Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT)
- Class of 1894
Page 1 of 280
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 280 of the 1894 volume:
“
--Y ' - W f -- vw .U Ayr A --a- I ES1'ABI.ISl'iED 1864. The TR VELERS OF HHRTFORD, CONN. --- is 'rim -- Largest Accident Company in the World, Larger than all others in America together Also Best of Life Companies Issurzs as ACCIDENT Poucles will Ig i01,1il'1iigr-mln, I - COVERING ACCIDENTS or - 'ff' i :-QL?-F. :g.1.',. f-'ZA' ii 1 0 ,f Gravel f Sport 5 or 5 Jsneineee -4-'.Q5- 'IAQ -jp Eli' home and abroad, No Medical Exam- i 'juli '35 ination required. Business and Pro- . fessional men, S5 a year for each 31,000 in- - surauce with 35 weekly indemnity. No extra charge for foreign travel or residence. ljfq and Endowment Poliqiqs Best in the market, non-forfeitable and world-wide. No other Life Policies as liberal cost as little money, no others as cheap give as much for the money. Assets, SI6,0I4,000. Surplus, S2,2o6,ooo. Pays all Claims Immediately on Receipt of Sut- isfactory Proofs. Returns to Policy-Holders nearly 32,000,000 n Year, Has Paid Them 325,- 000,000 in all. ...... . JAMES G. BATTERSON, P1'0S't RODIIEY DENNIS, Soc'y i I J BEST LIN E CHICAGO OR ST. LOUIS O NI A H A KANSAS CITY PAGIFIG consr Il-Q' i . ., ,... , , .,.,11-A 1. .-,. lu I OLD DOMINION INE PIER 26, NORTH RIVER, FOOT OF BEACH STREET, NEW YORK, AT 3 P. M. SATURDAYS, 4 P. M. F011 I IIUIIFULK, ULU PUIIIT UUMFUIIT, IIEWPUIIT IIEVIS, HIUHMUIIU and PETEIIS- BUIIU, Va., and WIISHIIIUTUII, U. U. MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY. THE NEW SCREW STEAMSHIPSfU JAM ESTOWN .NDYORKTOWN LEAVE NEW YORK TUESDAY, THURSDAY AND SATUR- DAY, PUTTING PASSENGERS INTO OLD POINT COMFORT IMMEDIATELY AFTER BREAKFAST NEXT MORNING. The routes which the Old Dominion Steamship Company's many railroad con- nections form offer exceedingly tempting and various ways of returning home. This Company issues tickets and checks baggage through to all important cities on the lines of and the connecting roads with the NORFOLK AND WESTERN RAIL- ROAD, the CI-IESAPEAKE AND OHIO RAILWAY, the RICHMOND AND DANVILLE SYSTEM, the SEABOARD AIR LINE and connections, and other roads. Tickets include meals and stateroom accommodations on this Company's ships. For staterooms, parlor and sleeping car accommodations through to destina- tion, apply to PECK 84 BISHOP, AGENTS OLD DOMINION STEAMSHIP CO. 102 Chapel Street, New Haven, Conn. ii The Bridge Teachers, Agencies, Q. A. SQOTT 6' CO., PROPRIETORS, BOSTON AND CHICAGO. 'EE' One Fee Registers in Both Offices. ' Agency Manual Free to Any Address. 'EE' ' We have placed teachers in the following New England cities : Augusta, Maine. Bath, Maine. Beverly, Mass. Boston, Mass. Brewer, Maine. Brockton, Mass. Bridgeport, Conn. Cambridge, Mass. Chelsea, Mass. Concord, N. H. Deering, Maine. Dover, N. H. Eastport, Maine. Everett, Mass. Fitchburg, Mass. Gloucester, Mass. Hartford, Conn., Haverhill, Mass. Lawrence, Mass. Lewiston, Maine. Lowell, Mass. Lynn, Mass. Malden, Mass. Manchester, N. H. Middletown, Conn. Nashua., N. H. New Bedford, Mass. New Britain, Conn. Newburyport, Mass. New Haven, Conn. ' New London, Conn. Newport, R. I. Northampton, Mass. Norwalk, Conn. Old Town, Maine. Pawtucket, R. I. Pittsfield Mass. , Providence, R. I. Quincy, Mass. Rockland, Maine. Salem, Mass. Soinersworth, N. H. Somerville, Mass. Springfield, Mass. Taunton, Mass. Waltham, Mass. Woonsocket, R. I. Wo1'cester, Mass. Marlboro', Mass. We have placed teachers in lfcfcfztyfflzzz' of the cities included in this list during the last year, and infzriy-lhrce within the last three years Outside of New England we have filled positions in every State and Territory in the United States, with two exceptions. In the Southern, Western 'and Middle States we have filled several college positions. Oilices: 110 Tremont St., Boston and 211 Wabash Avo., Chicago. 6 El ' 'll 61311811 m6l'lC8Yl NSLIIISUCC O. M Mew lpork. STATEMENT JANUARY 1, 1894. PAR VALUE DESCRIPTION MARKET VALUE 51.397.78.000 United States, New York City und Brooklyn City Bonds. .... .SI,43O,884-00 200,000.00 St. Louis, Portland, Ore., Atlanta and Nashville City Bonds.. 200,000.00 1,548,800.00 Railroad Bonds .... ................. . ... ...----..-..--.----....... 1,651,215.00 25,000.00 Western Union Telegraph Company Bonds .... 26,125.00 50,000.00 Maryland Steel Company Bonds. ............ - . 50,000.00 1,oo3,350.00 Railroad Stocks .......... ---. ................ . 1 ,2S9,655-00 104,075.00 New York City Bank Stocks ................ , 164,165-00 130,000.00 New York City Gas Companies' Stocks. .... . 168,500.00 50,000.00 Standard Oil Trust Stock .... ,.... .......... . . . 76,500.00 44,000.00 Western Union Telegraph Company Stock.... . 36,520.00 1,000.00 Underwriters' Salvage Company Stock ...... 1,000.00 54,554,009-00 S5,D64,564.00 Cash in Banks ............... .... S 3Q3,5l7-69 Cash in Trust Companies ................ .. 46,031.67 C8311 in OFHCB ............................... .... x 0,388.36 Cash in hands of Department Managers .............. 24,092.52 Cash in hands of Agents and in course of collection.. 418,808.86 Real Estate ...-....--- ' .... ---- . . . . . . . . . ....... ......... 4 o,ooo.oo 932,839.10 Total Assets.. ..--. .... .... ..S5,997,403.IO Unearned Premium Reserve ....... .... 5 2,700,610.30 Unadjusted and Unpaid Losses.. ..... 555,669.38 Commission and other Liabilities., .... . 83,761.72 CAPITAL STOCK .... . ............ . . x,ooo,ooo.o0 4,34o,o5o.40 Surplus beyond all Liabiliticsu... ........ ...SI,657,252.70 E. OELBERMANN, President. JNO. W. MURRAY, Vice-President. JAS. A. SILVEY, 2d Vice-Pres. and Sec'y. GEO. T. PATTERSON, 3d Vice-Pres. ll5 BROADWAY. NEW YORK. iv ln American Life, Journalism Plays an Important Parti Qt X52 21? The Greatest of American Newspapers is Gbe Mew 112orh Gribune. s its jk Invariably on the right side of popular ques- tions, always taking the side of reason, sound judgment, the welfare of the whole country and the honor of the United States. No young man can choose a better compan- ion for life than Ztbe Gribune. 1851 1894 E PHOENIX I MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF HARTFO RD, CONN ECTICUT. Is one of the strongest and best Life Companies in the Country. Our new forms of Lllfl-2, ENDOWMEN1' and Lu-'12, ENDOW- MENT and ANNUl'rv Pomcuss have all the liberal features endorsed thereon: EXTENDED INSURANCE, CASH VALUES, LOAN PRIVILECIES AI!! PAIDfUP VALUES. Incontestable After Two Years. A Our new 3x2o Policy is a Low Price Insurance and Invest- ment Contract. Our new IOXZO INs'rALLMEN'r Pomcv is the lowest price Life Insurance Contract issued by any old line company in the world. In 1893 the business of the Company shows an increase in each of the following items: ASSETS, SURPLUS, NEW PRENIUNS, INSURANCE WRITTEN, INSURANCE IN FORCE. JONATHAN B. BUNCE, President. CHAS. H. LAWRENCE, Secretary. JOHN M. HOLCOFIBE, Vice-Pres. A. A. WELCH, Actuury. I 'THE cgiwrww UE' The Best Shoe Made for Man. When we make the above Announcement We mean just this: ' It is made in Proper Style, Q Of the Best of Material, By the Best Custom Workmen we can Hire. It is not like hundreds of factory-made Shoes, made for shoe dealers to sell at 33.00, 34.00, 35.00, 3126.00 and 37.50, through expensive advertising. We do an immense business in Boston, New York, Philadelphia and other large cities on our CRAWFORD SHOE alone, and we do it on the GOOD REPUTATION of our Shoe. Think of this: visit one of our stores, and examine the Shoes for yourself. They are JUST AS GOOD as they look. WE NEVER SELL DUB SHOE T0 IJEALEHS. BRANCH CRAWFORD SHOE STORES: NEW HAVEN, HARTFORD, No. 808 Chapel Street, 247 Main Street, Corner Orange. South of Asylum. BOUV E, CRAWFORD 6: CO. ICORPORATIONJ MAKERS or Tm-: CRAwro1ux Sums AND P1101-R11-:'roRs 01-' ALI, 7 Clmwl-'oven Suolc STORES, BOSTGDN. U. S. FE. The educated man, whose brain is his capital, is preeminently the man who should carry insurance on his lifeg and for any man, the time to begin insuring is when he is young. Gbe fllbassacbusetts flbutual life Tlnmlrmlce OF SPRINGFIELD, VIASS. Issues a policy that is easy to understand and solid enough to rest upon: the guaran- teed return in case of discontinuance is a liberal feature of the greatest importance to the insured. Gbe fllbassacbusette flbutual life 1Insurance Assets 3 1 4,48o,48o.8o Liabilities I3,46O,I 63.84 Surplus . I,O2O,3I6.96 Fl. V. B. EDGERLY, President. JOHN A. HALL. Sec t y G GO THE ALE CLASS BQQK '94 WILLIAM .IOSIAH TILSON, EDITOR 4' Q NOVP A L' Wmnsumx f , , I . we , U Q ,cm xr: 690 S' 33 : O gg Q 1 K1 'C' 'ZA 2 5 Q as U' 7' O 1 I - - .1 L11 Q 4 5 E G it CJ 1 I 5 1 i ' ' '-9, 'J M . 5.59 '.'l '7 'l'1Ivlv Im:vlvfv'l 'mn' YALE UNIVERSITY NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT MAY, 1894. THE CLASS, . FORMER MICAIIIERS, NEW RECRUITS, IN MEIIIORIAM, FRESIIMAN YEAR, SOI-IIOMORE YEAR, JUNIOR YEAR, SENIOR YEAR, LITERARY, EDUCATIONAL, MUsIc, . RELIGIOUS, SOCIAL, FINANCIAL, POLITICAL, PERSONAL, ATHLETICS, . PI-IYSICAI., MISCEI.LANY, NICRNAMES, FUTURE OCCUPATIONS, OE1-'IcERs, . . SENIOR CI,Ass OFFICERS, FUTURE ADDRESSES, Contents. PAGE. I 65 69 72 73 81 35 95 101 IOS I IQ 124 I28 134 139 142 150 160 167 177 186 190 192 193 Preface. In preparing THE CLASS Book I have endeavored to give to the class as many things of interest and in as accurate a form as possible. The small half-tone picture of each man in connec- tion with the history will, it is hoped, turn out to be a recog- nized improvement in the book and make it a souvenir indeed. I am under obligations to Leete for materially assisting me in the business management of the book. Class Photographers Pach Bros. very kindly helped me with the pictures. Dr. Seaver assisted me in compiling the physical tables. Reed, Paine, Fowler and F. C. Perkins have written the Years' His- toriesg Worthington, the Dedicatory Poem, Arbuthnot, the Musicalg Sallmon, the Religiousg Eno, the Literaryg Skinker, the Athletics, and Judson has helped with various suggestions. Our dear classmate, Harrington, has kindly helped me in 'varzbus ways. WlI,LIAM TILSON, May. 1894, Dedication. Storm and sunlight in the sky Hold alternate supremacy, After the grim night is gone Gleams the laughing light of dawn, Wintry branches, bleak and bare, u Freight with bloom Spring's balmy air, And so we greet with furtive tears These records of four smiling years. From far lands and foreign shores, By devious ways, some stern to fare, Warriors we w11o mustered here, Beleaguering 'round Wisdom's doors- Stubborn doors, the needle's eye To blundering camels of our band, And swathed in densest mysteryg All knowledge tedious tomes command. Yet lustier backs for bravcr gains Have bucked and broken learning's line, With scalpel gaze and lancet brains Ripped deftly thro' the bitter rhineg That wards for grasp and gorge divine The fabled fruit of Paradise, Soaring far sun-wards, eaglewise, Thro' esoteric subtleties. Still some have loitered in the rear Inglorious, and shall not be near To share the triumph, loud and large, Gracing our honorable discharge. And some have fallen-nay, farewell, Farewell, old friends, and let it tell, Tho' silent and irrevocable, No less love past forgetfulness. O, noble causc we labored in! O, kind young hearts, and keen to win Fame's pinnacle! What tho' we fail ? Let cynic earthlings rave and rail 5 What boots it so we still may cry With Cato, in our consciousness, Sempronius, we'1l deserve success! Shall we not flaunt their mockery? Ye minstrels, whose soft-twanging lyre, O'er wood, and stone, and savage breast Have wrought the web of your desire, My song should vaunt Ya1e's friendship higher Had I but learned your wizard lore. Are ac Vale, '94. RICHARD WOILTEIINK TON The Class of 1894. So might we talk of the old familiar faces. -Charles Lamb. Samuel Stokes Allen was born at Philadelphia, Feb- ruary 8, 1874. His father, Theodore M. Allen,is a retired business man. He has cousins in the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania, Johns Hopkins, Geneva and Berlin. He traces his ancestry to the eleventh century directly and Greek and English blood are in his veins. Has renowned relatives too numerous to mention. William Boyd Allison began his fruitful career at Peosta, Iowa, july 31, 1871. His father, james H. Allison, a graduate of Wooster Academy lOhioj is a farmer and country gentleman. His paternal has held all the offices of the township in which he lives. English Scotch and Welsh blood keeps him alive. Hon. W. B. Allison, U. S. Senator from Iowa. is an uncle. Gustav Albert Andreen began life at Baileytown, Ind., March 13, 1864. His father, Andrew Andreen, a minister, is a graduate of Vexio Normal Academy. He is of good old Swedish stock with a small trace of German ancestry that emigrated from Germany sometime after the Thirty Years' War. i I I I E 'f nw X lt.: YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Thomas Shaw Arbuthnot has spent most of his life in Pittsburgh, Pa., but was born at Allegheny, Feb- ruary 18, I87I, and has since learned to spiel the banjo and baseball. 'His father's name is Charles Arbuthnot, who is a wholesale dry goods merchant. Tommy never traced his ancestors, but tells us that good Scotch-Irish blood is present in his veins. Lack of time forbids him giving us an itemized list of his distinguished relatives. Raymond Holbrook Arnot began to grow at San Francisco, Cal, September 29, 1873, and has spent a good part of his life looking at the Pacific. N. D. Arnot, lawyer, University of California '69, is his father. He doesn't trace his ancestry, but mentions the fact that he has several relatives graduates of Wellesley, Vassar and Harvard. f William Bacon Bailey, following a natural prefer- ence, was born at Springfield, Mass., May 7, I873, where he could easily get to Hamden Park in time to hold a seat. His father, William L. Bailey, is a farmer. English and Scotch blood in about equal proportion travels in his veins. Old Mother Bailey, who tore up her petticoat to make wadding for a cannon during the Revolutionary War, is mentioned as a distinguished relative. Harry Samuel Bandler arrived on the scene March 23, 1873, in Brooklyn, N. Y., but has spent most of his life in Owego, N. Y., where he had a good time and, incidentally, prepared for college. His father is Robert Bandler, a merchant, and is not a college graduate. , THE CLASS OF 1894. 3 Alexis Painter Bartlett was born in Washington, D. C., February 2, 1872. His father, D. W. Bartlett, a journalist, is not a college graduate, but has held .. offices in connection with the House of Representa- , ' tives. He has a brother and a number of uncles and . . . Columbia fhe is-sorry to sayj. Can trace his line ' ff' 1' cousins graduates of Yale, and one cousin of ' , . ,il I , i . back to Elder Brewster who came over in the May- ' flower. Blood, English and Dutch. ' William Spencer Beard first attracted attention at 5 Harwich, Barnstable Co., Mass., where he was born june 9, 1870, at 1:45-37M A. M. His life has been . spent at various places, but mostly at South Kill- ingly, Conn. His father, William H. Beard, QB. D. Union Seminaryj is a minister. G. M. Beard '62, E. S. Beard '59, A. F. Beard '57, and S. F. Beard, Amherst, are relatives. He traces his ancestry eight or ten generations and d6esn't mention the style of i blood that flows in his veins. Among his distinguished rela- tives, Dr. john Whitmore, Ph.D., is mentioned. Andre Alden Beaumont first saw the light in San Antonio, Texas, August 4, 1870, and has since divided his time between the four states, Texas, Penn- V H5 Sylvania, New York and Connecticut, and the ter- ritories Arizona and New Mexico. His father, Eugene Beauharnais Beaumont, is aretired army f officer and is a graduate of the United States Mili- tary Academy. Thomas Darling, a prominent man ' in the class of '86, was a cousin and numerous rela- A tives are graduates of University of Pennsylvania and a cousin Wellesley '93. His great-great-great-greatsgreat-grandfather landed at Saybrook, Conn., in 1635. Some of his distinguished relatives are, john Alden, Nicholas Stanforth, Deputy Governor of Massachusetts about 1635, William Beaumont, surgeon, noted for discoveries regarding action of the stomach on vari- ous foods, Andrew Beaumont in House of Representatives in Jackson's administration, and a great list of other notables. 1-' 'U 111' A . V 5 5 4 v M ...Z 55 'T- K!- V Lin, kr' f '...A' - YALE '94 CLASS Book. Albert Anson Bigelow hails from St. Paul, Minn., where he was born july 31, 1872. His father, Charles H. Bigelow, is in the insurance business, and hasn't held any public ofiices. A relative, Nelson P. Bige- lowggraduated in Yale '84, and he has also relatives that are graduates of Williams College Traces his ancestry back three generations and has only pure American blood in his veins. Charles Benjamin Bishop, Jr., comes from Litch- field, Conn., where he was born june 1 1, 1872, and has spent most of his life there. His father, Charles Benjamin Bishop, is in the fire insurance business in Litchfield. He traces his ancestry to the early part of the sixteenth century and has English, French and Welsh blood. Among his distinguished rela- tives are mentioned Sir Francis Bacon, Lord High Chancellor of England and Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England. Clinton Spencer Bissell was born at Clinton, N. Y., March 5, 1871, and has spent most of his life in eastern cities of New York state, Pennsylvania and Florida. His father, L. P. Bissell, M.A., LL.D, is a graduate of Hamilton College, class of '63, Traces his ancestry to the Huguenot family, Bisselle, one of whom was Governor of Connecticut and another a bishop. Among his distinguished relatives are W. S. Bissell, William Henry Spencer, Samuel Hopkins, Dr. Lemuel Hopkins and Mark Hopkins of Willian1s. Samuel Burr Sherwood Bissell 2d made his appearance at Norwalk, Conn., May 13, 1872, but has spent most of his life in New York city. His father, R. H. Bissell, is a stock broker of New York. Sherwood B. Ives '93, B1-ayton Ives and S. B. S. Bis- sell 1st, are graduates of Yale. And to the question, How far can you trace your ancestry, he says, God only knows, perhaps to St. Patrickg may he. rest in peace. French and English blood in his Veins and among his distinguished relatives are james J. Corbett and Lillian Russell. HE CLASS OF 1s94. Edward Richmond Bosley was born at Geneseo, N. Y., August 9, 1869. His father is B. Richmond Bosley. He had a cousin, Wm. B. Bosley, in Yale '92, and two cousins graduates of Princeton. He traces his ancestry to the Douglass family of Scot- land and to the landing of Walter Bosley in Virginia, 1689. His blood is Scotch and English. Frederick Merrell Boyer is a native of Watertown, N. Y., where he was born january 13, 1872. His father, Frederick H. Boyer, is a grocer. He traces his ancestry to the fifteenth century, of French stock and the blood in his veins is principally French, but just a little tinge of English. Sir Wil- liam Howland, Governor of Ontario, was a relative. Albert Simmons Briggs was born at Dighton, Mass., December 30, 1871, and spent his life in divers places. His father, Albert Briggs, is a retired business man. An uncle graduated from Harvard. English, French, Dutch and Irish gore travel in his veins. U 1 Edward Harold Bronson began life at Wallingford, Conn., july Io, 1869, and has spent most of his life in Eastern Connecticut. His father, Asa C. Bron- son, is a clergyman. Relatives have graduated from Brown University and are now teaching, one a pro- fessor at Brown, one at Chicago University and another at Boston Latin School. He traces his ancestry direct to William the Conqueror. V w.A, -,,. 6 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Samuel Palmer Brooks was born in'Mil1edgevi11e, I Ga., December 4, 1863. Since 1863 has lived in Texas T where he has undergone many of the hardships of i frontier life. He learned to mark and brand i Texas yearlings and ride mustang ponies long before he was initiated into the mysteries of common frac- tions. Has since joined the Baptist church, Masonic Lodge and Democratic party. His father, S. E. u . Brooks, B.A., fUnion Universityj has long been a U11SS10H21ry pastor in the Lone Star State. Can trace his an- cestry to I62I and is of English-French blood. V ' 1- Alphonso Bickford Brown, born at Dover, N. H., january 23, 1872. His father, Elisha Rhodes Brown, . , , is a banker and is not a college graduate. He traces 1 1' his ancestry on his father's side to Chad Brown of f Providence, I63O, and to Roger Williams. Good 4- if ig ',', H . lt pure English blood runs in his veins. General V V' Rhodes of Providence is mentioned as a distin- guished relative. Q james Crosby Brown hails from New York City, where he was born September 28, 187 2. His father, john Crosby Brown, is a banker, and is a graduate of Columbia College, class of '59. The following relatives are graduates or members of Yale: His great grandfather, john Adams, class of I795, grand- father, W. M. Adams, '27g uncle, T. M. Adams, '56, 1 a brother, '86, and one now in '97g cousins in '91 S, ' '95 S, '95, and lots of other classes. Traces his an- cestry to the sixteenth century, and his blood is Irish, English and Scotch. Among his distinguished relatives are Gov. Wil- liam Bradford, john Adams and john Quincy Adams. I james Elwyn Brown was born at Kittanning, Pa., March 17, 1873, and has since lived there and at Pittsburgh. His paternal, james Elwyn Brown, a banker and iron manufacturer. Some of the rela- tives who are graduates or members of Yale are J. H. Painter '86, I. C. Neale, '91 S., and J. B. Neale '96. 1 He doesn't trace his ancestry, or at least he did not favor us with any remarks on this subject. He has L many distinguished relatives-too numerous to mention. 1 1 6 513 Q .. V , Q x - it THE CLASS OF 1894. Pratt Anthony Brown first saw the light at Dub- lin, Bibb County, Georgia, September 6, 1874, 6 o'clock A. M., and has spent most of his life at Macon, Ga. His father, William W. Brown, is in the insurance business. He traces his ancestry to the landing of the Huguenot refugees in South Carolina. French and American blood in his veins, and he says that if he has any distinguished relatives he has never met them. Albert Henry Buck comes from Wilmington, Del- aware, and was born March 9, 1873. His father was Dr. C. Elton Buck, a chemist and a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, class of '52, who has held various public offices and among them Presi- dent of the Board of Education. His ancestry is traced to one who arrived in this country from Eng- land about 168o. French and English blood in about equal proportions keeps the machine going. Charles Herbert Buell began life at Brooklyn, N. Y., December 17, 1871, and has spent most of his life there. His father, Charles S. Buell, is a manufact- urer. He traces his ancestry, with one or two breaks, back to the anthropoid ape, but he doesn't give us any idea of the kind of blood through which all this tracing is made, though we are sure he is not a representative of Borneo. Henry Walter Bunn, our 'tclass infant, came before the World at Morris, Otsego County, N. Y., May 29, 1875, and with the exception of five years spent in China, he has lived his life in the Empire State. His father, Rev. A. C. Bunn, is a minister and is mentioned as a distinguished relative. The aforesaid 'finfantn was formerly amember of the class of ,94 Columbia College and changed for Yale at the beginning of our Senior year. s YALE '94 cLAss BooK. Frank Scott Bunnell is the son of Rufus W. Bun- nell, an architect. The place of his nativity is Strat- . 'l ,. ford, Fairfield County, Conn., and the date of his A. birth October 2, 1872. One of his great-grand- ff . - 1, fathers graduated in the class of 1797 and another - - in the class of 1804, and he also had an ,uncle in 64 wi J , - , , . f and a brother in '91 S. He also had a cousin in Rut- ' I gers '87, Ancestry traceable to 1639. English, M Scotch, Welsh, French, Norse blood in his veins. fSome of this, he says, is well filteredi. Captain John Mason was a distinguished relative and too many others to mention. Calvin Burr was born April 21, 1872, at Auburn, N. Y. His father is Charles Porter Burr, retired. Many of his relatives are Yale graduates and among them are Nelson Beardsley, '27, H. Woodruff, '63, Alonzo Beardsley, jr., '75, Porter Beardsley, '86, and N. B. Burr, '93 S. He traces his ancestry to one generation before Adam and Eve and his blood is A Dutch and English. Nelson Beardsley Burr is a ' distinguished relative. john Cadwallader, jr., was born in the Quaker 1 -1 , 1 City, February 24, 1874. His father, john Cadwal- lader, is a lawyer, a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, class of '62, His father has been col- lector of the Port of Philadelphia. Many relatives on father's side have graduated from University of Pennsylvania and many on his mother's side have graduated at Harvard. He traces his ancestry far ' ' enough for respectability, and is of Welsh, English :md Scotch blood. ku v V -1 '. ,' , 2. E. -.' ' I if , Walter Reid Callender made his debut in Provi- dence, R. I., February 28, 1872, and since that time his life has been fmisl spent in Providence, New Haven and Hampden. His father, Walter Callender, is in the dry goods business. Traces his ancestry only to his maternal ancestor. His blood is prin- cipally of the Scotch sort, and Cal says he is the only distinguished member of the family. ,- ,... .. . THE cLAss or 1894. james William Cantwell first visited that part of this earth known as Nacogdockes County, Texas, on March 6, 1868, and is the son of J. T. Cantwell, a Texas farmer. He was admitted on a diploma from another college the Hrst of our Senior year. Traces his ancestry four generations and is of Scotch-Irish blood. President Bayard Taylor was a cousin. Ira Merrill Carley was born at Shelburne Falls, Mass., May 11, 1871. His father was Rufus W. Car- ley, deceased. Has relatives at Harvard, Amherst and Williams. Traces his ancestry to about 1640, where it is lost in the shuflie. His blood is English, French and Irish, and he says his distinguished rela- tives are very few. George Bowen Case has made Kansas City, Mo., his home since June 9, 1872. His father, E. Case, jr., a lawyer, is a graduate of Marietta College. Cousins have graduated at Yale and several cousins and uncles in different colleges of the country. Traces his ancestry to the fifteenth century, and his blood is French, English, German and American. George's three-base hits have made him the most distin- guished of the line. Patrick joseph Cassidy came before the eyes of an admiring public at Norwich, Conn., july 6, 1874, and is the youngest of the class that entered at the first of our course, but he has since coughed up long trousers. His father, Patrick Cassidy, is a physician. Pat traces his ancestry directly to the paleolithic age, and his blood is Scotch, Irish, French and English, with a dash of German. MacLeod of Dare is a distinguished relative. lil AI ' V' w '41 . V . vi, ,pf s ., 7 . .1 v , f-4 fir' u. - ' , v' . , . ,, Y YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. john Payson Chamberlain was born at Seneca Falls, N. Y., March 3, 1869. His father, Harrison Chamberlain, is a. manufacturer and graduated from Genesee College fnow Syracuse Universityj in the class of '59. Traces his ancestry to the Knights of Sankerville, Norman Knights, who came to England with William the Conqueror. His blood is English, Dutch and a little mite of the French mixture. Frederick Shepard Chapman was born at that old and Yale-renowned town of Saybrook, Conn., August 11, 1871. His father, Robert Chapman, is a farmer, and has been a representative in State Legis- lature and selectman. Relatives graduated from Yale in ,73, '79 and '84, His ancestry on the mother's side runs back to Kehelm Winslow, brother of Edward Winslow of Mayflower fame. He has Eng- lish blood. Frank Herbert Chase was born at Portland, Maine, April zz, I87O. His father is Hazen M. Chase, retired, was formerly a manufacturer of shoes. Traces his ancestry to Aquilar Chase, who came to Salem, Mass., soon after I63O, and Thomas Hale, who came to this country about the same time. His blood is English with just a dash of Scotch and Irish. Distinguished relatives are Daniel Webster and Salmon P. Chase. William Genung Chase began a winning career at jerusalem, N. Y., February 19, 1869. His father, Birdsall Chase, is a merchant, and has been post- master and held other public offices. Traces ances- try back to three brothers, who came to America in early colonial times. His blood is English, Dutch and French. Salmon P. Chase is a distinguished relative. THE CLASS on 1s94. William Henry Clark began to entertain his friends at Saginaw, Mich., September 3, 1872. His father, William H. Clark, is a merchant. He does not trace his ancestry, but only remarks that his pedigree was lost in the Chicago fire. His blood is English and Dutch, with plenty of each kind. Ward Robinson Clarke appears on the scene at Cherokee, Iowa, March 9, 1872. His father, Leroy Clarke, is a farmer. Traces his ancestry on paternal side to Lords of England and on maternal side to john Robinson, pastor for the Pilgrims. john Alden was a later ancestor. His blood is English,- you know. His renowned relatives are Hon. Gay- lord Clarke, formerly U. S. District judge in Texas, and Rev. Horatio Clarke, D.D., of Binghamton. Alexander Sessums Cleveland, born at Houston, Texas, September 11, I87I. His father, William D. Cleveland, is a wholesale grocer and cotton factor. He entered the class at the beginning of our junior year and during ourlast vacation he took B.A. from the University of the South His blood is English. Grover Cleveland is a distinguished relative. William Davis Cleveland, jr., brother of the above, was born in Toronto, Canada, August 2, 1873, but has spent most of his life in the Lone Star State. Traces his ancestry many years and loses sight of it among the noble English. He is also a graduate of the University of the South, class of '93, and entered at the beginning of our Senior year. I2 lf . Zi' .. f ' A . 52115 i v,4 , N lish gore YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Thomas Cochran, jr., is a native of St. Paul, Minn., where he was born March zo, 1871. His father, Thomas Cochran, is a broker, and is agraduate of the University of the Cityof New York, class of '63. His relatives have all gone to Princeton. He traces his ancestry ten yards fno lossl and afterwards makes a touchdown. His blood is Scotch, Irish and Yankee, the latter partially blue. joseph Platt Cooke hails from Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands, where he was born December 15, 1870, and has spent his life in Honolulu, California and the East. His father, Joseph Platt Cooke, is a graduate of Yale, class of '63. joseph P. Cooke 1750, joseph P. Cooke '57, and Joseph P. Cooke '63, are among the relatives who have graduated from Yale. Traces his ancestry to William the Conqueror, Earl of wick, etc. His blood is unadulterated English. VVar- William Clayton Crafts was born at Austin, Cook His Co., Ill., january 18, 1873, at 2 o'clock A. M. father, Clayton E. Crafts, a lawyer, is a B.A. of Hiram College fOhioj, and L.L.B. of Union Law School at Cleveland, Ohio. The paternal has been State Representative in Illinois. Traces ancestry back to Gov. Winthrop's colony in Massachusetts. 1630, and the blood is English. Among his famous relatives are Samuel T. Crafts, Governor of Vermont, and Major Wm. Crafts of Revolutionary War fame. Erastus Milo Cravath, Jr., was born at Lincoln, Pa., August 24, 1872. His father, Erastus Milo Cravath, president of Fisk University at Nashville, Tennessee, is a graduate of Oberlin with the degrees M.A. and D.D. Relatives who are graduates or members of Yale are Caleb S. jackson '94, and H. T. jackson ,93, S., and from other colleges his rela- tives are numerous. Traces his ancestry back to 1661, and his blood is a mixture of French and Eng- With a dash of Welsh. Distinguished relative- cravatte maker to His Royal Highness Louis XIV. THE cLAss OF 1s94. Charles Frederic Crawford first attracted atten- tion at Rockford, Ill., April 25, 1872, at 2:43 P. M. Spent his life mostly in Chicago, but has been in Westville once. His father, Charles Crawford, is a dealer in stocks. An uncle in Yale '76, S., and two uncles have graduated from Amherst. Traces his ancestry to the anthropoid ape and, therefore, he says, he is an ape-ology for a man. His blood is Scotch, Irish and Malay. Had an ancestor hung for highway robbery, also Char1ie's Aunt. George Marshall Crawford began his fruitful career at Empora, Kas., july Io, 1872. His father is Samuel J. Crawford, and has twice been Govenor of Kansas. Traces his ancestry to 1700 and is of Scotch, Irish and English blood. He also tells us that one of his renowned ancestors was hung for highway robbery early in this century. Ferdinand Swift Crosley was born at Muncie, Ind., january 23, 1872, and has spent his life in Europe and the United States. His father is Rev. Marion Crosley, a distinguished preacher. Traces his ances- try to the time of the Revolutionary War and has English, French 'and Dutch blood in his veins. Walter Barnes Cruttenden began life at East River, Conn., january 27, 1873, and he has spent most of his life there. His father, S. D. Cruttenden, is a grocer. He has a brother that graduated at Union College, New York. He traces his ancestry to the settlement of Guilford, Conn., and the blood in his veins is of various shades and nationalities. He is the tallest man in the class. l YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Thomas Frederick Davies, jr., was born at Phila- delphia, Pa., july zo, 1872. His father Thomas F. Davies, a clergyman, is a graduate of Yale, class of '53, and has since received the degrees of M.A., D.D. and LL.D. Fred doesn't attempt to trace his ances- try and barely mentions the fact that he has English blood. Henry Shepherd Dawson came before the world at New Haven june 22,187z, and has lived in this delightful city since that noteworthy event. His father, a traveling salesman, not a college graduate. He doesn't trace his ancestors, but no doubt Noah was in the direct line. He received several votes for the most prominent characteristic of our class, and is also noteworthy for his walk, his knowledge of Greek and the success with which he runs the financial side of the Yale Union. Edward Marvin Day was born at Colchester, Conn., August zo, 1872. His father, Erastus S. Day, is a lawyer of Colchester and has held public offices. Traces his ancestry back three generations, and his blood is Anglo-Saxon. He doesn't mention any dis- tinguished relatives, though we have no doubt that he has them. Charles I. DeBevoise appeared to mortal gaze at Brooklyn, N. Y., on the night of October 17, 1871, :md has spent most of his born days in that City of Churches. His father's name is Isaac C. De Bevoise, and further Deb doesn't enlighten us, though we are convinced that he has ancestors and that his blood is not too thinly filtered to have a name. THE CLASS OF 1894. Allen Ross Defendorf first became well known at Savannah, Cayuga Co., N. Y., December 21, 1871, and with the exception of the first six months of his mundane existence, he has spent his life at Fairport. His father, Fletcher A. Defendorf, is a manufacturer and has held all the public oflices of the town, and has been in the New York legislature. Traces his ancestry to the settlement of the Dutch in Mohawk Valley, and his blood is unadulterated Dutch. Arthur Gillespie Dickson was born at Philadelphia, Pa., November 17, 1873, and has since been in the bosom of his family. His brother, Samuel Dickson, a lawyer, is a graduate of the University of Pennsyl- vania, has held public offices and was a stump speaker for Cleveland. Had an uncle in,Ya1e '53, cousin in '94 S., and he had a brother in the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania '91, cousins in Stevens '89 and '74, and cousin in Amherst '92, Traces ancestry to the Plantagenets and has Scotch and Irish blood. 15 . Q. af, ' up N 1' uf ,Q '-A 1 Rf X HKS. A distin- guished relative was Alexander Hagard, who was the first postmaster of New York city. Loten Abijah Dinsrnoor appeared to public gaze at Tidioute, Pa., January 25. 1870, and most of his life has been spent in the Keystone State. His father, Charles Dinsmoor, is an oil producer. Traces his ancestors to 1630, and has Scotch and Irish blood. Great grandfather and uncle were Governors of New Hampshire. Alexander Samuel Diven was born at Elmira, N. Y., November 8, 1869, and has since that time been at home. His father, George M. Diven, a lawyer, is a graduate of Hamilton College, class of '57, Alex traces his ancestry as far as it is neces- sary, and has a mixture of Irish and English blood. L 1 ' ' ,J V , .gm f'... lr '. .E T, L' YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Bayard Dominick, jr., has lived in New York city since March 1, 1873. His father, Bayard Dominick, is a banker and broker. George F. Dominick, jr., '94, and L. Dominick '95, are cousins. Traces his ancestry to 16oo, and claims French and English blood in equal proportion. He says the only really distinguished one of the family is Bayard Dominick, jr. George Francis Dominick, jr., came into promin- ence july 21, 1871, in New York city and has since resided in the metropolis. He doesn't favor us with a very full account of himself, but says he can trace his ancestors to 1600, and his blood is French, Eng- lish and Scotch. He is a cousin of the above, Whom, perhaps, he considers a distinguished relative, but he doesn't mention the fact. George Elias Dorland Qknown as the Good J- began his upright life at Orchard Park, near Buffalo, N. Y., August 13, 1869. His father, E. T. Dorlancl, a physician, is a graduate of the University of Mich- igan. His father never held any of the public offices, but ran against Billy Sheehan and got left. Traces. his ancestors to 16oo, and is of English, Dutch and Yankee blood. Benson Lossing is a distinguished relative. Winthrop Hillyer Duncan is a native of Lowell, Mass., and the date of his birth june 24, 1872. The name of his father is William W. Duncan,who isn't a college graduate. With a struggle he traces his ancestors to the seventeenth century, and his blood is a mixture of English and Scotch. THE CLASS or 1894. iv Casselberry Dunkerson has made Evansville, Ind., his home since july 9, 1872. His father, Robert K. . Dunkerson, is abusiness man. It's about all Dunk can do to keep track of kimsem so he doesn't go into fir- the mysteries of his ancestral line. His blood is T . ' ,- Scotch and German, with a preponderance of the . former. . ' QWY' . 31' 'Q ffkfl T Harry Westbrook Dunning appeared on deck December 1, 1871, at Roxbury, Mass., and immedi- 7 ately inquired if clam chowder was on the bill of fare. His father, Albert E. Dunning, an editor, is a graduate of Yale, class of '67, and has since taken the degree of B.D., at Andover Seminary and D. D., 4 at Beloit. The paternal has held several offices, at one time being a member of the Boston school com- mitttee. A brother is in Amherst '96. He traces A' his ancestors to the lattter part of the sixteenth century, and he has the blood of England, Holland and France in his veins. 1 . 1 ',' , 'rai li ng il.. 45 5 ,-1.5. 4 . .911 ' f 4 . ., . . 1? 1 Mx . X 31, .V 5:-I Frederick Dwight made his debut near midnight, Tuesday, September 30, 1873, in Brooklyn, N. Y. His father, Frederick A. Dwight, is a retired ship- ping merchant. A brother graduated in the class of '93. His ancestry can be traced to prehistoric times, and English and Scotch blood runs, in an undis- sheveled way, through his veins. I George Francis Eaton has lived in the city of Elms since May 30, 1872. His father, Daniel C. . Eaton, is Professor of Botany in the Scientific School, graduating from Yale in the class of '57, and after- wards receiving LL.B. from Harvard. D. Cady Eaton, Yale '62, and William P. Ketcham '62, are relatives. Gen. A. B. Eaton, his grandfather, graduated at West Point, class of '26 and his great grandfather gradu- ated at Williams, class of 1799. Traces his ancestry to 1584, and his blood is English and Dutch. K YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Theodore Eaton, better known as Ted, was born at Wakefield, Mass.,April 15, 1872. His father, Chester W. Eaton, is a lawyer and a graduate from Dartmouth, class of '59, and afterwards from Har- vard Law School. A brother graduated in the class of '92, at Yale and his grandfather at Amherst. Traces his ancestry to the beginning of the six- teenth century and his blood is English, Scotch and Welsh. Earl of Buccleuch, Roger Conant and Law- rence Leach are among his distinguished relatives. Thomas Long Ellis began life at Kittery, Maine, December 11, 1867. His father, Thomas Long Ellis, graduated from Bangor Theological Seminary. A brother graduated from the Scientific School, class of '88, and two brothers are graduates of Williams Col- lege. Tom's ancestry was lost in the shufiie, but his blood is English and Scotch. Arthur Wells Elting entered this mundane sphere at South Cairo, N. Y., October 6, 1872. The name of his father is Francis Elting, retired. Traces his ancestors to 714 A. D. After a thorough chemical analysis, at which, by the way, Socks is quite an expert, he finds that his gore is a mixture of German, French and English. Henry Lane Eno began life at New York city, July 8, 1871, and has since spent his life in Europe and America. His father, Henry Clay Eno, is a physician and a graduate from Yale, class of '6o. William Phelps Eno, class of '82,and.Gifford Pinchot '89, are relatives. He traces his ancestry to the seventeenth century, and English, Irish and French blood flow peacefully through his veins. THE CLASS OF 1S94. Wilber Leslie Evans drew his first breath at Upper Alton, Ill., November 27, 1872, and has since spent most of his life in a Pullman sleeping car. His father is Ira I-I. Evans, who has held most of the public offices of the town. He can trace his ancestry to 1574, and his blood is pure English. He is a graduate of Knox College fIll.J and entered the class at the beginning of Senior year. john Mackintosh Ferguson, began his career at Uniontown, Pa., February 15, 1874. His father, Edmund Morswood Ferguson, isa banker and gradu- ated from Trinity Collegef Traces his ancestors to the latter part of the Hfteenth century, and his blood is English, French, Scotch and Danish. Henry Clay, Wadsworth and Isaac Walton are distin- guished relatives. Albert Nelson Cheney Fowler was born at Glens Falls, N. Y., November 3, 1871, and has since spent most of his time in Milford. His father's name is Byron Baker Fowler. An uncle graduated from Yale,and also uncles from Dartmouth and Columbia. Traces his ancestry to Edward III of England, and his blood is English, Irish and Dutch. Lord Nelson, Sir Robert Cheney and Alex. Waller, ,Q4, are distin- guished relatives. ' George Howard Fox was born in London, Eng., july 4, 1873 fnot a holiday over therel, and has since spent most of his time in New York city. His father, George Henry Fox, M. D., is a graduate of Rochester College, class of '67, C. G. Carter, Yale '91, and C. J. Miller, '77, are relatives. Traces his .ancestry five hundred years and finds it all pure English. so YALE '94 cLAss BooK. Clinton Hart Furbish took up his abode in New Hartford, N. Y., july 18, 1869. His father, Edward B. Furbish, is a clergyman, and graduated from Yale in the class of '6o. His ancestors are not traceable, and our subject is the most distinguished one of the family. Fred D. Gallup first appeared on the scene june 6, 1872, at Smethport, Pa. We learn that his father, William D. Gallup, a merchant, is the big gun of the town and has held all the oflices from magistrate to mayor. His ancestry can easily be traced to 1465 and is of pure English extraction. Winfred Ernest Garrison first became known in St. Louis, Mo., October 1, 1874, and since that event- ful day has spent his time in St. Louis, Boston and Southport, Eng. His father, 1. H. Garrison, an Quite a list of his relatives have graduated 'from dif- ferent colleges of the country. Traces his ancestry six generations, through English, Scotch and Irish blood. William Lloyd Garrison is a relative. He wins second in the race for class infant, but his roommate says that doesn't hinder him from being engaged. 'A 153, -fr editor, graduated at Abingdon College, class of '68, Edward Joseph Garvan began life fscratchj at East Hartford, Conn., May I7, 1871, and has spent most of his time wherever they'd have me. His father, Patrick Garvan, has been State Representa- tive and Senator and held minor offices. A brother is in the present Freshman class, and a cousin grad- uated from Yale Business College. Traces his ancestry on his mother's side to Charles Carroll of Maryland, signer ofthe Declaration of Independence, and also on a snowy night he can trace it as far as Paul Weils. Blood, Irish and Scotch. Distinguished relatives died before the family became acquainted with them. THE CLASS OF 1894. Charles Henry George made his debut at Cedar Rapids, Iowa, june 27, I873, and: will therefore be a man the day he graduates. He has spent most of his time since his birth at Milwaukee, Wis. He doesn't mention his father's name, but says his great-great-great-great-grandfather graduated at Yale. He fails to make connection with his ances- tral tree, but he has royal blood. Merwin jeptha Gibbons began the game at Gran- ville, Mass., june 2, 1867, and has meekly squan- dered his days in Massachusetts and Kansas. His father, Edwin C. Gibbons, is a merchant. He man- ages to trace all the intricacies of his ancestry to his great-grandfather. His blood is English and Irish, with a smattering of French. Louis Packard Gillespie was born in Brooklyn, N. Y., January 2, 1872, and has since spent his life at various points. His father, Louis Charles Gil- lespie, is a merchant. john C. Gillespie, '94 S., is a brother. Doesn't trace his ancestors and has a mix- ture of Scotch, Dutch, English and Welsh blood. Thomas Warrington Gosling began his career at Mt. Airy, near Cincinnati, Ohio, September 15. 1872, and has since that time been in and near the above mentioned places. His father's name is Flavius J, Gosling. Two uncles graduated from Ohio Wes- leyan University. His ancestry can be traced to Adam, without any important breaks. English blood predominates fin what little he hasl. 'U YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. john Henry Goss comes from Waterbury, Conn., - where he chanced to be born june 5, 1872, and he says, I don't consider my life spent, as I believe I have several years to live and am at present enjoy- ing good health. The paternal, C. P. Goss, is a brass manufacturer, which he says accounts for his brazen traits. Has a seventh cousin in '96, S., and is thinking seriously of adopting Blondy Mil- ler as his big brother. A brother graduated in class of '87, Massachusetts Institute Technology. His ances- tors kicked over the traces long ago. Blood, Irish, Welsh and Dutch. Thinks he is related to the Christmas Goose from the way others sometimes spell his name. Allan Greeley fmost of the class think it is q Horace J began his race for the lazy man at jack- sonville, Fla., January 29, 1871, and has since spent his time in Florida, New jersey, Maine, Minnesota, New York and New Haven. His father, jonathan C. Greeley, is a banker, real estate dealer and director of an English Land Company. The father is a graduate of the World's College and title of Honor- ' ' able, was candidate for Lieutenant-Governor of Flor- ida, and Representative, Senator, Legislator, Mayor of jack- sonville and customs collector. Traces ancestry to the Holy Grail. Blood Scotch, Irish and Southern Gentleman. Gen. A. W. Greeley, Horace Greeley and Rufus Choate are among the distinguished relatives. Gervase Green first saw the light of day at St. Helens, Lancashire, England, December 27, 1869. Until he was sixteen he stayed in England and since that time in America. Traces his ancestry to , johanus Bullus, and his blood is English and Welsh. ' Among his many distinguished relatives are Glad- 'l stone and john Bright. THE cLAss or rsgl. 23 Nathan William Green was born at jaffua, Ceylon, . March 13, 1871, and the first two years of his life were spent in India, and since that time in America. V - i His father, Samuel F. Green, a physician, graduated , XF ' relatives are graduates of Brown. Can trace his . 1 , - from P. and S., class of '45, Several of his ancestry to Henry I, King of France, and Anne of V Russia. Blood, French, English and Welsh. Earl of Leicester and some others are among his rela- tives. Warren W. Guthrie, jr., began life at Atchinson, Kas., july 22, IS7I, and has spent his time in the Wooly West. His father, Warren W. Guthrie, a lawyer, has held most all the big oFfices in his state, among them member of state legislature, sen- f r i brother in Midland College. Can trace his ances- ---G . atof, Attorney-General of Kansas, etc., etc. Has a try to an early King of Denmark. Blood, Scotch- ' Irish. Gen. B. F. Loan and Benjamin Harrison are among his renowned relatives. l.. Charles Henry Hall, Jr., was greeted by an admir- ing world August Io, 1872, at Ronkonkoma, Suffolk Co., N. Y., but has spent most of his time since that epoch-marking event in Brooklyn. His father, clergyman, and graduated from Yale in the class of 42. He has also had the following degrees con- K lx ferred: D.D., Trinity, Columbia and St. johns . fMd.jg D.C.L., Trinity, and LL.D., Yale '9z., and among the offices held, civil service commissioner of Brooklyn. Cousins in '69, '91, '92, and '93 Yale, and graduates of other colleges he represents by the symbol oo. Traces his ances- try to a gentleman who had a difference of opinion with Charles I, and left his country for his country's fand his ownj good, at the public expense. Blood, Scotch, English and United States. Thomas Wentworth Higginson and Edmund Clarence Stedman are relatives. r Charles Henry Hall, is a Protestant Epispcopal , Q l 24 YALE '94 CLASS BooK. john Loomer Hall was born at Willimantic, Conn., january 23, 1872, and has since been in the bosom of his family. His father, john M. Hall, is vice- president of the N. Y., N. H. Sc H. R. R., gradu- ated at Yale, and has held rnost all the public offices from Judge of Superior Court to Magistrate. Two uncles were graduates from 'Yale. Traces his ancestors eight generations, and his blood is English and Scotch. . . , -rg r- Frank Manson Haradon appeared to vision july 7, 1869, at Marshalltown, Iowa. His father, Amasa F. Haradon, lawyer, graduated from Yale in the class 1 of '61, and has since taken LL.B. at Harvard, and has held public offices too numerous to mention. He can trace his ancestors to 1620, and his blood is English and Spanish. Meredith Hare first became known at Orange, N. 3 J., july zo, 1871, and has made that place and New York City his home since that date. His father, james Montgomery Hare, is engaged in the fire 7 insurance business. A brother graduated in '93 and T one is now in '96 S. He doesn't succeed in tracing his ancestors and forgets what sort of blood he has. Amos Thompson Harrington, the Commodore and Heliographer, was greeted by an admiring audience February 2, 1870, at Lyons, N. Y., where he has since lived. His father, Amos Thompson Harring- - ton, was a manufacturer of pottery. A cousin gradu- , I ated from Brown. Commy is a direct descend- ant of Roger Williams, and his blood is English, Irish, French, Welsh and Eskimo. Thomas Sim- mons, First Assistant Attorney General of the United States, was a near relative. The Commodore is him- self distinguished and has delivered many roundly applauded speeches, from appropriate places around the campus, tohis dear classmates. THE CLASS OF 1894. 25 James Anderson Hawes has lived in New York City since july go, I872. His father, Granville P. 7 ' Hawes, a lawyer and judge, is a graduate of Bow- doin College, class of '6o, and has had several degrees conferred. Besides judge and School Com- ' missioner he has held several military offices. Jim- mie is the first one of the kind to come to Yale. An uncle graduated at Rutgers. Can trace his ancestry to the De Vanc, who came over with Willie the A Conqueror. Blood of England and Holland. Has lots of dis- tinguished relatives. Among them are, john Carver, first Governor of Plymouth Colony, and Nicholas Anthony, one of the first Burgomasters of New York, and lots of other Worthy buccaneers. r Fidelio Sharp Henry first saw the light at St. -' p Louis, Mo., September 7, 1872, and has since lived in l 1 the World's Fair City. His father, Robert Llewel- f H I lyn Henry, is a lumber merchant. None of the i jiviiiii Fidel's relatives are college graduates, but several l H f' of them have quituated. He is an all-round is ' f'i l - I athlete and a semi-professional umpire. nnnn V H I Everett Gleason Hill began life at Madison, Conn., April I4, 1867, and has always made this place his home. His father, Charles W. Hill, is a farmer, not a college graduate, and has held several local offices. Traces his ancestry to 1650, to the early settle- ment of Connecticut, and his blood is English and Scotch. He desires to state that his most distin- guished relative is not David B. Hill, after whom he is sometimes called. l George Cooley Hixon was initiated into society , , qf H' March 4, 1871 fnot an inaugural yearj, at La Crosse, I V Wis., and has spent his life here, there and every- , where. His father's name is not given. Fails to 'V V' discover many of his ancestors but claims English ' V f . . and Scotch blood. 0 YALE '94 CLAS.S BOOK. Ralph Winthrop Holmes was born at Winsted, Conn., October 6, 1869, and has never changed his place of abode. His father, Rufus E. Holmes, is a banker and has run the town in the matter of public oihces. His ancestors can be traced to 164o, and his blood is of undefiled English. Hamilton Holt began his history in Brooklyn, N. Y., August 19, 1872, and his life has been spent in Brooklyn, Spuyten Duyvil, and in the esteem of my friends. His father, George C. Holt, a lawyer, graduated from Yale in the class of '66 and also is a graduate of Columbia Law School. Five uncles and numerous cousins are graduates of Yale. Any num- ber of relatives at Harvard. Can trace his ancestry to Beti Mawr, king of Britain, 53 B. C. English and Welsh are the chief strains of his blood. Benjamin and Noah are nnong the distinguished relatives. Edwin Olaf Holter was born at Helena, Mon- tana, April 23, 1871, and has since lived on the frontier. The paternal, A. M. Holter, is engaged in the mining and machinery business, and of the public trusts he has held, chairman of the Vigilance Committee has been his the longest. Ed can easily trace his ancestors back to the Aryan Plain a.nd his blood is Scandinavian. Hardicanute and Henrik Ibsen are distinguished relatives. Walter Deyo Hood was born at Auburn, N. Y., january 28, 1872, and spent his early life at home in school. His father, Peter Hood, is a merchant. A cousin graduated at Harvard and he has a sister in Wellesley. Traces his ancestry back to john Hood, who, came to America in 1770, and English-Dutch gore is in his veins. THE cLAss OF 1894. Lloyd Mortimer Howell was born at West Hamp- ton Beach, N. Y., October 25, 1873, and has been the delight of his friends on Long Island, Massachusetts and New Haven since that date. His father, Mor- timer D. Howell, is in the hotel business. A brother graduated in Yale '91, He can trace his ancestry in America to 1639, in England to 825, and the blood of his veins is of English extraction. Roscoe Conk- ling was a relative. john Howland was born in New York City Febru- ary 3, 1873, but has spent most of his time in New England. His father, Henry Elias Howland, Yale '54, is a lawyer, has held several judgeships in New York City and is a well known Yale alumnus. A brother graduated in '91. His ancestry can be traced to the time of Elizabeth and his blood is English. Charles Nelson Hulbert was first known in Nor- wich, Conn., December I2, 1873, and has since spent most of his time in the family circle. His father, Charles H. Hulbert, is in the livery business, and has held all the public oflices, including Councilman and Street Commissioner of Norwich. Traces his ancestry to the middle of the seventeenth century, and the blood is English and Dutch. Ralph Squire Hull began life at Scranton, Pa., December 17, 1872, where he has since lived. His father, Stephen Parker Hull, is a furniture dealer, and hasn't held any of the public offices. He doesn't trace his ancestors, and leads us to believe that he is the most distinguished one of the family. l r I L. 1 1 L YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Caleb Samuel jackson was born in Chester County, Pa., May 9, 1892, and has spent most of his life in the Keystone State. His father, C. H. jackson, is a business man. A brother and cousin have gradu- ated at Yale, and relatives have graduated from Cornell, University of Pennsylvania, Oberlin, Colum- bia Law School and others. Traces his ancestors three hundred and fifty years, and his blood is pure English. Among his distinguished relatives are Andrew jackson, Stonewall jackson, judge Butler and Bayard Robert Campbell james was born at Cantonsville, Md., july 25, 1872, and has since lived in his native state. His father, Henry james, is a banker. He don't know how far he could trace his ancestry, should he try. The blood in his veins is of English color. jesse james is a well known relative. OJ Charles Orlando jenkins started to grow in Cleve- land, Ohio, May 28, 1871, and has since made that place his home. His father, Charles E. Jenkins, is a building contractor. Traces his ancestry five generations, through English and Scotch blood. He spent one year at Harvard and entered our class at the beginning of Sophomore year. No distin- guished relatives. james Sinclair jenkins began his fruitful career at Stamford, Conn., October 31, 1871, and his life has been spent anywhere His father, is G. W. A. Jenkins. Has an uncle in '97. Diven of ,Q4 is a relative of some degree or other, but whether an uncle, cousin or grandson We can't say. Can trace his ancestry about a mile after a light fall of snow, and he has jenkins-Perique blood. Ole Olson and Bluebeard are renowned relatives. THE CLASS or 1894. 29 Nathan Hall Jewett began life at Buffalo, N. Y., , . June 6, 1871. His father, Josiah Jewett, Yale '63, is ' ancestors and distinguished relatives are numerous, . from Yale during the first part of the eighteenth century, some of them coming from Yorkshire, Eng- , land, and were the founders of Wallingford, Conn., and Rowley, Mass., fought in the Pequot War, and have been representatives and governors of several states of the Union and signers of the Declaration of Independence. Also United States District Judge of New York, and one was law partner and Postmaster-General under President Filmore. Blood, English. L Lawrence Bullard Jones, born at Fitchburg, Mass., January 8, 1872, has lived at Wilkesbarre, Pa., most of his mundane existence. His father, Henry L. Jones, is a clergyman, having graduated from Columbia College in the class of '58, He says he lzzz.m't any relatives, or they might have graduated at Yale. A distinguished relative is Charles Harl-' ton Coffin. Arthur Judson was born in Brooklyn, N. Y., Sep tember I2, 1871. His father, Fred A. Judson, Yale '64, is of the Trenton Iron Company. Four cousins and an uncle are graduates of Yale. Traces his ancestry to 1590. Blood is English only, none other need apply. Some of his distinguished rela- tives are Lemmie Welles, '93, fthrough Gov. Thomas Welles of Connecticutl Adoniram Judson and many others, mostly dead. Frederick Love Keays began his life at Berwick, 1 Me., December 14, 1871, and has spent his life down east. His father, 'Daniel G. Keays, deceased, was a farmer. Traces his ancestry to King Harold. Blood is English. Distinguished relatives are Dan- iel R. Goodwin, an uncle, late president of Univer- sity of Pennsylvania, and also Ichabod Goodwin, ex- 1 governor of New Hampshire. L ' a banker. Had relatives in '91, '87 S., and '78, His l K 1 quite a number of his relatives having graduated g T '41 ' '-..- hifi' T x Wi f J' .g,.,,.. Q t I 30 YALE ,94 CLASS BOOK. Sarkis Couzu Kebabian was born at Rodosto, A - European Turkey january 29, 1872, and has since divided up his time between that place, Constanti- . T nople, Vermont, New Haven and Cambridge, Mass. His father, George C. Kebabian, retired, has held A - several public oliices and among them Treasurer of - Municipality. A brother graduated in Yale '88, and Q . fl 4 if .1 4. - . ' a relative graduated at Hamilton Medical College. Traces his ancestry to the eighth century, to the Armenian Suni Dynasty. Blood pure Armenian. Herbert Humphrey Kellogg was born at Warsaw, I N. Y.,'September 14, 1872, and has spent part of his life at the above place, a part at Carthage, Mo., and P .. if, still has a part to spend. His father, Charles Alexis - Kellogg, is a real estate agent and stock raiser. An uncle graduated in Yale '83. Traces his ancestry to the Norman conquest, and his blood is Scotch Q V SJ' ' ' l A and English. fNot a representive of Borneoj. Sir Humphrey Gilbert and john Alden of Mayflower . fame are relatives. I Jacob Fry Kempfer first said, Good morning, . ' sir! at Beaver Springs, Pa., july 14, 1868, and has f ,.', spent his life at various places in the Keystone State. His father, J. O. Kempfer, is a mechanic. Y ' i Traces his ancestors four generations, and his blood - ' , ,,.,,1 is Scotch, Irish and German. He is a graduate of 'fl ' Pennsylvania College, class of ,93, and entered our class at the beginning of Senior year. Ulysses Simpson Grant Kendall began to grow at A a place named Pocahontas, Pa., September 26, 1866. it i His father, john C. Kendall, is a magistrate and mechanic. Can trace ancestry three degrees, accord- ing to the Canon and Common Law Method. Blood, tinguished relatives are Adam and Eve, Brutus, William Tell and Guiteau and also jefferson Davis. He graduated from Lebanon College QOhiol in the class of ,QO, in the Yale Law School in '93, spent part of this year in Sheff., and came over and slapped us on the back and Call cl us captain the first part of the Winter term. , 1 it , English, French and Knickerbocker Dutch. Dis- ::. 4 , - , l A .l THE cLAss or 1s94. 31 Charles Garfield King was born at Chicago, Ill., February 21, 1873, and has spent most of his time in the Windy City. His father is Charles B. King, retired. Numerous relatives have graduated from Yale, Harvard and Williams Colleges. Traces his ancestry to King Edward, and the blood is pure English. John Crerar and james A. Garfield are dis- tinguished relatives. Rufus King, Jr., has lived at Cincinnati, Ohio, since January 31, 1872. His father, Rufus King, was paymaster of the Cincinnati Southern railroad at time of death and was previously iron broker and lawyerg he graduated at Harvard, class of '63. Many relatives have graduated at Harvard. Traces his ancestry to 1o66 A. D., and his blood is English, Scotch, Dutch and French. Among his distin- ' , guished relatives are Rufus King, Minister to Great mi ' Britain, Charles King, president of Columbia Collegeg Gen. Rufus King, Minister to Rome, and Gov. Worthington of Ohio. Edward Kirkland began life in New York city, father, Charles P. Kirkland, is a lawyer, and gradu july 1, 1872, and has since lived at Utica. His H. ated at College of City of New York, class of '61. I X's, Traces his ancestry to Adam's first wife fprevious 1 ,,- Q '1 2 1 records lostj, and English, Dutch and Scotch blood .. L lf 1 X 1 , ,4'.Q fiow in his veins. Some of his renowned relatives Q are Nathan Hale, Peter Cooper, Jas. J. Corbett, john Y. McCane, Dr. Parkhurst, and Grove. . Ernest Knaebel was born near Roslyn, L. I., June 14, 1872. Spent the first eight years of his life in and about Brooklyn, and all since that time at Santa Fe, N. M. His father, john H. Knaebel, is a lawyer. Traces his ancestors to Edward the Confessor, and English-German gore is in his veins. YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Charles David Kyle was born at Cayuga, N. Y., December 28, 1870, and has spent his life at home.'.' His father, David Kyle, deceased. Numerous cousins have graduated from Cornell and Williams Colleges. Traces his ancestry to the leading fami- lies of the anthropoid apes, and his blood is French, Irish and English. He entered with '93, but was out a year on account of sickness, and entered ,94 at the beginning of Senior year. Clarence Hinman Lake first said Hel1o! at Mon- ref Fairfield County, Conn, December zo, 1871. His father, D. jackson Lake, is a civil engineer. His ancestry traces, authentically, back to Captain john Fairfield, who came over to this country in I627g tradition says it can be traced to King Edward IV. of England. Blood, pure English. Some of his distinguished relatives are the late Ray R. Hinman, at one time Secretary of the State of Connecticut, and Gen. Wood Hinman of the War of 1812. George Bigelow Bartlett Lamb began life january 30, 1871, at New Haven, Conn., and has spent most of his time in the Elm City and at the Yale Field. His father, George D. Lamb, is a manufacturer. His ancestry he has never tried to trace, and English and Scotch blood is in his veins. Distin- guished relatives are Charles Lamb, Col. Lamb, and others too numerous for George to mention, Howard Asa Lamprey was born at Laconia, N. H., at 2 P. M., Sunday, September 13, 1868. His father, George Henry Lamprey, is a mechanic. Two cousins are graduates of Dartmouth. Can trace his ancestors four generations and has the good old stock of English blood. THE CLASS or 1894. John Edward Lane began to live at Whateley, Mass., February 12, 1872, and has spent most of his time since that event at Hadley, Mass. His father, Rev. John W. Lane, is a graduate of Amherst, class of '56, and has held numerous public offices. A cousin is now in the Divinity School here, and several uncles are graduates of Amherst. Traces his ancestry to 1650, and his blood is English and Scotch. Edward Herman Lay was born at Morrison, Ill., November 23, 1866, and has since made that place his home. His father, R. E. Lay, is afarmer, and has held the office of school director. Can trace his ancestry more than two hundred and Hfty years, and his blood is of the pure Englidi stock. He is the most distinguished of the family. William Henry Leete was born at Thompsonville, Conn., April 25, 1869. His father, George Leete, is a railroad overseer. He can trace his ancestry to IZOQ and there loses it in the shuffle, and his blood is English and Irish. Some of his distin- guishedrelatives are Gov. Leete and Fitz-Greene Hal- leck, the poet. Bill prepared for college at Hart- ford High School, but spent several years in busi- ness and in the various town offices before entering college. He now holds the office of magistrate. James Patrick Linahan began life at Springfield, Mass., November, 7, 1871, and has since lived in Springfield, Middletown, Qnot in the asyluml and in New Haven. His father, Thomas Henry Linahan, has held several public offices, as water commis- sioner, selectman, etc. An uncle graduated at Columbia College, and a cousin and grandfather graduated at Dublin University. Pat doesn't trace his ancestry, but his gore is Irish. i YALE Q4 CLASS BOOK. Albert William Lindeke was 'born at St. Paul, Minn., March 7, 1873. His father, Albert H. Lindeke, is a dry goods merchant and has held office on several boards of commissioners. Can trace his ancestry direct, without a break, to Adam and Eve, and his blood is German and American. Charles Pleasants Lineaweaver began life at Pottsville, Pa., September, 15, 1871, and has lived pretty much everywhere. His father, W. K. Lineaweaver, is a manufacturer of powder and high explosives. Has a brother now in Yale. Traces his ancestry to 1614, and has English, Irish and German blood in his veins. His relatives are all distinguished. Raymond Lloyd was born at Cincinnati, Ohio, December 9, 1871. His father, Harlan Page Lloyd, an attorney, is a graduate of Hamilton College, class of '59, Can trace his ancestry to Count Ray- mond of Toulouse, and his blood is French and Welsh. -I. H. Raymond, president of Vassar Col- lege, is a relative. A -Frederick Ayers Lockwood is a native of Nor- walk, Conn. His paternal, F. St. John Lockwood, is a retired business man and is a graduate of Yale '49, He has been a member of the Legislature of Connecticut for two sessions. An uncle graduated from Williams College. Ancestry unknown, but distinguished. THE cLAss OF 1894. as Ralph Longenecker was born at Bedford, Pa., ,Q October 6, 1873. His father, J. H. Longenecker, is Judge of the Sixteenth judicial District of Pennsyl- vania. Graduated at Albany Law School, and has 1 tion, being Lieutenant and Adjutant-General of Union Army during Civil War, judge, Senator, -,'l ' . , held all the public offices allowed by the constitu- f A l Representative, etc. A brother 'was a member of '94 during Freshman year. Relatives have graduated at Princeton, Washington and jefferson, and Lafayette Col- leges. Ancestors came to this country in 1738, and blood is Scotch, Irish and Swiss. His distinguished relatives are counted in scores, and among them James G. Blaine. Ralph Reed Lounsbury, born at Meriden, Conn., November 3, 1871, has lived most of his time at 9 . -V Hartford. His father, Cooke Lounsbury, is a law- yer and graduated from Yale in the class of '52. A ' ' , cousin graduated in Yale '93, and numerous cousins and uncles are graduates of University of Vermont, Harvard and Dartmouth Colleges. Can trace his an- ! . -cestry on the father's side to early settlement of Lon- -don, England, and on the mother's side to a colony of A-.ml Phoenicians in time of Moses and Joshua. Blood, English. Walter Whitney Lounsbury, born at Kendia, Seneca Co., N. Y., july ro, 1872. Thomas Raynesford Louns bury, Yale '59, a. professor in the Scientific Depart ment, is his father. Several cousins are Yale gradu lates and relatives also graduated at Princeton, Union, Hobart and Harvard. Blood, English French, Graeco-Roman and catch-as-catch-can. All relatives distinguished, consult encyclopaedia: the saysl. YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. CharleslNoyes Loveland began life at Wilkes- barre, Pa,,'LNovember 26, 1872. His father, George Love1and,j1awyer, is a graduate of Lafayette, class of ,44. Several cousins are graduates of other col- leges. Traces his ancestors-to 1635, when they left England, and, therefore, his blood is English. Two relatives were among the founders of Yale College. Dean Belden Lyman was born October 11, 1872, at Omaha, Neb. Spent his life among the Mormons at Salt Lake City, Utah. His father, C. W. Lyman, is a banker. Dean is a lineal descendant of Baron von Pfouts, and the corpuscles of his blood contain English oxygen. His distinguished relatives are numerous. Frederick Henry Lynch has lived peacefully in Peace Dale, R. I., since july 21, 1867. His father, Thomas B, Lynch, is a sea captain and has held various offices in the navy. Can trace his ancestry several generations, and his ancestral nations are France, Ireland and England. George Day McBirney was born at Cincinnati, Ohio, February 29, 1872, and so celebrates his birth- day just once every four years. He has divided his time between Cincinnati and Chicago. His father is Hugh McBirney. A brother, Hugh J. McBirney, graduated in Yale ,75. He can trace his ancestors fone sidej to the thirteenth century, and his blood is English, Scotch and Irish. THE CLASS OF 1894. William Wickliife McCandless began his career at Pittsburgh, Pa., january 27, 11:30 A. AM., 1873, and has made the Smoky City his home since that his- tory marking event. He traces his ancestors to 1611, and his blood is Welsh and Scotch. Wil- liam McKinley is a distinguished relative. Edward Hill McCray started out on his forward march at a place named Ellington, Conn., August 2, 1870, and has lived in Connecticut and New jersey. Father deceased. Can trace his ancestry three centuries, and his blood is of English and Scotch origin. Has many distinguished relatives, including Jennie McCrea and Lawyer McCrea of West Vir- ginia. Hall Park McCullough began his existence in San Francisco, Cal., June 23, 1872, and has lived most of his time in New York City. His father, John G. McCullough, lawyer, is a graduate of Delaware Col- lege and was valedictorian of his class. Welsh, Scotch, English and French blood circulate in his veins and his relatives are mostly distinguished. Frank ElmerxMcDuifee began to improve his biceps after November 28, 1866, at Bedford, Vt., and life has been spent at various places. His father, Horace E. McDuffee, is in the real estate business. Can trace his ancestry to Lay on McDuff, and damned be he, etc., and Mac thinks all the afore- said has come true. His blood is Voodoos. as YALE '94 CLASS BooK. Buell McKeever was born at 1446 4ISt St., Chi- cago, Ill., September 2, 1872, and has since spent his time on earth. 1. L. McKeever, his father, is in the real estate business, and is agraduate of the Uni- versity of Berlin. Can trace his ancestry to his father and mother surely, and his blood- clon't know, I never investigated it. T'7 4 ' V 'l Q' ' l Winthrop McKim had his origin in New Windsor, . N. Y., July, 31, 1872, and has spent his life at various W F, A places. His father, Rev. Haslett McKim, is a grad- ' uate of Harvard. An uncle, grandfather and il brother graduated from Yale. He doesn't trace his Q ' J M English blood. john Winthrop is distinguished for Le Anlgl ' being a relative. Kirk Crawford McKinney was born at Pequa, Ohio, january 4, 1870, and lived most all the time in Colorado, till he came East to school. His father is Crawford McKinney. Traces his ancestry to the downfall of Scotland. Blood is Scotch and German. Scores of famous relatives. 5 Harry Brent Mackoy has lived in Covington, Ky., since july 18, 1874. His father, William Hardia Mackoy, is a graduate of the University of Virginia, class of '6o, and was a member of the Kentucky Constitutional Convention. An uncle graduated from Yale in '61, and cousins have graduated at Princeton, Heidelberg, University of Virginia, Uni- versity of Tenuesse and University of Kentucky. Traces ancestors on paternal side to their crossing over from Scotland in 1787, and on maternal side to Odo de Brent, Lord of Covington at the time of the Norman Con- quest. Blood, Scotch, English, Irish and French. Several col- onels, judges, senators, congressmen and governors are distin- guished relatives. THE -CLASS OF 1894. 39 Philip Hamilton McMillan was born at Detroit, Mich., December 28, 1872. His father, james McMillan, is engaged in the manufacturing business, and is a graduate of Canada College. The paternal has held all the offices, United States Senator, etc. Three brothers are graduates of Yale, and cousins at Princeton. Traces his ancestry way back, and his blood is English and Scotch. Distinguished rel- atives are Talleyrand and Oliver Cromwell. Sanford Bouck Martin, born at Gettysburg, Pa., November 2, I87O. Life spent in Gettysburg, New York City, New Haven and intoxication. His father, Adam Martin, is a college professor and graduated from Hamilton College, class of '58, D.D., '88, Great grandfather and grandfather, on maternal side, graduated from Union College. Could trace his ancestry to ixoo A. D., if it were worth the V' . trouble. Blood, German and English. His great ' 'I grandfather, William C. Bouck, was-governor of New York State in its palmy days. john Albert Matthewman was born in New Haven, Conn., November 23. 1872, where he has tramped out 7 most of his shoe leather. His father, Charles Bar- Q, ' ton Matthewman, is a lawyer, and is a graduate of Yale Law School. He has held various public of- l fices and is now a town official. Bert never z'1'z'ed - ' -Q. 2 to trace his ancestry, but ancestral nations are Eng- land and Holland. ,,. . I . Guy Bryan Miller began his life at New Rochelle, . G, N. Y., February 23, 1872, and his life has been spent in De Bauchf' His father, Charles Griffin Miller, is a banker. Two brothers graduated from Sheff, Can trace his ancestry to Guy Fawkes, but his knowledge of anatomy doesn't permit him to tell us what kind of blood he has. X I-In 4. . iii. fi , .' -, , ix, . YALE '94 cLAss BooK. Pendleton Miller began his mundane existence at Olympia, Wash., December 21, 1872, and has always lived on the Pacific Slope. His father is William Winlock Miller. He never tried to trace his ancestors. He has English and Scotch blood in his veins, when he is in good health. Edmund Pendle- ton is a distinguished relative. Winlock William Miller is a son of Willian Win- lock Miller and brother of the above. He was born at Olympia, Wash., October 15, 1870, and has spent most of his life with his brother Blondy, on the Pacific Slope. The rest of his history corresponds with the above, except with the addition of the above distinguished relative. Arthur Mitchell was born in Chicago, Ill., july 6, 1872, and has since lived at Chicago, Cleveland, Brooklyn, Philadelphia, Michigan, New jersey, New York City, and New Haven. His father, Arthur Mitchell, deceased, was a clergyman, and graduated at Williams, class of '53. Pierre Jay, ,92, was a cousin. Traces his ancestry three generations, and his blood is English and Dutch. One of his distin- guished relatives is the above-named jay. William Russell Moorhouse was born in Chicago, Ill., july 17, 1873, where he has since lived. His father, William H. Moorhouse, is :L tobacco manu- facturer. Can trace his ancestry to Noah, and the family records before that time were lost in the flood. Blood is Anglo-Saxon and Norman. William Pitt was an ancestor. THE cLAss or 1894. joseph Elias Morgan began his running career at Essex, Conn., March 21, 1870, Quin the morning, he thinksl. His father is Harrison Sherwood Morgan. Traces his ancestry far enough to establish his iden- tity. The blood of his own nation Hows in his veins. A distinguished relative, my son, probably, but more of that anon. john Edward Morley began his life at Saginaw, Mich., January go, 1873. His father, George Morley, is a merchant and banker. Grandfather graduated at Yale and also a cousin in '86, Traces his ances- try to 1637. Blood French, Huguenot and Eng- lish. George W. Morley, M. P., is a distinguished relative. Henry Perkins Moseley has lived in New Haven since April I4, 1872 and is too cosmopolitan to name all the places at which he has lived since his debut. His father, Seth H. Moseley, is proprietor of the New Haven House. Fourteen relatives have graduated from Yale and four from Harvard. Traces ancestry to England before 1620, and blood is English and good old Anglo-Saxon. Had four direct ancestors in the Revolutionary War. Oliver Clayton Mosman was born at St. joseph, Mo., September 27, 1870. His father, Chesley A. Mosman, a lawyer, is not a college graduate. He can trace his ancestors to 17oo B. C., but 0llie hasn't all the records in his hands at present. Blood, Scotch, Dutch and English. Distinguished relatives, never had none? YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Walter Fletcher Murray has lived at Plainfield, N. J., since May zo, 1873. His father, john W. Murray, is in the fire insurance business, and has held all the oiiices of his town, councilman, school trustee, etc. A brother, W. D. Murray, is a Yale graduate, and relatives have graduated from Brown. Can trace his ancestry about a thousand years or so, and his blood is pure Scotch. A distinguished relative is Murray, the hackman. Robert Hastings Nichols was born at Rochester, N. Y., October 2, 1873, and has spent his life in Rochester, Milwaukee, Denver and Binghamton, N. Y. His father, G. Parsons Nichols, D.D., is a cler- gyman and graduated at Union College, class of '6o. Grandfather graduated at Union College and uncles at Rochester University. Can trace his ancestry to about IO7O A. D., and the blood is decidedly English. He is the most distinguished of the family. Alvin Probasco Nipgen was born December 23, 1871, at Chillicothe, Ohio, near which place we are informed some of our prehistoric pottery has been found. His father is a physician. Can trace his ancestry to 1453, where he thinks it was lost in the shuffle. Blood is of German, Spanish, Scotch- Irish and English extraction. Nip isihimself famous, being our poetess and Vogue representative. Henry Shore Noon began his life at Needham, Mass., April xo, 1873, and has always lived in New England. His father, Rev. Samuel H. Noon, a cler- gyman, is not acollege graduate, though he attended Wesleyan two or three years and' left before graduation. Has a brother in '96 Yale. A brother graduated at Wesleyan, grandfather and uncles are graduates of Harvard and has two cousins now at Harvard. Traces his ancestry on maternal side seven generations, and his blood is English, Scotch and Yankee. THE CLASS OF 1894. George William Olmsted was born at Yonkers, N. Y., April 7, 1872, at sunrise. He has lived of late years at Buffalo, N. Y. His father, William D. Olm- sted,-is a miller. Can trace his ancestors to 1620 in America, and his blood is of English, Dutch, Scotch and Irish extraction. V Samuel Lowry Orr has lived at Evansville, Ind., since August 18, 1872. His father, james L. Orr, is a merchant. Several cousins are graduates of Prince- ton. His ancestry can easily be traced to Robert Bruce and his blood is royal English and Scotch, with a preference to the latter. , Charles Grosvenor Osgood, jr., was born at Wells- borough, Pa., May 4, 1871, and has since spent his life in the bosom of his family. His father, Charles Grosvenor Osgood, is a retired merchant and has twice been Burgess. Some ancestors graduated at Yale, and still more at Harvard. Traces ancestry to the Massachusetts colony in America, and a hun- dred years earlier in England. Blood, Scotch, Nor- man and English. Relatives are Elihu Yale fby marriagel and Governor Winthrop. Ralph Delahaye Paine, born at Lemont, Ill., August 28, 1871, and has lived in several states of the Union. His father, Samuel Delahaye Paine, a minister, is a graduate of Northwestern University and has the degree of D.D. from that institution. He was chaplain-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic. A cousin graduated at Yale, a cousin at University of Pennsylvania, and still another cousin at Miss Cady's. Can trace his ancestry 'through the Delahaye family to the thirteenth century. 43 I 1 l The Hrst Delahaye was hung for stealing a horse from William the Conqueror. Blood, English and Puritan. Distinguished rela- tive, Tom Paine, I reckon. YALE '94 CLASS Book. Frederick Curtis Perkins, born at Sharon, Pa., July 9, 187o, and has spent his life in the Sharon High School. His father, Simon Perkins, is an iron manu- facturer. A great uncle and a cousin are graduates of Yale, and Pete '94, is a cousin. Traces his ances- try to his father, without thinking, and his blood is Scotch and Soda. Distinguished relatives are Paul Revere, and General Putnam, the wolf catcher. Henry Bishop Perkins, Jr., began life at Warren, Ohio, May 1, 1871, where he has spent most of his life. His father is H. B. Perkins, retired. The paternal has been State Senator and has held minor offices. Two uncles and one brother graduated from Yale. Can trace his ancestors to 1620, and his blood is of English and Scotch tinge. The above named cousin is one of his most distinguished relatives. Frederick Torrel Persons was born at Sandislield, Mass., February 2, 1869, and has since lived at home on the farm, His father is Byron J. Persons, a far- mer. His ancestors all came from Ireland about I63O, and his blood is English. He is the distin- tinguished member of the family. Ansel Phelps began to exist at Brooklyn, N, Y., December 15, 1872, and has since lived in and around New York City. His father, Charles Phelps, deceased, was a dry goods commission merchant. A brother graduated from Yale '9o. Traces his ancestors to 1465, and his blood is English. Distinguished relatives are E. J. Phelps and William Walter Phelps. THE CLASS OF 1894. 45 Isaac King Phelps began to rubicate at Enfield, Conn., February 16, 1872. His father, john Phelps, is a farmer. Traces his ancestry to William the' Conqueror, and is straight Yankee of English extraction. He has lots of renowned relatives, but can't think of them on short notice. He isn't related to the above. Decius Latimer Pierson began life at Meriden, Conn., December 8, I87I. His father, Stephen 3 I Condit Pierson, civil engineer, is a graduate of Yale , f l a- l g '64, and is city surveyor of Meriden. Many uncles A , ' il f and cousins are graduates of Yale, and distant rela- iii? 4 tives graduates of Princeton. Traces ancestry, on ' .Q M.- if 5 one side, to England in sixteenth century, and , E I' Q from England to Italy in the ninth century, and li on the other side to England to the time of 7' Charles I. Blood, English, both Puritan and Royalist. Distin- guished relatives are numerous, and among them are Abram Pierson, first president of Yale, Noah Webster, Grant, and William H. and Benjamin Harrison, with various lesser lights. Frank Lyon Polk, born in New York City Septem- ber 13, I87I, and has since lived there. His father, W. M. Polk, a physician, is a graduate of Virginia Military Academy and Bellevue M.D., LL.D.i Can trace his ancestry as far as he has time to do it, but doesn't favor us with his researches. Blood, Scotch, Irish and English. Alfred Macauley Pope was born at Indianapolis, Ind., September 3, 1873, and has lived at Louisville, A I ,gn Ky., St. Louis, Mo., Toronto, Canada, and New York 1 . i City. His father, Charles Pope, was U. S. Consul to I f Toronto. A brother graduated in Yale ,93, and two ' .K 'gm I I cousins from Vassar. His ancestry can be traced p if-3.-f n infinitely, and his blood is a mixture of Irish, 7 K. ' V A. -- . Q 3 1. Scotch, German and Spanish. . ,.. 46 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. 7 5 Alonzo Potter was born at Newport, R. I, june 6, 7 . , 1872, and has since lived mostly in New York City. if L His father, Henry C. Potter, is a bishop and clergy- lf' , man. An uncle graduated in Yale '46. Does not 'f lfv 7 trace his ancestry, but his blood must be English. 'W ' fi ' . He has many distinguished relatives, but has not 7 space or time in which to mention them. james Tracy Potter was born Bennigton, Vt., january 26, 1870. His father, Andrew Potter, is a lawyer and graduated from Williams College, class of '56. His paternal has held numerous public otIices,includingjudge of Probate Court. A brother graduated at Williams, class ot 'QO. Traces his ancestry to Duke of Leicester. Blood, English and Scotch. Warwick james Price, born at Cleveland, Ohio, November 25, x87o. His father, Warwick Price, is a lumber and real estate dealer. A cousin graduated in 'go Sheff., and J. E. Farmer, ,9I, was also a cousin. A cousin graduated from Annapolis Naval Academy. On his father's side he traces his ancestry to Captain john Price, who was serving under his Majesty George III., in Boston Qabout 17502. On mother's side to a lady who spent an entire night in water chin high to avoid capture and persecution for the Huguenot faith. Blood, English, Scotch and Welsh. Distinguished relatives are the above, and a couple of farmers who were scalped while chasing around after Indians with Boone in Kentucky. 1 standing 'iulffflfr , , Ralph Pringle was born at Pana, Ill., October 15, 1872. His father, j. V. Pringle, is a clergyman and a graduate of Dennison University and Western Theological Seminary. Our subject is a graduate of Monmouth College and entered our class at the first 1-:Starr L 1- '-ws.-Q ws.-wm:f . 5 0415.31 - -T , ya ,, ,:,L.,.v1,-i ,L 'L 'Q ,f'f:!,fl 4 - W 2 ' -ffiifil 'gm ., 13.14 ,. '.,' 7 ggi ni, iv J 155 M, ffl fi , 7 . 1 ' . V 4 , . E, of Senior year. 2 w ' 4 M: il THE CLASS OF 1304. 47 Edward Franklin Raymond began his mundane troubles at Chicago, Ill., August 4, 1872, and has spent his life in the Windy City. His father, Charles L. Raymond, is a commission merchant. He can trace his ancestry to the seventeenth century and his blood is English and French. William Miner Raymond, ed., was born at Evans- ton, Ill., Saturday, November 23, 1872, and has spent his life at the above place, Chicago and in Germany. His father, Samuel Benedict Raymond, is a broker, and is a graduate of Northwestern University. Traces his ancestry to Raymond of Toulouse, leader of the First crusade. Blood, French and Irish. Cap- tains Perry and Kidd are among his distinguished relatives. . Edward john Redington was born at Evanston, Ill., September rr, 1873, and has spent his life in H ' . ' Chicago, Philadelphia, New York City, Brooklyn, Arlington, N. J., and Syracuse, N. Y. His father, John Calvin Owen Redington, is an editor and pub- lisher, and is a graduate of Middlebury College, '60, and was lieutenant-colonel of the 6oth N. Y. Volun- teers during the Civil War. A brother is in ,Q4 L. S., and a cousin graduated in '92 and is now in ,94 L. S. Numerous cousins are graduates of Cornell, Harvard and P. and S. of New York. Ancestry found to 1620, and blood Eng- lish, pure and blue, and his famous relatives are numbered by scores. S Edward Bliss Reed began his versatile career at Lansingburgh, N. Y., August rg, 1872, and his life ...L , has been spent at Springfield, Mass., New York City - T and Holyoke Mass. His father, Edward A. Reed, is l a clergyman. An uncle graduated in Yale ,77, and ! numerous great uncles and cousins previous to that. He traces his ancestors to Noah-earlier traces removed by the flood-and his blood is Dutch, Eng- lish and Irish. He mentions a distinguished uncle who sang three years in the college choir and is still al1ve. L. ., V z, i , ,:.E - f , , 7 , 1 i , 7- . -,, YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Harry Simeon Richardson was born May 24, 1870, at Chicago. Ill. His father, O. S. Richardson, is a wholesale coal merchant. Can trace his ancestors to- 1638, when the first settlement was made at Boston, and his blood is filtered and adulterated as follows : English, Scotch-Irish, Scotch, Dutch, Spanish, Welsh, French and German. Richardson, Secretary of the Treasury, was a relative. Ernest Lauren Robinson has lived at Meriden, Conn., since january 1, 1872. His father, Benjamin A. Robinson, is a mason. His ancestry has been traced to the time of the first settlements in New England, and English blood is all that runs in his veins. Distinguished relatives were all extin- guished before he heard of them. Philip Fletcher Rogers was born at Milwaukee, Wis., August 14, 1870. His father, Georgej. Rogers, dealer in real estate, has held public office to the extent of being a juryrnan, president of Y. M. C. A., and Sunday School superintendent. Brother gradu- ate of Wisconsin University '89, Traces his ancestry to Adam, and his blood is English, Irish, Scotch, Dago, Chinese, with a trace of Scandinavian and South Sea Islander. John Rogers, burnt at the stake at time of Reformation, was a distinguished ancestor. Charles Philemon Rowley was born at Chelsea, Mass., December 1, 1871, and has lived in Boston, New York City and Poughkeepsie. His father, C. M. Rowley. is a business man felectricityl, and was once mayor of Poughkeepsie. An uncle graduated at Cornell. He never took interest enough to find out about his ancestors, but is satisfied that his blood is French and English. Ex-United States. Senator Moody of Dakota is a cousin. THE CLASS OF 1594. Albert Thorpe Ryan has lived at Washington, D. C., since january 5, 1873. His father, Albert G. Ryan, deceased, was once Mayor of Little Rock, Ark., held revenue offices and was in the Department of Interior. A cousin graduated in Yale'72, and another in Sheff. His grandfather was a graduate of Harvard. He can trace his ancestors four gener- ations, and finds his blood to be English, Irish and Scotch. Robert Morris and Fred T. Dubois are dis- tinguished relatives. George Hope Ryder began his career at Plain- field, N. J.,.October 24, 18.72. His father, Charles Edwin Ryder, deceased, was formerly assistant cash- ie'r in the Chemical Bank, New York City, and was on the Common Council of Plainfield. A brother graduated in ,QI and another is in '97. Traces his ancestors to the Revolutionary War, and never tried to go any farther. His blood is Dutch and Eng- lish. Judge E. D. Culver, once Minister to South America, and Salem Wines, inventor of the center board, are relatives. William Henry Sallmon was born at London, Can- ada, the day of the year on which the Atlantic cable was successfully laid fSeptember 6, 18665, and has since lived in Canada and the United States. His father, Christopher Sallmon, is a manufacturer. Traces his ancestry to the Royal Stuart line, and his blood is Scotch and English. Distinguished rela- tives are Tammany and Dwight Hall. Walter Edward Sanders began his life in New York City, February xg, 1872, and has lived in New York, Brooklyn, New jersey, Connecticut and Auburndale, Mass. Rev. Marshall Danforth San- ders, a graduate of Williams College, is his father- Prof. T. K. Sanders of Yale is a brother. Two brothers graduated at Amherst and one at Williamsf He is a lineal descendant of Alexander the Great and Charlemagne. M V225 if r . Y Y 2: T' 23' Fsfli YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Charles William Saunders was born at Athens, On- tario, Can,, August 26, 1870, and has spent his life all over. His father, William J. Saunders, is in the flour and grain business. Charlie doesn't know how far he could trace his ancestors if he would only brace up and try. He has Scotch blood in his veins. james Cowan Sawyer was born at Dover, N. H., March 3o, 1872, and there he has always lived. His futher, Charles H. Sawyer, is a woolen manufacturer, and not a college graduate, but has the honorary degree of M. A., and has been Governor of New Hampshire. Had brothers in '89 and go S. Has never found any traces of his ancestors. Origen Storrs Seymour was born at Bridgeport, Conn, April 19, 1872. His father, Morris Woodruff Seymour, is a lawyer and graduated at Yale in '66 and now has the degree of LL.B. He has held all the offices from state senator and judge of city court to councilman. Grandfather, uncles and cousins for generations back are Yale graduates. Traces ancestry to the tenth century, and has Eng- lish, Irish, Scotch and French blood. joseph Earl Sheffield was born in New York City November 16, 1871, and his life has been spent prin- cipally in New England. His father, George St. john Sheffield, graduated from Yale in '63, His father, brother, four uncles and nine cousins are graduates of Yale. Blood is English and Scotch, and distinguished relatives too numerous to mention. Harry Shevelson Silverstein was born at Syracuse, N. Y., September 3, 1873, and has since lived at the above place and Denver, Col. His father, Solomon Silverstein, merchant tailor, is a graduate of the University of Gottingen. Relatives have graduated from Vassar, Syracuse University, Columbia, and University of Denver-. Traces his ancestry through six generations and finds his blood to be German. Several relatives were knights-Knights of Pythias. THE CLASS or fs94. Eugene Wilson Skelton was born at Brooklyn, N. Y., October zo, 1871. His father, Christopher P. Skelton, is a builder. Relatives are graduates of Harvard. Traces his ancestry to Miles Standish and Mills of New York, and his blood is English. Distinguished ancestors are Skelton the poet, and judge Skelton of Massachusetts. Charles Rives Skinker, born at St. Louis, Mo., December 18, 1870. His father, Thomas K. Skinker, is a lawyer, having graduated from Washington University fB.A.l and University of Virginia fB.L.l William Maffit, '93, is a relative. Traces his ances- try to first Lord Carrington, and his blood is Welsh, English and French. Distinguished relatives are Marshall Keith, john Marshall, Amelie Rives, and Billy Maffit. Charles Albert Smith, born at Stratford, Conn., December 4, 1870. Franklin Curtis Smith, insur- ance and co-operative bank business, is his father. He thinks the family of Smith is too well known to make it necessary to trace any ancestors. Scotch and English blood run riot in his veins. U Howard Franklin Smith began his career at Hart- ford, Conn., Tuesday, 9 P. M., September 3, 1872. His father, Franklin Smith,is a joiner and builder. Traces his ancestry not more than a few generations directly, but z'rzdz'rer1!y, on mother's side, as far as 1553. Blood, Anglo-Saxon and Norman-English. U. S. Grant and j. A. Garlield are distant relatives. V l I l i YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Leonard Bacon Smith was born in New York City, May 18, 1873. His father, Eugene Smith, a lawyer, graduated in the class of '59, Abrother is in '96, and quite a number of uncles and cousins have graduated from Yale. He gives up in despair over the traces of his ancestors, and his blood is Smith. Letchworth Smith was ushered into being at Auburn,N. Y., March 28, 1870. His father is Byron W. Smith. A cousin, F. W. Robinson, graduated in ,9O, and a cousin also graduated from Cornell. Traces his ancestors three or four generations and the blood of most European nations is in his Veins, principally English and Welsh. Rest Fenner Smith, jr., was born in Brooklyn, N. Y., May 8, 1870, and his life spent chiefly in East Orange, N. J. Rest Fenner Smith, his father, is a manufacturer. Can trace his ancestors for three hundred years. -Blood is English, Spanish and Ger- man. Frederick the Great Elector, and others of the House of Hohenzollern are among his distinguished relatives. , Charles james Sniffen, our class patriarch, was born at Stratford, Conn., August ro, 1863, and has all these years lived at Stratford. His father, Charles Birdsley Sniffen, is a carpenter and builder. His ancestors are not worth looking up, and his blood is blue. THE CLASS OF 1s94. john Beach Solley, jr., was born March 18, I872, at Newark, N. J. His father is john B. Solley. F. P. Solley, '88, is a brotherp Traces his ancestry to Adam and Eve, possibly farther, fsee Darwinj. Blood is dead English. Great-great-grandfather was keeper in the castle of Georgie the III. A celebrated English blacksmith and a legion other lights are relatives. Carl Frederick Stahl was born on Yale campus, in a house which stood where Chittenden Library now stands, and gave his first yell for Yale, April 28, 1872. His father, William F. Stahl, is a merchant and undertaker on Church street. Blood purely Yale blue. Heis the distinguished one of the family and expects to be state senator. Walter Eugene Stewart, jr., was born at Plain- Field, N. J., November 7, 1872. His father, Walter E. Stewart, is a Custom House broker. A brother, Percy Stuart, graduated from Yale, class of '9o. The line started by the marriage of the Lord High Stewart of Scotland to the daughter of Robert Bruce. Blood is Scotch, English and Dutch. Leland Stanford Stillman was born at San Fran- cisco, Cal., September 8, I87O, and his life has been spent all over. His father, Jacob Davis Babcock Stillman, graduated at Union College in the class of '39, and has been Coroner of San Francisco. Three brothers graduated at the University of California. Traces his ancestors to the sixteen th century. Blood, English. William james Stillman, a distinguished uncle. ' YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Albert Worthington Stone began his life at Charleston, S. C., january go, 1873, and has lived in the South, New York and New England. His father, William Stone, is a lawyer, and was an officer in the United States Volunteers and the Regular Army, Assistant United States Attorney of South Carolina, Attorney General of South Carolina, etc. Relatives graduatedi from Bowdoin. Traces ancestors in New England to 1630, and his blood is Yankee, Quaker and English. Bayard Taylor is a distinguished rela- tive. Edward Merrell Stothers was born at Port Richmond, Staten Island, N. Y., March I2, I87O. His father is David Stothers. He can trace his ancestors to about rooo A. D., and his blood is of Scotch, Irish and English extraction. He doesn't stop to mention any of his famous relatives. Andrew Sanford Taylor began his career at South Orange, N. J., September 28, 1867. His father, Lewis P. Taylor, is a surveyor and real estate agent, and has been Postmaster of South Orange. D. N. Beach, salutatorian of the class of '72, and H. P. Beach, class of '76, are cousins. Traces hisiancestry about one hundred and twenty-five years, and his blood is Welsh, English and French james Henry Taylor began life at Charleston, S. C., October 2, 1871. His father, Frank E. Taylor, a manufacturer of fertilizers and phosphates, is a graduate of Hillsboro Military Academy QN. HQ. Many relatives have graduated at Yale, with George Terry, 392, the fifth Terry relative since '2I. Wyllys Taylor, Harvard, '88, is a cousin. Traces his ances- try to uoo, and his blood on paternal side is English and maternal side Scotch. Hon. john Haynes and Hopford Hall Essex, Governors of Connecticut and Massachusetts fabout 1654, are relatives. 4 THE CLASS OF 1394. Edward Russel Thomas was born at Columbus, Ohio, December 30, 1873, where he lived till 1880, and since then he has lived in New York City. His father, Samuel Russell Thomas, is the president of several railroads and also engaged in the iron manu- facturing business. The father was a member of Marietta College qOhiol, but did not complete his course. He was brigadier-general in command of the state of Mississippi after the Civil War. Traces his ancestry four generations and Scoth, Irish, Welsh and English blood run in his veins. William Edward Thoms began his life at Ply- mouth, Conn., December zz, 1870, and has lived mostly in Waterbury. His father, W. P. Thoms, is a merchant, and has held all the minor town offices. He is the first of the kind to graduate from Yale. Traces his ancestors, not beyond Adam, and his blood is Scotch, English and Waterbury. William Josiah Tilson was born at Clear Branch, Tenn., August 13, 1871. His father, William E. Til- son, is a farmer and clerk of Chancery Court. He was a magistrate for about twenty years. john Q. Tilson, Yale ,9I, and 793 L. S., is a brother. Can trace his ancestry to 1638, and his blood is English and Dutch. The above mentioned brother is a welll known relative. William Todd began his life at Melltown, New Brunswick, 6 A. M., May 6, 1872, and has spent his life under his hat. His father, Charles F. Todd, is a lumberman, and a graduate of Bowdoin College. An uncle graduated at Yale. Traces his ancestors to Adam Todd. His blood is English, and -he says, I am not American so there is no Irish blood in me. His grandfather was amember of Parliament. l l l 4 L YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Ralph Tousey began life in Brooklyn, N. Y., October 21, 1873, where he has spent most of his life. His father, john Evart Tousey, is manager of the American News Company, A brother is a graduate of Columbia College and an M.D. of P. and S. Traces his ancestry to Sir Ralph Standish and his blood is English. George Marcy Townsend was ushered into exist- ence at Springfield, Ill., December 7, 1871, and has since lived at Springfield, Chicago, Boston and Hart- ford. His father, Samuel Pierpont Townsend, is a broker. He can trace his ancestry beyond the Revolution, and his blood is English, with a mixture of German and Irish. James Rutherford Trowbridge began to train for his Alumni Weekly at Riverside, Cook Co., Ill., june I2, 1871, His father, james Hewitt Trowbridge, is a Presbyterian minister, and a graduate of Middle- bury College, fVt.l class of 1847. He has been a justice of the peace. Three uncles and two cousins are graduates of Yale, including the generation of Masons, two of whom are now in college. A brother gaaduated at Amherst, class of '83, and an uncle at Union College. Ancestry goes back to Edward III., and blood is American with traditon of Welsh. John Rogers and Rutherford B. Hayes are among the dis- tinguished relatives. Henry Brownell Tucker was born at Troy N. Y., March 1o,1873, and has since lived at Troy and Utica. His fatl1er, H. O'R. Tucker, is ajournalist. He can trace his ancestors to his grandfather, at least, and finds his blood to be of English and Scotch extraction. THE CLASS OF 1894. Willard Gibbs Van Name began his career in the City of Elms, April 18, 1872, and has since made it his home. His father, Addison Van Name, is the Librarian of Yale University and a graduate of the class of '58, His ancestry is lost in obscurity, and blood ought to be Knickerbocker Dutch. George Finch Van Slyck was born at Montclair, N. J., january 24, 1874, and has lived in New York City. His father, William H. Van Slyck, is a Whole- sale dry goods merchant. Freddie Boyer, '94, is a third cousin. A cousin has graduated from Wil- liams. Can trace his ancestors to john Howland of the Mayflower, and never tried to go any farther. His blood is Dutch and English. The above named Boyer is a distinguished relative. William Stewart Walcott, Jr., has lived at New York Mills, Oneida Co., N. Y., since june 28, 1871. His father, William Stuart Walcott, is a manufac- turer of cotton cloth. Grandfather, uncle, brother and several cousins are graduates of Yale. Can trace his ancestors to the Cliff Dwellers and he is of English and French stock. A famous ancestor is one john D. Walcott, who downed the King of England at chess. james Alexander Waller began his mundane game in the Windy City fwe don't wonder at Al's proclivities in that directionj, February 1, 1871, and his life has been fmisj spent in that city. He can't unravel his ancestral entanglements, but he is sure he isn't a hybrid. N YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Milton jones Warner began to sing at Salisbury, Conn., January 9, 1873, and his life is not spent yet. His father, Milton jones Warner, is a lawyer, and a graduate of Williams College He has held the office of judge. He can trace his ancestry to King Rufus of England, and his blood is Welsh, English and French. Hasn't enough paper loose to write all his distinguised relatives. Walter Abbott Waterman was born at Providence, R. I., and -has lived in Rhode Island, Maine and Connecticut. His father, Jothan Waterman, is a carpenter, Grandfather was a graduate of Bowdoin College. Can trace his ancestors to Robert and Rufus Waterman who came together from England with the early colonists and settled, one in Massa- chusetts, and the other in Rhode Island, The blood is English and Scotch. Several of the most distin- guished men in the history of Rhode Island are rela- tives. Frederic Jabez Waters began life December 16, 1869, at Cincinnati, Ohio, and lived there till he was seven years old, then he spent thirteen years on a farm among the rustics of Westwood. Ohio, and has since livediin the city. His father, Jabez Matthew Waters, is a manufacturer and graduated from Colby University fMaineJ. A brother graduated from Yale '78. His ancestry is known only to his father, and his blood is too thinly filtered to be determined. Henry Little Welch started in life at West Win- sted, Conn., November 6, 1871, and hislife is not all spent yet, but badly bent. His father, William C., Welch, is a physician and a graduate of Yale Medi- cal School. Has held the oHice of school visitor. An uncle graduated at Yale and one from P. and S., New York. Traces his ancestry to the first Welshman who arrived on the Mayflower. The blood of the Welsh nation fnjust founded, I am kingnj is in his veins. A distinguished relative is Mickey Welch, fox nierly pitcher on the New York baseball team. A THE CLASS OF 1894. 59 Shelton King Wheeler began his life at Chatta- .. , nooga, Tenn., Aug. 13, I872, and has lived in Ten- I nessee, Massachusetts and Connecticut. His father, 1 Xenophon Wheeler, is a lawyer and graduate from ' 3 2 Yale in the class of '63. Has been district attorney. I I if Traces his ancestry to his grandparents, and his 1 3 blood is English straight. Vice-President Wheeler l it -4 , . ,ff l and Israel Putnam are distinguished relatives. L A -A -A Al li Larz Augustus Whitcomb was born at Clinton, 5 Ind., March 26, 1871. His father, john Whitcomb, attended Wabash College. Can trace his ancestry l ,a i 1 eight generations and his blood is pure English. i James Whitcomb, United States Senator and Gov- . '- 1 ernor of Indiana, is a relative. . ' ' ' . 1 Ellsworth Daggett Whiting began his career at Bellevue, Iowa., july 2I, 1869, and has spent his life in Iowa and Illinois. His father, Edward Payson Whiting, is a minister and is a graduate of Oberlin. Can trace his ancestry to 1664 and his blood is of English tinge. President Hayes and George Wash- ington are distant relatives. . , l v jay Edmund Whiting was born at Pawlet, Vt., ' wh' August 18, 1868, and has spent some of his life in , hw ' New York state. His father is Edmund C. Whiting, I 35,1 l 1 K, I a farmer. Can trace his ancestry five general 5 ' ,. 1,.,- f' tions and his ancestral nations are Scotland, Hol- if l ,, land and Germany. l YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Harry Payne Whitney was born in New York City, April 29, 1872, and his life has been spent in various places. His father, William C. Whitney, graduated from Yale in '63, He was Corporation Counsel of New York City three terms and Secre- tary of the Navy in Cleveland's Hrst administration. Three uncles are graduates of Yale. Traces his ancestry out of sight, and his blood is English. Too many distinguished relatives to make the selec- tion of a few possible. james Dawes Williams has lived at North Adams, Mass., since October 27, I872. His father, Charles Howard Williams, is a lawyer. An uncle, three cousins and a brother are Yale graduates. Can trace his ancestors on his father's side to the Puri- tans who came over in 1622, and on his mother's side to Sir William Wallace. Blood, English, Puritan and Scotch. Senator Dawes is a relative. Nathaniel Niles Wilson is a native of San Fran- cisco, Cal., where he arrived on the scene early December 2, 1872. His father, George O. Wilson, is a merchant. Can trace his ancestors to Rameses III, and his blood is Egyptian and Scandinavian. Distinguished relatives are james Wilson who helped put the frame on the constitution and that tariff fellow. Thomas Melville Womersley began his career at West Deerfield, Mass., March 2, 1871, and has spent most of his born days at Greenfield. His father, Thomas Womersley, is a physician. He traces his ancestry to I7 50, where it is lost, and his blood is English and American. THE CLASS OF 1894. William Wallace Woodruff, jr., was born at Knox- ville, Tenn., September I2, 1873, where he has since run the town. His father, William W. Woodruff, isha wholesale hardware merchant. Can trace his ancestry to 1638, and his blood is English and Irish. He expects to be distinguished himself. Charles Francis Word began life at Virginia City, Madison Co., -Mon., April 3, 1871. I-le has always lived in the state of Montana. His father, Samuel Word, is a lawyer. Traces his ancestry to the mid- dle of the tertiary period and his blood sparkles of Scotch, Irish, English and Napoleonic French. Dis- tinguished relatives are William Wallace, Rob Roy, O'Connor, Oliver and Roland. Richard Hardesty Worthington made his debul at Baltimore, Md., December 1, 1872, and there he has whiled his time away in poetic reveries. His father, Wm. G. Worthington, is a broker. He doesn't attempt the arduous task of hunting out his ances tors, but he thinks his blood is English and Irish. Many relatives are gentlemen William R-unk Wright appeared to mortal gaze in New York City, August 29, 1873, and has always lived in the Big City. His father, Andrew Wright, deceased, was a carpet merchant. An uncle gradu- ated at Rutgers and one at Columbia. Can trace his ancestry without a break of any importance to the race of Canstadt, and his blood is Scotch, Dutch and Huguenot. Famous relatives too numerons to men- tion, but very ancient ones are Lucius Serigius Rectus and Xenias Orthos. 62 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. New York takes a great lead of all her rivals in the matter of furnishing material for Ninety-Four. She beats all her previ- ous records in sending sixty men, while Connecticut shows her appreciation of home industry by sending forty-sevenf Penn- sylvania, with twenty men, steps in ahead of Massachusetts, with a following of eighteen, then comes Illinois with fifteen heelers and Ohio is next in order with only eight. Texas, Missouri and New Jersey each furnish six men homes, with quite a crowd of other states sending four each, Tennessee winning the toss from having furnished us Martin Luther Beeler a couple of years. The following table gives us the relative representation of some of the best Yale-producing states for the past four years : , 9 I- 92- 93- 94- New York ..... . 50 42 42 60 Connecticut .... .. . 33 43 40 47 Pennsylvania ..... . I7 7 I3 20 Massachusetts ..... 7 16 I5 1 S Illinois ........ . I2 IO 5 IS Ohio .......... . ro 7 to 8 New Jersey ..... . I2 9 I2 6 New York City has twenty men in the class, .New Haven thirteeng Chicago, teng Brooklyn, nine, Hartford, five, Pitts- burgh, four, and Philadelphia, three. Our fathers represent forty-four different occupations fa point in proof of the differentiation of labor once casually mentioned by Prof. Sumnerj. Thirty-four are manufacturers, twenty-one are merchants, twenty-four are lawyers, ten clergy- men, nine bankers and as many physicians, six professors, five lunibermen, inventors, college presidents, civil engineers, mechanics, real estate dealers and sea captains. THE cLAss or 1894. oss The blood of twenty-five men is English only, seven say they are unmixed Irish, nine are pure American, four are French, one is Scandinavian and another claims to be closely related to the Cliff Dwellers. The others have mixtures and hybria' blood in as many different shades as the process of combina- tion and permutation allows. The blood of nine nations, including Dago, Chinese, Spanish, South Sea Islander and Eskimo. William and Charles are the given names occurring most often, each receiving nineteen votes, Henry coming next with fourteen, George and Edward thirteen each, james twelve, john and Fred ten each, Ralph eight, and Albert and Walter six each. The following are some of the odd combinations: Alphonso Bickford, james Elwyn, Loten Abijah, XVinthrop Hillyer, Mer- win jeptha, Fidelio Sharp, Edwin Olaf,'Walter Deyo, Frederick Love, jacob Fry, Sanford Bouck, Winlock William, Alvin Pro- basco, Charles Philemon and Frederick Jabez. Our longest name is owned by Charles Pleasants Lineaweaver, with twenty- seven letters, and the shortest is Rufus King, requiring only nine letters. 1 X in- -2, 1 N., X.. 4.- x 4 f f, , L, V' jf- ix. Ygg,,f',s.'gLL'K arf' at . . v V., ' 1 , I v- In W1 h' A if ef.: MPM ..- If fr, X, ' 5 lifhgm -,f'1 '.., 1. - 1- IK. -. , U. : 'ff X P-Q f- 115 r , , ,:. aa.,-.: Former Members. x It is to be noticed that of the two hundred and fifty-nine men who entered Yale in the fall of ,9O, only two hundred and fourteen remained till the end. The places of the departed have partially been filled, but eight per cent. of the original number has evanesced. Others have gained by our loss, for some have entered other institutions of learning, many have won laurels for the lower classes, while others have gone into business. Ninety-five owes much to us in the way of contributions which have brought her many honors. The following is the list of the departed: F. S. Armstrong was with us till the winter term of Junior year, when he left on account of sicknessg later he entered '95, but has since gone into business. S. S. Auchincloss left '94 at the Christmas examinations of Sophomore year and has since been in business in New York. E. C. Baldwin was compelled to leave at the end of Fresh- man year on account of ill healthg he has been a member of ,QS for the last two years. M, L. Beeler finished inventing machines for 194 in November of junior year. M. Boocock abandoned us in February of Sophomore year because of ill health. He went into business in Brooklyn and has lately been married. E. F. Burke was lured to Trinity at the end of Fresh- man year, after receiving a communication written in blue from 136 F. He graduatesnfrom that institution this june. 66 YALE ,94 CLASS BOOK. H. E. Buttrick succumbed to the deadly condition, Decem- ber of Sophomore year. He now adorns '95, J. F. Chace, overpowered by the Sophomore Fence orator, immediately left, and has since resorted to business as apastime. J. I. Chamberlain wins laurels for '95. He left '94 at the end of Sophomore year. E. H. Connell was taken with typhoid fever November of Junior year. On his return he entered '95, T. E. Connell left at the end of Freshman year. Later he joined '95 and '96g all occurring through a stand of 1.9935 C. E. Coxe left in the fall of '90 after five weeks' acquaint- ance. Later he entered '93 S., remaining a year. R. F. Crosby took to the Berkshires at the end of Sopho- more year. He graduates from Williams this year. C. J. Curtis left in Sophomore year on account of illness. A. P. Dean preferred UQ the crimson to the blue and deserted, going over to the enemy at the end of Freshman year. He has since regretted the step. F. M. DeForest left in the early part of Sophomore year on account of ill health. On returning to college he entered '95- F. P. Dodge is a member of the present Sophomore class. He left '94 in the winter term of Sophomore year on account of illness. Theodore Douglass left early in the fall of 790. R. M. English was with us till the winter term of Sopho- more year. L. F. Frissell is a member of '95, having left on account of illness early in Sophomore year. R. F. Gillis left us after the first year on account of sick- ness. Z. P. Gilman had a condition in Freshman gymnastics and sixty marks, which produced a vacancy in our ranks at the end of Freshman year. FORMER MEMBERS. 67 C. Willing Hare was willing, but the faculty was not QFD. Leaving at the end of Sophomore year, he entered '95, which was also unWilling after a short time. F. J. Harris was inherited from '93, He left after twoyears to enter '95. H. W. Harris was not inherited, but preferred to accom- pany his namesake and is now with him in '95. A. F. Howe left us after a few weeks' acquaintance. A. B. Hughes found that '95 was more congenial and in December of Sophomore year entered that class accompanied by conditions. S. R. Longenecker left at the end of the first term in order to study law. H. F. Loomis left '94 entering '95 at Christmas of Sopho- more year. C. M. Ludwig remained with us four months, he left and is now a physician in the west. Walter Mann staid with us till Christmas of '9o. ' H. G. Miller was taken sick and left in the early part of Freshman year, he is now a member of '95. G. D. Morgan dropped out in November of junior year. R. H. Nelson died of brain fever in New Haven, january izth, 1893. C. C. Nolan died of appendicitis in New Haven, May 9th, 1893. D. O'Day left us in junior year and is now in business in New York. C. D. Perkins thought '94 well supplied with the name and left in the winter term of Freshman year. C. D. Richmond was overcome by the duties of the Fresh- man Union and left after a few months' sojourn with us. Howard Roosa formed such a close attachment to Prof. Harper that he accompanied him to Chicago. Roosa's oration on the Antiquity of Thebes will be delivered by him at commencement this year. 68 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. W. Rustin died of peritonitis june 6th, 1892. G. M. Sicard left early in Sophomore year to study law. L. K. Stewart is a dentist in Joliet. Ill. He spent Fresh- man year with us. H. L. Street after a spell of sickness and some trouble with his eyes left us and was initiated into '95 in the second term of Sophomore year. H. S. Vorhis left in the month of November of junior year, marrying soon afterg he entered '95. I. V. Wait left after a few months and is now a lawyer in New York. M. F. Westheimer left at the end of Junior year to go into business in St. Joseph, Mo. J. W. Wheeler added one more to the number of '95 men in the spring of Sophomore year. E. R. Williams was with us till the spring of Sophomore year, when he left college to travel. 'T. G. Wood left the class at the end of the fall term in Freshman year on account of illnessg he died of consumption January 29th, 1892, New Recruits. W. B. Allison came from Iowa College where he had been a short time. He entered Yale at the opening of Sophomore year. G. A. Andreen is a graduate of Augustana College, class of '8r. He entered Yale in our Senior year. - E. H. Bronson entered with '93, but owing to illness dropped out a year. He joined our class in the fall of '92, S. P. Brooks was graduated from Baylor University in 1893. He entered Yale in our Senior year. 1 P. A. Brown took his B. A. from Mercer University in 1892. He thought one from Yale would be of more avail and entered '94 in the fall of '92. l-l. W. Bunn was at Columbia College three years, merely as preparatory for Yale. He entered ,94 in Senior year. J. Cadwallader graduated from University of Pennsylvania last yearg not liking the combination of the blue and the red, he came to Yale in Senior year. J. W. Cantwell was graduated from Baylor University in 1893. He became a member of our class in the fall of '93, W. G. Chase, formerly '92, lost two years on account of illness. He entered '94 in junior year. A. S. Cleveland graduated from the University of the South in ,93. He joined our class at the opening of junior year. f W. D. Cleveland, graduating at the same institution as his brother, was persuaded to take an additional degree from Yale. He entered in Senior Year. 70 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. J, P. Cooke has left ,Q3 on account of sickness and will enter '94 next fall, if alive. - Vale News, january 151891. He lived and entered in Sophomore year. W. L. Evans, an alumnus of Knox College, class of '93, entered '94 at the beginning of Senior year F. D. Gallup attended Trinity two years but changed for Yale in Junior year, following a natural preference. W. E. Garrison graduated from Eureka College in the class of '92. He entered '94 at the beginning of Junior year. C. O. Jenkins spent Freshman year at Harvardg not liking the place he entered Yale in Sophomore year. A. Judson was at Williams College one year. He entered ,94 in the fall of '91. J. F. Kernpfer took a B. A. from Pennsylvania College last Juneg not deeming it sufficient he entered Yale in our Senior year. U. S. G. Kendall started across the green in the fall of 'QSQ stopping at Sheffield three months, he entered '94 just after Christmas. C. D. Kyle was in '93 for three years but was compelled to lose a year on account of illness. He joined the class at the beginning' of Senior year. J, P. Linahan, formerly '93, entered our class in Junior year. Helleft '93 on account of sickness. S. B. Martin took his B. A. from Pennsylvania College in ,QOQ coming to the Yale Law School, he compelled that institu- tion to confer upon him the degrees of LL.B. and M.L. He entered the class in Senior year. G. B. Miller entered our class at Christmas of Sophomore year. He was formerly in '93. 4 W. W. Miller, also a member of '93, was compelled to leave on account of illness. He entered '94 at the beginning of Junior year. NEW RECRUITS. 71 R. D. Paine was compelled to leave ,QS through sickness. He became a member of the class the second term of Freshman year. R. Pringle graduated from Monmouth College last year. He entered '94 at the beginning of Senior year, P. F. Rogers spent two years at Beloit College, but came to Yale in junior year, entering the second term. L. A. Whitcomb, an alumnus of DePauw University of the class of '93, entered the class in Senior year. E. D. Whiting, formerly a member of '93, left that class on account of illness, entering '94 in the fall of '92, J. E. Whiting spent one year at Colgate University and entered the class at the beginning of Sophomore year. ln Memoriam. Robert Hubbard Nelson, Died in New Haven, Jan. 12, 1893 Cyrus Clarke Nolan, Died in New Haven, May 9, l893. Wilkins Rustin, Died in New Haven, June 6, l892. Freshman Year. Our college course, which is now, alas, so near its end, began on the evening of September 25th, 1890, when we met on the Grammar School lot in numbers about one hundred and fifty and were soon decidedly in the push with the class of ,93. Following the lead of every other Freshman, we won the rush hands down, and the New Haven papers next morning addressed us as Gal- lant '94, which title we have ever since merited and kept. We did not win the wrestling, for only one bout was decided, all the rest were tied. After these impromptu games were over, and those who had fainted in the rush had recovered enough to proceed, by easy stages, to Prokasky's, those of us who could not escape attended the informal reception given there by the Sophomores. We sang, danced, and made others merry until a late hour. The rest of the night we spent in obeying the command, delivered in song, which bade us shake slum- ber and be on hand when the sound struck the sky. If that sound struck the sky as unfavorably as it did us, we might easily account for the Freshman Rains. Thursday morning, although as yet we had no regular seats, all embraced our first opportunity to attend chapel, and the Freshman gallery, for a while, looked like a continuation of the rush of the evening before. At four o'clock we again assembled in Chapel to learn where our regular seats were to be and to find out over what studies we were to enthuse for the next three months, 74 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. After a neat and pleasing speech from Andy, and a little swipe laughter from us, we received our cards of instruction and filed out trying hard not to keep step with the march whistled by ,93 from their exalted perch on the fence. We had already heard and greeted with delight, the news that we were the largest class that ever entered Yale, and this report was verified by having the class divided into eight divisions, which were more divisions than any other class had ever had, then a little later on, the faculty found with wonder that we were the highest stand class that they ever had anything to do with, in fact, they had to be unfair in marking in order to have any men for the lower divisions. Thus we started and thus we have progressed, excelling and outdoing all who came before us. On September 26th, we assembled in Alumni Hall at four o'c1ock, and when the assignments had been made for the French and German divisions, Professor Phillips announced that the election of officers for our Athletic Associations would take place. The captains of each of the 'Varsity teams spoke for a few moments and told us that every one should try for the teams who was not bedridden or hopelessly maimed, and that no affliction could excuse us from subscribing liberally to everything in the University. No one of the candidates received a majority in the elections so they were postponed. One of the most important days of our year was September 29th, when, amid breathless silence, Dr. jay Seaver outlined the gymnastic work for the year, and divided us into two separate classes ac- cording to our relative physical development, one to perform with light dumb-bells, the other with heavy chest-weights. About this time our class crew began FRESHMAN YEAR. 75 training. The methods which from that time it pursued for three long years fitted it well to pursue every crew with which it came into contact. Our Football Asso- ciation chose Sawyer for President and Jones,Vice-Pres- ident: Curtis, Treasurer, and L. Smith, Assistant Treasurer. ' On October Ilth the Intercollegiate tennis tourna- ment was finished and john Howland brought honor to the class by winning the second prize. Our football team had been working hard and gave promise of great things. Vance McCormick was elected Captain. Our deacons were the next of our number who were exalted to high and mighty positions, and Cochran, Solley, Dodge, Smith, Stillman and Lounsbury were elected preliminary captains of the religious movement which has ever been rife among us. The fall regatta was somewhat of a disappointment, for Sheff. only wins a Freshman race once in about thirteen years, and it was mighty hard luck that we should have struck that year. Still our crew deserved credit and can now console themselves for that race by the thought that the worst was yet to come. For our boat club, C. Burr was elected President, with N. Burr, Vice-President. About this time, all our interest was centered in the 'Varsity foot- ball team, and very good heelers we were of the practice games. The News about every other day bade us, in an editorial, to show the greatest amount of interest possible in the eleven, and stated that its success or defeat de- pended largely on the size and enthusiasm of our attend- ance at the field. Our excitement over the outcome of the game with University of Pennsylvania was second only to that of the Harvard and Princeton games. The papers had used a great deal of space to inform the world at large that, on November 15, Bowser, the heavyweight 76 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK of Pennsylvania, was going to kill Heffelfinger on the home grounds, and we all wanted to be in at the death. The score of 60 to o gave us great confidence for the game at Springfield on the following Saturday. This was our first great game and I do not believe any of us will ever forget it. The trip to Springfield, the cheering and singing, neither side scoring in the first half, and then Lee's and Dean's runs, the latter a fluke of the rankest kind, and as a climax, the wonderful pluck displayed by Yale, who by magnificent uphill playing was able to score against a victorious team, is still fresh in our memory. It was a very bitter disappointment to us, the loss of that game, but we were proud of our team and their magnificent work, and at once began laying plans for revenge on Princeton. On Thanksgiving Day our most sanguine hopes were more than realized at Eastern Park. We had expected to win, but to score 32 to o was far beyond even our enthusiastic Freshmen anticipations. We yelled ourselves hoarse all during the game and all the way home. And then for a change in the evening we yelled ourselves hoarser. It made up for the sorrow of Springheld, and I do not think that New York had any doubt that we were Yale men and entirely satished with Yale. On the following Saturday came our game with the Harvard Freshmen. We were beaten I4 to 4, but a great deal can be said for our team. They were unable to practice at all before the game since Lewis and Bliss were with the 'Varsity, while the Harvard Freshmen had had a week together and the benefit of the coaching of their whole 'Varsity eleven. It was a well-fought, plucky game and our team deserved far more credit than the world at large gave them. FRESH MAN YEAR. 77 The football season over, we subsided into the dismal quiet of Greek roots and Andyls curves, looking forward with little anticipation to our first examinations. If we could only pass them we would be through forever with Graphic Algebra and the first course in club-swinging with Dr. jay Seaver. We began looking forward to our baseball team's winning the privileges of the fence for us in the spring and elected C. Nolan as our mana- ger. Then came the grinding and the examinations in which some of us dropped bythe wayside, some were mor- tally wounded and fell later, while others bore scars of the affray far into junior year. Then came our first vacation, and it is needless to say that we enjoyed it to the full. We had great stories to tell and we told them, The jokes and many merry pranks we played on half- blind and crippled professorsg how dangerous was the game of football and how addicted to its use we were 3 how important '94 was to the University, and how important we were to '94. On january 7th we met again to commence our second term, and our class was divided into four divis- ions of two sections each, according to stand. Prof. Harper began his lectures on Oriental History which were much enjoyed by all. .Under the leadership of Van Huyck our crew commenced its training for the race with the Harvard Freshmen, and the Freshman Debating Club began its illustrious career. Prom. week came with all its fair visitors, but they were not for us. We were busy preparing our part of the entertainment for the Yale Cflee Club Concert. We had heard that it was our duty to show our numerals and to throw cards from the gallery, and we have always lived up to our duty. We had a big iron plate rigged up so thatit would at a certain moment drop before the curtain and there 78 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK hang far out of the reach of the Sophomores. Confident of victory in this scheme we complacently listened to the concert and threw about a bushel of cards apiece, which completely deluged the fair audience beneath us. Two or three pigeons were casually liberated and an attempt was made to hurl an old hen, with 794 around her neck, down upon the crowd, so anxious we were to show the visitors that we were just as important as the Glee Club and just as anxious to receive notice. When, at the appointed time, the big iron plate displayed our numerals, we threw an extra five or six thousand cards and screamed with delight while ,93 made wild endeavors to gain possession of our trophy. By cutting all the ropes behind the scenes they frightened the man who was in charge into lowering it. In the rush outside we regained what was left of it, and were satisfied that we had done ourselves proud. Our baseball team had been working under the charge of Case for the first month or so, but when he was taken on the 'Varsity, McCormick was elected in his place. During the Easter vacation our crew remained in New Haven, but all they gained then was lost a little later when Van Huyck and Kinney were stricken down with scarlet fever. H. Perkins was elected Captain. The term from Easter on is always the best of any year, but I doubt if we ever enjoyed any as much as we did that of Freshman year. Those balmy nights when we first heard the Glee Club sing from the fence, before the faculty had erected their now popular electric lights as a sour on the moon, and tolet her know that, like the Old Brick Row, she was no longer needed. On Saturday, May 9th, our class won its first decisive victory by defeating the Harvard Freshman 16 to I3 and winning for us the fence. Those of us who were unable to follow FRESHMAN YEAR. T9 the nine to Cambridge and cheer them on to victory received the news with true Yale abandon. Tin horns, Roman candles and Otto's beer demonstrated to the public our enthusiastic joy. We marched around the green and up to take possession of the coveted seat upon the fence, cheering wildly for the men who had won it for us. On May 23d our team again covered itself with glory by beating the Princeton Freshman on their home grounds 6 to 3. Over their next attempt let us draw the veil of silence. It was the first big game that they played in New Haven, where all of us could see them, and the score, 5 to 15, was not all that could have been hoped for by about ten runs. just before our final examination we formally received from '93 the guardianship of the fence. Eddie Reed responded for us and completely put to blush the efforts of ,93,S representative. Examinations over, we were no longer Freshmen but full blown Sophomores. We sat on the fence, smoked our pipes, and looked with scorn and contempt on the candidates for ,QS who were wan- dering around the town in search of rooms and Alumni Hall. If we knew any of them, we, invited them in an off-hand way to Moryisg explained to them that beer was not sold thereg asked Mr. Eddy to fetch us ale and over it dilated at length on the antiquity of the place and the old customs which it embraced. It was a very happy ending to a very happy year. Our class had become firmly cemented in the bonds of friendship and had proved what, from the first, we had predicted for it, that it was not only the largest but the best that Yale had ever had. From the pleasure and excitement of our first Com- mencement week and from tbe fascinations of Traeger's and I-Ieubleinis we tore ourselves away to see Columbia 80 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. beat our Freshmen crew and Yale chase Harvard for four long and weary miles. In an athletic way the year might have ended more auspiciously, but we left feeling that if Sophomore year could be enjoyed as much we would all be satisfied. FREDERICK C. PERKINS. K E Q r m e Sophomore Year. For a concise and detailed account of the usual cere- monies upon which we entered with such a spirit of persiflage in the beginning of our Sophomore year, vide the columns of the Yale News for the latter part of September, 1891, and there, in that record of contemp- oraneous antiquity, witness how we suffered defeat in the rush with the Freshmen, although we know the victory was certainly ours, as was so well attested by the greatly reduced pride and embonpoint of 795. With our omnipresent pipes we swarmed daily to Mory's, there at last to carve our initials on the tables, with that air of cold hauteur that could belong rightly to only those of such long experience as we, or, in the pride of our position, dangled our sophomorical legs from the fence our nine had won for us. Following precedent, of course, we hazed the Freshmen, just a little, to show there was no hard feeling, and, in the morning, summoned by the musical peals of that blatant discourager of hesitancy, went to chapel and took our new seats as unconcernedly as though they had been ours from the beginning of time, for we were no longer Freshmen, and the eyes of the world were upon us. In fact, Freshman year already seemed so long past that, even with the beginning of the new term, we for- sook one M. Bergeron fnow long gathered to his reward, for the greater glamo-r of the field, there to watch McClung's efforts to get the team together. 82 YALE '94 CLASS BIOOK. Although, as a class, we never won such great distinc- tion in athletics as we certainly achieved in scholarship, still we were always superatively magnaminous and there- fore could condescend to applaud the other classes for excellence in that very respect in which we had been so often weighed and found wanting. And so, wrapping our nether garments closely about our benumbed limbs, through many a blustering afternoon at the Field our enthusiasm in detecting the weak points in the halves and the high tackling of the ends made us forget how gleefully the wind from the ubiquitious soap factory was casting pneumonia germs broadcast, for we were only too glad to lose, as we watched those who could do some- thing, all thought of our crew-Zhe crew par excellence, that wonderful aggregation, with every man in the boat for captain, that never got in, during a race, in time for chapel next day. Thus, with trips to the field, seances at Mory's, that memorable occasion when the blond boy from Baltimore got back at the triangular tutor and at the same time established for himself an enviable reputation for skill in mathematics, the fall term slipped by, not, however, without bringing with it large doses of horizontal com- ponent administered ad nauseum under the watchful eye and sardonic grin of Professor Beebe. And, almost before we knew it, the fall term was gone, and we knew only as a thing of the past those months which culmin- ated with the Christmas vacation after having seen our eleven, in whose coaching we had so materially assisted, -defeatiboth Harvard and Princeton and end the season without having been scored against by any of its opponents. After three weeks sans chapel we returned like blush- ing buds to make our debut at our first Prom. Although SOPHOMORE YEAR. 83 we had not subscribed for quite as many tickets as in Freshman year, still each one of us was eminently pre- pared to gather together from the four quarters of the earth all the girls whom he knew, with a reasonable number of chaperones per capitum, and yet, with this qualification for admission at la Mormon, most of us went stag, choosing rather to blow ourselves on our own Prom. in the following year. We think we behaved fairly well, as debutantes go, at this our first Prom., toying unaffectedly with pink ice-cream, and not over- taxing ourselves with dancing. But afterwards? Nothing but a long period of innocuous desuetude, broken by the frequent appearance of strident creditors, and by vain endeavors on our part to look interested while investigating the peculiar properties of ellipses, carefully dispensed by Professor Phillips, or blindly groping after the elusive anapzest under the very nose of Professor Clapp. It were useless to revive our experiences with the malodorous Moore, or the attacks of heart disease engendered by Dicky, or our many trials to keep below the limit in marks during all the long New Haven win- ter and the beginning of the beautiful, balmy New I-Iaven spring, for of such matters was our winter term composed. I And presently, by the simultaneous appearance of hirsute goats in various colors and a livelier tint in the Freshmens' jeans, we knew that Bock beer was with us and that spring was near. Therefore we departed for other climes for a season, though some few of us preferred to stay and hear the Trinity chimes on Easter. But after a very brief. vacation of a week we returned to the best and so the shortest term of all the three. For, by successive stages, that delightful thing, New Haven snow, had yielded to the all-persuasive force of New S4 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK Haven mud, and this had, in turn, given away to mere patches of grass here and there, not very much, it is true, but still enough for us to lie on, of an evening, and listen to the Freshman Glee Club trying to get together at the fence, Again we could turn our steps to the field and watch the nine preparing to rub Princeton in the mud of her own native soil, or else go down to the harbor and see the eight in their shell, and feel confident, as we saw how well they could row, that the Harvard crew had better get round-trip tickets before leaving for New London. Omega Lambda Chi night came and went in all its glory, and then, in the fullness of time, our veteran '94 crew made its annual appearance, and our hearts thrilled within us as we saw in what magnificent condition every man was after the winter of hard training. And in the spring regatta at Lake Whitney how they a'z'a' rowg and they may still be rowing, for all I know, Before long, examinations were upon us and found us in various stages of preparation, but even they were soon finished, and we were left amazed at how little we really did know of all we had had in our Sophomore Year-thehardest one of the four, by far. And there was weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth when Professor Beebe's budget was announced, but even that could not disguise from us the fact that we were juniors at last and had nothing at all to do in the near future but to go to New London and see our eight again tow Harvard over the course. ALBER'1' N. C. FOWLER. Junior Year. The syndicate of manly beauty and talent prosaically designated as Ninety-Four returned to New Haven in September, I892, just in time to allow of President Dwight's opening of the fall term. The class has always been considerateg indeed, many members have been occasional objects of consideration on the part of the Faculty. It was pleasant to meet all our little play- mates again, to gambolon the campus and on the chance of having cod-fish for lunch at Commons. As every class has done at this point in its career., we pondered much whether we were looked up to with the same awe that overwhelmed us at the sight of upper classmen and decided by a large majority that anything else was impossible. College life now first began to be tinged with that rosy hue which the Glee Club impresses on the country in swipe chords and serried ranks of dazzling shirt bosoms. In those balmy autumn nights on the fence, the fuss- ers' recounted their summer campaigns by land and sea and cheered one another out of reminiscent grouches.'i The ex-captains .of the ,94 crew sat in long rows and a dozen or so of them would wax excited as they lived again their thrilling victories--we don't think, There was a new freedom about our march along the rocky road to learning that lasted until fifty-eight marks compelled :1 return to the narrow path. We said good- 86 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. bye to compulsory delving in dead languages and tangle-footed mathematics with glad hearts, but soon discovered that there was a Nubian concealed in the kindling wood. For larger batches of physics and liberal exhortations regarding the Usomewhatness of the that 'i as revealed in logic taught us that our freedom had a string to it. The Democratic victory of ,Q2 was without doubt largely due to the formidable display of the Yale Re- publican battalion. The spectacle of Nony H Swayne, general-in-chief, his paper-helmeted officers and his mor- tar-boarded myriads brought votes in hosts-to the other side. The Phelps Battalion mustered eight hun- dred sturdy Protectionists, and the Ninety-Four recruits bore themselves like men. It was a noble sight to see Captain McMillan advancing at the head of his dauntless company while the rattling tatoo of a thou- sand tenor drums put an extra quota of martial ardor under manly waistcoats. Sad indeed, though, was the return of that tin soldier brigade 'l after pounding New Haven cobblestones for three hours and thrice as many miles. Only the weary walkers who were seen removing their shoes in secluded nooks at the World's Fair after a day of sight seeing, can appreciate the feelings of our footsore politicians. A raid on Bridgeport was planned, but a kindly Providence interfered with a rainstorm and saved our lives. It was reported that a Democratic aggregation was in evidence, and a blackamoor paraded the campus bearing a banner inscribed, Won't some- one please join the Democratic Battalion? The haughty free traders under command of Captain Whit- ney were not dusty paraders but their revenge came not with axes, but with the silent and persuasive ballot. While all Yale was learning to step high and revolve JUNIOR VEAR. sv in Wheels other than those in various heads, the Fall regatta startled the town, and the busy bacilli in the Lake Whitney drinking water. I will quote from a collection of Rejected Lii. Contributions, lately edited by the obituary editor of the .News Humble apologies are due Mr. Kipling: , 'What makes the water fly so high?' inquired the anxious maidg Tis Ninety-four! 'tis Ninety-fourl' the blushing junior said. ' What makes that man lie down and kick?' again observed the maid: ' He's caughta crab! he's caught a crab!' the weary junior said. ' Don't fear they'l1 tumble over, or their boat will spill them outg Each oarsman has a life-preserver girding him about, If they ever reach the finish, you'1l hear the people shout, They're sure to pull the distance ere the morning. ' What makes them stay so far behincl?' again outspoke the maidg 'Because they ca11't row fast enoughf the patient junior said. 'Why don't they stick to playing chess?' observed the artless maidg ' What! With every one a captain? the loyal junior said. 'For they've trained like very Spartans since the Freshman year began. To win a race ere quitting is the hope of every mang But to help out a procession is the only thing they can, And they'd better rise quite early in the morningf The crack of oars strained to breaking, the crash of outriggers snapped short off, the hiss of burning paint, ignited by the friction on the bottom of the shell, the thump, thump of hearts throbbing with the vehe- mence of Waterbury watches, the agonized shouting of 88 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. the eight captains to the rest of the crew, and the thunderous surge of falling torrents-these were the sounds that smote the affrighted ear as the junior crew crawled swiftly by in the Fall regatta. In a Garrison- johnson finish they were beaten by three lengths. Over-confidence and overreaching were the causes of this aquatic Waterloo. Football was everything that could be expected, and the athletic year started out most brilliantly. We did all we could,to help win the Harvard game by recklessly exposing our voices to the night air and caroling, Down by the River side and Hold the Ball for a week beforehand. We went en masse to Springfield, confident in Captain McCormick and his team, and saw the Crimson sun set in an all-blue sky- a remarkable astronomical phenomenon, by the way. That day was put down in our little diaries as famous for the greatest game of football ever played. Thanksgiving Day was simply an encore to the previous Saturday's matinee. The tail of the Tiger was carefully tied in a hard knot, and we had seen for the second season a Yale eleven complete its campaigns without being scored on. From Thanksgiving to Christmas, exams made a wasting grind, and the supply of junior gray matter ebbed low. The prospect of the Intercollegiate Chess Tournament kept the class in a tumullt, and when vaca- tion came, with what enthusiasm we flocked to the New Haven House corner to cheer the bruised and battered chess heroes off to New York. But overtraining and a couple of sprained fingers lost us the championship. It was a bitter pill indeed. We scattered far and wide for the holidays. A safe .leturn was granted all except Nelson, who died of JUNIOR YEAR. 89 brain fever brought on by overwork, in the second week of january. Those who knew him mourned the loss of a true friend and a loyal Yale man. Prom. week began to loom vaguely in the distance with its visions of visiting angels, of society whirl, of high hats and higher bills, of teas and small talk with- out end, and the kaleidoscopic wind-up in the armory. Of course the Ninety-Four Prom. surpassed anything given up to that time. As the New York Whirrlled recorded, the scene was one of fairy-like brilliancy. The decorations were superb, the music entrancing and the crush of beauty and fashion on the floor rarely equalled among society functions. The reaction from this gala week was severe and the expansive afternoon-tea-smile, the tail-coat and the Heaven-aspiring collar were laid away with' many a moving memory of fascinating tete-a-tete, or never-to-be- forgotten-for-a-minute waltz. The undergraduate rule made plenty of material for campus talk through january and February. What with war and rumors of war, threatened resignations, University meetings and the terse and pithy News editorial, those were stirring times beneath the Elms. The University decided to stand by its captains and its traditions for a year, and a loyal majority of the junior class voted this way. The University Tea on Washington's birthday became an enthusiastic fixture, and the Pink Tea of our junior Year will long be remembered. So great was the interest shown in this social innovation that wet weather did not affect the attendance in the slightest degree. In the early spring the various college publications were elevated in character and standing with a sud- 90 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. denness that savored ofa premature blasting operation in Harlem. The Recwfrl dared to be as funny as it could, the Cozwfani distanced the Arabian Nights in its story-telling powers, and the Lii. was even more sprightly and vivacious than before. The Ninety-Four boards had assumed control and literary America was shaken to its centre. Spring came on schedule time and never seemed so ideally perfect in its pulsing life, its warmth of sunshine, and the intoxicating witchery of the out-of-doors. 'We were loafing in the sunny spots on the campus before the first robin skirmisher yodled, and when the lonely blade of grass grew green, Ninety-Four was in the full tide of spring recreations, and that tired feeling peculiar to the season. About this time a stranger might have thought that the football season had rollecl around again. Numerous young men with crysanthemum locks dotted the college grounds,and there was a suggestion of a limp in their weary gaits. No, gentle reader, you must guess again. They were actors-long-haired Thespians in the Robin Hood junior Burlesque Company, and they were stiff and rheumatic from the terpsichorean paces through which they nightly cantered with Ballet-master Lothian striving to limber them up. The first joint play given by Delta Kappa Epsilon and Psi Upsilon owed its inception to Ninety-Four, and despite many discouragements and de- lays incident to the preparation of a first production. not to mention a chronically objecting Faculty, the blood- curdling outlaws and the 20 beautiful Coeds, 207' followed Robin Hood, the fair Annabel, and the gaunt and ascetic Friar Tuck through the wilds of Sherwood Forest to a happy curtain fall-happy forthe audience. JUNIOR YEAR. 91 The last two weeks of rehearsal were shadowed and saddened by the absence of one who had looked forward to taking part with his classmates in this event. On May 9th, Cyrus Nolan died after an illness of only four days. No event in our course has more affected and startled the class than this untimely loss of one whose friends were many and whose future seemed so bright. The athletic season was coming on apace. The Gun Club settled down to martyrlike training, and daily the tail feathers of the innocent clay pigeon iilled the sulphurous air. The class nine--well, there was a class nine. It played ball on several occasions but failed to win the Interclass championship on a technicality--a trifling lack of a few dozen runs, hardly important enough to mention. The Spring regatta was a pathetic occasion -the last appearance of the Ninety-Four crew on any course. For the last time the little band of heroes which had fought against such odds, pulled down Lake Whit- ney, while the spectators nearly pulled down the bridge in the excitement. We did not win this regatta. The Ninety-Four crew never received the laurels it deserved for beating Harvard in Freshman year. After losing half of the crew early in this season, this feat was highly creditable, and it has been forgotten in the light of subsequent history. The Mott Haven Cup returned to New Haven after a splendid fight in the Intercollegiate games, and we were more than consoled for the loss of the Dual meeting at Cambridge. Princeton fell an easy prey on the diamond and the series went to Laurie Bliss' team, one-two-three. Then came those two magnificent Harvard games at 92 YALE '94 cLAss Book. Cambridge and New Haven--struggles which would have shattered the nerves of the sphinx to watch. Honors were even, and then came the boat race at New London. With an undergraduate crew the dark blue swung down the four miles of flashing water, clean and easy, and shook off splashing Harvard after the two- mile flag, finishing with four lengths to spare. Some one suggests that an asbestos veil be drawn over that last Harvard game in New York. Do nothing of the kind. Yale made a splendid fight with a green undergraduate nine against a collection of ex-captains from all American college-dom --graduate students whose wives and children cheered them on from the grand stand. It was no disgrace to lose that game as we did. Yale had swept the athletic field again, taking three Intercollegiate championships, and one baseball game was poor consolation for Harvard. We were not all athletes, despite our heavy contri- butions to the various University teams. Spring shaded softly into early summer, while we sailed, walked, loafed in open breeze-swept windows, and grew confidential on the fence in the warm dusk of the june evenings. We learned to know each other then, in those idle june days, and although the pursuit of this sort of knowledge may have interfered with the successful out- come of certain engagements at Alumni Hall, there is more in college than book-larning Phi Beta Kappa and other high stand pirates to the contrary. We were living in the present then, a life of which we shall only know the fullness when it is goneg but the future began to obtrude itself now and then. Across the pleasant vista of the summer vacation, we could see the dim vision of Senior year-the beginning of the end. JUNIOR YEAR. 93 But the end was too far off for its shadow to touch the joy of the present. We parted for the summer as Seniors--the junior year of the class of Ninety-Four was a memory--to grow dearer with the retrospective years that arerto come. RALPH D. PAINE. fl' :fx leap PM VVSQSTKQVV stxbfxfk A XWNA - ra e9 1, gap ty saws..- 'XJQ -3- fl V ,jeg X rt, f Senior Year. Samuel Taylor Coleridge has objected to Gibbon's History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Em- pire, because he has made no philosophical treatment of his subject. To the average Senior, this might seem a point in his favor, but not wishing to interfere with Mr. Coleridge's popularity by contradicting him, we will accept his statement and follow his theory. By an appeal to consciousness, we establish the following philosophic principles: QAQ We are Seniors. CBD The Seniors run the University. The reader, keeping these principles firmly in mind, will now be prepared to follow the course of events. How we conducted ourselves as Seniors during those dangerous yet delightful summer months, can not be told here. Recent estimates Hx the number of sofa pillows in the college at ten thousand, nine hundred and ninety-four. It is safe to say a goodly number of these date from last july and August. For besides the natural charm of the Yale Senior, there is a tinge of sadness about him as he realizes this is his last chance, that makes him, in theory at least, almost irresistible. Enough to say that we arrived last fall in New Haven to find the Chapel suddenly enlarged. Several of our art connoisseurs criticized severely the general outline, but architecture that gives us half a week's respite from an eight ten service, deserves commenda- tion, whatever be its school. At length the asupiciou-s SENIOR YEAR. 95 day appeared, the Lyceum bell rang out once more, and we assembled. The choir groaned and were still, a solemn hush, a sudden downward movement of two hundred and forty-three heads, a jam, a melee, a rush, a scrap, and our first bow had been made. We were Seniors indeed. The autumn days were spent in walks to the field in the endeavor to assist the coachers in picking out the team. After many trials we settled on the men and the last practice was over. Ut is strange how the word last 'i will persistently re-appear-our last game at the field, our last Prom., our last college vacation, and so on indefinitelyj. There is no need of alluding to the Pennsylvania game. Every one knows that our victory was virtually a defeat, and that we only won by a fluke -that -is, every one who has talked to a Pennsylvania man. The Springfield game is at hand. Thanks to our manager, who really wasn't quite so bad as the New York papers painted him, we were not obliged this year to rise at 1 A. M., and stand in line eight hours to secure seats. The day was a perfect one, and certainly no game was ever watched with such intense interest, partly because of Harvard's confidence, and because of the rumors that floated from secret practice that we had a team worthy to wear the blue. We had entered with a defeat. To end with one would be humiliating indeed. There is a m-urmur arising from the north end of the bleachers. It grows louder and louder, it bursts into a wild shout, and there they come, the gallant defenders of old Eli's fame. Gur opponents line up in their now famous patent leather suits, and up and down the field the battle turns. Every Yale man breathed easier after the first fifteen minutes, and thc second half found 96 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. us confident and expectant. At once, they near Har- vard's goal. We forgot to tell the girl beside us why those big men let the little quarter-back do all the talk- ing, for a sudden wave of humanity, sweeping over the bleachers, bearing on its crest innumerable blue ribbons and banners, and an indescribable roar, mark the touch- down. We were not skilled, they say, in strategyg in fact, I-Iarvard's strategy was far superior to ours. Cer- tainly Harvard should have beaten. So said Mr. Whitney. Well, Eli could rejoice that night, while from the Crimson side there arose only the dismal wail, It's a way we have at Old Harvard. There was also a game Thanksgiving Day. It must not be thought, however, that football occu- pied the entire term. It is rumored that some men studied. And some plotted for the overthrow of the electric light. We found the pole in front of Durfee one morning, stretched out in -its last collapse. Who perpetrated the deed has remained a mystery. The act, however, was fruitless. The light was replaced the next day and now sheds its mild beams over a radius of some twelve feet. Examinations over, we hurried away for our Christmas vacation, while the Glee Club fussers started for the West, looking for new fields to conquer. The' two weeks passed rapidly as two weeks will at that season. The New Year came and who can forget that strange thrill he felt when for the first time he dated his letter 1894. Vlfhat once seemed so far off, had come at last. On our return there was a noticeable seriousness throughout the class. We realized that we were on the home stretch, and many a man did more reading and thinking the winter term, than in his whole course. About this time certain fellows would drop into your room and ask you casually SENIOR YEAR. 97 what you thought of a college man getting engaged. You admitted that there were instances in which it had worked well. There are some facts which even Dr. Seaver's statistics can not reach, and it is hidden from the investigating historian how many of our classmates succumbed that fatal Christmas tide. At this period of history a new figure shot across our horizon, to speak in appropriate astronomical language. The Commodore may justly be considered the Napoleon of our class, for as that famous general made his reputa- tion by moving his men with astounding celerity, so the Commodore first achieved fame by the way in which he rushed us to Pach's. Here, however, the analogy fails, for instead of falling as a comet, his star is too firmly fixed in the zenith to ever decline. In a class meeting which rivaled the wildest gathering of anarchists, he alone could quell the tumult by explaining his system of telegrams, and in him we have a secretary who will preserve, as no one else could, the records of the finest class that ever entered Yale. The Prom. came, bringing with it the usual accom- paniment of beauty. Front seats in Chapel sold at a premium, and such was the excitement that it was not found necessary to bring in the customary dog. In fact, the Chapel exercises have been unusually interesting this year. As a rule, we have visitors whom we are to delight by our bows. If they fail, the choir forms an interesting psychological study. There is a delightful uncertainty about it. Like lightning, it never strikes twice in the same place, that is, so far as the pitch is concerned. The Glee Club Concert forcibly reminded us what changes four short years can make in college customs. The days of the rush are over, Ninety-Four being the last 08 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. class to indulge in that athletic event. And at the con- cert, no Freshman threw various articles ranging from cardboard squares to pigeons upon the heads of the de- lighted audience. No numerals dropped gracefully from the flies. lnstead,jim appeared, and with that bold, dar- ing manner of his told a spell-bound assemblage that Those who wanted to go out could go out from the out- side. The Senior German was, of course, the event of the week, but our last Prom. will always be one of the pleasant recollections of Senior year. When that delightful bit of Color fades from memory, we will cer- tainly be dead to the world. The Prom. over, we settled clown for the long winter term. Those of us who were athletic proceeded to dash around the Gym., while those who were not watched them and wondered whether life really were worth living. The usual snowball fights occurred at all hours of the day, and there is a report that the Faculty have decided to postpone the building of the companion dormitory to White, and devote the funds to window panes. We passed February as best we could, varying our existence by a skate at Lake Whitney or an afternoon at the library, when the New Haven weather suddenly realized that if we were to carry away a good impression of it, it must do or die. We were surprised to find the last of the month that Spring had actually arrived nearly four weeks before scheduled time. These last months can never be forgotten. Then it is that the Senior reaches the top of his ambition and wears away his fin- gers spinning it. What a difference between the cold mathematical formulae we learned with Prof. Beebe Sophomore year, and the concrete reality. Most of us now cannot tell a toggle joint from a screw driver, to say nothing of computing the velocity of -rotary motion, SENIOR YEAR. 99 but we appreciate none the less keenly a lignum vitae as it circles around Osborne followed by an admiring crowd of newsboys and bootblacks. Baseball enthu- siasm returned and the whole class joined in the game with the zest and vigor that has brought Yale's athletes to the front so many times. Good material for the nine was undoubtedly brought out and developed in this way and if the standard is not raised the coming year, it cer- tainly is not our fault. Who can forget the inspiring sight of Dawson only missing the ball by about ten feet or sliding for the electric light pole in a way that rivals the best efforts of Captain Case. The time may come when the brick row will be but a name, and if the imagination can take such a flight, a lawn stretch from Vanderbilt to Durfee. No doubt it will please the eyeg our present campus is far from ornamental, but it certainly is useful. We doubt whether thcre is one of us who would exchange that bare patch for the finest turf. It is the rallying place of Yale Democracy. There it was that the famous boar hunt took place, when Handsome Dan stood in danger of losing his position of the Yale Mascot. And there, during the long summer afternoons, perched on the fence, we gazed into the future and wondered whether living on five dollars a week would be our ideal of hap- piness. And in the warm evenings, we listened there to the Glee Club, or produced our own music-less artistic but certainly spirited. Senior year has been the fitting climax of our college life. At times the thought of Graduation would obtrude itself with an unpardonable persistency, and the uncer- tainty of our future would bring some unpleasant moments. But these were soon forgotten. The Yale spirit is no myth. Never in our course has there been 100 YALE '94 cLAss Book. such a feeling of friendship throughout the entire class. The last few weeks have brought us nearer to each other than the first two years. Our rivalries have been forgotten and we have given ourselves up to enjoying the last days we will ever be together. The average college man can rarely be accused of sentiment, except towards his Alma Mater, but surely as we hang out our signs and offer to the inhabitants of New Haven chairs and tables at an incredibly low price, we will feel a bitter pang of deep and sincere sorrow. VVe leave these elms now, who knows when or how we will return? We may come back rich and famous and go down to posterity by endowing the shower baths at the Gym., or some equally great act of benevolence. But the probabilities are that we will return to acampus where all has changed, except the News editorials, and wander among strangers, unknown save by the Log. Smith, ,Q4, was in town yesterday. EDWARD B. REED. Literary. Alas, I t k g t p to study it and 'tis poetical. -Twelfth Night. But strange to say, the university at large, and par- ticularly the reigning editorial boards of the various college publications, did not take so kindly to our literary endeavors when we were Freshmen. As a class we are undoubtedly remarkable, and for many things-for our high stand, for our famous crew which never won a race, for our colossal row in Sophomore year, for our great religiosity and thirst, for our general unkemptness and brilliant personnel. But somehow our literary career, though creditable, has been neither so marked nor so dazzling as one might naturally expect, The class, however, took a flying start in poetry. Early in Freshman year G601'gC Morgan electrified the college world by a Lz'!. poem. Unfortunately his brilliant genius soon burnt itself outg the next year he left col- lege, and now only his name lingers as a fond memory. Through most of this year the Lz'z'. pursued its calm unperturbed way, unharrassed by Freshmen contribu- tions, at least in print, how many literary contributions were given birth to, only to eke out their toil-nurtured existence in the degrading duty of lighting the lires in the rooms of the various editors, will be forever hidden in the inscrutable abyss of the past. The Coumfzi, how- ever, with far-sighted policy, lent a helping hand to the 102 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. struggling aspirants, and during the year R. D. Paine, W. R. Price and E. R. Williams, jr., were elected to the editorial board. I hardly know whether drawing for the Reewfd can be called literary work, but since there is no one in the class who has altogether devoted himself to such artistic pursuits, it may not we worth while to discuss the ques- tion here. E. B. Reed, however, was favored by the owl this year, and duly inaugurated as one of our famous coterie of professional wits. I-Ie was also elected fence orator, and was uanimously acknowledged to have gloriously turned down his sophomore rival. The ways of the News heeler are harrowing to behold. Scouring the journalistic Held from morn ,til night, squeezing each twenty-four hours dry of every precious drop of news, only to find those same drops served up by some one else at the same time. I-le, at any rate, wins his hard-earned position by brain toil and the sweat of his brow. The class, nevertheless, rolled up its sleeves and went in. Howland proved by his survival to have been the fittest and was duly elected to the staff. To be sure, we can hardly be said to have inaugurated a new literary era when Freshmen, the opening of Soph- omore year showed brighter prospects. Paine Qhaving resigned from the Couafanly and Reed now began their triumphant career for the Lit., and by the end of the year G. F. Dominick, Price, Judson, Lounsbury, Eno, and Nichols fwho had taken the Wyllys Betts prizej had also joined the race. Todd was taken on the Coumui, Fowler and Chamberlain on the Record, and jones, Mosely, Stillman, Whitney, and Wright on the News. In fact, the literary creative genius of the class, like yeast in a loaf, was beginning to seethe and stir, coming, every now and then, to the surface in a bubble LITERARY. 103 of productionfl' The class was finding its wings, but had not yet learned to soar into the empyrean. Although coming more strictly under the heaid of Edu- cational, a word about Prof. McLaughlin seems here appropriate. Whatever love of things literary the class has developed in its brief college career is due more to his single influence, than to all other influences together. Those of us who had the good fortune to attend his course can testify to the irreparable loss which the suc- ceeding classes have suffered by his death. By Christmas of Junior year competition for the sev- eral papers had reached high water mark. The first month of the new year saw B. Dominick and Thomas taken on the Courani, and shortly after Judson, and Cochran Qwho had been overheard to express the desire of being editorially connected with some college period- icalj were elected to the Record Board. Chamberlain, our chief draughtsman, had retired with Chesterfieldian reserve to Ninety- Five, leavingJudson as our only artistic representative. The Senior Board was thus made up of Reed fchairmanj, Fowler, Cochran, and Judson. In March, Todd, B. Dominick, G.F. Dominick, Thomas, and Price were made editors-in-chief of the Comfmzi, with Price, chairman, and Todd, financial editor. Trowbridge was elected to the News, and, with those previously chosen, constituted the Senior Board of that illustrious daily. Stillman received the chairmanship, and Howland was made financial editor. The Lizf. election resulted in the choice of Paine fchairmanj, Judson ffinancial editorj, Nichols, fthe recipient of the Lil. medall, Reed and Eno. 'It would be unfair not to state that this striking simile is not original, but was kindly suggested to the writer by one of our eminent professors in the Philosophical Department. 104 YALE '94 cLAss Book, During this month the junior exhibition also took place. The speakers were Reed, Nichols, Hall, Gilles- pie, Lynch, Lounsbury, Wheeler and Kellogg. Hall, with the assistance of Burke and Gladstone as philo- sophical statesmenf' carried off the prize. The statisti- cal history of the literary attainments of Ninety-Four is thus brought nearly to a close. In Senior year Price, Vlforthington, Lounsbury, and Davies were elected to membership in Chi Delta Theta, and G. F. Dominick was elected chairman of the Coumnl in place of Price, who left us for a mastership at St. Paulis. The Town- sends and the De Forest are the only literary events still left to the future. ' We have done nothing superlatively great, perhaps, but we have at least done creditably. With the addi- tional attractions of new and luxurious editorial rooms in the white dormitory, we should have reasonable grounds for hoping that the literary development of the university will, in the future, throw entirely into shadow the efforts of the past college editors, doomed to the bliss of a ground Hoor apartment in the basement of South Middle or North, or the subterranean horrors of Durfee. We have seen the last of the old era, and after us, not the deluge, but the demolition of the old brick row, and the dawn of the age of luxury. And yet we ought to feel, I think, that the time we have spent in writing has not at all been wasted. The bene- tits outside the curriculum are many, and not the least of them has been the pleasure and profit derived from college literary work. It may have been embryonic, but to quote from the philosophers om1zz'umex ow, and who knows what mighty literary giants we have been chumming with, all unawares, men, perhaps, who in the future years shall help to light the world with LITERARY. D 105 their genius, some gleams of which shall reflect to the credit of dear old Yale. HENRY LANE ENO. lu:Qr We have furnished the editors of the college papers fruitful material for the waste basket and as a reward we have had our full share of editors on the various college publications. Sixty-eight have written either for college or out-of-town papers and ninety-four say they have not. Eighteen have written for the Lit., seventeen for the Record, fifteen for the News and ten for the Courant. Four men have written for all. Sixteen have at one time or another been correspondents to out-of-town papers, but Paine is easy first man in this race. He has written for about thirty papers, among them the follow- ingi New York World, Boston Globe, Philadelphia Press, Chicago Tribune, Minneapolis Tribune, San Francisco Chronicle, Pittsburgh Dispatch, Providence journal, Asbury Park journal, Philadelphia Times, Philadelphia Ledger, Youth's Companion, lVIcClure's Syndicate, Florida Times, Florida Union, Commercial Advertiser, Daily American, Hartford Post, Hartford Courant, Washington Post, Police News, New Haven Palladium, Register and all the college papers. One hundred and seventy-two were subscribers to the News sometime during the course, Record, one hundred and forty 6VCQ.LZ.f.,O1'1C hundred and thirty-nineg Comfani, one hundred and twenty-two, and eighty-nine have been subscribers to all the college papers. Some of these say, even the C'0Zl7'tZ7Zf,,, and another even the ' Ban- ner' and ' Pot-Pourri. ' The News is voted the most 106 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. valuable receiving eighty-one, Lit., fifty-five: Record, twenty-six: Courant, seven, The Trowbridge Alumni Weekly, twog Class Book, two, and Banner, one. The Record is the preferred bi-weekly according to one hundred and twenty-eight, the Courant receiving eighteen votes, uneitherf' five, Pot-Pourri 'I don't think', three. Some of the reasons given for preferring the Record are: Most original, four, Choice of two evils, five, Not as footless as the Courant, twelve, Worth reading sometimesgv Because of the mental training I get in trying to find the joke CC. Smithjg The Courant is too sensational fDiven5. Some of the reasons for preferring the Courant are: Its startling brightness fThomasjg Because of Thomas' Cuban stories fWoodruffjg Good men on the board QToddj. And quite a few say neither, and one gives his reason, Record tries to be funny and isn't3 Courant tries to be serious and fails fRobinsonQ. We prefer the New York papers in the following order: Tribune, seventy-eight, Herald, forty-three, Sun, twenty-nine, Times, sixteen, VVorld, sixteeng Post, nine, Press and Police Gazette, one each. .The Register easily wins first place with over one hundred votes, and the Courier and Palladium are tied for second with ten votes. Our favorite prose writer is Dickens, thirty-six, fol- lowed by Thackery, thirty, Scott, twenty-five, George Eliot, Irving, Hugo, eight, and the following receive votes: Hawthorne, Macaulay, Mitchell, Bret Harte, Dumas, Lamb, Holmes and Moses. Favorite poet, Longfellow, thirty-one, Shakespeare and Tennyson, twenty-two, Milton, ten: Wadsworth, eight. Mrs. Browning is the most popular poetess, receiv- ing thirty-seven votes, with Ella Wheeler Wilcox LITERARY. . 107 and Alvin Probasco Nipgen tied for second place, six- teen, Mrs. Hemans, eight, Sappho, seven, and the fol- lowing are voted for: George Dominick, Sam Bissell, jean Pardee and A1 Fowler. The best book in our opinion is David Copperfield, fourteen, and the following are voted for: Henry Es- mond, twelve, Vanity Fairf' nine, Pendennis, nine, Lorna Doone, nine, Ivanhoe,l' nine, Les Misera- bles. nine, Ben Hur, Bible, Ladd's Introduction, Tale of Two Cities, The Newcombsf' five, and Reveries of a Bachelor, Adam Bede, , two. Our favorite poem is Evangeline, sixteen. Other popular ones are Gray's Elegy, eleven, L'Allegro, nine, Lucile, eight, Thanatopsisf' seven, Hiawathafl six, Ancient Mariner, five. In Memoriamv and Mannion are also mentioned. The figures most admired in history are: Napoleon, thirty-eight, Washington, twenty-eight, Lincoln, twenty, Hannibal, eight, Christ, six, Alfred the Great, four, and Eli Yale, three. Corbett also receives two votes. In romance, Col. Newcomb wins first, twelve, Jean Val jean, eleven, David Copperfield, Ivanhoe, King Arthur, Don juan, six, and the following are voted for: Falstaff, Dare-Devil-Dick, Count of Monte Christo and Harry in its career at Yale. Educational. Whence is thy learning? Hath thy toil O'er books consumed the midnight oil? -G ray. F we believe what everybody says we were induced to come to college by about as many different reasons as there are members in the class, no matter how near to that aim we thought we were coming during our grind in Freshman and Sophomore years, which in a certain way made all our aspirations one. A large num- ber came because they were sent, others came because of their fitting school influences. Other answers given are: Wanted to wear long hairg Desire to become Prime Minister of England gl' To dodge workg Instinct, or categorical imperative gn Io become a 'University mang ' A desire to be able to find tongues in trees, books in the running brooks, sermons in stones and good in everythingf' To study Ladd's Introduction fi The desire to keep off work four years more. Yale was chosen in preference to other colleges by about one-half the class because relatives had gradu- ated here, the family place, and because I had a pullg I didn't want to boom any other collegeg Because I thought John Ferguson was going to Har- vardg Had seen Harvard play footballgn To see Harvard lickedg Yale more fitted for my Yankee EDUCATIONAL. 109 bloodg Yale combines more desirable elements than any other college I know off' fjudsonjg To buy Gos- ling's digests. Not many of us regret coming to Yale, and most of the reasons given are merry jibes, and at particular times, not lasting up to this time. Some of the answers to this question are: No, because I found Commodore Harrington here, When I had physics with Whit- more, Yes, when I met Painel' fPolkjg Wl1en bill for Prom. carriages came in Per-kinsj. Comparing Yale with other colleges there is a gen- eral sameness in the replies, which is generally a very emphatic statement that Yale is easily the best, Incomparable, etc. Other answers are: The sun to the electric light after the accident, as Yale to the next bestgl' 'tl-larvard is better in some ways fNicholsj3 Yale is sensibly Democratic, Harvard is blindly cocky, Princeton is apt to be muckerishg Trinity is sweetly ladylikeg University of Pennsylvania and Cor- nell both imagine they own the earth, and the rest are too small to be in the game QPriceQ3 Most thoroughly American Universityl' CReedJ. Our entrance examinations were taken in multifarious places ranging from San Francisco to Exeter, N. I-I., and though a majority of the class sa.y they didn't receive any entrance conditions, yet, to make up for this, one man says he received twenty-two, and six say they had so many conditions that they never received entrance certificates. One hundred and one different preparatory schools helped to fit us for Ninety-Four. Some of those con- tributing most follow: ANDOVER-Beard, A. B. Brown, Burr, Case, Chamber- lain, Cochran, Cooke, Dickson, T. Eaton, Ellis, Har- 110 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. rington, Hixon, Holmes, Lamprey, Lane, McBirney, McDuffee, McMillan, Moseley, J. Potter, Richardson, Sawyer, Seymour, Skelton, L. B. Smith, L. Smith, Still- man, A. Taylor, J. Taylor, Walcott, Wheelei'-31. ST. PAUL,S-BOYCT, J. C. Brown, B. Dominick, jr., G. F. Dominick, jr., R. King, Kirkland, Lyman, G. B. Miller, F. Perkins, H. Perkins, A. Potter, Price, Wo1'th- ington-13 EXETER-Arnot, Diven, Elting, Haradon, Henry, Holter, Hixon, Howland, james, Stothers, Word-11. HILLI-IOUSE-Cafley, Cruttenden, Dawson, Kellogg, Lake, Lamb, Matthewman, Paine, Stahl-9. HARTFORD HIGH SCHOOL-B2tI'tl.Ctf, C. Bissell, Gar- van, Leete, R. Lounsbury, Pierson, H. F. Smith, Town- send-8. LAWRENCEVILLE-Greeley, jackson. Mitchell, Nichols, Sheffield, Walcott-6. Many other schools are repre- sented and a number of us came unprepared. Twenty-five men own up to having been valedictorians in their classes in preparatory schools, but as several out of the number were either joking or have, to our knowledge, lost some of their cunning since that time, we will not mention any names. Not so many say they were salutatoriansg however, this seems to have been a fruitful subject for several to make use of their imagina- tions and to quote ancient sayingsf' which can be found in previous editions of the CLASS BooK. We didn't break any records in our junior Appoint- ment list, except the whole number on the list, which perhaps is accounted for by our unusually large class, as perhaps in the same way the record of those failing to get appointments raised the record. Allen, Bosley, F. Chase, Dawson, Cooke, Davies, Dorland, Bailey, Bandler, J. C. Brown, J. E. Brown, Bunnell, W. Chase, Cruttenden, Dickson, Dwight, Bartlett, Briggs, A. Brown, f Crafts, Dunning, Beard, W. R. Clarke, Defendorf, Guthrie, McCullough, li DUCATIONAL. lll Junior Appointments. PHILOSOPHICAL ORATIONS. Gosling, Knaebel, Nichols, Reed, HIGH ORATIONS. lr Gillespie, Kellogg, W. Raymond Skinker, ORATIONS. T. Eaton, Elting, Goss, Judson, Lloyd, Loveland, Noon, Osgood, Price, ' C DISSERTATIONS. G. Eaton, Hood, Keays. McKeever, I. Phelps, IRST DISPUTES. McKim, Moorhouse, J. Morgan, Morley, A. Potter, Ryder, Thomas, Van Name, Van Slyck-12 R. Smith, Whitney, Wrig'ht-Io. Richardson, Silverstein, L. B. Smith, J. Taylor, Warner, Westheimer, Wheeler, J. Williams-26. Rowley, Stillman, Tucker, Word--14. Skelton, H. Smith, Trowbridge, Waterman, Wilson-16. 112 Case, Day, Ellis, Fowler, G. Green, C. Hall, 1. Hall, Hulburt, Arnot, Bissell, Callender, Chamberlain, Chapman, Crosley, B. Dominick. Allison, Bigelow, Bishop, Cassidy, Cochran, G. Dominick Dunkerson, Eno, Fox, Garvan, George, YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. SECOND DISPUTES. Larnprey, L9-Y, ' Leete, Lineaweaver, Longenecker. W. Lounsbury, McCray, McDuffee, FIRST COLLOQUXES. Hare, Hixon, Holt, Hull, Lane, R. Lounsbury, Orr, snconn COLLOQUIES. Gibbons, Haradon, Holter, james, Lake. McBirney, McMillan, Matthewman, Mitchell, Murray, Nolan, ,i-, -J Mackoy, Moseley, Olmstead, Pope, Sallmon, Stone, Todd, Waters--24. Pierson, J. Potter, Redington, Robinson, Saunders, L. Smith, StOthC1'S-2 1 . H. Perkins, Persons, E. Raymond, Sanders, Sniffen, Stahl, Tilson, Tousey, Townsend, Walcott, E. Whiting-33. March Ilth, we had a half holiday given and we were supposed to attend our junior Exhibition .en masse, but the dozen fellows that sat in the back gallery that day didn't speak very well for our Yale culture, as the News so brightly puts it. The speakers and subjects were as follows: EDUCATIONAL. 118 L. P. Gillespie, New York City, Final Estimate of Tennyson. E. B. Reed, Holyoke, Mass., Dante in Exile l' S. K. Wheeler, Chattanooga, Tenn., Lessons of the Homestead Strike. R. H. Nichols, Bingham- ton, N. Y., Dante in Exile. R. R. Lounsbury, Hart- ford, Conn., Victor Hugo and Louis Napoleon. J. L. Hall, Willimantic, Conn., Burke and Gladstone as Philosophical Statesmenfl F. H. Lynch, Peacedale, R. I., Final Estimate of Tennysonf, H. H. Kellogg, Carthage, Mo., Burke and Gladstone as Philosophical Statesmenf' The prize was awarded to Hall. Prizes and scholarships have been awarded to the following: Freshman Year: Hugh Chamberlain Greek Prize, Dawson. Woolsey Scholar, Dawson. Hulburt Scholar. Van Slyck. Third Freshman Scholar, F. Chase. De Forest Mathematical Prizes--First Prize, Lamprey, Van Slyckg Second Prize, Dawson, Goss, Third Prize, Beeler, Keoabian, Williams. Berkeley Premiums- First Grade, F. Chase, Gosling, Nichols, Osgood, L. B, Smith, Van Slyck, Second Grade, Allen, Dawson, De Forest, Dwight, Knaebel, 1. Taylor, Thoms. Sophomore Year: Thomas Glasby Waterman Scholar, Judson. Scott Hurtt Scholar, Thoms. Lucius F. Robinson Latin Prizes--First Prize, Nichols, Second Prize, Thoms. De Forest Mathematical Prizes-Sec- ond Prize, Lamprey, Thomsg Third Prize, Nelson. Williams. C. Wyllys Betts Prize, Nichols. College Prizes in English Composition-First Prizes, J. I. Chamberlain, Price, Van Name, Second Prizes, Gilles- pie, Kellogg, Reed, Third Prizes, Lynch, E. Raymond, Sniffen. Elocution Prizes-In Reading, Seymour, in Speaking, Haradon. 114 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. junior Year: Thomas Glasby Waterman Scholar, Judson. Scott Prize in French, Noon. Scott German Prize, W. Raymond. De Forest Mathematical Prize -Second Prize, Lay. Lucius F. Robinson Latin Prizes-First Prize, Nicholsg Second Prize. Thomsg Third Prize, Van Slyck. Winthrop Prize, Thoms. Henry james Ten Eyck Prizes-First Prize,j. L. I-Iallg Second Prizes, Gillespie, Kellogg, Lounsbury, Lynch, Nichols, Reed, Wheeler. Our opinions of the marking system are pretty forci- ble and emphatic, but our ideas as to what changes we would suggest are not very clear cut. Thirty-five say, good, twenty-five, unnecessary evil, twenty-four rot- ten,'l eighteen say, unfair at times, and the following descriptive adjectives receive five votes each: Crude, fair, too low, foul, easily improved. couldn't be worse, and sev- eral others of like nature get one and two votes. The Commodore says, Poor system. Let the degree be the reward. An unmixed evil and not even a necessary one. A perfectly effectual incentive to cribbing, trot- ting, cramming, and the selection of high stand courses. We will improve the defective system in the following ways: Seventeen say abolish the entire sys- temf' Fifteen say mark on exams., entirely, and the same number would have the high stand men excused from examinations. Eight would have the professors mark higher. Six would abolish rZiw'.rz'o1zs and appointments, and the following improvements on the system receive one vote each: t'Try the Heidelberg system, Make Q. B. K. in the middle of the class, Less horsingf' Get better Profs.g Try the Harvard system 3 The abolition of the law of diminishing returns ClVIcCrayj. EDUCATIONAL. 115 Our elective system, on the other hand, is approved by a very large majority of the class, one hundred and forty-nine pronouncing it a good thing, nineteen that it is good as far as it goes, but should be extended, and three say they are Hdoubtfuli' on the subject, while Van Name expresses his opinion thus: I think they ought to offer good courses in preference to a lot which look well in the catalogue, but which few ever take, and itls a good thing they don't take them. The class is about evenly divided on the subject of extending the elective System to all the classes, that is, counting the vzoes 4795 against both those that say yes and those that say to all but the Freshmen Q47l. It seems to be the prevail- ing opinion of the class that the Freshmen, at least, should be put through the mill and allowed no liberties in their studies till some of the greenness leaves and they know more and what they want. Following the example of previous classes we vote Senior year the easiest, with junior year a good second : Senior 129, Junior 69, Sophomore 12, Freshman Io. Likewise we follow former votes for our hardest year, though Sophomore year seems to poll a greatly increased majority over other classes: Sophomore 113, Freshman 69, Senior 29, junior sl Prof. Richards wins an easy victory for the professor to whom we found it most difficult to recite, receiving 71 votes. Prof. Wheelei' second with 47, and the follow- ing tied for third place with I3 votes each: Clapp, Duncan, Beebe, Capps. The vote for easiest man is more evenly divided: Beers and Sneath 23, Reynolds, Dana and C. H. Smith 20, Schwab and Kitchel 14, and Phillips 1o, and several scattering votes, not more than 3 each. 116 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. We were least successfulin blufHng Prof. Richards, 75, and others in the following order: Wheeler 46, Chittenden 12, Adams 9, Dutcher and Duncan 7. And we succeeded most in Hbluffingl' the following: Whitmore 36, Kitchel I9,SI'1621tl1 17, Oertel 15, Beers 13, Ladd 10, Dana 8, and so on down to z'nji1zz'ly for Richards, who couldn't be bluffedj. Prof. Reynolds easily wins as our favorite professor. and the following receive votes: Dana 24,VV1'lglf1lI 22, Wheeler, Hadley and Gooch 12. Dutcher 59 is our favorite tutor, Abbott 36, Fisher 28, Capps 16, Gruener 7. We consider Wheeler, 46, the best teacher, and the following receive votes: Chittenden 23, Adams 21, Phillips 17, Hadley 16, Dana II, Smith and Sumner 9, Wright 8. Cnr blufnng ability is evident by the number that vote to recite verbally 114, but quite a number would prefer to Write 80, and yet a few prefer 7ZZZ.fk67' 9. Polk prefers a lecture, and C. Smith prefers to get on his feet and let the professor do the talking. All sorts of sensations are experienced by us while reciting: Feelings of enum' and 'I d0n't think ' fTr0wbridgeJ, Feel like one sailing to infinity fHar- ringtonj, A dramatic sundering of the ego from the chemical mass fSallmonj, Sadness mingled with inde- scribable longing fReedj. Several required studies seem to have afforded us trouble by the large number of subjects voted for, but Mechanz'cs received the most votes, 37, with the follow- ing in the game: .Psychology 30, Physics 20, Greek 20, Analytics 12, Latin and Trigonometry II, Logic io. Latin 27, seems to have troubled us least, with the following in order mentioned: French 19, Psychology EDUCATIONAL. 117 15, Geometry and English 13, Physics, Prexy's Lec- tures, Philosophy, Trigonometry and Greek IO . The most valuable required study in our opinion is English 34, and others as follows: Physics 29, Psychol- ogy and Mathematics 15, Ethics 13, Law 8, Modern Language 6. It is a very hot contest for the easiest elective, the following being tied for first place with 22 votes each: Law, Political Economy and Political American His- tory, and others receiving votes are, English 18, American Constitutional History 16, French IO, Four Gospels 9, English Literature 8, and Botany 7. Mediaeval History under Prof. Adams was found most difficult by 38, Modern Europe 21, English Con- stitutional History II, German Physiology and Philoso- phy IO, English under Cook 8, and History under Miss Williams 4. The most valuable elective is Political History according to 41, History 38, Law 19, Social Science 11, French, English, Chemistry, and Four Gospels, 7, Anatomy, Geology, Norwegian and Hebrew 2. Have I ever 'trotted' Latin and Greek? Yes, a good many miles QP. Millery. One hundred and sixty-four men say they have used translations and it seems to be the general opinion of the class that its the only logical thing to do and the instructors certainly expect it from the lessons they give. It isn't held to be a bad thing unless one wishes to become very proficient in the languages. Some of the reasons given for using translations are: To keep out of the fourth division 5 Life too short to grindgn When in Rome do as tourists do QR. Kingyg Save'timeg Wanted to be sure I was right and also to accelerate the pace QNicholsj. 118 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Most all the class disapprove cribbing under any cir- cumstances, though a limited number of exceptions to this general rule are mentioned: justifiable until we are put on our honor Cjudsonjg Only justifiable for a man in danger of Milfordg' justifiable under certain conditions which I haven't space to namely tPainej. Three men say they cribbed in Egyptian History under Prof. Harper and that they thought it justifiable then. One hundred and eight men say they didn't write for the junior Exhibition Prize, forty-two tried and a fewer number were successful. Twenty-two have sold all their old text books, eleven half, sixteen some,,' twenty-four a few, thirteen when hard up, while thirty-one say they have sold none, Didn't buy anyg Gave them awaygv All I could get after Potter had a sale QPolkj. One hundred and one have attended extra courses or lectures, while seventy-four have had enough to do to keep up what was required. We are emphatic in our opinion about all the depart- ments of the University being Co-ed. One hundred and ninety-nine men say No, with sev- eral large lines below, while only nine say YES and most all these have conditions governing the decision. Some of the opinions on this subject are: Not if we 'see them l'irst ' fl-Iolmeslg Yes, if maximum age be fo-rty and beauty a requirementll QR. Kingjg Not until after I am dead fThomsjg Yes, if the committee on entrance be composed of Seniors. The applications should also be accompanied by large photograph and census Qand otherl statistics. Music. If Music be the food of Love, play g' mc excess of it. Had Shakespeare, the sole originator of the above, successfully passed his finals for the glorious class of Ninety-Four, he would have e'en o'er eat himself eier Luna in refulgence fair closed up the first short day. When lived there such a class? I So full of love and music. To prove conclusively the semblance of the two terms is only to bring forward Poet Arbuthnot's apt quotation: Music and Love go hand in hand, and sympathy guides the feet. Yes, Ninety-Four as a class is musically eminent. Can it be that the numerals 9 and 4 have concealed about them a mystic shroud of half-hidden harmony? For we remember 'twas the year 49 B. C. which, how- ever, since times have changed, is equivalent to ,94 Eastern Standard, that Virgil in mock propriety wrote up Pan, the god of music, in the Sunday edition of the Bucolica. The following is a direct clipping by the author in dactylic diameter. All was still in the new-mown Illyrian provinces. Strangely stillg for was't not here on verdant green that Pious Pan did hit the pipes from 7 o'clock in the morn- ing until 7 o'clock in the morning? Too true. But see! Under ample spread of yon tall elm they sit, the figures 120 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. two. ' King Solley,' said Pan, wrapping his linen duster about him tPanj, 'Hoary old age fast creeps o'er me and my pipes are freezing upg do thou take to the New VVorld this art of mine and blow thyselff And so Ninety-Four can thank advance-agent john. I'm sure when the Chapel Choir, after strenuous calis- thenics, has rendered for us some rare Canon and Fugue, we must all remark, Yes, what would life be without music? In awarding the prizes for proficiency, honorable mention should be paid to Nlilton jones Warner of Connecticut. What members of the class rooming in Durfee--but the quali- fying clause is unnecessary: Rather, what members of the class do not remember Milt's rendition of that sym- pathetic little love ballad Answer P Oh, the depth of feeling displayed therein! What tender insight into the very realms of pathos! Surely the composer intended it for just such a voice. Can you ever forget how you and your roommate held down all the vases and lamps in the room when Milt was doing his best, and when the last, sweet, sad note struck against East Rock and fell back into the Sound, alas, never to rise again, how your roommate, removing his arms from around the collected bric-a-brac, would remark, Nature has been very kind to Milton. just while we are on deep subjects, mention should be made of old Nat Green. When asked whether it was true that he could go two notes lower than the piano, Nat modestly replied, No, only one note. Peter Gray might never have come to the surface if Nat hadn't gone down and dragged him up. The next number on the program is a selection by the Oriole Quartet, composed of Pete Perkins, Dunker- son, Word and jimmy jenkins. MUSIC. 121 How strange that fate should so favor ,Q4 as to give her four such voices, and yet these men never even tried for the Glee Club. Like all quartets the members sang parts but there was a touch of originality in the Orioles that blended the parts nea.tly into one common whole in a manner -seldom attempted on the concert stage. When we admit that they sang parts, we mean that part of them sang on the key part of the time. Another champion of the Oriole School is Paine. Little Casino agreeing with Keats:- Sweet are the pleasures that to verse belong, And doubly sweet a brotherhood of song. organized just such a brotherhood under the name of Paine's Personally Conducteds. Two assistant con- ductors who carried the Cantus Firmus throughout for Paine were Open Air Stewart and Potter, the Proud. Style of music, popular. Rendition of music, personal. We see at a rough glance asimilarity in Lord Byron, Thomas Moore, and W'indy Whitney. For as the noblest portions of Byron were dictated by his imagin- ary griefs and sufferings and as the most beautiful ballads of Moore owe their birth to intense love of country, so we see Whitney acting the double part in his rendition of If I were Presidentf' and other of our national airs. In his singing one may discern the By- ronic imaginary grief and suffering and in his desire to sing, the love for country or love for something other than music. But why care what ye do, If the 'eart be true. Respecting thishsubject of music, what the class thinks of itself per capitem may be of some interest, One 122 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. hundred and one claim they sing: seventy-eight answer Nog while five are coy enough to answer, Others say notf' Alas, the fickleness of man! The reasons and excuses for singing are varied and in some cases unpardonable. Three sing because it is natural. Twelve have the interest of their friends at heart. Quite a number plead birdlike disposition. This reason can be fully appreciated by those who sleep on the ground floors. In the race for favorite song, Daisy Bell wins first place with Oh, Promise Me a close second. But Ninety-Four has not confined this branch of its zesthetical nature to vocal development alone. We find that twenty-nine play the piano, thirteen, the violin, twenty, the banjo, fifteen, the guitar, seven, the Heber- ger harp and flute. One man whom genius had overlooked claimed him- self a dead-beat in order to prove his proficiency on the drum and hence merit representation among the role of musicians. To what recourse will the age not revert? Several men played on the Welch Hall Banjo Club, Bigelow plays the cornetg two, the races: seven, the ban- jeaurineg three play horseg four, the mandolin, and one man plays the wheel. Say, what an orchestra we could have gotten up had the statistics been handed in sooner! The orchestration might indeed have been somewhat novel but with Corn- mordore Harrington at the wheel, all would have been well. Music has been one of our strong bonds of good fel- lowship. It has been one of the great incentives for Ninety-Four to meet at the fence. ' l ' MUSIC. 123 Ninety-Four, cultivate it to some extent at leastg for, remember when you are out in the cold, cold world, The man that hath no music in his soul and is not moved by concord of sweet sounds, is Ht for treasons, strategems and spoils. T. S. ARBUTHNOT. . . iff i l W l - 4 Religious. The best is vet to be. ' The last of life. for which the first was made: Our times are in His hand Who saith, A whole I planned, Youth shows but halfg trust God ! See all, n fr be afraid Y -Browning. The active religious work of Ninety-Four began in October of Freshman year. when Cochran, Solley, Dodge, L. Smith, Stillman and J. P. Chamberlain were elected temporary deacons. In February the class chose as per- manent deacons Cochran, Sallmon and Solley, and under their leadership in connection with the Young Men's Christian Association the work has gone forward. Soon after the election of deacons, Bible study was sub- stituted for the Wednesday evening prayer meeting and has been sustained successfully ever since. Experi- ments in undergraduate leadership and attempts to arrange permanent and progressive courses are helping to solve the problems in Bible study for many other col- leges as well as for Yale. Prayer meetings have been held regularly on Sunday led by members of the class, and while the average attendance has been larger than that of previous classes, it has not been satisfactory when compared with the large number of professing Christian men in the class. Several lines of Christian work outside the college have been well cared for. A committee of which Letch- worth Smith was chairman received the Boy's Club from the preceding class, and raised the usual amount RELIGIOUS. 125- of 9,5300 to prosecute its work. Under their management the rooms were transferred to Orange street, where a bath-tub was put in by two members of Ninety-Four. During the year over one thousand free baths were given to the boys by college men in attendance, who rolled up their sleeves and with scrubbing-brush in hand washed the urchins as many of them had never been washed before. Verily Cleanliness is next to Godli- nessfl The interest in this branch waxed so warm that scrubbing-matches were in order, and if memory serves correctly, one of the meekest men in Ninety- Four holds the record at thirty-eight scrubbed during one evening. A Penny Savingls Bank was inaugurated in which one hundred and twenty-nine boys deposited one hundred dollars and received interest. There were five hundred and sixty visits of college men, or an aver- age of three every night the club was open. Bethany Sunday School under charge of E. B. Reed has done good workin another part of the city, in reaching a class of boys and girls not otherwise touched by religious influences. All graduates who have been connected with this school seem to retain a lively inter- est in its progress, and watch its growth from year to year with pride. The Grand Avenue Mission, with A. B. Brown as superintendent, moved to East street where a lodging house was opened and the work enlarged. An old saloon was renovated and fitted up for a meeting room -twenty beds were put into the second and third Hoors--and again two Ninety-Four men stepped forward and provided a bath room. A clean bed, bath, bread and coffee for breakfast are furnished for fifteen cents. A large number of college men conduct meetings on Wednesday, Friday and Sunday evenings, coming into 126 YALE '94 cLAss isooic personal contact with an uncared-for class of men and endeavoring in I-Iis name to minister to all their needs. Many of these men give evidences of changed lives and testify to a power not their own, which through the work of the Mission has freed them from bondage to sin, self and Satan. Perhaps no part of the religious work at Yale exerts such strong reflex influence on the workers as does this, and Mr. Brown with his able band of supporters deserves the praise of Ninety-Four for his efforts in this field. There are 164 church members in the class divided according to denominations as follows: Congregational 49, Episcopalian 43, Presbyterian 42, Baptist 18, Nletho- dist 4, Lutheran 3, Roman Catholic 3, Dutch Reform 1, jewish 1. Of those not members of churches who have a preference for certain religious beliefs 5 would be Presbyterians, 9 Episcopalians, 6 Congregationalists, 2 Universalists, and 1 each Unitarian, Inhdel, Atheist and Mormon. Of the New Haven churches 44 men enjoy most attending The Church of Christ in Yale College. Trinity 29, Calvary 14, Church of the Redeemer 9, Center 9, St. Paul's 4, United 3, Christ 3. Some prefer chapel Because no collectiongv Variety of preachersf' The rest dog Fosters democratic spirit, etc. Trin- ity is in favor because of The girlsg' The music. Calvary, Pretty girlsg Near campus. Church of the Redeemer, Jerry Green sings theref' Sociable people 3 Shep's playingf' Forty-one have attended class prayer meetings regularly and'34 occasionally. The following churches have been attended regularly on Sunday morning as follows: Chapel 165, Trinity 15, Calvary 10, Christ 4, Dwight Place 2, and leach to St. Mary's, Center,St. Francis', St. Thomas', and Messiah. Ninety- RELIGIOUS. 127 five men have been Sunday School teachers, and 46 have had no experience in that line. The sentiment seems to be in favor of compulsory chapel. One hundred and ten say it is a good thing, while 62 oppose it with various comments. Twelve say Abolish, while I2 others say it is Good for Week days, but bad for Sundays. Others think it Should be optional g Good for Freshmen, 5' Relic of middle ages 5 Unmitigated evil, etc. Different organizations such as the Berkeley Associa- tion of Episcopal students, meeting for evening prayer every Friday, C. B. Bishop, jr., Presidentg the Oxford Club of Methodists, T. W. Gosling, President: the Northfield Club of men who have attended the summer schools for Bible study, E. B. Reed, President, the Wool- sey Club of students expecting to enter Christian work at home, F. Dwight, President, and the Student Volun- teer Band of those who have pledged their lives for the foreign Held, W. S. Beard, President, have done efhcient workin their respective lines. The religious life and activity is a powerful factor in elevating the moral tone of the college, and in produc- ing the type which Dr. Sneath calls the all-around man l' and Phillips Brooks the four-square man ' WILLIAM I-I. SALLMON. Social. O woman, in our hours of ease Uncertain, coy and hard to please. -Scott. We have been too devoted to our books to spend much time in New Haven Society, and it seems to he the general opinion that it is preferable to spend the time with the fellows and be chummy good fellows than to waste time with the classical girls of the Four Hun- dred, who are agreed to have a remarkable .wwzwzcss to each other, nevertheless we have a variety of opinions from the few that have had experience in this line. Quite a large majority of the class say they have been in New Haven society none, and then quite a few say, 'fnot much, a littlc,', enough to repent itf' and the rest vary between Kendall who spends half his time in that way, and the man that attended one of Proxy? Dwight Hall receptions and hasn't done anything lin that linel since. Callender has attended one German, one tea, two Arions, one City Guards and the Co-operative Society. Some of the opinions of time thus spent are 'fwell spent, good, very pleasant, good recreation, ex- pensive, good sport, 'fbettcr used otherwise, ought to have studied, time waz'sler!, got to know Prexy, QSolleyj, with formalities, wasfcd, with informalities, a bczzejilf' lMatthewmanj. SOCIAL. 129 The real .Vf6fMf New Haven girl is considered, intel- lectual but not pretty, 'fall good except the 'a'z'1'z'y d0zm', conceited, too flip, shop too much, H2730 below zero, stare too much, f'harmless, they try to make every man they meet feel how unimportant he is by im- pressing him with the fact that they know several hun- dred smooth men in college, society members, etc., to whom he can not hold a candle, she never grows old, not very pretty, but good enough for an evening or two a term. Don't come up to Saybrook girls, QChapmanj, good college widows, but otherwise no good, they are coldly and classically beautiful, but they are too thin and delicate to suit, Qliendallj. Our favorite game is wbzk! according to eighty-four, poker has seventeen supporters, billiards fourteen, chess five, Jenkins up, pass in the corner, checkers, sitting on the fence, beer game, gambling, horse, nigger baby, one each. Objections offered to card playing are very few, and if it isn't carried to excess, or turned into gambling, it is considered a manly game. We amuse ourselves in the following ways, trimming hats, studying psychology, horsing Pierson, blowing in money, reading the Comfa1zzf, fussing, spinning tops, calling, eating, hearing Dunning talk at twenty-four knots an hour, lBunnellj, sailing, The race for favorite drink was quite an exciting one, with beer and water tied for hrst place with thirty-one votes for each, and the following in the order named: milk, lemonade, whisky and ginger ale, ice cream soda, orange phosphate, Kentucky rye, Seltzer, Pierson's lem- onade, liquor and champagne. We are evidently a f'much traveled class, judging from the statistics handed in, as fifty-two of our number 130 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. have travelled abroad and quite a few very extensively. Fowler has been once to East Rock, Jerry Green has crossed the Atlantic three times, and Captain Dunning has traveled more than one-hundred thousand miles, though not on a stretch, for not many boats can carry enough provisions to feed the captain that far. Dur- ing his travels he has visited the following places: Labra- dor, Newfoundland, twice around Cape Horn, all the states on the west coast of South America, Holland, Germany, Austria, Hungary, Dalmatia, Italy, Switzer- land, Belgium, Greece, Egypt, Palestine, Chicago and the Great Lakes. We have spent our summers in various ways, and as one says, wise and otherwise. Quite a number have been at the sea-shore and a larger number have spent their time fussing, fthis class evidently includes the formerj while yet a larger crowd have loafed. Fred- die Perkins has spent his time resting from his studies, and some have worked and others farmed, while oth- ers only say,, at home, in the bosom of my family, traveling, playing tennis, getting off conditions, at various summer joz'1z!s, QR. King,j and have 'waisted' them. Some of the opinions of the summer girl are, most dangerous product of modern civilazationf' fReedj,f'leave her alone, beware, she is -fooling thee, out of sight, f'smooth, entertaining, good while you have her, wears too many clothes, QS. Bissellj, all right if you are the only man in town, fHoltj, an oasis in this life's weary desert, fPcrsonsj, and Nipgen grows poetical on the subject in the following soft notes: She's the dearest little lady, Classic type of old Arcady, And as wise, SOCIAL, 131 And her hair is brown and curly, And her teeth are white and pearly, Blue her eyes! Would you know this little maiden, With such charms so sweetly laden, Grace galore? List I She wears a huge straw-bonnet, With some nodding poppies on it, At the shore. One hundred and twenty-tive of the class dance and forty-nine do1z'!. Only eight men have any objection to it, and one other says, no, except when I am dancing with an 'it.' The two-step and waltz receive an equal number of votes for favorite dance and the polka and skirt dance are mentioned. Twenty-seven have learned since com- ing to college, one at the Arion Ball in '91, and the rest learned before entering. just one man in the class says he doesn't attend the theatre, and there are no objections given except time and money and 'fliable to excess. One hundred and forty-four attend the Hyperion most, twenty-two, Polis', and eleven, the Grand. joe Jefferson is undoubtedly our favorite actor, re- ceiving sixty-seven votes, and the following are voted for, Sothern, 16, Crane, 14, Irving, 11, Salvini, 8, Worth- ington, Mansfield, Willard, Robson, Booth, 6, and two each for Arbuthnot, F. C. Perkins, Russell, .Tim Corbett and Sullivan. Ada Rehan, 26, easily wins for the favorite actress, Modjeska, 14, Ellen Terry, 13, Lillian Russell, 12, Julia Marlowe, 9, Gladys Wallis and Marie Tempest, 6, W. Raymond, Bernhardt, Theresa Vaughn and Burroughs, 5, Mary Anderson, Mrs. Langtry, Mrs. Kendall and Miss Richards. 132 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Hamlet and Rip Van Winkle tie for first place for our favorite play and the following get honorable men- tion, As You Like It, Senator, Twelfth Night, Mer- chant of Venice, 1492, Henrietta, Rivals, Three Guards- men, Romeo, Lord Chumley and The Professor's Love Story. There is scarcely any competition for favorite opera, Robin Hood, receiving 68 votes, and Faust second in the race, only seventeen. Carmen, Lohengrin, Seig- fried, Wang and Erminie receive votes. Only ten own up to being engaged and all the rest say no with varying emphasis. Howell exclaims, do I' look it, and Warner says, I am in thought. Our matri- monial prospects are poor, slim remote, good, have a fighting chance, fVVarnerj, have sworn not to, till I can support her, at present am looking for an heir-ship or heiress-ship, QMackoyj, Welch says, yes, regular cinch to get engaged to another girl at the same time. Only a few say they prefer to be bachelors, and some of these say only for four or five years yet, and Price says, read the REU67'Z.L'5 and thought I would, read Prue zmdland thought I might be wrong, went up to Lyme and knew I had been llfflf-Zlfbl mistaken. I do not believe I am fitted to make a wife happy. I have lived too long alone, and have many set, old-maidish ways which are very dear to me, but would drive my wife wild, QF. Chasey, no, one must try to be a 'full developed man in all his normal possibilities, QLampreyj, the companion- ship of women brings out the best there there is in man. ' ' A Most all the class own up to having been in love at one time or another and one man says, yes, seven times, F. Perkins says, get off my feet, and F. Chase lkifzks he was. SOCIAL. 133 The various sensations are mostly zmiescvfzbable. Other' sensations are, Hextreme discomfort most of the time, Worry, loss of sleep, etc., pleasure so intense that it approaches pain, a feeling of infinite longing mingled with satisfaction, QMorgany, 'fsensations of momentary clation Qwhen you are with herj, followed by hours of dejection fwhen you are elsewherej, QC. Smithj, feelings of doubt and uncertainty, mingled with gloom and des- peration, yes, swam! ilorists' bills, fReedj. 'Tis not the form, 'tis not the face, 'Tis not the stature, nor the grace, Nor gold she brings to you, But 'tis the heart as true as steel, That keeps its trust through woe or weal, That makes the woman true. Financial. It is a recognized fact that slowly but surely it is getting to be harder and harder for a poor man to get through Yale, and whether this is so just for Yale alone, and she is gradually giving up her name for being the poor man's college, or whether it is that life is growing more complex and that the price of a collegiate education has risen at all other institutions just the same, is a question that we are not fully prepared to answer. That Yale is by degrees giving up some of her boasted democracy, and that it is getting harder for a poor fellow to get his dues than it once was, is certain, but re- membering the vast advantages that wealth in the outside world gives in the way of environment, polished man- ners and agreeable ways, to these rich fellows before en- tering college, we do not wonder at their slight advan- tage at being popular after they do enter. This how- ever, does not prevent poor fellows of decided merit from coming up and being just as much honored as the richest. ' ' A majority of the class have done nothing, except by parental authority have prepared for college, and by their own inclination have loafed the rest of the time, neverless, fifty-one of our number have been engaged in some kind of work, whether remun- erative or not. Several have been clerks, postmasters, FINANCIAL. 135 real estate agents, base ball players and farmers, other things mentioned are: House painting, ditch digging, plumbing, electric lamp trimming, etc., QL. Smithj, ran a printing press about five years, Hflonesj, selling counterfeit stamps to suckers at school, QDick- sony, hard work for an interrupted period, not exceed- ing twenty years, QMorgan,j started a refreshment stand once, QCassidyj. Wright ran a printing press and edited a paper, and Callender made money playing the great American game. About fifty men have done something towards paying their own ways and ten have received nothing from home, while one or two made the money before coming that has supported them here. Ryan was employed as door keeper of the Senate from july I, 1892, to January 1, 1893, and made 5600. Pulled a few fel- low's legs for a digest only to have them forget to pay, fDicksonjg and one man, QW. R. Clarkj, says, have waited on table, raked leaves, shoveled snow, mowed lawns, picked grapes, took care of furnaces and Y. M. C. A. rooms, tutored, canvassed, collected subscriptions, rung chapel bell, wrote for college secretary, wrote up statistics, put papers on Hlein reading room, etc., and Charlie Craw- ford has been contented with extracting the parental femur. Four men have paid three-fourths of their way and eight more have paid half. Not more than a dozen of the class say emphatically no, to the question, whether they would advise a young man to come to college, if he had to borrow the money, or work his way, but quite a number say it would depend on the man, his health and his capacity to work, and a few think it would be better to borrow the money and do the work afterwards. No, if, he had to borrow from Heberger, otherwise yes. fReedj, yes, but don't touch Heberger forit, U. 136 YALE '94 CLASS Book. Jenkinsy, yes, every time, unless he is so thick that he has no business. I think some poor men, who are also hopelessly dumb have a terribly hard time and get no good result, Uudsonj. The average expenses for the course: Freshman year, 613 So homore ear, IO 5 Junior ear 121 ' and 9 31 for Senior year, 351255. FRESIIMAN. SOPIIOMORE. JUNIOR. SENIOR. llnder 5200... . 3 2 2 1 S200-300. . 9 II 8 8 300-400. . II I4 I3 IO 400-600. . 22 25 I9 20 600-800. . IQ 21 20 18 SOO-IOOO . 26 27 20 22 1000-1200 . I9 24 22 IQ 1200-1500 . 20 IQ I7 2I ISOO-ZOOO... .. I4 16 I2 18 2000-3000 . 9 7 I3 IQ The highest figure given for a year's expenditure is 354000 and the lowest is 5135. Some of the answers given to how they could have cut down their expenses arc: by getting on the News, QReedj, 'fdoing my own washing, QF. Perkinsj, by re- fusing to subscribe to Courant Freshman year, fTrow- bridgej, with an axe, fCallenderj, Hroomed in the old brick row, bought clothes of Moses, grubbed. at Com- mons, used the University examination paper, borrowed text books and worked on the town, meantime, QBoyerj, 'fby eating poorer food, if it is possible to get poorer food than is given at Commons, QCraftsj, 'froomed' in brick row and stopped eating, also ceased to have clothes washed, but have an unfortunate prejudice in favor of keeping clean. Might not have bought a C0-op ticket the FINANCIAL. new 'first year I arrived, Qjudsonj, by not eating and by entering into a contract with Pabst dt Co., to stop the making of bock beer, QDicksonl, by going less in society, QW. Chasej, by murdering myself with three dollar grub or keeping Captain Dunning out of Com- mons, QKnaebelj. The average price paid for board has been 55.63, and our opinion of New Haven board at any price is not vcry exalted. The question of opinion of board at Commons has received special attention from most every one in the class and the opinions are various. Some of the opin- ions are: Barring bad service and tough meat, I Should say, for the price, it is better than it is given credit for QHolti, at its bcst, tolerableg at its worst, damnablef' QPersonsj, I should rather not ligure in a libel suit, QR. Kingjg and for further information on this subject, call on Andrew Sanford Taylor, who is ever ready to talk on this theme, as he handed in four pages of fool's cap closely written giving his ideas on the subject. Almost a hundred men think that a new steward and better fare if it does cost a little more would be an im- provement. Some of the individual opinions are: I think it is for the interest of the Commons, at least as far as the students are concerned, to let them yell if they want to, even if this necessitates the resignation of the tutors and the present steward, QI-Ioltj, discharge the steward, but get him loaded Hrstf' QR. Kingj, raise the quality and lower the price, a better system of organ- ized yelling with a leader at each table and the expulsion of tutors from the privilege of eating with the under- graduates, QCrafts,j abolish Kenersonf' QJacksoni, Fire Kenerson and stop getting provisions from morguesf' QBuck,j vary the monotony of rump steak, QWatersj, I would suggest a better discipline and 'inspection of the 138 YALE '94 CLASS Book. czzz'sz'ne and steward's department. If necessary I would have better board even at higher rates. At any rate, I would be iirm in keeping the cockroaches out of the apple sauce and stewed prunes, and the fur out of the pie, QKnaebell. Strange to say seventy-four men say they have been subscription fiends. Beaumont succeeded in collecting 354.50 for the Cricket Club and quite a number have helped the Y. M. C. A. in this line. Jimmie jenkins says, yes, to buy a bath ticket. Collected SB47. Howland bathed, caught pneumonia and was out of college most of Sophomore year. A few have been fiends for the Yale Union, among whom could be mentioned, Dawson, F.Tor- rel Persons and others, and Bailey also succeeded in collect- ing seventy-five cents for this object. Some of the remarks on experiences in this line are: too personal, Hagreeably disappointed, all men are liars, I'll never go there any more, made a fool of myself, a good chance to size men up, yes, about one-dollar for the Y. M. C. A. The next place I struck was apoker game, and I dropped the dollar, lSeymourj. Not very many think they are successes in this line, though two men say, yes, preeminentlyf' not enough gall, 'fall onto me, QWoodruffj ask the victims, the reason I am not is found in the natural depravity of man, QMorgan,l not enough of a winner. Don't lie naturally enough, Uud- son, no, not enough Defendorf-gall, fPersonsl. Political. As our last has not been a campaign year, our political enthusiasm has, to some extent at least, died out, but we can still vividly remember how the deep voiced Swayne gave us orders to march on various occasions and how we met Chauncey at the station and afterwards listened to his jokes at the Hyperion. Though we imbibed so much of that kerosene smoke from our elaborate torches, that we still had the Udark brown taste in our mouth next day, and polished our russet shoes with Bowery-State street mire, we enjoyed it all immensely and wished every year was like that, a cam- paign year. But the nation at large did not decide with us politically, for our class is largely Republican, but still it made the victory that much sweeter for the Democrats. The tabulated ballot is as follows: Republicans, 144, Democrats, 44, Independents, 12, Mugwumps, 6, and Prohibitionists, 2. Forty-six voted for Harrison in ,Q2 and nineteen in '88, while ten voted for Cleveland in '92 and four in '88. Quite a number have voted in class elections, against the undergraduate rule, and Harrington for Picture Committee. Seymour says, on the Mills Tariff Bill in '87 when Speaker Carlisle called for a standing vote, fthis is true,j and Reed voted for Dawson for Senior Prom. Com. Some reasons given for preferring the 140 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Republican party arc, I am an American, 'fsuits my principles, believe in protection, the only thing to be, because Tammany is so rotten, because the Dem- ocrats have made such asses of themselves, fCookej, any unprejudiced man can easily see how superior it is to the Democratic party. We have no McKane, Croker, Hill, Murphy, etc., lA. Taylorj. Some of the reasons for being Democrats are, hereditary, protection too high, purest, more advantageous for the South, free trade is the only logical conclusion, can't see how a Southerner could be anything else after seeing those worthless, good for nothing negroesf' The following table shows the vote on Free Trade and Protectioniof the classes '89 to '94 inclusive: '89 ,90 , '91 '92 ,93 '94 Free Trade, ...... 55 40 49 42 36 4Q Protection, .... . . .43 36 70 83 71 144 It is interesting to note how many men have formed or strengthened their opinions on this subject since en- tering, and though it used to be current that all those who formed their opinions while in college became Free Traders, perhaps because of our very strong corps of professors in this branch who are known to lean in this direction, still a large majority of these have become Protectionists. Fifty-seven say they have formed their opinions since they entered and twelve more say they have been strengthened in their belief, whatever it was. J. E. Brown says, I can't tell you till I have finished my course with Dr. Schwab. ' One hundred and fifteen belonged to the Phelps Battalion and twenty-seven followed Whitney when he raided the State street beer shop. POLITICAL. 141 Fifty-one paraded every time the band played, thir- ty-six paraded twice and twenty-nine tried it only once. One man went along 'fonce too much, and another, when beer was to be distributed. Some of the funny things that happened to us on these street exhibitions are, hearing the ladies' remarks on Stothersf' fliunnellj, won a nice bouquet from a lady, fMorganj, chased a banner all over town but got fooled, fStewartj, I fell on my face and wept, fCravathj, spoiled a pair of light trousers and burnt off of that hat arrange- ment, tPrice,j HI walked in the same row with Dunning all one evening, fMeCrayj, found the place where you can get the largest glass of beer in New Haven, QBand- leizj We are certain that politics ought to be jbzufwed, but there are a variety of ways offered to bring this about. Civil service reform, put Yale men in, 'fstop buying and selling votes, f'educate the lower classes, let the best element vote and be interested, imitate the example of Brooklyn, send jimmy Hawes to congress, start in with McKinley as president and the rest you can safely leave with him, fPricej, 'fknock out Tammany, fBand- lerj, don't give the franchise to every Tom, Dick and Harry. The idea of saying that the opinion of a saloon loafer is worth as much as that of a gentleman from Yale! QA. Taylorj, 'fincrease the salaries so that the men of worth will enter the field, QG. B. Millerj, get Boss Mc- Millan out of politics, tPainel, kill all the Democrats and Grover f1rst,' fCookej, fflet the President be elected according to the constitution, that is by a college of electors, not by the uneducated rabble of thecountry, QG. Greenl, turn the rascals Qllepublicansj out, tThomasj, get an axe and begin with the Irish, ffoddj. Personal. To be a well-favoured man is a gift of fortune. -Shakespeare. We never did claim any special honors in nautical feats or in athletics in general, but in appearance we areremarkable, whether we see ourselves as others see us or not. . The class beaubf Chuck King wins without a strug- gle and the vote in full is as follows: C. King 91, Nip- gen 44, Burr 26, Dwight Io, and the following from 1 to 6 votes each: W. Raymond, Dawson, B. Dominick, George, F. Perkins, S. Bissell, Rowley, Fox, Howell, Hawes, Orr, A. Cleveland, Thomas, Boyer, Harrington, Trowbridge, Worthington, Linahan, Word, Arbuthnot, Dunning, Cassidy, Polk, Henry fvoted for himselfj, Lake and Whitney, with a few honorable mentions. For the handsomest man the contest is a little more exciting though Burr wins easily with 48 votes and others follow: Holmes 24, Whitney I7 Cabout half of these tacked on the condition that Whitney should be judged immediately after a bathj, A. S. Cleveland 13, Nipgen 13, B. Dominick 9, and the following receive votes: Word, W. Cleveland., Walcott, A. Potter, james, C. King, Polk, Todd, McMillan, john Hall, C. Craw- ford, McKinney, Stothers, Sawyer, Dawson, Arbuthnot, Wilson, Wheeler, Paine, J. E. Brown, W. Raymond, Haradon, Trowbridge, Rowley, Harrington and S. Bissell. PERSONAL. 10 Dawson wins for homeliest man with 84 votes and the following are voted for: Lane 14, Linahan, Row- ley 9, Seymour, S. Bissell 7, A. S. Taylor, Ferguson, Dunning, C. Hall, Defendorf, Bosley. Kellogg, Dunker- son, Sheffield, Henry, Hawes, Gallup, Beaumont, A. Phelps, Lloyd, Harrington and tie between Dawson and Rowley. Gibbons is our meek man, receiving 59 votes, W. R. 'Clarke 15, Noon ro, Bishop 9. Ryder, Van Name and Sheffield 6, Diven, Robinson, Persons, Tilson, Wriglit, Nichols, Paine, Garrison, Kirkland CHI don't think HJ, Bronson, Cruttenden, Waters, Arnot, Loveland, jones, Nipgen and Lay. Captain Dunning comes in first for our most eccen- tric man, with the Commodore as a good second. The vote is as follows: Dunning 51, Harrington 41, Dawson 38, Ferguson 26, Nipgen 17, Lloyd, Hawes, Arnot, McCray, Whitney, Allen, Worthington, G. Miller, Dun- can, Tousey, C. Hall, Bishop, Hood and Lake. The vote for most versatile man is: Paine 62, Reed 42, Arbuthnot 18, Whitney 17,judson 14, Woodruff II, Harrington 6, Howland, Cochran, Kellogg, L. Smith, Persons, Nipgen, McMillan, Case, G.'Miller, Nichols, Dawson and G. Green. Solley easily wins for the greatest winner with 57 votes and others come in the following order: Bosley 12, Whitney ro, Lindeke IO C' he always wins from mef' one man saysj, Nipgen 7, Paine 6, H. Perkins, G. Green, Kellogg, Burr, S. Bissell, A. Phelps, A. Potter, Polk, W. Chase, Guthrie, and McMillan. Harrington has made most dates lately. For social favorite Solley also wins, receiving 34 votes, followed by Whitney 29, A. Potter 24, McMillan 10, A. Phelps, J. C. Brown and H. Perkins 8, and others men- 144 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. tioned are: Seymour, L. Smith, VVord, Arbuthnot, Todd, Bartlett, Dunning, Howland, Walcott, Polk, Henry, J. Hall, Lyman, Davies, Bosley, W. Chase, J. C. Brown, Ryan and G. Green. The race for grouchy man is more exciting. fGoss and Case tie for first place, 23, Hixon and Skinker 12, Morley II, jackson 9, and the following are mentioned and receive 2 or more votes each: C. Hall, Lay, Olmsted, C. Crawford, Woodruff, Lindeke, Bailey, Seymour, Bartlett, Moseley, Moorhouse, Orr, McKinney, Duncan, L, B. Smith, Stillman and George. The vote for our windy individual is as follows: Whitney 75. Howell 38, Beard 36, Sanders 18, Lamb I2, Holter 8, and the following honorable mentions: Guthrie Cooke, Goss, Pierson, Cassidy, Trowbridge, Lloyd, Sey- mour and Crafts. Another says, A dead heat between Whitney and Solley. For lazy man there is quite a contest: Greeley 49, first, Holmes and Woodruff, 18, tie for second, and the others follow in order named: Saunders 11, Hixon 9, james 11, C. jenkins, Polk and Whitney. Several of our number are to be admired, to judge from the number of men receiving votes for this honor. The vote-is as follows: Paine 33,S2llll'I101'1,JL1ClSOD, 16, John Hall, L. Smith and James 13, Case ro, Davies, Whitney and Walcott 6, Holter 5, Burr, Word, Hara- don, A. Brown, Howland, Dawson, Arbuthnot, Reed, McMillan, Sawyer, Nichols, Leete, and Fred Perkins. The vote for the man most likely to succeed is as follows: Whitney 45,JOhI'1 Hall 32, Paine 24, McMillan 21, Howland 8, Holter 7, Judson 6, Silverstein, Bosley, Cochran, Knaebel, Harrington, Reed, Sallmon, Walcott, McCray, Allison, Thoms, Hulbert, Elting, Davies, Dawson and Case. PERSONAL. 145 Freddie Dwight wins first place for the dude of the class with 71 votes, and is followed thus: Fowler 43, Polk 15, Boyer and McKim 14, Kellogg 7, Bosley, Dunkerson, C. King, Waller, W. Raymond and Dick- son 6, Persons, Nipgen, J. C. Brown, Worthington, Diven, Dunning, George, Ferguson, Burr, E. D. Whit- ing, Skelton and one man cannot decide between Dwight, Polk and Tack i' McKim. The honors for worst dig are awarded to T. Warring- ton Gosling 51,who is pursued in the race by the follow- ing: F. Chase 33, McCullough 25, Allen 24,'Nichols 22, and the following honorable mentions: lVlcBirney, Dawson, Thoms, Bosley, Kellogg, Van Name, A. Pot- ter, Noon, Holter, Nipgen, Saunders, McKinney, Skel- ton, Cruttenden, Dorland, Lane and Solley. , The contest for the brightest man was very close: The tabulated score: Reed 56, Whitney 52, Judson 17, Bosley 13, Davies 10, F. Chase 8, Thoms 7, Paine, Cooke, Nichols, Worthington, Knaebel, Van Slyck, F. Perkins, Fowler, Skinker, Van Name, and Callender. Our popular men are: Arbuthnot 37, Harrington 29, Case 27, Walcott 17, J. Hall and L. Smith 14, Cochran Io, McMillan 9, Solley, Whitney, Holter, Paine, Jimmie jenkins, james, VVorthington, Trowbridge, Todd, Saw- yer, A. Potter, Nat Green, Davies, Sallmon, Word, Howland and W, R. Clarke. The race for most conceited man is hotly contested with four tie votes: R. R. Lounsbury and Dickson 18, Ferguson and McBirney, 14, Burr and Eno II, Bartlett and Ansel Phelps 8, and others mentioned are: Orr, Cochran, Boyer, Bosley, Lyman, Solley, Thomas, Nipgen, Defendorf, C. King, Goss, Hare, Morley, Moorhouse McKim, Wright, Whitney, Leete, Dwight, Van Slyck, 144s YALE '94 CLASS Book. Waller, George, E. Whiting, Seymour, Guthrie, C. Hall, Thoms and Price. And the man with the most unadulterated nerve is Nipgen with 47 votes, followed by Cochran 25, Guthrie, Whitney, Price, and Goss 12, Solley and Defendorf 8, Saunders 9, and the following receive mention: jackson, C. Hall, McKinney, Kirkland, Beaumont, Gosling, George, Skelton, Seymour, Howland, lVlcBir- ney, W. W. Lounsbury, Holter, Paine, Boyer, lVlcCray, Garvan, Bosley, Trowbridge, C. O. jenkins, Waller, and Milton Wa-rner. The class retires later by two minutes than any pre- vious class, which fact perhaps is due to our anxiety to see the electric lights go out at 12, sharp, and we get up in time for chapel next morning Cwhen we have no more marks to sparej. Sixty-two men wear glasses. Nineteen wear them all the time except when they are asleep, while fourteen wear them when reading. Arbuthnot wears them to extent of both eyes, another man wears them at the rate of 3536 a pair, and C. Crawford was born with them on. Thirty-one have begun to wear glasses since entering and from this can easily be seen how we grind. All but about thirty men either had begun to shave before entering or were shaved in the entrance exams. Six men began as early as '84, and quite a number when boys of 'steen. Eight have always been little shavers, and one when he was a child of three. At birth I was a shavzbzg or chip of the old block fHoltjg When my 'whiskers leaked ' QI-Iaradonjg Fifteen years ago 'l QW. Raymondjg Years ago at the first sign of fuzz l' fVan Slyckj. Sixty-four have mustaches and PERSONAL. 147 the following have full beards: Commodore, General Coxey Holmes, Lynch, and C. A. Smith. The vote for our favorite barber though rather hotly contested goes as usual to Frohlich with 64 votes, jack Robinson 54, Griffin 19, Merle 3,3.1'1Cl 24 shave them- selves. The vote for our favorite tailor is : Corbin 40, I-Iurle 14, Machol 7, Jimmie Taylor 7, Hendee 6, Somers 5, Moses 5, Dunn 5, Cav. Sanford 4, Rogers, Peet 8: Co. 4, Franklin 4, Dick Pierson 4, Oak I-Iall 4, and Batson Tailoring Co. 3. Our weaknesses are described as: A craving for chapel 'l fWi1sonjg Sleeping over in the morning, thus running my marks up to the limit fAllenjg My ina- bility to Hunk gracefully QAllisonjg Love for women QW. Chasey, Soft boiled eggs 7, fCasej, A quondam desire to get an article in the Li! fTrowbridgejg Associating with Diven A' U. jenkinsj. To balance these weaknesses we have the following strong points: Not having tried for the Coumvzf' CBuckJg Pig stealing U. Jenkinsjg Running to fires QCasej, Resisting my weakness for women QW. Chasejg Ability to dodge subscription fiends fCraftsj. Some of our most prominent characteristics men- tioned are: My mustache QVVilliam Spencer Beardyg My feet and voice fCallende1'Jg My nose CS. Bis- selljg My backwoods origin QI. Phelpsjg My easy bearing, pleasant manner, apt remarks and quiet dress- ing fBuckj. We are all' well pleased with Ninety-Four, judging from the answers to this question. Sk6,S all rzlgktf, is the general verdict. Individual opinions are: Smoothest class in college, ever was or ever will be Uudsonjg There is no second, your majesty QMorganjg 148 YALE 'Q4 CLASS BOOK. A very even class QSolleyj, God made them there- fore let them pass for men fMcCrayjg ffNin'ety-Four will be the bright star in the Yale constellation. 'Com- modorel can point her out with the telescope on Alumni Hall in the near future U. Taylorj. Price says: Whether we're fat, or whether we're thing Whether WS'1'6 good, or whether we sing Whether we're short, or whether we're tallg Whether we row, or hit the ball: W'hetl1er we sing, or whether we Hirtg Whether we're clean, or revel in dirt: NVhether we're dry or have quenched our thirsty Ninety-Four is still easily the first. .Some of the many strong points of the class are: Its crewg 'i Religiosityg lVIcBirney's breath fBuckjg Religiosity and sportive character, also the practical tendency of its men, as a rule QSolleyjg High standl' QR. Kingj, and quite a few think our number is the strong point. Over against this some of our weaknesses are: John Mackintosh Fergusongf' Athletics and Hawes QCal- lenderjg james Mackintosh Ferguson and Samuel B. S. Bissellgu Fondness of its members for Women CMcCrayjg Devotion to Dwight I-Ialll' CJ. jenkinsj. The prominent characteristics of the class are many. The tendency to cliques receives by far the most votes. Number of heelers CLeetejg Commodore I-Iarringtongv Cassidyg Dawsong Its birdsg Smooth mengl' -Musicng Umpiring ability of Har- ingtonf' Its good order on the campus after I2 o'clock at night fMcCrayj. PERSONAL. 149 Our opinion of self is a question that shocks the modesty of a majority of the class, but still a few answer this very important question. When I com- pare myself with the membership of Ninety-Four as a whole, I feel somewhat saintlyv tRyderjg Rather good- natured, blunt and serenely truthful. Follow my con- victions even contrary to public opinion--this amounts to idiocy and once the damaging fact is established my chances for Q. B. K. are ruinedn QR. Kingjg 'tSmoothest man in Ninety-Four, I suppose. Don't think of any- thing else CTrowbridgejg Don't like to praise myself so fCasejg I'm a 'cuss' on wheels fCallenderjg A fool in general and a darn fool in particularn QWomers- leyjg If I prefer myself to any other, it's some one else CWilsonj. Our startling ideas are quite numerous and here are a few of the wild ones: Once thought that by seeing the proper authorities I could get a crosswalk from Battell to Divinity CW. R. Clarkelg Thought once I could touch Ansel Phelps for a dollar tj. jenkinsjg That Harvard was better than Yalen CCasejg That I could make the Lit and 42.13.167 fPriceQg All men are mortal CR. Kingjg The brevity of the college life of the 'educated man, QBeardjg 'Andy' Phillips attempt- ing to plot the curves described by ' Tack' lVIcKim, on his way home from lVIory's at I o'clock A. Mfg also, That Sniffly Clarke should forget to ring the chapel bell fKeaysyg I thought I understood a sentence in Porter CReedJg I dreamt I had rushed Wheele1'I' QWilsonjg The idea of Capt. Dunning afioat in a soup- plate on a sea of clam chowder, with a spoon for a rud- der and the Arabic alphabet for a sail QKnaebelj. Athletics. - The athletic career of the class began in Alumni Hall, in the fall of '90, when we were summoned to listen to the words of wisdom that fell from the lips of the four Captains. A short but feeling address by Billy Rhodes opened the game, and he was shortly followed by Calhoun, Brewster and Williams, each of whom urged the Freshman class, one and all, to come out and try for his particular team. Persuaded by the seductive phases of Capt. Brewster, Gus Whitney became a candidate for aquatic honors. He made the Fall crew, but even his windy work could not save the Academic crew from defeat at the hands of the Sheff. crew. The men who helped Capt. Holmes' stroke on that memorable day were Bish Perkins, 7, Howland, 65 F. Perkins, 5, Francis Pope, 43 Susie Walcott, 33 Pete Stillman, 2, and Gus Whitney, bow. Pat Cassidy, our Infanta, was cox. With such a galaxy of talent, I fail to see why we lost. While the crew had been in training for its glorious per- formance, others were playing the gentle game of foot- ball, prominent among the candidates being Frank Lyon Polk, Vance McCormick, Winter, Bliss, Coch- ran and Doctor Henry. Of these the bright particu- ATHLETICS. l5I Iar star was Frank Lyon Polk, whose hot Southern blood lost him a place on the Varsity because he would play roughly. f After more or less severe training the team went to Cambridge and played a very close and exciting game against Harvard. Although the Harvard Freshmen averaged four pounds more than their winning Varsity, they could only beat us by I4 to 4. The features of the game were Laurie Bliss' 70 yard run and Polk's play opposite Newell. The Harvard men won because they would tackle our men when we had the ball. Rowing and base ball claimed the attention of the athletes of the class in the Spring. Every one who read the Nezcus was thankful to read in the Log. notes: F. C. Perkins, '94, is training with the Varsity crew. But Capt. Brewster concluded there was no roomain the boat for a light weight, and Freddie was relegated to No. 2 in the Freshmen boat. After many vicissitudes and with the able advice and assistance of Captains Van Huyck, Perkins, Dunkerson, etc., the crew went to New London, where in the trian- gular crew race with Harvard and Columbia they beat Harvard and rowed second to Columbia in the fastest Freshman race ever rowed up to date. The nine was put in charge of Casey who used to lead them a dusty of about four miles per afternoon 'fjust to nll up the time. The survivors of the first two weeks rejoiced when V. C. McCormick Qwho had been captain of the elevenl was appointed captain in place of Casey, who was taken with the Varsity. QN. BJ Vance used to take the street cars on the long runs. Among the men who composed the Freshman nine, which on May 7th, at Cambridge beat the Harvard Freshmen, I6-13, in a very exciting game, were George Case, 152 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. H Mon Beall, Jack Kedzie, Henry George, Laurie Bliss and Albert Anson Bigelow of St. Paul, Minn., all of whom afterwards made the Varsity, besides our late classmate, Willciiis Rustin. The return game at New Haven resulted in a defeat after the most wretched exhibition that a Yale team ever gave. Kind reader, be charitable and draw the veil over the excruciating scene. Dean Lyman won third in the 120 hurdles at the Mott Haven games over Fearing, Harvard's crack hur- dlcr, but ,94 did not do much else on the track in Fresh- man year. Since Freshman year, however, Morgan has developed into a great long distance runner and is now one of the stars on the team. Ninety-four while not remarkably prolific in athletes has to boast of G. B. Case, the captain of the nine, who will, if any one could, lead our nine to victory this Spring. Casey has played regularly on the nine since enter- ing college, either as pitcher or left Helder, but this year he will play center so as to better direct his men. The best captain Yale ever had will be the verdict over him, and may the good Lord grant him victory over Harvard and Princeton. Sunshine Arbuthnot made his modest debut on the nine in Junior year, and, although in the most difficult 'position in the diamond, played the steadiest game on the team. Arbuth is of a very retiring clisposition4re- tiring men at Hrst with great regularity. His appear- ance on the field could be improved, but we don't know how to do it, he is about fourteen hands high and six inches across the moustache. Tom hails from Pittsburgh, where he became so fond of hunting that he had to in- BEALL, 'Q3 S. YVALCOTT. BIGELOW. BLISS, '93 S. N. BURR, 'gg S. QScorerJ. J. JENKINS. DALZELL, 'QI CCoach7. IUCCORMICK. '93 S. CASE CCaptJ. RUSTXN. FRAMBACH fSpec.j. KEDZIE, '93 S T. EATON. SKINKER. NOLAN Gianagerj. GEQRGE. . ATHLETICS. 153 stitute a boar hunt on the campus just to keep his hand in. You bet Tom was in at the death, too. T. Cochran, played such a foxy game of foot-ball that since Sophomore year he has been a University player, although not playing in every game. At Springfield in ,QI Tom was to have played the second half in place of Wallis, who was hurt before the game, but McClung forgot, so Tom was deprived of a chance for eternal fame. Last fall, however, 'l'horne's retirement in the Penn. game gave Tom the chance to show the University that he had not played four years for nothing, for, on the second down after he entered the game, he grabbed a fumbled pass and scored a touch- down. But, seriously, Tom deserves the greatest credit because he has not played a single season that he has not had a serious injury, in spite of all, however, he kept on and has the satisfaction of knowing that he has helped to develop some of Yale's best teams. Doctor Henry is another of our foot-ball lights. Doctor is about as tall as I-lickok's shin guards with a head three times as long, in fact, Doc found his vocation at quarter-back, but alas not in time to play on the University. I-le is another man who had an injury just when his chances were brightest, but '94 will not forget to give Credit to the brainy captain of the scrub eleven which used to score on the Varsity every afternoon. Alice Bigelow, a beautiful specimen of budding manhood, is one of our sturdy athletes. She made the nine in Junior year, as a substitute, and played very reg- ularly on the team this Spring, until her recent diflicul- ties with the second base bag. Alice's grace is entranc- ing, but she manages to get her bat up against the ball once in a while. I-Ier strong point is making second on 154 YALE ,94 CLASS Book. a home run. This she did first in Freshman year when she made second by a close slide on a corking drive to the Princeton running track in centre field. Like her namesake Anson, she uses a bat weighing in the neigh- borhood of 45 ounces with a most graceful swing. Capt. Case will miss our sturdy left fielder, but we trust she will be in shape to H line her out soon again and show the stuff '94 is made of. Ralph D. Paine and J. Howland are the only men in '94 whom the University ever took seriously in rowing. Ralph rowed on Hartwell's winning crew, and was seemingly sure of a place in Ives' crew up to the last, but fate and weight were against him. The new regime of lighter oarsmen came hard to Ralph, but he may rest content with the knowledge that he will he remem- bered as No. 4 on the winning crew of 'Q2. John Howland rowed long and faithfully with the Varsity, but was never quite able to get a seat in the boat. After graduating from his Freshman crew he was substitute on the Varsity for two yearsg at times his prospects were bright, but favoritism must have been shown, for some one else got .lohn's seat. At tennis John is a shining star. Although he has never won a Newport tournament he has represented Yale very well so far, and we expect to hear of his vic- tories over all comers in a year or two. ' 'f Bish Perkins and Long John Dunk are shining lights as oarsmen and fine coachers. They belong to the list of Captains of the '94 crew which is quite imposing. The following in the list: Van Huyck, Dunkerson, Perkins, H. MeDuffce and Polk. It would seem that with such wealth of captains '94 should have swept all before it, but the only victory we ever won was over the Varsity in a two mile race in Freshman year. Land is good enough for us. l P. MILLER. DUNKERSQN. HENRY. STEWART. LICDUFFEE. COCHRAN. Pour. H. PERKINS. NOYES, '92. N. BURR, '93 S. Buss, '93 S. STRONG, ,93 S. WINTER, '93 S. IICCORMICK, ,QS S. QCapt.J. VAN HUYCK, V93 S. T. EATON. 1. JENKINS. JAMES. ATHLETICS. 157 ever, has been attribited, by those who know, to the presence of eel-grass f??j and the tendency to catch crabs. Our crew was composed of the same men as in the Spring Regatta, exept that L. B. Jones was the Cox., instead of G. H. Fox. In the Spring Regatta of Sophomore year we were again defeated in the class races and we anxiously stood on the bank at the finish and saw some of the crew faint from exhaustion, when they finally came in-Qsomething like five minutes late.j But the worst was still to come. Our famous junior crew put an appropriate climax on our marine career. The crew was made up as follows: Stroke, Howland, No. 7, Pope, No. 6, C. Jenkins, No. 5,VVoodruffg No. 4, Polk, No. 3, MeDuffeeg No. 2, Holmes, Bow, Holter, Cox., Cassidy. Gur Freshman foot-ball team was made up of the following: McCormick, QCapt.l Cochran, James, Win- ter, H. Perkins, C. jenkins, Van Huyck, McDuffce, Dunkerson, Polk, Henry, J. jenkins, Stewart, L. Bliss, T. Eaton, P. Miller, N. Burr. Though we had to play Harvard on her own grounds, and after they had had something like ten days of united coaching from the first victorious Harvard Varsity eleven for fifteen years, we showed them how 'we were going to strengthen the Varsity for the next three years. They defeated us by a small margin Q14 to 4j, and we didn't have any celebration that night. Our base-ball career has been a little better than our crew record, at any rate, and we can now show examples of our prowess. The following was the make up of our Freshman nine: Case, p., QCapt.j Walcott, 1' b., George, c., Skink- er, 2 b.g Beall, s., Rustin, 3 b., Bliss, r. f., Jenkins, e. f., Bigelow, 1. f., T. Eaton, 3. b., McCormick, r. f.. 158 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Kedsie, c., and we won the game at Cambridge by a score of 16-13, and thereupon took the fence, but were defeated on our own grounds in the return game. In Sophomore year we won the class series Qby a tossj, but in junior year we were second in the race, with '96 the winners. Case, Bigelow and George have been on the Varsity, Case all the four years, Bigelow the last two and George a substitute for two years. Those participating in the various branches of athletics are: forty-one, foot-ball, thirty-four have rowed, fifty-six, base-ball, twenty-nine, tennis, thirty-one, track athletes. four, the Yale Union, three, going to chapel, and one trotting Greek. The vote for favorite sport is as follows: foot-ball, fifty, tennis, twenty-nine, base-ball, twenty-six, hockey, six, Solley, eight, Stewart, six, Woodruff, two, nigger baby and fishing, one each. The solution of the problem as regards athletic con- tests with Harvard and Princeton is: triangular league, f42l, dual league with Harvard figj, dual league with Princeton fgj, make Harvard play Princeton Qgj. Some of thcindividual opinions on this subject are: under- graduates and a three cornered league in everything, 1Allisonj, have Harvard come off her perch, fBunnellj, let Mem play first and then play the winner, QG. Crawfordj, make Harvard play Princeton or drop her till she stops her nonsense, fl-Iawcsl, Yale to offer Harvard an 7l!L'Z'77Z!ZfZt77Z in '95 Uudsonj, triple league in foot-ball, base-ball, and track athletics. Dual league in rowing, intercollegiate contests, in chess, tennis and debating, QH. B. Perkinsl, have Harvard 'let sup' on the baby act, QA. Taylorl, 'fought to be a triple league. Harvard is playing mucker ball, fVVrightl. In other words we don't believe in the miserable, unfair arrange- ATHLETICS. 159 ment we have had to play under for the last few years and we want the others to do Meir parts of a fair arrangement. Our opinions concerning the changes that ought to be made in the foot-ball rules are: abolish momentum plays, f27l, 'fmake the game more open, trol, 'fleave this to Camp, adopt the Record proposals, H just about right now, let things be decided by a University vote and not by the politics of a few captains and managers, QI-Ioltj, new system of counting points, and shorten the halves. . Although this vote was made before the late changes in the rules, it is noticable that our opinions on the sub- ject were gvof! and that our suggestions were gloriously followed by the,late committee appointed to revise the rules. Besides the prizes We have taken for scholarship and high standing, we have some winners on the track. Mor- gan has taken more medals than any other one, with How- land, Bunnell, T. Eaton and Lyman close for second. The following have also taken medals of one degree or another: Goss, Dickson, W. Cleveland, S. Bissell, Allison, Wheeler, Pierson, Seymour and Waller. fmt' Z'll'X'lJl'tfF 7ro134Ji1' 'EfJl'gEl'4l'l 7t'UflICl'I rf 2611506 0p61J7w1fol. -Pindar, First Olympian ode, V, 95. I Physical. S. U1 NN O0 O - -O I Age . . . Card 7 We1ght. Helght. Chest G1rth. Biceps Girth Sa 1' . 1 ,JN l -,J KN, ,WH m-,,- LJ , ...,. 5 1 'ix NAME' 5111 SE 5,3 E03 EUS Eg vi if 'g P1 g 2- 'g 2- 3 21 ig 1- 2 -1 3 P12 V3 'E ' :I ' :.' 1 A 0 o ' 0 L' 0 ' o H PE io-90'Ec:.9:'51:1-91: 191:.2..':.' go 21-:een 5787 57 5752 P' 5 61 va I 2. ua rx. :zz w W5 Allen, . 20- 4-19 116 122 66.3 67.4 33.6' 35.9 12,7 310 Allison. 22-10-261 . . . 139 67. 67.5 37.8 37 8 11.6 285 Andreen, . 30- 3-13 . . . 195 . . . 67 4 . . . 41.7 13.8 2130 Arbuthnot, 23- 4- 9 132 145 65 0 65.4 36.4 38.0 12.0 250 Arnot, . . 20- 8-27 130 . . . 63. . . . 33.5 . . . . . . 230 Bailey, . . 21- 1-20 ISI 131 69. 69.6 34.2 35.1 12.6 230 ganqlif. - 21- 3- 4 132 I-14 167-3 67-7 33-7 3513 II-5 255 arte t, . 22- 4- 142 ... 70.5 ... 3 .2 ... .. 335 Beard, . . 24- O-IS 115 127 1 64,4 64.5 31.6 34.2 11.0 220 Beaumont, 23-10- 123 127 68. 63.2 34,3 35.5 12.0 245 B1gel0w, . 21-10- 155 183 70 8 71.3 37.2 40.1 I3 3 290 B1sI10p, 22- 0-111 116 133 67. 67.9 33.3 35.5 II.2 265 glsseu, S., 23- 3-22 126 134 24.3 64.8 35.5 36.8 12.3 260 lsse , '., 22- 1-14 130 ...1 7.5 .. 34. ... .. 230 Bosley, . 24-10-19 152 153 ' 70.0 700 38.8 38.8 I2 355 Boyer, . 22- 5-14 112 II2 62.7 62.7 33.1 33-5 11,6 185 Bnggs. 22- 5-27 175 177 67. 67-S 40-4 40-4 13-7 265 E1-onson, . 24-11-17 133 140 68.7 69.3 35.9 36.4 11.8 260 rooks, . 20- 6-23 . . . 174 . . . 71.' . . . 40.4 12.0 290 B1'0XVl'1,l'X. B., 22- 5- 4 171 193 71.0 71.3 39.3 41.4 14.3 375 Brown, . C., 21- S-29 135 159 171.5 72.3 34.0 38.5 I2 3 265 grown, IZ, 21- 3-10 155 178 V 72.2 72.3 37.5 39.4 l3.I 330 rown,. 19-9- Buck, . . 21- 3-13 120 . . . 168.5 ... 32.6 ... ... 230 Buell, . . 22- 6-10 110 .. . 66.7 .. , 33.8 ... ... 255 Bunn, . . 19- 0- . . . 117 . . . 65.0 . . . 35.0 10.8 230 Eunnell, . 21- S-26 I2g 143 70.3 32.8 37.5 11.2 305 urr, . . 22- 2- I4 . . . .4 . . 3 .4 . . . 240 Cadxvallader, 20- 4- 31 . . . 134 . . . 69.1 . . . 36.0 11.0 245 Callender, 22- 3-ZQL 129 132 68.0 68.4 34.7 35.0 11.3 275 Cantwell, . 26- 3-21 . . . 138 . . . 68.5 . . . 38.4 11.7 290 Carley, . 22- 1-16 .. . . .. 69.5 ... 28.2 ... ... 290 Case, . . 22- 0-18 152 163 67.5 63.0 36.6 37.0 13.3 255 Cass1dy, . 19-11-21 77 107 56 1 62.5 27.6 32.2 10.6 160 ClCT7C7iDG7G7GT 1i'11'11'11t11t11t11t1'1t11l11C.UUUUUUUUUUUUCUOOOOOOOCOO000000 ' O::: rDmmmr:ooru4-.:x:':2DDf:.:s::ooo-------ornmmm'f 'f '1 'fOO5E5'g:: .:r'::'b'S 235222555203305'm'8a'f-HM-asaiigawf242829252-Secwwaagm5 I-4'. . .4 - v mggogggea-.say-m P9032-2ESQs's'Pasg2 S2'6FEh212'.f2'fDgg'g5S'f fvsv55, Z 'Fw-'niF 'O....Qq,f'.,'3GP9-s'6'.3PQ2. P-EF-Q-F DD:- Q mwah 5 - - 'P -1.-3 fr-fag' sfLP1 '.Q-12 -Pg 5 .'. ...'-3. ..., -I' . - CTW ' 970 2-Tzpuf'-3' 5 ------.-.. .... .... NNNNN-DNNNNNIJNNNNNNNNNMNDNNNIONKQNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN r . Hnxlwmom-PONO1-1:ov-cncNON'-1NANH-I---LOtoNHnHHmf-4mm-4,-4LnmOr:roHuu.J:.rou1 X93-T5 Illllllxllllllllllllllxllllillllllllllllllllllll 323, HF' H ' HH ' H ' ' - '-' Months 'dw OUIOOvccncr-er-4xl-J:-xlHOOOQIQOOOCH-4u10--l.nxIu1xlOwCDOOv-4ulu1v-1n0uxCxu:0:JwO-I:-NOQJ 1 - SDNUQI lllllllllllllllnxllllllfllllxllllllllxlllsllalll Q-We Hmm Hn'-1 ro .- ... ,Q -. wwf ' nu-moocw-o .L o mm ra .ra muon U-on ou: 1 U Hr-lr-an-4-- r-4 r-1:-u'p-49-Amar-4-up-uv-4r-4Hr-4n-un-4n-er-4Hr-1n-4r-an-la-4r-4v-1v-awn-fv-4--'u-4,-4,-41-an-er-4:-4 RFI-e5h,Ye3r, HQAPLJN- - OCNUI'NUINJALAOIJUIUINCALHhlkdbll-IJUKNUILQLBUIJ-LHCUI.LHLAUJCLBLA I 2' uuwcnnu, , -tsulv--P. 42-Ovuomoumoaoaononv-1.x.u1xnu1cnnOzo,H.5-ou-L.:-ou-, mmm,-qorom I Pounds, Q 1 r4Hr-4u-en-lHr-4r-4v-1 v-4r-4v-4r-cn-un-oHr-e's-4 H ,-4-4'n-erdrdv-1Hr-4'-,-I-ev-quqve-'u-4'-as-4 Qseniofyegr, 2' PU m.r..uu1w-nasmo---rocxwu-.aww-U-..I...m.u.4:.om:u1wL.z-u-one-u-4-1..g,,.4,g,,N .Q I III 04-w.-foso'-cow, , o1wmoa:xn.r-cp, cn. . so. . -Lo. 04:-no-1-0. -1-ocx14.xnom, Xl, cw l pounds, ' l ,4 ix ID c-oxo-ocx-- oc-own' ooooxncxoxuxzoxxooaooooqxlxxooxxxnooo- oo-c:-X:-:moo F hy . I P- 'PN ??'T ' ? : '!'9' T'E'f?'9'9!'! ! '9T'? 9?9S'J?'S'39? ! :'i'.OZ99I 9?W9' 5 :7-f-CWWX' res ear' I 1 O xlooxruua 'uxcxno u14.muuou1wHm:x:r-:om-oqlsmxxcxlmwmnomow'cpwmnomnf-4 Inches. Q I D2 z '.... h, Xnosoooxxc-o-oh - ooooqxnoo- xl- - xr- - oo- oxwxnxm:-Nu. xuoooooo- xr- oo 35 - Y 1 2- 5 sw-P52-:Ia-www--swf-IPP-9:04-so.9-.O--ewwsnswv-:vC.r-of-s1QQff2.9-ffm I emo' ear-! rf l omooxzoowm..w-xuwoncxaocn-xx-'un -cow moo-nom.-4.cnX:u-cnxxwu-.xx wwf Inches. f 3 bfbbbibibl- Q b3bJ'uJLaJ- bibibibbbl1AbDblbJblL9b3b1LALnLAblb2bJb3KDkAbJb3bDblLAbl- blblblblblblbl F S O I 1-'f-PPWM-r'941:'-af'0iMf'991?'P9+1v-S+s-'v-v-r'+U-f-v'0+v'O?S v'-:Is-w-Omer' 'es' ear- EJ 1 mmonoo -:ammo wxowooorno-Powmohoonono-uoowmmo mu-m.u-mcm.:x:.po Inches. 1 gf, uwwwggwwuw. . mwwwmwww. m. . ga. . um. wwuswmw. uwuhumw- Ln- mb: Seniory ' CI v-9942?-v-9-vlrf. -v-+-vfvpswv-sm+I-.ff-Q.v'Q9Qv'Q.v'f1+9+wwv.v-vf W-I :' nmnoxocxmumcn.-u-Xue'-xxwoo o--co .mm-amo-PHO-ooooo-bm-w-mo Lnches. I 15 l-li-1l4l-1P1..P4 I-I5-4.P-IP-il-lb1l-lhtlib-ID-4h1!-tP-4P-4l-ll-li-4i-4l'lP-iP'4b1P-lP-ll4I-l!-lb-'lP-1.!'1l i'l 'I-ii-4b-1 E 0'-'!-'serv-919:'P-r :'rN'-'Os-'Na-fs-f:-':-rf?2-'r'S'2r'r'9e-'z-'Q-'Pr-2-'PWP95-'PQHP1'eS'eaf' G ocwloun .Omoo-oem-w-4.-1cnoo-1ov-1ov.a:oooXx-4oH4r--Sh-l:-oXx4:.oon4:--mono-recomR Inches. -S Ui 1 55565555-Q..FFEESGFFGISIZF..FFZGFEFFF-FFESSFS-F-55 lsemofmf- 2 A me-.p.p.omwwo..Q.p.oOoU.U.u.X,..w -m-is-oo-:noom.oowxx-zaxuow-N qu- Inches. Q numnronnnroronronwnromwmux.:-:ownsrommnronouannrowmnownom-Hwmmua Senior-Year Lum f- -zsxn omqpqo-ammo-paof-1-Lwawxn-D-mu-cxooo-nwou--:sooo-4:x:m4:-woo-m:ou1o . ' 3 - 1,-QSmooou-ou-Qulgmu-mgu-moou-mov-oocoou-oouw-oou-U-U-u-ooooou-o CUUICIHCHQS-CaPaC1fY 5 RQ 162 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. be Age . . . . 318 Gard We1gl1t. - Hezght. Chest Girth B1ceps G1rth E gt lf .JAM 1. 1: in 1: 1: NAME. . g ,S ,gs 53 ,,g L3 .,5 vi ffl .,3 53 4 555-E E -4:12 '13 fi' 43 C2 1215 'afiiS.2E88.28i8.28 49.3.2.2 .212-L 88- 4'3 EH 2' SH E' 56' A Q in v1 Fr- cn In m cn U25 K Goss, . . 22- 0-22 148 164 71.2 71.7 37.0 39.4 I35 330 Greeley, . 23- 4-28 148 153 69.4 69.5 37.0 37.6 12.3 295 Green, G., 24- 6- 0 105 103 60.7 61.6 33.3 34.4 II.3 ISO Green, N., 23- 3-14 128 136 70.2 70.4 34.1 35.6 12.0 285 Guthrie, . 22-11- 5 129 135 67 8 68.2 36.0 36.6 11.4 275 Hall, C., . 20-10-17 112 128 65.6 67.2 32.5 35.0 11.3 250 I-Ia1l,dI., . 22- 0- 4 ISI I4I 66.8 67.5 34.7 36.3 12.7 270 Hara on, . 24-11-20 134 135 67.2 67.6 36.3 37.0 12.4 270 Hare, . . 22-11- 7 138 144 67.5 67.8 36 S 38.0 12.8 245 Harrington. 24- 4-25 153 172 66.6 67.0 37.2 39.5 I3.0 325 Hawes, . 21-10-27 I35 140 70.5 70.6 35.6 36.3 11.5 290 Henry, . 21- 9-20 125 . .. 64.8 .. . 35.0 . . . . . . 205 Hill, . . 27- 2-13 162 164 69.3 69 3 38.2 38.6 12.5 280 Hixon, . . 23- 3-23 T49 I53 68.1 68.5 37-2 38.2 13.5 255 Holmes, . 24-10-21 163 . . . 69.8 . . . 37.1 . . . . . . 220 Holt, . 21-10- 8 153 156 69.8 69.8 36.0 36.8 13.0 320 Holter, . 23- 2- 4 156 173 69.4 70.3 37.2 39.2 13.8 290 Hood. . 22- 4-29 159 199 65.6 66.0 39.5 43.7 14.8 375 Howell, . 20- 8- 2 II2 127 63.0 64.8 33.0 36.3 12.0 240 Howland, . 21- 4-24 161 171 69.5 69 8 39.2 41.1 13.6 340 Hulbert, . 20- 6-15 116 119 65.4 66.3 33.2 33.6 IO.6 230 Hull, . 21- 6-I0 132 ... 68.0 ... 35.2 ... ... ackson, . 22- 1-18 136 ... 68.7 ... 36.8 , ,. ... ames, . . 21-11- 4 145 ... 69,5 .. . 37.8 ... ... 260 enkins, C., 23- 0-29 . . . 174 . . . 70.6 . . . 41.0 13.8 350 jenkins, J., 22- 7-26 142 138 64.8 64.8 35.5 35.7 12.5 255 ewett, . . 23- 5-21 133 135 69.1 69.1 34.7 36.6 11.9 260 ones, . 22- 5-19 104 127 64.5 66.4 33.7 35.2 11.6 225 udson, 22- 9-15 133 134 64.3 64.8 34.8 36.3 I2.5 260 Keays, . 22- 6-13 139 152 68.2 68.4 36.7 39.0 13.3 330 Kellogg. - 21- 9-13 117 121 65.0 65.3 33.7 34.0 II.I 285 Kebablan, 22- 4-28 II9 126 65.9 66.2 33.8 35.2 11.0 230 Kempfer, . 25-11-13 125 125 64.2 64.7 .36.2 36.5 11.5 310 Kendall, . 27-9-1...... .. .. King, C., . 21- 4- 6 132 161 67,4 68.6 35.1 38.0 13.8 285 King. R., - 22- 4-26 135 ... 65.1 ... 36.0 ... ... 215 Kirkland, . 21-11-26 126 . . . 68.4 . . . 35.7 . . . . . . 270 Knaebel, . 22- 0-13 I27 141 66.8 675 34.8 37.6 13.2 280 Kyle. . 23- 5-29 146 149 69.3 69.5 36.4 38.6 11.9 265 Lake, . . 22- 6- 7 I27 133 65.5 65.7 36,6 36.2 11.6 300 Lamb, . . 23- 4-27 107 . .. 65 8 .. . 32.7 .. . . . ... Lamprey, . 25- 9-I4 145 155 67.7 67.7 37.2 38.6 12.7 285 Lane, . . 22- 4-15 131 135 70.9 72.1 35.2 36.9 11.5 345 Lay, . 27- 7- 4 164 177 70.8 71.1 39.8 41.0 12.8 330 Leete, . 25- 2- 2 129 I4I 66.1 66.3 35.8 37.2 13.2 195 Llnahan, . 22- 7-20 140 169 695 70.5 36.0 39.4 12.5 270 L111deke, . 21- 3-20 157 161 67.7 67,8 37.1 39.4 I2.5 260 Lmeaweaver, 22- 9-I2 132 I6O 71.0 71.4 365 37.0 I2.8 230 r-1 pwwnrwwwwwwwwooc2ZZSEZEEEZSZEZEEEEEZ3ZS3zE'r'r':-'L-+r'r'g -oooc'-'-::':rnwcnn:m:n-1'-' ----- .-.....,.--..-. , fcocooo ...nf,H,-,Q HHHH, H owngQo0QQ,,,,,,,,,,,mmomoooooooc' D00 amfawfifi-mM: s' Bam 325310220maanzswwveflowaaasim-Q l-narv,- un-Un-UQ,.......m 1 wo -,G 5-HHH ,...,., H.....0,.5o-gg:-,- SD,-I 0 Q, FQ, Sf P5E.5'8 'Q smiggsgifm-Hg'P5Q3BgEngHg'g3F:g39:i' E --f- ,'--.,-:- ,-'m- .' sam. H -Tu 3-:D mm' ' 523193 P Q 29,5 gr: 9-Qgga ..-. '.-1..........-. .,g...'.'.:f.m....--0- ' ' .. '1 v ' NN NIO Jii??3SISSS'l'3J'3d?l3S23LSEESSSESSSEISESEOXEBSBS'LEQEZHNSQQ Years- llllIIIIIIIlllnlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Q, H H r-ar-4 v-4 0- r-4 r-4 r-4 Bionths -13 qwcooobf 'hTT'?T'?'f'f?ff'T?'f'1 1'TT? ?'4TT'7'L1'TL1'?k?'? ??'1'LT'T? 7'TTTT? ' i1 'f3 'InLul:l1l-,L-LrLNHmno NH n HH HNH mm neuron no no H Hmm H Days. I' ' wHH.x.4.oHmu-owomom.uooH1-:su-slow-Loso-NQJLJ:-u-oxowo-v-xoau-omo-o-HH:.uHocn l I Hn-HH.-HHH:-4Hv-uHHv-4HHHHHHHHHHHHHHH'H'n-ev--v-:Hs-:H--Hr-:Hn-ev-4HHn-1IF!-95h,Yea,r,' I .gsH.pu.HlU.Hu:Hu1mm4..Hraowwmppwnouwmmu.m-umnowwnuwmmmmnpa - -2 P menu!-O4-oxlw-pxxo-AHwxlxl-4-O-Jr-woou-Hu:mxoH, O-. wxlsouauumo--P-mwocr-mowoouw Pmmds, 0 ' ... 'v-1 u-ev-1n-1v-n-4---n-cn-4v-4a-qv-4----n-an-Hu-1'n-an-4'n-4'Han-4H'n-an-4 H 'v4n-4'.n-4s-ar-nu Seni0fYeaf jg' PU ,pq,.XlNlg,J.jg.-xl.NO-P-D'-DH.U'l-U1UllAl-l--lkUlfbl-blOWb3-UIbD--Ln-.-.943-JAQAUIJL ff :C ,sO,.OfOlo-I-xx+-,v-1osHoon-4,O,0'N0ONN1.O'-1.00, Ufu1b2.UO..U'...UH-1,O1OK0DC7- Pgundg, ,Q U1 H1::'-HnH:sxH:oo-cr-snowooooououvoooooooo- c-- owxoxo-c-owoxo-ooxcsaxo-osxro F hy I. H OOOPOHU-v-sv:--ON-CQN5-Nfv'Or'9r-sfef-9--3-ff2v'v'+.rl-xOr'sff9'v-v-5'Jr'sN99cP09N9'rlP 'es' ea' ,Ig O f,,Q0ox0ou1w0uuHl0n.p.Huu1oxunxxHu-nwnwmoo-o. H- Osxxlcvzovxlcwwunxr-OOHIOOHIO Inches. ,, P I ii' F' - -- oo-ox - cwoxoxow- - zo-csc-ohvov oNow1'Hroscvo---- o-cv oo 0- - :r ' -3''?v'? v1swF'-?3x9-9f'v--?1'-7v'TQ90v-99-s72-v1- Pwsv- swsw-1:----w9vf- sw-F59 Se '0'Yea'- f' -H--Huoonoou-unon-:sn-v1-4:-onAroom--p oNwo'oHw'x: -on-owxosz Inches. X LdbiblblRDLBLQLQLBQAKAJLLALQDILALAKBLQLAKACAIKHblblblblbibi-in-blbIblb3blb3blbllalkAlAblb3b3blbJ Freshxvear gg '- 4-': U'9?E ? P9o9'O'!'P'?'PE 1PP9'9'E l: '-:'T'9T'9?'- T'- E-Nf'LP909'T'Y ?'T'T : !o57!'F7'T' ' ' m mwv.,:nH:oHxon.pa.:o4:.w1,1Hu-wwwnom mxowu-ua-cn. ou-u-ooooxo-I-omu1wnH:m4s Inches. ' gg, . 1.-D bb3LQ-b--ISbJblb1LA-L9-b3LAb3bI-b3LB-b3-bDbJK.A-LpJb2-Ia-lal---bib!-Cdblbibl - v .'5--soflhipov-9-rf-9-Peso.9-f-Povw-Koen-f'-2-svf-.sf-v-r--X---.Q-Pwnevlvl Se '0nf'a l 1 .m..04sgsQoo-H1rarooH.ox-Hn4:-.p.w-ou-os-Hloo.Hnnoo-ow----Jhm.nou:.c-Ja Inches. I 5' In-ll-lb-47-ll-49-GD-CI-I D-lr-45-li-I O-1 Pllllldi-CP-15-4'-4547-4b-il-lFlP-1:l'lnl-'lD-lD-1l-1P-1D-4I-lb-1l-lI-lD-lP 4P'1l-ll'4P'4 F hxy I E -PHHwwowvrswswv-N9r9-NH99ONrNPN-W-:-'I-fre:-'wowrrfserwcz-'P 'es' ear' g wooonauqnoooowouwowoohmmmwmonm--ss.mOxx-lr-rooounrooouncwu-0 Inches. -U U3 3533GGF'Gf5G3ff3I-3f'3a3'f535355553557515532595-ZSZZZSGZSFSF Se i0fYeaf- '53 'uv'Hnoo-Aww-wu-oro.p.-.p-oso4:-U-'Hw'no omu1-H1mu1.H...wH.mo- ua Inches. an nronrorournwrounwmaronwemronwuannrouxwroronnonrorororonnronnmnmHwHroro iseniog-Year, Lung r-1 -3- NO O' NNUNKDKX7 USNO NO NLG -COOONIOXI-lBbDO'C7'O'U'UlNUIO'NC1MD WJBNININO - . - ' , 9 3'-u- 3nZ,oSogmoomoflggmosowgamosOOOOOOOOU-U-ou1ou-oouuu-u-ou-0 lCub1cInches.Lapac1t5 CQ . H1 fn 11 ra 0 17 164 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Ps Age D bcfg' at Weight. Height. Chest Girth. Biceps Girth Q 11 Grad. 1-JS' H. .- ,,,..- 1.-. .. 11. ..- LL..- 4--..,.,.. .Q , 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 1: 6 N 8.11 Sui 8- 0,1 8,1 8,3 8,7 5, ,S-5' .6 'E 'E V2 'E VE 'E V2 ',?1 .E 25.1.6582 .dv '5-.156 30.150 Bots., 5 2? Ei 'Ei' E5 E5 E5 'EE 25 'EE 'EE if' 2 C 1.1. ua 11. un 11. vz 11. 21 11:5 Pringle, . . 21- 8-12 . .. 150 .. . 70.1 .. 36.4 .. . 12.2 290 Raymond, E., 21-10-23 131 133 66.0 67.0 36.6 38.0 11.5 12.0 295 Raymond, W 21- 7- 4 134 144 67,9 68.1 35.4 36.2 II 9 12.6 245 Redington, 20- 9-16 III . . . 63.2 . . . 32.7 . . . IO 2 . . . 205 Reed, . . 21-10- S1120 126 68.1 68.7 34.6 36.6 I0.'.3 ll.3 315 Richardson, 24- 1- 3 133 140 67.7 68.0 36.0 37.8 II 8 12.8 290 Robinson, , 22- 5-26 120 . . . 66.3 . . 33.3 . . . ll 2 . . 230 Rogers, . . 23-IO-I3 I-37 143 70.0 70.3 35.8 38.0 II I 12.1 300 Rowley, . 22- 6-26 134 135 65.0 65.3 35 1 36.3 II 9 II 9 240 Ryan, . 21- 5-22 140 152 67.5 68.3 36.2 37.5 Il 7 I2 8 250 Ryder, . 21- 8- 3 127 148 66.5 67.4 33.8 37.0 IO 5 11,9 300 Sallmon, . 27- 9-21 126 126 66.4 67.2 34.8 35.4 II 8 12.1 220 Sanders, . 22- 4- 8 135 150 67.4 68.0 35.6 37.2 11.4 12.1 245 Saunders, . 23-10- 1 IIS 132 65.8 66.5 34.4 36.3 10.9 11.8 275 Sawyer, . 22- 2-27 137 ... 69 2 ... 35.2 ... 11.3 ... 255 Seymour, . 22- 2- 8, 149 . . . 68.9 .. . 37.8 . . . ll 5 . .. 275 Sheffield, . 22- 7-11 113 ... 65.8 .. . 33,2 ... 9.8 .. . 210 Silverstein, 2c- 9-24 131 . .. 65.6 . .. 36.4 . .. II 7 . . . 215 Skelton. . 22- 9- 7, 128 129 64.3 65.2 34.3 35.8 12.0 12.0 245 Skinker, . 23- 6- 491 133 ... 67.6 . .. 35.8 ... 11.9 ... 250 Smith, C., . 23- G-237 l2S ... 68.5 .. 33,7 ... ll 3 ... 230 Smith, H., 21- 9-245 135 139 67 67.5 35.4 36.2 12.0 I2 8 260 Smith, L. B., 21- 1- 9K 134 144 68.8 70.0 36.2 38.6 10.7 11.8 365 Smith, L., . 24- 2-29 137 144 68.2 68.5 36.3 37.0 Il S 11.9 280 Smith, R.,. 24- 1-19 115 125 65.2 65.4 33.5 34.1 10.7 11.4 225 Sniffen.. . 30-10-17 144 158 68.6 69.3 37.7 39.0 11.9 12.5 270 Solley, . 22- 3- 9 134 145 66.3 66.5 37.9 38.6 12.6 13.5 300 Stahl, . . 22- 1-29 133 . . . 70.2 . . 34.2 ... 10.8 . . . 225 Stewart, . 21- 7-20 141 148 67.6 67.6 37.0 38.0 I2 3 12.4 250 Stillman, . 23- 9-19 158 163 69.3 69.3 37.5 39.2 I2 4 13.0 300 Stone, . 21- 4-27 l32 124 65.2 65.2 35.5 35.8 116 11.3 255 Stothers, . 24- 3-15 168 ISO 68.8 68.7 38.8 39.6 II 3 13 8 300 Taylor, A,, 26- 8-29 124 . . . 68.5 . . . 32.4 . . . II.O . . 200 Tay10r.J-. 22- S-25 131 136 65-8 66-4 31.7 35.8 II.9 13.5 245 Thomas, . 20- 5-27 145 . . . 74.4 . . 35.0 1 . . II.I . . . 250 Thorns, . 23- 6- 5 135 136 67.4 68.0 34.7 35.6 II 3 11.7 290 Tilson, . 22-10-14 14K 143 68.2 68.6 36.4 36.6 II 1 11.4 280 Todd, . 22- 1-21 145 148 69.4 69.3 36.4 37.8 11.2 11.5 290 Tousey, . 20- 8- 6 110 . . . 62 8 . .. 32.3 . . . 10.9 .. . 195 Townsend, 22- C-20 III 121 62.6 63.2 345 35,6 II 5 I2 3 240 Trowbridge, 23- c-15 116 123 67.8 68.1 31.1 32.0 I0 7 11.2 225 Tucker, . . 21- 3-17 127 127 65.2 65 2 36.1 36.3 II 8 II 275 Van Name, 22- 2- 9 115 121 70.8 70.5 32.5 33.9 10.5 10.8 235 Van Slyck, 20- 5- 3 I48 153 72.0 72.7 36.7 39.0 11.6 12.2 275 Walcott, . 22-11-29 162 I72 71.4 71.6 38.0 39.4 12.3 12.9 300 Waller, . . 23- 4-26 133 . . . 69.3 . . 36.2 . . . 11.3 . . 240 Warner, . 21- 5-18 168 177 70.2 70.4 37.6 40.2 12.0 12.9 310 Waterman, 24- 5-25 145 149 68.6 68.2 36.6 ,37.4 11.7 12.3 260 C3 vi S. En N X10 14 1 ESEEESSSSSQSSQSSE I g,ooco::::::r:r:r:r::-msw 1 -gv-gg3y,....-.........--rp r- I 'iss-QJ.,Os':':f:fsfv2fS2 I ..-.' '1 5 QSDQH- gi Z PD 55' f ' 9 I 03,'5n.v'-vga. 1 E I - O. . KS. . . - Fi' . . V 1 :x - 1 , , NIC Nl -JIJIQIQ IJ IJ I Ov-'LA Q91 lQuu.L-I, -rl:-L , A I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 1 -4- 'P 3 -P-4 P4 . '1 ser-rrrrvtrrwr 41'0m t- si-is -.....-.,-4I-.i-1,---,-4-.-.I-4-- Fresh.Yc-av, I Owmuuwuwn. - Ln. www I j ' ooo-nomo-, . os. w4-.4- , Pounds. I up , I -- I I IH 1 'U 0 - - ra - - ' 1-' ' . :- :foghh ISn1orXear F, E L4 Lplwuml.-D, uw, NN-is-I-, to 5 Pounds, g 4 UI o ooosxcx ow oo-9 ' Sgowqgp, , 0, Cod, I4xesn.Xear. :E E 0 IP .. ' oo' s ' Hoo- ' 'N - - - 1 :' - Lp. Ebemoryear., F, gg-Q.-.0 Xu-:nu-xoo'wZ Inches. . . . ' C Lal Yalblkhikd Kal LDLBKA ' -- fl-f9,U,u,g,, , U, CMP? Fresh.Xear.v 5 Hosxw 0 Eg A fs LA' Jhill' LA' biblbsi-' K9 - ' uh bipglu ,:,,, ?T,,:,,9, y, Sen1orX r 3 6' Emma: X1 0-1-mn' 0 Inche I :r . . . , , cu 5 l'resh.Xear 5' A Cnioinu- 0' ' - ov 4- Iuche 'U I 1 1 , A . . . 1 , , I If, NGS. 2. I, 5en1orYear. I .p.- mo... 00- me os- or Inches. Q, ' N N N N N N N- NN- D4 . LN Senior Year! Lung I '-' UI ICN J--L-Xl N bl O - - 'T M5013 CC ' wifi- U.- Q ICub1cInches. Capacity 5, The following are some of the most interesting facts in the preceding table. The oldest man in the class is Sniffen, 30 years, IO months, I7 days, Brooks is second, 30 years, 6 months, 23 days, and Andreen third, 30 years, 3 months, I4 days. Bunn is the infant,19 years 28 days, Pratt A. Brown second, I9 years, 8 months, 2I days, Garrison is third, IQ years, 9 months, 26 daysg Mackoy fourth, IQ years, II months, 9 days, and P. J. Cassidy a close fifth, I9 years, II months, 21 days, being the youngest who has gone through the whole four years with us. The average age of the class will on Commencement Day be 22 years, 8 months, 29 days. Harry George will be 2I years old the day we graduate. The class will be 5,459 years, 7 months and 16 days old on Commencement Day, and the class birthday is September 28, 1871. . 166 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Hood has the largest chest, 43.7 in.: Whitcomb comes second, 43.5 in., and McDuffee 41.9 in., while Fox is 32.2 in. The tallest man is Cruttenden, 75 in., Thomas is second, 74.4 in., and the shortest man is Gervase Green, 61.6 in., Cassidy second, 62.5 in., and Boyer third, 62.7 in. McDuffee has the largest biceps, 15.6 ing Fox the smallest, 9.5 in. In lung capacity Paine is able to imbibe 385 cubic in- of wind and says he could have gone right on, but jay didn't have enough water in his can. A. B. Brown and Hood can blow 375 cubic in. of wind. The least windy man as regards lung capacity is Patrick joseph Cassidy, blowing only about Ioo cubic in., while the average man can surround about 265 cubic in. The heaviest man in the class is Whitcomb, 203 lbs., with I-Iood a good second, 199 lbs.g Paine, 191 lbs. Our featherweight is G. Green, 103 lbs., Fox, IO3.5 lbs., and Cassidy IO7 lbs.. but Pat weighed only 77 lbs. when he entered. Miscellany. Gather up the fragments that remain, That nothing be lost. -ST. JOHN. f'The shortness of the college life of an 'educated man,' was one of the startling ideas indulged in by one of OLll l'lLllUbCl', though perhaps this is not fully appre- ciated during the toil and turmoil of Freshman and Sophomore years, but this sad fact dawns upon us with a vividness in inverse proportion to the days and hours remaining, till we receive our diplomas. This year in particular will be looked back upon as the happiest of our lives and can be appropiately called the climax of all our previous efforts, whether as a H iinished product we come up to our first aspirations or not. What was begun rather in the spirit of experiment and far from the true realization of how much was meant and how much we would be attached to our class-mates and Yale life in general, we have finally reached the point where we can appreciate to the fullest, all We were so uncertain of at first and which at that time seemed as far distant to us as the point at which Mr. Dutcher told us parallel lines would meet. We have gained this all but imaginary point only to be reminded that 'tour days 168 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. are numbered, and that we shall soon have to pass out and be recognized by the college world as only one among the great number of classes Yale has turned out, and counted only among the rabble alumni gang who are looked at as good for nothing else but to return by installments at commencement time and smash out all the window panes and thereafter electric light globes included, within brick reach, and boisterously devour the dinner prepared at an expense of eighteen dollars per Senior. lSee previous term billl. But notwithstanding this seeming short term we have seen great and mighty changes and creations come about and perhaps witnessed the greatest advancement the University has, in the same length of time, ever realized. ' We have been eye witnesses to the building of Welch, Gymnasium, WVinchestcr, Infirmary, Vanderbilt, White, Berkeley and the enlargement of Battcll chapel, besides an addition to the Medical School, and a Law School building assured. We have been the ones to see the long talked of quadrangle completed and that with one of the most elaborate college dormitories now in existence. Besides this we have seen a new quadrangle begun, which when complete will include the block between Elm, High, Wall and College streets. Women have been admitted to the graduate depart- ment and we have survived to see their classical and studious looking faces multiply and have watched oft and long the ability and deliberateness with which they monopolize most all the books in the reference library, and that 'ffrom ruddy morn till dewy eve. Four electric lights have also been put on the campus, which perhaps in furnishing targets for the 'jags' have, MISCELLANY. 169 to the treasurer's delight, diminished the out put for window panes, and have been judiciously turned out at twelve ofclock skmyi, before the 'dark deeds of the campus' are always wont to be done. The elective system is being extended every year, for now even the Sophomores are allowed a choice between so many evils and the Freshmen are only charged live cents a page for Beebe's Mechanics' pamphlets, Qleavesj, whereas we as freshmen had to pay Zen cents for the same amount. We have seen a very great increase in numbers in all departments of the University and per- haps none more noticable than the academic side, and because of this increase the Sophomore fence has had to be lengthened several parasangs and chapel capacity enlarged. Some of the noticable changes in the faculty since our arrival have been the loss of Prof. Harper, whom we barely met, and with him went Professors Knapp and Bergeron, Messrs. Abbott and Capps. Ex- Presidcnt POl'tCl', whose venerable figure we occasionally saw on the campus has passed away, and also Professor McLaughlin, with whom we had become better acquainted and whom the class had learned to love. Mr. Hunt, another wellbe-liked instructor of our course, who so graciously had us order the 'ttrot instead of the text, has died. .Professor Clapp, whose image we could not blot out of our memory if we tried and who received us with such tender hands about the middle of our iirst term here and so vividly depicted to us how Foliare's place on the wall was blank, etc., this one, we say, has twitched his mustache for the last time as an assistant Professor of Greek here and is now Professor of Greek in the University of California. Some of the additions to the faculty, but with whom, as a rule, we have not 170 YALE '94 cLAss BOOK. become intimately connected are: Professors Morris, Palmer, Luquiens, Perrin, Sneath, and the following instructors: Lang, Thompson, Phelps, Harley Roberts, Adams, and last but not least, Mr. Williams, by whom, at least a few of us were favored with some interesting talks on English constitutional history. These are some off the things we have with our own eyes seen take place, and a few of the things we have wzmfed to see but of which voluminous Nates editorials have not yet convinced the faculty of their need are: light in the Treasury Building alley, a cross-walk from Divinity to Battell, the Library open of evenings and Alumni Hall open all the time for visitors to see the pictures, but with all her faults we love her still. And now, 'fdear class mates fwith apologies to Commodorej, its about all over, and When the lxurly-burly's done, Whcn the battle's lost and won, we are now about to start in life to try to put into use what we have gained and whether we are 'successes, or 'go on to Washington' as privates in Coxey's army, let us never forget our loyalty for God, for Country and for Yale, and to us 'Y ale means, 1Vz'1zc!yfom'. Seventy-live men think Yale's greatest need is money, ten think that a better and stronger English department is worst needed, and some other needs mentioned are: another class like '94, 'fmore Yale spirit, more !z'6c1'a!z'sm, better salaries and some good young energetic Profs, abolition of Sophomore Societies, a course in skyology under Uranographer Harrington, smoother line of Co-eds., age and beauty limit, QMC- Crayj, new line of Nczu.v editorials, some one to take MISCELLANY. 171 John Mackintosh Ferguson's place when he is gone, better Sunday sermons, more room, new steward at Commons, 'fswift half-tackles, conservatism which is not fossilism, qStothersl, 'fmore Christianty, i. e., the genuine article, QA. Taylorl, the unrestricted use of an unlimited supply of 'long green,' tWordl, fewer moss- backs in the corporation and freedom from the control of a set of congregational ministers, QA. Pottery, some queens in the Co-ed. department and unlimited skymouls'- ttrans. moneyl, tSeymourl, a more scholarly spirit among the undergraduates and a real University form of gov, ernment, instead of the present Connecticut, clerical congregational corporation government, tludsonj. Reed waxes poetical and says: Some say another Dormitory, A Sheff. Dwight Hall Reformatory, Endowments for the college, Three millions, maybe more, A Sweep who's swept an entry, Or some honest ole close gentry. But Yale's great need is, without doubt, Another Ninety-four. Seventy-one men think the West offers the most advantages to an enterprising Yale man, twelve say the Soulk, eleven, New York City, nine, the East and six, the West without a jmll, the Ears! with one, and, then quite a number mention their own particular place of abode. The following sections also are voted for: Milford, Mexico, Farmington, Sahara Desert, Chapel Street of Saturday night, Buffalo, Uewettl, Yale men will suc- ceed anywhere, a highly uncivilized community,-say Chicago, QEnol, 'fany section of the Yale side at 172 , YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Hampden Park, fWilsonl, Montana, if he be a cheer- ful liar and a dead shot, tHolterj. Not many of the class have been hazed, and a moder- ate amount, judiciously doled out is considered to be a good thing. Reed says, yes, I was hazed-they tried to get me to take the Cam'mzz', and C. Crawford to the extent of his underclothing. Only a few Say they have hazed' Freshmen though quite a number have sem the ceremonies conducted at Prokasky's. Some of the incidents in this connection are: the Freshman thanked me when I got done with him, QLeetej, Frederick William Burge of Brooklyn, looked extremely lady-like in splits and chimesef' tRyanjg most all say, its's a good custom, it ought to be continued, tNicholsj, it ought not to be abolished while men like Copp enter college, U. Jenkinsl, yes, except in extreme cases like Elmore Franklin Elmore, QA. Phelpsl, just as necessary as the entrance exam- inations, Qlillisj, ffgives necessary toning down to Freshmen, fCookej, exerts a sedative infiuencc upon the swelling pride of the dear-little things, fKnacbelj. Only a 2111731 few men say they haVcn't been out of some reeitations on account of illness, either from real sickness or a bluff on the Dean. E. Whitiiig was out of college three years on account of trouble with his eyes, Furbish, sick, and out three years, Linahan, Paine, Cook and Fowler were all out one year on account of sickness and Howland, T-Iarrington, Van Slyck and Goss were out something like one half year, and the others were only sick for a short time, some just as long as they could fool the Dean, and others were more in earnest. MISCELLANY. 173 The nature of the illness has varied from a bluff and that tired feeling to typhoid and pneumonia fevers, consumption and appendicitis. One hundred and eight would use the Infirmary in case of sickness and seventeen say no, and a few more think it would depend largely on Whether they could get home or not. Ninety men have as good digestion as when they entered college, twenty-two say they have belief digestion and seventy-seven have not as good. Commons is assigned by forty-one of this number as the cause of their poorer digestion. Some of the other answers arci trying to make breakfast and chapel in eight minutes, too much smoking, bad grub and lack of exercise, fKnaebely, Foote's steak, fCallenderj, atc three days at Commons and crammed in indigestible courses before exams, QReedj. We have raised the record on the number of signs stolen, one hundred and twenty-two men have stolen three hundred and sixty-nine signs, mostly szfreei signs, but a few marble statues and cigar store signs are included in this number. Wilson stole Ha cosine and sine from Dickey. Some of the experiences given are: your question is impertinent, 'a wicked and perverted generation seeketh after a sign, but there shall no sign be given unto them,' fsee Holy Scripturef' QA. Pottery, got pulled for watching Pete Perkins lick Stoddard's Indian, U. Jenkinsl, Jimmie Pope, Pug O'Day and I were once chased by a large and angry dog, QPricej, got jugged, QC. Crawfordj, tried to steal the signs of the zodiac in Beebe's room and couldn't, QCallenderj, ask Jack Ferguson, QI-I. Perkinsj. 17-L YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. The electric light pole in front of Durfee was cut clown for the following reasons Qthis dosn't include our excuse for bm'1zz'1zg down that pole with nails in ity: Linahan was jealous of it, QCallenderj, handed my excuse for it in to Baldy, U. jenkinsj, threw cold hands with Callender and had to do it, QC. Crawfordj, kept me awake nights and interfered with kicking foot-ball, QLeetcj, I wanted to give the Nczvs a new subject on which to write editorials, Uielloggj, so that the Commodore could see the stars from the tower on alumni, good thing, wish I had done it, QCasej, it obstructed my View of the batter when I played ball on the campus, U. Taylorj, 'fled to it by Dwight Hall infiuencef' fBandlerj, no excuse necessary--eye sores should be removed, fRowleyj, I received absolution from the pope of Dwight Hall previous to the act, U. E. Brownj, must have been walking in my sleep or, 'drunk and disorderly, ' QBeaumontj, Was com- pelled to carry out Harley Roberts' orders, QMcCrayj, 'fto ,assist the Commodore in looking at the stars from Alumni Hall, fHarringtonQ. , Receiving our entrance certificates, beating Harvard, vacations, junior Prom., are some of the pleasant events of our course. When I rushed Dickey, my boxing match with Bennie Bishop, fBeardj, 'fbecoming a Sophomore, QA. Pottery, six weeks I spent in Mil- ford, stealing the pig, U. Jenkinsj, 'fwhen I heard Clapp was going to leave. ' Some of our unpleasant experiences are: leaving college, Ujricej, VVilliams' recitations, QSkeltonJ, -'when I missed I. B. K., the fact that I studied once, my first recitation to the Freak, waiting two hours for a train at Springfield, last November, being MIS-CELLANY. 175 obliged to hear the choir sing, QMcCrayj, when I dropped a division, being taken to the Infirmary, handing all my money over the counter to Farnam every term, the receipt of that card saying, 'Call at the Dean's office immediately, eating Commons grub, and when I think of my career as a Freshman. ! We most admire men with manliness, t26j, courage, f25l, sincerity, 4185, sand,t17j, strength of character, fIOl,ll1ClC13CIlClCl'lCC, QSQ, unseliiishness, modesty, purity, push, tact, brains, pil, and the following are mentioned: unaffectedncss, get-there-itiveness, frankness, magno, nimity, and generosity, the ability to sit in front of a mirror through a dinner and not look in it, fPricel. In woman we like modesty, Ugj, womanliness, flgl, SCI'1SC,fI8l, sincerity, fI5,l virtue, .f14j, trueness, fII,l clinging disposition, unsellishness, naturalness, culture, development in all particulars, QHarringtonj, 'f a cling tenderness seeking protection, QReedj, beauty and squeezibilityf' fidelity, smoothness, neatnessf' tender ness and loving kindness. V Seventy-seven prefer the brunette style of beauty and twenty-six like blonds better, and some of the kinds preferred are the 'Chuck' King kind, 'fany old thing, Grecian style, a chemical blond, Hrcd haired quad. noon, a hybred between a brunette and blonde, 'fa Creole, 'fa Caucasian, QArbuthnotj, the Renaissance, i. e., short and chunky, tMcCrayl. To the question, next to yourself, whom would you prefer to be, there is a variety of answers and among those mentioned are the following: Queen Lil, the man that broke the bank at Monte Carlo, Cleveland, 176 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. thc Pope, Harrington, '1'hos. Reed, Ex-Presi, dent Harrison, Prince of Wales, Superintendent of rounds, R, E. SJear PhilliJs Brooks, Pabst G , , Dr. Parkhurst, McKinley, my wife's second hus- band, Gladstone, Chauncey, P. H. McMillan, HA. Lincoln, Zems, 'Long' Thomas, HV. Kenerson, a Farmington queen, my rival, one says he would prefer to be H non-existentu, and Cooke would prefer to be Pres. Dole of the Provincial Government of Hawaii. We give the following advice to those that are to follow us: keep out of my tracks, don't go to Harvard, QVVilsonj, study like the devil Fresh- man year, QSeymourj, make a fool of yourself as seldom as possible. Break all electric light globes and window panes you can hnd. Leave a name behind you for something or other no mazffer What, fCasej, don't wear sweaters or corduroy vests to Chapel and recitations, QChapmanj, 'flook out for Professor Luquicns when he looks over his glasses at you, Be- ware of Heberger and heel Dwight Hall, QC. Crawford,j avoid Ike's and Heberger and make a bluff at study, tBuckj, 'shun the Commons, QBue1lj, 'ftry for the Cozzmazi and obtain wealth, fame and happiness, QPriceQ. Nicknames. Allen- Sam, 'S Sammiej' Critic. A lliswz- Senator, Bill, Andrew- Gus, Bert, Augustana. Arbuflmol- Ike, Arby, Tub, The Sea-going Arbuth. Arno!- Ray, Arn, Hornet, Grouchf' Bailey- Bonus, Parson, Bill, Willie the Good Man. Baudler- Ban, Band Wagon. Brzrfletf- Bart, Al, Alex. Beam'- Windy, Whiskers, Lady's Man. Beaznnofzt- Beai1x, Pete, Pilld.ust, Billy, Bill Whiskersf' Bzlgelow- Peach, Anson. Bzkkop- Ben, Bennie, Cardinal, My Lord, Bishf' C. Bzlvscll- Clint, Clinnyf' S. Bzksell- Willie,'l Bush, Bishtelf' Sam. Bosley- Bos, Coed, Rabbit the Greater, Fusserf' Hoynr- Dodger, Freddie, Ward, Briggs- Fatty, Briggsyf' Bronson- Bron, Ed? Brooks- Sam, Texas. A. B. ff7'0'ZU7l1 Al, A. B. f. C, Brown- Cob, Cos, W6HCl1.,, j. E. Brown- jim, Jimmie, R A. Brown-- Brownie, Solid South. Buck- Al, Frohmanj' Buxomf' Buell- Charlie, Bull. Bunn- Bunnie, Hen, Columbia. 178 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Burma!!- Bun, Bunningf' Burr- Cal, Pretty Boy, Handsome. Cadwalladcr-- Caddy, Cad. Callmder-- Joe, Cyllender, 4' Cal, Almanac, Cule. Canfwell- Cant,'l Texas. Curley- Ire, Pretty Boy, Pink Cheeks, Fusse1'. Case- Casey, Captain, 'F Tebe, Glaukopisf' Dodo,'l Blew Eyed Cassidf' C'!ZS.S'Z.Il3l-H jo-Pat, Pat, Kid. C'hamberl1zz'1z- j. P., jack. Ckllf7ll!ZlZ -H Chappief' Chap, Kaufmann, Fred, Fred- die. F If Clzase- Frank, HF. H., Valedic. W. G. Chase- Wild Goose Chase, Lady's Man, Fusser, Bi11V. W1 H. Clark- 'Ewl06, Clarkyf' Billy. W R. Clezrlce-SnifHy, Fiend, Clarkeyf' A. S. Clezfelanfz'- Ses, Alex, Al. HZ D. Clmfrlzznd- Billy, The Sprinter. Cochmu- Torn, Tommyp, Deak, The Irrepressible Deacon. Cooke'- joe, Honululu, Hawaii. Cnzfls- Pete,', Windyf' Cmrfalk- Raef' Rastusf' Cravatf' C. Ii Cmwfom'- Crawf, Krif, Fat, La Bengulaj' Craffordf' G. M Crawford- Georgie, Wooly West, Kansas, G, My? Crosley-- De Lesseps, Cross, Maitland. Cruttendm- Crut, Crutty, Walt. Dawes- Freddie, Zebidee, T. Freddie? Dawson- Dawshon Dawskinsf' Day- Eddie, Sport, Deacon. .Dc'Be11oz3'e- Deb, Debbie, Deebj' Ike. Nicknames. Allen- Sam, Sammie, Critic. Allisofz-- Senato1', Bill. flfzdrcefz- Gus, Bert, Augustana Arbufhuof- Ike, Arby, Tub, The Sea-going Arbuth. Arno!- Ray, Arn, Hornet, Grouchf' Bzzz'!e'y- Bonus, Parson, Bill, t'Wil1ie tl1e Good Man. Handler- Ban, Band Wagon. Barllelf- Bart, Al, Alex. Beam'- Windy, Whiskers, Lady's Man. Bmzunrmf- Beaux, Pete, Pilldustf' Billy, Bill Whiskersf' Bzgzlow- Peach, Anson. Bzkhojh- Ben, Bennie, U Cardinal, My Lord, Bishf' C. Bz's.vc!!- Clint, Clinnyf' - S. Bissell- Willie, Bush, B,ishtel. Sam. Boslzy- Bos, Coed, Rabbit the Greater, 4' Fusserf' Boyer- Dodger, Freddie, Ward. Brzlggs- Fatty, Briggsyf' Bronson-- Bron, Ed. Brooks- Sam, Texas. A, B. Brown- Al, HA. B. f. C. Brown- Cob, Cos, Wenchf' j. E. Brown- jim, Jimmie R A. Brown- Brownie, Solid South. Buck-- Al, Frohmanj' Buxomf' .Buell- Charlie, Bull. Bunn- Bunnie, Henf' Columbia. 178 YALE '94 CLASS Boox. Burma!!- Bun, Bunningf' Burr- Cal, Pretty Boy, Handsome. Cadwallader-- Caddy, Cad. Clzllwzder- joe, Cyllencler, Canlwell- Cant, U Texas. Cal, Almanacf' Cule. Carlqy- Ire, Pretty Boy, Pink Cheeks, Fusserf' Case- Casey, Captain, Tebe, Glaukopisf' Dodo,' u Blew Eyed Cassid. C'!ZS5Z'1ljl-U jo-Pat, Pat, Kid. Chambrr!1zz'1z Chapmzzlz- die. F H , Clzasr- -441. P-,vi cc Cliappief' W. G. Chase-'fWild Go Billy. Frank, jack. Chap, 't Kaufmann, F. H., Valedic. ose Chase, Lady's Wi H. Clark- 'Ell7T06,H Clarky, Billy. W R. Clarlee--Sniftlyj' Fiend, Clarkeyf' A. S. Clewflana'- Ses, Alex, Al. Wi D. Clmfalezfzd- Billy, The Sprinter. Cockrzzfz- Tom, Tommy , Deakf' The Irrepressible Deacon. Cooke- Joe, Honululuf' I-Ia.waii.', Cmffs- Pete, Windy. Cmffatk- Ras, Rastusf' C. If Crzzwfom'- CraWf,' Craffordf' G. Jil Crawford- Georgie, Wooly West MIN Cravatfl Crosley- De Lesseps, Cross, Maitland? Crzzttmden- Crut, Crutty, Walt. Davies- Freddie, Zebidee, T. Freddie. Dawson- Dawshon Dawskinsf' Day- Eddie, Sport, Deacon. .Dl'BE7l0Z1Y6 6'DCb,,, Debbie, Deeb, Ike. Fred, Fred Man, Fusser, ' Krif, Fat, La Bengulaf ,H if GC ll NICKNAMES. 179 DFf?7ld07f'-C' Def, Fiendf' Deffie, U Dorf, Nervy, Windy.,' DZfk.S'0ll-H Blandyf' Art, Dick. DZ'7Z5'lll007'-'iDl11,77 Dinnyf' Dennisf' Divan- Alex, Dapper, Dap, Devins, Slip, Yerk, jerk, Scratch, Fitf' Yap-Alex, Nip, Crackf' Slitf' Tiny, Fin, Wet-ball-Alex 13. Do111z'm'ck-- Bid, Bydie, Freight Car,', Dom. G. Ii Domz'1zz'ck- G. F.,,, Frank. Dorlzwzz'- The Good, The Sainted Dorland, Tough Titty. Duncan- Duncf' Win, Hellyerf' Duzzkerxozz- Dunk, Cass, Copper john, Tipu Tib, the Algerian Water Carrier, Dunkleberry. llumzifzg- Captain, Bull Dog? The Sailor, Squattyf' Dwzglzl- Freddiejl Fred, Prexy, The Dude. G. Eaton- Botf' Georgie. 75 71 liafofz- Ted, Varsity. Eflis- Tommie, Tomf, Ellizzg- Socks, Doc. Eno- Hen, Harry, O-no. liwzns- Bill, Billy, Texas. I'?r,g'zz.s'a1z- -Ioan, Duc,' jack, FB1'g,,, Freak. Fowfer- Al, Bertf' Bertief' Nat, FoWley, San foy. For- F. ox,l' Charley ox, Foxy,l' Bacchus, Richard K.,ll Della. f'iYl7'blLS'h-U Furb, Clint, Clin, Useless. Gallup- Freddief, Fred. Garrzkwz- Garry, William Lloydf' Snapper, Sport. Garffmz- Eddie, Rabbit, Coed. George- Willie, Harryf' Gibbolav-- Milt, Gila, Gibbsyf' Gz'!!espz'c- Lou, Louis, Gillspyf' Gosling- Digest, Wa1'ry, Shylockf' iso YALE '94 CLASS BooK. Goss- jack, lone, jinnie, Hen, Gossy, Goose, Goosy, By Gosh. Greeley- Bugs, Horace. G. Gram- Jerry, Ger-vasy, Short. N. Ml Grcwz - Nat, Boss. Gulluie- Warry, Guth, Prairie Ranger of Kansas. C. Hall- Charlie, Spider, Halley, C., C. f. Jia!!-HJ. L. jack, The Orator. Hzzmdozz-- Frank, Frankie, Buck. .Hare- Bunny, Whiskers, Anarchist, I-leermostf, Monte. llzzrrzkzglufz- Dream, Cat Eyes, Pusher, Commo- dorus, Commo, Commy, The Skipper, Skipper- dore, Skip, Captaindoref' Skyographerf' Astrono- mer, Heliographerf' Doctor, Old Sport, The Pro- fessor, The Anthropoid Ape, The Anthropoidalf' Dr. Kekling, Whiskers, Whiskerets, Fatty, Papa, Grandpa, Cup, General, Major, Admiral, StradiVarius, Old Strad, Pictographj' Tommy, Dummy, Dahomeyf' Hawes- jimmy, HaWsy, HaWsers. Henry- Fiddle, Fid, Horse Doctor, Doc. Hi!!- David B., Dave, Governor, Senator. Hixon- Hix, Grouchy, Hickyf' Holmes- Domus, Laziness, Whiskers, God Bless our Holmes. ffolf- Old Grouch, Hammief' Ham. Holter- Manager, Bolster, Hanc, Slumberfoot Hank, Chauncey, Olaf, Hoon'- Walt, Tom, Robin, Bill, Dago, Alder- man, The Tub. Howe!!- Windy, Noisy, Runt. . Howland- jack, Howl, Fat Man, Wencher, Pud, Oatmeal, Sleeper, jakie, Yap. Hzzlberf- Hully, Charlie, Fussen NICKNAMES. 179 Defkvzdorf- Def, Fiend, DeHie, Dorff' Nervy, Windy. DZk'k.Y0ll-U Blandyf' Art,,' Dick. DZIIISIIZD07'-u1Ji1'1,H Dinny, Dennis. 111.71671- A1CX,7, Dapperfl Dap, Devinsf' Slipf' Yerk, jerk, Scratch, Fitj' Yap-Alex, Nip, Crack, Slit, Tiny, Fin, Wet-ball-Alex B. Do111z'nz'ck-- Bid, Bydiej' Freight Car, Dom. G. If 1207112712-L'dl16' G. F.,l' Frank. Dorland- The Good, The Sainted Dorland, Tough Titty. Duncan- Dunc,'l Win, I-Iellyerf' Dwzkersou- Dunk, Cass, Copper john, Tipu Tib, the Algerian Water Carrier, Dunkleberry. DZLILIIZ-713414C2l.pt3.iIl,M Bull Dog. The Sailor, Squattyf' Dwzlglzl- Freddief' Fred, Prexy, The Dude. G. Enron- Bot, Georgie. If .Ealou- Tedf' U Varsity. billlis'- T0n1mie, Tom. l1'!!z'ng- Socks, Doc. Eno- Hen, Harry, O-no. 1131161715-HBii1,H Billy, Texas. f'i?7'gAZI.S'071- Joan, Duc,', jack, Fergf' Freak. Fowler- Al, Bert, Bertie, Nat, Fowley, San foy. For- F. ox, Charley ox, Foxy, Bacchus, Richard K, Dellaf' ! m'b1's!z- Furb, Clint, Clin, Useless. Gallup- Freddie, Fred. Garrzlwzz- Garry, William Lloyd, Snapper, Sportf' Garffafz- Eddie, Rabbit, Coedf, George- Willie, Harry. Gz'bbo1z.v- Milt, Gibf' Gibbsyf' Gz'!lespz'c'- Lou, Louis, Gillspyf' . Gosling- Digest, Wa1'ry, Shy1ock. iso YALE '94 CLASS Book. Goss- jack, fone, Jimmie, Hen, Gossy, Goose, Goosy, By Gosh. Cfrerlryf- Bugs, Horace. G. Green- Jerry, Ger-vasy, Short. N. PK Gram - Nat, Boss. Gufkfie-- VVarry, Guth, Prairie Ranger of Kansas. C. fla!!-- Charlie, Spider, Halley, C, C, H. f. lla!!- J, L. jack, The Orator. likzradozz-- Frank, Frankie, Buck. lfzzrc- Bunny, Whiskers, Anarchist, Heermost, Monte. ffarrzbzgfwz- Dream, Cat Eyes, Pusher, Commo- dorus, Commo, Commy, The Skipper, Skipper- dore, Skip, Captaindoref' Skyographerf' Astrono- mer, Heliographerf' Doctor, Old Sport, H The Pro- fessor, The Anthropoid Ape, The Anthropoidalj' Papa, Grandpa, Cup, General, Major,' Admiral, Stradivarius, Old Strad, Pictograph, Tommy, Dummy, Dahomeyf' Hawes- Jimmy, Hawsy, Hawsersf' Henry- Fiddle, Fid, Horse Doctor, Doc. Hi!!- David B,, Dave, Governor, Senator. Hzlron- Hix, Grouchy, Hickyf' Holmes- Domus, 'fLaziness, Whiskers, God Bless our Holmes. - Ho!!- Old Grouch, Hammie, Ham. Holler- Ma11age1', Bolster, Hanc, Slumberfoot Hank, Chauncey, Olaf, lufooa'- Walt, Tom, Robin, Bill, Dago, Alder- man, The Tub. Howe!!- Windy, Noisy, Runtf' ff0'ZUflZ7Z!I,--U-I2lCk,H Howl, Fat Man, VVencher, Pud, Oatmeal, 'A Sleeper, jakie, Yap. Hnfbfrf- Hully, Charlie, Fusserf' rv Dr. Keklingf' Whiskers, Whiskerets, Fatty, NICKNAMES. 181 Hu!!- Tubby, Hu11y, Hoolf' jackson- jack,,' Caleb, Pete. , james- Nunck, Jes, Jessie, Uncle, Moke, H Bobbie. C. jmkzhs- Sallie, Charlie. j.je1zkz'us-- Jenks, Chim1ny jesse, jenker, Turtle, Runt, Shiny, Sinner, jeenes, N Little Fat, Saint jawn!!- jeWie, Senator, Nat, jewel jones- Deacon, Deakf' fudson- juddy, Artie. Kmys- Fred, Kaze, Kazy, Doctor. Kcbabizm- Harvard, Baby, Babian, Kebabf' Kvlfogg- Patrick Henry, Bill, Herbert Humphrey, Borneo. Kmqhfer- jacob Fry, Freak. Kezzzizzll- U. S. G., Green, U? Familiarity C. Kz'1zg-- Chuck, Natty, Pretty. R. Ii'Z'7lg1'6Rl1f,,, Rune, Kid, job, jack, Kirklafzd- Ki1'k, Nervy, Clara, H Hydrophobiaf' Klzafbel- Ernie, The Judge. Iijfle- Charlie, Davy, Dwight Hall. Lake- Fresh Water Lake, Lakey, Gust. Lamb- Whity, Sport, Wind. Lamprey- Howard Asa, The Mathematicianj' Lamp. Lane-- Windy, Jimmy. Lay-- Ed, E. H., Lazy, Deacon. Lacie-- Billy, Bill, judge, Pres, Squire. Limzhafz-'K Pat, 'C Patrick, The Sun. Lindeke- Oolah, Lulah, Oulu, U Ol. Lzheawmver-- Baldy,', Patty. Lloyd- Ray, Dauphin. Lockwood- Freddie, Lockff Lofzgefzfcker-- Lo1ig, Neck, Neckerf' R. R. Loznzsbmjf- Ralph, Lunchberry, Handsome, Fatty, Pete, Dear Ralph. 182 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Ml W Loufzslmry- Jogo, Joe, Doggy, Lovclanri- Lovely, Noisy, Chizzy, Charlie. Lymzzn- Dean, Mormon, Utah, Captain, Lynch- Freddie, Whiskers, The Good. fWcBz'rmg'- Mac, Daisy. IWcCa11a'!cs.s'- Mack, Bill, Billy. IlYcCra-y- ,Mack, Crazy, The Dig. JVfcC11Z!ouglz- Mack, Holly, McCoughlan, Dig. MCD1lf6l'-'K Mac, Fatty, Frankie Mr!i'ecker- Bull, Mac. .fWcKz'm- Tack, Sport, Dude. .McKz'1z1zey- Mac, Kirk, Toby. ,Wfackoy-'K Hatfield, '4Forlorn Hope, Last of the Mackoys Pete. JVfcM1'l!an- Pub, Boss, Drunk, Publius. Mar!z'11- Mart, Yale Law School, L. L. B. 1Wzzlthcw11za1z- jack, Jam, Mat, Matthy, Bert, Al, G. B. JIlz'llcr-- Gobbs, Gob. H Jlliller- B1ondy, Vermilion, 5' Frank, Von, Tyd. Wi W. Mz'!ler- Billy, Sherlock. Mz'!cheZ!- A1't, Artie, Mitch. Moorhozzse- Sallie, More, Moryf' IVfargan- Joe, -I. E. Morgf' Morley- Johnnie, Jack, Morl. 1Vfoselcy- Ike, Doctor, Mose. .Mosman- Ollie, Olio, Moseman. H Mzzrrajf- Charley, Shots, Mero. Nzkhols- Rob, jones of Binghamton, he pays the' freight, Nick. Nzfgm- Nip, Nippie, Neptune, Alvin Probascof' Noon- Shore, A Hen. D Olmslfd- Georgie, U Buffalo. Orr- Sammie, S. Lawrie. Osgood- Charlie, Os. NICKNAMES. 181 Hu!!- Tubby, Hully, Hool. jackson-- jack, Caleb, Pete. james- Nunck, Jes, Jessie, Uncle, Moke, Bobbie.' C. f87lfdZ.7ZS-'C Sallie, Charlie. f.fE7lkZ-715- J6HkS,,, Chim1ny jesse, jenker, Turtle,' Runt, Shiny, Sinner, jeenes, Little Fat,' Saint. jewel!- jeWie, Senator, Nat, jewel jones- Deacon, Deak. fudson- juddy, Artie. Keays- Fred, Kaze, Kazy, Doctor. Kcbalzzkzn- Harvard, Baby, Babian, Kebabf' Kflfogg- Patrick Henry, Bill, Herbert Hunuphreyj Borneo. Ifeffqifer- jacob Fry, Freak. Kefzfirzlf- U. S. G., Green, ? Familiarity. C. King-- Chuck, Natty, Pretty. R. King- Ruf, Rufie, Kid, Joh, jack Kirkland- Kirk, Nervy, Clara, t' Hydrophobiaf' Kmzebe!- Ernie, The judge. Kyle'- Charlie, Davy, Dwight Hall. Lake- Fresh Water Lake, Lakey, Gust. Lamb- Whity, Sport, Wind. Lamprey- Howard Asa, The Mathernaticianj' Lamp. Lane- Windy, Jimmy. Lay- Ed, E. H., Lazy, Deacon. Leeie- Bil1y, Bill, judge, Pres, Squire. Limzkzzfz- Pat, Patrick, The Sun. Lindeke- Oolah, Lulah, Oulu, Ol. Lineawezwev'- Baldy, Patty. C Lloyd- Ray, Dauphin. Lockwood- Freddie, Lock. Lofzgenecker- Long, 't Neck, Neckerf' R. R. Lozmslzmjf- Ralph, f'Lunchberry, Handsome, Fatty, H Pete, Dear Ralph. 182 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. Ml W1 Lazmslmry- jogo, joe, Doggy. Lozfclanzi- Lovely, Noisy, Chizzy, Charlie. Lyman- Dean, Mormon, Utah, Captain Lynch-- Freddie, Whiskers, The Good. ZWcBz'rmjf- Mac, Daisy. McC'a11ff!4'i's- Mack, U Bill, Billy. !VlcCray- ,Mack, Crazy, The Dig. JVlcC11l!o1lglz- Mack, Holly, McCoughlan, Dig. McDujYec-- Mac, Fatty, Frankie Illclfecker- Bull, Mac. .McKz'm- Tack, Sport, Dude. flflcIi'z'1z1zey- Mac, H Kirk, Toby. JVlfzckoy-- Hatfield, For1orn Hope, Last of the Mackoys Pete. Jllcfllzllmz- Pub, Boss, Drunk, Publius. JWa1'Zz'7z- Mart, Yale Law School, L. L. B. Jlfzzllkcwmnwz- jack, Jam, Mat, Matthy, Bert, Al G. B. IWz'!lz'r- Gobbs, Gob. P. Zllifler- Blondy, Vermilion, Frank, Von, Tyd, W1 PV. M1'l!fr- Billy, Sherlock. Illifckell- Art, Artie, Mitch. 1Woorho11se- Sallie, More, Mory. IVlo1'gzzn- joe, J. E. Morg'. 1War!ey- Johnnie, jack, Mor1. Ilfloselfy- Ike, Doctor, Mose. MOS7llHll-cg Ollie, U Olio, Moseman. Mzcrrajf- Charley, Shots, Mero. H Nfclzols- Rob, jones of Binghamton, he pays the' freight, Nick. Nzpgm- Nip, Nippie, Neptune, Alvin Prohascof' Noon- Shore, Hen. CJf7lZ.S'fL'd'-U Georgie, Buffalo. Orr-H Sammie, S. Lawrie. Osgood- Charlie, Os. NICKNAMES. 183 Paizze-'KWindy, Gusty, Florida Terrapin, Umslopo- H gas, Borneo. F Perkizzs- Face, H Freddie, Perk, 4' Friar Tuck. If fJL'7'kZ'7Z.S'-'H Pete, S1ob, Wooden Man, Bruppo, Tim- ber Toes, Bishf' A. Phelps- Brother Alselmo, Aus, Puff of Wind. f. Plzcqfu- Ike, Young Ike, Iky. Persons-- Freddie, Pers, Personisf' Pzkmvofz- Fat, Dick, Freak, Sucker. Po!l5:j The Prince, The Fat Student. lbjze- Hamish, Rip, Bup, Anthropoidf' A. Pollw'- Bishop, Hyppiasf' Pope. j. Potter- Rabbit, Trace, Pot. Price-- Prix, Spider, Wigwam, Warryf' Privzglc'- Spindle, . U Ralphusf' E. Raymond- Ed, Eddie, Ray. VK Raymamz'- Billy, Actress. Rfdzlzglofz- Red, Reddy, Ted, Ned, Jack, Ted Red Nedingtonf' Reed- Speaker, Ed, Eddie. Rzrhanison- Rich, Simof' ff0bZ'7ZSQ7l1H Rob, Robby, Robin. Rogers- Phil, Beloit, Windy West. Rowlry- Socrates, Socs, Old Man, Beauty. Ryan- Pug, Bertie, Alf' Ryder-4' Short, Stumpy, Shorty, Sflfllllllll'-H The Pope, Billy, U Deacon, Sporty Deacon. Sanzkrs-- Windy, Tha! Sanders? Szzmzdc1'.v- Charlie, Lazy, The Man of Oleanf' .Shwyer- Jim, Sawbonesj' 'jovial jim the Manager, Lucci, Dover, Fusserf' Seymour- Orry, X and Y Axis, Sin1o. Sheffield- Joe, jo-jo, Pinky, Red. .Sz'!zfn'slri1z-- Stein, Silveyf' A Skelion- jean, George, 'Euydvos. 184 YALE 'Q4 CLASS BOOK. Skinleer-- Manager, Charley, Smiley. C. A. Smith- Smithy, Whiskersf' H. F Smith- H. F., K. G., Smithyf' L. B. Smith- Leonard Bacon, The Hermit. L. Smillz- Letch, Letchyf' R. F Sfuitlz- Rest, Restyf' Snzjivz- Snif, Sniffy, Charlie. Sollry-- Deacon, Deak, Fusserf' Stahl- Stahlie, Tank, Carlie. Slewart- Toughie, Walt, Stewtsie, Little Waltie, Thoughet, Open Air jean. S!z'Z!mzz1z- Pete, Slit,' The Fat Chairman. Slam'- Al, Stoney, Rocks. Stotkers- Ed, Eddie, Strouthers. A. Taylor- Windy, Crank, A. S., Duke of Orange, The Helper of the Afflictedf' f. Taylor- Jimmie, Prof, The Gentleman, Der Philo- sophischerf' Thomas- Long Tom, Anthropoid Ape. Thows- Tommy, Billy. Tilsou- joe, Til, Tilly, Bill, Tilson, jr. Ybzia'- Harvey, Wales, Doh, Billy. Tozzsfy-- Ra1phie, Tussie, Towser. Towlzsezmf- Dolly, ToWny. Trowbrzdgc- Ruth, Drawbridgef' Brown Boy, Windy Jimmie. fucker- Darwin, Tuck, Friar Tuck. Van Name- Van, Pete. Van Slyrk- Van, Slick. Walsall-- Handsome, Buxom, Toothsome, Bill-Dad, Susan Waller-- Al, Alex, Windy, Calamity. PVaruer- Milt, Milk, Mike, Smike. Wzzicrmzzlz- Walt, Wat,f' Water. NICKNAMES. 183 Pzzizze- Windy, Gusty, Florida Terrapinf' Umslopo- gas, Borneo. V F Perkins- Face, Freddie, Perk, Friar Tuck. If Perkins- Pete, U Slob, Wooden Man, Bruppo, Tim- ber Toes, Bish. A. Phelps- Brother Alse1mo, Aus, Puff of Wind. L Pkeys- Ike, Young Ike, lky. Persons- Freddie, Pers, Personisf' Pz'er.von- Fat, Dick, Freak, Sucker. Polls- The Prince, The Fat Student. Pope- Hamish, Rip, U Bup, Anthropoidf' A. Police'- Bishop, Hyppiasj' Pope. f. Porter- Rabbit, Trace, Pot. Przke-'A Prix, Spider, Wigwam, Warryf' Pringle-- Spindle, Ralphusf' E. Raymond- Ed, Eddie, H Ray. W Raymorza'- Billy, U Actress. Rm'z'1zg!ou- Red, 4' Reddy, Ted, Ned, Jack, Ted Red Nedingtonf' Rem'- Speaker, Ed, Eddie. Rzkhardson- Rich, 'C Simof' Robivzsofz- Rob, Robby, Robin. Rogers- Phil, Be1oit,', Windy West. Rowley- Socrates, Socs, Old Man, Beauty. Ryan- Pug, Bertief' Al. Ryder- Short, Stumpyf Shorty Szzllwon- The Pope, Billy, Deacon, Sporty Deacon. Sanders- Windy, Tim! Sanders. SlZ7l7lll'C'7'S1H Charlie, Lazy, The Man of Olean. Szzwyer4 jim, Sawbones, jovial jiin the Managerff Lucci, Dover, Fussen Stywour- Orry, X and Y. Axis, Simo. Skejield- Joe, jo-jo, Pinky, Red. .S'z'lz1c1'slfi1z- Stein, Silveyf' Skelton- jean, George, fEyy.-Svcs. 184 YALE '94 CLASS Booic. Sfcinker- Manager, Charley, Smiley. C. A. Smz'!h- Smithy, Whiskersf' H. F Smifh- H. F., K. G., Smithyf' L. B. Smith- Leonard Bacon, The Hermit. L. Smillz- Letch, Letchyf' R. F 51112711- Rest, Restyf' Srzzfivz- Snif, Sniffyf' Charlie. Sollayf-- Deacon, Deak, Fussen Sink!- Stahlie, Tank, Carlie. .Siezvzzrt - Toughie, Walt, Stewtsie, Little Waltie, Thoughetj' Open Air jean. Sz'z'!!mzzu- Pete, Slit,' The Fat Chairman. Slam'- Al, 'K Stoney, Rocks. Stolkfrs- Ed, Eddie, Strouthersf' A. Taylor- Windy, Crank, A. S,, Duke of Orange, The Helper of the Aftlictedf' f. Taylor-- Jimmie, Prof, The Gentleman, Der Philo- sophischerf' Thomas- Long Tom, Anthropoid Ape. Thows- Tommy, Billy. Tz'!.i'o1z- joe, Til, Tilly, Bill, Tilson, jr. Ybdzz'- Harvey, Wales, Doh, Billy. Tazrsry- Ralphie, U Tussie, Towserf' Ybzuuxelm'- Dolly, Towny. TrozUbrz'a'gL'- Ruth, Drawbridge, Brown Boy, Windy Jimmie. Tzzckm'- Darwin, Tuck, Friar Tuck. Van Name- Van, Pete. Van Sbwk- Van, Slick. Waldo!!-- Handsome, Buxom, Toothsome, Bill-Dad, Susan. , Waller- Al, Alex, Windy, Calamity. lfVar11er-'f Milt, Milk, Mike, Smike. lfVnfcrmzz1z- Walt, Wat,f' Water. NICKNAMES. 185 Wfzl4'r.v- Bally, Grandmother, 'gjabezf' Wvlclz- Doc, Doctor, Mickey. DVhrc'!z'r- Shell, Ske1, King Shelton. lfVlzz'z'c011zb- Whit, Fatty. li. D. PVhz'Zz'ng- Whitey, 4' Cyclops, fills. f. li. Whz'!z'1zcgf- jay, Edj' J. E., Whitey. WflZ'f7lfjf-LiGl1S,,' Windy, Dog, High Roller, Dog Face. WZ'!fZ'd7llS-'Q Billy, jack, The Williams of Williamstown, Jimmie, Wilson- Rabelaisef' Nate, Shorty, Francis, H Old Sport, The Queen. Wanzcrsltyf- Torn, Tommy, 4' Worms,'l Chippief' Wooa'1'zqil- Woody, Bill, Lazy, Willie, Grouch, Misery, Wallief' lf'Vom'- Minnie, Peasleyf' lfVorthz'1zg!01z- Dick, 'fThe Triangle, Jag, Sleepy, Poet. Wrzlglzf- Pcewee,', Stump, Shorty, Runk, Coed, Miss Peewee. Future Occupations. Whether we succeed in life is a different thing from what we aim or Zillfdllli to hc, but judging from some of our aspirations and highest aims in life, we have good hopes of ourselves. President of the U. S., Senator, Chief Justice, be a useful citizen, rcilect credit on Yale, are things that attract most attention, while the following are some individual opinions: not to be lost in the shuffle, live happy and die at fifty, learn the law of love, have enough money to support a wife, dress like Freddie Dwight, marry and make money, raise sheep and be happy, QF. Perkinsj, to discover the new method of growing new arms and legs when once they have been lost, lRogersy, conscious life in the full develop- ment of all its normal possibilities, QA. Pottery, H to have plenty of money, a pretty and good wife, and lov- ing children whom I may give an education at Yalc,' QCraftsj, to find out the normal happiness, of the normal man, QI-I. Perkinsj, to sit in the Battell chair of music at Yale, lCal1enderj, to know as much as W. E. Sanders Mivzks he does. QPainej, to observe ethical principals, and to become Hrmly convinced of the solidity of the 'Author's Theory, ' fKnaebelj, to entertain certain ones of ,94 at my own home in thr country, with good claret, and my latest novel, fPriccj, FUTURE OCCUPATTONS. 187 to conceal the fact that I've roomed with Howland,' U. S. Jenkinsl, to trap the lost digammaf' QA. Phelpsl, 'fself-realization, or perfect development of the physical, intellectual, political, social, moral, aesthetical, religious, and linancial powers, tlieedj, to lecture to a Yale senior class and say that 'no man can pretend to know the law,' tKelloggl. We will make a start towards these aims after the following manner: seventy-one will study law, twenty- four will study medicine, thirty-six go into business, twenty, teach, ten, preach, and six, journalism. Arnot, Cruttenden, Day, J. L. Hall, Kellogg, Lamb, Leete, Matthewman, J. T. Potter, Saunders, Tilson, Thoms and VVhitcomh will enter Yale Law School. The following will enter some New York Law School: Bosley, Bartlett, P. A. Brown, Case, Diven, Garvan, Fowler, Hawes, ,Kirkland, Hare, Howell, jones, Mc- Cray, McDuffee, McCandless, McCullough, Polk, Stillman, L. B. Smith, A. Taylor and VVhitney. Cros- ley, G. M. Crawford and Greeley will go to the Univer. sity of Michigan Law School. Crafts, Haradon and McKeever to some Chicago law shool. T. Eaton, Hol, ter, McMillan and Stothers to Harvard. E. Brown and Cadwallader to University of Pennsylvania, and Mackoy to a Cincinnati Law School, while the others who intend to study law havcn't fully decided where they will go or forgot to answer that question. They are: Allison, Bandler, tafter teaching a yearj, Guthrie, Gos. ling, Dwight, Gallup, Duncan, Knaebel, Hull, Longe, necker, Lamprey, Mosman, Lineaweaver, Morley, Pringle, Silverstein, Ryan, Seymour, W.. M Raymond, j. E. Whiting, Word, VVorthington and Wheeler Martin and Kendall are already graduates of Yale Law School. OI those studying medicine, Defendorf, Ellis, 188 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. H. F. Smith and Welch will enter Yale Medical School and the following will enter P. and S: Bishop, N. Green, Howland, Rogers, Touscy and Van Slyck. Elting and Moseley will go to Johns Hopkins, A. Brown to Harvard, C. Jenkins to Uni',fei'sit:y of Michigan and Fox will perhaps study in a German University, and the following are undecided where they will learn their med- icine: Arbuthnot, Cassidy, Keays, McKinney, L. Smith, VValeott, E. Whiting, Tucker and Van Name. I. Phelps will pursue a chemical course. Beard, Garrison, Harrington and Hill will enter the Yale Divinity School, Lynch, C. A. Smith and Sniffen, Berkeley Divinity School and W. R. Clarke, Oberlin, l'. S. The following will follow teaching, at least for awhile: Bandler, Qfor a whilel, Bunnell, Qperhapsl, Price, Judson, W. Chase, Cantwell, F. Chase, lEngIish teaehcrl, Dun- ning, Qteaeher or sailorj, Kempfer, Kebabian, fedueator and reformerl, Hood, Lay, Lake, Lloyd, Osgood, A. Mitchell, ffor four years and then theologyl, Sallmon, llinglish Bihlel, Sanders, Qbiblical lit.l, Robinson, Red- lngton, Ixeed, Waterman. Buck, Holt, Hulbert and Paine will go into journalism. The following will go into some sort of business: I. C. Brown, Bigelow, S. Bissell, Chapman, Callender, Cochran, Cravath, W. D. Cleveland, Qcottonj, Chamber- lain, Qmanufacturerl, A. S. Cleveland, Cooke, Goss, Dunkerson, G. Dominick, fbanker and brokerl, Evans, Qbankingl, Dorland, Ferguson, Qironj, Hixon, flumberl, Holmes, James, Qforestryl, jewett, lbankingl, Linahan, Loveland, Lockwood, Moorhouse, Murray, A. Phelps, E. Raymond, Orr, Richardson, Skinker, Stewart, Qbusiness or bad companyj, Sawyer, Trowbridge, Wilson, Rowley, 'I odd, Thomas, Qrailroadj, 'VVoodruff, Qhardwarej, Wright, FUTURE OCCUPATIONS. 189 fearpetj. G. F. Eaton and Noon will take a P. G. course at Yale, R. King, Qelectrieal engineeringj, at Stevens or Cornell, Gibbons, feivil engineerj, and C. Hall, Qnaval architecturej. J. S. Jenkins will employ his time in 'tkeeping clear of Divenf' Seek peace and pursue itf' QG. B, Millerj. Fred Perkins will be a country gentle. man farmer and H. B. Perkins will busy himself with 'fpieking buds from century plants, and the following are undecided: Allen, Bailey, Boyer, Buell, Dawson, C. Crawford, Carley, Eno, Furbish, Gillispie, Kyle, Lane, Lindeke, R. Lounsbury, W. Lounsbury, Morgan, Pier- son, W. Miller, P. Miller, Ryder, R. F. Smith, Skelton, Solley, J. Taylor and VVomersley. Wlieii those that didn't answer this question have made up their mind and have gotten into something, they will please immediately telegraph the nature of the ease to our class secretary, the Commodore. Officers. JUNIOR PROM!-INA IIE Co1xrMl'1 1'E1c. Cochran, Ch!lZ'7'llZlZlZ,' Whitney, Ff007-Md7ldAf67 Case, A. Potter, Jr.. Word, McMillan, Stillman. Solley, L. Smith, UNIVERSI'I'Y BOAT CLUB. McMillan, Prz'sz'n'mf. BASEH.-xl,I, CLUB. Skinkcr, jJi'6'.VZlll'L'1lf,' Case, C'lIffIZZ'7l. Callender, Sforfr. FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION. Holter, Pn'sz'a'mI. A1'HLE'r1c ASSOCIA'l'ION. Walcott, Pn'sz'a'mf ,' Lyman, Caplazbz. 'PENNIS Cnun. Pope, !'re.vin'ml. CLASS BOAT CLUB. Burr, !'1'.'sz'1!e1zl ,- 'Hol mes, CLASS BAS1-:rsAI.L. Nolan, !'rvsz'1z'4'1zl. CLASS Foo'rnA1,L. Sawyer, l'rv.vz'dc11f ,' Curtiss, GLEE CLUH. L. Smith, Prcsz'a'wzl,' Arbuthnot, Sawyer, flflavzfzger. Lkzjflaiu. y'7'l'!1.Vll wr. Vzkf- lf'resz'a'c1zi OFFICERS. FRESHMAN GI.liE CLUB. Solley, Prcsz'a'en!. FENUE ORATOR. Reed. UNIVERSITY CLUB. Polk, Presz'a'en!,- Polk, F. C. Perkins, Whitney, .El,'L'6'6'7lfZ ZfF Commiliee Y. M. C. A. Sallmon, Pre.vz'a'erz!,' Case, Treasurcv. CLASS -DEACONS. Cochran, Sallmon, Solley. Boys' CLUB COMIVIITTEE. 1 L. Smith, J. H. Taylor, Stewart. BETHANY MISSION. Reed, S7lf6'7'Z'7ZfE7l!l'E?lf. BERKELEY ASSOCIATION. Bishop, President. ANDOVER CLUB. McMillan, Presz'a'e1zz'. ST. PAUL'S CLUB. F. C. Perkins, P1'esz'a'enz'. PHI BETA IZAPPA. A Davies, Presz'dent,- Nichols, Vzte-Presz'dem',' Dorland, Y9'uz.vurcr,- Knaebel, Secretary. YALE UNION. Leete, Presz'de1zt,' Dawson, T1'c'asurer,- McKeeVer, Secretary. Co-oP. DIRECTOR. Howland. ' DUN!-IAM BOAT CLUB. McMillan, Preszdenf. Senior Class Officers. A. T. HARRINGTON, - Scfrcfary. E. B. REED, - - Puff. J. L. HALL, - - Omtor. W. jj 'l'11,soN, -.-.- SftlfZSf1AL'l'lZIl. Ivv CoMMI'1 1'EE. j. R. Trowbridge, R. H. Nichols, N. W. Green HISTQRIANS. R. D. Paine, A. Judson, T. F. Davies, jr. E. B. Reed, A. N. C. Fowler. CLASS DAY CoMM1'1 ricE. L. S. Stillman, W. Walcott, jr., T. Eaton L. Smith, W. H. Sallmon. Cul' CoMM1'1 1'r11c. H. B. Perkins, A. T. Harrington, F. L. Polk. ' Sum-I-:R ComM1'1 rE1-L. H. P. Whitney, W. E. Stewart, jr., P. H. McMillan, J. B. Solley, jr., j. C. Sawyer. - T1uENN1AL ComM1'1 1'm:. john Howland, P, H. McMillan, A. Potter. P1c'1'URE CoMM1'r'1'1aE. A. T. Harrington, E. R. Bosley, A. W. Lindeke. Y Future Addresses. Class Secretary, A. T. Harrzbzglon-4o3 Elm street, N ven, Conn. S. S. Allen-640 Drexel Building, Philadelphia, Pa. W B. A llzlvon--Cook County Poor House, Chicago, Ill. G. A. A fzzfnfen-N ew Haven, Conn. YI S. Arbzzlknol-Pittsburgh, Pa. R. H. A rnoz'-Yale Law School, New Haven, Conn. W. B. Baz'!z'y-Springfield, Mass. H. S. Bandler-Owego, N. Y. ' A. P. Bar!lell+Torrington, Conn. W S. Beam'-South Killingly, Conn. . A. A. Beaumom'-35 Union street, Wilkesbarre, Pa. A. A. Bzlgelow-St. Paul, Minn. X C. B. Bzlvlzop-Box 144, Litchfield, Conn. C. 5. Bzkse!!-Hartford, Conn. S. B. S. Bzlvxell-235 West 44th street, New York City. E. R. Bosley--Geneseo, N. Y. F M Boyer--15 Clinton street, Watertown, N. Y. S. Brzggs-North Dighton, Mass. fi. H. Bronson-N ew Haven, Conn. 5 A . H Brooks-Waco, Tex. A f. C. Brown-36 East 37th street, New York City. f. Brown-310 Highland avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. , B. Brown-50 Silver street, Dover, N. H. H A. Brown-New York City. A. H, Buck--Baltimore, Md. C. H Buell--302 jefferson avenue, Brooklyn, N, Y. ew Ha 194 YALE '94 cLAss Booic. H. W. Bmw-Brooklyn, N. Y. F S. Burma!!-Stratford, Conn. C. Burr-Auburn, N. Y. f. Cadwallzzdcr-1519 Locust street, Philadelphia, Pa.' W R. Cutlffflllllff-1509 Westminster street, Providence, R. I. f. W Cardwell-Powell, Texas. Z M Carley-New Haven, Conn. G. B. C1036-706 West toth street, Kansas City, Mo. If f. Cassiafy-Norwich, Conn. f. If Chzzfzzlzerlzzm-Seneca Falls, N. Y. E S. Chapman-Saybrook, Conn. F H. Clzasc-ro Arch street, Haverhill, Mass. W G. Chase-Penn Yan, N. Y, W. I-L Clark-Saginaw, Mich. I W R. Clarke-Oberlin, Ohio. A. S. Cletfelavm'-Houston, Texas. W D. Clewland-Houston, Texas. T. CQ0L'fl7'LZ7l -S9 Western avenue, St. Paul, Minn. f. H 650017211227 Linden street, Oakland, Cal. W. C. Crafts4Austin, Ill. Ii. JW Cravallz-New York City. I C. F. Crawford-Care of Charles Crawford, Stock Chicago, Ill. Exchange, G. M Crawford-433 Harrison street, Topeka, Kan. l F. S. Crosley-Springfield, Mass. WT B. Grultefzden-East River, Conn. YI F Dawes-Detroit, Mich. H S. Dawson-New Haven, Conn. b E. M Day-Colchester, Conn. V C. If DeBez1oz'se-7 5 Greene avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. A. R. Defendorf-Yale Medical School, New Haven, A L. A. Dinsmoar-Soo Water street, Warren, Pa. A . G. Dickson-gor Clinton street, Philadelphia, Pa. . S. Dz'z1en-Elmira, N. Y. Conn. FUTURE ADDRESSES. 195 B. D07lZZ'7ZZZL?122 West 51st street, New York City. G. F. Domz'nz'clc-N ew York City. G. E. Ddfftlild-388 Elmwood avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. W H. Duncan-x56 Appleton street, Lowell, Mass. G. Dunkerson-Louisville, Ky. H. W Dll7l7ZZ'7Zg'-7 St. John street, Jamaica Plains, Mass. F Dwzglzl-51 Remsen street, Brooklyn, N. Y. G. F Ziaion-zo Sachem street, New Haven, Conn. T. Eaton-Wakefield, Mass. T. L. Ellis-16 Brown street, Portland, Me. A. Wf Eltiug-Upper Red Hook, N. Y. H. L. Eno-Saugatuck, Fairneld County, Conn. W. L. Evans--Austin, Texas. f. M Ferguson-Fifth Norwood avenue, Shadyside, Pittsburgh Pa. I A. N C. Fowler-New York City. G. H. Fox-New York City. C. If Furbislz-Spencerport, N. Y. F D. Gallup-Smethport, McKean County, Pa. IV E. Garrzlvon-5828 Bartmer place, St. Louis, Mo. E.j. Garwzn-228 Farmington avenue, Hartford, Conn. C. H George-495 junean place, Milwaukee, Wis. M.,f. Gilzlzons-New Haven, Conn. L. 12 Gillespzb--P. O. Box 158, Morristown, N. J. T. W Goslifzg-Cincinnati, Ohio. j. H. Goss-Waterbury, Conn. A. Greeley-jacksonville, Fla. G. Green-New Haven, Conn. N. W . Green-Worcester, Mass. W. W. Gulhrie--Twelfth and Parallel streets, Atchison, Kan C. H. Hdfl-'I57 Montague street, Brooklyn, N. Y. f. L. Ha!!-Willimantic, Conn. F IW. Haradon-Marshalltown, Iowa. ZW. Hare-28 W. nth street, New York City. 196 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. A. T Hzzrrz'1zg'!o1z--403 Elm street, New Haven, Co f. A. Hawes-9 W. 46th street, New York City. F S. H67Z7.jl13656 Grand Boulevard, Chicago, Ill. E. G. Hi!!-New Haven, Conn. G. C. Hzlrou-La Crosse, Wis. R. W. Holmes-West Winsted, Conn. H. Halt-go Willow street, Brooklyn, N. Y. E. O. Holler-Helena, Montana. W D. Hood--7 Elm street, Auburn, N. Y. L. M Hozvell-West Hampton, Beach, N. Y. f. Howland-14 W. 9th street, New York City. C. N Hulbert-Norwich, Conn. R. S. Hu!!--1561 Sanderson avenue, Scranton, Pa. C. S. jackson-Allegheny, Pa. V IIII. R. C.f:z11zes-1o31 N. Charles street, Baltimore, Md. C. 0.fenlez'1zs-Cleveland, Ohio. f. S.fe1zlei7zs-11 Oliver street, Stamford, Conn. N H. fewei!-3o3 North street, Buffalo, N. Y. L. B. jones-Wilkesbarre, Pa. A. fudsou-Montclair, N. I. If L. Keays-North Berwick, Me. S. C. Lfflldblidil-NSW Haven, Conn., and Rodosto, Turkey H. H. Kellagg-Carthage, Mo. , f. F Kempfer-Montoursville, Pa. Uf S. G. Kendal!-Homestead, Pa. C. G. 1fZ.7Zg-159 Rush street, Chicago, Ill. R. King-Lafayette avenue, Clifton, Cincinnati, Oh E. Kirfeland-219 Genesee street, Utica, N. Y. E C. D. Iijfie-Cayuga, Cayuga County, N. Y. . Iffillfbff'-404 Equitable Building, Denver, Col. C. H. Lzzlee-New Haven, Conn. G. B. B. Lamb-New Haven, Conn. H. A. Lamprey-5 Summer street, Laconia, N. H. f. E. Law-Hadley, Mass. , io. FUTURE ADDRESSES. 197 Ji. H Lay-Fulton, Ill. U5 If. Leefe-Thompsonville, Conn. j. B L2.7l!ZlZll7Z-271 Ferry steet, New Haven, Conn. A. W. Limiclce--St. Paul, Minn. C. B Linmweaver-Philadelphia, Pa. R. Lloyd-269 Auburn avenue, Mt.' Auburn, Cincinnati, O. F. A. Lockwood-Norwalk, Conn. R. Longmecleer-Bedford, Pa. R. R. Lozmsbury-1207 Asylum avenue, Hartford, Conn. W VV. Lounsbury-New Haven, Conn. C. N. Lowfcznd-34 West River street, Wilkesbarre, Pa. D. B. Lyman--Salt Lake City, Utah. F H Lynch-Peacedale, R. I. G. D. JIlcBz'1'1zey-1736 Prairie avenue, Chicago, Ill. Wf W McCa1zd!ess-Bellevue, Allegheny County, Pa. E. H. IWbCra,y-Rockville, Conn. H. R JVfcCu!louglz-88 Park avenue, New York City. F E. McDzgj'ee-Bradford, Vt. B. Mclfeevfr-39oo Lake avenue, Chicago, Ill. IV McICi1n-33 West zoth street, New York City. I K. C. Mclfinfzey-New York City H B. Mackay-Covington, Ky. P H. McMz'l!an-515 Jefferson avenue, Detroit, Mich. S. B. Martin-New York City f. A. Jlflaithewvmm-561 Howard avenue, New Haven, Conn G. B. Mz'!!e'r-331 Franklin street, Buffalo, N. Y. P Mz'l!er-Olympia, Washington. DV. VV Zlliller-Seattle, Washington. A. JWtclzeZ!-Care Syrian Prostestan College, Beirut, Syria, fvia London and Brindisij. VV R. MO0VHOZlS6-3741 Grand Boulevard, Chicago, Ill. f. Zi. Morgafz-Essex, Conn. f. E. Morley-1617 S. Washington avenue, Saginaw, Mich. H. P. .Moseley-31 Wall street, New Haven, Conn. D 198 YALE '94 CLASS BooK. O. C. Mosffzafz-St. joseph, Mo. W F Mzrrray-8o4 Central avenue, Plainfield, N. 1. R. H. Niclzols-Binghamton, N. Y. A. H Nzpgen-265 Broadway, New York City. H. S. Noon-Gloucester, Mass. G. W Olmsim'-Buffalo, N. Y. S. L. Orr-Evansville, Ind. C. G. Osgood-Wellsborough, Pa. R. D. Paine-St. Augustine, Fla. F C. Pcrkzhs-Sharon, Pa. H. B. Perkins-Warren, Ohio. F. T. Persons-Sandisfield, Mass. A. Phelps-New York City. L K. Pkehs-Thompsonville, Conn. D. L. LJZ.67'S0ll-72 Washington street, Hartford, Conn. F L. LJUM?-7 East 36th street, New York City. A. M. Pope-St. Louis, Mo. A. I-'otfcr-29 Lafayette place, New York City. f. T. Poller--North Adams, Mass. Wi f. Price-St. Paul's School, Concord, N. H. 16. Pringle-Red Oak, Iowa. E. F Raymona'-2239 Calumet avenue, Chicago, Ill. W. JW. Raymond-Chicago, Ill. E. f. Redzhgtan-904 Irving street, Syracuse, N. Y. E. B. Reed-Holyoke, Mass. H. S. RZ'L'Ll!Z7'dS0ll--II7 Buena avenue, Buena Park, Chicago, Ill Zi. L. Robffzson-Meriden, Conn. P. F Ragers-Room ro, Plankenton Block, Milwaukee, Wis. C. If Rowley-Box 316, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. A. T. Ryan-1230 13th street, N. W., Washington, D. C. G, H. Ryder-615 East Front street, Plainfield, N. J. V HL H. Sallmon-Dwight Hall, Yale Univ., New Haven, Conn W Ii. .Sanders-Auburndale, Mass. C. IW. Saunders-zo Grafton street, Worcester, Mass. FUTURE ADDRESSES. j. C. Sawyer-Dover, N. H. u O. S. Seymour-Litchfield, Conn. f. Ii. Slzejielai-Attleboro, Mass. Q H S. Sz'!fJerstein-1721 Emerson avenue, Denver, Col. E. W Skelton-296 Sixth avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. C. R. .Slebzfcer-zzo N. Fourth street, St. Louis, Mo. C. A. Smith-r49 West avenue, Bridgeport, Conn. H. F Smith-215 Garden street, Hartford, Conn. L. B. Smilh-23 East 44th street, New York City. L. Swilh-Auburn. N. Y. R. F Smiilz-Brooklyn, N. Y. ' C. f. Snffevz-Stratford, Conn. f. B. Solley-Brooklyn, N. Y. C. .F Sink!--New Haven, Conn. HZ E. Slewarz'--526 West Seventh street, Plainfield, N L. S. Sfillmavz-95 joralemon street, Brooklyn, N. Y. A. W. Sf0ll6'--243 Broadway, New York City. Ii. M. Slothers-Port Richmond, Staten Island, N. Y. A. S. Taylor'-South Orange, N. J. f. H. Taylor-47 Rutledge street, Charleston, S. C. Ii. R. 710011103-I7 West 57th street, New York City. PV. li. Tkoms-Waterbury, Conn. Wf f. Tz'!.ro1z-Clear Branch, Tenn. W. Todd-Calais, Me. R. TOZlS6y-250 Henry street, Brooklyn, N. Y. G. M Townsend--Hartford, Conn. f. R. Trozvbrzdge-27 Delaware Place, Chicago, Ill. H. B. Tllfkffkg Washington Park, Troy, N. Y. W G. Van Name-121 High street, New Haven, Conn G. F Van Slyck--5r Learned street, New York City. W. S. W'aZcoti-New York Mills, N. Y. f. A. l'Vzz!!er-Chicago, Ill. Mf. Warner-Salisbury, Conn. W. A. Waterman--New Haven, Conn. 200 YALE '94 CLASS BOOK. F f. Waiers-Mt. Auburn, Cincinnati, Ohio. H. L. WE!L'h-44 College street, New Haven, Conn. S. K. Wheeler-Chattanooga, Tenn. L. A. Wlzifcomlf-Clinton, Ind. . D. Whiting-149 N. Fourth street, Aurora, I11. f. E. Wlziting-Granville, N. Y. E H. H Whitney--2 West 57th street, New York City. f. D. Williams-North Adams, Mass. N. N Wilson-zo Drumn street, San Francisco, Cal. Yi M Womersley-Greenield, Mass. W. W. Woodruj'-Knoxville, Tenn. C. F Word-626 Madison avenue, Helena, Mont. R. H. Wortkifzgton-Baltimole, Md. WY R. Wrzlghz'-125 East 57th street, New York City JWfW,fW7W.iW,'W.Wh m'WNW,vlo.'va.'v4,'vM'vh.-110. wf. W. W., W.. .. ... -W -xw mx- NY .wf.w-.mv .uw Aw Aw' aw mwzsv .4wkW1w.NTN1oV' Index to Advertisers. Apotheearles. Hotels and Restaurants. Prlntcrs. , Osborn Hall ...... ----xxxvii Schnrnian .... ........ . .lxiv Athletic Goods. Hulbert Bros ......... ...,xii Horsman, N. Y ..... .....xlv llarbers. Frohlich ............ ..... 1 i Bicycles. Bennett 8: Co ....... ..xlvii Books. Balch Bros ................ lxi Caps and Gowns. Strawbriclge M Clothier..xv Carpets and Drapery. Perry ......... ...... .... 1 x iii Cameras. Eastman Kodak Co. .... xxxii Caterer. Stewart ....---. .... .... x l i Coal. McCusker ee Schroeder.. .xl Sanderson . .... . ..... xliv Collars and Calls. Earl 8: Wilson, N. Y .... xlix Dentist. Phila. Dental Rooms. . .lxiv Dlctlonarles. Webster's Dictionary .... xli Drugs and Medlelnes. Ponds Extract, N.Y..xxxix Dye Works. Empire ........... ,,,,,, X liii Florists. Champion.......... .... xlviii F. S. Platt.. .... .. ....... xxvii Furnlshlng Goods. Brooks Bros., N. Y ........ xi Groceries. Allyn Bros...... ....... .lvii Hardware. The j. E. Bassett Co. .xlviii Cox K Lyon ........ . ...... lii Hntterl. Brooks K Co ...... .... x lvi Fifth Avenue, N.Y ....... xl Fisher..... L ,......... . .... lv Fleming ........... , ....... li Grand nion, N. Y .... ,.xlii Jackson. ............... ... lx Cooley House ............ xii Spring House, N. Y...xxxii Stewart ................... xli xlviii '1'raeger................ Vendome, Boston.......xx1 lee Dealers. B. Dickerman .... .. ..... lvii Insurance. Massachusetts Mutual. . .vii Nat'lLile Ass.,l-I'rtf'rd.lxiv German American, N.Y. .iv H'rtf'rd Life 49 Annuity.xix 1-I'rtf'rd Steam Boiler..xliii Home, N. Y ........... xxxiii National Life ............ xiii Phoenix Mutual H'rtf'rd..vi Travelers, H'rtf'rd.ist cov. Jewelers. Kirby.. ...... .........xxxv1i Kruder... ............ ....lxiii Starr... ....... ....... . ...xxx Law Schools. N. Y. Law School .... ..... 1 Lauuilrles. Niagara Maehlnen and Tools. Gould 8: E erhardt .... xxvi Macltlntoshes. Tremont Rubber Co ...... xl Newspapers. New York Tribune ........ v Newspapers and Stationery. Ratner ................---. lvi Paper Manufacturers. Marcus Ward ...........lxii Carter . ................... liii Huston, Ashmead, Smith X: Co........, .......... xvi Hurd......... ........... xliv Pens' Franklin Fountain Pen I Co. . . .............. . .xx xv1 Photographers and Photo. Supplies. Butricks.... ...... ......1iii Leopold ..... .....lvii Paci .... .....xlv Meriden Gravnre Co. . .lviii Hunn.... ..............xlvn1 luernan..................x1vi Stafford Printing Co ...... lx Railroads. Boston and Albany ...... xx c. c. c. .Q sr. L ......... nn N Y. K N. E ............ xxiv C. B. 8: O. ................... i c. c. e 2: ................. in Nickel Plate ............ xvii Norfolk and Western.xxxiv Sea Food. A. Foote 8: Co ........... xlii Sewlng Machines. Wheeler and Wilson . .xxv Shoes. liouve, Crawford 61: Co. . .vii New Haven Shoe Co.. .xlvii Hanan-Dillon Shoe Co,, Outside cover Stables. Candee .......... . .. ....... liv Enterprise ...... .......... l x Steel and Brass Mfgrs. Scoville Mfg. Co., Water-N bury ...............-.. xxin Steamship Company. Old Dominion Line ........ ii Tailors. Bliss 8: Co ................. lv Corbin. , ............... xxxv Franklin LS: Co .... ...... 1 iii oak Hall ..... . .... xiv Hurle 8:Co ...... .....lxnf Kleiner 8: Son .... ..... x lvl Machol .... .. ..... xiii Batson ........ .... x .ll Simon ......... . .... xliv Smith 8: Co .... ......... 1 ii Somers.......... ....... ....li Hendee..... .... .....3dcov. Teachers' Agencies. Bridge, Boston ............ iii Eastern, Boston ....... .. ..1y E. O. Fisk it Co .... ,,xxxvn Ticket Agencies. Peck 8: Bishop... .... xxxvii Pobacco. Allen 8: Ginter, Richmond.l Cameron dt Cameron.xxxix Stoddard........ ....... ..1vi Typewrlters. Yot, N. Y. ..... ........ x xix The Hammond .... ..... . lix ESTVXBLISHED 1818. ROOKS BROTH ERS BROADWAY, Cor. 22d St., NEW YORK CITY, Qlotlyinqg and Furnisbino Goods REA D Y ,VA Dlx' fum' AIA DE YU -WEA S URE. 1lfOI? 51311115 HND SIIIIIIIICIZ of 1894. In announcing the opening of the season's goods, we de- sire to call most particular attention to the fact that we have avoided the present general tendency to reduce stock, and have in no way curtailed ours either in quantity or variety. On the contrary, we have added several new classes of garments not hitherto obtainable ready made. In style and out we have endeavored to guard against those exag- gerations of fashion so generally found in lower grades of ready made garments. Our Furnishing Department embraces a most complete assortment of articles in that line for Boys as well as Men. We would call especial attention to a line of Leather and Wicker Goods in this department, including Luncheon Bas- kets for two, four, six or eight persons, also Leather Trav- elling and Kit Bags, Sheflield Plate Flasks, Riding Whips, Crops, etc. . Catalogues, samples and rules for self-measurement sent on application. 1 SUPERIOR SPORTING SUPPLIES MADE TO GIVE PERFECT SATISFACTION CAN BE OBTAINED AT HULBER I BROS. 6I. CO. 26 w. 23d ST., NEW YORK. .. QQ FOOT BALL LAWN TENNIS 4' 1?f?w.Qf+3gaP1 CHEST BICYCLE ,'.' g z1.,wQn f- ' w:Ii.e.sfIf:-2 - - I T255 1 WEIGI-ITS ,.'.'f gf 3 '1-.4-QQ2 I - BASE ' . 421, .' BALL GYM NASIUM Ii-4' APPARATUS LACROSSE . filiirff' ' - j.:.,zf IMPLEMENTS AND ' FOR TRACK BOAT GOODS. I Q V U Q fl 1, . ATHLETICS. 1.. ,..',' 'Ig '.n:'ii : I I ' , A gu A H e i rxghted. There is absolutely nothing in the way of ATH LETIC OR SPORTING OUTFITTINGS That cannot be found at this place, and at the RIGHT PRICE. We aim to give satisfaction, but do not handle cheap goods. ' Send for complete catalogue. A Xll INCORPORATED 1843. PURELV MUTUAL. CHARTER PEFIPETUAL. y Ai- NATIONAL . I LIFE . . . INSURANCE COMPANY . W L... Montpelier, Vermont. OLD, TRIED QE TRUE. CHARLES DEVVEY, 111-av. GEORGE W. REED, sary. Insurance in force January I, 1894, : S6I,632,6I3.00. THE NATlONAL. lVrites the fairest Policy Contract ever issued. All its Policies are Non-Forfeiting, and plainly state on face of contract for each year definite surrender values in Casn, Pani- ni- INsi'uANcE or extension of the Insurance, as preferred. Has the benefit of more than forty years' experience. Is purely mutual, furnishing Insurance at lowest cost. Maintains a large surplus over all liabilities. ENDOWMENT BONDS. For a young man this Bond of the National is the most attractive combi- nation of Insurance, Investment and Savings Bank ever oflfered. Call at oiiice of this Agency and see it. In response to inquiry made of him by a business firm in Philadelphia, I-Ion, GEORGE F. EDMUNDS, Ex-United States Senator from Vermont, wrote as follows : The Directors and Managers of the National arc among the most highly respected and trusted gentlemen of our State. and the Insurance Company managed by them has always borne among us, and still does, n perfectly lnnnucnlule reputation. EDXIILH RD E. SI LL.. State Agent for Connecticut, 850 Chapel Street, - - New Haven, Conn. XIII WHAT WAS 'rum' ms- uNm:us'1'ANmNr: BETWEEN You ANU DEW1':s'l', FRESH- MAN YEAR? mu WAS ALL MINE. I Tuouczm- 'rum' I cou1.u chu. mm A LIAR NVITH 1MxfuNl'rx'. It Makes No Dilferlence Whether you buy your Clothes made to. order in our Custom Department, or buy them of us Ready Made. We guarantee Perfect Fit, Good Workmanship, and repair all goods bought of us for one year free of charge. Our Priees are Guaranteed to be 25 per eent..belouJ any elotbier in tnis state, or we will refund your money. 63.1114 I-Im..I.. 49-5l Church Street. I2l Crown Street. YH Tm: M1sUN1muRs'rAND- WE AKE PIKEPAEED -W CAPS AND GOWNS Universities, Colleges ml Schools THROUGHOUT THE UNITED S ATES. .AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES FOR HIGH CLASS GOODS. By nur Blanks, Furnished lei Sell-Nleasuremenl, we are enabled in , Guarantee Enneet Fil. STRAWBRIDGE 81 GLOTHIER, Market, Eighth and Filbert Streets, PHILADELPHIA. 4597 4. ' lv,-ix. if Af Fi '90 -:V V ix - 'VG 1.5 I, ' 1 pill, ,all 4 Wiva Q7 4' fm pix yvgl , - '-firm? ? f 54- , h 5 ge QQ!! -W 2 I' Q Q f f' CF I ffgiff, 'Mp tx ,D Nw wp, 5-5 1 . Q' T mawfgfuym Nw' wnwmzmm QW M ,HD , 'J my-I Hmst my, frR.:3h1mQad, Smith QQ. ua. Succcssors. QOMMENCEMENT, RECEPTION and WEDDING INVITATIONS QLASS and FRATERNITY MENUS, 'Q PROGRAMS and STATIONERY 'ES STEEL ENGRAVED ILLUSTRATIONS. '12 moNoGRAM and ADDRESS DIES. 15 UISITING CARDS. 'Q 'Q 'avi The Nic EL Al l TheNewyo!Ihf3.gogIQ3?i American Short Line. Tbrozlgb 'Bzqfel Sleeping' Cars from BOSTON to CHICAGO, 'via Filcbburg, West Shore and Nickel Plate Roads. Lovvest Rates, Shortest Line, No Ferries. Try this NEW Lmefor Erie, Cleveland, Fostoria, Ft. Wayne, and Chicago. For all ifyformation call on nearesf liaise! agent, or addregs F. J. MOORE, Gen'I Agent, BUFFALO, N. Y. A. W. JOHNSTON, B. F. HORNER, Ueffl Snjzl. Geri! Pa.r.venger A gefzf. CLEVELAND, O. xvii 5 ' T - .L 1, 4 'J -iii 'j X Vp .. . ffxfi ' ii TDL' W 4 - ' , 51A I 4: '.,L . -5- F ,A -- fiw-'-'i r F F CF are .2 -5 2 if ' , 7 , 2 ' -N x ,H :W '-fd Z I f 7 f ,L ' fi x '1-gf -H'-,C-A Q DEQ .y a -, .4 5 Q-1 1 ia - M - ' H f ,if 515. 1 1, W ,Y 'W-cg +5-T-' gi-a X- -4--if f , EEQ THQ-w.?ffs . in EI4 fi - - , Z ra- - -il --- fnfijimz-52' i if NW , YNY .C X V-'PQ'-TAX Ii ' M F new f 'W ,fm Q . IL' -Ry? 2? '57l1nX',o,x - -hfgf' hiv Qhugs K ' Q ,, M -X ,f 1 lk - ,ww ,, 223355, ax WMcI'Hf 3, 1,,,.lg.x 3 - , fi nj-, Q-gg U--I mfr 1 . 4 -Z5-,,fj 3' tl, X A I VA b', In lx. .... ' :LT all in L: In-HK Hlurll: ..flllglywjlW1l!j,Ap'eM'mH!w'lIwwplmhl I up wft KIL QZJKQ 1-rI.'.1r':: 12 w'mlZmg?.,N'wlU'.QfI.,HwgH':jlL..H 'HI I Hn4.u,f,, HT i .5 Y, THE CALEDONIAN BOAR HUNT. LDesigned by Homer for his Author's edition of the 0dys.vqy.j G EN TLEM EN Leaving College and seeking bus- iness occupations should investigate the life insurance field, It would surprise many to learn of the oppor- tunity afforded in that profession and to find how many college men are successfully engaged therein. It offers ample scope for the best minds, the most thorough scholarship, the greatest energy and push. THE HARTFORD LIFE wp ANNUITY INSURANCE COMPANY is making contracts with such men. The policies issued by this Company are THE BEST, securing as they do the maximum of protec- tion to the beneficiary at the minimum of cost to the insured. This makes the policy very desirable, easy to carry, and consequently not difiicult to sell. Investigate this subject by calling on or addressing, THE COMPANY'S HOME OFFICE, HARTFORD, CONN. FINEST KOADBED ON THE QONTINENT The Through 0 gd I I Car' 1 I Line West, IIOPIIIWGSI dlld SOIIIIIWBSI. FIVE EXPRESS TRPIINS DAILY. SPRINGFIELD LINE. To WORCESTER AND BOSTON. Trains run as follows : Leave New Haven Arrive Worcester Arrive Boston II.O5 A. M. 2.17 P. M P. M. 1.05 P. M. 4.20 11. M. 5.30 P. M. 5.52 P. M. 8.55 P. M. 10.00 P. M. 1.20 A. M. 4.56 A. M. 6.15 A. M. For time tables, berths or seats in palace cars, tickets or information of any kind, call on any Ticket Agent or address A. S. HANSON, I Gwzcra! Pnsxcazger flgmzf, BOSTON, MASS, . Hi H+ All 'T f J - W' '2 . si TE. ' IQ. . ' ' Q ' A , ' ' E :f - H iv.-,I-E ' -I I qi I ' 7' '52fii:'U - GM ? I gEf,p'i,w 1 s - 7-I' A H ,33.1f.i1 5 1. gf' JA ,K-ff' 5522? c 1. ,4M'1'-!' I 1 V 'i 1355 ,vids ' AQJQR' ' ff MQQM' s 'fL Wpmjfi.-L 'L ' L' -. wh . -'54-ling.. 3- . -.M - ..1 1 -5 ':, ,-in i :lf lf , :XJ 'gg f lg, :qv xp. L. . ,una W .ag I5---xx... .bg b 2 - lf '??f Nr - 4- Iuig K K b f V -,.,. yn ,-nf, 4. -Q if . r 'i, T ' -W ' 'i.?-!'.f .a- 17,7---M n ,119 ta-VX ,WGWM g'oev6wWgH.. p ......... munllllllllllllllu. Corner of Commonwealth Avenue and Dartmouth Street, BOSTON THE Hotel Vendonze is one of lhe larges! and jiIl8Sf cy' fhe new hole! .S'f7'llL'lZl?'L'.S' in fhis connlfjy. Ifs elegance, spaeionsness, srznitazy excellence and nneonallen' localion mahe if most zlesirable for transfenl 'Zlf.YZ'f07'.V and 1'onrz'sls. Iz' z's also peenliarbf ezt1'r'aclz ve as zz resz'denee for lazlies and fanzz'lz'es. If z's sz'!na!ea' in the Back Bay Dzlvlricl, one of lhe 5 7'l?7lII7L'5f archz'z'ec!nral seclzons io be found in any counhy, and smvouzzderz' by noleworlhy pnblzc buildzngs- the Ar! Wlnsennz, Public LZ'b7'll7jl, Triniiy, New Old Sonlh, Hes! Baplisf, and olher jrronzznenz' ehurchesqand schools, bolh pnblzk and jzrzkfale. ' Cll1ll7Il0lI'Zlll3!lffhV Avfcnue Qe.1'lendz'ng from Ihe Pnblzl: Garden lo ihe new flI7'A'D,7lf0l1 which fhe VENIJOME has its main fronl, is achnowlcnfgwi lobe lhe fines! bonlefzmwz' in Anzc1'zZ'a. If is Iwo hnnflred and forfy feel wzkie, and fhrongh z'ls cenlre zs an z'nzpr0'ved Pzzrh one hn2m'rm' feet wz'o'e, lined wzlfh frees and shrubs, while facing if are fha nzosf 6l7Sf4j' and beanfgful 1'esz'rlenecs in the czly, ji! envfiron for fhzs holel, which has for z'1's gnesfs lhe represenlafzbfe sociefy pefyble fy' the Union and n'z'slzngnz'she1l 71z'sz'!ors from abroad. C. H. CIREENLEAF if CO., PROPRIETORS- xxi Q ..e in, Q9 ,fe V' f-E QQOUTOQ 0 Qgnicinrnyy THE T' UIQ SOUTHWESTERN from LI M IT E D RUNNING DAILY BETWEEN NEW YORK, BOSTON, Columbus, Springfield, Dayton, Cincinnati, Indianapolis Terre Haute, St. Louis and Peoria Wagner Sleeping Ears, Baie and Library Ears, Elegant Beaches and Dining Ears FINEST TRHIN IN NME-RICH SOLID TRPIINS DAILY BETWEEN CINCINNATI, INDIANAPOLIS, ST. LOUIS AND CHICAGO Dining Cnr Service Unequnlled. M. E. INGALLS, President. E. O. MCCORMICK, D. B. MARTIN, Passenger Traffic Manager. General Passenger und Ticket Ag C' ' 't' O F. J. KINGSBURY, Pres. C. P. GOSS, Trcas. M. L. SPERRY, Secy. l7 'l1Q1f ESTABLISHED 1802. SCOVILL WF' CO. MA NUFACTURERS Ol BRASS AND GERMAN SILVER In Sheets, Rolls, Tubing and Wire. ALUMINUM KPURE! In Ingots, Sheets, Rods and Wire. This Metal can be Stamped, Drawn, Spun, Engraved, Burnished and Polished to the same extent as Brass or Silver, and by similar processes. lt will not tarnish, and it weighs only about one-fourth as much as Silver Qbulk for bulkj. BUTT H I N GE S Narrow, Middle, Broad, Desk, Ship, Stop, Spring and Pianoforte. BUTTONS Military, Naval, Livery, Society, Railroad, Schoolj Lasting, Silk and Dress. LAMP GOODS German Student Lnnips, Kerosene Burners, Kerosene Lamps, Etc. Novelties in Brass, German Silver and Aluminum Nlade in Urdsi. DEPOTS. NEW YORK: BOSTON: CHKACIOZ 4x9 ,xxu .gill liuooms No. 20 I-limi S'riucic'r. No. 210 LAKE S'rREE'r. xxiii NEW YORK AND NEW ENGLAND RAILROAD CO. rw' Mew .rieiitggno ..'1Limiteb . Grain. THE BEST TRAIN Between Boston and New Haven, via Air Line and New York and New England Railroad. -ili- Leaves New Haven daily, 4:57 p. m.g arrives Boston, 9:oo p. m. Leaves Boston daily. 3:oo p. m.: arrives New Haven, 7:02 p. ni. The Shortest Line, only 140 miles. Finest equipment, comprising buffet smokers, parlor cars and coaches. Dining car service: Meals table zfholc or zz la cariv. Excellent cuisine. This train stops also at Willimantic and Putnam. Ask for tickets via the New England 'and see that you get them. TICKET OFFICES IN BOSTON: STATION, foot of SUMMER STREET. 322 WASHINGTON STREET. W. R. BABCOCK, General Passenger Agent. I-BOSTON GEO. F. RANDOLPH, General Traffic Manager. l ' xxiv ELE Flisq ILSON s :sl-1 ARM mmf' E I S TI-IE ONLY. Q41 on 4, 9 'VIILY 0 1 WHEELER QE WILSON M'F 'G CO., BRIDGEPORT, colvlv. YYV CICJULID 8: EBERHARIDT, NEWARK, N. J. HIGH GLASS MACHINE TOOLS OF THE MOST ADVANCED CONSTRUCTION. NEW TYPE MOTOR GEAR CUTTERS. NOW mznov. ' FOR ELECTRIC CARS. -xnr X, DOUBLE the Amount of Work can be TURNED OUT on This Machine OVER OTHER MAKES. DOUBLE TRIPLE QUICK STROKE SHAPER. STRI KE IS CAST DN VISE angina mens ml K:-L U - I B I,I.. in I I.L,.. -I Q -I ' ,. Ie-I I I'II fp - -'ffff'--'?oZ ' 'EBERHARlT5 PATENT I894, SHAPERK cuT REPRESENTS 28'X32 SIZES Capable of giving 50 to loo per cent. more strokes per minute over other makes. xxvi . CUT FLCDVVERS FLORAL AND PLANT DECORATIONS , L., , 'ffreeww' -A r, jx. , ,. eff., ' 0 -., ,f 1. ee f , 1 , A1-3-, , f H. if fee.--we- f :ld '3!w,A , v 'jf ,. f 13 If' . 15' 'li' L' ' uf.-f'Q'7QW X ' XE ' if f 1 fe-U if-2? ,. 'er A,7.3,?,,.. Q. , . ff l ,ff -7 4 3 J f' e Vw' uf' , A , 'L X f ' N v Q9 XX L? N W - elif :Ei 510 5f fi . e- .. L-4,1 ,1 L, ez- - fy -vein --- -- 'Vf Av . Y 28' RI, LBS FRHNK S. PLHTT. 374 gl 376 State St., New Haven, Benn. XX I WAS f y 1 'f :www an we iw? f W I 1.11 TQ .fa , Sire 1. H1 nz, , rf-,V 57 h, ,1-' Y' -ri ' Cy, 'Sin' 3 fr an 4 l N 9 X521 K ' ' SJ,-f.mw X- ' thought :lm I d drought the commas that my studies elusiou, 'tvras found Fd been N X we -:wegflcxis Q Q,-.yiiwfsgygx wxsy X-,beck S-QX X VXL .gilxkxrhxr k'lrougRfS'k'u8t5. Xrrxarxxs arfclemy cuts were not gone N xx 7 rosy Q 4 thoughr Phe ollgtergijauqeglbeeutiful lawn, i thmght 'that myXrieighB5r'fKEi?.5e51gAfI7Qowing his horn, a'U.ade1usion,'twas onlxa dream, and found IH Been greening. pants, from antst in advance, BER 3 v I I i i er dear, L? e was all a. was - fi awoke and fauna IH 'been j k A Vp , X J my laundry hai made no mistake, VA f IH 'been wide awake, ,K was using a. rake, 1 f de1us1.on,'twa.s only a dream, ,was My ,awoke - and Eound Pd been dreaming. T0 KEEP ABREAST WITH THE TIMES NO. 4 YOST -i has ...Q X, r X :g m '11- fa. ' 03. lull E of E .zI.'m'5 'l. 33 38 lr X ag 55112 F- 4. 3. -2-19 1? 2 A 51551, W fsitggtw' ' -f ra m ? T11T ' ' ffl., V' I f THE- tg . Thi s ml if' It is the hest of all writing machines. The most simple, practical and durable. An examination will show its merit, and a trial will convince you of its superiority. VVrite for Catalogue. Yost Writing Machine Co. 71 Broadway, New York. 40 Holborn Viaduct, London, England. xxix n THEODORE B. STARR, 206 Fifth Avenue, Madison Square, N I M c I 2 New York Diamonds, l Diamond Jewelry, Other Precious Stones, Gold Jewelry, Watches, 2 Richly Decorated 2lPorceIains. mcsla goods will be found on the first tloor. The stock of Precious Stones is one of the largest and clioicest in the countryhand covers such a wide range in val- ues that every class of buyers can be served to advantage. Whether stones are small and inexpensive, or larger and more costly, they are selected with equal care, and set with equal regard to artistic effect. I..- i Solid iSilverware, g TeaQSets, I 'V AFM ,.egServlce, DinnerlandjDesserti Forks and Spoons, Toilet Goods, Etc. Tmasia goods will be found on the second floor, which is reached by elevator. Forks and Spoons are sold at fixed rates per ounce, so low as to deserve attention from buyers. Nowhere else will be found a finer variety of artistic designs in Tea, Dinner and Dessert Services, or of the numberless articles of silver that are suita- ble for gifts for alljoccasions. Clocks, I Chiming Clocks for Halls, 5 Bronzes, E Porcelalns. , ON the thirdlfloor will be found a further stock of Porcelains and other decorative goods. We have given special attention for some years to the improvement of Hall Clocks, and now offer a most attractive stock in line cases of our own designs. fl? XXX X x , Si? lV f, f f , f A X 4 N: f N X Q 7 We ' fl x sg Kodaks g 7 ,i Styles and Kod ets Sizes' 5 4 if 56.00 to 5:00.00 Q - ' Q3- I' THE KODAK FAl'llLY has grown wonderfully since fl the little No. I first popularized amateur photog- 4 raphy. lt now includes a. score of styles and sizes S -Kodaks for the children-Kodaks for amateurs who want double swing backs, sliding fronts, inter- , changeable lenses, iris diaphragm shutters and the X , thousand and one improvemenls that enthusiasts X Q 5 value so highly. There are seven kincls of Kodaks Qs that use either plates or films. X ,, X ' THE KODET is the youngest member of the Kodak , x l family and is especially designed for those who X want a glass plate camera that can be used with 1 roll film at any time by the mere addition of a roll holder to the outfit, but do not care to invest in an expensive instrument. The 4 x 5 Folding Kodet i at Sl5.00 is the best camera made for anywhere K -If near the price and is equal to any except our Z 2560.00 Folding Kodak. New shutters, finest adjustments, handsome Hnish. X ' y EASTMAN KODAK co., ff V Send lor Catalogue. Rochester, N. Y. N 5 1 , XXXI SPRI C. ousia GRICHFIELD SPRINGS, UW. Y. i.5,?..l HE new bathing establishment furnishes all the ac- cepted European methods of treatment fby sulphur waterj of rheumatism, gout, sciatica, catarrh and skin diseases. It contains sulphur baths, Turkish and Russian baths Qwith sulphur vaporj, douche, massage, inhalation and pul- verization rooms, swimming bath, gymnasium, sun room, resting rooms and other conveniences. Skilled masseurs of both sexes. A full corps of competent attendants. All under the personal charge of DR. CHARLES C. RANson, 152 YVest 48th Street, New York. Kbe Swine 11101156 an to KHOTELD I OCTOBER. Illustrated pamphlet on appli- Elllb JBMIJ 'IDOIISCS cation- A representative will be at the WINDSOR HOTEL, New York, from April I5 to june 15, to attend to all engage- ments for rooms. T. R. PROCTOR. xxxii I-IOYVYE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK, Omce: - No. II9 Broadway. EIGHTYQFIRST SENIQANNUAL STATEMENT 4 JANUARY, l8.9ll- 4 SUMMARY OF ASSETS: Cash in Banks, ...... SE 297,241 31 Real Estate, ....... 1,566,468 90 United States Stocks, fmarket valuej, . . 1,426,625 00 Bank, Trust Co., and Railroad Stocks and Bonds, fmarket valuej, ...... 3,456,227 50 State and City Bonds, fmarket value,J . : 866,386 14 Bonds and Mortgages, being first lien on Real Estate, 615,592 82 Loans on Stocks, payable on demand, . . 102,400 00 Premiums uncollected and in hands of Agents, 627,868 03 Interest due and accrued on lst january, 1894, 50,023 92 39,008,833 62 LlABILlTIES: Cash Capital, ..... . 333,000,000 00 Reserve Premium Fund, .... 4,553,920 00 Reserve for Unpaid Losses and Claims, . 894,588 95 Net Surplus, ...... 560,324 97 359,008,833 62 DIRECTORS! Levi P. Morton, Henry M. Taber, john Washburn, George C. White, Henry A. Hurllaut, Daniel A. Hcald, whn Inman.. Elbridge G. Snow, William Sturgis, David H. McAlpm, alter H. Lewis, George H. Hartford, lf d AnclrewC.Armstrong, Francis H. Leggett, Henry F. Noyes, ohn R. or , lVilliamH.'l'ownsend, Cornelius N. Bliss, Benjamin Perkins, Lucien C. Warner, Oliver S. Carter, Edmund F. Holbrook, George W. Smith, NG?rn31iiV8n Norden, .0 re 1. ross. DANIEL A. HEALD, President. WILLIAM L. BIGELOW, 2. Secretaries JOHN H. WASHBURN,ZL Vice- THOMAS B. GREENE, 5 ' ELBRIDGE G. SNOW, Presidents. HENRY J. FERRIS, l . - AREUNAH M. ?URTIS, S Asst Secretaries. NEW YORK, JANUARY 9, 1894. XXXIII LQIENANDQAH if LIMITED: CARRIES DIN IN G CARS NEW YORK fo CHA TTANOOGA. liilflil PULLMAN SLEEPING CARS NEW YORK io NE W ORLEANS and WASHING TON to MEMPHIS. WR.WRSHWGTON,HRRPERB FERRY.LURAY,NHTURHL BRWEG ROANOKE.KNOXWLLE.CHRTTRNOOGR LOOKOUT MOUNTNN. HE SHENANDOAH LIMITED leaves New York daily from foot of Liberty Street at 6 p. m., via. Royal Blue Llne and Shenandoah Valley Route, and runs solid from Washington to Chattanooga without change of cars of any kind. Its route is is through the most beautiful and historic part of the South, and over the best rock bnllasted road bed in the South. It is the most attractive route to tourists and the most popular with the business world. All tickets are good to stop off within the limit of ticket at Luray Caverns, the Grottoes of the Shenandoah, the Natural Bridge of Virginia, Roanoke and Lookout Mountain. For rates, tickets and information of any kind apply to Norfolk and Western agent at following agencies: ago Washington Street, BOSTON, 317 A Broadway, NEW YORK, and X433 Penn Avenue, WAsluNG'roNg or, W. B. BEVILL, GENERAL PASSENGER AGENT. ROANOKE,VH. xxxiv .ik il?-X JK .XX .XX .X -XX HS-X .X ik HS F. A. CURBIN. Importing Tailor, 1000 01-IAPEL STREET, NEW HAVEN, CONN. 1 The Franklin Fountain Pen f. ' Is mnde under late patents,zmd has features.that plnce it ahead of all previous nmkes. The meehzmisni is very simple, - 5' and overcomes blotting and lloocling. l . :affix 'till X .24 1 . I M , is ,W 1 N lv 17 ill, ' e X il, X fum .4 Milli , . I ht, it X , x It ' . X .1 .Tl 5 at N1 xg: ' iz? ..f,llill. X. li- - Ifzfgfr xxx ,v ., ' 1 l -X rr' alll:-.-. ' 115.-H -t U VNE5, XX 's X K . .S sis, - QN X The Holders are of vulcan- ized hard rubber of the hest grzule, and are handsomely polished and finished in vn- rious patterns and designs. The Gold Pens are those of the best known makers, and much care is taken in select- ing only those having very smoothly ground points, and a quick, uniform action. The Prlc-e is lower than any make ot an equal grade Every FRANKUN FOLINTMN Penfff has the name on holder, and each is furnished with nn ink tiller and direetions,nll in zu handsome box, un which is printed Il iruuruutee of the quality and working. Those catalogued are the very best, and will last a life- time if not broken. The FRANKIJN is also made with pens of a somewhat lighter weight, which are lower price but will wear well and give good satisfaction to the user. Elegant in tinish, and un- surpassed in quality ond working, and guaranteed to give entire satisfaction. -R el These Pens are sold In the ilu-operative Store al Yale Collage. .mmnm rnrrrn 'll'll1ll 1 . . l ll I . X -lf ' vw. Il 'IN H l. V :l l .I L ' l ' -' ' I lil A gl, ' '11 ly 4 . . . ' W if 1 '! R . V fl' 'Q M l l 11' 'N ' 'l t ll fi . xl ll,ll.'1 lf' . e il .-. . !3'A1 - t l ill F Q ,Q IA wil lx I ' ll Ill, l ll l i 'ill or .Qs e Nl' ll iff, Q2 fl.. 'ml -'Ml' f ,fig ?l,f, Il l f A THE FRRNKLIN P 4, N, ull , j.,:f ,fx '11mwI! ' I ll ,I I l MVNU ll l l ll l 'll lj , ll ll W 1 Ill ll ll ll' ljll ll l ll l l l l I Wll wljl l 'l lil V ll' ll ' 'lf , ill VT .W EN. 4 l l ll l ll' l ill Wal. ff, WNW will ,Lf lit' . ,ij fr 'witlllllwll WJ' f hwy? lilly, llll'll'i I GW' N, 'N ll I ll t l lr 01 'ibglll .X hi 3 -Mir ,lllrrnx V Wi qi 'N 'i' 'ah lf lv will-lL . ,rx A, grllglnlk li' 'XX , PRICE LIST OF- Style ol' Holder. Size of Gold Pen. Fancy Chasing, long or short cover cap, . . . No. 2 32.50 No.3 53.50 with Gold mountings, . . . 3.50 4,50 Hexagon or Spiral, in black or mottled rubber, . . 2.50 3.50 xxxvi THE FISK TEACHERS' AGENCIES. BOSTON, NEW YORK, CHICAGO, TORONTO, PORTLAND, LOS ANGELES. EVERETT 0. FISK 6: CO.. Proprietors. F' R E S I D E N T : ICVERETT O. FISK, 4 Ashburton Place, Boston, Mass. Long Distance Telephone 2580. MANAGERS: W. B. HERRICK, 4 Ashburton Place, Boston, Mass. A. G. FISHER, 4 Ashburton Place, Boston. Mass. L. I-I. ANDREWS, 4 Ashburton Place, Boston, Mass. MARTHA HOAG, 4 Ashburton Place, Boston, Mass. HELEN' G. EAGER, 4 Ashburton Place, Boston, Mass. H. E. CROCKER, yo Fifth Avenue. New York, N. Y. W. O. l'RAT'l', 70 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. li. F. CLARK, 106 Wabash Avenue, Chicago, lll, W. O. Mc'l'AGGART. 32 Church Street, Toronto, Ont. I. C. HICKS, Room 3, 131 Third Street, Portland, Ore. C. C. BOYNTON, 12054 Spring Street, Los Angeles, Cal. Send to any of the above aglencies for mo-page Agency Manual. Correspondence with employers is invited. Registration forms sent to teachers on application. PECK .94 BISHOP, SEJiLL-,.T.I.Q.KET AGENTS- Lowqgt Rates to All Polrytg. BAGGAGE CHECKED FROM ROOM T0 DESTINATION. Agents for all First-Class EUROPEAN AND SOUTHERN STEAMSHIP LINES. Students wishing Furniture Stored or Shipped will find it to their advantage to favor us with their patronage. PECK 6:.BlSHOP, 702 Chapel Street. xxxvii SAMUEL HV MRBY Jeweler' 1: and 3 SHVQ1F'SllTl'Y1l1U1J 822 CHAPEL STREET, NEW HAVEN, CONN. ' 'TT-Yale Souvqryir Spoons. A '1i,1lf'3'3fj , I 7 V 5' ' n ' - f. n: H i5 m f y E 'F' ' ' a m i . . -... . . , .. ., NN --- YW P f::,.wy:::::::ggf5Eggs::::q5?:::::rm HQ NNWNYSRXQQ Y jig'- ' 1 'fj -fb ' vw stzzfvl f' 1 . L 1 ' 11'-rx- .-L.'l.,14a1, -- 4. N , - ,U-I, I! ' r I Ee. I ' , ml 1 ,1 1 V1 1 J-EAR-1' ,. eA522.f g,1l :HJ - ' fm' 11 uiwdfuf' v 'fi 'Ii N wh, .A . A A 1.-LJ,-,L 'Kwik- 1 E. I ., .A ,. Nu., ,,1, . . Y ,N , . -N . fax- - x sl-fr--Lf: E 7iZf?W7ff72 - -' 1 N ' . 3 x lj - 1. . Q, 'fl wj I N , LI UXVHY mn mn ' f 1' dmv X LT .4 - ,mfi'fi.- ,H f -,-,,,, -fr:-L 1-u'r TIIUSE WINGS 'f'l '4:vJf-,B gil, 'ff ' E QgQmf ON THE '1'RANsroR- ' 7 A ,- ' , A ,QZQF N: A A I 1'A'1'1oN BUILDINGIJ' :iw ' ,ig N ,: Xi- ,X I SUl'l'OSE'1'lIEY 1 aj? ' Q? X Rm-'ER'1'o THE FINAI f ,ff -D, ,QV if '-': , ,A-- 512611 2-:Q 295:05 M I, V, M1.'l'llo1J OF TRANS- Tniy f IWW rf H ggi- ii WM 10R'rAT1oN. -fx' L- - .f, PURE DRUGS we HEDICINE5. USBQRN HALL PHARMAGV loo8 Chapel St., opp. Osborn Hall. TENNEVS FINE C'0NFl:'CTl01VS. xxxviii CAMERON :St CAMERQN, RICHMOND. MR. WERE AWARDED lllhe Elnlg Prize at the Columbian Eixposilien, H X CHICAGO, 1893, CIGARETTES, ig' I M it ' o ' ,., +5tg Q. - 5 Guld Medal Straight Cul s Hlchmnml Eluh lg l,- S f. l... hitjf gwf g giif Also Fmsr Pmze on cur PLUG. SMOKING fjgg - fill? ilgggj' Toancco. and their celebrated Mixtures. V, . 1 'V ' ' Lil, jfljlg-glcl . Xli ' manufacturers of Finq Qbqroots .8 GENVH ff lli'l'41 fi' 'll' '4f:,,i, fiiiillE, and All-Gobaeeo Qiqarettqs. IV. 'l'. ENGELMAN, Xveslcrn Agent, 4102 N. 2d Slrect St. Louis, Mo. 64 Yvahnuh Ave., Chicago, lll. M. FALK, 25 Warren Street, New York. POND'S EXTRACT. lf you wish to take REGULRAR DAILY EXERCISE, and not be compelled to desist from Work because of SURE MUSCLES, you must, after exercising, TI-IOROUGHLY RUB the MUSCLES with POND'S EXTRACT. By its use you are made QUICK and ACTIVE, and ALL SORENESS, STIFFNESS, or SWELLING is prevented, and you will AVOID the DANGER of TAKING COLD on going out after exercising. We have at book full of testimonials from the most famous athletesg to quote them is superfluous. Almost everyone in training uses it. But don't expect some cheap substitute for POND'S EXTRACT to do what the genuine article will, for you will surely be disappointed. Manufactured only by POND'S EXTRACT CO., 76 Fifth Ave., New York. xxxix FIFTH AVENUE HOTEL, A',UE9vNf8,S,QRE NEW YORK LAW SCHOOL 120 Broadway, New York City. Incorporated june, 18913 first session opened Octo- ber 1, 1891. Number of students first year, 381, second year, 508. 06 this number, 36 were gradu- ates of Yale, 30 of Princeton, 17 of Columbia, 9 of Harvard, 7 of Rutgers, etc. The Professors were associates of Prof. Theodore W. Dwight, as teachers of law, and follow the U Dwight Method of legal instruction. Degree of LL. B. given after two years' course. Graduate course now established. Tuition fee, 3100. Next session begins October 1, 1894. For catalogue, etc., address GEORGE CHASE, Dean. xl COOI...6Y'S I-IOTSL.. NEAR UNION STATION, - - - SPRINGFIELD, MASS. RESTAURANT ON 'rx-in EUROPEAN PLAN. ALL MODERN CONVFINIENCES. INCLUDING Elevators, Electric Bells, Barber Shop, Turkish Baths. Billiard Rooms, Sample Rooms, News Room, Long' Distance ' ICISPIIOIIC, und Western Union Telegraph, Lighted by Electricity, and heated by Hot Water System throughout. LARGE DINING-ROOMS AND PARLORS. 'Z he 5 Q KRuuiom TIONA F1 Y , C Wins! Ellllilllilll , FIRST CL ASS ACCOMMODATIONS FOR SOO GUESTS. HENRY E. MARSH, l'rop'r, JUUUUUI The New Unabridged It is the Standard of me U S Su mreme Court of the U S Gov t 1 rmtlng Otlice, and of nine tenths o the Sc honlbooks It is warmly commended by es ery State Superintendent of Schools The One Great Standard Authorrtx Hon D J Brewer, Justice of U Q Supreme Court writes The 'iiwlif mpl0T ' 1 as the one great standard authority. Intemational is the perfection of dictionaries I commend it to all ' Ask your Bookseller to show lt to you. . G 8 L Merriam Co , Publishers, Springfield Mans U. S. A. IH' Send for free prospectus contnlninxr epgrinmen pages. em. Webster's International Dieiionary I , W -yi :I I mimi! 2 '--- ee- . ' - W 'f Q . figazi EFS ,, . . . . ul., A . ' , ' : 'mlm ,,,1,uII K I , ' ' . :. 'I M' i:::.:mxI 153-130 not buy cllezxp photographic reprints of ancient. editions. THE BATSON TAILORING CO., POPULAR PRICE TAI LORS. Prints to Order From S .poo up. Suits an is Li lsnoo M Par7t5 to Ordqrirp Eiqbt Hours. Latest Novelties in Silk and Fancy Vests, White Duck and Flannel Trousers, Tennis Goods, Mnckintoshes, etc, 96 Crown Street, NEW HAVEN. OTHERS TRIED, BUT . W. STEWART, 1o1snnapais1.,nEwHAvEN, Succeeded in Serving Successfully YALE JUNIOR AND SENIOR PROMSU' vvNA,vxAAAAAAAA,sAn Student Boarders a Specialty. xli WHEN vou vlsiT NEW voRK cwv . Stop at the ...EGRAND UNION HOTEL, FOURTH AVE. AND FORTY:SECOND ST COpposite Grand Central Depotj. You will find it convenient, comfortable and moderate in price. . . EUROPEAN PLAN . . Rooms One Dollar Per Day and upwards FORD 6: CO., Proprietors MAQH UL,-T 798 CHAPEL STREET, LEADING TAILOR. A. FOOTE 8: CO., DEALERS IN FISH, 353 STATE STREET, TELEPHONE 351 I ORGANIZED 1866. STEA A I F OR b GQ 4. -' Q Q 5-.ll Xfmllf 9' 5F5'WiJ:a1m Lb 077 1 ' mf, 'ez'-Pl' ' V 0 Comi- NANDIH5 J. M. ALLEN, President. A W. B. FRANKLIN, Vice-President FIB. ALLEN, ed Vice-President. J. B. PIERCE, Secretary and Treasurer Under New Management E- Empire Eye works -E ro6o CHAPEL STREET. STUDENTS, CLOTHES CLEANEO, DYED OR PRESSED, AT SHORT NOTICE. Goods Called for and Delivered AS PROMISED. J. A. ARNOLD, PnoP xliii GEORGE B. HURD 6: CO. MANUl Al I'lllU'IRS Ol FINE STATIONERY, V 13 425 AND 427 BROOME S'1'REET, NEW youu, U. S. A. .,.....,,.., SOLE AGENTS FUR : I : Z. K W. M. Crane's Unrivalled Writing Papers and Wedding- Bristols. Crane K Co.'s World Famous Bond Papers. Augustine Smith K Co.'s La Monte French Quadrille Papers. L. L. Brown Paper Co.'s Genuine Hand Made Papers. Crane Bros.' All Linen Note Papers, Envelopes and Tablets. Hurd's Prince of Wales writing paper, in the two colors, Cream and French Gray, is now the swellest thing in paper, and is to be had of all dealers. When purchasing your stationery see that it has Hurd's Name on the Box. B. SIMON, Ioo Church Street, New Haven, Conn. FIRST CLASS CLEANING AND REPAIRING. SUPERIOR QUALITY or FAMILY Ano GRATE COAL. LUGIEN SANIJERSON, Ojfce: II4 Cburcb Sireef, near Chapel. xliv PACH BRQS. GQ 'Che Glass botogvaplnew makers of All the Pictures in This Book. I ,024 CHAPEL STRHTT 5 5 5 NEW HAYJEN. .. BRANCH OF 935 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. ' v , l FINETUINI A - , , K cs , W , . wmwesf 65 sr wa. 0 'E PERFECTION gg5fgagz,z,z,z,Q,:,z:1Qg i .,,:m f . Q ATEFYKFNRED fK2gf?'zIz t'z'2'zzt't'3331 ' PATENT N?203'2'.'i'N+'b26'Zi'263 R ' ff A STRINGINtiMggzzzsstiziizgzzztztzsk 1 GWE5 N5 - :X 'N'Q'n'vI9'v'4'Wv A ' T E ?i3':'q'o'o'o Wfwffdmi' 'ma3f5WLc . gZg2gI:3QfW2, A SURFACE AND9: F f '4.QZM4vfQ:ff3Q1, , A TUEI1 T QWW V A 'NcREA5EDRnvzToTH T, FOR A1 5'3M5FEF w1g ' SPEEDANDD BALL N- 4 EL- .ww 1 ANVTENNIS PLAYERWILLAPPRECIATE . A A- W -Q THIS DRIV1NG POWER. - A ' . F CHOIq:E'Sg6XE58'iAXf' fa, 1 6' .N':il225Effx PEI N O ' M A 51 -A-T .ff THROAT DBUT' 'N POEISHEU ANY' sll-VER.. I E S HANDLE AN HIGHLY' 'MAHOG wlT ' scnsws A '- L J TWINEWRAPPED HANDLEIVIAKING THE EASIESTAND MOST ,. ' .. EEFICIENTGRIP QBTAINABLE -g f SEN AMP U5 THE Tux.Eno as BUILT FORTHE NEEDS or THE A ,DR 06 'TENNIS EXPERT AND FOR HARD PLAY.J MPX, E. l.H.oRSMAN 34-Al BROADWAY, N .M 0- xlv -JOHN an BOOK AND JOB PRINTER, Printing of all Kinds, - Fine Book Work ci Specialty. 968 GRAND AVENUE. I. KLEINER :Sc SON, TAILGRS, 707 86 709 CHAPEL STREET, Esfablzlfked 1632. NEVV HAVEN COSOP. HATTERS. BRGGKS 8: CO.. CORNER STATE AND CHAPEL ST. DUNLAI7 HATS, CHRISTY HATS, HEATH Er co. HMJ, DREJJ sun M555 DENT'S GLOVES. Popular Stylqs and Priqes. xlvi VERU HALL, BICYCLES Of the Best Makes. GHTRLGGUS F1-Q66 f' .......,, , ,,,,V -- som ,3 x I f R sfronsn AND 4 .Wgff l HND RENTED. Ky i v , X REPAIRED First Quality Rubber Goods INCLUDING Maolcintoshes, Rubber Garments, Rubber Foot Wear and Everything in Rubber. The E. C. BENNETT CO., 151i-IFBSORANGESTREET just North of Chapel St. THE NEW HAVEN SHOE COMPANY, OUR SPRHNIG STYLES iN GqENTI.ElvlEN'S v---7' FOOTWEAR ARE READY Russian Leather, Seal-skin and Patent: Calf Bluchers, Button and Low cut Oxfords, in the latest touch of lasts and trimmings. fsvsmfvvnfvvvxfxfsfnfvgfxfe, OUR DEPARTMENT FOR sPoRT1NG SHOESE --l-IS LARGE.--i We keepin stock the best makes of Tennis and Baseball Shoes and specialties adapted for all games. THE NEW HAVEN SHOE COHPANY, 842 8 846 CHAPEL STREET, lvii I JGJI-IN W. I-IUNN, Boox AND IGB PRINTER 71 ORANGE STREET, NEAR csnvzn STREET. Lg Engrnxled Visithlg Cugls at Reasopnble Rates. I Ye Olde Hardware Store ,E IiSTAllI,lSHED 1784 if ee E THE IOI-IN E. BASSETT Sc CO. Harciwaffe and Fz'1zepCm'!e1fy 754 Clmvm. AND 318 ST.-x'r15 S'1'Ru12'rs. CO-OP 'Dl.S'COUN7'. A. G. TriILIIEQIER'5 HQTEIJIN -M W 'N SUPERIOR CUISINE. EU IQOIIPEAIXI PLAN. 962 and 964 Chapel Street, opposite the Green, qxmx CAMPUSJ NEW HFVEN, GONN- - LORISTe 'ep p CHAMPION Opposite Campus. I xlix Riqlymond Straight Qut No. 1 Qioarqttqs. Cigarette Smokers tle more than the price charged for the ordinary trade Cigarettes will find THIS BRAND superior Who are willing to pay a lit- to all others. THE RICHMOND STRAIGHT CUT NO. 1 CIGARETTES Are made from the brightest, most delicately flavored and highest cost GOLD LEAF grown in Virginia. This is thc old and original brand of S'l'RAlGll'l' CUT l b ht out b us in the ear 8 C1G.xRic'i i'ias am was mug y y 1 75. BEWARE OF IMITA'l'IONS and observe that the firm name, as below, is on every package. ELLEN Sc GINTER, The Hmericcm Tobacco Co. Successor, Nlanufacturer, Richmond, Vo. Every Yale student should have one of these stylish and necessary articles in his wardrobe. They are the most perfect in lit and finish. MADE TO ORDER any style and length. Soft, pliable, will never grow stiff or hard. Guaranteed to be ABSOLUTELY W ATERPROOF. Especially low prices to Yale students-936.00 and upwards. We invite comparison. Orders and measures taken by WARD R. CLARKE, , I8I Lyceum, Yale College. MANUFACTURED BY TREMONT RUBBER COMPANY, .65 Franklin St., BOSTON. 1 J. EDWARD SCDYVYGRS. Fine Woolens for Custom Tailoring 6 3 Cenfer Sireet, opposite New Post Ojice Building. New HAVEN, coNN. Sample Garments from the Best London Tailors received Each Season. WM. FRoHL1CH's,qg5NfER Sfwffffj BENEDICT BUILDING, NEW HAVEN, CONN. -Q .- THE LEADING TONSORIPIL ROOMS IN THE CITYQ Yale LQ mo11adQs and Lu11Ql1 146 PFIRK STREET. li IF YOU WANT ANYTHING IN Ms .. HARDWARE .. DON'T FAIL TO CALL, AS WE KEEP NOTHING BUT FIRST-CLASS GOODS. SPECIAL ATTENTION IS PAID TO OUR CUTLERY DEPARTMENT. IZEIX Bc LYEIN, 77E Ehapal Efraaf. 3IDfXI9FXG3.9UMJliDPk9Z'I9'X66bL'913E1GQ'1019? 90PNvl1MEi'!6vIQ9'?l!Ill9, GEIQJMXM Ft 551 R . I-I. F. Smitty E3 Qo. loo Oranqq Strqqt, ' Nw HBUQI7, Qomv. BLQEQ Fine Tailoring , at Popular Priqqs. R 1Q'f2Z1l0Jl!1IQI WJIOLLUPQJOIDEJWJWINCPMIQIIVDIVDEGDIWIIWI'SPXWEWZWI GJEUBIUIQ R Wi: Em... L. E WM. FRANKLIN 6: CO.,-.1.. Taft- 'IMPORTING TAILORS,fff 41 IENTFI S'l'REE'I'. H. H. CARTER 81 COMPANY, Paper Flerchants and Manufacturers, Engrav: ers, Publishers, Etc. CALLING CARDS, WEDDING AND CLASS:DAY INVITATIONS A SPECIALTY. SAMPLESO A ,CAT ON 3 Beacon St., BOSTON. Photographic Supplies. X + WILLIS N. BUTRICKS, No. Il Center Street, New Haven, Conn. Developing' Kddnk Films n Specialty. mi AT TH E FAI R. llr: WELL, I HAVE lil'2l'IN HERE ONLY 'zwo .1wAx's ANU I'x'l-:SEEN jUS'I' Ali0l7'I' 'rms wlmm '1'n1N1:. SHP: VVHAT lm you 'rll1Nnamf 1'mc ADMlNlS'I'RA'I'lON Bml.mNm:? Hu: Wuv, I Il0N l' lu-zxrmxlucu slalcmu VV. XVASNIT S '1'IlA'l''l'llEONl'I'l'llA'l' lIUllN'l' 1mwN? i KX? :f fi? 'Pb' YALE MEN L-- WHEN YOU VHSH TO PATRONEE Sf' A FWRST?CLASS UVERY, BOARD- INO AND SALES STABLE GO TO... F. C. CANDEE, You WELL. 284 ELM STR1-:E'1', HE'LL TREAT AND 39 BROADWAY, NEW HAVEN, CONN. liv COLLEGE MEN -15414-uf: 111414-11: Wisio' T7 H9 QV Wlmksiired -.4-if-5.1-0.11 1.1-4-:funn A TEACHERS' GENCY Helps you to a position If you join the rzlgfk! one. An agency that has increased its business one hundred fold is cer- tainly a good one. IL needs a large addition of applicants in order to meet the demand upon it. Write now. Eastern Teachers' Agency, E. F. Foster, Manager. 50 BROMFIELD STREET, BOSTON. X94 Meadow Street, New Haven, Conn. SMITH de ADAMS, Managers, Re 'ulnr Breakfast, Dinner or Su r ver, 25 cents. 44+ -9 is ll an 21 Regular Meal Tickets. 33.50. .-l--TABLES RESERVED POR LFKDIES------'--+ Choice Wines and Liquors Served at Our Tables. MEAL HOURS: Breakfast, 6 to 9. Dinner, 11.30 ro 2. Supper, 5 to 7 30. SUNDAY MEAL HOURS I Breakfast, 8 to 10.30. Dim'1er,2.30t0 5.30 ALBERT 1-1. sM1'rH. EPHRAIM M. Amms. Iv j. RATNER, UNIVERSITY PAPER STORE. Newspapers and Periodicals Delivered at Students' Rooms. Also carries a full line of Fine Stationery, Fireworks, Yale Flags, Baseball Goods, Etc. 976 Cl-IRPSL. STRSGT. NEW HAVEN. GGNN. TH YALE mEN's E LAUNDRY., WE DO YALE MEN'S WASHING FOR FIFTY CENTS PER DOZEN. As to Fine Duality of Work we are ahsolutaly Without Hivals. THE NIAGARA LAUNDRY CO. c0RNEEN8FcgI1R?EsTREETs New Haven v Conn - NEW STORE! NEW GOODS!! College Pipes and Fine Smoking Tobacco, Imported aud Key West Cigars by Post, X Turkish Cigarettes, X Meerschaum and Briar Pipes Made to 0 d r, Repairing of all kinds done. CO-OPERATIVE DlSCOUNT.........,-1 L10 L10 D R Do CHAPEQEWSTREET lvi BURTON DICKERMAN, QM--'? -if IC E D EA L E R Office: 7I Broadway, : ' New Haven, Conn. TELEPIIONE CONN!!! IION YFLE YVYEN -6- -6- 'Mfhen gon are in need, of Groceries, Provisions, Meats, vegetables or 'fruits of any kind. G0 To ALLYN BROTHERS, No. I Broadway, Corner York Street. '-50901409 Photo Studio, 83I Chapel Street. No one in the city makes interiors of rooms or groups superior to ours, and our experience and facilities are such as to guarantee the best work at popular prices. We solicit orders to make College Rooms. Cabinets, 33.00. LEOPOLD, Photo. l ll ? 1 1 4, l ID Dxs'rl4na5TRgsT. -:V 'A , ---Q... , Ifl fqllusttfatovs and Frf'i'q of thi 83 Rook. i fx 1 FL 1 1 lviii tem It does ibe Fine Yjfpewriiifzg' of fbe World. THE HANIMOW D TYPEWRITER 4,1 -ff--ff IS USED EXCLUSIVELY FOR COPYING:-el ' , fa?-il IE T Ti ESSAYS fl 7' uirmnswfih A I ORATIONS 'S .Tie ui f'liflaf'tT'7 IW I P AND ALI, O'I'I'llClQ S'I'UDliNTS' wolllc, A'r THE I'IAIVII lOND TYPEWRITEK AGENCY, 87 Church Street, New Haven, Conn. We Guarantee Superior Work, both for Neatness and Accuracy, GO SOUTH, YOUNG IVlAN. TI-IIE I'IONORAI5l,I+I CIIAUNQICY M.vDEI'EVV, IN AN ADDRESS TO THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF YALE IINIVERSITY, SAID UF A TOUR THROUGH THE BOUTHERN STATES: 'llhe net result of this visit to the South to my mind is just this -that the SOUTH IS THE BONANZA OF THE FUTURE. We have developed all the great and sudden opportunities for wealth -or most of them Ain the Northwestern States and on the Paciric Slope, but Here is a vast country WITH THE BEST CLIMATE IN THE WORLD, with conditions ol' health which :ire absolutely unparalleled-with vnst forests untouched, with enormous veins of coal and iron which yet have not known anything beyond their original conditions, with soil that under proper cultivation, for little capital, can support a tremendous population: with conditions in the atmosphere for comfortable living, winter and summer, which exist nolvherc else in the country, and that is to be the attraction for the young men who go out from the farms to seek settlement, and not by immiaration from abroad, for I do not think they will go that, way, but by the internal immigration from our own country it is to become in time as prosperous as :mv other section ofthe country and as PROSPEROUS BY A PURELY AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT. No portion of t'1e South hglg m pre wozirlerfully developed resources than the high- land region lving between the Ohio River and the lower Atlmtie scaboarml. Through this picturesque region, from Southeast to Northwest. is projected and partly built the CHARLESTON, CINCINNATI AND CHICAGO RAILROAD, which when completed will connect the lower Atlantic seaboarcl, the Ohio River and the Great Lakes, tlius making a great cross-continent system, traversing a portion of the country unsurpassed in all resources. For information concerning this section of country, or the CllARLlES'l'ON, CINCIN- NATI AND CHICAGO RAILRIIAID, Address, SAMUEL HUNT, or A. N. MOLIDSWORTI-I, Cincinnati, Ohio. johnson City,'1'enn, Iix 1323- 1894. che Stafforb, rinting Go. llbrinters. FINE WORK AT CORRECT PRICES. 86 to go Crown Street Cliegister Bldg.J S. A. YORK, l'1'cS. G. IC. B,x1l.l-lv. S- ' z IT' K.. E. o..,...,N,sH?pY. 'W 'Mew lbaven, Glonm. I .. ENTERPRISE .. LIVERY, BOARD use FEED STABLES 111. C. SCH I'V.4NEli', l'r0f1rz'Nm'. 108 CROWN STREET, : : NEW HAVEN, CONN. Telephone Call 682- .... OPEN DAY AND NIGHT. j5QKQQN',S, RESTAURANT 469 State Sfreef, New ljqveu. Q11 'mm EUROPEAN PLAN. 5 CENTS PER ORDER. iif COMMUTATION TICKETS, 53.00 FOR 32.75. REGULAR MEALS, 25 CENTS. WEEKLY BOARD, 34.00. PI4 WE Lead the Procession in point of cleanliness, excellent N table service, best cookery, greatest variety of food, and in honest dealing with our patrons. In fact, will not take ' ' i second place from any one in our line. j. A. JACKSON. lx Che JBooR of the Glcntiirgf' THE CENTURY DICTIO ARY Supersedes all others. li receives fbe nfzqzmlwed C0lIZlllBIId!lff0llS of fbe most emhzenf 1lllfl10I'fI'1'B5. A wonderful combination of learning, capital, enthusiasm and per- severance. -DANiE1. C. GILNAN, lj7'c'.Yl.1Ilt?lIf lff-fllhlhl' llnj:kz'u.v UllZ'i'Ul'.Yl7J!. It will be a great help to students of English for generations to come. -CHARLES W. E1.1o'r, l'r1.'.vz'a'wzf of ffllI Z1lI7'll' Ufzz'zfer.v1'fy. It should be used in every family of culture in which the English language is spoken. -Mfxjoii j. W. Pownu., llfreclnr ZZ S. Gealo-gzka! Slrrifey. It is not for scholars only, but for all who are intelligent enough to care to understand the English language. -Rlcv. MINOT J. SAVAGE. the Century Eictionary Combines an encyclopedia up to dateg a series of special dic- tionaries of every branch of science and artg the most comprehen- sive collection of phrases, quotations, and synonyms ever pub- lished, with the results of the latest investigations in respect to etymologies and the history of words. Address: SOLD BY BALCH BROTHERS, , New England Agents for Century Company, ONLY. 36 BROMFIELD ST., BOSTON. lxi V eg' Royal India Ivory ' n N WRITING PAPERS .pig MARCUS WARD an Co., BIO-3I8 Sixth Ave .. N w York llbhilabelphig Zbental 1Rooms .... 781 Chapel Street, New Haven. The Largest and Best Equipped Offices in the Country. All Work it Wnrrzmted First-Class. Teeth Put in without plates by our Perfect Crowning S stem. M t b ' ' ' ' ' y os eautiful, substantial and lasting. We especially call the attention of the nervous and de1icate,alRo children, to our Painless System df Dentistry in all its branches. We Posltively Extract Teeth Without Pain by our Vitulized Air, made fresh at our office. Anyone can take it with perfect safety. iiiiiil 1:3 L. L. MONKS, D.D.S., MANAGER. HURLE 81 CG. IMPORTING THILGRS 38 CENTER STREET. . , We are very grateful for the large Student patronage . . . we have received. .. . Broadway Drug Store , , P. BONNETTE SQHURMAN. 'Drugs and Medzcznes. wrPz'esc1-zptions a Specialbf. 'Best Soda Water in Town. ELM STREET, CORNER voRK, NEW HAVEN, coNN. CARPET WAREROOM5 ARE ALWVIYS A SAIU5 AND li'El.lAEl.l:' PLACE T0 BUY YOUR -a I-IOUSE FURNISHINGS. H. B. PERRY, 914 Chapel sf. ....... ' llllllllllll lx iii O. H. BLANCHARD, President. H. T, BRAMAN, Secretary. D. S. FLETCHER, Ge11'l Manager. E. F. PHELPS, Vice-President. E. E. SMITH, Treasurer. THE NATIONAL LgE,Ass0c1AT10N. Insurance in force, over 520,000,000 Assets, over - - - - 4,500,000 THE PIONEER IN WRITING UNDER-AVERAGE BUSINESS. - THE BEST ALL AROUND EQUIPPED COMPANY FOR MANAGERS AND FIELD SOLICITORS. IT Originality of Plan. It New and Desirable Forms of Policies. Single Premium System. Largest Ratio of Assets to Liabilities. Premiums Adjusted According to the risk Assumed. IN Under-Average Lives written on the Only Practical, Safe and Equitable Basis. Business will be largely extended during 1894. Managers and Agents of All Companies will consult their interests by corresponding with the NATIONA LIFE. Address, D. S. FLETCHER, G:N'i. MANAGER, , I'IAR'1'l+'0RD, CONN. ,. J THE YALE MEMENTO ef- . - QI 3 'Q Beauty and Appropriateness of Design I I 'X are Combined in I I I ' is I I I I F ' K' '5' I I 2 0 Q KO -I I I I I I I 0 Q Q I Y: ' ,I f Q ' I I' II 1 ' ex I Lf X Enameled in Yale Blue. Etched with Yale Yell. X I ' -. 5 . A 5 ' one S 2 ' eos lsr ' Forwarded postpaid on receipt of Price. Send for Descriptive Pamphlet. 5' Also the same design with special ctchings in bowl, as follows: '3' -LA Yale-Harv:u'd Race Etching, , T Yale-Harvard Football Game Etching, Cwith Scorel s ff ,.,1.I' file jnnior Promenade Etching, ,fi-1 Frog Yell Etching. XX V, Prices: lirog Yell Etching, 152,503 the others, 32.75 each. cyl, some MANUI-'Ac'1'URr:us ,gl N . . ...I I: I p PETER L. KRIDER C0., 618 Chestnut St., Phlladelphla. --iillllgi . is . JI'I!,,l'!:fE Special Representatives, I'-Od A I YALE CQ-OPERATIVE CORPORATION, LXDM I South Middle College. New Hnven, Conn. W4-. For Sale by leading jewelers. Also made with colors and yells '-QF LEE? ' of other leading colleges. Ti-:f Rednced from Coffee Size. lxiv Design Patented f 'l A THE v.-- ED HENDEE V 1--'-r .-Q. . TAI LORS. Q . .- .-cp X
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.