University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL)

 - Class of 1901

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1901 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 346 of the 1901 volume:

The CA? and GOWN VOLUME VI PUBLIJHED ANNUALLY UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE ORDER OF THE IRON MAJK OF THE UNIVERJITY OF CHICAGO 1901 A. C BARTLETT To ATDOLPHUJ' C. BARTLETT This Book is respectfully DEDICA TED k9 Greetmgy. . . TOU may laaw Mm m all before In clan, on club: or team;; You may 17am read our records der, t Or learned oarfoadexz dreamy. You may Xzaw fleard m gave tfze clzeer Taat urged oar comrade; on,- , a You may aaw blown our common fear J Of kai, gap, at and non. You may have loved fbe le-Jame girlx, Orjgzmaed five 56! -same wane; You may laaw prized ourfootaall curly, Or axed $66 Jelf-xame Wzarxe. You may 6am 53m,y0a may 13am fward, You may aaw known our meeting; ,- Ta eacb, to all, flak written word N aw flare proclaim: oar y Greetings y EDWARD CHRISTIAN KOHLSAAT FREDERIC GRAHAM MOLONEY Managing Editors Business Managers EUGENE H. B. WATSON VERNON TIRAS FERRIS Associate Editors JAMES RONALD HENRY CHARLES ERI HULBERT TURNER BURTON SMITH HAROLD BENNETT CHALLISS HOWARD SLOAN YOUNG WILLIAM ARTHUR MOLONEY ELIZABETH HOLT BELDEN JULIA COBURN HOBBS MARGARET G. COULTER LEES BALLINGER ORVILLE E. ATWOOD JAMES MILTON SHELDON EMMA DOLFINGER DAVID A. ROBERTSON CHARLES M. VAN PAMEN DAVID B. STERNS FRANK P. BARKER ESTELLE RUECKHEIM 7 Board of Artists 4 ISAAC A. MORGAN ELIZABETH HOLT BELDEN CARL VVERNTZ WALTER WHITEHEAD B. ENGLEBERT KEY FRANK H. HARMS H. VON HOFSTEN DAVID A. ROBERTSON LONA SHIELDS H. RICHARDSON BOEHM FRED MOWEN B0130 Officers e a otKEiiLLE ? RUCKS MARTIN A. RYERSON, President ANDREW MCLEISH, Vice-President CHARLES L. HUTCHINSON, Treasurer HENRY A. RUST, Comptroller THOMAS W. GOODSPEED Secretary M embers Class 1. Term Expims in 1901 En B. FELSENTHAL HAROLD F. MCCORMICK WILLIAM R. HARPER MARTIN A. RYERSON HERMANN H. KOHLSAAT WILLARD A SMITH GEORGE C. WALKER Class 2. Term Expires in 1902 CHARLES C. BOWEN 59 . ISAAC W. MACLAY JESSE A. BALDWIN ENos M. BARTON ANDREW MCLEISH JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER, Jr. DAVID G. HAMILTON Class 3. Term Expires in 1903 FRED T. GATES ALomzo K. PARKER CHARLES L. HUTCHINSON ' HOWARD G. GREY EDWARD GOODMAN A. C. BARTLETT FREDERICK A. SMITH I eceased. ,QA ac lglty If! e r Officers of Instruction and Administration J VVILLIAIVI RAINEY HARPER, PH.D., D.D., LL.D., President of the University, Professor and Head of the Department of the Semitic Languages and Literatures; Director of Haskell Oriental Museum, GALUSHA ANDERSON, A M., S T.D.y LLD., Professor and Head of the Department of Homiletics GEORGE WASHINGTON NORTHRUP, D.D., LL.D.,7 r Professor and Head of the Department of Systematic Theology. WILLIAM CLEAVER WILKINSON, A.M., D.D., Professor of Poetry and Criticism. FRANKLIN jOHNSON, D.D., LL.D., Professor of Church History and Homiletics. THOMAS WAKEFIELD GOODSPEED, D.D., Secretary of the Board of Trustees and University Registrar. ERI BAKER HULBERT, A.M.. D.D.. LL.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Church History ; Dean of the Divinity School. HERMANN EDWARD VON HOLST, PH.D., Professor of History emerituw. :k Deceased IO THOMAS CHROWDER CHAMBERLIN, PH.D., LL.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Geology ; Director of Museums. JOHN HENRY BARROWS, D.D.. Non-Resident Professorial Lecturer on Comparative Religion. CHARLES OTIS WHITMAN, PH.D , LL D., Professor and Head of the Department of Zoiilogy. NICHOLAS SENN, M.D., Professorial Lecturer in Military Surgery. RICHARD GREEN MOULTON, PH.D., Professor of Literature tin Englishy CARL GUSTAF LAGERGREN, A.B., D.B., Professor tin the Swedish Theological Seminaryt of Systematic Theology and Dean of the Seminary. JOHN MERLE COULTER, PH.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Botany. WILLIAM GARDNER HALE, A.B., LL.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Latin. HARRY PRATT JUDSON, A.M., LL.D., Professor of Comparative Constitutional L'aw and Diplomacy and Head of the I Department of Political Science; Dean of the Faculties of Arts, Literature and Science ; Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Literature. CHARLES RICHMOND HENDERSON, A.M., D.D., Professor of Sociology in the Divinity School and University Chaplain. SHERBURNE WESLEY BURNHAM, A.1VI., Professor of Practical Astronomy and Astronomer in the Yerkes Observatory. CHARLES FREDERICK MILLSPAUGH, Professorial Lecturer 011 Botany. CHARLES CHANDLER, A. M, Professor of Latin. 11 EMIL GUSTAV HIRSCH, PH.D., LL.D., LITADU Professor of Rabbinical Literature and Philosophy. HENRIK GUNDERSON, A.M., D.B., Professor 011 the Dano-Norwegian Theological Seminaryh of Systematic , Theology, New Testament Interpretation; and Biblical Literature THE REAL BOSS and Dean of the Seminary. CHARLES CUTHBERT HALL, 13.15., Professorial Lecturer on the Barrows Lectureship. FRANK W GUNSAULUS, D.D., Professorial Lecturer in English Literature. WILLIAM H. HOLMES, A.B., Non-Resident Professor of Archaeologic Geology. JAMES LAURENCE LAUGHLIN, PH.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Political Economy. ALBERT ABRAHAM DHCHELSON, PH.D., SC.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Physics. FRANK BIGELOW TARBELL, PH.D., Professor of Classical Archaeology. DANIEL GIROUD ELLIOT, F.R.S.E., Professorial Lecturer on Zoology. OSKAR BOLZA, 1311.13,, Professor of Mathematics. ERNEST DEWITT BURTON, D D., Professor and Head of the Department of New Testament Literature and Interpretation. ALBION WOODBURY SMALL, PH.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Sociology; Director of the University Affiliations. JOSEPH PAYSON IDDINGS, PH.B., Professor of Petrology. 12 EDMUND JANES JAMES, Ath P1111, Professor of Public Administration, Director of the University Extension Division. CHARLES REID BARNES, PH.D., Professor of Plant Physiology and Dean in the Colleges. 1. FRANKLIN JAMESON, PH.D., Professor of American History and Head of the Department of History. PAUL SHOREY, PH.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Greek. BENJAMIN TERRY, PH.D., Professor of Mediaeval and English History. WILLIAlVI DARNALL MACCLINTOCK, A.M., .7 Professor of English Literature ; Dean of the University College. JOHN DEWEY. PH.D, Professor and Head of the Department of Philosophy. , HENRY HERBERT DONALDSON, PH.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Neurology. CHARLES RICHARD VAN HISE, PH.D., Non-Resident Professor of Structural Geology MAXIME MAXIMOVITCH KOVALEVSKY, Professorial Lecturer in Russian History and Civilization. GEORGE BURMAN FOSTER, A.M., Professor of Systematic Theology. IRA MAURICE PRICE, DAB., PH.D., Professor of Semitic Languages and Literatures. GEORGE STEPHEN GOODSPEED, PH.D., Professor of Comparative Religion and Ancient History ; University Recorder. JACQUES LOEB, M D., Professor of Physiology and Experimental Biology. 13 ROLLIN D. SALISBURY, A.M., Professor of Geographic Geology and Dean of the' Ogden tGraduatet School of Science. OLIVER CUMMINGS FARRINGTON, PH.D., Professorgl Lecturer on Detgrminative Mineralogy. STARR WILLARD CUTTING, PH.D., Professor of German Literature. FRANK FROST ABBOTT, PH.D., Professor of Latin. JOHN MATHEWS MANLY, PH.D., Professor and Head of the Department of English. ELIAKIM HASTINGS MOORE, PH.D., Professor and Head of the Depaitment of Mathematics. ISAAC BRONSON BURGESSy A.M., Academy Professor of Latin. ROBERT FRANCIS HARPER. PH.D., Professor of the Semitic Language$ and Literatures, JOHN ULRIC NEF, PH.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Chemistry. ANDREW I. MCLAUGHLIN, PH.D., Professor of American History, University of Michigan. 'X RICHARD ALEXANDER FULLERTON PENROSE, JR, PH.D., Professor of Economic Geology. T SHAILER MATHEWS, A.Mty Professor of New Testament History and Interpretation and Junior Dean of the Divinity School. IAMES HAYDEN TUFTS, PH.D., Professor of Philosophy and Dean in the Senior Colleges. tk Permitted to conduct work in the University of Chicago by the courtesy of the Regents of the University of Michigan. 1' On leave of absence 14 SAMUEL WESLEY STRATTON, 8.13., Professor of Physics. EDWIN BRANT FROST, A.M., Professor of Astrophysics and Astrophysicist in the Yerkes Observatory. CARL DARLING BUCK, PH,D., Professor of Sanskrit and Indo-European Comparative Philology. EDWARD EMERSON BARNARD, A.M., SC.D., Professor of Practical Astronomy and Astronomer in the Yerkes Observatory. GEORGE LINCOLN HENDRICKSON, A.B., Professor of Latin. ADOLPH CASPAR MILLER, A.M., Professor of Finance. EDWARD CAPPS, PH.D., Professor of Greek. AMOS ALONZO STAGG, A.B., Professor and Director of the Division of Physical Culture. GEORGE ELLERY HALE, S.B., SC.D., Professor of Astrophysics and Director of the Yerkes Observatory. LEVVELLYS FA BARKER, IVI.B., Professor and Head of the Department of Anatomy. CHARLES EDMUND HEWITT, D.D., Student Secretary in the Divinity School. FRANCIS ADELBERT BLACKBURN, PH.D., Associate Professor of the English Language. HEINRICH MASCHKEY PH.D., Associate Professor of Mathematics. JOHN WILDMAN MONCRIEF. A.M., Associate Professor of Church History. 15 ELLA FLAGG YOUNG, Associate Professor of Pedagogy. OLIVER JOSEPH THATCHER, PH.D., Associate Professor of Mediaval and English History. CLARENCE FASSETT CASTLE, PH.D., Associate Professor of Greek on the Edward Olson Foundation and Dean in the Junior Colleges. ZELLA ALLEN DIXSON, A.M., Associate Librarian. MARION TALBOT, A M., Associate Profesgor of Sanitary Science, Dean of Women and Head of Green House. ERNST FREUND, J.U.D., PH,D , Associate Professor of Jurisprudence and Public Law, FREDERICK STARR, PH.D., Associate Professor of Anthropology and Curator of the Anthropological Department of Walker Museum WILLIAM ISAAC THOMAS, PH.D., Associate Professor of Sociology and Superintendent of Departmental Libraries. GEORGE EDGAR VINCENT, PH.D., Associate Professor of Sociology and Dean of the Junior Colleges. ALEXANDER SMITH, PH.D., Associate Professor of General Chemistry and Dean in the Junior Colleges. CHARLES ZEUBLIN, PH.B., D.B., Associate Professor of Sociology. EDWIN OAKES JORDAN, PH.D , Associate Professor of Bacteriology. WILLIAM F. E. GURLEY, Associate Curator in Palaeontology. I6 Prof. Angell Just before WM; '16! . ,, Q t ALBERT HARRIS TOLMAN, PH.D., Assistant Professor of English Literature. WILLIAM HOOVER, PH.D., Non-Resident Assistant Professor of Mathematics. FRANK JUSTUS MILLER, PH.D., Assistant Professor of Latin and Dean of Afflliations. GEORGE EMORY FELLOWS, PH.D., Assistant Professor of History. KARL PIETSCH, PH.D., Assistant Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures. FELIX LENGFELD, PH.D., Assistant Professor of Inorganic Chemistry. MYRA REYNOLDS, PH.D., Assistant Professor of English Literature and Head of Foster House. HENRY WILLIAM ROLFE, A.M., Non-Resident Assistant Professor of English Literature. THORSTEIN B. VEBLEN, PH.D., Assistant Professor of Political Economy and Managing Editor of the Journal of Political Economy. HANS M. SCHMIDT-WARTENBERG, PH.D., Assistant Professor of German Philology. OLOF HEDEEN, A.B., Assistant Professm- an the Swedish Theological Seminarw of Practical Theology and Exegesis. FRANCIS WAYLAND SHEPARDSON, PH.D., Assistant Professor of American History and the PresidentYs Secretary. GEORGE HERBERT MEAD, A.B., Assistant Professor of Philosophy. I7 HERBERT ELLSWORTH SLAUGHT, PH.D., Assistant Professor of Collegiate Mathematics FRANK MELVILLE BRONSON, A.M., Academy Assistant Professor of Greek. EDWIN ERLE SPARKS, A M., Assistant Professor of American History. WAYLAND JOHNSON CHASE, A.M., Academy Assistant Professor in History and Dean. GEORGE CARTER HOWLAND, A.M., Assistant Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures. CAMILLO VON KLENZE, PH.D., Assistant Professor of German Literature. , MAXIME INGRES, Assistant Professor of Romance Languages and Literature HERBERT LOCKWOOD WILLETT, PH.D., Assistant Professor of the Semitic Languages and Literatures and Dean of the Disciple? Divinity House. JULIUS STIEGLITZ. PH.D., Assistant Professor of Chemistry. CHARLES BENEDICT DAVENPORT, PH.D., Assistant Professor of Zoblogy. JACOB WILLIAM ALBERT YOUNG, PH.D., Assistant Professor of Mathematical Pedagogy. WILLIAM BISHOP OWEN, A.B., Assistant Professor of Greek. JAMES HENRY BREASTED, PH.D., Assistant Professor of Egyptology and Semitic Languages; Assistant Director of Haskell Oriental Museum. 18 CLYDE WEBER VOTAW, D.B., PE.D., Assistant Professor of New Testament Literature. JAMES ROWLAND ANGELL, A.M., Assistant Professor of Experimental Psychology. FERDINAND SCHWILL, PH.D., Assistant Professor of Modern History. ROBERT HERRICK, A 13., Assistant Professor of Rhetoric. WILLIAM HILL, A.M., Assistant Professor of Political Economy. FRANK RATTRAY LILLIE, PH.D., Assistant Professor of Zoiilogy. ROBERT MORSS LOVETT, A.B., Assistant Professor of English. JARED G. TROOP, A.M., Assistant Professor of English. NEWMAN MILLER, PH.B., Director of the University Press Division. LEONARD EUGENE DICKSON, PH.D. Assistant Professor of Mathematics. SOLOMON HENRY CLARK, PH.B., Assistant Professor of Public Speaking, PAUL OSKAR KERN, PH.D., Instructor in Germanic Philology. WILLIAM MUSS-ARNOLT , PH.D., Instructor and Assistant Recorder. PORTER LANDER MACCLINTOCK, A.M., Instructor in English. CLARK EUGENE CRANDALL, D.B., PH.D., Instructor in the Semitic Languages.56 I9 K On leave of absence WARDNER WILLIAMS, MUS.DOC., PH.D. Instructor in and Director of Music. FREDERICK JAMES GURNEY, A.B., D.B., Assistant to the Recorder. LUANNA ROBERTSON, PH D , Head of Kelly House. THEODORE LEE NEFF, A.M., PH.D., Instructor in Romance Languages. FREDERICK IVES CARPENTER, PH.D., Instructor in English. DAVID JUDSON LINGLE, PH.D., Instructor in Physiology. IRA WOODS HOWERTH, PH.D., Instructor in Sociology University College. JAMES HARRINGTON BOYD, SC.D4y Instructor in Mathematics. ELIZABETH WALLACE, S.B., Instructor in Romance Languages and Head of Beecher House. WILLIAM AUGUST PETERSON, D.B., Instructor On the Swedish Theologic Seminarw in General History, Church History and the Greek and the Swedish Languages. CHRISTIAN JORGINIUS OLSEN, Instructor Qn the Dano-Norwegian Theological Seminary in Homiletics, Church Polity and Pastoral Duties. CHARLES PORTER SMALL, M.D., Examining Physician. KURT LAVES, PH.D, Instructor in Astronomy. ERNEST LE ROY CALDWELL, A.B., Academy Instructor in Mathematics. 20 1m. ehnsmm's hsmsn ' WALTER A. PAYNE, PH.D., Instructor and Secretary of the University Extension Lecture-Study Department, WILLIAM H. RUNYON, A.M., Academy Instructor in Natural Science. OSCAR LOVELL TRIGGS, PH.D., Instructor in English. NELS SORENSON LAWDAHL, Instructor Qin the Dano-Norwegian Theological Seminarw in Church History. CHARLES MANNING CHILD, PH.D.y Instructor in Z0610gy. ADDISON WEBSTER MOORE, PH.D., Instructor in Philosophy. ALBERT CHAUNCEY EYCLESHYMER, PH.D., Instructor in Anatomy. CHARLES RIBORG MANN, PH.D,, Instructor in Physics. RALPH CHARLES HENRY CATTERALL, A.B., Instructofin Modern History. JOSEPHINE CHESTER ROBERTSON, A.B., Cataloguer. BRADLEY MOORE DAVIS, PH.D., Instructor in Botany. ROBERT ANDREWS MILLIKA'N, PH.D , Instructor in Physics. GORDON JENNINGS LAING, PH.D., Instructor in Latin. HENRY RAND HATFIELD, PH.D., Instructor in Political Economy and Political Science. 21 JAMES WESTFALL THOMPSON, PH.D., Instructor in History. WILLIAM VAUGHN MOODY, A.M., Instructor in English and Rhetoric. FREDERICK MASON BLANCHARD, A.M., Instructor in Public Speaking. GEORGE HERBERT LOCKE, A.M., Instructor in Pedagogy. LINDSAY TODD DAMON, A.B., Instructor in English. STUART WELLER, S B., Instructor in Palaeontological Geology. FOREST RAY MOULTON, PH.D., Instructor in Astronomy. JOHN CHARLES HESSLER, PH.D.I Instructor in Chemistry. JOSEPH EDWARD RAYCROFT, A.B., M.D., Instructor in Physical Culture. GERTRUDE DUDLEY, Instructor in Physical Culture and Head of Spelman House. WORTHINGTON CHAUNCEY FORD, Lecturer on Statistics in the Department of Political Economy. EDWARD AMBROSE BECHTEL, PH.D., Associate in Latin. EDWARD S. ARIES. Assistant in Philosophy. CHARLES JOSEPH CHAMBERLAIN, A.M., PH.D., Associate in Botany. 22 Photographed by Allen Ayrauu Green. CAMPUS BY MOONLIGHT METTON LELAND MILLER, PH.D., Associate in Anthropology. HERVEY FOSTER MALLORY, A.B., Associate and Secretary of the Correspondence-Study Department. EDGAR JOHNSON GOODSPEED, PH.D., Associate in Biblical and Patristic Greek. GLENN MOODY HOBBS, S.B., Associate in Physics. CLARENCE ALMON TORREY, Ph.B., Inspector of Departmental Libraries. ELLA ADAMS MOORE, PH.B. Associate in English. PHILIP SCHUYLER ALLEN, PH.D., Associate in German. LAUDER WILLIAM JONES, PH.D., Associate in Chemistry. ALFRED REYNOLDS VVIGHTlVIAN, A314, Academy Associate in Latin. AMY ELIZA TANNER, PH.D., Associate in Philosophy. HERMANN BENJAMIN ALMSTEDT, PH.D., Associate in German and Dean in University College. HENRY GORDON GALE, PH.D., Associate in Physics and Head of Snell House. SUSAN HELEN BALLOU, PH.B., Associate in Latin. EDITH BURNHAM FOSTER, PH.B., Associate in English and Head of Kelly House. 25 FREDERICK DAY NICHOLS, A.B.,36 Academy Associate in English. HARRY DELMONT ABELLS, S.B., Academy Associate in Physics and Chemistry. JOSEPH M. FLINT, Associate in Anatomy. HORACE BUTTERWORTH, A.B., Associate in Physical Culture. HIRAM PARKER WILLIAMSON, Assistant in Romance Languages and Literatures. ALICE NORTHRUP SIMPSON, A.B., Academy Assistant in French. ISABELLE BRONK, PH.D., Assistant in Fren ch. FRANCES KNOX, Assistant in H istory FRANK W. DlGNAN, Assistant in Greek. MARY E. MCDOWELL, Head Resident of the University of Chicago Settlement. WARNER FITE, PH.D., Assistant in Psychology. ADOLPH BERNHARD, PH.D., Laboratory Assistant in Chemistry. JAMES H. RANSOM, A.M., PH.D., Lecture Assistant in Chemistry. HARRY NICHOLS WHITFORD, S.B., Assistant in Botany. 26 F Resigned WILLIAM GOROUCH, Assistant in Elocution. WESLEY CLAIR MITCHELL, PH.D., Assistant in Political Economy. JOHN J. MEYER, PH.D., Assistant in Sanskrit. CHARLES S. FOX, Academy Assistant in German W. B. HOLMES, PH.D., Research Assistant in Chemistry. HENRY C. RIDDLE, PHIL, Lecture Assistant in Chemistry. A. W. LEONARD. Academy Assistant in English. HAYDN EVAN JONES, PH.D., Academy Assistant in Latin and History. FERDINAND ELLERMAN, Assistant in the Yerkes Observatory. CORA BELLE PERRINE, A.B., Head of Accession Department HENRY CHANDLER COWLES, PELD.Y Assistant in Botany. MAUDE LAVINA RADFORD, PH.M., Assistant in English U11 the University Collegey ANNA SOPHIA PACKER, A3,, Accession Assistant. JAMES XVEBER LINN, A 13., Assistant in English. 27 HOWELL EMLYN DAVIES, PH.D,, Assistant in Bacteriology. NOTT WILLIAM FLINT, S.B.. Assistant in English and Head of North Hall. IDA FURNISS, Assistant in Physical Culture. ROBERT WALTER BRUERE, A M., Assistant in Rhetoric. FRANK LELAND TOLMAN, PH.B., Loan Desk Assistant. JONATHAN EDWARDS WEBB, A.B.. Academy Assistant in Physiography and Biology. DAVID HOBART CARNAHAN, A M , Reader in Romance Languages and Literatures. L131 CECILIA CIPRIANI, PH 13., Docent in Literature Un Englishy ERRETT GATES, D.B., Lecturer in DisciplesY Divinity House CHARLES WILLIAM SEIDENADEL, PH.D., Docent in Ancient Greek Authors 011 Music. EDMUND BUCKLEY, PH.D., Docent in Comparative Religion $ummer QuarterL AGNES MATHILDE VVERGELAND, PH.D., Docent in History. ELEANOR PRESCOTT HAMMOND, PH.D., Docent in English Language and Literature. JOHN 1V1. P. SIVHTH, PH.D., Docent in Semitic Languages and Literature. 28 University Extension Lecturers g! NATHANIEL I. RUBINKAIVI, PH.D , Lecturer in English. w. M. R. FRENCH, A,B., Lecturer in Art. LORADO TAFT, Lecturer in Art. JENKIN LLOYD JONES, Lecturer in English. LATHAN A. CRANDALL, D.D., Lecturer in American History. CHARLES ALEXANDER MCMURRY, PH.D., Lecturer in Pedagogy. HORACE SPENCER FISKE, A.M., Lecturer in English Literature. PHILIP PAYNE, A.M., Lecturer in English. 3X Instructors Appointed for the Summer Quarter 1900 J NATHANIEL BUTLER, A M., D.D., President of Colby University, VVaterville, Me. JAMES STEVENSON RIGGS, D.D., Professor of Biblical Criticism, Auburn Theological Seminary, Auburn, New York. MAURICE BLOOMFIELD, PH.D., LL.D.. Professor of Sanskrit and Comparative Philology, John Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md. HENRY MORSE STEPHENS, A.M., Professor of Modern European History, Cornell University. JULIUS GOEBEL,-PH.D., Professor of Germanic Philology and Literature, Leland Stanford Jr. University, Plato Alto, Cal. FREDERICK MORRIS WARREN, PH.D., Professor of Romance Languages, Adelbert College of Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio. ARTHUR CUSHMAN MCGIFFERT, PH D., D.D., Professqr of Church History in the Union Theological Seminary! New York, N. Y. JOHN PAUL GOODE, S.B., Professor of Physical Science and Geography, Eastern Illinois State Normal School, Charleston, 111. EDWARD SCRIBNER AMES, A M., PH.D., Professor of Philosophy and Pedagogy, Butler College, Indianapolis, Ind. 32 THEODORE C. BURGESS, PH.D., Assistant Professor of Greek and Latin, Bradley Polytechnic Institute, Peoria, Ill. THOMAS ATKINSON JENKINS, PH.D., Adjunct Professor of Romance Languages, Vanderbiit University, Nashville, Tenn. FREDERICK WILLIAM SHIPLEY, A.B., Assistant Professor of Latin, Lewis Institute, Chicago, 111. HERBERT NEWBY MCCOY, PH.D., Assistant Professor of Chemistry, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah IAMES ARCHIE SMITH, PH.B., $.31, Instructor in Mathematics, South Side Academy, Chicago, 111. ELLAS POTTER LYON, PH.D., Instructor in Biology and Physics, Bradley Polytechnic Institute, Chicago, Ill. HENRY LAWRENCE SCHOOLCRAFT, PH.D., Instructor in History, State University of Illinois, Champaign, 111. JOHN GAYLORD COULTER, A.B., Instructor in Botany, Syracuse University, Syracuse, N.Y. WILLIAM EUGENE MOFFATT, A.B., Associate in Latin and Greek, Bradley Polytechnic Institute, Peoria, 111. FRANK BALDWIN JEWETT, A.B., Assistant in Physics. ALBERT LINCOLN SMITH, PH.D., Lecturer 0n Bacteriology. WILLARD KIMBALL CLEMENT, PH.D., Assistant in Latin. IRVING HARDESTY, PH.D., Assistant in Neurology. 33 WALTER EUGENE GARREY, 8.13., Assistant in Physiology. RUSSELL D GEORGE, A M., Assistant in Geology. SAMUEL MONDS COULTER, A.M., Assistant in Botany. NEVIN MELANCTHOM FENNEMAN, A.B., Field Assistant in Geology. FRED HARVEY HALL CALHOUN. S.B., Field Assistant in Geology. ANDREW CHARLES MOORE, A.B., Assistant in Botany. MICHAEL FREDERICK GUYER, Assistant in Zoijlogy. SHINKISHI HATAI, Assistant in Neurology. BURTON EDWARD LIVINGSTON, S.B., Assistant in Botany. MARY BELLE HARRIS, A M., Assistant in Latin. ELLIOT ROWLAND DOWNING, S.lVI., Graduate Student in Z0610gy. ARTHUR D. DUNN, PH.B., Graduate Student in Neurology. FRANKLIN DAVIS BARKER, A.B,, Graduate Student in Zoblogy. JONATHAN EDWARD WEBB, A.B., Academy Assistant in Physiography and Biology. DORCAS FIDELIA MERRIMAN, Assistant in the Wometfs Gymnasium. 34 In Memorium GEORGE WASHINGTON NORTHRUP, DD., LLD. DIED DECEMBER 31, 1900 Deansof Affiliated Institutions 4 HERBERT LEE STETSON, Des Moines College. ARTHUR GAYLORD SLOCUM, Kalamazoo College. JOHN J. FORBES, John B. Stetson University. HENRY MUNSON LYBIAN, Dean, Rush Medical College. JOHN MILTON DODSON, Dean, Rush Medical College. FRANK BILLINGS, Dean, Rush Medical College. FREDERIC SHURTLEFF COOLIDGE, Dean, Rush Medical College. WILLIAM PARKER LICKEE, Frances Shimer Academy. EDWARD OCTAVIUS SISSON, Bradley Polytechnic Institute. SCOT BUTLER, Butler College. WILLIAM BISHOP OWEN, South Side Academy; 36 JOHN J. SCHOBINGER, The Harvard School. HIRAM ABIFF GOOCHfe Princeton-Yale School. JOHN COWLES GRANT, Kenwood Institute. HOMER JEROME VOSBURG, Wayland Academy. LAURA A. JONES,9+ The Maynard School. WILLIAM RIGGS TROWBRIDGE, The Rugby School. GEORGE NEWTON SLEIGHT, Elgin Academy. HENRY H. BELFIELD, The Chicago Manual Training School. A F. FLEET, Culver Military Academy. MERTON LELAND MILLER, Dearborn Seminary. iF Resign ed 37 Fellotds and Scholars Appointed for 1900 : 1901 a! F allow: SOLOMON FARLEY ACREE, SM , Chemistry. CHARLES CHRISTOPHER ADAMS, S.M., Zoology. HAMILTON FORD ALLEN, Biblical and Patristic Greek. WILLIAM OTIS BEAL, A.M., Astronomy. HENRIETTA KATHERINE BECKER, A.B., German. JOHN MASON BOUTWELL, S.M., Geology MORTON CLARK BRADLEY, A.M., Mathematics. JAMES DowsE BRADWELL, PH.M., Political Science. EDWARD ERNEST BRAITHWAITE, A.B., D.B., Semitic. SOPHONISBA PRESTON BRECKINRIDGE, PH.M,, Political Scien'ce CAROLINE MAY BREYFOGLE, A.B., Comparative Religion. WILLIAM MCAFEE BRUCE, A.M., Chemistry. PRESTON PISHON BRUCE, A B., Semitic. FRANCIS WILLIAM BUSHONG, A.M., Chemistry. FRED HARVEY HALL CALHOUN, 8.13., Geology. SAMUEL MONDS COULTER, A.M , Botany. THOMAS LOUIS COMPARETTE, A.B., Archeology. LUTIE REBECCA CORWIN, ST B., Semitic. HARRIET EMELINE CRANDALL, A.M., English. ELLIOT ROWLAND DOWNING, S.M., Zoblogy. MINNIE MARIE ENTEMANN, S,B., Zoology. NEVIN MELANCTHON FENNEMAN, A.M., Geology. MAYO FESLER, PH.B., History. WILLIAM FINDLAY, A B., Mathematics. TENNY FRANK, A.B , Latin ERRET GATES, A.B., D.B., Church History. RUSSELL GEORGE, A.M., Geology. VVILLARD CLARK GORE, PH.B., PH.M., Philosophy. CLIFTON DAGGETT GRAY, D.B., Semitic. MASON DEWITT GRAY, A.M., Latin. WILLIAM BUCK GUTHRIE, PH.B., Political Economy. EUGENE HOWARD HARPER, A.M., Zoology. MARY HEFFERAN, A.B., Zoology. AMY HEWES, A.B., Sociology. BENJAMIN OSCAR HUTCHINSON, A.B., Physics. EDWARD ERNEST IRONS, 8.13., Zoology. FRANK BALDWIN JEWETT, A.B., Physics. RALPH GRIERSON KIMBLE, A.B., Sociology ANSTRUTHER ABERCROMBIE LAWSON, S.M., Botany. RALPH STAYNER LILLIE, A.B., Zoiilogy. 38 BURTON EDWARD LIVINGSTON, 5.13,, Botany. SVANT GODFREY LINDHOLM, L.B., Political Economy, STEPHEN BUTLER LEACOCK. AB., A 13., Political Economy ARTHUR CONSTANT LUNN. A.B., Astronomy. EDGAR HOLMES MCNEAL, A.B., History. GEORGE LINNEUS MARSH. A.M . English DAVID LEE MAULSBY, AAB., A.M., Anatomy. WILLIAM EDWIN MILLER, S.B., Political Science. IRVING EDGAR MILLER, A..M., Philosophy GENEVA MISENER, A.M., Greek. WILLIAM J MOENKHAUS, A.M,, ZoGLOGv. ANNE MOORE, A.M.. Philosophy EBEN MUMFORDA A B., Sociology. JAMES BERTRAM OVERTON, PH.B . Botany. ROBERT SAMUEL PADAN, A.B,. Political Economy. SUSAN WADE PEABODV, 5.13., Political Science. PAUL FREDERICK PECK, A.B., History. HARRIET EVA PENFIELD, A.M., Philosophy, LLEWELLYN PHILLIPS, A.M., Bucknell Fellow. THOMAS MILTON PUTNAM. S.M., Mathematics. FRITZ REICHMANN, S.M., Physics. DAVID MOORE ROBINSON, A 13., Greek. DANIEL MARTIN SCHOEMAKER, S.B., Neurology. FREDERICK OTTO SCHUB, A.B., German. GEORGE WINFIELD SCOTT, A.B., Political Science. GEORGE CLARKE SELLERY. A.B., History. JOHN WILKES SHEPHERD, A.M., Chemistry SAMUEL BOVVER SINCLAIR, A.M., Pedagogy. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN STACEY, D.B., Sociology. CLAUDE ELLSVVORTH SIEBENTHAL, A.B , A.M., Geology. EDGAR HOWARD STURTEVANT, A,B., Comparative Philology. CLIFTON OSCAR TAYLOR, A.B., Philosophy. DAVID THOMSON, A.B., Latin. BERTHA THORMYER, A.B., German. LA RUE VAN HOOK, AAB , Greek. OSWALD VEBLEN. A.B., Mathematics. RALPH WALDO WEBSTER, M.D.. Physiology. HOWARD BROWN WOOLSTON, AAB., Sociology ROBERT BRADFORD VVYLEY, S.B . Botany. 11. Divinity Fellotvs GEORGE ELSTON BURLINGAME, A.B., Church History ELIJAH ABRAHAM HANLEY, A.M., Systematic Theology. THOMAS ALLAN HOBEN, A.M.. New Testament. WILLIAM Ross SCHOEMAKER, 8.3,. DB. 39 Graduate Jobolarsbips g? 1900 : 1901 MATILDE CASTRO, Philosophy. KATE GORDON, Pedagogy. CHARLES BYRON WILLIAMS, Political Economy EDWIN D. SOLENBERGER, Sociology. JULIA LILIAN PIERCE, Greek. MARY BRADFORD PEAKS, Latin. JOSEPHINE C. DONIA'L Germanic. ARTHUR RICHARD SCHWEITZER, Mathematics. ALFRED EDWARD WHITFORD, Physics. ALBERT O. SHAKLEE, Chemistry. PAUL J. Fox, Physiology. PHILIP G. WRIGHTSON, Botany. ELIZABETH H. DUNN, Neurology. ALICE HAMILTON, Neurology. Senior College Jobolarsbips AV 1900 c 1901 HAROLD B. CHALLISS, Philosophy. DAVID A. ROBERTSON, Physics. GRACE B. LINCOLN, Geology. WM. L. GOBLE, Chemistry. ARTHUR E. BESTOR, History. ARTHUR F. BEIFELD, Romance. EDWIN G. KIRK, Zbology. FRANCES M. DONOVAN, Germanic. MATILDA V. GIBSON, Greek. BENJAMIN W. ROBINSON, Mathematics. FLORENCE TURNAY, English. MABEL KATE VVHITESIDE, Latin. 40 niversity Ruling The University Cangregation President WILLIAM RAINEY HARPER, PH.D., DD. . . . . . . . PreVsident Assistant Professor JULIUS STIEGLETZ, PH.D. . . . . . . Vice-President Dr. JAMES HARRINGTON BOYD . . . . . . . Treasurer Professor GEORGE SA GOODSPEED, PH.D. . . . . . Recorder Associate Professor GEORGE E. VINCENT, PH.D. . . . Marshal The University Jenate THE PRESIDENT . . . . . . Chairman. Professor GEORGE STEPHEN GOODSPEED, Recorder. Professor GALUSHA ANDERSON. Professor GEORGE WASHINGTON NORTHRUP. Professdr ERI BAKER HULBERT. Professor HERMANN EDWARD VON HOLST. Professor THOMAS CHROVVDER CHAMBERLIN. Professor CHARLES OTIS WHITMAN. Professor JOHN MERLE COULTER. Professor VVLLLIAM GARDENER HALE. Professor HARRY PRATT JUDSON. Professor JAMES LAURENCE LAUGHLIN. Professor ALBERT ABRAHAM MICHELSON. Professor ERNEST DEWITT BURTON. Professor ALBION WOODBURY SMALL. Professor PAUL SHOREY. 1 Professor HENRY HERBERT DONALDSON. Professor ELIAKIM HASTINGS MOORE. Professor JOHN ULRIC NEFF. Professor IOHN DEWEY. Professor JOHN MATHEWS MANLY. Professor LEWELLYS F. BARKER. Director EDMUND JANES JAMES. Deceased. 41 Professor CHARLES R. HENDERSON, Representing the Divinity Alumni. Associate Professor STARR W. CUTTING, Representing the Graduate Alumni. Professor ROBERT FRANCIS HARPER, Representing the Collegiate Alumni. The Unitiersity Council THE PRESIDENT . . . t . . Chairman. Professor GEORGE STEPHEN GOODSPEED, Recorder. Professor CHARLES RICHMOND HENDERSON, Chaplain. DR. THOMAS VVAKEFIELD GOODSPEED, Registrar. Professor ERI BAKER HULBERT, Dean of the Divinity Faculty. Professor CARL GUSTAV LAGERGREN, Dean of the Swedish Theological Seminary. Professor HENRICK GUNDERSEN, Dean of the Dauo-Norwegiau Theological Seminary. Professor THOMAS CHROWDER CHAMBERLIN, Director of Museumst Professor HARRY PRATT JUDSON, e Dean of the Faculties of Arts, Literature and Science, and Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Literature. Professor ALBION VVOODBURV SMALL, Director of Afflliated Work. Professor WILLIAM DARNALL MCCLINTOCK, Dean of the University College. Professor CHARLES REID BARNES, Dean in the Colleges. Professor EDMUND JANES JAMEs, Director of the University Extension Division. Professor ROLLIN D. SALISBURY, Dean of the Ogden tGraduatet School of Science. Professor SHAILER MATHEws, Dean in the Divinity School. Professor JAMES HAYDEN TUFTS, Dean of the Senior College. Associate Professor MARION TALBOT, Dean of Women. Associate Professor GEORGE EDGAR VINCENT, Dean of the Junior Colleges. 42 Associate Professor CLARENCE FASSETT CASTLE. Dean in the Junior Colleges. Associate Professor ALEXANDER SMETH, Dean in the Junior Colleges. Assistant Professor WAYLAND JOHNSON CHASE. Dean of the Morgan Park Academy. Assistant Professor FRANK JUSTUS MILLER, Dean of Aiiiliations. HERMAN B. ALMSTEDT, Dean in University College. NEWMAN MILLER, Director of the University Press. Professor GALUSHA ANDERSON, Representing the Collegiate Alumni. Professor IRA MAURICE PRICE, Representing the Divinity Alumni. Professor ROBERT FRANCIS HARPER, Representing the Graduate Alumni. Assistant Professor HERBERT LOCKWOOD WILLETT, Dean of the Discipley Divinity House. President HERBERT LEE STETSON, Des Moines College. President ARTHUR GAYLORD SLOCUM, Kalamazoo College. President JOHN F. FORBES, John B. Stetson University. President SCOTT BUTLER, Butler College. Dean FRANK BILLINGS, Rush Medical College. Dean JOHN MILTON DODSON, Rush Medical College. Dean FREDERIC SHURTLEFF COOLIDGE, Rush Medical College. Principal WILLIAM PARKER MCKEE, The Franses Shimer Academy, Director EDWARD OCTAVIUS SISSON, Bradley Polytechnic Institute. Principal WILLIAM BISHOP OWEN, The South Side Academy. 43 4 Resigned Principal JOHN J. SCHOBINGER, The Harvard School. Principal HIRAM ABIFF GOOCHIK' Princeton-Yale School. Principal JOHN COWLES GRANT, KenwooD Institute. Principal HOMER JEROME VOSBURGH, Wayland Academy. Principal WILLIAM RIGGS TROWBRIDGE, The Rugby School. Principal GEORGE NEWTON SLEIGHT, Elgin Academy. Director HENRY H. BELFIELD, The Chicago Manual Training School Superintendent A. F. FLEET, Culver Military Academy Dean MERTON MILLER, The Dearborn Seminary. Tbe Tbirtydhird Convocation . . Midsummer Held in the Graduate Quadrangle, June 19, 1900, Convocation Chaplain . . . . The REVEREND FREDERICK E. DEWHURST CONVOCATION ADDRESS: uThe True Scholars Attitude Toward the Past, President James G. K. McClure, D.D., Lake Fofest University The Thirtynfourtb Convacation Held in the Graduate Triangle, August 10, 1900. Convocation Chaplain . . . . The REVEREND JAMES STEVENSON R1005 CONVOCATION ADDRESS: T The Iniiuence of the University of Chicago, and our Pacific Possessionsf General Joseph W'heeler. The Tbirtyfiftb Contiecaticn Held in Studebaker Hall, September 18, 1900. Convocation Chaplain . . .. The REVEREND EMIL GUSTAV HIRSCH, D.D. CONVOCATION ADDRESS: TKRace Problems in the Light of Educationf The Reverend George C. Lorimer, D.D., Tremont Temple, Boston, Massachusetts. 45 The Tbirty:sixtb Convocation Held in Studebaker Hall, December 18, 1900. Convocation Chaplain . . . . The REVEREND WIL-LIAM WALLACE FENN. CONVOCATION ADDRESS : WPhe Idea of God in Intellectual Inquiry, President Francis Landey Patton, D.D., LL.D., Princeton University. ' The Tbirtyaetlentb Convocation Held in Studebaker'Hall, March 19, 19m. Convocation Chaplain . Professor CHARLES RICHMOND HENDERSON, DD., Chicago. CONVOCATION ADDRESS: Chinese Civilization, Wu Ting Fang, Chinese Minister to the United States. REGISI'RAR'S OFFICE x; i. . jx . : By Courtesy of the Chicago Evening News The M arshals 4 Head Marshal WALTER LAWRENCE HUDSON. Assistant Marsfmls ARTHUR EUGENE BESTOR. MARIAN HARMON CALHOUN. WILLIAM FRANKLIN ELDRIDGE. MARY ETHEL FREEMAN. CURTISS ROCKWELL MANNING. JAMES MILTON SHELDON. KELLOGG SPEED. CHARLES JULIAN WEBB. Former Head Marsbals JOSEPH EDWARD RAYCROFT, 1895. W1LLIAM SCOTT BOND, 1896. NOTT WILLIAM FLINT, 1898. WILLOUGHBY GEogGE WALLING, 1899. WALTER JOSEPH SCHMAHL, 1900. 47 JAMES ROWLAND ANGEL President GEORGE STEPHEN GOODSPEED Vice-President LINSAY TODD DAMON Secretary NEWMAN MILLER T reasurer Council CHARLES L. HUTCHINSON . HENRY GORDON GALE HENRY HERBERT DONALDSON ERNEST DEVVITT BURTON ERNST FREUND. The entertainments of the Club during the year have consisted of receptions, dances and informal talks by men of note. 48 The University of Chicago Jettlement 4 Officers JAMES ROWLAND ANGELL . . . , President ROBERT MORSS LOVETT . . . . Secretary FRANK BIGELOW TARBELL . . . . Treasurer Directors WxLLIAM RAINEY HARPER CHARLES L. HUTCHINSON M155 MARY E. MCDOW'ELL MISS CAROLINE BLINN MRS. EDWIN CAKES JORDAN CHARLES REID BARNES MRS. HORACE S. FISKE CHARLES RICHMOND HENDERSON ADOLPH CASPAR MILLER The University of Chicago Settlement was established in 1894 by the Philanthropic Committee of the Christian Union, and was incorporated in 1898. It occupies apartments at No. 4638 Ashland Avenue. In addition a gymnasium and assembly hall has been erected on Gross Avenue, and forms the nucleus bf a projected group of buildings in which the student will ultimately find its home. Since 1894 the work has been under the supervision of Miss Mary E. McDowell as Head Resident. 49 Jemi : Official Clubs ,3 THE SOCIOLOGY CLUB THE POLITICAL SCIENCE CLUB THE PHILOLOGICAL SOCIETY THE GEOLOGICAL CLUB THE ZOOLOGICAL CLUB THE BOTANICAL CLUB THE NEW TESTAMENT CLUB THE CHURCH HISTORY CLUB THE ROMANCE CLUB THE GERMANIC CLUB ' THE ENGLISH CLUB THE MATHEMATICAL CLUB THE PHYSICS CLUB THE CIVIC CLUB n Tbe Alumni Association EDGAR A. BUZZELL; President DEMIA BUTLER GORRELL, First Vice-President DONALD S, TRUMBULL, Second Vice-President RALPH W. WEBSTER, Third Vice-President MAYO FESLER, General Secretary Executive Committee For Term IQWIQOI For Term I900-1902 CHARLES R. HENDERSON, 70 FRANK A. HELMER, 78 ANNE B. REED, ,99 JENNIE K. BOOMER, ,95 VVILLIAM 0. WILSON, ,97 jOHN F. HAGEY, ,98 For Term 190071903 HARRY D. ABELLS, 97 DARIUS R. LELAND, y66 ALICE VVINSTON, 98 Local Alumni Clubs CHICAGO ALUMNI CLUB, STACY C. MOSSER, 97, Secretary. CHICAGO ALUMNAE CLUB, EVA B. GRAVES, '98, Secretary. EASTERN ALUMNI CLUB, FRANKLIN D. ELMER, R38, Secretary. INDIANAPOLIS UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO CLUBy JOHN LEMAY, ,95, Secretary, NEBRASKA ALUMNI CLUB, GEORGE SUTHERLAND, 174, Secretary. DENVER ALUMNI CLUB, LOUIS B. JORALMON, 93, Secretary. SI Official University Publications 4 The Biblical World Edited by President WILLIAM R. HARPER 0f the University of Chicago. Monthly Magazine. The Johool Review Published monthly at the University of Chicago, except in July and August. The Botanical Gazette Edited by JOHN M. COULTER. Published monthly. The Astrophysical Journal Edited by GEORGE E. HALE. Published monthly, except in July and September. The American Journal of Jociology Edited by ALBION W. SMALL. Published bimonthly. The Journal of Political Economy Edited by J. LAURENCE LAUGHLIN. Published quarterly. The American Journal of Theology Edited by the Divinity Faculty of the University of Chicago. Published quarterly. The American Journal of Jemitic Languages and Literatures Edited by President WILLIAM R. HARPER of the University of Chicago. Published quarterly. The Journal of Geology Edited by T. C. CHAMBERLIN. Published semi-quarterly. The University Record Edited by the Recorder of the University of Chicago. Published weekly. 52 University Guests 4 CHAUNCEY M. DEPEW. Honorable JOHN R. MOTT. General JOSEPH VVHEELER. Honorable DAVID B. HILL. Honorable WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN. MONSIEUR CogUELIN. President JAMES G. K. MCCLURE, D.D. Lake Forest University. Reverend GEORGE C. LORIMER, DAD. FREDERICK HARRISON. President FRANCIS LANDEY PATTON, D.D., LL.D., Princeton University. JOHN BARRETT, Former Minister to Siam. WU T ING FANG, Chinese Minister to the United States. 53 Secret Societies at University of Chicago 52 Fraternities PHI DELTA THETA PSI UPSILON DELTA TAU DELTA CHI PSI PHI BETA KAPPA DELTA KAPPA EPSILON PHI KAPPA PSI BETA THETA PI ALPHA DELTA PHI SIGMA CHI DELTA UPSILON Local Jocieties THE SIGMA CLUB THE ORDER OF THE DRAGONS TOOTH THE VVYVERN CLUB THE MORTAR BOARD THE ESOTERIC THE QUADRANGLERS PHI BETA DELTA Honor Societies THE OVVL AND SERPENT THE ORDER OF THE IRON lVIASK THE THREE QUARTERS CLUB NU PI SIGMA ilelta Kappa Epsilon Founded in 1844 sf Roll of Chapters Phi Yale University ' Theta Bowdoin Xi Colby Sigma Amherst Gamma Vanderbilt Psi University of Alabama Chi University of Mississippi Upsilon Brown University Kappa Miami University Lambda Kenyon College Beta North Carolina Eta University of Virginia Pi Dartmouth College Iota Central University of Kentucky Alpha Alpha Middlebury College Omicron University of Michigan Epsilon Williams College Rho Lafayette College Tau Hamilton College Mu Colgate University Nu College of the City of New York Beta Phi University of Rochester Phi Chi Rutgers ' Psi Phi De Pauw Gamma Phi Wesleyan University Psi Omega Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Beta Chi Adelbert College Delta Chi Cornell University Delta Delta University of Chicago Phi Gamma Syracuse University Gamma Beta Columbia University T heta Zeta University of California Alpha Chi Trinity College Phi Epsilon University of Minnesota Sigmau T au Massachusetts Institute of Technology Tau Lambda T ulane University. Alpha Phi University of T oronto Delta Kappa University of Pennsylvania Tau Alpha Magill University 58 zx HQQXX M1 iv , ZOYIwnmmH Aaadv- 4FQHD Delta Kappa Epsilon . ,1? THE DELTA DELTA CHAPTER Eslablislwd December, 1893 Fratresjn Universitate Graduate Colleges Ralph Waldo Webster Ralph C. Hamill Undergraduate Colleges Curtiss Rockwell Manning Walter Lawrence Hudson Hugh Lafayette McWilliams Donald Saxton McVVilliams Daniel Pearson Trude Edward Christian Kohlsaat Vernon Tiras Ferris George Wilson Kretzinger Charles EriHulbert Efnest William Kohlsaat, Jr. Charles Sumner Hayes Thomas Johnston Hair Maurice Mandeville Harry Milton T iugle Charles Allen Wright Frank McNair Richard Howells VVelliugt'on Howard James Sloan Harvey Hurd Lord Virgil Milton Gautz Walter Hellyer Edward Reid Ferriss Milton George Gustavus Sills Philip Armour Sunderland. Edson Benton Cook Max Holcombe Cook 61 Phi Kappa Psi Pa Alpha Pa. Beta Pa. Gamma Pa. Epsilon Pa. Zeta Pa. Eta Pa. Theta Pa. Iota Pa. Kappa N . H. Alpha M'ass. Alpha N. Y. Alpha N. Y. Beta N. Y. Gamma N. Y Epsilon N. Y. Zeta Md. Alpha Va. Alpha Va: Beta W. Aa. Alpha Miss. Alpha D. C. Alpha Ohio Alpha Ohio Beta Ohio Delta Ind. Alpha Ind. Beta Ind. Gamma I11. Alpha 111. Beta Mich. Alpha Wis. Alpha VViS.Gan1ma Minn. Beta Iowa Alpha Kan. Alpha Neh Alpha Cal Beta Cal. Gamma Founded in 1852 4 Roll of Chapters District I XVashiugton-Jefferson College Allegheny College Bucknell University Gettysburg College Dickinson Colledge Franklin and Marshall College Lafayette College University of Pennsylvania Swarthmore College District 11 Dartmouth College Amherst College Cornell University Syracuse University. Columbia University Colgate University Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute Distrid III Johns Hopkins University University of Virginia Washington and Lee University University of West Virginia University of Mississippi Columbian University District I V Ohio Wesleyan University VVittenberg College University of Ohlo De Pauw University University of Indiana Wabash College Northwestern University University of Chicago University of Michigan District V University of Wisconsin Beloit College University of Minnesota University of Iowa University of Kansas University of Nebraska Leland Stanford. Jr.y University University of California 62 ZJmhmPJwIzL Hmnn Jamnwaam HEW Phi Kappa Psi a THE ILLINOIS BETA CHAPTER Eslablislzedfanuary 4, 1894 a Graduate Colleges Percy Bentley Stevens Robert Bailey Davidson Frank Lincoln Stevens Undergraduate Colleges Fred Sass Clarence Whittaker Richards Francis Baldwin Milton Howard Pittit Howard Sloan Young Albert Bertram Garcqlon Dean Swift Carl Irwin Neptune Richard Cone Neptune Hanson Fielding Randle Howard White Johnson William Frahkliu Johnson William Walter Johnstone William Atwood Brooks Harry Ingle Raymond Joseph Charles Neptune Edgar Jtistian Downey Harry H. S. Van Velsor Edward Goode Woods 65 Beta Theta Pi Founded in 1839 a! Roll of Chapters Miami UniverSity Ohio University W'estern Reserve U niversity Washington and Jefferson College: Harvard University De Pauw University Indiana University University of Michigan Wabash College Centre College Brown University Hampden-Sidney College I'lliversity of North Carolina Ohio Wesleyan University Hanover, C ollege Knox College University of Virginia Davidson College Beloit College Bethany College University of Iowa Wittenberg College . . Westminster College Iowa VVesIeyan University Denison University Richmond College University of Wooster University of Kansas University of Wisconsin Leland Stanford, Jr., University Yniversity of West Virginia Bowdoin C 66 Northwestern University Dickinson University Boston College Johns Hopkins University University of California Kenyon College Rutgers College Cornell University Stevens Institute St. Lawrence University Maine State College Colgate University Union College Columbia College Amherst College Vanderbilt University University of Texas Ohio State University University of Nebraska Pennsylvania State College University of Denver University of Syracuse Dartmouth College University of Minnesota University of Cincinnati Wesleyan University University of Missouri Lehigh University Yale University University of Chicago University of Colorado ollege llNka B ETA THETA PI Beta Theta Pi 13 THE LAMBDA RHO CHAPTER Established january 25. 1894 J! F ratres in Universitate Graduate Colleges Horace Gillett Lozier Alfred William Place Undergraduate Colleges Leroy Tudor Vernon VVIIL Franklin Eldridge Kellogg Speed George Gilbert Davis Eliot Blackwelder Harold Bennett Challiss Eugene H. B. XVatsoh Thaddeus jasper Merrill George Bernard Donlin Wilbur Condit Gross Platt Milk Conrad Clarence P. Scofield Richard Bruce Blake Harry Albert Evans Samuel Francis Fellows Albert Conro Fiero Lambert Arundel Hopkins John Bruce Carlock Dudley Woodbridge Hopkins 69 Alpha Delta Phi Founded iil 1832 3! Roll of Chapters Hamilton Columbia Brunonian Yale Harvard Amherst Hudson Bowdoin Dartmouth Peninsular Rochester Williams Manhattan Middletown Kenyon Union Cornell Phi Kappa Johns Hopkins Minnesota Toronto Chicago McGill Hamilton College Columbia College Brown University Yale University Harvard University Amherst College Adelbert College Bowdoin College Dartmouth College University Of Michigan University of Rochester Williams College College of the City of New York W'esleyan College Kenyon College Union College Cornell University Trinity College Johns Hopkins University University of Minnesota University of Toronto University of Chicago Montreal, Canada 70 vindm. 14am; HI; 49433 4 31.41 Alpha Delta Phi 1! THE CHICAGO CHAPTER Esmblz'slzed March 20, 1896 Fratres in Universitate Graduate Colleges Henry Mage'e Adkinson Joseph Marshall Flint Clarence Bert Herschberger Fred Merrifleld Charles Lindsey Burroughs Elliot Saltonstall Norton Undergraduate Colleges Walter Scott Kennedy William Arthur Maloney Turner Burton Smith Harry Preston French Jerome Pratt Magee Frederick Graham Moloney Royal Willing Bell Roy Wilson Merrifield Albert Grant Miller Frank Ogilvie Horton Henry Cowles Smith Claude Carlisle Nuckols Edward Clayton Eicher William Ralph Kerr, Jr. Ferdinand Moseley Horton Edward Vail Lapham Brown Alfred Ward Greenwood Frank Joyce Sardam George McHenry Adelbert Turner Stewart John 01b0 Backhouse 73 Sigma Chi Founded in 1855 2! Roll of Chapters Alpha Beta Gamma Epsilon Zeta Eta Theta Kappa Lambda Mu Xi Omicron Pho Tau Chi Psi Omega Alpha Alpha Gamma Gamma Delta Delta Zeta Zeta Zeta Psi Theta Theta Eta Eta Kappa Kappa Lambda Lambda N11 N11 Xi Xi Omicron Omicron Sigma Sigma Phi Phi Alpha Beta Alpha Gamma Alpha Epsilon Alpha Zeta Alpha Theta Alpha Iota Alpha Lambda Alpha Nu Alpha Xi Alpha Omicron Alpha Pi Alpha Pho Alpha Sigma Alpha Tau Alpha Upsilon Alpha Phi Alpha Chi Alpha Psi Alpha Omega Miami University University of Wooster Ohio Wesleyan University Columbian University Washington and Lee University University of Mississippi Pennsylvania College Bucknell University Indiana University Denison University De Pauw University Dickinson College Butler University Roanoke College Hanover College The University of Virginia Northwestern University Hobart College Randolph-Macon College Purdue University Centre College The University of C incinnati University of Michigan Dartmouth College University of Illinois Kentucky State College Columbia University University of State of Missouri University of Chicago Hampden-Sidney College University of Pennsylvania University of California Ohio State University University of Nebraska Beloit College Massachusetts Institute of T echnolony Illinois XVesleyan University University of Wisconsin University of Texas University of Kansas Tulane University Albion College Lehigh U niversity University of Minnesota Univeriity of N Carolina University of Southern California Cornell University Pennsylvania State College Vanderbilt University Leland Stanford, Jn, University 74 H30 4.2..va Sigma Chi 4 THE OMICRON OMICRON CHAPTER EslabliskeZz' janzmry 23, 1897 J F ratres in Universitate Graduate Colleges Dewitt C. Croissant James F. Poyster Undergraduate Colleges Earl Dean Howard Ray Prescott Johnson Benjamin Rector Bell Charles W. Erwin Max Jonax A. John Gazzolo Freeman Drake Martin Arthur C. Seyfarth 77 Phi Delta Theta F ounded in 1848 4 Roll of Chapters Miami University Indiana University Ceatre College Wabash College University of Wisconsin Northwestern UniVersity University of Indianapolis Ohio Wesleyan University Franklin College Hanover College University of Michigan University of Chicago De Pauw University Ohio State University University of Missouri Knox College University of Georgia Emory College Iowa Wesleyan University Mercer Universify Cornell University Lafayette College University of California University of Virginia Randolph-Macon College University of Nebraska Gettysburg College W ashington and Jefferson College Vanderbilt University University of Misisissippi University of Alabama Case School of Applied Science University of W 78 Lombard University Alabama Polytechnic Institute Allegheny College University of Vermont Dickinson College XVestminster College University of Minnesota Iowa State University University of Kansas University of the South University of Ohio University of Texas University of Pennsylvania Union College Colby University Columbia University Dartmouth College University of North Carolina Central University Williams College Southwestern University Syracuse University Washington and Lee University Lehigh University Amherst College Brown University Tulane University of Louisiana Washington College Stanford University University of Illinois Purdue University University of Cincinnati ashington :meTAY ,m cmm Y mmm h r PHI DELTA THETA Phi Delta Theta 4 THE ILLINOIS BETA CHAPTER Established February 18, 1897 sf Ffatres in Unitiersitate Graduate Colleges George Henry Garrey Lawrence Emery Gurney William Lewis Fisher Frank Leonard Jewett Undergraduate Colleges Austin Young Hoy Allen Ayrault' Green James Milton Sheldon Frank Walbridge DeWolf Ernest Wilson Miller Herbgrt Bartlett VVyman Halbert Brush Blakey Alfred Chester Ellsworth Herbert Frederick Ahlswede William Edmund Godso Floyd Everett Harper Bruce McLeish Oliver Brown Wyman Ralph Clarence Putnam George Allen Denerling Carl Shelley Miner Theta Delta Beta Sigma Gamma Zeta Lambda Kappa Psi Xi Upsilon Iota Phi Pi Chi Beta Beta Eta Tau Mu Rho Omega Psi Upsilon Founded in 1833 i7 Roll of Chapters Union College University of the City of New York Yale University Brown University Amherst College Dartmouth College Columbia University Bowdoin College Hamilton College YVesleyan University University of Rochester Kenyon College University of Michigan Syracuse University Cornell University Trinity College Lehigh University University of Pennsylvania University of Minnesota University of XVisconsin Un iversity of Chicago PSI UPSI LON Psi Upsilon a THE OMEGA CHAPTER Establishgd Navember 24, 1897 H Graduate Colleges Ernest De Koven Lefiingwell Charles Gibbons Flanagan Undergraduate Colleges Herbert Paul Zimmermann Owen Elwood Hotle James Ronald Henry Francis Denis Campeau W alker Gaily McLaury Charles Murfit Hogeland Edward Munroe Carl Van Vechten George Alexander Wilson, Jr. Clifford Willard Gaylord Ernest James Stevens Charles Pearson Montgomery Arthur Evarts Lord Fred Mowen Bobo Charles Ferguson Kennedy 85 Beta Gamma Omicron Beta Eta Beta Kappa Beta Pi Beta Pho Beta Tau Beta Upsilon Gamma Alpha Beta Omega Lambda Pi Phi Beta Epsilon Beta Theta Beta Iota Beta Xi Beta Delta Epsilon Zeta Kappa Mu Chi Beta Alpha Beta Beta Beta Zeta Beta Phi Beta Psi Gamma Delta Alpha Gamma P110 Upsilon Omega Beta Lambda Beta Mu Beta Nu Beta Omicron Beta Chi Delta Tau Delta Fomzded in 1859 H Roll of Chapters University of Wisconsin University of Iowa University of Minnesota University of Colorado Northwestern University Leland Stanford, Jr , Univemity University of Nebraska University of Illinois University Of Chicago University of California Vanderbilt University I'niversity of Mississippi Washington and Lee University Emory College University of the South University of Virginia Tulane T'niversity Ohio University University of Michigan Albion University Adelbert College Hillsdale College Ohio Wesleyan University Kenyon College Indiana University De Pauw University Butler College Ohio State University W'abash College University of W'est Virginia Alleghany College Washington and Jefferson University Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Steverw Institute of Technology University of Pennsylvania Lehigh University Tufts College Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cornell University Brown University 86 I Ipulllllllllm A lllimllllhlhxn: xxxm x xxx x? 7714 IL, IJJHIH 1h pyugxlw 4.54m Q L duh fuwhu Q Delta Tau Delta :1 THE GAMMA ALPHA CHAPTER Established May, 1898 H Fratres in Universitate Graduate Colleges Ernest Edward Irons Clinton George Stuart E11111 Arthur E. Palmquist Frank Russell White Russell Lowry Joseph Chalmers Ewing W'alter Stowell Rogers Edward Allen Sibley Undergraduate Colleges Vernon Servilian Phillips Thomas Venard Graves Frank Perkins Barker Benjamin Griffm Lee Albert Langworthy Jones Claude Frederick Smith Arthur George Thomas Francis Norwood Bard Waite; Edward Francis Donald Kennicott Charles Forrest Leland Robert Spring Butler Theodore Ballou Hinckley Frank Michael McKay Harvey Dakin T rimble 89 Pi Theta Mu Alpha Phi Epsilon Chi Psi Tau Nu Iota Rho Xi Alpha Delta Beta Delta Gamma Delta Delta Delta Epsilon Delta Chi Psi F0 untied in 1841 a Roll of Alphas Union College Williams College Middlebury College VVesIeyan University Hamilton College University of Michigan Amherst College Cornell University W'offord College University of Minnesota University of Wisconsin Rutgers College Stevens Institute of Technology University of Georgia Lehigh University Stanford University University of California University of Chicago 90 CHI PSI Chi Psi a ALPHA EPSILON DELTA EstaHz'slzed November 25, 1898 a Fratres in Universitate Graduate Colleges Arthur XVhipple Smith Rowland Thumm Rogers Undergraduate Colleges XViHis Henry Linsley Lees Ballinger Perry Joshua Payne Warren Brownell Smith Robert Llewellyn Henry, Jr, Willis Lane Blackman, Jr. XVilliam McMicken Hanchett Justin Louis Muller Herbert Eastou Fleming Charles Roland Howe Ralph Crissman Brown Dwight Howard Freeman XValter Murray Johnson Carl Walker Sawyer Arthur LeRoy Young Moses Coulter Craig Milton LeRoy Hinkley 93 Phi Beta Kappa M Roll of Chapters Alpha of Maine Alpha of New Hampshire Alpha of Vermont Beta of Vermont Alpha of Massachusetts Beta of Massachusetts Gamma of Massachusetts Alpha of Connecticut Beta of Connecticut Gamma of Connecticut Alpha of New York Beta of New York Gamma of New York Delta of New York Epsilon of New York Zeta of New York Eta of New York Theta of New York Iota of New York Kappa of New York Alpha of New Jersey Alpha of Pennsylvania Gamma of Pennsylvania Delta of Pennsylvania Iota of Pennsylvania Beta of Ohio Alpha of Indiana Alpha of Kansas Alpha of Illinois Beta of Illinois Alpha of Minnesota Bowdoin, Brunswick, Me. Dartmouth, Hanovery N. H. University of Vermont, Burlington, Vt. Middlebury, Middlebury, Vt. Harvard, Cambridge, Mass. Amherst, Amherst, Mass. Williams, Williamstown, Mass. Yale, New Haven, Conn. Trinity, Hartford, Conn. Wesleyan, Middletown, Conn. Union, Schenectady, N. Y. University of the City of New York College of the City of New York Columbia, New York City Hamilton, Clinton. N. Y. Hobart, Geneva, N. Y. Colgate University7 Hamilton, N. Y. Cornell, Ithaca, N Y. Rochester University, Rochester, N. Y. Syracuse University, Syracuse, Ne Y. Rutgers, New Brunswick, N. L DickinSon, Carlisle, Pa. Lafayette, Easton, Pa. University, Philadelphia, Pa. Lehigh, South Bethlehem, Pa. Kenyon, Gambier, Ohio De Pauw, Green Castle, Ind. State University of Lawrence, Kan. Northwestern, Evanston, 111. University of Chicago, Chicago, 111. State University, Minneapolis, Minn. 94 4.54M dhum :E Phi Beta Kappa a THE BETA OF ILLINOIS CHAPTER Organized April 4, 1899 a Officers for 1900:1901 PAUL SHOREY . . . . . . . President HENRY RAND HATFIELD . . . Vice-President FRANCIS WAVLAND SHEPARDSON . Secretary-Trcasurer Active Members Anna Poole Beardsley Josephine May Burnham Charles Lindsay Burroughs Helen Loretta Carmody Matilda Castro Josephine Catherine Doniat Frances Mane Donovan Marian Fairman Helen Gardner Kate Gordon Walter Wilson Hart Edward Ernest Irons Paul George William Keller Florehce Leona Lyon John Mills Margaret Morgan Roy Batchelder Nelson Eunice Bertha Peter Julia Lillian Peirce Guy Whittier Chadbourn Ross Arthur Richard Schweitzer Alfred Ogle Shaklee Laura Amelia Thompson Ella Katharine Walker Frank Howard Westcott Charles Byron Williams 97 EHOOH mTIHODAqunH HEP NO MMDMO NHHF The Order of the Dragon's Tooth Eslablz'slzed August, 1899 E Fratres in Universitate Graduate Colleges William Alexander Gordon Undergraduate Colleges Oliver Le Roy MCCaskill Charles Mackay Van Patten Donald Randall Richberg Russell Wiles Joseph Walter Bingham John Douglas Sutherland Aubrey Percy Nelson George Alexander Young John Alexander Liggett Leon Patterson Lewis Ermine Phillips Alfred Newton Burnham IOI Delta Upsilon Founded in 1834 ,2: Williams A U nion Hamilton . Amherst Adelbert . Colby Rochester . Middlebury Bowdoin . Rutgers Brown . Colgate New York . Cornell Marietta . Syracuse Michigan . Northwestern Harvard . Wisconsin Lafaye 1te . Columbia Lehigh . Tufts De Pauw . Pennsylvania Minnesota . T echnology Swartmore . Stanford California . McGiH Nebraska . Toronto Chicago 102 x DWNMI 137111. ,1 KO: Hmmb a...vuqhg Delta Upsilon 17 Fratres in Universitate Graduate Colleges George Clarke Sellery Elmer Dent Grant 'William J. Rusk William Joseph Eyles Arthur W. Greeley Hamilton Ford Allen Franklin Turner Jones John Wesley Rice Undergraduate Colleges Arthur Eugene Bestor John Mills Harold Hayden Nelson Orville Elbridge Atwood William Henry Elfreth Bertram G. Nelson Emery Brigham Jackson Frank Harry Gilchrist Walter Benjamin Fulghune Robert Halsey Campbell Lynn John Bevan Merritt Berry Pratt Frank Rainsay Adams Thomas Andrew Hamilton 105 THE MORTAR BOARD The Mortar Board .27 Graduate College Eleanor Jones Undergraduate Cclleges Virginia Wynne Lackersteen GeorgeyMae VVheeIer Julia Coburn Hobbs Lina Priscilla Small Margaret Donnan Clara Josephine Kretzinger Edith Runsdall Shaffer Grace Howard Darlington 109 THE ESOTERIC The Esoteric Established 1894 J Honorary Members Louise Palmer Vincent Elizabeth B. XVallace victim? Members Mary Judson Averett Mary Ethel Freeman Agnes Eleanor Chambers Monica Railsback Emma Dolfmger Jane Munroe M. Narcissa Cox Cornelia Bruere Mary XVrigh't Dorchester Edith Bradford Wiles 113 mzwuoyimaim Mme The Quadranglers E stablz'slzed january, 1895 4 Active Members Leona Canterbury Marion Calhoun Louise Dodge Elizabeth Belden Belle Halsted Edna Robinson Ester Linn Eunice Hunter Helen. Dunn Aiice Mafiess Edna Stevens Breta Bobo 117 mmqo dnnonm ME? The Sigma Club Estawz'slzm' 0510667, 1895 4 Active Members Margaret Coulter Katherine Paltzer Louise Shailer Rachel Henton Charlotte Leonard Martha Landers Elizabeth Dunlap Bertha Hes Blanche Felt' Augusta Stettler Martha McDonald Marie MCEvoy 121 m .9me Zwmm.w.w.$ th The Wyvern Club Established 1899 4 Honorary Member Mrs. Charles P. Small Active Members Rebecca Louise Day Estelle Rueckheim Charlotte Dillingham Smith Grace Elizabeth Peabody Cornelia Sitnrall Smith Laurette. Irene Octigan Lillian Danaher Fran ces Helen Ashley Phi Beta 0elta Establishedfanuary, 1900 4 Active Members Blanche Bowers Helen Hayner Edith Harding Blanche Hogan Marie Lamb Irma Mowbrey Ruth Terry 126 The Owl and Jerpent a! Senior Society Established 1896 :1 Active Members Kellogg Speed Walter Lawrence Hudson Herbert Paul Zimmermann George Gilbert Davis Curtiss Rockwell Manning 128 MmAQm ZCV: NEH The Iron Mask 164 Junior Society EstaHishedjune 12, I896 16f Active ,Members james Ronald Henry Vernon Tiras Ferris Eugene H. B. Watson William Arthur Moloney Edward Christian Kohlsaat Frederick Graham M01011ey Howard Sloan Young T urner Burton Smith Harold Bennett Challiss Quinton Ward Hungate Charles Eri Hulbert Albert Bertram Garceton 131 Three Quarters Club a! Freshman Jociety Eslablislzed February, 1896 4 EDWARD R. FERRISS . . . . . . President MILTON LE ROY HINKLEY . . Secretary and Treasurer Active Members William Atwood Brooks George McHenry Dwight Howard Freeman Edgar Julian Downey Oliver Brown W'yman Thomas Andrews Hamilton Theodore Ballou Hinckley Henry Davis Fellows Harry Albert Evans Samuel Francis Fellows Lambert Arundel Hopkins Frank Joyce Sardam Charles Forrest Leland Walter Murray Johnson Walter Hellyer Milton George G. Sills Clifford Willard Galerd Carl Walker Sawyer Phillip Amour Sunderland Joseph Charles Neptune Ralph Clarence Putnam Freeman Drake Martin Adelbert S. Stuart John O. Backhouse Max Holcombe Cook Nelson Le Roy Buck George E. McKillip I35 N u ?i Sigma Established fammry, 1898 4 Active Members Marian Harmon Calhoun Agnes Eleanor Chambers Leona Susan Canterbury Katherine Paltzer Margaret Coulter I36 Members of Fraternities and Jocieties Not represented by Chapter: at tbe University of Chicago 4 Sigma N u BENJAMIN FRANKLIN STACEY . . Lombard College JOHN WILLIAM KIRKPATRICK . Missouri Valley College GEORGE TAYLOR NESMITH . Northwestern University ROBERT MACBURNEY MITCHELL . Northwestern University EDWIN DEVVITT SOLENBERGER . . . Northwestern University HARVEY MONROE SOLENBERGER . , . Northwestern University Kappa Kappa Gamma ANNA M CORBETT . . . . . , . . Alleghany College Alpha Tail Omega LLOYD CLARK AYRES . . . Ohio State University I37 Fraternity Conventions H Delta Kappa Epsilon Providence, Rhode Island, November 15-17, 1900 Delegates .' Curtiss Rockwell Manning Edward Christian Kohlsaat Daniel Pearson Trude Phi Kappa Psi Columbus, Ohio, April 17-19, 1900 Delegates: Parke R055 Albert Bertram Garcelon Dean Swift Beta Theta Pi Puttin Bay, Lake Erie, August 30-September 1, 1900 Delegate.- Kellogg Speed Alpha Delta ?In' New York, New York, May 11-13, 1900 Delegate: Charles Scribner Eaton Sigma Chi Chicago, Illinois, November 11, 1900 Delegate: Ray Johnson Phi Delta Theta Louisville, Kentucky, November 29, 1900 Delegazfes .- Austin Young Boy Halbert Brush Blakley Psi Upsilon Syracuse, New York, May 9-11, 1900 Delggale .- Herbert Paul Zimmermann Delta Tau Delta Chicago, Illinois, February 22, 1901 Delegates .- Walter Edward Francis Donald Kennicott Cbi Psi New York, New York, April 17-20, 1900 Delegate : Clark Scammon Reed 138 a0rg9nm 123t10nfi Officers ARTHUR EUGENE BESTOR . . . President MARGARET MORGAN . . Vice-President FRED SASS . . . . . Secretary FRANK PERKINS BARKER A . . Treasurer CURTISS ROCKWELL MANNING . , Historian Executive Committee Francis Baldwin Donald R. Richberg Helen Gardner Kellogg Speed Althea Somerville John Mills Charles Walter Britten LILLIE F. ABBOTT. MARY ELIZABETH ABERNETHY. Honorable Mention, Junior College. FRANCIS BALDWIN, 1P K. W. FRANK PERKINS BARKER, A. T. A Philolexian Literary Society ; The Morgan Park Club; Junior College Councillor, 398; Comic Opera, 00; Daily Maroon Board, bo; University Weekly Board, ,00; Junior Promenade Committee, ,00; Senior College Scholarship in Debating. y00; Cap and Gown Board, ,01; Washington Promenade Committee, 01; Treasurer Senior Class, lOI. MINNIE BARNARD Honorable Mention, Junior College ARTHUR EUGENE BESTOR, A. Y. The Iron Key; Secretary Y. M. C. A., 799101; Ferdinand Peck Prize Public Speaking, ,98; Ivy Orator, 98; Sophomore Orator Freshman Presentation Exer cises, 98; First Prize Northern Oratorical Preliminaries, 799; Second Place Northern Oratorical League Contest, ,99; Senior College Scholarship Public Speaking, Yoo; Comic Opera, y00; Cap and Gown Board, 300; Leader Chicago- Michigan Debate, 00; Chicago-Columbia Debate, ,00; President Oratorical Association, '00-,01 ; Honorable Mention, ,99; History Scholar, y00301 ; Marshal, 00- 01 ; President Senior Class. 140 Anna Bodler 2 Josephine Burnham 3 Minnie Barnard 4 Carlotta Collins Lillie F. Abbott 6 Mary E. Abenethy 7 Lucia Bradley S Henrietta Chase William Gable 10 H. E. Bulkley II F. P. Barker 12 A. E. Bretor C. W. Britten 14 H. E. Corey 15 E. Blackwelder 16 Francis Baldwin I Marian Fairman 2 Harry 0A Gillet 3 Martin H. Haertel 41131631101 M. Doyle m E 5 May Graves 2 a 6 Clara German 7 Ruth Hardy 8 Frances Donovzui: 9E dOwen Elwood Hotle :1; IO George Gilbert Davis 11 William Franklin Eldridge 12 Ethel Laurens Dunn I31Helen Gardner ,' 14 Mary Ethel Foreman 15 Nellie Grant ELIOT BLACKWELDER, B 8, II. Glee Club, ,98399; Comic Opera, 99- 00; Junior Promenade Committee, ,99; Senior Promenade Committee, $0301 ; Honorable Mention, ,99. ANNA BODLER. HORACE BOGART. JAMES H. BRUCE. LUCIA BRADLEY. C. WALTER BRITTON. Scholarship Senior Oratorical Contest, be; President Y. M. C. A.; Senior College Councillor. 01 ; Executive Committee Senior Class. HERMAN E. BULKLEY. JOSEPHINE BURNHAM. MARION HARMON CALHOUN Quadrangler; Nu Pi Sigma; Marshal, 00. LAWRENCE RANDOLPH CARTWRIGHT. HENRIETTA CHASE FLORENCE CHAMBERLIN COLE. CARLOTTA COLLINS. HYATT E, COVEY. Comic Opera, y00; Senior College Scholarship in Public Speaking, 00; nAs You Like It,,, 01. GEORGE GILBERT DAVIS, B. Q. 11 The Owl and Serpent ; Iron Mask; Sphinx ; Three-Quarters Club ; Tigers Head; Secretary Junior College Council, ,99; President Junior College Council, 99; Senior College Council, ,00; Cap and Gown Board, ,00; Track Team, ,99-,00; yVarsity Championship Feather Weight Wrestling; Chairman of the Junior Promenade, ,99; Chairman of the Washington Promenade, 00; Mandolin Club '98-'99300301 ; Leader Mandolin Club, ,01 ; President Glee, Mandolin and Banjo Clubs. FRANCES MARIE DONOVAN. ELEANOR MARY DOYLE. ETHEL LAURENS DUNN. HELEN DUNN. WILLIAM FRANKLIN ELDRIDGE, B. O. H. . Order of the Iron Mask; Football Team, V00; Tennis Team, 00; Junior College Council; Senior College Council; President Senior College Council, y00; Chair- man Finance Committee Junior Promenade, 99; Chairman Finance Committee Washington Promenade, ho; Marshal, y00:01. I45 JOSEPH CHALMERS EWING, A. T. A. Entrance Scholarship; Foot Ball Team, 98; Base Ball Team, 99300; Junior College Council, 799; Secretary Junior College Council, ,99; Senior College Councillor, loo; Cap and Gown Board, 100; Athletic Representative Senior College, ,00; Chairman Athletic Committee Junior Day, 99; Senior Promenade Committee, '00; The Morgan Park Club. MARIAN FAIRMAN. MARY ETHEL FREEMAN. Esoteric Club. HELEN GARDNER, 4,. B. K. Entrance Scholarship, 97; Spelman House; Treasurer Y. W. C. A., 00- 01; Executive Committee, Senior Class. CLARA GERMAN. HARRY O. GILLET. Entrance Scholarship ; Honorable Mention, Junior College WILLIAM L. GOBLE. Honorable Mention, Junior College; Senior College Scholarship in Chemistry, ,00301. CHARLES GOETTSCH. ELLIOTT ROBERT GOLDSMITH. JULIAN FRANk GOODENOVV. Track Team, y98399300; Lincoln House; Scholarship in Public Speaking; Senior College Council, 'or. NELLIE GRANT. MAY L. GRAVES. Spelman House. FRANCIS GREVIER GUITTARD. MARTIN HAERTEL. JULIUS THEODORE HALLER. RUTH HARDY. WALTER WILSON HART, 45. B. K. Lincoln House; Honorable Mention, Junior College. ELBERT ALPHEUS HARVEY. CARRIE HERNDON. ALMA M. HOLDEN. ELSIE PRISCILLA HONN. JAMES FLEMING HOSIC. Secretary Y. M. C. A., y94; Secretary Oratorical Association, y93-'94; Delegate Northern Oratorical Association, 94; Member Orchestra, ,93394; Member Band, y00-'01; Honorable mention, yoo. I46 james F. Hosic Elsie P. Honn Paul Kellar Jane Johnson Walter Hart Carrie P. Herdon Florence Lyons WynneLackerstcen W, L. Hudson Myrtle Hunt E. H. Harvey Erxfest E. Irons: G.XV.KrelzingE-r Grace Lewis W. H. Linslcy Lucy Keith OWEN HOTLE, W. 0. Senior College Scholarship ; Public Speaking ; Tied for First Place in Finals. WALTER LAWRENCE HUDSON, A. K. E. OWI and Serpent; Order of the Iron Mask; Three-Quarters Club; Marshal, ,99301; Head Marshal, ,01; Managing Editor Cap and Gown, hoo; Executive Committee Comic Opera, hoo; General Chairman Washington Promenade, ,01; Junior College Council, Fall Quarter, '97; Organization Committee Senior Class, ,01. MYRTLE HUNT. ERNEST EDWARD IRONS, A. T A. JAY STANLEY JACKSON. JANE RACHEL JOHNSON. LUCY KEITH, Y. W. C. A. PAUL G. W. KELLAR, tP. B. K. Honorable mention Junior College ; Honorable mentiofi, Senior College. GEORGE WILSON KRETZINGER, A. K.'E. AMELIA LACY. VIRGINIA WYNNE LACKERSTEEN, The Mortar Board. KATHERINE LEE. GRACE LEWIS. MARY CAIN LINCOLN. VVILLIS HENRY LINSLEY, X. W. Three-Quarters Club ; The Sphinx ; Comic Opera, ,01 ; Assistant Manager Glee, Mandolin and Banjo Clubs, yOI. FLORENCE LYON, 4i. B. K EUPHAN MACCRAE. CURTISS ROCKWELL MANNING, A. K. E. Owl and Serpent; Order of the Iron Mask ; Three-Quarters Club ; T rack Team, y99,301; Dramatic Club, hooplm; Banjo Club, y98,100; Tigerhs Head; Senior College Cauncillor, 300; Senior College Scholarship in Public Speaking; Junior Class Representative to receive Senior Bench ; Historian of Senior Class. GRACE MANNING. MARY E. MATTHEWS. RALPH AINSWORTH MCBROOM, A. T. A. 149 Jean Odell Mary Miles Margaret Morgan Grace Manning Lucy Jeannette Osgood John Mills Annie Moore Albert E. Patch Ernest McKibbon Curtiss Rockwell Manning Laura O'Brien Isabel McKinney Hugh Lafayette McVVilliams Oliver LeRoy McCaskill Donald Saxtdn McWilliams OLIVER LEROY MCCASKILL, , The Order of the DragonTs Tooth; Lincoln House; Secretary of Civic Club; Senior College Council, T00; Chairman Senior College Council, ,00; Member Oratorical Association; NAs You Like 1th; QT Junior College Scholarship in Public Speaking; Senior College Scholarship in Public Speaking; Ferdinand Peck Prize in Public Speaking. ELIZABETH WATSON MCCLURE. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN MCCORD. EMMA MCFARLAND. M, ELLA MCGUIRE. ERNEST MCKIBBON. ISABEL McKINNEY. DONALD SAXTON MCWILLIAMS, A. K. E. Three-Quarters Club; Banjo Club, Y98399300301 ; Mandolin Club, ,01. HUGH LAFAYETTE MCWILLIAMS, A. K. E. Three-Quarters Club; Banjo Club, ,98100; Leader Banjo Club, y99. I GEORGE MELTON. EMILY MILADOFSKY. MARY MILES. JOHN MILLS, A Y., rP. B. K The Iron Key; Aid at McKinley Convocatioh; Honorable Mention, Junior College; Senior College Scholarship in Physics; Executive Committee Senior Class. MARGARET MORGAN, 41 B. K. Entrance Scholarship; Secremry Junior College Council, T98; Junior College Scholarship in Latin, ,99; Zwinglius Grover Scholarship, oo; Vice-President Senior Class. ANNIE MOORE. ELLEN MURRAY. AUGUSTINE FRANCIS NAYLOR. , Member Band; Comic Opera, ngioo. HAROLD HAYDEN NELSON, A. Y. The Iron Key; Lincoln House; Mo'rgan Park Club; Colonial Dames Hiskory Scholar, y00102. ' Roy BATCHELDER NELSON, it B. K. Junior College Councillor, ,98; Senior College Councillor, y00; Recording Secre- tary Y. M. C. A, y98399100301 ; Vice-President Christian Union, TooJoI. CARL NEPTUNE, tIr, K. W. MARIE BAKER NICKELL. LAURA EDITH OTBRIEN. 153 I 5 H. II. Nelson 2 Lillie Pfeifer 3 Fred Sass 4 C. W. Richards F. D. L. Squires 6 Vernon Sirvilian Phillips 7 Donald R. Richberg 8 Virgil V. Phelps 9 Kellogg Speed 10 A. Webster Pierce 11 Laura Thompson 12 Wm. F. Roberts 13 Eva M. Russell 14 Guy W. C. Row 15 A. F. Naylor 16 R0y Batchelder Nelson JEAN TUGELOVV ODELL. Honorable Mention, Junior College. JESSIE OGLEVEE. LUCY JEANNETTE OSGOOD. ALLA PARETTE. PERRY J. PAYNE, X. W. Comic Operay Y99300; Glee Club, y99: Mandolin Club, ,99. ALBERT EUGENE PATCH. EUNICE BERTHA PETER. LILLIE ANNA PFEIFFER. Senior Scholarship in Public Speaking. VIRGIL V. PHELPS. VERNON SIRVILIAN PHILLIPS, A. T. A. Washington House, '98-99; Junior College Scholarship and Ferdinand Peck Prize in Public Speaking, H98; Senior College Scholarship and Univgrsity Prize, yoo; Scholarship in Graduate Divinity Debate, ,00; Second Prize in Preliminaties Northern Oratorical Contest, ,00 ; Vice-President Oratorical Association, ooJoI ; University Band, y99300. ALEXANDER VVEBSTER PIERCE. Mandolin and Banjo Club, bolox ; Comic Opera, 00. CLARENCE W. RICHARDS, 4a K. 1.1; DONALD R. RICHBERG. The Order of the DragonVs Tooth; Track Team, 98- 99- 00; Hand Ball Cham- pion, Singles and Doubles, 799; Weekly Board, yoo; Associate Editor Weekly, 01; Staffpf Daily Maroon; Glee Club, 00-'01; Comic Opera, 00; WAS You Like It,H 501; Oratorical Association; Senior College Council, 00- 01; Senior Class Executive Committee; Reception Committee Washington Promenade, Y01; Musical Clubs Investigation Committee; Memorial Day Committee; Chairman Cap and Gown Committee, Senior Class; Cheer Leader Foot Ball Games, 300; Junior College Scholarship in Public Speaking; Senior College Scholarship in Public Speaking. ' WILLIAM ROBERTS. ANNE HAWORTH ROBY. WALTER ROHMEYER. GUY W. C, Ross. Washington House. EVA RUSSELL. FRED SASS, Cb. K. W. Secretary Senior Class. IJOUIS HOOPER SHAILER. Sigma Club. 157 ALTHEA SOMERVILLE. Executive Committee Senior Class. KELLOGG SPEED, B. 0. II. Owl and Serpent; Iron Mask; 8. N. E.; Sphinx; Three-Quarters Club; Tigefs Head; Foot Ball Team, y97-'98 Y99; Captain, Too; Junior College Councillor, 197- y98399; Junior Promenade Committee, ,98; Business Manager Weekly, T99; Junior College Representative of Athletic Board, ,99300; Senior College Representative of Athletic Board, yOO-YOI ; Comic Opera, Too; Honorable Mention Junior College; Special Marshal Summer ,00; Marshal, TOOJOI; Bacteriological Journal Club; Mandolin Club, yox ; Executive Committee Class, ,01 ; Associate Editor Cap and Gown, ,00; University Strong Man. FRED D. L. SQUIRES. LAURA A. THOMPSON, 11?. B. K. Entrance Scholarship. FLORENCE GURNEY. RUTH VAIL. JESSIE VAN METER. CHARLES MACKAY VAN PATTEN. The Order of The Dragon's Tooth; Assistant Editor Weekly, ,00; Associate Editor Weekly, Too; Cap and Gown Board, '01 ; Base Ball Team, Too. LENA VAUGHN. ELLA KATHERINE WALKER, Cb. B. K. Spelman House. MARCIA POYNTER WAPLES. ALLA WEBB. NINA ESTELLE WESTON. Entrance Scholarship; Honorable Mention, Junior College; Spelman House. ALBERT WIEAND. ERNEST S. WILCOX. RUSSELL WILES. The Order of The Dragoxfs Tooth; Junior Council, y98; Senior Council, 500; Weekly Board, Too ; Secretary Oratorical Association, Tooe'ox ; Banjo Club, ,00101. NELLIE WILLIAMS. ALMA YONDORF. HERBERT PAUL ZIMMERMANN, W. Y. . The Owl and Serpent ; The Order of the Iron Mask ; 8. N. E ;Three-Quarters Club; The Tigers Head; The Weekly Board, Summer, ygSeFall, 99; Managing Editor The Cap and Gown, ,00: Banjo Club, '99900; Mandolin Club, TOOJOI; Orchestra, Y99-'oo; Band, '99-'01; Chairman Organization Committee Senior Class, ,01 ; Chairman Reception Committee Washington Promenade, T01 ; Junior College Cr'mncil, '98 ; Manager Assembly Informals, '98-,99. I58 I Alma Yondorf 2 Marcia P. Waples 3 Nellie Williams 4 Herbert Paul Zimmermaun 5 Perry I. Payne 6 Charles Mackay Van Patten 7 Lena Vaughan 8 Ella Katherine Walker 9 Frank G. Guittard 10 Nina Weston II Ruth Vail 12 Zayda Wentz I 3 Russell Wiles 14 Florence Turuey Class of 1903 17 ORVILLE ELBRIDGE ATWOOD . A . President JULIA COBURN HOBBS . . . . . Vice President EMMA DOLFINGER . . . . Secretary LEON PATTERSON LEWIS . . . . . Treasurer Executive Committee Louise Dodge Willis L. Blackman Halbert B. Blakey Flatt M. Conrad Ferdinand M. Horton Class of 1904 a SAMUEL FRANCIS FELLOWS . . . . President BERTHA LILLIAN ILES 1 Vice President E. J. DOWNEY . V . . . Secretary FRANK RAMSAY ADAMS . . . . Treasurer LAMBERT ARUNDEL HOPKINS . . . Sargeant-at-Arms 3 m. ROWLAND T. ROGERS M embers Leona Canterbury Margaret Coulter Louise Dodge Bertha Iles Virginia Wynne Lackersteen Martha Landers Florence Miller Lina Snmll Eugene Watson The Dramatic C President Lees Ballinger Jesse Cook lVIauriCe Mandeville Curtiss Manning Walker McLaury Claude Nuckols H. G. Paul Roland Rogers DRAMATIC CLUB Gbe KentaJood Institute Club a4 M embers Lina P. Small Louise H. Shailer Cordelia Patrick Rena Hooper Elizabeth Belden Mary Bristol Susan Grant Ethel Remick Ethel Holman Claribel Goodwin Gratia Belle Russell Augusta Stettler 6779 Joutberh Club 4 The Southern Club was formed in 1898, mco bring into closer social relations all mem- bers of the University who are Southeners, angi to study such problems pertaining to the South as may be Of Interest to the Club.H THOMAS H. BRIGGS, JR. . . . President JOHN A. RICE . . Vice-President MARIE L. LEWIS . A Secretary LAURA W. DARNELL . . Treasurer 165 Lincoln House J Professor JAMES H. BOYD . . . . . . Head Professor OLIVER J. THATCHER . . . . Councillor JULIAN FRANK GOODENOW . . . . . Vice-Head LEWIS ALEXANDER PRINGLE . . . Secretary ALLAN CAMPBELL WILLIAMS . . Treasurer M embers Edward Lyman Cornell Wilbur Condit Gross Hayward Dare Warner Charles Walter Britton Gordon Hensley Campbell Alfred Hugh FOWIer Ralph Merriam Walter Wilson Hart E110 Lubbert Van Dellen Charles Joseph Bushnell Harry Orrin Gillett Bertram G Nelson Mark Reginald Jacobs Francis J. F. T ische Harold Hayden Nelson Philip Graeme VVrightson Frederic Dennison Bramhall Erwin William Eugene Roessler David Moore Robinson Allen Campbell Williams Julian Frank Goodenow Lewis Alexander Pringle 166 Washington House J PROF. CATTERALL Head HORACE B. STREET Vice-Head GUY W. C. ROSS Treasurer OMAR H. SAMPLE , . Secretary M embers Clifton 0. Taylor Charles M. Barber PaulJ Fox R. H. Rea Zellmer R. Pettet Alvin B. Snider Virgil V. Phelps Robert 8. Wright Edwin G. Kirk Wynne N. Garlick Leon F. Lewis Jesse D. Cook Frank J. Seiter Sidney Klein Leo Klein Harry C. Smith Edwin E. Perkins William A. Averill Morris Lipman J. J. Vollertson H. F. McNeish Henry W. Jones Charles VJ. Collins G, B. Hallett ' W. H. Fielding William J. McDowell E. D. VanDellen Carl H. Grabs Samuel XV. Severance Charles H. Swift Frank L. Griffin W. A. Sibley Jpelman House .1! MISS GERTRUDE DUDLEY Professor EDWARD CAPPS Members Marion Biegler Mary E. Chandler Helen Gardner Harriet R. Going May L. Graves Grace T. Hayman Leila D. Hill Faith R. Lilly Anne Moore Mary Morrison Jennie M. Rattray Jessie E. Sherman Florence B. Shields josette E. Spink Jennie Thompson Ella K. Walker Nina E. Weston Alene N. Williams Nellie Williams Margaret Wilson 168 Councillor mmmLCI Kzuunvhhamm Q- Oratory and Debate : X, W7 4 Oratorical Association 1900:1901 g ARTHUR EUGENE BESTOR . . . . President VERNON SIRVILIAN PHILLIPS . h Vice-President RUSSELL XVILES . . . . . Secretary JOSEPH WALTER BINGHAM . . . . Treasurer BERTRAM G. NELSON, Chairman of the Committee on Northern Oratorical League SYLVANUS GEORGE LEVY, Chairman of the Committee on Intercollegiate Debates w Northern Oratorical League Final Contest Madison, Wisconsin, May 4, 1900 FIRST PLACE PERCY E. THOMAS . . . . . . Northwestern University Subject : The American Infamy SECOND PLACE . CLARENCE E. MACARTNEY . . . . UniverSIty of Wisconsin Subject: National Apostacy GEORGE W. MAXEY . . . . University of Michigan Subject : VVebsterE Reply to Hayne. WALDRON M. JEROME . . . University of Minnesota Subject : The Last of the Puritans. BERTRAM G. NELSON . , . . . . University of Chicago Subject : The Machine and Its Message LEIGH W. STOREY . . . . . . Oberlin College Subject : The Webster-Hayne Debate PERCIVAL HUNT State University of Iowa Subj ect : Samuel Adams. 171 Northern Oratorical League Annual Home Contest Kent Theatre, March 12, 1901 WINNER BERTRAM G. NELSON 1 . . . . The Oratory of Jesus ALTERNATE OWEN E. HOTLE . V . . . The Child of the Nation EDWARD GREEN . . . Jefferson and Lincoln WILL1AM H. HEAD . . The Modern Alexander MAURICE MANDEVILLE . . . John Quincy Adams CHARLES ADDISONQUACKENBUSH . . . The Tramp Problem THOMAS J.HA1R . . . Chinese Gordon PETER C. DE JONG . . . The Rights of the Boers a Central Debating League Semifinal Contest UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO VS. NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY Evanston, January 11, 1901 RESOLVEDiThat House Bill No. 7864 tproviding that immigration into the United States should be restricted to those who can read and write the Constitution in some languageE should become a law. AFFIRMATIVE NEGATIVE Northwesiewz Universily University 0f Chicago Harry 0. Hill Sylvanus George Levy George H. Parkinson Thomas J. Riley John Ernest Smiley Guy Whittier Chadbourn Ross Decision in favor of the Negative 'Waba r-fruzv '11 Z Senior College Finals E Spring 1900 Louise Roth Arthur V. Snell Hyatt E. Covey Vernon S. Phillips V Charles W. Britton Summer 1900 Frank P. Barker Grace Bushnell John W. Thomas Russell Lowry C. R. Manning Leroy Hombeck Aulzmm 1900 $9 Mary C. Lincoln Donald R. Richberg Owen E. Hotle S. G. Levy Peter C. DeIong Oliver L McCaskill Lillie A. Pfeiffer :k The cash prize was divided equally between Owen E Hotle and Peter C Dejong. I73 acaaw J 11 1 x Junior College Finals ' a Spring 1900 Ferdinand W. Peck Prize of Excellence in Debate, $50.00 Joseph W. Priest Alternate, Elzo L. Van DeHen WINNERS OF SCHOLARSHIPS David A. Robertson Benj. W. Robinson Peter C, Dejong Phillip Davis Walker G. McLaury Summer 1900 Ferdinand W. Peck Prize Karle Wilson WINNERS OF SCHOLARSHIPS Mary Roth C. M. Barber Alfred Crawford Leon P. Lewis H. F. MacNeish ALTERNATES Henry D. Reid Luella Harn A utumn 1900 Ferdinand W. Peck Prize M. A. Jacobs SCHOLARSHIPS Florence Foysinger G. H. Norton H. E. Smith A. L Jones C. A. Quackenbush II. J. Lurie Winter 1901 Ferdinand W. Peck Prize C. A. Quackenbush SCHOLARSHIPS Zerlina Hirsch C. C. Nuckols Annie McHardy Marie Lamb I74 Senior College a Spring 1900 R0 8. MCCLURE . . . . . Chairman MARY J. AVERETT . . . . Secretary H. P. Kirtley Charles Scribner Eaton W. S. Rogers Rhoda Jeanette Capps Donald R. Richberg Rowland Thumm Rogers Julia Lillian Pierce William Franklin Eldridge Joseph Chalmers Ewing : Summer 1900 O. L MCCASKILL . . . . . . Chairman C. R. MANNING . . . . . . . Secretary Donald R. Richberg W. A. Gordon Mary J. Averett Elizabeth M. King W. S. Rogers R. B. Nelson R. S. McClure Russel Wiles G. A. Young Aummn 1900 WILLIAM F. ELDRIDGE . . . A . Chairman GEORGE A. YOUNG . . . . . . . Secretary Russel Wiles Clinton L. Hoy R. B. Nelson Julian F. Goodenow C. R. Manning Donald R. Richberg Elizabeth King Vernon Tiras Ferris W. A. Gordon Ernest W. Kohlsaat, Jr, W intiw 1901 Vernon Tiras Ferris . . . v . . Chairman Edna Stevens . . . . . . . . Secretary Ernest XV. Kohlsaat, Ir. Mary C. Lincoln Donald R. Richberg Grace Manning Julian F. Goodenow C. W. Britten D. A. Robertson Leona Canterbury I75 TURNER BURTON SMITH GEORGE A. YOUNG Lees Ballinger Le; Roy T. Vernon William R. Jayne James Ronald Henry James Milton Sheldon Summer 1900 A. G. M ILLER KATHERINE PALTZER B. XVatson Harriet Shirk Leon P. Lewis ' C. W. C ollins Aufzmm 1900 LEON P. LEWIS HARRIET SHIRK O E. Atwood James M. Sheldon Edna R. Robertson Harry Milton Tingle L. A. Hopkins Winter 1901 HARVEY H. LORD EMMA DOLFINGER James M. Sheldon Edna R. Robertson James M3 Sheldon 176 Junior College Council a Spring 1900 Chairman Secretary Roy Wilson Merrifleld John Sheldon Riley XVilliam Ralph Kerr, Jr. Albert Miller Howard J. Sloan Chairman Secretq ry Georgia Mae Wheeler A G T homas E. C. Kohlsaat A C. Crawford Chairman Secretar y E. H. B. Watson C. W. Collins A. C. Crawford Harvey H. Lord Chairman Secretary Zellmer R. Pettet F. F. J. Tische Richard Wellington. L. A. Hopkins .a CHARLES REID BARNES ROY BATCHELDER NELSON ROBERT STEWART VVRIGHT M embers MISS GRACE MANNING ROY W. MERRIFIELD ALLAN TIBBALS BURNS C. WALTER BRITTON MARY ETHEL FREEMAN FLORENCE PARKER Religious Organizations The Christian Union President Vice-President . Secretary and Treasurer Senior College Junior College Divinity School Y. M. C. A. Y. W C. A. Y. W. C A. Assistant Professor JAMES ROWLAND ANGELL Professor JAMES RICHMOND HENDERSON University of Cllicago Jettlement Board of Directors P5iIantbropic Committee of the Christian Union JAMES ROWLAND ANGELL ROBERT M. LOVETT FRANK BIGELOW TARBELL President Secretary Treasurer The Young Menic Christian Association M Q. WALTER BRITTON . . . . . . . President ROY WILSON MERRIFIELD . . Vice-President Roy B NELSON . . . . Recording Secretary ARTHUR EUGENE BESTOR . . . Corresponding Secretary FRANK FREDERICK JOHN TISCHE . . . . . Treasurer C ommittees CHARLES GIBBONS FLANAGAN . . . Religious Meetings WILLIAM K4 MATTHEWS . . . . Missionary Roy WILSON MERRIFIELD . Membership ARTHUR EUGENE BESTOR A . . Intercollegiate HERMAN EGBERT BULKLEY . . . Reception FRANK FREDERICK JOHN TISCHE . . . . . Finance Advisory Committee FACULTY Professor John Merle Coulter Professor Charles Reid Barnea Professor Amos Alonzo Stagg ALUMNI Harry Belmont Abells Walter A. Payne Stacey Carroll Mosser ASSOCIATION OFFICERS C. Walter Britten Frank J. Tische Charles A. Marsh E Burritt Smith Judge Freeman The Young Womenis Christian Association lg MARY ETHEL FREEMAN . . . . . President GRACE MANNING . . . . VicePresident CECILE BOWMAN . 7 . '. Secretary HELEN GARDNER . . . . Treasurer FLORENCE PARKE'R . . . . General Secretary C om mittees Grace Manning . . . Membership Adaline Hostettor . . . . Reception Mary Rockwell . . . . Prayer Meeting Grace Baird . . . Union Prayer Meeting Helen Gardner . . . . . Finance Helena Hunt . . . . . Publication Catherine Cleveland A . . Missionary Anne L. Patrick . . . . Philanthropic I78 AEEEs, Opera Comique A Musical Comedy 4 A cademic A lchemist Songs by Miss M. Cooke, C. R. Barrett, J. W. Linn, F. J. Miller and others. Dialogue by Several Hands. Music from Various Sources, arranged 31111 Orches- trated by O. S. Brown. CAST Richard Wingold, The Academic Alchemist . Harry Burleigh Friend to Wingold . Uriah Wiley, Head Professor of Alchemy William Brainey Driver President of the University H. E. Runsitall, Secretary to President Driver William McKingley, President of the United States Jack Straw Secretary of State George Diddit, Admiral of the U. 8. Navy Nelson A. Styles. Major General of the U. 8. Army Campus Mart1us,A Mend1cant Merchant P D. Q Packmgham An Itinerant Caterer 1 Hautboy Redfern- Redfem, An Indigent Dancmg Master H: H. Kartoffelsalat, A Needy Newsboy A. S. Drooper 1 - Pat. N. Gill Penitent Pilgrims from Step-sister Universmes C. K. Sadalus Braymore Bellows, A Collapsible Orator Walter Van Smirkle, A Retiring Business Man Roxy Ann Shekelsworth, A Fair Philanthropist Maud S. Trotwell, Confidante to Roxy A1111 Rebecca Witheriug, Au Enemy of Ca-educatz'on Katie Clattcring, Stenogmpher to President Driver . Mrs. Headway, 0713 of the Four Hundred Mrs. Benison, An Amiable Almsgiwr Signorina Giratrice, Premiere Danseuxz 181 SCOTT BROWN R. C. MANNING P. J. PAYNE E. M. LUBECK H. M. ADKINSON H. G. LEIGHTON V. W. SINCERE W. W. BLACKMAN H. B. CHALLISS WILBUR BASSETT C. B. DAVIS H. A. TIRRELL B. R. BELL J. I. PRUGH 1H. B. CHALLISS V. W. SINCERE A. F. NAYLOR R. C. BROWN M. E. COLEMAN S. C. MOSSER 1 A. T. STEWART H. P. WILLIAMSON G A. YOUNG A. W. PIERCE . C. S. FREEMAN . C. M. HOAGLAND THE GOLF BALLET: Messrs. F. P. Barker, L. J, Bevan, L. W, Case. H. Cohen, H. E. Covey, T. F. Freeman, A. Y. Hoy. H. F. MacNeish, E. Monroe, C. M. Steele, C. W. Trumbull, E. A. Sibley, H. Woodhead. COOKS' QUARTETTE: Messrs. G. M. Hobbs, J. L. Cook, V. W. Sincere, B. F, Millspaugh. SWEEPERS' BRIGADE: Messrs. A. E. Hester, Eliot Blackwelden H. H Blakey, H. E. Bulkley, V. T. Ferris. H. G. Gale, R. C. Hamill, E. C, Kohlsaat, E. W. Kohlsaat, R. C. Manning. H. H. Newman. J. E Raycroft, A. B. Snider, H. B. VVyman, H. E. Wilkins, Clark Reed. POLICE SQUAD: Messrs. B. F. Millspaugh and G. A. Yqung. ANTHROPOMORPHIC AUTOMATA : Messrs. P. S. Allen and J. E. Raycroft. SOCIETY P'EOPLE: Messrs. H B Blakey, R. C. Brown. W. E. Francis, C. S. Freet11a n7 R. C. Hamill, E, C Kohlsuat, A. XV. Pierce, H. E. XVilkins BAG PIPER : Roben Keith. THE ELEPHANT: Forelegs, M. E. Felt: Hindlcgs, W. S. Hilpert. THE UNIVERSITY BAND: Messrs. F. Bard. J. D. Cook, A. B. Garcelon, E D. Howard, P. Rhodes, D. A. Robertson, G. VVellm3 er. UNIVERSITY FOOT BALL TEAM: Messrs. Cassels: Eldridge. Flannagan, Herschberger. Holste, Kennedy, Place, Sheldon, Speed and Webb. THE CADDIES: Masters Paul Harper, Lander MacClintoch, Howard' Burns, Fletcher Marsh. CHORUS OF PROFESSORS, STUDENTS, SOLDIERS AND SAILORS : Messrs. R. A. Augustine. W. A. Averill, H J. Balleuline, F. A. Bard, F. O. Barker, W. W. Rlackman, C E Carey, Herbert Cohen, C. B, Dirks. E. C. Eicher, W. H. Fielding, A. B. Garcelon, H, W. Johnson, XV. W. Johnston, Donald Kennicott, Sidney Klein, Eliot Norton, H. S. Osborne, E. P. RichI C. W. Richards, D. R. Richherg, E. A Sibley. AA 1. Thomas, A. J. Walters, G. A. XVilsnn, H. S Young, Wm. MacWicken Hancllett. EXECUTIVE STAFF G. M. HOBBS . . . . . . Musical Director R. C MANNING . . . . . . Stage Manager W. W. KELSO , . . , . Business Manager EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE C. B. Davis W. A. Gordon C. D. XV. Halsey KM L. Hudson C. S. Eaton B. G. Lee C lark Reed Glee, Mandolin and Banjo Clubs 4 WILBUR M. KELSO . . A . . . . . Manager WILLIS H. LINSLEY, ,02 . . , . Assistant Manager GEORGE GILBERT DAVIS, bx . . . President DONALD SAXTON MCWILLIAMS . . . . Secretary The Glee Club FREDERICK GRAHAM MOLONEY, 02 . . . Leader GLENN MOODY HOBBS . . . . K . Director FIRST TENORS Harlan Judson Ballantine, gr. Ralph Crissman Brown, 02 Allen Ayrault Green, y03, William Arthur Moloney, 702 Ralph Homer Smith, ,02 SECOND TENORS Paul Stanwood Harvey, y01 Charles W. Leigh, gr. George McHenry, '04 Frederick Graham Moloney, ,02 Adelbert Turner Stewart, ,04 FIRST BASS Willis Henrvainsley, ,01 William Ralph Kerr, J11, $3 Ernest Vt ilson Miller, 02 Frank Joyce Sardam, '04 SECOND BASS Gustave Adolph Johnson, b3 Donald Randall Richberg, y01 Albert George Thomas, 03 Herbert Bartlett Uryman, '03 I89 Ghe Mandolin Club J GEORGE GILBERT DAVIS . . . . . . Leader FIRST MANDOLINS George Gilbert Davis, ,01 Ernest Wilson Miller, ,02 Jay Schoenmann Patek, ,02 Forest Garfield Smith, 301 Kellogg Speed, 301 SECOND WIANDOLINS Max Holcomb Cook, b4 Donald Kennicott, y03 Edward Geode Woods, b4 VIOLIN . . . . . . William McMicken Hanchett, 03 CELLO . . u . . . Bowman Franklin Reinmund, b2 MANDOLA . . . . . Clarence Henry Wagner, Sp. FLUTE . . . . Horace B. Street, 02 TRAPS MAN . . . . Herbert Paul Zimmermann, '01 GUITARS Frank Rainsay Adams, R34 Donald Saxtou Mc'Williams, ,01 Alexander Webster Pierce, ,01 190 The Banjo Jextette M DON CARLOS DYER . . . . . . . Leader FRANCIS DENIS CAMPEAU, ,03 DON CARLOS DYER, '04 DONALD SAXTON MCWI1.L1AM5, '01 JOSEPH VVALTER BINGHAM, 102 ALEXANDER WEBSTER PIERCE, 101 RUSSELL WILES, yOI . . . . . . . Bass Banjo 191 The Choir J RALPH CRISSMAN BROWN RALPH HOMER SMITH MAURICE MANDEVILLE GEORGE H. BRUNSON ERNEST H. MILLER WILLIAM E. GODso HENRY'A. RUGER GUSTAV A. JOHNSON 192 University of Chicago H GLENN MOODY HOBBS ADELBERT T. STEWART Eb CLARINET SOLO Bb CLARINET FIRST Bb CLARINET SECOND B17 CLARINET THIRD Bb CLARINET SOLO Bb CORNET SOLO B17 CORNET FIRST Bb CORNET FIRST Bb CORNET SECOND CORNET . SAXAPHONE OBOE FLUTE SOLO ALTO FIRST ALTO SECOND ALTO FRENCH HORN BARITONE Bb BASS SLIDE TROMBONE FIRST TENOR SECOND TENOR Eb BASS BBb BASS SNARE DRUM BASS DRUM MASCOT Military Band . Leader . Secretary Charles Goettsch E. D. Taylor E. Goettsch . G. B. Smith R. Merriam T. W. Thompson Chas. B. Elliott A. T. Stewart R. C. Smith M. B. Pratt C. Wagner L. J. Bevin D. Kennicott J. F. Hosic H. M. Olson S. F. Acree F. N. Bard Floyd Brower Oliver Wyman M. Olson F. M. Horton H. B. Street F. L. Love M. Potter H. P. Zimmermann H. J. Lurie Robt. Johnson 193 The Tiger? H ead a Curtiss Rockwell Manning George Gilbert Davis Vernon Tiras Ferris Francis Denis Campeau Kellogg Speed Herbert Paul Zimmermann Ralph Crissman Brown Forest Garfield Smith William Arthur Moloney Frederick Graham Moloney Everett Wilson Miller Bowman Franklin Reinmund William Ralph Kerr D011 Carlos D yer I94 University of Chicago Weekly 5 Spring 1900 JOSEPH WALTER BINGHAM, '02 . . . . . Managing Editor FREDERICK GRAHAM MOLONEY, '02 . . Assistant Managing Editor JOHN E. WEBB. ,oo . . . . . . . Business Manager Associate Editors Arthur Frederick Beifeld, R32 George A. Young, Y02 Charles Julian Webb, ,02 Louis B. Chaplin, '03 Earl A. Howard, i0; Su mmer 1900 JOSEPH WALTER BINGHAM, io2 . . . . . Managing Editor CHARLES SUMNER HAYES, ,02 . . . Assistant Managing Editor LEON P. LEWIS. io3 . . . . . . . Business Manager Associate Editors Herbert Easton Fleming, '02 Eugene H. B. Watson, ,02 Charles W. Collins, R53 Frank P, Barker, '01 Russell Wiles, '04 John A, Liggett, b4 A ullmm 1909 FREDERICK GRAHAM MOLONEY, '02 . . . . Managing Editor ARTHUR FREDERICK BEIFELD, ioz ; CHARLES MACKAY VAN PATTEN, '01 LEON P. LEWIS, '03 . . . . . . . Business Manager Assistant Managing Editors Associate Editors George Alexander Young, ioz Donald R. Richberg, ,OI Douglass Sutherland, i02 Charles Mackay Van Patten, ioI Women Editors Louise Dodge, i015 Emma Ddliinger, iot I96 Gizaex ?giwmmkr 3:9 W infer 1901 GEORGE ALEXANDER YOUNG, yo2 DONALD R. RICHBURG, ,01 LEON P. LEWIS Managing Editor Assistant Managing Editor Business Manager Associate Edito rs Charles Mackay Van Patten, 101 Charles W. Collins ,03 Herbert Easton Fleming, ,02 T homas Johnston Hair, ,03 William Ralph Kerr, IL, '03 Women Editors Louise Dodge, y03, Emma Dollinger, '03 Former Officers of the Board Managing Editors 1892 E. M. Foster 1893 E. M. Foster 1893 H. L. Burr 1893 H. C. Murphy 1894 H. C. Murphy 1895 G. W. Moran 1895 F. W. Woods 1895 F. D. Nichols 1896 F. D. Nichols 1896 W. O. Wilson 1896 G. W. Axelson 1897 H. L. Ickes 1897 M. P. Frutchey 1897 M. D. McIntyre 1898 M. D. McIntyre 1898 E. C. VVooIey 1898i. E. Freeman 1898 A. G. Hoyt 1899 W. P. Cornell 1899 Lewis Lee Losey, Jr. 1899 Emory Cobb Andrews 1899 Walter Joseph Schmahl 1900 Parke Poss The Womenis Weekly Publislzgd March 14, 1901 127 NARCISSA COX, ,03 Managing Editor CHARLOTTE RUST LEONARD . Assistant Managing Editor Associate Editors Grace Johnson, 01 Nellie Williams, YOI Helen Brandeis, y01 Cernelia Dimrall Smith, '02 Mary Isabelle Brush, ,02 Elizabeth Belden, 02 Belle Upton Halstead, '02 Hildred Mildred French, 02 Lina P Small, ,03 Alice R. Corbin. y03 Hester Ridlon. o3 Edith Bradford Wilesjo4 4 THE WOMEIWS EDITION 4 .. nH the university of Qbicago 1 Weekly march fourteenth X nineteen 1bunbreb , Elna $116 9' 5O 4' ' ,- .- Volume IX PRICE TEN CENTS Number 2: KLY BOARD . F: F wmncx s w THE THE CAP AND GOH'N BOARD Cap and Gotzm a Managing Editors Edward Christian Kohlsaat Frederick Graham Moloney Business Managers Eugene H. B. Watson Vernon Tiras Ferris Associate Editors James Ronald Henry Orville E. Atwood Charles Eri Hulbert James Milton Sheldon Turner Burton Smith Emma Dolfinger Harold Bennett Challiss David A. Robertson Howard Sloan Young Charles M. Van Patten William Arthur Moloney David B. Stems Elizabeth Belden Frank P. Barker Julia Coburn Hobbs Estelle Ruckheim Lees Ballinger Margaret Coulter 9 Former Officers of the Board Managing Editors Business Managers 1895 Philip Rand 1895 Walter Atwood 1895 Charles Sumner Pike 1895 Oswald Arnold 1896 Philip Rand 1896 Frederick Davies 1898 Arthur Sears Henning 1898 Allen Grey Hoyt 1898 Willoughby George Walling 1898 Ernest Hamilton Dillon 1899 Walter Joseph Schmahl 1899 LeRoy Tudor V ernon 1899 Ralph Curtiss Manning 1899 Charles Bradan Davis 1900 Herbert Paul Zimmermann 1900 Charles Scribner Eaton 1900 Walter Lawrence Hud'son Assistant Managing Editor 1898 Thomas Temple Hoyne 205 The Daily Maroon Founded May 12, Igoo-Dz'stontinuea' fame 23, 1900 4 EARL D. HOWARD, 01 . . . . Editor and Manager HOWAND S. YOUNG, 02 . . . A . Athletic Editor PARKE Ross, ,00 . A . . , - News Editor Staff Ida Theresa Hirschl, y00 Clark S. Reed, '00 William E Eldridge, ,01 Frank P. Barker, '01 Lafayette W. Case, 01 J. Frank Goodenow, ,OI Vernon T. Ferris, 02 Lees Ballinger, 102 Katherine Marsh, ,02 Herbert E. Fleming, '02 C. C. Nuckols, '03 Walker G. McLaury, '03 206 University Houses a SOUTH DIVINITY HOUSE. Dean Eri Baker Hulbert, Councillor. Elijah Abraham Hanley, Head. MIDDLE DIVINITY HOUSE. Associate Professor John W. Moncrief. Councillor. William B. Shoemaker, Head GRADUATE HOUSE. Prefessor Albion W. Small, Councillor. H. Parker Williamson, Head. SNELL HOUSE. Professor H. P Judson, Councillor. Henry Gale, Head. BEECHER HOUSE. Assistant Professor Frank Justin Miller, Councillor. Miss Elizabeth Wallace, Head. KELLEY HOUSE. Assistant Professor Robert Morse Lovett, Councillor. Miss Robertson, Head. NANCY FOSTER HOUSE. Professor Adolph Casper Miller, Councillor. Assistant Professor Myra Reynolds, Head LINCOLN HOUSE. Assistant Professor William Isaac Thomas. Councillor, Dr. James Harrington Boyd, Head. WASHINGTON HOUSE. Dr. Frederick Ives Carpenter, Councillor. Ralph Charles Henry Catterall, Head. SPELMAN HOUSE. Professor Edward Capps, Councillor. Miss Gertrude Dudley, Head. GREEN HOUSE. Professor Henry Herbert Donaldson, Councillor. Assistant Professor Marion Talbot, Head. The University also recognizes the following houses, outside of the Quadrangles : CUMBERLAND PRESBYTERIAN DIVINITY HOUSE. Dr. Ira W. Howerth, Councillor Dr. W. C. Logan, Head. 207 DISCIPLES DIVINITY HOUSE. Associate Professor VViIliam Darnall MCClintock, Councillor. Dr. Hiram VanKirk, Head. ALPHA DELTA PHI HOUSE. 5722 Kimbark Avenue Professor George Stephen Goodspeed. Councillor. Ferdinand Schwill, Head. BETA THETA PI HOUSE. 5757 Madison Avenue Assistant Professor Francis Wayland Shepardson, Counciilor. Assistant Professor William Bishop Owen, Head. DELTA KAPPA EPSILON. 5826 Washington Avenue Assistant Professor James Rowland Angell, Councillor. Professor Shailer Matthews, Head. DELTA TAU DELTA HOUSE. 5731 Monroe Avenue. Herbert Lockwood VViHett. Assistant Professor Alexander Smith, Head. PHI DELTA THETA HOUSE. 5738 Monroe Avenue Associate Professor John Wildman Moncrief, Councillor. Mr. Harold L. Ickes, Head. PHI KAPPA PSI HOUSE. 650 Midway Plaisance Professor George Lincoln Hendrickson, Councillor. Dr. David Judson Tingle, Head. CHI PSI HOUSE. 5833 Monroe Avenue Professor John Matthews Manley, Councillor. XValter A. Payne, Head. SIGMA CHI HOUSE 5732 Washington Avenue Assistant Professor Solomon Henry Clark, Councillor. Newman Miller, Head PSI UPSILON HOUSE. 6058 Kimbark Avenue Associate Professor Robert Francis Harper, Councillor. Assistant Professor George Carter Howlaud, Head. 208 Athletic Representatives k7 The Graduate Schools . ALLEN T IBBALS BURNS The Divinity Schools . . . FRED MERRIFIELb The Senior College . . EDW'ARD CHRISTIAN KOHLSAAT The Junior College . . . JAMES MILTON SHELDON Coaches AMOS ALONZO STAGG CLARENCE BERT HERSCHBERGER WALTER SCOTT KENNEDY Manager of Games HORACE BUTTERWORTH 210 03.; L! m :15 . '- TM arm w 3 'O- THE FOOT BALL TRAIN Foot Ball Team 1900 27 Nothingr became the foot ball season of 1900 so well as its vic- torious ending. In spite of unexpected reverses and overwhelming defeats, the team, hacked by student loyalty that became strongtr its the excitement of it became greater, stuck phickily to its task until it had, in part, atoned for its early season record by soundly trouncing Michigan on Thanksgiving day by the score of 15 to 5. Chicago had had :1 championship team in 1899, the strongest in its history. Several of the best men on that team had left College at the end of the year, and a scarcity Of new material, a heavy schedule and hard early games which crippled many of the men, presented 21 harder combination than the skill of Coach Stztgg and the pluck 0f the men could at first overcome. The first games of the season, in which Lombard, Knox and Dixon were the oppo- nents. failed to bring out the scores that Chicago had been accustomed to roll up against teams of this Clztsst Dixon, even, had the Score 5 t0 0 in its favor at the end of the first half, and Mr. Stagg was forced to put in his strongest available team in the second half. Purdue. which had been beaten by a large Score the year before, played Chicago a Close game ; but still the supporters of the Maroons ditl not lose heart. In Minnesota Chicago met one of the strongest teams it haul played during the season, and was fortunate to escape with a tie. Here several valuable players were more or less severely injured ; 11nd from this game dated the reverses 0f the team. It seemed to be unable to get in shape for the hard games following. There was not sufficient time between the hard games to allow the men to recover from their injuries. Part of the second team was substituted 111111 defeats followed in rapid succession Brown won 011 Marshall field ; Pennsylvania, at Philadelphia, gave Chicago the worst defeat in its history. Iowa administered a shut out. Northweatern repeated the dose in spite of the fact that it looked as if the game ought to have gone to Chicago. Wisconsin took revenge for its defeats of the two preceding years. After the defeat at the hands of Pennsylvania, the Chicago Student body gave what nus perhaps one of the greatest exhibitions of College loyalty ever seen. The students ermuled Kent theatrel cheered, sang songs and made speeches just as if a victory was being celebrated. Classes were dismissed for thetoeeasiont ztnd the professors joined in praising the pluck the team had shown at Philadelphia, and inspiring Confidence into the team for future games. It was the noteworthy incident of the year, and the same loyal spirit found frequent outbursts during the rest of the season in spite of the followingsr tlefezltS. The way the team rallied for the Michigan game give: evidence that next year will find Chicago once more leading its western rivals 011 the gridiron. Some of the nlen have left College, but good new material is expected to enter in the fall to 011 the gaps left vacant and help make the team a ehzunpionship one. 215 Right End Right T ackle . Right Guard Center Left Guard Left Tackle Left End Quarter Back Right Half Back Left Half Back F1111 Back Benj 21min Strauss W'. E. Post The Team 4 WILLIAM FRANKLIN ELDRIDGE ZELMER O. PETTIT JAMES G. MACNAB CHARLES WILLIAM IRWIN WILLIAM CAREY HORACE GREELEV BODVVELL KELLOGG SPEED maptaim CHARLES GIBBONS FLANAGAN FREDERICK FEIL O. E. ATWOOD EDWARD PRICKETT RICH JAMES MILTON SHELDON LGEORGE HENRY GARREY I ALFRED W. PLACE L FRANK HORTON 1 JAMES RONALD HENRY I HARVEY H. LORD j ERNEST CARL PERKINS LALVIN BRICKER SNIDER SUBSTITUTES J. W. Hoag Alfred H. Fowler Gerhard H. Jensen Ernest DeKoven Leffmgwell Record of Team for 1900 Lombard 0 Chicago 24 Monmouth 0 Chicago 29 Knox 0 Chicago . . . I 6 Dixon 5 Chicago . 2 3 Purdue 5 Chicago . 1 7 Rush 0 Chicago . 40 Minnesota 6 Chicago 6 Brown I I . Chicago 6 Pennsylvania 4T Chicago 0 Iowa . I 7 . Chicago 0 N orthwestern 5 . Chicago 0 Wisconsin 39 Chicago 5 Michigan 5 . Chicago I 5 I 34 18 I Number of games won, 7 N umber of games lost, 5 Number of games tied, I 216 The Jerubs 1900 4 Left End . . . . . . . FOREST G. SMITH Left Tackle . . . . . . . EDWARD C. EICHER Left Guard . . . . . . DWIGHT H. FREEMAN Center . . . . . . . ROBERT S. MOTH Right Guard . . . HERBERT B. WYMAN Right Tackle . . . . . . . . PLATT CONRAD Right End . . . . . . . JOHN BACKHOUSE Left Half . . . . . . SIDNEY A. CAMPBELL Right Half . . . . . . FERDINAND M. HORTON Full Back , . A . BENJAMIN STRAUSS Quarterback g HENRY C. SMITH JULIAN F. GOODENOVV 1903 vs. 1904 J The second annual Freshmen-Sophomore football game was played in November. It was an exceedingly interesting game, and fiercely contested throughout, fmally result- ing in a Victory for the Freshmen by a score of 6 to o. The Teams CHAS M. HOAGLAND . Right End . ELMER H. ELLSW'ORTH FLOYD E. HARPER . . Left End . . HOMER E. WATKINS PLATT CONRAD . . Right Tackle A MERRIT B. PRATT EDWARD C. EICIIER . . Left Tackle DWIGHT H. FREEMAN ?ngiiNiE::::::Rg Right Guard . . ROBERT S. MOTH HERMAN B. VVYMAN . Left Guard . . . MAX H. COOK VVALLEN STEIN . . . Center . CLIFFORD W. GAYLOR HENRY C. SMITH Captaim Quarterback MARTIN E. SCHRYVER SIDNEY A. CAMPBELL . Right Half . . ALFRED W. GREENWOOD FERDINAND M. HORTON . Left Half . . . MURRAY B. LOL'ER FRANCIS M. BARD . Full Back . JOHN BACKHOUSE maptaim w p Base Ball Team 1900 1'! 1 he Chicago tmm of 19110 1111111311 the longest schedule of any base 111111 nine which 6V er represented Chicz1g0.1 ractice began 111 March with a series of three 1111111125 with Vanderbilt I 11i1crsity at Nashville. This was the first southern trip which 11 Chicago team had take11..z1ter in the season we had 1111 opportunity to 111311511er strength with C0r11L11, Pennsylvania 111111 11201113th 11 At IthnL'a we 1111111L 011C eror which brought in 111100 111115 and lost 115 the 1rmue' , at Pennsy'lumia WL won 111 the SLOrL 0f 10 6; at trcorgetown we 11611 worstLd in each L'ontht by n 1111rrow11111rgi11. During the latter part of June Pe1111s1'1v1111i11 won two out of three 5111111133 at Marshall Field thus e1 emng 11p matters between I;Lnnsy1v1111ia 111111 Chicago for the xenr 1n the Middle West Chicago won two series viy. Its series with both Wisconsin and Northwestern. Illinois took 1111 four g11111es from 115, while Michigan won two out of three. The t1eci11in51r game with Michigan was 21 ten inning contest in which we were defeated 111' 11 score uf 3- 2. Our s6cond te1m1 was wry successful in its SLerlule With two exceptions tth won 1111 of their ga111es.0ne was 10st to Austin IIiUh SL11001 the other Morg1 111 Park 11611. XS 11511111 much interest 11' 11$ 1111111ifeste11 in the games of the IntLr- fraternity Baseball ASSOLiatiOH Phi DL1t11 11161.21 curriul UH the 1111111161 11s 11 trophy when thex' triumphed over the strong Deha T1111 Delta nine. ' Names of tfae Players FLOYD EVERETT HARPER 1 112111131111 OLIN W0011.jR. 1 Ulmllm TURNER BURTON 81111111 1:111:11 MERRINELD i Pitchem WALTER 5111111211 ROGERS 1 ' i ' t ' ' ' A1 1111-211 CHISTRI 1311511011111 W111 114R SL011 ILENNEDV . . . . 1 . . . I'irst 1.1151 I 1: Rm 1111011 V1. RNON 1C11pt11in 1 EDWARD OLIN WV 00D, Jr. ' . . , . Second B1186 CHARLES MACKAV VAN PAT'I'EN FRED NIERRIIHEIJ1 TURNER BURTON SMITH - . . . . . . . . Third Base Roy MERRIFIELD LEROY TUDOR VERNON 1 x 11 . 1 1 v 1 1 1 Short Stop LHARIJLh IVIALKAY V115. 1111111111 1 ROY MhRRIILIIuLIVJ 1. Left Field EDWARD OLIN 110013.111. 1 ALFRED1V. PLACE . . . . 1 . . . . . . Center Field 1051111111 CHALMERS EWING . . . . 1 . . . Right Field 218 Hndmnh QAQN mumzwm MEH Chicago? Base Ball Record for 1900 Dale W lzere Playgd Malch 29 Nashville March 30 Nashville March 31 Nashville April 10 Evanstou Aplil 14 Marshall Field Ap1i1 17 Malshall Field April 18 Marshall Field April 19 Maxshall Field April 21 Champaign April 24 Marshall Field April 26 Marshall Field April 28 Marshall Field May 3 M'arshall Field May 5 Marshall Field May 9 Ann Arbor May 12 Malshall Field May 17 Marshall Field May 19 Marshall Field May 22 Marshall Field May 23 Champaign May 26 Malshall Field May 29 Madison May 31 Evanston June 1 Marshall Field June 2 Ann Arbor June 4 Ithaca June 5 Philadelphia June 7 Washington June 9 Washington June 12 Marshall Field june 16 Marshall Field June 18 Marshall Field June 20 Marshall Field 4 55073 Chicago 18 Chicago 11 Chicago 22 Chicago 10 Chicago 12 Chicago 6 Chicago 2 Chicago 4 Chicago 1 Chicago 10 Chicago Io Chicago 11 Chicago 13 Chicago 1 Chicago 9 Chicago 11 Chicago 6 Chicago 2 Chicago 4 Chicago 6 Chicago 3 Chicago 5 Chicago 12 Chicago 4 Chicago 2 Chicago 3 Chicago 10 Chicago 8 Chicago 3, Chicago 4 Chicago 7 Chicago 6 Chicago 11 Oppon mt Vanderbilt Univemity Vanderbilt University Vanderbilt University Northwestern University Marquettes N orthwe stem University American League Amelican League University of Illinois Rush Medical College Lake Forest University N orthweste1 11 University Kansas University University of Illinois University of Michignl University of Michigan PLudue Universitv Nntl e Dame University University of Wisconsin Unive1sity of Illinois Unive1sity of Illinois Univelsity of Wisconsin N 01 thwestel 11 University Beloit College Univelsity of Michigan C01 H811 University University of Pennsylvania Gcmgetown University Georgetown University University of Minnesota University of Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania Sta re HH 1:00on0-le 000: .4 H H ... H H ONOOMPLNWWN O0mN IQ M$-POH0 m 10 I2 Univelsity of Pennsylvania 2 The batting and fielding records f01 1900 wexe as follows : Harper, c . Smith, p , 3d b and 1 f Roge1s. p andl f Kennedy, Ist b Wood, C , 211 b and 1 f Vernon, 2d b and s s Merriiield, F . 3d b andl f Ewing, r f andl f Place, 0 f and c Merrifield, R , 1 f and 31113 Van Patten, s s and c f Ellsworth, p andl 1 AL Games Bat 23 92 22 81 I4 41 28 123 21 77 26 102 28 117 27 102 27 112 2I 79 I9 77 5 X3 Fetal Hits Bases 18 24 22 27 5 5 37 57 9 1 1 27 33 37 52 2 3 27 4o 62 16 19 1 7 18 o 0 221 Aver- Stolcn Put As age Runs BASES Outs sists 196 14 2 146 23 271. I4 2 24 59 I22 3 0 7 35 300 26 6 300 8 .157 7 3 49 28 294 25 T3 37 S4 7117 41 9 47 60 225 18 4 27 4 357 36 I0 49 5 202 9 2 17 6 221 11 4 28 32 000 2 I 2 3 Er- IOl'S 12 9 3 I4 11 22 16 6 8 8 25 1 Aver age 934 871 742 Track Team 1900 a Chicago was last year represented by an all-around team; in the sprints, in the distances and in the weights the Maroon was up- held by holdii men and tried. Many of these men, Burroughs. B. B. Smith. Black and others have gone, and in their departure we have lost most of the men upon whom we could always depend for points. There is not, therefore. in the present team that skill and development so characteristic of the team preceding, hut in their stead have sprung up the admirable quality of nerve and an unconquerahle spirit of fight that in moments of defeat elicits only expressions of surprise, qualities which are sure to maintain Chicago in the place of prominence she has attained to. The relay team journeyed jauntily to Philadelphia and returned victorious. They had won easily from Pennsylvania and Georgetown, and they returned to active work with great zest. Emulating their example, the men in all branches of track work began steady and systematic training, Our first dual meet of the year was with Illinois. Chicago won so easily, 90 to 38, that the meet took ml somewhat the nature of a nne-sided affain The performances of Slack, Lemngwell and Fred Moloney in the'220, Ioowyard and hurdle races respectively were easily the features of the meet. Slack did the 220-riash in 22 seconds; Lethugwell the IooAyard dash in even time, and Moloney the hurdles in 16 175 and 25 seconds 011 May 12th our dual meet with Wisconsin was less productive of good results, The meet was won for us by the men in the bicycle races and by our seconds When the tired members of the team reached Madison in the early morning they found that trav- eling all night just before a race is not the best of training, There was one relievingr feature, however-Lister's good work in the shot-put made a new record for our I'niversity weight-men. The Western Intercollegiate at Ravenswood was lost to us by half a point. XVhile we were disappointed with the outcome of the meet as a Whole, we were more than pleased with a number of the individual performances. tt Bill Moloncy. in running the quarter and half milesY performed in his usual manner. The finish of the half mile was the most heart-hreaking and spectacular event ever witnessed in the W est. Hulbert and Mortimer got seconds in their respective events. Fred M01011ey alternated first and second in the high and low hurdles with McLean of Michigan Our failure to win the meet may be laid to a number of causes. Slack was laid up with a sprained tendon and Lord and Leffingwell were ineligible. The principal reason. however, was our almost utter failure in the bicycle events. I'p to this point we stood well to the front in the number of points won, and with before us the splendid work of the bicycle men in former meets, 222 we felt confident of victory. But the best of plans go oft awry, and the bicycle men failed to win. A miserable day and unforseen accidents had played havoc with our heretofore unbeaten squad and we were forced to acknowledge defeat. After the Intercollegiate, training began for the Paris trip. After repeated trials live men, Capt. W. A. Moloney, Charles Linsley Burroughs, Harvey H. Lord, Henry B. Slack and Frederick G. Moloney were chosen to represent the I'niversity, and on the 23rd of june, these men with Mr. Stagg sailed for the old world, there to try conclusions with the foreign athletes in the London and Paris Games. In these games Captain Moloney, Harvey Lord and Fred Moloney did the place Winning for the team, breakdowns pre- venting Slack and Burroughs from taking their places in the front ranks, where it is generally conceded they belonged. Considering the accidents that are always attendant upon track men, Chicago may be said. without boasting, to have done well in her trials abroad. I With the opening of the new year of 1901. Captain Moloney began to search out the candidates for the track team. Soon promising runners for the long and middle distances were found. The muclrfeared H con l, notices overtook some of the most promising, and as a xesult our five indoor meets were not always hanner-winning eventsv Harvey Lord at Notre Dame ran the half-mile in world's r cord time, and at Milwaukee Fred Moloncy established a new worldls record in the 75eyarrl high hurdles. The splendid work of Captain Moloney in the 440, 880 and one mile relay pulled the meet out for us, only to have it lost again through a most unfortunate decision by lax, if not incompetent, judges. What our team for the Spring of 1901 will be, is at best a matter of conjecture, but with an encouraging absence of it flunk notices for the athletes, Chicago will have a team which must at least inspire the other western colleges with proper fear and wholesome admiration. Tllli NlitV GYMNASH'M 223 Members of the 1900 Team J WILLIAM ARTHUR MOLONEY Captain Theron XViufred Mortimer Harvey Hurd Lord Frederick G Moloney Charles Eri Hulbcrt Curtiss Rockwell Manning Ferdinand Mosely Horton George Gilbert Davis John Thomas Lister Jerome Pratt Magce Henry Berry Slack Walter Joseph Schmahl Carter VanVIeek Brown Donald Randall Richberg Ernest DeKoven LefEngweH Zelmer Ormsby Pettit Daniel Pierson Trude 224 TRACK TEAM PARKS AND LONDON PICTURES The Illinois: Chicago Meet 4 Held 011 Marshall Field, May 12, 1900. Track E tients First Second 100 yards Dash Lefiingwell, C. Slack, C. .10 120 yards High Hurdles F. G. Moloney, C. Martin I. 16.1; Lmile Run Hulbert, C. Siler, I. 4.55g 440 yards Run W. A. Moloney, C. Cayou, I. .53; 200 yards Dash Slack, C, and Cayou, 1., tied. . .22 220 yards Low Hurdles F. G. Moloney, C. Merrill, I, .25 880 yards Run Lord, C. F. M. Horton, C. V 2.0613: Half-mile Walk Davis, C. Richburg, C., by default. Quarter-mile Bicycle Brown, C. Goodenow, C .33 Mile Bicycle Goodenow, C. Stevenson, I. 2.195, F ield E vents Discus Throw Leiiingwell, C. Cassels, C. 103 ft. 412: in. High Jump Went to Illinois by default. Shot Put Lister, C. Pettit, C. 38 ft. Broad Jump Garrett, I. Keator, I. 22 ft. Hammer Throw Mortimer, C. Lister, C. 125 ft. Pole Vault Magee, C. Kratz, I. IO ft. 6 in. LeHingwell in the Ioo-yard Dash, Moloney in the Hurdles and Lister in the Shot Put broke the University records in their respective events. SUMMARY Chicago won with 90 points, Illinois getting but 3,8 points. 229 The Relay Race 4 x Held at Franklin Field in Philadelphia, on Saturday; April 28, 1900 Chicago won by about Hteen yards from Pennsylvania, with Georgetown third, Captain W. A. Moloney, who ran last for Chicago, ran the fastest quarter of the day, in 492; seconds. The time for the mile was within two-iifths of a second of the wor1d3s record for the distance, held by Harvard. The teams were : CHICAGO H. B. Slack H. H. Lord F. G. Moloney W. A. Moloney P ENNSYLVANIA Cools Smith Westley Drumh eller 2 3o GEORG ETOVVN Holland Desseg Mulligan Kernan 2am; alum WE. The Chicangisconsin Meet 4 Held at Madison, May 26, 1900 Track E vents First Second 100 yards Dash Leflingwell, C. Senn, W. .10 i20 yards High Hurdles Trude, C. F. G. Moloney, C. .17 One-mile Run Hahn, W. Hulbert, C. 4.3g 440 yards Dash W. A. Moloney, C. Lord, C. .51?g 220 yards Dash Senn, W. Leftingwell, C. .222. 220 yards Low Hurdles VSchule, W. F. G. Moloney, C. .25; 880 yards Run Burdick, W. Lord, C. 2.03;, Mile Walk Bredstein, W. Young, W. 7.07 Mile Bicycle Goodenow, C. Brown, C. 2.30;; g-mile Bicycle V Brown, C. Goodenow, C. .45;- F ield E vents Broad Jump Schule, W. Pettit, C. 22? ft. Discus Throw Granke, W. LefEngwell, C. 108 ft. I in. Shot Put Lister, C. , Cochems, W. 39 ft. 2g- in. Hammer Throw Mortimer, C. Lister, C, 130 ft. 7 in. Pole Vault Wheeler, W. Magee, C, 10 ft. 10 in. High Jump Went to Wisconsin by default. Lister broke the University record in the Shot Put. SUMMARY Chicago won with a total of 71 points, Wisconsin getting but 57 points. 233 Western I nter:Collegiate Meet a Held at Ravenswood, June 2, 1901 Track E-tlents Firs! Seamd V 772 ird 100 yards Dash, Cadogan, Cal. Nash, Knox O'Shaughllessy,N.D. .Iog- 220 yards Dash, Cadogan, Cal. . Drum, Cal. Nash, Knox .225? 440 yards Dash, W. A Moloney, C. Pick, N. D. Teetzel, M. .512 880 yards Run, ' W. A. Moloney, C. Hayes, M. Baker, N. W. 2.02 Mile Run, Baker, N. W. Hulbert, C., Hahn, W. 4133; 120 yards H, Hurdles, F. G. Moloney, C. McLean, M. Hamlin, Cal., .1631 220 yards L. Hurdles, McLean, M. Moloney, C. Bockman, Minn. .2557 14 Mile Bicycle, Gaffney, N. D. Brown, C. ,Sudheimer, Minn. .33 Mile Bicycle, Gaffney, N. D. McDougau, N. D. giftieiw, 0.? tied 2 53, Mile Walk, Bredstein, W. Richberg, C. Walsh, Cal. 7.00 F ield E vents Pole Vault, Dvorak, M. Wheeler, W. Juneau, W. 10ft. 3 in. Dvorak vaulted for record and did II ft. 6 in. Hammer Throw, Plaw, Cal. Mortimer, C. Brend, Neb., 156 ft. 3 in. Discus Throw, Granke, W. France, M . Corew, Neb. 110 ft. 2 in. Shot Put, Flaw, Cal. Woolsey, Cal. Cochens, W. 41 ft. 8 in. High Jump Armstrong M. Flourney, M. Tate, Minn. 5 ft. 104 in. Broad Jump, Schule, W. McLean, M. Broughton, Cal. 21 ft. 42 in. Summary Universities Points Michigan . . . . . . . . . 31 Chicago . . . . . . . . . . 30V; California . . . . , . . . . 29 Wisconsin . , . . 1 . . . . . 21 .Notre Dame . . . . . . . . . 17 Northwestern '. . . . . V . . . 6 Knox . . 1 A . . . . . . 44 Minnesota . . . . . 1 . . . 3 Nebraska . . . . . . . . - . . 2 INTER-COLLEGI ATE PICTURES Chicago:Y. M. C. A. Meet 4 Held in University Gymnasium February 2, 1901 3 5 yards Dash, 40 yards Hurdles, 44o yurds Run, 880 yards Run, Mile Run, 220 yards Dash Relay Race, High Jump, Pole Vault Broad jump, Shot Put Track E Uen ts Firs! Pefley, Y. M. C. A. F. G. Moloney, C. F. M. Horton, C. H. H, Lord, C. Henry, C. W. A. Moloney, C. Chicago Swami Snow, Y. M. C. A. C. R. Manning, C. Turtelot, Y. M. C. A. Humphrey, Y. M. C. A. Grabo, C. Wellington, Y. M. C. A. Y. M. C. A. Field Events Clapper, Y. M C. A. Bailey, Y. M. c. A. Bassan and Kennedy tied at 10 feet. Hopkins, C. Speih, Y. M. G. A. D. Hopkins, C. Pettit, C. Chicago won with a total of 59g points. Third W. A. Moloney, C. Horton, C. Buckwater, Y. M. 0. Henderson, Y. M. 0, Kelly, C. Wellington, C. A. A Ferriss, C. Friend, Y. M. C. A. Hopkins, C. Chicago:Micbigan Indoor Meet 4 Held in University Gymnasium February 20, 1901 Track E vents Firs! Second 35 yards Dash Neufer, MA Fishleigh, M. 40 yards Hurdles F. G. Moloney, C. C. R. Manning, C. 880 yards Run, Hayes, M. H. H. Lord, C. 440 yards Run, Neufer, M, W. A. Moloney, C. Mile Run, F. M. Horton, C. Grabo, C. Haslam Lord Sweeley Wellington Relay, Neufer Horton Hayes Pettit Field E vents Shot Put, Snow, M. Robinson, M . High Jump, Snow, M. Ferriss, C. Pole Vault, Dvorak, M. Fishleigh, M. Michigan won With a total of 42 points, Chicago getting a total 0f 30. 237 Amateur Athletic Union Indoor Championship Meet a Held at Milwaukee, March 2, 1901. An open meet given by the Central Association of the Amateur Athletic Union Track Even ts F1751 Seamd Third 75 yards Dashy Borden, F. R. G. Smith, F. R. Corcoran, N. D. - . V . F. W. Shule, W. 73 yards Hurdles, T. G. Moloney, C. J. T. McLam, F. R. C. Bochman 440 yards Run, Chas. D. Smith, F. R. E. S. Merrill, 13. Henry Slack, F. R. 880 yards Run, Wm. Moran, F. R. H. H. Lord, C. E. M.T110telot,Y.M.C A. One Mile R1111, J. F. Hahn, W. C. S. Lorentzein, B. T. T. W'ebstery F. R. LOW Hurdles, J F. McLain, F. R. F. G. Moloney, C. Schule, W. Two Mile Run, 1. Bredstein, W. A. McEachron, W'. R. L. Henry, C. . E. erhes XV. h . . h , F. R. . . .M.C.A. b , ng Jump, 0 H Koec e L E Clapper, Y ; E.C.Quantre11,Y.M.C.A. Shot Put, 1. W. Eggerman, N. D. E. B. Cochems, W. R. J. Maxwell Pole Vault, F. A. Martin, F. R. P I Stevens, Y M. C. A. James Kearney Open Relay, First Regiment Chicago N otre Dame Score by Points Poinfs First Regiment . . . . . . . 44 University of Wisconsin . . . . . . 18 University of Chicago . . . . . 15 Notre Dame University . . . . . . . 8 Beloit College . . . . . . . 6 Northwestern University . . . . . . . o Pullman, A. A. . . . . . . . 0 Central Y. M. C. A. . A . . . . . . 7 University of Minnesota . . . , ; g 238 Notre 3ame Meet a An invitation meet held in Notre Dame Gymnasium between the Universities of Notre Dame, Chicago and Illinois, March 9, 1991. 40 yards Dash 40 yards Hurdles 220 yards Dash 440 yards Run 880 yards Run Mile Run 2-mi1e Run Relay Pole Vault Shot Put Broad Jump High Jump Bell tied the worldhs record of 4-3 seconds in the 40-yard dash. Track E vents First Bell 1111.1 F. G. Moloney hChiJ Corcoran 1N. DJ W. A. Moloney hChiJ H. H. Lord eChiJ Gale 1 111 1 Henry hChiJ Notre Dame Second English 1111. 1 C. R Manning 1ChiJ Staples 1N. DJ Corcoran 1N. DJ W. A. Moloney OChij Uffendel 1N. DJ Hulbert 1Chij Illinois F ield E vents Sullivan 1N. D. 1 Eggerman hN. DJ Thompson 1111.1 Glynn 1N. DJ Glynn 1N. DJ Glynn 1N DJ Hopkins mhiJ Sullivan 1N. DJ Corcoran ran the 220-yard dash in 233,; seconds, world record. F. G. Moloney tied the worlcPs record of 5g seconds in the 40eyard high hurdles Notre Dame, 42 points 40 yards Dash 40 yards Hurdles 880 yards Run 440 yards Run I-mile Run Relay Shot Put Pole Vault High jump SUMMARY Chicago, 36 points Michigan Meet a Held at Michigan, March 16, 1901. Track E Vents First Hahn, M1 F. G. Moloney, C. Hayes, M. Neufer, M. Kellogg, M. Michigan Field Events Snow, M. Went to Michigan by default. Snow, M. Third Mile HIIJ Herbert hN. D 1 Miles 1 111 1 Murphy UV. DJ Uffendel IN, DJ Hulbert hChiJ Lloyd HIM Chicago Baird HIM Pettit 10mg Pettit 10hij Ferriss hChiJ Illinois, 30 points Second Fishleigh, M Robinson, M. W. A Moloney, C. F. M. Horton, C. Hulbert, C. Chicago Robinson White, M. Michigan won the meet with a total of 55 points to Chicagds 17. 239 University of Chicago New Records 100 Yards Dash, 220 Yards Dash, 440 Yards Dash, 880 Yards Run, 75 Yards Hurdles, 120 Yards Hurdles, 220 Yards Hurdles, X Mile Bicycle, 2 Mile Bicycle, 1 Mile Bicycle, Shot Put, Hammer Throw, Broad Jump, .IO .22 .492 '4 2.002 .10; .1673; .25 -33 ASE 2.191;: 39 ft. 299-111. 130 ft. 7 in. 21 ft. 6; in. University of Chicago Indoor Records 35 Yards Dash, 40 Yards Dash, 7 5 Yards Dash, I Lap, 220 Yards Dash, 2 Laps, 300 Yards Run, 440 Yards Run, 880 Yards Run, I Mile Run, 2 Miles Run, I Mile Walk, 880 Yards Walk, 40 Yards Hurdles, Pole Vault, Running High Jump, Running Broad Jump, .25 .32 .352 .53; 2.04;; 4.47? 10.493? 7.20:; 3-142! .05? 10 ft. 10 in. 5 ft. 8;;i in. 21 ft. 3 in. 2 r 2 2 2 21900J 2 E. D. K. LefEngwell Marshall Field May 12 H. B. Slack Marshall Field May 12 W. A. Moloney Philadelphia April 28 W. A. Moloney Ravenswood June 2 F. G. Moloney Milwaukee March 2 F- G- Mommy 2 11215223222103121 122111 I: F. G. Moloney Marshall Field May 12 C. V. Brown Ravenswood May 12 C. V. Brown Madison, Wis. May 26 J. F. Goodenow Ravenswood May 12 Lister Madison, Wis. May 26 T. W. Mortimer Madison, Wis. May 26 Z. R. Pettit Madison, Wis. May 26 E7 T. H. Patterson, Competition Feb. 22, 1895 C. L. Burroughs, Competition Feb. 7, 1897 F. M. Horton, Competition Feb. 2, 1900 C. Smith, Competition Feb. 11, 1900 F. Merriiield, T rial March 21, 1900 D. P. Trude, Trial March 21, 1900 F. Merrifield, Trial Feb. 8, 1900 V .A. Moloney, Trial Feb. 26, 1901 C. Smith, Trial Feb. 19, 1900 H. B. Slack, Trial Feb. 23, 1900 W. A. Moloney, Trial Jan. 31, 1901 H. B. Slack, Trial Feb. 7, 1901 W. A. Moloney, Competition Jan. 24, 1899 W. A. Moloney, Trial Feb 11, 1899 W. A. Moloney, Trial Feb. 23, 1900 H. H. Lord, Competition Mar. 9, 1901 Bliss, Trial Jan. 31, 1901 R. L. Henry, Trial Dec. 15, 1900 G. G, Davis, Trial Dec. 23, 1900 M. B. Parker, Trial F. G. M01011ey Competition Feb: 2, 1901 C. V. Drew Trial Mar. 22, 1899 C. Smith, Competition Feb. 10, 1900 L. A. Hopkins Competition Feb. 2, 1901 240 Western I nter:Collegiate Records 109 Yards Dash, 220 Yards Dash, 120 Yards Hurdles, 220 Yards Hurdles, 440 Yards Run, 880 Yards Run, 1 Mile Run, I Mile W'alk, k1 1 Mile Bicycle, Mile Bicycle, Running High Jump; Broad Jump, Pole Vault, Discus throw, Shot Put, Hammer Throw, 6' '10 J. V. Crum C. L. Burroughs .22 J. V. Crum .15; J. R. Richards 2532; A. C. Kraenzlein .50; W. E. Hodgman 1.59; L. R. Palmer 4.33 H. B. Cragin 7 .00 Bredstein .21? G. Gaffney 2.25 H. P. Burton 5 ft. 11 in. :L'OEi'SPOWerS 22 ft. 7; in. I. A. MRoy 10 ft. 6 in. Dvorak 117 ft. 4 111. C. G. Stangel 41 ft. 8 in. Plaw 156 ft. 3 in. Flaw 241 Iowa Chicago Iowa Wisconsin Wisconsin Michigan Grinnell Lake Forest Wisconsin Notre Dame Minnesota Notre Dame Iowa Michigan Michigan Wisconsin California California June 1, June 3, June 1, Junes, June 5, June 1, June 1, June 6, June 2, J 11116 3. June 6, June 3, Junesy June 1, June 2, June4, June 2, June 2, 1895 1899 1895 1897 I897 1895 1895 1896 1903 1899 1896 1899 1899 1895 1900 1898 1900 1900 The Pa ris Team 4 CHARLES L. BURROUGHS WILLIAM A. MOLONEY HARVEY H. LORD HENRY B. SLACK FREDERICK G. MOLONEY 242 24E? $de mam? Inter:Fraternity Meet 21 Held at Marshall Field, June 15, Igooajunior Day 50 yard dash -We11ingt0n, Delta Kappa Epsilon; Hammond, Delta Kappa Epsilon ; Vernon, Beta Theta Pi; .05; 100 yard dash--Hammond, Delta Kappa Epsilon; Wellington, Delta Kappa Epsilon; H. C. Smith, Alpha Delta Phi; .10? 220 yard dash Hammond, Delta Kappa Epsilon; Vernon, Beta Theta Pi; Merriiield, Alpha Delta Phi ; .2245. 440 yard run -We11ington, Delta Kappa Epsilon ; H. C. Smith, Alpha Delta Phi ; Reed, Chi Psi ; .57; 880 yard mn-Hammond, Delta Kappa Epsilon; Coulter, Beta Theta Pi; Henry, Chi Psi; 2.137;. Mile run H Henry, Chi Psi ; Cassels, Alpha Delta Phi ; Fleming, Chi Psi ; 5.10 7g 120 yards high hurdles F. O. Horton, Alpha Delta Phi; Green, Phi Delta Theta; Hungate7 Beta Theta Pi ; .1631. . 220 yards 10w hurdles-F. O. Horton, Alpha Delta Phi; Wellington, Delta Kappa Ep- silon; Hungate, Beta Theta Pi. .28. Half mile walk-Eldridge, Beta Theta Pi; Miller, Phi Delta Theta; Lee, Delta Tau Delta; 4.24. Shot put--P1ace, Beta Theta Pi ; Ahlswede, Phi Delta Theta ; Eldridge, Beta Theta Pi ; 35 ft. 10 in. Hammer throw-Henry, Psi Upsilon; F. O. Horton, Alpha Delta Phi; Speed, Beta Theta Pi; 83 ft. 5 in. Discus Ah1swede, Phi Delta Theta; Place, Beta Theta Pi: Eldridge, Beta Theta Pi; 107 ft. Pole vault-Hungate, Beta Theta Pi; Horton, Alpha Delta Phi; Miller, Phi Delta Theta; 9 ft. Broad jump-Babcock, Beta Theta Pi; Horton, Alpha Delta Phi; Brown, Chi Psi, Ver- non, Beta Theta Pi ; 20 ft. 8 in. . High jump- Kohlsaat, Delta Kappa Epsilon ; VVellingtou, Delta Kappa Epsilon ; Bab- cock, Beta Theta Pi ; 5 ft. 6 in Delta Kappa Epsilon won the meet With forty-two points. Beta Theta Pi was second with thirty-six and a half. Alpha Delta Phi took twenty-seven, Phi Delta Theta twenty, Chi Psi eight and 011e-ha1f, Psi Upsilon eight, and Delta Tau Delta one. 245 Inter:House Meet a Held on junior Day, June 15, 1900 50 Yards Dash, F. G. Moloney 050 Pettit WW Sutherland. HV .06 100 Yards Dash, F. G. Moleney 8 Pettit W Strauss $90 .Icilf, 440 Yards Run, Hulbert $ Jayne 8 Smith W .56.; 880 Yards Run, W'right WW Jayne 8 McCaskill WW 2 I 5 Izo-Yd. H. Hurdles, Sutherland 070 Pettit GNU Goodenow .17; Shot Put, Erwin 8 F. G Moloney 8 Perkins 33 ft. Broad Jump, Sutherland um F. G Molouey 8 Walters UVW 19 ft. 11 in. Snell House won with thirty-three points, Washington House getting a total of thirty. 246 The Tennis Team 1900 J The tennis team'hag a much more successful season than any of the other Varsity teams in 1900. This success was due mainly to the magnificent form displayed by the two vetefans, Halsey and Gottlieb. The members of the team were: HARRY NORMAN GOTTLIEB, Captain CHARLES DUFFIELD WRENN HALSEY VVILLIAM FRANKLIN ELDRIDGE CLARENCE W. RICHARDS JEROME PRATT MAGEE JOHN STEVENS HAMMOND PRESTON PISHON BRUCE JAMES HERBERT McCUNE The first toum ament was with a picked team of University professors. The h Profs ' were overwhelmingly defeated by the Chicago team. Jingles Gottlieb UN defeated Michelson OW 6-2, 6-1 Bruce hCT defeated Jordan GU 6-3, 6 2 Eldridge TCT defeated Moore GU 9-7, 6-1 Torrey UH defeated Magee 10 7-5, 2-6, 6-3 Halsey 023T defeated Hobbs hPT 6-0, 6-0 Richards TCT defeated Barnes TP; 6-3, 8-6 Doubles Gottlieb and Halsey TCl defeated Torrey and Hobbs 1P1 6-3, 6-1 Mugee and Hammond TCT defeated Barnes and Jordan 0U 6-3, 4-1 The last match was left uncontested and was conceded to the Chicago team. A few weeks later the team took a trip to Evanston, and in a dual meet with North- western, easily carried off first honors. 247 Chicago 95. Northestern a Held at Evanstou May 22, 1900 Jingles Gottlieb MD defeated Zimmermann my 6-3, 6-1 Halsey tLU defeated Fargo tN7 6-3, 2-6, 6-4 Magee m defeated Dwight tN7 6-2, 6-2 Hammond, m defeated Kennedy W 6-4, 6-1 Bruce 607 defeated Moore tN7 6-0, 6-1 Richards tC7 defeated Grayston aw 6-0, 6-0 Logan tN7 defeated McCune U27 6-4, 6-2 Doubles McGee and Hammond U17 defeated Fargo and Kennedy tN7 5-7, 6-4, 7-5 Bruce and Eldridge H27 defeated Zimmerman and Moore tNy 6-2, 7-5 Total, Chicago 8; Northwestern, I Chicago :75. Michigan d Held at Ann Arbor, June 7 and 8, 1900 In the latter part of June the team played its annual dual tournament with Michigan and hnished the season by defeating the maize and blue by a score of 3-; to 2;. The score was three to two and the match between Gottlieb and Haley toy and Ashcraft and Wherry tM7 was to decide whether the meet was to be a tie or a Chicago victory. Rain stopped the match, however, and the players agreed to fmish the tournament a week later in Chicago, but no definite date Could be decided upon, and so the point was divided, giving Chicago the tournament. Gottlieb tcy defeated Ashcraft OVU, 6-4, 6-0. Wherry tM7 defeated Halsey tCL 8-6, 3-6, 6-0. Ripley tM7 defeated Magee th. Hammond m defeated Guthrie QM, 7- 5, 5-7, 9-7. Halsey and Gottlieb defeated Ashcraft and Ripley, 5-7, 10-8. Magee and Hammond defeated Wherry and Guthrie. The match between Halsey and Gottlieb and Ashcraft and Ripley was left unfinished. An attempt was made to play it off in Chicago later, but this proved impossible and so it was agreed to leave the match a tie and to consider the tournament ended. This gave Chicago the tournament by the score: Chicago 3h; M 2$A 248 Western Inter-Collegiate Tennis Tournament 6 Held at Kenwood Country Club, May 28-June 2, 1900 In the early part of June the Western Inter-Collegiate Tennis Tournament was held on the Kenwood Courts. Here Chicago managed to retain the supremacy which she has always had in Tennis. This was due to the steady playing of Capt. Gottlieb. He easily disposed of all comers in the singles, and proved himself a worthy successor to Chicago's other great tennis players, Carr Neel, William Scott Bond and Harvey McQuinston. He was not defeated during the season, and hnished his career as a member of the tennis team by winning the Western Intercollegiate championship in singles. In the doubles, he and his partner Halsey won the championship in doubles easily by defeating Ashcraft and Wherry of Michigan. Jingles Beye 6W4 Beye Gottlieb 1 Hayden QM I-6, 6-1, 6-1 i 62. 6-3 1 ,, . Gottlieb 4c; , Gouglegiz 6 l Ashcraft iMi Ashcraft l 3, i i .4 Zimmerman 4N4 6-4, 6-4 j erottlieb Ieloyg QM e ngyd6 i l 6-4, 7-5, 7.5 1'05 y W; 4: i2 1 ,1 Noble 6A4 k142i: 4-6 6-3 Magee 404 Magee Magee 1 I i Wherry 4Mj 6-4, 7-5 6-2, 4-6, 6-2 J j Doubles Ashcraft and Wherry iMi Ashcraft and Wherry A and W 1 , Noble and Heyden 4A4 6-4, 6-4 e 6 0 6 2 ' l H. and G. Lloy and Kennedy 4N4 - i ' if 6-0, 4-6 Beye and Croly URN H. and G. I 6-3, 6-2 Halsey and Gottlieb 023 6-4, 6-2 J 249 g Strong Men Ten Strongest M en 1. Walter Scott Kennedy, 801, 4511 lbs. 2. Alfred William Place, Div., 4238 lbs. 3. Ernest DeKoven, Lefiingwell, Grad, 3852 lbs. 4. Clarence:Bert:Herschberger, Grad., 7. William Alexander Gordon, V01, 3842 lbs. 3427 lbs. 5. Frank Louis Slaker, '02, 34801113. 8. T . J1 Lister, Grad., 3423 lbs. 6. Theron Winfred Mortimer, Div., 9. James Ronald Henry, 302, 3378 lbs. 3448 lbs. 10. Henry B. Newman, Grad., 3350 lbs. Holders ofa Total of3,000 lbs. or more B. D. K. LefHugwell, 3183, Oct. 5, '97 J. M. Sheldon, 3070, Sept. 21, ,99 XV. S. Kennedy, 3289. Dec. 12, ,97 A. W. Place, 3880, Nov. 15, ,99 C. B. Herschberger, 3263, Dec. 17, '97 W. A. Gordon 3427, Dec. 4, ,99 O. Hallingby, 3143, Dec. 20, 197 H. B. Newman, 3350, Jan. 5, ,00 I. E. Webb, 3002, Dec. 21, '97 B. I. Cassells, 3301, Ian. 23, 100 T. W. Mortimer, 3448, Dec. 22, y97 J. R. Henry, 3378, Feb. 8, 500 C. F. Roby, 3655, Jan. 12, '98 W. S. Kennedy, 4101, Feb. I3, ,00 C. B. Herschberger, 3714, Jan. 12, 198 W. I. Schmahl, 3050 Feb. 16, y00 H. G. Gale, 3113, Jan. 13, ,98 A. W. Place, 4238 Feb. 16, ,00 W. T. Gardner, 3468, Jan. 13, '98 E. D. K. Lefiingwell, 3725, Feb. 21, 700 W. S. Kennedy, 3835, Jan. 15, 198 C. B. Herschberger, 3842, Feb. 27, 100 T. C. Waterbury, 3156, Feb. 22, y98 L. C. Babcock, 3022, Feb. 28, 100 E. L. Heath, 3331, April I3, ,98 G. H. Canard, 3220, Mar. 7, 300 W. A. Gordon, 3293, Oct. 6, ,98 W. S. Kennedy, 4511, Mar. 16, ,00 A. S. Russell, 3081, Nov. 10, ,98 T. J. Lister, 3423, Mar. 21, '00 J. R. Henry, 3173, Dec. 13, '98 H. F. Ahlswede, 3038, Mar. 22, 300 F. L. Slaker, 3480, Dec. 15, ,98 E. D. K. Lefiingwell, 3852, April 10, 800 250 Records in Individual Tests LUNG CAPACITY 358 cu. 111., F. D. Nichols, Oct. 18, 195 392 cu. 111., J. E. Webb, Dec 21, 197 366 cu. 111., I. E. Webb, Oct. 20, 196 408 cu. in., C. J. Webb, Sept. 12, 198 420 cu. in., C J. Webb, Sept. 21, ,99 RIGHT GRIP 1681b5., H. G. Gale, Nov. 27, ,97 175 1b5., T. C. Waterbury, Feb. 22, 198 195 lbs , L. C. Pettit, Mar. 4, 198 2001bs.+, L. A. Hopkins, Nov. 3, 100. LEFT GRIP 1501b5., P. MandeviHe, Oct. 10, Y96 1601b5., W. A. Gordon, Oct 18, ,97 I601b5., H G. Gale, Oct. 15, 196 1611105., H. G. Gale, Jan. 12. 198 165 lbs , L. A. Hopkins, Now 3, 100. STRENGTH 0F CHEST 2001135 , C. B. Herschberger, Dec. 17, 397 235 1115., E. M. Gammon, Aug. 24, V98 222 1115., C. B. Herschberger, Jan. 25, '98 2701115., A. W. Place, Feb. 16, '00 BICEPS PULL 1 545 1195., H. G. Gale, Jan. 12, 98 5601175., W. A. Gordon, Oct. 6, 198 5601135., E. L. Heath, April 13, 198 5601115., F. L. Slaker, Dec. 15, 198 5901b5., W. A. Gordon, Dec. 4 199 TRICEPS PUSH 5001135., W. T. Gardner, Dec. 20, 197 5501115., I. E. Webb, Dec. 21, 197 6901b5., W. S. Kennedy, Jan. 15, 198 v LEGS 10001b5., J. S Brown, Jan. 11, ,94 1311 1115., D. F. Roby, Jan. 12, 798 11001135., F. D. Nichols, Oct. 18, 195 13321115., W. S. Kennedy, Jan. 15. ,98 11801bs., C, B. Herschberger, Dec. 17, ,97 13351b5., F. L. Slaker, Dec. 15, 198 1465 1bs., W. S. Kennedy, Feb. 13, y00 A. W. Place, Feb 16, 100 155511358 W. S. Kennedy, Mar. 16, 700 BACK 8501b5., F. D. Nichols, Oct. 8, 194 10101bs., A. 1V. P1ace, Feb. 16, 100 995 lbs, W. S. Kennedy, Mar. 13, 197 1253 1b5., W1 8. Kennedy, Mar. 16, 'oo Ho1ders of Total Jtrbngtb Records OLD SYSTEM 25161bs , F. D Nichols, Oct. 8, 194 27141bs , F. D Nichols. Oct. 18, ,95 NEW SYSTEM 3183105., E D. K. Leflingwell Oct. 5, 197 38891135., A. W. Place, Nov. 15, ,99 32891135., W. S. Kennedy, Dec. 12, 197 4101 1115., W. S. Kennedy, Feb. 13, '00 36551135., C. F. Roby, Jan. 12, ,98 42381115., A. XV, Place, Feb. 16, '00 3835 lbs, W. S. Kennedy, Jan. 15, 198 4511 1115., W. S. Kennedy. 251 Season 1900:1901 E F ootball Z. R. Pettit Wm. Franklin Eldridge James McNab Charles W. Erwin William Carey Horace G. Bodwell Kellogg Speed Frederic Feil Charles G. Flanagan Edward P. Rich Orin E. Atwood George H Garrey James M. Sheldon Frank O. Horton Alfred W. Place James R. Henry Harvey H. Lord Ernest E. Perkins Alvin Brisker Snider Track W. A. Moloney Charles L. Burroughs Ernest D. K. Leifmgwell Donald R. Richberg Carter V. Brown Henry B. Slack T. J. Lister George G. Davis Harvey H. Lord Charles E. Hulbert Frederick G. Moloney Jerome P. Magee Theron W. Mortimer Daniel P. Trude Ferdinand M. Horton Robert L. Henry Zellmer R. Pettit Julian F. Goodenow Baseball Floyd E. Harper Edward 0. Wood, Jr. Turner B. Smith Fred Merrifield VVaIter S. Rodgers Walter Scott Kennedy LeRoy T. Vernon Charles M. Van Patten Roy Merrifield Joseph C. Ewing Tennis Harry N. Gottlieb Charles D. W. Halsey Jerome P. Magee 252 Former Athletic Captains a Football 1893, A. R. E. Wyans 1894, C. W. Allen 1895, C. W. Allen 1896, C. F. Roby 1 1897, C. B. Herschberger 1898, W. S. Kennedy 1900, Kellogg Speed Baseball 1895, F. D. Nichols 1896, H D. Abells 1897, H. T. Clark 1898, S. W. Sawyer 1899, F. Merriiield 1900, LeRoy T. Vernon Track 1895, Harry Holloway 1896, C. W. Bachelle F. F. Steicrmeyer 1897818. H. Pattberson 1898, F. H. Calhoun 1899, B. B. Smith 1900, W. A. M01011ey Tennis 1895, C. B. Neel 1896, W. 8 Bond 1897, P. Rand 1898, C. D. W. Halsey 1899, E. L. Poulson 1900, Harry N. Gottleib Basket Ball h l Basket ball this year has included a number of minor games played during the fall and early Winter. The close of the season was celebrated by a series of four games, three of Which were played :by the Junior and Senior College teams for the cup. In 1899 the Seniors won the Cup, in 1900 the Juniors, and in 1901 the Seniors again. This gives the Junior College the possession of the cup and the first trophy for the VVoments Gymnasium. Jenior College Team Anne Roby, Captain Ethel Freeman, Manager Louise Shailer Alma Yondorf Isabel McKinney Cecil Bowman Eva Russell Marian Fairman Anne Ross Junior College Team Agnes Wayman, Captain Narcissa Cox, Manager Nanna Ostergren Edna Martin 'Winifred Ashby Anna Goldstein Sarah McBride Mabel Wilder Grace Warren Graduate Team Mrs. Louise Vincent Louise DejCeW Helen Brehd Edna Bevens Caroline Paddock Dorcas Merriman University Team Louise Shailer Agnes Wayman Anne Roby Marian Fairman Eva Russell Anna Goldstein SCORES Februar 2 . . . . . Seniors I I uniors 2 y 5 , , March 4 . . . . . . Semors 4 Jumors 2 March 8 . . . . . Graduates 2 University I March 1 3 Semors 6 Juniors 10 256 SENIOR BASKET HALL TEAM JUNIOR BASKET BALL TEAIU Gbe Jocial Calendar 190071901 April . May APRIL 6. Alpha Delta Phi initiation of Mr. F. M. Horton. APRIL 6. Initiation of Miss Landcrs into the Sigma Club. APRIL 7. Phi Beta Delta Musical. APRIL 7. Miss Rehecm Day gave a luncheon and theatre party for the Wyvern Club. APRIL 9. Miss Foster and 111emhers of Kelly athome. , APRIL 17. Sigma Club entertained at Miss Coulteris home. AmuL 20. Miss Ruekheim entertained the YVyvem Club at luncheon. APRIL 20. Delta Tau Delta initiation of Messrs. Ken. nicott and State. APRIL 21. Phi Beta Delta theatre party. APRIL 21. Delta Kappa Epsilon reception at chapter house. APRIL 22. Miss Willett entertained the Mortar Board. A PRIL 23. Phi Upsilon initiation of Messrs. Prugh and Monro. APRIL 30. Phi Delta Theta smoker at chapter house. APRIL 30. Phi Kappa Phi smoker. Psi Upsilon theatre party. MAY 5 MAY 7. Sigma Club open meeting at the home of Miss Palmer. 8 MAY Snell Hall Smoker. MAY 10, 11, 12. Comic Opara2Acade1nic Alchemist-at Studebaker. MAY 1 1. Phi Delta Theta Alumni Banquet. MAY 12. Mr. Vincent gave a dance at the Del Prado for the Comic Opera troupe. MAY 12. Alumni Smoker of Delta Tau Delta. MAY 14. Miss Foster and members of Kelly at home. MAY 16. The Sigma Club gave a picnic in Jackson Park. MAY 16. Miss Teller entertained the Mortar Board for Miss Spray. MAY 18. Miss Lina Small gave a dance at Kenwood Hall. MAY 19. Kcnsiugton of Phi Beta Delta. MAY 19. Delta Tau Delta card party. MAY 25. Beta Theta Pi talIy-ho party, followed by dance at Rosalie Hall. MAY 25. Phi Kappa Psi house-warming and dance. MAY 25. 27. Esoteric house party at Milhurst. MAY 26. Sigma theatre party. MAY 26. Mrs. Raycroft entertained the Mortar Board at tea. MAY 26. Phi Beta Delta old times party. MAY 31. Pan-Hellenic smoker at Alpha Delta P111 house. 261 June JUNE 2. Delta Kappa Epsilon 115mg party at Chapter house. JUN 1-: 2. Phi Kappa Psi Alumni smoker. JUNE 4. Professor Siarr entertained his anthropology class at his home. JUNE 5. Miss Smith gave dinner for the Wyvern Club. JUNE 5. Miss Ruekheim was initiated into the VVyvern Club. JUNE 8. Sigma trolley party to Blue Island, followed by dance at Miss Dunningm home. JI'NE 8. Mortar Board dance at Foster Hall. Juxg 9. Miss Leonard was initiated into the Sigma Club. JUNE 12. Owl and Serpent initiation. JUNE 13. Iron Mask initiation. JUNE 15. Junior Day. JUNE 16. Dance at Green Hall -for Pennsylvania base ball team. JUNE 18. Tally-ho ride for Pennsylvania team. JUNE 18. Psi Upsilon annual connnencemcnt hanquet. I JUNE 18. Phi Kappa Psi informal dance. . JUNE 19. Dance at Hutel Lexington for Pennsylvania team. JUNE 21. Phi Kappa Psi entertained by XV. H. Alsip. JUNE 23. Mortar Board reunion and initiation of Miss Kretzinger at Highland Park. JUNE 23. Mrs. Charles P. Small e11terpai11ed the Wyvem Club at luncheon, JUNE 30. Psi I'psilou initiation of George Wilson, Jr. JuIy-A ugust-Jeptember JULY 2. Miss Dunlap was initiated into the Sigma Club. JULY 30. Excursion to Lake Geneva. AUGL'ST I. Psi I'psilon reunion. AUGUST 3. Moonlight Excursion 011 Lake Michigan. AI'GUST 4. Lawn Party given by the residents of Kelly Hall. Al'GUsT 11. The resident; of Green Hall gave a Lawn Party and Dance. AUGUST 25. Psi Upsilon reunion. SEPTEMBER 30. Miss Ruekheim entertained the Wyvern Club at dinner. 262 Junior Day June 15, 1900 ,d Committees of the Day FREDERICK GRAHAM. MOLONEY - - - - - Chairman of the Day Athletic Committee LEES BALLINGER, Chairman HENRY B. SLACK JOHN D. SUTHERLAND 1213,: Committee MISS MARGARET COULTER, Chairman FRANCIS D. CAMPAU ALBERT B. GARCELON Dramatic Committee M155 ELIZABETH BELDEN, Chairman MISS KATHERINE PALTZER LOUIS B. CHAPLIN Printing Committee CHARLES I. WEBB, Chairman ARTHUR F. BEIFELD HERBERT E. FLEMING Decorating Committee HOWARD S. YOUNG. Chairman DANIEL P. TRUDE MISS BELLE N. HALSTED Program of the Day 9:00 A. M. Interfraternity and Interhouse Athletic Meets, Marshall Field. 2:00 P. M. Junior Day Dramatics, Presented by University of Chicago Dramatic Club at Rosalie Hall. I. RUBBER BOOTS.yy By Manley H. Pike CAST PAULINE 1 S MISS CANTERBURY FLORENCE , 515mm ' - ' x MISS COULTER LOU MISS LACKERSTEEN H. WEARY HOBO, the tramp - - - - - - - - MR. ROGERS T1ME-The Present PLACE Pauline3s Home 265 H. By Grace L. Furniss CAST Jack Kendall, Captain Foot Ball Team, ,00 - - Percy Girard, Chicagoy ,98 Arthur Chester, Chicago, '97 - 7 7 - Miss Cornelia Girard - 7 - Dorothy Girard, Jack's Fiancee - 7 7 7 - Katherine Chester, Percys Fiancee 7 - Mary Scribner, Reporter 0n HTelegraplf' - - Mrs Olenn, KendalYS Maid - - 7 7 7 TIME-The Present PLACE-Graduate Hall Of 4:00 P. M. Ivy Exercises - 7 7 - Poem - - - - - 7 7 - Oration - - - - - Presentation of Spade - - 7 - - Planting 0f Ivy - 7 - - 7 5:00 P. M. 74 THE TOUCH DOWN. Reception in the VVonlalFs Quadrangle by members of the MR; R; C. lVIANNING - MR. ROGERS MR. MAGEE MISS CANTERBURY - MISS SPENCER - MISS SMALL - MISS BUCHANAN MISS LACKERSTEEN HULL COURT MISS ALICE COREY . BERTRAM G. NELSON NIR LEES BALLINGER - MISS ROBINSON W'omank Halls. Jeventh Annual Junior Promenade ChicagoBeaCh Hotel, 8:30 P. M. Committees JAMES MILTON SHELDON, General Chairman Reception Committee CHARLES S. HAYES, Chairman AUSTIN YOUNG HOV JAMES S. RILEY Arra ngement Committee JAMES RON GEORGE A. YOUNG ALD HENRY, Chairman FRANK P. BARKER Finance Committee HENRY P. FRENCH Patronesses MRS. WILLIAM R. HARPER MRS. HARRY P JUDSON IVIRS. GEORGE E. VINCENT EUGENE H. B. WATSON, Chairman XVILLIAM R JAYNE MR5. WILLIAM J MANNING MRS. WILLIAM B. OWEN MISS ELIZABETH WALLACE MISS EDITH FOSTER 266 October OCTOBER 3. Phi Beta Delta Theatre Party. 22.. OCTOBER 5. Delta Kappa. Epsilon smoker at the Chapter house. OCTOBER 5. Sigma Chi dinner and theatre party for Jack Camp. OCTOBER 8. Phi Kappa Psi stag party. OCTOBER 8. Beta Theta Pi faculty smoker. OCTOBER IO. Delta Kappa Epsilon initiation of Messrs. Lord and Sloan. OCTOBER 12. Psi Upsilon Smoker. OCTOBER I2. Phi Kappa Psi smoker. OCTOBER 12. Delta Tau Delta smoker. OCTOBER I 3. Sigma Chi Chapter smoker. OCTOBER 15. Sigma Club open meeting at Miss Paltzefs. OCTOBER I9. Alpha Delta Phi smoker. OCTOBER 19. Phi Kappa Psi informal dance. OCTOBER 19. New residents of Kelly entertained by the house. OCTOBER 20. Delta Kappa Epsilon smoker at the Chapter house. OCTOBER 20. Psi Upsilon buffet luncheon at the Chapter house. OCTOBER 26. Sigma Chi H stag at T. J. Harahams res- Lwyg OCTOBER 26. OCTOBER 27. OCTOBER 28. OCTOBER 31. OCTOBER 31. OCTOBER 31. OCTOBER 3!. NOVEMBER NOVEMBER NOVEMBER NOVEMBER NOVEMBER NOVEMBER NOVEMBER NOVEMB ER NOVEMBER NOVEMBER NOVEMBER I . 2 2 2 2 2 2 3. 3 9 9 O idence. Phi Delta Theta reception to Alumni. Sigma Chi provincial convention and banquet at Hotel Leland. Snell Hall reception. Mortar Board Hallow E'en party at Miss Spencefs. Sigma Chi Hallow E2en party at Miss Hirschl's. Hallow E2611 party at Kelly Hall. Hallow E2en party at Foster Hall. N ovember Sigma Club gave a musical at the Misses Osbornew. Delta Kappa Epsilon informal at Rosa!ie h'all. Graduate Club held a reception at Kelly Hall Walker McLaury entertained Psi Upsilon at a dance. Sigma Chi Chapter smoker. Phi Beta Delta musical. Floyd E. Harper initiated into Phi Delta Theta. Alpha Delta Phi initiation of Dr. J. N. Flint and Dr. E. G, C. Brown. Chi Psi informal dance at the Chapter House. Informal dance at Alpha Delta Phi Chapter House. Miss Robertson gave a dance at Kelly hall. 267 NOVEMBER IO. NOVEMBER 10. NOVEMBER 12. N OVEMBER 15. NOVEMBER I7. NOVEMBER 2:. NOVEMBER 23. NOVEMBER 23. NOVEMBER 24 NOVEMBER 24. NOVEMBER 24. NOVEMBER 26. N OVEMBER 27. NOVEMBER 28. NOVEMBER 28. NOVEMBER 28. NOVEMBER 30. NOVEMBER 30. Miss Eberhart entertained a number of University pupils. Psi Kappa Phi entertained its Northwestern Chapter. Receptions at the different VVometfs halls. Card party at L. L. Losey's home for Sigma Chi. Phi Delta Theta alumni dinner and dance at Chapter House. Mortar Board literary meeting at Miss Thompsonk. Third annual Freshman convocation. Esoteric informal dance at Kenwood Institute. Miss Small entertained the Mortar Board. Phi Kappa Psi informal dance. Sigma Chi musical at the Chapter House. Psi Upsilon initiation of Owen Hotte. XVyvern Club dinner at Kenwood hall. Snell reception. Sigma Chi Alumni Association dinner at the Union. Mrs. Vincent gave a reception for the foot ball team. Sigma Chi smoker at Iudge Frank Bakerhs. Three Quarters Club annual initiation and Banquet. X . i'tn' : k m$ l N'kV , , 0 1w 6 mo Q , 45 Q X h .. 113': - X. NE 9 xv. s $1.? x :33 4 $ ERESSHMN H 'RESENEEAEWNO II III IV VI VII VIII IX XI XII XIII XIV XV Third Annual Freshman Convocation UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE Junior College Council Kent Theatre, Friday, November 23, 1900 7:30 P.M. 4 PROGRAM Music . , , . . . . . . . UNIVESITY BAND Convocation Procession Address of Welcome . . . t . . PROF. OLIVER J. THATCHER . r MISS LOUISE DODGE Heart to Heart Talks W1th the Freshmen . . . 1 Dean of Women Song, HAlma Mater ,t . . . . . . . . . , BAND Convocation Address, H Educational Influences of the University - . . , T. L. MULLER LEON P LEWIS, ' 1 Premdent 5 Annual Statement President Junior College Council Song, Kt 1893 ,t . . . . . . . . UNIVERSITY BAND Award of Honors and Degrees . h . . . . . THOMAS j. HAIR Instruction to Freshmen . . t . . . . THOMAS J. HAIR Reply ofFreShmen . . . . lVIASTER MILTON GEORGE GtSTAVUs SILLS Song, HJohn D. Rockefeller h . . . . . . UNIVERSITY BAND Benediction upon the Freshmen . . . . THE CONVOCATION ORATOR Recession Music by the Band TUG OF VVAR ON CAMPUS 27o December DECEMBER I . First University informal. DECEMBER 1. Phi Beta Delta luncheon at Miss Hogan's. DECEMBER 5. Mortar Board luncheon at Mrs. Thompsoms. DECEMBER 6. President Harper gave foot dinner at Quadrangle Club. DECEMBER 7. Beta Theta Pi annual promenade at the Chicago Beach Hotel. DECEMBER 8. Phi Beta Delta luncheon. DECEMBER 8. Sigma Chi informal dance. DECEMBER 8. Mortar Board luncheon DECEMBER 8. Delta Kappa Epsilon smoker. DECEMBER 12. Miss Belden gave a dinner party for the Quadranglers. DECEMBER 13. The Sigma Club entertained at Miss 5 Shailefs. WI 74116 A ball Delta Tau Delta k5 stag 15 party. Sigma Chi theatre party. ' DECEMBER 15. Psi Upsilon smoker. DECEMBER 15. Miss Krezinger entertained the Mor- tar Board at luncheon. S DECEMBER 15, Delta Tau Delta initiated Mr. Frank McKee. DECEMBER 17. Phi Kappa Psi smoker. DECEMBER 19. Esoteric dinner for Miss Foster. DECEMBER 19. Phi Beta Delta butterfly party at Miss Cherrys. January JANUARY 2. Phi Kappa Psi banquet and initiation of Messcrs Raymond, Van Velson. Downey, Neptune, Woods and Brooks. JANUARY 4. Sigma Chi Chapter smoker. JANUARY 5. Second University informal JANUARY 11. Phi Kappa Psi informal dance. JANUARY 11. Initiation of Miss Donnan into the Mortar Board. JANUARY 11. Dramatic entertainment in Kelly. JANUARY 12. Delta Kappa Epsilon initiation at the Chicago Beach Hotel of Messrs. Hellyer, Sills, Sunderland and Ferriss. JANUARY 12. Phi Delta Theta initiation of MessrstVyman and McLeish. JANUARY 19. Alpha Delta Phi initiation of Messrs. Greenwood, McHenry, Saxdam, Stewart and Backhouse . JANUARY 19. Psi Upsilon annual initiatory banquet at the Victoria Hotel-initiated Messrs. Van Vechten, Gaylord, Stevens, Montgomery, Lord, Bobo and Kennedy. JANUARY 19. Sigma Chi initiation banquet. JANUARY 25. Phi Delta Theta annual ball at Chicago Beach Hotel. JANUARY 25. Sigma Chi smoker. JANUARY 29. Psi Upsilon annual ball at Chicago Beach Hotel. JANUARY 29. Phi Beta Delta kensington. DECEMBER 15. 271 FEBRUARY FEBRUARY FEBRUARY FEBRUARY FEBRUARY FEBRUARY FEBRUARY FEBRUARY FEBRUARY 11. FEBRUARY II. FEBRUARY II. FEBRUARY 12. FEBRUARY 13. FEBRUARY 14, FEBRUARY 15. FEBRUARY 15. FEBRUARY 16. FEBRUARY 16. FEBRUARY 18. 0990$NNPH .beruany Chi Psi annual ball at the Chicago Beach Hotel. Delta Tau Delta initiated Messrs. Hinckley, Leland and Butler. Quadranglers initiated Misses Hunter, Dunn, Matlass and Stevens. Miss Brock entertained her French class at a dance Sigma Chi annual ball at Chicago Beach Hotel. Alpha Delta Phi assembly dance at Bourniques. Third University informal. Sigma Club initiated Miss Iles and Miss Felt. Reception at Women s Halls. Beecher Hall informal dance. Dr. A. K. Parker entertained Chicago Chapter of Alpha Delta Phi. Annual Glee Club concert. Delta Kappa Epsilon seventh annual assembly at Chicago Beach Hotel. Valentine party at Kelly Hall. Phi Beta Delta initiation of Misses Lamb, Mawbrey and Bowers. Snell Hall smoker. Sigma Chi hStag party for F. F. Steigmeyer. Psi Upsilon h stag h theatre party. Miss Smith entertained the Wyvern Club at dinner followed by initiation of Misses Octigan, Danaher, and Ashley. FEBRUARY 21. FEBRUARY 22. FEBRUARY 22. FEBRUARY 22. FEBRUARY 23. FEBRUARY 23. FEBRUARY 23. FEBRUARY 25. MARCH 1. MARCH 1. Phi Beta Delta Washington afternoon. Annual Washington promenade at Chicago Beach Hotel. Kelly Hall gave a colonial ball. Phi Kappa Psi informal dance. Delta Kappa Epsilon initiation of Mr. Max Cook and Edson Cooke. Mortar Board initiation of Misses Shafer and Darlington. Delta Tau Delta smoker. Snell Hall reception. Alarcb A h Herd of Buffaloes 71 came onto the campus. Dramatic Club presented h Miss Flim Flam at Rosalie Hall, followed by an informal dance. MARCH 1. MARCH MARCH MARCH MARCH MARCH MARCH MARCH MARCH 11. MARCH 14. MARCH 15. MARCH 16. MARCH 19. Moxosoersnsv H Phi Beta Delta luncheon. Green Hall dance. Miss Lilian Danaher entertained the Wyvern Club at dinner. Snell Hall initiation of Mr. Ben Feniger. Circus given by members of Kelly Hall at the Womenhs gymnasium. Fourth University informal. Miss Iles entertained the Sigma Club. Reception at Womexfs Halls. Ralph C. Putnam initiated into Phi Delta Theta. . Phi Delta T heta annual banquet at the Auditorium. Phi Kappa Psi informal dance. Phi Delta Theta informal at Kenwood Institute. Tigerhs Head initiation and banquet at Union Pacific Hotel, 272 Gbe Assembly Informals 1900:1901 n Committee Flatt M ilk Conrad Harry Milton Tingle Claude Carlyle Nuckols Jubscribers Walter Lawrence Hudson Kellogg Speed Alfred W. Place William Franklin Eldridge Eliot Blackwelder Eugene H. B. Watson Harry Milton Tingle Henry D. Fellows Harry A. Evans James Weber Linn Frank Perkins Barker Francis Norwood Bard Lees Ballinger Willis Lane Blackman Justin Louis Muller George Alexander Young Russell VViIes William Arthur Moloney Royal Willing Bell Turner Burton Smith Ferdinand Moseley Horton James Milton Sheldon Herbert Bartlett VVyman Ernest DeKoven Leflingwell James Ronald Henry Clifford Gaylord George Gilbert Davis Edward Christian Kohlsaat Harold B. Challiss Flatt Milk Conrad A. Conro Fiero Claude Carlyle Nuckols Charles Murflt Hogeland Arthur Thomas Willis Henry Linsley Robert Llellyn Henry, Jr. William McMicken Hanchett Herbert Easton Fleming Joseph Bingham Donald Randall Richberg ' Frederick Graham Moloney Frank Ogilvie Horton William Ralph Kerr, Jr. Benjamin Bell Ernest Wilson Miller Halbert Brush Blakey Herbert Paul Zimmermann Walker McLaury Byron Bayard Smith Adolph Jahn 275 f v.1 U11 HWH y Kl ? I .. H W w llr L; H W luv! 4 mun A C ontribu tors II JAMES WEBER LINN CHARLES SUMNER PIKE THERESA HIRSCHL OMAR H. SAMPLE WALTER SCOTT KENNEDY IDA SUSAN GRANT PHILEMON B. KOHLSAAT GEORGE WILSON KRETZINGER DOUGLAS SUTHERLAND GERTRUDE FULTON KATHARINE CHILDS MARSH 279 A Very Improbable Jtory a :3 Dr. Hayward tapped his pencil on the desk, looking into Blakels wide blue i eyes, his face hardened. He exercised pleasantly in the field of Political Economy, but to Blake it was a luiry, boggy place, hardly passable even with the extremest effort. There was bitter contempt in the way the instructor k realized the contrast. Perhaps the contempt had an added shade of bitterness because Hayward was small and thin, with a chin that fell away precipitously from his lower lipy so that his face had a convex, peering shape. tt Final? ll he echoed. tt Certainly it is final. I set the class a standard ridiculously low, but I insist that they shall come up to the standard. Your work is execrable.H HITJs-it,s very sudden, Doctor, Blake remonstrated feebly. He drooped his splen- did shoulders and gulped once or twice. tl I donyt think you quite know what this means to 111e,H he added. Dr. Hayward plainly Showed his annoy- .ance. lt I think I realize cverythingf he :snapped. h The team,H suggested Blake, hope- . 7, 'lessly. : d i I H That I cannot help You should have thought of that before.H Thought of it! Blake choked again. Had he thought of anything else, as night after night he turned over the pages of the enormous textbook, with its subtle twists among the ideas he had once considered so simple? He had read of Malthus, and the Wages Fund, and the Minimum of This and That, but he was always thinking of the Team. He had put his tingers in his ears, trying to shut out the rough, seductive noises of the training quarters and shut in the theories of Ricardo and John Stuart Mill- theories he cared as much for as he did for cats and tea-but there was no use ; he could think of nothing but the Team. Put him in a broken field, with a shifty half-back to carry the ball, and he could ram those shoulders into alien stomachs in a fashion to make ten thousand people rise at once and express their feelings, It was to be allowed to con tinue thinking of this that he pored over Political Economy. ti If there is nothing further, Mr. Blakefl repeated Hayward. Blake turned silently away. He would have liked to say something. He would have liked to ask this sharp- faced Rhadamanthus, without even a bowing acquaintance With football, how hejidared judge What was a high standard and what a low. He would have liked to ask another chance. But he had no words. He loitered down the damp streets, until he reached the Phi Beta Chi house, and dropped in there for comfort. They cried out to him when he appearedatt Tug ,' Wilson and Peeler and the Jack of Hearts-and when, failing to answer, he only sat heavily down on the divan beside the 'lireplace, they demanded at once what the trouble was. HPve flunked Pol. Econ,U he answered curtly. They stared at each other half- frightened. It Why, Tommy, what do you mean? ti asked the Jack of Hearts. 280 UThatts right, Blake answered. HHayward called me up and told me that my work was below grade, and he was going to report the to-morrow morning. tt Why, I thought youtd been boning yourself black in the face,H cried Wilson. tt Shut up, Tug. The Jack of Hearts came over and admin- istered sympathy after his own fashion, with his arm on Blakets shoulder. But Blake shrugged him away. It I did bone,H he as- sented moodily. But I can't get the stuff?' He stretched out upon the divan, while the fire crackled and sputtered. The Jack of Hearts picked up his guitar for comfort, and strummed 10w chords, down in the bass, where the tired music hides. u And to-morrow we play Grafton! muttered Wilson, tt Oh, if I had my hands on that beast HaywardV7 The Jack of Hearts, stirring suddenly, swept his hngers over the strings with a elang. HTom! he cried, Hwake up.H Blake rolled over with a heavy sigh. The Jack of Heartsealias John Brink, tall and slender, with a face to set your soul aesinging, and a voice that was dangerous to women thence the namet paid no attention to the sigh. tt When does that Hunk go on record? he demanded. t t To-morrow. ' t tt Sure he hasnyt sent it in yet. tt I know he hasnyt. I told him he ought to have let me know it before; I said they wouldift have any time to work up the tandem with me out; I asked him to hold it over just this one gamey but he kept saying that hetd send it in by morning. D--n him,n Blake added, soberly. tt Well, Pm going round and see him before he does,H announced the Jack of Hearts. H'No good, answered Blake. But his voice was a triiie less gloomy. The Jack could do so much! It Go to sleep, Tommy. advised Brink. tt Tug, come for a walk with me. Some- thinge-perhaps the iirelight, or the light of the battlev-fiickered in his eyes. When Blake went to the training-quarters that night, a little before ten, he found Curtis, the Captain, in his room. tt For the love of the Lord, Blake, whats the matter With you? ltd like to know what you mean by missing dinner the day before the Grafton game? t, tt 17m sorry, Billy, Blake answered. tt But I felt so used up I diant have the face to come? tI What are you used up with? n H Pm out of it Billy. Hayward has hunked me. I cantt play to-morrow. Curtisy eyes opened wide. tIQuit your guying, Tom, he said; but his toneswas uncertain. tt Guy? Do you think Pd joke about it? It Welly ifs a case of life or death; I hope you woulant. You know as well as I do that youtve got to play to-morrow. Did you talk to Hayward? Blake nodded. tt Did you tell him that pivot play was the only thing we've got to gain with, and without you we might as well not have it? 281 tt You donlt understand, BillRy Blake dropped upon the bed. U That wouldnlt mean anythIng to him. He?s a - I don7t know what he is; hes a sort of a rat, I guess. He thinks Pin a loafer, and no good. He as much as told me he was doing this to put me out of the game, so that I could do my work.H tt Your work. Maybe he thinks his rotten what-do-you-call-it is your work,H sput- tered Curtis. He got up and began to pull on his trousers. tt I'm going to take Linden over there and talk to him right now, he declared. tt Not a bit of use in itli persisted Blake drearily. tl Brink and Tug Wilson went over there before dinner to see what they could do, and they havetnt showed up since. If held been willing to soften, John would have come back a running to let me know. And if John couldntttdo anything, you and Linden can t, thatis surefY tt Pm going anyhow. ! , He dressed and left the quarters. In half an hour he returned. UCouldnlt get him, he said. HHe went out somewhere. I've got to go to bed now, but Linden's waiting to nab him when he comes. But Linden waited to nab him in vain. At two otclock he gave upy determining to come around in the morning. As he tramped up to the steps of Haywardys hat, early the next day, he encountered John Brink coming out. ttLooking for Hayward ?H ttYes answered Linden, eagerly. HIs he at home?H e Brink shook his head. HHasnuc been here all night. The landlady thinks hels out of town. She says he went away in a cab last evening about half-past six without stop- ping for dinner. She didn't know why and she didrft know where. I was around here last night, and I know he wasntt in then. ' itI was here myself till two o'clockfl replied Linden. HYes? I came earlier, but I couldnlt waitfi UWell I suppose thereis no use of my going in. Linden hesitated. uI guess its all off with Blakewand with us. it tt Maybe, suggested Brink, ti Hayward chased away in such a hurry he didnlt have time to send in the report. tt Ilm afraid therels no such luckfi Linden said. H well know now in an hour or so, however. The committee meets at half-past eight ; if the report has been sent in. they'll throw him off ; if it hasntt welre saved, unless Hayward comes back and tells yem about it. tt Oh. I don't believe hell come backW Brink answered hopefully. The morning dragged on. The cro wds began to trickle across the quadrangles, some with the Grafton purple, more with the Chicago Maroon. The shriek of a thousand tin horns spoiled the solemnity of the campus. Still the committee sat. This committee, in which so much interest was taken by all Chicago athletes at all times, and so much more by a disturbed few on this particular morning, was merely the omcial promulgator of the decisions of the different instructors. If Hayward had sent in as he had threatened, a report that Blake's work was below grade, no action of the committee could override the report; Blake would be forced to watch the struggle from the sidelines. On the other hand, even at the last moment, if Hayward changed his mind, the committee would be authorized to cancel the report, and Blake might thunder down the field as usual. tThey say the method is different now; that no instructor is allowed to change his mind ; that Emersonis hobgoblin has been adopted as the official motto. I wonder if it's true ?i So Linden and Curtis and two or three others who were informed of the delicate position of affairs, lingered near, alternately discussing the chances for the afternoon and comment- ing in low but Vigorous tones on the dilatoriness of H Old women? whatever that might mean. The committee sat and sat ; the crowd drifted and drifted by ; the disturbed few 282 Waited and waited. At last the door opened, and Linden button-holed the first member out, an elderly man with glasses, put on the Committee of Athletics to ballast the younger ones. tt Can Blake play ? The old gentleman adjusted his glasses, apparently embarrassed. b Why not? ,, he asked, slowly. , tt You got no adverse report? ll tt Iereally I cannot say as to that. Linden abandoned the old gentleman with an abruptness that might have been called rude. tt Theodore! he welcomed a younger professor just behind. H What about it? t, Theodore Winthrop took him by the arm. h Walk along with me, he said. tt We,ve had the Kilkenny of a time in therejt he added, when they were out of earshot of P10- fessor Ballast-as we may call him. H Well, how did it come outecan Blake play? U Yes, replied Winthrop briefly. H Thank Heaven ! It He can ; that is, if Hayward doesnlt turn up and stop him,H added Winthrop. tl Go on I ,t H Now: Linden, you know I have He business to tell you what we do in there. But this is a rather curious matter altogether, and considering your proposition as coach I think you ought to know the whole affair. The way of it is this : We had got through the routine business, and were just on the point of adjourning, whena telegram was brought to Mitchellehets the secretary of the committee, you knowfy tt Hold on a minuteft interrupted Linden. 't You had finished the routine business ewas disqualifying Blake part of it ? tt Not a bit of it. We had no report on Blake ; nothing against him. But then, as I say, came this telegramt It was from Hayward. t Do not allow Blake to play; below grade in political economy? tt Then, of course, we were all thunderstruck. That was the first warning we had that anything was wrong with Blake. You know he has had a clean record ever since he came, and I have always found him a hard worker in my courses. I said so, and Moore said the same thing. Ballast was for throwing Blake out on the dot, but we argued the point. The report should have been in last night; it should have come through the official channel; this was wholly irregular. We examined the telegram, and found it was sent from Jacksonville. We sent over to Haywardls house to find out anything we could, but they knew nothing ; he had gone away last night, and had not returned. We looked up Blakels other work, and found everything in good condition; luckily the man was taking anthropology with Ballast, and Ballast had to admit was doing pretty well in it. Mitchell telegraphed in a hurry to Jacksonville, but the agent there knew nothing; couldn't tell what the man was like who had sent the telegram, or whether he was still in the town, or anything about him. The question came up, what was Hayward doing in Jacksonville, and why shouldnlt he have reported Blake in the regular way? We wrangled over the thing two hours, and finally decided, since the telegram couldn't be confirmed, was late and irregular anyway, and Blake was otherwise in good shape, to let him play. So, as I say, he can go in, if Hayward doesntt turn up to stop him.n tt Do you believe the telegram was from Hayward? ,t N How can I tell? Certainly, I cant see any reason why anyone else should tele- graph about itfl 283 Linden pondered. It Thanks, Theodore, he said finally. ti Iill g0 and tell Blakeft He shook his head as he hurried away. tt I suppose, to be strictly a sportsman, I should have told Theodore what Hayward said yesterday about reporting the boy, he remarked to himself. it Well, ifs too late now anyway ; Pm glad they didn,t call Blake or me in to see if we knew anything about it. I wonder what time a train gets in from Jackson- ville? When the game began Blake was in his place. The revulsion of feeling on learning that he could play had inspired him7 apparently; he was tremendous. But one man is not a team, and the fortunes of war shifted. After the hrst half it was clear that which- ever side scored would win. When the second half was well under way a small man, angry and excited, hurried up to the gate. As he attempted to thrust through the man barred his way. tt I am Professor Haywardf declared the small man. it I wish to see President Yates. They told me at his house that he was here. It Ticket, pleasef' answered the man at the gate. Hayward. foamed It Bring me somebody in authorityf he cried. tt Pm in authority at this gate, answered the gatekeeper. tt Let me in, then, foolishly attempting to push by. The man caught him by the shoulder. It You're too small to try that sort of game, he remarked, contemptously, whitling him back. Hayward gasped. tt How much? ,, he asked furiously. HDollar and a halffi Hayward pulled out the sum, thrust it at the gatekeeper, and again tried to shove by; but the keeper again intercepted him. ti Get a ticket;' he commanded. Choking with rage, Hayward was forced to retire once more, hasten a hundred feet to the ticket othce, Contribute three fifty-cent pieces to a cause he detested, and again present himself at the gate. it Why didnt you behave yourself at first? was all the consolation his fiery looks brought him from the gate-keeper. As he faced the crowd, Haywarst heart sank: ten thousand people, crowded into a small space, all shrieking and howling, as impenetrable, apparently, as any chevauX-de- frise ever stormed by a forlorn hope. However, Hayward dived for one of the stands, and when an usher with a badge barred the way, rejoiced, for he knew the manga student in one of his classes, and an embryo political economist after Hayward's heart. It Take me to President Yates at once? Hayward demanded. But the usher shook his head. tt The President is in a box at the center of the held, on the other side, he said. wWe cantt get at him. Cantt you wait a few minutes, Professor? The game will be over in half an hour, anyway. ti I must see him at once,H Hayward shouted. tt There has been H-he checked him- self. tt I must see him,U he repeated furiously. , tt Well, P11 see what I can do,,y the usher answered, and led the way around the end of the field. They dived into the roar and sway of the multitude; pushed, squirmed, anathematized and were anathematized; heard unheedingly audible remarks from the women, and absent-miuded murmurs from the men, and emerged at last at the Presidentts box; where he sat, with a pair of field-glasses slung over his shoulders, alternately staring at the players and dropping the glasses to Clap his hands. Hayward, wasting no time on formalities, thrust himself in. 284 tt President Yates;y he demanded, H this game must stop at once.H The President turned wonderingly to him. tt I have been outragetin stormed the instructor. tt I have been Waylaid, misled, abducted by the students of this institution- those brutes who are now fighting out you- der, and he pointed to the held. Now the Presidents oldest son was a substitute tackle; and people said the one great grief of President Yatesy life was, that John was only a substitute. So this speech grated on the Presidents ears. However, he saw that Hayward was in earnest, and he half turned; but just at that moment something happened. A runner on the Grafton side shot out of a mass and circled for the edge of the field. A Chicago man tore diagonally across to intercept hime-a big man but iieet. He dived not downwards, but parallel with the ground, and his shoulders struck just above the runner s knees. Up in the air went the Grafton man, spun like a top; he dropped on his head, and the ball listlessly slid out of his arms. The Chicago many letting go his tackle. crawled to it and hugged it to his heart, just as a dozen players of both sides precipitated themselves tquite unin- tentionallyt upon him. The grandstands rocked and screamed. HBlake ! Blake I h Hayward leaned out of the box and cried to a policeman who stood within the inclosure, ttArrest that man for forgery He might as well have clamored in a tornado; but his fae e was close to the President 5 and the President heard. tt What do you mean, Doctor P ,t the President demanded. While the elevens battered up and down the field, Hayward told his story feverishly. it Last evening a boy knocked on my door and handed me a tele- gram, which he said t the woman 5 had receipted for. It was eit sum- moned me to Jacksonville, Illinois, at once. The boy had waited, in case I wanted to send an answer, and I asked him if he knew anything about the trains to Jacksonville. He said he did; that one left on the Alton at half-past seven that I could catch if I was in a hurry. He volunteered to get a cab in case I wanted it. The tele- gram was-it was very important, and I thought I had better leave at once; so I told him to go and fetch it. He did; I caught the train, left money with him to send a telegram announcing that I was on my way, and got into Iacksonville at two otclock last night. This morning at eight I went-I discovered that the nrst telegram was a hoax; that none had been sent me, and I had been simply lured away. I began to think why anyone should have taken the risk of doing that, and suddenly remembered that in my hurry I had forgotten to send in the report announcing the deficiency in his studies of Thomas Blake? tt Blake? That Blake? H the president demanded. tt That man theregyes. Of course I telegraphed at once to the Committee of Ath- letics, reporting him below grade, got a train at nine otclock, and as soon as I reached town hurried over to acquaint you with the facts. I found that you had come to this - to the football game,:and followed you. The matter seemed to me of suHicient import- ance to deserve immediate action. I get here, and I discover that no attention has been paid to my telegram; the committee has disregarded it utterly; the execrable plot of those young hoodlums has succeeded ; and the man Blake is playing. He stopped from sheer inability to control his voice. H What was this telegram they brought you? It asked the president. 285 H It was a very transparent deception, no doubt,H Hayward returned bitterly. h I suppose I was a fool to be taken in by it. There it is.H He showed the ordinary yellow envelope. The message looked as usual, properly dated and checked. ti George Hay- ward, 5867 Sucheand-Such Avenue, Chicago. Board of Trustees of Jacksonville College unanimously votes to request your acceptance of the presidency of the college. Can you come on at once. iSignedl Silas R. Weeks, secretaryF H You accepted? i' H I did,H returned Hayward dehantly. t: Any man would in my place. I knew the presidency was vacant, and I know Iio reason why it might not conceivably have been offered to me. I accepted it by telegram and then went down, as I say.H tt The boy Who brought you the false message - was he a regular messenger? u I don : know ; I think not. I did not suspect anything at the time. I recollected afterwards, being surprised at not being asked to receipt for the message ; but his state- ment that tthe woman, had receipted threw me off. He sent the message I left with him. H Your acceptance? 1 ti Yes emy acceptance. Hayward gritted his teeth. tt They thought it a joke, down there.H Theyethey laughedli He choked again. tt President Yates, are you going to allow this'-- such work? ' ti But what would you have done, Dr. Hayward? n lt Stop the game I President Yates was plainly puzzled It But -here are more than ten thousand people who have paid to see it. Look at them I Listen to them ! He let a comprehensive gesture express the rest ; needless to put it into words I tt At least put Blake out ! I tell you he is below grade ! i, The hill of people behind yelled and were strangely still, as the enthusiasm rolled over them in waves. Chicago was pushing Grafton more and more, and it seemed only a matter of minutes until the men in maroon should score. HBut it is not certain that this was done to enable Blake to play,H the President debated. HThere is no evidence at all to that effect. What we must do is to find the boy who delivered you the false telegram. H But I tell you Blake is below grade ! tt Roy,H said the President to his smallest son, who otnamented the front railing of the box, tt jump down and tell Mr. Linden I want to see him.H While Linden was being summoned, the President turned to Hayward. t Certainly this is outrageous. When we fmd those concerned in it. we shall not stop with expelling them-if indeed they are students here. I will have Blake removed. Linden, puzzled, vaulted the wire fence surrounding the held and ran to the front of the President's box. Suddenly the roar of the students swelled to something as monstrous and unearthly as the clamor of a mob. A compact group of Chicago players dashed into one side of the line, struggled, swayed and stopped. But from behind the mass two rushing figures detached themselves, shot to the left, and in a moment were twentye thirty yards nearer the goal. A Grafton man, hurling himself, brought one to the ground, but the other, staggering, kept his feet and tore 011. A11 enemy clutched him by the shoulder, vainly ; but another had time to come up and clasp him around the waist. He was pulled to the ground, and crawled there. When they got him out from under the other twenty-one, the ball was over the line. The grandstands called aloud on the name of Blake, l 286 HTake him out of the game, Mr. Linden. said the President. 't Who, Blake? W'hy, Dr. Yates, he's all right Can't hurt him that way, Linden returned cheerfully. H No, take him out, insisted the President. lt P11 explain later. H Take him out at once, sir ! 'V cried Hayward, losing control of himself. Linden stared from one to the other, suspecting, he did not know what. U That Will do, Dr. Hayward,H iuterrupred the President curtly. H You will do as I ask, Mr. Linden.H lt Certainly, sir.n Linden vaulted back again. After all, the game was won. What did it matter? So he took Blake out. In five minutes the timers ran out on the field, and the referee blew his whistle. Chicago had the victory. 46 +9 4t- 45 51V The search that was made for that telegraph messenger is old history now, like the rest of this story. Everybody regretted that he was never found, for undoubtedly his part of the affair would have heeninteresting hearing. Hayward left Chicago soon after- wardsethe tale having unfortunately got out in some way. He did not take the presidency of Jacksonville, however. Of course, Blake had a cloud of witnesses to his alibi ; besides, when he said a thing, looking at his questioner out of those blue eyes, he was generally believed; and he denied all knowledge of the trick. Some people said that if the authorities had left off looking for some unfortunate boy, bribed to take for the nonce the position of telegraph messenger, and had questioned a young fellow by the name of H Tug Wilson, at Phi Beta Chi, who really did very well in the University Dramatic Club, they would have found out more than they know nowialways supposing that H Tug had been truthful. But some people always talk. 287 FaretUell of the Seniors 4 Four years we've spent within thy walls, And wandered happy through thy halls That echoed With our shouts and calls, Alma Mater. Four years thy grim gray towers have frowned, Or from their summits, gargoyle-crowned, Laughed With strange mediaeval sound Alma Mater. Four years we've drawn from thy rich store, Deep draughts of wisdom brought from yore, And treasured up thy precious lore Alma Mater. But soon too soon, we needs must leave T by loving arms, though parting grieve, And try what thy gifts may achieve, Alma Mater. Yet, though our path be hard and drear, T hy lighted torch shall still shine cleary And through the gloom send radiant cheer, Alma Mater. Then be thy name our battle cry, Our shout that hails each victory, Our never-dying memory, Alma Mater. g i i i -mx mm M establishment in the United States making a i specialty at College Publications. The following are a few of the larger colleges that we are issuing Annuals foreachyearlfI6011636663336$ University of Chicago Tulane University University of Wisconsin Lake Forest University Northwestern University Purdue University University of Illinois University of Arkansas A x x x i A ' r- . . i '1 I v A A k v v A i a i X A A z ; .r 5i Z i x i: A A A i X, . . i i xx i i i i v R , i a 4 i 'i . f : i x A g . . x i A i i i x x i i ;A x A A4 x . x A A f V - A i Write for Prospectus giving full information as to the i ,flr p making of an Annual KEV? xv i Viik. V 4 L '- Xi m. ONG DISTANGB TO LYMOUTH TLL HARRISON 411i LACER HICAGOi' kansawmmam a9 '7 NNUALJ U 1,, ' AZ WE are the only first- class printing and engraving 1 Pagador E ; a .5;an HERE was a low- hanging tropical moon that night. The waters of Anotta Bay in mirror-like stillness reflected only the vivid stars and the lights of the gunboat It Scorpion as she lay at anchor Save for the continuous whirr of the night bugs and the occasional sharp toot 0f the ttScorpionls steam launch as she sped back and forth from the mainland to the ship the silence was absolute. H I know I havenlt known you very long, the Paymaster was saying to Miss Arkwright as they sat at the further end of the now deserted veranda of the hotel that overlooked the bay, N but you must have guessed from my absorbing devo- tion a l , it Being the only girl at the hotel,H she laughed teasingly. tt 0 yes, I knowfy he interrupted impatiently, Hbut you do yourself great injustice if you think anyone could go away without a It 0 dont! w she said imperatively, as she looked out 011 the dark waving cocoanut palms silhouetted against the moonlight like great sprawling spiders. She was thinking of the old adage that had been served up to her every day since the arrival of the it Scor- pion, that tt a sailor has a sweetheart in every port? and also of a certain Richard with a lionis heart at home. tt We have certainly had some splendid times together? Miss Arkwright began, as if in apology for her abruptuess. HI dont know what I should have done if you men hadntt appeared. I was simply dying of ennui. XVhen I first saw the HScorpion putting in here I almost went insane with joy. I hadnit seen a civilized American for so long. And it was such fun hearing you tell about South America. just like a novel. And oh, those gorgeous horseback rides l I shall die when you all go.H The Paymaster put his hand impulsively forward. H I wish you wouldnlt say tyou allt as if you meant the entire crew. I am selfish enough to want you to be sorry because I alone am going. Felicita, though I have known you only these two weeks -- It Mr. Dana, please ! l, Her tone was pleading, but she found herself looking into a pair of frank, blue eyes. As the Paymaster leaned forward, his white suit shining in the moonlight showing the outlines of his well-knit physique, his manly features clearscut in the crisp shadows, Miss Arkwright felt a sudden thrill sweep over her, and into her heart crept a feeling which if put into words might have been, It Richard go hang. A look in her eyes plainly told him to go on. uXVe have become as well acquainted in these two weeks as lots of people do 111 a lifetime, and I don t see why I shouldn' 1; ask for a p1cture1l There were voices in the night singing softly down by the ship. The Paymaster stopped short and sat back in his chair as if that were all he intended to say. Miss Arkwright began to feel sheepish as she remembered, in going through the ward rooms of the Scorpion,n that he had refused to let her see his suite, and one of the o-fhcers had laughed out, ttPay. has his sweet- heartls pictures in there,H much to Mr. Danals discomfiture. tt I really havenlt any photographs here. Besides, I never like to give away my pic- tures, Mr. Dana.H Her tone was cool and decisive. There was a sharp whistle from the steam launch which had come up to the pier. 289 CHICAGO COLLEGE OF LAW Law Department of Lake Forest University. If h ATHENAEUM BUILDING. Hon. Thos. A. Moran, LL. D.. Dean. 16:, Degree of Bachelor of Laws conferred on those who complete the three years, course satisfactory to the Faculty. College graduates who have a suihcient amount of credit in legal studies may he admitted to advanced standing. Summer course during months ofJune and July. For furtherinformation address the Secretary, Elmer E. Barrett, LL. B. 1501, 100 Washington St. : : CHICAGO. Rush Medical ' College IN AFFILIATION WITH THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO The academic year of Rush Medical College is divided into four quarters, corresponding with those recognized with the University of Chicago, They are designated as Summer. Autumn, Winter and Spring Quarters, begin. ning respectively the Erst of july, first of October, hrst of; January, and first of April. each continuing for twelve weeks. A recess of one week occurs between the end of quarter and the beginning of the next following. In- structions in all departments of medicine Will be given in each quarter. The general course of instruction requires four years of study in residence, With a minimum attendance upon three quarters of each year. Credit will not be allowed, however, for more than three successive quarters. At least 45 months must elapse between the date of a hrst matriculation and the date of graduation. For further information, address correspondence to Rush Medical College Chicago, Ill. ORGANIZED 1837 Many of the foremost students of the Univer- sity ofrChicago were prepared for college at its Academy at Morgan Park, 111., known as h40rgan.Parklhcadenqz' For Boys It is a constituent part of the Univertity though situated eight miles from the University Quad- rangle. It stands for high ideals and has the men and equipment with which to realize them. e FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, APPLY TO DEANWWAYLAND11CHASE The Paymaster arose. N I'm sorry, Miss Arkwright. But I am much obliged to you, for I came near forget- ting - Just then a chorus of voices came up from below, singing, to the air of H Maryland, My Maryland : e ii 0 Pagador, Our hearts are sore, For the girl you left in Baltimore. It Pagador,H he added, with a dreamy smile, His the Spanish for ipaymasterf and theyire reminding me of w The song was suddenly changed into It The Girl I Left Behind Me. It I am afraid I must be going. They are calling me. Good-bye, Miss Arkwright. Thank you for being so good to me. Miss Arkwright arose. She, too, wore a dreamy smile. it Remember me to the girl from Baltimore, Mr Dana, And the reason I didn7t want to give away a pictiiie is because Pm engaged to Richard Wallace at home.H They shook hands. The Paymaster strolled down the terraced lawn to the pier Whistling softly, ti 0 Pagador, under the full light of the tropical moon. J In Washington J! He was small and very black. His tattered clothes, many sizes too large for him, happed cheerfully in the December wind, and his hat was a remnant. His hands were sunk in his voluminous, empty pockets in an attempt to keep them warm. But he shuffled contentedly along and whistled HDiXie as only a Washington darkey can Whistle it. I turned around to wait for him The whistling ended in an embarrassed grin as he approached slowly. Finally he reached me. A brief glimpse of white teeth and big eyes, then, abashedeiK Did yo' wany aboy lady, tpw do any kinY 0, wowk? 7i Ii No,H I said, I didnit. Here's a dime for you. Just keep on whistling Dixie, as long as I can hear you. Amaz'ement, skepticism, fear and delight were marvellously blended on his black features. He uttered an incredulous HAw, now-, shifted from one foot to the other, smiled sheepishly and expansively, and reached out for the dime. HA11 right, I said, ti Now whistle. But it was too much. He made one or two heroic but ineffectual attempts, looked back with another happy ahd apologetic grin, and escaped around the corner. 291 Lewis Institute The Institute was opened in September, 1896, as a. polytechnic school with day and evening classes for pupils of both sexes. A four-year course in Mechanical and Electrical Engineering is offered; also two, four and six-year courses in Science and Literature, preparing students for the Senior Colleges of the University. The buildings now erected have cost $275,000. The laboratories of physics, chemistry, engineering and domestic economy have been equipped at a cost of $40,000. Thirty-Eve thousand dollars have been spent for the shops and drafting rooms, $15,000 for classrooms and general equipment, and $10,000 for the library. The buildings were planned and con- structed, and the work of instruction organized, with the View of helping those who are willing to help themselves in securing such an education as will give them a more complete mastery ofrnodern life, with its increasing demands for skilled and intelligent service. Followng is a summary of attendance for the flrst four years: Year ending in June ...................... 1897 1898 1899 1900 Students in day classes ..................... 4.34. 54.5 64.3 790 Students in evening classes .................. 260 520 775 1 190 Total, day and evening ................. 694. 1065 14.18 1980 The Institute is supported by the income from an endowment fund of$1,ooo,ooo, and the tuition fees, which are $20 for a term of three months for day students, and $10 for evening students. Following is a summary of the annual expenditures and receipts for tuition: Year ending June 30th ............ 1897 1898 1899 1900 Annual ex enditures for in- . struction aid maintenance T ''''' $52,037 $65:352 $76,203 $81,794- Receipts for tuition ............... 19,560 27,515 34,826 37,900 Balance from endowment ....... $31,477 $37,837 $417377 $437894- A Jenior View:?oint M When our course is run, And our work is done, What is there then For a poetVs pen To write about? Would you have 115 do A last stunt, or two, As a sample show That enough we know To right about? Then all read herein How degrees we Win, And the records break- Cause enough to make Festal rite about? 293 ; .I',, un' . i9 ? nin H P x l:,1::llf n rlrilfU' rHHHU SEND TO The Chicago Beach Hotel :CHICAGO FOR ITS NEW ILLUSTRATED BOOKLET GOLF M BATHING BOATING M FISHING ETC. 1 THE. FINEST WINTER AND SUMMER HOTEL ON THE GREAT LAKES A Ballad of the Girls of Yesterday 4 Faces as fair as the flowers of May, And faces to show which is barely fair. Skirts all of silk, with their sweep and sway, And skirts reformed up fogGod knows where ; I pass them daily on the stair. Girls in a phalanx, a blooming row, But ever this query is my despair : Where are the girls that I used to know? Oh, they were prettyesuch eyes had they As would lure St. Anthony from his lair, Smiles like the sheen of an April day, And a dainty scorn in their hearts for care. What lad the hash of their wit would dare, Keen as a rapier; yet, I trow There was tenderness, too, deeply hidden there - Where are the girls that I used to know? A tinkling laugh, like a brook at playy Sunshine 0r midnight caught in their hair. Goddesses allabut a man might pray Life-long, and they never would grant a prayer. Now I kneel at the altar till dawn gleams there. And the day grows red as the mountain snow. But vain, in vain to the heights I stare- Where are the girls that I used to know? Envoy Prince, you have lived ; you have learned to bear The strifes of life, with its ebb and 130w, Yet to your heart comes the longing ne'er : Where are the girls that I used to know? 295 Carlton P. Abernathy J. Hartwell Staples Abernethy t? Staples Builders of Men's Clothing 901 Cable Building 28 Jackson Boulevard, East Chicago 3 Exclusive British Fabrics J ohn J . Magee E N G R AV E D DRUGGIST INVITATIONS ...... AND...... FOR SOCIAL AND C H E M I ST PUBLIC FUNCTIONS FRATERNITY STATIONERS DANCE PRO GRAMS ANNUAL INSERTS WM. FREUND 6,! SONS 174:176 STATE ST CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 3352.3?9 464 OPPOSITE PALMER HOUSE ENTRANCE Cor. 57th St. and Lake Ave. CHICAGO The Rubaiyat of the Womanis Gym? 4 Before the phantom of False morning died, I dreamt a well-known voice reproaching cried- H When all the class was formed in line within Why seek the unregenerate for cuts outside? The moving finger writes, and having writ Moves on: Nor all thy excuses of thy wit Shall lure it back to cancel half a cut, Nor all thy prayers blot out a word of it. Then three clad in a crimson gaxb and neat, Came forth from one small shoe box like retreat, And took their stand among the pawing throng And all tt marked time with rubber soled feet. There was some H facingY of the Line twice cleft, There was a lt halt well Haccented and deft; Some little talk awhile of tt Left and Right, And then there was no more of Right and Left. But strange contortions of this human clay, Which seemed at last to find a voice to say, tt If you were Frog or Woman none could tell, But oh, remember! and bend slowly, slowly pray. The Ball no question makes of Ayes or Noes, But right or left as strikes the player goes, But you are twisted in so strange a wise The question is to find your eyes and nose. But when yourself with limber foot shall pass Among the students hastening to class Let your dull brain remember that it dwells In a well trained and ti activeU Fleshly Mass?' 9'? 9 : $6 96 ?E '36 AKA Oh, Love, could thou and I with Fate conspire To grasp this sorry scheme of gymnastics Would we not shatter it to bits and then, Forget the thing that brought us woe so dire 297 Can we throw a httle light on the Overcoat questlon for your benefit? Glad to do so any time when you. can call. Remember our stock is probably more; stnctly confined to all-wool, fast-colored fabrics than 15 trye of any other clothing stock west of New York. Satlsfac- tion is assured, yes, guaranteed here. Business Suits $I5 to $30. Dress Suits $20 to $35. Winter Overcoats $15 to $50. . . Also Hats and Furnishing Goods, attractive both 1n prices and qualities. F . M. ATWOOD N. W. Cor. Madison and Clark Streets, Chicago AN AFFILIATED ACADEMY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 756 Keizwood lmfz'fwg FOR GIRLS Graduates of the School are received. wzthout gramm- alz'on, on certificate of the principal, at the University of Michigan. the University of Wisconsin. Vassar College, Smith College and Wellesley College. Similar arrange- ments may be made with any college which receives students on certifmate. MISS ANNICE BRADFORD BUTTSL PRINCIPAL 4.0 East Forty-Seventh Street Chicago Ozzzfmg Flmmds Every gentleman should have a couple of pairs of Hannel trousers. The coolest and most comfortable thing one can wear in hot weather, and ifs usually hot in Chicago and vicinity until late in October. We have 50 styles in stock. $5.00 to $8.00 per pair. Suits $20.00 up. N I C OLL five Tailor Clark and Aldams Sireefs Gostmszis 2 Ordyesird ,6? I. GOLDSMITH Direttor lg? Ojice Room 5, 59 Dearbom Street Hours 12 to 2 P M T 61511250716 Ceniral I9 50 Residence 9 39 N ortlz Clark Street Hour59t01111M,4t07PM Telephone North 578 The Graduation af Behold here the graduate. weak and forlorn, Burdened with books, indigestion, and care ; With miseries plenty, enough and to spare ; Brain and apparel and stomach outworn, Moving the healthy young Freshman to scorn ; Three meals a day at a fifteen-cent fare, With his thin, sickly purse no more would he dare. For a doctor's degree what a load has he borne! Life is calling before him, books pushing behind, Doctors cry out it Give your body due thought ! i, ' Professors insist, tt Without books time is lost I i, While his soul lies neglected 'neath body and mind. See what the graduates labors have bought ! See what his one-sided living has cost! Is his dear Alma Mater not growing unkind? 5! Honor Jimong Thieves 4 H Say, fellowsfi called the inventor, appearing at one end of the car, just as the men were crawling into their berths, the old man has a telegram from the dining-car peoplef, tt 0, go talk to the porterfy yelled Sliver, throwing the butleris shoe from the other end of the car. ti Hold on there! You think Pm joking. Listen here! iAsk Manager Stagg if any of his men, by mistake, took from the dining car seven spoons, one knife, a tooth- pick holder, and a pair of sugar tongsf The Old Man feels rather bad about it, and I told him Pd see what could be done. Of course We dont want to be written up, or anything. I think it would be a good scheme for every man who did take anything to drop it into the aisle. Then no one would know who did the stealing. Ill be back in a minuteQy and the inventor disappeared. Several of the more timid dropped stolen spoons on the floor at once, and were slowly followed by the more reckless. Returning, the inventor gathered up the pieces of silverware and went into the smoker, where, chuckling to himself, he packed them in his grip. ti I never could bring myself to steal things outright, he murmured, winking slowly at the Old Man, who was sound asleep. 299 A Jummer Jtudent p7 E Was a pompous. heavy man from a sleepy town in Missouri. He had puffy, overhanging cheeks. a drooping mustache, anda shufiiing gait. Aside from these peculiarities his most prominent characteristics were E; g iii 3 his appetite, and his absolutely 131131 manner of settling all questions m that came up for discussion. When at home he was superintendent of schools, and was always addressed as tt professorfi It was quite evident that he had been tt the law and the prophet H in his small world, and he could never quite reconcile himself to being anything else in Chicago. The fact that the accustomed deference was not paid to his remarks seemed to cause him no small irritation. This fact in itself betokened disaster to his physical well-being. i He brought his full-grown country appetite with him, and quartered himself at a two-dollar-and-a-half boarding club. This fact in itself betokened disaster. He expected to be fed on the fat of the land, and if the proper abundance of food was not always forthcoming it was not because he did not ask for it. His fellow-boarders were soon aware of his presence, for his voice was as that of a campaign orator. His words always carried convictione-to himself, He invariably began his remarks with, tt Let me tell you, brothah,H and ended them with, ti and that's the way it looks to me. That the sum of knowledge on any particular subject was not confined between those two phrases, he never for a moment suspected. When he expressed the opinion that the department store was a complete feudal system, that settled it, notwithstanding the fact that he had never before seen a business house larger than a Village store. The only occasion on which his prerogative received a decided check was when he called for a second order of chicken. Then he discovered that his sway did not extend to the kitchen, On his first visit to the campus, he was not met and welcomed by the President, the Board of Trustees. and the University band. Moreover the Registrar did not seem to be expecting him, although he had written early in the spring informing the authorities that he should probably run up and take a degree. Now, whenever he arrived in Burgville, he was always met by some of the trustees, or a committee of prominent citizens, who had been previously informed of his approach. He had heard of the University, and it pained him that no one here had heard of him. He was allowed to wander about among the various Deansy offices, and select the right one by the process of elimination. This finally brought him to the Dean of the Junior Colleges. He had been informed by the Dean of the Graduate School that, in spite of his being a graduate of the Burg'ville Normal School, he could not obtain the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in one summer. The Senior College Dean had remonstrated with him for trying to register for an advanced course in ethics without having had the prerequisites, and had referred him to the Junior Dean for registration. That busy official had registered about three hundred students that morn- ing, and was beginning to feel the effects of it Consequently he was not in his most pleasant and amiable manner when the gentleman from Missouri announced himself. The dignity of the teacher-student here suffered another jar, for, on expressing a desire to take some work in English, he was informed that he must begin with course one. He de- murred, but the Dean was obdurate, and he iinally acquiesced. To add insult to injury, he was assigned to a class under a curly-headed, boyish assistant, who had probably been a Freshman at high school when our friend from Missouri was a teacher of several 3788.15, 301 0H1Lmkm1 H ardware Company 71 and 73 Randolph Street Near Northwest Corner of State MANUFACTURERS WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS We make a Jpetitzlty of Fifze Buildem, Hard- ware, Higb Grade Cullery, Pangrt K712312571, Razan, Manual Trainiizg TMZJ, Eta, En. The best of everything and the lowest pdce for the quality sold is our rule Chemical Laboratory and Hospital Supplies We Will furnish estimates on Drugs,Chemicals,Surgical Ma- terials and Alcohol,ifrequested We handle the best grade of goods and our prices are uniformly reasonable Morrisson Plummer 8: Company WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS :: CHICAGO HENRY W. MARSH THOMAS E. FRY HERBERT I. ULLMANN FRANK P. SHELDON MARSH, ULLMANN 8: CO. SUCCESSORS TO R. A. WALLER 8; CO. INSURANCE am mam: C3 :1 $ x z x I 7- 11.111253111213111 164-168 LA SALLE STREET NEW YORK OFFICE, 41-43 CEDAR STREET CHICAGO experience. That his work in this department was not entirely satisfactory I gathered from a remark he made to a fellow sufferer from Kansas. tt The idea, he said, Hof that young dunce telling me that my English is vague and inflated-a man who has been before the public as long as I have. i, He bore it, however,, for the rest of the Quarter, and When he was ready to leave for his native soil he expressed his entire willingness to get back to his regular duties. A few days later the following item appeared in the Burgville Clarion : ti Professor Bruceton Blanks, who has been pursuing a special line of investigation in the departments of English and Pedagogy at the University of Chicago, returned yester- day. He expresses himself as favorably impressed with the University, but says that he will not return to complete his investigationsfy Appreciation Just tt To a Muse ; he lines nine or ten, Thus titled, went to pretty Gwen, Wherein I vowed that every gracey Each sweet expression of her face, Was inspiration new to men. The Muses of Parnassusis glen She far surpassed ; itwas surely then Enough above my lines to trace just tt To a Muse.H The saucy maid! I well know when F11 pen my rhymes to her again. She termed it Hattery most base, Uncalled for, and quite out of place. I wrote, she saidy with idle pen, Just to amuse. 303 SIEGEL, COOPER 48 aux: Everything that you re- quire on the Big Storek great plan -The same goods for less money or better'goods for the same money . . . . . . Gust. Lindell CARPENTER AND GENERAL CONTRACTOR Tel. Room 723 Main I777 l07 Washington St. W. R GWINN, JAMES DAMEY, Pres. and Treas. Secre tary union Foundry works Q M Hrcbitectural and General Foundry work 0 O O O O O O . . fire Escapes . . Office Telephone Oakland 1277 Works Telephone Central 399 OFF! C E W0 HKS 417 First National 76th Street and Green- Bank Bldg. wood Ave. MUSSEY S Billiard Halls AND Bowling Alleys The largest, handsomest and most completely appointed establish- ment of its kind in the world . . . 48 Tables ii 17 Alleys Occupying six fioors, with nearly 40,000 square feet of iioor space. Our Bowling Alleys are of the very latest construction and are strictly regulation ...... First:Class Restaurant on Fourth Mth Floor, and Barber Shop 104:106:106 Madison St. Chicago, USA. Ghe Fable of the Beecher Woman and the Up:to:Date Professor 5 There was once an Old Woman who Lived in Beecher, who wore Bedside Slippers to Recitations, She Elected a course in Anthropology, and learned the First Day that she was the Direct Descendant of an Orang-utan. This She took asa Personal affront. After Class She went to Cobb, looked up the Monkey Family, and with rising Indignation, read this : tt The Ourang-utan is Ferocious and Sullen. Its Walk is little better than an Awkward Hobble. This Creature Shuffies along uneasily by the help of its Arms. It is singularly Hideous in Aspect, owing much of its Repulsiveness to the great Projection of the Jaws and the Coilosities appearing on the Cheeks. In her Heart of Hearts she was morally certain that in the Awkward Hobble the Professor referred to her Decrepit Gait, in the Shuiniig, to her Carpet Slippers, and in the Protrusion of the Lower Jaw, t0 the Deficiency of Teeth, from which she Suffered. Her Decision from that Hour was made. to Oust this Professor from his Chair of Learning by presenting to the President and the Senate Such Documentary Evidence as Her Family Tree, the Marriage Licenses of Her Grandparents, the Babtismal Certificates of Her Nieces and Nephews, Her Letter to the Church, and all the Diplomas that hdppeued to be lying around the House Handy, proving she was of an Educated, Refined, Aristocratic Family. As she was on her way to give the Senate the Benefit of her time and Thought, armed with the Convincing Proofs, she was accosted by a Fellow Student who it Knew the Ropes, and pointed out to her that in case she resorted to these Bitter and Iconoclastic Measures, she would Miss the Ice Cream Party which this Professor almost Invariably gave, and this, she learned, was the Real and Only Object of the Course. The Old Lady could not resist the weight of this Assurance, so thanking Her Fellow Student for Her Timely Advice, she warmly Shook Hands and wended her way Back to Beecher with Exaltering Steps. MORAL : After All it is Best to Hitch your Wagon to a Starr. 4'7 Physiology 1 E When hrst we take this subject up We merely skin it oier, And scarcely flesh our mental steel By poring oier a pore. But as we near the Quarteris end, -Observe our change of touee We pause from skimming over skin, And get us down to bone. 305 ' Weaver Coal Company MARYLAND SMOKELESS COAL POWHATAN SMOKELESS COAL WEST VIRGINIA GAS fBSTEAM COAL 802 Marquette Building Telephone Central 1724 Chicago 169 1404 Bowling Green Building New York He was entering Cobb Hall just as I was coming out. very well, he barely nodded He had on his face that same bored look that seems to be with him habitually. N othing, apparently, awakens more than a passing interest in him; and even when telling what are sometimes funny stories he seems oblivious of the fact His five and a half feet of withered body is rarely, When, clad in his golfing costumeewhich, by the way, is entirely uniquee-he attempts to play his own peculiar little game of golf, he resembles more than anything else one of those little men which we sometimes make out of a piece that his face should lighten up a bit. if ever, disturbed with laughter. To the Love of a Jummer's Day a Lets go to the tt truly country, to the tt reallyy truly ti land, Where the clover buds are blooming in the fields on every hand, Where the grass is green and Wavy, where the skies are always blue, Where therets life and love and freedom, Where therets peace, content-and you ! Let's go to the tt truly country, leaving town and toil behind, Let's seek out the rare 01d. places, brooks that dance and paths that wind, Lakes that laugh amid deep valleys, hills whose heights the heavens woo, Let's go to that Kt truly V country, Peace is there, and love-and you! Let's go to the tt truly h country, where the fresh, sweet breezes blow, Where the stars peep out at evening with a soft and gladdened glow, Where the birds sing in the orchards, wheresthe dawns are drenched in dew, Where thereis joy in just the living ; Where therets rest, content-and yon ! Lets go out into the hayfields, to the woods and to the hills, To the lakes and to the valleys, letis both go where Heaven distills Draughts of deep delight and gladness, dreams of joy forever new ; Dreams of life and love and freedom, Dreams of truth and youth-and you I of gum and two toothpicks. 307 As usual, though I know him EMS. A Siewm 86? Bros. CHICAGO ELIEVING that the women of Chicago and vicinity would B appreciate a shop that made a specialty of showing the strictly high class novelties and exclusive pieces in woments ready-to- wear garments, this business has been conducted along these lines from the very hrst. That Stevens, is now recognized as the leading fashion store, as making a specialty of tthe real Clever novelties, styles that are away from the commoner sort, is the best evidence that we were right in our premise. Today the women of Chicago have one store, atx least, that can offer them as up-tO-date garments as they will be able to flnd in any store in America. In fact, Stevenst customers are in Closer touch with the foreign ideas, as we are the hrst house to show them STRONG MEN sustain injuries, bruises, sprains, muscle soreness, which need treatment. Men in training are constantly in need of a remedy for these. Greenes Liniment is a guaranteed cure for all of these. Prominent ath- letes, trainers, coaches and others are unanimous in their eraise of it. SEND FOR SAMPLES, CIRCULARS AND OTHER INFORMATION TO J. w. GREENE Ex CO. 505 STEINWAY BUILDING CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. To Her t1 0n Saint Valentinek DayJ VVheu a man becomes a poet, Hes always sure to showit In a way a maid Will know it, On a day like this ! With a loverWs frenzy frantic, His heart and head romantic Are disposed in manner antic, His thoughts go all a-miss ! So now, pray, know the reason Why those words are writ in season, Why my pen commits high treason yGains'c my single state of bliss ! IVS because Won surely guess it D ItYs because mrcrds canuc express it D IFS because 07vhy further press ith It s because- It's just BECAUSE I SAMUEL SIEGEL IS YOUR MANDOLIN GUITAR OR BANJO A If not, we would suggest that you compare it with some of the REGALS, as we feel sulc we will have in store for you a very pleasant surprise indeed. The new Regals are really marvels of power and brilliancy and tone. In all products of human skill there is a stand- ard of comparison, and in the Mandolin, Guitar and Banjo world to-day the standard of comparison law The Regal Judged by any standard you choose the merits of Regals are at once apparenth The quality of tone, responsiveness of action, and the refinement Of workmanship, is all that can be desired. Among some of the prominent musicians who use and recommend Regals, the Fullowing well- known names carry with them a recommendation of value: Sixgel, Bane, Lab'arge, Pamt'ruy, Ger hurt, Curti, Hastings, Illmm'en, Sarto , Brady 3-7- lecll, TM! Bostrm Idcm'x, The Tuxedo Triu of IVcw York, The AVseu'mm Trio of Clzicago. We could hardly say morn for any instrument, could we F jOHNSON BANE HARRY HASTINGS THE HOME OF THE REGAL, THE REP RESENTATIVE MANDOLIN, GUITAR 8: BANJO FACTORY OF THE WORLD REGAL MANUFAC TURING COMPANY INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA V w Nw 1n J. A. LE BARGE A Four Hour Wait a HE train slowed up and came to a stop just long enough for me to step down, with a bag in each hand, upon a little platform. where I stood . and watched the long vestibuled coaches r011 slowly across a high trestle ' .t I work and disappear around a wooded hill. Then everything was quiet- awfully quiet. The old man, on whom the duties of the place seemed to rest, watched the train longingly, and then, gathering up the leather mail sack, slumped half way down the embankment to the little four-byinine station house. A hundred feet below, and running at right angles With the road over which I had come, lay the shining rails of the Burlington road, which, four hours later, I expected to take me home. Look as I might, in every direction, I could see no signs of habitation. The Qne little shanty was the sole building of which Afton Junction could boast. Depositing imy baggage on the floor behind the door, I asked the station-man if he could suggest any, thing I could do to pass the time away. He chewed long and meditatively, and spat twice. Then he said : HYe might ketch some fish, if ye be much of a fisher. So with a borrowed pole and tackle I struck off into the woods. The shade of the trees formed a soothing contrast to the sun-baked road-bed and hot, iron rails I had just left. Underfoot the Violets and sweet-williams had pushed their way through the dead leaves and fallen sticks, and gave out a faint but delightful odor. Occasionally a squirrel, recognizing that my weapon was not a gun, would scurry up a tree, and sit scolding away at me for intruding on his private grounds. From further away came the hollow sound of a wood- pecker pounding on a dead tree trunk Following a well worn path I soon came to the river if one can dignity a stream twenty feet wide by that name Its watexs looked cool and deep, and seemed scarcely to move. I lay down in the shade and watched it as it slid indolently past. What secrets could its silent waters tell, were they able! Tales of noisy children trying to dam its course way up in the north; of lovers with oars at rest, floating along its bosom ; possibly of some darker sides of life. Indeed, it looked as if it might hold all the secrets of the world and keep them, too. r ' Far above me, plainly outlined against the clear sky, a hawk circled slowly around, attacked on all sides by a crowd of plucky little birdsu I watched them coming nearer and nearer, till the hawk gave a shrill cry and started straight down for me. I woke with a start, and found I had just six minutes to catch my train. Tearing through the under- brush I arrived at the station breathless. tt Has my train gone? I panted out at the old man. He spat and chewed, and spat again, before he answered : It Your train will be along here in a Hour and twenty minutesf, 0; H H COLLEGE MEN AND COLLEGE WOMEN ea lghf E have a perfectly equipped Menls Furnishing Department, where in all seasons of the year Will be found the most exclu- sive and desirable assortment of fashionable furnishings, and at prices much lower than usually asked by exclusive haberdash- E, ers for equal qualities. Among women this store has justly earned a reputation Which must necessarily inspire confidence in all WhO patronize any of its departments. Whether you desire ready-to-wear garments or fabrics of any sort you will consult your best interests if you do your shopping here. CARSON PIRIE SCOTT 8: co STATE AND WASHINGTON STREETS, CHICAGO, U.S.A. TAKE THE Santa Fe When you travel to or from Chicago. Reaches nearly , every important point in the Southwest. Student patronage solicited Ticket OHice 109 Adams Street, Chicago Prima Facie Evidence a Y seventeenth summer began very inauspiciously. My dress'de resist- ance I did not like and the man of my heart did not like me. On the other hand, he persistently drove, sailed and sat on the beach with my cousin, andias he was the only man on the coast, the situation was serious. When the summer was half over I put on the objectionable j A; s dress, to make myself as miserable as possible, and wandered about disconsolately. It was white and huffy, with miles of rose-colored ribbon, and several people pronounced it beautiful. In the course of time, the man came to take me, instead of my cousin, driving and sailing, but his alteration in manner was 'so gradual that not even the gossips in the hotel could tell when he had experienced his change of heart. The night before he went away he was unusually gallant, and I was attired in the frock with the rose-colored ribbons. Do you know, he began impressively, ti you had on that dress the first time I ever saw you? and then, as I perhaps did not 1001; particularly responsive, added: tt Now, tell me that I haveift been devoted from the beginning. ' 5! While his wife talked with the saleswoman, the maxfs eyes followed with unconcealed admiration the figure of the cloak model, who paced slowly back and forth, showing off the garment to the best advantage. The model carried herself proudly, and the droop of her eyelids and mouth gave a half contemptuous expression to her face. Suddenly she looked up and met the mants compelling gaze, squarely, boldly. His eyes narrowed, then he wheeled quickly around. tt Pardonme, my dear, he replied, tt I didntt under- stand what you saidf'v 4 He sat staring at the figured wall paper. A look of blank despair overshadowed his face, while his ruflied hair told of external efforts to solve a hard mental problem. Nerv- ously he watched the noisy little clock as it ticked around to 4215742307445; then with a cry of despair he threw down his pen. tt Why, 0, why did I take another theme course? he groaned aloud; and the little clock ticked merrily on. 313 NASHVIllE CHATTANOOGA ATLANTA JACKSO NVI LLE Daily Pullman Buffet-Sleeping Car every evening from Chicago to Nash- c ville. But one change, and that en route, to through Sleeping Car to Chatta- :: g nooga, Atlanta and Jacksonville. Dining Car serving supper out of Chicago. 1 . CITY TICKET OFFICE, 99 ADAMS ST. Phone Gen. 2705-; . ,,,, lm...... , x , - Chicago 8 Eastern Illinois Railroad THE SHORTEST AND MOST DIRECT LINE TO THE SOUTH SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHWEST Double Daily Train Service from Chicago ' ELEGANT DAY COACHES LATEST PULLMAN CARS SUPERB DINING CARS For full information apply to Chicago City Ticket OHice I 3 I AdamSILSt. Chicago Telepmrze Central 555 YYYVY arocv medical $0 ch EVENING CLINICS AND BEDSIDE WORK. PATIENTS IN ABUNDANCE. VVWWY 1 f 115 w outYs Class in Laboratory Physiology. One Section Sophomore Class. x' YYYYY EVENING SCIENTIFIC WORK. VISIT THE LABORA- TORIES. YYYYY BUT ONE COLLEGE Ulla Northwestern Medicah BETTER EQUIPPED IN CITY OF CHICAGO. SEN D FOR ILLUSTRATED ANNOUNCEMENT. Huatomv, Physiology and zbemmrv in number of hours and quality 01 teaching not excelled In any college In abicago. 167, 169, 171 SOUTH CLARK STREET FHAchs DICKINSON, M. D., PRES. C HICAGO l City Ticket Office 95 Adams St., Chicago . CHICAGO MILWAUKEE 8: ST. PAUL RAILWAY Electric Lighted Trains between Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Minneapolis. Through Parlor Cars on day trains between Chi- cago, St. Paul and Minneapolis. Electric Lighted Trains between Chicago and Des Moines and Omaha and Sioux City. Less than two hours between Chicago and Milwaukee; eight fast trains each way daily, With Parlor Car Service. Solid Trains between Chicago and principal points in Northern Wisconsin and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Through Trains With Sltzeping Cars and Coaches, between Chicagp and points In Iowa, . Minnesota, Southern and Central Dakota. The finest Dining Cars in the world. The best Sleeping Cars. Electric Reading Lamps in berths. The best and latest type of Com- partment Cars, free Reclining Chair Cars and Bquet Library Smoking Cars. 6,600 miles of road in Illinois, Wisconsin, Upper Peninsula of Michigan, Iowa, ancsota, Missouri, South Dakota and North Dakota. Ticket Agents everywhere sell tickets over the Chicago, ' Milwaukee 81 St. Paul Railway. Union Passenger Station, Chicago Madison, Adams and Canal Sts. J, H. HILAND. Traffic Manager F. A. MILLER, Gen'l Pass Agent CHICAGO


Suggestions in the University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) collection:

University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1898 Edition, Page 1

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1899 Edition, Page 1

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1900 Edition, Page 1

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1902 Edition, Page 1

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1903 Edition, Page 1

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University of Chicago - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1904 Edition, Page 1

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