University of Cincinnati - Cincinnatian Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH)

 - Class of 1908

Page 1 of 298

 

University of Cincinnati - Cincinnatian Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1908 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 298 of the 1908 volume:

T'Ilge gear book of the mnibersitg 0f QIi'ncinnafi m .i.l !ll..III.-I XIIII. H.111: 10.... :0 ...IL..AY. .. 1 ' -,, .41 l1: -- . . THE QINCINNATIAN 1908 U N IV E R S I TY OF CINCINNATI PUBLISHED BY THE JUNIOR CLASS ELISE REIS LOEBMAN - - EAitor-in-Cbicf STANLEY FARRAR BREWSTER. Business Managcr JAN 17. I 101:! WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT. LL.D. To WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT. LL.D. alumnus and professor of T11: Cincinnati Law School to whose egorts its present eEiciency is largely due. this. THE CINCINNATIAN 1908 is dc6icated CHARLES WILLIAM DABNEY. Ph. D.. LL.D. - presiticnt WW FOREWORD HE last words have been written, the last bit of proof has been read and now the words of part- e ing must come as we, the members of the J unior Class, bid our Senior classmates a last adieu. mm For three years we have worked and played together, for three years we have been college-mates. But now the parting comes and we realize that our relations can never again be quite the same. Though love for our Alma Mater will always bind us, still never again shall we all be gathered together by our daily work at the University. K. t . w 4- :- In accordance with the custom of our predecessors, we, the J unior Class, have edited the CINCINNATIAN as a fare- well tribute to you, the Seniors. We have tried to make its pages represent your college life as well as ours during our last year together, and, in consideration of the sacredness of tradition,as well as the love we have for our task, and the laurels which we know the Class of 1908 to have rightfully won, we have striven to make our CINCINNATIAN something really worth while. Although we realize that it is wanting in many wayse that it has notby anymeans fulfilled our hopes and anticipa- tions- still we feel that its pages mean something more than the mere printed words, something of the motive that lies behind them. 11an seven And now, Seniors, as you leave us, as duty calls you far and near, may this, our CINCINNATIAN, form the link which joins you to coilege days; may it always mean to you, in moments of happiness or sadness, the heartiest, best, most sincere wishes of the Junior Class. And if, perchance, as you turn its pages now or in the years to come, you feel a thrill of pleasure or regret for your college days, if your hearts beat a little faster at the thought of the Red and Black, we feel that our task Will have been really worth while and our labor not in vain. THE EDITOR. a a a Ct $9 ? page eight WWW BOARD OF DIRECTORS Appointed. Ly flue Mayor of Cincinnati Frederick A. Geier . . . . January 1910 Sanford Brown . . . . . January 1910 Henry Melville Curtis, D. D. . . J anuary 1910 James J. Hooker . . . . . January 1912 Ernest F. Du Brul . . . . January 1912 Thomas J. Moffett . . . . January 1912 George Guckenberger . . . January 1914 Robert W. Stewart, M. D. . . . J anuary 1914 Arch I. Carson, M. D. . . . January 1914 W OFFICERS OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS Henry Melville Curtis, D. D. . . . Chairman Daniel Laurence . . . . . . Clerk Christie Wilke . . . . . Assistant Clerk page nine WPN . . . ' I.- :.' '3 :43. . .' '5. ,1. ' , . J i. I. K k- 15. ... :x? i, F. . m if .33?ng ' . TI: ' G -. 4 c . If 1 e ?'17 . . tf; 1le . - .;:. ; .14 THE UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI WW In the order of their foundation The College of Medicine The College of Law The McMiclcen College of Liberal Arts T11: Department of Clinical Metlicine The College of Engineering The College for Teachers The Graduate School page eleven FREDERLCK FORCHHEIMER. M. D. D633 QS-E Q5952 $$ Lee Eg Qg COLLEGE OF MEDICINE Historical Statement that the Medical College of Ohio .: c became a part of the University Elli of Cincinnati yet it is the oldest of any of her departments, having been founded in 1819. Since its organization in 1887, the Clinical and Pathological School of the Cin- cinnati Hospital has been afiiliated with the University, being designated as the tiMedi- cal Department until 1896, and after- wards as the HDepartment of Clinical Medi- cine? page thirteen mmmmm COLLEGE OF MEDICINE Faculty CHARLES WILLIAM DABNEY, Ph. D., LL. D., President. P. S. CONNER. M. D., LL. D., Emeritus Professor of Surgery. SAMUEL NICKLES, M. D., Emeritus Professor of Materia Medics. and Therapeutics. THAD. A. REAMY, M. D.. LL. D., Emeritus Professor of Obstetrics and Clinical Gynaecology. CHAUNCEY D. PALMER, M. D., Emeritus Professor of Obstetrics, Gynaecology, and Clinical Gynaecology. FREDERICK FORCHHEIMER, M. D., Dean, Professor of Theory and Practice of Medicine and Clinical Medicine. JOSEPH RANSOHOFF, M. D., E R. C. 8., Professor of Surgery and Clinical Surgery. B. K. RACHFORD, M. D., Professor of Diseases of Children. ALLYN C. POOLE, A. B., M. D., Professor of Materia Medica and Therapeutics. E. GUSTAV ZINKE, M. D., Professor of Obstetrics and Clinical Gynaecology, AUGUST RAVOGLI, A. M., M. D., Professor of Dermatology and Syphilology. STEPHEN C. AYRES, A. M., M. D., Professor of Ophthalmology. ALBERT V. PHELPS, M. D., Secretary. Professor of Anatomy and Demonstrator of Anatomy. page fourtccn CHARLES L. BONIFIELD, M. D., Professor of Gynaecology. BROOKS F. BEEBE, A. M., M. D., Professor of Mental Diseases. HORACE J. WHITACRE, B. S., M. D., Professor of Pathology and Lecturer on the Principles of Surgery. ' WILLIAM MUEHLBERG, M. D., Professor of Physiology and Demonstrator of Physiology. CHARLES A. L. REED, M. D., Professor of Clinical Gynaecology. :' CHARLES SETH EVANS, B. S.. M. D., Professor of Genito-Urinary Diseases. ALBERT H. FREIBERG, M. D., Professor of Orthopedic Surgery and Supervisor of Clinics. C. R. HOLMES, M. D., Professor of Otology, Rhinology and Laryngology. ROBERT CAROTHERS, M. D., Professor of Clinical Surgery. JAMES WILLIAM ROWE. A. B.. M. B Professor of Clinical Obstetrics. PHILIP ZENNER, A. M., M. D., Professor of Neurology. H. H. HOPPE, A. M., M. D., Professor of Neurology. B. F. LYLE, M. D., Clinical Professor of Diseases of the Thorax. A. G. DRURY, A. M., M. D., Professor of Hygiene. SAMUEL IGLAUER, B. S., M. D., . Associate Professor of Otoiogy, Rhinology and Laryngology. J. E. GREIWE, A. M., M. D., Adjunct Professor of Practice and Lecturer on Physical Diagnosis. kAbsent on leave. page fifteen mwmmm Department of Clinical Medicine T11: Clinical and Pathological School of the Cincinnati Hospital an-O BOARD OF MEDICAL DIRECTORS OF THE CINCINNATI HOSPITAL W. E. KIELY, M. 13., President. E. GUSTAV ZINKE, M. D., Vice-President. JULIUS H. EICHBERG. M. D., Secretary. MEDICAL STAFF G. A. FLACKLER, M . D., President. B. K. RACHFORD, M. D., Vice-President. C. F. HEGNER, M. D., Secretary. P. S. CONNER, M. D., Libmn'an. Consulting Physician wJ. C. MACKENZIE, M. D. Consulting Surgeon P. S. CONNER, M. D. Consulting Oculists - G. R. HOLMES, M. D.; S. C. AYERS, M. D. Consulting Obstetrician and GynacologistF-C. D. PALMER, M. D. Physicians-qJOSEPI-I EICHBERG, M. D.; E. W. MITCHELL, M. D.; GEO. A. FACKLER, M. D.; OLIVER P. HOLT, M. D. Surgeons- N. P. DANDRIDGE, M. D.; E. W. WALKER, M. D.; JOSEPH RANSOHOFF, M. D.; JOHN C. OLIVER, M. D. Obstetricians - W. D. PORTER, M. D.; G. M. ALLEN, M. D. Pathologists -- C. F. HEGNER, M. D.; R. W. THOMAS, M. D. Oculists - ROBERT SATTLER, M. D.; D. T. VAIL, M. D. page sixteen Neurologists-WH.H.HOPPE, M. D.; FRANK W.LANGDON, M. D. Pediatrists - ALLYN C. POOLE, M. D.; B. KNOX RANCH- FORD, M. D. Laryngologists and Aurists - S. E. ALLEN, M. D.; J . W. MURPHY, M. D. Dermatologists -A. RAVOGLI, M. D.; M. L. HEIDINGSFELD, M. D. DentistS- H. G. MATLACK. M. D.; W. D. KEMPTON, M. D. Orthopedic Surgeons-A. H. FREIBERG, M. D.; C. E. CALD- WELL, M. D. Gynaecologists -- CHARLES A. L. REED, M. D.; JOHN M. WITH- ROW, M. D.; CHARLES L. BONIFIELD. M. D.; SIGMAR STARK, M. D. Neuropathologistm DAVID I. WOLFSTEIN, M. D. RadiographerhSIDNEY LANGE, M. D. Director of the Clinical and Pathological Laboratory and Museum H. J. WHITACRE, M. D. Assistants to the Director of the Clinical and Pathological Labora- tory and MuseummCLIFFORD SATER, M. D.; F. W. LAMB, M. D.; H. L. WOODWARD, M. D.; A. P. COLE, M. D.; H. FREUDENBERGER, M. D.; W. H. LEWIS, M. D.; LOUIS G. HEYN, M. D. Physician and Pathologist to the Branch HospitalnALBERT FALLER, M. D. Resident Physician - A. W. FOERTMEYER, M. D. page seventeen WILLIAM F. ROGERS. A. 13., LL. B. ' 13m mmmmm COLLEGE OF LAW Historical Statement . , LAW DEPARTMENT was estab- Q , jf lished at the University of Cincin- 5.1.1331! nati in 1896, but the following year a contract was made With the Law II. School of the Cincinnati College and a union was effected. The Law School of the Cincinnati Col- lege was founded in 1833, making the Uni- versity? Law School of today her second oldest department. page nineteen ?WW COLLEGE OF LAW Faculty CHARLES W. DABNEY, Ph. D., LL. D.. President of the University of Cincinnati. WILLIAM P. ROGERS, A. 3., LL. 3., Dean, and G. H. Wald Professor of Law of Contracts. WVILLIAM H. TAFT, LL. D., Professor of Law. HENRY A. MORRILL, LL. D., Rufus King Professor of Constitutional Law. JUDSON HARMON, LL. D., Professor of Law. JOHN R. SAYLER, LL. D., a Professor of Law. LAWRENCE MAXWELL, Jr., A. M., LL. D., Professor of Law. ROBERT C. PUGH, LL. 3., Professor of Law. ALFRED B. BENEDICT, A. B., LL. 3., Professor of Law. FRANCIS B. JAMES, LL. 3., Instructor. CHARLES T. GREVE, A. B., LL. B.. Instructor. ELDON R. JAMES, B. 3., LL. B., Instructor. MOSES F. WILSON, LL. B.. Instructor. M. F. PIATT, Secretary. Mkbsent on leave. page twenty-onc MERRICK WHITCOMB. P11. D. Dean McMickcn College of Liheral Arts Historical Statement m? HARLES McMicken, at the time of 312$ ; his death in 1858, bequeathed to 'h the city of Cincinnati almost the whole of his estate, valued at $1,000,000, for the purpose of establishing and maintaining tttwo colleges for the educa- tion of white boys and girls. Nearly half of this property was in Louisiana, and was lost by a decision of the Supreme Court, and for ten years the revenue derived from that part of the estate lying in Cincinnati and its vicinity was applied to its improvement. It was not until 1869, then, that the Trustees provided for a School of Design. In 1870 the General Assembly of Ohio, in order to unite the various educational trusts in Cincinnati, passed an act 7to aid and pro- mote education? and through this, almost a year later, the University of Cincinnati was established. Students were first received in 1873, and in 1874 the Academic Department, now the McMicken College of Liberal Arts, was organized. page twcnty-tb rec M. ELIZABETH J. CZARNOMSKA. A.M. DBIII McMicken College of Liberal Arts Faculty CHARLES WILLIAM DABNEY, Ph. D., LL. D., President of the University. JERMAIN GILDERSLEEVE PORTER, Ph. D. Director of the Observatory and Professor of Astronomy. FREDERICK CHARLES HICKS, Ph. D., Sinton Professor of Economics and Civics. HARRIS HANCOCK, Ph. D., Dr. Sc., Professor of Mathematics. JOHN MILLER BURNAM, Ph. D., Professor of Latin. MAX POLL, Ph. D., Professor of the Germanic Languages. JOSEPH EDWARD HARRY, Ph. D., Professor of Greek and Dean of the Graduate School. MERRICK WHITCOMB, Ph. D.. Professor of History and Dean of the College of Liberal Arts. LOUIS TRENCHARD MOORE, Ph. D., Professor of Physics. MICHAEL FREDERIC GUYER, Ph. D., Professor of Zoology. BURTIS BURR BREESE, Ph. D., Professor of Psychology. NEVIN MELANCTHON FENNEMAN, Ph. D., Professor of Geology and Geography. page twenty-five MARCO F. LIBERMA, A.B., Professor of Romance Languages. HENRY HEATH BAWDEN, Ph. D., Professor of Philosophy. LAUDER WILLIAM JONES, Ph. D., Professor of Chemistry. GEORGE MOREY MILLER, A. M., Associate Professor of English. M. ELIZABETH J. CZARNOMSKA, A. M., Dean of Women and Lecturer on English and Biblical Literature. HARRIS MILLER BENEDICT, A. M., Assistant Professor of Biology. J AMES EDMUND IVES, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of Physics. CLAUDE M. LOTSPEICH, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of German. EMILIE WATTS McVEA, A. M., Assistant Professor of English. GEORGE HENRY ALLEN, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of Latin. ISAAC JOSLIN COX, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of History. HARRY SHIPLEY FRY, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of Chemistry. GEORGE WALLACE UMPHREY, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of Romance Languages. EDWIN WOODRUFF GLOVER, Director of Music. JOHN ALFRED DAVIS, Director of Physical Eucation. page twenty-eix HERMAN SCHNEIDER. B. S. Dean mm mm meg; CEEEM COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING Historical Statement UT of a professorship of Civil Engineering in the college of gEEE College of Engineering, now one of the most important depart ments of the University of Cincinnati. It was organized in 1900, and became a distinct department in 1904. The Engineering De- partment embraces Civil Engineering, Chemical Engineering, Electrical Engineer- ing and Mechanical Engineering. page twcnty-nine $$ 63th Etiw seas; CO-OPERATIVE ENGINEERING Historical Statement T THE opening of the scholastic year 1906-07, ' there was inaugurated at the University of Cincinnati 3 new system of engineering edu- cation, which, since then, has attracted the attention of educators from all parts of the world. By this plan students gain both prac- tical and theoretical knowledge during their college course, and at the same time earn their livelihoods. The plan is carried on by the University in co-opera- tion with a number of the largest mechanical and electrical manufacturing companies in the vicinity. The students pursuing it are divided into two sections, which alternate with each other in spending one week studying at the Uni- versity, and the next working at the factories. Six years are required to complete the course, during Which the stu- dent more than earns his expenses. Although the Co-operative Engineering scheme is not yet two years old, still its success and promise is remark- able. Its enrollment in the Freshman Class this year is double that of last year, and among its students are repre- sentatives from two continents. Not only are the Univer- sity professors pleased with the excellent work of the HCo- ops, but the manufacturers as well, and the University will no doubt have reason to be proud of this plan which it has initiated. page thirty mm mm am imw COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING Faculty CHARLES WILLIAM DABNEY, Ph. D., LL. D., President of the University. JERMAIN GILDERSLEEVE PORTER, Ph. D., Director of the Observatory and Professor of Astronomy. FREDERICK CHARLES HICKS, Ph. D., Sinton Professor of Economics and Civics. HARRIS HANCOCK, Ph. D., Dr. Sc., Professor of Mathematics. MAX POLL, Ph. D., Professor of the Germanic Languages. LOUIS TRENCHARD MOORE, Ph. D., Professor of Physics. In charge of course in Electrical Engineering. MICHAEL FREDERIC GUYER, Ph. D., Professor of Zoology. HERMAN SCHNEIDER, B. 8., William Thorns Professor of Civil Engineering and Dean of the College of Engineering. STEPHEN ELMER SLOCUM, Ph. D., Professor of Applied Mathematics. JOHN THEODORE FAIG, M. E., Professor of Mechanical Engineering. page thirty-on: NEVIN MELANCTHON FENNEMAN, Ph. D., Professor of Geology and Geography. MARCO F. LIBERMA, A. B., Professor of Romance Languages. LAUDER WILLIAM JONES, Ph. D., Professor of Chemistry. GEORGE MOREY MILLER, A, M.. Associate Professor of English. Gn charge 1907-08J HARRIS MILLER BENEDICT, A. M., Assistant Professor of Biology. JAMES EDMUND IVES, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of Physics. CLAUDE M. LOTSPEIGH, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of German. ALEXANDER C. LANIER, M. E., Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering. HARRY SHIPLEY FRY, Ph. 13., Assistant Professor of Chemistry. GEORGE WALLACE UMPHREY, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of Romance Languages. ALEXANDER LEWIS JENKINS, M. E., Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering. FRED EUGENE AYER, C. 13., Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering. JOHN JERMAIN PORTER, Assistant Professor of Metallurgy. JOHN ALFRED DAVIS, Director of Physical Education. 1mg: thirty-two ga GbomasTvansJJb.E. x Born. 1863 :Dleb 1902' Member of the faculty of the Kniverstty of itnctnnatl 1398-1907 ' ' r- ytalpb Ogben Wartimns. Born. 1882 191:6 1907.1. Unstructw at the H. university of $lnctunati Nu 1906-190? m I'm: Ia? WILLIAM PAXTON BURRIS. AM. Dean COLLEGE FOR TEACHERS Historical Statement . HE College for Teachers was organized in 1905 by the Board of Trustees of the University, in co-operation with the Board of Education of the city of Cin- cinnati. It is a professional school for the training of teachers under university auspices and in close touch with a large system of public schools. For purposes of observation and prac- tice, public schools of Cincinnati are placed at the disposal of students of the College under expert direction and guidance. An 31'- rangement has been made, also, whereby courses in the Cincinnati Kindergarten Training School are open to students of the College. Opportunity is thus afforded for the professional training, theoretical and practical, of teachers for kindergartens, elementary and secondary schools. page thirty-Hve mmmmw COLLEGE FOR . TEACHERS Committee in Charge CHARLES WILLIAM DABNEY, Ph. D., LL. D., President of the University. HENRY MELVILLE CURTIS, D. D., 0f the Board of Directors of the University. FRANK BENJAMIN DYER, LL. D., Lit. D., Superintendent of Cincinnati Schools. EMIL POLLAK, Member of the Board of Education. Faculty CHARLES WILLIAM DABNEY. Ph. D., LL. D., President of the University. FRANK BENJAMIN DYER, LL. D., Lit. D., Superintendent of Cincinnati Schools. WILLIAM PAXTON BURRIS, A. M., Professor of the History and Principles of Education, and Dean of the College for Teachers. JOHN WILLIAM HALL, A. M., Professor of Elementary Education. BURTIS BURR BREESE, Ph. D., Professor of Psychology. MICHAEL FREDERIC GUYER, Ph. D., Professor of Zoology. FRANK WASHINGTON BALLOU, B. 8., Assistant Professor of the History and Principles of Education. ALICE CYNTHIA KING, A. M., Assistant Professor of Elementary Education. page thirty-aix THE GRADUATE SCHOOL Historical Statement N 1906 the Graduate School qu sepa- . rated from the McMicken College of Liberal Arts and was organized into a distinct department. Since that time the enrollment in this depart- ment has been large, containing graduates of many of the most prominent colleges in the country. page thirty-sevcn JOSEPH EDWARD HARRY. PhD. Dean THE GRADUATE SCHOOL Faculty CHARLES WILLIAM DABNEY, Ph. 13., LL. D., President of the University. JERMAIN GILDERSLEEVE PORTER, Ph. D., Director of the Observatory and Professor of Astronomy. FREDERICK CHARLES HICKS, Ph. D., Sinton Professor of Economics and Civics. HARRIS HANCOCK, Ph. D., Dr. Sc., Professor of Mathematics. JOHN MILLER BURNAM, Ph. D., Professor of Latin. MAX POLL, Ph. D., Professor of the Germanic Languages. JOSEPH EDWARD HARRY, Ph. D., Professor of Greek and Dean of the Graduate School. MERRICK WHITCOMB, Ph. D., Professor of History. LOUIS TRENCHARD MORE, Ph. D., Professor of Physics. MICHAEL FREDERIC GUYER, Ph. D., Professor of Zoology. BURTIS BURR BREESE, Ph. D., Professor of Psychology. WILLIAM PAXTON BURRIS, A. M., Professor of the History and Principles of Education. page thirty-nine JOHN WILLIAM HALL, A. M., Professor of Elementary Education. STEPHEN ELMER SLOCUM, Ph. D., Professor of Applied Mathematics. MARCO F. LIBERMA, A. B., Professor of Romance Languages. HENRY HEATH BAWDEN, Ph. D., Professor of Philosophy. LAUDER WILLIAM JONES, Ph. D., Professor of Chemistry. GEORGE MOREY MILLER, A. M., Associate Professor of English. Hn charge 1907-083 M. ELIZABETH J . CZARNOMSKA, A. M., Lecturer on English. JAMES EDMUND IVES, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of Physics. CLAUDE M. LOTSPEICH, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of German. EMILIE WATTS McVEA. A. M.. Assistant Professor of English. GEORGE HENRY ALLEN, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of Latin. ISAAC JOSLIN COX, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of History. HARRY SHIPLEY FRY, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of Chemistry. GEORGE WALLACE UMPHREY, Ph. D Assistant Professor of Romance Languages. FRANK WASHINGTON BALLOU, B. 8., Assistant Professor of the History and Principles of Education. JOHN JERMAIN PORTER, Assistant Professor of Metallurgy. pay: forty V. .41 Hmllniw MINI i! H Class Officers y l' W 'l J --. . . ' 3 AcaJemics anal Engineers I BERNARD C. BOWEN . . President VIOLA PFAFF . . . Vice-President ALMA HAYMAKER . . . Secretary WWW LOUIS LURIE . . . . Treasurer I ?W- r 1 Medics ! JOSEPH HUGHES SHAW . . President THOMAS J. GLENN . . Vice-President E. R. BRUBAKER . . . Secretary A. E. SCHLANSER . . . Treasurer W. Laws .IXV - I t J WILLIAM AULT STARK . . Preszdent SIDNEY G. KUSWORM, Secretary-Treasurer Class Yell Hit 'em on the eyebrow! Hit 'em on the pate! Cincinnati, Cincinnati! E i Nineteen eight! 33w mm mew mew SENIOR REMINISCENCE CUSTOM has long existed among the writers of class histories to enlarge upon the deeds and attainments of their own classes. This is the historianis right, but in setting down the events W of the Class of 1908, the historian Will not take advantage of this privilege, but will confine herself closely to the truth. A good historian, however, must tell all of the truth, and telling all the truth in the present instance means the recounting of a long list of glorious deeds. Almost four long years ago we, the members of the Class of 1908, having conquered everything in the high schools, entered into the life of the University of Cincinnati. Our natural ability to conduct ourselves properly in any and in all positions enabled us to get along Without the least trouble. The Junior Class at that time, underesti- mating our executive power, presumptuously called us to- gether. This was entirely unnecessary, for we were fully able to take care of ourselves, but as ladies and gentlemen, we swallowed our wrath and proceeded to elect our officers. The result of the election clearly showed our perception, for what class ever before or since has had such able leaders in the hrst year of their university life as President Robert Taylor, Vice-President Ella Wilson, Secretary Ruth Hamil- ton and Treasurer Herbert Snodgrass? Again, we showed our ability in the selection of our flag-rush Captain. Under page forty-two Captain Forshee our boys valiantly defended the flag of 1908. Then strength and endurance, coupled with their daring heroism, called forth time and again, ttHit ,em on the eyebrow! Hit ,em on the pate! Cincinnati! Cincinnati! Nineteen eight! With increased volumn it was quickly taken up and rang out in the early morning air. For almost twelve long hours the fight for the flag continued. Rush followed rush with scarcely an interruption. Finally our boys, in a spirit of mercy and renunciation, decided by a unanimous vote to give the victory to the now thoroughly disheartened Sophomores. But the act was not even ap- preciated. In fact, the Sophs actually dared to boast about what they called their Hglorious victory? Their exultation, however, was short lived, for in the Freshman- Sophomore football game, our boys easily defeated their opponents by a score of 20 to 0. In our Sophomore year we elected the following officers: President Charles Ashcraft, Vice-President Mar- garet Shepherd, Secretary Rose Sherwood and Treasurer Robert Caldwell. Taught by experience, our second hag- rush resulted in a crushing defeat for the Freshmen. The flag was virtually ours from the time that we made our first rush, but in order to spare the young and unsophisticated Freshmen the ignominy and disgrace of losing the flag so early in the day, we did not cut down the ,09 emblem until afternoon. In our Freshman and Sophomore years we did not only limit ourselves to mere physical victories, but our power was equally felt in social events. The Freshmen dance which we gave at the Fort Mitchell Country Club was un- usually successful, and our Sophomore dance was acknowl- edged to have been the crowning event in the social calendar of 1906. page forty-thrcc As Juniors, with Thomas Schmuck as President, Re- becca Hopkins Vice-President, Viola E. Pfaff Secretary and James Clancy Treasurer, our achievements were varied. We gave what is conceded to have been the finest Prom. in the history of the University of Cincinnati. Financially and socially, it was the greatest success of our Junior year. We did not, however, let our whole future reputation rest upon this dance. THE CINCINNATIAN OF 1907 was pub- lished through our efforts, a result which could only have been attained by such a class as ours. Because of the fail- are of the preceding class to edit an annual, our class not only did their work but also its own, for THE CINCINNATIAN OF 1907 contains the history of both 1906 and 1907. It is said that 0all good things come in threes? The third event of our J unior year was the Teddy Bear Party. There was not anyone present at that glorious affair tTeddy Bears includedl who will not confess that the girls of 1908 were the most entertaining, delightful and original of hostesses. In this, our Senior year, our deeds have been so daz- zling as to surpass comprehension, so great that I should fear to chronicle them were it not for the fact that this is a history of actual events, events which have aroused the en- vious admiration of the under-classmen. From the time when we elected as our oflicers President Bernard C.Bowen, Vice-President Viola E. PfaE, Secretary Alma Haymaker and Treasurer Louis Lurie, the Class of 1908 has accom- plished results hitherto undreamed of by any class of Sen- iors at old U. C. We have worked harmouiously and unsel- fishly, and today the outcome of our efforts lies before you. All arrangements for the Senior Boat Ride on the nlIsland Queen have been made. We have selected The Import- ance of Being Earnestii as our class-play, the success of page forty-four which is already assured. The saying that ttAll work and no play makes J ack a dull boy, has always been believed by the members of our class, consequently we have both worked and played together. To the girl graduates of this class alone is accorded the honor and pleasure of having been the guests of the Senior men of the Academic and Engineering Colleges. The girls themselves have entertained their fel- low classmen with several pleasant hat homes. These affairs will always remain as happy recollections of the last year spent at our Alma Mater. As the time rapidly moves to the end of our university days, and as the day for commencement approaches, the Class of 1908 wishes to bid farewell to the J uniors, Sopho- mores and Freshmen, and, as a last word we wish to say that although history never repeats itself, we leave you this, our history, from which you may best learn how to follow 1n our fOOtStepS' ESTELLA LUELLA RENDIGS, Class Historian. page forty-five ....4 H gg -,-.g.- H r 4 ! .-.. ,npq Wk...- 4-! n-Q : .,.;.:l .. Wt; .- :X --.-4:.-. i .-..-'e .rr-u-MM-p-y- .. . . Y, K .. -. hm. wn-c-w- A I . : .. A A' ' A . A ' . ,. 4 - A V 'x'n- -:-' .- 1A .A. w- 1. u. 1 . . -..- Ammjgerkjv. . MA . Senior Academics MADOLIN ADLER, Walnut Hills High School. ILH- German Club. III.- German Club. IV.- Senior Girls Club; German Club. EMMA ANDRIESSEN, Woodward High School. I.- Thorns Scholarship; Y. W. C. A. 11. Thorns Scholarship; Y. W. C. A.; Blue Hydra; German Club; French Club. III. Blue Hydra; Secretary French Club; Secretary German Club. IV.- Student Assistant in German; President German Club ; French Club; Blue Hydra; Senior Girls Club; University Club. ANNA ETHEL BECKER, Hughes High School. II.- German Club; Glee Club. III.- German Club; Glee Club. IV. German Club; Senior Girls Club. HOWARD L. BEVIS, Technical School. Ir- S. F. D. 0.; News Staff. 11. News Staff; German Club; Blue Hydra. III.- Business Manager of News: German Club; English Club; Blue Hydra; Speakers Club; Assistant Editor of CINCINNA- TIAN, 1907; Class Orator. IV. President Academic Club; President Debating Associa- tion; Vice-President Speakers Club; Editor News; Staif 0f CINCINNATIAN, 1908; Univer- sity Club; U. C.-Miami Debat- ing Team. 7:3. J OEL BLAU, BERNARD COX BOWEN, Augusta. High School. 1. S. F. D. C. II.- Glee Club. III. Manager CINCINNATIAN, 1907; Speakers Club; Dramatic Club; Academic Club. IV. Class President; President University Club; Speakers Club; Academic Club; Stu- dent Government Tribunal; JonesX Prize Contest; Class Play; A. M. A. EDNA BUTTERWORTH, Hughes High School. 1. Y. W. C. A. II.- Glee Club; Y. W. C. A. 111. Glee Club; Y. W. C. A. IV.- Senior Girls Club; Y. W. C. A. ORIN C. CLEMENT, La Belle, Miss. 111. Economics Club. HM- TLI RALPH CUMMINS, Walnut Hiils High School. I.-a Rhoms Scholarship; Y. M. C. ILL Thoma Scholarship; Blue Hy- dra; Y. M. C. A. III.w Y. M. C. A.; Economics Club; Blue Hydra; Speakers Club; Comegys Scholarship. IV.- Blue Hydra; Economics Club; Manager CovOperative Book Store; Debating Council; Sec- retary Academic Club; U. 0.- Miami Debating Team. FT mm...- ..1..L..............,.......,,...... A V-'-! ':--:pl .1 .-'-h. L hmmmh , ., .A A ., A . . - 7 . ma ...-.....wwu-n. 5-0 ELLA DAVIS, Walnut Hills High School. II.-- Settlement Board; Class Bas- ket-Ball; German Club. III.- German Club; Literary Society. IV.-- Vice-President Literary Socie- ty; Senior Girls Club; Class gay Committee; University ub. - -D--IL .31 --,--- ... -:. ; -:-. - -5 c'- A ! qua. l? L 1:: ?L 'l L l I AMY FERRIS, A A A I.- Vassar. IL- French Club; Glee Club. III.a French Club; Literary Society. IV.- French Club; Literary Society; Senior Girls Club. L :24 . L 1; .1 - .9..de L ..l . , ; 'J arr, . A ' 'L -F,.F..-..m...i ANNA MAE GAUCHE, Woodward High School. I.- Glee Club. ILL Glee Club. III.-- Class Basket-Ball. IV.-m Senior Girls Club. ELIZABETH G. GINN, Augusta High School. I.- Glee Club; Y. W. C. A. II.- Y. W. C. A. ma Y. w. c. A. IV.-a English Club; Senior Girls Club; Y. W. C. A. SARAH GLAZER, Madisonville High School. IV.- Senior Girls Club. LOUIS GROSS, Hughes High School. I.- Glee Club; Thorns Scholarship ; Class Football. 113- Glee Club; Class Football. IV. Class Play; Manager Class Play; U. C. - Ohio Debate; Jones' Prize Contest. ALMA EARLE HAYMAKER, AW Clarksburg, W. Va. I.- Y. W. C. A. II.-- Y. W. C. A. III.-- Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; German Club; Literary Society. IV.r- Y. W. C. A.; Secretary Liter- ary Society; Secretary Class; Senior Girls Club; English Club; German Club. . REBECCA HOPKINS, AM. Woodward High School. I.3 Glee Club; Blue Hydra. II.- Class Basket-Ball; Glee Club: Blue Hydra. III.- Vice-President Class; Literary Society ; Blue Hydra; Dramatic Society; Convocation Com- mittee. 1V.- President Literary Society; Staff CINCINNATIAN, 1908; Blue Hydra; Vice-President Dramatic Society; Senior Girl! Club; Vice-President Univer- sity Club; English Club. w, A. .1-2-5 - A ; A- 5-1.; muff manning 3...; .-o q... f A EMANUEL JACUBOWITZ, Rochester High School. 11.3 Class Football. IV.H Speakers Club; Jones Prize Contest. --l--4-10-9-39- qu3-n3. n: --u. - . n3-n-ag31- mm A . 3 . . A's- .w . AA -.;3-.p-h'F-ul'p-dhhngr A'. .3 'A .- ALMIRA J EWETT, Walnut Hills High School. III.- Literary Society; Class Basket- .3 Ball. . A ; IVE Class Play Committee; Senior Girls Club; Literary Society. F-MWH F1 I f E i e: 1-: MAY KUTCHBAUCH, Hughes High School. I.3 Y. W. C. A. 11.3 Class Basket-Ball; Y. W. C. A. IV.-h- Senior Girls Club. igrrrwi HF- hr 4. vJ-th- I L .. S L- -' . LEA BLANCHE LANZ, vcp Troyes, Aube, France. 11. French Club; Y. W. C. A. 111. President French Club; Y. W. C. A.; German Club; Univer- sity Club. IV.- President French Club; Sen- ior Girls Club; Y. W. C. A.; University Club; Class Play. H'da u.mw- .F-.-.-. mwwm A. n- :u Ami -....-A .. . -- .n-g m um w-5 HELENE LOTZE, Walnut Hills High School. a : La German Club; Glee Club. IL-a Y. W. C. A.; German Club. III.- Y. W. C. A.; Dramatic Society; German Club. IV.u Senior Girls Club; German Club; Dramatic Society; Presi- gtinlf; Glee Club; University u . f . l? f' nn-JI--,-hi- w I l I LOUIS LURIE, Hughes High School. 1. Blue Hydra. II.- Blue Hydra; Thorns Schoiar- ship. III.-B1ue Hydra. IV. News Staff; Treasurer Class; Blue Hydra; Fellowship in Psychology. f k n .. ELSIE MEYER, Woodward High School. Lh- Y. W. C. A. II.- German Club; Y. W. C. A. III.-F German Club; Y. W. C. A.; Glee Club. IV. - Class Basket-Ball; Senior Girls Club; German Club; Y. W. C. . .4-'::.XI'L:P-Lk A y;.;. . ...-..-,E. EDITH G. MORRISON, Walnut Hills High School. I.-n Y. W. C. A. HLmBlue Hydra; Y. W. C. A.; McMicken Scholarship. IV.h Senior Girls Club; Blue Hy- dra; Y. W. C. A. u A . . H4. 1' . ; .. v -A:w ,- :-;-::.- : ;-.: : -v A, . -: - --'- u. A- .-; . y. pr ' '- 4'!- ! a-IL $JA. HT-D'I- Rj Awl'n: RALPH EDWARD OESPER, I and ILH Purdue University. III.- Chemists Club; German Club. IV.- Assistant in Chemistry; Ger- man Club; French Club; Sec- retary and Treasurer Chemists Club; American Chemical So- ciety. u: 4 A ...-...-:,-. -.-.4 - .. --.-...- J4 n. 4 - KATE PERIN, Madisonville High School. 1. Y. W. C. A. 11. Blue Hydra; Y. W. C. A.; Thoma Scholarship. III.- French Club; Blue Hydra; Y. W. C. A.; McMicken Scholaru ship. IV.mY. W. C. A.; French Club; Blue Hydra; Senior Girls Club; Literary Society. .- , . x. A . Elf - :. : u A 4 L - .' A A '1 - j '7. k ! .' ' -2'419'h VIOLA E. PFAFF, A cur Walnut Hills High School. I.-Y. W. C. A.; German Club. II. Y. W. C. A.; German Club; French Club. 111. Secretary Class; Treasurer French Club; Y. W. C. A.; German Club; Dramatic So- ciety; J unior Prom Committee. . :13??? ' IV. Vice-President Class; Corre- ,. A. r. -. IA .5 2; ' F. '5 A; :1 : r' . A 4 ;.: - ' u, .4 -F-I-fr-F-ri A.Rq-g-rM'u-o-w-Wp-H-I-q: I x P 'I' law's. 'k-L-zm': spending Secretary Settlement 52-33 ff? 1 Board; Y. W. C. A.; German Club; Secretary French Club; Senior Girls Club; Class Play. :1; x A a... a H, ..-..4.... :d....-... ...- . MM . 3 . ' '11 1'5? .--,---9--4--'I .- ,......-.. .1 .-n- ........,...., .-..., .-.... . A .- Ar-Y . Ebb jI-uu-HI- H '-. '- FA -'-'-.'- - .-- hh-HHI-nh- g...- u. yF . .-,.-.- 44.n-gh $.me Mm' ELSA PFAFFINGER, I.-- Y. W. C. A.; German Club. 11. German Club. III.-- French Club; German Club. IV.- French Club; German Club; Senior Girls Club. JESSIE PHIPPS, Woodward High School. IV.-- Senior Girls Club. ESTELLA L. RENDIGS, Walnut Hills High School. I.- Y. W. C. A. II.- Y. W. C. A. III.- Y. W. C. A.; German Club. IV.-u German Club; Secretary Sen- ior Girls Club; Y. W. C. A.; Class Historian. E. REIMAN, Woodward High School. I.- Glee Club. II.m Glee Club. III.+H Assistant Manager Glee Club; Student Assistant in Physics. IV.--G1ee Club; Student Assistant in Physics. AUGUSTA LOUISE ROOS, Woodward High School. I.-a Y. W. C. A.; German Club; Thorns Scholarship. 11. Blue Hydra; German Club. 111. French Club; German Club; Blue Hydra. IV.-n Treasurer French Club; Ger- man Club; Blue Hydra; Glee Club; Senior Girls Club. ' , FLORENCE ROOT, , Woodward High School. I.- Y. W. C. A. III.- Glee Club; Clasa Basket-Ball. 'IV.- Senior Girls Club; French Club; Glee Club. REGINA C. ROTHSCHILD, Walnut Hills High School. III.- German Club. IV.-h Senior Girls Club; German Club; Glee Club; Class Play. FLORENCE K. SCHAAF, Walnut Hills High School. 1. - Glee Club; Tennis Club. 11. Glee Club. ' 3 III.-- Class Basket-Ball; Glee Club. IV.- Literary Society; Vice-Presi- dent Senior Girls Club; Class Play. :xgzt? . THOMAS KIRBY SCHMUCK, E X- $ A 4 Dr. Schmidt's School. 1. News Staff. II.- News Staff. 111. President Class; Economics Club; University Club; Uni- versity Settlement Board. IV. Class Play Committee; Execu- tive Committee Law School. ROSE S. SHERWOOD, Hughes High School. 1. Thoms Scholarship. 11. 012153 Secretary; Blue Hydra; French Club; News Staff. III. Staff CINCINNATIAN, 1907.; Literary Society; Blue Hydra; Dramatic Club; French Club; Shakespeare Society; Board of Directors Co-Operative Book Store; McMicken Scholarship. IV. Literary Society; Blue Hydra; Dramatic Society; French Club: Board of Directors Co- Operative Society; Staff CIN- CINNATIAN, 1908. LAURETTA Q. SHORTEN, Woodward High School. 1. Blue Hydra; Glee Club. 11. Blue Hydra; Glee Club. III.- Blue Hydra; Glee Club. IV.- Secretary Blue Hydra; French Club; Senior Girls Club. GRACE SPIEGEL, Hartwell High School. 111. McMicken Scholarship. IV. - Senior Girls Club. T 3 UK .11 .' A --D-H A. -J-: ..... .-..- u- 'awl unn- 4 A 3qu . J .. A amj-gu-g '- .1: i : .1 : q, ROBERT ALMS TAYLOR, B G n Walnut Hills High School. LA Class President; Glee Club; Track Team. 11,- Glee Club; Manager Track Team. III.-m President Glee Club; Captain Track Team; Athletic Council; Student Government Tribunal; University Club. IV.-A President Student Government Tribunal; Athletic Council; Glee Club; University Club; Class Play. ELLA CAMPBELL WILSON, A A A Delhi High School. I.- Vice-President Class; Y. W. C. A. ILA French Club; Glee Club; Class Basket-Ball: Y. W. C. A. III.- Class Basket-Ball; Junior Prom Committee; French Club. IV.- University Ciub; Senior Girls Club; English Club. MABEL M. WITZENBACHER, Woodward High School. LA Y. W. C. A.; Class Basket-Ball. ILA German Club. 'A 111- German Club; Class Basket- Ball. IV.- President Senior Girls Club; University Club. ' ISAAC M. WISE, Educational Institute. Lt S. F. D. C. ILH S. F. D. C. I : III.- Speakers Club; Academic Club. IV.- Speakers Club; Academic Club. Senior Engineers CHARLES E. ASHCRAFT, Newport High School. I.--G1ee Club. 11. Engineers Club; Class Presi- dent; University Club. HL- Engineers Club; Student Gov- ernment Tribunal; Student Assistant in Civil Engineer- ing; A. M. A. IV.H President Engineers Club u-e- signedh Student Government Tribunal Resignem; Glee Club; Student Assistant in Civil Engineering; A. M. A. w - ' I A I . .. .. , u-bw-EAI' 5-: ,- . y - A .... .1 . E. F. BAHLMANN, Ch. E., 9A9 Walnut Hills High School. ILQ Chess Club: Lieutenant of Flag-Rush. III.-- Secretary of Chess Club; En- gineers Club. IV. American Chemical Society Degree Ch. E., 1907. V. Vice-President Cincinnati Sec- tion of American Chemical Society. . -.A- -.-w ' .g-q-j-a-ya-u :- ..q-qu-gh-q-y. .-. J -T u 1. ROBERT M. BOOTH, Technical School. 3. -s.::.a.n A . .. I.- Weekly N 9108. II.- Engineers Club; Board of D1- rectors of Co-Operative So- ciety. III and IVrd President of Board of Co-Operative Society; Student Assistant in Electrical Engi- neering; Engineers Club; Uni- versity Club. 4, I - '1': W . .n - 5 J ':. J 133 l' 2-.- I -,-.i ,I i n ...- 'WP-4--F...-...-.W l 'i! x A. . - LOUIS BRAND, Ch. E., Newport High School. II.- Engineers Club; Chess Club. III.- Engineers Club; Chess Club. IV.- American Chemical Society - Degree Ch. 13., 1907. V. Engineers Club; American Chemical Society; Assistant in Mathematics. m, ...; - ...-pm: 7'...- m ..r .. ..-...-.--.- - . ,- A-x'LL' 4 EA: .mJI-a' rII; '44 i A 4 ' x, A nu-q-n F I I I II I c-O-F-d-i-W - I an .-n--A AA: v-J -- 4:: W ---..-.-F . ; n:n- . i w; I CARL GEORGE BUCHANAN, EA E Hughes High School. I.- Class Baseball Team. ILI Engineers Club; Class Base- ball Team. III.I Engineers Club; University Club. - IV.;- Engineers Club; Universnty Club; Secretary U. C. Branch of A. I. E. E.; Student As- sistant in Physics. AUGUST BIEDERMANN, Jr., Hughes High School. I.--Class Baseball and Football Teams. II.-- Engineers Club; Class Base- ball; Captain Class Football Team; Lieutenant of Flag- Rush; Captured '09 Flag from Stack. III and IV.I Engineers Club. HAROLD W. T. COLLINS, ILI Engineers Club. III.- Engineers Club. IV.I Engineers Club. 0' NORMAN B. CONWAY, IFAQ 5'2 Covington High School. LI Class Football; Class Baseball; Captain Class Basket-Ball; U. C. Basket-Ball. II.-- Class Football; Class Baseball; Captain Class Basket-Ball; U. C. Basket-Ball; Engineers Club. f III.I Captain U. C. Basket-Ball; Engineers Club; University Club. IV.H Captain U. C. Basket-Ball; Engineers Club. .- m .......-. -3 --,-j--Ql-4 . . ..- x1: ..ueH-ug-y- gn -....,.--.-u,...., . . A : ' 4 ..-. 1' m . ea- ...:'g,--;-,.........-.EJ'5 amp... ...,.F,F. ,5 V... a- . ..,..,,...14, . GODFREY A. DOELLER, '3 59 M E 1907 Technical School. I.- Glee Club. '11. Engineers Club. IIIr- Vice-PresidentEngineers Club; IV.- Glee Club; Engineers Club ; Student Government Tribunal ; Class Play. DAVID G. DEVORE, BQH Georgetown High School. 1. Class Football 11. Class Football; Engineers Club. HL- Engineers Club; Student Gov- ernment Tribunal. IV.H- President Student Government Tribunal; President Engineers Club; University Club. FRANK F. FISHER, Bran Hughes High School. I.- Lieutenant Flag Rush; Class Football; Class Baseball; Class Basket- Ball. IL- Engineers Club; Class Foot- ball; Class Basket-Ball; U. C. Basket-Ball; Captain Flag Rush; Glee Club. III.M Engineers Club; U. C. Foot- ball; U. C. Basket-Ball; Flag Rush J udge. IV. - U. C. Basket-Ball; Glee Club; President Athletic Council; Engineers Club; University Club. JAMES GALLAGHER, Walnut Hills High School. IL- Engineers Club. 111. Engineers Club. IV.H Secretary Engineers Club. WALTER HENRY, AA 11 Newport High School. 11. Engineers Club. III. - Engineers Club. IV.- Engineers Club. CHAS. H. MACKELFRESH, Woodward High School. 1. Glee Club; University Settle- ment Board. II.-- Glee Club; Engineers Club; Class Football; Class Basket- Ball; Track Team. 111. Engineers Club; Glee Club; Track Team. IV.-d News Staff. STANLEY FRANK POWELL, Middletown, Ohio. I and II.-+ Case Schoo'l. 111. Engineers Club. IV.- Engineers Club. LOUIS G. RINNINSLAND, EAE Hughes High School. 11. Engineers Club. III.- Engineers Club. IV. A. I. E. E.; Engineers Club. HARRY S. ROBINSON, Ben Home City High School. I.- Class Football. IL- Class Football; Class Basket- Ball; Engineers Club; News Staff. III. Engineers Club ; News Staff. IV.- Convocation Committee; Class gay Committee; Engineers ub. -,-H, h-n-q-q ' P... HERMAN F. SCHICK, Woodward High School. 11. Engineers Club. HLh Engineers Club. IV.- Engineers Club; Student Gov- ernment Tribunal; Class Play. .1 E I' J V:- r 1. . :i x l. l l L E l CLEVELAND P. STICKSEL, Technical School. I.- Class Baseball. II.- U. G. Baseball. IV..- Engineers Club. .- ,- Hf-m- HMM- MILTON HENRY WAGNER, q, AG Hughes High School. II.-- Engineers Club; 111. Engineers Club; University Club. IV.F Staff CINCINNATIAN, 1908; Treasurer University Club. w me..-g-i :15 9 ? ' 3 kA-HHFHH; RICHARD EARL WARD, Lancaster, Ky. IL- Engineers Club. III.- Engineers Club. IV.-- Engineers Club; A. I. E. E. M$ Uniclentificcl BERNARD S. SHAAR, Ohio Mechanics Institute. 1. - Glee Club. II.- Mandolin Club; Engineers Club. III.E Mandolin Club; Engineers Club; Vice-President Chemists Club. IV.- Treasurer Engineers Club; President Chemists Club; Uni- versity Club: American Chem- ical Society; Student Assistant in Chemistry. CARL EBERLING, Woodward High School. ILH Engineers Club. 111. Engineers Club. IV.- Engineers Club. GONE BUT NOT FORGOTTEN r'Mw5, Abraham, Selina Adams, Edwin Myron Armel, Grace Auer. Estelle Aultman. Merwyn Boss, William A. Bosworth, Charles W. Caldwell, Robert Chambers, Victor T. Dabney, Mary Moore Dickerson. Jeff. Dickey, N ida W. Dieterle, Anna H. Dine. Hanna Evans, Teresa B. Fehl, Isadora Friehmelt, Marie E. Getelson, Joe Glickert, John Hamilton, Ruth Helman, Mabel R. Hirst, Fred E. Hoerner, Ida C. Hoffman, Herbert H. Innes, Myra. Ethel Jones, Isabel Kahn, Lucian March, Janet page sixty-three Meis, Blanche Mitchell, Henry Clay UBarr, Bess Rainey, Katheryn G. Ramsfelder, Leila J. Ransom, Edwin P. Rasch, Alma H. Roth, Alma J . Rothschild, Amy Shepard, Margaret Sutfleld, Florence O. Tafel, Melitta Thirkield, Gilbert H. Vincent, Margaret L. Weakly, Robert B. Whetstone, Thomas Franklin Woodward, Donald Allen, Raynor Huntington Brenner, Michael F. DeMar, C. Eaton, Chester Fannestock, Leroy Forshie, Alva Gather, Walter Glen, Charles Hair, Earl Hatmaker, Daniel Luhrman, John F. Meyer, Roland Meyer, Alfred Miller, Robert Miller, Vance Kain Moore, J . R. Partington, Charles Rapp, L. B. Raschig, R. A. Ratz, Otto Richards, Otho Roof, A. B. - Sattler, Gustave Smith, A. L. Smith, Elbridge G. Smythe, M. Snodgrass, Herbert Waddell, Howard Wakeman, Albert Werk, Casimer Wilson, Frank page aixty-four MW MEDICS OF 1908 +$VF-f+ Class Song TUNE g 'And'rea,s Hofew. Come,classmates,fillyourglasses, And when in life's long journey W911 drink a. brimming toast, We ease the sick and blind, OurAImaMatefs name and fame W611 think of dear old Medic. Resounds from coast to coast ; And Faculty so kind; And, now, while we're receiving Remember,boys,where!er we be, Her teaching in an art so great. W611 all cling fast to memory Stick by your fellow-classmates, Ofcollegeanddearoldclassmates, THE CLASS OF 1908. THE CLASS OF 1908. Then let us sing the praises Of the Class of 1908, For class and college glory On them our hopes we stake; To M. C. 0. our love is due, To her ideals we'll e'er be true, And to our dear old classmates, THE CLASS OF 1908. page :I'xty-Eve $1 -....... ..-.. .11., .. 4- -lt w-r? :- J. .u... f .. . 1 . EH. 0 1 . Wk?- u-uq m -.-,........,u .F-H. . -D i' .. -r m w- mv mm-w-n- - f : a . p9 ' . .. . .3 1 1: q . V. , .: FA -. f, -. . . f ,5,- .. K V 1 Senior Medics AZIZ ABRAHAM, Simnoris, Egypt. A. B.Assiut Training College, 1903. TutorAssiutTrainingCollege, 1900. Head Master American School, Zagazig, Egypt, 1904. Medical Department, Syrian Pro- testant College, Beyrout, Syria, 1904-05. Medical College, Ohio, 1905-08. ARLINGTON AILES, a Y :1: Anna, Ohio. Ohio NorthernUniversity, 1902-03. State Entrance Examination, 1904. Resident Obstetrician, 1907-08. Externe Liberty Street Maternity Hospital. 1907-08. Manager College Book Store, 1908. Medical College of Ohio, 1908. ngh-practice in Jackson county, 10. -H --'3-'---9 .5 pg... '--.'h- ...12mu 4 ! y- .- 1. EDWARD D. ALLGAIER, N E N Westwood, Ohio. Hughes High School, 1901. University of Cincinnati, 1905. Manager Baskethall Team, 1904. Captain Basket-Ball Team, 1905. President Athletic Council, 1905. Medical College of Ohio, 1908. Dr. Phelp's Quiz. ELBER R. BRUBAKER, :1: r A Springiield, Ohio. Springfield High School, 1899-00. Wittenberg College, 1901-03. Nelson1s Business College, 1900. Medical College of Ohio, 1908. Secretary of Class, 1908. Married, 1907. .'-... H... :1:- . map... qn-q-qM H5! H H . . 0 - .- 1...: A , ,.. .A .-. 4 Au x... mm m r...- g..- 1.3: A .41-hgw-m- I .c .HMF m - I 9 4. .. h- - Had. I-id-I-jn-I-j ,- .-.,.-......-. - . Y. - 1 f .. .4; .. .1- N kmmm u-I- cal! 0-H Ji 1 I9 . Ma:mmm. ' Hm 4' Htm.lr'w . q n-u': - OTT CASEY, N 2 N Terre Haute, Ind. Terre Haute High School, 1901. Ingiana State Normal School,1901- Laboratory Assistant in Physics and Chemistry, 1903-04. Medical College of Ohio, 1908. Interne Union Hospital, Terre Haute, Ind., 1908-09. FRED DE COURCY, Cincinnati, Ohio. Hughes High School. International Correspondence School. St. Xavier College. Physician to St. Vincent de Paul Society, St. Petefs Cathedral. Assistant Physician St. Joseph's Maternity Hospital. Knnilghst, of Columbus, Y. M. I.. Y. Medical College of Ohio, 1908. CHAS. A. DONNELLY, AB A Ft. Thomas, Ky. Dayton High School, 1904. Medical College of Ohio, 1908. RACHID FAKHRY, Mt. Lebanon, Syria. Syrian Protestant College, Bey- rout, Syria. Medical College of Ohio, 1906v08. ..., f-q ii- . TI 1; II x51! 4 mph-HI-I-II-r-r- -- II. - F.- F-h-t-h-h-h-nh P-HHf-fmp. .0 - ... . I .I-d- 9 a- .b .111- 11.6,? . I 5- s 1 I y . :0 -.- w-r w-Q-n-q-H E0... 1 0H,; -.-:...-:.-..:m .......... A . . - . m z-Y . HWF...1..-n-r- THOMAS J. GLENN, Ludlow, Ky. A. B. St. Xavier, 1904. N urse, Good Samaritan, 1907. Vice-President Class, 1908. Medical College of Ohio, 1908. CHAS. E. HOWARD, 0Y4: College Hill, Ohio. Woodward High School, 1904. Medical College of Ohio, 1908. WILLIAM HARRY HULL, ch A 61, N 2 N, ea N E Cincinnati, Ohio. Woodward High School, 1904. Medical College of Ohio, 1908. Dr. Paul's Quiz. SAWEERIS IBRAHIM, Sohag, Egypt. B. A. Assiut Training College. Medical Department Syrian Pro- testant College, Beyrout Syria, 1904-07. Medical College of Ohio, 1908. Will practice in Egypt. ARTHUR J. LIGHT, nY rb Cincinnati, Ohio. Woodward High School, 1904. Medical College of Ohio. 1908. Dr. Osmond's Quiz. -.q.-ul-a ---r l .ngg H. -----v - ............ ,. 0 9-w- 4 XE .194. W'- v-.;;.- -,..wvj .. . FRAZER F. MONROE, N E N Falmouth, Ky. Falmouth High School, 1902. Medical College of Ohio, 1908. Dr. Phelp1s Quiz. .m-m- --m - WA. 4 $1 I H H? n 1:1; .K. .1 ROBERT D. MUSSEY, B 9 H. N 2 N Glendale, Ohio. Glendale High School, 1902. University of Cincinnati, 1902-04. Class Treasurer, 1903-04. Basket-Ball Team, 1903-05. Blue Hydra. Medical College of Ohio, 1908. Class Orator, 1908. Dr. Phelp's Quiz. - a ,q34-WHHW- I: , . r . A. E. SCHLANSER, 9 Y :1, Terrace Park, Ohio. Entrance Examination. Medical College of Ohio, 1908. Class Treasurer, 1908. Dr. Osmond's Quiz. . . ,Hwawwag-y GEORGE H. SCHOMAKER, 9 Y 4, Cincinnati, Ohio. A. B. St. Xavier, 1904. Medical College of Ohio, 1908. -. . ,u... .13. -.-. 1mm ,1 A urns- . H 'h-u-y- 1 m-ij-u-u-Amiwammi-a .1 agar ---.:.: --.,.... ma.- Whm FI- JOSEPH HUGHES SHAW, B 9 H, q: B K, N 2 N Cincinnati, Ohio. Hughes High School, 1901. Umversity of Cincinnati, A. B., 1905. Teaching fellowship Biology. 1904- 05. Medical College of Ohio, 1908. Paul Surgical Pathology Prize, 1906. President Class, 1908. Dr. Phehfs Quiz. . 37- 4.: y I.Wu .k , v-H 1 ' 5. r'd-D'F-bx 3.1-. .; . 3-,: LA. : A . J. HHWWHH-i' 9 ---.---u- '?. '5. 1'11 -c 1 :l. .'.. ram: mgr A. WILLIAM T. STEWART, BQII, aNE,;N2N Oxford, Ohio. B. S. Washington and Jefferson, 1899 Dr. Phglp's Quiz. Mummy. q------n, EMIL M. STRASSER, x 2 X, 9 Y ch, 19 N E Cincinnati, Ohio. Woodward High School, 1904. Dr. Paul's Quiz. Medical College of Ohio, 1908. .1 . 1 A1 41 .-- I-up--. h-quI-qhn-qqh .Hrdh1 ah ,3... '4'; ERRA D. STUMP, N 2 N Charleston, W. Va. Charleston High School, 1904. Medical College of Ohio, 1908. Will practice in Charleston. WILLIAMS S. YEAGER, Independence, Ky. Independence High School, 1901. National Normal University, Leb- anon, Ohio, 1902. Resident Obstetrician, 1907-08. Manager College Book Store, 1908. -1 T' 7 T l. I V 1 Medical College of Ohio, 1908. iii; .1 V le; 9,: m - NELSON P. YEARDLEYJB q. 31L Parkersburg, W. Va. - J; . Parkersburg High School, 1903. . H 25 Louisville Medical School, 1904. I: . ;; Starling Medical School, 1905. . H Medical College of Ohio, 1906-08. - n ! W ' Uniclentified iii .99.:pr . -. SOPHIA BERTHA DAUCH, g... . . .. '4 .5: ' .- ,.. -cv '..- Mt. Auburn, Cincinnati. Entrance Examination. Will practice in Cincinnati. Medical College of Ohio, 1908. FRANK C. HEFFNER, Celina, Ohio. Celina High School, 1903. Medical College of Ohio, 1908. ARTHUR SILVER, B a II, N 2 N Sidney, Ohio. A. B. Miami University, 1904. Dr. Phelp1s Quiz. 5-... 1-! T ..m-bt-u-h-gp-b-h n L 1.7. ,a .1 v. 00 R.l m E mum Em .n .m mt: m a .P ns H . m mm ,.m o. r00 r W0 r Rh !.-m h mum P mm T m E0, 30 Madam tm R Ua Kn. 10$ H.1 E A3 03 r RnaQ er n In 0 .mW1,s.a.w Ba. Hn Hn .1 Em ,r7ma 0A. ..m .m n anmmmem Rx? Cm Ym mm A. maJRe E Dc AC R 1mm WWM C R R A Mowmgg A A S chdrh W I C m M w m U w , H D 0 E L . .. t lilflrllllllfrll fllllllllrrlrrlnlllllllhl ,flllllllrllal. .flrlli1l.r lilllvllllll lllrllnllpllllprlffbill Illalfflnlall lrllilllnIIII-Ivklllllnl! lill'nltlrt. . a RALPH H. INOTT, Cincinnati, Ohio. I.-a President Class; FootballTeam Basket-Ball Team; Baseball Team. IL- Football Team: Baseball Team; Basket-Ball Team. HI.- University Coach of Athletics. CARL JACOBS, 4: A q: Cincinnati, Ohio. I SIDNEY G. KUSWORM, - Dayton, Ohio. 1 - U. C3Washington Debating Team. IL-Vice-President Debating Council; U. C.-Washington Debating Team; De- bating Senate; Speakers Club: III.- President Speakers Club; Vice-Presi- dent Debating Association; Secretary- Treasurer of Class of 1908; U. C: Miami Debating Team; Manager Uni- versity DVeekly Newx; Student AHairs Committee; CINCINNATIAN StaH; De- bating Senate: University Club. Pn-LM . . A -. . ; J - A -. A .- .m-A -.. .;:.:.- y: mm .n- : ;- - n; A w-Iu w. - . . R. G. LAMBERTON, Covington, Ky. Ohio. V MICHAEL MINGES, Cincinna i, ALPHONSE PATER SHULER MCCORMICK, ' nes, Ind. t Hamilton, Ohio. D. WALTER ROGERS, Norwood, Ohio. .. . 1 . 4r frilllllIII-Illl Ktllilii Illilllillnllltl lrrF-IllfII-fll lillinl or llll c.llul L .IIIII ;. lirlllilrtf lxlillllttllK .IOIIIII-Ilo-jji.l .IJIIIIIOJIIIOIIIIIIII mg 8.; .m mm .m M m, N. Lm on . M - A mp mm. M . Nm: M m1 hm. Am N. mmw LmsW s: Tm mm Hn.1. Wwwm wmhh Mum Mn. LMm CmL mem Lm Om. Em1 smiw hwcc Um Hn wal mem .33 Am. Tw Hm UDm .35... w Aw E B B .mem.mLaa M A G t Dian Go... A e L .lwhe.1.n.n. R k I CvTCUSS I Y 0 w W . . . m m E B . I. .L L .l. E G A I H W P .. 1...... . .i. 3.5.1. .:1. . 1 1:1: . 1 1 . e. . a . . . a 1. . . . .H 1 . . .s lfiflllffi Iffnnrilnlllnlalu.n4 liliiilfllfhll. Illrllrnl ..Il...ll.l..xl..llll..v. . .. FIEIITIIIFIYI hr ltlT-TTIIT. .I Itlltjlljllllcll! I. jjlllllllltlul F... .. . . Unidentified ?xE-u-axe, THOMAS TURNER JUSTIS, Norwood, Ohio. THOMAS GREGORY, Cincinnati, Ohio. BURT RABBITS, d: A 43 Springfield, Ohio. LINMUR SCAMMAN, Saco, Maine. Class Oi-Ecers w-E-GZI Academics and Engi neers HARVEY MANSS . . . President STELLA VAN HISE . . Vice-President MARIAN STEWART . . Secretary JOHN JEWETT . . . Treasurer ELISE REIS LOEBMAN, Editor CINCINNATIAN STANLEY FARRAR BREWSTER, Business Manager CINCINNATIAN 'z'hShwcat-U Medics JOHN H. PRINCE . . . President NOEL GANG MUSSEY . . . Secretary W Law ROBERT UCONNELL . . President JOHN CABLE . . Sem'etary-Treaswer qy-QEPN Class Yell Whiskey, high-ball. Brandy, wine; Cincinnati 'Varsity, Nineteen nine. WWWWW JUNIOR JOURNAL :fE'fff'f? . T IS INDEED with reluctant spirit that we write '. ' '3 this, our history. As Freshmen we were delighted '3 With the idea, we were eager to shout to the world ' our mighty deeds. As Sophomores, we wished to call the attention of the student body to the extremely valu- able presence in their midst. As J uniors, we are less eager to push ourselves forward. We are fast losing the spirit of boastfulness which exists to such a large extent in the souls of young people. Already we are able to realize that our time for remaining in college is very short. Someone has said, or is supposed to have said, HHistory is a tracing of the iniiuence that has been at work in mold- ing the lives of men. To write a history proper 0f the J unior Class would be, then, to trace the influence this class has exerted upon the life of the Cincinnati University. Be- sides, it is held to be generally desirable for the historian to sing the praises of his comrades with the vim and cheer- ful idiocy of a freshly-inspired poet. The object, however, of the present historian is not to praise, but to lay simple facts before you, that you may consider; and, furthermore, you are given the privilege of judging these facts by your own standards. From the moment that this class became a member of the student body of the Cincinnati University, it has always page seven ly-eight been foremost in college life. Nothing has been too great for it to achieve. Nothing too trivial for it to learn. Its men and women have always held positions of responsi- bility. In class standing, it has stood for the best. In athletics, its men have filled practically all of the responsible positions, and its women, relying solely on the gigantic force of their stupendous capabilities, easily have eclipsed all their competitors in basket ball, dazzling every eye With the brilliancy of the contests. Along literary lines it has not been wanting, but we must not boast of our deeds e they are written on all the pages of the university life -- a place where all may read. We will say no more. IOLA BISHOP SHAFER, Class Historian. page seventy-nine mmmmm ACADEMICS AND ENGINEERS AcaaemicswCIass R011 Andridge, Mabel Babbitt. Hildegarde Margaret Brewster. Stanley F. Buerger, Rose W. Carrington, Elizabeth Cabell Clark, J eanie M. Closterman, Aline M. Collins, John M. Conway, Geneva Cook, Evangeline Elizabeth Crowe. Mary Emily Deutsch, Hermann Dodds, Pocahontas W. Evans, Roberta Farbach, Florence Louise Famham, Beatrix M. Gallagher, Rachel Shaw Gallagher, Andrew Geigerman, Hortense Gregg, Irma Guethlein, Emma Haffner, Edwin Hagerty, Marguerite Hathaway, Edward S. Hoffmeister, Charles Herbert Hunt, Emily Louise Kreimer, Edith Latz, Charles Benjamin Lazaron, Morris S. Leist, Stella Grace Von Lepel, Marianna Zephora Levi, Isabelle J . Levi, Ruth Loeb, Florence Loebman, Elise Reis Latter, Frederick D. Lyons, M. Ethel McAvoy, Blanche Mackzum, Henrietta Manss, Harvey M. Murphy, Loretta Murray, Alma Darst Oehler, Marie Elizabeth Oskamp, Pearl C. Outcalt, Ethel Louise Perkins, Mary Louise Podesta, Charles W. Reid, Harriet Sammet, Lydia Margaret Schroerlucke, Laura Louise Schutzkwer, Marie Selbert, Louis Shafer, 1013 Bishop Shelow, Elizabeth 1:151: eighty Sommerfield, Elsie Stegemeyer, Anna Marie Steinau, Irene A. Stewart, Marian Stugard, Caroline Van Hart, Clara M. Van Hise, Stella. $Wherner, Lewis Wilkinson, Helen Williams, Charles T. Witherspoon. Thomas G. +W Engineers-Class Roll Abrahams, Mortimer E., Ch. E. Ackerson, David Hayward, E. E. ChalkIey, Roger Herman, C. E. Clancy, James Anthony, C. E. Dawson, Benjamin Alfred, C. E. Eckert, Clarence Roy, C. E. Fels, Clifford George, Ch. E. Friedman, Harry Bayard. C. E. Gabriel, Richard W., C. E. Hacker, Charles Henry, Ch. E. Jewett, John Gibson, C. E. Kilgour. Charles Edmund, C. E. Lange, William Charles, C. E. McMinn, Fred F.. C. E. Sanders, Frank Wilson, M. E. Schwenker, Robert Fred., M. E. Shine, Bartholomew J ., C. E. Thomssen, Edgar L., C. E. Wayne, Byron E., E. E. Williams, Howard B., C. E. Williams, Walter Ward, E. E. Winder, Clarence August, E. E. ' LEWIS WERNER Born August 24. 138? Died April 20. 1903 page eighty-Dn: mmm MEDICAL COLLEGE Classoflgog Class Roll Lurie, Hyman Louis McVay, Frederick R. Adams, Edwin Myron Applegate, Matthew Mullin Blair, Faris Morell Bowdle, R. A. Butt, Charles Colwell Dorger, Philip Henry DuCasse, Ralph R. Ertel, Robert Joseph Estermann, J. R. Fogel, E. Israel Gaines, Benj. Winston Gates, George Roy Gray, Joseph Gilbert Hyndman, Howard C. Irvin, J ames Krumpelbeck, Albert Kudwani, Yenni Tadrus Miller, Alvin Charles Mombach, Gilbert Mussey, Noel G. Prince, J ohn Henry Puterbaugh, Charles Florent Querner, Lewis Alfred Ramsey, Thomas LeRoy Ravine. William Shenudah, Selim Smith, Edith Strathmann, William Henry Stuhlman, Oscar Harley Wagner, Edward A. Wenger, George Newton Wolf, Sigmund Page eighty-a-two L A W S C H O O L Claasoflgog W Class R011 Anthony, Frank A. Bouscaren, Timothy L. Bruce, Eward Knowiton Cable, John L. Cohn, Albert Nathan Creed, William Joseph Dickerson, Richard Tunis Dineen, John Dornette, George August Dowling, Hobart P. Egbert, John Clinton Flynn, James F., Jr. page eighty-thrcc Marx, Robert S. Miller, Frank R. O'Connell, Robert Patterson, Ward W. Schroetter, Charles Albert Shaw, Harris Fitch Sorter, Albert Earl Wesco, Thomas E. Williams, Floyd Charles Williamson, Edward F. Wright, Riner Sayler Class OfEcers M AC ademics and Engineers FRED HYNDMAN . . . President MARIETTA CARSTENS . . Vice-Pv-esident ELSIE TANGEMAN . . . Secretary LINCOLN STANLEY . . . Treasurer ?Sbua-a Medics FELIX HUFFMAN . . . President WILLIAM NICKLES . . Vice-Pres'ide'nt ERNEST MCCULLOUGH, Secretmy-Treaswer REZGALLAH GABALLAH, Special Representative in East. ?..W Law CARL LEHMAN . . . President ORIN CLEMENT . . Secretary-Treasuref $45.5 Class Yell Where, when. now, then, Cincinnati Varsity, 1910. mwmmm SOPHOMORE PRATTLE hammer- w 4 423i I-IE Class of 1910 needs no other introduction than HQ 5i ii it has already gained for itself in the last two figaE years. Who of the dignihed Seniors does not 32,3; know our true worth, or what amiable Junior does not respect and fear our every undertaking in which they are involved, or what Freshie does not look up to his victors with awe and admiration and regret that he did not enter just one year sooner? Never mind, Freshie, you may do something yet. Even if there was no other event in the history of the Sophs , the two victorious flag-rushes would be suiiicient to prove the ability of the sturdy, determined men and the genuine class spirit of the girls. The union of these brought about our hrst victory, when in the Freshman year, and won for us the last rush fought before the so-called cruel, torturous rush was put aside. Likewise was the second rush ours, although under new and stricter rules, when, after several skirmishes in the open, muddy field, we car- ried off the trophy triumphantly. Following the two greatest events of our Freshman and Sophomore years were the awakening of new ideas and class affairs. The custom was adepted of carving the numbers of the victorious class in the 01d pole, with the intention that 1910 should head the list of victorious classes page eighty-six that shall in the future take part in the flag-rushes. Sopho- more Night, the first social gathering of all Sophs., was one of the successes of the year, as it not only made us better acquainted, but also showed the personal interest of each member for the welfare of the class. Then with the dances, parties and numerous meetings, the Class of 1910 has be- come united, and a foundation has been set upon which the next two years are to be built. IMOGENE POOLE, Class H istorian. page cidhty-acven Egg? agig Qg Qg $$ $$ ACADEMICS AND ENGINEERS Academics-Class R011 Abrahams, Maurice B. Allgaier, Marguerite Baht, Antoinette Baum, Edna F. Bell, Alice Logan Bernstein, Archibald Bloom, Rosalie Goldsmith Braun, E. Lucy Brown, Audley H. Brown, Janet Beggs Buchofski, Hyman Burns, Helen Ormsby Burrell, Ethel Carstens, Marietta B. Collins, Lydia Conner, Majorie Miller Cowen, Mary Detraz, M. Julia Bowling, Gertrude du Bray, Ernest S. Dyer, Margaret Elsinger, Verna Farmer, Martha Franzmeier, Emma Katherine Frederick, Gertrude Froelich, Harry Charles Gerdsen, Mary Anna Hagans, Samuel Lewis Harris, Arthur Marc Harrison, Ellen Brown Hays, Minna S. Healy, Carolyn Heim, Mollie Vivian Heise, Viola. Heizer. Raymond Henshaw, Lesley Hoffman, ClarE-nce Humphrey, Winifred M. Huttenbauer, Samuel Isaacs, Schachne Jacobs, Retta. Johnston, Marcella E. J ones, Stephen W. Keller, Mamie Keller, Webster F. Kreimer, Ralph A. Kelsall, Alice Belle Leiman, Hattie Laura Levi, Frances Lynch, Mary Agnes Macbrair, Bessie McVay, Vera Meis, Corinne Morrison, Edward V. pag: eighty-eieht McGlaughlin, Mabel Seybold. Edith C. Nichol, Edith Mary Smith, Elizabeth Anita. Opes, Franziska Sorgel, Ruth Alms Perin, Carrie M. Stephens, Maude C. Plaut, Irene . Strubbe, Alfrida Poole, Imogene Tangeman, Elsie Porter, Christine Vawter. Maude Price, Lucille Wagoner, Edith Raschig, Adele L. Waliach, Jacob Ratz, Otto Whitfield, Mary Dunn Rule, Elects. Alice Wilfert, Ernest Ryan, Hazel E. Williamson, Anna Engineers Class R011 Andrew, Charles Stuart. E. E. Hyman, Harry Joseph, C. E. Baldwin, Stowe, M. E. Hyndman, Frederick Wm., C. E. Bess, Earl, Ch. E. Jahnke, Charles B.. M. E. Blachschleger, Samuel, C. E. Kersey, Ralph Blaine, E. E. Bruckhaus, Louis, C. E. Kinker, Edward Herman, Ch. E. Bruner, George J ohn, C. E. Kistner, Amor Edward, C. E. Buvinger, Wilson Jewett, Ch. E. Koenig, Jr., Henry Fred., Ch. E. Chapman, Jr., A1fredBeek,E.E. McCall, Mahlon M., M. E. Gallas, Morris, M. E. Maas, Julian, Ch. E. Goldblatt, David. C. E. Reenan, James Charles, C. E. Hoifman, Charles Barth, Ch. E. Reiter, Hayes, C. E. Holzwarth, Charles, Ch. E. Schuessler, Gustave, Ch. E. Huxell, Walter C., C. E. Valentine, J r., Fred, C. E. page eighty-m'ne 635w Q3333 mm m M E D I C S Class of 1910 W Class Roll Burton, Cosper Conway, Marinus Willett Gaballah, Rezgallah Getelson, Joseph Graf, William Joseph Grisard, John Simon Hamsher, John F. Hansell, George Hart Harris, Fred H. Heizer. Wade L. Huffman, Felix Hunter, Joseph Nathaniel J ones, Charlie Curtis Kennedy, Charles P. Kennedy, Clifford C. Kiffmeyer, Alexander King, George Wesley Korb, David A. Littell, John Charlesworth McCullough, Ernest C. Nickels, William Henderson Pigman, Eli Shott, William Schriver, Howard Stammel, Charles August Stitt, Howard Lee Stoffregen, Charles H. Topmoeller, George Bernard Twachtman, Eric Renesch Van Pelt, Stanley Hull pagc ni ncty mmmmmm LAW SCHOOL Class of 1910 W C1285 R011 Anderson, Charles Howard Beebe, Henry Edwin, Jr. Bevis, Howard Landis Birnbaum, Sigmund Eisig Bowen, Bernard Cox Boyd, Clinton DeWitt Clement, Orin Clark Cox, Frank Hurd Dosch, Michael John Dye, John Van Ausdel Dye, Robert Campbell Finn, Martin Gatley Franks, Edwin William Harrison. William Henry Hayes, Edward L. Heisel, Elmer Rudolph Hoban, Nicholas John Hooker, Frederick Johnson Isaacs. Nathan T. Kilgour, Garfield Matthews page ninety-onc Kittredge, Ben Webster Koehler, Harry Joseph, Jr. Lehman, Carl Blayney Manischewitz, Joseph Moeser, Edgar Ralph Nunn, Theodore Thomas Orr, Loran Earl Pearce, William Henry Ralston, Frank Anderson Ransom, Edwin T. Richards, Milton Wells Risinger, Harry Lester Schmuck, Thomas Kirby Shaw, Arthur F. Shepard, William Hughes Summers, John Howell Tatgenhorst, Charles F. W. Waddle, Benjamin Lee Weber, Charles Wright, Eldon James mmmmm CO-OPERATIVES C13550f1912 $6.59 Class OEcers DICK PAULSEN . . . . . . President GEORGE BINNS . . . . . Vice-P'resident ART. CONNER . . . Secretary and Treasurer Class Roll Binns, George Walter Humphreys, Howard Brownell Conner, Arthur Burnell J ohnson, Robert Leroy Cook, Howard Boardman McComas, Ralph Turpin Cragg, Walston Shelby Otting, Elmer Frederick i$Fletcher, John Herman Paulsen, Jr., Richard John Goodwin, Philip Howard Peaslee, Willetts Hart, Alden Leonard Plueddemann, R. Oscar Hermann, Joseph Rowell, John F. Hood, Calvert B. Stewart, Harry Morton UOHN HERMAN FLETCHER Born January 15. 1890 Dial April .51 1908 page ninety-two RES Class OHicers 15-531Qag, Academics and Engineers CHARLES W. CUMMINGS . . President PHYLLIS CARTER . . Vice-President ADELAIDE FISHER . . . Secretary JOHN SCHIFF . . . . Treasurer Medics CHARLES HOFLING, Representative to Athletic Council. C1355 Yell Hand km a lemon, Hand 'em a lemon; Cincinnati, Varsity, Nineteen eleven. FRESHMAN HOPE ' T HE Freshman Class History begins with the rush. The part taken in it by the Class of 1911 is in :1 every way creditable' , the girls gave hearty sup- port by their presence, by their cheering and by Y: . their attention to the refreshments, and, though the Qboys lost the rush, they deserved every bit of this en- couragement. There was never a more spectacular or ex- citing light, and the Freshman Class was never before re- stricted to a level field for the rush. They fought this year a class trained by a former yearis experience, who knew the value of retreat into shelter to rest. But the rush had one distinguishing mark, the absence of foul play or vindictive- ness. Though the loss of the rush was a blow to the Class of 1911, they evened up matters by holding their own With the Sophomores in football, and by winning the honors on Field Day. The Class of 1911 will make a name for itself in athletics, for, in addition to the natural enthusiasm for this pursuit, there is now a splendid opportunity offered for the development of strong, honest athletics in the Class of 1911. The Freshmen hope to win by battle in the field against the foes of old U. C. in clean, honest and enthusias- tic athletics. page 111' ncty-fuur The student life is generally understood to consist principally of study, and, though there has been some change in this view, the mental training from the scholastic side of the college education holds by far the greatest part in the student life. By the new, stricter entrance require- ments, the Class of 1911 was admitted to U. C., and it is apparent from the work done this year in all departments of study that there is a proper appreciation of this part of college life, and there is a proper attention to it. There is one thread which binds all of the class together more than even a common interest in athletics or study can accomplish - the social life. The Freshmen Class has taken advantage of every opportunity for the increasing of friendship among its members, compensating by this means for the disadvantages of the municipal college. The one great means to this end, the class dance, has been used with great success. The purpose of education is, of course, a training for taking up of the duties of life, but what can there be better iitted for this than the development of a common love, great- er even than ambitions or tastes or friendship. This is the love for our Alma Mater, the spirit which will make our desire to honor her in athletics, in sociai life, in study, the mainspring of our college life. Without this spirit, or patriotism, or sentiment, education would be purely selfish. With it, it is raised to the height of a service of an ideal. The Class of 1911 hopes that in all things it may help to glorify 01d U- 0- FRANK GAVIN, C lass H istorian. page ninety-Eve mmmmm ACADEMICS AND ENGINEERS Academics--Class R011 Ackerland, Nina C. Acomb, Helen Janet Adams, Camille Helen Aiken, Gwendolyn Bakewell Austin, J ennie Charlotte Belmer, Helen Louise Betscher, Alma Bettan, Israel Bingel, Doris Augusta Birch, Laura Ella Black, Eleanor Louise Blair, Ruth Blesi, Ada. L. Bowen, Kate Bookmyer, Gussie Broeman, Charles W. Brutton, Dulci Holloway Burns, Marina Ormsby Carter, Phyllis Clark, Edna Gertrude Coflin, Stella Naomi Crosley, Lewis Marion Curry, Marguerite Pearl Darrow, Emma Lulu Davidson, Alvina Davy, Jeanette Dehner, Rosina Mary Dolle, Grace Katherine Draper, Mary Ruth Durrell, Lawrence Wood Dyer, Arthur Edwards, Martha Elizabeth Einstein, Aimee Berenice Feldman, Erna Marie Fisher, Adelaide P. Foote, Alice Bradford Frank, J osephine Frazier, Sallie Pattie Gavin, Frank Stanton Burns Goebel, Lillie Wilhelmina Greenland, Albert K. Haehnle, Elmer C. Hall, Clifford Porter Halliday, Clifford Moody Hamilton,Mildred Sherbrooke Herminghausen, Matilda L. Hexter, Leo Solomon Hoffheimer, Edith Springer Holmes, Robert Benjamin Hopkins, Ella May Huheey, Lilian Ada. Hurley, Walter page ninety-aix Hutchins, Mabel Hyatt, Edith Isaacson, Isadore James, Edith Merle Johnston, Ethel Fern Johnston, Louise Jones, Russell Hanley Joslin, Allen Roberts Kaplan, Israel Louis Kelly, Thomas Henshaw Kelsall, Edith Marie Kleinschmidt, Emma Knapp, Edwina Glen Koch, Lucile Hazel Kopenhoefer, Ruth Nellie Kraft, Jr., Theodore Krueck, Josephine Laas, Benjamin Lantz, Stafford Baker Lorenz, Edward Joseph McKihben, Robert Patterson McNelley, Alston Ellis Macke, Una. Matre, Joseph Maxon, Margaret Meier, Ruby Emily Metzger, Ruth Harriet Minor, Gladys Marguerite Murphy, Alice Parker, Heien Hope Piieger, Lucie M. Pirman, Hilda Francesca Podesta, Octavia. Hazel Pohlman, Helen Lovett Pollak, J acob Pollard, Samuel Bruce Raitt, Anna. Hall page ninet y-vaen Reece, Paul Drought Reedy, Laura Anna Rendigs. Rhoda Renner, Mrs. Martha Renner, Ruth Clara Reutepohler, Gertrude Ries, Clara Elizabeth Rothschild, Miriam Rowell, Florence Anna Santen, Florence Schift', Jr., John Jefferson von Schlichten, Otto Charles Schriver, Anna Belle Sherrod, Edith Mae Shine, Rose Jennings Smith, Edith Elizabeth Snodgrass, Ella Stanley, Lincoln Steele, Elizabeth Kissick Stevenson, Louise Garden Stratemeyer, Norma F. Strautman, Alma. Amelia. J . Tate, Mary Lee Thilly, Christel Tobias, Charles Harrison Volkert, Nora Elsie Walther, Elmore C. Warner, Douglas Alexander Warnking, May Weber, Edwin Walter Wichgar, Helen Wilkinson, Elizabeth Williams, Frank R. Willis, Clara Grandstaff Witte, Raymond Charles Wuiif, Gretchen van der P. Engineers-Class R011 Allen, Harry R., E. E. Arend, Armin Conrad, C. E. Barrett, Glenn F., Ch. E. Betts,Jr.,A1bert Raymond, E. E. Branson, James Eli, E. E. Clancy, Benjamin Joseph, C. E. Clingman, Palmer, E. E. Cummings, Charles Wm., C. E. Curtis, Carl, C. E. Day, Howard Monroe, E. E. Donough, Robert Park, 0. E. Fosdick, Cedric Earl, C. E. Gaessler, William G., Ch. E. Getz, Charles Howard, M. E. Ginsberg, Wm. Abraham, 0. E. Heuck, Walter, Ch. E. Hill, Charles Owen, C. E. Janssen, J. William, G. E. Kevil, Homer R., C. E. Knoebel, Carl B., M. E. Kranz, Henry H., C. E. McAlpin, Geo. Washington, C.E. Majoewsky, Leo Rudolph, Ch. E. Mason, Walter Ray, C. E. Ransom, Pryce J ., M. E. Royer, Earl Buford, M. E. Skinner, Charles W., C. E. Smith, James Thomas, R. E. Smyth, Paul Henry, Ch. E. Taylor, James J ., C. E. Than, Walter Ervin, E. E. Thomas, Robert R., M. E. Waldo, Howard C., G. E. FIE: ninety-cighe MW M E D I C S Class of 1911 W Class Roll Bentley, James M. Bruns, William H. Coleman, David G. De Courcy, Giles A. Dowlin, William A. Feid, Louis Gerlach, Earl Bernard Gewert, Arthur C. Hofling, Charles Andrew Hard, Winn Estille Judkins, Robert John page ninety-nine Lurie, Louis Aryah McDevitt, Charles J oseph Margot, Arthur Rapp, Allan Blythe Rapp, Harry Floyd Renneker, Aloisius Frank Rover, Paul Philip Spelman, J. Dillon Whallon, Arthur James Wiechelman, Clement John Zielonka, Samuel Q39 E33295? $$ QQ $ E9 CO-vOPERATIVES Classof1913 +923$ Class OECCTB PAUL C. YOUNT ARTHUR C. HEWITT JOHN A. STACY President . Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer Class Roll Barringer, Charles William Bissmeyer, Albert Henry Bowman, Charles Burman, Stanley Wagner Cox, Roger Milton Federle, Joseph Candidus Frohman, Nathan Sigmund Gearhart, Shirley Zurmehly Grotlisch, Victor Edward Guntrum, Ernst Haeussler, Charles A. Haines, Philip Gable Hewitt. Arthur Challis Jeii'erson, William Harold Krampe, Hugo J ohn Littell, Donald Campbell McCoy, J . Arthur McLeod, Earl Hudson Mackay, Charles T. Marshall. Lauer William Majoewsky, Walter Malone, Charles Joseph Mathewson, James Stanley Miller, George Kinsinger Montgomery, Walter Henry Morrison, Robert Hall Morrow, Lester Caydon Nickles, Samuel Walter Oehler, Willis Alward Pinkerton, Clarence Short Reif, William W. Reller, Otto Robert Robinson, Max Brewster Sivas, Peter Paul Smith, Walter Lewis Spear, Walter Arthur Stacy, J ohn Abbott Stanley. Garth Blunden Stratemeyer, Edwin A. Taylor, Allan Marshall Walker, Carroll Algeron ' Yount, Paul Chaffee Zange, Max page one hundred mmmmm FRATERNITIES In the order of their establishment at the University of Cincinnati m LITERARY Sigma Chi . . . . . . . . 1882 Sigma Alpha Epsilon . . . . . 1889 Beta Theta Pi . . . . . . . 1890 Phi Delta Theta . . . . . . 1898 PROFESSIONAL Nu Sigma Nu . . . . . Medic., 1892 Phi Delta Phi . . . . . . Law, 1869 Omega Upsilon Phi . . . . . . Medic SORORITIES V. C. P. . . . . . . . . 1891 Delta Delta Delta . . . . . . 1898 Alpha Phi Psi . . . . . . - . 1903 LOCAL SOCIETY Sigma Sigma . . . . . . . 1898 HONORARY Phi Beta Kappa . . . . . . . 1898 page one hundred and two WWW S I GMA CHI m Founded at Miami University, 1855. Zeta Psi ChapterFounded atUniversity of Cincinnati,1882. Active Chapters, 53. m Alpha w- Miami. Beta Wooster. Gamma - Ohio Wesleyan. Epsilon - George Washington. Zeta - Washington and Lee. Eta. - Mississippi. Theta - Pennsylvania. Kappa - Bucknell. Lambda - Indiana. Mu - Denison. Xi -n DePauw. Omicron - Dickinson. Rho - Butler. Phi H Lafayette. Chi -. Hanover. Psi -- Virginia. Omega a Nort;hwe$1:ern Alpha Alpha - Hobart. Alpha Beta - California. Alpha Gamma Ohio. Alpha Epsilbn - Nebraska. Alpha Zeta w Beloit. Alpha Eta. Iowa. Alpha Theta Mas5. Inst. Tech. Alpha Iotam Illinois Wesleyan. Alpha Lambda Wisconsin. Alpha Nu - Texas. Alpha Xi H Kansas. Alpha Omicron -- Tulane. Alpha Pi Albion. Alpha Rho - Lehigh. Alpha Sigma - Minnesota. Alpha Upsilona-South Carolina. Alpha Phi Cornell. Alpha Chi .. Pennsylvania. Alpha Psi - Vanderbilt. Alpha Omega - Leland Stan- ford, Jr. Beta Gamma Colorado. Beta Delta +- Montana. Delta Delta Purdue. Zeta Zeta - Central. Zeta Psi -- Cincinnati. Eta Eta Dartmouth. Theta Theta - Michigan. Kappa Kappa - Illinois. Lambda Lambda Kentucky. Mu Mu - West Virginia. Nu Nu .4 Columbia. Xi Xi - Missouri. Omicron Omicron - Chicago. Rho Rho Maine. Tau Tau Washington. Upsilon Upsilon a Washington. Phi Phi Pennsylvania. Psi Psi - Syracuse. Omega Omega -- Arkansas. page one hundred and three ' 2 Q g E V $ :3 Colors 1 Azure and Old Gold. Fratres in Facultate. William P. Rogers, A.B., LL.B., Dean of Law Department. James W. Rowe, M. D. Carleton Graves Crisler, M. D. Fred Eugene Ayer, C. E. Greer H. Baker, M. D. Brent Woodall, Secretary of the University. Fratres in Board of Directors. Frank Sanford Brown, B. L., LL. B. Fratres in Collegio J uris Prudentize. Robert 01Connell. Horace H. Bonser. Clinton Egbert, O. S. U. Edward Williamson, University of Minnesota. Frank Ralston, Miami University. Fratres in Collegio Medicinae. James Magee Bentley. Fratres in Academica. 1908. 1909. Thomas Kirby Schmuck. Charles T. Williams. 1910. 1911. Audley Brown. Arthur Dyer. Raymond Heizer. Lewis Hood. Calvert Hood. Paul Reece. Ralph McComas. Douglas Warner. Charles Skinner. page one hundna and Eva Ohio Epsilon Chapter m Colors - Purple and Old Gold. Flower 1 The Violet. Fratres in Facultate. William Muhlberg, M. D. Fratres in Collegio Juris Prudentise. Percy Asbury Thompson. William Atkins Pearce. Richard Tunis Dickerson. Frederick Johnston Hooker. Fratres in Collegio Medicinae. Eric Renesch Twachtman. R. M. Brumfield. Fratres in Academica. POST-GRADUATE DEPARTMENT. Joseph Martin Good, M. D. 1908. 1911. Carl George Buchanan. Clifford Porter Hall. Louis Germain Rinninsland. Clifford TrifHe Harvuot. 1909. Walter Joseph Hurley. Howard Bates Williams. John 563353 Schlff. John Gibson Jewett. Russel St? By Jones. Thomas. Green Witherspoon. Ernst Ado ph Guntrum. Allen Roberts J oslin. 1910. Frederick William Hyndman. Glenn Foraker Barrett. page on: hundred and uven mmmmmm History of Sigma Alpha Epsilon Ed I ternity of true southern origin, having been founded at the University of Alabama in 1856. The leading spirit of the band of founders was Noble Leslie De Votie. A great general fraternity was planned, and the work was zealously undertaken, and so well did it progress that at the outbreak of the Civil War there were twelve flourishing chapters. The unsettled state of affairs prevailing throughout the South at the close of the war extended also to the educational institutions. Fraternity chapters, under such conditions, necessarily led a pre- carious existence, but the loyalty and devotion of her members enabled Sigma Alpha Epsilon to weather the storm of this period of unrest and uncertainty. Towards the end of the seventies, Sigma Alpha Epsilon had regained her former strength. So ob- vious did this fact become to other fraternities that more than one made overtures for amalgamation, only to be met in each case with a negative answer. Up to this time Sigma Alpha Epsilon had been entirely a southern fraternity, but early in the eighties a strong sentiment in favor of northern extension became manifest. The first effort in this direction was the establishment of Pennsylvania Delta, at Gettysburg College, in 1883. Since then the growth of the frater- nity in the North has been steady and permanent. Sigma Alpha. Epsilon new numbers seventy active chapters, very evenly distrib- uted among the leading institutions of the country. Chapter Ohio Epsilon was established at the University of Cincinnati in the fall of 1889, Sigma Alpha Epsilon being the sec- ond general fraternity to enter the institution. Since that time Sigma Alpha Epsilon has gained a. strong foothold in Cincinnati, and in all phases of college life her men have brought honor to the red and black of old U. C. page one hundred and eight mmmw Active Chapter Roll of Beta Theta Pi Amherst. Boston. Bowdoin. Brown. Dartmouth. Maine. Columbia. Rutgers. Stevens. Wesleyan. Yale. Colgate. Cornell. St. Lawrence. Syracuse. Toronto. Union. Dickinson. Johns Hopkins. Lehigh. Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania State. Washington-Jefferson. page one hundrcd and nine Davidson. Hampden-Sydney. North Carolina. Virginia. Central. Texas. Vanderbilt. Bethany. Cincinnati. Miami. Ohio. Ohio State. West Virginia. Wittenberg. Case. Denison. Kenyon. Ohio Wesleyan. Western Reserve. Wooster. De Pauw. Hanover. Indiana. Purdue. Wabash. Beloit. C hicage. Illinois. Knox. Michigan. Northwestern. Wisconsin. Iowa. Iowa State. Iowa Wesleyan. Minnesota. Nebraska . Colorado. Denver. Kansas. Missouri. Oklahoma. Washington. Westminister. California. Stanford. Washington State. Fratres in Facultate. g ,7: w. A... -'..-'u:'l William Paxton Burris, Ph. D. Harry Kennon Dunham, M. Stephen C. Ayers, M. D. Shaler Berry, LL. D. Allyn C. Poole, M. D. Eldon R. James, B. 8., LL. Fratres in Collegio Medicina. Joseph Hughes Shaw. Arthur Silver. Robert Daniel MUSley. Noel Gano Mussey. Faris Morell Blair. Benjamin W. Gaines. William Stewart. John Fremont Hamsher. Fratres in ' Collegio Juris Prudentiae. William Ault Stark. John Howell Summers. Edgar Ralph Moeser. Fratres in Academica. 1908. 1909. David G. DeVore. James Anthony Clancy. Frank Fremont Fisher. Bart Jennings Shine. Robert Alma Taylor. George Hayes Reiter. Harry Shields Robinson. 1911. 1910. Stanley Wagner Burman. Stowe Douglas Baldwin. Benjamin J . Clancy. Alden Leonard Hart. Stafford Baker Lantz. Ralph A. Kreimer. Thomas Henshaw Kelly. Raymond Charles Witte. Allan Marshall Taylor. A. Lincoln Stanley. page one hundred and eleven Colors - Azure and Argent. Flower - White Carnation. Fratres in Facultate. I. J. Cox, Ph. D. L. D. Peaslee, B. A. Fratres in Universitate. 1908. Erwin Felix Bahlman. Norman Butler Conway. Godfrey Albert Doeller. William Harry Hull. Edwin Haffner. Milton Henry Wagner. 1910. Garfield 1Kilgour. Henry Beebe. Edwin Porter Ransom. Eli Pigman. Felix HuiTman. Harry Froehlich. 1912. Joseph Herman. Willetts Peaslee. page one humircd and thirteen 1909. D. Hayward Ackerson. Edwin Myron Adams. Powel Crosley, Jr. Charles Edmund Kilgour. Frank Miller. Lewis Adolphus Querner. 0. Albert Schroetter. 1911. Lewis Marion Crosley. Charles Owen Hill. Pryce J ones Ransom. James Jared Taylor. 1913. Robert Morrison. PLEDGE. Fred F. McMinn. q . , . 8.4 a 3 888888888888 PHI DELTA THETA Active Chapters, 71. Miami University ....... 1848 Indiana University ...... 1849 Central University . .. .1850 Wabash College ......... 1850 University of Wisconsin. .1857 Northwestern University .1859 University of Indianapolis, 1859 Ohio Wesleyan University, 1860 Franklin College ........ 1860 Hanover College ........ 1860 University of Michigan. . .1864 University of Chicago. . . .1865 De Pauw University ...... 1868 Ohio University ......... 1868 University of Missouri. . . .1870 Knox College ........... 1871 U niversity of Georgia. . . .1871 Emory College .......... 1871 Iowa Wesleyan University, 1871 Mercer University ....... 1872 Cornell University ....... 1872 Lafayette College ........ 1873 University of California. .1873 University of Virginia. . . .1873 Randolph-Macon College. .1874 University of Nebraska. . .1875 Pennsylvania College ..... 1875 Washington and J efferson. 1875 Vanderbilt University. . . .1876 Lehigh University ....... 1876 University of Mississippi.1877 University of Alabama. . .1877 Lombard College ......... 1878 Alabama Polytechnic Inst, 1879 Allegheny College ........ 1879 University of Vermont. . .1879 Dickinson College ........ 1880 Westminster College ..... 1880 University of Minnesota. .1881 University of Iowa ....... 1882 University of Kansas ..... 1882 University of the South. ..1883 University of Texas ...... 1883 Ohio State University. . . .1883 University Pennsylvania . . 1883 Union University ....... 1883 Colby College ........... 1884 Columbia University ..... 1884 Dartmouth College ....... 1884 University of N. Carolina.1885 Williams CoIlege ......... 1886 Southwestern University. 1886 Syracuse University ...... 1887 Washington and Lee Uni. .1887 Amheg'st College ......... 1888 Brown University ........ 1889 Tulane University ........ 1889 Washington University . . .1891 Leland Stanford, Jr., Uni., 1891 Purdue University ....... 1893 University of Illinois ..... 1893 Case School Ap. Science. . .1896 University of Cincihnati. .1898 University of Washington. 1900 Kentucky State College. . .1901 McGill University ....... 1902 University of Colorado. . .1902 Georgia School of Tech1gy, 1902 Pennsylvania State 0011., 1904 University of Toronto. . . .1906 University of S. Dakota. . .1906 pag: one hundred and fourtccn Qg QQE $ $$ ?ggi $ Nu Sigma Nu Chapters. Alpha - University of Michigan. Beta Detroit College of Medicine. Delta-Western University of Pennsylvania. Epsilon -- University of Minnesota. Zeta - Northwestern University. Eta w University of Illinois. Theta University of Cincinnati. Iota -- Columbia University. Kappa - Rush University of Chicagm. Lambda - University of Pennsylvania. Mu - Syracuse University. Nu -University of Southern California. Xi F New York University melleviewy Omicron Union University. Alpha Kappa Phi Washington University. Rho -- Jeiferson Medical College. Sigma - Western Reserve University. Tau - Cornell University. Upsilon Cooper Medical College. Phi -University of California. Chi - University of Toronto. Pi Mu - University of Virginia. Beta Alpha-University of Maryland. I. C. I.- University of Buffalo. . Beta Delta -- University of Iowa. Beta Beta- J ohns Hopkins University. Beta Epsilon w University of Nebraska. D. E. LF Yale University. Alumni Societies. New York. Buffalo. St. Louis. Boston. Syracuse. Omaha. Philadelphia. Cleveland. Minneapoiis. Baltimore. Cincinnati. San Francisco. Chicago. page one hundred and fifteen cw-w, -+ m if: :V :-'.';-' 7- 97$; Eff Colors - Garnet and White. Flowers 1 Red and White Carnations. m Yell Nu Sig, Nu Sig, Nu Sig Nu! Nu Sig, Nu Sig, Nu Sigma Nu! nu Members in College. 1903. Edward Allgaier. Ott Casey. Harry Hull. Frazer F. Monroe. Robert D. Mussey. Joseph H. Shaw. Arthur Silver. William T. Stewart. Erra D. Stump. 1910. William Graf. J ohn Hamsher. Wm. Henderson Nickels. Howard Lee Stitt. 1909. Edwin Adams. Matthew Applegate. B. Winston Gaines. Howard Hyndman. Noel G. Mussey. Alvin C. Miller. Leroy Ramsey. 1911. James M. Bentley. Louis Feid. Arthur J. Whallon. page one hundred and sixteen PHI DELTA PHI Kent Booth Story Cooley Pomeroy Marshall Joy Webster Hamilton Gibson Choate Waite Field Conkling . Tiedeman Minor Dillon Daniels Chase Harlan Swan McLain Lincoln Fuller Miller Green Comstock Dwight Foster . Rauney Taugdell Brewer Douglas page one hundred and seventeen 55-59 Chapter R011. University of Michigan Northwestern University Columbia University Washington University University of California Columbian University Union University Boston University University of Cincinnati University of Pennsylvania Harvard University Yale University . . New York University Cornell University University of Missouri University of Virginia University of Minnesota University of Buffalo . University of Oregon University of Wisconsin Ohio State University University of Iowa University of Nebraska . Chicago College of Law Leland Stanford University University of Kansas . Syracuse University New York Law School University of Indiana Western Reserve University University of Illinois University of Denver . University of Chicago 1869 1880 1881 1882 1884 1884 1885 1885 1886 1886 1887 1887 1888 1888 1890 1890 1891 1891 1891 1891 1891 1893 1895 1896 1897 1897 1899 1899 1900 1901 1901 1902 1903 f5. , VJ, ?- 5' f In Facultate. Wm. P. Rogers, A. B., LL. B. Judson Harmon, LL. D. John R. Saylor, LL. D. Lawrence Maxwell, Jr., A. M., LL. B. Wm. C. Herron, A. 13., LL. B. Roht. C. Pugh, LL. B. Charles T. Greve, A. 3., LL. B. Moses F. Wilson, LL. B. In Collegiate. 1908. Horace Robert Bonser. William Ault Stark. Burt Rabbits. Percy A. Thompson. 1909. Timothy Lincoln Bouscaren. John Dineen. Edward Knowlton Bruce. John Clinton Egbert. John Levi Cable. Carl Jacobs. Richard Tunis Dickerson. Robert UConnell. Floyd C. Williams. 1910. Henry Beebe. Carl Lehman. William Harrison. Edgar Maser. Benjamin Kittredge. Thomas Kirby Schmuck. John Somers. page on: hundred and ninetcEn Colors - Crimson and Gold. Ftower - Red Carnation. Ho! Ho! Ho! Hi! Hi! Hi! Phi! Phi! Phi! Fratres in Collegio Medicinia 1908. Arlington Ailes. Arthur J. Light. Chas. E. Howard. A. E. Schlanser. Geo. Schumaker. Emil Strasser. 1909. R. A. Bowdle. R. R. DuCasse. F. R. McVay. Oscar H. Stuhlman. Geo. Wenger. Edward A. Wagner. page one hundred and twanty-anc 1910. J . C. Burton. L. W. Heizer. C. 0. Kennedy. W. C. Schott. L. W. Schriver. M. W. Conway. Chas. Stammel. Geo. B. Topmiller. 1911. Winn E. Hord. Chas. A. Hoiiing. Harry F. Rapp. Allen B. Rapp. mm 63$??83 gm mm OMEGA UPSILON PHI m Chapters. Alpha - University of Buffalo. Beta - University of Cincinnati. Gamma - Union University. Delta -,. University of Denver. Epsilon - New York University. Eta University of Colorado. Theta. - Cornell University, New York City. Theta Deuteron -- Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y. Iota Cooper Medical College, San Francisco, Cal. KJappa-u- Columbia University, New York City. Lambda - Miami Medical College. Cincinnati, Ohio. MumNorthwestern University, Chicago, Ill. Nu- Medical College of Virginia. Richmond, Va. Xi - University College of Medicine, Richmond, Va. OmicronuMedical Department, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. Pi Medica1 Department of University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa. Rho-Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, Pa. Alumni Organizations. New York City Kappa Chapter Alumni. New York Lake Kinka Alumni. Cincinnati Alumni. Chicago Alumni. California Alumni. Denver Alumni. page one hundred and twenty-two ghee $2533 eeee came THE V.C.P. SORORITY RLE Founded, University of Cincinnati, 1891. 6 :U m-P1 HE V. C. P., the first sorority founded at the University J of Cincinnati, was organized there in the spring of the year 1891. The seven charter members hoped, in found- .. ing it, to strengthen the bond of fellowship already ex- g h isting among them; to include in that bond others still to enter college; to keep in touch with the University after gradua- tion, and to gain such help in the pursuance of the ideals set before them as true friendship could give. These purposes have always remained those of the society. In the sixteen years which have passed since the founding of the V. C. P., its membership has grown from seven to over a hun- dred. As the members have left college to enter upon the broader lives which awaited them, they have brought back to the society the richness of added experience, and thus have made it far more than a mere undergraduate organization, though the bonds of col- lege days spent together will always be the basis of its close ties of fellowship. The meetings of the society, held every two weeks, pre- serve these ties of fellowship, and the symbolic colors of white and green are a constant reminder of the V. C. P. ideals of attainment. page one hundred and twenty-three Founded, 1891. EU Flower - White Carnation. Colors - Green and White. Honorary Members. Mrs. Edward Miles Brown. Mrs. Wm. E. Waters. Faculty Members. Edith Campbell. Elizabeth Merrill. Madeline Maury. Marguerite Resor. Postgraduate Members. Bess Caldwell. Alma Holt Thomas. Alice Donnelly. Amy L. SchoiT. Hazel Cairns. Natalie Merrill. Mildred Merryweather. Margery Gordon. University Members. 1908. 1910. Lea Lana. Ruth Blair. 1909' Marjorie Connor. Florence Farbach. Allce K3153 - Mary Perkins. Matti ; I'lule. Harriet Reid. Lydia Wiseman. 1911. Dulci Brutton. Edith Kelsall. Caroline Healy. Margaret Maxon. Merle James. Lucie Paeger. page on: hundred and twenty-fivc DELTA DELTA DELTA m 00 a a w ?gELTA DELTA DELTA is one of the twelve National Ocog sororities, and one of five having more than twenty E53, MOE chapters. It was founded at Boston University on U35 6V $3an 0 3 Thanksgiving Eve, 1888, by Isabel Breed, Eleanor Pond, Sara Shaw and Florence Steward, names ever dear to every Tri-Delta. The extension of the sorority to other colleges began about a year after its founding. when a chapter was established in the West. The growth of Delta Delta Delta has been rapid until now, and, in spite of the conservative policy she has al- ways maintained in the granting of charters, she has enrolled twenty-four active chapters, with a total membership of more than nineteen hundred. Since 1891, the sorority has published an open quarterly maga- zine, called The Trident. The Triton is the secret publication. By these means, and by the National Conventions held every two years, and the Province Conventions, held the alternate years, the members are kept continually in touch with the internal devel- opment of the sorority. On May 23, 1892, Zeta Chapter was founded at the University of Cincinnati. The anniversary of this day and also of the found- ing of the sorority are celebrated each year by the active chapter and the alumnae. The latter are organized into a separate body, known as the tiAlIiance. This organization, through its own en- thusiasm and its wise counsel, has been an ever-present aid to the Active Chapter. The Active Chapter holds its meetings on alter- nate Saturdays throughout the year, while it is kept in close touch with the Alliance by means of joint meetings held every six weeks. page one hundred and twcnt'y-sl'x DELTA DELTA DELTA J Alpha Province. Alpha - Boston University. Beta St. Lawrence University. Eta -- University of Vermont. Xi - Womaws College of Baltimore. Omicron H Syracuse University. Rho - Barnard College. Sigma Wesleyan University. Tau - Bucknell University. Psi - University of Pennsylvania. Alpha Xi Randolph-Macon Woman's College. Beta Province. Gamma. - Adrian College. Epsilon Knox College. Mu - University of Wisconsin. Nu Ohio State University. Upsilon Northwestern University. Zeta - University of Cincinnati. Chi -University of Mississippi. Beta Zeta -F Kentucky State University. Gama Province. Theta University of Minnesota. Kappa -University of Nebraska. Lambda - Baker University. Delta Simpson College. Pi -- University of California. Phi -- University of Iowa. Alliance Chapters, 14. Alpha b- Boston, Mass. Theta - Minneapolis, Minn. Beta - Canton, N. Y. Omicron Syracuse, N. Y. Gamma Adrian, Mich. Sigma Middletown, Conn. Delta - Indianola, Iowa. Rho - New York City. Epsilon -- Galesburg, Ill. -- Denver Col. Zeta Cincinnati, Ohio. Mu Madison, Wis. --Los Angeles, Cal. Eta - Burlington, Vt. page One hundred and twcnty-scvcn Colors Silver, Gold and Blue. Flower The Pansy. Sorores in Facultate. Florence C. Lawler. Cora May Box. Postgraduates. Edith Fox. Caroline Black. Active Members. 1908. Jessie Ireland. Ina Dan Christy Walton. Ella Campbell Wilson. Amy Helen Ferris. 1910. Mary Cowen. Ruth Alms Sorgel. Marietta B. Carstens. Ellen B. Harrison. Elsie S. Tangeman. Viola Heise. page one hundred and rwcnl-y-m'ne 1909. Florence Matilda Cooper. 1018. Bishop Shafer. Marian Stewart. Edith Kreimer. 1911. Gwendolyn B. Aiken. Eleanor Louise Black. Phyllis Carter. Hermia Feuser. Ella May Hopkins. Adelaide Peele Fisher. Rhoda Rendigs. Ella Snodgrass. Established May 18, 1904. TELS Colors - Crimson and White. Flower - Red Carnation. T'VLE Sorores in Academica. 1908. 1910. Alma E. Haymaker. Edna Baum. Rebecca Hopkins. Lydia. Collins. Viola E. Pfaff. Alma Earl. 1909. Martha Farmer. Irma. Gregg. Mabel McGlaughlin. 1911. Camille Adams. Emma Kleinschmidt. Lilie Goebel. Sorores in Alumnae. Organized October, 1906. 1905. 1907. Linda V. Eger. E. Gertrude Avey. Lucy Helen Pearson. Grace Mittendorf. 1906. Emma Eger. POST-GRADUATE. Nan Evans Ryan. Florence Baxter. page one hundred and thirtY-on: ALPHA PHI PSI uuilr'L-v'a Sorores in Urbe. Carolyn B. Allen. Myra Ethel Innes. Elizabeth Burkhold. Eva LeCount Tarr. Gera Dickerson Emrick. Marion Tarr. Marie E. Friehmelt. Bess O Barr. Bertie Pfirrmann. Sorores ex Urbe. Louise Gorton. Patronesses. Mrs. Grace T. Eddy. Mrs. H. T. Miller. Mrs. W. A. Goodman, Jr. Mrs. Wm. B. Melish. Mrs. Wm. Christie Herron. Mrs. A. P. McCarty. gag: one hundred and thirry-two CESSQ $$$$th mm mm SIGMA SIGMA FELQ 1.. IGMA SIGMA was founded at the University of Cincin- ' nati in the year 1898 by a group of young men whose purpose was to foster and encourage college spirit, and to enhance the glory of the University of Cincinnati in the college world. The fact that the students in the three higher classes only are eligible for membership gives the society an opportunity of study- ing the young men and choosing those who show the right spirit. Sigma Sigma is not opposed to other fraternities in any way, nor does it cunfme itself to Greek-letter men entirely. The men are chosen on their merits. Sigma Sigma is strictly a local society, and will remain so, as its most important function - that of teaching loyalty to the Uni- versity of Cincinnati -- would be destroyed were it to enter other colleges. In all things that go to make up the best in college life you will find Sigma Sigma men most active-ever ready to boostl, Old McMicken. Long may she live, Her childrenls pride, And grow and prosper, Far and wide; At all times let our motto be, lStand first and last for old U. C.' page one hundred and thirty-three SIGMA SIGMA 5-5.9 Colors9White, Gold and Black. 61g Local Society. Yell. Torch and hammer! Skull and bones! Sigma Sigma! Hear the groans! Fratres in Academica. 1908. 1909. Norman B. Conway. Howard Williams. 1910. Hayward Ackerson. Ernest du Bray. Charles Williams. Fred Hyndman. Frederick J . Hooker. page one hundred and thirty-four mmwwm PHI BETA KAPPA m Honorary Fraternity Founded December 5, 1776. m '1 HE charter of the Delta Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa 3;. in the State of Ohio was granted at the sixth tri- 1ah ennial National Council of Phi Beta Kappa held hm?! at Saratoga, September 7, 1898, in response to a gagggggggg petition signed by forty-one members of the society resident in and near Cincinnati. The object of the Phi Beta Kappa Society is the promo- tion of scholarship and friendship among students and graduates of American colleges. m OECCI'B RABBI DAVID PHILIPSON . . . President OSCAR W. KUHN . . . First Vice-President JULIA BENTLEY . . . Second Vice-President BURTIS B. BREESE . . . Third Vice-President LELIA A. GARVIN . . . . Secretary R. E. CLYDE GOWDY . . . . Treasurer Those elected to membership of the Phi Beta Kappa from the Class of 1907 are as follows: Jean Olive Heck. Louise Bentley. Ethel Sanders. Helen Wilson. Nathan Tovio Isaacs. Amelia Leist. Natalie Merrill. Florence McNutt. Lillian Raresheid. page one hundred Ind thirty-Ev: ORGANIZATIONS .5, H.156 Alumnal Association. University Settlement. A. M. A. Engineers Club. Engineering Tribunal. Senior Civil Engineers. Academic Tribunal. Chemists Club. Debating Association. Speakers Club. Literary Society. German Club. Le Circle Frangais. Y. W. C. A. Y. M. C. A. Blue Hydra. Senior Girls Club. Yellow and Black. Sophomore Girls Club. Freshman Girls Club. University Club. Co-Operative Book Store. page one hundred and thirtyaaeven mmmmm ALUMNAL ASSOCIATION of the University of Cincinnati WM OfEcers MR. HENRY BENTLEY, t01 . . . . President MISS M. KATHERINE RATTERMAN, t98 . Vice-P'resident MR. ALEXANDER HILL, JR., t06, Secretary and Treasurer W Executive Committee Mr. Morgan Vanmatre, 97. Miss Lucy M. Lambdin, ,95. 165.19 ? The Alumnal Association has been noticeably active during the past year. Under its auspices The University of Cincinnati Song Book was published, the volume being handsomely bound, well illustrated, contains the words and music of some fifty tVarsity songs. The alumni in and around New York City have united through the efforts of the Association, and from now on will hold regular meetings at stated intervals. Similar local or- ganizations are being formed in Chicago, Pittsburg, the District of Columbia and other centers where a sufficient number of grad- uates warrant such a move. There have been a number of enthu- siastic alumni reunions during the year, the largest being held in McMicken Hall, November 22, 1907, when about 800 graduates of 1:qu one hundred and thirty-eight departments of the University gathered together, the principal speaker being Dr. Frank Thilly, ,88, now Professor of Paychology at Cornell University. A complete and accurate roster of the alumni has been compiled, and will soon figure as one of the Uni- versity bi-monthly publications. The objects of the Association are to keep the alumni in close touch with the student activities, to encourage and take care of bequests, and to assist in every way for the bettering and advancement of the University of Cincinnati. I New York Alumnal Association University of Cincinnati WW MR. CLARENCE W. HAHN, h99 . . . Secretary Executive Committee Rabbi Martin A. Meyer, '99. Dr. Seldom A. Rainforth, 199. Rev. John Howard Melish, ,95. page one hundred and tHrty-nine Egg $ 669$ Egg? QQ ??,E The University Sefuement Boarcl of Directors WM GEORGE A. THAYER . . . . Acting Chairman DANIEL L. BURKE,Head Resident and Treasurer Pro Tem LELIA A. GARVIN . . . . Recording Secretary VIOLA PFAFF . . . Corresponding Secretary Charles W. Dabney. M. E. J . Czarnomska. J . W. Hall. Maria C. Collins. Mrs. Herman Lackman. Coleman Avery. Herman A. Bayless. Harry L. Brown. Edith Campbell. Mary B. Latta. Brent Woodall. Florence Farbach. page one hundred and forty ;.HE A. M. A. Club was organized in ! December, 1905, by seven University 7 : students. Since then the organization has grown steadily to the present mem- bership 0f twenty-two, and includes students of the Liberal Arts, Engineering, Law and Graduate Schools. The purpose of the Club is to encourage good- fellowship and Varsity patriotism, and to pro- mote in every way the interests of old U. C. page one hundred and fortyvone mwmmgm THE A.M.A. page om: hundred and forty-three CLUB WW Members Ralph Inott. Clifford S. Lewis. Ralph E. Dimmick. George Story. James B. O'Donnell. William Quirk. Oliver C. Wyman. Robert Schwenker. Stanley T. A. Goff. Glenway Maxon. Clyde Gowdy. Walter Williams. Frederick Koenig. Palmer Clingman. Byron Wayne. Bernard C. Bowen. Orin G. Clement. Charles Cummings. Charles Ashcraft. George McAlpin. Max Zange. Walter Heuck. Office 1'5 D. G. DEVORE, President. B. E. SCHAAR, Treasurer. JAMES GALLAGHER, Secretary. 9415 ? I-. -l' 2' 14. $1 9+! HE Engineers? Club was organized in June, 1903. Mem- .1 a E bership is open to all Senior, Junior. and Sophomore 15d; engineers, the Engineering Faculty being honorary L;?T:?LE members. The function of the Engineers, Club is to unite in the bonds of goodfellowship all the students of the Engineering College, and to aiford an opportunity of meeting and discussing questions that are of interest to students of engineering. Since the organization of the Club it has rapidly increased in influence and power, and is, at present, one of the most important organizations in the University. The Club is always ready to sup- port any laudable undertaking proposed by the students, and is noted for taking the initiative in many important student affairs, not the least of which is the student gevernment move, which has worked so successfully in the Engineering College for the past two years. With the rapid increase in the size of the Engineering College, doubtless the Engineers' Club is destined to become a potent factor in the University. page one hundred and. forty-flvc Colors - Red, Black and Gray. Yell. Ra-Ra, Ra-Sis, Boom-Bang, Hulla-ba-lu, We're the gang; Rickety, Rackety-Ra-Re SENIORS. Brand, Louis Ashcraft, C. E. Baldwin, R. A. Buchanan, C. G. Collins, H. W. T. DeVore, D. G. Doeller, G. Albert Eberling, Carl Fisher, F. F. Gallagher, James Henry, Walt. Mackelfresh, G. H. Powell, S. F. Rinninsland, L. G. Robinson, H. S. Schaar, B. E. Schick, H. S. Sticksel, C. P. JUNIORS. Abrahams, M. E. Chalkley, Jr., R. H. Clancy, J . A. Eckert, C. R. Fels, C. G. Friedman, H. B. Gabriel, R. Hecker, C. H. Jewett, J. G. Engineer's-U.-C. Members Kilgour, G. E. Sanders, F. W. Schwenker, R. F. Shine, B. J . Thomssen, E. L. Wayne, B. H. Williams, H. B. Winder, G. A. SOPHOMORES. Bess, E. Buvinger, W. J, Goldblatt, D. Hoffman, C. B. Holzwarth, C. Hyman, H. J . Kersey, R. B. Kistner, A. E. McCall, M. McG. Peaslee, W. Schuessler, G. Clingman, D. P. Conner, A. B. Hood, C. B. Otting, E. F. Hyndman, F. W. Chapman, A. B. Maas, J. Valentine, F. Herman, J. M. page one hundred and forty-six Tribunal of the College of Engineering behave OECBI'S DAVID G. DEVORE, '08, President. HERMAN S. Scmcx, 38, Secretary. G. ALBERT DOELLER, E08. EDGAR L. THOMSSEN, '09. FRANK W. SANDERS, '09. 3414:.21HE Tribunal is the judicial body of the Student Gov- : i .1 1 . ernment Association of the College of Engineering. GE As such it investigates all cases of discipline in which $$$wa students of this college are concerned, and recomends to the Dean of the College of Engineering what action should be taken regarding the offender. The Tribunal is composed of three Seniors and two J ungors, eIected annually by ballot by the uppereclassmen of the College of Engineering. ELI. I page one hundred and forty-aevcn Senior C1v11 Engineers M415 : Charles E. Ashcraft. James Gallagher. Norman B. Conway. Walter Henry. David G. DeVore. Harry S. Robinson. G. Albert Doeller. Herman Schick. Frank F. Fisher. Dean Herman H. Schneider. Prof. Fred E. Ayer. Tribunal of the College of Liberal Arts W154 031cm ROBERT A. TAYLOR, tOS, President. BERNARD C. BOWEN, '03. EDWARD S. HATHAWAY, '09. CHARLES T. WILLIAMS, '09. RALPH A. KREIMER, 10. W! HE second year of the Academic Tribunal has shown one .- t very encouraging feature, namely, there have been very gawk; few cases to try. There can be no more satisfactory t1, 4-2;!!! evidence of the success of student self-government than a. decrease in the number of offenses. The primary purpose of the Tribunal is not to punish wrongdoers, but to pre- vent a recurrence of the evils. These evils wili cease only when the spirit of the student body is against them, and already the iniiuence of the Academic Club can be felt in raising the standards of university life. page one hundred and forty-nin: wuzwmg$g mm If! Chief Chemists Bernard E. Schaar, President. Cliif G. W. Fels, Vice-President. Ralph E. Oesper, Secretary and Treasurer. WW , the advanced students in the Department of Chemistry . for the purpose of furthering the interests of chemistry : and promoting goodfellowship. Meetings are held ' monthly, at which, after a little time has been spent in serious discussion, a general good time is enjoyed. W154: Plain Chemists Eckert, Clarence R. Abrahams, Maurice B. Hecker, Charles H. Koenig, A. Frederick Abrahams, Mortimer E. Bess, Earle Gowdy, Robert E. C. Ratz, Otto Biederman, August Maas, Julian Kinker, Edward Holzwarth, Charles Hoffman, Clarence Huttenbauer, Sam. Hoffman, Charles B. Buvinger, Wilson J. Real Chemists Porter, Mr. John J . J ones. Dr. W. Lauder Farnau, Mr. Earl F. Fry, Dr. H. S. ?age one hundred and Effy-on: WWWWW Debating and Public Speaking caril-qEI-a - 244154 W0 years ago. after the rej uvenation of the interest in 9a public speaking at Cincinnati by the two debates ar- g ranged by Professor Miller, the Debating Association was formed. Last year it was re-organized, and in r addition, the Speakersi Club was brought forth as a practical aid in the cultivation of forensic and histrionic ability. This year we have both of these organizations, with vigor unabated, and in addition two new members of the Faculty who have taken a very active interest in the work. Professor Van Wye has taken up the work in public speaking from the standpoint of technical in- struction, and Mr. Park aids very materially in the progress of the Speakers' Club by his helpful advice and criticism. It will readily appear from this that public speaking at U. C. is iton the boom. Due to no want of active endeavor, it was very late in the season before any definite arrangements for intercolle- giate debate were entered into. Still, a very satisfactory tri- cornered debating league was, however, arranged with Miami and Ohio Universities. Although the old stars have, one by one, left our firmament to shine elsewhere, our supply of debating material is not poorer than it has been. The younger men trained in the various organi- zations named above, have shown up in splendid shape, and, no matter what may be the actual outcome of any specific contest, it behooves any proud rival of Cincinnati in debate to take heed lest she fall. The time, we hope, will never come when the names of the mighty Ellis, of the suave Landman, of the earnest Pflueger shall lose their glorious signiiicance as the blazers of the way in this great work. Nevertheless, if a greater shall not come among us, at a future day, yet the mantle that fell from their shoulders will not fall on unworthy successors; and the spirit of the pioneers, transfused into the souls of those who follow after will insure for Cincinnati a worthy place among Ohiois debating colleges. page one hundred and fifty-two mmmmw . . . n - u n C1nc1nnat1-M1am1-Ohlo Debate 03 With Miami University. April 24. at Cincinnati QUESTIONu Resolved, That the United States adopt a policy of promoting the American merchant marine by Government aid. Affirmative - University of Cincinnati. Negative - Miami University. Cincinnati Team Ralph Cummins Howard L. Bevis Sidney Kusworm Alternate - Arthur Harris. Won by Cincinnati. With Ohio University. April 24. at Athens Affirmative - Ohio University. Negative - University of Cincinnati. Cincinnati Team Louis Gross Morris Lazaron Robert Marx Alternate - Edward Hathaway. Won by Cincinnati. WV; Law School-Ohio State Debate '08 With Ohio State University. February 28. at Columbus QUESTION -- Resolved, That all concerns engaged in inter- state commerce should be compelled to incorporate under a Federal charter, the constitutionality of same being granted. Affirmative - Ohio State. Negative ... Law School. Cmclnnati T3331 Robert S. Marx T. Lincoln Bouscaren Nicholas I. Hoban Alternate q- Carl J acobs. Won by Cincinnati Law School. page One humirad and Ef-ty-three e a1 W0 years ago the Speakers! Club was formed. Its aim L4 is to foster and increase the interest in public speaking. .' Meetings are held twice every month at Burnet Woods, 1 and the Law School, alternately, at which programs con- sisting of debates and various forms of speaking are rendered. The Speakers' Club is unique in that it is the one or- ganization at the University including members from the various colleges. For the past two years, every man chosen upon the Varsity debating team has been 9. Speakers' Club man. The organization is, therefore, accomplishing much, not only for its members, but for the University as a whole. Members MEMBERS. Hoban, Nicholas J . Barman. Oscar Isaacs. Nathan Bevis, Howard L. Jacobs, Carl Broeman, Charles Kusworm, S. G. Bouscaren, T. Lincoln Lazaron, Morris S. Bowen, B. C. MCCOrmick, Shuler Cummins, Ralph McKibbin, Robert Biitifohl: T' HONORARY MEMBERS. Gallagher, Andrew Professor Miller Harris, A. M. Dean Rogers HathaWay, Edward Professor Hicks Hicks, Roy Messrs. VanWye, Seasongood, Huttenbauer, Samuel Park, Greve and Morrill. paie one hundred and th-fivc THE. WM Ev Officers REBECCA HOPKINS . . President ELLA DAVIS . . . . . . Vice-President ALMA E. HAYMAKER . . . . . Secretary AMY HELEN FERRIS . . . . . Treasure? wave ?:??:??.N MARCH, 1900, a. general feeling throughout the Univer- sity of Cincinnati, for the need of a literary society, led to f. the formation of two organizations, one among the young women and the other among the young men, the member- ship of each being restricted to students of the Senior and J unior Classes. For the first two years of its existence, the society among the girls was called the Young Women's Literary and Debating Club? and its aim was to foster the intelleetual life of the University students by literary work and debates. Then the debates were given up, and the name changed to the Literary Society? Each year since the adoption of purely literary work, the girls have studied an interesting and prohtable program. The active membership is limited to fourteen, and new the organiza- tion numbers more than seventy. Faculty Members Elizabeth Merrill Grace Wright Madeline Maury Post Graduate Members Louise Estelle Bentley Marie Paula Dickore Jean Olive Heck Under Graduates 1908. Florence Schaaf. Alma Haymaker. Rebecca Hepkins. Rose Sherwood. 1909. Ella. Davis. Ruth Levi. Almira Jewett. Elise Reis Loebman. Amy Helen Ferris. Iola Shafer. Kate Perin. Gera Dickerson Emrick. page One hundred and fifty-neven 1132 05am om Officers EMMA ANDRIESSEN . . . . . President RUTH LEVI . . . . . . . Secretary BENJAMIN DAWSON . . . . . Treasurer ewil-IEH? Wi'cgggER DEUTSCHE VEREIN of the University prepared :3 for presentation, for the year 1907'08, Ludwig Fuldzfs 00E three-act comedy, Das Recht der Frau. The play was given on Tuesday evening, March 17, in the Uni- versity Auditorium. and proved a splendid success in every way. ?WW WAS RECHT DER FRAU. CAST 0F CHARACTERS. Hans Kerner, Gutsbesitzer ....... Albert Greenland Erna, seine Tochter ................... Viola Pfaff Baron Firnhofen .................. Arthur Harris Hillner, Professor .................. Edwin Weber Ludmilla, seine Frau ................... Ruth Levi Dr. Waldemar Krauseneck ....... C. H. Hoifmeister Grethe, seine Frau ................... Viola Heise Gottlieb, Bedienter ...................... S. Isaacs Ein Photograph. Zeit Die Gegenwart. page one hundrcd and fiffy-ciglat Hanorary Members Professor Poll. Dr. Lotspeich. Active Members Andriessen. Davis. Lotze. Pfaff. Pfamnger. R003. . Adler. Becker. . Deutsch. . Carrington. Franzmeier. Heise. Haymaker. Levi. Lanz. Meyer. von Lapel. Oesper. . Rendigs. . Rothschild. Stegmeyer. Stugard. . Schutzkwer. Sommeriield. Strubbe. Gallagher. Greenland. PFEPFSP?WHPFPPP?SEHE?EPP$F?W page one hundred and fifty-nine . Witzenbacher. Miss Schrader. Dr. Umphrey. R. Kreimer. S. Leiat. I. Levi. M. Merryweather. D. Stacker. M. Burris. M. Lynch. H. Trounstine. H. Hotfheimer. C. Adams. A. Betscher. D. Bingel. R. Bloom. M. Conner. E. Feldman. H. Feuser. L. Hexter. S. Isaacs. R. Jacobs. J. Krueck. B. McAvoy. E. Shelow. L. Stevenson. N. Stratemeyer. C. Thilly. E. Smith. M. Heim. E. Smith. 1? LE CERCLE? FPHNCHIS LEA B. LANZ, l08 EMMA ANDRIESSEN, OfEcers '08 VIOLA E. PFAFF, ,08 AUGUSTA Roos, 08 1908. Emma Andriessen. Ralph Cummins. Amy Ferris. Lea B. Lana. Ralph E. Casper. Kate Perin. Viola E. Pfaff. Elsa E. Pfaffinger. Augusta Roos. Florence Root. Rose Sherwood. Grace Spiegel. Marco Liberma, A. B. Active Members 1909. Irma Gregg. Evangeline Cook. Jeanie Clark. Florence Farbach. Hortense Geigerman. Emma Guethlein. Edith Kreimer. Henrietta Mackzum. Alma Murray. Lydia Sammet. Zephora von Lepel. Edith Wagoner. 1911. Elizabeth K. Steele. Honorary MOBIL 81'! Ellen Keily. A. B. President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer 1910. Marguerite Allgaier. Ethel Burrell. Edna Baum. Gertrude Bowling. Roberta Evans. Arthur M. Harris. Lesley Henshaw. Alice Kelsall. Edith Nichol. Carrie Perin. Christine Porter. Elsie Tangeman. Mary D. Whitfield. George W. Umphrey, Ph. D. 17:11: one hundred and sixty LE CERCLE FRANCAIS 522232355? students in French, 3, 4 and above, to become members. At the reorganization, the name of Le Cercle Litteraire et Drama.- tique was chosen. The meetings are held the second Wednesday of every month in the reception room of the University. In addi- tion, Le Cercle gives several plays each year. The following comedies were presented by Le Cercle Litter- aire et Dramatique, Tuesday evening, May 7, 1907, in the Auditor- ium, under the direction of M. Alfred Nonnez: LA GRAMMAIRE. par Labiche. Francois Caboussat. ancien negociant. . . .Arthur J. Kinsella. Poitrinas, president de l'Academie d' Etampes, Charles Miller Jean, domestique de Caboussat ............... Ralph Oesper Machut, veterinaire ...................... James OtDonnell Blanche, mle de Caboussat .................. Viola E. Pfaff LES PRECIEUSES RIDICULES. par Moliiare. La Grange . . .Ralph Cumming Du Croisy I. . . . . tAmants rebutesJ . . . ' . . . Arthur Harris Gorgibus, hon bourgeois ................. Arthur J . Kinsella Cathos, niuice de Gorgibus. . . Precieuses . .Natalie Merrill Madelon, fille de Gorgibus. . .i Ridicules, . . . .Lea B. Lanz Marotte, servante des Precieuses Ridicules ..... Helen Wilson Le Marquis de Mascarille, valet de la Grange, Nathan T. Isaacs Le Vicomte de Jodelet, valet de Du Croisy ..... Charles Miller Deux Porteurs de Chaise, et Violons, Ralph Oesper et Wm. Graf page one hundred and uixty-on: Young Wotnerfs Christian Association W159i: MARY J. CORBETT . . . . General Secretary WW Officers. 1907-8 IOLA SHAFER . . . . . . President HELEN WILKINSON . . . . Vice-President IRMA GBOGG . . . . . . Secretary ABEATRIX FARNHAM . . . . . Treasurer W15 ? Officers. 1908-9 STELLA VAN HISE . . . . . President HILDA BABBIT . . . . . Vice-President HARRIET RIED . . . . . . Secretary MAUD VAWTER . . . . . . Treasurer page mu: hundred. and aixty-two OHicez-s EDWARD S. HATHAWAY . . . . President FRANK R. WILLIAMS . . . . . Secretary EDWIN W. WEBER . . . . . Treasurer PRES. CHARLES W. DABNEY . .Leader of Bible Class Members Arthur T. Condit. Robert H. Morrison. Ralph Cummins. Earl B. Roger. David G. DeVore. Frank W. Sanders. L. W. Durrell. Louis W. Sauer. Frank F. Fisher. Otto V. Schlichten. Frank Gavin. Louis Selbert. Elmer Haehnle. Elmore Walther. Robert B. Holmes. Herman S. Schick. Walter Majoewsky. William G. Gaessler. Robert P. McKibben. page one hundred and sixtyvthtcc bk. at13:2: gm.- 9; OHICCI'B LOUIS W. SAUER . . . . . President LAURETTA SHORTEN . . . . . Secretary WEBSTER KELLER . . . . . Treasurer WW History-Feunded in the Biology Department of the Uni- versity of Cincinnati in the year 1903, A. D., by Harris Miller Benedict. Purpose- To bring together twice each month of the college year those most interested in Biology, with the aims UJ. of foster- ing goodfellowship, EL keeping in touch With current scientific literature and research, and GL promoting, with the strength of an organized body, the advancement of municipal sanitation in our city. Annual Functions - The presidential address, the open house. and the planting on the campus of a tree to the memory of some great scientist, are established functions. Motto - 0bserve closely, think deeply. 1mg: one hundred and aixty-fiv: Active Members for 1903 Belmer, Helen Bingel, Doris Braun, Lucy Brown, Janet Dodds, Pochahontas Dowling, Gertrude Deutsch, Hermann du Bray. Ernest Durrell, Lawrence Gavin, Frank Halliday, Clifford Hathaway, Edward Henshaw, Lesley Holmes, Robert Isaacs. Schachne Johnston, Marcella Kelly, Thomas Keller, Webster Keller, Mamie Krueck, Josephine Leiman, Hattie McAvoy, Blanche Morrison, Edith Oskamp, Pearl Peaslee, Leon Raitt, Anna. Porter, Christine Perin, Kate Perin, Carrie Smith, Elizabeth Shorten, Lauretta Santen, Florence Sauer, Louis Seibert, Louis Stevenson, Louise Tangeman. Elsie Van Hart, Clara. Volkert, Nora Walther, Elmore Wilkinson, Helen page one hundred and aixty-aix AWE Madolin Adler. Emma Andriessen. Anna Becker. Edna. Butterworth. Helene Lotze. Elsie Meyer. Edith Morrison. Kate Perin. Ella Davis. Roberta Davy. page one hundred and aixty-seven is to further class spirit. regular meetings are held once every three weeks. mu j , MGM? CEEREI -' CQILUB f Officers MABEL WITZENBACHER FLORENCE K. SCHAAF ESTELLA L. RENDIGS WA Members Anna Mae Gauche. Elizabeth Ginn. Sarah Glazer. Alma Haymaker. Rebecca Hopkins. Jessie Ireland. Almira Jewett. May Kutchbauch. Lea Lanz. President Vice-President Sec'retGL-ry 1.1-! HE Senior Girls, Club of the University of Cincinnati was organized in the spring of 1906. The aim of the Club In pursuance of this aim, v 'q fa jv, year an open meeting was given in honor of the Senior men of the Academic and Engineering Colleges, and 311 who were present will vouch for its success. active members entertained the Alumna of 1907. On February 6, the Viola Pfaff. Elsa Pfaifinger. Jessie Phipps. Augusta R003. Florence Root. Regina Rothschild. Rose Sherwood. Lauretta Shorten. Grace Spiegel. Ella Wilson. This History Lame HE Yeliow and Black was organized by the girls of 1909 '2! a: during their Sophomore year, for the purpose of having :9ng; a good time together, as well as showing the girls of 33:...e'mi other classes how things ought to be done. For over a gg g year it has been fulfilling its purpose. Its members turn out in a body at every college event, and the Club has been so successful and inspiring that this year the girls of all the various classes have organized. The ttYellow and Black has been especially enterprising this year. Not only has it given a number of brilliant social affairs, but also a play for the Senior girls. This play, Frivolous 1908, a Leap-Year Drama in Two Acts, was written and produced by the club members and has been pronounced by one and all as one of the greatest hits the University has known. A l r' ,. 1. page one hundred and sixty-nine SOPHOMORE GIRLS CLUB - we're? OUBTLESS there have been Sophomore girls' clubs in the history of the Varsity, but we of 10 defy you to produce a similar organization which has entertained ' - and been entertained so much, which has feasted and aggg been feasted in such lavish style. We have given g parties for the boys, and the boys have given parties for us, and there are still more coming! mThe last of life for Which the first was made? And that last in this case is going to eclipse everyone elsels whole. To be exact, we have had, so far, two dove parties and one Valentine party, to which the boys were hidden, and to which they turned out en masse. Masculine hearts were freely exchanged for those of feminine workmanship, and vice versa. We have heard that some of those peculiar organs have not been returned to their rightful owners as yet, either. For such a young society we think that we have done very well. True, the Freshmen may say that we have not entertained the Seniors; we do not deny the accusation; all we say is, the Seniors have not entertained us! Is that not defense enough? We are so well known that it is useless to sign any names. and it is only for busi- ness reasons that we inform you that Mary Lynch is our honored President, Elsie Tangeman our Secretary, Marjorie Connor our Treasurer, and VIOLA HEISE, Scribe. page on: hunarecl anti seventy mmmmm FRESHMAN GIRLS CLUB Officers CAMILLE ADAMS . . . President DORIS BINGEL . . . . . . Treasurer Members Nina Ackerland. Josephine Frank. Anna Raitt. Helen Acomb. Lillie Goebel. Laura Reedy. Camille Adams. Clifford Halliday. Rhoda Rendigs. Gwendolyn Aiken. Mildred Hamilton. Ruth Renner. Helen Belmer. Ella May Hopkins. Clara Ries. Alma Betscher. Matilda Herminghausen. Miriam Rothschild. Doris Bingel. Lillian Huheey. Florence Rowell. Laura Birch. Mabel Hutchins. Florence Santen. Eleanor Black. Edith Hyatt. Anna Schriver. Ruth Blair. Merle James. Edith Sherrod. Ada Blese. Ethel Johnston. Rose Shine. Gussie Bookmyer. Edith Kelsall. Edith Smith. Dulce Brutton. Emma KleinSChmidt. Ella Snodgrass. Marina Burns. Edwina Knapp. Elizabeth Steele. Phyllis Carter. Lucile Koch. Louise Stevenson. Edna Clark. Ruth Kopenhoefer. Norma Stratemeyer. Stella Coffin. Josephine Krueck. Alma Strautmann. Alvina Davidson. Una Macke. Christel Thilly. Jeanette Davy. Margaret Maxon. Nora Volkert. Rosina Dehner. Ruth Metzger. May Warnking. Grace Dolle. Gladys Minor. Helen Wichgar. Ruth Draper. Alice Murphy. Elizabeth Wilkinson. Aimee Einstein. Helen Parker. Gretchen Wulff. Erna Feldman. Lucie Pfleger. Hermia Feuser. Adelaide Fisher. Hilda Pirman. Malke Segal. Alice Foote. Heien Pohlman. Helen Trounstine. page one hundred and seventy-onc An organization representative of all the social, politi- cal and fraternal bodies of the University of Cincinnati. Each organization is represented by its President or special representative. WW Officers BERNARD BOWEN President REBECCA HOPKINS . Vice-President HARRIET REID Secretary Members Senior Class...Be1-nard Bowen Junior 01335.. .Stella Van Hise Sophomore Class, Frederick Hyndman Freshman Class, Charles Cummings E X ......... Charles Williams E A E ......... Bates Williams B a II .......... James Clancy :1: A GD .......... Milton Wagner V. C. P .......... Harriet Reid A A A ............ Ella Wilson A :1: q- ....... Rebecca Hopkins Blue Hydra ....... Louis Sauer Speakersf Club, Sidney Kusworrn page one hundred and aevcnty-thrcc Literary Society. . . .Ella Davis Y. W. C. A ........ Iola Shafer Y. M. C. A. .Edward Hathaway University News, Howard Bevis CINCINNATIAN. .Elise Loebman Engineers;I Club, David DeVore Senior Girly Club, Mabel Witzenbacher Physics Club. . .Carl Buchanan Merfs Glee Club, Ralph Kreimer Girls? Glee Club..He1ene Lotze Mandolin Club. . . .Howard Cox German Club, Emma Andriessen French Club ........ Lea Lanz Co-Operative Society, Robert Booth 1$ STORES m The University of Cincinnati Co-operative Society W15 ? Board of Directors ROBERT M. BOOTH, 08 . . . . President MARGUERITE S. ALLGAIER, ,10 . . . Secretary DR. S. E. SLOCUM . . . . Treasurer ROSE S. SHERWOOD, 08. J OHN G. JEWETT, 09. WW This Society, started in 1904, has grown steadily, and this year, under the management of Mr. RaIph Cummins, it has firmly established itself as a permanent factor in University affairs. page one hundrcd and aeventy-four MUSICAL THC CLEE CLUB Officers RALPH A. KREIMER, C10 . . . . President CLARENCE WINDER, '09 . . . . . Manager WALTER C. HUXELL, ,10 . . . . Treasurer FREDERICK LOTTER, ,10 . . . . . Librarian EDWIN GLOVER . . . . . . Director FRANK GAVIN, B11 . . . . . Accompanist FIRST TENORS. Ernest S. du Bray. Frederick Letter. Herman Deutsch. Leon D. Peaslee. H. Frederick Koenig, Jr. Edward G. Rieman. Herman Schick. SECOND TENoRs. Charles Ashcraft. Allan M. Taylor. Audley H. Brown. Byron H. Wayne. Ralph A. Kreimer. Raymond C. Witte. Stanley W. Barman. FIRST BASSOS. Stowe D. Baldwin. G. Harold Mackelfresh. Stanley F. Brewster. A. Lincoln Stanley. Robert Holmes. Robert Aims Taylor. Samuel Huttenbauer. Edwin Weber. SECOND BASSOS. Earl Bess. Thomas H. Kelly. G. A. Doeller. Robert Schwenker. Frank Fremont Fisher. Elmore C. Walther. A. C. Hewitt. Clarence A. Winder. page one hundred and ac'vcnty-scvcn WW THE MANDOLIN CLUB WILLIAM HOWARD Cox . . . . . Leader FIRST MANDOLINS. Stowe D. Baldwin. Howard Getz. Stanley F. Brewster. Frederick D. Letter. W. Howard Cox. Robert Alms Taylor. SECOND MANDOLINS. Alfred Beak Chapman, Jr. Max Robinson. Walter Montgomery. Robert F. Schwenker. GUITARS. Allan M. Taylor. Ralph A. Kreimer. Henry Krantz, page one hundred and uevcnty-cight GIRLS GLEE CLUB Ochers HELENE LOTZE President MARY COWEN Manager EDWIN GLOVER . Director FRANK GAVIN Accompanist Members Mabel Andridge. Mary Lynch. Helen Belmer. Loretta Murphy. Rosa Buerger. Marie Oehler. Ruth Blair. Franziska Opes. Jeanie Clark. Ethel Outcalt. Geneva Conway. Carrie Perin. Mary Cowen. Augusta Roos. Evangeline Cook. Florence Root. Emily Crowe. Regina Rothschild. Alvina Davidson. Lauretta Shorten. Grace DolIe. Anna. Stegemeyer. Ruth Draper. Maude Stephens. Erna Feldman. Carrie Stugard. Amy Ferris. Elsie Tangeman. Mary Gerdson. Stella Van Hise. Clifford Halliday. Maud Vawter. Carolyn Healy. Molly Heim. Edith Hyatt. Lucille Koch. page one hundred and a:vcuty-m'ne Elizabeth Wilkinson. Emma Bray. Christel Thilly. Lucie Pfleger. F rances Levi. stion Of 111: Freshman Que The Eternal Editorial Stag for 1908 ELISE REIS LOEBMAN . . . . Editor-in-Chief STANLEY FARRAR BREWSTER . . Business Manager wea-Gw Assoeiates COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS. Howard L. Bevis. Florence Farbach. Rebecca Hopkins. Ruth Levi. Rose Sterrett Sherwood. Marian Stewart. Ralph Kreimer. COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING. Milton Wagner. COLLEGE OF MEDICINE. J oseph Hughes Shaw. COLLEGE OF LAW. Sidney G. Kusworm. W Artists Stanley Thompson. AJmira Jewett. Frank Miller. Charles Tobias. page one hundred and eighty-thrze Horace Greely mighty fulmz'nations hurled; Pap Watterson fires shots hea'rd 'rozmd the world; The Post, the Times-Stm, and the Enquivre'r, too, With information laden, pass '51:. view; With home of these your intellect; abuse; For full particulars, just read - The News. W UNIVERSITY WEEKLY NEWS Published by the Students of the University of Cincinnati. Printed by the University Press, Burnet Woods, Cincinnati, Ohio. Mer- Editorial Board HOWARD L. BEVIS, '08 . . . . . Editar-in-Chz'ef Elise Loebman. '09. John Jewett, '09. Edward S. Hathaway, '09. John Dineen, 139. Viola Heise, '10. Louis Lurie, hll. Ralph Kreimer, '10. Florence Farbach, h09. Laura Schroerlucke, '09. 0. Harold Mackelfresh, '08. MW Business Department SIDNEY G. KUSWORM, h08 . . . . . . Manager ROBERT MARX, '09. . SAMUEL HUTTENBAUER, '10, h Assistant Managers page one hundred and :ighty-hvc Our Stuclent Creature 11.132553 1:511 PVIE' - The Athletic Council OHicers FRANK FISHER . . . . . . President ED. ADAMS . . . . . . Vice-Presz'dent ERNEST DU BRAY . . . . . Secretary JOHN DAVIS . . . . . . . Treasurer RALPH INOTT . . . . . . . Coach :i-Jg'wg HIS year witnessed a vital change in athletic control at ' E the University. Athletics are now placed in the hands of the students, who are represented by an organization . , i known as the Athletic Council. The managership of . , g 8 different athletic teams is now competitive, and is open to men of all departments. Another move made for the betterment of athletics has been the organization of an Athletic Association. Membership to this Association is open to all students upon the payment of the specified fee. COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS. Robert Taylor. Ernest du Bray. Walter Hurley. COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING. Frank Fisher. James Clancy. Fred McMinn. COLLEGE OF MEDICINE. Ed. Adams. Charles Hohing. COLLEGE OF LAW. Robert O'Connell. Clinton Egbert. page one hundred and eifhty-cight Freshman-Sophomore Football Game November 30 WW: FRESHMEN. POSITION. SOPHOMORES. Tobias ............... L. E ............. Hyndman Reece ................ L. T ................. Marx Skinner .............. L. G ............. McComas Haehnle .............. C ............. Schuessler Broeman ............. R. G ............... Peaslee Feid ................. R. T .......... Huttenbauer Dyer ................ R. E ............ Abrahams Hurley ............... Q. B .............. Kreimer B. Clancy ............ R. H ............... Brunet Heuck, Capt .......... L. H ........ du Bray, Capt. Zange ............... F. B ............... Stanley page om: hundred and :Eghty-m'ne L12 I' . : 0- 'm.,... l... Rn. Track T eam STOWE D. BALDWIN . . . . . Captain H. F. KOENIG. JR. . . . . . . Manager MEMBERS. Allen, 011. Bess, 010. Baldwin, '10. McNeIly, '10. McMinn, '09. Tobias, 011. Mackelfresh, ,08. Brown, '10. Barman, '11. Dyer, '11. Manss, 009. Bruner, '10. Koenig, a10. du Bray, 010. RAJ Fenclng J . A. DAVIS . . . . Manager and Instructor MEMBERS OF TEAM. R. J. Paulsen, Jr., Captain. E. Walther. Joe Herman. M. Zange, Substitute. SQUAD. Howard Getz. Oscar Plueddemann. Paul Rover. Match with Cincinnati Gym. won by Cincinnati Gym. pag: one huu3red and ninth! WWW Basket-Ball Recorcl 655.9 'Varsity claims State Championship, having won every game played during the season. was Schedule Of Games December 20.- At Cincinnati. 'Varsity, 43; Miami, 15. February 1.- At Oxford. Warsity, 29; Miami, 19. February 5.- At Wilmington. Varsity, 28; Wilmington, 27 February 6.- At Parkersburg. 'Varsity, 29; Parkersburg Y. M- C. A., 17. February 7:- At Marietta. Varsity, 15; Marietta, 12. February 8.- At Athens. 'Varsity, 22; Ohio, 20. February 13.2At Cincinnati. Varsity, 49; Ohio, 10. February 27.- At Cincinnati. 'Varsity, 35; Wilmington, 17. March 6.d At Cincinnati. ,Varsity. 27; Denison, 19. Total Goals McMinn, 44. Conway, 30. Fisher, 4. Shelhorn, 37. Schroetter, 3. Ackerson, 6. Total Fouls Conway, 36. Shelhorn, 9. Total Points 'Varsity, 299. Opponents, 165. page one hundred and ninety-nne BASK BALL 1.5.1 'Varsity Basket-Ball Team m NORMAN CONWAY . . . . . Captain CHARLES KILGOUR . . . . . . Manager LINE-UP Fred McMinn, Center. Norman Conway, Right Forward. George Shelhorn, Left Forward. Frank Fisher, Right Guard. Albert Schroetter, Left Guard. Hayward Ackerson. Arthur Dyer. page one launched and ninety-thrcc EJLLLE HE baseball season opened April 9, by a game with the . ,9 'L i; a; '? g g g The emciency of Coach Inott was demonstrated throughout the season. Although the CINCINNATIAN was at press too soon to obtain a complete record. we feel conlident that the team of 1908 will do the University credit. yage one hundred and ninety-four mmmmm Varsity Team BOB O'CONNELL . . . . . Captain $03 TAYLOR . . . . . . Manager Bruce Pollard. Right Field. Arthur Dyer, Short Step. Bob O'Connell, Center Field. Peter Sticksel, 3d Base. Richard Dickerson, Left Field. Walter Thau. Catcher. Glenn Barrett, lst Base. Cliff Hall, Pitcher. Walter Williams, 2d Base. Howard Waldo, Pitcher. George Darnette, Pitcher. Schedule Apr. 9.- At Cincinnati; 'Varsity 7, Stumps. 8. Apr. 22. University of Virginia, at Morgantown. Apr. 23-H University of Virginia, at Morgantown. Apr. 24.- Ohio University, at Athens. Ohio. Apr. 25.- Ohio University, at Athens, Ohio. May 5?- Georgetown University, at Cincinnati, Ohio. May 13.-- Wilmington University, at Cincinnati, Ohio. May 19.- Wilmington University, at Wilmington, Ohio. May 21.- Miami University, at Cincinnati, Ohio. pag: one hundrgd and ninew-Evc CEMQ mm 63$???E 6:339:33 T E N N I S TENNIS ASSOCIATION FOR 1907. 06cm. 1907 8 HAYWARD ACKERSON . . . . . President JOHN JEWETT . . . . . . Manager FRED HOOKER . . . . . . Treasurer TENNIS TEAM. Ernest du Bray. John Jewett. Frank Sanders. Match with Kenyon, May 21, 1907. du Bray vs. Sam Fennell, tie-- 6-4; 4-6; 941; 6-2. Jewett defeated Southw0rth-- 6-4; 6-4. SQUAD FOR 1908. Ernest du Bray. Arthur Dyer. John Jewett. Frank Sanders. Charles Tobias. Match with Kenyon, May 2, 1908. Match with Miami, May -, 1908. page on: hundrgd uni ninety-six 63$meme Saphomore Team EDWARD KINKER . . . Captain and Manager Stowe Baldwin, 2d Base. Fred Hyndman, Right Field. Walter Huxell, Short Stop. Lincoln Stanley, Center Field. Ray Witte, 3d Base. Audley Brown, Left Field. Glenn Barrett, lst Base. Ed. Kinker, Catcher. George Dornette, Pitcher. WAG Freshman Team CLIFFORD HALL . . . . . . Captain CHARLES TOBIAS - . . . . . Manager Clifford Hall, Right Field. Walter Heuck, Short Stop. Douglas Warner, Center Field Allen Joslin, 3d Base. Bruce Poilard, Left Field. Walter Than, Catcher. Cedric Fosdick, lst Base. Howard Waldo, Pitcher. Arthur Dyer, 2d Base. Walter Mason, Pitcher. Schedule Apr. 3.-- Hughes High School; Freshmen, 13, Hughes 14. Apr. 13. 0. M. I.; Freshmen 8, 0. M. I. 4. May 9. Hughes High School. May 16.- Stumps. Sophomore-Freshman games. page one hundred and ninety-aeven The Co-Op. Athletic Association OffiCBI'S MAX ZANGE . . . . . . President ARTHUR B. CONNER . . . . Vice-President RICHARD J. PAULSEN, JR . . Secretary-Treasmer 9-6315 ? Football Team. 1907-8 RALPH INOTT . . . . . . . Coach BILL PEASLEE . . . . . . Captain ARTHUR CONNER . . . . . . Manager LINE-UP. Max Zange - Full back. Bill Peaslee .4 Half back. Waddy Williams H Halfback. Ki? Malone w- Quarterback. Hing Krampe w- End. Wally Montgomery h Tackle. Charlie Hoffmeister - Guard. 0. Plueddemann E Center. Bobby Morrison H Guard. Harry Stewart u Tackle. Artie Conner m End and Quarterback. page one hundred and ninety-zight 50131631116 Oct. 12.- Erlanger, at Erlanger, Ky. Oct. 19,- Tigers, at Home. Oct. 26. Bellevue, at Bellevue, Ky. Nov. 16. Ohio Military Institute, College Hill. Nov. 23.-- Northside, at Home. Thanksgiving HMiamisburg, at Miamisburg. Dec. '7.- Northside. at Northside. W Basket-Ball Team. 1907-08 RALPH INOTT . . . . . . . Coach J OSEPH HERMAN . . . . . . Captain WILLETS PEASLEE . . . . . . Manager LINE-UP. Victor Grotlisch -- Center. George Binns - Forward. J ohn RowelI - Forward. J oseph Herman - Guard. Walter Majoewsky Guard. Max Zange - Guard. page one hundreci and ninety-nine September . 19.- Registration. 20.- Brown, of Harvard, in town. He makes acquaintance of Schwenker, of Cincinnati. 21. Tuition all paid; quiet, and Daniel Laurence, clerk, re1gn supreme. 22h Lest auld acquaintance be forgot, everybody goes fussin'. 23. Fine weather; birdies; treas. 26- Professors, in chorus: ' We d better get settled now! 28. Papa Blau takes a walk with Blau, J r. Calls it park- ology? October 1. Vast quantity of bread cut in Mrs. KelscEs lunch-room. 2. - Miss Czarnomska's feather boa turns up blue this year. 3. George puts up a clean towel. 5. - Tri Delta initiation. 9. Hathaway and his overcoat go on a bug-hunting jaunt. 10.- Hathaway comes back. 11.g Beta pledge dance, Elberon Country Club. 14.- Rain; parkoiogy carried on in the hall. 18.-- Tom Kelly makes a speech in convocation. 20. - Rumors of a flag-rush. page two hundred . 21.-- False alarm. 22.- More rumors of a fIag-rush. 23.- Foiled again; false alarm. 24.- Oh, yes ; the rush will certainly take place tomorrow. 25.0 Phi Delta Theta initiation. 26.- Rumors of fiag-rush revived. 27.-- More rumors. 28,-,- Freshmen decide to buy a load of sand ; rumors every- where. 29.010. M., Freshmen eating Dr. Ackerson's Energy Pills. P. M., dense fog, caused by rumors. 30.- Flag-rush at last! Sophs go to Lyric and other places. Freshmen start for Mammoth Gave. 31,- Behold the Sophomore Captain! Bleary and bankrupt! November 1.0 Beta Theta Pi initiation. 2.- Alpha Phi Psi initiation. 4.-- Captain Miz opens a barber college. 5.- Clipped hair the vogue. 8.-H Tri Delta dance, Linton Hall. 12.- Freshman reception. 18.- Mr. Burke is seen in the Registrar's office. 19.- Ballou looks worried. 23.-- Clancy goes to church by mistake. He never puts off until tomorrow, however, what he can do today, so he takes car for Mound Street Temple. Happens to think what heNd say if they'd ask his name. Changes his mind. 27.-- 9.00 A. M.; the sun is shining; Nell takes a. walk. 10.00 A. M., Nell takes another walk. 11.00 A. M., Nell would like to take another walk 0 A1. is too tired. 28.- Beta dance. Phi Delta Theta province convention opens. 29.-- Phi Delta Theta dance. 30.-- 930-1030 A. M., Coach Inott works. 2.30-4.30 P. M., Sophs 0, Freshmen 0. 5.00 P. M., Inott smiles; du Bray cusses ; Cupe tears his hair; Heuck says. 'Thank the stars. page two hundred and one Dec. ll December 1.- Rumor current that Professor Breese has had very nar- row escape. 2.- Professor Breese appears in full health. Only a close shave. Mustache gone. 6. University night. Harvey show; off, Baldwin shows off, Mr. Davis shows off, Miss Strickland shows 0E, SchWenker shows off - the whole show's off. 10.- Horse in Gym casts a shoe. 12.- Sophomore banquet at Worpenberg's. 14. Luncheon 12.30: HHave youse ordered 1m 17.- Teddy Craft buys a water pistol. Be-w-a-a-re! 18. Teddy is summoned before Tribunal for carrying con- cealed weapons. 19.- He pleads insanity. He is taken at his word. Acquitted. 20.--'Varsity 43, Miami 19. Professor Hicks sees how com- petition works. Alpha Phi Psi dance. 21..- Holidays begin. 23.- Sigma. Chi dance. Avondale Club. 24.- Supposed to be date of Professor Millers wedding. May have been yesterday - maybe tomorrow. 25.-- Merrick Christmas, says the Dean. 26.-- Beta Theta Pi dance, Avondale Club, Phi Delta. Theta dance, Hotel Alma. 27. Sigma Alpha Epsilon dance, Avondale Club. 29F- Sleep. 31. V. C. P. dance, Avondale Club. January 1.- Tri Delta dance, Avondale Club. 3.- Horrors! Back again. 4.- Holidays over. Money stringency a real cause for name. 5.- Where, 0 where, will I get my next meal? 6.- Tailofs bill comes to little Willie. 7... Florisffs hill. 8.-- Carriage bill. 9.- Pa says, What the --, Bill? pad: two hundred and two J an. 10.-- All the fellowa wearing hunted looks and soiled clothes. 11. Warner says 1165 not worth twelve and a half cents on the dollar. 12.- Heizer down to his last cigarette. 14.- Exams. approach. 16.- News comes out without a mis-spelled word. 18. Semi-annua1 bread-cutting in lunch-room. 20.'- Exams. begin. 21.-- Rain. 22.w Snow. ' 23.- Hail. 24.- Sleet. 25,- Thunder and lightning. 26.- Reign of terror. 27 .- Heavy firing heard in vicinity of the emce. 28.- Battle of last can dies away. Miz offended because he is overlooked. 29. Mike, the ground-keeper, sees red-eyed, wild-looking earth-being in Burnet Woods, fondly gazing toward buildings through opera glasses, and murmuring', 0h, Varsity, dear Varsity! 30. Junior Prom Committee decides to invite Sophomores. 31.-Sigma Alpha. Epsilon dance. Felt wary Feb. 1.- Harry celebrates his twenty-flrst birthday. 2.- Ground hog sees his shadow; so does Harry. 3.- Brewster gets an ad. for the CINCINNATIAN. 4.H President Dabney, lecturer on hygiene, Walks right in, turns around and walks right out again. 5.--'Varsity 28, Wilmington 27. 6.- Mr. Davis gathers audience. President Dabney lectures at last. There is applause -JVarsity 29, Parkersburg, 17. 7.- Sophomore celebration and pole carving. Miss Letter and Miss Br'uner stars at basket-ball -'Varsity 37, Marietta 21. 8.- Varsity 22, Ohio 20. 9.- Sunday. Fish is home again. No, not his home. page two hundred and three Feb. 10th Gossip has it that George borrowed bloomers for the H 6! i6 11 H a ti II n n 9,, girls game. 11.- George says, No, sir, I never seen 'em. 12. George before the Tribunal. 13,; Justice Kreimer makes a speech in Georgets defense. J ustice Hathaway becomes suspicious. 14.-- Tribunal out all night. George acquitted. 15.htVarsity 49, Ohio 10. 17.-- Senior caps and gowns arrive. Space in front of girlst room mirror at a premium. 20.-- Professor Hicks congratulates himself on seeing his Economics class so interested in its own interests. 2Lh Miss Czarnomska leads the Prom, assisted by Bates. The retinue follows. 22.- Tom can not tell a lie. 'Twas he caused the train wreck. He did it with his little footiet. 25.-- Freshman dance at Elberon Club. Among those pres- ent were J . J. Schiff, John Schiff, Jr., J . J efferson Schiff, and SchiHie. 26.- Selbert falls in love. 27.-- Stanley falls in a sewer. 28.-'Varsity defeats Ohio State in debate. 29h Professor Miller falls into ecstacies. March Mar. 1 .-- Sunday. it it u an Tri Delta Play for benefit of Settlement. Ella in her favorite role. 4.- Spring fever laps at base of even such firm and incorrup- tible rocks as Bevis. 5.- Smith-Kasson, Potter and the Big Store pay off. 6.- Denison game. Society event. Boys have money. Panic relieved. 'Varsity 27. Denison 19. 7... Junior boys entertain girls. Great doings. 9.- Barber pole falls and hits Ernie on head. He takes the hint. 11.H George stationed in the hall to prevent loitering. 12H Strains of wedding march issue from Gym. 13.; Junior girls give ttFrivolous 1908, a Leap-Year Drama, for the Seniors. Big doings. Glee Club concert. page two hundrei and four Mar. 16.-- Last bread-cutting of 1907-08. 17.- German Play. St. Pat-thrick's Dhay, too, begorra! 20.- Great Freshman-Sophomore girly basket-ball game and dance. Miss Strickland awfully busy. 23,- Mid-term tests begin. Well, the professors enjoy 'em. 24:- Anxiety. 25,- Worry. 26.n- University holds forth at Olympic. April Lw- Professor Miller wears a black tie, April fool! 2.- New rule no loud talking in Burnet Woods. 3. Baseball team minstrel show. Kus-worm turns. 5.- Alma wears fiowers. Howard looks guilty. 6. A Bart-Iet pair is seen in the woods. 8.- Mr. Gross asks no questions in Psychology. 10.H Beta Theta Pi minstrel show. 11.- Easter vacation begins. 13.H Skinner skinning along as usual. 19. Professor Ives is seen in a new Easter bonnet a stove- pipe, not a. merry widow. 20.- Back again. Hard luck! 22. Spring Grove aroused by biologists. 23. Literary Society gives open meeting. 24. Blue Hydra Tree Day. 24.-- Big triangular debate U. C.-Miami-Ohio. 'Varsity wins all around. 27. Hoifmeister gets his spring hairvcut. 30. French Play. May LH Jones Prize Oratorical Contest. 3.-- First concert at Zoo. 4.- Bowen buys season ticket. 6.a Biologists begin inspecting animals at the Zoo. 9.-- Yellow and Black entertain Junior boys. 11.-- Senior boat ride. BoweWs picnic-a la Mike Mullen. page two hundred and Eve May 13.-- Hathaway asks a girl to go to the Freshman reception, 1908. 15. - Senior girls give May-pole party for Juniors. 16.- Alumnae banquet to Seniors. 26.- Blue Hydra selects camp. 27?.- Final exams. begin. 29..- Finals in parkdlogy. Booth and Ward preside. 30.- Stella and Cliiford bid the birds and trees of Burnet Woods farewell. 31.- Baccalaureate Sermon. June J une 2.- Phi Beta Kappa day. 3... Class Play. 4. Alumni-Senior baseball game. u 5.-- Class Day Faculty-Senior baseball game. 3.. Commencement. page two hundrc$ and six The Jones Oratorical Contest May 1, 1908. EMANUEL JACUBOWITZ, The College Man in Politics. BERNARD C. BOWEN, HOhioh Contribution to the Union. LOUIS GROSS, Charity from a Biological Point of View. The J ones Prize of $40 was awarded to Louis Gross. The second prize of $20 was awarded to Emanuel J acubowitz, page two hundred and sum WE HLSHMAN EEEEEEJEE lilll E3 CR055 Tov N E1 UHWIIJHIHH l a IIHIIIIIIH Hm WI McMickcn Hall. November 22 COMMITTEE. Bernard C. Bowen. Harvey Manss. Fred Hyndman. page two hundret! and eight Avondale Club. February 21 raw COMMITTEE. Howard Williams, Chairman. Ethel Outcalt. Fred McMinn. Iola Shafer. Bartholomew Shine. page two hundred and nine Elbcron Country Club. May 1 COMMITTEE. Audley Brown, Chairmn. Nell Harrison. Alice Kelsall. Hoyes Reiter. page two hundred and ten FRESHWN EAN E Elberon Country Club. February 25 Mar- COMMITTEE. John Schiff. Jr., Chairman. Phyllis Carter. Lucie Pfleger. Camille Adams. Lewis Crosley. Staiford Lantz. page two hundred and eleven T H E F L A G R U S H A Tragedy in Five Acts tags?- DRAMATIS PERSONAE. King Dodo ......................... Captain of the Sophomores Hermes Hurley, better known as ttHer Miz, Captain of the Freshmen Wayward tAckert Son ...................... Freshman Trainer Fighting Fisher .................. Fury-Furnisher for the Sophs Deacon Stanley. A dashing Sophomore lieutenant with a head full of schemes du Bray ...... Another Sophomore lieutenant very much in Ernest Wallie, Larry, h ....................................... Judges Schmittie, ' C. H. Eeseit, B. Rassbut Tonnes, C. Lubber, Nonoyer Sass, Their bodyguard. from the Eighth District Runnem Inne, C. Opper, Paul Milkcan, Mike, George Fry ....................... A janitor, the Power that IS C. Wm. Dabney ............. A President. who has nothing to say Freshmen, Sophomores, spectators, pretty girls, other girls, officials, reporters, voices from Within and without, nurses, doctors, dead, wounded and Bowen. TIME - One day. page two hundred and twclve ACT I. SCENE- Room 3. A Freshman meeting. Enthusiasm plenti- ful in the hall outside. Wayward AckeH Son addresses the meeting. WAYWARD ACKEm SON Friends, younguuns, and country- men, listen to me or 111 break a couple of heads. You know it is a custom in this University to have a fiag-rush once a year - FRESHMEN UN CHORUSL-Hurrah! WAYWAED 11; is customary to elect a captain for this affair, although not necessary. In my Freshman and Sophomore years we had captains. We lost both times. so I think it would be ad- visabie for you to elect a captain. FRESHMEN - Hurrah-ah! WAYWARD - Nominations are now in order. FRESHMEN - Miz! Miz! WAYWARD Miss who? FRESHMEN - Miz! Miz! Miz. Rah! Rah! Rah! Miz! Whoopee! WAYWARDa-Hark! What's that? The Sophs are coming! Put up a bluff I D0or fiies open. Sophs surge in. Freshmen try to block en- trance. Chairs, door, clothes and Buvingefs eye suffer. Every- body slugging. Footsteps in the distanceJ ALL TOGETHER- Cheese it! George! Run! Beat it! Duck! Wiggle! Let me out! Wow! GEORGE I got your name. mell ketch it fer this! Curtain. ACT II. TIME m Some days later. SCENE - Oche of C. Wm. Dabney, a President. C. Wm. seated at desk reading Enquirer. Enter Wayward Acker Son and Fighting Fisher. WAYWARD AND FISH - Greetings, King. C. W. D. Good morning, men. Is there anything you can do for me? FIGHTING FISHERHYBS, sir, but we're afraid the Tribunal wouldtft stand for it. C. W. D.-We11, if there is nothing you can do for me, maybe I can do something for you. pay: two hundred and thirteen WAYWARD e Yes, maybe. We have something here we would submit for your approval. The new flag-rush rules. I will read them. tReadsJ Rule OneeThis contest shall be known as the flag-rush. It shall be such in name only. Rule Two e There shall be no unnecessary noise. Rule Three -- There shall be no brutality 0r roughness of any kind, except in case of a disputed decision of the judges. Rule Four - There shall be no kicking with one eye open. Rule FiveeHitting in clinches shall not occur when the judges are looking. hRule Six-The judges shall impress upon the contestants' minds the fact that they are, after all, only gentlemen. hRule Seven- The rush shall last long enough for Bowen to get a good picture. Rule Eight-The winning class shall not order more than they can pay for. Are these satisfactory, King? 0. W. D.-- You said her pal! That's what I call a good set of rules for a hag-rush. They will make a contest for men. And everybody will get a show at everybody else. Admirable! Craps bell. Tall, slim individual appearsJ Brent, my boy, me pen and ink, please. Ah, now I can under. stand how John Hancock felt when he signed the Magna Charta. , tSigns documentJ There, my men. Go out and stir up something. I am con- tent. As a man soweth, so shall he reap. The Enquirer, Brent. Curtain. ACT III. TIME - One week later. The great dressing-room scene. Sophomores everywhere. Everybody talking. McComae asleep in corner. Hart asleeD in another corner. Enter Lieutenants Stanley and du Bray, in grave consultationJ DU BRAYeThat's a good scheme, alright, Deacon. Youtve got a head like a tack. You ought to be in West Point. Letts tell the fellows. Hey, fellows-hey, I sayaMac, you fat tub, wake up. Listen to me. Come over here; listen to this. We've got that rush cinched. Nothing to it. Herets the scheme e Stanleyts idea. Listen, I say. tExplains schemeJ page two hundred and fourteen How about that, King Dodo? tAbsolute quiet, while Dodo considers the plan. Everyone holds breathJ KING DODou-Yes, yes, by all means. Of course. well do that. Yes. THE GANG e E-e-ay-ay! Whatls the matter with the Old Owl? DU BRAY e Quiet, fellows a quiet. I haven't finished. Itls six o'clock. Let's go down there now and jump right in on 'em. Scare the tar out of tern right on the jump. Sail into ,em, fight like Billyebe-condemned-to-all-tarnation-forever-and-ever. Amen. Weive got the bunch, welve got the Captain, welve got the exper- ience, welve got the sand, welve got the reputation, and now, by gosh. we're going down and get that d- hag! THE SOPHSeYay-ay! E-e-ayl du Bray! Dodo! Come on fellows. Right at 'em! KING DODOeThatls the stuff, fellows! Don't forget the scheme. When you hear the three whistleswformation number two! Now, follow me! tExit. Sophomores singingJ Welre the SOphs; oh, were the gang! We couldnit lose if we tried, by hang! Hail, hail, the gangs all here, And Captain Dodo buys the beer? Curtain. ACT IV. 11.00 A. M. same day. SCENEiThe athletic field. Water, water, everywhere, and not one drop to drink. In the center, a pole. Around the pole, Freshmen. On top of the pole, a Freshman. Approaching the pole, Sophomores. On a raft near the pole, Wallie, Larry and Schmittie, J udges. Keeping the fog from enveloping the pole, cops. KING DODO-e Now, fellows, we get em this time. Theylre all in. Right at iem! Drive your wedge in! Thatts it! Now. up! Ted, Goldie, Conner, up! Get up, I say! Stick to it! Nice work! Keep 'em away from the back! Here you, cut that slugging! Fight fellows, fight like h-e! MIZ-aPull ,em down! Step on lem! Get that fellow away from the pole! Grab their legs! Pull lem down! Pull ,em down! Here, let me get him. Now, keep em down; keep em down! Look out, there goes Hyndman. Get Kreimer, not his shirt! Watch that fellowwhe's up-donlt, don't let em pile up like that! page two hundred and fifteen DODOwNext! Right up! Keep the back clear! There's a Jersey on the fence, Jim. Ted! Goldie! Froelich! Up! Get up! Heizer-go on up. Stretch! stretch! stretch! He's got it. SOPHse Ites over. IE5 over! Weeve won again. E-ee-ay! eCheers and yelling, dancing, slapping on back, cartwheels, 9,th Curtain. ACT V. The Tragic-Part Scene. The Lyric Theater. Time, 11.00 P. M. same day. Aisles and other floor space covered with Sophs, sleep- ing. King Dodo alone is awake. He sits in end seat and goes through his pockets. KING DODOeI know I had some more money. Where is it? Where is it? My last cent gone! Well, well, what care I? We won, didnet we? Carft expect the Captain to be tight, can you? Should say not! Hurrah for 1910. E-e-ay-ay! CHORUS OF SOPHS Ukwakeningye E-e-ay-ay! eUshers rush upJ HEAD USHER - Here, what do you mean by that yelling? DODOwWhat do we mean? Herefs what we mean. ePoints t0 sleeping foms about himJ My namees Herman! We are the Sophomores. HEAD USHER e Can't help that. All together, boys! eExit King Dodo and his bandJ Curtain. page two hundred and sixteen SHARPERS EUUUDDDDDDDDDDD HUGE! DGQDDDDDDDD HUI? Pq'glalill'JD Amateur Photographers Supplles KO .AKS And Supplies of Every Description We clefvelopf 'I? QufFimshmg' . print and. Depameyif, ' finish 'your ' I K'iaii the . . Plateg A . Best in 1:11? i and Films ' Chg? . '- The Imus: Which not only carnea the greatest stock of goods but also makes 1t an exclusive business. We cap 'uupply alny dgeired Article at once. FIRST-CLASS WORK FURNISHED ONLY Slmplunson 599 Miller 433435 Elm Street f A . CINCINNATI-K $$$$$$$$E$WME$A $3 $5 $5 Ii .. 3.: $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ KGELL Sharperqs Magazine ilk IOI JHI JUNE. 1908 CONTENTS 31FIZIII$2IHZIIOIIIZII zlrmllmllEIWIF-WG; I5 HIE Io- 41F -u Frontispiece ............................... 222 The Editor's Wail .......................... 223 2 Dreaming ................................. 224 6 The Porch ................................ 226 ; All for Spite ............................... 227 .1 Q Modern Maxims ........................... 230 E - Vanitopsis ................................ 231 -1 University Dictionary ...................... 232 Observations .............................. 234 Pride vs. Love ............................. 236 In the Limelight ............................ 239 Statistics ................................. 240 Epitaphs .................................. 243 5 The Stage ................................. 246 ; g A Leaf from the Notebook of a Sophomore IE. Medic .................................. 248 1 5 Mary had a Little Horse ..................... 250 o F The Editor's Camp Stool .................... 251 2 2 The Editor's Rag Bag ...................... 253 i Kain 41k .0. cur 41:9; SHARPER'S MAGAZINE BOOKS ad How to Win the Flag-Rush, by the Class of 1909. Thrilling and interesting, as well as practical. Contains most valuable information and advice. May be had at all book-sellers for the small consideration of $1.98. Come early and avoid all pessibili- ties of exhaustion of the limited supply. The Glorious Carnival of 1907. The full account of one of the most successful carnivals in the history of the Uni- versity, by one who was there and saw. Full account of all the shows, decorations and results. $1.30 at the Co-Operative Book Store. How I Became Famous, by Bern- ard C. Bowen. A personal talk containing invaluable hints to those at the bottom of famets ladder, by one who has successfully reached the top rung. Methods of busi- ness management and of po- Iitical campaigning discuss- ed fully and freely. Only $2.23 While they last. Has the College Student a Brain? An interesting and logical treatise by Burtis B. Breese. Beneflcial especially to those students Who think they have brains. Cloth editions, $1; paper editions, 50c. Lemon Extract. Manufactured exclusively by the University of Cincinnati Trustees. Can not be distin- guished from the fresh fruit. Lemons are grown on the Uni- versity lemon tree. Endorsed by ExeProfessors Snell and Phillips. Hypnotism. Taught by mail. Especially useful to college students. Rec- ommended by Misses Sherwood, Perin, Andriessen and several other sharks at the University of Cincinnati, who manage the teachers entirely by this art, and thereby get A's. page two hundred and eighteen SHARPERiS MAGAZINE Skidonis Hair Restorer. Makes fine and silky hair grow on the baldest head. Guaranteed to work in three weeks. Endorsed by Profess- ors Hancock, Lotspeich, Miller, etc. Professor Hancock says, I used Skidoois Hair Restorer for two weeks and three days preceding my marriage, and the results were wonderful. Before using, my head was smooth as a billiard ball, but now it is cov- ered With beautiful, long, silky hair? Zabolio. uThe constant use of Zabolio is what has made me so bright? iEndorsedJ RALPH CUMMINS? Use Zabolio for three months and you will shine so much that people who look at you Will be dazzled. Only 10c. a package. Write for a sample. ZABOLIO COMPANY, Sharktown, Ohio. Dancing Taught by Mail. Easy, graceful, swan - like dancing taught to the most awkward person in ten lessons. Donit put it otf. Learn imme- diately. Address, EDWARD S. HATHAWAY, Care Sharper? Magazi'ne. page two hundred and nineteen Don't Stammer or Map. Join Prof. Van Wiggleis class in public speaking and become eloquent. You can stir thou- sands if you will. No charge whatever. All come. Tiemtite Matrimonial Agency. The most 5ourishing in the country. Will procure for you either a husband or wife in ten days time. Send at once for free booklet and read testimon- ials from George Morey Miller, Claude M. Lotspeich and others. Cost of match is only one dollar during leap-year, of which fifty cents will be refunded if mar- riage is not entirely satisfac- tory. Write to 23 East 23d Street, Skidooviile, Ky. Stringem's Breakfast Food. Nutritious as well as delicious. Will make a football player out of the puniest grind. Used in youth, it insures a strong, large physique. DEAR MR. STRINGEM-My mamma raised me on your breakfast food. I used to be a small, delicate child, but now I am large, stout and beautiful. I recommend your food most heartily. Sincerely, TOM KELLY. SHARPERiS MAGAZINE Buy Stock in the Co-Operative Book Store, and thus gain en- trance to the most thrilling, blood-curdling meetings ever held. Nothing, not even a flag- rush could excel the meeting of the stockholders of this store in the spring of 1907, for both ex- citement and active tongue hat- tle. Only a few shares left. Donlt miss it. Patent Lunch Jammers. For the use of all students who take eighteen hours a week with lab., and who are on most all of the committees and ex- pected to do all the work. These instruments are so constructed as to force down a lunch for two in one and one-half minutes, allowing time and space to talk and study. Every student ought to be provided with one of these time-saving inventions which w w W'WI'W'VIWrW x ' wdmwadmimh A A are highly recommended by all the Faculty, especially by Miss Czarnomska, who is anxious to have the girls waste as little of their time as possible. The Patent Lunch Jammers come in two sizes: One for engineers. With arrangements for sending down double amounts of food in a given time. One for stu' dents in public speaking, so ar- ranged as to send the food down the wind-pipe. Write for our catalogue at once. Address, PATENT LUNCH JAMMER 00., Care Mrs.Kelschis Lunch Room. Electricity. The latest, most practical and surest method for removing conditions. No danger what- ever to patient, and absolutely guaranteed results. 'W wlw wees WANTED-Information about Schickis diamond ring. SENIOR GIRLS. A WANTED -- Suitable raiment for Dean Harry's statues dur- ing the winter season. WANTEDaA permit to play hands in the library. HECKER 85 CO. WANTED - An alarm clock to be used during Psychology lect- ures. HOFFMEISTER. WANTED - Information as to why Miss Wilson always says Amen at the proper time in church. WANTEDwAn instructor in dancing. Only small, light- haired girls with dark eyes need apply. LOUIS SELBERT. page two hundred and twenty SHARPERiS MAGAZINE WANTED e The HWright oi way in the library. THE EDIT- ORB. WANTED - Some able professors. ORINES. marriage- THE PROFESS- WANTEDeSomeone to ad- mire Professor Umphreyis mus- tache, and to coax it back. WANTEwExperienced hands as assistants in the canning de- partment of the University of Cincinnati. Apply to PRESI- DENT DABNEY. WANTEDe-Two credits per semester for going up to the mail-box at least sixteen times daily, Sundays and holidays ex- cluded. DE VORE. WANTED H A phonographic arrangement to take down Breesehw. lectures, and prevent disturbance of the Psychology Social Club. WALLACK 3: Co. WANTED-A professor to an- swer Robinsonis questions. This will be his sole occupation. Any- one thinking himself capable, and being willing to devote all his time, Sundays included, to the task, please reply immedi- ately. THE UNIVERSITY TRUS- TEES. page two hundred and twenty-ane , WANTED-A soft, stretchable hat. BOWEN. LOST-A rat with a purple string tied to its tail. Finder please return to the Senior Elec- tricals. LOSTeA class which was to cinder scathed and thunder blasted of his strength, by my edition of the Prometheus. DR. HARRY. LOST, STRAYED OR STOLEN- The connection in Professor Ive'a lectures. Finder please return to the University and be rewarded With a pleasant smile. LOSTeA carved side comb with gold trimmings and green sets. Valued especially because it was a present. Finder please return to Charles Hoffmeister and be liberally rewarded. For Sale or Rent. ILLUSTRATED Pamphlets trac- ing Professor Burnamis family tree. MODESTYHBy all members of the Sophomore Class. This article is not so fresh as it was about the time of the flag-rush, but it still excels all other brands. The supply is unlimit- ed, still it is best to buy early. SHARPER'S MAGAZINE VOL. XVI JUNE. 1908 No. 23 The Editor's Wail WW Yes, everyonds heard the poor editorts wail Of his fiooded waste-basket and more hooded mail, Of his merciless taunts as he always makes game Of the poems and stories intended for fame. Now here is a story that's equally sad, Of an editor's woes that have 'most made her mad; For try though she did to be tactful and nice, The hood of effusions she could not entice. Her coaxing was useless, entreaties were vain, Ideas were scarce in her poor, tired brain; And, oh, she did write at a wonderful pace, For though it were bum, she must fill up the space. So reader, take pity and be not severe, If the stories sound flat and the poems seem queer; And ere you read further this secret I'll tell, The book may be rank, but she really meant well. page two hundred and twenty-three SHARPERIS MAGAZINE Dreaming CWRE . mighty queer, Itll ad- . mit, and as Ferguv- son watched the smoke of his cigar slowly uncurl and fioat away, the fellows settled themselves on their various perches and awaited a story. I guess it must have been pure force of habit, he con- tinued, but, at any rate, I dreamed last night that it Was Monday morning, ten minutes past eight and I was just ready to pike off to U. C. Groans from the audience. That doesnit sound good to me, ttNor me, was the mur- mur. ttDry up, fellows, until Pm finished, and Ferguson went on with his story. itAs usual, I boarded my car and in due time found myself racing up the steps at the bridge, expecting to see the rear of a Cross Town just near enough to make me swear. Well, at that very mo- ment these lights fell on the eighth wonder of the world- six Cross Towns lined up, ready to load. Say, fellows, I heard the 8.30 bell ring that morning for the first time since my Freshman year. Ferguson paused long enough to knock the ashes from his cigar, and then, after taking a few long puffs, continued. iiAs I said, I was early that morning, and so had a chance to look around a little before my first dose. Well, first thing on the program, I bumped into Brother Dabney, who was rac- ing around the halls in a fear- ful flurry, weighted down with a bunch of papers and books and looking so worried. Gad, I felt sorry for him. He looked al- most worked to death, poor man. And George, that lazy good-for- nothing, was sitting on the stairs killing time. And, by gosh, fellows, he was fat, as fat as that red-headed Sophomore who has freckles. ttI started down stairs to de- posit my overcoat and the hrst thing I spied at the foot of the stairs was a row of telephone booths, and they had no slots for coins. And the humming. room, I wish you could have seen it, Bob! It was furnished in mission oak and had Turkish rugs on the hoor. It was so page two hundred and twenty-four SHARPER'S MAGAZINE quiet, I began to think I was in church. Say, have you been drinking, Ferguson '3 put in one of the fellows, but Ferguson was not to be quelled. A University News was lying on the table. It was a daily paper and boasted across the top of a circulation of ten thousand. Well, fellows, I'm not in the habit of reading the News. If I want literature, I get something more classical, and if I want news, I get some- thing more up-to-date, but when I saw such headlines as U. C. Beat Carlisle Indians 23 t0 0, and t'Arrangements Completed for a Boat Race with Harvard on the Ohio River, I pocketed that News with the idea that it would keep me awake in class, that is, if anything could. Among the Faculty Notes was an account of a swell cotillion at the Alms Hotel led by Professor Burnam, and then it said that Dr. Ives had finally been per- suaded to join the hrst basses in the Ments Glee Club. I did- n't get any farther than that in the Faculty Notes, for, by George, if I didntt see the head- line, ttExaminations a Thing of the Past at U. C? That looked good to me. Well, Professor Breese had finally persuaded the Faculty to cut out exams. be- paze two hundred amt twcnty-ch cause they were unjust and un- necessary. Life was beginning to look rose-colored to yours truly. The exchange column came next. It was headed by a clipping from the Harvard Daily saying, The University of Cincinnati is without doubt the most live example of a col- lege with college spirit. The way the students of that Univer- sity turn out at football and baseball games, in fact, at all college affairs, is marvelous. Harvard might well follow in the footsteps of this noble leader. Ferguson lit a fresh cigar and then went on: ttThere was a 'Lost and Found' column, too. Some en- gineer had found a five-dollar hill in the chemistry lab. and was advertising for the owner. A whistle sounded from the corner where DeVore, the Presi- dent of the Engineers Club was seated. hDid you notice any account of wings sprouting on that en- gineer ? he asked, but Ferguson went on. ttAIl of a sudden I heard a bell. It was 9.30, the shortest hour Pd ever put in at U. C. Well, I pocketed my News and moved on with the rest of the procession. When I got to the foot of the stairs. who should I SHARPER'S MAGAZINE see sitting on the stairway across the hall but Miss Czar- nomska cutting up with Ed. Haffner. P11 tell you, fellows, coweds were scarce. Why a fel- low had to ask a girl a year ahead for the Freshman recep- tion and - ttSay, Ferguson, said John, thatts enough of that kind of rot. If you are in the habit of getting dreams like that I'd ad- vise you to see a doctor, or to offer yourself to Prof. Breese as a specimen, and Ferguson duck- ed his head just in time to es- cape a Watsonts Physics which was coming his way. The Porch They stood on the porch at midnight, But didntt unlock the door; They stood in the shade of the ivy vine For a half an hour or more. And far down the asphalt pavement, Hasttning footsteps could be heard; The two drew closer together, They murmured never a word. How often, oh how often, tNeath the selfsame ivy vine, She had stood on that porch at midnight With a diff'rent beau each time. How often, oh how often, She had sworn eternal love, And had pledged herself to faithfulness By the stars and moon above. But her heart was ever trembling, And her soul was full of care, For she feared to hear a window Raise up in the still night air. And she thought of another ev'ning, When the moon sent its soft, white light, How a voice from the upstairs window Called out a distinct Goodnight? page two hundred and twenty-ei: m SHARPEPCS MAGAZINE A11 for Spite m SCENE e A graveyard. TIME - When the owl boots and the wind goes ttoooh. Enter First Conspirator. He seats himself upon an old grave- stone. tP. S.- He is masked, but he hears a. strong resemblance to Hayes ReiterJ FIRST CONSPIRATOR - tTll rest me here upon this ancient stone, And wait until my fellow-sufFrers come, With broken hearts and salt-tear-drenched eye, To seal the bond, bind fast the solemn tie That holds us swains together. But hist! methinks I see a friend draw near, tTis Bart, our Bart, alas the little dear That he should thus be forced to join our throng Because he fears one maid will do him wrong, Their love for aye to sever. BART - Ah, Hoyes, to think it should have come to this, That we must say farewell to former bliss, And join, to ease our poor cleft heartts fatigue, Th' Amalgamated Woman Haterat League. But see, they come, they come! Anon approach with serious, thoughtful mien A band by sorrow wasted thin and lean; Poor Harry hangs on Jim, his doughty friend, While Howard, Bob and Ray bring up the end Of this bee-bumbled crowd. SAYS Homs - t'Dear friends, we are assembled here To make a mournful vow, shed one last tear, Then enter in the world again as though We didntt mind that they should treat us so, And sting us cruelly. page two humircd and twentyaazven SHARPERIS MAGAZINE And now as he is called, let each man rise To tell why he does womankind despise T0 such extent that he has joined our band, Renowned and famed afar throughout the land, And now Itll call the names. He called on Harry first, who stood and said, ItBelt known that I to this resort was led Because I tried my durndest, did my best, And yet the maid would not heed my behest, And love me fondly? And then, at Hoyesls command, arose up J im; Could only say, Dear friends, it is a sin ; Then, weeping, raised his right hand to the sky And moaned, Ah, pity, pity, boys, I die, I die of broken heart. Hoyes nodded thrice, and Howard took the floor, To tell what ltwas had made him wrath and sore; How he was stung, and Who had played the bee, He stammered, blushed, then said, ttAh, dontt ask me! You know I am quite shy. He sat; then up leaped Bob with angry eye, ttI'm furious! these maids have dared deny That 1, without a peer in all this town Am great as any god from Jove on down To Phoebus, gallant Phoebusfl SAID RAY - Too young was I; I didnlt know That girls were eler unkind, could sting us so; I little thought that they would do me harm, I thought my pompadour would work a. charm; Alas, it didn't! When Bart was called, he furrowed up his brow, Said, Boys, I honestly am happy now, But, then, maids are so fickle, I am vexed, Because I can't tell What they may do next, Why, she might throw me over. page tWD hundred and twenty-zigllt SHARPER'S MAGAZINE Hoyes stood; a parchment grimly did he hold And quoth, See here. the constitution bold, Which now Itll read, then each of you can swear You will be true; the goblins of the air Shall be our only witness. ttHear, hear, they cried, while Hoyes said, hem, ahemf Quite eloquently; then read aloud to them As follows: The object of this club shall be J ust this v prevention of all cruelty To us poor lads. Th, Amalgamated Woman Hatersi League Shall be its name, and, hark! let none renig, When once youive placed your pile upon this deal, Stick to it, for well help you not to feel The coldness of the girls. HAll mortal men shall eligible be Who do sincerely wish that they were free From all the slights and taunts that may be given By girls; for flower, the fruit called lemon, Most bitter of all fruits, we'll have. Our paes-word for all members shall be Stungg Aye more, aye more, our motto fair is itRun ; Whene'er a maid draws nigh, donlt trust her looks So fair, her words so fine, her love in books; Donit tarry! Run! Beware! They sign. Anon depart with sadder mien, A band by sorrow wasted thin and lean; Poor Harry hangs on Jim, his doughty friend, While Howard, Bob and Ray bring up the and Of this bee-bumbled crowd. Now Hoyes is left alone. He looks around. The owl hoots not, the wind makes not a sound; He smiles a mournful smile with empty glee; He sighs, then says, What fools we men do be? And then departs. page two hundred and twenty-nine SHARPERlS MAGAZINE Modern Maxims rem A kiss on the mouth is worth two on the cheek. Allts fair in love and examinations. A stitch in time saves embarrassment. Its a tough exam. that blows no one an A. The Lord Ioveth the cheerful flunker. The police help them who help themselves. If at first she doesnlt accept, try, try again. Flunk and the class flunks with you, Pass and you pass alone. In time of peace prepare for exams. A crib in need is a friend indeed. Ignorance of the text passes no man. The wages of fun is flunking. Examination without preparation is misery. A little cheating now and then is relished by the best of men. You can bluff some of the teachers all of the time, and all of the teachers some of the time, but you can't bluff all of the teachers all of the time. An ounce at the Sinton is worth a pound at Mrs. Kelschls. Never do anything today that you can put off till tomorrow. We the early bird that gets tired first. Eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow you Hunk. It is a wise professor that knows his own subject. All that graduate are not learned. A greasy grind gathers no friends. page two hundred Ind thirty SHARPERS MAGAZINE Vanitopsis To him, who in the love of co-eds, holds Communion with their iVarsity forms, they speak A various language. For his gayer hours There is Ella Wilson, with her smile And eloquence of giggling, and t'Sis falls Into his darker musings with a calm And nurse-like sympathy that steals away Their sharpness ere he is aware. When thoughts 0f the hard exam. hours come like a blight Over thy spirit, and stem images 01' the questions, and cram and all, And the senseless answers, and the bad report Make thee to shudder and grow sick at heart, Go forth into the park and list To Iola's teachings, while from all around Ruth and the fellows, and the Fresh sorors Comes a eo-ed's voice- Yet a few years, and then The all-beholding George shall see no more In all his course. Nor yet in Music Hall Where thy diploma came, by many tears, Nor in the camera of Bowen shall exist Thy image. at as 3k e a: 4: :1: :I: as at :k 5P All whoire here Will share thy destiny. Majorie will laugh When thou art gone, the solemn digsi' of school Grind on, and each girl as before will chase Her favorite phantom; yet all these shall leave Their fun and their routines, and shall go Soon from U. C. like thee. As the four years Of 'Varsity glide away, the girl of wit, The girl in mindis green spring, and she who goes In the full strength of gym, Hilda, Marian, The young in years, the Freshie, in the smiles And beauty of its innocent licrib sent forth e Shall, one by one, be stamped as has beens By those, who in their turn, shall follow them. page two hundred and thirty-nne SHARPERtS MAGAZINE University Dictionary saw A. B.- Awful bore; A. or B; addled brain. A. M.e Antiquated maid ; maiden aunt. ANNUAL.- Collection of select specimens from rogue,s gallery and roasts. BARKe See Freshman. BATES.e Miss Williams; our auntie. BEAKER.e Originally breaker; a thing which breaks. BILL-OF-FARE.eA mathematical and economic impossibility. BLOTTERre Unknown article at U. C. BOOK-STORE.e The place where you can get anything you don't want upon paying cash. CAMPUS.- Classroom for parkology. CATALOGUE.- Guide-book for the Chinese. C. Be Stands for ttGaNt Explain; condition E.; cranium empty. CHAPERONE- An unfortunate creature forced upon humanity. CLASS.-- A political party consisting of the president and the eyes. CLAss-YELL.e Horrible sounds emanating from the political party. CLASS-MEETING.e Much Ado About Nothing. CO-ED.e Charming individual, not half appreciated at U. C. COMMENCEMENT.- The end of the world. COMPLEXION.-- One of our chief imports. CONDITIONH A diabolical invention of the Faculty to torment all good students except digs. CORe Rare specimen of an extinct race. COUCHe The bone of contention. COLLEGE WIDOW.e An honor greatly desired by all co-eds. At present in the possession of Ella Wilson. Cute A walk in Burnet Woods. CASEre Technical term for a pair of languishing lovers, no longer the fad since our two Toms have left us. DABNEY.-- Large-sized ornament of the ,Varsity corridor cf. Miner- va and Jove. DEUTSCHE VEREIN.eA society for the purpose of cultivating a taste for sauer kraut, pretzels and sausages. page two hundred and. thirty-twu SHARPER'S MAGAZINE EXCUSEe My Dear Dean Whitcomb --Will you please excuse Williets absence yesterday. He had the measles. Also, please excuse his tardiness on day before yesterday. He lost his collar-bultton.w His Mama. FUSSER.- Game bird very plentiful in this section of the country. Large head, loud plumage. GREEK LIFEe You're a fool if you miss it. GRIND.-- A creature who is the abomination of the rest of the class. GEORGE- Popular hero who is the real head of the University. HAMBURGER STEAKe A slice from the same old horse. Imae A vacuum completely surrounded by sound. J UNIOR PROM. The time, the place, but no J unior girl. JOVE.- Valuable ornament of the corridor. LIBRARIAN.- An individual whose chief occupation is to prevent cases. and to strike terror into the hearts of Freshmen. LOCKERFROOM.e Small, under-ground cell. LEMON.-e Most common fruit at U. C., emblem of our most distin- guished society. MATRIMONY.e Fad among the profs. MINERVAe Stately ornament of the corridor, fondly called Minnie. NEWSe Wrapping paper at three and one-half cents per week. PARKOLOGY.e Favorite course at U. C. cf. matrimony. PSYCHOLOGYw- Brain-storm. QUEEN OF THE WHITE SLAVESre Mrs. Kelsch. RESTAURANT.-- Hell on wheels. REGISTRARe Long-suffering humanity personified. SNUBY.--- Nickname for one of our pets. STREET-CAR.e An ancient vehicle which gets you there just in time to be late. STUNG.- Cheer up - the worst is yet to come. TOWEL.- Something wet and soiled. TELEPHONE.--A nickle-in-the-slot machine for the benefit of the Faculty, at the expense of the students. TEA.-eA dire punishment meted out to those who are caught loitering. WHITCOMBue Misprint for wisdom. WOMAN-HATERS, LEAGUEw An organization composed of those who have tasted the bitter fruit and have not relished it. page two hundred and thirty-threa SHARPERtS MAGAZINE Observations 6 :L9 Pm a shy and modest creature, Dull of mind and plain of feature, Struggling on for my degree, At this college called ttU. GP And although Pm swamped in labors, Still Pve time to watch my neighbors, And about their various stations, To observe some observations. Hoping none may be offended When my lowly task is ended, I will classify each kind As seems best in my poor mind. First to profs. 111 do my duty, Ut's a case of age tfore beautyy . Profs. are modest at our college, Theyh'e too shy to show their knowledge, Yet Fm sure they know a lot, Though some say that they do not. Students range in classes four, Each at all the others sore. Seniors are quite large in kopf, Not from knowledge, but from bluff. J uniors make a great ado Teaching Freshmen what to do; Sophs blow much of their great worth t Scarcely ever come to earth; Freshies, numbering far from few, Are of green and grassy hue. Next to classes W611 get at Whats known as the college Rfrat, And composed of lady fussers, Also dudes and first-class cussers. Girlst frats, too, are quite the fad, Really they are not so bad, page two hundred and thirtyhfour SHARPERlS MAGAZINE Made of girls who boast of looks, Though they are not stars at books, But who can, if they have cause, Talk for hours without a pause, Having not a thing to say, Simply passing time away. There are clubs of all kinds, too, Each one making great ado lBout the stunts that they have done, Though these stunts are known to none. Still I don't begrudge them this, For their ignorance is bliss. First, the Glee Clubls members here Think theylre musical - how queer! Each belongs lnow herels a tipl For his credit and his trip. Then the Germans have a club, They attend to get some grub; And biologists, so bright, Think Blue Hydra out of sight. Well, it saves them two great crams o They escape final exams. The girls who write with wondrous tact A Literary club enact, Whose members will write books, no doubt, For one thing sure, ttMurder will out? Then thereis the News Staff, world-renowned, Who fame and glory both have found, Who write the News e it's news, not tlnew, For things too fresh would never do. The Year Book I must needs ignore, For what I'd say might make it sore, And then my verse would be turned down, And I would miss all this renown Which you are sure to quote as mine, When you have read this poem fine. pat: two hundred anc'. thirty-Eve SHARPER'S MAGAZINE Pricle VS. Love N ' RM in arm they walk- ed through the de- sertedstreets. Neither spoke; neither cared to speak. Thoughts and hopes for the future filled their minds. Both were ready to begin a new epoch in life. They crossed the street and started up a drive. The lawn, the house, the stables, looked large and forbidding in the white moonlight. Not a leaf moved; not a sound could be heard. Silence and thought seemed suited to the surround- ings. They mounted the broad, stone steps and seated themu selves on the moonlit porch. At last the man spoke. Itis late, Nell; I know it's late, but its the last night thatis our own. Tomorrow morning is commencement; tomorrow afternoon I leave the East for- ever. Tonight, then, is good- bye? The girlie breath came quick- ly; she looked up; her lips mov- ed as if in speech, but she said nothing. The man went on. Weive known each other four years, Nell, and those four years have meant more to me than even you can know. When I came to college from the prai- ries it was not as a mere boy; high-school days had been past two years, and good, hard work had made me a man. I had never known any women, Nell; only a few silly high-school girls. I knew my mother only as a picture on the parlor wall. But I had dreamed of women. I had thought of them as em- bodiments of all that is pure and noble. As each college Freshman has his special sweet- heart, I had my ideal and I worshiped her; I dreamed of her. Then I came East. There seemed something strange and artificial about it all. The hurry, the sham, the deceit, made me long for the big. bare prai- rieS, where a man has time to commune with his God. Amid the life and excitement and work I was lonely; I was lonely for the solitude and my ideal. She seemed farther away than ever, and as I saw the women of the East, my college-mates, I began to think that she was only an ideal, my own creation. Then came that bleak, cold, snowy night of the Freshman page two hundred and thirty-six SHARPER'S MAGAZINE Reception. I hadntt intended to go. I would rather have stayed home and smoked. I dont know yet how I happened to go. E1- well said something about stag- ging it with him, and somehow I just went. That was the night I met you It was the ninth dance, a waltz, The Blue Dan- ubet-h he paused a moment. I dorft remember a thing you said but when that dance was over I knew that I had met my ideal. IISince then we have been friends; we have found sympa- thy, encouragement and peace in our companionship. Each link in the chain of our friend- ship has but strengthened my ideal. I dontt know how much it has meant to you, Nell, but somehow I have felt that you understood something of what it meant to me. You have en- couraged me; you have been the inspiration of my college career. They say it has been brilliant, that I am talented. They do not know. If I have succeeded; if I have done one worthy act in all these four years, it has been through you. God made woman His highest creation; He gave her a soul full of love and sym- pathy; she guides His universe. tIAt first I simply lived in our friendship. The present was so complete I didnt think of the page two hundred and thirty-seven future. It seemed as though it must go on forever just as it was. But lately it has been different, for I have realized that college days must soon be over and I must go back to the prairies, but far away from my ideal. For months I have been struggling within myself, and it has been a close, hard fight, a fight between mind and soul, reason and love. But now, that the end has come, my decision is made. I used to dream of going back home with you. I used to dream that your body would occupy the place your image has had these many years. But I see now how wrong it was, how selfish, how mean. I wonder that my honor, my pride, ever let me dream of such things. HCollege days are over for me, but even now I have not paid for them. I can not start in fresh. I must first of all balance my accounts with the world. Then, my father is waiting for me out there, broken in health and overcome by the trials and misfortunes of life. I must be- gin life worse than poor--in debt. I may only hope in the dim future for some of the good things of life. tlAs I said, my struggle is over, my mind has won. I can not ask you to leave wealth, so- SHARPERIS MAGAZINE ciety and luxury for poverty and want and the solitude of the prairie. Thank God I still have my manhood! So, tonight, I must say goodbye. I am going to give you a little ring as a remembrance of What our friendship has been. I do not give it to you as a pledge. You must live and love and marry long before I could ever dream of it, and I dont want you to wait. Tomorrow I go West, and, as I lie in my bed by the window and look at the stars, I shall know that the same stars shine on you, too, far away in the East, and I will pray to God for your happiness. There was a catch, almost a sob, in his voice as he stopped. Goodbye, he murmured, and he pressed a kiss on her fore- head and was gone. The girl sat quite still for a time. Then she rose and went mechanically into the house to her room. She flung herself on her bed, kissed the ring over and over and shook convulsively with dry, silent subs. Tomor- row was indeed commencement ethe beginning of sorrow and bitterness. After all, has a. man the right to let his pride ruin a woman's happiness? On Monday, when George hangs it out, A nice, white, scratchy, laundry towel; On Tuesday, after all its popularity, Somewhat the worse for wear and damp In many spots. On Wednesday, getting Grey and, well, weill say, a triiie dirty after all. On Thursday very wet and yet quite Good to clean your shoes and pen upon. On Friday, very soapy, black, alack, iTis scorned by all: 'tis sad, Too bad, dejected, limp, quite mouthful. On Saturday, it hangs in all disgrace While mean remarks are made right to its face. On Sunday, George removes our towel, Sons one dry spot, sons one clean thread e A rag. page two hundred and thirty-cight SHARPERlS MAGAZINE In the Limelight 534-3 Listen, my children, and you shall hear That old U. 0. must close next year, Because, oh disgrace of printed page, Her Faculty all have signed for the stage. Though all of their parts we could not procure, We'll publish a few of which we are sure, And we hope that all will carefully trace The billboards for each dear, familiar face. Dr. Allen, the first one booked for a show, Makes a fetching and handsome young Romeo, And Ives, as the stalwart, bronzed Ben Hur, Is certain to make a tremendous stir. Beau Brummel was given to Burnam, old boy, And Hancock is classed second to Eddie Foy, Our deaness will star in the famed Peter Pan, And Whitcomb as Bernard Shaw's great HSuperman. Dean Burris is Francois in ltIf I Were King, And Breese as an acrobat, is quite the thing; Misses Schrader and Merrill in the chorus well see, And Benedict, sad, morose Hamlet will be. aweu-a So work, that when thy mid-term grades are sent To the relentless registrar, who goes To that mysterious book, wherein she sees Thy credits in the sharpest black and white, Thou go not, like a criminal away, Canned from the college, but, retained and passed By thy unfaltering toil, take thy mid-terms, Like one who hears the music of a dance Around him, and joins in with mirth and joy. page two hundred anti thirty-nine SHARPERS MAGAZINE Statistics 513...? WHAT IS THE GREATEST ACHIEVEMENT OF YOUR COLLEGE COURSE? H ofmeiste'r Learning to sleep during- lectures. Bevis Learning to use a nickle telephone for nothing. WHAT IS THE GREATEST BENEFIT YOU HAVEDERIVED FROM COLLEGE? Kreimer- Learning to eat lunch in three minutes. M ackelfresh - Glee-Club credits. WHAT PART OF YOUR COLLEGE COURSE HAVE YOU ENJOYED MOST? Lurie - Collecting class dues. Rose Shermaodn Miss Czarnomskak teas. Gowdy Mrs. Kelsdfs lunches. To WHOM WOULD YOU GO FOR ADVICE 0R HELP IF IN A SCRAPE? Schwenkea' - Miss Czarnomska. Hafner Mamma. WHY ARE YOU GLAD YOU ARE IN THE CLASS OF 1908? Conway Iffs the only class that graduates this year. Ward - Itis. next best to 1907. WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE HAUNT? Prof. Ballou The oflice. S. Baldwin The lunch room. WHAT IS YOUR IDEA 0F HAPPINESS? Elia Wilson Ninety-five per cent cuts. Harriet Reed To go to class and find the prof. absent. Gailagherh To flunk all the professors. Mackelfresh Sleep, gentle sleep. WHAT IS YOUR IDEA 0F MISERY? McMinn - To take an exam. on the front row. Winder French from Miss Kejly. WHAT IS YOUR AMBITION? Bowenu To boss the CINCINNATIAN 08. Riemann To be a physics professor like Ives. Dean Harry -- To own a dime museum. Deutsch-To be a grown-up man. pag: two hundred and forty SHARPER'S MAGAZINE WHAT ADVICE WOULD You GIVE A FRESHMAN? Hoffmez'stera Have your head shaved. Dawson-Have Professor Umphrey show you how to raise a nice mustache. Zepha van Lapel - Dotft flirt with Engineers. WERE YOU EVER IN LOVE? Hecke'r H Never before. Schmuck - Never was out of it. Do You EVER EXPECT T0 MARRY? Blau Come on in' the water's fine. Do YOU EVER. USE A CRIB? Ackerson Not so you could notice it. Lange - No, the b00165 more accurate. Fels To sleep in. WHAT PERIODICALS Do YOU SUBSCRIBE FOR? Hathaway - The Ladiey Home Joumal. Kate Perm - The Newa' and the Black Cat. WHAT PART OF THE UNIVERSITY Do YOU THINK DEAN HARRY WILL DECORATE NEXT? Tobias The humming room. Viola Pfayff - The car station. WHAT MEMBER OF THE FACULTY Do YOU THINK WILL BE THE NEXT TO GET MARRIED? Lotter-- The Dean of Women. du Bray - Professor Burman. Valentine Professor Ballou. WHAT DO YOU EXPECT To Do WHEN YOU FINISH COLLEGE? Mabel Amdr'idge Guess! Robinson - Everybody. Bowen m Run for President. WHICH COURSE AT THE UNIVERSITY Do YOU FIND MOST DIFFICULT? Lazm'on - English 13. Hathaway Greek Life. WHICH TEACHER Do YOU THINK MOST FASCINATING? Sewer - Van Wye. Carrie Perm - Allen. page two hundred and forty-on: SHARPER'S MAGAZINE WHICH COURSE AT THE UNIVERSITY Do YOU FIND Mos'r INTEREST. ING? Booth Advanced Calculus. Sanderst-Direct Current and Machinery from Lanier. Do YOU BELIEVE IN THE HONOR SYSTEM? Jewett - It might Work for co-eds. and Freshmen. Fisher - Too much like Sunday school. WHAT DOES THE UNIVERSITY NEED MOST? Everybody Money. Ca-ed.- Fellows. WHAT Is YOUR FAVORITE BOOK? R. Baldwin PilgrimE Progress. C. Williams-Angell's Psychology. WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE SONG? 1908 'When You Know You,re Not Forgotten. Ethel Outcalt - School Days. HAVE YOU ANY SUGGESTIONS F01: IMPROVEMENTS? Everybody Kill the News Staff and the Class Treasurers. Selbe1 t Buy Dean Harry's statues some clothes. WHAT IS YOUR HEARTS DESIRE? Professor Miller To have hair like Mr. Blau. Be'vz's To speak as eloquently as Professor Van Wye. WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE PLAY? Engineers - The Singing Girl of Killarney. Wayne The Follies of 1907. Do YOU BELIEVE IN CO-EDUCATION? Oespe'r - Not this year. Bevis Well rather. WHAT DOES MGMICKEN HALL REMIND You OF THIS YEAR? Kreimer h A cemetery. Williams - A palm garden. page two hundred and forty-twu SHARPERiS MAGAZINE Epitaphs Here lies our dear Dean Harry, We mourn his cruel fate, For neier again will we be given A course like his Greek 8. One day while he was walking, A statue caught his eye; This statue, he decided, Was one for him to buy. And while he stood and rubbered, And viewed it oier and der, An auto came upon him, And Dean Harry was no more. Here lies our famous Doctor Fry, Who wouldn't take the Newa, And thus its classic columns He never could peruse. So, once when it predicted A herce wind-storm in May, He didnit see the notice, And so was blown away. And When they found his body, And brought it to his wife, She sighed to think a dollar Might have saved poor Shipleyis life. W159? Here lies a dainty creature, With soft and lovely cheek, Who earned his bread and butter By trying to teach Greek. page two hundred and farty-three SHARPERiS MAGAZINE Here lies an English teacher, One called B. C. Van Wye; Each student, as he reads this slab, Must heave a pensive sigh. We quote the sad facts treating His tragic, awful death, The sentence that he uttered When drawing his last breath. Once in a burning building, He found himself to be, The passageways were blocked with iiames, For smoke, he could not see. The iiremen were busy, But when it came his turn. He said, iiDon't discommode yourselves, I'd really rather burn. Here lies a man of learning, One in mathematics skilled, Whose head, though smooth and hairless, Was with legs and sines well filled. Our hearts were steeped in sadness, As he drew his last short breath, Although he had himself to blame For his untimely death. For we had often warned him iAlas, ,twas fruitless talki, We never could induce him To give up eating chalk. For every day, like clockwork, His chalky meals he ate, And now, alas, we sadly fear He is a carbonate. page two hundrec! and Eurty-four SHARPERS MAGAZINE Here lies a great biologist, Who Benedict was called, His death was sad and sudden, And we were much appalled. Twas once in dead of winter, The night Was dark and black, Poor Benny walked with baby And stepped upon a tack. Tis said the air around was blue, But be that as it may, This one sad fact remains unchanged, Pooor Benny died next day. Here lies dear brother J enkins, His grave is fresh and new; It marks a murdered martyr, of such we have but few. His death was really touching, But, come now, dry your eyes, He was not shot nor strangled, But died from wifey's pies. page two hundred and forty-Evc SHARPER'S MAGAZINE The Stage M 9:535. 3a: :1 E :Q': HE year 1907-08 has been particularly successful in its dramatic efforts, for, although there was no carnival, 1a still as many as five distinct dramatic successes were r i 1- u: , E presented before packed ho-uses. W'fff; Besides the German and French plays, which are $.54 noted in another section of the CINCINNATIAN, there was the annual Senior Class Play, as well as a vaudeville and a minstrel show given by the men interested in athletics. These two were particularly successful, the minstrel show being given two nights. It would be impossible to comment individually on the mem- bers of the aIl-star casts of these shows. Sumee it to say, they all made a tremendous hit. The last part of the minstrel Show, A Night with the Faculty, was especially famous, and was known far and wide. The cast of this part of the program was as follows: Dr. Charles W. Grabiney, A. B. C. D., etc ........ H. Landis Bevis Dr. Esperanto Themistockles Harry, U. S. A. A. W. C. taL S. Farrar Brewster Dean Merry Sidecomb, Graduate Student teat, R. Augustus Kreimer Dean Herman Spider, D. D. tbt Prof. N. W. Funnyman, Guardian of the Quarry and Knight of the Chisel .............................. H. Shobert Schick Prof. J ohn T. Laigs .................... R. Frederick Schwenker George Borey Biller, Student Assistant in English. .R. Coach Inott Prof. Harris Handyman, Ph. D. duxdz. . . .H. Charles Mackelfresh Prof. Rameses, Jr., Burn 'Em M. A. tel ...... A. Lincoln Stanley tat means Main Squeeze of the Amalgamated Association of Women's Club. tam , now taking on M. A. under Dr. Peaslee. tbt , D. D.- Dave DeVore. t0 , M. A., not Master of Arts, but Manicure Artist. page two hundred and fortyqix SHARPERS MAGAZINE The Senior Class Play was also very successful. The play pre- sented this. year was The Importance of Being Earnest, by Oscar Wilde, and was presented by the following cast: John Worthing ................................... Mr. Taylor Algernon Moncrieff ................................ Mr. Schick The Rev. Canon Chasuble ................. . ......... Mr. Gross Merriman ....................................... Mr. Doeller Lane ........................................... Mr. Bowen Lady Bracknell ...................... . ............ Miss Pfaff Gwendolin Fairfax ............................... Miss Schaaf Cecily Cardew .................................... Miss Lanz Miss Prism .................................. Miss Rothschild page two hundred and forty-uvcn SHARPERtS MAGAZINE A Leaf from the Note Book of a Sophomore Medic N MATRIMONY. SYNONYMS AND FREQUENCY e DEFINITION. Synonyms are e A picnic for two. FrequencyuThis disease has manifested itself with alarming frequency at the University of Cincinnati, six cases being the record for one month. Dejinition- Matrimony is a disease which has been prevalent at the University among the professors. A - ETIOLOGY. a e Predisposition e Age e Anywhere from twenty-iive to sixty years. Sea: - Only the male sex at the University have been strick- en with the disease. Race e Professors of any race are likely to take the disease, since German, Latin, English, Biological, Gymnastic, Mathematical and Engineering professors have suc- cumbed. Climate e That of McMicken. Season - When love is young in spring-time? HabitseWarranted absolutely safe in harness; will not shy or buck, smoke, chew or drink. Heredit: eThey blame it on heredity, hut thafs a poor excuse. Occupatione Professors, i. e., gentlemen of leisure. Other Disease - Flirtation, escalation. b ... Exciting Causes e Dimples, naughty eyes, curly hair, ruby lips, fiounces and furbelows, dim lights, grate fire, cosy-corner -- B - CLINICAL HISTORY. ae IncubationePeriod of incubation differs according to nationality. In the case of the English professor, being naturally of a slow race, the period of incubation was sixteen page two hundred and forty-cight SHARPERTS- MAGAZINE yea-rs. In the case of the Gymnastic professor, the period of incubation was sixteen weeks. bethner of Onset e Always sudden, through the eyes into the heart. 0 erdromal Symptoms eOdor of Cokeis Dandruif Cure. shiny shoes, new red tie. at Manner of Oculation e First with one. then with both. C - SYMPTOMS. meCirculationePalpitation of the heart is common, accom- panied by increased pulse, which frequently beats 189 times per second, but occasionally drops to 0. b-wRespimtioazeAbnormal. The patient is in the habit of catching his breath suddenly. This is followed by expan- sion of the superficial capillaries. c wNervouse Patient is subject to elation and depression. at times seeming to be at the heights of joy, and again in the depths of despair. D eTHE CAUSE OF THE DISEASE. The disease takes its course quite steadily with but few fluctua- tions until it reaches the crisis. E -MANNER 0F DURATION AND TERMINATION. The disease in its duration is marked by restlessness, which fre- quently takes the form of an insane desire to pace the corri- dors. tSee case of Mathematical professor, clinical ease num- ber 23J In other cases tsee Latin professori the patientis face is marred by silly smiles. In all cases. absent-minded- ness is extremely common. The patients are always very nervous and rather shy, easily embarrassed and very easily bluifed. The termination of the disease is always fatal. F - COMPLICATIONS AND SEQUELAE. a e Complication - Insomnia, delirium, insanity. b - Sequelae - Excessive tardiness to classes, indigestion, wor- ried expression, old ties. G e DIAGNOSIS. Differential TGStS-FTO be differentiated from fiirtation and puppy-love by the results. H - TREATMENT. tiLet it alone. page two hundred and farty-nin: SHARPER'S MAGAZINE Mary Hacl a Little Horse 6-in-3 Mary had a little horse, His mane was white as snow, And everything that she forgot, Her horse was sure to know. She carried him to school each day, Which was against the rule, But there were other children, too, Who horses brought to school. One day the teacher turned her out, The horse must needs be burned, When next day Mary came right back, Her horse with her returned. What makes her love her horsey 50? Well, here is a surprise: The horse so many things does know, That Mary cantt surmise. e-ql-gb-q With lofty mien she trod her way, In thoughts profound she spent her day; She looked not here, she looked not there, But ever with sublimest air She marched right on toward that great goal, For which ambition trained her soul. Aesthetics, Math, Psychology. Italian, French, Histology, Greek Life and Economics, too, All these to her were triHes few, And when at last school days were oter High grades and honors, both galore, Were heaped on her tto her delightt , She said shetd work both day and night To carry out her mighty plan. Alack, alas, she met the man. pagc two hundred and Efty SHARPERtS MAGAZINE The Eclitorts Camp Stool mu .USTOMS are rather different from most things, for, as time advances, they be- - come stronger and more unehangeable, instead of feebler. Our lives are contin- uous stretches of acts governed by custom; we are custom's slaves. Our daily routine is custom; all our holiday cele- brations are customs, and even Leap Year, the means by which the seasons are preserved with- out confusion in the calendar, has its own particular custom. The origination of the Leap Year custom, which gives the fair sex the privilege of i1301;3- ping the question, seems im- possible to discern. In 1606, a book, entitled tTJour-tsh'q'a, Love and Matrimony, was publish- ed, and in this Volume reference is made to the tradition. Whether or not it is the origin of it you may choose for your- selves. The reference is as fol- lows: Albeit it is nowe be- come a part in the common lawe, in regards to social rela- tions of life, that as often as every bissextile year doth re- turn, the ladyes have the sole pug: two hundred and Efty-one privilege, during the time it continueth of making love unto the men which they love, either by wordes or lookes as to them it seemeth proper; and more- over no man will be entitled to the benefit of clergy who doth in any wise treate her proposal with slight or contumely. At any rate, we see that the idea is by no means modern. Another privilege allotted to the girl besides the right of propos- ing is quoted by one authority. If the gentleman to whom she declares her love refuses to marry her, she has the right to demand from him a silk dress. The above explanations, al- though fragmentary, are all we have been able to find after an endless search through encyclo- peedias, periodicals and books on customs, for facts about the Leap-Year tradition. But after all, the origin, although inter- esting, is not vital, for the cus- tom is made and we must abide by it. Recognizing this fact, it seems hardly fair to allow a class of one hundred or more to leave our college and enter the World's buSy field without some words SHARPERlS MAGAZINE of council and advice. There- fore, we take this opportunity to warn the fair as well as the sterner sex of what is before them. The men are no doubt inclined to think that they are the only ones who need warning, but this we must deny, for each sex has its own dangers and pitfalls. The girls must use the great- est discretion in choosing their helpmates, for the young men will all know that they have their teachers' certificates, and are prepared to make the living. Teachers seem to be the only people with positions waiting for them nowadays anyway. At any rate, it is best to take precautions. Especially is this advisable if proposing to a col- lege mate. After loafing four 01' five years at college, men are often willing to let the women do the wor . Then there are the breach-of-promise suits, too. If a man sued a girl for breach of promise, she might have to teach all her life to pay the costs. We can scarcely stretch our imagination so far as to picture a man suing a girl for kissing him, but even this might happen in Leap Year. The men must take a few pre- cautions, too. It is not so much a question of Yes or No't with them as one of avoiding proposals, unless they really mean to accept. What man would have the heart to refuse a maid on her knees before him. even though he did not love her ardently? Then, too, college men are apt to beast in the presence of the girls of the posi- tions waiting for them. Well, a girl will grab at a hint like that as though it were a pair of gloves marked down from a dol- lar to ninety-eight cents. And suppose the man should refuse! There is that silk dress Silk has gone up, too. Still, we are prone to think a silk dress might be cheaper in the end than a wed- ding. The man would probably have to give the wedding at his home, too, and swear to love. honor and obey. Be that as it may, we tremble to think of the poor guileless graduates of 1908. May these warnings he of some use to our departing breth- ren. The situation that awaits them is dangerous, and we shud- der for their safety. We see only one way for their real sal- vation, and doubtless some will use it. Wait for 1909; it's the best class anyway. page two hundred and Effy-t-wo SHARPERos MAGAZINE The Editons Rag Bag m Now, without the slightest hoax, 'Tis agreed by each one here, That amid the many j okes In the Annual this year There is one -thou1d shake an elf With :1 ha, ha, ha! Quite true! 'Tis the one you made yourself, Or the one thatos made on you. Happiness at U. C. w0uld be nothing to do, and an eternity to do it in. PLAYS IN WHICH THE SENIOR LAW MEN WILL BE SEEN IN 1920. BERMAN aooThe Pronouncer? BONSOR - The Eagle Eye. HAUER nooThe Prince Chap. HICKS oo'The Dancing Master. INOTT -- The Human Derrick. J USTIS - Ten Barrooms in One Night. LAMBERTON - The Rotten Thespian. MINGES -- The Prize of Albina. MCCORMICK nfThe Vincennes Cannonball. PATER - Aiphonse and Gaston. RABBITS nooCoroial Burt, or Letos Have a Drink. ROGERS -J'In Silence. SCAMMAN FooThe Maine Squeeze.n SCHELHORN ro'Natureos Error, or The Goose's Revenge? SCHULMAN nooLittle Cupid. STARK - Wyoming. THOMPSONF A1W3ys in Bankruptcy. GREGORY aooOh, Let Me Sleep? page two hundred anal Efty-thne SHARPER'S MAGAZINE CHEMISTRY FD About noontime one can see many an orange precipitate. ON REGISTRATION DAY. PROFESSOR BREESE-Well, Miss Pfaff, what courses in Phil- osophy are you going to take this year? MISS PFAFF -- History of Philosophy and Anaesthetics. EXAMPLE OF A SYLLOGISM FROM A PSYCHOLOGY TEST. All men are mortal; Socrates is mortal ; Therefore, Socrates is a man. A PSYCHOLOGY EXAMINATION. What is imagination? My answers. What is forgetfulness? F atal. What is memory? A blessing. What is an hallucination? An A. What is involuntary attention? Class-room attention. What is a reflex act? Flunking. To cheat, or not to cheat; that is my problem. Whether it is better in the end to dig for The answers to questions of some fool professor, Dr to take notes to the examinations, And with caution use them? To cheat, to pass, Thatis all, and by this act to know we 'scape The torture and the sleepy, unending nights That we are forced to, cis a situation Frankly to he sought. To cheat, to pass; To pass; perhaps be caught; oh, there's the pinch; For from that dear proffs mouth What words may come When we have misled out our ponies dear, Must hold us back; thereis the drawback That makes honesty of so much use. page two hundred and EHy-four E? SHARPERiS MAGAZINE PROFESSOR MOORE Now, take for example, a solid iron ball that is hollow in the center. FROM A MID-TERM PSYCHOLOGY EXAM. ilDeiine ldeduetioni and 'inductionl If I study, and do not add to my knowledge, this is 'deductionJ but if I study, and do add to my knowledge, this is iinduction! PROFESSOR POLL e Who was Helena? MR. GROENLAND-She was Mary Stewartis grandmother. PROFESSOR POLbYouid better get your history dates straight, Mr. Greenland, or they will be putting you in the News or the Annual. Man wants but little at U. C. Nor is he hard to please; He neither craves for A nor B e- Heis satisfied with De. INOTE T0 READER.- The Editor has been particularly fortunate in obtaining the following. Its author, a Freshman, was care- less enough to leave it lying on a table in the library after it had been returned by the teacher in English 1.1 THE LAST LEAF. tlHolmes, in his poem, The Last Leaf,' describes a man, who, once strong and handsome. with a Roman nose and glowing cheeks, had outlived his wife and all his friends. His once-erect form had stooped With age. His chin protruded, almost reaching his nose, which, on account of its extreme thinness appeared very long and hooked. He still clung to his quaint, three-cornered cap and queer breeches, doubtless as old friends. nDaily he wandered helplessly about the town, leaning on his cane, tottering up and down the streets, seeking to discover some familiar countenance. Among the sea of faces not one could he find, so he only shook his head wanly and sadly and continued his ramble. page twb hundred and fiRy-fivc SHARPERIS MAGAZINE STUDENT e Gee whiz, if that professor's brains were dynamite he wouldn't have enough to tip his hat. Ask Rinny. If things keep on, Powell will have to get the Railroad Omni- bus to transfer his lunch from Vine street to the University. He is now carrying- it in a suit case. Powell says it just suits him. Say, girls, have you noticed that Engineer Devore? He is getting to be a. terrible fusser. SARAH e He looks handsome, but I dont know. The CINCINNATIAN is a great achievement. The Editor gets the blame, the Business Manager the experience, and the printer the money - if there is any. PROFESSOR MOOREF-Physics is the science of applying cor- rections. BUVINGER - Well, then, if you find the latent heat of ice to be 78, and you just add 2 it will be correct. Is that what you mean, professor? My grade jumps up when I behold A pony 0n the sly ; So was it when I first began; So was it with my last exam.; So be it till some prof. is told, Then let me die! The grade is what I like to plan, And I want my reports to be Bound each to each by A, not C. MISS PFAFF twho is ushering visitors at the History Conven- tion aroundte Is there any special part of the University that you would like to see? GENTLEMAN VISITOR-Why, yes; is Professor Harry's mu- seum open? page two hundred and fifty-eix SHARPERlS MAGAZINE What is a. what-not ?ll If it is not What it is, then What in it? If it is what it is not, then what not is it? Any member of Mr. Van Wye's class in English I, Section 5, whosends a correct answer to the above enigma will get as a prize an enlarged photograph of Mr. Van Wye lor what-notl. A young man named Porter, A rip-roaring shorter, Came here one day from afar; His dad all his days At the heavens did gaze, Maybe that's why his souls such a star. For he is a sage of siderial lore, And of knowledge of fossils he wants a big store, But of working in metals, the science he taught, We must confess it, his. knowledge is 0. Mrs. George Morey and her husband had rented a charming apartment with all modern conveniences and a speaking tube. This speaking tube was situated next to the front door, and, up to this time, Mrs. George Morey had been able to find no use for it. Time, Wednesday afternoon, four olclock. GEORGE MOREY e I canlt understand, my dear, why you canlt hear through this speaking tube. Itls very simple. Oust then the door-bell rings. G. M. rushes to the speaking tubeJ G. M.e Hello. VOICE e Hello. G. M. taside to Mrs. G. MJeSee how plainly you can hear? MRS. G. M.- Well, it never sounded so plainly to me before. G. M.- Who is it, please? VOICE - Miss Czarnomska. G. M. lwith his blandest toneleOh, Miss Czarnomska, Pm so glad you've come to call. Come right up. M. E. J . Gel beg your pardon, but if you will open the door I'll come in. Henceforth G. M. will not use the keyhole for a speaking tube. page two hundred and fifty-ocvcn w?! SHARPER'S MAGAZINE Frivolity, frivolity, Why did you come to class? You might as well complete the bell Before the looking-glass. You can not tell a single soul A single thing you know; Professor Whitcomb called the roll Full half an hour ago. Frivolity, with jollity, Exclaimed, No more objecting! Why should I rack my brain to track Your mental vivisecting? My dutyts clear: 'tis looking dear. Let mirrors do reflecting? FROM GREEK LIFE. PROFESSOR HARRYhMan may be the head of the family, but woman is the neck, and sways the head whichever way she wants to. tWe hope he does not speak from experienceJ WITH APOLOGIES. The hour is long, and dry, and dreary; It drags, and the prof. is never weary; For still he clings to his tiresome rot, We miss each word for we heed him not, And the hour is dry and dreary. My grades are low, and harsh, and dreary; Of school and its tortures I am weary; My thoughts now turn to the man who passed, And the hopes of my Freshman year so vast, And my grades are low and dreary. Be still, sad heart! and cease regretting; For there are others who F's are getting; Thy fate is the common fate of all, Into each life some flunks must fall, Some grades must be low and dreary. page two hundred and fifty-zight SHARPER'S MAGAZINE She came out of the library with a huge book on The Develop- ment of the Childts Mind under her arm. She paused and looked at the different buildings, and then stopped one of the girls who was going to the library. Pardon me, she said, but is that small building at the foot of the steps leading to the University the University Book Store which I have heard so much about Tt Here is the story Of a young co-ed. Who should have passed, But stopped instead. Here is the tale Of a tVarsity boy, Who passed one term And died of joy. The Inter-Class Meet is an affair given annually by Harvey Manss, assisted by Holmes and Hathaway, and attended by a few Who know the gate-keeper. Maid of Athens, ere you go, Let me once more be your beau, Or, if that can never be, Let me help you at U. 0.; Use my notes, or take my heart, Never fear, for I am smart. The English 13 class came sauntering in, one by one, from twenty-five minutes of until a quarter of nine. PROFESSOR VAN WYE thaving waited until the class had all assembledt-Does this class find it inconvenient to get here at eight-thirty? tPauseJ If you do. we will change the hour until a quarter of nine. There were no objections. p31: twa humired and fifty-m'n: SHARPER'S MAGAZINE TUNE - My Rosary. The hours I've spent with you, dear prof., Are as a score of years to me; The tasks you gave me always were put off, 0h misery, oh misery. Each hour an age, each age a year, Your dreary rot Ilve bravely faced, Until my blamed report came home, And there an F was placed. Oh, memories that smart and burn, My bitter fate I sadly scoff, To think that all I really had to learn Was jolly met, I say, yes jolly prof. The lVarsity lunch-room is a daily race-course wherein the majority of students enter. The menu varies from a three-inch piece of pie 5 la mode to a turkey dinner. The winner is usually the one who is best able to stand the strain. The time is seldom less than sixty seconds. CO-EDS. Lives of Spinsters all remind us, We may have j ust such a fate, And the years to come may hnd us Still Without a loving mate. The Faculty l aita on all the plans Of everything we would do; On football, flag-rush, carnival, They sat on this Annual, too. And though we kick and fuss and fume, One more sit weld joyfully back, That is, if the Faculty, one and all, Would kindly sit on a tack? page two hundred and sixty SHARPERiS MAGAZINE iVarsity, iVarsity, long may she live, To give each student a brain like a. sieve. NOTICE FROM THE GIRLS'-ROOM BULLETIN BOARD. LOST-A brown umbrella with a round nob? iAnd there is no class in spelling at the UniversityJ ECONOMICS. MISS VAWTER e Which has more value, a plate of ice cream or a loaf of bread. MR. STANLEY e Now, is that something to bite on? ANGLo-SAXON. MISS SHAFEReMiss Merrill, doesnit ut mean out? MISS MERRILL w Yes. MISS SHAFER w Then how do you get iiutii in? FROM A FRESHMAN THEME. tiMy tongue grew stiff with terror as I heard a noise of flying hoofs in the distance which caused my horse to swallow hastily his last mouthful of lunch. IN PHILOSOPHY. MISS FERRISn-Professor Bawden, what would happen if I were thrust into a vacuum? PROFESSOR BAWDEN - Why, you would fill it. The Literary Society was having its picture taken for the CINGINNATIAN. RUTH F Everybody look at that meadow. BECKY-That isn't a meadow. You never saw a meadow with trees on it. RUTH ito the photographerie Isnit that a meadow? PHOTOGRAPHER-No, that's no meadow; thatis background. page two hundred and aixty-one SHARPER'S MAGAZINE School is real, school is earnest, Christmas time is not its goal; Thou, dear heart, to school returnest, In physique, if not in soul. A 'Varsity man rather small, Once went with a girl rather tall; He wanted a kiss, But he told the sweet miss, That he feared if he jumped he might fall. There was a professor called Racksie Won fame as a. drinker of Moxie ; He stopped not with few, The result was he grew Quite tall, very handsome and foxy. The mill grinds And the grindh grinds; And yet whoever can say Which one of the twu Has work to do, And which work of the two Fades away? DEAR READERS h Herehs a last request, We hope each one will heed, For, though your help we did behest, You offered none indeed. So, classmates all, who would be bright, Our efforts do not mock; One needs some little brains to write, But any fan! can knock. pig: two hundred and ailty-two Ill IllllIlllIlIlIEIlIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIlllIllIIIIlllIiIlllIlllIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIII!llllllllllllllllllltllliIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllflllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllillllIIIIIIIIIIJIIIIlIIIIIllllllllIlrllllEIIIIIIIlIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIlIIIIIlIlIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllillllllllIIIIIIIIIIIILIIIIIIIJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIIIIIlIII unlmlllllmlmlllIIIIIlmlmlullmlmlmlllIIIIanmIIIrlIlIIIIIHlI1IIIIllllllmllllllllnlllulmlllIllullnlrlllmllullulmluIiummlllnlllIIlIIIlullInlmlmmnmmmmlnlllllllw menial Qtullege at $1311: Chartered 1819 :: Eighty-nine Successful Years :: Graduates, 4.362 Huinrrnitg nf Qlintinnati, Eppartmrnt nf mrhitiuv CONDUCTS IN ADDITION TO SYSTEMATIC DIDACTIC TEACHING IHrafliral 01111111125 In Comparative Anatomy, Elementary Chemistry, Physiology, Normal Histology, Embryology, Human Anatomy, Physi- ological Chemistry, Bacteriology, Pathological Histology. Erhaihe Gunmen in the Cincinnati Hospital, Hospital for Consump- tives, Good Samaritan Hospital, Ohio Maternity Hospital, and German Deaconess Hospital. Amphiihwtre alinim in the Cincinnati Hospital and Good Samaritan Hospital. 317W Glinirul Exprrirnrp 15 obtained in the Dispensary of the College. Each student serves a term in the Drug Room. Students are given practical instruction in CLINICAL MICROSCOPY, SURGERY and MEDICAL ELECTRICITY. igngpital ynaitiuna In Six Hospitals in the city and Vicinity are open to the students of the College. Practically all of the Seniors who desire a term in hospital service are placed each year. WN. B.-In 1910 in addition to a four year High School diploma, a year of Physics, Biology, Chemistry and Language will be required for entrance. For Catalog or detail information, write to gmmtary, mphital mallow nf GDhin CLIFTON AVENUE CINCINNATI, OHIO UIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllll llIllFIFIIIIIIIIIIIll IIIIII rllIlllIlIlIllIllllllllllllllillllIIIIIIIIIIHIIII IIIllllIlllllllllllllllllll IIIIIIIIIIIIIlIllIllIIIHIIllIllllIIIIIIIIIIll'ImIllllllIllIIIIIIIllIIIlllllllllllillllilllllllflllllllllll lillllllllillwulnlnhlllnlhllilll'llllmllmnlIIIIIIHIEIHIIIHlllllilllllllllllllIIIIIJIIIJIIIEJIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllltlllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIII:IIBlllllllmlllIhhillllllmllllllIIIIIIIIIIIJlInIIIIlIllIIIlmlmjs I lEIIIIIIdIiII Private Leased Wires Telephone. Main 999 0230 Charles E. Bultman STOCKS BONDS 3 G RA I N COTTON Bought and sold for cash or carried on margin for future delivery. MW HOTEL SINTON CINCINNATI, OHIO $E$XaQQC$QK$WiGEE GEEQQGB Qli$ 63a GW$$WW ? C $9336 69 W636? E? '63 aggwammg m m 63 mtaDMWmacmmamg' White 8: Adams CLOTHES Lrgi 3- Possess that dash and go which make them irresistible. Are you wearing them? Come see us. wanem 4Z5 RACE. STREET SPORTING C. O 0 DS We are headquarters for every- thing used for all In and Outdoor Sports - Also Kodaks and all photo suppiies. ' ' Our specialtyhAll college supplies ' such as athlelic and gymnasimn apparel. pennants. etc. 2 w . 17 E.P11'th St., South Side Fountain Square . The Raffabie Mail Order Music Home of the West :3 L George BJennings Co. 3 ' of Cincinnati, Ohio , RESPECTFULLY sollcll yum- kind patronage. and ' . begs m Inform dea'lors and wachns that they are . ' fully equipped to handle an businnss entrusted to ', them. Our speclally ls caterlng to the wards of Col- ' . logos. Seminaries. Convonts. and Private Teacher: ' Music aelectod wlih great care. We do not canfme ow szfecffons to ourown cafaiague: on the contrary. we ' . sand the best from all American and foreign publica- .. tlons. Give us a trial. Our Stock Me Most Compfefe Our Prices the Lowest Our Edflforls the Very Best Terms. made known on application. All aelcctions 2 made under lhc suparvislon of MR. J sunmcs, whose: '. . experience of over thirty years 15: guarantoe of sat: ' ' isfactlon. ' The George B. Jennings Co. . ' 104 and I07 W. Fourth Street. CINCINNATI :f W. H. ANDERSON :: COMPANY - W 89 LAW BOOKSELLERS g AND PUBLISHERS We buy Second-hand Reports and Text Books for Cash ' Student's Books, New and Second- hand, always in stock TELEPHONE CANAL 3395 524 Main Street CINCINNATI Z 1878'190'8 the zollegc oi music of aincinnati ENDOWED Announces the Opening of the Blst Academic Year, Sept. 7, 1908 Music in all its branches- ElocutioneModern Languages HE standard of artistic excelience in the char- acter, capacity and work of our students is only equaled by a few of the National Schools of Europe. This institution is nearer the Eu- ropean idea than any other schoo! of music in America, in that it is in no sense commercial. The best educated classes of men and women in the country there- fore come here for study and graduation. The broad plan of education, the unquestioned superiority of the fac- ulty, the high-standard requirements for certificates and diplomas, the uniform excellence and success as teachers and executants of those who have carried their well-won parchments into every part of the world tinciuding Strassburg, Berlin, Prague, St. Petersburg,Vienna, Paris and London abroad, and nearly every large city of the United States, including New York, Boston and Chicagot -all of these and other eloquent reasons have given to the College of Music of Cincinnati its superlative repu- tation for thorough instruction in all its departments. Send for catalog and illustrated booklet of the Ladies' Dormitory. Students may enter at any time THE COLLEGE OF MUSIC OF CINCINNATI . . ELM STREET, OPP. WASHINGTON PARK mmmmmammwmmwammmmmwmwm? why Hninn Olmtral Eifv Slnaurattrp 0111. OF CINCINNATI, OHIO Established t 867 Assets, $60,000,000 were alike; now every one knows that there is a great difference. The UN ION CENTRAL proves its superiority by the unparalleled results of its annual dividend policies. It insures at the lowest annual net cost to the policy holder of any American Company2a fact made possible by the high rate of interest earned on its investments, a low death rate. and a tow expense rate. JESSE R. CLARK, President E.. P. MARSHALL, Vice-President S t 5 S 5 Afew years ago some men thought that all life insurance companies g S 5 S S S S R $WWWQ2MU2MUJZEUa'a macawmuamm wnmwwwgawwmauiwyawwwwwwwmw maammamuammmmwmwawmmwmwa HIGH GRADE PIANOS DIRECT FROM THE FACTORY Our stock is now complete. comprising well-known makes of the very latest and artistic designs .3! .3 We are the Sole Distributors of the following: HENRY AND S. G. LINDEMAN SOHMER LUDWIG KURTZMANN KRANICH 51 EACH SPECIAL BARGAINS IN OUR EXCHANGE DEPARTMENT TEWS: Cash or any Payments THE OTTO GRAU PIANO CO. Phone M. 4979 222 and 224 West Fourth St, Cincinnati gnawwmmamuauauaaw gamma. awwwmmwwwwmwwmmwaw wwmwwwanw2nwwuwwwwuwwuwww Elle mvyrr gamma PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHERS OHicial Photographers of CINCINNATIfo ,08 eWr-wc ?,Md K .r I309 VINE STREET, CINCINNATI PHONE, 542 Canal. The Individual Treatment ofthr: Lighting, Pos- ing and Finishing ofour Photographs produces in our work the Artistic Quality sought for in Modern Portraiture. ' easememmeeeeemmeeeememe mmmmsmnnmmmmwwmmmw Bbe School ofjiife Is just commencing to the many eegrads of this yeares class, and there is much to learn and remember. Shilllto's have therlargest variety of articles for personal adornment and for home embellishment. Trice: for these goods are such that aslants money to the purses e of the purchasers. Xemembar Shillito's have been satisfactorily serving their customers for seventy-seven successive years. 15b0, 30bit Sbilltto Gompany 51mm. Seventh. ana Shillllo 'mm. Th: Oldcit Dry Gouda Houa: Writ Commence Early in Life to Deal of tho: Allcghanies V 3 with Shillito's Established m l 39 QWWWWWWWWWGGWG fwmmmmmmm- .mmmmmememmammmmmm QQt6$0$6$0QQQQQQQOGOQQQO$Q$QWQ Q QQWQ$O$GQ $0 iiwlmET us show you our snappy line of SUITINGS made to your order at $30.00 E m. mObmann 24 E. Seventh Street tailor diincinnati, $1310 egomawamowegemosoteoayobosomemaw F umomememewowetpemomoesewenogamo $913,353st mouaaao'bemo memewwbasewemswomememsm l. E gNHIIlIHIIHHHHIIIIHHHHIHIIIillHHHIHHIJIIIILIIHIIHHHHIIIILIIIIHHHII!HHHIIHHHHIHHlliEHUHIH IHIIlILlIHIHIIHIHIIHIULLHHIHHHHUIIilIHIHIHHHIHHlillNlJltlllUlLlHHHIHHJIHIIHiIIIlilHIIHIILINHHIHHHIIHIHIHHllilllmilhilHIIIHIIIIIIIILHUII THE ENGRAVINGS In the 1908 ccClNICINNATIAN were made by the . . g?talfnrh Engraving Q'Ln. ARTISTS, ENGRAVERS, E LECTROTYPE RS And Specialists in the Production of High-Gradc College and School Work IHHIIIWIIIIIIIEEIIHIHIHIIIHIIEEIIHHHI IlllmlillHIEIIIFIHHHIII CENTURY BUILDING :2 :: INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA Kind words from two cf than we .rer'Ued last year: Everything has been satisfactory, and Your work has been entirely satisfact- we are delighted with your work3 cry and prompt. EDWARD A. Ross, Editar-in- Chief H. M. FULLERTON, Bax. Mgr. uDlluus Purdue University, Lafayette, Ind. '07 'Hn-rcnrr Washington University, St. Louis :2: a romraa? :aa Mgfar ear Iarge mad rumplere plant, and none too .mall to receive :12: most rare- ful alteration. Specimen: qummfful Color Etrgmyirrgl Fr?! iLiJiMlHHILIHHIHHhimIIHHIIHL'IISEIIHHHIHIHLIHLIHIHHHIlllIIHIHHHIIHlliiliHIIHIHIIHIHNIIIINHHIHIWHHIIIILIHHIHHHIHHIIIHIILIIHIHHIHHWIIUIHIIHIHHHHIIIIIIIIILIIIIIHHHIHHHIH IIHllllilllltilllllllllHMHHIHHIHHHliII IIHlillIIINIIIIIIIIIIIIIE immumm CAPS and GOWNS ExceHenl Workmansbr'p and Material a! Very Low Price: Faculty Gowns and Hood's, Pulpit Em andfudicr'al Robes Cox Sons 6: Vining 262 Fourth Ave.. New York Makers to l906.l007,1903 University of Cincinnati m E a E mmmm Eh? $Prman Natinnal mania N. W. CORNER FOURTH AND VINE STREETS mincinnati, ampin Undivided Profits. $240300 Deals in hQ-class Municipal, County, and School Bonds. a a a a E a E Capital, $500,000 Surplus, $500,000 a a a g mxmummmlnln Ill Issues Letters of Credit. Sells Foreign Exchange and I5 Agent for the Principal Ocean Steamship Lines : : : : mg memnmmzzmwwm x317 amtBe wounsforb gfafionerg Company 22m LAWN TENNIS W Agents for WRIGHT 8: DITSON. Boaon, Mass. MAKERS OF THE CELEBRATED DAVIS, PIM, CAMPBELL 6c SEARS RACKETS 5-4--.. W e carry a Complete Slack of the above make of Tennis SEND FOR CATALOGUE FINE. CROQUET in Boxwood, Apple Wood and Rock Maple. $2.50 to $I0.00. Special $1.00 set for children. Visiting Cards. Monogram Dies and School Commencement Invitations. Engravers of Wedding Invitations Send for Samples. THE POUNSFORD STATIONERY COMPANY 22 I31. I33, I35 East Fourth Street W n n E H H Beautiful sets From E z: :: CINCINNATI 22m GEO. GUCKENBERGER. President --ffas QIafionaf QBanF: mszzagsraaz-Exigimrw g CHAS. l. ZIEGLEK. Assistant Cashier Capifaf $ 4100 000 First Class Bond Investments 8. Specialty gurpfns, $ 600 000 We Solici: the Accounts of Individuals and Firm: ' Safety Deposit Boxes For Rent at $2.00 and Upward. Agents For ali Principal Steamship Lines 3 7 Jnfercsf mdib on wafnut gmet, nexf to most Office 0 540m QwOEitE-ng J . 11 nr n r W ew Um D e. t. a D


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University of Cincinnati - Cincinnatian Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1904 Edition, Page 1

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