Market St., San FrancIsco, Cal. W. T. GARRATT CO. PUMPING MACHINERY Brass an(d Iron Goods of all kinijs for Water, Steam an(-1 Gas, Brass an(d Iron Pipe an(d Fittings Brass a n (j Bell Foundry and Machine Works 138 to 142 Fremont Street San Francisco, California T 1 A I S I for Fishing, Sliooting, Sailing, Rowing A_-y lvCr JL C l Iv C Swimming, Mountain Climbing and all summer vacation sports, visit this unsurpassed resort. The railroad between Truckee and Tahoe follows the line of the Truckee River, which makes a beautiful trip in itself. Sixteen Hours Only from San Francisco By leaving San Francisco at six in the evening, vou can lunch on the magnificent lake steamers the following noon. Get breakfast at the New Hotel Tahoe and take For particulars, tor regular and excursion rates, dinner at the same place on the return trip. apply to any Southern Pacific Ticket Agent or to D. L. Bliss, Jr., Superintendent Tahoe, California Jax. 7 — Many good fellows go home without registering. Jan. 7 — Hauverman pastes his registration card in his hat to prove that he didn ' t flunk. O. AV. NORDAVELL DRAPER AND TAILOR s 385 JBUSH S XKKET SAN FRANCISCO, CAI . Jan. 8 — We hear the great Booker. Jan. 13 — Glee and Mandolin Clubs return in a blaze of glory. Pacific Hardware Steel Company Successors to Miller, Sloss Scott and Geo. W. Gibbs Co. Pumps, Pipe Brass Goods Mine, Mill Railroad and Steamship Supplies Hardware sporting Goods Iron and Steel Tin and Enamel Ware House Furnishing Utensils, Cutlery Sewing Machines Blacksmiths ' and Wagon Material Mission and Fremont Streets, San Francisco, Cal. The Lyceum An accredited preparatory school for the University Law and Medical Colleges Phelan Building San Francisco Kohler Chase 26-30 O ' Farrell St. Low Prices iClilUo Easy Terms Pi Everything in Music HOTEL ST. JAMES SAN JOSE ' S NEW MODERN HOTEL ALBERT BETTENS, Manager A home for those who desire comfort and courteous attention Jan. 15 — Kennedy and 60 girls register for Household Economics. Jan. 24 — Ninety-fivers lay their plate under cover of the darkness. Telephone Grant 172 Webber Aicher Machine Works 27 and 29 Beale Street, Near Market SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. GENERAL HACHINISTS Special attention given to repairing and moving printing machinery Builders and Designers of Special Machinery for all Purposes c t . The management ot the PALACE HOTEL San Francisco, Is inaugurating many improvements Handsomely furnished reception rooms, convenient writing rooms with individual desks. A beautiful billiard and pool room will add much to the comfort and pleasure of ladies dining in THE FAMOUS GRILL M. J. B. Brand of Coffee. Sold only in i lb., 2 lb. and 3 lb. cans, by your grocer. If you will try it you will then appreciate what a delicious beverage a good cup of Coffee is. Army Officers ' Regulation Soft Hats — Stetson ' s Fine Quality Established in 1851 FISHER CO., Inc. HATTERS 9 Montgomery St., Lick House San Francisco, Cal. We beg to call your attention to our latest styles of Hats and Caps of the very finest quality. Extra large and small sizes. We carry the finest stock of Leather Hat Boxes. Dress Suit Cases, Valises, Bags and Um- brellas on the Pacific Coast. Our Shriner Fez is made of the best goods and in the latest style. FURNISHERS We also have a full line of the finest and la- test novelties in gentlemen ' s furnishings. Shirts and underwear to order. Agents for genuine Irish linen and mesh underwear. Jan. 25 — Church dedicated. Baker and Bush go to bed. ' ' Feb. I — King, ' 06. entertains Col. Langdon and friends. Heywood Brothers and Wakefield Company M. Nl ' F.- CTURERS Cane and Wood Seat Chairs, Bent Wood Chairs, Reed and Rattan Furni- ture, Children ' s Carriages, Chair Cane, Cane Webbing, Car Seats, Opera and Folding Chairs, Rattan Mats and Matting and Rattan Specialties New York. N. Y. Buffalo, N. Y. Chicago, III. Bo.ston, Mass. Gardner, Mass. Wakclield, Mass. WARKHOUSES I ' liiladelpliia, Pa. Baltimore, M. D. San Francisco, Cal. Los Angeles, Cal. FACTORIES Chicago, III. Portland, Ore. London, Eng. Liverpool, Eng. San Francisco, Cal. 659 to 663 Mission St. SAN FRANCISCO Chas, M, Sorensen ,.„l ai or,„. 22 Post Street Between Powell and Mason Streets S dfl Fvanc ' lSCO HOTEL VENDOME Recognized Headquarters for Stanford students and visiting tourists. This beautiful hotel is situated in the Garden City of the Pacific Coast. Only fittv miles from San Francisco. The Vendome is strictly first class, modern, up to date. From here ( Hotel Vendome ) stages of the Mt. Hamilton Stage Company leave daily. The Vendome has for the con- venience and pleasure of its guests a large swimming pool, ping pong, bowling alleys ot the most modern design : . : : : GEO. P. SNELL, Manager San Jose, California Feb. 2 — Shadbourne, the bridegroom, i.s ducked. Feb. 6 — Phi Delta Phi visits the EngHsh Chib. San Jose Woolen Mill Blankets We are headquarters for fine all wool blankets. We manufacture all weights, colors and sizes of the best grades. Special lines for camping purposes. Our prices are low and the quality the best. Our blankets may be seen at our S. F. Agency, 22 Market Street , San Jose Woolen Mills SI-. . or at tne o t an l rancisco ban Jose FOR CLOTHINfi GO TO SPRING ' S SAN JOSE We will be pleased to attend to your orders The Yard near the Palo Alto Depot Telephone John 1 1 Fine Single or Double Teams Fine New Robber-Tired Rigs Palo Alto and University Stables Vandervoort Bros., Proprietors Telephone James II Feb. 7 — Freshman-Sophomore game. Love-feast on Lasuen St. at midnight. Feb. 14 — Eli abctlian play ca t lias a studio rehearsal. TELEPHONE MAIN 5369 Ralston Iron Works INCORPORATED CONTRACTORS FOR STRICTIRAL IRON AND STEEL ARCHITECTURAL .ORNAMENTAL IRON Work of All Description 222-224 HOWARD STREET SAN FRANCISCO Feb. 16 — English Club barnstormers spend the day with Mr. Donaghho. Look on the back of the title page of this book d o ' n near the bottom Fed. 17 — Proliiltiticm Club organized. Consternation in Mayficld. UNION GAS ENGINE COMPANY 244-246 First Street san francisco BUILDERS OF THE UNION GAS AND OIL ENGINES FOR MARINE AND STATIONARY SERVICE GASOLINE MINING HOISTS AND PUMPING PLANTS J-Eii. ]8 — Alplia Pliis announce tliat llieir uniljrella has not been returned. a.


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

Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1901 Edition, Page 1

1901

Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1902 Edition, Page 1

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Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1903 Edition, Page 1

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Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1905 Edition, Page 1

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Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 1

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Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 1

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