Stanford University - Quad Yearbook (Palo Alto, CA)
- Class of 1907
Page 1 of 332
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 332 of the 1907 volume:
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. j I : jt • - .-r • ' ■• ' •• • ' « ' ' t • ■. n oo The Stanford Quad Earthquake Edition Vol. 1 3 Photo by Grimths atpi-iii e. t e f Dedicated By the Class of 1907 to Charles David Marx The Father of the Stanford Engineer Copyright, 1907. by KARL A. BICKEL S. S. SMITH S. M. SALISBURY ENGRAVED , PRINTED AND BOUND BY THE STANLEY-TAYLOR PRESS SAN FRANCISCO FOREWORD .... THE STANFORD EXGIXEER IN MEMORIAM KING OF KINGS FOUNDERS .... FACULTY GRADUATE STUDENTS CLASSES FRATERNITIES . . . ORGANIZATIONS MUSIC PUBLICATIONS ATHLETICS .... DEBATE DRAMATICS .... LITERARY .... VENICE JOSHES UNIVERSITY DAYS 6 8 11 14 16 19 32 38 67 120 143 149 158 196 203 213 223 224 228 M Foreword When this bit of matter is reduced to cold type and locked up in the form, the 1907 Quad will be on its way to the bindery and all that the QuAn Board can do or say will not erase one line of it. With this prefunctory editorial, which tra- dition has made essential in the making of a Quad the last sheet of dope will be in and the Quad will be virtually completed. We are not sorry to have it so. There is little joy in creating a rehabilitated Quad. The Quad Board passed over the final proofs last evening and saw them go without regret, not a drum was heard, not a funeral note. Last year this same board of editors gathered together material for what we feel confident would have been one of the best Quads in the history of Stanford University, but we were volume thirteen and the hoodoo was too strong to be shaken off. When the book was two days from the bindery the earthquake and subsequent fire swallowed the Quad along with the balance of the business portion of San Fran- cisco. The class determined, however, that the tradition of the annual should be kept up, and taxing themselves two dollars per capita, ordered the editors to gather what material they could in the present semester and issue a Quad. This book was virtually gathered together within the space of three weeks. The art was secured, statistics obtained and the matter hurriedly edited and rushed to the publisher. Only a veteran staff, such as the ' 07 Board was, could have ac- complished the feat. We submit it as a college record. The book may not be all that the reader expected for his two dollars and a half. If it is not, we advise him to stop reading it right now and to hurry back to the stall, where Messrs. Smith and Salisbury are disposing of the book to other unwary purchasers, and request his money back. You may get it back, but if you do our trust and confidence in the above mentioned gentlemen is misplaced. Take the 1907 Qu. d for what it is intended, a book of record, retaining for the college historian of the future the story of our Junior year at Stanford. BOARD OF EDITORS. ' ' -- - The Stanford Engineer B Prof. Chas. D. Marx JVM ■i : M y M =31M S Sr HE Stanford engineer is a product in whose making a number of factors are combined. Most of these factors are variable, and as they are combined in varying propor- tions, the product is a varying one. It must be admitted that the factor least susceptible to change in the varying processes of turning out a finished product, is the quality of the raw material. Upperclassmen are ready to admit that the material is of this character only during the first year. This may be so. At all events the material entering the engineer- ing courses, if raw, is no more so than the material which enters the University for being shaped in other lines of work. It was of the greatest, importance not only to Stanford engineers, but to all members of the engineering profession, that when Stanford Uni- versity opened its doors in the fall of ' 91, the entrance requirements to the engineering courses were made as high as those to the other courses in the University. In a description of the technical courses of the Leland Stanford Junior University, sent by the writer to one of the leading en- gineering journals at the time of the opening of the University, particular stress was laid on this fact, because it tended to wipe out the line of division, which up to that time had been drawn at most American insti- tntions between students in so-called technical and so-called cultural courses. In other institutions it has been customary to look down upon the students and the work in the scientific and engineering courses. This, fortunately, was never the case at Stanford, and it has been a helpful factor in shaping the raw material. A sympathetic environment has been the privilege of the students and of the faculty in engineering, since the doors of the University opened. As a result the technical students have taken a position in the greater life of the University, have taken part in all student activities, including some not always looked upon with favor by the authorities, and have had collectively the respect and good will of their fellow students. I speak of this factor of environment because I consider it one of the most important ones in influencing the men we are trying to train as engineers. This environment in a university brings home to them day by day a realization of the fact that in order to be able to influence men, in order to be good company, as Dean Hodges said, they must first of all be men. Starting with the same amount of general training as their fellow students, the men in the technical courses take up studies which as a rule are not sought after by the snap hunter. These studies are by some believed to be narrowing, but the ability to see clearly and to think straight can hardly be said to have a narrowing efifect on a man ' s intel- lectual development, be he a major in Latin, English, Philosophy, Science or Engineering. The ability to speak and write fluently is, of course, an accomplishment to be desired, if the speaker has something to say worth listening to, or the author something to write worth reading; Stanford engineers, as a rule, have been able to say well what they had to say, be- cause they knew what they were talking about ; those who have written have written well for the same reason. On looking over the list of our graduates I am impressed with the fact that not a few of our Stanford women, the five hundred of intellect, the wisest of their sex, have been willing to take Stanford engineers for better or worse. Nft higher compliment can be paid these Stanford engineers as men than this statement. It also proves my contention that when these engineers have something to say worth saying they say it, and in a way to carry conviction. 9 Environment and the studies taken have shaped the raw material which has come to us in the past. It has heen sent out into the world, not a finished pro(Uict. but a modified one, still ca])able of undergoing many changes. Have the men who have been sent out from the technical courses in Stanford University made good? I do not mean measured by the stand- ard of financial success, for some of those we hear least of are often the most successful. Are the communities in which Stanford engineers live any better for their living there? Are these men standing for what is right, are they possessed by the spirit of courtesy? A short tin:e ago I wrote the biography of the late (ieorge Draper Stratton, a member of the pioneer class. J said of him : Among his associates, both business and social, he was much beloved for his fine character and sweet temper. He was ever and always the same quiet, even-tempered man, whose sincerity and loyalty were unfailing. Strat- ton himself, in writing the memoir of his college mate. Van Norman McGee, who died before him. summed up the latter ' s qualifications by saying: He was ever a true man, and is greatly mourned by all who could call him friend. Since first writing this, another name has been added to the list of Stanford engineers who have quietly and bravely done their duty. A. H. Toll died in Mexico, young in years, old in responsi- bility, faithful to his trust. Ability, trustworthiness and modesty were characteristics of these S nford engineers, now dead. I believe these are also the characteristics of many of those still living. The raw material which enters the engineering courses at Stanford now is as good as it was in the past, the environment is the same, the opportunities in the matter of training are larger, and still larger ones will come to those who enter in the future. The responsibilities on the Stanford engineers now in the University and on those who are to follow them are the greater, because the Stanford engineers we have sent into the world in the past to do their work have made and are constantly making good. Chas. D. Marx. Stanford University, October 15, ' 05. 10 InM emoriam 3n ifKemoriam Ivan E. Dennis, ' 08 John Samuel Burcham, ' 02 Died November 12. 1905 Robert Fountain, ' 05 Died May 1, 1905 Raymond Frederick West, ' 07 Died January 18, 1906 George Adderson Died March 1. 1906 13 The King of Kings By James Temple Deep in a buried forest beyond the sea, • Undreamed my city ' s cloud-hewn pallor looms In sombre majesty all shadowy. My slumbering winds are drugged with heavy blooms Of deathly night flowers dark with age-worn light Of brooding, blood-red moons, still sabled through The noiseless echoing halls, and giant Night Stalks huge in mists of dull Lethean dew. Oblivion ' s ocean rolls about my walls, But sleep with sombre web builds low the ghosts, Of stoneless bridges, dark and dawn-forgot That ye may cross my flood, and yearn in halls Of silence with the wan, unnumbered hosts Who seek the face of Death and find me not. 14 . Found ers . ' -f ' l iu  « ' ' a generous education is the birthright of every man and woman in AMERICA ° ' , List of Founders Quad 1907 LELAXD STANFORD fJANE 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 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 THE HON. WHITELAW REID New York MR. GEORGE EDWARD CROTHERS San Francisco MR. CHARLES PARMALEE FELLS . . . . . San Francisco MR. WILLIAM BABCOCK San Rafael Officers of the Board of Trustees $MR. SAMUEL F. LEIB Vice-President MR. CHARLES G. LATHROP . Treasurer MR. GEORGE EDWARD CROTHERS Secretary Died June 21, 1893. tDied February 28, 1905. Acting President. 18 Faculty Stanford Quad DAVID STARR JORDAN, President of the University. 1907 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. A T; 2 S JOHN CASPER BRANNER, Vice-President and Professor of Geology. B.S., Cornell University, 1882; Ph.D., Indiana University, 1885; LL.D., University of Arkansas, 1897. A T ; 2 S OLIVER PEEBLES JENKINS, Professor of Physiology and Histology. A.B., Moore ' s Hill College, 1869; A.M., 1872; M.S., Indiana Universitv, 1886; Ph.D., 1889. MELVILLE BEST ANDERSON, Professor of English Literature. A.M., Butler University, 1877; Professor of Modern Languages. Butler Uni- versity, 1877-80. JOHN MAXSON STILLMAN, Professor of Chemistry. Ph.B., University of California, 1874; Ph.D., 1885; Assistant in Chemistry, University of California, 1873-75. Z ; 2 S FERNANDO SAN FORD, 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 Polytechnicum. 1881; Instructor in Civil Engineering, Karlsruhe Polytechnicum, 1880-81. O A X; CHARLES HENRY GILBERT, Professor of Zoology. B.S., Butler University, 1879; M.S., Indiana University, 1882; Ph.D., 1883. -DOUGLAS HOUGFITON CAMPBELL, Professor of Botany. Ph.M., University of Michigan, 1882; Ph.D., 1886. 2 2 EWALD FLtJGEL, Professor of English Philology. Ph.D., University of Leipzig, 1886. CHARLES BENJAMIN WING, Professor of Structural En- gineering. C.E., Cornell University, 1886. 2 2 FRANK ANGELL, Profes. or of Psychology. B.S., University of Vermont, 1878. 2 i LEANDER MILLER HOSKIXS, Professor of Applied lathe- matics. B.C.E. and B.S., University of Wisconsin, 1883; M.S.. 1885; C.E., 1887. ! A e. ROBERT EDGAR ALLARDICE, Professor of Mathematics. A.M., University of Edinburgh, 1882. 2 S. Absent on leave, 1905-06. 19 Stanford VILLIA: r RUSSELL DUDLEY, Professor of Botany. Quad B.S., Cornell University, 1874; M.S., 1876. A T; S 3 1907 AUGUSTUS TABER MURRAY, Professor of Greek. A.B., Havcrford College, 1885; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, 1890; Fellow in Johns Hopkins University, 1887-88. NATHAN ABBOTT, Professor of Law. A.B., Yale University, 1877; LL.D., Boston University, 1893. V T JOHN ERNST MATZKE, Professor of Romanic Languages. A.B., Hope College, 1882; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, 1888. B K JAMES OWEN GRH FLN, Professor of German. Graduate of the Pennsylvania State Normal School, 1873. A T RUFUS LOT GREEN, Professor of Mathematics. B.S., Indiana University, 1885; A.M., 1890. ARLEY BARTHLOW SHOW, Professor of Mediaeval 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 LYMAN KELLOGG, Professor of Entomology, and Lecturer in Bionomics. B.S., University of Kansas, 1889; M.S., 1892. Ae;2S; BK JAMES PERRIN SMITH, Professor of Paleontology. A.M., Vanderbilt University, 1886; Ph.D., University of Gottingen, 1892. Ben ' LIONEL REMOND 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 ; B K MAX FARRAND, Professor of History. A.B., Princeton University, 1892; A.M., 1893; Ph.D., 1896; Boudinol; Fellow in History, Princeton University, 1892-93. WILLIAM FREDERICK DURAND, Professor of Mechanical Engineering. Graduate U. S. Naval Academy, 1880; Ph.D., Lafayette College, 1888; Engineer Corps, U. S. Navy, 1880-87. A HARRIS JOSEPH RYAN, Professor of Electrical Engineering. M.E., Cornell University, 1887. tGEORGE HEMPL, Professor of Germanic Philology. A.B., University of Michigan, 1879; Ph.D., University of Jena, 1889; LL.D., University of Wisconsin, 1904. Absent on leave, second semester, 1905-06. Absent on leave, 1905-06. fBeginning January, 1907. 20 WILLIAM JAMES, Acting Professor of Philosophy. Stanford M.D., Harvard University, 1870; LL.D., Princeton and Edinburgh; Ph.D., Quad and Litt.D., Padua. IQ07 $ALPHONSO GERALD NEWCOMER, Associate Professor of English. A.B., University of Michigan, 1887; A.M., Cornell University, 1888. f r A ARTHUR BRIDGMAN CLARK, Associate Professor of Drawing. B.Ar., Syracuse University, 1888; M.Ar., 1891. A T FRANK MACE McFARLAND, Associate Professor of Histology. Ph.B., DePauw University, 1889; A.M., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1893; Ph.D., University of Wurtzburg, 1896. A K E GEORGE CLINTON PRICE, Associate Professor of Zoology. B.S., DePauw University, 1890; Ph.D., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1897. A K E JOHN CHARLES LOUNSBURY FISH, Associate Professor of Civil Engineering. C.E., Cornell University, 1892. A T Q; i) S ELLWOOD p. CUBBERLEY, Associate Professor of Education. A.B., Indiana University, 1891; A.M., Columbia University, 1902. A GUIDO HUGO MARX, Associate Professor of Mechanical En- gineering. M.E., Cornell University, 1893. A T; 2 S CLYDE AUGUSTUS DUNIWAY, Associate Professor of His- tory. A.B., Cornell University, 1892; A.M., Harvard University, 1894; Ph.D.. 1897. B K GEORGE ARCHIBALD CLARK, Secretary to the President. B.L., University of Minnesota, 1891. A T GEORGE JAMES PIERCE, Associate Professor of Botany and Plant Physiology. B.S., Harvard University, 1890; Ph.D., University of Leipzig, 1894. HERMANN DE CLERCQ STEARNS, Associate Professor of Physics. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1892; A.M., 1893. OLIVER MARTIN JOHNSTON, Associate Professor of Ro- manic Languages. A.B., Mississippi College, 1890; A.M., 1892; Ph.D.. Johns Hopkins University, - 1896. STEA ' ART WOODFORD YOUNG, Associate Professor of Chemistry. B.S., Cornell University, 1890. A T fl Absent on leave, second semester, 1905-06. ♦Absent on leave, 1905-06. 21 Stanford Quad 1907 MELVIN GILBERT DODGE, Associate Librarian. A.B., Hamilton College, 1890; A.M., 1894. A T ; B K JOHN FLESHER NEVVSOM, Associate Professor of Mining. A.B., Indiana University, 1891; A.M., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1893; Ph.D., 1901. H e II EPHRAIM DOUGLASS ADAMS, A.ssociate Professor of History. A.B., University of Michigan, 1887; Ph.D., 1890. T tSIMON JAMES McLEAN, Associate Professor of Economics. A.B., University of Toronto, 1894; LL.B., 1895; A.M., Columbia University, 1896; Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1897. HENRY WINCHESTER ROLFE, Associate Professor of Greek. A.B., Amherst College, 1880; A.M., 1885, A K E . DAVID CHARLES GARDNER, Chaplain of the University Memorial Church. Scholar, Lord Scudamore ' s School, Hereford, England ; Student under Farquhar McKerow, Usk Grammar School, Monmouthshire, England ; Graduate Church Divinity School of the Pacific, San Mateo, 1897. EDWARD CURTIS FRANKLIN, Associate Professor of Organic Chemistry. B.S., University of Kansas, 1888; M.S., 1890; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, 1894. A O HAROLD HEATH, Associate Professor of Zoology. A.B., Ohio Wesleyan University, 1893; Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1898. $ A e GEORGE ABRAM MILLER, Associate Pro- fessor of Mathematics A.B., Muhlenberg College, 1887; Ph.D.. Cumberland University, 1892. 2 S WILLIAM FREEMAN SNOW, Associate Professor of Hygiene. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1896; A M-, 1897; M.D., Cooper Medical College, 1900. KARL G. RENDTORFF. Assi.stant Professor of German. A.M., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1894; Ph.D., 1896. FREDERICK JOHN ROGERS, Assi.stant Pro- fessor of Phy.sics. M.S., Cornell University, 1891. 2 Z LILLIEN JANE MARTIN, As.sistant Pro- fessor of Psychology. A.B., Vassar College. 1880. tCHARLES REYNOLDS BROWN, Lecturer on Ethics. A.B., University of Iowa, 1883; A.M., 1886; S.T.B.. Boston University School of Theology. 1889. Absent on leave, 1905-06. fResigned, December, 1905. Absent on leave, second semester, tAbsent on leave, 1905-06. 22 1905-06. I907 HANS FREDERIK BLICHFELDT, Assistant Professor of Stanford Mathematics. Quad A.B., Lelaiid Stanford Jr. University. 1896; Ph.D., University of Leipzig. 1898. COLBERT SEARLES, Assistant Professor of Romanic Lan- guages. A.B., Wesleyan University, 1895; Ph.D., University of Leipzig, 1899. X RAYMOND MACDOXALD ALDEX, Assistant Professor of English Literature and Rhetoric. A.B., University of Pennsylvania, 1894; A.M., Harvard University, 1896; Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1898. WILLIAM ALPHA COOPER, Assistant Professor of German. A.B., Marietta College, 1892; A.M., 1897. AT; B K ANDREW ALLEN BROWNE, Assistant Professor of Mechanic Arts, and Superintendent of Shops. Student, University of Michigan, 1888-90. THOMAS ANDREW STOREY, Assistant Professor of Hygiene. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1896; A.M., 1900; Ph.D., 1902. K JEFFERSON ELMORE, Assistant Professor of Latin. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1895; A.M., 1895; Ph.D.. 1901. JOHN OTTERBEIN SNYDER, Assistant Professor of Zoology. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1897; A.M., 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. HARRY ALVIN MILLIS, Assistant Professor of Economics. A.B.. Indiana University, 1895; A.M., 1896; Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1899. GEORGE LOFTUS NOYES, Assistant Professor of Drawing. Art Student, Collorossi and Delacluse Academies, Paris, 1889-93. JA IES ROLLIN SLONAKER, Assistant Professor of Physi- ology. B.S., University of Washington, 1893; Ph.D., Clark University, 1896. WILLIAM RANKINE ECKART, Assistant Professor of Mechani- cal Engineering. M.E., Cornell University, 1895. HALCOTT CADWALADER MORENO, Assistant Professor of Applied Mathematics. A.B., University of Georgia, 1893; A.M., 1894; B.L., 1896; Ph.D., Clark University, 1900. A e Absent on leave. 1905-06. 23 Stanford Quad 1907 CLARA S. STOLTENBERG, Assistant Professor of Physiology. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1896; A.M., 1897. SAAIUEL SWAYZE SEWARD, Jr., Assistant Professor of Eng- lish. A.B., Columbia College, 1896; A.M., Columbia Univer.sity, 1897; Scholar in Literature, Columbia Ihiiversity, 1896-7. B K ALBERT CONSER WHITAKER, Assistant Professor of Eco- nomics. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1899; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1904. B e II BENJAMIN OLIVER FOSTER, Assistant Professor of Latin. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1895; A.M., Harvard University, 1897; Ph.D., 1899. A T DORSEY ALFRED LYON, Assistant Professor of Metallurgy. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1898; A.M., Harvard University, 1902. A T HENRY LEWIS CANNON, Assistant Professor of History. A.B., Western Reserve University, 1893 ; Ph.D., University of Penn.sylvania, 1898. ATA HOWARD JUDSON HALL, Assistant Professor of English. B.S., Michigan State Agricultural College, 1890; A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1896; A.M., Harvard University, 1900. AUSTIN FLINT ROGERS, Assi.stant Pro- fes.sor of Mineralogy and Petrography. A.B., University of Kan.sas, 1899; A.M., 1900; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1902. CHARLES HENRY HUBERICK, Assi.stant Professor of Law. LL.B., University of Texas, 1897; LL.M., 1898; D.C.L., Yale University, 1899; J.U.D., University of Heidelberg, 1905. MACY MILLMORE SKINNER, Assistant Professor of German. A.B., Harvard University, 1894; A.AL, 1895; Ph.D., 1897; Harvard Fellow, University of Strassburg, 1897-98; University of Berlin, 1898-99. B K ELMER REGINALD DREW, Assistant Pro- fessor of Physics. B.S., University of California, 1888; Ph.D., Cornell University, 1903. LEE EMERSON BASSETT, Assi.stant Pro- fessor of Evolution. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1901. 24 HENRY SUZZALLO. Assistant Professor of Education. Stanford A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1899; A.M., Columbia University, 1902. Quad LUTHER BURBANK, Lecturer on Plant Evolution. 1907 GEORGE HODGES, University Preacher, and Lecturer in Bibli- cal History. A.B., Hamilton College, 1877; A.M., 1882; D.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1892; D.C.L., Hobart College, 1902. JOHN EZRA McDowell, Assistant Registrar. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1900. ' I ' A 9 JULIUS EAJBRET PETERSON, Foreman of the Forge. EDWIN CHAPIN STARKS, Curator in Zoology. Assistant in the United States Bureau of Biological Survey, 1897-99 ; Curator of The Museum, University of Washington, 1899-1900. ALVIN JOSEPH COX, Instructor in Chemistry. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1901; A.M., 1902; Ph.D., University of Breslau, 1904. CHARLES FREDERICK SCHMUTZLER, Instructor in Ger- man. 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. JOSEPH GRANT BROWN, Instructor in Physics. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1901 ; A.M., 1903. ANSTRUTHER ABERCROMBIE LAWSON, Instructor in Botany. B.S., University of California, 1897; M.S., 1898; Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1901 ; Fellow in Botany, University of Chicago, 1900-01. ERNEST WHITNEY MARTIN, Instructor in Latin and Greek. A.B., University of Chicago, 1900; A.M., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1902. ATA HALBERT WILLIAM CHAPPEL, Instructor in Hygiene. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1901; LL.B.. 1903. K 2 JAMES BENNETT LIGGETT, Foreman of the Foundry. WILLIAM ALBERT MANNING, Instructor in Mathematics. A.B., Willamette University, 1900; A.M., Leland Stanford Jr. Uriiversity, 1902; Ph.D., 1904. CHLOE LESLEY STARKS, Instructor in Drawing. KENNETH LIVERMORE CURTIS, In.structor in Electrical Engineering. B.S., University of Colorado, 1901. ARTHUR MARTIN CATHCART, Instructor in Law. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1896. A T January-April, 1906. 25 Stanford STANLEY SMITH, Instructor in Romanic Languages. Quad A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. Univer.sity, 1903; A.M., 1905. 1907 JOHX KESTER BOXXELL, In.structor in English. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1903; San Franci.sco Harvard Club Fellow at Harvard University, 1903-04. ATA THEODORE PALMATEER, Foreman of the Machine Shop. GALEX HOWELL CLEVEXGER, Instructor in Metalkirgy. B.S., South Dakota School of Mines, 1901 ; A.M., Columbia University, 1903. CLIFFORD GILMORE ALLEX, Instructor in Romanic Lan- guages. A.B., Boston University, 1900; A.M., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1903; Student University of Paris, 1903-04; Fellow of Boston University and Student of Universities of Paris and Madrid, 1904-05. PAYSON JACKSON TREAT, Instructor in History. A.B., Wesleyan University, 1900; A.M., Columbia University, 1903. A A tROY VALEXTIXE REPPY, Instructor in Law. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1902. B 9 IT SAMUEL BARCLAY CFIARTERS, Jr., In.structor in Electrical Engineering. M E., Cornell University, 1904. SAIML ' EL JAMES DEXXIS, Instructor in Alechanical Engin- eering. Student, Cornell University, 1901-05. LEON PATTERSON LEWIS, Instructor in Law. Ph.B., University of Chicago, 1902; J.D.. 1905. r A HENRY DAVID GRAY, Instructor in English. Ph.B., Colgate University, 1897; A.M., Columbia University, 1898; Ph.D., 1904. AT; B K HUBERT HARRY HALL, Instructor in Civil Engineering. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1904. 7. V % WESLEY NEWCOMB HOHFELD, Instructor in Law. A.B., University of California, 1901; LL.B., Harvard University, 1904; San Francisco Harvard Club Fellow at Harvard University, 1901-02. RENXIE WILBUR DOAXE, Instructor and Curator in Ento- mology. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1896. HOMER PRICE EARLE, Instructor in Roman Languages. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1904; Student. Johns Hopkins Uni- versity, 1904-06. B K JOHxX FRAXCIS COWAN, Acting Instructor in Physiology. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1902. 2 X Absent on leave, 1905-06. fResigned October, 1905. Begiiming August, 1906. 26 WALTER KEXRICK FISHER, Acting Instructor in Zoology. Stanford A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1901; A.M.. 1903. Quad MARY ISABEL McCRACKEN, Acting Instructor in Bionomics. igoy A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1904; A.M., 1905. JOHN PEARCE MITCHELL, Acting Instructor in Chemistry. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1903; A.M., 1904; Student, University of Leipzig, 1904-05. AT; I B K HARRY BAKER HUMPHREY, Acting Instructor in Botany. B.S., University of Minnesota, 1899. Assistants Greek ESTHER CRAXDALL. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1903; A.: I., 1905. German JEAN DU BUY, German and Philosophy. J.D., University of Heidelberg, 1889; Ph.D., Yale University. 1894. ADELE MEYER. CHARLES PHILLIPS. J.D., University of Tubingen, 1902. Romanic Languages MARIE CAROLINE DUBY. BEATRICE LESSEY. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University. 1905. English ANNA PEARL COOPER. A.M., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1906. JENNET JOHNSON. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1905. EDITH R. MIRRIELEES. Philosophy JEAN DU BUY, Philosophy and German. J.D., University of Heidelberg, 1889; Ph.D., Yale University, 1894. THERESA PEET RUSSELL. Ph.B., State University of Iowa, 1895. Education REBECCA BEATRICE FRENCH. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1905. n Stanford Economics Quad DONALD KINGSLAND SEIBERT. 1907 A.B.. Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1905. WILLIAM CORTEZ SHELTON. Applied Mathematics THOMAS GUTHRIE BROWN. A.B., Maryville College, 1903. RAYI IOND AUGUST FULLER. CHARLES HUGH PAXTON. ARTHUR RANUM. A.B., University of Minnesota, 1892. HENRY WALTER STAGER. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1902. HALBERT RAY THOMAS. Physics GRACE NIMS BROWN. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1902. GRACE HERMANITA BRUCKMAN. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1904. GEORGE ALBERT CLARK. Ph.B., Hillsdale College, 1887; Ph.M., 1891. WENDELL PRESCOTT ROOP. Chemistry PAUL W. AVERY. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1906. GEORGE DE FOREST BARNETT. WILLIAM GEORGE BATEMAN. WILLIAM EDMUND BURKE. WILLIAM ELMER CRAWFORD. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1906. FRED FINLEY FITZGERALD. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1906. DANE MASON GREER. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1906. Systematic Botany RICHARD MORRIS HOLMAN. OLIVE AGATHA HUMPHREY. B.S., University of Minnesota, 1899. JAMES IRA WILSON McMURPHY. 28 Physiology and Histology Stanford MICHITARO SINDO. Quad Hygiene and Physical Training EARL HAMPTON COLEMAN. HAROLD WILLIAM STRONG. FLORENCE BOLTON. EDITH VIRGINIA MATZKE. M.D., Woman ' s Medical College, Philadelphia. 1895. MARY ROSALIE STOLZ. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1906. VERA TOWNSEND. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1901. Zoology MILO HERRICK SPAULDING. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1903. Entomology and Bionomics ROSE W. PATTERSON. CHARLES PIPER SMITPI. B.S., Purdue University, 1903. Civil Engineering HAL BREW. MYRON CARLOS BURR. JOHN FLETCHER BYXBEE, Jr. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. Universitv, 1902. LESTER LEVI CARTER. LAWRENCE EDMINSTER CUTTER. GEORGE ASHMUN HODGE. LOUIS JOHN MAYREIS. FRED ORDWAY SHUTTS. GALE STANLEY STROUT. Mechanical Engineering JOHN STACK. WILLIAM CHRISTIAN THEILE. President ' s Office DAVID TIMMINS FULLAWAY, Stenographer. JOHN PARKS HEMPHILL, Stenographer. 29 Stanford Registrar ' s Office Quad SUSAX BROWN BRISTOL, Secretary of Committee on 1907 Recommendation of Teachers. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1897. CECELIA FREEMAN ATHERTON. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1904. University Library FLORENCE HUGHES, Head Cataloguer. LILLIAN PEARLE GREEN, Reference Librarian. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1898. ALICE NEWMAN HAYS, Classifier. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1896. MARTHA ELIZABETH HAVEN, Supervisor Accessions. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1896. HARRIETTE MILES, Supervisor Serials. HELEN BINNINGER SUTLIFF, Cataloguer. A.B., University of Kansas, 1890. JOHN EDW ARD GOODWIN, Supervisor Stocks and Loans. A.B., University of Wisconsin, 1901. BELLE HEBER THOMPSON, Chief Loan Desk Assistant. JOHN FRANKLIN BARCUS. VlILDRED IRENE CROSIER. GEORGE ETHELBERT DOLE. ELIZABETH HADDEN, Cataloguer. ANNA GERTRUDE HALL. ALFRED LAWRENCE KOCHER. LETITIA PATTERSON. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1901. MAIDA ROSSITER. A.B., Cornell University, 1903. JOHN EL IER STEWART. SETH BLAINE THOMPSON. WINIFRED WOOD. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1904. ELMER ELLIS YOUNG. Law Library GILBERT DENISON BO ALT. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1903. HARRY LUr IMIS DEARING. FMMET CLOYD RITTENHOUSE. A.B., Leland Stanford Jr. University, 1904. 30 Memorial Church Stanford BENJAMIN C0L: IAN BLODGETT. Organist. Q Mus. Doc. Oxon., 1877; Student, University and Conservatory of Music, 90 Leipzig, 1858-61; Principal of Alusic School, Pittsfield, Mass., 1865-78; Director of ]Music, Smith College, 1878-1903; Honorary Fellow, London Society of Arts and Letters, 1880; Member, Wagner Musik-Verein, Bay- reuth, 1883; Xew York Art Club, 1890. Leland Stanford Jr. Museum HARRY C. PETERSON, Curator. Roble Hall LUCRETIA HOUSTON LANKTREE, Matron. Business Office CHARLES GARDNER LATHROP, Treasurer and Business Manager. PRICE. WATERHOUSE CO., Auditors. DAVID MONASCH, Purchasing Agent. A. C. LASSEN, Cashier. .SAMUEL H. RICH, Bookeeper and X ' oucher Clerk. R. H. WORSLEY, Bookkeeper. FANNIE HADDEN, Stenographer. PHILIP QUINN ATKINSON, Custodian. CHARLES EDWARD HODGES, Resident Architect. C. P. HUGHES, Chief Engineer. DAVID H. HOLMES, Chief Electrician. GEORGE ADDERSON, Overseer of Buildings. F. A. STEVENS, Foreman Mechanician Shop. T. B. SCOTT, Storekeeper of the Chemical Laboratory. M. H. DORGAN, Chief Plumber. CHARLES F. }iIOORE, Plumber. CHARLES C. WALLEY, Chief Carpenter. CHARLES F. MILLER, Chief Gardener. JEREMIAH CROWLEY, Foreman of the Farm. P. J. TULLEY, Painter. ROBERT W. BEALE. Sexton : remorial Church. J. McGLYNN, Engineer Science Building. A. A. QUINN, Clerk Encina Hall. FDWARD SOULE, Foreman Manual Training. 31 Stanford r J , Cj. J j. Quad Liraduate otudents 1907 Aldrich, John Morton, Moscozv, Idaho, Entomology M. S., University of Kansas, 1893. Alexander, Charles Ivan, Mcnlo Park, Mathematics I). S., University of Texas, 1902. Applegate, Bessie Bell, Klamath Falls, Ore., German A. B., Stanford, 1905. Atkins, Herbert French, San Jose, Education A. B., Harvard University, 1889; LL. B., 1894. Atkinson, Harry Hunt, Salt Lake City, Utah, Law A. B., Stanford, 1903. Avery, Paul W., Washington, D. C, Chem., Eng. A. B., Stanford, 1906. Bailey, Forrest Culter, San Jose, English A. B., Stanford, 1901 ; A. M., 1903. Barlow, Mary Grace, Berkeley, English B. L., University of California, 1905. Barrett, Richard Watts, Stanford University, Law A. B., Stanford, 1904. Bell, Jessie Newcomb, Santa Barbara, Drawing A. B., Stanford, 1904. Boalt, Gilbert Denison, Palermo, Law A. B., Stanford, 1903. Brown, Grace Nims, Palo Alto, Physics A. B., Stanford, 1902. Bruckman, Grace Hermanita, Palo Alto, Physics A. B., Stanford, 1904. Calland, Dean Stanley, Springfield, Mo., Geol. and Min. B. S., Beloit College, 1903. Carter, Luke Berne, Titusville, Pa., Geol. and Min. A. B., Yale University, 1901. Chappel, Halbert William, Stanford University, Physiology A. B., Stanford, 1901 ; LL. B., 1903. Clark, George Albert, Yankton, S. Dak., Physics Ph. B., Hillsdale College, 1887. Clark, William Otterbein, Yale, III., Geol. and lin. A. B., Union Christian College, 1899; A. B., Stanford, 1906. Cone, Elizabeth Hiett, Palo Alto, English A. B., Stanford, 1901. 2,2 Clevenger, Galen Howell, Palo Alto, B. S., South Dakota School Mines, 1901 A. ] I., Columbia University, 1903. Cook, Jessie Loring. San Jose, A. B., Stanford, 1902. Cowan, John Francis, Los Angeles, A. B., Stanford, 1902. Crandall, Esther, Palo Alto, A. B., Stanford, 1903 ; A. M., 1905. Crawford, William Elmer, Cupertino, A. B., Stanford, 1906. Curtis, Kenneth Livermore, Stanford University, B. S., University of Colorado, 1901. Daniels, Henry Winter. Ousted, Mich., B. S., University of Michigan, 1898; B. S., Adrian College, 1902. Doane, Rennie Wilbur, Pasadena, A. B., Stanford, 1896. Douvart, Helen Rebecca, Friend, Xeb., A. B., University of Nebraska, 1901. Downey, Abner David, Palo Alto, Ph. B., Colorado College, 1900. Dunipace, Joseph Evans, Toledo, O., A. B., Oberlin College, 1905. Dyer, Edwin Francis, Palo Alto, A. B., Indiana University, 1891 ; LL. B., 1892. Firebaugh, Charles Ludwig, Palo Alto, A. B., Stanford, 1904. Fisher, Walter Kenrick, Palo Alto, A. B., Stanford, 1901 ; A. ] I., 1903. Fitzgerald, Fred Finley, Palo Alto, A. B., Stanford, ic)05. Fleisher, Lilian Gertrude, Santa Maria, B. L., University of California, 1904. Gabel, Hermine Hainer, Stanford University, B. S., Iowa State College, 1884. Gamble, George Edwin, Palo Alto, Geol. and Alin. A. B., Stanford, 1905. Gerlach, Andrew Jesse, Los Gatos, Chemistry B. L., University of Pacific, 1906. Geology Stanford Quad 1907 History Physiology Psychology Chemistry Elec. Eng. Chemistry Entomology Latin Education Chemistry History 2. Law Zoology Chemistry Rom. Lang. Education 33 Stanford Gibbons, Oscar, Paso Roblcs, Law Quad A. B., Stanford, 1905. 1907 Gibbs, Harry Drake, San Francisco, Chemistry P). S., Cornell University, 1894. Gibson, Cora Helen, Lakeport, English A. B., Stanford, 1904. Glasscock, William Leon, Nezv Boston, III., History A. B., Indiana University, 1905. Gonsalves, Louis, Mendocino, Law A. B., Stanford, 1905. Gove, George Ross, Palo Alto, Greek A. B., University of Wisconsin, 1904. Green, Lucius Peyton, Mountain Viezv, Law A. B., Stanford, 1905. Greer, Dane Manson, Stanford University, Chemistry A. B., Stanford, 1906. Hammond, Peter Homer, Palo Alto, Latin A. B.. Stanford, 1905. Harkins, William Draper, Missoida, Mont., Chemistry A. B., Stanford, 1900. Haviland, Edwin, Jr., Stanford University, Mathematics B. S., Swarthmore College, 1885; A. M., Cornell University, 1899. Hillebrand, William Arthur, Palo Alto, Elec. Eng . A. B., Cornell University, 1900. Humphrey, Harry Baker, Palo Alto, Botanv B. S., University of Minnesota, 1899. Hussey, Laura Mandana, Los Angeles, English A. B., Wellesley College, 1905. Johnston, Florence Poyas, Los Angeles, English A. B., University of Nashville, 1892. Johnston, John Leslie, Redwood City, Law A. B., Stanford, 1904. JoUyman, Alice, Cupertino, Rom. Lang. A. B., Stanford, 1905. Keiser, Emelie Caroline, San Jose, German A. B., Stanford, 1904; A. M., 1905. Kimball, Ruth Laird, Stanford University, English A. B., Stanford, 1904. 34 Kroeck, Louis Samuel, Sail Jose, B. S., University of Pacific, 1895; A. AI., Stanford, 1897 Lamb, Earl, Sail Jose, A. B., Stanford, 1905. Lanagan, James Francis, Palo Alto, A. B., Stanford, 1900. Lanktree, Aland Houston, Stanford University, A. B., L ' niversity of California, 1902. Leming, Gareld, Ludloiv, Ky., A. B., Ohio Wesleyan University, 1904. Lessey, Beatrice, Sail Francisco, A. B., Stanford, 1905. Lewis, Howard Alilton, Palo Alto, A. B., Stanford, 1904. McCracken, Alary Isabel, Oakland, A. B., Stanford, 1904; A. AL, 1905. McFarland, Olive H., Palo Alto, B. L., Ohio esleyan University, 1893. Alead, Alabel, Greeley, Colo., Romanic Lang B. S., Cornell Utiiversity, 1898. Alills, Charlotte E., Peoria, III, A. B., Ohio Wesleyan Lniversity, 1901 A. B., University of Chicago, 1903. Mitchell, John Pearce, Palo Alto, A. B., Stanford, 1903 ; A. AL, 1904. Monahan, John, Savannah, Ga., A. B., L ' niversity of Georgia, 1903. Moulton, Dudley, Palo Alto, A. B., Stanford, 1903. Murgotten, Francis Clark, San Jose, A. B., Stanford, 1901. Orcutt, Alary Eva, Santa Paula, A. B., University of California, 1902 ; A. AL, Stanford, 1905. Palmer, Walter Curtis, Stockbridge, Mass., A. B., Williams College, 1903. Peck, Clair Leverett, Indianapolis, Ind., B. S., Purdue University, 1904. Phillips, Charles, Palo Alto, J. D., University of Tiibingen, 1902. Physiology Stanford , 1897. Quad Law 1907 Law Drawing Law French Law Entomology Physiology English Chemistry Civil Eng. Entomology Greek Latin Zoology Alech. Eng. German 35 Stanford Pinkham, Alice June. Sail Jose, Greek Quad A. B., Colby College, 1903. 1907 Ranuni, Arthur, Palo Alto, Mathematics A. I ., University of Minnesota, 1892. Rittenhouse, Emmet Cloyd, Santa Cruz, , Law A. B.,, Stanford, 1904. Roehr, Frank, San Jose, Law A. B., Stanford, 1904. Seibert, Donald Kingsland, San Francisco, Law A. B., Stanford, 1905. Shafer, George Daniel, Muncie, Ind., Entomology A. B., Indiana University, 1900. Smith, Charles Piper, Indianapolis, Ind., Zoology B. S., Purdue University, 1903. Smith, Gertrude Mary, Campbell, Greek A. B., Stanford, 1904. Smith, Lilian Rebecca, Campbell, German A. B., Iowa College, 1900. Snyder, Edwin Reagan, San Jose, Education A. B., Stanford, 1905. Spaulding, Alilo Herrick, Palo Alto, Zoology A. B., Stanford, 1903. Stager, Henry Walter, Palo Alto, Mathematics A. B., Stanford, 1902. Stolz, Mary Rosalie, Redlands, English A. B., Stanford, 1906. Thiriot, George Milton, Santa Clara, English A. B., Stanford, 1905. Thomas, ] Iicajah Anderson, Jr., Ukiah, Law A. B., Stanford, 1904. Thompson, Robert A., Palo Alto, Education A. B., Stanford, 1905. Todd, Clarence E., Menlo Park, French A. B., Fairmount College, 1904. Walker, Richard Washington, Glen Moore, Pa., Education C. E., Lehigh University, 1884. Wing, Wilson Gordon, Corona, Law A. B., Yale University, 1903. Yocum, Eliza Hinchman, Berea, Ky., English A. B., Penn College, 1883; A. M., 1897. 36 Senior Committees Stanford Quad Senior Week Committee 1907 c. A. Beardsley G. V. . IcIXTOSH R. H. Lachmund G. S. Strout A. X. Lewis L. G. Russell C. T. Paixe J. L. D. D. Sales, Chairman ]Maloy Finance Committee C. S. Osgood C. T. Ross W. Y. Wentz, Chairman Program Committee M. A. WiNSLOw R. Kimble J. Xibley J. J. Sheehy, Chairman Farce Committee A. S. Hayes E. V. Henley X. K. Duxx P. C. Edwards E. R. May L. W. Cutler, Chairman Promenade Committee F. Grace J. E. Campbell M. J. Ward L. J. Brawley C. C. FowLE J. L. Choate M. H. Pedlar M. J. Duxx J. D. McGlLVARY C. B. XlMS K. I. HUXTER J. X. ROSEXFELD C. T. Ross E. A. CuNHA, Chairman Plate Committee R. H. Gilbert C. G. Atwood B. Hexzel P. B. Smith R. A. Xaftzger, Chairman Encina Reception Committee M. H. Pedlar J. G. Marks J. V. Berry W. L. Blair X. F. Bradley R. D. Fleming, Chairman B. S. Allen, Class Will E. A. Cuxha, Oration W. H. B. Fowler, Class Historian H. I. Cruzax, Permanent Secretary 37 Stanford Quad 1907 SENIOR CLASS Officers First Semester President R. H. Lachmund Vice-President Miss Edith Mirrieleks Secretary J. G. Marks Treasurer W. Y. Wentz Sergeant-at-Arms . L. W. Cutler Second Semester President D. D. Sales Vice-President Miss Ruby Kimble Secretary R. E. Naftzger Treasurer W. Y. Wentz Sergeant-at-Arms . . . R. H. Lachmund Yell: Rickety! Rackity! Ree! Raw! Rix! Rah! Rah! Stanford! Naughty-six! 38 1 906 Class QuTd° ' ' Ackerman, Irving Charles, San Francisco, Law ° Allen, Ben Shannon, Woodland, History $ A $; 2 2; President Press Club (4) ; Quadrangle Club; English Club; Executive Committee ' 05, ' 06; Associate Edi- tor 1906 Quad; Member President ' s Conference ' 06-07; Editor-in-Chief Daily Palo Alto (4). Alexander, David Clifford, Kansas City, Mo., English Altnow, Geo. G. Seattle, Wash., Philosophy Chaparral ; Sequoia. Ames, Alden, San Francisco, Law A X; Vice-President Tennis Club (3); University Band (2x4) ; University Orchestra (4). Anderson, Robert Van Vleck, Washington, D. C, Eng. and Geol. Assistant Editor D. P. A., (i), (2) ; Associate Editor (2), (3) ; English Club (2), (3), (4), (5); Associate Member Young Men ' s Christian Association (2), (3), (4), (5) ; Elizabethan Carnival (2) ; Knight of the Burning Pestle (3) ; Sword and Sandals (3), (4), (5); Geological Society (3), (4), (5); German Club (5) ; French Club (5) ; Assistant in Geology (5). Balcomb, Mary F., Palo Alto, English Represented the University in the Interstate Prohibition Ora- torical Contest (4), (5); on the winning debating teams be- tween the Prohibition Leagues of Stanford and Berkeley. Barnett, George DeForest, Rochester, Indiana, Chemistry Phi Beta Kappa. Beardsley, Charles Alexander, Campbell, Cal., Law Alternate on Sophomore Debating Team (2) ; Nestoria Lit- erary Society (i), (2); Vice-President (3); President (4) ; Class President (2) ; Vice-President Student Body (4) ; Chairman Auditing Committee (4) ; Senio r Week Committee (4) ; Second Varsity Debating Team (4) ; Phi Beta Kappa (4); President ' s Conference (5); President Republican Club (5). Bell, Harvey Wesley, Healdsburg, Geol. and Mining Quadrangle Club ; Geology Club ; Sigma Sigma ; Ahletic Com- mittee ; Treasurer Class (5) ; Captain Varsity Track Team (5) ; Member Eastern Track Team (4) ; Stanford Records in High and Broad Jumps ; Four Stars in Track. 39 Stanford Rertheau, Rudolf Cesar, San Francisco, Law Quad 2 X ; 4 A $ ; 2 2. Senior Society. 1907 Rerry. Jessie V., Alameda, Chemistry Blair, William Leeper, Rcdlands, Economics President Eiiphronia (5) ; Alternate Intercollegiate Debate (4) ; Stanford-Nevada Debate Team (5) ; Intercollegiate Debate Team (6). Boulvvare, Stella, Palo Alto, French Girls ' Basket Team (3) ; Roble Gymnasium Club (3), (4). Bradley, Nathaniel Forsyeth, Visalia, Law Delta Chi ; Senior Reception Committee ; Cast of ' 06 Farce ; Class Tennis Team (4) ; Nestoria Debating Society; Uni- versity Band (2), (3), (4). Brawley, Lee J., Seattle, Wash., Economics Promenade Committee ; $ A 0. Burkhalter, Margaret, Stanford University, History Campbell, Jesse Eugene, Adin, Law Class Baseball (i), (3); Class President (i); Euphronia (i), (2), (3), (4); Executive Committee (2) ; Junior Promenade Committee (3) ; Member Law Association (2), (3), (4) ; Senior Promenade Committee (4) ; Vice-Presi- dent Euphronia (4) ; Director Encina Club (4) ; Intercol- legiate Finals (4) ; President ' s Conference (5). Carter, Lester L., Stanford University, Civil Eng. Coleman, Earl Hampton, Cupertino, Chemistry Member of Encina Club ; Gymnasium Club. Collom, Roy Edward, Denver, Colo., Geol. and Mining 2 A E ; Geological Society of American Universities. Crandall, Roderic, Palo Alto, Geology Treasurer of Geology Society and Vice-President of Same. Cruzan, Harold Ide, San Francisco, Law Senior Farce Cast (2) ; Class Track Team (i), (2) ; Ben Greet ' s Plays (3) ; Glee Club (4) ; Chairman Football Farce Committee (4) ; Football Farce Cast (4) ; Senior Week Committee (4) ; Chairman Alumni Reunion Com- mittee (4) ; Permanent Class Secretary (4). 40 Cutler, Leland Whitman, Palo Alto, English Stanford Quarterback Intercollegiate Freshman Football Team ( i ) ; Quad Class Baseball Team (2), (3) ; Class President (3) ; Man- 1907 ager University Band (3) ; Leader Band (4) ; English Club (3), (4) ; Sword and Sandals (4) ; Cast Plug Ugly (3) ; Cast Every Man in His Humor (3) ; Cast AH Tangled Up (4) ; Chairman Senior Farce Committee (4) ; Down and Out, September 7, 1906. Cutting, James Arthur, Palo Alto, English Darr, Harvey Emmonds, Neivniati, History Dey, Benjamin Clifford, Portland, Ore., Law K 5 : i A $ ; 2 2; Quadrangle Club ; Press Club ; English Club; Editor-in-Chief Daily Palo Alto; Freshman Debating Team ; Sophomore Debating Team ; Abbott ' s Inn ] Ioot Court; Assistant Editor Alumnus; Assistant Manager Alumnus. Dille, lone Candace, Campbell, Latin A r ; Roble Gymnasium Club ; Vice-President Woman ' s League ; ' 05 Senior Promenade Committee ; $ B K. Downey, A. D., Colorado Springs, Colo., Education Dunn, Nora Kathleen, Ojakland, English English Club ; ' 06 Farce Committee ; ' 06 Promenade Com- mittee ; Phi Beta Kappa ; Cap and Gown. Edwards, Carolyn Z., San Jose, English A I ; English Club (2), (3). (4); Vice-President (3) ; Ex- ecutive Committee (4) ; Play Committee. Every Man in His Humor (3) ; Roble Gymnasium Club (3) ; Vice-Presi- dent of Class (3) ; President of Women ' s League (4). Ellis, Annie Alexander, Pacific Grove, Chemistry Falk, Laura, Eureka, German Featherstone, Gertrude Drusilla. Los Angeles, Latin Co-Editor Woman ' s Edition the Chaparral (3) ; Girls ' Glee Club (4); French Club (5). Finney, Clara Eugenia, Modesto, Mathematics Roble Gymnasium Club (3). (4); Saturday Night De- bating Club; President Basket Ball Squad (4). Fitting, Ralph Ulf, Porland, Ore., Elec. Engineering Band and Orchestra through four years. Fitzgerald, Catherine G., Gilroy, Latin Fleming, Louise Kate, San Jose, English 41 Stanford Fletcher, Arthur Ransford, Palo Alto, English Quad Foster, Mabel Gertrude, San Diego, Latin 1907 Fowler, William Henry Begbie, San Francisco, Economics Encina Club (i), (2), (3), (4); Secretary (2); Sigma Sigma (3), (4) ; Quadrangle Club (3), (4) ; Editor-in- Chief Daily Palo Alto, Vol. XXVI. (3) ; Associate Editor 1906 Quad, Vol. XII (3) ; Correspondent San Francisco Chronicle (2), (3), (4); Press Club (i), (2) ; Vice-Presi- dent (3); President (4); English Club (i); Executive Committee (2) ;. Secretary-Treasurer (4) ; President (4) ; Executive Committee Associated Students (2), (4) ; Chair- man 1906 Plug Ugly Committee ; Senior Ball Committee ; Senior Class Historian ; Representative of 1906 to Receive Remains of Mrs. Stanford in San Francisco (3) ; Memorial Flower Committee (4); Social Service Club; Governor Stanford University Interscholastic Athletic Association. Frizzell, Porter Tayler, Stanford University, Chemistry Varsity Football 1905. Gabel, Mrs. Hermine Hainer, Palo Alto, . Education B. S. Iowa State College 1884. Gamble, James Lander, Palo Alto, Physiology $ A (S) ; Class l )aseball Team ; Physiology Club ; Class Tennis Team. Greer, Dane M., Fort Smith, Ark., Chemical Eng. Hadley, Clyde Musgrave, Belliiii:;ham, Wash., Law K 2 ; I A $ ; Press Club ; Hammer and Cofifin Society ; Daily Palo Alto (2), (3) ; Manager Chaparral (4) ; Senior Ball Committee (4). Hainer, Julia, Lincoln, Neh., German Hall, Anna Gertrude, Palo Alto, ■English English Club (4), (5) ; Staff of Woman ' s Chaparral (4) ; Sequoia Staff (5). Halsey, Edna Gerardine, Santa Cm::, Latin Henry, Gertrude May, Monrovia, English 42 Hayes. Alice Sedonie, Denver, Colo., German n B 4 ; English Club (3), (4) ; Election Committee (4), Art Editor 06 Quad (3) ; Junior Farce Committee (3) ; Senior Farce Committee (4) ; Cast of Trick for a Trophy (i) ; Man from Missouri (2) ; Patience (2) ; Hamlet (3) ; Costume Committee, Two Gentlemen of erona (4) ; Woman ' s Edition Chaparral (3) ; Cap and Gown (4) ; Football Show Committee (3) ; Show Committee (4) ; T K (3), (4). Hay ward, Emma, San Carlos, Economics Basket Ball Team (i), (2), (3); Tennis Squad (i), (2), (3) (4) I lanager (4) ; Roble Gymnasium Club (2), (3) ; Director Woman ' s Athletic Association (3) ; Secretary- Treasurer (4) ; Secretary of Class (3) ; Football Play Com- mittee (4) ; Vice-President Students ' Guild (4) ; Chairman Management Committee (4) ; Cap and Gown (4)., Hay ward. Jeannette May, Los Angeles, Drawing Girls ' Glee Club (i), (2); Spanish Club (i), (2), (3); Art Editor ' 05 Quad; Ladies Chaparral (2), (3) ; Alem- ber English Club (3), (4) ; Ladies ' Edition Daily Palo Alto (4). Henzel. Bertha, San Francisco, German K K r. Hiller, Rachel Rose. MiddleHeld Road, Latin Phi Beta Kappa. Hackett, Xeena Helen, Los Angeles, Latin Phi Beta Kappa. Hunter. Katherine Isabel. Fullcrton, Greek Hyatt. Shirley. Riverside, Physics Roble Club Director (2) ; President (4) ; Basket Ball Team (i), (2), (3), (4); Executive Committee Woman ' s Ath- letic Association (3) ; Social Service Club (4) ; Woman ' s League Treasurer (4). Jackson. Edward Royle, Redding, Law Kimble, Ruby, Los Angeles, History Vice-President of 1906 Senior Class ; Member of Senior Program Committee ; Member of Senior Ball Committee ; K K r. Stanford Quad 1907 43 Stanford Lachniiind. Ralph Henry. Clinton, la., Law Quad A 4 ; I A 4 ; 2 2 ; Quadrangle Club ; President Senior Class 1907 (1); Leader Glee Club (4); Glee Club Soloist (2), (3), (4) ; Student Body Secretary (4) ; Senior Week Commit- tee ; Court of Abbott ' s Inn ; Cast ' 06 Plug Ugly. Lamborn, Bertha T., Palo Alto, Latin Lewis, Ervin Eugene, Palo Alto, Education IVIember of Nestoria ; President of Education Club ; Di- rector of Student Employment Bureau. Lutz, Ralph Haswell, Seattle, Wash., Law A X. Lyman, Chester Laidlaw, San Francisco, Law K 2 Chaparral; English Club ; Encina Club. McDowell, Blanche Blair, Clay Center, Neb., English MacFarland, Olive Hornbrook, Palo Alto, Physiol, and Histol. MacSwain, Elizabeth Annie, San Jose, German Membership German Club ; Roble Club. Marks, J. Glenn, Los Angeles, English Class Secretary ' 06 Senior Year ( i ) ; Substitute Right Half ' 05 ; Varsity Encina Club. May, Ernest R., San Francisco, Law A T A ; 2 2 ; Editor ' 06 Quad; Press Club (3), (4) ; English Club (i), (2), (3), (4); Secretary-Treasurer; Executive Committee; Sword and Sandals (i), (2), (3), (4); Cast of Knight of the Burning Pestle ; Cast of ' 03 Senior Farce (i) ; Cast 05 Junior Farce (2) ; Cast of ' 04 Senior Opera (2) ; Cast of ' 06 Senior Farce (4) ; Cast of Two Gentlemen of Verona (4) ; Combined Musical Clubs (2), (4). Naftzger, Roy Edgar, Stanford University, Economics B 11; $ B K; Chairman 1906 Plate Committee; Class Secretary. Nibley, Joel, Salt Lake City, Utah Law K 2 ; Press Club ; English Club ; Executive Committee ; Freshman Debating Team ; Sophomore Plac. Committee, Junior Farce Committee ; Chaparral Board ; Quad Board ; Senior Program Committee. O ' Brien, Mabel Genevieve, Merced, History Girls ' Mandolin Club (i), (2), (3); President Girls ' Mandolin Club (3) ; Director Roble Club (4). Paine, Charles Treat, Redlands, Entomology 44 Paxton, William Arthur, Riverside, Drawing Stanford Pedlar. ? Iary Hazel, Sail Francisco, English Quad Memorial Floral Committee (4) ; Cap and Gown (4) ; Staff 1907 Daily Palo Alto (2), (3), (4); Editor-in-Chief Women ' s Edition Daily Palo Alto (4) ; English Club (2), (3), (4) ; Vice-President E. C. (4) ; Vice-President Class (2) ; Senior Promenade Committee (4) ; Encina Reception (4) ; Ex- ecutive Committee Women ' s League (3). Perkins, Brigham A., Salt Lake City, Utah, Physics Pollock, Ralph Carleton, Greeley, Colo., Chemistry Reed, Haines Wads worth, Los Angeles, Economics Member Xestoria Literary Society; Member Foil and Mash ; Member Spanish Club. Rosenfeld, James Wendel, Baltimore, Md., Physiology Senior Promenade Committee ; Secretary-Treasurer Com- bined Clubs (3) ; Manager (4) ; Mandolin Club (2), (3), (4)- Sales, Dudley D., Stanford University, Law Captain Baseball Team ' 06; Quadrangle Club; Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Simon, Elizabeth, Santa Rosa, German Sheehy, John Joseph, San Rafael, Economics B II; Press Club; Chaparral Staff; Chairman Senior Pro- gram Committee. Smith, Putnam Busk, Ferndale, Law K2; A$;$BK; Euphronia Literary Society ; Court of Abbott ' s Inn ; Junior Plug Committee ; Senior Plate Com- mittee. Spalding, Jane McCormick, Los Angeles, English K A ; Secretary-Treasurer Woman ' s Athletic Association (3) ; Roble Gymnasium Club (2), (3) ; English Club (3), (4) ; President Woman ' s Athletic Association (4) ; Cap and Gown. Stanley, Owen Garrett, Ukiali, , Civil Engineering Stillson, Harriet Alice, Oberlin, 0., Germanic Languages Girls ' Glee Club ; Opera Patience ; Volunteer Band ; Chairman Missionary Committee Y. W. C. A. - Stroud, Genevieve, Alhambra, English Sullivan, Elizabeth Teresa, Hollvzvood, Education 45 Stanford Thomson. Jessie Giffen, Stanford University, German Quad German Club; Roble Club. 1907 Toll, Asahel C, San Francisco, Civil Engineering Wentz, Walter Y., San Diego, English • ' ■' .. ' $ B K; Class Treasurer Both Semesters Senior Year; Eng- - ' ■• - lish Club; Sequoia Staff; Chairman Senior Finance Com- mittee; President Social Service Club; President ' s Con- ference ; Cast Senior Farce. Weinmann, Louis Randolph, Alameda, Law ■' •. , A K E ; $ A $ ; Senior Society ; Quadrangle Club ; Press ■' .. .•- Club; English Club; Court of Abbott ' s Inn; Class Baseball Team (i), (2), (3), (4) ; Captain (4) ; Class Track Team (2), (3) ; Assistant Daily Palo Alto (i) ; Associate (2) ; News Editor (3) ; Managing Editor (3) ; Editor-in-Chief {4,} ; Chaparral Staff; Plug Ugly Cast ; Quad Board ; Presi- ident of Class (3) ; Executive Committee (4) ; Chairman Senior Ball Committee. Winslow, Ola Elizabeth, Santa Clara, English A. B., 1906. 46 Junior Class History l ' r was that March night in at Healey ' s that all that talk about Naught-Seven came up, and we got a closer feeling than ever of just about what it means to have belonged to that particular class. There had been a revival of the Prince of Pilsen at the Grand, and somehow seven of us got together afterward around the big table in the Stan- ford room. Stump started it by saying something about Robinson — Do you remember him? I ran across him in town the other day, and it brought back the first fake election any of us ever saw. Sure enough, said Bull reminiscently. He was our first president. I suppose that ' s the day Naught-Seven first saw the light. No sir! Kel ' s hand came down on the table in so significant an excitement that, with something like a freshman thrill, we foresaw what was coming. Naught-Seven came into her own on October seventeenth, and you all know what that date means. That ' s the day Stump, here, captained us straight to glory, and the college began to sit up and take notice. ' By a score of 12 to o, which does not adequately express their com- plete superiority ' — quoted the D. P. A. man. Do you remember the way the papers had it the next morning? Keep it up. Bit. Can you name the team? Kelly, True, Slianer, Molfino, Stephenson — remember little red- headed Stephenson ? Played like a streak of fire that day and never came back to do it again — Butterfield, Morrow, Stott, Dole, Brennan, Weller, — then West and Packard came in as subs. And the big game that year, — it was a beastly tie, wasn ' t it? But Bull and Sunny Jim got their S ' s in it, and the college didn ' t expect a bit more of them than it got. There wasn ' t much of anything else that year, was there, said the track man reflectively, unless it was — Track, of course, said Pres. Who won the interclass meet in the spring? And in the big meet you pulled us three points, Mac, and Brick West brought us five. How the dickens do you remember it all. Bit? asked some one in amazement. Did you keep a clipping bureau for Naught-Seven history? 51 1907 ■V!,;v Stanford Sure. Do you want the account for the big game the next year? ' In Quad the best ' — 1907 Wait, we haven ' t got there yet, said Laup. There was something we did first that Sophomore year, and they ' re wearing those red and gray Soph hats back there yet. And another precedent was estabHshed on the twelfth of November, when we got a Lanagan victory over our friends across the bay. Now, Bit. ' In the best football game ever seen on this coast Stanford de- feated the University of California by the score of 18 to o. ' How many Naught-Seven men helped to dedicate Berkeley ' s field? West and Stott and Chalmers and Weller, answered the track man. And still a third precedent, along in January. Wasn ' t ' The Rivals ' the first Sophomore play? Ask Kel, said Pres. He was the shining light that night, — he and Jimmy Ray. You were shining yourself along in there, Pres, retorted the stunt- man. ■Iethinks you captained the team that won the interclass baseball championship in February. Who were the other men on the nine? Chalmers, Stott, Dailey, Kelly, Rhyne, McLean, Salisbury and Burtis, said Pres. And Naught-Seven and Naught-Five won the in- terclass field-meet, and Mac brought us the relay, at least, in the inter- collegiate. What next, asked the varsity man. I can ' t remember that any- thing happened after that. Don ' t you know why? The Sequoia man was speaking. Mrs. Stanford ' s death came on the twenty-eighth, — and a little later we went North and South for vacation. We were silent around the big table for a moment or two, then some- one ventured under his breath, Then our Junior year — Our Junior year — words to conjure with! Reminiscence there was no longer, it was actual living with us now : we were back in a September of 1905, all seven of us, — Juniors again, with the best year of all stretching away before us, and the University at our feet. Our Junior year ! Kel began. Was there anything we didn ' t have? Answer to your names : Varsity captain ? Here, said Bull. And Molfino, Stott, Dole, Chalmers, Slusher — all wore the S that year. WHiat did the papers say that time. Bit? ' Stanford ' s new football field was dedicated yesterday — baptized 52 in cardinal ' , contributed the D. P. A. man promptly. And we ' ll not Stanford forget your yell-leading, Kel, if we live to be a hundred. Quad ' ' Cut it out, said Kel, with the old spread-eagle gesture. ' ' Next — 1907 track captain? Here, said Mac. D. P. A. editor? Here, from Bit. His second semester. And Spurrier and Fitch close seconds. Quad editor? Here, said Bick. And Brennan, manager. Sequoia manager? Here — Pres this time. And captain of the class nine that got the championship again. And Stump and Bull were on that nine. Yes. and they got the All- Pacific eleven, and Stump was chosen varsity captain for the next — ' Hold on. One of us was on his feet, and we leaned forward to catch his words as hands instinctively went out toward our glasses, for he was one who in the old days had been the embodiment of all that Naught-Seven stood for. That ' s as far as we may go, fellows. But first there ' s something I want to say. A roll-call like that means a good deal, — everyone knows we all got our college honors long before they were coming to us because Naught-Seven had the luck and the men, but there ' s something everyone doesn ' t know, — one of the best things Naught-Seven was responsible for. and that wasn ' t a matter of individual honors but of that much-abused but beautiful thing, class spirit. I mean the estabhshment of the right kind of feeling between the Hall and the Row, a thing that started largely with Xaught-Seven, but thank Heaven didn ' t end with her. And now — you all know what our Senior year was like, that ' s a part of us yet, but — there ' s a reason for our being here to-night. Do you know what day this is? March thirtieth? someone questioned, then someone else said softly Junior Day, and we all remembered. Up in the loft the violins were sinking into the notes of Oh ! Heidelberg, dear Heidelberg, thy sons will ne ' er forget — and we gripped the stems hard as the speaker raised his glass above his head. Yes, Junior Day, — seven years ago to-night was the Prom. And because after all that was the best day of the best year we ' ve ever known, — men of Naught-Seven. I call for a drink to — the best class of the best college ! Helen Thobum. 53 Stanford Quad 1907 JUNIOK CLASS Officers First Semester President C. F. Elwell Vice-President . . J. D. Kennedy Secretary Miss Florette Hodgdon Treasurer M. C. Burr Sergeant-at-Arms J. C. Macfarland Second Semester President N. P. Bryan Vice-President J. C. Ray Secretary Miss C. C. Pedlar Treasurer Guy Knupp Sergeant-at-Arms C. F. Elwell Yell: Stanford! Stanford! Zip! Boom! Ah! Natighty-seven! Naughty-seven! Rah! Rah! Rah! 54 Stanford 1907 Adkinson, Laura Ruth, Alvord, J ohn Hartvvell, Ariake, Bunkichi, Bailey, Bertha Colville, Balsbaugh, Mary Alice, Bandini, Ralph, Barbur, LeRoy Wright, Bartruff, Jeannette Eleanor, Bateman, William George, Bates, Callie Hildred, Beard, Ethel Grace, Beattie, William Alfred, Beckwith, Henry Truman, Bee, Charles Everett, Beebee, Ralph Augustus, Beeger, Gertrude Margaret, Behlow, William Wallace, Bell, Rosa Edith, Bellows, Marie Florence, Bennett, Lyman Hakes, Bernard, Floyd Erwin, Bernard, Fred Horton, Beyer, Earl Edward. Beyer, Forrest Baker, Bickel, Karl August. Bille, Anna Matilda, Bittner, Harvey Peter, Blodget, Rush laxwell. Blood, Herbert Theodore, Bodley, Grace lajella. Bogle, Lawrence, Bothwell, Ina Grace, Bowman, Melville Bryant, Boyle, John Lawrence, Branner, Elsie, Brennan, James F., Brooke, Banner R., Brown, Arvin Harrington, French English Zoology German Latin Law Geology and Mining Latin Chemistry German German Economics Chicago, III., Ventura. Oakland, Palo Alto, Palo Alto, Pasadena, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, Salt Lake City, Utali, LaziTCJice, Modesto. Campbell, Proridence, R. ., Geology Mining Cupertino, ] Iechanical Engineering Gridley. Civil Engineering Redzvood City. German Redlands. German Santa Rosa, English Cleveland, O., English Virginia City, Mont., Law Sandusky, N. V.. Psychology Tucson, Arizona, Law Rochester, Ind., Economics Kcndalkillc. Ind., Economics Geneseo, III., English Sp. Palo Alto, English Albuquerque, N. M., German BakersHeld, Law Sp. Denver, Colo., Law San Jose, History Seattle, Wash., Economics Salt Lake City, Utah, French San Jose Electrical Engineering Raton, N. M., Civil Engineering Stanford University, History Palo Alto, Law Portland, Ore., Physiology Los Angeles, Law Stanford Quad 1907 55 Stanford Bryan. Xorris Pinkiicy, Quad Bryant, Claribel, 1907 Bundy, Eudora Beaufort, Burge, Hazel Delle, Burke, Charles Victor, Burr, Myron Carlos, Burtis, Prentis Townsend, Campbell, William Archy, Carpenter, Nelson K., Carpenter, Susan Wilshire, Cassell, John Francis, Center, Inez, Chalfant, Alice Jessie, Chalmers, Alexander Jessiman, Clark, Willis Arthur, Clarke, John Fairfield, Clift, Denison Halley, Close, John Manley, Clover, Katharine, Cole, Ernest Delevan, Cooper, Alice Cecilia, Cory, Edith Marie, Cotton, Claudine, Cox, Albert Brooks, Cox, Katherine, Cozzens, William Lloyd, Crandell, Ethel Mae, Crawford, Perry Orson, Crider, Clay Russell, Crittenden, Franklin Avery, Crow, John Franklin Whitton, Crumby, Elizabeth Julia, Daily, Harry Parker, Davis, Dwight M., Davis, Warren A., Derby, William Flagg, Devendorf, Ada, Dillon, Isaac, Dillon, James Root, Dole, George Ethelbert, Hallhncii, ll I ' d., Sioux City, lozva, Los Aiigclcs, Stockton, Palo Alto, Monrovia, San Francisco, Kcndallvillc, Ind., Escondido, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Lawrence, San .lose. Forest Grove, Ore., Greeley, Colo., Stanford University San Francisco, San Francisco, Alhambra, Santa Ana, Los Angeles, Fresno, San Francisco, Joplin, Mo., Sa)tta Clara, San Jose Rcdlands, Los Angeles, San Jose Cupertino, Hollistcr. Rcdlands, Ft. Smith, Ark., Law German Latin Drawing Zoology Civil Engineering Economics Law Civil Engineering English Law History German Physiology Mechanical Eng. Law History Law Sp. PVench Civil Engineering English German History Electrical Eng. History Geology and Mining Latin Electrical Engineering Economics Law Geology and Mining History Historv Kansas City, Mo., Law Crockett, Electrical Engineering Alameda, Zoology Los Angeles, Botany San Francisco, Physiology San Francisco, Physiology Riverside, Economics 56 Dorn, Grace Beatrice, Coriii)ig, English Stanford Dotten, John Knowles, Riverside, Economics Quad Du Flon, Thaddeus Avery, Plainfield, N. J., English 1907 Duncan, Louise, Portcriille, English Dunne. James Leonard, Pah Alto, Civil Engineering Durand, Wm. Leavenworth, Stanford University, Electrical Eng. Eckstein, Pearle Marie, Norzi ' alk, English Edwards, LeRoy Mallory, Palo Alto, Law Elliott, Agnes, Pasadena, History Elwell, Cyril Frank, Los Angeles, Electrical Engineering Elwood, Roby Theresa, Alhambra, German Engle, Alfred J., Palo Alto, Law Everson, Fred Leroy, Palo Alto, Law Ewing, William Ferdinand, Stanford University, Mathematics Fairfield, Edith May, Palo Alto, German Farnsworth, Louis Dugett, Salt Lake City, Utah, Electrical Eng. Fay, William Stiles, San Diego, Civil Engineering Ferguson, Carl Augustus, Cotton, ■Electrical Engineering Ferguson, Claude, Bakersfield, Chemistry Ferguson, Roy Noble, Cotton, Mining Engineering Fisher, Frank Alma, Salt Lalce City, Utah, Law Fitch, Harold, San Francisco, Law Fitzsimmons, Victor Ross, Sebastopol, Chemistry Forbes, Ruth, Chicago, III., English Fowle, Carolyn Curtis, San Francisco, French Fowler, Richard, San Jose Electrical Engineering Franklin, May, Watsetia. 111., French French, Davida Catherine, San Francisco, History French, Henry Nelson, San Jose Law Gabel, Alice Hermine, Stanford University, German Gandolfo, Mary Elizabeth, San Francisco, Geology Gardner, Dian Rathbun, Orange, Law Gardner, Sue Helen, Washington, D. c, English Gardner, Vera Placida, Orange, Chemistry Gartzmann, Pauline, Long Beach, English Geer, Charles Lester, Campbell, Law Gilmore, Sadie Lois, San Jose, Mathematics Goodspeed, Lillian Mildred, Palo Alto, Latin Grau, Miriam Stedman, San Francisco, Physiology Grinnell, Fordyce, Jr., Pasadena, Entomology 57 Stanford Gudo, Julie Augusta, Quad Haas, Caroline, 1907 de Haas, Jacob Anton, Halsey, Mildred, Hammond, HalHe Wray, Hartzell, Phillip Nicola. Havenner, Franck Roberts, Haynes, Walter, HefFron, Harold J., Henderson, Charles William, Henking, Stella Viola, Hill, Ella Naomi, Hill, Frank Lloyd, Hiller, Rachel Rose, Hoag, Bessie Bell, Hoagland, Dennis Robert, Hodgdon, Emma , Florette, Holman, Mary Persis. Holman, Richard Morris, Hopkins, Ralph Allen, Hopper, Shirley Marie, Hornby, Raymond, Hosford, Ada, Hudson, Robert Henry, Hull, Delia Mae, Ichihashi, Yamato, Inahara, Katsuji, Jackson, Edward Royle, James, Grace Louise, Jarman, Edith Louise, Jenkins, Hubert Oliver, Johnson, Albert Oscar, Johnson, William Samuel, Johnston, Ila Lee, Jones, Kenneth Inskip, Jones, Robert Alton, Jorgensen, Henry Garfield, Jourdin, Willis Wallace, Kawai, Taiyi, Kawara, Masaki, Los Angeles, English San Jose English The Hague, Holland, German Redivood City, German Syracuse, N. ¥., Geology and Min. Palo Alto, Chemistry Baltimore, Md., Mathematics Palo Alto, Electrical Engineering Sp. Los Angeles, Civil Engineering Portland, Ore., Geology and Mining San Diego, French Redlands, History Palo Alto, Law Springfield, 111., Latin Palo Alto, Latin Denver, Colo., Chemistry Sacramento, French Palo Alto, Education Palo Alto, Botany Pasadena, Electrical Engineering Fresno, German Redlands, Chemistry Menomonie, Wis. , Latin JVatsonzille, Law Palo Alto, Latin San Francisco, Economics Tokyo, Japan, Economics Redding, Law Santa Monica, History San Jose History- Stanford University, Zoology Portland, Ore., Civil Eng ineering Sp. Stanford Univers ity. El ec. Eng. Sp. Santa Clara, French Crockett, Law Burlington, Vt., Chemistry Los Gatos, Law San Antonio, Tex., Mech. Eng. Sp. San Francisco, History San Francisco, Electrical Engineering 58 Kearne. Arthur Lindsaj-, Santa Barbara, Economics Stanford Kelle}-, Leigh, Ft. Smith, Ark., Economics Quad Kellogg. Roy Seldon, Pasadena, Chemistry 1907 Kelly, Walter Poundstone, Los Angeles, Law Kennedy, James Derwent, Honolulu. H. I., Economics Kerr, William Horace, Logan, Utah, Law Kilgore, William Roberts, La Junta, Colo., Civil Engineering King, Preston Wallace, San Luis Obispo, Mech. Engineering Knupp, Guy. Portenille, Law Lace}-, Rowland Sherman, San Diego, History Lambert, Elamae, Woodland, English Laumeister, Clarence F., San Francisco, Law Levy, Edmond L., San Mateo, Geo log}- and Mining Lewis, Charles Lux, Alameda, Economics Lipscombe, Maud May, Saratoga, Latin Lord, Wilma Grace, Palo Alto, Zoology Loughborough, William B., San Francisco, English Sp. Lull. Glen W., Los Angeles, Mechanical Engineering Lyman, Georgina. ■Ft. Smith, Ark., English Lyman, Margaret Elizabeth, Yuba City, English Lyons, Willard Everett, Los Angeles, Law Macdonald, William Griffith, Troy, X. Y ., Law McDonnell, Alberta, Tacoma, Wash., Latin Macfarland, John Cobb, Los Angeles, Law Macfarlane, Guy Orear, San Francisco, ] Iech. Engineering McGeorge, Edith, Eureka, German McGovern, Edward Joseph, Palo Alto, Law Sp. McLain, George Baundige, Los Angeles, GeologA and Mining McLean, Herbert Harris. Colton, Civil Engineering McMurphy, James Ira Wilson, Portenille, Zoology, Sp. McXeil, Warren Truett, Tracy, Ph.Asiolog} ' Maloy, John W., San Jose, Law Mansfield, George Curtis, Los Angeles, Law Mathews, Ralph Berkley, San Francisco, Elec. Eng. de Mattos. Augustine Edward, Watsonville, Law Metcalf. Marie Helen, Los Angeles, History Miano, John Norton. San Jose, Elec. Eng. Miller, Edith Frank, Sausalito, French Miller, Iva Myrtle, Santa Ana, German Miller, John Martin, Rcedly, Zoolog} ' 59 Stanford Mitchell, John Shepard, Quad Mitoma, Taizo, 1907 Moise, Clarice Sara, Moise, Hazel Irene, Molfino, Albert Andrew, Moore, Edith Harriet, Moore, Kirk Tonner, Moore, Mary Adaline, Morrow, Ben Stogden, Mott, James Wheaton, Nagel, Alice Emine, Nakayama, Fumiya, Nash, Edward Jay, Nelson, Ina May, Nohara, Shigeroku, Norvell, Louise, Officer, Elizabeth Logan, Ogier, Margaret, Osborne, Edith Helen, Owen, Elsie Dorrance, Packard, Ashley Burdette, Palmer, Jessie Bowen, Patterson, James Druillard, Patterson, Mima Florence, Pearce, Louise, Pedlar, Calla Claire, Pepper, Helen Neville, Pettingill, Tallahatchie, Phelps, John Dudley, Philippi, Beatrice Genevieve, Pier, Earl Harriman, Pierce, Samuel Hatch, Poage, Johanna Lelia, Poison, Anna, Poor, Herbert Emery, Pratt, Robert Risdon, Presley, George Joseph, Price, Jacob Meday, Proctor, Asa Glisson, Proctor, James Norris, Ontario, Oakland, San Francisco, San Francisco, Jackson, A Itadcna, Tucson, Ariz., Pasadena, Portland, Ore., Salem, Ore., Davenport, Iowa, Kyoto, Japan, Palo Alto, Lake Valley, N. M., Kyoto, Japan, Merced, Salt Lake City, Utah, San Jose, Los Angeles, Stockton, Naco, Aris., Palo Alto, Reno, Nev., Los Angeles, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Redlands, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Santa Clara, Palo Alto, Azusa, San Jose, Palo Alto, San Francisco, San Francisco, Palo Alto, Woodland, Ventura, History Elec. Eng. Sp. French Latin Law German Law German Civil Eng. English Mathematics Mecli. Eng. Elec. Eng. Chem istry Botany History English Zoology Drawing History Law German, Sp. Civil Eng. Latin Physiology English Latin History Chemistry English Law Law Sp. Mathematics History Chemical Eng. Mech. Eng. Law Chem. Eng. Civil Eng. Zoology 60 Ramsay, Lilian, Palo Alto, Entomology Stanford Randall, Charles Alfred, Richmond, Mining Eng. Sp. Quad Ray, James Chandler, Stanford Univ., Geol. and Min. 1907 Redman, Frank AL, Fargo, N. D., Elec. Eng. Reed, Inez Whitmore, Junction City, Mathematics Reyburn, Emory Everett, Fresno, Electrical Eng. Sp. Rhyne. Homer, Paso Roblcs, Geol. and Min. Rice, Edward Waldo, Stanford Univ., Chemistry Sp. Richards, Dexter Newell, Gridlcy, Physiology Riddell, Harry Starr, Coronado Beach, Drawing Robertson, Harry, Redzvood City, Mech. Eng. Robinson, Lucy Adeline, Los Angeles, Mathematics Robotham, Edna May, Redlands, French Roller, Jennie Josephine, Palo Alto, Drawing Rosenberg, Leo M., San Francisco, Mining Eng. Rosenfeld, Arthur, Portland, Ore., Physiology Ross, Harry Scott, Pasadena, Chemistry Ross, Lee Thornton, Belmont, History Ross, Perley Ason, Fallbrook, Physics Rossiter, Ernest, Palo Alto, Elec. Eng. Ruggles, Howard Edwin, Ross, Physiology Rule, Orville Rey. Los Angeles, Law Salisbury, Stuart McFarland, Los Angeles, Law Savage, Harry King. Stanford Univ., Civil Eng. Sp. Schwabacher, Samuel Isaac, San Francisco, Chemstry Severy, Hazel Wood, Pasadena, Chemistry Sevier, Florence M., Eureka, Latin Shaner, George Franklin, Los Gatos, Law Sidwell, Wilson, Springville, la.. Law Silent, Chester, Los Angeles, Law Simpson, Walter Irving. MayHeld, Education Sindo, Michitaro, Stanford Univ., Physiology Singletary, Emory Grigsby, San Jose, Civil Eng. Sinnock, Frank Brown, Quincy, III., Civil Eng. Slusher, Dale, Pendleton, Ore., Geol. and Min. Smith, Avis Katharine, San Luis Obisf o, Greek Smith, Harold Fred, Campbell, History Smith, Mildred, Redzvood City, Spanish Smith, Stuart Sawj er, Campbell, Economics Sowles, Lewis William, Salt Lake City, Utah , Elec. Eng. 61 Stanford Spencer, Esther Jean, Quad Spurrier, George Otis, 1907 Squire, Mary Louise, Stadtmiiller, Ellen Smith, Stagner, Charles Elmer, Stallcup, Margery Bruen, Stanley, Leo Leonidas, Starnes, Xaver Brand, Stewart, John Elmer, Stott, Edmund Plowden, Street, Horace Marvin, Stuntz, William Oliver, Suits, Charlotte Belle, Swayne, Warren Hasting, Taft, Harris Welch, Taylor, Alfred Loomis, Taylor, Nain, Thayer, Jessie Shirlaw, Thoburn, Helen, Thomas, Halbert Ray, Thompson, Estelle, Thompson, John Hamer, Thompson, Seth Blaine, Thomson, Hugh Leslie, Topp, Roger, Tucker, William Henry, Turner, Maude Elizabeth, Vail, Stanley Marshall, Ward, John McCartney, Ward, Milola Joy, Ward, Wendell William, Wassman, Max, Jr., Wathey, Ralph Lockwood, Weaver, Gertrude Benjamin, Webber, Burpee Oglivee, Weitbrecht, Susan Greene, W ilhelm, Frederick S., Wilhelm, Victor H., Willoughby, Pearl Vivian, Wilson, William Webster, Los Aii}iclcs, Paso Roblcs, Visalia, Sail Francisco, Wheatland, Tacoma, Wash., San Miguel, Ashevillc, N. C, Parkzille, Mo., Portland, Ore., Sonora, Palo Alto, Palo Alto, Alameda, Santa Monica, Irwin, Pa., San Diego, San Francisco, Palo Alto, Los Angeles, San Jose, San Jose, Butte, Mont., Burlington, Vt., Stanford Univ., San Jose, Talma ge, San Francisco, San Diego, Portland, Ore., Los Angeles, San Jose, Palo Alto, Palo Alto, Santa Cruz, St. Paul, Minn. Portland. Ore., Portland, Ore., Palo Alto, Los Angeles, Latin Economics Physiology Physiology Physiology Law Physiology Geol. and Min. Law Law Law Botany English Law Law Chemistry English Latin German Elec. Eng. Drawing Entomology Law Chemistry Mech. Eng. Law Latin Economics Law Botany History Law Economics Psychology Civil Eng. History Law Geol. and Min. History Elec. Eng. Sp.. 62 Winslow, Mercelia Anna, San Jacinto, Drawing Stanford Woods, Robert S., Los Angeles, Elec. Eng. Quad Yantis, Frances A., Lezuiston, Idaho, History 1907 Yoder, Noah S., Palo Alto, English Yorke, Edwina, Sacramento, English Young, William Thomas, Ft. Jones, Physiology Zschokke, Irma Ju lia. Palo Alto, Economics Zimmerman, Fred, Portland, Ore., Economics w= 63 Stanford Quad 1907 Officers First Semester President J. H. Bell Vice-President R. E. Hodge Secretary Miss H. Pugh Treasurer F. R. Mugler Sergeant-at-Arms R. F. Myers Second Semester President E. N. Smith Vice-President S. B. Ross Secretary • Miss Margaret Post Treasurer C. B. Nordhoff Sergeant-at-Arms • • ' • . J. H. Bell Yell: Rah! Hoo! Rah! Hon! L! S! J! U! Naughty-eight! A ' aughty-eight! Stanford ! 64 IFIRIEISIHINIAINI iClLlAlgJi Stanford Quad 1907 Officers First Semester President G. F. Morgan Vice-President J- F. Peiper Secretary Miss G. Strickland Treasurer . . •. E. N. Bush Sergeant-at-Arms F. J. Tarney Second Semester President C. E. Xaylor Vice-President C. A. Waymann Secretary Miss Geraldine Strickland Treasurer ■F. H. Wyatt Sergeant-at-Arms G. F. Morgan Yell: Naughty-nine I Rah! Rah! Naughty-nine. Rah! Rah! Naughty-nine! Naughty-nine! Stanford! 65 ■Tfi ii ' : t :,i -.5; !? Zeta Psi 1 Lasuen Street Phi Delta Theta 6 Lasuen Street Phi Kappa Psi Palo Alto Phi Gamma Delta 18 Alvarado Row Sigma Xu 15 Alvarado Row Sigma Chi 10 Lasuen Street Sigma Alpha Epsilon 6 Salvatierra Street Delta Tau Delta 7 Lasuen Street Beta Theta Pi 11 Lasuen Street Chi Psi 12 Salvatierra Street Kappa Alpha 11 Lasuen Street Delta Upsilon 8 Salvatierra Street Kappa Sigma 12A Lasuen Street Delta Kappa Epsilon 18 Lasuen Street Theta Delta Chi 17 Alvarado Row Acacia 4 Salvatierra Street Phi Delta Phi (legal) Sigma Sigma (local) Sigma Xi (scientific) Phi Beta Kappa Kappa Alpha Theta 15 Lasuen Street Kappa Kappa Gamma 12 Lasuen Street Pi Beta Phi 17 Salvatierra Street Delta Gamma 8 Lasuen Street Alpha Phi 17 Lasuen Street Gamma Phi Beta 1 Alvarado Row Pan-Hellenic Association of Women Stanford Quad 1907 67 Stanford Quad 1907 Zeta Psi Mu Chapter, Established October 5, 1891 Frater in Facultate John Maxson Stillman Fratres in Universitate Post Graduate Harry Hunt Atkinson, A.B. 1906 Charles Brewster Nims Ross Henry Rook Hugh Park, Jr. Thaddeus a. V. Du Flon Edgar Stillman 1907 Edmund Plower Stott George Brundage McLain 1908 Gustav Reeve Gartzmann Eugene Watson Rockey John Cobb Macfarland Arvin Harrington Brown LORELL LaNGSTROTH Francis Blackburn Langstroth Joseph David Bernard 1909 Arthur A ins worth Phillip Royal Johnson John Kennedy Branner William Robert Ellis Joe Edson Henry John Raymond Holman Stephen Norris Sage 68 Zeta Psi ' ' ' Quad Founded at New York, June 1, 1847 1907 Chapter Roll Phi, New York University Beta, University of Virginia Zeta, Williams College Psi, Cornell University Delta, Rutgers College Iota, University of California Sigma, University of Pennsylvania Theta Xi, University of Toronto Chi, Colby College Alpha Psi, McGill University Epsilon, Brown University Nu, Case School of Applied Sciences Kappa, Tufts College Eta, Yale University Tau, Lafayette College Mu, Leland Stanford Jr. University Upsilon, University of North Carolina Alpha Beta, University of Minnesota Xi, University of Michigan Lambda, Bowdoin College Gamma, Syracuse University Alumni Associations Northwestern Association of Zeta Psi, Chicago, 111. Capital City Association of Zeta Psi, Washington, D. C. Zeta Psi Association, Cleveland, Ohio Zeta Psi Club, New York City, N. Y. Metropolitan Chapter of Zeta Psi, Philadelphia, Pa. New England Chapter of Zeta Psi, Boston, Mass. Pacific Association of Zeta Psi, San Francisco, Cal. Stanford Quad 1907 Phi Delta Theta California Beta Chapter, Established October 22, 1891. Fratres in Facultate Leander Miller Hoskins, Al.S., C. E. Vernon Lyman Kellogg, M.S., Ph.D. Ellwood p. Cubberly, A.M., Ph.D. EmvARU Curtis Franklin, M.S., Ph.D. Harold Heath, M.S., Ph.D. Halcott Cadwalader Mareno, Ph.D. W. F. Durand, Ph.D. John Ezra McDowell, A.B. Fratres in Universitate Graduate Scott Hendricks, A.B. George Ashmun Hodge Lawrence Bogle Hugh Leslie Thomson James Lauder Gamble William Wallace Behlow Earl Edward Ben lr William Leavenworth Durand Leigh Kelley Ale.xander Jesseman Chalmers Clarkson Beem Bradford William Chester McDuffie 1906 1907 1909 George Edwin Gamble, A.B. George De Forest Barnett Lee John Brawley Noel Swane Burge Alfred Bingham Swinerton Forrest Baker Beyer Harold Johnson Heffron Preston Wallace King Harry Robertson William Denison Spalding Horton Thompson Dennis Tod Ford, Jr. Herbert Arthur Stowe 70 Phi Delta Theta Founded at Miami University, Decembe r 26. 1848 Chapter Roll Stanford Quad 1907 Alpha Province Xew York Epsilon, Syracuse University Pennsylvania Alpha, Lafayette College Pennsylvania Beta, Pennsylvania College Penn. Gamma, Washington and Jefferson College Pennsylvania Delta, Allegheny College Pennsylvania Epsilon, Dickinson College Pennsylvania Beta, University of Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Eta, Lehigh University Pennsylvania Theta, Pennsylvania State College Quebec Alpha, McGill University Maine Alpha, Colby College New Hampshire Alpha, Dartmouth College ' ermont Alpha, L ' niversity of Vermont Massachusetts Alpha, Williams College Massachusetts Beta, Amherst College Rhode Island Alpha, Brown University New York Alpha, Cornell L ' niversity New York Beta, L ' nion University New York Delta, Columbia Universitv Beta Virginia Beta, L ' niversity of Virginia ' irginia Gamma, Randolph-Macon College Virginia Zeta, Washington and Lee University Gamma Province Kentucky Alpha-Delta, Central University Tennessee Alpha, Vanderbilt University iventucky Epsilon, Kentucky State College Tennessee Beta, L ' niversity of the South Delta Province Ohio Alpha, Miami University Ohio Eta, Case School of Applied Science Ohio Beta, Ohio-Wesleyan L ' niversity Ohio Theta. L ' niversity of Cincinnati Province North Carolina Carolina Beta, Universitv of North Ohio Gamma, Ohio L ' niversity Ohio Zeta, Ohio State L ' niversity Indiana Alpha, Indiana L niversit ' - Indiana Beta, Wabash College Indiana Gamma, Butler College Indiana Delta, Franklin College Michigan Alpha. L ' niversity of Michigan Epsilon Province Indiana Epsilon. Hanover College Indiana Zeta. DePauw L ' niversity Indiana Theta. Purdue University Zeta Province Illinois Alpha, Northwestern L ' niversity Illinois Beta, L ' niversity of Chicago Illinois Delta, Knox College Illinois Zeta, Lombard College Illinois Eta, L ' niversity of Illinois Wisconsin Alpha, University of Wisconsin Minnesota Alpha, University of Minnesota Iowa Alpha, Iowa Wesleyan Eta Georgia Alpha, University of Georgia Oeorgia Beta, Emory College Georgia Gamma, Mercer L ' niversity Iowa Beta, L ' niversity of Iowa Missouri Alpha, L ' niversity of Missouri Missouri Beta, Westminster College Missouri Gamma. Washington University Kansas Alpha, University of Kansas Nebraska Alpha, University of Nebraska Colorado Alpha, L ' niversity of Colorado Province Cieorgia Delta, (ieorgia School of Technology Alabama Alpha, L ' niversity of Alabama Alabama Beta, Alabama Polytechnic Institute Theta Province Mississippi Alpha, L ' niversity of Mississippi Texas Beta, L ' niversity of Texas Louisiana Alpha. Tulane University of Louisiana Texas Gamma. Southwestern University Iota Province California Alpha. L niversity of California California Beta. Leland Stanford Jr. L ' niversity Kappa Province Washington Alpha, L ' niversity of Washington Alumni Clubs 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. Selma, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Mobile, Ala. New Orleans. La. Cincinnati, Ohio Akron, Ohio Cleveland, Ohio Columbus, Ohio Athens, Ohio Toledo, Ohio Hamilton, Ohio Detroit, Mich. Franklin, Ind. Indianapolis. Ind. Crawfordsville, Ind. Chicago. 111. Galesburg, 111. Bloomington, 111. Peoria. 111. La Crosse, Wis. Milwaukee, Wis. Menasha, Wis. Minneapolis, and St. Paul, Minn. Kansas City, Mo. St. Louis. lo. Omaha, Neb. Denver, Colo. Meridian, Miss. Oklahoma City, O. T. Austin, Texas Salt Lake City, Utah San Francisco, Cal. Los Angeles, Cal. Portland, Ore. Spokane, Wash. Seattle, Wash. Burlington, Vt. Warren, Penn. Lexington, Ky. Sioux City, la. Hutchinson. Kans. 71 Stanford Quad 1907 Phi Kappa Psi California Beta Chapter, Established November 10, 1891 Frater in Facultate Harris Joseph Ryan, M.E. Fratres in Universitate 1906 Samuel Robert Downing John Graham Wood Arthur Adelbert Mathewson 1907 Horace Marvin Street Frank Alma Fisher Newell Stocker Forrest Stanley Marshall Vail Tenny Davis Williams John Nelson Alexander Francis Carillo Tyng DwiGHT Moody Davis James Derwent Kennedy 1908 John Eugene Gallois James Vivian Hart John Bayard Hyde-Smith John Henry Bell 1909 Floyd Arthur Parton James Sheldon Woodbury 72 Phi Kappa Psi Founded at Washington and Jefferson College, 1852 Stanford Quad 1907 Chapter Roll Pennsylvania Alpha, Washington and Jefferson College Pennsylvania Beta, Allegheny College Pennsylvania Gamma, Bucknell Univer- sity Pennsylvania Epsilon, Gettysburg College Pennsylvania Zeta, Dickerson College Pennsylvania Eta, Franklin and Mar- shall College Pennsylvania Theta, Lafayette College Pennsylvania Iota, University of Penn- sylvania Pennsylvania Kappa, Swarthmore Col- lege New York Alpha, Cornell University New York Beta, Syracuse University New 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 Col- lege Virginia Alpha, University of Virginia Virginia Beta, Washington and Lee University California Gamma, U West Virginia Alpha, University of West Virginia . Marvland Alpha, Johns Hopkins Uni- versity Mississippi Alpha, University of Mis- sissippi Tennessee Delta, Vanderbilt University Texas Alpha, University of Texas 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 Illinois Delta, University of Illinois Michigan Alpha, University of Michigan Wisconsin Alpha, Universitv of Wis- consin Wisconsin Gamma, Beloit College Iowa Alpha, University of Iowa Minnesota Beta, University of Minnesota Kansas Alpha. University of Kansas Nebraska Alpha, University of Nebraska California Beta, Leland Stanford Junior University niversitv of California Alumni Associates Philadelphia, Pa. Sunbury, Pa. Baltimore, Md. Newark, N. J. Easton, Pa. Meadville, Pa. Washington, D. C. Pittsburg, Pa. Buffalo, N. Y. Bucyrus, Ohio New York City Springfield, Ohio Anderson, Ind. Cleveland, Ohio Toledo, Ohio Minneapolis, Minn. Indianapolis, Ind. Kansas City, Mo. San Francisco, Cal. Chicago, 111. Portland, Ore. Omaha, Neb. Denver, Colo. Columbus, Ohio Johnston, Pa. Cincinnati, Ohio Seattle, Wash. Lancaster, Pa. Boston, Alass. Salt Lake City, Utah Duluth, Minn. Colors : Pink and Lavender Flower : Sweet Pea Veil: High! High! High! Phi Kappa Psi! Live Ever, Die Never! Phi Kappa Psi! 73 Stanford Quad 1907 Sigma Nu Beta Chi Cliapter, Established Xoveniher 17, 1891. Cr.AiR Lkverett Pfxk Homer Fellows Curran Otto Karl Grau Walter Poundstone Kellv Glen WiLLARi) Lull James Alexander Gibson Walter William Blood Robert Clark Peyton Donald George Heinly Graduates 1906 1907 1908 1909 Hector Cowan McNaught Alfred Aubert Hampson Joseph Hale Hampson George Curtis Mansfield Percy Friars Valentine Horace Sandes Wilson Octavius Weller Morgan Hector Casara Keesling Philip West Dicksox William Sheritt Barkley 74 Sigma Nu Founded at Virginia Military Institute. 1864 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 ] I. College Lambda, Washington and Lee University Mu, University of Georgia Nu, University of Kansas Xi, Emory College Omicron, Bethel College Pi, Lehigh University Rho, Missouri State University Sigma, Vanderbilt University Upsilon, University of Texas Phi, Louisiana 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 Beta Nu, Ohio State University Beta Rho, University of Pennsylvania Beta Sigma, University of Vermont Beta Chi, Stanford University Beta Psi. L niversity of California Beta Tau, North Carolina College of A. and M. Beta Upsilon, Rose Polytechnic Insti- tute of Arts Delta Theta, Lombard University Gamma Gamma, Albion College Gamma Alpha, Georgia School of Tech- no log - Gamma Delta, Stevens Institute Gamma Beta, Northwestern University Gamma Epsilon, Lafayette College Gamma Chi, University of Washington Gamma Zeta, University of Oregon Gamma Eta, Colorado State School of Mines Gamma Lambda. University of Wis- con Gamma Mu, Illinois State University Gamam Nu, University of Michigan Gamma Iota, Kentucky State University Gamma Kappa, Colorado State Uni- versity Gamma Theta, Cornell University Gamam Sigma, Iowa State College Gamma Xi, University of Minnesota Beta Xi, William Jewell College Alumni Associations Dallas, Texas New Orleans, La. Belle Plains, Iowa Brookfield, Wis. New York City, N. Y. Columbus, Ohio Chicago, 111. Shelbyville, Ky. St. Louis, Mo. Seattle, Wash. Colors : Flower : Athens, Ga. i tlanta, Ga. Charlptte, N. C. Bessemer, Ala. Louisville, Ky. Birmingham, Ala. San Francisco, Cal. Kansas City, Mo. Greencastle, Ind. Tacoma, Wash. Stanford Quad 1907 Black, White and Gold White Rose 75 Stanford Quad 1907 Phi Gamma Delta Lambda Sigma Chapter, Established November 30, 1891. Re-established October 24, 1903. Alphonso G. Newcomer William Harold Bradley Karl Al ' gust Bickel Fred Zimmerman Fratres in Facultate Fratres in Universitate 1906 Leon P. Lewis Chilton Hampton 1907 Franklin Avery Crittenden Charles William Henderson William Baldridge Loughborough 1908 Carl Kalani Hedemann Benjamin Franklin Ogden Charles Austin Prevost Charles Edward Clowe Charles Frederick Smyth Louis Reginald Eaton 1909 William Leroy Brooks Frank William Oliver Samuel Wilbur Cooper Floyd Alfred Wildman Virgil Franklin Bellows Edward Cyril Wynne 76 Phi Gamma Delta Founded at Washington and Jefferson, 1848 Stanford Quad 1907 Chapter Roll University of Elaine Massachusetts Institute of Technology- Worcester Brown Dartmouth Amherst Trinity Yale Q)llege of City of Xew York Q)Iumbia New York University Colgate Cornell Union Syracuse Pennsylvania Lafayette Lehigh Johns Hopkins Bucknell Gettysburg State Virginia Washington and Lee Richmond Washington and Jefferson Allegheny Wooster Adelbert Denison Wittenberg Ohio State Ohio Wesleyan Indiana DePauw Hanover Wabash Purdue Tennessee Bethel Alabama Texas Illinois Wesleyan Knox Illinois Michigan Wisconsin Minnesota Chicago William Jewell Missouri Kansas Nebraska California Washington Leland Stanford Jr. Graduate Chapters Lafayette, Ind. Indianapolis, Ind. Kansas City, Mo. Chicago, 111. Seattle, Wash. Denver, Colo. San Francisco, Cal. Chattanooga, Tenn. Brooklyn, N. Y. Albany, N. Y. Lincoln, Neb. Bloomington, 111. New York City Pittsburg, Pa. Toledo, Ohio Cincinnati, Ohio Columbus, Ohio Cleveland, Ohio Philadelphia, Penn. Minneapolis, Minn. Washington, D. C. Davton. Ohio n Stanford Quad 1907 Sigma Chi Alpha Omega Chapter. Established December 19, 1893. Frater in Facultate John Francis Cowan Fratres in Universitate Graduate Student William Lkod Glascock 1906 Carl Franklin Braun George Curtis Singletary Rudolph Caesar Bertheau 1907 Louis Duzzett Farnsvvorth Emory Grigsby Singletary 1908 Thomas Tankerville Bennett 1909 William Dorsey Dalton Frank Alexander Robertson James Tullius Tupper 78 Sigma Chi 1 Founded at Miami University, 1855 Chapter Roll Alpha. Miami University Beta, University of Wooster Gamma, Ohio Wesleyan University Epsilon. George Washington University Zeta. Washington and Lee University Eta. University of Mississippi Theta, Pennsylvania College Kappa. Bucknell University Lambda. Indiana Lniversity Mu. Denison University Xi. De Pauvv L ' niversity Omicron. Dickinson College Rho, Butler College Phi, Lafayette College Chi, Hanover College Psi, L ' niversity of Virginia Omega, Northwestern University Alpha Alpha. Hobart College Alpha Beta, University of California Alpha Gamma, Ohio State University Alpha Epsilon, University of Nebraska Alpha Zeta, Beloit College Alpha Eta, State University of Iowa Alpha Theta. Mas. Inst, of Technologj- Alpha Iota. Illinois Wesleyan University Alpha Lambda, University of Wisconsin Alpha Nu, Universitv of Texas Alpha Xi, L ' niversity of Kansas Alpha Omicron. Tulane University Omega Omega, Univ Alpha Pi. Albion College Alpha Rho, Lehigh L ' niversity Alpha Sigma. University- of 5linnesota Alph a L ' psilon. L ' niversity of Southern California Alpha Phi. Cornell Universitv Alpha Chi, Pennsylvania State College Alpha Psi. Vanderbilt University Alpha Omega, Leland Stanford Jr. Uni- versity Beta Gamma. Colorado College Delta Delta. Purdue L niversity Zeta Zeta. Central University Zeta Psi. L ' niversity of Cincinnati Eta Eta, Dartmouth College Theta Theta, University of Michigan Kappa Kappa. L ' niversity of Illinois Lambda Lambda. Kentucky State College Mu lu. West Virginia University Xu. Xu. Columbia University Xi. Xi. L ' niversitv of the State of Mis- souri Omicron Omicron. L ' niversity of Chicago Rho Rho. University of Maine Tau Tau. Washington L ' niversity Upsilon L ' psilon, University of Wash- ington Phi Phi. L niversitv of Pennsylvania Psi Psi. Syracuse University ersitv of Arkansas Stanford Quad 1907 Alumni Chapters Atlanta Boston Baltimore Chicago Cincinnati Columbus St. Louis Springfield. 111. Detroit Denver Indianapolis Kansas City Cleveland Los Angeles Milwaukee San Francisco Washington. D. C. X ' ashville X ' ew Orleans Xew York Peoria Philadelphia Pittsburg St. Paul-Minneapolis Louisville Toledo Colors : Flower : Light Blue and Gold White Rose 79 Stanford Quad 1907 Sigma Alpha Epsilon California Alpha, Established March 5, 1892. Fratres in Universitate 1906 Roy Edward Collom James Duillard Patterson George Wade McIntosh George Franklin Shaner Daniel Dudley Sales Burris Goudy George R. Gove Roy Viets Meikle 1907 Ben Stogden Morrow Willis Arthur Clark 1908 Amos Newton Cole Walter Augustus Sumner Howard Dearborn Ainsworth Ralph H. Bookmeyer Claudius Raymond Frederick Rodgers Lanagan Frederick Warren Turner 1909 Philip Ries Faymonville Norman Eugene Doan Harry Frederick Brunning Gorham Lane Goodell Eliot Holcomb William Harvey Stark Clarence Micheal Lynn a. g. luchsinger 1 B S fll awn iCin i K, y.faa SJBWH 80 Sigma Alpha Epsilon Chapter Roll Founded at University of Alabama, 1856 Stanford Quad 1907 Maine Alpha, University of Maine Mass. Beta-Upsilon, Boston University Mass. lota-Tau, Massachusetts Institute Technology Mas. 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 Washington City Rho, Washington, D. C. Va. Omicron, University of ' irginia Va. Sigma, Washington and Lee University N. C. Xi, Univer sity 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 Ohio Rho, Cleveland, Ohio Indiana Alpha, Franklin College Indiana Beta, Purdue University Illinois Psi-Omega, Northwestern University Illinois Beta, University of Illinois of Illinois Theta, University of Chicago Minn. Alpha, University of Minnesota Wis. Alphaj University of Wisconsin Kentucky Kappa, Central University Kentucky Iota, Bethel College Kentucky Epsilon, Kentucky State College Tenn. Zeta, Southwestern Presbyterian Uni- versity Tenn. Lambda, Cumberland University Tenn. 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 Missouri Alpha, University of Missouri Missouri Beta, Washington University Neb. Lambda-Pi, University of Nebraska Ark. Alpha-Upsilon, University of Arkansas Kansas Alpha, University of Kansas Iowa Beta, Iowa City, Iowa Iowa Gamma, Ames, Iowa Colorado Chi, University of Colorado Colorado Zeta, Denver University Colorado Lambda, Colorado School of Mines Cal. Alpha. Leland Stanford Jr. University Cal. Beta, L ' niversity of California La. Epsilon, Louisiana State University La. Tau-L ' psilon, Tulane University Miss. Gamma. University of Mississippi Te.xas Rho. L ' niversity of Texas Wilming ton, N. C. Worcester, Mass. Adrian, !Mich. Alliance, O. Americus, Ga. Atlanta, Ga. Augusta, Ga. Birmingham, Ala. Boston, Mass. Chattanooga, Tenn. Chicago, 111. Cincinnati, O. Cleveland, O. Alumni Associations Dayton, O. Denver, Col. Detroit, Mich. Florence, Ala. Indianapolis, Ind. Jackson, Miss. Kansas City, Mo. Lexington, Ky. Knoxville, Tenn. Little Rock, Ark. Louisville, Ky. Los Angeles. Cal. Macon, Ga. Madison, Wis. Milwaukee, Wis. Memphis,, Tenn. New Orleans, La. New York, N. Y. Schenectady, N. Y. Philadelphia, Pa. Pittsburg, Pa. San Francisco, Cal. Savannah, Ga. St. Louis, Mo. Talladega, Ala. Washington, D. C. Washington, Ga Colors : Roval Purple and Old Gold Yell: Phi Alpha Alicazcc! Phi Alpha, Alicacoii! Sigma Alpha, Sigma Alpha! Sigma Alpha Epsilon! 81 Stanford Quad 1907 Delta Tau Delta Beta Rho Chapter, Established August 13, 1893 Fratres in Facultate Ernest Whitney Martin, A. M. Henry Lewis Cannon, Ph. D. Harry Drake Gibbs, A. B., Cornell, ' 94 Fratres in Universitate Graduate 1906 Ernest Raymond May Chester Silent Frederic Horton Bernard Hans Barkan 1907 1908 Myron Morris Stearns John Francis Cassell George Otis Spurrier Ross Wallace Harbaugh Kirke Tonner Moore Walter Hamilton Hill 1909 Joseph Kellogg Hutchinson Arthur Jewell Gowan Thomas Brotherton Griffith Harley Johnson Boyle 82 Delta Tau Delta Founded at Bethany College, 1859 Chapter Roll Southern Division Lambda, Vanderbilt University Beta Xi, Tnlane University Pi, University of Mississippi Gamma Eta, George Washington Uni- Phi, Washington and Lee University versitj- Beta Epsilon. Emory College • Gamma Iota, University of Texas Beta Iota, University of Virginia Beta Theta, University of the South Western Division Stanford Quad 1907 Omicron. University of Iowa Beta Gamma, University of Wisconsin Beta Eta, University of Alinnesota Betta Kappa, University of Colorado Beta Pi, Northwestern University Beta Rho, Leland Stanford Jr. Uni- versity Beta, Ohio Universitv Beta Upsilon, University of Illinois Beta Omega, University of California Gamma Alpha, University of Chicago Gamma Beta, Armour Institute of Tech- nology Gamma Theta, Baker University Beta Tau, University of Nebraska Northern Division Delta, University of Michigan Epsilon, Albion College Zeta, Adelbert College Kappa, Hillsdale College Mu, Ohio Wesleyan University Beta Alpha, Indiana University Chi, Kenyon College Beta Beta, DePauw University Beta Zeta, University of Indianapolis Beta Phi, Ohio State University Beta Psi, Wabash College Gamma Delta, University of West Vir- ginia Eastern Division Alpha, Allegheny College Gamma, Washington and Jefferson Col- lege Rho, Stevens Institute of Technology Uosilon, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Omega, Universitv of Pennsylvania Beta Lambda, Lehigh University Gamma Zeta, Wesleyan University Alumni Chapters Beta Mu, Tufts College Beta Nu. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Beta Omicron, Cornell University Beta Chi, Brown University Gamma Gannna, Columbia University Gamma Epsilon, Dartmouth College Chicago New York Cincinnati San Francisco Milwaukee Philadelphia Indianapolis Atlanta Boston Toledo Twin City St. Louis Cleveland Richmond Pittsburg Detroit Colors : Purple, White and Gold Flower : Pansy Manila, P. I. Jackson New Orleans Washington Los Angeles Yell: Rah! Rah! Delta! Delta Tau Delta! Rah! Rah! Delta Tau. Delta Tau Delta! S3 Stanford Quad 1907 Beta Theta Pi Lambda Sigma Cliapter, Established Ji ly 26, 1894 Fratres in Facultate James Perrin Smith, Ph. D. John Flesher Newsom, Ph. D. Albert Conser Whitaker, Ph. D. Fratres in Universitate 1906 Arch Albert Perrin John Joseph Sheehy Edward Pomeroy Wells Bryant Mathews John Pirnie Davidson Azro Nathaniel Lewis, Jr. Roy Edgar Naftzger George Ethelbert Dole Charles Lux Lewis 1907 Benton A. Eby 1908 Leslie Rowell Gay Charles Bernard Nordhoff Morris Atwell Cadwalader Raymond Howard Moore Roland Tracy Will 1909 Paul Beckwith Davidson Theodore Royer Cadwalader William Truxtun Gregory Harold Wilcox Beard Sanford Ballard Dole Charles Alfred Thorpe S4. Beta Theta Pi Founded at Miami University. 1839 Stanford Quad 1907 Chapter Roll Kappa, Brown University Upsilon. Boston University Beta Eta. University of Maine Beta Iota, Amherst College Alpha Omega, Dartmouth College Mu Epsilon, Wesleyan University Phi Chi, Yale University Beta Sigma, Bowdoin College Beta Gamma, Rutgers College Beta Delta, Cornell University Sigma. Stevens Institute of Technology- Beta Zeta, St. Lawrence University Beta Theta, Colgate University Nu, Union College Alpha Alpha, Columbia University Beta Epsilon, University of Syracuse 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. Davidson College Epsilon, Central University Beta Lambda, Vanderbilt University Beta Omicron, University of Texas Alpha, Miami University Beta Nu, University of Cincinnati Beta, Western Reserve University Beta Kappa, Ohio University Theta, Ohio Wesleyan University Psi, Bethany College Alpha Gamma. Wittenberg College Alpha Eta, Dennison University Alpha Lambda. Wooster University Beta Alpha, Kenyon College Theta Delta, Ohio State L niversity Beta Psi, University of West Virginia Lambda Kappa, Case School of Applied Science Delta, DePauw University Pi, Indiana University Tau, Wabash College Iota, Hanover College Beta Mu, Purdue University Lambda, University of Michigan Alpha Xi, Knox College Chi. Beloit College Alpha Beta, University of Iowa Lambda Rho. University of Chicago Alpha Epsilon, Iowa Wesleyan University Alpha Pi, University of Wisconsin Rho, Northwestern L niversity Beta Pi, University of Minnesota Sigma Rho, L niversity of Illinois Tau Sigma, Iowa State College Alpha Delta, Westminster College Alpha Iota, Washington University Alpha Nu. University of Kansas Alpha Zeta, L niversity of Denver Alpha Tau. University of Nebraska Zeta Phi, L ' niversity of Missouri Beta Tau. University of Colorado Omega. Lniversitv of California Lambda Sigma, Leland Stanford Jr. University Beta Omega, Washington State L niversity Colors : Flower : Pink and Blue The Rose Yell: Phi. Kai, Phi! Beta Theta Pi! Alpha, Omega, Lambda Theta! Beta Theta Pi! ' f° ChiPsi Quad 1907 Alpha Gamma Delta, Established April 24, 1895. Frater in Facultate C01.DERT Searlks, Ph.D. Fratres in Universitate 1906 Walter Edwin Trent Willard Everett Lyons 1907 Eldridge Green Russell Platt Hastings Ralph Bandini William Griffith Macdonald 1908 Everett St. John Dunbar Francis Andrew Curtin John Eldridge Gushing Ernest Nathaniel Smith Charles Perkins Trantum 1909 Clyde Augustus Real Raymond Houston Lyons Fredric Albert Hale Wx rd Waldo Todd 86 Chi Psi 5, ' ° ' Quad Founded at Union College, 1841 1 907 Alpha Roll Pi, Union College Iota, University of Wisconsin Theta, Williams College Rho, Rutgers College Mu, Aliddlebury College Xi, Stevens Institute of Technology Alpha, Wesleyan College Alpha Delta, University of Georgia Phi, Hamilton College Beta Delta, Lehigh University Epsilon, University of Michigan Gamma Delta, Leland Stanford Jr. Chi, Amherst College University Psi, Cornell University Delta Delta, University of California Tau, WofFord College Epsilon Delta, University of Chicago ' . Xu, University of Minnesota Alumni Associations X ' ew York Boston Chicago - Pittsburg Detroit Milwaukee Minneapolis Duluth Schenectady Washington. D. C. Los Angeles Atlanta, Ga. St. Louis Portland, Ore. Des Moines San Francisco Colors : Purple and Gold. Flower: Fleur-de-lis. 87 Stanford Quad 1907 Kappa Alpha Alpha Pi Chapter, Established October 27, 1895. Fratres in Universitate Dewey Harold Miller William Ritchie Charles Elmer Stagner Ralph Lockwood Wathev Cale Clark McQuaid John Paul Dunn John Rothwell Pemberton George Donald Hussey Francis Marshall Smith Julius Robert Parry 1906 1907 1908 1909 John Lawrence Boyle Walter Karl Miller Frank Brown Sinnock William Lewis Harnan Frederick William Dorr Joseph Richard Hickey Dal Millington Lemmon Thomas Lenear Whitehead Harry Ignatius Stafford Vance Edward Skahen Kappa Alpha Stanford Quad Founded at Washington and Lee University, 1865 QO? Active Chapters Alpha, Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Virginia Gamma, University of Georgia Athens. Georgia Delta, Wofford College, Spartanburg, South Carolina Epsilon, Emory College, Oxford, Georgia Zeta, Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, Virginia Eta, Richmond College, Richmond, Virginia Theta, Kentucky State College, Lexington, Kentucky Kappa, Mercer University, Macon, Georgia Lambda, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia Nu, Alabama Polytechnic Institute, Auburn, Alabama Xi, Southwestern University, Georgetown, Texas Omicron, University of Texas, Austin, Texas Pi, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee Sigma, Davidson College, Davidson. North Carolina Upsilon, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina Phi, Southern University, Greensboro, Alabama Chi, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee Psi, Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana Omega, Central University of Kentucky, Danville. Kentucky Alpha Alpha, University of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee Alpha Beta, University of Alabama, University, Alabama Alpha Gamma, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana Alpha Delta, William Jewell College, Liberty, Missouri Alpha Zeta, William and Mary College, Williamsburg, Virginia Alpha Eta, Westminster College, Fulton, Missouri Alpha Theta, Kentucky University, Lexington, Kentucky Alpha Kappa, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri Alpha Lambda, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland Alpha Mu, Millsaps College. Jackson, Mississippi Alpha Nu, The George Washington University, Washington, D. C. Alpha Xi, University of California, Berkeley, California Alpha Omicron, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas Alpha Pi, Leland Stanford Jr. University, Stanford, California. Alpha Rho, University of West Virginia, Morgantown, West Virginia Alpha Sigma, Georgia School of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia Alpha Tau, Hampden-Sidney College, Hampden-Sidney. Virginia Alpha Upsilon, University of Mississippi, University, Mississippi Alpha Phi, Trinity College, Durham, North Carolina Alpha Chi, Kentucky Wesleyan University, Winchester, Kentucky Alpha Omega, N. C. A. M. College, Raleigh, North Carolina Beta Alpha. Missouri School of Mines, Rolla, Missouri Beta Beta, Bethany College. Bethany, West Virginia Beta Gamma, College of Charleston. Charleston. South Carolina Beta Delta, Georgetown College, Georgetown. Kentucky Beta Epsilon, Delaware College, Newark. Delaware Beta Zeta, University of Florida. Gainesville, Florida Beta Eta, L niversity of Oklahoma, Norman. Oklahoma Beta Theta, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri 89 Stanford Quad 1907 Delta Upsilon Stanford Chapter, Established March 13. 1896. Fratres in Facultate David Starr Jordan, LL.D. William Rlssel Dudley, M.S. James Owen Griffin Arthur Bridgman Clark, M. A. John Caspar Branner, LL.D. Geor(;e Archibald Clark, B.L. H. D. Gray, A.B. Melvin Gilbert Dodge, M.A. William Alpha Cooper, A.B. Guido Hugo Marx, M.E. Benjamin Oliver Foster, A.B. Dorsey Alfred Lyon, A.M. John Pearce Mitchell, A.B. Howard Milton Lewis Ernest Griswold Dudley Paul Carrol Edwards Henry Roland Johnson Guy Pierrepont Jones Raymond Hornby James Maxwell Clarke Harry Parker Daily Roy Seldon Kellogg Clover Perkins Harry Scott Ross Fratres in Universitate Post Graduates Charles Ludwig Firebaugh Dane Manson Greer 1906 1907 1908 1909 Harold Bowen Jordan Ralph Henry Lachmund Fulton Lane Robert Breck Moran James Chandler Ray Stuart McFarland Salisbury Dale Slusher Herbert Harris McLean Clarence Luther Severy William Moore Walker Carrol Chauncey Owen Herbert Rowell Stolz Francis Joseph Torney . — m 1. ki 3 CsH rita ■BBl N°7flr ' TT ' .j K ' SlSf Kfvlf 1 E V- H MHHI w_ 9 1 J Hffi |Mi_ M HP HH iM i wk $ S1 HH 90 Delta Upsilon J ° ' Founded at Williams College, 1834 IQO? Chapter Roll Williams, Williams College Union, Union College Hamilton, Hamilton College Amherst, Amherst College Adelbert, Western Reserve University Colby, Colby University Rochester, Rochester University Middlebury, Middlebury College Bowdoin, Bowdoin College Rutgers, Rutgers College Brown, Brown University Colgate, Colgate University New York, University of City of N. Y. Cornell, Cornell University Marietta, Marietta College Syracuse, Syracuse University Michigan, University of Michigan Northwestern, Northwestern University Harvard, Harvard University Wisconsin, University of Wisconsin Lafayette, Lafayette College Columbia, Columbia University Lehigh, Lehigh University Tufts. Tufts College DePauw, DePauw University Pennsylvania, University of Penn. Minnesota, University of Minnesota Technology, Mass. Institute of Tech. Swarthmore, Swarthmore College Stanford, Leland Stanford Jr. Univ. California, University of California McGill, McGill University Nebraska, L niversity of Nebraska Toronto, L niversity of Toronto Chicago, University of Chicago Ohio, Ohio State University 91 Stanford Quad 1907 Kappa Sigma Beta Zeta Chapter, Established May 19, 1899. Frater in Facultate Halbert William Chappel, A.B.. LL.B. Fratres in Universitate Graduate Frank Roehr, ' 04 1906 Benjamin Clifford Dey Clyde Musgrave Hadley Chester Laidlow Lyman Warren Hastings Swayne Kenneth Lucas Fenton Earl Jonathan Hadley Edward Eben Haskell William Koerner. Herbert Philander Bell Frank Lockhart Fetzer Raymond Arthur Gott Joel Nibley Alexander Sherriffs Putnam Busk Smith Alfred Loomis Taylor 1907 1908 1909 Seth Blaine Thompson Francis Douglas Mahone Claude Charles McColloch Ernest John Swift Clarence Reginald Young Frank Jewell Macomber Robert Allen Rattray Roy Cook Witmer 92 Kappa Sigma Founded at University of Virginia, 1867 Chapter Roll Psi, University of Maine Alpha Rho, Bovvdoin College Alpha Lambda, 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 Eta, Columbian University Alpha Epsilon, University of Penn. Alpha Kappa, Cornell University Alpha Phi, Bucknell University Beta Delta, Washington and Jefferson College Beta Iota, Lehigh University Beta Pi. Dickinson College Delta, Davidson College Upsilon, Hampden-Sydney College Zeta, University of Virginia Eta, Randolph-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 Tau, Georgia School of Tech. Beta Eta, Alabama Polytechinc Institute Beta Lambda, Universit- of Georgia Theta, Cumberland LIniversity Kappa, Vanderbilt University Lambda, University of Tennessee Phi, Southwestern Presbyterian Univ. Omega, University of the South Alpha Theta, Southwestern Baptist Uni- versity Beta Nu, Kentucky State College Alpha Upsilon, Millsaps College Gamma, Louisiana State University Gamma Iota, Sy Iota. Southwestern University Sigma, Tulane University . - . Tau, University of Texas ' .• ■Xi, University of Arkansas Alpha Psi, University of Nebraska Alpha Omega, William Jewell College Beta Gamma, Missouri State University Beta Omicron, University of Denver Beta Sigma, Washington 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 University Beta Epsilon, University of Wisconsin Beta Mu, University of Minnesota Beta Rho, University of Iowa Beta Zeta, Leland Stanford Jr. Univ. Beta Xi, University of California Beta Phi, Case School of Applied Science Beta Chi, Missouri School of Klines Beta Psi, University of Washington Gamma Delta, Mass. State College Mu, Washington and Lee University Beta Epsilon, North Carolina Agricul- tural and Mechanical College . Beta Tau, Baker University Gamma Beta, University of Chicago Gamma Alpha, University of Oregon Gamma Theta, University of Idaho Gamma Kappa, University of Oklahoma Gamma Epsilon, Dartmouth College Beta Omega, Colorado College Gamma Ggmnia, Colorado School of Mines Gamma Eta, Harvard University Gamma Zeta, New York University racuse University Alumni Chapters Boston, Mass. Norfolk, Va. Pittsburg, Penn. Indianapolis, Ind. Memphis, Tenn. Louisville, Ky. Los Angeles, Cal. Waco, Texas Yazoo City, Miss. New Orleans, La. Pine Bluff, Ark. San Francisco, Cal Ithaca, N. Y. [ vnchburg, Va. Utah Nashville, Tenn. Milwaukee, Wis. Kansas City, Mo. Durham, N. C. Chattanooga, Ten Colors : Scarlet, Flower : Lilv of Yell: Rah! Rah! Rah! Crescent and Star! Five la! Vive la! Kappa! Sigma! Danville, Va. Atlanta, Ga. New York, N. Y. St. Louis, Mo. Buffalo, N. Y. Concord, N. C. Little Rock, Ark. Washington, D. C. Philadelphia, Pa. Chicago. 111. White and Emerald Gi the Vallev. 93 Ruston. La. Denver, Col. Fort Smith, Ark. Vicksburg, Miss. Portland, Ore. Mobile, Ala. Kingston, N. C. Jackson, Miss. Covington. Tenn. Birmingham. Ala. Stanford Quad 1907 Stanford ' Quad 1907 Delta Kappa Epsilon Sigma Rho Chapter, Estal)lished February 8, 1902. Fratres in Facultate Gkor(;k Clinton Price, Ph.D. Henry Winchester Rolfe, A.M. Frank Mace McFarland, Ph.B. Fratres in Universitate Graduate Luke Schuyler Carter 1906 Louis Randolph Weinmann 1907 Ashley Burdett Packard Prextis Townsend Burtxs Robert Druke Plagemann Charles Holbrook Merrill Thomas Hugh Agnew George Fowler Morell GiRARD Xye Richardson Carlos Eugene Sampson Ro(;er Topp 1908 1909 Harold McCuller Haver Edward Canfield Sterling, H. Newton Alexander Johnson Morgan Orland Adams Le Roy Minturn Halsey Luther Rixford David S. Barmore 94 Delta Kappa Epsilon Founded at Yale, 1844 Chapter Roll Stanford Quad 1907 Phi, Yale University Xi, Colby University Psi, University of Alabama Beta, University of North Carolina Eta, University of Virginia Pi, Dartmouth College Alpha Alpha, Middlebury College Epsilon, Williams College Tau, 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, ] Iiami University Sigma Tau, [Massachusetts Institute of Technology Alpha Phi, University of Toronto Tau Alpha, McGill College Theta, Bovvdoin College Sigma, Amherst College Upsilon, Brown University Chi, University of Mississippi Lambda, Kenyon College Iota, Central University Omicron, University of 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 Delta Pi, University of Illinois Alumni Associations New York Northwestern Pacific Coast Rhode Island Kentucky Northwest Rochester Mississippi Valley Western Michigan Central New York Rocky Mountain Wisconsin Detroit Washington Buffalo Cleveland Eastern New York Connecticut Chattanooga Southern Harvard Indiana Western Massachusetts Central Tennessee Southern California New England Colors : Crimson, Azure and Gold Yell: Rah! Rah. ' Rah! D..K. E.! Rah! Rah! Rah! D. K. E.! Rah! Rah! Rah! D. K. E.! Sigma Rho! 95 Stanford Quad 1907 Theta Delta Chi Eta Deiiteron Charge, Established April 25, 1903. Frater in Facultate Charles David Marx. C.E. Fratres in Universitate 1906 H. W. Chadwick J. Q. Young F. R. Havenner H. T. Beckwith R. M. Ferguson D. E. Wood F. C. Xye H. F. George L. J. Hart C. A. Ferguson 1907 1908 1909 R. A. Hudson W. T. Ogier ' W. W. Edwards W. T. Young J. K. Dotten E. R. Falconer John A. Robertson G. R. Barry R. G. Marshall 96 Theta Delta Chi Founded at Union College, 18-18 Stanford Quad 1907 Chapter Roll Beta, Cornell University Gamma Deuteron, University of Michigan Delta Deuteron, University of California Epsilon, William and Mary College Zeta, Brown University Zeta Deuteron, McGill University Eta, Bowdoin College Eta Deuteron, Leland Stanford Jr. University Iota, Harvard University Iota Deuteron, Williams College Kappa, Tufts College Lambda, Boston University Mu Deuteron, Amherst College Nu Deuteron, Lehigh University Xi, Hobart College Omicron Deuteron, Dartmouth College Pi Deuteron, College of the City of New York Rho Deuteron, Columbia University Sigma Deuteron, University of Wisconsin Tau Deuteron, University of Minnesota Phi, Lafayette College Chi, University of Rochester Chi Deuteron, George Washington University Psi, Hamilton College Colors : Black, White and Blue Flower : Ruby-red Carnation 97 Stanford Quad 1907 Acacia Beth Chapter, Established November 14, 1904 Fratres in Facultate William Fredkrick Durand Jamks Owen Griffin Fratres in Universitate Fred Ordvvay Shutts Rush Maxwell Blod(;et Samuel Hatch Pierce Paul McDonnell Davis Charles Marvin Taylor Arthur Burton Shutts Alexander Macbeth Cuthbertson 19(36 Benjamin Rankin Saunders Gereld Leming 1907 John Hamer Thompson James Root Dillon 1908 Charles Archibald Jones Frank Adolph Herrmann 1909 George Edward Schuele Robert Rowe Wo mack A cacia !f i° ' Quad Founded at University of Michigan, May 27, 19()4 IQO? Chapter Roll Aleph, University of Michigan Beth, Leland Stanford Jr. University Gimniel, University of Kansas Daleth, University of Nebraska He, University of California VVaw, University of Ohio . Za Yin, Dartmouth College Heth, University of Illinois Teth, Harvard University Colors : Black and Gold. 99 Stanford Quad 1907 Phi Delta Phi Miller Chapter, Established April 10, 1897 Fratres in Facultate Nathan Abbott, LL.B. X William Cullen Dennis, LL.B. Charles Ross Lewers, LL.B. A T Leon P. Lewis, Ph.B. 4 r A Allen, B. S. Atkinson, H. H. b ertheau, r. c. Boalt, G. D. Crittenden, F. A. CUNHA, E. A. Dey, B. C. Dunn, J. P. Edwards, L. M. Firebaugh, C. Fisher, F. A . I ' ITCH, H. Galbraith, W. J. Gardiner, D. R. Hadley, C. M. Hampson, a. a. Lachmund, R. H. Fratres in Universitate Lane, E. A. Larnach, a. D. Lewis, A. N. Lewis, H. M. Lyons, W. E. MacFarland, J. C. Maloy, J. L. Mansfield, G. C. Packard, A. B. Presley, G. J. Roehr, F. Sales, D. D. Salisbury, S. M. Smith, P. B. Stott, E. p. Thompson, S. B. Ward, J. W. Weinmann, L. R. lUL) Phi Delta Phi !, ' !- ' ' Quad Chapter Roll °7 1869. Kent, Law Department, University of Michigan. Ann Arbor 1878. Benjamin, Law Department, Illinois Weslejan University, Bloomington 1880. Booth, Northwestern University Law School, Chicago, Illinois 1881. Story, School of Law, Columbia L niversity, Xew York City 1882. Cooley, St. Louis Law School, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri 1883. Pomeroy, Hastings College of Law, San Francisc6, California 1884. Marshall, George Washington University-, Washington, D. C. 1884. Jaj ' , Albany Law School, Union University, Albany. Xew York . ' 1885. Webster, School of Law, Boston University ' , Boston. Massachusetts 1886. Hamilton, Law School of the University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio 1886. Gibson, Department of Law, University of Pennsylvania, Pliiladelphia 1887. Choate, Harvard Law School, Cambridge, Massachusetts 1887. Waite, Yale Law School, Xew Haven, Connecticut 1887. Field, Department of Law, Xew York Universit - 1888. Conkling, School of Law, Cornell University. Ithaca, Xew York 1890. Tiedeman, Law Department. University- of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri 1890. Minor. Law Department, University of Virginia, Charlottsville, Virginia 1891. Dillon, Department of Law, L ' niversity of Minnesota, Minneapolis 1891. Daniels, Buffalo Law School, Buffalo, Xew York 1891. Chase, School of Law, University of Oregon, Portland, Oregon 1891. Harlan, School of Law, University of W isconsin. Madison, Wisconsin 1893. Swan, Lew Department, Ohio State LTniversity, Columbus, Ohio 1893. McClain, Law Department, State University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 1895. Lincoln, College of Law, University of Xebraska, Lincoln, Xebraska 1896. Osgoode, Law School of Upper Canada, Toronto 1896. Fuller, Chicago-Kent College of Law, Chicago, Illinois 1897. liller. Law Department, Leland Stanford Jr. University ' , Palo Alto, Cal. 1897. Green, School of Law, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 1899. Comstock, College of Law, Syracuse Universitj-, Syracuse, Xew York 1899. Dwight, Xew York Law School, 35 Xassati Street, Xew York Citj- 1900. Foster, Law Department. University of Indiana, Bloomington, Indiana 1901. Ranney, Western Reserve Law School, Cleveland, Ohio 1901. Langdell, Law Department, University of Illinois, Champaign, Illinois 1902. Brewer, School of Law. L ' niversity of Denver, Denver, Colorado 1903. Douglas, The University of Chicago. Chicago, Illinois 101 Stanford Quad 1907 (Skull and Snakes) Sigma Sigma H. H. Atkinson, ' 03 C. L. FiREBAUGH, ' 04 P. J. Treat R. C. Bertheau, ' 05 O. K. Grau, ' 05 G. A. Hodge, ' 06 R. H. Lachmund, ' 06 E. R. May, ' 06 W. H. B. Fowler, ' 06 H. P. Daily, ' 07 J. F. Cassell, ' 07 R. Bandini, ' 07 A. J. Chalmers, ' 07 C. F. Laumeister, ' 07 H. R. Wilde, ' 06 K. A. Bickel, 0 ' 7 B. S. Allen, ' 06 A. L. Taylor, ' 06 J. C. Ray, ' 07 B. L. Cosgrove, ' 07 J. D. Kennedy, ' 07 P. C. Edwards, ' 06 H. Fitch, ' 07 W. E. Lyons, ' 06 102 Sigma Xi Officers President George A. jMiller Vice-President E. C. Franklin Recording Secretary Walter K. Fisher Corresponding Secretary A. A. Lawson Treasurer H. C. Moreno Stanford Quad 1907 Stanford Chapter Members J M. Aldrich R. E. Allardice Frank Angell H. F. Blichfeldt J. C. Branner VV. E. Burke D. H. Campbell A. J. Cox E. R. Drew W. R. Dudley W. F. DURAND W. R. EcKART, Jr. J. C. L. Fish W. K. Fisher E. C. Franklin Harold Heath H. B. Humphrey D. S. Jordan V. L. Kellogg A. A. Lawson W. A. AIanning JNIiss L. J. Martin C. D. Marx G. H. Marx G. A. Miller J. P. Mitchell H. C. Moreno J. F. Newsom G. J. Peirce Arthur Ranum A. F. Rogers F. J. Rogers H. J. Ryan J. R. Slonaker J. P. Smith J. O. Snyder E. C. Starks J. M. Stillman R. E. Swain C. B. Wing S. W. Young 103 s ' f Delta Chi Quad ig07 Stanford Chapter, Established May 19, 1905 Frater in Facultate Arthur Martin Cathcart, A.B. Fratres in Universitate Graduates Lucius Pkyton Green, A.B. Emmet Cloyd Rittenhouse, A.B. John Leslie Johnston, A.B. Earl Lamb, A.B. Donald Seibert, A.B. 1906 Alden Ames Ralph Haswell Lutz James Roy Choate Edward Joseph McGovern Harry Lummis Bearing Charles Roy Pierce Frank Swart 1907 William Archy Campbell Samuel Hatch Pierce Thomas Edgar Robinson 1908 Royle a. Carter 104 Delta Chi ' ' Quad Founded at Cornell University, October 13. 1890. IQO? Chapter Roll Cornell, Cornell University X ' evv York, Xevv York University Minnesota, University of Minnesota Michigan, University of Michigan Dickinson. Dickinson University Xorthwestern, Xorthwestern University Chicago-Kent, Chicago-Kent School of Law Buffalo, University of Buffalo Osgoode, Osgoode Hall of Toronto Syracuse, Syracuse University Union, Union University • West Virginia. University of West Vir- ginia Ohio State, Ohio State University New York Law, New York Law School Chicago, University of Chicago Georgetown, Georgetown University Pennsylvania, L niversity of Pennsyl- vania Virginia, University of Virginia Stanford, Leland Stanford Junior Uni- versity Alumni Chapters. New York City, N. Y. Chicago, 111. Buft ' alo. X. Y. 105 Stanford Quad 1907 Phi Beta Kappa Beta of California Chapter President Prof. H. R. Fairclough Vice-Presidents Prof. R. M. Alden Secretary i S ' ' ?.• ilbur I Dr. O. L. Elliott Treasurer Prof. B. O. Foster Members from the Class of 1906 Elected November and April, 1906 George DeForest Barnett Charles Alexander Beardsley Julia Salter Boynton Ione Candace Dille Nora Kathleen Dunn Arthur Ransford Fletcher Mary Thornly Graham Rachel Rose Hiller Neena Helen Hockett Lena L. McNaughten Lulu Marie Menter Roy Edgar Naftzger Alexander Sheriffs Emma Louise Simpson Putnam Busk Smith Walter Yeeling Wentz 106 Stanford Quad 1907 Kappa Alpha Theta Phi Chapter, Established at University of Pacific, April 4, 1888 Transferred to Stanford University, January, 1892 Julia Gilbert, Beta Harriet G. Marx, Iota Addie p. Newsome, Beta jMartha Haven, Phi Pearle Green, Phi LvDiA W. BoDLEY, Alpha Florence Hughes, Beta Elizabeth Hughes, Beta Letitia Patterson, Phi Frances Patterson. Phi Bertha Colt Rolfe, Iota Clelia D. Mosher, Psi Cornelia Stevenson Carolyn Curtis Fowle Georgina Lyman Katharine Clover Mary Caroline Baker Mary Emeline Hutchins Jessie Gillmore Lucy Abbott Souther Sorores in Urbe Elsie Shelley Heath, Phi Marion Browne, Iota Barbara Alden, Phi Edith Basye Price, Alpha Louise Van Uxem Chapel, Phi Minna Stillman, Phi Gertrude Marx, Iota Dora Moody Williams, Phi Elizabeth Hogue, Phi Maida Rossiter, Iota Alice Meyer, Omega Alberta Perry Kelly, Beta Sorores in Universitate 1906 Jane McCormick Spalding Elsie Branner 1907 Ruth Forbes 1908 Mary Thornley Graham Ellen Smith Stadtmuller Karoline Siiliman Hammond 1909 Alice Agnes Hutchins Helen Green Ruth Edna Robertson Kathryn Lee Culver 108 Kappa Alpha Theta Founded at De Pauw University, 1870 Stanford Quad 1907 Chapter Roll Iota, Cornell Universit}- Lambda, University of Vermont Sigma, Toronto University Chi, Syracuse University Alpha Beta, Swarthmore College Alpha Delta, Woman ' s College of Baltimore Alpha Epsilon, Brown University Alpha Zeta, Barnard College Alpha, De Pauw University Beta, Indiana State University Epsilon, Wooster University Eta, Universit} ' of Michigan Mu, Allegheny College Pi, Albion College Alpha Gamma, Ohio State University Alpha Eta, Vanderbilt University Delta, University of Illinois Kappa, University of Kansas Rho, University of Nebraska Tau, Northwestern University Upsilon, University of Minnesota Psi, University of Wisconsin Alpha Theta, University of Texas Phi, Stanford University Omega, University of California Alumnae Associations Gamma, New York City Eta, Burlington, Vermont Nu, Syracuse, N. Y. Alpha, Greencastle, Indiana Epsilon, Columbus, Ohio Zeta, Indianapolis Mu, Cleveland, Ohio Kappa, Pittsburg Lambda, Athens, Ohio Beta, Minneapolis Delta, Chicago Xi, Kansas City Iota, Los Angeles Colors : Black and Gold. Flower: Black and Yello - Pansy 109. Stanford Quad 1907 Kappa Kappa Gamma Beta Eta Chapter, Established June 10, 1892 Sorores in Universitate 1906 Margaret Burkhalter Ruby KembLe Bertha Henzel 1907 Cr.AUDiNE Cotton Edith Cory Hazel Burge 1908 Jessica Wilson Ethel Wallace Anna Lawry Beth Hughson Grace Watson May Cunningham Bertha Shidler Bonnye Anderson Hilda Broderson Jean Henry 1909 MiRL M Harris Evelyn Sherrard Hazel Maddox Carol Larkins 110 Kappa Kappa Gamma l ' Founded at Monmouth College, 1870 1 907 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, DePauw 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, Universitj of Missouri Sigma, University of Nebraska Omega, University of Kansas Beta Mu, University of Colorado Beta Xi, University of Texas Pi, University of California Beta Eta, Leland Stanford Jr. University Beta Omicron, Tulane University Beta Pi, Lhiiversity of Washington Colors : Dark and Light Blue. Flower : Fleur-de-lis. Ill Stanford Quad 1907 Pi Beta Ph 1 California Alpha Chapter. Established September 13, 1893 Sorores in Urbe Francks Rand Smith Effie Scott Franklin Harkiktte Miles Hermine Gabei. Helen B Sutliff Sorores in Universitate 1905 Edna Mary Reeves 1906 Myrtle Leonore Timmons Alice Seuonie Hayes Elizabeth Logan Officer Louise Pearce May Franklin Alice H. Gabel Bonnie Carter Frances Henking 190? 1908 1909 Eugenia Romaine Miller Laura Ruth Adkinson Stella Viola Henking Elamar Lambert Ethel C. Duncan Marie Bellow. Mildred Hadley May Brunton Ruth E. Lewis 112 Pi Beta Phi Founded at Monmouth College, 1867 Alpha Province Stanford Quad 1907 Vermont Alpha, Middlebury College Vermont Beta, University of Vermont Columbia Alpha, Geo. Washington Uni- versity Pennsylvania Alpha Swarthmore Col- lege Pennsylvania Beta. Buchnell Universitj ' Pennsylvania Gamma, Dickinson College Ohio Alpha, Ohio University Ohio Beta, Ohio State University- New York Alpha, Syracuse University New York Beta, Barnard College Massachusetts Alpha, Boston University Maryland Alpha, Woman ' s College of Baltimore Beta Province Illinois Beta, Lombard College Illinois Delta, Knox College Illinois Epsilon, Northwestern Univer- sity Illinois Zeta, University of Illinois Indiana Alpha, Franklin College Indiana Beta, Indiana University Indiana Gamma, University of Indian- apolis Michigan Alpha, Hillsdale College Michigan Beta, University of Michigan Gamma Province Iowa Alpha, Kwa Wesleyan University Iowa Zeta, Iowa State University Iowa Beta, Simpson College Wisconsin Alpha, University of Wiscon- lowa Gamma, Iowa State College sin Missouri Alpha, University of Missouri Delta Province Louisiana Alpha, Newcomb College Kansas Alpha, Kansas University Nebraska Beta, University of Nebraska Texas Alpha, L niversity of Texas Colorado Alpha, University of Colorado Colorado Beta Denver University California Alpha, Leland Stanford Jr. University Boston, Mass. New York Citv Burlington, la. Kansas City, Mo. Syracuse, N. Y. Washington, D. C Philadelphia, Pa. California Beta, University of California Alumnae Associations Columbus, O. Indianapolis, Ind. Chicago, 111. Galesburg, 111. Des Moines, la. St. Louis, Mo. St. Joseph, Mo. Colors : Wine and Silver Blue. Flower : Wine-colored Carnation. Lincoln, Neb. Lawrence, Kan. Boulder, Colo. Baltimore, Md. New Orleans, La. Detroit, Mich. 113 Stanford Quad 1907 Delta Gamma Upsilon Chapter, Established March 6, 1897 Soror in Urbe Alice Windsor Kimball Post Graduate Ruth Laird Kimball 1906 loNE Candace Dille Julia Salter Boynton Jessie Duff McGilvray EuDORA Beauford Bundy Edna Robotham Edla Naomi Hill Edna Lucile Brown Clara Vickers Lucy Elizabeth Howell Mae Browne Marie Gavagan 1907 1908 1909 Mercile Winslow Gertrude B Weaver Susan Wilshire Carpenter Elizabeth Julia Crumby Julia Derby Beatrice Gavagan Genevieve Helen Thornley Elizabeth Hislop Axjrania Ellerbeck Marjorie Jennison 114 Delta Gamma ?, ' ° Quad Founded at the University of Mississippi, 1872 1907 Chapter Roll Alpha, Mount Union College Zeta, Albion College Eta, Buchtel College Kappa, University of Nebraska Psi, Woman ' s College of Baltimore Chi, Cornell University Phi, University of Colorado Tau, University 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 Jr University Beta, University of Washington Alumnae Associations Psi Omicron, Baltimore Omega Alpha, Omaha Kappa Theta, Lincoln Chi Upsilon, New York Colors : Bronze Pink and Blue. Flower: Marechal Niel Rose. 115 Stanford Quad 1907 Alpha Ph 1 Kappa Chapter, Establislied May 20, 1899 Sorores in Urbe Constance Smith Hyde, Beta Mary Ishbel Lockey, Kappa Clara Earle Lanagan, Kappa Sorores in Universitate 1906 Xora Kathleen Dunn Carolyn Z. Edwards Florette Hodgdon Ila Lee Johnston Esther Stuart Stevens Margaret Post Alida Vail Laura Wells 1907 1908 1909 Ethel B. Hall Kathrine Loeser Alice Louise Roedel Davida French Eva Pears all Mabelle Frances Osborn Mercedes Huffman Grace Coolidge Dorothea Macpherson 116 Alpha Phi ?, ° Quad Founded at Syracuse University, 1872 1907 Chapter Roll Alpha, Syracuse University- Beta, Northwestern University Gamma, DePauw University Delta, Cornell University Epsilon, Universit) ' of Minnesota Zeta, Woman ' s College of Baltimore Eta, Boston University- Theta, University of Michigan Iota, University of Wisconsin Kappa, Leland Stanford Jr. University Lambda, University of California Iota, Universit) ' of California Mu, Barnard College Alumnae Associations Chicago Central New York Boston Minnesota New York City Southern Western New York Colors : Bordeaux and Slver Gray. Flowers : Lilv of the Valley and Forget-me-not 117 Stanford Quad 1907 Gamma Phi Beta Mu Cliapter, Established January 9, 1905 Sorores in Universitate 1906 Emma Eulalif Chari.ebois MiLOLA Joy Ward Ruth Hughes Gh-eert 1907 Carolin ' e Benson Helen Thoeurn Pauline Gartzmann Elise Owen 190S Mabel Sabrina Gray Jessica Bird Georgia Mullin Rachel Beard Winifred Gilbert 1909 Florence Forbes Jeanette Cole Edna Earle 118 Gamma Phi Beta ' ' ' ; ' Quad Founded Xovember 11, 1874 1907 Chapter Roll Alpha, Syracuse Universit} ' Eta, University of California Beta, University of Michigan Theta, University of Denver Gamma, University of Wisconsin Iota, Barnard College Delta, Boston College Kappa, University of linnesota Epsilon, Northwestern Lambda, University of Washington Zeta, Woman ' s College of Baltimore Mu. Leland Stanford Jr. University Alumnae Associations Syracuse Boston New York Chicago Milwaukee San Francisco Colors : Mode and Brown. Flower : Carnation. 119 Organizations ' f° Associated Students Quad 9°7 President E. A. Cuhna, ' 06 Vice-President C. A. Beardsley, ' 06 Secretary R. H. Lachmund, ' 06 Treasurer R. W. Barrett, ' 04 Executive Committee tW. H. B. Fowler, ' 06 fL. W. WiENEMANN, ' 06 B. S. Allen, ' 06 H. K. Savage, ' 06 . J. C. Macfarland, ' 07 C. F. Laumeister, ' 07 K. L. Fenton, ' 08 H. L. Horton, ' 08 Resigned. t Appointed to fill vacancy. 122 Stanford Quad 1907 Officers First Semester President . . . W. H. B. Fowler Vice-President . Miss M. L. Timmons Secretary-Treasurer Miss J. S. Boynton Executive Committee First Semester The Officers named above and K. A. BiCKEL Miss A. S. Hayes J. NiBLEY Miss H. M. Patterson Professor R. M. Alden B. S. Allen H. Barkan K. A. BiCKEL H. P. Bittner Miss J. S. Boynton J. F. Cassell D. H. Clift J. E. Gushing L. W. Cutler Miss N. Dunn Miss C. Z. Edwards A. R. Fletcher W. H. B. Fowler Miss R. H. Gilbert Second Semester . ' P. C. Edwards . Miss M. H. Pedlar . . . W. H. B. Fowler Second Semester The Officers named above and J. Nibley Miss C. Z. Edwards K. A. BiCKEL Miss A. S. Hayes E. K. Putnam Miss A. P. Cooper Miss L. J. Culver Miss B. K. Freeman A. J. Newcomer R. M. Alden M. B. Anderson L. E. Bassett Dr. Jordan Members Undergraduates E. J. Hadley Miss M. H. Pedlar Miss A. G. Hall Miss J. M. Spalding Miss A. S. Hayes M. M. Stearns P. C. Edwards Miss H. Thoburn Miss J. Hayward Miss M. B. Timmons Miss G. Henry L. R. Weinmann W. F. Herron Miss S. F. Wynne H. R. Johnson W. Y. Wentz Miss J. Johnson Miss E. M. Robotham Miss B. Jones Miss D. C. French G. Jones Miss C. C. Pedlar C. Lyman J. C. Ray E. R. May Miss A. Crawford E. R. Mirrielees P. B Delano J. Nibley Graduates Miss M. F. Haven 0. P. Morton Miss A. N. Hays Miss E. A. Needles Miss A. W. Kimball A. R. Fletcher Miss R. L. Kimball Faculty V. L. Kellogg E. K. Putnam D. C. Gardner H. W. ROLFE H. D. Gray S. S. Seward H. J. Hall Honorary Mrs. 0. L. Elliott M. I. Lockey K. a. Chandler A. R. Fletcher, Resigned 123 f Sword and Sandals Quad ' 9°7 Officers President R. S Kellog, ' 07 Secretary and Treasurer .• ,. . E. R. May, ' 06 Stage Manager . . . ' . .•. ' . ' P. C. Edwards, ' 06 Warden of Properties . . ' . . . . . . ■. . . J. M. Warde, ' 07 Members H. R. Johnson, ' 04 Hans Burkan, ' 06 D. D. Sales, ' 06 L. W. Cutler, ' 06 J. C. Ray, ' 07 J. E. Stewart, ' 07 F. H. Bernard, ' 07 Honorary Members L. E. Bassett S. S. Seward 124 Press Club ?. ' ' °« Quad Officers President ..._... . . W. H. B. Fowler, ' 06 Vice-President . ' . . . ■. L. R. Weinmann, ' 06 Secretary-Treasurer ' . .• t . . . . J. Nibley, ' 06 Toastmaster . . . ' . . . . E. R. May, ' 06 Members P. J. Treat (Gr.) W. H. B. Fowler, ' 06 B. S. Allen, ' 06 L. R. Weinmann, ' 06 E. R. May, ' 06 J. Nibley, ' 06 P. C. Edwards, ' 06 C. G. Atwood, ' 06 C. M. Hadley, ' 06 K. A. BiCKEL, ' 07 G. O. Spurrier, ' 07 J. F. Cassell, ' 07 H. P. BiTTNER, ' 07 H. Fitch, ' 07 J. J. Sheehy, ' 07 1907 125 Stanford Quad 1907 Quadrangle Club Members Max Farrand Frank Angell A. A. Hampson Benj. C. Dey H. W. Bell W. H. B. Fowler D. D. Sales L. R. Weinmann R. H. Lachmund G. A. Hodge P. C. Edwards E. A. CUNHA B. S. Allen J. N. Stanford 126 Roble Club ! f° ' ' Quad Officers ' 907 First Semester President Shirley Hyatt, ' 06 Treasurer Edith AIcGeorge, W Secretary . Jeannette Morgan, ' 08 Senior Director Helen Sprague, ' 06 Junior Director Ina Nelson, ' 07 Sophomore Director Marguerite Hyatt, ' 08 Freshman Director Hazel Severy, ' 07 Second Semester President Florence Grace, ' 06 Treasurer . . . . . . . Florence Sevier, ' 07 Secretary Myrl Morris, ' 08 Senior Director Mabel O ' Brien, ' 06 Junior Director Ethel Bearu, ' 07 Sophomore Director May Drum, ' 08 Freshman Director Ruth Blodgett, ' 09 127 Stanford Quad 1907 Geological Society of American Universities Officers Stanford Section President R. B. Moran, ' 06 Vice-President E. A. Austin, ' 06 Secretary S. Taber, ' 06 Treasurer R. Crandall, ' 06 Members R. V. Anderson, 06 Vk R. Saunders, ' 06 g. f. zoffman, ' 06 C. B. NiMS, ' 06 H. R. Johnson, ' 06 H. Bell, ' 06 F. Lane, ' 06 Dr. J. C. Branner Dr. J. P. Smfth Prof. A. F. Rogers H. Rhyne, ' 07 Associate Member P. Avery Honorary Members Mr. Olsson-Seffers L. T. Mayreis, ' 06 L. T BER, ' 06 B. Bryan, ' 06 E. A. Austin, ' 06 R. B. Moran, ' 06 R. Crandall, ' 06 R. A. Fuller, ' 06 Mr. G. H. Clevenger Dr. J. F. Newsom Prof. D. A. Lyons 128 ' T?«l5if ■- ' .. f° Encina Club Quad ' 907 Officers First Semester President W. E. Crawford Treasurer ■. . . . J. N. Stanford Secretary J. W. Ward Directors R. D. Fleming, ' 06 P. B. Delano, ' 08 J. N. Stanford, ' 06 Guy Knupp, ' 07 J. W. Ward, ' 07 Joh n Rielly , ' 08 R. B. Borland Moved to Terrace. Borland filled unexpired term. Officers Second Semester President R. D. Fleming Treasurer W. A. Campbell Secretary X. P. Bryan Directors J. E. Campbell, ' 06 C. C. Johnson, ' 08 Geo. Tarbell, ' 06 Chas. Carter, ' 08 W. A. Campbell, ' 07 C. Breer, ' 09 N. P. Bryan, ' 07 C. Coonan, ' 09 130 [(: . i-. ■' .« ri ' r ip 1 Stanford Quad 1907 Stanford Gymnasium Club Officers First Semester . , f P. E. Millar, ' 07 President . ' . . . . . . . H. A. Wyckoff, ' 07 Secretary-Treasurer . . E. V. Henley, ' 06 Second Semester President G. J. Presley, ' 07 Secretary-Treasurer . . C. H. Schmukser, ' 09 Members E. H. Coleman, ' 06 P. E. Millar, ' 07 R. Cree, ' 08 G. J. Presley, ' 07 J. A. Cutting, ' 06 C. H. Schmueser, ' 09 E. V. Henley, ' 06 H. W. Strong, 06 P. W. King, ' 07 H. A. Wyckoff, ' 07 Resigned. 132 Foil and Mask ! ' ' ° ' ' Quad Officers ' ' 907 President J. L. Choate, ' 06 Secretary-Treasurer . . , P. E. Millar, ' 07 Members R. H. Baker. 09 L. BUSTAMENTE, ' 08 H. W. Chappel, 01 J. L. Choate, ' 06 P. B. Delano, 08 W. J. Galbraith, Jr., 06 P. E. Millar, ' 07 R. L. MoTZ, ' 07 F. C. TvNG, ' 09 H. A. Wyckoff, ' 07 133 Stanford Quad 1907 Court of Abbott ' s Inn Officers President Ralph Henry Lachmund Secretary and Treasurer Jeff. L. Maloy Members Ralph Henry Lachmund Jeff. L. Maloy Louis Randolph Weinmann Alfred Aubert Hampson William J. Galbraith LeRoy Mallory Edwards John Cobb Macfarland Ashley Budrett Packard Stuart McFarland Salisbury Arcade Moot Court Officers President Secretary John Leslie Johnston Thomas E. Robinson Members Emmet C. Rittenhouse Donald K. Siebert Charles Roy Pierce Joel Nibley Alexander D. Larnach Dudley D. Sales E. A. Cunha 134 Bench and Bar Moot Court ' 1° ' Quad H. M. Lewis 1907 C. L. FiREBAUGH Frank Roehr M. A. Thomas E. J. MCGOVERN H. H. Atkinson H. M. Strong E. A. Lane Earl Lamb D. R. Gardner R. M. Blodget J. F. Lanagan a Chess Club Officers President . . H. W. Strong, ' 06 Secretary . G. E. Dole, ' 07 Intercollegiate Team H. W. Strong, ' 06 F. E. Ulrich, ' 06 M. M. Stearns, ' 06 G. E. Dole, ' 07 T. T. Bennett, ' 08 L. Newland, ' 08 S. B. Show, ' 09 (Alternate) Members T. T. Bennett, ' 08 L. R. Tower, ' 09 C. L Chandler, ' 08 C. E. Spaulding, ' 06 G. E. Dole, ' 07 M. M. Stearns, ' 06 T. R. W. F. Figg-Hoblyn, ' 08 S. B. Show, ' 09 R. A. Fuller, ' 06 H. W. Strong, ' 06 L. Newland, ' 08 F. E. Ulrich, ' 06 Seventh Annual Intercollegiate Chess Match, April, 1905 (Mechanics ' Institute, San Francisco) Stanford 3y2 California 3 135 ' Y. W. C. A. Quad 1907 President .... M. ry Graham, ' 06 Vice-President Pauline Gartzman, ' 07 Recording Secretary Ina Miller, ' 07 Corresponding Secretary Helen Sprague, ' 06 Treasurer Mary Betz, ' 06 General Secretary Gertrude Smith, ' 04 Cabinet Chairman of Bible Study Committee Pauline Gartzman, 06 Chairman of Mission Study Committee Harriet Wakeman, ' 06 Chairman of Membership Committee Mary Baker, ' 08 Gliairman of Finance Committee Mary Betz, ' 06 Chairman of Devotional Committee Ola Winslow, ' 06 Chairman of Music Committee Marion Osgood, ' 09 Chairman of Poster Committee Sadie Robinson, ' 07 Chairman of Intercollegiate Committee . . . . . . Helen Sprague, ' 06 Chairman of Social Service Committee Ada Devendorf, ' 07 Chairman of Social Committee Elise Owen, ' 07 Advisory Board Mrs. R. L. Green, President Mrs. Mitchell Mrs. O. L. Elliott Mrs. R. E. Swain Mrs. O. M. Johnston Mrs. H. R. Willis Mrs. Fowler Mrs. C. E. Giliskrt Mrs. J. E. Matzke Y. M. C. A. Officers President C. S. Osgood, ' 06 Vice-President CM Hadley, ' 06 Secretary E. G. Sheibley, ' 08 Treasurer . . . S. S. Smith, ' 07 General Secretary H. P . Henderson, ' 06 Cabinet Bible Study Committee C. C. Sanborn, ' 08 Membership C. E. Spaulding, ' 06 Missionarv D. C. Boyd, ' 08 Social . ' W. H. Tucker. ' 07 ' Finance S. S. Smith, ' 07 Advisory Board Prof. R. M. Alden, President Prof. A. T. Murray Prof. L. E. Bassett, Secretary Rev. D. Charles Gardner Dr. D. S. Jordan G. E. Crothers. ' 95 Prof. Max Farrand Dr. O. L. Elliott Hugh A. Moran 136 1907 Senior Society Quad ' ' p. J. Treat Rudolf C. Bertheau Louis R. Weinmann George Hodge Students ' Guild Officers President R. W. Barrett Vice-President Miss Emma Hayward Secretary — First Semester J. U. Stanford Second Semester G. E. Presley Treasurer — First Semester H. E. Savage Second Semester J. X. Stanford G. E. Presley (First Semester) R. E. Austin (Second Semester) Prof. C. H. Gilbert Prof. W. F. Durand Prof. W .F. Snow Standing Committees W. F. Snow. Chairman On Cases R. W. Barrett On Management Miss Emma Hayward, Chairman J. N. Stanford (First Semester) E. A. Austin (Second Semester) W. F. Durand On Ways and Means H. E. Savage (First Semester) Ch.- u v oecunu oeiiiesier; f i C. H. Gilbert J. N. Stanford (Second Semester) ) -nairmen G. E. Presley 137 Stanford Stanfofd AluHini Association Quad ' 9°7 Officers President . . . . ' Dennis Searles, ' 95 I Scott Calhoun, ' 95 Vice-Presidents Chester Griffin Murphy, ' 00, LL.B., ' 03 I Ethel Hilda Foster, ' 04 Secretary-Treasurer . . . . . . Charles Frederick Wright, ' 96, A.M., ' 97 Executive Committee Ray Lyman Wilbur, ' 96, A.M., 97, Chairman Samuel Wilson Collins, ' 95, A.M., ' 96 Thomas Marion Williams, ' 97 Charles Frederick Wright, ' 96, A.M., ' 97 Dennis Searles, ' 95 Social Service Club Organized March 22, 1906 Officers President Walter Y. Wentz, ' 06 Secretary Elsie Branner, ' 07 Treasurer John E. McDowell, ' 00 138 Stanford Quad 1907 Japanese Students ' Association Officers First Semester. 1905-06 Second Semester, 1905-06 Treasurer M. SiNDO, ' 07 F. Nakayama, ' 07 r T. KlMURA, ' 06 Executive Committee ■S. Anju, ' 07 ( Y. Shibamiya, ' 08 ( T. KiMURA, ' 06 I S. Anju, ' 07 C M. SiNDo, ' 07 } F. Nakayama, ' 07 ( T. KOBAYASHI, ' 08 Members T. KiMURA, ' 06 A. HoRi, ' 08 S. Anju, ' 07 Y. Shibamiya, ' 08 B. Ariake, ' 07 T. Watanabe, ' 08 Y. ICHIHASHI, ' 07 K. Yasuda, ' 08 K. Inahara, ' 07 T. Katakura, ' 09 T. Kawai, ' 07 E. Katsumata, ' 09 M. Kawara, ' 07 T. KOBAYASHI, ' 09 T. MiTOMA, 07 Y. Manabe, ' 09 F. Nakayama, ' 07 S. MOTOMURA, ' 09 M. Nohara, ' 07 S. Yamakawa, ' 09 M Sin DO, ' 07 K. YOSHIUA, ' 09 S. Amy a, 08 139 Stanford Quad 1907 Prohibition League Officers President W. O. Stuntz, ' 07 Vice-President P. C Boyd, ' 08 Secretary . Prof A. F. Rogers Treasurer ] Irss M. F. Balcomi? Der Deutsche Verein Von Stanford University Officers President Vice-President Secretarv-Treasurcr . H. Peters . A. J. Cox, Ph.D. ] Iiss E. A. Wright Members Miss M. E. Rawd.an Miss A. M. Bille Miss A. Meyer Miss C. B. Bryant Miss B. Phillippi Miss A. Gap.el Miss Stauff Miss E. G. Beard Miss E. McGeorge Miss H. T. Thompson Miss E. E. Rowe Miss I. M. Miller Mr. J. A. de Haas Mr. Chas. Phillips Mr. Chas. Reining Mr. H. p. Bittner Mr. E. G. Schaupp Mr. R. V. Ander.son Mr. J. W. Smith Mr. J. E. Rubin Honorary Members Dr. and Mrs. K. G. Renutorff Mr. B. Boezinger Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Humphrey Mr. W. A. Cooper Mr. K. L. Curtis 140 Associated Civil Engineers Leland Stanford Jr. University Officers Organized Xovember 15, 1905 President G. S Strout, ' 06 Vice-President P O. Shutts, ' 06 Secretary- ; 1. C. Bl ' rr, ' 07 Treasurer O. G. Stanley, ' 06 Stanford Quad 1907 Executive Committee G. S. Strout, ' 06 M. C. Burr. W F. O. Shutts, ' 06 C. B. Taylor, ' 06 O. G. Stanley, ' 06 C. A. Strong, ' 07 Members F. H. Fowler, ' 05 F. O. Shutts, ' 06 C. AIosER, ' 06 G. S. Strout, ' 06 L. L. Carter, ' 06 A. C. Toll, ' 06 S. MosER, ' 06 O. G. Stanley, 06 H. Brew, ' 06 J. L. Dunne, ' 06 A. M Porter, ' 06 E. C. Smith, ' 06 C. B. Taylor, ' 06 V. R. Garflas, ' 06 M. Edson, ' 06 N. S. BuRGE, ' 06 H. K. Savage, ' 07 H. R. Gardner, ' 07 M C. Burr, ' 07 C. A. Stronc;. ' 07 F. C. Squire, ' 07 R. A. Beebee, ' 07 U. S. Fay, ' 07 H. J. Heffron, ' 07 Honorarv Members Prof. Chas. D. Marx Prof. L. M. Hoskins Prof. Chas. B. Wing 141 Stanford Quad Varsity Glee Club 1907 R. H. Lachmund A. B. Packard Leader Manager First Tenor Irving W. Adams, ' 06 Rush Maxwell Blodget, ' 07 Otto Karl Grau, ' 06 John James Hill, ' 08 Clarence Luther Severy, ' 08 Ernest John Swift, ' 08 Second Tenor Fred Horton Bernard, ' 07 Ashley Bukdett Packard, ' 07 Alexander J. Chalmers, ' 07 Seth Blaine Thompson, ' 07 George Etheldert Dole, ' 07 First Bass Harry Hunt Atkinson, ' 03 Franklin A. Crittenden, 07 Roy Seldon Kellogg, ' 07 l- ' REiiEHic Rodgers Lanagan, ' 08 John Cobd AL cfarland, ' 07 Ernest Rossiter, ' 07 Second Bass Alex. Macbeth Cuthbertson, ' 09 Ralph Henry Lachmund, ' 06 Harold McCuller Haver, ' 08 Hugh Park, Jr., ' 06 Carlos Eugene Sampson, ' 09 F ipjr w r •, ' ' - ' ' %« .£E w- 1 i si i 1 J E„. r ■i eg s 11 P)i 144 Mandolin Club Stanford Quad F. R. Lanagan, ' 08 ..... Leader 1907 J. RosENFELD, ' 06 Maiiager First Mandolins F. R. Lanagan, ' 08 G. Wallace, ' 08 J. RosEXFELD, ' 06 G. R. Gove (Grad.) G. E. Dole, ' 07 Second Mandolins R. H. Moore, ' 08 Carl Ferguson, ' 07 F. W. Dorr, ' 08 Guitars F. B. GouDY, ' 06 A. L. Taylor, ' 07 E. K. SopER. ' 08 S. B. Dole, ' 09 F. A. Wildman, ' 09 Cello L. Langstroth. ' 08 145 s ' ° Girls ' Glee Club Quad 1907 President Lilian Ramsay, ' 07 Treasurer Irma Zschokke, ' 07 Members First Soprano Anna Ellis, ' 06 Alexandra Bradshaw, ' 09 Stella San key, ' 07 Lois Millar, ' 08 Edna Wilson, ' 06 Helen Wilkins, ' 08 Ruth Foster, ' 09 Second Soprano Marion Osgood, ' 09 Jennie Roller, ' 07 Pansy Woods, ' 05 First Alto Grace Dorn, ' 07 Grace Kirkpatrick, ' 06 Second Alto Ellen Pearce, ' 08 Grace Bruckman, ' 04 Irma Zschokke, ' 07 Helen Gardner, ' 07 Lilian Ramsay, ' 07 146 Orchestra | ' ° Leader— First Semester W. A. Clark, ' 07 1907 Second Semester E. G. Sheibly, ' 08 Manager . R. E. Collom, ' 06 First Violins W. A. Clark, 07 E. G. Sheibley, ' 08 R. E. Collom, ' 06 C L. Bradley, ' 08 Second Violins L. S. Levy, ' 08 C. T. Norwood, ' 09 W. L. Jordan D. H. Walker,, ' 09 Flute M. W. Haws, ' 06 Clarinets A. Ames, ' 06 R- U. Fitting, ' 06 Trombone H. H. Fitting, ' 08 Bass M. Wenk, ' 08 Piano H. R. Thomas, ' 07 Cornet H. B. Menardi, ' 08 Traps F. W. Turner, ' 08 147 Stanford Band Quad i- ' CAii 1907 Officers L. W. Cl ' tler, ' 06 Leader Guy Knupp, ' 07 Manager Cornets N. F. Bradley, ' 06 L. W. Cutler, ' 06 R. A. Beebee, ' 07 D. N. Richards, ' 07 F. K. Wyatt, ' 09 Clarinets A. A. Ames, ' 06 R. U. Fitting, ' 06 D. W. BucHAN, ' 09 A. O. Johnson, ' 07 Altos Guy Knupp, ' 07 J. M. Miller, ' 07 G. W. Reyburn, ' 08 Baritones B. E. Jenny, ' 08 Homer Keesling, ' 08 Trombones H. H. Fitting, ' 08 K. A. Miller, ' 06 A. W. Morehouse, ' 08 E. A. Nissen, ' 07 Tubas E. E. Reykurn, ' 08 J. E. Koontz, ' 08 Drums F. W. Turne: , ' 08 L. L. Stanley, ' 07 148 ' Qual ly University igoy By W. H. B. Fowler, ' 06. What should be the policy of the Daily Palo Alto in its relations with the administrative officers of the University? Here is a question that has prob- ably attracted more attention during the past year than ever before in the history of the University. The Faculty Committee on Student Affairs solved the problem in one way when they dismissed Ben. S. Allen, 1906, editor-in- chief of the Daily Palo Alto, from the University for expressing his honest convictions regarding the Encina control plan. Pmt this solution — so generally condeinned, both among the students, the Faculty, and the men of the world outside — had in it very little either of justice or wisdoin. Chairman Green and his committeemen, in their disappointment at the utter collapse of the plan that was doomed to death before it was born, harked back a century or more for their reinedy. When they tried to shut ofif the flood of criticism by dis- missing the editor who gave it voice they made the longest backward step in all their tempestuous career. No man or institution or government ever gained a permanent advantage by attempting to prevent the people over whom they ruled from giving free expression to their thoughts. The right of free speech is guaranteed in the constitution of practically every enlightened coun- try: in America it is the most prized of all our privileges. What is true of a nation at large is true of a university in a smaller degree. While it must of necessity be conducted by its appointed officers, the principles of its govern- ment cannot trample . upon the self-respect of the governed and yet be successful. The Daily Palo Alto has an editorial function, and a very clear one. It has the function of expressing what seems to be the best sentiment on all that concerns the general body of students. The University is here for the student body: it was founded and established for them. The Faculty and the business department are inerely the necessary machinery. The students are the most vitally concerned in all th at is done. Their voice must be heard and heeded by those who control, or the latter must fail in their purpose. Rules and reforms cannot be imposed upon a student body almost unanimous in its opposition, any more than laws can be successfully and permanently im- posed upon an unwilling nation. It is generally safe to say that what is actively opposed by a large majority of the student body has something radi- cally wrong about it. The opinions of that majority must find expression in the columns of the Daily Palo Alto, and the editor of that paper must have an absolutely free hand. There is nothing at all sacred or infallible about university management. The administrative officers make just as many and as 150 serious mistakes as other persons in places of authority. There is no good Stanford reason why these mistakes should not be pointed out — frankly, bluntly. If Quad plans fall to the ground as a consequence, it certainly is because they were 1907 wrongly constructed in the first place. A writer in the 1906 Quad — a pioneer editor of the Daily Palo Alto, who, in his ten years of active life has kept in close touch with the University — in telling the history of the Daily Palo Alto, had this to say: Editorships have given the man holding them an unusually comprehensive insight into the life of the college and an opportunity to help guide the development of the Stan- ford spirit. Probably no other equal number of undergraduates as a group has done more toward moulding Stanford University ' s distinctive college ideals than have the twenty-seven men who have been in editorial control of the Daily Palo Alto. The writer in the Quad might truthfully have added that much of this good work has been accomplished in the face of the opposition of the authori- ties, who have set themselves firmly on the ground that nothing suggested through the medium of the Daily Palo Alto may be acted upon, no matter what the merits of the proposition. Suggestions from such a source are, in the minds of these in power, dictation by the students. It is hardly necessary to comment on this peculiar attitude. Meanwhile, until broader views enlighten the minds of the administrators of the University, or until more liberal men take their places, the Daily Palo Alto will undoubtedly continue to fight for what it regards as the best inter- ests of the men and women who make up the student body. W. H. B. FOWLER, 1906. Note. — The above article was written in February of the present year, when the entire University community was wrought up over the dismissal from college of an editor of the Daily Palo Alto who had used plain language in discussing certain plans of the Student Affairs Committee. Subsequent events and recent developments have shown that the new light has come to the chief administrators of the University, and the consequent reorganiza- tion has resulted in the establishment of ideal relations between the students and the Faculty. This new era is well described in a letter from one of the chief actors in the drama of last spring, just received by me. In the letter occurs this paragraph: Harmony has become so intense in these parts that you can almost feel it. I fear greatly that if present conditions continue college life will be- come an insufferable bore. Already the effect is noticed in the vast increase of travel in the direction of Menlo, for it is ever the tendency of monotony to drive men to drink. This new era of good feeling in the life of Stanford is the result of the refusal of the editors of the Daily Palo Alto to permit their policy to be dictated or dominated by the officers of the University. B. F. November 15, 1906. 151 Stanford Quad 1907 ; m , B ' w l l L V ' ! E l H iM m H Va f f L B - , i ' The Stanford Quad Editor Managers Associate Editors A. B. Packaki) Harold Fitch J. C. Macfarlani) D. H. Clift L. M. Edwards Jamks Ray Vice J. F. Brcnnan, resigned. Karl A. Bickfx j S. M. Salisbury [ S. S. Smith C. F. Laumeister James Dillon Louise Norvell Ruth Thoburn Katherine Clover Helen Osborne 152 The Stanford Sequoia Stanford Quad Vol. XV. 1907 Established December 9, 1891 Editor P. C. Edwards. ' 06 Business Manager G. J. Presley, ' 07 V Associate Editors Edith R. Mirrielees, ' 06 K. A. BiCKEL, W Stella F. Wynne, ' 06 D. H. Clift, ' 07 Assistant Editors W. F. Herron, ' 08 J. E. CrsHiNG, ' 08 M. ] I. Stearns, ' 06 Anna G. Hall, ' 06 W. Y. Wentz. ' 06 153 Stanford Quad 1907 Chaparral Vol. VII. Editor M. Oppenheim, ' 05 Manager CM. Hadi.ey, ' 06 D. H. Clift, ' 07 Dug Ferry, ' 08 J. J. Sheehy, ' 06 E. E. Horowitz, ' 06 G. G. Altnow, ' 06 Chet Lyman, ' 06 I. C. Ackerman, ' 06 L. S. Levy, ' 08 E. J. Hadley, ' 08 ■. J. Nibley, ' 06 M. M. Stearns, ' 06 H. P. BiTTNER, ' 07 L. R. Weinmann, ' 06 F. A. Curtin, ' 08 154 B : ' i: Stanford Quad 1907 The Daily Palo Alto Editors • First Semester — Vol. 27 Editor L. R. Weinmann, ' 06 Business Manager J- A Quelle Managing Editor B. S. Allen, ' 06 News Editor J- F. Cassell, ' 07 Associates H. P. Bittner, ' 07 Miss M. H. Pedlar, ' 06 G. O. Spurrier, ' 07 H. Fitch, ' 07 Assistants J. E. Gushing, ' 08 G. Perkins, ' 08 G. G. McGoLLOCH. ' 08 I. W. Alexander, ' 09 P. B. Delano, ' 08 H. L. Rixford, ' 09 D. E. Wood, ' 08 F. L. Fetzer, ' 09 J. K. Hutchinson, ' 09 Second Semester — Vol. 28 ( B. S. Allen, ' 06 ' ° ' ' ■• j H. P. Bittner, ' 07 Business Manager J. A. Quelle Managing Editor J- F. Gassell, ' 07 News Editor H. Fitch, ' 07 Associates Miss M. H. Pedlar, ' 06 G. G. McGolloch, ' 08 J. E. Gushing, ' 08 P. B. Delano, ' 08 Assistants H. L. Rixford, ' 09 Miss D. G. French, ' 07 J. K. Hutchinson, ' 09 Miss Laura Wells, ' 09 155 Stanford Quad 1907 The Stanford Alumnus — Vol. VII Publislied by the Executive Committee of the Alumni Association Editor, J. TiMMONs, ' 97 Business Manager, O. A. Wilson, ' 04 Inirmer Editors C. E. Schwartz, ' 99 . C. E. Schwartz, ' 99 L. E. Ray, ' 97 . . E. B. CoPELANn. ' 95 . J. T. BURCHAM, ' 97 ) O. A. Wilson, ' 04 f A. B. Rice, ' 95 . . Vol. . Former Managers Vol. 1 W. Hull, ' 99 Vol. 2 W. Hull, ' 99 Vol. 3 . F. E. Nangle, ' 03 Vol. 4 . C. W. Wright, ' 96 Vol. 5 . . S. W Charles, ' 98 Vol. 6 . . C. F. Wright, ' 96 156 Stanford Quad 1907 Wearers of the S A. J. Chalmers, W . Football Team, ' 03, ' 04 ; Baseball Team, ' 04, ' 05 : Capt. Football Team. ' 05 J. C. Macfarland. ' 07 . . . . Track Team, ' 04, ' 05 ; Capt. Track Team, ' 06 R. J. McFadden, ' 05 - Football Team, ' 00, ' 01, ' 02 D. D. Sales, ' 06 ' Baseball Team. ' 04, ' 05; Capt. ' 06 E. P. Stott, 07 Football Team. ' 04. ' 05 ; Capt. Elect. ' 06 R. A. Thompson, ' 05 Football Team, ' 01, ' 03, ' 04. ' 05 G. E. Dole, ' 07 Football Team. ' 05 T. Vandervoort. ' 08 Football Team. 05 W. E. Lyons. ' 07 Football Team, ' 05 W. F. Koener, ' 08 Football Team. ' 05 H. L. HoRTOJi, ' 08 . Football Team, ' 05 ; Track Team, ' 05 D. P. Crawford. ' 09 Football Team. ' 05 P. T. Frizzell. ' 07 Football Team. ' 05 A. MoLFiNO, ' 07 Football Team, . ' 05 J. N. Stanford, ' 06 Football Team, ' 05 D. Slusher, ' 07 Football Team, ' 05 George Presley, ' 07 Baseball Team, ' 05 J. H. Bell, ' 08 Baseball Team. ' 05 K. L. Fenton. ' 08 Baseball Team, ' 05 R. S. Lewls, ' 06 Baseball Team, ' 05 T. H. Colbert, ' 06 Baseball Team, ' 05 E. G. Dudley, ' 06 Baseball Team, ' 05 L. M. Edwards, ' 07 . . . . . Track Team, ' 05 C. F. Elwell, ' 07 Track Team, ' 05 John O. Miller, ' 08 ..... Track Team. ' 05 W. E. Crawford, ' 06 Track Team, ' 03, ' 04, ' 05 R. S. Carter, ' 05 Track Team, ' 05 L. G. Russell, ' 06 Track Team, ' 05 R. A. KocHER, ' 08 Track Team, ' 05 F. R. Lanagan, ' 08 Track Team, ' 05 M. J. Weller, ' 07 Football, ' 03. ' 04; Track Team, ' 03, ' 05 H. W. Bell. ' 06 Track Team. ' 02, ' 03, ' 04. ' 05 W. H. Lanagan, ' 06 Track Team, ' 04. ' 05 F. P. Whitaker, ' 05 Track Team, ' 05 L. G. Burr, ' 05 Track Team. ' 05 A. G. Freeman, ' 05 Track Team, ' 05 W. C. McNeil, ' 07 Track Team. ' 05 A. L. Trowbridge, ' 05 Baseball, ' 03, ' 04, ' 05 159 COACH J. F. LANAGAN, ' 00 Assistant coach bansbach, ' 04 Stanford Quad 1907 Football Review Of the thirteen ' Varsity men who so ably dedicated California Field in 1904, but three returned last season, and to those unacquainted with Stanford and Coach Lanagan it appeared almost a certainty that California would serpentine at the initial intercollegiate gamQ on Stanford Field. Coupled with this loss of veterans was the worry concerning the comple- tion of the bleachers in time for the big game and, graver still, came the news at the outset that our friendly enemies had imported from the East new mehods, new systems and new coaches — well-known football men who had played the game with the world ' s best. Suffice it to say at once, there was no over-confidence among us at Stanford. The vague and mysterious whispers of secret practices, Dartmouth methods, and the like, coming from across the bay, were not encouraging. Confidence in the ability of the coaches there always was, but real confidence in the team came only after the Nevada game, on October 21st, and from that time, notwithstanding the low score against the Indians, excitement and interest grew, not only among the coaches and the players, but in the student body as well. The success, then, of last season, for a success it surely was, is due first to the Training House Corporation, a body which made Stanford Field a possibility, and after no end of worry and hard labor made it a reality. To Drs. Wing and Angell special thanks are due. Consider what it means to devise, superintend and construct such a network of timbers into bleachers capable of accommodating 15,000 people, and after their 162 completion, to be held out to the public as one who had planned without regard to safety. It is enough to say that of the few structures remaining whole April i8th, the bleachers on Stanford Field had withstood the shock best. It is Dr. Angell, now treasurer of the Training House Cor- poration, who has kept alive the idea that we must have an athletic field, and his constant support and hearty co-operation have never been lacking. From a second view-point the season ' s success is due to the coaches — graduate coaches — Stanford men themselves, who knew well for what they worked. Coach Lanagan ' s methods are too well known in the West to need explanation, if such were possible. With the assistance of Bans- bach, Air. Lanagan manufactured one of the best teams ever seen on the Pacific Coast. But after all, the team is made by the men themselves. While there was a very small nucleus around which to begin building, there was at the outset a splendid second team of the year before, taught and trained already by the same coach. It needed but the final assortment, the final welding together, to make them what our friends across the mountains would call Lanagan ' s men, but which we are pleased to term Stanford men. Stanford Quad 1907 . 163 Stanford Quad 1907 Schedule, 1905 Score Sept. 23 Varsity 10 Sept. 30 Varsity 12 Oct. 7 Varsity 51 Oct. 17 Varsity 10 Oct. 21 Varsitv 21 Oct. 28 Varsity 6 Nov. 4 Varsitv 16 Nov. 11 Varsity 12 St. Vincent ' s College . Willamette College Fifteenth Infantrv . University of Oregon . University of Nevada . Sherman Indians . Univ. Southern California University of California . Score Total 138 4 4 5 13 Varsity Football Team, 1905 James F. Lanagan, ' 00, Coach; Louis P. Bansbach, ' 05, Assistant Coach; A. J. Chalmers, ' 07, Captain and Fullback; G. E. Dole. ' 07, Right Halfback; T. Van- dervoort, ' 08, Left Halfback; E. P. Stott, ' 07, Quarterback; W. E. Lyons, ' 07, Right End; W. F. Koerner, ' 08, Left End; H. L. Horton, ' 08, Left Tackle; D. P. Crawford, ' 09, Right Tackle; P. T. Frizzell, ' 07, Right Guard; R. A. Thompson, ' 05, Left Guard; A. Molfino, ' 07, Center; J. N. Stanford, ' 06, Right End; D. Slusher, ' 07, Fullback. Substitutes: J. R. Pemberton, ' 08; L. R. Gay, ' 08; A. B. Cox, ' 07; F. Lane, ' 06; J. G. Marks, ' 06; R. H. Rook, ' 06; C. F. Laumeister, ' 07; J. F. Crow, ' 07; K. L. Fenton, ' 08; S. M. Vail, ' 08; S. B. Thompson, ' 07; L. Bogle, ' 06; E. Lamb, ' 06. Intercollegiate Football Record Year! Captain Coach 1892 J. R. Whittemore, ' 92! 1892 C. L. Clemans, ' 93... ' 1893 J. F. Wilson, ' 94 1894 P. M. Downing, ' 95.. | 1895iG. H. Cochran, ' 96... 1896! C. M. FiCKERT, ' 98.... J 18971 S. W. Cotton, ' 98.... J 1898 F. S. Fisher, ' 98 • 1899 C. G. Murphy, ' 00 1900 W. W. Burnett, ' 01... 1901 R. S. Fisher, ' 01 , 1902 H. S. Lee, ' 03 ] 1903 L. P. Bansbach. ' 05.. J 1904 G. H. Clark, ' 05 1905 A. J. Chalmers. ' 07.. J Manager Walter Camp Pop Bliss Pop Bliss Walter Camp H. P. Cross G. H. Brooke H. P. Cross Burr Chamberlain F. H. Yost C. M. FiCKERT, ' 98.. C. L. Clemans, ' 93. J. F. Lanagan, ' 00. J. F. Lanagan, ' 00. J. F. Lanagan, ' 00. C. L. Clemans, ' 93. G. B. Champlin, ' 95 R. E. Maynard. ' 94. H. S. Hicks, ' 96.... O. V. Eaton, ' 95... D. E. Brown, ' 97... J. M. Switzer, ' 98. . W. A. Prichard, ' 98 F. L. Berry, ' 99.... G. B. Gildersleeve, ' 03 H. J. Edwards, ' 01 . . H. J. Edwards, ' 01 . . D. V. COWDEN. ' 03. . R. W. Barrett, ' 04. R. W. Barrett, ' 04. 10 10 6 6 22 30 2 16 6 5 14 10 6 6 6 20 28 5 6 18 12 Games won, 7. Games lost, 4. Games tied, 4. 164 .- u) w [} ui 1 r l m o : J o ' Q 03 d- ? M • • ' ■' Si as SfeF Jife ' ' ' Ssh -_- - — ■— .• ■HHi, -- ' - ' - ' - ■■■■i Ao V H H sB a BI M. . , ■if - - ' % 3 ) A - IPV K ' ' .- w . . . . «. KS 1 i- __ s a . V,3 r-:= - -sisS ; Mfp v j pr STANFORD VS. CALIFORNIA, STANFORD FIELD, NOV. 11, 1905 ...■' ifF ' ' feafci 1 jCljif i m .. ■sLi .?fy --XaT 1 STANFORD VS. CALIFORNIA, STANFORD FIELD, NOV. 11, 1905 STANFORD VS. NEVADA STANFORD VS. OREGON STANFORD VS. OREGON Stanford Quad 1907 Freshman Football Schedule, 1905 Sept. 20 Freshmen Sept. 28 Freshmen 10 Sept. 30 Freshmen 28 Oct. 5 Freshmen 17 Oct. 7 Freshmen 15 Oct. 10 Freshmen 10 Oct. 14 Freshmen 80 Berkeley High School . . 6 Hoitt ' s School .... Palo Alto High School . 6 Belmont School . . .11 Univ. Pacific Academy . Santa Clara College . . Univ. California Freshmen 6 29 Games won, 5. Games lost, 2. Freshman Football Team, 1905 J. F. Lanagan, ' 00 Coach L P. Bansbach, ' 05 Assistant J. R. HoLMAN Captain and Quarterback F. K. Jackson Left End A. M. CuTHB RTSON Left Tackle L. R. MiNTURN Left Guard N. E. DoANE Center F A. WiLDMAN Right Guard D. P. Crawford Right Tackle I. R. Tower . Right End C. Terrill Right Halfback L. GooDELL Fullback F. J. ToRNEY Left Halfback Intercollegiate Freshman Football Record Stanford Year Californ ia Stanford Year California . . . 1894 . . . . 4 5 . . . . 1900 . ... . . . 1895 . ... 44 11 . . . . 1901 . . . . 5 14 . . . 1896 ... 4 . . . . 1902 . ... 12 16 . . . 1897 ... 8 12 . . . . 1903 . . . . . . . 1898 ... 21 6 . . . . 1904 . ... 5 6 . . . 1899 ... Games won. 7. . . . Games lost, 5. . 1905 . . . . 6 170 INTKKCOLLKGTATE FRESHMAN GAME AT BERKELEY TRAINER DAU MOULTON CAPTAIN H. V. BELL — 1905 TRACK TEAM ■. .1 . w a. « — i . % ■J ■W l ' t V '  ' ' ' P fWg ■eyjw ' 9  « « r; c;«Mi «ss ' v - ' -  .■% ' j3es59«. - gii ■iifci II :tit[i:url -{mu, .. .. .  i F Tl i l H XadXrtiaMifcwil riilii ' , «atf «iii. «lt ' i« j ' i il Vi ' iii! ' ' ' ! • Stanford Quad 1907 Track Review, 1 905 Although Stanford lost the Intercollegiate track in 1905 by the score of y2. 1-3 to 49 2-3, the track season at Stanford was a successful one. The meet with California was held at Berkeley and the day of the contest foun d the track soaked from the heavy rains which lasted right up to the time the first race was started. In fact it rained during the meet and there were great pools of water along the track. No Intercollegiate meet was ever held under such unfavorable conditions and the Stanford men m the field events did not come anywhere near the form they had shown during the season. Out of the five field events only 6 2-3 points went to the Cardinal athletes. On the track, however, the Stanford men did wonderfully well. The work of J. O. Miller, a freshman, in winning the mile, the quarter, and taking third in the half-mile is a record that has never been surpassed. And in view of the condition of the track it was doubly notable. Another freshman who distinguished himself in this meet was H. L. Horton, who won the high hurdles and together with W. H. Lanagan and J. C. Macfarland he divided the points in the low hurdles, shutting the Calif ornians out of the finals. L. G. Burr won the two-mile run in great style and broke the Stanford hoodoo in this event. The relay was captured handily by the Stanford team and alto- gether the showing of the men in the track events was fine. California won the meet by the prowess of her sprinters — notably Snedigar — and field event men. On account of the weather conditions it was not a defeat that was as keenly felt as some have been, and Captain Bell ' s team will go down in Stanford track history as a great aggregation of athletes. In reviewing the season prior to the big Intercollegiate meet the two points that seem most characteristic are the wonderful showing of the freshmen track athletes and the general fine condition of the team. The new men on the track squad were the stars in 1905 and it is this feature that makes the season a notable one. These men will help win many a track victory for the Cardinal, even if they did not chance to be on a winning team in their first intercollegiate meet. And in regard to con- dition too much cannot be said for the work of Dad ' Moulton, the veteran trainer of Stanford ' s athletes. When men are able to run dis- 177 Stanford Quad 1907 tance races and hurdles on a track like that at Berkeley on April 15th, 1905, they are certainly in grand condition. This brings up the question of training rules and it might be well to mention that the season of 1905 on the track was like every season since the arrival of Dad Moulton and Jack McCaughern at Stanford — every man kept training rules with religious strictness. The track season began about as soon as college was open and by the middle of January there were more than a hundred and twenty-five men in training. There were several meets during the season between the different departments and classes and in all these contests the perform- ances were high-class. In the interclass meet on March 29th, the honors were carried off by the seniors with a total of 50 points, and the contest was marked by Burr ' s fast two-mile and Miller ' s speedy quarter. Im- mediately after this meet fourteen athletes were picked to take a trip to Pomona and meet the track team from Pomona College. This meet with the Southerners was held on April rst. at Claremont and Stanford won a decisive victory by the score of 81 to 36. Pomona only took one first place in the meet and all the Cardinal ath- letes did great work. Miller and Horton eacli took three first places and P. A. Wood won both the sprints in fast time, showing that he would have been a factor in the intercol- legiate but for his un- fortunate accident in the first heat of the hundred. All the per- formances at Pomona were good, and al- though Stanford won the meet by a large margin every event was closely contested and the Cardinal ath- letes had to extend themselves to win. The team returned from Pomona with the brightest kind of chances of winning the big meet. However, the victory went to California and Stanford will wait for another chance to even up matters. In spite of the fact that the season did not end in a victory it may be considered a good track year. There was plenty of interest in track athletics ; there were a large number of men in training; the trainer and ca])tain were both popular and able, which does a great deal toward advancing the standards of track work. 178 _j 0tK. zT 1 LANAGAN VAULTING JOHN 0. MILLER WINS THE MILE THE NIGHT OF THK PROM. « l! vr ■SI HHpix9 Bfiii llllH 1 ' viWlSMBBi Mm — KNUPP LEADS IX MILE HORTON WINS IN HURDLES VANDERVOORT WINS 100-YARD DASH CAPTAIN A. L. TROWBRIDGE 1905 BASEBALL TEAM Baseball Review, 1 905 | ' f Stanford lost, for the seventh consecutive time, the Intercollegiate 1907 baseball series. In neither of the two games played was there anything done to stamp this year ' s team as different from other Stanford baseball teams of the last few years. The team was woefully weak at the bat and. on account of the number of new men, inclined to go up in the air at critical times. The season itself was so broken up by the weather and by Irs. Stan- ford ' s death that the team had no three straight weeks of practice and was probably unprepared to meet California on this account. The first game of the series was played at Berkeley on April ist and from the start it was conceded that California would have an easy victory. With two outs in the ninth inning and California leading with three runs, it looked as if the game would be prolonged. Fenton hit deep into right field, scoring Bell and making a home run. The next man at bat, how- ever, hit to short-stop and was thrown out at first. In the second game California was crippled by the loss of Bliss and HeitmuUer and Stanford should have won handily. Again the ' Varsity batted poorly and although they led up to the fifth inning. California rallied, tied the score and before the game was finished the Blue and Gold team had four runs to its credit. ' 183 Varsity Baseball Record Jan. 28 Varsitv Santa Clara 5 Feb. 4 Varsity 2 Saint Marv ' s . 3 Feb. 9 Varsitv 2 Santa Clara 5 Feb. 11 Varsity 2 San Jose Professionals 5 Feb. 14 Varsitv 6 Clabrough-Golcher 5 Feb. 18 Varsitv Saint ]Marv ' s . 4 Feb. 22 Varsitv 6 Independents 1 Feb. 25 Varsity 6 San Jose Professionals Mar. 7 Varsitv Santa Clara 7 Mar. 11 Varsitv Saint Marv ' s . 1 Mar. 16 Varsity 4 Santa Clara 1 Mar. 28 Varsitv 9 Presidio .... 2 Mar. 30 Varsitv 2 Santa Clara 3 Apr. 1 Varsitv 2 California .... 3 Apr. 8 Varsity 1 California .... 4 Apr. 29 Varsity 9 Waseda University 1 May 2 Varsity 3 Waseda University 1 54 Games won, 7. Games lost, 10. Varsity Baseball Team, 1905 d.wid v. cowden, ' 03 Richard W. Barrett, ' 04 Alfred L. Trowbridge, ' 05 Dudley C. Sales, ' 06 Edmund Plowden Stott, ' 07 George J. Presley, ' 07 Alfred L Trowbridge, ' 05 John Henry Bell. ' 08 Kenneth L. Fenton, ' 08 Robert S. Lewis, ' 06 Alexander J. Chalmers, ' 07 John H. Colbert, ' 06 Ernest G. Dudley, ' 06 Intercollegiate Baseball Record 51 Coach . lanager Captain Pitcher Catcher First Base Short Stop Second Base Third Base Left Field Left Field Center Field Right Field Year 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897 1898 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 Captain Coach Manager C. C. Adams, ' 95 H. A. Walton, ' 95 J. F. Sheehan, ' 95 H. T. Dyer, ' 97 W. L. McLaine, ' 96 C. L. Thompson, ' 97. W. A. Lang H. E. Lougheed, ' 00. J. F. Sheehan G. M. Beckett, ' 00. . . J. F. Sheehan C. B. Strohn, ' 01 .... Dr. W. H. Murphy. . H. J. Edwards, ' 01.. Dr. W. H. Murphy.. D. V. CowDEN, ' 03... C. J. Swindells, ' 01. . F. A. Brown, ' 03 C. J. Swindells, ' 01. . R. B. Ball, ' 04 C. Doyle A. L. Trowbridge, ' 05 ' D. V. Covvden, ' 03. . . M. L. ROSENFELD. E. D. Grove H. E. Cox, ' 95.... E. R. ZioN, ' 94... J. O. Watson, ' 96 H. James, ' 98.... F. V. Keesling, ' 98 J. F. Lanagan, ' 00 A. B. Haslacher. ' 00 E. Warren, ' 01 ... . H. J. Edwards, 01 . H. J. Edwards, ' 01 . D. V. CoWDEN, ' 03. R. W. Barrett, ' 04 C. s. Stanford Quad 1907 Series won, 6. Series lost, 8. 185 COACH DAN MURPHY Stanford Quad 1907 Boating Review Stanford started the season of 19()5 with the purchase of her first shell, a four- oared boat with coxswain, bought by the boat club from Cornell University. To make the use of this boat possible crew practice was carried on at Redwood, where the boating men constructed a boathouse and float on Redwood slough. R. H. Gaither, captain of the ' 04 Varsity, volunteered his services, and by hard work turned out a Varsity crew which lost to the University of Washington by a few feet in the early season race at Sausalito. On June 4th, in the triangular regatta on Lake Washington, against lost to the Universities of Washington and California, the Blue and Gold four winning. On the same day Stanford won her first race, when the freshman four, which had not been seriously considered, de- feated California and Washington by wide margins. The work of the sea.son, especially the winning of the freshman race, has shown the student body that rowing facilities at Stanford are as favorable as at any other university. The mild climate making work on the water possible at any time during the year is a fact that would make Stanford seriously considered should she ever decide to enter a crew against the Eastern universities. Stanford I ' s. Washington. Stroke, W. H. Dole, Captain F. Zimmerman Bow, H. P. Butterfield B. Bryan Coxswain, W. F. Turner Stanford-California- Washington Race. Stroke, W. H. Dole, Captain N. P. Bryan Bow, H. P. Butterfield B. Bryan Coxswain, W. F. Turner Freshman Crew Stroke, E. N. Smith No. 2, R. Conant No. No. Xo. No. No. 3, L. R. Gay Bow, N. Cole, Captain - fifev, HSm , rrti ji ' Sl 1 l jtf B ' • j.i-y f]% ' jj 1 i H ik II B 9 m |M M m K? r? - ' 3 S K Sb HH K %i.. — —■- ' - ■' 8BB 3gl boMV ' ' jMiT s ■: ' 3 .- 5 5 r- r .jr  ..,,„ — -Ti SB Em . ■«« ■. Km. 1906 crew squad 188 R eview ofT ennis Stanford did not succeed in breaking her rather long record of defeats upon the courts in the intercollegiate tournament of 1905. but the play was close and the rec- ord had a narrow escape. Hodge, Stanford ' s captain, played his opponent, Wayne, off his feet in the first set, and only lost the last two after a stubborn contest. IMacSwain in the other singles match, and Hodge and Cassell in the doubles, gave a good account of themselves before going down to defeat. At home there has been a noticeable step forward in this sport. The more systematic arrangements of the interclass and other tournaments, together with a better general management of all affairs relating to tennis, augurs well for the development of future winning teams. Stanford Quad 1907 Tennis Season of 1904 Richard Watts Barrett, ' 04 . . . George Ashmun Hodge, ' 06 ... . George Ashmun Hodge, ' 06 Alexander Reginald MacSvvain, ' 08 I Georgf Ashmun Hodge, ' 06 ) John Francis Cassell, ' 07 J Manager Captain Singles Doubles 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897 1898 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 Record of Intercollegiate Tennis Stanford 5 University of California 4 Stanford won by default. Univer sity of California 5 University of California 5 University of California 1 University of California 5 University of California 3 University of California 1 University of California 1 University of California 3 University of California 3 University of California 3 University of California 3 University of California 3 Stanford 1 . Stanford 1 . Stanford 5 Stanford 3 . Stanford Stanford 2 Stanford 2 Stanford Stanford Stanford Stanford Stanford Intercollegiate Tournament Saturday, April 15th, Berkeley Courts, University of California Claude Wayne, California, defeated George Hodge, Stanford, 2 — 6, 6 — 4. 6 — 3. Neill Baker, California, defeated A. R. MacSwain, Stanford 6 — 0. 6 — 3. Wayne and Variel, California, defeated Hodge and Cassell, Stanford, 7 — 5, 6—4. Interclass Tennis Gay, ' 08, defeated Alexander, ' 09. 6—3. 6- , 6—4. Cassell, ' 07. defeated Mathewson, ' 06, 6 — 4. 6 — 3. 6 — 1. Gay and Cadwalader, ' 08, defeated Gowan and Adams. ' 09. 6 — 2. 6 — 0, 3 — 6, 1—6. 6—3. Burr and Dole, ' 07, defeated Bredley and Savage, ' 06, 6 — 1, 6 — 4. 6 — 2. Cassell defeated Gay. ' 08. 7—5, 6—1, 7—5. Burr and Dole, ' 07, defeated Gay and Cadwalader, ' 08, 3 — 6, 6 — 3, 6 — 3, 6 — 4. Championship won by Juniors. Stanford Tennis Club Officers First Semester Second Semester President . . . . B. S. Allen, ' 06 G. E. Dole. ' 07 Vice-President . . . G. E. Dole, ' 07 H. P Bittner, ' 07 Secretary-Treasurer . P. B. Delano, ' 08 . . . . . . P. B. Delano, ' 08 Executive Committee First Semester Second Semester J. E. Gushing W. H. Swayne J. E. Gushing W. H. Swayne 189 Stanford Quad 1907 1906 BASKET 15ALL TEAM Stanford Golf Club Officers President D. Charles Gardiner, D.D. Secretary and Treasurer Edward C. Sterling, ' 08 190 The Woman ' s Athletic Association ' ' Quad The Women ' s Athletic Association has advanced during the past jear in organization and efliciency, due largely to the definite basis for work given it in the field granted by the trustees of the University to the women. The organization aims to be of service in promoting sports among the women, and all women who pay Student Body fees have membership. The business of the Association is done by a board of directors, consisting of the President, Vice-President, Secretary- Treasurer, one representative from each class, a Faculty director, and the director of the Roble Gymnasium. Last year the funds available were one-half the Student Bod} ' fees, paid in by the women, and the income was used to improve the field and carry on tennis and basket-ball. A recent action of the Student Body in- creased the income fiftj- per cent — that is, to include all the Student Body fees paid by the women — with the proviso that at least fifty per cent be used for permanent improvements on the field. The field, which includes about six acres, is directly back of the Roble Gym- nasium, and extends nearly to Eucalyptus avenue. It has a beautiful situation and is bordered on two sides by trees. Plans have been made to occupy the space with courts and fields for various sports and to beautify it by planting extensively to trees and shrubs. There are now on the grounds five newly constructed tennis courts, a basket-ball court and a hocky field. Out-door hand-ball courts may be put in this year. A row of pepper trees has been planted along the north side, just beyond the tennis courts, and a thickly growing hedge on the south side along the road that leads to Cedro bridge. There is room to provide facilities for any sports that may claim attention. Ultimately it is hoped to establish a clubhouse on the grounds, to be used as a center for all the women ' s activities, and a pleasant meeting place for many beside those who are actively interested in the games. Such a clubhouse would be of great service in unifying the women ' s interests and would become an important factor in their college life by affording the common ground that is so keenlj- missed now. A Board of Control has been organized by President Jordan, to have permi- nent control of the field and to develop a plan of consistent improvement, so that future boards of directors shall not work at cross-purposes. The Board of Control consists of the Chairman of the F aculty Committee on Athletics, a member from the women of the Faculty, both appointed by the President for an indefinite time, the President and Secretary-Treasurer of the Women ' s Athletic Association, and an alumna member, chosen by it. Jane Spalding, ' 06, President. 191 1907 Stanford Quad 1907 Woman ' s Athletic Association Officers President Jane Spalding, ' 06 Vice-President Florence Grace, ' 06 Secretary and Treasurer Emma Hayward, ' 06 Executive Committee Mary Betz, ' 06 Elise Owen, ' 07 Elizabeth Buckingham, ' 08 Ruth Sterne, ' 07 Faculty Mrs. Matzke Committees Tennis Elise Owen, ' 07 Ruth Sterne, ' 09 Myrl Morris, ' 08 Basketball Florence Grace, ' 06 Jane SpALniNc, ' 06 Mary Betz. ' 06 Girls ' Tennis Squad Mable Ray, ' 05 Georgia Pitman, ' 05 Elise Owen, ' 07 Record Roble Courts, Stanford — Miss Ratcliffe, California, defeated Miss Ray, Stanford. Miss Edwards, California, defeated Miss Owen, Stanford. Miss Edwards and Miss Wickson, California, defeated Miss Ray and Miss Pitman, Stanford. W. A. A. Tennis Cup Won by Miss Mable Ray, ' 05 Basket Ball California Court, Berkeley — California defeated Stanford. 11 — 4. Roble Court, Stanford — Stanford defeated California. 10 — 8. Squad Captain .... Mary E. Betz Manager . . . . Jane Spalding Members Mary Betz, ' 06 Minerva Monteith, ' 08 Jane Spalding, ' 06 Helen Dorrence, ' 05 Emma Hayward, ' 06 Hazel Huiscamp, ' 07 Florence Grace, ' 06 Hazel Hetherington, ' 06 Laura Falk, ' 06 Elizabeth Buckingham, ' 08 Shirley Hyatt, ' 06 Julia Derby, ' 07 192 L. S. J. U. Athletic Committee Frank Angell E. D. Adams D. D. Sales, ' 06 E. P. Stott, ' 07 K. L. Fenton, ' 0 Faculty Members W. F. Snow Student Committee H. L. HoRTON, ' 08 WiLl-IAM F. DURAND Colbert Searles R. J. McFadden, ' 05 J. C. Macfarland, ' 07 L. G. Russell, ' 06 Stanford Quad 1907 H i m§ 193 uad and his dope Stanford Quad 1907 Athletic Review Bkn S. ALr,p:N The athletic year covered by tills annual was not like its pre- decessor, a season of almost un- broken Cardinal successes, but after many vicissitudes and sev- eral unexpected defeats, it was crowned by a brilliant football victory which compensated for all previous reverses. It was a year which saw the Stanford athletic spirit put on its mettle, and the conclusion of the trial proved that the men who introduced the pres- ent system did not labor in vain. Heavily handicapped by their failure to secure practice during the gloomy days which followed the sad death of the last founder of the University, the baseball and track teams went down to glorious defeat. It would have l)een easy to have neglected train- ing during those troublous days, but the Stanford men on track and diamond kept plugging away as best they could under adverse conditions, and the failure of the l)ird of victory to perch on the Cardinal banners cannot be ascribed to any lack of effort on the part of the athletes who met the Blue and Gold that spring. This season also witnessed the end of professional coaching in ])aseball, and Cowden ' s great work with a squad composed al- most exclusively of novices, gave promise that California ' s long series of diamond victories was doomed to come to a sudden but not unexpected end. Inspired by the example of the track men, the players of the national pastime l)egan to look with more favor upon strict training rules, and an infraction of these regulations will soon become as grave a crime on the diamond as it is on the cinder path or gridiron. Such things mean more for the Stanford spirit than victories over California, so the baseball season cannot be called entirely unsuc- cessful. The most notable success of the whole season was the securing of a J. F. Lanagan as football and baseball coach for a term of three years. His engage- ment was the result of a spontaneous desire of Faculty, students and alumni to have the policy of the brilliant coach continued as long as possible. Lanagan ac- cepted the post through a sense of duty and loyalty to his college, which necessi- tated the sacrificing of a remunerative and responsible position. So well has the contidence in the coach been justified that Lanagan ' s policy and Stanford spirit have become almost synonomous terms. Boating, not yet recognized as an intercollegiate sport, struggled along pluckily under the auspices of the Boat Club, and the dual regatta with Was hington over 194 A LOST GRAFT the Sausalito course and the three-cornered race on Lake Washington have given an impetus to the sport in spite of the fact that they were not Cardinal victories. Although the Varsity crew failed to win, the Freshman four scored a brilliant vic- tory over the first year oarsmen of Washington and California. In tennis the Cardinal representatives were generally outclassed by the Cali- fornia players, but Hodge put up a game contest against Wa ne, and the match was in doubt until the last ball was played over the net. At the end of this spring semester the Daily Pah Alto ran its usual football prospect story, and while not unduly optimistic, it predicted the return of the great backfield of the magnificent 18 to team and enough line men from that famous eleven to form a nucleus of forwards. But when the doors of the University were thrown open in the fall, only three veterans appeared at the Registrar ' s office. Captain-elect Sprott w as among the absentees and, voting by mail, the far-scattered gridiron warriors chose Bull Chalmers to lead a forlorn hope to a glorious Cardinal triumph. Probably a coach never faced a harder prob- lem than that which confronted Lanagan at the beginning of the season. With one forward and two backs of known ability and a crowd of aspirants who in only a few cases showed more than mediocre ability, the determined coach set out to develop a team which was to keep California from dedicating Stanford Field. Stanford sent her Freshman team to Berkeley, and the best team came home defeated by one touchdown. It was a fighting team and the heartbreak- ing work its players did after they were scored upon did much to remove the sting of defeat. Several visiting teams found the weak places in the Varsity, but the coaches keep steadily at work with dogged perseverance, and when the team appeared for its last open practice on that memorable Thursday, before the big game, the Stanford men on the bleachers knew that the annual battle with Califor- nia could have only one outcome. The final rally that night was an inspiring ex- hibition of Stanford spirit, and rooters as well as players knew that one of the most dismal slumps in football history was at an end. It was well that we were prepared, for California came down with a splendid team, carefully coached in the latest style of Eastern play by coaches who had done their work thoroughly, and for the first time in many years Stanford rooters saw the players from across the bay make their downs more than five times in one game. Many critics maintained that the two teams were evenly matched and, granting this, it must be conceded that the ensuing Cardi- nal victory proved that the Stanford spirit is much more than a mere patriotic ex- pression. The contest was a splendid ex- hibition of the greatest of American games, cleanly and fairly- played, and if we are doomed to lose this mighty sport, we could not have asked for a more glorious finale to the brightest page of our athletic his- tory. How any one who witnessed this clean, spectacular, sportsmanly game could have stood for the abolition of American football, as played by Stanford and Cali- fornia, is an unsolved mystery to all those who are not ready to accept the theory that the enemies of the game had pronounced its dodm long before the 12 to 5 contest. So came to a glorious end an athletic season of which all Stanford men can be justly proud, and grateful also they are to the men behind the teams, James F. Lana- gan, who more than any other made the 12 to 5 victory possible ; Bansbach, his faithful and efficient assistant ; Dad Moulton, who has never turned out a badly conditioned team, and Dave Cowden, who turned baseball novices into players in one brief season. Stanford Quad 1907 W. It.ARRKTT. ' 04 195 Stanford The Debating Season of 1 905-06 In the Intercollegiate Debate, held in the Alhambra Theatre of San iQo? Francisco the night after the track meet in the spring of 1905 Stanford won her third consecntive victory. This victory was due to splendid team work, and to the masterful rebuttal of Alexander Sherriffs. This rebuttal was pronounced to be incomparably the best delivered in an intercol- legiate debate for many years. The Stanford team, which was composed of Alexander Sherriffs, D. D. Sales, and R. G. Barnett, upheld the affirma- tive of the question, Resolved, that the Interstate Commerce Commission should be given power to regulate railway rates. As a result of this debate, Stanford came into permanent possession of the Hearst Trophy Cup which was offered as a prize to the first of the two universities to win three debates. When the debating season of 1906 opened, Stanford had but one veteran debater to whom she could look to win the Carnot medal. The final contest for places on the Carnot team was held on Jan. 19 in the Chapel. There were twelve contestants, all of whom with the exception of Sales were new men. After an exciting contest, the judges picked a team composed of D. D. Sales ' 06, E. A. Cunha 06, and W. F. Herron 08. The Carnot debate was held in the Harmon Gymnasium at Berkeley on the evening of Feb. 2d. The question for debate which was an- nounced two hours before was, Resolved, That France should abandon her policy of alliance with Russia. The judges awarded the medal to N. A. Eisner of California. The result of this decision was to give Berkeley eight victories in the Carnot out of a total of twelve debates. Stanford debaters should learn several important lessons from the last season. Chief among these is the value of the extempore speaker in a debate. We have won the Intercollegiate year after year because our teams have worked hard and secured enough evidence to make an im- pregnable case. We have lost the Carnot because our teams have not been sufficiently trained in extemporaneous speaking. It is desirable that this branch of debating should be assiduously cultivated in the Societies and in the various tryouts. In all contests for places on the teams each speaker should be required to deliver a rebuttal. Finally, we must break the hoodoo that seems to hang over us in the Carnot. It is of the very highest importance that the medal come to Stanford this year. 197 Stanford Quad 1907 Thirteenth Intercollegiate Debate Stanford University vs. University of California, Alhaml)ra ' J ' heatre, San Fran- cisco, April 15, 1906 Question Resokcd, That the Interstate Commerce Commission shall be given power to fix and enforce railroad rates. otc — A. It is understood that the commission may be so enlarged and equipped as to enable it to meet the new conditions. Xotc — B. The question of constitutionality is to be disregarded. Affirmative Negative D. D. Sales Alkxanuer Sherriffs F. P. Griffiths H. A. Stout R. G. Barnett J. W. Scott Decision for the Affirmative. Presiding Officer, Professor C. A. Duniway of Stanford. Judges Mr. H. U. Brandenstein Mr. Jesse W. Lilienthal Mr. E. S. Fowler Twelfth Carnot Debate Stanford University vs. University of California, Harmon Gymnasium, Berkeley, Friday, February 2, 1906. Question Resolved, That France should abandon her alliance with Russia. Stanford D. D. Sales E. A. Cunha W. F. Herron California A. W. ScoTT F. D. Griffiths N. A. Eisner Decision for Norman A. Eisner. Presiding Officer, Professor Charles Mills Gayley of California. Judges Justice F. M. Angelotti of the Supreme Court Justice Lucien Shaw of the Supreme Court Mr. Edward Lande Stanford Carnot Medal Winners Richard L. Sandwick, 1895 William A. Morris, 1901 Fletcher B. Wagner, 1902 Alexander Sherriffs, 1905 198 Euphronia Literary Society Enphronia Literary Society Organized Januar}- 14. 1893 Officers First Semester President D. D. Sales, ' 06 Vice-President J. L. M. loy, ' 06 Secretary-Treasurer N. P. Bryan, ' 07 Sergeant-at-Arms W. L. Blair, ' 06 Second Semester President E. A. Cuxha, ' 06 Vice-President J. E. Campbell, ' 06 Secretary-Treastirer G. Knupp, ' 07 Sergeant-at-Arms D. D. Sales, ' 06 Members W. L. Blair, ' 06 G. K.nlpp. 07 R. H. Borland. 08 J. L. Maloy. ' 06 B. R. Brooke, ' 07 J. W. Maloy. ' 07 X. P. Bryan, ' 07 C. C. McColloch. ' 08 J. F. Brennan, ' 07 A. A. Murphy, ' 08 T. T. Bennett, ' 08 B. E. Mahon, ' 09 M. J. Brooks, ' 08 L. Xewland, ' 08 J. E. Campbell, ' 06 S. H. Pierce (Sp.) C. R. Crider. ' 07 J. M. Politzer. ' 09 • E. A. CuNHA, ' 06 J. F. Reilly. ' 08 J. P. DiNN, ' 08 D. D. Sales, ' 06 L. M. Edwards, ' 07 J. E. Stewart, ' 07 F. A. Fisher, ' 07 W. C. Shelton. ' 08 G. D. Ferrell (Sp.) P. B. Smith, ' 06 B. B. Hecston, ' 06 W. C. Theile. ' 08 C. X. Hadley, ' 06 E. E. Young. ' 09 W. F. Herron. ' 08 Stanford Quad 1907 199 Nestona Officers President J- D. Gibson, ' 06 Vice-President W. A. Campbell, ' 07 Secretary and Treasurer C. L. Geer, ' 07 Sergeant-at-Arms ............ C. A. Be. rdsley. ' 06 Graduates M. A. Thomas, ' 04 Louis Gonsalves, ' 05 1906 H. L. Bearing C. S. Osgood C A. Beardsley S. D. Stewart N. F. Bradley E. E. Lewis J. D. Gibson A. R. Fletcher H. W. Reed W. A. Paxton 1908 R. E. Hodge W. A. Amend B. S. Chaffee F. T. B. tes 1907 J. M. Close R- M. Blodgett J. S. Mitchell Y. Ichih. shi W. A. Campbell Emerson Baker W. H. Tucker D- R- Gardner N. S. Yoder W. a. Beattie C. L. Geer S. S. Smith 1909 G. B. Bush Stanford Quad 1907 201 Dramatics Drawn by V. F. Bellows Dramatic Review, 1 906 ' [° ' Quad By Paul C. Edwards. igoy Many times during the last college year the old red curtains of As- sembly Hall swung back upon the painted and pasteboard world of the stage; the footlights flashed their mock daylight upon the buskined actors ; and the audience, — well, the audience came late as usual and applauded at the wrong place. The year was not one of great stars, or of great plays ; the sad-eyed muse of the drama seemed to have forsaken Stanford for a time, and yet, all in all, it was an enjoyable calendar that we were privileged to see. The season would have been an unusually full one had it not been for the rude interruption of the earthquake, which de- spoiled us of two excellent productions that were billed for the very end of the year. Our eyes were opened to a new departure with the first dramatic event of the fall semester. Possibly in emulation of the Class of 1905, which at the end of the preceding year, chose to shuffle off its mortal college ex- istence with that strange, abortive child of the drama, Kidnaped , the youthful Boat Club, seeking money and not art, produced a howling farce entitled All Tangled Up . It was. As the press agent shame- lessly announced this clever little society drama had enjoyed a run of a hundred nights in the Bowery Theatre of New York several years ago, and there was no one, not even the dramatic critic of the Daily Palo Alto, who would have ventured to refute the statement. It was a continuous performance kind of entertainment ; when the curtain was up there was comedy to laugh at and melodrama to thrill the blood ; when the curtain was down there were vaudeville stunts to while away the time. Feminine hearts were once again enthralled with the sight of immortal Dudley as the dashing hero of the piece, and there were masculine hearts that flut- tered also at the vision of Miss Claire Pedlar in the clever role of the daughter who had her own way. Then there was Doc. Curtin, who made a decided hit in the part of O ' Toole, the old Irish servant ; and Miss Katharine Clover, the bewitching ingenue ; and Leland Cutler as the irascible Major Ilolliday; and Rob Baker, the long-faced undertaker; and John M. Ward, as the scheming lawyer, — a cast that made the press agents ' claims to an all-star production a verity. All Tangled Up en- joyed a fair measure of success, the coffers of the ambitions Boat Club were temporarily opulent, but shades of classic Sophocles, and rare Ben Jonson , and Will Shakespeare ! fortunate is it that your eyes never be- 205 held such things as these. However, let the fiirtain fall and the scene Stanford change. Quad In the nebulous procession of dramatic events the 1907 Plug Ugly 1907 came next. Pirates ' was the pseudonym under which it boasted a place in the realm of the drama. It represented the jointed efforts of Bill Herron, A. O. I. S., ' 08, and Leroy Edwards, ' 07, and was supposedly written in the undistilled moments of the former and the same moments of the latter, but it is a noteworthy fact that neither author could ever explain just how the thing came into existence. All we can remember of the plot is that at the end, to the accompaniment of red fire and slow music, several of our dearly beloved professors were ruthlessly embarked upon the brimstone path to everlasting glory and the painted plug reigned supreme in the land. But even long after we have forgotten this cus- tomary feature we will remember Crittenden in the role of the wild cannibal, — oh, shocking. He affected the extreme summer-night decollete of the South Sea Islander, and it is safe to say that Robinson Crusoe with his string of beads and heavenly smile was quite decently attired com- pared with the big Fiji chief. But despite such blows to the innate modesty of the college public, Pirates was greatly appreciated by a large and enthusiastic audience , especially by Cruzan and his bald-head row of 1906 men, who insisted upon reading from the purloined manuscript the star jokes of the mellow drama before the mellower actors could mouth them. The real denouement, with a slight change of scenery, was enacted a little later, and in some respects proved the most dramatic episode of the evening. But the old order changeth, and hardly had the Plug Ugly actors ceased their struttings and frettings before the great and original foot- ball show, The Beauty Shop , was heralded abroad. It was a wonderful production, imported for the occasion from Fischer ' s Theatre, late of San Francisco. Filled with joy over a gridiron victory on our new football field, we went to the play and were conquered by the ravishing femininity that scintillated behind the footlights. Pretty maidens, oodles of them, dainty ankles, whisking petticoats. — these were the stuff and substance of The Beauty Shop , not such stuff ' as dreams are made of, either, but as material as abundant rouge and stalwart limbs could make them. It was hard to believe that all those vivacious maidens were men, — rude things, — but such was the case, for when Cruzan hung out his managerial sign announcing Chorus girls wanted , all the young ladies of the Uni- versity immediately joined the chorus girls ' union and then struck. For Extract from The Daily Palo Alto. 20F ' - •ir f_-,ga __ I B tOf iL jMflnBfc ■rA iW ' K l mm - H |B, oV; ' 1 a few days there were dark prospects of a Beauty Shop without any beauties, but the ranks of corduroys and Sophomore hats were invaded and and an amateur beauty chorus was re- cruited that outshone the prize display of any sorority on the Row. The scenes of the play were fairly amusing, but the frantic efforts of the players in the dressing rooms were the real show. There are more puzzles in feminine lingerie than are dreamed of in man ' s philosophy. Many new fashions for ladies were created that night. The audience did not knit its brows over the plot, for luckily The Beauty Shop was no problem play, was it now, Hedda, huh? Local hits and an occasional song kept things going pretty well, and the front row became positively enthusiastic when Mcintosh, Hill, Rosenfeld, and Had- ley did their ciiampagne dance before the footlights. R. S. Kellogg as Madame Voluptia was all that could be wished in the prima donna part, and Barney Bernard and R. U. Fitting had the Kolb and Dill stunts down to perfection in the characters of Culm- bacher and Pilsner. The Beauty Shop closed the dra- matic season for the first semester, but with the earliest blush of the second semester the Sophomores blossomed forth as Thespians and selected, as the mirror they would hold up to nature, Oliver Goldsmith ' s comedy, She Stoops to Conquer . Not since the days of Bill Irwin, the days when Encina Gym served as a theatre, had this old standard play been presented at Stanford, so its reproduction was Stanford Quad 1907 209 Stanford Quad 1907 haled with high favor. The cast selected to play it was, with a few excep- tions, indifferently good and this, coupled with an unfortunate lack of training made the pro- duction not quite so suc- cessful as its predeces- sors. l ut it did discover a new star for the Stan- ford stage in the person of Miss Aurania EUer- l)eck, who took the role of Miss Ilardcastle in an exceptionally clever and finished manner. Her acting was distinctly graceful and natural, and she made the char- acter of the coquettish country maiden excep- tionally convincing. Miss Viola Steele also showed no little dramatic skill in the part of the indom- itable Mrs. Hardcastle and Miss Lillian Sturgis was an ingenuous and naive Miss Neville. Will Walker, in the part of Young Marlowe did the hero ' s stunts with more ease than is usually shown by amateurs, and lUmny Swift won well deserved plaudits for his spirited portrayal of the gallant Hastings. Bob Haker succeeded in 210 getting considerable fun out of the part of Tony Lumpkin, but he did Stanford not realize all the possibilities of the character. From the standpoint of Quad the box-office, She Stoops to Conquer was a flattering success, but fre- 1907 quent pleasure excursions of the cast to San Francisco cut down the big receipts very materially. The work of the local dramatist was again given a chance to bud by the announcement that a prize of twenty-five dollars would be pre- sented to the person who should write the best Junior farce. W. G. Bateman was the successful competitor, and his musical comedy entitled ' ' Stanford, the Life Strenuous , had its brief hour upon the stage in the month of March. Book, lyrics, and music were all the work of the author, which was a commendable thing, and if more time had been allowed for training the cast, the play would doubtless have made a greater hit, al- though it was credited with no small measure of success. It was the most pretentious original opera ever staged at Stanford, not excepting the widely heralded Princess Enone , of the previous year. Like The Beauty Shop there was not much plot to cloy the minds of the spec- tators, but unlike The Beauty Shop there was a real chorus of real maidens, and for this there was general thanksgiving. The Palm song simg by these young ladies was the feature of the show. The stolen silverware, which seemed to be the piece dc resistance of the play, fur- nished subjects for communications in the Daily Palo Alto for days after the opera had passed into history, for the actors appropriated the prop- erty silver as souvenirs of the occasion. So the year passed, or rather, so it was on its way. when the gentle little early-morning reminder of Mother Earth ' s fickleness put a stop to all such deceptions as play acting. There yet remained Sword and Sandals production of The Two Gentlemen of Verona , and Miss Stella Wynne ' s Senior farce. The Original Miss Tewksbury , to be heard from. But these will form a dramatic introduction for another chronicler. 211 Whom the Gods Destroy THE MAN DARRELL (Prize Story) W. GiLMORE BeYMER I. N appearance Darrell is a man whom people in passing turn to look at a second time. And, let me say, before describing him further, that it in no wise annoys him to have them do so, — and there you have a trait of character. I can ' t help it, Bill, he would say to me complac- ently, I swear it isn ' t my cravats ; my clothes fit me, — it isn ' t that attracts ' em ; it must be my classic style of beauty. Whatever it was, it was not any classic style of beauty, for of that he had none ; and yet people looked — especially the women. It used to puzzle me when I walked with him, and now I looked at him critically as he stood facing me on the hearth-rug. Six feet tall, as straight as an arrow and nearly as slender, graceful as a woman in every movement of his body ; at times his movements were languid as those of a born-tired Southerner, at others quick and impetu- ous as a Parisian. He caught my look, and flinging out his long, white hands and shrugging his high, square-cut shoulders, he bowed in low, mock obeisance. Voila! he cried in his vilely pronounced French. Cest moi; regardez-vous hien! And I did. He straightened and stood looking down at me with his ironical, sardonic grin. Stand still until I look at you, I growled. He laughed, then his face resumed its cold, mask-like inscrutable expression and he stood before me with unseeing eyes. Inch by inch I studied his face. Hair, glossy black except for the gray above the ears, parted and brushed with scrupulous care, (during our long acquaintance I never saw it the least particle rumpled) ; it framed the upper half of the face in an oval frame, making the face look longer and thinner than it really was, and more ghastly white in contrast. The forehead, low and slightly receding ; nose, long and decidedly acquiline, with thin nostrils ; the mouth wide, with thin, colorless lips, which were usually set in a cynical curve, drawing deep, sharp lines down at the sides of the nose ; his chin, long and pointed, deeply cleft, essentially that of a strong-willed man. I have purposely left the eyes till last ; they were the only feature of the face which one thought of. Deep set they were under straight, black brows ; the lids narrow, long lashed, and quick to droop, shutting in the telltale ■expressions and completing the inscrutability of his face. The face was Stanford Quad 1907 213 igoy Stanford (lee])ly lined and there were crows ' feet about the eyes ; it was hard for Quad 1116 to remember he was only twenty-four. A long — too long description? He. was my boyhood ' s hero, so why not? Finished? he asked quizzically. . I had but had not arrived at any solution of the matter. Maybe it ' s my charmin ' and engagin ' manner, he drawled. To this day I do not know why people looked at him so, but they did. J left soon after, and on my walk home I thought over some of the peculiarities of dispositiou and character of Mi Lord, as we called him. Angry, I had seen him once only ; then it was the tense, white fury of an absolute devil, and I dismissed the memory of that night when a girl had closed the door in his face with the scathing, contemptuous taunt, I thought you were a gentleman. The times I had seen him with the mask off and the real man under- neath I could number on one hand. Those glimpses of the serious, sensi- tive nature, which he had kept repressed and guarded so carefully from the eyes of even his best friends, fascinated me and accounted in a measure for his hold and influence upon me. Then I thought of him as he showed himself ; affected, self-conscious, vain. The real brilliancy and wit and cleverness of his conversation were lost in mocking tones and flippant manner. Always flippant, reverencing nothing, fearing nothing of God or man, careless, debonaire, an unshak- able sang froid in every word or gesture — such was Darrell — Mi Lord Darrell. It is an odd fact that when with him people appeared under a spell and ailmiration for him overmastered all other feelings ; wheii away from his power they spoke of him with bitter contempt— yet, when he ap- proached them they slipped without a struggle back to their old places under his thumb. With women it was worse ; no matinee idol swayed the younger girls as did he ; older girls and the younger married women looked at him — well, I was glad I had no sister. To the old maids of the village church he was the embodiment of all romance. And yet, away from him, how their tongues lashed his name and reputation. Let him but pass the window and how the tune changed ! A Virginia girl, visiting in our village, described him to her hostess at breakfast the morning after his first call in three words, with a world of scorn in their utterance : His Serene Nothingness. The phrase stuck and it does describe him well. Let it be my resume of his outward character : the inner man is more simply described. A man without moral principle of any sort. — for the present conforming in all appearances to the customs and demands of society. There you have Alan Darrell. H. We all saw what was coming, and God knows we did our best — we who loved the boy or man, I scarcely know what to call him — to make him take seriously the matter of his life or death. 214 None of us expected to accomplish anything, and we were not dis- Stanford appointed. If the prayers and tears of his foster-mother brought forth Quad only half mocking caresses and laughing promises to take a day off next month and weed the bugs out of the lung patch, what in heaven ' s name could we hope to do with him? I have no trouble in recalling my last attempt. - ■■' The cribbage board had been pushed back unreasonably early. I ' ve got to turn in, Bill, he drawled, soon ' s I finish this ' coffin nail. ' The bugs are busy tonight. ' ' He had insisted on the usual game when I had urged him to give it up and go to bed. His thin hands shook and his head sunk forward on his shoulders ; the hectic flush on his face was deeper tonight, and that tearing, rasping cough came in spasms, so frequent and prolonged that conversation had become almost impossible. When speech was prevented, the long, thin hands had waved in graceful, eloquent gestures and the game had gone on. Outside the wind of a Pennsylvania November slithed in reiterated gusts through the bare maple branches and sent one soggy branch chafing against another; the melting snow dripped incessantly with dreary monotony. The cigarette burned shorter and shorter and Darrell watched it regretfully. If I could, I ' d smoke another, IHll, he said maliciously. If he did it to provoke me he was rewarded. On a sudden a burning contempt seized me for this exasperating fellow who took so indifferently his own approaching death, while we, whose affair it was not, worried our- selves sleepless over him. You fool ! I burst out : you miserable, selfish, stubborn fool ! Why don ' t you stop that smoking and take the one chance in a hundred which you have left and get out of this abominable climate? Your gentle pleadin ' almost wins me, Willie, he jeered. Take a fresh start and try again ; you may get me yet. Suddenly his mood changed, and like an actor throwing oft ' his make- up he shook off his mannerisms and his pose and stood looking down at me with sombre, thoughtful eyes. And through those eyes, telltale for the first time, I saw the naked soul of the man ; a soul sick unto death itself, but kept alive by ambition and indomitable will ; a soul that was not a soul, for it had no part in the hereafter either in heaven or in hell. Now listen to me. — the voice was cold and stern so that 1 sacrcely recognized it for Darrell ' s. You know what I am and what I have been, — you don ' t know what I will be — if I live, he added grimly. Do you think I am blind, or, as you say a fool? I know I have consumption and not a chance in a thousand to get well. You think, you and my friends, and his sneer was almost a snarl, that I am childishly staying in this God-forsaken climate because I am too stubborn to give up the shops before I finish my apprenticeship, simply because I had vowed I would finish something, even though it were myself? You think that I imagine that by sticking to something until it ' s finished 1 can 215 Stanford redeem the five years I idled away? You think I ' m trying to convince Quad yo that I ' m worth something after all — that this perverseness is atone- 1007 lent? What in hell do I care what any of you think! But you have goaded me into talking for this once and now listen. When I refused to go to college or to work, or to do anything anyone wanted me to, I was just what has always been said of me — a ne ' er do weel. But that five years was not all wasted ; I thought and read a lot, and the days you fellows couldn ' t find me I was out in that little shack up the gully, working as none of you ever dreamed of working. And I found there I couldn ' t do what I wanted to do because I didn ' t know how it was technically done. And so I apprenticed myself in the machine shop. Of course everyone said it was another whim, another way to show oflf, to be eccentric, because no other fellows in my class ever tried to become common machinists. In two months I finish my time; Bradley says that with more strength I ' d be the best man in the shop ; that ' s true. When I finish my time I ' ll get some strength and then I ' ll finish the greatest machine that any human being ever devised. A log in the fireplace fell apart with a muffled thud ; he turned like a flash at the sound, and the nerve tension broke. The burning eyes glazed, the long suppressed cough welled into his throat and he fell forward, the blood gushing from his mouth. It was his first hemorrhage and his eyes were mad with fear. Not yet, — God, — not yet, he gasped. • ' Ten days later he was back in the shop, weaker, but debonaire, mock- ing and frivolous as ever, in all but his work, — in that he strove with a mad intensity that left him at the end of the day so weak that he could but drag himself home. The weeks passed ; each promised to be his last, but he mocked us, scofifed at death, played fast and loose with women and went his own mad gait. In his health and strength he had been stared at by strangers, now his own people watched him out of sight with fascinated interest and something of awe, as one fey — with his great, dark, flashing eyes in their black-rimmed caverns ; his hair silvering over the temples and over the ears ; his hatchet face, white, with two burning red spots on either cheek. He ' s dying ! they said. And we believed it — and, I think, so did he. He called me to him the night before his last day in the shop. As he lay looking up at me from the pillow he looked like a death mask; the bloodless lips uncurled from their habitual sardonic grin, and he drawled out the words until they seemed a purr — surest sign of supreme irony. Bill, you ' re the biggest fool of them all about me; it ' ll be a real dis- appointement after all these months of faithful prophesy if I don ' t curl up before I finish my time. Tomorrow ' s the last day ; come with me, and if I do go over the river I may be cheered by your T told you so, smartie ! ' It was his confession that he dreaded the morrow and the relaxation from the effort that had sustained him these many months. 216 I spent the night at his home; spent it in ahnost sleepless dread of Stanford the morrow, as though it were I who might not come home at night ; Quad spent it in restless tossings and broken dreams from which I awoke in an agony, and stole to his room in terror lest I should not hear the labored breathing, or the fierce, dry cough. A nd through the long, bleak hours of that interminable night I thought over the life of the man across the hall — of the drawback fate had given him at the very instant of his birth ; how as he grew older and to realize it, this taint, this irregularity of proceedings on the part of others, for which he was in no wise responsible, clung to him and dogged him and made him an irreverent cynic and scoffer against all things good and pure, in spite of the gentle upbringing and lavish care of his foster-mother. Brought up in luxury, without an ungratified wish, in a town where he was king by virtue of his wealth and social position, yet where he knew himself sneered at behind his back, — what wonder he had become the careless, reckless man he was, in his efforts to hide his wound with an ever-mocking tongue? If he defied custom and opinion and society, what had they done for him ? And now he was dying. Save your strength for the stretcher tonight. Bill, was the way he declined my proffered help on our way through the slush to the shops ; the carriage had been sent back to the stable. If I can ' t ride in the hearse I won ' t ride at all, he had said, to enjoy seeing me shudder. If I had expected a tragic end to the ending of the apprenticeship I was not given it. His strength that last day was superhuman and his merriment and chaffing, almost too wild for reason. When the whistle blew he packed his tools, picked up his dinner bucket, and with a last parting jeer at his companions we left the shop forever. The conversation during the walk home was in his usual bantering tone, and as for his plans, I knew nothing of them ; if he had any he skilfully kept them to himself. Naturally the reaction came, and unnaturally he partially recovered after a time. I returned from a week ' s trip to find him gone. Notes, — he never wrote letters, — came at intervals, but told me noth- ing; they were too characteristic of Darrell for that — slangy, witty, frivolous. But he gained slowly in weight and strength and health at the sanitarium in the Ozark mountains. He had at last stopped smoking, but there were hints of wild doings now and again and his progress was slow. In June he left the mountains and went to the ranges of Wyoming, where he rode fence and breathed into his lungs, — or what was left of them, — the life-giving air. His notes became more and more infrequent, and for months I would not hear at all. At last from a stranger I heard of his being in a mining town in Northern Dakota. He was interested in mines, the man said, but was not mining. 217 1907 Stanford Then I had a letter, a real letter, from Colorado. He said he was Quad ' iiood as .new — weighed one hundred and sixty-eight pounds and was sassy as ever. But a mere phrase interested me most, — My model will be ready for the patent office in a few months. What model? I had not heard a word of it, and read eagerly. But the next paragraph began an account of an unusually reckless advent- ure, as he termed it, from which only his collossal coolness and nerve had saved him. I]ut, he added whimsically, I had to leave the town without saying- good-bye. ] Iexico, California. Montana, — a week here, a month there, and it was the third winter since his leaving home. Then our little town awoke one morning to find itself celebrated, for was it not the home of the man whom every paper in the country reckoned the greatest inventor of his day? The daily papers brought to our doorsteps each morning accounts of the life of Alan Darrell and his marvellous patent by which the gold mining industry was to be revolutionized, and the days of ' 49 repeated in every state containing gold-bearing ore. By this new process every man holding a claim of apparent worth- lessness stood to become a millionaire in a short time. The scientific monthlies were filled with the technicalities of the device and with accounts of the life of the inventor. It was some weeks before his anxiously awaited letter came and then it was but a. satirical essay in slang on the value to mankind of so-called great men. Then apparently his mood had changed over night, for next day I received another letter in so strange a vein for Darrell that only the signature showed it to be his. I ' ve been steered along a blind trail. Bill, pretty nearly all my life. The ' great invention ' I dreamed of as a boy, and which sent me to the shops, wasn ' t worth a whoop. But it kept me in the shops until I learned what has enabled me to work out this ore-crusher. The work in the shops and the gait I struck gave me consumption nearly to a finish, but that drove me west and, for pastime, to hanging around mines where I got my idea. It only needed a combination of the knowledge of mining and of mechanics by a practical machinist — the rest was easy for me. The papers have, as usual, overestimated the value af my inven- tion. — that is, in its present condition, — ultimately it will do all that is claimed for it and more. I kit I know there is one thing that prevents its practical adoption. I am probably the only one who can remove that defect ; if anything happens to me the machine is worthless and may never be given the touch to make her go. Now here ' s where you can come aboard. I have a gift for getting into trouble and these mining camps are the incubators of evil. Come to me, and, a ' s you used to do in the old days, keep me as straight as you can just for the next month or two — I may be worth it after all. Such was the letter. 218 1907 Weak? Not necessarily; only a realization of an impulse-guided Stanford nature, absolutely reckless of consequences, and trying , to safe-guard Quad itself against itself. The old hero worship dormant during the past few years reawakened like the leaping up of a tongue of hot flame. In three days, my own affairs left to run themselves, I was off to the west, to play nursemaid and mentor to a man three years my senior. III. Sixteen hours of cold and discomfort, not to say hardship, in the jolting stage, over the almost impassable mountain road, brought me to the mining camp of Lundy. The stage drew up sharply. I waited, but no one came to meet me and I got stiffly out. I was drowsy with the cold and staggered like a drunken man into the office of the road-house ; but the chill at my heart at this neglect on Darrell ' s part outweighed all phvsical discomforts. Suppose it was midnight and bitterly cold, was it not for him that I had come? Surely he might have waited up for a few hours to welcome me. The night clerk was all the hotel officials in one, chief of which was that of bartender, and he was hard at work at the bar which ran down the side of the room. I accosted him : Will you tell Mr. Darrell I am here? He paid no attention to me, evidently not hearing my cfuestion. and impatiently motioned me to line up in turn. I repeated loudly, Tell Mr. Darrell I am here! In an instant the room was quiet, and the few men about the stove and strung along the bar edged nearer to me. The bartender stood poised in the act of pouring whiskey into a glass. He peered at me curiously over the top of the bottle. Well ! he said in an admiring tone, if that feller aiiit a son of a gun! — and you have some nerve, too, stranger! What do you mean? I cried angrily. Well, they do say that Darrell fellow is not popular around these parts, leastways Jeff Tucker is gunnin ' fer him — a stranger arrived only last night and left, hot on the trail ; now here you be — number three ! — say, wife or daughter? and he leered maliciously at me. I was helpless but choking with fury and a savage anger against Darrell. I am Mr. WHiarton of Pennsylvania, I cried. I do not know what you mean (that was a lie, I knew too well) ; I have a business appointment with Darrell. Did he leave no word ? The bartender appeared crestfallen and sulky. No, he didn ' t leave no word for nobody, — there ' s them as wish he had besides y ' self. Then he brightened. If you ' re W. R. Wharton, here ' s a letter as came by mail two days ago. 219 Stanford The door opened and a man entered, stamping the snow from his Quad boots. Instantly the room quieted again ; the men glanced at him curiously. The man strode to the bar and ordered whiskey, giving me as he did so a sullen stare. The shaggy eyebrows met in a scowl over his sullen eyes, his jaw under the red beard was set and determined. I took the letter eagerly. It was addressed in a strange hand and the postmark was blurred. I slipped it cautiously into my pocket and ordered brandy. Then, when attention was diverted from me, I walked over to the .stove and read the letter. It was unsigned, but I knew the writing. Come to Tonopah, Nevada, was all it said. I thrust it carelessly into my pocket. I ' ll go to bed now, I said. First room to right at head of stairs, the bartender growled. And almost exhausted, I climbed the steep stairway. In my last glance back at the room I saw the red-bearded man in low, earnest conver- sation with the bartender, who gave a sly glance toward me, then looked hurriedly away when he was detected. ly room was bitterly cold. I flung my clothes on the chair at the bedside and fairly tumbled into bed. Once during the night I awoke, quaking from some horrible dream which was gone before I could grasp it, leaving behind only a shadowy memory of a great, mad plunging horse and the ring of his iron hoofs coming nearer and nearer in pursuit of me. Suddenly I sat up in bed; my heart stopped beating from fear; nearer and nearer, ringing and clanging on the icy road, came a horse at a mad gallop down the stage road. Then he swirled by and was gone, fainter and fainter. It was late in the morning when I awoke. The cold winter sun shone in dazzling brilliance on the snow outside. My long, sound sleep had left me dull and stupid and I dressed mechanically, then went down to see about breakfast. By daylight the room was even more bare and grimy than by lantern light ; the odor of stale beer and tobacco smoke was in- tolerably offensive ; they recalled the scene and events of last night and I slipped my hand into my pocket hastily for my letter. It was. gone. Feverishly I searched my pockets, then dashed back to the room and searched every inch of it ; I knew it was useless but I must do something. Oh, why had I been such a fool as not to destroy the letter upon reaching my room ! I could do nothing ; I was morally certain my clothes had been searched for the letter while I slept, and that by now Jeff Tucker, ■who was gunning for Darrell, would be on his way to Tonopah. Then I remembered my dream and the sound of the madly galloping horse. Thus had Jeff Tucker gone to Tonopah, — the thought firmly fixed in my mind, nearly drove me mad. The stage would not be back until two o ' clock; the hours dragged by, and when I finally tumbled into the belated stage- coach I was half sick with worry and with well-founded alarm for Darrell. We were about to pull away from the road-house when the burly, red-faced stranger of last night slouched out of the door and took his seat opposite me in the coach. We were the sole passengers. During the interminable hours that followed, he maintained a sullen, morose silence 220 I9Q7 and either stared out of the window or slept, where comparatively smooth Stanford bits of road made sleeping possible. Quad I could not sleep ; at first I idly speculated on my companion, — his destination, his business ; then I gave myself up to my own gloomy fears and speculations regarding the letter, and to wondering where Jeff Tucker was by now, and if I would be in time to warn Darrell. We boarded the train at Hawthorne. I say we, but at the time I did not know it. Upon reaching Hawthorne, the red-bearded gambler — for so I had set him down — had betaken himself off and I had seen no more of him until we pulled into Tonopah, by which time, in my overwrought nervous state, I had forgotten his very existence, and stared at him stupidly as he brushed by me. Now to find Darrell. if it were not too late ! Tonopah boasted a score of lodging houses and so-called hotels. From one to another I hurried, inquiring for Darrell. He had been at none of them. No one had seen him or knew anything of him. With a heavy heart I returned to the most promising hotel and stood moodily looking out of the dirty-paned window in the office at the desolate street with its stained, trampled snow and the forlorn buildings over the way, indistinct in the rapidly falling twilight of the gloomy winter day. It was almost dark in the room, which was empty save for a wo- man, — pretty, I noticed ; pretty in a hard, cheap way. She moved rest- lessly about the back of the room, but seemed inclined to stay in the shadows. Then from far up the single street came a whistle, the notes of the opening bars of II Trovatore, clear and sharp, just as of old when we had used that for a boyish signal beneath each other ' s windows. With a glad exclamation I stepped forward ; the woman, too, heard it and made an eager movement toward the door. At that instant a door in the back of the room opened and the red-bearded man slouched into the room. The woman suddenly cowered back into a corner but the man did not see her ; he stood still in the center of the room, listening. The whistle drew nearer, — full and clear, boyish, light-hearted. The man, with a venemous gleam in his eyes, made a few quick strides and crossed the room to the door opening into the street ; he stepped out, slamming the door in our faces. And then, blind fool that I was, not until then did I know him ! I leaped to the door. I was quick but the woman was qu icker. Jeff ! she screamed, J ff ' fo God ' s sake don ' t ! ' ' and together we tore at the ' handle of the door, which refused to turn. Then came a shot — and silence. The door at last opened and we leaped into the street ; the woman darted by men and flung herself on her knees in the snow beside him and caught his head to her breast, crying and calling him over and over again. 221 Stanford On the other side of the street Jeff Tucker stood, an evil smile on his Quad face, the smoking pistol still in his hand. A shot is too common in Tonopah to attract attention and we four were alone in the dreary snow and the fading twilight. Darrell tried to raise himself, then fell back. He paid no attention whatever to her. He looked at me curiously for a moment. ' Milord, ' I cried, you know me, old man? I am here, Alan! He looked with his darkening eyes into mine ; for an instant the old whimsical look flitted into his face, and in a voice scarcely more than a whisper he drawled : So, Bill, you did get here for the finish after all ! 222 Josh es No Josh Stanford Quad 1907 It is hard to rehabilitate a Quad but it is impossible to rehabilitate a Josh. It is for this reason that the present edition of the 1907 Quad does not contain this otherwise indispensable section in the Junior Annual Harking back to the Quad that never was, the 1907 Board can affirm that they joshed most liberally and well in that unfortunate edition. Forty pages were devoted to the section and every one was joshed, including the Business Office and the Sororities. But these be thin and hungry days for the professional Quad jokist. The old familiar recipe, one part McDowell ' s naked forehead, one part Hodges dog, one part Treat, mixed liberally with spiced verse on Green and Gilbert, filled the section nicely and caused the whole campus to cackle. But Doctor Gilbert has gone from among us and Professor Green is no longer a prominent figure in the mind of the undergraduate. AIcDowell is married and Hodge ' s dog has left the campus. What ' s the use. The flag of ' truce is still flying on the gables of the Kappa Sigma and Kappa Kappa Gamma houses, and the cloud of trouble that settled down between the abode of Sigma Chi and Delta Gamma has been blown away by the breezes of time. Walter Y. Wentz still circulates about the campus unharmed, dispensing rare philosophy and invitations to the Social Ser- vice Club. The Junior girls are. strenuously endeavoring to keep before the public eye and as a result they have secured a hat that is as homely as the Sigma Nu bull dog. This hat might be a legitimate subject for a ' ' josh but it developed since the year the 1907 Qu. d celebrates and we bow before ' o8 s moral right to pillage the campus for joshee ' s this semester as well as next. If we did not we might wax gleesome over Miss Rugby and relate in iambic pentameter the three-cornered tale of Tommy , the Daily and the Glee Club. There was a good josh in the last student body election but Sales doesn ' t know it yet. The Reason Why Bittner resigned from the Chaparral StafT is a tale best left for the Bogie, and William Archery Campbell ' s aspirations for the Senior presidency are not yet ready for publication. Whether Dave Walker or the rest of the Sophomore class will run for the ' 09 Quad has not yet been settled by Ben Shannon Allen, and what Fred Lanagan thinks of the Mandolin Club is not fit for print. If the Chaparral correctly calls Spurrier the Child Editor did McColloch rob the cradle for the ' 08 Quad, and why is it that Harvey Bittner is sourerballed when he will have the Inter.scholastic Magazine as an epithet. Whether x llen can 226 continue to maintain friendly relations with two sorority houses at the Stanford same time and still write lucidly on the subject of coeducation, is another Quad question that is up to the judgment of 08 Josh editor. 1907 The Junior class might still be running under the old firm name of Herron, Gushing and McColloch but for Mac ' s Lincoln StefTens dispatch to the Oregonian in which he almost exposed the B. O. and at the same time wrote himself into an extended vacation. This won ' t be joshed in the ' 08 Quad nor will it ever be told whether Levy ' 08 won the Plug Ugly and stung his class for twenty-five on the strength of his manuscript or political pull. How long will it be before Bonnehiem comes to and gets wise to the fact that he is furnishing a lot of Easy Money every fall to the Long Heads who can discriminate between a dictionary and a bottle of Pabst. The burning question in Stump ' s heart is still. Was that dog really following me? and Ben Allen is looking into the question. These are the germs of the joshes that linger about the campus and which are the legitimate game for the josh editor of the iqoS Ou. I). If properly nursed they will reach their full maturity next ] Iay in all their glory of cartoon and caiicrture. In the meantime it will- be the humor of the Plug L gly poster and the Chaparral that will be butchered to make a student ' s holiday — not the josh section of the 1907 Ou. d. 227 Stanford Quad 1907 March 27. March 28. March 29. • March 30. March 31. April 1. April 1. April 1. April 8. April 10. April 15. April 15. April IS. April 17. April 20. April 20. April 21. April 21. April 21. April 26. April n. April 29. May 1. May 2. May 5. May 5. May 9. May 9. May 15. May 18. May 18. May 20. May 21. May 22. May 23. May 24. Aug. 29. Aug. 31. Sept. 6. Sept. 8. Sept. 9. Sept. 11. Sept. 12. Sept. 15. Sept. 20. Sept. 20. Sept. 23. Sept. 2Z. Sept. 28. Sept. 28. Sept. 28. Sept. 29. Sept. 29. Oct. 4. University Days 1905 Track training table begins. Varsity Baseball. Stanford, 9; Presidio, 2. Interclass Field Day. Seniors win. Varsity looses to Santa Clara, 2-3. Spring Vacation begins. First Intercollegiate Baseball Game. California, 3; Stanford, 2. Interclass Regatta. Won by Freshmen. Varsity Track. Stanford, 81 ; Pomona, 36. Second Intercollegiate Baseball Game. Stanford, 1 ; California, 4. First election of Phi Beta Kappa. Stanford looses Intercollegiate Field Day, IIYj. to 49 2-3. Stanford wins Intercollegiate Debate. Intercollegiate Chess, a tie. Stanford crew loses to Washington. 1906 presents The Princess Enone. Stanford loses Intercollegiate Tennis. Junior Day. M. J. Weller elected Track Captain. Waseda Baseball Team arrives. Student Body election. E. A. Cunha elected President. English Club presents Every Man in His Humor. First International Baseball Game. Stanford, 9; Waseda, 1. Delta Chi Legal Fraternity estalilished. Second Waseda Game. Won l)y Varsity, 3 to 2. Musical Club ' s Annual Concert. D. D. Sales elected Baseball Captain. 1906 Quad comes out. R. H. Lachmund elected Glee Club Leader. Cornerstone of Library laid. 1905 presents Kidnapped. End of College. Faculty-Senior Baseb:dl. Baccalaureate Sermon. Class Day. Alumni Day. Commencement Day. Beginning of College. A. J. Chalmers elected Football Captain. First Student Body Assembly. Dr. Branner and E. A. Cunha, ' 06, address students. MacFarland elected Track Captain. First Football Rally. One hundred and eighteen men s ' gn up. First Football pract ' ce. Work begun on bleachers of Stanford Field. Student Assembly. Corporal James Tanner speaks. First Football Game. Freshmen, 0; Berkeley High, 6. Fall Track Work begins. Varsity Football. Stanford, 10; St. Vincents, 0. J. F. Cassell wins University Tennis Championship. Twenty men dismissed from Encina Hall. Freshmen beat Hoitts, 10 to 0. G. E. Dole and M. C. Burr win Doubles Championship of University. Varsity defeats Willamette, 12 to 0. Freshmen defeat Palo Alto, 28 to 6. Dr. Jordan addresses Student Assembly. 228 Oct. 4. Oct. 5. Oct. 7. Oct. 7. Oct. 10. Oct. 12. Oct. 12. Oct. 13. Oct. 17. Oct. 20. Oct. 21. Oct. 23. Oct. 27. Oct. 28. Oct. 30. Nov. 1. Nov. 3. Nov. 4. Nov. 9. Nov. 10. Nov. 11. Nov. 16. Nov. 16. Nov. 18. Nov. 23. Nov. 25. Nov. 27. Nov. 28. Dec. 5. Dec. 5. Dec. 6. Dec. 9. Dec. 9. Dec. 11. Dec. 12. Dec. 13. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. 16. 18. 22. 22. Jan. Jan. 9. 12. Jan. Jan. 15. 17. Jan. Jan. 19. 19. Jan. 22. Jan. Jan. Jan. 22. 22. 23. Jan. 23. Jan. 26. Jan. 28 Feb. 1. Feb. 3. Feb. 3. Feb. 5. Feb. 6. P. C. Edwards writes The Streak of Cardinal. Freshmen 1)eat Behnont, 17 to 11. Varsity defeats Fifteenth Infantry, 51 to 0. Freshmen defeat U. of P.. 15 to 0. Freshmen v. Santa Clara. ' 09 wins, 10 to 0. . J. R. Hohnan elected Freshman Captain. Dismissed Encina men appeal to Trustees. Freshmen Intercollegiate Game. California, 6; Stanford, 0. Varsity defeats Oregon, 10 to 4. . Beauty Shop chosen for Football show. Stanford, 21 ; Nevada, 0. Stanford Quad 1907 Feb. appears. Boat Club Farce. All Tangled Up. Varsity defeats Sherman Indians, 6 to 4. Secret Practice begins. Stanford Field completed. 1907 presents Plug Ugly. Last preliminary game. Varsity, 16; U. S. C, 0. Last open practice. Football Rally. Intercollegiate Football. Stanford, 12; California, 5. Post Season Rally. Athletic Committee gives S to crew men. Fall Track Meet. Golf Club organizes. E. P. Stott elected Football Captain. B. S. Allen nominated for Editor of Daily Palo Alto: P. B. Delano wins Theile Tennis Cup. Allen elected. Students break up show at Mullen ' s Hall. Student Assembly. Gen. Woodruflf speaks. Borheim Contest won by P. L. Geer. ' 07. Basketball Team defeats California College of Photography, 51 to 4. Faculty Committees pass resolutions to abolish or greatly modify American Football. Civil Engineering Society organ- izes. R. D. Fleming, ' 06, elected Presi- dent of Encina Club. Football Banquet in San Jose. Dan Murphy chosen Rowing Coach. Glee Clubs leave for southern trip. First Semester ends. 1906 Opening of College. Degrees granted to twenty-nine men and women. Crew men called out. Governor Chamberlain of Oregon addresses Student Assembly. Return Concert of Glee Club. Interscholastic Meet proposed. Cup offered by W. H. B. Fowler. Sales, Cunha and Herron Make Carnot Team. Baseball practice begins. Track Training begins. Student Body decides to build track. D. D. Sales elected Senior Presi- dent. First Baseball Game. St. Marvs, 4; Varsity, 2. Intercollegiate Committee meets. Interscholastic Association formed. First Track meet. California wins the Carnot. B. S. Allen suspended. H. P. Bittner elected Editor of Daily Palo Alto. Varsity, 7; Alameda, 4. CAPTAIN STOTT 231 Feb. 8. Feb. 10. Feb. 10. Feb. 16. Feb. 16. Feb. 19. Feb. 21. Feb. 22. Feb. 22. Feb. 28. March 6. March 7. March 8. March 8. March 9. March 9. March 10. March 10. March 13. March 16. March 17. March 17. March 17. March 21. March 22. March 23. March 24. March 29. March 30. March 30. March 31. March 31. April 7. April 7. April 11. April 11. April 12. April 12. April 14. April 17. April 18. April 19. Varsity, 8 ; Santa Clara, 9. Varsity, 2; Elks, 1. Track meet. Campus, 50; Palo Alto, 37. Sophomore Comedv. She Stoops to Conquer. ' 1907 gives $100 to new track. H. P. Bittner gives cup for Interscholastic. Prof. James and Dean Hodges address Assembly. Varsitv, 1 ; Alameda, 2. Track ' meet. 07 and ' 08 defeat ' 06 and ' 09. Anniversary of Mrs. Stanford ' s death. Interclass Baseball Series begin. ' 09, 12; ' 08, 3. Interclass Baseball. ' 07, 2; ' 06, 0. Encina Club gives cup for Interscholastic. Varsity Baseball. Santa Clara, 3; Stanford, 2. Founders ' Day. 1907 winter interclass baseball, 6 to 2. Freshmen win Track ]Meet from Oakland High, 85 to 28. Varsity Baseball. Stanford, 10; Twenty-second Infantry-, 1. Trustees grant links to Golf Club. University Assembly. Dr. Remsen, Prof. Carpenter and Dean West address Students. Varsity Baseball. Stanford, 30; Fort McDowell, 2. Freshman Track Team defeats Bay Coimties. 1908 win Interclass Regatta. Intercollegiate Football Conference adopts English Rugby. Social Service Club organized. B. S. Allen reinstated. First Interscholastic meet won by Oakland High School. 1907 presents ' Stanford — The Life Strenuous. Junior Day. Varsity Track. All-Southern California defeats Varsity, 63 to SSyi. Stanford loses first Intercollegiate Freshman meet, 48 2 to 731 2. Easter Vacation begins. Stanford wins first Intercollegiate Baseball Game, 1 to 0. Varsity Track meet. Olympic Club, 8; Stanford. 6. Dean Hodges and Dr. Gardner address Student Assembly. Sophomores win Interclass F ield Day. Varsity Baseball. Stanford, 15; Alumni. 2. Gowan and Delano make Varsity Tennis Team. California wins second Varsity Baseball Game, 4 to 3. Conant, Pemberton, Zimmerman, Gay and Turner make Varsity Crew. The Earthquake. University work suspended. Stanford Quad 1907 ■9t % 2 AT THE FINISH 233 Stanford Quad 1907 An Appreciation Fourteen forms of the 1907 Quad are whirling off the presses while these few brief words of appreciation are being written. To the men and women of the Class of 1907, who so loyally supported the Board during their struggle to get out the Quad under such peculiar conditions, the Quad Editor can offer no adequate thanks in words. Their loyalty on this occasion is only one exhibition of that wonderful spirit which has made the 1907 Class one of the greatest in Stanford ' s history. But at the same time we wish to acknowledge our indebtedness to Fowler, Allen and Cruzan of the Class of ' 06, who spared neither time nor trouble to assist the Board in their work of procuring informa- tion and statistics. The ' 07 Quad owes much to the readiness and untir- ing enthusiasm of Photographer Harry Robinson, whose photographs made our athletic section possible. It is right at this time to formally thank those artists who con- tributed last year and lost all the results of their work in the fire. Among those artists were Messrs. Adams, Bonnell, Borroughs, Culver, Terry, Dillon, Beymer, Ferry, Sheehy, Oppenheim, Bellows and Hol- comb. Many of these artists could not sacrifice the time this year and are not represented. Others, like Beymer, ' 07, reproduced their work. Upon Jini Dillon, Beymer, Bellows and Nelson the brunt of the art work fell this year. Miss Josephine Herron reproduced the title page which she had drawn for the first ' 07 annual. As for the work of my staff, I can only say that they have answered every demand made upon them ; that they have unselfishly given up their time and their work to secure the results required, and that they all, time and again, risked their hours in college and their chances of ad- vancement in other activities, that they might assure the Class of 1907 a ])roper annual. To them should go the credit. Karl A. Bickel, Editor. 234 SAN JOSE Garden City of the World Eighteen Miles South from Stanford University LARGE TELESCOPE at Observatory — 36-iftch lejis ALUM ROCK PARK San Jose ' s Play Ground 1000 acres LICK OBSERVATORY Greatest Astro7iomical Institution in the World Near Sa7i Jose FRANCISCO NGELES AND HENSHAW. BULKLEY CO. 219=221 Spear St SAN FRANCISCO GINEERS AND MACHINERY MERCHANT B O I L E R S ACHINERY FOR ALL PURPOSE ilTE US FOR INFORMATION AND PRICE F. E. KNOWLES, THOMAS BRADBURY, ABEL HOSMER, President Vice-President Secretary Colusa Sandstone Company Incorporated Contractors and Stone Dealers Cut, Random and Dimension Stone Supplied to the Trade Quarries and Mills • Office and Works SITES, COLUSA COUNTY COR. 10th and DIVISION STS. Telephone Market 737 SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA Exclusive 2)c5ign5 in enu5 lace (Tar 65 tic. 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RYAN, General Passenger Agent H, Liebes £f Company INCORPORATED Manufacturers and Importers of 1442-1444 Van Ness Avenue San Francisco A Free Excursion To Any Part of California in 1907 The most liberal offer ever made by a magazine is that of SUNSET, the great monthly of the West, to young folks and others who secure sub- scriptions. Liberal cash pay and a free excursion over the Southern Pacific. For details and a copy of SUNSET, send your address to Union Ferry Building C J 1% r • union j erry Duuaing Sunset Magazine San Francisco, Cal. Cooper Medical College Corner Sacramento and Webster Streets San Francisco ,Ss6Si£- 3i i V Faculty C. N. ELLINWOOl), M. D., LL. D., Professor of Physiology, and President ADOLPH P.AKKAN, M. 1)., LL. I)., Professor of Ophthalmologv, Otology and Laryngology HENRY GfUBONS, Jr., M. A., M. 1)., Professor of Obstetrics and Diseases of Women and ' Cliildren. and Dean • JOS. O. HIRSCIIFELDER, M. D., Professor of Clinical Medicine A. M. GARDNER, M. D., Professor of Legal Medicine and Mental Diseases W. T. WENZELL, IVL D., Ph. M., Emeritus Professor of Cheniistrv and Toxicology STANLEY STILLMAN. M. D., Professor of Surgery EMMET RIXFORD, B. S., M. D., Professor of Surgerv WILLIAM FITCH CHENEY, B. L., M. D., Professor of Princi])les and Practice of Medicine, and Secretary WM. OPHULS, M. J)., Professor of Pathology GEO. F. HANSON, Ph. G., M. I)., Professor of Materia Medica and Theraiieutics GEO. 15. SOMERS, B. A., M. 1)., Professor of Gynecology WALTER E. GARREY, B. S., Ph. D., Professor of Physiology ALBERT H. TAYLOR, M. D., Professor of Anatomy And a large corps of Associate Professors, Instructors and Assistants Attendance is required on four regtilar courses of lectures of eight and a half 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 Examinations for admission to Stanford University, the University of California, or any other University or College whose standard of admission is equivalent. Announcement of the College will be mailed upon request. Address all coinniunications to the Secretary at the College. HENRY GIBBONS, Jr., M. D. DEAN WILLIAM FITCH CHENEY, M. D. SECRETARY SPRING ' S INCORPORATED High Grade Clothiers AGENTS FOR HART, SCHAFFNER k MARX L. ADLER k BROS. AND COLLEGE BRAND CLOTHES SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA WHEN THE LAUNDRESS TAKES UP ARROW CLUPECO SHRUNK 1 4 SIZE COLLARS she knows there ' s light work ahead for her — Clupeco shrunk means the fabrics have been shrunk before being cut — this insures smoothness of finish, non-shrinkability and exactly true V4 sizes — over a hundred styles to select from. 2 for 25 cents CLUETT. PEABODY CO. LARGEST MAKERS OF COLLAKS AND SHIRTS IN THE WO I ' I. ABCORT F. C. THIELE Fine Tailoring TAFT PEN N OYER Headquarters for Men ' s Furnishings Don ' t make the mistake of thinking us to be a store for women. Our line of Men ' s Furnishings is more than favorably commented on by everyone around the bay. Everything is exclusive and the prices include a legitimate profit only. Broadway at Fourteenth St., OAKLAND And It Was All Over But The Shouting ! Did you see our Stanford window ? We had one ready for each College and we were ready to yell for either side. But now it ' s a case of sell clothing for Thanksgiving and Christmas. We have just the kind college folks like and we want your trade. Do we get it? Outfitters for Male Folks C. J. Heeseman 1 1 07 to 1117 Washington Street OAKLAND FILLMORE dmmi o o Sbros. ALSO VAN NESS B SH San Francisco Good Clothes and where to get them THERE are only two kinds of clothing — the kind that is worth the price and the kind that is not. The lat- ter does not interest you, so let us talk of the former. You are interested in good clothes — every college man is, or should be. You may not know just where to get them — and that is the object of this message. For 52 years The Hastings has enjoyed the distinc- tion of selling good clothes — clothes of known quality. Our clothes are worth what you pay because reliable clothes cannot be sold for less. All our stock of men ' s clothing is made by us in our own manufactory in New York City; it is made there so that we can be in touch with the center of fashion and likewise be near to the source of the necessary materials. Style in men ' s clothes originates largely in our univer- sities — in Harvard, Yale, Princeton and other famous in- stitutions. Our designers keep us in touch with these styles; and what the Harvard or Yale man wears on the campus will be found in our stock. When you are in need of your next suit or overcoat come to The Hastings , and see the clothes themselves — then you will know where Good Clothes are to be had. THE HASTINGS CLOTHING COMPANY VAN NESS AVENUE AT PINE Established 1851 Tears on Montgomery Street FISHER CO., INC. HATTERS FURNISHERS Now at 126 Market Street opposite Call Building Reliable and Up-to-date SOMETHING NEW FINEST $3.50 HAT IN TOWN All goods guaranteed to be as represented SOLE AGESTS FOR STETSON SPECIAL HATS GREATEST HAT MADE VOdl S kty SCIENTIFIC C LOTHIE RS Frank Bros. THE BIG CLOTHIERS 1344-1354 FILLMORE STREET NEAR ELLIS CHARACTERISTIC CLOTHES FOR MEN AND WOMEN New Location Pauson Co VAN NESS AT POST STREET World Beaters for Overcoats Agents for Hart, Schaffner Marx Fine Clothing The 45 H.P. Pierce Great Arrow Seven Passengers When we say seven passengers we mean seven comfor- table seats. The two additional seats are in the tonneau, with backs and arms. They revolve so that the occupants can turn around and chat sociably with the three people in the rear. The appeal of the PIERCE ARROW is made upon some- thing deeper and more vital than a change in the form of the body. It is in the car itself. Honest construction, adapted to American conditions and temperaments, has won for the PIERCE ARROW the envi- able reputation expressed by those who know with no other motive than true conviction — you want the best buy the PIERCE GREAT ARROW CAR. ' The Mobile Carriage Company 762 and 764 Golden Gate Avenue Telephone Franklin 1784 San Francisco CONTRACTORS FOR COMPLETE PLANTS Power Mining Lighting Pumping CONTRACTS TAKEN FOR COMPLETE INSTALLATIONS A Few of Our Complete Plants Now in Course of Erection PACIFIC LIGHT AND POWER CO. LOS ANGELES 15,000 K.W. Plant HOTEL DEL MONTE ) Complete Electric MONTEREY i Lighting Plant CITY OF PASADENA ) 200 K.W. Complete J Electric Lighting Plant PASADENA, CAL. Including Many Others Fairbanks, Morse Co. Gasoline Distillate ENGINES Pumping Plants Electrical Machinery Gasoline Hoists Nissen Stamp Mills Fairbanks Scales FAIRBANKS, MORSE CO., 531 Howard Street, S. F. SEND FOR CATALOGS Brooks-Follis Electric Corporation Importers and Jobbers of electrical uppliesi 212-214 First Street San Francisco Cal. Telephone Temporary 559 Atlantic, Gulf Pacific Co. Incorporated Engineers and Contractors SPECIALTIES Dredging, Dredging Machines Canals, Land Reclamation, Docks, Piers Foundations, Bridges CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED 517 Monadnock Building San Francisco, Cal. OFFICES: New York, Seattle, Manila, P. I., Vancouver, B.C., Los Angeles The Eby Machinery Co. Temporary Headquarters 1220-1222 Myrtle Street Oakland, Cal. San Francisco Office Atlas Bldg., 604 Mission St. Dealers in Saw Mill and Wood Working MACHINERY ENGINES AND BOILERS LINK BELTING AND SPROCKETS Everything for the saw mill and planing mill W.T. Garratt Co.  Pumping Machinery Brass and Iron Goods of all kinds for Water, Steam and Gas Brass and iron Pipe and Fittings BRASS AND BELL FOUNDRY MACHINERY WORKS 138-1 42 Fremont Street SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. United Gas and Electric Company Electric Light Electric Power G as For Light and Fuel MAIN OFFICE : REDWOOD CITY, CALIFORNIA GALASSI MARBLE AND MOSAIC CO, T. V. GALASSI, President and Manager IMPORTERS, MANUFACTURERS, DEALERS, CONTRACTORS Roman, Venetian, Glass, Pearl and Ceramic Mosaic Decorations Marble Steps and Wainscot Terrazzo Steps and Wainscot Terrazzo and Mosaic Floors N ' enetian Mosaic Tile Floors Marble and Mosaic Mantels Cement Tile Floors With a large factory equipped with modern machinery, a complete stock of material and a staff of skilled artists and workmen, we are prepared to furnish the 15EST WORK AT THK LOWEST PRICES. W ' e make a specialty of Roman Mosaic, Terrazzo and Tile Floors for vestibules and interiors of public buildings, stores, offices and dwellings. We are the sole manufacturers in the United States of ' enetian Mosaic Tiles and now furnish this work promptly in any design to order at moderate prices in competition with the cost of other stock tiles. Special designs and estimates of cost furnished for all classes of work on application. Samples of all Mosaic, Terrezzo and N ' enetian Tile work on exhibition at display rooms. .Ml work guaranteed. Correspondence invited. OFFICE, FACTORY AND DISPLAY ROOMS 1 2 1 FELL STREET, near Devisadero Street, San Francisco, Cal. General Electric Company SCHENECTADY, N. Y. Electrical Apparatus and Supplies of All Kinds SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. OAKLAND, CAL. OFFICES : LOS ANGELES, CAL. PORTLAND, ORE. SEATTLE, WASH. G. W. Price Pump Company DESIGNERS AND I ' .UIT.DEUS OF Complete Plants for Irrigation and Reclamation of Land CONSULTING AND CONTRACTING ENGINEERS 21-31 Jessie Street, San Francisco ' Piatt Iron Works Company Successor to Stilwell - Bierce and Smith -Vaile Co. Steam and Power Pumping Machinery Filter Pressers Victor Turbines Feed Water Heaters E. G. DEWALD, Manager 824-822 Monadnock Building San Francisco ASSOCIATED OIL COMPANY Producers and sellers of Fuel Oils Manufacturers of Kerosenes, Benzines, Gasolines and Napthas. Offices: KOHL BUILDING. COR. CALIFORNIA AND MONTGOMERY STS., San Francisco, Cal. Electric, Railway anc Manufacturers ' Supply Co. The Electrical Specialty House California Electrical Works 642 Folsom Street San Francisco Exclusive Agents The Turmbull Electric Mfg. Co. L. M. Ericsson Telephone Mfg. Co. J0 Pacific Coast Agents of Western Electric Company 619 Howard St. San Francisco Telephone (Temporary) 1299 De Laval Specialties Still Leading The Best of Everything for Creamery, Dairy and Cheese Factory Telephone Market 348 Globe Engineering Company ih De Laval Cream Separa- tors cannot be beat for Clean Skimming:, Dura- bility and Economy Estimates and plans furnish- ed upon application for up-to-date creameries and sanitary milk plants. Whether you have only one cow or one thousand cows we can fit you out. Write for free literature. De Laval Dairy Supply Co. 309 12th St. 123 N. Main St. 107 First St. 1017 Post St. OAKLAND LOS ANGELES PORTLAND SEATILE Engineers and Dealers in Machinery and Engineering Appliances Heating and Ventilating Plants Agents for the Paul System of Circulat- ing Steam at Atmospheric Pressure. 1937-1939 Market Street, SAN FRANCISCO Western Fuel Company ' s Wellington Coal Best for Family Use All Dealers Sell It Western Building Material Company SOLE AGENTS Standard Portland Cement Co. The Holmes Lime Co. Santa Cniz Portland Cement Co. Marbleite Plaster Co. Central Urick Co. 340 STEUART STREET SAN FRANCISCO Garrett M. Goldberg Co. Manufacturers and Importers Paints Oils Varnishes and Brushes 477=481 Grove Street San Francisco Bonestell, Richardson Company = PAPER — 473 = 485 Sixth street San Francisco Among Out Best Known Brands are Bank Bond Columbian Bond Sterling- Flats Beechwood Flats Herculean Covers Buckeye Covers A complete line of Papers and Cardboards Samples cheerfully furnished PUMPING MACHINERY OF THE HIGHEST GRADE fl Students are respectfully invited to visit our Avorks Geo. E. DoAV Pumping Engine Company 179 First Street San Francisco TRADE MARK o OF THE CUTTER IT MEANS QUICK SERVICE ACCURACY SATISFACTION Most Complete Stock C. W. MARWEDEL 256 to 260 Ni nth Street, near Folsom SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. FINE TOOLS, MACHINERY Machine Shop Supplies BRASS, COPPER AND STEEL IN ALL SHAPES Agent B. F. Barnes Co. Morse Twist Drill Mach. Co. PHONE BLUE 131 FRED H. SMITH Columbia Cyclery On the Circle, Palo Alto, Cal. AUTOMOBILES FOR HIRE AND SALE, REPAIRING, BICYCLES SPORTING GOODS EASTMAN KODAKS AND SUPPLIES San Francisco Telephone West 2584 Los Angeles Chanslor and Lyon Motor Supply Co. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Exdusive California Agents for Schebler Carburetors H ' ' l ' Absorbers Automobile Tires and Accessories M. M. Cement and Acid Gilbert Tire Covers VulcaniZing Duro Batteries 542-44-46 GOLDEN GATE AVENUE Exclusive California Agents for Detroit Cape Tops Harris Valve Oil Leavitt Timers La Coste Coils Ecco Batteries SAN FRANCISCO The Pennington Hammered Steel SHOES and DIES Are the Best in the World. Manufactured only by Ourselves OUR SPECIALTIES: Cam, Crank and Steamboat Shafts; Rock-Breaker Plates, Connecting Rods; Best Refined Tool Steel, Drill Steel, Wedges, etc., Hammer, Pick, German and Machinery Steel; Iron and Steel Forgings of all descriptions. Correspondence solicited and circulars mailed upon request. Telephone Main 5197 GEO. W. PENNINGTON SONS (Incorporated) ' P ENNINGTOJV - «ADE MARK Main Works: iSA Qb S.W.Cor. Montgomery and Chestnut Sts. Office and Branch Works: 313 Folsom St., San Francisco, Cal. ii illi0Ammm-!tMmi iAimmmit m,mm VULCAN- ' Ice Making and Re- frigerating Machines Of any desired capacity SiiO Machines in United States, Philippines, Japan, Mexico, Central America, South America. Send for Catalogue. Pacific Mail Steamship Co., 16 machines Pacific Coast Steamship Co., 6 machines. Oceanic Steamship Co., 10 machines. U. S. Transports, 10 machines. Built hy the Vulcan Iron Works SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA, U. S. A. F. W. BRAUN CO. Manufacturers of Deale Importers and Dealers in Labor Saving , , . , Laboratory Appliances for Assayers Materials supplies of Every Assayers m m i Description SCIENTIFIC APPARATUS FOR COLLEGES AND SCHOOLS. FIRE CLAY, CRUCIBLES, MUFFLES, SCORIFIERS, HEAVY CHEMICALS, CYANIDE AND ZINC. LOS ANGELES 501 North Main St. SAN FRANCISCO Temfrary Address: 303 Market Street SAN DIEGO 5th and J Streets Risdon Iron Works Albion Lum 3er Company Manufacturers of Gold Dredgers OFFICES: MONADNOCK BLDG. Stamp Mills Smelting Machinery Yards : Channel, Between Fifth and Sixth Streets San Francisco U. S. A. Engines Boilers Ship Builders Redwood DRY, CLEAR HEAVY TIMBERS Ties, Posts, Lumber SEND FOR CATALOGS Office: 298 STEUART STREET SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA LARGE KILN CAPACITY Prompt Shipments by Cargo and Rail Our goods cannot be excelled for quality, purity or wholesomeness Goldberg,Bowen Company 1244 Van Ness 2829 California 1401 Haight 13th and Clay Streets, Oakland : : : 16th and Wood Streets, Oakland ...The... Public Favorites On sale at all first-class grocers Old Reliable Japan Tea and Raja Brand East Indian Chutney and Curry Powders Geo. A. Moore Co. SAN FRANCISCO Sole Importers and Distributers John Rothschild . Co. Wholesale Grocers and Liquor Merchants II, 13, 15 Spear Street, Sati Francisco Telephone Temporary 2412 CAUFORNIA ' S CHOICEST FOOD PRODUCTS Griffon Extras PURE AND WHOLESOME ' % THE LARGEST PACKERS  r- OWNING OPERATING OF CANNED FRUITS LatsuD Asparagus Preserves thirty canneries vegetables , _r . on the IN THE WORLD Canned r ruits 1 omatoes pacific coast OUR GUARANTEE FOLLOWS OUR GOODS MJBCoffee Packed in tins only WHY? rx ALL I HAVANA I ALL iHAYAml EHRMAN BROS. CO. San Francisco, California Distributers Smoke El Principe de Gales Now King of Havana CIGARS M. A. Gunst Co. Sole Pacific Coast Agents San Francisco - California Imperiales Cigarettes With or without mouthpieces Manufactured by The John Bollman Company San Francisco, Cal. STEVENS WHEN YOU SHOOT You want to HIT what you are aiming at — be it bird, beast or target. Make your shots count by shooting the STEVENS. For 41 vears STEVENS ARMS have carried off PREMIER HONORS for AC- CURACY. Our line: Rifles, Shotguns, Pistols Ask -our Dealer — in- sist on the Stevens. If you cannot obtain. we ship ciirect, ex- press prepaid, uptjn receipt of catairjErpri.e Sena 4 cts. in stamiis fur iJo-pajje Catalog of coinpieie output. A vaiuai tebook ofrefer- en- e for present and t:)rosnective s ' nooters. Beautiful three-color Aluminum Hanger will be forwarded for 10 cents in stamps. J. Stevens Arms k Tool Co., p. O. Box 4096 CHICOPEE FALLS, MASS., U. S. A. DROSSNER BALIN will open January 1, 1907 1115 Van Ness Ave. Sporting Goods P. NOBLE Successor to THE PACIFIC ROLLING MILL CO. STRUCTURAL IRON WORKS Beams, Angles, Channels, Tees, Plates Machine Bolts, Iron Castings Blacksmith Work and Forgings SEVENTEENTH AND MISSISSIPPI STREETS SAN FRANCISCO Still in Business ! New Stock New Location New Stores Our Warehouse is at 36th and San Pablo Avenue, Oakland Our Salesroom is at 141 to 1 45 Grove Street, near Van Ness Avenue, San Francisco Our stock is larger than ever and consists of School Furniture and Supplies, Books and Apparatus, Opera and Assembly Chairs Church Furniture, Office Stationery and Supplies New catalogue:; are ready. Send for them The Whitaker Ray Company Pubhshers and Booksellers Good Salesmen Wanted E. J. Shattuck Co. Makers of All Kinds of INKS Printing . . . Lithographic PRINTERS ' ROLLERS AND COMPOSITION Telephone West 5183 We are pleased to inform you that we are now permanently located at SOS Clay St. , near Sansome, San Francisco, where we have better facilities for handling and filling our orders. Factory 2418-2424 Blanding Avenue ALAMEDA Telephone Alameda 1060 E. J. SHATTUCK CO. ■■1 Sporting Goods ! We want college men to know about our Gun and Sporting Goods Department. It is the most com- plete in San Francisco, and in charge of expert sportsmen. The lines carried comprise: Firearms Ammunition Hunting Clothing Football Fishing lackle Baseball lennisand Athletic Goods MAIL ORDERS SOLICITED Brittain ® Co., '  VAN NESS AVENUE AND TURK STREET SAN FRANCISCO 1 Fire, Marine and Inland Insurance Home Office : 401-405 California Street May field Bank and Trust Co mpany MAYFIELD, CALIFORNIA Officers and Directors: ALEXANDER PEERS, Preshient MARSHALL BLACK, Vice-President C. S. CRARY, Cashier GEO. R. PARKINSON A. B. CLARK LEONARD DISTEL JOSEPH HUTCHINSON . . P. PONCE . . J. MORRIS K. H. LIST Three and one-half per cent interest paid on Sa vings Deposits. Representati-x ' e at Campus Book Store. Kodaks Supplies Amateur Finish R. A. 1111 BROADWAY J Stationery y Kngraving ing Office Supplies LEE ' l ' CO. OAKLAND, CAL. THE OLD WAY THE NEW WAY is to use Conklin ' s Self -Filling Pen the only Perfect Fountain Pen CARDINELL-VINCENT CO Coast Agents Ask Your Dealer OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA For sale at THE BOOK STORE Stanford University The Bank of Palo Alto ORGANIZED 1892 Transact a General Banking Business INTEREST PAID ON SAVINGS ACCOUNTS Safe Deposit Boxes for Rent in Steel Lined Vault OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS G. B. PARKINSON President JOSEPH HtXTCHINSON Vice-President C. S. DOWNING Cashier H. P. CONGDON Assistant Cashier PBOP. CHAS. B. MABX D. !•. SI.OAN The Anglo- Calif ornian Bank UMITED London Office, 1 8 AUSTIN FRIARS SAN FRANCISCO OFFICE N. E. Comer Sansome and Pine Streets Authorized Capital Stock . . $6,000,000.00 Subscribed 3.000.000.00 Paid In 1,500,000.00 Surplus and Undivided Profits 1 ,000,000.00 Remainder Subject to Call Bills of Exchange. Commercial and Travelers ' Letters of Credit Issued. Collections Made, and Stocks. Bonds and Bullion Bought and Sold on most favorable terms. MANAGERS IN SAN FRANCISCO Ignatz Steinhart P. N. Lilienthal National Bank of the Pacific CALL BUILDING, SAN FRANCISCO is a United States Depository and has a FIRST-CLASS SAFE DEPOSIT PLANT Union Tmst Company san francisco COR. MONTGOMERY, POST AND MARKET STS. Telephone Private Temporary 1 I Capital and Surplus, $2, 1 3 1 ,927.37 OFFTCERS IsAiAsW. Hellman, President; I. W.Hellman, Jr., Vice-President Manager; Robert Watt, Vice-President ; Charles J. Deering, Cashier Secretary; J. M. Fsrael, Assistant Cashier Assistant Secretary; H. Van Luven, Assistant Cashier DIRECTORS Isaias V. Hellman, J. Henry Meyer, Chr. de Guigne, Vm. L. Gerstle, I. V. Hellman, Jr., J. L. Flood, Timothy Hopkins, CJeo. T. Marye, Jr., John D. Spreckels, Robert Watt, Geo. A. Pope, Jacob Stern, Charles Holbrook, A. H. Payson This Company transacts a General Banking, Trust and Safe Deposit Business; is authorized by law to act as Trustee, Executor, Administrator, etc. Savings Deposits received and the usual Savings Bank rates of interest paid. Safes for rent in new fire and burglar-proof vaults from $4 per annum upwards, and valu- ables of all kinds stored at lowest rates Swiss -American Bank Main Office: 1452 Fillmore Street Branch Office: 51 5 Davis Street SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. Capital and Surplus Total Resources - $ 800,000.00 5.000,000.00 We transact a general banking business, pay interest on savings and special de- posits, make loans on bonds, mortgages and approved collaterals, and issue letters of credit available all over the world International Banking Corporation Capital paid in Surplus $3,250,000.00 3,416,083.37 Head Office, 60 Wall Street, New York BRANCHES London Penang Cebu San Francisco Bombay Hongkong Shanghai City of Mexico Calcutta Canton Yokohama Washington Singapore Manila Kobe Panama Fiscal Agents for the United States in China, the Philippine Islands, and the Republic of Panama. Accounts of Banks, Merchants and Indivi- duals solicited. Correspondents and branches in all parts of the world. Interest paid on term deposits. SAN FRANCISCO BRANCHES Main Office, 4 J Montgomery St., nr. California Branch, 2045 Sutter St., nr. Fillmore WILLIAM H. HIGH, Manager Continental Building and Loan Association MARKET AND CHURCH STREETS SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA Paid in Capital and Reserve : $3,000,000.00 Pays on Ordinary deposits S ' f and on Term deposits 6% WASHINGTON DODGE, President JAMES McCULLOUGH, 1st Vice-President JOS. G. CRAWFORD, 2nd Vice-President WILLIAM CORBIN, Secretary and General Manager GAVIN McNAB, Attorney Hotel louraine N. K. DUNNING Proprietor Comer Fourteenth and Clay Streets SAN FRANCISCO ' S LEADING HOTEL OAKLAND. CAL. TdepboDc Oakland 1072 Lawge Commercial Sample Rooms Majestic Special Rates on Application Strictly First-Class Special Attention to Tourists and Family Trade Best American and French Cooking on the Coast SUTTER AND GOUGH STS : : : : SAN FRANCISCO New and Modem in Every Department Suites with Private Baths Electric EUevator Electric Lighu GUSTAV MANN. Manager .y jtT ' - r The German Savings and Loan Society 526 CALIFORNIA STREET SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. Guaranteed Capital and Surplus ... $ 2,552,719.61 Capital Actually Paid Up in Cash . . 1 ,000,000.00 Deposits June 30, 1906 38,476,520.22 BOARD OF DIRECTORS: F. TILLMANN, Jr., President E. T. KRUSE DANIEL MEYER, Vice-President W. S. GOODFELLOW EMIL ROHT, Second Vice-President A. H. R. SCHMIDT, Cashier TGN. STEINHART WM. HERRMANN, Assistant Cashier N. OHLANDT (iEO. TOURNY, Secretary I. N. WALTER A. H. MULLER, Assistant Secretary J. W. ' AN REROEN (lOODFELLOW EELLS, General Attorneys Wells Fargo Co. Express Money Orders Payable at over 30,000 places in the United States, Canada and Mexico Fee from 3 cents upward Foreign Money Orders Payable throughout the world Fee from 3 cents upward Travelers Money Orders Payable everywhere at par and without identification Fee from 30 cents upward Money by Telegraph Between principal agencies V .-; ISAIAS W. HELLMAN, President I. W. HELLMAN, Jr., Vice-President F. L. UPMAN. Vice-President FRANK B. KING, Cashier GEORGE GRANT, Assistant Cashier W. McGAVIN, Assistant Cashier E. L. JACOBS, Assistant Cashier Wells Fargo Nevada National Bank OF SAN FRANCISCO UNION TRUST BUILDING NO. 4 MONTGOMERY ST. Capital Paid Up $ 6,000,000.00 Surplus and Undivided Profits . . . 4,000,000.00 Total . . . $10,000,000.00 ISAIAS W. HELLMAX ROBERT WATT JOHN F. BIGELOW C. DeGUIGNE DUDLEY EVANS DIRECTORS E. H. HARRIMAN WILLIAM HAAS I. W. HELLMAN, Jr. WM. F. HERRIN HERBERT E. LAW JAMES L. FLOOD CLARENCE H. MACKAY LEON SLOSS F. W. VAN SICKLEN F. L. LIPMAN JUNE 30. 1906 SEMI-ANNUAL STATEMENT OF THE FRENCH SAVINGS BANK OF S.W FRAXCrSCO PAID UP CAPITAL OFFICERS CHARLES CARPY ARTHUR LEGALLET LEON BOCQUERAZ - JOHN GINTY - - V. A. BERGEROT $600,000.00 - - President Vice-President Secretary Assistant Secretary - - . Attorney Mutual Savings OSnk f Francisco Capital Guaranteed One Million Dollars B ink s Biiildiiii; Assets Ten Million OFFICERS James D. Phelan, Pres. S. G. Murphy, John A. Hooper, Vice-Presidents Geo. A. Story, Cashier C. B. Hobson, Ass ' t Cashier F. J. Sullivan, Attorney Are You Going to Make a Will ? If so, send for Pamphlet to , California Safe Deposit Trust Company Capital and Surplus .... $ 8,000,000.00 Total Assets 10,500,000.00 ADDRESS : Cor. California and Montgomery Sts. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. Awnings Made and Recovered Carpets Cleaned and Laid F. W. Shennan Co. 266 University Avenue, Palo Alto, Cal, FURNITURE, BEDDING, DRAPERIES Picture Frames, Bamboo Goods, Camp Goods Floor Coverings FURNITURE REPAIRED, UPHOLSTERED AND REFINISHED EDGE TOOLS FOR QUALITY EVERY ONE WARRANTED Table Cutlery Carvers Shears Clippers we- CUTLERY EYEEY b lade: VARRANTED Pocket Knives Razors Scissors Trimmers ACCEPT NO OTHER FOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS Cox Seed Company Kstahliihed 187O hi.arpaniteJ 8qS Seed Growers ..and Nurserymen.. Vegetable Flower Field and Tree Seeds Nurseries: OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA 109 Market St. San Francisco CABLE ADDRESS COX SAN FRANCISCO Stanley— G. I. Electric Mfg. Co. Northern Electrical Mfg. Co. Fort Wayne Electric Works Sprague Electric Co. ALTERNATING AND DIRECT CURRENT MOTORS AND GENERATORS, TRANSFORM- ERS, ARC AND INCANDESCENT LAMPS. DESK FANS, METERS. FLEXIBLE CONDUIT AND IRON ARMORED CONDUCTOR Rooms, 403-406 Atlas Bldg, 604 Mission St., S. F., Gal. Refreshing Invigorating Castle Rock Mineral Water BOTTLED ONLY AT THE SPRINGS WITH ITS OWN NATURAL GAS Insist on CASTLE ROCK WATER Goodyear ' s Rubber Goods Mackintoshes Rain Coats Sporting Boots Etc. Goodyear Rubber Co. 573, 575, 577 and 579 Market St. San Francisco New York Office : 27 William Street Haas Brothers Importers and Wholesale Grocers 00 and 1 1 4 California Street San Francisco Agency of The Napa Consolidated Q. M. Go ' s The New Idria Q. M. Go ' s Quicksilver Camille Mailhebuau Louis Coutard Formerly of Frank ' s Rotisserie, Pine Street, San Francisco Jules Vigouroux Lamolle House ONLY FIRST CLASS French Hotel and Restaurant ON THE PACIFIC COAST Telephone, Private Exchange 31 Telephones in all Rooms Corner Santa Clara and San Pedro Streets European Plan. SAN JOSE, CAL. The Original Cresta Blanca Clicquot Souvenir Wines Direct from FRANCE Is ' ' Not tied with a String THE STANDARD WINES OF CALIFORNIA It bears . Vignier Label Wetmore - Bowen Co. AMI VIGNIER Ill San Pablo Ave, Oakland 462 Greenwich St., New York Pacific Coast Agent, Sati Framisco 46 Van Buren Street, Chicago ONE OF THE VIEWS ALONG THE LINE OF THE SAN JOSE. LOS GATOS INTERIRBAN RAILWAY F. E. CHAPIN, General Manager All who enjoy beauti- ful scenery should take the twenty - five mile triangle trip through the heart of the Santa Clara valley. Start from San Jose pass through Sorosis, Saratoga, Nip- pon Mura, Los Gatos, Campbell and Willows, and return to San Jose without change of cars. . superb panorama of the valley and foothills, by which the tourist may see, without fa- tigue, dust or other dis- comfort, the famous orchards, beautiful country homes, foothill vineyards, with glimp- ses of redwoods and sylvan streams. Or go to Congress Springs, via Saratoga. Xo charge is made for entrance to this charm- ing resort; delicious mineral water, swings, tables and dancing platform free to our patrons. Cash fare to Los Gatos or Congress Springs, 25c. Excursion tickets at reduced rates sold at offices on Sun- days only. Special cars and extra trips can be arranged for at general office,143 South Market .Street, San Jose. Telephone Main 404. Lake Tahoe CALIFORNIA 6,240 feet high, 2,000 feet deep, 23 miles long and 13 miles wide Hunting, Fishing, Boating Camping. An ideal place for a Summer Outing. Finest Hotels on the Pacific Coast STOPOVER PRIVILEGES AT TRUCKEE, CALIFORNIA, ON OVERLAND RAILROAD AND PULLMAN TICKETS ]T From June Lst to September 30th the Lake Tahoe Rail- way trains will make two round trips daily, connecting at Truckee with Southern Pacific trains. East and West bound. From May 15th to May 31st, and from October 1st to October 15th, they will run one train daily, connecting with the evening train to and from San Francisco. For further particulars regarding rates and time table, inquire at any SOUTHERN PACIFIC CO MP AN Y ofifice or D. L. BLISS, Jr., Manager J. U. HALEY, Gen. Pass. Agent 1 ' A H O E C I 1 ' Y, CALIFORNIA 3S Oo o 55 22 Q o be o c I 0) O ' c ti3 S ' -r 9i-r C The Pennant impson cx L.o. store Hatters, Haberdashers and College Outfitters Frat. and College Pennants carried in stock and made to order Fraternity Hall Bldg., Palo Alto, Cal. Waterman Blythe Plumbing and Tinning, Stoves and Kitchen Utensils EUREKA STEEL RANGES 1 83 University Ave. Phone Main 94 W. F. Pennebaker New and Second-hand Furniture and Stoves 5j?S Emerson Street Phone White 497 PALO ALTO. CAL. Telephone Main 35 Opposite Freight Depot F. L. WORRELL PROPRIETOR Hay, Grain, Millstuffs, Wood JinH Cn l Delivered at dllU V Uctl Market Rates Corner Alma St. and Hamilton Ave., PALO ALTO, CAL. Cut Rate Clothing Renovatory 262 University Avenue Telephone James 481 Stanford Meat Company Fresh, Salt and Smoked Meats 185 University Ave. Phone Main 67 Hudson The up-to-datf Jeweler ON THE CIRCLE OPPOSITE DEPO ' I ' THOITS ' SHOE STORE Our carefully selected footwear pleases a continually growing patronage. Each season finds us showing the newest and neatest styles. Our shoes have qualitv 1 74 University Avenue, Palo Alto F. L. Grand ALL COLUMBIA AND CLEVELAND Bicycl es EASTMAN KODAKS AND SUPPLIES Developing and Printing Leading Fire Insurance Company of the World D O L L A R FOR OYAL JNSURANCE, COMRAHYi D O L L A R J. J. MORRIS REAL ESTATE CO., Palo Alto, California ROLLA V. WATT, Ma nager Pacific Department 122-124 Sansome Street San Francisco Wh en you need any Furniture ! McKIBBEN FURNITURE CO. Phone Main I 2 222 University Avenue LOOKS GOOD TO EVERYBODY ! Each individual shirt is made The latest shown ; they must be seen X T 1 INcck tay that way to let the goods do the talking v V iV 1 • Lach individual shirt is made 1 he latest shown ; they mu NhiyrC as it should be made — right, to be appreciated, and we i and made to stay that way to let the goods do the talki See US for the largest and best selected stock on the peninsula ! are anxious wear FRAZER CO. CITY MARKET FRESH AND SALTED MEATS OF ALL KINDS 301 Union Ave. Phone Main 160 Orders Delivered Promptly PALO ALTO Chnstensen- Darling Co. Plumbing, Hardware, Stoves Palo Alto, California Phone Main 83 PALO ALTO GAS COMPANY 547 High Street, Palo Alto, California Telephone Main 62 E. F OSWALD, Mgr. Tobacconist THE HOUSE OF QUALITY PALO ALTO n yir y .y Artistic D • V 1 Ud O Painter and W 1235 Broadway Oakland, Cal. Wall Hangings ecorator ood Finisher H. W. Simkins Palo Alto, Cal. Bookseller and Publisher Stanford Souvenir Books Views, Spoons, China and Die - Stamped Stationery Qyads on Sale Printing Department Makes a Specialty of School and College Work, Linotype Composition for the Trade Publisher of Decennial of Stanford Song Quad Stables Vandervoort Bros. Proprietors 542 High Street Main 4 1 G. W.LAPEIRE E. A. LAPEIRE uller Co. G. W. La Peire d Son Groceries Groceries HAVE THE CELEBRATED General Merchandise M. J. B. MOCHA AND JAVA 521 Ramona St., Palo Alto, Cal. Telephone Main 29 I ' ry It All Goods Delivered Free in Palo Alto and on University Campus University Avenue, Palo Alto EA ' l ' SOMEIHING NEW No-meds You should know that A Cereal Laxative Food ABBEY ' S ASK YOUR PHYSICIAN Prophylactic No Medicines or Drugs looth Powder Grocer or Druggist MANUFACTURED BY is a thoroughly modern Cereal Laxative Co. Hygienic Tooth Necessity 186 Erie St., San Francisco Phone Market 1864 ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR IT Corbaley Co. Telephone Black 121 Automobiles Motorcycles and Bicycles 234 University Avenue Palo Alto CROWN FLOUR McGaw Lazarus Opticians CONGDON CROME STATIONERS BOOKSELLERS Eyes Tested and Glasses Accurately Fitted 750 Van Ness, corner Turk Street SCHOOL SUPPLIES MAGAZINES ENGRAVING 230 University Ave. Palo Alto, Cal. It is easy enough to be pleasant When life flows on like a song. But the man worth while is the man who will smile When everything goes dead wrong. For the test of the heart is trouble, And it always comes with years. And the smile that is worth all the praises of earth Is the smile that shines through tears. Telephone Temporary 1634 a §ellotogtone 22 Montgomery Street TWOMEY BORREMANS SAN FRANCISCO The Press CAFE GRILL STANFORD HEADQUARTERS !? Lights tone St., San Jose, Cal. William Schmidt, Proprietor Bonds for Investment We own and offer high-grade bonds of municipal, railroad, gas and electric, and other public service corporations. We oifer only bonds which we our- selves have purchased after careful investigation, and v ' hich we can recommend for safe investment. Lists and prices on applicatioti N. W. Halsey Co. BANKERS 4rj Montgotnery Street, San Francisco tw York Philadelphia Chica u Oberon CAFE GRILL When in San Jose, drop into the Louvre STANFORD HEADQUARTERS STANFORD HEADQUARTERS $ $ J West Santa Clara Street San Jose, Cal. Geo. Keffel, Proprietor 52 North First St., near Liberty Theatre San Jose, Cal. N. J. FERGUSON, Proprietor David Woerner Telephone Mission 25 COOPER Manufacturer of Beer, Wine and Liquor Barrels Wine and Beer Casks, Tanks, Etc. OFFICE AND FACTORY S. W. Cor. 14th and Harrison Sts. SAN FRANCISCO Blake, Moffitt Towne PAPER TEMPORARY OFFICE. 4 1 9 I Ith STREET Telephone Oakland 7685 OAKLAND, = = CAL. Everybody knows that Tipo Chianti CaHfornia ' s : Choicest Product. Italian-Swiss Colony Battery and Greenwich Streets Radke Co. Jewelers and Silversmiths Van Ness Avenue and Bush Street San Francisco Goldsmith Silversmith p. L SEAMANS I65-I67 University Avenue Palo Alto MM J M%JL MMWl ers THEY MOVE NONE SO EASY These are the kind of suspenders the Col- lege man will like immensely. At play or at work you will experience more comfort wearing PRESIDENT SUSPENDERS than any other kind. The back slides with your every move. Bend, lift or reach, row, run or ride, -PRESIDENT SUSPEND- ERS adjust smoothly, quickly, gracefully. No hiking the trousers, no pressing the shoulders, no strain anywhere. You want one of two weights. Light weight or Me- dium weight. The Light weight webbing is I } s inches wide, the Medium I j inches wide. If you cannot find the weight to suit you at your dealers buy of us by mail. 50c. a pair. We will allow you to wear them for two or three days. If you don ' t like them, send them back and we will return your money. The C. A. Edgarton Mfg. Co. 70 Shirley Square Shirley, Massachusetts Th ere s a Diff erence There ' s as much difference between some kinds of developing and good developing as there is between eggs and fresh eggs. We do the good kind — do it so well that particular people send us their work from all parts of the country. Send us your next roll. Hirsch Kaiser 757 Fillmore Street San Francisco Government Municipal Railroad and Corporation Bonds E. H. Rollins Sons BANKERS 804 Kohl Building, San Francisco %N BO ftN CHICAGO DENVER Come, everybody, and see our unexcelled stock of Men ' s Furnishings Roberts k Baylers The IVIen ' s Furnishers 645 Van Ness Ave., near Turk When out on New Van Ness on shopping trip or drive, don ' t fail to make a call at six hundred forty- five We have the goods to please you at prices low and fair. Just give us a trial, and we ' ll treat you on the square We have a full line of up-to-date high-grade Jewelry, Watches, Clocks and Diamonds, at most reasonable prices. Our Optical business has increased during the last ten years until we now have the finest Eye- Testing Rooms and Factory for grinding Oculists ' Prescription Glasses in San Francisco. The large volume of business done by our firm enables us to make you the very lowest prices consistent with the high quality of our goods. It will pay you to see us The San Francisco Optical and JeAVelry Company 627 van Ness Ave. optical Branch : 1613 Fillmore Street A. L. SPENCE, Manager Hotel Crellin Oakland, California FRED. A. JORDAN Proprietor Students visiting Oakland will do well to make their head- quarters at the Crellin. Excel- lent hotel accommodations. Cafe and buffet in connection. Long distant telephones in every room. American, $3.00 and up European, $1.. ' 0 and up Tenth and Washington Sts. Benj. Curtaz Son Pianos Musical Instruments and Sheet Music 1605 VAN NESS AVE. San Francisco XcAPAeKK. Standard Optical Co. Gives each and every case special attention and take great pride in careful diagno- sis of any refractive errors. Glasses are prescribed only when needed and of making examinations of the eyes there is no charge. A full record is kept of all glasses prescrib- ed so that should a glass be lost, broken or a new pair re- quired, such can be obtained at shortest possible notice without further examination, which makes our method worthy of investigation. Our glasses fit the eyes, nose and face perfectly. Standard Optical Company 808 VAN NESS AVENUE Distinction in Furniture Means the true expression of individuality, it means beauty in design — finish. A following of the demands of discriminating and cultured taste. People who most care for the refinements of the home, will appreciate the efforts of the LIXDHOLM FL ' R- XITL ' RE CO. in antici- pating their wants, the sev- eral departments are well stocked with the new choice distinctive designs in furni- ture. A cordial invitation is ex- tended to the public to visit this exposition of fine Fur- niture. Carpets, Draperies. ' isitors incur no obligation to purchase, and may view this collection of artistic merchandise with freedom. Lindholm Furniture Co. 744 to 748 an Xess Avenue 769 to 775 Eddy Street San Francisco Commercial Teachers reserve f romi eight hundred to fifteen hundred dollars per year, and the demand far exceeds the supply. The San Francisco Business College, San Francisco, gives a special short course in Book- keeping, Typing, and Shorthand to University men and women to prepare them to teach the Commercial Branches. Write us for particulars. WINCHESTER .32 AND .35 CALIBER SELF-LOADING RIFLES The Winchester Model 1905 Self-Loading: Rifle is not cumbersome, complicated and unsigfhtly like most other self-loading- firearms, but a simple, handsome, well-balanced g-un. The Winchester self- loading system permits rapid shooting- with g-reat accuracy and on account of the novelty and ease of its operation adds much to the pleasure of rifle shooting- either at targ et org-ame. For certain kinds of hunting- where the quarry is g-enerally shot on the run, the Win- chester Self-Loading- Rifle is particularly well adapted. The .32 and .35 caliber cartridg-es that the Model 1905 handles are of the modern smokeless powder type and g-ive excellent penetration and g-reat shocking- effect on animal tissue. Winchester g-uns and Winchester ammunition are made for one another FREE : Send name and address for large illustrated catalogue describing all our guns WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO. NEW HAVEN, CONN. COTRELL LEONARD ' To Ts ALBANY, NEW YORK Sporting Goods, Fishing Tackle, Guns, Rifles Pistols, Revolvers, Ammunition, Hardware Tools, Cutlery, Foot Balls, Base Balls, Track Supplies Gunsmiths Locksmiths The O. A. Bremer-Lewis Co. 140 Van Ness Avenue, near Hayes Street SAN FRANCISCO A Book Store Robertson ' s San Francisco Miller Desk Co. Desks Chairs and Office Furniture 436 Bush St. San Francisco Phone Temporary 2283 Oriental Turkish and Hammam Baths COLD WATER PLUNGE Eddy and Larkin Sts. , San Fraficisco Bath Inckiding Room $1.00 OPEN DAT AND NIGHT W. J. BLUMBERG BRO. Bracelets Wc are now showing a magnificent as- sortment of Solid 14-Karat Gold Brace- lets artistically set with every conceiv- able precious stone, such as diamonds, rubies, jade, sapphires, emeralds, ame- thysts, etc. Some burnished, others beautifully engraved with scroll and floral designs. All reasonably priced. Besides the above we carry the largest and most complete line of Filled Brace- lets and novelties in town. SEE OUR WINDOWS Baldwin J lS 1261 Van Ness at Sutter Gas for Heating... Quick Clean Economical GASTEAM RADIATORS Steam Heat from Gas at a cost of only five-eights cents per hour to maintain a comfortable temperature in a room 10 feet square. Approved by Underwriters. Backus Patent Gas Grates and Logs At Your Service The Gas and Electric Appliance Co. 809A TURK STREET c, . f 500 Haight Street Salesrooms: | presidio Avem 2965 Sixteenth Street 1260 Ninth Avenue A. B. COSTIGAN. Pr«. Phone Franklin 1431 Pacific Motor Car Co. Agents for Packard and Stevens=Duryea Motor Cars Branch Office : 1 4 1 6- 1 4 1 8 Broadway OAKLAND, CAL. F. W. KEMLING The Belmont 24-26 FOUNTAIN STREET San JOSE. California Every successful lawyer must know the law of his own state. Every successful lawyer owns Kerr ' s Cyclopedic Codes of California. Why? Because for the first time in the State of California a thoroughly annotated set of Codes have been edited and published, and are now for sale in the sets of four books as follows : Henning ' s General Laws Kerr ' s Cyclopedic Political Code Civil Code and Code of Civil Procedure Price, and sold in sets only, $40.00. No law student who hopes to amount to anything in the legal profession can afford to be without them. Ask your lawyer friends or the judges of the courts, for they are more enthusiastic over them than we are. Yours respectfully, Bender-Chaquette Company No. 1 03 1 Franklin Street San Francisco, Cal. OLIVER Type ri-ter IS BUILT RIGHT WRITES RIGHT IS RIGHT IN EVERY PARTICULAR AND IS THE STANDARD VISIBLE WRITER Art Catalogue Free Upon Application Fred W. Vaughan Co. 907 Fillmore Street San Francisco, Calif. All the Writing in Sight L. M. Alexander Co Exclusive Pacific Coast Dealers L. C. Smith Bros. Typewriter 1820 Fillmore Street Phone West 6288 Recent Sales : Union Trust Bank ; G. H. Umbsen Co.; City and Covnity Bant: ; S.N. Wood Co.; A. J. Rich Co.; Cal. Wine Association; W. J. Sloane Co.; Western Union Telegraph ; Standard Oil Co. Write for Illustrated Catalogue L. M.Alexander Co. 1820 Fillmore Street, San Francisco Branches : Portland Seattle Spokane Tacoina Los Angeles TWENTY CENTS A YEAR A Williams Typewriter used by a California concern has cost for maintenance and repairs but $1.00 in four and a half years. The machine was hard w orked, averaging fifty letters a day. Here is their letter : JOHN J. FULTON CO., 5910 San Pablo Avenue, Oakland, Cal., June 20, 1906. Our Williams was burned in the big fire. We have been using another machine, but want to get back to the Williams as soon as possible, so send us over a No. 6 as soon as received. Just before the Quake our old No. 4 Williams was printing pale, and more ink didn ' t seem to help, and we thought we had a kick coming, when I discovered that we were still using the original pair of pads, bought with the machine four and a half years ago. . new pair put us all right again. Total cost for ink and repairs, four and a half years, Sl.OO. So you see the Williams does after all cost something to operate and maintain, viz.: about 20c. a year. At least that is our e.xperience. JOHN. J. FULTON CO., A. E. Shattuck, Mgr, P. S. And our machine is hard worked — averages about 50 letters per day. This record can be equalled by no other typew riter on the market ! You know that. And w hen you consider that during the whole time better work w as secured than can be done by any other typewriter, you cannot afford to have your Avork done on any other machine. We guarantee cost of maintenance to not exceed $1.00 a year. WE KNOW THE TYPEWRITER PROBLEMS with which every user is confronted. Our business has been to seek a solution of these problems. Whether we have succeeded is for you to say when you have read our proofs. We have produced a machine which Reduces the cost of maintenance ninety per cent. Increases the operator ' s capacity twenty per cent. Turns out the most beautiful work ever known. Is so simple that repairs cost almost nothing. Is capable of a speed of 200 words per minute. Is visible, light running and convenient. Possesses every known improvement of importance. The price is SIOO.OO, and it comes nearer giving value received than any machine heretofore manufactured. It is sold on easy payments, and always offered on ten days ' trial. We don ' t want a man ' s money until he has satisfied himself that he has bought the machine that comes nearer perfection than any other. WILLIAMS TYPEWRITER CO. Or 1116 GEARY STREET, SAN FRANCISCO TYPEWRITER INSPECTION CO. 24 SO. SECOND STREET SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA Agents Santa Clara County No. 2 $40. oo SUN VISIBLE TYPEWRITERS Visible writing Extreme speed Heavy manifolding Forced alignment Durability Best type bar construction Ball-bearing carriage Simplest in mechanism Costs less to maintain Excellent stencil cutter All desirable features Light touch Perfect work Direct printing No ribbon Efficiency THE ONLY SATISFACTORY TYPEWRITER AT A LOW PRICE SPECIAL ALUMINUM WEIGHS NINE POUNDS PACIFIC TYPEWRITER COMPANY 2108 BUSH STREET (near Fillmore) SAN FRANCISCO No. 3 $75. oo Our High-grade Model No. 6 will be Ready for Delivery in January AGENTS WANTED The Autopiano The Ideal Instrument for the Home The Autopiano is the ideal instrument for the home where all the members do not play for themselves. It can be played by anyone with the aid of music rolls and, best of all, it can be played with feeling and with expression. People of the finest musical taste are realizing the boon that the Autopiano is in the home or in the club. It has been the means of stimulating a liking for the better classes of music. It has appealed to grown people who never ex- pected to be able to play for themselves just as it has been warmly accepted by young people because it has been the means of producing every class of composition without the labor of constant study and practice. The Autopiano is not a combination of a piano and a player mechanism. It is a single instrument built in one factory of the finest materials and by the most expert work- manship. Send for Beautiful Art Catalogue. Eilers Music Company 1 1 30 Van Ness Avenue SAN FRANCISCO. CAL. ] 220 Fillmore Street Other Stores — Oakland, Stockton, Portland, Spokane, Seattle, Etc. All Kinds of Books Cameras Supplies New Location Van Ness Avenue at Post Street Everything to Wear and Eat Sporting Goods A SPECIALTY Mail Orders Filled with Care and Promptness— No Delay THE STORE WITH THE MONEY BACK POLICY Fredericks = = We are now located in our new home, and showing a full line of — Carpets Furniture Linoleums Wall Papers Curtains and Draperies Oriental and Domestic Rugs OFFICE FURNITURE A FEATURE Jos. Fredericks Co. 819 to 835 ELLIS STREET Between Polk and Van Ness obc parts Oea (5ar6en T2Vn36eal lace forTLuncl)eon MUSIC FROM 12 IT) 2 AND 3 TO 5 This hall can be rented at night for Balls, Banquets, Concerts and functions of all kinds. : : : : Double maple floor for dancing. as lngton at Van ss Entrance through City of Paris Dry Goods Company Good Knit Goods Moderately Priced Varsity Sweaters, A thletic Suits, Varsity Coats, Bathing Suits, K Neck Sweaters, Gym. Suits, Ladies ' Knitted Waists, Jerseys Underwear Hosiery women Silk, Wool, Lisle, Cotton and Irish Linen - - Knit to Fit — Fit to Wear Cor. Van Ness A ve. and California St. San Francisco An elegant line of furniture suitable for glp Dens or Frat Houses Shaving- Stands, Cellar- ettes, Tabourettes, Morris Chairs, Library Tables, Mag-azine Racks, Oriental Rug-s and all g-rades of Por- tieres and Hang-ing-s. LOW PRICES PREVAIL 1451-14.91 Vai Ness NearPitvc 2I4I-21S1 Mission Near I7tK Main Office Phone Temporary 80 1 Low Rates Branch Gffice Photie Temporary 512 Prompt Service BAGGAGE AND FREIGHT Tra?isferred to and from Railroads, Steamers, Hotels, Reside?ices, etc., at low rates Morton Special Delivery ' l ' - f ' Lra,,.,m s,. Branch Office: Oakland Ferry Depot, Foot of Market St. Money saved buying clothes at Brown ' s is good for fun. YOUNG MEN ' S FASHIONABLE Suits and Overcoats at mill to man prices Haberdashery Hats Canes Umbrellas Leather Goods BROWN BROS. CO. Van Ness and O ' Farrell, San Francisco B. F. BELL H. S. RITCHIE C. W. TOOTHAKER Coal Wood Hay Grain Etc. Corner Emerso7i St. and Hamilton Ave. Telephone Main 60 P. O. Box Electrical Machinery and Supplies PACIFIC COAST AGENTS FOR FOURTEEN FACTORIES Prompt Delivery Guaranteed Goods Courteous Treatment Low Prices Consistent with Quality Our Motto si KiiXiiiw GET OUR CATALOGUE AND BU LLETINS Standard Electrical Works SAN FRANCISCO. CALIFORNIA Geo. H. Fuller Desk Co. California PowderWorks Office Manufacturers of Bank Hercules Lodge and Church Dynamite and Furniture Fumeless Gelatine § Black and Smokeless Sporting Powder 659-663 MISSION STREET San Francisco, Cal. Berkeley California Pacific Metal Works Importers and Manufacturers of METALS Pi Tin, Pig Lead, Slab Zinc, Antimony, Solder, Bab- bitt Metal, Stereotype, Linotype, Electrotype and Monotype Metals Sheet Copper and Soldering Coppers 153-159 FIRST STRIIET San Francisco GEO. J. CAREY Phone Main 7 THE ELITE MARKET - - Fish on Friday. Nice Poultry Al vays on Hand Prompt Delivery Service W. W. NELSON, Pres. G. J. JAEGGI, Sec. Western Mercantile Company, Inc. WHOLESALE LIQUORS FAMILY TRADE 1520 Ellis Street Between Webster and Fillmore San Francisco BAR IN REAR Phone Vest 6734 AII=the=Year-Roun(l Vacation Tours EXPRESS SERVICE fjj jg g Special Vacation Excursion Trips LOW RATES, INCLUDING BERTH AND MEALS Between San Francisco and all ports in California, British Columbia, Washing ton, Alaska and Mexico ALASKA EXCURSIONS— Season 1907 TOTEM POLE ROUTE Land of the Midnight Sun, Glaciers and a Thousand Islands en route Inside Passage — Seasickness Unknown The Palatial AlasKa Excursion Steamship SPOKANE June 14 and 28 Will leave SEATTLE and VICTORIA July 12 and 26 Aug ust 9 ■S Reservations now being made. For Rates, Tickets, and Illustrated Literature, apply SAN FRANCISCO TICHlET OmCElS 3 Market Street and Broadway Wharf C. D. DUNANN, General Passenger Agent, Broadway Wharf, San Francisco Henry R. Worthington 9-11 Minna Street Dean Steam Pumps Laidlaw Dunn-Gordon Co. San Francisco, Cal. The National Ice and Cold Storage Co. and the Union Ice Co. FRANK WOODARD, Agent Palo Alto, California J 0. D. McGILVRAV, President and Gen I Manager ROBERT COLLIER, Secretary THE McGILVRAY STONE CO. THE McGILVRAY RAYMOND GRANITE CO. Masonry and Stone Contractors Office and Yards: Townsend St., Bet. Jth a fid 8 th Sts., Sa?i Francisco, Cal. OPERATISG: Duntrtoie Quarry - Sites, Colusa Co., Cal. Granite Quarry _ - - - Raymond, Cal. Pacific Tool h. Supply Co. H«BB Dealers in High Grade Machine ' ' £, ' . :a Tools and Shop Supplies Vji ttir Fine Tools and Material for Workers in Metal 556-560 Howard Street San Francisco Telephone Temporary 1365 The Market Street Bank COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS MarKet Street, Cor. SeventK Street Oommercial Department Receives checking accounts from cor- porations, individuals and societies Safe Deposit Vaults Savings Department Pays interest on deposits at the rate of 3; and 4 per cent per annum f Boxes rented at $2.50 per annum and upwards 20 Mule Team Borax Is the world ' s greatest cleanser and most harmless antiseptic. Softens water and makes bathing a delight. Will cleanse the most delicate fabrics without injury and leave the hands soft and white. SOLD BY ALL DEALERS AUTO LIVERT COMPANY Automobile Experts N. VI . Cor. Goldeii Gate and Van Ness Avenues, San Francisco, Cat. Sales , Rentals, Garage and Repairs. Livery Service at all Hours. Active Auto Company Cars for Pleasure and Commercial Purposes 60 Van Ness Avenue, San Francisco W.L.GrowallCo. Third Floor Mutual Savings Bank Building, Market Street, Opp. Third, San Francisco Phone: MARKET 124 ° - V ' wo JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO TELEPHONE MAIN b BUaOtRS EXCHANGE BO . Mm i LOjjiijgi. p INCORPORATED DlRECrafiS: Jf.FORDERER W.J REES WJ DEOEAR F FORDERER.JR, J . 5 S FOHOERER J: ' TILE.SlATEAMEtM. -s ;| ,:1|: ROOFING i—-— , P:;-- . e ' Pfjoof WINDOW FRAMES .. i r j; : ■' • asASHts C01 I EK Z1NC {)R . niNTS 269 I ' otrero Avenue, near 16th St. — 2 blocks south from junction 10th and l rannan Streets For the Latest and Keenest in Artistic Apparel see Wideman The College Tailor Always exclusive in styles and fabrics Garments specially designed to suit you That Fit You hit the nail on the head when you select your Suits or Overcoats from Winninger. You obtain high-grade garments at popular prices. There is just one occasion, and one only, when you should not wear a Winninger suit, and that is in bed. At all other times a Winninger suit is in good form. J. U. WINNINGER THE A R T I STIC TAILOR 4S E. Santa Clara St, , San Jose,, Cal, BUSHNELL FOTOGRAPHER SAN FRANCISCO SAN JOSE SACRAMENTO - - If M %
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