University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA)

 - Class of 1905

Page 1 of 401

 

University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1905 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1905 Edition, University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collectionPage 7, 1905 Edition, University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1905 Edition, University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collectionPage 11, 1905 Edition, University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1905 Edition, University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collectionPage 15, 1905 Edition, University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1905 Edition, University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collectionPage 9, 1905 Edition, University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1905 Edition, University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collectionPage 13, 1905 Edition, University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1905 Edition, University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collectionPage 17, 1905 Edition, University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 401 of the 1905 volume:

1'i1rhiratiu11 with siurrrr affrrtiuu thr 0112155 nf Niurtrrn ifinr hrhirutr this nnlumr In 13r1umgl11zu1iu'5 Inga! mm uf Zfiftg-Gum Zlusfph Gvnrgr iKn5r11gartrn 'WL C 5132 math Ninvirrn Eunhrvh muh 5HiuP x Www N10 6 ffxg' S Y D' ???i,w l Mfg ,125 Q 'T - ff 1' -A Q 2 '.1 fM 'f ki iii V --- 1-nj: lvpk -J ga ,, W L H , if ' J ,snow WW The College-j Hxriurrziig nf Iirnnzgluania lghilahrlphia CHARLES ELLIS GOODIN Editor-in-Chief A. WARREN WAY Nlanager .. I - - we 2 ,. - I xwiyliqbi Myyiff 2HmffF7'i i'E'?'5 9 5'iQ?2'..'QFfh:-.-nllllllllll W' 5 .,,,,, , ..... .. .,L, . . , Wgfpya-. Xg A -I :iii , l 5' ,Q A X ING l ' lil? GREET , E L. 7: 4 S i W '1 fb'i?.6:2isi , . ,. ,. ray, t ia., pt X e-11-f. Ss,fsg,fff-E,sv.1Qf-- --1,f'- - ' -if-.-er'-Y.- 9 Q -of i? fi1fif-fee? A Record 1 That which preserves the memory or remembrance of anything. INCE our dictionaries prescribe this definition for the volume we here place before you, it has been our intention to embody in our Record those incidents in the history of Nineteen Five which will recall the happy years we spent at Pennsylvania. The members of the Class of Nineteen Five have experienced several if1U0vations during their undergraduate life at the University: innovations Which have become necessary on account of the marvelous growth of Penn- sylvania, but innovations which have tended to deaden our historic Class spirit. At the end of our Freshman year the elective system cast the mem- bers of the Class to the four winds, and the varied array of courses forced disintegration upon us, and separated our men in a manner heretofore unex- perienced by former classes. At the end of the Junior year the VVharton School was transferred from College Hall to Logan Hall, and our Body Loyal was split again. In the face of these serious obstacles, Nineteen Five has endeavored to keep alive that Class spirit which has drawn the under- graduates together in a common purpose. The success which the Class has attained is set forth in these pages. We hope that we have not been boastful in recalling those days agone, as it was not our intention. We have jealously guarded our Class honor, and mayhap our zeal in placing Nineteen Five in the van of loyal Pennsylvanians appears arrogant. If so, pardon us. We were over-zealous. Our history is here set forth with the idea of showing future classes how we of the past have fostered that Pennsylvania spirit which has accomplished so much in the past decade. We of Nineteen Five have been thrice blessed in the enjoyment of four such prosperous years at Pennsylvania, and if we have done anything to repay the great debt we owe our Alma Mater, we will feel that our efforts have not been in vain. ' To those who may criticise this unpretentious volume, and critics there will be, We would say that our aims have been high and our efforts strenu- ousg the results we leave to your kind consideration. THE COMMITTEE. X- i E 4' Y- -7 ' I' -A - ' 4 2 I, I ' KBXXTR 4' I. 1 P 932 I If PENNSYLVANIP 5? I - - A 'Jn-L, ' I MI pam? W MI , WN X - Ly L? 'fl 4!,'I ,Q X 'rl ' .- 1, N 7 , A ad ' l , - . , I Q Q7 ft: ' 0 ' , Y Y , A: gg O W I 1' . g 'IE ' 'I I W gf- 3:9 -GT G H L 'ff I -- ' ' 9 9 2,15 '-0 ff' Ei' QQ I II T 5 X 'li ,wjksvl Ur f ,, 1 Ig ' 5' 1 fs I L ' 5 5 5 5 I G '- H vw A . I IM' 'II I .I 3305133 of QUIYDFS I 'IH U I' 'III - W-f'II ' I I1 Jcmx NII'I'cIIIaI.I. BAKER IJ , TS ' Q RAKSIHIRII MIK BEACH X I' JAREII SIIERRI' Buc:ARIII's ,. 5 'N X ' RIILLIX CAN'I'XYEl,I. BIIRTLR 2 I' ' JIIHK .'xR'l'l'IL'R BRLIWN 'ts' ' RI JIISEIIII CARSON I M H ' ' , 'I ROBERT CASIVIILI. CRQIVELL ' I I L II I-I.-xxs AUGUST GEFIRKE ,VI Ill ' FRANK AI.-XCKXIGHT GRAY .ff I I L FRANK XVILSIIN HIIWARD I ixjyy Q I ' KERXX'IX XVEIIILIAK KINARII I ' Il 'Q I S'rAxI.IeI' NIAKEPEACE ., ' Il CHARLES FOLK RAIQENOLD QI ' ,W IW, JosIAH RICHARDS EI ' ' Q A.LEX.-XNDER BURNS ROE PERCY VAN! DX'KE SHELLY ' ., HARRISON BAXTER TRAXER - ' , CHARLES ELLIS boomx Editor-in-Chief ,R 'N A VVARREx WVAY Manager .r 495 bv I P . 165 2 9 'L ' 'Xu f'4 iI- if A A , 4 L- ' ' R1 iffy' - 1 'lat I1 ' F-fag 1 'f,'5f?I'-'1P:'I'1'- -'-11' JY-'.':J5:'5---:if Q ' 1 JI , f ' . ' 5 1 - ' ' 1 I I, 5434 ,fj X NWZIIKV R 4, 5-Q ng., XJ? J-45 UD w i as S- ld QU tt? pP J N semi-nens os ,tg 5 if Algal? ff r Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. April April April May May June June June Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Nov. Dec. Dec. Tuesday. Wednesd Monday. Monday. ay. Wednesday. Thursday. Monday. Tuesday. Monday. Monday. Wednesd ay. Thursday. Thursday. Friday. Friday. Friday. Friday. Monday. Monday. Tuesday. Tuesday. Tuesday. Friday. Wednesd Monday. Friday. ay. Christmas Recess ends: Department of Law, 9 A. M. Christmas Recess ends: College, and Departments of Medicine, Dentistry and Veterinary Medicine, 9 A. M. Mid-year Examinations: College, 9 A. M. Second Term begins: College, 9 A. M. University Day: Recess, all Departments. Easter Recess begins: all Departments, 6 P. M. Easter Recess ends: College, and Departments of Medicine, Den- tistry and Veterinary Medicine, 9 A. M. Easter Recess ends: Department of Law, 9 A. M. Last day for receipt of Theses, Prize Essays, and Reports: College, and Department of Medicine. Final Examinations: College, and Department of Law, 9 A. M. Commencement, ii A, M. Registration of Candidates for Admission: College, and Department of Medicine, 9 A. M. to II A. M. Entrance Examinations: College, and Departments of Law, Medi- cine and Veterinary Medicine, ir A. M. Qummet Recess Re-examination of Conditioned Students: College, 9 A. M. Competitive Examination for Dental Scholarships, ir A. M. Registration of Candidates for Admission: College, and Department of Medicine, 9 A, M. to II A. M Entrance Examinations: College, and Departments of Law and Medicine, II A. M. Competitive Examination for Medical Scholarships, ro A. M. Re-examinations, and Examinations for Admission to Advanced Standing: Department of Medicine, 2 P. M. Entrance Examinations: Department of Veterinary Medicine, ioA. M. Entrance Examinations: Department of Dentistry, 9 A. M. Re-examination of Conditioned Students, and 'Examinations for Admission to Advanced Standing: Department of Dentistrv, io A. M. Session begins: College, and Department of Philosophy, ro A. M.: Department of Law, II A. M.: Departments of Medicine, Dentistry and Veterinary Medicine, I2 M. Thanksgiving Recess begins: all Departments, 6 P. M. Thanksgiving Recess ends: all Departments, 9 A. M. Christmas Recess begins: all Departments, 6 P, M. 4 SQLJHIRI IB RII.'QfJl8 ELI-ICTFD 1870 1873 1875 1876 1880 1881 1886 1887 1887 1889 1891 1894 1896 1896 1896 1898 1901 1903 1903 1903 1905 1905 Irustees 'THE CEOYERNOR OF PENNSYLVANIA,lhvndenrrxnyhm JOHN VALGHAN KIERRWR RJCHARD XVOOD SILAS YVEIR RJVVQHELL, BIlJ..IJ,l7- KEJMLJ CHARLES C5515 PLARRm0N,I.LlJ, YVHARTON BARKER SAMUEL IMCRSON HON. SAXHHl,XVFHTAKER PENNYPAQRER, Llhll RHI REV.CDZINVHAJANIXVLHTARER.IUJDN LL.Il JOHN BARNARD GEST JOSEPH SNHTH PiARR1S Sail VVALTER.C3EORGE SNUTH W1LL1AM VVEST FR.-XZIER BJORRB JAMES LEu1S 1113 JOSEPH CEEORGE ROSENGARTEN RANDAL RJORGAN SAMUEL FREDERKIIJOUSTON JOSEPH LEVERING JONES ROBERT GRIER LE CONTE, M.D. CHARLES STUARI'YVOOD PACKARD RBHUA BERTRAM LANHNCOTT VVHARTON SNKLER ARTHUR LATHAM CHURCH 5 PROVOST C. C. HARRISON THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD '52 QE. tu '05 CEE. Do you think what fifty years may do for you, for the College and for the University? I graduated in 1852, with twenty others, and Fifteen for one cause or other had left College without graduating. The Faculty counted about ten-in those days Provost and Vice-Provost were part of the teaching force, and with Provost Ludlow and Vice-Provost Vethake, there were Henry Reed teaching English Literature and History, George Allen teaching Greek and Latin,with first, Arthur and later Francislackson assisting, Frazer teaching Chemistry and Natural Philosophy, and asuccession of German and French teachers, and occasional lectures in various voluntary courses. It was a case of 11011 111111111 ,ml IIlIl!fIlllI 'OI1C had few subjects, and few teachers, but they were very thorough and mostly very good. The only recognized College Societies were Philo and Zelo, and I think the Phi Kappa Sigma was the first, and for a long time the only secret society, much antagonized by the Faculty, and frowned down by the old Literary and De- bating Societies. Block programmes on Commencement Day and other rare College functions were the only outlet for students' fun, and pretty rough and riotous it was. Commencement was exclusively a College celebration, for Nledical and Law had theirs apart-and occasional Alumni Dinners were held in November quite outside of the College. We were housed, some two hundred students, in the North Building on Ninth Street near Market, and under the same roof were the Law School, the Literary Societies and the Library, and that was all easily accommodated in one room in which Faculty K-leetings were held, and all we ever saw of the Library was when we were summoned before the Faculty for all sorts of offences. In the South Building was the Department of Medicine, strong in numbers and in its Faculty, and we were occasional listeners to Wood or Horner or Leidy or Rogers or some other famous teacher, and now and then we were smuggled into the dissecting room or the Wistar Anatomical Nluseum. In the small Campus between, there were occasional class rows or even struggles with Nledical men, and once or twice with bold High School men from their Building on Juniper Street near lvlarket, and when we were very bold, we met them ftheir numbers were far greater than oursl in H Centre Square I Life for the students was uneventful and torpid, and so was College life everywhere then. There is a story that one of the Trustees said fin earlier days than mine even? to Provost Clater Bishopl DeLancey, H Pm told the College is looking upfl U Then,'l answered the Provost, Hit must be on its back. So the College, even in the eyes of Trustee and Provost crept on, until the awakening under Provost Stilleg the removal to West Philadelphia, the new life under Provost Pepper, and the splendid development of College and University and all its departments under Provost Harrison and Vice-Provost Smith. And may Nineteen Five be one of their many great graduating classes. C'7'EJ'Cllf,f07'EH1f er viwat Nineteen Five. if fV z - JUNIORES PRIORES: THE SENIOR CLASS 3 CEZIRSS Qbffirnrs l'1'u:iffs:1l HARVEY BIRCI-l.-XRD 'IQAYLOR fire-l'1'r:irle11l SAx1L'l2L. BR.-xv WH12'1's'rONE Sufrrlary NIAGRl.'l.JER CRAIG!-IEAD Treasllrcr JOHN AUGUs'1'us BOERS Hixlorian FRANK NIACKNIGHT GRAY Execulive Cammillee JARED SPERRY BOGARDUS JOHN ARTHUR BROWN ROBERT CASWELL CROWELI. FREDERICK VVARREN NIARSHALI. THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD CARMALT WILLIS ADAMS, Q Il A HEnglislz ' ' Hdddie HBrummeI I 5342 Wayne Ave., Germantown, Pa. Wharton Born October 16, 1822, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year: Friends' Central School. Phi Kappa Beta ,lunior'Sm1iety: Friends' Central Cluh 111 fel 133 i-D. Secretary and Treasurer tel. Chairman Picture Committee 121: junior Ball Committee: Class Secretary 131: Ivy Hall Committee 143: Senior Prom Conirnittee. Gun Team 111 1.9, Secretary and Treasurer 421, Cardin 133, Second Assistant Business Manager Red and Blue 121, FirslAsSistantll1 iness Manager 131: Associate Editor and Editor of l'ennsylvanian 12p. Assistant Business Manager13l: Business Manager of l ennsylvnnian and 'Treasurer ol 'l'ennsylraninn Printing Co.14J: Chorus of Old King Cole 11J: President ol' Intercollegiate Shooting Association 133. CHARLES HAHN ALBRECHT 1526 N. Sixth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born February 22, 1885, at Philadelphia. Entered Junior Year: Central High School. Zelosophic Society 14.3 3 Deutscher Verein 141. Member of Zelo Team against Barnard g Member of Zelo Team vs. Swarthmore. CHARLES HOWARD ANGSTADT H The Little Dutchman Phoenixville, Pa. Civil Engineering Born April 19, 1883, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year, Phoenixville High School. Civil Engineering Society cu 121 cn mg Houston Club cu ei 135 143. JAMES HAROLD AUSTIN, .1 V, fb li ll' Lansdowne, Pa. Arts, First Year Nledicine Born September 22, 1883, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Yearg Episcopal Academy. Philomathean Society 111. ' IO THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD LEWIS PENN BAILEY, A 7' 53, HBH! Philadelphia, Pa. Mechanical Engineering Born October 23, 1882, at Chester, Pa. Entered junior Year: Central Manual Training School. Houston Club Q1lQ2lQ3ll.l,lg Athletic Association Qxl Qzl Q3l Q+l: Engineers' Society Q3lQ4.l, President Q4l. Cane Committee. JOSEPH BOYD BAKER, 3d, 'I' I' 116 N. Thirty-fourtl1 Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Civil Engineering Born December zo, 1882, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year. Class Baseball Team Q1lQ2lQ3lg Class Football Team Q3l. JOHN lVIITCHELL BAKER, W I lt, Ufackn Portland, Oregon Arts Born February 9, 1884, at Media, Pa. Entered Freshman Yearg Media High School. Custodian of Bowl Q3lQ4.flg Ball Committee Q3lg Record Committee, Senior Reception Committee, Banquet Committee Q4lg Class Day Committee Q4J. Class Football Team Q1lQ3lg Class Track Team QU: Class Crew Q3l. Associate Editor Penn- ,tylfuanian Q3 l, Editor Q31 QQ. LIND NIASON BAKER, 0 lfli' icMa:e HL. XVI. f b Philadelphia, Pa. Civil Engineering Born August 26, 1882, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year, William Penn Charter School. Civil Engineering Society Qrl Qzl Qgl Q4.l, President Q4lg Houston Club Q15 Q25 Qgl Q4jg Athletic Association Q11 Q21 Q31 Q4jg Penn Chaner Club Qrl Q21 Qgj Vice-President of Junior Classg Class Yell Committee Qxjg Chairman Mock Program Committee Qgjg Pomp Memorial Committee Qgj. II THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD CLAUDE WEBSTER BANKES, H Doc ' Middleport, Pa. , Arts Born July II, 1885, at Middleport, Pa. Entered Junior Year, Keystone State Normal, Kutztown. CHARLES EDWIN BARTLETT H Bart H Dadl' H Ed 2018 Spring Garden Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Wharton Born February I7, 1883, at Philadelphia. - , Entered Freshman Year, Friends' Select School, Class Presenter, Toastmaster Senior Banquet: Santa Claus Wharton School Christmas Tree Committee Q.tl. Class Football Team Q11 Q35 Q4,lg Class Cricket Team Qzl. FREDERICK BAY 235 E. Dauphin Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Civil Engineering Born January 10, 1882, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year, Central High School. Civil Engi- neering Society Q1lQ2l Q31 Q4lg Houston Club Qi J Qzl Q35 Q4.l. Class Football Team Q11 Qgl. RANSFORD MIX BEACH, 'lf' l', HRuf HRastz1s Oak Lane, Pa. Arts Born May 11, 1883, at Troy, N. Y. Entered Freshman Year. Houston Club Qrlg Atlileticsfksso- ciation Qrlg Mask and Wig Club Q35 Q4.jg Cercle Francais Qglg Dandelion Club Qzlg Chairman Debate Committee Qrlg Class Pin Committee Qrl. Junior Banquet Committee: Senior Prom Committeeg Class RECORD Committee, Sopho- more Picture Committeeg Senior Class Day Committee. Chorus, Mask and Wig, Alice in Another Land Q3lg Chorus, Mask and Wig, Mr. Hamlet of Denmark Q.i.lg Business Manager Cercle FrangaisQ4lg Sophomore Cremation Trial, Cast Preliminary Mask and Wig Show QQ. I2 JHE NINEFEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD ARTHUR GUSTAVE BEIN, l'F!o.vsy New Haven, Conn. Archifecfufg Born September 25, 1884, at Newark, N. J. Entered .lunior Year, Booth Preparatory School. Architec- tural Soclety l3ll.q.l: Secretary of Connecticut Club lgl MJ. ALFRED BERGHAUSEN 34.27EvansPlace,Clifton,O. Chemicallfngineering Born December 31, 1882, at Cincinnati, Ohio. Entered Freshman Year, YValnut Hills High School: Univ. of Cincinnati. Member of Ohio Club lgl, President LQ, Member of Ewing Chemical Club Qgjlyl. Class Basket- ball Team lzil. BENJAMIN NEWCGMER BIRD H Birdie H Professor 'l 408 E. Fourth Street, Chester, Pa. Arts Born June 22, 1883, at Chester, Pa. Entered Freshman Year, Chester High School. Houston Club: Chester High School Club l2l. George Allen Me- morial Prize in Greek, Demosthenes' De.Corona. Chris- tian Association. WILLIANI GIBSON BIRD 408 E. Fourth Street, Chester, Pa. Electrical Englneermg Born May 11, 1882, at Chester, Pa. Entered Freshman Year: Chester High School. The Engineers' Club lzl lgl: Houston Club C1lCzlC3X4l. Class Track Team S1Jl2ll3ll4lZ Class Track Squad f1llzll3ll4l: Class Basket-ballTeamCzll3 00- Novice Games, second place in quarter mile run, Freshman-Sophomore Meet, won the quarter mile run and zzo-yard dash, Freshman-Penn Charter Meer, second placein quarter mile, and third in zzoq Sophomore-Freshman Meet, won quarter-mile and second in 210-yard dash: Fall Ga-mes for University Championship, won third place in quarter mile run. I3 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD WILTQN WALLACE BLANCKEZ a lf A' Wm Philadelphia, Pa. A115 Born September 16, 1884, at Philadelphia. - Entered Freshman Year, Central High School. Zelosophic Society irlfzltgl Qi, Treasurer izl, Secretary C315 Deutscher Vercin tg? C411 Fencers' Club 532. Entrance Prize in Greek: Freshman Prize in Grcckg Sophomore Sight Reading Prize in Greckg Sophomore Sight Reading Prize in Latin: Junior Prize for Examination in Latin of thc Empire: Honorable Mention Latin Entrance Prize: Sophomore and Senior Honors. Cast of Dr. Wesnc ill: Cast of i'Ein Teller Einfall l4J, Member of Zclosophic Team that Debatcd against Barnard of Columbia l4l. STEHMAN ATLEE BQCKIUS, Bock Aft - 3844 Brown Street, Philadelphia, Pa. llflechanical Engineering Born January 27, 1884, at Columbia, Lancaster Co., Pa. Entered Freshman Yearg Columbia High School. Engineers' Club fgj fail. Mask and Wig Chorus, Robinson Crusoe , Alice in Another Land. HAROLD BOERICKE, H Buck 6386 Drexel Road, Philadelphia Pa. Civil Engineering Born February 19, 1884, at Philadelphia. Entered Sophomore Yearg Friends' Central School. JOHN AUGUSTUS BOERS HGUJH HGus.rie HBeer.r Hfabn 1717 N. Fifty-second Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Nlechanical Engineering Born November 8, 1901, at Wilmington, Del. Entered Freshman Year: Central Manual Training School. Mechanical Engineers' Club Qgjlajg Houston Club L2,li3J -C4.jg College Boat Club iLife Memberl. Treasurer of Sen- ior Classg Senior Banquet Committee. Class Crew Q15 lzjg Stroke of Junior Varsity Crew, Substitute on Varsity Crew C355 Rowed No. 3 in Varsity Crew fgl. H Ul- THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD JARED SPERRY BOGARDUS, J l' uB0g H.Il'7'l'j'H hflt. Vernon, O. Science Born January zo, 1883. at Mt. Vernon. Ohio. Entered Freshman Year: Mt. Vernon High School. Phi Kappa Beta Junior Society. Bowl Fight Committee ill: Class Executive Committee 113 1413 junior Ball Committee: Class RECORD Committee: Senior ,Banquet Committee: Senior Prom Committee. Varsity Freshman lrtltllllilll Team: No. 3 Varsity Freshman Crewi Class Football Team 111 121 131 l-All No. 7 Class Crew 131g No, 5 Junior Varsity Crew 111: Substitute Varsity Crew 1113 No. q American Henley Eight 12.11 No. 7 College Crew lil. Captain Class Crew lil. Marshall at Bowl Fight 131: Engineers' Dance Committee 1-tl. CORNELIUS VAN REYPEN BOGERT Bogota, N. J. Architecture Born February 17, IS79, at Bogota, N. J. Entered .lunior Year: Hackensack High School. Architec- tural Society 141, ROLLIN CANTWVELL BORTLE, Q .J 1-I HRoz1 ' Bart V 4835 VValton Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born ,lanttary 11. 1882. at Cnlnml-us. Ohio. Entered Freshman Year: llulialo Central l-ligh Srhool: Pllilatlelplaia Central High Schvul. ll--ustou Clul' in 421 131 141: Mask anti Wig Club tn 125 131 1-IJ. Board of ticivenirrierit 121 t3l1-ti: l'hilrunathcan Society Ili: Athletic Association 111 1:1 131 1.11: Reception Cr'-rnmittee of Relay Races 121: .lunto ,lournalistic Society 121: Danrlelion Society 121. Sophomore Banquet Committee and 'Voastmasterg Soplioitmre Cremation Committee anrl Cremation Exercises: President ol' Class 131: Stutlent Discipline Committee 131141: Responder! to Toast The Class at .Innior Banquet: junior Hall Committee: Editor ot'-lunior Mock Program: Class REt'IOItD Committee: Senior Reception Crunrnittee: Ivy liall Committee: Senior Prom Committee: Responder! to Toast The University at Senior Banquet: Chairman Class Memorial Committee: Marshall at Howl Fight 141. Valeflictnrian: liotvl Man. Freshman Delrating'1'eant. Mask and Wig Prelims, Rose in My Lnrtl in Livery , Horace Scope and Louis Xl in Old King Cole tt1: hlrs. justin I,at'enrlar antl l.a Du Barry in Sir Robinson Crusoe 1 took part in Mask and Wig Football Smoker 121: Alice lien Bolt and Yo-San in Alice in Another Land 131: Anna Sthetic in Mr. Hamlet of Denmark 1441. Associate lftlitnrtiif Pennsylvanian 121. Erlitor121131: Editor. Editor-in-Chiel' of Rerl and Blue 131, Managing Editor 1-tl: Responclecl to Toast The Associate l2tlitors at l'ennsyli'anian Banqnet1z-1: Song Leader 131: Airle at University Day Exercises 131: Pallvbearer at l'omp's Funeral: judge at Fall Regatta 131: Committee on Mask 'anul NVig Inter-acatlernic Smoker 1-ti. LESTER COMLY BOSLER, Q A' 'l . 'iBozl' Ogontz, Pa. liflechanical Engineering Born April 29, 1874, at Ogontz, Pa. Entered Freshman Yearg Abington Friends' School. Houston Club 111 121 131 1413 Engineering Society 111 121 131 141. Varsity Golf Team 1315 Sub. Varsity GolfTeam 111 121. I5 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD JAMES SLINGLUFF BOYD, If 0 ll 3 Jim Ufimmyn uCap l 29 E. Main Street, Norristown, Pa. Wharton l Born july 11, 1883, at 29 E. Main Street, Norristown, Pa. Entered Freshman Year: Norristown High School. Sphinx Senior S-ociety: Houston Club Cxl tal f3l till. Senior Banquet Committee. Varsity Track 'l eam fhll t2l t3J K-ll. Captain 1.9. Year '01, 'o2, Shot Put Championship Atlantic Association! at Sportsman's Show: Fall Championship, First Shot, Second High jump: opio- more-Freshman Games, First High jump, First Shot: Spring Handicaps. First Shot: Spring Trials, First High jump. First Shot, Third 1oo yards: Columbia Meet, First High jump, Third Shot: Relay Races, Third Discus: Comell Meet, Third High jump, Third Shot. Year '02, '03, Fall lrlandicaps, First High jump, leirst Shot: A Columbia Indoor lX'Ieet,'I'hirtlShot: Georgetown lndoorMeet,SltivntlSll0t:Igf1Jlfl1jfl!1y'I Indoor Meet, Thirrl High jump: Varsity Indoor Games, First S rot, First - igi ump: So homore-Freshman, First High-lump, First Shot,Thirrl Broad jump:Spring Handie P caps, First Shot, Third High jump: Inter-department Championships, First Broad jump, First Shot, Third High jump: Columbia Meet, Second Shirt: Ccirgieg Nlileet. Second Shot, Third Hifh jump. Year '07, '04, Cohuu mia Indoor L' cet. ' mir S ot: Second Regiment lndgor Meet, First Shui: Varsity Indoor Series, First Shut: Spring Handicaps, First Shot: Princeton Hanclicaps, First Shot: Inter-department Games. First Shot: Relay Races.Third Shot, Fourth Discus: Columbia Meet. First Shot: Cornell Meet, First Shot: lntercollegiates, Second Shot: Fall lnter-class Games, '94, First Shot: BostonfA. A. Games. February rr, '05, Second Shot: University Record for 16-lh. Shot Put, 44 t., 1 in. VINCENT BEAN BRECHT, .4 .Y I' Vince Ashbourne, Pa. Arts Born November 24, 1874, at Worcester, Montg. Co., Pa. Entered Senior Year: North East Manual Training School. Athletic Association : English Club. Contributor to Penn- syIvania's Verse. RQBERT FERNANDO BRTNER, HLeg.v 1917 Girard Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. ' llflechanical Engineering Born December 22, 1883, at New York City. Entered Freshman Year: C. C. N. Y. Houston Club til tal t3l Lil: Engineers' Club tgl tal. Varsity Lacrosse Team Crl tal Cgl Ctrl. Representative of Fitler House itil . JOHN ARTHUR BROWN, 'lf' l' H .duzlecumborious H 128 W. Upsal St., Germantown, Pa. Wharton Born July 23, 1884, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year: Germantown Academy. Gargoyle Society Qzlg Sphinx Senior Society. President Freshman Year: Dance Committee Cali Executive Committee Lzltgl Q4lg Senior Prom Committee: Ivy Ball Committee: Disci- , pline Committee Ctrl: Class RECORD Committee: Hall Rush Ofiicial Crtlg Spoon Man. Class Baseball Team trl Cal tglg Class Football Team tal f3lf4l. Bowl Guard tal: Bowl Marshall fgl. 16 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD LOUIS SCHUMANN BRUNER, W .I H H Pllhfn H 1 fr'i11l ' I72I N. 18th St., Phila., Pa. Civil Engineering Born December 26, 1883, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Yearg Central High School. Civil Engineering Society l1H2lt3Jl.tlg Mandolin Club C35 l4.jg Banjo Club 14.1. Ball Committee f3lg Banquet Committee l4.lgClass Day Committee l+l. Coxswainjunior Varsity Crew l213Coxswain junior Class Crew Czl. Editor Pezzmylfuaniarz lzl lglg Mask and VVig Chorus lily Engineers' Dance Committee lil lzl l3l, Chairman fttl. ROBERT HENRY BRUNKER, .I TJ 'lBr1n1k Kid 'lBol1 109 W. Penn Street,Gern'1antown, Phila., Pa. Arts Born November 4, 1884, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year: Germantown Friends' Select School. Left Class end of Sophomore Year lillnessj. Houston Club trltzlg Athletic Association lrllzlq Y. M. C. A. lil. Constitution and Executive Committee fr l: Sophomore Dance Committee. Class Football Team frlg Varsity Gym- nastic Team til. - JOSEPH SAMUEL CARLITZ 2036 hflanton Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Chemistry Born November I2. 1881, at Russia. Entered Freshman Yearg North East Manual Training School. University Orchestrat3lg Ewing Chemical Club Qrj Q25 Q31 LQ. JOSEPH CARSON, J fl , Hfoey' IO33 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born July z, ISS3, at Germantown. Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year: The Episcopal Academy, Entered from The Hill School. Philomathean Society lI,c2lQ Junto Club, Executive Committee lzlg Mask and Wig Club: The Dandelion Club: Houston Club. Class Cane Com- mittee Cglz Class RECORD Committee MJ: Senior Entertainment Committee: Chairman of Ivy Ball Committeef4.J, Substitute Varsity Golf Teamfglg Var- sity Golf Team ittl. President and Director of Pennrylunnian Printing Co.. , Incorporated Cstl. Pennsylwuian Associate Editor fri. Editor lzl, Assistant ' Managing Editor, Managing Editor lil. Editor-in-Chief f4J. Chorus of Old l King Cole lil: Undergraduate Director of the Athletic Association C4Jq l Sphinx Senior Society: Member Allied Sports Committee of Athletic Associa- I tion 447: Member of Committee to Tender a Banquet to Football Team of 'o4. 17 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD 1 ev .'sK:,,.,,A,g3g-351 8 . .2 .1 ' .' :tf:.... ,. . - . 11 5- ' . iifssft -Q .V -W -1 - 1 11.2-IR: . '4 '2 'FQ 2291 ' -' ' . -1. 1 . :ir 3i:3v,s1f.g.2f.x1, . ,.'-Q-33551:-fl? x J 11. . ,-ws:-.:e2fQ:Q1 -, -Q 1 -' l 5 ' 2' 'il-::'-i 7 .5 -8.5 s:gg11,.4, , 1 3 5. if ' Q fi ' 1 vc wissf' w gi Wy' 0 K A X 4 if. ,v,,wI f ol 'L ww? Qs aft? ti, , X X R4 ,gr Q nv-cf X N 3 ig: - YQ 45 ,Ag . 5935 -wi J. we M, 1 ,fat V Gift r M QQ X ' vu Q 4 ' n ' if , - fir. . 'ga Q 1 ' 'r we 'F yew 'El Q I X I lx bb Rh. N l ..t,:. 2-222 1- emails. 3151229 ' .. . - sz-:are-1. 1-g 1a,,:3g.vu::' -2 -e-f--::,, .. fx, V , -2,6 , .gzggrsr 4:.L9:gri -'54-13: 5' .lgiffj . 2-fi?-S ' 4124-172 f:,Q:'?E:X' .-15:25 A i Q 4 S1:f1:.:j-.fg:T.E 5' . 31311 .3-515 -2 i 1 , ::'Qge-2-.:.5f':gs1f2F915 .gf 5.359-f,f.Qf.-.1 -1 :212if:,Q'ff5i5?f . :if ' . if? if 22, . 4 'N' 1 i' I.: 'ffii5:5If:3i' .i .if ' i D' .14 l. '-3':f1i5f5ff ' ' X, f-'ff1ii:f'1:?'3 - ' 1- i?'5.:i::'5:E1 if'.'f:1E2efi5?55si' ' :EfE?2sf21E4P2E?l I 1 ':51'E'1-45:E:E5:5S5fE5E?21 1 ,' N 3- Y ' E:2'Qi'E5I9255152fFs:13ie:i552sigfl., 2 1 JOHN HUGH MCQUILLEN CARTER, Z 'F' U Ameriran People 3' 6337 Drexel Road, Overbrook, Pa. Wharton Born February 29, 1884, at New York City. Entered Freshman Yearg College of the City of New' Yorkg Prepared by Tutor. Sphinx Senior Societyg Phi Kappa.Beta Junior Society. Chairman Senior Reception Committeeg Banquet Committee Lrlg Chairman Class Day Committee Q4jg Senior Prom Committee. Assistant Manager o'fV Track Team 135, Manager Q4jg Editor of Perznrylfuanian l3lC4,J. Houston Clubg Member of Executive Board of I. C. A. A. A. A. falg Treasurer of I. C. C. A. A. lil. EDWIN DICKINSON CASSEL Bill Pop 1327 lVIelon Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Civil Engineering Born December 28, 1878, at Philadelphia. Entered Sophomore Yearg North East Manual Training School. ROBERT ARNOLD CHACE, Henry Chicago, Ill. Arts Born November ro, 1882, at Chicago, Ill. Entered Freshman Yearg Chicago High School. Houston Club 113 Lal tgl Lily Chess and Checker Club L31 C455 Zelo- sophic Society til Qzl. FREDERIC ANTHONY CHILD, Chaucer 318 S. Fortieth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born October 24, 1881, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Yearg Central High School. University Ofchesffa i1lf2ll3l, Malliiger Qzlg Philomathean Society f2lg3lQ4.l, Treasurer fgl, Moderator 145. Second Prize junior Oratorical Contestg Second Prize Essay Contest of Philomathean Society 18 THE NINETEEN HUNDEED AND izfwii RECORD ARTHUR VVELLESLEY COQNIBS, H .follofw 429 S. Fortieth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Civil Engineering Born Septemher 3, 1882, at Philatlelphia. Enteretl Freshman Year, Central I-Iigh School. Civil Engi- neering Society. Class Football Team l+l. MAGRUDER CRAIGHEAD, J fb, Craigie 21 IO Deloancey Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Mechanical Engineering Born March 4, 1885, at Carlisle, Pa. Enteretl Freslirnan Year, The Blight School. Mask and Whg Club itllz I l3ll.Q.l, Cercle Francais 1.4.1, Blight School Club, Secretary-Treasurer l3l, Phi Kappa Beta junior Soci- ety, Secretary of Class l4l, Ivy Ball Committee, Senior Reception Committee, Class Banquet Committee lal, Ball Committee lgl, Senior Prom Committee, Chorus of Old King Cole antl Sir Robinson Crusoe l rl 121. FRANK ELMER CRAVEN, ii Doc 2019 Columbia Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Electrical Engineering Born April 15, 1884, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year, Central Manual Training School. Houston Club, Engineering Society. ROBERT CASWELL CROWELL, li I-I l1', Bab Worcester, lvlass. Wharton Born January t, 1883, at Worcester, Massachusetts. Entered Freshman Year, Worcester High School. VVorcester. Massachusetts. Mandolin Club i7.li3', Assistant Manager Combined Musical Clubs 131, Life Member College Boat Club, Phi Kappa Beta junior Society. Class Executive Committee 141, Ivy Ball Committee: Junior Ball Committee, Soph- omore Banquet Committee, Invitation Committee 1412 Senior Reception Com- mittee, Chairman Xvharton School Christmas Tree Committee, Rowing Commit- tee ill lzl, RECORD Committee, Senior Prom Committee. Captain and Stroke of Fall Crew ill, Captain and No. 4 of Poughkeepsie Crew ll lg Captain and Stroke of Fall Crew lzl, Stroke of Fall Crew gl, Captain and No. 2. Second Varsity Crew fzl, Captain and Stroke Second Varsitv Crew C31 , Stroke College Department Crew '7.l, Stroke of Varsity Four-oared zl, No. 4 of Varsity Crew fgl, Varsity Crew i-UZ Stroke Varsity Four-cared in PeopIe's and Amer- ican Henley Regattas Qzl. Toast the H Crewv Banquets ltltzl. 19 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD CHARLES HOWE CUMMINGS, H Chow Gwynedd, Pa. Civil Engineering Born January 26, 1884, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year, William Penn Charter School. Civil Engineering Society. . LUTHER BUSHONG DECK ' 1310 S. Tenth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. V Arts Born September 12, 1883, at Chester Springs, Chester Co., Pa. Entered Freshman Year, Central High School. Track Team C21. Second in Mile Run, Freshman-Sophomore Meet. Member of Bible Study Class Cr1C21C31C41g Member of Mission Study Class C31C41g Member of Chorus in Greek Play Iphigenia among the Tauriansf' LOUIS STANISLAUS DE LONE, C5 I' ..l HLou MDW llGusse 920 N. Third Street, Harrisburg, Pa. Wharton Born May 8, 1884, at Harrisburg, Pa. Entered Junior Year, Notre Dame Prep. and Notre Dame University, Indiana. Phi Kappa Beta Junior Society, Friars Senior Societyg President Dauphin County Club C41. Rep- resentative Provost Smith House C41. RICHARD MILES DEWHURST, Q li' fl HDick HDewey', I245 Western Ave., Allegheny, Pa. Electrical Engineering Born December 30, 1881, at Allegheny, Pa. Entered Freshman Year, Washington and Jefferson College. Mechanical Engineers, Club C21 C31, Vice-President C415 Houston Club C11 C21 C31 C415 Gun Club C21 C315 Athletic Association C11 C21 C31 C415 Gown Committee C41. 1 20 PHE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD VVILLIAM SEDDINGER DYE, JR. UDz'rm'-man 1509 E. llflontgomery Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born July 9, 1880, at Philadelphia. Entered Senior Year, Central High School, Dickinson College. University Scholarships tgl Ltl. CHARLES LOUIS EM MART Baltimore, Nld. Architecture Born February 4, 1884, at Baltimore, Md. Entered Junior Year, B. C. C., Baltimore, Md., Maryland Institute, IQO2. Maryland State Club tgl l4l, Architectural Society Ml, Southern Club tttl. JOHN CARLYLE EVANS, dl : fr Sw mfr J, 0.15 Luz,-ff Lilly, Pa. Civil Engineering Born September 9, 1883, at Shamokin, Pa. Entered Freshman Year, Altoona High School. Civil En- gineering Society lgllrtlg Houston Club lrlfzl, Athletic Association til l2l tgl t.,.l. Substitute on Class Football Team lzl, Class Football Team tgl luqfl. CLOYD BENTON EWING Mount Union, Pa. Arts Born November 9, 1882, at Mount Union, Pa. Entered Sophomore Year, Mount Union High School, Juni- ata College. President Huntingdon County Club lgllrtlg Christian Association, Superintendent University Christian Settlement C4l, Bible Class Leader t4l, Students' Guide Association tal. 21 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECQRD Q ' '? ' .Y 1 a: 1 J ig D 'T t V 1 lg 3. 5 4 gl 1 . r f ' -A 1 'wa Q . W il 1, 75 if 1 21 .sa -21 '- ...JVC Q f, j 5 r' , fi SAMUEL WANAMAKER FALES, H Sammien 44057 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born january 1, 1883, at Palestine, Texas. h Entered Freshman Year, Friends' Select School, Cercle Francais C35 C455 Banquet Committee C35. Class Football, Cricket and Baseball Teams C155 Class Baseball Team C25 C351 Class Football and Basket-ball Teams C453 .Varsity Basket-ball Team C35 C45. THQS. BROWN WRENTHANI FALES H Tommy 4407 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born June 24, 1886, at Palestine, Texas. . Entered Freshman Year, Friends' Select School. Class Cricket Team lI5Q Class Baseball Team 135: Substitute Class Football Team l-ll! Class Basket-ball Team C45. GEORGE COMER FENHAGEN H Fen HFin1zrgan Baltimore, lVId. Architecture Born December, 1884, at Baltimore, Md. Entered junior Year, B. C. C., Balto., Md. Architectural Society C35 C455 Maryland State Club C35C.l.l, Southern Club C45. T-square Club Prize. LEWIS REPP FERGUSON, Q I' lt, U Fergn 2033 N. Fifteenth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Civil Engineering Born june 27, ISSO, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Yearg Central Manual Training School. Houston Club C15 C25 C35 C.15g Athletic Association C15 C25 C35 C+5g Civil Engineering Society C15 C25 C35 C45, Secretary C455 Banquet Committee C355 Picture Committee C45. Class Basket-ball Team C15 C25 C35 C453 Sophomore Gymnastic Team C25. 22 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD 'VL -1 Aa ,L ' Li.f ' ,Q .-.i.v-.. ,, L., .933 .6551 ff 951' 'R fi A I -'Q .i,:.... I ,Q 1, ,UQ l W we ffl A,.,.1 VA., w Q 4 I E. , - 11 . . K, , .. 2 4 ,M gi. u 'kfffli M .iqyw A 1 -in Wi 1, :-.L l A .1 V-fl CM . . 1. I , ,g..1. 4'-J ...IA- ..:,- . .N.,..., -. 8 :LJ -1 PL.: f 1. 1 1-il 'S 'N .Vina I- .. 5 , l. 1 s .es . :N via . ii'3' . . 1 71 .J-. , . 'f 4 M -,f.,1.,...-- 4 'A 1. ., 4.245-114: ,z... ..,.,T,,i ' r l .1 A-iff! , 1.4 I ,HJC .. ol '?' A, .vw L., 1... 3 .15 i .1 QJHQ ...... -,-t-:- -.T-nf-. -r ---iq x t- vi- l 4 -11,51 'l . ,- PAUL FREEMAN, L' ,Y 206 E- Penn Street, Germantown, Pa. Arts Born January 1.1, 1884, at Germantown, Pa. Entered Freshman Year: Penn Charter School. Cercle Francais l3lf4.l: Penn Charter Club l2H3Jf4,lg Tennis Association 43,3 l+l. Senior Invitation Committee. Varsity Lacrosse Team lrllzj 131. Captain of Lacrosse Team Kal tresignedl. HOYVARD VVILSQN GARNER Hatboro, Pa. Arts Born March 31, 1880, at Hathoro, Pa. Entered Freshman Yearq Hathoro High School: Penn Charter School. Philomathean Society Lily Deutscher Verein 123, Athletic Association l3 l 1413 Houston Club l1,l lzl Kgl 14.1. Associate Editor Ren' and Blur lgl 14.1. HANS AUGUST GEHRKE, W 1' li' , , if l'Sfb1irz H ,, ,Z 9. Detroit, lVIich. Architecture gf , ,K Born April zo, 1883, at New Orleans. La. ff. Entered junior Yearg Technical School of Cincinnati. Eff! f Friars Senior Society, Architectural Society fgj Lil. RECORD I - Committee. Won Competition for Design for H Old Pennn g I Heading fp. Punch Bafwl Board LQ. ' SIDNEY BYRON GOLDSNITTH If- -iifliiif ff ' H ' 5 '1 Szd Goldzg 1, ' . I 2336 N. Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts '- ' Born August 30, 1882, at Bridgeton, N. J. Q, Entered Freshman Year, Central High School. Houston . I . ' 'A-'i Club KID C21 C3l QQ, Athletic Association Q21 Q31 fail. 23 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD X t 1 X , X X za tx f Q X X Q 4 t r Q l Q, N .15.'4Ll1? -t - wig I. - 1-f 'f 'ng.l-1 3 - 2:1 sins-gi' ' ., mit, . '- sw fyfilfif' -. 91:45.11 N - -' Qv:..j:j' s ,ff . , , Q , N M A I I 1 1. , 3 tt Mt 5' ' 1 f 4 tCf?5V ea: G' 1 - ' - ar:.-asm-le1es::f:.:..frz:e:sezr:+S:: sf ' XaP:.:zs'1r 1 x, i .3 ' 'V ig. . 1 1 'V ,I N t , , I-I , . J 3 -12331. 75.15-'fy . sag. gt ,, tg --iiiighif it ata., .Q V ..:.. ' ., me -fs -X ff 1-f'5f'QIF'5xff g2. Q' ,253 H1-?i f5'f -1 75' 't ' ' t,w..,f.: v l 1 '. D' 1 - HPF! kts r Z J'3f7f-1-EI ff 5 C'l- -C fl il -fi I .. 1 ' ELZEM, ,a.,. t .. . .. . .. 511 , ' 'r1,'i5.j I 'N Q QX N 6 I N4 'N -tof- ' K ' ' -- l:'::5'i.fS mai-: : t P 5:2-5 if '- - -1 few.-.w .ip . 1' 3.55:-s EZ. a:f3,5:'t - A V 2 fa, M321 ,, 'tx -'-:-ffifffiit-524: , iftffgtififff-'I 1:1-S. IMA-:efirEf:':2:.f. ' . ..:a52:-at er:-,fn Cie fa -i1.,,.,.e:f , . Mi.: , -sw-. ' -.-1+--1t,wata1fuft-Q.-.5-..:+,3,:4y-:Q-i::.::rt:-:QLi.Misc-l --:ta aexa:,G:4r1ae-aft CHARLES ELLIS GOODIN, Q J H i'Nat'i N Une Philadelphia, Pa. Wharton Born May 28, 1881, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Ycarg William Penn Charter School and Phillips Andover Academy. Athletic Association trltzJt3lt4Jg Houston Club tlltzltgl t4l3 Mask and Wig Club tzDt3lt4lg William Penn Charter School Club til tzltgl t4lg Cercle Francaistglttglq Junto journalistic Society tzltglttgl: Phi Kap a Beta Junior Society. Constitutional Committee tri: Banquet Committee tag: Executive Committee tglg Cremation Exercises 2 glunior Ball Committee :Ivy Ball Committee: Senior Reception Committeeg Wharton School Christmas Tree Committee ttyl: Responded to Toast UThe Faculty Senior Banquet. Assistant Business Manager Combined Musical Clubs til: Assistant Business Manager Pezinsyluarziari tal t J, Business Manager t4J: Editor Red and Blue tzl, Business Manager tzl Q4-li Editorgin-Chief Class Rccokng First Chorus Old King Cole , Sir Robinson Crusoe , Alice in Another Land , Mr. Hamlet of Denmarkug ii Ethel Granger in Preliminary Show The Snow Ball . Atlantic City Summer Show JOSEPH HUGH GOODWIN Joe Nat Calcium Stirton, Ontario, Canada Chemical Engineering Born October 17, 1880, at Drayton, Ont., Can. Entered Freshman Yearg Owen Sound tOnt.l Collegiate Institute. Ewing Chemical Clubg Canadian Club, Presi- dent tgltrtl. Sophomore Honors. FRANK IVIACKNIGHT GRAY, li' L' iTDoIly N Sunbeam 4305 Aspen Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born May 26, 1880, at Media, Delaware Co., Pa. Entered Freshman Yearg Central High School. Friars Senior Societyg Philomathean Society tal tgltttjg Christian Association tIlt2lt3lt4JQ Houston Club til t2l tgl tal: Athletic Association trl tal tgj tal. Class Historian tgl tttjg Banquet Committee t3lQ RECORD Committee. Flute Player in Greek Play tzlg Responded to Toast Our Future at Junior Banquet. ROBERT EADS GRIFFITH, .4 TS2, H Grifi' 1223 N. Alabama Street, Indianapolis, Ind. Architecture Born June 28, 1883, at Indianapolis. Entered Senior Yearg Purdue Universityg Indianapolis High School. Theta Nu Epsilon g Musical Clubs tgl t.tl. 24 IHE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD HASLETT GARDINER HALL W .I H H Fatty Hays Ridley Park, Pa. Arts Bern September 14, 1882, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year: William Penn Charter School. Athletic Association lrllzllzlhl: Houston Club llllzllslwz MHSK and Wiz Club txllfalz Penn Charter Club. Secretary and Treasurer lallglq Cerclc Francais, Secre- tary and Treasurer lil. President CU. Chairman Class Committee on Rowing til: junior Banquet Committee. No. 4 Fall Class Crew: No.7 Spring Class Cl'CXViIl. First Chorus Sir Robinson Crusoe . Alice in Another Land , Mr, Hamlet of Denmark g Sylveslic in French Play Les Fourberies de Scapin 1 'Alcan in La Grammaireng Part of Uloshua CilIibrand in Mask and Wig Prclimsl-1-li Summer Show lgl. WALTER KELLER HARDT, W .I 1-I H Presl' H Pffalz' 3303 Powelton Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Wharton Born October 24, ISSI, at Frederick, Md. Entered Freshman Yearg Central Manual Training School. Friars Senior Society. Class Treasurer l3l. Class Baseball Team lrllglg Class Track Team lr l lzlg Varsity Track Squad l3J. Chorus of Sir Robinson Crusoe g Manager of Class Baseball Team lglg Mock Program Committee l3l. DANIEL ROBERTS HARPER, 3d, W li'l1', L' E H Robin U Rob l' Old Second Street Pike and Wyoming Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born June 17, 1885, at Ridley Park, Delaware County, Pa, Entered Freshman Yearg North East Manual Training School. Kelvin Physical Club fgl. First City Scholarship from North East Manual Training School, Sophomore Hon- ors, First Prize in Quaternions Qglg Senior Honors. Var- sity Chess Team lzl 1,33 tal: Chess and Checker Club frl lzl i3-l tal, President Cal: Appointed Assistant in Physics, University of Pennsylvania Cal. .lAlVIES HUGH HARTLEY, Hjinmzyn 2101 W. Susquehanna Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Electrical Engineering Born August 22, 1882, at Palmyra, New Jersey. Entered Freshman Year, William Penn Charter School. Houston Club CIJQZDQ Mechanical Engineering Society Cgl Cal. Class Track Team CIJ fzlg Scrub Lacrosse Team lzjg Guard in Hall Rush and Corner Fight Cal. 25 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD CHARLES ELVIN HAUPT, JR., AB., :fs H Taadie Lancaster, Pa. Architecture Born September 12, 1880, at Lancaster, Pa. Entered Sophomore Yearg Franklin and Marshall College. Architectural Society C21 Qgl f4j , President f4jg Friars Senior Society C4lg Lancaster County Club f3,c4.l, President fgl. Fencers' Club Czl. Designed Houston Club Flags C3l. Designed Architectural Society Pin Crtjg Designed Cover for The Scope My '04 Medical Class Record Cglg Stage Mani ager Architectural Society Play, A Pair of Queens l' Cqj . WILLIAM HENDERSON, JR., A 1' Q Efzw - Rutledge, Delaware County, Pa. Electrical Engineering Born March rr, 1884, at Philadelphia, Pa. - Entered Freshman Yearg Central Manual Training School. Houston Club Cal, Theta Nu Epsilon Societyg Athletic . Association Crlfzl fgl C415 Engineers' Club Q31 C4l. LEWIS BURTRQN HESSLER, Burt 4009 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born May 12, 1884, at Omaha, Nebraska. Entered Freshman Yearg Media High School. Deutscher Verein Qzl, Vice-President Lil. Entrance Latin Prize, Second Prize Geor e Allen Memorial Prize in Latin. Cast of German Play Q5. HAROLD EZRA HILTS, CD 2' lf, Ez H 4221 Stiles Street, Phila., Pa. Civil Engineering Born May 1, 1882, at Cobleskill, New York. Entered Freshman Year, Temple College. Civil Engineer- ing Society. Class Track Team Q1lg Class Basket-ball Team Q21 on co. l 26 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD FREDERICK LOCKE HOLMAN, Fred Mercliantville, N. J. Wharton Born October 3, 1884, at Glens Falls, N. Y. Entered Senior Yearg Brown Preparatory School. Students' Guide Association l3ll4.lg Brown Preparatory School Club llgllrtl, Secretary letlg Houston Club lgllrtl. Class Bowl- ing Team lgl K4.l. FRANK WILSON HOWARD, Q lt' 'lf' U Spi,l'e U Blondy 3400 Iowa Street, Pittsburg, Pa. Wharton Born August 2.8, tSSo, at Wcllsville, Ohio. Entered Freshman Year: Allegheny College, Meadville, Pa. Phi Kappa Beta Junior Society: Theta Nu Eosilon: FriarsSenior Society: Glec Club: Assistant Manager of Combined Musical Clubs lxlg Manager Musical Clubs l4lg Ccrcle Francais Nl. Banquet Committee lglg Senior Prom Committceg RECORD Committee l4l: Wharton School Christmas Tree Committee l4lg Class Prophet. Chorus Old King Cole til: Sir Robinson Crusoe Kal, Representative of Robert Morris House fglq Vice-President Board of Representatives LOGAN HOWARD-SNIITH, J lt' li H Coxie H Losb 4838 Pulaski Avenue, Germantown, Pa. Arts Born November IS, 1883, at Montclair, New Jersey. Entered Freshman Year: Germantown Academy. Gargoyle Sophomore Societyg Phi Kappa Beta junior Society Q Germantown Academ Clubg Athletic Association ill Kal lil l4l1 Houston Club lil lzl lgl 1.0. Class Yell Committee lil: Dance Committee lzlg Ball Committee lil: Bowl Fight Com- mittee Czlg Banquet Committee t4lg Chairman Cap and Gown Committee QI, Senior Prom Committee. Coxswain Class Fall Crew Ctl,Coxswain Var- sity Frcshman Crewg Coxswain Class Fall Crew Cal: Class Track Team Cal. Editor Pennrylvanian lzllglg House Committee of Houston Club l3lC4l. JOSEPH WOLSTAN HUFF 331 Dickinson Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born July 28, r877, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year, Central High School. 27 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD CHAS. MILTON HUTCHISON, Hunk Ross Avenue, Wilkinsburg Station, Pittsburg, Pa. Architecture Born October 25, 1881, at Conemaugh, Cambria Co., Pa. Entered Junior Year: Wilkinsburg High School. Architec- tural Society fgj f4j, Vice-President fttlg Allegheny County Club, Secretary HARRY ABE HYMAN, Hy Mt. Vernon, Ohio ' Civil Engineering Bern May 4, 1881, at Mt. Vernon, Ohio. ' Entered Junior Year: Mt. Vernon High School: Ohio State University. Civil Engineering Society Cgi l4i: Secretary f4J:Ohio Club i4l. Varsity Track Teamfzlfgi First 22.0-yard Dash, Second 440-yard Run, Varsity Inter-class Games, Franklin Field: First 360-yard Run, Varsity Handicap, Franklin Field: Inter-city Relay Team vs. New York A. A. U. Meet: Winning Relay Team vs. Yale and Cornell G. N. Y. I. A. A. Games, Madison Square Garden, N.Y. Winning RelayTeam vs. Harvard, Boston, Mass.. B. A. A. Games: Relay Team N. Y. A. C. Games, Madison Square Garden, N. Y.: One Mile Relay Team, Columbia Games, Madison Square Garden, N. Y.: One Mile Relay Team, Relay Races, Franklin Field: Second 440-yard Run, Columbia-Penn Dual Meet, N. Y.: Second 440-yard Run, Cornell-Penn Dual Meet, N. Y.: Repre- sented Pennsylvania in Track Meets during the Summer of 1904 in England, Ireland, Scotland and WVales, breaking the 12.0-yard Track Record at Man- chester, Eng. HERBERT EUGENE IVES, dl If lt, L' E Woodcliff-on-Hudson, Weeliawvken, N. J. Arts Born July 31, 1882, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year: Rugby Lower School, Rugby. England. Zclosophic Society til l2ll3if4l. Secretary lzl, Vice-President lgl, President i431 Deut- scher Vcrein i-I-il Cercle Francais KU: Kelvin Physical Club LU: Fencers' Club ikl- Debate Committee Cai. Sophomore Honors: Senior Honors. Asso- ciate Editor Zelosophic Magazine: Varsity Debate Team vs. University of Virginia l-til Varsity Debate Committee tgltn, Secretary Ml: joint Literary Society Outdoor Play Committee LU. Zelosophic-Philomathean Debate Team hi: Zelosophic-Barnard Association, Columbia University iii: Responded to Toast A' The New Members Phi Beta Kappa Banquet Cai: Veronika in U Ein Toller Einfall 1.1.1. NIERKEL HENRY JACOBS, l' .l', QD If It Hfaken filo ' Harrisburg, Pa. Arts Born December 6, 1884, at Harrisburg, Pa. Entered Freshman Year: Harrisburg High School. Zelosophic Society fljfli igjfui, Vice-President Ui, President MJ: Chess Club Czifgiytj, Vice-Pres- ident f-tl! Fencers' Club Cgl: Mandolin and Banjo Clubs lrig Dauphin County Club C3ll4i, President fill Graduate Botanical Club Substitute Class Football Team iii. Sophomore Honors: Senior Honors: Phi Kappa Sigma Prize in English Composition lei: Faculty Prize in Greek Sight Translationg Honorable Mention Faculty Prize in Latin Sight Translation. Debate Team vs. Columbia tsl: Alternate Debate Team vs. Cornell CZJQ Zelosophic-Philo- mathean Debate Team QQ: Zelosophic-Barnard Society Columbia University Debate Team 135: Chess Team fgi: Representative from Fitler House fgi. 28 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD WALTER MULFORD JOHNSON H fer-sry J0l1m1y U Wzzlt Cedarville, N. J. Arts Born January 8, 1882, at Cedarville, New Jersey. Entered Freshman Yearg West Jersey Academy. Houston Clubg Ewing Chemical Society. Banquet Committee C31. Class Baseball Team CI1C21. JQHN KELLEY, Sleepy I-738 N. Sixteenth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Electrical Engineering Born june 6, 1883, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Yearg William Penn Charter School. Penn Charter School Club C11 C21 C31 C41. Fencers'Club C31 C415 Engineers'Dance CommitteeC31gEngineers'ClubC31C41. ALBERT WILLIAM KIEFER, W L' li' H Hot dir U Nat1z1'al Gas 37 Wabash Street, Pittsburg, Pa. Civil Engineering Born November I4., I88x, at Pittsburg, Pa. Entered Freshman Yearg Pittsburg High School. Pittsburg Club C115 Civil Engineering Society C11 C21 C31 C415 Houston Club C11 C21Q Athletic Association C11 C21 C31 C415 Allegheny County Club C31 C41, Vice-President C31, President C41. Class Day Committee C41. ELLWOOD WALTER KHVIBER, .4 T S2 H Walt H Pat it Dutch 3614 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Mechanical Engineering Born October 15, 1884, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year, Germantown Academy. Mechani- cal Engineers' Club, Executive Committee C31 C41gTheta Nu , Epsilon, Houston Club, Athletic Association. Poster Com- mittee C11. Chorus Sir Robinson Crusoe. v 29 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD 'Q K9'6'?'?Sl?R i?W -Q95 ' X. ' 4 T5-' 11' , X J 4 44 ai 4533? -I ' ,gift , ' . - - 'G V . 5 ---:I ' Q . Nei 5. A t Z5 , Q 3' 5 ' jfs t . i N at 3. tif, 4- gt , : ,. Ay . l' ' ', 1 ,' J- ' - 1' fj- M -. - in - T '. . ,, .,.- wi f., ' i ' I' .1 S7 :ff at f - -M , 'x si be ' fi 1 was Q, V .. . '-'is .4 I E K- 1.3 ,. Q81 as Q 5 4 .ae , - Exe T1 - .ti':f5SQigf- if ' f'-1 t?:?f'55l'.iErs .t 'Y4'-' 13455 ' '- sr.Qx14-size'-' Q4 wi? -mu, ltpiffeggqa-:g.,:ff -trxsawsgz :r:w:'t,. 23+ YF:- .,-- K' t.,e?,,5si -5 , 'V sf 5:15153 ',52,5fgLg. A, 1 , io:-ra , V. . .:.,,.s5 565353 . ' Tis- lL5.,,.,.,sg.g. l i ff , xx,., . , , 2. W 5,-,f.f4,, t-5f.,,M. 'Y V Q . Q swag-' 1 , .vga r 4 E Q-Tak? E - , . 1 ii . , , . 1 it -5 r 5, Q. , , . 'fx 15.52 Y its 1 ' .ws .. V, 1 ' H-. ,gas-yi rx ' firms, in ,vs 'eo w We X94 3 we 4: 0 1 9553 H fa t it is 0 apfsfilfy a 4 we i tel-. +M- rzatazgg, . -,x',..-mf' . . -f' f td?-if .--' ':5- - .C . ' QM , ' ' ' f:r125fiffQ : ' - .mfvf2a?2.. :-:ram-'14 ' wa sw- -7' .:::::35g.,1.:, .-,, fx .av f -. , . '-rr.-',.r-5: 23 :'i'T ' .f 'w .fill Ag? Af 'if '4flM..!Q KERWIN WEIDMAN KINARD, J lr E, A 111119 H Kitty H Kit U Lancaster, Pa. Arts Born july 30, 1885, at Lancaster, Pa. Entered Freshman Yearg Faud M. Acatlemyg Lancaster High School. Pepper Medical Society: Phi Kappa Beta junior Society: Sphinx Senior Society: Danrlelion Club: Vice-Presitlent Class 1213 Ivy Ball Committee OU: Chairman Banquet Committee 4253 Cremation Committee C277 Crew Ball Committee C273 RECORD Committee: Assistant Manager Varsity Crews C353 Manager Varsity Crews 443: Undergraduate Member Rowing Committee: Varsity junior American Henley Crew: Tennis Club C-U: Class Football Team 113. Poughkeepsie Crew 1113 Class Crew fejz Class Football 'lieam 121: Captain Class Football Team C315 Class Fall Crew 133: Class Football Team 0,73 Second Shot Put Fresliman-Sophomore Games C231 Second Hammer Throw Freshman- Sophornore Gaines C233 Right Encl Varsity Scrub Football Team C411 Manager Class Crew 1433 Mazinger Class Football Team C3J: Omcial judge Class Races Fall l-ll: Guartl Bowl Fight up Cel: Aitle University Day 1215 Respontlecl to Toast The Soplis Class Banquet 1131 Responder! to Toast H1905 on the Gridiron Class Banquet K:-jg Houston Club Q!Jf2JC3JC47: Athletic Association fly faq lay 1433 Lancaster County Clubg Marshall Bowl Fight L37 141. JAMES DGUGHERTY KIRKBRIDE . nl .ll ll SZ, H ffm 2212 Green Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born September go, 1882, at Spring Lakc Beach, New jersey, Entered Freshman Yearg Friends, Select School: Penn Charter School. Houston Club irl fzl Kg! 445i Athletic Association lil lzl lil 1-ll 3 Pepper Medical Society: Phi Kappa Beta junior Society. Executive Committee izlg Banquet Committee Class Fall Crew ill Kzl i3lZ Varsity Freshman Crewg Represented Sophomore Class in Middle-weight Boxing.May Day Sports. ALBERT EDWIN KOCH, HAZ Homer Philadelphia, Pa. Wharton Born November 21, 1883, at Philadelphia. Entered Senior Yearg North East Manual Training School. Swimming Association Q13 Qzlg Boxing and Wrestling Club Cgl itil, Christian Association Lil. Class Track Team C15 fzlg Substitute Water Polo Team Q1lg Class VVrestling Team fel. Associate Editor Pennrylfzxanian Lil, Editor CIll2l- ADOLPH TELLER KOHN, Kid 1434 Franklin Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Born September 13, 1885, at Philadelphia. Entered Sophomore Yearg Central High School. Willis Terry Prize Wharton 30 THE NINEYEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD PHILIP GEORGE LANG, JR. 5553 Ridge Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Civil Engineering Born September 11, 1883, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year: North East Manual Training School. Civil Engineering Society 1151251351451 Class Day Committee 14.5. JACOB LOEB LANGSDORF, Jani 1432 Girard Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Wharton Born November 1, 1884, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Yearg WVilliam Penn Charter School. Penn Charter Club 1151251351-1.5: Cercle Francais 115125, Houston Club 1151251351455 Athletic Association 115125 1351.153 Banquet Committee 135. EDWIN CONQVER LEEDCNI H Sanahd' H Con 216 W. Rittenhouse Square, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born September 11, I882, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Yearg Brown Preparatory Schoolg VVilliam Penn Charter School. Class Fall Crew 115g Class Spring Crew 1153 Class Fall Crew 125. JOHN LISLE 2109 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born November 24, 1885, at Philadelphia. Entered Junior Yearg DeLancey School. Cercle Frangaisg President DeLancey School Club Editor Pemzfyl-'uanian 13514.53 Chorus Alice in Another Land. 31 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD v Q-. fvcfhs 1 . .1-1 Q' 11 11 ,Y ,1 F. .: s'z,fSfg.if'3t S 'V . 1551 ..,.. , - '13-Q,gf.:,f - -1:-..ty:-1 p 1,1-1: . L' J- ' Q fix' A N P ,?Qa,Qi'l 11. ' 1 1 :a:.11 . I :YPJZ I-Q 1 , ,QA I...3- .Li 15511 .,., , , .NW .W.,,,, - -8 'E41:T1'.ef-,sa 311-it'-Ti-?: grgfngfil , . s-2:1 .,.:..,,.,.g .- .. ::t.sx3.lt , ,,,. . 1 ,,,,,, L' '.-.i1'..f..,i1-':.i.'Q1-'.- ml PRE . :irfagr 14t5fWx:'2N 1 . -N.. 1 at ' lf 1-, R Af 2. .cilprv ' IS?-- 4s'f f5r , . .f . .,..,,3 .X -. -.Wie :KUX ' 'f V. .,1...-'ps vmw Max--1, M. T' -:TA t lu- '3i4+1r,5:i. '15 'xiii . 'szzwff Q vt xi '. if - ., . ' I-1 A .- 14'v':pe?.i: 5. glff? X 1 RX 9- 956' 1 31 -1 Ke 'R nf',f1f'5'!'.if 15st wa 'E -xv. fb-5 Sys 5 1 , figs. 1 13,3 :Vg 8.-WU L 4 31 L pl' X w. 1 S ' gy. s 'xxx E mm A we 15:5 1 A mask? ,K 2:1 K, Q Q EXXX .-,gg X s 1 , Jw- 5 X, P N., 1-.ss ' is Mus .9 at C S ' 1.1 3 rs -. A 2 '9.::x,f:1: eP?e': ' ' f1::f1'2zvX'- .-::-1:4'a'.A- ..2 ' . f1:1sra.n:, , , -, 2111264551: , , 1 4.51-' -v .- as-52-1:11-A Q' A -4 1' 2 ' 1 T . 4. 1::f1'?:-11125532 1 1 V -. 'Mel-E-.:w:1:t. -.I ,sri K'-121921 ' 2512-Emi'-L. X ' afelfifffw ,.:,.,,4-W 11 - I:-asfefs,-:ssgt -f41w-rw ' 5-4'-'rizrstEPQY53?Q-E'1x.v2:a:g:s,1::4?E.efiswrafi- me--rs, xi :. gsgvfshzcf. f1.::2-,111-ei:--a mga.. i 1w13k ROBERT THOMPSON MCCRACKEN ff' 13 Q If K, Mac 5443 Greene Street, Germantown, Pa. Arts Born July 15, 1883, at Philadelphia. - Entered Junior Yearg Central High School. Sphinx Senior Society. Henry La Barre Jayne Prize in Freshman Composi- tion. Prize for Latin Sight Reading 121. Editor Pennsyl- wznian 1211315 Editor Red and Blue 1311415 Editor'Pzmrl1 Ba-wl 141. . MICHAEL JOSEPH MCCRUDDEN, 1' ,Y E Hflliken Millar UCap . 2417 Columbia Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Civil Engineering Born August 2, 1883, at Philadelphia. , Entered Junior Year, La Salle College, Philadelphia. Civil Engineering Society 1311413 Houston Club 131141. Varsity Basket-ball Team 111121131141, Captain 1313 Class Football Team 1311415 Class Basket-ball Team 131141. ELI ALLEN MCELHENY, Millar Einleyville, Pa. Electrical Engineering Born July 6, 1883, at Allegheny County, Pa. Entered Freshman Yearg Pittsburg Academy. Zelosophic Society 121131g Engineers' Club 131141: Allegheny County Club 1311415 Houston Club 111121131141. STANLEY MAKEPEACE, If I-I ll H Stem H Make Syracuse, N. Y. Architecture Born June 26, 1881, at Watertoxxrn, N. Y. Entered Junior Yearg Syracuse University. Architectural Society 1.11. Recoizn Committee. 32 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD FREDERICK WARREN MARSHALL, W li' 'I' .X H Pop H Langhorne, Pa. Wharton Born September 7.5, ISSI, at Pliiladelpliixi. Entered Freshman Year: Vl'illiam Penn Charter School. Musical Clubs lil lzl lg! Lal, Associate Manager lil l-U1 Cercle Francais lil Lzl lg! 1,453 l Gargoyle Sophomore Society: Phi Kappa Beta junior Society 1 Sphinx Senior Soci 1 . Cla's Vice Pr' 'd. ll li E l' C ' L' l l D G ' e yy s ' - esi on I xccu ivc ommnt-e 2 1 alice Com- mittee lzli Ball Committee lil: Treasurer Ivy Ball: Discipline Committee l3l1 Marshall Bowl Fight lzl: Crew Ball Committee lll lzli Senior Prom Committee: Spade Man. Class Fall Crew lil: Class Spring Crew llll Class Fall Crew lglg Suhstitutejunior Varsity lzl 5 Stroke of Four, American Henley lgl. . JOB VAUGHAN lVIATHIS, W L' li' Hfllzzfllu Millar 6 il 16 Nlt. Vernon Ave., Atlantic City, N. J. . Architecture F Q Born November 3, ISSI, at Tuckerton, N. J. TQ-ji ,N Entered Sophomore Year: West Jersey Academy, Bridgeton, , N N. J. fi . , NORWQOD DEAL MATTHIAS if - Fil' E n f Norristown, Pa. Arts CQ ' i Born July 4, 1880, at Norristown, Pa. 1 Entered Freshman Year: Norristown High School. Houston Club Q1l lzllgl l4.l3 Athletic Association lrl Kal C35 Carl, Zelosophic Society Q33 Lal. 'ffl-il:'i,i'1'i fi. N rr --irzhi .f .' . .J .: X: t -. x ' w.a.1t--- l'-:L lu'-ix 13:3 CHARLES WILLIAM MEADOWCROFT, IR. 4627 Mulberryf Street, Frankford, Pa. Arts Born January 14, 1885, at Frankford, Pa. Entered Sophomore Year, Central High School. Deutscher Verein l4.lg Zelosophic Society Qzl. Chairman Debate Committee lrl. Sophomore Honors, Freshman Greek Prose Composition Prizeg Honorable Mention in Mathematical Entrance Prize Examination. 'L S. l ' t A-i ..., . 5 , . at , . sl 5 0 V 33 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD rf' 1. Ap ag .gf W - ek - 1 -- lslset-YQHS, ' ..-aq ak l A 'Q - s . .:':Q'QwVf:':2r:f:t- iff 135: 5- X f:if2QeQX:5f:-11 1, 'I.'I'f2--af':'f:- 1:2551-3' .r15:'.-: -1: wr .. X, ' 'ITE g1:ij5.,215,-1 Ego-2249 . X- fermmk . .- reef-mgwbii V. N K? , :s:'-1,::i:.q.- ., , . Qtggre'gyitieleh-,19':p,,.,.Q, ,-np. ,. .- ' g:'s.5,1i3: wargggzy-fxwxz -,s , 121: - llzii 'B-5-: t ,aug 1 ,.mn:wQ:ww-sf.-f-nw fre' 1---'ezrfw N-- l3Q15f:3g:5:.,:,::-:' 55,1 1'-5 I 32,1-1.. 1 ff NL., Q r -.frlf an.-15 R. Nr. ,. ., ,. i- 1 fi eafw- 1 . m Qkhkwysf QM- :.L-- ' lf5Sl2f'i1'?'f:' ia.:,.g . ,x Q., 1-., cr -3. ei? tt . ---.-X., ...L N1 Mx-'X 4.14, .R ,'-.'5n ' : v- V- - :.e.- .L..f .-,.Le..-., 11.. f'f'4,:wl-f'1EfTt'Ss,. ,153 tif-f?'1159LfQ:'iiiig2?s ,-1-iv!-:.1t' , A .1 fu., 1 xx ff' -. . tvfrJ1F?fiQT 'WET'P'TKT','f Tf X .. ,Q ' X 1 swim' - 4 K-aa, . . My .,, - g - ': ' FMS: MS .em . K. t ,. -gr: A 3 527525, N: . Q ., .1 .c.xg-'J iff-if .twef-A ,. N y, wa tw.. .1-x 'TP HL-:lb . s, M M J' X X NN A- . . ,n ff . ,-Y if V -.ww-M-fffs. E:f'f?SX5'? -XF!-.aah if' -V: ,-,-- 4 g.r.:1- 1.5 tC.:k,q4t51'.f 15,5-s,.LQ:.-.:,,31.:,:.e1L.... --s- ...Le a-.1-wa.,,-..,...,-ma-ew--, 1- - WM- ' .r if -9.-5'-fmvsrx-'w:'r, .1 .: , 1: 'W-'hf::-:grae-s :rf ' if 'f' A, 3 N Ea? 3 9 1' 1,,. ,Q:.'Q:Y rf-.X ., .. , ..TE,T-,. -wifxg' ff XS: z hay - . lzwafl- 511: 1.1 Q gr ffm--L 1 W , .- ' , ,f.:,,. f ' .fart ff- 38 Vu I ,-v:.1r-f- V. 1. .-Fiqta - P. ' - fqgggfiu-,g.', ., . .!::,Qa5.g1u,,3M 4. . ff-Yiii f f'i:- ,- ,...a.....-.,..,.. GEORGE WILLIAM MERKLE H Famer HPrafessor 'l 509 W. Cumberland Street, Philadelphia, Pa., Wharton Born May 2, 1883, at Philadelphia. Entered Sophomore Year, Central High School. Deutscher Verein fzlfgj. ' AMOS LAWRENCE MILLER ' 4037 Reno Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Chemical Engineering Born December 19, 1878, at St. Mary's, Chester Co., Pa. Entered Freshman Year, Birdsboro High School. WILLIAM HENRY MOENCH Biff, Billy Goat 629 N. Twentieth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Chemistry Born July 21, 1883, at Newfoundland, Wayne County, Pa. Entered Freshman Yearg Franklin and Marshall Academy, Lancaster, Pa. Ewing Chemical Club frlfzjfgglgl, Sec- retary and Treasurer 141. Picture Committee tel. MICHAEL MONAGHAN 62 N. Thirty-sixth Street, New York, N. Y. Science Born June 11, 1883, at New York, N. Y. Entered Junior Yearg Harrisburg High Schoolg St. Josephls College. Newman Club l3lf+lg Civil Engineering Society H415 Houston Club Qgj Cal. 34 YHE NINEFEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD RAYNOLDS COMBS MOORHEAD 5523 Pine Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born October 30, 1884, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year: Blight School. Blight School Club Q15 Q25Q35 Q45g Tennis Club Q25 Q35 I45. Assistant Editor and Editor Penmyl-vaniarz Q25 Q35Q Varsity Chess Team Q25. SPENCER KENNARD MULFORD, JR., Q l1'U U Spence H Wgfncote, Pa. Arts Born June 8, 1884, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year: William Penn Charter School. Cercle Francais Q15 Q25 Q35 Q45g Houston Club Q15 Q25 Q35 Q+5. Banquet Committee QI5Q25 Q351 Chairman Class Cane Com- mittee Q35. Class Cricket Team Q15. Chorus Sir Robinson Crusoe g French Play Q25 Q35. CHARLES ALOYSIUS MURPHY, 'ifudgeu 4220 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born November ro, 1883, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year, St. Joseph's College. Newman Club lI5l25l35l45- JOHN HERR MUSSER, JR., IP' 1' . 1927 Chestnut Street, Philadelphla, Pa. Arts Born June 9, 1883, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Yearg YVilliam Penn Charter School. Houston Club cI5QZ5 Q35Q45: Gargoyle Sophomore Societyg Phi Ka pa Beta Junior Societyg Sphinx Senior Societg Athletic Association Q15Q25QD35Q45g William Penn Charter Club QI5c258g5Q4.5j Junto Journalistic Society Qz5g Dandelion Clubg Gymna- sium Building Committee Q15g Poster Committee Q15: Chairman Dance Com- mittee C251 Chairman Pennsylvanian Banquet Committeeg Senior Reception Committeeg Ivy Ball'Committeeg Marshall Bowl Fight U55 Guard Bowl Fight Qz55 Associate Editor Pennryluanian Q15, Editor Qz5g Mask and YVig Prelimi- nary Play Q153 Chorus Old King Cole Q15: Second Assistant Manager Varsity Baseball Team Q15, Assistant Manager Q35, Manager C451 Member of Baseball Committee ex-officio. 35 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD SCOTT NEARING 1427 N. Sixteenth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Wharton Born August 6, 1883, at Morris Run, Pa. ' Entered Senior Yearg Central Manual Training School. Wharton School Association 14.15 Students' Guide Associa- tion, Secretary 141. Treasurer Class of 1906 1115 Banquet Committee 141. Prizes in Freshman-Sophomore Debate 121. Varsity Debate Team vs. Cornell 131, Columbia 141. - HENRY PEPPER NORRIS West Chester, Pa. Arts Born July IO, 1881, at West Chester, Pa. Entered Freshman Yearg The Blight School. WILLIAIVI HENRY NORRIS, IR., .1 T .I H Ted 3622 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. lVIechar1ical Engineering Born February 8, 1883, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Yearg Episcopal Academy. Engineers' Club 1311415 Houston Club House Committee 141. Invita- tion Committee 14.1. SAMUEL WALLACE OGLESBY, H Crouch 212 E. Broad Street, Chester, Pa. Chemistry Born September 22, 1881, at Chester, Pa. Entered Freshman Yearg Chester High School. Athletic Association 111 121 131 1415 Houston Club 111 121 131 141g Chester High School Club 111g Ewing Chemical Club 111 121131141, President Class Track Team 1111215 Class Foiatball Team 1211311413 Varsity Scrub Football Team 121 3 36 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD f af' fb! - Xml, J' . M, . ,,, , jfsrplii -qi 15 .5356 Zz afrl it. t. F ev- lr ' sv ? l 3 1 r 1 - Na A 5, 'Q wail Q 9 F 'll f it s 1 are . .f'!1'bf U77-N. V ..., . .i ,ft-. . v:,!f'7' .1 , qi . A DL ., ' 'gl 1 3.1 .tstfg-', . ,5',i:,::: .u 1. ml.. . if g,r.v,,,,, . ,.,.. 3.,,,,5. r- .. . a,t.::-gap.. v.1.1.. - 4 --' 'F ai .sgrzsmerfsf 12- -s ' ' ,Q rly ' 51 A321 'Y X. rs. 2351. xt Kr! 1- 31. rr ful, 'un ,t 5, gi fi it 1 vi 'fx 1? AL-:1-'..-A ,.,, - -.- fv- Qilif. V ., .Qi .. .sept- . ' filip- tgp '- 3' v Ffizg. , f A' rt -1 ' ,-:sv r 1 1 W . af . -,. 15,813 L .5-s 'isis ff-.sie-. el ull , H'-11111 Pgzff l l i 'J fit , , 1. 'i i F21 ' 1 Q 'l 4, .tl .' - -1 .. K , K kiZ'+. .'s ff'-1.71 'rr-321 .zilfrff . fa: If qrrirru' 'L,xg'z.: , i,,N,S.-Q. Q .rw :sz 41 1 -- 1115 -' .,,,. . I X, leqfiqa Swan'- .- -: 1' 1: ,rp . .. X. it,ata.,.,. .1 .. 1 f'..'-We - F2-'S f ..-Ea--fs-.fl 5 gg l 62. sit?-..2f 'EU-i1.'?Y I:I.' 252 V at ge, I 1, S'g12j,.'51 ,T 'f 1 1 - a. Qc.. 1. uf'-1. ' . , 8:tt,s:q:f:-:I A ' .Q ,,.f,. 5.1. fag.: ,, 1-1 Y.,-:.,.s-1 .- .st-.-sv. .:+'.,c,'s.,,.:.. ' ' 1vr:2a:.::w :':-V :rf '- .,s- -: :::zaQf,:-1-'x:s:-sa .....,..,, , .. ,. .... .- -. t Lge:-..:f. f.-sv -t-A-sv: :. out ...tt-.v W . .--- .m.t-rf -wa. ,::v:-w:-:m:v:'- 'few -'-qt-rr-am1-aa-x--.f:gs::,a ff.i,i4-z.:..,--- ' ' -.-.1ff:a,a-g...2eaaa:Qers.,Ms SAIVIUEL ROWLAND MARRINER ORUNI U Bess 'l 1318 N. Nineteenth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Electrical Engineering Born January 7, 1883, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year: Central Manual Training School. Mechanical Engineers' Club iIli2ll3li4.l. Scrub Varsity Lacrosse Team lzj. First Prize in Quaterninns l3J. HARRY OTTINGER, K' Off Philadelphia, Pa. lvlechanical Engineering Born September 17, 1882, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year, Central Manual Training School. Mechanical Engineers' Club l3l l-HZ Central Manual Train- ing School Club lrlg Deutscher Verein l3l. Sophomore Honors. HENRY CLAY PARKER, JR., J V, Pere Nlt. Vernon, Ohio Wliarton Born .lanuary IO. 1381. at Ml. Vernon, Ohio. Entered Freshman Year: Mt, Vernon, Ohio, High School. X'Vestern Club lil- Qzlg Ohio Club lgfl LQ. Banquet Committee Ill: Class Day Committee LU. Varsity Gymnastic Team til lzl: Class Baseball Team lil izl lgli Assistant Manager Varsity Gymnastic Team lzli Manager Varsity Gym- nastic Team lzl LU: Manager Class Baseball Team lzl: Chorus Alice in Another Land lgj: Manager Princeton-Pennsylvargia Annual Gymnastic Dance 'lgl l4J. Executive Committee Inter-collegiate Association ot Amateur Gymnasts of America l,4,ll University Band lll Lzl. FREDERIC EDWIN PEESO, Prince 4251 Regent Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born September 12, 1881, at Syracuse, N. Y. Entered Freshman Year, Fayetteville High School, Fayette- ville, N. Y.g Brown Preparatory School. Houston Club Qrj Q25 lgl Kal, Civil Engineering Society l1ll2ll3ll4.lg Deut- scher Verein C35 latlg Brown Preparatory School Club C35 lttl. 37 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD x -,.j.g?siS? Y:-Sze:-. V 1 . rf,-.riff '- --5. - ' '-: .14 4 .iii :-we -emit-:fzfiqagg ..,.. 1 ..t. Nizwif-4 yet?-si? ' Sfgfiiil ' --8 1-:avg '. ' gf' 5.21 -1 f.. 8 Ns he Q H 6 . .. K xl v iz , f Y x -. . .1- 'zz .- t:p:e..ew:.:-eaer.. V' i.4.,..... .... - a-:1:r1:5m,. 'retiree . Y ,. .vw-: rf' s . 1 T :t f::,E,. ' :gjl Q I - K 11.-fl'--'Q . 2 V ,al A E113-ffifff. 1 ii 5 .4 it , l if. 4:31. 51:15 K W - ia.. 0 liz, .f.:,:-:s IJ 4 ' y Q51 . ff' ' ' 1' A - F Q-2:15. ' . - - 1 ii-ws-.. A , ' .1. . lIf.:Q:gg:3j. ' me 1- 5 . . V. 1 Q ' ii 111,- 'f 1 '1' En 3-vii.-Q.f gt, -. gs it '11 -.- . .-1 .'.-3--.-,: . .0,J '1', W.-g..,aa ff: F111 -:fag ., qwaiiifg P 1 afar I viflikiiilkssga ' l -, fe f- 5 mf-il sv . - 'SS 1.2 . F 3 1' 5- fifty? pf ' f' ,--' fi . as - . 1 - -tegyza.. 'N M , ra 9 M ' ggi B 96 ia? 'if IRQ? ,-we-::.5s:H?2 OLIVER HAZARD PERRY PEPPER, Z IP' rcpegpn 1811 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born April 28, 1884, at Philadelphia. . Entered Freshman Year, St. Mark's School. Athletic Asso- ciation lrj C2j fgj frtj, Houston Club Q1ll2Jl3Jl4lg Phi Kappa Beta Junior Society. Dance Committee lzl, Ball Committee Cgj, Ivy Ball Committee. Varsity Golf Team Q31 QD. French Play lil, Chorus Alice in Another Land C3l-. CHARLES FOLK RABENOLD 'lRab Naam 1 137 W. Oley Street, Reading, Pa. Architecture Born April 22, 1883, at Reading, Pa. Entered Freshman Year, Reading High School. .Zelosophic Society C33 frtl, Secretary 14.3, Architectural Society t2M3j fail. RECORD Committee. Representative ,Craig House l4l2 Chairman Calendar Committee Cp. Designed Class Cre- mation Poster. HERBERT MARSEILLES RAIVISEY, 'l 7' UfVIarb!es l'Mars Bryn llflawr, llflontgomery County, Pa. Wharton Born November ro, 1882, at Bryn Mawr, Pa. Entered Freshman Year, Haverford Grammar School. Hav- erford Grammar School Club C1jl2ll3Jl+l. Bowl Fight Committee frj, Cane Committee lglg Chairman Picture Committee 133. Class Football Team f3ll4.l, Manager ttyl. ADAM REBER, HReeb HDzztcb Harrity, Pa. Wharton Born June 27, 1876, at Harrity, Pa. Entered Freshman Year, Polytechnic Institute, VVest Chester State Normal School. Philomathean Society C1ll2ll3ll4.l. 38 IHE NINEIEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD JOSIAH RICHARDS, fD .I I-I Dirk fork USv HRich Spokane, Wash. Wharton Born june 13, ISSI, :tt New York City. Entered Freshman Year: Spokane High Schooli Athletic Association ft5 H5 H5 i451 Houston Club f15 17.5 M5 145: Combined Musical Clubs 115 125 lgl l.tl, Assistant Manager ttyl: Dcutscltcr Vcrcin l7.5 ftl: Philumathcan Society U5 lil: Frinrs Senior Society: Hospital Fund Committee i352 XVharton School Christmas Trct: Committee LU: ,RECORD Committee: Chorusi' Die Racubcr 135. Varsity Bicycle Team lil: Scored in lntcrcollcgiatesi Class Football Team lgl: Editor Rn! and Blur ltl, Editor-in-Clticf LU! Sophomore Cremation Exercises. JONATHAN RING Oak Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. Architecture Born August 23, 1878, at Philadelphia. Entered Junior Year: Central Manual Training School. Architectural Society t3H.tl. ALEXANDER BURNS ROE, W L' lt' H Babe H ii Tommy Pittsburg, Pa. Arts Born February 5, 1883, at Mansfield, Ohio. Entered Freshman Yearg Allegheny High School. Pittsburg Club QI5. Picture Committee 1353 Mock Program Com- mittee l35g RECORD Committeeg Class Day Committee 145. Varsity Gymnastic Teams l25l35f..l.l1 Varsity Swimming Team 1,455 VVinner Light-weight Boxing May Day Sports 115. DAVID RUPP, gd, I' N, Dave York, Pa. Arts Born January 28, 1284, at York, Pa. Entered Freshman Year, York County Academy. Vice- President York Club f35g President York Club 145, Houston Club C15 H25 C35 Q45 . Executive Committee Board of Dormt- tory Representatives C4.5g Class Day Committee C45. Class Baseball Team f35g Class Bowling TCHmf35 Q45, Captain Q45. Representative McKean House Q45. 39 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD A 4 , sw isa' sf iiblf , ' 4 STKIMQ ' I-,rim if ' , .. ,.., , .,,4.y: . 318' -.X . X ., , mtg. C .v.,:-.j-gg X - X - - 1x4-ir'-:CQQQQ -:---K 41 't 2 , it 3 , was 3. - Syl 1 X 553-1551 tt xv C ,y 'I cl 9:8 1 N19 N Q. VY y X2 'K X3 'Q C 1 CK xx xx '35 C P t 1:5 , 39523, .X tx ,C C gags ' 'XM Q N 7 a ,C N vt, 1 ,wk M X x .rr-.-,Aw-:rim is .:':'zis. - ij 3' , .am 1 ' - ' A f- sseeqmms, -4a5'ma1 .f-s. .a - '::-:1:w-vac-sf H' ' ,.3mEq - . Q , '-ax A.. .1 .1 H. .,. V'-fgffsikq X .1 A a,.,,f,, . 1 :fx Qc 1222341 5 'S Qi? 351 ' 33' sfmfitfl X 3 5 1.2 1 N 1 ' 4 Q 1 ,C QC it fu M-3 4 N0 H51 'S GWY' NE.. fe 1. AM i ' fx J 1 M83 1 ' ,!g?fS3 ff' -' X s ' :lr zest 'ig Q, . ,sv-1-.L-an s -fi ,, QQ X Si 3 f,..,Eg, . EES' 251 ' .- - sa , ...M 24:5 , x h -f,-t--- 1-1 2 Tia, we ..,, .2 C 0, iw H S R is xqs, C 0 X W 4 ix r Q 5 H tx , ,J -sa r 851 N f' j 3:35,-:fg1?'-Q ' it -rn., -A'-f,,...,...,.,.,., -5. 3 gg -T ff , .Y pi, f :.1:ff 1- Q. 0' 'Si :cj 1:4 Qi 1 llxffj A Y Apr? if ff: :,.,.1.: :j,.'::sk+:-1 'El' L 0 1 1, '- .VJ 1- ' 1 -'-' ' - . . .- 13.-.:f' W':R9P ' 1 .--f.r.qg5k+0Q-Q-, ' : - --' .Mx Qffwiigfgo. 'Pit-,.p5'31S, i , , Q '- 'J 'f v 1. . . 4 WALTER SAMANS, HSam'l 431 N. Thirty-second Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Mechanical Engineering Born February 17, 1882, at Goes, Holland. ' Entered Freshman Year, Central Manual Training School. Central Manual Training School Club C41, President Chess Club C31C4.1g Engineering Club C31C41. Varsity Track Team C415 Varsity Cross Country Team C415 Class Track Team C11 C21 C31 C4.1g Class Basket-ball Team C21 C31. CHARLES WILLIAM SELTZER, K'Bfomo Palmyra, Pa. Architecture Born March 29, 1880, at Bellgrove, Pa. Entered Junior Yearg Columbian University, Wash., D. C. Lebanon County Club C31. JOHN NELSON SEMMENS 567 lVIcDermot Ave., Winnipeg, lVIanitoba, Canada Architecture Born October 7, 1879, at Toronto, Canada. Entered Junior Yearg Graduate of Beaudon High School, VVesley College, University of Manitoba, Canada. Archi- tectural Society C31 C41. ROY BLAKE SEYFERT, Se3yf', Soap 101 1 Farragut Terrace, Philadelphia, Born December 10, 1884, at Pinegrove, Pa. Entered Freshman Year, Pinegrove High Senior Society, Houston Club C11C21 C31 C+1. Class Picture Committee C315 Mock Program Committee C313 Wharton School Christmas Tree Committee C41g Wl1arton School Association C41. Pa. Wharton School. Friars 40 THE NINEIEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD PERCY VAN DYKE SHELLY, .-l .Y l' Calc Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born June 2, 1883, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Yearg Central High School. Friars Senior Societyg Houston Club Crllzl Q35 Kal. Debate Com- mittee tgzlg Cane Committee C315 RECORD Committee, Inter- Fraternrty Bible Study Committee tal, Ivy Orator. junior Literary Frrze. Assistant Business Editor Punch Bofwl lrl 222, Buslness Editor lgj, Managing Editor, Editor-in-Chief -l FRANKLIN UHRICH SHUGAR, Sling Lebanon, Pa. Wharton Born July 27, 188I, at Lebanon, Pa. Entered Senior Yearg Lebanon High School. Lebanon County Club, Vice-President ltti. Xvharton School Asso- ciation Lil, Chorus i'Mr. Hamlet of Denmark. ANDREY LATHAIVI SIVIITH, .Y .-l la' Hdzzdyu Hflrliell Du Bois, Pa. Chemistry Born September ro, 1883, at Du Bois, Pa. Entered Sophomore Year: Pennsylvania State College: Bcllcfontc Academy. Phi Kappa Beta junior Society: Ewing Chemical Society tal Kgl l4l, Executive Committee lil! Banquet Committee lil: Dance Committee lzlg Senior Reception Committee: Discipline Committee Cgl C413 Cremation Committee lzlg Varsity Football Team C35 f4lg Class Football, Basket-ball. Baseball and Track Teams fzlg Class Football Team Ui. Captain Cresignedl: Class Baseball Team lil. Captain tgl. Sophomore-Freshman Meet, First Shot Put, First Hammer Throw, Third Broad jump, Fourth High Jump! Guard Bowl Fight lzlg VVon Heavy-weight Boxing Match, May Day Sports HARRY MALCOLIVI SMITH H Smitty H Florence, Mass. Wharton Born July 28, 1883, at Florence, Nlassachusetts. Entered Junior Year, Northampton High School. Massa- chusetts Club Cetlg Wharton School Association Lil. 4.1 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD .,. ,. T' 5 'Z Q3,43x4i1gC:5.g-,,:--- -1-Q, rea- x'-- -.5-rr ' .5,- 2 .-. , . F. A' . ' .1 . - . I 1 iafsegie it ., 'yy -- l u v , ' ' 11 , 4 1. 4 , V W1 ' 'X FN , . , - QZ,'3i!fy?1,, QQ? 'S --f' t A- , 2 I, . '2,f3i1,g4..: -af. 1, :::.- .1 f 6 ' 1 l ' , - X - : . ff 1-V '. ff: - ' Lat- A - ' ft. ff , 'f-?5?ffi:.u if . A.. ' .1 523 Nga- 45, ga, k Nnmsfe' , ip-W-H' .. ,. iiffft-fa 2- . 1-' - swi- 1. -. ..' 'F5'A5 :I ' i5i':.Lh--1.- ' 1 .rt-:rat-5:5252 Mu 'z lit 1. . MG.. . . , 6 Sf, t at 'gr .. H sw ,'fx-I-.iv '-f-fa--assi' , . ' 1 -522-:sql-sf,--:gk ,J ,.,, . 3.1, 35 , X s:g,,.i.g,,..! in X sift: gf? 5 A X K5 ig. .. 5 Q it XC Su at . ...,1:-.amzrf ' 45:21-as::i:g,:1.+:i 5. 'kia5vi1QkPr:-5:3-.nuff ....af2'u-K. i er.-1:51-qi, t, 98553, , , ,.,, ,..,,. .,.4.,s. ,,.H.,. .- ., .e.1v.-.ic-zzazbeeiiv . .plow w.v..4..1ae.e4.' . 235515-f1f '1'5Y ' ' ' ' . ,.,. as .J f:1:.f:-e.52f::f.aff aff' -12 '- ':..,: .Ang vi .-1-sz .R':f: z1' N5 z::,Qg.E:'s ,vt 4 7 ,I I- M ggfwg 5J.':J:V5Z3? - I? X N L .,,, .. .. . Nl i r :3'17.l.: 121, 32.1.3 555,917 . X, .. .-y., 5, ALFRED DE FOREST SNIVELY, A A' P HForry Sixty-third and Market Sts., Phila., Pa. Arts Born August 18, 1883, at Flatbush, L. I. - Entered Freshman Yearg Hamilton School, Philadelphiag Manor School, Stamford, Connecticut. Philomathean Society C453 Fencers' Club C25 C35Q Deutscher Verein C35 441. .Asso- ciate Editor Punclz Bofwl C45, Managing Editor C45 5 'Chorus Old King Cole , Alice in Another Land , Mr. Hamlet of Denmark . Cast of German Play Dr. Wespe C35. WILLIAM PARVIN STARR Bi!!,' HWiIlie P Billy P 154.1 N. Park Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Civil Engineering Born July 12, 1882, at Watsontown, North'd Co., Pa. Entered Freshman Yearg Central High School. Houston Club CI5C25Q Civil Engineering Society C35CJ,5g Athletic Association C25C35. Van Nostrand Prize for Junior C. E. STANLEY SIMPSON SWARTLEY, LD If li' 'KSbart!ey Maile HS. S. S. North Wales, Pa. Arts Born July 2, 1884, at North Wales, Pa. Entered Freshman Yearg Eastburn Academy. Young Men's Christian AssociationC15 C25 C35 C455 Houston ClubC15 C25 C35 C45g Athletic AssociationC15 C25 C355 Philomathean SocietyC15 C25C35C.1.5, TTCHSUFCTCZ5, Second CensorC35 , Moderator C452 MontgomeryCountyClubCq.5. OrationCommitteeC25. Honorable Mention, Entrance Lating First Prize Oration Contest Philoma- thean SocietyC25g First Prize Essay Contest Philomathean Soci- etyC35g Alternate Philomathean-Zelosophic Debate Team C35 . CHARLES KEEN TAYLOR 5321 Wayne Ave., Germantown, Pa. Arts Born December 18, 1879, at Philadelphia. Entered Sophomore Year, Cornell. Zelosophic Society C35 C453 Camera Club C35 C453 Class Day Committee C+5g Gown Committee C4.5g Editor Punch Bofwl C25 C35. 42 THE NINEYEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD HARVEY BIRCHARD TAYLOR, If I-I ll U Yiirclz H 5321 Vifayne Ave., Germantown, Pa. Civil Engineering Born November 17, 1832, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year: Germantown Academy: North East Manual Training School. Phi Kappa Beta junior Society. Treasurer: Sphinx Senior Society. President of Class l-tl: Discipline Committee til i-tl, Chairman Nl! Chair- man Cremation Committee ill: Ball Committee QZJQ Engineers' Dance Com- mittee itll Executive Committee lgl. Centre Varsity Football Team lgl Cal: Substitute til lzl: Class Football Team ill: Class Track Team tal. President Houston Club 445: Board ul Directors Athletic Association l.tl: Baseball Com- mittee i4lZ Guard Bowl Fight izll Marshall KU. PERCIVAL DRAYTON TAYLGR, .1 'lf' CKP.D.1y fl-PKG!!! ISO4 Pine Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Mechanical Engineering Born September 8, 1882, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year, Episcopal Academy. Phi Kappa Beta Junior Society. Constitution Committee lrlg Sophomore Dance Committee: Junior Ball Committee: Ivy Ball Com- mittee: Engineers' Dance Committee tzlg Henley Ball Committee lrlg Chairman Banquet Committee trlg Senior Prom Committee. HARRY SAMUEL TINKLER, 2' .l lf Norristown, Pa. Nlechanical Engineering Born May 3, r88r, at Guelph Mills, Montgomery Co., Pa. Entered Junior Yearg Norristown High School. Engineers' Club Qgltqjg Executive Committee f4l. HARRISGN BAXTER TRAVER, 1' QV U Trafue Hfllanten I Willard Place, Hudson, N. Y. , Architecture Born December 2, 1881, at Hudson, N. Y. Entered Freshman Yearg Hudson High Schoolg Williston Academy. Architectural Society C21 fgl C455 Executive Com- mittee C4.lg Houston Club CID Kal Cgl frtlg University Calendar Committee f4l. Class RECORD Art Editor. Class Bowling Team lglg Class Baseball Team 43 PHE NINEl'EEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD WALTER KURT VAN HAAGEN, L' E 749 N. Fortieth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born January 9, 1881, at Celle, Germany. , Entered Freshman Year, Real Gymnasium, Germany. Ewing Chemical Club C455 Deutscher Verein fgl f4l, Secretary lgl, President Q4l. Sophomore Honors. K' Honan in German Play Dr. Wespe fglg Ernst Liidersn in Ein Toller Einfall 14.7. , CLARENCE LAUER WAITE, .4 T52 t 1712 S. Fifteenth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Mechanical Engineering Born September 9, 1883, at Cleveland, Ohio. . Entered Freshman Year, Central Manual Training School. Engineer's Club fgllttlg Executive Committee lalg Chess and Checker Club H353 Central Manual Training School Club Lal. FRANK B. WALDN ER H Dutrlz H H George H H fllzzngser ll Ashland, Pa. Architecture Born December 20, 1880, at Ashland, Pa. Entered Freshman Yearg Franklin and Marshall College. Architectural Society Czllgl 14.5, Treasurer Lal. Represen- tative Baird House L4lg Durham in Architectural Society Play l+l. GEORGE HERBERT WALSH, QD li' L' H Hezfb H H Hcr'bage 1804 Pine Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born December 11, 1883, at New York City. Entered Freshman Year, Episcopal Academy. Athletic Association C11 tal Q31 Lqtlg Cercle Francais lgl trtlg Houston Club Crlfzltgj. Class Pin Committee LID: junior Ball Committee, Ivy Ball Committee. Le Soufilleur in 'lLes Plaideurs Ctrl. 44 II-IE NINEIEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD JOSEPH BARNARD WALTON, W If lt, .Y E George School, Pa. Arts Born May 29, 1885, at Ercildown, Pa. Entered Freshman Year: Friends' Central School. Houston Club lt1lz1l31 Q41: Christian Association t11lz1tz1l41: Philomathcan Society l11lz1l31f41. Second Ccnsor and Secretary l7.1. Treasurer and First Ccnsor L31, Moderator i-UZ Friends' Central Club l11l21l31l4l3 Chess and Checker Club l21l31l41. Debate Committee lz1: Oratorical Contest Committee t31. Class of 1880 Prize for Entrance Examination in Mathematics. Alternate Sophomore Debate Teamg Alternate Philomathcan Debate Team vs. Zelo lt1l1.1: Alternate Philomathcan Debate Team vs. Loganian Socielyof Haverford l11l411 Second Prize Philoma- thean Debate Contest 141. JANIES SMYTH WARNER, If H ll HSunny Jimi' Erie, Pa. Architecture Born September 23, 1881, at Erie, Pa. Entered Senior Yearg Erie High School. Architectural Society f21l31 l.11g Executive Board 131, Treasurer K41. Punch Bofwl Cal. Prof. Munyon in Architectural Society Play Visiting Critic l21, Billy Charette and Manas ger of A Pair of Qtteens L41. FRANCIS DEKKER WATSON 1810 N. Thirteenth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Wharton Born .Tune 28, 1883, at Philadelphia. Entered Sophomore Yearg Central High School. Q Deutscher Verein f31l41Q Students' Guide Association Q41. Varsity Debate Team vs. Cornell l4.1g Chorus of Greek Play Q21. ALBAN WARREN WAY, A TSE St. David's, Pa. Mechanical Engineering Born August 22, 1883, 'at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Yearg Central Manual Training School. Theta Nu Epsilon Societyg Mechanical Engineering Club Q31 141, Executive Committee 131, Secretary l41g Dance Com- mittee Q31 C415 Central Manual Training School Clubg Houston Club lI1l21f31f41, Athletic Association lI1f21l31 C415 Chess and Checker Club Q31. Business Manager Class RECORD, Class Gown Committee C41. Class Track Team K21. First in Quarter Mile Novice Races H215 Second in Quarter Mile of Freshman-Sophomore Games Q21. 45 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD HARRY CQNNER WEEKS, W' T, HClzubby Rosemont, Pa. Wharton Born November 18. 1883, at Philadelphia, Pa. Entered Freshman Year: lVilliam Penn Charter Schoolg Houston Club L13 Q23 Q33 C435 William Penn Charter Club Q13 Q23 Q33 143, Vice-President C432 Gargoyle Sophomore Society: Phi Kappa Beta junior Societyg Sphinx Senior Society: Ace of Spades C33. Executive Committee Q13q Bowl Fight Committee Q13 123, Marshall 1233 Banquet Com- mittee Q23: Ball Committee i335 lvy Ball Committee: Senior Reception Committeeg Chairman Senior Prom Committeeg Cane Man. Varsity Cricket Team 113 C23 K33 Q43, Manager Q23 Q33 i433 Varsity Swimming Team l13123Q33Q43, Captain Q43: Water Polo Team Q43: Varsity Baseball Team C433 Class Baseball Team Q23 Q33: Class Football Team KIJ 6:3 131 643, Captain K43: Captain Class Cricket Team 113 1233 Class Fall Crew Q33: Captain Class Swimming Team Q13 fel: Class Bowling Team C33 4.531 First Place Novice Race Sportsman's Show 113g Second Place ioo-yard Race Yale Dual Meet Q33g Third Place roo-yard Race Sportsman's Show Q13: Second Place 100 Feet Race I. C. Champ:onshipQ43: First Place l. C. Goal Kicking Contest 113: Second Place 50-yard Race New York Athletic Club f33: First Place xoo-yard Swimming Championship ofUni- versity Q33. Mask and Wig Club Q13 Q23 Q33 Q43g First Chorus Old King Cole . Sir Robinson Crusoe 1 Preliminary Show QQ3. HENRY MQRGAN WEIDNER 1421 S. Sixty-seventh Street, Philadelphia, Pa. liflechanical Engineering Born May 12, 1882, at Chester, Pa. Entered Freshman Yearg Central Manual Training School. Mechanical Engineering Society. HARRY EDWARD WEIR 3605 N. Fifth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born August 9, 1882, at Philadelphia. Entered Senior Year: Lehigh University. Zelosophic Society. JOHN MQRRIS WEISS 1726 N. Sixteenth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Chemistry Born March II, 1885, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Yearg Central High School. Ewing Chemical Club Q13 Q23 Q33 Q43g Houston Club Q13 Q23 Q33 Q43 . Class Football Team Q33. Honors in Chemistry Q23. 46 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD SIDNEY LOUIS WELLHOUSE Willie I' Wellie l'S11m17 ' Atlanta, Ga. Arts Born December 23, 1883, at Atlanta, Ga. Entered Freshman Yearg Phillips Exeter Academy. Zelo- sophic Society Q35 Q..l.5i Georgia Club Q35 Q45 , Treasurer Q35g Phillips Exeter Club Q45. First Prize Junior Oratorical Contest. Representative of I-louse P Q45. GEORGE DANIEL WESCHLER, Wesrh 'I 445 W. Eighth Street, Erie, Pa. Wharton Born December 6, 1882, at Erie, Pa. Entered Freshman Year, Erie High School. Erie Club Q15 Q25 Q35 Q45, Vice-President Q45g Boxing and Wrestling Club Q45g Houston Club Q1 5 Q25 Q35 145, Athletic Association Q15 Q25Q35Q45. Class Football Team Qr51 Half-back Varsity Football Team Q25g Class Football Team Q35Q45, Captain Q35g Class Crew Q35. Guard Bowl Fight Q15 Q25, Marshall Q35Q45. SAMUEL BRAY WHETSTONE, 'lf' V cgprayyn cr Sanz ii Wayne, Pa. Wharton Born March 6, 1881, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year, DeI.ancey School. DeLancey School Club, President Q35g Phi Kappa Beta junior Society, Combined Musical Clubs Q25. Vice-President of Class Q45: Ball Committee Q351 Ivy Ball Committeeg Chairman Bowl Fight CommitteeQ15: Cremation CommitteeQ25. Class Crew Q153 Class Football Team QI5C25, Manager Q15Q25g Class Baseball Team Q35Q Class Track Team Q35, Scrub Varsity Football Team Q35Q45g Guard Bowl Fight Q15Q35. Editor Pennxylfvanian Q35 Q45i Chorus Alice in Another Land . FRANCIS SIMS WHITE, .1 W, Fuzzy 144 W. Penn Street, Germantown, Pa. lVIechanical Engineering Born August 26, r883, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year, Germantown Academy. Banquet Committee Q45. Varsity Cricket Team Q15 Q25 Q35Q4D. Presi- dent Intercollegiate Cricket Association Q35, Treasurer 47 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD l GEORGE MORRIS WHITESIDE, Qd, .4 To U Whitie H l 709 Corinthian Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Architecture Born July 7, 1884, at Philadelphia. Entered Junior Year, Central Manual Training School. Central Manual Training School Club Qglftpjg Architectural Society f3l IQSEPI-I SMITH WILDS, IR., HJerry ' 1808 N. Twenty-sixth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Civil Engineering Born September 28, 1883, at Philadelphia. ' Entered Freshman Yearg Central High School. Civil Engi- neering Society frl tzl Cgl itil . DE FOREST PQRTER WILLARD, .l 11 U De ry 1818 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born February zo, 1884, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Yearg VVilliam Penn Charter School. Sphinx Senior Society: Phi Kap a Beta Junior Society: Gargoyle Sophomore Socictyg Cercle Francais lllf2ll3lli4l: Dandelion Society lzl: Ashhurst Surgical Society QU: Athletic Association filfzligli-1-lc Treasurer Golf Club Cgllgtl. Secretary of Class itlg Executive Committee ill. Chairman Bowl Fight Committee lzl: Dance Com- mittee fzl: Chairman Ball Committee lil! Ivy Ball Committee: Football Com- mittee Ulg Chairman Picture Committee Varsity Track Team fzlg Var- sity Squad iglg VarsityGolfTeam fzl Q35 KD, Captain fzli Class Track Team Cilizl, Manager Cal: Class Baseball Team Cillzliglg Class Cricket Team ill. Marshall at Bowl Fight ALEXANDER COXE WILLIAMS, .I Uf' H Coxie 21 I2 DeLancey St., Phila., Pa. llflech. Engineering Born April 12, 1883, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Yearg Episcopal Academy. Phi Kappa Beta Junior Societyg Cercle Francais Q11 Qzl Cgl C+lg Golf Club, Vice-President Cal, President Q3jC.tjg Mechanical Engineers' Club Ml. Dance Committee tzlg Cremation , Committee fzlg junior Ball Committee, Chairman Banquet l Committee Cttlg Toastmaster Banquet Crl. Class Track l Team fri Qzlg Class Golf Team Q11 Q25 Cgl fatlg Varsity l Golf Team frj. UM. Scapin in Les Fourberies de Scapin fri. 48 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD CLAIRE VINCENT WILSON HPud', Hflfilrn York, Livingston County, N. Y. Wharton Born july 22, 1883, at York, N. Y. Entered Junior Year, Geneseo State Normal, N. Y., Casca- dilla Preparatory School, Ithaca, N. Y. LAURENCE NIERRILL WILLSON, J li' la' HPI7oggZeI1z1g H Tlzafs 2111 2226 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Science Born February 8, 1884, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year, Blight School, Tennis Club Q2l, Cercle Francais Qgl Q+l, Mechanical Engineers' Club Qq.l, Athletic Association Q1lQ2lQ3lQ.1.l, Houston Club Q1l Q21 Q35 Q+l. WALDO SHERMAN WILSON, df L' li' H Plug H Pad Danbury, Conn. Civil Engineering Born January 1, 1885, at Danbury, Conn. Entered Freshman Year, Danbury High School. Civil Engineering Society Q1l Q2l Qgl Q41 , Houston Club Qrl Q21 Q3j, Athletic AssociationQ1l Q21 Q35 Q.g.j . Class Football Team Q2l . ERNEST GARFIELD WINDLE, Win West Chester, Pa. Wharton Born April 5, 1881, at West Chester, Pa. Entered Sophomore Year, West Chester High School, West Chester Normal School. Young Men's Christian Associa- tion Q4l, Leader of Bible Class Class Debate Com- mittee 49 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD WARREN WINFIELD WOOSTER Berlin, N. J. Electrical Engineering Born December Io, 1879, at Camden, N. J. Entered Sophomore Yearg Drexel Institute. ' X MARCELLUS EUGENE WRIGHT. 4? l l1' l'Mark Markus Richmond Va. Architecture 7 Born April 5, 1881, at Hanover Co., Va. A Entered Junior Year. Architectural Society C31l4.1g Virginia State Club f31C4.1, Secretary and Treasurer 4311413 Southern Club Q31 5' Mrs. Hoodwink in A Pair of Queens , Architectural Society Play. FREDERICK VALENTINE WUNDERLE A T Q, H Freddyn M 'Rpdl' Edge Hill, Pa. ' Chemistry Born September 12, 1883, at Edge Hill, Pa. Entered Freshman Yearg Central Manual Training School. Ewing Chemical Club l11fz1Q31l41, Vice-President Q31, President fq.1g Houston Clubg Athletic Associationg Deutscher Vereing Musical Clubs f31g Inter-Fraternity Bible Class Committee Q41g Central Manual Training School Club C41. Banquet Committee C315 Mock Program Committee Q31. Cast German Play Dr. Wespe l31g Cast German Play Ein Toller Einfall l41g took part Chemistry Smokers C31 C41. 50 .. .. ,v ,. .... .Y , .,,l.,,. 5 -' TT: T ' ' Y I T ui A A A ' ' ff ' 1 5 .A . 3-A MHFLJQI f 'Q fihx .14 I - .f , 1 ,. I-I ' ..- 5 2 , 25 E Ta 5 ff ' D- 9 u l fi.-QFLPQ I 1 I lj ' 1 ltlllvnygt H-u 5, ni 1. 1 1, I- I' lu ,l....,,l H 1 , - fb ,, . - . . - .. .. I, V I ' QT L V-1 2 riiiiir., i? 7? .lit 2771 l PHILIP EDGAR ADAMSON, li H ll Wister Street, Germantown, Pa. Chemistry Born August 5, 1884, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Yearg Germantown Academy. Left end of Freshman Year. Germantown Academy Clubg Ewing Chemical Societyg Golf Clubq Houston Clubg Athletic Association. Sophomore Proclamation Committee. Class Baseball and Cricket Teams trlg WVrestling Team, May Day Sports til. BLANEY ALEXANDER BEACH, W li' fl Joliet, Illinois Wharton Born May 30, 1881, at Morris, Illinois. Entered Freshman Yearg Joliet High School. Left end of Sophomore Year. Gargoyle Sophomore Societyg Mandolin Club lrl tal, Class Pin Committee lil, Class Picture Committee tzj. ARTHUR BLOCH, K' flrr 2131 N. Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Wha1'ton Born June xo, 1882, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year, William Penn Charter School. Left end of Freshman Year. Houston Clubg Athletic Association, William Penn Charter Clubg Chairman Pin Committee Crlg Pipe Committee lrjg Captain Class Track Team ill, Gymnastic Team lrjg Varsity Track Team LID. Third in High Jump in Inter-class Games C123 Substitute Bowlman C115 First in Standing Broad Jump, Atlantic Division Championship Qrjg Third in Standing Broad Jump and Three Standing Broad jumps in National Championship frj. 51 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD ROBERT ANDERSON CABEEN, J Q U Bob Care of Cabeen Sc Co., Real Estate Trust B'ld'g, Philadelphia, Pa. - Science Born October 12, 1884, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Yearg DeLancey School. Left end of Sophomore Year. Class Fall Crew L1lf2jg Class Crew at Poughkeepsie Qrjg Substitute Varsity Crew at'Annapolis Czjg Second Varsity Crew Czl. CECIL BALTIMORE CALVERT, .J Uf' 4' Ce ru 269 S. Twenty-first Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Wharton Born September 11, 1882, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year, The Blight School. Left end of Sophomore Year. Class Track Team lrjg Class Golf Team trlg Varsity Golf Team Qrjg Captain Varsity Golf Team tzj, fresignedl. Mask and VVig Preliminary Show frlg Part of Amelia Rate in Old King Cole Crjg Mask and Wig Clubq President Golf Club fzl. ADAM SOUTHERN CONWAY, Q .I H 'iff-dam i'Mufl' 1811 Green Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born February 20, 1883, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Yearg William Penn Charter School. Left junior Year. Athletic Association LID L23 l3l C455 Houston Club C1ll,2ll3ll4lg William Penn Charter Club frl Q2j L31 Lalg Cercle Francais fIJC2ll3lc4.l. First Chorus Old King Cole and Sir Robinson Crusoe 3 Mask and VVig Club Q21 Q3llq.jg Preliminary Show 135. WHARTON LANDELL DONALDSON If H ll, MDM Pup 4307 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Wharton Born June 26, 1881, at Atlantic City, N. J. Entered Freshman Yearg William Penn' Charter School. Left Sophomore Year. President Gargoyle Sophomore Societyg Houston Club lrlg Dance Committee C233 Right Tackle Varsity Football Team trjg Varsity Football Team Qzl. 52 THE NINETEEJV HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD GILBERT DOOLITTLE, Hfzzpifefl UDoo!c'y Upper Darby, Pa. Civil Engineering Born October 18, 1884, at Bethlehem, Pa. Entered Freshman Yearg Friends' Central School. Left Junior Year. Civil Engineering Society l1ll2ll3l3 Tall Men's Club lil: Friends' Central School Club lrllzllgl. Class Track Team tillzl, RONALD BRUCE DUNCAN H Dznzku U Kid 4926 Frankford Ave., Frankford, Pa. Civil Engineering Born September 28, 1883, atPhiladelphia. Entered Freshman Year, North East Manual Training School. Left Junior Year. Civil Engineering Society lrl lzl. Class Basket-ball Team Qxl lzl. EDWIN HENRY EITIJER, 3d, W .I H H Win7z51 4 1530 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Wharton Born August 2, 1883, at Riverton, N. J. Entered Freshman Year, DeLancey School. Left Sopho- more Year. Houston Club lrlg Athletic Association lrlg Won Pool Tournamentlrlg Class Banquet Committee l1lg Bowl Fight Committee lrlg Class Yell Committee l1lg Class Poster Committee lrl. Class Baseball Team ltlg Varsity Gun Team l1l. HQWARD LETTS FORTINER, .1 T J H Forty 158 Prospect Park W., Brooklyn, N. Y. Chemistry Born November 12, 1882, at Camden, N. J. Entered Freshman Year: Friends' Central School. Left beginning of Junior Year on Account of Health. Convicts' Clublrlg Mandolin Club lrlg Gargoyle Sophomore Society, Chairman Class Pipe Committee Qrlg Poster Committee frlg Class Picture Committee lrlg President of Class Cap- tain Class Football Team Varsity Gymnastic Team lrlg Left Half-back Varsity.Football Teamlzl. Bowl Man I Qrlg Heavy-weight Wrestler May Day Sports lll lzl. 53 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD I l DONALD DAVIE HAY, 'iMatll Fort Niobrara, Neb. Arts Born October 9, 1881, at Fairview, Erie Co., Pa. ' Entered Freshman Year, Erie High School. Left Sopho- more Year. WILLIAM FREDERICK HAYDEN - ' 308 Union Street, Bloomington, Ill. Science Born January 9, 1883, at Bloomington, Illinois. Entered Freshman Year, St. Joseph's College. .Left Sopho- more Year. Zelosophic Society Crlg Western Club Qrlg Houston Club irlg Newman Club ill. LOUIS EINSTINE LEOPOLD, Lep 1632 Franklin Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born April 28, 1883, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year, Central High School. Left end of Freshman Year. Miller Law Club C15 . Class Debate Team KID. Left College to enter Law School. ALAN LEVIN, KD A' II'- . 629 N. Sixteenth St., Phila., Pa. Wharton Born November 9, 1884, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Yearg VVilliam Penn Charter School. Left Middle of Junior Year. William Penn Charter Club iilizliglz Junto journalistic Society izl g C353 Golf Club izlfglq Cercle Francais irlfzlial Vice-Presidenti3l1 Hous- ton Club Crlizliglg Athletic Association illizlifl. Class Historian irlizlg 5 Chairman Poster Committee ill: Class Picture Committee lil: Proclamation I Committee izlg Bowl Fight Committee Czlg Class Banquet Committee izl: f Ball Committee i3l. Associate Editor Penmvylvanian CID, Editor izl, Assis- 3 tantManagirig Editor Czlfglg Editor Red and Blue ill i3l1 took part of : Carle in ' Les Fourheries de Scapinl' irlg Chorus in Old King Cole and 3 Sir Robinson Crusoe . 54 THE NINEIEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD ROY MONTEFIORE LIVINGSTONE Tamaqua, Pa. Wharton Born January 11, 1886, at Tamaqua, Pa. Entered Freshman Yearg Tamaqua High School, William Penn Charter School. Left end of Sophomore Year. Houston Club. Left College to enter Law School. SYLVAIN RAPHAEL LIVINGSTONE H Woods31 348 W. Broad Street, Tamaqua, Pa- Wharton Born April 14, 1884, at Tamaqua, Pa. Entered Freshman Yearg Tamaqua High School, William Penn Charter School. Left end of Sophomore Year. Houston Clubg William Penn Charter Club. Houston Club Swim- ming Eventsg in Swimming Events at Sportsmans' Show JOHN MARSTON, 3d, A A' P Merion Station, Pa. Electrical Engineering Born August 3, 1884, at Laurel Hill Mountains. Entered Freshman Year. Left Senior Year. Houston Club Qrl Q21 Q3l f4lg Athletic Association KID Qzl Q31 QQ, Mont- gomery County Club frj Q25 H315 Executive Com- mittee Cttj. Mock Program Committee Editor Punch Bafwl fzl C31 QQ, Business Editor Punch Borwl C4.jg Editor Red and Blue lgl f4j. BARLOW MOORHEAD J ln' E MBU! H'Ralabit i 243 W. School-house Lane, Germantown, Pa. Wharton Born January 21, 1881, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Yearg St. Paul's School, Concord, N. H. Left middle of Junior Year. Gargoyle Sophomore Societyg Phi Kappa Beta Junior Society. Dance Committee fzjg Bowl Fight Committee Czjg Picture Committee 55 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD JOHN HOOKER PACKARD, 3d, .l ll' HSnook.v 326 S. Twenty-first St., Phila., Pa. Wharton Born May 4, 1884, at Philadelphia. . Entered Freshman Year, Episcopal Academy. Left during Second Term Freshman Year. Class Pipe Committee CID. Associate Editor Pennsyifuanian CID. Crew Ball Com- mittee QIJ. ' JOHN STEWART RODMAN, J 'lf' . URod 'lStefw ' IQO4 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Biology Born July 21, 1883, at Atilene, Texas. Entered Freshman Year, William Penn Charter School. Left end of Freshman Year. Gargoyle Sophomore Society. Executive Committee LID, Crew Ball Committee fill. Class Track Team Crl. CHARLES LTPPINCOTT SHEPPARD, Z W in Carl H H Slzepp Wissahickon Heights, Pa. Arts Born April 7, 1883, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year, Chestnut Hill Academy. Left Freshman Year. Class Football Committee UD. CHARLES MONROE SMITH 3737 Walnut St., Phila., Pa. Wharton Born April 9, 1882, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year, William Penn Charter School. Left Sophomore Year. Combined Musical Clubs lrlg William Penn Charter Club C1l. 56 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD REGINALD SPEAR, L' Tu! Norristovvn, Pa. Civil Engineering Born May 16, 1881, at Nice, France. Entered Freshman Year: Episcopal Academy. Left Sopho- more Year. Dance Committee 12l. Custodian of Bowl 12l. DAVID LAURENCE VAUGHAN H Louie H Louy H H 71111131 1'73ufk Haddonfield, N. J. Civil Engineering Born June 8, 1884, at Monongahela City, Pa. Entered Freshman year: Haddonfield High School. Left end of Freshman Year. Civil Engineering Society 115: Varsity Gun Team 115, Wurtz Dundas Trophy Cup for Shooting 11jg Novice Cup for Shooting 115. BRINTON BUCKWALTER, J 41, fBzzck ' West Chester, Pa. Wharton Born September 2, 1881. at NVcst Chester, Pa. Entered Freshman Yearg Lawrenceville School: DeI.ancey School: Yale University, Left end of Sophomore Year. Theta Nu Epsilon: Gargoyle Sophomore Society. Executive Committee 121: Chairman Baseball Committee 113: Chairman Class Yell Comniittee11l. Dance Committee 123: Varsity Baseball Team 125: Substitute Varsity Baseball Team 1133 Varsity Tennis Team11y127: Varsity Hockey Team 115123: Class Football. Baseball and Cricket Teams 113: Winner of Tennis Tournament for the Championship of the University in Doubles 123: Nifinncr of the Challenge Round for the Tennis Championship of the University in Doubles 12j. l-Iockey Association 10123: Tennis Club 113 125: Houston Club 113 123: Del.ancey School Club 115 123: Secretary 123: Chairman ofthe Hockey Association 123. WALTER MONTAGUE DE BE'RARD U deB H deBe Ontario, California Civil Engineering Born October 10, 1882, at Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Entered Freshman Yearg Coe College, Cedar Rapids, Iowag Beloit College Academy, Beloit, VVisconsin. Civil Engineering Societyizlg Mandolin Club 1rl1zl13Jg California Club, Vice-President13l. Class Picture Committee fzli Class Banquet Committee 17.l: Class Proclamation Committee 125. Varsity Freshman Baseball Team frlg Class Baseball Team 11l11.l13l, Captain 12.35 Class Football Team 1zl1 lg Varsity Baseball Squad Representative joseph Leidy Dormitory CQJQ Secretary of Board of Representatives Bowl Guard fllfll. WARREN ALEXANDER HARLAN Ottumwa, Iowa Wharton Born March 12, 1883, at Ohttumwa, Iowa. Entered Freshman Yearg Ottumwa High School: Iowa College, Gommell, Ia. Left Freshman Year. 57 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD MURRAY BALDWIN KIRKPATRICK, JR. H Kirk H Kirky H Bummer H 203 De Kalb Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Arts Born April 9, 1884, at Philadelphia. Entered end of Freshman Year, Newton CMass.5 High Schoolg Mt. Hermon School. Left Junior Year. Houston Club C15 C355 Chess and Checker Club C15 C25 C355 Athletic Association C15 C25C35, Y. M. C. A. C15C25C35. Varsity Track Team CI5C25C35, Class Track Team C15 C25. First Pole Vault in Freshman-Sophomore Games C153 Second Inter- class and Inter-department Games C25, Second Penn-Columbia Dual MCEtC25, Third Penn- Cornell Dual Meet C25, First Inter-class games C35, First Winter Handicxap Games C35, Second Princeton Handicap Games C35. PAUL MAX KEMPF, .1 J' I I4 Bleecker Street, Newark, N. J. Arts Born February 24, 1883, at Newark, N. J. , i Entered Freshman Year, Newark High School. Left Junior Year CGraduated5. Univer- sity Band C253 New Jersey Club C25. Varsity Gymnastic Team Captain, C15 C25 C35 . Inter- collegiate Championship Flying Rings CGymnastic5 C15C25C35g A, A. U. Championship Flying Rings CGymnastic5 C25 C35. . ROBERT CABEEN LEA, J 'l , 'K Bob 332 E. Walnut Lane, Germantown, Pa. Arts Born October 2, 1883, at Philadelphia. Entered Freshman Year, Germantown Academy. Left end of Freshman Year. Class Treasurer C15. Leader in Hall Rush C15. Chorus Sir Robinson Crusoe . JAMES FRANCIS MCCABE 40 Hazle Ave., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Wharton Born' March 26, 1878, at VVilkes-Barre, Pa. Entered Freshman Yearg Stroudsburg Normal Schoolg High School: Business College at Wilkes-Barre. Transferred from Wharton School to Law Department, October, 1902. Vice-President Newman Club C25 C35 C455 President Luzerne County Club C45. Centre on Varsity Football Team C15 C25 C355 Substitute All-American Centre C25. Won Heavy- weight Boxing Event in May Day Sports C15. EDMUND BERTRAND WATSON, .1 T .I Danbury, Conn. Civil Engineering Born June 29, 1881, at Brooklyn, N. Y. Entered Freshman Year, Danbury High School. Left Sophomore Year. Class Crew C25Q Varsity Basket-ball TeamC25. Won Middle-weight Boxing Match, May Day Sports C15. TI-ICMAS HUMPHREY WENTZ, If I-7 ll 824 W. Main Street, Norristown, Pa. Wharton Born August 16, 1882, at Norristown, Pa. Entered Freshman Year, Episcopal Academyg William Penn Charter School. Left Sopho- more Year. Class Banquet Committee C25. Class Baseball Team C15. 58 COLLEGE HALL THE JUNIOR CLASS Q.-.-Q4 I 5 TA D CD L J Il Qilass Q9fficers Plwiflezzl JAAIES DEIJLJE TAYLOR Vita-l'z'e5ir!eIIl FRANCIS HOLT GALIQY SCfl'I'flIl'y EDWARD REIGLE SNYDER Tl'EOJII1'EI' JOHN HARRY YORK Hisloriarz JOHN EDWIN HOPKINS Exefulizfe Cammillee PAUL BOUCHERLE EDGAR JVIAURICE CORTRIGHT WATSON BEATTY LENDERMAN, Jr. FRANCIS DRINKER PERKINS, Jr. 61 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Albrecht, Herman Carl Anderson, Howard Bruce Appleton, Henry Lewis Armstrong, James Ashmead, Duffield, Jr. Bary, George Bement, Russell Birkinbine, Henry Edgar Blakeley, Abraham Gustavus Bockius, Charles Albert JVBogle, Arthur Phillips Bolton, Charles Lewis Bond, George Wells Booth, George Boucherle, Paul Bowen, Edward Rose Boyd, William, Jr. Bradford, James Sydney Broadbelt, Oscar Garfield Brownlee, Edward Gould, Jr. Budd, Francis Herbert Burns, Eugene L. Caldwell, Ralph Grant Campbell, William Alexander Carpenter, Aaron Everly, 2d Chadwick, Edward Wallace Chillas, Richard Burt, Jr. Coleman, Reynolds Colgan, Robert ,Joseph Conderman, Norman Kerr Conwell, Edward Laurence Cooper, Stanley Fenimore Cortright, Edwin Keen Cortright, Edgar lVIaurice Craske, Charles Edmund Members Crawford, Winfield Wilson Croasdale, Laurence Broadhead Culler, Aaron Andrew Culp, Samuel William ' Dading, Charles Henry Darling, Douglas . ' David, William Morris Deininger, Howard Franklin De Victor, William Knight Dickson, Reid Stuart Diefendorf, Edward G. i Dieterle, George Andreas Dise, Homer Allen Docker, Horace Stokes Donnelly, Joseph Francis Sinnott Doran, John Francis Dout, Edgar Philip Drayton, Newbold Dripps, Harold Dulles, James Bateman Earnshaw, Frederic S. Eaton, Robert Smith Eckels, Lawren Samuel Eckman, Hensel Ecob, Robert Gilbert Ellett, Thomas Harlan Entwisle, Alfred Lindsey Ewing, Nlaskell, Jr. Feigel, John Henry , Feldstein, Leonard Forster, Arthur Oscar Freed, Theodore llflegargee Foulkrod, Frederick Shelton Foust, George Comly Fulweiler, John Edwin 62 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Galey, Francis Holt Geisler, William Henry German, Harry James Geyelin Henry Rawle Goldbeck, Albert Theodore Goldstein, Horace Govan, Elwood lVIillard Gregory, Albert Main Griest, Thomas Haines Gross, Murray Ulysses Haag, Frederick, Jr. Haasz, George Neiler Hager, Chauncey Smith Hamilton, Robert Devitt Harbeson, William Page Hardt, John William Harris, Henry Samuel Harris, llflorrison Heacock, Edward Rockhill Hendrie, John Gibson Hepburn, Joseph Samuel Hewson, William Hicks, John Frederick Gross Hitchcock, Edward Fithian Hobbs, Raymond Mason Hopkins, John Edwin Hopper, Thomas B. Huff, Thomas Ellwood, Jr. Huggins, John Robinson Ingersoll, Edward Jenkins, David Evans Kelley, Edward Kemp, Alexander Singer Knipe, Albertson Floyd Koronski, Stephen Kraus, Gtto, Ir. La Bree, Benjamin, Jr. Lamberton, Robert Eneas Lang, Henry Christian Latimer, Lewis Spann Lenderman, Watson Beatty, Jr. Lewis, Henry hdartyn, Jr. Linton, Walter Powell Lipper, lVlilton Williain Logo, Victor Le Van Lupton, Lewis llflorris Green Lysle, Frederic Bowers McCartney, Eugene McCaughey, William John McConnell, Thomas Leo McElwain, Clarence Stanley NIclVIullin, Irvine Stuart llflartin, Edward Burk Nlason, Lennox Stirling lvlayer, Henry Christian, Jr. Nlendenhall, Earl Nlerwin, Charles lVIerrill lVIillar, Willis Norman lVIills, Charles Peale lVIilner, Byron Albert Nlitchell, Paul George Moore, Edwin Close lvlorrison, Max Philip Murphyf, William Robert lVIyers, John Andrew Newbold, Richard Sydney Nields, .John Lent Nields, Mosmer Aldewin THE NINETEEJV HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Page, Joseph French, 3d Perkins, Francis Drinker, Jr. Perkins, Rowan Penrose Perry, Lynn Elwood Potter, Clarence Wonderly Read, John Smilie Redding, Charles Summerheld Reed, Alan Howard, Jr. Reeves, Rufus Sargent Riley, Charles llfladison Robinson, Laurence Eugene Rodman, Thomas Ernest Roecker, John lVIartin Rogers, Frank Henkels Rommel, William Gus Rosenberg, Solomon Leopold Sajous, Louis Theodore de lvledici Sakai, Yunosuke Salomon, Benjamin Louis Scott, Forrester Holmes Sewell, Harry Dickey Sherwood, George Horace Shillingford, William Galloway Shoemaker, Louis Jack Simkins, Eugene Schuyler Sinkler, Wharton, Jr. Sledge, Edward Simmons Smith, Arthur Thomas Smith, Ridgway Pancoast Snyder, Edward Reigle Snyder, John Amos Soifer, Joseph Stafford, Morton Ogden Stern, Julius David Stetser, John Joseph Stiller, Francis Carr Sullivant, Andrew Denny Rodgers Taylor, James Depue Terry, Samuel Heebner Thissell, John lylahn Thompson, Faith Tunnell, Frederic Harold Van Cleve, lvlorrison Robb Vaughan, David Laurence Walker, William Homer Watson, William Shermer Weills, William Edgar Weissenfiuh, John Edwin Welsh, Raymond Wilmer Wherry, Edgar Theodore Willing, Charles Wilson, Luther Elgin Wittkorn, Thomas Henry Wolf, Daniel Dorsey Wolf, Eugene Wolf, Franz Herman Dercum Wood, Richard Francis, Jr. York, John Harry Young, Thomas Gorsuch Yrigoyen, Pedro Zelley, -Joseph Antrim Zellner, Carl Sina HOUSTON HALL THE SOPHOMORE CLASS 25 I3 NWI I ff r' X ff S IIIIIIII X X X PEA HS Qillass Q9fflEB1'5 Prexzdenl How ARD BLACRWOOD LIOOET Vzfe Pfesldent HERISERT BOOTH Sen efary LLOYD PRESTON CARPENTER Treasurer CHARLES PICKETT STOKES Jr Exemlzue Commzllee CARL CHRISTIAN BLOCK THONIAS COCHRAN JOHN WILLIAM TOWNSEND J WILLIAM BELL WATKINS 3d WALTER LOWERY ZIEGLER W I 'HJ , , 'II 1lXu' IJKX1JMH T II I' Ir , I W I '--- 3- I V ,XI If I , rn ' 2523 . 5 If EJIIL 2 if 67 Members THE .NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Abrams, Joseph Addison Alburger, Elmer Russel Allyn, William Ellery Apeldorn, Guy Scott Arkin, Morris Leo Ashbridge, Donald MacQueen Ashton, John llflilton Atkin, Hercules Boyd Bailey, Harrington Morell Baker, Franklin Wharton Bandman, Chester Gabriel Bauder, Charles Franklin Beard, Walter Ellwood Bell, Joseph Horace Benjamin, ,Joel Malverii Benners, Alfred Eugene, Jr. Bilyeu, Charles Smith Blass, Charles Arthur Block, Carl Christian Boggs, Joseph Watson Borden, John Alfred Bortin, Harry Brautigam, Ernest LaH'itte Bright, Dudley Seymour Broadbent, Alfred Lee Bromley, Wallace Brooke, Brooks 7 Brown, George Albert, Jr. George Reitzle Charles Taylor Brown, -John Tabele, Jr. Brown, Samuel Lehman Bryans, Henry Bussell Burch, Francis French Butler, Buzby, Samuel Percy Woodward Cadwallader, Wallace Laird Calhoun, J. Ellwood Carpenter, Lloyd Preston Carson, John Baker - Carter, Oscar Sedgewicke Carwithen, Hydrich Van Court Cathcart, Robert Henry, Jr. Chance, Edwin Mickley Cofhn, Henry Pennmann Conway, Adam Southern H Coonahan, William Joseph Cope, Edge Taylor, 3d Costello, John Noble Cupitt, Frank Raymond Dallam, David English, -Jr. Dalton, John Franklin Damon, ,James Graham Dana, William Jay Daniels, Frank Crittenden Davis, John Ralph Delany, Howard Sharpless Dennis, Bruce Wallahan Dettre, Linn Ambrose DeVan, Howard Gove DeVan, Rugeley Pierson Dickhut, Roger Milton Duke, Alfred Wilson Dunn, Herbert Everett Dyer, Charles Dickey, Jr. Edelman, Samuel Ehlers, Carl Herman Evans, Henry Sebastian Evans, Wayne Standley Eysenbach, George Gifford THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Fetterolf, Horace Mann Fiske, Charles Pomeroy Fitzmaurice, William John, Jr. Fleisher, Maurice Tracy Fletcher, Gustavus Bergner Forsythe, James Hutchison Foster, Alexander, Jr. Foster, Walter Chapin Frank, Benjamin Galbraith, Ernest John Gartland, John Joseph, 2d Garvin, Dean Archibald Gaston, Frederick Harold George, Howard Howell Gibbons, Oliphant Gill, Calvert Burke Gimbel, Bernard F. Godfrey, Ross Orange Gold, Guy Davis Goldbaum, Jacob Samuel Golder, Mandes Goldsmith, Herbert Nathaniel Goodfellow, Arthur Norton Graham, Donald g Greathead, John Francis Gucker, Charles Brooks Halberstadt, George lVIoore Hall, James Scott Harry, Carolus Powel Hartley, Harry Hartwell, Cushman Haug, Thaddeus Leon Euclid Hawley, Samuel Davis Heizmann, Charles Raymond, Jr. Hepburn, Minor Danenhower Herbrecht, Otto Gustav Hill, Everett Wentworth Hodge, Horace Bush Holm, Douglas Livingstone Hood, Warren Blake Hopkinson, Edward, Jr. Hoskins, Francis Guild Howell, Gersham lVlott Hubley, Francis Curtis Huch, Alwin Frank Hulin, George Hyde Hulton, Florence Hunt, Biddle Newbold Ingle, Nlark James Jacobs, hflichael William, Jr. Jacobs, Robert Augustus Jayne, Charles Adams Jenkins, Warren Carrol Jones, Charles Ramey Joyce, Bryan Pope Kennedy, William Ernst Kepler, Walter Emerson Kister, Alfred B. Knowles, Emmett Bryan Koenig, Waldemir Addison Krause, H. Ogle Krauss, Edward Eugene Lafean, Stuart Bernard Lavery, Urban Augustin Layton, Caleb Sipple Lee, Lothrop Levene, Israel George Lewis, Robert Morton Lewis, Shippen Leymel, Zygmunt Stephen Loos, Paul R. THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD McCormick, George Wylie McCulloh, George McKnight, Howard Allison Macfarlan, Donald Mackay, Robert Ronald MacMillan, Frederick Ebenezer Maits, Charles Buckley Mann, Philip Leopold Martin, Sydney Errington Martin, Thomas Scott Mason, John Alden Masters, Albert Ralph lvlendenhall, John Cooper Millar, Bruce Drum Miller, Arthur Persons Miller, George Lewis Mills, Albert Bird Mink, George Washington, Jr. Moench, Theodore Frederic Monaghan, Paul Montgomery, Archibald Roger, 2d Moore, Arthur Roland Moore, Louis Joseph Francis Muchnic, William Maurice Miiller, Hugo Arthur Nibecker, Karl Nicholson, William Shomo Nordyke, Addison Haynes Clson, Ray Leander Philler, George, Jr. Pierce, Stanley Ladomus Plummer, George William Pollitt, Edward Raine, Wendell Phillips Refsnyder, Harry Price Rieser, Jacob Leinbach Riley, Henry Joyce Ringe, Henry Ralph Robertson, George Franklin Ross, Edward Allen ' Ryder, Robert Beahm Sailer, John Morris Sawyer, William Alfred Scarlett, Hunter Watt Schutte, 'Leroy Brown Schwarz, Henry John ' Shelly, Isaac High Shick, Augustus Walton Shoemaker, Joseph Moore Shoemaker, Robert Jay Simpers, Thomas Eder Simpson, Bertine Gillette Smith, Francis Palmer Smith, Louis Christian Stadiger, Norman Bennett Stager, William Edson Stanton, William Cyril Stine, Sidney Livingston Stuckert, Howard lVIorris Swain, Warner McKechnie Thomas, Fred'k Throckmorton Thompson, John Small Todd, Joseph Zook Topping, Wilbur Baird Townsend, John William, Jr. Troelsch, Henry William Turnbull, James Beatty, Jr. Turner, Charles Alexander Van Horn, William Thomas, Jr. Van Osten, Andrew Maurice YJHE NINETEEN HUNDIQED AND FIVE RECORD Van Scoyoc, Harry Stewart Williams, Carlton Vaughan, Charles Zimmerman Williams, Kenneth Vondercrone, John Walter Williamson, Clarence Heiss Willoughby, Alfred Slocum Winpenny, James Harold Winterstein, Otto Alfred Wolff, Alfred Daniel, Jr. Wood, Robert Leaming Woodroffe, George Henry Wynkoop, Frederick Walker, James Abraham Wanner, Henry Eckert Ward, William Briening Warnick, John Hagey Watkin, William Ward Way, John Harold Webb, Henry Phelps Weed, Joseph Dunning Yocum, Isaac DeHaven, Jr. Weiss, Charles Robert Young, Edwin Starr Weiss,'Harr51 Bischoff Young, James Barclay Wetherill, Francis llflacomb Young, Rowland Lawrence x STACK ROOM, UNIVERSITY LIBRARY 71 THE FRESHMAN CLASS 'WWII Q Qllass QBffiner5 Preyideflt DONALD HENDRIE Vife-Prcyidenl LLOYD TILGHRIAN EMORY Secretary VVALTER FRANCIS KEENAN, Jr. Treasurer ALFRED GUILLON HARE Exerutive Commilfee HOWARD WELLS FULWEILER ALBERT NIANSFIELD QRNIE RICHARD MONTGOMERY PHILLER DUDLEY SHOEMAKER 73 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Adler, Julius Aiken, Harold Roland Albrecht, Emil Rudolph Allen, Alonzo Kushton Arny, Louis Wayne Ash, Isaac Astley, Royden Jefferson Atkinson, John Donaldson Bailey, Frank Guinn Baker, ,John William Baldwin, Allen Thomas Baltzell, Edward Digby Barakat, Samuel Wickes Barker, .Joseph Hudson Bassette, Roy Donald Bauer, Walter Snyder Baxter, Osmond Monroe Beekley, Waldron Cheyney Bellinger, Wilsey Simon Bickham, Martin Hays Birney, William McDowell Bricker, John Henry Bricker, William Elmer Brooks, Edwin Hinchman Brown, Thomas Wistar, 3d Brown, Walter Earle Brown, William Laird Buckley, William Robert Burleigh, Charles Carroll Buzby, Charles Ernest, Jr. Bythiner, Eugene Cannon, Horace Henry Cannon, James Lewis Members Carson, Hugh Graham Chamberlain, Lewis Boyer Chapin, John Richards ' Cheston, George Morris Clark, Edward Lyon Clay, Edward Biddle Clayton, Albert Joshua Cochran, Joseph Hunsicker Cochran, Thomas Cody, Harold Bryant Connor, Isaac Baum Cooke, Charles Boker, Jr. Cope, Robert Harper ' Corson, Egbert Dexter Cox, Charles Hugg Coyne, James Kitchenman Crawford, Alexander Loller Crawford, Charles llflontgomery Crowell, Abraham Albert Cuskaden, Millard Erwin Cuthbert, Richard Williams, Jr. Danenhauer, Howard Lee Darlington, Henry Saulnier Davis, Henry Blaine Davis, Malcolm Irvin Day, Beaver Wade Dean, Harry Clinton Del Rossi, Alfred Dever, Harvey Conquest Dickerman, Franklin Forrest Dickey, Horace Clement Dickinson, Bayard Clarence Disston, Hamilton Dixon, John Shipley 74 THE ZVINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Dodge, Henry Henley Doering, William Helwig Donnelly, Augustine Leo Dwyer, James Kain Eager, William Goronwy Eckenrode, David lVIartin Eichengreen, Leon B. Elliott, Lea Caulk Emory, Lloyd Tilghman Engel, Francis Joseph Erwin, Bertine Francis Esrey, William Provost Evans, John Clifford Ewing, Howard Abraham Fairlamb, Horace West, Jr. Feinberg, Fanny Polano Felton, John Garret Fernberger, Samuel Weiller Fitzpatrick, James Anthony Folger, Oliver Heyward Folwell, Robert Cook, -Jr. Eranzen, Carl Gustav Frederick Fromme, Murray Bernard Fulweiler, Howard Wells Gardiner, Roy James Geiger, Arthur Edwin Gibson, Gaylord Mercy Gibson, Henry Clay Gloth, William C. Goff, Byron Heazelton Goldman, Louis Charles Good, Marriott Augustus Goodwin, Harold, Jr. Grab, Eugene Granville Greene, Edward Lawrence Greene, Garton Spence Griffin, William Alonzo Griffiths, Charles Hayden Grunwell, John Roscoe Hake, William Eugene Qster Haldeman, Clifford Lloyd Haldeman, Guy Kammerer Francis Hamilton, Russell Donohugh Hare, Alfred Guillon Haring, Arthur Winfield Harker, Norman Woolston Hazel, Walter Theodore Heller, Harry Helton, Roy Addison Henry, Cleveland Hepburn, Barry Haves Hess, Willard Mallalieu Hill, Horace Greenwood, Jr. Hilton, William Stanford Holcombe, Herbert Dwight Holland, -James Burnette Holmes, Gerald Anderson Horn, lVIax Howell, John Lewis Hughes, Harold Knight Hummer, Wayne Humphrey, Laurence Paschal Hurshman, Abraham Eleazer Hyman, Arthur David Jwaya, Kiheiji Jack, Richard Dutton James, Jesse Evans John, Rutherford Lewis Johnson, Arthur Charles, Jr. Johnson, Edward Earle 'J Johnson, Lindley, Jr. Jones, Roy Childs THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Kane, William Reno Keast, William Richard Morton Keating, Peter McCall Keely, David Fulmer Keely, Edmund lVIark, Jr. Keenan, Walter Francis, Jr. Kershaw, William Henry Kervick, Francis William Kinley, Ernest Arthur Kirk, Harry Hamrich Kirkpatrick, Clarence Appleton Klauber, Edward, Jr. Klebsattel, Christian Frederick Kromer, Alfred Edwin Laise, Clemens Albert Leary, James Wade Lee, Ruckman Levi, Irwin Palmer Levy, Fabian Franklin Levy, Lionel Faraday Lewis, Charles Frederick Lippincott, Joseph Wharton Lobb, llflorris Keeler Logan, James, Jr. Long, Bayard Henry Longaker, Norman Longland, John Alan Lowe, Robert Launitz Lusk, Donald Augustus lVIcCaffrey, John Carroll McCandless, Thomas Wattson lVIcClure, llflatthevv Simpson lVIcCurdy, James Aubrey McKay, Robert Barnes lVIcManus, Charles Joseph MacElree, James Paul Macfarlan, Douglas Mack, Joseph Peter Mann, Benson, Jr. Mann, David Isaac lVIarshall, John Theodore lvlartin, Julius Christian llflartin, Samuel Babbit. Meiglian, James Vincent hflelvin, Frank Worthington llflessinger, William hfloore, Charles Angelo lVIoore, Robert DeWitt llflorgan, Randal, Jr. Nlorris, George Ralph lvlorris, Leland Burnett ' llflonville, Francis Xavier llfluzzarelli, Gladstone Stuart Aloy- sius Edward lvlyers, Frank Albert Nachod, Julius Ernest Neely, Walter Clarkson Newbold, John DaCosta, Jr. Nides, Emanuel Nowack, Earnest William O'Brien, John Obermayer, Leon Jacob Ogden, George Steelman Oliensis, Gershon Lazarus Grme, Albert llflansheld Paschall, Charles Nloulder Paul, Frank Albert Pearce, Henry George Peirson, Christopher Loflin Perry, William Waller Philler, Richard lVIontgomery THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Pickles, John Frederick Pilling, Joseph Roso Platt, Frederick Epenetus Pollock, William John Potter, Sheldon Frothingham Potts, Thomas Swagar Powers, Frank Ethelwulf Raiguel, VVilliam hflagee Reeves, Edmund Hoffman Reeves, John Franklin Reger, Carl Reinish, Joseph Richmond, Carl Edward Rinehart, Harry Paul, Ir. Rishel, Harry Armstrong Rodman, Clarence Wignall Rogers, Karl Henkels Rosengarten, George Ross, Robert Emmett Rothschild, LeRoy Berman Rowland, Ernest Wilson Rumig, Edward Francis Ruth, Aaron L. Sagendorph, Lloyd Arthur Schaefer, William Charles, Jr Scheling, George Louis Schneeberg, David Scott, John Henry Seaton, Hartley Hawley Sellers, Stanley Lincoln Service, William Spencer Shaw, Richard Mosbro Shoemaker, Dudley Shuman, Victor Armin Simm, Irene May Simon, Carroll Williams Small, Edwin Weed Smith, George Lathrop Smith, Hoxie Harrison Smith, William Wharton Snyder, Francis Berry Sotter, Frederick Alexander Spangler, Evan lVIcKinley Spruance, Frank Palin Stevenson, Vincent lVIoore Stifft, Perry William Stilwell, Thomas Huber Stockhausen, Thomas George Stokes, John Spencer Stover, John Logan Sunderland, John Norman Swoyer, Alfred Edward Takaki, Shunzo Taylor, Leonard Nlulford Teich, Frederic Charles Tener, Henry Brown, Jr. Teuhner, Edmund Rudulph, Ir. Thompson, David Throckmorton, ,John Bayard Thumel, August Bernard Tilden, Herbert lVIarmaduke Townsend, Joseph Breritt, 3d Tuck, Arthur Elmer Tustin, ,Jones Buckwalter Tuttle, John Betley Vendig, Norman Casseres Vogdes, Joseph Johnson Waite, Ralph John Walling, Ritner Kelsey Wanger, George THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Way, Le Roy Balliett White, Walter Rhoads White, William McKean Widmer, Louis Charles Wilbraham, Rossiter William Wilensky, Max Harris Wilson, Thomas Bateman Wimpfheimer, E. H. Winter, Raymond Withers, Benjamin Thomas Wood, Clarence Hall Wood, George Shaffer Woodhead, Frank Allen Wykes, Thomas Edward, Ir. Yarnall, Charles Hubert Yetman, William Henry, Jr. Zeckwer, Jamard Richard ENTRANCE TO DORMITORIES 78, THE LIBRARY 7006- ' ., . - A -15:33 E P 1 7611 '1 1 , - ' Q ' 1 1 , , RW . - - ,J ' ? 'Q Q . , - - 5 ., p:s ivq-gg-2: 5,fz1.'--.- 15245 g,g,,N.::1.,I. V 12- -qrwg:-A,-Q1-W-f ffffig'-'-.-132:-'ISim. wa: ..: 'L-sal f , - -v H Q--L'P111fdr' 34: -A ,Vi 3Sff'Sg2i11fQ'Qw.,f.,5g,,5 V14 Zl szf , if- .f gj 3 -arf Q.,-- pg .1 . W ,. - 2 f' f ' Y WILLIAM PEPPER, M.D., LL.D. Provost of the University, 1881-1894 80 . -7 ' T has been said that history is the record of mankind in all his depart- ments of activity and that each age has its own means of expression. So the history of our class is a record of its members in all the depart- ments of College, though not always of activity, and, instead of one means of expression, all means are found for recording our glory. The trophies of our scraps and contests are preserved with pride-torn neckties, pieces of clothing and odds and ends bear record to our prowess. The Dean's trophy and the debate trophy are memorials to our superiority in athletics and in forensic ability. We have also our heroes to whom we can point with pride, including such celebrities as Andy Smith, Rollin Bortle, and Jimmie Boyd. Our literature has kept the English department busy and enabled the periodicals of college to continue publication. Among modern poets we include such men as McCracken and Boyd, and among successful editors we class Carson, Richards and Shelly. Adams and Goodin as business managers of the Pennsylwanian and the Red and Blue respectively, have amply demonstrated the value of a Wharton School training. We have also our records of political life-our class elections, in which reform organizations saved our credit and preserved our glory. Words fail to fittingly convey the glory and fame of our illustrious class. As we gathered in chapel on that opening day, toward which we had ,looked with longing, we represented a noble addition to Pennsylvania, and the Sophs soon found out that they had to confront a very energetic Freshman class. Anxiously we waited till Tuesday, when we prepared for the hall-rushes and the corner-Hght, determined to wing but as we did not know what We 81 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD were expected to do, the Sophs claimed they won. The object of this con- test is to tell the Fresh to do the wrong thing and then, when they have done it, to praise the Sophs for doing the other. As we were much excited over this injustice, Levin and Musser were selected to describe on proclama- tions what we thought of the Sophs. The posters about the .wormy Sophs were a great success and, in fact, were so sought after that Levin was welcomed by the police force after an exciting capture in which the U cop fell over the paste and had to stay off his beat until he secured a new suit. The politics of our class were so well arranged that we discovered John Brown had been elected our Freshman president. So carefully were the acts of the officers and the doings of the committees guarded, that not only were the Sophs kept in ignorance, but few of the Freshmen knew much about what their class was doing. Our football team should have been successful with Fortiner as captain and Whetstone as manager, but we may say that the good spirit shown made up for the small scores. The team did not win from the Sophs, but in the usual scrap after the game, we so displayed our strength that, although the Sophomore team was victorious,yet the Sophomore class felt like the vanquished. We had many candidates for the crew and everything looked prosperous, especially when Bob Crowell was chosen captain, and if our hopes had been realized, our crew would have outstripped more than the Freshman lVIed. We now felt that the Sophs had won enough and resolved to win every- thing hereafter. Our debating team, including Bortle and Swartley, proceeded to show the Sophs what good debating consisted of. It is needless to say we won the debate trophy. Our baseball team continued our good work by defeating with ease all the school teams about Philadelphia and then completed its victorious record by defeating the Sophs in an exciting game. In the Track events we won more points than any other competitor, since Boyd, Hardt, and Bird were some of our representatives. This good work in Track events so continued that six of our class were chosen on the Varsity. We were feeling rather elated over the victories and decided to pose for our class picture. Some U wormy Sophomores dared to face us and when we had Hnished with them they wished they had let us alone. Our prowess so intimidated the rest of the Sophomores that the Pennsylwanian tried to encourage their spirit by a critical editorial about their H yellow streak of 82 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD cowardice. To celebrate the victories our class then held its banquet. It is needless to say that no Sophomore disturbed us. As some needed deco- rations for their rooms, many mementos were carried home from the banqueting hall. Some now laid aside the glories of war and scraps for the attractions of the stage. Harry Weeks and Conway were numbered among the H beauties. So well did our class contribute to the success of the show that Eve of them were elected this year into the lVIask and Wig Club. The papers said the Bowl Fight ended in a draw, but as the Sophomores drew away or ran away with the bowl, there is some justice in calling it a draw. The first half was an undisputed victory for us. Witli Fortiner as our bowlman we easily eluded the Sophs and won almost before we had begun to work. The Sophs were determined not to lose the bowl, and so in the second half they all piled on top of it. When the whistle blew we had so many hands on the bowl that we felt we had won it, but when we tried to take it the Sophs ran for protection and defense to the Dorms. lVIay Day was another time for rejoicing over victories. Our class won almost every event by the help of lVIcCabe, Roe, Kemp, and others, and then as a finishing contest we had the pleasure of pulling the Sophs all over the lot in the tug-of-war. Flushed with victory, we returned to the class- rooms again and conquered the last foes of the Freshman year-the final examinations. At the beginning of our Sophomore year we were greeted with the new course-card system. The trustees had become convinced that the office force was not sufficiently overworked, and, as Pomp had collected much old paper, the course-card system was devised to make use of this scrap paper and keep the oflice force always on hand. The principle of this system, which is modelled after the elaborate system used in the library, is to arrange everything with great complexity, and then, when it is found to be satisfactory and in running order to so rearrange it that it may be unintelligible alike to the students and to their advisers. The Summer rest had prepared us for giving the needed gymnastic training to the Freshmen. In the scrap after chapel, though the rain dampened our clothes fit would be more correct to say bodies, as we were not over-burdened with clothesl, yet it could not dampen our spirit. Kinard and Brown became leaders in the receptions to the Freshmen and so cordial and so 83 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD frequent were these receptions that the Faculty had to protect the Freshman class from annihilation. The hall-rushes and corner-fights were then held to give the upper- classmen an exhibition of our prowess and provide for the lack of gymnastic exercise. Of course we won everything, and then after defeating the Fresh- man class we published in the proclamations throughout the town, the terms of their surrender and the rules they were to obey. Andy Smith was on our football team this year, and though Kinard, as captain, reaped the glory, Andy did the work. By defeating the Freshmen and then the Seniors we Won the College championship. The Fresh were so anxious to win something that our baseball team permitted them to win so as to encourage their endeavors. The victories of our class had been so numerous that the Dean further honored us with the trophy as a memorial of our superiority. Instead of celebrating by a snake-dance, Musser, aided by 'a committee, had us celebrate in a dignified Sophomore dance, and Kinard and his corn- mittee arranged a banquet for us. We did not bring home any souvenirs because kitchen dishes and pewter spoons are not valuable enough to be prized. As we found that Kerwin was among the speakers, we voted to dispense with the toasts. I The lVIask and Wig show this year was a great success, especially since our class was represented by Rollin Bottle, as one of the leading ladies, and by Goodin, Hardt, and Hall as attractive members of the chorus. As the profs had been so kind to us this year, we felt it was only justice to show our gratitude by burning a few of them at the Cremation. A special delegation of devils were present with Dean Garvin as their leader, and we almost forgot it was HDean,l' for his impersonation was so realistic. Three chorus girls, who were found out to be Goodin, Bortle, and Conway, gave a great exhibition of dancing and high-kicking. Another attraction was the boxing contest between Andy Smith and Logan. The spectators witnessed the only time that Andy has ever met a superior opponent. After an exciting trial, which nobody could understand nor follow, and in which Whetstone took the place of ii Pop Spangler because of his shapely contour, the fires were lighted, and amid the lurid glare the two victims hung suspended. It seemed very realistic until George Turner came on with the hose. 84 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AVND FIVE RECORD At the beginning of our Junior year we were again confronted by the course-card system, but as we did not have to manage the receptions to the Freshmen, we had some leisure to try to understand it. Finally we came to the conclusion that its purpose was to keep us from taking any course we wanted. It was a great pleasure to go to Schwatt to hnd out whether Schelling's courses were useful, or to find out from Richards why we ought to take Greek. As the influence of the Satanic delegation had affected our class politics, a reform movement was begun, which ended in Bortle being unanimously chosen president. No record could be found of our treasury account, so the fellows were told to pay up their back dues, if they had not previously paid them. But so many seemed to think they had paid them that we came to the conclusion that some had very strange imaginations or vivid recol- lections of what never happened. Yet Walt Hardt, our treasurer, so well managed the funds, that our class was saved from bankruptcy and its credit restored. In athletics we won from the Seniors in football, but lost the game to the Sophs, since Weschler had not expected much opposition, as he thought they were still afraid of us. Our baseball team defeated the Seniors so well that the Fresh were afraid to play us, especially when they heard that Whet- stone and Fales were on our team. Our crew, consisting of such fellows as Crowell, Bogardus and Weeks, won the second place in the University championship. The Nlask and Wig had improved the dancing of the fellows so much that De Forrest Willard and the committee arranged for the Junior HProm - which was an example of what Willard can do when he feels like it. As Dean Garvin was hungry, he had the committee arrange for the Junior banquet. Bartlett nearly missed getting there, as he had a lengthy argument with one of Philadelphia's police force. The banquet was so suc- cessful that many wanted to make speeches who were not among the chosen few. In the show this year the reputation of our class was well kept up by Beach, Goodin, Hall and others, but a very great loss was felt when Bottle was prevented from acting the part of M Alicef, Senior year brought some changes and improvements. As the Hco-eds wanted to know our ages, we had to write short biographies of ourselves to satisfy all the inquisitive, and also for future use in case we became famous. 85 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD If we were under twenty-one we were charged extra for coming to college so soon, and as the authorities needed the money to finish the gymnasium, it was found to be a good plan to make the defenseless minors help pay the expenses. The Wharton School had grown so greatly that they could no longer be crowded into a corner of College Hall. So Logan Hall was Htted up for them with the hope that the studious atmosphere of the old medical building might infiuence them to work, and then, lest they should work too hard, an annex of Houston Hall was fitted up in Logan Hall so that the Wharton fellows might not have to leave their building for rest and leisure. H Birch Taylor had been elected Senior president without any opposi- tion, since no one was allowed to nominate anybody else. All year he was kept busy appointing committees and yet had time to set us a good example by his attendance at chapel. It is needless to say that Andy Smith and H Birch H Taylor were members of our renowned Varsity team this year, which displayed the latent powers at Penn and added to her renown. H Iimmyn Boyd proved that poets are not queer specimens of humanity, for while he was captain of the Varsity track team he was elected our class poet. Not only was our class well represented in athletics, but in oratory and debating she upheld her record. Ives increased the fame of Penn in the Virginia debate, and Jacobs and Nearing in the Triangular debates displayed their powers of oratory and their ability in argumentation. During this year the gymnasium was finished and is a noble addition to the advantages found at Penn. The only objection to it was aroused when an edict went forth that we dignified Seniors had to take a course in it. Garner, Huff and Freeman headed the opposition and so well did they plead our cause that the authorities became convinced that it was a shame to make us exercise or work. But Joe Carson thought that we should not graduate without being able to say we had used the new Hgymf' so he had the Ivy Ball held there. No dance at Penn has been more successful, and not only did the committee have money to purchase tokens of appreciation for their work, but gave the balance over towards the memorial fund of our class. The Mask and Wig production this year attracted great attention, as the public felt it was their last chance to see the '05 fellows in the show 5 so there was a great demand for tickets. It is a cause of great satisfaction and credit to our class that it has had more participants in the lVIask and Wig shows 86 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD than any other class at Penn, and has played leading roles in the four pro- ductions. Besides, more undergraduate members have been elected into the club from our class than from any other. lVIost of the work this year at Penn, was done bythe RECORD com- mittee. M Charlie Goodin set us a wonderful example of business ability and untiring energy as chairman of the committee, and it seemed hard to realize that he had been trained in the Wharton course. The RECORD absorbed such attention that Frank Howard, who was also manager of the musical clubs, managed to come to some of the committee meetings. Indeed, all on the committee worked when they felt like it. If the history was to attempt to do justice to everyone in the class, it could be continued indehnitely. But as a few important events serve as the backbone of history, these few events and incidents have been recorded to reveal in some small measure the glory of our class. And we only hope that we may in some manner repay to the world and our Alma lVIater what Pennsylvania has done for us. FRANK MACKNIGHT GRAY. BIOLOGICAL GARDENS 87 I MEMORIAL TOWER Q. 4 .. 1-M - .. -' -. 57157, -tif? fax - -. Q . . . 75::'z'f'f214'Lh' -'T :.- - - . 3 , 3 ,.,,. ,Q - -- .. ... . .b 1 H -. ,.---A' t 514 . 5 ...,... I -, '31-. I-.1-.-:izzw Gris-V59 'P . , -7? in T--X-., 0' ..-'v-'11 3-.. 3. za .-1-BAP. 3 'fl H I - - I. v I, as - ' 1.-,uv -- .. ,g -1 A I I ,1-3 sq, ::., ,,......'-.,-.--...-. fi t A S - h-Ll I ' - 1 1 r . . -.' -' . ' 'I g ' l 1 1 .Ig 4 ' r.:'1 - -,xx -' .jr -, .T '- --I f..'-'f'1 .g, .1: - '.- V . ' ' ' , . . , . .- ..,., .-, .v.u , 9. n ixgxqyhsz :C-f Nh'-A a:::::f:l':':' .1 -.11.. - -,- F -. .l.'r-v. 413,14 , Qu - ly ....- 'l l-v , . '1,.A:-I cf- 'Wa' gr x -LL .v, '- . , l ' l -C91 ' -1 . , , . - , A . .s. . . s.r , '. nfl ' 'L '..Q..'-',-t'-- . . . , - .. . x - -1 4- t wx. Q 5 tk . .4 -1 .1 -Q - .- ...sv ' ' . . . -,g--In--, - . .---have C, 5-Cmviffzl' N-.-95--'?jB3.f.-.g.v1 - 1 3 , - .. . I Q '-.-L . '1 V. x - - xl ' -.v , -Q5 ' , -J., -',. ' 1 ,,'...-11.3, -, . - 4' . . , . 1, , .. , -. - . - - gs, .- , v 1. v., -- -. Q . - .1 . - ' i fi-st-,Q - .,..-If A .NT f, ,, - .' fn ..:-Nh .-' - . - ' f' -f mg .. . x A .. .,- rt 5 1. I -nu I -. . .. --A . , K I - - 1. --7 . .1 ..','.: ' --H fx ' ,. ' , , 1. ' ' ' f .1 f ,. .,' Frlendb and compamona of these four short jeans, Hou uould you hate me Qrnff our partmff sonff Shall lt be boaxtlnv ITILINIC, loud and strong Shall nt be hushed and eaddened by vam tears Or shall that mnlder passmn, uhxch endearb Unnumbered recolleetronb ae they thronff, Inspire plam nordb to hxe Z1 lift tlme lonff, And cheer um xx hen the last, great paltmg neau ? No mxffhty conquermg host :hall be my theme 'Nlor ahall If be a broken hearted hand, VVeepmg and xx 21llll'10' for the vambhed dream My theme shall be OLllSClVCh 35 here ue stand, Our facem wlth brrght hope and trust agleam, As voyafrers xx ho have reached the prommed land P sn,- ,-1 I , ,F .. Q 0 v . P04 v. My Q!-glut' -Y ' Q ' lv: Nga,-3.1 ' Qu' 5 3.1. Q 5 - C ., . , . . , ,-. L.- .,,. ,..- . I IJ 1 - - . . ,g, - . - , .,,, gil.: ' U l r rs ra ' 0 - u - X ? .V . G . . . . . . D wr. - f -. .:' ' rl . Y . N N' y' . 5 23 , - - .. C' ' ' ' , , l D, l ,I L - an , D . U 7 fn' , ' ' I K 1 .1 . , . - D . ' I1 0. f u. ,Q L 1' l Q' kr, . . N 'L 'tl'- ' ' K 5 '- . ' - , . - - 18' ' M- e.7c P11 . 1 - .' - . 4 1- . . , . ,. -'-' . -. ' ,, .' ..q:','f :f':1'- L-..v...r.:.' ' ,h - L- 5-5. , at-e.uN,x1.a--hx 1- . 1' .n -:T ' ' 5 a u a 4' ' ' ' F K' K . N th . ' v J' ' -I. c A' 0 ' .2- 'i '1 .1 - , .r y',. 7' . -----1 -f---z.,r .- '---.-- , .-' . ' Ti- ', :sg f.5,35 XT' -:S ' .Y 'e':.-. 1l 'li. 'f'b'.f:-' , -en - .-'-' 'jf . -.' ' S.. -- .A . , -.'. ,. A.. , --v .-1, QC'-' Q .. , , . 5 - - ' u . ' ' 'f'. - up l' 1 xi -' ,gf 1 V .rffnv P . 'I-f . 1.l Wu .- x-I 4 . 1 I 4 v -5 uf In n ,, . N i' ' 'Q . J, G. Q-' lr - ' al-.8 -QL.. . ll TCA ' 'Q - I 1 . la I 3 ag.-L' . -fa ..,g' s ua ,N 1 'ff 1- 4- 5-s PM , s, 1 ' I ,Nl x94 K 'vs . . ., 4: 'Mfr' 'Nu-'X WD' 9' l,-K4 I Q.-6 . esta- 1- -f N - ak 'h Now, when the tres of frrendshrp that have grown Unnottced ln the hurrled rush of days, Blnd us the stronger at the partmg ways Our thoughts assume a deeper sadder tone Even the dullest feels that, all unknown, The spark that ghmmered through the mornrnfr Has kmdled ln our noontlde to a blaze That wrll endure when these last hours have flown No man among us has a heart so cold That as he sees our sun about to set, Although hrs next day more for htm may hold Can see It slnlt wlthout a deep regret 'T hese are the days when love and hope are bold Here ue have dreamed and we cannot forget haze Nou come the years of swrftly flyrng days Already we have felt the press of txme No longer shall the passlnff hour s slow chlme Nor the rmpatlent, future seeltlng gaze Inspxre the mmd that from 1ts purpose strays For, as ue slowly vrou to manhood s prrme We feel the cruel qurtltenlnor of the Rrme To VVl1lCl'l the Master Headsman srngs and slay Let me recall those days that seemed so long, Fllled as they xx ere xuth tlungs both strange and neu , And let me weave mto my web of song Threads which may lend to it a brighter hue. Let me recall, while yet the halls we throng, The days when first we cheered the Red and Blue. -'-- -..- .-.- ,, . 3-3-. ,,, -v-- ' -5' ci . , P ' I ' I 1 ' 0 ru, ' - I xx! 'J' ' 1 - 1.21.1 '-Co , . w vr - - Ld ,wx 5 i. ' ' - 15 ,, , '. .-- . Q - .. . .- I, .,.. - 0 51? 1 J r up . nj, .,. :G , . r I ' 1 N 1 ' 5 ,Q-4 .1 21 'E 0' ' ' I Q r.. f 1. ' -n ' I 44. .- 4 1 . 741. , 4 F' I ,ix M 5-Q fi .Q ' GW l . x 1 4 L' .,, 6 ' 'Q I 'f 1 - I.. L V 7.3, , fav' 7 .AIC ' 'L' v 4 I I n ' ! - P '10, 4-1' lf ' . .14 v , 'l Ni' -.J P.: .7 ' .' C' -. IA. - :J-'r - . . -' . N - x.x.,,, lg . '-.. 4 1 , Z--' F- 1 U..- - - . . - .. .-,, , ' - - ,i. , - ' 574' u gn..-Z 1:1-in .Els ...1Q -r .-A EN: -X ' -ly! F ,H Ys,',:' . y - , 4 ' f0 I ' . J -' 1 .--'TQIX , . , - an ,f nn, yf'- 'Hn ., ' , - , -t n hs.. . - fr.: . P A ' 'J-'.-:7.-,'.'.': '., Et' -1 'G' mfr ,X . , - . . I . i - .,., ,. 54 ' 3' ,- . ,r 4 '- H ' ',- .-' ' ' A'w,.3 -,'.- . - ,'.'1'. ' l'- r .. ... sf :,'J'1 115- - - . . F9 ' ' ' - 0 g I - .. -, . . . , .-, , . , - ., -.-, f .. .5 4 X. 1 ' 2:1-TH-2 R.:-.3t2 ..-'- ' K. - L' ' f ' 1- ' '-1' ' f -13, ..:'.' -is 5. m, Mi 1 I ., 'J -0-Ao. 'I ,574 up -.-M- ,L 7 ni qgnfge I , - '43 - I.. - , - . - - .. t N ' ,. 1 U , , ' , , ,-. - H0 . 'E . 3- , N-1'i1- -'f-'-I. Q A ' - .r:' Z ,' sz- -. '. xr' ' xr . J- .. 'u'.'. , ' '- '.-. '.v '.'. t..' 5 3 . --.-' T .. ..,, ,,...4...,., .- - t ,, . , ..- ', vs uf-K. - - .s'. - . . - - ' , , 1. ,x '- 11 .-'Yq , . . . ' 1 ' lar: I, 1 P -'l , cl' : 5 - rw. - 1 vi.. 0. . . .1 II . 1 l . ' ' ' I .I ' . I . .' ' ID Y -. - V . , . ',., AI - . 1 5 I 'lf I ' I n . . , Y s 1 I . : - . . .. , H, ' s a'z--'- ' ' il . -' r I Pr' . ' . ' T... 3 ' fx ui ' ' n.. . . r III I ' I . ' Z n I ' - w l l r .' . 3. , A A ' r r v Q . . . : N ' , 7. . E ' Y Y U 1 V I , I-'o I W as , S. 'SH 4 Wx 'N .,, 1 T 9 l,l X. x x 'Sf' .4 gbbhsflv' M .2 Ngo... .. s.: . tb N' .u the old leffends of those Knxghtly days VVhen men retained the Godly fflft of dream We sometimes hnd 1 soul axvalxenxng gleam ouch xxhlch 0 El our heartstrxnffs str VVhen, xxxth the pride of our oxxn heroes praise Q VVe sxnff the victory of our xxmmnff team, , Of all the songs that baclx to us xxill stream None xx1Il be dearer than these cheers xxe raise hearts will dxx ell The first time that xxe gathered as a class And shrxelxed dehantly our xx arlxlxe yell HW Of that same t But even lonffer ln our As xxith black loolxs xx O l rd their tauntxnfr slogan loudly sxxell r xea When xxe rushed orx them in a tight locked mass Do you remember hoxx, in solemn state, VVe sat in Chapel on the openinq morn ' Silent with axxe, until the air xvas torn With boasting yells and cries of bitter hate' ' And, xxhen the taunting challenge did abate Hoxv we returned it xxith a noble scorn ? I Ah there indeed xx as our Class Spxrxt born 1 ' The spirit which soon sealed the Sophomores fate. And those Herce Fights in hall or on the field! ' Such is the time when blood will surely tellg , Then manly men would rather die than yield, . And put their last, short breath into their yell. Never did Honor seek a fairer field, ' I 4 v I., . I li' And we should be content,-for xxe fought xvel . If v' fx ' BJ. Lv . Q1-1-. 1- -.,'-,. - f ' 1 '- .. - -- . ss . --.-.,- - - -.v..- . ,,, u... I u.-- Ai nr' . 9- x rs, u, e t : - . 'u '1 -Fw 5' . , '---S' v'. . I 4.1 ' :fJ - - 'Q -x ' ' ' rs' V .' -' y ...am--,+,'. - - : '- ,., :.:u:.:-eww - - -l .... , V -' ' ' 4 nl A -, e... . M: e xx atched the Sophomores pass ni use-0.1 in ily, 5 X 1 ' ,xg xig, ul fo . r 1, A -. ag . - .,, Q-. 'il -he nas- - ,fe 1 , i f ' gf - t : X5. x I-.1 -P g X . J- I A K IL'-A 8 Q 1 V 'g u' ' -' . 9 . ..g Q1 5- 5,95 ink 95 gl.. -:nf Q z K' v g .4 1 4 J U ts! , s ' ' 1 Qc'- I I U' ' l I -I '.' . . '1' x: ' :..l V.: 1 ' . ,, t V. L-I .. .x , ..-..-., ,,-. A lx ' 'Qz f- I'.'2'v'--.:Y -L' -'ix 7---' '- - A-pf. Xia-.:..-. - I- D l .. ,V D- , vu, F. , ,. 'v JN- N ' H:---Z 'trfs-'.-s .....: . .- ' 5F'xx i 1 F. --p'. J 4 . ' 'I X .3 'I' ' 1, .. ,. . - . lr x' 45:51 ,-.-. a. Mag' ' ag .-r,. I ---. Ffa. .-9 . I' 4- .. . .-. -- . -I ' ' ' '. nh :I-.-L -- '.. fx V 1 . I x J- .4 x . , ' ' 5 ' fn., If, I .....,...-..--g-1- ,H 'x, A l 1' I . ..e.. .,i...':. A..,.3,,',.., .....-.rn-5-fi. 1 ,vu ftp-'--11.4-..: :Arg .- ' - . V I . .'-- .P 5. ,J . - .., : .-1 . - 3. , '- . - ' '-1-: '. .5 1 'W-:rx-.-xf-,ti-,ZS '-- .Q 'Q' ' ' . ' ' 4 rf '-':'.--1- --35 -. -'1- - .x...f--. . . .1 ,.- - -..- ' -1 .1 - -. W ,T h . ... L , N W . W x-, -. ' x. -ps Sl y. , -..-L--'-'ft -. -L f .r:' 0 . X - s , , . -. -. .Q - -.. - :N , N xos XQQ ,x . xr. . y, .-5, --vw'---' .f 1. u 5 1 nn, -.1 ,.'.-:', ,, --u.:,..- .- -' ks,.. ' -' - :--- . ' .v .- x z . - . . .l- , X: -. ,-x N 1- ,-NY.. 1 'lair ' LF .,-. I , -'. v g' 'i fs . ,- .-'. '1 . Its ' .. . 1 '.-5 IV . . . 1-' In h : A ' f: ' , . - . Y . . . , N za 'rs 1 4 I. , t . - , ' . , . . . Y 'v ' v y . l - s ' 1 . f, 1 . ,, y., 1 - . , ,r '. H . . . . ' ' 'Q' as l .zu l .U . . . . , . .V . . ' , , , . . , . If . . ' ' .n:.,, U - V ' . . N .,,. . Y , , x . F . V ., fl., - i ' ' 1 5 -. , , . , , I .y' v U v- v as 1, f f ,, . . ,., , . H , ,R Us . . r V I . . ' rs x . Y I I V I ,Q Y Q- ' , I a 1 y 3 S: 'TIxT. 1. . -'z 2 '- .e-1 . 54 .L J 5 ' I 'A h L. - 1 1 , ... ' I . tl.0 I K . gg . ol U . . . , - .. , . . I . f v ' , we s 'Y:s1:.2':si': 'I' -P2914 s,-'-4-1:1--2 , If ,-f y-y ,lege-I: r 0 .ng l ,y ' we , :- R 5 ' 1 ng 'v'?'- 'W . ,. Y, ' 4' v ,s a 4 .-sal, -'.- 9 s Q : Q ,- sf. 'W . n Q ' ' r ','5 . 5,1 . U' V '- . Flu 1 'I sn, s fha. pl Vie- ...-, . ' -- - ' - g,:. 'ag :ff '.o..v 1 'J ?1W,0 '- u...aZQ'. ,, J. :VE-'n-PS5 , ' ' .1115 Ts, . .1 fr. ,,- -ls .1 X I ' .1751 K . , rs- A ,Q in s I, J: : 5 3 rx K! ,, f-s - 4' , 1 --11' .: 'f '- . I s 11-mv ,gl , . ll L .-.naw -,- - ' 1 L ' ' -' -. ' ..s. - 3- 'hYf'e v. f . ' 1 .ff .4 V 71, F- H NL'-. - '-fr' - -- , Q. '.:-f- '- -3:-.... - , '. 0 X ,-':f39 - lg,u,,.d. ,fs -mi 1. . , I. -..- - il- 'df - 5 ' A- -4 K1 Q Y Q 5 , , .5p.,.',t-P21 '- 1 s' -s Q. 5 - . 4- . , , xqgix :M q .,'5f:- , ,..s ,, h., 5 Q 2 ..-nh 1. ,.., ' i sg y o x' . x, ,s s', sv , ,, , ,,.n-- :.,...,f',s ' , ' Q,-'yi' '.' l'n' 5 ss. usb, . 'J is 3 4 f's?'l -rx ' . . .11 VI For many of us, those first years held naught But work, and lacked the pleasure and content Wlrich, in our later days, experience lent. Many, before we knew them, left, and sought 'I he Ureater school where sterner thrngs are taught Others, through followrng some foollsh bent, Therr hours rn rclleness or nonsense spent And rn the net of farlure soon were caught But these last days have been a Joy to all The full worth of thrs lrfe at last we know , And whether rn the world we rrse or fall Our love for Pennsylvanra e er urll grow However sueet we hnd lrfe s louder call The old song s charm strll makes us loath to 0' V Our souls, lrke waters freed and unconfined, Seek therr own level rn thrs mystrc thrnff Whrch we call lrfe, and unto whrch ne clrn As though twere all we own althouvh the mrnd Be rt rn youth or ave, can never find In lrfe an oblect, or rn death a strng And yet a great deal to thrs lrfe we brrng And passrng, sometrmes leave a trace behind So has rt been urth us secluded here, Safe from the great world that we soon must face, Each of us now has sought hrs proper sphere And found hrs proper frrends, hrs proper place 'I he day that seemed so far rs very near, As we have trarned, so shall ue run our race ng, gysw. s I 0' x p . ' 1 vo 5 ,-v 9 051111, x ' XP., ' l L-CDNQLYAQE I :gear A A l 9 s- -. C A, ' . .ay , D . Q ,I . . . ' . s . 's y 5 . - .. I . : 'u' ' - If . . ' ' , ,, . . . x . y . fp- - . , , , gvzn ' r V . l N N v v Q I , . P. Q-J' 1 . ' l 0 rl 1, - No . . r II I V . . . . N . 3 s . , . g D , . ' Q - I s D v C '1 . ' I -Q. . . -. .2 . . nf , U - . . . N . H' ' ' 'a . . . ' . 1, ' ' ' . tw - ' - - . . I 1 . n rp., ' 1. .I T ' .- .. , X ll-Q - f- N - e - .' '- .- . f -'.-- ,., --.' vw'-', - . .519 1 -M -x.'.'i. - - L-..-. ,flip ' ' Q , 5.3. , ,- J-, 1- -'M 'sl 9 S lk L A--...-..,,, ,,- -.-.,.,,1. m in. -5... s .... 1 . . KY ' W9 -J Q-E '. l -.I ,. 1 gl.-j I :Fri-' ' ' r -F14 ,. gs- Q 4 . r 'f.. :' . 1---W H'-'v' '5--.543-' !, ' ' - - W V .,...-H - my :Q .5 13... :Y V . -F5 u, Lush- .t,'.:,. 6 ,.sa.,'. -. 1, as .s.. . -, .-. eq:- - . - 1 ..- ' - A , . - 1 - . -5 , , g3: ,1,j -I ..- ...rr-' -1 .1 . 1 . . as 1 r- ' I ' ' .1-Ji-, M, . .5 , t- , I 161. :,-J X-,rr .'7 4' S is 6 I X Jfggxliz 511 : 5' ' ' H l 5 ,,,., .-1' ' . -- .-'-t:'., - -..l . . . -,,..-,- -Q..-.2 r' , -., , ., ., . , . . . . . . . . . ..,.. . , , . . a ,. . rm.. , 1 'A ',.. .. . u 1 Q' 1. :N-,:.'e-'--r,-, -c'5.:w b ,. -k 7'rL.-Z.,.,: 5 1 -., , .2.1, . . w'g:.s-'so ' ,-. - -.- 77 . '.. 5. fj- i .,' '.:f: . -11t : 1:3 3,. .-5597- Q 1. . Q-J V: l15 f'uv-- n ' o . ., .: ' - I - f .-,- 1--N, S. :'. ,.-3+ .yin vu - - .rw N3?T:,w Z., 7- H U up . 'N VZ .., -. . 1 , - ' - 1 ' . 'K I '21 l. . I f I . J , , ,Q g 'J . .1 A , . - L .-. ls 5 2 'J . . , I ,A ' ' A t . X' 1' 1' u.:-'Ch - f.- .- ' -' ' l X 5.1 Qi: ' ' B .04-'. +3 rv. I.: .. - ...L 's. ' 'l'9 ' ' .E ' ' .qv .1',.-tu- ' ' I . T l 1: 5. t 1 1 '.. A s.-. - . :'-,- ,, N.- , Y ',,b I . .- - 1 ...a-, -'-.H 1 . -, - : - . . IAS S A. Q. ' ' ., ,1 f . ,. 'N-1 ,I ag , . -V 4-.sm-so .- . --,- . 'aiv.l'l'7N:t ? Cqxsikl,::.,:.W1- 'girl' ::x3I-i ',1 - f .1-.' -TPQN'-'Q-' 7. . -I 1 V N' ff - pk -fc'-1-It - Q' - s-.'-...- I -Q- ,.,,x - f- 4 .J '1 VIII How we shall scatter when we leave these halls! Some to dark dreary Cillllltlllg'-llOLlS6S go, To add another pen to tllat lonlf ION That llstlessly l7EI'fOIlllN eaeh task that falls And Ll1Ol'lC thelr llfe away between four walls Some, xl hell the hated IHOIIIIHU' wlllstles blou lVIust lose themselles ln the lonfr stleams tllat Hou I 0 the vreat uorlmsllop uhlch thelr soul enthralls Du elllnlf ll'l ldleness or careless xx ays Some 1l'1tO Folly s cup flllfll' souls wlll pour Others, by ealnest toll lllll sxln rlcll IJFZIISC And even knock not valnly at Fame s door Some few, perchance, may dream away then days, And be loved for the dream forevermole Hall and farewell' Hall and farewell, dear frlends' Our llttle sonv IS sung, Our act IS played and there lb no encore A few more days, and then forex er ends The tlme of play and study Wl1lCl'l forefends MLlCh of the trouble that llfe holds ln store A few more days and then forevermore The gallant banner of our class descends Hall and Farewell' We meet and then ue part Such IS the tale that every class must tell Hall and Farewell I We come and we depart The same bell summons us and tolls our knell Let each one speak the message of hls heart Brothers of Naughty Flve, Hall and Farewell ' JAMES SLINGLUFF BOYD our dream IS 0 er ,QPU S A .- .rl g Q o, . ig vat ,gd yu if, ' ' 3r.l.'4 -.1 --u' QR? N... ,QM -. a ' c - .. XQN- nl' l s- u P I - l' ' , l . 1, ' b . ' H . . .. ,- - . 3 . 3, K S' th: A , . n . .2 !,. l ' 4 ls W lv -,. . 5 '.. ,, : ' , ' 'J , ., , ' . .. ' . rr- A l ll. . Y ' , , ' . 1 .,1 - v a i..'. ' T . ' ' i l Q 1' T - fl' Y - , . '. . V. A --li . Y w.. A A IX ' ' . ' l . ' , . 5 . 1 . . - I 1 1 v. ' ' . ff . . ' 1 . .o l ' fl ' ,y - 1 . ' ' . 4- - . R- . - 3 .O .I 1 . 'K l - - 5 1 I - . -' x .- ' I - r. 13-. ' ' 'Q fu 1 1' 1 I ll, - if-, W' Q-8.1 -91 Y. ', , ' A ' fx' - ,z-sf . N. . - , ,., . , ' 'fr' ' ...---, ' -s-' QR... s ,'v..n L.uq4,,,n,J.- . pg- . 1-,, 4-,u,3s: .--Mx 1- A 3 X - we ---..--.... I..- -.--.-- ' I 0 -C' D . ' 1 .I mf- y C.. U- 1 . .1 a - - - 'v' ' - - f 4' - 'M ,. .f pa ,. 1, -1: vt.: , .s.,s,--.--g- -.'-1 A , ',-.. .13 ,Q U..-. '.,-X V -. f- .--.r -N -3. . ,. K A l, , -,1 x , -. H , 5 .-.-J-Bo' , ' ' . gf h . . . G M ., 1 , . . . . I 3, . ,,, A -- . 1 I y -r-,.-.' fr. .- ., i,. 5.3 C.: WEST GATE-DORMITORIES , iflltt ill .aa J, K5 ' I ' Hai' -Ygggkrw My fi' - Q ui?-fi y ie 1,m . E ,.,. li li a r n 5 l l i V, ' I .i TlE.G l ST. HELENA ISLAND, June ist, 1930 THE INSTITUTE FOR THE INCURABLE RICH To flfly Clarsrnatrs, 1905 College, Ulzitffrsiry afPcn1zry!w11zia IVIY DEAR CLASSIN-IATES :-In the celebration of this, the twenty-fifth year of our graduation, I am with you in spirit if not in body. It would be impossible for me to be with you in body, for I am being forcibly detained here, with other enemies of Tom Lawson's private schemes, as I will explain before I finish. All I can do now is to wonder over the fact that a course in Finance and Economy in the Wliarton School should have Ianded me where I am to-day, here on this island, where a century or more ago, they gave Napoleon the kingly quietus by freighting him to St. Helena and permitting him to dally with a chess-board during his older days. Poor Nap! Poor me I On this island, since Tom Lawson influenced Uncle Sam to purchase it and exile to it all Americans who were unfortunate enough to amass a fortune, there are five thousand men who are shocking examples of what money cannot do. Years ago I might have felt Hattered to think of playing tag on the beach with the families of Morgan, Rockefeller, and Mrs. Chadwick. But at the present time, even though I see them daily, there is no balm in Gilead when I take my early morning ramble by the sad sea waves and see the descendants of these money kings trying to make a corner in mud pies and constantly writing money in the sand. We have no money on the island, we are never permitted to mention it. The other evening a cricket began to tick and young John Rockefeller went into a spasm. John thought he heard a stock ticker at work, and that he had lost 95 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD thirty-eight cents while he had been reading Meade's Trust Finance, which he had smuggled in with him. We hear from Mr. Lawson once every six months. He usually arrives in a Government automobile boat, comes down to the beach, and downs old man lylorgan and a son of Henry H. Rogers and rubs sand in their eyes. Then he recurs to his old occupation of throwing mud, and sometimes he sits for half a day at a time yelling like a maniac at the bunch of millionaires, myself included. U Hal Ha! Hel He! You will 'make a million, eh? Take that! CBiffD and that! fBiffl Then he throws a wad of money down and when they dive for it, he yanks it away with a string. We succeeded once in getting a petition to the United States Govern- ment, but we received our ultimatum last week when a cruiser landed here. The captain came ashore with a package all done up in red, white and blue paper, and sealed with Uncle Sam's seal, till it looked like a bottle of 'K lVIum's Extra Dryf' He handed us a letter which said that the Honor- able Secretary of State had given us his reply to our petition in person on the phonograph enclosed under separate cover. We broke the seals with beat- ing hearts, and, after a few preliminary wheezes and screeches, the cylinder yelped: 'K When you can't get your money you needn't come around, and Hnished with NGO Way Back and Sit Down. Ch! It was dreadful. Almost as bad as that memorable day a way back in the Spring of 1905, when we fellows in the Senior Class found out we would have to take Gymnasium for two hours a week or be exiled. And now, having told you something of the Island of St. Helena, and of the Institute for the Incurable Rich, I will jot down in this my com- munication to my classmates, a few notes, telling of the occupations and marvelous success of the boys of old 1905-the year of the War of the Museum in the reign of C. C. Harrison. These I met for the last time, I am afraid, last year, while engaged in collecting statistics concerning H Get Rich Companiesf, Concerning myself you are possibly, through the newspapers, and the publications of the Lawson Income Regulation Bureau, familiar with my financial career-and crash. While it may be true that I swamped a few people, caused some suicides, and helped put the price of coal to 3100 a ton, yet I feel that I had a perfect right to enjoy my own life without interference from a national government that seems to care entirely too much for poor people. 96 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD But first to tell you of the boys whom, as I say, I last saw during my travels a year ago. just before being sent here I was delegated to compile some statistics relative to the number of Get Rich Concerns doing business throughout the United States, and it was during these travels that I had the good fortune of seeing so many of my old classmates. You will all be interested in hearing of the marvelous success of our worthy and illustrious president, Birch Taylor. Wliile in college, as you will all remember, besides playing football, and attending to the many and labor- ious duties attendant upon the presidency of the Houston Club, Birch used to go over to the Engineering Building now and then, get out a transit and look for Saturday night. Some times when the weather was good he would join the chain gang and measure the distance from College Hall to the H Normandie. Birch did this so well that at the end of four years he received a diploma in Civil Engineering. Soon after leaving college he went to Paris, where he made a great reputation for himself as Chief Engineer for the Santos Dumont Ariel Navigation Company. He surveyed several aereal routes from Paris to lVIonte Carlo. This alone brought him great fame, but when he superintended the digging of the post holes for the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company, his reputation as an engineer was made. During Birch's several years in Paris he used to drop down to Monte Carlo quite often. In fact he dropped in so often, that the manager of the place offered him one million dollars in cash if he would get out of the country and never come to lVIonte Carlo again. It seems his old time luck never changed. Say a college education don't pay! There are many things you never learn from books, and Birch learned to play so well at college that he broke the Bank at Monte Carlo, and was given a fortune with which to retire. This he did. Last year he returned to Philadelphia, purchased a castle out in Manayunk, with Italian gardens strewn carelessly about it. When I arrived in Philadelphia, in the course of compiling the statistics regarding the H Get Rich Concerns, the first thing I did was to look up Birch to see if all the stories which I had heard about him were true. I took a subway train for the beautiful little city of Manayunk, famous the world over for its villas and Italian gardens, situated upon the banks of the beautiful Schuylkill. Sure enough, it was all true. As I walked through the gate of Birch's villa,I gazed about me upon a most magnificent scene. Everywhere there was lavished a wealth of Howers, marbles, and costly decorations. I saw coming down the walk a man rather 97 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD portly in build, with a beautiful bunch of incandescent whiskers, and, upon drawing near, I recognized my old college churn Birch, the same hale and hearty athlete he always was. I stayed with him all night, talking over old times, and about the boys. The next day he asked me if I would not like to go down town and hear some political speeches. And of course, having had a year of practical politics with Dr. Young, I was very glad to go. I had been away from the city so long I had lost track of the political leaders, so I asked Birch who was now 'ishaking the Plum tree. H You remember the boy orator, do you not ? And of course I knew at once he meant Scott Nearing. U He is Chairman of the State Republican Committee, now, and leader of the Reform movement. Wait until you see the other prominent leader and candidate, and you will be surprised. i As we came to Broad Street the throng surged to and fro as the boys used to before the chapel door, all trying to get in first. HTO Indepen- dence Hall H was the cry upon all lips, and the crowd moved swiftly down Chestnut Street, its numbers increasing as the journey progressed. At last we reached the old Hall and as Chairman Nearing's Committee reached the first landing, with the enthusiastic people blocking up stairway and wide rotunda below, and streaming out into the street, choking up doorway and sidewalk, the shouts and cheers grew louder. Presently there was a movement above, and the subject of all this wild demonstration was seen descending with uncovered head fbeing quite baldi, and visible agita- tion. No sooner did he appear, than the old Hall resounded, and shouts and exclamations from the struggling mass below indicated that there was a disposition to get eyes upon him, Chairman Nearing, his long flaxen hair disordered, and eyes flashing with inward excitement, waved his hand and shouted in stentorian tones for order. Instantly, as if by magic, there was a hush and the sea of upturned faces, which a moment before had been so turbulent, became calm and still. Impressive was the scene, and greatly to my astonishment, Jack Carter stepped forward. His head was slightly bowed as a new burst of enthusiasm came from the throats of the multitude. His face was a little more red than usual, and his nose was very much more so. He explained to me afterwards that his red nose was due to nosebleed. Finally, he made motions for silence, and I moved closer to hear. E H Fellow citizens, there is one thing which is uppermost in the hearts of the American people, and that is the love of a good race, and in order to have 98 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD a good race, there must be two candidates for office and I am one of them. I was at once carried back to my college days, when I heard Jack make this same speech at the election of class officers in Junior year. No longer now were the people silent. Touched by the impressiveness of the scene, and by the stirring remarks of their favorite candidate for Collector of Taxes, and realizing the wrong 'which had been inflicted upon them, the repressed feel- ings of the crowd again broke forth, and cheer after cheer echoed throughout the old Hall, coupled with enthusiastic shouts of H Carter and Reform. Just before leaving Philadelphia I mentioned to Birch and Jack thatI intended going to Harrisburg the next day to look over some charters which had been granted to new H Get Rich Quick Companies. U Of course, said Jack, M you will drop in to see Gov. Brown? H Brown, said I, H you don't mean to tell me John Brown is Governor of Pennsylvania? I gathered the story of his nomination and election the next day from some loungers in the hotel, and it all happened about as follows, as near as Ican remember it: It seems that about 1920, the Pennsylvania Railroad had absorbed all other monopolies and had purchased the State outright by buying up the House and Senate. John had risen quite rapidly in the law, and had been employed for some time as chief counsel for the Railroad Companyg but believing he would be more valuable to them as Governor of the State, he was in due time nominated. Then the plot thickened. Joe Carson, who was now Secretary of the Law and Grder Society, had obtained a great reputation, and by some very shady political methods, which he had learned when editor of the Pennsylwznian, and after openly pulling the wires and bribing delegates, was nominated as the opposing candidate for Governor. The campaign was a very hotly contested one, and the struggle increased day by day in intense vehemence and bitterness. Carson scored Brown as being the candidate and tool of heartless and home-breaking monopolies. Brown toured the State and soon became popular by the free and unlimited distribution of booze and passes to Atlantic City. Finally election day came on. About one o'clock the rival candidates met in a saloon which was run by Frank Gray and Roy Seyfert. As the rival candidates could not challenge each other to a duel, they did the next best thing-they entered upon a drinking contest. At two Uo'clock they were both hilarious, and talking over their checkered college careers. At four o'clock Carson's 99 I THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD eyes looked like two holes burned in a red blanket, and he was white and motionless, while Brown called for more with the old regularity of Less Bosler and Dick Dewhurst's answer of H No 'I to the chapel roll. Ten minutes before the polls closed Carson was all in, and calmly went to sleep under the table. Brown ordered another high-ball and left his vanquished rival asleep at the switch, ran around the corner and voted for himself. When the returns came in, it was found that Brown had been elected by one vote, after the greatest contest ever known in the history of the State. After finishing my business in Harrisburg, I came down to the station to take- the train, and having a few minutes to wait, I amused myself by looking over the books and periodicals at the news-stand. Suddenly my attention was attracted to a little book neatly bound in calf with the tale Ci' tail l in the inside. The title of the book was N Letters of a Tailormade Man to his Son at College, by Spencer K. lVIulford, Ir. I was so sur- prised at learning that my old classmate had chosen a literary career, that I immediately bought the book. This is one of the letters: HDEAR PIERREPONT: Your ma got back safe this morning, and she Wants me to be sure to tell you not to overstudy, and I want to tell you to be sure to remember about your clothes. What we are really sending you to college for, is, to be a fashion plate and an example for the other students to follow. Remember that the first thing college should do for a man is to teach him to be a fastidious dresserg then, if you have any time after that, take a course in History of Painting. I am anxious that you should be a good scholar, but I am more anxious that you should be the best dressed man in the class. I shan't care so much if there are a few holes in your Latin, just so there are none in your trousers. There are two parts of a college education-first, the part that you get in the school-room, and the part you get from the tailor. The latter is really the important part. For the first can only make you a scholar, while the latter can make you the H Beau Brummel 'l of the class. I want you to learn right at the outset not to play with the spoon before you take the medicine. Remem- ber that procrastination is the longest word in the language, so do not put off things, but every time Embick 85 Sons send you a hot-air letter with a pen wiper enclosed, go right down at once and order a new suit. Remem- ber that when I was a boy, I had the reputation of being the best tailor- built man in college, and got exempted from one more course than I took, so you have a reputation to uphold. Naturally, as a son of the old man, IOO THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD you will have a lot of fellows watching you, so keep your shoulders well padded. I simply mention these things in passing, as an example of the fact that it is hard to tell where the beauties of nature stop and the art of the tailor begins. Your affectionate father, , SPENCER K. MULFORDX' After returning from Harrisburg, I was sitting one evening in my room at the hotel, when the bell boy came up, about nine o'clock, and told me a gentleman in clerical dress wished to see me. I supposed it was some one who wished to pry a check out of me for the H Home for Feeble-Minded College Graduates, so I told him to bring up the man's card. Soon he returned with a card bearing this inscription : Ben. Benn Qrchiimlh Qurbin Immediately the proud bearer of this name entered. He wore a long Prince Albert coat, which was a little the worse for wear, light trousers, high collar, long white bow tie, and a vest which had once been white. I would scarcely have known him without the card, but soon I was able to trace through the beautiful, clustering whiskers, the familiar outlines of his face as I remembered him, screeching for order at our Junior Banquet. Dean informed me that he was the rector of the Nurses' Home, the chief occupants of which were the nurses who had devoted the best part of their lives to his care during his college days. I learned later that Dean some- times preached in a little chapel out in Brewerytown, and that his star sermon was on Free Thought, Free Speech, and Free Beer. Imust now tell you of the day I met Sam Whetstone away out in a little town just outside of Chicago. It was by mere happenstance that I saw him and this is how it happened : I was glancing over the local paper, and as there was very little news, I let my eyes wander to the advertise- ments. In one corner of the paper I saw a 'glaring Had with two pictures, one marked H before, the other Hafterf' I recognized Hbefore IOI THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD as being Sam Whetstone. The H after looked like the long, shaggy locks of Meadowcroft, but it was Sam, too, after using his wonderful discovery. The rest of the H ad H read as follows: H HAIR BOOK FREE. It tells how to preserve the natural beauty of the hair, how to regain this beauty if lost. Not a tonic but a hair grower. We will send you a bottle of iWhetstone's Hair Grower,' express prepaid, upon receipt of f2.00, and if you do not cultivate a sudicient growth of hair to get a job in any circus as the wild man, any bank in Chicago, except the one with whom we deposit, will return your money. A little further down in the U ad I' was a testimonial which was quite interesting, and incidentally, throws light upon the occupation of one of our classmates. The testimonial read as follows: HI was born and bred into the belief that a man once bald always bald, but I have had to change my mind. I am the proprietor of a billiardroom and general gambling joint in Chicago, and one day, while opening a bottle of your hair grower, I accidentally spilled some on the billiardballs-and would you believe it, the next morning those billiard balls were covered with hair. I take great pleasure in recommending your hair grower. Yours very truly, JACK. BAKER. Strange what a small place the world is after all! A little business trip took me up to Quebec. Qne evening while I was wending my Way to my hotel, I came upon an immense crowd on the corner. In the midst of the crowd I could see a little man standing on a barrel, while a gasoline lamp lighted up his countenance. He wore a fur-lined overcoat, high hat, and held a cane in his hand. Upon drawing closer I recognized the cane as being a 1905 Class cane, and by the law of association I at once associated the cane, the fur coat, and high hat, with Logan Howard-Smith. Sure enough it was he. After fixing his tie, adjusting his hat, and unbuttoning his coat, so the fur would show, he began his lecture: H Ladies and gentlemen, I am here to-night in the interest of the Carti- lage Company as their sole representative in Canada. The subject of my lecture is U How I Grew Tall, or A Story which will Interest All who are Short-Cbank cashiers exceptedb-H I listened to his lecture with great interest. After he had finished, a number of young ladies gathered about him to ask about his treatment. I-Ie was all smiles, till one young lady made the mistake of her life by addressing him as IO2 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD H IVIr. Smithf' Whereupon he blew out his light, and I shall never forget the disgusted tone of his voice as he informed her she had forgotten the hyphen. As soon as he saw me he greeted me with the familiar slap on the back, and Hello, old man, bah love Iam glad to see you! Yes, it is strange that I am away up here in Canada, but you know it is much here and I can wear my fur coat the year around? Colder In the Spring of IQ28, it became necessary for me to go out West to look after some mining stock. I did not expect to Hnd any of my class- mates out there, but I did. I had no sooner reached Deadwood, South Dakota, than I heard the name of Harry Weeks on the lips of every man, woman and child, in connection with the capture of fifteen bandits. Harry had become a great detective, and was known as the Bloodhound of the State. It seemed that soon after Harry went to Deadwood, he was foolish enough to go on a bond for a constable who, he guaranteed, would perform the duties of his office for a term of years. Scarcely had the constable been installed when he was shot by a gang of robbers. Ut was always thought that Walt Hardt, Iohn IVIusser, and Bob IVIcCracken were in the gang, but nothing was ever proven.l This was unfortunate for Weeks, for, try as he would, he could induce no one else to assume the official reins. Then with customary modesty he took the job which has given him a tablet in the Hall of Famef' In the community of Deadwood, Harry is a group of public institutions in himself. He was Postmaster of Deadwood, Sheriff of Killemquick County, Food Inspector, County and State Detective, Over- seer of the Poor, Fishwarden, Township Constable, and Doorkeeper of the Ladies' Gallery in the Opera House. These facts are mentioned merely to illustrate who and what an important man Weeks really is. While sitting in front of a hotel in a little country town out in Ohio, I heard strains of music being wafted on the August breeze. Upon making inquiry I was told that a circus was the cause of the music, so I settled back in my chair to watch the passing parade. As it drew near I saw a drum major of exceptional ability twirling his baton on his fingers, now throwing it high into the air, now under his arm, now over, and I knew at once such a drum major must surely have led the University Band. Sure enough, it was H Pete I' Parker. I In the afternoon I strolled out to the circus. In the ticket wagon stood H Lew De Lone handing out the paste-boards, and taking in the long green. He wore a checkered suit which looked like a miniature football 103 . THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD field, and loud enough to awaken a U stiff on the third floor of Logan Hall. Cf course I could not stop to talk to him then, as, that was his busy day, so I wandered in. I saw more old classmates connected with that circus than I ever saw at chapel at one time. Pete Parker was still doing stunts with his baton, while H Lans Beach, dressed as a ballet girl, was performing on two trained automobiles. Gus Boers and Ierry', Bogardus were doing stunts on tight wires. George Weschler had charge of the animals, besides doing the high dive in a peanut shell. But the greatest surprise of all was when I was passing the hippopota- mus tank. As I stood watching the huge animal floundering about in the water, it suddenly came to the top and said: Hello, Spike! But as clever as was the disguise, I knew it was H Fatty Hall. H Kit H Kenard and Perry Pepper were the veterinary surgeons of the circus. Soon after leaving college Kit started to practise medicine, but as soon as the State Board found it out he had to stop, while Perry Pepper's reputation as a physician was ruined by a patient who let it be known that Dr. Pepper had ordered her to gargle her feet in a glass of water three times a day. Hence they had to appeal to Ed Bartlett and Joe Richards to allow them to join their circus as U vets. Bartlett had a job which just suited him, as he had nothing to do all day long but sit in an easy chair disguised as the fatlady in the side show. Richards was the active manager, which is enough to explain the breaking up of the circus within a couple of weeks. While on my way to Boston, I stopped at Worcester to see Bob Crowell. Bob was the proprietor of the largest livery stable in the town. Iremembered Bob's fondness for ponies and horses while in college, so I was not surprised to find him running a livery stable. Rollin Bortle and Charlie Goodin I found in Boston, engaged in the publishing business. Not wishing to lose the valuable experience they had gained as editors of the Red and fB!ue and the RECORD, they had chosen to follow publishing and newspaper work. Bortle was editor of the Sunday- .vclaaal Times, and Goodin, society and sporting editor of the same. Bortle told me he had received many tempting offers from David Belasco to take the place of Mrs. Carter, but he spurned them all. I had hoped to see Willis Adams when I returned to Philadelphia, but did not, as he had just gone to England to buy a new suit and a cap. Iwas told that he was doing well, as he had bought out Roe's Dancing Academy, and had given a number of swell Monday evenings. 104 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Une day I strolled out to see the old University buildings. As I came to the corner of 36th and Woodland Avenue, I saw a man leaning against a lamp-post. He was rather small in stature and had a cigarette in his mouth. As I passed him, he stepped out, saying : H Say, Dock, got any old clothes? Give you the best possible price. And there stood Louis Bruner. I told him I had nothing but old clothes, and went on. How well do I remember the last few days I spent in Philadelphia. One event in particular was the Charity Ball of 1928. Thinking I might see one or two of the boys there I dropped into the gallery as a spectator. As soon as the cotillion started, I strained my eyes to see if I could tell who was leading it. He was an elegantly dressed man, with a proud and haughty air, yet his face was arrayed in smiles. I noticed that no one else had his trousers creased quite so well as he, and by this I knew it was Warren Marshall. The next day he took me out to his farm in New Iersey where he raised chickens for a living. It was while I was down at Warren's farm that I began to hear that a considerable reputation was following me East from the West. It appearedI had been too inquisitive about some points that tended to interfere with Tom Lawson's private schemes for his own achievement, so that he was using his influence with some politicians that he was in with, to get me out of the country. I did not pay much attention to these rumors, naturally looking upon Lawson as a harmless meddler, without much sense or pull. But before I knew it, Iwas picked up in the streets of Camden, on my way to the ferries, by two fellows who looked like ships' officers, was carried to Gloucester, gagged and bound, and from there carried out to a steamer in mid-stream. Qnce aboard, when I could no longer kick up a dust, I was informed that my passage had been paid to this island, by some one in power, and from that time until our arrival here on the first of May, I had no chance of getting into communication with any one who could have helped me out. So here I am, after a month's stay on the island, writing you this letter which I have arranged with a native to have smuggled to the mail-steamer from Cape Town. Do what you can, will you, to get me out of this, and believe me to be Very sincerely yours, FRANK WILSON HOWARD. 105 THE FREE MUSEUM OF SCIENCE AND ART IN Y f i Y ' l'f -L i f IVY CDRW? -M , ! E, g g,5iA ,E 2.2! at-e g: Q -.o' 'S - -wil ' 5 f -' 'iff --,. ll jliif f7iE...Qf',-it' fQ'!45Llff'-l fii-ll !': :5..'.lll,l1 is liw l H -Q' 'il - ' ff JIQLP . .. l C it , ',i l llllif ii' l -z w i jpQ...- , llj il' l'l'll H1 l t '.i is l ll' gif Y' ,Ili I iI'u 'a li ii' i 'I l' . 1 I 'f4'l':nf'2 1 - . ' .i f'J, gf? - , Q. K V .111 . ' iii -A lm Qlillfillw ' . . ,- xi., l Mil l!! iliilii'a 'I ,ll ll ,rf ,. ,, .1 . I .. v 1 i .A., , U'-:A li t ll V V , I , I' ' L, . ' A I ' if i 'Ill,i bl! il l, Q. 'gi-f':' ll .mi .zi In I 'fly 'fi 'li?7Ee'r:ef . fbblllll ' ' 2 -'fi V' ' -Nr '2':7f 'f.i-1,1 li., 1- 1 ' H' .wy,,..i ,., . ..,f,.. , -he I A, if .- ' il' . 1 -tt, .H ri M i N-I CN ,Emi f 'hi fi ll lffllllllllllll in lln li illlll l' .1 lx, U lu l will i , ll el 'i' a ll il Wflzaf does flu' sznhflzirzf' my i? W'lmt is ibn Sozztlzwind .ringing ofuerlzcfzcl? Bits of an mzfient lay, l1Jf'!l5Il7 E5 lzndying of II day long dead. Down through the cycle of a thousand years, Over the stretches of a hundred hills, Cometh the Song that heartens, Song that cheers, Cometh the Word that searches, Word that chills And the Song is virgin gold to him that hears, To him that lists, the Word is virgin goldg But Word and Song must waft to waiting ears, And Song and Word bear each its hopes and fears Down from the stores of old. The Song is a priceless token That comrades have gone before, And the Word is a warning spoken Out of the throes of yoreg And we know that the birds are singing And we know that the skies are fair, That golden bells are ringing, That music is everywhere- But the Song and the Word are clinging Like the ghost of a half-caught air. 107 THE JVINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD And Lilt of a liquid measure, Snatches of vagrant run, Gems of a lyric treasure, Melting of Chords in one. Straining at hints of meaning, Catching at shards and shreds, We gather in one the gleaning And weave together the threads. the Song runs in this wise: Qh, one man sings of his courts Glamor and glint of glory, And one man paints a legion of and kings- saints, But ours is another story. For the wind comes in from the And the sun looks down on you And what care we ? And what What ho! We are free-free-free I glistening sea, and me, care we ? Oh, one man groans of his path of stones, Jagged and grim and gory, And one man cries that the world is lies, But ours is another story. Oh, one man's dream is a vanishing gleam Till his locks be few and hoary, And one man toils for guerdon of spoils, But ours is another story. We may not know of the ways we go Nor see the long trail's ending, But we journey along with a rousing song, For We know where our steps are bending. Our course is one with the rolling sun- Forever onward wending- He casts our days in a golden haze, All jarring colors blending. 108 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD And soon a silvery moon a night unending, For all too Foretells Then here's to life and a store of life, Unspent, yet ever spending ! For the wind comes over the whispering lea And the sun looks down on you and me, And what care we? And what care we? What ho 1 We are free-free-free ! the Word runs in this wise: Above the joust, the noise and dust, The clashing and the jarring, Ch, sit supreme where pennons gleam, Nor heed the ceaseless warring! Your hearts be free from vanitv, From lure of earthly glitter! Ye know the gloss but covers dross, The sweet conceals the bitter. Let not your pride be deified, Nor care for fulsome clatter- A witless brood the multitude, And know not whom they Hatter. Above the stain, the needless pain, The reaping and reviling, Oh stand ye free in purity, And safe from all defiling! Your thoughts be high as yonder sky, Nor grudge the soul its dreaming, The deed is there behind the dare, The being with the seeming! Thus the Word And thus the Song, Like the note of a bird In the dawning heard, IO9 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD When the dew lies fresh on the opening bloom, Like the voice of a gong All sudden and strong, From a spire half hid in the gathering gloom, And the heart as it listens is strangely stirred. 4 Gazing back on all the gladness Of the playtime gone before, Gazing back 'mid all the sadness .Of the days that are no more, We are sighing that our places Shall be filled with other faces, With the heroes of a future day. We are lscribing in the spaces Sprigs of legend, guiding traces, Lest our image fade in nothingness away. Then let us plant the ivy here And watch the ivy grow, And let us dream that, year by year, As leaves wax green and brown and sere, And seasons come and seasons go, Ever the ivy will stay. For slowly, slowly the ivy grows- Ages will pass away, Tall trees spring up and wither and decay 5 Yet potent ever in a strong repose, Ever the ivy will stay. Fresh and green and pure, Living and firm and sure, Till the lizards roam in our Motherls home The ivy shall endure, Till the nethermost stone be overthrown The ivy shall endure. All around Her the ivy stands, Upbearing as with myriads of hands The strong and stately dignity of wall- Outspreading over all, IIO THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Lest any buttress crumble, Or flanking tumble, Or peaked and pointed gable-end may fall 5 All around Her the ivy stands, And to us doth the ivy call. Gather round our Ancient Motlzer, Gird Her in as with a shield ,- Yield we newer to another, Flaunting flag or stricken ,Held- Sball our eourage falter never, Naught our fealty dissefuer, But forever and forever To Her serfuiee are we sealed. ROBERT THOMPSON IVQICCRACKEN. r , . HIM , J 5 E, ,Hu , I V ,. L T ,. , A 2 'J 'f' Tfigfn-1.-3.1: ' vm rr ' 1 5 ', 'g ,f E. -fam - -5 Agp -, , -- - wx 1 - 1. I.:L N, , 4 4-ri 52 ' 129-,ifzqygif-:f.f --- ,, 1 .5-:. 'ng :.- - 1 I-' .w'5.?.-rp,,'. 11' IBHHMHMZ'-'-1:7443 f . 'ffihl-',.'Q s'14' ,IP - :4,w,.5eri':u 152-aefzlgfzfggisf 53 ' 52' sr .. .pg-,:jjfg,..-.1 1-' 'v fv'f.j:?.'1':5f9F g,,:L, . 1.--ev: '-':. '-..z - P'-'. ' ':'l 1- . 'T VJ, 3 34-,Q A 41' .' .ff-'w' 'gg' 1.9. IA.-,,..-,figq A fm ,W ' .1 , .- 6 - '-1 +-fag ', 1-' ' .f , new-:f : . ' -1' . , A a11'?-- ,.2.,5,.,a.r-f'-'V' I uW 'QlZNuE..,-fu ' yfwd-. , ,Q V. , , BIOLOGICAL GARDENS III 5.,.,-9....w1-qe- LOGAN HALL , .wma-Q DENTAL'HALL fa- bw y'1qf53 ' ,'fQ32,E if..'.' 15, . 1 ' '-f1'Qi'f,7',2i.f ,..f.2-'yii.5Q'1' 9 It . '- r T 7, -r 'J ,P hr X ,k,13,'. .1-:.:- ,,3. - ' ':'-QL, '+1:-gy. les- . -if eg-S1115 -,nfs Q' ' -' ,af 1 G ,lvpl .-4. h' tl c 1-'1ff:fi.ff.:11'f -'4L ' ' -'Q ' - -' T' ' lf i gj',1f' 4,1j5fQ.-rug,-3'. ,'., - L. f,,,Q -' I !,fjj114- l 6 ' 3 ' 4f'f: 5 '- T1':'I . . - .-ff.-f' '54 'Y .inf ....... , .. .,., . .. . H-al f was se S 1 . . J. -: 7' :t vs sn ,. ara- a W' 4, Aaaaass 5 ras vigil . .N J. +. ....f.-.. -. . , AMI HE history of our past and the forecast of our future have been set forth in glowing terms. It now becomes my duty to bid you a formal farewell in behalf of the class of Nineteen Five. Contrary to established precedent I will not bid you farewellg let it merely be a H good- morrow, for we are not anxious to part from friends who have been so dear to us. It would be impossible for us to say farewell to Pennsylvania for we are just learning to know her. True it is, we have been here four years, but those years have been so full of pleasure that it seems impossible to leave them behind. Pennsylvania has become a part of our life, and everyone of us has entered into the life of that noble institution across the Schuylkill. The question is often asked, HWhy do you call this Commencement when you are leaving your Alma Mater rather than entering upon your college duties ? To my mind the reason is this: We have been undergraduates for the past four years, and now we are entering upon the duties of life as full-fledged Pennsylvanians. Every year a loyal body of graduates is launched upon its career imbued with that wonderful Pennsylvania spirit. The un- tutored may again demand, 'KWhat is this so-called Kspirit' of which you boast ? And the answer is on our lips on the moment. It is that indefin- able something which makes our lives deeper, broader and stronger. It is that quintessence of loyalty which infuses the heart of every man who spends four years at Pennsylvania. On the field, on the track, on the water, wherever the Red and Blue may wave, this spirit is found. This spirit has erected the noble structures which form our college home. This spirit has spread the name Pennsylvania from one end of the world to the other. Imbued with this wonderful spirit, we of Nineteen Five are about to enter upon our life work as full-fledged members of that great Pennsylvania family. We will always look back upon our Senior year with the greatest pleasure, for the college year of 1905 marks the tenth anniversary of Dr. Harrisonls election to the ofhce of Provost. It is a source of great pride to II3 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD know that this same year finds Pennsylvania in the enjoyment of the greatest prosperity in the long years of her useful activity in the commonwealth. During these ten years of Provost Harrison's incumbency, Pennsylvania has waxed strong in mind and body. Each succeeding year has seen an increase in the student body and in the Faculty, while keeping apace with that growth our habitations have been added to until we now occupy as com- modious and handsome a collection of buildings as any university in the country. This rapid growth is unparalleled in the history of our American col- leges, and it is the result of the untiring energy and devotion of our beloved Provost. E So we of the class of Nineteen Five, are justly proud of our heritage. Great has been Pennsylvania's advance in the past decade, but ten years hence, when we as a class gather to dedicate our Class llflemorial, we shall find an even greater advance. It is with the most profound regret that we cease to be undergraduates of our University of Pennsylvania, and that regret will find its expression in the loyal devotion of the years to come. Classmates! To-day we assemble as undergraduates for the last time. We shall have annual re-unions, birthday celebrations so to speak, of that memorable September of 1901 when we first gathered in that ivy- covered hall which has grown dearer to us every day of our lives. The future is very uncertain for many of us, but of one thing everyone of us is certain, that is, that our hearts and hands will always be ready to serve Pennsylvania. I once heard a prominent actress liken the life of the actor to a child's wild pursuit of a gay butterfly. How like this pursuit is our life here at Penn- sylvania! As Freshmen, we look forward to that glorious moment when we can lord the college campus in the guise of a Sophomore. That glory soon flits away, and the careless, nonchalant air of the Junior creates longing desires in our hearts. This caprice is soon replaced by the sober thoughts of the Senior. And lol When that last year is reached the butterfly has taken wings! Every action is measured by that ever-present thought for the last time we tread this path, and before we realize it our college days have flown. The gay butterfly has lived for four short years, years which we do not learn to appreciate until they have passed into memory. If college teaches a man any one lesson, it most assuredly impresses upon him the briefness of this existence. Four years seem a lifetime from the Freshman's standpoint, but to the Senior they are the mere twinkling of an eye. II4 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD So we have lived together these four short years. We have learned to love one another and to love Pennsylvania. These friendships have the stamp of constancy, which time cannot eradicate. True it is, we have had our factions and our strifes, but they are at an end. Every healthy class has them, and we have come out of these trials better and stronger Pennsylva- nians. Standing side by side in the bowl fightg striving to Win our class games on the field and on the waterg working together in the multitude of activities which surround a man at collegeg these ties have brought us closer and closer togetherg these ties have brought us closer to Pennsylvania. And now after four years we are called upon to lay these activities aside. It is a difficult task, but we must submit to the inevitable, and as we part an old refrain rings in our ears:- And now, through all the years to come In midst of toil and care, We'll get new inspiration from Our colors waving thereg And when to all our college life We've said our last adieu, Weill never say adieu to thee, Qur colors, Red and Blue ! 7 ROLLIN CANTWE LL BORTLE. , .iff 1 r ,Ls - :fx ,' 5 ' ci - ii- -fu zzy? 77.4 .4 ,, K , Psa. , ff! M4 ug-fs 994' 1'4 -'fi t-.tn -. .. .1 'Q Q' -' ? vi ' : 'i5fvi',ff-4'1:g: fEi 'aww ' PC' .. . .f we 9' ..- fi Jf'p,',3'-!-' -4-AM, gag- ay A . ', rw. ! .. J':f :Gs, ?i'ji'3 i' agggf' 'uf 5' lugs., w,4.,,5:.,,,-wg, ':'.i..,.,,, ,-Q. 7 V '1?:fz2f2' ic I ffl t J' . .'S2'f. ' QA-'e 'ft' , 4 s EF' ,fi ' I 11'ff.fw-.f'2.f-- s 6f,, -s J.. --,,..,,.g,:-1s--1v -' 1 -Qfw'm'4'i .IA-,a.,,f:'.-ew my ,IM . . . am- V-,,v'V'4,.,,-15. qgL,' -1: .-js-se:',41qyg-.4:jf3f 3-' ' ' --.ffiqf 5,5-ffggw . ',--M IN? f - ' ' .- . 5 .'F'?i'235 5 ' T 3 -i.'5Q- i ... Q ,:g2,i1a5,2 'f.li1 5 '5E?3l wfff , .:,s-9-' .ifrfit-f a f-1 Af .:..:f''?'E:EQZi3::f5i5f5i5.5351 4 ' EF' e 'Lv ' 3.:f-7f'f1'::3iifZ:iiE'Zf?-in' F-Fi' . i,,vf,,,,h . . . 1 -1 10 - P 1 . BIOLOGICAL GARDENS 115 2 ? I ,T wi - Pow MAN ge gn if L 'I p 'iw . sf' ii -6 -4 I gJ.ij. QQ:: - J 552 -:A.L.::- . , ff ,Ww 5 W , :vi Q f 'N bflwis JQJSQ, Al ..f--Jag'- VD - f Q: o x 1 -, . Q7 Q sl THE HONOR MEN L .e n 'fQ. '71 PU! UF,Qff-PE fr 19' P Q 1-w. xx-ghd kr .f Jr sl 1 I+ ISSJ likx f 1, IVSIS 'S QW' H I if Lf: QW M XP IG5!Qi. f Fffaiz-,fmt MA 6 J 'sky -,Jw-,I .fi Aiw a 52 sw A9154 s'r,i j 'I 33'-f' L Ir aqui get Y ,I f 1 xv F 'I HHH SJ' RMI VI LMA IIIWWIQN, Fl I .SQA w:fSb,g3i51s Q , ,ngaffgt mm! kr L A Af' ZIELI 157342 'SG FQZJSM lk- 191 6, I I EAL w .- , -.,,- ,yu-1 I r ' ' 'nfl' ,., . , ' , - I -, ,H ..,-B ..: 'R 'W 'i:7 P2f- 1 Aw-' 2 5li1 lfl ' 'v'7 4f T' 27,-H - 5151- 'i'f1' b3 :, ',-fs N '45 Hp' ' ' .- 5-5 . - ' - -5' . - f..Se..v1':L It 'fh ' ,v hh . kgig, gig'--' 4 1 1 I ag-R-smzuygiga-I, ,Wg - 235551 , ' JI E, 1 - I ' 1 ' '-.--sE- -' '- '-'::- f X 1' . . A.-R. 1 1 f' - . R - Js?E3EZE.b'P1s'X::g.,i'5,:y:.- IQIIXZT Ti- f'2Q,X'.,'1Yg ji -,Qffx-fif:,e,:'f.lEf,5' . 'T - 1 -- -as'-rf-.-.swa-M 41315 an xv,-I-.'I-wa ,Q 51'-.av +-1.11,-fv-f,::f? - 1 +':1,,r91ES.fl?:s:iSi-'f Ibm .qrj AW- ' if 2ifz::inSiI2 Jw? I :' -S+?-:. '321'-.-:grin 'J' '1-:ga 4251.-,'.:'f --':-::-- 2.-:, .gf-.-.P-fy:f-,':.-,','Q: -4 ,I Aff '-:gif--'-AP:-. ' Q-.54:,p :-.g ,'.'1-:-ef I- ,R:-'-55:.:1r-.,:p.'::,c.I- Refi I w-,-.fig-I, LII.:-'.,-f.: Q.. :, A ,,: ,f.'-11y:'.o,Qg'L5,f' iaifiz w- V 1 Sqrma'-L 311---:4:,z-zu. -?g:::-.. 2-52 --:-J Jfxr, --kip A- ii-4 Q'-FP , A 'L17S49 .: :-11. 'Lp-aw, 1' -r , L-1.:-, - -' I 21 R- UI'4F 15-.4--:L ,. 'Irie-:H-F-'E'1'.t-. fL2'E2,f-L. ,aan .1-:ffl7--X:-'-..32gI-f .+ - f -'5 ' i 'lf 1 5: I-'EF'- f1Aff'.:fiQ'-' 1517- 'LLHQ :Q E 6-ffff H311 1- , .-'f.:',:' 'Eg 51 'i1 - I ig5M'ga9.i2sL- TIE'-'I-'-1-'r1.f'-f?i1 iff.-'fl--I .5 -if-1 SS'-1' - - mv. ,- :I ,. 7 I.: '-.wig ,If V I , -,l.J'.j.1. 3. ,. V :gl ' . - :- ' - - 1-.' . ' :gf p -- - -2- .' .- 1-, .-: ef .ff--'2--. v...1' -,w IA.. - - ISV wijbgi '-.-tap 2- . - , , '- 1. w .1-gE?fgnh1p5.ng:f - nf Mg. '-'Rang - I - S - -A -' ' -' 5 :. 1 ' I T , . ,S .,I-:.,.-.-:'-I-P.,-,.-SGW. ' I -:.5 -S. 1- . f ' S.. - ,-:,L+Ji2Qa5.3aWm. .. 553.51 I ff , 1 J .: .- , ,S:.Lw:aIxg::z.,m. If :iw 5.f3+?NgaFZSf. ' -.f P4 -- J- H. 1. I .fg,g: 2-SL 1 ' V. .-: -mi--'.',---,-11' H-'E' R mg- 'I il H6371 . - ,uf 142. -. Igiyifi.--3. I-., ,:,-Mg-1.15551-.I-xi , - I 'M A -. 1-Sag' - 1 ' ., .. . R: 12 3, - A . 1 29, S E II,,lL1...1rff 4- N.-I -, . in A, , - 45. Iy'2:ggA3EIgg1:,.4-R I ' 5 721, ' -9- X I I A-'SAL L -5::--E ' :BW ' ri -- ' . 'RL Ii ., , . A, . -..-.. .. W, , . pg V, Im.:-IS, I Q25 1-3, gfvi -1 , G -erfsuw - 51,3 Quan, T- 7.11.5--. 'H , -' Q .. ,, um... I ' ' Z5Z:D I:5'U' , gd - S- , 1,,.W.-,,',..,.,.-A rw , -.- -4- N aa ' ,-4... ' . ' - - -L-Q... , ' - 'Q -V .A-.QV fr ly -Q, , .. .. ,,, . - --'fae H, 1 ii, .N if . V 1.455 X A-' - ' -5: 1:1-1'-.I-.u '.:.1:I.:-:-.1-fa.-1:-'rea-..f:,,.'.-.,.nwLu-4'-1.-'-1-1:1':.:s.,-:II155,5-.1'f.','L-531f,gf.g,,:.q.-.,,,' I A-2 ,.,., Q16 '-:, .., P Q, -A. -.-g- ' ,QV 5: I- N I, I ble Q ' ll I--ff ' ,FD ..... .. 9 .,fL' 'I I . ' . . . - , ft'-fwfr 111.1-9, ..,-.,,..,.,.q,,,, . ., , J.H.5emmena 'os . CLASS OF 1905 COLLEGE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA Program Selections from H Yankee Consul I' . .,.. 'Robyn H Hail Pennsylvania . Salutatory . . . . . . . Duffy . HARVEY BIRCHARD TAYLOR Selections from H Woodland . History ...- Poem . - . Graceful Dance Prophecy . . Presentations - . . . . . Lueders FRANK lVIACKNIGHT GRAY JAMES SLINGLUEF BOYD . . . . Szllliwzn FRANK WILSON HOWARD . . CHARLES EDWIN BARTLETT Selections from H Babes in Toyland H . Valedictory . . . Interrnezzo-HArnOreuSe Transference of PreSident'S Gown . H Star Spangled Banner CEZIRSS 7292111 Committee . . . Herbert ROLLIN CANTWELL BORTLE . . . lierger Key JOSEPH BOYD BAKER, 3d PHILIP GEORGE LANG, Jr. LOUIS SCHUMANN BRUNER HENRY CLAY PARKER, Jr. WILLIS LILBURN ESSEN ALEXANDER BURNS ROE ALBERT WILLIAM KIEFER DAVID RUPP, 3d JOHN HUGH MOQUILLEN CARTER, Chairman II7 DR. EDGAR FAHS SMITH THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD QBITJ Enya AIVI told that I must write a few paragraphs for the RECORD of IQO5. My desire to do this is great, but as I put pen to paper, in compliance with the mandate sent forth by the all-powerful editor, I am overwhelmed with anxiety and deep concern as to what will be most suitable and proper for a publication reflecting the student-life of our University. I wonder if the reader has ever permitted himself to dwell upon the fact that the College, so dear to us all, has passed its 165th birthday, or upon the fact that, in the many intervening years, there have been other boys U who wrought for and gloried in Pennsylvania's achievements. Ifeel sure that if we will turn for a moment to those other boys, we shall find much to admire in what they did, much of which we may feel gratefully proud, and all of which surely should serve as incentives to us, who have followed them in the halls of Pennsylvania. For example, there was the great painter Benjamin West C1758 Col- legel, famous not only at home, but abroad 5 receiving, eventually, election to the Presidency of the R. S. A. of England, whose skill and ability were known throughout the entire civilized world. And we must not pass dash- ing Tench Tilghman C1761 C.l, the faithful aide-de-camp of Washington for more than seven years. What must have been his thoughts on that memorable ride from Yorktown, when entrusted with the glorious news to Congress of Cornwallis' surrender ? Surely he thought of Alma Mater and of his college-mates, as he thus rode to Philadelphia. How proud the young collegians were of him! Tilghman of '61l lVIethinks I hear-faintly it is true-a familiar college slogan. And in 1760 C. was that other loyal, devoted friend of the great chieftain, Washington,-I mean John Cadwalader. The deep intrigues and the cabal against his honored and beloved leader were too much for his true and noble spirit. What did he do? Called out and fought a famous duel with Conway, the leader of the plotters. We may deprecate duelling, but the spirit of loyalty and devotion of Cadwalader must command our respect and deepest admiration. And it was Cadvvaladefs classmate, Thomas Mifflin, who, in 1783, presided over-Congress when Washington laid before it his resignation. I II9 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD It is very interesting to discover how closely so many of our boys entered into the affairs of the father of his country. Un the eve of the battle of the Brandywine, it was Tom Read C1765 C.l, a zealous patriot, who guided Washingtonls Army, and John Clopton, of 1776 C., serving from the day of his graduation to the close of the war, wounded at Brandy- wine, who declined promotion for meritorious service because of his attach- ment to his Virginia Company, H composed of friends, relatives and humble dependents of his family, all belonging to his native Parish of St. Peter's, -who were equipped and clothed by his father, during that entire period. Many of Washington's captains, colonels, brigadiers and privates were Pennsylvania's sons. They were with him throughout the entire conflict. They suffered uncomplainingly at Valley Forge, and were with him when that ill-clad army marched westward out Market Street, bent upon its Southern campaign. In the last hours of the great first president of our country, when the grim messenger came to summon him hence, it was Elisha C. Dick CI78OD, who watched through the long hours by the bedside, rendering such aid as human skill could command. Many other instances of like devotion might be cited, but those given suffice to illustrate how closely our boys Were interwoven with the affairs of him whom the world will never cease to honor,-and who, him- self, was an adopted son and brother in our University family. From his nephews, George S. and Lawrence A., both of 1789 C., he must have received regular news of college doings. When moved to patriotic endeavors and display, let us not forget, while singing Hail Columbia, that it came from the pen of Joseph Hopkinson C1786 CQ, a son of Francis Hopkinson C1757 C.D, signer of the Declaration of Independence,-to which famous Instrument are affixed the names of others who owed joyful allegiance to Alma Ivlater,-namely, Paca, Clymer, McKean, Morris, Rush, Wilson, and the immortal founder, Franklin. In calling attention to this short list of some of our old boys and their achievements the story has by no means been exhausted. Many other exceedingly interesting patriotic services might be described, and to these might be added the conquests of the older boys in the fields of science and literature, but it would carry me far beyond the limits I have been assigned. If this gentle reminder of the glorious past will serve to lead H the boys of 120 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD to-day to turn baclc to the period when the University stood at Fourth and Arch Streets, and carefully inspect the efforts and the successes of those who laid the foundations of the University of the present,I shall have accomplished the purpose I had in mind. No Pennsylvanian can afford to be ignorant of our University's beginningsg no Pennsylvanian can afford to neglect the study of Pennsylvania's oldest sons. What they have done will only serve to fnake us love more deeply the institution and the man who gave it to us. 5254104 . 454.5455 STAIRCASE IN LAW SCHOOL 121 r x 4: an --f .. 4' ' -'f Q. cw 1 Z- ' J . Eg K 'Q . in ff . 'iQ i v ? Q? 752,-: Ei::f.s , 5 '15 . , -..-, A . . 'Ile 'Q ' Q2 ' X , .,2f I 1: '13 :- f - 3 ,L 2 M . Arts f ,fl Zlftilidl Seietae UR life at Penn began with the usual service at Chapel. For the first time we heard the Well-used prayer and hymns, but for some of us it was the last time. We listened with rapt attention to the silent s.1.3m1: words of welcome, for though we could see the motion of the Provostls mouth, yet, owing to the acoustic properties of the room, his words failed to reach us. After being told to End room 217, we were dismissed while Dr. Clarke played a funeral march as a last adieu to some of us. The task of finding Dr. Childls room did not prove difficult, for Bottle had found from H Pomp where the room was, and so safely guided us there. Thus was early displayed Bortle's ability to manage our class. In came Child, the friend of all Freshmen, and it needed only one story from him to win our admiration. We all determined to take his course, nor have we ever regretted our decision. As usual, we were told to buy our books at Leary's, and then found that almost every Prof had just published his own book and would sell it at a high price, though he felt it was not worth it. Several of our Arts section were already conspicuous. Carson seemed very busy, and had already collected enough material for an extra edition of the Pennsylfvanian. Shelly announced that if any of us knew witty stories, to give them to him, but as we learned they were for the Punch Howl, our wit failed us. Leedom, Kinard and Howard-Smith were already discussing their chances for the Varsity crew, While Blancke had come to the 123 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD conclusion that he knew more than anyone else in our class, and so had an easy chance to make Phi Beta Kappa. Un Monday we met Gibbons. In glowing words he portrayed the charm of Horace's odes, but Hessler said something about their being Hodiousf' To show us the melody of the Latin, we were told to scan the hundred odes. Because we sang them too much like chapel hymns, Gibbons seemed disgusted and in agony would pass his hand through his hair. Only those with good musical voices like Deck and Huff passed with honor. Gibbon's favorite way of explaining an allusion was to say, H Can anyone explain that allusion ? Of course none of us could, though Blancke would always try in vain. H Well then, gentlemen, Iwill let you have the pleasure of looking it up. But none of us sought the pleasure. It was not Dr. McDaniel,s fault that all of us did not learn Latin, and he worked hard to make Murphy and Armstrong see that Latin was somewhat different from English. In History, Jacobs and some others were energetic, and took the course with Ames. His words of greeting gave us the following impression : H Gen- tlemen, I know there are very many books on history in the library, but they are there to be read, and so, read all there are and if there is any time remaining you may give it to your other courses. Musser, llflulford and others needed the rest, and so chose to be put to sleep by the lectures of America's greatest historian. Greek absorbed our efforts under Bates. As we always recited in order, either beginning with Aiken or with Zerbe, each one perfected himself in his own sentence. By this method we were enabled to cover much ground with beautiful translations. H Perhaps you will favor us with a translation, usually brought forth a smooth translation by the help of a pony or a kind neighbor. Bates never could understand why some, who always recited so well, did so poorly at examinations. In lvlathematics, Crawley showed us how little we knew, and made fellows like Harper wish they knew something about geometry, for his kind words of criticism hit hard. We bought Fisher and Schwattls Algebra, and then tried to forget everything we had learned previously in order to absorb its contents, and we came to the conclusion that it was a remarkable book, and about as hard to comprehend as Schwatt. In the English Department, Quinn taught us the rules of rhetoric and composition, and Hoag showed us how beautifully they Work. H Gentlemen, if no one objects I believe this is correct, but if anyone thinks differently, I 124 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED -AND FIVE RECORD will consider his views, for most likely he is right. So by this means of self- criticism our compositions improved greatly, and Garner saved his essays for the Red and Blue. German and French were taken by those who wanted an easy time, and so not many Arts fellows were found in those classes. Qur Freshman work had been so strenuous that Briggs and Aiken had stopped for a needed rest. Drayton decided to repeat his Freshman year, and Evans and Fitler had found that college took too much of their time. But Albrecht and Crewitt entered our ranks and came prepared to work. This year we were greeted with the course-card system, which becomes more elaborate each year, as the janitor finds it a good way to use odd pieces of paper. We were required to sign our names as often as we could, and then charged according to the number of times we had written them. After this, we were sent into a room in which three inches were torn off our papers and then sent to successive rooms, each time losing three inches until the last piece was gone. The purpose was to make sure that several persons had our signatures in case we became famous. As we found that Chemistry and Physics were required, we decided that the sooner we passed them the better. So we went to Goodspeed, but he knew too much about physics to stoop to make it clear to beginners, and so dazzled us with complex details that we decided one year of physics was quite enough, and we have often wondered what induced Harper to con- tinue taking it. Goodspeed seemed to delight in giving us the impression that nothing could be washed clean in the physical laboratory and there- fore that was the cause why the instruments and experiments never acted just right. After we were mystified by Goodspeed, Myers would struggle to show us what was meant in the lectures, but it seemed a hopeless task, for even Jack Baker could not give clear definitions. Mr. Baker, donit you see that it is not defining water when you say its wetness is due to its aquosity? Chemistry seemed a combination of a two year's course in one. Richter had written such a large book that we had to hurry to Hnish itg but the more we listened to Dr. Smith, the more our admiration for him increased, because of his great knowledge and because of his kindly spirit. In the laboratory, Kirkbride and Moorhead considered an experiment successful if they had broken some apparatus, filled the room with smoke and wasted a lot of chemicals. Walt Johnson enjoyed the excitement so much that he decided to take more courses in chemistry. 125 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Some of us closed our history course with Lingelbach and enjoyed it so much that we decided to take every course we could with him. Fullerton taught us Logic and Ethics. He had a way of saying things that showed he knew how to use what he taught. So well did he dispute everything, that Goldsmith feared lest black was white. On Fullertonls departure we were treated to Newbold, who seemed to imagine that we knew as much about the vagueness of philosophy as he did. Since we did not seem to become wiser, Singer was appointed to teach the subject, and so well succeeded that the subject was clearer before he began than when he finished, and with the help of calculus he succeeded in making the subject enjoyable. Hoag again tried to encourage us in composition, and said to Bartlett after he had written a wonderful story, Mr, Bartlett why don't you publish that story in Harper's? It might make you famous. We all believed what Hoag said and so some of us started to read Harper's just to find Bartlett's story, but it muSt have become lost in the mail. The most popular course this year was in the Mask and Wig. Bottle carried off high honors, and others, including Beach and Conway, gave suc- cessful impersonations of the H cold girl. junior year our class seemed incomplete, for Bob Brunker had dropped out, owing to illness. We certainly did miss Bob and felt his absence keenly. Rogers and Doak did not return, and several of our number had advanced a year. Two great changes happened. HLilly Pound could not bear our teasing any longer and had left us naughty boys, and Slonimsky had changed his name to Sloane and was advanced a year for this act of bravery. Some of us took Greek with Lamberton this year, and even Walton and Swartley were deeply impressed by the perfect and thorough knowledge he has of his subject. As we heard that Penniman was going to give a course, we decided it was best for us to take it and win his good-will. The object of the course was for the Dean to explain in this class the scripture lesson read in chapel that morning. The Library was becoming very attractive to some of our number, and it is feared that the main attraction was not the books but those in charge of the books. Again we had the opportunity of taking a course under Child, and even HChaucer had its charm and interest when taught by a man of such attractive personality as Dr. Child. Many of us had a chance to take Schelling, the only one of the Faculty who does not appreciate his own 126 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD worth. U Here's your humble servant, thrust into literature and humbly drinking in knowledge and begs you to take his words for what they are worth. We felt that his words were worth very much to us and have developed in us a taste for literature which we would not have had other- wise. Besides teaching us literature, Schelling taught us how to spoil our script. HGentlemen, I would like you to take down four points, and before we could start he had finished giving them and hurried on to some- thing else. Lapsley had come into our midst from Harvard and attracted a few of us to his course. In addition to history we learned the proper way to drop all the U rls 'l in our words, and how to carry our handkerchiefs in a new place. He was called to Oxford, so none of us tried for the Rhoades scholarship, since one year of Lapsley was sufficient. We began the Senior year with the course-card system now grown more elaborate and complex. As the ladies in the office were anxious to know our ages, we had to inform them, and if we did not happen to be over twenty-one, we had to pay Eve dollars to help finish the gymnasium. As our brains had grown so greatly, the Faculty felt that the Wharton fellows were in the way and were not giving the proper example of activity to us, so they were removed to Logan Hall. Weddle stayed out West for a needed rest, but the Arts course had developed such strenuous activity in Kinard, Willard, Kirkbride, and others, that they decided to take the first year in medicine in addition to their Senior course. As Albrecht and Mead- owcroft had learned almost everything in the Arts, they added some work from the Wharton School. Their main purpose was to keep the Wharton School Profs from making any mistakes. Albrecht in his falsetto voice would Hobjectf' and llfleadowcroft in his deep tones would Hdisagreen with almost everything. Weygandt struck a hard proposition this year when he tried to make Bird write a funny story, but as it hurt Ben to laugh it was a hard task. Weygandt also taught a course in H Modern Poets, and was so wrapt up in the subject that some of his enthusiasm affected us all. Freeman could not appreciate some of the poetry and gave some comments-but Paul gets excited so easily. As we had heard so much about the imposing architecture of the Library, we took a course with Osbourne to be able to distinguish what was HQueen Anne and what was Mary Anne in its construction. This 127 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD was a most interesting subject and Osbourne knew how to impart his knowledge in a most attractive manner. A few selected a course in Hebrew and found that Clay could make any subject attractiveg but as he was so busy deciphering H old bricks, Ranche had to help him teachg but it was not Ranche's fault that he was a German. An important addition in our Senior year was H Fatty ' Hall, he of the Mask and Wig, who took so much N Arts that Young fired him from Wharton. A faithful tried number have withstood all the attacks and buffetings of the Arts course and are proud to have been able to keep up to the pace of our class. Though the weaker have dropped out, others have flocked to our ranks. Even Bob McCracken remained out West longer so he might have the privilege of graduating with us. And now, instead of working together as a class we will have to work individually for ourselvesg and if we succeed in doing something in this world we will truly confess that it has only been made possible by the transforming influence of Penn- sylvania upon us. ,, ,,,V , - E' N' READING ROOM-THE LIBRARY 128 x Fx WWW' NTC? N wxf- Xxx X. LMMCXM x, Y Bw' 'T' vm' V E' T X' 5- 1 A ' I - , lf. f, , . lc. , ,X I: Z We Q . g Q -Q Y, Q FLUTE K - - Til: -2 S5 if fri-,ww -N ' 1,2592 V T NLT ,X I x ' v 44 A 'lil' ,,,, is 1 u i ' Q i' I ' 'LA I'H ku- 'T ,Ry 4 K 3 7 q I X 5 . A f Q - J. C 1 1 in gl V i illibz Qetnnh Zguuk ui Ulfllibartnn CHAPTER I. 1 The tribe starts on its way. 3 Josiah gets oft his annual jest. 9 Among the prominent men seen there were, etc. rr Cleveland butteth in. 16 Charles gets a call down but it worrieth him not. 18 Charles anointed. I. Now it came to pass, according to the custom, that the young men were gathered together to commence work anew upon their appointed tasks. ' 2. And Josiah, the son of Penniman, admonished them and spake unto them after this manner : 3. Unto every chamber let there be affixed a number, that ye may know them. 4. The rooms upon the first Hoot shall begin with one hundred, and those upon the second shall begin with two hundred and those of the third floor with three hundred. 5. And it was done and Josiah saw that it was done and was pleased. 6. Thus was the prophecy fulhlled, for until these words are spoken is not any work done nor any task begun. 7. Then said he unto them: Go ye each unto his appointed room, and there shall ye be told what manner of work is set apart for you. 8. And in one chamber set apart from the others and nigh unto the place wherein was Simon the Chief, and James the Younger, the scribe, he who was afterwards made chief, there were assembled many youths strong of stature and fair to look upon. T 129 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD 9. And they were of the tribe of Wharton, and there were at that time there, Samuel, whose surname was Whetstone, John whom they called Brown, Roy whose name became Soap because he was a peach fwhich came near being a jokel and Frank of Smokapolisg IO. Jacob of Langsdorf and Willis whom they called Adams. They who cared not for outward appearances and who were clad like unto hoboes. 11. And lo! a taskmaster appeared upon a height and his hair was as scarlet and his raiment of green., and from his mouth there issued fiery flames like unto burning vapors. 12. And he opened his mouth and spake unto them, telling them of wealth, and value and wealth which is not value and utility of which he was not. Also spake he of moneys, and as he spake there arose a great noise. 1-3. And it was like the rushing of a mighty wind and the gnashing of many teeth or the ripping of countless saws in the Wood. 14. And it increased many fold so that none could hear of what Cleve- land spake. 15. Whereupon Cleveland, he of the brickish upperworks, halted in his speech and looked g and he beheld a young man asleep whose face was as an angel's, nor was there any verdure on it, and they awoke him. 16. Then said Cleveland unto him : Who art thou that thuswise dozeth P What manner of man art thou that dares to thunder while I am reigning? Whereupon the multitude groaned, for they thought he jested. 17. Then said the young man, I am Charles of Goodin. And the hosts knew it was he because he slept, and straightway did they fall down and worship him. 18. And they put on him costly raiment and named him Israel Durham, which being interpreted is Rule Ch! Boss, and they obeyed him. CHAPTER H. 3 Simon saith. It's Fine, but-. 7 A descent on Logan Hall is planned. I2 James the Scribe becomes Chief. I3 Simon giveth unto James the merry ha ha. 1.1. James returns the punt. 1. In the third year after the entry of the tribe, in the sixth month of the year when the labors were completed, Simon the Chief called the young men unto him. 2. And he opened his mouth and told them, saying: A 3. Long have we labored in this land and prospered, as did our fathers prosper. 130 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED JAND FIVE RECORD 4. And peace and plenty have reigned over our people and happiness has blessed this land. 5. But our numbers wax great, and it has become a weariness to the flesh to be forced to recline upon the easements of the windows. 6. For it had been the custom there to rest on account of the numbers. 7. And we have taken counsel together and determined to enter into and possess the land of Logan. 8. Wherefore make yourselves ready at the appointed hour. Gird up your loins and go forth and possess this land wherein is great joy and which Howeth with milk and honey. 9. And after him arose James the Younger, and he spake likewise unto the multitude. IO. And he told them of love, much love, yea verily, bunches of love that the elders held for the youths. ' II. And the youths waxed strong in faith and went their ways. 12. VVhereupon did James the Younger become chief and Simon retired to his tent. 13. And Simon was glad, for he knew of what James was in for. 14. Likewise also was James glad, for he did not. Selah. CHAPTER IH. 1 Logan Hall is entered. 3 The grinders rebuked-splash ! 5 VVho's who in VVharton. 9 james turneth into a cultivator. I3 Christmas cometh on. 1+ Sixteen goats sacri- ficed. zo Frank Howard escapes and singeth. 23 Darkness and dawn, or who greased the clutch? 1. Now after the dry season had passed, the tribe of VVharton descended on the land of Logan and possessed it. 2. And they put skilled artisans at work and established it. A 3. And they erected roofs so that they might fall down and smite those who grind in their studies. And it was so. 4. And James the Younger was made Chief and he called together the elders and they counselled together. A 5. Now those who were elders at this time were six and ten. James the Younger, Simon whose surname was Patten, Leo whose surname was Rowe, Carl of the tribe of Kelsey, and Solomon whom they sometimes called Hubnerg 6. Edward of lVIeade, he who wrote Bust Finance, and Emory whom they call Johnson, and others Whom they call'Alsorans, which is by inter- pretation, Among those present. 131 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD 7. And the halls having been prepared, James the Chief called the multi- tude together and did again get off that love joke. 8. And the labors were commenced. 9. Now it so happened that James began to grow large in his own eyes and did seek to enhance his impressiveness. IO. And he began to cultivate vegetation upon his face, and he fought hard. II. And it was delivered unto him so that Wilhelm the Kaiser waxed envious. 12. And James rejoiced greatly, for while he was chief there was no one who dare to call it down. CBut that was a feathery jest.l 13. Now once more the Christmas season approached and a great sacri- fice was appointed. 'J 1.1. And sixteen goats were to be offered upg and the question is, who were the goats? 15. And the Seniors grew greatly busy and did travel into far countries, that suitable gifts .might be had to bestow upon the victims. 16. And a young tree was cut and laden with costly presents. 17. And the day was come and the people did say one to another, to- night's the night, and did hasten into the temple. 18. The multitude having assembled and the victims in readiness, the sacrihce began. 19. And the high priest, Edwin of Bartlett, the greatest of all the sons of Wharton, did give forth many gifts. 20. And all was well until near the close of the day, when a gasping was heard and the multitude was sore afraid, for they knew not whence this noise came. 21. Then said the high priest: Fear not, my children, keep unto your seats, for there is no danger. And lo! there was not, for it was but Frank Howard singing. 22. And the sacrihce was the greatest that had been held in the tribe of Wharton and there was much joy loose thereat. 23. And the morning and the evening were the first day, which being interpreted means, Here's a good place to stop. 132 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD INTERIOR OF MUSEUM THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD lin Memoriam nf ilknhert Qiasbaell Qlrutnell Burn Eianuarp 1, 1883 ZBMJ Zfune 3, 1905 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Bn jllilemuriam uf Biubn Stott Scully Earn Zlugust 11, 1883 EBRD jjlilatrh 20, 1905 lin flilemuriam uf iiautnarh ?Lett5 gfnrtiner Earn janhzmhnzr 12, 1882 EBRD may 10, 1905 133 1 J-' C- .. ,v I -af ' fi J, I If COLLEGE HALL 'rf w ' F' , .. TL, Pi f 3 . El ii .ARQeli QjlVVll?iilItf... i 1, ,..t ly 1 li i i X fig r ,-yr - --,- - V '-. i i ,l ,ll li' - l V l li' it 1'9 'imt3T A: ta -- W - , NE September day in the Fall of nineteen hundred and one, there assembled on the third Hoor of College Hall a most unique crowd of little boys, each as green as the brightest emerald, but eagerly seeking that knowledge which might eventually launch him into the world, an architect. We had roamed about through the various rooms of the department, studying the glittering display of designs found there, until at last the time arrived for us to appear before Professor Laird. This kind man talked to us soothingly-almost like a father, and we left his office convinced that the Architectural School was a nice comfortable Home for Boys. However, it wasnlt long before Professor IVIcGoodwin had us all roped off in what is now known as the Garret Theatre, after which things didnlt look so easy. From that time on, complications arose which gave excellent variation to the monotony of the simple life we had chosen to lead. HMac tried his best to pound into us such things as descriptive geometry, perspective, and shades and shadows-a delightful subject. He also taught us many little office tricks known only to experienced draughts- men. For example: Always wet paper before making a sketch, when running an India ink wash, do not start at the bottom and work up hill against the tide, or wind. While working in the upper right hand corner of a H double elephant board, a short step ladder will be of some assistance. But we had other troubles besides those with f'Mac. Professor Laird, who in some mysterious way had become known as H Popsy, strove in vain to explain the difference between a telegraph pole and a Doric column. His quizzes on the H Disorders of Architecture were decided fby himselfl as most essential. and they never failed to bring us the much dreaded N. Cn our last quiz paper we were asked to solve this question: 135 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Ulf a Doric dental weighs three pounds and is just four feet high, how many kinds of Orders will it take to reach the sky ? We all decided that this must be one of those H catch questions Professor Laird is so fond of. We sailed along nicely, until after the mid-years, when slight changes altered the make-up of our class. Packard thought it possible to do more work in the Wharton School, so left for that department. Torchiana figured it out by descriptive geometry that to argue a case is much easier than to cast the shadow of a conical tower on a rough surface. The remaining members of the class stuck to it until June, when all anxiously hastened to offices where countless head draughtsmen were clamoring for us to do stunts with India ink. C, That next Fall brought great sorrow to those who had been Freshmen. In vain did we wait for the majority of the class to return. News Hnally reached us that Haines had taken an earnest interest in a Camden grocery store. DePerven was drawing a large salary in a down-town office, and Nlathews decided to follow Popsy's advice in regard to settling on a quiet little farm. Ray Qlsen seemed to like the entering Freshman class, and joined its forces. This left a lonely trio to uphold the honor of the original class. -There isn't a great deal to be said of this Sophomore class, except that it existed quietly, and always moved around in a body. You see, there were nineteen in the Freshman class that year. It was only with the greatest difficulty, that the traditional Hsink victim was finally discovered alone, and made to suffer for the torture inflicted upon Willie DePerven during our own Freshman year. The only really interesting course we took, in addition to Usborne's history, was the one with Dawson. He had a way of artistically piling up such articles as broken vases, potatoes, old shoes and scrap iron, after which we would struggle for hours, in order to get the best results in light and shade. After having again suffered the agony caused by Summer work in an office, the class assembled once more in College Hall and commenced the duties of Junior year. We found that several new men had been added to our list. Bogle came on from Chicago to give information concerning the West, and llflakepeace came down from Syracuse to tell us all about Edna llflay. French, Bigelow, Mathis and Conkey came into our class in design, in preference to continuing second year special work. 136 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD In regard to work this year, we were booked to meet Tommy Nolan, Sallie Everett, Professor Bergi, and Hays-all new to us. But most important of all was lVIr. Cret, who came directly from Paris especially prepared to teach design. To us he was and always shall be regarded as wonderful. Under Mr. Cret's system we were actually obliged to work nights, but we managed to stand the shock, and tried our level best to attain the Beaux Arts habit. Besides all this new French work, other important duties arose. Tommy Nolanls mysterious formula had to be met and conquered. This course was called H llflechanicis Delight, and i'Applied Destruction. Sallie made us design green and blue peacocks executed in mosaics. Professor Bergi told us how to best take care of our health, and Dawson taught us many things about water color. The only courses we took which were not duties, were Professor Osbornels history, and Popsy's course in HlVIemory and Imaginationf, We all possessed wonderful powers of imagination, but none of us had an unusually strong memory. Senior year opened with a rush, and I doubt if ever there was a more versatile class. Another inventory shows many more changes in the class roll. Bogle, Conkey, Bigelow and French did not return. Jim Warner came back from foreign lands to join our forces, and lVIr. Hornbostel Webb came over from New York to impart the atmosphere of city life. In connection with the Senior year it is my first duty to speak of the changes made in our roster. New courses were added, which wonderfully strengthened the school. Singing and dancing lessons were given daily. The class in Hwall decorationf' met twice a week, while Supply Store Raffles had to be attended every Wednesday. When a man has been through the course in Architecture at Pennsyl- vania, he has a feeling for that old third floor of College Hall, which no outsider can begin to realize. As each year passes, he meets new duties, pleasures and tortures up there, which make the place and those in it, most important factors in his life. It is true that many of the duties have been painful and some of the work discouraging, but the pleasures have been greatly in the majority, and close friendships have grown up which might have been formed in no other place. So when the day comes for a man to say good-byen to this life he has been leading in the Architectural department, he will instinctively ask himself when and how he can return to have just one more look at that old third floor. Thatls the way the Class of Nineteen Five felt about it ! 137 LABORATORY OF PHYSICS LABORATORY OF I-IYGIENE 3'-E i i I . T all I- ' I of , ' 1 . C 1 ! I ou . I ' .i A . c 0 u ,- - , u 'fo u 1. I . x Q.lr.,., X Q o t. Q o a o q 'n' o ' , T' , , X so U Vlqe. I: I 3 N XYXQQX . , N X w 0 5 -1 . , , 0 - D .S 4 0 YU' d 6 ' 29.2 0 0 ' 9 V 1 u E K' R-A v , esxww- i . ' I ex ' R W N.. 5 1 . S s. E . lr S i 5- ' l ' 3 I 1 . 1, J skixor. ' llv u QSY xx IV.: H Qmm...t.' . 0 u 4 I N-,yt-....,, l V .Q S ,Q Q. X , - ll Mxnwm. iv UI i, 1.1 HH I0 ff ' lol T n , U I' . r- 1 5 glint' ni' Tl , Q I . I -'ln H- tml 'I ' rw- +a1'?P-,, , 1 ff- 'li img? X f-lu . ts, ::r- 1 lil!-' 0 0 l xxx M X H-r a f f ,ff dl 1 P 'L ,--f, lg g f.. Q 1.1.23 6BjEEQ5 4 I I I SSX x x X I QNIE four years ago, there gathered about the doors of College Hall a crowd collected from all the States -from Montana to Jersey, from Connecticut to Nlanayunk. Some were handsome and some were not-principally not. All types were represented from Lundahl, the blushing blonde, to Hlerry VVilds, the dashing brunette, while Bill Star represented the strawberry type. They were of various shapes and sizes, from the graceful, willowy, drooping Hgure of Ulupe Doolittle to that of the plump, chubby cherub-like H Plug Wilson. The conversation which ensued among them will be withheld out of respect for the survivors. Presently, one of them, a little more venturesome than the rest, knocked at the door of a room marked HProfessor Marburg, Civil Engineering Department. He was greeted with an authoritative HCome! and he disappeared within. Soon the rest were herded in room 121, where we Hrst ofr icially made the acquaintance of the H Dookf, After alittle preliminary speech, he started to tell us about the Afefw Engineering Building. Each man was to have a private locker and desk, where he could lock up all his property, so that drawing boards, T-squares and even thumb tasks would be private property. 'I This building, gentlemen, will be ready for use next year, and, Freshman like, we believed it. This was our first interview with the H Dock. We have had many since-but let us not dwell upon such painful subjects. It was not until our Sophomore year that We first became acquainted with H Flower Farm. We donlt know yet whether or not there are any flowers planted there, but we do know that they have some figs there that ought to be planted-common scents told us that much. They have an observatory register out there, it don't give off heat like an ordinary register, yet Jupe H tells us that any time his father turns to a certain page in it he simply H boils over. Une look at it will tell the reason. . 139 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Sophomore year we held our banquet. At this occasion Al Kiefer succeeded in getting himself elected president and has never called a meeting since for fear of losing his job. The greatest event of the year, however, was our trip to Naomi Pines, the flourishing metropolis of Monroe County. Our first night at the Pines was fairly peaceable. We were still awed by the presence of H Bill Easby, H Rusty Harris and H Willie H T. Lyle, who had been sent along to show us the ins and outs of the engineering business-principally the outs, we found the ins ourselves. Une evening we heard that there was to be a strawberry festival at the church, so we spruced up for the affair. H Chowe Cummings had a drag with the cook and borrowed the butcher knife to shave himself. Ut might be said in passing that H Chowe gained the everlasting respect and gratitude of the proprietor because he did not require water to shave.D The festival was a success and the ladies thanked CU us for our kind patronage. HlVIike McCrudden appointed himself a committee of one to make a speech in reply. Needless to say he made a hit-fortunately the other things didnft. A It must not be thought that the religious side of our life was neglected. The Hrst Sunday we were at the Pines, services were held at the inn. All the fellows were there except U Plug Wilson, whose H modesty kept him from coming. H Ted Spear and H Joe Baker led the singing while Mace and Mother Goose sang a beautiful duet entitled H Prunes, Prunes, Prunesf' About one or two o'clock one morning we were sleeping peacefully, that is, except Jerry H Wilds, H Cy H Evans, H Joe H Baker and H Ted H Spear, when suddenly a terrible din, shrill and hideous, broke upon our dreams. Almost immediately a pounding was heard at Easby's door, accom- panied by shrill cries of H Professor Easby, the acetylene tank's gone up I Lang, fully dressed, was the author of this racket. 'L Ez Hilts and H Bill H Boericke, the latter in his red pajamas, were rushing up and down the hall crying HFire ! At last, however, it was found that it was merely the whistle of an old traction engine in which H Cy had playfully built a fire. Two hours later we were awakened again and there was H Chowe Cum- mings with a glass of water ready to do his duty as a citizen and life saver. The Junior year was the most eventful one in many respects. We here hrst really made the acquaintance of the U Dookf, We can still hear him 140 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD say in our dreams, HHub it out gentlemen, it is good practice and I advise you to do it over, even if it is acceptable as it isf' It was at the beginning of this year that we lost the majority of our classmates. H Jupe I' decided to try the untamed West, Lundahl sought the shady nooks of the mountains of New York State, and H Deb decided to try the P. R. R., while Hlackl' Goodman began to sponge on the Bell Telephone Combine. In the Senior year, however, we Hrst met a real celebrity, His Royal Highness, Admiral Spangler, G.0.D.Q. The following will explain the degree. Une day, having in mind the Admiral's love for the military, we took the liberty to march into his building. We kept perfect step and did everything in strict military style, but as it was not done under his orders we were court-martialled and found guilty. We got out of the building pretty quickly that day. In secret session we decided to confer the degree. We took several trips of inspection during the Senior year. The most important being one to Phoenixville, where Coombs and Baker saw two of everything, and one on the lines of the P. R. R. Gn the latter, the most important part seemed to be the eating, of which Bay got the most. What a scramble there was for theses subjects ! Kiefer and Evans got in early and attempted to show what they knew and what Bill Easby didn't know of filtration. Ferguson, Stac, Lang, and Bruner think that a lot might Cnotice the mightl be learned about re-enforced concrete. H Plug Wilson tried to show how cement tests as they are at present conducted, are all wrong. lVIcCrudclen worked at Belmontifour weeks and thought he knew sulhcient to design a filter plant. Hooper decided that Wilmington needed a new water supply. Angstadt and Hilts tried to improve the methods of surveying. Coombs and Baker, with the help of Prof. Ives, studied a little about block signals. Boericke thought that sewers do not run right-and tried to find a section of pipe that would carry the greatest volume with the least effort. Wilds, Cassel and Cummings took bridges. Hyman decided to tackle arches. IVIany other things happened, but they all can't be mentioned here. We will remember them and recall them at the first opportunity. Qur undergraduate life at Old Penn is at an end. We have had four pleasant years together and our hope is that the old C. E. crowd will assemble once a year at the Nineteen Hundred and Five banquets to recall those days of yore. A 141 up-wr, ,,,,,.,..,... X-YEAH .:..A. 'w f'X39mE?er..'+2J 91 f I Q ,gg,gg,n, ,W s' -5 xl -'------f gmip L affa- ,, ., -f-u..--.,::.-V- iff,-'f , V . if S Aw-fx-'isis-ff f V' -'54, 'vit 5 f f.: 1 ' r . 5 7 , ,I ' :jam ' x-, .uma , '1r - ' 1. 1m'.'H '14 '52 '- .fr '1fN. i W 5 Sy f 'f'x 5,.,.ST ' '5 Q Af 4 'ff' W. 1 ffi vf N - if E 4.2. V 1 ,V I A X , . 3 -. . . - 2. I X -. . K W SCENES IN HOUSTON CLUB DR. JOSIAH H. PENNIMAN ANATOMICAL HALL Medical Department, 1765-1802 PRESIDENTIAL MANSION University, I80Z'I82Q mf- UNIVERSITY BUILDINGS, 1829-1871 ,, t ummm in 6 xt-I V, V-ig, , -- -,gl-L: , Q A -i A' T IS nearly four years since we first entered the H cab as Freshmen, some Fifty strong, and now, by the grace of the powers that be, we are at last grave and reverend Seniors. In attaining this rank we have, of necessity, followed in the footsteps of previous classes, to a certain extent, though it must not be thought that we lack originality, for we do not. It were best, however, to suppress this originality for the sake of our reputations. Perhaps, too, we are not so original as we suppose, and the previous classes already mentioned might be able to put us up to a wrinkle or two. But, be that as it may, we assembled one September morning in the year IQOI, in the drawing room on the third floor of the Laboratory, and there filled out a multitude of useless cards under the supervision of a portly, benevolent looking gentleman. This gentleman took an early opportunity to inform us that he was not NIL Spangler, nor yet Dr. Spangler, but Professor Spangler, if you please. This discouraged us mightily, since we had been told that a sure way to exemptions lay in calling an instructor doctor- We tried this title elsewhere, but found that others had been before us, and the instructors accepted the doctor, but were very cautious about granting exemptions. Like all Freshman engineers, we were handed over to the tender mercies of Dr. Schwatt for instruction in mathematics. Sophomore year opened with a new list of subjects, a new lot of Fresh- men and a few new instructors. We ignored the first, worked on the second, while the third tried to work us. Our ranks had thinned considerably this time. Gosch and Birch Taylor contracted cold extremities and changed, one to the Wliarton School, the other to Civil Engineering, while Pack, Lawler, Himbaugh and several more departed from the college for good. The survivors learned to read Assyrian cuneiform, and Astic pictorial writings, to calculate the value of the n'th term, to prove all triangles isosceles and a few other necessary trifles. Bessy Orum took a special course in phrenology and palmistry this year, and was soon able to offer to read our palms or feel ' 143 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD our bumps at twenty-five cents per, guaranteeing a true and life-like picture of our future wives. It was said that if the subject did not happen to possess sufficient bumps for his purpose, H Bess H would inveigle his victim to the Houston Club, and having secured him in the gymnasium, would endeavor to create a few bumps by a Fine display of the manly art of self defence. This scheme worked all right until Orum tried to change the contour of Ottinger's cranium. That worthy, resenting such treatment and feeling that he was getting more than his money's worth, landed a few on Crum that put an end to his seances for the future. On returning to our Junior year we found that hoodoo word-work- on all sides and as we could not escape, we made the best of things. We came into close contact with the H Colonel l' this year and found him much better than we had expected. We had cremated him the year before, poor man, but we found his spirit kind and apparently forgiving, for he explained at great length the Hstoryl' of statics and thermo, and related in avery lively manner his experiences on the high seas, in connection with marine engines- Senior year brought great changes. No conditions in any classes, was the Faculty's cry, and so Jim Hartley, Percy Taylor and Kelley-John, our ladies' man-together with some others, were forced to decide in favor of the five year course. This year also brought a complete change in the Electrical Department. Schramm, Waldo and Shane left, and Brown, Barrows and Temple took their places, while Kirby and Kniskern were added to the Mechanical Department. lt is whispered that Kniskern takes his slide rule to bed with him, but this may be just a malicious rumor started by some malcontent. Thermo and hydraulics are again on our list, together with several courses in design. Crane design in particular, has proved a Godsend to those of us who are fond of guessing the Bulletin puzzles. Our last mid- years are over, and it is a great pleasure to write H last H in connection with such a subject. It will, indeed, be a happy day when we sign our names to the last page of the last examination of all. Despite our work, we have managed to find time for recreation, and the Houston Club has come into vogue again. Bailey, Bockius, Boers, Bosler and Briner, the Busy B's, may be found at any spare hours, rolling up huge scores on the club alleys. They have even entered the tournament, in which they are holding their own, under the title of '05 lVI. E. When we returned for the second term, and saw thirty-two hours a week ahead of us, with theses and Joubert in the 14-4- THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD foreground, We decided, to use the language of lVIr. Gill, that We Were U up agin' it, but Specifications, or How to :lo the Contractor and Naval Archi- tecture, the'scene of HBeggy Weidi1er's great bluff, as administered by H Pop H are bright spots in the dark background of turbines, ice machines and electrical charges. There remain two great events of the Senior year to be mentioned- the Engineers' Club Smoker and the Engineers' Dance. The smoker was the last one to be held in the old building and the honors on this occasion belong to H Pop, if we may still call him by that time-honored nickname, for it was through his generosity that the committee was enabled to make it the most successful smoker in the history of the club. The dance was a great success, as every Engineers, Dance is, and we gladly share the honors with the Senior Civils, our fellow-workers in this good cause. The time has come when we must say farewell to this dear old Uni- versity and to a life which must, henceforth, be to us only a pleasant memory. But before we leave, let us thank as best we can, those men, who by their constant cheerfulness and ready help, have enabled us to complete successfully four of the happiest years of our lives. 145 HARE LABORATORY BIOLOGICAL HALL AE Q-ggi? l ml l WAS indeed a serious moment when the class of 1905 made its advent into the Department of Chemistry in the latter part of September, four years ago. Little did the Faculty guess what anxious concern, what sleepless nights and what stormy sessions would be caused by this class of embryo chemists. However favorable may have been the impressions created by the appar- ently strong front of our class it was not long before our instructors began to have the scales removed from their eyes. On our part everything looked bright and rosy and some of our childish minds even cherished fond hopes of some day becoming world-renowned scientists like HQxygen Priestly, Lavosier, Berzelius and our own Dr, Hildebrand. Indeed to this day that same hope still lingers in the breast of one, John Morris Weiss. The rest of us, however, like our preceptors, were not long in becoming disillusioned. Simpkins, an elderly lad of rather serious mien, after spending a month or two with us, decided not to rob any of the rest of us of any laurels we might earn and, as the newspapers say, H left college to go into businessf, The rest of our Freshman year was rather uneventful but for the interest aroused in scientific circles by Bill lVIoench's successful attempt to Hgrow a chrome-alum crystal. His fame, thus easily acquired, was not long to remain undimmed. We shall never forget the expression of horror on Dr. Shinn's face when Bill, innocently pointing to a direction in his book which read, Hadd silver nitrate and agitate, asked the Doctor where he kept the agitate. Outside of the laboratory our young, impressionistic minds had stamped upon them indelibly the image of Dr. Corny Weygandt with his hearty laugh, and Dr. Child, the exponent of the ding dong and bow wow theories of the origin of speech. Thus passed the first happy year of our college life. 147 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD The beginning of our Sophomore year found the class minus the presence of Phil Adamson, who decided to make a more thorough investiga- tion of the work done in the Freshman year. The class was augmented, however, by the entrance of A little off the topl' Stout from the Phila- delphia College of Pharmacy. A few weeks later still another addition was made in the person of H Big Chief Andy Smith of State College, whose scholastic attainments, it may be said, were somewhat overshadowed by superior football ability. No formalities were observed in introducing us to lVIr. Gracey, ,O2, whom we had previously known as U Grace, Feh1ing's Solution Wagenseller and Amos Brown, with his H smile that won't come off. Little time elapsed now before we realized that we were in for a year of hard work. We soon renewed our acquaintance with Dr. Weygandt fwith an accent on the dl, and many were the essays we Wrote for him describing buildings we had never seen, narrating incidents that had never happened, etc., etc. By this time the fellows had become well acquainted with each other's faults and virtues. Gillan began to be noted for his hot airg Al Berghausen and Freddy Wunderle for their touching rendition of H Everybody's awfully good to me, and Weiss for his-well, precociousness. The monotony of daily routine lab. work was relieved by little seances with Dr. Hart, whose favorite farce, entitled U How not to teach Physics H proved a source of con- tinual amusement. In strong contrast, however, were the awful quizzes of Dr. Smith, who delighted to see us go up in the air, as Gill expressed it. His delight knew no bounds when, on an unlucky day, and under the influ- ence of the Doctor's quiet chuckle, Gill was unable to withstand his rapid- fire of questions, and exclaimed H Doctor you've got my nerve and Illl admit it. Why, I hardly know my own name. If you were to ask me wherel live, most likely I'd tell you up in the 28th ward somewhere. The only event to mar the close of our Sophomore year was the with- drawal of Howard Fortiner, a prominent athlete and Varsity half-back whose personality had won for him a warm place in the hearts of instructors and classmates alike. Owing to ill health he was compelled to go out to Arizona, where he is gradually regaining some of his former health and is now on a fair road to recovery. The beginning of Junior year marked the disappearance of Busy Bowen from our ranks. A series of events crowding one upon another in rapid succession, however, soon served to allay the pain and grief suffered on 148 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD account of his departure. lVIr. Wallace-he of the falsetto ha ! ha ! ha !-soon taught us to calculate results without performing any actual work. Weiss, as usual, proved an apt pupil. Then there were the weekly trips with our erstwhile instructor, Dr. Shinn. Among others none stands out more prominently than the trip to a brewery where Stout proved his true worth by taking six straight without even closing an eye. Speaking of Dr. Shinn, we should not neglect to mention the bi-weekly lectures describing in detail how things used to be done and merely giving passing mention to the way they are done now. But we must pass on. Lack of space forbids us to narrate in detail the many little incidents that happened from day to day-how Dr. Smith broke up a hockey game in the Assay room just as Big Smitty was about to shoot a goal with a coal-shovel, how we handed essays to Dr. Schelling which had done service year after year, how Dr. Newbold conducted a rough-house hour in Ethics whenever he didn't forget to come. Fortunately however, we all survived the June exams and Senior year began with the class intact. Cur first new acquaintance was Dr. Taggart, whose frenzied efforts to impress us with the extreme difhculty of organic chemistry proved that our reputation as an easy going crowd had preceded us. We were all more or less apathetic until we heard lvfother Taggart mention ethyl acetate, ethyl iodide, etc., when Bill lvloench, our fusser, immediately sat up and began to take notice. Wallace Oglesby, on the other hand, at once became pre-occupied and by the far-off look in his eyes it is not unreasonable to suppose that he Was, in spirit at least, with the object of his affections in that attractive little suburb-Chester. But not to digress. Qwing to the natural dryness of our course, the faculty provided us with weekly entertainments in the shape of one hour a week under Thomas Raeburn White, who lectured on business law and told us how A went to B, a farmer, and finding the latter hidden in a corn crib, shot him right through the slats. Who will ever forget how, in response to Whiteys request for the names of all the men in the class, the fellows handed in the names of James K. Hackett and John Drew to be entered upon the rollg how religiously someone would answer Hpresent H when the above mentioned celebrities were called ong and how White flunked both of them at the end of the term for failure to recite ? And then there was that Hquiet hour with Dr. Smith. Oh, the wailing and gnashing of teeth as a result of those little family talks! The 149 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD first few periods were rather drowsy, but after football season the Doctor's remarks on Theological Philosophy became more interesting because of their being omitted. i'Why Smith left College was the subject of the new series of lectures and needless to say they evoked much discussion. When mid-year's came, however, and all that we could do was to pass a required exam in theoretical chemistry with fairly high marks, the Doctor decided to place a check upon the growth of our reputation, which by this time had assumed alarming proportions, so he Hunked practically the whole class. It mav be stated here that Weiss's wounded feelings have never entirely healed because of his having received but a passing mark. Some reason for the Doctor's radical action may be found in Fred Wunderle's tactful QD remark to Tag that U no one ever Hunks chemistry. And now we are at the close of our college careers and are about to leave behind us all that we have learned to love so well during the last four years, to cross that threshold into a mysterious future, which has in store for us-we know not what. Though our paths may diverge we shall ever bear in mind the debt of gratitude we owe to our preceptors for their kindness and forbearance, and as each of us pursues his chosen path may he ever remem- ber that injunction of our honored teacher and adviser, Dr. Smith, to U work hard, pray hard and play hard. DORMITORIES 150 1, .jjj CMM! ,TV 'V ' 5: 3 rf-1ff ' Q15 uk .,'L - 1 M .-g' ' N 7-H as-fi. rg' ifq V A it L E : .f F -- f . . i -1' I W4,.fr.... qggqflllb -.it A X gh.. 1 . i 5592 iSIR ROB i :if - F M. -' , IQFEUSOEN i i ash M . f , Oyisliiisiti GMC C5853 ' t f t TY , Sk . 1 HE Mask and Wig Club undoubtedly owes a debt of gratitude to the Class of Nineteen Five, for the last four productions have been more loyally supported by Nineteen Five than by any other class in the University. Early in our Freshman year a crowd of the greenest Freshies wended their Way to 310 Quince Street and after a hearty reception from Charles Snyder Morgan, Jr., they decided that Dr. Clarke's course in music was more to their liking. But a goodly number were chosen for the H Pre- lims and the rest turned out for the chorus a month or so later. This started the ball rolling and since then Nineteen Five has been printed all over the lVIask and Wig programs. If a man gets a true taste of college life and college spirit any place, he gets it in the lVIask and Wig. It is there that hearts beat true, and Penn- sylvania is the name for which every true Wigger strives. And the annual productions are not the only stronghold of the club. The Football Smokers, the HPrelims, Founderls Night and a score of minor celebrations bind the present and the past with ties that are inseparable. A man who spends four years at Pennsylvania without trying for the Mask and Wig throws away that golden opportunity which knocks at each man's door but once. Every man who has ever taken part in a Hshowf' whether he becomes a star or carries a spear in the last row, experiences a part of Pennsylvania life which is well worth the effort. What could 'iOld King Cole have done without the seventeen Freshmen chosen from Nineteen Five? Rollin Bortle and Cecil Calvert, woefully lack- ing in talent but wonderfully strong in Hdragf' landed in the l'Pre1ims, and subsequently appeared in the Easter production. For once in its history the Committee on Production made a mistake, for they cast H Bott as 151 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD H Horace Scope, a tourist, and HCece as Amelia Rate, the King's ward. It was evident to the Hknowing onesl' that Rollin would have made a stunning soubrette, while Cecil could have been more strenuous in trousers than in an accordion plaited skirt. Accordingly the Sunday editor of the Nortlz American was so infatuated with H the young Calvert that he succeeded in establishing Cecil's fame as H Lord Baltimore I' by a generous supply of green ink. In fact the aforesaid editor even offered the young peer a seat in the House of Lords, but the offer was refused with the laconic reply-H I prefer to be an American l The burlesque on HIf I Were King was very clever and both of Nineteen Five's men acquitted themselves with credit-Rollin as 'iKing Louis U and Cecil as H Cissy Loftus. Harry Weeks carried off first chorus honors and landed in the premier collection of beauties. H Chas. Goodin was booked for the same bevy but an attack of typhoid delayed his appearance until the following year. Among the second and third chorus N ladies H were Conway, Bruner, Carson, Dirlam, Weidener, Levin, Adams, and Howard. The surprise of the whole bunch was Conway, and his Hravishing beauty landed him in the front ranks after the first show. Among the H Fiddlers H may be men- tioned Snively, Craighead, lVIusser and Ashburner. Eddie Fitler fell under the Faculty's ax and the club lost a good man. Sad to relate, on the Southern trip Ashburner had some trouble with his wearing apparel and instead of continuing from Washington to Richmond, returned home on the limited express. Snively had a terrible time with his baggage and upon arriving at Washington all he could find in his trunk was one overshoe and a toothbrush. The club decided that Nineteen Five had so many H stars H that they elected the following members: Bortle, Calvert, Carson, Craighead, Weeks. When our Hdear old author decided to make Daniel Defoe's hero famous by introducing Robbie Crusoel' into lVIask and Wig circles, he unwittingly paved the way for the biography of Nineteen Five's leading lady. As the haughty adventuress, H Mrs. Justin Lavendar, Rollin made such a bewitching damsel and danced so gracefully, that' he immediately jumped into the first ranks of lVIask and Wig stardom. It has been many a day since the Wiggers have discovered so clever and versatile an exponent of the Terpsichorean art, and it is doubtful whether a more finished impersona- tion has ever been given than that of HlVIrs. Leslie Carter in U Du Barry. 152 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Qur newspaper critics decided that Bon was a scintillating star, with cute little ways. It is rumored that lVIrs. Carter threatened to break her contract with Belasco unless the burlesque was stopped, whereupon HDavie, smiling in a knowing way, told the irate actress that her second could easily be persuaded to assume her role. U Sir Robinson l' found some new recruits among his followers. N Chasf, Goodin had sufficiently recovered to cavort in the ranks of the first bevy, while UHays Hall and 'KAd'l Conway entered the same galaxy. Nineteen Five also entered Hardt, Kimber, Bockius, Mulford and Huntington Hicks Harter. The Champagne Dance of this year was the best chorus specialty the Mask and Wig has ever produced and its success was due to the wonderful dancing of Goodin, Weeks and Conway. The trip this year was most successful. At Atlantic City we had a deucedly good time, don' cher know, but Washington and Richmond capped the climax. The untutored who had never visited the capitol on previous occasions, climbed to the top of the Washington monument and then slid halfway down just for exercise. The knowing ones purchased all the boxes for a melodrama, but the result was disastrous. When the villain pulled fourteen revolvers, the occupants of the boxes ducked and called for help. And they got it! They were assisted to the front door and no rain checks were presented. After our evening performance, Weeks and Howard insisted on serenading the President, but argumentation changed their program Uwithout further notice. The Board of Government finally decided that our club membership should be augmented, so Goodin and Conway were elected. The very sudden and lamentable death of Rollin Bortle's father, coming as it did a week before the Easter production, gave rise to the fear that U Alice in Another Land might not be produced, as the show was deprived of the services of its star. H Charlief' Morgan, although almost exhausted from his arduous duties as ballet master, loyally undertook the part and played it with such Wonderful success that he added fresh laurels to his already enviable record as an undergraduate. When H Alice H looked over her chorus list, she found the old stand-bys from Nineteen Five and the following new-comers : Parker, Beach, Whet- stone, Reynolds, Lisle, and Pepper. Whetstone felt so badly about his lack of hair that he insisted on taking a girl's part, so he could wear a wig, but Sam Hnally submitted and played a man's part-in a wig. H Chubby 153 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Goodin was our only representative in the first chorus, but he managed to supply the lack of quantity by quality, and appeared in all the specialties- even the midnight raid on the Wilmington Hotel. .Toe Weber visited Philadelphia during the show for the purpose of securing UChubby's services as chorus leader, but Bonnie Maginn threatened to sue the vivacious young star, and U Chas. refused to sign Joe's contract at four hundred per-? 'lHays Hall, the heavy-weight wonder, was transferred from the U maids to the H chappiesu as a result of a disease contracted in the previous show, known as Hcorsetitisf' Beach created quite a furore on account of his dancing, and the club decided to honor Nineteen Five by electing Hall and Beach to membership. H Mr. Hamlet of Denmark caused much apprehension when it was announced that this was the title of the new production. As tragedies seldom require the services of soubrettes it was confidently whispered that there were surprises coming. It seemed that U Bortlel' had displayed so much lingerie upon previous occasions that the management decided it would be safer to order ankle lengths. Undaunted by this conspiracy to conceal his pride f?l our pert ingenue manipulated his petticoats with such cleverness that he did not disappoint the bald-headed QD row. H Mr. Hamlet was undoubtedly a clever satire, but the first spark of Mask and Wig brilliancy shone forth when the H Astrologers and H Hin- doos took the staid old court by storm. Everyone knew that there would be something doing in Denmark. And there was! HAnna Stheticfl the dashing intrigante fsame old Bort of coursel fairly dazzled the audience in a black gown bespangled with jewels especially purloined for the occasion from our Eighth Street emporiums. But Senior year found our chorus stars head over heels in work. Goodin had the class RECORD on his shoulders and for a time it looked as though the club would be minus a chorus leader, but a special delegation finally convinced the fair danreuse that duty called him to his post at the front of the H merry merry. Then Beach and Hall became studious and put away things frivolous, but the Easter temptation was too great and they joined H Mr. Hamlet's', court in the guise of Hindoo men, not hoodoos. Reynolds and Snively also joined the court followers. We had a rollicking good time in M Mr. Hamlet. The show was a H corker and the chorus specialties were the best ever seen in Philadelphia. Will posterity ever forget Goodin's interpretation of the coy Japanese, HLu Lu San F Can it ever 154 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD forget the Terpsichorean wonders performed by Beach and Hall in U Sambo and UThe Parlor Car ? Rumor has it that HRans', borrowed one of father's parlor cars and rehearsed every day for a month in the Reading Terminal, and rumor is a knowing damsel. And then the trips! It was most assuredly H the best ever. We spent Eve days between Wilmington, Baltimore and Washington, and they were surely days to remember. It was a glorious ending to Nineteen Five's experience in Mask and Wig pro- ductions. We of Nineteen Five can scarcely realize that it is all over. We love Pennsylvania and we love the lVIaslc and Wig, for that body of loyal Penn- sylvanians has made our Alma llflater very, very dear to us. Saturday night at the lVIaslc and Wig is a joyous occasion, but there were sad hearts in the midst of all that joyousness. Nineteen Five's delegation gave a rousing cheer for the club and then retired to the stuffy old dressing rooms for the last time. Life probably holds much in store for us, but we are positive that it can never give us four years crowded with such pleasant memories as those experienced in the Mask and Wig. Nineteen Five is proud of her record. Her men have held leading rolls in the cast and chorus for the past four years, and she has more undergrad- uate members of the club than any other class in the University. It is with regret that we bid a fond farewell to llflaslc and Wig footlights l H There's only room for one l H 1 'lull -' ' ' f f .:ll'l llliiflif1ii 'S l rl' . izlgj fff .fl ' A ,gif , A. .f X f 155 ., 1.5 ! I . ?5!'2Wi' ' ' .. . 1:- -V 5'-': ' , . fr' 'ffm f- 2 51535 L '- I' 9 X ji-Qzv' ' :ff ,- nz -v. J wg' a Lv ag' 1 '10 Q , sf djflf X .'4 ei? es -- M v IP' ,X A , If-f 5' 49 f , L A 1, ,l , A 6 .m 1. lf-ij 4: P 5 ,X ,A f f . -1-1-:-.-'-rv - A 3 4.- Jive' -'f ' , .,j. . .f. . ff - , I gf A. 4' V '. . f f . ' V+ 51. 4 L 'la V ' vt X' 'fs wlxskf Qfdqi 35 cf' x - In XI: i '-'iii r 1 '3f':.' . ,f.,j,1g. A . 'i' , CHARACTERS IN UMR. HAMLET OF DENMARKH BC Di 4 2 'Z rn Q L!-4 O H ua .A 2 -1 n: cg 2 fd VJ fc U U-1 rx: ef Cl y, AMBO AND DINAH H J: LU LU SAN J gk xo, ?l' gf ,Nz ..,,1z', .AJ , VJ get-1, - ig.: lil' Jw-:.',: ,c'f'a':-. hw :gif ' H J 1 rig ,Q-521 925' rm , t- Q jg-X Fifi Sift .. .',: ' rf: '-2 1 54k'cfL11-siqffgif 44,41-,..,, ,At-.,f 3..L--...- ',,wvf',.:f iii MT'-ima ,.. ff: H: 'sr ' I 5 .,,. xg, fr . K s . -ng, Y, 1 v f. 5 M,-J 'pq xx 'jak an 5 -1 at Q yy A., f T,- I' -.T LJ 1905 un the Erihitun T is a pleasant task to review Nineteen Five's football career. To do so is to recall many of the happiest events of our four years, with not a single feature to mar the pleasure of the retrospect. True, many games have been lostg but none without a hard Hght in which every member of the team gave up the best that was in him. The record shows, for the most part, steady consistent work, although at times it has been brilliant, and always creditable. Notwithstanding the proportionately large number of players contributed to the Varsity, a good team has been turned out each year with results that were very satisfactory. Above all there has ever been present a predominating spirit of H sport for sport's sake which has added much to the success and enjoyment of the game. In response to the call for candidates early in October of 1901, a ,large number of Freshmen reported, each with a different colored jersey and differ- ent ideas as to how the game should be played. Among the others Kinard made his ,debut and asked the first man he met on the held H Do you think Illl make the team? By common consent this first day's practice was considered sufficient for the next two or three weeks and seldom were more than three or four of the candidates out for practice. However, we finally got enough together to elect Fortiner captain, and with Whetstone as manager, started the season. On October 23d, Weeks, Whetstone, Bay, Bartlett, Bogardus, Baker, Dirlam, Brunker, Kinard, Fales, Fortiner, Longwell, Buckwalter, and Brown journeyed up to Pottstown to show Hill School a few of the fine points of the game. They were apt pupils and scored 21 points. The Pennrylfuanian congratulated us on keeping the score down to 21 and prophesied better results after we had obtained more practice, which proph- 159 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD ecy was subsequently realized. So we took heart and with the aid of John Gardiner put in a few afternoons in really good practice and a week later beat Drexel 12-O. The next game was with P. R. R. Y. M. C. A. We were greatly outweighed and the game ended 23-O in their favor. This game is memorable on account of Fales' long run. He caught the ball on the kick-off in the second half and ran clear through the other team and was in imminent danger of making a touch-down, when it occurred to him that there might be a ground rule against ,running faster than awalk, so he changed his gait and was promptly, though inconsiderately, tackled from behind. Large joined the squad for the Wyoming Seminary game and proved to be a valuable addition, kicking a goal from the Held-our only score. Wyoming was too strong for us, however, and succeeded in making four touch-downs. In this game we first sprung on our startled opponents a play that was calculated to revolutionize football. By the aid of Weschlerls inexhaustive vocabulary and Bartlett's clever manipulation, the opposing team was put off its guard and the ball started down the Held before they even thought of lining up. The other side was dumfounded, that is, all but the referee. He was equal to the occasion and declared that time was being taken out all the whileg so the ball was brought back and the revolutionizing process postponed. The game with the Sophomores was hard to lose. It was a see-saw from one end of the field to the other with little advantage on either side until in the second half Weede broke loose from the crowd and ran fifty yards for a touch-down and the only score of the game. But for that one run, which might be called fiuky, the game would probably have ended without either side scoring, for even with the advantage of a lead of five points the Sophs could not score again and the game ended 5-O in their favor. But the Freshman team was beginning to find itself and when Columbia was met a week later showed marked improvement in form, and though outweighed had little trouble in winning. The score was 21-5, Columbia scoring after we had fumbled on our five yard line. A drizzling rain made the ball and the fieldislippery and lessened the final score, but it could not dampen the spirit of the team nor the enthusiasm of the loyal supporters over such a glorious finale to the season. When we assembled for practice Sophomore year, Buckwalter, Bartlett, Fales, Brunker, Weschler and Fortiner were absent, and Qglesby, Edgerly, 160 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Heller, Wilson, Taylor and Weede came out to fill the vacancies. Kinard was elected captain, to the disgust of Weeks, and we proceeded to win the College championship. Just about this time there wandered into our camp a tall, tow-headed individual who said he was a Sophomore, and that he would like to try for the team. This modest request was quickly granted, for U Andy Smith had been tearing holes in the Varsity line all season. The first game was with the Freshmen. They started with a rush and before we knew what had happened scored a touch-down, missing the goal. Then Nineteen Five started in, and, by steady gains carried the ball the length of the field, pushing Smitty over for a touch-down. Kinard kicked the goal and we had the lead. The call of time prevented further scoring and the game ended 6-5 in our favor. The Seniors had vanquished the Juniors, and so they alone stood between us and the championship of the College. The result of this game came as a great surprise to them. They couldn't see how they could lose it until H Smitty U showed them. They kicked, he caught the ball and ran through the whole team for a touch-down-the only score of the game. Thus we had won the College championship, and were anxious to demon- strate our right to the University championship, but the early arrival of Winter prevented, and it remained undecided. In Junior year, Weschler felt too strong for such light work as Varsity football, and came back to us. We showed our appreciation by electing him captain. lVIcCrudden, Richards, and Ramsey also joined the team. We defeated the Seniors I2-O, but lost to the Sophs by the same score. How- ever, the next Fall, we turned the tables on Nineteen Six, winning by the score of 6-O, HKit Kinard making the touch-down after a spectacular run. Weeks was captain-this, our Senior year, and the presence of twelve men in suits, the day of the game, proved that he was a good one. Coombs and Evans were the only new men to try for the team. The College championship was not decided this year, as a heavy snowstorm prevented our game with the Sophomores. Thus ended Nineteen Five's football career. It has been one that the class may look back upon with pride. Out of six inter-class games played, four have been won, and two lost. Seven men have won their letter on the Varsity, namely, 1VIcCabe, Piekarski and Donaldson in Fresh- man yearg Fortiner and Weschler in Sophomore year, and Taylor and Smith in Junior and Senior years. 161 O5 FOOTBALL CJUNIOR YEAR, COLLEGE CHAMPIONS 'O5 CREW QFRESHMAN YEAR, POUGHKEEPSIE CREW rlzgz., '?Df32Hi:i'9i5Vg?Q6 - N QV 4-1-Y' - -1, ' .- ' ff ,5am.::.+ '-si... l - sf, i ,r we ,. - -gi? - fi we ,- -1- H .- ----. . ' . Si af 'K admigr , , W A- 375 . yea, - -1 x 4 y 'i ' It - ffiflfifiksifgb . Q . f 'Z .I wax x...r,,AiFq-2,5 s f ' . -My sa- .Q 53325 Q. ,f .. -- -4-aaki ' arf' ' if 'x faf' 'rn ' x 'rife'-' nfl? - V? - L--' '- ' 5:63 ' ,:fEf ' U I X CE, V -., 4, 1 F ' l?:,1fgfz,-43555 5 -V -'Q-5:1 F - - , 7 .f , - 5.55-,fa-'.-:ip-sys ' mt- 'sf-3 .-- '- - . ,.1 , - -1 .J hui!-L mf: - - -- - 1 - - . me if ,assi 1-'--: ' r 21- ,- , ' - ' ' .2 H OWING l we once heard a lady exclaim, U Why what fun can there be in rowing? Anybody who is big enough can pull an oar, and besides it ITILISY be awfully tiresome to sit in rows and gaze at the manls neck in front of you, and be shouted at, just like a chain gang. This young lady was doubtless picturing rowing as she saw it, and we must admit that if that was all there was to rowing, it would not be very alluring, but a man who sits in a boat and feels it fairly leap through the water, as the eight pairs of strong legs are driven out, realizes that rowing is a pleasure. Among oarsmen there is never any lack of love for the sport which they esteem highest. Such certainly was the experience of Nineteen Five's crews. Early in October, 1901, a meek and unprepossessing crowd of Freshmen appeared at the boat-house for the Fall crew. All sizes and weights were on hand, from lanky Jim Kirkbride to roly-poly H Fatty Hall. It took the H old man several days to find out whether some of the candidates were trying for coxswain, or whether they really thought they were big enough to row. Finally the Fall crew was picked to row in the following order: I, Boers, 2, Marshall, 3, Rogers, 4, Hall, 5, Kirkbride, 6, Cabeeng 7, Leedom, 8, Crowell 5 coxswain, Howard-Smith. We worked hard for three weeks before the race and had improved so rapidly that U Bob Crowell, who had been unanimously elected captain, actually made us believe we were going to win. Contrary to expectations Regatta Day was warm, and this was a God- send to us, and it gave us all a chance to show our new rowing jerseys which we had been fortunate enough to get the class to pay for. We were 163 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD finally off, but on the first stroke, Rogers, who had warned us against nervousness jumped clean off his seat, and carved some big strokes in the air. It was nip and tuck between our men and Nineteen Four for second place, and from the head of the island to the finish we gained all but six feet of the length we had lost at the start. The Nineteen Three crew won easily by three lengths. We were not last, however, as we defeated '05 M. by several lengths. We made such a good showing,against Nineteen Four, they having won the championship at Poughkeepsie the previous Spring, that the chances for another champion crew seemed very bright, and all the Fall crew, together with twenty or thirty new men, started to train early in January. Qur first Spring race was at Annapolis. Leedom and Jerry Bogardus furnished some excitement for us while there. Leedom refused to take a bath and two of the Varsity men, Pepper and Eisenbray, insisted that he should. There was a splash and a cheer and Leedom took the first shower bath of his rowing career. Jerry, on the other hand, was too anxious, and he missed the dory and fell in. As usual the course was very rough, and We were obliged to stay over Sunday and row Monday morning. Even then the river was covered with white caps, but we managed to finish. It was im- possible to tell whether you were going to touch water with your oar or fan through the air. In fact, it was a question of H now you do, and now you don't, and we didn't, losing the race by two lengths. Upon our return to Philadelphia several changes were made, and in June the following crew went to Poughkeepsie: I, llflarshallg 2, Whetstoneg 3, Bogardusg 4, Crowell, captain, 5, Cabeeng 6, Rogers, 7, Hall, 8, Leedomg coxswain, Howard-Smith. Substitutes, Kinard and Boers. HBob Cabeen was taken down with malaria, and Kinard took his place. At Bellevue Villa we settled down to hard work. H Sam U Whetstone furnished considerable excitement by singing Good liflorning, Carrie every day at 6.45 A. M. As the bell did not ring until seven, the Hold man finally put a stop to Sam's practice, saying H I'll take all the extra air you've got out of you this morning. Another time we were rowing along close to shore when suddenly a female voice was heard to say U Oh! look at the bald-headed man in the Pennsy crew l 'l After that Sam always wore a hat. Well the day for the race arrived, and we paddled to the start confident of winning, but in this we were disappointed. We Hnished first, 164 g THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD but it was first at the other end, in other words Columbia just beat us out, thereby avenging the Freshman football game. Sophomore year, Watson took H Fatty Hall's place and H .lim Kirkbride returned. This combination defeated the Freshman crew, and assisted in landing the Dean's trophy. Our Junior crew was without doubt the best crew we ever had, and this year several new men blossomed out as promising oarsmen. 'K Bob Cabeen, Rogers, and Watson had left college, H Gus Boers was too busy with Spangler, and of course Hall was too big to sit in a boat, but with the addition of 'ljacld' Baker, Weeks, Weschler and Lou', Bruner as coxswain, we turned out a crew that Hnished second in the University championship. How we ever did it is a puzzle, for Baker and Weeks were passengers, while the rest of the crew did the Work. The most exciting event was the election of the Junior captain a few days before the race. Two men were nominated, and both desired the position, more particu- larly the defeated candidate. The nominees were Jerry Bogardus and Kit Kinard, and when the votes were counted it was found that Jerry had six and Kit two, his own and HJin'1 Kirkbride's, who nominated him. One day Rollin Bortle came out to try for the crew, so we put him in at number four. On returning to the boat-house with numerous blisters on his hands and other parts of his anatomy, a lame back, and fifteen crabs hanging to the end of his oar, he decided that it would be his farewell appearance on the rowing stage. This was the last appearance of Nineteen Five on the Water, and although we have had many trials and tribulations, there is not one of us who regrets the time he has spent on the water. Our class has been well represented on the Varsity squad. Sophomore year, the second crew was almost entirely composed of Sophomores. In the Junior and Senior years, Bohn Crowell and HGus Boers rowed on the Varsity eight, and HKit Kinard was manager. With this record Nineteen Five retires on her well-earned laurels. 165 '05 BASEBALL CEREsHn4AN YEAR, N as .aq Xfjix Y'.j,'5 :,: FT' b5 BASKET-BALL SENIOR YEAR? COLLEGE CHAMPIONS 11 5: Sr' 1 y . ,QI -Q-3 ,I 14:1 5, .rf-'.,-.-:fr1::.f1.16+'ff'f'i'fr it-'it-.' F-: A' 'Z ' . if ' - 1 .- ' .W . . . - .' '- V1 iff- '-'11 rea: 211 .- sf . -. -4-fzjfs-'..1f -1 1 :- I-. - -1' 2 B ' 4:1 ' -.:.P 4:-1'f5Q1 f:.r-'A .K ,i pg ,5.'.g,-3. , ,rpzg 5:,,'p --pw ,gm 2-gfmff' .lf . :giftff.?fggeafi1fauEaA4yfi3.fs?:ifq1Ek1.f2err.fg+grits: 1 T ,- nn. , 'Tung ..:,:' ,.,.-'v,f,.::2, jr-g,,:--. va:-L '- I. ' 5' . --. J.: V- 1 32- 3.5. 3.15, wr f 1- 4Q'J'f35 W wi fr. -4:1121 qrpf A., .4-.--1 5.4 l I, 5.g,,.feqx-:..f:,,r:f.- -,..'v-f? ,'J.-fihqnrq -r C - -w,,- -cu? gs.-.. -' ,, 31,5 . 'fi ,' 1- swlikifisaiwf 1ii?Efi'ase,, . i- . i -. .i J' F ' f 1, ii.. .3 K .-'1.u-r:f:r. -.'irr,1 ff-me r--2, aff-qu ffiffiiiff -tt e . .ejtp , lx f ,. . ' 1' 1 1 f ' V ' r.- f V fp: ' J 1' . 1 Q' ' 5 if if ,. , X . I , N . I I be X . R , ix Ili X ' 5 .-'w'-L ,gQH.,jif-. 1 'v .a br 5,51 A f as a..21fJfktmf' fr-L WWW 55 V 'fx ,Q .arg i5f:f:f:1'f r'jg ggi' 3: - ii A , P :Q gf fgf'QfQ3fQ' ik.-s..f 'Z 'f-fi--3 ,. . .14 ' - '. 'L' .155 J., ..,. ...t . - 4 - . . E 1905 un the iamunh HILE the Class of Nineteen Five has left behind a record in athletics that few classes have equaled and very few surpassed, yet it must be confessed that when baseball made its appearance in the cal- endar of sports, the goddess of Good Luck sometimes deserted us. In our Freshman year we started out with bright prospects in the shape of fifteen shining stars trying for the team. They practiced faithfully until the first weeding out, when the hopes of about Hve were suddenly cut off in their bloom, and our number was reduced to ten. Although few in number we made up in quality what we lacked in quantity. We walked away with the school teams in and around Philadelphia until we journeyed to Lawrenceville to meet an opponent worthy of our steel. Here we put up a magnificent game, in spite of the fact that Buckwalter, our premier short- stop, was playing on the Varsity. But luck was against us in the shape of a very close score, and the prejudice of the umpire could not be overcome by 'fWalt Hardt's fine fielding. We came back to Philadelphia and soon locked horns with the strong Mercersburg team. This truly was a battle royal, but they were powerless to withstand the pitching of Reynolds and our team Work, with the result that they met defeat by the score of 7 to 5. At Peddie Institute We made quite an impression, especially left fielder Spear, who gracefully sat in a young ladyfs lap while chasing a high Hy. Strange to relate, he persisted in sitting there until carried away by his team mates. H Ted has never been able to satisfactorily explain this, and it has always been a much discussed incident among his classmates. Thus we went through our Freshman year, making a fine impression Wherever We played, although We ended the season with a close game with 167 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Nineteen Four, the final score being in doubt until the last man was out. Sad to relate, the score was against us, about IO to 7. H Tommy Wentz, De Berard, and Ulohnnyn Large put up a fine game, but even this trio was unable to break the hoodoo. Thus ended our Freshman year, and although some may criticise us, yet, when one considers the coaching we had under the old system, and the lack of attention we received, it is a mystery how we turned out as well as we did. Fortunately, this old system' has been abolished, and the Freshman teams of to-day receive a proper amount of coaching and guidance. In our Sophomore year we only played one game, but that was worth a dozen to those who saw it. We met the Freshmen that year, and in spite of having Buckwalter and Weeks playing on the Varsity squad, we put up a Wonderfully strong game. The score remained 3 to 2 in our favor up to the ninth inning, when a miraculous play was made by our short-stop Baker. There were two men on bases and two out, when a Freshman knocked a bouncer at Joe. He made a magnificent stop, but unfortunately misjudged the height of De Berard, our first baseman, who is only six feet two. Some claim to this day that they saw loe throw the ball, but this is a grave assertion to make, for the ball shot about one hundred yards to the railroad track and then lost itself in a ditch. This, unfortunately, brought in three runs, and although in our turn at bat Joe redeemed himself by hitting a three bagger, we were unable to overcome their lead, and had to succumb. But fortunately we had beaten the Fresh in all other branches of sports and thus retained a hold on the Dean's trophy. In our Junior year we were more fortunate and made a very creditable showing, especially in the number of candidates for the team on the day of the game. It seems to be a remarkable fact about these games that in practice about two or three fellows show up, but on the day of the game they appear in dozens. This may explain the wonderful team work of the Junior and Senior teams in that game. Fortunately we had some good men of experience, Weeks of the Varsity squad, Andy Smith our football star, Walt Johnson, John Brown and a host of others. Many were the errors, fumbles, hits and home runs, but for once luck was with us, and we administered a sound trouncing to the Seniors, to their great disgust. But when We insisted upon playing the Freshmen, who had beaten the Sophs, for some unaccountable reason the game was delayed until too late in the season. Far be it from me to hint that this was due to 168 f THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD the great fame of Fales and Whetstone at the bat, and the general excellence of our team, but whatever the cause the game remained unplayed. Our record has been so consistently good for three years that We fully expect to live up to it-maybe to excel it--Senior year. Thus runs the history of our illustrious Class of Nineteen Five in baseball, winning many games and losing some few, but leaving behind it a record of honesty and fair sportsmanship that We can well be proud of. And now We must say good-bye to the class we have loved so well. May every one of us put up as good a Hght in after life as we have for the Class of Nineteen Five. 4 ni ,J i ..g-if ig LL W 3 sm? !??ihgT1??iL- sft ff -eg -ocf w - LC' fa, J Rehn 'M' . -iv- -JAEFJ 4 ..'f'-I if- Myy!-N -- aeieew , , .. .5 -H ,,, air! All '- :ii ' ii-. e - ,l ffl Nriffaf , ns yr' fy ' vzrygw g , ,in 'gim- ll' 5' 'YN fi -13? .+L ,nag lei?-W I ,H ,, LE -57' fejyfffuhuwwwr-M ir-af.,,,-Q? nf: l 17 I 5. I -- .,-- ,QW --- -- . I 3-W. , 9,74 PM 2' l ' ...aldfgv 4 ,, 4 i ....:::- ,.b:i,?wf,,i . , , . 'ui 'L , ..... . . slflllinifi - 2 31 1' 'A 91 ,f If Ewe- L y, 'ilu f',' l I lv 1, , - A . - M 1.55: . Je T D' T W , ' in ,gm . 169 MASK AND WIG CLUB HOUSE GRILL ROOM ,.,.. L7-gp:-77-L. . .. 'V ,' 1 ,-A '.-.: .. yihizb. 'fr' 5.5 -' ea-wg .-.-'Lg ': -'H my ,gap -f-1,1 svtwfuw 555:12 --I' -.ELM 5131.1--13 .-- ,I A 1 .-.,4f.-- ,v,.'r,-. 4. I Lg: I If 2,2 Q- 5 ,-5.7. -was sa? 325, I 15274. r .5 ':.' sing, f- :, Liv 'act '-56 117 .M 3: --Q 75.5 -77 ,jlif ' 131 'Pai' -11' ..-sg5 .,.:1:.r 532555121 ...U ,-Za., .g.5. -- -5,3 .5522 41:13 'bi-1 'ftrfi ,- g ,,.,,.,,: 1905 nn the rank INETEEN FIVE'S record on the cinder path is as brilliant as that of any class which ever entered Pennsylvania. The first appear- ance of the class in this branch of sport was at the Inter-class games of November, 1901, and although the number of our entries was small we took third place in the meet. Boyd won the shot put and took second in the high jump. Baird won the pole vault, while Block, Samans and H. S. Smith captured seconds and thirds in the other events. In the Spring, Nineteen Five held a quadrangular meet and succeeded in winning more points than all her competitors combined - Central High, Drexel, and Temple College. Qur track record was thus firmly established by the time the great event of the year arrived, the Freshman-Sophomore games. Our men were trained right up to the top notch, and Nineteen Four scarcely knew they were in the meet. And how could it be otherwise with such men on our team as Hardt, Rittenhouse, Boyd, Jack Baker, Latimer, Willard, Kirkbride, Piekarski and the World-renowned Freddy Ford? It was just another case of Ucoming, seeing and necessarily conquering. Hardt was so energetic that he even went so far as to protest the pride and joy of Nineteen Four, 'iFatty,' Sterner, for he insisted that he was George Turner. The Sophs fought to the bitter end, but their case was hopeless. Boyd won the shot put and high jumpg Bird captured the 220 and 44.0 runs, Ashburner took both the hurdlesg Piekarski threw the hammer even farther than he playfully tossed the Sophomore president the day We had our Freshman faces takeng and- why elaborate ?- the score 88 to 53 in favor of Nineteen Five. As a result 171 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD of our excellent showing, we landed six men on the Varsity squad that Spring: Boyd, Piekarski, Ashburner, Kirkpatrick, Rittenhouse and Block. In the days that followed, many of our greatest athletes departed from our folds and when we met the Freshmen the following Spring our numbers were somewhat depleted. The old saying that quality is of greater import than quantity was never more clearly demonstrated than in our Sophomore year. The Freshmen insultingly asked if we didn't want to give them the meet and save our men. Our laugh was dilatory but it was correspondingly sweet. There were about eight Freshies in every event and in many of them there were no Sophs on the program. At the last minute our old friend H Andy Smith entered the Held and Nineteen Five heaved a sigh of relief. H Andy took so many firsts that we forgot to count them all, but we all well remember that he landed the track games and incidentally won the Dean's Trophy. The Varsity track team again had the services of our stars from Freshman year and in addition, Hardt, Willard and Rutschman joined the squad. So Nineteen Five's track record is one to be proud of, and when the Intercollegiates came to Franklin Field in our Junior year, Jimmy Boyd walked off with second place in the shot put. Jim was then elected captain of the Varsity team and Carter manager, and our record ended in a blaze of glory. The class owes a debt of gratitude to all her track men, for they have labored unceasingly for Pennsylvania and for Nineteen Five. A 47fT'i'.-' i X rm - , . N, f . Mix ,g f-...- Wflj., .W wg! is. 1 ..,xs.1ifgsg F53 5 M31 , , . 3351 -ee-- -1.5 5 . .7-' 1 L-.1 -i 5f'.-- v, '- ,. . f- f' 2 E 2 .. 1 - t. ESF. ll- fn.. f fd S lv axial ' r , 1 , , ..,,, WE!! ,F-pi,-gala.. . ,m 2 1 if 'QW , 1 . ,f 2 .T X. f 'i F F-J i' l5f:?iE 'E' .. F- 172 ,. 1 -vi , . . .- I nl? ,.,,1.1.4,...,,., . , . .. ,gig-Ei ifv 2. ga? . v mf' - 31 Vg. Q s - , 111 V- Y u -7,14 , f -wx . 4' -. x ' - I . . .N .Pnf ' .-E R 4 .f L .1 1 . 3 - . :.-V Tk if - -- Q '-- 1 -.H Y iff -.L . '1ffT',' A 05- ' WM , H' w fill w . 1' ,,5x,:,1-,.,.n1-. C'-.Jisznr-1 - 5 J C, 11215226 905 Q-E2 . ,ff- s VK'+ j K .p x w J t 'fl'-K Ulbz antes O begin in genuine H lingua Wharto have been successful from three standpoints, viz: Social, financial and economic, social, because the dance floors have been crowded with more paid-ticket holders than dead-heads, Hnancial because the com- mittees have never been stuckg and economic, because it has ever been the desire to make a large show for little money. In this latter triumph Nineteen Five's committees have never failed. John Musser was our chairman for the Sophomore, and it is said that Howard Fortiner appointed him because John had such a nice H strawberries and cream complexion, a face that would look well on a dance floor, in other words. Well, advice and device were showered upon John and finally the fatal night arrived, the night when Nineteen Five was to make her debut into the social world. The Houston Club never looked better, which is saying a good deal for that H classic structuref' as the Pennsgflwanian so very aptly put it. Indeed, so well did Johnny manage his committee, that it had the nerve to buy souvenirs before the dance, and the committee proudly wore them on their coats that evening. Yes, it was a little H rah, rah niensis, Nineteen Five's dances , but then we were 173 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD only Sophomores in those days. So much money did the committee make and so Hush were its members afterwards that the Discipline Committee came to life and passed a decree that all money left over and above the nominal price of souvenirs should be turned into the class treasury. This outrage against the delicacy and self-sacrifice of the dance committees in general, was answered by committees of much larger numbers. So effective has been this scheme that the class has never received anything in spite of the Discipline Committee. Junior year saw the H Prom at the Houston Club again, and for the second time Nineteen Five had a successful dance. De Willard Was chair- man of the committee and he says that the dance was a great success, pointing to the fact that Tommy Duncan left for the West just a month later. Tommy Duncan Wasn't treasurer either. The most exciting event of the whole dance was when somebody fell all the way down stairs with a plate of ice cream in his hand without mixing his identity up with that of the ice cream or Without spilling a drop. No, it was not Roman punch. But let us hasten over such preliminary dances, to the Ivy Ball, that ever memorable occasion when the gymnasium was dedicated from tank to locker room with croquettes, spruce trees and boracic acid. The boracic acid, or talcum powder of our childhood, was what made the Floor, but for a little While there was more reclining than dancing. The chairman of the committee, Joe Carson, being also editor-in-chief of our comic daily, was more or less in touch with his paper at that time and he prevailed upon the night editor to devote a few Words to the ball. The following was the result, with jack Baker as the suspected author: H The orchestra of ten pieces, was stationed in the south end of the gymnasium room proper, on a platform. The most novel part of the dance was the decorations, which were truly out of the ordinary. The walls were almost entirely covered by pine and hemlock trees, with green foliage to fill in the vacant places. Potted palms and plants of every description were placed around in every conceivable place, and all presented the appearance of the Hnest of dance hallsfl This is a speaking picture! But it cannot compare to the talking done by Charles Ellis Goodin, who was responsible for the elaborate decorations. The decorators Worked until 9 P. lVI., and Charlie said more things than are found in the family Bible, in order to impress upon the men that the hall was to be used sometime during the evening. 174 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD For days before the ball, Warren Marshall's room in the Dormitories fWarren was the committee's treasurer and hence the goatl was a wreck, but at the end of a couple of weeks the invitations were all addressed and three men crawled out to rest on their laurels: Percy Taylor, Herbert Walsh and Sam Whetstone. Sam has been resting ever since. In trying to get the gym for the ball, the committee discovered the extraordinary fact that that building is not owned by anyone, not managed by anyone and not responsible to anyone. We only found this out after thirteen trips between Thirty-second and Spruce and 400 Chestnut Street. The ninth of February finally arrived, but the programs, Willis's pride, did not. However, they were Hnally discovered in the ladies' cloak room, nee Dr. McKenzie's oHice, by a brave member of the committee whose fame shall be nameless. And such programs! Snake silk covers from England, satin lining from France, and all pasted together with good old Yankee fish glue l Eddie Beale, as usual, discoursed the music sitting high above the heads of the dancers, where he could be seen and not heard. The lemonade bowls fplural mind youl though largely patronized were never empty, and-well the Nineteen Five Ivy was the greatest ever and even to this day the gymnasium authorities, if such men exist, will tell you in enthusiastic tones of how every room in the building received its share of chicken salad, the same having been procured five minutes before the ball opened by Weeks and Bottle. Oh! the committee was generous. The Promenade made the fourth success for Nineteen Five, and the laurels of four successful dances were truly earned. . i . 1 '- V ,I , 4, 5 , 'I . f V Y 'im' 4, 1. Hg!! tn ' .-1..:1,Q:5 ,,,. T A 5' - gi-giiigi-334 f , , - - ,,. .... . . .. . . riff ' 21 - ' V 2 . 2 if:'2.52PLZ-:EE4:f'if:.fgEW'?tY3qE1,L ' ,. :iff .Qi '59 'ff fz' - - ' . ff , Lx - ,r 1,4 ., T .,'. ' ,Q , . i V , , ,V . . , ...JJ 1 V, 5, .- -' - W , ,, ','-' V 175 E .- 1 MEDICAL LABORATORY GATE TO CAMPUS E .Vi-,lx ,JI it W i f f fi' , V ' fp f X r u t F - 3 V, N gpm A , V . . i n Y img' Ta -V 4 HF,N Nineteen Five poured out of chapel on that hrst memorable occasion and passed in review before the cynical, sneering Sophs, there was a slight collision. The Sophs stood out in the hall and punctuated the Deanis speech with a cackle that carried us back to our grammar school days while we were learning the complex system of numerals, floors, hundreds and bulletin boards that were intended to steer the newly arrived through the mazes of College Hall. The Dean finished his little song with a plaintive note of warning about weak banisters on the stairs and gentlemanly conduct in the halls and then turned us loose. The Sophs renewed their caclcle with all the vigor of a Lancaster barn-yard, and Nineteen Five passed on to their departments unmolested. The Sophs continued these cackles each morning after chapel but they showed no signs of light. With the single exception of that one collision on the first day, when several Nineteen Five men wore red ties, no desire to collide was shown on the part of the Sophs. They loved to caclcle but they hated to tightg Nineteen Five's propensity for this pastime is well expressed in that good old slogan: M Chew 'em up, Eat 'em alive, Pennsylvania Nineteen Fivef' It was not until the hall rush and corner fight that we had anything like a satisfactory chance to work off our class enthusiasm. It is a good thing to have regular scheduled fights between Sophs and Fresh, as it places a moral obligation upon the Sophs to give the Fresh satisfaction. This thought was uppermost in Nineteen Five's mind all during the Hrst half of our undergraduate life. It was the only means by which we could draw Nineteen Four into a scrap and later it seemed to substantiate our attitude toward Nineteen Six. These fights came to us as tradition-the hall rush 177 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD and corner iight on the first Tuesday of College and the bowl fight on the first warm day of Spring, when the frost has left the ground and the mud has become soft and pliant. Tradition has ordained that these fights end in a drawg and tradition sits back and smiles at her creation. Now when Nineteen Five came to Pennsylvania, things took a different turn. In our Freshman year, being modest and retiring, we sided with tradition, won the hall rush, but gave the glory of the corner fight to the Sophs, and tradition beamed benignly. However, when the bowl fight came along we broke from our ancestral inheritance and proceeded to win both halves. It took just 4.7 seconds to rush Fortiner through the Sophs and assist him over the Woodland Avenue fence. This is the established record for the Hrst half. The second half was not so short, but whatever it lacked in brevity was fully compensated for by the thrilling pleasure derived from it. It was a memorable fight. For twenty minutes a laudable attempt was made to remove what little raiment the Sophs possessed and retire the majority of that set to the list of hors du combat. At the close of the half Nineteen Five was in complete, but not undisputed possession of the bowl. We were greedy too, and wanted to keep it, and no amount of argument could convince us that although we had won the fight we were not permit- ted to carry off the trophy. The Sophs had to call to their aid the entire Senior class before they could induce us to give up our prize and deposit it in Bodine House. While wrangling over this point, some wild-eyed Nleds., remembering what their ancestral classes had done in years gone by, threat- ened to swoop down and carry off the bowl, as was their custom in days before there were any fives in the calendarg and so for the honor of the college, as against the Medical School, Nineteen Five gave up the bowl to the Sophs, who had pleaded so earnestly for it, telling us, with tears in their eyes, that they could not have a second honor man on class day unless they had the bowl. We did it just to tease them, we really did not want their bowl. The memory of this victory lived vividly with us all Summer and whet our Sophomoric pugnacity to such an extent that the entire class returned to college a week earlier to greet the embryo Nineteen Six who had come on to take entrance exams. The embryos did stunts for the pastime of the entire University. Three days out of the week they chased pennies up and down the floors of Houston Club with their noses, incidentally picking up splinters and any quantity of green grease, most appropriate for their visages. From the day college opened until the end of the Sophomore year, Nineteen Five broke 178 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD the bonds of all tradition, and went contrary to her long established customs. In the first place we won both the hall rush and corner fight, contrary to all tradition. We had no trouble breaking through the Fresh and we easily kept Ted Spear out of their clutches in the corner hght. During the intermission between the Hirst and second rush the Fresh received some strenuous coaching from the Juniors, who in their eagerness to explain the underlying principles of H How to Butt, rammed their heads against the lockers, to the delight of the assembled multitude of spectators. But as the Juniors had never won a rush the Fresh fared badly by their instruction, and by a little strategy Nineteen Five won the fight, although greatly outnum- bered. Truly an ounce of strategy is worth a ton of brawn. Nineteen Five simply opened a large gap between its left Hank and the wall, clinging closely to the lockers on the right. The Fresh poured through like stampeding cattle, waving their arms and yelling incoherent noises. When a sufficient number of the demented maniacs had rushed past, Nineteen Five got under Way and ambled down to the goal. ln the corner Hght Ted was never once molested and sat on his guards' shoulders as cool as a Bday morning. In the second place we instituted a new fight. The Dean had warned us again of the frailty of banisters, so We decidedito have it out with the Fresh in that little spot of the campus known as H Mrs. Harrison's garden, which lies between the back door of College Hall and the Club, and which for the trimness of its paths and freshness of its verdure excels all other parts of the neatly kept grounds of our ancient institution. Thither did we repair and formally institute Nineteen Five's gift to all posterity, the now well-known chapel fight. The object of this Hght, pure and simple, is to get the Fresh down to the primitive state of birthday suits and Hg leaves, and incidentally to scare the co-eds away from Pennsylvania. Everybody goes home in a barrel after this fight and those who canlt procure this shift are forced to linger about the denser shrubbery until sun-down, when they make their way home- ward up dark alleys. Then came the Spring bowl fight. Profiting by the example set by Nineteen Five, the Fresh got their bowl man off the Held in precisely the same methods but consumed considerably more time. Wliatever Nineteen Six learned of the art of U scrap l' was drubbed into them by Nineteen Five. With the single exception of the above mentioned incident, they were not apt pupils, and it was only after continuous and consistent effort that we were 179 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD able to impart anything like Pennsylvania efliciency. At the time of this bowl fight Nineteen Five's men had branched out into the broader activities of the University, which prevented their taking part in the conflict. One of the chief objects of this Hght is not to have anything on that your opponent can tear off except your skin, and if you lose that you win the game. It was upon this principle that the Fresh claimed a victory. At the close of the half, the referee, Sol lvletzgar, who later joined the ranks of Nineteen Four, counted sixteen sets of grimy, greasy digits, stuck fast to the bowl and gave the Hght to the Freshmen. It took eleven Fresh to haul AndyU Smith away from the bowl and eleven more to keep him out of the fight. They perched along his anatomy from head to foot, twining themselves in and out of his legs and around his arms and ribs. Five more stood guard and rushed to the assistance of their classmates whenever K' Andy stirred. Nleantime Logan Howard-Smith had three Fresh pinned to the earth. Uh ! those were the days when to live was to Hght and to hght was to live, and the honor of Nineteen Five was held aloft in many a victorious struggle! But those were the regular hghts, the scheduled ones of which we all know, which we have gone through and which we have lived again each time we have told them. But what of the U scraps,'! those delicious little impromptu U goes, born on the moment, unpremeditated and spontaneous, rushed to a climax and passed down into the record of the deeds of Nineteen Five? What of that snow fight when H Peggieu Dirlam rushed into chapel, his hair, his face, his collar all drenched with snow, and Nineteen Five rose as one man and rushed out to avenge the wrong, just as the Dean began reading that passage in the Scriptures exhorting all men to be kindly disposed toward one another, living in peace and harmony with all men Qreference furnished by Weschlerl? It was after this memorable Hscrap that Pick delivered his famous address to the class upon H The Use of our God Given Weapons Cand here H Pick H shook his brawny fists! H upon that Motley Gang of Sophsf' And what of the time we threw Folger in the frog pond, and painted Nineteen Fivel' all over the walk of his room in Franklin House! And the fights after the class games, what of them! When we threw Sterner and lVIitchell in the mud and rubbed it in! And the time we turned the hose on the Sophs after the Spring ball game! And how we licked the Fresh the following Fall! When we think of how we lost the Spring ball game we are reminded of those lines we all loved to repeat: 180 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD We lost the game But won the fight, Like Penn in the days of yore! We mopped the ground With Nineteen Six As we did with Nineteen Four! And then we all got together in close harmony and to the tune of H Dunderbeck we sang that good old song which goes : Oh, We'll whoop her up for Naughty Five, We'll whoop her up again, We'll whoop her up for Naughty Five, A pleasant crowd of men, We'll whoop her up for Naughty Five, We'll whoop her up once more, We'll whoop her up for Naughty Five, To i with Naughty Four! And what of those nightly expeditions to Franklin Field when we plastered our numerals all over the goal posts and the fences! VVe had heard of old H Pop Turner, his bull dogs and his six-shooter loaded with rock salt and didn't this just add the necessary spicelto the occasion ? And then that little affair in 221 hfIcKean when we tied up a lot of Fresh before the bowl Hght and deposited them under the bed! The balance of the Fresh- man class got nervy that night and battered down Jack Baker's door and then stood in the hall like a lot of grinning apes afraid to go in, and wary lack posing as a Fresh aided in the search for himself, under beds and behind closet doors and so passed easily away from the marauders. And the H scrap in the Triangle with the Fresh on the night of lVIrs. I-Iarrison's reception, when they got noisy and paraded about on the grass until that handful of Nineteen Fivels men came out of Bob Crowell's room and scattered the Fresh in fourteen directions! Of course the Juniors came out and saved the captive Fresh from cold showers. It always did take two classes to accom- plish anything against Nineteen Five. These are the fights that will remain most dear to the hearts of Nineteen Five. They are the ones that will cling more closely to our memory than the ivy does to College Hall. And they will live as long as there are any Nineteen Five men left, and when Nineteen Five is gone they will go too, for they are Nineteen Five's own and cannot endure after them. I8I LAW SCHOOL HE morning College Hall woke to End itself spattered with those flaming and furious posters, everybody knew something was doing. Great and intense interest centered about the two portrayed vic- timsg wonder and wonderment were rampant. The rather classical outlines of the rotunda of one victim and the linear design of the other, kept every- body guessing. And still the wonder grew, as the fatal day approached, and on the day of the final expiation, College was wild with excitement. Some said it was HQuo Vadis and others said The Sign of the Cross l' that was to be produced. The scene of this terrible execution was Franklin Field and our fuel was furnished by Spangler and lvleade. The announcement that U a score of red-hot- warranted-union-made devils would lead the procession caused, everybody to come early, and consequently the east stand was crowded long before the show began. U Birch Taylor had been hustling all over town the whole day to find a way to light up the scene of action and had succeeded in getting at least three torches, which greatly aided the participants. Everything was ready now. So after dark, which proved to be about eight o'clock, the program started. From a corner of the field emerged the pro- cession led by the band. The band, in the person of Ike Jones, enthroned on a piano stool, beating out HBedelia or something else equally classic, was a ...,.t,. , ..... ...X.. ., .. ..,..,,,,A,., Q. .D--..-,. A .-. 'v,.:55,.. -.:...A... ..,,,:,v.3y.u,gf.g3553-,.x 325 .. I . . .. , 1-. f.. -. ., .. , -,L f 1 :A Q' r'l 315, .gg L :I . fi Ze ' lite - 2591 11- -I.1f 1F- 5 - S- f 4 1 A Q a g 'I 19. 7, 'Q r' ll If l A 4 n n ' rl Q gl ' M f . . Y' 1 1 1 4 ' ' ' 4 ,. ', .4 X . 1 , 1 n, 3 1 , I 0 u 'a . ii A, uv . ' '. 1 :::,', ' T ' -:.'.1f - . fi: 2' .'f'f 2? f - Q I 'Q 3:-:ix 5 P ' :la :E f :. lf. -' :.14. E :qw . 1-, -a 2 -'IPL 1:5 5 ,s Ii.. -.1 .. .. f .31 . , ,iz .. .zyzt 5i:,,.:f:. . l-1 'cJJ 111T f 't'-' .. '-':Yi.fi'1i','. lf!-I-'Vu'Yl!.'fi2lTn'F:'.'- 'CU if. : '-T'f ' ':1'i' S a. e.f, at-H9 5 183 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD distinct hit, although the audience at times feared for his safety. After the band had been seen, not heard, came the great pageant. First came the devils led by Garvin. We are so unused to think of Archibald as a devil that we all wondered at the perfect impersonation of the Old Boy. There, of course, were other devils and imps, but dressed as Andy Smith or Craighead, we could never realize them as such-until after the cremation. After the devils, came the main attractions in the persons of three Mper- fect ladies. Bottle, Goodin and Conway answered the purpose. Oh, but this was nice ! Honest lVIme. Duval or Mme. Yale would have hidden their faces out of pure envy. What figures, encased in Van Hornls remnants! Oh, joy ! Then came the motley throng of judges and other court officials, but they were minor attractions in comparison with what had gone before. After showing ourselves off a bit, we decided to sit down and do a few stunts before the final great court scene. Then fell a great hush over the vast assemblage as John Brown rose to say that a special feature would be songs and dances by our famous llflask and Wig members. Before the words were out of his mouth, Goodin, Con- way and Bortle were up and ready, each with his smile divine. They started to sing and dance, and when half through their stunt, Jones decided to give them a little music, so he began at the beginning. Oh, what a great effect! The audience really howled with delight. But this was not all. Bortle had bribed the committee to let him do something all by himself, so they let him do his famous Spanish dance. We heard then that he was to star in Weber and Fields the next season. Will any one ever forget that boxing match that followed between Andy Smith and little Logan ? You could easily see that Logan was in for business and meant to make a hit, for all Germantown had turned out to see him be an actor. Andy was taken completely off his feet from the very start. Logan didn't have on his high hat or his fur coat, but he looked just like a sport anyway, and we all sympathized with Andy because of his side-splitting defeat. Then Josh Richards, the boy wonder from the wild and woolly West, appeared on the scene and Tommy Duncan was booked as his opponent. Three rounds followed and both the contestants were willing to shake and call it off. Josh has a scar on his left ear and he claims that Tommy insisted on leaving his initials. 184 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Somebody then thought that perhaps we had better have a trial. So the inquisition then held the centre of the stage. Ed Warwick was the chief judge, owing to the fact that H papa had been Mayor, and Whetstone made a perfect Spangler, but the game came near being busted up because some lcid on the fence yelled U bald head and Sam was awfully annoyed. Kinard made a rather coy court crier and was very effective in his part. Beach and Rittenhouse did the best they could as attorneys for Spangler and llfleade, but the jury beat them down because of their strong defense. Willard and Jimmy Kirkbride were anxious to do something, so they did U thinking parts in the jury. Well, the jury returned verdicts of conviction of U hot-air in the highest degree and the executioners proceeded to do the terrible deed. The match was then touched, and in the rising flames, there hung the culprits. As if to fete them, about to be consumed, we sang and yelled to our hearts' content, as though to sing and dance the soul on its way. The flames reached up higher and higher their scorching weapons and soon the victims' awful acts had been paid for by the price of blood, and ashes alone told the awful tale. As the spirits of the departed were taking their flight to Hades, and not to let them go without a last fare- well, onto the Held dashed Bob Crowell and lack Baker in fatherls cast off Oldsmobile. This greatly added to both their social standings and increased the general chaos. ' The fires died down, the lights fliclcered, the revels ceased and with bowed and bared heads we left the field of our latest caper, smouldering with the charred remains of greatness. --tt, V. ,Q . s ,- ff' ,F ,' if T 'K If '9'px'n'1 at ,' 'ffl , kr. .. sqwnf' X 3 ff ' '-6.311 .aww-.- N2 W- , -'Til 'ff' 'ff in Q57 -v - .1011-,-f' ',:,-1-'4' .i-.1 . f- A, 1 :ff 1254 iw-'14 , - . . .W lEx'?f'..fwx f. ' a,-: ' 3 wir., v'Z .A 'ffm-xi: la. - X VI ,f gg' 3,-gfP.5if,f , ff '-1 SN , 4 :Ly-2 . gl ' ggi? ' ar at .Q i t S ' , W 'lil Sly K' W A ff?-'X 23525 fl 71- ., 3 ' uf: ,-'Jia 'um V2 , 1.4 4, A L 3, T Ti -L 4 J f452D7t,a f BIOLOGICAL GARDENS 185 COLLEGE CHAPEL WISTAR ANATOMICAL INSTITUTE rf' ,.,. 1 1 is 5 DI E.12S'tfi LULL had o'erspread all nature, and all living things were hushed and still, the beasts of the field and the birds of the air bore mute and silent testimony to the awful air of mystery which pervaded everything. The inanimate things one and all responded to this mysterious in- fluence. The sun, which was wont to shine, hid himself and only shed a faint, misty, murky light. The tangled, tumbled, tossed, tumultuous masses of clouds which scudded swiftly, silently, smoothly, sullenly across the sky, lowered upon the earth as though threatening desolation, devastation, destruction, yea, even death to all mankind. The winds were quiet and no longer moaned through the trees with their weird, whining cadence. The brooks, which formerly rippled and purled so merrily and blithesomely, as though rejoicing in the ecstasy of mere existence, now Howed in a sour, glum fashion as though in mortal terror. ' Yea, verily, all things kept silence as though terrified by the awful portent of the impending mystery. Doctor Smith's long years of experience gave him the only available clue to these ominous signs. It's the Freshies, said he, and he was right, the Freshies were up and doing. They had decided to have their banquet on the evening of the day mentioned above. We state for the benefit of those who did not observe the aforesaid rare psycho- logical. physiological, meteorological happenings, that it was January seven- teenth, nineteen hundred and two. The .committee had prepared a splendid 'banquet at the Roosevelt and if Frank Gray had remained sober, all would have been lovely, but then Frank always was a boisterous, reckless hellion. Great secrecy was in vogue in the distribution of tickets. Why, you couldnlt get the committee to tell you that there was a banquet until they saw the color, of your coin! H Bob Brunker and H Ed Fitler managed the secrecy so well that there wasnlt a Soph in sight. The toasts were rhetorical to the extreme. Marshall, HThe Ladies, Crowell, HThe Crewgl' Fortiner, i'Footballg'l Rodman, Track, Kinard, HThe Faculty, and Brown, The Classfl They received the customary applause, such as bread, etc., etc., but to the great relief of the committee and the caterer, the H etc. did not include glasses or china. 187 THE NIZVETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Cut Sophomore affair was much different, no more hiding, no more secret meetings with pass-words and countersigns, everything was open and above board. The fatal event took place on January fifteenth, nineteen hundred and three, at the Colonnade. The whole affair was very quiet, very little happening! It has been said that Kinard, together with about thirty others, was?-welllerljust a trifle? The toasts were omitted, so were several of the courses, and had it not been for Fortiner, our presi- dent, it is not at all unlikely that the affair would have adjourned to the City Hall for reflection or twenty dollars bail. Still we had a good time- those of us who remembered what happened-and although the committee had to refurnish the banquet hall we didn't mind. It was on H Kit, the chairman. Qur Junior Banquet was held at the Rittenhouse, March eleventh, nineteen four. A very lovely party, yes, thank you! Dean Garvin was the pilot on this occasion and he made a crackerjack ! He acted as toast- master and when Logan Howard-Smith-think of it, dear little Logan l- became unruly, Dean thus addressed the assembled multitude: 'iGentlemen and those of you who have partaken too freely of the wine cup! This is an insult to my dignity. We all have dignities, but where they are-you don't know, he doesn't know, I don't know! Biff! And a bun struck Dean's bun and all was well. The toasts con- tinued, H Jack Baker giving a ii hoorah wrapped in a napkin after each and every word and sometimes before them. Johnny Musser entertained the company with his famous specialty of Candelabra wrecking. He also had N doings with an umbrella holder. And Perry Pepper, Harry Weeks, Chas. Goodin and lim Kirkbride rendered a boozo basso obligato of the class anthem. Between the acts the following toasts were delivered in prize packages punctuated with chicken salad and croquettes: 'fAth1etics, HAndy Smithg H The Class, Bortleg H The Ladies, Beach, H hdask and Wig, Howard, H lVIaking Phi Beta Kappa, Whetstoneg U Qur Future, Gray. The Rittenhouse was refurnished the next day and Dean took a trip to Palm Beach to save up enough to foot the bills. Ch, the joys of a banquet chairman are delicious! After considerable persuasion i'Alex Williams consented to act as chairman of our last feed as undergraduates, and congratulations are in order, for our Senior Banquet was the H best everf! Doctor Smith and Professor Marburg were the invited guests, Dr. Harrison sending a note of regret, as 188 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD illness made it impossible for him to attend. The Rittenhouse was the scene of this brilliant affair and the speeches continued far into the gray dawn of the morning after. Several of our old H pals turned up on this occasion and they were heartily welcomed. 'A Andy H Smith, H Ed 'l War- wick, and Alan Levin were among the visitors. The toasts were great and the toastmaster was none other than that robust corporation of jollity, H Ed Bartlett. After Doctor Smith and Professor Marburg addressed us, the following toasts were responded to: H Classf, Taylor g H Athletics, Kinardg University, Rortleg Faculty, Gooding 'iLadies,', Wlietstoneg Remi- nuisancesf, Howard. Lou De Lone was not called upon for a toast but he responded to several. The whole affair was most enjoyable and We retired feeling glad that Pennsylvania had given us the opportunity to be in Nineteen Five. 189 ,,-, ,ll-v ., K x .Yr fig , b y f. F,- 'iiigff 1-se S1 aim . +2 SQ Y: -Q-1 .aa . ' S . . - - TIT- gig.-5-,Egan F:?:M:, ?x.Jig:-:f- L-:ff ' i 1 'g ' ill ' F . .' , 4 . . 1- li I - .iam-as-:2-. A 1 ' I 1 ' ----:W l - , 5555-ffffa, , A l X if l xi' f Eid ' ' fr - . , f T 75 ff ', , E . Qftff -',-p I X gi . , , f 1' f , 53' , ,. V V 'Ef.Q3gqf ' rx 'K X -1' y ' 'El ll-gxtfgafl ,- -- .Q ..-OL- ...rx..-L-, ' - ' X X I T ' ' - ,' jr 19 DEBATES 05 W Q T ,' - 'X V i i LQfi.l,' ,, INETEEN FIVE evidently believes in j.,ff.QNl' l , free trade in debaters, for we have -I- imported or exported nearly all of our ' good speakers. Wlietlier it is because we could not live on good terms with their art or because they were too smart to wait for our slow pace of four years in college, we will let the exponents of the three years' course answer. Of the Freshman team, Leopold left immediately for the Law School, Weinstein has escaped by means of the three years' course into the same haven of hot-air artists, and Bottle, the only one true to the class, has deserted the noble calling of the forum for the more showy glory of the stage. The Sophomore team, too, is scattered before the winds of time4Barnes to the Law School, while Shaw accom- panied Weinstein into the ranks of the enemy, Naughty Four. But in spite of this shifting constituency, Nineteen Five has a debating record to be proud of. When we entered we found the Sophomores drilling hard in Philo. By Spring they were confident of victory. But, just to show them what we could do, our men got together in a few weeks and with some snappy team work, scattered to the winds their nicely laid schemes, and captured the Hoag trophy, which now hangs in Houston Club. Qf course it is not necessary to mention that it was only overconfidence that let the Freshmen turn the tables on us the next year. Our Sophomore team can scarcely be said to have been defeated, however, for of the three prizes offered to the speakers, Barnes and Shaw captured two for our class. The same year other of our men were getting practice. The Zelo team against Philo was composed entirely of Sophomores: Asnis, Ives, and Weinstein, who did good work in tieing with the strong Philo trio. In the Junior year we began to reap the fruits of our work. Zelo inaugurated a debate with the Barnard Society of Columbia. Nineteen Five IQI THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD men were far the best to represent the home society, so Asnis, Ives, and Jacobs were chosen. They won in a style that kept Columbia from forget- ting the Varsity teams we had sent the years before. At the same time our men were rising to present intercollegiate quality, and we manned the Varsity teams of our Junior year with alternates. In the trials for the Cornell team, Jacobs brought out such a strong argument against our side that the team could not overcome it. I-le was rewarded for his disloyalty in showing Cornell how to win by being made alternate. At mid-year's Asnis could not resist the temptation to desert to the Seniors, but the credit of his making alternate on the victorious Virginia team really belongs to us. In the Senior year we took the lead in one of the most active debating seasons ever known at Pennsylvania. The different organizations and com- binations, from the University Debate Committee down to the Freshman class, managed among them to put eleven separate teams in the field. In fact, so many events were scheduled that everybody who ever cared the least for the sport could make a team of his own. Alas, then, what should be done for rooters? Perhaps that is the reason that the judges appreciated our teams no better, because there was not enough applause to help them make up their minds. At any rate the merit of the year's work must not be judged by the judges' decisions, for honorable and prominent men of the world are notoriously incompetent to comprehend a college man's logic. Not all of our good work was unapplauded by victory, Ives, one of the few who have stuck both to debating and to us, made the Virginia team, and played an important part in winning the deciding contest with that University. The subject was about negro voting. The team from the Quaker City, the sons of abolitionists, had to argue that the work of their fathers be undone. The Southern team, on the other hand, undertook to prove the virtue of that monster of oppressive legislation, the Fifteenth Amendment. Our team, by the liberal use of cartloads of books displayed on the platform and, a life-size map of Virginia, succeeded in convicting their opponents of the blackest frauds in their own state. The decision declared the Penn team the more expert in making the worse side appear the better. Then came the first of that famous series of Triangular League debates. Penn debated Columbia and Cornell simultaneously on the same subject. We will not trouble the hurried reader with the text of that question. It can be found complete in the Appendix of the Interstate Commerce Com- mission Report for 1906, vol. 9-20, inclusive. On the two teams our' class I92 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD secured three places. Jacobs, an unwavering henchman of Nineteen Five from hall rush to Commencement, was there with his well-rounded periods, his clearly cut arguments, and that shy little gesture. Nearing, who as a Freshman lent his voice to defeat our Sophomore team, but who learned wisdom as he grew older, and was converted into the ranks of Nineteen Five, also appeared on the team. With his fiery eloquence and flowers of oratory he expounded illustrations about a little boy's sled and a pair of scissors. In his rebuttal-speech, closing our side against Columbia, he precipitated a sensation by unwinding a great roll of manuscript, yards and yards of assorted cases, and hurling it at the audience. Alas! An anti-climax! The paper tore, and the spectacle fell awkwardly in the orchestra. We fear that this confused the judges! Watson, who joined us in the Sophomore year, found courage as a Senior to try for the team. His stored-up ability at once won him a place, and sent him to Cornell. The judges, decisions are such an insignificant part of this Triangular League show that we have no space to record them. Nineteen Five has done much of the less conspicuous work for debating- office work for the University Committee, places on society teams, all that does not award the coveted H P has been upheld by our men. Blancke, another dramatic debater, showed his versatility by laying aside his most recent comedy to take part in the Zelo-Barnard debate. There were other Halso-rans. We feel sure that our debating career is one long to be remembered, at least by ourselves. l M. .-E-. - I COLLEGE BOAT CLUB 193 I cc ,, THE DORMS. xl e if H.. , .-jffff ig . ' V L fe LE C12:RcL1: P -5 -X-'r X fly X ill vga 7 H fr li 5 ' 4.1 . . fd I-TIANQAIS H F GJ... Srni: 4, 1 E Cercle Frangais of the University of i Pennsylvania has just completed its fifth x5 ,, ' successful season. Founded six years ago, i it has grown both in size and popularity until it now figures as an University activity. The club was founded upon a rather restricted plan, the membership being limited to twenty-five. Admission was gained more through social status than through ability to converse in the language of France. This policy held until all the founders had left college and then a new order of affairs was instituted. The membership was increased to fifty, and entrance was obtainable only after the sanction of the French department had been obtained. Thus the best scholars in French were obtained, and the Cercle now stands as an association of those who are pursuing or have already pursued courses in French at the University. This year an innovation was made. The officers felt that the friends of the Cercle in the city Wanted something practical in the way of weekly lectures, dispensing with the flowery-spoken Parisians of former years. Therefore a course of lectures, or rather talks, vvas arranged and has been given throughout the college year. A goodly number attend regularly these talks given by M. Florian Vurpillot, Professor of French at the Uni- versity and Rector of the French Church of Philadelphia. Perhaps the most important feature of the year is the play. Some comedy of one of the French masters, is given every year by the Cercle. The first Was, Le Medecin Malgre Lui in 1900. In 1901, U Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme was presented. H Les Fourberies de Scapin in 1902, was very well rendered, and was very enthusiastically received. This Was doubt- less due in a large measure to the entrance that yearinto the University of the class of Nineteen Five. We were Well represented, there being Hve members of the class in the cast. The star role was ably interpreted by Alex. Williams, 195 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD in true Parisian style. His well rendered H Gentilesse d'Esprit, has won for him undying fame in the annals of the Cercle. Perry Pepper was a rav- ishing blonde, and made a bold attempt to look like an old time Amou- reuse. Hall held down a part as a valet, and threw dice all through the first act to kill time. He appeared again later as a warrior, and tried to look fierce, but H pas d'affaire. Alan Levin had a part just nineteen words long, and only forgot about a dozen. H Spence Mulford made a decided hit as a H Portier who carried in the dying hero. The following year N Pathelin was produced. This comedy is extremely ancient and of doubtful authorship, but was well interpreted. H La Grammairef' a short farce, was also given that year and proved immensely successful. The one female part was hlled by Harter and he was Ha perfect lady. He received the only bouquet of the season. Heller proved himself worthy of the name and surprised us all by making a decided hit. Hall again appeared as a servant, only many years older. This year has been marked by the greatest success in the history of the Cercle. Les Plaideurs of Racine, admittedly one of the most difficult comedies ever written, was produced very successfully. French critics who had never witnessed the comedy before outside of Paris, pronounced the production excellent. The leading role was assumed by Dondo and he won for himself the undisputed title of Hthe best ever. His acting has no equal in any of the productions of the Cercle. The other member of our class who was in evidence was Walsh, and he acquitted himself nobly of the few dozen words allotted to him. Of this year's ofhcers, two are Nineteen Fiveg Hall is president and Beach is business manager. We wish here to express our great appreciation of the untiring efforts of Prof. Vurpillot, whose energy has been directly responsible for the great success of all of the productions of the Cercle. Particularly is this evident this year. Prof. Vurpillot is alone and entirely responsible for the marked success of HLes Plaideursf' He had entire charge of the cast from first to last and deserves the very highest praise for their admirable performance. Le Cercle Francais stands as a field of activity for all who are inter- ested in the study and advancement of French. The local Cercle is a member of the Alliance Francaise of clubs all over the United States. It represents the University of Pennsylvania before the public and displays a high standard of excellence in the study of French. 196 Deufft Verein .STL , Srlfis NOTHER page in the history of the Deutscher Verein was written during the college year 1904-1905, and the heroes live to tell the tale. By all that is properly respectful to Doctor Wilhelm Hohenzollern fLL.D., Hon. U. of Pa., 19055 the chronicle should be indited in the highest Deutsch, but when a Celt tackles the task it would only be a bid at lese majeste to struggle with the German verb and article. Besides, it is against precedent immemorial of class records, to patronize any but college patois. The red-letter event of last year, was the successful production of the first annual play. With the aid of a number of patronesses, and under the able tutoring of Prof. E. C. Wesselhoeft in pronunciation and Herr Th. Bollmann, stage manager at the German Theatre, in stagecraft, an enjoyable presentation'of Roderick Benedix's comedy, 'C Dr. Wespe was given on lvlay 3, 1904, at the New Century Drawing Rooms. The candidates for histrionic honors who appeared on the bright side of the footlights were as follows: HERR voN ZUNDORF . ELIZABETH . THEKLA . . THEUDELINDE . . DocToR ALFRED WESPE . LUDYVIG HONAN . . VVELLSTEIN . . SCHRUER . ADAM CHR1sToP1-1 FRIEDERIKE . XVilton VV. Blancke, '05 C Louis M. Fleisher, '04 C XVm. L. C. Spaeth, '07 M Fred. H. Tunnell, '06 C Hugo Schlatter, '04 C Walter K. Van Haagen, '05 C Harold A. Shryock, '04 C Henry P. Erdman, '04 C Frederick V. VVunderle, '05 C E. A. Welden, '03 C Alfred cleF. Snively, '05 C At the semi-annual election in June, the machine selected Elwood Austin Welden, IQO3, founder of the Verein, as staunch presidential timber, and being well-oiled, he was elected with the following cabinet: vice-president, L. B. Hessler, '05 C5 secretary, Walter K. Van Haagen, ' 197 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD '05 C5 treasurer, J. A. Beck, '04 C. At the December election, Secretary Van Haagen was promoted to the 'iherr-presidency, and the other officers were chosen as follows: vice-president, S. Leopold Rosenberg, '06 C, secretary, Adolph Wischan, ,O7 C3 and treasurer, J. A. Beck, '04 C. During the year a number of anxious searchers after Germanic knowledge and Huency in Berlin argot, knocked at the door. No blots being on their escutcheons, they were admitted to the privilege of paying dues. . For the first time in its history the Verein had a press agent, and its doings received complete publicity in the local print. A scare occurred early in the year when a downtown paper came out with glaring head-lines that co-eds were to appear in the annual German play. President von Welden denounced this as Hyellow journalism of pronounced saffron hue.', Several social evenings occurred during the year. One occurred at a member's Dormitory room, and it is only just to say that a bottle of ginger ale was kept for the teetotalers. The biggest affair was the farewell dinner given on February 9, 1905, in honor of the departure for Europe of founder and ex-president, E. A. Welden. Several members have gone for advanced U study to the H Vaterlandf' No one has yet explained what that hitherto happy land has done to deserve the infliction of E. A. Welden, Hugo Schlatter, and R. H. H. Ch. K. L. Riethmueller. A Teutonic atmosphere was easily gained by the members calling each other HHerr.'l Such sentences as HI-lerr lVIurphy kommt immer zu spaet and Herr Blancke, sitzen sie ruhig seemed to evidence a foreign element in the Verein, but no one minded the Celtic calibre of one's name or the acute accent over the otheris. At the meetings after the routine opening, the secretary would favor with the minutes and the treasurer make an effort to get next to the delinquent taxes. Following this invariably came a warm discussion concerning some phase of the new play. For literary exercises Rosenberg could always be depended upon to recite some poetry, and Blancke to start the bung hole of his barrel of orphaned anecdotes. To be serious at the solemn moment of parting, the Verein did much good work on the lines projected in its establishment, and all those who attended the meetings regularly, certainly secured a firmer grasp on spoken German. 198 J GYMNASIUM, STREET SIDE WEIGHTMAN HALL GYMNASHML WELD MDE THE POOL THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD jfunthall aah :allege life HAT the game of American football occupies a peculiar position in its relation to sport in general and to college life in particular, can- not be denied. The game as We know it, while popular with all classes and conditions of men, is alone participated in by college men, or by boys preparing for college. Even when thus limited in its direct use, for nearly three months in the year it is the one sport which commands the popular attention and which certainly has become a most important factor-perhaps too much so-in college life. Why this game, of all others, should have become so conspicuous a part of our college life is to many inexplicable. To the man to whom sport of any kind has but little attraction, or to him who is unprejudiced by the associations of college life, or to him who understands but little of the physical preparation, and of the physical and mental requirements for the game, the sport seems to appear merely as a means for the display of physical strength, and as an encouragement for the development of combativeness and viciousness, and even brutality. To others who may not oppose the game on the above grounds and who may admit its value in the development of character, the apparently great liability to injury has seemed to outweigh all considerations for its existence. Yet, in spite of this more or less wide-spread opposition, football has con- tinued to gain in general popularity and is 'more Hrmly planted to-day as a factor in college life than ever before. In fact it is more than possible- even probable-that this sport to-day has grown to be a too important part of a college course. As the game has developed, popular interest and the spirit of competi- tion have developed in an almost exaggerated degree, and it is now only the wise and restrictive rules of our college faculties that keep away the taint of professionalism and restrict the game to those young men, who in pursuing a college life for education's sake, adopt this sport for their recreation. What can be said for a game, which in the face of such opposition and criticism, has gained such a popular foothold in the life of our college youth and in the athletic interests of a large part at least of the better class of people? Is the opposition we hear the criticism of a broad mind, and 201 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECGRD does it deal with facts, or is it his opinion whose athletic life has never been developed, who has never known the joy of physical competition, and who can little understand the possibilities of mind and character development in such competition? Can such a critic judge the value ofa life of discipline on, and a life of abstemiousness off the field? Can he know what traits of courage, of self-control and decision are developed by this game of physical contact, and by the necessity for instant action? Does our critic know of the careful preliminary preparation of the body, of the careful attention to the gradual development of the muscles of every man, that he may endure blows without pain, and apparent injury without harm? Does he know that the popular idea of the dangers of the game is as greatly exaggerated as is the report of such injuries, and that the real statis- tics show but a slight increase, if any, in the danger of injury and death as compared with other manly sports? Football, as we know it, is not a game for the physically weak, nor for the idler, the mental sluggard, the irresolute, nor for him of weak heart or morals. It is for him who is physically fit and who has those manly qualities to be developed which shall prepare him for a physical and mental struggle with life. Does not after all the development of these virtues more than offset whatever chance of physical injury there may be? Is it not the very demand for these qualities, which in all time has made man most respected by his neighbor, that has placed this game of foot- ball in its present unique position? If so, the sport cannot lose its attrac- tiveness for the American youth until through degeneracy, slothfulness shall be preferred to disciplineg indulgence to self denialg cowardice to courage, mental apathy to ambition, and effeminacy to manliness. Sli as EEC PK iff if Pls Competition has so developed football that success is now a mathematical proposition up to a certain limit. Ten per cent. of the chances of success may depend upon luck. The remaining ninety per cent. depends upon three factors-men, system and sympathy. These three factors muSt all be present at the same time and in a pre-eminent degree, in order to insure a first-class and successful team. By men we mean that every member of the team should be of excellent physical and mental capabilityg must possess certain sterling traits of disposition and have a natural adaptability for the game. 202 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD By system we mean that the styles of attack and defense of the individual player and of the team as a whole must be so carefully worked out and understood that every possible move of the opponent is instantly met by a counter move. By sympathy we mean college spiritg that thing which is college life idealized, and which, when possessed by player or spectator, has turned the tide of many games. These three qualities are essential to success. The absence or even mediocre presence of any one of them may easily be the ruin of an otherwise first-class team. Let us then, as Pennsylvanians, take heed from the lessons of the past. Pennsylvania is in the football race. She must either keep the pace or drop out all together. Wlien again we fall to the rear let us look to the cause. What one of the three essentials is lacking and how most readily can the fault be remedied? The easiest way is to meet the fault more than half Way. In the hour of prosperity prepare for adversity. The student body is respon- sible for the spirit of college life, the coaching staff for the development of systems of play and strategy, and all of us as Pennsylvanians for the quality of the men who represent us upon our athletic teams. The right word in the right way to the right man may turn the wandering steps ofthe embryo athlete in the right direction. -gi... . E . g,,A 4.1-2.fA.f1:v-fgg? . , ,T , A , g:, :.,- x -4 , v., .JM 1,1 , fr- Ear-if-E v flair. 3,152 'sig -'ft J - . --Mft ' J- -7a.'- '. -.. . 1' 4301- ..r v. V , vga,--i-,ks-rn.-. CHP: '- ,gl - L - 'r24m.'-.. : ' v' 1,.w'-- 'f f,,,-42-1 up .11-'ff .. 'sffvuil T-offering, if iff :if WH.-f,315 pf - 1 .N -in ill-aaa 'rfi ,-'.1 f.:f',.5ff-..++-'-'-w!WgQf11:- .- ' I rf' ' ?--FZQLIV1 ii--.-?Lf,S', .R ?..:x .f.ff-'t,1f':f2?'Y?5-H '1 wfw1'2-Li'?,l5- 5' ,Lil 'l T ff, i I J. , 1 ,A 9412.-, ..-J. .zf-, M-iw QA X244 321' -'-Q53-7f'F'-.2'.1w:.1: 1v'i-'5 W V A V ii Nixxxidl 'fx fair 'lf X- il .15 A .-: ,.. vin.: -5.5153 1: W ,fvfgn . 53: , .,... . ,,..,.,.,1r, z.,. , , . , . Q. 57,1'-....M'i ' I ls- fri .. ' ' ,V ,- J l fm . BIOLOGICAL GARDENS 203 BEFORE THE GAME PENN-HARVARD GAME ,, , .Q Y - -:-,Y-xv xx xx X X x W xx XSSQ mwx Q 1 .Sw ..X .x-, -. N1Ng.KN. Q, . ,wiza- :vfux Tiwb WW X- N .. HQ14iff:V'f'v .4 'lviy' -, -- K...,g .,,. . Q I sg- fi-7 '1 ' L,f'g?.?Jfgq:-5-' ' . 2: -- iff: 1-' 'I Q.: ,gaafv '-.1 . - -- ' , J, Ml' I, H .V-W. ' 7' , ' T' '11 T 'Jz- -w3- A ',,'z, :.,,A. :. in-., 1 ' 2392191 :s'3?3ft-f'- A '7 -wav.. '31-Tn-z . - fy ' . m iffx'-' sew . 'fr-WN' . 'Hive 1' 1 -- I .- . I - - . ' if . Q57 - . - , . -n . 5 I Na ' g: , J ' h . ' ' 1 '. 13:,f5.yE, ,- . . . - ' . rf 91- H. z 1 Tu 1 QWUUHIHH I'- LQ . E. Bennis W. J. Rooke Sq I 1 1 , T A. Butkiewicl J. H. Sheble ' 43-7,-Ll,,f, ' . f C. S. Corson YV. Sinkler, -Ir. ,Maivfm'1'IFllf',f',.,f .' G. R. Drake A. L. Smith ' - l'u'l:x.I ' -xr -' 4 - f J fm 5 il 2s:.:.': L1 esyzffof' fi' ll.iQf'.1l'l:-5' WN . J. C. Hollenhaclm O. F. Lamson - lllqr,-l,.'l',:l JW' I XV. M. Hollenbach R. G. Torrey Q ,i 'fly-gjzll W D. B. Km G. W. vveede 'll'-,ily F. A. Pielaarski A. B. Ziegler . .. .TW XM.. wut Qffq, ' - I Baseball ' X Eu i W. L. Cams E. P. O'Donnell ' g A 1 . ll 5.3 . . Qlrztn I . ' ,Bl j J. A. Boers S. S. Herman 'f fm 3 R. C. Crowell L. B. Register Qxl. Y.-l.,,, E. S. Duebler E. S. Stevenson fq-'ri JI-1 G. A. Dick J. D. Taylor s l, ' Ll, N. Drayton H. W. Vaux H ,Ll F. H. Galey J. H. York -E' - 7.5, ' Track ' J. S. Boyd H. A. Hyman 'T -' W. J. Cartmell G. R. M0f'l'itt W. R. Dear V I. A. Orton W. A. Gunn J. B. Taylor ., I T. P. Hammer S. H. Terry 3 D-55, .516 gy Qlrunknzt E gy H. C. Weeks 'Sf .J..9?' , AS fllinznnuzr 'EQEQEQ we E. B. Dewhurst .. I 205 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Earsitp jfnuthall Uleam HOLLENEACH HOLLENBACH PORTER GREENE CORSON DRAKE BUTKIEWICZ RooKE KASE BOYD CMgr.J SMITH SHEBLE WEEDE LAMSON CAss't Mgr.5 ZIEGLER PIEKARSKI TORREY CCapt.j REYNOLDS SINKLER BENNIS FOLWELL STEVENSON TAYLOR 206 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Earsitp Easehau Squaw HARE BRADY MUSSER KRAUSE CARTER CMgr-D WEEKS REYNOLDS JAMES COOGAN CARISS SCHULER MYERS LOCKWOOD CCoachj CCapt.j HORAN MINFORD HARRIS ZIEGLER CUHATT FERRY LAYTON ALDENDIFER HAY 207 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Varsity Culretn V R ,Q 4 , , , v-- - , , F ...Q MORGAN DICK STEVENSON DUEBLER WARD QMgr.j LCoachD I-IERMAN DRAYTON CROVVELL ZANE TAYLOR BOERS VAUX CCapt., Strokej REGISTER CCoxswainj 208 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Varsity Trask Uleam yv1.:,Zi,A:. ., ,-fi .I - R ' . EJ GILPIN DR. SHELL CARTER QMgr.j QCoachj QAss't Mgr.j THAYER SHERWOOD WEEDE BOYD HYMAN KlRKPATR'ICK DEAR CARTMELL ORTON RUSSELL HAMMER MOFFITT TAYLOR CCHPI-D GUNN AMSLER TERRY 209 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD 'Yjarsitp j:uur:QBareiJ Qiretn A.,-rf , ..2 ' Vu -4,- .,.,,Q..,.x:- - GALEY WARD YORK CCoachJ Q DUEBLER DICK 210 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Varsity i5asketJ5aII Tllieam EHLERS WALKER GRAYBILL MORGAN MCCRUDDEN LAWRENCE , KUNKLE EWING fMgr.D QCapt.j QAss't Mgr.j FLINT SPRAGUE 211 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Varsity Qtnimming Team Zintercullegiate Qllbampinns PEARCE LAMBERTON HoPK1NsoN COE KISTLER RODGERS BARR NEVVBOLD fCoachj MACDONALD MOLLE WEEKS COWLISHAW MUHLENBURG fCapt. Swimmingj MCCAREY BLOCK QMgr.D CCapt. Polol 212 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Varsity fnirinket Uleam EVANS DERAXVIN HOLLAND NIACFARLAN PEARCE WHITE BANES WEEKS CHRISTMAN BAKER D. GRAHAM 213 L THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Varsity Epmnastin Ulizam GALEY ROSENKRANS MASON RITCHIE PARKER,jr. ELIASON MOORE KRAUSS DIETERLE TAKAK1 CCapt.j SU1TER R012 BROOKE 214 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD 'ijarsitp 'ilacrusse Team D CAMPBELL SHERVVOOD FREEMAN MILLER Yocuzvr DAVIS BLAKLEY O. BRINER CORSON R. BIUNER GOLDSMITH fCapt.j KEMP SEssLER 215 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Varsity Glennie Team DEWHURST TAKAKI YQCUM MILLS fCaot.D 216 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Varsity Quit Team v, 51 F 1iiJf Q '?sevi'!'U1u:nQv..-A+-- --.- J -1 'W Q f. + PEPPER WATSON TOPPING WILLARD CARSON TOWNSEND MCCURDY 217 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Earsitp Gun Team PERKINS SMITH LONGNECKER ADAMS KooNs WAY QCapt.j 218 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Earsitp fanning illieam FLEISHER QCapt.j x SCOTT WILLIAMS TERRONE QCoachj FRICK CMgr.j 219 THE '04 LINE-UP PENN-HARVARD GAME Dpanuuqq Ann?-Stun- L-5,0 s--- N I If MHA-+15 'oe' 221 t ,133 - MARSHALL STARK REYNOLDS Captain '05 Football Team THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Cllhrunitle uf Zltbletir Qlfhents jfnuthall HE season of 1904 most gloriously vindicated the advocates of a graduate system of coaching. Dr. Carl Williams and his efficient board of assistant coaches should feel amply rewarded for their hard work, for after two years of defeat, Pennsylvania has again assumed her position as leader of the U big four. The team went through the season without a defeat and without having its goal line crossed, the four points scored by Swarthmore being the result of a goal from the field. The team developed slowly and consistently and surprised the football Wiseacres with its varied and open style of play. In the selection of an all-American team the majority of the critics gave Pennsylvania four men: Fullback Smith, Guard Piekarski, Halfback Reynolds, Quarterback Stevenson. The scores:- Sept. 24. State at Franklin Field: o-6 Oct. Sept. 28. Swarthmore at Franklin Field: Oct. 4.-6 Oct. Virginia at Franklin Field: O-2+ Oct. Oct. Franklin and Marshall at Frank- Nov. lin Field: o-34. Nov. Oct. Lehigh at Franklin Field: o-24 Oct. Gettysburg at Franklin Field: Nov. 0-21 igasehall 15. 22. 29. 12. 2 Brown at Franklin Field : 0-6 Columbia at Franklin Field: O'I6 Harvard at Cambridge: o-11 Lafayette at Franklin Field: o-22 Carlisle Indians at Franklin Field: O-I8 Cornell at Franklin Field: o-3+ The baseball season of 1904 was fairly successful. The team had ex- ceedingly bright prospects, but the development was so rapid that many defeats were met in the big games of the later season. The general results of the season were gratifying, for we administered defeats to several old rivals, including Princeton, Cornell, Georgetown, Brown and Syracuse. Mar. 30. Apr Apr Apr The scores 1- Trinity at Franklin Field: 19-1 Indians at Franklin Field: Rain University of Virginia at Char- lottesville: 7-1 University of Virginia at Char- lottesville: IO'I Apr Apr Apr Apr. Apr. II I 3 16 20 1 Georgetown at Washington: 4-1 Annapolis at Annapolis: 1-o Gettysburg at Franklin Field : 8-4 Lehigh at Franklin Field: 9-11 Franklin and Marshall at Lan- caster: Rain 223 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Apr. 23 Yale at New Haven: o-2 May Syracuse at Franklin Field: 6-5 Apr. 27 Columbia at Franklin Field: Rain May Cornell at Ithaca: 3-2 Apr. 30 Yale at Franklin Field: o-1 May Lehigh at South Bethlehem: Rain May 4. Georgetown at Franklin Field: 5-1 june Inter-Acad. at Franklin Field: 9-2 May 7 Princeton at Franklin Field: 8-3 June Cornell at Franklin Field: 5-0 May II Brown at Franklin Field: 7-o June Lafayette at Franklin Field: 0-2 May I4 Harvard at Franklin Field : 3-11 June Harvard at Cambridge: o-8 May 18 Columbia at New York: 0-1 June Brown at Providence: 2-0 May 2I Princeton at Princeton : 4-7 June Graduates at Franklin Field: 7-4 Trask The track team of 1904 was very successful in its various meets, while April 18. Princeton Handicaps, Princeton, May 28. Intercollegiates, Franklin Field, the holding of the Intercollegiates on Franklin Field was celebrated in a truly Pennsylvania style. At the Relay Races We won the two mile relay, While Hammer captured first in the broad jump. A few members of the team journeyed to the Princeton Handicap Games and carried off three hrsts: Taylor, 440 yards, Cartmell, 220 yards: Boyd, shot-put. Our cross country team distinguished itself in the Intercollegiates at Travers' Island by outclassing Yale, Harvard and Columbia, but Cornell succeeded in landing first place. The greatest surprise of the season came at the Intercollegiates. Not even suspected of being a dark horse, our team landed third place with 24 points, only U6 points less than Harvard. Taylor added another intercollegiate record to Pennsylvania's long list by running the 440 yards in 4913 Seconds. N. J. Taylor, scratch, won 440-yard run in .51 3-5. Cartmell, 2 yards, second in IOO-yafd dash. Cartmell, 4 yards, won 220-yard run in .23 2-5. Liggett, 2 yards, second in IZO-yard hurdle. Boyd, 1 foot, won shot-put, 41 ft., 9 in. Hammer, 2 inches, won broad jump, 21 ft., 2 in. Points: Princeton 69 Pennsylvania 42 Columbia I7 April 23. Annual Pennsylvania Relay Races. One mile won by Yale g second, Pennsylvania. Time, 3.23 3-5. Two mile won by Pennsylvania. Time, 8.30 4-5. Running broad jump won by Hammer, 22 ft., 4 in. May 7. Columbia won Dual Meet at New York, 542 to 495. May 14. Cornell won Dual Meet at Ithaca, 76 to 41. Philadelphia. Cartmell second in 100- yard dash, Dear third. Cartmell second in 220-yard rung Dear third. Taylor won 440-yard run, establishing a new intercollegiate record of .49 1-5. Boyd third in shot-putg Molfitt tied for second, 5 ft., IO in. Hammer second in broad jump. Points: Yale 34M Harvard 25f6 Pennsylvania 24 Princeton I5 Cornell I5 Syracuse IOM CROSS COUNTRY Nov. II. Dual Meet with Cornell, Phila- delphia fFairmount Parkj. Won by Cornell 12, Pennsylvania 28. Nov. 25. Intercollegiate Cross Country Championship held at Travers' Island, N. Y., Nov. 23, 1904. 224 Pennsylvania's basket-hall team of 1905 did not uphold the record of the THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD TEAM SCORES Yale: Hail 3: Alcott 15: Armstrong 16: Beardsley 17. Total 51 points. Cornell : Newman 1 : Magoffin 2 : Munson Harvard: Howard7: Whitaker 12: Lamson 4: Starr 5. Total I2 points. 13: Crosby 20. Total 52 points. Pennsylvania: Major 8: Hoskins 9: Mc- Columbia: McDonald 6: Russel 18: Rupp Curdy 10: Samans 14. rIIOIZll.4I points. 23 : Green 26. Total 73 points. igasket-33alI IQO4. team, which captured second place in the Intercollegiate League. The team was experienced, but it showed a lack of that get together spirit which wins games. Dec Dec Dec The scores :- Swarthmore at Philadelphia: 44- 27 Franklin and Marshall at Phila- delphia: 2-O Naval Reserves at Newport, R. I.: Jan. Jan. jan. Jan. Feb. 14. Harvard at Cambridge: 20-30 18. Princeton at Princeton : 35-37 21. Lehigh at Philadelphia: 37-31 27. Yale at New Haven: 31-19 3. Yale at Philadelphia: 22-26 17-18 Feb. 1o. Johns Hopkins at Baltimore:51-17 Dec. Naval Reserves at Fall River: Feb. 15. Swarthmore at Swarthmore: 24-27 20-30 Feb. 18. Princeton at Philadelphia : 20-28 jan. Washington Continentals at Feb. 22. State College at Philadelphia: Schenectady, N. Y.: 12-21 30-33 jan. Cornell at Ithaca: 29-23 Feb. 24. Cornell at Philadelphia: 17-20 Jan. Rochester University at Rochester: Mar. 1. Dartmouth at Philadelphia: 30-24 20-17 Mar. 4. Columbia atPhiladelphia: 17-27 Jan. . Newport Y. M. C. A. at New- Mar. IO. Columbia at New York: 16-51 port: 29-20 Mar. 11. Pratt Institute at Brooklyn: 37-33 Jan. 13. Holy Cross at Worcester: 20-40 Qhillmmllig The Nineteen Five swimming team carried off Hrst honors in the first Inter- collegiate Meet held at Pennsylvania. Our relay team defeated Columbia and Yale in the most exciting contest of the season: While in the individual contests we were awarded one first and three seconds. Mar. 17. Intercollegiate, Philadelphia. Relay race-Pennsylvania Hrst, Block, Weeks, McCarey, Pierce, Cowlishaw: second, Columbia: third, Yale. 300 yards, Pennsylvania Hrst, Pierce: second, Columbia. 100 feet, Columbia first: Pennsylvania second, Weeks: Yale third. Under water swim, Yale first, 267 feet, 1 min., 22 2-5 seconds: Penn- sylvania second, Roe 165 feet. 100 yards, Columbia first: Pennsylvania second, Cowlishaw. 22 5 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Cllritket The cricket team of 1904 landed second place in the Intercollegiate Championship. Haward and Cornell went down to bitter defeat, but Haver- ford triumphed over our defenders of the wicket. The scores :- Pennsylvania 187 g Harvard 78 Pennsylvania 211 g Cornell 159 Pennsylvania 132, Haverford 183 Iiattusae The Varsity lacrosse team tied with Cornell and Harvard for champion- ship honors, as Columbia and Harvard lost to Pennsylvania by default. The scores :- Apr. 16. Crescents 5, Pennsylvania 3 May 12. Hobart 1, Pennsylvania 4 Apr. 26. C. C. N. Y. o, Pennsylvania6 May 21. Lehigh o, Pennsylvania 3 May 5. Cornell 7, Pennsylvania 4 june 3. Toronto 6, Pennsylvania 1 May 6. Hobart 3, Pennsylvania 2 Ulenuis Dewhurst, the intercollegiate champion of 1903, lost his title in the 1904 contest, but later in the season won the indoor championship. Takaki, fresh from the shores of Japan, ably assisted our champion, and the prospects for a winning team next season are very bright. Oct. 4-5. Intercollegiate at Merion C. C., 6-3. Singles: Dewhurst defeated Sullo- Haverford, Pa. In the doubles Dew- way and Prentiss of Harvard and lost to hurst and Takaki defeated Prentiss and Le Roy of Columbia 4-6, 6-3, 7-5, 2-6, Whitman of Harvard 3-6, 6-2. 8-6, and 6-o. lost to Behr and Bodman of Yale 6-o, Gram Considering the inexperience of our oarsmen, the 1904 crews had a fairly successful season. We won the Varsity race with Annapolis, but at the Inter- collegiate Regatta we could not land better than third place in all three races. Syracuse proved to be the dark horse in the Varsity and Freshman races, and Cornell managed to avenge the football season by capturing second in the Varsity race. 226 gaahp BBEUYU , DATE orvomzw-rs April 30 Annapolis Naval Cadets Annapolis Second Crew . May '30 Vesper Crew, Union Boat Club . Pennsylvania Barge Club . RESULTS Ist Pennsylvania 2d Annapolis ISY Annapolis 2d Pennsylvania Freshmen . I st Vesper . 2d Pennsylvania and U.B.C.N 1st Pennsylvania Freshmen . 2d Pennsylvania Barge Club . ' Varsity Qiigljt-Q9areh june 29 Syracuse, Cornell, Georgetown, Columbia, Wisconsin . . Ist Syracuse . 2d Cornell . 3d Pennsylvania 4th Georgetown 5th Columbia 6th Wisconsin Varsity jfnur-Gurzh Cornell, Columbia, Wisconsin, Georgetown ISK Cornell . 2d Columbia 3d Pennsylvania 4th Wisconsin 5th Georgetown jfresbniun QEigiJt-Qmreh Syracuse, Cornell, Columbia, Wisconsin 'X Dead Heat. 1st Syracuse . 2d Cornell . 3d Pennsylvania 4th Columbia. 5th Wisconsin TIME MILES PLACE 10.37 2-5 2 10.51 2 ws Ik M4 IZ 20.22 3-5 4. 10.25 3-5 2 10.01 2 . Annapolis American Henley Regatta, Philad'a Poughkeepsie Poughkeepsie Poughkeepsie FHL NHV Z HIL N HH UHHUN F GN IJ HA GHODHH THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD bali Oct. 19. Intercollegiate, Morristown, N. J. pionships, L. M. Watson, De F. P. Pennsylvania put out by Harvard in Willard and W. P. Topping quali- first round, Harvard won the team lied but were beaten in the Hrst round. championship. In the individual cham- Shooting Oct. 29. Dual shoot with Harvard at Cam- Nov. 12. Intercollegiate shoot at Princeton, bridge, Mass., Pennsylvania won. N. J., Pennsylvania fourth, Jfznting Feb. 4. West Point Cadets at West Point: Mar. 2.4.-25. Intercollegiates at New York. 7-2 Annapolis 39-ISQ West Point Feb. 18. Annapolis Midshipmen at Annap- 37-175 Columbia 33-21 3 Cornell olis: 6-3 31-23 g Pennsylvania 21-33 3 Har- Mar. 4. Columbia at New York: 7-2 vard 17-37g Yale ro-4.4. 5' 228 .. 14- . -qfffff 51 ffia T THE TRAINING HOUSE . ,J .T V +. . -,J g .. . .Q 3 , 3 .. fl 1.-W, .. . . .... . .4 W. THE CRITICAL MOMENT THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD The 'A'1Be1m5pIhanian Baath MORGAN,R.,Jf. NEELY MARTIN HOPKINSON LEw1s,S. DANIELS PAUL MURPHY CARSON,J.B. DIXON FLEISHEK CORTRIGHT HARDT Nomus MACFARLAN GREEN SAWYER CONDERMAN CARSON,-I. MENDENHALL RUTSCHMAN MoRcAN,R. CARPENTER 230 s ,J ei s ge Ax,-s X,- X X Q ix THE PENNSYLVANIA l Vorurmxxl.-No1J+. PHlLADELF'H'lA,'I'1'ONDAYAPR1L5J2ji -Pn.Ce1xmcm'7f J' .- 1vw1N: DASEDALLGAP ,,, - W rr H X --f-.- gp- CMR- A THE PENNSYLVANIAN Entered a1'Pl1ilaclelpl1iu Poslofllm-e us second- clz1sslnz11'te1', Published daily munday exceptedl during the University year, in the interest ol' The Students of the University of Pennsylvania Editor-in-chief, JOSldl'Ii LJ.-XRSON, 1005. Ixlilllllglllg' Editor, EA KL MEN D,lGN1'I.fXI.L, 1000. Assistant Managiiig Editors, WlL.Ll.-XM A. SANVYEK, 1007. THOMAS S. M.-Xll'l'lN, 1007. Editors 1 Ralph Morgan, '06, .T.H.McQ.L'211'ter,'05. W. P. Norris, '07, E. U. Rutscl1nmn,'05, M. T. Fleislier, '07, li. M. Lewis, '07, E. Hopkiuson,J1'.,'07. S. Lewis, '07, John Lisle, '05, A. E. Carpenter, '06, E. K. Cortright, '00, J. M. Baker, '05, Associate Editors, RandalMorgan,Jr.,'08, ' J, S. Dixon, '08. E. D. Corson, '08. S. B. Whetstone, '05, J. D. Stern, '06, W. C, Neely, '08, W. R. Murphy, '00, Donald Macfarlan,'07. J. Vllilliam Hardt, '06. Frank A. Paul, '08, Business Manager, C. WlLLlS ADAMS, 1905. Assistant Business Manager, N. K, CONDERMAN, 1906. F. C. DANIELS, 1007. Business Manager's Office Hours: 1 to 2 P. M. daily. Subscription: 53.00 Per Year. OtT1ce: 3451 NVood1and Ave. Keystone Telephone: West 45-24 D. Bell Telephone: Preston 45-86 D. 231 THE NINETEEN HUNDREDJYND FIVE RECORD The Bah anh Eine Quart: MORGAN BARY GARNER BOYD STEIN MURPHY BORTLE RICHARDS GOODIN MCCRACKEN 232 ,,.tguuus5lmmu,,,,, 90 , 1.,,.1.l.wq15v ng! r in 7' -! . 'ZW' EQ.. 'W - l' ' ' ' ' FA' . 5.-if g as--ei iii e 1'-if-1 eff, - ii.-A gg?-1 1 S! ...mmf H .lp A iq -N , . IIICWK 1--JL.-. .E - L, LJ 11 ' Ib A Ei , S .-:Li 1. ' effqfj-1ff '? V .: l - gffm . . ,., -5 . ,. J. Kff- ff, ee., ,, : - 5: 'r --..'v.-Tc-, ' ' ' E llmug -f-- 713,11 L. -ez: W WE 1,f,5:Af,m'fM f M71 1 ' . LA L ATM... ,g lf' W7y 3fp L lfklf' gg 1 !,fyfv , lg , N. yM ,1g,g,g .Et . A f W, 1,4 1 1 qffxf W p ng .1 fe. ' f fl , , .900 ' Aw-,444 W ' ' if . - -.IP T1-1 ' ' '- ' ..TlY'::. '-1.7 T J- ,L fi,Q.:4 '-HCL? 'rf-fc:-1-1-ffza.rifiii-15.13 . . . . Y '. I-'rt--11-1: -:ii-is e 151fQgs1fg,if:ff:.12eieff 2114113 ifzffeee ,M f----e- , f-- . Lew.. -1- fm- --'::5,1:L- .LY ,H-'-ef-- - , VOL. XVII. PHILADELPHIA, JUNE, 1905. No. 8 1i11'1'lnr-172 - 6,71 ll'l-, Jcismiel Riel-1.-xiuus, 1905. ,llz1l1zI4Q'1'1l-gf If11'1'lm'. ROLLIN C.xNTxx'EI.L IiOR'l'l.l'E. 1905. Erflhzur, How.-xizn XVILSON GARNER, 1005. JOHN M..xRs'1'oN, 3cl, 1905. ROBERT Tiioxrrfsox DICCR.-XCKI-ZX, 1905. Wxr,l.1.nr Born, JR.,190f3. W1i.1.x,xxx Roiucizr 1IL'Rl'l'lX', 19013. li'11.v1'm-xx fi,!IIIl742'l'7', CHARLES El.I.1S GQUDIN, 1905, fl,v,w'xlu11f lJ,IINI'Ill'XS ,llaxlrzgrrm THOMAS ERNEST Roinr..xN, 1906. Gncmcsls B.-xur, 1906. SIDNEY LIVLNGSTON Srixia, 1907. Published Monthly during College Year by the Students ofthe University of Pennsylvania. Subscription Price. One Dollar per Year, payable in advance. Manuscripts must be prepaid, and will not be returned unless accompanied by postage Writer's name must be on all MSS., and will not be published unless :mm dfplume is signed. ail matter. Entered at Philadelphia Post Oflice as second-class in 233 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD The Bundy 3ButnI Quark MCCLELLAN GEHRKE CORTRIGHT MASON WARNER BASSETTE THOMAS RAINE REYNOLDS SAUL SHELLY MOWITZ EMERY SNIVELY 234 ,Sa :x as. N Q 'L Q? Z -- II K :S-.pr 'V' I 2 :: ..'l. eg g S54 -.1 Q. SESB -2 'fe Iii' -I ' -.MI .f'.s.v-f'l' ia 02 c N ugwi 9 J ,1 .wir I' I 4? ' 5 ' N- 4-,'Sf .'I-S.. My T' , X f i X , II X 'M S -f H I' ,I ., -, .R If 2.11. A 1 ' 5 F . I3-12? .f 1231+ 'r Q elseif 'vgiipamm .eil if' -1 : ' s 'L 2' 'Z - 3' :L- --fr-E 7 ' I 'T-53. 5? I . Matili, .i5j:Ai.gQS: : L-S mn. '. J Ire m-rua. Q' 455 ,m VOLUME SIX JUNE, 1905 NUMBER EIGHT Damn the torpedoes! Go ahead ! MAURICE BOXVER SAUL, '05 - PERCY VAN DYKE SI-IELLY, '05 - XVILLIAM BOYD. JR., '06 - - MOYER S. FLEISHER, '04 JAMES S. XVARNER, '05 ARNO PAUL MOXVITZ, '05 EDXVIN NORTH MCCLELLAN. '06 JOHN BIARSTON, 3d, '05 - - - WENDELL PHILLIPS RAINE, '07 - - E IJITOR-IN-CI-III2If MAN.xc:IxI: EDITQR - - - ART EDITOR FRANK WINTHROP REYNOLDS, P. G. GEORGE M,xcLAUGl-ILIN EMERY, '06 HANS AUGUST GEHRKE. '05 ALFRED DI: FOREST SNIVELY. '05 - - BUSINESS EDITOR ASSISTANT BUSINESS EDITOR EDWIN KEEN CORTRIGHT, '06 - - 2D ASSISTANT BUSINESS EDITOR Address all communications to the PUNCI-I BOWL. University of Pennsylvania Law School Building. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: 75 CENTS PER YEAR g Isx' DIAIL, 90 CENTS, PREPAID. Make all remittances payable to the Business Editor. 235 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD The ask ani: wig Qllluh GILPIN BRADBURY EISENBREY JONES BORTLE 1X4ERRICK GUTHRIE LE BOUTILLIER TAYLOR B.H.LUDLOW GATES BARTLETT FRAZER CRAIGHEAD WEEKS WHEELER C.N.NIARTIN HARRAR SINKLER CONNVAY A.C.G.ALLISON MORICE H.K.MOHR GEYELIN BEACH INGERSOLL Woon MELLON DOUGHERTY MELLOR DOVX'NING OLIVER HALL T.E.ALL1soN COULSTON DEEHAN DAVIS WIENER PAGE CARSON MCMICHAEL MORGAN BEMENT DoNALDsoN GOODIN A.R.LUDLow j'.K.MoHR W.F.MART1N OWEN VVARTHMAN 236 Gffitcrs Presidenr . . CLAYTON FOTTERALL lVlClVllCI-IAEL, '91 C First Vice-Prexidezzt . NIURDOCK KENDRIOK, '93 C, '96 L Second Vive-Presidenf WILLIAM ERNST, Jr., 96 L Treamrer . . J. WARREN COULSTON, Jr., '9o C, '93 L Secretary . . THOMAS BLAINE DONALDSON, '99 C Business flffanagez . HOWARD KAUFMAN lVlOHR, '95 C Stage fDireerar . CHARLES SNYDER lV.lORGAN, Jr., '95 C flflzzsical Director . CHARLES GILPIN, 3d, '99 C The Zgnurh of QUUETIIIUEIIY CLAYTON FOTTERALL NICNIICHAEL THOMAS BLAINE DONALDSON J. WARREN COULSTON, Jr. ROLLIN CANTWELL BORTLE HOWARD KAUFNIAN MOHR ALLEN RODNEY LUDLOW CHARLES SNYDER NIORGAN, Jr. HUBLEY RABORO OWEN CHARLES GILPIN, 3d SAMUEL BRADBURY, 3d Glnhergrahuute 5-Members T. Ellwood Allison, '07 L Haslett Gardiner Hall, '05 C Ransford Mix Beach, '05 C Emlen T. Hare, '06 C Russell Bement, '06 C Edward Ingersoll, '06 C Rollin Cantwell Bortle, '05 C Isaac Hampshur Jones, '06 M Samuel Bradbury, 3d, '05 M Edward Howell Le Boutillier, '07 C Joseph Carson, '05 C Alden Rodney Ludlow, '06 C Adam Southern Conway, '06 C Louis Aloysius Keegan Mellon,'05 L Magruder Craighead, '05 C Hubley Raborg Owen, '05 M Charles Leon Downing, '07 L Joseph French Page, '06 C Henry Rawle Geyelin, '06 C George Morris Piersol, '05 M Charles Ellis Goodin, '05 C Wharton Sinkler, jr., '06 C Malcolm Canmore Guthrie, '07 M Harry Conner Weeks, '05 C Robert Leaming Wood, '07 C 237 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD 05132 Rbilumatbean Qnnietp STIFLER J. SNYDER HARBESON HUGGINS MCCARTNEY MARTIN SNIVELY LEYMEL DICKSON BUDD FoUsT WALTON GRAY PAUL F. SNYDER DE VICTOR Smclc CHILD CHADWICK CRAWFORD SWARTLEY 238 ww -rt-21-2-:I awwwwwmfmwmmwwta awwww9 W ww .ws nmnmu fn' Rf'i fwa4 ILONIATIIDAN .,, .s.-.M-..,. V nm-I. .V ...,, ..., .,.-. ,-.. , . ,..,,... .. ' . .,.V. ,, . YAY . .1 fi. . -1-,- 'fel' I-f' .-. f, .. fi.-. 'Q fi. -' ... .1 ' '-.'- --t .tug-.1-.-fair:-f-' '-. F, .3t,:,:-,-,Q ' 1 ' ' '- .f.4 ,- ' J I - 1. ' -1, ' ,:'g-GJ,-1,',' -,A . ' j-E-e1?::'1, -,g 1 , . :S .rear-A -- -- -. If - , . ,-. --AFI! 595,535 If - ,- ,,-' I' , I, ,gf E3-Le' J' -'f' 7 ' 'I .:41' 1 , f 7 il 1-I T '-'GZ A - ,n's:j.1, -La , --f -1- - cg? ' .fy-tv , ,,- ...ff ' - L41 ' QA-T' . ' Q A 1. .- ,rf 4 3 , , I' 3Fw',-L ' :'- 2 -. - .- 52,2 ,fe ,qi .A A , gf, 5: . - ' 7'-Q I. 3 .I l33I'2,I- 15: 5, 0 Q E '- '12 6- -f--.- . . - E . , , E E .-.-. fi- 3 L ,l- A - A ,:1 115: .I M155-izii , ' -, g.. .gl .r 74- ' - , 1 .f-1 ' .-'. L- , - , gn- ,r :, - - I - zaflfg.-A A ', V- . Qi ' lik I ' -- 'kg' - U. . - '.n,,- '-Ls '-3,3 1 ,553 x I 1-Es'-1-A --I ' L-ar' - , . ' :2:g.,r,,:.v.-. . . , 5 V -q.4.1.n.a,- -. ,NV-:',-glry nz 55 3 12 : J ! Z'?!?fI: -' ... ..'...lQ.i....,...'5'P94 -23 i UL:-. . .,.. . ...-L.L..a....i .. - ' '..'- .' Ir wif I- I -:III IIIJ II' li I If -I 'II I' ' I I' ' IMI' I I II'll. Il'I'I I ,IM .Ii 'I E' 4 III,,,v Il, :V .l , I.1l,, .I. I I, I f l, ',,.. W 41 '-9'l'W!'Ff'AW4 N5'l'i 9W '-'f 'N 'N'N'9 ,'J1 'IllIlllllllllllllllll'llllllllliliillilllIllllllliilllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllll lllllllllIllllllilllllrlllilllllllIlIIlllI!ll'!lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilillllllllllll'IllIl.'IllllllIIllIlllllllllll' fWozz'erator First Censor Second Censaz Serretary . Treasurer 'Recorder . Joseph Barnard Walton, '05 Stanley Simpson Swartley, '05 Frederic Anthony Child, '05 Reid Stuart Dickson, '06 William Knight De Victor, '06 Edward Fithian Hitchcock, '06 Frank Macknight Gray, '05 Francis Carr Stifler, '06 Thompson Huff Wilson, '06 Edward Wallace Chadwick, '06 William Homer Walker, '06 George Comly Foust, '06 Francis Macomb Wetherill, '07 Edward Burk Martin, '07 Augustus Walton Shick, '07 John Robinson Huggins, '06 Winfield Wilson Crawford, '06 Qiiffitzrs FREDERIC ANTHONY CHILD, 'O5 . AUOUSTUS WALTON SHICK, '07 EDWARD WALLACE CHADWICK,'O6 . WILLIAM KNIGHT DE VICTOR, 'O6 WINFIELD WILSON CRAWFORD, 'o6 . FRANCIS NIACOMB WETHERILL, 'O7 members Bruce Wallahan Dennis, '07 Zygmunt Stephen Leymel, '07 Martin Hays Bickham, '08 Frank Albert Paul, '08 Frank Worthington Melvin, '08 Francis Herbert Budd, '06 Alfred de Forest Snively, '05 Francis Berry Snyder, '08 James Burnette Holland, '08 Eugene Stock McCartney, '06 Robert Eneas Lamberton, '06 Byron Albert Milner, '05 William Page Harbeson, '06 Alonzo Tushton Allen, '08 Elwood Millard Govan, '06 Charles Hayden Griffiths, '08 Howard Wells Fulweiler, '08 2 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD The Znzlusupbin Surietp MEADOWCROFT ASNIS BARKER WATKINS DOLBY S1NGLEToN VVILENSKI GEISEKE M.H.JACOBS ALBRECHT WEIGLE HELTON HARRY ATKINSON WEINSTEIN WATSON M. W. JACOBS FAUGHT Ivrss BANDMAN MASON 240 5 I h -5 .5 , V wg- I U' ' N Q.L:g5iJ'i'iii:g'-.'f21.2 l5f5'i , , I 'Tm fi ,M XM! 5,17 f : W'-Jf5Q'-1YT':- 1.1-,:J'ff.1' 5, .12 , ' 'A 'ff' ' Y., ,Q ,ff '1-1-5-fL.55L-'nllegff E 1 614- 1.22.1-. M ak: 1 i S 2 7 'TJ If-E V aeff. - . -Q'-Eff f A-.Q' fri- ,f E -' ft' i + W l7l li'0'5e ?fTF 5.9 if FK- Q dawg' 5.1.1 .ae ,f'? '2fv Q, 1752-may .1 5 it if + J ' l SAFE fgigfiimga fam' ,f R ' EVE 5N '.F 'ii 5:42, ,gf 'ii Nl, I -l f E ig i Fl'lfl'l'ff.15'?,'-7,,.h be M- ,ff SW -f 7 . AWA-X ..12'f1fxff'1,f5rg2f' V. AW .4 ,7 . is .aa - it ' ' W 1 1.1.g'J5f'T. -11-3 3'5'V'iffiiiiE 2 ,1 - ' f -5 Y fixgfagvqv YEQQ - w?Yj.LL vcff g:fiL.rww1 Vflvf Qbffifbrs Prmdwzf . . HERBERT E. IVES, '05 C Vive-Prexidmzr ALBERT S. FAUGI-IT, '06 L Rcrording S6'C7 I'fHI'-1' Corrzavpanzlifzg Serra' Trmszzr er C. H. Albrecht, '05 C C. E. Asnis, '07 L S. Z. Atkinson, '07 L C. G. Bandman, '07 C J. H. Barker, '08 C W. W. Blancke, '05 C A. R. Coleman, '06 C A. S. Faught, '06 L NI. T. Fleisher, '07 C A. A. Gieseke, P.G. Benj. Harry, '06 L Harry Hartley, '07 C R. A. Helton, '08 C . CHESTER G. BANDMANQO7 C rm-Uv JOHN ALDEN MASON, '07 C . M. VVILLIAM JACOBS, Jr.,'o7 C 5-Ele1niJerS Edwin Hopkins, '06 C H. E. Ives, '05 C lVI. H. Jacobs, '05 C M. W. Jacobs, '07 C E. E. Johnson, '07 C P. H. Killiam, '08 C Otto Kraus, Jr., '06 C G. C. Ladner, '06 L L. S. Latimer, '05 C J. A. Mason, '07 C J. S. Miller, '06 C L. J. F. Moore, '07 C W. R. Murphy, '06 C C. F. Raben-old, '05 C W. P. Raine, '07 C Burr Singleton, '06 L J. D. Stern, '06 C W. W. Watkin, '07 C W. S. Watson, '06 C H. S. Weigle, '08 M J. O. Weinstein, '06 L H. E. Weir, '05 C S. L. Wellhouse,'05 C M. H. Wilensky,'08 C K. Williams, '07 C H. E. Wanner, '07 C L. B. Way, '08 C 241 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD The Qrnbitsntural Snnietp Gehrke A.T. Smith Willing Hare Ellett Bein Bogett Emmett Samans Ring McDowell Cullet Sullivant Boucherle Wright Klinges Makepeace Howells Hopkins Waldner Hutchinson Haupt Boyd Rabenold Reynolds Warner Hobbs Whiteside 242 I I U 'S 'I X u Il u a E: . Q ! : -- 'ff inlhlnl J lil- v Irwin' viii: r I' uv In nr ugy fllllhfllll uv 1 n Us I 0 ll! li ll IJ .ww K HQ gg' mol-I ITB I- Ooqua-TY ,WX ,ft ,. .5 l..llJl!!.4!!-.I-lllll! Jllfl'-I Z- ' ' F'!JlllT'!l .!!!!!!Lll E l .5 3-ig-I. ' raiggigi H ' 1. 'ff ' .1 F- :E I ....,.. .E K 1 A v Y- ' ' , rj X ' ifrgyfl' 1 +f-Wilt - , , fif-?w J 1 T! ' B lf: qfg'-1? lf!:Y11 :.31f?. - - ' 'w'- 755.12 . If ' ' n at 1-.x:ii.1:--I f,q,H1:Q,u,,.s I ,lf I. ,I 'N nga- ,M J ' .55 5 A-4' 0' 1 4- A -. 4I -' . -I f fx ' 12'-fr-f' '-S-tr A ,I tl gi,-rip f:I37e:fL - 'QI 1 - re A 5, f 7 I. I-La. .. I A A gps.. a...g:a5:A5::.g:.fR1x F -vi 2:gf:g,!.1i1seAfIv::,g. .. '-2' -Evsrfiez-22i.fis5' my ' - -?1'is: ': f2r. .-15 -rf,-:Di Irizviiz-2:-2me-' A -A . ,I F'-3 -bf 'G::2f-:fzzf2- E I1IsIm.rI.l1:lm.lunominima- 5 w.,,4,FrmnIInInIInIIe1.In-In,rnIImIuI.n.Ii fngm ' As .. , N-A Q' ei. ! WQ15 H1- 5 E ' E ' e I l 5 'f President . Vice-Presidezzi . Secretary . Treasurer . CfM.!'l Qffiters . CHARLES E. HAUPT, Jr., '05 CHARLES M. HUTCHISON, '05 . WILLIAAII BOYD, Jr., '06 . FRANK B. WALDNER, '05 Qixctutibe Qlnnunittze VVILLIAM BOYD, Jr., '06 CHARLES E. HAUPT, jr., '05 JOHN E. HOPKINS, '06 CHARLES M. HUTCHISON, '05 HARRISON B. TRAVER, '05 FRANK B. XVALDNER, '05 5-Flenlhership-Zbollnrnry THE CORPS OF INSTRUCTION OF THE SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE THE ALUMNI OF THE SOCIETY Duffield Ashmead, lr., '06 Arthur Gustave Bein, '05 Cornelius Van Reypen Bogert, '05 Paul Boucherle, '06 William Boyd, Jr., '06 Aaron Andrew Culler, '06 Thomas Harlan Ellett, '06 Charles Louis Emmart, '05 George Corner Fenhagen, '05 Hans August Gehrke, '05 Robert Eads Griflith, '05 Emlen Spencer Hare, '06 Charles Elvin Haupt, Jr., '05 Raymond Mason Hobbs, '06 John Edwin Hopkins, '06 Carl Eugene Howell, '05 Hleinhsrsbip-Qrtihs Charles Nlilton Hutchison, '05 John Peter Klinges, lr., '06 Stanley lVIakepeaCe, '05 .lohn Andrew Myers, '06 Charles Folk Rabenold, '05 Frank Winthrop Reynolds, '05 Jonathan Ring, '05 John Wilson Semmens, '05 Arthur Thomas Smith, '06 Andrew Denny Rodgers Sullivant, Harrison Baxter Traver, '05 Frank B. Waldner, '05 James Smyth Warner, '04 George Morris Whiteside, 2d, '05 Charles Willing, '06 Marcellus Eugene Wright, '05 243 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD 1115132 Qiihil nginmzring bunistp VAN ScoYOc:,Sec. DUKE GEORGE BAY BRUNER YOUNG PERRY MONAGHAN STARR SMITH, A. T. BRIGHT DOERING PEESO CADWALLADER GRIEST MCCONNELL LANG WOLF JONES MORGAN WILDS THOMPSON SMITH, R. P. WILSON VAUGHAN CAssEL CUMMINGS FEIGEL, Treas. MILLS BOERICKE HOOPES HARDING CAMPBELL ANGSTADT MOCRUDDEN LIZLE HOAG HILTS FERGUSON PROP. MARBURG EASBY LEGGO BAKER, Pres. HENDRIE,V-Pres TROELSCH SMITH HUCH KORONSKI DARLINGTON 244 4 ,- K L MID! LK L I K I KU 'Ill KO! lll ki Ll!! lll LIIU I ll!! I 'I X'.ll'll.llLU'llll.ll7llllJ II I IMI! I 'U Ill ll! lllll UIQ fC-fFYH?-E INEE A ' JIUWJLVAL M. l .ll U. . .. -. . . .. J 15.1 lll. .. . .- .. . .- 1. .L J. .L , A j .5 . Ill an El' J N' JL 1114-f .Ja if K is w l l Gffiters P1-mdmr . . LIND NIASON BAKER, 'O5 Vice-Pg-mdwzr . . JOHN G. HENDRIE, 'O6 Trmmm- ' . . . JOHN H. FEIGEL, 'O6 Recorzifzzg SL'U'F1'lll'j' . HARRY S. VAN Scoyoc, '07 Corrr'sp0r1di11g Sl'U'f'f!II'-1' . HARRY A. HYNIAN, '05 f'HL'lllJ.lElI5 Charles H. Angstadt, '05 Lind M. Baker, '05 Frederick Bay, '05 Louis S. Bruner, '05 Charles H. Cummings, '05 Lewis R. Ferguson, '05 Harold E. Hilts, '05 Jonathan J. Jones, '05 Albert W. Kiefer, '05 Philip G. Lang, Jr., '05 Michael Monaghan, '05 Frederic E. Peeso, '05 VVilliam P. Starr, '05 George H. Stewart, '05 Waldo S. Wilson, '05 Joseph S. Wilds, Jr., '05 Henry E. Birlcinbine, '06 William A. Campbell, '06 Willis L. Essen, '06 ' John H. Feigel, '06 Thomas H. Griest, 'o6 Albert T. Goldbeclc, '06 Frederick Haag, Jr., '06 Chauncey S. Hager, '06 John G. Hendrie, '06 Stephen Koronski, '06 Thomas L. McConnell, '06 Ridgway P. Smith, '06 Charles S. Bilyeu, '07 Dudley S. Bright, '07 Wallace L. Cadwallader, 'O7 George G. Eysenbach, '07 Howard H. George, 'O7 Douglas L. Holm, '07 Francis G. Hoskins, '07 Alwin F. Huch, '07 George P. Jones, '07 Albert R. lVlasters, 'O7 Thomas S. llflartin, '07 Joseph lvl. Kerr, '07 Edward A. Ross, '07 John S. Thompson, '07 Henry W. Troelsch, 'O7 Harry S. Van Scoyoc, 'O7 Charles Z. Vaughan, '07 Robert L. Wood, '07 Albert D. Wolff, Jr., '07 W. T. Wolff, '07 Edwin S. Young, '07 Julius Adler, '07 Andrew K. Armstrong, '08 Charles H. Cox, '08 Henry S. Darlington, '08 Albert Kinney, '08 Albert T. Smith, '08 Joseph J. Vogdes, '08 245 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD 1113132 jmlechaninal Engineering bounty BAILEY DEWHURST WAY WAITE KIMBER NIELDS YORK BIRD S. BOCKIUS BOERS BOSLER BRINER CRAIGHEAD CRAVEN HARTLEX' HENDERSON J. KELLEY MCELHENY MILLER NORRIS, Jr. ORUM OTTINGER SAMANS WHITE WILLIAMS WEIDNER ALBRECI-IT ANDERSON C. BOCKIUS BOOTH BRADFORD BROADBELT DEININGER DOCRER DOUT DRIPPS DULLES ENTWISLE FULWEILER HAMILTON E. KELLEY KNIPE MASON MORRISON N EWBOLD PERKINS REDDING RODMAN ROGERS SNYDER WOLF ZELLEY 246 ',Q,',2M.5EQQQHANl,CAL ' fu ilEQN.G'INE.E.RIN.GA V24 A I ll! -w::: 7? .'S'QNC '-,' 5 1 GXBW QE9fficcrs President . . LEWIS P. BAILEY Vice-Prmdenr . RICHARD M. DEWHURST Secretary-T1'1'f15urz'r . . A. WARREN WAY Qixrcutibe Enmmittcc CLARENCE L. WAITE, '05 JOHN L. NIELDS, '06 E. WALTER KINIBER, '05 JOHN H. Y0RIc, '06 HIEIIIUBFS W. G. Bird, '05 S. A. Boclcius, '05 J. A. Boers, '05 L. C. Bosler, '05 R. F. Briner, '05 M. Craighead, '05 F. F.. Craven, '05 J. H. Hartley, '05 W. Henderson, Ir.,'05 J. Kelley, '05 E. A. Mclilheny, '05 A. L. Miller, '05 W. H. Norris, Jr., '05 S. R. M. Orum, '05 H. Ottinger, '05 W. Samans, '05 F. S. White, '05 A. C. Williams, '05 H. M. Weidner, '05 H. C. Albrecht, '06 H. B. Anderson, '06 C. A. Bockius, '06 G. Booth, '06 I. S. Bradford, '06 O. G. Broadbelt, '06 H. F. Deininger, '06 H. S. Docker, '06 E. P. Dout, '06 H. Dripps, '06 J. B. Dulles, '06 A. L. Entwisle, '06 I. E. Fulweiler, '06 R. D. Hamilton, '06 E. Kelley, '06 A. F. Knipe, '06 L. S. Mason, '06 M. P. Morrison, '06 R. S. Newbolcl, '06 R. P. Perkins, '06 C. S. Redding, '06 T. F.. Rodman, '06 F. H. Rogers, '06 E. R. Snyder, '06 D. D. Wolf, '06 J. A. Zelley, '06 247 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD The umhimzh jllilusinal Iuhs Greenberg Zille De Van VVard H. Howard Sturtcvant T. MoHirt L. KVallace Harker Kuryloski W. Vllallace Hay Campbell Boyer Hartzog Taggart Kershaw Ashmezxd Block Herr Erdman Dennis VVood Hitchcock Tobias Bruner Griffith J.MarshaIl VV.Mof'fert G.MoHitt Payne F. Howard Barnes F. Marshall Ray Simms Richards Gleason Rhodes 248 Q ' xg aiu! P '- 'WVBE-Y I W' A A- I' ll X ' ' I V ivf, 6590 '-J f -'Wt 'f I l I I i I I iS fs .rv .rs ' , ,V' 9 , .:'1 ll 2A bfvC'3h5iafw.69f. , --M igiwsxwt .fo 9 I 4 J -1 , I a n I . vs I I ,Nb I B N-T. . . ., vm-1-...F . Q . v. INGDQLJ Xqi, I. Ill' f I : . A 1- A - -4 A I r+f -ff' f- T I I ll A ' KJ LT D Q i . . Gffitrrs Prcxidenl, H. EDGAR BARNES, '06 .-1,f.rl. ll1Il7I!I.Lfl'I',.JOSIAH RICHARDS, '05 Alazzzzgmy FRANK VV. HOWARD, '05 .A1.I-rar. Mgr., F. VVARREN MARSHALL, '05 Glen ialllil Leader, ROBERT LEE PAYNE, Jr., '05 .e1.v.fi.flaz11 Lrndrr, GEORGE MOFFITT, '06 FIRST TENOR SECOND TEXOR FIRST BASS SECOND BASS S. B. Gleason, '06 F. S. Condit, '07 R. B. Tobias, '06 S. L. Kuryloski, '06 F. VV. Herr, '05 U. S. Zille, '05 W'illiam B.XX'Z1l'L.l,,O7 F. VV. Marshall, '05 C. S. Gleason, P.G. Geo. Molrhtt, '06 H. J. Hartzog, '07 C. M. Sturtevant, '07 G. H. VVo0d, '05 L. G. XVaIlace, '07 R. P. De Van, '07 H. J. Howard, '07 T. R. Morhtt, '06 E. F. Hitchcock, '06 VV. R. J. WallaCe,'07 R. L. Payne, jr., '05 F. NV. Howard, '05 H. Edgar Barnes, '06 5-Elanhuliu QTJIIIII Leader, HARRY CLIFFORD RAY, '05 FIRST MANDOLINS SECOND MANDOLINS MANDOLA GUITARS W. N. Moffett, '05 L. S. Bruner, '05 J. F. Marshall, '07 G. C. Rhodes, 707 W. B. Greenberg,'06 H. P. Erdman, '07 VIOLIN L. VV. Arny, '08 P. H. Senior, '05 B. W. Dennis, '07 L. M. Havy 206 D. K. Campbell, '05 D. Ashmead. '06 W. R. J. W3ll3CC,'O7 FLLTE A. H. Nordyke, '06 W. H. Kershaw, '08 R. E. GrIl'hth, '05 J Richards ,OS H. C. Ray, '05 ' ' 'CELLOS D. P. Taggart, '05 ' H. H. Block, '07 ZBanju Cllluh Leader, WALTER STOCKMAN SIMMS BANJEAURINES G. H. Boyer, '07 N. W. Harker, '08 Dr. H. K. Hickey BANJOS W. S. Simms Paul Eno BASS BANJO L. S. Bruner, '05 GUITARS G. C. Rhodes, '06 D. K. Campbell, '05 A. H. Nordyke, '06 L. W. Amy, '08 FIRST MANDOLIN W. N. Moffett, '05 SECOND MANDOLIN W. B. Greenberg, '06 2 49 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD It Qlimlz jfranngais' DoNDo STINE SAJoUs HAWLEY FLEISHER NIBECKER OLIENSIS 250 LE cr:12cLE r12ANcA1s Lf- '5. Gffircrs President . HASLETT GARDINER HALL, 'o5 Vire-President . . EDWARD INGERSOLL, '06 Secretary-Treasurffr EDWARD HooPER, 'o6 Correrpondirrg Serretary JOHN BAKER CARSON, '06 Bzzsirzfss jllllllllgff . RANSFORD MIX BEACH, '05 5-Elcmhrrs John Lisle, '05 Edward Earle Johnson, '05 Gliver H. Perry Pepper, '05 Frederick Warren lVlarshall, '05 De Forest Porter Willard, '05 6 Alexander Coxe Williams, '05 Spencer Kennard Mulford, Ir., '05 Charles Ellis Goodin, '05 John Herr lVIusser, Jr., '05 Louis Theodore de Medici Sajous,'06 Sidney Livingston Stine, '07 Samuel Wanamaker Fales, '05 Henry Rawle Geyelin, '06 George McCulloh, '06 Henry Lewis Appleton, '06 Newbold Drayton, '06 Charles Willing, '08 Samuel Davis Hawley, '07 Thomas Eder Simpers, '08 Benjamin La Bree, Jr., '08 Robert Ronald Mackay, '08 Henry Ralph Ringe, '07 Karl Nibecker, '07 Robert Wilmer Welsh, '08 Paul Freeman, '05 lylagruder Craighead, '05 Robert Leaming Wood, '07 George Herbert Walsh, Ir., '05 James Sydney Bradford, '07 Laurence Merrill Willson, '05 Frank Wilson Howard, '05 Stanley Fenimore Cooper, '06 Donald lVIacfarlan, '07 Hensel Eckman, '08 Charles Albert Bockius, '05 Henry Martyn Lewis, Jr., '07 Peter McCall Keating, '08 Dufheld Ashmead, Jr., '06 Charles Madison Riley, '06 Herbert Eugene Ives, '05 Jacob Loeb Langsdorf, '05 Russell Bement, '06 Roy James Gardiner, '07 Bernard F. Gimbel, '07 Walter Lowery Ziegler, '07 251 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Beutsnber Herein BLASS Jfxcoss WUNDERLE CoRsoN CLAYTON PAUL MAETZ MATTHAY BLANCKE' ROSENBERG DR.WEssELHoE1-'r VAN HAAGEN HESSLER MOWITZ SPAETH DAVIS 252 W H DEUTSCHEIQ VEREIN '7 3 Q35 P7'F,Vi1!Fllf Virc'-Prravizlezzt Sf'6rff1l1'-1' . y'l'FKISIl rm' . Pre.Yfflz?n1' Vice-Prz'5f11'r'1zt Secretary . Treasurer . M. W. Easton, Ph.D. H. Gibbons, A.M. Rev. H. V. Hilprecht, Ph.D., lvl. Jastrow, Jr., Pb.D. lVI. D. Learned, Ph.D. H. A. Rennert, Pb.D. J. C. Rolfe, Ph.D. Qbffircrss iimit Ez-rm S' nh E. A. WELDEN L. B. HESSLER W. K. VAN HAAGEN J. A. BECK Grrni W. K. VAN HAAGEN S. L. ROSENBERG A. VVISCI-IAN J. A. BECK itponornrp Rlrmbcrs ' D.D.,LL.D. F. E. Schelling, Pb.D., Litt.D. D. B. Scbumway, Pli.D. I. J. Scliwatt, Ph.D. Rev. A. Spaerh, D.D. J. D- Spaeth, Ph.D. E. C. Wesselhczeft, A.lVl. Rev. F. Wischan gmsnihers C. H. Albrecht, '05 C H. E. Ives, '05 C C. G. Bandman, '07 C J. W. Lippincott, '08 C J. H. Barker, '08 C C. B. lvlaits, '07 C J. A. Beck, P.G. C. W. llfleadowcroft, Jr., '05 C J. Bernstein, '06 C A. P. Mowitz, '05 L W. W. Blanclce, '05 C W. R. lVIurphy, '06 C C. A. Blass, '07 C H. Octinger, 05 C C. G. Brumbaugh, '07 M F. A. Paul, '08 C A. J. Clayton, '08 C R. H. Riethmiiller, P.G. L. Corson, P.G. C. W. Rodman, 'O8 C H. B. Davis, '08 C S. L. Rosenberg, '06 C B. W. Dennis, '07 C A. de F. Snively, '05 C W. J. Ellis, P.G. W. L. C. Spaeth, '07 M E. M. Fogel, A.B. W. K. Van Haagen, '05 C J. J. Gartland, 2d, '07 C C. C. Voelker, '05 D A. A. Gieseke, P.G. E. A. Welden, P.G. R. A. Helton, '08 C A. Wischan, '07 C L. B. Hessler, '05 C F. W. Wunderle, '05 C X 253 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD The iiauustun Qllluh Qffiners anh Qlummittmzs SAUL LAIRD TOWNSEND HENDRIE GREENFIELD HTLDEBRAND ASHPLANT Nomus -CAMPBELL GREEN MUSSER EVANS DARRISON KELLEY SCI-ILEITER BARRETT CLIME DR. SMITH TAYLOR WEISSENELUH WADDINGTON JONES 254 sq 2 X 411 'wvifv an-gfv 'i N' K Ck 4? EN N f XYIIYPN AM W5 5153? ,. exe ' ?gi+?QLLi.i - ' I if f. T fx ' - I 'iv I ' . EIOUET N rm 1 QM ff GR L 7 Q QQ ' Presidenl . Vice-President Refordfng Secretary Secretary- Trmszzrer DR. E. F. SMITH A. P. CLIME L. HOWARD-SMITH, '05 C W. H. NORRIS, '05 C T. P. MCCUTCHEON, Phil. J. H. HILDEBRAND, Phil. D. L. EVANS, '05 L J. A. BECK, '05 C J. G. HENDRIE, '06 C G. M. ELLIS, Phil. H. G. BELL, Phil. W. H. MUSSER, '05 L M. TOWNSEND, Jr., '06 L R. L. DARRISON, '07 C C. N. LAIRD, Phil. E. GREENE, '05 L CLUB J-N.5zi-nrnens 'op Q'9fficcrs . H. B. TAYLOR, '05 C . E. C. WADDINOTON, '04 C, '07 L . J. E. WEISSENELUI-I, '06 C A. P. CLINE Zbuuzc Gliummittnc M. B. SAUL, '05 L E. F. CORSON, '06 M J. H. JONES, '06 M L. BARRETT, '05 D D E 0 . L. CAMPBELL, '05 D . S. DUEBLER, '05 V . NELSON, '05 V jlilelnhersbip Cinmmittez I. M. GRISCOM, '06 M B. COLE, '07 M P. R. ASHPLANT, '05 D W. N. MOFFETT, '05 D G. W. GREENFIELD, '06 V J. REISHEL '06 V library Qllolnmittze H. SCHLEITER, '05 M E. B. COWLISHAW, '05 D T. KELLEY, '06 V 255 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD The Qhning Clllijeminal Snnietp WARNER BERGHAUSEN GILLAN DAVIS VAN HAAGEN GRAB WILLIAMS BELL INGLE WYNKOOP STOUDT HOFFMAN MCSORLEY FELDSTEIN BACON RHOADES MULLER DALTON EVANS DAVIS CONWELI, CARLITZ CHANCE COYNE GOLDBAUM WISE CHAPMAN VVHERRY BEEKLEY SHOEMAKER OGLESBY HICKS KOENIG MCCAUGI-IEY MCCLURE MOENCI-I PLUMMER AIKEN HELLER ASTLEY 256 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD 015132 Clitning Cibemiral Society QDffi:er5 P7'l'.ViIll'l1l' . . . S. W. QGLESBY, '05 Virr-Pzwfzlnzi . R. VV. DAVIS, '06 Sz'cr1'fzIry-Trmslzrzz' . K. VVILLIANIS, '07 iflmnbers A. Berghausen, '05 J. S. Carlirz, 'o5 C. M. Gillan, '05 J. H. Goodwin, '05 A. L. lvliller, '05 W. H. Nloench, '05 S. W. Oglesby, '05 I. M. Weiss, '05 F. V. Wunderle, '05 B. T. Arnold, '06 A. G. Blakely, '06 E. G. Brownlee, '06 E. NI. Chance, '06 R. B. Chillas, '06 E. L. Conwell, '06 S. W. Culp, '06 D. Darling, '06 R. W. Davis, '06 G. A. Dieterle, '06 L. Feldstein, '06 H. S. Harris, '06 J. S. Hepburn, '06 J. F. G. Hicks, '06 T. E. Huff, '06 D. E. Jenkins, '06 W. M. Johnson, '06 V. L. Logo, '06 H. S. Lukens, '06 L. M. G. Lupton, '06 F. B. Lysle, '06 H. C. Mayer, '06 W. J. McCaughey, '06 L. B. McSorley, '06 H. P. Protheroe, '06 B. J. Salomon, '06 G. H. Sherwood, '06 NI. O. Stafford, '06 I. S. Sroudt, '06 S. B. Terry, '06 R. Thayer, '06 F. H. Tunnell, '06 E. T. Wherry, '06 J. R. Bell, '07 A. L. Broadbent, '07 R. H. Chapman, '07 J. K. Coyne, '07 J. F. Dalton, '07 I. R. Davis, '07 H. S. Delany, '07 W. H. Doering, '07 C. P. Fisk, '07 M. T. Fleisher, '07 R. O. Godfrey, '07 J. S. Goldbaum, '07 M. D. Hepburn, '07 H. B. Hodge, '07 L. Hoffman, '07 lvl. J. Ingle, '07 W. A. Koenig, '07 R. W. Koons, '07 A. P. lvliller, '07 J. H. lvluller, '07 G. W. Plummer, '07 R. J. Shoemaker, '07 W. T. Van Horn, '07 H. E. Waniier, '07 K. Williams, '07 F. Wynkoop, '07 R. J. Astley, '08 A. T. Baldwin, '08 H. lVl. Barr, '08 W. C. Beekley, '08 E. E. Eakens, '08 J. C. Evans, '08 H. W. Fairlarnb, '08 E. G. Grab, '08 H. Heller, '08 E. M. Keely, '08 E. Klauber, '08 C. A. Laise, '08 L. F. Levy, '08 J. C. lVIcCaffrey, '08 lvl. S. McClure, '08 C. L. Peirson, '08 J. E. Rhodes, '08 E. F. Rumig, '08 L. NI. Taylor, '08 257 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD iguarh ui Eurmiturp Bepresentatihes - 5 'W DE LONE WALDNER RUPP LAUFEER WEALER NVENRICK HILL RABENOLD SMYSER FAHY CORTRIGHT MCMULLEN MILLER BRINER STAIR 258 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Euan: uf Eurmitnrp Bepresentatihes 0Dffirc1'S Prwidvzlf . Via'-P1'1'.vifff11f . J. S. lV.lClVlULLEN . A. M. SMYSER E. P. STAIR jflcnibrrs Sz'rrrf11z11' D. Rupp, 3d . McKean E. W. Hill . Baldwin VV. L. Cariss Class of '87 C. A. Lauffer . . Foerderer J. 0. Wallace . Leidy A. H. O'Neal . . Brooks C. F. Rabenold . . Craig F. Waldner . . Baird R. F. Briner . . Fitler G. C. Fahy . Nlemorial Tower S. L. Wellhouse L. S. De Lone . E. K. Cortriglit T. H. Nleaker . E. Philip Stair . F. B. E. lvliller . lVI. C. Katzenstein J. A. VVenrick . A. NI. Smyser . J. S. llflcllflullen . L. E. Perry . . House P Provost Smith . Hopkinson . Carrutli N. Y. Alumni . House S . E. F. Smith . Bodine . Morris . Lippincott Franklin 2 AUTOMOBILE CLUB STUDENTS, GUIDE ASSOCIATION i I Zmraivrnitirn Arrangrh in Ihr nrhvr nf tlgrir P5Ie1hli5h111P11t at the Tlniuvrsiig nf IJP11n5glus1niz1 1511i 162121 'Kappa Hratvrnitg 3321121 Ghapter 1 nf lgennagluania Founded at ilze College of Williarn and Mary, 1776 CHARLES CUSTIS HARRISON, A.M., LL.D., Prawn EDGAR FAHS SMITH, Ph.D., Sc.D., LL.D., Vife-P1-Wm Uruntrrs SAMUEL DICKSON, A.M. JOHN BARNARD GEST, A,M. S. WEIR MITCHELL, M.D., LL.D. JOSEPH GEORGE ROSENGARTEN, A.M., LL.D WALTER GEORGE SMITH, A.M. 0DHirEr5 GEORGE TUCKER BISPHAM, A.M. THOMAS DENIS BOLGER, B.S. MARTIN GROVE BRUMBAUGH, Ph.D., LL.D. EDWARD POTTS CHEYNEY, A.M. HUGH ARCHIBALD CLARKE, Mus. Doc. EDWARD ZIEGLER DAVIS, Ph.D. BURTON SCOTT EASTON, Ph.D. GEORGE EGBERT FISHER, Ph,D. HON. JOHN I. CLARK HARE, LL.D. JOEL HENRY HILDEBRAND, B.S. ARTHUR CHARLES HOWLAND, Ph.D. SOLOMON HUEBNER, M.S. MORRIS JASTROYV, Jr., Ph.D. HORACE JAYNE, M.D., Ph.D. JONATHAN JONES, A.B. ROLAND GRUBB KENT, A.M., Ph.D. WILLIAM ALEXANDER LAMBERTON, A. M ., MARION DEXTER LEARNED, Ph.D. Lirr.D. 1ql!hPI'QI.'i1hlIE1TP5 19115 JAMES HAROLD AUSTIN WILTON WALLACE BLANCKE DANIEL ROBERTS HARPER, 3d MERKEL HENRY JACOBS mms WILLIAM PAGE HARBESON CARL SINA WILLIANI MCCLELLAN, B.S. WALTON BROOKS MCDANIEL, A.M., Ph.D. CHARLES LOUIS NICKEEHAN, A.B., LL.B. JOHN BACH NICMASTER, A.M., Linr.D. EDWARD SHERWOOD MEADE, Ph.D. WILLIAM ROMAINE NEWBOLD, Ph.D. THOMAS NOLAN, M.S., A.M. JOSIAH HARMAR PENNIMAN, Ph.D. GEORGE WHARTON PEPPER, A.M., LL.B. ARTHUR HOBSON QUINN, Ph.D. HORACE CLARK RICHARDS, Ph.D. OWEN JOSEPHUS ROBERTS, A.B., LL.B. JOHN CAREW ROLFE, A.M., Ph.D. FELIX E. SCHELLING, A.M., Ph.D. JAMES TYSON, M.D. EDWARD H. WALDO, A.B., M.E. THOMPSON SEISER WESTCOTT, A.M., M.D LIGHTNER VVITMER, Ph.D. HERBERT EUGENE IVES ROBERT THOMPSON MCCRACKEN STANLEY SIMPSON SWARTLEY JOSEPH BARNARD YVALTON WILLIAM ROBERT MURPHY ZELLNER tj. 'lr 'ir uf:-nr EEE H fLA I 'ggi-fp MQ! T' W I 1 , X TTWQTJ' A Eff .0m:4nw Uhr Svnrivtg nf thx? Sigma Xi liiniurraitg nf iarnnzgllmnia Glhapier ALEXANDER C. ABBOTT, M.D. HENRY RIHL ALBURGER, M.D. GEORGE F. BARKER, M.D., Sc.D., LL.D. DAVID HENDRICKS BERGEY, A.M., M.D PAUL HAROLD BIKLE, A.B., M.D. AMOS P. BROWN, Ph.D. PHILIP P. CALVERT', Ph.D. EDWIN G. CONKLIN, Ph.D. EDWIN S. CRAWLEY, Ph.D. CHARLES L. DOOLIT'l'LE, C.E., Sc.D. ERICK DOOLITTLE, C.E. R. S. DORSETT, M.D. WILLIAM EASBY, jr., B.S., C.E. BURTON SCOTT EASTON, Ph.D. HENRY E. EHLERS, B.S. FREDERICK EHRENFELD, Ph.D. HENRY B. EVANS, Ph.D. GEORGE E. FISHER, A.M., Ph.D. HENRY GEBHART, B.S. NATHANIEL GILDERSLEEVE, M.D. OLIVER E. GLENN, A.B., A.M. ARTHUR W. GOODSPEED. Ph.D. ROBERT L, GRAY, M.D. ROY D. HALL, B.S., M.S. GEORGE H. HALLETT, Ph.D. JOHN W. HARSHBERGER, Ph.D. JOSEPH H, HART, Ph.D. C. J. HATFIELD, M.D. JOEL H. HILDEBRAND, B.S. THOMAS HOX'ENDEN, B.S. HOVVARD C. IVES, C.E. FREDERICK H. KLAER, M.D. WARREN P. LAIRD GEORGE PAUL LA ROQUE, M.D. WILLIAM THOMAS LEGGO, B.S. DANIEL JOSEPH MCCARTHY, M.D. WILLIAM MCCLELLAN, Ph.D. THOMAS P. MCCUTCHEON, A.B. JOHN M. MACFARLANE, SC.D. EDGAR MARBURG, C.E. JOHN MARSHALL, M.D. NAT. Sc.D., LL.D JOHN FRANKLIN MEYER, Ph.D. J. PERCY MOORE, Ph.D. LEVVIS IRVING NEIKIRK, M.S. THOMAS NOLAN, M.S., Ph.B. C. F. GSBORNE LEONARD PEARSON, B.S., V.M.D. EVERETT FRANKLIN PHILLIPS, Ph.D. GEORGE A. PIERSOL, M.D. GEORGE MORRIS PIERSOL, B.S. HORACE C. RICHARDS, Ph.D. FREDERICK H. SAEFORD, Ph.D. ISAAC J. SCHVVATT, Ph.D. OVVEN LOUIS SHINN, Ph.D. EDGAR A. SINGER, Ph.D. BURNETT SMITH, B.S. EDGAR F. SMITH, Ph.D., Sc.D., LL.D. HENRY W. SPANGLER, M.S. J. VERNE STANFORD, B.S., M.E. GEORGE WILLIAM STIMSON, M.D. VVALTER T. TAGGART, Ph.D. CHARLES TRAVIS, B.S. E. B. TXNVITAIIEYER, M.S., Ph.D. LIGHTNER WHITMER, Ph.D. ALLEN J. SMITH, M.D. HERBERT S, JENNINGS, Ph.D. WERNER NISBET, M.D. CLARENCE WILLIAM BALKE, A.B. PIAROLD CHARLES BARKER, B.S. ROBERT HARBISON HOUGH, M.A. JESSE FRANCIS IVICCLENDON, M.S. RALPH OGDEN SMITH, A.M. JAMES HAROLD AUSTIN JOHN AUGUSTUS BOERS JOSEPH HUGH GOODWIN DANIEL ROBERTS HARPER, 3d CHARLES ELVIN HAUPT CARL EUGENE HOWELL HERBERT EUGENE IVES MERKEL HENRY JACOBS JONATHAN JONES HARRY OTTINGER WALTER SAMANS WILLIAM PARVIN STARR WALTER KURT VANHAAGEN JOSEPH BARNARD WALTON JOHN MORRIS VVEISS JOSEPH SMITH WILDS, Jr. HENRY JOHN BARTLE ELDRIDGE LYON ELIASON, A.B. CHARLES HERBERT GERHARD ARTHUR BRUCE GILL, A.B. DON CARLOS GUFFEY, B.S., Ph.B. DAVID KAPP ALEXANDER HAY O'NEAL, A.B. HARRY ABRAHAM SCHATZ HOWARD GUSTAV SCHLEITER, A.B WILLIAM MAGILL SCHULTZ, A.B. km? It vi BDU H' J :V .4 his. - . 'cy -'Y' H .N -1 W, f , ,F Y 4v Jr ICA, Y iifzf 'gf gg? ' , HON. CLEMENT BIDDLE PENROSE, A.B., A.M. JOHN CADWALADER, A.B., A.M. RICHARD DALE BENSON, A.B., A.M. GEORGE QUINTARD HORWITZ, A.B., A.M., LL.B. E. HOLLINGSWORTH SITER, A.B., M.D. WILLIAM ALEXANDER LAMBERTON, A.M., Licr.D. WILLIANI HOBART PORTER JOHN BALDWIN LARGE REGINALD SPEAR ROBERT ANDERSON CABEEN MAGRUDER CRAIGHEAD BRINTON BUCKWALTER ISAAC ANDERSON PENNYPACIQER HAROLD STEELMAN NAYLOR JOHN HENRY DORAN IULIEN BERNARD DUPUY WILLIAM GIBBS PORTER, Jr. CHAUNCEY PELTON IVES PETER MCCALL KEATING ROBERT MORTON LEWIS SHIPPEN LEWIS Uhr EEUU Idhi Hrairrnitg Zim Qlhaptrr Founded 1827 Eslablixhed I849 3453 WOODLAND AVENUE ECKLEY BRINTON COXE, Jr. WILLIAM HENRY FURNESS, 3d M.D. ALEXANDER VAN RENSSELAER, A.M. SERVRO MALLET PREVOST ALBERT PHILIP FRANCINE, A.M., M.D. CHARLES NATHANIEL DAVIS, A.B., M.D. FRANCIS HOPPIN RICHMOND WILLIAM BELL WATKINS, 3d THOMAS COCHRAN DAVIS PEARSON PEARCE ARTHUR DONALDSON SPENCER EDMUND MOORE RHETT JACOB HALDEMAN LONGNECKER GEORGE MORRIS CHESTON JOHN KEATING WILLCOX HARRY BOND WILMER, Jr. FLOYD TILGHMAN EMORY HENRY CLAY GIBSON WILLIAM CORCORAN HILL NATHANIEL RAMSEY PENNYPACKER JOSEPH HUNSICKER COCHRAN V 5. 'QN 5 ck JW' ,A QPT: TM :ECVWSFA 32 aa4 L:1-,Lf Qjflmivfiiifx WHARTON BARRER, A.B., A.M. SAMUEL DICKSON, A.M., LL.B. RANDAL MORGAN, A.B., A.M. WHARTON SINKLER, M.D. WALTER GEORGE SMITH, A.B.,A.M.,LL.B. LOUIS ADOLPHUS DUHRING, M.D. 1Hhi lkrpper Sigma Hratrrnitg Alpha Glhapier Founded 1850 Extablished 1850 3537 LOCUST STREET BARTON COOKE HIRST, M.D. JAMES HARTLEY MERRICK, A.B. RICHARD HICRMAN HARTE, M.D. WILLIAM DRAPER LEWIS, LL.B. CRAWFORD DAWES HENING, A.B. CHARLES LOUIS MCKEEHAN, A.B., LL.B CHARLES ROOT TURNER, D.D.S., M.D. MALCOLM VERNON COATES GEORGE HERBERT WALSH GEORGE PHILLER, Jr. HARRY CUTLER CRAWFORD HUNTINGTON HICKS HARTER WHARTON SINKLER, Jr. HENRY RAWLE GEYELIN MESKELL EWING, Jr. RICHARD FRANCIS WOOD, Jr. WILLIAIVI HEWSON FREDERIC SMYTHE EARNSHAW ROBERT LEAMING WOOD JOSEPH DUNNING WEED, Jr. LOTHROP LEE SAMUEL MORSE FELTON PETERS ARCHIBALD ROGER MONTGOMERY, 2d FRANCIS DOWNING GODLEY EMMETT ROBINSON TATNALL MICHAEL HENRY MARCH EVERETT WENTWORTH HILL JACOB LEINBACK RIESER RUCKMAN LEE RICHARD MONTGOMERY PHILLER CHARLES MONTGOMERY CRAWFORD HAROLD HOLLINGSWORTH MORRIS LINDLEY JOHNSON, Jr. CHARLES CHRISTOPHER MORRIS Drlhn. Phan . 1 .5 -.C . -I- f A I I . I . ,f , . .,., -: F Y - I -5-I-jg' 'xfi .I 3fg,3u,, S.-'E 'k 3 - Sf I- V' 1 1 .-a 'g,y.gp: ,Q I I rf.. X V7 1 fi, Lfaxffzw P EI 51 1'EI PIYUI x.fTIg5'g.....s ww m,QY..x- . .. I-WI, .mpg X , 4-..,,?,,. 4 iii I ,wg if-'ff'-f3'11'-,.,x I --'- I . v ' x:xY'1f iwipz. - -,If gk 4. if .I Y:l,7f--1-:f:.1'lj f: St ill 9- G A ,,,,g,,.I.,. ,, ff I tgma hupivr ik ,f' - 1 . -2.-5. - I. rhgf 1- -5. L+.4,g-I . Founded 1847 Extablixlzed 1850 .gg P115 I 14 my 'QS ' ., Q. -7-1--P mir! +V 4 sk V, 1.- 1:5 -i,. .,, -- . A ,,.I.ff' -f' -' 'iv-'-v---v-1:1-Hvfw -V :V'..,i,:V,-74ml-TV V H---X 'T' -F WM: 3337-39 WALNUT STREET ' h ' CHARLES C. HARRISON, A.M., LL.D. HORACE JAYNE, M.D., Ph.D. ARTHUR E. NEWBOLD, A.B. GEORGE WHARTON PEPPER, LL.B. THOMAS R. NEILSON, M.D. DESAIX BROWN MYERS WILLIAM WELSH HARRISON, Jr. OLIVER HAZARD PERRY PEPPER CHARLES LIPPINCOTT SHEPPARD HARRY LOCKWOOD RITTENHOUSE JOHN HUGH NICQUILLEN CARTER JOHN GRAFIUS CANDOR STANLEY BRIGHT FRANCIS CAREY LEA WILLIAIVI SPENCER SERVICE EDWARD HOPKINSON, Jr. JOSEPH P. TUNIS, M.D. CHARLES C. TOWNSEND, LL.B. J. ALISON SCOTT, M.D. WILLIAM PEPPER, M.D. JOHN M. CRUICE, M.D. JOHN ELLIOT NEWLIN SYDNEY ERRINGTON IVIARTIN JOSEPH BREVITT TOWNSEND, 3d JOSEPH WHARTON LIPPINCOTT RANDAL MORGAN, Jr. HAMILTON DISSTON ALFRED GUSTAVUS BAKER STEEL RICHARD SYDNEY NEWBOLD JOHN DA COSTA NEWBOLD JOHN SHIPLEY DIXON HENRY PAYNE MCINTOSH, Jr. J! W1 gh F' rg sf' :- 3' . . , ,. , ,fy 1 1...- in: xlT'i' 1 ix: ky-f 'S' 7 4.4- : 92523. Evita Elgzi Hratvrniig Eelia Glhapirr Founded 1847 Established 1851 GEORGE TUCKER BISPHAM, A.B., A.M., LL.B. JOHN P. CROZIER GRIFFITH, A.B., M CHARLES STUART WOOD PACKARD CHARLES PREVOST GRAYSON, M.D. ROBERT GRIER LA CONTE, A.B., M.D. SAMUEL FREDERICK HOUSTON, A.B. ALEXANDER COXE WILLIAMS NORRIS WISTAR VAUX ROBERT CABEEN LEA PERCIVAL DRAYTON TAYLOR FRANCIS SIMS WHITE HUBLEY RABORG OWEN JOSEPH CARSON JOHN STEWART RODMAN DEFOREST PORTER WILLARD JOHN SELLERS BARNES FENWICK BEEKMAN MORRISON HARRIS WILLIANI BRYAN HART JOSEPH FRENCH PAGE, 3d RUSSELL THAYER, Jr. EMLEN SPENCER HARE CHARLES WILLING .D. 32 SOUTH zzd STREET FRANCIS HERMAN BOHLEN, LL.B. NORTON DOWNS, M.D. GEORGE STUART PATTERSON, B.S., LL.B CHARLES HARRISON FRAZIER, A.B., M.D CHARLES CAMBLOS NORRIS, M.D. THOMAS NOLAN, B.S., M.S., Ph.B., A.M JOHN FRAZER, B.S. in Ch., A.M. EDWARD INGERSOLL A WILLIAM PEPPER NORRIS JOHN WILLIAIVI TOWNSEND, Jr. JAY DASHIELL WHITHAM LLOYD PRESTON CARPENTER LLOYD PENISTON JONES HARRY KIRK BROWN DAVIS GEORGE MCCULLOH JOHN BAKER CARSON SAMUEL BUTLER NEVVBOLD DRAYTON ROBERT WRIGHT KOONS ALFRED GUILLON HARE EDWARD BIDDLE CLAY BENSON MANN, Jr. JOHN PEMBERTON HOLLINGSWORTH FRANK BAKER HARRIS 1 ul I lui! ,EQ K ' ' i3iE'i iajilliff Founded 1855 I EMORY RICHARD JOHNSON, Ph.D. MILTON B. HARTZELL, M.D. WARREN CORSON GRAHAM ALEXANDER HAY OYNEAL HARRY LUTHER SMITH CARL ANTOINI CHRISTIANI FLOYD CASTERLINE HUGHES MICHAEL JOSEPH MCCRUDDEN JOHN DANSKIN MATTSON HAROLD SALVIN SHERTZ WILLIAM NEWTON MOFFETT FRANCIS FRENCH BURCH ERWIN ROBERT LAMP PAUL FREEMAN PERCY WOODWARD BUZBY MERREL HENRY JACOBS Sigma Glhi Phi ElHhi Olhzxptrr A Eftablished 1875 331 1 WALNUT STREET HENRY WOLF BIKLE, A.M., LL.B. WARD WRIGHT PURSON, B.S. WILLIANI BRADFORD GREENBERG WENDELL PHILLIPS RAINE JOHN EDWIN FULWEILER HENRY RALPH RINGE MICHAEL WILLIA1X'I JACOBS, Jr. HARRY BAYNE NIAGEE JOHN SMALL THOMPSON ROBERT KENDIG REWALT BAYARD CLARENCE DICKINSON LEMMEL EASTBURN POTTS WILLIAM NICDOWELL BIRNEY ALEXANDER FOSTER, Jr. ROBERT BEAKER RYDER JOHN JOSEPH GARTLAND l ' '11 im Cf' . 1 sw-N V rl r JM ! 2 ' Y P , E Z E E- W ' -' F5554 X f A ' 'I ' A wh, V i Lil X c XM., :NND SIGNQGQ 'Nh Dmkd-77u1a Mx 01 ii' -4 ' wks MM www M AERA! k, Jf3 -gigswiigfis SN' 5235 Q we -'+ 'S -2-....., WP' S Sf G-Raman...-ggnbuv E ff Ml ' if. E: el in: +2 r W' I ...J ? V -we 'V-92219 A r --.. g, .Ssisgggfffsf -'- gf- Hf. I ' ' . 'I - -. 1.1 -.f'--aufv-51, 4. f I-:...::si4:5:s.f1SR 1 '?'-V Fw-If ,:,:::.,1:,.,q15::,-' -ga 1,-.:,.1 ree, As-'fwfvis-r:g:1S,:I-3 .,:: .. - .' 5 S- . v: Z52'-1 . '1 -1-,i i:.4' 11:11-.P .Z 'ELK' ' 'R f 3' - -.wig Q Q' I-:ef:'f'-fm - .-mg . S- ,. , .LS Y v. ,..6- up -H -f'-- .. 4, . ., . X .'-'AWA pq 'A. N. -,J V ' A .C-1:.,V . ' :N ,. 51- :EE 'ifD1x 'fSf+SsE'f z- 1,11 -i. 5' NR A -' T53-' swf.. I f : . I ,. , QS -A Q4 1 - . 1 f:v . , X , I M, .. gg.. .. . HH, ' .52-. S T - :.- ' ' -'-7,.3i5'-?I- egg.: 235 T:::1 Iv- wr I ff I fi: is A-'IJ--It I ' -: ' 4 Jie ' Ag: 1. , ., fro m 31 . ' 5 J A, X H' -ff' lp . ,':f:' EAI 2'V ' -f'Ngg5g,Ei.grff.:V- LLRQHA- I 5.,,.,.:.,,,,.,.:p-EL .ippwyl -.Q nl 1' - .. W 5233 J ' 215115, .-5-,gpz-. -. -I '-f--f-IQ..-2,3 . ff- I. -S9T,S: fr H X V fy-f1::55,3552'?QL -'miffx iv-:-: Iz.-SM-, .. . . 4' , - -'--:::1V,,I5 'rS',g:,x+5f:c,.g--,gQgo-:f-::,-.,:-:.-,-.:. -9 A , A - ,-3-:yr ..:,:g,1 ,f:g:y- : - 2 -- , . EDGAR FAHS SMITH, Ph.D., Sc.D. FELIX EMMANUEL SCHELLING, A.M., Ph.D. JOHN MARSHALL, M.D., LL.D. GWILYM GEORGE DAVIS, M.D., M.R.C.S., CEHE-D MARION DEXTER LEARNED, Ph.D. WAKEIVIAN GRIFFIN GRIBBEL HUGH BLACKFAN ELY BROWN FREDERIC WARREN MARSHALL SPENCER KENNARD MULEORD RICHARD MILES DEWHURST SAMUEL BRADEURY, 3d RUSSEL BEMENT JOHN SCOTT CHILDS DUEEIELD ASHMEAD, Jr. CHARLES MADISON RILEY LESTER COMLY BOSLER EDGAR IVIAURICE CORTRIGHT SAMUEL HEEBNER TERRY DONALD MACFARLAN EDWARD HOWELL LEBOUTILLIER CUSHMAN HARTWELL IHIII Kappa Hai ihaivrniig Founded 1852 Eyiablished I877 3639 LOCUST STREET JOSIAH HARMAR PENNIMAN, Ph.D. ALLEN JOHN SMITH, A.M., M.D. FREDERIC EHRENFELD, Ph.D. JOSEPH SAILER, M.D. I HENRY KULMRATH PANCOAST, M.D. JOSEPH HEWES MANN BINNS HOWARD BLACKWOOD LIGGET, Jr GEORGE MCCLELLAND SMITH ALBERT RALPH MASTERS JOHN THEODORE MARSHALL LENTZ EDMUND KLOTZ DOUGLAS MACFARLAN JOHN HOVVARD RAHTER THOMAS GEORGE STOCKHAUSEN CHARLES CHARMING WATT, Jr. JOHN BANCKER GRIBBEL JAMES AUBREY MCCURDY FRANK WILSON HOWARD JAMES CRUICKSHANK WATT JOSEPH PETER IVIACK FRANK EMIL KRIEGER GEORGE ANDREW FOSTER -- - f - - WILLIAIVI RUEUS NICHOLSON, Ph.B., M.D. AU-A f E9 v ruawx, K 12' -' -,A HQIQD5-h :wh 'Mb ,6- Drake. 5512121 flhsta 151 Founded 1839 lihi Glhaptrr Esiablixlzed 1880 3529 LOCUST STREET JOHN GOODRICH CLARK, M.D. ARTHUR HOBSON QUINN, Ph.D. SAMUEL NICCUNE LINDSEY, Ph.D. EDWARD WANLOCH NIUMFORD, Ph.B GEORGE FETTEROLF, M.D. FRANK DAKE DICKSON JAMES SMYTHE WARNER JAMES SLINGLUFF BOYD HARVEY BIRCHARD TAYLOR ROBERT CASWELL CROWELL WILLIAM HOLLINSHEAD LAMB HAROLD DRIPPS JAMES HAROLD VVINPENNY ARTHUR VVILLIAM HOOD ROBE CHARLES ROBERT WEISS ARTHUR NORTON GOODFELLOW VVILLIAM HAZELTON FOLWELL, zd LUCIUS WARREN JOHNSON ROY DONALD BASSETTE ROBERT COOK FOLWELL FREDRICK GERHEARDT SCI-IIPPER BYRON HEAZELTON GOEE GEORGE LOUIS SCHELING RT LAUNITZ LOWE l, V' 3 X f JL y ' s, H, . :X . jf .1 ,.9,m.Qgl x , A .,,,4b,, , !'lIlYIm IIHII 'k ! IN 554 PRESLEY MCCANCE LLOYD WILLIAM FREDERICK MOORE CHARLES ARMAND ELLIOTT C. WILLIS ADAMS JACKSON STEWART LAWRENCE GEORGE REILLEY MOFFITT STANLEY FENIMORE COOPER CHARLES MONTANYE FRANKLIN LESLIE MARSHALL WESTFALL WILLIAM PENN VAIL CHARLES LEON DOWNING WILLIAIVI KNIGHT DE VICTOR FRANZ H. D. WOLF WILLIAM SLATER GRANLEES WALTER CLARE ELLIOTT LOUIS STANISLAUS DE LONE STANLEY QUAY GRADY lihi Gamma Evita ilhaivrniig ' Zfirta Qlhapter Founded 1848 Established 1881 3600 WALNUT STREET JOSEPH MICHAEL DE LONE THOMAS ROBINSON MOEEITT FRANK CRITTENDEN DANIELDS GEORGE HENRY WOODROFFE LEROY LUCIEN SCOTT ALBERT BURD MILLS JOSEPH ZOOK TODD HERBERT BOOTH EDWARD HADDUCK PEPLOW HUNTER WATT SCARLETT HOWARD LEE DANNENHAUER WILLIANI JOSIAH PUSEY LELAND B. MORRIS CHARLES JOSEPH MCMANUS - FRANCIS CURTIS HUBLEY WALTER WHALEN IRVINE STUART MCMULLEN L-T---ggi -J-----SJ-P-My - -f -.YY -. . ALKLTWN, A 'ESE f I id 'N -' '-'-1451: ,JKA 'vw 1 A. V, 7 A i :Amor ff 1 S -w--'-T ,sl .35-E 1'TTI!-EI I Jw' wwf HW VM? D- me hi 55121121 111121221 Hratrrnitg lgrnnzgluania ZPTEI Glhaqaier Founded 1848 Exlablirlzed 1883 , . . . ., . Y S.-sis . .M . ,L -, 'f:, 5 'I ' I - E . 3 K' '55 '5 - . Aiizgfiff . -1: q fn A 75:fQfPfI.f2':'-15-. ,Y,:h.1i:e.5:-13:1.4nL.:i:.,: 'Li - A'::.53w , Li.Zg:eagf if I . NFIB! 3, 3 ' i-:fa n1- U S JIII .5962 A -1 - '- - :In I., IA ' ' A Ig .J-QI., - H .wa-L,g,. .,,. --' I-H 1 vln-4-sexi-EPT, NL,-, '- A''fi'ff-'-1''fi-M2--xiii:'ASQ-,.IfE5ZZf3,,.,...,,. - 11-A----1.1-----:apiLs-.ff' A - -.,AL.,1. wif-6:,iy' -'-' AQ53-:56?1eZS2--12mcA,I-ff,,-A... T -'H .lj -A CHARLES LOWER POTTS, M.D. DANIEL BUSSIER SHUMWAY, Ph.D. 3400 WA LNUT STREET T. VERNE STANDFORD,B.S.,1VI.E. JOEL H. HILDEBRAND, B.S. EDWARD ADAMS SHUMWAY, B.S., M.D. JOHN P. GARDINER, M.D. FRANK ARDARY CRAIG, M.D. FRED H. KLAER, A.B., M.D. FLOYD E. KEENE, M.D. WILLIAIVI GILFILLAN GARDINER CHARLES ELLIS GOODIN LOUIS SHUMANN BRUNER ROLLIN CANTWELL BORTLE WALTER KELLER HARDT JOSIAH RICHARDS CHARLES BROOKS GUCKER RAYMOND MASON HOBES JOHN WILLIAIVI HARDT IVIALCOM IRWIN DAVIS JOHN GIBSON HENDRIE ADAM SOUTHERN CONWAY WILBUR JONES COLLINS GEORGE ANDREAS DIETERLE HENRY LEWIS APPLETON CHARLES ANTHONY MCCAREY RAYMOND WILMER WELSH JOEL HENRY HILDEBRAND 'HASLETT GARDINER HALL JOHN HENRY YORK ROY JAMES GARDINER RAYMOND BLAINE TOBIAS JAMES BEATTY TURNBULL, Jr. SAMUEL DAVIS HAWLEY HAGO HENRY BLOCK SIDNEY LIVINGSTONE STINE CHARLES SMITH BILYEU CARL CHRISTIAN BLOCK T. ELLWOOD ALLISON WILLIAIVI ALFRED SAWYER JOHN BELLEAU DE HAMEL SHUNZO TAKAKI KIHEIJI IWAYA ZACHARY TAYLOR HALL DONALD HENDRIE ,ff Vx,,,, ,,,, ,, ,, din.. ,fgi Xi i s -ft ,Jr- X fx Y , ' -, TKQ Q 1 C555 , o 'A ,E Efffi- I 5' ' E . 0i s,y? ? ' mgwh K Q' fy X i QQ xx X jx H , L V V ' A W TM' Q Founded 186-5 HENRY DRAPER JUMP, M.D. FREDERICK VALENTIN WUNDERLE WILLIA1NfI HENDERSON, Jr. ALBAN WARREN WAY LEWIS PENN BAILEY CLARENCE STANLEY NICELWAIN ALBERTSON FLOYD KNIPE JOHN EDWIN HOPKINS VICTOR FREY ELLWOOD WALTER KIMBER EDWARD REIGLE SNYDER HARRY DICKEY SEWELL SAMUEL ELLIS RICHARD CLAUDE GRIFFITH ROBERT EADS GRIFFITH JOHN HAROLD WAY Alpha Eau Ubmrga Hratrrniig libnnaglnania Eau Glhaptvr Eflablislzed 1884 36 I4 WALNUT STREET MAZYCK PORCHER RAVENEL, M.D. LEWIS SPANN LATIMER CLARENCE HEISS WILLIANISON CLARENCE LAUER WAITE GEORGE MORRIS WHITESIDE GEORGE FLOYD ROSS EDWIN KELLER KLINE FRANK DENTON CROWL RALPH JOHN WAITE FRANK GUINN BAILEY LOUIS WAYNE ARNY ISAAC BAUM CONNOR ROBERT LAWTON BOUSE ALFRED EDWARD SWOYER JOSEPH HOWARD LANGWORTHY HARVEY JAMES HOWARD XJQW4 I xr - , X246 94016, ,,,,k :-'1,f,..:,: :'vu:.n. 'f3e1?7 mE ff' 'E E ' K rt 'ef- : If V' H v 4 HENRY GIBBONS, A.M. HERMAN V. AMES, A.M., Ph.D. WALTON B. MCDANIEL, A.M., Ph.D JARED SPERRY BOGARDUS HENRY CLAY PARKER, Jr. ERNEST LEROY GREEN GEORGE VICTOR JANVIER FRANK HOLT GALEY FORRESTER HOLMES SCOTT FREDRICK SHELTON FOULKROD GEORGE BARY EDWARD GORDEN WILLARD CRIST THOMAS SCOTT MARTIN, 3d WALLACE BROMLEY ROBERT HARRY CATHCART, jr. WILLIAM ELLORY ALLYN Evita lipailnn fraternity Founded 1834 Established 1888 34.3 8 WALNUT STREET EDWARD S. MEAD, Ph.D. BURNETT SMITH, B.S. JOHN HARPER GIRVIN, M.D. EDWIN MICHENER FINLETTER JOHN SPENCER STOKES JAMES HAROLD AUSTIN WISTER MORRIS ELLIOT JOSEPH JOHNSON VOGDES FRANK JOHNSTON LESLIE FRANK MULEORD SAMUEL BABBIT MARTIN EDMUND RUDOLPH TEUBNER, DAVID FULMER KEELY JOSEPH ADDISON ABRAMS BENJAMIN WILLIAM GREER, Jr. GEORGE RALPH MORRIS J snxowr px-m.fr, :I ' ' uf R ,gmt Ms., e X vo.. I A X lx xx 'NPV QP xf'V'j ' X f ,E S. -, ' 'fihhfgf 'Eff' 5 Y 'il I , R Sw. U, 4 ,,,g?,g . ,Was S-5 8 A f 1' I ,,-gh f 'Q' I 1 -If ,,,1HA4- . ' .,: A ,A ,ix , ' X A l w 21 'JK U N 1 Tx P I E A L f MSE yi'-ff RS L'--Ai ght gp u 1 X ,Y Ex-,G pkx 2 0 ff mf., ,HM '. -hi. I :- A X M xlp, N R Ttf'-P QA iii N .I 3 433' 1 1 'ifzgg X wgsegiwag ,R A f cw -1 - f- -rf-Tl -ffffz' I Q If f ' f.-'-- ,A:.'..m.- -I. A ,Aw 'UI' 'I I YS' 'f' f MV: S ,f 'HSN J Y 3, . 332 I j -Pfvq 'J ,gy 4 1' J ,Q M new E Y YI A N. I I I ' ' A A .H 1 1 X 'UR f 5' J 1 IA N -M c33.fjv 1k wg 'S :E It ge' FX gf , R, I ' 33 jf Yi, 1 S A ffl if-F-5 Q ' . .1 NS' I J' U I -'N' ,P+ Q5 Rage 'P-I 'lx-1-...,v4,w.1,I A A ,... .. .- figs - , L 'IL . 'QTEK .,SfCfQ.f.:'f'5Yfj1fIfq .A-j:f3' :7'f.?ZfiQE,ifQQl ' L PH:-J ES'-milf' If 3:2 uk: '- '- M95 ' I swf' JSF? GAF :I m AC V awk: 211551, Hai lipailnn Hratvrniig Eau Qlhapter Fgundgd 1833 Eilllbfiihtd 1891 goo SOUTH 36TH STREET PM RT. REV. OZI WILLIAIVI WHITAKER, D.D. LL.D. RT. REV. ALEXANDER MACKAY-SMITH, D.D., S.T.D. MORTON WILLIAIVI EASTON, A.B., Ph.D. M.D. JOHN PERCY MOORE, Ph.D. THOMAS HARVEY DOUGHERTY THOMAS HENRY POWERS SAILER, Ph.D. CLARENCE GRIFFIN CHILD, Ph.D. ROBERT NELSON WILLSON, Jr., A.B., M.D JOHN WILLIAMS ADAMS, A.B., V.M.D. OWEN JOSEPHUS ROBERTS, A.B., LL.B. STIRLING WALKER MOORHEAD RALPH BERRELL EVANS LUTHER ALBERT GRAY ROBERT THOMPSON MCCRACKEN HENRY PRESTON ERDMAN ROBERT BURNS LAYTON BARTOL REGISTER JOHN HERR MUSSER, Jr. JOHN ARTHUR BROWN JOHN ARMSTRONG SAMUEL BRAY WHETSTONE HERBERT MARSEILLES RAMSEY HARRY CONNER WEEKS JOSEPH BOYD BAKER, gd JAMES BATEMAN DULLES RANSEORD MIX BEACH EUGENE L. BURNS ROBERT GRANT TORREY JOHN WARREN WATSON ISAAC HAMPSHUR JONES ROYAL REYNOLDS JAMES GRAHAM DAMON HENRY GEORGE PEARCE DAVID IVIADISON RAMSEY CHARLES TAYLOR BROWN CHARLES SCHELL CORSON ARTHUR COE MARTIN WILBUR BAIRD TOPPING MORRIS SHALLCROSS PHILLIPS FREDERICK THROCKMORTON THOMAS GEORGE KINGMAN HELBERT CHARLES MARIS KEYSER, Jr. VINCENT MOORE STEVENSON JOSEPH ROSS PILLING SHELDON FROTHINGHAM POTTER HERBERT MARMADUKE TILDEN 'S M. W' rf: f:lMXx , if N. :ff Gm , 'VL U Q' ' Q, f f y. .LN A F 41, 1 vDv:e'irw. FRANK VAN HART SLACK, A.B. ROBERT MCARDLE WILLIAM LAWSON BERST FRANK JONES KILR GEORGE VALENTINIS-DEE GEORGE LORD DE SCHWEINITZ PAUL ALEXANDER RISTON GEORGE CARROL RHOAD JOSEPH PAUL RITENOUR GEORGE WILLIAM MCCLELLAND FRANK MACKNIGHT GRAY ALFRED BAYARD CREWITT CHARLES SUMMERFIELD CARL HERMAN EHLERS Kappa Sigma Alpha-lipsilnn Qlhapivr Founded 1867 Exlablislzed 1892 II3 SOUTH 37TH STREET HENRY EDWARD EHLERS, B.S. KEOWN, B.S. WILLIAM HOMER WALKER LEROY BROWN SCHUTTE EDWARD BUEHLER DELK ALFRED SLOCUM WILLOUGHBY EDWARD SIMMONS SLEDGE THOMAS WATSON IVICCANDLESS GEORGE LATHROP SMITH BYRON ALBERT NIILNER GEORGE WASHINGTON MINK, Jr. ROBERT RONALD MACKAY JAMES FRANKLIN DONNELLY ROY SPRINGER LATIMER ROBERT CHARLES DAVIS ES REDDING ..Z A ' . -' AVE Eudora- P1-inn. ' i .f S wx wsimisg QE Q mu We I Af' S gran K WJ, Aw: ww x Y xi I Sy ll S Nm 5 R513 E.fE5?fsfQgg .J . , I View ,fmair gr 51311131 Y A with - 2 X QxI'43fI21Q,SQ5p?9I23 ,J 1 152161 531 iijlitk X gebii-'Il??ii Q? fx V W- Fourzded 1869 3303 .owe Q-W X 'sf mx l 'f'f'w f: 3:Jf f:f2 . 455 '4,51, ' iff 1. 'Y- v-.' '- -1 '- .. 'SH' E:-.: ,.x-If ,. S 1 - .- 1, 2: f m. 'WSUIHEK - . 1 'E .yxl5,5A ' - . . I QQ f-.1 rx lr . . .A..L.,:Sf -1.-A.. ., -:i x ,v.yA.-,I-1. 1.E,r5 ,., .-AQESQQIEQE-,2f, s1:s-. '- . . 'FXSNQVE ' 1 I. I A 2-::z -If-Aw-I : -efft -. I 0 :N-:L '-E ,Il ,Ts . g- -- -.-T-E-f:.,,. S Jiri! .,-A + I 'gggf-A r.-S H: . . V., M I . NM, 1-Q V VS. ' LN' .ESS . ',, ' , -, f-igeyal ESE-I .. Q- 1.'S ',f: 'S 29 ' 2 LAR? A -. :T -. -I -Vw . - 4 -5e7?E,...:'.51 -, .-EC . -- 0' Y73? .AIAQE 1.3 Irg'-'xii-NE 'IPI I 'I -1 M s. Q .ay I ,-.Vs '5 .fn . -,E I 1? 5 7- .,,', .1 I-Q. We . X, ,Q A a. .. X. ...yi 4,b.w: X hp.. ., ,I+ gg. :Qi . IiIx,R:EcQ,.T:V.S-nz, -ffl '58 li' 31 in Em fr. A liz:-I QW 'f If. if ifgrzig E- yfiz ji-I' -ff, .-.:-.IF ' - I-1 ' fx -vu f 1 ggi ,L Qs, gf if I-rI, .,R'f-'-gi,.'i'5::k ' -:lk L. Nj 99- 5V.Vi.21:1-'-'i5!?Si. -rf W 'im srz, R.. . Q- If ' .1 115 ,K W T' Miva'-y 'N-.,.x ,-.! ' -.,. JOHN EDWARD LEWIS SULLIVAN GERALD PHILLIP GALLAGHER THOMAS SEABROOK ALOYSEUS REILLY JOHN JOSEPH REILLY DANIEL GEORGE COOGAN JOSE PEDRO HORCASETAS CHARLES SHOEMAKER JACK ALFRED E. BULL LI Ilkatnrniig IKIIII Glhapier Exlablixhed 1894 WALNUT STREET EDWARD ALBERT DARBY CHARLES SALADIN GILBERT, Jr. WILLIAM JOHN GOECHLE PEARL ZANE GREY 4 JOHN ERASMUS PETERSON BENTON ELKINS LONGWELL CHARLES HOWARD EARHART ROBERT MURDOCH MARTIN ALFRED CHARLES NICHOLAS PETERSON THOMAS GORSUCH YOUNG SAMUEL SNYDER HERMAN FRANK HENDRICKS HOBSON LESLIE MILLER HAY WILLIAM BULLOCK FLEMING MARK TOWNSEND, Jr. ROBERT LEE PAYNE, Jr. WILLIAM THOMAS ELLIS RENE GRANGER CALVERT BURKE GILL JOHN LENT NIELDS FREDERICK SCOTT CONDIT WILLIAM DEMMOND COATES, Jr. HORACE MANN FETTEROLF DAVID RUPP, gd HARRISON BAXTER TRAVER CLARENCE HOLMES CRILEY FREDERICK WILLIA1X'I HERR WATSON BEATTY LENDERMAN FRANCIS DRINKER PERKINS ik in-an fffaff- 1 s:'1.'1-1v:::a:: I A . '-U JE- I -.-:ae-::tE'5'iE3L' ' fl .pf1gI.- --,A Q: 'dy - ' P I : AT. ...fgfz .fw?:ff-..f- 1 . ., 'f i - Ps 1 els. 5:-' 2- . .....,......4.... -A-. .e.-Req . .E - 'Ev :a?iS :-Tif 315. 'LL 'K 1: - 'Q -fx! 3.22 52. 514 Q21 Q j ix Founded ISQS 1333! , ma r ' ,T ...rw-'A ,sul 3-',. -L25 5? gig 'fa . ,.,. . . - ,. ,L .- -W ' TP w A T, V-M--my ..,..........-.---v,:,., W. OWEN LOUIS SHINN, Ph.D. BURTON SCOTT EASTON, Ph.D. PERCY VAN DYKE SHELLY MAURICE BOWER SAUL FRANK GEESAMAN SAYRE ALFRED DE FOREST SNIVELY JOHN MARSTON 3d EDWIN NORTH MCCLELLAN WALTER BREAM EDMUNDSON JOHN ROBINSON HUGGINS WILLIAM HENRY GEISLER OTTO KRAUS, Jr. Alpha Qlhi llhn Phi Elghi Olhaqnirr Exiablislz ed 1896 204 SOUTH 36TH STREET ISAAC JOACHIN SCHWATT, Ph.D. WILLIAM NICCLELLAN, Ph.D. JOHN SMILIE READ VINCENT BEAN BRECHT VAN COURT CARWITHEN ALFRED B. KISTER EDWARD ALLEN ROSS WALDENIIR ADDISON KOENIG FRANK PALIN SPUANCE FRANK ALLEN WOODHEAD JOHN GARRETT FELTON CHARLES NIOULDER PASCHALL livwhmflzilm Evita Tian Evita Obmvgu Qlhaptrr Founded 1859 Established 1897 3533 LOCUST STREET WALTER STEWART CORNELL, B.S., M.D. THOMAS POTTER MCCUTCHEON, JR., A.B. SAMUEL MCCLARY, III., B.S., M.D. GEORGE NIORRIS PIERSOL NELSON WILSON JANNEY WILLIS LILEURN ESSEN SETH ARTHUR BRUMM GEORGE BOOTH JOSEPH RALPH ALDENDIFER PAUL BOUCHERLE JOHN NOBLE COSTELLO FREDERICK EBENEZER MACMILLAN THOMAS ERNEST RODMAN WILLIAIVI PROVOST ESREY EDWARD GRANT COSTELLO RUGELY PIERSON DEVAN HOWARD GOVE DEVAN WAYNE STANDLEY EVANS FREDERICK PRIME, JR. WILLIAM HENRY NORRIS, JR. THEOPHILUS EDWARD HESSENBRUCH RAYMOND LEROY BAULT HOWARD WELLS FULWEILER RICHARD DUTTON JACK ALBERT MANSFIELD ORME CLARENCE WIGNALL RODMAN WALTER FRANCIS KEENAN, JR. LLOYD ARTHUR SAGENDORPH JOHN NICHOLAS SPARGO HERBERT WATSON CORNELL 11 . ZW, H x W I Ml , - X 1, f H -ZW ' '- if ,Q f'1Q'7 ' ,x ,3 91 1 gfp lif- . mx x X x ,XX I xx 1 3: 2 1 hs K E 11 ' C i law 41 1 Dzvh:m,l?m'm . ffojz y myh rf iam, fa E 5 JOHN BACH MCMASTER, A.M., LITT.D., LL.D. J. DUTTON STEELE, M.D. THOMAS BIGGS HARNED FRANK BOYCE TUPPER LOUIS GUEST WALLACE KERWIN WEIDMAN KINARD LOGAN HOWARD-SMITH SAMUEL HARVEY IAMS EGIL BOECKMAN NORMAN KERR CONDERMAN WILLIAM BOYD, JR. JAMES ARCHIBALD LIVINGSTONE LOUIS JACK SHOEMAKER HARRY CLIFFORD RAY GOUVERNEUR HAMMEKEN BOYER CLARENCE VAN REYNEGOM BUMSTED ERNEST LAEITTE BRAUTIGAM JAMES DEPUE TAYLOR JOSEPH FLEITAS Brita liamm Epzilnn Evita liappa Ghaptvr 9 Founded 1844 Exlablishzd 1899 307 SOUTH 39TH STREET EDGAR S. SHUMWAY, A.M., Ph.D. PHILIP B. HAWK, Ph.D. ' CHARLES PICKETT STOKES HOWARD SHARPLESS DELANY WALTER LOWERY ZIEGLER LAWRENCE MERRILL WILLSON WINIERED SELLMAN OBERRENDER RUSSELL DONOHUGH HAMILTON CHARLES HEWSON CANNING STEWART CAMDEN PRATT ROBERT MILTON SALMON HENRY HENLEY DODGE DUDLEY SHOEMAKER CHARLES ANGELO MOORE HOWARD ABRAHAM EMIG JOHN FRANCIS XAVIER JONES LOUIS BARTON GEMMI FRANK ARTHUR MOORSHEAD K7 .,.,. Y A ydxka 'VA Y-A QT!! xxxf' Mark A. R X -N I E IIHIHII QHIIIMI 'W I E WIIHE ,M WNH Qixfmrsi . ex N XN f Wff Cv GULF ighi Sigma Kappa 1111111 Glhagrivr Founded 1873 Eslablislzed IQ00 3745 SPRUCE STREET NATHANIEL GILDERSLEEVE, M.D. HARRY GOBIN HENRY LIND MASON BAKER LEIGHTON PAXTON STRADLEY LEWIS REPP FERGUSON JOHN CARLYSLE EVANS ALEXANDER BURNS ROE HARRY ALFRED GARRISON WAYNE WEIDMAN LIGHT WALDO SHERMAN WILSON GROVER CLEVELAND LADNER ALBERT WILLIAM KIEFER HAROLD EZRA HILTS HARRY STEWART VAN SCOYAC ARNOLD HARWOOD SUTHERLAND JESSE LE VAN WAGNER NORMAN STADIGER CHARLES BUCKLEY WAITS JOHN CRAIG HUFF EDGAR MCCOMB JOHN CHRISTIAN DALLENBACH WALTER LINFOOT CARISS AUGUSTUS BERGEY ZIEGLER WILLIANI HERSCHEL ALLEN, JR. VAUGHAN MATHIS LUCIAN ANSELM HILL OSCAR SEDGWICKE CARTER EUGENE HENRY WI1N'IPHEIlN'IER LAUREN SAMUEL ECKELS MARCELLUS EUGENE WRIGHT CARL PENNINGTON HOLCOMB WILLIAIVI HARKER ELLOR JOHN MITCHELL BAKER DONALD BRAYTON NICHOLS FOLSOM HORACE HAMILTON BROWN ABNER HANSELL OLD HARRY SAMUEL TINKLER ELLWOOD CHARLES RUTSCHMAN AARON EVERLY CARPENTER, zd FREDERICK EARLE GODFREY MOSNIER ALDEWIN NIELDS RALPH MORGAN ROBERT ENEAS LAMBERTON HAROLD EDGAR BARNES EARL MENDENHALL PHILIP HENRY SENIOR FRANK PHILLIP KENDRICK BARKER FREDERICK HAROLD GASTON WALTER CHAPIN FOSTER WALTER FRANCIS LEO BARRY GEORGE LEWIS MILLER WILLIAM SHOMO NICHOLSON DUDLEY SEYMOUR BRIGHT ROBERT EMMETT ROSS Sigma Alpha 7 pailnn Founded 1856 Established 1901 ALBERT STUDEBAKER WEDDLE LINN AMBROSE DETTRE CHARLES RAMEY JONES HENRY BROWN TENER, Jr. HERBERT WILSON EDWARD LAWRENCE GREENE RITNER KELSEY WALLING JAMES WILLIARII MCCURDY EDWIN WEED SMALL HAROLD KNIGHT HUGHES CHARLES DICKEY DYER, jr. DAVID GRAHAM SMITH THOMAS POWELL EVANS HARRY CLYDE HOFFMAN ANDREW LATHAM SMITH WILLIAM BRIENING WARD JAMES LESTER JUNK JESSE FRANCIS MCCLENDON -,fb 2? , 1,1 ' , Q 4,,. 'IQ .,.' QQ.:,gf ,fi TQ ,'j' ' X I 7 l A , f IVIIlWiu4 f 9 Q 7 Q' f Q O.. WZ . , x Q 'vyr , :M X ,, QV K Mb G9mPgz1 IHI Alpha Founded 1901 Euabhxhed IQQ3 325 SOUTH IITH STREET SAMUEL GILBERT SCHWARTZ EUGENE VICTOR ALESSENDRONI JACOB ISRAEL WEINSTEIN ANTHONY ALBERT ASHER SCHWARTZ CHARLES EDWARD ASINIS GUY SCOTT APELDORN SAMUEL WINERED EDELMAN JOEL MALVERN BENJAMIN LEVY GEORGE FRANKLIN ROBERTSON EUGENE GRANVILLE GRAB GEORGE FREDERICK CAMERON me -2 ,vm 5 ., fx Y f Q ,, Y W, W5 Nu M y Wy 55 A N:--135. X ' U-W X vip '- , .. .m i f-f ., , V , .V X., .. A MEJQ C A 5 F . M 'ai fi I -vi .Q F , 9 45 G1 nr ,f 621 . 1 Lf 535 in eg D , ' 5? 'f , : 'J' 'im ' - f 2p'w'f AQ ! 1 ,M , W .JM JW X f wvmgii 3.1, Q Alpha H1111 Hi 091112321 illllehiral Hratvrnitg Hniuernitg nt' Idrnnngluania Qlhapivr Fgyyldgd 1890 EJfabliJllEd 1890 1415 LOCUST STREET iiimnhers uf tlyr Eurultg ADLER, LEWIS H., Jr. ALBERGER, HENRY B. ANSPACH, BROOK M. BURR, CHARLES W. CARPENTER, JOHN T. COCA, ARTHUR F. CORNELL, WALTER S. DAVIS, GWILYM G. DORLAND, W. A. NEWMAN HOYT, DANIEL M. JOPSON, JOHN H. NIULLER, GEORGE P. MUSSER, JOHN H. PIERSOL, GEORGE A. RANDALL, B. ALEXANDER RIESMAN, DAVID SAILOR, JOSEPH SHUMWAY, EDWARD A. SMITH, ALLEN J. STAHL, B. FRANKLIN STANTON, WILLIAM B. STENGEL, ALFRED SUTTON, HOWARD A. SWAN, JOHN M. WILLARD, DE FOREST WOOD, HORATIO C. 19rI5 BERST, WILLIAM MOORE, WILLIAN'1 P. BOECKMANN, EGIL PIERSOL, GEORGE M. IVV, ROBERT H. PRIME, FREDERICK, Jr. LAWRENCE, J. STUART RICHARDSON, D. LEROY WOODWARD, WILLIANI W. IHIIE BRUMM, SETH A. DEAR, WILLIAIVI R. CLARK, HERBERT C. GRISCOM, JOHN M. CORSON, CHARLES C. JANNEY, NELSON W. CORSON, EDWARD F. SWALM, CHARLES J. VAIL, WILLIAR1 P. Inn? EVERHART, EDGAR S. ROBINSON, JAMES W. HEILMAN, RALPH S. ROSS, GEORGE F. JONES, JOHN F. X. ' RUTHERFORD, THOMAS A. JOHNSON, LUCIUS STURTEVANT, CHARLES M. LAMSON, OTIS F. TEAGARDEN, GEORGE M. NICELY, WILLIAIVI E. VEEDER, BORDEN S. 19118 DIEFENDERFER, ALAN L. GIBBY, HAROLD J. HOWELL, ARCHIBALD A. KINARD, KERWIN W. WHIPPLE, EARL R. KIRKBRIDE, JAMES D. PURVES, JOSEPH D. SAXON, GORDON S. SPARGO, JOHN M. N j ,wr Qi Y Q V Q M 1 , L:.m1-r Pm mv Alpha Kappa 'illappa 111311 Glhaptrr Founded 1888 Esmblixhed IQOI Eifratrw in 5Hi1Il.IlfE1TP CHARLES KARSNER JVIILLS, M.D. CHARLES P. GRAYSON, M.D. JOHN COOKE HIRST, M.D. NORMAN BEECHEY GWYN, M.D. EHrz1trI-5 WILLIAJN'1 HENRY ANTHONY, M.D. JAMES DOUGLAS BLACKWOOD, Jr., M THOMAS FRANCIS BRIDGMAN, M.D. WILLIANI REDFIELD BUTT, M.D. CHARLES C. CROSBY, M.D. HENRY NIOLYNEUX CULLINAN, M.D. WILLIAM TAYLOR CUMMINS, M.D. ARDREY WHIDDIN DOWNS, M.D. JAMES ROY FREELAND, M.D. NATHANIEL GILDERSLEEVE, M.D. CHARLES P. GRAYSON, M.D. .D. RICHARD MILLS PEARCE, M.D. NATHANIEL GILDERSLEEVE, M.D. IVIARIUS BRECKENRIDGE MARCELLUS, M.D WILLIANI TAYLOR CUMMINS, M.D. in 'Hrlw NORMAN BEECHEY GWYN, M.D. EDWARD HARRIS GOODMAN, M.D. JOHN COOKE HIRST, M.D. HOWARD THOMAS KARSNER, M.D. FRANK CROZIER KNOWLES, M.D. WILLIANI HUMPHREY MACKINNEY, M.D. NIARIUS BRECKENRIDGE NI-ARCELLUS, M.D CHARLES KARSNER NIILLS, M.D. RICHARD MILLS PEARCE, M.D. JOHN READ, M.D. WILLIAAI BERRY WHETSTONE, M.D. ZHratrrs in 'lflniuzrsitair HARRY STANLEY BACHMAN JOHN MOORE CAMPBELL WALTER LINFOOT CARISS EDWARD WILSON FELDHOFF ALFRED LEE CLIFTON JOHN CHRISTIAN DALLENBACH RICHARD HAYES DAVIS WILLIAIVI GILFILLAN GARDINER, Jr. JAMES S. JUNK GEORGE FAY GRACEY 19115 WILLIAM FRANK GUILFOYLE, Jr. WALTER SAMUEL HARGETT CARLOS P. HOLCOMB FRANK STEWART INKSETTER wma ALBERT JOHN HAMILTON LUCIAN ANSEL HILL JAMES OLIVER WALLACE JESSE LE VAN VVAGNER 151117 EDGAR JOSEPH STEIN IEIHE FORREST GRIMM SCHAEFFER HENRY HEISTER JVIUHLENBERG W X. mga ' ' EJ W 5 .a..vn v x- :sev .4515 em, E g.. Q H VI. Y. N RS P6 glad gig 4- Jxwjfgmfiix ew- H515 qt -x HX' Jimi? 3354 W Www www H - v, ' . ' . 'E . 5 1261-f:::G1. '1'::1:::K:L :::.xp-n:'1.s., .':3:C:P-E.'. Q. S-4'..':.LvA3gq'-1-:, T -' 4, ,- ,5::3Qgq:Ef,Qer -4, . -::x. ,-:g:::g .. s. gaxmgf. I ,.,., A ,W .. . ..,..,..S. R I I-l-fx ' -I3 is! .I:F'E f ' ::7- -- 'iJ.,.-3' ii'-E-42, J' -31'-I 14.9321 Fiifxf .EC-. - wi-VI 'ffl' I ' ..-?:'?'-P1 :':-. 94115: .. 'P ff- Fa'L'r'z , 'E-.ig Ejgv.g,.Q5,If-4 Lg-.kffaawf-:Iggy-'Egg . 531.1 .. :aw .. Ts I .fin 3 - I ' Y, ff-I m --1 .r:!.Er--.e.- swf: -I 1. - R?-Nxgrf.. Hum- - 1+ 1 -1 -ww-'-,.,....SI--11:-.1--.1: 2, - -1.-:nfl I . ,r-.-:A . I A A 1: fr 1 f ,... . T2 ,sf I., N E213 A ,tk - ' ' 'iii' -V - L . 'N-.1 .. ..- .V..,.. -:L I -Rib?-rx-2-S ' '- 'iffmiqnwi waz. ?gf.?,Iy, I .. , .. It YW. Brita Sigma EDITH Brutal Hrairrnitg Founded 1891 Exiablislzed 1896 36 zo WALNUT STREET Zlhlrultg EDWARD C. KIRK, D.D.S., Sc. D. EDWIN T. DARBY, D.D.S., M.D. CHARLES R. TURNER, D.D.S., M.D. R. HAMILL D. SWING, D.D.S. MEYER L. RHEIN, D.D.S., M.D. Srninrs PERCY R. ASHPLANT LELAND BARRETT WILLIAM A. CAPELL J. HENRY CAREY NORMAN G. CLINE EDWARD EVAN-JONES BERNARD C. GRAEI-'AM JOHN C. GROUT ARTHUR M. HUNTER WALTER E. JONES ARTHUR F. BRIGI-IAM EDWIN L. GIBSON LEWIS C. LEAMING WILLIAM G. MARTENS GEORGE M. FLINT CLARENCE M. OLIVER Deceased Zluninra Zlkvshxurn JULIO ENDELMAN, D.D.S. S. MERRILL WEEKS, D.D.S. WALTER W. MCKAY, D.D.S. FREDERIC A. PEESO, D.D.S. ELON KANAGA, D.D.S. HAROLD W. LAMB R. KELSAY MORGAN GUY E. CTN EIL WALDEMAR VON OSTROWSKI ARTHUR S. SANDSTEIN DEANE P. TAGGART D. JEFFERSON THOMAS AUGUST WESTERBERG GILBERT H. WOOD WILLIAM G. YOUNG GEORGE H. NETTLETON FRED RATZBURG HAROLD E. ROBERTS WILLIANI D. STEVENSON FRANK W. PEESO NEWMAN E. SPRAGUE ifigf S2 1-' 24,-.ff gy' 1 , fm X : 3 6.553 0 if f!'f'!5-wi? Nr 9: LR -5+ Ulhe Hai Gbmvga Brutal Zeta Glhnptrr Eiurultg iflilxzxnhrra JAMES TRUMAN, D.D.S., LL.D. MATTHEW EPnInnBtratnrB FRED. W. ALLEN, D.D.S. MICHAEL T. BARRETT, D.D.S. J. EDW. DUNWOODY, D.D.S. HAROLD B. ADAMS W. J. R. AKEROYD HENRY BAUMANN J. ADAMS BROWN DAVID K. CAMPBELL ADOLFO CASARES JESSE F. COOPER WM. H. CHILDS WM. B. CRANE HARRY N. DARROW CHARLES A. DENNIS GEORGE C. FAHY ROBERT H. -FARNHAM FRANCIS D. GRIFFIN HENRY W. HARDT FRED. W. HERR DAWSON H. HUBER WM. R. JONES CHARLES M. KELLOGG Pxrtiur :!IHrIuI1rrB WM. C. WEBB 3HI'EITP1'11fTg I-I. CRYER, D.D.S., M.D. JAMES G. LANE, D.D.S. ALFRED P. LEE, D.D.S. WM. C. MARSH, D.D.S. HENRY F. LOMBARD ROBERT R. LUCE JAMES T. MACDONALD THOMAS F. NIACDONALD NICHOLAS J. NICKONE JOHN A. MCKONE JAMES R. NIALLON HARRY T. MORELAND ALBERT E. IVIERKLE IRA L. NEIL WM. H. SI-IARPLESS THOMAS F. SHERLOCK JOSEPH L. SMITH A EUGENE A. SMITH DANIEL W. SPANGENBERG ALBERT H. SPICER, Jr. CHARLES J. SPRIGGS EDWARD L. STEVENSON WARD M. VAN NESS 234: Ihr? nginrrring IHYEITPYNJTQ nf H1111 1511i Alpha Founded 1895 ibjnnnrarg QHPIIIITPYH HENRY W. SPANGLER EDGAR F. SMITH Artiur Hlznulrrra HORACE WOODHULL ASH GEORGE BISHOP BAINS MATTHEW BAIRD BARKLEY WILLIAM C. BIDDLE CHARLES ALFRED BLATCHLEY EDGAR SELDEN BLOOM WILLIANI B. BRENDLINGER THEODORE BUNKER ' JOSEPH HOWELL BURROUGHS, Jr. WILLIANI HENRY BUTLER, Jr. HAROLD CALVERT ROBERT FOSTER CARBUTT THOMAS CRAIG CHARLES DAY CHARLES COLLINS DAVIS FRANK LUCAS DEARMOND JOHN ALLAN DONALDSON EDWIN ELLIOT OWEN BROOK EVANS HENRY DONALD FISHER HORACE PUGII FRY CHARLES BRINTZINGHOFFER GAMBLE HENRY GEBHART ARTHUR M. GREENE, Jr. EVANS ROBERTS HALL DAVID HALSTEAD FRANCIS CHARLES WILLIANI WILLIAM WILLIAINI FRANCIS HEAD CHRISTIAN HEYL GIBBONS HUMPTON RUSH JONES CAMPELL KERR WILBIIER LAWRENCE GUY ALBERT LUBURG ALBERT KIENZLE LUDY WILLIABII GRISCOM NJAROT LEWIS FERRY MOODY HAROLD T. MOORE LEA MOORE STANLEY B. JVIOORE HERBERT STEWART MURPHY ALBERT PANCOAST WISTER E. PATTERSON ALAN BIGELOW PERLEY FRANKLIN H. SHAKESPEARE FRANCIS CLINTON J. TUCKER REUEL STEWART JAMES WIGHT VAN OSTEN GILBERT IRVING VINCENT RALPH L. WARREN WALTER B. WARREN JOHN SHREVE WISE, Jr. D. ROBERT YARNALL fm 556 36564511 2 RR 1 f - -'W A fig W9 X .lc . 1 Nm lf '53-. 4- , M Exo - ff. L A-. gf . . I I A X. 9, Q Q5-. 79 V7 5251 1. , .1 Q 1 Y - L , I ' ,1 Vx wh . 7? N Eb: Ghv Evita Glhi Evgul Hrntvrniig NIARSHALL STARK REYNOLDS FRANK ANTONY PIEKARSKI HERBERT VELDE STEELMAN ARNO PAUL IVIOWITZ FRANK HENDRICKS HOESON LOUIS ALOYSIUS IVIELLON JOHN BOYD CRUMRINI Efla blixlled IQO4 SAMUEL SNYDER HERMAN MALCOLM VERNON COATES SAMUEL ARTHUR WILLIAMS ETHAN FRYER VVESCOTT FREDERICK LORRAINE ORLADY MAXWELL HILLEOASS KRATZ JAMES HENDERSON DUFE f LL Q 1 w 4 415' ,, Eiuozi-rfnn..-, Sphinx Svrninr Snrivig JAMES SLINGLUFF BOYD ROBERT THOMPSON MCCRACKEN SAMUEL BRADEURY, 3d JOHN HERR NIUSSER,J1'. JOHN ARTHUR BROWN HUELEY RAYBORG OWEN WALTER LINFOOT CARISS NIARSHALL STARR REYNOLDS JOSEPH CARSON HARRY LOCKWOOD RITTENHOUSE JOHN HUGH MCQUILLEN CARTER HARVEY BIRCHARD TAYLOR KERWIN WEIDIVIAN KINARD NORRIS WISTAR VAUX FREDERICK WARREN MARSHALL HARRY CONNER WEEKS DEFOREST PORTER WILLARD Hrrlrrr Uhr Elfrizlrz Sarninr Snrivtg WALTER KELLER HARDT LOUIS STAINSLAUS DE LONE JOSIAII RICHARDS FRANK WILSON HOWARD ROY BLAKE SEYFERT FRANK MAOKNIOHT GRAY PERCY VAN DYKE SHELLY CHARLES ELVIN HAUPT, Jr. ALBERT STUDEBAKER WEDDLE HANS AUGUST GEHRKE Aff if S' ww, 4 ' 1 X Y' I1-X lf: . W? ., I 1 . Drkkn 15111 Mappa Zfieta Zlnniur Svnrwig 'VIORRISON HARRIS, M0lh67' Superior EDGAR MAURICE CORTRXGHT, Sister Szcrztary ALDEN RODNEY LUDLOW, Sister Treasurer WILLIAIVI BOYD, Jr., Arlilzg Sister Sefreialy EMLEN SPENCER HARE WHARTON SINKLER, Jr. JAMES DEPUE TAYLOR HENRY RAWLE GEYELIN FRANCIS HOLT GALEY GEORGE PHILLER, Jr. RUSSELL THAYER, Jr. LOUIS JACK SHOEMAKER SAMUEL HEEBNER TERRY DUFFIELD ASHMEAD, Jr. V' QEWIN P.-:iii FLOWER ASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATORY .mr mhrra Uhr ElBrPtzPl Glluh rArMr Gbffirera ' GUSTAVUS BERGNER FLETCHER, Pmidfnf SAMUEL BUTLER, Vire-Preridenl LLOYD PENISTON JONES, Sffftlllfy LOTHROP LEE, Treasurer l T. ELLWOOD ALLISON CHARLES TAYLOR BROWN LLOYD PRESTON CARPENTER THOMAS COCHRAN JAMES GRAHAM DAMON RUGELEY PIERSON DE VAN WAYNE STANDLEY EVANS ARTHUR NORTON GOODFELLOVV CUSHMAN HARTWELL SAMUEL DAVIS HAWLEY PETER MCCALL KEATING ROBERT WRIGHT KOONS EDWARD HOWELL LE BOUTILLIER HOWARD BLACKWOOD LIGGET, jr. JACOB HALDEMAN LONGNECKER SYDNEY ERRINGTON MARTIN ALBERT RALPH MASTERS GEORGE BRINTON MCCULLOH ARCHIBALD ROGER MONTGOMERY WILLIANI PEPPER NORRIS HENRY GEORGE PEARCE SAMUEL MORSE FELTON PETERS HUNTER WATT SCARLETT WILLIAM SPENCER SERVICE CHARLES PICKETT STOKES JOHN VVILLIAM TOWNSEND, jr. WILLIAM BREINING WARD WILLIAM BELL WATKINS ROBERT LEAMING WOOD ,zd Zllibe Clllnmmittee ZBesires to Tllibank the jfnlluhaing fur Qiijeir Binh Zlssistante in Preparing This ilieeuth Dr. Dr. Mr. lVIr lVIr Mr Mr Mr lVIr lVIr llflr lVIr llflr lVIr lVIr Mr Mr lVIr lVIr llflr lVIr Mr Mr lVIr lVIr Mr lVIr Edgar Fahs Smith Carl Williams Clayton Edward Wolf Walton Pennewill Charles H. Clarke E. Nitzsche Fry George John L. Edwin Bartlett Gustave Bein James Slingluff Boyd Louis Schumann Bruner Charles Louis Emmart Charles Arthur George Corner Fenhagen Francis Holt Galey Dean Archibald Garvin Haslett Gardiner Hall Charles lVIilton Hutchison Jacob Loeb Langsdorf William Robert lVIurphy William Henry Norris, Jr. Jonathan Ring Charles William Seltzer John Nelson Semmens Sidney Livingston Stein Joseph Barnard Walton Frederick Valentine Wunderle Fotterall lVIclVIichael THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD THE The The The The The The The The The The The THE THE THE THE THE THE THE THE Qlunrsizs ann Departments at the Uklnihersitp nf Pennsylvania COLLEGE, including CIN THE SCHOOL OF ARTSD Courses in Arts and Science Courses iII Biology Course in Music CIN THE TOWNE SCIENTIFIC SCHOOLD Courses in Architecture Courses in Science and Technology Courses in Mechanical and Electrical Engineering Course in Civil Engineering Course in Chemistry Course in Chemical Engineering CIN THE 'WHARTON SCHOOL OF FINANCE AND COMMERCED Course in Finance and Commerce Evening School of Accounts and Finance COURSES FOR TEACHERS SUMMER SCHOOL DEPARTMENT OF COURSES PHILOSOPHY CGraduare Schoolj VETERINARY MEDICINE DEPARTMENT OF LAW DEPARTMENT OF TVTEDICINE DEPARTMENT OF DENTISTRY DEPARTlN'1ENT OF UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL THE WISTAR INSTITUTE OF ANATOMY AND BIOLOGY THE LABORATORY OF HYOIENE THE VETERINARY HOSPITAL THE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY THE DEPARTMENT OF ARCHAEOLOOY THE FLOWER ASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATORY THE DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION 326 S f-. - 1. THE NINEIEEN HUNDKE,D AND FIVE RECORD Students nn Speclal Courses 2 W - . Q ' E 5 33 F5 532' N 2 5 E5 EW? CD U, lg g og fqgf- T, L-----27 ':.':ov5 'J 53 Z3 C C 5-vu 'L U a.. ' O V u 3 O x.. C, U--1 41 g-4 C-.cn-NUJIL. Ln.:-fcnia D-1 . N O N N N -I-H mln -1 ol -1 lx O SIBJOXL wo g To f- mm ND lx oo m 43?- - A M .. - .. - H . . .- 9.Il11391fLlD.IV b-oo :X mm j -1--A N 3- 62- I 'LIDJV - - 55 ox Supaaugfiug 1 :Sow ox 0 0 IEOEJJDQIH put: lnogumpaw j M 'A 'X 21 Q 3 'EI 'H PUB 'EI 'VXI . . I . ,,-5 . . . O Eulxaalllfhljl IIAIO l oo Q rx - N-1 oo Q-U' A 4 ' . - ' '- GI -++ N No va L- 'EI D 1 ' Bugxsaugiug lrzoguuaqg I -1-:X +- ' 3 3 Q , N 'H 'KID A 1 Q Vw 1 bb J 5 AJJSILUSLID .ow rx lx . .. g .. of, E2 D Z : . A - . , N O 3 U rt Q LID rs f: ...- Q 'Hug 'osgg A2 'qaaw I N - . N1 If jc N 'S 5 V39 i E32 ,SX L12 Q . : : 6 ,U Q Suglaaugnug HMO H NN-A . ' Q 5 cn 22 z -as GJ U egg .iusguxaqg j N N 1 'og ' ' I A l -1- - o , WWW OH - I 'W ' I ' I . ABOIOEH 2 fi-oooo Q oo 2- 'Sl , I . N I aolawulog put: saueugd l S123 gm , IX gl' L12 E 'LIAA I I -1- 1 ' ... aouagog pun SJJV wg img . H I N 3 'V ' . N :.. L. la ' S 3 Q2 1-. 94,51 Z .::.U'r:D-1 . . C 1-1 C H W . - - . . -'-- O rn ' . . . 5: 3.5 5 2 ' 'fn - L1-.Pcnla -:J ' .Q 2 1 35 -- 2 A c: , . Q 4.1 sssmog un .2 U 2 2 x. E d .-. cn O O O ,. Inna S C, P, -- - .H Q, - Q4 U, iw fl, sluapms Q4 327 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD General Summaries Gfficers of Zinstrurtinn The College . . 131 Departments Philosophy . . 6.0 Law . I8 Medicine . . . 129 Dentistry . . 46 Veterinary Medicine 24 Emeritus Professors . . 3 1 41 1 Duplications 86 Total . 325 Svtuhents The College School of Arts . 346 Towne Scientific School 600 Wharton School . 226 Courses for Teachers 181 Summer School CIQOLQ 137 Departments 1490 Philosophy 213 Law 303 llfledicine 546 Dentistry . 359 Veterinary llfledicine 79 1 2990 Duplications I5 Total . . 2975 328 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD geographical Qummarp of btuhsnts Alabama . New Hampshire I2 Arkansas . New Iersey . 200 Australia New York . 124 Austria . New Zealand I3 Belgium . . Nicaragua . 2 Brazil . . . North Carolina 8 British West Indies North Dakota . 1 California . . Ohio . . . 53 Canada . . Oklahoma Territory I Chile . Oregon . . . 2 Colorado . Panama . . I Connecticut . Paraguay . I Costa Rica . Pennsylvania . 2056 Cuba . . . Peru . . . 1 Delaware . . Philippine Islands . 1 District of Columbia Porto Rico . . 2 England . . P. E. Island . I Florida . Rhode Island 6 France - Russia . . 5 Georgia Scotland . 1 Germany . South Africa . I Holland . South Carolina 4. Honduras . South Dakota 3 Illinois . Spain . . I India . Sweden . . I Indiana Switzerland . 4 Iowa . Syria . . I Italy Tennessee I Japan . Texas . 8 Kansas . . Utah . 3 Kentucky . Vermont 6 Louisiana . Virginia . I6 Maine . . Washington . 9 Maryland . West Virginia I I Massachusetts Wisconsin . 6 Mexico . , L' Michigan . 2990 Minnesota . Duplications . I5 Mississippi . 2 Missouri . Total . 2975 Nebraska . 29 'PQ 'fbi' 7219- . 5- F . t p 476,940 m -an r- E ' g 0? ith F' E if 5. 22,2-by :Y obqjg S 232, mn ... 0, v E e z 6? 1. 8 5 3' ik u u 0 ' ff J' .J Q . I ' '5 . L 12' 5 A is od' -, Nl Q s' 0 U t F 'uve A F V . Q ua -:L N 3 -i- - ., - .. ., .F .. ...i I - l- . 2, . 'Q u E M98 ' 3 s Q X 17,5 li Q I I 5 m ' 4 1-31:--, x E E . N if -- My rl N 4 - Tu' I J R ld zz lf 253: - Q ' 5' ,, 5 4 E- 3 ' ' ? i 'I ,, ll- -Q: 5 z w-, E! R ' L '- u hit? :r : , . E 5 2 4 2 g :A '-G EQ va z p. 5 E N 3 X .. -I m 3 4 ! B 5 Q 8 4 3 IL i N E hx., g u W 'G 5- 3 0 A - vo fig? - 2 0 1 ' Q' 03-' i U- 7' 52,3 ,- 4, 2 gigs Fil oo FW. E33 o 'U E '5' +0 In QSQVY. 2- fy P E E' 15 ,Q a gl HLGB 0 Y 4 ji IW Er J. -III I in U D U 1 I I 5 -7, 3 5. . 1, ' l'.' 1 R: igeeaf, it HECTIONPN A -A 57f00L c'LU? Af2 l '. 'A-' H 1 1 -. A- ' ' '. 1 - .. - 'E ' Ulbnz william Prznvidenl l'ife-Preyidenf Serremry Trrarzzrer . Kelley, '05 ann Ctllbarter bcbuul Qllluh Qbfficcrs . F. WARREN MARSHALL, '05 . HARRY CONNER WEEKS, '05 . Louis JACK SHOEMAKER, '06 . FRANK HOLT GALEY, '06 l L. M. Baker, '05 R, Reeves, '05 J. H. Hartley, '05 H. W. Garner, '05 F. W. Marshall, '05 C. E. Goodin, '05 W. L. Essen, '05 H. G. Hall, '05 J. L. Langsdorf, '05 H. C. Weeks, '05 P. Freeman, '05 H. Winpenny, '06 S. F. Cooper, '06 S. H. Terry, '06 D. Ashmead, Jr., '06 J. Read, '06 F. H. Scott, '06 A. E. Carpenter, '06 F. H. Galey, '06 G. C. Foust, '06 F. Foulkrod, '06 L. J. Shoemaker, '06 R. Bement, '06 members C. M. Riley, '06 W. B. Hood, '07 F. Rogers, '06 H. Pearce, '07 J. Doran, '06 R. W. VVelsh, '06 W. J. Collins, '06 A. S. Conway, '06 N. K. Conderman, '06 H. Booth, '07 W. L. Ziegler, '07 B. Fletcher, '07 . Gimble, '07 . O. Krause, '07 . Delany, '07 . N. Hunt, '07 . Mackay, '07 . Gibbons, '07 W. Duke, '07 W. J. Dana, 707 E. Hopkinson, '07 H. A. Miiller, '07 J. G. Damon, '07 N. Stadiger, '07 E. Le Boutillier, '07 M. T. Fleisher, '07 EJwO7JU5'S.. 'EUJQ B. Gribbel, '08 Z. T. Hall, jr., '08 M. I. Davis, '08 F. Keely, '08 T. McCandless, '08 H. Wimpheimer, '08 F, Levy, '08 R. Cuthbert, jr., '08 H. S. Darlington, '08 S. W. Fernberger, '08 J. P. Mack, '08 K. Rogers, '08 DI. F. Reeves, '08 N. W. Harker, '08 C. A. Moore, '08 J. E. Nachod, '08 E. H. Reeves, '08 Le R. B. Rothschild, '08 D. Shoemaker, '08 T. G. Stockhausen, '08 W. White, '08 J. R. Zeckwer, '08 331 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD 011132 Jiaaherfnth Grammar School fliluh Gffitzrs President . . . H. M. RAMSEY, '05 Vice-President . . R. S. NEWBOLD, '06 Treasurer - LOTHROP LEE, '07 Secretary . . S. BUTLER, '07 I. S. Barnes, '05 P. Nicholson, '07 H. Mi. Ramsey, '05 E. S. Hare, '06 R. S. Newbold, '06 H. R. Geyelin, '06 L. Lee, '07 jlflemhsrz S. M. F. Peters, '06 W. H. Folwell, 2d, '07 S. Butler, '07 Ruclcman Lee, '08 H. C. Dever, 'O7 J. S. Dixon, '07 R. G. Folwell, '08 A. G. Hare, '08 J. A. McCurdy, '08 A. M. Orme, '07 C. L. Peirson, '08 F. E. Platt, '08 015132 IBB iiantep btbnul Qllluh dbffiters President . . . JOHN H. DORAN, '06 Secretary-Treasurer . . . SHIPPEN LEWIS, '07 E. Hoopes, '06 S. B. Whetstone, '05' J. Lisle, '05 Q. H. P. Pepper, '05 E. L. Burns, '06 C. E. Craske, '06 J. D. Mattson, '06 R. P. Perkins, '06 L. L. de M. Sajous, '06 E. Wolf, '06 R. Thayer, '06 C. A. Christiani, '07 5-Iilzmhers E. NI. Chance, '07 P. lVIcC. Keating, '07 W. E. Kennedy, '07 R. NI. Lewis, '07 S. Lewis, '07 G. McCulloh, '07 J. T. llflarshall, '07 J. M. Sailer, '07 .l. H. Doran, '06 R. W. Koons, '07 W. P. Morris, '07 S. M. P. Peters, 'O7 J. H. Longnecker, '07 D. P. Pearce, 'O7 K. Willcox, '07 L. Johnson, '07 D. F. Keely, '08 E. B. Clay, '08 E. T. Clark, '08 H. H. Smith, '08 R. Hamilton, '08 C. Watt, '08 H. Gibson, '08 R. Park, '08 332 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD 015132 Qllentral jllilanual Training Snbuul Cllluh Qbfficcrs Preridenl . . WALTER SAMANS, '05 Vice-Preridezzl . SCOTT NEARIN0, '05 Secretary-Tram-urcr . HENRY Lewis APPLETON, '06 5-Elexnbnrs L. P. Bailey, '05 J. A. Boers, '05 F. E. Craven, '05 L. R. Ferguson, '05 WV. K. Hardt, '05 W. Henderson, '05 J. Leedom, '05 E. A. Leonard, Jr., '05 S. Nearing, '05 S. R. M. Orum, '05 H. Ottinger, '05 W. Samans, '05 C. L. Waite, '05 A. W. Way, '05 H. M. Weidner, '05 F. V. Wunderle, '05 H. L. Appleton, '06 E. R. Bowen, '06 D. Darling, '06 H. Dripps, '06 A. L. Entwisle, '06 A. T. Goldbeck, '06 A. M. Gregory, '06 F. Haag, Jr., '06 A. S. Kemp, '06 T. E. Rodman, '06 J. M. Roecker, '06 T. E. Taws, '06 G. M. Whiteside, '06 C. S. Hager, '06 E. E. Eakins, '06 H. W. Donaghy, '06 L. Fisher, '06 H. M. Bailey, '07 C. F. Bauder, '07 P. W. Buzby, '07 C. H. Ehlers, '07 A. Foster, Jr., '07 J. J. Gartland, Jr., '07 M. Golder, '07 J. F. Greathead, '07 W. A. Koenig, '07 S. E. Martin, '07 J. H. Way, '07 H. P. Webb, '07 F. H. Hoskins, '07 O. S. Carter, '07 R. Allen, '08 R. J. Astley, '08 F. G. Bailey, '08 W. C. Beckley, '08 J. H. Bricker, '08 T. W. Brown, '08 C. E. Buzhy, Jr., '08 E. Bythiner, '08 C. B. Cooke, jr., '08 H. L. Danenhauer, '08 H. C. Dean, '08 F. F. Dickerman, '08 A. E. Geiger, '08 H. Goodwin, jr., '08 G. K. Haldeman, '08 R. D. Hay, '08 H. K. Hughes, '08 C. M. Paschall, '08 W. M. Raiguel, '08 C. W. Rodman, '08 L. A. Sagendorph, '08 G. Rosengarten, '08 G. L. Smith, '08 H. B. Tener, Jr., '08 E. R. Teubner, Jr., '08 J. B. Tustin, '08 J. R. Zeckwer, '08 J. C. McCaffrey, '08 333 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD The Qllentral Zaigh School Qiluh Q9ffirst5 President . . . R. C. BORTLE, '05 SFCf6fHf-1'-TTEGXHFFT . G. HENDRIE, ,O6 Ulihe Brnmn Rrnparaturp bnhnul Cllluh QBffirerS Prfsizlenz' . C. H. DADING, '06 Vice-President Trmszzrer Serreiary . W. L. NIAHN, '06 M. S. BENNETT, '04 F. L. HOLMAN, '05 334 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Qtate Qlllubs Qllulifuruiu State Qilub Pimvidmzi, G. O. SPENCER Serremry, N. E. MCCOY Iyifl'-P7'6'.fidL'Ilf, W. NI. DE BERARD 'I'rm.rurz'r, H. VV. 'IXURNER ffllllflhlllll tlllub Pfl',fi!1IEl1f, J. H. GOODWIN Fitz'-Prc.ridz'11I, I. G. STEWART Sfrrflary-'Trea.v1u'm', S. VV. SPICER Qlnlurubo State Club President, D. F. LAMSON riff-PI'E.fldF7If, J. N. ELYVELL 7,dl'l'!1.fIU'F7', R. MCK. FRENCH Qionnertinut State Gllub Presiderzl, R. HUNTER Secrelary, R. H. STRONG Eistrict uf Glulumbin Elub Sefwfrlry, H. E. BARNES Georgia Surat: Klub Presidezn, J. N. HESSE Scrrelary, R. GRANCER lfire-Prmidmzz, V. L. BROYVN Trea.wn-cr, S. L. VVELLHOUSE isentudsp State Qilub Prexidenz, B. L. SALOMON I-'ice-Prefidmzf, VV. M. EACEN Serrelary-Trea.vzn-er, E. KLAUBER Maine Stats Qilub Prefidenf, L. L. POXVELL Ifife-Prexidenf, H. L. TURBUSH Secretary-Trea.vzn'er, B. C. GRAFFAM 5-Illarplanh State Qllub Prefident, J. G. YOUNG Serrelary, F. C. CONREY Vice-Prexidezzl, H. L. HOMER Trezzxzzrer, N. S. HARGETT 5-lllassacbugetti Qtate Qilub Prexidenf, J. F. STREEBER Secretary, R. A. KIELTY Vice-Presidezzl, H. H. SENIOR Treaxurer, G. CUMMINGS 332111 fork State Qillub Prefident, D. TAYLOR Secretary, J. H. FEIGEL Fire-Prefident, J. B. TURNBULL Treasurer, F. M. SHERMAN 335 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD new Zlersep State Klub Presidenf, L. BARRETT Vice-Prexident, H. N. HARDT Sefrelary-Treasurer, VV. HERVEY Q9bin State Klub President, A. BERGHAUSEN Vice-Prexidenl, E. F. PHILLIPS Secretary-7'rea.vure1', S. L. STINE Southern Klub Prexidenl, W. F. PRIDE Seerelary, L. E. PERRY virginia State Klub Prexidezzt, H. M. LEWIS Vice-President, C. P. STOKES Secretary-Treaxurer, H. E. WRIGHT Qllegbenp Kountp Klub Secretary, W. H. MILLER Zlizrbz Kuuntp Klub Prexident, P. DEETER Secrelary, C. R. HEIMAN Vice-Prefidelzl, W. LIGHT Treaszzrer, F. ARNOLD Blair Knuntp Klub President, J. L. ZERBE Seerezary, H. S. VAN SCOYOC lfiee-President, J. HUFF Treasurer, C. H. WILLIAMS Kurbun Knuntp Klub President, A. REBER Serrelary, B. V. ERWVIN Treasurer, S. J. SONDHEIM Belamarz Kountp Klub Pre.ria'enz, E. W. CHADYVICK Secretary, F. A. STIFLER lfire-Prexident, M. EVVING Treaxurer, J. J. STETSER Kris Klub President, A. BECK Sefretary, A. R. BLASS lfiee-Prexidenl, G. D. WESCHLER Treaxurer, G. H. GIBSON Zgparrisburg Klub President, M. H. JACOBS Serreiary, H. L. SMITH Viee-President, R. E. ADAMS Treafzzrer, C. L. BISHOP Zbpuntinghun Kuunty Klub Prexidenf, C. B. EWING Vire-President, R. R. WHITTAKER Zlunrasster Kountp Klub Prexident, C. E. HAUPT Secretary, J. C. MARBELL Vice-Prexident, H. C. KNIZER Treaxurer, J. ARMSTRONG lebanon Knuntp Klub Prexident, C. E. FOX Secretary-Treafurer, S. W. LIGHT 336 THE JVINETEEN' HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Eichigb Qllub Hlcchrn Gliluhb Pre.vin'z'21f, C. VV. WEBB Szfrwlnry, H. D. ERDMAN l iU'-Praridmll, H. J. CvERMAN Trm.r1zrm', T. H. WEALER 'lLu3rrnc Qluuntp Qiluh Pr-e.vin'm11, J. F. IVICCABE Serralary, E. NIORCAN l 'if1'-l'n:'.vi11'r11l, Z. S. LEYNEI. tTI'l'lIJ'Ilfl'!', R. VVARREN NIDIIYQDIIICFP finuntp muh Prr.fidm11, C. P. NIAJOP. l'ire-Prwifiwzi, j. A. ANDERSUN Sfrrfmry-Trfa.v11r1'r, M. D. MATTHIAS janrtbumpton Qinuntp Qiluh Svfrcmry, F. A. KURTZ iiorthumberlnnb Gnuutp Qiluh Prz'.ridf'nl, L. C. Gl.,ASS SI'l'fl'fllI'J', G. D. GOLD l'irc-Pwnridmll, J. A. CLINGER 7'rm.vz1rz'r, H. C. BARYOX Scranton Qluuntp Eluh Pravidcni, J. E. WEISSENFLUH Scrrrtary, R. R. LUCE l iff'-Pr1'.via'm1l, E. HORAN 7sI'I'!l.Vll!'l'!', CULLIN york Qinuntp Qlluh P7'l',fil'iZ'll1, W. H. BLANEY Sl'l'I'l'flll'-j', VV. BAIRD ,riff-Pl'l'.YfII'F7If, D. RUPP, gd TI'I'!l5I1l'l'I', H. T. DISE E:f,.g 5- H f. -:D Af fi-'REV . E ...g- jj -rg .f l G Ji gf 5 ' 'gf -H' .T-'M '5 M14 , . . . Q 4 . T555 fi .. F555 v . I 'WQWSNQ l-15? f N .fa- :in k 11.2 1 , .J N 1:12 .it 'm ir ' . R 1 -1 .525 'PY ' pr J' R Y W EM..- R N V oig.23q.e1 V 4,-.. 3 1:. - 3 - . y R ka'-1 1 Q 1-NE--' -1, Qwest. :EQ 55 3.5. , ,. 1,11 7 . iff.. 3 'fl-V W' 1-iz-Lg. N: -4? WR I ZEQTQQL1 V iii, ziiiv F' 3 -JT'-S 15 -i.C E.---. 'if ',X - 'F . -1 .- ' 1 E54 7 ' ' Aff' f '-'-. -..'.Fx'! .1 1 YT 4-I '- iff, -Diff :w g e ,Q usa-gzffew. rl R iff.. . - - .r W , 1345. ' 553 1 Jw' WEN: Q -ww nf? R1 -T.. ---8, , . - wif? l X -- . ff- 315.2 E -Q3 TW. f '. HT4.,rI:. 5,.LJ,f1 :um 'IL-. A ,pe W , z -rim ' .V ' 337 COMMENCEMENT DAY, CAMPUS ?' COMMENCEMENT DAY, STREET THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD 1905 Qlllass Iwffirers jfresljnmn Ecu: Presielenr JOHN ARTHUR BROWN Vine-Prefiflenr FREDERICK VVARREN MARSHALL Seeremry DE FOREST PORTER WILLARD yw7'6!l5llI'L77' . ROBERT CABEEN LEA Hixforian ALAN LEVIN SwuPbnInore gear President HOWARD LETTS FORTINER Ifiee-President KERWIN WEIDMAN KINARD Sem-emry DEAN ARCHIBALD GARVIN Treaxurer . FREDERICK WILLIAM FORD HiSl'07'fII7I ALAN LEVIN Eiuniur Seat Premlenf ROLLIN CANTWELL BORTLE l7iee-Presielenr LIND MASON BAKER Serrcfary CARMALT WILLIS ADAMS Treasurer . WALTER KELLAR HARDT Historian FRANK NIACKNIGHT GRAY Senior year Prexident HARVEY BIRCHARD TAYLOR l7iee-President SAMUEL BRAY VVHETSTONE Secretary MAGRUDER CRAIGHEAD Treasurer . JOHN AUGUSTUS BOERS Historian FRANK MACKNIGHT GRAY ' . 2 . M .. .,a?', V-a,,1.3jgIf,i-Q-311:52riqiz:23531 3,51 :Ei'5 1 ::, '., 'gg r Y aB f n ,f , -ze--Q:-:'z5iQP'n . .1.. ff,?j'Sl?5'f , , Z sc Q. ' . QQ 3 . - a- X X Q Q' :2'HQr, mn IH 511146, V Vw' , . :,,14.fL4--V-.':,:-, 'z..,af Q .-. ,. 31,1924 Myfrigfm-Agfqxbiygs-ffm!' 1 1-1' x B Sffff' f' 'Q .gf 3 S V C 1- 1 ,, if , r . . ., Q . 4 ,-, Q .V ---- K 2 O ff' f' N I I IALU 4 W , W, ., , ,. A, , 'gffslr .Tv-Rf.. ,Q - L f a' Aff' RENT I V' ,Lf gig? ' j x : ,55fE,.1. '1 RE h ':r2os:i'?hfei5F1x1.'.:.:,:f.f.,-,-,3 11 A jx,:rfr5 f.., Iwi.. 'I'FxS-'gl.'T'i'ilf'f5,QI,. ,,,, A L ,. 11--jj' u2.E'm!'gE.'.r,'::.g15g.va.:f-f.:'faw,,,-.Q,ff.. ' 4515 LP! .5 -gk1::,L.,'---xi., V5 51547 4 - '--wr ' - in nw' fv X i v ,bf 1 'J '-r' , ifi f:q,..f'9, U ' .' ' T.. ' , -5 I .A., . - :mm xi- -, -, ' 'F ' gf! X H: Z' ,- Hi N Y i F if-1. ' . f a r 35. 14. 3 Lx, .rx wg vyx f xx 1 x .a 9. X 1 x 'N '7' x ,- x , 55 -y E ., :glibg-:Fri-::fQw7'-ffgivlxfq f gMi 'fi3f1'95-ff t-'xx ' A N' ip g X gg L SCENES AT THE B ' NW L- K' f i 5234--q:41':5f'4N-V f'..fz5-'E' ' fx 'H-51' , '. X ' , '13-,Sh 5:1 'F 5,'Ai-GSS' f M ' , f '..,g11?m:: ,, .. ,- 'Q W ,f-..-Gr: -'-'N - 'F x 'N GL 'bt Kff 'si 3-! -sa. -f x L.: p, ' 3 Hive .n...s..., X .-,w5- .X fl 1-.i1.:.3:' ' ' , N' V 'W . N '-awicr:'.,-14. Y-, . . A, so M , . is Q L g M ,K Qt. , 1m N I , W' Nix k x I x y mg w U ' , We K, xx' yxxkguyr 44 X X ,X x Q-A v B , P If L I HK ' 1 .f ., I.,-. Es ., 1 . ., 4,4 , 112.5 1.--, :,.w -RN.-,r - b 6 I .fxg 1 ,I ,Ty : is-A - 4 yu, , xp 9 4 . I 5 V 1 K S X X. 1 X I 1 :Nts 1 4 A N 4: x is M Lv , x is df -P sn 1 is . 1 W . M-my .A Q n OWL FIGHT THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Mnhergrahuate Brganigatinns P1'e.vit1'enl, I'ife-Prexident Prexidenl, Vita'-Presidtfnl, Football Committee G Bafebzzll Committee Track Com miltee Rowing C0111 In iflee T j. H. Qrchitcctural Snurietp C. E. HAUPT Secremzjf, VV. BOYD, jr. C. M. HUTCHISON 1'I'L'll.Y1ll't'I', F. B. WALDNER Qtbletir Qls5ncintinlI H. L. GEX'ELIN Sefrclary, C. F. MCMICI-IAEI. T. REATH TI'L'H.YIlI'L'l', C. S. VV. PACKARD lhmrh nf Elirrrfnra MCFADDEN, Clzairmanq j. I-I. NIINDS, M. S. REYNOLDS, F. B. TUPPER, XV. BOYD, jr. BLAKELEY, Clmirnmnq T. B. DONALDSON, W. I... CARISS, H. B. TKAYLOR, j. H. Mussak, jr. K. HILL, CVIdlf7IIl1Il,' H. L. CSEYELIN iActirIg ChHil'l Il3Il during the absence of Dr. Hillbg C. F. MCMICHAEL, J. S. BOYD, J. H. CARTER, W. SINKLER, Jr. REATH, Clznirmafzg VV. I. FORBES, J. D. TAYLOR, K. VV. KINARD, F. BOND Allied Sport: J. A. SCOTT, Clzairnmng L. S. GLIVER, M. S. BENNETT, R. G. Committee TQORREY, J. CARSON Qurumobile filluh Prefidenf, F. H. SCOTT Vive-Pre.Iit1'ent, E. LE BOUTILLIER Secretary-Treaxztrer, G. B. FLEISHER Qlumera 6EZIuiI Preyitlent, M. T. FLEISI-IER Vibe-PreJit2'e11l, T. NIARSI-IALL Secretary, S. DIXON 0513255 ani: Qflbecker Qiluh Prexitlent, A. S. FAUGHT Treawrer, E. B. RICHARDS Secretary, A. B. DAILY Qlbtistian Qasnciatiun President, P. E. HOWARD Vice-Prexident CCollegeJ F. C. STIFLER fPhilosophyj J. H. HILDEBRAND fLawj R. B. TOBIAS CMedicinej O. F. HILLS CDentalj J. F. MCEWEN CVeterinaryD S. LOCKETT Secretory-Treaxurer, T. ST. C. EVANS College Secretary, F. V. H. SLACK Medina! Secretary, H. J. HOWARD Fintzmial Setretary, E. C. WOOD Settlement lltlanager, P. R. STOCKMAN 341 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Qtihil QEng1neering gvunietp Prexideni, L. M. BAKER Seeretary, H. S. VAN SCOYOC Vice-President, J. G. HENDRIE Treasurer, J. H. FEIGEL Qliullege moat Qilluh Prexident, D. MILNE Sefretary-Trecuurer, F. F, HAI.LOVVELL Qlinmhineh fiilusiral Qiluhs Preyident, H. E. BARNES Secretary, W. MOFFIT Manager, F. W. HOWARD Ant. Manager, J. RICHARDS ,4.r.rociate Manager, F. W. MARSHALL IBBUISEJJBI' Ezrein rf' Prefident, W. K. VAN HAAGEN Secretary, J. WISCHAN Vice-Prefidenz, S. L. ROSENBERO Treaxurer, J. A. BECK Eisntpline Glummittee Seniors, H. B. TAYLOR, F. W. MARSHALL, R. C. BORTLE, J. CARSON Janiorx, J. D TAYLOR, W. SINKLER, jr., J. E. WEISSENFLUH Soplzomore, H. B. LIGCETT, Jr. Fresllman, D HENDRIE Enrmiturp ikepresentatiheg Presidezzt, J S. MCMULLEN Vice-Prexident, A. M. SNIYSER Secretary, E. P. STAIR Qituing Qlherninul Surietp Prexident, S. N. OGLESBY Vice-Preeident, R. W. DAVIS Secrelary-Treaxurer, K. WILLIAMS jfencsrs' Qiluh President, L. M. FLEISHER Vice-Prexidenl, R. E. ADANIS iiauuitnn Prexident, H. B. TAYLOR Vice-Prexidenl, E. C. WADDINGTON Secretary-Treaxurer, J. D. HILL Manager, B. O, FRJCK Klub Sefretary-Treafurer, A. P. CLIME Refording Seeretary, J. E. WEISSENELUH Zaelbin 1BiJpsiraI Svurietp Prexidenz, A. N. GOODSPEED Vice-Presidenz, H. C. RICHARDS Secrelary-Treasurer, J. H. HART Jie Qlercle francais - Prexidenl, H. G. HALL Treaeurer, E. HOOPE5 Vice-Prexident, E. INGERSOLL Secretary, J. B. CARSON 5Buxine.rJ Manager, R. M. BEACH 342 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD jH?Ia5k anh Ulldig Qliluh Prexideni, C. F. MCMICHAEL Treaxzzrer, J. W. COULSTON, Jr. Seeretary, T. B. DONALDSON Mufiea! Direetnr, CHARLES GILPIN, 3d Stage Director, C. S. MORGAN, jr. jflflcchallical Qinginezring Svncistp Prerident, L. P. BAILEY I 'ire-Preridenl, R. M. DEWHURST Secretary-7 rez1.furer, A. W. WAY .iaelnlnan Qiluh Prexident, J. B. GAFFNEY Secretary, J. C. HOLLENBACH 7'rea.rurer, J. A. BECK Bbilnmuthzan Smcietp Moderator, j. B. WALTON Firxf Censor, A. W, SHICK Seeretary, F. C. STIFLER 7'rea.r1n-er, W. W. CRAWFORD Qparring mm Ulliltestling muh Prexidenl and Manager, J. E. WEISSENFLUH Vice-Prefideni, C. A. MCCAREY Sefrefary-Treaturer, ALLAN REED Stuhcntz' Quite Qssuciation President, M. W. LIPPER Setretary, J. W. Boccs Vice-Preyident, OSCAR SHOMBURGER Treaxarer, E. P. DOUT Glennie! Qilluh Prefident, E. B. DEWHURST Vive-President, J. K. JVJILLS, Jr. Secretary-LTrea.vzzrer, S. F. COOPER Varsity Teams Enarhull Captain, W. L. CARISS Manager, J. H. MUSSER, Jr. Basket-hall Captain, M. J, MCCRUDDEN Manager, R. MORGAN 011-rua Captain, J. D. TAYl.0R Manager, K. W. KINARD Cilrirhnt Captain, W. D. BANES Manager, H. C. WEEKS Zlfenring Captain, L. M. FLEISHER Manager, B. O. FRICK Eiinuthall Captain, R. G. TORREY Manager, W. H. PORTER Gulf Captain, J. W. WATSON Manager, DE F. P. WILLARD 34-3 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD 0131111 Captain, J. H. Longnecker Manager, H. L. APPLETON f5yIlllI8.5il.11ll Caplain, E. E. KRAUSS Manager, H. C. PARKER, Jr. Enrrnsm Captain, D. K. CAMPBELL Manager, A. KEMPT Slllflhlllfllg Cajziain, I-I. C. WEEKS Manager, C. A. MCCAREY Efrnuis Capfain, E. B. DEWHURST Manager, S. F. COOPER Erark Captain, J. S. BOYD Manager, J. H. MCQ. CARTER ilillibartun Svrbnnl Qssuniatinn Prexident, J. A. BECK Sefrelary, S. NEARING Zelusnpbic bucietp Prexident, H. E. IVES Serrelary, B. SINGLETON Vice-President. A. S. FAUGHT Treaxurer, M. H. JACOBS Edimr of Magazine, W. R. NIURPHY Mehiral Suurieties Stillr Hirhical Snrirtg Prexideni, G. M. LAWS Serrezary, R. H. DAVIS iff. Ol. Hlnuh iih-hirul Snrirtg Previrievzl, D. GUTHRIE Seerefazy, W. P. VAIL Qilppprr iflrhiral Suri:-Ig Prexideni, S. H. JANIS Serrefary. H. B. RVILMER 5.51. Tfiugrn AQIIPIU Surgiral Snrirtg Prexideni, G. M. PIERSOL Setretary, R. REYNOLDS Pxslgurst Sllfgifill inrirty P1-exidenz, A. B. GILL Sem-elazy, C. VV. BUVINGER flfmllifrruu lilatlgulngirzxl Satisfy Prefident, C. A. NAULTY, jr, Secretary, G. VALENZUELA Tfiirzt llllhsfririrul Sndrtg Prefident, W. L. BERST Secrelary, E. F. CORSON Qlharlru ij. livurnsr L5gnrrulngim1 Suririg Presideni, J. E. MENDENHALL Seerelary, VV. F. GURFOYLE Zlnlyu TB. Ernurr Sfurgirul Sark-tg Preyident, J. SCHENBERG Seeretary, J. D. W. KERR ilnxnms iifgsnn Hlrhirnl Smrirty Prexident, E. L. WEST . Secreiary, K. C. MELHAM 344 ' THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD lam Societies Sigurmuunh filiam Qllnh Chief Clerk, J. A. PI.-XYES, jr. Clerk of Lower Difvixion, M. H. KRATZ Clerk of Middle Difvivion, E. P. STAIR, Jr. Clerk of Upper 7Jifui.vion, R. W. BARRETT Tliurr Tliaiu mlllh Prexielenl, W. C. MONTGOMERY Seerelary, W. H. HUSSIL Ifire-Presidenf, R. B. TOBIAS '1'ree1.i-urer, D. E. STECKEL. Hiillrr Eau: LEluli Prexvident, H. J. NELSON Seerelary, C. E. KUEMMERLE Vice-Prexidenf, L. A. K. MELLON 'Treaxzn-er, W. G. HAINES ?Krn1 Emu Qlluh Prexidenr, W. W. CHAMBERS Secretary, A. S. FAUGHT Vive-Presideni, A. F. GREENBERG Treasurer, H. VV. DONAGHY Hliisnn Exim Cllhxh Prexidenz, A. M. STEARNE Secretary, B. HARRY Vice-President, J. J. RAHIELY Treaxurer, S. L. IQURZLOSLA Hirlfrzui 'millll Gllul: President, L. C. GLASS Ifiee-Prexidezzt, M. ARON Serrelary, S. FELDMAN Hlursliall Eau: Gllnh Prefidenz, M. MCCONNELL iam Emu. iam President, E. H. BOLES Secretary, E. S. RICHARDSON Vire-President, F. H. S1-HELDS Treasurer, F. H. SHIELDS Enliu Ollii Prexiderzr, H. V. STEELMAN Seerelary, F. A. PIEKARSKI Rental Societies 31. Urumau Brutal Snrfrtg President, E. E. JONES Secretary, G. H. WOOD lfice-President, W. G. COOK Treafurer, M. HEELMAN E. 31. Ea:-bg 131-nfal Sark-ty Prefideni, H. W. LAMB Serretary, D. J. THOMAS Viee-President, P. H. SENIOR Treasurer, Z. E. O,NEIL E. 01. Kirk Evnial Smitty Prexidenz, C. M. KELLOGG Seereiary, W. N. GOLDSMITH Vice-Prefident, W. D. STEVENSON Treasurer, T. SHERLOCK 345 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD Ulinhergrahuate iBuhIicatinns Glyn lirnxmgluunizxn Edizor-in-Chief, J. CARSON Managing Edizor, E. MENDENHALL Assiszanr Managing Edilors, W. A. SAWYER, T. S. MARTIN Business Manager, C. W. ADAMS Assistant Business Managers, N. K. CONDERMAN, F. C. DANIELS Ghz Zllrh ani! Elm, .Editor-in-Chief, J. RICHARDS Managing Editor, R. C. BORTLE Business Manager, C. E. GOODIN Assisianl Business Managers, T. E. RODMAN, G. BARY, S. L. STINE Uhr Eunrlp Bowl Q Editor-in-Chief, M. B. SAUL Managing Editor, P. V. D. SHELLY Art Editor, W. BOYD, jr. Business Manager, J. MARSTON, 3d Assistant 'Business Managers, W. P. RAINE, E. K. CORTRIGHT Sfrninr Maas Ez-rnrh Editor-in-Chief, C. E. GOODIN Business lWanager, A. W. WAY Amrrirzm Emu Eirgiatrr Edizor, F. H. SHIELDS Manager, S. A. ANDERSON FREE MUSEUM OF SCIENCE AND ART 346 J H.5cmmozn5 ob. WHO IS THE HANDSOMEST MAN? Taylor, in spite of his name, landed head. WVe suspect this was due to his committee appointing power, as, after a thorough investigation, we can find no other excuse. Marshall, the first row decoration of our class pictures, won second place. A. L. Smith and J. M. Baker tied for third, thanks to those who had a sense of humor. Kinard and Howard-Smith voted for themselves. As they failed to explain the reason for this action, we can't tell why-maybe they really thought so. WHO THINKS HE IS? Kinard was boomed by everybody except himself for this distinction, and the result was that he received all 'except one vote, his own, and this went to Musser. WHO IS THE HAPPIEST? A Beach and Bartlett had a very close race for this, but Bartlett was handicapped by his weight, and came pulling in a good second. Gray, Goodin and J. M. Baker qualified. VVHO IS THE SADDEST? The melancholy Harper had no trouble in cinching this honor. The Wharton School by systematic work gave Parker second place, while the Engineers, not failing to recognize the qualifications of B. N. Bird, managed to get their candidate in third. WHO IS THE BEST POLITICIAN? Brownls reputation, made by the adroit Lea during our Freshman year, lasted through the four years and gave him this honor. Nearing, Goodin, J. M. Baker and Bortle were early at the polls and managed to get quite a number of vOtCS. WHO IS THE SPORTIEST? Twenty votes were cast for a high hat and frock coat, the owner of which upon microscopic examination proved to be Howard-Smith. Weeks, Whetstone, Mulford and Bosler won places. WHO THINKS HE IS? Kelley, Mulforcl, Craighead, Walsh, Adams and Musser were entered in this event. Mulfo1'd ran strong but died at the finish, while Kelley came in first, with Craighead a close second, and Walsh, Adams and Musser a lap behind. WHO IS THE MOST- VERSATILE ? Anyone who could play Anna Stheticf' a spiritualistic medium, was it, so Bottle won easily. Blancke said that he had not been in the Houston Club for a year, and the class, appreciating this hitherto unheard-of feat, gave him second place. McCracken qualified by writing a story for the Red mm' Blue. 347 ' THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD WHO IS THE GREASIEST GRIND? Four candidates were entered-Samans, Whetstone, Ives and Garvin. Whetstone and Garvin were able to prove alibis, and were dropped at their own request. Samans and Ives had a very close contest until Sunny jim Ives took Force 'l and left Samans far behind. WHO THINKS HE IS THE BEST STUDENT? Craighead won easily. He says the class has another think. Ferguson and Baby H Weiss tied for second place, the latter refused to toss a coin, and politely surrendered the place to Ferguson, saying, Age before beauty. Garvin had one vote and he is looking for its author at Kirkbride's. WHO IS THE BIGGEST BLUFFER? Boers won over Evans by six votes. Kirkbride, Mulford and Crowell made aegood run. Brown should have won but failed to make good. This only proves what an artist he is at it, for he has successfully hluffed the class for four years into believing that he is the real thing. WHO IS THE MOST RELIGIOUS? Gray won by securing the vote of his Bible class. Walton prayed during the whole of the election and was rewarded by second place. Hilts stopped smoking cigarettes and carrying matches, and justly won third. WHO ISN'T? Garvin first and all the time. The profanity twins, Weschler and Weeks, tied for second place. They are now fighting it out in the midst of a lurid atmosphere. WHAT IS THE BEST COURSE IN COLLEGE? The schools ran fairly even for this stake until some Arts men fell down in some of the Wharton courses and went back home and voted for the preservation of their own firesides, thus throwing the honor to the Arts and Science. WHICH IS THE BIGGEST CINCH? Gym won, which only proves again that the numerically stronger Arts find mus- cular effort easier to them than brain work. The Wharton men, holding strongly to the wise experience of ages, voted for the Arts. WHAT ISTHE GREATEST BENEFIT YOU HAVE DERIVED FROM COLLEGE? Whetstone, rubbing his bald spot, says pathetically, The appearance of having wisdom. Appearance doesn't make the man, but it will help some. Carter began, Dear to the hearts of all true Americansl'-the rest is a secret, as the applause was deafening. Oliver Hazard Perry Pepper thoughtfully remarks, H Learning to bear up cheerfully under the burden of a perissosyllabic cognomenf' Craighead looked over his committee record for this year and said with ' A the-smile-that- won't-come-off, 'A Finding that the key to success is the elongation of an amicably disposed pedal extremity. Adams, with his smile of baby innocence, says, Learning the value of graft.', Goodin thinks, HLearning to face all conditions with a smile, Bartlett sagely observes, The annexation of the ability to work hard and appear at leisuref' 348 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD WHAT IS YOUR IDEA OF HAPPINESS? Brown says, To be one of the Philadelphia political ring. We fear he will be very happy. Howard-Smith sentimentally says, To see the love light in her eyes. He should see it, he's worked hard enough. Bartlett says, Hell with the crowd slated for there. Gray says, Taking up a large collection for the pastor. Leedom says, To live far away from soap and water. Blancke's heaven is L' When Greek meets Greek. McCracken says, Contributing to the communication column of the Pzmz.fylfuanian.' WHAT IS YOUR IDEA OF MISERY? Marshall says, VVhen the pants pressers all go on a strike. Hall says, To have a good figure in the first chorus of the Mask and Wig. Langsdorf sighs, Life without French cooking. Carter mourns, Just as I am, without one plea? Goodin growls, Away from the Dean's ol'lice.'l Hardt says, An unoccupied afternoon. v VVHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE AMUSEMENT? Andy Smith likes best, Beating Harvard McCracken, with a pious look, says, Rendering honor to whom honor is due- maybefl Weschler is a yachtsmang his keenest delight is, Piloting schooners across the bar. Nearing says casually, Oh, just orating. Albrecht says, Calling Patten down. WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE DRINK? Water, milk and diluted taffy were passed around freely during the last election, but near the close some religiously inclined mortal had an ebullition of spirits and the returns never came in. A unanimous desire for water was apparent next morning, from which we conclude, like Mrs. Partington, that water is our favorite drink. WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE FEED? From the variety of names sent in we may deduce that excelsior, sawdust, or any other packing will do. WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE SMOKE? Bartlett says that he thinks anything he smokes is the favorite of the class, for he supplies the makings for the bunch. WHO IS YOUR FAVORITE ACTOR OR ACTRESS? A By a funny coincidence Bottle won first place in both classes. This leads us to suggest to the learned debaters that they decide next year whether the leading lady in the Mask and Wig is an actor or an actress. SHALL CHAPEL BE ABOLISHED ? The class by a large vote said no, on the ground that the Dean should be allowed to look holy once in a while to offset his usual appearance to the delinquents. Beside, Walton and Gray seem to like it. WHY ARE YOU GLAD YOU ARE IN NINETEEN FIVE? Our gallant comrades were of the opinion that we could not be otherwise if we look 'at the classes which have gone before and are trailing after. 349 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD WHO IS THE BOY ORATOR OF NINETEEN FIVE? When the nominations for this honor came off, Nearing, Boyd and Shelly all jumped up and nominated themselves. Nearing started to rant in many words, Boyd got poetical, and Shelly struck a Give me liberty or give me death attitude. At the finish Nearing was talking as fast as ever, while Boyd's metre was registering falsely, and Shelly was reduced to reciting 4' Ba l Ba! Black Sheep. DID YOU MAKE PHI BETA KAPPA? The majority opinion was that this was an euphemism for greasy grinds, and they were glad they didn't make it. WHO IS OUR LADIES, MAN? It was decided to let the ladies vote on this question. Here follow extracts from their letters : Mr. Howard-Smith is a little darling, and oh, my! but he's cute.', Mr. Beach has just won my heart by the coquettish way in which he lifts his eyebrows. 'l 'fMr. Marshall's serene countenance and stately look have always made me think he would make a nice husband. Mr. McCracken is my ideal mang he talks so nicely of the ideality of ideals. McCracken wins. Any man who can create hot-air like that is it. WHO IS THE LAZIEST MAN IN NINETEEN FIVE? Bartlett fell asleep during the race, and it was decided by the judges to award him this honor. Howard was given second place because he is too lazy to get any new jokes and will insist on telling us old chestnuts. Crowell got so tired during the election that he had no energy left to vote for himself. DID YOU EVER GO TO CHAPEL? Some of us have. Those who did could never tell us why. DO YOU BELIEVE IN CO-EDUCATION? Answer: H Yes, anywhere but at Penn. WHAT IS THE MOST APPROPRIATE MOTTO FOR THE DOOR OF EACH Dr Dr Dr Dr Dr PROFESSOR'S ROOM? Smith-' ' Bless you, my children. Marburg- When in doubt take a section. Patten- Wake up and go to sleep right,'l Spangler- Cut out the lock-step. Meade- Now look here, John Francis 37 or L' Let me put it in another way. William Brisben VValker, forget the po-litical economy and talk business, Dr Dr Dr Singer- What is, is, what is not, is not. Schelling-A ' For Heaven's sake, cut out the slang. Schwatt-H Continuous V21LlClCVlll6.H WHO IS THE BEST ATHLETE? First, Smithg second, Boydg third, Crowell. That's about right. Howard made a strong run but he couldn't sing loud enough to qualify. WHO THINKS HE IS? Kinard won in a walk. Gus Boers received honorable mention and McCrudden was in the money. 350 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD WHO IS TI-IE GREATEST GENIUS? Goodin got this because he is. Running the RECORD, the Red and Yflue, and play- ing in the Mask and Wig in his Senior year, beside the incidental matter otmakinga fair bluFf at graduating, amply prove it's coming to him. Carson landed second on account of his truly masterful stroke of lilling the editorial column of the Penmyl-vanian with ads, thus relieving the student body of inHnite misery. WHAT SORT OF A GIRL DO YOU LIKE THE BEST? A general glance at the answers reveals the fact that Nineteen Five prefers a very tall, spirituelle brunette with blue eyes and golden hair, of light complexion, rather small and plump. WERE YOU EVER IN LOVE? Any necessity of trial by jury was avoided, as the class unanimously pleaded guilty. WI-IO IS THE MOST CHEERFUL LIAR? Frank Howard made a killing in this heat. It was a treat to see him bluFf McKenzie into believing that he tHowardiJ was contending for the principle our fathers fought for at Bunker Hill. A most promising bunch were in .the also rans. Among those present were Bruner, Adams, VVeeks and Wellhouse. WHAT IS THE GREATEST ACI-IIEVEMENT OF YOUR COLLEGE CAREER? Richards says, Keeping Howard straight on the musical club trips. VVeeks says, Wearing a frock coat and high hat and keeping it quietfl Louis De Lone brags of, Being called a gentleman by Dr. Smith. Whetstone says, Graduating. We agree with him. WHAT IS YOUR GREATEST AMBITION? The consensus of opinion seemed to indicate that to graduate was the limit of most of our ambitions. It's a worthy object, and to those of the Wharton School who have Jimmy Young to buck against, it's really quite an achievement. WHO HAS DONE MOST FOR THE CLASS? Bortle first, Weeks second and Goodin third. When our reporter called to interview these gentlemen they were not at home, hence we are still in the dark as to why they were elected. WHO HAS DONE MOST FOR THE UNIVERSITY? A. L. Smith won first by his great work in the Harvard game. Bortle and Weeks passed under the wire, neck and neck. So many tied for third that we had to call it a dead heat. WHO IS THE WITTIEST? - 'lThere is only room for onen-Bartlett. WHO IS THE WORST GROUCH? Freeman looks the part so well that he got a majority. Kimber also carries a lovely grouch and got second. Hardt, in the Wharton School, worked so hard he got on the back platform and came in third. Several other men were voted for, but as Frank Gray was among them we disqualilied the lot. WHO IS THE MOST ENERGETIC? Goodin first. Thatls a cinch, even if he doesn't look it. Carson was second under the same reasoning that the Old York road was so named because it doesn't go to York. Traver finished third. He really deserved better, for he made the architects work. 351 THE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE' RECORD WHO IS THE FRESHEST? Adams, our Buster Brown, had the field to himself. Albrecht came in somewhere in the dim distance. WHO IS THE WORST GOSSIP? Langsdorf, the peripatetic digest of town topics, with all modern improvements for collecting and disseminating scandals in high life, wears this crown without a fight. Adams made an attempt to qualify, but his effort alongside of the winner was as the toasted Maltese to the tiger of Bengal. WHO IS THE BEST BUILT MAN? Mulford tried to butt in with the thoroughbreds but got careless and took off his coat and quilted shoulders. When the smoke had cleared away, Andy Smith was on top, with Boyd as a pedestal and our dandy Marshall as a concrete foundation. WHO IS THE BEST TAILOR-BUILT MAN ? V V Mulford thought he was in the running here, but at the last minute, Howard-Smith, his strongest rival, protested him on the ground that Mulford was not tailor-built, but upholsterer-built. The referee allowed the protest and Howard-Smith galloped home, while Louis Bruner died on first. WHO IS THE BIGGEST FUSSER? -P. D. Taylor and Bosler had a lovely scrap for the Don Juanship of the class. Taylor, by dint of hard work and calling acquaintance on several pairs of twins, won out. Bosler got second. There was no third, as Howard-Smith went out one night without his hyphen and it queered him. WHO IS THE WORST KNOCKER? Roy Seyfert. Well I should think! This bland youth has brass enough to be a first-class knocker and he had no trouble in beating all competitors. Langsdorf gave him a run for a while but did not distribute his favors enough. Wunderle also faced the starter but broke at the quarter and reformed. WHO IS THE MOST CONCEITED? Kinard, having voted for himself in almost everything, absent-mindedly did so here. Someone else agreed and he won out. WHO IS THE MOST AWKWARD? Carter, who Hits about as gracefully as the bird they call the cow, and McCracken, who is the poetry of motion in blank verse, were doing the Alphonse and Gaston act when the committee called. At this point Carter's left hind leg interfered and he went down and out. Rans Beach gave an exhibition, but failed to make good. Andy Smith was a promising specimen, but didn't enter. 352 GRAVE OF BENJAMIN FRANKLIN fuylr 13' :ix N Z? 55. ,4j'!- I- N 563 4 -4,-A 54 ' A sw! f . ga' X .fi X f V F , ?.Sx1I!is , areas- rv' WX gig Hia anal? ::5i i5?L lim - - IJ'AP L4-f.5-E? ig 55 3593115 ' .1 1 - -we ', 1- ,,,. e ',-1 ' -. .11 ' .,. ' fs . -- 1 if if 'W 51,41-W ..,. is V - !..L-- 14 f5' 1' .x: Viz A gl C' Q 'A l 74, . ' . -Ll '. -fl lf' -'- r 7' , 'gafryr' ff' L4 ' 5' rt! YP? 7, x if -,-: s-1--1 -.,- M : 'rf 1' 'nat' .- rj -1 Q-753 K5 at T-Sgkbig' iii:-ff , ,: f- ,, ,. ' , 3 - , Q 2? 7-T,-ff qnw4n-,Q N sff'-' I Q r I ' fat'-'ng J 5, T wi PAGE Acknowledgment . . 325 Advertisements 1. . i-xxxii After the Game, Illustration 229 Architecture . . 135-137 Architectural Society, Members 243 Architectural Society, Photo 242 Arts and Science . . 123-128 Athletics, Colored Insert . Automobile Club, Photo . 260 Before the Game, Illustration 204 Biological Hall, Illustration 140 Bowl Fight, Illustration 340 Calendar - - 4 Chapel, The, Illustration 186 Chemistry . . . 147-150 Chronicle, Illustration . 221 Chronicle of Athletic Events 223-228 Civil Engineering . . 139-141 Civil Engineering Society, Photo 244 Class of Nineteen Five, Photo 8 Baseball Team, Photo 166 Basket-ball Team, Photo 166 Census - . 347-352 Class Day . . I I7 Cremation - 183-185 Crew, Photo 162 Dances - 173-175 Dinners 187-189 TBIE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD PAGE Class of Nineteen Five Football Team, Photo . . 162 History .... . 81-87 Honor Men, Photo . . 116 Individual Records IO In Memoriam - - 133 Ivy Ode . . . . 107-1 1 1 Mask and Wig, The . 151-155 O1-1icersC1J,C2D,C3J,C4D - 339 On the Diamond . . 167-169 Cn the Gridiron - 159-161 On the Track 171-172 On the Water 163-165 Poem 89-93 Prophecy - 95-105 Quondams . 51-58 Scraps - 177-181 Senior Officers - 9 College Hall, Illustration . . 59, 134 College Statistics 1 . - - 327 Combined Musical Clubs, lVIembers 249 Combined Musical Clubs, Photo . - 24.8 Commencement Day Scenes, Illustrations . 338 Corporation ---- 5 Courses and Departments - . 326 Dances, Colored Insert . . Dean Iosiah H. Penniman, Photo . 143 Debates .... 191-193 Dental Hall, Illustration . . 112 Deutscher Verein . . 197-198 Deutscher Verein, lVIembers . 253 Deutscher Verein, Photo . 252 Diagram of University, Illustration 330 Dormitories, The, Illustration . 194 Dormitory Representatives, Members 259 Dormitory Representatives, Photo . 258 Dr. William Pepper, Illustration . 80 Ewing Chemical Society, IVIembers 257 Ewing Chemical Society, Photo . . 256 Finis ..... 354 Flower Astronomical Qbservatory, Illustration . 324 Football and College Life . . . 201-203 Franlclin's Grave, Illustration . . - 353 Fraternities . . 261-323 Fraternities, Colored Insert . . 356 YIHE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD mos Free lVIuseum of Science and Art, Illustration 106 Freshman Class .... , 72-78 Gate to Campus, Illustration 176 General Summaries . 328 Geographical Distribution - 329 Greeting - - - 2 Gym, Field Side, Illustration 200 Gym, Street Side, Illustration 199 Gym, The Pool, Illustration . 200 Gym, Weightman Hall, Illustration 199 Hare Laboratory, Illustration . 146 Harrison Laboratory, Illustration . 190 Houston Club, Illustration 65 Houston Club, lVIembers . 255 Houston Club, Photo . - . 254 junior Class . . . . 60-64 Laboratory of Hygiene, Illustration 133 Laboratory of Physics, Illustration 133 New School, The, Illustration 182 Le Cercle Frangais . 195-196 Le Cerele Francais, lVIernbers . 251 Le Cercle Frangais, Photo 250 Library, Illustration . 79 Line-up, '04, Illustration . 220 Logan Hall, Illustration . . . 112 lVIarshall Stark Reynolds, Photo . . 222 NIask and Wig Club House, The, Illustration . 170 Mask and Wig Chorus Specialties, Illustration , 158 Mask and Wig Grill Room, The, Illustration 170 Mask and Wig Poster, Insert . . , Mechanical and Electrical Engineering . 143-145 Mechanical Engineering Society, Members , 247 Mechanical Engineering Society, Photo . . , 246 Memorial Tower, Illustration . . . 88 H Mr. Hamlet of Denmark, Characters, Illustration , 156 New lVIedical Laboratory, Illustration . . . 176 Old Boys . . . . 119-121 Penn-Harvard Game, Illustration - . 204 Penn-Harvard Game, Illustration - . 220 Pennsylvanian Board, Photo . 230 HPennsylvanian Staff . . 231 Philomathean Society, Members - . 239 Philomathean Society, Photo . 238 Provost C. C. Harrison, Photo . 6 357 TI-IE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIVE RECORD PAGE H Punch Bowl Board, Photo . 234 U Punch Bowl Staff - 235 RECORD Committee . 3 U Red and Blue Board, Photo - 232 H Red and Blue Staff - . 233 Scenes in Houston Club, Illustration 142 Sectional and School Clubs . - 331-337 Sophomore Class -.--- 66-71 Students' Guide Association, Photo - - 261 The Cast, U Mr. Hamlet of Denmark, Illustration 157 The Critical Moment, Illustration . - 229 The Mask and Wig Club, lVIembers 237 The Mask and Wig Club, Photo - 236 Undergraduate Qrganizations - 341-346 Valedictory . . . 1 13-1 I5 Vice-Provost Edgar Fahs Smith, Photo - . 118 Varsity Baseball Squad, Photo . 207 Varsity Basket-ball Team, Photo . 21 1 Varsity Crew, Photo . . 208 Varsity Cricket Team, Photo 213 Varsity Fencing Team, Photo 219 Varsity Football Team, Photo . 206 Varsity Four-Qared Crew, Photo . 210 Varsity Golf Team, Photo - - 217 Varsity Gun Team, Photo . - 218 Varsity Gymnastic Team, Photo . 214 Varsity Lacrosse Team, Photo . 215 Varsity Swimming Team, Photo - 212 Varsity Tennis Team, Photo - 216 Varsity Track Team, Photo 209 Vivarium, The, Illustration . 190 Wearers of the U P . . 205 West Gate of Dormitories, Illustration . . 94 Wharton School .... 129-132 Wistar Anatomical Institute, The, Illustration . 186 Zelosophic Society, Members . . 241 Zelosophic Society, Photo . . . 240 ,52 C to '05 C . . 7 358 Ahuvrtifwmvnin THE NINETEEN FIVE RECORD The Requisite at Smart Functions fGIANT STRIDES W III Refofhfgalhzfpkew -- -A i OET U CHANDO A XE? f CHAMPAGNE '65 HEADS T1-TE L1ST ,of of lmportatlons mto Q the UNITED STATES f A fn ,EA A 3 Wifhf E ,dv 5 ,ig Q. REACHED 2 f e T 127 4+ A? V' 'LE' PERFECTION 5 , T AAE' -A IN QLJALITY I , S gk q,j?,5R X' T 5 A T MES wffglifffw .9 , N ', r f y fitlgjhll' .Ang K vyM giig7 DIJCRIMINATIUN X A 'E,,T DIJTINCTION an? QW 11 PREFERENCE t 71851 CASES Given fo M e m WHITE SEAL C H AM PAGN E ,L GqEO.A.KESSLER ffm ,.S'oLEfA1PpRf.eRsj5 The Requisite at Smart Functions ADVERTISEIVIEJVTS 015132 Qllummunhaealtb Uliitle Zlnsuranne anim Qirust Qllnmpanp uf ijabilahzlphia Gffiners Presid I HENRY NI DECHERT V P sdent. DIMNER BEEBER S d X I s S y., and Trca VI ILLIAM F. KLING Title Otiic ANDREVV T KAY T tljtficer, CHARLES K ZUG A s I IS dT s. EDMUND B Mc IA ' I n . L RTHY Assista tTtl Offi Q ROBERT J. w1LL1Awxs Eirzctnrs IDININTI III I IIIIx IUIIX NI NCCURIIY I IIN II SI INN 1-1 ANCIbI BI I XI YI I R IUSI III H-KVIIJIIE PRI IJI I ICR SX I X I.S'II I CHAI I L9 LXIxK I I I IJXI XI II X SLIIXI II I X l'RNI I III:NIxX NI III LIII I 'I I C UI II SIIAI I IOIINI T II INDI IN1 I'I XXRLIN I IYII IIIINI I lx SHULII I5KXC D I CUNI The Market Street National Bank IIO7 Market Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. QL An adminis- trator is one Who finds out that all the dead man's estate has shrunk except Capital - - - 81,000,000 Surplus and Net Profits - 703,000 ance. Consult OFFICERS 12116 GEORGE 1-1. EARLE, Jr., President JAMES F. SULLIVAN F' sf v' P sid n - PENN MUTUAL LIFE GEORGE D. MCCREARY S co d V P de t WM. P. SINNETT, Cash PHILADELPHIA YHE NINETEEN FIVE RECORD Sayre 85 Fisher Company Manufacturers of M f iliarv Lflrirk ff' , :'1g1..':,ri-i ' , ., Mi A ff' ' . q,,2,3f:...Q5,f, .Ltr In . s V 1 l, , ,' ,4-,ff M ig feb-ri' ' '- V I -I H U - 1-wi-ss. gang, W r Y. .,4. K .1541 gb, V -Zi 215335, Q I Q r ,,,,,,:, ,mg Z ,W , A V , X . - A 'g'-',,gm'v,.xxq5. i 2 as ,n,1,N,-9 1-. .A ,si . . , . M. ,.,A ,x iii .A ., . I il, -., N 'if vein' I ' 1 f, 'il M?. ' i s Works: Sayreville, N. J., onthe Raritan River Sayre 85 Fisher Face Brick used exclusively in the following buildings of the University of Pennsylvania: Dormitories, Law School, Gymnasium, Museum of Science and Art, Engineering Building and Medical Laboratories PRESSED FRONT BRICK in White, Ochre, Light and Dark Buff, Red, Gray, Old Gold, Pompeiian or Mottled, Plain or Moulded. Hard Building Brick, Hollow Brick, Fire Brick, Faced-Washed and Re-pressed Common SUPERIOR ENAMEL BRICK in Colors and Shapes A G E N C I E S BOSTON NEWARK CLEVELAND CHICAGO Philadelphia Oflicel 718 I1EED BUILDING Lang Distance Telephone 91 NEPV BRUNSWICK Private Exchange all Department: New York Ofliceg 207 BROADWAY IDI EPFISFJIIFN fS ROIG'S CELEBRATED CIG-ARS FOR SALE BY ALL FIRST-CLASS DEALERS ANTONIO ROIG and LANGSDORF MANUFACTURERS 317, 319, 321 N. SEVENTH ST., PHILADELPHIA CHAIRS Heywood Brothers and Wakefield Company 1010-1014 RACE STREET, PHILADELPHIA WE NIANUFACTURE P tbl sw1ngsforA 1m1yR H ll s ay sn 1 d g 1 p p vi THE NINETEEN FIVE RECORD - ' I, , A THERE Is NO COMPARISON , between the heating capacity of the MODEL BOILER i- X N f X I f' I and that of the Sun, but you can't harness the sun, so NX what's the use. A Model A-'iw Q Boileris no more cornpli- ,jig EQ,-'XS cated than a tea-kettle, , Axgfi' and is just as easily op- 5-.in-,L lil, E X erated. A draft to raise I1352 ' -fg 5 Fil'X JW 5 for more heat-a damper , 'l I X to raise for less heat, and oi N 0 : W ,A ' f I :QLX x an dh . L wmwmfy WWW . y goo eating engi 1 HN t,,L Ml: .' 3 ' neer can readily connect ' ' . dl. I '- X it with a steam or hot N '- U ' water system. xl ' Efllliz Y V A ' II Your name on a postal will bring our latest hook, Don't U if Shiver in a Cold House, if addressed to V HMMMMWM AQQEF 1 55-WE: N A i J V39 -'l MODEL HEATING COMPANY PM New York City Philadelphia PIU 76-78 Centre Street 1412 North 10th Street X ' iiwhi H A W Xxgn THE KIND THE PEOPLE BUY 92 ABRAM COX STOVE CO. LARGEST MANUFACTURERS OF STOVES AND FURNACES IN THE WORLD PHILADELPHIA :: CHICAGO ADVERTISEJIIEZVYS V11 Ask Your Dealer 930 FILBERT STREET For Satisfactory Heating and Cooking Apparatus HOT WATER, STEAM OR WARIVI AIR When buying Pocket Books and Fancy Leather Articles to show you goods with this imprint TRADE MARK They are guaranteed by the manufacturers F. RUIVIPP 81 SONS PHILADELPHIA Estimates and Advice Submitted without Costi Salesroomsz New York, Boston and Chicago Dynamo, Engine, Spindle Oils All Kinds Cup Greases W. J. DONAHUE Manufacturers of the HCELEBRATEDU PEERLESS Cylinder Oil and Machinery Oils Office, 612 BETZ BUILDING Autoclean QI Will clean your hands, the painted or vamished wood work of your automobile and anything and everything without injury 11 On receipt of your name and address, name of machine you own or are interested in and mention as to where you saw this ad and enclosing 25 cents, we will send a sample pound can, prepaid, anywhere in the United States som MANUFACTURERS TH E BRIDGEPORT iff? woon FINISHING co. New Milford, Ci. 55 Fulton St., N.lE'. 70 W. Lake St., C icado 231 Dock St., Philadelphia 1 1 THE IVINETEEN FIVE RECORD THE HALL-MARK OF SUPERIORITY IXTY years of almost uninterrupted enlargement is the record of this house. Beginning in 1844 with one product-Porcelain Teeth-and one employee, it has grown until its manufactures em- brace substantially every article used by the dentist in his practice and its employees number over 1700. This great business-the largest of its kind in the world-was founded upon and its growth has been fostered and maintained by the superior quality of its goods, they were and are better than others. Always the watchword in the factories of the house has been, The best is the cheapestf' The effort to excel has never ceased. Examples of our products, the superiority of which is recog- nized without question, are 1- PORCELAIN TEETH HREVELATIONH BURS PORCELAIN BODIES FOR INLAY AND CROWN WORK NEW MODEL WILKERSON CHAIRS MOSS FIBRE GOLD GOLD FOIL TRUE DENTALLOY STEEL INSTRUMENTS, FORCEPS, BOW SPRING RUBBER Each of these is a leading article. The same superiority is apparent in the use of any of the minor dental appliances which bear the trade-W-mark. The range of our manufactures covers every department of dental practice, operative and prosthetic. Whatever the operation, the tool or instrument for its performance will be found in our stock. THE S. S. WHITE DENTAL MEG. CO. ADVERTISEZIIEIVTS ix The VALZAHN COMPANY HOSPITAL SUPPLIES ELECTRICAL APPARATUS ORTHOPEDIC APPLIANCES SURGICAL INSTRUMENTS ETC., ETC. : : : : SPECIAL PRICES TO U. of PA. STUDENTS Send for New Edilion Illustrated Catalogue-750 pages IWHladehHHa,SurgicalInsumunentfiouse NO. 132 SOUTH ELEVENTH STREET, PHILADELPHIA . eye. 1 YQ f M em! W 07'kZ77g eg ' 'lynx 4.I' M ez ch me T 00 I 5 Builders of 5' 'Q I V I - f -, f ' 19 -' 'fi Complete Eqmpment ' 1 FOR LOCOMOTIVE and REPAIR . V gf, sHoPs, MACHINE and BOILER l .l 111' . V.., ' I SHOPS, SHIP YARDS : 1 : : W g: ,,,l, ,,L, I , .-.R- ,,,..e I Be r -fr Ihll I IA Q.. ,Y Universal Radial Drill 4 , ' '- 1 .'-,. .. .-,' 1 ,.1.,,.', i.,faf1Qi.J5l.,.i1 ' NILES-BEMENT-POND COMPANY BEBIEPJT-BIILEHS W7OIlKS PHILADELPHIA:PENNSYLVANIA Illini Jil IHHl r 1--1 THE IVHVETEEN FIVE RFCORD ,M will , 9, ,, ,.,t.flllfl,. fa H, nl H .55 ll A A ww 453. wx ' 96 'I' -I I . I IA M N ,f A I if El lull W - 1-'tt A n NT' ?X wwf ft ffl lf ,f'i' . f bo' EQJIQ M f itJ nJ' 5 - -J sgttxiqvca - 2 fffld ' ll ff QQ Wayls Mufflers A perfect Chest and Throat Protector for Men, Women and Children. l,lIAs easily put on as your hat. Don't go on over your head The WAY MUFFLER CQ. 23d and Arch Streets :: Philadelphia 'l lnllll ww - is til it i t ,A 111 A general banking business transacted. Deposits r'ddtrtllwed flll t ADVERTISEZIQTEAVTS xi Germantown Saving Fund Penna. State College l-lahnemann Hospital U. S. Post Office, Jacksonville, Fla. Allentown State Hospital il. Reed's Sons Bldg. U. S. Marine Hospital Savannah, Ga. Elkins Masonic l-lome Engineering Bldg., U. P. Phila. Orphanage Society Wallingford, Pa. ffdrkelimf Ili-5' c5zT'eeZ ' KURT PPLETO PHXZADELQWZT fill' .A IQ. ,UU- GRADESEBFNI Brown Brothers 85 Co. Foafrfz aaa' Caesmaf Srreefr E. W. CLARK 8 CO. PHILHDELPHIA NEW YORK BosToN BALTIMORE QI Letters of Credit for Travelers-ln Sterlin Q for use abroad and in Dollars for usein the United States, Canada and Mexico. ill International Cheques for Travelers- lssued in denominations of 55, il l0, and 220, and payable at Hxed tales of exchange in the pnncipal cunencies of the world. 'll Bills of Exchange and Cable Transfers of Money-'Payable in any part of the World. 411 Commercial Credits-For importation of mer- chandise from foreign countries. Bankers and Brokers No. 139 South Fourth Street lnvestment Securities a Specialty ecexve an in e es a o . Care u y se ectecl inves - BROWN SHIPLEY Sc CO. London A General Banking Business Transactecl lnterest Allowed on Deposits Members of the Philadelphia and New York Stock Exchanges Connected by Private Wire with New York xii TIJE IVIZVETEEIV FIVE RECORD Ihr meaiern Staining, fnnh Snrieig nf ighilahvlphia TENTH AND WALN UT STREETS I Office B, 26 So. Fifteenth Street Office C, York and Front Streets ASSETS, S22,930,252.02 DEPOSITS, S2O,8TO,178.53 INTEREST ALLOWED, 3 PER CENT. PER ANNUNI Qbffirrrs C. STUART PATTERSON, President. WM. RAMBORGER, Treasurer and Secretary ROBERT BRUNKER, Assistant Treasurer FREDERICK HALLOWELL, Comptroiier ANC-ELO T. FREEDLY. Soiicitor Hiexuugrrs CHARLES S. WURTS, M. D. JAMES V. WATSON Incorporated February 5, I847 CHARLES HARTSHORNE R- DA'-E BENSCN . ..... CLEMENT A, Q,R15C01v1 ,gigwf C. STUART PATTERSON N. PARKER SHORTRIDGE WILLIAM D. WINSOR 1 JOHN STORY JENKS WILLIAM W. FRAZIER LINCOLN GODFREY .f 5' W 1 ' - i im 1. -F 'EI 3 I fx. . f , f arf- 1 . , ., .. ,F , , l .run ,hu ? as J X '1 I. A an rx . .. - r., X IAMES C. BROOKS iiiauagrrz CHARLES H. CRAMP IOSEPH C. FRALEY EDWARD D. TOLAND WILLIAM P. HENZEY ALFRED C. HARRISON A. J. CASSATT HARRY F. WEST EDWARD P. BORDEN GEORGE H. MCFADDEN JOSEPH B. TOWNSEND, Jr. EDWARD MARTIN, M. D. GEORGE STUART PATTER SON RANDAL MORGAN FRANKLIN NATIONAL BANK INCORPORATED 190 Ulbe jllilanufantuters atiunal Zgank 27 and 29 North 3d Street O Broad and Chestnut Streets, Philadelphia PHILADELPHIA, PENNA. Capital, S500,000 Surplus and Profits, .15334,I 51.44 CAPITAL, 31,000,000 SURPLUS, 31,500,000 W. H. HEISLER, President SAMUEL CAMPBELL. Cashier EI i r r r 1 u r 5 Q9 ffi I P r I4 W. H. HEISLER HENRY P. BROWN President Attorney-at-Law J' R' MCALUSTER' P'e5'de ' ISAAC SCHLICHTER JOHN w. MOFFLY E- P' PASSMORE, C- V- THACK-ARA Schiichter lute Cordage Co. Capitalist Cam' A5S'5'a tCash1e' EDWARD WOLF GEORGE s, COYNE FOREIGN EXCHANGE DEPARTMENT Wolf 8l CO. Chemicals WILLIAM WRIGHT, Manager HENRY H. BARTON, Ir., H. H. Barton 8c Son Co. ADVERTISEIWENTS xiii WIIETSTONE 62 CO. Incorporated 911 Filbert Street PHILADELPHIA Agents for Norwall 8, Allen Automatic air and Vacuum Valves Wrought Iron Pipe Universal Cast Iron Pipe for Gas, Air, Steam and 3 .. Water. Fittings, Valves, g etc. Tools, Plans, cut 2 and fitted to sketch A Form of U The 'Szinple' Life is to live under an unreliable or neglected roof. The mistake is sooner or later followed by an unpleasant taste of H The Stremmm Lzfe I when a severe storm comes a1'a.M9Gin1e gf 0 23 South l7!P St. Philadelphia. Tin, Tile, Slate and Slezg Roqfers JENKINS BROS. MANUFACTURER S OF Ill JENKINS villa i JENKINS BRos. VALVES it m '96 4 P A C K I N G '9 f f'2'ff . , .lt 12 All goods of our manufacture bear Trade-Mark shown in the cut, and are absolutely guaranteed. 133-35-37 North Seventh Street PHILADELPHIA NEW YORK BOSTON CHICAGO LONDON Tfze Roessler Sc I-Iasslacher Chemical Company , gxlfllg 5' 'Q gy .- ea worucs: 51- Sgr PERTH m 1 rv E, cntwusrs 5 AMBOY Wfwvod' ,MM ...af- 1Md!1ufGflH7'6fS and Importers of Chemicals, Drugs and Ceramic Colors loo WILLIAM ST., N. Y. THE NINETEEN FIVE RECORD GEO. B. NEWTON 8: CO. ANTHRACITE AND BITUIVIINOUS COAL Office. North American Building, Broad and Sansom Streets PHILADELPHIA YARDS 30th and Chestnut Streets 30th and Locust Streets 956-966 Beach Street Cambria and OI'l'l1CS S12l'66tS 2929 NOI'T,I'l BI'0Eid Sill'66t Camden, N. J PEALE, PEACOCK Sz KERR OLD PARDEE, VICTOR AND DECATUR BITUIVIINOUS COALS z: ANTI-IRACITE COAL AND COKE No. I Broadway North American Building New York Philadelphia Roelinr nENoERsoN sl co. S muel B. Crowell, President JAIIILIIIIEICIIQG and BIIZUIIIIIIOIIS WOOD J thanP. Edwards U V ViG6-PTGSIGGIUS C E L Hickory. Oak, Pine Knots H ySH'rSel':'al1i3i1and Treasurer O and Kindling OFFICE AND YARD, PINE STREET ABOVE 26th STREET PHILADELPHIA ADVERTISEIIIEJVTS xv Diamaaa' Sfarage W affelwayes FREDERICK L. BENNAGE, General Manager .STORAGE : : PACKING SHIPPING AND MOVING Wagons and Vans to Hire. Carpets Cleaned Money to Loan. Goods Insured. Estimates Given 1002-1012 DIAMOND STREET Both Telephones PHILADI-ELPHIA 1 a j, 0000000 , 0 e w w g7Z?'Cf1 jay f M gc, W M is ln' TEN Q 1 'fl ki E211 is 1 , f, r wi 1' 1 'A f iff'3'f r i ' ki! 13' A-em i 1 1? Y X I Z X 5 we ave r e wanre ' Uhr H5251 Hahn, X in Efiirturrz Grahuaiinn C5615 ftiggieiisrhanilxsomeliyi framedri carbon Photos of me old r- lil Masters ---- Sl.50 TSQAEV me are artists in iliraming Special Rates to Students for Framing Class Pictures and Diplomas . . . bcbeihals T 16 N. NINTH STREET if WMM ff' i f I 15 I Taba, I 'i V5 ug! I ll I at ' f THE EASTBURN UU., Exclusively a ladies . Store When in want of CORSET, Hosiery Knitted Underwear 2 to THE STORE in Philadelphia w h i c h makes this their only business. We are more competent and bett eq ipped to give y b t e s ul t h dl ly reliable g o o d s , a d p ri lowes . t Corsets from SOC to 520.00 perpair. Hosiery from HMC to 53.00 pe pair. Knitted Under wear, all grades. V rec rices 1 ti g tp F t dperso latt t g t d. C O R S E T S UNDERWEAFT H 0 S I E R Y' 929 MARKET ST. EXHIBIT OF THE ABERFOYLE MFG. CO., ST. LOUIS, M0 MILLS AT CHESTER, PA. ADVEIETISINVIEJVTS xvii PHILADELPHIAVS LEADING BOOK STORE The Latest Books of all Publishers on sale as soon as issued. Our stock is com- plete and up-to-date in every department. American Baptist Publication Society 1420 CHESTNUT STREET SOUTHWARK FOUNDRY AND MACHINE COMPANY FOUNDED 1836 PHILADELPHIA, PA. SOLE MAKERS OF THE PORTER-ALLEN STEAM ENGINE Single, Compound and Triple The McDaniel Steam Trap H - ls the Dividing Line Be- '-X-: tween Steam and Water Steam Can't Blow Throughg Water . 4 -,, , l.'lSMi:2B5mHm1lEJ2. . Z , Canit Stay Inv and ' the Cost is small N JI -11. Ir Jn, WATSON Sc IVICDANIEL CO. 146 North Seventh Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Christopher Sower Company Established I738 THE OLDEST PUBLISHING HOUSE IN AMERICA Publishers of Modern Textzhooks Broolcs's Arithmetics, Algebras, Ceometries Brumbaughs Standard Readers Westlake's I-low to Write Letters The Student's Herbarium-For the Analysis and Preservation of Plants. By Dr. John W. Harshberger, of the University of Pennsylvania. CHRISTOPHER SOWER COMPANY 614 Arch Street, Philadelphia R. D. WOOD St CO. 4-O0 CHESTNUT ST. PHILADELPHIA Sole Manufacturers ol the Taylor Gas Producers Patented in the United States and all Foreign Countries A ill The best producer for either Bituminous or Anthracite Coal or Lignite. Continuous in operation, as the fire is cleaned out without stopping the flow of gas. LESS LABOR REQUIRED ana LESS WASTE THAN ANY OTHER PRODUCER Send for Pamphlet Hydraulic Tools and Machinery Camden High-Pressure Valves Centrifugal Pumps xviii THE IVIIVETEEJV FIVE RECORD X ' 5 9 l A The Men s Store e f Ph 'l d I 11 ' .vw 'I-51. ' f , 0 1 21 e P 13 ,ff '. . Ne-Lf: ' . -f : V n - - i 'L Clofhlng, Hats and Fufmsh- Q mgs for men who appreclate it fx fo am . Smaf S Y C H fe-350118 C PHCCS- t , fn? Four college men are now con- --N o . :gig M 'N-Mxig nected Wlth us. H. ..-' - ,Q ---,, 'ifl -swear, . ff M ,.,,,,.L - j ' 'E U-, l - A ' ..14' ' h ' 'H' J ' . - , ,. ' - ---f -- , W A. c.Ya1eSac0. '-L: -- - - 'ff-l.'ei'?..,w,iT' is the best 6105? eeee eee. eeeee Chesfnuf, 1301 Sf' PHILADELPHIA 2iJi5f0i1'1'3-153153315 . Mm- ' ' ' ' G R E E N 9 S H 0 T E L Eighth aimmgllgllglgzisltrrgit Streets For Ladies and Gentlemen European Plan A: 315 Rooms at Sl and , A 1 upwards per day. le , I 3,:.,,,.5I K -it M SXWN R .th 'S' 5 1 g g Berks alfchezozifef Et 4- of 1 At', B f R t f ggw i flw t Midi?-5'i1Ta - 2 W' S N sin Sfsj 4 -: E L Table cl'Hote Dinner Q- , K in f if gg. w w M 50 Cents V E - X' V ' Froml2toBp.m. - .DVQFW ORCHESTRA-I2.30 to 2: 6 to 8, and I0.45 to I2 p. m. M, W, NEWTON, Proprietor AD VERTISE1UE1VTS L. R. ERMILIO A. D. ERMILIO J. FRANK McCALL L. R. ERMILIO 81. COMPANY WTAILORSW 1225 WALNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA PETER THOM PSON N aval ana' Merchant Ta i l 0 if Ladies' Tailor Made Suits ana' Riding Habits. Boys, and Misses' Sailor Suitsa specialty .' .- .- .- .- .- II 18 WALNUT STREET, Plziladelpbia I4 and 16 W. 33d STREET, New York CHARLES O'CONNOR LORENZ REISER Gailqg 137 SOUTH 15th STREET PH1Lf1DELP,H.1A Q XX THE NINETEEN FIVE RECORD THE SLOGAN OF THE CAMERON: CHARACTER THE GRANDEST THING Cameron Pumps HIS horizontal sectional view of a CAMERON REGULAR PATTERN PUMP readily shows the construction and superiority of design. The steam mechanism consists of four stout pieces only, a slide valve, two plain tappet valvm and a plunger. III The tappet valves are placed at each end of the cylinder and no matter how fast the piston is trav- eling, it must instantly reverse on touching either one of the valvesg on the other hand let the piston be moving ever so slowly it cannot reverse until P it opens the valve. For this reason a full length P Our Cafalgv Contains in- stroke is always given, while there is absolutely no ferc'Si Hg data f0V en T ,, ...tt - E S A M P LTMP KS do --:.:st L, ' danger of the piston striking the cylinder heads. gineers' Send fof it' it f.- 5,1 -sle A gl I F ' R ' g - ' Foot of East 23d Street : New York A D V E R TISE11Uz'N 718' xxi Reed's New Store is very bright and beautiful, and it is full of smart t lu i n g s to r Spring and Su m mer Wear in C lo t ln i n g, I-lats, Furnish- ings jncoa REED'S sons l424-I426 CHESTNUT ST. Duncan St Crossley Colonial Furnishers and ' ' Decorators ' 1616 Chestnut Street PHILADELPHIA DREKA Fine Stationery and Engraving Huuse 1121 Chestnut Street PHILADELPHIA College lnvitations Visiting Cards Dance Programmes Reception and Fraternity Menus Wedding Invitations Engravings for Annuals Monogram ancl Book Plates Fraternity Stationery HERALDRY AND GENEALOGY COATS OF ARMS PAINTED FOR FRAMING lf : T . 7222 T -'-iv -' A ' T , ,X gxsw g ' T 51 Q H I -Q HQ 4 H ' ' 4 ' ., 1 . V . is-.. fs. 1 -a .r ,.- . A ,..' in ':v ra 1-.v :slr ,Q , A f' - 1 91-52,2 5:5 ,S , f , i s 5 , .. ,L 17.1 P lf- A' ,asf ' wf 9::.:i-.iz-A: ' 5,-:'f l r 1 -, a.,1.,ff ,.A,:i:M ' 1 , , s .-.,, . .,, A ..,,. y ' ' eff fxsswrz ,fx .. .,- ., t , I .- .. T . .. A 4 . :ff 1' .tr - 1 1 ' , ., ,. 1' E4 :' , W' I sf w A We A 1 ',v:,f. -1 -' 5 --?'f':.,ffs2'qi.n ,, : maxmrll Sc Errlrt, Slnr. GOLDSMITHS AND SILVERSMITHS 13321111111 SIZKPPT, at Ellyirtrrntli PHILADELPHIA ' Hiukrra nf Svprriul Elirairrxiity Idhm :mb itlrizr Efrnplgirn D I v 9 THE NINETEEJV FIVE RECORD 11 THE NAME OF . . . 0 . . Stands for every thing 6exz' in N 1 Photographs . . and . . I ' Miniatures. N M5424 .' X Ilth and F Sts., 926 Chestnut St., X SEQ? Washington, D. C. Philadelphia. Boardwalk, , Atlantic City. Xin CAPS AND GOWNS Makers to l905 Class U. P. Best workmanship ' ' Lowest Prices f f W Silk Faculty Gowns ancl l-loods Xl f Z ff l X Q I PULPIT AND JUDICIAL GOWNS I 1 E .Q lr!! A1ft,Qfl'l, X f Ilffffl- 1 f f I rf COX SONS 81 VINING 262 Fourth Avenue, NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA, Church House, Twelfth and Walnut Streets f1DVERYYSEIIfE1V7ZS yxm I The Philadelphia -- . L-' 'sNe LawnMowe1'Co. gt, yy t Ch S ,,cL?lN'l 'I' ov 3101 O 3107 CStI'1I.1t II. PHILADELPHIA -5 Send for Illustrated Catalog, containing I7 Hand Style A, Steel MOVVCI' and 5 Horse Mgwers TYPEWRITERS! :: .. DUPLICATORS! SPAYD RENTS 60 styles from 50 cents up per month, anywhere to responsible people. HUVEW5'1,6 SPAYD sELLs 00 styles from 510.00 to 35100.00 3 '90 on terms to suit you. if 9 SPAYD Repairs, Exchanges, Buys all Type- writers, Mimeographs, Numbering Machines, etc. QQ sv' SPAYD'S TYPEWRITER COMPANY M'NvfS1 Q 912 WALNUT STREET, PHILA., PA. Fl E ' 01' Y 1'1g11'16S .. STEAM and ELECTRIC lllqtni li.: 'il I X 1 N Adapted for General Contractors' Use, Mines and A FT .. Quarries. Cablevvays and Dredging Machinery IE Write for Catalogue Wy- ,h a fl S. FLORY MFG. co., BANGOR, PA. X In H My-I '-Q11 ...- is the order of the day. You get it from Fire and Water when your building is covered with EHRET'S SLAG ROOFING Applied only by WAFlREN'EHRET COMPANY THE LAND TITLE BUILDING PHILADELPHIA, PA. xxiv' THE AUNETEEIV FIVE RECORD 1 7 l 108 Chestnut Street Philadelphia -1 I I I I We have our own Photo- I I graph Gallery for Half Tone 1 and Photo Engravings. I FASHIONABLE ENGRAVING AND STATIONERY LEADING I-IousE Fon 1 COLLEGE, SCHOOL AND WEDDING INVITATIONS, DANCE PROGRAMS , MENUS AND FINE ENGRAVING OF ALL KINDS BEFORE ORDERING ELSEWHERE COMPARE SAMPLES AND PRICES AD VER YYSEJVEJVYIY LORD Si BURNHAM CO. HORTICULTURAL ARCHITECTS AND BUILDERS 1133 Broadway - - New York HIDE laurel 39111 Qlemeterp T CC1Qei:fhoQ1QNEQY3E,f7? W C C situated on Ridge Avenue, Between 341th and 36th Sts. PHILADELPHIA 'JI The prices of Lots range from 5823 cents to 33.00 per square toot, according to location, and the size from 8 feet by I0 feet to any size ciesirecl. So that lots can be purchased from about 355.00 to almost any sum :: :: QI Lots can be Obtained at the Cemetery t Company's Office BENJAMIN W. RICHARDS A TREASURER Office: 415 SO. SEVENTEENTH STREET WINDOW GLASS Best Brands American Window Glass French Window Glass German Looking-glass plates Ornamental and Skylight Glass PLATE GLAS BENJAMIN H. SHOEMAKER 205-7-9-ll N. Fourth Street PHILADELPHIA Tl-IE JVDVETEEIV FYVE RECORD Studeht's Photographer ijautt 8: jfultg 1318 CHESTNUT STFIEET CONIPLINIENTS OF TI-IE LINK-EaEu.T ENGINEERING C O M IPA N Y NICETOWN, PA. JOHN J. GRIFFIN cis CO MANUFACTURERS OF GAS IVIETEFIS A P PAHAT US T H E P O S I T I V E PREPAYIVIENT METER No. 1513 to 1521 Fiaoe Street PHILADELPHIA 559 W. Forty-Seventh Street, New Y k Jefferson and Monroe Streets, Ch Q Xxvii SCHUTTE Sr KOERTING COMPANY Philadelphia, Pennsylva nia Schutte Vertical Automatic Free Exhaust Valve conven- iently installed in vertical exhaust pipe This valve is of the Noiseless Piston Type and thus prevents hammering. We also Manufacture lniectors, Steam Jet d r d Svphons, Blowers, Exhauslers,Con ense s an High-Grade Valves, etc. BALDWIN I LOCOMOTIVE WORKS Broacl and Narrow-gauge, Single-Expansion 81 Com- pounclLocomotives. Mine, Furnace and lnclustrial Locomotives, Electric Lo- comotives with Wesdng- house Motors ancl Electric Trucks. Cocle worcl, Bald- win, Philadelphia. Burnham, Williams 84 Co. Philadelphia, Pa. THE DORMITORY D R U G S H O P OPPOSITE THE DORMITORIES FOR YOUR WANTS IN THAT LINE W. R. M U R PROPRIETOR RAY Oomplimentx of S. H. Levin's Sons PHILADELPHIA X 4 ESTABLISHED 1 850 Xxviii 77-IE zVINETEEJV' FIVE RECORD FERDINAND KELLER 216, 2I8. 220, 222 S. Ninth Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. Importer and Dealer in Q1 Foreign and Domestic Antiques Q Antique Colonial. Chippendale. and Black Oak Furniture IL China, Silver, Delft, ancl Brie-a-Brac IL Cran-:lmotl1er's and Mantel Clocks IL Manufacturer of Furniture in all Styles u nuil X , ' 511 leeve loelrnneyou er I ll rnonzfnnent gfvirrtne. Il Write your name latino- I ness, love errno nterey' on ' tllte ltteerte cj the thouee El errtusyoofoorane in ntetet I with dey by AW and 1.1435 when you write,use o. X' QV J'9 - fl We re Q Ieeert X Aa F ons Fo n t in 3.0 I L,E.Wz1terman Co I I73 Broadway. New York Nf'B5c.hu0I5I.Bos1m IeosIaIfst.cnIwgq Iss mIntgImuy5I.ssIIrm-me I I2 Couch I..f-Q Landon lO751.JameA51..f'lnn1renl ll 5 Hifelle 3 TH EO. F. SIEFERT 2 W Q Furrzer D' 3 1211 ARCH STREET PHILADELPHIA MOST POPULAR ALL HAVANA CIGAR MADE TRY FAMOUS MARCELLU BLUNTS DUNCAN 81. MOORHEAD, Inc. 606 Chestnut Street PHILADELPHIA Has the clioicest selection of all kinds of POPULAR FURS to be worn this season. Talk to him about your alterations: it will pay you. auzfplm.. Filbcr!37'99 AUTO FURS DIADE TO 01219512 FELTON, SIBLEY a. co. Makersof Varnishes and Colors I36, I38 and I4O North Fourth Street PHILADELPHIA Are you happy or unhappy P To feel happy wear Arrow Brand I-4 Size Collars, Two for 25 cis. Nl. Anspach SL Son Gent's Furnishers and Shirt Makers 1038 Market Street We are the largest distributers of Arrow Brand Collars in the City AD VER YYSEJWEJVYIS mx etter printing is the result of careful attention to all details. We Write, design, illustrate and print business literature of all kinds. College ancl school work. XXX TPIE JVLVETEEIV FIVE RECORD APPROVED WESTERN SECURITIES At Remunerative Rates CITY, COUNTRY SCHOOL DISTRICT BONDS TRUSTS EXECUTED if . E iw' OOQ SPOKANE AND EASTERN TRUST COMPANY SPOKANE, WASHINGTON Josmu RICHARDS. 1905 J. F. GRAY 29 SOUTH ELEVENTH STREET INear Chestnut SLD PHILADELPHIA, PA. Official Athletic Outfitter for the Varsity and Freshmen Base-BallTeams X W7 fry , jun T3 1 Qi 2,5 'ep' Headquarters for A. G. Spalding Sz Brosf Trade-Mark Athletic and Golf Goods ETS.. H. Elliott C.. IIHINIK WHITE IIUUII The Largest College Engraving House in the World Works: 17th St. and Lehigh Ave. PHILADELPHIA. PA. Qlnmmrltrrment Zlnuitatinna smh Glass Bag lgrngrama DANCE PROGRAMS AND INVITATIONS MENUS CLASS-AND FRATERNITY INSERTS FOR ANNUALS CLASS AND FRATERNITY STATIONERY CLASS PINS AND MEDALS fwrite f0rCnt l 1:1163 MAKERS OF SUPERIOR HALF-TONES THE WoRLD's BEST TABLE WATER Sold at all First Class Hotels in the United States ROBERT M. BOYCE 4 Philadelphia Agent fl D VER 7Y.S'lf,IflIN 718' xxxi EDWARD FOERUERER Tn-eos E HUFFINGTON D 'I' SECRET RY TREASURER MARK l I LEA 535 6 f I-In I: :- Q-ll Ei SE D vs F! cv vs FT vs V! INCORPORATE D Y C LEATHER MANUFACTURERS FRANKFORD, PHILADELPHIA T Bo-mu OF Dmscrons Q . CAROLINE FOERDERER EDWARD FOERDEREFI EBE JAMES COLLINS JONES MARCUS BE THO5 E HUFFINGTON THE. I-IOIVIE OF' VICI KID Mu!! ' 1' ,equi-yu sug'+f+f..,w,..,,,,? Af in mlm. Pi-EBI , ' yr up f-L sit- Sf Quit, 1, 2- no 'H ?h in mx mf Iiinr. E-QQ. N THE LARGEST PLANT OF ITS KIND IN THE WORLD TRADE MARK LADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S FINE SHOES Lu f ' ARE MADE OF VICI KID Y UER H 1 AWARDED THE HIGHEST PRIZES AT ALL WORLD'S PAIRS WHEREVEFI EXHIBITED O4 T if I was -H-FUR ' L 'fy-gwsqflia Q-I xi 1 Q 1: . i br I-I XX? I -- ff fu An 'Shi hx A lk iv4IIZ,. 5' f ' - I j ,Q I5 . fl Q f- I I f -1- gl V Eff fffwf gif I I - Q - af. 1 . --- mt R 1. ' 2 l-ffff -figs! 'Q -f 'I I III: ' JI k Af- A . Eff ' ' ,- f , - M I! . , . QX H F IT. -3, 1.-: -: -.Y ,, A I Q ' ' . ,I ,y':::ij9i I4.I4 I I, '- I X A fIi5:,:7A'f'IIII'flf Xfiffl- ' cu I E Q' A :ggi -,V x 'aff ix Q -'E' Egg fiixf J., IV! Xb ' ivzfiv. ' I bi, I , 2' Q -I Q1 306 I A A - I - '


Suggestions in the University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) collection:

University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1901 Edition, Page 1

1901

University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1903 Edition, Page 1

1903

University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1904 Edition, Page 1

1904

University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 1

1909

University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 1

1910

University of Pennsylvania - Record Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 1

1915


Searching for more yearbooks in Pennsylvania?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Pennsylvania yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.