Wabash College - Wabash Yearbook (Crawfordsville, IN)

 - Class of 1894

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Wabash College - Wabash Yearbook (Crawfordsville, IN) online collection, 1894 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 162 of the 1894 volume:

Q4 A DUBL HSH ED WABAIH BY THE JUNHOQ GLASS HM VQLM Ammmwwxa oncuoooo WUI' 1bonoreb lDl'68iD6Ilf George Stockton JBIIFFOIIQDS Cbte Bnnual is Debtcateb DD the Suntor Glass. . - IW-'l-5514 . mls-I6,xN1ml1'vu l.I'IHH. .mln Ima :Numa-xml'-uns, mm. v .,- uni X 6 T' 334' , -Y I . - bv- YES! ', qui.J.?-Q -4 m 1 .sp -.1 xl 4 T f , ,,f - .M- ., I 'T dmtor-an-Chi E . - Burns osteiier . ,L gill , Thomas on-re A anagrr . A Syiiitblfht Efdytors... V A' 'mum Jr. +,+s.za.en C.5gL.mQ. diA.E1.A I '- WU- .lfgvitui-.QoK4 fJiTries' 'ardingLE,X, N i it l:.D.5tqbe-nm-A I . f b gg , i i.:g1'f. .- ' , .. M f 41 . A .K ' I ' ., lil' 'kziigdfi ' .-N - -f , , 'A ' ' . ' 751 , k. ff K. . Q ,M Vi. - . .4 .1 4 ,: , Nu 'qv . QRN Q, V .LL bfN!fQ 1 Sw E f. gm ,, g.-rs,..- ' wh, ff, ,ywwfv x 4 'ii...q...- 1. gli? NJ, , 7 x7 ' f U V , Xa 'M-Z,, ' , .QW ,zghfl 'th A w,.:.:,f V Y. ,.- K, , , ,. Q14 llll '.. 1. f f we Q C145 gf 94 cu ll, fifth volume olye q 1' A wi e no lille irelnidahon. We can not lnul lne 'l C01Tl-ciOLLS ol: ma.1'D1,el'ra'la ande Elelfxcnencies inn ouve lJ00lfe ,lJu'fW9 lwfie 'co fmcle even llwe crnlicks a kincl bl Emile clw avikalo e r'ace3 smile among owne Friends we llml appeal' willwe grealcer' lemegjmiy To all llwole wl1o la e llweiv lwlzlpe lwave llwown 'luclw kind? intereli in cure W 1-kalcin 5 we givekhanks Qilwle joielulyi ancle if welwave flzuceeede inn commemora in a few evenls al: OldeWabash,oL1re cup ol lelicitie wil be 'brymme ful, We lr-uf-t, deqre reacfler 'clwai llns J Cclliilon oltlwe 0LLlCJf9I'l07'l may? nolc loe llfll ul l . founfl wlwolly undellerfveing ol your Y!! Z approlmlion. V.. ,.. ll t COLLEGE FACULTY. GEORGE STOCKTON BURROUGHS. . B., Princeton, 18735 A. M., PI'illC6t0ll, 18765 Ph. D., Princeton, 18845 D. D., Princeton, 1887. President and Professor of Biblical Literature and Philosophy. JOSEPH F. TUTTLE. . B., Marietta, 1841 5 A. M., Marietta, 18445 LancThcologica1Seminaryg D.D., Marrietta, 18605 LL. D., Marietta, 1885. Ex-Prcsidciit and Emeritus Professor of Philosophy. A JOHN L. CAMPBELL. .B., Wabash, 18485 A. M., Wabash, 18515 LL. D., Indiana University, 1876. Baldwin-Peck Professor of Physics and Astronomy. HENRY Z. MCLAIN. B.,Wabasl1, 18675 A. M., Wabash, 18705 UlliOll Theological Scminaryg Universities of Berlin and Leipzig. LaFayette Professor of the Greek Language and Literature. HENRY S. KRITZ. . B., Hanover, 18535 A. M., Hanover, 18565 Pl1. D., Hanover, 1872. Principal of tl1c Prepar- tory Department. l ARTHUR B. MILFORD. .B.,mag11a mm laude, Princeton, l879Q A. M., Princeton, 18825 University of Gflttingen. Yandcs Professor of the English Language and Literature. JAMES H. OSBORNE. B., Wabash, 18795 A, M. Wabash, 1885. Associate Principal of the Preparatory Department. ALEXANDER SMITH. B. Sc., University of Edinburgh, 18865 Ph. D., University of Munich, 18895 F. R. S. E., Peck Professor of Chemistry and Mineralogy. I f ROBERT A. KING. B., Hamilton, 18853 A. M., Hamilton, 18885 Union Theological Seminary, University of Berlin. Professor of Modern Languages and Literature. HUGH M. KINGERY. B., Wooster, 1884, A. M., Wooster, 18873 Ph. D., Wooster, 1892. Thomson Professor of the Latin Language and Literature. MASON B. THOMAS. B. S., Cornell, 1890. Fellow in Biology, Cor11ell. Rose Professor of Biology. DUANE STUDLEY. B. S., Cornell, 1881. Professor of Mathematics. CHARLES A. TUTTLE. A B., Amherst, 18835 A. M.,Amherst, 1886, Ph. D., University of Heidelberg, 1886. Professor History and Sociology. ROBERT CUNNINGHAM. D. D., Wabash College, 1888. Associate Professor of Philosophy and College Pastor. EVERETT B. THOMSON. B., Wabash, 1864, A M., Wabash, 1867. Lane and Union Theological Se1ninaries. Libra- ria11 and Lecturer 011 Bibliography. ' ELMER G. HORTON. B. S., Cornell, 1892. Professor of Hygiene and Physical Culture. JAMES M. CHAPMAN. Professor of Oratory. JAMES H. RANSOM. B. S., Wabash, ISQO. Assistant in Physics and Chemistry. EDGAR W. OLIVE. B. S., Wabash, 1893. Assistant in Biology. HERBERT THOMSON. A. B., Wabash, 1892. Assistant Librarian. CALENDAR. 1893. Annual Examinations ............. June 14-16. Prize Contest in Elocution, Preparatory Depart- ment .................. Friday, june 16. Baccalaureate Sermon, by the President . . . . Sunday morning, june 18. Commencement Sermon .......... Sunday evening, june 18. Prize Contest in Elocution, Collegiate Depart- ment . .... Examinations for Entrance .... Animal Meeting of Board of Trustees . . . . Class Re-unions . . Class Day Exercises Commencement . . Alumni Dinner . . Fall Ter111 Begins . . Thanksgiving Recess Examinations . . . Christmas Vacation . Winter Team Begins Day of Prayer for Colleges .... Freshman-Sophomore Celebration . Examinations . . . Baldwin Oratorical Contest . A Spring Vacation . . Spring Term Begins Decoration Day. . . Annual Examinations Commencement . . 1894. Monday evening, June 19. june 19-20. Tuesday morning, june 20. Tuesday, june 20. Monday, June 19. Wednesday, June 21. Wednesday afternoon, june 21 Tuesday, September 12. November 30-Dec. 3. December 21-22. Dec. 23, '93, to Jan. 8, 1894. Tuesday, January 9. Thursday, January 25. February 22. March 22-23. Friday, March 23. March 24 to April 2. Tuesday, April 3. Wednesday, May 30. June 13-15. june 20. GEORGE STOCKTON BUKKOUGHS. PH. D., D. D. . MVN, ,XL J,..', ', -. -NA 1-:ORGE S'1'oc1c'roN Buaxoucsi-is was born January 6, 1855, at Waterloo, N. Y., where his father, Rev. George W. Burroughs, was at that time pastor of the Reformed tDutch'J Church. Boyhood and youth were passed mostly in Brooklyn, N. Y., and in Philadelphia, Pa. His mother was his teacher and inspirer, and when he began attendance at school, at the age of eleven, he was more advanced and ahler than any of his class. In two years he was prepared to enter college. But thirteen was too young an age. He entered the Sophomore Class at Princeton College when he was sixteen and graduated, with the highest honors of the college, in 1873, when he was nineteen. His theological training in the Seminary was with the class of 1877, at Princeton. Dr. Burroughs was married on the 30th of May, 1877, to Miss Emma Frances Plumley, daughter of Rev. G. S. Plumley, D. D., F. S. S., at Metuchen, New Jersey. Their children are Mabel, Ralph and Edmund. On july IO he was ordained to the ministry and made pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, Slatington, Pa. After serving that church two years he accepted a call to the First Congregational Church, Fairfield, Conn., where he labored for four years. From 1883 to 1886 he was pastor of the Center Congre- gational Church, New Britain, Conn., from which he was called to the pastorate of the College Church of Amherst, Mass., and from that position he was called to the presidency of Wabash College. His alma mater has honored him in quick succession with its academic degrees: A. B., M. A., Ph. D. and D. D. Dr. Burroughs is director and secretary of the American Institute of Sacred Literature, and is also a member of two other societies of sacred learning, namely, the American Oriental Society and the Society of Biblical Literature and Exegesis. His specialties being sacred learning and philosophy, he is emi- nently qualified for teaching those branches which usually belong to the President. .,,,,,.o I well remember the day, in September, 1870, when President Burroughs, then a timid and trembling boy of fifteen years of age, entered the Sophomore Class at Princeton, and I remember, equally well, how youthful shyness and inexperience gradually gave way to a positive and strongly developed character. It was then and there that those deep and broad foundations of mind and personality were laid, on the basis of which there has been reared so goodly a structure. Dr. Burroughs' college course, from first to last, was successful and satisfactory, a steadily progressive career in all that constitutes the life and work of an undergraduate student. Diligent in the improvement of every academic privilege, and conscien- tiously careful as to his personal Christian influence, he was a pronounced example to his fellow students of what a college man should be, in securing what Milton terms a complete and generous education. Especially able along classical and literary lines, and thus early de- veloping that taste and talent in biblical study which has ever characterized his subsequent life, he graduated with the 'second honor of his class, and entered thus, with more than usual promise, on his professional work. Entering the Seminary, at Princeton, in 1874, his theological course was equally creditable, while the special success that he achieved in the sphere of Oriental languages, opened the way for that scholarly work that he has done in later years in that department. Of President Burroughs' pulpit and pastoral work at Slatington, Pa., Fairfield, Con11., a11d New Britain, Conn., it is needless to speak, further than to say that he brought to it the wide and rich results of all his pre- paratory study, and proved him to be a good minister of Jesus Christ, rightly divining the word of truth, and blessed of God in all his personal labors among the people. His call to Amherst College, in 1886, as Professor of Biblical History and Interpretation, and as Pastor of the College Church, marked a new era in his life, and, in its combination of the educational and ministerial, afforded rare opportunities of usefulness and ever-widening influence. Himself a young 111811, and, both by natural endowment and thorough training, eminently fitted for the duties of his double office, we have not been surprised to hear, from time to time, of his sing-ular success, both as teacher and preacher, among the students whom he taught and guided. His preaching is what all preaching should be, evangelic and evangel- istic, sound in its doctrinal basis, and apostolic in its spirit a11d effect. The degrees of Doctor of Philosophy and Doctor of Divinity, conferred upon him by his alma mater, honored her and him alike, and happily indicated tl1e fact that his philosophy was biblical, and his theology philosophic. His active membership in societies founded in the interests of biblical study, and his various publications in the line of linguistic criticism, and practical suggestion as to tl1e English bible, confirm this combination of the divinities and humanities, as they also evince his right to speak with au- thority on those critical questions at present so prominent. In their choice of President Burroughs, the Trustees of tl1e College deserve high praise as having had an eye to the fitness of the man for the place, and the place for the man, thus assuring the future prosperity of tl1e institution whose interests they are guarding. President Burroughs comes to his new and most important oftice with large acquisitions at command, with a keen fllld thorough scholarship, with wide experience in the church and college, and with a personal and Christian enthusiasm full of vitalizing influence, and full of promise for the cause of liberal learni11g in the West. Princeton sends her son to Wabash as she did to Amherst, while Princea ton and Amherst join in cordial congratulations to the institution that they have thus so richly endowed, and also join with special fervor in the prayer that, from the very outset, the administration of President Burroughs may be in favor with God and man. THEODORE W. HUN'1', P1-1. D., Professor of English, Plzilologgv and Disrourse in the College of New jersey. reaidenl' Burroughs od' CGXNQBQAF1. NNW 7 ,T WAS an important day in the history of Wabash College when new Dr. George S. Burroughs accepted the presidency of it. No 2 ,NX 4 ji!! . - . ff. one could have been present on the occasion of his arrival if and doubted its felt importance. The College and its friends had been many weeks in happy expectation. When the hour fl A came Trustees, Faculty, students and citizens were ready W with their warmest welcome. The whole body of the students meet him at the depot, cheered him loudly, and unhitching the horses, a select number of them hitched themselves to his carriage and, accompanied by the rest i11 procession, proceeded to his hotel. His reception was more than a display of characteristic Western enthusiasm. It was a splendid ex- pression of welcome, expectation and confidence. And there was intelligent ground for it. Although coming a stranger, he was not unknown to us. His election was the Trustees' most deliberate choice. Careful investigation of his career had been made, and the cordial endorsement of ex-President Seelye, President Harper and others, had already established him in the confidence of the authorities. All of us were pre- pared to believe that he was the right man, and that under his leadership the college would enter upon a new era of prosperity and progress. Dr. Burroughs' generous appreciation of cordiality and confidence, his easy ad- dress and eager social interest, at once strengthened this impression. His first contact with the young men demonstrated his ability to enter into their lives and grasp their affections. His quick perceptions and power of self- adjustment to new relations created, immediately, still stronger assurance. His regard for the work and achievement of his predecessor and co- laborers, established him in their esteem. The manner in which he probed every feature of the college organiza- tion and its resources showed his talent for organizing, and his business in- sight, to be extraordinary. His first appearance before the Board, having J, been but a few weeks in office, with plans and methods and resources in hand, discovered to them a new wisdom in their choice and the rare good fortune of the college in securing the leadership of so able a man. He was evidently thoroughly familiar with educational needs and methods, broadly informed as to tl1e local situation, judicious, earnest, energetic, resourceful. His determination at the outset to move forward, marked him as a man of progress and modern method. Immediately his influence began to be felt in the life and conduct of the college. His hand was upon everything. No detail of administration escapes him. Already new courses of instruction have been added. Old ones have been strengthened and developed. The departments are stronger and combined into a more complete unity. The whole organization is more complex and perfect. ' Nor is this all. The new President's influence has been extended al- ready far beyond the college organization. He has visited all of the larger cities of the State, and not a few of the smaller ones, and been heard in their pulpits and in their conventions. These sermons and addresses have brought him in demand to an extent that is beyond his limits of time and strength. The successful college President of to-day must be largely a man of alfairs. It is no longer sufficient that he be dignified and scholarlyg he must know men and methods. He must have business ability and adminis- trative power. He must know tl1e value of details, and have patience and tact a11d energy in mastering them. All these qualities belong to President Burroughs in a marked degree. He is not only educated in all scholarly attainments, but of man, the heart of man and human life, is he a trained and accurate student. One of his splendid qualities is his ability to enlist the interest and sympathy of men and women who are able to supply tl1e financial needs of the college. Already he has gained new friends and supporters who are of great value. He is always approachable and companionable. In his govern- ment l1e appeals to the manhood and self!respect of the student rather than to his own authority. His own energy, and industry, and unselfish devotion to his work are a constant inspiration to all about him. Wabash gives to her new President an open heart, a fraternal 11and, and a loyal support. NX.. Hgfie Urzegaqaecfeci, Because of God. EX-PRICSIDENT TUTTLE. 1111: ROMAN HISTORIAN asserts the pleasure of tracing a river to its source. I desire to trace Wabash College to the fountain from which it flows. When,Sir Walter Mildmay said, referring to the origin of Emanuel College, Cambridge, Eng.: I have set an acorn, which, when it becomes an oak, God alone knows what will be the fruit thereof, he expressed the Roman's thought by another figure of speech. In one it was a river, in the other an oak, but in each case the result came from a cause. In November, 1832, the Rev. James Thomson, and sev- eral men of like mind, set an acorn in the wilderness at Crawfordsville. a young town of a few hundred people. The Indians had re- cently sold the land, over which wild beasts still roamed. In 1821 its first white family came. In 1822, Rev. Charles C. Beattie preached the first Presbyterian sermon and solemnized the first marriage. In 1824, the first Presbyterian Church was organized, and, in 1827, the Rev. James Thomson became its pastor. He was a graduate of Miami University, in its first class, in 1826. While in the University, he formed the purpose of setting an acorn, of Sir Walter Mildmay's kind, somewhere in Wabash valley. This he did November 21, 1832. He and his fellow enthusiasts in the sublime undertaking, were home missionaries who had little money but a large wealth of faith. In one year from the starting of the work the first college edifice was sufficiently advanced to allow the first school to commence. 'Prof. Caleb Mills, December 3, 1833, began it with twelve students. In another twelve months the institution had shown enough vitality to get itself deep-hopelessly some thought-in debt. ' f Y , x j. 1 1 ' 1 WI Q . 3 a I ' 1 ' 1 . I 1 E 1 f 2 , . V + , -4 V. . g 1, J- M , ,,- , . F 7 .- -Y--.--- . kph N, sf' A xx ' 'K V1 The Rev. Edmund O. Hovey, one of the original convention, was sent east in May, 1834, to solicit aid. To further this e11d he was also sent by his Pres- bytery as a Commissioner to the General Assembly at Philadelphia. At Cinci11- nati, Philadelphia, New York and Boston, he found every door and purse closed. More distressing still, he found himself unable to open them. In despair, and with not enough money even to take him home, Mr. Hovey, then in Boston, wrote his resignation. He did not sign or send it, because just then the door opened, and his friend, the Rev. John M. Ellis, who had helped set the acorn, came in with a cheery salutation, which changed the situation radically, and the outcome was a trip to Andover to tell his story to the Theological Faculty, a grand body of men, bent on taking captive for Christ, not only the West, but the world. It is said Mr. Hovey told the story eH'ectively, and that Dr. Leon- ard Woods voiced the advice of the Faculty that the agent go to the country churches of New England, for the hard times had not yet reached them. The advice bore its first fruit the next Sabbath at Amesbury Mills, where Mr. Hovey received the first gift of his mission, sixty dollars a11d twenty-five cents! It was a great incident. As Dr. Beecher said, it was as sunlight shining on the bosom of a black cloud fleeing away. Victor Hugo explains the victory of Waterloo by the famous sentence, It was the unexpected, because of God! H T he uneapeciea' ! We are not done with it yet. It is the key of these paragraphs concerning the history of Wabash sixty years. During four months Professor Hovey had been telling to the country churches of Massachusetts the story that had captivated the Andover Faculty, and they gave him in cold cash fifteen hundred dollars. It seemed to him and those at home as if the Bank of England was unloading its boundless wealth at the door of the little college somewhere in the Wabash valley. But the God whom these men had worshiped that winter morning, Novem- ber 22, 1832, in the midst of nature's unbroken loveliness, was not yet through with them. He had opened on their delighted visio11 one UUNEX- PECTEDQ' and now He would give them the sight of another. It was in November, 1834. Let me introduce it. When Professor Hovey, in June, had sought aid in New York, among those who declined to give was Joshua Leavitt, one of the greatest journalists of his day. He gave no money, but he gave the agent this advice, to secure a President for his collegef' And what advice it was in the case! Even Southern Indiana then had a sparse and POOY population, scattered through its counties. A large moiety of it was still 2 wilderness. It had not a single city of considerable size. The northern half was worse off. North of the Wabash, outside of Fort Wayne and Logansport, there were not three hundred white inhabitants. It was one vast wilderness with few settlers. Indianapolis was a small town. The State was in its rudest conditions. Houses, farms, roads and the adjuncts of advancing, but pioneer, population were rude and primitive. And this great New York editor advised Mr. Hovey as an absolute necessity of success to secure a President for the infant college in such surroundings as have been described. It must have seemed to the agent, when he heard it, a cruel joke, or, at best, an empty pleasantry. But it was not. joshua Leavitt was not that sort of a man. He was in dead earnest in this as in other things. The statement will illustrate the mission of Professor Hovey to New York in November, 1834. His attention had already been directed to the Rev. Elisha Whittlesy Baldwin, of New York, as the right man for the place. He was a native of Greene county, New York, a devout and wide-awake Christian, a ready scholar, an alumnus of Yale 1812, and Andover 1817, a successful teacher and 1820-32 the honored pastor of a large Presbyterian church in a populous but extremely destitute and immoral portion of New York. This church was chiefly the result of his own labors through large and constant accessions-one hundred and seventy-five in one year. The reputation thus gained was further intensified by his heroic conduct during one season of yellow fever epidemic and another of cholera. In each case he remained at his post to cheer and assist the sick and the dying. He was not only a brave and sweet Christian minister, but he was a ready and attractive preacher, greatly honored in the large congre- gations of New York and New jersey. He also had a charming family, consisting of a wife, son and two daughters, who greatly relished the privileges of city life. This was the man who, by the advice of the best men in the metropolis, was to be visited by Prof. Hovey, to invite him to accept the Presidency of the Wabash College. Let the intelligent reader reproduce the elements which make up the picture of the Indiana, the Crawfordsvillef' and U the Wabash College of November, 1834, and then imagine the agent at the door of the city pastor's home in East Broadway! Could it have been otherwise than that Professor Hovey must have felt his heart sink as he placed in the 1l1l11lStCI',S hands an invitation to leave his position in New York to take one in Indiana, the hard and narrow circumstances of which he himself had had such thorough experience? How little reason had he to expect a favorable consideration! It is true that in this new country were noble men and women- the salt of the earth -a fact which greatly softened the hardships without entirely correcting them. Imagine the city pastor's surprise as he received this call, and the almost amused excitement with which he repeated to his wife the contents of the agent's communication? Who could have anticipated it? And yet the city pastor consented to go to the Wabash Valley, and the College l1ad found a President! This was a remark- able incident, and with it is to be associated another-that within a few months the agent and the President-elect collected in New York and its vicinity twenty- four thousand dollars-relatively the greatest cash-gift the institution has ever received. And again we resort to Victor Hugois philosophy of Waterloo z The unexpecfed, because of God. In the surprises of life, especially in dark periods, is found peculiarjoy. In this respect Wabash has had a singularly happy experience. Professor Hovey, the Treasurer, relates the fact that in more cases than one the College notes had been saved from protest by unlooked-for interpositions. In one instance a large note unexpectedly was paid by a new friend, whose kindness did not stop there. In another case the presentation of the wants of the College in a New Jersey church arrested the interest of a stranger casually present. It resulted in large and timely gifts. Quite similar have been the interpositions in several dangerous crises. It might seem invidious to name a few without naming all. Nor is it necessary. These noble friends poured out hundreds of thousands to help the institution. Their gifts have ranged, as appear on the books of the College Treasurer, from the smallest one of ten cents to the largest one of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars. The sum total is large, and the results in equipments and endowments large. And once more I venture to introduce Victor Hugo's philosophy of the fate at Waterloo, The unexpected, because of God. Dr. Baldwin's influence in the college was in all respects great and benign, but his death, October 15, 1840, after five years' service, was regarded as a calamity. But in methods very ex- traordinary the Rev. Charles White, D. D., of Owego, New York, was induced to accept the vacant Presidency. As in the former case, it was a matter of Surprise tl1at he should leave his beautiful home in the valley of the Susque- hanna. The correspondence shows that he did it under the constraint of duty. In his case, as in that of Dr. Baldwin, we still wonder at the choice. The balance of motives to eyes unannointed by faith seemed against it. And it was so until faith and duty placed their heavy weights in the scales. In Dart- mouth College a first-honor man, among the highest at Andover 3 at Thetford and Owego, and on great occasions, as when he preached the annual sermon before the American Board, pleading for a lost World 5 and especially when, as under Beecher's church, he plead the cause of Wabash College, and most especially when in the twenty baccalureates of his presidency he plead for the highest and best education of young men for the sake of country and the world, President White was a great preacher. He was heard with intense admiration in the churches of the East and the West. Robust in thought, Ciceronian in style, and profoundly emotional, he was regarded with peculiar partiality. Dr. White was amply worthy of the fine words with which his friend and associate, Prof. john L. Campbell, summed up his character, Dr. White was of the highest style a Christian scholar. These words state the blessings with which Wabash College was enriched until the translation of President White occurred. Between two golden mile-posts-the consecrating prayer in the forest, November 22, I832, and the translation of Dr. White, October 29, 1861- the space is occupied with grateful surprises, blessed repetitions of T he unex- pected, because ey' God. And it is certain the last for the College has not yet been reached. , -. ga., ,...- ' G S ul ' 'W 'Q' To The Campug. Qcazoc, has W1-Q, -moot Cr1M'fli'CyL0b aff Hale ou,11l'nea-ma fxzhahlf, Qsifnicfw gnibao-fi-'fre Vocab hwncb ffm ofut to gfofb, mvefoze Wm moon' fxuitfv pafo, fanataati-c fignfut Taiufo vcizb, fsfcaycfz' .wfrabolua H711-ougfm ffm Eeocfwo ofb. :Gmc ouucuaiuq l3ougYva -luiH'1-in Nw gabfvaziug qfoom QfVY1-viopoz ffwiyz aroma. to WW aizud bwpg 'Gfw Hub ffolvww mob auitpn- zicft perfumvf, aub rfw ooft 'nu-igghr-Breeze fziooca Hamm- fo ofwp. aft, acaeb camvpwo, oizcfiugq :Je-au fwwe, mabo qlfow bam fzom 'nwmvoziao clfxwtezifngf zouub prion: fazow Qffouz fO1U2f'!fi'!'lq Mao-topo cast Wzoiyz oomlfaza ofvcwba Gifs ge1wzal2i,o1fm pact ao 'nwff cm vnovsuf 51146 glatufc-Qfo w113alfczi,o,n of fave, ofwb booth flu fwzfz ccwb ffiwgoz iw qouz oofmuw fyaeatfv. Q ---- .143:'15 4- 4- N 4 Q i - - - - - ' 'ffsfggssx saga -1 ss lie 5 ef- ? at , if 2 -iris? 2'-' e -f' s 5 ,-Q..,.14:,i ' -Xi X 1 ,'- fy ?-fi-5 is-1?-iffgf .fl 54 tw 5 . X - H Y , , N I J' g by QXXXXX . n M i XXX i - . C- i NWS! ss, H - .13 - a . i. . 1 ' 'gud f if 2. M- , 'sa sf-wr f Ei ' mil, ilflgf--xx Wit. ,' , fa? ' ' 31.571 i H xml' Q it ' 'wr Jil' filly Q, Ml ,':- V- if '-4, ' ., ' 'IV i'7i'f 5' xi1,f'f,i1'l ' ,pill 7 , c N ,1jQl,,,,,x.,gQ E. .H pg , ,P X vw f! , 1 1, ,l T '- .. J a,f'F'5,1- :9'f iU: T 'WFT i 'lff,fg'l 4'Vfffy'Q'f A 4-5. I Q. , H x-K, ! Lv Ng vlswi. fb: fl fl i 'i f - f ' ' ' -I -1 WQQNK 'TM' 0 M. - 1 i, f- Z ' ,1. 5. . FJYQSI' W V +4 -' E ARE accustomed to admire Q--sf: f 12 . ' . ' ' ' . ' ' and raise stead f frowth, but a er10d of luxurlant ro ress . , P 5 L, . is not therefore to be despised. Wabash has never stood still, much less regressed since its foundation. But a period of volcanic activity is all the more to be welcomed as a change from the quiet mode of advance. With the arrival of Dr. Burroughs, on the IIt11 of November, when he was re- ceived at the station by the whole body of students, the new era began. The welcome was a most hearty one, and with closer acquaintance, the admiration and affection of the College for its President have steadily increased. The students took informal possession of their new chief by unhorsing his carriage and dragging it themselves to the hotel. A week later the Trustees and Faculty tendered a public reception to Dr. Burroughs in Yandes Hall, and for hours the building was crowded with students and citizens, anxious to pay their respects to him. There, in the Art Gallery of the College, surrounded by the portraits of his predecessors, Dr. Burroughs made the acquaintance of his constituency. . The first regular meeting of the Trustees with the new President took place at the end of December, and further signs of progress immediately manifested themselves. Simon Yandes, of Indianapolis, had, six months before, offered the College 330900, provided an equal sum was raised before the December meeting of the Board. This was punctually accomplished and 360,000 thus added to the endowment of the institution. In connection with this it s110uld be mentioned that 34,000 of this sum was given by the county through its Commissioners. Their whole gift was indeed 5SI0,000, but the other 256,000 was payable only 011 condition that the College became co- educational within two years. There have been several noteworthy changes in the Faculty during the year. At the very start Hymen transposed one of the members and doubled him up in a trice. Later a long regretted vacancy in the Chair of History and Political Science was filled by the appointment of Professor Chas. A. Tuttle, of Amherst. Dr. Cunningham was at the same time appointed Col- lege Pastor and Professor of Oratory. Sunday afternoon chapel was abol- ished at the end of the Fall term and in its stead attendance was required in Center Church or some other approved place of worship. A little later still Mr. E. G. Horton was appointed Professor of Physiology and Physical Culture, and Gymnasium exercise was required of all students. This recog- nitio11 of the value of exercise, and the health which it brings, has been welcomed by all. Everybody does his work better and it is expected, too, that a marked effect will be observed on the place the College will take in athletics. - The remaining change was not of the same pleasant nature, for it involved the deposition of Professor Jim McQuowan, of the mop and duster gang, and his replacement by VVienerwurst. It was rumored tl1at jim ob- jected to the department of natural law and odor, and was heard to mutter as he left, I had rather be a toad, And live upon the vapor of a dungeon. Everything about the College seems to be much more attractive than ever before. Formerly there were some students who attended chapel in imagination only, and who even occasionally came to recitations in the same way. But tl1e new regulations as to absences, demand bodily presence from all-and get it. Some changes have been noticeable in the campus. A great sleet storm in February overthrew entirely two trees and broke a great number of branches from all the others. The whole campus was strewn with the debris for weeks afterward. It is thought that some complete scheme .for laying out the campus and beautifying its paths has been matured. At all events it was observed at the beginning of the year that no less tha11 two whole loads of gravel were distributed in three or four of the worst places. With such extrava- gance as this regularly indulged, we may reasonably hope that by theclose of the next century, rubber boots, wet feet and muddy Hoors will not be necessary adjuncts of our college life. ..! Ninas!-1. 0000 Founded upon the eternal rock of truth She stands, a beacon-tower amid the waves, And pours her inextinguishable rays Of light and truth out o'er the troubled deep. The storm may rage and tempests dark may lower The rnaddened billows' ineffectual surge May rise and roar and dash against her feet- She still stands firm. Above the storm-cloud's rage Above the incessant 'rurnult of the Waves, She lifts her head and far away beholds, Outlined along the horizon of Tirne, Eternity's vast shore. And hither 'tis Her guiding rays would lead the mariner, Storm-tossed and weary of the restless sea. Oh! may she ever stand thus firm and sure, A never-failing fountain-head of light! Oh! may her guiding, rays thus ever beam Out o'er the foaming, turbid Waves of life, And lead the Weary Voyager at last Into the haven of Eternityl I 7 R 4 A' m W 'zQ1 39'?B -lfifyifif - Z, 'N x1V'3X' lm' ' w f !fff frmQfk mYf,1f+ 1 I - x? :gy 1 ,yd I- IKM 1 I X 3. s T 1 'fqlf'!G Q W ff XX' ,N r 4 Lf? yi :Jinx f l ,gf-f. ill X, F 1 fl , X. -QS l.,, '. - fliifw ,l 'V ,X 1 J! V1 yu :ii N!! ffm! W x' j Q, 1 ' '7' ' ' N- X n I M ' x' -x' X f' ' --x , ,,4 '.. jj ed ,qw l,5 WR P X ff 223 ,I I ' -'-g- WA , ' 3, -M x X X XX J' A , f X 'g! f5' Hf M A 1IfX V, - 551 R Sf V9 , x :e, Q w w l fn, F X ff X 1 wa v K -w W 5 l 'MeerwrA I1 f JN X if 4 , ,1 f 1 1.4 lZV1 ' M -'T ,f:f.f.+, fl- -Q 1,4r' 'L - ,A , X45 M -- My .I lx S :pq Qi? Q W, L XX FT- min f- ,, -w-Qi:',,,1 W ' ff ,,,- I ...I W, :jr --F Xl , V X - -- l,2'.l,Yi H -7.1-Tgfgglif, 1 X M ,am - mf- -' 1. :Q J- Ja l Ya- . KLM - xml-N l ,Li K E - - ff Cx, fl 111 49 X - -E--L M if 4: ' T NNN --,vi----.H ,QX A N-J 1 V- , 1 -L 129 ,N l, ,, Q A L .Q H Aff I - -'Q .-hm ZW Gff fafwsff , BIBLICAL LITERATURE. PRESIDENT BURROUGHS. 0 vq FYQL LIE education ofthe College consists of certain departments of faflo E j p V W ? if vp Spd 5--.it 3-xi in rf ' iw iz- ir ' J fflutk .i g . its if instruction, moving along side by side and following one another. These are calculated, each in itself and all combined, to liberalize the mind and train it for usefulness in life. This training is brought about through acquaintance with the experience and life of the past as seen in history and letters and through knowledge of nature and man, as observed through science- physical, mental, moral and social. Among these courses of instruction we, therefore, rightly emphasize literature, ancient and n1odern, history, social science and philosophy. Consider the intimate relation of the study of the Scriptures to these branches of learning. Ask, for example, these two ques- tions: Whence is the Bible? and What is the Bible? Can they be answered without discovering and considering much that belongs in the fields of history and literature? When replies have been made to them, has not also valuable information for the pursuit of social science and philosophy been placed in our hands? But the answers to these inquiries are the results of a course of scientific Bible study, they summarize the outline and substance of such a course. When we ask, Whence is the Bible? we imply that the Scriptures have a history which we seek to investigate. They are a body of literature which has been handed down to us. Our investigation at once becomes a study in the history of sacred letters. We take up the sacred library as it comes into our hands in its English dress. We trace its history, first in one version and then in another, up the stream of its transmission through the territory of English life and literature. We notice the iniiuence of this life and literature upon the Scriptures and we observe the more extensive influence which these Scriptures have in turn had in the formation and molding of the life and letters of the English people. But the Scriptures are not simply English literature. Here is a library of world literature, wonderfully gath- ered together, then wonderfully transmitted through the ages. The Scriptures are, to all intent, the mirror of the life of tl1e race in its relations with God, as He uncovers Himself to humanity in its own life. Tracing back the history of this sacred library, through the days of its handing down in manuscript, until we reach the period in which the ancient writings of the Hebrew faith are supplemented, interpreted and completed by the addition of those born of the Christian life, we find our question, Whence is the Bible? naturally changing into the inquiry, What is the Bible? Regarding each book of the collection, we raise and endeavor to answer the whence and the what. Throughout the whole field of inquiry we find in the Scrip- tures themselves our answer. Each book bears witness regarding itself. It testi- fies of the circumstances under which it arose and because of which it was demanded. It reveals to us the personality of him through Whom it came into being. Thus are we led along the pathway of historical and literary study to a realization of the divine authorship of the Scriptures. Increas- ingly this authorship manifests itself through an investigation of the work of the human writers of tl1e several parts. The divine unity of the Bible reveals itself through the consideration of the wonderful relations of its diverse forms viewed as human literature. -2- l7nn.o.sovn'r. -2- PRESIDENT BURROUGHS. PROFESSOR CUNNINGHAM. ax fa T' Y gms Department of Philosophy is devoted to the search after .Q truth regarding those problems of inquiry which fall under the subjects of Logic, Psychology, Ethics, the History of .. Philosophy and the History and Philosophy of Religion. X 1 g The work embraces a considerable portion of the Junior .. and the Senior Years. It is the aim of the department to be at the same time thorough and comprehensive. In method the work is many-sided. Observation and experiment are the natural and necessary bases of investigation. Historical research is carefully and pains- takingly conducted as both an inspiration and a corrective. Speculative and reflective thought are encouraged as stimulating and leading to independent and satisfying results. Philosophy, broadly considered, is to be regarded as the science of sciences. It should do for all the sciences what each does for its own field. It should End the unity of science to be the reflection of the unity of nature, and this in turn the reflection of the unity of the Supreme Reason pervad- ing all nature, the Source of all intelligence, calling all things back into responsive fellowship with itself. All that precedes and accompanies in the college course is to be here gathered up and unified. The love of unity, the great and abiding passion of the mind, becomes the informing spirit of philosophical investigation. Language, literature, history, social science are all regarded as bearing on logic, psychology, ethics. Science, pure and applied, is brought to its largest and highest results when the mind is guided by the philosophic spirit: it is supremely fostered by that love of science in its entirety which philosophy gives. Those ultimate principles which are the roots underlying all scientific specializing are to be sought for and found in the work of the Department of Philosophy. Logic is the systematic study of thought. In its principles it is co-ex- tensive with human knowledge. All objects experienced can be treated logically. It is discovered that the general conception of knowledge deter- mines the conception of logic, the general philosophic view of thought determines the view which will be entertained regarding this discipline. Here are the distinctions of metaphysical, empirical, formal and mixed logic. The solution of logical problems commands special attention. Time and pains are devoted to the handling of the difficulties of individual thinkers in the class. The work in Psychology stands in direct relation to work in physiology. The structure and functions of the brain are carefully considered in their bearings upon the subject. Theses are prepared as the result of special individual investigations. The course of thought in special philosophical research must be inquir- ing and critical in order to be faithful and exhaustive. A positive philosophy rightly prepares for a critical. We turn from the relations of the known to an examination of the conditions and guarantees of knowledge. A theory of being and becoming, which shall be satisfying, is to be found. Final and efficient causes are to be considered. We ask what is the goal of science? What the goal of life? What of beauty? What of truth? What of virtue? We ask these things in view of the thought and experience of the past. We think regarding these problems i11 view of the speculations and theories of the centuries. The steps of 111ental advancement in tl1e ex- perience of the race and in the thinking of the student are found to be along the pathway of sensation, knowledge, science, philosophy, and this last, in turn,,is found to be, stage by stage, positive, critical, metaphysical, practical. -2' GREEK. -2- f PROFESSOR MCLAIN. .fzlif-11' -v - ' 1 if O THE PI-IILISTINE, the young American who studies Greek !! i,,kllii,i1rllll is an unpardonable anachronism. Ill this age-in the year of the never-to-be-equalled Columbian Exposition, one of Maw' Q., whose buildings would hold fifty Parthenons-to be occupy- .mi ylx, vi ing onels attention with the language, literature and life of a people who never heard of Chicago and knew nothing whatever of our countless -graphs a11d -phones and -meters--albeit, by some sort of unconscious prophecy they did furnish names for them all-what is the sense of it? What does the world owe to the old Greeks or what of interest can anyone find in them that they should claim the time of an American youth, when he might be learning to compound prescriptions or manage a telegraph-key for living wages? There is little use in arguing the question. It will not be attempted here. Tothe utilitarian, the things of culture will always be foolishness: neither can he know them: they are spiritually discerned. But, certain it is, that upon those who, without hostile prejudice, venture within her reach, the charm of Hellas is as fresh and potent as ever, the world over. And how fares the youth who enters on the task of gaining what Greek culture has to give, and grows not weary in well-doing? By dint of perse- vering work, such as affords most varied discipline and presently becomes a pleasure, he comes to know and to admire the most perfect language of all the ages-a language in itself a consummate work of art, like the per- fectly developed body of an athlete, trained to symmetry and powerg a language musical almost as Italian, vigorous as the tongue of the martial Romans, flexible, clear and exact beyond comparison: by its delicate ap- paratus of mood and tense and particle and varying word-order, distinctly expressing every subtlest phase of thought and shade of emphasis, and almost reproducing tone of voice and play of feature: its words all coined of pure Hellenic metal, and not time-worn, but fresh minted, with edges sharp and superscription still distinct. Thus brought into the immediate presence of the great ancients, he lingers for a time among them, listening to the voices which have charmed the world so long. First, as is meet, he gives his ear to the undying music of Homer's matchless lyre-Homer, poet all of gold, poet of all ages, all races, all moods. With instructed interest he accompanies the prose Homer, the child-minded Herodotus, as with open-eyed wonder he journeys through the world, graphically recording all he sees and hears, yet not without re- Hection, nor without dramatic plan. On the southern slopes of the Acrop- olis, with unhindered view of sea and plain and mountain, he sits an auditor of the lofty, grave tragediansf' Hebrew prophets with Greek tongues, as to ear and eye they preach the solemn doctrine that Sorrow follows wrong, As echo follows song. And when, as a relief to tragedy's high tension, Aristophanes appears witl1 splendid burlesque and unsparing satire, he learns that freedom of speech in no American iuventiong in Agora and Academy, he mingles with groups of Apollo-like youths as they hold converse with the unique, undeiinable Socrates and witl1 Plato the Divinef' in the Pnyx, sitting among the thousands of the sovereign people, he listens to the voice of Demosthenes, patriot saint, as with art and fire, rhythm and force, never since so blended, he calls to arms against the man of Macedon, and, failing, utters the dying cry of Grecian freedomg a death which ministers to life, for, as Renan has said: Nations must 'first die, that the world may live through them. By converse with such and kindred spirits Clet not Theocritus be for- gotten- Thee, Theocritus, wha matches? said Burnsj,-noting also the peerless poems in marble which surround him, in peristyle, pediment and freize, the student grows to realize in some measure the world's ever- lasting debt to Hellas for its best lessons in literature, in art, in civil life, and is ready to say with Shelley, We are all Greeks. - ya w',,...1 -2- Encmsn. -1- PROFESSOR MILFORD. HEN a student commences his college course he is full of lofty ideals, and has some prodigious notions about books ,, and reading. Like the man in the fairy tale, he is obliged yi Q to have his legs tied ,to keep him from outrunning the object ix of his pursuit. For example, a bucolic sub. will apply at K the library for john Stuart Millls Syslcm ry' Logz'c,- or, J , very likely, the first book he tackles will be a volume of N 1 Bacon's Philosophical Works ,' but, there are others who have Q ' entirely different plans for collateral reading. They read f ! and read again I-Iuchleherry Finn, gloat over Allan Pinkerton's 16:51, -4' . X wh qi 3 qiffl .15F.1q. Nz' N My GX If 'ii ., .lf f1't'. 2. 'IWW ikflsegl 1 --Mil i l Q f Y , is V -1 Alf T- JI 74 .L-,Z-277'- :I A II Bank Robbers and Deteolhzes, or search the alcoves in vain for The Lic and W'orhs of jesse james. A taste for such books as tl1e ones last named, and others that are deliberately evil, is, to say the least, perilous. He wl1o reads such pernicious stuff is like one breathing a rarified atmos- phere. He takes in fuller breaths, but pants, becomes breathless, and his lungs collapse. Now, it is the object of the Department of English Litera- ture of Wabash College to introduce the young man into a fresh, invigorating air, to give him a solid and manly literature, that he may recover from his intellectual breathlessness and prostration. He is urged to let Bulwer and the French writers alone, and to devote his attention to Milton and Wordsworth, to Johnson and Addison and Macaulay, to the critical labors of Matthew Arnold and Russell Lowell, to Dickens and Charles Kingsley, and to Hawthorne, whose literary talent has placed him among the greatest masters of English prose. In the Freshman Year, the student is required to submit a careful anal- ysis of one of the works of George Eliot, of Sir Walter Scott, or of Washington Irving. He must give an account of The Vicar of Wakefield, or some such poem as Longfellow's Evangeline. He is carefully drilled in the art of ex- pression, aided in acquiring the habit of employing the aptest words in the aptest places, the power of writing in clear, vigorous, and picturesque Eng- lishg he devotes much time to poetics, to the science of rhetoric and its relation to logic and aesthetics. He then revels in the historical develop- ment of our language from the years in which the poets and harp players of the Anglo-Saxons sang the popular legends of their old home, and from the time the mythical heroic Song qf Bcowolf was put in writing, down to tl1e epoch of the magazines and daily newspapers of the nineteenth century. But the top and fadiance of the entire course is the work of the Senior Year. The student is directed to the study of the plays of Shakespere- Shakespere, the man who was not of an age but for all time! the poet whose sublime mission is not yet accomplished!'i He laughs heartily over the artisans in Midszzrnfzzer N11,gfkl's Dream, and the comical blunders of Falstaifg boils with rage at the hellish devices of Iagog and is lifted into a region of purer thought and feeling by the lovely creatures that compose Shakespere's divine gallery of womanhood. Following the study of Shake- spere is the work of original research in the library. Here the young Zillfraleur can continue the study of the best and most idiomatic English authors to much greater advantageg he has opportunity to delve down 'mid the tangled roots of subjects that interest him, and by handling the volumes as they are grouped and arranged on the shelves he forms an acquaintance with books and their writers that is invaluable. There is no question but that the Department of English Philology and Literature is very finely equipped. In the 'Junior and Senior Years the elective students crowd the recitation hall and literary laboratories, eager to avail themselves of the opportunity of studying the English classics, in this way forming the friendship of good books, that shall be the pleasure and glory of their lives, and the knowledge of which they would not exchange for the glory of the Indies. M- Pnrslcs. -A- PROFESSOR CAMPBELL. IZ J , , ' fl! . 41 HYSICS is domiciled in the second story of Peck 'W Scientific Hall, and is elbowing for more room. The 72 5-Tu f f Professor in charge cordially unites with Prof. Smith ' QR in the wish that tl1e first floor of Peck Hall may be : . V.: relieved of Chemistry and devoted to the electric plant. Z ,, .f A f A,5 ,,IIiilll,5- The constantly increasing use of the three dynamos which belong to the equipment in this department, ' requires more direct connection with the engine, and this can be accomplished economically and satisfac- torily by converting the large chemical laboratory to a dynamo room, and placing the engine in the basement immediately under it. The small laboratories would be used for electric measuring apparatus. In the different departments included under the general term Physics, satisfactory progress is noted. The equipment of apparatus necessary for laboratory work is being increased, and the College very fairly claims to have an outfit at least equal to that of any other institution in the State. Astronomy is attached to this department, and in future is to be an elective study, extending through Junior and Senior Years. The Junior, a first year course, will be limited to general descriptive Astronomy, and the second year course will be mathematical. The equipment of an observatory is greatly needed for practical work in this the most interesting of the sciences. GERMAN one FRENCH. PROFESSOR KING. '. o ERMAN and French have a place in tl1e list of re- f , , .X - , ' quired subjects taught in the College. All stu- ffy or ff gin E dents have opportunity to master the elements X K 7 and to gain a considerable facility in the'use of 04 , ,I 'f each language. The course in French is con- ,- lx ,E ff V, W fined to the Sophomore year. Beginning with W, I the elements of grammar, advance is made X 0 wi d vi, ..,7l!f,!f through easy graded selections tor reading and , .5 , translation, until the student is able to read 'yi' ,- 170 readily, and at sight, ordinary French prose. ' ' il X' ll, g X fi Selections are then made from the best modern 'Il S gg ' p 3-1 authors, and some knowledge of the literature is I 'gf si 5' thus gained. The course in German is more ex- M i 3 tended. It is begun in the first term of Fresh- 'M Q ie' man Year, continued till the e11d of Sophomore J.- .fe s--N,--lf' Year,' and may be elected during Junior and Senior Years. There are three distinct stages in the course: an elementary, an intermediate and an advanced. In tl1e elementary stage the attention is confined chiefly to the gram- matical and syntactical structure of the language. A large number of easy poems, short tales and stories, and extracts from histories furnish ample reading material. The ear is trained to catch and interpret the strange sounds and the vocal organs to reproduce them readily and accurately. Much practice in translating from English into idiomatic German is also given. In the intermediate stage the student is carried through an extensive course of reading, chiefly historical and biographical, for the purpose of gaining familiarty with the best prose style and to acquire ease and facility in the use of the language. In the advanced stage the great writers of the Classic and Romantic periods are taken up and studied systematically and correctly. The masters of the German classic drama, Lessing, Schiller and Goethe, receive particular attention. Guided and aided by them, the attempt is made to gain a comprehensive knowledge of the vast field of German literature. .X ' f -.1 , I- , ' 'pq 1 f ala' fzfi , . QQ? f f Emx 5 My .2 4 li ' LATIN. f- ' PROFESSOR KINGERY. UR grandfathers used to master the classics, as they did all other things, by main strength Accus t01l1Cd to the hardships of p1o11eer life they brought to tl1e1r study of the liberal arts the same sturdy scorning of difficulties they had displayed 111 clear 111g and settling the new country They knew no foe NX 1th any such stratagem as the inductive method new er occurred to them The young learner C0ll11Illtt6Cl to ineinorx lllS giammar with all 1ts p'1r'1d1gn1s rules and ucceptions assisted by n1'1ny '1 Hogging 111 fixing tl1e more difficult points Next '1 Latlll reader was trax ersed from end to end , X I, nil , - I ,V ff ' W '.' ,I .1 ff . . . . .' 1 1 ff I , . . c. L 1 . if f f 1 f is . . . ff,-14 1: -' 43 s , I 5' Q92 af, - - , . . 1 ' -5 ' 7 J' 1-4' L N ' ' u A Sch -rg x . . . U .. . 4 Q6 T all ' . . 1 1 -f f:-wa nf' 1, .' . V ' ll Lg J ' ' cz vv ' ' lvl 311 1 1-, ro al road to Caesar, and the idea of 1116612111 the -,Tj 11 - n 1 gl - ss -Q Mt ' fl, ,- s. ..- - 'ff-rx N- ix, 1' , :ff fi. l W- :li . . ' .115 N A ' S., 'V - y ,X k 'N' ,,':.-' :Q L C 1 t C, .' L 2. ' 14 ' .. ' . -1 1- :sag . . . . . .,f' jzf . t c . ' .'. ...st-'T' ' fl:-Q A S ' C L .1 Y y and then the beginner was ready to enter upon his reading of real, live Qdeadj authors. That fine classical scholars were trained by tl1is method is undeniable, yet it is equally true that it ca11 l1Ot often be applied to-day. The 111ultiplicatio11 of sciences and arts has reduced the ti111e the average student can devote to any one subject, however importantg and research into the nature of language and tl1e linguistic faculty has resulted in a radical change i11 Il16tl10dS. Languages are studied scientifically to-day. The beginner takes 11ot a grammar, but a bit of literary Latin, with a life and character of its OXVII, and proceeds to analyze or dissect it. He observes facts of form and relation. As new facts come out they are correlated witl1 tl1e old, and laws are reached by induction. Every principle learned is seen in practical application, and not as an abstrac- tio11. Thus the pleasure of grasping the thought in its original form is enjoyed from the first, and reading becomes easy for the diligent student. This, of course, is not all. Another step is the analysis of words into their elements-a process which may be pursued far back toward the ultimate atoms or roots, and, by the association of kindred words, greatly increases one's power over the language. T11e11 special lines of research may be followed within the literature itself, or the growth of the language and its relation to others 111ay be investigated. The Latin, from its use in the learned professions and the sciences, and from its immeasurable contributions to our own vocabulary and modes of thought, has a practical value for every one, and some knowledge of its elements is recognized as an essential part of one's education. But beyond and above this every-day utility are other phases of its importance to us. The scholar sees in it an instrument of culture: the lover of literature, the medium of a great and noble body of thought. The philologist finds it a model of inflection, a member of a great family ot languages and the mother of a modern group, and from its double relation gains data and principles which guide hllll in his studies of language in general.. In its literature are models for historian and poet, and an incomparable body of legal principles. And when with all this is considered the part played in the world's history by the people whose tongue it was, and its own ceaseless vitality through all the centuries since it first was classed as dead, we cease to wonder at its claims or at men's recognition of it as indispensable to culture. Wx -ea-M B1oLoQ1'. -are Q.. x IROI l SSO1x lIIO'Nl XS tl1e whole of 1 large tvsostory brick building 'S known as Hovey Museum This 15 a little may lf- l'6ll1OX ed from thc main buildings 111 order that Z4f i,4 'If ,, the 0CCllP'lllt5 of tl1e depart111ent including tl1e Megalkerzzcm Cu 'zen may not be corrupted by tl1e ir H f J .T Q .,., . ., 1 , .,2,Q1:m,.1 11 - ------me - 3-V zislff-1T5'1T':722f 'H Nil I ,-.,' lil , . . , 1 , 1-Var HE Biological Department of the College OCCLIIHES I U .F ' ,' Alia? I li ,I ' Y C 1 - I - . . 'S 1 X ' ' . . , f- 'f . 3 r - , 1 .. -, l G4 . . . . X121 1- QW Min 7' 'y r - up ,sw .. , X3 Lf W regularities or tl1e French verbs, or drowned by tl1e e notes from the college organ The bu1ld111g contains five laboratories in addition to a large room occupying the whole center of the structure, and in which are arranged cases filled with vast collections of minerals, fossils, zoological and botanical material. O11e room is finished i11 alabaster a11d natural wood for tl1e retention of various articles of do111estic discipline a11d a fine co111b wor11 by tl1e queen ofthe Sandwich ISl2I.lldS. The building is approached from all four sides, or i11 tl1e lllflllllel' of the rain through the roof, while tl1e visitor bows with awe at tl1e soleinnity of his surroundings. Once i11side all fears may be quelled, for tl1e various skeletons and casts are S6811 to be chained to the wall or fastened to tl1e floor. The instruction in the department is carried 011 n11der courses in Botany and Zoology alld to the former three years 111ay be devoted by the stu- de11t. The ain1 ofthe instruction is first to enable the students to see things for themselves a11d 11ot depend 011 text books for tl1e understanding of that wl1icl1 ca11 11ot be placed on a printed pageg consequently the laboratory work is 111ade a11 important part of tl1e courses. The material equipments of the department are among the best, not only for elementary courses, but also for advanced instruction, while an abundance of new and interesting material gives the student an ample opportunity for independent investigation. The department library contains many new and choice volumes which, with the leading magazines, increase the working facilities of the student by putting him in constant touch with the great leaders i11 Biological science. It is expected that a green-house will be erected during the year. This will furnish the elective Seniors with button-hole bouquets, and also enable instruction to be given in Plant Physiology, while it will likewise provide material to illustrate the subjects given to the students in general courses. It is the aim to keep the department abreast with the times and enable it to contribute its share toward the growth of the College. ef! If V' . f 'I if , .. . .X ,is W V T J: 4513 4 ' X 'K -:- CHEMISTRY. 4- PROFICSSOR SM ITH . 1 ,,,, 1131.5 dv!-in ' 'tE. i- 'xi' EEL .f -. ' ff. e, ' f ws ip, , ff .1 i-Vg! H17 VW! 'Lg -li 'X . A JG . r ' e - ' .f'vo Wi-'A' A fl, 5 ml m 'wi n il , l .-1 fi! ' i9. ' wi X, XI Wx l-. ft' f l lv l I ii -tl ii' .QQQHE Department ot Chemistry occupies, along with Physics, the building known as Peck Hall. Chemistry has the use of the lower' floor, while Physics is housed in the corresponding rooms above. Charles Dudley NVarner says, somewhere, that Some people are born with neigh- bors, some achieve neighbors and some have neighbors thrust upon them. The last is very decidedly the view which Professor Campbell takes of this combi- nation. As the psychologist would be en- tirely at sea if deprived of his perennial orange, so no mention of Chemistry is possible without a reference to smells. They bear the same relation to Chemistry that King Charles' head did to Mr. Dick Babley's petition-they are inevitable. In Peck Hall the fumes and stenches pour gaily upwards, and the vaporous air which is the life of the chemist is death, or at least a bad fit of coughing, to the physicist. It is hoped that Chemistry may soon be able to move into ,another building where the atmosphere, which is so great an inspiration to the students of that science, may he maintained with- out discomfort to others. The laboratories are well fitted up for the purpose of teaching Chemistry. The rooms are lofty, so as to give full scope to the elevating character of the science. The students are supplied with sets of reagents and locked cupboards. A three years' course in the subject is offered, and there is ample provision for post-graduate students who wish to do special work or undertake original inves- tigations. A touching aspect of the department is the fact that the Professor has to act as nurse to two poor orphans, Mineralogy and Geology. Mineralogy, the elder, is a model child and is always contented when well supplied with play- things. The nursery, we mean laboratory, is stocked with all the apparatus and collections necessary for 'its delectation and sustenance. Geology still feels strangely on account of its severance from its toygbox. But its good humor is restored by occasional visits to the museum. f f ,, MATHEMATICS. PROFESSOR STU DLEY. OR some years the course in Mathematics, as out- lined by the College curriculum, has been a matter of serious contention between Faculty and student. The recent efforts of the Sophomores to have Analytical Geometry made an elective, rather than a required study, as well as the half rebellious, half indifferent attitude of the class which preceded them, faintly yet forcibly bespeak the injustice which the regular student feels in l being compelled to do Work which should be expected only of the specialist. But the hardships of the Mathematical Department must not be exaggerated. Stoic resolution and endurance, incessant plodding and neglect of other subjects are usually sufficient to get a passing grade. Certainly no student will allow these trivial requirements to discourage him. That all were not born mathe- matical K' freaks is no reason why they may not become such, if their training be snfliciently long and arduous. After all, what is the real object of a college education? To develop the individual? To strengthen and reveal his nobler qualities? Rather, is it not, that he may be ground and polished by the cuifs of instruction and the rigor of repulsive discipline? The mental athlete must not be trained until he is first put into tl1e cast-iron mold of our College curriculum, and shaped to conform with our ideas of manly symmetry. This may result in stunting and deforming him somewhat, but it will suppress all personal irregularities. And when at last the time comes for perpetrating him upon the world, we see an admirable machine, capable of ben- efiting mankind in about the same manner that a corn-sheller does. A knowledge of the lower branches of Mathematics is quite valuable-indeed indispensable in practical life. But regarding the utility of its more abstract phases, even as a mental drill, we are in serious doubt. Injustice, however, let it be said that under our present instructor, the Department of Mathematics has become one of the strongest 3.1161 most thorough in the College, and ranks second to that of no other institution in the State. What it lacks in popularity it makes up in efficiency. Perhaps the former is but a result of the latter. HISTORY AND SOCIOLOGY. ' PROFESSOR TVTTLE. fav .. H 1 41 V .2 jf ii, M, 'hilt J - ' WP, , ' K . . Ns lv ff- fag' ll X HE GREAT social questions of the present are 'tif f-1 77' pressing upon us on every hand. Every -,-in is X xx ij ! thoughtful and educated man must be pre- T' X ' , X o 1 f 5 , pared to honestly face them, painstakingly and Q candidly grapple with them. No theories will T: I 5 -.1':l?::L. ':Fi'i' -A----H -f . . . . .V if f 3 s..53iQS:::,'. ' , suffice in the present crisis. Facts must be ' mi ':1'lT:: 's 9 .ffiiffzr w - - - - - - 7:67, 1 sought for, weighed, viewed in their relations 'f 'Z 'fi 31 .. ,-' r' X one to another. The facts of the present must also be regarded in their connection with the , 'f-.?fT-..... - I facts of the past. We must 11ote the genesis and the heredity of our present conditions. The study of history is, there- fore, indissolubly connected with the study of sociology. The historical spirit is necessary to the successful investigation of social problems. More- over, the facing of social questions tends, on the other hand, to cultivate a true instinct for historical investigation of a philosophical character. History, studied in the light of the present movements of society, can not be regarded as a mere aggregate of events, a chronicle of happenings. Rather must it be viewed as the record of lunnan progress. We look beneath events for the great moving principles. We are more interested in the changing social conditions of humanity through the ages than in the march of armies or the biographies of great leaders. And in studying these changing conditions, we seek for causes rather than recorded results. Especially within the limits of thought regarding our own republic are history and sociology clearly seen to be bound together. The best study of American history is that investigation of An1erica's progress, which, moving along the path of cause and effect, shows the development of our country politi- cally iinancially, industrially. Such a study as this is the necessary prepara- tion for full and frank handling of American social conditions to-day, and no college training can be adequate wl1ich passes these by. No young man is prepared for intelligent citizenship who does not tarry here for deep thought- Wabash, therefore, gives a large portion of the time of the Junior and Senior years to the work of the Department of History and Sociology. Political economy is rightly to be regarded as a part of Sociology. Its problems must be investigated from the point of view of history. Only the student of the historical school can reach satisfactory and abiding results here. The comparative method alone is broad, comprehensive, fundamental. It will cultivate that fearless, independent spirit which not only searches for truth, but, searching, perseveres unto its finding. In the Department of History and Sociology the student is taught to cultivate sustained and logical thought, he is trained to long-continued and patient investigation. As the course of study proceeds, these qualities are more and more insisted upon and emphasized. The seminary becomes an important adjunct to the class-room. The thorough mastery of some limited field and the preparation of a thesis, which is the fruitage of matured thought, is regarded as the best evidence of substantial work done. The unbiased and liberal spirit is constantly fostered, everything narrow and dogmatic is repressed and rejected. Especially is this to be emphasized in the consideration of current questions. The college student is to be trained for leadership, but he only is suited to lead whose mind is many-sided, who can see and receive truth from whatever quarter it may come. Sympathetic, comprehensive, symmetrical scholarship alone can meet tl1e needs of American life to-day in the realms of true politics and true citizenship. Such scholarship the college must strive to produce, and sl1e must not strive in vain. ELocu'rloN are CRATORT. f P it iMONG the new courses of instruction added to our College curric- ,5 ,ulum during the past year, none has received a more cordial welcome than that of Elocution and Oratory. The students are especially glad to see the old system of fossilized declamations and stilted 32'E0f?foratio11s replaced by something into which they can enter with V 'D greater zeal and profit. 63 The work this year has consisted mainly of debates, confined to the Junior and Senior classes, and has been ably conducted by Professor Cun- ningham. Commencing with next year, Professor Cunningham will confine himself entirely to work in Philosophy, and we shall have a Professor who will devote all his time to the Department of Oratory. Instruction in this depart- ment will, therefore, be much more extensive than hitherto. Professor James M. Chapman, now of St. johnsbury Academy, St. Johns- bury, Vt., who has had fifteen years experience as an instructor in elocution and has earned a wide reputation as a platform reader has been called to the Chair of Oratory in the College. It is expected that he will take up his work in this department with the beginning of the fall term. All students. both of the Pre- paratory and Collegiate Departments, will be under his instruction, in class exercises and also in private drill. The work will be a part of the curriculum, and will be carefully graded according to the advancement of the student. P We are looking forward with great expectations to the work of Professor Chapman, hopeful and assured that the time is near at hand when Wabash will take a high position in oratory among the colleges of the West. 1'-. r . ' s x I Q ,MSB N X 9 v ...5g:'f?,3 544 H 3 . K 59 f 7 V Q v , EZ! Class oF ,S-DB. COLORS: Cherry Red and Nile Green. VELL: Zip Za Boom, Rip Ra Reel All lhere, Worla s Fair! Hurrah for Ninely- Three ! ! Q 1,'I umnmmwi Colle e is a sta e and all her 111811-SOlllCl,l1l1CS women-are Zf53f4 f. ' g . g ' . ' . . ' merely dramalzs personm, who have thelr ausplclous entrances, fol- mdrmmlllllg lowed frequently by unpremeditated exits, and one man in his course undergoes many metamorphoses, his evolutions continuing through four years. At first the guileless and embryonic Freshman, hardly a man, but yet has hovered in adolescence beyond the required period. His early book was that of Nature, now short of leaves, but his cue demands thirteenth edi- tions of the latest approved. His incipient initiative relegates to the past the young bay tree, the rippling streams and meadows brown and sear. Life takes on a two-by-four investment of self'-complacency, and new-born pleasures, rising in unclouded radiance, unveil their gorgeous light to cast a dreadful darkness o'er the past. Thus, pleasure's calcium concludes tl1e first act. Now the proud and supercilious Sophomore, arrayed in conceit that apes humility, struts toward the proscenium. With neophytic art he cheats the eyes of the gallery critics, but falls prone before wisdomls phylac- teric touch. Pride unmixed with reason, and pleasures antagonistic to knowledge, at this juncture loosen their outer mantles, a11d judgment first dawns upon the mind. Still young-yet soft as young-the Sophomore be- gins to tread the unprimrose1uatic'l path of wisdom. His callow flights of wit here become fledged by a coalescence of fortuitous circumstances, and he disappears in a phantasm of revivification. Thus closes the second act with orchestral symphonies. A 'gh' yu .N 'nf -' . G , X gy:-vxgmvwnfvfp yi . fA,3w.1Mv 5.,w.3,w gz,,g'53'5gXa 1 1 va vrwmq r,fa 3?SA?L - llfwhl , IWIIHQ - If v Y gg X. . 59' - Ss 2 :fb 'L , ' 11. ', fin U, 5. , 1 an .. ,X v vm . , ,f H W er! 1 .fx- -4 Next appears the learned, yet slowly evolved, Junior, full of strange equivocations, and more or less bearded withal. He seeks in vain the bubble reputation, well knowing that time only matures excellence, and that fortune flatters only to betray. At this stage the fair Geralclinesn hear the sweet whisperings of love's devoted flame, and look and sigh, then sigh and look for coming generations, until at last they vanish in tl1e chinks that time has made. In the Junior period, love-in-idleness reaches its consummation, and all affection is but a simulated passion. Love to him is not an angel girt with golden rings, but a cold and colorless sentiment that blights all with its withering touch. Wrapped in a cloud of experience and pedestaled on a foundation of scientific and classical technicalities, the Junior disap- pears from the sce11e, a11d the third act is at an end. The dramatic denouemen! in the drama of collegiate life is reached when the Senior, like a full-blown rose, bursts the calyx of immaturity, and enters upon the scene with obsequious majesty. Untrammeled by servile and pas- sive subordination, l1e makes obeisance only to his own significance. He is not naturally great, but sometimes so by chance. For having in his patro11- age tl1e teachings of experience, grave and transcendent honors are thrust upon him. His investiture of noble and conscientious sincerity becomes an incentive to the neophyte, who will subsequently exert a like influence. With true regard for the varied sources of development which have aided i11 the molding of his character, the Senior bids adieu to ivied walls and endeared friends to tread a while upon the stage of life. I . . , X 1 . . - . N - i '1-?1:E:'i' P ...-. --ff ' f sa- 1 I ll gi frlm le A. f 'X ,f.,,1.,, ufvf' 9 A Ca: af' ew ,, , 2 Class oF ,94. 5...-QLY.-Q COLORS: Rm' ana' Black. Yi-ZLL: Hi Yi, Hipfri Ki, Whoop 1V0f,1Vl7lEfj'-fbllf. to LONE traveler wandered o'er a dreary desert for many a weary day. I, Longingly he sought for rest, and wearily scanned the distant horizon 3 ' , ' naught but unbroken sands, reflecting the parching heat, met his eager ca eye. Hungry was he and sad, and his tongue was parched and dry. Often had he turned aside, and hastened forward with eagerness, only to find that he was following the delusive mirage 1 hope was almost gone, faith was to him, indeed, the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen. Time wore heavily on, his shadow lengthened as the fiery orb sank from view in the western sky 5 the shade deepened into gloom, the gloo111 into sombre darkness, and yet he wandered on. 1 :K zl: :lf :ls :lc :lc :la al: It was morning. The Wayfarer had slept long and peacefully, but he now awoke. VVas he awake or yet dreaming? Astonishment possessed him. He no longer felt the desert sands beneath his feet, the scorching sun and dread simoon. Instead there burst upon his sight the vision of a beautiful land-an Eden in the desert. Here he found no delusive vision g but grassy, fertile plains, stately trees and abundance of fruit, shady forests, singing birds, and everything delightful. It was a grand place in which to live, and the exhausted traveler enjoyed the restg he had reached the Utopia of his dreams. A strange curiosity to know the cause of this wonderful transformation led him to pursue his journey farther into the heart of this inviting region. As l1e continued on his way, the farther he advanced, the more luxuriant became the vegetation, the more fertile the fields, the richer the fruits, the fairer the flowers, in fact his idea of perfection was fast being realized, when sudde11ly he ca1ne upon a mighty river, broad and deep, such as he nowhere else had seen, wending its way between mossy banks and through shady dells, now with a stately leisure R X . 5 mu af ,N X X iw wi if as gg X 4 XXQX H - A Qgffa rw,.f.42e f that marked it king of all its kind, and again, with an impetuous rush, as if to carry everything before it, and as if each several wave was racing to a goal. He lay him down and drank, and found its waters sweet and wholesome. He arose thinking of its source and determined upon an attempt to reach it. Ill this he was successful. It was not issuing fron1 the crevice of a rock in some romantic spot, as l1e expected, nor yet bursting from the ground in a ti11y spring 'neath some gigantic tree, kissed by the zephyrs that play in its shade, but it was formed by the happy union of many noble streams. Here our traveler halted on his way. His was no new discovery, for the fame of each individual stream had gone forth among men. From far and near they watched its flow with reverential awe as they beheld the waste place bring forth fruit, the desert place to bloom again. He turned himself and wandered along its bank, until weary, he lay himself to rest beneath a shady tree. Weary? Yes, for to l1im who follows this river's long and winding course, weariness indeed must comeg but there within the shadow of its productions, beneath the growth resultant from its flow, 'tis There the heart its aching ceases, There the weary be at rest. Thus he lay, a11d tl1us reflected and thought witl1i11 himself: Tl1e world is a desert place, and should these streams but separate again, and bearing each its share of this sweet magic power, go forth to dreary plains in distant lands, 110 more the earth tl1e false mirage would know, but the weary traveler would find there hope and- rest and joy like he himself. ,V -dxf ' K5 i, i-- ' 1 f, '5 4 if rv' 3 - be Y, -Y H .,.,,.-V Y- V - '-Y X 4514 X ' X44 Class QF ,95. COLORS: Cream and C'ara'i11a!. YELL: Wah Hoo, Wah Hoo, Wah Hoo, I-live! Wah Hoa, Wah Hoo, Ninety-Five!! is the mirror in which we behold the achievements of the past. Come, see what we have doneg it will not take you long. Though almost two years have passed since that memor- able day when tl1e career of '95 began, we look back to it as only yes- terday, partly on account of tl1e pleasure in which it has been spent, and partly on account of the little that we have done. With some patience the College had awaited the arrival of a truly great class. We entered, and their desires were more than satisfied. We have infused 11ew life into the old institutiong even the campus trees seem greener since their association with us. The first few weeks of our college career were full of good resolutions, hard study and honiesickness, but these are now things of the past. We had just begun to become accustomed to our surroundings when ,94 sent us a challenge to 1neet the1n on the bloody sands of the foot- ball arena. Were we actually in a foot-ball game, you ask? Well, there was a game but we weren't in it. Washington's birthday next arrived with its appeal for our attentiong and right here it must be said we reached the highest pinnacle of fame that we have yet attained, namely, the belfry on Center Hall. The heights by Freshmen reached and kept, XVere not attained in broad daylight, But they, while other clssmen slept, XVere climbing upward in the night. Longfellow must have been at Wabash when he wrote that, for he exactly describes the manner in which we reached the cupola, prepared to unfurl our banner. But at this juncture the scene changed. The watch- ,, , lm! ,,r,,, ,,., - ,,,..,,, ,,...,..i,,.f , .ww 5--1-2-.'...-,Aw 3- 1 m y , 3,31 Fw J,?:F,,!.J, R. mf fu, aw 5 v,f1m A , .5., .,v ,lllfif . ,. , ., 1 ri ' 'tt rl 1 , ' ' '.?i6A-aww? ..: ,.'.m' X f5'???T5W1!fQ wr3wfgwr:'fHW'??w1N:t11mwmfm'rN - a . .If'V.:- -nyfvf, X . ' ES' , M llrrhu, lmfla. 1 1 A .yqwa-g,. ...xx . . ,Q 1- f L ,ww .-,, ,Z 7 ' 1 , Q- ,J 1.3. .,1 ...x,,'.,-..4. .' ifwmk- ' 4 ' ' 1 . .. . VZ,-G'-TFi QT,1 'i f.- .,, , ,Fil Q., W, .1 X x , . -mf man on the tower announced the approach of tl1e enemy. Yes, in the dim moonlight we could see ,94 coming with ladders, canes, clubs and other appropriate paraphernalia, and from another direction the form of Professor Campbell began to loom up in the distance. At the appearance of the latter even '94 changed their minds. Then came in thundering tones these memorable words: Gentlemen, come down from that belfryg I command you, I am Professor Campbell. i' To sum it up, we lost our potential and came down from the roof like the proverbial brick. But though our Freshman year was brilliant, we must say no more of it lest it overshadow the consummate glory of our Sophomoric existence. Oh, what a change has come over us. The stormy, busy days are past, and we have drifted into the calm, smooth sea of sopliomorism, content to drift or lie at anchor. No more are we guilty of wasting the midnight oil. We have adopted as our motto the very appropriate quotation, Olizcm cum dzlgnilalej' which, however, is not easy to live up to under tl1e new regime. Yes, we are now third-term Sophomorels in all our glory, and in conclusion can make a few contrasts between our present state and what we were as Fresh- men. Our heads are larger, our hearts and purses smaller, our acquaintances more numerous, our friends fewerg more accomplislnnents, fewer virtues: larger feelings, smaller merits. In our College career we have been singularly unfortunate in all our under- takings, yet we know tl1at this is not due to any inherent fault, for no class more gifted or eilicient than our own has ever gone in and out of these College halls. But, sad as it may seem, we must yet confess that all hope for fame rests upon our future achievements, for upon our past record we can look o11ly with shame and regret. SX C' 6 li P ' ' gi ini' .-ii ' U iw ' ' I f . liiiifl. Q ' ' if gydf f , 4 A . X in 'f 525.1 W qllld iimix ,Hl X . ,, X! ' ' 7 , fi 3 f .1 N ,, ' I f ,, I fl . MJ ' ' e. N l W nn .L E-gf1 ,,Ti.g-ifjz' i ff! i , fu ' 1 IWW fu' ' 'ffl' I f 1 , ,Mx In fy A 44. Class QF i96. 9-A+++--5 COLORS: Lavender and Cream. YIQLL: Heike Aezix. Kezix, Kezix, Heike Kezix, Aezix, ltezix, Rah Rah, Ninety-S1'a'.' Rah Rall, N1'11ely-Six, Hoa Rah!! COLLEGE is a fallow field, in whose rich soil flourish many '....,. growths. We invite you to take a walk with us through this mysterious bit of land and examine with especial care the trees which are here under cultivation. The original managers of this farm evidently had an eye to strength above every other quality in their choice of species. However, it was doubt- less with 11ll1Ch curiosity, not to say anxiety, that those who, in 1833, drop- ped the first tiny acorn in this as yet untried soil, watched its gradual de- velopment until in '38 there stood a thriving young oak, tl1e earnest of many which have succeeded it. So admirably has this species been found to meet all requirements that succeeding managers have adopted it as a sort of standard, and as a result Wabash l1aS furnished much intellectual timber of which any college might well be proud. Each of the graduating classes, mighty oaks with far-reaching branches, has developed from the aforementioned tiny acorn carefully sown in the first year of Prepdom. We had thought it would always he thusg but, alas! the vanity of hu- man hopes! What see we here? A tree just beginning to thrust its puny form up from the cold, sterile ground of Prepdom into the fresh black soil, life-giving light a11d beneficent dews of college proper. Surely there has been some mistake. No promise is there here of the noble king among trees. 1 , wm- , ,I 'L w, fs 1 Jil 'J L fpv, Wai. 'Ffv 'ig V 1.2 11' , wi, 5333,-. '.3'3:'4 L g if.- P 'Q 1 ,E ' 4 3. 2 A Vx 4, f 1 rl' ' W uf H 5' A K., . A .. . 4,31 agp: 237- Q-iv' .sw A.. 'An i? 1- SH, WP - ..,. , EM, .H , 1 bs, A ' If z r - 4, .429 X rfb ? t ,- V 5 tif., ' -' 6' .affbg 13:2 1, ' Q iyffl ti nmg. A M, Upon closer scrutiny the mystery solves itself. Through some inadverteuce, doubtless, a peach-stone found lodging in this our College home, and taking root in the dirt which farmer jimls harrow failed to scrape off the floor of Old South Hall, sent up a feeble protest in the shape of the enigma before us. That we can not be mistaken, the budding fruitage bears witness. But what a pedigree that original seed must have had. There are all kinds and sizes in this remarkable crop, including both the smooth and rough-faced varieties. The former predominate, but now and then we find a peach contumaciously bold enough to wear whiskers, and though we may stand aghast at such phenomenal presumption, we await with patience canning day, when we know that tl1e quizzical paring-knife will remove skin, whiskers and all. It is with fearful tremblings that we think of the uncertain future be- fore this new experiment in college horticulture. But it is not the province of this history to enter into minute prophe- cies, nor is it its purpose to deal with existing facts in any but the most charitable manner, yet, as to the latter, when we contemplate the unqual- ified gall and withal innocent freshness with which the members of '96 individually and collectively are wont to assume to themselves the wis- dom of many Solons, our gentle, modest peach tree turns as by magic before our eyes into an egotistic young rooster who, to use the words of Geo. Eliot, thinks the sun rises only to hear him crow. f'N N ,, , -W ML . , -L Q aff kid .jilvx A ghd U- w ill Cf ljf1 'm: - I ,XX ci, if A, E7 i fa fra w e ll I IH MBMQRIAM. BLACKFORD MILLS CONDIT CLASS or '92. HORN, DECEM R QTH, 1871. DIED, JUNE IST, 1892. I1-1 MBMORIKM. JAMES HARRIS ADAMS. CLASS or 'Q3. BORN, NOVIQMIII-:R 4'r1-I, 1867. DIED, JUNE 9TH, IS92. AI 4 I fW,.,,,m 1 0 1 N I K 1 X x x .B . 1 ', ' 'v .L V . N FRATERNITIES IN ORDER OF THEIR ESTABMSHMENT I I ig. QQ jg ,... --..,, BETA THETA PI. PHI DELTA THETA. PHI GAMMA DELTA PHI KAPPA PSI. SIGMA CHI. ALPHA THETA PHI. Y yum 4 ,s ,-f'f'!Vf T! VA , mx :ffl ' u if 5'1if 'h -Q A4 'ik glr ' .':- ,Q . w 2 -3' ,, 1' 3 I r ' 4 ! l 4 ' - , .1 , V 1 ,X ur, , V , W It Q Y M 4 f nw- Q ' I . I , Baia Theia Pi. l-----TAU cnAr1'Ex - Prof. j. L. Campbell. Prof. H. Z. McLain. Hon. M. W. Bruner. S. C. Campbell. N. P. Keen. Fred T. McCain. Curtis B. Mather. Fred W. Lamb Charles F. Embree. ESTABLISHED 1845. Si? Fratres in Urbe. Col. I. C. Elstun. Rev. T. D. Fife. Prof. R. A. King. R. S. Thomson. Dr. H. E. Greene. Frau-es in Collegio. ...T.,93.l john A. Blair. ........?94 Roh't M. johns. Win. . 995 Louis G. Witherspoon. G. J. Welborn. Homer O. Allen. ..-.i796...-..... O. P. Welborn. J. Collins Thompson. F. Fry. S. A. Trout. J. A. Greene. A. A. McCain. L. S. Durham. Philip F. Greene. H. H. Ruston. john C. Fry. Andrew S. Nelson Joe. Condit. k -...M up -my-Qu, .,..,f --'Q'ddi L' ' ' 1-mov-,.,, Harvard . Brown . Boston . . . Maine State . . Amherst. . . Dartmouth . . Wesleyan . . Yale . . . Rutgers . . Stevens . . . Cornell . . St. Lawrence . Colgate .... Union. . . Columbia . . Syracuse . . Dickinson . . . Johns Hopkins Pennsylvania State Lehigh .... Hampden-Sidney North Carolina . Virginia. . . Davidson . . . Baia Theta Pi. FOUNDED AT IVILAXVII UNIVERSITY, 1889. Richmond .... Randolph Macon Centre ..... Cumberland . . Mississippi . Vanderbilt . Texas .... COLORS:-Pink and Blue. WN Sl? ROLL OF CHAPTERS. . . Eta. . . Kappa. . . Epsilon. . . Beta Eta. . Beta Iota. . Alpa Omega. . .Mu Epsilon. . . Phi Chi. . . Beta Gannna. . .Sigma . . Beta Deta. . . Beta Zeta. . . Beta Theta. . .Nu. . Alpha Alpha. . . Beta Epsilon. . . Alpha Sigma. . . Alpha Chi. College . . . Beta Chi. . Alpha Upsilon. . Zeta. . . Eta Beta. . . Omicron. . . Phi Alpha. . . Alpha Kappa. . . Xi. . . Epsilon. . . Mu. . . Beta Beta. . . Beta Lambda. . . Beta Omicron. Miami ...... University of Cincinnati . . Ohio .... . Western Reserve Washington-jetTerson . . . Ohio Wesleyan . Bethany . Wittenberg . Denison . . Wooster. . Kenyon . . Ohio State . DePauw . . Indiana . . Michigan . Wabash . . Hanover. . Knox .... Beloit . . University of Iowa Iowa Wesleyan . Wisconsin. . . Northwestern . . Minnesota. . . Westminster . Kansas . California . . Denver . . Nebraska . Missouri . Alpha. Beta Nu. Beta Kappa. Beta. Gamma. Theta. Psi. Alpha Gamma. Alpha Eta. Alpha Lambda Beta Alpha. Theta Delta. Delta. Pi. Lambda. Tau. Iota. Alpha Xi. Chi. Alpha Beta. Alpha Epsilon Alpha Pi. Rho. Beta Pi. Alpha Delta. Alpha Nu. Omega. Alpha Zeta. Alpha Tau. Zeta Phi. C. W. Eltzroth. D. N. Morgan. Rev. E. B. Thouison. T. H. Ristine. james B. Garner. Charles S. Little. Royal H. Gerard. Harry R. Applegate. EDI-1? Dqlia . l'he':a. INDIANA BETA CHAPTER-1-'Q ES'rAnI.lsHl-:n 1852. slb 415 Fratres in Urbe. C. M. Travis. Ira McConnell. W. F. Sharpe. F. G. Sharpe. Ristine, M. D. Herbe -I. E. Neff. Rev. J. W. Greene W. S. Moffett. Frank Hurley. rt Tllonlson. Frntres in Colleglo. -T993..i. Edgar W. Olive. William W. Wilson. ' '94l G. E. Mayhew. .....995-.l Lloyd Haumlond. Walter M. Curtis. -,.J96 Harry Clark. N. H. Richardson. Paul M. RllO2lLlS. XVz1lter I. Snider. Claude C. Travis. Harry W. Little. E xp it but nk . 11 1 -4 Phi Delia Theta. FOUNDED 1848, MIAMI UNIVERSITY. Colby University. Dartmouth College. University of Vermont. Williams College. Amherst College. Brown University. Cornell University. Union University. Syracuse University. LaFayette College. Pennsylvania College. COLORS :-Argent and Azure. ROLL OF CHAPTERS. Centre College. Central University. University of Georgia. Emory College. Mercer University. Vanderbilt University. University of the South. University of Alabama. Alabama Polytechnic Institute. Southern University. University of Mississippi. ' Butler University. Franklin College. Hanover College. DePauw University. Purdue University. University of Michigan. State College of Michigan. Hillsdale College. Northwestern University. Knox College. Illinois Wesleyan University. Washington and jefferson Col. Tulane University of La. Lombard University. Allegheny College. University of Texas. University of Wisconsin. Dickinson College. Southwestern University. University of Missouri. University of Pennsylvania. Miami University. Westminster College. Lehigh University. Ohio Wesleyan University. Washington University. Roanoke College. Ohio University. Iowa Wesleyan University. University of Virginia. University of Wooster. State University of Iowa. Randolph-Macon College. Buchtel College. University of Minnesota. Richmond College. Ohio State University. University of Kansas. Washington and Lee Univer'y. Indiana University. University of North Carolina. Wabash College. South Carolina University. New York, N. Y. Pittsburgh, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. Baltimore, Md. Washington, D. C. Richmond, Va. University of Nebraska. University of California. Leland Stanford, jr.,University .,,1.,+. ROLL OF ALUMNI CHAPTERS. Columbus, Ga. Atlanta, Ga. Nashville, Tenn. Montgomery, Ala. Selina, Ala. Cincinnati, O. Akron, O. Kansas City, Mo. Louisville, Ky. Minneapolis, Minn. Franklin, Ind. St. Paul, Minn. Indianapolis, Ind. San Francisco, Cal. Chicago, Ill. Los Angeles, Cal. Galesburg, Ill. Ph? Gamma DQY'Ea. Y.Sl CHAPTER. Es-munrsnnn 1866. A ai? Fratres in Urbe. Gen. Lew XVal1ace. Ben Crane. Hon. J. Maurice Thompson. NV. E. Rosebro. H. H. Ristine. XV. XV. Cllipmau. W. W. Hammel. S. M. Dague. H. W. Duckworth. Fratres in Collegio. A. McKee. ..l..793.1. F. L. Cutter. ,....994...-? ..?.995.-.i C. G. Dochterman. M. S. McDonald. -......!96......... A. D. Richey. C. McKee. Moore. C. L. Thoulpson G. S. McCluer. C. M. Zeuer. H. C. Hall. F. L. Trout. 5 Ph? Gamma Delia. FOUNDED AT VVASI-IINGTON, PENNSYLVANIA, 1848. Mass. Inst'te of Technology . Worcester Polytechnic . . Yale ....... College of City of N. Y . . Columbia ..... University of City of'N Y . Colgate ...... Cornell ...... Washington and jefferson . University of Penn Bucknell ..... Pennsylvania. . . Allegheny. . . Muhlenberg. . LaFayette .... Lehigh ...... Penn. State College johns Hopkins . . University of N. Carolina University of Virginia. . . Roanoke ..... Hampden-Sidney . Chattanooga, Tenn Columbus,O . . . Kansas City, Mo. . Cleveland,O . . . COLOR :-Royal Purple. ROLL OF CHAPTERS. Iota Mu. Pi Iota. Nu Deuteron. Upsilon. Omega. Nu Epsilon. Theta Psi. Kappa Nu. Alpha. Beta. Delta. Xi. Pi Epsilon Deuteron. Sigma Deuteron. Beta Chi. Gamma Phi. Beta Mu. . Epsilon. Ornicron. Beta Deuteron. Delta Deuteron. Washington and Lee . Richmond ...... Marietta ...... Wittenberg. . . Ohio Wesleyan . . Denison . . . Ohio State . . Wooster ..... Ann Arbor ...,. Indiana University . , DePauw ...... Hanover ..... Wabash ...... Illinois Wesleyan . . Knox ........ University of Minn . . Bethel ........ University of Tenn . . University of Kansas . Wm. Jewell ...... University of California . . Leland Stanford,jr . . GRADUATE CHAPTERS. Delta. Epsilon. Zeta. Eta. Williamsport, Pa. . . Seattle, Wash ..... Chicago, Ill ...... Zeta Deuteron. Rho Chi. Eta. Sigma. Theta Deuteron. Lambda Deutcron OmicronDeuteron Rho Deuteron. Alpha Phi. Zeta. Lambda. Tau. Psi. Alpha Deuteron. Gamma Dcutcron Mu Sigma. Nu. Kappa Tan. Pi Deuteron. Zeta Phi. Delta Xi. Lambda Sigma. Theta. Iota. Kappa. Southern Alumni Association, Baltimore, Md Prof. A. B. Milford. Prof J. H. Osborne S. B. Thomas. Ed. McCulloch. W. O. Braxton Carpenter. C. C. Hufiine. Sennett Kirk. Augustus. Ph? Kappa PSY- INDIANA GAMMA CHAPTER--A-W-A - I':STAHI.lSllED 12472. il? Fralres in Urbe. E. E. Ballard. Chester Britton. Will Goltra. Fratres in Collegio. . .,931 J. H. Armstrong. John Meteer. .......994....... .996 Harry Kline. A. LeRoy Piser. Howard Sideuer. Frank Hendrich. Frank Crawford. Hon. F. M. Dice. Hon. A. B. Anderson W. Von Hutchings. Arthur Yount. Ralph Wilkins. Ray Mutz. WL U U Phi Kappa Psi. FOUNDED 1852, VVASHINGTON AND JEFFERSON COLLEGE. COLORS :-Pink and Lavender. als ROLL OF CHAPTERS. Washington and jefferson Col. Colgate University. Bucknell University. Dickinson College. Allegheny College. Pennsylvania College. Franklin and Marshall Col. LaFayette College. University of Pennsylvania. Swartlnnore College. Cornell University. Syracuse University. Hobart College. Pittsburgh Alumni Association. New York Alumni Association. Philadelphia Alumni Association. Cincinnati Alumni Association. Springfield Alumni Association. University of Virginia. Washington and Lee Univ'y. Hampden-Sidney College. University of West Virginia. johns Hopkins. Columbian University. University of South Carolina. University of Mississippi. Ohio Wesleyan University. Wittenberg College. Wooster University. Ohio State University. A --ago...-..Y A... . DePauw University. Indiana State University. Wabash College. Northwestern University. Michigan University. Wisconsin State University. Beloit College. Iowa State University. Minnesota State University. Kansas State University. University of Pacific. Leland Stanford, jr.,Univers ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS. Cleveland Alumni Association. Maryland Alumni Association. Chicago Alumni Association. Minneapolis Alumni Association. Kansas City Alumni Association. ity Paul C. Barons, M. D. H. T. King. XV. K. Martin. THINGS B. Waugh. Sigma Ch?- DELTA CUHI CHAPTER I41s'rAm.lslmn xxso. SIG Fratres in Urbe. XV. J. Evans. Geo. T. Durham. M. H. Binford. Lee Smith. Fratres in Collegio. '93,i. O. E. Acker. -?'94T-1 james A. Harding. !95...-..- P. A. Reynolds A. E. Reynolds Rev. Ed. Lune. Ed. B. Cotton. Nicholas Harrison. Luke Wood. 1,796 1 Roy Mowers. Parke Hunter. Floyd Woods. Guy Cramer. C. C. I-Iuffer. Wm. j. Murdoc Harry Morgan. sa- 4... -F, ,hw ,V . w,...,,, W--1 . I FOUNDED Miami . . . Wooster .... . Ohio Wesleyan .... . Washington and Lee ,... Universitypof Mississippi . Pennsylvania College ...- Bucknell ....... . India11a . - - Denison . . . DePauw . . . . Dickinson . . . . Butler . . . . . Hanover . ..,.. . . University of Virginia . . . Northwestern .... . Randolph-Macon. . . - Purdue ...... . Wabash . . Centre .......... University of Cincinnati . University of Michigan . . Washington, D. C. Indianapolis, Ind. LaFayette, Ind. Sigma Chi- 1855, MIAMI UNIVERSITY, COLORS:--Light Blue and Old Gold. alt ROLL OF CHAPTERS. . Alpha. Beta. Gamma. Zeta. . Eta. Theta. . Kappa. Lambda. . Mu. Xi. Omicron. Rho. Chi. Psi. . Omega. Gamma Gamma. Delta Delta. . Delta Chi. . Zeta Zeta. . Zeta Psi. Theta Theta. OXFORD, o. University of Illinois . . I-Iampden-Sidney . . Hobart ......... University of California . Ohio State ........ University of Nebraska . Beloit .......... Mass. Inst. of Technology Illinois Wesleyan .... University of Wisconsin C. University of Texas . . . University of Kansas . . Tulane ....... . Albion ........ University of Minnesota . University of N. Carolina University of S. California, Cornell ......... Pennsylvania State . . . ALUMNI C New York, N. Y. Chicago, Ill. Kappa Kappa. Sigma Sigma. Alpha Alpha. Alpha Beta. Alpha Gamma. . Alpha Epsilon. Alpha Zeta. . Alpha Theta. Alpha Iota. . Alpha Lambda Alpha Nu. Alpha Xi. Alpha Oniicron Alpha Pi. Alpha Sigma. Alpha Tau. Alpha Epsilon. Alpha Phi. Alpha Chi. Vanderbilt ...... . Alpha Psi. Leland Stanford, jr. . . Alpha Omega. HAPTE RS. Louisville, Ky. Cincinnati, O. San Francisco, Cal. Columbus, O. FXYPHE THQ? PH?- FOUNDED AT VVABASI-I COLLEGE, 1890. COLORS :-- Ola' Rose and Olive Green. Fratres in Cnllegio. , -J93,.? J, C. Van Nuys. H. C. D. D. D. Hains. W. R. Davidson. H. H. E. W. Johnson. L- Starr. 7q4.l. Stevens 196--T Herdman. L. D. You W. Ii. Vanderbilt nt. B. C. Downey. j. H. Biuford. fs f fi? F v ,Q f wg '.-.4-,,, I- , :MT1:f2:Ifr:f1rff'?F,'W.'f'1'kTW' 1 -Y ' I f K -Hz.. ,grw'.f5gw:'fwgwf11 f W ,5:,yxr,.u :Jaw 1 . g v.-, K .ffwg-I, .. -V 1. 4-.. X . , T' , - M K N A ,M . . , r- TY.. ' :X 1 + i55 ? F5', V. 1, 3' Fifi L 1 1, ml. 'ww 5. Y Wu , :'y,w,m..J, 3 M Q N :M A 1 if , Qv Q Wi:-' a+'fv'W- f - . - fn fig 2 ' tri 'Y'-,1 'r., .-ff ., A ,, M4142- fivlg v- my , Lf5I5,Y:fF gg, ff' , :lx wx .. WM EMT, 'TN ,. is A QIQY. -' 'V ,. .. A, ,, w ,4 L ., 3--ri : ff-me gf- ,,..f,M.,l.,,+,f. Y .,.,, F-1' : 1 JA' V ' --953 Qiiihii QM . . ' , ,few-vwfrf' Q r Aff . ' ' Q3-gii.. .r I H 1 -w-... .-f-.f - ., -- .-s., F, 1 . - ff.. A .:.,. ., A ' .y -v.1,.,,- 3.4 mv.. . . X, .W ..y , TH, Q gal., . Q , :Q-Wiz, , Q 5,v7gm,... . fm 14 3, 4431! A ,wk V4 1, ,Q Wg ,K I E L.:.-Sian 3' ww, , , W .EQQI Q W-,, M- -L-cu. RT iv.,-V., 5 . .mp mdgm ,f,.. . -ww , ..w.PVV 143 -, ' K , ,gum T?-L - ,f 'Qi w 2 yn, , 1, V fr :..,:,. .- -- l ' ,,J, , . ,nw , x. , 1 1 '11, V , ,. . ,K , Qi1 ..w.ff , X , ..j,'1.Y,1h,,.f..,., . , V . F5'f.'f'.w A' M!- s. 5411. 1 A' .4f,.41..1g4',-ga Nav , U -.'.2v.mm'-1 , ,. N .. '-:1-- 1 f.5A'-'-ZF'-'AAYN .' N -2- l7m'slcAL CULTURE. -f- PROFESSOR HORTON. ABASH COLLEGE has adopted the principle that the complete development is an all round development. She has perceived where her weakness lay and has set about it to strengthen her- self. It was 1lOt intended that man should spend all his youth in the pursuit of intellectual growth to a degree that would break down the neglected physique. Wabash no longer proposes to send out weakened ships to sink beneath an intellectual load. This she seeks to preve11t not by diminishing the cargo but by increasing the capacity. To this purpose there was founded the present Department of Physical Culture. As this is a Christain College, a suitable physical development was not to be thought of under the immediate influences of French novels, odious chemicals, and heart-rending moans of animals sacrificed for dear science's sakeg accordingly the Trustees of the College sought a home for us in the restful realms of the Y. M. C. A., and found there a proper atmosphere in which to train the student mind Qand bodyj how to shoot --the horizontal bar. The department labors at a great disadvantage by having its pure Eng- lish misunderstood. We do not consider it child-like t0 play at horse, nor are we to be taken as common circus property because fancy acts are done between the rings. We admit students to the bar at the end of one week. The club drill is a preparation for admission to the Order of Foot- pads or to the ranks of the Metropolitan Police Force. The wand drill admits its graduates without examination to the mysteries of legerdemain. If space permitted we would gladly free foot-ball from its unjust censure as a brutal game. Why should it not be called the Gentleman's Game? Do not tl1e elile of our young ladies delight in a touch-down, or why else should they show a lack of preference for the beardless youth? It is well known in domestic circles how a gridiron rush restores peace and quiet to the home. The crying need of the College now is for a fund from the Alumni with which to erect near the athletic field a commodius gymnasium, with baths and dressing rooms. I wwf, W. 2 ef 514, yi il T' '93 55. E flop EJ, - lm.. gg e :-Q Q iii-l.!ii'i1:ilhsdigM!2 x l 0 .- . 9 , ,N Q 1 BQ, pix 'V 1 '-N 1. fgQ':2'f3 4512?-Q - f ?'f ' 'fir' -F W W , su 33 f fa, fig? X...4 1 gf? z A 1- 42. ,-fav-7 if 'ez I 'x ff' Q ' ' I W - 1 , 5 - '+A-x.efg3' ',-'i1-Q 7 ' Z, W Ylim iii Q s i , PQ. 2 T Af- f ,A ,, E N1 Q ' ' . ' ii. li ' 4 CW, iq, 4- 5-Ng gig, p w e X U' 93:3 if-5 :E rg ii G 'ff Q L:.F? :Li ritz: S ,Ip 3' vf, if , Tia vii. QQ TT Qf 6 Lf .js-4 f X -,'1',N 04 5-75 w-f - ' air' -1-as-i Q fl -vb A,-J 5' N ww J v ,, ,Lf . 2541 J Q V -..-:ff 25 Afii-33 ' N :ci-L54 S5 - I J1o.sm.+Trf. : ?? ' ' x 6 5 is V 5 Babe-52acL?P. .:, W?-CCDl..l...IF.IC3 E 'l EAlVId'+-- .:, J. C. VAN NUYS . . . ,MANAGER G. S. MCCLUER . . . .CAP'rA1N. P. F. GREENE, p. GAYLORD MCCLUER, ISt b. R. L. TODD, 1. f. THAD. R. BAKER, s. WILL VON HUTCHINGS, 2d b. A LUKE WOOD, c. fl V. MARTIN, c. ROB'T ,M. JOHNS, 3d b. J. E. FRY, r. fl W. A. HIGGINS, sub. CLIFFORD MCBRIDE, sub. loci:-be-SQJQPP. M--CLASS TEAMS ee-- SENIORS. J. H. METEER .... . . Manager. J. A. BLAIR ..... . . Captain. D. M. Kingery, c. P. F. Greene, p. J. H. Meteer, Ist b. W. V. Hutchings, 2d b. P. M. Rhoads, s. I. A. Blair, 3d b. F. C. Cutter, l. f. W. W. Wilson,'c. f. I. C. Van Nuys, r. f. BOPHOMORES. L. G. WITHERSPOON .... Manager. J.B.GR1r'F1'rH . . . . .Captain J. L. Hammond, p. H. O. Allen, c. J. E. Fry, s. s. J. B. Griffith, Ist b. W. A. Higgins, 2d b. H. M. Ball, 3d b. C. B. Mather, l. fi L. G. Witherspoon, c. f. C. E. Robinson, r. f. O Q., JUNIORS. L. M. GENTRV ....... Manager R. M. JOHNS . . . . . Captain, H. H. Bushnell, c. R. M. johns, p. W. O. Augustus, s. s. L. M. Gentry, lst L. XV. Fry, 2d b. C. S. Little, sd b. J. W. McKee, l. f. A. J. Stott, c. f. G E. Mayhew, r. f. FRESHMEN. A. P. HUFFER ....... Manager. BRANDT C. DOWNIQV .... Captain. B. C. Downey, c. H. H. Herdman, p. A. P. Huffer, S. S. Guy A. G. Cramer, Ist b. Sennett Kirk, 2d b. J. Collins Thompson, 3d b. C. C. Hulline, 1. f. R. L. Todd, c. fi H. W. Little, r. f. ,Af -R -If: G-'1oUND'5 I 1 1 - 50012-5230.95 Q- Q-COLLEGE ELEVEN---W W. V. HUTCHINGS. . . . .MANAGIQR J. A. BLAIR ...... . . .CAP'rA1N. J. H. METEER, C. r. C. B. KERN, r. g. G. C.ASHMAN,1. g. RAY MUTZ,'r. t. HARVEY wYN1'aKooP, 1. r. C. S. LITTLE, r. c. C. M. GENTRY, 1. e. J. C. FRY, q. b. IRA WYNEKOOP, r. h. b. W. F. FRY, 1. h. b. J. A. BLAIR, f. b. J. C. VAN NUYS, sub. H. 0. ALLEN, sub. Boot-2aa?P. 01, 1--CLASS EI-EVENSWH '- oz. ' SENIORS. . JUNIORS. J. H. METEER .... . . Manager. C. S. LITTLP: ........ Manager T. E. DEMAREE ....... Captain. L. M. GENTRV ....... Captain. W. E. Vanclerbilt, r. e. H. H. Bushnell, C. r. A. A. Hughart, r. t. W. P. McClaskey, r. 5.5. J. H. Armstrong, r. g. J. V. Willigan, 1. g. J. H. Meteer, c. r. A. J. Stott, r. t. J. C. Van Nuys, 1. g. H. E. Wynekoop, 1. t. T. E. Demaree, 1. t. C. Gentry, r. e. L. E. Acker, 1. e. S. W. Malone, 1. e. J. A. Blair, q. b. R. M. Johns, q. b. W. Von I-Iutcliings, r. li. b. Wm. Fry, 1, 11. lx. E. M. McCu1loc11,l. 11. b. L. Gentry, r. h. b. F. C Cutter, f. b. C. S. Little, f. b. SOPHOMOREB. FRESHMEN. M. C. MCDONAI,lJ ...... Manager. O. P. YVELBORN ....... Manager J. C. FRY ...... . . Captain. A. P. HUF!-'ER ....... Captain. H. C. Hall, c. r. Chas. E. Combrink, c. r. C. ll. Kern, r. g. B. W. Carpenter, r. g. G. C. Aslnnan, 1. g. . H. C. Clark, 1. g. C. H. Leech, r. t. Guy A. G. Cramer, r. t. C. M. Gregg, 1. t. W. R. Davidson, l. t. J. B. Griffith, r. e. August Sonne, r. e. D. D. Haines, 1. e. F. W. Lamb, 1. e. L. G. Witherspoon, q. b. A. P. Huffer, q. b. Ira Wynekoop, r. h. b. Percy A. Parry, r. 11. b. W. O. Allen, l. h. b. J. L. Lardner, 1. h. b. J. C. Fr , f. b. Harr W. Little, f. b. Y Y VW' J 1 f f .M N . 1 W I , r L q igJg.. . .G-'-v A :bw-:-: -. -2- ' 11 ' . B .-1 '5','Inx-N '. l:4'fif:f. , , ...,+., ' I X. 'Lf - X I?:ES '1 ' Nfff wf ff f I ' .iff p 1 ' ' . , , 'f -'..-7-'7.+T'iaE-L'-:':f5x': N ff - I - A ff'--:-.-1-.. -...---'NX-g x-'N f 'I R - 4 f,fg45?'5'-- - ' ' - ' - -'-frspx f I x. X ,442 1' ' - '.. 1 .-New-fqb g I 5, if' -L : -. - j 9 TIN -f ff ' ,1 X Q 5 X N V I ' f - -' . . - . 1 . - f f ,, - .. ui? ' :I , L ' 2. 1 .' . 'f 1 ' Q f el - Q ' Q. ' ' . - f 5, . iz- FS - K 3:35. - . -X 4 1, ' I-if ' . 42. at - i - - 53 '--C. , -f I , :,.-j' fr, gd.,-, - A V' .. L4-51,1-j',4:4.fj 5 1. 1 ff z. 51.559 f., LL. - .': x X -s - Q .A . . N , Q 1, -in I' f . X -. 2' -1 X. I ,' X N4 6 ' 'I ' Q, ,' ,IZ 5' I5 I ' I IW' xv- 1 Ms X I f L f 1 av I . , -V X A , 9 , I I .Egg 33, ,D f I 2 'NN . . .BETA THETA PI TENNIS CLUB. PHI DELTA THETA TENNIS CLUB. PHI GAMMA DELTA TENNIS CLUB. PHI KAPPA PSI TENNIS CLUB. SIGMA CHI TENNIS CLUB. ALPHA THETA PHI TENNIS CLUB THE TYPOS TENNIS CLUB. C.-.N.L.,Q,,CwVM TENNIS Tollxnnnnnr. SINGLES. DOUBLES. N. P. KEEN, First. N. P. KEEN, , First. W. I. ABBOTT, Second. R. M. JOHNS, CLIFFORD MCBMDE, M. S. q Second. MCDONALD, vi-Q .-,Q 4 E--lv H ' X 'ig' Mfg d ll iwiwlj fil l T i W f - V X 153914-1 lx fr ra- .rj 7 -D 5.412-4u,,.f ,W VW HIP -l. rj .xx I X3 Af- x 'Ls n AL an ,, - .- rx. - .1 , 'A V t. Ik I .. 1'! X xx -r I AS? EN! ' f 1 'D bl XXX 1 i ,x',4 Fi.- - in x 1355! 'f X L, if 2 : 'fn ' XZTN , YY, Emlll '7. ' -1, ,Ax QE -'.-Q' 11,1 x. f M Qi 2 -,, f r w. .lie 1- fit 7 ,.,, 1 A EL, L-A!.x!1'Aiw5NX I K nife w X rf . X P -'xx '- ,,'4 i fa 1 S ':.3.' n rf . ,S x ' Nj ' -, . Q, . J .,.' fl- 4 .. ,JL W.O. AUGUS'1'U:-2 . . N. P. KICICN ..... I'. M. RHUAIJS .... L. G. W1TH1':Rs1'ooN . lf. M. Gregg. J. II. Meteor. C. M. Gregg. M. S. Mcllonalrl. Frank IC. Hcnclrich. Ross Moore. N. C. Riclizlrdson. Prof. Milford. OFFICERS. MEMBERS. N. P. Keen. P. M. Rhoads. XV. O. Augustus. B. W. Carpenter. G. J. Wclhorn. J. C. Tliompson. Frost Trout. IIONORARY MIEMIZERS. Prof. Tllonlas. President. Corresponding Secretary. Captain. First Lieutenant. Ii. M. McCullough. C. M. Zener. II. C. Hall. C. S. Little. L. G. Witherspoon. W. C. Montgomery. Prof. Horton. Hare ana Jliouncl 5516. W. Ii. Vanderbilt. C. B. Mather. J. A. Blair. I-IARES. J. L. IIAMMOND . . C. S. Little. W. W. Chipnmn. B. C. Downey. P. F. Greene. G. J. XVelborn. C. C. Travis. W. R. Davidson, Roy Mowers. A. Yount. H. B. Hostetter. HOUNDS. Ii. W. Olive. T. E. Deineree N. P. Keen. . . Hound Master. F. C. Cutter. J. C. Fry. H. O. Allen. Roy Gerard. C. C. Hufline. J. A. Little. A. P. Huffer. XV. A. Higgins R. M. johns. H. N. Mount. ohllafelilc Jxt-Bmocicdlon. T--,I4-.1-1. OFFICERS. R. M. JOHNS . . ........ . . . President. J. E. FRY . . . . . .Vice-President J. W. MCKEE . . . . . Secretary. C. B. KERN . . . . ......... Treasurer. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. R. M. Johns. J. A. Blair. Lloyd Hammond. C. Little. w. lf. Fry. BASE-BALL COMMITTEE. H W. V. Hutchins. J. H. Armstrong. F. C. Cutter. FOOT-BALL COMMITTEE. XV. V. Hutchins. J, A, Blair, J. C. Fry. TENNIS COMMITTEE. G. J. Welborn. M. S. McDonald. P. M. Rlxoads. FIELD-DAY COMMITTEE. G. M. Zener. G. J. Welboru. C. B. Kern. Eiefgl.-Qctg. CGD ---Tl-IIRD ANNUAL FIELD-DAYi HELD AT FAIR GROUNDS, MAY 24, 1892. THE FOLLOWING RECORDS WERE MADE: One Hundred Yards Dash-C. S. Little, Ist, O. E. Acker, 2d. 'Flll1C, 105 sec. Throwing Hammer-II. C. Rice, ISlLQ J. C. Van Nuys, 211, 78 ft. 4 in. One-fourth Mile Safety- L. G. Witherspoon, lst, Paul Zimnierinann, 211. Time, 421 sec One Mile Run-joe Herron, Ist, C. B. Mather, 2d. Time, 5 Illlll. 155 sec. Standing High junip-J. A. Blair, 1st, F. M. Erickson, 211. 4 ft. 7 i11. Hurdle Race--O. E. Acker, lSll1 A. T. Martin, 211. Time, 175 sec. High Kick---Inglis, ist, I-I. C. Rice, 211. 9 ft. 2 in. Pole Vault-J. A. Blair, lst, L. G. Witherspoon, 2d. S ft. 6 in. One Mile Walk-W. E. Vanderbilt, ISlLQ O. E. Acker, 211. 8 min. 8 sec. Two Hundred and Twenty Yards Dash-C. S. Little, ist, C. B. Mather, 211. Time, 225 sec. Running Broadjump-H. G. Alle11, Ist, McClaskey, 2d. 18 ft. IO ill. One Mile Bicycle-L. G. Witherspoon, lst, Paul Zinnnerinan, 2d. Time, 3 n1in. 33 sec. Standing Broad jump-II. O. Allen, 1st, Paul Rhoads, 2d. 9 ft, 7 ill. One-fourth Mile Run-C. S. Little, 1st, C. B. Mather, 2d. Time, 1 llllll. 4 sec. Putting Sixteen Pound Shot- H. C. Rice, 1st, A. T. Martin, 211. 335 feet. Hop, Step and jump-H. O. Alle11, 1st, Mctllaskey, 2d. 39 ft. 2 i11. Running High Juinpe-W j. A. Blair, Ist, O. E. Acker, 211. 5 ft. 2 i11. Throwing Base Ball--V. Martin, ISU McC1uer, 2d. 310 ft. Tennis Doubles-Keen and johns, ist, McBride and McDonald, 2d. Tennis Singles-N. P. Keen, ist, W. I. Abbott, 2d. ' .... At State Field Day, wl1icl1 was held at Terre Haute, May 27, 1892, Wabash came off as usual with flying colors. J. A. Blair broke the State record in the Pole Vault, and W. D. Inglis broke tl1e record i11 the High Kick. J. Herro11 received second ill tl1e Mile Run, Va1111erbilt received first in tl1e Mile Walk, and many second and third places were secured for the scarlet. X :vw- 51 ff! 4,3-q 5. IAF' WCQ H65 'SI-'immlfzeg r-'OMS of Hggc s1feQ'fQl.glqjr Awe gemngm WIHZ npqoy A SEQ, BJ 426 ARP 101011 glow of Ped f1r1-u-IBJIU7 I MP2 +0 HCC GIA xggu.1lf'cxn0 K ww Jflgjoglzhs awe all of H26 gxqyo, gorge grgbx may rrgicudofdy WGIZJLXCPIQIQB wlari Is waffeok orl by Avcaruzvy 801295 Egorrll SIWQD5 Qf HIE Olafgdlfcxf' Hg 'Hia bwcefly gevdlz wtfyfzgcfg amse, EW HES wcwyfJoP. H X H22 nlnsf of JreCxf'S l093WYg hgy 65165 ff fl Qc 2 X ,?!xMii I 'ix Jfjffzt U85 ojf olukgwfcwfa 7 K A Z9 7 QOQUE I5 JE 5vvcc'+'Y'q fn IZ 7, ! gum al L :Jilin w 'PC1 H ln 'YW X N 3 JV I I ag 'P l3,effx1 Wfm50'fe5 280 ,v 3 QQJ4 Was 5.'J'fD' ggi ',,' , 5 f. ,L H so 1 ff i q '14, 1. Jr 1 ff i'f?5'if BU 'O' 4 1 aff 5 ' U 4 4 !:gf1 3X'f'.f.!',jg.'.N af X51 ' ' 1 !:' .421 A SI 11, of P Q of 3 Hr .1 -45 .1 - ws--X--,,,fN.4 lotmh 5,,,1Nl I ' ---.- urn ,- -w QVXI. - ' . cf -.N .,, Ji. IU .jggisffx x Q -4. Y N- Tx ... . - ,Al I, .lf .N .Y -K. f ' VPU x +2116 Q7 , A ? fl uigw ig' M if I -it' ls ! j U gy CL, me- 3 faq, X 'Gm i ni' 0 'QOQQW Wowfgwi' 1' YM : 'y QQ MQWXKX Cf5oPPege Cifee Cf5Pu5 First Tenor-J. W. VAN Nuvs. W, W. CHIPMAN. i X I H I 1 .J D' fo bi iii? 'rvfiwr h .., , I ,, N wi -2:1-, .Ji Qt V41 -Y J X X . rf 'li '7 ,N YQ 2, jf, L,,,. 'K-SWIM L 'f' 'A 'fx ' tl' 'L - A,-,A, A! V V, 5-I , . T' V 'i i in - I 3 ' 'P X : w ii Wm O5 iw? in ?i , IV - Q 'J L. K Ijfx , -- ,K -f. 1.i1i'f7 i -Q .V Q V . we . 'l :-J: ,ET-, 'V K VR ' gi' Y ii x i ' ' - ' ,QI N f' 1 X ii cg? E 'wg 7 Q I 75, Ex ,f I L lf. O 1 ' '-lg! is iiiii iiiiiiilfili li M. , .W twill lift. C-5oFPe9e Second T enor'AC. F. EMBRV. E. W. JOHNSON. First Bass-G. T. MOORE. L. D. YOUNT. Second Bass -'-1 J. A. MOKEE. H. II. BUSHNICLL. G3 rofxeoira. .vvv -.1-., First Violin . . . Second Violin . . Flute .... Clarinet. . . First Cornet . Second Cornet. . Tronxbone. . . Piano . . . 7 P. KEEN. . . . .N. . . .C. MCKEE. B. GARNICR. . . .E. W. OLIVE. . . . C. D. STEVENS. . . .A. LEROV P1sER. . . .j. H. METEER. . . .LOYD HAMMOND. . .J. PIAMMOND. College Orgauist, LOVD Firsl Cornel, C. D. STEVENS. L. O. M. P F. E P.M uc1r1'e,1'i'e. SMITH, Mandolin. I-IUNTIQR, Banjo. HENDRICK, Guitar RHOADS, Guitar. Second Cornet, E. W. OLIVE. X L r ff A I . , y ,M - -if '.,. .7 .15 f , ' f 1 .fn'f'1x I7 A ,f . r ' 'A 7'li.K ii if .. ,wx OFFICERS. A. A. HUGHAR1' . . ..... President. T. E. DEMAREE . . Vice-President FRED. M. GREGG . . Secretary. E. W. OLIVE . . Treasurer. MEMBERS. HONORARV. Proi john M. Coulter. Prof M. B. Thomas. - Prof. Alex. Smith. ACTIVE. W. W. Cliipman. F. M. Gregg. Win. Von Hutchings. G. TIIOS. Moore. P. M. Rhoads. J. C. Van Nuys. T. E. Demaree. A. A. Huglxart. J. A. Little. E. W. Olive. C. D. Stevens. S. H. Watson. Gratorica? Jxebociaiion. --MTW OFFICERS. H, N, MQUNT . . ....... . . President. C. S. LITTLE. . . .Vice-President J. A. LITTLE. . . ........... Secretary. REPRESENTATIVE AT STATE CONTEST. E. G. Davis. DELEGATES TO STATE CONVENTION. E. G. Davis. J. A. Blair. BIC-...A Ax C5o?Pege Honore. BALDWIN PRIZE ORATION. P. F. Greene. BALDWIN PRIZE ESSAYISTS. E. Wm. Olive. P. F. Greene. E. G. Davis. J. A. Blair. JUNIOR PRIZE ESSAYS. First Prize. Second Prize. J. A. Blair. W. W. Cllipman. SOPHOMORE PRIZE DECLAMATIONS. J. A. McKee. W. A. Swank. A FRESHMAN PRIZE DEOLAMATIONS. C. Claud Travis. L. D. Yonnt. Gyoung Mania Gariollaq Jxooooialfoq. 8 the many and variant interests which combine to make up 'U' Wi college life of to-day, the Young Men's Christian Association has taken a lasting place. The object of this organization is to keep alive and advance in every way possible the cause of Christ among college men. The Wabash Association was organized in 1876. It has since that time been the means of strengthening many, and in its development of individuals has beyond a doubt influenced the whole college body. The plan of work is systematic, there being committees for each separate branch of work, and also an executive committee which looks after the interests of the association in a general Way. Then, too, the College Asso- ciation is in constant touch with the State and National committees, being a branch of the bodies which they represent. Through them many helpful suggestions are gained and the dignity of being a unit in a great unity is added to the local branch. It would be unfair to close this article without a word as to the co- operation of the Faculty. That co-operation has been this year a decidedly active one, and while the past year in college life has witnessed a forward impetus all along the line, through the efforts of our President and his corps of helpers, nowhere has the effect of the Faculty's sympathy been more strongly felt or more thoroughly appreciated than in the Young Men's Christian Association. J. A. McKEE . . Ross MooRE . - Gus BUCHANAN . J. B. FARRELL . . H. N. MOUNT . . J. H. Armstrong. T. E. Demaree. A. H. N. Mount. W. M. Elliott. J. C. Fullenwider. J. A. Little. F. C. Weimer. C. E. Allen. C. E. Combrink. L. Lardner. Ross Moore. R. B. Miller. W. O. Benson. H. E. Thompson. G. F. Ellis. J. B. Farrell. Paul Hale. J. E. Schweringer. OFFICERS. MEMBERS. ----'93 A. Hughart. W. W. Chipman. W. E. Vanderbilt. -lun S. W. Malone. G. T. Moore. C. A. Cloud. J. A. McKee. 'QST-Q Chas. Gregg. L. D. Yount. ---'se R. N. Todd. C. C. Huftine. F. D. Stone. H. B. Cooper. C. M. Rauch. Wm. Hale. Gus Buchanan. W- E. Nicely. A. W. Messmore. J. F. Geddes. President. Vice President. Treasurer. . . Recording Secretary. . . Corresponding Secretary. J. G. McMurtry. J. C. Van Nuys. C. M. Zener. H. E. Bard. H. B. Hostetter. W. I. Snyder. H. H. Bushnell. H. N. Ball. H. C. Hall. A. Sonne. S. Montgomery. A. G. Cramer. C. McKee. H. M. Nichols. D. R. Montgomery W. F. Sigmond. Fred McAllister. Harry Pattison. Wm. Davidson. Ereeanqen-Sophomore Ecqferilainmenii. THURSDAY EVENING, FEB. 23. -lPAR'l' L1 -FRESI-IMEN.-- CARPENTER, CRAMER, WELBORNE, EMBREE, MowERs, Dowm-xv, CLARK, HUFFER, NELSON. Opening Overture . . . . . . . Song ....... Speech . Speech . . Song ..... Instrumental . Speech . . . . Instrumental . Speech . . . . Orchestra . .Nelson . .Downey . .Welborne . .Quartette . . .Trio . .Embree . . .Trio . . . . . .Embree -PART n.--- THE .S0l'HONOKE'S DREAM, -IN THREE ACTS1 ACT 1. The Sophomore's Soliloquy. He sleeps. ACT II. The Dream. l'l'ransposed from the original Sophomoric writing of Ruston, Hal18L Com- pany by a select committee of Freshmen, with the aid of keys, tiles, nerve and slickness.1 The Freshmen before the Gods. ACT III. The Awakening. The Freshman's true position. CHARACTERS. Zeus fDr. Burroughsl .... .... P arry Ganymede fProf. Studleyl ......... Welborn Ares CI'rof. Campbellj .... . . Applegate Cupid LProf. Ransom, minus mustachel . Thompson Heplmestns CProt'. McLain? . . . . . . Larsh Olympian Supe QProf. Osborne! ...,.. . A Supe Pluto 1I'rof. Kingeryl ..... .... L ittle Freshman . . . . . ....... . . .Piser Hermes QProf. Kingl ..... .Davidson Sophomore .... ....... . . . Downey Bacchus QProf. Milfordl. . . . . .Mowers Old Maid ................. .Hutfer Apollo CProf'. Smithj .... . Cramer M -d f Au Richey, Dnvis, Dague, Fine, Poseidon QProf. Thomasj . . ...... l-Iufline at so Iens' ' icooper' Mme' and Mnhr'- +SOPHOMORES.l ACT I. Scene-from Julius Cvesar. Scene I.-Sophomores. Scene II.-Freshmen. Balcony Scene from Romeo mid Juliet. Romeo, A Junior, Juliet, a C'vil1e girl. Mark Antouy's Oration. Drinking Scene from Othello. Iago, a Junior: Cassio, a Freshmang two Freshmen, Piser and Stone. ACT II. The Canterbury Club. Scene I.-The Campus. Scene II.-The Club meeting. ACT III. Witch Scene from Macbeth. ACT. IV. Junior Debates. C WVa6aoF1 lgiilerarey Socieiitj. PB OFFICERS. J. A. LITLTE . ....... . . President. P. A. PARRV . . . . Vice-President. C. B. KERN . . . Secretary. Ross Mooan . . . . . Treasurer. W. E. ELLIOTT . . Critic. C. H. LEECH . . . .Censor. H. N. MOUNT. . ....... . . .Sergeant-at-Arms . MEMBERS. A. Hugliart. W. A. Higgins. H. E. Bard. C. B. Kern. C. A. Cloud. C. H. Leech. W. M. Elliott. F. Stone. J. C. Fullenwider. Ross Moore. H. B. Hostetter. P. A. Parry. J. A. Little. l-I. H. Bushnell. J. V. S. Milligan. H. N. Mount. F. E. Shanklin. W. A. Swank. G. C. Ashman. ePkPumni Jxooooiaiion. MEM OFFICERS. C. W. MOORES, '82 . . ....... . . .President J. H. OSBORNE,'79. . . . . .Secretary. G. D. McCULI.oc1-I '76 . . .............. . . .Orator. COMMITTEE ON BANQUET. Prof A. B. Milford. Benj. Crane. Dr. C. L. Thomas. Annual Meeting and Banquet on Tuesday of Commencement Week. Gowege Qufficcmliond. The Wmsnsrl. PUBLISHED MONTHLY BY THE SENIOR CLASS. W. W. WII,SON . . C. M. ZENER . . . E. M. MCCULLOCH J. C. VAN Nuvs. . W. VON HUTCHINGS. . . A. A. HUGHART . . BOARD OF EDITORS. +g?.. Tru: OUIATENON. Editor-in-Chief. Editorial and College. Local and Fraternity. Exchange and Alumni Business Manager. Solicitor. PUBLISHED ANNUALLY BY THE JUNIOR CLASS. I ! Y s 1 -4 I :i I '--'I 'a ef fha' 0 ff' .v..1 4-'flgxif I , m f Q!--i 5. 'hr' v5l ,,f- . I ,Q , 2 gg gf ,,, 32, F5 4 ff 'lg ,f Ai' oi 'rf' ik Z, H -cpl .. I fs... , nj.,-. 4 '-'- 1 fgnywy N N aff: S v -' A 1 ' '5' f' . 'n J,-'L' 'ffm' f 'MMF 1 f 'N .' Wggfiu QQ if ' ' Q J f ' X x 1 ' fx ' A X Nb? sa-Q., I, L 'jH4,,Y'S,f' Xxbkh 4 .Q p, . Eig?4iAf-gggg,,fggQE,-',az:mgAwg9a. ,W- A .5 l,,Q .- 5, 1' ,, we -2:-.--..?,g 1 3 -V 'QNQQQW RW 2 7 V N . -F-'fm -' f' QW, -1 ' - 'Q . ' J rafg5?yMw1'-ESCJMMtlfiM,7v,2'!R ,E -af f' :-ws? 5-fX,,AH5r,lf' :X-eMv7v f-, ,I x W lv Q lgggggpy' E , , yy. 4 'yn ,n. Y,,,r. , 3.0 UAL, MM' It V A .qu .1 iimlng , : M -:5,,.-- ., 1'..n K IW .... M' ,awk ai wk: ' lx X- -'W cr, , - XJ ' 'L -2,14 -Q 1,1 ,:yf21'-'-- 1 A NFL-, tx. ' ,,,f,, ' ,1'TPg '- N, - Xa'--X A... x Y 1 W 'ch M -X- W- 4 f SX 1-H r ' 1571134 Q59 V - ' in ' , ra: mf? . A if .f Ri f ct- A - , -If ,. J I ' Q C3 C Q I Y Q ' , Q S G-493: fz. J 8,1 4-Jgfgy Y , -J ., Q 'A' ' if ff gk My -M S,fLf'llIffi WWE THE CHI-ll'EL BELL. Listen to the bell-chapel bell! What a host of' day-dreams do its tolling notes dispel: What clouds of vapored sighs Float in blackness to the skies At the warning, every morning, of the bell! O, what aching, longing, yearning! How the studcnt's soul is burning, Not with science, not with learning, Not with things the text-books tell- Nay, his is another notion For his strong, his wild emotion Centers with a fiend's devotion Round the ringing of that bell! Hear him curse its hated name- But he gets there just the same-Q And he drags his weary limbs within in manners mild and tame In that sobbing, tolling, knell Is a power that naught can tell, And though P1easure's atomizer, Yet a certain hypnotizer Of the late and yawning riser Is that everlasting bell! Now, when years have passed behind us, And with weary sighs we find us In the din of hurrying footsteps rushing onward to tl1e goal, Will our memories, slowly bleaching ln the shadows, far out-reaching, Thus lay bare our ancient teaching And the bell's ironic toll? 'Will we joyously be clasping Hands convulsive, trembling, grasping, With the bony claws of memory just creeping from his shell? Through our hearts made young and bounding Will the music keep resounding Of those college yells astounding Which insane asylunls swell? And, enwrapped in n1emory's wrapper, Will we feel quite young and dapper As the cracked and clanging clapper Of that hoary-headed bell Makes our thoughts to tuned rytlnnic music flow? Well--'most anything is possible, you know! S-ffl' OUR CLASS. Willis Agustus, a queer little lad, Sits next to Bowers, and ever looks mad. While Bushnell speaks with a voice so loud 'Twould almost reach to the high-flying Cloud Then Elliot comes with a well-done Fry, And Little, and johns with an evil eye, While Harding, sits with several others, Next to the ancient Gentry brothers. Pettit Little who fumbles the ball, Hostetter, slender, slim and tall, Sam Malone resembles grass, But Stevens is star of the Junior class. Baby McKee is still on duty, Milligan shows a face of beauty, Ragan has pockets extremely slim, And Moore-there is nothing to say of him. Harry Mount is a famous logician, Wynekoop's a would-be matheniaticiang Ajax Stott, a horrible crank, Rivals the beauty of Orator Swank. Several others we ought to mention: Bard who went to the State convention, Up i11 the region of LaFayette, And Mayhew tl1e fiend of the cigarette. Farmer Shanklin, Fullenwider, And Will McC1asky all drink cider. So fill the mugs a few times more And drink 'to the health of Nivzely-Four. STYLE. How wondrous astonished old Adam and Eve Would be, could they visit our gathering places! Their eyes would bulge out and their spirits would grieve To see such a contrast of dry goods and faces. How surprised they would be to see a strange creature With a pack on her back like a large load of hay, With a prism-like twist to each hand-painted feature, And her arms in a wash-woman sort of way. Their mouths would pop open as round as a dollar Should they gaze on that other strange creature by chance With Celluloid cuffs and a similar collar, A little gold eye-glass and checker-board pants. But soon would Eve get all that fashion could lend her, And do up her hair at the close of each day, While Adam would purchase a striped suspeuder, And the fig leaf in sorrow would wither away. To fiunk or not to flunk? That is the question. Whether 'tis better to go to recitation unprepared, To sit and dream while others skim aheadg Or by dint of careful work before hand To fix the lessons on a tiny card? Q wc - : M mn M- ,.-...-T--M , J wr..--A i 1'TJ , Y Lracpwrzlaagy Q H3-wM 2' :r:?: ::.::!!g::::: : ::: ::!:::::E:!LL: .k- ........--- ... -. 43:44 4 i '- ' E ' A : l'1:l'? ' i.'T.'1:2 : :: : E 4-wff L im! . HH -z. 'JW' 1 -. - . L. -n Cdlbe q me 4.1 Ffsbmm lv 1 rd -:YJ .fhga v. .fuavvc burghv. Fq wabnshdnml bu 455-:En ss ' ' 5: J ,L 1 AN og ' -4 ' 3 9 - ? , E 5 E f E ae?-' i -1 A 5: . E: - 5: -,-E I -W ffff .nsf-lun MV 1 , 'flf , M974 Sur sm Mm --mm, Aff-ery Fw -IN .' Q ' V H H I 3. 4 4 W1 1 4 W? P F A E i A m 7 ' -1 --1 nn- - . . unn- -,-,.1-1 Z.:-:E-1-5,-:::.:.:.:--- -.1 pls- .12 : ':: 11Qz:x V Jgqd L, vgydwg grg-qv., Bit :mf in .ng-.t vt :I fl -q' puff 9 owl. , . '- :fl 2 1 ' 'Egr' :E EEE!25i1! :.: : :::45::':5.:g ' A ' '- ..-, - 1' :- ' ' -:::'-'--:E Q!-w .Q . ' -: : : :zz Quoin.: Jivyfad usda -5111.1 nn nn 1 1 nun:-u Ur: nz :rg 1 1 J21'.?2:- ' 2 -:F 2- ' -.. . . Urn f-omclu uri uni N fyl Q'tJ 't K, QOMQXCY! Sfni I oky 4 J ::::.::-:.. ...j.-. 1:--.:-:E-:::' -,tf.1 '-::-.1-. fic: :' : :' .. ' ' -r .. - ',- ' A 1 N 4 -1 , I 1 I I -- - .. , .-.-. -- -1 - QS fn - -: - i ll I I U l - ns V fa nw 555 0'U. Qmq lv: vs dy K bt b4'v'Cb 0 Qs mv q.'l5'vcc?r,cns fn nffnf- B R. EF 45- E? 1 - ! l --a 1-.. . ,Gb wmgaqw T' And when we hue' Q 3v'J'l 'U PJ 1-I 0W'l WHNM jo' Sr' 'I .I or' Jo 33 so ,ml,l4. brow, cmd wut, . T-Rat flees no 'ner mknuwfc-dqc, no Hqlx school :V-ig on hy road mqblf if in T-Ol' vnilu? Vnluf' on ml Kruk' xV0u.Ux. ,lxuurecl ly sunhu Pm5ej Z I, Y-I-153 x-sl mx-'K XNGLUSLX Cuufqf' X L f FY' 7 ' . Bul MIULUUJ1 Slwldffl v5 vxl-Qwmng' -mv Rum? u-4 KIYS IHVBU'-Ov! nluwi Nor auwg-1-9,4 one to Sviy Q f gfilf, Qer cxlll Un' won- gl 'Naya AIUUIC' fiom wuclu' her nmtevnnl v.'y,g7 f .d4i!' 'DVEUI Q b0 2q:xgQ':eA U 'l -flux qvumhua QIKHIQ. mb!! V0 W 'Mu ,A .. Chorwx. Cher.-5 HIS SUIT. He was immaculate, complete, Handsome and straight and tall, She was petite and very sweet- 'Twas coming from the ball. The distant band sounds o'er the sand, With viol and with flute, All tenderly he took her hand And warmly pressed his suit. The twinkling stars were at their height, He begged her for his bride, The bright moon-light shone on the night, She shook her head and sighed. She trembled 'neath his ardent gaze- QThe wind wailed like a lutej- A tear, a blush, a kiss, a crush, And then she pressed his suit. Ah wrinkled coat and baggy pants, And crumpled, dainty vest, Whence came that plain crushed rose-leaf stain Upon thy satin breast? Another fellow has thee now, He laughs-the horrid brute! And there next day, for sordid pay, The tailor pressed his suit. fl ,wa A TRIBUTE T0 BEAUTY. It can not be wicked I know, Since to church I am rlriven to go: 1l'I am in love, Not with angels above, But with Crawfordsville girls here below. Though I list to the sermon in vain, And the organist gives me a pain, If on them I can gaze VVhile the minister prays, I well am content to remain. CO-EDUCATION TURNED THEIR HEADS W, ,i Nw, tw' wa llblucktng a :lflower for an 1berbarium. -f-X1-XT, fx., Thou new-born child of Nature, sweet and fair. I come to pluck thee with unwilling handg How oft the sun hath kissed, the breezes fanned These petals, kindly with parental care, And dews, distilled from the evening air, Have soothed thee drooping on the fev'rish land, The laws of God have served thine each demand To rear thee in this loveliness so rare. For what? that I might now thy beauty spoil? In Science's name invade tl1y sacred bower, And ruthless tear thee from tl1y natal soil? Alas, that pryin gscience hath the power To ravish Nature, to undo her toil, And make thee, blooming plant, a nnumny-flower. . -I----2, ., M if ga-, f:.4,f fi ' 7 , f . .. .1 - 'V f , - , ,,',f -. 1 1. i 4 L, .N , : gl ' 'V -:f THE l'AENE'S VlKQlL.' Anna pirum the paene read, just from the farm set free. I sing of arms, he softly said, Thcn shouted loud in glee. Oh, that I too could sing a song Of arms as others cang Of thine I'd sing, for whom I long, Beloved Mary Ann. Virum carlo. Oh dear! Oh dear! Those words will be my ban. It means the rival that I fear, The hated hired man. Paene, dream on. Ere thou be done Thy College course for good, Some co-ed fair will have thy hair- Thy name will then be mud. When all my thinks in vain are thunk, When all my winks in vain are wunk, What saves me from a dreadful flunk? My Pony!! -i,.--- ,, TJ f an PUMPSW' ' Q,f',!M5 0+ me 9,101 and Me glvgfevk ' 1 fojf We UGSK and 'fke Jfafful gu ll V! 1 ,-1-kwlfxer-e We used +0 l:e fm1d IISfGp'lV j Affri! I 'Eye vyw4er's ryfyqg rwffsiqm, gy f ,low I B Vfeshwlefvyflalpjjxed avldffslrugyfgd f' , 9 fOr' 'I Gfrln I1 +409 Ig - ' ' ,Q X A x f Vj 'VWSS jf'0WfVSpo,M -f, ,f N- X Fir vwrqld q'fMVk ':yJur6l1,vyfHXa E21nU54LZ3 !ff I , beqfrva V Lv'-ijix IXQXMMWXX , X I X Y' ,Miwki ii... V X ml J: jxvyd clavqovouslq Saw! .- W' fx M8 Tquvvxh I0 WMM 11, My 7 K nd I would 'wif wefexlzlfzljxlln VW' il x KW PM UPN WN WMM if XXX wo. waj Hqaff Seeyyxellx beat SX 'Z ,V W 'HW S4'B61d5 How of He IO ' 1 ,L 'fnffofff xx X fl VXOZZI6 duo' 'Hqg Yagi' OK PUMPS S0 bw 'gg M 6 S XX 3.41 Ouf 'mere wx T e X avvmu M .5L,.7,! Axijfx Ilqafve OL paw M 'F 0, g -Iwjgexxa kff A -,f rw IA 'fine uorvxev of WM ,OWU Vx X XX XXX fqvld 'W X'4'f'IV1'Xe +0 Hx fvvyuslds chlbvye M! 'Wag 'Rowe Spvvx 'full H olawq of doug 'l 1 j'l,?HSlfx?lil Mavxfj More Q! Hqe well waxe Holly ! . ew sovlg Lxwvg . u3 W ff, X .- M- 74 f . J 1 f f f ,X X 42 ff f nf -fp '-'-f,,'7Q - Uf,,--- ' I f ' -' ' -4' ' ,f f 'A ., , H- ,.. ,f .5 , ,A vi- .-- - ', ,-- f 1 -1----W, , W-. '- --,.,f-f 1.1 V -- 9 1 , .WW-., ' ff,-'.1-'gil .,. A lt-, - - ff- I--33,2,75.i. ,A-'M ,T,-pf, ' ' -..--f--ff' 4 2: 7 ,..-- ' ' ' ' ' f '7 -. . ---f 2 3 SOME QUESTIONS. I wonder why the Chapel seats no longer empty are? I wonder why we didn't have our 22d jar? I wonder why the boys don't cut and why jim walked so straight? Or why instead of 8:15 College begins at 8? I wonder why? Why don't the Seniors celebrate or throw peas in the dark, Or fire waste paper during prayers, with juniors for a mark? O, tell me why no one goes home and stays n week or two, And why we don't raise all the noise, just like we used to do? O, tell me why? Is it because the High School girl no longer treads our way, Or do we fear with quaking heart a general judgment day, When interview and letter home are both within the past, And we are standing just outside with countenance aghast? I wonder! X J X 'N Yfx,,f' ,,,.x HIDSUHNER NIGHT. .., A..3,,..i,.li The mellow light Of the moon at night Falls over hill and prairie. The zephyrs steep All the sphere in sleep But awake is every fairy. The western breeze In the rustling trees Is murmuring drowsy mysteries. Each star on high In a sea-like sky Looks down on earth with a cold, calm eye The wild bird's moan And the ceaseless drone Of insects without number, The distant call Of the water-fall Is lulliug the world to slumber. Through the shinlmering night The fire-fly's light Is borne along by some merry sprite. I The breezes brush O'er the upright rush And the rippling waters whisper, u1111Sll!H The star-lights gleam On the sparkling stream And flash through the tree-tops' tresses. The willows weep ' As they sway in sleep In the depths of their dark recesses. And Minerva's fowl, The great-horned owl, Mingles her hoot with the were-wolf's howl While the beetle springs On his whirring wings O'er hill and dale in his wanderiugs. The wild-cat's scream Like a gruesome dream Is borne from the prairie billow. The night-11awk's cry In the startled sky - Floats down to my lonely pillow. In silent glee The shadows Hee Away from the moon to their mother tree. ' While the moon-beams creep From the azure deep And bear me away to the realms of sleep. ,.L. WHO IS SHE? My kingdom is my sweetheart's face, And these are the boundaries that I tr Northward, her forehead fairg Beyond, a wilderness of auburn hair. A rosy cheek to East and Westg Her little mouth The sunny South- It is the South I love the best. X 3 X 'r ZF 2 'w C ,I HC C CIGARETTE.. 0 sweet, pale cigarette, O rare, stale cigarette, Who gave to you your fatal dower? Who gave you, love, that soothing power That whiles away each empty hour? The smoke that, rising, wreaths me yet, Sweet as the evening violet Or perfume of the cuckoo flower. O slender cigarette, O ten-cent cigarette, What mortal dared to give you blame Or fasten on your dainty name The dreaded doom of death and shame? Here, deep within this hallowed haze O, listen to my song of praise, My goddess clad in smoke and flame! .p1lGJ l.'. Dear Father please excuse, he wrote, The hurried shortness of this noteg But studies so demand attention That I have barely time to mention That I am well, and add that I Lack funds, please send me some, good-bye. He signed his name And hastened--to tl1e foot-ball game. sq' 'V' xv x.,,Yd QPX grip to The Bangles. -?.,,,.i? AVE you seen the Shades? A trip to this beautiful re- gion is absolutely necessary for a complete college course, and deep must be his humiliation, who reaches the culmination of his college days without having performed this salient duty, at some time or other, during his sojourn at VVabash. It is the cynosure of the stu- dent's eye when autumn comes, tinting the earth with her rich and varied colors, the paramount place toward which his fancies tend, when Spring appears fresh and radiant, alluring him from close halls and musty books. If a Freshman, he goes 011 a picnic with his sweetheartg or a Sophomore, he accompanies his professor on a botanizing expedition, but the Junior, with his wonted sagacity, selects the ideal manner of visiting the Shades and goes with our class in a huge pic- nic wagon. He rises two hours earlier than usual on this eventful morning, and scans the gray heavens, with great apprehensions, for the least sign of rain. Oh, for- tunate mortal! he finds the gods propitiousg for, out of the east dart the first rays of light, heralding the birth of a perfect day. Nothing, now, is wanting to complete his joy, nor aught evident to mar or curtail the most sanguine expecta- tions. He iinds the wagon waiting, and clambers in, the last of the twenty-eight that compose the party. The driver cracks his whip, the horses start off in a brisk trot, and soon the jovial Juniors are bowling merrily over the smooth road, which lies, with its sinuous windings, like a gigantic serpent stretched out over the fruitful fields. The city of their alma mater is now far behind, but, ever and anon, a bend in the road brings it into view again, as it lies basking peacefully in the fresh splendor of a new day, the light wreaths of smoke mounting slowly over it un- til dissipated in the blue skies. On either hand stretch the cultivated fields, edged with golden-rod, while yonder in the distance the gray mists hang a lucid veil about the parti-colored crown of some lone monarch of the forest- As far as eye can see, The lands arc lit NVith all the autumn blaze of golden-rod g And everywhere the purple asters nod And bend and wave and Hit. Occasionally a quail or a meadow-lark rises from some grassy meadow, startled from its seclusion by the shouts of our lusty excursionists, and goes whirling away into the depths of a neighboring thicket. Now the road leads them through a narrow wood whose spreading branches shield them from tl1e sunlight, save where some rays, piercing the leafy vault above, have iiecked their wayg and now it declines gradually along t11e margin of a stream Where high rocks throw, Through decps below, A duplicated golden glow. And thus, midst ever-varying scenes they speed, their spirits rising with the mounting sun, their shouts and laughter wakcning the echoes far and near, until the cry of Youutsville from some watchful Junior has temporarily checked the wild farrago, while the horses brought to a respectful walk, enter the ve ner- able Yountsville bridge. . The bridge is crossed, the vil- lage left behind, and again the fields and pastures lie around tl1en1. The sun is nearing its zenith as the driver draws rein at Pine Hills. Here tl1e students dismount with alacrity, since this is the point at which they intend to partake of their mid-day repast. They have just crossed a bridge, to tl1e pier of which are chained the boats that are to carry the party witl1 their din- ner to yon shady bank which marks a11 abrupt bend in the creek. The boats bound lightly over the water, now darting out into the broad sunlight, now gliding beneath the spacious dome of Over-hanging Rock, until finally, they are moored on the shore at the Cottage Landing. Pine Hills is a foretaste of the Shades, and its attractions only heighten one's impatience to reach the latter. Our Juniors, like all students, being moderate feeders, especially when absent from the palata- ble delicacies of the boarding-house, have ere long resumed their advance, and soon find themselves in the imposing precincts of the Shades of Death. They enter a cool wood whose shade is very refreshing to the warm and dusty travelers. They catch glimpses of log cabins nestled here and there in the leafy depths, and hear the voices of campers reverberating in neighboring hollows. How cool and picturesque and pleasing the whole appears, but there is not time to loiter here-to swing in the great swing or recline in the numer- ous hammocksg they have come to do the Shades, and the day is waning. They visit first the Devil's Kitchen and drink from His Satanic's Punch Bowl, a draught from which insures the realization of one's fondest wish. Here they are surrounded by precipitous stone walls, from the crevices of which spring flowers and ferns, and o'er whose humid surface the moss and lichens creep in wild profusion. The little rill that flows adown this glen leads our ex- cursionists to a gigantic escarpment, over which the water flows, and, falling many feet in air, strikes in spray upon the ragged rocks below. On the verge of this declivity they stand at the center of a deep recess in the hills, whose densely wooded slopes, curving away 011 either side, form a colossal Horseshoe. On their right stands forth the bold promontory of Buzzard's Roost, whose bald and treacherous summit affords the intrepid adventurer a commanding view of the surrounding country: and on their left a narrow ledge girdles the hill-side, carpeted with the softest sa11d and skirted by straggling rocks and trees. Far below them Hows the creek, its waters glistening here in sunlight, darkling there within the shadow of the rock-ribbed hills, while on its farther shore the low fields lie, their cultured aspect strangely contrasted with the wildness of the hills. Here, immediately below them stands the pier, with its gaily painted boats tugging impatiently at their moorings. No excursion to the Shades is complete unless the excursionists have their pictures taken in the boats on the creek. They row out upon the glassy ex- panse, arrange their boats with 11ice precision, and then rest on their oars to await the shot-themselves, their boats, the hills, the blue clouds, all mirrored in the placid depths. The day is now far spent and the lengthening shadows Juniors from these fascinating scenes. They follow the ledge stopping often to write or carve a name upon the stone cliffs sky and drifting call the reluctant above mentioned, at their left, or to look out over the abyss that lies alarmingly near to them at their right. Finally, after many a turn around protruding angles of the hill, they arrive at a steep path ascending the latter. The summit attained, they traverse woods ablaze 'with flowers and make their way, by scarcely perceptible paths, back to the spot from which they started. The woods are now totally bereft of sunlight, and as our party stand on the hill-side, looking down into the deep shadowy ravines that separate them from the opposite slope, they no longer marvel at the name this region bears. A The remains of dinner furnish f the evening luncheon, which is eaten while the driver brings his horsesg and now the Juniors have resumed their places in the wagon, and are bidding the Shades adieu. The sun has set in a sea of blood, and its waning light blends weirdly with the softer effulgence of the rising moon, while the gather- ing shades of night take refuge in the wood that now lies dark and still. The return trip by moonlight forms an appropriate and grand finale for such a felicitous jaunt. Our Juniors, influenced by the mystic power of moon and stars, be- gin to sing, while through the silvery light they speed en route for home. Finally, as the Queen of Night sinks in the West, the horizon becomes ablaze with another light, wl1icl1 resembles the glow that illumines the east at dawn. It is the city's lights tl1ey SEE--11121lliS mimic suns, whose brightness heightens as our party near their bourne. Soon the city itself is reached just as the public clock is striking the midnight hour. The day has fallen from the chain of time into the abyss of the past, and the trip to tl1e Shades has been committed to tl1at mysterious store-house called Memory. Jgjifwfg 'ivgg K A PX 'X ly img Gm' N Ml3 V WkKkkNX1x T M I ' ig? X L nk X Xu I ' . Wy! .4 I -ff 1 W III 17 J H ifsafrzlh ' mrs! .1 , ' ,,:., ,!,g.gqu,S-5,f'..' nk ,sf rf f Lg! Qqmgfs J ,ff , ,f . . . ,' K 1 eS'Q7q:gs.3i'Q is ,I M X ff ly X 1 f X 'nf X K! I f - ' Narita 2129-,sgaf1..:,: N ' ' ' ' fl? X XX ww - N V x W X xx lf ,- f A mfg''iQEI 45'5:g1Q1af,yi,gi- 5 M J ' L 1, N 1' 1 K , ' f s emzwszfm uf f W 577: X ' V -- f 'Ax x X M T'gg1 ,l.:XSamm ?4i5Q5gi Q1E P r ,,, ,pw ' 'ff X Ja'-x1i',7-,'.'--5.-QQ-33 , ,f ,fL3 - 1-f '- N'-' XE'W3S1Tv!gf'wiv 53 'X ---KA , ' tg- Q' Q! ff fag E31 up 47, EASTNIA ,SCHLEICHEH LEE, CARPETS, DRAPERIES, WALL PAPER, FU RN ITU R 7 AND Q EAST WASHINGTON STREET -FMEA'-A M- 'M ' XJ INDIANAPOLIS, IND. 25? S C GF L C A AC C T GL SS LA ETC FO E G A G T ESE TS Thai-J andalia ine . . .IS A FAVORITE. . WITH THE STUDENTS OF THE VARIOUS COLLEGES THROUGHOUT INDIANA . . A call upon any agent of that line will convince the enquirer that it is the aim of them all to please the public. WE ARE ALWAYS WILLING TO SPEAK A GOOD WORD FOR, THEi.,..,N,..,-.... - VandaIYa LIHQ. SENIOR CLASS. C OFFICERS. J. H. Am1s'rR0Nc:, President. W. W. CHIPMAN, Secretary. O. E. ACKER, Vice-President. T. E. DEMAREJQ, Treasurer. CLASS ROLL. MEMBERS. ADDRESS. RESIDENCE. Acker, Otis E., ZX ..... Bourbon . . . 406 West Main St. Armstrong, james H., 1!'K1lf . jeffersonville . . 209 East Pike St. Blair, John A., BSU .... Crawfordsville . . 503 Wabash St. Chipman, Walter W., d1l'A . . Warsaw .... 222 West Main St. Cutter, Frank C., 1I1I'A . . Indianapolis . . 222 West Main St. Davis, Edgar G ...-. . Crawfordsville . . 901 West Main St. Demaree, Thomas E. . . Rossville, Ill. . 715 South Grant Ave. Galey, Albert S ..... Crawfordsville . 702 South Washington St Garner, james B., KDAU . . . Lebanon . . . 403 East Wabash Ave. Greene, Philip W., B911 . . Crawfordsville . . 606 East Wabash Ave. Gregg, Fred M .------ Crawfordsville . . 112 North Water St. Hughart, Arthur A ..... Valparaiso . . . 403 East Wabash Ave. Hutchings, Wm. Von, WK? . Crawfordsville . . 414 South Washington St. Keene, Norwood P., B011 . . Evansville . . . lOl Franklin St. Kingery, D. Newton .... Crawfordsville . . 414 Wabash St. Leech, Ellerslie W. .... Crawfordsville . . 311 East Wabash Ave. McCulloch, Edward M., 41K-lf New Albany . . . 406 South Grant Ave. McMurtry, james G ..... Judson ..... 715 South Grant Ave. Meteer, john H., d'K1l' . . Pine Ridge, S. Dak. . . . . 406 South Grant Ave. Olive, Edgar W., 411.19 . Rhoads, Paul M,,1l1AG . . . Starr, Harry L., A641 ...... Vanderbilt, William E., A6111 Van Nuys, J. Chauncey, A041 Watson, Samuel A. .... . White, Will E. .... . Wilson, Wm. W., flue . . . Zener, Clarence M., 1bI'A . . Indianapolis . . Newport . . Homer, Ill. . . Williamsport . Thorntown . . Yonntsville . . Alamo .... Crawfordsville . Indianapolis . . 409 East Wabash Ave. 307 East jefferson St. 515 Perry St. 706 West Wabash Ave. 515 Perry St. 406 West Main St. 901 West Main St. 117 North Grant Ave. III North Grant Ave. R. S. CLARK'S Furnishing Goods 951 Merchant Tailoring HATS, Cavs w Hncmurosnas. ONLY LATEST STYLES AT LOVVEST PRICES ........ Y will sav money by dealing with him. SE? SIG 516 1.31 EAST MAIN ST., -----CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND. J.. gf! - nf' if -.rf ff' s...-f E.-fa JUNIOR CLASS. OFFICERS. W. M. E1,1,1o'r'r, President. ROBERT R. RAGAN, Secretary. G. T. MOORE, JR., Vice-President. H. E. BARD, Treasurer. CLASS ROLL. MEMBERS. ADDRESS. RESIDENCE. Augustus, Willis O., 'DK1' ,... Paris, Ill. .... 217 South Green St. Bard, H. Erwin . . . Crawfordsville . 220 South Green St. Bowers, Homer D. . . Alamo ..... 1115 North Washington St Bushnell, Herbert H. Cloud, Chas. A. . . . Elliott, W. McKee . . Fry, W. R, Ben . . . Fullenwider, James C. Gentry, C. M. C .... Gentry, L. M. . . . . Harding, J. A., EX . . Hostetter, H. B ,... Johns, Robert M., BGH Little, C. S., me . , . Little, J. A. .... . Malone, Samuel W. . Mayhew, G. E., fbA9 . McCloskey, W. P. . McKee, J. A., fl 1'A . Milligan, J. V. S. . . . Moore, G. T., Jr. WTA . Mount. H. N. . . . . Ragan, Robert R. . . Shanklin, Fred M. . . Stevens, C. D., A9111 . . Stott, Andrew J. . . Swank, Wm. A. . 4 Wynekoop, H. E. . Concordia, Kan. . Chili ...... Hammond . . . Crawfordsville . Shelbyville, Ky. Aroma ..... Aroma ..... Crawfordsville . Crawfordsville . Sedalia, Mo. . Evansville . . Logansport . Eugene .... Red Bluff, Cal. . Darlington . . Remington. . Waveland . . Indianapolis . . Shannoindale . . Neoga, Ill .... Crawfordsville Vevay ..... Princeton . . . Crawfordsville . Wolcott . . . T232 South Washington St IIQZ East Main St.- College Campus Boulevard Q02 West Wabash Ave. 5oo Meadow Ave. 413 South XVashington St. 413 South Washington St. Lock box 473. 711 South Green St. 515 East Main St. 502 East Jefferson St. 22o South Green St. 311 South Walnut St. 308 West Wabash Ave. 214 South Walnut St. College Campus Boulevard South Hall. III North Grant Ave. 706 West Wabash Ave. 308 South Green St. 806 West Pike St. 514 South NVasl1ington St. 2K0 West Pike St. Crawforclsville, Ind. 107 North Grant Ave. C. E. GILXBERT Taiior and Draper CARRIES A FULL LINE OF NOVELTIES H141 IFGREHQIN HND E Q DQHESTHQ WGQLILENS Suitings, Trouserings and Fancy Vestings CALL AND ExfxM11NT5FxYLEbTiTN6XffND SUMMER IMPORTATIONS BEFORE PLQCING YOUR OQDER QQQQ No. 120 East Main Street. SOVHOHOKE CLASS. OFFICERS. D. D. HAINS, President. H. H. R11s'1'0N, Secretary. C. C. TRAVIS, Vice-President. H. C. HALL, Treasurer. CLASS ROLL. MEMBERS. A1111R1iSs. RESIDENCE. Allen, Homer O., BGII Rockville. . , 308 South Green St. Asl1ma11, Geo. C. .... Frankfort. . . 401 West Market St. Ball, HOWHYG N .--.-- Crawfordsville . 101 West Franklin St. Curtis, Walter M., 'DAG . Crawfordsville . 608 South Elm St. Dochterman, Chas. G., fl1I'A Covington . . . 314 West Main St. Fry, john E., BOII .... Crawfordsville . 902 West Wabash Ave. Gerard, Royal H., fI'A6 . . Crawfordsville . 311 East Main St. Gregg, Charles M. . . . Crawfordsvillc . 112 North Water St. Griffeth,Jan1es B .... Crawfordsville . 218 South Green St. Hains, Daniel D., A641 . . New Albany . . 203 South Grant Ave. Hall, Henry C., d1I'A . . . Wesley .... 401 West Market St. HHl1l1ll0IlC1,J. Loyd, IPAQ . Lebanon .... 307 East Jefferson St. Harding, Chase ..... Crawfordsville . 614 South Washington St Harrison, Nicholas M., ZX Indianapolis . . . 201 East Pike St. Higgins, Wm. A. . : . . . North Indianapolis 503 West Wabash Ave. Kern, Chas. B ...... . Frankfort .... 715 South Grant Ave. Larkin, Edward I . . . . Crawfordsville . 215 West Pike St. Mather, Curtis B., BBII . . LaGrange . . . 414 East Main St. McCain, Fred T., BGII' . . Crawfordsville . 419 East Wabash Ave. McDonald, Malcom S., 1b1'A . . . Robinson, Chas. E.. . . . Ruston, Hiram H., B9l1 . Sig1er,J. Homer .... Stillwell, George F. . Travis, C. Claud, d1A6 . . Weimer, Fred C.. . . . Welborn, Geo. H., B911 . . Wood, Luke, EX. ..... Witherspoon, L. G., BGII . Wynekoop, Ira W ..... Yount, Lozier D., AGKD . . Indianapolis . . Crawfordsville . Princeton . . Waterloo .... Crawfordsville . Crawfordsville . Pern . . .' . . . Princeton . . . Crawfordsville . Princeton . . . Wolcott . . . Yountsville , . . 514 West Main St. 704 South Washington St. 308 South Green St. 213 West Pike St. 303 East College St. 514 East Main St. 203 West Main St. 224 South Green St. 222 South Green St. 221 South Green St. 107 North Grant Ave. 512 East Market St. CHARLES MAYER at CO. as-Base-Ball and Foot-Ball Supplieg Gymnasium Goods, Sportsman's and Cyclists' Clothing, Fishing Tackle in Endless llarioty. M A sss Tfef1LAwN 'rm-11-11s AGENTS FOR----- A. G. SPALDING Ga BROS., WRIGHT 80 DITSON, AND THE DAVIS BOAT AND OAR CO. Kodak, Hawkeye and Premier Cameras. BE D C ' TKAVELING OUTFITJ, LEATHER GOODJ, ETC. CHARLES MAYER 8: CO., 29 and 31 West Wassllington Street, INDIANAPOLIS, IND. O ALOGUEB THE THE , DAILY WEEKLY dOUF?NAL QJOURNIXL Anoiffhcoonlnnn JOURNAL Co' cnocoinnfs - - PRINTERS - - O ders by Mail or Express R ceive Prompt Attention. T A310555 No. 20 East Washington St., PRINI lNG COPPER Pl ATE ENGRAVING . FKESHHHN CLASS. OFFICERS. G. A. G. CRAMER, President. E. W.Jo1-1NsoN, Secretary. H. C. CLARK, Vice-President. J. C. THOMPSON, Treasurer. CLASS ROLL. MEMBERS. ADDRESS. RESIDENCE. Applegate, Harry R., WAS . Noblesville . . 502 East Jefferson St. Beard, Edson B ...... Waterloo . . . 411 East Market St. Carpenter, Braxton W., fhK'l', . . Cincinnati, O. . . 201 East Pike St. Clark. Harry C., 'DAG . . . Charlestown, Ill. 307 East Jefferson St. Clements, George . . Ladoga ..... 509 North LaFayette Ave. Coen, Newel M ..... Monticello . . College Library. Combrink, Charles E. . . Cooper, H. Bernard . . , Cramer, Guy A. G., EX . . Dague, Samuel MCK., 'DFA Davidson, William R., A611- Davis, Thomas A ..... Downey, Brandt C., A041 . Embree, Charles F., BGU . Fine, Henry N ...... Gohn, Joseph F. ..,. . Gregg, Charles W ..... Herdman, Hugh H., A9411 . Huffer, Arthur P., XX . . . Hufline, Charles C., 4'K11' . Johnson, Edgar W., A041 . Kirk, Sennett, 'IVKWI' .... Krug, Earnest A. . . . . Lamb, Fred W., B911 . . . LaI'dl1EI',J. Lawrence. . . Larsh, Herbert G .... Little, Harry W., WAS . . Miller, Robert B. . . . . Montgomery, Samuel B. . Moore, J. Ross ..... Mowers, A. Roy, EX . . Carrollton, Ill. . Harrisburg, lll. . LaFayette . . . Fowler .... Evansville . . Goshen .... Indianapolis . Princeton . Veedersburg . Danville, Ill. . Crawfordsville . Crawfordsville . Muncie. . . Kirklan . . . Thorntowu . . Garnett, Kan. . . Crawfordsville . Boone, Iowa . . Goodland . . . Crawfordsville . Evansville . . Thorntowu . . Cynthiana . . Centralia, Ill. . . LaFayette . . 132 West Main St. Y. M. C. A, Building. South Grant Ave. 307 East Jefferson St. 706 222 502 219 314 314 SOI 516 513 203 706 201 401 503 West Wabash Ave. West Main St. East Jefferson St. South Green St. West Wabash Ave. South Washington St South Green St. South Washington St West Main St. West Main St. West Wabash Ave. East Pike St. East College St. Wabash St. 132 West Main St. 811 South Washington St 502 East Jefferson St. 503 West Wabash Ave. 308 South Green St. ' Y. M. C. A. Building. South Grant Ave. C. L. ROST4-+4 V V, l207 East Main Street. X Waii ,af Nzixfpf We re e rem Sf M' QQ WEECHQS7 fait Diamonds and N p ' ll Fine Jeweivs , l ' nmoolmwrens were gl-1 e souvsum SPOONSZU The most approved method known to modern science used to fit the eyes with Spectacles. Fine complicated watch and jewelry repairing a specialty. We take pains in fixing old watches given up as past repairing. Geo. W. URNllA.li1j i W WY lm Y V V-A A K W- HAAQA- Maniiging Partner. Q Geo. W. 8 GO. Wholesale and Retail Grand Opera House Building. -1:1 QONFEQTIONERY - Q A Seef-'SMD - f - ICE CREAM5, lcas 1 BU'b fllefevafvts .,, .,, B ,,, ,., House DECORATIONS ifigfliqlei- I LANDSCAPE GARDENING Q Q N CUT FLOWERS. POTS CIVI ERING l.l1XlTED. No. 'wil' Prices Reasonable N in P 1 ' st., or may mm HOUSES: East Market st. INDIANAPOLIS, IND. OFFICE: 204 East Main St. IPRIQSIUIAN CLASS CoN'rIN1'EIv. Nelson, Andrew S., Bflll Piser, Arthur L., 'l'K'l' . Richey, Arthur D., 'I'l'.X. Sonue, August ..... SlL0llC,1'll'3llk 13, . , . . ThonIpson,jan1es C., Bill Todd, Robert N. . . . . Trout, Frost L., 'WA . . Welborn, Oscar P., B011 Willis, Raymond IC. . . Heudrich, Frank li.. NIU' Parry, Percy A. . . . . . .Evansville . . . . SllllSll8ll, N. Y. . . .llowler. . . . I . . Evansville NCg!lllllCC,BIlCll. . . . . . . . Sednlia, Mo. . . . . IndizI11zIpolis . . . Crziwfordsville . . .l'l'lllCCLOll . . . . . Waterloo . . . . . . I7!lllVlllC, Ill. , . . Crown Point . 224 South Green St. 219 South Green St. 107 North Grant Ave 306 East College St. 502 East Jefferson St 5I5 liast Main St. 205 West Collge St. 403 East jefferson St. 224 South Green St. Llll linst Market St. 6o3 South Water St. 306 East College St. R5M1III5 mf. TE N15 ,lf Q 0 0 0. E RETL I 0,,gw,'g.'.,' , 4 W0 ' '0'0' '0' WX EVER , 16 9 9.0 06s 'W A' N f D , 2 ..zf:'z1 A I EXP E RT E N T '4'0'0 0 0 0,0,0,0,0,0,' 0, i l 0 N G I N G X xQ0'0:020'0,0,0 '.'Q'0'0'0'69 I 0 90 'q'0'0 0 0' 'WYZ s ,455 l+iv.u+'0 +! '!'.W2ff T SPRING '0' 0000 'v H I T0 PLAYING l3'4 0 '!XZ517' SURFACE AND , 0949151 I W INCREASED NETOTHE X mg, SPEEDANDDR BALL If ANY TENNIS PLAVER WILL APPRECIATE TI-us DRIVING Pow:-:R FRAME OF CHOICEST ASH X T ROFIFAVILINPEIEIHESPCED VE H UT I Y L R HANDLE ANDB HIGHLYPOLMAHOGANWITH Siscnaws X TWINEWRAPPEDHANDLEMAKINGTHEEASIESTANDMOST i 4 El-'FICIENTGRIP oa'rAINAaLL: SEND MP THETUXEDOISBUILTFORTHENEEDS OF THE ' , 5' 9 I . , gg 5 L M4 XJQEIU ,, x 1, 9 - ,--. ' ' N A f :Zia 'I 00. ...az fx PERFECTION , ,,14M:.j0j0,0,020,0,02 li X .. 6 ' 'Zh 0'0i'0 '0',' . A WI ATT 'AA '0 3' Q ' e PAT Q-4 0000000 O M ME My 0+ nil., , If Nl . I X, 0 ' lx N '-Aram ,'ff2--N A I IIIIIII xi gk 4. ,JA 1 Jrgr x , 4. ! 4 x N' . - wx- I, ' L, , I1 TENNIS EXPI-:RTAND FOR HARD PLAY. . FW., E. I. HORSMAN 34-I BROADWAY, N .Y. 9' '55 SCHOOL ALL SUMMER. M fW f A X I X WHEN stock, oPPoslTe POSTOFFICE. A J Bryant 8: Stratton. Established 1850. More than 600 Students Annually. LEADING BUSINESS, SHORTHAND AND TYPEWRITING SCHOOL. Graduates assisted to positions. More than ten thousand started on successful business careers. lilanufacturers, Bankers, Railroad, Professional and Business Men send their sons, daughters and wards to the Business University and elnmloy its graduates. ., . ,A ' . . . . . C.'1l1 or wrlte for full p irticulars EEB 6. OSBORN, Prop'rs. W. D. SEATO , 'T-PI'1HTS'S'I 27 N. Penn. St. Indianapolis. Ziegler 8z Reiman, LEADING BAKERY AND conmcfrloumir. yew ICE CREAM Ano SODA WATER. Caterers to Banquets, 1'arties,Weddings, etc. The only Confectionery in the city that manufacture their own Candies. 217 EAST MAIN ST. CRAWFORDSVILLE. City haundry. Mopirm s. Moreau, 116 WEST PIKE sr. Dfllcgcglifff, Office. 129 SOUTH GREEN ST. Y COLLARS Arm currs A SPECIALTY. f25 EAW1' MAIN STRISET, Wonx GUARANTEED. CRAWFORDSVILLE. HONG HUNG, Proprietor. ALL or 'ri-is Beer, PERFUMERIES. Q n JL .lp W, - U, 5 uf' .- XZ --. .. .Xa 'Sv- I. NHT, l892. ' 6-College Glee Club gives its annual concert at Danville, Illinois. 16-Fisk Jubilee Singers render a very exquisite program at Y. M. C. A. Armory. I9-20-Several of the Phi Gamma Delta boys attend their State Convention at Madison under the auspices of the Hanover Chapter. 22-The noted evangelist. Sam Small, harangues at three meetings in town before crowded audiences. , 24-Field Day contests. Five State records broken. 31-High School Seniors have their class day exercises. BOB DAVIS HAS THE ONLY FIRST CLASS S uvew Steak 4 IN THE CITY. GIVE HIM A CALL AT 1253 WEST PIKE STREET. CRAWFORDSVILLI6. LIGHT LIVERY A SPECIALTY AIXX AX' LOOK TOR IHT' TAIL 1 INOVII 111 S IN C OT D .KIND SII VI R AND THI IINLSI LINI OI' DIAMONDS AND FINE JIQXVICLRY AT II. III. OTTO'S The Leading Jeweler, 111 South Washingmn St., Crawfordsville, Ind. J. IIIIINIES, Merchant Tailor. CLEANING, REPAIRING AND DYEING A SPECIALTY. 214 M East Main St. Ed.G.VaHIIEIm11 I II. IIIIDIES' IIIIID GENTS' QE FINE SHOES PROMPT ATTENTION T0 REPAIRING Main Street, Opposite Court House, Crawfordsville, Ind. JUNE, 1892. 6-The Glee Club, ably assisted by town talent, gives a concert for the benefit of Eddie Brandkanlp, the blind pianist. Io-Contest of the Preparatory Department. Lamb captures the Paene prize, and Rauch that of the Subs. I2-Baccalaureate Sermon, by President Tuttle. I3-SC11lOI' Class Day. Presentation of Faia Scribunda. 14-Declamation contest of the under classmeu of the College. McKee receives the Sophomore prize, Travis, Freshman. Alumni banquet at Yandes Library Hall. I5-Connnenceinent exercises. Oration by Rev. Niccolls, D. D., LL. D., of St. Louis, Presideut's reception. Vacation. Good-bye, Puellfe Alhenwzmz. SDQIHIINIQIILIL G CO.. wholegnlii Grocerg I'I. J. HEINZ 61 CO.. PITTSBURGII, PIENN.. Onondaga and Hamburg Canned Goods. Headquarters for CALIFORNIA CANNED AND DRIED FRUITS. 2, 64, 06 und 68 South Meridian Nu-eel, - A - INDIANAPOLIS. FOR TIIE BEST READY-MADE CLOTHING 0:- THE LARGEST AND BEST SELECTED STOCK OF AINIIQ FOIRNUSQETNG - Grooms oN--- Tllllllllllliillllll Bros. JAMES ISREAL, ie? DEALER IN ' CHOICE BEEF, MUTTON, LAMB, 3 VEAL, PORK, HAMS, BACON, CORN BEEF I TONGUES, ETC. 1 17.-l S. Washington St. BAYLESS' Cab and Transfer Line. fr eggs For Parties, Weddings, Funerals, Trains or Private Calls. llnno Picnic and Party Wagons. IM,E3Sl1l!SI.DHmm9lS' WIISQUE L I: onosns AT II8 WEST MARKET ST SEPTEMBER, l8.92. 5-Preps began to arrive. 13 men. I 9 zo-- 23 20 College opens with most of the old students in town and with quite an influx of new Keen returns to the classic halls, after a week's detention byl-sickness. Meeting of Athletic Association and election of officers for the ensuing year. Reception to students at the city Y. M. C. A. Parlors. New students stand around with hands in their pockets watching the boys play f oot-ball. DREKA Fine Stationery and Engraving House, 1121 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. WEDDING INVITATIONS VISITING CARDS COLLEGE INVITATIONS CLASS STATIONERY BANQUET MENUS I SOCIETY STATIONERY DIPLOMAS AND MEDALS I PROGRAMMES, BADGES STEEL PLATE ENGRAVING FOR FRATERNITIES, CLASSES AND COLLEGE ANNUALS. All work is cxec utcd in the estnlrlisl ixxi ent ixxim ler the personal snpe ilx' ision of Mr. Drekn, nnrl only in the nest nm iiii er. tmeqnaieti facilities 4 iiii 1 mug practical experience enable its ml ,i-i1f nice the newest -:tyles :ind most urtistic effects, while our repntution is ri guarantee ol' the quality of the production of this house ' Designs, Samples and Prices sent on application. DR. PAUL J. BARCUS, Plpygiqian and Su rgqon Ormen-iii W. Main St. Rusn ENQE-522 112. Mnin St. GUY IWONTANI, Lender, Violin. l BIONTANI, Flutist. ll. MoN'rANi, llnrp. morytani Bros! Orel7Q5tra No. 110 N. ALABAMA ST MUSIC FURNISHED POR ALI. OCCASIONS l'RlVA'l'E PARTIES, RECl1TP'l'l0NS, WVEDDINHS ANU COMISIENCEMBIN I8 A SPECIALTY. Inmliainaipolis, Intl. ALBERT w. w1sriARD, ATTORN EY AT LAW, Rooms 39, 40 and 4I Ingalls Block, 1 INDIANAPOLIS. IND. CALL ON . . . C, R, SNOUGRASS, Ghz Popular Tailor, 1342 East Main St., CRANVl 0RDSVIl.I.E, IND. OCTOBER, 1892. I-A few of the students enlist in Company I, of the State Militia, so that they can attend the World's Fair Dedication. Ir-Our new President is met at the Big Four station by the students eu 71111355 14-Reception to President Burroughs at Yandes Library Hall. 15-Football with Purdue-not in it-too much boiler-maker's strength. 2I-Columbian Day. Students do not join the procession. Nice to have a holiday. 31-Q-I'IElll0WCCll. The boys attire in gorgeous costumes mul pay their distresses to the young ladies. , Chicago Photo-Gravure Go., Pontiac Building, CHICAGO. 6 l7no'ro-Gnnvunss l lALF-TONE CUTS, ZINC ETCHINGS. Excellent Work in all three Departments. We particularly invite the College Trade in Illustrations of Class Annuals. .,-l'H'.PP our EXW! aHll9lE'S..F'1'F...lP and LlUiliiB.l'l.ll'Ei,D0P'l L' 6000600000000000009000000000000OOOOOOOQOOOOQOOQ Family, Sbhool, Library, v and 0 H H uv PCYSOI1 who Reads or Writes SHOULD OWN A DICTIONARY. Cure should be taken to . Webster's International, e'1,'Q'i,'3 ,S,'qg ,2,'fJ,,gffVe It is a. thorough revision of the authentic 'Una.'brldged, fully abreast of the times. The work of revision occupied over ten years, more than a. hundred editors being employed and over S300,000 expended before the first copy was printed. Sold WEBSTEFUS G. dc C. MElElEl5'M COMPANY, 2 Springfield, Mass., U.S.A. Send for a. pamphlet containing specimen pages and giving full particulars. It will be sent prepaid. ' BQPDO not buy reprints of obsolete editions. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOQO I' NOVEMBER, 18.92. IdJUNIORS conspire and cut Physics. 3--Natural History Society gives a fine exhibit of work accomplished. 8-All eligible students vote for President. Republicans stay up till eleven, then retire, sick at heart. Io-Prof Milford cuts chapel 14-I8-Special prayer meetings in Y. M. C. A. room. I9 -Foot-ball with State University. We swiped 'em -3,6 to 24. 22--Dr. john M. Coulter, President of I. U., lectures on Darwin. 23-28-The boys are thankful, and eat turkey and cranberry sauce at home. HARRIE PONTIOUS. - I oHAs. E. LACEY. PONTIOUS CKE LAGEY, CQIIQQQ 'TQJVE .BUCKS a Specialiy SEE OUR HVVABASH COLLEGE LETTER-HEADS. T0 THE STUDENTS 0F WABASH AND 0THERSl I am making strictly first-class work in the Photographic Line nt reasonable prices. Would he pleased to have a share of your patronage. Respectfully, T. W. LAWSQN. ??3e9QeiS.C0mQQ!s1 THE IilslS'l' FOR THE BABY, THE BATH AND THE TOILET. lllivessitg-QZo111pIegio11Tllllayslq REMOVES PIMPLICS, BLOTCHES, FRECKLES AND TAN. Address all orders to STAN KEENEY, Crawfordsville, Ind. GONZALES 81 GALEY, DENTISTS, Office, 1312 East Main St., CRAWFORDSVILLE, - IND. JHEFKIFMINIS CEIFE9 NO. 59 South Illinois Street, IUIILICI' Grand I'lotel.J LUNCIIIXND ,v, ,v, AMUSEMENTS - ' .5 Q.. Emcgelyiw IIINIIDMIINIEIHVCDLIIJ, IIINIID.. The Best Goods for the Money can Always he had at 7 D. I.. I. E E S, The Iinest goods at the lowest possible prices, is the motto. Nowhere in the city can you find such an assortment of FINE GROCERIES, Anso FISHING TACKLE, Guns -ro lima, I,oAmzn SIIELLS, Picnic Goons, Ere. Please call and take a look at the most complete store in the county. CHAMBERS, PICKENS sl Moomss, LAWYERS, Rooms 109, 110, 111 and 112 commercial clun BIIIIIIIIIQ, INDIANAPOLIS. '-if 14-...mf 'Ar 4' DECENBEK, 18.92. 2 The lovers of fine music hear the New York Pliilliarmonic Club. I1-Cutter goes for a walk and tries to capture a coou. KPJ I5-Meeting of College Trustees. Aggressive steps taken to raise the standard of Wabash still higher. I9-Term examinations the order of the week. Nobody Hunks. 23-St1.ldE!1tS all go home to sce their mammas. X 25-Meteer finds a safety razor in his stockingg Piser gets a clay pipe, but doesn't understand wl1y. .19 -.ex Eff' TI -14' . 4 27133 : -ffwf. lfl3L il f-1: DOC. BRITTON'S MAIN ST. LIVERY. 1-'inn-st Livery in th City. C15 Il I 5, S1 Il Clflt BII 1111 sp ny St d ts' Pntronnge Solicilcd. DOC. BRITTON, PnoP. S xav, .1 gm Tic Y- M- C- R- Bavbqv Shop, TI-IIE I,1xRu1-:s'1', FINIIZST AND Blewr Snov IN CRAw1fo1:11Sv11.1.E. S'IIIIDIfN'1'S AND FRIIQNDS 011 XV1x1sA:-111 Cm.1,1cc:1c RES1'lCC'l'lf11I.I.V SQLICITIQD. EIQga1-fc Fans and GOOCI Ba'EI'1s Students' !Qdq.Uar!Qrs- -- -Y FOR- . HATS are Fuxnlfnlnw 111111151111 81 c011T1111's-4-1: DRESS AND NIEGLIGPIQ SHIRTS IIIXRI. AND XVILSON COLLARS I,INI'DI!RXVIf!XR IIAI I IIOSI NECKWIIAR, BI ITS TENNIS CAPS. SIIIR I S XADE TO ORD! R RAIVISAY ci GOLTRA, 113 S. Wash. St., CRAWFORDSV!LLE, IND. COLLEGE TEXT Books AND FINE STAT1oNE11Yf-1 AT SPECIAL RATES TO I STUDENTJ. ROBINSON di WALLACE, CQRNER BQQK STQORE. CRFXIAHQORDSVILLE, INDIANA. JANUARY, 18.93. IO A-Winter term comnieuces. Owing to the new rules and regulations, all but four of the students are in their places. 13-Profl Smith lectures at Newport-the home of Paul.', I5-All the boys go to church. A case of have to, you know. The Sunday after- noon lecture at the College chapel relegated to the past. I7--The students contribute liberally for the relief of the poor. 22-Sunday. Piser is not yet fully acquainted with tl1e rules and goes to chapel as usual. 24-Milford cuts chapel again. 26-Day of Prayer for Colleges. No recitations. Roll's ons E I I I g EQVVV E VV P, INTEKIQR necoknroxs. gxfifex' V' K ,I M I ' , 4 WALL ravens 3 ESFLIIEW L00 f' FKE1' w6mc me AKTISTIC FKESCO PAINTING. mf' l ' , If fu, eoia en ion ai o eoora in uro es, sp Fr:t:':1EtytHa11: ax?dtPr?vate Itlegdiice: 38 South lllmols St., INDIANAPOLIS. INSLEY fi DARNALL, - L. Slersdorfer, I City-.Y INE Livery gSI-IOES CABS AND CARRIAGES FOR RECEPTIONS, BALLS, Ladies' and Gents' Boots and Shoes PAR-HES' ETC' Made to Order. Double the Livery Stock of any firm in the City. ' 27 W. WASHINGTON ST., STUDENTS' PATRONAGE SOLICITED. I 12-116 E. Market St. INDIANAPOLIS' FEBRUARY, 1893. 2-Campus in ice. Great destruction of our beautiful trees. 3-Gas supply is turned off and conseqneutl ', tl1ere is no c ll f . Th b coasting at Bluff Hill. , , 3 o ege e oys go 9'PHl'l Hellenic dance-costumes dazzling. The Greeks spend their fathers' hard earned cash. I3-Milligan has his hair cut, and so will l1ave to wait three weeks before sitting for his OUIATENON picture. 16-Primary oratorieal contest. Davis takes first placeg Blair, second. Other speakers noi in il. Some naughty Freshman sets fire to Egypt, causing its complete destruction. I7-Reception to Prof. Horton, our Ph, D. lPhysical Directorj, 23--5013110111OTC-F1'C5ll11l2ll entertainment. Everything passes off quietly. HICHOLSOH 6' 30l'l3,g, E Q Fotoqgrafers. CLOUDY WEATHER PREFERRED. pl! Work Guaraptqqd. 185 Iifxwr MAIN ST., fffA f::CRAWFORDSVILLE, IND W. B. Q Q QHQEHRS Q gp TKM JQQ0 1.1. P, NWN. CoL1,1am IQRXI Rv1'rx' A 'bag Bfxm s . . South Green Street, Two Do S f .IQ John St., E182 NEW YCDRK NHKCH. 1893. 2-The ,gf1'ave and rezferemi Seniors are entertained by President and Mrs. Burroughs. Seven failed to materialize. 3-High School benefit entertainment. Students in tl1e front rows ogle the girls throughhtelescopes and beer bottles. 7--The JUNIORS made their debut in society at- a reception tendered them by the President and his wife. Every member is present. , I3--Prof. Smith has a violent attack of tl1e mumps. It is such an absurd thing to have. 24-Baldwin oratorical contest. Green is the successful man, and carries off the forty dollar booty. 25r QSl.lld6lltS leave for home, mother and -- HYRIL, l893. 1- All Fool's Day. Witherspoon, one of four to eat an April fool meal with some of the Crawfordsville belles. Cotton biscuit, rubber macaroni and saw-dust pies served at the various boarding houses. 3-Vacation closes and the boys flock in so as not to miss chapel the next day. 4-Spring term begins. The Faculty are punctual in attendance. 6-7-Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity holds a convention of tl1e third district at Bloomington. 8-Our base ball nine is a good one, but it is not in it witl1 the Illinois University team. II--Fl'6ShI11eIl cut Prof. Milford but afterwards weep bitter tears. 23-Moore breaks the record by staying in town over Sunday. 29-Base ball witfi Purdue. GEO. IVIANNFELD, QQQ Q Merchant aww Tailor I7 EAST WASHINGTON STREET, Indianapolis, Ind. N. R. Rucxmz, 1'uu.u' F.1c:olQ, I.. U.L.A1.x.1s, President. Vice-Pres't and Trans. Secretary. ITEIIIIII'-TIEIIIIIIIIIJTI IJIIIIll.llI'IIlIII IIIIII TIIIQIHIIIIQ ITU. 28, 30 AND 32 WEST MARYLAND STREET, - INDIANAPOLIS, IND A sP1f:C1AL'1'v or 1 . FINE BOOK PRINTING, . CATALOGUES, ANNUALS, ETC. BIRST CLASS ILLUSTRATIONS EXICCUTICIJ BY 'I'I-IIC ZINC-ICTCII ANIJ I-IAI.F-TONIC PROCIQSSIQS, OR ON WOOD. HIGH GRADF PRINFINK A, 1 DESIC NS XND DRAW INC S O1 EVFRV DFSCRU LION EE S 5 HX III SI CI ASS ARI ISIS 1 SIIMAFES FURNISHICD PROM! I I X Fbpl I' k'tl bLdIu1ur IDA o lllffa asri Qottrdr. FVFYHFY SlXTY'5ECQND YEAR. no-o-o-1 Full Classical and Scientific Courses of study. Post-Graduate Courses for advanced work in specialties. A thorough Preparatory Course. Premium scholarship offered to tl1Cl1011OI' man of each class graduating from the Commissioned High Schools of Indiana. Expenses as low as at any institution affording like advantages. Benevolent funds available to Worthy students who may need assistance. Students deficient in any study will be enabled to obtain full standing in the regular classes by extra work in special classes. ,,,,,.-,....e-,,...y8, X, ew, D GALEN DAR 1893-'94-. Fall Term, September I2--D6':C6I1llJC'll' 23. Winter Term, January 9-March 23. Spring Term, April 3-June 20. Catalogues containing full information mailed free to any address, upon application to LIBRARIAN WABASH COLLEGE, CnAxv1foRDsv1LL1'c, IND.


Suggestions in the Wabash College - Wabash Yearbook (Crawfordsville, IN) collection:

Wabash College - Wabash Yearbook (Crawfordsville, IN) online collection, 1895 Edition, Page 1

1895

Wabash College - Wabash Yearbook (Crawfordsville, IN) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 1

1910

Wabash College - Wabash Yearbook (Crawfordsville, IN) online collection, 1912 Edition, Page 1

1912

Wabash College - Wabash Yearbook (Crawfordsville, IN) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922

Wabash College - Wabash Yearbook (Crawfordsville, IN) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923

Wabash College - Wabash Yearbook (Crawfordsville, IN) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

1926


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