Williams College - Gulielmensian Yearbook (Williamstown, MA)

 - Class of 1892

Page 1 of 270

 

Williams College - Gulielmensian Yearbook (Williamstown, MA) online collection, 1892 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1892 Edition, Williams College - Gulielmensian Yearbook (Williamstown, MA) online collectionPage 7, 1892 Edition, Williams College - Gulielmensian Yearbook (Williamstown, MA) online collection
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Page 10, 1892 Edition, Williams College - Gulielmensian Yearbook (Williamstown, MA) online collectionPage 11, 1892 Edition, Williams College - Gulielmensian Yearbook (Williamstown, MA) online collection
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Page 14, 1892 Edition, Williams College - Gulielmensian Yearbook (Williamstown, MA) online collectionPage 15, 1892 Edition, Williams College - Gulielmensian Yearbook (Williamstown, MA) online collection
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Page 8, 1892 Edition, Williams College - Gulielmensian Yearbook (Williamstown, MA) online collectionPage 9, 1892 Edition, Williams College - Gulielmensian Yearbook (Williamstown, MA) online collection
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Page 12, 1892 Edition, Williams College - Gulielmensian Yearbook (Williamstown, MA) online collectionPage 13, 1892 Edition, Williams College - Gulielmensian Yearbook (Williamstown, MA) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 270 of the 1892 volume:

The Mutual Life lnsuranceC0mP3'1y OF New vomc. I RICHARD A. Mcounov, President. I Statement for the year ending December 3lSt, 1891. Nr ASSETS ----- 959,507,138 ee as 1 was 00 52 16 53 Reserve on Policies lAmerica.n Table 4 .1l- ' 8146233323 L' i1't' th th Reserve, f - ' ' sliglsles on srl mf I , 12,030,967 Receipts from all Sources, - - 37'634'7Ig: 86 Payments to Policy-Holders, - - - I . 18.755, 0 Risks assumed and renewed, 194,470 policlell. - - - 6071171-801 0 Risks in force, - - - 225,507 policies, amounting to 695,753,461 03 . ' I I 1 I ' I ' 5 I 1 .' N0'1'1i.-' ' 1: :1l1ox'1,- sl:1l1-1111-111 :-l111w-:1lurgv1111'1'1-5141-1111-1 1111 I111-1111 S- -11 1 r Ill llliuillli I1 'Wh UT' 111 11 111 l I1 1 I1 ll 1 1 1 1 1 l ll 1 111 lll 111l 111 lui 1 ll ll1 . - - . 1 f - , ' ' .S ' N 111151 ess assu 1: , 1r1v11- S 11 1.1 1 . --11' -. 1-1 1-.-'li' - - lf f- ' S- ' ' Q N' ll d 1 I 1 , I I I I , ,l I. , H , . z1ss11111c1l onli' lllCIllllllbl'l' Zlllll Zllllillllll ul I1--ll1'1 s Ilflililllii 'W 'l 5 l l 'l ' 'hc ' ' uma X ll yi-nr. ' THE ASSETS ARE mvesreo AS FOLLOWS: ?-if Real Estate and Bond and Mortgage Loans. - 681,345,540 48 1 United States Bonds and other Securities, - 57,661,455 78 . .Loans on Collateral Securities, A - - 101323-903 90 Cash in Banks and Trust Companies at interest, 5,070,153 03 .Interest accrued, Premiums deferred, etc., 5.206.035 49 si'5e.5o7,131e lee Il1:11c1':11'cl'11ll1'1-x:1111i111-1lll11-I11F1'g11i11g -l.1'1 111 -111 :111-l liufl Clif'S.111I1r'lvnvl-11-A--111'-1. K.N.x1.1ll'.lClllll'l. Mai -- F11-111ll11' S111'11l11-.11li1i1l1'111l11-illlw Ill-1---l'li1-111-flgis11e11.1i. REPORT OF THE EXAMINING COMMITTEE. Orrics or-' THE MUTUAL L11-'E lnsummcc COMPANY or New Vonx January 25,1892. At a meeting of the Board of Trustees of this Company, held on the 23d day of December, ultimo, the undersigned were appointed a Committee to ex- amine the annual statement for the year ending December 31, 1891, and to verify the same by comparison with the assets of the Company. The Committee have carefully performed the duty assigned to them, and hereby certify that the statement is in all particulars correct, and that the assets specified therein are in possession of the Company. ln making this certificate the Committee bear Testimony to the high character of the investments of the Company and express their anprobation of the system, order, and accuracy with which the accounts and vouchers have been kept, and the business in general is transacted. H. 0. vofv Posr. ROBERT sfwfu. 0501105 Buss, J. H. HEHRlCK,' Juuffv r. on v1ES. 0. 0. ROBINSON. -mgI w-M JAS. 0. HOLDEN. BOARD Ol? '1' Ii U STE ES. SAMLYE1, E. SP11ou1.1.s. ll1.1v1a11 I-I.x111z1x1.1x. . C11.1111,1as R, H,1NI,I,II IIA WII I I III IP II., II, I SAMUEL D. liA11CoCK. I-l1zx111' W. S111'1'11. fl1e11111.1a l!1.1s-4. 1 I NI, I I IH IQI. 'IJIQII' GEORGE S. Con. R11111s11'r O1.1'1'11.1x1 Rl'l-l'S W. P1a1'1c11.1'.1 .Xi-1 l'Hlli'iY li Il'll'Il 1 RICIIAIQD A. MCCu11111'. 111111111115 l . llixmzn. I, ll1111,111'1' ll1z1:1:11 1. i'11 itil rs-l ll 1 1- -W JAMES C. HOLDEN. li1'111,1a1' O1,Co'1'T. 'W11. P. liixim. I.III,l W 'Xl Q' I B' . l . A HERMANN L. Vox l'1,1s'1'. l'11H111c111c C11111111'111,1,. RllIilfR'l' A, 1g,, W-,I 'W II I .II -H:- H I. . . .iX1is1cAri1?1z11 H. Riu-.. jU1,11.sHl .I llxvliis. , llIiNRX: ll. R1111141:s. j I1uI,.,,'1.jI IQIIIIUQILLII P .1-.1115 . .11. lifllfltlll SlzXVlil.l.. I I Ilxii. XX . Al'1'111x1A1,11s,, l 11 ,vm V, R,,I,IX,,NI S. Mix R1sxss1c1,.1ER L111'1:1a1c. I l'111a1111r11:1a 3111111-111111. I ROBERT A. GRANNISS, Vice-President. WAI,T1:11 11. 1111,1.1:'1 1'1-2 G1-1101-'11 111111 ,..,- I-I.I-III.I,I . . . . ,. ' ' 1. - ' '. '. LLRIXXXIII --:- 51111111 111-u.1N'1'111'14. .-Xcluzirv. X 1 I H I' ' ' ' . E ' -1 .11-Z ig' ..,.' . T it f A ' 1 ,I .......,. . .q ..,,,.-. ,f' , .. . .- F- -rf -I--H -7 -:fm--v.P JJ ' NC 378C G951 1893 GE ' gllD-CSDNTINENT PUBLIC LIBRARY I . - enea 09y 8- Local Histo B f The Gul lelmenslan 317 W, Highway 24 'Y 'anch I l'1dePeI1dence,MO 64050 G E I K i'-2 Jljp,difIi i I , xg M X,T,,..4fJ7 I jfor Stuoents f' Q ff' W O ,f watches. I8 KARAT GOLD STEM-WINDING 'HUNTING CASE TIFFANY WATCHES. . I . . . . Medium Size for Gentlemen, - A ' 555 00 Large, cc cr cc! - . TIMING WATCHES FOR COLLEGE SPORTS.: : 5 Sterling Silver Cases, upwards from S35 00 I8 Karat Gold ' '125 00 I Glaze Stationery. I ESTIMATES AND DESIGNS FURNISHED POR INVITA- TIONS TO COIvIIvIENCEIvIENT EXERCISES, PROMENADE ORDERS AND CLASS DINNERS4 . I . . . FRATE-RNITY NOTE PAPER WITH MONOGRAMS AND SOCIETY EMBLEMS, STEEL PLATE ENGRAVING AND DIE WORK. . , .... . Ellumni Baoges. CLASS CUPS AND' RINGS, FRATERNITY EIvIELEIvIS, ETC.. SUITABLE CUPS, TROPHIES AND PRIZES POR COLLEGE SPORTS ALWAYS IN STOCK. . . Mu. Eiftamg 8 Ctompamg. 'ml1fOl'l SCILIHUC, is 1 ! -I I ::1Mew1Qorh.:: LUX WVTHDRAWN OVW rl ' FVQU1 the Fwnily SWB 1HIstory Library xflvqaw PV f l 6 QC M fb E67 TQ-if 5 1 t.'Q.:': 5f':f,'i3129212-1,:5fZ.5 'EWU' f-','1!1'.5L'f,1:3 ,1fllv!y-J?-vi -'..,r.'g,g..,,, ,, ' ,, ,, . , ,, , , 1 4 '.-l':'1!i'41..i,.311154vlififiziii-CSEWiiiswixliiiiiiiiikiii-iiiiimi2?kilii11iidQ1g'nf 1ff'45ig5ff'Lf5Qgffy f1gi.gp'5f-g5' f11ja5j5Iris 'r:-fail'-V , . -.. V-7 4 ' f , - 1 v. ., I tl P ' f ,QL Wm. Ixicelgillville again, Freshmen loaded Wltll sofa plllows, Q3 s xanks swelled iy 16 rmre DVANCE Jos PRINT WORKS, ' li , AS I North Adams, Hass. 4994949 THE LEADING FIERCANTILE AND , ' GENERAL BOOK AND .los . 0916 Printin I.. A M Western WS I . . W Massachusetts. N800 Printers of the HLit. and Class Statistics, to the Editors of which we refer. : : : iffii Compare Grade of Work and Prices with any other House. . . t O Advance - Job Q Print - Works, loo MAIN STREET, NORTH ADAMS, Mass. f71z1z. 18.-Peter's bench showin chapel. One entry and one exit. ii. Lasik 1515 f' i'fl4- 11,3 , vans 44-1- i v x 'I i l 6 l 'r ,l i l r l s l I I I l i l jhn. 10.-Allen received note of thanks from the president for gallant conduct. QQ QQ jfrancie Garleon, A flbercbant A ailor, 326 ZIVQIIIIC, :Between 32b anb 33b'Streets, 'MQW lpork. QQ QQ The leading athletes say that all 'sore- ' ' ness, stiffness or swelling is prevented ' ' . n I or almost instantaneously removed, ii I 0 D after exercising, the muscles are thor- ' - oughly rubbed with - tc. J Pond's Extract VlmI lllllllm' N M -- I W ic-esocen . l f:1 ,-,,,'.V,' 'EE: : K mt ,if fjfywf is gxillif E MIKE DONOVAN, Ex-Champion Middle-Weight, and 'ill' I -12,353 ' Trainer for the New York Athletic Club:- I use it ' I --5 7 constantly. i ii i V L. E. MEYERS, Champion Sprint Runner of the 31,22 World:- The best liniment I have ever used for rub- ' bing purposes, soreness, strains, cuts, etc. - 1grxfif5 . , i W ROBERT E. SHAW. Captain Olympic Athletic Club. A VT' 'XC' - Makes the muscles quick and active. u 1 ii- A ,mlhnmzmxouswainr JAMES MUTRIE, Manager New York Base Ball Club. Ta,Tlg'1:emaxnLuslvnviv1?iRL - Removes stiffness and soreness of the muscles in -fbuEELiffIgl2F'i:,nu. , a very short time. No athlete should be without it. 'Atal-utEn...:::s:r..,...fwfffK ----- , DEMAND Dis QNLY' REFUSE ALL SUBSTITUTES. THEY CANNOT BE AS GOOD. Yan. 20.-Maclay receives reproot' from Registrar for levity. A iii. NENT PUBLIC LIBRARY ' NllD-CONTl 8K Local History Branch MID-CONTINENT PUBLIC LIBRARY I Y . 354' G E IIIII llllll Ill IIU IIU llll Ill III IIII llll IIII llll llll IIIII llllll Independence' 3 0000-.'L2E?i3E g-W -W Vx, r, , .E - 7Ql,,'Yg,Y2l1Eefe,-5 asked fn apologize for dogds IHiSdCmC3U0T' VM A-MWMAA ARE You Banjos, Guitars, Mandolins, INTERESTED 'N AND II-T SO, HAVE YOU SEEN O C e . . . ' Th CLUEI I 7 ' YOU WILL BE PLEASED YOU WILL BE DE' WITH THEIR SUPERIOR I LIGHTED WITH THEIR HNISH .,,,, I QNX RICHNESS OF TONE. NN 1 52:55 E' C - Q WE GUARANTEE FOR II I I ARTISTS ACKNOWL- ONE YEAR EVERY ' ' FDGE OUR Il L ' Ban'o Guitar' I . . -lil Banjo, Guitar Mandolin . - I R Mandolin OFOURMANUFACTURE all , lla' - ARE THE BEST. ALL OF OUR MAKE OF Q - I INSTZUMENTS ARE ll' A ALL OF OUR MAKE OF TAMPED L INSTRUMENTS ARE I llii STAMPED The CLUETT. I ' 1-1 ll-ifng The CLUE'lUl'I. The CLUETT Special .l ON APPUCAT'ON- Have the best quality of tone' A Y . 'fm' Wim anything Are the most durable JI' 1 the MWCHI Line: 35' made. Celfain what We can do Try them and you Wm Nqfg m f for you. W.e.take pleas- use no other me m Showing Goods and quoting prices. CLUETT Sc SONS, TROY. ALBANY. NORTH ADAMS' 94171. 22--PCfCl'S and Booth visit the VVhite I-louSc. Y A iv. -I: EI If- L :IWJWLIAA xl':.,,..:.J LJ WI: A Y X Y I I t .I ': . .I ' -: f.:'.'i- ' - 'I4I1f' 1-I.'::fI:rf1 .::II I -if IH' '11 'HI' I - - I' -- I -. -- ervwr H. l .iIiI 4-' N ' I l f I E T H Tl l. lli .l,.,,, 1'...!1 .l!.d!fCBh!1':' -li: 2 ' -' - f'e' 'l l 5 1- - I,':I1: .f,1 'J- 106. 10.-GllI Board eIected at last. I 4 FOR SPRING 1892. I CLLUETT, CQQN al CQ. CQLLARS AND CUFFS ANU MQNARCH SHIRTS, ACTORIES. TROY, N. Y NEW STYLES' DRESS SH I RTS :AND : Q SHQRT BOSGIVI SHIRTS. I FOR SALE BY THE LEADING HABERDASHERS. lwflv. 1 3.--Colinas br:-alms thx: recorcj Ill cI1apeI SICIC sprmts. V IM. 141.-MC3l'S, H Where is It f d H Il In I N Y St I I t Geo, flb. Ibopkins, ED I . jfurniture 1: anb zz Ulpbvlstery, 0 llbicture framing. v I saws UCIIIIIIHNIS GOIICQC GOSODGICHYIVC ECEIICP. A18 Spring 511662, TIUIIIIIEIYIISYOWII, IIDHSS. 5 , HE WQRDEN SARATQGA SPRINGS NEW YORK BRGADWAY, COR., DIVISION STREET OPEN THE YEAR RUUND .. . W- W- WURDEN, Proprietor ff -9 Cl I-1' d Q I d 1 1 Vg-1 L f'TTRfirTATNWW E-E VQYQQUJZM'n'Jiiixwv:ffffE'fMm4iJf4flI'vfwIuH,JUf,' :.w'I ,. . -ii 123' 1-'51gf ' ff I I'-7.521 EI '..,,L!.l'r':I f 4I1l'4f1'2Iffrf- 115':.fv::rI4Ii :'I:':'f32'lULlL1'ffj5' -- 'TJ I I 1' .1 , :,:' 1 ' ' ' ' - AAA' ' A A wr... .2 1.2. U., .:' '1a:i:z4I'IIxI!zfi1Il'wLf'. I1 ' .. ' 1' - -1 . 'I' 'I V If bb. 2 1.-'94 shows marlcefl deference to their superiors. Leonard repairs his door. fdni Horsford's Acid Phosphate. PREPARED, ACCORDING TO THE n1REc:T1oNs OF PROF. E. N. HORSFORD. Tins ,breparalzbn is reearnrnended by Pbysiezans as a WLOSZ eaceellenzf and agreeable ianie and appe- zfirer. , lif nanrisbes and Z'7fL'UZ,Q07'6Zf6S fbe Zzred brazn and body, ennparis renewed energy and 'Uz'ialz'W, and enlipens Zbe fnneiians ..... 'Dr. Epbrz'arn'BaZenean, Cedarville, N. j., says: I have used it for several years, not only in my practice, but in my ovvn individual case, and consider it under all circumstances one of the best nerve tonics that We possess. For mental exhaustion or overvvork it gives renewed strength and vigor to the entire system? Dr. 73. W. Tbarnas, Grand Rapids, Mreb., says Dr. Dr. Dr. t'One ofthe best oftonics. lt gives vigor, strength and quiet sleep. H. K. Clarke, Geneva, N. Y., says , - 1' lt has proved of great value for its tonic and revivifying influence. R. Wz'llza1ns, Le Ray, N. Y., says: A good general tonic, and worthy of trial. j. H. Sfedrnan, Wesi Bralilebara, Vi., says .- H Best tonic I ever used.', DEsc:R1rT1vE PAMPHLET FREE ON APRE1cAT1oN TO , ' RUMFORD CHEMICAL WORKS, Providence, R. I. 'Beware of Snbsiz'fnz'es and lrndazfzbns. CAUTION:-Be sure the word HORSFORDQS' is PRINTED on the label. All others are sp I0 s NEVER SOLD IN BULK. lwb. 2 ff.-Allen's alarm clock out of order Goes to breakfast t 7 5 a J , . . a . .m. vi' DREKA Fine Stationery and Engraving House, gl 121 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. 14216. 2.1.-Poetic Revenge. Allen cuts chapel and morning recitations. o o ' COLLEGE INVITATIONS WEDDING INVITATIONS CLASS STATIONERY VISITING CARDS FRATERNITY STATIONERY A BANQUET IvIENuS PROGRAMMES, DADGES DIPLOMAS AND NIEDALS Steel Plate Work for Fraternities, Classes and College Annuals. All work is executed in the establishment under the personal supervision ot' Mr. Dreka, and only in the best manner. Unequalled facilities and long practical experience enable us to produce the newest sltlylels and most artistic effects, while our reputation is a guarantee Ot the quality ot the productions of t is ouse. Designs, Samples and Prices sent on application. HALF TONE, PI-IOTOTYPE AND PHOTO-ELECTRO ILLUSTRATIONS furnished from photographs, designs sent us or designs furnished by us. E. S. 6: J. K. TOBIN, p zoo Broadway, Troy, New York. Q Fine Q Stationery, 1 Engraving, Printing and Stamping Hail 0,-de,-S will Of Every DeSCl'iPti0ll- Receive Flost Careful Attention. C- H- WILSON- C. E. WILSON. I-1. A. NVILSON J V 9 Glbas. iblllllllsoru 8 CEO., LADIES AND Gm fs INE BOOTS AND SHOES SOLE AGENTS FOR F O BURI ,gc CO 242 8110 244 'lRIV6I.' STFCCT, UPOQ 'INCW pork IENIXIS GOODS OF ALL CRADPS CONSIAINIIY ON HAND 6' r es In X111 A 1 . l W , 0 . . V 0 . . , , O T . 1 l 2 1, ., , T, , A 1, Y ' 1-h-- - .J YMAO T' Y--fm. E. NYM y - FM' 2 -' 92 f 1 Valli to start Z1 rush, - T ' 'TT '- f f 'f ' f f- --A . . ., .,,.,',l.l l1':l ', .':-Q f, - Ffl 5-f'1f5'j1?IlI iIIIIfr 'l?ir1.: 3 - , I- -- , .. . ' -1:1 If-E141-I-1+ - ,E-. :IJ 1'.' sea-1. Q'i'.:E,.Is1l'iQiiiluii:iiE I' 1-I '-'H 'Wi' '. I WV- I' -1 l 1 I tr L le-in Warch 4.-Marcus tunnels 'Q in ef 4 54 ' f,-ls Q!! Q MWF f 4 f 4 ff Z? X Z!! I7 ,7 fb ' ff! fl! 5 444 a t N, 1 2 as .2 y, 4' E'-A.-' , Z 'iii 'fxji -,Q 4: I f xy f Zvi X Z ei 4, 2 5 4 6 Z f -1, W ea e snow for his hat. T hrou h Of The Greatest States In The Union. R ofthe World Famous NEW YORK 6: CHICAGO LIFIITED, O e the Finest, Fastest, most Elegant and Luxurious of America's through trains. In daily service between New York and Chicago: equipped with the elegant : : : Private Compartment Cars. : : : The only ones ot their kind running between the cities mentioned. A Solid Vesti bule Train. R ofthe new and popular BOSTON St CHICAGO SPECIAL 0 e in daily service between Boston, New York and Chicago, gix ing New Englanders the most comfortable, most elegant and punctual service ever aiiorded for all points in the West. Has New Vestibule, Sleeping Cars, Buffet Smoking and Library Cars, and Dining Cars. w. H. cANNlFF, oem: supr. CLEVELAND, 0- I A. J. sivnrn, G. P. an A 3' ox - ii :' l'mf if-T p MW ,lie a Q93 FRAT TY com, X- to lg, f Q ERNX Q m C' Ve Q Fx l 6 fe 2 eg 5 14 . 2 1. ff' X at g 1 .:,:-5 f- ,' 2 . ' . f , ,Q , X. ammgxegx V 11 .ff I: E :E , I 19 gr l'7g15'1'-' JOHN STKE o W ORK nm 4 ect to a quiet smile, but a lmwl !!.' b 6.1Schweing d0esn't obj ix. Ilia rc zo THIRD sT'REET ' C. c. TROY N. Y. SINSABAUGH, Wm' 1 -Hartt and Lansing test heads in the gym. COVERINGS L are showing a lar 'e line of Furniture Covcrin its varied in style andquality to suit ex crv taste and every 'purse For Wilidow Curtains examine our stock of Louis XIV Real Lace Irish- Point, Antique, etc Forshort or Sash yard' samples sent. A full assortment of Door Drapery in new styles, and new colorinvs. Poles Cornices and Rods for all kinds of Curtains. gi? Buyers of Carpets, Housekeepinof Linens and Cottons, Silks, Dress Goods Gents Furnishing Goods etc. will find our stock the best selected in this marl'et I A G V S QUACKENBUSH. 6: CO. Corner Broadway and Third Street Troy N Y . F w DEVOET ,ag co Cor Fulton and William Streets Q A New York T IMPORTERS and MANUFACTURERS of o Drawing Papers, Q2 Mathematical Instruments, 3 Draughtsmenis Supplies, etc We make a Specialty of Drawing Instruments CATALOGUES ON APPLICATION in Sets for Technical Schools. ' fri C Slnsabaugh T Restaurant ' AND A Confectionery, Proprietor. W1 I7 -Usual Fresh d - ' ' 1 , CDH? e gathers Shirt-tail SCI33gniELl1OI1Sfl2ltl0IlS in robes-de-nult. Burr and Dodd fTommyj serenaded. X CURTAINS and FURNITURE 4 g -'Q 1 g Curtains use Scrim: Silkaline, lVIadras, Silks, Real Lace or 'Irish Point by the as 1 l ws J ' 6 -9 0 0 0 O C O O llzr IQ Q2 Lzt board elected. HGTEL f KE NICDRE THE LEADING HOTEL OF' THE CITY 'S Y xiii - 4 ?L N ,, IX-1......I , A TL- - -Y '--f-lY+- 1-1- ....-, A nz: A W i 37- wi ,, '- - , , Y.- ,, M-, lv L, I I , ii.. -:ERA ' l T M.,-,. If ATEA PP ! fm1L:4X.Ll fi I- 'Ill I V VII IfIfIlfIfuV' 'I-I nLnf:-if F I ' 'N - - M ,II L IB - - U-4'A'f!I!I,1 I ' ' iw' -3 LI--1 1 I lr-gl-I I+' I I f III LI- I M'-I-H 4' ,II rl I II Iv H--L '4T I 'ffm-I A -U 'T' ' A A I 1 1-iI,IEIIffI111plE1I,f-,Ifafgfmrqgyh qjlrfpwj fy sg Q I! I III ,.., II A,.,. II ll V III- '+ IE My Elm WI aluliwl I 1' L:H5,,m'1r.:L I I 'II III ' 1 II -A- fgff-, . -, A - 2 FED!!! WIIEA rw ff: fi Iug,gI,mw,iTu, mfr- IL In L - 1- I- - N! fl IH mg' fl Il s I- Ill I- '- A - U-,:-Iulrrl'-'U ,f'Jii7 .-g L2:ei'.-.4 , I l-. L. ulii - 'ir f I Uni I I ,L MI Ifamg-is I 1 W I I I IJ I IIIIII ,IQ I I ,- +i11i...IL ig SI 'wa MI 1 A I. IIJI a 5 9 52 I ' A 1 -fy QM-Sf axef., A, -513 ff T TQ- A'T W, '21, 1 - fa'-.,-35:55. zfxsr--'-11 JT- ' '-f-:- - QTL ' --- - , V. - ,Lt L-1:-:.7f.,,Vu Y 5 F W ROCKWELL, H J RUCKWELL MANAGER. , PROPRIPTOR MADRAS CHEVIOT SHIRTS. 0000 SHIRTS S. E. MILLER, JR. IVIEN'S OUTFITTER ..AND.. CUSTOM SI-IIRTIVIAKER 34 AND 36 MAIDEN ALBANY, N. Y. LANE NECKWEAR. GLOVES lwllf 21 Freshmen appear with fish-pole canes and mackinto-,Ines Hand carrles cane and umbx ella xi. ,f N.,,'..,, ' -? - ': 11231-w.R.A.Sf. pl I d- . H.CUTTING . ofa 5 K C009 5 Clothiers, T T Platters, A T and Haberdashers. STANDARD GOODS AT POPULAR PRICES. T 4 I W. AND CLUETT COLLARS AND CUEES, MON- ,I ARCH SHIRTS, DENTS' AND PERRINS' GLOVES, BEST 1 I ' lli MAKES, NECKWEAR, MACKINTOSHES, ETC. . :: PDUNLAP HATS. : HIGH GRADE, TA1LoR MADEVCLOTHING, FROM A. SHUMAN Sz Co., AND STEIN, BLOCK Sz Co ..... THE FINEST AND MOST PERFECT FITTING GOODS MANUFACTURED. COR. FIAIN AND STATE STREETS, North Adams, Hass. V U I I t d t f l board elect Cambell editor-in-chief. ST- .4l!'5I'I'1 16 -Term begins. Q-gsm E HW: X27 ,.-:.-. 0 5, 7, diff' l 071632 Ql BROADWAY 1 H 5 -.u,1xfTiij:fLE:5f11' 4Ei 12 rf NEW YORK HOTEL, I C' ' 'G' VM: ...Ab N w, -sg : fi ALB E MARIE HO TEL. Copyrighted.. Youman's Celebrated Hats. Style and Quality Unequalled. 'WU 158 Broadway, near Liberty Street, 719 Broadway, New York Hotel, 1107 Broadway, near 24th Street, New York. WSWS April 20.-FI'CSllIU3.fl class meeting to consider monument rush. Bliss Perry chairman. R. S. Hartt Scc1'f:ta1'y. Rush abandoned. College smiles. iii siire. .fljirzf 23.-Weekly CNCVVC0llllJD extols treslinizin Fmt t I l NKICHI GAN ET 'Ebe !lDiClJiQElll Ctentral is the only real 'L Niagara Falls Route in the country. It is the only Railroad that gives a satisfactory view ofthe Falls. All day trains stop five minutes at Falls View, which is what the name indicates, a splendid point from which to view the great cataract. It is right on the brink of the Grand,CaI1y0n at the Canadian end of the Horseshoe, and every part of the Falls is in plain sight 11.1.1 from window or platform. THE NIAGARA FALLS RouTE fa, The l , R Niagara Direct VIA Q I Falls Line From Ugrad W -'TW 2 e Williamstown : : TO DETROIT, TOLEDO, I BAY CITY, SAGINAW, MACKINAW, I ,.IAcKsoN, GRAND RAPIDS, BATTLE CREEK, KALANAZGO, CHICAGO, sr. Lows AND ALL POINTS WEST, SOUTHWEST, AND NORTHWEST. ' 1848 Through Sleeping Car Service to All Principal Points. Unexcelled Dining Rooms, ROBERT IvIII.I.ER, 0. W. RUGGLES, w I-I UNDERWOOD Genfg Szwl'-, Detroi, MM.. G. P. E9-' YT Agemf, Cfzzkfzgo, Ill. Q Easfi ,Jussi Ag! B1 Wa 10 A7 Il April 25.-Action reconsidered. Mentors absent. College grins x i V lmemnmmmmmmwmmi ,f-mn A .fffsflgl 30.-lVeekly QNewcombl Sits on Freslnuell ESTABLISHED IBGO. - Fine Family Q KU SU 6256 D005 9 F. W. ADAMS, S Society Trade-Soliciteol. Price and Quality Guaranteed. Q09 ' 496437 COB. MAIN 64 PARK STS., WILLIAMSTOWN, MASS. I POOL AND BILLIARD S- C. PRAfl1T2 - g SPRING ST. if A ALSO A OVER PPESTOWS STORP Full Line of Cigars and Cigarettes Constantly on I-Iand. I - - 1 WILLIAMSTOWN. E THE HANDSOMEST BILLIARD PARLOR IN WESTERN MASSACHU- SETTS CAN BE FOUND AT THE W1 LSON HQUSE, . NORTH ADAMS. 'Wi Round Ivory Balls and Srnall Tipped Cues a Specialty. Four FirstfC1ass Billiard and Pool Tables. . . . . NO BAR. W. H. FOSMIRE, Proprietor. -Tilkgjigo-.,:aP'1'eaYl1men lCCOTlSldCl' reconsidered action. Rush re-abandoned. College laughs. x v. n Q 1 I! f A 5. 17 6 'Q M., .-.--..'.. C A May Q -Columbus B 1 1 discove . h t ent in Mission P rk, all hidden by trees. Dan'l Klock, Jr. 6: Co., TROY L RUBBER STORE. R I0 Broadway, Troy, N. Y. ' ' ' vows C Mackintosh Coats, Rubber Coats, Rubber Boots for Fishing and Sporting, I-lard and Soft Rubber Drink- ing Cups, Air Pillows and Cushions, Foot Balls All Kinds. Everything in the Line of Rubber Goods Kept by an exclusive Rubber House at reasonable prices CALL ON Us. INTERIGR Woon WORK. WAINSCGTINC, MANTELS, R FLooRs AND FURNITURE. Curtains and all Interior Decorations 'SQQQ , GREEN Sc VVATERMAN, i FURNITURER WAREROOMS, 283 RIVER STREET, , Factory: Front St. 'Q' I N, Y, E iii d u , d ervfpelegweeeaa aaaa Q Mix- l 113 S' le 1 llSCllCll1lSiI P. J. BoLANo, WO FIN E Custom Tailoring . AND , ACientlemen's Furnishing Goods 'U THE LATEST NOVIQLTIES. if Satisfaction guaranteed to all favoring US with their patronage ..... . My representative will be in Williziiljstowli each Week with samples ..... . BOLAND BLOCK, NORTH ADAMS, O mAssAcnUsE1vrs. 08101401 it of town. Faculty cut chapel in a body. Nobody blames them xvii. E. 7' e E UNS N Thvfoagh C am Dazbf I TO AND Neon! i EOSTOIW SRRINGFIELD, RITTSFIELD, I ALRANK NE W YORIT L . RUFFAL O, POPMZUV WW CLEVELAND, I Q CHICAGO, I 77 61 77677726 2616 ZZESK Aflllfl aa Cf. A ROUTE OF THE E Doslofe aaa' C hzoago Special T0 THE TEE NEW ENGLAND FA VORITE. 9 ' 58 W ovflcl S F aw ' Tlzis Lime Rrovzaes lhe Safes! and Most I Comfortable Roadway, lhe Fines! Egazfmenl, Mos! Coffee! ana' Rzmolaal Sevfvioe, I g AND THE Oabf DoaOle T 76166 Razlway BETWEEN BUFFALO AND CHICAGO. W. LI. CANNIFI2 A. ff' SMITIL C. P. 69-' YT fl. Goff! Szgfl., Cleveland, O. xviii. ii i i m -,i:..u-,.,.,.,-' . ,-.. . - M .. if r, - A- .A Y A f. L , , ., , N, . 4, M--.,-.K ,W 1, g,- . ,g,.,4. '.:,, ': ' -- ,,.. .v.,4..,,. ..-w-,1--',-,- 1' , . 1 ,, . A ca CQ W4 lr' 'X 'I .-'g:.1.,. :V r I I - , I 'I iff!!! f fvfzwf , - 1' - , aww I ' 'IZ' X , fi - 'I A 'f 'I' - 'I' V N . W V 5 A . f'. 1 Ql1...,.i' .,q'gi:,' ' 03534 'Y' ., 4: fl ' 1- 53152 Y- nk, ff if '-ffl 1' ' fl! JMU, r'- f:, 'T :1 ,. -- 'lun 1 4 5: Ei., fl '1IllfL1fy-:,w'f-,Q-gf 'leii-:Z-if-fiif lf I217:15i5g iL9V if? 15' EW? M! 'nm Wu W v .'?E?1iin754 W - 2 .z :+A 2'J1f1+' n H' ' E1 - -'I+' .' I 'humffff 'ff MR, , , 41' .4 . 11? .44 .. WT,ff 5E:'f55',i1!1I11, Qgll!mfMmfH5 'nf f f , KVI, f- MII, IQL1.-. ,. v ,-4 .ll T! IJ Mllflml ...v.!XJ.JJ1,4::,l:,vgs.Hn UU 1-ly 'J ,1 Aff! 'in i-r.2fp14vf1.f':'f' I . . , 'IMY W 'slum ..u2z'f2f-ff vw- -A'f iw--JT 'N:'ffelsm'f -... WM: f lx .1 A'-1 .M 1, ry: Jw' IW I1l:lV . Qyifgh HV '1.fqIuW 5 hal- , 1 dlllu- I-Ml. .I IQ ,gh nff-' ' f vf:s,f.f::.z ML. m.2l'. f5l1gMJ ,, a sg. ' YI ffwff 12,111 M ' 1ffgf4f 1:ffy 1' im' - .,- f .,,1ff:Mg'Al 'lulvwi - l':?!i LAfk4fp1kL'lH4Hnl4h.e1S1.-A jg. Qi , I ' E: zfmjmafj +36 ml 1 W , .f ,i5g!?'7f fislgig:5,f J,jQff' .g3i!I5 ' ,i wMImHI.ln-.l 'm Jf,,lA,f?E'N Mk ,A ' ,,sf5FFgy , llilium! ':,:,I:c51!'3rf!.':l!J ! 3- ' HHH f'!!5aW!5 fnzffiliffff ff f'f 'W W I 'M V Mil W .HW 'M'2li Milli hl llllgllit ,mx I.Iwi-T::LlJ,r5j',12fc1f,Hill-mN,f Almyz: ' - . W Uf1fm,.m1':s'5:.A ..... '-1 ',--wf1f'f! 1 1Illf 'w 'f ff , ' f f -' f H: lf. ' .1-, 11.HIIIUU9 wHj i1-'H' I f Hf'l'7gJii5l! ',ffjmfiys1fe'i.2um, jUk if 'f'h!Ll.?a,1.i-I.Vwlmll . f - A' 1 1 a5sn5:gu 5' 'H , 1151! ' ,y1isw',!'f'f,f4 ff' jjQ'fv3 f7' , J N- 5 'N-f ,f W' -f ' , 5 ' I l ,W .,., ..i,,,, 1 vw' CHASMR 'QQ mi Cf-4 R OV-' Q KK. fs gf TUE-J fx X Q 'NI BR053 '- M f -THE- GULIELMENSIAN VG L. XXXVI Q 2 ' f 1 WILLIAMS COLLEGE DATE MICROFICHED FEB 2 2 20050 1892 PHQJEQQT and 6.5. V' mx-123 as CAL1 is 'gk ffilw, ZLIB USCAN6 0 g 7 5 2 7 A L L' F 5 5 9 2 A f7Ti lf-Lfffxfr C, WCIQ IUBI ISHED BY THE CENTENNIAL CLASS -V 14- A f !V -'i- TB fx-. xt I fx-, tb 14- we N., ,M .-.L .......w. E6DiCHIiOI'l. The was a kino ano generous man, JEph. 'lllllilliams was, they sagg- This name inspires 'paternal love, Tln williams men to:oaQ. C1Cwas he who soweo the vital seeo, 1In soil of ooubtful strength, jfrom which our feeble college grew 'Gio man's estate at length. Go him-brave Ephraim Zllllilliams- 'lllllhose spirit we imbibe, 1In honor of his memory, 'Clhis volume we inscrihe. JEDHOIIS. -ff' Q ' - '.,: 1. ,rf 1 -H -- V----V--fr , ,, Y ,Q ,gulgglzl.,..'u..'.jA:g:!f?T.,.-.,- - -+ A , I 'N' ' f -' ' -R M - .r , A H, ' ' . ' V, - Y, .. W, , , ,, , . , .::.lL1w1a. i. M, '11 al-iii .timleazhmi'1rii4i fl'....f:. 1t. l,W-E .,, ,,., ,, ,, V. 1, . i 4 ., 5Boarb of Ebitors. 'IDCIIFQ JBLIIWIDEIIII JBOOIIQ, llbresibellt. JLQHII IDHCDOCFI ZlI'I115fI'0I1Q,l: GDHYICS 6I'6IWiu6 SCWHH, jfllflilk 'lD21lTll'l1Ol1D QNQQE5, GJLOIUS !lDOl'I'i5 Staff, flffblllf 'lkiifiilgel' 'UU1iu'QO'l1llg, GDHYICS IEUWHYDS fmiuef, Zlrtist. Zlbram CBSWHGIC, JBusiness manager ,F1Resigneb. The boezrcl cleslre lo express their grezlitucle lo 'Dia Arthur Latham Pewgffor his very wrlu able sketch Qf the Etlfbl histofyf of the college which czppeczrs in this issue. -fry, f. , -. ' N 5. s r m I I , 1 Q .A ,k i A 1 , -V A Hbreface. T is a painful nzonzenf LZ'ZU6l7'Zl7'l'lg the rise of fhe IJlll'l'6l7'7l. The crash and bang of the overture before the fool-lzlg'lcfs,' the hunz of the expeclanl andienceg lhe ralflrrzg of seats in the houseg the hoarse 'voice of the stage carpenier, all conlr1'buz'e lo the anxrebv of a slight figure nervonslgv f07l7rlfZ'7'lg' the nzonzenzfs before the lasf bell. She is no debufanle. lf fs not her khrsf or even her lhrrd season, buf ll fs her-jirsl appearance for a long twelve rnonlhs, and she has reason Zo be anxious. Changed, she hnows she has, fn rnargv ways. Harder is rl eoergv year lo sustain anew role which will nzosoe the pens of unfrrendbv cr1'f1'cs to praise and refarn her pas! popularly. Will she succeed .P Ah, rf she could bul know now ! One flung' above all others grves sleadrness lo her nerfves and firnzness fo her lzps, she has clone her best. The full crescendo wrflz nfs roar and boonz is a thing of fhe paslg the grand finale ends,- flze lasz' bell is rungg lhe curfain surges upward. fBul.furfher we cannol gog would ihal we could. THE EDITORS. , aEl......!B.-H,,..i.,, V-,.,,,,,,,.,,..- .,,, V L ,, 2. , ,. ---- f 1 11 ' I l I Ti 41 , I l U x 'N , I V, 1 s ' -I iff l y 4 ' x 7 . 'N .'1. l , ' 1 ' K 9 1 'Qlllilliamstown jfrcc School, 1791-'93. secondary Williams family were being born and ...., R GB?-4 , .3-5, 2 CL. EPHRAIM WILLIAMS was a bachelor. He T had encountered in his childhood some ofthe sin- isterinfluences usually derivable from the genus pi ,M b I step-mother. His own mother died April 12, 1718, but a few days after giving birth to her .-bi c onlyother child,Thomas,when Ephraim was just i' turned four years old. The father married again in thirteen months, and the maternal grand- . rw father, Abraham jackson, took the two boys to , his own home and brought them up, while a bred in the immediate neighborhood. There came to be seven children in the new family. The environment, accordingly, of the two boys was abnormal. The grandfather jackson was the son of the first permanent settler in what came to be called Newton, on the Charles river, Cambridge and Watertown being the adjoining and closely associated villages. He had a large family of his own, was much in the public business, and for twelve years certainly was a Selectman and also one the first School Committee in Newton. He made his will in january, 1739, and died eighteen months thereafter, being then eighty-tive years old, when Ephraim Williams was not quite twenty-five and Thomas not quite twenty-one, and he bequeathed .1-lzoo to these grandsons, saying in that connection in his will that he had already spent considerable sums upon their bringing up and education. Two important features of the childhood and youth of Ephraim Wil- liams are plainly enough to be discerned at this late day, even in the absence of all direct and contemporary testimony. First, his early school education, though considerable, was neither thorough nor extended. ' This is proven directly by his manuscripts still extant, mostly letters, of which there are twelve or fourteen of some length, besides muster-rolls and money-accounts with the Province of Massachusetts. These letters dis- play, without exception, unusual insight into personal character, good sense as to the then existing relations of things, more or less of humor, 9 t! l '----'il' i and the firmest principles of Fair and Right throughout, but not a single one ot' them is well spelled, few, if any, of them come completely under the rules of common English Grammar, and there is additional proof in them of a fragmentary home and school training, many arithmetical mistalres creep into the successive muster-rolls, and few of the many-itemed bills are found to be strictly accurate. That he put, nevertheless, a high estimate upon that ofwhich he himself had been deprived, is clearly shown by a good many expressions in his last will and testament, and particularly by the essential clause of it establishing the Williamstown Free School, and condi- tionally also Haschoolin the EastTownship, where the fort now stands, and the same fact is st-rongly indicated by several concurrent lines of tradition, which was best gathered up 'by Mr. Fitch, the first preceptor of the Free School, forty-five years after the Colonel's death. ,He had a taste for books, and often lamented his want of a liberal education 5 he witnessed, with humane and painful sensations, the dangers and difficulties and hard- ships which the first settlers were obliged to encounter, and to encourage them he intimated his intention of doing something liberal and handsome for them. - It is nearly as plain, from a full survey of all the circumstances, in the second place that Ephraim Williams found his double and doubtful home re- lations disagreeable, if not intolerable. The best evidence of this is that he left home and went to sea when quite a youth, and no traces of the time when, or reason why, or manner how, have ever been discovered, although these were diligently soughtforfifty years ago by Dr. Stephen West Williams, agrandson of his younger brother, Thomas. It is certain, however, that his father was troubled by this sea-faring life of his motherless boy, that he earnestly tried to dissuade him from pursuing it, and that he ultimately succeeded in inducing him to abandon it. It is certain also that the boy or young man made many voyages to Europe, in some of which he visited Spain and Holland and England, but whether he went before the mast or as a supercargo, or as apetty officer, will never be known, though perhaps it may be fairly inferred that he personally profited by these opportunities as towards that agreeable companionship and social success and political influence of his later life, and it is certain further, that while ships of a con- siderable burden then sailed up the Charles River as far as Newton, none of his own immediate family on either side were then, or had been, sea-go- ing people, and too that there is a strange reticence both of record and of after-reference to this portion 'of the Colonel's life. The same year, 1739, in which his Grandfather Jackson made his last will and testament, his father, Williams, then forty-eight years Old, broke up his establishment in Newton, where he had been prominent both in church and civil affairs, sold the ancestral acres there, and moved his family IO . to Stockbridge, with the laying out and settlement of which town as a mission station for the I-Iousatonic Indians, and with the new townships adjoining, he had had much to do for two or three years. A committee of the General Court of Massachusetts with johnfStoddard for chairman, had been appointed for this general purpose in 1735, and had been instructed to reserve 1-6o of the new townfor the missionary, john Sergeant, and an- other 1-6o for the schoolmaster, Timothy Woodbridge, both of them already at work for the Indians there, and also a sufhcient portion of the land for four other English families, whose permanent residence and intercourse were designed to encourage the missionary and schoolmaster, and to ex- emplify tothe Indian families at once both civilization and Christianity. The Williams family were the first of these four to arrive, and settled in june on Stockbridge Hill. Neither of the two older sons accompanied the family to Stockbridge, for Thomas, who had received the better early education, who had already studied medicine after the fashion of those times with Dr. Wheat of Bos- ton, and who took the honorary degree of Master of Arts from Yale in 1741, was just then settling down in old Deerfield as a physician, where he became and continued distinguished as such till his death in 13775, and the whereabouts and attitude of Ephraim in 1739 is not now known. just at this point of time, the many-branched Williams family, all de- scended from Robert, who emigrated from the English Norwich, and was admitted a Roxbury freeman in the year 1638, members of which early became potent on the Charles River, and others equally so along the Con- necticut later, and now in 1739 established upon the I-lousatonic in strong public influence, touched the same year the Hoosac valley also with a potency never for one instant intermitted since. In addition to the terri- tory bought by him ofthe Stockbridge Indians and organized into the four I-Iousatonic Townships so-called, the elder Williams brought to Stock- bridge authority from the General -Court to survey and lay out two townships along the Hoosac River, and during this autumn he with others proceeded to execute the somewhat pressing mandate, as New Hampshire claimed a strip of territory along the whole northern border of Massachusetts, as well as New York along the entire western border. So far as written records go for even traditionj Williams and his surveying party were the first white men to traverse what is now Williamstown and North Adams and their report accompanied by a careful map of the locality which alone preserves the Indian name Ashuwzllficook and Mayunsook of the south and north branches the of Hoosac, respectively, is still held in the archives at Boston, although for certain reasons another and final survey ten years later located in part these two townships differently, and so be- came the guide to their legal organization. , A II 1 4' 95E '!F 5P'l F Ef'!Y-'1 T - , ,While there are no present data to determine the exact year, it IS certain, nevertheless, that Ephraim Williams, having previously abandoned the sea at the father's solicitations, took up, under the same impulse, a domicile with him not long after the hearth-tires were lighted on Stockbridge Hill. The Berkshire registries of deeds show that he purchased considerable tracts of land in that town early, particularly one lot on the northerly side of what was then called Great Pond, nowa Stockbridge Bowl. Gn account of its Indian Missions, which were for some years very promising, if not very flourishing, a remarkable interest in the new town was felt by influential parties in Boston-by Governor Belcher and most members of the General Court, and specially by the Commissioners of the Hollis and other English funds given for the moral uplifting of the Indians. A new road had just been opened through the Housatonic towns and Westfield from Albany to Boston, and Ephraim Williams, being less entangled than his father in land speculations and other local' functions, became a fre- quent messenger between Stockbridge and Boston in respect to their reciprocal and important interests, and even legally represented for one session at least the new western towns in. the General Court. As in per- son he was large and imposing, in natural spirits genial and facetious, with manners polished and conversational powers quickened by extensive foreign travels, he came to be a general favorite with the leading characters of Boston. There is evidence a plenty, that his politeness and address, his evident integrity and weight of character, procured him unusual and a lasting influence over the General Court, he was very popular there, whether as member or otherwise g and when the old French War broke out in 1744, his own military advancement and that of a number of his rela- tives, though certainly due in part to the combined influence and pressure of the several heads of the Williams family, which they always exerted in the behalf of their own, was also due in part to his personal capacity and taking ways with men. The war between England and France, which meant in New England a war with Canadian French and Indians, led Massachusetts to plan a line of defences all along its northern border between Connecticut river and the Hoosac, of which Fort Shirley in the present town of Heath was built the first in 1744, and Fort Massachusetts in the modern town of North Adams in the course of the next year, Fort Pelham between these, and small forts or fortified houses to the eastward as far as Northfield on the Connecticut, were soon in line all fronted towards the hostile north, and we discover Ephraim Williams, with the rank of Captain, in command of this line of forts with his headquarters at Fort Shirley during the winter of 1745-46, having about 350 men in his scattered garrisons. Not long after he moved his quarters to Fort Massachusetts, as the more exposed and larger fort, I2 '11 ,I which was attacked and captured in his absence by the French and Indians in August in 1746, and burned to the ground after the lilied banner of the old Bourbons had flaunted for a few hours from the top of its watch- box. The fort was rebuilt the next spring, and Williams resumed the com- mand there. The hollow Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle did not bring full c011- fidence to Massachusetts. Doubtful whether it would prove to be peace or war, she kept up her line of forts in vigor, while on the other hand lay- ing out in 1749 the township of West Hoosac within its present limits, and opening up for sale and settlement in 1750 011 each side of a broad main street sixty house lots of ten or twelve acres each. Williams himself bought two of these lots, and encouraged his soldiers also to purchase. He was highly respected and even beloved by those who served under him, on account of his courteous and sportive as well as authoritative mode of intercourse with them. Fifteen of the men then in Fort Massachusetts bought of these lots at one time, and a beginning of rude homesteads was soon made along the street, especially towards its western end, and the first child born in the precinct was Rachel Simonds, April 8, 1753, on lot No. zz, now a part of judge Danforth's farm. Her father was Benjamin Simonds, one of the soldiers carried captive to Canada from Fort Massa- chusetts in 1746. The war had languished about tive years, and Ephraim Williams had spent the interval partly in Stockbridge where he bought out his father's large landed possessions, and partly on the Connecticut where he served for a while as Deputy Sheriff under Col. Oliver Partridge of Hatfield, having a sort of home with his brother Thomas in Deerheldg when the only half- smothered embers of the old war blazed forth again in 1754, and Williams, now promoted to be Major, was recalled to Fort Massachusetts, where he had been occasionally in the intervals and whither many of his old soldiers followed him to reinlist in the public service. Nothing of much importance happened then and there, and the Major had leisure to watch the state of things in the little hamlet three or four miles west of the fort, and to become still better acquainted with the small householders there, several of whom had re-entered the garrison of the fort. Two of the small houses already then built in the hamlet were within a stone's throw of the Major's own houselots, both of them built and owned by his own comrades on opposite sides of the main street and on opposite banks of the Hemlock Brook, both of them still standing as houses in this year of Grace I8Q2 though not in the original locations, and in one of them was holden the first legal meeting of the proprietors of the incipient township, Dec.,5, 1753 5 Ephraim Williams was no stranger to the men and their hardships, struggling to lay the foundations in war-time of the first town on the Hoosac : he was well acquainted with them. I3 Bemis ima When was set on foot in 1755 the famous, but futile, expedition to Crown Point, a frowning French fortress on Lake Champlain, Massa- chusetts required a new regiment of infantry to be raised to make up her quotag a commission as Colonel was made out to Major Williams, in part because he was thought to be the most popular military man in the Pro- vince, and the most likely to make effective the pecuniary aid and other inducements for enlisting men , and so once more the stalwart voice of their old leader appealed, in the name of the Protestant religion and of English loyalty, to the soldiers who had been under him during the ten years past, to the then garrison in Fort Massachusetts, and to all others willing to strike a blow for king and homestead and country. Four hun- dred and six men responded to this call, nearly all of them from his old stamping grounds on the Connecticut and the I-Iousatonic and the Hoosac, and a number of the soldiers in the new town left their houselots on the broad street then full of trees and rocks from end to end, and marched with their honored Colonel to Albany. Being delayed here for some time, and conscious of the extraordinary hazards of the campaign, Williams employed a scrivener to write out his last will and testamentg being delayed longer at Fort Edward on the upper Hudson, he wrote back from both places a number of letters to friends at the eastward, all of which are preserved 5 and thence he marched to the head of Lake George, where in the bloody morning scout of the Sth of September, I755,'he met an instantaneous death in an ambush of French and Indians. Fifty of his own regiment were killed, and twenty wounded in the same general action. ' The essential clause of this will of Colonel Williams, which in its broad outcome has made that name forever memorable, is as follows: Item. If is my will and pleasare and desire ihai' ihe remaining par! of lands noi ye! disposed of shall be sold al ihe direclion of my execulors, wzlhin jive years afier an eslablished peace, and lhe inleresf of lhe money, and also lhe inieresl of my money, arising by my bonds and noles, shall be appfepfp aled lowards lhe snppori and maznfenance of a free school Qin a lownshzp toes! of For! Illassachasells, commonly called lhe Wes! Yozonshzpj forever provided lhe said township fall zvzlhzn lhe jarzsdicizon of lhe Masisachusefle Bay, and provided also, fha! ihe Governor and General Courl give ihe said iownshzp ihe name W' Wzllzamsfozonf' ' The will nominated and appointed my trusty and well-beloved friends, Israel Williams of Hatheld and john Worthington of Springfield to be the executors 5 and in sending a copy of the will to the former tha day on which it was drawn, the Colonel showed in a letter accompanying it on which of its clauses his own heart lay : You will perceive I have given somelhing for lhe benejfl of lhose unborn, and for ihe sake oflhosebpow, 14 ' creczfures fam vnosfbf concerned,for fear any wzll should be broke. This letter had also two postscripts, both of which are significant, the first, 'tfn my 1017! you will find I ordered some money for fhe benejf! oflhe Eos! fown. Irion? know ffm! 2720171116 enough for fhe zozll, bu! so for as 2? goes zodlpay weff, and lhen some good wzlf come ou! of 22,-5' and the second, Ld no one Im! yow'seQ'a1zzZ fohn PV07'fhZ'7Zg'f07Z know wha! my zozll con- faznsf' , Those two trusty and well-beloved friendsi' became faithful execu- tors and patient administrators. For thirty years from the date of the will they nursed the little properties, such as they were, lands and notes and bonds, paid off from time to time the numerous small bequests in money, distributed the books and other personal items as the will directed, and cared sagaciously for the remainder of the property, adding interest to principal and reinvesting as occasion required. Early in 1785, they reported the condition of their trust to the General Court of Massachusetts, and applied for the passage of a legislative Act to enable them to fulfill, so far as they were concerned, the benevolent intention of the testator. Accordingly, on the 8th of March, 1785, an Act was passed creating a body politic, a non-terminable corporation, by the name of The Trustees of the Donation of Ephraim Williams, Esq., for maintaining a Free School in Williamstown. The act appointed the nine Trustees, empowered them to receive from the executors of the will the proceeds of their trust, which then amounted to 39, 157, and to go on and erect a building and to man- age in all things the Free School, under the visitation and direction of the Supreme judicial Court. The Trustees thus incorporated were William. Williams, of Dalton, Theodore Sedgwick, of Sheffield, john Bacon, of Stockbridge, Woodbridge Little, of Pittsfield, Thompson Skinner, of' Williamstown, Israel jones, of North Adams, Daniel Collins, of Lanes- borough , David Noble and Seth Swift, both of Williamstown. These nine Trustees, being all of .them residents of Berkshire County, held their first meeting in Pittsield in April, 1785, when William Williams was chosen President of the Board, and Seth Swift, Treasurer, and when Messrs. Noble, jones and Skinner, were selected as a committee to solicit subscriptions from the people of Williamstown and elsewhere, both in money and in materials, to assist in erecting the proposed Building, Q' as the present fund of the Corporation will be insufficient to effect an object of extensive usefulness in instructing the 'rising generation. At the second meeting held in Williamstown August 3d of the same year, two alternative sites for the School Building were agreed upon, the one actually employed for the purpose five years afterwards or the one still later utilized forthe erection of the old East College. Messrs. Skinner, Jones and Noble were appointed a committee 4' to provide the materials and erect. the I5 l 5 . l x l l l 1 in , ,A V . ,,,,,i,,.,,.-,,,- ,.-,.,.. n-.....,......,....1.- .-i---1----Z ---- building as soon as may be g and the next vote to this is remarkable on many accounts, namely, Resolved, that Col. Benjamin Simonds be re- quested to join said Committee in the discharge of their appointment, and that the President be desired to inform the Gentleman of this request. Who was Benjamin Simonds, that he should be honored in so unusual a way as this? He was not a member of the Board at all, nor was he an educated man in the ordinary sense of that phrase 5 he was innholder of the little town, and had been Colonel of a Berkshire regiment through- out the revolutionary warg one beauty of this incident is, he was one of the intended beneiciaries of 1755, he was doubtless personally in Col. Williams' mind when he devised the School, for the Colonel knew him well as one of his soldiers from the first, as one of the Canada captives from Fort Massachusetts in 1746, as one of the earliest householders and the very first father in the little settlement west of Fort Massachusetts, was it not for the benent of his and his neighbors' children that the bequest had been made thirty years before? and now his counsel and help were con- spicuously sought in erecting the building for putting in motion the touch- ing benefaction! Moreover, totally unlike the action and spirit of close corporations in general, whose members think they know it all and more too, who grasp all that belongs to them and more too, these Trustees put -on a level with their own chosen committee-men a simple citizen and an -outsider 1 It may serve in partial explanation of this admirable liberality, that Simonds had then in 1785 builded in the little village three good houses in succession for himself and family, sharing the comforts of the two latter, however, with the traveling public. Nevertheless, as always happens at the outset of a brand new enter- prise like this, there arose serious difficulties and delays over the erection of the building and the opening of the School. The money in hand was not thought enough to justify the going forward at present 5 the local sub- scriptions were small, and ultimately amounted to but 3903.582 as had been said, the Williams bequest amounted, thirty years after his death, to 159, 157 : limestone rocks protruded and projected all over the site selected, and it was a matter of difficulty to level this down to a proper foundation 5 a well to facilitate the present building, and to accommodate the future scholars, was begun, found difficult, intermitted, resumed, and at last abandoned : moreover, the town of Adams objected to the plan of the cor- poration for spending all the moneys to the benefit of the H west town, and opposed legal obstacles to their action before the Supreme judicial Court. In these ways and others, nearly -five years were practically lost, although in August 1788, the corporation voted' to petition the General Court for the grant of a Lottery to enable them to receive the sum 581,200 for the building proposed to be erected, Messrs. Williams and Bacon and 16 ,, .,,,,,,,,, some fi W..-..f,.i,f.Yb. viii , Little were to present the petition at Boston, and Messrs. Sedgwick and Skinner and Little were to prepare the Lottery-scheme tif grantedj and get the tickets printed. The Lottery was granted by the legislature in Feb- ruary, 1789. Q , In the newspaper called the Massachusetts Centinel of May zz, 1790, appear what we should nowadays call an advertisement of and an Editorial in behalf of this Lottery, as follows, and now reprinted for the first time since then :- XWILLIAM STOVVN FREE-SCHOOL LOTTERY. THE 7th class of VVILLIAMSTOWN FREE-SCHOOL LOTTERY, will poszlfzizefy commence drawing on MONDAY next, Qbeing the 24th inst.j and will be completed early on the next day g alist of Prizes will be published the same week in THE CENTINEL.-The publiclcmqy depend on pzmclualzgv. The FREE SCHOOL has hitherto experienced the Friendship of the Citizens of Boston, and the neighboring Towns and it is hoped that it will once more receive lhe same benevolent Assistance. ' MAY zz, 1790. W1LL1AMsTowN FREE SCHOOL LOTTERY. We are authorized to assure the Publick, and we do assure them- that the 7th Class of this Lottery will not only commence drawing on Monday next, but will poszktzzfebf be compleleci on Tuesday morning-and a list of Prizes will be published in the Cenfzbzel the same week. The metropolis of Massachusetts hath ever been celebrated for the attention. it hath paid to the education of its youth. In the elder world, a FRANKLIN hath been a living testimony of it, as well as in the younger. But not confined to the youth of the town, is this benevolent disposition- it extends to the remotest parts of the Commonwealth, and hath been abundantly manifested in the liberal encouragement given to the Williams- town Free School Lottery. The class to be drawn on Monday next, will perhaps be the last opportunity our citizens may have to gratify their humane wishes-which they will not let pass unimproved, especially as great pecuniary profit may attend the gratification. The Massachusetts Centinel fBostonj, May 22, 1790. Hon. Charles A. Dewey, a native of Williamstown, and an alumnus of 1811, in an argument before the ,Legislature in 1819 against the removal of the College to Northampton, stated that the profits of the lottery were realized almost solely by the sale of the tickets in this and the adjoining towns: so that, the lottery in its practical operation proved to be a tax upon the local inhabitants. The corporation gained from the lottery scheme j53,459.68. Adding the local subscriptions, 3903 58, it made 554,363,265 and if the Williams bequest, which was 59,151 when passed 1 7 A over from his executors to the new trustees, had been kept on interest at 6 per centum during the live years, 1785-90, it would have amounted to a little over 311,000 In 1802, President Fitch estimated that the legacy amounted to 311,000 when the building fthe present West Collegej was commenced in 1790. The entire cost of the building he estimated at the same time at 131 1,700, although it was not then quite finished throughout. The entrance doors at Hrst were in the middle of the broad sides of the building, and there was a wide hallway connecting the two doors, through which the commencement procession passed for sixty years to the public exercises in the church on the hill to the west. All this was changed in 1854 to doors and hallways in the north and south ends. There was a commodious chapel with galleries occupying the two middle floors of the southendg and this continued the college chapel till 1828, when the present Griffin Hall was erected for that purpose. t Colonel Skinner, as the chairman of the building committee of the Trustees, and as the ablest and most enterprising and most ambitious of the local oliicials, apparently took upon himself the main functions of clearing the rocky ground and putting up the building-no doubt con- sulting from time to time with the venerable Colonel Simonds, as the com- mittee had been bidden to do by a vote of the Trustees. He even ven- tured to enlarge the size of the house beyond what had been prescribed by vote, and solidly built it of brick, eighty-two feet long forty-two wide, and four stories high, with a cupola, into which his colleague of the building committee, Judge Noble, afterwards placed a good bell at his own expense. Twenty-eight large rooms, besides the chapel, which occupied just the space of four rooms, were substantially finished offin the structure for the students and their teachers, one of which on the third floor, north hall came to be used as a small library, several as recitation rooms, and the rest as studies and dormitories. There were originally no bedrooms as such in the building, study and sleeping rooms were one and the same, though they were of ample size and well lighted. The thorough remodel- ing of 1854 attached lighted bedrooms to all the study roomsg two to each corner room, and one long one to each middle room, and by econo- mizing the wide hallways increased the number of the study rooms to thirty-two. Four large rooms precisely like the rest had been cut out of the original chapel space on the dedication of Griffin Hall in 1828. October 20, 1791, the Free School, as the Act of the General Court in conformity to the will of Col. Williams had designated the foundation, opened in the new building, under the direction of a Preceptor and Eng- lish School master. An usher was also shortly afterwards appointed. The building had lodging and study rooms sufficient to accommodate one hlmdfed persons, besides a common school room sufhcient for sixty 18 ...wg scholars, a dining room that would seat one hundred persons, and the chapel served as a hall for public academical purposes. The School con- sisted, from the first, of two departments , an English free-school, in which reading and writing and arithmetic were taught, composed almost wholly of boys from the higher classes in the common schools of Williamstown , and a grammar-school or academy, in which the higher branches were taught, and for instruction in which a small tuition was charged. The latter soon became popular, upwards of sixty young men were in attend- ance upon it during its first six months. They came from southern Ver- mont and eastern New York, and all parts of Berkshire County. The impulse that brought many of them was the desire to qualify themselves to become good teachers of common schools. Not a few of them had be- fore taught school, without having had suitable instruction themselves, and most of them engaged afterwards in that employment more or less, so that, the pitch was given at the very outset for the song sung by this Institution ever since, the song namely, of useful and uplifting action upon the less privileged masses of the People. The Trustees were elated with the success of this experiment, such instruction as they offered in the academy was evidently in demand in the entire region round about,--it is noted, that a few pupils came even from Canada, when, and in whose mind, first dawned the purpose to transform, tif possiblej the School into a College, whether it were before or after the erection of the Building, cannot now be known , some talk of founding a college on the Connecticut river, near Northampton, had been rife for a quarter of a century, and some of the Williams family had been in the movement, and such talk was rife also in several other parts of New England at that time , all that is certain is, that the Trustees here at their meeting May 22, 1792, prepared and signed a Petition to be presented at the next session of the Legislature, of which the final sentence runs as fol- lows :-'tlfoar rnernorzallsls, Zherqfore, humbly pray your Honors, fha! lhe Free School in Wzllzarnsfown, may be zncorjnoraled info a College ly! ihe narne of W ILLIAMS HALL, and fha! lhe narlaring, liberal hand of lhe Legislalare rnryf be exlenalerl fo 22' by a gran! Wflanrls at lhe easlerbf par! ofthe Cornrnonzoealfh, or in suclz oiher way as foyour Honors rnay seern Jil. , This petition, unanimously signed by the trustees, found favor in both branches of the Legislature of Massachusetts. An Act of incorporation, changing the Free School into a College, under the name of WILLIAMS COL- LEGE was consummated june 22, 1793. By this Act all the trustees of the Free School were made trustees of the inchoate College, and to them were added Stephen West of Stockbridge, Henry Van Schack of Pittsiield, Elijah Williams of West Stockbridge, and the presidentof the College pro lernpore. The new charter allowed the board to consist of seventeen members, and I9 to become a self-perpetuating body. lt vested also all the property of the Free School, real and personal, in the hands of the new College Corpora- tion, and it made a grant outright of 34,000 from the State Treasury for the purchase of a library and philosophical apparatus. West College itself, crowning its limestone swell, and standing wholly in the public highway, was the principal legacy from the Free School to the College. It was a noble legacy in the spirit of its origin, in its prompt adaptation to the local wants of the common people, andin its actual uses and associations for a full century past, cheapening the higher education to those who might not otherwise have been able to receive it at all, and the question of its present demolition ought to be decided, and doubtless will be, in its relations to the future possible development, intellectual and moral, of that promising class of young men, who thronged its halls at first, and who, speaking broadly, have thronged its halls ever since 5 very many of whom would never have been highly educated at all, had it not been for its specially accessible facilities. Perhaps the three most distinguished men during the century past, who, using the facilities of this primal building here as at least a stepping stone to vast influence in later life as champions ofthe Rightsand Progress of the masses of their countrymen, have been WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT, DAVID DUDLEY FIELD and SAMUEL TILDEN. Mr. Bryant entered the class of 1813 at the beginning of their Sopho- more year, and went through but two entire terms with them, rooming in what is now No. II, West College, with John Avery, a student much older than himself. College was not then in a very wholesome condition, and his naturally satirical mind seized upon salient points of objection, which he embodied in a caustic poem read before the Technian Society, entitled Descrzpfo Gulzlelmopolzsf' john Bigelow in his biography of Bryant quotes one ofthe six ten-lined stanzas of this poem, with the word, Thqy show fha! he was saizsjfed nedher wzhth ihe climaie, fown, college nor zlfs auihor- mes. Nevertheless, the instruction of that Sophomore year, 1810-I 1, was all the college instruction he ever received. He thereafter studied the classics and mathematics at home, in Cummington, with some expectations offollow- ing his roommate Avery to Yale, but he never went to another college, on account of his father's poverty g and he soon settled down to the study of the law, which he practised some ten years in Western Massachusetts. In his old age he returned to the classics, and made a fine success of new translations of Homer. The Norih Amerzkan Rewew of September, 1817, contained his Thanatopsisf' whose appearance made an Epoch in Amer- ican Poetry 5 and again when very old he treated poetically the same cir- cle of thoughts in his Flood of Years, and filled in many interstices of opportunity between these with lyrics of avery high order, butit was after 20 -.--.gr all asian editor of a Democratic newspaper in New York, and as a social and political reformer, that his life became more significant and influential. He stood as the peerless champion of the essential Rights of the many as against the ever encroaching few. Hfhave been jfjijf ,years in fhzs senate, he said publicly and proudly near the close,--Hfhave been jfffy years in ihzs serzvzee, and have never weaned of z7. He believed in the inalienable right of all men to buy and sell and get gain. He made the N K Evening' Posf, what it still continues, the leading advocate in the land for universal freedom of Trade, and he rightfully became the first President of the Amer- ican Free Trade League. It is a noteworthy fact, that' Mr. David Dudley Field, another of the old roomers in the solid edifice of the Williamstown Free School, who was graduated from the College in 1825, the year that Mr. Bryant became editor of the 'fF.vening Post, was the immediate successor of lVIr. Bryant, as the second President of the National Free Trade League. Mr. Field is still living in an universally honored old age. He has been uniformly and liberally and strikingly loyal to the small college of his boyhood. Aside from his strictly professional labors, which have been herculean, he has given, as it were, a second life-time of toil, to possible improvements in the substance and form of the Law,-endeavoring to make it simpler and cheaper and more certain to all 5 especially striving to bring over from the Roman jurisprudence everything applicable to the state of things in these mixed and modified social relations of ours under the American States. Success along these lines has not been proportioned to the desirability of the undertaking, and to the personal desert of the chief undertakerg but good seed has been sown, some good fruit has ripened, and the tangled legal territory has been at last surveyed and laid out in plots. Mr. Field has wrought powerfully in political as well as in legal ways, both as a private citizen and as a member of Congress, in the clear interest of the common people as such, and While, owing to his superabundant labors, he passed over to another alumnus of the College, Mr. David Ames Wells, the Presidency of the National League for commercial freedom, the three large and elegant volumes of his published works, attest alike the popular drift of his life-labors and his prodigious industry. Governor Tilden once told the present writer, that he roomed in the West College for two or three terms in 1830, while attending upon the Williamstown Academy, which became and continued for nearly half a century, the successor of the original Free School. Mr. Tilden's home was in New Lebanon, N. Y., and he lodged here with a college student from that neighborhood, and he spoke pleasantly in his old age of his associations with the town and the college. If Mr. Field had been successful in securing the adoption by his State of his Code in its en- 2I P PM ' W W' T tirety, Mr. Tilden's last will and testament could not have been broken down before the Court of Appeals, as it quite recently was broken down, to the deep regret of uncounted millions throughout the civilized world, and to the probable ruin of the half-dozen alleged heirs of his estate, because it is a fundamental principle of the Roman Law, the basis of the New York Code, that clear Intention overrides H- Form through and through. Mr. Tilden clearly intended in and by his will, that the vast bulk of his fortune should go in a simple and untrammelled and most effective way, towards the increase and diffusion of knowledge among men. No such will as that, of a private citizen who had inherited nothing, was ever before sent to Probate. lt was disinterested, and it was magnilicent. Moreover, these two old West College boys reached each other their hands in their powerful old age in another matter of vast conse- quence to good government and popular liberty. ln common with all other thoroughly competent and broad-minded citizens, so far as proof to the contrary has reached the writer, Mr. Field believed that Governor Til- den was chosen President of the United States as fairly and squarely as any President was ever chosen, and in speeches as a member of the I-louse of Representatives during the winter of 1876-77, and in two elab- orate pamphlets of january and March 1877, he maintained the thoroughly fraudulent character of the proceedings, that counted in an excellent but unfortunate gentleman, who was never elected in. These speeches are on record, these pamphlets are extant, these proofs and arguments are as open as the day 3 no solid satisfaction was ever drawn by the per- sons most concerned out of attempted overthrows or Weakenings of them, and if our old Williamstown Free School and 'its brick pile of 1790 had any, the least, influence as towards the upbuilding and stability of these two men of might and right-to say nothing of-Mr. Bryant whose princi- ples of popular liberty were identical with their own+why, we just put it into the record. 1 J- , - fs- f . S4E?i 3-feaiff.Qiw5N5X 5 1 0 ' ,1'E?l1'l S t 4i7x,'m jle'5 1 .V . 7 ' thx 1 .Er ' WF' 1 5 -h 'U v 2, I' o 'N f ixlktf- , - Jgghvg- -- , . I t 7 - . 5 A 22 ... - alenbar. 1891 june 24.-CQMMENCEMENT, Wednesday ?5'lIlT'lYI'lCY IDEICRUOII of 'GNPYZZII 'U1l166k5. Sept. 24.-l'li1'SlQ Term began, Thursday Oct. IS.-h'iOLU1t2Lll1 Day, a holiday, - - Thursday Nov. 26.-Thanksgiving Day, a holiday, - - Thursday Dec. I7-22.-SCIDl-ADHLl3l Examinations, Thursday to Tuesday Dec. 22.-First Term ends, - - Tuesday 'QU1illf6Y l.l9HC3.lIiOll of Gwo 'ml166l25. 1892. Ian. 7.-Second Term begins, - Thursday jan. 28.-Day' of Prayer for Colleges, - - Thursday Feb. 22.--VV9.Sl1ll1glIOf17S Birthday, a holiday, Monday April 5.--Second Term ends, - - ' - Tuesday Spring lbacation of wuz week. April 14.--Third Term begins, Thursday May 30.-Memorial Day, a holiday, Monday June 6.1-Senior Examinations begin, - Monday June I3-18.-Semi-Annual Examinations, Monday to Saturday June IS.-Graves Prize Speaking, - Saturday Evening june 19.-Baccalaureate Sermon, - Sunday Forenoon June I9.--Mission Park Meeting, - - - Sunday Afternoon june 19.-Address before the Mills Theological Society, - Sunday Evening june 20, 21.-EX3lUl1,'13tlOUS for Admission, - Monday and Tuesday Iune 20.-Address before the Adelphic Union, - Monday Evening june! 21.-AlLlIT1U,l. Meeting, - - Tuesday Forenoon june 21.-Class Day, - - - Tuesday Afternoon June ZI.--P1'lZ6 Rhetorical Exhibition, Tuesday Evening june 22.-COMMENCEMENT, - - Wednesday .'5lll1lI1l6P vacation of GDUYZZII 'U1l166i26. Sept. 20. 21.-Examinations for Admission, Tuesday and Wediilesday Sept. 22.-First Term begins, - - - - Thursday 23 illiams College WAS FOUNDED . BY CoL. EPHRAIM WILLIAMS, OWho fell in battle at Lake George, September 8, 1755. It was Chartered I1I4I7Q3. Corporate Name: THE PRESIDENT AND TRUSTEES OF WILLIAMS COLLEGE REV. REV. REV. REV. HoN. llbreeibentz. EBENEZER FITCH, D.D., 1793-1815. ZEPHANIAH SWIFT MOORE, D.D., 1815-1821. EDWARD DORR GRIFFIN, D.D., 1821-1836. MARK HOPKINS, D.D., LL.D., 1836-1872. PAUL ANSEL CHADBOURNE, D.D., LL.D., 1872-1881 FRANKLIN CARTER, PH.D., LL.D., 1881 -. . WHOLE NUMBER OF GRADUATES, 3,218 24 ------A he Society 0 Bllumni Zlmilliaflw QOHCQC. fOl'g'6ll1I'f8c77 1821.5 Mficets. FIAMILTON W. NIABIE, L.H.D., Pafesideni, - COL. EDWARD E. SILL, M.A., Wee-Pr.e.vz'dwzf, - E. B. PARSONS, D.D., Secrefary and Necr0Zogz'sl, JE! 6C11tiV6 GOl11l11iff66. CEN. ALONZO ALDEN, M.A., - - - I-ION. JAMES M. BARKER, LL.D., REV. EBEN H.AI.LEY, D.D., - - - . REV. CHARLES H. BURR, M.A., - - - And the Secretary. Ellumni visitors. QTQU11 are elecim' and fwo retire each ye'ar.J HON. J. EDWARD SIMMONS, LL.D , .... REV. JOEL D. MILLER, M.A., ' - PRIN. JAMES C. GREENOUGH, M.A., HON. JAMES R. DUNBAR, B.A., - REV. STEPHEN W. DANA, D.D., PROE. GEORGE F. MILLS, M.A., - - - Class Of Class of Class of Class of Class Of Class of Class of Class of Class of Class of Class of Class of Class of Glanbibates for illumni Gruetee, 189247. COL. WILLIAM S. B. HOPK1NS,M.A., ---- REV. WASHINGTON GLADDEN, D.D., LL.D., I'ION. XVILLIAM RUMSEY, LL.D., - HON. JOHN B. THACI-IER, M.A., - JOSIAH M. LASELL, B.A., ...-- Class Of Class of Class of Class of Class of , I 1867 1863 1859 1859 1860 I864. 1 868 1862 1864 1860 1871 1861 1862 1855 1359 1861 I 869 1886. Annual meeting in the college chapel, Tuesday forenoon of Commencement Week. Elssociation of llbetmsxglvania, qzamzflfzfgfmzay REV. STEPHEN W. DANA, D.D., Presideazl, - CIHSS Of 1861- HON. EDWARD L. PERKINS, LLB., War-President, - - Class of 1863. PROP. JOHN H. SAFFORD, M.A., Secrefmgf and Treasurer, Class of 1884. 25 wr,-5 - 1 IEQCCIIUVC GOl1ll'lliff66. DR. VVILLIAM GOODELL, M.A., - - - - EUGENE DELANO, M.A., - - - v - - 7 ' And the President, Vice-President and Secretary. 8 31650085011 of UIUGSTQYH H110 Central MQW HON. CHARLES C. DWIGHT, LL.D., Pfiesidmf, EUGENE T. CURTIS, M.A., Wee-Pffesidmi, - - REV. HALSEY B. STEVENSON, M.A., Wee-Prfsidmf, - PAUL C. RANSOM, LL.B., 1SEC7'Ef!Z7'jf' and 7-9'KlZ.S'Zl7'E7', - 6 Egecutive Gommittee. CHARLES B. WHEELER, M.A., - - - - CHARLES W. WOOD, M.A., - - ELBRIDGE L. ADAMS, B.A., 1lftevo 1511913110 fl55OCiHfiOl1 of fullmni. A A Mficers. COL. W. S. B. HOPKINS, M.A., Pffesifieni, -V FRANK H. DAVENPORT, M.A., M.D., 1720-President, - BENTLEY W. WARREN, M.A., Smfemry, - CHARLES D. WHEELER, B.A., Treasurer, - - lEZQ6Cl1fiV6 GOl1ll11ifT66. FRANK FOXCROFT, M.A., - '- - - - - HERBERT S. UNDERWOOD, M.A., JOSIAH M. LASELL, M.A., - - ARTHUR T. SAFFORD, B.A. ,... - Meetings and dinners in Boston. Class Class Of 1851 Of 1866 1lQOt'h. Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Ellumni Elwociation of 1I1levo llyork Glitp. wfficers. HON. GEORGE B. ABBOTT, LL.B., Presidmr, - - HAMILTON W. MABIE, L.H.D., Wee-Presidanf, CHARLES B. HUBBELL, LL.B., Wfe-Presz'denf, - LOUIS V. DAVISON, M.A., Smfemafy, HENRY W. BANKS, Jr., B.A., Treaszzrer, - , V 26 Class Class Class Class Class Of 185O Of 1864 of 1878 Of 1886 of 1873 Of 1884 Of 1887 Of 1855 Of 1870 of 1885 Of 1888 Of 1871 Of 1883 Of 1886 Of 1887 of 1872. of 1867 Of 1874 Of 1874. Of 1885 Egecutive Gommittee. JQIIN C. GO4JDRI.lJGIC, jr.. M.D., ---- - HENRY D. NlCOI,I,, M.D., - Nl.-X'l.'1'I'lliXV D. FIELD, M.D., - - IEIOXVARD H. BURDEN, M.A., VVALTER B. SAFFORD, B.A.. - STEPHEN H. TIJNG, jr., HA., - - CARRQLL PERRY, B.A., - - - - - - - Meetings and Dinners in New York City. 1Rortbwe5tern Ellumni Elssociation of williams Gollege. fjlfI'?'Z7ZI36Zf0Zi.S' and Sf. PGZILD wfficers. l'lON. FRANKLIN A. RISING, M.A., Pw.vz'dwz!, - HON. O. DlA'l'SON HALL, M.A., M.C., If?ca-P7wz'a'wzf, - PROF. HENIZY P. JUDSON, M.A., Zfice-Pffesidwzf, - JOHN T. BAXTER. HA., SL'L'7'L'li!Z7jf and T1'm.vzz7'w', - . IEECCLIUVC GOl11l11itfC6. Suifr. CHARLES B. GILBERT, M.A., - - - HOWE PAIGE, M.A., ---- - JOHN H. AMES, Esq., partial course, ----- Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Meetings and Banquet alternate between Minneapolis and St. Paul. of 1863. of 1863. of 1875. of 1878. of 1885. of 1886. of 1890. of 1864 of 1868. of 1870 of 1887 of 1876 of 1878 of 1860 Zlibe williams Ellumni Elseociation of the Hflortbvoest. fChz'mg0.j WffiC6l'5. E. ISHAM, M.A., f77'6.S'i6l167Zf, - - - JAMES R. DEWEY, M.A., Wie-Presidefzf, - - G. A. SAUNDERS, M.A., V2'ce-Presideni, W. VV. XVIGHT, LL.B., 17265-P1'e.s'ia'e7z!, - - A. XV. UNIDIQIKWOOD, M.A., Sefwiafjf and Y9'c'!Z.S'Il7'c'7 - 152 ecutive G0l1'lI11itf6C. S. S. ROGERS, M.A., Clhllliflllflll, ---- - THE REV. XVILLARID Sco'I I'. D.D., FRANCIS ICING, - - H. W. AUSTIN, B.A., PHILII' S. ALLEN, B.A., - 27 Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class of 1857 of 1854 of 1861 of 1869 of 1884. of 1877 of 1875 of 1884. of 1888 of 1891 1 1 ' I i I I FINANCE COMNHTTEE. EXECUTIVE COMNHTTEE JBOarO Of Grustees. FRANKLIN CARTER, PH.D., LL.D., PRESIDENT. REV. ROBERT RUSSELL BOOTH, D.D. CHARLES LAUGUSTUS DAVISON, M.A. HON. DERICK LANE BOARDMAN, B.A. HON. JAMES MADISON BARKER, LL.D. E REV. WILLIAM WISNER ADAMS, D.D. HORACE ELISHA SCUDDER, B A. FREDERICK FERRIS THOMPSON, M.A. REV. CHARLES CUTHBERT HALL, D.D. REV. HENRY HOPKINS, D.D. REV. WASHINGTON GLADDEN, D.D., LL.D. HON. JAMES WHITE, M.A. 5 HON. JOHN EDWIN BRADLEY, PH. D. HON. HENRY MARTYN HOYT, LL.D. FRANCIS LYNDE STETSON, M.A. ALBERT CHARLES HOUGHTON. JUSTIN KELLOGG, M.A. I HON. JAMES WHITE, M.A., SECRETARY AND TREASURER. CHARLES A. DAVISON. DERICK L. BOARDMAN. JAMES M. BARKER. FREDERICK F. THOMPSON. FRANCIS LYNDE STETSON. 4 , .... . O -- -fr A, A., , , ROBERT R. BOOTH. WILLIAM VV. ADAMS. CHARLES C. HALL. HORACE E. SCUDDER JOHN E. BRADLEY. l'5, ., , .JNL .1-..-Irv.,-, jfaculty an fficers. FRANKLIN CARTER, PH.D., LL.D., P11Es11J1cx'r. Jimi Bzzrday 7E7'lllIIZ'lZ Projxvsor Qfwlxfllfllfllf Theofogf. , REV. JOHN BASCOM, D.D., LL.D., 11 effigy' Orrin Sage Professor of I'o!1'!ieo! Economy. Rl-tV. ARTHUR LATI-IAM PERRY, D.D., LL.D., E71lL'7'1,f7lS Professor of Poliffeo! Eeonoflgf. TRUMAN HENRY SAFFORD, PH.D., H'e!a' M8llZOFZ'Hf Professor Of-ASf7'0lZ01IQf. CYRUS MORRIS DODD, M.A., Professor of Maiheflzafies. JOHN HASKELL HEWITT, M.A., Gl77fl'!If f'roj5'sxor of Me Azzcienf Lcmgzzfzgei. REV. ISBEN BURT PARSONS, D.D., fl,L1g7'I'.S'f7'U7', and Seereizzry of Me fkzczzfgf. .............................-.......-..... ffnrksofz ProjQ'.s'.vor of Christimz Theology, and Pczsfor ofibe Co ege Chzlreh !,L'!lT1Hll Ilffller frojessor ofA11zer1'mfz ffisfory, Liferafure arm' ,Eloquence sent in Z! REV. LEVERETT WILSON SPRING, D.D., Zllorrfs I'rojQ'ssor of Ifheforie. ORLANDO MARCELLUS FERNALIJ, M.A., Lofcfrelzee Professor of Me Greek Lfmgzlage ann' L1'!ern!11ru. REV. FRANKLIN XVESTON BARTLETIX. D.D., Dzslrzzclor in ffebrew. RICHARD AUSTIN RICE, M.A.,f1 Rxcv. CHARLES HENRY BURR, B.A., Ll-b7'f77'I'fZlZ, ZIIZILI bzslrnelor in Hz'o!1'm! f,1'!ernf11re. I2ul'nlw. 29 JOHN EDWARD RUSSELL, M.A., Wlorh ffophifzs Professor fyf hzlelleelzzal and Illoral Philosophy. LUTHER DANA VVOODBRIDGE, M.D., Professor ofAnzzlo71g1 emo' Physiology. LEVERETT MEARS, PH.D., Professor of Cheflzislfjf. .-.-nnos.....-.nn-..........--........, Mzssaehzlsells Professor of lhe Lalin Lnfzgzzage mul Lilerrzfnre. Thomas SAMUEL FESSENDEN CLARKE, PH.D., I - Professor of Nolural fbslory. BLISS PERRY, M.A., lrofessor of EZ0CZlfZL07Z and English. FRANCIS LOCKWOOD KENDALL, M.A., flssislmzf Professor of llloflerfz Lfzizgmzges. C HENRY LEFAVOUR, PHD., Read Professor of Physics, amz' fnsz'rz1ez'or in jyblfhdlllllllllli' THOMAS LOCIE, P1-LD., Assislzml Professor of Zhe Roflumee Lzzzzgzzzzlg s HENRY DANIEL WILD, M.A., Assislzznl Professor of lhe L!lfZ'7Z Lzzfzgzfrzgge. BERNARD CHRISTIAN STEINER, PH.IJ., bzslrzzelor in Plfslory. FREDERICK CARLOS FERRY, B.A.', bzslruelor in Lzzlin and Greeh. ELI HERBERT BOTSFORD, M.A., Assistant in Chemislry. FRANCIS ERNEST LLOYD, B.A., Asssislezfzl in Biology. THOMAS GOVE ADAMS, B.A., Direelor of fhe Gjflll7ZllS2'7ll1I. 30 N , Stubents. -7- --YAi-- ----t-. CBIZHUIIHTC SUIDCIITS. I'HII,IP SCIIUVIER ALLEN, B.A., 1891, Chicago, Ill., CARI. PAUL KAS1'.ARI BOTIINE, B.A., Clneago, Ill., Luther' Coll ego, 1886. WILLIAM ROBERT WILLIAMS, B.A., 1889, Sf. Paul, zllinn., Feliow in Biology. DAVID FITCH fXRMS'I'RONG, :HARRY EUGENE AVERV, ROBINSON PAIGE BRAINBRIDGE, ERNEST CLARK BARTLETT, EDWARD BARTOXV, EDWIN WHITNEY BISHOP, GEORGE ANDERSON BLANCHARD, JAMES MCDOUGALL BLUE, TWILLIAM IUSTUS BOIES, QRTON BISHOP BROWN, CHARLES ALBERT BROXVNE, JR., CALVIN BULLOCK, MUNSON BURTON, GEORGE ALDRICH BUSHEE, JOHN CHARLES CAMPBELL, WILLIAM RANSOM CARPENTER, PARRY CHAMPION, CHARLES DEXTER CLEVELAND, TCHRISTOPHER WALTER COLLIFZR, BENJAMIN CALVIN COOKE, ARTHUR ROBERT DAVIES, BENJAMIN DE VVOLFE, FRANK RANDALL Dow, Senior Glass. Auburn, IVY K, Delroit, Men., Yrojl, N. K, Woburn, Glenlzanz, N. Yf, Norwich, Conn., lfudson Cenire, N. fl., Nonanlcmn, Hudson, N Yi, Portland, Irie., Aforln Adams, Royalslon, La Crosse, PWR, Woonsockel, R. I., Oak Park, Ill., Pitfsyield, Goshen, N Y., New York Cizjf, Williamstown, Williarizslown, VVZUZ Sand Lake, JV. Y., Norln Adams, Clareznonf, N. If., 31 A. T. House The Berkshire Mr. Blakeslee's A. K E. House 29 M. H 2I W. C 1 E. C 0. A. X. House 9 E. C 1 W. C 24 E. C Miss Bardwe11's KA. Lodge 4 W. C Mr. DaIIiel,s X. Yf. Lodge I7 S. C A. T. House I7.S. C 21 W. C KLA. Lodge GP. A. X. House 4 W. C 20 E. C II K. H I7 C.,H TFRANKLIN BANCROFT DOVVD, WILLIAM FRANK EDGERTON, LAXVRENCE BRADFORD FITCH, FRANK PRICE FREIN, PIERRE JOSEPH FREIN, HAIIRY GILSON GARDNER, OSCAR THOMPSON GEHRIS, PAUL WILLIAMS GOLDSBURY, WINTQHROP BENTON GREENE, ROLLIN LYNDE HARTT, CHARLES LOVEJOY HIBBARD, GEORGE PORTER HITCIJCOCIQ, CHARLES MARVIN HOLLISTER, ALBERT WILLIAM HOIJIQINS, EARL HOLBROOK PIOTALING, WILLARD EVANS I'IOY'l', r HERBER'll SAVAGE IDE, ROBERT HOIT JOHNSTON, LAUDER WILLIAM JONES, FREDERICK WILLIAM l4llEOUGll MI'CHAEL FAY LA FAYETTE, THENIQY SHATTUCK LUDLOW, ANDREXV PORTER MCIQEAN, HERBERT LESLIE NIAPES, ROLPH MARSH, EDWARD NORRIS liIRK BIEARS, RAPHAEL FREDERICK MEDRICK, lVlORRISON ELLSWORTH MERIABI, LEVERETT BRADBURY NIERRILL, WOODBURY TREAT MOIQIQIS, JOHN NELSON, JOSIAH TURNER JNEXVCOMB, PAYN BIGELONV PARSONS, JAMES EDWARD PEAXBODY, GEORGE MANN PECK, ALFRED PEARSON PERKINS, .Saraloga Sjbvwzgs, N Y., Batavia, N. Y, Roclzesfer, .Nf Y, zo M. H Q. A. Q. House 2. Q. Place Crea! Ba1'1'mg!a1z, 7 W. C Graaf Barringlofz, 7 W. C Chicago, Ill., 3 K. H Fleefzvood, Pa., 24 E. C flW1meapo!z'.v, jllinlz., 9 E. C ZV2fwl0nm'l!a, IO K. H Bzgjlzlo, N. K, Mr. Adams'S. Pillgield, Q. A. X. House Piihyfoffd, Vt., I7 W. C Callzbffidge, N. K, 2 W. C Wz'!Zz'a11zs!a1u1z, Mr. HOpkiIIS'S Baldwinsville, N K, 36 M. H Sfaffyfoffci, Conn., A. A. Q. House. Troy, IV Y, A. FF. Lodge Cfzzkago, ffl., I2 K. H Peoria, III., 8 W. C Piickbzzfjg, II E. C W0fL'7Ul'!ZE, XV. Y.. 7 E, C Troy, N. K, 31 M, H Lafzszbzgbzfvfgk, N Y., 6 K, H Por! yerffis, Af Y., 2 K, H x767'.S'6:jf Cizjf, N. 7., VV0n'c.vz'e7', Por! j7c'7'7!I'.f, JV. Y., lI'ana'0Q5h, O. Wfenaam, Cincinnafi, O., Omaha, Afeb., Washifqgfofz, D. C. , Wz'Z!ia71zsZozv1z, Askbznffzham, Oswego, Ai Y. lfV01'cfsz'e1', 32 Tn. . Z. Q. Place A. A. Q. House. 2 K. H Chapel Prof. MearS'S. I K. H I K. H ,5 K. H A. If. E. House zo C 7 K. H 3 K. H T, CIIARLES LINCOLN ROIIERTS, JIXINIICS CIIARLES ROGIQRSON. IR., ,l AMES XVILLIAM ROWE, FREDERIGIQ BUSHNELL RIDER, FERDINAND XVILLIAM SACKl'1'l l', Cl'IARLl+1S LOUIS SAEFORD, WILLIAM CLIFFORD SMITII, XVALTER BULLARD STRI-LET, RUSSELL LORD TARIIOX, AMOS HURT THOMPSON, Berzzawlwille, JV. jf., fhzelson, N. Y., Cz'1zez'mzali, O., Alzrlover, Ajfe, N Y., m'!liIZlll5f0'ZUIl, Chicago, Ill., Lee, Balazfla, N. Y, Cleveland, O., TJOSEPI-l REYNOLDS TIl.l,IXGI'IAST, JR., Ezzglezuoofl, IVY jf., HENRY AIIGIISTUS TOWNER, JR., HERliEliT BALLIQY X7AlL, Nl2XKV'l'ON BRIGGS VANDERZEE, EDWIN VAN XVORMER, VVILLIAM ORR XVARK, VVALTER ANSON WEED, JR., HENRY' ICIRKE WHITE IR., DAVID HENRY WILLIAMS, JR., IVIYRON CLARK WILLIAMS, EDWARD EVERETT WILSON, Ckfeago, Ill., fgffle Park, N Y, Cezlar ffill, JV. Yf, Albany, N K, ' ' Y ffooszek Falls, JV. .Swh6'f6Zl7'lZE, Vi., Delroil, llfek., No1'lh Argyle, Ni Y Canandaigua, N Y., Azzslin, Tex., WILLIAM ROBERT ANTHONY WILSON, Peoria, Ill., ERNEST GLEN WOOD, FREDERICK RUEUS WOODWARD, CHARLES IIEXVITT WRIGHT, SENIORS, IAMES XVIGHT ANIJERSON, JOHN BENJAMIN ARCHER, LYNN PADDOCK ARMSTRONG, LEON BROOKS BACON, LOUIS J. BALI.IlQ'l'T, CIIARLES EVERETT BANRER, l Part ial Cours e. Lake Foresl, Ill., Soula Fffaznifzghaflz, Pilztyielzl, 3unior 021356. Springfield, Blaekzfnlon, Befminglon, Vl., bjfvfaczzse, N Y, Lockport, N. Y, Sekaghlimke, N Y., '10 JJ 7 E. C A. A. Q. House 2I M. H. IO K. H 2 M. H Prof. Safford's Z. Yf. House I E. C Mr. Daniels A. K. E. House K. A. Lodge A. A. Q. House Z. W. House 5 K. H Z. Q. Place 9. Ll. X. House 6 K. H Mr. Daniels I2 E. C K. A. Lodge 6 S. C Mr. Danie1's I W. C 5 E. C Observatory 6 C. H. Mr. Wells's. I2 S. C, 8 K. H. I2 K. H. 2 S. C FREDERICK WINTER BARTHICI., HOWARD HALSEY BAYNIC, HENRY BURNI-IAM BOONE, JAY STERLING BOYVEN, CARL DAVIS BURTT, JMILFORD WHITELUCHILDS, LESLIE LINVVOOD CLEVELAND, ALBERT EDMUND CLUET'l', EDWARD JAMES COLLIEIL, WALTER COLLINS, FRANKLIN STORY CONANT, JAMES BRONSON CONANT, 'f'HEN,RY JOY CONDIT, WILLIAM IRVING CORTHELL, ALFRED JOSEPHULIJALY, RAYMOND DODGE, ALVAN EMILE DUERR, HENRY- HUDSON EDDY, ELMER ROCKVVOOD EDSON, CHARLES TAFT ENNIS, JAMES ALBERT EVANS, FREDERICK WILLIAM FUESS, ABRAM GARFIELD, IRVIN MCIJOXVELL GARFIELD, ANDREXV BOYD GILEILLAN, PERCY GODING, HARRY NOYES GREENE 3 FRANK HAMMOND GRIGGS, NA'l'HAN RUSSELL HARRING'1'tJN, FRANK HENRY HASKINS, JOHN WILLIS HOLLIS'1'ER, CHARLES EDNVARD I-IULETT, JOHN NILES HUYCIQ, EDWIN FRANKLIN JENKS, O HUGI-I HENRY LANSING, T Partial Course Wes! 7?'oy, JV. Y., ffczdley, Fall River, Lowvllle, N Yi, Lowell, lWedz'1zrz, AL If , .Sv0lllL'7 Z!llZ6, Troy, N. Y., A7nde1'hool', JV. Y., jfersejf Cigf, IV 7., Wellesley ffflls, Afnslerdfzoz, JV. Y ., Colzzfnola, S. C., ffhlghlllll, T roy, Al. Y., W est A elon, Oniario, O. Fall River, Indianapolis, bzd., Lyons, AL Y, Little f?2zlls,QlV. Y., Walerz'ille2, XV. Y., lldenlor, O., Mefzlor, O., Peoria, IV1 Y., Soulk Berwick, .lVfe., Lansingbzzfign, N. Y., SZ. Paul, lVflnn., Cleveland, O., bioringfield, Cambridge, IV. Y., for! Seoll, Kazz., Albany, N Y., Adafns, Troy, AL Y, ' 34 . 45. A. Q. A. 'zo W. C I6 E. C A. T. House Z. W. House r' 2I E. C A. EF. House IO S. C A. 117. Lodge A. O. House 1M.H I3C.H IOS.C I5M.H 3E.C I6S.C 2oW.C I5W.C 5M.H 25M.H 25M.H I2E.C I4E.C 28M.H 28M.H 22W.C 14W.C T. A. Lodge Z. W. House A. O. House 6 G H 3 W. G X. Yf. Lodge A. BF. Lodge Mr. AdamS'S T. A. Lodge HAROLD AL'c:Us'rI:s I.EwIs. JOIIN P.-XRKPLR LOQRE. l':RXl'1S'l' AIUNSICLI. I.oNc:, rCIIARI.I-is FoRREs'I' NICLIEAN, ROIIER1' ADAMS BI.-XNNING, ROHICRT l,ilI.I.IQSPIIC Blli.-XD, JR., 'fACH.Xlil.l'1h HIJXY.-XRIDS MI1.I.ER. FRANKLIN I'iIiI!HIil,J. MILLS, WII.IfRID RYAN MORGAN. JAMES DAVID MURIAIIY, 1VIlf1Rl,IC FARMER NIVRPHY, Aoos'I'A NIQIIDLS, WARREN CARLOS NU'I rING, ARTHUR ULJVER, 'J'I'1UXX'.-XIQD OPDYKIC, FRANK EUGENE PARKS. CIIARLI-:s PARK PRESSEY, CHARLES PIIILIP REDFIELD, RORERT NICEXVEN SCI-IAUFFLER, FREDERICK EDWARDS SEARLE, CHARLICS GRENVILLE SEXVALL, Louis PALMER SLADE, GEORGE NEWTON SLEIGIIT, FREDERIC MILLER SMEDLEV, BERTRAAI I,LEXVEl.LYN SAIITII, FRED CLARK S'I'ANI.Ev, Louis IVIORRIS STARR, TWOODRUIQI' SU'I I'oN, JR., CI.IIf'I'oN W INTRINGH.-XM XWARDELL, FREDERIC AI.I'IIoNso XVEDDELL, ERNEs'1' NASII WILCON, ALDEN Rows WILD. JOHN PIOXVARD WII,I.IS, ARTIRIUR ICITTINGER W ILLYOUNO, FRANK YIENRY WOODMAN, JIINIORS, T Partial Coursc-:. 1Vew York CMV. Iloosfck folly, JV. lizzffwiehporl, Chicago, lll., Hlorqzretle, llfeh. , SUZQQ' Sfzzg, JV. Y.. lVor'walk, Conn., Aozlzersl, ChZ'CfQQ'0, Ill., Mi. Slewarl, P. li. I., f7Z!ZI8pU7ZlZ76'7Z6'L', Kon., liroolelwz, N Y., lVoo1l.vloek, Vi.. Hzzrllzqgalize, film. l'l1zz'rLfiel1l, lV. WH7'l'z.'ll, O., llfzzlzpsleazl. lV. lf., Vernon, Conn., .AQZIZSIZJ Ciiy, filo., lflfesjelfl, Sehelzeelfzrljf, N. I Fall River, Orleans, N. Y., lbrezo York Cily, I+?.vhkz'll-on-fhzzlsolz, JV. Y., Norwalk, Corm., New York Cigf, New York Cily, Brookbfn, N Y, Clevelarzzl, O., Slzelozzrrze Falls, Lee, Palmer, Bzgfalo, N. Y., jf?L'7!L'7'b', 35 I A. T. A. Lodge. Miss Hopper's. 22 E. C. I 23 M. H. 36 M. H. I4 M. H. X. W. House I I3 C. H. X. W. Lodge. 8 S. C. ' I7 E. C. 3 M. H. ' I6 E. C YP. A. O. House 2. SP. Place The Berkshire 3 E. C I4 E. C I7 M. H SP. A. O. House I4 M. H N A. T. House O. A. X. House 4 M. H Spring St 22 E. C Mrs. Hart's 32 M. H 3 M. H. A. E. House. Prof. Dodd's 21 E. C. 22 W. C. A. IC E. House. V II W. C. 76 Sophomore Gllaso. WILLIAM HAYDEN BAKER, BURNELL FINLEY BASSETT, JOHN NEW'IxON BEACH, JR., WILLIAM ERASTUS BECKWITH, FRED ANDREW BENTON, ROBERT ANDREW BRUCE, GAVIN ARCHIBALD CAMPBELL, FREDERIC WILLIAM CAREY, EDWIN NESBITT CHAPMAN, BAYARD HENDERSON CHRISTY, ARTHUR HERBER'1' COAR, FRANK LINLEY CRITCHLOW, FLOYD ELMER DEGROAT, HAIQRY DEWITT DEGROAT, JAMES HARVEY DONNELLY, ALEXANDER WHITE DOOLITTLE NOIQMAN HERBL1R'l' DUTCHER, EDVVARD EDWARDS, JR., RICHARD SWEET FOLSOM, EDWARD CARLTON GILLETTE, THAZEN LABURTON GOODRICH, PAUL MYRON GOODRICH, NATHANIEL EDWARD GRIF14'IN, REYNOLDS FREEMAN GUERIN, ROBERT JOSEPH GULLIVER, THEODORE DUDLEY HAMMATT, MILES. TRACY HAND, PETER OLIVER HANFORD, VVILLIAM COOK HART, FREDERIC THATCHER PIARXVARD, ALFRED BIRCH HERRICK, ALLEN JOHN HOLLEY, .S'raaghz'z'coke, N. Yi Bnrw, l37'00kQf1z, 1V. Y., Graaf Barffivzgfofz, Ea1'Z11iZZe,- N Y, E'ankZin, Pa., Oak Park, Ill., N01'1Uz'ck, Comz., Brookbn, IV. Y., Srzofcklcjf, Pa., Wes! Sp1'i1z,gjie!zz', East Norikjicflci, Zwchols, N Y, 020500 N Y QS 7 '7 V! Aforla 5L'7ZllZ.7Zg'Zl0lZ, PVYz!e1'vi!!e, JV. Y, S!.A!6a1zs, VZ., Dfqy, N1 Y., Chicago, III., ffarzford, Colm., ffawrkiil, Norill Adzzffw, Baliimovfc, Jlfd., Calzzllzbus, O., 1Vo1'wz'rh, Colm., Topeka, Aim., ,SC7'!Z7Zf0lZ, Pa,, Penn Yau, IVY Y., VWl!z'a11z.v!own, A,Z'L'hlll0lZllI, IW., Amslerzialfz, N Y, Salem, N. Y., TWILLIAM SWINTON BENNETT HOPKINS, jr., LV0we.vfer, BARTHOLOMEW HOWARI5, T Partial Course. Norlh A77'00ff6'!lZl, 36 I IX 14 4 H IIW.C 9W.C Mrs. Ga1uSha'S 6 E. C 23 Spring St The Be1'kSlIiI'e A. T. House 22 M. H. 35 M. H 23 M. H I9 E. C IO E. C 4 K. H 7 K. H II C A. T. House 33 M. H I7 E. C A. T. House 6 W. C A. Kf E. House II S. C I3 M. H X. W. Lodge 6 M. H II M. H Mr. Wl1eeleI S X. SV. Lodge MIS. Hart'S 8 E. C I2 C 9 S. C 2. 515. Place 26 W. C rl I IIIN PI-:RIT H L'N'I'INIsjI'ON, I'II,IRI.ISS PI-1I.'I'ON HIVIICIIINS, l':IrXX'.Xl1lJ I'IY.X'1 l' f'IL l'TON, IXR'l'Ill'R AI'GUS'I'US JORDAN, FRANIQ IJQUNARD JIIDD, -IOIIN LEWIS IfR'l'CI'IAM, JR., LIANIPZS GORIQ KINO I.If:I5, I.I4.Ix IS EARLI4. I.I+,If., IIARRY BALDWIN LEONARD, .IOIIN -IOSIQI-II LYNCI-I, TIIOAIAS JAMES LYNCH, I-CI-:I'II. LAIYRIQNCE MAO COY, COLIN BLXCIQIENZIIE, XVILLIAM HINMAN NI.-XCIAXY, HERBERT JOHN MCMUll'l'liIE, SIDNIQY GRAVES NIATI-IER, ARTHUR GUY MERRILI., W ILLIS ISBISTER MILHAM, LOUIS GREGG NEVILLE, EDWARD DELAHAY OSBORN, OLCO'I'T OSBORNE PARTRIDQE, CHARLES PINKERTON, LLEVVELLYN EDXVARD PRATT, AI.IaER'I' HAWLEY PRENTISS, 1'WILI.IAM NIAGUIRE REED, HIENIQX' GRANT ROWE, WILLIAM LUTI-IER SAXVTELLE, BENJAMIN ROBINSON SCHENCK, EDWARD THOMAS SCULLY, -IOHN RUMNEY SEARLES, +ALPlXANDER' SLOAN, C.IRI.Iz'rON GIFFORD SMITH, ITARRY OSGOOD SPALDING, '3'SAMUR.L ROMNEY SPRING, XVILLIAM 1NIR'l'CAI.FE STONE, 'I' Partial c,:Ulll'St:. A'orwz'ek, Coma., B7'00k6'7Z, N. Y., Ifoekesfer, N Y., Piifqjfelzi, Earl' Ckarlemolzf, Dz1iz'a1zapo!z's, Ind., ZVew York Cizjf, Alomgf, Oregon, Ckieago, Ill., ffolvoke, fi0Zjf0kL', Nmztuekei, New York Cizjf, New York Ciiy, New York Cily, U .kll07'7'L..S'f07U7Z, IV. 7 Shelburne Falls, Kinderkook, N. Y ZVrzskua, N. H, Topeka Kan., Pillyielei, Wefst Ckesier, Pa., Colzmzozzs, O., Bzgfalo, If Y., Chicago, ffl., Mediizzz, O., Alkens, Pa., .Sy7'dC1l.S'lf'., IVY Y., Pz'!z'.yie!a', Rowe, N Y, Moo York Cily, W1'!!z'a 1115 forwz, Bosfofz, Wil!z'a11zs!owrz, Owegfo, N. Y., 37 5c.H I6 M. H I8 C. H 9 VV. C 27' W. C Taconic Inn I6 M. H I4 W. C 2. Q. Place 5 S. C 5 S. C X. EV. Lodge A. Yf. Lodge Mr. Gavitt'S A. T. House 7M. H 27W.C Mr. WellS'S Mrs. Tenneyks II M. H 6 E. C IO M. H Mrs. Tenny'S 22 M. H 8 W. C Q6 W. C 6 W. C Z. Yf. House II E. C . 33 M. H Hermitage Mr.. Smithks 6 M. H Prof. Spring'S 4 K. H LYMAN EDDY '1'I'IAYER, HERBER'P LLEVVELLYN TOWNE, VOLUNTINE COVEL TURNER, DAVID EMERETT VVIFIEELER, EUGENE RICHARD WHITE, SEVVARD H. VVILLIAMS, GAVIN PIAMILTON WRIGI-I'l', SOPHOMORICS, C Zeveland, O. , WiZZz'a1lzsfozU1z, Sf. Louis, IWO., New York Ciljf, Bujfafa, JV. Y., Amsleffdczm, N Y., Hickbzzvfg, jfresbman Glaze. v FREDERICK CARHART ADAMS, GEORGE MARSHALL ALDEN, LEWIS RAYNOR ALDRICH, JEROME RIPLEY ALI.IieN, FREDERICK BOXVDEN AX'ER, VVINFRED HOVVARD BABBITT, HENRY JOSEPH BARON, BENJAMIN THOMAS BARTLETT, FELTON BENT, MARTIN WHITTEN BERRY, JTHOMAS 'EDNVARD BESOLOWV, WALTER ANDREVV BRATTON, FREDERICK WILLIAM BREWSTER FRED PRESTON BRONVN, JAMES JAY BROWN, JR., JJAMES MONROE BROWN, CHARLES MILTON BURDICK, BEN EMERY BURNS, JEDVVARD CLIFFORD CHISHOLM, JOHN POTTER CONGDON, JAMES RAY CRAIGHEAD, 7 GEORGE GRISWOLD DAVIDSON, JR., STEPHEN BRADFORD DAVOL, T Partial Course. Na!z'ck, ' 75101, N. Y., Pffmreville, Ill., G766lm6Zd, Slirezefsbinjf, West Bmzftleboro, Vi., VW!Zia1ns!0w1z, Nottz'1zgka11L, NT ff, Sfeelfon, Pa., Porflnfzzi, Me., Befzdoo, Guinea, Ajhca, Sfd77ff07d, VZ., Iola, ffan., N01'!h Adams, Omaha, Nab. Mansield, O., Lowville, Ni K, VW!z'0n, JV. H., S!ZUIZ7Z7Z!Zh, Ga., VQ1o1ni1qg', JV. Y., Sarzzlqga .Sfrifz,g'.v, N Yi, Afbaigf, .Af Y., Fa!! A,I.7Jc'7', 38 A I 554115 E. 515. Place. I8 E. C. X. W. Lodge. 2 M. H. 32 M. H. 8 K. H. I8E.C 23 E. C IO M. H 30 W. C 34 M. H I3 W.:C 23 W. C Mr. Baronas 8 Spring St Mr. HOpkin'S IO W. C IO S. C 2 W. C Mr. Lansing'S I6 W. C 38 M. H I5 VV. C 8 E. C The Berkshire 4 M. H 9 K. H 5 C. H 30 M. H 37 M. H E SYLVESTER CHITTEXIJICX IDEM ING. WILLIAM DOHERTY, LOIJIS DEFOREST IDOXYNICR. FRED ELLIOTT IDR.-Xl'I-IR. CHARLES .HARROD I5UFFEE, NIOSIQPII QRXEL EATON. NVILLIAM SEXVARD ELDIER, CLEMENT GOLDSMITII ELMER, PIENRY COURTNEY EVANS, 1-CHARLES EVELYN FARGO, JR., CHARLES VVILMER FITCH, WELLS PIUBERT FITCH, HARRY ERNEST FOSTI1:R, VVILLIAM BRADLEY FREAR, WILLIAM FRED FRENOII, ROBERT TORRINGTON FURMAN, CHARLES DVVIGHT GATES, FREDERICK DAY GOODWIN, WILLIAM HARDY GORMAN. HORATIO HENRX' HAYNFZR, BENJAMIN CALLENDER HEALD, J STANLEY EDXVARD HORES, MACLAX' HOYNE, ARIEL HAIQIQIS IDE, ROBERT HUTCHINS JEFFREY, HAROLD ABBOT JOHNSON, ADAIN1 LEROY JONES, FREDERICK PORTER IQIMBALL, 'f'FRANK RANVLINGS KNIGHT, BENJAMIN WELD KNOWER, RALPH SAXTON LANSING, ARTHUR HENRY' LONGFELLOW, GEORGE ARTHUR LUNDY, 'f'FRANCIS MICHAEI, MCMURRAX', WALTER HORTON MAIN, ALLAN MARSEIA, TYQPYEI Course. R., A rl'1'1zg'!o1z, Vi. , I-Yztcmofz, Af. -7. New York Cizjf, s Lonsingozujgk, YN. Y.. Gczzuseo, NY Y., Cz'1zci1z1zaf1', O., Azzozlwz, IV. Y., 1JL'l'0lll'6', N. Y., Yozmgsiozwz, O Ckimgo, UZ., IVlooo1'.v, N. Y., -S B7'00k0'7Z, N. Y., Aifmf, N. ff., T roy, IV. Y., ffovoffkill, Topeka, A'zzn., Peackam, Vi., Norfolk, Vo., Colzwzous, O., Troy, N. Y., Porflzzmi, O7'QQ'01L Monson, Ckicogo, Ill., Troy, N. Y., Columbus, O., Brookfield, Ifooposfofz, ffl., Lakewood, IV. , New Y ork Cify, Wes! Troy, N. Y., Troy,AN. Y., Somervilfe, Troy, N. Y., W est Fiffhbllfg, Troy, N Y., Omfzka, Neo., 39 Mr. C12l1'k,S Mr. BOtSfOrd's I5 M. H 8 M. H. U 3 S. C Mr. vDIiI1fOTf11,S. 28 W. C. I3 W. C. Mr. VVhCC181',S 26 M. H 5 W. C Mr. WIIee1er'S 23 E. C 21 M. H 35 M. H Mrs. Suther1and'S l 32 - 25 VV. C Mrs. Tenney'S The Berkshire 2. Q. Place I2 W. C Ll. T. House ' S M. H Mr. LanSing'S Mr. Ada.mS'S 30 W. C Mr. Smith'S 4 M. H IO E. C. A. T. A. Lodge IO W. C 2 W. C Mr. AuStin's I7 E. C Mr. DanfOrth'S JOHN ALBERTSON SAMPSON WILLIAM YOUNG MARSH, RUFUS GRAVES NIATHER, JOSEPH OTTO MEAD, FREDERICK WILLIAM MEMMOTT CLARENCE MESSER DITERRIANI, CRAIG- CARLTON MILLER, EDYVARD CLARENCE MII.LE1i, WILLARD PIERREPONT MILI,S1'AUCI'I, FRED HONVARI5 MOFFI'1', GUY HATFIELD MORGAN, LEWIS ARTHUR MORROW, HARRISON ALEEON MORSE, HAROLD PHELPS NIOSELEY, HENRY MARIQS NICHOLLS, GEORGE IWORTIMER NORTON, JAMES OGILVIE, CHARLES ADAMS PARLIN, FRANK SILLIMAN PARMENTER, STUART FORBES PATTERSON, JOHN HERBERT PECK, GEORGE FITCH PERKINS, JR., EDVVIN SERENO POMEROY, CLIFTON CHUTE PUTNEY, WILLIAM GEORGE RAMSAY, STANLEY MATHEXXVS RAMSEY, FRANCIS VVILLIAMA RAWLE, EDWARD ROWLAND RICHARDS, HENRY DRINKER RILEY, YVILLIAM CHANDLER ROUDENBUSII, ARTHUR BELDING RUDD, JOHN STEXVART RUSSELL, 7 HENRY GANSEVOORT SANFORD, ALBERT FRANKLIN SAXVYER, NVILLIAM MERRIAM SAWYER, T Partial Course. yersey Cizjf, IV-J M0r7'z's!o1Un, IV. 7-. l?1'o0kQf1z, ZW Y., jVv6 ZU!Z7'fe, N. 7., Topeka, ffan., fWz'!Ze7f's Corners, YY. .SX'!I7ZL'IIf6'!6'.S', N Y, l3z'eh1110mz', N K, P1-fem-Jaffe, Jzz., Pozlglzkeepsie, N Y. . Princeville, III., Mafzjeld, PWM-Yield, Lockporl, N K, imfmfzzze, IVY If., Lawrence, fV'o1fwz'eh, Conn., Troy, N. K, Coopeffsfown, N Y., Pz'!Z4yie!d, jersey Cizjl, Aff 721251, Pa. , Leominsier, .New York Cffv, Cineifmaii, O., Bryn fllawr, Pa., Iflfesf Wfinsiefi, Comz. , Pfzzhzflellphia, Pa., Greenfield, P0zzQg'lzkeej5sz'e, IV Yi, Troy, N Y, T1'0y,'jV. K, Pozzghkeepsie, N. Y, New York Cizjf, Nashzza, N H, 4O Y . I Il MIM I8 M. Il 7 M. H Mrs. Te1IrIey's I9 W. C rs. Su12herland's Mr. DanfOrth'S I3 E. C 28 VV. C 29 W. C Z. T. House 29 W. C I2 W. C Mr. Smith's Z. Elf. House 16 W. C 23 W. C MISS H0pper's I4 C. H 25 W. C I3 E. C I8 M. H 4 S. C I9 W. C 4 S. C Mr. DaIIfOrth'S Mr. HOpkiII's I5 E. C Mr. HOpkin's 32 W. C 34 M. H Mrs. Hart'S I4 C. H 26 M. H A. T. A. Lodge The Berkshire i VVILLIAM SILNGER, CHARLES MILLS SLOOOM. MONROE WEED SMITH, ARTI'IIIR TRESCOTT SOUTHARD, 'f'HEN1iX' DALLAS SPEER, HERMON ARNOLD STRONG, EDWARD CHARLES S111.1.1vAN, ELNATHAN SYVIQET. JR., EXVING TAYLOR, JAMES TAYLOR, JR.. CHARLES BROOKS THOMAS, JOESPH ELMER TUCKER. ROBEIQT' HENRY WA1TE. HARRY BARNES WARD, RICHARD PERCY NNARIJ. MORRIS MORT1MER NVIIITAKER, JOHN DANIEL W11.D, TJAMES S. NVILSOIY, LUTHER BLANCHAKD NVOODXYARID. JOHN I. ZOLLER, TFREDERICK DE PEYSTICR TOWNSEND. Pon' f7e1'7J1's, JV. Y., Por! jfeffvis, N Y., Warsaw, N. Y., Brooklyn, N Y., Chicago, Ill., Wifzsfed, Colm., North Azizzffzs, Albany, N. Y, Pozqghhoepsio, JV Soulhonligo, Topeka, K'mz., Bosfon. B1'fm'fo1'a', Adams, IV. Y., Bzjzlo, IV. Y.. Troy, N Yf, 1?7'00kQ'7Z, IV. Y., fYfll7Z6'hE.S'fc'7'. VK., ZVo1'waZh, O., South Frzzmingfozz. Lifflo Falls, LV. Y Y 31 VV. C 31 W. C 9 K. II Miss Bardwell'S Mr. l,ansin0',S I5 I5.C I7 W.C 3OM.H 1OC.H II K. I-I 38M.H 26M.H Mr. Danie1S'S Z. W. House 3SiC IO C. II Miss BardWe11's 5 W. C Mr. Lansingk. 5 E. C 8 Spring St FRESHMEN, - - 1 I5 T Pzwfial Course. YY ' -' . J' 'f:::1-'fX:::- ' . Y T ' . f E If f ' '2 . ' 7 J ' ' 'iff-2 W .f 'IS:fSs4:e2:a2Jff f , f ff N ,- f 'N 5- lip., 4 f 'yu-mlwli - 40 , .7 , V, , fy .. , . ' 1 'QA ' i f 6 1 7 if fi? 'fsfrf-42 - ' ' S . Away, ,v Y WS W ,A ' 5 gf 11342, If X .S ff, . .Ziff W1 .A XS 1' M ,P ,, W LL ffm 6 .ff 1 iifff f . HE , I, . ,M --fo-.v. .ff arf .1 f , X I fo r ,,,1,,FL:?:f xxjuz '!i,::Qjg.:6QzsgQ!?l Jlf f . ff I f ., ,gg.,gggf1g15g,M1,- qw ,, . .2-15:11 'm ig, ff f ' .- 3 - - ' . - - - Y n F I 41 I 1 Summary. GRADUATE STUDEN'rs, 3 SENIORS, - 84 JUNIORS, 76 SOPHOMORES, 76 FRESHMEN, - U5 TOTAL, - 354 Elbbreviations. E. C.-EAST COLLEGE. C. H.-COLLEGE HALL. S. C.--SOUTH COLLEGE, K. H.-KELLOGG HALL. ' W. C.-WEST COLLEGE. M. H.-MORGAN HALL. Ebirectorp to Eormitories. MORGAN HALL. EAST ENTRY, - - - - NOS. 28-38 EAST MIDDLE ENTRY, H 20-27 WEST MIDDLE ENTRM, 44 II-I9 WEST EN'l'RY,a - - A 1-11 WEST COLLEGE. NORTH ENTRY, - . - NOS. I-I6 SOUTH ENTRY, A - - LL I7-32 EAST COLLEGE. L NORTH ENTRY, - . - NOS. I-I2 SOUTH ENTRY, G4 I3-24 42 - N 4 Q.. . an wometxme embers. '92, Cushing Adams, Fisher Howe Booth, james Hunt Brinkerhoff, Robert Cluett, Ir., JfGeorge Elroy Durgin, George Hoyt, Jr., 2 tMarshall McLean, - - T-lames Youngs Smith Nichols, Thomas Henry Reddish, - tCharles Edwin Reeves, - Gregory Rosenblum, - john Cyril Ross, - George VV. Smith JfAlba Carlos Storer, Henry Marion Ward, - 'f'E. D. Morgan Waterman VQID, 1 Henry Vinton Woodward, - '93. .lay Sterling Bowen, George Henry Carter, William Henry Chase, TWalter Herbert Cluett, - Frederick Henry Duryea Crane, William Henry Seward Edwards, 'l'Herbert Atwater Goddard, Hazen Laburton Goodrich, - Colin Mackenzie, Jr., f'94j, 43 lfroofegfn, N Y Englewood, N 7 ffanms Cllgf, Mo Yroy, N Y. Brzzoyford, Cleveland, O. BelQorl, N. Y. Prowdeazee, R. I Norllz Broadalozfz N Y New London, Conn 1Vozfgorocl Azzm-nz Montreal, Comulzz W orresier, Brookbfn, N. Y New York Cizyf New York Cizfy Rochesler, N. Y Lowzfllle, N. Y Braaford. Worcester. Troy, N Y. Sehelzeclzmjf, Nl New York Cily. Chicago, Ill. , Haverhill, New York Cigf, 1'Rufus VVheeler Peckham, Williain Conrad Pree, Herbert Paul Queal, - Walter Niles Sherwood, 1'Clarence Rice Slocum, John Albert Snow, -fCharles Storrier Stearns, Warren Bertram Travell, Edward Neville Vose, Robert Clark Welsh, james Raynor WVhiting, Seward ll. Williams f794l, john Heister Beecher, John Woods Brennan, John Williams Cook, Charles Pelton Hutchi ns, Arthur Judson, - Harry Baldwin Leonard fggj, Martin Lewis Murray, Franklin Pleasants Noble, JfGeorge Curtis Rand, Ernest Dalton Richmond, Henry Grant Rowe, Charles Shaler, Ir., - Howard Williams Simpson Perley Dennison Smith, Harry Griffin Stephens v Ailbzmy, N. if. 19J7'00kfZ'7Zl'. A zzburn, N. Y. Norllz ffoasick, Ni YY Broakgfn, N Y. Pine Poinl, Me. llaryord, Conn. Tray, N. Y. Ashburnfzam. Broakbxrz, N Y New York Cizju . Amsterdam, N Poffslazwz, 151. SZ. Albans, Vi. Blacleinfon. Braokljfn, N. Y. Zlffolz!c!a1'r, N. Chicago, fir. Tray, N K Mefzflhaflz, IV. Lawrence, N Yf Ear! Cl'lCZ7'fL'llZ07'Zf. M'Ii1'NH, 0. West Yroy, .Nl Y. 'Bangor, Me. A zrbzzrndfzle. Brzkige Htl77Wf071, I g Q. Y N.K Tbistorical memorabilia. 'williams Giollege, Qlbartereb 1793. BUILDINGS ERECTED. West College, 17905 East College, 17985 Griiiin Hall, I8285 Observatory, 18375 East College, Qrebuiltj 18425 South College, 1842 5' Lawrence Hall, 18465 Kellogg Hall, 1847 5 Jackson Hall, 18555 Chapel, 18595 Goodrich Hall, 1871 5 College Hall, 1872 5 Field Ob- servatory, I882Q Clark Hall, 18825 Morgan Hall, 18835 Lasell Gymnasium, 18855 Hopkins Memorial Hall, 1889 5 Thompson Chemical Laboratory, 1892. Williams Alumni Association, founded September 5, 1821. First College Alumni Association in America. 5 . Williams Chapter of the Phi Beta Kappa Fraternity, founded 18045 Adelphic Union, founded 1793 5 Philologian Society, 1795 5 Philotechnian Society, 1795. Gulielmensian, founded 18565 Athenaeum, 18735 Argo, 18735 Fortnight, 18855 Literary Monthly, 18855 Weekly, 1886. ' Historical Society founded, 1882 5' Andover Club, 18875 Dramatic Association, 1891. 45 x Ib Cllustoms at illiams. , Ext HERE is always associated with the idea of col- , A Y lege and those four happiest years of a lifetime, 7 X U a suspicion IU the minds of some, of four years f. f i of pranks and capers. There is no accounting 'f Cf-,VM 'if for this, but certain it is, in college towns at fu f 1 .fr-P s i 9 I . 5 . least, people in general expect some unheard rp, Ag of thin s to ha en on an and all occasions, f b7-QQSQ gf 3. and this is tracedin some queer manner to some e long established college custom. The cus- V ' -lg t toms var with the colle e. Yale's are ecu- Y S P liar to Yale, Harvard has hers, Cornell originates what Cornell only would be guilty of doing. There are some, however, common to all, every col- lege has seen hazing, as much as every college has its own name for grubs, or men who study all the time to the detriment of everything else. Every college has had its cane-rush as surely as it has had two under classes. Tom Brown at,OXford and Tom Brown at Yale would not be two such very different persons, nor Harry in Yale and Harry in Williams. His first year in either place might not be fagging, for he is out of Rugby or And- over, but it would be something very like it. If Tom's Senior or Junior friend said do this, and it happened to be something not far from right, Tom would do it. If a Sophomore asked it, it would look very different anywhere. But hazing at Williams has seldom taken a severe form. The men of the 'zo's did not show much bravery in going in crowds to remonstrate with a Freshman over some eccentricity, but would let him find his error and correct it through the efforts of friends he was sure to ind in the upper classes. And to the men of the '9o's it looks very much like cowardice for a band of twenty to worry one poor lonesome boy. Any case that has be- come public has usually become exaggerated, as indeed allhave been, and sometimes hazing', has been quite a necessary addition to the curriculum. k There are as many definitions of hazing as there have been cases of it and each one true to that instance. There is always someone in the vis- iting delegation who has some new idea of humiliation, some new method 46 of showing his year's experience, and this serves asa part of the hazing. In general it is a foolish attempt, made in a foolish way, to eliminate a Freshman's verdancy, and quite as often his tormentors need a pill of the same making. Williams has had no cane-rush for two years past, and had not had one then in quite an interval. Its place was taken in a large measure by the monument rush, a physical contest between the Sophomores and Freshmen classes which has taken place the first Saturday night of the fall term for many years. Previous to 1860, nothing of this sort was done in an organ- ized way except the occasional ducking of a Freshman as he passed through the dormitories, or his standing treat from necessity and not from choice. Often enough as the general college spirit pervaded the atmos- phere with ideas of an undue growth in the newest class, importance, a certain crowd of Sophomores spurred on by twice their number of upper classmen, would make as many Freshmen give them right of way, and the origin of what is now the rush would then follow. It was a spirit of Hello! -here's a new 'un, lets try his strength, as one Alumnus puts it, that prompted the whole affair. It was the natural consequence of the process that humanized, if we can so speak, the Freshman. In an old copy of the college laws, will be found evidence of the recognition the Faculty made of the distinction between upper and lower classmen. Upper class- men had first privileges by rule in the library, chapel and dormitories. Now all the difference they receive is theirs by virtue of public opinion as we find it in college. Now the Freshman class officer generally tells the class that it is the custom for them to rise and remain standing in the pews until the upper classmen are passed out, in olden times, a rule was promulgated which made it impossible for the class to visit even the library when their seniors were there. The gradual bettering of the con- dition this rule would assume is the only assignable cause for any organ- ized objection on the part of the Sophomore class, for instance. This class began to feel that their year's advantage would soon count for nothing if the under classes' condition was raised much more, and this feeling led to the search for a remedy. The rush served as a check on the Rise of a Freshman, and certainly presented a good occasion for his corporal punishment. These encounters took place irregularly and in any convenient place until the erection of the Soldiers' monument. It was the thing for the men who had been here a year to show their acquirements and appreciation of college ways to the less fortunate new arrivals by gathering onthe monu- mentsteps as soon as possible after college opened, and holding a class sing. The Freshmen, newly determined to profit by all instruction, were ready- to follow suit and hold lhezz class sing. If both came at the same time there 47 was sure to be trouble. And so it came about that, at the instigation of a few junior friends, a Freshman class once tried a class sing the first Satur- day evening of the term on the steps of the Soldiers' 'monument The Sophomores stopped it after a wanton destruction of personal property. The next fall, the entering class appeared on the monument in uniforms that might get ruflied but not spoiled, and from then on, the monument rush was a custom, F p The cane rush so much in vogue in other colleges consisted in the selection of the two strongest men from either ofthe under classes to hold the cane. They were placed midway between their classmates, who were drawn up in line on either side and who at a given signal rushed for the cane. Every man strove to get a hold on this object of contention and the class having the greatest number of hands on it after the lapse of five min- utes, won the rush. Sometimes serious bruises were the results of these encounters, but everyone must stand his ground, and it was a lesson to learn. A Another custom peculiar to Williamsis the Shirt-tail Parade. Some exercises were deemed necessary to indicate a cessation of hostilities be- tween the lower classes. On Feb. zz and after, of each year, Freshmen were allowed to carry canes and were considered full fiedged members of the student body, and a date near that, St. Patrick's eve, was finally fixed upon for a union meeting, with appropriate exercises. The ,present mode of conduct on this occasion, appearing in night dress, with the full quota of horns and drums, an immense bonfire and dress parade, was the final outgrowth of a long system of evolution. One feature of the evening has lately been dropped, that of ringing the Congo bell. When other colleges were accustomed to such exercises, Williams was not without her Cremations. A sketch of this ceremony, published in 1847, read as follows: The class assembled in the recitation room in full numbers, at nine o'clock,. On the table, formed of the old blackboard, lay the corpse, in which a triangular hole was made for the purpose of pos! morfem examination Through this hole, those who wished were allowed to look, and then, placing the body on their heads, they could say with truth that they had for once seen through and understood Euclid. After a eulogy and the reading of an oration and epitaph the class marched to the place of burial, ra spot about a half a mile south of the col- lege. As we approached the place we saw a bright fire burning on an altar of turf, and torches gleaming through the dark pines. All was still save the sympathetic groans of some forlorn bull-frogs, which came up like minute guns from the marsh below. The sexton, wearing a white robe bound around his Waist with a black scarf and on his head a black conical-shaped hat some three feet high, re- 48 is ceived the corpse. Burning the remains in the fire, the ashes were placed in an urn, with a latin incantation. The urn being buriedgdeep in the ground and a dirge sung, We retraced our steps with feelings suited to the occasion. ' There were many customs of minor importance, which changed often, and some good ones which were sadly left to decline. U It may be men- tioned as a custom worthy of continuation, as it is by some of us, that from the time of the great revival, in 1825, the students were in the habit of holding little prayer meetings in their various rooms, and up to about 1845 'revivals were no unusual occurence. This is mentioned because our fame as the birthplace of American Missions, and the Alma Mater of so many eminent divines is due in a large ,measure to this influence. I -cf-'- f ':. 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Having surmounted all the preliminary steps, and standing now at the summit of our college world, it contemplates benignly the efforts of those who are still climbing, with all the self-congratulation of victors. As the weary editor surveys this band of leaders, who, their past youthful follies almost forgotten and their station assured, shine in all the prestige of their position like real heroes, he is moved to consult the annals of bygone generations, to find if possible all their successive stages of development. As Freshmen, like many another class, their soft, rounded exteriors hid most of the excrescences that might hereafter be manifested, and in the eyes of the editor for '90, they appeared as 'fmerely a collection of small common-place looking youths, well meaning perhaps, but still very much in the adolescent state. They passed with more or less credit, through the usual infantile epidemics of rushes, ball games and Soc, top- ped off by the inevitable visit to Saratoga, and we see them next clad in the pin-feathers of Sophomority. V A mightily-monstrous mass of misformed, misshapen, molecular matter they were indeed, making the nights hideous and the days ridi- culous in their vain attempts to prove that they owned the earth.l True, it was, that, in common with all other Sophomore classes, --except Ninety- four--they gained the usual athletic victories and even showed unique ability as detectives and photographers, but though successful in a few things, they were not rulers over many, in spite of their own assertions to' the contrary. I ' ,f Next, in the full plumage of upper classmen, the most complacent. juniors since the days when Tommy Dodd was young, we find them in the bloom of that halcyon time when to see is to conquer. Modestly enough they stopped, however, at the impossible. We lay no claim to super- natural attractions, their own editor shyly remarks, evidently implying thereby that, in his opinion, all possible human charms lay within their grasp. , - V Sl X f W y ' But now, in the individualized maturity of Senior year, to characterize them by a word is well nigh impossible, and we can only say that they possess the average attributes and the necessary excellencies that should pertain to any class that for four years has lived under the fostering care of our Alma Mater. i But to you, Ninety-Two, we owe many debts that can never be esti- mated. The two year's success in football gained, as it largely was by the prowess of your representatives and exercising an influence over the col- lege, the results of which are yet to appear, stands first among the list. To the efforts of ,Q2, also, the Y. M. C. A. owes its improved and more com- fortable room, and a member of your class has given us the Stroller, with its parental and amusing advice which nobody everifollows. In your career, too, there have been manychanges in the college, now looked upon as among its necessary comforts, and we sincerely hope that such improvements will not cease with your graduation. Last, but by no means least, we have found in your ranks the friends of a lifetime. There are tiesof love which binds us to you, irrespective of class or condition, that can never be severed either here, or in the busy world outside by any power but that of death. And when, in the future that is all too close upon us, we shall sadly and almost tremblingly step into the places that you have left, we .shall turn to the memory that you leave behind you with an affection which forgets all the rivalry of the past. ' Q ! 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STREET, JAMES C. ROGERSON, ERNEST: C. BARTLETT, JOHN C. CAMPBELL, HARRY E. AYERY, Louis C. SAEFORD, ,.ll ..i-A ' wfffC6I'5. 53 President. Wee-President. Treasurer. S ecretgzry . Historian. Poei. Clzoragus. -Q--rg-V 9' , 23.25 - ' Q' -V.1-2.1-2.1-1.4:':.:.g5.3r,e5g:w,- . mg-:51:-Q..-'..3i.E5,y.j:':...:,:' - ' W. 4-'sb 55-5.1-z:.:1:-63:2:::-:ZW .- - . f -2,f'..1u-rfegzvzerez-xg. . . , 4 - - .LffiiziiifiiQ1iii5i2Yi.E Nw' A - F, . -, f., ., A ' .f.. z, X . , , -Si.: - V. , -' .,q- - - .,.V. -E? E xg .. Q. , T , ah., V ,Q , 4 if 'N w -,. dm- ' 0- ' , N ,fiwfiwmh-A,nV ilw- WU'p?' QQ cJH3w.5 bxg siw ? Ho-QFWASV - ,- -,.- .. ' -.gf f'5,,L. .ff f- :v-.,- far- 4 '-, . ,Y- , .' , izggfig.. xx. XN., ' SM A V A .4 r. -1 ' - v , --1 ,fm-42' '- N- 11, ,ok ,x4g.-1 A .f ' - -ami-1--.-255'2'- K ' ,,5 f,.. .'f11,1g. A53 V fm. '- N, 'I , v - 1 1 L L' W. ' f ' w x Y ' X .Q:., ?siNWy w . 55355. H ,, 6. .,., fi . 3.8 ,, I ,Q . ... N F, K. .f n ff..lMC?. 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K L.,-.V 1... .11,,.5,-,- Q . ,,., . .fi-il -L'- I -' . ' f L' v' ' .x . 5 L 2- , .fag --', I -F ' - A ' ' 115552zaefiifki-1' I2 A . ' ' ' ' ' - 'gf '.'? 1f7ii?'Ii?-E15E3?- 1'2:iirfE11-fIi55'5i5Z:551Iafi: 'E -.121 1.-iii 16:-fx-.. .1 V-ff-as ,::.2-i.z-If-r:1kse.z'21'. 2.':g':g:.s-:grt-59.5 if-:. I ti-.219 -' 'K .g-rg: , '. W- ,:' :,: :A:.:. 4-'fx :e , . - H . - ' i ' fz. '- sir-2, .1-11 1. 1 ' ' 5. 1'-.3 1 'uw Izumi 1l1g4k,1x.!1gk4 QU, MY'hQJ'HQWQiQ -fxL4-Q---fwfM.-p- f,,...vU.w w.M,.. . . . ,. . .. .'. 1, .1rage-1415-:fa-G12-ESP!-El:-415225141624fsilenziz-v:Qi:fiE' 41451 'lmbiiffc ll ' l1 :.: : Lf '.:.r:h 1' ' 1, -A 2 X -s :'.:1 . 3 I r i 2 l r r I I l i w P 5 w 1 K I X x r l r I 1 ' 1 r a V. fi 1 P U w w r s i z A wi U F f 3 n 1 f f I i I I i it ri l I , 1 l i i l 2 I Q 5 Sunior Eoitorial. T has been said that a man's junior year in college holds the brightest memories in his course. The ship is well on her voyage, a long way back it seems to the harbor where first we hove up our anchor, where our sails first filled. There was a certain excitement, a certain pleasure, then, but it was of expectationg We were new, we were untried, no matter how hard we sought to appear used to the water. h The wise-foolishness of sophomorily is, too, fading rapidly away, a long, receding stretch if we look astern. But new shores, new waters are ahead, we see the future enveloped in the usual rainbow halo of promise and we take an extra pull at the sheets so that every thing may draw. So it will always be. Each one pushes on with feverish haste, fearful of delay or lest some plodder overtake and pass him. Few, indeed, will be his opportunities for lazy ease, the treadmill once embarked upon and kept in motion by many feet carries him along resistlessly, and he himself will give it extra impetus. 1 Many a change has Ninety-three seen since she entered this college not quite three years ago. Many a step in the right direction has this con- servative old institution taken, but in these days of co-education and unearned degrees who would not see her conservative? As a class we have had little real fault found with us. Previous GULS have sought with zeal to pick out our weakness but that was their business and we bore them no ill-will. Twice in succession at the end of the year have we journeyed in a body to a place of meeting and the utmost good-fellowship has prevailed. But the custom of using this editorial for purposes of self-congratulation has long since died out. We are mindful of victories and defeats, but through them all runs that line of smoothness which characterizes the path of one, who, upon a higher plane looks back upon the road recently broken by ups and downs and fails to note the difference. ' According to the popularidea, the junior sits before his tawny, leaping fire, while the wreaths of smoke wind themselves into fantastic figures above his head, and dreams. V 55 Photographs of daughters of the Gods, divinely tall and most divinely fair look down upon him from his mantelg the room gives unmis- takable evidence of feminine appreciation of his Worth. Many an airy castle does he build, as he sits there, puffing at his pipe. Many a bright remembrance of the past comes before him, many a dream of the future does he conjure up as the Wood crackles and snaps and the Hames leap up the wide chimney, sending bright gleams oflight dancing down the length ening shadows of the room. V What good would it do, fair reader, to disabuse your mind of this illusion P What good would it do to picture to you the real junior bending over his desk, bestrewn With its books and to tell you that though the sound of the grinding is low, it is going on nevertheless? Ah! but success is the goal at which we would arrive,'and it is the goal which the mere dreamer can have small hopes of gaining in this race, the true success for which every man, worthy of the name, should strive, putting aside all selfishness and every vain thing, and what prouder thing could he say when his race Was over than that he had donehis best? And now, my dark-eyed ladye, frown not at this seeming Want of sentiment, it is but a seeming lack, for to you, though in secret, this volume is all but dedicated. ,L n l' wx rf.. --1 ik I Jf kxmm niiuuulwwmwulwm x if . N-xx , W- x I X l V-5 11 v:-i -1' lk JM . W mlm g I-da nl.: - V 100 Q, , y , Q: Z H 4 - ,. N. , ,bl gif-,fi:N rf' Qf gfffmga I, f g-,, 'ff 1211 law ' 'l-'f ' , 'I N, , Q, x 1, 1, -1192 , --A -,r--- - , fgv u' , ' '- ' Q- v ', -rn rf -l1l,,.,E, , - X. . 1, bv'-. 0. Q '- 'r ',Z H' A -- bla 151 Q A M f,1ffw Rigas -- N , , - .. I, K if filwillf 'Wm r:n'.flIlei' -e ' 1 . WllsQ:Q?fx.fQE7w 'ir tai - - 1 -5 --1. x g, ii i. f'1Gf:,Lfv--,,gifa'S1g Q7 , ' ' I6 4 4 ll -r 1in--1 :1-lmJrQ'iL'liis.'if1sibx,i.ier1Q3QLa4mQQQi:Q1rZii1Q-irififeafiaksiualiesiiiaifaiimW' 'wif-, fm .w r . , ' 9 1 Q. Q . , ' v A f ' X . v-' , : n Q 1 1 1 m.1us.:.f ..QgimQ-im? f A - .LAX s N I, ,, ' X ' 'K , l - - ,u , X ,.-X , 1 v 1 11-.M ,X ,N ,4 -1, w .f x 2 ff 'V 54. .- is -Y, J . gfgi' Dfwlca .flhfilag , I I Y ' ' ,A r -1 . L- ': ,-, H ---V ,. ,: .V - ',l,,,:-- ., .... .,:.:..z . . ,. , , H , ' MAL 'L'f4'fUlf MiH!'1f'A1Muzinkf:f:-31555915wa11:2fi:e:11s1vaii:hfmf512ii.'1:fiii41Si?i55Ei5iEii51lf5i3 .'ff'2:4W3iIi1if'I1D 4' . mr. . . ,. , P S i V I L 1 i 1 I r I F , f P f I Q .-f.--..,-T...-..-,.. ...muy :.+.:szffv.vnv- - L, - Glass of 1893. COLOCRS-Gold and Wh1'Ze. T I YELL--Hekaion, HeZmzf0n,,'fRah,. GRM, Rah, TTZ'd-KdZ'- CHARLES E. MILLER, WALTER COLLINS, j. DAVID MURPHY, CHARLES E. BANKER, 'HARRY N. GREENE, IRVIN MCD. GARFIEI.l7, ARTHUR OLIVER, - . E11-ferz-e-lzorz-ta,! . mffiC6I'5. 57 Presideni. Wee- Presideni. Secreiary. - Treasurer. C11 aragus . fisioriafz. Poef. 1 1 1 w J 1 1 1 1 11 I 3 X n., 1 fl. . 53 4? .55 1 I .1 if 15 s. :g M 5. A 'E E ! . J R .Q I 1 4 Q J 4 i 3 3 1 .5 1? 5 9 x 4 A , 2 53 Kg: ef Qu 15, K V I Ninnety F0ur's Rush f?j 'N 1 Yf'l '. 1f'..,,I.''.'f. '.-14.1.5.- V ,fi,'1'.',,:.,.:.zfv-' ' 1 ' A'--'3...,: ---f-1 --4:--ff-...-X'--,W , ,, , , , liakin:li515151:-i1L53'i1,ik'-nz-:hi:4':1Heinfwiifiviiiikiulf1rimigi-113-1:6-ns5ee?Q4L21w'a,'1'fckEQ111-,i:uiz:55:mk'fiPi+l1rfiifilB!E+4x2k9Fl55igx'Q54i:i51!454sils:1'fax-mis.:-:wvmfif if ' ' n c c k . F Q P r fir' H- v , 'v'vrr'r-vin' wwf-.ie-1 Sophomore Eoitorial. WISE man once said to his son: My son, there are some men who are asses and not fools, others who are fools and not asses, and still others who are both fools and asses and nothing else. Be either of the first two you please, but leave the last alone. Getting on a metaphorical step-ladder, and taking a gulflj-eyed view of the brilliant aggregation of Qchildrenj beings, who compose the Class of Ninety-four, the impartial observer is forced to admit reluctantly, that he has before him a representative group of that class of'men against whom the father warned his son. There we observethe perversity of the child, who always does what he pleases, and especially rejoices in doing what is forbidden him. Ninety- four has chosen to be what it now is, it had its making in its own hands 5 the larnentable failure it has made is known to all. Looking for good points in this class is like looking for reason or jus- tice in the new room-renting system. It does not know how to play foot-ball or base-ball, it does not know how to study, it does not know its own mind, and the only thing it can do and that indifferently, is to hold daily class-meetings to revoke the prev- ious day's decisions. But in spite of your general worthlessness you are very good and saintly--in your own estimation. You did not rush, because Ninety-tive was too strong for you? oh dear no ! but because you decided it would be so much more gentlemanly to treat the Freshmen kindly. It only took about eight class meetings to convince you of this, and that with the aid of the in loco parentis authorities. Ninety-four, you are too good for this rough world, but it is the -kind of goodness which is spanked into you 5- and like the mark of the slipper, or the effect of midnight visitations-it does not last. But no one is disappointedin you. Since the night when Ninety-three brushed you carelessly off the monument, the college has expected nothing from you, and its expectations have been more than realized. There is talk of importing a class to take your place. Your feeble intellects are so overworked and your ranks so thinned that this may be 59 l 9 L- all necessary. It is doubtful, however, if any could be found who would be willing to come after you. Your past reputation would be enough to frighten the heart of the freshest Prep. school graduate. In the future there are no brighter prospects for you. You may graduate one or two men,-this, however, is mere conjectureg but supposing you do, the class reunions in the years to come will be very select. The solitary graduate will applaud his own speech, drink his own health and weep crocodile tears for the score of sometime members who will still be in college. lg ., l r v . ' -- W f-I- Q - ---.l-.--sfrf-.pf 'fi f .,- . -Q f -- 31 5. .,,ff-' ,Ziff 3457, fl , If 1 ,rv-wksl, , , A 1-rs 32, .f All ,iwfpm 1. is gag. -f gg-gg , H217 , Wk- ,',.,4'.,,, .l.f.,fff5,-i f -,g,f.-.X a ... , My .'.,- V. fp- , fr: W 41 .,:-.f,4 ,l'1i9.ff rgig tq l ' U 5 f ' -5:4 - 11 i:l:' Jffw-f if , 'fy 'UQ-a 1 uf 1 , 'f' if New 'E LPH' -. Q. .:,, : ff f- K Jlx - :lp : i 'kan iffiv.. X. h 5 X 6o T'-1 V- ,'4.:' ' H1-f -V , , V W ' 5 l -I 1 l .2-.'!:uAl!:. U5ge-'1hu..'hh1:f:'Q:?:EG465'e34!Ql'ItQ?l21f-2L!!n:':e!4:2ziiliL' :LC ' :e.: G U' .. 'LL' 1' ii- 4 - w -1 Y . s , 1 4,.,4yH W , -. I ' ' , ,I :-Q-f,1:?Wi5 . ' M My M mi , ,H V H M E.A.WmaH1, Pmu. x Q., :,'1:1'.'..l,j,,jj Q,j Q j , :.1,.,su,-Tig. g g , 5,11 1-f-:H-,,, ,,, LA ' ' el1r1l:w!14f-M:fa!h!.:1:'1uzhke-r1mu.ei PA:1:Z5 15eL'i444v21r:-,.. . -'ff' ' '.2',-Eg' Z'a ':.:'zff' 1 '51 :-n: 4 vw, -2 . wr-va-..+x-uw-a...u:rLe1x61Ie,'wr Mil'-9 If+-1f-w-1-1-- -4-.1..A-M if 'f : Glass of 1894. COLORS.-Lavender cmd W lziie. YE LL. -Rah-Rah-H001fa iz- W z'll1'ams-LRah-CRah- Tessaffes- BAYARD HENDERSON CHRISTY, PETER OLIVER HANEDRD, HENRY GRANT ROWE, - BENJAMIN ROBINSON SCHENCK EUGENE RICHARD WHITE, - NORMAN HERBER'lx DUTCHER, GAVIN ARCHIBALD CAMIJBELI, Kaz'-E11-en-e-hon-fa. Mficers. 61 Presideni. cf?-P1'esz'de1zZ Secrfelzwy . Treaszzwr. Hisforiafz. Poet. C koragux. - , ,F .,,A.....i... ,J 5 1 1 1 .f ,jf pf f 1 ff ff 1 3, ,Q .f X f ,,. b.r ,- Q ff , 1 52 L L. , Z ff f f ff I , f 4 K, fff' 4 ! 4 ff g ,a, 62 g' '.' f'. 'Q 'A5Yi'VI'.'a'L ff, Wu '-' Hu ' .' 1 ' ' , .'s.'-14'----,--,Q-gy..-y.. .,,A.. . , . , , A ,-, 1, -. .. .. . 1.5 : ,-,. , -1-4 1-l--... -1 - , :'.1, 1l...:'.. '.-A H --- r.. 1.---gy.,-:nj-': :g Li -:z ez :1.'x.i f'rt1::'.3: ?ng 'f 2?-Mr' . . , ,. , ff f +G- ,...a...,.a f-f-pi., wxvcxqr-.-11. any 5 resbman Ebitorial. EHOLD an aggregation of freaks that would make a. veritable Crcnsus of a dime museum manager of the most ordinary abilities. Fresh importations from all the Classical Academies and High Schools throughout thelength and breadth of the land, here are the many late vale- dictorians who have been for several years the objects of supreme veneration in the provincial localities, here are the silver-tongued orators-the destined Websters and Clays-who have time on time made the blood tingle in the veins of many a spell-bound audience, here are the marvellous herculean prodigies who have won Olympic honors and revered tin cups in number- less contests on the village green, here are the fastidious swells and faultless dressers of society, the coming leaders of fashion and the moulders of public sentiment in the approaching age of progress-in a word, the creme de la creme and the pink of perfection, the very pick and flower, the seed of all our great agricultural districts. The virtues of this class are as yet few and far between. Its abilities are, for the most part, latent, its possibilities are by no means so clearly defined as the anxious public had been given to understand previous to its actual appearance. It entered this peaceful vale as a solid phalanx, exclaiming in blatant fresh-like tones, Our name is Legion, for we are many! Soc and the other powers of the Faculty were quick to take the cue and at once set to work to carry out the analogy. A recapitulation of the forces at the conclusion ofthe Christmas holidays revealed the fact that a number of devils had been cast out. Whether they went to the swine or to Amherst, has not been reported. In either case they are assuredly grovelling in the mire. True it is that the class of Ninety-tive enjoys the peculiar distinction of being the largest that has yet entered Old Williams. This fact, doubtless, aided by the usual freshman conceit and over-confidence, is largely the cause of the abnormal development of head with which it is afflicted. However, this malady is not a new one in the case of first year infants and by the judicious use of T. Dodd's condition powders and Adam's massage treatment We venture to prophesy that the unnatural swelling will soon be reduced. V 63 4 There is little to be said of Ninety-live that could not be said with equal truth of any freshman class that has yet existed. It has abundant gall, little substantial learning and the usual tendency to imagine itself extremely tough, It is abominably fresh l It has some nerve, we are glad to notice. This fact was evidenced by its spirited charge on the Sophs at the Monument last fall. The freshmen do, by the way, deserve credit for refusing to be entirely counted out of the Monument Rush. So long as Sophomores are allowed by law to perpetrate such ear-splitting discord on the suffering public as did 794 on that memorable occasion, no freshman class will be justified in standing by idle and the rush will not be' consigned to oblivion. Yes, Freshmen ! You have much to learn, much to digest and assim- ilate, before you reach perfection, the blissful state of Juniority. You must climb over Mearsie's Non-Metals and wade through Leffy's ether waves later, you will keep time to the music of the spheres under Saffy. What you are fated to assimilate and digest GJ may be nothing more than Hash house beef steak, but you may rest assured it will keep your hands full-and mouth too, it is to be hoped. Now, freshmen, we trust you Will take these few remarks of friendly criticism in a kindly spirit. Don't,get down in the mouth and prepare to leave college because we have spoken harshly, but stand up like little men and resolve to walk in the paths of rectitude in the future. Make yourselves less conspicuous in the daily life of the college, have a proper appreciation and respect for the rights of upper classmen and, finally, lay low for Tommy Dodd! If you will but heed these few final words of advice, success, honor and prosperity will attend your career to the end of the chapter. V -yn. 1' 0 N 1 iff' ... 5,g,Qj'-, I ' Q r ,Mx if L wi. 0 - QQ' N 'Q 74' 'f f ' N l' - - x 'Q'X 0 T WV 3 V .if lx K1 x lyl fp, .' lamp ' bt W - gif'-5 0 - N , fa- fxwy Qi' if H ,.e':,, az , '- . 4 fp' . A' W 4 , , ' S ixjf, 1 ,yjqhffv X' V-X' K ,, v .ru ' I 257975, X lu W l' txyliilh . -gl! ' rw 'f .4-Artikel ' , , r r, XX , ,f ' Fw 1 A ' ff ..xf,t-xii ' . fl-,... ,' Q 'sf 5h ':f V . ASN :-:QW - -X -' x f fly- Q- ' rv 64 l g As.. A41 1 mug? Dwelmf Pflwlam .. T' U 4 W l i 1 1 I 5 i 1 4 l 41 'x i 11 A, 3 n i W ii lass of 1895. COLORS.-LdU67'llZ8I' and 'Pale Gold. YELL. -Rah-Ra iz- W1'll1'a11z5-Ano-CRQIZ-Penta JAMES TAYLOR, JR., - WILLIAM GEORGE RAMSAY, WILLIAM SENVARD ELDER, BENJAMIN CALLENDER HEALIJ JOHN HERBER'1' PECK, - ARTHUR HIENIRX' LONGFELLOXV WILLIAM BRADLEY FREAR, 7 Kai- E11-en-e-K011-fa. mffiC6I'5. ,J R., 6 I P1'u.v1'a'en!. Wke- I 7'esz'a'e1z! .S2'f1'e!rz1jf . Treaszrwr. fh'.n'o7'ian. Foal. Chorzqgzfs. 5 I Eleven ofstbesdlloche 'Pe1'ehaz11fzee zfonzghl mv lillel love doth jleepe, Sofle-pillowea on a beanie of olownie eajeg Fam would I lmowe what 'vzj2'onsfay1fe sleejeej W hlle, OJE7' her, patient 'waffle lhe 6Z7flg'6ffS keepe. 4-Amlyelle, mayhappe, she walehelle loage and late, cfilwcl kywelegl majelh on her lofve for mee- A 11, lzllel love, wha! would I g'z oe lo fee Thy laag'hy1fzg'faee for once aZzfeo11jolafe! Loe, I, lo1f1g'abfe1fzle, lake whaljoye l eamze, 'Bal moafffze I mzfjle in fz'lenlfeparal1'o11: 'Pefehaanee fah, fpare lhal lhozlghle of Li6fff67'llZL7'01'l lj UVLV lofoe if a'a111zo1'1zg 'wifhe another manfze. l 66 we -- J 1 1 ! l RATERNITI S' fi, , . I1 f 1 MT s ul! q I, 4.1 ' ff . 1 V ' f Y' f ..,. ll :EW fi fx 67 .1 kappa Ellpba Society NIQXV YORK ALPHA, MASSACHUSETTS ALPHA NEW YORK BETA, NEW YORK GAMMA, -' ONTARIO ALPHA, FOL NDED AT UNION COLLEGE, 1325. ,i,YL,,,, ,A , Zlctive GIUEIDTCYS. 68 lkziozz College. Williallzs College. Ifobnrzf Collqgfe. Cmvzc!! Uv7'Ll.Zlc'7f.S'iljf Yb7'0lZf0 U9Zi'Z!L'7'57ffj' X 1 ! 1.-5 fn-Q.. f 1 f ' x 'U , 11 . . . ,ef FM . .1 f fqm. , , . a ,Q J' .- y 1 X , , Q yr, 1,1 ., H Q' X5 V: 'Aff . . . , . .J r -'J ., zkrxnq. k F ,. , V f,V-, . 4. We N Y M . L. 1 . :J , , . W., N, g. 5 .V . i .5 3 ,- , , 91 -, . 1. ' , V v ,ig .' . , . , ...v i Q . . wx -Hr' i, 'fu . ., ,L 6, rf-JMR Q-V, , ,- iw Y . 3, y wr ,av V 1: L -iggmg, . .4 f 1' Q.,-. ,., . 5 Q 4 . vbwr-.-,f f, ,Q 11 a ,.,. , , , .n., , n, X.. ,-1, X ,s. ,4 i' -2? M 1 QQ A , M, .4............ M.-Q --A - ff I M-Afmfmvf'Q?-'ST'f14'l -f:Q2ilF ,N 52.25 ig 5 'S 1 Ellpba massachusetts Glhapter. I Socletp of kappa E S 1 A111 ISHLD 1833. 1892. ORION BISHOP BRONVNI, P1 RDINAND WILIIAM SACK1 ll IOSFPH REX NUI DS TI111xc 11AS1 I1 L1 Om BROOKS LIION, ACOSI I NICIICDI S, Ellpba. C IIA RLES DEXTER C 1.EvE1.AN IJ, CHARLES LOUIS SAFFORD, MYRON CLARK W11.1.1A1x1S. ROBERT GILLESPIE MEAD, jR. CHARLES GRICNVILLE SEXVALI., Qlll ION XVIN IR11xGHA1x1 WARDELI.. 1894. IIIEODORI DUDLIEY HAMM X1 1, QIIARI 1 S PI'XkFlx PON, N.AX'l'I-IANIIQL EDWARD GR11f1+'1N, WILLIAM IAIINMAN MACLAY, DAVID EVERY l'T WHEE1.1f,R. 189 . C14 OROI NIARSII XII A1 111 x CHARLES EVEI vw FARGO, JR , FR1111 IxICIx D13P1:vS11'1 TO OFHHE O ivx u -1 1- .4R 4 ' A v - A xx x wfwrx . 4 4 1 - , .1 , , 1. ,xv If. , ., 1 . 1 .,I 1 . , x., 1893 Q 7 f- J . 1, . X, - .NJ W U. vw Y wx y 1 4 L ' L ri -1 w s V rwrx A , J 1 I N Q, vv yr ,'.. L .4 ' r 2 N . N- .1 ' 6: J , . 1 ,, A 1 4, . . ' . 1 L . 1 Q' I - II 69 LOUIS DIC 'FOREST IDOXVNER, HARRY GANSEVOORT SANFORD, XVNSEND. 1 4 X1 I 1 I 4. ..,. ,-,,.- ..,,..,.,.....,..,.. ,.,,.,..,,-,...E,..-ynmmw-n-w-fz-wo-1u:vvnuiw ,Sigma llbbi jfraternitg ALPHA OI' NEW YORK, BETA OF NEW YORK, - ALPHA OF MASSACHUSETTS, DELTA OF NEW YORK, ALPHA OF VERMONT, ALPHA OF MICEIIGAN, - ALPHA OF PENNSYLVANIA, EPSILON OF NEW YORK, FOUNDED A1 UNION COLLEGE, 1827. Zlctive GIDHDTQFS. 70 Union College. Ifamilion Collqgu. Willianzs Collegu. Hobari College. U7Zl.'U6'7'.S'I:Zj! of Iflfrzlzolzt. U1zi1Je1'siQf of ZlWchQg'n7z. Lehigh Universigf. C ornell O9ziw'1'xz'!y. I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Ellpba of massachusetts Gbapter I I N OI THE D F . jfI'3f6I'l'liIQ of Sigma llbbi. Es'I'ARLIsHIaD 1834. 5 1892. LAWRENCE BRADFORD FITCIAI, 9 ROLPH MARSPI, EDWIN VAN WORMIQR. , 1893- ? HOWARD OPDYRIQ. A 1894. I W. S. B. IiOPKINS, JR., LYMAN EDDY TIIAYRR. ! 1895. BENJAMIN CALLENDER I'1EALD, JR., HIXRRY BALDWIN LEONARD, W HAROLD ABBOT JOHNSON, GEORGE FITCH PERKINS, JR., WILL'IAM YOUNG MARSH, VVILLIAM MERRIAM SAXVYICR, EWINO TAYLOR. ' I I u 2 5 i E 7 I I f ' , 'Af-A-1,w wsu , we 1' -W alta Ulpsilon jfraternity. FOUNDED AT XVILLIAMS COLLEGE, 1834. WILLIAMS COLLEGE, UNION COLLEGE, HAMILTON COLLEGE, AMHERST COLLEGE, ADELBERT COLLEGE, COLBY UNIVERSITY, UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER, MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE, RUTGERS COLLEGE 7 BROWN UNIVERSITY, MADISON UNIVERSITY, UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK, UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, Zlctive GbEl1Jf6t'5. 72C CORNELL UNIVERSITY, MARIETTA COLLEGE, SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY, UNIVERSITY OF MICI'lIGAN, NORT H XVESTERN IJNIVERSITY HARVARD UNIVERSITY, UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN, LAFAYETTE COLLEGE, L COLUMBIA COLLEGE, LEHIGI-I UNIVERSITY, TUFTS COLLEGE, P DEPAUXV UNIVERSITY, INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY. 'ae ' A A Juv 538.241 59 3k kh0,1,i,,1v I ul, Q, YN. 'A gif, . I 1 5 0 ...,za.,.. :af- , , W., .J , M ., X. K ,. . f n-L Us '--, 1- Q W ,1-,r 'maui 1, nga, ,I , V, 4ff,,,, . , . ,A .avg Q 1. QA A,..., - . , , ' my .101-.n...fer1zx::.4..u a,,4H.....,.A,4,fn 1' ,-. .. A. wv K - - - Y. , . Dxekm Eh, 1 4' - -,ag-,.1:-,zr.: ::.-1.14-15: -' .' 1 5 yi 1 W 1 1 I I Ilham bapter 1fI'8f6lI1IfQ of ECU3 mD5ilOH. l 4 + 5 JF H ESTABLISIHIILII 1834. f I8Q2. i hR1wEsI LI XRK BARIII ll, WINTIIROI1 BENTON GREIQNI-1, JOHN CHARLES CAMPIsI1:L1,, LEvERE'I I' BIIAIJIIUIIY NIIQRRILL, FIIIQIJIQRICK Busl-INIQLI, IQYIJER. 1893. IMIENRY BURNHAM BOON15, CHAuI.,Es TAFI ENNIS, ELMER ROCKWOOD EDSON, LOUIS PALMER SLADl5,R FIIANIQ I-IENIIY XVOODMAN. 1894. ' WILLIAM HAYDEN BAKILII, ALEXANDER WI1I'I'15 1JOOI,I'1x'l'I,lC, 2 GAVIN ARCHIBALD CAMI11sIcLL, RICHARD SIVIQIQT FOLSOM, I HEIil5lQli'lx JOIIN MCMIIIUIIIIQ. 1895. WINFRED HOXVAIQD BAl3lSI'lx'Ix, BIQNJAMIN TIIOMAS B,x1:'1'I,I+:'I I', MACLAY HOYNE, DIOIIN ZDANIICI, XVILIJ. i S I Q I i fo I -quasi . ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA bi, llbsi jfraternitg. THETA, - MU, - ALPHA, - PHI, - EPSILON, - ZETA, UPSII.ON, BETA, GrAMMA, - CHI, - PSI, TAU, - NU, IOTA, RHO, XI, - - ALPHA IDELTA, IUUNDFD Xl UNION COLLEG E, I84I. i- Zlctive GDHDTCIIS. 74 Iflfilliams College. fllizlzllellzzry College. Wesleyan University. Ifamillon College. Uozifzzersily of lllielzzgan. Columbia College. Furflzan University. Uniwersiijf of Soatli Carolina. Uriiversigf of Zllississippi. A mlzersl College. Cornell Universizgf. Wofo1'd College. University of Minrzesota. Universigf of VWseonsin. Rutgers College. Stevens Inslilute. Universiqf of Georgia. , .-1 4 f 4 . 1 ,f , X . 1.4 .n7,.,,, ,xp -Q if -f gm, L ,.,,,, ., ,K .Y A 1 7 .15,-D Lpww - , ' 5 11' Lf1 ?- ., , W ff Y W' 'ifv'-i' ' ' 'W ,xwllmlwlilliibf ff: !!:,,4yf,f ., , -,Vx in A A' 1 w ' ,. QQ if f r cqoynyhzewj Y Ellpba beta bapter OF THE jfraternitp of Glbi llbsi. ESTARI,ISHED I842. 1892. MUNSON BURTON, A CARL BULLOCK, 1893. CHARLES EDWVARD HULP1'I l', A WILI-'RID RYAN MORCSAN, I894. REYNOLDS FREEMAN GUERIN, V'0LUN'l'INE COVEL TURNER, LOUIS GREGG NEVILLE. 1895. IQOISERT HU'l'CfIINS JEEIIREY, HENRY IQIRK WHITE, JR., LAUDER WILLIAM JONES. JOHN BENJAMIN ARCHER, CHARLES EDWARDS MILLER PETER OLIVER l'IANl+'ORIJ, CECIL LAURENCE MACCOY, STEPHEN BRADFORD DAVOL CRAIG CARLTON MII.l.l5li. 75 PHI, ZETA, DEL'1'A, . SIGMA, CHI, RHo, KAPPA, TAU, XI, PI, - LAMBDA, PSI, IOTA. - THETA XI, ALPHA, ALPHA PSI, NU, - UIASILON, EPSILON, ETA, IOTA ALPHA, - Mc. ,.,. AM--- , ......,......, , ,L . -.... - .-....... - --- Zeta 11551 jfraternitwg. IOUNIDFD Xl I HF UNIVERSITYVOF THE CITY OF NEW YORK, I846. Zlctive GIJHDICYS. - Unlwersigf ofllze Cifjl of New Yo Williafizs College. - Rutgers College. Universizgl of Pemzsylffzznia, - Colby Universigf. florvawl Uniwffsify. - Yofls College. Lafczyelle College. - Universigf of Michigafz. Rensselaef' Poblechnic bzslilzcle. -A Eowcloin College. Cornell Universizjf. - Univeffsily of CalQfor1zz'a. University of Torofzlo. - Columbia College. X McGz'll Ufzizfersily. - Case School of Applied Science. L77'li7JL'7'J'lQl of Norlh Carolina. - Brown Unlifersily. Yale Universily. ek Leland Slzmqford, jr. L9z1'7Je1'x1'zjf. 76 I If I 2 4 S I I 1 I I Q 1 ,.. ,V . , , Qmuvi A W L ALM , I 1 ' ' ' H4 H v-V V .,,, f I I 5 x I I I ig ' g fi? I f-?1'1 fig ''1-3125155522551IEIiI!5III5f?!iIi'f5!I?3!fliiEIii.EEWIIIZQIEIEEEEEEIEEIH4 1935-gn ,, I 323- ' ...EZ Q H Q :S A , E 4 IjIIE?5ilE.'-?l'I IEW!'if' gig I Q ,,I'II,vII'III 5522215 .P'21:'f Q-if EEEEKQIIIE ESEQEI IIIZIIIIQ-I IIfIif I 'jIgI.:3f,II'Ifii'III 211I'II-IIji '1-I,i- -ff' --' 5 'Ml III :!'rq,':'5 'j '- .I LISII 314421, 'I Moy' , - 'E 1123! w ':' ' 1' I wp-FEI iIde5I I:'1JI 352454 I , :' -'XY1 Q i III? IIIIIEIIE' , N Il QI 1' ' '- ' '--i f I Qpy11p,q II I Ziifiifgipiiize ' ! ' 'IIII I ' QHT, fffvgaf-gh' if xr- - I' ' :I - '-'if-A--:2'-2252511213 ,I , W II, ' ',4 A .f,,.,r ..ffm,, 51' ' X Ijiwf fi IIIIImIIIII I5:mI mm . -2, I I i I I I GEO.R,LCICKWO0D sgsonwwswvonk, I fCop'yn9lzLj I 1 ,ll I I I f I I I I I I .I.-.1-1...-1.-,......--,,.... .f . ., ,QI -,-- ' K ' 1 V N m y 4' V 1 H .L -, V- .- f--mm-,W I-f--+-- N fam-Mzimmmnzfwr-fzsfffi v:'1:'f'3?rffffx--s'f'i:.Tfif'ff'fi?F:T'TiTi'gMi:,:.f,5.7I-1.K'f .fff?'3:f'f' ,- i ff iff '- f'pT'-'F Zeta bapter fraternity of Zeta lD5i. ESTABLISHED 1847. RE-ORGANIZED ISSI. I892. PARRY CHAMPION, ANDRENV PORTER MCKEAN, ROBERT HOIT JOHNSON, WILLIAM CLIFFORD SMITH, HERBERT BAILEY VAIL, WALTER ANSON WEED, JR., GEORGE MANN PECK. 1893. . LOUIS J. BALLIET, . MILFORD WHITE CHILDS, FRANK HAMMOND GRIGGS. I894. FLOYD ELMER DE GROAT, BENJAMIN ROBINSON SCIIENCK, ALBERT HANVLEY PRENTISS, CARLETON GIFFORD SMITH, VVILLIAM METCALI1' STONE. . 1895- GEORGE GrRISNVOLD DAX'IDSON, GUY HATFIELD MORGAN, WILLIAM BRADLEY FREAR, PIENRY MARKS NICHOLLS, ROBERT HENRY VVAITE. 77 .,.,,Y ..... mt - F. J , W-L Ellpba Ebelta Wai fra enmity. HAMILTON, COLUMBIA, AMHERST,' - BRUNONIAN, HARVARD, HUDSON, BOWDOIN, - DARTMOUTH, PENINSULA, ROCHESTER, WILLIAMS, MANHATTAN, MIDDLETOWN, KENYON, UNION, CORNELL, I PHI KAPPA, YALE, - FOUNDED AT HAMILTON COLLEGE, 1832. Zlctive GDHDTCYS. 78 - HLJ...f.mmgm-. ....EgmnA:.1- Hallzillon College. Colmfzoia College. Aiiiliersl College. ' Bifowii College. H07'U07'!l Uieiizeixvizjf. Arleloerl College. Bowdoin College. Darimoiilh College. Unioersigf ofllhehigizn. , U7ZiU67'SlU of Roehesler. Williams College. College ofthe Ciiy ofNew York Wesleyan Uiiioersilv. Kenyon College. Mzion College. Cornell Unioersily. 171 rinigf College. Yale Uniwersigf. X . 1 .f . .. QI Mijn., . , -A .A Q., 3 ' M, - .,-. X L , ., N., - - 1' 1 145-1.-aWX.i3Ak.r!'L.'Hizim3nJ .'?,.Js:4 'a:5:i?:,.h5.,i1fsZ 9HarluuihiEng.'..s,. ',... '3' ' l 1 Mi-KWQ9 DREKA, PHILA . 1 Tnww. fHFmi-v.u M - ,5..k'inf--'Af' -' f' illiam bapter OF THE 1fl'Ht6I'l1ifQ of Ellpba ERIE! llbbi. EARL HOLBROOK HOTALING, EDWARD NORRIS ICIRK MEARS, JAMES CHARLES ROGERSON, ABRAM GAIIFIELD, IRVIN MCDOWELL GARFIELD, CHARLES PELTON HUTCHINS, JEROME RIPLEY ALLEN, FELTON BENT, JAMES JAY BROWN, JR., STUART FORBES PATTERSON, ESTABLISHED 1852. i,...-i....i..T 792. 7 93- WOODRUFF SUTTON, Jr. 794. EUGENE RICHARD WHITE. 7 95- 79 WILLARD EVANS HOYT, HARRY SHATTUCK LUDLO HENRY AUGUSTUS TOWNER W FRANKLIN HUBBELL MILLS, ROBERT ADAMS MANNING, JAMES GORE KING LEE, FRANCIS WILLIAM RAWLE, HENRY DRINKER RILEY, ARTHUR BELDING RUDD, CHARLES BROOKS THOMAS ALPHA, EPSILO N IOTA, LAMBDA DELTA, P1-il, UPSILON, SIGMA, TAU, --Y---11 .- -. -.. - . .Pi . A ..,-- -W Y . A alta 1155i fraternity. FOUNDED AT COLUMBIA COLLEGE, 1847. Elctive Gb5lDi6I'S. Colznnoia College. Trinity College. Universizy of Rorlzeszfer. Williaffzs College. Univevfsigf of Pennsylvania. University of Mississippi. U71i7!6VSiQl of Virginia. Shejiela' Scienlyic School. Wlass. fnsliluie of T echnology. n i L 1 i I , . 'qi N ku A4 s C1 4 ! Q, f-I ,I ,f il I. I 'N J 1 1 E I' b ul F I E 2 z V I i 1 5, 1 I. L. I 5. gi ' f 80 --.. --.,n..--- .....,. .,....----mruuz.-. 1 2 An: Q ' L . ,.' Mt, NY, . . - .- A Af- - I ,V . 2 - g, . I, . H . :, , Wag - N af 'J 4 .1 W. mf, A, gfffnj' 'U' 5 3 'Ls 4- , 4' .- ,34 'Jef ' 441. ,. 4 ' a- sf ' ' P w f xl' 'Q ' 'I K pi' 'f iw' ' 4 v 1 I 454 v r x-,,, .fu Q w. ..,., T V ..! J. . Jim , . ,. L4 4 1 f LM, ,U w 1 iv 4 . ' , , 1 W' 1 f Y Q5 -I f' X 51 J W A -ar fm in '1 - 'fix ' L -J .a ,v :1ii'un- 5 .-1.6 ,,N Q 4 Q,-'f'l , Jil. 5. 1,15 1, , -3. f :Q , 1 I 1 ' . ff , , . ,., I, n . . . ,21'.'-'. V 4 if' Y 3 1 5 N -V J-,f f ' 11 , .-, L i' 1' 29: t ' -A ' -, x L , , 91 ' ww, 4,5 E iLambOa bapter fU:I'3fCI'I1ifQ of Eelta Ilbgi. ESTABLISHED I 853. FREDERICK FERRIS THOMPSON, '56, CHARLES HUNTOON KNIGHT, '71, FREDERICK IQELLOGG DAY, '68, EDWARD AUGUSTUS DAY, '73, MELVILLE EGGLESTON, '7O, CYRUS WILLIAM FIELD, JR., ,79. 1892. HERBERT SAVAGE IDE. 1893. ALBERT EDMUND CLUETT, S ROBERT MCEWEN SCHAUFFLER, JOHN NILES HUYCK, -LOUIS MORRIS STARR, FREDERICK MILLER SMEDLEY. 1894. COLIN MACKENZIE, JR., WILLIAM COOK HART, SIDNEY GRAVES MATHER, SAMUEL ROMNEY SPRING. 1895. EDWARD CLIFFORD CHISHOLM, FREDERICK PORTER KIMBALL, FRED. ELLIOTT DRAPER, JR., FRANK RAWLINS KNIGHT, ARIEL HARRIS IDE, RUFUS GRAVES MATHER, JOSEPH ORIEL EATON, HAROLD PHELPSMOSELEY, STANLEY MA'FHEWS RAMSEY. 81 Eelta PHI, THETA, XI, SIGMA, PSI, CHI, - UPSILON, I ETA, - LAMBDA, PI, - IOTA, - ALPHA ALPHA, OMICRON, - EPSILON, - RHO, TAU, - MU, - NU, - BETA PHI, PHI CHI, 4 PSI PHI, - GAMMA PIII, BETA CHI, DELTA CHI, - PHI GAMMA, GAMMA BETA, THETA ZETA, - ALPHA fCHI, - A PSI OMEGA, BETA, KAIIIJA, - PHI EPSILON, SIGMA TAU, is kappa Epsilon jfraternity. FOUNDED AT YALE COLLEGE, 1344. Zlctive Gtbapters. 82 Yale Universigf. Bowdoin College. Colby University. Afnlierst College. , University of Alabama. University of Mississzjbpi. Brown University. g University of Virginia. Kenyon College. Dartfnoutlz College. Central Unioersigf. lllielcllebury College. University of Michigan. Williafns College. Lafayette College. Hanzilton College. Colgate University. College of tlze City of New University of Rochester. Rutgers College. De Pauw University. Wesleyan Unioersiyl. Aclelbert College. Cornell Universigf. Syracuse Unioersigf. Columbia College. Uniuersigf of Calfornia. Trinity College. York. Rensselaer Pobteehnic Institute. University of North Carolina. Mianzi University. Universigf of Minnesota. Ilfassaelzusetts Institute of Technology. I i I I E 1 I I r A1 F 1 I I v 1 4 I 4 i J n I A 1 1 , . . f a.. .14 , 'nf' 1 f .ff11:,, -3 .1 ff- 1 ag' 1-. T, ,Y ,,. , ,r WJ.:-A, ,F .. ,.,, v U M ,. , 4. , , HJ I ,, U N '-I 'wx-J t 1 ' 'f 12 pf - - - 1:1 3, 1 1 'xv . f H s f f- ,, 'fff' ' ,say - 'ff K '2 'M 5 ' 1 4 ,. - 1 K , . , . V, V .r V.. .. J, - .n ,. ,,., 1 X 1 Y as w 5 1 Ax 4 U f s. i -. I O 1 x Q my - uf ,- -qf-5 f - IA -1- 'immvnan-.-,....,... M-. ,.-. f gf 14' f IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIS32325252 1 , MIIII A ' I MI- I -. IIIXQI W MUVOQ 1711 llilNilN3 mm I 1, 1 I I I I I I 1 I I I I I I I I 9 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 4.-hi.L..k-...vm .A-' if :ar ..... , v..f....L.rx- L2i.i3g::,5.1??Y-211.471 Epsilcn bapter OF THE jfraternitp of Ebelta kappa Epsilon. ESTABLISHED 1855. 1892. IDAVID FITCH ARMSTRONG, AMOS BURT THOMPSON, PAYN BIOELOW PARSONS. 1893. , FREDERIC ALPHONSO VVEDDELL, ARTHUR KITTINGER WILLYOUNO, CHARLES FORREST MCLEAN. 1894. - I EDWIN NESBI1' CHAPMAN, NORMAN HERBERT DUTCHER, BAYARD HENDERSON CHRISTY, JOHN RUMNEY SEARLES, EDWARD HYATT HUTTON. ' 1895. HENRY COURTNEV EVANS, ' HENRY DALLAS SPEER, JOSEPH ELMER TUCKER. A , 83 llbhi Eelta MIAMI UNIVERSITY. INDIANA UNIVERSITY. CENTER COLLEGE. WABASH COLLEGE. IINIVERSITY OF IVISCONSIN. NORTHVVESTERN UNIVERSITY. BUTLER UNIVERSITY. OHIO WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY FRANKLIN COLLEGE. HANOVER COLLEGE. UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN. DE PAUW UNIVERSITY. OHIO UNIVERSITY. ROANOKE COLLEGE. MISSOURI UNIVERSITY. KNOX COLLEGE. UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. EMORY COLLEGE. beta jfraternitxg. MIAMI UNIVERSITY, I848. .l...l-.iil- Zlctive GIDHDTCPS. IOWA VVESLEYAN UNIVERSITY. MERCER UNIVERSITY. UNIVERSITY OF WOOSTER. CORNELL UNIVERSITY. LAFAYETTE COLLEGE. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA. UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA RANDOLPH MACON COLLEGE BUCHTEI COLLEGE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA. RICHMOND COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA COLLEGE. MICHIGAN AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE. N WASHINGTON AND JEFFERSO VANDERBIL'I' UNIVERSITY. COLLEGE. UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI. UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA. ILLINOIS WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY. LOMBARD UNIVERSITY. ALABAMA POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE. ALLEGHENY COLLEGE. UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT. DICKINSON COLLEGE. IIVESTMINSTER COLLEGE. STATE UNIVERSITY OF IOWA. A UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA. UNIVERSITY OF IQANSAS. - HILLSDALE COLLEGE. UNIVERSITY OF THE SOUTH. UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS. OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY. - UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA. UNION COLLEGE. COLBY UNIVERSITY. DARTMOUTH COLLEGE. UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA. CENTRAL UNIVERSITY. WILLIAMS COLLEGE. SOUTHVVESTERN UNIVERSITY. SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY. WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY. SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY. LEI-IIGH UNIVERSI'1'Y. AMHERST COLLEGE. BROWN UNIVERSITY. TULANE UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA. WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY. II 84 LELAND AND STANFORD JUNIOR UNIVERSITY. 'TI r Ii I I I I I I I, II I I I . 1. 3, I I I I I I I I, ll. I I 5. ,. 4. 1. I I I I I I I I I I II .I 1 I I I I I I -I I I I. I I I I .I 'I I l I I I I I ,. I I I: I I I I I I I I I all ,Q A -was Dwiim Hindu f6'oj1y7:g771 61 H 4 massachusetts Ellpba bapter OF THE jfraternitp of llbbi 'Delta Zibeta. ESTABLISHED 1885. I892. WILLIAM FRANK EDGERTON, WOODBURY TREAT MORRIS, HERBERT LESLIE MAPES, RUSSELL LORD TARBOX, WILLIAM ROBERT ANTHONY WILSON. 1893. EDWARD JAMES COLLIER, ARTHUR OLIVER, NATI'IAN RUSSELL HARRINGTON, FRANK EUGENE PARKS, FREDERICK EDWARDS SEARLE. - 1894. EDNVIN CARLTON CHLLETTE, I ROBEli1' JOSEI-II GULLIVER, HARRY OSGOOD SIIALDING. - 1895. WILLIAM DOHER'l'Y, ALLAN MARSH, CLARENCE MFISSER MERRIANI. 85 Z .v,V .,-.,4.,- ...yu ... ...WVU beta alta bi jfraternityg. BETA, - A GAMMA DEUTERON, DELTA, - I EPSILON DEU'PERON, ZETA, - - ETA, THETA, - THETA D1sU'1'ERoN, IOTA DEUTERON, 1iAPPA,f - LAMBDA, MU DEUTERON, NU DEUTERON, XI, - - OMICRON DEUTERON P1 DEUTERON, - RHO DEUTERON, SIGMA, - PHI, PSI, FOUNDED AT UNIUN CULLECEE, 1846. - Elctive GDHDITQFS. '86 Cornell University University of Miohigazz Rensselaer Pobfteolinzo Institute Yale Universigf. Brown University. Bowdoin College. Kenyon College. Mass. Institute Technology W illiams. College. Tzjts College. Boston Unioersigf. Amherst College. Lehigh Unifoersigf. Hobart College. Dartmouth College College of !Vew Yov e Czty Columbia College. Dickinson College. Lafayette College. Haniilton College. V, N Q 'r 4 fx L El 2 v 1 Q 4 A 1 X, 1 1 U A Q .4 V4 wi 5 1 3 1 H ,- Azwmcu-r, mm. 4, ,, X . w f y'1F'i if g. I 5 E Si E . 5 'QU ,5 ,i 55 E Q. 5. .5 Li 3? if 5 3 3 4 H E I I 4 I I f i 1l ta Zbeuter n bapter OF THE jfraternitg of Cbeta Eelta Glbi. REV. WILLIAM SLADE, EDWARD BARTOW, EDWIN WHITNEY BISHOP, CHRISTOPHER WALTER COLLIER, JAMES WIGHT ANDERSON, LYNN PADDOCK ARMSTRONG, WILLIAM IRVING CORTHELL, PAUL MYRON GOODRICH, JOHN PERIT HUNTINGTON, OLCOTT OSBORNE PARTRIDGE, JAMES RAY CRAIGHEAD, JOHN HERBERT PECR, ESTABLISHED I89I. 1fI'8fI'65 ill 'U1I'b6. I892. WILLIAM ORR WARK. I893. ERNEST NASH WILCOX. 1894. 1895. JOHN I. ZOLLER. 87 FREDERICK CARLOS FERRY. BENJAMIN DE WOLFE, CHARLES LOVEJOY HIBBARI3, JAMES' EDNVARD PEABODY, ANDREXV BOYD GILFILLAN, CHARLES PARK PRESSEY, GEORGE NEWTON SLEIG HT, WILLIAM LUTHER SAWTELLE HERBERT LLEYVELLYN TOWNE, GAVIN HAMILTON WRIGHT. JOHN ALLERTON SAMPSON, RICHARD PERGY WARD, ' rin. --,.,.. A .. ,?1f--f..-- -t - -F '-- -- alta au Ebelta jfraternitwg. TIIETA, BETA, DELTA, EPSILON, - ZETA, ETA, IOTA, KAPPA, MU, - PHI, ' CHI, - PSI, - BETA ALPHA, BETA BETA, BETA ZETA, LAMBDA, PI, - - BETA DEL'1'A, BETA ETA, BETA THETA, BETA IOTA, BETA XI, ALPHA, GAMMA, - NU, . RHO, TAU, - UPSILON, - BETA LAMBDA, BETA MU, BETA NU, - BETA SIGMA, BETA GMICRON, SIGMA, - OMICRON, XI, - OMEGA, BETA ETA, BETA KAPPA, FOUNDED A'I BETHANY COLLEGE, 1859. Zlctive GDHDICPS. - - - Bethany College. Ohio University. - University ofllliehigan. Albion College. - Ailelhert College. .eueia-1 College. I - ,Michigan Agrieultural College. Iillsdale College. - Ohio Wesleyan Universigf. Hanover College. - Ifenyon College. University of Wooster. - Indiana University. De Pauw University. - Butler Universigf. I Vanderbilt Universigf. - University of lllississifpi, University of Georgia. - Entory College. - University of the South. - Universigf of Virginia. Tulane University. - Allegheny College. Washington and jfejferson College. - Lafayette College. Stevens Institute of Technology. - Franklin and Marshall College. Rensselaer Pobfteehnie Institute. - Lehigh University. Tufts College. - Massachusetts Institute of T eehnology Boston University. - Cornell University. VWllianzs College. - University gf Iowa. Sinizbson College. - Iowa State College. - U7ZZ Z!E7'SZ.Z3f of Minnesota. - - University of Colorado. 88 A V-,X .V . V -'H ,, fn 1, - -A -' .. ., . . A V . X f, ,.. ., -qf,-11 -- - A-, L 1 s-,,,.: . ,W -M 1 ' 1 . -I , A ' 1 .V '-sw:-.f 4 r f wit? , WFTKA v r .3 . : f Nfva fc, r, ' V' 4 fx' f 4. , 'pe A f., wa 3 21' ' ' ' ' my A ,-g '. Q . , , .1 , V W 3 , A Y . 1 , -Q , .1 . . , , ,, Q . l L 4 M . 4 -r , 1 1 1 f 4 4 Q f. f- 4 Hu , 3-W! 5 J, mg, , .Q,.., ij K . ,n,f,,i n W,- v v 1 Q . 65,3 V. 7' 'uf , - ! 1 4 ,x ,. .53 A ,, 'L,.,--, A- ' f ' A ' ' R' 'W W ' 'J'M5'f-f3- ,w -n ? . .- A' f f 51: my 1? V- , V. 1 5 -,M akin w 9 , . - x - 1 1 v -M. nina... iw he 4.4.-a4.SaaL -La.,f'- sv 1 Q ,.' we v I E AWRIGHT F HILA Sigma bapter 1fI'Hf6l'l1ifQ of ECIIH E311 Eelta. ESTABLISHED ISQI. A 1893. AI.vAN EMILE DUERR, HUGH HENRY LANSING, HARRY NOYES GREENE HAROLD AUGUSTUS LEWIS. 7 1895. ' Q JAMES MONROE BROWN, 'ALBERT FRANKLIN SAWYER, JR RALPH SAXTON LANSING, ARTHUR TRESCOTT SOUTHARD, MORRIS MORTIMER WHITAKER. 89 , I V, '- , J. -r, Q, 1 . Z V I 1 58 f f! x V4 ' 1 Nomar V V AND Q VJ-fs' NX, ,...4 isis. l . EX' ' E f. 'I mu S iv I 11 , , Li.. 163: W an X ',, Q . - :H I I Yr ff S - - ww kgkxx .1 is Wm ligfiix-Q1f5Y.d:ak,Q ggss 41 jj ,.fll1M'L.cf- , ll N ' L ,I I A j 1 . -,Q ,A K . :J x -i i ' Q . llbbi LfBeta kappa jfraternitxg. FOUNDED AT VVILLIAM AND MARY COLLEGE, 1776. ALPHA OF MAINE, - ALPHA OF NEW I IAMPSI-IIRE, ALPHA OF VERMONT, BETA OF VERMONT, - ALPHA OF MASSACHUSETTS, BETA OF IVIASSACI-IUSETTS, GAMMA OF IVIASSACHUSETTS ALPHA OF CONNECTICUT, BETA OF CONNECTICUT, GAMMA OF CONNECTICUT, ALPHA OF RHODE ISLAND, ALPHA OF NEW YORK, - BETA OF NEW YORK, ' GAMMA OF NEVV YORK, - DELTA OF NEVV YORK, EPSILON OF NEW YORK, ZETA OF NEW YORK, ETA OF NEW YORK, THETA OF NEW YORK, IOTA OF NEW YORK, ALPHA OF NEW JERSEY, ALPHA OF PENNSYLVANIA, BETA OF PENNSYLVANIA, GAMMA OF PENNSYLVANIA, BETA OF OHIO, - ALPHA OF INDIANA, ALPHA OF ILLINOIS, ALPHA OF IQANSAS, Zlctive GDEIDTCFS. QI Bowdoin College. Dd7l7!l0Zlfh College. Vermont Universlgf. ll!z'a'fz'lebu1jf College. fforfoorcl Univeffsiyf. Amherst College. Wf?lllanzs College. Yale Unizfersizjf. Triniyf College. Wesleyan Zhziversiiy. Brown Universily. Mzion College. Oniverxlgf ofllze Cizjf q'New York College of the Cizfv of New York. Columbia College. ffafnillon College. ,Hobarl College. Colgale U3zlzfe7'.s'iQv. Cornell Unz'1Je7'.vz'Zy. Roehesler C7722-'Z!L'7'.S'lU'. Rzligers C ollege. Dleklnson Collegep Lebzgh L'7fLl7!E7'.S'll'j'. Lafayelfe College. Kefgfon College. De Pauw Ihziffersigf. Norlnzveslern Universizjf. Unzbersiyf of ffansas. Gamma of flbassacbusetts Glbapter OF THE llbbi JBeta 1kappa jfraternitp. mffiC6I'5. REV. ALFRED E. NUEERT, M. A., Presidmf, REV. JAMES F. EATON, M. A., Wag-Pfesidmf. - REV. E. B. PARSONS, D. D., Sec7'ez'a1'y, - PROF. HENRX' LEFAVOUR, Ph. D., Treasurer, IEEQCIIUVQ Gommittee. The Secretary, the Treasurer and H. H. BALLARD, ROBERT P. BAINBRIDGE, CHARLES A. BROWNE, JR., PAYN B. PARSONS, JAMES E. PEABODV, GEORGE E. LADD, ROBERT N. MCMYNN, EDYVARD NILES, 'lll11I116UiHt6 IIDCIUDGFS. CLASS OF I892. .flD6mb6I'S 56TIiOil 1Q63I'. CLASS OF 1891. 92 - Class of 1866. Class of 1887 - Class of 1859 Class of 1883 - Class of 1873 RUSSELL L. TARBOX, EDXVIN VAN WORMER, WALTER A. WEED, JR., FREDERICK R. WOODWARD JOHN W. TRAVELL, CHARLES L. YVARNER. PAYSON S. WILD. i al -..-M , - .,...,... ..v,-. ., .. . , . +A., . ..,.T,,,..,..,.-.- W, .,...,,.,..A-Q.:-.,...f..,1.. , .,...,,.-,..-. .-1 cm.-a.,:,:,.1.g. .,MI. .,.., I I L I l .l Ai, Wlinetysieventb ommencement. Q:OlIlI1l6llCCm6llf 01316110812 Co1qg'1'qQ'a!z'wzfz! Ckllffh, .S'a!111'a'ay, jfzmv 20, S jr. 711. PICOF BLISS PEER K HIIQIXLI GRANT PERSQN, CIIARLIQS GII.Rr:R'I' RUSSELL, ALVAH NIAXIMILIAN LEVY, ERNEST LIN DELI, CRA N DA LI., ROBERT CHARLES COOLEY, CHARLES PRES'roN HALLOCK, CBFHV65 IDU36 GOIIICSY. A MUSIC. fha Madvzfsx 0fA'oz1xseaz1. H Cfzrdifzal M'7Cf11Id7Z.,7 M US IC. 4' The ftI7 lll6'7' fu P0!1'!z'c.v.,' Akin Purifs of Rejm6!1'c.v.' MUSIC. UTM' Farmer in Po!z'Zz'c.v. 'L The F07'llZE7 in ,PoZ1'!z'rx. MUS IC. Aslllillllllfjf, 5711716 21. J'resia'i1qg Ojicef' - Bachelerville, Great Barrington, West Townshend - Hancock, Springlield - Riverhead, N. Y Mass Mass Mass Mass N. Y Bacmlzzmfeaie Sermon to Graduating Class by President FRANKLIN CARTER. Congrega- tional Church, 10:30 a. ni. Mission Park Prayer Meeting, conducted by Rev. Dr. ROBIQRT R. Boo'I'II, of New York City, 4:30 p. m. Address to Mills Young Menis Christian Association, by Rev. Joi-IN I-IENRY BURROXVS, D.D., Chicago, Ill. Congregational Church, 723013. m. JBHBC JBHH CBHYIIC. Mofzday, -72111: 22. AMHERST VS. WILLIAMS, VVeston Field. Resulting score, 2-0, for Williams. 93 Zllllmlii HUC C1355 ESQ. Ybesziay, Yum' 23. Meeting of the Society of Alumni, in College Chapel, 9:30 a. m., Col. NV. S. B. HOPKINS, President. Business Meeting of the Phi Beta Kappa Society in the Chapel immediately after alumni meeting. Operetta, Romeo and Juliet, by W. H. EDWARDS, '91, Williamstoxvii Opera House, 10:30 a. m. 4 Reunions of the Classes of 741, 751, '61, '66, '71, '76, '81, '88 followed the Class Day Exercises. A Class Day Exercises, at the Congregational Church, 3:00 p. m. QFDCI' of IEQCFCISCS. - MUS IC . PRESIDENT'S ADDRESS, - - EDXVIN HOLMES. f MUSIC. ORATION, - - - I'IIRAM GRANT PERSON. MUSIC. POEM, - - FREDERICK CARLOS FERRY. MUSIC. Elf 'lbophitw Tball. MUS1C. IVY ORATION, i - - - CHARLES GILBERT RUSSELL. IVY SONG. On 'Library Gampus. I LIBRARY GRATION, -... EDNVARD ROXVLAND DYER. MUSIC. ADDRESS TO LOWER CLASSES, - ' - - - MARCUS JULIAN BRONVN. SMOKING CLASS PIPE. PIPE ORATION, - - - SILVANUS BLANCHARD NEWTON. CLASS SING. H Ushers. H- S- IDE, I. B. ARCHER, ROLPH MARSH, I. MCD. GARFIELD, MUNSON BURTON, C. G. SEXVALL, H. A. TONVNER, F. A. VVEDDELL. A 94 . llbrige 1RbetoricaI Exhibition. C0l.QQ7'Kg'lZfI'07ZfZZ Chzzreh, 7.'3oj1. 112. jf YOI11 the 5O.DI3OmOI'6 GIH55. LYNN P. ARMSTRONG, - - - - - FRANK H. GRIGGS, HUGH H. LANSING, 4'The bzherifrmce of fhe XIXth Cem'u7'y. ' 4A Needed P1'0Zee!z'0n. i ' H The Power ofExa11zpZe. MUSIC. FREDERICK E. SEARLE, - - - f 4 The I'j11'a11zz'a's.', LESLIE L. CLEVELAND, - - - - ERNEST G. VVOOD, HA IWW E7Zg!tZ7ZIf Prahlezlzf' MUSIC. 2lfI'Ol11 U96 3'l1l1iOI' GIH55. The Lax! of fhe Tefzqblarsf' JOHN C. CAMPBELL, - - - HA Poliliral l72'ew of Zhe Chzzreh Qz1esz'z'01z. MUSIC. EDWARD E. VVILSON, ----- CI-IAS. L. HIBBAIIIJ, The Philosopher mais! he ffE'1zg. 4' The Las! Days af Jf'hzz1'!ozmz. M. FAX' LAFAYE'I I'I4:, - - - - - CC The f77'07!l'0,6'?Z6'L' of Goa' in Aiherieezlz lfsforyf ' Bennington, Vt St. Paul, Minn - Troy, N. Y Westfield, Mass Somerville, Mass Lake Forest, Ill Milwaukee, Wis - Austin, Tex. Pittsfield, Mass Waterville, N. Y. 'Cl15b6l'5. yV1LLARD 15, Hoyq-, IRVIN MCD. GAREIELD, EARL H. HOTALINO, LEON B. BACON, ANDREW P. MCKEAN, CI-IAS. E. MILLER, HERBERT B. VAIL, ,MILFORD W. CI-IILDS. 95 Senior llbromenaoe Concert. Goodrich ffall, Qp. oz. jfIOOlI GOlTll11itf66., E. P. CARTER, E. R. DYER, E. H. CHILDS, W. H. EDWARDS, EDWIN HOLMES, G. A. MASON. QOmm6I1CCITl6I1f lEI6I'Ci565. Congregzzliolzzzl Church, Wednesday, fone 24, 10.120 zz. m. MUSIC . PRAY ER, - - - By lhe Presidefzi. LATIN SALUTATORY, ------ I --- ROBERT' NORMAN MCMYNN, Madison, Wis. E ORATION, --------- fferoes . I WILLIAM HOWELL EDNVARDS, Binghamton, N. Y. DISSERTATION, ------- The Bible in Liieroizzre. CHARLES STILLMAN HAYNES, Fitchburg, Mass. CRATION, ------ The A B C75 ofAa'11er!z'sing. ERNEST LINDELL CRANDALI., Hancock, Mass. ' MUSIC. ORATION, ---- The Ilford! Element in Sofia! P1'ogre5.v. GEORGE EDWIN LADD, Woodstock, Vt. DISSERTATION, ------- Unwriiiefz flisfory. GEORGE ALPPIEUS CONVEN, North Falmouth, Vt. ORATICN, - - - - - National Songs, T heir Thc'llZ6.K' and Power. CHARLES PRESTON HALLOCIQ, Riverhead, N. Y. MUSIC. ORATION, - A ----- .PdZ?87'1'JIll. JOHN WILLARD TRAVELL, Troy, N. Y. DISSERTATION, ---- The fhfluefzfe ofbzfercollegiafe Aihlefics. g CHARLES GILBERT RUSSELL, Great Barrington, Mass. ORATION, ------ , Poelfy rzno' the Buxifzess Maiz. PAYSON SIBLEY WVILD, Manchester, Vt. MUSIC. ORATION, - - - ---- The Adveizz' off5'z'1z1'J in E1zglana'. HIRAM GRANT PERSON, Bachelerville, N. Y. PHILOSOPHICAL ORATION, ----- A Pnzciiezzl Ea'uca!z'on. ALVAH MAXIMILIAN LEVY, West Townsend, N. Y. VALEDICTQRY ORATION, ---- The Ola' mm' Nefv in Eo'uco!z'o7z. FREDERICK CARLOS FERRY. IFREDERICK CARLOS, ALVAH MAXIRIILIAN LEVY, and ROBERT NORh'IAN NICNIYNN are considered to be of equal gradej 96 W i I f l l I t , f I t l l l l t I 2 I I F l n l 1 1 g Elnnouncement of Ilbri5e5. CONFERRING Ol DEGREES. BENEDICTION. 'U,l5l3CF5. D. F. ARMSTRONG, H, 13, ISQQNE, O. B. BROWN, F, H, GRIGGS, J. C. ROGERSON, JR., C. E. HULET'1', EDXVIN VAN YVORMER, - L. M. STARR. Alumni Dinner, Lasell Gymnasium, Trustees, graduates and invited guests dine imme- diately after Commencement Exercises. . fBy vote Ot' the trustees, admission tothe dining hall will hereafter beby ticket. Graduates are entitled to tickets, which they can Obtain by registering their names in the library.j lDl'65iD6l1f'5 'tR6C6lDtiOIl. hz f700HIl'l'Ch Hafl, 7Z111'sa'ay, func 25, 49 jl. 111. CLASS SUPPER, - - - Grqflock ffolel at Sp. 111. HISTORIAN, - - ROBERT CHARLES COOLEY, Springfield, Mass. CE0l1lmiII6C of Zlttallgehlellm. RUIPUS RIKER GRAVES, Chairmm. FREDERIC RUSSELL BIGELOWN, JOHN HILl.,, FREDERICK BAKER LINDSAY, THEODORE LICXVIS PETERS. Q 1 Y V L 'ix-' 5'3Q'. -- fwfr 'S If if 33. as 51,5 ,L ,,' , A I 1 -, ,iw f 1' ' 4'-g., 'I 97 V . i 1 I l . t l If I tx ommencement. Philip Schuyler Allen, Clarence Walworth Alvord, Charles Burgess Arthur, Charles Anderson Austin, Clarence Wesley Austin, Garabed Simeon Azhderian, Frederick Russell Bigelow, Jacob Alfred Bohrer, XVilliam Robert Briggs, Marcus Julian Brown, William Marriot Canby, Jr. Edwards Herrick Childs, Robert Charles Cooley, George Alpheus Cowen, Ernest Lindell Crandall, Richard Law Crump, Robert Piercy Dow, Edward Rowland Dyer, Charles'Adelbert Edgerton William Howell Edwards, Frank Harvey Elmore, Frederick Carlos Ferry, Rufus Riker Graves, Nathan Hunt Hall, Charles Preston Hallock, Charles Stillman Haynes, John Hill, 7 ,Suite 24, 1891. EQQIZGCE CBFHIUGD. JBacbeIor of HITS. Gifford VVilkinson 98 Edwin Holmes, William Berkeley Hotchkiss Samuel Humes, Harry Wbodruffjohnson, George Edwin Ladd, Alvah Maximilian Levy, George Morton Lightfoot, Frederick Baker Lindsay, Frank Leonard Luce, Robert Norman McMynn, Edward Harding Marsh, George Allen Mason, Charles Elbert Montague, Oscar Fitzland Moore, Jr., Silvan us Blanchard Newton, Edward Niles, Henry Herbert Taylor Noble Louis Arnold Pierson, Hiram Grant Person, Charles Gilbert Russell, John Shoemaker Sheppard, Ji Daniel Webster Sitler, William Bradley Storer, John Willard Travell, Charles Lyman Warner, Reginald DeMerritt Wentwoi th Payson Sibley VVild, L g 'll30lIOI'Hl'Q ECQFZCCS. DOCTOR OF DIVINITY. The Reverend John Abbott French, The Reverend cimunicey Goodrich, ' The Reverend Byron john Hall. DOCTOR OF LAWS. Justin Dewey, VVilliam Eustis Russell, Marshall Wilcox. DOCTOR OF LETTERS. Cecil Franklin Patch Bancroft, TS2laC HCI1ClC1'SOll- A MASTER OF ARTS. Samuel Fessenden Clarke, George Herbert Gutterson, Alfred Tyler Perry, . V Henry Daniel W'ild. W., 5,1 , V ,-' - .155 :E A ,f al'- J T 1 f.- L it f 1 . . ull.. '1'V.., 'f:':rr.3 . -- 'LH .J ..f 'w X? I I-I f 5. ' . .fg 'ii 99 llbremiums Elwarbeb at ommencement, Inofsz' Prize--Arthur Oliver Second P1'ize--Louis Balliett, 1891. ISENEDICT PRIZES. IN LATIN Hofzorable Jlleniion-Franklin Hubbell Mills. IN GREEK. fin! Pffize-Franklin Story Conant, - - Second Prize--Louis Balliett, Honorable jllenlion-Franklin Hubbell Mills. IN MA'l'llEMATICS. Fin! P7'iZ6-HOXVHI'Ql Halsey Bayne, - - Second Prize-Louis Balliett, Ifonorczble Ilfention-Harry Noyes Greene and Frederick Miller Smedley. IN NATURAL HISTORY. Class of,1893 Class of 1893 Class of 1893 Class of 1893 Class of 1893 Class of 1 893 !fP'1's! Prize-Fra11kliniSto1'y Conant, ----- Class of 1893 Second Prize-Equally divided between Louis Balliett and Charles Grenville Sewall, .------ - - Class of 1893 IN FRENCH. Jiffy! Prize-Garabed Simeon Azhderian, - Second Prize--Clarence Wesley Austin, Ifonorable Zl1enz'ion+Ernest Lindell Crandall. IN GERMAN . Fin! Prize-Alvab Maximilian Levy, - - Second Prize-Clarence Wesley Austin, Hofzoroble fllention--Payson Sibley Wild. Frederick Carlos Ferry, - Ernest Lindell Crandall, PRIZE FOR PRIZES. GRAVES PRIZE. IOO Class of 1891 Class of 1891 Class of 1891 Class of 1891 Class of 1891 Class of ISQI hs 'IDOHOI' 5Cl?OlE1l'5l3ilJ6. Thomson Scholar, ' Charles Albert Browne, jr., J. Ruthven Adriance Scholar. Walter Anson Weed, Jr., VVarren Scholar, Robinson Paige Bainbridge, Gilson Scholar, Louisll. Balliett, ' VAN ,V1+5c1-1TEN PRIZE. FOR EXTEMPORAN EOUS SPEAKING . ALVAH MAX1M1L1AN LEVY. RICE PRIZES. Class of 1892 Class of 1892 Class of I892 Class of 1893 IN LATIN. Riff! P1'1'zff-Freclerick Carlos Ferry, - - Class of ISQI Second Prize--Jacob Alfred Bohrer, - Class of 1 891 Ifonornofo Zllwzfiozz -Sam uel Humes. IN GRIHQK. A fl.7'5ll !'v'z'zo--Frederick Carlos Ferry, ----- Class of 1891 Sefonft' Prizo-Equally divided between jacob Alfred Bohrer and Charles Lyman Warner, ------ . - - Class of 1891 Honorable Me1ztz'o1z-Rolaert Norman McMynn. BOOK PRIZES FROM THE RICE FUND. CLASS OF Frederick. Winter Barthel, Franklin Hubbell Mills, Carl Davis Burtt, Louis Palmer Slade, Albert Edmund Cluett, George Newton Sleight GRIFFIN PRIZES. IN ENGLISH LITERATURE. fin! Pmzo-Frederick Carlos Ferry - - Second P1'z'ze-Alvah Maximilian Levy, - - RHETORICAL PRIZE. Charles Lovejoy Hibbard, GENERAL PRIZE. JUNIOR PRIZES. 1Q'rsz' Prize-Edward Everett Wilson, - - Seconzi Prize- -John Charles Campbell, - - 1675! Prize-Hugh Henry Lansing, SOPHOMO RE PRIZES . Seoona' P7'1'ze-Lynn Paddock Armstrong, - DEWEY PRIZE FOR ICXCICLLENCE IN COMMENCEMENT ICXICRCISICS. Ernest Lindell Crandall, - 1 IOI Class Class Class Class Class Class Class Class of I89I of 1891 of 1892 of 1892 of 1892 of 1893 of 1893 of I89I xg. ws N J g Q Q? X5-' SY, , Qx X 95' b uh Imenslan VOLUME XXXVI llbublwbeb by the 3llT1iOI' Glam H1 Nm BURWHAM BOONF Inxzderz! LYNN PADDOCK ARMSTRONG X V CHARLES GRENVILLE SEWALL, FRANK HAMMOND GRIGGS, A i LOUIS :MORRIS STARR, QHARLFS ILDWARDS MIIIER, -11 mf ABRAINI GARFIFLD, Bzmnem Mmzaffer 'F Resignecl. IOS, v o 9 O 6 5 1 x Y ' 4 - jf, ' ,. . ,, . 5 ARTHUR ICITTINGER WILLYOUNO. Q ' l A - ' 15 ' h he illiams literary fllbonthlg. FOUNDED BY THE Elfbeliifllm HUD HFQO. I llibitors for the Glass of 1892. JOHN C. CAMPBELL QCbaz'1wz1mjj, ROLLIN L. HARTT, EDWIN W. BISHOP, YVVILLARD E. HOYT, CHARLES D. CLEVELAND, VVILLIAM R. A. WILSON, MUNSON BURTON, - T1'wzszr1'e1'. 1 Annual Literary Prize awarded to JOSIAH T. NEWCOMB. Lit. Fiction Prize awarded to HENRY BURNHAM BOONE. IO4 E I 1 E I I K f I P I I T T I I Y I l S I 5 ...J be 'dlllilliarns 'literary flbontbly. lDolume wne. EDITORS FOR THE CLASS OF 1886. G. W. ANDERSON, C. H. PERRY, P. W. BLACKMER, H, W, PHELPS, D- C- BREWER, J. J. THOMAS. E. LEONARD, 71711515117 47' volume Iwo EDITORS FOR THE CLASS OF 188 E. L. ADAINIS, WILLIANI GOODYEAR J. TFBAXTER, S T LIVINCSIONE J. H. CRAVENS, E R SMITH C. H. BIGELOXV, fwafzrrev lDoIume Kbree EDITORS FOR THE CLASS OF 1888 H. M. ALLEN, E. N HUYCIC F. W. GRAVES, G. L RICHARDSON F. G. IEWETT, JR. H. D WILD E. C. KNICKERBOCKER Trezzszrrer lDoIume jfour EDITORS FOR THE CLASS OF 1889 OLIVER S. BROWN, JAMES R. NIACDONALD J. F. FITSCHEN, FRANK J. MATHER HOWARD KENNEDY, JR., JAMES R. NASH ARTHUR FRANKLIN CLARKE ---- Treaszlfev' lbolume jfwe EDITORS FOR THE CLASS OP 1890 T. M. BANKS, A M HIILIICOCK ' H. W. EDSON, C L N011 3 I. A. HERRICK, T WHIIIEISEY 4 V. ADRIANCE, ULIISIIH1' lDoIume 5121 EDITORS FOR THE CLASS O14 I89I P. S. ALLEN, O F MOORE J W. H. EDWARDS, S B NEWION EDWIN HOLMES, C G RUSSELL F. R. BIGELOXV, - 717517511757 'lR6CiDi6I1t6 of lit. IDIJ36 . VOLUME 1. E. A. BLACKMER, '86. 4 C. T. FITTS I H 2. SAMUEL ABBOTT, '87. VOLUME 5' P. S- ALLEN, '9 ' H 3. A. M. HITCIICOOK, 790. H 6. 1. T. NEXVCOMB, '9 4. P. S. ALLEN, 91. IO I , , , , U o - . A f' . 1' X ,I A ' 'f R . . Jr . 7 ,X i I rt ! . . 1 . f ' 1 - - - - ,' ., ', .. Q X1 . , , . , 1 . . If 9 ' ' ' ' - i: Z? . A H EZ ' 'I . 15 I - ' H . 9 , . ,. ' 6? 4 ' . 1,1 . 1. , ,r .. . 5 . . , ,VR L . , . E , , , ' U , ,sp iii . ,Q UQ 6 A - ii? . W, al' ' . HIT . . 7 R., ,S jj! a 1 5 . '. . . if 559 II, 5!S 15.2 137 -.-.+- in fbi Qglf ' EY., 0 M? 7 I 7 90' SLI: I. 2- 7 N H5521 mls 111' 1, . ug 1291, Wil 5 .ein ' My IM: :Qi-V Hifi.: iw 1 :yu qw' . .sm HM QW? 214+-I glfiffx 191' V.. V!- ,., M. ,, sl v I I I 'Il' RI be 1 mms wee Q. . wolume ID. PUBLISHED THURSDAYS. JBOMD of JEDitOr5. -I. T. NENVCOINIB, 792, - Eriz'z'0r-ifz-Ckzkyi 9 M. C. WILLIAMS, ,92, Asszkfauzf E!iff0I'-Illl-ChZ.Lff. L. PIIBBARD, '92, E. N. K. MEARS, '92, B. BOONE, '93, C. G. SEXVALL, '93, I K. WILLYOUNG, '93, F. KVI. SMEDLEY, '93, H. CHRISTY, '94, A. W. DOOLITTLIQ, '94, S. FOLSOM, '94, O. O. PIIIURIDGE, ,94. I B57 D E. C, BARTI',ET'l', 792, Buszhess Mn1zager. I I 5 I I I E IO6 I I . I I I ,J i 1 3 I Y 5 hi illiams weekly lDOIume wne 15. THOMAS, - - - lfa'z'!0r-flz-Chicj L- G. HOSKINS, - - A.vs1's!1z1z! Ediimf-ifz-Chie M. H. PIOOVER, '88, G. B. ROGERS, '88, G L HUBI3hLL 88 S '1 TINC '8 J. F. FITSCHEN, JR., '89 J. S. UNDEIQI-III.I., '89, MCG. JENKINS, '90, W. A. GLENN, '88 lDOI1lm6 EWG W P SIDLEY '89 W R BLBINETI 89 T M BANKS 90 BIISZIZESS Mana W. P. SII111.Ev, '89, - - - Ea'z'for.z'n-Ckzky J. S. UNDERIIILL, '89, - - Asszlvfani Ea7z'z'o1'-z'1z-Chief T. M. BANKS, 790, B. COLBY. '90, MCG. JENKINS, '90, T. WHITTELSEY, '90, P. S. ALLEN, ,QI, H CLI MINSHAXV '90 W EDSON '9 L WARD 90 H G W00STrR ,QO H ILLNIORE '91 volume Kbree C. L. WARD, 790, - - Ediior-ifz-Ch1'4y' H. G. WOOSTER ' - - Assisirzfzz' Edifof'-1'1z-Che B. COLBY, 790, W. H. CLEMINSHANV MCG. JENKINS, '90, P. S. ALLEN, ,QI F. H. ELMORE, '91, ' G. A. MASON, '9 E. C. BAR'I'LE'1 1', 792, J. C. CAMPBELL, '92 J. T. NEwC0MIs, 792, M. C. WILLIAMS, 9 G. A. BAKER, 790, - - Bzzsi1zes.v.7Wa1zage1' F. L. LUCE, ' I, - - A.vsz'sZzz1zZ Bz1.fi1zz's.v Illanaffer G. A. MASON, '91, - - Editor-in-Chiey' P. S. ALLEN, ,91, resignedj, - Assisiant Ea'z'lo1'-z'1z-Ckiej F. H. ELMORE, 91, - - A.vsz'sz'a1z!Efiifor-in-Ckz'e E. C. BAR'1'LET'1', '92, M. C. VVILLIAMS, '92, C. L. IIIBBARD, ,92, N. K. MEARS, 792, H. B. B00NE, ,93, F. L. LUCE, ' 1, IO I T NIXYCORIIS '9 'T C CAMIBELL '9 W R A WILSON 792 C D CLLXILAND ,92 C G SEIXAIL '93, Bzzxzfzws Mafia er Q O j. ' A 7 P . . , , . '. f I ., 8 , 9 X ' ' 1 Q 9 7 ' . -. , 1 H, 7 1 - 7 ' ' 7 7 1 T' - gref. Q . W. . ' 1 I H. . , 0, C. . , ' , . '. L , , F. . ' I ,A . G. A. BAKER, ---- BZlSl'7Z6.S'.S' Mafzngef-. ' 0 1 901 ff , ,90 3 I, 7 ' 2. 9 .S - 11901111116 jfOllI'. Q . 7 f. . . if f , 2, . . I I , 2, o l 1 I' S T, , '. . I I +3 , , . .. .' , , J , 07 9 1 -f-I ' A A - 7 X I I -J , , X M I , - f ,+A- pg'i'A, 1- ' I f .:. 1, if .1 f, ,U-I , 4,1 , W Q Wiggsf' '!g5ff ' :w-.nI,-mg? N , ' , .C' -- f' - ' . - ' , ,! .-- .f 'N' Iglljg 1 gh .JS Ex L -, , Q L' xx.. zf' - ,W , .., ,, f2q,,,,,,.,I , Q-4 -,I . 1.3 , I ff., I' '1 , ' ,, . ' Maw V , ---V- --Eff? --. '-u-, 'f X 4, LH- '. . N :iff-1-EFTQ E K f ' 'wh JM ,i l X001 .r f ., Q I .. Q ty ? E ,M L 6fLfJI V X 1 'Q ' N. - ' ml L. ff ffpgf. My -. , ,. f If Vfffgv N f , X .6 -f2'e2w.1III' 25: Mg QQ? .. ' 'JN X Xx ' ,: I . I. - 1.-7 .q X 1 - yT'.p ,fa-if I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I l I I I I I I I I FOUNDED 1793 EDU066 il1f0 U36 lDbilOlOgiEll1 HUC IlDlJilOf6Cl9l1i8l1 SOCi6fi6S 1795 A. I'. PERKINS ' - - - .... - p,,c,35,,Q,,,f C. L. HIIBBAIQD, 792, A ...- - - , gefygfafy Zfoint Debate, Twlebnesbap, jfeb. 25, 1891 PROF. A. L. PERRY -...... Pygygdmo- 0 6,7 3115965 PROF. I'lEVV1T'l' - PROF. RUSSEI,I PROP. F1-:RNALD PROF. MORRIS DR BASCOM QLICSTIOI1 .A'eso!1Jea'.' That Canada should be annexed to the United States This proposition excludes the attitude of England on this question. QAgreement between the debatersj E6bat6t'5 Ajiffwzzz'z'w'-Pkilologzfm JV? zzfwe Pkzloltchnulfz B. C. COOKE, 792 C C1 SIIWALL 93 E. C. BAR'l'LE'l'T, Q2 I 1' NFYVCOMB 9 H. G. PERSON, ,QI A M Levi 9 liecfsiozz in fha Neffalz'7Je. 109 13 . il I bl ' Q Q Q be -I3 IC HIGH. ow f a 92, - ii 91 4 if a O ji '. 0 L if 3 1, ,l li 4 ,N o . ,Ol . T. A. J. . I O J ' ' 4 7 7 1 f Fla ' , 5. . L , ' 2, - Sl. 1 ' ' 71 7 Ia ' H? 1 6 I ' If 1 'v i. ql i: if l 5 H112-BARD, ,92, WOOD, '92, BANKER, '93,' L. E. LEE, '94, VOSE, '93,'f - DODGE, ,93, MONTAGUE, '91 LADD, '91, - NILES, '91, HOLLISTER, '92 PEABODY, '92, LADD, '91, NILES, '91, - SITLER, '91, BLANCHARD, 792, WOOD, 792, B1sHOP, '92, MERIAM, ,92, GODING, ,93, BANKER, '93, PEABODY, '92, PEABODY, 792, BARTOW, ,Q2, MERIAM, 792, BANKER, '93, BAYNE, '93, , 'FLeft College. 7 llbbilologian Society. yearly Officers. Elected May 20, IXQI. FIRST QUARTERLY OFFICERS. ffanuary 21, 1891, Io Zllarch II, 1891. SECOND QUARTERLY OFFICERS. March 11, 1891, lo May' '20, 1891. THIRD QUARTERLY OFFICERS. ' MIIJ' 20, 1891, to Nozfelfzbef' 4, 1891. FOURTH QUARTERLY OFFICERS. Novefvzbef' 4, 1891, to Yamzary 13, 792. IIO ffislorian. Librarian. I.S'f Assislnnl Librariafz, 2d H Library Dzspeclor. l'1'1fsizz'enl. Vice- Pffesidml. Crific. Secretavjf . T7'e1Isz11'1'7'. Presidefzl. l7Yce'-P7'esia'en!. Criiif. Secreia ry . T1'e11s11re1'. Presidenf. Wce- Presidwz! Secrelary . Treaszlnfr. C riff r . Presidenf. Wee-Presidenl Crific. .Secreizzry . Tvfeczszzrfr. 1 1 i I l i V i E E 5 I ! i 1 1 P r I I 5 E 1 I I I I I 5 i I . 1 i P 1 c 2 5 i 1 L I O 1 . E. C. Bartlett, E. Bartow, F.. W. Bishop, G. A. Blanchard, W. J. Boies, C. E. Banker, H. H. Bayne, B. F. Bassett, F. A. Benton, F. W. Carey, B. H. Christy, A. H. Coar, F. B. Ayer, Craighead, W. Doherty, C. H. Durfee, IIDCITIDCIZB. 1892. B. C. Cooke, B. DeWolfe, O T Gehrls W B Greene Hltchcock 1893 L Cleveland M Long 1394 H Dutcher Edwards Jr 'VI Goodr1ch Gullwer Howard 189 C G Elmer W H l'1tch Hobbs Daye f p1'L ff ,f L-2' III M. E. Meriam, J. E. Peabody, Jr, Wxlson Wood Holllster I D Murphy P Huntlngtox jordan Lee G Rowe Scully M McMurray M3111 Mlller Wlld - - ' , E. G. , 7 1. . , - , F.. . , , , , N. . , , , ' 1 IE. , ., 1x.fx. , P. 1 . ' , L. E. , 11.1. W ' , ri. . , B. ' , E. T. . . . , A F. . F , D . .. , . , 3 l 7 , . 'xx Cx --s??G2DUf'f? f pf- I , , f . - H7155 ... .M ff - ng -5'. Q' ,I s ur H O A .filfigligiy F 1 ' w..y,. 'f . Q KQ Q JW Ki'-I? F s. I .. , V, v llbbilotecbnian Society. 0ffiC6I'5. SECOND QUARTER, 1891 N. B. VANDERZEE, '92. V - - - - E. N. K. MEARS, '92, - A. P. PERKINS, '92, F. M. SMEIDLEY, ,Q3, - - - . FOR THE YEAR. H. N. GREENE, ,Q5, - - - - C. P. IQEDFIELD, 7Q3, - 1 Cf. H. VV.RIGH'l', '94, - - - !ll56l1lbCI'S. 1892. Bainbridge, Hotaling, Merrill, Blue, Jones, Newcomb, Bushee, Keough, Perkins, Brown, C. A., Ludlow, Rogerson, Davies, Mears, 1893. Bacon, Fuess, Manning, Burtt, Garfield, Mills, Conant, B., Garfield, Nichols, Cluett, Giliillan, Redfield, Corthell, Greene, Schauffler, Ennis, Lewis, Sewall, Evans, Lansing, 1894. Doolittle, Lee, Pinkerton, Grifiin, Milham, Reed, Gillette, Merrill, Schenck, Hand, Maclay, Sawtelle, Judd, McMurtrie, 1895. Aldrich, Jones, Longfellow, Congdon, Lansing, Millspaugh, Elder, 112 '9 Presidenl . - Vice Presidezzl. Crilic. - Secretary. T7'zrz5z11'e7'. jfzmiof' Librarian. Soplzomore Lz'b1'ar1'fm. Thompson, Vanderzee, Wark, Wilson. Slade, Srnedley, Sleight, Stanley, Sutton, Wilcox. Towne, White, VVheeler, Wright. Morrow, Ward, R. P. l I l 1 l l I l l l 4 Y 1 i l l I l l l l 1 l 1 l L E I 1 E 1 l I l 3 l l i J S 0fffC6I'S. XV. A. XVEED, JR., l'res1'de1zl J. NV. ANDERSON, Secrefary PROF. HENX'I'1 l', FOCll!Ql Dl'7'KL'f0l' IIDCITIUCFS. FACULTY. PROF. FERNAI.D, PROF. XVILD, FREIN, MORRIS, MARRS, BAI,I,IR:'I I', ANDERSON, CORTHELL, DALY, YVILD, 1892. BARTLETT, XVEED, EDGERTON, 1893. DUERR, SLEIGIIT GR EENIL, ENNIS, 5 LANSING, OLIVER. CONANT, STAN LE NIILLS, BU R'l l'. P. wLASSlCALw0ClETY,t-if Y , PROF. I'IEWIT'l' MR. FERRY QARILNII R 3IsIIoIf I wo versions. HEN before the fateful three, Dire Leffy, Soc and Sam, Comes the student with his plea, As meekly as a lamb -He lies I When beneath the cold, green sod, Safe planted he shall be, Then, indeed, confined within, Excused in truth We'll see -He lies! II4 3? I I I I I I I I I I I I I 3 I I I I I E I I , r I I 1, I I 0 2 i 'I W..-...,,...,,, , E F4 5 Y 'iv N Sf A. P. MCKEAN, 9 F. S. CONANT H. J. CONDIT C. P. REDFIELD L. I.. CLEVELAND 95, C. E. BANKER, 793 BA RTOW, CLEVELAN D, ARMSTRONG, BANKER, BARTHICL, CLEVELAND, F. S. CONAN1' j. B. CONANT, CONDIT, NffiC6I'5 IIDCITIDCUS I8Q2 DOW D, JONES, 1393 DODGE, EDSON, HARR1NO1Ox HUYCK MII IFR MORGAN IIS 5 R '9 Pm szdmz' WL 6 Preszdelzf Secretary Yreaszzrez C 0771 .Yp0lZdllZU Sean in Curn lon MCKEAB VANDFRZP 1 PRESSY REDFIELD SCHAUFFI FR SU ri ON WILCOX WILLYOUNK 7 1 g X be Blncient but Hoonorable rber o flbacropobibae. I892. ' VVOODBURY TREAT IVIORRIS, EDVVARD BARTOW, LEVERETT BRADBURY MERRIIJL, WALTER ANSON WEED, JR., 1893. ALBERT EDMUND CLUETT, A CARL DAVIS BURTT, ANDREW BOYD GILFILLAN, FRANKLIN HENRY HASKINS, fVIlIL'7'0f0!ZlitlI1IfZl.S' Priffzzzs. EDNVIN WHITNEY BISHOP, JAMES WILLIAM ROWE, FREDERICK RUEUS WOODW HRD H0zc1'0p01z'ia'az'us Secunzizrs. WOODRUFF SUTTON, PERCY GODING. LOUIS PALMER SLADE, FRANK HENIQY WOODMAN. 1894. WVILLIAM PIINMAN NIACLAY, Zlhc1'ajwq'ia'afu.v Ylfrfim. FLOYD ELMER 'DEGROA'F, JOHN RUMNEY SEARLES, BURNELL FINLAY BASSETT, FRANK LINLEY CRITCHLOXV ALFRED BIRCH HERRICK, FRANK LEONARD JUDD, REYNOLDS FREEMAN GUERIN. 1895 Freslmman podes yet in embryonic State. II6 o 1 oung !lDen'S Christian Elssociation XVALTER B. STREET, ,92, JOHN C. CAMIIIIELI., ,92, JAMES D. MURPHY, '93, J. BALLIETT, -'93, X L. SAWTELIJC, 794, T TAYLOR, - wffiC6 1.5 GOmmltfC65 MEMBERSHIP L. P. ARMS'l'RONG, '93 B. BROWN, ,92, B. BACON, '93, A SLOAIN, 94 R L TARBOX 9 DEVOTIONAL J. C. CAMPBELL, 9 M. SCHAUFFLER, '93, P. HUNTINGTON, '94, C L HIBISARD BIBLE STUDY H. S. LUDLOW, '92 S. CONANT, '93, OPDYKE, '93, E. LEE, '94, C H WPIGH1 94 MISSIONARY Preszden! Wee Preszdem' A erordmff Serv Efllffj C01 nspondm .Sen em: 1 Y Wfzszzrer fn S'h7lI!77Z Dzrecfov Chazrman W A WELD 9 NI H CHRISTY 94 Chazrman R TILLINGHAST 9 Clzazrman R HARRIN CI ON Chazrmzzn M. E. NIERIAM, 792 14 W FOESS 9 GENERAL RELIC IOLS WORK R. L. HARTT, '92 L. TOWNE, '94, P. REDFIELD, ,93, W. B. GREENF P. SLADE, '93, A W DOOIIITI1- 94 L L CLPXFIAND '93 INTILR COLLEGIATE WORK C C SMITH 94 FINANCE E. C. BARTLETT, 92 j E. PEABODY, '92, A JUDSOIN MUSIC W. L. SAw'I'EI.LE, 94 F R. WOODWARD, ,92, G A. CAMPBELL, '94, W O WARK '9 F H MILLS Q3 II C WOOD Clzazrmafz V E BECKVVI1' A C GILI E I FF 94 Chau man Chazrmalz M SMEDI EY Chau man R DAX IES, 92 W COLDSRURI O O W O - , , , - 7 fb , ,I . , - - - - 1 , ' U- ' .1 , ' o , . . . - - ' . , ', , . o . 7 ' ' ' ' ' - Y 7 7 . , . . ' , 2, 7 7 . . , 2, B. . , . , . 2, - - - - , 7 , 7 . . I , 92, J. . . , 2. R , ' - -' - ' 1 1 7 7 , . . x , , l . . '1' , Q3 '11 K . 7 ' ' 1 ..... 7 1 '- 7 . . .., 3, 1. , 92. 4 .- 1 Y J . . , ---- . ,. . 7 X, ,H 7 . . . ,.,, , . . , 94, ' . , 7 1 - - . 7 ' ', ., 92, - - - - 1 , 1 7 . . , . , . - 7 ' ', , 1 ' ' ' ' ' ' Y 7 7 vv , , 94, F. . .- , 93. - . 7 - - , - - '.- , . . 7 . . , 2, - - 7 1 7 1 Y 7 - - 7 7 P' ' ' 92' 1Reabing com. 0fl'iC6l35. HIBBARD, '92, - - Pffsidfni. MERIAM, '92, - - - .S'er1'ez'a1'y and Tkeasurfr Glass Directors. HIBBARD, IQ2, WRIGHT, '94, J. D. MURPHY, '93, SLOCUM, 795. IIDHDCFS. DAILY. The New York World, 1 The Chicago Inter Ocean, 'L Recorder, .Springfield Republican, Tribune, Troy Press, I H Herald, Albany Argus, 4' Boston Globe, Saturday New York Mail and Express 4' Herald, SEMI-WEEKLY. The Phillipian. VVEEKLY. The North Adams Transcript, The Golden Rule, Y H Voice, 'f New York Evangelist, Our Country, U Christian'Union, The Citizen, Public Opinion, American Economist, Young Men's Era, The Christian Cynosure, H New York Observer, Congregationalist, Food, Home and Garden, Good Health, The College Man, The Universalist Monthly, A MONTHLY. IIS U Independent, H Scientific American, Frank Lesliels Illustrated Newspaper Harper's VVeekly, Life, Puck, judge. The Missionary Herald, U American Missionary, Medical Missionary Record gf -A 8? 85515. C C- G- RUSSELL, 791, Y - - - - Presiden! and Manag'1'1 W- BOIES, '92, - ----- T566-President CLARK WILLIAMS. 792, .-... Scorer Giollege mine, 1891 HOTCHKISS, - - nz 6. and Cnpmfn ARTHUR, Lf. IWAPES, I. s. . PIOVVARD, 2. 6 SPALDING, p. C. HOLLISTER, f. CLUETT, af ROBERTS, 3 6. RICHMOND, nf J. I'IOI,I.IS'l'ER and BILLINGS, - Snb.v!1'f111If.v GHDYHUIE of 'umillianw 55356 'JBHII 5631115 5il'lC6 1881 1881 F. H. FOX, 1882 E. R. CROWELI., 1883 E. R. CROWRLI., 1884. JOHN H. SAFFORD, 1885 JULIUS HUBBEI,L, 1886. P. W. BLACKMER, II 188 1888 I 889 I 890 I 891 I 892 WALIFR PFRRNI ARIHUR FRANKLIN QIARR ARIHUR FRAINIRIIB CI ARK RICHARD LOBDINN C,AwIPIsI+II WIILIANI BFRKFIEX HOIcIIRIss BAR I IIOI ONII w HOXVARIJ 2 3- 4, 2' Q E . , 1' f 1i'fI J D fi 'H D ' f f - ff ,I L . . ' gif R, In i. if f N A' ff ' :I 11 111: .I 1, 513 1. 32? Fiji - , , si gf 5 ig 3,1 aff Mficers for 1891. I My . ' iffi. ' M ' Mi. - VJV9' - Milf' Jflfw ' . - .M ifiw! limi-2' ' ZW fur' - Hill! M- um ' iw 15512 . 1321 151:1- . EMI- 'I, '31, W-A-. --H. . .www WMA, 121121 I!I1jff NVE JW. ' izj ' W fed 7- 2 A 'I H 1 . . - , ' ' ' 1 'sw ' llflllsz ' ,. . , , I 41551 1,5 ' ' I!-mv - Pei: . ' 3 ' I :.., Ifig-E, . , ,, . . .. 1211121 . . I L , 1 , f .., ,115 1731212 .. H I 3111 QW 9 ' 21.513 SLIM iF' Z! f- 15123, 1' 1.59 INN Imp!! . :HP lass 1152156 JBRII eams. 1894. HU1'CH'INS, - - - p. :md Cajifain. TOWNE, c., j. LYNCH, 3d b., BAKER, af, BEACH, Ist A., T. LYNCH, s. J., HERRICK, ref. HOXVARD, 2d b., HAMMATT, Z. f., FOLSOM and LEONARD, - - - Szfbsfitufes. ' K' 1890. Ima, - - 5. J. amz' Capiafn. DRAPER, c., EATON, za' b., ALDEN, af, MCMURRAY, js., WILSON, 3d L., BABBIT, nf EVANS, nf 6., HOYNE, Lf., FITCH, TAYLOR and MATHER, - Szzbxfiizzfes. 120 E i I E L I Q ! A A I I 5 Y 1 I 1 5 1 1 i l P i ! 1 1 . l 1 1 l 5 1 I w I 1 1 v w . i i i x n i I I K r I E s WILLIAMS vs PLAXI I1 Al DATE Amherst Dartmouth Dartmouth Amherst Dartmouth Dartmouth Amherst Amherst Amherst VV 1ll121I1'1StOWl1 Williamstown Williamstown Hanover Hanoi er Williamstow n Amherst M ly 6 une SLORE mon league Games, 1891 WILLIAMS PLAYED A1 DATE DCORE New York St. John s Princeton Lehigh Philadelphia Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania Hill s bchool Hill s bchool Yale Yale, Albany Albany Greylock 'l roy Holy Cross Harvard Y ile Harvard Ridgefield Laureates Trojans Northampton University of Pennsylvania University of Vermont Hoosic Falls, North Adams New York Fordham Princeton Philadelphia Philadelphia Philadelphia Philadelphla Pottstown Pottstown New Hax en New Haven Albany Albany Williamstown Troy Worcester Cambridge Williamstown Williamstown Albany Troy Williamstown Williamstown Williamstown Williamstown Williamstown, North Adams April Ma. ' HUC p Sept 4 O-I8 4 6- 5,-0 IZI 5llmmHl'Q of 1689116 CBHH165, 1891. , I 4 - . L i . w - i . F pu E 1 I . 1 4 2 , IO-I4 , . . ' H 133 i 21' 8 ' . . 1 5 54, l 5- 4 ' 1 l 01 z 3- 4 7 1 t I 3, 8- 3 1 . u ' , 1 4, IO-I5 1 ' , I H 22, 2- o ' 1 I 23- - 2- 4 ,M F 5 o vs. -A I , ' l A EH- I 7 1 , ' I, 3-2I I . 1 21 9- 9 , , 1 sn 3, 2- 7 . , . Bethlehem, Pa., ' 4, 3-IO , 5 ' ' , I ' 6, E 2-16 1 I t I : 1 6 71 0-18 , p u 1 , I Z 8, 6-II 7 t 1 3 1 91 4- 8 1 1 I H IO1 5 9- 3 7 ' , , GL 13, 3 1 l 7 1 U 141 9' 2 3 , LL IS, ! 4- 6 1 t 1 H 181 J 5- 6 1 I . 1 H 221 4- 8 Q , . H 25, I 22- 4 9 1 , in 247 I - 9 1 t 1 H 281 4- 6 1 9 . ' 1 H 291 I O-13 2 1 f 1 1 Y 21 1 i 1 i H 97 3 5 , , ff 19. ro o , I , 4 1' zo, , 7 I 1 t 1 l L' 271 4 15 5 7 . 7 1 I IO? 3 7 D ' . 1 1 H 131 , 3 ' , , U 16, I5 6 , ' 20, I 8 4 7 , . 26, f 2 I Q i' - . ..... QL J 5 .A ' Agipx' I g Q -Q., 1 ' . ng ' - Q NR W? j F - ,L W Q-b J 'V X ri? A ggi 3731 Q JBase JBatt. 'H' ILLIAMS course in base ball has been character- t- A 55 , , 9 ized by two or three periods of success which were brilliant, and at other times our failure to play the game has been dismal. We have al- ways been especially antagonized by Amherst liiiiiisesaeisf--'ill ali mg: . ' and Dartmouth, and have on various occasions won from Harvard and Yale, and other colleges who have been leaders in the race, and our rep- utation for a base ball institution has always been upheld. Still it seems more protitable to look back at the times when we were in the league, for our base ball history and we shall en- deavor to present a completed account of those periods. Base ball in some form has always been played at Williams. As early as 1796 we hear of ball clubs, and the game played in the old college square, where the chapel now stands, and reaching from there to east college. Nothing like the modern game, however, was played until about I87O. The base ball history in the north consists of the New York game, arranged on a square like the present diamond, with more players, and the Massachusetts game, the Held in this latter was an oblong, with what corresponds to home base in the middle of one side. An account of the first championship game follows : ' A championship game of base ball with Amherst College was played upon the grounds in the rear of Maplewood, at Pittsfield, july 1, 1859. It was called the round game, sixty-five tallies winning the game- in favor of Amherst. The captain of the Williams Club was H. S. Anderson, the valedicto- rian of the class of 1859. 123 A Pittsfield paper of that time says : The game commenced at II o'clock. Among the spectators were the venerable ex-President Humphrey of Amherst, Professors Lincoln and Bascom of Williams, several of the magnates of Pittsfield and dazzling representatives of the beauty of the town and county. The emulation ofthe players was enhanced by the sight of a silk flag suspended from the balcony of Maplewood. About one hundred and fifty students were present from Williams. Base ball remained a practice game up to about 1870-71, when more interest was taken in it. In '71 and '72 we played for the most part with the teams around Troy and Albany, especially with the Haymakers and Troy Polytechnic. In these games We easily came out the winners, and such a series of games continued until '80, when we first began again to play with the other colleges in New England. It must not be understood that meanwhile there were intercollegiate contests among the other col- leges, for athletics was in its infancy and even Yale and Harvard met but occasionally, still our rivalry with Amherst was closely kept up and the majority of the victories were ours. However, very little was done in the early '80's in athletics, even the crew came to be a thing of the past, and football had just begun to be played. The only college baseball con- test in 1880, was with Amherst, October 21, when we won with the score ro to 4. Before we come to our league history in this branch of athletics, it must be mentioned that our victories were not all of them over amateur clubs. In '66, for example, we beat Princeton 30 to 17, and Princeton played us Nov. 22, winning by 27 to 16. In '64, our Sophomores had beaten the Harvard Sophomores I2 to 9. 1866 was probably our best year before '87 entered college, for in that year we held the college champion- ship' of the country and had won from Harvard at Worcester, july 7, with the score 39 to 37. During the season of '83, we played with all our present rivals in New England, and lost but two games, the one to Lafayette, and one to Union, june I, 4 to 0. The season was started May 3, at Williamstown, by a game with Bowdoin, which we won II to 9. On the 12th, we defeated Stevens I2 to 7, and on the 16th, another game at Williamstown was a victory for us over Dartmouth, 9 to 5. Tufts came up the 19th, and lost her game 16 to 8, and Lafayette won hers on the 24th, 5 to 4. Williams T24 l went up to Dartmouth june 7th, to win another game, 4 to 2, and on the 16th 'defeated Amherst on her own grounds, 3 to 2. This closed the sea- son for '83, In '84, Amherst turned the tables on us, and won both games played, that of May 28th, at Williamstown, 9 to 2, and that of june 11th, at Amherst, I7 to 3. We started with a victory over Renssellaer of 16 to o, at Williamstown April 26th, and May 8th, added to it one over Hamilton, II to 1. Both these teams lost to us later in the season on their own grounds. Holyoke won from us May 16, 2 to 4, and Union tive days later, 2 to 1. Their last defeat was returned by a victory ofg to 2 on the 23rd. We played Harvard in Cambridge, Decoration Day and lost, 2 to o. Later in the season we won from Dartmouth at Hanover, IO to 9, and lost to her the next day, june 5th, 9 to 5. But six intercollegiate contests were played in '85 and of these we won two from Brown, 5 to 2 and 6 to 4, won from Amherst on our own grounds May 25th, I2 to 6 and lost to her at Amherst, june 4th, ro to 9. Decoration Day saw the team beaten in New Haven, I3 to 4, and Harvard won from us at Cambridge, june Ioth, 8 to o. This was the year that Jule Hubbell was captain, and to be fair he alternated with Tuck between pitcher's box and center Held. Both these men were what ten years ago called good pitchers, and there was great rivalry between them. The battery with Eastman at catch was a very popular one. '86 found us in the league for the first time, with Amherst, Brown, Harvard, Yale and Princeton, all but Amherst and Brown won their games with us. Yale won one in Williams- town, May ISt, IZ to 3, and one in New Haven, May 3oth, io to 3. Har- vard won hers in Williamstown, May roth, I3 to 2, and the game at Cam- bridge three daysllater, 26 to I. The day after that game we beat Brown at Providence, 2 to o, and on the 24th, won from her at Williamstown 8 to 3. The next game at home was a victory over Amherst tive days later of 6 to 4, and our game at Amherst, june 19th, resulted in a victory of 1 1 to 5. Princeton won both her games at Princeton, 9 to 5, and 4 to o. This year Tuck was 'Varsity pitcher, with Eastman and W. Perry to catch him and Percy Blackmer, Captain, at tirst base. The only non-league games with other colleges were two victories over Bowdoin. In '87, we won our first league championship, but this year only Am- herst, Brown, Dartmouth and Williams contested. The thing was getting narrowed downto its present limits, when either Amherst or Dartmouth 125 won from us. In our non-league games We defeated Harvard, Union and Trinity, the first at Cambridge, May 25th, 3 to 2. U. of P. won from us twoigames at Philadelphia, and Cornell won from us here at home, May IM4lh, 8 to 3. The following is a summary of our first league series result- ing in a championship. Williams vs. Dartmouth, . . at Williamstown, . . May 6 Dartmouth at Williamstown 7 Amherst, at Amherst, 4' II Brown, at Providence, 2o Brown, at Providence, ZI Amherst, at Williamstown, 30 Dartmouth at Hanover, June 8 Dartmouth at Hanover, 9 Brown, at Williamstown, I7 Brown, at Williamstown t' 18 Amherst, at Williamstown, f' 22 Amherst, at Amherst, 27 7 ' This was our first year with Kink Wilson in the box and Clarkie to catch him, and base ball gossip resounds more with their names than any others up to this writing. W. Perry played left field and captained the team. . '88 found Trinity in Brown's place, and Williams won eleven out of the 'twelve league games. Renowned for base ball and free-trade was sung with greater zeal than ever, and Clarkie and Kink were the heroes of the hour, Clarkie captained, and the names of Hotchkiss, Luce and Billy Brown were on the roll as the greatest living players. A 4 I The U. of P. won from us April 3d, II to 6, Harvard won two games, 5 to 4 and 9 to 4, and Yale won two games, 6 to I and 9 to 4. The last two games with U. of P. were two victories, 7 to 3 and 7 to o. The fol- lowing is a summary of league games : Williams vs. Trinity, at Williamstown, . . May 4, Trinity, at Williamstown, , . 5, 'Y Amherst, at Amherst, 9, Dartmouth at Hanover, 15, Dartmouth at Hanover, 19, Amherst, at Amherst, 23, Amherst, at Williamstown, . 26, Dartmouth at Williamstown, . 29, Dartmouth at Williamstown 30, Trinity, at Hartford, June 5, Trinity, at Hartford, 6, Amherst, at Williamstown, . ff 9, 126 , ' The league in '89 remained the same, and again the purple had the championship with but two games lost. Clarkie and Kink was an oft- repeated story, but the seven men behind them showed their mettle. The non-league games of interest were mainly those with Harvard, of which she won one and the other was ours. The following is a summary of the league games : Dartmouth Williams vs. , . . at Williamstown, .. May 3 Dartmouth at Williamstown 4 Trinity, ' at Hartford, 9 Trinity, at Hartford, ' IO Amherst, at Amherst, ' 1 5 Trinity, at Williamstown ' 24 Trinity, at Williamstown 25 ' Amherst, at Williamstown 30 Dartmouth at Hanover, june 5 Dartmouth, . . at Hanover, 6 Amherst, at Amherst, 22 Amherst, at Williamstown ' 25 In ,QO the league became a triangular one, and has continued so since. Clark and Wilson were gone, but Tim Spaulding! turned out a senior marvel, and we still played thegame. A It must be said that in base ball as in foot ball, carelessness lost the pennant. Of the non-league games, Harvard, Yale and U. of P. won theirs from us, and nothing else of interest was playedj The league games were as follows : A Williams vs. Amherst, . . at Amherst, . May 7, . . , 2- 4 ' Dartmouth, . . at Williamstown, . 16, .. II- 9 Amherst, at Williamstown, . . 30, Q-IO Amherst, at Williamstown june, 6 Dartmouth at Hanover, 13, 'f Dartmouth at Hanover, I4, Amherst, at Amherst, ' 21, The games for ,QI will be found in another part of the GUL, and observations from them can easily be made. We lost the championship, but shut Amherst out once, and increased our determination to win in ,QZ. Tim 3' was back with us, and did the best of work, but when he was in trim the team was not. Hotch worked faithfully, but everything was against us, and our fate was defeat. 1 127 llfep'-WWW ' I i Since '89 it has been the custom for the team to take a Southern trip I at Easter, and these trips have always proved beneficial. From what precedes it can be seen that our record in base ball has l ' been a successful one, and highly inspiriting, but with it all, we pride our- l selves on the politeness and gentlemanliness which has characterized our l n meetings with other colleges. We have-been but seldom accused of any- t thing like applauding errors or slugging in foot ball, and are proud of it. ' ' I I w .1 ll fr r l if ll, I It U A ' ' bu . Ax' 1 A dia 19 1 r ' f- , I- . x :lr fi gs 'I ' x ' ,g-'lift-li ng ? in l qs rl V ' l . jf K ' ' ,ith V. - 3 1 lt-,if f,f 1 d l , l t . l ll in l 128 E li ll ll ' ll V it il lf yn, ,t '.. 'ik y. ' I '-. J, 1 S 5 5 1 l I 1 M , i A V i i ,,J 5 ,Qm+m,- , ,g,- Jilnlgixl not oc. FB 'willianw Giollege jfoot 3155111 Elssociation. H. K. WII1'I'15, JR., ,92, - Gollege Eleven. BOTHN13, P. G., 1.57. NELSON, '92, Z. t. LA FAYETTE, 792, Z. 6. STREET, '92, I 7 ROGERSON, 92, RYDER, ,92, 188O. 1881 1882 1883 1884. 1885 1886 R USH LINE. AI.I.1f,N, P. CL, I. QUARTER BACK. BROXVN, '92, QCnp!1zif1.j HALF BACKS. FULL BACK. FARGO, 795. SUB5'1'lTUTES. BAIIBITT, '95, OGILVIE. '95, . P1'eJ1'a'e7z! and Illzizagw' SAW'1'EI,LIs, 94, ff. 51. TOWNSEND, '95 r. f. ENNIS, '93, fa In I. GARIPIELD, 793. TAAILOR, 79,5 WILSON, 795. Gaptaina of 'willianw jfoot IYBHH Ceama.. FRANCIS LOCKNVOOD KEN1DAI.I., ALFRED LINCOLN HOL'1', NO Foot Ball Team. IDIXNVELL IfIEWI'1 I', W. D. FIELD, THEODORE B. TAFT, 1887 1888 1889. 1890. 1891 1892 CIIARLII FREDERICK BRUSIIQ, 131 EDNVARD MEAD BELDEN, GEORGE HAIBXXVEN IQIMB ALL, RICIIARD COIIDEN CAMPBIa1,1. ORTON BISHOP BRONVN, GRTON BISHOP BROWN, A IRVIN MCDONXVELL GARFIIQLD. Glass !Elevens.A HUN'1'1NG'rON, Z. g. BRUCE, Z. Z., DE GROAT, H., 1. Lf., BEACH, TAYLOR, r. gn, TOVVNSEND, af. f., QCapfaz'nj, DOWNER, ff. e., WILSON, 1894. A RUSH LINE. ! BASSETT, c., QUARTER BACK HAMMATT, QCap!fzz'n. HALF BACKS. FULL BAC K. TOWNE. ' 1895. RUSH LINE. HEALI.J, r., QUARTER BACK. BABBIT'1'. HALF BACKS. IDE, FULL BACK. FARGO. I32 J BAKE R . VVHITE, 1-. kg., DE GROAT, lf., 1. 1 P1NKER'rON, r. e. UGILVIE, L. gn, RAMSAY, W., Z. L, DRAPER, Z. La HOYNE. . Oct. 3 1 Nov. 7 Nov. I4 Nov. zo Oct. 3, Oct. ro, .. Oct. 14, Oct. 17, Oct. 21, Oct. 24, Nov. 4, l TOTALS : SUIHIHHPQ of 163906 Williams vs. Stevens, . . ' Technology, . . Dartmouth, . . Amherst, . . Williams, TOTALS: Opponents, CBHN166. at Williamstown at Williamstown at Dartmouth, at Amherst, .1o4.- 6. Summarp of mon-league Games. Williams vs. Laureates, . . Yale, . . Laureates, . . Harvard, . . Fordham, . . Stagg's Team, . . Brown, . . Q Williams, - 2 Opponents, lon at Williamstown at Albany, at Troy, at Cambridge, ,..3o 6o- o - o 14- 6 o- o 42- o I O-44 46-o 6-26 at Williamstown, .. io- o at Williamstown, .. 16- 6 at Williamstown, . . - zo8. 76. 58- o I T Mew Englanb Tlntercollegiate jfoot JBaII Elssociation. O. B. BROVVN, Williams, President. W. H. LEWIS, Amherst, - . Wee-President. I. S. PARRISH, Technology, x---- Treasurer. Champions of League, ISQI, Williams T34 oot JBall. Q, 'ig ii by oor-BALLqRugby gamepwasgfirstpiayed at Wil- -- hams about 1879. Students coming from other .,A, Colleges and those from preparatory schools Q? f Q ' 5 Y N . f ,fi ff , :D where the Rugby game was played started the E Q! ball rolling, and interest never slackened. This 'j 1 A51 X spirit of emulation has given us more than our ' is 9 'lc ,Z 1 S Q 'B 0 ff? N l X I K fx Q X i ' ' Qt? tit 1 share of championships since we entered the league. Efforts were made as early as 188o, to arrange games with the other colleges 'but with no success. No cuts were granted the team by the faculty, in those days, and foot-ball was played on the old campus subject to their disfavor, among its other hard- ships. In 1881, the manager, then an unimportant personage in college life, succeeded in arranging a game with Wesleyan, to be played on Hampden Park, Springfield. The day was a nasty one, and pools of water covered the field, the wind blew cold from the North, and the halves whistled on their fingers between runs to keep warm. Quite a prominence had been given the gamein the papers, but there was not more than a score of spectators, no students, only an unappreciative Springtield audience, small fry, as one player put it. Scoring was done by the old method of goal, and at the finish we had won with a score of Io-o. No crowd of exultant students waited at the depot for the team, to draw them to a boniire in a long line of two hundred, and very little mention was made of the victory in college talk. i ' fx . -J fqffifiw it 5' ' . ' . 1 mp, 4'-'. y'lI 'D f so Q. , ffl I A ' xx' fx 4, r A ' W ' M :X , .L',7?71 A , E, .Y !'T cfwlx. gf-Q X ,-4-L 1' l ,rx ' ' .8 ' -, 4 1 . This was our first appearence at intercollegiate football. This year Prof. Kendall was captain and half-back. For the next two years no games were played and only desultory practice was kept up. In 1884, however, there was a revival of the sport, and the management arranged tive games with other New England Colleges. The season started October 18th, with a game between Williams and Technology at Williamstown. Tech failed to score, and the student body became enthusiastic when once 135 k the game was brought before them. The faculty, however, still frowned. On October 24th, Trinity was defeated with the score SI to o, and soon after we Won our first football game with Amherst. The team next went to Cambridge, and returned beaten, but Harvard had made but IQ points. Another game with Amherst was another victory, and thissuccess en- couraged Williams to petition for membership in the league, consisting of Amherst, Tufts and Tech. The petition was granted and the men went to work with renewed energy for the season of 1885. On October 18th again, in that year Tufts was beaten here in Williamstown, 4Q?O. Another victory over Amherst tied us with Tech for first place and the deciding game was arranged to be played at Springfield, Nov. 25th. Another bad day this proved to be, but it brought another victory, and we had won our first championship. Wil- liams on this occasion was ablaze with boniires and .enthusiasm and the team was accompanied home by a number ofjubilant spirits. At the depot therest ofthe college awaited them and that night occurred the irst bonfire- speeches,'7 of the captain and manager, which those of us now in college have heard repeated during the two years past. The next year the aver- aging ofthe score was reckoned by half games but the scoring was on points by the old method, and for a result Williams again came out in the lead followed by Tech, Amherst and Tufts in order. Williams closed the season withua total of 235 points against her opponents' 94. The first championship game was with Tufts at College Hill, October 2oth and re- sulted in a score of 61-o in favor of Williams. The iirst game with Tech, played in Boston, resulted in a tie I4 to 14. Three days later Nov. 6th, Tufts played us in Williamstown and lost by a score of 33 to 4. Tech came up a week later and went back with a score against her of ZI-O' Amherst forfeited her game four days later, but on the zoth, played us in Williamstown without scoring, while Williams made a total of zo. Foot- ball was becoming more and more popular, this was the year in which Conn and Johnson, now Cornell's captain, made their reputations, and Richards played his last game for Williams in a blaze of glory. In 1887, the records have it that we were not members of any league and we certainly played games with none of our rivals of the year previous, except that the Freshmen won from the Amherst Freshmen a game played on the old Campus, Nov. 16th, resulting in a score of 26 to o. This year Rowland and Hotchkiss played their first college games and Ruic and johnson appeared in their old places in the line. We scored against Har- vard on her own grounds 6 to 52, let Yale shut us out, and won from Rut- gers and Union here in Williamstown. The only other intercollegiate game played was one lost to Wesleyan 6 to 18 in Hartford. The season closed Nov. 5th with a score of Q4 to o against Union. The result that year has 136 . -i lr- -----f -- wr i been attributed to the small size of' I wh' h l '90 entered Q5 men. 9 , 1C on y entered 73 men when However, that may be, '88 saw us members of the league her senior year, and on October 2d, when Harvard flaunted her crimson in Williams- town, the same class saw her return with the small score of I4 to 6 against us. Yale also played here, and made but thirty points. Cornell lost to us at Ithaca, zo to O, and Rutgers played here again with another defeat, 48 to O. In the games for the pennant, we were unfortunate in playing all but one out of town. This we won from Stevens, Nov. 17th, 42 to 4. We lost to Dartmouth at Hanover, 6 to 36, and were shut out by Tech in Boston, 22 to o. The championship first game of the season, however, was a victory over Amherst, S3 to O. This year our new material was strong, and some ofthe best players we have had developed fromxit. Bige- low was the notable example, playing a strong right end. Brown played his first game as substitute, as did Rogerson, and old Hotch, with Rowland and Johxnson made a center. Amherst could not buck, nor could Har- vard. Sanford played his star game at full. . In the fall of'89, we were forced to accept a defeat, which was all the more bitter in that it ought to have been a victory. We played but three league games, and but one of these in Williamstown, when we won from Tech Nov. 16th, I8 to 6. The game with Amherst was a tie, and a very unsatisfactory game at Springfield, was Dartmouth's with thescore 9 to zo. We lost two games to Yale and one to Harvard, but scored 13o vs. Union. Two sophomores, Nelson and Lafayette, were found in the rush line and one freshman, I. Garfield, at half. Phil Allen was playing centre for his first time and Hotchkiss at his old position as guard. Brown showed considerable ability at quarter, which position he had been holding since the Yale game, in which Rogerson, the regular quarter had been badly hurt. Walter Street, the street which nothing could turn, played this year as a substitute behind the line. Brown was made captain for I8QO, and the wisdom of the choice was afterward seen to a marked extent. It turned out to be the most success- ful year in our foot-ball history. Bowdoin lost to us at Portland, go-o. Three days later, Nov. 7th, Tech also failed to score while we made 36 points. Amherst and Dartmouth each met defeat by the same score 6-o. Cornellwstopped here on her eastern trip to lose a game I8-6. The only other colleges scoring against us this season were Yale and Harvard. Street and Garfield played the criss-cross trick again and again for long gains down the field. Allen with Hotchkiss on one side and Sawtelle on the other made an iron center. Every man trained hard and did his best- This year Williams Won another championship. Hardly less brilliant was the playing in '91, Hotchkiss, Bigelow and 137 Hall had gone, but new men were found. Bothne took the vacant place at guard and Ennis at end. Fargo played at full. This year Williams won another laurel wreath, winning three games out of four, the fourth being a tie game with Amherst. Next to her came Amherst winning two and tieing two, one with Dartmouth and the other with Williams. This has been our short but eventful career in football. ,It is one of which we may feel justly proud. Through it all there has been the utmost interest evinced by the college, and never was there more pride for the record of our alma mater than now. Let the men who represent us next year, re- member the names of Sanford, Richards, Allen, Hotchkiss, Street, Brown and Garfield and appreciate on what team they are playing. I. is v lb Al 4' . . gf f5.vlj,.'. , 1 ' L p- K--f I ' 9 ,A Tl I QRHICEMX4 l ' 'lf Sfo i 'fin 'ix 74-of ' ,Eff at 14. f ii,- ,. ., . ' I -' -' JW , .J5.4 .' m' K l J f .Y ,3. x ,H r- ll- hzglg is .z,4,-il-Qi,TdLI:.??Z-fi? M- 4' f' hifi? -: N Vggifgg, j' .. uw s x38 ll i 1 4 XX ji' 7 'ffl 3 B . J-is s 1 . I I :, l 5? R if '55 vt p 60 rj -:2wf 5a. f ffefffgrf f I,fyg,,,,,j5gi-zjffgf rj .J 535, fn . , ,.'f1.-'!Qfw5p 'Cf-,f 14,33 ,A . iff ,v .' L' f,,,.,g,',g. mlu'.1v:.f1.1'N5,. V- 5 w55,aj4f,5., v,5wg,,1f 1 W-a55,QW,,.ff 5:f ,+R xN i.'.:'l'?1.V.'v 5 ' ' ,af , ' 1 M14 1l,,f ,,- f 1 Z din ' , , . if. ,, ff' -'1 2' -Z Viz , -5 ,,?fz1Ffw1f'-1 1 1 ff' -'-, 4 4 ,..,f14-1'2g1eL7,1- ..gv,f, f I If ,,,',Q.gz-g3.QAqqQg:g.g V- Z F 1' H592'ffyfi52S'Pff51'5-'?2'7-'ff eff- .171i.1 w ill ' HZ? 1:15-via'fi ,-2w'1.ff if-'L 5:02 'f f ,L , 'fiikf Q,.'L'51'ir?ilm?163'!.. iff . M , 4-P11 ,:I:1:1,FP1f9:?cf551' .Q.'?Sif-!ff7 '1'WFffHf , f If ff WV 55 IIN - ' ' , 1977 ' - f',.fv'.' k 1 4f'f1Z.'T' ' 1, .a f:- gf. Q ., - 1 ffl X5 0 'A-1M f4fZAw:I ' --'ifsj-g':'g1, ' y. ff I 54364 M , Q -ng..-,Lg -',4,b,, .5 4 n :,Qgf1hqs.:',.g.3sZ5,5j,.- W' uf M 2 ' ' 1' w -.ff 44 'ya' 1. f 1 ,W , g,.,t. X B, Y ,yrs-1 -v li .5 ,'f'7f. 'I , ' N, gn, ,pw 1' 4--iff,-j' - .mf -- 221412, X ,. - :fn ,153-J1',:.' 'E 1 5 W3'f-W , f N55- fly J X 7 ' BK' V 4 X ,, 122 ' 2 af' if ff If 45 K- 1 fu 1? 'Q.2,g:' 4:-.J ff- 43:85-122-' f ' 3 -zu ,ga ' Z? ':'l'LJ5 '5i'.QQ:7 f Q f , 54' ff 4 'YZ'.+5'1'-A , J. ,,l.,.y W Y ' tu,-. AN V f , F ,.,12'1' 41977 .K ,ff-f VZ, ,' J Z' wif' f' df! XZ ,W 'auf ff we ,iff WAN-,5' 74 M' 244,35 'I 1-iff ' f fyfw5gb 'i ff L. .iziiz f ' f I , - ,Y-- Qui! ',,L 4- ' f a ma 1 , ,E-.-:xg ' KX Qf ' -Y- Q fl , U H Mew Englanb Tlntercollegiate Eltbletic Elssociation. jfiftb Elnnual meeting, Springyield, Mass., fllay 27, 1891. CD6 Zl55OCiHfiOT1. AMHERST COLLEGE, UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT, DARTMOU'PH COLLEGE, WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY, TRINITY COLLEGE, WILLIAMS COLLEGE, 4 BROWN COLLEGE, WORCESTER POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE- 9ffiCCI'5 of the H55OCiHfiOll f0I' 18901, 1891. C. O. WELLS, AMHERST, -..-.. Presidenf. E. A. BARROWS, BROWN, I First Vice Presidenl. T. P. THURSTON, TRINITY, - Second Wee President. H. L. DADMUN, WORCESTER, - .S'ec1'emry. W. E. HOYT, WILLIAMS, - - Treaszzrer. ' IEJQCCLIIWC GOlT'lmitf66. C. O. WELLS, AMHERST, .- - ' Chaiwizaiz. W. T. MCCLELLAND, AMHERST, G. C. MAR'1'IN, UNIVERSITY OF VT., F. F. EASTON, BROWN, E. W. MOORE, WESLEYAN, E. K. HALL, DARTMOUTH, J. C. ROGERSON, JR., WILLIAMS, GORDON HALL, TRINITY, H. M. SOUTHGATE, YVORCESTER. 9ffiC6P5 of U96 ESQ. REFEREE. G. W. CARR, MANHATTAN ATHLETIC CLUB. JUDGES. S. J. CONNELL, M. A. C., A. C. PALMER, M. A. S., CROOK, M, A, C, 140 I williams College Eltbletic Zlssociation J. C. ROGERSON, JR., '92, ABRAM GARFIELD, ,93, WOODRUFF,SUTTON, JR., 793 J. W. ROWE, '92, J. A. EVANS, 793, --l-Ali, Q Eirectors. - President. Wie-President. - Secreiary and Treaszzrer W. L. SAWTELLE, '94, J. OG1Lv1E,, '9 5. Representatives tOl'lI2l.JE. 1l.z1.z1. I A. M. LEVY, 791. C. A. EDGERTON, 791, T. L. PETERS, 791. N. HALL, '91, G. A. BUSHEE, '92, E. VAN WORMER, '92, J. M. D. BLUE, ,,92. J. A. EVANS, '93, W. H. CHASE, '93, H. L. TURNER, '94, J. G. K. LEE, '94, D. E. WHEELER, '9 Glollege 1Rope llbllll Ueam. 4. J. NELSON, ,92, ----- Anchor. F. P. FRIEN, 792. L. W. JONES, '92, H. A. GODDARD, '93, - - - Captain. FIRST PRIZE TAKEN. TUG OF WAR. , SECOND PRIZES TAKEN. A. M. LEVY, '91, ---- Mi!fA'11n- W. H. CHASE, ,93, - - Mia Walk. C. A. EDGERTON, '9I. - S!andi1zgB1'oaa' fzmgp 141 ii ll, 'll ll ll V 1 v l l l i l l l l l l 1 l l 1 I JBGEI 'Qlllilliam5 Eltbletic 1R6COl'b to H039 29, 1891. n EVENT. RECORD. MADE BY DATE. 100 Yards Dash, ICQ sec. R. C. Campbell, 790, Oct. 5,4 1889. YM Defi - 24 'f.'.?508'Z1..,?Ea1, 190, 32? il 12231 Quarler Mile Run, - 52 sec Johnson, '77, Oct. 15, 1876. Hay Mile Run, , - 2 min. 75- sec H. S. Lee, '89, May 24, 1888. One Mile Run, Q 4 min. 44s sec H. S. Lee, '89, May 24, 1888. One Mile Walk, - 7 min. 50 sec. F. K. White, ,9O, - Oct. 5, 1889. 120 Yards Ihfrclle, 10'fD1rclles, 18 sec L. S. Crawford, '76, June 3, 1876. Hafllile Biqfcle, - 1 min. 322 sec W. Vermilye, '88, Oct. 9, 1886. One Mile Bicycle, -I 3 min. 272f,L sec. J. XV. Rowe, '92, Oct. 5, 1889. Running High jfump, - - 5 ft. 7 in T. Peters, '91, Oct. 5, 1889. Running Broad jump, - 20 tt. -5 in A. R. Davies, '92, May 23, 1889 'f'Slana'ing High ffufnp, . - 5 ft. Ig in S. Crook, '90, 4 May 28, ISQO Slancling Broad jump, , - IO ft. 53 in S. Crook, '90, Q May 24, 1888. Throwing 12-lb. Hammer, 84 ft. 52111. P. W. Blackmer, '86, Oct. 10, 1885. Pulling 17-lb. Shol, - - 36 ft. 6 in W1 K. Jewett, '79, Oct. 12, 1878. Pole Vaull, ' Idcking Fool Ball, -- 155 ft. II in R. M. Taft, '86, Oct. Ill, 1884 Throwing Base Ball, 381 ft. 4 in R. C. Campbell, '90, Oct. 8, 1887 Fence Vaull, A 1 - 6 tt. 72 in S. Abbott, '87, May 12, 1887. . JBe5t.1IntereGZoIIegiate lllecorbs. EVENT. RECORD. I MADE BY' COLLEGE. YEAR. 100 Yards Dash, IO sec L. H. Carey, Princeton, 1891 .220 Yards Dash, - 213 sec L. H. Carey, Princeton I89I 440 Yards Dash, A - 49? sec. G. B. Shattuck, Amherst, 1891. HaH.Mile Run, - 1 min. 57? sec. W. C. Dohm, Princeton 1890 -One Mile Run, - 4 min. 295 sec C. O. Wells, Amherst, 1889 S5120 Yards Hurdle, - 15-'g- sec H. L. Williams, Yale, 1891 220 Yards Hurdle, - - ' 25-,lg sec H. L. Williams, Yale, 1891 Ytoo Mile Biqfcle Race, 6 min. sg sec R. H. Davis, Harvard, 1889 One Mile Walk, - 7 min. 5g sec Lloyd Collis, Columbia, 1891 Running Broad ffunip, 22 ft. II-2 in V. Mapes, Columbia I89I Running High jfunip, - 6 ft G. R. F earing, Harvard, 1891 'il'Slana'ing High Yung, 5 ft. Ig in S. Crook, 790, Wfilliams, 1890 .Pulling lhe Shol, - - 40 tt. 95 in C. B. Coxe, Yale, 1887 Pole Vaulling, - IO ft. 7.5 in E. D. Ryder, Yale, ISQI Throwing lhe Hammer, - 107 ft. 75 in R. Finlay, Harvard, ISQI T Throwing lhe Base Ball, 381 ft. 4 in R. C. Campbell, NVilliams, 1887 4World's Record. T World's Amateur Record. ill I l li 1 Nl ll 11 ,. l l s 1 l v l E l I Q?y'f2 Q4 ffW'W' X 7 if 77 X ' 'f fff'fjff,f'w,- fwf' -f gf, f f ff' ,I f, , af- , , V , ,,,,. , , ,, , , , Y , My Wffyrffifwfmf rw ' 11-Sz-f iff, , f. i. f E X K4 5 2 f2:':-4 1 Q, f xy ! 4 ,f Z 'Q 3:15551 ' I Z ZA' i 5 A V E r X A 1 aa , A f -' K Q K' L ff' J Z,f'Zf1'f7'Yf' fl my ffi.f,,,5ZA.f,,ff F, iff, My nf,.,,,,,,7,7,,,-,,,, 7 .7 l 22 'jf' , 'wp'-9' ' gf V ' ,f ff Jw Q44 ff, , ,I ,' Z, f f ff! f My M H. E. AVERY, '9 F. H. BOOTH, THOMPSON, - ROGERSON, ANDERSON, - EDDY, - I MATHEK, EATON. - ECICQEUZC Wrenn, of H l?'e.s'z'fz'u1z!. 2 - - .S'ucreZary. Senior Direrlor. 4 L C L -Yzmior Direclor. 4 L C C Sopkoznore Dirertor. - - - - - - - - FVKSh7IZtI1l Dirfcior. 5 to Tlntercollegiate 'EOllI.'llHlTlCIlt at 'MQW 'IDHVCIL J. W. ANDERSON, H. E. AVERV. arvard, vs. Anderson, 6-3, 7-5. Fish, of Yale, vs. Avery, 4-6, 7-9. Hovey, of Harvard, vs. Avery, 6-I, 6-1. Gunnison an d Brown, of Dartmouth, vs. Avery and Anderson, 6-I, 6-3, 6-1. UNHIIQIIIHI' ZLCHQIIC of ZlmlJCY5t, EHl'tlTlOl1tl9 HUD 'Ucl,1iuiHm5. 1 A Championship in Doubles and Partridge Cup won by Dartmouth. Championship in Singles won by Williams. 54. 1 143 hgv, 'Ye W i gn X, l N 1 I I. Q P Q -- 1 ,xi fr?-3542 ffh- fx -af x Q Lfyffj 3' f E - 54211 - X Q - ,, Af - L 442,y ' AwwJ:m:mwv ' 12 .. ' ' ' 1 it Iv ' Pg' ,- f w x ' fa 1 . Q 2 . ' ,f'iui2Qivf Q ng, ' H Rx ' . I 1 W V lf! I , -g fl E f' 7. w x N In , bfi!!! -xg I If , 4 X 5 5 4' g M f ,319 ' ' Q oi lr . NN-aff, fu W ' ww if if I xNxxXxxxX 'I f W ff' A W XW3 mu 4w I 'XY 2 . exxitrii 5 N ? Gu 5 Qu G' Xxx- JP. I ..d, ff-if' XAN-. I I. I I 1 QL +1 M: WE Qi l db JF! I. v L! -1 l Es ' 1.11 ,V W I ' 21 Q. W V7 , ,,,, 4 . W ' .'!, I 1, L: X. 'H I i 4 1 I J 4 Q! v, v, 'i yg g Yf I T x 5 1 , 1 if 'I ,, F, ffl P. + jig h .I 1 P 2 Y. E L xr 5 I 1 I 1 I i f b- W , -..-,, , ..,-- -- Q C. L. SAF1-'O RD, 92, H. K. W1u'rxf:. IR., H. N. GREENE, 793, W. B. FREAR5 '95, C. D. C1.xf:vELANn, '92, L. B. MERRILL, '92, ...J v 92- FIRST TENORS. j. R. ALLEN, 795. SECOND TENORS. F. P. KIMBALI., '95, FIRST BASSES. J. B. ARCHER, 793, SECOND BASSES. C. I.. SAFFQRD, ,Q2!, 147 l,t.'IIli6'7' . - Mllzrzgzfr. W. H. BABBITT. '95 G. F. PERKINS, JR., QS C. E. M1LL1cR, ,Q3, L. M. STARR, 793. VAADD, ADDAAADWAAA Om..Wm- A . - ANNA X UE +R! ml IM .M il :gf W all ri, N Q l ' 7494 . 'axu M A ' -, Ag! . ., - C D X as XT., O fb!-'-' '59, X A 'VZ Q f-1 ERAY Q -F j 17,1 X' 1' ' S Nix, 'A JJ 2 K UN I 4 'iq ' 'gin L A i r E E29 45W 'R ,, wif .A 'PS-xg, ,Nga Ag ' WA ' E' . . 5 Q . X W - mnwofoovooowooooomcooomowoowoowomanooowoxoooooowooommanmwo i E ' . E. VAN WORMER, Leader, 4 E ' JBHIUOS. H. S. IDE, '92, 1 F. A. NVEDDELL, 793, H. A. TOWNER, jk., ,92, H. G. SANFORD, 795. C. W. WARDELL, ,93, - CBllifElI'5. E. VAN WORMER, '92, H. O. NICHOLS, '95, E. N. CHAPMAN, '94, F. DEP. TOVVNSEND, ,95. dbanbouns. H. G. SANFORD, '95, H. O. NICHOLS, '95. ,N I Ji M I48 it H WI W iii i I Q l r Q Z i A ir, 5 A i 5 ! I I I P i 1 A - ---F-.Y-1--H .- -A A -2 I-----A---If-4--f-W E- - N I. V -it I- .V Q, , S' gf., , I U Wu D 1 31 A I 'C - . ff S ' '-'. Y'I A 4:'Qq?if2f.j'-',..w . 'L . WN 'I ' 'fs r. . , A .- -' ,ig '41-fatgglfwgifgjafyi ffifi- - . 9 -' if . H SLK ' - ,fi A -, , , . - EHiEM!3EEigf3i 3 x'EJ NI ' 9 if A , TEA! 'lf u f ' ' 1+12'f: WN 'M AF'f '4'9 'f A ': ff ,szfff-7 -If ...-.. fi ' ' 'fi 15 arf' ie' ., 1 3 .51 Q'J 5Q2ffQ 1 A I -f ig -.A a N ,b , WILLIAM HOIX7IEI.I, hIJXVARDS. P1'e.v1'a'ent. ILDVVARDS HERRICIC CHILDS. - Tfm,,,f,-,,,-, fgrmrviyfg - - 1 , S' - .4L,' . val ,h- ' - I o rr -1R ' l A-.1 DCI? El. 011160 HUD 31111612 A Q I? -f I ,uf i' ' i A ..f'f+. Muslc by W. H. EDWARDS. I ' , ,. IIIIJTGJEIO by W. H. EDXVARDS and O. F. MOOIIE, JR. ESCALUS, Prince of Verona, PARIS, a Young Noblernan, CAIPULET, A A FRIAR LAWRENCE, GHSI ,Of QIJHPHCICPS. - JOHN BENJAMIN ARCHER. PAYSON SIBLEY WILD. . - - EUGENE RICHARD VVHITE. BALTHASAR, Servant to Romeo, - CIIARLES LENVIS SAFFORD. ROMEO, - CHARLES DEXTER CLEVELAND LADY CAPULET, - CHARLES EDWARDS MILLER. JULIET, - PHILIP SCHUYLER ALLEN. NURSE TO JULIET, . - - EDWIN HOLMES. FIRST MONTAGUE SERVANT. EARL HOI.I3ROOK HOTALING. FIRST CAPULET SERVANT, - - EDXVARDS HERRICIQ CHILDS. JOHNSON, SERVANTS VVENTNVOR'l'I'I, PECK, EDDY, P. MILLS, SEXVALL, SLOCUM, BAKER. I3OGI,l'l'TLE, GOODRICH, SAW'rEI.LE, WOODIIAN. ISI LEVERETT BRADBURY NIERRILL. ' Is . i , .I 5 I . I. . ,Q .i F. .I,,. v' IE ,I ,I ,. -I . 5' ,ll in , 'jig 1 V3 .ffl . H' ,IL ' T11 I I , . A 1 I -ir! I , I F f 1 I is If ,ul .,,. ,, ' 7 W: ,I-a ,.L' I w 4: . v II. . ug 5 I. 'I :,4 Eu I .,,, . ri 'I+ ffP'I31'f ,H I W. IIHQ W, 5 . ,,,,, il .IV Hu .- 5 Eg ' :Q , Y ll I im!! ., 1.2, I I 2. ,J 15. E I2 . 13' 2 Af f 'I I Q ,F I 1.35 I X , NSY lm . Ii CF ' . f, 53513: I HW Mii Ml, ii fgwsiff If I 'Qu K .K ,,,,,. ,V : Ll' '4' ,hcl 3 'Ifl'5M: .IU gif! Jxrlf' +I- .3E:5',:'I1'f2' Ia:9 W Vfxilma g,I,I,?,f., 1:i?'v We mr VN., In ,a3I,t.IfII5? .N 1 ,Er xnfwilfff I-I 5 MII' .ww gt, fl5,1'.,,1f' 2 nr, .gm-: Q- 1' mf. . ,5WQ','F' Q WEL 2 Qfffiilllil I,':fI:., . -Uni I Ian ' I Wm EE ,ph EI.. ,,3IfI'.'I' I Lg. 1115.5 I' lNQ1., If rl?-WI? Ulf: MI' 31!5.I3gi1f:ff .'I.IWfL ?5l'I7Ef:',Qi if flf f,,1fI 5,fi 'I -A, 1- I-fl f'Is15,'iI-:ff .vgigmms ifffvafx L! .tggQ,fi. If :Iv LI x: 551316: Is,ii?W 5 J'I':21'IU!:lg , rI'tI1'f A If I WE l-,.: Iljf' EMA PN!! J'f s': ifQiIf':2!.lIfIf .I , ,, ,. S 5flI:- Sw' f fl f i1.Iif52,.4 I ' I'1'EQ.'iA',f Q E' EN-'jsfi ., 1, if 414152 If F531 If Ki! I- .IPM 'I 'v5I f smmixl I.. .. - ,' 'II .I 'Qu Lf 9L?ggm7:H1i', , Heil . I1 4 Dil ll .. ,Hi ,VIH 4 f 4 7 XI -I-1-1-,:'ge '-4' 27 ijifggfyyg' 4, ,ag .RMI- f ff' xx iQ?'fTtI'3I'f1I Z X 'ffiiffgf , .I4f,m ..,.I it 5:53934 9 , Q!.7f'f3i,i X '13 ,. 0 1, 2 -f 1 133:69 Z g I I I' f l 5 g 5 I-I 11 I ' Z 3 'Z 75 1 I ' 4 f 4' H grflf FBI gk ,IIII -L.-I fY gIIL: J A aff f .1-E5 I 1 Z . 5 ,iiazywu .nf f .V . 1 I 5 ,I I :- , vvn V . I 'I . I I I q rj I f: ., I I. In, II Illlgl I I I I II FIRST TENORS. Ijn I, I .. ll III . -'II . l.',I, N. AGREENE, 793, I W. H. BABBITT, '95, FIRST BASSES. W. B. ARQHER, 793, L. ' G. A. CAMPBELL, '94, - C. L. SQAFFORD, 152 'I 9 ,fl 5?fW f?Z5 Zfff !lff ?Z?Z Zig? SECOND TENORS. L. SAWTELLE, '94, J. R. ALLEN, '95 SECOND BASSES. B. MERRILL, '92 Mandery. V Organisi. -0- g 1In ransept Seats - N transept seats, sometimes 'ay maid, By rare good fortune, has essayed To hear the long drawn sermon outg The Freshmen's heads are right aboutg' No Wonder she seems half afraid. The glass throws in its sombre shadeg The droning preacher, undismayed, Winds on Without a glance, no doubt, - In transept seats My heart with love is over-weighed Before her eyes' fair cannonade 5 For she hath put at once to rout A11 other thoughts by that- sweet poutg . A heart beats mutual serenade In transept seats. 153 J X illiams Elnbover Club. FOUN IJED 1887. fNoN Q' 5 snar V S Q, Q ff 6' 4 ff, ,F D- if .g n Que Q H fi j. C. CAMPBELL, '92, O. B. BROWVN, '92, F. H. MILLS, 793, C. G. SM1TH, '94, E. C. BAR'1'LE'11'r, G. A. BLANCHARD, G. A. CAMPBELL, W. H. BABBITT, J. J. BROWN, JR., E. C. CHISHOLM, ORIGTNEQ . Q, f Z 2 vgjg vnuHIHIHIHIIINIHNH1 114111806 P. A ! P. A! 'I1'ah, 'rahf 'Rah, Wah! P. A! P. A! 'Rah, 'nzhf 'Rah, Wah! A H00-rah ! Ifoo-1'ah! A fzdomff' .' A lzzfofver ! 'lfzzh, '1'ah, Wah! 1892. O. B. BROWN, M. BURTON, 1893. F. H. MILLS.' 1894. C. G. SMITH, 1895. J. O. MEAD, J. OG1Lv1E, E. S. POMEROY, A. MARSH, . H. G. SANFORD, 154 I Presidenf. - V i ee- Presiden! . Seeffelafy . - Treasurer. J. C. CAMPBELL, F. B. RYDER. H. O. SPALDING. 1 J. TAYLOR, JR., F. DE P. TOWNSEND J. E. TUCKER. I., i 2' Sopb more J anqu t, TOAST-MASTER PRliSIDENT'S ADDRESS 111 E PRESS, 6 6:1352 Gf 93 lll0,IH'lL7!L7ZI7l0' llll 19M 1891 1 1111 11111 AVAN AI BANY 'UIOEIBTS When thou dost tell anothex f-. jest therem Ollllf the oaths xx hlch the cannot neul Plck out ot talee the mul 1 but not tl1e S111 If H GRIGCS I P ARM51RoNc, H B boom In :Ch mlnd lb pxefaqed and open every eal lo heal neu l1d1!1f5S .941 11 H Mlllb Eosence of babe calf goat and kul Of xx l1om many would be gladly lld THE lt'ACUl,'l'Y, J D 'VIURIIIY J1tte1 he d'1n1ned than mentloned IO it '1' THE LADIES, ' W R 130111115 O Woman ! l.ovelv woman ! nature made thee to temper man ATHLETICS, ' L T 11.111111 lheir airy limbs in sport they exercise 'fPINKY M 1 MURPHY W'hat is the connection of though HISTORY, A OLIVLR POEM, A K VVILIXOUNC ' Iook the morn in russet mantle clad ' .Walks 0 el' the dew of yon high eas ern hill V GOUTIUITTCC 5 C. E. M11.L1z11, Chairman, I. MCD. GARFIELD J, N, HUyCK, R. G. MEAD, IR F. A. WVDDEI L. 'F l q 7 0 . ,rx ,- ' - j , 2 .51 .7 'J a - ' 1 1 i x 1 , ' 1 1 , 1 . , , O V l ff , 1 .1.- . A A l -, . x X V 7 l x C K- 1 .ly - . 3 , ' ' ' . . , ,' H . , . . , 1, 1 4. . ' vi i, 1 1 1 A l' - - - - - . . 1 C. - - 1: ' . ' li S Q' . l ' ' l v 1 Y ' c .. 1- 1- C. ,-.-,,, ' 11 . E31 - - - - - - - . . . 1 '. . 51, cc , ' - lv' ' 9 1 1 ,Q 1 ' 1 -1, - -' if Sz! ,l UL- ' . 11 ' - 1 t 1 1.l Y, - - - - - - A . . . . ' . ,f fi lk , ' u ' , if 1 r v - ----- . . . . cc ' ' , Y qi And on the green contend the wrestlers prlze. l , la 11, t. 1 - - - -4 A . F . - - . -. - . - - . . . ' 1. A51 :aff as J ,. 1 , 1 O H V . . ,1 . , ffl' lil I ' ,115 ' 1 'la :ya . gl -1 ,,' ', 4 11. ll-: ,M 15 . QQ' 515 'IH 'ills ill ll' gl! elf ' H11 ' ,IN 1' fll .f!'1 1.5.1 iLittle Tlfiineltigsfivel . ITTLE Ninety-tives come to great big Williams College To learn to play foot ball an' seek all sorts of knowledge, An' show the Profs the way to teach, an' use their cuts and fib, An' bohii up math an' Write it down, an' put it in a crib 5 An' all us other tellers, when our lab'rous tasks is done, We all go out an' gather 'round an' have the mostest fun A-watchin the Freshies as they goes terrified about, An' the Soph-o-mores 'at gits you Ef you Don't Watch Out l Once there was a Freshman Class wouldn't 'bide by college law, An' when it came to Williamstown, green an' fresh an' raw, They sassed the upper classnmen an' swore they'd carry canes, An' by many other actions show'd their total lack o' brains 3 An' when the town was still one night, ani naught but peaceful snores, Re-echoed through old lVIorgan's halls, an' shook its heavy floors, A band of vengeful ghostly things came an' hauled the Freshies out 5 Ani the Soph-o-mores'll git you K ' I 'Et' you Don't Watch Out ! An' little Ninety-live, when the fresh is blue, An' yer faint heart tlutters, an' you go boo-hoo I An' you hear the White Caps cornin', an' yer cover up yer head, An' you hear the fearful voice an' the awful mandate read,- You better mend yer habits, an' resolve no more to sneer At the classes 'ats above you, an' yer teachers fond and dear, An' churish all yer betters, with fear an' awe devout, Er the Soph-o-rr1ores'll git you ' Ef you Don't Watch Out I 156 ww l I l I 5 1 I I t i l l I 1 1 l A be Circus. bw ' f s I 2 W , , t ' X aa l was the innocent remark of a Freshman 'kt W - Q, I that caused the whole phenomenon. He I' ,U lg was standing on the steps of the college- , A N 77 - ,Q 2 3 book store. Prof. Safford's cane 'could be heard 1 , pf 5- . 1 on the hard walk, near the gym., the dulcetz 1 ' . fat. I g ? fs I tones of Neffy's silvery voice floated out on the- .Il -0 , n g ' breeze 5 and all was peace. The Freshman had ' , , a bag ofpeppermints in his hand, af heavy can- lt ,YN vas grip sack was atrhis feet, a new straw hat , . on his head and a pensive look on his face. His thoughts found utterance thus: I wonder what the Professors. do in their summer vacation. Une of the staff correspondents of the GUL was passing at the moment and overheard him. P He stoppled and eyed the Freshman with respect, verging on admiration. Truly this was a deep thought. All the way to the station he thought it over, mas- ticated and digested it on the train and even when he took the sleeper at Albany the query was still ringing in his ears, How do the Professors spend their vacation P And lhzs zs hzs 5100. ' The ceaseless rattle of the train gradually becomes music to my ears, and I seem to hear the sound of drums and the blare of trumpets. I am in a strange town, by the roadside, wagons of all descriptions and for the most part innocent of springs are drawn up, the wheels dusty, the horses cov- ered with sweat, but contentedly masticating their noonday repast. I won- der where the owners of these equipages can be, since there is not a man, woman or child in view, when again the strains of martial music strike my ear, the bass drum and trombone predominating. The melody is evidently in waltz time, but I am unable to decide what it is, for the waves of sound vibrating in nodes of different amplitudes and lengths reach my auricular organs at the same instant of time, and forcing an entrance, perform Lissa- jou figures on the drums. Proliting by my excellent course in physics and especially the lectures on sound, Iimprovise two Helmholtz Reson ators with my pipes, a meerschaum anda briarg the former a large structure donated to me by my great-grandfather and smoked by him until his death, and the latter of more recent origin. Placing one at each ear, I listen breathlessly 157 g and with awe. My great-grandfather's pipe, true to the instincts of its youthful days vibrates and thrills .to the soul-stirring melody of Annie Rooney, feelingly rendered by the bass drum and trombone, and I recog- nize, though faintly, vibrations in the briar, which in pain and misery, I End can lay claim to no tune but the ubiquitous H Comradesf' A cheer sets my feet in rapid motion toward the music, a bend in the road reveals to my sight a huge white tent surmounted by purple streamers embroidered with yellow W's. From its inner folds the voluminous volleys of voluntaries are being violently vomited forth. It is nota camp meeting, the music is too old and vicious for a religious gathering. - A gentle cough and a coytsmile arrest my' mad career thro' the, entrance as a deadhead. I find a gentle fawn-like creature at my side. Itspeaks, the words rustling noiselessly thro' silky white whiskers. I regret to in- form you that you cannot enter without acertiiicate, unless-er-you-er-er, he pauses with a cautious glance and stops. Realizing that I am not a ball player and struck with terror at his frightful appearance I quakingly ask the requirements, in my fright causing a few dollars to rattle in my trousers pocket. His sudden smile now reassures me. In a friendly tone, he directs me across the passage to a mercenary, muscle-bound athlete in White tights. Here cheerfullyand yet reluctantly I am parted with 37M cts. and am admi-t- ted to the awesome splendors of the inner arena. Hardly have I entered when a bald, muddy-bearded, soft-voiced man, who seems to be running things, seizes me and, explaining to me that I can wear a tall hat and carry a cane, sends me off to buy the rules and regulations and a program of the performance. ' The cavalcade is just passing through the flap of the tent and I only catch sight of Inspector of Garbage Clark, followed by Graham, Cobleigh and Robinson, all in magnificent alignment. The line is only broken at intervals to allow the members of the brigade to chase stray papers and peanut shells. lVIr. Patrick Collins brings up the rear. As the day is ex- tremely warrn, lVIr. Collins wears his coat on his back instead of on his shovel. I had just taken my place when the master of ceremonies, attiredfin a sombre frock coat, walked solemnly in and bowed deeply to the audience. He took off his glasses, coughed, put on his glasses, coughed again, and finally began: Gentlemen, of my audience! It is my peculiar pleasure this evening to bring before your eyes the sublime spectacle of the heights which can be reached by the humanfi mind, unaided and alone. To bring such a vision before an audience so enlightened and so very highly pre- pared is an honor not to be esteemed lightly. But I will not detain you. One idea alone would I desire to leave behind me and-that is, that this cir- 158 T ! 12 I 1. 4 gt li 1 i 1' Q r 1 i I i is ll I li 1 S 1 r 1 i i 1 l I i 1 t i 1 1 1 I r l A 1 14. cus has not for its object money making. There are no side shows. With this I will close. As he left the tent, voices were heard at the opening, the remarks be- ing all rather forcible and somewhat sulphurous. Suddenly the master of ceremonies returned with a momentum not all his own, and said in an apologetic tone-- Hum-ah--a-I beg pardon, gentlemen, I have still one little remark. The barrel juggler, the fireeater and the- snake charmer will each give a special exhibition in their respective tents-a small fee will be charged for each of these entertainments. p , A whip snapped and four horses came galloping out, beautifully man- aged by their riders. Looking at my programme to see who they mightbe, I found that the ring-master was my old friend, Prof. Safford, the saw-dust and astronomical wonder. The riders were mounted as follows: Prof. Fernald on Buckley, Hewitt on Edmunds, Wild on Carey, and Ferry on Smart. The riding was remarkable. At times it seemed as if the horses and men were one and the same, so firmly did they sit. They made the horses do anything they pleased, trotting, walking and jumping with the greatest ease. The clowns, I-Iibbard and Whittaker, laughed at each other's jokes very hard during this performance, much to every one's sur- prise. Prof. Safford then introduced the next artist, and Prof Mears began: Now I want particular attention. Let every one follow me for I only do these things once. I am sorry thatI haven't more time, I wont stop now to explain how I do these things. Later, I will show you how you can do them yourselves. I first take a little of this red powder, it don't make any differ- ence about its name yet, I expectorate on my hands-thus, immediately a paste is formed-this is a base. I put it on the palms of my hands, thus -now watch closely. The professor then took from a little portable stove a red-hot coal and placed it on his hand. The effect was magical. New life seemed imparted to every movement, he jumped up and down, smiled, sang and shouted, while the trombone and bass drum played a waltz. When the music stopped Prof. Mears managed to drop the coal and explained you see the principle. If the experiment doesn't succeed it is not my fault- So much for the coals. He was about to ignite some sulphureted hydro- gen in his mouth when Mr. Eli Botsford came in and told him that there was a scratch on one of the roof slates of the new Lab. In his fright the professor dropped everything and rushed off, holding on to his watch chain. Slow, charming music preceeded the next performance and Prof S. Fes- senden Clarke was announced as The only original Indian snake charmer under an American name. He came in carrying himself and a bottle of snakes in a very dignified manner. Exhibiting his pets with scientific skill, he explained their interior economy, using himself as a chart. By a 159 mathematical process, based on simple observations taken on the spot, he demonstrated to his own enlightenment the waste of brain energy which would follow if the snake tried to understand his ownstructure. When the affable charmer had gone, a gorgeous chariot rushed in and stopped in front of the Presidential throne. lt was driven by Thomas Loomis Dodd, the 'tonly tight rope performer with a beard sixteen inches long, as the programme stated. This performance was intensely interesting to the audience. His wonderful manipulation of cannon balls especially delighted the children, the interest rising to wild enthusiasm on his remov- ing one by one his outer garments, a mufHer, a pair of whole-falls trousers, top boots, Prince Albertcoat and clergyman's vest, emergingfinally in aspot- less day and night robe he calmly but with care smoothed out its wrinkles and brushed away an entirely imaginery fly. The usual cheer divested him of his final disguise and he leaped to the earth clad in purple tights, and firmly seizing his hat and cane, in a moment was a speck in the distance rapidly approaching infinity. A wild burst of barbaric music was the grandfinale to Prof. Dodd's per- formance, and when this was concluded Tommie Safford coollywturning up his coat collar and Merrill, scoring a fine shot at billiards, stepped jauntily into the arena with their instruments. Safford immediately began -an ex- tempore march upon the trombone, and Merrill, taking his hands from his pockets, accompanied him on the bass drum. ' The tramp of many feet was heard outside the tent, Monsieur Adam entered hastily on the run Ql'robably the only thing that he could get to carry him.-Edsj and imperiously ordered all performers, among them Praf. Safford, from the ring. Following him in close column came his band of trained Amazons in three divisions, Mesdames Pomeroy, Durfee and Brown leading. Their variegated and phantasmagorical costumes, their symmetrical, agilelimbs, their glittering spears, their unpainted rosy cheeks and youthful faces produced an effect so brilliant, so startling, that it baffled description. Monsieur Adam's commanding figure, his resounding bass voice and martial carriage, together with the perfect marching of the beau- tiful damsels, presented a spectacle seldom equalled in the scenic arena. The audience set spellbound, but on their seats, until President Carter rushed frantically out into the ring and enthusiastically shouted, Let us sing Gospel Hymns, number 95, hymn 14. Starting with the refrain, he led the chorus from the field, M. Adam striving in vain to reassume control, aided by Durfee. The mighty tent re-echoed with the strain: A A A Hold the line for Wilson's coming, Pmabbltt Signals still, Freddie Townsend's near the centre, Win we must and will. 160 -4 i l 1 . i 3 l l l l l i l 1 l 'J i l l t l . When th.e.nois.e,had.subsided Ge.neral.Adams drfew his company up and dismissed them. Lt. Colonel Beech alone remained with his chief. As there was nothing about them on the programme I awaited with curios- ity the reason for their staying. Presently Durfee came in carrying a rope ladder which was soon rigged to the top of the tent. Adams then kissed Beech, told him to be careful and steadied the ladder, as the wonderful athlete started to climb to the dizzy height. Oh, how graceful he was, how strong, how nimble, how cool. Adams was in a frightful state. His anxiety was pitiful. He stood under the swaying ladder holding a butter- tly net ready to catch his darling in the case of an accident, but luckily for the world everything' passed off smoothly and the dauntless athlete and the emulous Hercules were soon in each other's arms, weeping for pure joy. Prof. Safford then stepped forward and spoke as follows: GENTLEMEN: The next performer will be an imported Comet which has been procured for the College at great expense. I hope, therefore, that you will be as quiet and gentlemanly as possible while you watch his ellip- soidal eccentricity. As he stopped I noticed a figure issuing from the dressing room, and recognized it as my old friend Iiinstien. He was greeted with tumultuous applause, which did not seem to please him, for raising his right hand and voice, he shouted, Gentlemen, this is not a beerfgardenf' The disap- pointed howl which followed this remark gave .Saffie an opportunity to finish his introduction. I do not wish to pose as ajoker, gentlemen, but Doc. Einstien's walk is a practical application of my terrestrial wobble theory. Saftie now retired, tacking across the ring with long legs to the Windward, and Einstien, after coughing huskily and smoothing his sun- kissed mustache, began his performance. He Hrst gave his hen walk, and then' his monkey walk, the only perceptible difference being that one came before the other, and that the first had the element of novelty that the second did not possess. Paeans of applause and peanut shells rained down upon him from the appreciative and excited audience, but above the tumult I heard his calliopetic voice crying, Gentlemen, how can you expect to know anything if you don't listen. Nevertheless, taking the applause for an encore, he proceeded to give a graphic description of the Brothers Campbell, of the Oak Park settlement. The elder was short, yet of good height, brave as a lion, yet meek and gentle as a lamb, kind hearted, genial and sympathetic, yet firm, frank, yet reserved, audacious, yet cau- tious and wary, a man to be loved and respected, yet feared and dreaded. His brother was tall and spare. No amount of dissipation could shake his iron frame, not an ounce of superfluous flesh was on his bones. His Com- plexion light and his hair dark, his eye mild, yet steady blue, like a panther in his native lair he stalked about, a man whom every one would notice. 161 At this point, Doctor Einstien, overcome by his own eloquence, fell into poesy and chanted the following ditty: Bernard Christian Steiner, Prof. in Billville I, Teaching Hekatonians How Old Penn could lie. Rice. the former master, Of this subject fine, 'Cross the water saileth, - Leaving me to shine. . The chorus, consisting of the first four lines of the above stanza, was noiv vociferously sung by the whole vast audience, led by Harold Augus- tus Lewis. When the noise had subsided, in a tremulous voice the soloist continued: L A There's a golden maxim Towards which we should yearn: 'Chance you may have heard it, Listen if you'd learn l If you will be noisy, Whisper too and laugh, Please don't do it here, but Save it up for Saff. Prof. Spring, the celebrated serpentine contortionist, now showed his sinewy figure in the ring, accompanied by Prof. Lefavour, the Circassian barrel thrower. The latter immediately threw himself on his back, and proceeded to juggle barrels on his feet, aided by Mut, whom he some- times juggled in place of the barrels. During his whole performance he elici- ted enchanting strains from a barrel organ attached to his left arm, and Prof. Spring, inspired by its music, gave his soul harrowing exhibition. Among his remarkable feats, the most wonderful was that in which he curled his nether appendages softly about his swan-like neck and gyrated in billowy undulations over the gold-carpeted arena Qsaw dustj. Almost before they had finished, Prof. Safford introduced the Strong Man, a degenerate descendant of the old Norse Vikings, whose modern- ized name was Schweinigel. The band played My Schweinie, 'Tis of Thee. His long, flaxen locks, beard, mustache and steadfast smile quite won the hearts of us all. With the utmost equanimity he proceeded to toss about heavy weights and put up ponderous dumb-bells. All would have been well, but, in lifting a weight marked in white paint HI,OOO lbs., his hand slipped and the weight dropped on the summit of his pedzls polfex. The continuity of his smile being broken, he was helpless, and, murmuring clouds of Teutonic execrations, he was carried off in a small barrow. 162 1 1 F I n i i 1 1 1 3 w I ist li 1 1 l 1 l 3 3 1 tl 4 4 l 4 i I li kr . P w After the remains of Schweinie's smile had been brushed up and car- ried off by Carpy Clark, the calcium lights were turned on and the picture of the champion foot ball team was thrown upon a screen. Prof. Russell got up and amidst great excitementproposed three cheers for the team. Before multitude had time to respond, some one rose in his seat and taking hold of the Professors coat threw him in the ring shouting: Down in front, I've paid to see. I recognized Whittaker, he ofninety-live. A howl of rage arose from all sides and drowned out Safford's trombone. The lights went out and confusion 'reigned supreme. Wild yells rent the air 3 the Freshmen, formed in line and with unabashed foolhardiness rushed the Faculty to avenge their insulted martyr. The Profs., under the leader- ship of Russell, rallied gallantly. Above the tumult could be heard Soc. shouting: A horse! My kingdom for a horse! Einstein came to life for the occasion and his trembling voice could be heard aboventhe din: Please don't, gentlemen, please don't. Safford, not understanding the commotion, was trying to make himself heard: Gentlemen, if you don't make less noise I shall have to give you another examination. In the turmoil Bliss Perry, rising like a Phenix, seized Adams by the neck and threw him in the baby carriage, and was soon far from the slaughter, trundling his precious freight down the hill. A the assembled -'W t 91 Wit it f. iw , K- 'lLLuMll 5-Jig. lklkws- fb-Q-we - fr ww -Zum -ffl? U-.Tl -jig . fem! I, 3gf.,.i'-N wr' , , Aggj , . 2 Wi' ' ww slit? lg: if, V, V, , V1.7 -V 49 .f i, :.1:,5st'ff. ' 1 it 1 iH9ffi4tf4fa!'tu.lW .. W -tiwn' Q-HW - V ,fm-, 'u.,f'Q,-','Qf' Zz ' WW N' . 1 I ,wxffmf ,,f,-.16 :few pt.. y,.,,,,,, r,..-.i5fi44.V,tl,V,,,1' 1426 -. in 7 .-,,M,yAI,f3,-1. Qui !1ffg,Q5v'??i1l?1f1ZQ2f'i tf l' fi W lf fzilllf. ' L' I ' 4-19' .go ' df 163 ommxg Siaffortfs 1bome. CROSS the street from Goodrich The old stonevbuilding standsg And there I play the organ With lithe and wriggly hands. A corner in the choir-loft A Is all I call my own, And you're Welcome Sunday evening At Tommy Saftord's home ! C1-ioiaus. Such playing in the chapel Has ne'er been heard before, And such ecstatic squirming You see it here galoreg VVhile Pa sits in the back seat Behind Soc's shining dome, , And you're Welcome Sunday evening At Tommy Safford's home ! And when this life is ended And Tom has gone on highg When we too have cut chapel And with the angels tly, There Tommy'll play the organ, To give the place a tone, For harps will not be in it When Tommy is called home I I On Sunday night 'tis my delight And pleasure don't you see, Making all the Profs and all the boys Quite ill to gaze on meg Therels an organ in the chapel To make the students moan, And your welcome Sunday evening' To Tommy Safford's home! And when I'm perched aloft here At even-tide of day, Perchance some maidens enter Then listen to me playg I bend and writhe and wriggle, And make the organ groan, And there's no joy in chapel XVhen Tommy Saftord's home l 64 l l l l 5 l l i i 3 1 3 2 i P S l l l l 1 3 l il l 1 l 4 4 .ai . Tln the Sancturn. ,I . ggi ' i r ' Q ' HE sun had set in golden glory behind the in t western mountains, the stars were beginning if to tWl1llil6 dimly am0I1g' the drifting masses Qf i ll - Cloud in the eastern sky, the clock on the lift? 7 Gym tower was striking six, but still the great press moved on in restless confusion, its rush . f'f and whir reaching the ear only indistinctly. li li Each window of the stately GUL building was 1 f,2 'lll'l 'l'ltli gTf ablaze with light, and the occasional passage 4 , , if li of hurried and anxious individuals through the f I, crowd of loungers on its steps excited only a 3 transient curiosity. Within, on the paved floor of the hall, the Bouncer walked restlessly to and fro with cat-like tread, his eye seldom leaving the door bearing the inscription Private Gffice of Editor in Chief. Further down the passage the Assistant War Correspondent was dozing comfortably before the fire waiting for orders. Loud voices, pushing, scrambling and excited tones could be heard down the hall at the left, and a crowd of eager men could be seen, madly striving to reach a little window, over which hung the legend Business Manager. Confused sounds of Ahundred a line, Any price you want, More than any one here, Five thousand for inside cover, could be heard in various tones of anxiety, when suddenly a little card bearing the words No space appeared at the window, and yells of disappointed rage followed, as the crowd surged toward the outer door. The door of the office of the editor in chief opened with a jerk and two dejected poets shot out, burdened with rumpled manuscript. The assistant war correspondent kept awake long enough to see the bouncer take them in hand and prepare to assist them down the steps as the command, Let Bishop down easy, but kick that White twice, for my sake, was shouted from the office. He was just dozing off again when he was summoned into the office where there seemed to be trouble. 165 nil- YW WM 77777-W-M MW Before the brass rail stood an angry man, one hand in his overcoat pocket, the other just finishing a gesture, He was saying: Yes, my rights! ProfessorSafford will sustain me. If you print my name Jonas Pants Haskins this year, Iill dog your path. Another thing, Idid not make that remark about Mr. Moore's poem, I read it and liked it. What is more I said so, but no such idea as ' his not seeing the boy's face' ever entered my mind, Mr. Jenks will assure you of the truth of this. The gentleman, referred to, started nervously and hiding behind his principal said Yes, feebly, Mr. Haskins went on more mildly, It was probably a mistake. They must have taken me for Mr. Hoyt, '92. The door closed behind them and they were gone. Mr. Boies who had saunterediin during the above named gentleman's indignant remarks now stepped forward, confidentially. I Now, old man, say, do you know my name was spelt wrong last year. By Gad! it was B-o-y-c-e. Now you know, I am-am an old family, my family, I mean, are old. See! No, oh, no I Ihav,en't children, but-you know, old man. Thanks, I don't smoke, except for com-com- panions-ship. Say I do you know that Ryder? No? Well, you ought to. I-Ie's a wonder! He's going to tell me more about his trip to-night, you know. Gad, it must have been great. Oh! old man, do you know I've been to Amherst three- times, and er-er we were-er beaten twice and tied once. Gad! I'm tired of it. Play football myself? No, I'm not strong. Guess I'll get some cream. Good day. The above monologue which took nearly thirty golden minutes drew to a close as the speaker turned to the door. ' A voice in the shadowy corner yelled out OhI Willie have you, - but the slamming of the door cut it off. . , Mr. Durfee, ,QS was the owner of the voice and he came forth twirling a baseball in his hand. I got into him, didn't I. My name? Why I was first president of the freshmen, - But at this point he was seized from behind by the city editor at a signal from his chief. Never mind a little glass, said the lat- ter calmly and through the Window went the freshman president. Unfor- tunely it was not a bad fall, for Professor Logie was going by at that instant and the misguided youth struck soft material. There was quiet inthe office for some time, broken only by Mr. Hotaling's opening the door and shouting, Say! those girls in Jersey City are high enough society for me. Tell that to the Prince and add my initials E. H. H. So long ! and he could be heard for some dis- tance down the street whistling, Every night on the end of the street, I whistle and wait for Katie. 166 l t 1 T I t 5 3 V 43 4 Aloud knock sounded at the door, and before there was time for an a ' n nswer, a tall Apollo-like youth stepped in. In his right hand he carried a large bird cage, in which there was about a dozen sparrows hopping about. His' innocent appearance had deceived the bo uncer, and the novelty of the thing disarmed for the moment the editor's usual hostility to agents. My name is Cecil MacCoy he blushin l b , g y egan, and if you have time, I'd like to show my birds to you. Without further parley, he opened the cage door, and the birds flew eagerly out, and began to flutter about him, now and then pecking his cheeks affectionately. He then proceeded to make them perform many pretty and amusing little tricks, h . c arming everyone by the affectionate and caressing manner with which he handled them. During the exhibition, the editor remarked It mnst have taken a good while to tame them. Yes, said Cecil, I have spent a good deal of my time chasing them, but they all learn to love me after they're once caught. You see they like my hair, he added, as one of ' er a few moments, however, the thing grew the birds alighted there. Aft monotonous, and the Editor, remarking that he had more im ortant P business to attend to than bothering with a bird-man, showed MacCoy the door, and started to go on with his work. A few moments later, the editor, as he wearily turned to the window, saw a coupe driving up to the curb. As it stopped, Mr. W. R. A. Wilson emerged hastily, and rapidly ascended the steps. Entering the office, and stepping up to the desk he spoke as follows : I have a few grinds left over from last year, which the former board were unable to publish. Perhaps you would look at them. They vary in price, but are of almost equal excellence. I will read a few. The first is retailed at fifty cents a yard, larger quantities at lower prices, special reduction to the trade ' Did you ever hear the loquacious Ennis loquate? QGood word isn't it? I coined it myselfj. Scene : Gym. Time : nine o'clock. Mr. Ennis to Mr. Fargo. ' Hurt your knee? Pshaw! Too bad! Better not run to-night! humph! humph! Ha! Hal Nervy boy! Good work l Pshaw I Better run, Limber it up! 'Been to see Woody? Water on the knee? Humph ! Yah l Good work l Nervy boy l' And so on, adinfinitum. We also throw in McKean's laughs as an inducement to the trade. ' Got anything fora quarter ? asked the editor. Uh, yes responded Mr. Wilson, I can give you 'Gulliver's Travels among the eating houses, none keep him but for a week at a time, Faculty put him out of the hash house,' or, a little sketch of Reed, in running trousers and calico shirt. These are my cheapest effusions. I am also agent for Newcomb's literary criticisms, re-edited, with notes by 'Perkins, and annotated by Gardner-Why, here he comes now! I have an engagement,--EXCUSC me 5 and he vanished by the poet's exit. 167 H Yrir wi WW! Y 1. The door opened violently, and a short,thick-set,se-lf-satisfied looking man strolled in, holding in his hand a small leather bag, on which he was busily writing a literary criticism. The editor looked up with a weary smile, and said, Well, Mr. Newcomb, what can I do for you P All I've got to say is this, said Mr. Newcomb, in a loud nasal tone putting his pad in his pocket. I understand you juniors are getting pretty fresh and in- tend to grind me. At this moment a strolling band stopped at the Win- dow and commenced to play H Every body take their hat off to me, but Mr. Newcomb did not notice the interruption. I haven't been ground since I entered college and I don't intend to be now. I might state that I ran that Weekly to suit myself, and that I don't give a-hoorah for the Ld, GUL, or College. I want to see the whole board. Messengers were sent out, and, after some trouble the board were assembled. The religious editor came down the elevator, the war correspondent from the next room, and the young and willing society editor 'coming last of all from the cellar. Now, said Mr. Newcomb, you can take your choice between being blown to thunder or scratching out that grind on me. In this satchel I have dynamite, if you don't hand over that promise, up she goes. It's your last chance,-choose I The editors sought to temporize, but in vain. Mr. Newcomb's eyes dilated with demoniacal fury. He dropped his bag. There was a crash. PF Pk Pk Pk Dk P14 Dk PK Dk Six hours afterwards, lVIr. Newcomb's head was discovered, the lips still moving. Later on the excavations reached the business manager, who was the only survivor left to tell the tale. Though his check-book was still intact, his sorrow at the terrible fate of his beloved co-laborers overcame him, and only after a long illness was he able to resume his placein the every day world. 191, .. ,- ,.-iw . ,g0,. 1,5-f 'f-'1- jf:J ',, I 'Z I if ,,,'l':,s15?LQr.',vf 1 1 L' ' 1 1 0, 12, , xg, my .tjg ,' .5 , ' 1 ,Of 168 Q l 2 1 .l i 3 , i l E v l 1 l 5 , , 9 II' fr m the wpera. - hl saddest saddest fate of all, To crib, alas I and crib in vain, T'is but to rusticate, that's all l Oh l Tommy, dearest love, O I would that thou could'st hear The curses of deep dejection Thy victim makes sincere! ?. , When you choose a star elective For the year, And you get yourself all ready for a high, And when your toil you shirk, ' And you sit there with a smirk, But at the end of the term you get a V. H, for dusting off th'e telescope' once a week What is that? ' T That's a Gut l When youqmeet a guileless youth Upon the street, And you get yourself all ready to pass by, And when you think you're past, Then he grabs and holds you fast - And he says, Qld man, hovv did you hit that exam We had last week P Who is that? That is Mut l 169 ree Elo. for the eehly C6 ILL you Walk into my parlor? Said the spider to the fly, As she' spun her little fly-trap To catch the passers-by. Yet the rule for cobwebs' duties, The exception veritiesg On the Uwlzkzms Weekbf cobwebs There surely are no flies. 170 Q ,A I1 fu , fN 5622? q A . f1v,,Z7tf-L yy-eg YW REHAB 45: r mx if A R E3 V,,.v'i5 7? ,, . , ,J 5 Q P-'S Om - R X 1 - ' -. 1' ff' :aj ' Jn - ' - ,gfff.'2l'f Mg . - grfiifszf ' 7i'7 A i X f 3:1 I . ' A N X 9 I . . I , , , ,. H . -, vi I ., ,lt V.. V r , 3 1 AX xXQ:.'f'I4 , o9 5 it viii! -tiff' . V I-'KN xxidvo a-.,.:-za! ng- 3 Ig lll i 5. Q ! Q o - A N Milk I X ' Z 3 M I X- 0 ,Mi 69 ' ,.- -' O Q..- my I A ki' Im -'-V. Q Q 3 '.l4.Zg- ' , ,.l'T1'id . 6 0 I .-9 , 0 If 1 ', e o 0 Q. , ff ,Q . X E, Z1 SOIIFIIHI EEIVOICU to U96 'HIIYCPCSTS of 6Cllt'5 1ll'Et5biOIl5, JEUQIICYTB HIIC flBHCCElI'Ht. BOARD Oli' EDITORS. WALTER COLLINS, ESQ., Editor-in-Chief, Manager, Editor and Business Manager. ' HARRY EUGENE AWERY, ESQ., Sporting Editor, expert authority on tennis BERTRAM LLEWELLYN SMYTHE, ESQ , Club Gossip. RIGHT HON. EARL or HOTAXLING, flrish Peeragej, Uncomniercial Exchanges. FRANKLIN MARTIAL Down, ESQ., Hygiene, Hydropathy and Hysterics CHARLES LOVEJOY HIBBARD, ESQ., Snake Editor and Devil. CHARLES FOREST MCLEIXN, News-Boy and Satellite of the Editor-in-Chief. TERMS. Payable strictly in advance-one set up per number to be paid to the Eclitoiiin- ir IC yr ,file Cliff l Chief. ON. O. Adams, preferred, Jerry Macaulay, Second choicej. Publisher! every Tliursclay, by gentlemen Students of Williams College. 171 gf fiff ,Munn - mum- WILLIANISTOWN TOPICS. EIJITORIAL. Realizing thenecessity of a reform in this college, in matters pertain- ingrto dress, .de-p,ortment and genteel amusements, Ihave consented under pressure to accept the management of this sheet, aided :by an able corps of assistants. We hope through these columns to supply a long-felt want, and to present to the public a readable and newsy journal, which, we regret to say, our esteemed con- temporary has not always succeeded in doing. We feel that this will appeal both to that select coterie which has here- tofore paid strict heed to the man- dates of fashion, and also to those who are groping blindly Without a guide. While we consider this as of paramount importance, we shall not permit it to crowd out other vital and interesting matter. A cursory glance over the list of editors will convince the reader of the entire reliability of each department.-The P1 z'1zce. Pk Pk Pk Pk In these days of Universal tennis, lawn and otherwise, it is a great surprise to me to see such general ignorance of the game in our very midst. Years and years ago, when I first learned to play, I was taught tonencourage my opponent by such polite remarks as Ah, he can't get it! See him muff it! Too bad, old cock I U and the like. It is 172 a small matter, but politeness is so cheap nowadays Qsince the McKinley Billj that we can certainly afford to be courteous to our opponents. When playing doubles it is consider- ate and kind to take all your part- ner's chances, it saves him, keeps him cool, and, of course, pleases him immensely. If you are going to take a ball which youasee-he can get more easily than you, don't tell him, but take it yourself even if you have to run into him, it surprises him, and after all, what is more pleasant in life than a surprise? Should you by some fatal chance miss a ball, as I have once or twice, it is the best of form to throw your racket on the ground and dance around it, using your best ejacul- atory English. This shows your audience, first of all, your skill, secondly, your self control, and, thirdly, the extent of your vocabu- lary. By watching a man five minutes, you can tell whether he is a crack player, and as you all want to become good players you have but to follow these simple hints. bk X :if X A few remarks about dress in tennis matches may not be out of place in this column. I have found in my career that the best dressed man does not always win, so avoid vanity. If you wear glasses and your hair perspires, a Turkish towel wrapped about the head will be -,Q l l 2 5 5 ....l. in-.1 -. .. ,....,, ,....,-...,,5..,, ,,.,., -.,- ,., ta WILLIAMSTOWN TGPICS. found' 'very efficacious. As to clothes, almost anything will do. Caps should be very large and con- spicuous, and blazers more so. Trousers can be substituted for knickerbockers and vice-versa, the main thing, however, is to be con- spicuous-wear something that will distinguish you from the common herd, so that you can be easily rec- ognized, and mistakes will then be obviated.-The Fiend. Pk ik :ze Pk X Pk Pk Pk Sk It is rumored among the 400 that the etiquette of street salutations is soon to undergo a radical change, a report which I am much pleased to hear, since the old customs were to me, and I doubt not to many others, extremely annoying. Nobody except a man in a responsible position can imagine the trouble which these continuous greetings may cause him, especially if his mind be absorbed, as mine often is, in thinking out some abstruse problem of tennis, or meditating as to how the inter- ests of the Athletic Association can be best promoted. Why one should be obliged to recognize every man with whom, he may be barely ac- quainted when the greeting is merely an empty form, is to me an un- answerable question. But often it is desirable to speak to 'some one with whom one has not the honor of being acquainted, and here, too, the change willbe most enjoyable. I have never scrupled a moment, in i such circumstances, to treat any college man as if he was my most intimate friend, even to the extent of borrowing money of him, and'I am glad to see that the polite world is coming around to my view of the matter. Some time ago I was accused of lowering my dignity by kicking a foot-ball in front of the post-ofnce with one of the hall-boys from the hotel, but you will readily see that in accordance with modern ideas, this was proper, after al'l.- The Crank. ' Pk Sf :ze :xc if Sometimes I think that one woful piece of neglectfulness in our col- lege life is the absence of any or- ganized plan of borrowing. As yet the scheme is in its infancy, and the small progress made by a few indi- viduals is no criterion of the reasonQ ableness of the plan. Even in my own personal experience I have found that it addedmost amazingly to the comfort of one's existence to be able to eke out one's own pos- sessionstby judicious use of the property of others. And not only in this way, but in promoting the mutual acquaintance of those living in the same entry is it of especial advantage. Now, I found, if you will pardon a bit of my own experi- ence by way of illustration, that by the time I had borrowed a few blank checks of Nichols last year, I could call him by his christianname with great ease, and, moreover, that I l l i ,, . , I ll? sl il pa 5. .ii it 4 fi it flw lf! , . 2 ent' ,J ,I li if ,l in , Fl! ll 5 Mt! I L i it If 1 ,j F .f, 'Hs 1-pi 'Sli X I I fi lliifil tilt will 1 its ilgiigf SIZE! ' W! Wi 2 well il-.V 1 --nn WILLIAMSTOWN TOPICS. felt quite at home in his apartments. After sampling his library, trying his window seat and borrowing as I did once, a cake of soap to wash my patent leathers, I think I quite won his friendship, and this is only one example of many that I could adduce. Now, if this habit were more extensive, doubtless the good- fellowship of the students would be vastly improved, and the ideas of meum and feum would be less offen- sively insisted on, to the greater promotion of internal harmony among the students.-The Sponge. ,..iil-l- FASHION Fashion does not prohibit the wearing of gloves without an over- coat fa style conducive to health also, Dowdj. None but patent-leather shoes can be worn by gentlemen. Stage of dilapidation not important. The sweater, a comfortable, though disgusting article of wearing apparel, may be worn when abso- lutely necessary, but never except during winter term. Upon occasion, however, it saves much valuable time in dressing, and often enables one to reach chapel within three minutes from the time of rising. . Brown and yellow checker-board stockings are suitable for men repre- senting important interests, especi- ally when taking a little exercise on the football Held. Blucher top, Russia leather shoes harmonize well. Brown Llewellyn coats, sack pat- tern, with three slits in the tail are being extensively worn by club men. Cinnamon suits, single-breasted are now commezifaul. We may say without pride- that we are the 1 I NOTES. originators ofthis artistic innovation. A silver-gray derby can be Worn with impunity and with this costume. The effect is quite nobby. We take great pleasure, also, in recommending blue sweaters for general wear. This also is an idea of our own origination. The yachting cap must go. Origi- nated by leaders of fashion in great London, and worn by the nobility of the Royal Yacht Squadron, it has degenerated to emigrants and their lady friends. No gentleman at all careful of his reputation as a dresser will wear one hereafter. On the contrary, Doolittle Straw Hats may be worn with propriety from January twenty-sixth to December twenty- fifth. On entering Chapel, the hat, pre- ferably brown and creased, should be held in the left hand, palm up- ward, near the body and well up to the shoulder. The cane should be grasped in the right about eight inches from the ferule fthe cane's ferulej and its head trailing behind, 74 I - 1- -N- WILLIAMSTOWN TGPICS. The head tof the bodyj should be somewhat in advance and covered with an engaging smile. - The latest Spring styles indicate the extensive wearing of Tam-oi Shanters in London, this winter-- The Dresser. 1 FINANCIAL BUREAU. I can confidentially recommend my friends to take stock in the New Portable Ruddy Non-Actinic Light System, just established by a company of well known financiers. The officers are as follows : ARTHUR BELDING RUDD, Presziienf, EDWIN NESBIT CHAPMAN, Vice-Preszl deni, CLIFTON VVINTRINGHAM WARDELL, Secrefary, BAYARD HENDlERSON CH RISTY, Treasurer and Clerk. Offices of the well-known broker- age firm of McLean, Rowe dz Co., funlimitedj have been opened at Nos. 1, 21, and 23, Morgan Building. tSee Adj Money somewhat more plentiful this week. People who want call loans now can provide them at small discount for cash Qunder three termsj. People who fancy that I shall not be able to get through the months of March and April without one or two convulsions or upheavals cannot do better than to take my note for one term fthree terms of grace, I6 mosj. A book for which we predict a great sale is the Mapes Betting Primer, or How to Start with noth- ing fsave a nickelj and be worth millions. Edited by Frederick Porter Kimball.--The Payzhg Teller. CLUB GOSSIP. Among the recent elections to the popular and fashionable Club known to the world at large as De Gang are Mr. M, M. Whittaker, his dog, Mr. Sawyer, Mr. W. G. Ramsey, Mr. Durfee and Mr. Ward, all of '95, also, by a close vote, the following choice spirits from '94 : Messrs. Reed, Gulliver, Herrick, Jordan and Bruce. From ,QZ, Perkins and I Parsons. Mr. Thomas Gove Adams was unanimously elected to mem- bership, but from some inexplicable reason Qpossibly fearing the dis- pleasure of the facultyj declined to accept. A knot of purple ribbon worn in the buttonhole has been adopted as the badge of the '95 delegation. At the opening meeting of the WIALLIAMSTOWN TOPICS. year the Pokeville Star Semi-sextette Master Ray Guerin, CSopranoj. gave any-extremely enjoyable con- Master H. J. McMurtie, QBassoj. cert. The following Well-known artists took part: Proff Wm. Hayden Baker, Pianist, QThe boy-fiend, late of the West Seignor W. M. DeB.XScu1lyfmemA' Side Family Museumj. ber de Gangj. Mr. G. King Leefrj, Soloist. EXCHANGES. Wiwlil exchange Tam-o'-Shanter for any hat in college. -Spring. iWill exchange my moustache for cubit of stature.- Ge! There E111 Will exchange my sombrero for Spring's Tam-0'-Shanter and two cents to boot. -Pomerqy. f Will exchange my room-mate for a phonographj-f G. Kzrzg Lee. Will exchange my beard for a clean shaveqt--Ogzlvze, '95, Will exchange my collection of famous Paintings for a two cent stamp. Terms cash.-R. G. Jlleaci, fr. .. WANTS. Wanted : Brainy men.-Appbf 10 '94. Wanted: Some one to take my photograph while I play the organ. -YI -Safofci. Would' like to '-fmeet some one who would teach' me how to walk. --Doc. Einsfezbz. VW'KalnitedEfi Two cuts, by two gentlemeniwith 'long hair. Apply on .pre1friis:es.Q+F0Zs0m and Eaion. if Wild Man of Borneo. . V T '11 Exchangedf ' Wanted immediately : A choir. -Apply lo College. I want some milk.-'95 Fifty men wanted to learn a new criss-cross trick. Terms in advance. Court plaster and Arnica furnished. -Appfy to Crzss-cross Largf. Wanted at once: Some one to salt me down.--Tucker, ,Q5. 1'76 WILLIAMSTOWN TOPICS. Wanted: A rea! Izbe man: foamin- structor.-Appfy ai fhe - Wanted : Some one me hard. -Freak Sawyer. Wanted : Two and three quarter Wanted : The earth.-Amhersf. Wanted: A bottle of Rubifoam. -Thomas D. 1 Wanted : A bottle of Dr. Greene's Nervura.-Ebeze. ounces of optimism.-Prex. I don't Want to be ground.--Burr. TO RENT AND FOR SALE. For hire: Rent nominal, my automatic Stroller. Works a little out ot' order, or, would exchange for a grain of reason.-.75 YT Newcomb. A Peeping Tom to rent. Specialty made of faculty meetings.-Abi. For Sale: Down for pillows picked from live geese.-Apply fo Leon B. Bacfm, If K Whz2'e, G. M Peck, or C H Wright. For Sale: job lot of freshmen. Very fresh and low.-Wwlzkzms C014 lege. A For Sale : An astronomical book- rest.-T Wardell. 4, 15 .4 :K s 'J A . QT? '-if - ' 1.2 if-'ld 2.1 ' L .fr .Z J. .sf ., We-bag, i. 'iffil 'ifz A ,. .. A, 'J , . ? 1'?f'fXb 4i Q'f-711 1 ,,JQ3i,1 f - 111 ilo J W W 1 . ix tjfg 1 S1 11 Pip' l K' 'xyfgx -1 f f. ,. 't Nbe'Zf'! v'f y uma' ' 1 - lg, 1 f 1 ag. ' '1f1:f.mgf?. 51 el P, 1JfZxx,fW,f ' 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 f 1 111 1 1-.1 , ,,.-,.- WF111 11 . x ' f ' 1 111' 1 T' 1 f'l1i5'T12'4! - .- at-WE' ' 11' I-H-5l T . 1' 11.411 X -214. B- -1' ,- N 11. x V, --:-:, , X7 7 I1 , elf ' 1 i 1 fl fl, 111 111 11 1 'H . H '1 i 11. 15 .i 11' 11 5 - I 11 11 11 1. 1 1 21 1,1 1. 11 1? I1 11. ' ,1 1' 1 1 I E 1131 1 H. 11421 E'1lf ': I1 X1 1 11, 1 :K11 1 11 vi 1 ,il 1i . 1 11 Ylf 11 11 12 1 111 fl Q1 I 1 I Q 1 11 ll 13' Q 1 15 1 1 1i 11 , 13 1151 1 iii W l' 531. 111 iii juli? 111 ll A il 1 H I T11 1 1, ii 115 1 13, ix 1 1:1 ' 321 1 1. 5. 1 'l I I' 11 .1 1 -13 F1 1t V I 1 I1 l 1 1 l 3 1 1'f I ' l I 1 Q1 Mt 1' L 1 1 1, 1 iff :1 FH ' lp 1:1 121 it 11: 11 fi if ,lil f 1 'Q 1 1 ffl lf 1 111 ll 1 1 ll? 1 1 F 1 I1 I 1 1 i1 11 1 1 11 1 I 5 11 1 1 1,1 1 , 511 'l' 111 ll 1 1 I 11 '1 1 1 1 I ll' I 11 1' It 1 lr , ll: il 1 1 1? 1 1. 1 i 1 l 1 13 ll I '1 11 ll' ll 1111 U11 1 'ln fmgi ii 11911 ' 1 1 1 I 11 S '1 5 . '1 li l11 lfi' I MII 1 '11 l l. 1 11 11, 1 1 51211 Y - YY -mm WILLIAMSTOWN TOPICS. We are advertised by our loving friends. King Henry Vl- H 7307 ml S Of 555 f J' l14f6W1fS Sent by Wmkfw , Effciiiipi' 5:25,-fziiizi ,iii A. I-If-'Z-2.-Q:-:I-I.-Q,-fQ'i i 1-LST? ' I.f'f','i::-'Qi.'f,f'Yi :-', .-:Z-3 gi-gifzii-:T-:Z-I-A ' i t Lliiwgiir' -ifgf.fQiff5f?'Zi-g1- A bl ,ff.?.1iii-Ti T'::f:.-:I-5-11--1... ffi'- vii-Z-'iiffii- P W' 574155 017 gf WWW 9 5 Eifldfffw Uf 15796 500061161106 Of 9 , ...ag-.. . ,,.,,,,,.,.,.,,.,,,.,.....it..,.,..i:..,,,.. -.-. ef . , A- L :iihaiii'-2.2.22121'1'n'-232523219 .yisssfi ' M415-111211:1-:f9:11:12-11::1:r':1:Z:'Si:4 1619112242 ' 1 112:-.5 4 f' iissssssi? .-:G'1-1:11:1:11+'1'2:S-'-1:11141-1-'1-11:-2--1-If . ,tax-.2 '- .:2:15Q?a:fh1:' 1:32e11i1E1EQ2:121:22v1. . it - l:L1xP'i- ..,. -T 31 iW51E1i25?13? 1I51:-' FOR l N FAN T8 AND IN VALIDS ae:e:fa:es:eeae:z' ' ASQ' Z 9af-523213:i:1:5:12:2:Z:i??i:f5- I O I fewsae12:s:5:1:1:2:2:a:11- Y ' -rffevjf.-53:-El-Q-:.3::-5:Ig:I-::1:2g:2::I5:1?52g5-gg., .,g..sg52iE1E:5:1EfE:3:1:rE:E:2:1s111v . 1,1-.girvzz-.194' -:f-:S--ri-5-:-:P:I-:C-12:2-:II-:1:i1::esf:.3f, ,Q:r?552i:i:1:ihmzizl-6125112-I-:f:i-3':- 52323 f .fa--252i HE OLI BE : OOD ALE 0 .,:.1.,2:s:5a:2:12:z:52:31:s:52g2--ef -'P'Ae252fseazgaizegziaigsgaasgf555555.1:g:..,:11.x5z12:5:Zg?i5l ' ' 1 , . 5:1525:IE1E:1E?2i1f:2f:1f11:f-2.... .-..-EE22?EE5525325555?ii3259ii?15SS5f5515525:221:21:1Erf:1i21:1?-535' 1-WSJZ1ai-:--:-'ri-'I--I-'ez-I-:I--:IA-:Z-:1-:D :I-'.-I-L-1-'Z-:--K-:Z-: -I-1--2-:1:1-1-:izrzzezrselrf-1-:-:3-ffi213g:':: :--2-'I-'Z-'Z-'--I-'I-:fat-'-ff :-:.f1-1.:.+-.- . -+f+1.::fsy:H2' ,'QIESSSEZIE:12:Zf:2f:1:E:2g2tgE:4' m1q:55::f::5g::::,:5::5f:gwee I , , lggggfgfzj' un.,- ,.::3yigf3,Q, - ..:.-:-:t5:2g:f3E5:ig.52f,g1- 130511011 MIIISS- .. . 555: f:3f11i1 Z1XX -,N 122.55155 12'-g3'.-21g:'.-,..- .. -L ' ' XNNXXX 1.32, -,.:-:CA i TINVITES CORRESPONDENCE. in 7 ' in 1' . W. YOUNG MARSH, Billville, Mass. When you write, please mention WILLIAMSTOWN TOPICS. A MARKET FOR PRODUCTS I8 PRODUCTS IN MARKET. DO YO WE R PANTS? F. R. WOODWARD, Agt., 5 East College. Our sole representative for this town is located as above, and will take measures for the FAMOUS PLYMOUTH ROCK SB3, 33.75, SB4.25, 35.25, 556.25 and 37.25 PANTS, Cut to Order, as well as SUITS and OVERCOATS at proportionate prices. A deposit required of 31.00, on Pants, and 353.00 to 35.00 on Suits and Overcoats, the balance to be paid on delivery of goods. Our representative will show a tine lot of over two hundred samples in the piece to select Hom, and will be pleased to have you call upon him. A package containing samples of cloth, tape measure and self-measurement blanks will be given to those not in immediate need of clothing. The way to SELL goods is to have the COODS TO SELL. We LEAD, but never FOLLOW. Headquarters: u to 25 Eliot St. Annex, 695 Washington Street, I9 Summer Street, ' ' Sl Green Street. BOSTON MASS 249 Washington Street, 178 T A WILLIAMSTOWN TOPICS. THE ELLIS KINDERGARTEN PINKVILLE, ILL. being paid to the connection of thought. Ideal home training. Pets- such as mice, horse-pistols and cigarettes not allowed. Buildings kept at a uniform temperature. Wood placed on registers every hour. Special instruction in Horace and the art of controlling men. PINK I. ELLIS, PRINCIPAL. MRS. P. I. ELLIS, MATRON. E. H. I-IOTALING. H F AVERY HOTALING ec AVERY, BROKERS. LOCAL INVESTMENT SECURITIES. STOCK IN VVILLIAMSTOVVN 'l'oPIcs FOR SALE WAIQRANTED TO GO OUT OF SIGHT.-W07'g'd7'l BzIz'!dz'ng. Just Out!! Steinerls Spelling Primer. I SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO BIOGRAPHICAL AND GEOGRAPHICAL NAMES .... Published by N. F. SMITH 6: CO. Thorough and systematic educational advantages, special attention MATI-IERS VARIETY COMPANY, WILL Pos1TIvELv APPEAR AT THE VV'rnStOW1d Qpera HouSe,I FO R Ioo . NIGHTS - BEGINNING . APRIL . 15th. Sale of seats now opened at Company's Gffice, 7 MORGAN BLOCK- . 179 7 .--.i--...- Uwe jfeetewne llyarb. I WONDER if you ever thought That Billy Maclay was poetic. Then pray but once to scan his feet! This grind is too mean ! Its pathetic! Hb Ebayer I BLAND Lyman T., a big gun, he Is with conceit o'ercharged, And though his calibre is small, His bore can't be enlarged! El Slight O11 George. TIIERE was a grave junior named Sleight Whose demeanor was calm and sedeight Because the Profs would'nt, . Or possibly could'nt X Pronounce his name properly, Sleight! jfresbman Giaxglor. NINE tailors make a man, An adage old doth state 3 To be a man then, Ewing must Produce the other eight! Discipline. THE freshman that came to old Williams Was mild, unassuming and meek 5 The Sophomores made him Walk Spanish And Socrates made him trot Greek! i8o he 'IIHHLI I Q QLIYH 11111611 250 Wh? S the Religious I:.d1tor came into his office the ah., r fy ,fs-xg -M other day he saw an envelope on the table or- . . , . . ui 1 . N 4 . I - 'l li ' -Mi' , X ' 'lj 1 1 0 Q . . . it 'H , , . namented with Ebbies-farn1l1ar scrawl. I f Wonder how many cuts the angel has against 5 ....' pu- me now he muttered, as he tore open the ' 1 QE. , envelope Instead of the usual printed for- ay 4'.f , QL mula he found to his astonishment and appre- C 2 sgzsiuf , 3 ... ,,... A, -., ciative Joy the following invitation inscribed 2:1 -:': g:-gg :nf . v., .-.. .. ' ILAI: gi, ,' on a half sheet of note paper Your presence is respectfully requested at a dinner to be given at the Hash Cafe in honor of the inauguration of Pres. Fernald. QSignedj EBBIE, Secreiary offhe Faculgf. Ticketsgcan be procured ofthe Excuse Committee at I6 cents each. as Pk :nf wk :rf :sf ff X , ac As I was making my Way through the crowded streets to the above mentioned restaurant, I was obliged to Wait at a cross street until a long procession had passed. It was evidently bound towards the same des- tination as myself. Torches lit it up magnificently as it passed by. The order of march was as follows : I P Little Muckers. Big Muckers. Police. ' More Muckers. First carriage containing: y ' Pres. O., M. Fernald, Mr. Judd, JQ4, Prof., Safford, and Mr. Griffin, orators of the evening. f I 1 ' I Brass Band in donkey stage, T. Safford bass-drum. ISI Second carriage : Berry, '95 with three neckties, lVIr. H. Walden and George M. Alden, '95, Amherst Delegates. ' The Stroller. Muckers. x As I entered the room which was brilliantly illuminated by the N. P. R. N. A. L. System if I caught sight of a beautiful crayon portrait of lVIr. Myron C. Williams which, as it was placed in a conspicuous position fat his own requestj gave a tone of respectability to the whole room. In a secluded nook a diminutive bar had been set up behind which Bartow and Dodge, brave in white aprons, were industriously polishing glasses. ' A At a side table a dozenfreshmen were taking notes for the Weekly. As the feast in gastronomy was about to begin, Prof. Safford arose and said :' H GENTLEMEN :-I don't.see any ladies. Some were invited, however, and I wish that they would let me know before they go why they weren't here. I p His voice had been traveling into obscurity during theseiremarks and the next few sentences were held in suspense by his beard. V However, -and he began to draw in his breath in quick short puffs, emitting a sound like a sudden vent of steam from a cylinder- However I hope that their absence will not in the least detract from the pleasure of the evening. His voice arose in pitch and his head kept pace with it in speed of movement. Let me say in conclusion that I trust the superior quality of the food will not lead any of us into excess. - he looked signiicantly at Berry. I am sorry to see that an editor of a scurrilous publication,lknown as the Gul, has been admitted. Such men should not have tolerance in good society but we can show him at least what gentlemen look like. He sat down and fell to with zeal and his example was straightway followed. , , The exercises proper began bytoast master Griffin rapping on the table, at which signal the gentlemen ushers, Mr. Patrick Collins, Mr. Ken- dall and Mr. Robinson cleared the table with marvellous celerity. I Mr. Griffin then arose and told Professor Hewitt's story about the multiplication of the Rabbits in Australia. Then by some means he made this apply to the fact that Mr. Perkins, orator of the evening, was if See ad.. in Williamstown Topics. I82 unable to be present and introduced Mr. Wheeler, who read a paper on Books which had helped him. ' Primer QSee Ad in Williamstown Topicsj, Almanacs, Timetables, Society as I have found it, The Stroller, Wilson's Rivals, Bishop's Guilty Steiner's Speller, Natural Law in the Spiritual World, or How to Study Phy- sics in Chapel. Next by special request, Dr. Snosrap, the noted authority on Lunacy delivered in a very lady-like manner his famous speech on ff The Triumph of Idiocy as illustrated in the Morgan Hall Room Renting System. Owing however to the technicalities and logical fallacies with which it was filled, I was only able to understand, as the title had already implied that the System was little more than the outcome of the ravings of a dis- ordered mind. 1 I gl i I l Q : lx le. 22.3 il 'J 3 l I lt 4 w e Those that I remember are: Trots, Town Topics, Mapes Betting 'fl ll I n ,l J v l 3 1 I f lt l , ll l x 1 Y ill l 1 The continuity of the article was somewhat broken, for during the reading Bishop and Hartt rushed headlong through the door leading from the hall and, holding it shut, piled chairs and impedimenta against it. - The voice of Mr. Newcomb could also be heardjust beyond the keyhole saying: ' That's all right, Bishop, but if I get hold of you there will be one de- partment on that magazine vacant next issue and that department will be Sanctum. Chairs were provided for the refugees and the entertainment was about to go on when it was discovered that Gardner was trying to let Newcomb in. The offender was disposed of and harmony prevailed. Hulett and Huyck the sweet voiced duo from '93 then rendered the fol- lowing song, by special request of Professor Safford : Up in old Griffin There sits a little Proflet fair, He's a mere infant With big blue eyes and scanty hair, And if you ask me Why we raise the devil there. Don't you know, Speak it low, He's N. G. I-Ieighol Heigho I He's the Prof. for me. If once he'd ever dare to blow, We'd paint him red from top to toe. Heigho! Heigho! 'Rah for '93. The reason is, why don't you know? He's N. G. I 183 'il El l . ll l i i ll ll Th lf l i. li l I 1 I l i pig N 1 5 l i l I 1 Q I ll A Il! ill l ll mill? ll, l if ' .ll 5 Ili .44 t l F, fl lll I l film t. li will 1 lr ,g ill.. I A They then recited the following littleverse, dedicated also to Professor Ellis fresignedj : W , Little Pinky blue eyes, .With red upon his chin, The long-lost link of Darwin, Must surely have been his twin. Whiskers I Whiskers I What a Prof. ! If we could only fire him ' , We would be well off. Mr. Gnat Griffin then read by request his learned dissertation on How to Manage a Baseball Teamf' I was unable to understand it all, but the main points were as follows . - I. In selecting a team you must pick out nine men, one of whom, at least, musthave money.. II. The men's capacity for ice cream must be measured before any trips are taken. III. The manager should not trouble himself aboutsuch petty details as conveniences, money, meals or accommodations. Sandwiches and bananas are the only necessary articles of food. IV. Suits should be of the most expensive kind, without regard to pecuniary conditions. V. A manager coming out eighty orfa hundred dollars short is to be congratulated on his sagacity. The toast-master had forgotten who came next and Mr. Adams offered to read a paper which he had elaborated with -much care. The instructor CPD started to his feet and immediately riveted his own attention by his report entitled, Rules for taming Freshmen, being a scientific dissertation by a little ostrich on his own idiosyncraciesf' Some of the rules were as follows : xl. Freshmen caught bathing will be conditioned and counted a cut. tThus far an unnecessary rule.j ll. All Freshmen are expected to run a mile the tirst day, two the second and so on until the limit has been reached 5 men with heart disease will begin with two miles. III. To develop symmetry in the body, use Hfty pound dumb bells the Hrst week, and reduce the weight gradually until the men have difnculty in going through the exercises. The speaker then stated that the following appointments had been made for the year. Commandant, myself, Lieut- Colonel, Mr. Beach, ,Q4,, av remarkable athlete by the way g Model of obed- ience, Durfee, '95 5 Spirometer Blower, johnson, '95., The more important exercises were begun by Mr. Berry, substitute orator, rising and bowing tothe toast master. . Fellow students and teach- ers. Don't think that- this meal is a sample of hash house board. Don't for Heavenis sake. Don't I say I Don't '-Here there Was considerable excite- 184 H 731' on the other, and, between them the orator was choked' back -into his seat: Mr. White shouted across the table, I told Perkins to tell him, if he said a Word against this restaurant he would be ejected immediatelyf ment, for pro fem Pres. Fernald had risen on one side, and Professor Safford So between them all, Berry was put out and the oration dispensed With. Mr. Griffin now announced as the next toast, Freshmen by pro lem President Fernald. Professor Fernald was finishing a bottle of vichy, and he asked for an extension of time, so the toast master called for the poem of the evening. Mr. R. White then rose and said he had left it in his room, but if some one Would go after it he would read it. Professor Safford and Mr. Dodge each started on the run but as the former had forgotten to ask Where he roomed, and not having the sense to follow Mr. Dodge, he wandered round and around- and finally Went up to the observatory. Mr. Dodge asked for the honor of reading the poem himself but it was refused and Mr. White then 'gave the following with a great display of feeling : - So gleich Wie einer Esel Ist unser Lehrer Schwein. ' Ich sehe ihn an und Kranikheit Schleicht mir ins Herz hinein. Ich Wttnsche dass ich die Hande Aufs Haupt ihn legen darf, Schlegend ihn in die Augen Und ziehend ihn bei 'dem Bart. V ' Professor Kendall called for an English-German dictionary and looking up half a dozen words retired in high dudgeon. A iPres. Fernald had not as yet -finished his bottle and Dr. Logie was asked to speak to occupy the time. ' , As he rose, Wardell uttered a faint laugh, and the speaker turned O11 him and said hastily, A horse has four legs and one tail. Un chev-4 chev al al ont no! etait no I- mechanically replied the one ad- dressed, but could get no further and hastily left the room. W Professor Fernald, being at last ready, arose, and Wiping his beard, was about to begin, when Dr. Parsons entered the room and handed ,a small paper to Mr. White, who rose, in heated wrath. . s 4: r 185 The paper dropped near me, and I picked it up. It looked something like this- ,A4zfL M-.A,..fL zzfg ' ,JZ , , .4 P Mr. White glared at the speaker, the audience looked from one to the other. p Come, said the treasurer, hand over that twenty-nine cents. But they were used for the college, expostulated Prof. Fernald, wildly. Makes no difference, hand 'em over I The required sum having changed hands, the speaker was allowed to begin. This has been a very pleasant occasion to me, and I am very glad to be able to address you on this subject, with which I flatter myself I am quite' familiar. There are Freshmen and Freshmen. Sometimes they become Sophomores-that is, quite a number, but many are Freshmen still. , Hurrah l arose from Mr. Berry, who was listening outside, but the speaker went on, unmindful. 'F' Ifit vvasn't for the ' GUL' they might remain fresh 'till they grad- uated. All honor to the 'GUL' for its work. The religious editor, being the only member of the staff present, bowed deeply. In the present Freshman Class there are many men who ride high horses. I do not refer to translations, but I hope that this equestrianism will be of short duration, and that they will soon be brought low. At this point Prof. Russell arose, and taking out his watch, said, ex- cuse me. 186 Where are you gomg? quer1ed Prof Safford , Why Armstrong Lloyd and Merlam are go1ng to g1ve an exh1b1t1on of hypnotlsm 1n the Opera House, answered the gentleman Just named, puttmg on h1S overshoes The doorway was hardly Wlde enough for the rush that followed sor Fernald had also left by theback door he too hurr1ed away ' Toastmaster Griffin sought hard to bring them back but finding that Profes- , f I, ,eu e -,..Q,,,, u,'f: ' ' If LI : Z' ' fl' 5' --- Q,-K .1.,, , Wrjigf f ',l - Q I Z bi S '11 'P If - 'Ti- 'V ip 'fm' ! M t, V 5 ,A 1, . 4 - d '21,--L-fx -WT J., H X' I ul ,J 2, If Ii f 1 -4 -'X fn swim N., y fk.T7f1'2.'+,'-2:1111 'f ,KPN fialfffv' :Wi 5 17 txxqg JI, f fs:l,,L.x'v ..,-11,3 ,Z Ea: NA, 37.44 ' Pic. eff M.'fy:af11ilIrf.'h., , fe. f 17 vi r 1 187 Y, 11-17 ,WK , x ,gif-A. zW3hfW V 535 1' MM V 'YL Wx 2 -5' V ici! Sl!!! .QFELV . I. 1 , - ' ' Eligtb kg QI ' 1 xiii? Jw. ll 1 , sig' 1 ff! 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STARR, JEWELLER AND SILVERSMITH, 206 AVCHLIG, Madison Square, i NEW YORK. ' Q 0000 Gold and Silver watches of all grades. Chrononieteijs and timing pieces. Chains, fobs and seals in 18 karat gold. Seal rings of all kinds. ' Studs, cuff-buttons, links, scarf pins in all styles--many of them from special and exclusive designs. ' Desk furnishings in solid silver. Ink-stands, pads, blotters, calendars, rulers, niucilage pots, spirit-lamps, etc. U 4 Class cups, presentation pieces and objects suitable for prizes in great variety. ' Monograms, crests, and coats-of-arms engraved with the greatest care. Special designs made on request. XIX ffzme 5.-Jojo recommends Latin Grammar to Huyck as a very useful book. ESTABLISHED 1 818. BRCDGKS BROTHERS, Broadway, cor. 22d Street, New York City. Clothing and Furnishing Goods y for Men and Boys, READY MADE AND MADE TO MEASURE. In the de artment for Clothin to order will alwa s be found P u . g Y a large variety of foreign Suitmgs and Trouserings in desirable patterns, giving the fullest opportunity for selection. i In speaking particularly of our Ready-made stock. we may remind customers that we have special facilities for obtaining the best .qualities and the newest designs 3 that, in the cutting and making up of our garments we exercise particular' care to avoid the stiffness and awkwardness of appearance which so frequently characterize ready-made clothing, that all noticeable patterns are limited to small quantities 3 and that we endeavor to exclude every style, fabric, and cut which can be easily imitated in inferior grades of goods. . Evening Dress Suits and Ulsters for all seasons always in stock ready-made. V D Our furnishing Department offers armost completeassort- ment in that line including the proper shades in Gloves and Scarfs, Allen, Solly 81 Cois Hosiery and Underwear, andthe best makes of Waterproof Coats. Samples and rules for self-measurement sent on application. Qur location, one block from Madison Square, is convenient to the leading Hotels and easy of access from the principal Rail- way Stations in New York and vicinity. XX. , I 1 .V -ff K llc, id In l Heal ie h me iecx lb MERTENS 6: PHALEN OF TROY N. Y. Lxhibit the larbest btock uid ehoicest assortment of Sl YLIQIEI LLOI IEIINC fo Y11114' r'.-. 2 2 1 i 'S' 1 '-2 3 'Q I . I 7 ' x o- - I - , . K ' ' ' ' ' 3 1. . : : : MEN and YOUTHS : zo: to be found outside of New York, and equal to the best in that or any other city. All clothing sold by this firm is made in their own manufacturing house and is gzmrnzzfeezz' to give Satisfaction in lit, style and quality ol? materials, or money refunded. K Their prices are from twenty-live to forty per cent. lower than other dealers. TRY TI'llEM. lXfIERTENS cgc PPIALEN, MANUFACTURING CLOTHIERS, RIVER, GR'AND 8: 4th STS., FFROY, N- Y- Four Stores. Two Floors. Elevator. J. J. ALDEN. u H. M. A1,m:N. E 1.1. ALDEN Sc some Grocers, FINE : WINES : AND : LIQUORS, : CIGARS : AND : CIGARETTES. V884 1 1, 2 and 3 HARMONY BUILDING, River and Third Sts., TROY, N- X5 'lH0lZ'El56lflli bio Stubents 513119 flbews jflll'lli5lJil'lQ5 FROM The W. B. DAVIS CO., 245 Superior Street, CLEVELAND, 0. XXI DDITIE 5 o UV13N11e . E DD I N C' VH 'Q' A17 0 O .QI DICKINSON 712 WELER , W . -N f f ' 'W Y Y-' - ii A T HEADQw1'1fTEA'Spf'0ff A ON 5WD Milf-E 0092 75 .MAIN STICEEY1 Norfib Addins, IVLZSS. I?EPAI1?IA'G AND EZXGIPAVING SKILLFULLY EXECUTED. The refracfzoe errors of lhe eye delecled ,- and correcfeo' by scfenfgic adjizslmenf ofglasses. MS ' is Belie in eelng v g. Some lamps V Are tolerahl ood, X mall But who yyants a tolerably good egg? t ,Q IHTWWWW The question emphasizes the fact l,f,ff4ifplllt:1igQa'i't some things must be good and b 0'0 flt5'tjx tltolerable. There is one lamp which is good.-- THE ROCHESTER.H Simple, P3 K' Beaulmzl, Goof!-these Words mean if ' much, but to see t'The Rochester T' chester' I -C will impress the truth more forcibly. All metal, tough and seamless, and Fa made in three pieces only, it is absolufegf safe and unbreak- H able. Like Aladdin's of old, it isindeed a Wonderful lamp, R R for its marvelous light is purer and brighter than gas light, , softer than electric light and more cheerful than either. , 5 . '- l 9 ., Look for this stamp-THE Rocr-IESTER. It' the lamp dealer hasntt the genuine N- . S ' .KR Rochester, and the style you want, send to us for our new illustrated catalogue, I f and we will send you a lamp safely by express-your choice of over 2,000 varieties ti 41? from the Lazjgesf Lzzmib Siore Z-IZ ilu' PVorZn'. Xu I n ' 52563 ROCHESTER LAMP CO., 42 Park Place, New York City. 9355 25? 2? 'tThe Rochester. 99 NHOA MEIN '3OV'Id BIHVC! Z17 'INOOHSEFIVS 'SAOO dWV l HELLSBHOOH El-LL :IO E:lOIH3.l.NI Y , ,,,, '3SVd 3J..ISOclelO NO .LN3W3SIJ.H3AClV dlNV'l ESS H Few, Ny W ,,, ,,,,,2?Qi,f,2mnf,? M-W-W--Hf W fT5m-..v.Q :HL-. K..Q,M .1a... ,f M14 ' ft!! yifjjl' 10,-Ol , 1 I. I I I CHARLES F. LUCAS, Confectioner and Caterer, 1 A No. I2 Second Street. TROY, N. Y. The Springfield Republican A11 Independent, C omplefe cmd. Able Newspaper. THE REPRESENTATIVE JGURNAL QF NEW ENGLAND ESTABLISHED IN I824, By SAMUEL BOWLES. , Special attention given to Sporting and other News from the c New England Colleges. DAILY 58g SUNDAY Szg WEEKLY Sl., TI-IE? VV EEDKXLY A 12-page paper of superior merit, will be sent tree for one month, to any one who Wishes to try it. Address THE REPUBLICAN, Springneld, Mass. ffzrm' 15.-I-I at weather an I inuals begin. xviv 9' 9'9 I9 f xxu f 1ReeIer's Restaurant 'WS mx J13roabwaQ a11b fllbaiben lane Ellbamg, 114. 19. Wt. 1b. 1keeIer, llbroprietor Yum' 20.-'1l'Lllllxh Z'Ll1Llg11lblN'g tu ,U 1 IX c-. . Campbell, Hurlburt 6: Day, Ole alfa CYCLES. ROW BOATS. . All the leaders. O 'L Some of the finest' GYMNASIUM SUITS FENCING GOODS. of every variety. Our Specialty-French Coulerex V blade ES, Hjust look at them! H A519 Broadway, Albany, N. Y. Hecldqucm'e1'sfor Class Pgoes, Fmiermzy Pipes cmd C ones. Cyou will fincl it to youz aclvcmtacqe to look, at my otoclz, wlzlclz lo tlzef lcnzcgeot lilo tlzlo Jaazt of tlzef Qftatef, oefozef pwaclzaolfzg eloefwlzezef, cg make! ouclz cgooclo cz opecialty ao are Lloecl 6 tl CW!! 6 ll f y ze! memo ol I lame o ecgcy, ag pzlceo wlzlclz muot ,move oatlofactozy. cg Jolzyty wants they eaztlzn wllena cg oell 41, pipe, and lzeep ouch . cgoocln ao you uae, O7 :lo all lzlnclo of ,oipef ze- palzlntg.. gome anal oee mef colzen, you, aze lilo Clgozilz qZ,3lclanw, at ergo. 8 Qlfgamlzall Qftzeekn. Johm ecifaoerv, xxvi. 7 fyN71L' 23--Fillill performance of the opera. E. L. AVERELL, - . . IWUVATE . 7 PooL AND BILLIARD . . . PARLORS FIRST-CLASS CUES AND BALLS. THREE POOL TABLES I NOQ4 MAIN STREET, NORTH ADAMS. -IO HN A. WALDEN. XVARREN J. C RAXVLEY WALDEN 85 CRAWLEY, FINE T O Book - and- Job - Printers. Special attention paid to Menus, Pro- grammes, and all kinds of Commercial W'ork ....,. 81 MAIN STREET. NORTH ADAMS,-MASS. ARTISTIC NQVELTIES IN FINE WALL APERS. Room Mouldin gs and Wvindow Shades. The choicest line of goods ever displayed in the city. Comprising all grades, both Foreign and Domestic. Estimates cheerfully given on all branches of DECORATING, PAINTING and FRESCOING at . . H. S. DICKSONS, 267 RIVER ST., TRoV, N. Y. 7Ij1Ig' gf.--Coxnm 1 ll 1 1 X N11 Sepf. 24.-SOC. herds the Freshmen into Chapel. WILMARTH HCDTEL, STAIVIFORD, VT. QSSQVU SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO THE PREPARATION OF ELECIANTLY AND RICHLY SERVEOSIIPPERS FOR LARGE OR SIAALII PARTIE s. OQVWSQ FR.E.D.'APAL.RA.DflSE, I .. .4 PRORIHETGR. REACI-IEIJ BY TELEPHONE.. F EDERICK M THER - o Coal- Merchant. - .- Delaware and Hudson Canal CO's and Delaware, P Lackawanna 81 W. R. R. CO's Coal. . .... ALL RAIL COAL A SPECIALTY. OFFICES: POST-OFFICE BLOCK, AND B. F. MATHER,S STORE, MAIN STREET. WWSQ REQUESTING YOUR PATRONAGE, GUARANTEE' PERFECT SATISFACTION. xxviii. 3 5319- 26--V. M. C. A. rec 1' N f , . . rngh. ep 1011. exxcoinlx tells lion hc inn a newspaper, S0l,l,r,,,,0,-C9 did not E. . Bouoi-iToN at co., M Fin Hats. w 248 River Street, Troy, N. Y. T he Headless Horsemani of Sleepy Hollew. S ' 25554 'fm' H S ,,,,,, if X - C + C MP7-r.ir 'lllllllllW ll N:-252' sl' s C . .1 V. , 1- , la, twig , - - r . 1 tim KH f a s ' H 0 L L i5i-fig , ' This souvenir Coffee Spoon of New York appeals to the most cultured. On the bowl is depicted the Headless Horseman rendered so famous in the sketch of Washington Irving, while the handle is surmounted with the statuette of lchabod Crane, the old school master. The spoon is more interesting hom the tact that both the etching of. the Headless Horseman in the bowl and the figure of the pedagogue have been taken trom F. O. C. Darley's illustration of the story as told by lrving. We will send it to any address,..price, SS2.25g with gold lined bowl 52.50. Send for complete price-list of souvenir spoons, diamonds, 8cc. J. H. JOHNSTON do CO., 17. Union' Square, N. Y. DIAMONDS, WATCHES, JEWELRY, SlLVERVVARE. 5. 1-1. FLAGS, Livery, Sale and Boarding Stables 57 Main Street, NO,rth Adarns, Mass. o 0 0 Good Horses and Carriages Furnished at Short Notice on Reasonable Terms. Hacks to and from all Trains. xxix. Scif. 26.-Prof. G. Peck makes his debut. Q 1 Sfjff. 2cS,.-1Xfl3CMUl'l'Zl3' is going to win back the CIIZIIDPIOIISIIIIJ. THE GREYLGCK, ' ' ooo Livery and Boarding Stables, ALSO Ornnibus and Baggage Transfer to and frorn 41 all 'trains to any part of the Village. Order, slate at the Stables, Hotels and Severance Drug Store' Y V lVI-. VV. THOMAS Sc CO. . XXX THOMAS MCMAHQN LI ERY STABLES, .IVIAIN AND SOUTH STREETS, ' f WILLIAIVISTOWN, NIASS. 44445408 - PRICES REASONABLE. - 44!S4444f4v LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE TO NEW YORK, BOS TON, BUFFALO, ALBANY, TROY AND ALL A PLACES INTHIS VICINITY. Od. 6.-Avery's tennis tonrnzunent begins. Plumbing and Gas Fitting Agent fOr' 'Che Furman Promptly Attended to Steam and Hot Water Heaters. B. H. SHERIVIAN, Hardware, Stoves, Furnaces . if House Furnishing Goods, Paints and Oils. I Nb- ' WIS If you want the best steam and hot water heater! in the market, get the 'C Furman. It has scores of good heating pointsg it is perfectly fitted, has an unequal grate, immense radiating surface, and the price suits everybody ........ Sik mv , PRICES AND CIRCULARS ON APPLICATION. WATERMAN at MooRE, . . DEALERS IN . sm 9 vs LOIVIBER, LIME, CEMENT, DRAIN TILE, and SEWER PIPE ....... BUILDERS, MATERIALS. OFFICE AND YARD: WATER STREET, NEAR MAIN. , VVIIIIHITISIZOWTI, IVIHSS. Oct. 27.-S2ll:l.5'llZlS11 .t a . . .t O X. The STURTEVANT HUUS A NEW YORK. AMERICAN PLAN. EUROPEAN PLAN, 52-50 to S3-50 31.00 per day Pei' day- Upward. THAEA STOU'Rl'TEVA'N'T' AHKGUSE' is the niost central in the cityg near all elevated roads, street cur lines, principal places Ol-2ll'l1LlSCl1lCl'lt and large letail stores ........ All the Comforts of Home with the additional conveniences of the Metropolis is Offered our guests ...... ...... A wavy THE STURTEVANT HOUSE, Broadway, 28th and 29th Sts., New York City H. GAYLORD, DRE O' O . GOODS, Bi..AOKSfnrr3Ifgi.ORiaD p CLOAKS, SHAw1,s, l-losmiw, GLOVES AND TRIMMINGS. . . . . GERMANTOWN WOOL IN ALL COLORS. RIBBONS Au. SHADES AND WIDTHS. . Agents for FOSTER'S CELEBRATED KID GLOVES, The Celebrated P. D. CORSET. .... - 3 lVlARTlN'S BLOOK, NORTH ADAMS, Mass O - ' I . . alentine, WILLIAMS . . . I C0:0PERATlVE . . Fo.. THE . . soc1ETv. . . . . . Carpets, Draperies, . 3 . Wall Papers, . . Windew Shades, Etc. . Prices, Right. Styles, Correct. Quality, Best. Quantity, Immense. Workmen, -A No. NI. l ..OUR. SPECIALTIES. IJ. W. Valentine 107 MAIN STREET, North Adams, A Mass. J- H DAMS- w. o. ADAMS. J. H. ADAMS an SoN, R Furniture M III 6: II3 Main Street, 'SQ 9 North Adams. . . Oysters, Nuts, Fruits, Etc. lce2Cream at all Seasons. 0 6 W. O. ADAMS, Post20ffice Block, l Williamstown, Mass. The Hoosac Valley News, A RELIABLE LOCAL NEWSPAPER. l'lcI'llLLAN 6: BARBER, 2 2 2 2 Proprietors. Terms, 32.00 per year, Strictly in advance. Published every Saturday m0l'fliI'l9- Book, Commercial and Show Printing FINE WORK AND REASONABLE PRICES. Estimates on all kinds of Letter-Press Printing Cheerfully Given. 38 STATE STREET, NORTH ADAMS, Mass- Oct. 16.-Perkms wants a senior table 1n H1StOl'X'. THEPLACE TO CPURCHASE . e 'Picture Frames, C utlemf, Games, Musical Instruments, Brackets, A lhums, Pocket-Books, 'Pi,oes, jewelmf, etc., etc., 3 RAMSDELLQ9 99 CENT STORE. . Pictures Framed to Order. No. 6 Wilson Block, North Adams, Mass .. SEVERANCE C55 CO., . . T 'Druggist and Apothecaries, Post-Ojjice Block, X W illiamstown, Mass FINE IMPORTED CIGARS A SPECIALTY. .A Choice Suppbf of Confectionery Always on Hand. Prescriptions made up with Care and 'Dispatch NE YLA ND as-J QUINN, Are the Largest Dealers in Town rn V T V Groceries, Fine C igfars, Boots W slag and Rubbers, . . Gents' Furnishing Goods. 23? Dunlaps' Celehrated Hats. x Terms Lhsy. 8 9 S7-J xxxvi. A O.-,s,f.,e,-., ,f,,.'srP'ii' e - f We - f ' ' ' 'r ' ' 'f ' 'X- ' 'Q - -f i A 'W .fffiffiiiff T :Ll Q22 n Off- 3 I-ffsl-ellflll KUUSVYO Z1 Hailoweeu party and cuts Il tootli. A Fff--gi --i R O fl 1 NNN 8-A ' NM fx -N-. - Xa' . f fs W1 W ai it Qi N if R .I ' Z 'Y 5-1. --i f f --fi..QAf.L,-, ,xXn'i , '-1 i l 1 W N 1 2: ' X 'Y N XM ' 'W ffffwii-1 ff f W f f ' L ifjifi I sip W 1,1 N , 4 5 Nw, :M up T ..,, , if 111aglMsYwllllWQMipMW, fi' 'Wi' f' 1 1 W HW s ' ' I .1'1'fSfMi ':' A'-' WW - -fb! 'u J' X W4 . ll fy V 'F , -T ,J f 'X1r,iqyi,-iikfulxyf,7d'fvtj-gsfia ,N f' Y Xi'-,,Jj. 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X f T w '- ' .1 i WN X 0 N N ri N W QSQNFXQY ig.. W g, it 39 W fi T .Qxii x'x! N K.,-ill! , up QR: X X yfdzitli I 4, ' xg i y N f X .V V! . 6 . , . f ilf iw, M Q fl Iv xl Qi RSX Fi N W LW' v ' 'N Z' ff X A-I W W , 'x XX Mrs Nl X i 5 A 553 , 5 Q TNQ! 41. t i ' se ff-M YM i 545' if ffm -iii sw, Z X Y .u ii ?'S fQ-Mj . ' .W ' Mt Xi- agp' Q5 ix ng WT ,W xp .,,, .. iL,,5.T ,, I, ,Z ,i i HV- it-' I 1wg!i4,gqR.': wa-gangs qi .hw XX xi xr -QW wv t E' Emgmiiitakeailu it ,W,3Z!29!,f.Hl!ll'!f,JIM fmt? img N :gm iw'i:'4'4. U :3'iffI.e1N ' f , A N V5 4.122 r X' lie Nfvfttitli - N N 'K 'J '.w3,,5 -X Q 1 jf' .i -. ' 1 .Hy-5Q2,:'1,, 'su ' w- ' . :iii-t'.--2-viii-:xii-X 7: 1 ,I f T X Y X t 1U 'W 'ii'm f ffwlf A , f, . 1 i M . W X Q X 4 f -'L: my-'f f,-J., ,f f ' I T' 'X Qx If 1 'i!W '-, 10QW'ifii3U i V 3 'TTf ?,! xx N X X O N I J ' W i y iiiliiiiffilii fi it W ' Q- N- 1 Q xxasismagil q Qi.3:ii,5-r.w:5'Xiv ig' ni -WjQ1..IU'lf P pl WI X E Y K ig ' vxyemgy 54 , KQBSLT iaiggllllll L 5 K-jf l- It N X A Q-y,VLxWv,i, x Xxx N xp- Q M J, ia- , L Xiglghv , ,Avi TALQXYE , ,HI z EL I! ' Wk fl' . T B x, 1914, lvl, fl , , If-2 , 26 rg- -- X ,L x 'H' l ' cb ,. by ffvxj ft, Xi-an f Q, gf'-P72 ff! sd XX l E v ' Q wks' X N 71.4-' . li! Z ':-71 W Sepieovffl ii jidQi,3 New ' N wus ig 'A 1 'lENAL , A copy of the most el b' I . egant 1CyC e catalogue ever issued, descriptive of our new styles for 1892, wlll be sent to any address on receipt of three two-cent stamps. POPE MFG. CO. 221 COLUMBUS AVENUE BOSTON, MASS. 12 WARREN STREET, NEW YORK. 291 WABASH AVENUE, CHICAGO. HARTFORD, CONN FACTORY I Nlm. 0.--Freshmen rush the Soplmomores. GUI meeting tl I y t upted. DORI os AN MILITARY AND ORCHESTRA -1 SIC A .. FURNISHED 1 AT : SHORT :NOTICE. . 159' f , CHARLES DORING, LEADER, 88 SECOND STREET, TROY, N. Y. iff? 'KI-If Pa rasols 8 Wkxxe- A M, FINE SILK AND Umbrellas X Walkingsticks , ' MAKER. - d' ' NA Y Ik. A CLASS CANES A SPECIALTY 684 Broa way, ew or - Mansion - House. M. CROWLEY, Proprietor. American Plan: TRUY, N, Y A-A-H LEE L tafraid. I'IaVCI'HOI1L1IHCllfSillg. 'lm 845 1 I 5 B1 NO MERCHANT IN THE STATE I CARRIES A LARGER OR BETTER STOCK OF GENTS' UNDERWEAR, QENTS' SHIRTS, QENTS' COLLARS AND CIIEES, GENTS' CLOVES OR GENTS' NECKWEAR THAN WILL BE SHOWN YOU AT F.REAR'S TROY BAZAAR. I NO ESTABLISHMENT IN THE STATE HAS A BETTER STOCK OE SUITINGS I TO SELECT FROM OR A BETTER CUSTOM TAILORING DEPARTMENT THAN WILLIAM H. FREAR. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED AT THE TROY CASH BAZAAR. xxxix. gx csn.-Jl1ddl2ltCf lpl s tl 1 1111 1 I 1 fl lb-fshed 18580 Breese's Restaurant. 18 Third Street, Troy, N. Y. W. H. BREESE, Proprietor. M. M. GAVITT 1. I-IAS RE-OPENED HIS Liver - Stable WITH NEW HORSES, CARRIAGES AND HARNESSES Summer visitors especially are invited to try stock. Satisfaction is guaranteed. Students who try our horses 1 always come again. Landaus, Single and Double Car- riages of all kinds on reasonable terms, and at short notice. ....... ' . I I A , L lf Dec. 5.-Schweiny I-lunl-:S in chemistry. THIS IVIAY INTEREST YOU! I At your request we will send you Samples of WALL PAPERS by mail free. YOU WILL FIND OUR PRICES EXTREMELY LOW. When Writing for Samples please mention the kind of rooms they are wanted for also the size of the rooms including height ......... WALES Sz CRANE, - . . Y. DEALERS IN FINE WALL PAPERS ' 973 RIVER ST' TROY, N AND RooIvI MOULDINGS. . . - NEAR THE MONUMENT- ,L ,,,, , LF, ,,,, , .-W-Q WILSO - HOUSE. NORTH ADAIVIS. 'LA LONG FELT ,WANT. E. S. LALIBERTE, MERCHANT TAILOR, 1 REPAIRING AND CLEANING DONE IN FIRSVCLASS I STYIE AT Low PRICE. CLUB SUITS FORMING- Wl-IITESI BLOCK. WILLIAIVISTOWN, IVIASS. I Dec 22.-Freak Sawyer wears a stove-pipe in Troy. I II III IV V VI VII VIII IX X XI CI H RYIIYERICRN . JOHN QUINCV ADAMS, By John T. Morse, Jr. . ALEXANDER HAMILTON, By Henry Cabot Lodge. . JOHN C. CALHOUN, By Dr. H.Von Holst. . ANDREW JACKSON, By Prof. Wm. G. Sumner. . JOHN RANDOLPH. ' By Henry Adams. . JAMES MONROE, By Pres. D. C. Gilman. THOMAS JEFFERSON, By John T. Morse, Jr. . DANIEL WEBSTER, By Henry Cabot Lodge. STIXTESYIIYEN- XII. XIII. XIV. XV. XVII. XVIII. XIX. XX. JOHN MARSHALL, By Allan B. Magruder. SAMUEL ADAMS, By James K. I-Iosmer. THOMAS H. BENTON, By Theodore Roosevelt. XVI. HENRY-CLAY, By Carl Schurz ftwo volumesj. PATRICK HENRY, By Moses Coit Tyler. GOUVERNEUR MORRIS, By Theodore Roosevelt. MARTIN VAN BUREN, By Edward M. Shepard. XXI. GEORGE VVASHINGTON, By H. C. Lodge, ftwo volumesj., - ALBERT GALLATIN, XXII. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, By John Austin Stevens. By John T. Morse, Jr. . JAMES MADISON, E XXIII. JOHN JAY, X BY SYCIUQY Howard Gay- By George Pellew. - JOHN ADAMS, XXIV. LEWIS CASS, BY.I0hU T- MO1'Se,J1'- By Prof. C. A. McLaughlin. . Each volume 16mo, cloth, gilt top, 31.25. Invaluable to the student ot' American history. -New I'ork.Examz'ner. The Educational value ot' such books is not to be easily overestimated. To young men especially they will be a political llbrary ot the utmost value. -Boston Traveller. - 3 3 For sale by Booksellers. Sent post-paid, on receipt of price by the Publishers. I-IOUGHTON, IVIIFFLIN 81 CO., BOSTON, ANTON REUTI-IEE, Meats, Gamewf' Poultry, MANUFACTURER OF f Bolognas and Sausages xlii. s....,, .- ....1'L-nunaxua-x,ee1sf:2?eef P L . . i V ?'zr1z.x8.j1lIea1'S Ioquiter: Mr. NVIICCICI' this is t , EMEMBER! O 5-'WSU IS TH E POPULAR SHOEIST OF ORTI-I ADAMS Main Road, Opposite the Wilson 'VS HE largest stock of Gents Shoes m the county All the leadmg styles of Sportmv and Dress Shoes as well 'is the ity of goods Trunks Travellng Bags line line of Um brellas and Canes Come and be convmced as to Style PFICC and Q,11l1ty F. N. ' Opposite the Wilson, ' NORTH ADAFIS, Flass 1 . . R Y, I D y . ' . . C I , 6 medium grades. Will never be undersold for equal qual- 9 96111. Q.-Lundy leans t'orwarc,l and falls on his back TACQNIC INN, ,OPEN YEAR ROUND, STEAM HEAT. OPEN FIRE PLACES. A Most Desirable Family Hotel. , Rfsf:s171.s..s5i.ggz3a1'Ss WM. ST. LAWRENCE, Williamstown, Mass. A1s0Weantinaug Hotel, NewMilf0l'd,C0l1l1- Select Family Hotel on the line of the Housatonic Ft. R. Open From June to November. Address. Wm. sr. LAWRENCE, A Williamstown, Mass. Hoosac Tunnel Route. . Superb Equipment, Excellent Train Service, Fast Time and Courteous Employees Make the FITCHBURG RAILROAD THE FAVORITE LINE from Troy, Albany, Saratoga, Lake George, Adirondack, and Catskill Moun- tains, Syracuse, Rochester, Buffalo, Niagara Falls, Hamilton, Toronto, Cleveland, Detroit, Cincinnati, Chicago, St. Louis, and all points VVest, Southwest and Northwest to Boston and New England. Fast Express T rains with elegant Palace Parlor and Sleeping Cars to and from Chicago and Boston, and St. Louis and Boston, via Niagara Falls, with: out change. A THE POPULAR ROUTE from New York and Troy for-Pali points in Vermont and Canada. THE ONLY LINE RUNNING through cars, without change, from New York or Boston to Rutland, Brandon, Middlebury,Vergennes, Burlington and St. Albans, Vt. THE PICTURESQUE ROUTE between Boston and St. Albans, St. Johns, Ogdensburgh, Ottawa, Montreal and Quebec. - Elegant Palace Sleeping Cars to and from Montreal and Boston without change 'For Time Tables, Parlor and Sleeping Car accommodations, or further information, apply to any Agent ofthe Fitchburg Railroad. J. Ft. WATSON, C. A. NIMMO, A General Pass. Agent, Boston, Mass. f Gen'l NVest. Pass. Agent, Troy, N. Y. xliv. .- W.--vw... - -E-nga, CI-IAS. A. SPENA Merchant 2 Tailor 'CARRIES' IN STUCK ALL TI-IE. BEST IMPORTED SCOTCH TWEEDS, CLAYIS AND MARTIN,S FINE ENGLISH WORSTEDS AND THE VERY BEST MAKES GF FRENCH AND GERMAN CLOTHS AND CASHIVIERES AND GIVES SPECIAL ATTENTION TO FASHION. MY GOODS AND GARMENTS ARE ALWAYS NEW AND IN THE CORRECT STYLESQ ' 3O7-3OO EULTDN STREET, ' I TRQY, N. Y. JENKINS fs. co., FURRIERS - AND - I-IATTERS. AGENTS FOR HEATH'S LONDON HATS, Felt, Silk and Pull-over. CORRECT : STYLES : AND : UNSURPASSED.: QUALITY. A well-selected line of Mackintoshes, Eton and Oxford Caps, Umbrellas and Canes. - - - Ourirepreseniiative MR. GREENOUGH will show a full line of samples at regular inter- vals during the college year. Agent, 1 West College. - 407 WASHINGTON STREET, BOSTON. NEW IVIAII. HANDSOMEST . ' BEST SAFETY. . ' THE BEST MEDIUM-PRICED SAFETY YET SHOWN I Si? 5100.00 255 A A A A A fvw Qfifll j . 4 Tangent Spokes, Cushion Tires, Diamond Frame, 7 ALL PARTS INTERCHANGEABLE. vvlvl. READ aa soNs,. MANUFACTU RERS, Send for Catalogue. WaShinQtOni Boston, Mass., xlvi. ...Q-lvqi.5QA,diw L ,y-E4 J mi l p l r - , V4 w x 1,1 in .1 W-.V ,jx 5 , , V ROY HOUSE TROY, N. Y. 56 W. F. KELLY, Manager. FREDERICK JACOBSON, Proprietor. ESTABLISH ED 1869. Nlolleson Bros. Company, PAPER, TELEPHONE, 842 CORTLANDT. Beekman St., NEW YORK CITY. Paper of Every Description Made to Order. -,.1.i..-- The Paper in this Book was furnished by us. xlvii. NUR :E- ,F : ,- ww , H - -.W ' , Ai Hs a 5 E xrf-vi: ' gil' J r fi. Q 1 'C x Q. 'r 'za Viz 1 .Lf .f ' A . ,L , a, ,5 , - dam g N 'EVE Q ,li Q. Nisxgg- - K 'ww +6.19 f .. ,M ' ,.-A ,, , - . . ' , , 1545 , -Q .Vp , P535 ,Q S ,M W v qv- 1: f-,'y. ',. ' ., 0- Q5 bw-4 411510 E.. ,W F. l .v af K ft I -6, pX,,g ,., vi! i 54, 4 L 4? Q' sf? ,' ,qv W sr J . , V , . i V ' -I , ,, Timm! sd , 3 ' , 1 'I' 4'- is .W .,f' .1, ev- ' '- ,hy-. 4 L, ' wwf 5' '. Jz:..: z, 'Q I 1 J 4 f,?3ff'w 'E I V 4 I Q 'Zh' A , ' 1 . 3' 59 , .fm :fu , 9, 7 if ' . Q' 4, . 1 f , gy L W-,.-+f',.?v,. ' 'Pm' jo 1. 791 . -L . W .Fw 'f f ff .5 ., , V, ,, , , ww' ww -L ,- -, gf . f -in i',.kNz1r L gg Q, '04 Q 19 .Aa .Ai Q 'T' '33 Tl Vt H ,g, Q - A A- LW '- A 1. ly ' 1, .H N i . I+ A ,Bk . . 'T' f .5 .V X ,. -2.4, un I: Q 'sal , 5 , Aw N1 1-3 ,.ug. f?4?2Eif2if .N, q., Cdlege Gazbns for Gl'6l6ZZl6ZfZ'O7Z cz Speczkzlyf. rife for Samples. E' X HS E111 AGENTS NEW YORK ei'- AVL 5599 TS NDON DERBYQSI 1 HATS and Q xfordl ape, for 4 LASSES affgggglal rafes . ER T- S o evemgy 21 - f- Z if EC LO 1 ,,.. fllbjfjlffljuillgjiijm in 7' H - h-- Q gg, gf-I4 PEUISUJNEGF 4 -- , Q1OVe5fw,,Cap5,Furl4necK Gvercoadsv H QOTRELJWD LEONARD '1 , u72.wu7L1 l5V051dW5.VALBAHY.N.Y. h 'HLBROWN-NewYofk I 4 151 VVA '


Suggestions in the Williams College - Gulielmensian Yearbook (Williamstown, MA) collection:

Williams College - Gulielmensian Yearbook (Williamstown, MA) online collection, 1884 Edition, Page 1

1884

Williams College - Gulielmensian Yearbook (Williamstown, MA) online collection, 1888 Edition, Page 1

1888

Williams College - Gulielmensian Yearbook (Williamstown, MA) online collection, 1890 Edition, Page 1

1890

Williams College - Gulielmensian Yearbook (Williamstown, MA) online collection, 1895 Edition, Page 1

1895

Williams College - Gulielmensian Yearbook (Williamstown, MA) online collection, 1897 Edition, Page 1

1897

Williams College - Gulielmensian Yearbook (Williamstown, MA) online collection, 1899 Edition, Page 1

1899


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