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LIBRARY MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE The Andover Press andover, mass, ' Ihe Index AN ANNUAL PUBLISHED BY THE JUNIOR CLASS OF THE MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE, AMHERST, MASS. DECEMBER, NINETEEN HUNDRED AND NINE 191 I Volume X L I ■A, t, ) B IndeK Sitrrnry t, itiirH ALLYN PARKER BUKSLEY EDGAR MORTON BROWN S ' tatiatiral .tDitnra IRVING WILDER DAVIS PERCY WILLIAM PICKARD ArtiBto LOMAS OSWALD STEVENSON PHILEAS ARMAND RACICOT Pufcfls ecf by t e Junior flass of tpe i Dssachusetfe jgnculTmol (oi pgc m.xu r far ,. ' HTl e butij of compiling tl|e college an- nual t as tl is year fallen upon us. Wz IjavQ strioen to reach tl e Ijigl] stanb-- atb establisbeb by tl]e precious classes in its publication. IPI etlier u)e I]ar e reacljeb tljat stan ar or not sl all be jubgeb by tl e readers Wz now present hz 3n(?ex of tl e (Elass of nineteen fjunbreb (Elenen to tl e CJlumni, Students anb rienbs of JTlassactjusetts CJgricuI= tural (BoIIege. Clje €bitors Co tiie president of m. Q. €. in appreciation of l]is unceasing efforts toroarbs tlje aboancement of tijis m- stitution tl e Class of nineteen fjunbreb (Elenen corbially bebicates tljis columc THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI ENYON Leech Butterfield was born at Lapeer in the South- eastern part of Michigan some sixty miles north of Detroit in 1868 . His father was a Michigan farmer of exceptional ability, intelligence and accjuirements, who after four 3 ' ears ' service on the Board of Agriculture, which in Michigan, practically controls the Agricultural College of that state, became and for six years remained Secretary of that body. At present, the elder Mr. Butter- field resides in Detroit, where he fills the important position of Secretary of the State Fair. It was natural that the son should seek his education in the institution with which his father was for ten years thus closely connected. It is the oldest of the important group of state land-grant colleges, now sixty-three in number, having been established by the State of Michigan a few years before the passage by Congress of the Morrill Act of 1862. He was gradu- ated B. S. in 1 89 1 with high honors as a scholar, evincing, even at that early period in life, a strong inclination toward the special studies in which he has since distinguished himself. He was known as a diligent, painstaking, thorough and conscientious student. After six months ' work upon the farm immediatel} following his graduation, he served a like period as Assistant Secretary of his College. Then came three full years of valuable training as Editor of the Grange Visitor, the organ of the Michigan State Grange. It was undoubtedly this experience which fixed and confirmed his literary style which is one of unusual charm and effectiveness. In 1895 he was promoted to the important post of Superintendent of Farmers ' Institutes, a work carried on with great success by his college, and which he advanced to a position of unprecedented importance and wide recognition. Retiring from this post in 1899 he spent a year in further study and writing along the lines of his favorite topics. In 1900 he entered the University of Michigan for graduate work. There he received his Master ' s degree in 1902 and at once became Instructor in Rural Sociology in that great intsitution. In this position he remained until called MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE to the Presidency of the Rhode Island State CoUege at Kingston in 1904. In 1906 he was unanimously elected, by the Trustees of the Massachusetts Agricultural College, President of this institution, as successor of Henry Hill Goodell, L. L. D., whose recent lamented death had left us without a head. Three years of service has confirmed the wisdom of our Trustees ' choice. Among the sixty-three land-grant colleges of the United States — the Southern States having duplicates along the color line — ours is the only purely Agricultural College. All the others combine in one institution both agricultural and industrial education. Both of these were provided for under the terms of the Morrill Act of 1862. In Massachusetts alone, the bene- factions of the general government were divided between this ' institution, which was chartered by our General Court in 1863 for the single purpose of affording collegiate instruction in agriculture and kindred subjects, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, then already in existence, which offered unrivalled facilities for higher industrial training. Of the income arising from the Massachusetts Land Grant two-thirds is appropriated to the Agricultural College, one-third to the Institute. Subsequent grants of money from Congress have been received, all specifically to maintenance, no part being available for buildings. Under the existing scheme of division this college receives annually about $25,000, while the Experiment Station gets about $30,000 more. The State is making annual liberal gifts of money for the erection of buildings — and maintenance — and support of an adec[uate teaching outfit. The administrative and teaching outfit of the College and Station now numbers about fifty, of whom at least 25 per cent have been added since President Butterfield assumed charge. Our President seems to possess administrative c]ualities of the highest order. He has before him a scheme of education of very broad scope, to the development of which he brings a mind alert and vigorous, disciplined and trained to the highest efficiency. A mass of details crowd upon his attention and demand constant effort and watchfulness. His annual budget for the Legislature rec[uires the m ost careful preparation and presentation, and here he has occupied a field in which he has thus far won the confidence and support of successive legislative bodies. His remarkable earnestness and sincerity and entire frankness in dealing with them, have won for him the entire confidence of the men at the State House. 12 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI In addition to the oversight of this important trust, he was called by- President Roosevelt to assume the responsible position of membership in the Commission of Country Life, to the wfork of which he contributed much, and an important part of whose report came from his pen. In the Depart- ment of Rural Sociology he is reckoned as one of the leaders, so that what- ever he says or writes on this fruitful topic commands universal attention and is received as authoritative. Under his guidance the Massachusetts Agricultural College is rapidly advancing in influence and importance. This year opens with 350 students, the Freshman class numbering 130, with a notable increase in the graduate courses and special students. The winter and summer courses are increas- ingly popular and are numerously attended. A strong effort is being made to carry the benefits of the college to the farmers and dwellers in rural communities. The standards of scholarship are being much elevated. Thus far the administration of President Butterfield has been a notable success and the future prospects of M. A. C. brighten under his gracious guidance. v t- H a o :- 7C -vi,.«a----«,.., M dabnbar September 13-14, Monday-Tuesday, Entrance Examinations September 15, Wednesday, 9.30 A. M., Assembly ; First Semester Begins November 24-29, Wednesday, i P. M.- Monday, I P. M. Thanksgiving Recess December 17, Friday, 6 P. M., Winter Recess Begins January 3, Monday, i P. M., Assembly ; Winter Recess Ends February 6, Sunday, Fall Semester Ends February 7, Monday, i P. M., Assembly ; Second Semester Begins February 22, Tuesday, Wasliington ' s Birthday March 25, Friday, 6 P. M., Spring Recess Begins April 4, Monday, i P. M., Assembly ; Spring Recess Ends April 19, Tuesday, May 30, Monday, Patriots ' Day Memorial Day June 18-22, Saturday-Wednesday, Commencement Exercises • •.. ' ■■- ..-Vi p ScTW 14 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI loarh of ©ruBt a Mtmbets sx (©ffirtn His Excellency Governor Eben S. Draper President of the Corporation Kenyon L. Butterfield . . . . President of the College George H. Martin . . . Secretary of the Board of Education J. Lewis Ellsworth . . . Secretary of Board of Agriculture Msmbtts bg Appotntmrnt Frank Gerrett of Greenfield Samuel C. Damon of Lancaster Thomas L. Creeley of Belmont. . Charles H. Preston of Danvers . Davis R. Dewey of Cambridge M. Fayette Dickinson of Boston William H. Bowker of Boston George H. Ellis of Boston . Charles E. Ward of Buckland Elmer D. Howe of Marlboro Nathaniel L Bowditch of Framingham William Wheeler of Concord Arthur G. Pollard of Lowell Charles A. Gleason of New Braintree Term Expire: 1910 1910 1911 1911 1912 1912 1913 1913 1914 1914 1915 191S 1916 1916 ©fitrpra Slwlpii bg tljf CUnrpnralinn Charles A. Gleason of New Braintree Vice-President of the Corporation J. Lewis Ellsworth of Worcester Secretary Fred C. Kenney of Amherst ...... Treasurer Charles A. Gleason of New Braintree Auditor MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 15 (Enmmtttpp on 3Finanrp Charles A. Gleason Chairman George H. Ellis Charles E. Ward Arthur G. Pollard Charles H. Preston CttommtltPf on (Hourap of f tu g anb iFantltij William Wheeler Chairman William H. Bowker George H. Martin M. Fayette Dickinson Elmer D. Howe Davis R. Dewey (Hummittpp on iFarm anb i nrttrttlturp Jfarm Slutatan George H. Ellis Chairman Frank Gerrett Charles A. Gleason Nathaniel I. Bowditch il nrtirultural Blutaian J. Lewis Ellsworth, Chairman Thomas L. Greeley Elmer D. Howe CUnmmtttpf nn Expmmpnt IrpartntPttt Charles H. Preston, Chairman ]. Lewis Ellsworth William H. Bowker Arthur G. Pollard Samuel C. Damon 16 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI (Hammittee an SStttlbtttga anb ArrangpJttPttt of dirnuniiH M. Fayette Dickinson, Chairman William Wheeler Frank Gerrett William H. Bowker Nathaniel I. Bowditch iExamtntttg Qlommittfp of ©uprsrprB John Bursley of West Barnstable, Chairman Warren C. Jewett, of Worcester Isaac Damon of Wayland Frank Gerrett of Greenfield Noble B. Turner, of Great Barrington THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI iFarult George F. Mills, M. A. Dean of the College, Head of the Division of the Humanities, and Professor of Languages and Literature. Born 1839. Williams College 1862. A A $. Associate Principal of Greylock Institute 1S82-89. Professor of Eng- lish and Latin at Massachusetts Agricultural College since 1890. Apointed Dean of the College and Head of the Division of Humanities in 1907, Charles H. Fernald, Ph. D., Direetor of Graduate School and Professor of Zoology. Born 1838. Bowdoin College 1865. Ph. D., Maine State College 1886. Studied in the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Cambridge and under Louis Agassiz on Penekese Island. Also traveled extensively in Europe, studying insects in va- rious museums. Principal of Litchfield Academy, 1865. Prin- cipal ofHoulton Academy, 1865-1870. Chair of Natural History, Maine State College, 1871-1886. Professor of Zo- ology at Massahcusetts Agricultural College since 1886. William P. Brooks, Ph. D., Director of the Experi- ment Station and Lecturer on Soil Fertility. Born 1 85 1. Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1875. •i S K. Post-graduate, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1875-76. Professor of Agriculture and Director of Farm, Imperial College of Agriculture, Safforo, Japan, 1877-78; also Professor of Botany, 1881-88. Acting President Im- perial College, 1880-83, and 1S86-87. Professor of Agricul- ture at Massachusetts Agricultural College, and Agriculeural- ist for the Hatch Experiment Station since January, 1889. Ph. D., Halle, 1S97. Acting President of the College and Acting Director of the Experiment Station, 1905-06. Director of the Experiment Station, 1906. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE William D. Hurd, B. S., M. Agr., Director of Short Courses Born 1875. Michigan Agricultural College, 1SS9. r A; $ K $; A Z. Nursery Inspector, University of Illinois, 1S99. Teacher in Lansing High School, 1900-02. Professor of Horticulture, Practical School of Agriculture and Horti- culture, Briarcliff Manor, New York, 1902-03. Professor of Agriculture, University of Maine, 1903-06. Dean of College of Agriculture, University of Maine, 1906-09. Director of Short Courses, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1909. Frank A. Waugh, M. Sc, Head of the Division of Horticulture and Professor of Landscape Gardening. Born 1869. Kansas Agricultural College, 1891. K S. M. S., 1893. Graduate Student Cornell University, 1S98-99. Editor Agricultural Department Topeka Capital, 1891-92. Editor Montana Farm and Stock Journal, 1892. Editor Denver Field and Farm, 1892-93. Professor of Horticulture, Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College, and Horti- culturalist of the Experiment Station, 1893-95. Professor of Horticulture, University of Vermont and State Agricultural College, and Horticulturalist of the Experiment Station, 1895- 1902. Professor of Horticulture and Landscape Gardening, Massachusetts Agricultural College, and Horticulturalist of the Hatch Experiment Station since 1902. Horticultural Editor of the Country Gentleman since 1898. James A. Foord, B. S., M. S. A., Acting Head of the Division of Agriculture, and Professor of Farm Administration. Born 1872. B. S., New Hampshire College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, 1898. M. S. A., Cornell University, 1902. S E; K ; K S. Graduate Summer Schools of Agriculture, Ohio State University, 1902 ; University of Illinois, 1906; Cornell University, 1908. Assistant in Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station, 1900-03. Pro- fessor of Agriculture, Delaware College, 1903-06. Associate Professor of Agronomy, Ohio State University, 1906-07. Asso- ciate Professor of Agronomy, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1907. Professor of Farm Administration, 1908. Charles Wellington, M. A., Ph. D., Professor of General and Agricultural Chemistry. Born 1853. Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1873. K S. Graduate Student in Chemistry, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1873-76. Student in University of Virginia, 1876- 77- Ph. D., University of Gottingen, 1885. Assistant Chem- ist, United States Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C, 1876. First Assistant Chemist, Department of Agri- culture, 1877-82. Associate Professor of Chemistry at Massa- chusetts Agricultural College, 1885-1907. Professor of Chemistry, Massachusetts Agricultural College since 1907. , iW 20 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI James B. Paige, D. V. S., Professor of Veterinary Science, and Veterinarian for the Massachusetts Agricultural Experiment Station. Born 1 86 1. Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1882. Q. T. v., On farm at Prescott, 1882-87. D. V. S., Faculty of Comparative Medicine and Veterinary Science, McGill Uni- versity, 188S. Practiced at Northampton, 1888-91. Pro- fessor of Veterinary Science at Massachusetts Agricultural College since 1891. Took course in Pathological and Bac- teriological Department, McGill University, summer 1891. Took course in Veterinary School in Munich, Germany, 1895-96. m George E. Stone, Ph. D., Professor of Botany and Botanist for the Massachusetts Agricultural Experi- ment Station. Born 1 86 1. Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1882-S4. $ S K. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1S84-89. In the summer of 1890, in charge of the Botany classes at Worcester Summer School of Natural History. Leipsic University, 1891-92; Ph. D., 1S92. Studied in the Physio- logical Laboratory at Clark University, 1893. Assistant Pro- fessor of Botany at Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1893-95. Professor of Botany at Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1895. B. S., Massachusetts Agricultural College, John E. Ostrander, M. A., C. E., Professor of Mathematics and Civil Engineering. Born 1865. B. A., C. E., Union College, 1886; M. A. 1889. Assistant in Sewer Construction, West Troy, N. Y., 1SS6. Assistant on Construction, Chicago, Saint Paul Kansas City Railway, 1887. Draughtsman with Phoenix Bridge Company, 18S7. Assistant in Engineering Department, New York State Canals, 1888-91. Instructor in Civil Engineering, Lehigh University, 1891-92. Engineering for Contractor Alton Bridge, summer or 1892. Professor of Civil Engineering and Me- chanical Arts, University of Idaho, 1892-97. Professor of Mathematics and Civil Engineering at the Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1897. Henry T. Fernald, M. S., Ph. D., Professor of En- tomology and Associate Entomologist for the Massa- chusetts Agricultural Experiment Station. Born 1866. University of Maine, 1885. Ben, K 4 . M. S., 1888. Graduate Student in Biology, Wesleyan Uni- versity, 1885-86. Gradudate Student in Johns Hopkins Uni- versity, 1887-90. Laboratory instructor, Johns Hopkins University, 1889-1890. Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1890. Professor of Zoology, Pennsylvania State College, 1890-99. State Economic Zoologist of Pennsylvania, 1898-99. Professor of Entomology, Massachusetts Agricultural College, and Associate Entomologist, Hatch E.xperiment Station, iSgg. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE George C. Martin, C. E., Captain United States Army, retired. Professor of Military Science. Born 1869. C. E., University of Vermont, 1S92. S . With Engineering News, 1895-97. Entered army, July 9, 189S, as Second Lieutenant of Twenty-first United States Infantry. Promoted to First Lieutenant of Second United States In- fantry, March 2d, 1899. Promoted to Captain of Eighteenth United States Infantry, August 26th, 1903. Placed on duty at Massachusetts Agricultural College by order of the Honor- able, the Secretary of War, September, 1905. Retired from United States Army, 1909. Edward A. White, B. Sc, Professor of Floriculture. Born 1S72. Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1895. K S. Assistant Horticulturalist, Massachusetts Agricultural Col- lege, 1895-97. White Frost, Florists, Arlington, Mass., 1897-1900. Assistant Professor of Horticulture, Texas Agri- cultural and Mechanical College, 1900-1902. Professor of Botany, Forestry, and Landscape Architecture, Connecticut Agricultural College, 1902-07. Assistant Professor of Flori- culture, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1907. Professor of Floriculture, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1909. William R. Hart, B. L., A. B., A. M., Professor of Agricultural Education. B. L., Iowa State Law School, 1880. A. B., University of Nebraska, 1896. A. M., University of Nebraska, 1900. De- partment of Psychology and Education in Nebraska State Normal at Peru, 1901-07. Professor of Agricultural Educa- tion, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1907. Fred C. Sears, M. Sc, Professor of Pomology. Born 1 866. B. S. Kansas Agricultural College, 1S92. Assist- ant Horticulturalist at Kansas Experiment Station, 1892-97. M. Sc, Kansas Agricultural College, 1896. Professor of Horticulture, Utah Agricultural College, 1S97. Director Nova Scotia School of Horticulture, Wolfich, Nova Scotia, 1S98- 1904. Professor of Horticulture, Nova Scotia Agricultural College, Truro, Nova Scotia , 1905-07. Professor of Po- mology, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1907. 22 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Philip B. Hasbeouck, B. S., Associate Professor of Mathematics, Adjunct Professor of Phvsics. Born 1S70. B. S. Rutgers College, 1893. x ' i. Assistant Professor of Mathematics at Massachusetts Agricultural Col- lege from April, 1895 to 1902. Associate Professor of Math- eipatics since 1902. Registrar since June, 1905. On leave of absence, 1909-1910, at Sloane Physical Laboratory, Yale University. Joseph S. Chamberlain, M. S., Ph. D. Born Hudson, Ohio, 1870. B. S., Iowa State Agricultural Col- lege, 1890; M. S., Iowa State Agricultural College, 1892. Instructor in Chemistry, Iowa State Agricultural College, 1834-1897. Ph. D., Johns Hopkins University, 1899. In- structor in Chemistry, Oberlin College, 1899-1901. Voluntary Assistant in Chemistry at Wesleyan University, summer of 1900-1901. Research Assistant to Professor Ira Remsen, Johns Hopkins University, 1901. Chemist, U. S. Department of Agriculture, 1901-1909. Student, University of Berlin, 1909. Chief of Cattle Food and Grain Investigation Labora- tory, Bureau of Chemistry, 1907-1909. Associate Professor of Organic and Physiological Chemistry, Massachusetts Agri- cultural College, 1909. Fred C. Kenney, Treasurer. Born 1869. Ferris Institute, 1890-91. Bookkeeper for Man- istee and Northeastern Railroad Company, 1891-1895. Assist- ant Secretary and Cashier of Michigan Agricultural College, 1895-1907. Treasurer of Massachusetts Agricultural College since July i, 1907. S. Francis Howard, B .S., M. S., Assistant! Professor of Chemistry. Born 1872. B. S., Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1894. S K. Principal of Eliot, Maine, High School, 1S95. Stu- dent of Philosophy, Johns Hopkins University, 1S96-98. Assistant Professor of Chemistry at Massachusetts Agricul- tural College since July, 1S99. M. S., Massachusetts Agri- cultural College, 1901. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 23 A. Vincent Osmun, B. Agr., M. S., Assistant Pro- fessor of Botany. Born iS8o. Connecticut Agricultural College, 1900. Assistant Storrs Agricultural Experiment Station, igoo-02. Massachu- setts Agricultural College, 1903. Q. T. V.. K , M.S., Maissac ' hu-setts Agricultural College, 1905. Instructor in Botany at Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1903-1907. Assistant Professor since June, 1907. Clarence Everett Gordon, B. S., A. M., Assistant Professor of Zoology and Geology. Born 1876. B. S. Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1901. Student Clark University, summer session, 1901-03. Science K $; C. S. C, B. S., Boston University, 1903. Instructor, Cushing Academy, Ashburnham, Mass., 1901-04. Graduate student in Geology and Zoology, Columbia Univer- sity, 1904-05. A. M., S H., Columbia University, 1905. Instructor iifGeology, summer session Columbia University, 1905. University Fellow in Geology, Columbia University, 1905-06. Assistant Professor in Zoology and Geology, Massa- chusetts Agricultural College, 1906. Robert Wilson Neal, A. B., A. M., Assistant Pro- fessor of English. Born 1S73. A.B. University of Kansas, 1898; A. M., 1S99. $ B K. Assistant in Department of English, University of Kansas, 1898-99. University scholar, Yale Graduate School, 1899-00. Teacher in Wallingford, Conn., High School, 1900- 01. Instructor in English, University of Cincinnati, 1901-02. Harvard Graduate School, 1902-03. A. M. Harvard, 1903. Substitute Instructor in English and Acting Head of De- partment, Rutgers College, 1903-04. Editorial department of The World ' s Work, 1904-06. Assistant Professor of Eng- lish and Instructor in German, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1906-08. A. M. Yale, 1908. Assistant Professor of English, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1908. Percy Loring Reynolds, M. D., Assistant Professor of Physical Education and Hygiene. Born 1876. International Y. M. C. A. Training School, 1902. M. D., University of Georgia, 1906. Assistant Instructor Training School, 1901-02. X Z X. Medical Fraternity. Physical Director at University of Maine, 1906-oS. Assistant Professor of Physical Education and Hygiene, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 190S 24 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI William P. B. Lockwood, B. S., M. Sc, Assistant Professor of Dairying. Born 1875. B. S. Pennsylvania State College, iSgg. K S. With Walker-Gordon Laboratory Co. of Boston and Phila- delphia, 1899-01. Instructor in Dairj ' ing, Pennsylvania State College, 1902-03. Inspector Hires Condensed Milk Co., Mal- vern, Pa., 1903-06. Creamery and Condensing Construction Work, 1906-08. Ms. C. Pennsylvania State College, 1909. Assistant Professor of Dairying, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1908. Elmer K. Eyerly, A. B., A. M., Assistant Professor of Political Science and Lecturer in Rural Sociology. Franklin and Marshall College, 1S8S; A. M., 1893. Student in Yale Divinity School,, 1S88-89. Professor of Political Economy, Redfield College, i88g-gi, 1892-93. Student of Political Economy, Berlin University, iSgi-gz. Professor of English Literature, Yonkton College, i8g3-9g. Student of Sociology, University of Chicago, summers of 1897, ' 98, ' 99. Professor of English Literature, South Dakota Agricultural College, 1 899-1907. Fellow in Sociology, University of Chi- cago, 1908. Fellow in Political Economy, ibid., 1909. In- structor of Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology, Correspondence-study Department, ibid., igoS-09. Assistant Professor of Political Science and Lecturer in Rural Soci- ology, Massachvisetts Agricultural College, igog. Robert H. Lyman, LL. B., Lecturer on Farm Lazv. Born 1850. B. S. Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1S71. K . Q. T. V. Followed Civil Engineering, 1 871 -78. Admitted to the Bar as Attorney at Law, 1878. LL. B., Boston University Law School, 1S79. Appointed Judge Dis- trict Court of Hampshire Countj ' , 1882. Registrar of Deeds for Hampshire County since i8gi. Lecturer Rural Law and Citizenship Law, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1882. George N. Holcomb, B. A., S. T. B., Lecturer in Political Science. Born 1872. Trinity College, 1896. Philadelphia Divinity School, I goo. Graduate Student in American Institutional and Political History at University of Pennsylvania, igoo-oi. Graduate Student in History and Economics. Harvard Uni- versity, igoi-03. Williams Fellow, Harvard Union, S. T. B., Harvard, igo3. Then engaged in agricultural work. In- structor in Economics in Massachusetts Agricultural College, igo7. Lecturer in Political Science in Massachusetts Agri- cultural College, igog. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 25 Sidney B. Haskell, B. S., Instructor in Agriculture Born 1881. C. S. C, $ K . Massachusetts Agricultural Col- lege, 1904. Assistant Agriculturalist, Hatch Experiment Station, June, 1904, to July, 1906. Instructor in Agriculture since September, 1905. Harold F. Thomson, B. Sc, Instrucor in Market Gardening. Born 1885. K S. Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1905. Instructor at Mount Hermon School, January, 1906, to Jan- uary, 1907. Instructor in Market Gardening at Massachusetts Agricultural College since February, 1907. Ray L. Geibben, B. S. Husbandry. A., Instructor in Animal B. S. A. Iowa State College, 1906. Assistant in Animal Husbandry in charge of livestock judging, Iowa State College, 1906-07. Instructor in Animal Husbandry since 1907. Edgar Louis Ashley, A. B., A. M., Instructor in German Born 1S80. Brown University, A. B., 1903; A. M., 1904. $ B K, $ K . Instructor in German at Brown Univer- sity, 1903-06. Student at University of Heidelberg, Germany, 1906-07. Instructor in German at Bates College, 1907-0S. Instructor in German at Massachusetts Agricultural College, 26 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLl A. Anderson McKimmie, A. B., Instructor in French and Spanish. Born 1878. A. B. Princeton University, 1906. B K. Bondinot Fellow in Modern Languages, 1906-07. Instructor in French, Colchester Academy, Truro, Nova Scotia, 1906-08. Instructor in French and Spanish at Massachusetts Agricul- tural College, 1908. C. Robert Duncan, B. S., Instructor in Mathematics and Physics. Born 1884. B. S. Rutgers College, 1906. On East River Division of Pennsylvania Tunnels, 1906-08. Instructor in Mathematics and Physics, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1908. Charles Robert Green, B. Apt., Libre nan Born 1876. Connecticut Agricultural College, 1S95. T!te Hartford Courant, 1895-1901. Assistant Librarian, Connecti- cut State Library, igoi-o8. Librarian at Massachusetts Agricultural College since September, 1908. Frederick B. McKay, B. A., Instructor and Public Speaking. in En$:lish Michigan Normal College, 1902. Instructor Reading and Oratory Department of the Michigan Normal College, 1909. Instructor in English and Public Speaking at Massachusetts Agricultural College since September, 1909. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 27 Harry Milliken Jennison, B. Sc, Instructor in Botany at the Massachusetts Agricultural College. Born 1885. B. Sc. Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1908. C. S. C. John Noyes, B. Sc, Assistant in Landscape Gar- dening. Born 18S6. B. Sc. Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1909. Q. T. V. John N. Summers, B. Sc, Assistant in Entomology. Born 188 c. s. c. B. Sc. Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1907. Frank William Rane, M. S., Lecturer in Forestry. Born 1 868. Ohio State University, B. Agr. 1891. Cornell University, M. Sc, 1892. A 9. Lecturer in Forestry at the Massachusetts Agricultural College since September 15, 1906. 28 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Floyd B. Jenks, A. B., Instructor in Agricultural Ed- ucation. A. B. from Purdue University. Practical farmer and dairy- man. Speaker for the Indiana Farmers ' Institute. Teacher of Elementary Agriculture, Goshen High School, 1904-08. In- structor in Agricultural Education at Massachusetts Agri- cultural College since 1908. Alexander E. Cance, B. S., M. S., Ph. D., Instructor in Agricultural Economics. B. S. from Yale University; M. S. and Ph. D. from Univer- sity of Wisconsin. Instructor in Agricultural Economics at Massachusetts Agricultural College since 1908. (ifi rprs of tl|f iEKp rtmrtit B ' tattntia Charles A. Goessmann, Ph. D., LL. D., Honorary Director and Expert Consulting Chemist William P. Brooks, Ph. D., Director Fred C. Kenney, Treasurer Charles R. Green, B. Agr., Librarian SppartmPitt nf (Hljpmtalrg Joseph B. Lindsey, Ph. D., Chemist Edward B. Holland, M. Sc, Associate Chemist in Charge of Research Division Henri D. Haskins, B. Sc, In Charge of Fertilizer Division Philip H. Smith, B. Sc, In Charge of Feed and Dairy Division Roy E. Gaskill Assistant in Animal Nutrition Lewell S. Walker, B. Sc, Assistant Philip V. Goldsmith, B. Sc, Assistant Amity St M. A. C. Mount Pleasant Mount Pleasant 47 Lincoln Ave. 28 North Prospect St. 87 Pleasant St. 102 Main St. M. A. C. 19 Phillips St. 32 North Prospect St. 30 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI James C. Reed, B. Sc, Assistant Charles D. Kennedy, Assistant Ifpartmfttt of Agritttlturp William P. Brooks, Ph. D., Agriculturalist Erwin S. Fulton, B. Sc, First Assistant Agriculturalist Edwin F. Gaskill, B. Sc, Second Assistant Agriculturalist Sppartitipnt nf ffarttrulturp Frank A. Waugh, M. Sc, Horticulturalist Fred C. Sears, M. Sc, Pomologist Jacok K. Shaw, M. Sc, Assistant Horticulturalist 19 Phillips St. 120 Pleasant St. M. A. C. North Amherst. Mr. Goldberg ' s. I M. A. C. Mount Pleasant. I Allen St. Ippartmpnt of iBatang anb Ipgttablr PattfolDgg George E. Stone, Ph. D., Botanist and Vegetable Pathologist George H. Chapman, B. Sc, Assistant Botanist Sppartmfnt nf iEntmnologa Charles H. Fernald, Ph. D., Entomologist Henry T. Fernald, Associate Entomologist John N. Summers, B. Sc, Assistant Entomologist Bppartmntt of Urtprinarg rirnrf James B. Paige, B. Sc, D. V. S., Veterinarian ippartmput of iMrtfurolnga John E. Ostrander, A. M., C. E., Meteorologist Charles M. Damon, Observer Mt. Pleasant 13 Fearing St. 3 Hallock St. 44 Amity St 66 Pleasant St. 42 Lincoln Ave. 33 N. Prospect St. M. A. C. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE ®tl|er ©ffirpra nf lift xpstimeat tatintt Miss Rose J. Brown, Secretary to the Director Miss Jesse V. Crocker, Stenographer, Department of Botany and Vegetable Pathology Miss Harriet Cobb, Stenographer, Department of Plant and Animal Chemistry Miss Bridie O ' Donnell Stenographer, Department of Entomology mi}n (ttollpgt WStceta Elwin H. Porristall, M. Sc, Farm Superintendent Ralph J. Watts, B. Sc, Secretary to the President Charles H. White, B. Sc, Field Agent Newton Wallace, Electr Clarence A. Jewett, Superintendent of Buildings James Whiting, Foreman, Department of Floriculture Burke Huff, Purchasing Agent Miss Mary E. Caldwell, Bookkeeper, Treasurer ' s Office Miss Clara L. Stuart, Correspondence Clerk Miss Henrietta Webster, Clerk, Treasurer ' s Office Miss Gertrude Warner, Stenographer, Division of Agriculture Miss Ruth G. Smith, Clerk to the Dean and Registrar Miss Ola H. Perrin, Clerk to the Director of Short Courses Miss Helen Granger, Clerk to the Division of Horticulture Draper Hall Sunderland, Mass. 33 Cottage St. Amherst, Mass M. A. C. 9 Fearing St. 9 Fearing St. 6 Phillips St. 112 Pleasant St. Draper Hall Draper Hall Draper Hall 79 Pleasant St. Draper Hall North Amherst Draper Hall Draper Hall 32 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI dra uat? tubftttsi Bartlett. Oscar C. B. Sc, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1909 Bourne, Arthur I. A. B., Dartmouth, 1907 Caffrey, Donald J. B. Sc, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1909 ChapmaNj George H. B. Sg., Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1907 Davis, Edward M. A. B., Harvard, 1909 Davis,, Irving G. A. B., Bates, 1906 GiBLiN, Edward M. A. B., Boston College, 1905 Holland, Edward B. M. S., Massachusetts Agricultural College Jennison, Harry M. B. Sc, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1908 Johnston, Frederick A. B. Sc, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1908 Merrill, Joseph H. B, S., Dartmouth, 1905 Parker, Jolin R. B. Sc, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1908 Regan, William S. B. Sc, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 190S Shaw, J. Kingsley University of Vermont, 1899 B. Sc, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1908 Smith, Phillip H. B. Sc, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1897 Summers, John N. B. Sc, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1907 ToppAN, Gushing A. B., Harvard, 1908 Waters, Theodore C. B. Sc, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1909 Whitmarsh, Raymond D. B. Sc, Massachusetts Agricultural College, 190S Westhampton Kensington, N. H. Gardner Amherst Cambridge Auliurn, Me. Holliston Amherst Millloury West ford Danvers Paquonoclv, Conn. Nortliampton Amherst Amherst Campello Cambridge Rocky Hill, Conn. Amherst MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 35 futor iltatorg HIS, the last history of our college years, is before you, yet it is only a very small part of our real history. This part, no matter how small it may be in the matter of words, means much to us, for it binds the past, present, and future with glory of color and its slow change to the more sombre side of life, is typically significant of the senior year. It has been during the last year that we have really found our friends. Like a veteran regiment, defeated perhaps in numbers, we are yet so close together that only death can really break our friendships. The year has transformed us from Jolly Juniors to Grave old Seniors. We are not here now to blazen forth glorious victories or to tell about class victories. The days of boasting are over. There are many memories of achievements and good times laid up in our hearts, memories that, way on in our future, will come stealing back to us, to lighten our load and cheer us on to victory. It is not the past we are thinking of now; it is the future. As the wheel starts on its fourth round, we look with feelings of joy and sadness. Joy, as we look to the nearing completion of our college course, and to that which, so full of promise, lies beyond. Feelings of sadness, at the thought of leaving the Alma Mater, who so kindly sheltered us for four years. So now, as we pass out of the circle of the classes, feeling that we have tried to stand by the best ideals of the college, it is our hope that the othe r classes too, will keep and endeavor to raise yet still higher, those ideals. 36 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI QUaaa (iffirprfi Walter R. Clarke Ralph A. Waldron Henry T. Cowles Charles A. Oertel George N. Vinton William E. Leonard President Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer Class Captain Sergeant-at-Arms Historian OIIaHH frfl i—g—T—E—N! Massachusetts Nineteen Ten OlkBH dalara Blue and White MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLI-EGE 37 mnsB of 13in Allen, Rudolphus Harold Fall River KS; 12 South College; Manager Varsity Football; President Fraternity Conference ; Class Baseball ; Class Basketball ; Manager Class Football ; Mandolin Club ; Class Sergeant-at-arms. AnniSj Ross Evered Natick 2K; K; 14 South College Armstrong, Robert Pierson Rutherford, N. J. $ S K; 13 South College; Fraternity Conference; Stock Judging Team; Class Vice-President, 1909; Class Track Bailey, Dexter Edward Tewksbury e ; e House ; Class Track Bailey, Justus Conant Wareham e ; e House Beeman, Francis Stone West Brookfield KS; K 2 House; Class Secretary and Treasurer, 1906; Freshman Rope Pull Blaney, Jonathan Phillips Swampscott C. S. C. ; 10 South College; Captain Varsity Football; Class Baseball; Captain Class Football; Class Basketball; 1910 Index Brandt, Louis Everett KS;K 2 House; Captain Varsity Hockey; Class Captain, 1908; Class Foot- ball; Class Basketball; Rope Pull; Glee Club; Choir; Burnham Eight; 1910 Index Brooks, Henry Alvan . Cleveland 2K; 16 South College; College Senate; Vice-President Y. M. C. A.; Signal Board; Class Baseball; Class Vice-President; 1910 Index Brooks, Sumner Gushing Amherst 2K; M. A. C. Grounds; Class President ' 06; Class Track Brown, Louis Carmel Bridgewater KS; 12 South College; Captain Class Baseball; Class Football; Signal Board Burke, Edward Joseph Holyoke C. S. C. ; 9 South College ; Captain Varsity Basketball ; Manager Varsity Baseball ; Captain Class Basketball 38 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Clarke, Walter Roe Milton-on-Hudson, New York KS: 4 South College; College Senate; Editor-in-chief College Signal; Editor- in-chief 1910 Index; Class President Cloues_, William Arthur Warner, N. H. Q. T. V. ; 7 South College ; Varsity Track ; Captain Class Track CowLES, Henry Trask Worcester ' 3 ; 9 $ House; College Senate; Class Baseball; Rope Pull; Track; Class Secretary and Treasurer; Second Prize Burnham Essay. Damon, Edward Farnham Concord Junction SK; 18 South College; Business Manager Signal; Cheer Leader; Class Baseball; Class Track; Assistant Manager 1910 Index Dickinson, Lawrence Sumner Amherst SK; M. A. C. Grounds; Manager of the Musical Club; Manager Junior Play ; Captain Varsity Relay Team ; Mandolin Club Eddy, Roger Sherman Dorchester Q. T. v.; 116 Pleasant Street; Manager Track Association; Class President Class Football and Rope Pull; Second Prize Flint Speaking; H. H. Everson, John Nelson Hanover 2 South College ; Manager Class Basketball ; Captain Class Track Team FisKE, John Raymond Danvers e ; House Folsom, Josiah Chase Billerica 10 North College; Signal Board; Y. M. C. A. Handbook Committee; Treasurer Debating Club Francis, Henry Russell Dennisport Q. T. V. ; 5 South College French, Horace Wells Pawtucket, R. I. 4 S K ; North Amherst ; Varsity Football ; Baseball ; Captain Varsity Baseball Assistant Manager Varsity Football ; President New England Federation of Agricultural Students ; President Stockbridge Club ; Class Football and Baseball Haynes, Frank Tuttle Sturbridge Q. T. V. ; 8 South College ; Vice-President College Senate ; Vice-President Stockbridge Club; President Y. M. C. A.; Class President; Vice-President Social Union; Business Manager 1910 Index Hazen, Myron Smith Springfield K S ; Veterinary Laboratory ; Varsity Football ; Burnham Prize Speaking Eight ; Flint Prize Speaking Eight ; Class Football ; Rope Pull Hayward, Warren Willis Millbury Care John Walsh MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 39 Holland, Arthur Witt Shrewsbury K S: 12 North College; Flint Prize Speaking; Treasurer Y. M. C. A.; Class Track HosMER, Charles Irving Turner ' s Falls C. S. C. ; 9 South College ; Varsity Football ; Basketball ; Baseball Johnson, William Clarence South Framingham Q. T. V. : 5 South College; First Prize Flint Prize Speaking; Secretary and Treasurer Chemical Club; Class Baseball; Class Track; 1910 Index Leonard, William Edward Belmont C. S. C. ; 10 South College; President Senate; Fraternity Conference; Varsity Football ; Burnham Eight ; Assistant Manager Varsity Basketball ; Class President ; Class Historian ; Class Track ; Football, Basketball, Rope Pull McLaine, Leonard Septimus New York, N. Y. KS; 4 South College; Class President; Class Vice-President; Cheer Leader; 1910 Index Mendum, Samuel Weis Roxbury e • 0$ House; Third Prize Burnham Essay; Fraternity Conference Nickless, Fred Parker Carlisle e ; 10 North College; Class Track Oertel, Charles Andrew South Hadley Falls 14 North College; Class Captain Partridge, Frank Herbert Cambridge S K ; Clark Hall ; Class Football and Baseball Paulsen, George New York N. Y. K S ; 2 South College ; President Rifle Club ; Captain Rifle Teams Rockwood, Albert Fletcher Concord. SK; 17 South College; Captain Tennis Team; Tennis Championship; Class Baseball Schermerhorn, Lyman Gibbs Kingston, R. I. Q. T. V. ; II South College ; Varsity Football and Basketball ; Manager Hockey Team ; Class Football, Basketball, Baseball, Track, and Rope Pull ; Class Captain Thomas, Frank Lincoln Athol Q. T. v.; 1 1 North College; Manager Tennis; Treasurer Musical Association; Class Football, Baseball and Track; 1910 Index; Class Secretary and Treasurer Titus, Willard McCready Snow New Braintree SK; 16 South College; Class Sergeant-at-arms 40 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Turner, Edward Harrison Reading Q. T. v.; 6 South College; Fraternity Conference; Burnham Eight; Class Football Urban, Otto Velorous Taft Upton K S ; K S Hotise ; President Chemical Club ; Class Football ; Track Vinton, George Newton Care Mrs. Tripp, East Pleasant Street ; Class Sergeant-at-arms Sturbrids ' e Waldron, Ralph Augustus Hyde Park Q. T. V. ; 6 South College ; President IMusical Association ; President Debating Club; Mandolin Club; Band; Class Vice-President; Class Captain; Class Basketball and Track Wallace, William Newton 6 Phillips Street Amherst MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 43 Sitntnr l|tBtiirg XCE more the hurrying hand of Time has brought a new class — nineteen hundred ' leven — to the pubhcation of its pride — the Index — and with it comes that necessary evil, the class history. From the staid and grave dignity of upper classmen, we ma} look back upon our Freshman and Sophomore years with a feeling of C]uiet satisfaction with work well done. Though small in numbers, it can never be said that we have been found wanting in spirit. To all phases of the full, bi ' oad college life, our class has given freely of its best. The year with us has scarcely been one of excitement. Rather we have pursued the even tenor of our way, undisturbed by the petty ripples which would fain have engulfed us. As disciplinarians our influence has been most strongly felt. Indeed, so ardently did we pursue our attentions along this line that the class which succeeds us has decided that our treatment should be enough for two years, and has, in consequence, relinquished all the pleasures incident to a paddling match or a ducking bee. In the field of athletics we have had our share of the sweets of victory as well as the bitterness of defeat. To the green but promising Freshman class we have handed down the doggedness and the never-give-up spirit which is one of the attributes of our Alma Mater. This is evidenced by this year ' s tug-of-war. In the class-room our record has fully ecjualled and even surpassed that on the field. Our victories over the tough places in the Sophomore year were manifold. As soon, however, as we had conquered the bugbears of our course, the cm-riculum was greatly altered and mitigated. Evidently our friends, the faculty, recognized the necessity of quitting the old schedule when classes which could not possibly measure up to Eleven appeared on the scene. But enough of boasting and vaunting. That partakes too much of the class spirit. During the first two years of our college life we have come to consider our College first in all things, not class nor clicpe, but M. A. C, first, last, and always. It is, then, with this spirit, that we are passing through our Junior year, and with which, if it may be, we wish to enter the golden days which mark the final, the Senior year, in our beloved Alma Mater. 44 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Juntnr Qllaaa ©ffiarB Herbert W. Blaney Percy W. Pickard Clarence A. Smith He rman A. Pauly Raymond G. Smith Allyn p. Bursley President Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer Class Captain Sergeant-at-Arms Historian Cdlaaa fFll Ki Ro, Ki Ro, Ki Ro, Ke! Nineteen ' Leven M. A. C. (Ckaa fflolora Brown and White. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 45 mUBB of IHH Adaais, James Fowler Melrose Q. T. V. ; II South College; Class Football; Class President, 1908-1909; Band; Glee Club; Fraternity Conference; Varsity Hockey; Assistant Manager Varsity Football Allen, Parker West Westfield 2K; 18 South College; Class Secretary and Treasurer, 1908; Senate; Signal Board ; Leader Glee Club ; Band Armstrong, Ralph Henry Holyoke 75 Pleasant Street ; Class Basketball and Baseball Baker, Herbert Jonathan Selbyville, Del. K 2 ; 4 North College ; Sophomore Rope Pull Team ; President Debating Club, 1909; Assistant Business Manager Index Barrows, Raymond Corbin Union, Conn. Q. T. v.; 16 North College; Class Basketball and Baseball; Captain Class Track Bean, Thomas Webster South Hadley Falls C. S. C. ; 75 Pleasant Street ; Class Baseball ; Varsity Baseball Bentley, Arnold Gordon Hyde Park Q. T. V. ; 3 North College; Manager Class Rope Pull; Class Baseball; Varsity Hockey Blaney, Herbert Wardwell Swampscott C. S. C. ; Tower, South College; Manager Class Baseball, 1907-1908; Burnham Eight ; Class President ; Senate ; Vice-President Fraternity Con- ference ; Signal Board ; Business Manager Index Brown, Edgar Morton Merrick 6 ; 8 House; Signal Board; Index Board; Manager Class Football; Class Baseball Burnham, Arthur James Holyoke C. S. C. ; 75 Pleasant Street ; Class Baseball Bursley, Allyn Parker West Barnstable e ; e House; Class Football; Class Basketball; Class Historian; Index Board ; Senate ; First Prize Burnham Eight 46 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI CoNANT, Arthur Theodore Sunderland Brooks Farm Damon, Charles Murray Williamsburg C. S. C. ; Tower, South College ; Class Football ; Captain Rope Pull Teams 1907-1908; Class Captain, 1908 Davis, Egbert Norton Sherborn 7 North College Davls, Irving Wilder Lowell K S; Insectary ; Class Vice-President, 1908; Band; Burnham Eight; Index Board Drury, Harold Blake Athol 6 North College Dudley, John Edward, Jr. Newton Center Q. T. V. ; II North College; Manager Class Track; Class Baseball; Class Track and Rope Pull ; Varsity Track GiLGORE, Irving Craig Schenectady, N. Y. Q. T. V. ; 3 North College Henry Willard Francis Hopedale 6 ; e $ House; Fraternity Conference Hill, Nathaniel Herbert Hopewell, N. J. S K; 19 South College; Class Baseball and Rope Pull Teams; Fraternity Conference Howe, Harold Hosmer Springfield K S; Wilder Hall; Choir; Class Secretary, 1907; Burnham Eight Jenks, Albert Roscoe Three Rivers Plant House Johnson, Leonard Matthews Easthampton 2 North College; Class Secretary and Treasurer, 1908-1909; Class Basketball; Varsity Tennis Labouteley, Gaston Edward Lynn K S; 1 01 Pleasant Street Larrabee, Edward Arthur Winthrop K S; Clark Hall; Class Historian, 1907-1908; Class Basketball MASS ACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 47 Lodge, Charles Albert, Jr. Manchester C. S. C, ; 14 North College; Class Vice-President, 1907; Manager Varsity Baseball McGraw, Frank Dobson Fall River C. S. C; IS North College McLaughlin, Frederick Adams Lee K S; 4 North College; Rifle Team; Class Football, 1908 Morse, Henry Bowditch Salem K S; 75 Pleasant Street; Captain Class Football and Basketball; Class Base- ball and Track ; Varsity Football Magai, Isaburo - Tokyo, Japan 9 North College NiCKERSON, George Payne Amherst 2 K ; East Experiment Station ; Class Baseball, Football, Basketball and Track ; Assistant jVIanager Varsity Hockey Neilsen, Gustaf Arnold West Newton C. S. C. ; 15 North College OsTROLENK, Bernhard Gloversville, N. Y. 9 North College ; Class Football ; Vice-President Debating Club Parsons, Samuel Reynolds N. Amherst Q T V. ; North Amherst ; Organist ; Assistant Editor Index Patch, Roland Harrison Wenham 6 ; 35 North Prospect Street Pauly, Herman Alfred . Somerville Nash Hall; Class Football; Class Captain PiCKARD, Percy William Hopedale Q. T. v.; 16 North College; Class Football, Baseball and Track Teams; Class Vice-President; Senate; Western Alumni Prize; Index Board Piper, Ralph Waldo South Acton Q. T. V. ; 8 North College; Captain Class Baseball, 1908; Manager Class Rope Pull Prouty, Frank Alvin Worcester Q. T. v.; Snell Street; Band; Choir; Class Track THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Prouty, Philip Herman Shrewsbury Q. T. V. ; West Experiment Station Racicot, Phileas Armand Lowell ■fSK; 15 South College; Leader Orchestra; Rifle Teams; Artist Index Robinson, Ralph Gushing South Boston 7 North College ; Class Football Smith, Clarence Albert Northampton Q. T. v.; S North College; Class Basketball; Class Vice-President, 190S, and Class Secretary and Treasurer Smith, Raymond Goodale Lynn 3 Fearing Street ; Class Football ; Class Sergeant-at-arms Stevenson, Lomas Oswald Radcliffe-on-Trent, England C. S. C. ; 87 Pleasant Street; Rifle Teams; Class Basketball; Index Sharpe, Arthur Harris Saxonville K S • K S House ; Fraternity Conference ; Signal Board ; Secretary Rifle Club ; Rifle Teams; Class Captain, 1909; Class Football and Basketball; Editor-in- chief Index Warren, Edward Erving Leicester PEK;is South College Whitney, Raymond Lee Amherst Q. T. V. ; 6 Maple Avenue ; Leader of Band ; Class Football ; Orchestra Willard, Harold Francis Leominster PEK; 14 South College; Class Track; Class Rope Pull Winn, Erwin Lawrence • Holden 87 Pleasant Street ; Class Baseball ; Choir ; Band TKe I Q t- ei )) •r e MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 51 opJinmor? HftBtorg I N entering the second year of otn- college career we are at the beginning of a more auspicious period than the first. The ensuing year is more propitious, because of the changed atmosphere, the different relations, and the greater oppor- tunities. As Freshmen, we were the largest class that ever entered M. A. C. From the time of our entrance we began to find our places, to be enthused with college spirit and to take our part in college activities. Some of us didn ' t find our places without much diligent searching and even then, not until the closing months of the year. Of course the upper classmen had to aid us, but we choose to use moral persuasion in directing wayward freshmen. Our college spirit is, perhaps, best shown in our attitude towards inter- class and college athletics. The tug-of-war made a successful beginning for us. This victory over the sophomores was but the vanguard of a year almost full of class victories for us. The college too, we are proud to say, was willing to have some of our members on many of its teams. During last year our class was and even this year expects to be, prominent in the varied college activities. We hope that by so doing we may make our college a bigger, better, and busier M. A. C. 52 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Ralph R. Parker -------- President. Charles C. Pearson ------ Vice-President. Arthur F. Kingsbury ----- Secretar} ' and Treasurer. Fred S. Merrill ------- Class Captain. Howard H. Wood ------- Sergeant-at-Arms. Edwin B. Young -------- Historian. (ClaoB frll J thrat, ta thrat, ta thrat! TerOj da li.v, da lix, da li.v! Kicka, zvah ha! Kicka, ivah ha! ipi2 Rah! Rah! Rah! Massachusetts QIIaBB (Unlora Silver Gray and Maroon MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 53 mnsB of 19U AcKERMAN, Arthur John Worcester Q. T. V. ; 5 McClellan Street; Varsity Baseball and Hockey; Class Baseball Beals, Carlos Loring Sunderland Brooks Farm Beers, Roland Trowbridge Billerica C. S. C. : West Experiment Station ; Class Track Team Bent, William Richard Marlboro Lovers ' Lane; Burnham Eight Birdsall, Webster Jennings Otego, N. Y. KS; 28 Lincoln Avenue; Assistant Manager Varsity Baseball; Class Track Team Bodfish, Edward Hill West Barnstable 6 Phillips Street Boland, Eric Nichols South Boston SK; 13 Fearing Street Brett, Alden Charles North Abington K2; KS House; Class Historian, 1909; Class Rope Pull Teams; Class Basketball ; Band ; Signal Board ; Rifle Team ; Debating Club ; Editor-in-chief 1912 Index Brown, Merle Raymond Greenwich Village 60 College Street Burr, Frederick Huntington Worthington 9$; 21 Fearing Street Cabot, George Dwight Winchester SK; 79 Pleasant Street; Band; Mandolin Club; Manager Class Track Team Caldwell, Lawrence Sanborn Lynn KS;KS House; Class Vice-President, 1909; Manager Class Basketball Carpenter, Jesse, Jr. Attleboro K2;KS House; Class Baseball and Basketball; Manager Class Basketball Castle, Fred Arlo Seattle, Wash. $SK; East Experiment Station; Business Manager 1912 Index Clapp, Raymond Kingsley Westhampton e ;20 North College; Class Track Team CuRRAN, Daniel Joseph Marlboro Lovers ' Lane; Class Football and Baseball Teams Daniel, Edward Stephen Coen Osterville Q. T. V. ; 9 Fearing Street Dee, John Francis Worcester 6 Nutting Avenue; Burnham Eight; Class Track; Winner Cross Country, 1908 Deming, Winifred Griswold Wethersfield, Conn. SK; 6 Nutting Avenue Dodge, Albert Wesley Wenham Brooks Farm; Signal Board 54 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI ElSENHAURE, JOHN LOUIS 6 Nutting Avenue ; Captain Class Rope Pull Teams ; Class Football EllSj Gordon Waterman 44 Triangle Street Fagerstrom, Leon Emanuel Q. T. V. ; 3 East Pleasant Street ; Manager Class Baseball Fisherdick, Warren Francis 26 South Pleasant Street; Band FiTTS, Frank Orus 6 ; North Amherst Fitzgerald, John Joseph 75 Pleasant Street Fowler, Gejrge Scott 85 Pleasant Street Frost, Newton John 75 Pleasant Street ; Band Gallagher, James Andrew 85 Pleasant Street Gaskill, Lewis Warren C. S. C. ; Goldberg ' s ; Band Gelinas, Louis Edmund Nash Hall ; Class Rope Pull Team GiBBS, Robert Morey Brooks Farm Gibson, Lester Earle K S ; 85 Pleasant Street Gray, Frank Leonard 21 Fearing Street; Band; Burnham Eight; Class Basketball Team Hallowell, Royal Norton K 2 ; K E House ; Mandolin Club ; Burnham Eight Harlow, Joseph Alvin K S ; K S House ; Class Track Team Heald, Jay Morrill, Q. T. V. ; 2 North College; Band; Banjo Club Hemenway, Thomas $ S K West Experiment Station; Class Secretary and Treasurer, 1909; Varsity Hockey Hills, Frank Burrows Q. T. V. ; 8 South College; First Prize, Burnham Eight Hickey, Francis Benedict C. S. C. : 5 McClellan Street Holland, Henry Lucius 28 North Prospect Street HuTCHiNGS, Herbert Colby E. H. Forristall ' s ; Class Track Kingsbury, Arthur French 9 $ ; 20 North College ; Class Secretary and Treasurer North Reading Cambridge Worcester Amherst North Amherst Holyoke Wayland Natick North Wihnington Hopedale North Adams Chester Melrose Highlands East Boston Jamaica Plain Turner ' s Falls Watertown Winchester irsity Bernardston Brockton Amherst South Amherst Medfield MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 55 Amherst Boston Canton Orange East Greenwich, R. I. Amherst Elkhart, Ind. Worcester Amherst Danvers Lamson, Robert Ward 51 Pleasant Street Lloyd, Edward Russell 3 Nutting Avenue LowRY, QuiNCY Shaw K S ; 85 Pleasant Street ; Manager Class Track Team LuNDGREN, Arthur Robert e ; e House Madison, Francis S. 12 Cottage Strreet Martin, James Francis C. S. C. ; 19 South East Street Maxon, Donald Charles 25 Sunset Avenut : Burnham Eight McGarr, Thomas Anthony 31 East Pleasant Street; Class Baseball and Basketball Team: Merkle, George Edward East Street Merrill, Fred Sawyer C. S. C. ; 5 Fearing Street; Class Captain; Class Sergeant-at-arms, 1909; Class Football Moreau, Theodore Joseph Turner ' s Falls 2 North College; Varsity Basketball; Class Football and Basketball Teams Muller, Alfred Frederick Jamaica Plain 31 East Pleasant Street; Class Basketball and Baseball Teams NoYES, Harry Alfred Marlboro Plant House O ' Flynn, George Bernard Worcester 75 Pleasant Street Parker, Ralph Robinson Penekese Island C. S. C. ; 13 North College; Class Secretary and Treasurer, 1909; Class Rope Pull Team, 1909; Class President Pearson, Charles Cornish Arlington 2 K ; 5 North College ; Varsity Basketball ; Class Basketball ; Class Vice- President Peckham, Curtis Clififord C. S. C. : I North College ; Varsity Hockey ; Class Baseball Philbrick, William Edwin Taunton $ S K; 5 North College; Manager Class Football Team Pierpont, John Edward Williamsburg C. S. C. ; 6 Nutting Avenue ; Class Rope Pull Teams Pratt, Marshall Cotting Lowell K S ; 85 Pleasant Street Puffer, Stephen Perry North Amherst C. S. C. ; North Amherst ; Band ; Varsity Hockey Raymond, Arthur Nathaniel Leominster 31 East Pleasant Street 56 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLl Reed, Robert Edward Abington e ; e House Roberts, Clarence Dwight New Haven, Conn. 10 Allen Street Robinson, Earle Johnson Hingham Q. T. v.; 116 Pleasant Street; Class Rope Pull Teams RocKWOOD, Lawrence Peck Waterbury, Conn. 116 Pleasant Street Sanctuary, William Crocker Amherst 9 ; Amherst: Varsity Hockey; Class Rope Pull Teams Sellew, Lewis Raymond Natick Brooks Farm Shaw, Ezra Ingram Amherst KS; 8 Spaulding Street; Class President, 1908 and 1909 Southwick, Benjamin Gilbert Buckland 82 Pleasant Street Stack, Herbert James Conway Pleasant Street ToRREY, Ray Ethan North Leverett East Pleasant Street Tower, Daniel Gordon Roxbury $SK; 13 South College; Class Vice-President, 1909; Class Football and Class Track Teams Tupper, George Wilbur Jamaica Plain C. S. C. ; 13 North College; Manager Rope Pull Team Turner, Howard Archibald Dorchester East Pleasant Street Wales, Robert Webster North Abington KS; KS House; Orchestra; Class Track Team; Botany Prize Walker, Herman Chester Marlboro $ S K; Brooks Farm; Varsity Football; Class Football; Class Captain, 190S Warner, Roger Andrew Sunderland 6 ; E. H. Forristall ' s; Band Weaver, William Jack Alandar 10 Allen Street Whitney, Charles Everett Wakefield Brooks Farm Wilbur, Emory Sherman East Wareham Brooks Farm ; Band Wilde, Earle Irving Taunton KS;KS House; Band; Class Football Williams, Edward Roger Concord Q. T. V. ; 3 North College ; Varsity Baseball ; Captain Class Baseball ; Class Football Williams, Silas Fall River e ; 6 House; Band Wood, Howard Holmes Shelburne Falls $SK; 79 Pleasant Street; Class Football; Class Sergeant-at-arms Young, Edwin Burnham Dorchester 5 Fearing Street ; Burnham Eight ; Class Historian MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 59 iFr?Hl)man l iatorg HORT but eventful has been our class history. The first Satur- day night, the Sophomores, fearing that we lacked entertain- ment, treated us to a parade which gave us a good view of Amherst by lamplight. It was a howling success. Soon after this, under the kind coaching of the Juniors, we began to prepare for the six-man rope pull. But before we had time to be coached into good form the Sophomores challenged us and we were obliged to enter into the contest. Our men fought hard but were defeatetl. Then came the great rope-pull across the pond. The afternoon on w!i;cii the pull was scheduled, both teams assembled and the contest began in earnest. The rope, however, could not stand the strain and parted twice. This neces- sitaicd getting a new rope, therefore the contest had to be postponed until the following afternoon. The time soon arrived and again the opposing classes lined up to do or die. It was a record pull. For the first few minutes dele. it stared us in the face. But the tide soon turned and ' 13 began to gain ground. Tliis gave us new hope and courage, and spurred on by the cheers of tlie Juniors and visitors, we succeeded in giving the class of 1912 a ducking in the college pond. We have already shown our college spirit in football — a large numbei ' reporting for practice — and in this and other forms of athletics we hope to ;lo well for Massachusetts. A bright future looms before us; a future full of energy, and spirit, and loyalty; first, to our beloved M. A. C, and then to our class, the class of 191, •!. 60 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI iFrpalfman ffllaaH (©fitr ra Oscar G. Anderson ... . . . . . . President Frederick A. Kenney ...... Vice-President Ralph J. Borden . . . . ' . . Secretary and Treasurer William S. Hayden Class Captain Frank J. Clegg Sergeant-at-arms Harold E. Jenks Historian QJlaaa f?U One-nine-one-three Nineteen thirteen M. A. C. (Ulaaa Ololora Maroon and White MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE- 61 m BB of 1913 Adams, Winfokd F. 2 Allen Street Allen, Harry W. West Pelham AmeSj Francis L. loi Pleasant Street Anderson, Oscar G. 85 Pleasant Street Angier, Harris W. 77 Pleasant Street Baird, Harry A. 6 Phillips Street Baker, Dean F. Brooks Farm Baker, Howard M. Chemical Laboratory Baker, Warren S. 75 Pleasant Street Barber, George W. Ill Pleasant Street Blake, Ralph C. 75 Pleasant Street Borden, Ralph J. I Allen Street Bradley, John W. Taylor ' s Place Brewer, Charlesworth H. Henry Nash ' s Brown, Herbert A. Brooks Farm Bullard, Alvan H. 75 Pleasant Street Burby, Laurence W. 19 Halleck Street Bursley, Harold B. 44 Triangle Street Caldwell, David S. East Experiment Station Carver, John S. 15 Fearing Street East Everett West Pelham Cochituate East Pepperell Westboro Somerville New Bedford Selbyville, Del. Wollaston Franklin Wollaston Fall River Groton Mount Vernon, N. H. Saxonville South Framingham Chicopee Falls Peabody South Byfield Roslindale 62 THE 19] 1 INDEX VOLUME XLI Chun, Woon Y. 90 Pleasant Street Clark, Norman R. 66 Pleasant Street Clegg, Frank J. 6 Kellogg Avenue Cleveland, Waldo A. 14 Kellogg Avenue Cobb, Joseph B. 84 Pleasant Street Cole, Arlin T. 3 Fearing Street Coleman, Isaac 8 Walnut Street Cooper, Everett H. Brooks Farm Cory, Harold 82 Pleasant Street CowLES, Winfred p. North Hadley Cristman, Clyde E. 44 Triangle Street Currier, Richard H. Curtis, Harold W. 19 High Street Dayton, James W. 25 College Street DOHANIAN, SeNEKEKIM M. Syi Pleasant Street DooLEY, Thomas P. 12 Halleck Street DowD, Daniel J. 12 East Pleasant Street Drury, Lewis F. North Amherst Edminster, Albert F. Mount Pleasant Ellis, Benjamin W. 120 Pleasant Street EvERSON, Leon W. 44Triangle Street Fay, Robert S. 120 Pleasant Street FoRBUSH, Wallace C. 12 East Pleasant Street Freifeld, Joseph 8 Walnut Street Shanghai, China Worcester Fall River Baldwinville Chicopee Falls West Chesterfield Boston Greenwood Rutherford, N. J. N. Hadley Dalton Pelham, N. H. Belchertown South Norwalk, Conn. Somerville South Boston North Amherst Rutland Brooklyn, N. Y. Plymouth Bryantville Monson Rutland New Bedford MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 63 French, James D. 1 16 Pleasant Street Fuller, George Corner Amity Street and Lincoln A ' ei Gaskill, Ralph H. Brooks Farm GoDviN, Thomas J. 4 East Pleasant Street GooDNOUGH, Henry E. 85 Pleasant Street Gore, Walter M. 75 Pleasant Street Greenleaf, WillL ' Vm F. 21 Fearing Street Griffin, William G. Griggs, Frederick D. 84 Pleasant Street Guild, Louis F. Forristall ' s Harrington, Russell C. 58 Pleasant Street Harris, Burton A. 66 Pleasant Street Hadsey. Willard H. 5 McClellan Street Hatch, Herbert T. Brooks Farm Hayden, Williaai Y. 3 McClellan Street Headle, Herbert W. North Amherst Headle, Marshall North Amherst Heath, Chester B. Forristall ' s Helberg, Henry W. 29 McClellan Street Holden, James L. 85 Pleasant Street Howe, Glover E. 75 Pleasant Street Howe, R. W. 85 Pleasant Street Ho wlet, Loring C. FIUBBARD, RoSWELL E. Lincoln Avenue Hyde Park Deerfield Worcester Jamaica Plain Wilbraham Wollaston Brockton So. Hadley Falls Chicopee Falls Swanton, Vt. Swanton, Vt. Wethersfield, Conn. Brockton Norwell Beverly Bolton Bolton Needham Lawrence Palmer Marlboro East Dover, Vt. Brimfield Hatfield 64 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Huntington, Samuel C. 19 Pleasant Street Hutchinson, Robert B. HylanD) Harold W. 44 Pleasant Street Jenks, Harold E. 15 Fearing Street Jenney, Herbert H. I Allen Street Jones, Harold F. 5 McClellan Street Jordan, S. M. 82 Pleasant Street Kelley, Albert J. 35 East Pleasant Street KelleYj Bernard J. 116 Pleasant Street Kenney, Frederick A. 77 Pleasant Street Kinney, Warren C. 120 Pleasant Street Lane, William F. Lake, James E. Corner Amity Street and Lincoln Avenue Larsen, Nilo p. 3 McClellan Street Lesure, John W. 44 Pleasant Street Little, Willard S. 120 Pleasant Street Lyon, Harold 79 Pleasant Street Macone, Joseph A. 116 Pleasant Street Mallett, George A. 3 McClellan Street Marsh, Frank E. Brooks Farm Matz, Julius 16 Pleasant Street Mayor, John L. 12 Halleck Street McDougall, Allister F. Brooks Farm Milbury, Freeman C. 3 McClellan Street Lynn Somerville Weymouth Worcester South Boston Campello Rutherford, N. J. Roxbury Harwich Charlestown West Bridgeport, Conn. Leominster Fall River Bridgeport, Conn. Lunenburg Newburyport Somerville Concord Bridgeport Jefferson Boston South Boston Westford Lynn MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 65 Miller, Harold H. Forristall ' s MoiR, William S. 3 McClellan Street Neal, Ralph T. 120 Pleasant Street Nichols, Norman J. Taylor ' s O ' Brien, James L. loi Pleasant Street Parsons, Robert 29 McClellan Street Patch, Roy K. 3 McClellan Street Pease, Lester N. 120 Pleasant Street Pellett, John D. 66 Pleasant Street Pierce, H.W. PiLLSBURY, Joseph J. 21 Fearing Street Post, George A. Theta Phi House Prouty, Roy H. Snell Street Putnam, Earl F. 58 Pleasant Street OuiNN, Joseph H. 6 Kellogg Avenue Roehrs, Herman T. 85 Pleasant Street RosEBROOKS, Walter E. 35 East Pleasant Street Ryder, Harold W. 21 Fearing Street Sampson, Stuart D. Seres, Paul, Jr. 35 East Pleasant Street Shea, John L. 22 McClellan Street Sheehan, Dennis A. Shute, Carl A. 9 High Street Smart, Herbert L. Brooks Farrn Needham Boston Mattapan Everett Wayland Lynn Beverly Meriden, Conn. Worcester Somerville West Bridgewater Richmond Plill, N. Y. Worcester Easthampton Boston New York, N. Y. Oxford East Boston Grand Isle, Vt. Jamaica Plain Amherst South Lincoln Clayton. 111. Framinoham 66 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Staab, Harold B. 85 Pleasant Street Streeter, Charles M. Thayer, Clark L. 77 Pleasant Street Tucker, Walter G. 19 Pleasant Street Tupper, Arthur S. Turner,, Leon B. 2 Allen Street Van Zwaluenburg, Ryder H. 66 Pleasant Street Walker, Charles D. 120 Pleasant Street Wheeler, Henry L. 19 Pleasant Street Wheeler, Merrill H. 56 South Pleasant Street Whitman, Warren C. 2 Allen Street Whitney, Francis W. Forristall ' s Zabriskie, George, 2nd 82 Pleasant Street InrlaBBttifJi g ' tuJifnta Barstow, Harold B. North Amherst Critchett, Edward R. 120 Pleasant Street DeMott, Henry V. Allen Street Greene, William A. 79 Pleasant Street Granger, Miss Helen 7 Draper Hammond, Arthur A. 12 Kellogg Avenut Hawkins, Guy C. 56 Pleasant Street Powers, Richard H. u South College Robinson, Sturgis M. 17 East Pleasant Street Northampton Brimfield Enfield Lynn Jamaica Plain North Abington Rutherford, N. J. Greenwich Village Salem Rutland Abington Needham Rutherford, N. J. Hadley Watertown Metuchen, N. J. Elm wood Amherst Bridgeport, Conn. Lancaster Maiden East Weymouth 68 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI a. c. fr. 1889::1909 AMHERST MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 1869 BOSTON ALUMNI CHAPTER 1889 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 69 a. c ' Established 1869 James B. Paige A. Vincent Osmun Frederick Tuckerman Gerald D. Jones David Barry J. E. Bement Henri D. Haskins 3fn 3fatttUatt Robert VV. Lyman John Noyes James E. Deuel Charles F. Deuel E. H. Forristall Albert McCloud Clarence W. Lewis eHnUeraraliuatcfi William Arthur Clones Roger Sherman Eddy Henry Russell Francis Frank Tuttle Haynes William Clarence Johnson Lyman Gibbs Schermerhorn Frank Lincoln Thomas Edward Harrison Turner Ralph Augustus Waldron James Fowler Adams Raymond Corbin Barrows Arnold Gordon Bentley John Edwai-d Dudley, Jr. Irvin Craig Gilgore Theodore Samuel Reynolds Parsons Percy William Pickard Ralph Waldo Piper Frank Alvin Prouty Philip Herman Prouty Clarence Albert Smith Raymond Lee Whitney Arthur John Ackerman Edward Stephen Coen Daniel Leon Emanuel Fagerstrom Jay Morrill Heald Frank Burrows Hills Earle Johnson Robinson Edward Roger Williams Joseph Moreau 70 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI 53f)t S)igma liappa 1873 1909 ALPHA BETA GAMMA DELTA EPSILON ZETA ETA THETA IOTA KAPPA LAMBDA MU NU XI OMICRON PI RHO SIGMA TAU UPSILON PHI CHI PSI OMEGA €I)c JSoII of CIjapteriEf Massachusetts Agricultural College .... 1873 Union University ........ 18S8 Cornell University ....... 1889 West Virginia University ...... 1891 Yale 1893 College of the City of New York ..... 1896 University of Manyland ....... 1897 Columbia University ........ 1897 Stevens Institute of Technology ..... 1899 Pennsylvania State College ...... 1899 George Washington University ..... 1S99 university of Pennsylvania ..... 1900 Lehigh University .... . . . . . . 1901 Saint Lawrence University ...... 1902 Massachusetts Institute of Technology .... 1902 Franklin and Marshall College 1903 Queen ' s University ........ 1903 Saint John ' s College 1903 Dartmouth College 1905 Brown University ........ 1906 Swathmore College 1906 Williams College i907 University of Virginia ' 907 University of California 1908 €l)c €Iut jef The New York Club The Boston Club The Albany Club The Connecticut Club 1900 1901 The Philadelphia Club The Southern Club The Morgantown Club The Pittsburg Club 1905 1902 1902 1907 72 The 1911 iisfDEX volume xlI College l)ake2ipearean Clul) of tbe ; a0 at iumt Agricultural College THE CORPORATION Incorporated in 1892 THE GRADUATE ASSOCIATION Organized September 4, 1897 THE COLLEGE CLUB Organized September 20, 1879 . oLri e , MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 73 College § ' |)akespearean ClulJ Dean Georg-e F. Mills Professor George B. Churchill Professor John H. Genung Professor Herman Babson Doctor Charles S. Walker Doctor William Rolfe Eesilrent ©raUnates Clarence E. Gordon Sidney B. Haskell Edwin F. Gaskill John N. Summers Donald J. Cafifrey Oscar C. Bartlett Joseph B. Lindsey George H. Chapman Lewell S. Walker Erwin S. Fulton Hari y M. Jennison Theodore C. W aters Frederick A. Johnston JHnJerpaiuatcs Jonathan Phillips Blaney Edward Joseph Burke Charles Irvin Hosmer William Edward Leonard Thomas Webster Bean Herbert Wardwell Blaney Arthur James Burnham Charles Murray Damon Charles Albert Lodge, Jr. Frank Dobson McGraw George Wilbur Tupper Gustaf Arnold Neilsen Lomas Oswald Stevenson Roland Trowbridge Beers Lewis Warren Gaskill Francis Benedict Hickey James Francis Martin Fred Sawyer Merrill Ralph Robinson Parker John Edwards Pierpont Stephen Perry Puffer Curtis Peckham 74 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI liappa g tgma 1867 1909 ZETA BETA ETA PRIME MU ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA BETA KAPPA LAMBDA ALPHA CHI PHI OMEGA UPSILON TAU CHI PSI IOTA GAMMA BETA THETA THETA PI ETA SIGMA MU XI DELTA ALPHA GAMMA ALPHA DELTA ALPHA ZETA ALPHA ETA ALPHA THETA ALPHA EPSILON ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA LAMBDA ALPHA MU ALPHA NU 3lctibe €tjaj)tcc$f University of Virginia ....... 1869 University of Alabama ....... 1869 Trinity College, North Carolina ..... 1873 Washington and Lee University ..... 1873 University of Maryland ....... 1874 Mercer University ........ 1S75 Vanderbilt University ....... 1S77 University of Tennessee ....... 18S0 Lake Forest University . . .... 1880 Southwestern Pennsylvanian University .... 1882 University of the South 1882 Hampden Sidney College ...... 1883 University of Texas ....... 1884 Purdue University ........ ..1885 University of Maine 1886 Southwestern University ....... 1886 Louisiana State University 1887 University of Indiana ....... 1S87 Cumberland University . . .... 1887 Swarthmore College ....... 188S Randolph Macon College ...... 1888 Tulane University ........ 1889 William and Mary College 1890 University of Arkansas 1S90 Davidson College ........ 1890 University of Illinois ....... 1891 Pennsylvania State College ...... 1S92 University of Michigan ....... 1S92 George Washington University ..... 1892 Union University ........ 1892 University of Pennsylvania ...... 1S92 Cornell University ........ 1892 University of Vermont ....... 1S93 University of North Carolina ...... 1893 Wofford College ....... 1893 % ' ' A, Oi-e MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 75 ALPHA PI ALPHA RHO ALPHA SIGMA ALPHA TAU ALPHA UPSILON, ALPHA PHI ALPHA PSI ALPHA OMEGA BETA ALPHA BETA BETA BETA DELTA BETA GAMMA BETA EPSILON BETA ZETA BETA ETA BETA IOTA BETA KAPPA BETA LAMBDA BETA MU BETA NU BETA XI BETA OMICRON BETA PI BETA RHO BETA SIGMA BETA TAU BETA UPSILON BETA PHI BETA PSI BETA CHI BETA OMEGA GAMMA ALPHA GAMMA BETA GAMMA GAMMA GAMMA DELTA GAMMA ZETA GAMMA EPSILON GAMMA ETA GAMMA THETA GAMMA IOTA GAMMA KAPPA GAMMA LAMBDA GAMMA MU GAMMA NU Wabash College ........ 1895 Bowdoin College ........ 1895 Ohio State University ....... 1895 Georgia School of Technology ..... 1895 Millsaps College ........ 1895 Bucknell University ....... 1896 University of Nebraska ....... 1897 William Jewell College . . . . . . . 1897 Brown University ........ 1898 Richmond College ........ 1898 Washington and Jefferson College ..... 1898 Missouri State University ...... 1898 University of Wisconsin ....... 1898 Stanford University ....... 1898 Alabama Polytechnic Institute ..... 1900 Lehigh University . . . . . . . • . 1900 New Hampshire State College ..... 1901 University of Georgia . . . . . . . 1901 Kentucky State College 1901 University of Minnesota . . . . . . 1901 University of California ...... 1901 University of Denver ....... 1902 Dickinson College 1902 University of Iowa 1902 Washington University ....... 1902 Baker University ........ 1903 North Carolina Agricultural and Mechanical College . 1903 Case School of Applied Sciences ..... 1903 University of Washington ...... 1903 Missouri School of Mines ...... 1903 Colorado College ........ 1904 University of Oregon 1904 University of Chicago 1904 Colorado School of Mines 1904 Massachusetts Agricultural College . . . . 1904 New York University 1905 Dartmouth College 1905 Harvard University ....... 1905 University of Idaho 1905 Syracuse University igo6 University of Oklahoma igo6 Iowa State ••......, 1909 Washington State College 1909 Washburn College 1909 76 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI appa g ' lsma aiumni Cljapterief Boston, Mass. Buffalo, N. Y. Ithaca, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Schenectady, N. Y. Scranton, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Danville, Va. Lynchburg, Va. Newport News, Va. Norfolk, Va. Richmond, Va. Washington, D. C. Concord, N. C. Durham, N. H. Kingston, N. C. Wilmington, N. C. Atlanta, Ga. Savannah, Ga. Birmingham, Ga. Montgomery, Ala. Mobile, Ala. Chattanooga, Tenn. Covington, Tenn. Jackson, Tenn. Fort Smith, Memphis, Tenn. Nashville, Tenn. Louisville, Ky. Pittsburg, Pa. Columbus, O. Chicago, 111. Danville, 111. Indianapolis, Ind. Milwaukee, Wis. Kansas City, Mo. Little Rock, Ark. Pine Bluff, Ark. St. Louis, Mo. Jackson, Miss. New Orleans, La. Ruston, La. Vicksburg, Miss. Waco, Tex. Yazoo City, Miss. Denver, Col. Salt Lake City, Utah Los Angeles, Cal. San Francisco, Cal. Portland, Ore. Seattle, Wash. Ark. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 77 appa g isma Charles Wellington Frank A. Wangh W. P. B. Lockwood Edward B. Holland William S. Regan Rev. J. M. Lent 3rn jFattiltate Edward A. White James A. Foord Harold F. Temps on 3 ' n Witit George E. Cutler Raymond D. Whitmarsh John R. Parker Carl D. Kennedy SSnJccffralinateii Rodolphus Harold Allen Francis Stone Beeman Louis Brandt Louis Carmel Brown Walter Roe Clarke Myron Smith Hazen Arthur Witt Holland Leonard Septimus McLaine George William Paulsen Otto Velorous Taft Urban Herbert Jonathan Baker Living Wilder Davis Harold Hosmer Howe Gaston Edward Labouteley Edward Arthur Larrabee Frederick Adams Lee McLaughlin Henry Bowditch Morse Arthur Harris Sharpe Webster Jennings Birdsall Alden Charles Brett Lawrence Sanborn Caldwell Jesse Carpenter, Jr. Lester Earle Gibson Joseph Alvin Harlow Royal Morton Hallowell Ouincy Shaw Lowry Marshall Cotting Pratt Ezra Ligram Shaw Robert Webster Wales Earle Irving Wilde 78 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI d)eta 5 1)1 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 79 ' Cf)eta W i3nJerji;ralr«att erabers Dexter Edward Bailey Justus Conant Bailey Henry Trask Cowles Raymond John Fisk Samuel Weis Mendum Fred Parker Nickless Edgar Morton Brown Allyn Parker Bursley Willard Francis Henry Roland Harrison Patch Frederick Huntington Burr Raymond Kingsley Clapp Frank Orus Fitts Arthur French Kingsbury Arthur Robert Lundgren Robert Edward Reed William Crocker Sanctuary Roger Andrew Warner Silas Williams George Atwell Post Henry Blaney MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE jfraternit Conference R. H. Allen President H. W. Blaney ...... Vice-President E. H. Turner ..... Secretary and Treasurer (S. c ©. E. H. Turner J. F. Adams |J i S ig:ma Rappa R. P. Armstrong N. H. Hill W. E. Leonard H. W. Blaney Slappa § isma R. H. Allen A. H. Sharpe eCIjcta piji S. W. Mendum W. F. Henry 3fnforniaI Committee R. H. Allen, Chairman E. H. Turner, Treasurer W. E. Leonard L. S. McLaine R. P. Armstrong R. A. Waldron S. W. Mendum 82 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Jloll of CfjapterjBf University of Maine Chapter Pennsylvania State College Chapter University of Tennessee Chapter Massachusetts Agricultural College Chapter Delaware College of Agriculture Chapter MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 83 W Happa W ]. B. Lindsey S. B. Haskell R. J. Watts President Secretary Treasurer E. A. Back, ' 04 F. D. Couden, ' 04 C arter JH emberB A. W. Gilbert, ' 04 S. B. Haskell, ' 04 H. M. White, ' 04 P. F. Henshaw, ' 04 A. L. Peck, 04 K. L. Butterfield G. F. Mills H. T. Fernald F. A. Waug-h S. F. Howard J. A. Foord jFatttltp iftembers C. H. Fernald C. Wellington J. B. Paige P. B. Hasbrouck A. V. Osmun C. E. Gordon S. B. Haskell W. D. Hurd W. P. Brooks G. E. Stone J. E. Ostrander R. W. Lyman H. F. Tompson fHtmUx h afSliation H. T. Fernald J. A. Foord n atbfiientta C. S. Walker H. Babson 84 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI C. F. Deuel J. B. Lindsey f n mxu H. M. Thomson E. H. Lehnert D. Barry E. B. Holland R. J. Watts O. M. Turner, Miss eiettiong for 1909 G. M. Brown, Jr. A. W. Hubbard H. L. Phelps R. C. Lindblad E. L. Hsieh - J. S. Whaley C. S. Putnam =:{5 ' 0 M °H ° ° °-==T ° ° ° h ' ° ' ]== ' = = 0 = 0-=: 0 =: 0 = 0 = = 0, r 0 iErmbfra for 1909-10 iFarultH Dr. James B. Paige Prof. Clarence E. Gordon Dr. Percy L. Reynolds Alumni Prof. S. Francis Howard John N. Summers President Vice-President Executive Committee Seci ' etary and Treasurer Auditor R. H. Allen F. L. Thomas George H. Chapman luifrgratiuatffi R. S. Eddy C. A. Lodge L. G. Schermerhorn wm % • M Allen, Mgr. Gage Blaney, Capt. Goodnough Harstttf J. p. Blaney Captain R. H. Allen Manager J. F. Adams Assistant Manager J. W. Gage Coach Dr. p. L. Reynolds . . . . . . • Physical Director ®pam for 1909 Hayden, Putnam, Center Walker, Powers, Hazen, Guards Schermerhorn, Leonard, Tackles Hubbard, O ' Brien, Lew, Ends Blaney, Hosmer, Goodnough, Halfbacks Roberts, Moreau, Ftdlhack Morse, Quarterback MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLI,EGE 89 iFnntball HEN the men reported for practice on September 13th, the outlook for a good team at M. A. C. this fall was rather dis- couraging. Of last year ' s team, only a few men were left and very few new men were out. To cap the climax, the coach who was expected to be here went back on us at the last mmuce ana we were forced to look around for another man. Good fortune favored us here, and Mr. Jesse W. Gage of Dartmouth, whom I believe to be one of the best coaches M. A.C. has ever had, offered his services. Our first games coming, as they did, inside of a week, and all being away from home, gave him but little time in which to whip the team into shape. But with that spirit which is always predominant at Massachusetts, the team met University of Maine, Dartmouth and Union, with only the loss of one game, that with Dartmouth, and making the other two teams work for a tie score. With practicall} ' the hardest part of our schedule over and the men in good condition, we should make a good showing in the rest of the games. The men on the team are doing their very best to accomplish this, and if the student body stand back of us, whether it be in victor} or defeat, there is no reason why Massachusetts should not be raised another notch in the athletic world. HI PPVI B r i Br BHI IH Hh ' v::: ' ' wB m Howells, Coach Hubbard Warner Burke, Mgr. Thayer OGrady, Capt. French Smith Bean 1909 J. R. O ' Grady E. J. Burke C. A. Lodge lasfball Captain Manager Assistant Manager W. D. Howells, Coach Dr. Percy L. Reynolds, Physical Director 1910 H. W. French C. A. Lodge W. J. Birdsall ®fam for 1909 French, Catcher Hubbard, Williams, Curran, Pitcher Hubbard, Hosmer, Coville, First Base Smith, Piper, Second Base Tha3 ' er, Right Field Ackerman, Shortstop Warner, Left Field O ' Grady, Center Field Tilton, Bean, Third Base MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 91 April lo 14 16 17 19 24 28, 8. II 19 21 22 24 26 28 June May faaon ' a i rarps 1909 Rhode Island College at Kingston Brown at Providence Tufts at Amherst Worcester Tech. at Amherst Holyoke Conn. League at Holyoke Williams at Williamstown Tufts at Med ford Amherst at Amherst Vermont at Amherst Trinity at Hartford Vermont at Burlington Vermont at Burlington Middlebury at Middlebury Springfield Training School at Amherst Andover at Andover Dartmouth at Hanover Holy Cross at Worcester M. A. C. Oppune 7 3 6 3 2 3 2 5 5 3 4 5 I 2 I . 4 3 4 •3 n Totals 65 55 92 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI laapball ONSIDERING that the team was composed of ahnost entirely new men, last year ' s season was fairly successful. We de- feated Williams, the first game of the season; played a good game with Vermont, and lost a hotly-contested game with Andover. A number of the games were cancelled on account of rain. This year the prospects are good, though we have lost five of last year ' s men. So far we have for a battery Williams and French, both members of last season ' s team. Other men for these positions will probably appear when practice begins. Both infield and outfield are sadly in need of new material. The only last year ' s men remaining are Bean and Ackerman. However, there is good promise of a large squad and with a good coach, we ought to make a good showing this year. Manager Lodge is now at work on a good schedule. With conscientious work on the part of the squad, and the whole college lending a hand, there is no reason why the season of 1910 should not be successful. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 93 M. A. (H. iJB. M. p. 31. L. S. Dickinson, Captain S. S. Grossman F. C. Warner J. E. Dudley, Jr. L. S. Corbett, Manager Won by M. A. C. Time 3 min. 30 sec. 2Irark lEofnts 100 yd. Dash: G. N. Lew, ' 11. Time, 102-5 sec. 220 yd. Low Hurdles : W. F. Sawyer, ' 08. Time, 29 2-5 sec. 220 yd. Dash: F. G. Warner, ' 09. Time, 24 1-5 sec. 440 yd. Dash: L. S. Dickinson, ' 10. Time, 55 1-5 sec. 880 yd. Run: E. L. Macomber, ' 01. Time, 2 min. 10 sec. Mile Run : H. E. Maynard, ' 99. Time, 4 min. 57 sec. 120 yd. Hurdles : L. G. Glaflin, ' 02. Time, 18 2-5 sec. I Mile Bicycle: E. E. Saunders, ' 01. Time, 2 min. 282-5 sec. Running High Jump : K. E. Gillett, ' 08. 5 ft. 7 1-2 in. Running Broad Jump : F. B. Shaw, ' 96. 20 ft. 6 3-4 in. Putting 16 lb. Shot : H. P. Grosby, 09. 2 7 ft. 9 in. Throwing Discur, 4 lbs. 4 oz. : W. E. Leonard, ' 10. 102.2 ft. Throwing 16 lb. Hammer : H. P. Grosby, ' 09. 105 ft. 4 in. Pole ault: F. G. Warner, ' 09. 9 ft. 2 in. Ifnrk g Q tnm Louis Brandt, ' lo, Captain L. G. Schermerhorn, ' lo, Manager G. P. Nickerson, ii, Assistant Manager (Ffam fnr I909 A. J. Ackennan, ' 12, Goal ' L. Brandt, ' 10, Center E. F. Hathaway, ' 09, Point W. C. Sanctuary, ' 1 2, Left JJ ' ing J. F. Adams, ' 11, Cover Point E. J. Norris, 12, Riglit Wing C. Peckham, ' 12, Rover BcoxsB for 1909 M. A. C. 2— S. T. S. o M. A. C. 4— S. T. S 5 M. A. C. o — Amherst 3 M. A. C. o— M. I. T. I M. A. C. o— Trinity i Rockwood, Capt. © tttttB A. F. Rockwood, Captain F. L. Thomas, Manager S ingles — A. F. Rockwood L. M. Johnson C. R. Webb H. Jen Doubles — Rockwood and Webb Johnson and Thomas BtatiB for 1909 April 24. Amherst 6, M. A. C. May i.S- Williams 6, M. A. C. May 28. S. T. S. 0, M. A. C. 2 June I. Bowdoin 7 M. A. C. June 3- Bates 3, M. A. C. 3 96 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Ufarrrs nf tl|f M J. p. Blaney R. H. Allen Ifaatbnll H. W. French M. S. Hazen L. G. Schermerhoi rn H. B. Morse W. E. Leonard C. E. Roberts C. I. Hosmer H. C. Walker Wmms nf tt|p m H. W. French Sasrball T. W. Bean E. J. Burke A. J. Ackerman C. I. Hosmer E. R. Williams Wmma nf tljp BJVlB E. J. Burke laskftball C. I. Hosmer L. G. Schermerhor n C. C. Pearson Ufarrrs nf ll p M L. S. Dickinson Ulratk J. E. Dudley Upartra nf tljp H| |T L. Brandt W il nrkfg C. Peckham . C. Sanctuary MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 97 iFr?Bl|man IFootball (Ltnm Robinson, Center Howard, Loker, Schmitz, Guards Becker, Pauly, R. G. Smith, Tackles Sharpe, Lew, Davey, Ends Morse, Quarterback Daniels, Tilton, Whittaker, Halfbacks Coash, Fidlback S ' tate 1911, o; 1910, o iFr sIiman Eojj -Pitll Qlmm Damon, Captain and Anchor Howard Daniels Becker Schmitz Tilton Bentley, Manager iFr00l|mau lasphall ® am Robb, Catcher Hill, Pitcher Nickerson, First Base Morse, Second Base Piper, Third Base Tilton, Shortstop Coash, Left Field Burnham, Center Field Blaney, Manager Bentle} Right Field 1911, 9; 1910, 4 b ' 1 . .= ' B :-l jtf r ■■■; ' ' ;, - ' W -M pl-: . Brown, Mgr McLaushlin Smith Pickard Sharpe Pauly i Morse, Capt. Damon Bursley B opl|0m0r0 iFootball (E?am Bursley, Center R. G. Smith, Whitney, Robinson, Guards Damon, Ostrolenk, McLaughlin, Tackles Sharpe, Nickerson, Ends Morse, Quarterback Pauly, Fullback Adams, Pickard, Halfbacks Btart 1911, o; 1912, o COUUECE R G fK n I L A T I r Ololbg tiat? Wm. E. Leonard Frank T. Haynes Allyn p. Bursley Frank T. Haynes Henry A. Brooks Walter R. Clarke Flenry T. Cowles President Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer Wm. E. Leonard Herbert W. Blaney Allyn P. Bursley Percy W. Pickard Park W. Allen (Uii? mtt (Club (iffir ra George VV. Paulsen, ' io President Henry A. Brooks, ' id Vice-President Arthur H. Sharpe, ' i I Secretary Justus C. Bailey, ' io Treasurer LoMAs O. Stevenson , ' 1 1 , Captain intfrrollfgtDtP Strnrha Arthur H. Sharpe 500 yards 49 Lomas O. Stevenson 300 yards 47 3lnbonr Stfl? ultam F. A. P. A. A. H. TOTAL SCORE 9 89 91 G. E. MacGowan, ' 09 F. S. Beeman, ' 10, J. N. Everson, 10 G. VV. Paulsen, Capt., ' 10 93 H. J. Baker, ' 11 92 (iul oor iStflp Stam G. W. Paulsen, Capt., ' 10 121 A. H. F. A. McLaug hlin, ' 11 113 L. O. P. A. Racicot, ' 11 no A. C. L. O. A. C. McLaughlin, ' 11 Racicot, ' 11 Sharpe, ' 11 Stevenson, ' 11 Brett, ' 12 90 90 94 91 92 TOTAL SCORE Sharpe, ' 11 123 Stevenson, ' 11 128 Brett, ' 12, 124 ®1|? SnaBtmastfr ' Montague, May 28, 1909 Petersham, June 4, 1909 Presented by otljp Sluninr Qllaaa Hanagftttrnt Amherst, June 18, 1909 L. S. Dickinson, Stage Manager R. A. Waldron, Business Manager J. K. Mills, Coach ull;p daat Bill Morgan zvho loves and owes, W. E. Leonard Towel Fairfax the Toastmaster, R. A. Waldron Bob KenmarKj a friend of Bill ' s, E. F. Damon Henry Reed, son of Prof. Reed, R. S. Eddy Tom RipleYj a friend of Henry ' s, H. W. Cowles George MacIntosh, zvho loves and hopes, J. P. Blaney Prof. Reed, who has something to say, E. H. Turner Mrs. Reed, zvho has nothing to say, H. A. Brooks Buzzer, tlicir son, zvho has too much to say, S. C. Brooks Cynthia, their daughter, Miss Calista Roy f m. 01. A. Frank T. Haynes, 1910, Henry A. Brooks, 1910, Arthur VV. Holland, 1910, ' . Charles H. White . Frank B. Hills, 1912, . Alden C. Brett, 1912, . Pres. Kenyon L. Butterfield Ralph A. Waldron, 19 10, . Henry A. Brooks, 1910, . Arthur W. Holland, 19 10 Samuel W. Mendum, 1910, E. Farnham Damon, 1910, . Horace W. French, 1910, Henry A. Brooks, 1910, . Roland H. Patch, 191 i, . President Vice-President Treasurer Graduate Secretary Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary . Advisory Committee . Musical Committee Membership Committee Bible Study Committee Devotional Committee . Hand Book Committee Social Committee Northfield Committee . Librarian 106 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI iEntomologtral Journal Cluh Prof. C. H. Fernald W. S. Regan Dr. R. T. Fernald J. H. Merrill J. N. Summers R. D. Whitmarsh A. J. Bourne H. M. Jennison F. A. Johnston O. C. Bartlett D. J. Caffrey i t0rkbnb9 Clitb H. W. French ....... President F. T. Haynes ...... Vice-President J. C. Bailey .... Secretary and Treasurer iExwutw Qlnmnttttpp H. W. French, Chairman Prof. J. A. Foord Prof. F. A. Waug-h A. W. Holland N. H. Hill tork-dl«Jigtng ulpam F. S. Beeman F. T. Haynes W. M. S. Titus CJi mtral Club Wm. C. Johnson President Dexter E. Bailey ..... Vice-President Dr. Charles Wellington . .Honorary Vice-President Dr. Joseph E. Chamberlain . Honorary Vice-President Otto V. T. Urban . . . Secretary and Treasurer MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 107 i bating Club PIerbert J. Baker . Bernard Ostrolenk Alden C. Brett President Vice-President Secretary iM ttabamp Club Dr. p. L. Reynolds ...... President F. C. Kenney ...... Vice-President C. R. Duncan .... Secretary and Treasurer A. V. Osmun . . . Cliairman Executive Committee Henri D. Haskins P. H. Smith ®rrk iHaatrra S. B. Haskell A. A. MacKimmie i mor iHtuBtrrl i I|nhi (ElaBB af 1909 Januarg 15. 1909 . ■«S: IK ' V S:: fl ■. fc ' U :- . Il | t 1 ... Hit_ :-;i-: _: I;. ■' ' fe S ' ■- ii : -i u OInlbp Signal Month flf Sbttnra Walter R. Clarke, 19 10 Arthur H. Sharpe, 191 i Henry A. Brooks, 1910 LoL ' is C. Brown, 1910 JosiAH C. FoLsoM, 1910 Edgar M. Brown, 191 i Herbert W. Blaney, 191 i Editor-in-Chief Assistant Editor College Notes Athletic Notes Alumni Notes Department Notes College Notes luBxtiPsa Bepavtmmt E. Farnham Damon, 1910 Park W. Allen, 191 i Alden C. Brett, 19 12 Albert W. Dodge, 19 12 Business Manager Assist. Business Manager Circulation Circulation l_ P ' B b l -i: HU- 1 1. 138 ■' f ■|3f; m ' -s-nm mm ML _. B wflSr Bi ' 1 1 ' CS SHSHHBB ■| m 1 ■,-;.,i ' ,.:. ;;J.,i... hB hBHh hI Ibie i %t., f.sNs-ir .■■;■' ;■■■' MflM ,--.;. r ' ..,.v i |M||||mBp|Ji . -V ■■- sai ■«ra H B v ' 9H ' 9r ' ' 5 •. mmm B Wi ' P w iirff ' ' . mMMtm E KT ' T fl jK : ' ' dV If k 1 jmBKhHI f :- ' , : ■-- . ,■. i ■' it- ' - ' : ' • ' ■' ' ■: .. X- :■■3ln ?3c Month Arthur H. Sharpe Herbert W. Blaney Samuel R. Parsons Herbert J. Baker Phileas a. Racicot L. Oswald Stevenson Editor-in-Chief Business Manager Assist. Editor Assist. Business Manager Artist Artist AaaortatP Ebttnra Edgar M. Brown Allyn p. Bursley Irving W. Davis Percy W. Pickard 12 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI PubltBljpb Annually bg Jljf f . M. (H. A. (fInmmiJtp? E. Farnham Damon, ' 10, Chairman Josiah C. Folsom, ' 10 Marshall C. Pratt, ' 12 George D. Cabot, ' 12 114 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI luBtral O rgamxattons N 3 ' ears past Old Mass ' chusetts was represented b} excellent glee clubs. For several years previous to 1906 there had been no attempt to organize special music — aside from the Cadet Band. Four years ago the need of such an association was again realized. A few of the more ambitious called together the different clubs and formed them anew. That year, and the year following, the work was carried on cjuite successfully. Since then the interest has lagged again. This was due, not to lack of talent, but to lack of enthusiasm. The prospects, this year, for a good Glee Club, Orchestra, and Mandolin Club are brighter than ever before. With the largest entering class on record, there has come much talent from which to choose, and to form clubs of which we will be proud. Music expresses the feelings and personality of the student body, and anyone with musical ability should try for one of the clubs. What we want is the old M. A. C. spirit to urge us to attend rehearsals and keep up this spirit and the interest in the clubs. Don ' t be discouraged because you think you cannot do much. Every man should put forth an effort if there is any music in him at all. He can at least make others work harder through the feeling of competition. We need the best support of all, to succeed as we should. We must keep up with our neighbors. We must not lag behind in one thing because we are ahead in everything else. One other thing we need is musical instruction. Let us hope for another department added to the college in the near future along this line. R. A. Waldron, ' 10, . . . . . . President L. S. Dickinson ' 10, . . . . . . Manager F. L. ThomaSj ' 10 . . . Secretary and Treasurer MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 115 mn mnb Park W, Allen Leader L. N. Pease .......... First Tenor G. W. Barber First Tenor F. A. Prouty First Tenor Geo. Zabriskie First Tenor J. D. Frencli ......... Second Tenor P. A. Racicot ......... Second Tenor H. H. Jenney Second Tenor J. H. Ouinn .......... Second Tenor P. W. Allen First Bass J. B. Cobb First Bass F. D. Griggs First Bass A. C. Brett First Bass E. D. Winn Second Bass H. B. Barstow Second Bass G. W. Ells Second Bass H. C. Walker Second Bass (irrli Btra A. Racicot, ' ii Leader P. A. Racicot, ' ii ' . . First Violin L. B. Turner, ' 13 . , . . . . . . First Violin J. D. French, ' 13 First Violin R. D. Wales, ' 12 Second Violin H. B. Staab, ' 13 Second Violin R. L. Whitney, ' 11 First Cornet R. A. Waldron, ' 10 Second Cornet H. H. Jenney, ' 13 First Clarinet M. H. Wheeler, ' 13 Flute P. W. Allen, ' 11 Trombone L. F. Drury, ' 13 Trombone H. W. Hyland, ' 13 Piano 116 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI iEmtbnUti nnh lattjo Ollitb L. S. Dickinson, ' 10, Leader . Guitar S. M. Jordan, ' 13 . Mandolin R. C Blake, ' 13 . Mandolin G. D. Cabot, ' 12 . Mandolin R. A. Waldron, ' 10 . Banjo J. M. Heald, ' 12 . Banjo C. M. Streeter, ' 13 . Banjo N. J. Nichols, ' 13 . Banjo R. H. Allen, ' 10 . Baujeaurine OInlbgf OIl|0tr S. Francis Howard, Leader First Tenor Louis Brandt, ' 10 . . . Second Tenor Frank ' A. Prouty, ' 11 Second Tenor Harold H. Howe, ' 11 First Bass Herman C. Walker, ' 12 First Bass Park W. Allen, ' 11 Second Bass Ervin L. Winn, ' 11 . . Second Bass Samuel R. Parsons, 11 . . . . . . Ors ' anist MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 17 m. A. (d. OIkrk (UnM lanb R. L. Whitney, Leader .... Captain and Solo Cornet F. A. Prouty . . . Sergeant and Chief Musician, Bass Drum I. W Davis . . Sergeant and Principal iMusician, Snare Drum P. W. Allen ..... Sergeant and First Trombone P. H Prouty . Sergeant, Cymbals E. L. Winn . Sergeant, First Cornet W. C. Sanctuary ..... Sergeant, Second Cornet F. B. Hills .... Corporal, Second B Flat Clarinet J. M. Heald Corporal, E Flat Clarinet A. C. Brett . . . . . . . Corporal, First Trombone R. A. Warner . Corporal, Baritone C. L. Beals Corporal, First Cornet D. C. Maxon Tuba M. H. Wheeler E Flat Alto W. C. Forbush E Flat Alto G. A. Post Second B Flat Clarinet N. J. Frost Second B Flat Clarinet H. H. Jenney B Flat Clarinet H. W. Hyland B Flat Clarinet S. P. Huntington Flute F. D. Griggs . Piccolo D. Cabot ... . ■Flute H. L. Wheeler Flute Lewis Drury . . .... Second B Flat Trombone S. Williams E Flat Bass F. L. Gray Solo Alto W. F. Fisherdick Tenor S. P. Puffer First Aho THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI (Elaaa i ' ong i wm i i , ii J i , I , i ,ii i-! 1 J i j J ' 5 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 119 1911 €la00 Bon Now our song of love and praise; Nineteen hundred leven, to thee we raise For thy noble sons will e ' er be found Coming forth with vict ' ries for the white and brown- When upon the field thy foes we meet, For the dear old class now gather ' round, Make the hills and valleys ring with joyful sound. Qlljnrua Ahogether, boys, now RAH-RAH-RAH, For the dear old College, too, Always by our Alma Mater stand Nineteen hundred ' leven so true. And all noble Aggie men shall know Of thy deeds of loyalty ; And our spirit then shall ever show To the grand old class we ' ll ever faithful be. 9- II. 14- 15- i6. (irtob r, 1908 Stock-judging Contest at Brockton. College Night. M. A. C. o, Dartmouth 23. Senior Landscape Class Visits Hartford. Rifle Range opened. Vespers. Prexy speaks. Rope-pull. 191 2 wins. Assembly, Horatio Knox of Providence. Republican Club organized. Water Wagon Parade. Democratic Club organized. Waugh speaks at Y. M. C. A. Prof. Grosvenor addresses Republican Club. Vespers, Rev. J. C. Breader of Northampton. M. A. C. 6, University of Vermont 6. Y. M. C. A. Speaker, E. C. Worman. Mass meeting. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 2 Spflprtiona of tip f far— ni«tin«ta 17. M. A. C. II, Worcester Polytech 5. First informal. 18. Vespers. F. L. Willis of Worcester. 21. Phi Kappa Phi oration, President G. E. Fellows of University of Maine. Governor Draper speaks at Town Hall. 23. Republican Club Supper at Draper Hall. 24. M. A. C. o, Williams 40. Reserves 16, Holyoke High School 2. 25. Vespers. Rev. E. F. Sanderson of Providence. 28. Debate, Republicans vs. Democrats. Republicans win. 31. M. A. C. o, Yale 49. Noufmbrr, 19O8 I. Vespers. Dr. Lyman Abbott. 3. Election Day. 4. Assembly, R. W. Stimpson of Smith ' s Agricultural School. 7. M. A. C. 13, New Hampshire State 9. 1912 wins Rope-pull. Prexy leaves on Country Life Commission. Edward Avis entertains for Union. Vespers. Dr. W. W. Fenn of Harvard. Uniforms are donned for first time. Mass meeting. Varsity Relay Team organized. 13. Mass meeting. 14. M. A. C. 5, S. T. S. 5. 15. Vespers. Dr. William E. Barton of Chicago — all dark. Assembly. Dr. Tucker of Boston. 19. Index Board of 191 1 elected. Mass meeting. 20. Mass meeting. 122 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI 21. M. A. C. 6, Tufts 6. 22. Vespers. Rev. C. L. White of New Yorl 23. Interclass Cross-Country. 25. Vacation begins. 26. Lots of Turkey. 30. College Exercises resumed. Bttsmbn, 19O8 5- 7- 10. II. 16. 18. 1911 o, 1912 o. Reception by Ladies of College. W. L. Cowles, on Sicily. Literclass Basketball. 1 9 10 Index appears. Freshman pledged. Hockey. M. A. C. 2, S. T. S. o. Hendrickson and Rosani in Chapel. Assembly, Pres. Butterfield. Christmas Vacation. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 123 Jmtuarg, 1909 4. Back again. Shorthorns arrive. Gym work starts. 5. Bobby arranges Enghsh. 6. Bolt on Assembly. 8. Hockey. M. A. C. 6, Northampton Y. M. C. A. o. 9. Basketball. M. A. C. 21, Rhode Island State 27. Fred E. Kendall in Chapel, Union Night. 10. Vespers. Rev. A. P. Reccord. 12. Debating Club elects officers. 13. No Assembly. 14. English exam. MacKimmie gives a startling explanation of rain. 15. Senior Minstrel Show. 16. Informal. 17. No vespers. No milk for breakfast. Water main frozen. 18. Chem. Ouizz. 20. Assembly. Prof. Churchill of Amherst. Physics Ouizz. Meeting of New England Federation of Agricultural Students at Orono, Me. 21. New Salem Academy visits us. 22. Exams, posted. M. A. C. 19, S. T. S. 29. 23. Interclass Track Meet. Frederick W. Bancroft entertains in Chapel. 24. Vespers. L. P. Powell. 27. Assembly. Rev. Thomas Van Ness. Zoo Test. M. A. C. 4, S. T. S. 5. 28. Stenographers ' Sleigh-ride. 29. Senior Minstrels in New Braintree. Agriculture Ouizz. 30. Hockey. M.A . C. o, Amherst 3. Basketball. Dartmouth 40, M. A. C. 11. 3fffhruary:. I909 Daddy wears a 1910 hat. Hockey. M. A. C. o, M. I. T. i. M. A. C. wins Relay from W. P. I. at B. A. A. meet. Second semester begins. New Hymn Books in Chapel. [24 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI II. apflfrtiana of tljp f par— tantmuE 10. Mass meeting. Rifle Club formed. 12. Junior Prom — Lots of girls. 13. Prom theatre parties. 14. Vespers. Pres. Harris of Amherst. 15. Capt. Martin lights on the Band. 16. Morse appears in German with a dog. Ashley: Will you kindly take your friend out, Mr. Morse? 17. Assembly. Rev. E. C. Swift of Fall River. 18. Class elections. Legislative Committee on Agriculture visits College. 19. Tabby forgets his necktie. 20. Basketball. M. A. C. 7, S. T. S. 31. 21. Vespers. Rev. E. M. Antrim of Springfield. 22. Measles. 23. No surveying. 24. Mendelssohn and Chopin concert. 25. Pauly sits in water. 26. College Night. 27. Hockey. M. A. C. o, Trinity i. Basketball. M. A. C. 23, W. P. L 21. Pitt Parker in Chapel. 28. Vespers. Carl Hamilton of Andover. Mnvt ), 1909 Blokie fools 191 1. Pigs ' Feet for supper. Assembly. Hon. F. H. Jackson of Providence, R. L 191 1 puts the Kid on the bum. Physics Test. Informal. Vespers. Rev. W. E. Tinker of New York. Horticulture Quizz. Assembly. Prof. Sedgwick of M. I. T. Farmers ' Institute. 12. Dedication of French Hall. 13. Union entertainment — David Todd of Amherst. 14. Vespers. Rev. J. Rolfe Stevenson. 15. Another of Billy ' s moving picture shows. 17. Billy says, Get busy! Mass meeting. 18. Sharpe makes a brilliant recitation in German. 20. Informal. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 125 SwnUwtinna of tlje f far — ronitnupb 21. Vespers. Pres. C. W. Huntington of Boston University. 22. Tax of $3.00 in Chemistry. 23. First lesson in grafting. 24. Intercollegiate Rifle Match ; M. A. C. 5th. Band concert 25. Chem. Final. 26. Vacation besiins. April, 1909 Back again. The pond roiled a little. Basketball. 191 1 9, 1912 18. Windy as the dickens. Freshmen do some stunts. Baseball. M. A. C. 7, R. I. 3. No vespers. Freshmen have an all-day class meeting. Freshmen decide to stay. Baseball. Brown 6, M. A. C. o. A few Freshmen disappear. Baseball. Tufts 3, M. A. C. 2. Ways and Means Committee visits College. Baseball. M. A. C. 3, W. P. I. 2. Informal. 19. Baseball. Holyoke (Conn. League) 5, M. A. C. O. Senior Class Tree transplanted. E. M. Brown also ran. Class meeting. 5 Bones. Freshman Banquet. Baseball. M. A. C. 5, Williams 3. Freshmen back. Horticulture Test. Only four take English Ouizz. Baseball. M. A. C. 4, ' fufts 5. Assembly. A. E. Winship of Boston. 29. Skip burns his mouth with hot air. 30. Surveying. Pace the distance to North College. 126 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI iMag. 1909 I. Informal. 4. Seniors water Class Tree Mouse in the pudding. 5. Assembly. J. H. McFarland. Williams 191 2 4, M. A. C. 1912 o. 8. Baseball. M. A. C. i, Amherst 2. 11. M. A. C. I, University of Vermont 4. 12. No Assembly. 13. Government Inspection. 14. Junior Banquet. 15. High School Day. 17. Juniors plant Class Tree 19. Baseball. M. A. C. 3, Trinity 4. Assembly. Mr. Critchett of M. I. T. 20. German Quizz. 21. Baseball. M. A. C. 3, Vermont 9. Intercollegiate Press Association meets at Boston. 22. M. A. C. 4, Vermont 2. Informal. 24. M. A. C. 10, Middlebury i. 26. Flint Prize Speaking. 27. Exams, posted. 28. Catalogs out at last. Baseball. M. A. C. 9, S. T. S. i. Toastmaster given in Montague. 29. Baseball. Andover 2, M. A. C. i. 30. Memorial Day. 31. Band goes to North Hadley. Battalion parades in Amherst. Hlunt. 1909 1. Tennis team defeated by Bowdoin. 2. Burnham Prize Speaking. Baseball. Dartmouth 7, M. A. C. 5. Tennis at Bates. 4. Baseball. Holy Cross 3, M. A. C. o. Tennis at Bates, broke even. 5. Bobby ' s bulletin board filled. 7. Senior exams, begin. 9. Prexy says, We give good board at cost. 10. Mass meeting. 11. Last recitation with Billy. 12. Tactics final. 14. Finals MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 127 i8. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23- Junior play. Intercollegiate Ritie Match at Seagirt, N. J.; M. A. C. .2nd. 1911 2, 1912 5. Baccalaureate sei ' mon. Commencement Drill.. Alumni Day. Commencement Exercises. Sophomore-Senior Prom. ptembpr, 1909 Beginning to return. More arrivals Registration. Football practice begins. More of the same. College opens with largest Freshman Class in the history of the College. Everybody broke. Y. M. C. A. Reception to 19 13. Freshmen attempt Class Picture. Prexy speaks. in chapel. Hampshire Fair. Rope-pull challenge posted. 191 2 wins Rope-pull. Junior Day. Mass meeting. Junior Class officers elected. M. A. C. o, University of Maine o. George E. Burgess in chapel. Seniors elect officers. Nick recites in absentia. Dartmouth 22, M. A. C. o. Rope breaks. Billy leaves for Yale. (l rtnbpr, 1909 I. Tug-of-war. 1913 wins. ' 0- Commencement iFltnt O ratortral Olontet MpiinPBtiag, iHag 26. 1 909 William Edward Leonard ....... Belmont Theodore Roosevelt. Willard McCready Titus ...... New Braintree The Young Citizen. Myron Smith Hazen ........ Springfield The No-License Question. William Clarence Johnson ..... South Framingham General Custer. Arthur Witt Holland ....... Shrewsbury The Duty of a College Man. Roger Sherman Eddy ........ Boston Capital Punishment, 130 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI W JinpaJiaa, 3lunf 2, 19119 William Richard Bent . .Marlboro Massachusetts and South Carolina — Daniel JVebster. John Francis Dee ........ Worcester Toussaint L ' Ouverture — Wend ell Phillips Frank Leonard Gray ....... East Boston The Victor of Marengo — Joel T. Headley. Frank Burrows Hills ....... Bernardston The Last Combat — Lord Lytton. Donald Charles Maxon ...... .Elkhart, Lidiana Irish Aliens and English Victories — Richard Shell. Theodore Joseph Moreau ...... Turners Falls The Honor of the Woods — Anonymous. Herbert James Stack ........ Amherst A Call to Action — Patrick Henry. Edward Burnham Young ....... Dorchester Napoleon the Little — Victor Hugo. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 131 i ' unDag. 3mt 20, 19D9 By President Kenyon L. Butterfield. Subject: Limitations. Class iag £xtnm s Supabau. 3lunp 22. 19119 Planting of Class Ivy By Class President Ivy Poem M. F. Geer Class Oration C. H. White Class Song W. D. Barlow Class Ode G. M. Brown Campus Oration L. S. Corbett Pipe Oration P. E. Alger Hatchet Oration O. C. Bartlett Class Tree Planted May 4, 1908. Hpbn?abae. 3um 23, 1999 Commencement Address : Hon. Gifford Pinchot, M. A., D. Sc, LL.D., United States Forester. Subject: The Next Step. 132 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI AmnxhB nnh Srtz s (grinttpll PrizfB: To members of the Senior Class who passed the best, second best, and third best examinations, oral and written, in theoretical and practical agriculture. First Prize, $25, Benjamin Franklin Barnes, Jr., Haverhill, Mass. Second Prize, $15, Paul Edgar Alger, Reading, Mass. Third Prize, $10, Jared Brewer Thomson, Monterey, Mass. Engltsli PrizPB : The Flint Prizes to members of the Junior Class delivering the best and second best oration. First Prize, $30, William Clarence Johnson, South Framing- ham, Mass. Second Prize, $20, Roger Sherman Eddy, Dorchester, Mass. lurnljam ? rt2PH: To Freshmen, for excellence in declamation. First prize, $25, Frank Burrows Hills, Bernardston, Mass. Second prize, $20, Theodore Joseph Moreau, Turner ' s Falls, Mass. Honorable mention to Edward Burnham Young, Dorchester, Mass. Entamologital PrizpH: To Seniors who have done the best work in Entomology during their course, in accordance with the scale of points prepared by the givers of the prizes. First prize, $20, Donald John Caffrey, Gardner, Mass. Second prize, $10, George Melvin Codding, Taunton, Mass. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 133 Jfnrrstrn T vizt: Given by the Bay State Agricultural Society as the J. W. D. French Prize for the best essay on arboriculture. $25, Charles Andrew Oertel, South Hadley Falls, Mass. Qlftipral SlmprofapntPttl Prt2P: Given to that member of the Sophomore Class, who, during his first two years in College, has shown the greatest improvement in scholar- ship, character, and example. $25, Percy WilHam Pickard, Hopedale, Mass. i Vs Sntantral Prtzra: For the best herbarium. $15, to Waldo Darius Barlow, Amherst, Mass. For the best collection of Massachusetts trees and shrubs. $10, to Waldo Darius Barlow, Amherst, Mass. For the best collection of Massachusetts woods. $10, to Waldo Darius Barlow, Amherst, Mass. The prize of $5, offered to that member of the Freshman Class pre- senting the best herbarium in regular course, is awarded to Robert Webster Wales. Honorable mention is made of Edward Hill Bodfish. illtUtarH anats anii J rtzps: The following officers were reported to the Adjutant-General of the United States, and to the Adjutant-General of Massachusetts, for high merit in their military work : Major Rockwood Chester Lindblad Capt. Lamert Seymour Corbett. Capt. Henry William Turner Capt. Richard Chute Potter. Capt. Myron Wood Thompson. Lieut. George Melvin Codding. Lieut. Frederick Chester Warner. 134 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI JPrtzfB To the winner of the Company competitive drill, a flag, to Company A. To the Captain of the best drilled company, a sabre with scabbard, to L. S. Corbett, ' 09. For individual drill in the manual of arms and firings : Gold medal, H. A. Brooks, ' 10. Silver medal, E. M. Folger, ' 12. Bronze medal, W. E. Philbrick, ' 12. For outdoor shoot : Gold medal, P. A. Racirot, ' 11. Silver medal, L. O. Stevenson, ' 11. Bronze medal, George Paulsen, ' 10. For indoor shoot : Gold medal, A. H. Sharpe, ' 11. Silver medal, George Paulsen, ' 10. Bronze medal, H. J. Baker, ' 11. To the Junior having the highest military standing, a gold medal, R. S. Eddy, ' 10. To the Sophomore having the highest military standing, a gold medal, S. R. Parsons, ' 11. To the Freshman having the highest military standing, a silver medal, H. L. Holland, ' 12. 136 fHE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLl Juntor Prom nab? Jfftbruarg 12, 1909 Suntor Prnm atrflnfaaw Mrs. VVm. P. Brooks Mrs. P. B. Hasbrouck Mrs. F. A. Waugh Mrs. E. A. White Mrs. A. V. Osmun 3«m0r Pram QlnmmittrF R. A. Waldron, Chairman Prof. P. B. Hasbrouck L. Brandt Prof. F. A. Wangli L. S. Dickinson Prof. E. A. White G. W. Paulsen Wm. E. Leonard F. T. Haynes E. H. Turner H. T. Cowles MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 137 3)unF 23. 1909 Mrs. K. L. Butterfield Mrs. P. B. Hasbrouck Mrs. J. A. Foord Mrs. R. D. McLaurin Mrs. A. V. Osmuii Mrs. J. B. Lindsey apI}omo«-i rmor Prom (HommitUt E. A. Larrabee, Chairinan Prof. P. B. Hasbrouck L. O. Stevenson Dr. R. D. McLaurin E. L. Winn R. C. Lindblad F. A. McLaughlin C. R. Webb F. A. Prouty J. E. Dudley, Jr. R. W. Piper H. W. Blaney G. P. Nickerson iHaaaarliuB tts Agnmltural Colbg Maroon and White A ass! Mass Massachusetts! Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Mass ' chusetts FT ■H 1 SUl l jnH 1 - - ' iiSiplfl wBSmSmx ' Clark ( nM Battalion %mUY mdh i ' taff R. S. Eddy . . . . . . . . . . Major E. H. Turner ....... Captain and Adjutant G. W. Paulsen .... First Lieutenant and Ordnance Officer D. E. Bailey ..... First Lieutenant and Quartermaster A. P. BuRSLEY ........ Sergeant Major H. H. Howe ....... Quartermaster Sergeant P. W. PiCKARD ........ Color Sergeant H. J. Baker ......... Color Sergeant (Unmpanij ©ffirtra Company A H. A. Brooks L. S. Dickinson W. C. Johnson A . H. Sharpe H. F. Willard E. L Warren E. N. Davis R. H. Armstrong L. S. Caldwell Q. S. Lowry H. L. Holland R. R. Parker D. G. Tower H. J. Stack W. J. Birdsall Company B F. T. Haynes L. G. Schermerh ' n L. S. McLaine L C. Gilgore F. A. McLaughlin G. P. Nickerson C. A. Smith H. W. Blaney W. E. Philbrick H. C. Walker T. J. Moreau A. F. Kingsbury J. E. Pierpont E. N. Boland L. E. Fagerstrom Company C H. W. French F. L. Thomas O. V. T. Urban S. R. Parsons W. F. Henry L. O. Stevenson H. B. Morse H. A. Pauly R. C. Barrows G. W. Ells J. J. Fitzgerald E. B. Young R. G. Southwick C. Peckham E. S. C. Daniel J. A. Harlow Company D L. C. Brown W. R. Clarke J. C. Folsom E. A. Larrabee G. A. Labouteley J. E. Dudley P. A. Racicot N. H. Hill M. C. Pratt E. I. Shaw A. W. Lamson F. A. Castle R. M. Gibbs E. I. Wilde R. N. Hallowell Captain First Lieutenant Second Lieutenar, First Sergeant Sergeant Sergeant Sergeant Sergeant Sergeant Corporal Corporal Corporal Corporal Corporal Corporal Corporal 140 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI AgnruUural Hnrattous UR last catalogue states in its introductory paragraphs, that The chief purpose of the college is to prepare men and women for the agricultural vocations. This is a very im- portant statement. Periodically, colleges are obliged to justify themselves to their students and to the public, not merely for their existence, but for their real task. In any college that is to be permanently successful,there must be some central idea, some dominant purpose, that shall work itself out in the administrative organization, in the curriculum, in the studies and researches of the professors, and that must pervade the atmosphere of the institution. In stating that the central idea of this college is to prepare men and women for the agricultural vocations, some explanations must be made, lest we be misunderstood. The catalog goes on to say that In this statement, the term ' agricultural ' is used in the broadest sense. It also says that the course is admirably fitted for training men for any pursuit in which the sciences are an essential preparation, and that, Still other students find the course a splendid general education, without regard to future occupation. !t also must be understood that no college, and particularly no state-supported college, can fulfil its obligation to society, unless it definitely trains its students to realize their duties as citizens, and inspires them for some form of leader- ship in helping solve the problems of democracy. Nor can any educational institution long justify its existence, unless it takes definite measures to main- tain enterprises that minister directly to the personal development of students as men and women, unless it encourages and leads the students to lay such foundations for successful living as will result in physical health, intellectual strength, personal culture, and moral power. Thus a college like ours has a peculiar task. Its avowed purpose it to prepare men and women for the agricultural vocations, the callings by which they are to make a living. But it must also prepare for citizenship and for life. Doubtless there are some who think that this announced purpose is too narrow, but I am convinced that if we can fulfil this mission properly, we will have before us a task that will strain our powers to the utmost. Many forces are contributing to a vast movement for the development of both scientific agriculture and the reconstruction of life under rural conditions; and the colleges of agriculture will indeed be fortunate if they shall be able to keep up with these purposes, to say nothing about taking leadership in them. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE Hj It is to be noted also that the term agricultural vocations means some- thing far different tlian the term farming. With the rise of the agricultural colleges, and the development of this movement for scientific agriculture and renewed country life, entirely new vocations have come into existence which have to do with some phase or another of this great movement. So that the agricultural colleges have the work of not only preparing students for prac- tical agriculture, and for teaching and research, but for entirely new vocations, or at least for vocations followed in an entirely new spirit. I think of at least five classes of agricultural vocations, for which an agricultural college may attempt to train men and women. 1. Independent farming. This would include all of those branches of agriculture and horticulture that have to do with the growing of plants and animals for human use. There is no doubt but the opportunities for college men in this field are developing very rapidly. 2. Vocations connected with agriculture, where expert service is needed b} some large enterprise, governmental or private, such as the Forestry Ser- vice or the superintendency of a large estate. 3. Research and teaching along- agricultural lines. The demand for men here is much beyond the supph ' , and the development of agricultural high schools is creating a still further demand. 4. Positions in general enterprises more or less dependent upon agri- culture, where men with agricultural training are needed for technical and managerial work, such as the canning industries, the fertilizer business etc. 5. A series of vocations which are really agricultural in their nature, requiring agricultural training, and in which too, there are developed leaders in social service, such as teachers in rural communities, rural librarians, rural Y. M. C. A. secretaries, and country clergymen. I should like, if there were space in this article, to describe the oppor- tunities in these different classes of vocations, but perhaps I have said enough to indicate that in definitely holding up as the purpose of this college prepara- tion for the agricultural vocations, we have given the institution a broad scope. I have no hesitation whatever in saying to young men and women who have the ability, and who like the subjects of study that underlie preparation for the various agricultural vocations, that in no field of human endeavor are there greater possibilities, and in no field is the demand for strong, alert people more sure of substantial reward. (CI , 142 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 143 N hi lining ImlJitttg f ? HE building now being erected for the Departments of Zoology and Entomology is located just north and a little east of the Insectary. Its front is one hundred and twenty-six feet in length, and its north and south wings are one hundred and five feet. It will have two stories, a basement and an attic. Mineralogy, Geology, Insecticide analysis, a pump-room and the lower part of the large lecture room, will occupy the basement. On the first floor will be the Zoological laboratory, the upper part of the large lecture room, the lower floor of the Zoological Museum, the Insectary of the Experiment Sta- tion, and several oflrces and supply rooms. On the second floor will be the Entomological laboratories for seniors and graduate students, the insect col- lection, the library of the departments, the gallery of the Museum, a small lecture room and a room for advanced Zoology. In the attic will be rooms for photography, and for the janitor. The present Insectary greenhouse will be moved so as to connect with the Insectary portion of the building. The building, which is to be fireproof, will cost about $80,000, and is being erected by the Allen Brothers of Amherst. C. P. Hoyt of Boston is the architect. It is hoped that it may be ready for use by the beginning of the next college year. 144 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI GROWTH ol the COLLEGE from l6(JJto f ' 9 7 ' f s: f s jo,ooo I Z 0,0 00 n 0,000 100,000 q 0.000 60,00 J 0.000. bO.OOQ Total Income ' 00 ' 0 OZ ' 0-5 ' 04 ' OS 06 ' 0 7 ' 06 ' Of Total Va uation of Buiidinqs and Colleae Proper tu ' (jj ' f ' qCj 00 ' 01 ' 01 ' Oi 04 ' OS Od ' OJ ' 06 ' Of qo 0,000. 600,000. JOO.OOO. 600,000 600,000 400,000 J 00,000 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 145 Instructors ,- 0 ' a(% ' q(? ' 00 ■01 ' 0?. ' 03 ' 04 ' OS ■06 07 ' 06 Of ?fS y ?.(■y ?.4. -- ?.?. 2.0 y Four - ijeor Students 7 ' ' 7Q ' 00 ' 0 ' or. ' 0( ' 04 ' OS ' o ■oj ' Ofi ' Of 200 It Z50 ZOO ISO - 100 ■— so Total Students ' fZ—, ' ( ' 9 •ao ' 01 •OP. ' 0 , ' 04 ' OS 06 ' 07 ' Ofi ' oq boo 7 S60 Soo 450 400 350 )00 150 ZOO y — 160 - 100 -- ' H H FRENCH HALL WITH NEW OURFEE PLANT HOUSES ERECTED 1909 148 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI ©rtbulattottfi attb a numpljs In the spring of the year nineteen hundred and eight, The Sophomores thought they would settle our fate, So they schemed to compel us our banquet to hold, While they kept in bondage, our president bold. Then on April eighteenth, as the sun sank from sight, They carried our Jimmie far into the night, Then they posted the challenge, in which they declared That to pull rope next day we must all be prepared. As it chanced, the next day on a holiday fell. So eleven rushed off to the Senate pell-mell. There, but small was the comfort the poor Freshmen got. For the grave Seniors said, You have vexed us enough. And the only thing possible which we can do Is to say that neither one of the two, That is, rope-pull or banquet, shall be carried through. Before midnight of the fourth day to ensue. At this, secretly pleased, the sly Sophomores, next day, Nailed up a new challenge for a rope-pulling fray. And now in sad quandary, the poor Freshmen lay. For if this new challenge was not soon accepted The rope-pull to ten would be given, ' twas expected. And if, at the same time, we wished to accept it. We must in three days pull off our class banquet ; Which without our Jimmie, ' tis sad to relate Would have been a sad failure, were it not for kind fate. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE [49 But as chance would ordain it, soon it was found out That Jimmie, bound captive, was held without doubt. At the house of a clergyman, father of he Who throughout the college was known as Tubbie. So, gathering up all the Freshmen at large. We prepared, on the stairs, to advance at full charge ; But alas and alack, how men ' s plans go astray, For the dominie stood in his own doorway. And demanded of those who were standing about What this smashing of windows and doors was about. Then sad, disappointed, we went on our way, Vowing vengeance we ' d take on the very next day. In the contest next day, it was merely child ' s play To take feet of rope from those Sophomores away ; And then ere the smoke from our pipes had died down. We started in haste for the river-side town. Where our scouts had assured us the captive was hid, Since from Amherst away he had been spirited. Through the long, weary night our search was in vain. Until as the sun o ' er the hills rose again Our outposts declared that our quest had been seen ; For, as Ostro against the boat-house door leaned The door was opened, then slammed with a sound. Disclosing the fear that the captive was found. The news of his whereabouts instantly spread By Marathon runners, of which you have read, To La France, Massasoit, and then Marble Hall, Summoning classmates. Juniors and all. 150 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Back over from Holyoke, we went with a speed That only mates give when a friend is in need If the banquet ' s success is the price at stake. On arriving a summons we then did make, And assured by force the captive we ' d take If instantly he was not surrendered up. And yet, they desired to hold him, but stay, A log up the bank of the stream found its way. At the point of the ram, soon the Sophomores found That they had little chance with the Freshmen ' round So, deeming discretion the .best part of valor, They loosened the captive, on whose face a pallor Bore witness to days in anxiety spent While he in the Sophomores ' camp had been pent. What a shout rent the air as he stepped forth again ! Free in the midst of eleven ' s bold men. With feelings relieved, hearts joyous and gay. We turned then to face what the new dawning day Might for us have in store. To Holyoke first. We went with intent to quench hunger and thirst. This having accomplished, we took the first train To the city of Hartford, far down on the plain. The morning was spent in the city ' s broad lanes And watching for all of the southern bound trains. Rose gardens, capitol, theatre and all Claimed attention, until the night shades ' gan to fall. To a right royal banquet we sat down together, And after the banquet was cleared from the board. At the toasts and the wit we all of us roared. But the happiest thought of this glad, joyous meal Was — How do you think those d Sophomores feel ? MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLI,EGE 151 Olampus iErl|0?0 Billy: Adams, have you got that example? Adams: No, sir, I don ' t know how to do it. Billy : Armstrong, have you ? Armstrong : No sir, I don ' t understand it. Billy : Damon ? Damon : I lost my book. Billy: Yes, I forgot you did. Well, Davis, how about you? Davis : I forgot all about the problem. Billy: AND THEY ALL WITH ONE ACCORD BEGAN TO MAKE EXCUSE. Advice to physically disabled students : Put your foot through the window and the pane will be gone. The Kid: When the bell rings the time is up ex officio. ' GiLGORE : Only fools are certain, wise men hesitate. Bentley: Are you sure? Gilgore: Yes, positive. 5.B.H. % J., . a U eU, w iyj so ' 152 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Short Horn to Kid Howard: Are you one of the fellows taking the short winter course ? Bl ney Wi n R cicot AIL en ProutY Smi h BurSley |i owe D mon ShaRpe OstrolenJ Pardons Pea green Freshman to Vint: You better take those corduroys off or the Sophs will get wise. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 153 M M R 154 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI A couple of fellows for fun Went out for the cross-country run ; A respectable horse Was scared from his course, And that ' s what the cross-country done nAa-r ' te G.N.H. r j j i J - « Tkjit ur ' xW ao, rni ter Barrov 5 Sergeant Warren : When I say ' halt, ' place the foot on the ground beside the one in the air, and remain motionless. QII|? iams OIlub I. W. Davis President I. G. Davis Vice-President E.N.Davis Treasurer E.M.Davis Secretary MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 155 Willard: How long will these bushes live? Prof. White : Oh, till the next generation. Willard: Oh, that won ' t be long. Prof. White : I guess not, at the rate you ' re going. A. P. Burs Ley H. W. BlAney G. A. NielsoN C. M. Damon A. H. Sharpe R. Robinson G. C. H wkins F. A. prouty E M. Brown Johnson: Did you hear about the explosion this morning? Adams: No; why, what was it? Johnson : Gordon talked so fast and used such big words that the windows blew out. 156 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI — ... ' ' WSi m B A ' 1 W W- %« m m 1 p m m jiaS:s:iisissB ' mf ' i - ■■-•■S MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 157 Hampshire Agricultural Society OF THE y : Massachusetts Agricultural College SEPTEMBER 21. 1909 H. A. PARSONS, Pres. U. G. GROFF, Secy. Squirt Neal has a system, they say, He revises it three times a day. For all crazy notions And useless commotions. There ' s none can meet him half-way. Johnson : Skip, got a match ? Smith : No, I ' m matchless. We were studying once how to cut up a cow, To get the best slices of meat, And Gribben, of course, was telling us how, And the parts that are finest to eat. He was telling about a fine Porterhouse steak He had eaten in days gone before. But he saw by our faces our hearts might break. And he stopped, ere he said any more. I am sorry I spoke of it, boys, he said, I know that I ought to beware. And not even mention a Porterhouse steak When you live on real Hash-house fare. 158 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI During Sophomore Chem. final : : Kid (To Sharpe) : Those tables are all in your book. Sharpe {zvhose book is on the radiator) : Yes, but I can ' t reach it. Kid (calling the roll) : Jenks, Jenks. Labouteley : He ' s got the chicken-pox. Kid (confidentially) : Do you know, I remember having them when a boy. One morning my mother told me that I had chicken-pox, and I, being inquisitive to see what they were like, pulled up my night shirt, looking for the feathers. Billy: If this keeps up, gentlemen, I ' ll have enough goose-eggs to set a hen every night. n r ?B.H. , m.. II h (• - Y .A J cb -Jjc U ril sXicV ye- How much can Has-brouck? Not so much as Lock-wood. Where has Grib-ben ? Across the Foord as far as Daddy Mills. R. G. SwiTii: Well, that ' s what it says in Alexander Smith ' s chemistry. Billy: That ' s Smith ' s chemistry, all right. Blokie ' s interest in football is evidenced by his becoming so enthusiastic in a mass meeting that he walks around with his crutch in the wrong hand. ' ilMtM ' - sd . j,. ;.. 9 9 f -■' ■:. ft 3 p ff ' ■■B p i-:: ' :;: Bp jaai l B A 4iA ■-■;■—J ' ■. ' -try- ' ; ;••■■. I B H ■■■■•.;;i? S ' v , -IW rfr.;- ' :■- ' ' ' ., s B ; mmmmmmmi ma u || - Bte ' iMfc j MB MR E -]mK K t . m K R- ; ;,:«;§:.: Hl ' ■■9i:wi 1 . ■' VRI K gt i B H 9 1 i rfli w 1 P | S9 l ' ' ' ■. -■. ' ' (yti ! j « ' - j . ' L on H ji fr- : m m kIi ' ' ' j h H 1 160 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI HaSkell W. p B. Lockwood NEal MacKimmi £ Howar Q pernald Gr I bben Reynolds Du 1 can FoorQ OSmun Billy : You can ' t get it by putting it under your pillow ; it don ' t soak up that way, nor you can ' t get it by sitting on it; it don ' t soak up THAT way either. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 161 AMHERST. LION HUNT IN PROGHESS. Kins of Beasts Reported to Have Es-. tablished a Lair in the Hickey AVoods. There was great excitement and consid- erable fear in North Hadley and the ad- joining part of Amherst yesterday over the report that a huge lion was stalking about. Men armed with rifles, shotguns, pitch- forks, crowbars, axes and other imple- ments of warfare hunted in vain all day for the creature. The animal was first seen by Michael Gekonski. a bright Pole, who has been in this country some 20 years a d been to many circuses, and he swears that it is nothing less than a huge bull lion. He was coming through the Hickey woods just west of the Massachu- setts agricultural college, when he saw the creature lying across its lair. He de- scribes it as being five feet long, with a shaggy head as big as a bushel basket and with a long tail with a big tuft of hair on the end. He backed away as rapidly as possible until out of sight and then ran for dear life. He was so thoroughly frightened that he was unable to leave the house yester- day. The hunters found the den. which is said to be about six feet deep, five feet in diameter and 20 feet long. Many are skep- tical of the whole story, but those who have seen the hole, including such men as Thomas Hickey, the well-known tobacco grower, are at least satisfied that; there has been some big wild animal there, and others who know Mr Gekonski say that he is not a man likely to be so badly frightened at nothing. 162 THE 19U INDEX VOLUME XLI Kid (to R. G. Smith): You have mercurous ; now mercurous and mercuric are just as different as C. A. and R. G. Quick, quick, bring some water, the hen-house is on fire and the hens are so excited they are running about laying fried eggs. pickard BUrsley Qrown BL ney Dav|is Stevengon S H arpe BakEr Racicot ParQons At inspection Armstrong stands with feet apart. Inspector: What is your position as a soldier? Armstrong: Oh! I ' m a corporal. A microscope they took to Chem, And when, perplexed, we questioned them, They said, Why you poor stupid folks To see the point in Howard ' s jokes. i r r SF.H, c limes y P ' MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 163 LOGIC ACCORDING TO R. G. SMITH Smith : All donkeys have ears. This man has ears, Therefore this man is a donkey. MacKimmie: Why, Smith, any fool can see that is not true. ' Billy: Do you know anything about this, Armstrong? Armstrong: Not much. Billy : Well, I suppose so, go ahead. I sipped the honey from her Hps As under the pale moon ' s ray we sat And wondered if ever man before Had drunk from a mug like that. McGraw (In Light) : They go but they don ' t arrive. 1 ' r A Ur m J I ...i I J 1;: M ps n ' 1 t ' IHI I f ' ' JhSI I - K Hi 164 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Attraction varies directly or inversely as the square of the distance. Interesting special case of equilibrium — the couple. Lever — at 10 P. M. Torque — hot air. Negative acceleration — due to chaperone. Dyne — only at Boyden ' s. = phase (d) I prom The tide (tied) — unfortunate. Lift pumps — naughty! naughty! Block — the chaperone, and tackle — the girl. Unit charge — six cents. Foot-pound — applied at 10 P. M. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 165 ©I|0 Olalkg? %x hn 1912 iHauag m ut AS there ever, in the history of our Alma Mater, a class equal to that of 1912? Never! The unstained record of our Fresh- man year will go down into the future as a glowing example of success. In all our contests with the Sophomores, we suffered never a defeat. Football they played well and hard — but they did not beat us. They contested the tug-of-war heroically — but they were pulled through the pond. The six-man rope-pull led them to do their best — yet they lost three and one-half feet of rope, and with it the six-man pull. Basketball they lost, eighteen to nine. They succeeded, to be sure, in kidnapping one or two of our class officers. But poor old 191 1! Their prisoners were taken from them at the moment of victory. At the hour when they had expected to be gloating over a despairing and bancjuetless class, the impertinent Freshmen were hilariously about the board. In athletics 19 12 was among the foremost. The college football eleven, the basketball team, the hockey squad, the baseball nine — we were well rep- resented in all. Not more than three college games were played in which at least one ' 12 man did not take part. Moreover, we had some good track men and it was one of our men who received the highest honors in the cross- country run. Our scholastic work, too, won us renown. Literary men, debaters, orators, mathematicians, scientists, philosophers, flourished among us. We were so industrious, and we learned so much — of some things — that one of our most learned professors has gone to Yale in order to find something more to teach us. We should have enjoyed taking you into one of our classes — Economic History, for example, that you might get a glimpse of our diligence and love of study. 166 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI • Nor was the social side of our life neglected. Better fussers never entered the social whirl of M. A. C. Some members of the class, indeed, went to excess, at least in their attendance upon Sophomore functions. And in justice we must say that, although their hosts met them more than half- way and gave them a very, very warm reception, yet our men for days there- after showed a painful sense of soreness. Our reception to 1913 is quite different ; we are treating them in the very best way we know how. We trust that they appreciate our efforts and will help us to maintain the good feeling which exists between us. Now we are Sophomores — 91 of us. The second quarter of our brilliant career was begun by pulling thirty-one feet of rope away from the Freshman class in the six-man rope-pull. It is true they won the tug-of-war across the pond, but they can never reach the heights that we have climbed. Hov ever, we wish them well. In a few words: the class of ' 12 has helped to make a bigger, better, busier M. A. C. — bigger, because of our numbers ; better, because of our presence; and busier, because to compare favorably with us, other classes have to hustle. A LAST YEAR ' S FRESHMAN MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 167 168 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI IForm r iEemh rB of 19X1 When musing on companions gone We doubly feel ourselves alone. John Becker Wihiam H. Bliss Irving C. Brown James G. Chadbourne William H. Coash Chester E. Coles Ernest L. Daniels James A. Davey Raymond A. Denslow Edward Fitzgerald George H. Grey Clarence A. Gunn Charles P. Hammond Henry Harrington William F. Hennessey Chen Hua Huang Herbert F. Hyatt Ying Chi Liang Walter M. Loker Philip S. McGann Rupert S. McNayr Charles E. Merrill George B. Merrill Chester Moody Clyde M. Packard William R. Phipps Gordon H. Robb Joseph Rosenbaum Frank J. Schmitz Howard Spencer George A. Tilton Ralph E. Wheeler E. Carl Whittaker Donnell B. Young MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 169 X9XI ilntot uaUit JAMES FOWLER ADAMS It was for Our Jim that the whole class paraded the streets of South Hadley Falls and a large number of those of Holyoke, on the memorable night and morn- ing of April 21 and 22, 1908, and great was the rejoicing when Jim, cold, hungry, and sleepy, was taken from the guardian Sophomores at 4.20 Wednesday A. M. Jim soon recovered from the effects of his night in the boat-house and led us in triumph to Hartford. Beside this adventure, to secure his name a place in our halls of fame, Jim played Class Football, Varsity Hockey, is Assistant Manager Football, a member of the Fraternity Conference, Band and Glee Club. Jim, with all his varied duties, is a very busy man and withal a studious one, as should be a man who was born in the cultured city of Boston. Jim or Jimsie, as he is known by some, has been very much alive since March 5, 1888, and after showing the boys of Melrose High a few pointers in various respects, came to old M. A. C as a member of 1911. Jim is a member of Q. T. v., and is taking Forestry. PARK WEST ALLEN This sturdy young New England ' s melodious voici first reached G Flat on March 12, 1889, near West field. After a few quiet years on the farm he enterec Westfield High School, where he developed into a great fusser as well as a scholar. It was here that hu adopted the motto, Use thy neighbor as thyself, lo which he has been faithful ever since. Stimulated by his success at High School, Park ventured higher and entered M. A. C. with 191 1. Here he has answered many callings and is Jack of all trades. Early in his career he was seen in the college choir, later on leading the Glee Club. He has also had the responsibilities of Class Secretary and Treasurer and is Assistant Business Manager of the Signal, also an active member of the Married Men ' s Club. Allen is a member of the Senate and blows himself in the band when not physically disabled. His early desire was to be a pomologist, but after a summer of practical horticulture, spent in Connecticut, he decided there was no place like home and has therefore elected Math, fitting himself for a partner in Allen and Son. Park is a member of ■S K. 170 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI RALPH HENRY ARMSTRONG Our Monk first attracted attention in Nashua, N. H., May 31, 1S89. But not being satisfied with the atmospheric conditions of the Granite State, he journeyed to Holyoke via Lowell and Taunton, stop- ping just long enough at the last-named place to take a peep at the fair ones as they went by. Now while we all realize that Monk is somewhat of a fusser and rough-houses his landlady once in a while, we could not possibly get along without seeing his smiling coun- tenance. Among his many achievements we find that he has played on the Class Baseball and Basketball teams. Annie has elected Forestry. HERBERT JONATHAN BAKER This is Bill Bryan of the mighty mind and mightier gab, but New England cannot claim this in- tellectual wonder, for he was born in 1SS5, in Selby- ville, Del. After assimilating all the knowledge of that vicinity and spending some time imparting it to others, he decided to come north and learn something. To be morally fortified against college temptations, he attended Mount Hermon before entering with 191 1. And until his second summer he did not fall, but the fair summer school dames were even too much for his amour plate. Bill ' s even disposition is seldom stirred from its lethargy, but when his righteous anger is aroused he makes the occasion so momentous that Al tabulates his profane phrases on the wall. Bake ' s ability to argue, besides getting him by, has made him President of the Debating Club. He was on the Burhham Eight and is also Assistant Manager of the Index. He says he will elect Botany and Pomology, but he should be classed with those wheats that live up in East Entry of North. Bake is a K E and if hard work will cause him to get there he will be waiting when you arrive. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 171 . RAYMOND CORBIN BARROWS The meek, demure voice of Barry was first heard in Providence, on March 8, 1889. We are told that Raj ' niond spent his school days as all well-behaved boys should and finally graduated from the Stamford High School. Raymond debated the question of his future education long and hard, but at last decided that M. A. C. was the proper place for him. So today we find him a classmate of gocd old ' 11. Raymond has achieved some success in athletics, being our Class Track Captain, and playing on the Sophomore Baseball and Basketball teams. But Barry ' s principal achieve- ment is the gentle art of fussing. On pleasant Sundays one may see him making tracks toward the regions over the river with his wife Pickard. Ray- mond has elected wheat and is a member of Q. T. V. THOMAS WEBSTER BEAN Here lies the body of Thomas Bean, Beneath the daisies and the green. Bean is not here, only the pod, Bean has shelled out and gone home to God. On the day of November 25, 18S8, to the post- master of South Hadley Falls there came a small package, and they named it Thomas Webster Bean. Owing to good fortune and political influence Tom emerged from South Hadley Falls High School after occupying every office possible, except janitor. By this time he had expanded every way but longitudinallj ' . Tom entered old M. A. C. with ' 09, but went back home to grow, and as a method of accomplishing this, he took to reaching for the cord to pull in fares on the electric cars. Having saved up enough money to bu3 ' a street car line, he decided to enter with 191 1. On arriving at M. A. C. Tom immediately showed the train- ing he had received at High School by making third base on the Varsity nine. His fielding average is better on some balls than on others. Joe spends most of his time with the books ( ?) but he devotes a few spare moments to fussing and caressing his old clay pipe. Besides playing Varsity Baseball, Beany assisted 191 1 by playing Class Baseball. He is a member of C. S. C, and Ski Hi. Tom will elect Forestry. 172 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI ARNOLD GORDON BENTLEY Over the river they ' re beckoning to me. Loved ones who ' ve gone afar. Born May i6, 1889, at Truro, Nova Scotia, we next hear of this clammy bacteriaceae in the town of Hyde Park, Massachusetts, where he graduated from High School in the good old year of 1907. Next, he found his way to M. A. C. and at once made his pres- ence felt. He has always been popular, as is well shown by the honors which he has received. He has been Manager of the Rope-pull team and has played on our Class Baseball and Varsity Hockey teams. Bent is a jolly, good fellow and is always ready to give advice. Whenever any discussion is going on, he is always on hand with a characteristic opinion. Moreover, he is a charter member of the BuUers Club and has an earnest desire to become major of the Battalion about 1925 A. D. He is a member of Q. T. V and has elected Chemistry. HERBERT WARDWELL BLANEY On a still and calm day, December 14, 1889, a stately boat sailed into Swampscott Harbor, dropped anchor off Blaney ' s rocks and landed Herbert. He was immediately tied to his mother ' s apron-strings, and was not released until he entered Swampscott High School. Here Herb started the independence which he has carried with him to M. A. C. Although unable to take part in any form of athletics, he has become prominent in other affairs of college life and has fulfilled his ardent desire to do something for the college. During his Freshman and Sophomore years he managed his class Baseball team, and since, has grown into Uass President, a member of the Senate, Fraternity Conference, Signal Board, was one of the Burnham Eight, and is Business Manager of the 191 ' Inde.v. Although his Index duties have taken most of his time, his religious duties are not entirely neglected, for he occasionally attends vespers over the moun- tain. Herbert being good at pulling strings, succeeded in landing the Tower room, and on account of this faculty, he roped in Johnny O. and Prof. Waugh, and will major in Math and Landscape. In spite of this last fact he is a good student, a worthy classmate and friend, and has the best wishes of the class for his future success. He is a member of C. S. C. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 173 EDGAR MORTON BROWN This small ciliate was first formed in Granville, Mass., October 4, 1889. As the flagella began to de- velope we find Brownie first in Stamford, Conn., then in Sound Beach, later in Springfield, and finally in West Springfield. Here he assumed a resting stage long enough to graduate from the West Springfield High School in the class of 1907. His next move was to enter M. A. C. with 191 1. Here he has had an easy time with the faculty as is shown by the fact that he found time to manage the Sophomore class football team and to play class baseball. Besides, he is on the Signal and Index boards. Some claim that Browni ' - has a tendency towards fussing but no marked symp- toms have been noticed as yet. Little Brown is a member of Theta Phi and has elected Landscape. ARTHUR JAMES BURNHAM This youth first tripped the light fantastic on the eleventh day of November in the year of Our Lord 1889. Racking their brains to find some name suitable to this squalling youngster, they finally called it Arthur James Burnham. The boys call him ' ' Art ' or Marie for short. After graduating from IlDlyoke High School he finally made his debut at M. A. C. Before he entered college he was a quiet and likeable youngster, but since he entered here he has Ijecome a finished wind-jammer. Owing to his many trips to Hanip he is mistaken by many people as a lireclor of llie Conn. Valley St. R. R. Co. He has a very striking fondness for blondes and is a great fusser, and between that and his studies we see very little of aim. During the summer months you will see Art juggling grain bags in his father ' s grain store in Holyoke. Usually you will see him holding down the only cushioned chair in the store, talking to some fair young maiden. Art is an all round good fellow and is studying the pros and cons of Horticulture. He succeeded in making a good showing on the class baseball team. He is a member of the C. S. C. and one of the Ski Hi bunch. 174 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI ALLYN PARKER BURSLEY In all the history of the progress of the world we find only one steamboat more famous than our own Steamer Bursley. Except for Robert Fulton ' s Cler- mont, the fame and renown of our own Steamer ex- ceeds by far that of any steam-propelled craft known to mankind, including the great Lusitania and her sister ship, the Mauretania. Our Steamer was launched January 7, 1S91, in that little down-on-the- Cape town of West Barnstable. It is needless to add that when launched he was christened with Old Cape Cranberry Juice. For his maiden trip, Steam- er sailed through Tabor Academy. This trip showed him to be seaworthy and his next trip was to M. A. C. Since arriving at that harbor Steamer has taken part in many student activities, being College Senator, Class Historian, Member of Index Board, playing class football and basketball and taking first prize in the Burnham Eight. Steamer is a member of 6 and is taking Math and Landscape. ARTHUR THEODORE CONANT Did any good thing ever come from North Lev- erett? Yes; July 11, 1887, Arthur Theodore Conant originated there, but at the early age of two, becoming weary of his monotonous surroundings, he migrated to North Hadley. He soon became possessed of a desire for more knowledge, and as a result, graduated from Hopkins Academy and proceeded to enter Am- herst College. Fearing, however, that he might not find the Willies very congenial, he chose M. A. C. as his Alma Mater. Pomology is his specialty along with Dairying and Agriculture, for some day he_ hopes to show us a thing or two about farming. He is that quiet, industrious sort of a chap whom everyone likes, even the girls, although he seldom fusses. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 175 CHARLES MURRAY DAMON The 25th day of April, 1889, was a fortunate day for M. A. C, for on that day was born C. M. Damon, who makes the weather for us. He is fortunate to have this work, for he thereby gets out of chapel attendance. Damon has always lived on a farm in Haydenville, Mass. But after graduating from Northampton High School he came to M. A. C. to study to be, not a farmer, but a civil engineer. His life here has been rather fast for a quiet man. During his Freshman year he was Captain of our winning Rope-pull team. The next year he was also Captain of the Rope-pull team and Class Captain. From the way in which he has served us in these lines we can but predict for him good success if he only can keep well. Just at present he is in bad condition, not being able to drill. Dame is a member of C. S. C. EGBERT NORTON DAVIS It was on the 26th day of the little month of February, in 1890, that a great event happened at Natick, Mass. This event was the birth of fair-haired Egbert Norton, otherwise known to us as Goldie, Beetle, etc. Goldie spent his school days in Natick, graduating from Natick High in 1907. He came to M. A. C. to fit himself to show the world how to grow fruits and garden truck. Beetle worked along practical lines last summer. He is an aspirant to the Married Men ' s Club, and is a sergeant in the Clark Cadet Battalion. 176 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI IRVING WILDER DAVIS This interesting and unique member of the Davis Club first put in his appearance at Lowell, Mass., November 19, 1889. He is a genealogist and recently was taken for George Washington, an ancestor whom he closely resembles. Irving, after fooling the Lowell High School into giving him a resignation, followed his brother to old Mass ' chusetts. He knew that the odd classes are the better, so ' 11 was his choice. Dave is a loyal classmate and a staunch friend. As a Fresh- man he was Vice-President. He is a remarkable mu- sician, too, for he can play the drum to beat the band. L W. stands in with the faculty, especially Billy and Jocko. Dr. Fernald has given Shine the responsible position of head bug nurse. You can always find him anywhere on Pleasant Street making all the new-comers feel at home. Dave is a good beefer, having been on the Burnham Eight. Tude nas the misfortune of being an editor of this book, is a K S, and believing in courses that afford free feeds, he has elected Pomology. HAROLD BLAKE DRURY This wonder hails from the wondrous town of Athol. It hailed there for the first time on April 28, 1888, and has been hailing all over the world ever since. Though nobody may know it, the fact is that Harold is the most extensive fusser in the class. His seductive charms are as alluring in Seattle, Washing- ton, as in Sinclair, N. J., or in New Haven, Conn., to say nothing of Boston, Orange, Athol, or over the river. Beat that ! tie it if you can ! H. B. learned the principles of fussing at the Athol High School, where he also obtained a sufficient knowledge of algebra to get a pull with Billy. His favorite apparel con- sisting of a green necktie, yellow shirt, brown socks, red sweater and checkered trousers, would make Joseph ' s coat of many colors look like a funeral garb. He farms when he is not fussing, and has elected Horticulture and Market Gardening. He was a mem- ber of the Burnham Eight. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 177 JOHN EDWARD DUDLEY, JR. John was first seen running through Wellesle Mass., on the 28th of August, 1886, and he has been running ever since, until now he thinks he is runnin, the college. Finding things rather slow here in the East, he went to the wild and wooly West, but he didn ' t leave all his wildness out there. After spending thirteen years in Colorado, the longing for the East became too great, and Dud returned in time to graduate from Newton High School with the class of ' 07. After spending a year at Brown, but thinking that he was too good and that he knew too much, he came here and cast in his lot with 191 1. Dud has helped us considerably in athletics, showing his pace last winter at the B. A. A. He has worked well as a classmate, having been manager of Class Track, captain of Class Track, a member of the Sophomore Rope-pull team, and the Sophomore-Senior Prom com- mittee. Dud has elected Chemistry, and he is a member of Q. T. V. IRVING CRAIG GILGORE Twenty years ago on the 28th of January, this roving character was found in Schenectady. From there he wandered to Geneva, then to Utica, and finally back to Schenectady. Here the High School furnished hnn an education sufficient to enter Columbia. Before he had been long at this college he came to the con- clusion that his supposed talents as a lawyer were lacking. Next he started in with the I. C. S. Com- mercial course, but his tastes were not congenial with the gay white way and again he changed and came to M. A. C. Here he found a satisfactory environment, both as to studies and fellow-students. From the time he entered he has been a loyal classmate, sharing alike the pleasures and misfortunes of 191 1. Gilgore is specializing in Pomology. He is a member of Q. T. V. 178 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI WILLARD FRANCIS HENRY Hopedale ! Did yon ever hear of such a place? No ? Well, neither had any of us, until a little chicken came to us tied to Percy as a companion. Small, fair, light-haired ; yes, that is Willard Francis Henry. He was born at Milford, Mass. September 28, 1888. He didn ' t remain long in an unknown state, for as peeps to chickens grow, so Chick has come out into the world of college life. He is a mighty wielder of paddles and a destroyer of hearts. Under classmen can testify to the first, and upper classmen acknowledge that the second is his worst fault. Willard expects to engage in the jeweler ' s business and if not successful in that line of work he will follow up his election, greenhouse management. With such a partner as can be found on McClellan Street, we are sure he will be successful in his undertakings. Chick is a member of the Fraternity Conference and the Theta Phi fraternity. NATHANIEL HERBERT HILL According to the generally preconceived notion of the state of New Jersey, it is able to produce nothing but mosquitos, but here is the exception which proves the rule, we have a genuine New Jersey Nat, not the common or garden variety of gnat, but Nat nevertheless. By Jehoo was discovered over on the Jersey side on March 23, 1S87, in the town of Glenmore, but at present his home is in Hopewell, N. J. Nat preped at Peddle Institute. His farm training gave him good muscle, which fitted him to be a member of our class Rope-pull team. He also twirled for the class Baseball team. He is specializing in Horticulture and after graduation he expects to go back to the Garden State and show them how to grow fruit. Nat belongs to S K, and is a member of the Fraternity Conference. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 179 HAROLD HOSMER HOWE This thick-set combination of three H ' s was first discovered March 29, 18S8, at Hartford, Conn. Decker soon moved his family to Springfield and in course of time was allowed to graduate from the Tech- nical High School with the class of ' 07. Believing in the luck of odd classes we next find him at Aggie with 191 1. Fat ' s melodious voice won hiiTi imme- diate favor with the Kid and consequently he sings in the choir. So skillfully has Fat manipulated the crutches that Bloke has given him a job in the office. Deck showed some tendency to fussing when he en- tered with us, but now he has advanced to President of the Fussers. Fat was Freshman Secretary and Treasurer; he was on the Burnham Eight. KS claims him as a member. He is using his gray matter on Mathematics. ALBERT ROSCOE JENKS Jenks floated into Three Rivers on Novemb er 13, 1889, but no one seems to know which river brought him ; perhaps all three contributed a little. He went to Palmer High School, where he learned the art of fussing, and has never forgotten it. As the train went by his house to the Northwest every day, he became curious to see the world. So one day he hopped a freight and the brakeman kicked him off at Amherst. Ever since, he has stayed with 191 1 and continued to plug. Yenks has quite a head for Math and French, although he has never found it out himself ; his only serious fault is joking. He thought he had a pull with the Hort. Department, but his hopes were all shattered when his abnormal taste for grapes was discovered. The Trustees decided to save the Old Plant House to give him a home for another year. Jenks is our prac- tical and scientific market gardener, and is majoring in Pomology. 180 THE 1911 INDEX VOfcUME XLI LEONARD MATHEWS JOHNSON Hail ! King of Rough-housers. When Skip comes down the stairs singing Then we ' ll rough-house Old Johnny, to the tune of Boola-boola, John at once remarks somewhat after the following ; You will, is it? Why so? There ' ll be no rough-house. And immediately the mixup starts. John with his husky left wing always holds his own with any number of men and even if he does get pounded never gets sore. Constantly good-natured, never letting anyone in his own room, or going into another room without trying to start something, John still finds time to get to the books, to play tennis, and to make weekly visits to The Girl He Left Behind in his home town, East- hampton, and in as many other towns as possible without conflicts in the sched ule. Johnny started his first rough-house in Easthanipton, Mass., December 15, 1889, continued the same at Williston Seminary and is still doing business for the same firm. John has been Class Secretary and Treasurer, has played Class BasketbaUl and Varsity Tennis. Along with his course in College Life John takes Horticulture. GASTON EDWARD LABOUTELEY Gaston E. Labouteley was born in the little town of Lynn, June 10, 1SS8. After graduating from that institution of learning known as the Lynn English High School, Lab came to ivi. A. C, where he was allowed to registed with 191 1. Gaston is one of those quiet chaps who devotes altogether too much time to study. On the other hand he has gained considerable reputa- tion as a fireman, has been known to smoke cubebs, chews gum once in a while, and fusses on the sly. Lab is majoring in Pomology ; belongs to K S, and withal is a loyal 191 1 man. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 181 EDWARD ARTHUR LARRABEE From the Witch City, July ii, 1SS9, blew a salt breeze which was refreshing to all ; it bore the spiril of Ed Larrabee. He was meant for a celebration, but became only the tail-end of the Horribles. Then the public and high schools he passed without serious troubles. He struck M. A. C. with the class of 191 1. and soon made a record in his studies, in rough-housing and in fussing. He has divided his InformalS between the mountain, over the river and Springfield. His latest accomplishment is that of dramatics, being the hero of North Amherst church plays. His first year here he was the freshest of Freshmen ; his Sophomore year he became a student and an important item in the expense account of the Chemical Laboratory. Ed claims Winthrop as his burg now: he madeXa bluff in class and captured the following honors : Class His- torian, Class Basketball, chairman Sophomore-Senior Prom, and Junior Banquet committees. He is a K S, Ed has elected Biology and you may often see him sporting with the lower animals. CHARLES ALBERT LODGE This young mountain of adiposity first saw the light of day in the little fishing village of Manchester, Mass. Why he selected that rube town for his na- tivity is a mystery to everyone. However, there he appeared, drifting in on a high tide one bleak and stonily day, the 17th of April, 1S88. It was said that above the screams of the howling gale could be heard his- lusty squalling of Ma! Ma! This was only a small beginning, but he persevered until he could say it all, Massachusetts. Charles Albert was always a precocious kid, and he soon mastered his A B C ' s at the Manchester Grammar School. He then enterred the Story High School, where he was the only male member among a bunch of fifty females. Here his fetching smile and black, curly locks earned him the nickname of Liz or Lizzie, which has stuck by him ever since. On the memorable day, September 16, 1907, Liz attained his highest ambition when he entered the gates of old M. A. C. While a pea-green Freshman Liz was chosen Class Vice-President : other offices hav e been his since coming, the most important being Class Hot-air Merchant, Class Co-ed, and Varsity Baseball Manager. In spite of all his failings, Liz is a good fellow and well liked in his class. He is a member of C. S. C. 162 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLl FRANK DOBSON McGRAW This ever-happy, don ' t cher care first absorbed the oxygen out of mother nature ' s vast atmosphere on February 8, 1887, in the little hamlet of Fall River. He began on this very day to paint the town red, and it was then that he acquired the name Dobby. No one seems to know how Dobsy ever got into the Bradford Mathew Challoner Durfee High School, but nevertheless he did and made a name for himself in the athletic world. McGraw again the star. These were the glaring headlines of the Fall River Hot-air Spreader. Mugsy entered old Mass ' chusetts with 191 0, but secured a year ' s leave of absence because of sickness. Thus it happened that Mac dropped into our midst in the spring of 1909. He always had a very kindly feeling toward Kiddo and even now you may hear their friendly squabbles when nearing the lab. It was understood that Mugsy would take up Horticulture, but after specializing on the Lemon (d) for a year, he decided that other branches afforded better openings. After spending a season in the wheat fields of Kansas, he has decided that he will follow the wheat course. Mugsy belongs to C. S. C. FREDERICK ADAMS McLAUGIILIN It all happened in Lee, Mass., on June 8, 188S. This homo sapiens Caucasian species of mankind, (Mac takes Zoo and likes to classify every mammal even himself) early acquired the habit of hunting and fish- ing. The former habit gave him the practice which enabled him to make both the Indoor and Outdoor Rifle teams. After graduating from the Lee High School, Fred prepared for Harvard at Mount Hermon. But learning that the opportunities for fussing were good at M. A. C. he entered with us in the fall of ' 07. He soon proved his ability as a fusser and his beefing qualities have enabled him to make good with the De- bating Society. Mac served on the Sophomore Prom committee. Nevertheless with all his faults Fred is a good fellow and shows the proper class spirit. Al- though he tackled the wrong man, yet he helped out in the Class Football team. He is K S, and has elected Forestry. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 183 HENRY BOWDITCH MORSE In which city was Keg Morse born? Why, in the Witch City, Salem, Mass., September 24, 1890, and on the beautiful North Shore, at that. He graduated from both the Pickering Grammar School and the Salem High School. In these places Keg was one of the big g uns, and an official authority on all social matters. Since coming to M. A. C. he has become a second Napoleon, having led 191 1 in Class Football and Basketball, besides being a member of our Class Baseball and Track teams. He has also played Varsity Football for two years. Now this modest young man is quite a fusser, having caused more than one of the fair damsels in this vicinity to succumb to his good looks. Oh ! If we could all fit like that. Hen is a member of K S, and is majoring in Chemistry. ISABURO NAGAI It was in Tokyo, Japan, on November 18, 1887, that Isaburo for the first time realized that there arc social problems in this world. However, that didn ' l worry him then, not until he had graduated from the Imperial University and entered M. A. C. did his thoughts turn to Sociology. Isoburo is a deep student and has no time for fussing, in fact, he doesn ' t belie e in it. He wields the tennis racket with considerable- facility and knows what he is talking about when he endeavors to demonstrate to you that agriculture in Japan has a brilliant future to look forward to. He has elected Rural Economy. 184 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI GEORGE PAINE NICKERSON This bunch of wind put in its appearance on March 31, 1S90, in Norwood, Mass., but he seemed to be of a restless disposition and has made his habitation at different times in Garamer, Maine ; Barre, Vermont ; Somerville, Mass. ; Abington, Mass. ; and at Amherst. He prepared for college at the High School at Am- herst. Since coming to M. A. C. he has occupied himself in wearing sporty clothes, knowing everybody and being into everything. He has represented the class in Baseball, Football and Basketball, and was a member of the Senior-Sophomore Prom committee. Last year he was elected Assistant Manager of the Hockey team. Windy is specializing in Forestry and is a member of S K. GUSTAF ARNOLD NIELSEN Eighteen hundred and eighty-eight years after the birth of Christ, on the self-same day, the breezes wafted into West Newton an embryo which attached itself permanently before it was discovered, and the suf- ferers called it Kiddo or Goostaff. After a course of studious application at Allen School, West Newton, Kiddo followed in the footsteps of Cap. Turner and entered M. A. C. After many trials and tribula- tions with the arduous courses at the ancient institu- tion, he finally struck his pace and decided to see eleven through. Goostaff is specializing in For- estry and Botany, and put in his time this summer in the Maine woods. He says he was working there, but knowing Kiddo as we do, we have our doubts ; how- ever, we know he wielded an axe effectively, for he came back with a scar on his knee. His experience in Forestry also enabled him to acquire lumber for his corner-seat this fall. We are proud to have Goostaff in our midst and although much of his time is spent in upholding his reputation as a confirmed fusser over the mountain, and in Hamp, we still see enough of him to know that he is a loyal classmate. Gus is a member of C. S, C. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 185 BERNHARD OSTROLENK Ostro was first seen in Warsaw, Russia, on ih ' cold morning of May 14, 1887, but as Russia had no charms for this active protoplasmic body, we find hnii migrating through Germany, stopping at Halberstadi. Friedrichshagen, and Berlin. But the advantages nt America soon appealed to him, so at the age of thirteen we find him at Gloversville, N. Y. Here he did nut stay very long, for we next find him at Doylstown, Pa.. where he prepared for college at the National Farm School. After completing his work there he went to Vineland, N. J., where he was a superintendent of farm work. But soon the desire for a broader educa- tion overcame him, and after his characteristic pon- derous thought he came to M. A. C, where he has been a loyal member of the class of 191 1, playing on our Football team. Blmks ' s early inclination to be a farmer has been overcome and we now find that he has elected Chemistry as a major. His ability as a debater is well known, and his special delight, arguing against something which everyone else believes, may gain for him a work of distinction in future years. SAMUEL REYNOLDS PARSONS Still, and still, and still, The wonder grew ; That one small head could carry AH that he knew. Sam, quiet and studious, came to us conflicted with two great desires or ambitions, one to be a great musi- cian, that is, to finger the ivories in such manner and with such technique as to bring forth more celestial strains than any ever produced on the pianoforte or pipe organ ; the other ambition to master the difficulties of Engineering. As a result of these two forces Sam will probably design a musical cantilever which will peal forth sweetest music. Sam was born June 23, 1 888, at North Amherst, and graduated from Amherst High School at a tender age, enjoyed life for a year or two, and came to M. A.C. as a worthy member of 191 1. With all his studying Sam finds time to play the chapel organ and has done good work on the Index Board. He is a member of Q. T. V., and is taking Math, along with Engineering. 186 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI ROLAND HARRISON PATCH On a calm summer day, July 28, 18S8, Roland was born in Wenham, Mass. Immediately Dan started his race. Through the Grammar and High Schools of Salem he went, a lap at a time, not with lightning rapidity, but with his characteristic steady gait. Then he came to M. A. C. to run another heat, preparatory to the final heat in life. He busies himself with Y. M. C. A. work and other college clubs. Because of his firm determination and ability Captain Martin has given his the dignified position of body-guard and night watch. Dan is a member of Theta Phi. The old race horse has our best wishes of success in his ambition to make Pomology his life work. HERMAN ALFRED PAULY This wily ape of impudence first made his appear- ance in the little town of Plainfield, Vt., July 5, 1888. He soon left the Green Mountain State for dear old Massachusetts, graduating from the Sonierville English High School in 1907. Then he packed his trunk full of old shoes and came to M. A. C. as an Elevener. Here he has proved himself to be a staunch and loyal classmate even though he does have a few bad habits, such as fussing and rough-housing. He was a valuable member of our class football team and is at present serving as our class captain. Through the far-reaching reputation of the course in Agricultural Chemistry at M. A. C, Pauly was attracted in this direction, but after two years of association with the worthy head of that Department, he has decided to drop the Chem- istry and simply take up the Agriculture. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 187 PERCY WILLIAM PICKARD Mostly Percy and generally known as Pick. This good looking youth was born in Fall River. Mass.. September 22, 1S89, and being of a roving disposition went on sojourns of different duration to Utica, N. Y.. and Manville, R. I., finally assuming a state of rest in his present home, Hopedale, Mass., incidentally be- coming a staunch supporter of Gov. Draper. Since coming to M. A. C., Pick has enjoyed many of the blessings here to be obtained. He is a College Senator, a member of the 191 1 Index Board and Class Vice- President, has won his numerals in football, baseball, and track, and was awarded the Western Alumni Prize. Pick improved his golden opportunities the past summer by attending the summer-school dances, and is now able to trip the light fantastic toe with the best of the profession. He is endeavoring to impart some of his knowledge to Barry and is planning to make a great conquest among the fair ones over the river. Pick is a member of Q. T. V., and is majoring in Pomology. RALPH WALDO PIPER See who ' s here ! Pipe, who gained for himself the cognomen of The Spider by his base running in one of the baseball games, spun the first strand of his web April 30, 18S9, in South Acton, Mass. He soon came to the center of the web, not to catch flies, as all good spiders do, but to handle grounders at third. This position he held down well as captain of the class baseball team. Pipe also served as manager of our Sophomore Rope Pull Team. As Johnson ' s companion in conquests of the fair damsels, Piper shows up in best advantage. Here is Pipe ' ' in his element for he is a past grand master in the art of winning the good graces of the ladies. Because of his strong pull with the ladies, Pipe was well fitted to serve on our Soph-Senior Prom. Committee. Pipe is assistant track manager and a member of Q. T. ' V., and is taking Pomology in hopes to one day feed the King of Ireland some fine apples. THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI PHILIP HERMAN PROUTY Whenever in the midst of a speech you stop short trying to think of somebody whom to put up as a model of gigantic achievements just mention Philip H. Prouty. Phil came to college to get what Prof. Eyerly would call future economic independence. Baffled hopes and suppressed desires have no place in Phil ' s vocabulary. He cow-milked his way through the freshman year, farmed through the sophomore, and has now joined the hash-slinger ' s league. Phil ' s abili- ties to get along were first recognized in Worcester, December 20, 18S9, and were developed at the Shrews- bury High School. Complete metamorphosis took place on entering M. A. C, for he is not only getting along, he is actuallly running along, and at quite a clip at that. If you are interested in fruit, watch Phil, for he is taking Pomology and there will be something doing when he gets out. He is a member of Q. T. V. PHILEAS ARMAND RACICOT Phil popped into the world in Lowell, Mass., in 18S5, with that If you want to know who ' s boss, start something air which he has retained ever since. Rossy prepared for M. A. C. at the University of Ottawa Preparatory School and at Williston Seminar} ' . Since he cast his lot with 191 1, he has won much fame in class and college activities, and has received the name of General, because of his commanding and military bearing. Soon after our class games began, General ' s superior bray was heard, and he was elected class cheer-leader, while he now sings in the college Glee Club. His adeptness with the crayon gave him a position as artist on the Iitdex Board, while his wonderful stunts with the violin procured him the leadership of the college Orchestra. Phil belongs to the Old Men ' s Club, and the K. C. Club, but he never goes fussing, because he cannot pull away from the Chem. Lab., where he has decided to spend the rest of his college days. General has taken the third degree in the Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 189 RALPH GUSHING ROBINSON Fat first hung out his shingle in South Boston, May 29, iSgo. After consuming a few barrels of Mellins Food with his enlarged cardiac stomach, he succeeded in squeezing through the massive gates of the Mechanic Arts High School. Finding the streets of Boston too narrow to allow him to meet a team, Fat chartered a box car and started for the West. But when he reached Amherst, there was a slight mishap to his car, and Fat rolled out. There is, to this day, a depression in the earth ' s crust showing where he struck. Just then a crowd of would-be Aggie Fresh- men came along. They helped him up, and brought him as far as the college, from whence no one has yet tried to remove him, except Billie, and he didn ' t succeed. Here, among his other asquisitions. Fat got the habit of frightening painters ' horses until they ran away. Ralph played on the Varsity Football team and was one of the mainstays of our class team. He hopes to become a forester some day. ARTHUR HARRIS SHARPE On July 6, 1884, the stork got lost, but finally wound up at Saxonville with Al in his beak and as a result he has been lost more or less ever since. He finished the Grammar and High Schools at Framing- ham, but not considering that preparation enough, entered Gushing Academy. Here Al was second D ' Artagnan, with the Annex as his retreat, and any old freight car for his charger. By this time Al had learned to use his head, so entered old M. A. G. with igii. He is a member of the Fraternity Gonference, Assistant Editor of the Signal, Editor-in-chief of 1911 Index, made the Indoor and Outdoor Rifle teams. Glass Basketball and Football and has been Glass Gaptain. He is a K S, and is electing Landscape Gardening. 190 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI CLARENCE ALBERT SMITH Skip first saw the light of this progressive world in the city of Northampton, October 14, 1888. From here this little animalcule was transported to Denver, Colorado. Then, the balmy air of the mining town not agreeing with the fundamental makeup of his constitu- tion, he was shipped back to the Meadow City. There he was given a try-out in the High School, and after successfully competing with all of the requirements of that illustrious institution, he entered M. A. C. with the class of igii. Since coming to this port of learn- ing, Skip has proved himself to be an industrious plugger, a loyal classmate, and a systematic rough- houser. Though small in stature, he developed into a valuable man for our class Basketball team, besides holding several class offices. Having more or less love for Tabby and the Kid, Skibo has elected Chem- istry. He is claimed by the Q. T. V. fraternity. RAYMOND GOODALE SMITH On April 12, 1888, the inhabitants of Ipswich were startled by a loud bray which came to herald the advent into this world of this highly intellectual protozoan fonn. The good people of Ipswich, however, soon tired of his musical laugh, and passed him on to Lynn, where he had drilled into his head the foundations of knowledge. Here by the ocean side he became inter- ested in zoological forms and forthwith he came to old Mass ' chusetts to perfect his learning along those lines. Among his accomplishments are football and fussing, of which the opponents of 191 1 well know the former. The popular fellow who has many nicknames, some of them drawn from the Scriptures, has been entrusted with the post of Sergeant-at-arms. He has elected Biology and we wish him the best of success. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 191 LOMAS OSWALD STEVENSON This beastly chap, don ' t-cher-know, first caught a glimpse of Merrie England at Beeston, May 28, 18S7. He did not remain there long enough to call it his home, for his inclinations called him to America soon after he was able to talk. He attended school at Chicago, and Wauhegan, 111., then decided to complete his education in his mother country, so he returned. There he attended Exeter School, in Exeter, Devon. Finding that his ambitions for learning would not be fulfilled at this place, he again crossed the briny deep, and landed at M. A. C. with 191 1. We are proud to have Steve in our midst and also proud to say that after years of training he is fast learning to see through a joke. We believe that Steve will also admit that America can produce some things as well as Eng- land. He has already learned this through his many visits to Hamp and over the mountain. Besides making a hit at these places, he has shown his optical abilities in other directions, being a member of the Outdoor and Indoor shooting teams. Steve also shot some baskets for his class Basketball team and is also responsible for many of the drawings in this book. He is a member of C. S. C, and is majoring in Agri- culture. EDWARD ERVING WARREN Coming into this world nearly twenty-two years ago in Leicester, Mass., Warry is said to be a direct descendant of Old Man Noah, he is that wise. With that sedate walk of his he trailed into M. A. C. last year with his suitcase in tow, from Clark College, to help 191 1 finish the innocent Freshmen. Having pre- viously been to Leicester Academy, where he learned his A, B, C ' s and other rudiments of wisdom, he came to M. A. C. just to brush up. He tried hard to make our Basketball team and is always yelling for Old Mass ' chusetts and ' Leven. When he is not plugging Pomology, which he insists on calling my course, he dopes over that dear old clay pipe of his or bums the makings from his classmates. He is a noted pillow- whacker from overstudy (?). It is said that Erving ' s favorite poem is That heaven on earth to the weary head ! Bed ! Oh, bed ! Delicious bed ! Tad is a good kid, and we all like him. He is a member of $ S K. 192 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI RAYMOND LEE WHITNEY Poor, poor fellow ! But why so? Why so? Listen ! He is a benedict. Whit started at Mendon, Mass., April iS, 1SS6. Next stop, Quincy. Here he gets an idea into his infant brain that quinces and fruit in general are good things to know about. Next stop, Cambridge ; second idea, must go to college for proper knowledge of Horticulture. Third stop, Brockton ; tanned with a piece of good old Brockton leather for having so many ideas. Since then it has been an express train, going through Brockton High School and the class of 1910 to the class of igii. Whit has played Class Football, is Captain and Leader of the Band, and plays in the Orchestra. He takes Horticulture, is a member Q. T. v., and is a good fellow, even if he is married. HAROLD FRANCIS WILLARD What have we here? A boodle politician? No; this is Harold Francis Willard, who first put in his appearance at Neilsville, 111., February 21, 1S84. How- ever, this little town was not exciting enough for Harry so he soon migrated to Chicago. But this metropolis didn ' t exactly suit him, so he went to Ludington, Mich., where he attended the Grammar School. From this place he came East, and after living awhile in Green- ville, N. H., he finally landed in Leominster, Mass. After working awhile, for the mere sake of experience, he awoke to th e fact that he wanted a higher education so he prepared for college at Mount Hernion, and entered M. A. C. with the class of 1911. He soon proved himself worthy of the honor, by being on the Rope-pull team, and later running in the Cross-country, iiarry has elected Horticulture and hopes soon to have someone help him manage his little plantation. He is a member of 4 S K. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 193 ERWIN LAWRENCE WINN This man came to us from the class of igii of Worcester Polytech. Just as soon as he had been pulled through, and thus bathed by the pure, whole- some and sparkling waters of the Pond, enough of his outer covering was removed to show his identification card. From this record of the immigration officers we learned that Windy (there being more truth than poetry in the name) was born February 8, i8S8, in the town of Holden, Mass., where he grew and waxed fat, going to Holden High as a prep for Tech. Very soon after arriving at M. A. C. Windy found his affinity Steve and has stuck to him with bull dog tenacity ever since, the campus continually resounding with calls of Oh, Windy! and answering ones of Oh, Steve! Steve took VVmdy to Old England this summer, thereby shocking the subjects of His Majesty. Edward VII, because Windy persisted in calling rabbits and other small animals little buggers. Aside from that Windy made a hit with the English. As a class man Windy played Class Baseball and was on the Sophomore-Senior Prom committee. He is also a member of A T U at W. P. I., and majors in Chemistry. m, A. 01. (Ulaaa nf 1911 lanqurt Celery Green Peas Strawberry Short Cake Cigars Blue Point Oysters Clear Mock Turtle Soup Planked Shad — Shove Style Potatoes Dutchesse Cucu Boiled Spring Chicken Potatoes Delmonico 191 1 College Punch Fresh Asparagus Salad Whipped Cream Coffee Cigarettes SJfw inm il ntrl il artfnrli, (Jnitit. April 22, lana ®oaatitiaBtpr, A. 1 . g-ljarfir MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 195 ©oasts Sloaattttaatfr A. L. Sharpe 191 1 J- F. Adams The Rope Pull CM. Damon Track G. N. Lew Wine, Women and Songs P. A. Racicot Our Struggles E. L. Daniels The Pond G. H. Robb Baseball W. H. Coash (Hommtttpp A. L. Sharpe I. C. GiLGOEE E. L. Daniels 196 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI , I Perry IT. Don ' ui ..laacliester and Artllu ; U. V ' hitlemoie of Dover. The delegate I 1 are impledccd and uniDslruct d. FRESHMEN HOLD BANQUET. isNQChnKPttn Krit-ull(irRl CollcRi; riant l::iudc Ihp SophomorefT and Have ' Their PrcHliU-nt With ' 1 hem. ■tini Dispiucli . lu I-uo Kcpublicaa. ilARTlor.D. Ct.. Wcdncsdaj-. April 22. Jespile liie fai.t lliat llicii- president was itnrcd on Salurdri.v Ind.beld in custodj- ny lioui-s, the Irc-tluneii of the Jlassa- .i ell jgrifnltural college held their ■is hanijiiet in the New Doni hotel in 5 city this eieuiDi-, and their president s there, very nineli lu cvidance In the ■ilie.s. This was the last iiisht upon LOijId have been held hif ' li file bniionet as the time limit vi Without tlie preset! the uresident. the an held, and .xpire ' the - ' 3d. ok fo irlv ho let lo-hichl arrived in Ihis left Sprincfield i ed. and there t I he opening i The toaytmiisie the banquet. at the baitfi uet wa )AILY REPUBLICAN: THURSI The u appetiz an.l there as also an abimdanee of entlui- .-.MSin. I ' he nails rans with college songs, ihe favorites being Kons of Old .Massa- ihiisettb ' and • ' Hail, Hail. Massachu- setts. The e.xnberanco ' of the freshmen vas vented at regular intervals in class and college cheers. Among those eallcj upon to respond to toasts by Toastoraster Sharpc wore -lames -idams, William Consh, George Tilton, Gordon Robb and Charles Damon. ' . daois, after being removed by his soph- omore captors from the house of George) H. Eversnn on C ' ailal street at ' -South Had- ley Falls, as told in The Jtepnblic .-inb ' s ved the Rei -liffe Ounecticut _ guarded by -- l ut .inally the number was reduced to throe. Soon some freshn peared outside and gave the f lagging. He had spent Monda agged. aiid desired to avoid fiirlh dimcnt of lluit kind. About 4 n. r the sophomores opened the ( m U iRE Into town to nd he fre shinan ban- will be held al the Neiv this but coUeg ' i history has been made sin ce last Sat- urday when the sophomot es captured Presldetit J antes F Adan 15 and at- to hold him from his cla mates. In true college manner, the eophomores kidnapped the Ereshmai president and took him to South Had iley Falls, The Ireshm invaded that town last ever found the house whore the ' ing chief they were trying to gain admittance bv way of the front door, the sophomores took President Adams through the back door of the house Canoe clubhouse 50 thU he KedcUffe le freshmen 1I5 Vnornlng, Adams was ibers of the :ity, wher: they Vlll hold their banquet tonight, after having gained a notable battle over the second -year class. A. H. Sharps, who I3 to be toastmaater of the banquet, waa alao taken a prisoner wltb President Adams, ' but he also Is The officers of the freshmen class arec President, James F,, Adams; vice- preistdcnt, Davis; secretary and treas- urer, Flpps; sergeant-at-arms, Loker; class captain, Daniels. People who live In the vi :Inlty of the New Dom will hear more tljan one college yi for Amherst. 1911. ■tonight and ihi may h ' ar some loud refereijce to 1910, t,at be ( nplin the (rail. Immediately ItpJttlliitC , [01 Hartford :uHl the: sm-reiidcr o iked 00 W ft Spriug IS WATERBURV after BARBOUR. MInan a Third 8nse- iQ TO({ Lh N the weeks spent in compiling this vohime we have been surrounded by Nature in aU her glory, and the trees which beautify our campus have been clothed in many gorgeous colors. At other times, too, we have been deeply impressed by the beautiful shades of green which spread themselves before the eye. How many times since we became students at M. A. C. have we been reminded that the environment is a factor to be considered in the development of this institution. However, there is another beauty beside the .beautj of the landscape which makes up our environment, that is, moral beauty. This morality should never be lost sight of. Hardly a year passes in which there is not some thoughtlessness on the par t of the student which tends to lower the standard of the college. This spirit of rowdyism does not pervade the entire student body, and in every instance the students of the college have rallied to the settlement of the regretted action. We find that this spirit is being felt less each year and soon will pass entirely from our environment. (Enlbgf Jftgljt The series of college nights held throughout the year are very successful means of bringing the trustees, faculty, alumni, undergraduates and friends of the college together. These gatherings which occur in Draper Hall, permit the discussion of plans for the advancement of the college. The one held this year was devoted to the celebration of the anniversary of the college. Last year, the athletic field was the main topic under discussion, and the opportunity was given everybody interested in the welfare of the college to listen to the remarks of representatives from every department of executive and undergraduate work. These gatherings can hardly be called elaborate, but simply a joining together of men with a single purpose, the advancement of M. A. C. Let us show a real M. A. C. spirit, and unite our efforts for this advancement. THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI The demand for organization in the financial control of the college activities is becoming imperative. Upon investigation we find that in this matter M. A. C. has much chance for improvement. In the spring of last year the managers of the various student activities received an announcement from the President recjuesting them to consider plans for such reorganiza- tion; This fall the matter was taken up afresh, and now has become the main topic of conversation among those interested. President Butterfield has outlined a plan which he thinks will meet all requirements; yet we hesitate to endorse such a plan. The board of this publication has investigated what is known among colleges as the Dartmouth System. To this system every Dartmouth man is loyal, and to it we may attribute the rapid development of that institution. Far from advocating a system which we expect to rectify all mismanage- ment in the student organizations, we seek to simply bring to the attention of the student body, a system which has been highly successful and in which we place our confidence. Stijt MatrlimorJi In the early part of the year, a watchword was adopted which signified the spirit of the college throughout the year. That watchword was a Bigger, Better, Busier M. A. C. The work here at college was reorganized. Every branch of activities received a shaking and finally was given an impetus which made possible a successful year. Especially was this true in regard to athletics. Football and baseball carried heavy schedules, yet their results show that M. A. C. was up to the standard in these major sports. Track, hockey and tennis teams were organized and their success has assured these sports a permanent place at this college. Basketball, which is becoming generally unpopular as an intercollegiate sport, has been dropped here. We should indeed feel that our development had been one-sided, if the development of the other activities had not kept pace with that of athletics. The Signal has made a great advance this year, by a reorganization which now places it among the leading college weeklies. After a lapse of several years, debating and dramatics have revived. The Debating Club has had a successful year and the Junior Play has become established as an annual event. A Rifle Club was organized, which received splendid support from faculty and students, and the team shot well in the intercollegiate matches. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE [99 The Y. M. C. A. has been especiaUy active and has been successful in securing prominent and interesting speakers. Under the auspices of the Y. M. C. A. Bible study courses are conducted, in which a large number of students show special interest. With the adoption of this watchword the demand for the athletic field became imperative. It was wonderful to see the organization and system which developed in the promotion of the fight to secure this necessary addi- tion to the college. Trustees, alumni, undergraduates, and friends of the college united their best efforts to secure the appropriation for the field. This unity of purpose, this concentration of action, succeeded in arousing a spirit which means the advancement of the college and will result in a Bigger, Better and Busier M. A. C. Mmic tu m. A. 01. During the last few years, the college has made a surprising growth in many directions. New departments and instructorships have been added, three new buildings besides the barns have been added, and a fourth is now in process of construction. Last year a successful Debating Club was organized, and this year the Signal has been made a weekly paper. In ath- letics, while we have dropped basketball, we have added ice hockey and tennis. But with all this growth along other lines, the musical organizations have not grown as they should. It has been a constant lament that music has been very much neglected. But this year, there has been a change. The entering class is large, and contains much good material, and the musical clubs have taken on new life. At the time this is written we cannot say much of what has already been done, but it seems safe to predict that this will be a good year for the musical clubs. The Glee Club will be more than a C[uartet this year; the Orchestra shows a promising number of pieces; and the Mandolin Club seems to have good prospects before it. There seems to be no reason why, with constant and systematic practice, we cannot develop some musical organizations that will be a credit to the college. The singing of the student body, while not materially different from what it has been, is fairly good, but this shows room for improvement. We need to do more singing, and we need some good, new songs. It is a good thing for the college that music should receive more atten- tion. This college is so intensely practical that we are in danger of becoming interested only in the one line in which we are specializing ; and of forgetting that a broad education demands something of a knowledge of things that interest other persons; and that music may add very much to our culture. But we are getting away a little from this exclusively practical feeling, and coming to realize the place that music should take in our college life. This 200 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI year a course in history and appreciation of music is being given by Mr. Ashley. This is a very good beginning for a department of music. Let us hope that the interest shown in this course may lead to the presentation of others in the future. Now let us all set to work this year for more and better music. Let those in the various clubs do their part, and let us who are not in the clubs stand behind them and give them our support. These clubs can be made a credit to old Massachusetts as much as any of the other college organizations. Let us make the singing of the student body on the field, in our mass meetings, and in the Union room, a feature of our college life. It will tend toward that unity of classes and students which makes the right kind of college spirit. There have been times in the history of the college when the musical clubs have been quite active. They have had their ups and downs. Now they are up, and we want to keep them up. The outlook is good, and prophesies a good year for music in old M. A. C. Let us see that the prophecy is fulfilled. S .R. P. During the past summer numerous changes in several buildings have been made. The Drill-hall, South College, North College, and Horse Barn are those upon which most work has been done. A new ceiling, a casing for the steam pipes, a shower and toilet room are the chief improvements made on the Drill-hall. Later a partition in the Gun Shed will separate the shooting gallery from a locker room. In South College another suite of student rooms has been appropriated for administrative purposes. Dean Mills occupies these new rooms, and Mr. Kenney has the Dean ' s old office for his private use. The English office has been remodelled, making a new office for the English professor and one for the new instructor in public speaking. The completion of last year ' s renovation in North College was reached this summer. The Social Union room and the student rooms were all tinted; the basement was plastered, and a room was made which eventually will be a billiard room. By raising the horse barn and making stalls and box-stalls, quarters more spacious have been made for the horses. The question arises — Does it pay to make extensive and expensive re- pairs upon old buildings? One of the first buildings that the Legislature will be asked for, is an x dministrative Building. Why, then, this outlay of money on South College offices? We also hope for a g minasiurn. If this comes with our new athletic field, why should such an old building as the drill-hall nave such repairs made upon it? MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 20[ The heating and lighting plant may not need a larger plant, but it needs something in it that will light the campus and buildings and will heat the class and students ' rooms. The plant has the directorship of laying steam pipes and caring for repairs. Why is it necessary for the campus to be dug up all the fall and North College and the drill-hall in a state of incompletion ? Could not some of the repair fund go into equipment and management of the power station, that would furnish lights and heat when wanted, and have repairs done on time? E. M. B. (Tiff Sormtt0rg ijatFin The steady growth of the college brings before us another vital ques- tion : Shall our dormitory system be extended ? At present our dormitories accommodate less than one-third of the student body. This means that the other two-thirds are broken up into small groups, which are scattered here and there throughout the town. The result is two-fold. First, we must consider the result of the present system upon the student himself. The fellow who rooms in a private house is, perhaps, compelled to room a long distance from college. This means a loss of a great many houi ' S, all of which are valuable to M. A. C. And the time is lost in this way: on our schedule are a few vacant hours each day ; a fellow cannot go to his room to study, for by the time he reaches his room and allows time enough to get back to his next recitation, the hour is consumed ; he can go to the -library, but in order to do his best work — get down and dig it out — he must be in his own room, at his own desk; he can go to a student ' s room, who lives in the dormitory, but when he gets there he probably finds a dozen other fellows, and the hour is idled away. If, on the other hand, he has a room in the dormitory, he can go to his room and there spend an hour profitably. The most vital thing to be considered, however, is not time, but the effect upon the student ' s college life, that is, his life among the students. In the private house he associates only with a very few fellows; in the dormitory he comes in close contact with a large number of fellows. In the private house there is the feeling that this is not my home; in the dormitory there is the feeling of a whole-hearted, wholesome freedom. And no student who has lived in a dormitory would consider for a moment living in a private house. To sum up, the effect of living in a private house is narrowing and confining, while dormitory life is broadening and unfolding. 202 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Second, the effect of the present system upon coUege Hfe must be con- sidered. As conditions now exist, the student body is — in a sense — divided. Those who room in private houses are taken away from the campus and they become residents of the town. There exists the feeHng that they are not reaUy a part of the coUege any longer; they have left college behind. On the other hand, the student living in the dormitory feels that he is a part of the institution and he unconsciously imbibes that wholesome and ennobHng spirit which can be given only by an institution of learning. The dormitory life, therefore, is necessary for the developmnt of the best college spirit — that spirit which is to make a Bigger, Better, Busier M. A. C. Shall we then extend our dormitory system? We voice the sentiment of the student body when we say : Give us more dormitories. H. J. B. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 203 E t Assortat Alumni of tl| M. A. 01. (fffirprs for 1909-10 H. J. WheeleRj ' 83 President J. B. Paige, ' 82 First Vice-President C. O. Flagg, ' 72 . . . . . . Second Vice-President S. B. HaskelLj ' 04 ........ Secretary David Barry, ' 90 Treasurer E. A. White, ' 95 Auditor H. F. ToMPSON, ' 05 E. B. Holland, ' 92 204 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI ICcral Alumni Assnrtattnn of M. A. C. Jnunlipli 1905 WftuUB David Barry ' 90 ......... President Charles W. Clapp, ' 86 First Vice-President Frank O. Williams ' 90 Second Vice-President A. C. MoNAHAN, ' 00 Third Vice-President Sidney B. Haskell, ' 04 Secretary A. Vincent Osmun, ' 03 Treasurer J. E. Deuel, ' 92 Auditor MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 205 IflBtnn Alumnt dlitb (iffima for 1909-1310 F. W. Davis, ' 89 . President H. W. Dana, ' 99 Secretary W. A. Morse, ' 82 ........ . Treasurer itrertora F. G. May, ' 82 R. B. Mackintosh, ' 86 Bertram Tupper, ' 05 206 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Olflnn rttrut lall g ABBoriatintt of M, A. C omhth iFfbruarg 21, 1902 (§mtns far 1909-10 G. A. Parker, ' 76 .President J. S. Eaton, ' 98 First Vice-President C. M. Hubbard, ' 92 Second Vice-President W. B. Hatch, ' 05 Secretary A. S. Kinney, ' 96 Treasurer MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 207 m. A. 01. ailuh 0f m WfCittva fat iflna-in A. W. Lublin, ' 84 President Prof. H. E. Chapin, ' 81 First Vice-President W. L. Morse, ' 95 Second Vice-President F. A. Cutter, ' 07 Third Vice-President S. D. Foot, ' 78 Choragus A. L. Fowler, ' 80 Treasurer Dr. J. A. Cutter, ' 82 Secretary 208 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI maaaarl ufi tta Agnrultural College Club 0f llaBl|ttt9ton, i. 01. Jfoun rb 19D4 (§tCicH for lana-iain A. F. BuRGESSj ' 95 President G. A. Billings, ' 95 First Vice-President J. W. Kellogg, ' 00 ...... Second Vice-President F. D. CouDEN, ' 04 ...... Secretary and Treasurer C. H. Griffin, ' 04 Choragus MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 209 WfBt rn Alumni Assnrtatton at t }t M, A. 01. A. B. Smith President P. C. Brooks, ......... Vice-President M. H. West ...... Secretary and Treasurer W. E. Stone, ' 82 L. A. Nichols, ' 71 J. E. Wilder, ' 82 G. M. Miles, ' 75 H. J. Armstrong, 97 A. B. Smith, ' 95 All Alumni West of Buffalo 210 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Iff rttalb lEntnmnlogiral Ollufa Dr. W. E. Hinds, ' 99 President Prof. R. I. Smith, ' 01 Vice-President VV. A. Hooker, ' 99 ...... Secretary and Treasurer MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 2 1 1 ®I|0 AUtmnt 71 E. E. THOMPSON, Secretary, Worcester, Mass. Allen, Gideon H , KS, B. S., 179 Court Street, New Bedford, Mass , former chairman Board of Assessors of Taxes. Considerable Newspaper Work, Reportorial and Editorial, Accountant. Bassett, Andrew L., Q. T. V., 36 East River, New York City, Transfer Agent Central Vermont Railroad Company. BiRNlE, W. P., KS, 34 Sterns Terrace, Springfield, Mass., Paper and Envelope Manufacturer. Bowker, William H., B. S., 43 Chatham Street, Boston, Mass., Reside ' ce Concord, Mass., Presi- dent Bowker Fertilizer Company. Caswell, Lilley B., Athol, Mass., Civil Engineer. Cowles, Homer I.., B. S., Amherst, Mass., Farmer. Ellsworth, Emory A., 35b Dwight Street, Holyoke, Mass., Architect, Civil and Mechanical Engi near, (Ellsworth and Homes), Member American Society Civil Engineers; Boston Society Civil Engineers ; American Waterworks Association ; New England Waterworks Association ; Resi- dence 40 Essex Street, Holyoke, Mass. Fisher, Jabez F., K2, 94 Myrtle Avenue, Fitchburg, Mass , Bookkeeper Parkhill Manufacturing Company. Fuller, George E., Address unknown. Hawley, Frank W., died October 28, 1883, at Belchertown, Mass. Herrick, Frederick St. C, D. G. K., died January 19, 1894, at Lawrence, Mass. Leonard, George B., LL. B., D. G. K., Springfield, Mass., Clerk of Courts. Lyman, Robert W., B. S., LL. B., K , Q. T. V., Courthouse, Northampton, Mass. ; Residence II Linden Street, Northampton, Mass.; Registrar of Deeds for Hampshire County, Instructor ■in Farm Law at Massachusetts Agricultural College. Morse, James H., died June 21st, 1883, at Salem, Mass. Nichols, L. A., B.S., KS, 6233 Cottage Grove Avenue, Chicago, 111., President of the Chicago Steel Tape Company, Residence 6054 Woodlawn Avenue, Chicago, 111. NORCROSS, Arthur D., D. G. K., Monson, Mass., Merchant and Farmer, retired. State Senator Hampshire and Hampden District. Page, Joel B., D. G. K., died August 23, 1902, at Conway, Mass. Richmond, S. H., B. S., 300 12th Street, Miami, Florida, Residence, Cutler Dade County, Florida, Agent Land Department, F. E. E. R. R. ; also Truck Farmer. Russell, William D., K i , D. G. K., 353 West 85th Street, New York City, Manufacturer, Paper Merchant. Smead, Edwin B., Q. T. V., Principal Watkinson Farm School, Hartford, Conn., P. O. Box 335 Hartford, Conn. 212 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Sparrow, Lewis A., Northboro, Mass., Farmer. Strickland, George P., D. G. K., 3825 So. Z Street, Tasema, Washington, Machine Shop Foreman. Thompson, Edgar E., B. S., Residence, 5 Jaques Avenue, Worcester, Mass., Supervising Princi- pal Worcester Schools. Tucker, George H., died October i, 1S89, at Spring Creek, Pa. Ware, Willard C., Hamilton, Mass., Manager Portland and Boston Clothing Company, Retired. Wheeler, William, K , K2, 14 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass., Consulting Engineer, Residence Concord, Mass. Whitney, Frank Le P., D. G. K., Harvard, Mass., Farmer and Miller. WooLSON, George Clark, i Madison Avenue, New York City, Representative, Morris Nursery Co. 72 S. T. MAYNARD, Secretary, Northboro, Mass. Bell, Burleigh C, D. G. K., address unknown. Breti ' , William F., D. G. K., address unknown. Clark, John W., Q. T. V., North Hadley, Mass., Fruit Grower. Cowles, Frank C, 22354 Pleasant Street, Worcester, Mass., Civil Engineer and Draughtsman. Cutler, John C, M. D., D. G. K., 7 Gates Street, Worcester, Mass., Physician, Author Cutler ' s Comprehensive Physiology, Professor in Agricultural College, Sapporo, Japan. Order of Rising Sun, conferred by the Emperor. Dyer, Edward N., died March 17, iSgr, at HoUiston, Mass. Easterbrook, Isaac H., died May 27, igor, at Webster, Mass. FiSKE, Edward R., Q. T. V., 234 West Chelten Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa., Manufacturer at Germantown, Pa. Flagg, Charles O., Q. T. V., Hardvvick, Mass., Superintendent of Mi. ter ' s Guernsey Stock Farm. Grover, Richard B., 160 Prospect Street, Gloucester, Mass., Clergyman. Holmes, Lemuel Le B., Q. T. V., died August 4, 1897, at Mattapoisett, Mass. Howe, Edward G., 10233 South Wood Street, Chicago, 111., Author of Systematic Science Teaching, also Advanced Elementary Science, Appleton Co. Kimball, Francis E., 8 John Street, Worcester, Mass., Accountant. LiVERMORE, R. W., Q. T. v., Pates, North Carolina, Residence, Red Springs, North Carolina, Merchant and Farmer. Mackie, George M., M. D., D. V, S., Q, T. V., died August 31, igo6, at Attleboro, Mass. Mayn. rd, Samuel T., Northboro, Mass., Landscape Gardner aud Fruit Specialist, Author of Prac- tical Fruit Culturist, Landscape Gardening as applied to Home Decorations, The Small Country Place, etc. Morey, Herbert E., 19 Washington Street, Boston, Mass., Residence 34 Hillside Avenue, Maiden, Mass., Numismatic Association, American Society of Curio Collections, American Geographical Association, British Numismatic Association. Peabody, William R., Q. T. V., Genera! Agent A. T. and S. F. R. R., Atchison, Kan. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 2|3 Salisbury, Frank B., D. G. K., died 1S95, ' Mashonaland, Africa. Shaw, E. D., Springfield, Mass., Salesman. Snow, George H., Leominster, Mass., Farmer. SoMERS, Frederick M., Q. T. V., died February 2, 1894, at Southampton, England. Thompson, Samuel C, SK, $K J , Third Avenue and 177th Street, New York City, Residence 810 East 173rd Street, New York, Civil Engineer, Engineer of Highways, Bron.x Borough. Wells, Henry, Q. T. V., died September 19, 1907, at Jamestown, R. I. Whitney, William C, Q. T. V., 313 Nicollet Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn., Architect. 73 C. WELLINGTON, Secretary, Amherest, Mass. Eldred, Frederick C, Sandwich, Mass., Cranberry Grower. Leland, Walter S., D. G. K., Concord Junction, Mass., Reformatory Officer in Massachusetts Reformatory. Ly ' man, Asahel H., D. G. K., died of peneumonia at Mainstee, Mich., January 16, 1896. Mills, George W., M.D, 60 Salem Street, Medford Mass., Physician, M.D. (Harvard), Brigade Surgeon, Major, Medical Department M. V. M., Member of the Association of Military Surgeons of the United States, Chairman of Board of Health, Medford, Mass. Minor, John B., Q. T. V., il K$, New Britain, Conn., Residence Plainville, Conn., Paper Box Man- ufacturer. Penhallow, David P., M. Sc, D. Sc, Q. T. V., McGill University, Montreal, Canada. Professor of Botany in McGill University ; Author of North American Gymnosperms, Residence 210 Milton Street, Montreal, Canada. Renshaw, James B., B. D. Simpson, Henry B., Q. T. V., 902 Pennsylvania Avenue, N. W. Washington, D. C. Care of Mutual Fire Insurance Company. Wakefield, Albert T., Sheffeld, Mass., Physician. Warner, Seth S., KS, Northampton, Mass., Dealer in Agricultural Instruments and FertiHzers. Webb, James H., LL. B., itK , K2, 42 Church Street, New Haven, Conn., Residence Hampden, Conn. Lawyer, Instructor in Law School, Yale University, Ameiican Editor of Kenney ' s Outlines of Criminal Law. Wellington, Charles, Ph. D., iK , K2, Amherst, Mass., Professor and Head of Chemistry De- partment at Massachusetts Agricultural College. Wood, Frank W., address unknown. 74 Benedict, John M., M.D., D. G. K., 81 North Main Street, Residence 80 Linden Street, Waterbury Conn., Physician. Blanchard, William H., Westminster, Vt., Teacher. 214 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Chandler, Edward P., D. G. K., Woodville, Oregon, Fruit Grower. Curtis, Wolfred F., died November 18, 1S78, at Westminister, Mass. Dickinson, Asa W., D. G. K., died November 8, iSgg, at Easton Pa., from apoplectic stioclc. Hitchcock, Daniel G., Warren, Mass., Agent Monaton Realty Investing Corporation, New York. Manager Ideal Trips to the Catskills and Bahamas. HoBBS, John A., Salt Lake City, Utah, Proprietor Rocky Mountain Dairy and Hobb ' s Creamery. 14 East Third South Street. LiBBY, Edgar H., Ki1 , Clarkston, Washington, Real Estate and other Investments, especially Irrigated Lands, Advisory Counsel in Organization of Irrigation Enterprises. Lym. n, Henry, died January 19, 1S79, ' Middlefield, Conn. Montague, Arthur H., South Hadley, Mass., Farmer. Phelps, Henry L., died at West Springfield, Mass., March 3, 1900. Smith, Frank S., D. G. K., died December 24, 1899, in Cleveland, Ohio. Woodman, Edward E., K ti, Danvers, Mass., E. C. Woodman, Florists ' and Garden Supplies. Zeli.er, Harrie McK., 908 Summit Avenue, Hagerstown, Md., Fruit Grower and Canvassar. 75 MADISON BUNKER, Secretaiy, Newton, Mass. Bartlett, Joseph ¥., •SK , $2K, Barre, Mass., Business Address 5o Trinity Place, New York City, Secretary Bowker Fertilizer Company. Barri, John A., Bridgeport, Conn., Residence 346 Maple Street, Springfield, Mass., Dealer in Grain, Berkshire Mill. Bragg, Everett B., Q. T. V., 135 Adams Street, Chicago, 111., Residence 1838 Chicago Avenue, Evanstown, III. ; Third Vice-President General Chemical Company. Brooks, William P., Ph. D., itK , i SK, Amherst, Mass., Director Massachusetts E.xperiment Station. Bunker, Madison, D. V. S., 28 Park Street, Newton, Mass., Veterinary Surgeon. Callender, Thomas R., D. G. K , Northfield, Mass., Farmer. Campbell, Frederick G., 2K, Westminster West, Vt., Farmei and Merino Sheep Raiser. Carruth, Herbert S., D. G. K., 32 Tremont Street, Assistant Penal Commissioner, Suffolk County, Mass. Clark, Zenos Y., ' I ' SK, died June 4, 1889, at Amherst, Mass. Clay, Jabez, W., XK, died October i, 1880, at New York City. Dodge, George R., Q. T. V., South Hamilton, Mass., General Truck and Small Fruit. Hague, Henry, ' i ' SK, 695 Southbridge Street, Worcester, Mass., Clergyman. Harwood, Peter M., i 2K, Barre, Mass., Business Address Room 136 State House, Boston, Mass., General Agent Massachusetts Dairy Bureau. Knapp, Walter H., K i , North Street, Newtonville, Mass., Florist. Lee, Lauren K., 611 Ryan Building, St, Paul, Minn., Residence 631 St. Anthony Avenue, St. Louis, Minn., Advertising Agency of L. K. Lee Son. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 215 Miles, George M., Miles City, Montana, Banker, Merchant and Stock Raiser. Otis, Harry P., KS, Florence, Mass., Manufacturer. Rice, Frank H., 854 Madison Street, Oakland, Cal., Accountant. SOUTHWICK, Andre A., ' i ' SK, Taunton, Mass., Farm Superintendent Taunton Insane Hospital, Re- sidence 355 Tremont Street, Taunton, Mass. Winchester, John F., Q. T. V., D. V. S., Lawrence, Mass., Veterinarian, Member Cattle Com- mision of Massachusetts, President American Veterinary Medical Society, President Massachusetts Veterinary Association ; Lecturer Massachusetts Agricultural College and New Hampshire State College; Inspector Animals for City of Lawrence. 76 C. FRED DEUEL, Secretary, Amherst, Mass. Bagley, David A., address unknown. Bellamy, John, D. G. K., 197 Webster Street, West Newton, Mass , Bookkeeper. Chickering, Darius O., Enfield, Mass., Farmer. Deuel, C. Fred, $K , Q. T. V., Amherst, Mass., Druggist. Guild, George W., Q. T. V., died May 8, 1903., of heart disease, at Jamaica Plain, Mass. Hawley, Joseph M , D. G. K., address unknown. Kendall, Hiram, D. G. K., East Greenwich, R. I., Assistant Superintendent for the Shepard Company. Ladd, Thomas L., Watertown, Mass. McConnell, Charles W., D. D. S., K2, 171 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass., Dentist. MACLEOD, William A., A. B., LL. B., D. G. K., K , 350 Tremont Building, Boston, Mass., Re- sidence 22 Tremlett Street, Boston, Mass., Lawyer. Mann, George H., ' .6S Stoughton Avenue, Readvills, Mass., Erecting Engineer with B. F. Sturtevant Company, Hyde Park, Mass. Martin, William E., Sioux Falls, S. D., Bookkeeper. Parker, George A., i ' K4i, iI SK, P. O. Bo.x 1027, Hartford, Conn., Residence 100 Blue Hills Avenue, Hartford, Conn., Superintendent of Parks. Parker, George L., 807 Washington Street, Dorchester, Mass., Florist. Phelps, Charles H., 155 Leonard Street, New York City, Dresden Lithographic Company. Porter, William H., SK, Silver Hill Farm, Agawam, Mass., Farmer. Potter, William S., D. G. K., 4 Wallace Block, Lafayette, Ind.; Residence 920 State Street, Lafayette, Ind. ; Attorney-at-Law Banker. Root, Joseph E., M. D., SK, 67 Pearl Street, Hartford, Conn., Physician and Surgeon. Sears, John M., Ashfield, Mass , Farmer and Town Clerk. Smith, Thomas E., D. G. K., died September 20, 1901, at West Chesterfield, Mass., of apoplexy. Taft, Cyrus A., died February 7, 1908, at Whitinsville, Mass., of pneumonia. Urner, George P., D. G. K., died April, 1897, at Wesley, Mont., from effusion of blood from the brain. 216 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Wetmore, Howard G., M. D., D. G. K., died at 63 West 91st Street, New York City, April 27th, 1906. Williams, John E., died January iStli, 1890, at Amherst, Mass. 77 Benson, David H., Q. T. V., North Weymouth, Mass. Brewer, Charles, Haydenville, Mass. Clark, Atherton, SK , K2, 140 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass., Residence, 231 Waverly Avenue, Newton, Mass., with R. H. Stearns Co. HiBBARD, Joseph R., killed by kick of horse, June 17th, iSgg, at Stoughton, Mass. Howe, Waldo V., Q. T. V., Newburyport, Mass., Poultry Raiser. Mills, James K., D. G. K., Amherst, Mass., Photographer. Nye, George F., 420 East 42nd Street, Chicago, 111., with Swift Co. Parker, Henry F., LL. B., died December 21, 1897, at Brooklyn, N. Y. Porto, Raymundo M. Da. S., 2K, Para, Brazil, Sub-Director Museum Pareuse. Southmayd, John E., $2K, died December nth, 1878, at Minneapolis, Minn. WvMAN, Joseph, 347 Massachusetts Avenue, Arlington, Mass., Market Gardener. 78 C. O. LOVELL, Secretary. 47 Summer Street, Boston, Mass. Baker, David E., 2K, 227 Walnut Street, Newtonville, Mass., Physician. Boutwell, W. L., died September 28th, 1906, at Northampton, Mass., of meningitis. Brigham, Arthur A., Ph. D., Brookings, So. Dakota, Principal So. Dakota School of Agriculture. Choate, Edward C, Q. T. V., died at Southboro, Mass., January 18th, 1905, of appendicitis. Coburn, Charles F., Q. T. V., died December 26th, 1901, at Lowell, Mass. Foot, Sanford D., Q. T. V., with Nicholson File Co., Patterson, N. J., Residence 231 West 70th Street, New York City. Hall, Josiah N., M. D., i K i , SK, 30S Jackson Building, Denver, Colo. Heath, Henry F , D. G. K., 35 Nassau Street, New York City, Lawyer. Howe, Charles S , Ph. D., D. Sc, K , SK, 2060 Cornell Road, Cleveland, Ohio, President of the Case School of Applied Science. Hubbard, Henry F., Q. T. V., 26 Custom House Street, Providence, R. I., Residence 37 Elm Grove Avenue, Providence, R. L, Representing A. P. Irvin Co., of New York City, Tea Importers. Hunt, John F., 27 State Street, Boston, Mass., Residence 232 Ferry Street, Maiden, Mass., Building Superintendent. LovELL, Charles O., Q. T. V., 48 Summer Street, Boston, Mass., i Madison Avenue, New York City ; Residence Paul Street, Watertown, Mass., President United Photo Materials Co. Lyman, Charles E., Middlefield, Conn., Farmer. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 217 Myrick, Lockwood, Hammonton, N. J., Fruit Grower. Osgood, Frederick H., D. V. S., M. R. C. V. S., Q. T. V., 50 Village Street, Boston, Mass., Veterinarian. Spofford, Amos L., tSK, Georgetown, Mass., Farmer. Stockbridge, Horace E., Ph. D., K2, Atlanta, Ga., Editor Southern Ruralist, Author of Rocks and Soils. Tuckerman, Frederick, M. A., Ph. D., Q. T. V., Amherst, Mass., Anatomist, Author of various papers on Anatomy in American and European Journals. Washburn, John H., M. A., Ph. D., K2, Farm School, Penn., Director National Farm School, Professor of Chemistry, Formerly President Rhode Island College for thirteen years. Woodbury, Rufus P., Q. T. V., 3612 Campbell Street, Kansas City, Mo., Secretary Kansas City Live Stock Exchange. 79 R. S. SWAN, Secretary, Worcester, Mass. Dickinson, Richard S., Columbus, Neb., Farmer. Green, Samuel B., K , K2, 2095 Commonwealth Avenue, Saint Anthony Park, Minn., Author of Amateur Fruit Growing, Vegetable Gardening, Forestry in Minnesota, Principles of American Forestry, Hedges and Windbreaks ; Professor of Horticulture and Forestry, University of Minnesota. Rudolph, Charles, LL. B., Q. T. V., Hotel Rexford, Boston, Mass., Lawyer and Real Estate Agent. Sherman, Walter A., D. V. S., M. D., D. G. K., 340 Central Street, Residence 214 Pawtucket Street, Lowell, Mass., Veterinary Surgeon. Smith, George P., KS, Sunderland, Mass., Farmer. Swan, Roscoe W., M. D., D. G. K., 41 Pleasant Street, Worcester, Mass., Physician. Waldron, Hiram E. B., Q. T. V., 12 West River Street, Residence 112 Highland Street, Hyde Park, Mass., Real Estate and Insurance. ' 80 Fowler, Alvan L., SK, 60 Sound View Avenue, New Rochelle, N. Y., Receiver Manisquan National Bank, Manisquan, N. J. Gladwin, Frederick E., ' I ' SK, 2401 North i6th Street, Philadelphia, Pa., Mining Engineer. Lee, William G., D. G. K., Holyoke, Mass., Architect and Civil Engineer. McQueen, Charles M., 2K, 802 Pine Street, St. Louis, Mo. Parker, William C, ' i ' SK, LL. B., 294 Washington Street, 636 Old South Building, Boston, Mass. Residence 162 Huntington Avenue, Boston, Mass., Lawyer, State Representative from Boston. Ripley, George A., Q. T. V., Jefferson, Mass., Farmer. Stone, Almon H., Wareham, Mass., Cranberry Grower. 218 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI ' 81 J. L. HILLS, Secretary, Burlington, Vt. Bowman, Charles A., C. S. C, Dillaye Building, Syracuse, N. J., Residence 609 Astrom Avenue; Secretary and Treasurer of Morrison Farrington, Inc., Civil Engineers. BovNTON, Charles E., M. D., died at Los Banos, Cal., date unknown. Carr, W. Frank, C. E., Q. T. V., 116 Thirty-Second Street, Milwaukee, Wis., Chief Engineer for the Falk Company; Member American Society of Civil Engineers. Chapin, Henry E., M. Sc , D. S. C , 49 Lefferts Avenue, Richmond Hill, New York City, Teacher of Biology and Physiology ; Joint Author Chapin and Rettger ' s Elementary Zoology and Laboratory Guide ; Honorary Fellow Society Biological Chemistry, London ; President Depart- ' ment of Botany, Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences. Fairfield, Frank H., Q. T. V., 42 Broadway, New York, President Black Sand Smelting Company, Residence, 153 Fourth Avenue, East Orange, N. J. Flint, Charles L., Q. T. V., died June, 1904. Hashiguchi, Boonzo, D. G. IC, died August 12th, 1903, at Tokio, Japan. Hills, Joseph L., Sc. D., K , KS, 55 No. Prospect Street, Burlington, Vt., Dean, Department of Agriculture, University of Vermont; Director Vermont Agricultural E. ' periment Station. Howe, Elmer D., itSK, Fair View Farm, Marlboro, Mass., Farmer, Secretary of Salisbury and Amesbury Mutual P ' ire Insurance Co.; Trustee of the Massachusetts Agricultural College. Peter.s, Austin D., D. V. S., M. R. C. V. S., Q. T. V., State House, Boston, Mass., Residence Walnut Avenue, Jamaica Plains, Mass., Veterinarian and Chief of Cattle Bureau, Massachusetts State Board of Agriculture. Rawson, Edward B., D. G. K., 226 East Sixteenth Street, New York City; Residence, 322 Sher- merhort Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. ; Superintendent Friends ' School, New York and Brooklyn ; Lecturer on Education, Swarthmore College. Smith, Hiram F. M., M. D., 9 East Main Street, Orange, Mass , Physician. Spalding, Abel W., C. S. C, 422 Globe Block, Seattle, Wash,, Spalding and Umbrecht, Archi- tects; President Washington State Chapter, American Institute of Architects, 1906. Taylor, Frederick P., D. G. K., Athens, Tenn., Farmer. Warner, Clarence D., D. G. K., died October 16, 1905, at Kimmswick, Mo. Whittaker, Arthur, D. G. K., died March, 1906, at Needham, Mass. Wilcox, Henry H., D. G. K., died at Honolulu, January nth, 1899. Young, Charles E., M. D., tSK, Aberdeen, S. D., Physician. ' 82 G. D. HOWE, Secretary, Bangor, Me. Allen, Francis S., M. D., D. V. S., C. S. C, 221 Main Street, Nashua, New Hampshire. Alpin, George T., Q. T. V., East Putney, Vt., Farmer. Beach, C. Edward, D. G. K., West Hartford, Conn., Farmer. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 219 Bingham, Eugene P., C. S. C, died March 31st, 1904, at Los Angeles, Cal. Bishop, William H., i ' SK, Farm School, Pa., Professor of Agriculture at the National Farm School. Brodt, Harry S., Q. T. V., died at Rawlins, Wyo., December, igo6. Chandler, Everett S., B. D., C. .S. C, North Judson, Indiana, R. F. D. ' No. 3, Clergyman. Cooper, James W., D. G. K., i Court Street, Plymouth, Mass., Pharmacist; Residence, 142 Court Street. Cutter, John A., M. D., 325 West 83rd S treet, New York, Physician; Author of Fatty Ills and their Masquerades, and Food: It ' s Relation to Health and Disease. Damon, Samuel C, Assistant, Agronomy, Rhode Island Experiment Station, Kingston, R. I. Floyd, Charles W., died October toth, 18S3, at Dorchester, Mass. GooDALE, David, Q. T. V., Marlboro, Mass., Farmer. HiLLMAN, Charles D., SK, Watsonville, Cal., R. F. D. No. 3, Fruit Grower. Howard, Joseph H., died of typhoid fever, February 13th, iSSg, at Minnsela, S. D. Howe, George D., 25 Winter Street, Bangor, Me., Commercial Traveller for H. J. Heinz Co. Jones, Frank W., Q. T. V., Asseneppi, Mass., Teacher. Kingman, Morris B., ii Amity Street, Amherst, Mass., Florist; Residence, 91 South Pleasant Street. Kinney, B. A., Littleton, N. H., or 18 Bleachery Street, Lowell, Mass.; Travelling Salesman. May, Frederick G., $2K, 68 East Street, Dorchsster, Mass., Printer ; Residence, 34 Adams Street. Morse, William A., Q. T. V., 15 Auburn Street, Melrose Highlands, Mass.; Accountant at 28 State Street, Boston, Mass. Myrick, Herbert, i to 57 Worthington Street, Springfield, Mass.; Editor, Author, Publisher Manufacturer ; has completed largest office building of reinforced concrete in United States ; Residence, 151 Bowdoin Street. Paige, James B., D. V. S., iK t, Q. T. V., 42 Lincoln Avenue, Amherst, Mass., Professor of Veterinary Science at Massachusetts Agricultural College, Veterinarian Massachusetts Agri- cultural Experiment Station. Perkins, Dana E., Medford Square, Civil Engineer; Residence, 12 Riverside Avenue. Plumb, Charles S., Q. T. V., Columbus, Ohio, Professor of Animal Husbandry, Ohio State University; Author of Types and Breeds of Farm Animals, Little Sketches of Famous Beef Cattle, Indian Corn Culture, Biographical Sketches of American Agricultural Scientists. Shiverick, Asa F., KS, 100 Wabash Avenue, Chicago, 111., Vice-President of Tobey Furniture Company. Stone. Winthrope E., Ph. D., LL. D , C. S. C, 146 North Grant Street, West La Fayette, Ind.; President of Purdue University. Taft, Levi R., K , C. S. C, Agricultural College, Michigan, Horticulturist, Michigan Experi- ment Station; Superintendent Farmers ' Institutes; Author of Greenhouse Construction, Greenhouse Management, and collaborator Garden Making, and Practical Gardening and Farming. Taylor, Alfred H., D. G. K., Brunswick, Neb., Farmer. Thurston, Wilbur H., died August, 1900, at Cape Nome, Alaska. Wilder, John E., K , K2, 212-214 Lake Street, Chicago, 111., Wholesale Leather Dealer and Tanner, Trustee of Beloit College, Beloit, Wis. 220 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Williams, James S., Q. T. V., President and General Manager of The Williams Brothers Manu- facturing Company, Glastonbury, Conn. Windsor, Joseph L., 922 State Life Building, Indianapolis, Ind. ; Residence, La Grange, Ind. ; Special Agent Glen Falls Insurance Company, Specializing in Insurance Engineering. ' 83 S. M. HOLMAN, Secretary, Attleboro, Mass. Bagley, Sidney C, SSK, Tremont Street, Melrose Highlands, Mass., Cigar Packer. Bishop, Edgar A., C. S. C, Hampton, Va., Director of Agriculture in Hampton Normal and ■Agricultural Institute. Brahne, Domincos H., D. G. K., Address unknown. Hevia, Alfred A., 2K, 61 Nassau Street, New York City, Mortgage Investments and Insurance Holman, Samuel M., Q. T. V., 39 Pleasant Street, Attleboro, Mass., Real Estate; Photographer; Member of Massachusetts Legislature, House of Representatives. LiNDSEY, Joseph B., A. M., Ph. D., K , C. S. C, 47 Lincoln Avenue, Amherst, Mass., Chemist. Massachusetts Agricultural Experiment Station. MiNOTT, Charles W., C. S. C, 6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass., Room loog; Residence, R. F. D., No. 2, Westminster, Mass; State Agent, Gypsy and Brown Tail Moth Suppression. NoHRSE, David O., C. S. C, Clemson, S. C, Professor of Animal Husbandry and Dairying, Clerason College. Preston, Charles H., K , KD, Danvers, Mass., Farmer; Trustee Massachusetts Agricultural College; Residence, Hathorne, Mass. Wheeler, Homer J., M. A., Ph. D., C. S. C, Kingston, R. I., Director Rhode Island Agricultural Experiment Station. ' 84 L. SMITH, Secretary, 25 Mercantile Street, Worcester, Mass. Hermes, Charles, Q. T. V., address unknown. Holland, Harry D., Amherst, Mass., Merchant, Firm of Holland Gallond. Jones, Elisha A. 2K, New Canaan, Conn., Superintendent of Waveny Farms. Smith, Llewellyn, Q. T. V., 25 Mercantile Street, Worcester, Mass.; Residence, 679 Main Street; Representative Norfolk Clothes Reel Co. ' 85 E. W. ALLEN, Secretary, Washington, D. C. Allen, Edwin W., Ph. D., K , C. S. C, Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C, As- sistant Director, Office of Experiment Stations; Editor of Experiment Station Record ; Residence, 1933 Biltmore Street, Washington, D. C; Secretary for Country Life Commission. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 221 Almeida, Luciano J. De., D. G. K., Director and Professor of Agriculture of Piracicola Agri- cultural College, Estate de Sao Paulo, Brazil. Barber, George H., M. D., Q. T. V., United States Naval Training Station, Newport, R. I., Physician and Surgeon in U. S. Navy. Browne, Charles W., K , Temple, New Hampshire, Farmer. GOLDTHWAIT, JOEL E., M. D., $K$, C. S. C, Milton, Mass., Physician. Howell, Hezekiah, SK, Washington Ville, Orange Co., New York, Farmer. Leary, Lewis C, died April 3rd, 1S88, at Cambridge, Mass. Phelps, Charles S., K , K2, ChapinviUe, Conn., Superintendent Farm Scoville Brothers. Taylor, Isaac N., Jr., D. G. K., 84-86 2nd Street, San Francisco, Cal., Secretary Electric Rail way and Manufacturing Supply Co. Tekirian, Benoni O., C. S. C, 201 West irSth Street, New York City, Dealer in Oriental Rugs. •86 DR. WINFIELD AYRES, Secretary, 616 Madison Ave., New York. Ateshian, Osgan H., C. S. C, Hotel San Remo, New York City, Dealer in Oriental Rugs and Carpets. Atkins, William H., D. G. K., Burnside, Conn., Florist. Ayres, Winfield, M. D., D. G. K., 616 Madison Avenue, New York City; Residence, Shippan Point, Stamford, Conn., Physician; Adjunct Professor of Surgery at New York Post Graduate Medical School. Carpenter, David F., K . K2, Mountain View, New Hampshire; Superintendent Schools of Ossipee and Tamworth. Clapp, Charles W., C. S. C, 102 Main Street, Northampton, Mass., Assistant Superintendent Connecticut Valley Electric R. R. Duncan, Richard F., M. D, 2K, 1236 Westminster Street, Providence, R. I., Physician. Eaton, William A., D. G. K., No. i Madison Avenue, New York City, Wholesale Lumber. Felt, Charles F. W., K , C. S. C , Chief Engineer, Gulf, Colorado Santa Fe R. R. Co., Galveston, Texas. Mackintosh, Richard B., K , D. G. K., 21 Aborn Street, Peabody, Mass., Acting Superin- tendent Salem P ' raternity. Sanborn, Kingsbury, SK, Riverside, Cal., Chief Engineer to Riverside Water Co.; Civil and Hydraulic Engineer. Stone, George E., Ph. D., K , 2K, Amherst, Mass., Professor of Botany, Massachusetts Agri- cultural College. Stone, George S., D. G. K., Otter River, Mass., Farmer. ' 87 F. H. FOWLER, Secretary, Boston, Mass. Almeida, Augusto L. De., D. G. K., Rio Janeiro, Brazil, Coffee Commission Merchant. Barrett, Edward W., M. D., D. G. K., 67 Main Street, Medford, Mass., Physician. 222 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Caldwell, William H., KS, Peterboro, N. H., Secretary and Treasurer American Guernsey Cattle Club; Proprietor Clover Ridge Farm; Editor of Guernsey Publications; Correspondent to Agricultural Press and Contributions to Agricultural Experiment Station. Publication CarpEiNTER, Frank B., $K$, C. S. C, ii South Twelfth Street, Richmond, Va., Residence 602 Lamb Avenue, Barton Heights, Richmond, Va., Chief Chemist Virginia and Carolina Chemical Company. Chase, William E., East Burnside and West Avenues, Portland, Ore., Fruit and Garden. Davis, Frederick A., M. D., C. S. C, 327 Jackson Block, Denver, Col., Eye and Ear Specialist. FISHERDICK, Cyrus W., C. S. C, Laplanta, New Mexico, Keeper of Varch Store. Flint, Edward R., Ph. D., M. D., Q. T. V., Professor of Chemistry, University of Florida, Gainsville, Fla. Fowler, Frederick H., K , C. S. C, Clerk to Superintendent of State Industrial School for Boys, Shirley, Mass.; Author of a Synoptical and Analytical Index, Agriculture of Massa- chusetts, 1837-1892. Howe, Clinton S., C. S. C, West Medway, Mass., Farmer. Marsh, James M., C. S. C, 391 Chestnut Street, Lynn, Mass., Treasurer of G. E. Marsh Com- pany, Manufacturers of Good Will Soap. Marshall, Charles L., D. G. K., 107 Stevens Street, Lowell, Mass., Florist and Market Gardener. Meehan, Thomas F., D. G. K., died April 4th, 1905, at Boston, Mass., of pneumonia. Osterhout, J. C, Chelmsford, Mass., Farmer. Richardson, Evan F., SK, Millis, Mass., Farmer, County Commissioner. Rideout, Henry N. W., Q. T. V., 7 Howe Street, Somerville, Mass., Assistant Paymaster, Office Fitchburg Division Boston Maine Railroad, Boston, Mass. TOLMAN, W. N., 2 , 24 North Twenty Second Street, Philadelphia, Pa., Civil Engineer, Erect- ing Engineer with United Gas Improvement Company. ToRRELLY, FIRININO Da S., Cidado de Rio Grande do Sud, Brazil, Stock Raising. Watson, Charles H., Q. T. V., Wool Exchange, West Broadway and Beach Streets, New York City, Representative Wool Department for Swift Co. ' 88 H. C. BLISS, Secretarv, Attleboro, Mass. Belden, Edward H , C. S. C, 39 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass., Residence 18 Park View Street, Roxbury, Mass., with Edison Electric Illuminating Company, of Boston. Bliss, Herbert C, 2, 14 Mechanic Street, Attleboro, Mass., Manufacturing Jeweler; Treasurer of Bliss Brothers Co.; Director of Providence Jewelers ' Board of Trade, Providence, K. I. Brooks, Fred K., C. S. C, 14 Washington Street, Haverhill, Mass., Residence 36 Brockton Ave- nue, Proprietor Merrimac Laundry. CooLEY Fred S., K , S , Bozeman, Mont., Supervisor of Farmers ' Institutes for State of Montana; Residence 603 South Central Street; Head of Extension Department, Mcntana College of Agriculture. Dickinson, P dwin H., C. S. C, Nonh Amherst, Mass., Farmer. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 223 Field, Samuel H., C. S. C, North Hatfield, Mass., Farmer. Foster, Francis H., Andover, Mass., Civil Engineer. Hayward, Albert I., B. A., C. S. C, Ashby, Mass., Farmer. Holt, Jonathan E., C. S. C, 67 Bartlet Street, Andover, Mass., Students ' Boarding House. Kinney, Lorenzo F., Kingston, R. I., Commercial Horticulture. Knapp, Edward E., K2, 3144 Passyunk Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa.; Residence Wells Avenue, Llanwellyn, Pa., in Mechanical Department Atlantic Refining Company, Philadelphia- MrsHlMA, Viscount Y.ataro, D. G. K., 5 Shinrudo, Azabuku, Japan, Farmer. Moore, Robert B., K , C. S. C, P. O. Bo.x 2530, Passyunk Station, Philadelphia, Pa., Resi- dence 5617 Girard Avenue, Superintendent Tygert-Allen Works, American Agricultural Chemical Company Newman, Geo. E., Q. T. V., 287 North First Street, San Jose, Cal., Residence 164 South Critten- den Street, Model Creamery, Wholesale and Retail Dairy Products. NoYES, Frank F., D. G. K., 472 North Jackson Street, Atlanta, Ga., Superintendent of Lines and Sub-stations for the Atlantic Water and Electric Power Co. Parsons, Wilfred A., 2 , Southampton, Mass., Farmer. Rice, Thomas, D. G. K., Business address, Daily News, Fall River, Mass. ; Residence Savoy Hotel, Fall River. Mass., Reporter for Daily News. Shepardson, William M., C. S. C, Middlebury, Conn., Landscape Gardener. Shimer, Boyer L., Q. T. v., Bethlehem, Pa., Mount Airy Park Farm, Breeder of Pure Bred Stock and Poultry; Real Estate Business. ' 89 C. S. CROCKER, Secretary, Philadelphia, Pa. Blair, James R., Q. T. V., 158 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.; Residence 35 Maple Avenue, Boston, Superintendent C. Brigham Co., Milk Contractois. Copeland, Arthur D., K2, died September 3rd, 1907, at Emerson Hospital, Boston, after an operation for appendicitis. Crocker, Charles S., K2., 2453 Carpenter Street, Philadelphia, Pa., Chemist with American Agricultural Chemical Co. Davis, Franklin W., K(f, SK, 85 Colberg Avenue, Roslindale, Mass., Telegraph Editor Boston Record ; Secretary Massachusetts Agricultural College Alumni Club 1899-1903; President, 190S. Hartwell, Burt L., Ph. D., M. Sc, K , C. S. C, Kingston, R. I., Chemist, Rhode Island Agricultural E,xperiment Station ; Professor Agricultural Chemistry, Rhode Island State College. Hubbard, Dwight L., C. S. C, 645 Washington Street, Brighton, Mass., Civil Engineer, City Engineer ' s Office, Boston, Mass. HuTCHiNGS, James T., iSK, Assistant General Manager of Rochester Railway and Light Co. Residential address 656 Averell Avenue. Kellogg, William A., SK, Amherst, Mass. Miles, Arthur L., D. D. S., C. S. C, 12 Magazine Street, Cambridge, Mass., Dentist. 224 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI North, Mark N., M. D. V., Q. T. V., Corner Bay and Green Streets, Cambridge, Mass. Veterinarian. NouRSE, Arthur M., C. S. C, Westboro, Mass., Farmer. Sellew, Robert P., 2K, 31 Whitney Building, Boston, Mass.; Residence 166 Kent Street, Brook- line, Mass., Eastern Representative of the J. W. Biles Co., Cincinnati, Ohio. Whitney, Charles A., C. S. C, Upton, Mass., Farmer. Woodbury, Herbert E., C. S. C, 1512 Delaware Street, Indianapolis, Indiana. ' 90 F. W. MOSSMAN, Secretary, Westminster, Mass. Barry, David, K , Q. T. V., Amherst, Mass., Superintendent Electric Light Works. Bliss, Clinton E., D. G. K., died August 24th, 1894, at Attleboro, Mass. Castro, Arthur De M., D. G. K., died May 2nd, 1894, at Juiz de Fora, Minas, Brazil. Dickinson, Dwight, W., D. M. D., Q. T. v., 25 Melendy Avenue, Watertown, Mass., Dentist. Felton, Truman P., C. S. C, West Berlin, Mass., Farmer. Gregory, Edgar, C. S. C, Marblehead, Mass., Proprietor J. J. H. Gregory Son, Seedsmen, Marblehead, Mass. Haskins, Henri M., Q. T. V., 87 N. Pleasant Street, Amherst, Mass., Chemist, in charge of Official Inspection of Commercial Fertilizers, Massachusetts Experiment Station, Amherst, Mass. Herreo, Jose M., D. G. K., Havana, Cuba, Associate Editor, Diario de la Marina. Jones, Charles H., iK , Q. T. V., Burlington, Vt., Chemist, Vermont Agricultural E.xperinient Station. LoRiNG, John S., died at Orlando, Florida, January 17th, 1903. McCloud, Albert C, Q. T. V., Amherst, Mass., Life and Fire Insurance Agent, Real Estate. MossMAN, Fred W., C. S. C, Westminster, Mass., Farmer. Russell, Henry L., D. G. K., 126 No. Main Street, Pawtucket, R. I.; Residence 34 Greene Street, Secretary Pawtucket Ice Co. SiMONDS, George B., C. S. C, 63 Forest Street. Fitchburg, Mass., Postal Service. Smith, Frederick J., M. Sc, K , Q. T. V., Corner of Smith and Huntington Streets, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Residence 46 Reid Street, Elizabeth, N. J., Manufacturing Chemist, Insecticides ; Author of papers. Board of Agriculture, 1897. Stowe, Arthur N., Q. T. V., Hudson, Mass., Fruit Grower. Taft, Walter E., D. G. K,, Berlin, N. H., Draughtsman and Secretary Sheeley Automatic Rail- road Signal Co. Taylor, Frederick L. M. D., Q. T. V., 524 Warren Street, Boston, Mass., Physician ; Medical Director of Walter Baker Sanatorium. West, John S , Q. T. V., died at Belchertown, July 13th, 1902. Williams, Frank O., Q. T. V., Sunderland, Mass., Farmer. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 225 ' 91 W. A. BROWN, Secretary, Greenfield, Mass. Arnold, Frank L., K , Q. T. V., 32 School Street, No. Woburn, Mass., Superintendent Oil of Vitriol Department of the Merrimac Chemical Company. Brown, Walter A., C. S. C, 93 Main Street, Greenfield, Mass., Civil and Landscape Engineer; Treasurer of the firm of Clapp Abercrombie Company, Greenfield, Mass. Carpe. ter, Malcolm A., C. S. C , 448 Huron Avenue, Cambridge, Mass., Landscape Gardener. Eames, Aldice G., 2K, North Wilmington, Mass., Literary Work. Felt, E. Porter, D. Sc, Cornell, C. S. C, Geological Hall, Albany, N. Y. ; Residence Nassau, Rensselaer County, N. Y. ; State Entomologist; Author of Insects Affecting Park and Wood. land Trees ; also Bulletins and Reports. Field, Henry J., LL. B., Q. T. V., Greenfield, Mass., Lawyer; Judge Franklin District Court. Gay, Willard W., D. G. K., Melrose, Mass., Landscape Designer and Planter. Horner, Louis F., C. S. C, 3905 Wisconsin Place, Los Angeles, Cal., Landscape Architect Landscape Gardener; Superintendent Cinque Foil Water Company; President Santa Barbara Horticultural Society ; Secretary Montecito Hall and Library Association. Howard, Henry M., C. S. C, Fuller Street, West Newton, Mass., Market Gardener. Hull, John B., Jr., D. G. K., Great Barrington, Mass., Coal Dealer. Johnson, Charles H., D. G. K., Lynn, Mass., General Electric Works. Lage, Oscar V. B., D. G. K., Juiz de Fora, Minas, Brazil, Stock Raiser. Legate, Howard N., LL. B, D. G. K., Room 136, State House, Boston, Mass.; Residence 11 Copeland Place, Roxbury, Mass., Clerk State Board of Agriculture ; Boston Y. M. C. A. Evening Law School, Class of igoS. Magill, Claude A., 902 Chapel Street, New Haven, Conn.; Residence 59 Division Street, New Haven; General Manager of The Connecticut Hassem Paving Company. Paige, Walter C, D. G. K., 725 Fourth Avenue, Louisville, Ky. ; Field Secretary of Y. M. C. A. Ruggles, Murray, C. S. C, Milton, Mass., Superintendent of Electric Works. Sawyer, Arthur H., Q. T. V., 98 Hudson Street, Jersey City, N. J. ; Residence 131 N. i6th St., Cement Inspector with Hudson Companies, New York City. Shores, Harvey T., M. D., K2, 78 Main Street, Northampton, Mass., R esidence, 177 Elm Street Physician, State Health Inspector for Hampshire and Franklin Counties. ' 92 H. M. THOMSON, Secretary, Amherst, Mass. Beals, Alfred T., Q. T. V., 120 East 23rd Street, New York City, Magazine Photographer. Boynton, Walter I., D. D. S., Q. T. V., 310 Main Street, Springfield, Mass., Residence, 73 Dartniouth Street, Dentist, 226 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Clark, Edward E., C. S. C, Hudson, Mass., Farmer. Crane, Henry E., C. S. C, Quincy, Mass., F. H. Crane Sons, Grain Dealers. Deuel, James E., Ph. G. Q. T. V., Amherst, Mass., Druggist. Emerson, Henry E., C. S. C, Master Mechanic, Arlington Mills, Lawrence, Mass. Field, Judson L., Q. T. V., 294 Fifth Avenue, Chicago, III., Residence, Oak Park, 111., Salesman with Jenkins, Kreer Co., Dry Goods Commission Merchants, Chicago. Fletcher, William, C. S. C, Chelmsford, Mass., Drummer. Graham, Charles S., C. S. C, Holden, Mass., Farmer. Holland, Edward B., M. S., $K$, KS, 2S North Prospect Street, Amherst, Mass., Associate Chemist, Massachusetts Agricultural E.xperiment Station, Department of Plant and Animal Chemistry. Hubbard, Cyrus M., Q. T. V., Sunderland, Mass., Tobacco Farming. Knight, Jewell B., M. S., Q. T. V., Poona, India, Residence, Kirkel, India, Professor of Agri- culture and Director Experiment Station, Poona College. Lyman, Richard P., M. D. V., Q. T. V., Residence, 1336 East 15th Street, Kansas City, Mo., Veterinary Surgeon ; Secretary American Veterinary Medical Association ; Editor Americair Veterinary Medical Association Annual ; Member State Board of Veterinary Examiners ; Or ganizer and First President of State Examining Board of Veterinary Surgeons; and Author of Laws Pertaining to Glanders and Rabies in the State of Connecticut. Plumb, Frank H., Q. T. V., Stafford Springs, Conn., Farmer. Rogers, Elliott, $2K, Vice-President and General Manager N. F. Bd. Co., Kennebunk, Me. Smith, Robert H., died March 25th, igoo, at Amherst, Mass. Stockbridge, Francis G., K . D. G. K., Narcissa, Pa., Superintendent of Triple Springs Farm. Taylor George E., Jr., K , Q. T. V., Shelburne, Mass., Farmer, Breeder of Pure-Bred Short- horn Cattle ; President Connecticut Valley Breeders ' Association. Thomson, Henry M., K , C. S. C, Amherst, Mass., Farmer. West, Homer C, Q. T. V., Belchertown, Mass., Traveling Agent. Willard, George B., $2K, Waltham, Mass., City Treasurer and Collector of Taxes. Williams, Milton H., M. D. V., Q. T. V., Sutiderland, Mass., Veterinarian. ' 93 F. A. SMITH, Secretary, Ipswich, Mass. Baker, Joseph, Q. T. V., Riverside Farm, North Grosvenor Dale, Conn., Farmer. Bartlett, Frederick G., D. G. K., 298 Cabot Street, Holyoke, Mass., Sexton Forestdale Ceme. tery. Clark, Henry D., D. V. S., C. S. C, 15 Central Street, Fit chburg, Mass., Residence, 69 High Street, Veterinary Surgeon. Curley, George F., M. D., K , C. S. C, io Congress Street, Milford, Mass., Physician and Surgeon. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 227 Davis, Herbert C, Q. T. v., 45 West Cain Street, Calant, Ga., Railway Postal Clerk, U. S. Government. Goodrich, Chas. A., M. D., D. G. K., 61 North Beacon Street, Hartford, Conn., Residence, 61 North Beacon Street, Physician. Harlow, Harry J., KS, Shrewsbury, Mass., Dairyman. Harlow, Francis T., 2K, P. O. Bo.k 106. Marshfteld, Mass., Farmer and Cranberry Grower. Hawks, Ernest A., C. S. C, P ' ourth and Broad Streets, Richmomd, Va., Evangelist. Henderson, Frank H., D. G. K., New York City, Rural Engineer. Howard, Edwin C, SK, Corner B and Third Streets, South Boston, Mass., Residence, 156 Hillside Avenue, Arlington Heights, Mass., Sub-Master Lawrence School, Boston, Mass. HOYT, Franklin S., A. M., C. S. C, 4 Park Street, Boston , Mass., Residence, 44 Winthrop Street, West Newton, Mass. Editor Educational Department, Houghton, Mifflin Company. Lehnert, Eugene H., D. V. S. 4 K , KS, Storrs, Conn., Professor of Veterinary Science and Physiology, Connecticut Agricultural College. Melendy, a. Edward, Q. T. V., Quincy, Mass., Government Drafting Rooms, Fore River Ship- building Company; Residence, 11 Grant Street, Wollaston, Mass.; Weight Clerk, C. and R. Department, U. S. Navy. Perry, John R., ioi Tremont Street, Boston, Mass., Interior Decorator. Smith, Cotton A., Ph. B., Yale, ' 94, Q. T. V., 327 Douglas Building, Los Angeles, Cal., Resi- dence, 323 South Hill Street; Real Estate Broker. Smith, Fred A., C. S. C, Turner Hill, Ipswich, Mass., Manager of a Country Estate. Smith, Luther W., SK, Manteno, 111., Stock and General Farmer. Staples, Henry F., M. D., C. S. C , 802 Rose Building, Cleveland, Ohio, Residence, 8628 Wade Park Avenue, Physician and Surgeon; Professor of Hygiene, Cleveland Homeopathic Medical College; Secretary Homeopathic Medical Society of Ohio; President of Cleveland Homeo- pathic Society; Vice-President and Member of Medical Staff of Cleveland City Hospital. Tinoco, Luiz a. F., D. G. K., Campos, Rio Janeiro, Brazil, Planter and Manufacturer. Walker, Edward J., C. S. C, Bo. 315, Clinton, Mass., Farmer. ' 94 S. FRANCIS HOWARD, Secretary, Amherst, Mass. Alderman, Edwin H., C. S. C, R. F. D. No. 2, Chester, Mass., Residence, Middlefield, Farmer. AvERELL, Fred G., Q. T. V., 131 State Street, Boston, Mass., Clerk. Bacon, Linus H., Q. T. V., Main Street, Spencer, Mass., with Phceni.x Paper Box Company ; Residence, 36 Cherry Street. Bacon, Theodore Spaulding, M. D., 4 K i , 4 2K, 6 Chestnut Street, Springfield, Mass., Physician and Surgeon; Secretary Hampden District Medical Society; Director Springfield Academy of Medicine; Associate Medical Examiner, Hampden County, District 2. Barker, Louis M., C. S. C, Hanson, Mass., Civil Engineer; Inspector of Waterbury Country Club, 228 THE 19U INDEX VOLUME XLI BoARDMAN Edwin L., C. S. C, Sheffield, Mass., Farmer. Brown Charles L. C. S. C, 870-878 State Street, Springfield, Mass., Residence, West Spring- field, Laundryman. Curtis, Arthur C, C. S. C, Salisbury School, Salisbury, Conn., Master in English. Cutter Arthur H. M. D., 2K, 333 Broadway, Lawrence, Mass., Physician ; Surgeon on Staff, of Lawrence General Hospital. Davis Perley E., Q. T. V., Granby Mass., Farmer. Dickinson, Eliot T., D. M. D., Q. T. V., 138 Main Street, Northampton, Residence, Florence Mass., Dentist. Fowler, Halley M., Mansfield, Mass., Railway Postal Clerk. Fowler, Henry J., C. S. C, North Hadley, Mass., Agent for Alfred Peats cS: Company, Wall ■Papers, Boston, Mass.; U. S. Mail Carrier. Gifford, John E K2, Sutton, Mass., Farmer. Greene, Frederick L., A.M., C. S. C, Red Bluff Union High School, Red Bluff, Cal. ; Princi- pal of Anderson High School, Shasta Co., Cal. Greene, Ira C, Q. T. V., 222 Pleasant Street, Leominster, Mass., Greene Bros., Coa! Dealers and Wholesale Shippers of Ice. HiGGiNS, Charles H., D. V. S., C. S. C, Pathologist to Dominion of Canada; in charge of Bi- ological Laboratory, Ottawa, Canada; Residence, 74 Fairmount Avenue, Ottawa. Howard, S. Francis, M. S., $K$, K2, Amherst, Mass., Assistant Professor of Chemistry, Mass- achusetts Agricultural College. Keith, Thaddeus F., Q. T. V., 8 Wallace Avenue, Fitchburg, Mass., Residence gS Blossom Street, Advertising Contractor. Kirkland, Archie H., M. S., 4 SK, 6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass., Entomologist; Superintend ent of Gypsy Moth Work ; Residence Reading Mass. LoUNSBURY, Charles P., iliKiI , SK, Department of Agriculture Cape Town, South Africa, Gov- ernment Entomologist, Colony of Cape of Good Hope; Residence Karlskrona, Kenihvorth, Cape Colony. Manley, Lowell, KS, Weld Farm, West Roxbury, Mass., Farm Superintendent. Merwin, Gf.orge H., C. S. C, Southport, Conn., Stock-farming. Morse, Alvertus J , Q. T. V., 59 Main Street, Northampton Mass., Attorney. POMEROY, Robert F., C. S. C, South Worthington, Mass., Farmer. Putnam, Joseph H, KS, Litchfield, Conn., Farm Superintendent; Lecturer Connecticut State Grange. Sanderson, William E., KS, 36 Cortlandt Street, New York City, Salesman for J. M. Thorburn Company; Residence 161 State Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Smead, H. Preston, KS, East Dummerston, Vt, p ' arm Manager. Smith, George E. C. S. C, Belfast, Me., Manager Stock Farm. Smith, Ralph E., K , i ' 2K, Berkeley, Cal., Associate Professor of Plant Pathology, University of California. Spaulding, Charles H , SK, Le. ington, Mass., United States Inspector of Dredging, Engineer- ing Department. Walker, Claude F., Ph.D., C. S. C, 155 West 6sth Street, New York City, Residence, 2 Saint Nicholas Place, Co-Editor of Outlines of Inorganic Chemistry and Laboratory Experiments, ' White, Elias D , ' I ' SK, Athens, Ga., Post Master at Athens, Ga. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 229 •95 H. A. BALLOU, Secretary, Barbadoes, West Indies. Ballou, Henry A., M S., K , Q. T. V., Barbadoes, B, W. I., Entomologist, Imperial Depart ment of Agriculture for the West Indies ; Author of Papers on Economic Entomology. Bemis, Waldo L., Q. T. V., Spencer, Mass. Billings, George A., C. S. C, Office Farm Management United States Department of Agricul- ture, Washington, D. C. ; Residence 3649 nth Street, N. W., Washington, D. C. ; Assistant Agriculturist in Dairy Farm Management; Author of Bulletins and Reports of Dairy Hus- bandry, New Jersey Experiment Station. Brown, Wm. C, D. G. K., 33S Boylston Street, Boston, Mass., with J. J. Wingott, Interior Decorator. Burgess, Albert F., M. S., 2k, 1358 Newton Street, Washington, D. C, Entomologist in Bureau of Entomology; Secretary of Association of Economic Entomologists. Clark, Harry E., SK, Middlebury, Conn., Superintendent of Biscoe Farm. Cooley, Robert A., $SK, Bozeman, Mont., Professor of Zoology and Entomology, Montana Agri- cultural College, State Entomologist ; Fellow A. A. A. S. Crehore, Charles W., SK, Chicopee, Mass., Farmer. Dickinson, Charles M., M. S. Q. T. V., 76-78 Wabash Avenue, Chicago, III; Residence Park Ridge, 111., Seedsman and Florist. Fairbanks, Herbert S., KS, 13th and Chestnut Streets, Philadelphia, Pa.; Residence Germantown Pa., Patent Attorney, Patents and Patent Causes; with Wiedersheim and Fairbanks. Foley, Thomas P , C. S. C, 17 Battery Place, New York City ; Residence 466 Valley Road, West Orange, N. J., Draughtsman with Construction Department of Otis Elevator Company. Frost, Harold L., K , $SK, Arlington, Mass., Forester and Entomologist. Hemenway Herbert D , C. S. C, Home Culture Clubs, Northampton; Residence 57 High Street Northampton, Mass., General Secretary Home Culture Clubs ; Author of How to Make School Gardens, Hints and Helps for Young Gardeners, Illustrated Lectures on How to Plan the Home Grounds, Gospel of Gardens, Our Common Trees, Children ' s Gardens in United States- Jones, Robert S., iSK, Columbus, Ohio, Civil Engineer, Water Filtration Plant. KuRODA, Shiro, ' i ' SK, 127 Second Street, Osaka, Japan, Chief Foreign Department, Osaka Revenue Administration Bureau, Utsobo, Kitadore. Lane, Clarence B., K , D. G. K., Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. ; Residence 4026 5th Street, N. W. Washington, D. C; Assistant Chief Dairy Division United States De. partment of Agriculture; Author of The Business of Dairying ; in charge of Market Milk Investigation. Lewis, Henry W., McCall Ferry, Pa.; Residence Rockland, Mass., Civil Engineer and Superin tendent of Construction. Marsh, Jasper, KS, Danvers, Mass., with Consolidated Electric Light Company. Morse, Walter L., KS, Grand Central Station, New York City ; Residence 1432 Pacific Street Brooklyn, Terminal Engineer for N. Y. C. H. R. R. R. Co. Potter, Daniel C, C. C. S., Fairhaven, Mass., Landscape and Sanitary Engineer. Read, Henry B., SK, Westford, Mass., Farmer. Root, Wright A., tSKj Easthampton, Mass., Market and Fruit Farm. 230 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLt Smith, Arthur B., Q. T. V., 332 Fifth Avenue, Chicago, 111.; Residence iSio Winnemac Avenue, Bookkeeper for Wilson Bros. Stevens, Clarence L., died October 8th, igoi, at Sheffield, Mass., of hemorrhage. Sullivan, Maurice J, Littleton, N. H., Superintendent of The Rocks. ToEEY, Frederick C, C. S. C, West Stockbridge, Mass., Lime Manufacturer. Toole, Stephen P., Amherst, Mass., Evergreen Nurseryman. Warren, Franklin L., M. D., Q. T. V., Bridgewater, Mass., Physician. White, Edward A., KS, 55 Pleasant Street, Amherst, Mass., Assistant Professor of Floriculture, Massachusetts Agricultural College; Director Summer School; Author of The Hymenialis of Connecticut. ' 96 BURRINGTON, HORACE C, $2K, died at Greenwich, Conn., November, 1907. Clapp, Frank L., $S , C. S. C, Cornwall-on-Hudson, N. Y., Civil Engineer, Board of Water Supply of the City of New York. Cook, Allen B., C. S. C, Farmington, Conn., Superintendent of Hill Stead Farm. De Luce, Edmond, SK, 27 W. 23rd Street, New York City, Salesman, % P. Putnam Sons. Edwards, Harry T., C. S. C, United States Department of Agriculture, 227 Calle Rege Malate, Manila, P. I. Fletcher, Stevenson W., M. S., Ph. D., il K$. C. S. C, Blacksburg, Va., Director of Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station ; Author of Soils and How to Make a Fruit Garden. Hammar, James F., C. S. C, Nashua, N. H., Farmer and Florist. Harper, Walter B., M. S., Q. T. V., Bogalusa, La., Manager Turpentine Department, Great Southern Lumber Company. Jones, Benjamin K., C. S. C, died August 21, 1903, at Springfield, Mass. Kinney, Asa S., K2, Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, Mass., Floriculturist and Instructor in Botany. Kramer, Ai.bin M., KS, 351 Main Street, Springfield, Mass., Architect and Civil Engineer; Resi- dence 452 Wilbraham Road, Springfield, Mass. Leamy, Patrick A., Q. T. V., Midas Via Golconda, Nevada. Marshall, James L. C. S. C, 18 Grafton Street, Worcester, Mass., Ofiice of Bradley Car Works; Residence 29 Gardner Street, Worcester. Moore, Henry W., K2, 19 Amherst Street, Worcester, Mass., Farmer and Market Gardener. Nichols, Robert P., D. G. K., Care of B. Parker Nichols, Norwell, Mass. Nutting. Charles A., SK, Ashby, Mass., Farmer. Pentecost, William L,, D. G. K., Chapinville, Conn., Superintendent of Grassland Farms. Poole, Erford W., K , KS, P. O. Box 129, New Bedford, Mass., Estimator and Draughtsman. Poole, I. Chester, D. O., K$, KS, P. O. Box 129, New Bedford, Mass., Osteopathic Physician. Read, Frederick H., SK, Oaklawn, R. I., Teacher in English, High School, Providence, R. I.; President Rhode Island Interscholastic Athletic League; Vice-President Eastern Commercial Teachers ' Association. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 231 Roper, Harry H., C. S. C , Ipswich, Mass., Manager Turner Hill Farm. Saito, Seijiro, C. S. C, Nautical College, Tokio, Japan, Teacher; Interpreter at Marine Courts ; Residence 12 Aoyama Takagi Cho, Tokio. Sastre, De Veraud Salome, D. G. K., Cardenas, Tabasco., Mexico, Sugar Planter and Manu- facturer. Sellew, Merle E., SK, Wallingford, Conn., Teacher, Central District, Wallingford. Shaw, Frederick B., D. G. K.. iS City Square, Taunton, Mass., Manager Western Union Tele- graph Company, Taunton; Residence 41 Winthrop Street. Shepard, Lucius J., C. S. C, West Sterling, Mass., Farmer. Shultis, Newton S., KS, 601 Chamber Commerce, Boston, Mass., Wholesale Grain Dealer; Resi- dence, 14 Winthrop Street, Winchester. TsuDA, George, SK, Editor of Agriculturist, Seed and Nurseryman, Ayabu, Tokio, Japan ; Pres- ident Tsuda Company, Importers and E-vporters of Plants, Seeds, and Agricultural Implements. ' 97 C. A. PETERS, Secretary, Moscow, Idaho. Allen, Harry F., C. S. C, Northboro, Mass., Farmer. Allen, John W., C. S. C, Northboro, Mass., Market Gardener. Armstrong, Herbert J., SK, 11337 Crescent Avenue, Morgan Park, 111., Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering, Armour Institute of Technology, Chicago. Barry, John M., SK, 509 Tremont Street, Boston ; Residence 552 Tremont Street, Automobiles. Bartlett, James L., K , Q. T. V., 615 State Street, Madison, Wis., Observer United States Weather Bureau, Assistant Professor, University of Wisconsin. Cheney, Liberty L., V. M. D., Q. T. V., 329 Telfair Street, Augusta, Ga., Veteiinarian to the Board of Health in Augusta. Clark, Lafayette F., C. S. C, 1337 Seventh Street, Des Moines, la., Beatrice Creamery Co., in charge of Testing Department. Drew, George A., 2K, Greenwich, Conn., General Manager of Conyers Manor, Estate of E. C. Converse. Emrich, John A., Q. T. V., Park Street, Portland, Oregon, Superintendent First Christian Bible School. GoESSMANN, Charles I., D. G. K., Scranton, Pa., Industrial Chemist. Leavens, George D., $K i , $2K, 24-26 Stone Street, New York City; Residence 527 Second Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Second Vice-President and Treasurer The Coe-Mortimer Company, Fertilizers, Soil Expert Agricultural Experts ' Association. Norton, Charles A., 2K, 30 Grove Street, West Lynn, Mass., Pianos and Piano Tuner. Palmer, Clayton F., A. M., C. S. C, Los Angeles, Cal., Residence 1622 Bushnell Avenue, So. Pasadena, Cal., Instructor in Agricultural Nature Study, Los Angeles (State) Normal School. Peters, Charles A., Ph. D., K$, C. S. C, Berlin, Germany, 103 Essmacher Street, Teacher in Frederick Werdersche Abberrealschule. Smith, Philip H., SK, 102 Main Street, Amherst, Mass., Chemist in charge of Feed and Dairy Division, Massachusetts Agricultual Experiment Station. 232 THE 191 i INDEX VOLllMiE XLt ' 98 S. W. WILEY, Secretary, Baltimore, Md. Adejmian, Aredis G., D. G. K., Harpoot, Turkey, Care Rev. H. N. Barnum, Farmer. Baxter, Charles N., A. B., C. S. C, o]A, Beacon Street, Boston ; Residence 209 Quincy Avenue, Quincy, Mass., Assistant Boston Athenaeum Library. Clark, Clifford G., D. G. K., Sunderland, Mass., Farmer. Eaton, Julian S., B. S., D. G. K., 711 Prospect Avenue, Hartford, Conn., Chief Adjuster and Attorney for Travelers ' Insurance Co. Fisher, Willis S., 2K, 24 Vine Street, Melrose, Mass., Principal of Lincoln and D. W. Gooch Grammar Schools. Montgomery, Alexander J., C. S. C, Natick, Mass., Wholesale Rose Grower. NiCKERSON, John P., M. D., Q. T. V., West Harwich, Mass., Physician. Warden, Randall D., SK, Board of Education, City Hall, Newark, N. J., Director of Physical Training in Public Schools. Wiley, Samuel W., KS, 15 South Gay Street, Baltimore, M. D.; Residence Kenilworth 339 Bloom Street, Analytical and Consulting Chemist, Wiley Hoffman. Wright, George H., 2K, Ennis Stoppani, Brokers, 34-36 New Street, New York City, Book- keeper. ' 99 D. A. BEAM AN, Secretaty, Ponce, Porto Rico. Armstrong, William H., i SK, San Juan, Porto Rico; Residence Cambridge, Mass., First Lieu- tenant, Porto Rico Regiment of Infantry, United States Army. Beaman, Daniel, Q. T. V., Teacher of Horticulture and Entomology, Ponce Agricultural School, Ponce, Porto Rico. Chapin, William E., LVi, 76 Lincoln Avenue, New London, Conn., Commercial Teacher. Dana, Herbert W., C. S. C, 5 Roslyn Street, Salem, Mass., Advertising Manager R. H. White Company, Boston, Mass. Hinds, Warren E., Ph. D., tK , C. S. C, Auburn, Alabama, Professor of Entomology and En- tomologist to the Experiment Station, Alabama Polytechnic Institute; Author of Publications on Economic Entomology, Thysanoptera of North America and Mexican Cotton Boll Weevil. Hooker, William A., $SK, United States Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Entomology Washington, D. C. Hubbard, George C, 2K, Sunderland, Mass., Farmer. Maynard, Howard E., C. S. C, Boonton, N. J., Electrician, Manager Westinghouse Stor. Bat. Works. Merrill, Frederick A., Mount Vernon, Ga., Professor of Agriculture and Member of Industrial Department of the Baptist Collegiate Industrial Institute. Pingree, Melvin H., C. S. C, 2343 S. Clinton Street, Baltimore, Md. ; Chemist with American Agricultural Chemical Company, Baltimore, Md. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 233 Smith, Bernard H., M. S., LL. B., K , C. S. C, Residence, 29 Lowden Avenue, West Somer- ville, Mass., Chief Boston Laboratory, Bureau of Chemistry, Department of Agriculture. Smith, Samuel E., C. S. C, Amherst, Mass. Turner, Frederick H , K , C. S. C, Great Barrington, Mass., Hardware Business. Walker, Charles M., C. S. C, Student Yale Forestry School, New Haven, Conn. ' 00 E. K. ATKINS Secretary, Northamp ton, Mass. Atkins, Edwin K., KS, 15 Hubbard Avenue, Northampton, Mass., Civil Engineer, with E. C. E. E. Davis. Baker, Howard, V. M. D., C. S. C, Care of ElUott Company, 37th Avenue West, Duluth, Minn., Veterinary Inspector, Bureau of Animal Industry, in charge of Station. Brown, Frank H., K2, Hosmer Street, Marlboro, Mass., Farmer. Campbell, Morton A., C. S. C. Sangerville, Maine, Principal High School. Canto, Ysidro H., Causaheub, Yucatan, Mexico. Crane, Henry L , 2K, Westwood, Mass., Farmer. Strawberries a Specialty. Felch, Percy F., C. S. C, drowned in Connecticut River, North Hadley, July 8th, 1900. Frost, Arthur F., C. S. C , 526-S West 147th Street, New York, N. Y., Bridge Designer with Public Service Commission of First District, 154 Nassau Street, New York. Gilbert, Ralph D., Ph. D., C. S. C, 43 Chatham Street, Boston, Mass., Residence, 254 Arling- ton Street, West Medford, Mass., Chemist, in charge of the Bowker Insecticide Co., Boston Mass. Halligan, James E., K2, Box 246 Baton Rouge, La., Chemist, State Experiment Station ; Asso- ciate Referee on Sugar; Referee on Molasses Methods for the A. O. A. C, 1906-1907 ; Referee on National Cattle Food Standards. Harmon, Arthur Atwell, V. M. D., K , C. S. C, Flagstaff, Arizona, Veterinary Inspector, Bu- reau of Animal Industry, Care of Dr. Marion Imes, Albuquerque, New Mexico. Hull, Edward T., M. D., K , C. S. C, 2420 Seventh Avenue, New York City, Physician and Surgeon; Pathologist at St. Mary ' s and Sloane Maternity Hospital. Kellogg, James W., 2K, Box 645, Room 635, Capitol, Harrisburg, Pa., First Assistant Chemist and Microscopist, State Department of Agriculture. Landers, Morris B., M. D., D. G. K., 13 East Street, Ludlow, Mass., Physician; New York Hos- pital and Sloane Maternity Hospital; Attending Physician to O. P. D. Harlem Hospital. Lewis, James F., SK, Carver-Cutter Cotton Gin Company, East Bridgewater, Mass. MoNAHAN, Arthur C, K , C. S. C, Principal Turner ' s Falls High School, Turner ' s Falls, Mass. Morrill, Austin W., Ph. D., (Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1903), SK, Entomologist Ari zona Experiment Station ; Author of Fumigation for the White Fly as Adapted to Florida Conditions. Munson, Mark H., C. S. C, Littleville, Mass., Sheep Raiser and Slaughterer. 234 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Parmenter, George F., M. A., Ph. D., i SK, 3 Center Place, Waterville, Maine, Professor of Chemistry in Colby College; Author of Laboratory Experiments in General Chemistry, and Papers on Entomological Subjects. Stanley, Francis G., M. D., Q. T. V., 144 Cabot Street, Beverly, Mass., Physician. West, Albert M., SK, Whittier, Cal., Assistant, Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. ' 01 J. H. CHICKERING, Secretary, Dover, Mass. B.-VRRY, John E., KS, Schenectady, N. Y., General Electric Company, Testing Department. Bridgeforth, George R., C. S. C, Head of Department of Agriculture, Tuskegee, Ala. Brooks, Percival C, $SK, 418 Englewood Avenue, Englewood Station, Chicago, 111., Foreman of Silicate Soda Department at Calumet Works of the General Chemistry Company. Casey, Thomas, Q. T. V., 145 Main Street, Fitchburg, Mass., Attorney at Law. Chickering, James H., $SK, Dover, Mass., Farmer. Cooke, Theodore F., C. S. C, 1S3 Elm Street, Pittsfield, Mass., Teacher in Pittsfield High School Dawson, William A., C. S. C, Willimantic, Conn., Florist. Dickerman, William E. $SK, Life Insurance Agent, Attleboro, Mass. Gamwell, Edward S.. C. S. C, 237 South Fourth West Street, Salt Lake City, Utah, Inspector for Faust Creamery and Supply House. GoRDAN, Clarence E., A. M., K , C. S. C, North Amherst, Mass., Assistant Professor of Zo- ology at Massachusetts Agricultural College. Graves, Thaddeus, Jr., SK, Hatfield, Mass., Tobacco Grower. Henry, James B., LL. B., D. G. K., 50 State Street, Lawyer; Firm Name, Chapin Henry; Residence, 288 Sargeant Street, Hartford, Conn. Hunting, Nathan J., C. S. C, Shutesbury, Mass., Farmer; Instructor in Massachusetts Agri- cultural College during school. Leslie, Charles T., M. D., C. S. C, Pittsfield, Mass., Physician. Macomber, Ernest L., 2K, West Barnstable, Mass., N. Y., N. H. H. R. R. Company. Ovalle, Julio, M. B., D. G. K., Chili. PlERSON, Wallace R., $K , KS, Cromwell, Conn., Florist ; Secretary A. Pierson, Inc. Rice, Charles L. C. S. C, Western Electric Company, 463 West Street, New York City, Resi- dence, 223 North Ninth Street., Roseville, N. J., Electrical Engineer. Root, Luther A., 2K, Amherst, Mass., Farmer. ScHAFFRATH, MAX, Box 95, Coalinga, Cal., Oil Business. Smith, Ralph I., Q. T. V., Agricultural Building, West Raleigh, N. C, Entomologist to North Caro- lina Experiment Station and A. M. College; Residence, 106 New Burn Ave., Raleigh, N. C. Tashjian, Dickran B., Q. T. V., Turner Hill, Ipswich, Mass., Landscape Gaidener to C. G. Rice, Esq.; Special Editor of Ardrive, a semi-monthly Armenian Magazine. Todd, John H., Q. T. V., Rowley, Mass., Dairyman. Massachusetts agricijltural colle,gE 235 Whitman, N. D., SK, 2307 West 30th Street, Los Angeles, Cal., Engineer for Reinforced Con- crete Pipe Company, 715-16 Central Building, Los Angeles, Cal. Wilson, Alexander, C, K , SK, Heller Wilson, ist National Bank Budding, San Francisco, Cal., Consulting Engineer. ' 02 H. L. KNIGHT, Secretary, Washington, D. C. Belden, Joshua H., SK, Hammond Building, Detroit, Mich., Home address, Newington, Conn., Special Agent of The Fidehty and Casuality Company, New York City. BoDFiSH, Henry L., D. G. K., 56 Olivia Street, Derby, Conn., Civil Engineer. Carpenter, Thorne M., K$, C. S. C. Chemist Nutrition Laboratory, Vila Street, Boston. Church, Frederick R., C. S. C, Shelburne Falls, Mass., Lecturer for German Kale Works. Claflin, Leander C, SK, 1107 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa.; Residence Media, Pa., Man- ager of Men ' s Department Shoe Shop of Waldo M. Claflin. Cook, Lyman A., Q. T. V., Millis, Mass., Farm Superintendent. CooLEY, Orrin F., 1636 Court Place, Denver, Col.; Residence 690 .So. Washington Avenue, Chief Engineer of The Bennett Tunnel and Machine Company. Dacy, Arthur L., •I ' K , C. S. C, Morgantown, W. Va., Assistant Horticulturist W. Va. Agricul- tural Experiment Station. Dellea, John M., C. S. C, Great Barrington, Mass., Farmer. DwYER, Chester E., C. S. C, Arbor Lodge, Nebraska City, Neb., Manager of Estate of Morton Bros. Gates, Victor A., ■i ' SK, Little Rock, Ark., Care of Scott-Mayer Commission Company, Whole- sale Fruit and Produce; Residence 11 16 North Third Street. Hall, John C, 2k, So. Sudbury, Mass., Board of Health and Tax Collector of Town. HoDGEKiss, Harold E., C. S. C, New York Agricultural Experiment Station, Geneva, N. Y. ; Residence 172 Genesee Street, Geneva, First Assistant Entomologist. Kinney, Charles M., 2K, 453 Cajon Street, Redlands, Cal., Organist. Knight, Howard L., K$, C. S. C, United States Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C, 1829 G. St. Washington, D. C, Editorial Assistant, Office of Experiment Stations, United States Department of Agriculture; Author of Dietary Studies of a Week ' s Walking Trip in Storr ' s Connecticut Report of 1905. Lewis, Claude L, M. S. A., C. S. C, Professor of Horticulture, Oregon State University and Oregon Experiment Station, Corvalis, Ore. Morse, Ransom W., M. S. C, Q. T. V., 231 Pocasset Street, Fall River, Mass.; Residence 140 Winter Street, Business Manager Fall River Herald Pubhshing Company. Paul, Herbert A., C. S. C, Escanaba, Mich. Plumb, Frederick H., Westport, Conn., Treasurer Purington Oil Engine Co., Stamford, Conn. Saunders, Edward B., D. G. K., Nashua, N. H., Manager Swift Company. 236 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Smith, Samuel L., C. S. C, Y. M. C. A. Work, Residence, 1314 West Street, Wilmington, Del. West, D. Nelson, Q. T. V., Care of G. G. White Company, Hatfield, Wis. ' 03 G. D. JONES, Secretary, North Amherst, Mass. Allen, William E., SK, 27 Boylston Building, Boston, Mass., representing Reiter Fruhauf Company, Style Creators, New York City. Bacon, Stephen C, D. G. K., Residence, 60 Warner Avenue, Jersey City, N. J., Engineer of Tunnel Construction. Bowen, Howard C, Q. T. V., Chemawa, Oregon, Teacher in Indian School. Barrhs, George L., K2, Lithia, Mass., Farmer. Brooks, Philip W., Q. T. V., Imperial, Cal., Irrigation Farming, Imperial Valley. Cook, Joseph G., K , C. S. C, Head Farmer at Northampton State Hospital, Northampton, Mass.; Residence, 219 East Street. Franklin, Henry J., K , Q. T. V. Halligan, Charles P., K2, Agricultural College, Mich., Assistant Professor in Horticulture. Harvey, Lester F., C. S. C, Rumford, Conn., Farmer. Hood, W. L., Normal. Ala. Jones, Gerald D., Q. T. V., Superintendent Cowles Farm, North Amherst. Lamson, G. H., C. S. C, Storrs Agricultural College, Storrs, Conn.; Assistant Zoology Professor. Monahan, Niel F., C. S. C, Ridgeford, Conn. Nersessian, Paul N., 32 West Street, Attleboro, Mass. OSMUN, A. Vincent, M. S., K , Q. T. V., Assistant Professor of Botany, Massachusetts Agri. cultural College. Parsons, Albert, Q. T. V., Instructor in Kamehameha School, Honolulu, T. H.; in charge of Agricultural Department. Peebles, W. W., C. S. C, 424 Fulton Street, Chicago, 111. Poole, E. M., K2, North Dartmouth, Mass.. Dairyman. Proulx, Edward G., 2K, Lafayette, Ind., Chemist, Indiana Experiment Station Robertson, R. H., D. G. K., died September loth, 1904, at Amherst, Mass., of peritonitis. Snell, Edward B., Q. T. V., 91 George street. New Haven, Conn., U. S. Inspector. TiNKHAM, Charles S., D. G. K., 15 Ashburton Place, Boston, Mass., Residence 126 Thornton Street, Roxbury, Mass., Civil Engineer, Massachnsetts Highway Commission. ToTTlNGHAM, WiLLlAM E., M. Sc, $K$, Q. T. V., Experiment Station, Madison, Wis., Residence 915 W. Johnson Street, Instructor in Agricultural Chemistry, College of Agriculture, and As- sistant Chemist, Agricultural E.xperiment Station. Tower, Winthrop V. $2K, Porto Rico Agricultural Experiment Station, Mayagues, Porto Rico. West, Myron H., Q. T. V., 28 Linden .Court, Chicago, 111., Superintendent of Lincoln Park, Clark and Center Streets. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 237 ' 04 p. F. STAPLES, Secretary, North Grafton, Mass. Ahearn, Michael F., C. S. C, Manhattan, Kan., Foreman of Greenhouses, Kansas State Agri- cultural College; Coach of Kansas State Agricultural College Athletic Teams. Bach, Ernest A., Ph. D., I K$, C. S. C, Washington, D. C, Field address Orlando, Fla.; Special Field Agent, United States Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Entomology ; Author of Dasypogonenae of North America, North of Mexico. Blake, Maurice A., Q. T. V., 197 Somerset Street, New Brunswick, N. J., Horticulturist at the New Jersey State Experiment Station. Couden, Fayette D., K , i 2K, 1310 Columbia Road, Washington, D. C, Entomologist, United States Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Entomology ; Law Student at George Washington University, 190S. Elwood, Clifford F., K2, Green ' s Farms, Conn., General Farming and Fruit Growing. Fulton, Erwin S., C. S. C, Assistant Agriculturist, Massachusetts Experiment Station, Amherst, Mass. Gilbert, Arthur W., M. S. A., iK . C. S. C, 32 Thurston Avenue, Ithaca, N. Y„ Fellow in College of Agriculture, Cornell University, Assistant Professor of Plant Breeding, Cornell University. Gregg, John W., C. S. C, Baron de Hirsch Agricultural School, Woodbine, N. J., Professor of Landscape Gardening and Ornamental Horticulture. Griffin, Clarence H., SK, 2002 G. Street N. W., Washington, D. C, Medical Student at George Washington University; Assistant in Laboratory of Bacteriological Chemistry, Bureau of Chemistry, United States Department of Agriculture. Haskell, Sidney B., K , C. S. C, Amherst, Mass., Instructor in Agriculture at Massachusetts Agricultural College. • Henshaw, Fred F. K , C. S. C, United States Geological Survey, Washington, D. C, Hydraulic Engineer, in charge of Stream Measurements in Seward Peninsula, Alaska ; Author of Water Supply Investigetion in Alaska in 1907. Hubert, Zachary T., A. B , 35 Humphries Street, Atlanta, ;Ga , Superintendent Grounds and Buildings at Spelman Seminary ; Lecturer on Agriculture for the Summer School at Clark UnL versity, Atlanta, Ga ; Professor of Chemistry at Atlanta Baptist College. Newton, Howard D., C. S. C, 117 Wall Street, New Haven, Conn., Graduate Student at Yale University, Head of Chemistery Department at Storr ' s Agricultural College. O ' Hearn, George E., C. S. C„ Pittsfield, Mass. Parker, Sumner R., C. S. C, Kahuku, Oahn, I. H., Team Overseer Kahuku Plantation; Herds man for Geo. Mixter of Hardwick. Peck, Arthur L., K , C. S. C, Manhattan, Kan., Assistant Horticulturist Kansas State Agri. cultural College and Experiment Station ; Assistant Professor of Landscape Gardening in Oregon Agricultural College, Corralis, Oregon. Quigley, Raymond A., M. D., C. S. C, 4 Hamilton Street, Brockton, Mass. Raymoth, R. Raymond, KS, Rockford, 111., Landscape Architect. Staples, Parkman F., C. S. C, North Grafton, Mass., Farmer. White, Howard M. K , 2K, 1106 K. Street N. W., Washington, D. C, United States De- partment of Agriculture, Division of Pomology. 238 THE 191 1 INDEX VOLUME XLI ' 05 P. F. WILLIAMS, Secretary, Milton, Mass. Adams, Richard L., K , Spreckles, Cal., Residence, Salinas, Cal., Director of the Spreckels Sugar Company Experiment Station. Allen, G. Howard, 2K, 1102 Flatiron Building, New York City, Residence, 522 West 158th Street, Care of J. G. Curtis, Vice-President Munson-Whittaker Company, Foresters; Vice- President Boston Nature Bureau; Author of The Care of Trees. Barnes, Hugh L., C. S. C, Box 35, Greenwich, Conn., Residence, Stockbridge, Mass. Recently resigned position as Horticulturalist, Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute, Hampton, Va. Farmer. Bartlett, Frank A., 2K, Depot Square, White Plains, N. Y., Residence, 147 South Lexington Avenue, New York, Business Manager H. L. Frost Co., Foresters and Entomologists. Crosby Harvey D , Q. T. V., New Canaan, Conn., Head Gardener, Waverly Farms. Cushman, Esther C, K , Teacher of Biology, Beverly High School; Residence, 683 Hope Street, Providence, R. I. Gardner, John J., C. S. C, Littleton, N. H., Assistant Superintendent of The Rocks. Gay, Ralph P., SK, Plainfield, N. J., Forestry Business. Hatch, Walter B., C. S. C, Torrington, Conn., Superintendent of Construction of Hillside Ceme- tery. HoLCOMB, C. Sheldon, K2, 67 Walnut Street, Somerville, Mass., with M. S. Ayer, Wholesale Grocer, State Street, Boston, Mass., Hunt, Thom.as F., C. S. C, Riverside, Cal., Pathologist, connected with Citrus Experiment Station. Ingham, Norma.n D., C. S. C, Superintendent University of California Forestry Experiment Station, Santa Monica, Cal. Kelton, James R., KS, Amsterdam, N. Y., Amsterdam High School. L.ADD, Edward T., M. S., KS, Baltimore, Md., Chemist for Baugh Chemical Company, Fertilizer Manufacturers. Lewis, Clarence W., Q. T. V., 28 Albion Street, Melrose Highlands, Mass., State Gypsy Moth and Brown-Tail Moth Commission. Lyman, John F., $K$, K2, 1292 Hunter Ave., Culumbus, Ohio, Residence, Amherst, Mass. Associate Professor of Agricultural Chemistry in Ohio State University. Munson, Willard a., K , ■tSK, Superintendent; Bay State Fruit Farm, Waugh Sears, Am- herst, Mass. Newhall, Edwin W. Jr., D. G. K., 114 Battery Street, San Francisco, Cal., Farming. Patch, George W., it K$, 2K, Purchasing Agent, Brown-Durrell Company, Boston, Mass., Resi- dence, Arlington, Mass. Sanborn, Monica L. (Mrs. W. O. Taft), tK , Brook Farm, Northfield, Vt., R. F. D. No. 4. Sears, William M., $SK, Norwood, Mass., Superintendent of Arbordene Farm. Swain, Allen N., 15 Merlin Street, Dorchester, Mass, Forester and Horticulturist. Taylor, Albert D., M. S. A., K , C. S. C, Landscape Gardener with W. H. Manning, Boston Mass. ToMPSON, Harold F., tK , K2, Instructor in Market Gardening, Massachusetts Agricultural Col- lege, Amherst, Mass. TUPPER, Bertram, SK, KS, West Newton, Mass., Foreman at Ellis Farm. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 239 Walker, Lewell S., C. S. C, Assistant Chemist, Massachusetts Agriciiltuial Experiment Station, Amherst, Mass. Whittaker, Chester L., itSK, 103 Union Avenue, Mt. Vernon, N. Y., Forester and Entomolo- gist with Munson, Whittaker Co., Residence, Somerville, Mass. Williams, Percy F., KS, Acting State Horticulturist, Auburn, Ala. Willis, Grenville N., iK , itSK, Massachusetts Highway Commi.ssion, 124 Oxford Street, Cam- bridge, Mass. Yeaw, Frederick L., iSK, Assistant Plant Pathologist California Experiment Station, Davis, Yolo County, Cal. ' 06 RICHARD WELLINGTON, Secretary, Geneva, N. Y. Carey, Daniel H., Q. T. V., Rockland, Mass., Horticultural Pursuits. Carpenter, Charles W., K , KS, Monson, Mass., Farmer. ' Craighead, William H., 427 State Street, Harrisburg, Pa. Filer, Harry B., 5 City Hall, Buffalo, N. Y.; City Forester. French, G. Talbot, K$, SK, Assistant Botanist, New York Agricultural Experiment Station Geneva, N. Y. Gaskill, Edwin F.,C. S. C, Assistant Agriculturist, Massachusetts Agricultural Experiment Station Amherst, Mass. Hall, Arthur W. Jr., 2K, North Amherst, Mass., Law Student with Hammond and Ham- mond, Northampton, Mass. Hastings, Addison T. Jr., Q. T. V., City Forester and Secretary for the Shade Tree Commission of Jersey City; 151 Lexington, Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. Hood, Clarence E., Q. T. V., Agent and Expert, LTnited States Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Entomology ; Residence 1S8 Rieger Avenue, Dallas, Texas. Kennedy, Frank H., C. S. C, 8 Paisley Park, Dorchester, Mass.; Assistant City Bacteriologist and Milk Inspector at Brockton ; Director of Sewerage Filtration Plant, Brockton, Mass. Martin, James E., C. S. C, Yale Forestry School, New Haven, Conn. MOSELEY, Louis H., C. S. C, Glastonbury, Conn., Student at Ohio School of Veterinary Medicine. MuDGE, Everett P., K2, 67 Cherry Street, Swampscott, Mass. Peakes, Ralph W., Q. T. v.. Chemist, Boston, Mass.; Residence Newtonville, Mass. Pray, F. Civille, 2K, Sugar Chemist and Superintendent, Trinidad Sugar Company, Trinidad, Cuba; Residence Natick, Mass. Rogers, Stanley S., K ' ! , K2, Spreckels, Cal.; Residence Salinas, Cal., First Assistant Plant Pathologist. Russell, Harry M., K , C. S. C, Orlando, Fla., Special Field Agent, United State Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Entomology; Home address Bridgeport, Conn. Scott, Edwin H., K , K2, Instructor in Agriculture, Storr ' s Agricultural College. Sleeper, George W., K , C. S. C, Swampscott, Mass., New Castle Leather Co., Boston, Mass., 63 South Street. Strain, Benjamin, Q. T. V., Assistant Engineer, Central New England Railway Company, Maybrook, N. Y. 240 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI SuHLKE. Herman A., KS, Assistant Superintendent of Penna Salt Manufacturing Company, Wy. andotte, Mich. Taft, William O., C. S. C, Northfield, Vt., Poultry Farmer. Tannatt, W1LL.A.RD C, Jr., K , C. S. C, Easthampton, Mass., Town Engineer. TiRRELL, Charles A., Q.T. V., 747 Webster Avenue, Chicago, 111., Landscape Architect. Wellington, Richard, K , Q. T ' V., Assistant Horticulturist, New York Agricultural Expei- ment Station, Geneva, N- Y. Wholley, Francis D., Q. T. V., 17(5 Railway E.vichange Building, Chicago, 111. Wood, Alexander H. M., KS, Easton, Mass., Farm Superintendent. ' 07 G. H. CHAPMAN, T, Secn aiy, Amherst, Mass. Armstrnno, Arthur H., KS, Amherst, Mass., Graduate Student in Entomology, Massachusetts Agricultural College. Bartlett, Earle G., K , SK, Instructor Kamehameha Schools, Honolulu, I. H. Caruthers, John T., Bordentown, N. J., Professor of Agriculture in Bordentown Industrial and Agricultural Institute. Chace, Wayland F., C. S. C, Lake City, Minn., Landscape Gardening. Chapman, George H., C. S. C, Amhersi, Mass., First Assistant Botanist, Massachusetts Agricul- tural Experiment Station. Chapman, Joseph O., KS, Brewster, Mass. Clark, Milford H., Jr., C. S. C, Superintendent of Forestry Department, Buffalo Park Commis sion, Buffalo, N. Y. Cutter, Frederick A., 4 SK. Orange, N. J., Forestry and Landscape Gardening. Dickinson, Walter E., K , SK, Nighi Superintendent, Sacremento Valley Sugar Company. Eastman, Jasper F., 4 K$, Assistant Agriculturist, New Hampshire Agricultural Experiment Station and Instructor in Agriculture, New Hampshire State College, Durham, N. H. Hartford, Archie A , Westford, Mass., Principal Washington High School, Washington Depot, Conn. Higgins, Arthur W., iKi, KS, Westfield, Mass., Florist. King, Clinton, K , Q. T. V., 28 Sagamore Street, Dorchester, Mass., Law Student, Boston, University. Livers, Susie Dearing, 60 McLellan Street, Dorchester, Mass., with Ginn Company, Boston, Mass. Parker, Charles M., K , Q. T. V., Riverside Farm, Stratham, N. H. Peters; Frederick C, SK, F. C. Peters Co., Foresters and Entomologists, Orange, N. J., Ardmore, Pa.; Residence, Lenox, Mass. Shaw, Edward H., SK, Belmont, Mass , Market Gardening. Summers, John N., C. S. C, Amherst, Mass., Assistant Entomologist, Massachusetts Agricultural Experiment Station, and Instructor in Entomology, Massachusetts Agricultural College. Thompson, Clifford B., SK, Instructor in Agriculture and Horticulture, Kamehameha Schools, I. H. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 241 Walker, James H., 1K, 39 Orchard Street, Newark, N. J., Foreman Newark Park Commission. Watkins, Fred A., SK, West Milbury, Mass., Farmer. Watts, Ralph J., i ' K , 2K, Private Secretary to President Kenyon L. Biitterfield, Massachusetts Agricultural College, Amherst, Mass. Wood, Herbert P., C. S. C, United States Department of Entomology, Bo,x 20S, Dallas, Texas. ' 08 JAMES A. HYSLOP, Secretaiy, Washington, D. C. Alley, Harold, KS, B. S., with Sprekels Sugar Company, King City, Cal. Allen, C. F., C. S. C, B. S. Agent United States Bureau of Immigration, New York City. Anderson, A. J., ii2K, B. S., Tree Commissioner, 39 Orchard Street, Newark, N. J. Anderson, K. F. B. S., Teaching, Flint Medical College, New Orleans, La. Bailey, E. W., K2, B. S., Assistant in Plant Breeding, University of Illinois, Champaign, 111. Bangs, B. W , Q. T. V., B. S., American Agricultural Chemical Co., Carteret, N. J. Barry, T. A., C. S. C, B. S., Amherst Electric Light Co., Amherst, Mass. Bartholomew, Miss Persis, Westboro, Mass. Bates, Carlton, KS, B. S. 205 D Street N. W., Washington, D. C, United States Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Chemistry, Scientific Assistant in Bacteiiology. Chapman, L. W., ' Q. T. V., B. S., Coe-Mortimer Co., Moosic, Pa. Chase, H. C, C. S. C , B. S., Gypsy Moth Commission, Harvard, Mass. Clark, O. L., SK, B. S., Ethical Culture School, New York City. Cobb, G. R., C. S. C, B. S., Pierson, Cromwell, Conn. Coleman, W. J., C. S. C, B. S., 39 Orchard Street, Newark, N. J., Forester. Cummings, W. A., Q. T. V., B. S., 413 Center Street, Chicago, 111., Park Forester, Lincoln Park. Cutting, R. E., SK, B S., Salesman, Quaker Oats Co., Amherst, Mass. Daniel, John, Q. T. V., B. S., Field Agent, Experiment Station, Durham, N. H. D.wenport, S. L., KS, B. S., Fruit Farmer, North Grafton, Mass. Davis, P A., 9 , B. S., Instructor in Sciences, Dover High School, Dover, N. J. Dolan, Clifford, B. S., Dairyman, Massachusetts Industrial School, Shirley, Mass. Eastman, P. M., B. S., with T. T. Withers, Landscape Gardener, i Montgomery Street, Jersey City, N. J. Residence, 120 Philip Street, Albany, N. Y. Edwards, F. L., 2K, B. S., West Hanover, Mass., Farming, P. O. Address, Rockland, Mass. Farley, A. J., Q. T. V., B. S., Assistant Horticulturist, State Agricultural E-xperiment Station, New Brunswick, N. J. Farrar, P. W., K2, B. S., with Salmon Land and Water Co., Twin Falls, Idaho. Flint, C. L., K2, B. S., with H. L. Frost Co., Box 145S, Philadelphia, Pa. Gillett, C. S., K2, B. S., vrith Sprekels Sugar Company, Ranch No. 8, Soledad, Cal. GiLLETT, K. E., 2K, B. S., Gillett ' s Nurseries, Southwick, Mass. GowDEY, B. C., C. S. C, B. S., 28 Albion Street, Melrose Highlands, Gypsy Moth Commission. 242 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Hayes, H. K., K2, B. S., Tariffville, Conn. Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station, North Bloomfield, Conn. Howe, W. L., B. S., Mariboro, Mass. HUTCHINGS, F. F., Q. T. v., B. S., Instructor in Physics and Chemistry in South Manchester High School, Conn. Hyslop, J. A., Q. T. v., B. S., Pullman, Wash., United States Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Entomology, Agent and Expert. Jackson, R. H., iSK, B. S., with Jackson Cutler, Amherst, Mass. Jennison, ' H. M., C. S. C, B. S., Instructor in Botany at the Massachusetts Agricultural College. Johnson, F. A., C. S. C, B. S., Post-Graduate Student at Massachusetts Agricultural College. Jones, T. H., Q. T. V., B. S. Earned A. J., Q. T. V., B. S., Lyonsville, Mass. Larsen, David, K2, B. S., Honolulu, Hawaii, Plant Pathologist, Sugar Experiment Station. Liang, Lai Kwei, B. S., Tiensin, China. Miller, D. P., KS, B. S., with American Nursery Company, 150 Broadway, New York. Paige, George, Q. T. V., B. S., 610 Elm Street, New Haven, Conn. Parker, J. R., K2, B. S., Post Graduate in Entomology at Massachusetts Argicuttural College. Philbrick, E. D., 2K, B. S. Reed, H. B., KS, B. S., Foreman Conyer ' s Manor, Greenwich, Conn. Regan, W. S., K2, B. S., Post Graduate Student, Massachusetts Agricultural College, Amherst, Mass. Sawyer, W. F., Q. T. V., B. S., Sterling Junction, Mass., with R. H. Hosmer, Leominster, Mass., Surveyor. Shattuck, L. a., C. S. C, B. S., Ipswich, Mass. Thurston, F. G., SK, B. S., Chemist, E. Atkins Co., Soledad, Cuba. Turner, Miss O. M., B. S., Amherst, Mass. Turner, W. ¥., Q. T. V. B. S., Auburn, Ala., Assistant Entomologist, State Experiment Station. Verbeck, R. H., SK, B. S., Petersham, Mass., Principal of Petersham Agricultural High School. Warner, T. L., Q. T. V., B. S, Coast and Geodetic Survey, Vinalhaven, Maine. Waugh, T. F., Q. T. v., B. S., 31 Bigelow Street, Quincy, Mass., with Bowker Fertihzer Company. Wellington, J. W., Q. T. V., B. S., Assistant Horticulturist at Vermont Experiment Station, Burlington, Vt. Wheeler, H. T., Q. T. V., B. S., Farmer, Lexington, Mass. Whiting, A. L., Q. T. V., B. S., Kingston, R. I., Assistant Agriculturist, State Experiment Station. Whitmarsh, R D., KS, B. S., Post Graduate Student at the Massachusetts Agricultural College. Wright, S. J., Q. T. V., B. S., Manager Stannot Farm, Sherburn, Mass. •09 C. S. PUTNAM, Sec)-6 ' a)y, Turner Center, Maine. Alger, Paul E., C. S. C, North Amherst, Mass., with Amherst and Sunderland Street Railway Company. Barlow, Waldo D., i SK, Post Graduate Work at Yale Forestry School, Residence, 5S Lake Place, New Haven, Conn. Barnes, Benjamin F., 6$, Plaverhill, Mass., Farming. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 243 Bartlett, Oscar C, C. S. C, Post Graduate in Entomology at Massachusetts Agricultural College. Briggs, Orwell B., Q. T. V., Great Barrington, Mass., Farmer. Brown, George M. Jr., Q. T. V., Greenwood, Mass., Salesman. Caffrey, Donald J., C. S. C, Post Graduate in Entomology at Massachusetts Agricultural College. Cardi.m, Patricio P., Q. T. V., Estacion Agronomica Santiago de la Vegas, Cuba, Chief of Depart- ment of Vegetable Pathology and Entomology. Chase, Edward I., 26 Chapman Street, Greenfield, Mass., Civil Engineer with Boston and Maine Railroad. Codding, George M., 2k, 10 Philips Place, Montreal, Quebec, Landscape Architect, with Fred erick G. Todd, Landscape Architects. CoRBETT, Lamert S., Q. T. V., Foreman with the United Fruit Company, Sixaola River, Bocos del Toro, Panama. Crosby, Harold P., C. S. C. Grossman, Samuel S., Q. T. V., Box 589, Orlando, Fla., Working on White Fly Investigation, Bureau of Entomology. Curran, D.avid A., Room 8, Bodanaceo Building, Marlboro, Mass., Engineer wifh North Attle- boro Sew erage Committee. Cutler, Homer, Orangeburg, S. C, Instructor in Science and Agriculture in Claflin University. Fulton, Gordon R., C. S. C. Geer, Myron F., 9 , Conway, Mass., Instructor in Sciences, Conway High School. Geer, Wayne E., 9 . Hathaway, Elmer F., KS, 97 Huron Avenue, Cambridge, Mass., with C. F. Hathaway Son, Wholesale Bakers. HSEIH, En-Lung, 132 Blair Street, Ithaca, N. Y., Post Graduate Cornell University. Hubbard. Arthur W., Q. T. V., with Kowker Fertilizer Company, 43 Chatham Street, Boston, Mass. Ide, Warren L., Wallingford, Conn., Fruit Growing. Ingalls, Dorsey F., Q. T. V., Cheshire, Mass., Farmer. Jeu, Huang, Q. T. V. Knight, Harry O., C. S. C, 419 Porter Ave., Buffalo, N. Y., Foreman Great Bear Spring Company. Lindblad, Rockwood C, K2, Signal Department, N. Y. C. R. R., New York City. MacGown, Guy E., Walnut Hill, Me., Farming. Monahan, James V., C. S. C, South Framingham, Mass., Farmer. Neale, Harold J., C. S. C, 193 Lincoln Street, Worcester, Mass., Civil Engineer with Park Commission, Noble, Harold G., KS, 747 Webster Avenue, Chicago, 111,, Engineer, Lincoln Park. Noyes, John, Q. T. V., Amherst, Mass., Instructor in Landscape Gardening, at Massachusetts Agricultural College. O ' Grady, James R., C. S. C, 23 Myrtle Street, Springfield, Mass., Landscape Architect. Oliver, Joseph T., 473 Adams Street, Dorchester, Mass. Phelps, Harold D., 122 Willow Street, Minneapolis, Minn., with Minneapolis Park Commission, Forestry Department. Potter, Richard C, Q. V. T., Derry Village, N. H., Instructor in Pinkerton Academy. PuTN- M, Charles S., 9 , Turner Center, Maine; Teacher of Science and Agiiculture, Leavitt, Institute. 244 THE 1911 INDEX VOLUME XLI Sexton, George F., Orange, N. J., with F. A. Cutler, Forestry and Landscape Gardening ; Resi- dence, 14 Blanche Street, Worcester, Mass. SUMLYAN, Marcus T., Amherst, Mass., Plant Breeding for th e Division of Horticulture, Massa- chusetts Agricultural College. Thompson, Myron W., SK, New Haven, Conn., Post Graduate in Yale Forestry School. Thomson, J. B., C. S. C, Ipswich, Mass. Turner, Henry W., C. S. C, Estacion Agronomica Santiago, de la Vegas, Cuba. Warner, Fred C, Q. T. V., Gatun, Canal Zone, Panama; Engineer with Municipal Engineering Division of Isthmian Canal Commission. Waters, T. C, C. S. C, Amherst, Mass., Post Graduate in Floriculture at Massachusetts Agri- cultural College. Webb, Charles R., C. S. C, Bo.x 999, Orange, N. J., with F. A. Cutler Co., Forestry and Landscape Gardening. Whaley, James S. White, Charles H., Amherst, Mass., Field Agent and Graduate Secretary of Y. M. C. A. for Massachusetts Agricultural College. White, Herbert L., Q. T. V., Maynard, Mass., Clerk, Massachusetts State Board of Agriculture, State House, Boston, Mass. Willis, Luther G., Q. T. V., Springfield, Mass. Wilson, Frank H. Jr., C. S. C, Nahant, Mass., Floriculture. MASSACHUSETTS AGRlCULTURAt, COLLEGE 245 Mnvtxn tB 95 William C. Brown to Miss Jacobs, at Peabody. ' oo Howard Baker to Miss Bertha Smith, Sept. ii, 1909, at South Hadley. ' 03 Lester F. Flarvey to Miss Laura Buckingham, May 25, 1909, at New Preston, Conn. ' 03 Albert Parsons to Miss Marion Sawyer, June 30, 1909, at Maiden. ' 04 Dr. Clarence H. Griffin to Miss Elizabeth Babette, Sept. 26, 1909, at Washington, D. C. ' 04 Sidney B. Haskell to Miss Florence Dacy, Dec. 25, 1908. Ex- ' o4 H. T. Witt to Miss Amy Crombie, March 31, 1909, at Manchester, N. H. 05 Harvey D. Crosby to Miss Helen Erickson, Oct. 14, 1908. 05 E. T. Ladd to Miss Rachel Bessom, Sept. 22, 1909, at Lynn. 05 Grenville N. Willis to Miss Florence Ripley, Aug. 8, 1909. 06 Addison T. Hastings, Jr. to Miss Marie Millett, Oct. 5, 1909. 06 W. C. Tannatt to Miss Alice Burt, Oct. 6, 1909. 07 John T. Caruthers to Miss Annie Greene, Dec. 22, 1908. 07 George H. Chapman to Miss A. J. Dick, March 27, 1909. 07 W. F. Chase to Miss Florence McDermit, Dec. 31, 1908. 08 W. A. Cummings to Miss Lillian Ives, June 16, 1908, at Bondsville. 08 Leroy E. Cutting to Miss Bertha Harlow, Dec. 24, 1908. 08 W. L. Howe to Miss Mildred Walker, Aug. 31, 1909. Raymond D. Whitmarsh to Miss Emma Nichols, June 30, 1909. Raymond L. Whitney to Miss Grace Hinckley, Sept. 2, 1909, at Amherst. 01 i ? Kenyon Leech Butterfield Calendar Trustees Faculty Experiment Station Staff Graduate Students Classes Senior Junior Sophomore Freshman Fraternities Athletics Football Baseball Track Hockey Tennis College Organizations Publications Musical Organizations 13 14 17 29 32. 35-66 35 41 49 57 67 85-100 87 90 93 94 95 lOI 109 113 MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 247 Reflections of the Year 120 Commencement . . . . • • ■• • .129 Awards and Prizes 132 Proms 135 Battalion Roster I39 Agricultural Vocations • • 14° New Entomology Building I43 Statistics of Growth of College I44 Grinds I47 191 1 Individually 169 Freshman Banquet I94 Editorials I97 Alumni Associations 204 Alumni 241 A tu rttstng itr rtnrg ' o }= o o i= o o i= o |= = o o rpo =po = o = = o o o o o o o o Adams, Druggist Allen Bros., Contractors American Fountain Pen Co. ' Amherst Book Store Amherst Co-Op Laundry Amherst House Amherst House Barber Shop Andover Press Beckmann ' s Candy Shop BoUes, the Shoeman Bowker Fertilizer Co. Boynton, Soft Drinks Breck, Joseph Sons, Seeds Briggs, Pool Tables Campion, Haberdasher and Tailor Carpenter Morehouse, Printers Chilson, Trunks and Bags Coe-Mortimer Co., Fertilizers Copley Square Hotel College Store, Student ' s Supplies Cotrell and Leonard Daniels, Cornell Co., Provisions Devel, Druggist EUwanger Barry, Trees and Shrubs Ewell, Chas. E., Student ' s Supplies Folger, S. L., Jeweler Gilbert Barker Mfg. Co. Gregory Son, Seeds Hearn, C. W., Photograph Holyoke Street Railway Co. Holyoke Valve Hydrant Co. XVII XVII XXII XXI XVI XVI Horticultural Department viii Howe, D. A., Wholesale Grocer xviii Jackson Cutler, Dry Goods iv Jacob Reed ' s Sons, Sporting Goods xii Keuffel Esser Co., Engineering Sup. ix Krugman, M. B., Florist v Labrowitz, Clothier xix Levin, Shoemaker V Lord Burnhara vii M. A. C. x-xi Marsh, Furniture IV Massachusetts Engraving Co., xx Millett, E. E., Jeweller vii Mutual Plumbing Heating Co. v Page, J. F., Shoestore v Paige, T. L., Livery VI Plumb, F. C, Barber iv Sanderson Thompson, Clothiers ii Schlegel Fottler Co., Seeds xxi Sheldon, W. A., Photographer xiii Spaulding, A. G., Sporting Goods xiv Stephen Lane Folger, Jeweler vii The H. L. Frost Bartlett Co., Landscape Foresters Trott, J. H., Plumbing Waldo Bros., Drain Tile Wards West Stockbridge Lime Co. Willard, Charles L. Co., Engravers Woodward ' s Lunch Wright Ditson, Sporting Goods xxvii XVII XVI xxm XV XIV XIII XIV The bell invites me, for it is a knell That summons thee to heaven or to chapell. 5:?o« =={soo€3=={9oc }==0«o£ =. 5™«}=={ ogj=H3 i=={s«j f =A FULL LINE OF- WATERMAN ' S IDEAL FOUNTAIN PENS EVERY PEN GUARANTEED HENRY ADAMS CO. THE OLD CORNER DRUG STORE I I ¥ PMmmfi.¥.m]fMmm¥MmmPMmmp.m GOODS FOR MEN C. K. Derbys (Quality De Luxe) ; Keiser Cravats, Sporting Goods ENGLISH AND SCOTCH WOOLENS Confined Styles, imported direct from London THE BIG COLLEGE STORES CAMPION AMHERST DARTMOUTH d S MtJMtJMiiSlfrMisMtsatJMtsJiltiJiltsatsMtJjiltJJiltJSllJ KJiMati M Can it be That this is all remains of thee — Check from home Fools are my theme ; let satire be my song — Index Editors Making Good There ' s only one reason why our store is such a popular resort with college men who desire snappy footwear, viz: Walk Over Shoes, $3.50. $4, $5, $6 Stetson Shoes, $5-$8 E. M. BOLLES ALLEN BROS BUILDERS AND BUILDING SUPERINTENDENTS Wood, Brick, Stone and Concrete Buildings Fire Losses Adjusted ; Plans and Esti- mates Furnished OFFICE, 28 SO. PLEASANT ST. Residences 28 and 125 So. Pleasant Street Tel. i2,-4andi2.-3 AMHERST MASS. SANDERSON THOMPSON Clothiers, Hatters and Tailors RELIABLE MERCHANDISE AT PRICES THAT ARE ALWAYS AS LOW AS THE LOWEST SANDERSON THOMPSON, Amherst m Sji j? ' A hat not much the worse for wear — Daddy ' s O, what a tangled web we weave When first we practice to deceive — The Crihbers. DEUEL ' S DRUG SI ORE Kodaks, Eastman ' s Films, Photographic Plates, FOUNTAIN PENS M. A. C. BANNERS DEUEL ' S DRUG SI ORE ' It was a boisterous captain of the sea — Bursley. If thou would ' st view fair Melrose aiight Go visit it by the pale moonlight. — Adams. F. C. PLUMB Barber Shop All Work of a First-Class Order ELECTRICAL MASSAGE 3 Amity Street AMHERST, ... MASS. HEADQUARTERS FOR Sheets Pillow Cases and Quilts A full assortment of Denims for corner seats. A large line of Dry Goods, Notions and Qroceries Jackson Cutler Amherst Furniture and Carpet Rooms MAKES A SPECIALTY of Students ' Furniture, Carpets, Rugs, Draperies, Bedding, Book-Cases, Blacking-Cases, Desks, Window Shades, Picture Frames, Cord, Etc., at Lowest Prices. Save freight and cartage money by purchasing here .... E. D. MARSH 18-20-22 MAIN STREET AMHERST, MASS. Blow, bugle blow ! set the wild echoes ringing. — Racicot. With just enough of learning to misquote. — Driiry. The Mutual Plumbing The Heating Company LATEST STYLES Plumbing, Heating, Iron Pipe, Sewer Pipe, Kitchen Furnishings, Wire, Pumps, Nails, Paints and Oils. IN College SKoes Everything in Hardware A-r The Mutual Plumbing Heating Co. Page s SKoe Store AMHERST, . . . MASS. AMHERST, ' - MASS. M. B. KINGMAN R. LEVIN M. A. C. ' 82 FIRST-CLASS Boot and Shoe Repairing Store Next to ' CAMriox J7 SOUTH PLEASANT STREET Shoe Shihihg AMHERST, MASS. The place to get the best Second-Hand Shoes bought and sold. Good workman- ship, Lowest Prices. Work Promptly Attended To. CUT FLOWERS For that girl II 1-2 AMITY STREET TELEPHONE IN TIME AMHERST, MASS. His beard was white as snow, all flaxen was his poll. — C. A. Smith. Tis pleasant, sure, to see one ' s name in print. Amherst Book Store T. L. PAGE Livery and Hack Stable Books, Stationery, Pictures and Pennants We have a large assortment of Waterman ' s Ideal and MoorE ' s Non-Leakable Fountain Pens Leave your orders here for Engraved Cards AND Picture Framing Rear of Amherst House Garage Connected You will find a full line of Blank Books Stationery Etc., Etc. Also all Magazines and Daily Papers at Charles E. Ewells, AMHERST, MASS. Carpenter Moreliouse BOOK AND JOB The Amherst Record amherst, mass. It will discourse most eloquent music. — Parsons The enduring elegance of female friendship — Howe E. E. MILLETT Jeweler and Optician Prescription Work a Specialty College S eal Jewelry Special Attention given to all kinds of FINE WATCH WORK Stephen L Foh en J ane r oiger Established 1892 Manufacturing Jeweler Club and College Pins and Rings, Gold, Silver and Bronze Medals I8O Broadway, New York Amherst House BARBER SHOP All First - Class Workmen Hair Cutting Our Specialty THIS IS OUR Handy Hand Book II is really a book covering every sort of ma- terial for building or repairing a greenhouse. It is the kind of reference book that every student should have hanging on a hook. It will help you now, help you greatly later on. Below is a list of ju St a few of the college and institutions for which we have erectec greenhouses, and we are building new ones for you this year. Send for the book Harvard, Bussey Institute, Yale, j Smith, Comeil, Mississippi Dept. j of Agriculture, Iowa Agricultural ! College, New Jersey Agricultural i College, Connecticut Agricultural ' College, Geneva, N. Y. Experi- f ment Station, Baton Rouge, La. | Experiment Station. ♦ Lord and Burnham i COMPANY } 1 1 33 Broadway, NEW YORK j 5 i 53 • — — «♦ — ♦« — •« —  — «-H Stern Winn-ter loves a dirge-like sound. ' I counted two and seventy stenches All well defined, and several stinks — Chem. Lab. COPLEY SQUARE HOTEL HUNTINGTON AVENUE, EXETER AND BLAGDEN STREETS BOSTON, MASS. 350 Rooms; 200 Private Baths. Headquarters for College and School Teams when in Boston. AMOS H. WHIPPLE, Piopiietor FOLSOM ' 10 NICKLESS ' 10 FELLOWS : Thanks for the favors you have given us in the past. We trust we may continue to receive and merit them more than ever before. Run for Students AGGIE STORE Run By Students CLAPP ' 12 BEERS ' 12 OUR SPECIALTIES Fruit Trees - We sell a few choice trees of select varieties. Furthermore, we are pre- pared to plan and furnish the stock for complete orchards. Ornamentals — Trees, Shrubs, and Climbers are grown and sold in all the best species. We also have a limited supply of hardy herbaceous plants. Cut Flowers — Chrysanthemums, Carnations, and Violets in season. Suitable for proms, informals, and general Sunday nights. Landscape Gardening — We have a complete Landscape Gardening department in which we are able to prepare surveys, designs, planting plans, etc., and to carry out such designs on the ground. GOOD MEN— We have a few good men to put on the market each year. Men who can do things. This is our Specialty of Specialties. Next spring ' s crop promises to be a good one. Better order early. DIVISION OF HORTICULTURE Telephone MassacKvisetts Agricultural Colleg ' e Or whispering with white lips, The foe I They come! They come! — Freshman Picture. Fat, fair and forty — Treasurer ' s AmKerst Co-op Laundry ....and Sanitary Cloblies Cleahing — KEUFFEL d, ESSER CO. 127 Fulton Street Central Office and Factories NEW YORK HOBOKEN, N. J. CHICAGO ST. LOUIS SAN FRANCISCO MONTREAL Our Laundry Work just a little better than ever. Our new process of steam cleaning and pressing is up to the minute. Try us and be satisfied JSk A J. F. BLANtY, ' 10, Laundry Agent L. BRANDT, ' 10, Clothes Cleaning and Pressing Agent Drawing Materials Measuring Tapes Mathematical and Surveying Instruments Our PARAGON DRAFTING INSTRUMFNTS are of the most precise workmanship, the finest finish, the most practical design, and are made in tlie greatest variety. We also have tlie Key, and other brands. Oar MANNHEIM and DUPLEX SLIDE RULES excel in construction and accuracy. Complete ( o- Page) Catalogue on request Special attention given to large and small spreads Ample room for transients AMHERST HOUSE D. H. KENDRICK, Prop. Terms reasonable House recently equipped with modern improvements A man who could make so vile a pun Would not scruple to pick a pocket — Ji ' ld Ho aard ' It was an ancient mariner — Blaney AMHERST, MASSACHUSETTS Ideal location. Oldest agricultural college in New England. Attendance of four year students has increased over ioo% in six years. Special attention given to short courses and correspondence courses. Attractive opportunities for efficient training in branches of practical and scien- tific agriculture. Tuition free to citizens of the United States. Necessary expenses moderate. Opportunity for needy students to earn part of their expenses. ADMISSION. Entrance examinations required in English, history, mathematics, modern languages, and sciences. Applicants presenting satisfactory certificates from approved high schools or academies, or from the regents of the state of New York, accepted without examination. DEPARTMENTS. The Academic Department offers a four years ' course leading to the degree of B. Sc. Required work of the first two years includes courses in Agriculture, French, Horticulture, Botany, Geology, Mathematics, Chemistry, German, Zoology. English, Additional required or elective courses, amounting to over 120 in number, are of- fered to juniors and seniors by the following divisions and departments: Agricultural education. Horticultural: Humanities: Agriculture: Floriculture, English, Dairying, Forestry, French and Spanish, Animal husbandry. Landscape gardening, German and music. Agronomy, Market gardening, Political science. Farm administration, Pomology, Physical education. Botany, Rural sociology. Chemistry, Veterinary science. Entomology, Zoology and geology. Military drill is required the first three years, elective the fourth. O call it by some better name For friendship sonnds too cold. — Biintham ' I am monarch of all I survey — Dudley The Graduate School offers advanced courses leading to the degrees of M. Sc. and Ph. D. to graduates ot this and other institutions of recognized standing, in the following subjects : Agriculture, Entomology, Veterinary Science, Botany, Horticulture, Zoology. Chemistry, Mathematics and Physics, Short Courses, both winter and summer, are offered in agriculture, horticulture, and allied subjects. This department also conducts correspondence and lecture courses. experiment St tion. This is immediately connected with the college, and gives students an opportunity to become familiar with Experiment Station methods and results of research and investigation. PARTIAL LIST OF EQUIPMENT. Clark Hall, for the department of botany, contains large laboratories and lecture rooms ; also private laboratories for individual research; the Knowlton Herbarium of 15,000 species of flowering plants and ferns ; also a large collection of mosses, lichens, and fungi. The thor- oughly equipped laboratories and the large collection of technical bulletins afford exceptional opportunity for elementary and advanced study in all branches of botany. Wilder Hall, the administrative center of the division of horticulture, contains offices for the departments of pomology and landscape gardening; lecture rooms, draughting rooms, and reading room for literature pertaining especially to horticulture. French Hall and its attached range of glass houses, adds to the equipment of the division of horticulture. It is used for instruction and practical demonstration of courses in floriculture and market gardening. Entomological Laboratory contains lecture rooms and laboratories, also one of the most valuable and complete collection of insects in the world. A magnificent new building is now being constructed for use by this department and that of zoology. Dairy and Storage Barns are models in construction and equipment. Sanitary production of milk and up-to-date handling of tne product is made a specialty. The farm of over 400 acres makes possible the demonstration of proper farm operations and management. Veterinary Labor.atory and Hospital offer unique facilities for study of animal diseases and their treatment. Chemistry Laboratory contains lecture rooms and well equipped laboratories for work in different branches of chemistry. Library contains 33,000 volumes. Drill Hall and Target Range make efficient and attractive the work of the military department Modern Dining Hall furnishes board at cost. Students room in college dormitories or in private houses of the town. For further information write to President KENYON L. BUTTERFIELD. Matters relating to entrance should be taken up with The Registrar. PHILIP B. HASBROUCK. Forty-third year begins Septeinber 14, I9IO. And when you stick in conversations burrs Don ' t strew your pathway with those dreadful urs — Nicktrson ' Pursuit of knowledge under difficulties — Larraiee JACOB REED ' S SONS 1424-1429 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA Uniform Martufactxirers for Officers of tKe Army, Navy and Marine Corps, and Students of many Mili- tary ScHooIs and Colleges « « « We are the oldest uniform makers in the United States, the house being founded in 1824 by Jacob Reed. Our uniforms are all made in sanitary warerooms on our own premises, and are ideal in design, tailoring, and fitting quality. Students Attention RED MAN BRAND riRWOOD EARL WILSON Have your clothes made to order at the TAILORING SHOP of I. M. LABROVITZ STYLE, FIT AND WORKMANSHIP THE BEST. GUARANTEED Gents ' Furnishings Full Dress Suits to Rent Silk Socks, Boston Garters, Gloves, etc. CLEANING, REPAIRING AND PRESSING NEATLY DONE L M. LABROVI TZ II AMITY ST. Tel. 302-4 Reputation, reputation, reputation ! Oh, I have lost my reputation I — Jenks ' I live in a crowd of jollity — Johnsoti We Make a Specialty of College, Class and Group Work TKe SKelden Studio NORTHAMPTON, MASS. W. L. CHILSON XrunKs, Bags, Suit Cases, Fxir Coats Harness, Blankets, and Horse Goods of all kinds. The Trunk and Bag Store of Hampshire Co. Both Hand and Machlne-Made Harness Always on Hand Repairing Done Promptly 141 Main St., Northampton, Mass. BECKMANN ' S The Candy Shop of Northampton 247-349 MAIN STREET Telephone 356 WOODWARD ' S T T T M r U L, vj iN v rl 27 Main St., Masonic Building NORTHAMPTON, - MASS. Lunches, Soda, Ice Cream Closed only from 1 a. m. to 4 a. m. F. W. WOODWARD, Proprietor England, with all thy faults, I love thee still — Stevenson XIII ' A delusion, a mockery, and a snare — New Schedule WRIGHT ' - DITSON CATALOGUE OF Athletic Goods is out, and should be in the hands of everyone interested in sports The Foot Ball, Basket Ball and Hockey Goods are made up in the best models, the best stock, and are official Everyone admits that the Wright Ditson Sweaters, Jerseys, Shirts, Tights and Shoes are superior in every way. Our goods are gotten up by experts who know how to use them. CATALOGUE FREE WRIGHT DITSON 344 Washington Street, Boston, Mass. Chas. L. Willard Co. ...nnh l rlnUvB... Class Day Programs Invitations Dance Programs Embossed Stationery Makers of Half-Tones and Printers of West Point Annual Howitzer and all the Leading College Souvenir Calendars I 56 Fifth Avenue, New York City A. G. Sf al-diimg Bros. SPALDING TRADE-MARK is known throughout the world as a GUARANTEE OF QUALITY Are the Largest Manufacturers in the World of OFFICIAL EQUIPIVIENT FOR ALL ATHLETIC SPORTS AND PASTIMES I r V n 1 1 are interested in Athletic Sport you II I U U should have a copy of the Spalding Catalogue. It ' s a complete encyclopedia of What ' s New in Sport and is sent free on request. A. C. Spalding Bros., 141 Federal St., Boston And what is writ is writ Would it were worthier — Finals Both were young, and one was beautiful. — Iiifo7-maUtes. West Stockbridge Lime Company HIGHEST GRADE FINISHING LIME and Agricultural Limes pREDERirK C. ToBEY, Gen. Mngr. WEST STOCKBRIDGE, MASS. OF EVERY KIND. Implements. TEiEPno-Es Machines. Woodenware. SI AND 52 NORTH MARKET STREET. BOSTON; fcLrnistie.s jiproved -EmpJoyeefS. Mercantile, A riculturaJ, Horflcaltural. TELEPHONE RICH. aTfl. 1857 INSURE YOUR PROFITS BY USING 1910 E. FRANK COE FERTILIZERS THE STANDARD FOR OVER FIFTY YEARS There ' s a Reason and Your Crops mil Make it Plain to You PERUVINA BRANDS (GENUINE PERUVIAN GUANO BASE) LEADERS FOPv MARKET GARDENING AND GRASS TOP DRESSING THOMAS PHOSPHATE POWDER (BASIC SLAG PHOSPHATE) 17% to 20% Phosphoric Acid 35% to 50% Lime THE COE-MORTIMER COMPANY 24 STONE STREET, NEW YORK CITY Soprano, basso, even the contra-alto Wished him five fathoms under the Rialto. — Rid Hozaard. There ' s a gude time coming — Bean iMlJslMliiilffliF ' SLC GO TO MT. TOM ! ! ! There the world is at your feet ! Ivoke JOBBERS OF WROUGHT IRON AND BRASS PIPE VALVES AND FITTINGS FOR STEAM, WATER AND GAS ASBESTOS AND MAGNESIA BOILER AND PIPE COVERINGS PIPE CUT TO SKETCH MILL SUPPLIES ENGINEERS AND CONTRACTORS FOR STEAM AND HOT WATER HEATING AUTOMATIC SPRINKLER SYSTEMS BOILER AND ENGINE CONNECTIONS HOLYOKi ....DRAIN OR LAND TILE.... ESTABLISHED .S69 WALDO BROTHERS C. D. WALDO, Sole Partner 102 MILK STREET - BOSTON Akron i alt O laggb ghi r ppg FIRE CLAY FLUE LININGS PORTLAND and ROSENDALE CEMENTS. MASONS ' and CONTRACTORS ' SUPPLIES. Oh that this, too, solid flesh would melt. Thaw and resolve itself into dew — Fat Robinson ' He sighed for many, though he loved but one — McGratv DRINK Boynton ' s Birch Beer and Hires 27 FLAVORS W. W. BOYNTON 31 River St., Northampton J. H. TROTT Plumbing, Heating, Steam, Gas and Water Piping, Paints, Stoves and Ranges, Tinv fare ALL JOBBING PROMPTLY DONE TELEPHONE 36 12 For the Land ' s Sake USE Bowker s Fertilizers They Enrich the Earth and those who till it. So we ' ll go no more a roving So late into the night — Henry ' Marriage is a desperate thing ' ' MOORE ' S Non-Leakable i $950 FOUNTAIN PEN ,, , - - CLEAN TO CARRY — Safe to carry in vest ..a 0 ' ' ' Omr ALWAYS READY— pocket or shopping bag in any position. 00 ' ' P° ' ' ' ' Impossible to lealc. .rfS lSP ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ° CLEAN TO HANDLE- Barrel . StK shaking is required, in one piece— no joints. gj Mt UNIQUE CONSTRUCTION— No other pen Can be filled with- ,ig0 ' ! S S like it. Can ' i leak — no pen section to nn- out soiling the aa P MBP screw and get covered with ink. Uses any kind fingers. - 0 K ° ' ' including Higgins ' India Ink. jljP ' illJI _ Each pen fully gTjarnnteed. Money refunded after 10 days ' trial if not y K t Send for illustrated circular and testimonials from highly pleased customers. EURAMERICAN FOUNTAIN PEN CO., 168 Devonshire St., Boston, Mass. D . A . MO A E: ..,5ilbole$ale Grocer,,. TEAS AND COFFEES S« GALLON CANNED GOODS A SPECIALTY WE SELL DIRECT TO LARGE CONSUMERS 273 MAIN STREET - WORCESTER, MASS. Stores at Worcester, Mass. ; Providence, R.L ; New London, Conn.; Manchester, N.H. THE DANIELS-CORNELL CO. SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ORDERS FROM SCHOOLS AND INSTITUTIONS MULBERRY AND FULTON STS., - WORCESTER, MASS. WM. F. WHIPPLE, Treas. and Mgr. Minds that have nothing to confer Find little to perceive — Ariiislrang Too fair to worship, too divine to love — Stenographers THI AIDOWIR PR! ESTABLISHED 1809 POSSESSING one of the best equipped Printeries in New England, we solicit all kinds of Printing with confidence in our ability to satisfy the most exacting demands M M M M M THI ANDOWIR PRISS JOHN N. COLE Printers f ublfelf rs i tattnn rs I had a hat. It was not all a hat, Part of the crown was gone — Daddy ' The silver snarling trumpets ' gan to chide ' ' — Band CHARLES WESLEY HEARN 561 Boylston Street _ - _ Boston, Mass. Mr. Hearn returns thanks to those students past and present of Aggie College, for much appreciated patronage during the years that he was selected to do their work, and for their most courteous and honorable dealings at all times. With best wishes for your future, believe me Cordially yours, Oct. 18, 1909 CHARLES WESLEY HEARN j0 RANK FOOLISHNESS - Do not buy your cuts and illustrations because they are cheap buy them because they are good You can ' t get fool ish with us. Massachusetts Engraving Company Half-tone and Line Cuts 104 HANOVER ST. Illustrators and Engravers BOSTON ■MASS. Let us liave wine and women, mirtli and laughter. Sermons and soda water the day after — Satitrdav A ' ight at Hainp ' Counts his sure gains and hurries back for more — Kenney Oliver L. Briggs Son BRIGGfS TABLESJ Manufactu lers of J i Pool and ft Billiard Tables Pool and Billiard Supplies 61 ESSEX ST., BOSTON Estimates Furnished GREGORY ' S ..HONEST SEED.. Send for our Free Catalogue J. J. H. Gregory Son MARBLEHEAD, MASS. Seed Growers and Seed Dealers Flower, Vegetable and Grass Seed Superior Quality Our Flower Seeds take the lead with many private gardeners and florists. Our Vegetable Seeds are in de- mand by the largest market gardeners, and our Franklin Park Lawn Seed, grass seeds for shady locations, tennis courts and golf links, cannot be excelled for purity and quality Catalogue Mailed on Request SCHLEGEL FOTTLEK GOMPANY 26 27 SOUTH MARKET STREET. BOSTON How fast has brother followed brother From sunshine to the sunless land — Ex-ii ■He mouths a sentence as curs mouth a bone — ' ■' ■Sqiiirt ' ' ..The Springfield Gas Machine.. Gas for Lighting and Fuel Purposes PRODUCED AT A MINIMUM COST Gas Appliances, Gas Furnaces, Gas Heating Burners, Gas Water Heaters, Incandescent Gas Burners, Pipe, Fittings, Valves, and all Supplies for Gas and Oil - . = Gilbert Barker Manufacturing Co. 193 LYMAN STREET SPRINGFIELD, MASS. ELLWANGER BARRY ' S Shrubs, P Oses and Hardy Plants ARE FAMOUS THE WORLD OVER Illustrated Descriptive Catalogue Free on Request MOUNT HOPE NURSERIES Established 1840 ROCHESTER, N.Y. ■I had a dream wliich was not all a dream — Assembly XXII ' His bark is worse tlian liis bite — Billv 57-63 FRANKLIN ST., BOSTON The place where original designs in fine Class Day Programs, etc., are executed Cottrell Leonard Caps, Gowns and Hoods To Massachusetts Agricultural College for many years, Amherst, Williams, Dartmouth, Wesleyan, Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Min nesota, Stanford, Tulane University of North Carolina, and the others. Class Contracts a specialty. Rich Gowns for Pulpit and Bench. Superior Workmanship, Reliable Material The H. L. Frost Bartlett Co. STAMFORD CONNECTICUT The loud laugh that speaks the vacant mind — J . G. Sinitit
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