ENTERED •T THE l'OSTOFFlCE AT COLVMIIA,~MO,, ASISECONO•CLASS MATTER

THE MISSOURI ALVMNVS r f

.ii,: The Alumni Luncheon, June 4 Reserve a Plate Now-See Annou.uceroent, Pages 243, 244

Vot. II. No. 8 MAY, 1914 OFFICERS OF ALUM l J ASSOClA'f JONS Affiliate Wit/1 } ·our Local 01ga11ization!

ST. LOUIS DENVER E. D. Smith, prrsiclent, Charles H. Talbot, president, 4127 Magnolia avenue. First National Bank Buildi ng. E. R. Evans, secretary, R. A. S mith, secretary, The Republic. 363 South Emerson street. ST. LOUIS ALUMNAE NEW YORK CITY Miss Cornelia P. Brossard, president, Finis E. t\•larshall, preside-in. 240 West Main s1ree1, l

Please t101ify lhe Secretary of the General Associatiou, Columbia, Mo. , of lhe formatio,. of any new alut1111i o, al1m111ae orga11i1111io11s, givfog names at1d addresses of presidetit amt secretary for publuatio11 ill lhis g11ide. Notice of lhe election of tmu officers sho11ld be promptly sent, so that /he guide may be kepi up.to-dale. THE MISSOURI ALUMNUS 239

COLUMBIA STEPHENS COLLEGE MISSOURI Not a Boarding nor a Finishing School but Ati Accredited Junior College For Women. Three Years of Preparatory and Two Years of Standard College Work. Democratic Atmosphere makes Ideal Home Life. \,Vrite for Catalogue and Illustrated Bulletin. A.B. and B.S. (Univ ersity of Missouri) James M. Wood, A.M. (Columbia Uni\'ersity) President

CAMP KECH-U-WA (tJ::a1F::~~~) ON LAKE MICffiGAMME. MICH •• So.. on J ul1 810 Au1uol l O, IOU. FIEALTH TFIE FIRST CONSIDERATION: Dr. and Mrs. Per Neuman, Excelsior Springs, Mo., graduates of th e Swr.dish Gymnastic School, will be in at­ tendance.

;? 320 COURSES. 175 INSTRUCTORS. Graduate and undergraduate work in all departments leading to all academic degreea. Letters and Science (including Medici ne), Engineering, Law, and Agriculture (including Home Economics). TEACHERS' COURSES in high-school subjects. Exceptional research facilities. NEWER FEATURES: Agricul­ tural Economics, Business Administration, Community Music, Eugenics, Festivals, Jour· nalism, Manual Arts, Moral Education, Phy­ sical Education and Play. FAVORABLE CLIMATE. LAKESIDE ADVANTAGES. One fee for all courses, $15, except Law (10 weeks), $25. For illustrated bulletin, address. REGISTRAR, UNIVERSITY, Madison, Wisconsin. 240 THE MISSOURI ALUMNUS Alumni' Business and Proiessional Guide ThlB guido is pu_blished !or tho oonvenien~ or Missouri Alumni of the various professions who ma.y wish ~ obtain reliabl~ corrosponden~s at a d1~t~noe to transact _bmunoss tor them.. . . Alumru or all proress1ons who are m a pos1t1on to be of serv100 to other alumo1 are ,ov1ted to place their cards in the guide. The charge is 33 cents a month.

DOUGLASS & DOUGLASS LAWYERS Sbunnon 0 . Dougl&88, A.B. '70, A.M.. LL.0. '73 s. o. DouglMS, Jr.. LL.B. '10 8 14-817 N. Y. LIie B14t:· B:antao Olt7, Mo . ILLINOIS POWELL, POWELL & KURTZ Judgo Walter A. Po,oell, A.B. '78, Dlcldn8on College WEIGHTSTILL WOODS, A.B.'11 Ehner N. Powell. A. B. ·so. Johnsl'lopklne: LL. a. '06, K. U. J. D., Unlverolty or Ohlcago, '13 John A. Kurtz, A.B.'07, LL.B.'08, M . 0. lits Fl1hor Didi, Ohloago, 111. AU,0rneys nnd Collll.8010MI Sui te eu-eu N. Y. LIie Bldg;. Kan ■ al Olty, !110. KANSAS STROTHER & CAMPBELL Srun B. Strother, LL.B. 'OS W. T. Oaoipboll,'02 E. W. CLAUSEN, LL.B.'10 1011 8<1arrtU Bld1. K anta , Olty, Mo. Atohl1on, E,u.uaa. H. W. TIMMONDS, LL.B.'97 MINNESOTA Lamar, Mo,

THOMAS J. NEWMAN, B.L.'97 CARLL. RISTINE, LL.B.'10 Attorney at Law Assoclt>t,ed with Charloe Lyons ttt•& Commerce Bide- St. Paul. Mlnne1ot11. L11lncton, Mo.

MISSOURI L. N. KENNEDY, LL.B.'82 General Prnctlco and Collections WALKER & WALKER Ne•ada, Mo. Oht.rloa J. Walker, Di>rtmouth '70 Loo Walker, MJ•sourl A.B. '10, LL.B. ' 12 Badon 814f, Oolumbla, Mo. FALKENHAINER, RUDOLPH & DAVIS Attorneye and Couruolol'II M Law Charles B. Davis, A.n··o2, LL.D.'06 BERLEY S. DAILY, LL.B.'10 Sult 510-5U Tim•• Bldg. 81. Loula, Mo. Attorney and Counselor Guitar Bide. Columbia, Mo. WARWICK HOUGH, A.B.'54, A.M.'57, LL.D.'81 COLE & SHEPHERD Attorney and Counselor Jolm B. Cole, N.O. '7., LL.B. '81 HO Rialto 814,:. St. Looh, Mo. Loo Shepherd, LL.B. '98 Ouuoh:icham Blds- J'oplln, Mo. JAMES F. CONRAN, B.L.'97, LL. B.'00 FRED W. KELSEY, A.B.'04, LL.B.'06 Attorney at Ll>w 308 Merchanl8•L•elodo DldJ. St. Louis, Mo. Roo me 1 a, , Cannlncbam Bld,c. Joplin, Mo. 1 FRANKLIN MILLER, A.B.'01 ,vagner & Miller BRUMBACK & WOODRUFF Praotfoo In all oourte Frank F. Brumback Hobart Colll)f!o '88 Salte SH Ploroo Bldf. St, Loni■, Mo, WIWam F. Woodruir, A.B.'07,LL.B.'09 IOI Rlllto Bide, Kan ■ ao O1t7, Mo. WILFLEY, WILFLEY, McINTYRE & NARDIN L. ,;a. W\Uloy, A.B. Central Oolloge '88, LL:B. Yalo'92: THEOPH. L. CARNS, LL.B.'86 Xenophon P. WWley,. A.I). Oontral '06, LL.B. Waeh­ !ngt,On U. '90: J os. s. McIntyre, ~11ssourl 1.B-'97, LI:.B, Attorney at Law 119 : w. T. N ard.In. MlaaourtA.B. 03, A.M. 04, LL.B. 07. tH If, Y, Lllo 8141, B:an ■at O1t7, Mo. Bullo 326 TlUe Cuaran11 Bldg. St. L ooi ■, M• ► THE MISSOURI ALUMNUS 241

EDWIN W. PATTERSON, A.B.'09, LL.B.'11 C.R. MACFARLANE, M.A.,LL.B.'95 Attorney M Law 105 Alamo Ban.k Bids. San A.ntonJo, Teaa. , 111•111 Flrll Nat'l Bank Bide- B:aota.t Otty, Mo. WYOMING H. A. COLLIBR, LL.B.'05 Attorney at Law VICTOR T. JOHNSON, LL.B.'05 111•1' GuHar Bide. Ootumbta, Mo. County and Pr01ocutlng Attorney. Bot Springs Co. Flut Nan Bani. Bide. Thermopoll1, Wyo. NEW YORK

JOSEPH R. CLEVENGER, A.B.'05, LL.B.'07 ENGINEERS WoolWorlh Bide- N ew York OU7 MISSOURI omo H. J. WOBUS, E.E.'10 SNYDER & DICKERSON ELEOTRIO LIGHT PLANTS and WATER SYS TEl\18 ThOrnton n . Snydor, LL.n. ·01 for Olty or Farm ... Mero. Llbr. Bids. Olnclnnatt, Ohio Stor-ago B&ttorlOI, Rydr&ullc Rt>me, Englnoe, Eloct.rlc Maeblnury, Pumps J155 OUte St. St. L.0011, Mo. OKLAHOMA HIRAM PHILLIPS, C.E. ROB'T N. McMILLEN, LL,B.'00, A.B.'04 M. Amor. Soc. o. n:. MoAJ.e1ter, Okla. c. F. PHILLIPS, Assoc. WILSON & TOMERLIN Consulting Englnooro 7U•H Internal'! LIi• Bids. St. Lou.ti, Mo. w. F . WilBon, A.B. '98, A.M., LL.B. ·oo Slt•IO Stale Nat"! Bank Blclr- Oklahoma Olty, Ok. FRANK L. WILCOX G. R. HORNER, LL.B.'07 Oou.-ullJng Engineer Okmuleoe, Okla. WATER WORKS, SEWERS AND PURIFICATION IWORR8 FOR TOWNS Syndtcate Trull Dulldln1 St. Louie, Mo. OREGON H. T. BOTTS, LL.B.'93 CLACK & TIDD TUlamook, Or,e. Oo,uultlng and Contracting En11lneent Jamoe M. Olt>Ck. Aasoc. M. Am. Soc. 0. E. Bru-ry Tidd, 0. E. '13 ALEXANDER & ALEXANDER NoYad•. Mo. G. F. Aloxandor, LL.B. '05 P. o. Aloxandcr, A.B."00. LL.B.' 11 t28 Oh&mber of Oommeroe .Port.land, Ore. J. T. GARRETT, C.E.'89 PN>61dent Mlaoourt Brldgo & Iron Co. 1.000 FuJl ert0lt Dlda. St. Loutt,, Mo. FOSTER & HAMILTON 0. H. FOlten' Admlttod to n,nr 1884 R. 8. · amllton, LL.B. 05 U. S . !fat'l Bani< Bide. Eugene, Oro. REAL ESTATE MISSOURI TEXAS ODON GUITAR, JR., 190 R. P. INGRUM, A.B., Pe.B.'91 Landa Hooro Bids. San Anton.Jo, Teza ■ TIile Guaranty Bids. St. Lout,, ?tto.

A /1mmi L 1111c/1eot1 Jtme 4 A THREE-FOLD ATTRACTION Commencement-Stunts-Anniversary Celebration MEET YOUR FRIENDS ON THE CAMPUS. Almm,; L1mcheo11 June 4 242 THE MISSOURI ALUMNUS

VOLUME II NUMBER 8 THE MISSOURI ALUMNUS Publitbed by the Alumni Association of the Univcr,ity of Mis,ouri CHARLES G. Ross, M a naging Editor Subscription Price, $2 a Year

OFFICERS OF THE ASSOCIATION O0O!'f GulTAR, JR., St. Louis ...... P resident N. T. GENTRY, Columbia ...... Vice-President MRS. SARAH GENTRY ELSTON, Kansas City ...... Vice-President CHARLES G. Ross, Columbia ...... Secretary S. F. CONLEY, Columbia ...... Treasurer

THE MISSOURI ALUMNUS is issued nine months each year, the first nu mber in October and the last just after Commencement. CHANGES OF ADDRESS of alumni should be received at the Alumni Office in Columbia before the fifteenth or the month to insure prompt delivery of the magazine for that month. LETTERS should be addressed to The Missouri Alumnus, Columbia, Mo., or to the Secretary of the Alumni Association, Columbia, Mo.

CONTENTS FOR MAY Pa.ge Commencement Program ...... 245 'l'he Missouri 'Varsity Cheer ...... 247 Re-Assemble 1904 !...... 248 By Pryor T. Scott New Men for the Faculty...... 248 Women's Interests ...... 249 The Passi11g 0£ the Stepping-Stones ...... 250 By E . W. Patterson Hinkson Creek ...... 251 By Robe,·tus Love Athletics ...... 252 Tbe News in Brief ...... 253 A New M. U. Song ...... 255 Weddings ...... 256 Bh-ths-Dentbs ...... • ...... 257 In St. Louis ...... 257 In Kansas City...... 258 In Chicago ...... 259 In Pittsburgh-In New York-In Hannibal...... 260 In Joplin ...... 261 From People You Know...... 261 Notes of the Classes...... 265 THE MISSOURI ALUMNUS 243

MAKE IT A BIG ONE!

Special preparations are being made for the annual Alumni Lunch­ eon this year. It is hoped that 500 or more alumni-old grads and new, men and women-will get together at Lathrop Hall for an A No. I luncheon ( that's the kind promised by Luther Marion Defoe, '86, in charge) and a rousing talk-fest. Let's make it the biggest Alm1mi L1mcl1eo11-at1d the best. The program comtniltee, consisting of N. T. Gentry, '84, and Charles G. Ross, '05, promises an excellent program of toasts, and a souvenir booklet, commemorative of the seventy-fifth anniversary cele­ bration, that will be worth taking home and preserving. This will be not merely a formal banquet program, but will tell, in picture and text, of the Old and the New University. The Alumni Luncheon is the event of the week for the alumni. Other events there are-many of them-in which alumni shai-e, but the luncheon is distinctively their own. Every alttm1111s who is in Co­ lm11bia for Commet1ce111e11t shottld make it a poillt to attend. T he luncheon will be held at Lathrop Hall immediately after the Commencement and Class Day exercises, Thursday, June 4. Tickets will cost $1.50 each- just enough to make the luncheon pay for itself. A special rate of $I will be made to members of this year's graduating class. Reller rrserve your place i11 adva11ce. One other point; There will be many guests, visitors from other universities, to take care of. Perhaps, as in former years, some al umni would like to purchase tickets for the accommodation of one or more guests. In this way, whether you come or not, you can contribute to the success of this big alumni event. Here's a chance to be there i,i spirit, if not in fact, and to show yo11r loyalty to Alma Maler and to the Alm,mi Associa,tion in a tangible waJ. Send remittances, for your own or for guest tickets, to LUTHER M. DEFOE, Columbia, Mo. (Sec coupons on next page.) 244 THE MISSOURI ALUMNUS

Set Precedinq Page. See Preceding Page. Fill Out One of These And Mail Today to L. M. Defoe

Chairman Luncheon Committee, 810 Virginia Ave. Columbia, Mo.

If you are coming back:

Please reserve a plate for me at Ille A11niml Al1111111i Lwicheou, Tlmrsday, bme 4- For this I e11c/ose $r.50. ( Add the followi11g or cross out, as desired.) I enclose also $,,__ _ to pay for plates for ---- guests.

Name

Degree Street

City State ------

If you are 110/ co111i11g back:

I e11close $:ti--- to pay for plates for --- guests at the

Ammal Alrmmi L1mcheo111 Thursday lime 4.

Name

Degree Street ------City ------State ---

Tickets $1 .50 Each. Mail Coupon Today. THE M1ssouR1 ALUMNUS

VOL. II MAY, 1914 No. 8

COMMENCEMENT PROGRAM The Varied Allracl,ions Offered at the Seventy-Second Annual Commencement and the Celebration of the Seventy-Fifth Anniversary of the Founding of the University, May 29 to J1111e 4, 1914.

FRIDAY, MAY 29 8 :1 5 P. M. THE BEN GREET PLAYERS m "A Midsummer Night's Deam."-The Campus.

SATURDAY, MAY 30 4 P. M. THE BEN GREET PLAYERS in "She Stoops to Conquer." -The Campus. 8:15 P. M. THE BEN GREET PLAYERS in "The Tempest."-Thc Campus.

SUNDAY, MAY 31 II A. M. THE BACCALAUREATE ADDRESS by the Right Reverend Sidney Catlin Partridge, Bishop of the Western Diocese of tifissouri.-The University Auditorium.

MONDAY, J UNE 1 9-12 A. iVl. OPEN HOUSE AND DEMONSTRATION OF HIGH TEN­ SION PHENOMENA by the Students of the School of Engineering.- The E ng in eering Build ing. 2- 5 P. M. HORSE SHOW under the auspices of the Students of the Co llege of Agriculture.-Rollins Field. 7 P. M. CONCERT by the U niversity Cadet Band.-The Campus. 8:15 P . M. PLAY by the University Women.-The Campus.

TUESDAY, J UNE 2 10 A. M. PLAY by the Students of the School of Jou rnalism.-The University Auditorium. 1 P. M. THE PHI BETA KAPPA LUNCHEON.-The Col umbia Club. (245) 246 THE MISSOURI ALUMNUS

2- 5 P. M. HORSE SHOW under the auspices of the Students of the College of Agriculture.-Rollins F ield. 7:30 P. M. THE STEPHENS ORATORICAL CONTEST.-The Uni­ versity Auditorium. 7:30 P. M. THE ANNUAL ALUMNI REUNION AND BANQUET OF THE SCHOOL OF LA W.-Virginia Tea Room. 9 P. M. THE SENI'OR BALL.-Rothwell Gymnasium.

WEDNESDAV, JUNE 3, Anniversary Day 9:45 A. M. ACADEMIC PROCESSION .-Formation in . JO A. M. CELEBRATION OF THE SEVENTY-FIFTH ANNIVER- SARY OF THE FOUNDING OF THE UNIVERSITY: Addresses by David Rowland Francis, President of the Board of Curators; Albert Ross Hill, LL.D., President of the Uni­ versity; 'vVilliam Rock Pain te r, Class of '82, ·Lieutenant Gov­ ernor of Missouri; William Prentiss Evans, Stale Superin­ tendent of Public Schools; David Francis Houston, LL.D., Chancellor of ~lashington University and Secretary of the United States Department of Agriculture; Harry Burns Hutchins, LL.D., President of the U niversity of Michigan, and Cassius Jackson Keyser, Class of '92, Professor of Mathe­ matics in Col umbia University. Presentation of the Bust of the I-Ionorable James Sidney Rol­ lins.-The University Auditorium. 1 P. M. LUNCHEON to the Alumni and Guests of the University. -Lathrop Hall. 2:30 P. M. ANNUAL BUSINESS MEETING OF THE ALUMNI AS­ SOCIATION.-The University Auditorium. 3:30 P. M. DRESS PARADE by the University Cadets.-The Campus. 4:15 P. M. AUTOMOBILE DRIVE for the Guests of the University.­ Starting from Academic Hall, South Entrance. 7 P. M. SINGING by the University Glee Club.-At the Columns. 8:15 P. M. CONCERT under the auspices of Phi Mu Alpha : Mlle. Jenny Dufau, Coloratura Soprano; Enrico Aresoni, Dramatic Ten­ or; 1\1:artin Bruh!, Concert Pianist.-The University Audi­ torium.

THURSDAY, J UNE 4, Commencement Day 9:45 A. :M. ACADEMIC PROCESSION.-Formation in Academic Hall. 10 A. M. THE COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES: Address by Abbott Lawrence Lowell, LL.D., President of Harvard University; Announcement of Prizes and Honors; Conferring of Degrees. -The Univ ersity Auditori11111. THE MISSOURI 'VARSITY C HE ER 247

12 M. CLASS D AY EXER CISES of the Graduating Class.- At the Columns. I P. M. THE ALU MNI LUNCHEON.- Lathrop Hall. 7:30 P. M. CONCERT by the University O rchestra.- The U niversity Au­ ditorium. 9 P. 'M. R ECE PTION by the P resident and the Board o f Curators of the U niversity to the Alumni, the Graduatin g Class and the Guests o f the University.- Rothwell Gymnasium. THE MISSOURI 'VARSITY CHEER Acting at the request of the St.1.f eighth inning three runs behind, Louis Alumni Association, the Student'•· against the Texas team which had Council of the University has adopted lost only two out of twenty-six games. an official 'varsity cheer. T his has T he bleachers, without a leader, rose been known for a long time as the as one man and swung into th e 'new' "new" yell. It runs : yell with football season 'pep' and spir- Hooray! Hoorab! it. Davis, the first man up fo r Missouri, Mlzzou! :rinzzou! walked, and scored on Grav's smash- Hooray! Hurrah! ing double to deep left. ·w hen th e Mlz1.ou! llflzzou! k 1 I d Hooray-ay! Hoorah-ab (drawn out) smo e c eared away t 1at three-run lea Bully for Old Mlzzou! was gone. Missouri had tied th e score Rahl Rah! Rah! Rah! in one of the classiest, nervies t rallies Mlzzou! staged by a Tiger team. Rah! Rah! Rab! Rab! ""[' , , l'l'!lzzou-rah! Mlzzou-rab! • hat new yell showed them where Hoorah! Hoorah! the bleachers stood. It had come Mlzzou-rah ! spontaneously from the li ps of 3,000 Tigers ! T iger rooters- a natu ral, instincti ve "T his," says George Willson, presi- expression of their feeling. 'W e're dent of the student body, "is the best with you all the way.' " written reproduction of the yell as it is given now.'' A Souvenir for Those Who Come :Back. Concern ing the selection of this yell, A ~pecial souvenir edition of the Mr. Vifillson writes The Alumnus : U niversity Missourian, the daily "The Student Council decided that newspaper of the School of Journal­ the so-called new yell was the most ism, will be issued during Commence­ appropriate because: ment , I\Teek. It wi ll contain a maga­ "1. It has the most 'pep' and zine section of special interest to the volume. "old grad," telling the history of "2. The name Missouri occurs the U niversity, in picture and often enough in it to stamp it as a text, from the foundation in 1839 Missouri yell and nothing else. to the present. There will be pictures "3. It is the only yell we have of noted alumni, of stunts, buildings which is long enough to drown out and and other phases of University life. to outlast the Rock Chalk of Kansas. The issue will replace the annual Yel­ "I think the second T exas baseball low Extra, which is discontinued for game was sufficient demonstration of one year. The aim of the publishers the wisdom of the council's choice of is to prepare a worthy souvenir of the this yell as the Missouri yell. In that seventy-fifth anniversary celebration. game the Tigers came to bat in the T. E . Parker has been chosen editor. 248 THE MISSOURI ALUMNUS

RE-ASSEMBLE 19041 By PRYOR T. SCOTT, A . B. '04 Dear absent friends, I greet you in the light of other days­ The quiet glow that 1n'emory sheds about you, vV here the ivy-mantled Columns above the tufted green A picture incomplete would be without you. From those days that are no more-days of yo re U nforgotten l unforgotten Flash your faces-happy faces, U n forgotten. Tomorrow, our tomorrow! was the parting word we gave­ We shall meet each other here again tomorrow. For the sake of days remembered from the not too distant past, I would meet you whe re the ivy green is growing. Around those vine-clad Columns let us gather as of old! The hearty clasp of comradeship bestowing. Harken classmates- harken all-heed the call: Re-assemble ! re-assemble ! F riends and comrades, at the Columns Re-assemble! Tomorrow! Our tomorrow is Commemoration Time! At the roll call, comrades, answer "}!ere!" tomorrow.

NEW MEN FOR THE FACULTY Prof. E. J. McCaustland, now head Another important step in the pub­ of the munkipal engineering depart­ lic health campaign which the U ni­ ment of the University of Washing­ versity is undertaking is marked by ton at Seattle, will come to the Uni­ the appoin tment of Dr. ~[. P. Rav­ versity of Missouri next fall as dean enel, now of the University of Wis­ of the School of Engineering. He consin, as professor of mectical bac­ will fill the place left vacant by the teriology and preventive medicine and resignation of H. B. Shaw to accept director of the public health labora­ a place on the State Public Utilities tory. Commission. P rof. McCaustland is Other recent appointments by the Board of Curators are as follows: widely known as a sanitary engineer Prof. I. F. Lewis, now or the Univer­ and a good roads advocate. }lis pro­ sity ot Wisconsin, to be professor of motion of sanitary engineering will botany. combine well with the work in pre­ Dr. E. R. Clark, now of Johns Hopkins University, to be professor ot anatomy, ventive medicine now being done by A. E. Fiarklns, now ot the University the University. of Chicago, to be Instructor In geology. WOMEN'S INTERESTS 249

Miss Frances Louise Nardln, who wlll In the Un iversity, bas been chosen dean receive tbe degree or Ph.D. from the or the Graduate School. University or l\11ssourl In June, to be Instructor In English. Resignations of the following are Orville H. Barnett, of Sedalia, a announced: rormer student or the Univer sity, to be Dr. 0. W. H. Mitchell, M.D.'08, as IIB• general attorney for the University. HI~ soclate professor or pathology and hac• chief work will be U1e collection of the terlology. He wlll go to Syracuse Uni­ collateral Inh eritance tax. He succeeds versity. Forrest C. Donnell, .A.B.'04, LL.B.'07. O. F. Field, as Instructor In physical Robert B. Caldwell, A.B.'03, LL.B.'07. education. to be special attorney for tbe collection ~llss Amy Louise Dan iels, as assistant of the Inheritance tax In Jackson and professor or home economics. Buchanan counties. J . S. Ankeney, Jr., A.'El.'06, as professor Dr. Walter lll Iller, professor of Latin or art. He will go to Ohio University.

WOMEN'S INTERESTS

:Miss Eleanor Asdale, '14, of Tip­ shows were mirth-provoking "sells," ton, Mo., was crowned May queen in of the kind familiar to those who have the prettiest l\{ay Day fete that the gone down the Pike at a Farmers' University women have given. The Fair. One bore the sign, "Terror of day was ideal and the West Campus Half the World." Inside was revealed was lined with spectators, including a mouse in a cage. The biggest hit many who had come for High School of the evening was made by the "Suf­ Day. In the dances that followed the fragette Band," composed of thirty crowning, Spring was interpreted by girl musicians wearing white skirts l\1iss Hazel Summerfield and a chor­ with mili tary coats and caps. Miss us representing Spring Flowers; Sum­ Louise Letts was the leader. mer by M iss Hope Hibbard as the Three hundred women students of Sun and a chorus of Sunflowers; Au­ the University met in April an{I tunm by l\1iss Dorothy Jones as Wind ;, nrl a chorus of Autumn Leaves, and formed a Woman Suffrage League. Winter by l\i{ iss Jane Quayle as the Miss Clara Dunn of :Monroe City, Storm and a chorus of twelve tiny Mo., was elected president; Miss Mar­ g-uerite McGowan of Kansas City, girls representing Snowflakes. vice-president, and Miss Dorothy Jones of Kansas City, secretary-treas­ An April Fool Carnival at Roth­ ur:er. Similar leagues, with which well Gymnasium was voted the most this will be allied, have been formed elaborate and successful stunt of the in many other coll eges. kind ever given by the University women. The profits, $Tr 5, will be Nearly everybody in the Univer­ used to send a delegate to the Y. W. sity communi ty was "tagged" for the C. A. summer conference at Estes girls' loan fund on ApriJ Fools' Day. Park. Colo. One hundred and four dollars was Ten cents was charged for admis­ taken in, and additional donations. sion to the g-ymnasium and one cent were promised. The money which each 1to the various sideshows. :Hun­ the Girls' Self-Government Associa­ dreds of bags of confetti were sold, tion raised by assessing the girls of with the usnal result. Toy venders the University 25 cents each will be in Italian make-up sold balloons, whis­ added to the fund after the running tles, knockers and horns. The side- expenses of the association have been 250 THE MISSOURI ALUMNUS

paid. The fund is call ed the S. G. A. THE PASSING OF THE Loan Fund. It will be administered STEPPING-STONES by a committee consisting of the chair­ B11 FJ. W. PATTliJRSON, LL.B.'JJ man of the Woman's Council and two I members of the faculty. Where once the maiden coyly stood With hesitating feet, Endeavoring to estimate Miss Eva Johnston, adviser of wo­ If she could safely ambul ate men, attended the biennial meeting The stepping-stones that crossed the of the Association of Collegiate A lum­ muddy street, nae held in Philadelphia during the The dull, r ed brick or mart and trade (Commercial Club's delight!) Easter holidays. The association is Flares up In all Its bourgeoisie, composed of representatives from the A mute yet moving mockery alumnae of first class co-educational Of maiden coy and her appealing schools and from alumnae and ad­ plight. Ji ministrative officers of first class wo­ 'Tis true that maids stlll coyly stancl men's colleges. Miss Johnston rep­ With reet that ··1iesit11te··! resented the U niversity of 11issouri They've other methods to appeal and the alumnae of Missouri. Ancl cause thei r ardent swains to feel Tile hel plessness or their unhappy state. New Work in the Summer School. But where's the glamor nnd romance. The Summer Session at the Uni­ The virtue that atones For all the p leasure nnd tile charm versity will open June Ir and close Of taking bold ~·Jlladi'a arm August 8. Courses in arts and sci­ Ancl helping ber across the stepping• ence, agriculture, education, art, en­ stones? gineering and journalism will be of­ III or dullal'd and or scholar, too, fered. Special features this year will They felt the passing tread; be : a school of music; gra

HINKSON CREEK (Ded i cated to ijeveral generalionij of alumni and alumnae of the Uni ver sity of l'lllssourt.J N the classic banks of Hini,son 1 should love to O linger 110w (Ob, tbe lure or that serene Missouri creek!) Wipe awtiy, 0 Time, the wrinkles thou hast written on my brow; Let m o !oat al ong the H inksou for II week! Let me loaf and linger there With a co-ed fond and raIr, And 1'11 ask or Fame no lnurels for my forehead or my hair. J HAVID memories of Hinkson rate nor fortune can erase (Oh, tbe ronglc of the m urmur or the stream!) There tbe overhanging willows and tbe hazels interlace Like U1e filmy, 0onling figments ot a dream; And Ll1e musi c of the rill Slngetb sonnets tor me still That are born of w itching voesy of sheer and sovereign thrill. HAVE journeyed far, O Hinkson, where the bitter waters I tlow (Ab, the sweetness and the purity or thine!) Yet I sense thy sllvern r ipples, as lo days of Jong ago, When l wandered where tby w illows Inter twine. Thou bast on my hear t bestowed Joy that lighter makes lbe l oad; lo return I can but otter thee o rhyme al ong the road. -Robertus Love In the St. Louis Republic.

ilfr. Lova, who /18 a you119 m1m was n printer in Colum/,io, know8 hi8 Ilinkson Creek, as did 'Gene Field and other Missouri poets. Flis 11111sioat 11crscs, publisl,ed dai/11 ,,, the "llh11mes .Along the Road" department of 1.'he Republic, nrll o/te"

ATHLETICS

The Baseball Record. souri winning the first, 2 to o, and Missouri 4 Kansas Aggies 8 the visitors the second, 5 to 4. Texas Missouri 5 Kansas Aggies 1 came to Columbia with an unbroken Missouri 1 Wllllam Jewell 0 string of twenty-three victories over Missouri 9 Westminster 6 college teams. MISSOUl'! 11 Ames 2 Missouri a Ames 6 The Kansas Aggies foll owed. 'Held (Twelve Innings.) lightly after losing th e fi rst game, 9 Missouri 6 Honolulu 3 to o, they battled the Tigers through Missouri 1 Honolulu 1 ('l'welve innings.) fourteen innini?;s in the SCC'ond con­ Missouri 2 'l'exas 0 test, which darkness stopped with the M issourl 4 'rexns 6 score 2 to 2 . Missouri 9 Kansas Aggies 0 T he team derartccl on it s second Misso uri 2 Kansas Aggies 2 trif) JVIay for two games at Law­ (Fourteen Innings.) 5 Missouri O Kansas U. 6 rence and two at Ames. T he games Missouri 1 Knnsas U. 4 with Kansas at Columbia will con­ Missouri O Ames 4 clude the season. Missouri 1 Am es 2 Angerer has been doing the bulk of By losing two games to Kansas at the pitching, with Taylor and Capp Lawrence May 6 and 7, the Tigers as capable understudies. Hall, cap­ blemished an otherwise fair base­ tain, has done good work beh ind the ball record. T he scores were 6 to o bat. and 4 to T. Missouri has a chance to get even in the two games to be Texas Wins at Tennis. played at Columbia, May 14 and 15. Texas won both the singles and the Of the si.xteen games played, Missouri doubles from Missouri in a dual ten­ has won eight, lost six and tied two. nis meet in Columbia April 27. C. C. Opening the season away from W ood and J. F. Loomis represente(! home, the T igers won four straight Missouri. games-two from the l(ansas Aggies, one from William Jewell and one from Failed to Place in the East. Westminster. The fi rst game of the Captain I-I. K. T hatcher of the track season in Columbia was an easy vic­ team was the only Missourian who tory, II to 2, over the Ames t

THE NEWS IN BRIEF

Irvin Switzler Resigns. Columbia business men and horse­ The Board of Curators a,t its April men. meeting in Colu~bia a~ceptcd the r~s­ ignation of Irvm Sw1tzler as rejlS­ Kansas City Schools Win. trar of the U niversity, effective July Kansas City Manual Training High r. Frank R. Chambers, at present Mr. School won the annual H igh School Switzler's assistant, was appointed to Day track and field meet on Rollins fill the vacancy. Field l\fay 2; Westport H igh School Mr. Switzler has bee n 1·egistrar of Kansas City was second; Joplin, since 1896 and before that was con­ third; Charleston, fourth, and Kan­ nected with the University as secre­ sas City Central fifth. A new Mis­ tary of the Experiment Station. He souri in terscholastic record was set by is a son of the late Colonel William Winn of Kansas City Manual, who F. Switzler, noted Boone County ed­ ran the high hurdles in 16 r-5 sec­ itor, for whom Switzler Hall is onds. The boys' debating contest al­ named. Irvin Switz ler was a student so was won by Manual, represented in th e U niversity in the early 6o's, by Bernard Hurwitz. He had the but when the school was closed on ac­ affi rmative of the qu estion: "Resolved count of the war he went to Chris­ that the judges of the Supreme Court tian Brothers Coll ege in St. Louis to of :Missouri should be appointed for complete his education. an indefinite term, subject to recall by the voters of the staite." Miss Jo­ A Real Horse Show P lanned. hanna Schwier of the Norborne High It will be a real horse show that School won the girls' essay contest the students in the College of Agri­ with an essay on "Man and H is Stom­ culture will g ive as their Commence­ ach." ment Week stunt on Rollins F ield. Many of the leading exhibitors of the Farmers' Fair Best Ever. Middle West are expected to have en­ The ninth annual Fanners' )Fair trie~. Cash premiums will be given g iven by the students in the Coll ege in the professional classes, while va­ of Agriculture April 25 was described rious trophies will be offered for the by the St. Louis Republic in a page best local entries. T hi s open-air show aITticle as "the biggest school stunt will be 1hc fi rst of its kind wes t of on earth." This year's fair lived up the Mississippi River. It is being ar­ to the advance advertisin g of "biggest ranged by the students, acting with and best." Nearly 4,000 people at­ an advisory board of faculty members, tended, paying a total of $2,255 for 254 THE M ISSOURI ALUMNUS admission to the g rounds and the va­ Raw!' until he gets into the hospital rious sideshows, for candy, confetti, with a ruptured lung, or elope with a red lemonade and the other pictur­ girl from the young ladies' seminary. esque "trimmings" of a typical coun­ Some of these days newspapers will ty fair. The parade which preceded be printing pictures of college fellows the fair covered seven blocks. Other who do nothing more notable than featu res were a hig h-diving stunt, a make highest grades for scholarship.'' pike with twenty-four sideshows a nd "The Follies of 1914," a musical take­ New H onor for Dr. Galloway. off on student activities of the year. Dr. Beverly T. Gall oway, B.S.in T he receipts a little more than cov­ Agr.'84, LL. D.'02, assiswnt secre­ ered expenses. Harry F. Reed was tary of the Uni ted States Department the manager. of Agriculture, recently was chosen dean of the New York State Coll ege of Agriculture. He will begin hi s Missouri Loses Three D ebates. new duties at Ithaca, August t. Missouri's debating percentage this year is zero, her teams having lost to Colorado, Kansas and Texas. T he Alumni in City P olitics. debate in each case was on the advis­ fn the 1\ fi ssouri city elections in ability of a literary test to restrict April, I-Ienry N . Eversole, A.B.'09, immigration. Missouri favored the was elected city atto rney of Fulton test in two of the contests and op­ on the Democratic ticket; Charles A. posed it in th e other. Calvircl. LL.B.'r2, was elected city attorney of Clinton on the Democratic ticket, and Louis J. Rassc, a student Willson Our Best Orator. in the School of Law last year, was George C. Willson of Neva..-te nsion Division of the U ni ­ versity. Eighty of the us cou nties A New Kind of Publicity. in Missouri are represented. Jack­ i\ifo re than a hundred Missouri son County, with Kansas City, has newspapers have printed articles about the largest enrollment- thirty-three. · students in the University of 1\1:issouri Henry County is represented with sent out by the Ad Club and the U ni­ fifteen students and Boone County versity publisher. In commenting on with twelve. T he outside states repre­ this. th e St. Louis Republic said : sented are : Oklahoma, Colorado, "Thi s makes interesting reading for Kansas, I llinois, Iowa, Idaho, Wash­ the students and their fri ends. Also, ington, Tiexas, North Dakota and it indicates that the day has a rrived i\1ontana. Ten students a re enrolled when a co ll ege s tudent to get his name from Oklahoma. One student lives in the paper, docs not find it impera­ in the Canal Zone and another in tive to wear football hair, shout 'Raw I Yeung Kong, C hina. Besides those A NEW M . U. SONG 255

taking courses for credit, there are tion. T he idea was taken to Okla­ more than 400 men and women who homa by A. W. McCoy, a Missouri attend lectLtres at the extension cen­ alumnus who recently went there to ters of the state. These are at Kan­ teach geology. sas City, Carrollton, Chillicothe, Cen­ tralia, Bowling Green, l\ifexico, Boon­ ville, Clinton, Jefferson City, Bonne A NEW M. U. SONG Terre and F lat River. Missou_ri now has a "battle song," selected m a $20 prize contest con­ Michigan Leads in Alumni. dueled by the Y. W. C. A. It was Statistics have been prepared on written by Fred D. Griggs, a grad­ living alumni of the various colleges uate student, of O1icopee Falls; l'vlass. of the United States. JVI ichigan leads "The Missouri Tiger" is the title. with 22,000. Harvard an

strong represents the Lawyers• Co-op­ erative Publishing Company of Roches­ I W EDDINGS I ter, N. Y., and bas offices 1n the New Bank of Commerce Building. He Is a member of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fra­ Miss Helen Elizabeth Cook, '13. ternity. Gallus L. Zwick, '97. Gallus Lawton Zwick, B.L.'97, LL.B.'99, M las Margaret Elston. a curator of the University, and Miss Donald Witten. Helen Elizabeth Cook, A.B.'18, were mar­ Miss Margaret E lston, a student In the ried April 26 at Liberty, Mo., the bride's College ot Arts 1908-191), and a member home. They will be at home after June of Kappa Kappa Gamma, and Donald 1 at 2240 North Twenty-Second street, Witten, a former engineering student St. Joseph. The bride ls a member or and a Phi l's! In the University, will I.he Pl l'leta Pb! sorority and of Phi Beta be mnrriecl at the home of Mrs. Sarah Kappa. Mr. Zwick Is a lawyer In St. G. Elston, 3610 .East Tenth street, Kan­ Joseph. He is a member ot Sigma sas City, the flrst part or June. Alpha Elpstlon. Miss Irene Curtis. Harold Peck, '12. Misa Martha Betz, '10. Miss Irene ('urtls, a sl udent In 1910-12, Harlow Shapley, '10. nud a member of Kappa Alpha Theta, Miss Martha Betz, A.B.'10, A.M .'13, and Harold 0. Peck, B.S.ln C.E.'12, wlll was married April 15 nt her home In Kansas City to Harlow Shapley, A.B.'10, be married May 20 at Lile home of the bride's parents In Kansas City. Mr. Peck A.M.'11. Miss Betz hns been studylt11; at Bryn ~lawr the past winter. Mr. is a member or Ph i Kappa Psi and Tau Shapley look his Ph.D. degree at Prince­ Beta PL ton last year, and ls now taking up re­ Miss Leah 8. Chickering. search work In astronomy at tile ob­ Guy B. Randall, '1 2. servatory on Mt. WIison, Cal. M.r. and Guy B. Randall, B.S.ln E.E.'12, and Mrs. Shapley wlll live In Pasadena, Cal. ~rtss Leab Shannon Chickering of Joplin were manled Ar> rll 18. They will live Miss Laura R. Larkin. la St. Louis, where Mr. Randall Is with David E. Dexter. tbe Arrow E ngineering Company. They David El. Dexter, former Tiger foot• are at home at 1394 Hnmllton avenue. ball player, was marrted lo St. Joseph ·April 4 to Miss Laura R. Larkin. They Mias Alleta Batterton. are at home at 908 Chestnut street, T homas R. Douglass, '11. Kansas City. Mr. Del(ter, who wna a The engagement Is announced of Miss student In the School of Joumaliam, Is Alleta Batterton of Co lumbia and now a reporter on the Kansas City Post. Thomas R. Douglass, B.S.ln Agr.'11, as­ slstaot professor of agronomy In the Miss Hazel E. Klein, University o! M lssourl. M las Batterton Ol iver J. Mi ller, LL. B. '10. will be graduated from the University Oliver J. MIiier, LL.B.'10, and MJaa In June. Hazel El. Klein were married November 24, 1913. They are living at ~060 Castle· Miss Sarah Moss. man avenue, St. Louis. Frederick E. Marshall. Miss Sarah Moss, a tonuer student of Miss Laura Campbell, '99. the University and a Kappa Kappa Glen D. Davia, '14. Gamma, will be married In June to Fred• Miss Laura Campbell, A.B.'99, of Co­ erlck lll. Marshall o! Twin Lake, Mich. lumbln and Glen D. Davia ot Princeton, Mias Moss Is the daugllter of Dr. Wood• Mo., who llnlshed his work lo the Col­ son 'Moss, University pbyslclan, or lege or Agriculture last semester , were Columbia. married In Columbia April H. M iss Florence Whitt ler. M iss Keates Rodgers. R. F. HQward, '08. Hugh C. Armstrong. R. F. Howard, B.S.ln Agr.'08, and Miss Hugh C. Armstrong, who was a student Florence Whittler, a g1·aduate of the lo the School of Law 1907-09, and Miss University or Nebraska., were married Keates Rodgers of St. Louis were mar­ April 9 at Whiting, Iowa. Mr. Howard ried March 14. They are llvlng at 8952 Is now assistant professor or bortlcul• De Tonty street, St. Louis. Mr. Arm- ture In tlle University or Wisconsin. BIRTHS-DEATHS-ST. LOUIS NOTES 257

professor of physics, he was head of the discipline committee. He was also a BIRTHS member of the dormitory board at one I tlme. Arter giving up active teaching Mr. and l\lrs. H. A. Collier of Columbia he was superintendent of the University announce the birth or a daughter, In buildings and grounds for several years. Denver, Colo. Mr. Col li er, LL.B.'06, ls He retired In 1910. nn attorney in Columbia. Mr. and J\•[rs. Carter Alexander an­ IN ST. LOUIS nounce the birlh of a son, Roger Morton By OSCAR E. RILEY Alexander, on April 16. Mr. AJexander, The high school seniors or St. Louis B.S.ln Ed.'05, A.B.'06, A.M .'08, was for• nre to altend a concert of the University merly of the racuU,y of the University of Glee Club In Soldan High School J\'lay Missouri and Is now professor of school 16, as guests of the St. Louis alumnJ administration and chairman of the and alumnae. President A. Ross Hill summer session committee at the wlll talk. The University Orchestra George Peabody Coll ege for Teachers, may come. A gymnasium dance and Nashville, 1'enn. Mrs. Alexander was luncheon afterward wlll enable the grad­ Miss Elizabeth M. Morton of Kansas uates to get closer together. City and a teacher of domestic art in Tbls event Is significant. The great the Central High School there. majority of St. Louis alumni, lncludlug myself, bave given slight Indications of A son, Ralph Steele Latshaw TII, was caring whether the seniors go to Mis­ born to Mr. and Mrs. Ralph S. Latshaw, souri or to the less progressive, less Jr., 3622 Michigan avenue, Kansas City, democratic private universities In the on December 26. ?vlr. Latshaw, LL.B.'12, East. Between 300 and 400 seniors from ls an assistant presecutlng attorney. St. Louis will enter the freshman class at college t11is fall. I think most of them A son was born April 10 to Mr. and should spend the next four years to Mrs. H. B. Hlll. Mr. Hlil, A.B.'10, LL.B. Columbia, and woul

tare as one o! hie absorbing Interests. Secord helped organ lze lhe fl rst Hegira, He left the Impression that life Is a wben the Academs visited in happy spin, not a long-raced altalr. a special train and explored some caves. Four alumni introduced Prot. Hudson He was a member ot the fraternity wblch to the students. R. E. Blodgett pre­ used to cha.lie tantalizing arrows on sented him at McKinley High; W. T. Columbia sidewalks way back lu the Nard In, Central; Forrest C. Donnell, early days or 'll aud '12. Yeatman, and Charles Collins, Soldan. l\Uss Ethel Denny was cboseu by the alumnae to arrange for the lectures. Other graduates who helped in the IN KANSAS CITY planning were i\llsses Brossard, Brendell , Walters and Mrs. Nardlo. By E. TV. PATTERSON lllessrs. Greenebaum and Hardy, ar­ chitects. have recently announced tbe A. P. Priestly, A.B.'11, passed a couple removal or their offices to 214-lG Scarritt of weeks in St. Louis around 1he middle or April. Whenever one of bis old Bulldlug, this city. Arthur R. Hardy, friends met another, lhe common ques· B.S.Jn C.E.'07, Is the junior member ot lion was: "Got bold or Priestly yet?" this llrm. Charles F. Newman, a stud ent In the He would bob up at Washington Uni­ School or Law In 1902-3, formerly of the versity while old ~tlssourl men were In firm or Neal and Newman at Greeutleld, class, and then seemed to disapp~ar. Mo., bas recently been appointed district Priestly lives somewhere on the Pacific laud attorney tor the Un!ted States Inter­ Coast, bet.ween Puget Sound and the Gu lr State Commerce Commission, In valua­ ot California. His classmates would like tion or railroad properties, and wlll bave him to come around and see a fellow hls headquarters lu this city. The ap. once In a whUe. polntment carries a stipend of $3,600 per Ira J. Buergey, B.S.ln m.E.'12, recently year. left the Union Electric Light and Power Judge John D. Lawson of the law Company to take up work with a similar school faculty was entertained at lunch­ public utility concern In Fort Scott, Kan. eon at the Midday Club In the Con:i­ Elmer Grimm, A.B.'13, recently was merce Building on April 11 by the fac­ elected a member o! Pbl Delta Phi, the ulty or the Kansas City School of Law. honorary fraternlly in the Washlngton Fie spoke 011 "The Relation of Lbe Law­ University Law School. Walter Roos, yer to the Courts," A.B.'13, who was a member at Missouri, Ira S. Gard oer, LL.B.'07, Is practicing also bas joined the chapter. Louis J. law with T. B. Buckner, at 530 New York Portner, A.B.'10, Is the third Missouri Life Building. man In the chapter's membership of nJue­ Montie Prewitt, LL.B.'12, has been teen. made a regular trial attorney for the Forrest C. Donnell, LL.B.'07. Is direct­ Metropolitan Street Railway Company. ing the appralsemeut or the Pieper es­ Montie has 260 pounds to lend weight to tate In St. Charles. This estate wlll bis arguments. yield the University rrom $20,000 to $25,· Samuel R. Freet, LL.B.'09, recently re­ 000 from the Inheritance tax. ceived a letter from Henry Elliott, Jr., Charles S. Rutrner, B.S.tn E.E.'00, who A.B.'08, LL.B.'10, stating that he had has been call ed "an engineering wizard," left Spokane, Wash., aud Is now located will address students in the School of lu Seattle, wher e he Is practicing law by Engineering sometime this sprlug. H. H. himself. H is offices are at 315 Central Humphrey, a consulting electrical engi­ Buil ding In Seattle. neer of St. Louis, a lso wlll address Charles C. Byers, Jr., A.B.'10, LL.B.'12, them. has been promoted to tbe position of WUl!am Flanagan, a student In tbe superintendent of claims In the legal de­ School or Englneerln!\' In 1908-10, has partment or the Metropolitan Street dropped life insurance wo rk at Linn, Mo., Railway Company. to accept a place with the Skinner and Theodore El. Dupuy Hackney, erstwhile Kennedy Statlonery Company. He lives exponent of the pigskin science, Is now at 3846 Delmar boulevard. He was traveling representative for Bruce Dod• president of the freshman engineers and sou, 907 Sharp Bullcllng, In writing tire a.Iso of the an-sophomore class. and indemnity inter-Insurance among Ice Lynn N. Secord, A.B.'07, LL.B.Har­ manufacturers, brewers and other con­ vard'l0, took up the practice of Jaw with cerns. Fordyce, Holllclay and White April 1. J. B. Busbyhead, a student tn 1908--l, He bad been with McDonald and Taylor. passed through here April 30 on his way IN CHICAGO 259 to Columbia to see the Ames-:-llssourl In tile oOlclal fife of Tlllnols. He warms track meet. Bushyhead was a Tiger up to the "bunch" just as he did lo the sprinter and quarter-mile man lo his old days, for after a stirring speech on palmy days. He Is now rarmlng at Pleas­ alumnl fraternity by our bnnguet com­ ant Green, Mo. mittee chairman, A. G. Miller, be pro­ Harry Tidd, the man who "almost posed the enactment of a law ror the beat" Kansas In the 1906 rootball game, abolltlon ot last names! Js now In the employ or Tuttle and Pike, civil engineers In the Shubert Theater The speaking program was arranged Building, as a. "Prelude" and "Postlude" to ou r Charles F. Cu rry, C.E.'10, was operated honored guest, Dean Charters. Io the on In February for a mastoid absces& musical preliminary we bad L. P. Bon­ behind his ear. He Is now entirely re• roey, who as manager tor Cook County covered. or the Travelors' Tnsuraoce Company bas R. E. Kavanaugh, LL.B.'08, ot Trenton, learned a lot or business since he was Mo., was In the city recently on business. known as "Dutch" around the "Quad"; Charles C'ox, B.S.ln Agr.'18, who scored Miss Florence Nesbitt, wbo Is doing as Splinters In the 1913 production of unique public Rervice aa bousekeeplug "Hund,·ed Dollar B Iil,'' was In the city and dietary supervisor for the Juvenile recenUy visiting trlends. H is home Is Court in the admlnlatratlnn of mothers' In J op lin. pensions; and Professor H. S. Philbrick, who, In the engineering school ot North­ western University, Is doing the same high Quality or work tor which be wns known at Missouri. Then we bad In the IN CHICAGO "Postlude"-as after-dinner mints, so to nv w. T. anoss speak-Enoch Fudge, of the class or '75 : Frank B. Thacher, now lo the steel AnoU1er annual banQnet of the Chicago works at Gary, one of our two ex-football alumni has passed Into history. We have captains: and Miss Clara Schmitt. who been dined ancl correed, and regaled with Is second In rank In the child study de• reminiscences of our Col umbia days, partment or the Chicago Board of Edu­ with Just that mlnJmum or extracts trom cation. the funny pnge of the Ladles' Home Journal which seems unavoidable. Some Mlss Bess C. Johnson, who In her day way, we feel "set up" tor another twelve treguenUy delighted Auditorium audl• months. Perhaps It Is because for one ences at Co lumbia, was the soloist or evening this band or exiles lo Chica.go the evening. To harmonize with the returned In spirit to their former made-In-Missouri spirit of the evening, student-selves. one of her selections was from a Mis­ President H ill very generously prom­ souri authoress. Though it Is paradox­ ised to be our guest and chief speaker. ical to mention singi ng and yelling lo and It was with great regret we learned the same breatl1, the spirited yelling or at tile last moment of bis sudden Illness. the banqueters under the leadership of But he could not have selected a more a real ex-yell leader, Mlssmao, ought to acceptable s11bstitute than he sent. Dean come lo for favorable mention. Tf we W. W. Charters bas a. genuine Missouri could ever get together for tile contest, temperament, and It must be a slip or the Chicago alumni would chall enge any nature that be halls trom Caoadn. He bunch outside the stale to n yelling bout. knew just what the crowd wanted, an The committee who arranged thia account or happenings, blg and little, splendid occasion worked on the basis around the Quadrangle and about the ot 100 per cent efficiency. It consisted state and he gave It to us with tile zest of A. o. MIii er, chairman; Misses Flor­ and 'humor or a visitor from "back ence Nesbit and Bess Johnson, anrt home." We cheered when he pictured Messrs. Welgbtstlll Woods, J. C. Baird, to us the growing leadership or the Uni• Oscar Llebensteln and L. H. Keller. vel'1!1ty In the state through the work The most valuable part or every ot Its Extension Dlv1slon, and we sighed alumni banquet is, of course, the pres­ when be told us of Mr. Swltzler's retire­ ence of the old grads. I regret space ment trom the office or registrar . reQ ulrements will not permit more ttan One or our local speakers whom alumni the list of those who attended. They everywhere would like to bear a.bout was were beside those already mentioned: Lieutenant Governor Ban-att O'Hara, V. A'. Halo, W. E. Moore, Harry E. Wll• who In li ttle more than ten years of cox Frank Burress and wife. R. B. Rut­ practical experience since b Is University ledge, R. H. Fauquier, J. A. MIiler, Edith days, has cllmbed up to the second r ank Allen, Veit Gentry, Ed Allen, Miss Mar- 260 THE MISSOURI ALUMNUS garet Johnson, Mrs. Johnson, Alex. burgh Testing Laboratories. He says We Sachs, O. J. Myers, C. A. Olson, Nora and work consists or everything from the ln­ Ora Edmonds, M. F'. Rubin, R. H. Miss­ vesllgatlon or a steel mill to the chemi­ man, Levi Moody, Jr,, £i'. M. Motter and cal analysis of salad dressing. wife, Vic Hornbacl{, Ernest C. Phillips, Messrs. Varrellman and Frost, W. T. Cross and several guests. IN NEW YORK The New York City alumni or the University held tbell' annual banquet, IN PIITSBURGI-I followed by a dance, Saturday, April 4. C. H. Hecbler, B.S.ln Agr.'06, presided, By W. P. JESS"/iJ and the speech of LL10 evening was by On the evening or April 20, twenty. Dean J. C. Jones of the University, wbo eight Missouri alumni met at the Pitts• canted greetings from Columbia. His burgh Athletlc Association to celebrate subject was "The Value of College Train­ University Day. Of the many novel ing.'' Burton Thompson, LL.B.'92, made features about the dinner, the first to a talk presenting a set or books donated strike the eye was a large model or the to the University ltbrary l)y J. K. Gwynn, Columns, made ot dough, which occu­ 1 Wall street, New Yo rk. T hese books pied the center of the table. With a are publlsbed In the Luther Bu rbank cal'l)et ot green ferns at the base they Serles, the Jlrat volume or which will be looked exceedingly natural. Issued shortly. About forty alumni and Dr. J. C. Jones, who brought to us the former students attended the banquet greetings of the University, gave a very and dance. inspiring talk on "Does a College Edu• cation Pay?" In the course of his re­ marks be showed ve1·y clearly that such an education was a good financial Invest­ IN HANNIBAL ment, even aside from the higher bene­ Alumni and former students living 111 fits, the value of which no one can and near Hannibal celebrated Founder's estimate. The members or the associa­ Day with a banquet at the Mark Twain tion .feel honored to have bad Dr. Jones Hotel AprlJ 20, at which the seniors ot as their guest during his short stay here the high school were the guests ot and look forward to another visit. honor. P lates were laid for more than Dr. C. C. Guthrie, '01, gave a highly a. hundred. technical discussion or "The Pathology L. Morris Anderson presided as toast­ of P'ost-orandtal Pyrotechnics," arter master and the principal speech was which Mr. Taylor, '13, from bis wide ex­ made by ID. A. Fessenden, o! the engl,­ perience discussed very ably "Tbe New neerlng raculty of the University. His Femintstlc Movement." Reminiscences subject was "The Relation or the Uni­ of "The Permutations and Combinations versity to the Educational System of the '91-'95" were given by N. C. Riggs, '95, fol­ State." Drake Watson of New London, lowed by a travelogue entitled "8ack to who was chairman or lbe Committee on Commencement" In which scenes trom UnJverslty and U1e School ot Mines In the Old Quad were shown. The evening the General Assembly, 1913, spoke on was closed by the singing of "Old Mis• "Missouri, Old and New." Mias Florence sour!." Helm told ot "Opportunities for Girls at Missouri." R. W. Hibbert had as sub­ We are glacl to welcome A. F. Porzel• ject "The Relation of Mlsonri University lus, '09, who has recently come to Pitts­ to Hannibal." The singing of "Old Mis­ burgh to engage In work tor the souri" closed the program. American Water Works Company. Alumni and former students present H. IC. Smith, '06, has been sent by the were: M. Agnes Treat, Florence Helm, Westinghouse Electric Company to rep­ Ida A. Jewell, Bess Carter, Minnie La· resent tbe company In experimental work Fou, Mary M. Wynn, Jean Harris, Mar• which Is being conducted along the New tha R. Singleton, Minnie B. Gray, Georgia York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad, l\l. Gettier, Frances Welch, Nelle Wood, He expects to be gone several months. Elllzabeth Letts, Jnne Findley, Bertha Eugene Williams, '13, who Is with the Schmidt, Katherine C. Gentry, Mary J. American Bridge Com pany, baa been sta­ Turner, Arretta L. Watts. Bertha A. tlonecl at Cleveland for the last six Stobernack, Nellie Lee Buford, Sadie months on construction work. Mathews, Carrie Barnett, Adela Mauthe C. El. Betz, Cb.E.'13, Is getting quite a •of DeSoto, Mo.; Frances A. White of wide range of experience with the Pitts- Palmyra, Mrs. Julia Brady Spalding, Dr, FROM PEOPLE YOU KNOW 261 and Mrs. A. J. Detweiler, Judge T. E. 20. E. F. Cameron, wbo was graduated Allison of New London, Mr. and Mrs. from U1e Missouri Jaw school Just thirty R. B. Finley, Mr. and Mrs. E . W. Keith­ years after Judge Craycroft, was ap­ ley of Center, ·Mr. and Mrs. S. 0 . Oster­ poh1ted city counselor by Mayor Mc­ hout, Mr. and Mrs. 0. ,A. Brown, Mr. indoe. Both Judge Craycroft nod Mr. and Mrs. L. McCartney, Mr. and Mrs. Cameron took leading parts In the ff, E. Frech, Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Boner, strenuou s Oght which Joplin underwent Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Chandler, William to obtain the new form or government. s. Hinton, Berryman Henwood, B. F. Judge Craycraft was recently appointed Smiley, 'fhos. E . Winn, Harry Wood ot secretary ot the state board of geology New London, J. U. Watson or New Lon­ by Governor l\faJor. don, E. A. Fessenden of Columbia, Mor­ V. .J. Chapman, B.S.ln E.E.'09, spent ris Anderson, R. W. Hibbert, Walter C. several days In Joplin recently, having Logan, Harold E. Holcomb, Frank Y. Just returned from Ontario, Canada, Shepherd, Alonzo White of Palmyra, where he has bad charge or reconstruc­ Scott Meyer, Drnl<& Watson of New Lon­ tion work on the Canadian Pacific rail­ don, George A. Brown, Sinclair Mainland, road. He was accompanied by Mrs. J ean P. P hillips, C. H. Killian, Glen B. Chapman, who was M l ss Mae v.ronsetler, Shuck, Wlll A. Cable, Worden W. A.B.'10, and daughter, Ruth. Abrlght, James Sterling. "Curley" R.lslloe, LL.B.'10, spent a week here the latter part of April, con­ valescing after an operation performed IN JOPLIN In lrofessor ol' ed ucation again. Here's wishing the school ancl at the Normal there. I have also seen The Alumuns nil the success possible." nay Doneghue, M.S.in Agr.'98. professor -J. P. Klein, B.S.ln Agr.'12. Kosh· of agronomy In the North Dakota Agri­ konong, Mo. cultural Coll ege. All like lheir new envl'ronments but love Mlssourl.''­ Wllllam 0. Bel<, A.13.'03, A.~·l.'05, Box "While on a dernonstratlon train on 1233, University, N. D. the Cotton Belt Lines lo South Missouri I met P. T. Cole, Agr.'10, who Is assistant agrlcultural and Industrial commissioner "The coming every montll of The tor t.be Cotton Belt Lines. Last sum• Alumnus Is the next best tMng to a mer be made quite a hit for himself and visit from an alumnus In person. For the Cotton Belt Lines by running a spec­ us out here It Is the only source ot news htl car which was equipped to demon­ from many or the Mends at home. . . strate proper methods or home canning Dean Williams paid up a visit the other for all kinds or products. This car stop­ day-be was the first University ot Mis­ ped at the principal points on the Cot· souri ilrofessor to visit us here. The ton Belt LI.nos. Mr. Cole Is now equip­ Missouri 'force' In Chinn now consists ping a car which Is to run as a dairy or T. E. Breece, '10, Tstng Hua College, Instruction car, which will make points Peking; W ilmot D. Boone, '10, Mrs. along lbe Cotton Belt Lines where U1ere Boone (Nellie Burgess), '11, and their Is a great deal of Interest In dairying, young son, at 'l'lentsln: MIsa Dora Otis, and will give practical Instruction to '08, Soochow: Hin Wong, '12, Canton; the tanners from this car. . . . I al­ Hollington Tong, '12, editor Pelting Dally so met Frank M. See, Law '11. He Is News; A. Heinz, '10, wile and young son, located at Charleston, Mo. He Is candi­ Tsing Hua College. . . . This year, date tor the Democratic nomination to about August 1, we send out about the ofilce ot prosecuting attorney In Mis• ninety students to the various American slsslppl County. Judging Crom tile way universities on six-year full y paid be mixed with the gray beards It Is my scholarships. Hope some or the boys opinlon that he wm make bis competi­ will tlnd the tor hustle. . . . I met Mrs. Penny, their choice. I hope to see the ColumnS: FROM PEOPLE YOU KNOW 263

In the summer of 1916."-A. Heinz, A.B., Ing so; perhaps my friends wltl cease B.S.in Ed.'10, Tsing Hua College, Pek­ asking me whether l'm practicing law ing, Cblna. or medicine. Well. I am doing research in nervous sboek. For two and one "f enjoy very much the notes, letters hair years I studied, from a neurocyto­ and lnformnllon concerning the activi­ logtcal standpoint, the eflects or surgical ties of our Alma Mater and the men who shock on the Purklnje cells of the cere­ have gone out and are now 'making bellum, and at present I am studying lbe good.' . . . ( am sti ll with t.he U. s. effects of fright on the same cells and Oel)artment or Agriculture, dairy divi­ on the pyramidal cells or the cerebrum. sion, conducting work toward the Im­ The results attained have been grntlfy. provement or the dairy Industry In the Ing. 'rhe data from my ex11erlments tn Slates of Tennessee, Kentucky, North surgical shock show rather concluslvely, Carolina. South Carolina. West Vlrgtula .I think, thal surgical sbocl< results ulti­ and Virginia, with headquiu·terR nt mately In premature "enlllty of the Nashville, Tenn."-J. R. Keithley, 13.S.ln brain cell s. r was flattered to r·ecelve Agr.'08. M.S.'11. Room 306 ~'oderal an invitation to rend my nrtlcie on tills Bulldlng, Nashville, Tenn. work at tho meeting of the American Pathological A SSClrinllon wh !ch WAS held "Reading the mngazlne from month at Toronto, C-anndn. In April. My work to month makes me want to get back 1n shock produced by fright Is progres­ to Columbia just ns soon as J can. The sing nicely. 1t will take me at least magazine ls serving an excell ent pur• one year longer to get satisfaction In It 1>ose nncl shoul

was my best man and Miss Eilts, who Is as tbe verses published ln this issue will a sister of Mrs. Kruse, was mald•Of• testify. Scott inquires about the Aster• honor. ll was a case of vent, vldl, vlcl. lsl,s. Here·R the roll call or the orglnal The weddlug w111 take place In Juoe."­ members: "Deacon" Croy Is on a tour S. A. Kruse, A.B.,B.S.ln Ed.'09, College of the world; Carl Crow ls editing a Station, Tex. poper in Tokio, Japan; Harry Lyon is a story writer in New York: J. E. Craig I WANT TO SEE THE BOYS. lll wlth the St. Lou la Post-Dispatch; Robert W. Jones Is city editor of the Robert W. Jones, A.B.'06, LL.B.'13, or Columbia Tribune; Leon R. Whipple Is, Columbia, contributes the following, a la or was until reC'ently, a writer of editor­ Walt Mason: ials tor a Richmond, Va., newspaper; Commencemont brings the same Dan McFarland, when last beard from, sensation, a sort of hopeful expecta• was selling bonds at San Diego, Calif., lion that I'll get to see the boys. and the other one Is edl tor of this maga­ Old B111 Johnson, who stole the clap­ zine.) per olt lhe bell, Is now a mission• ary, and a few are, truth to tell, loatlng through me receiving prince­ "It is uoed less for me to say that I ly pay, while some are riding swivel enjoy the contents of each number of chairs eight bours 'most every day The Alumnus. Up here In Northern Ohio and working through the weeks I never come In contact with any of my and months and years to drag out old associates from the University and a bare exlsteuce In this sad old without The Alumnus, I feel tbat I would be an entire stranger to my Alma Ma­ vale ot tears. A few have grown ter. . . . I have been extremely busy quite fat sud old, and some have during the past few years, building power played the game of life and lost, or plants, etc., and for tbls reason I have won, but all these crass distinctions sadly neglected my old friends. How• wlll be st mply fluug away when we ever, I often think of you and the pleas­ meet around the Columns on next ant days we spent in Columbla."-R. E. Commencement Day. I want to see Burger, B.S.in E.E.'07, 413 Broad street, them, one and all; I'd want to come Elyria, Ohio. if I had to crawl from San Francisco, or New Yorlr, even. You say you're coming? I've got you, Stepben. "I am glad to see by The Alumnus that a new University Song Book Is to be published. . . . I want to congratulate "I can't see how anyone who bas ever you on The Alumnus. I have never seen called Columbia bis home for any length any publication tbat so adequately cov­ of time while attending the Unlverslty, ered Its field. . . . Sorry I cannot can get along without tbat newsy paper meet with the 1904 Sav1tar Board at Com­ which brings home 1n a hurry many mencement."-C. H. Hecbler, B.S.lu Agr. happy remembrances of the good old '05, Harbor Hill, Roslyn, N. Y. days around the Columns. Like an oasis In the desert it la certainly jumped for and In tbe meanwhile work "The Alumnus Is especially Interesting 1s at a standstill while one runs through to me since I am so far from my Mis• the pages and eagerly devours the eouri friends. I see O. L. Steele tre• good news about Missouri's victory quently, but have not seen any otber here and tbere."-WUllam S. Hill. Missouri students since l have been In B.S.ln E.El.'10, 969 Oakland avenue. Mil• Dixie, although I understand there are waukee, Wis. two others in this city."-W. H. Burgess, LL.B.'06, 567 Whitehall street, Atlanta. "This ought to be the year for a re­ Ga. union of the 1904 class. Wbat do you think of suggesting this to the 'Naughty "The Alumnus is one of the bright 4' bunch? F. C. Donnell and Eugene spots In life. rt gives one a line on Fair are our officers chosen last year, many old friends that one could not I believe. Perhaps they would make otherwise get, and each month I scan the necessary arrangements.''-Pryor T. Its pages with eagerness to see what Scott, A.B.'04, Greenwood, Mo. they'll 'pull off' next. My beat wishes (Naughty-Fours, take notice! Also all will always be with Alma Mater and t'll members of lhe Asterisks, of whom Scott boost for her every chance I get."-Anne was one. He's a farmer now, but his Shaw, A.B.,B.S.ln Ed.'13, high school, poetical baud has not lost Its cunning, Trenton, Mo. NOTES OF THE CLASSES 265

NOTES OF THE CLASSES Notes will be run each mo nth, grouped by classes. These abbreviations are used: College of Arts and Science, ac. ; School of Law, law; School of Engineering, eng.; School of Education, ed.; School of Medicine, m.; College of Agriculture, agr.; School of J ournalism, j . Graduate degrees are aet in capital letter~. '59 '90 Walter w. Stone, ac., may be addressed at Loui s H. Burkhart, ed., li ves al Warren, Pa. Dunleith, Miss. Mr. Stone Is believed to be tbe sole survivor o! the etgbt students who es­ '92 caped from the Unlverslly Building In 1862 Herman F. Harris, ed., nc.'94. A.M.'97, may arter being imprisoned by Federal troops, ns be addressed nt no Maln street, rown Falls. related In the April Alumnus. [own. Omar E. Robinson, law, is 110 attorney lo '73 Kansas City, Mo. His address Is Su ite 1208 Jerrold R. Letcher, ac., law"75, llf.S.'76, may Commerce Bulltllng. lie addressed at Box 1076, Salt Lake City, '94 Utah. A. T. Quinn, m., Is 1Jractlclng medicin e lo '75 St. Louis. His address Is 6934 Bradley avenuo. Wllliam w. Asbley, m., ts II pbyslclan at Albert J. McCulloch, ac.. Is receiving con­ J\'lyrtle Creel<, Ore. gratulations on his ,rnccess as coach or the debating team of Southwestern Coll ege, Wln­ '76 lleld, Kan .. where be teaches history and po­ Anthony W. Graham, m., Is a physician 11nd lltlcnl science. His team has won eleven of surgeon at La Due, Mo. Its last fourteen debates, having recently scored n notable victory over Park College of '77 Missouri. .Robert P. Boulton, ac., M.L.'80, Is supreme '95 director of the Mutual ProtecUve League 11t Alexander s. Cumming, law, Is at Bethany, Decatur, Ill. Mo. '78 Robert E. Ward, law, Is at Liberty, ~fo. J erome D. Potts. m., Is a professor '96 In U1e American Medical College In St. Dr. Clarence Loeb of St. Louis, ac., A.M.'97, Louts. H1s office address Is 423 Delmar spoke nt the University Assembly In Columbia Building. He lives at 5018 Raymond place. Aprll 23 on "The Conservation of Vision." Joseph B. March, law, ts an attorney at Ne­ '79 vada, Mo. Frank H. Horrstrom, eng., may be addressed Frank s. Ballhls, eng., Is with the Tille In care or U1e Elngtneer's Office, Ci ty Rall. Guarantee and Trust Company, southeast Seattle, Wasb. corner Fifth and Broadway, Los Angeles, Cal. '80 '97 Mrs. J11mes W. Swayne, ac., A.M.'84, lives Wlntlirop W. Butman . m .. may be addressed at 930 Lincoln place, Boulder, Colo. at 512 Wyoming Building, Denver, Colo. '82 '98 George W. Wright, law, Is a n attorney at WIiiiam C. Crawford, law, Is ludgs of tbe Albany, Ore. Tenth Judicial Circuit Court at Dickinson, '83 N. D. Fred Moeser, law, Is auditor of St. Clair '99 County, nunols. His residence address Is 2916 "'alter Lalterty, law, or Portland, Ore., Is Bond avenue, East St. Louis, Ill. serving his second term In Congress. He la a member of tbe Committee on Tnterstnte and '85 Foreign Commerce. On March 11, Mr. Lafferty Louis Thellmann, ac., M.s:•oo, ts superintend­ made a speech In favor of Government owner­ ent of public schools at New Madrid, Mo. ship of all railroads and on March 14 he made the minority report opposing the repeat of the '88 law exempting American coastwtse vessels Patrick Henry Cul~n. l11w, ts a member or from payment or canal tolls. the Fauntleroy, Culen and Hay Jaw firm In St. Thomas J. Wilkerson, eng., Is with tbe Bu­ Louts. Hts office Is in tbe Commercial 'Build­ reau of Engineering, De()artment of Public ing. Works, Plttsburgb, Pa. 266 THE MISSOURI ALUMNUS

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are limited trains of unlimited comforts with chair cars, sleepers and dining cars that represent the best in railway equipment. They run on schedules that are fast and on tracks that are solid and smooth. For any travel information, write

W. S. St. George, General Pauenger Agent, St.. Louil, Mo. · NOTES OF THE CLASSES 267

Commencement Gifts Order Your COLUMN PINS, ANY YEAR 1914 Savitar WALL SIDELDS and SKINS SPOONS Before May 25 FOBS SEAL PINS Among other features are a PENNANTS Homer Croy Story illus­ BANNERS trated by Monte Crews and a History of the Uni­ Anything else in the way of Mis­ versity. souri Souvenirs. $2.50 the copy] Send for Catalogue, and visit [ 448 pages the Store when you are in Colum­ Address: bia. The Savitar

S . £. Corner Unlvera1tr Campus, Columbia, Missouri. .Columbia, Mo.

Don Carlos Guffey, ac.. Is practicing medi­ on "The Reconstruction of an Electric Rslil­ cine, wlt.h an office at 909 Waldheim Building, way." He based Ills talk on his experience Kansas City, Mo. His practice le limited to last tall In reconstructing an electric line oper­ obstetrics and gynecology. atlng out or Fort Wayne, Ind. Mr. Smith le now Clarence A. Barnes, law, Is an attorney at connected with the Arrow Engineering Com­ Mexico, Mo. pany, wblch Is In charge of the construction Lee Utley, ac., law'OO, Is a lawyer in Los work for the Mississippi River Power Company. Angeles, Cal. Hls address Is Suite 1029 Cali­ Charles A. Jenkins. nc .. Is In the ln_sura.nce fornia Building. business at Sedalia, Mo. Albert U. Brandt, eng., la superintendent of non C. Meyer, law, le practicing law ln Kan­ the electric department of the Pacific Oas and sas City, Mo. His address ls 602-606 Ameri­ E lectric Comµany, al Oakland, Cal. llls resi­ can Bank Building. dence address ls 872 Sixty-second street. ll!lss Frances E. Bedford, ac., A.M.'04, lives Walter C. Goodson, law, was cbalrman of at 6927 Parnell avenue, Chicago. the Mines and Mining Committee lo lhe Senate of the last Missouri General Assembly. Mr. '02 Goodson lives at Macon, Mo. Miss Emma M. W. Boardman, ac., Is prlnol­ ·oo pal of the high acbool at Bolivar, Mo. Wlllla.rn C. Lucas, ac., law'Ol, may be ad• Miss Ella A. Busch, ac., A.M.'04, may be dressed at 312 Kellh and Perry Building, Kan­ addressed at 1819 J3el'erly Road, Flatbw;b, New ae.a City, Mo. York City. Wilson H. McIDuen, law, may be addressed Frederick C. Schnfer, nc., Jaw, le an attorney In care of the Boorman Lumber Company, Box at Fort Rock, Ore. 1809, Great Falls, Mont. James P. McBaine, law. ls associated In the R. A. Kleinschmidt, nc., law, or Oklahoma practice of law with Boyle G. Olnri.. law '06, City, writes that the next meeting of I he Okla• at Columbia, Mo. He ls a professor In the homa Association of University or Missouri law school of the University of Missouri. Alumni, or which he ls president, will be held at Oklahoma City, October 17 next, after tbe '03 football game between :Missouri and Oklahoma. F. C. Magruder, eog., may be addressed at 'O I Newell, S. D. E. D. Smith, eng., of St. Louie addressed De Witt T. Rice, eng., lives at 3226 Park the engt.oeerlng sucl ents ln Columbia March 21 avenue, Kansas City, Mo. 268 THE MISSOURI ALUlVINUS GET IT BY PARCEL POST A G UA RANTEE SER.VICE. The high standing of these Columbia The Missouri Alumnus stands back of business houses is recognized by the these advertisements. If a subscriber many students and alumni who have pat­ who answers any of them, mentioning ronized them. They are prepared to The Alumnus, finds there has been mis­ serve you, in or out of town, promptly representation, the magazine will make and efficiently. Visit them when you come back to Columbia; meantime, take good any loss incurred, provided com­ advantage of the parcel post to buy plaint is made within thirty days. goods of known quality. Will E. Smith EVERYTHING IN MEN'S FURNISHINGS DRY GOODS and READY-TO-WEAR Wben in school you bought your clothes here. After you go home Of The Better Kind you may still do so by Parcel Post Parcel Post Service SYKES & BROADHEAD CLO. CO. COLUMBIA, MISSOURI COLUMBIA, M O. 8 FLOWERS~ A.\\~ - For the occasion can be sent to you anywhere rP. L., you wish. Good condition guaranteed Shoe s l\oeppe n's We wlll pA7 tbo Parcal Po,cnite. Our Sboea dcltva.red at your door. MIH A. Kocpp&n., Mann1cr. COLOMBIA, M O, COLUMBIA, MISSOURI WE. CARRY THE BEST Candies, Cigars, Perfumes,Brushes, When w riting t o advertisers please Toilet Articles. We pay the postage on a.ny of our specialties you order. be aure to m ent ion t he M lasourl Pech. Drug Co. A lumnus. COLUJlfBIA, IIUSSOURI

Fred E . Storm, ac., law'04, lives at Okmul­ O. M. Fairley, eng., inay be addressed at gee, Olda. Osceola, Ark. James A. Hooke, eng., ls the newly appointed Edgar S. Maupin, eng., may be addressed at sewer commissioner or St. Louls. a Democrat Vicksburg, Mies. holding office uocler a Hepubllcan administra­ Harry El. Kilmer, ac., A.M., law'08, lives at tion. He was formerly assistant sewer com­ Centerview, Mo. missioner. Edward S. Comer, e.c., Is at Mound City, Mo James 0. Ward, ac.. A.M.'06, may be ad­ '04 dressed at Mangum, Okie.. Miss Calla E. Varner, ac., may be addressed Ernest •A. Green, ac.. law, formerly assistant at 727 South Fifteenth street, St. Joseph, Mo. attorney general of Missouri, has formed a She Is tn charge ot tho Contra I High School partnership with John A. Hope and Wilson W. Annex. Selbert tor the practice of law under the name James A. Hammack, eng., Is a civil engineer of Hope, Green and Selbert, In the Bank of at Jackllon, Miss. Commerce BuHding, St. Louis. Charles C. Wilson, law, Is an attorney at 'OS Nyssa, Ore. Charles K. Martin, eag., may be addressed Thomas D. Woodson. e.c., ts a captaln In the at Doniphan, Mo. medical corps ot the United States Army, He Sherman E. Flab, law, Is practicing law a t Is at Fort Leavenworth, Kan. AmaMJJo, Texas. NOTES OF THE CLASSES 269

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'06 dean or women at the Capo Girardeau (Mo.) Normal School. Chester G. Starr, agr., was recently ap­ pointed professor or animal husbandry at '08 Purdue University, Lafayette, Ind., and began Miss Eleanor Kleeman, ed., ac., .'1..~r.•12, may bis duties there Ap ril 15. Mr. Starr has been be addressed R. F. D. 6, lnde 11endence, Mo. actively engaged In the live stock business Ralph H. Mason, agr., lives at Greenville, with bis father at Centralia, 11-To. s. c. Miss Gloria W . Carr, ac., ed., bas changed John E. Price, ac., law, Is practicing law at her Los Angeles address to 4601 Cimarron Houston, Texas. street. J. Russell Ellis. eng., may be addressed at w. A. Hurwitz., ac., ed., A.M., may be ad­ 2226 Cornwall, Regina. Saskatchewan, canade.. dressed at 8 White Hall, Ithaca, N. Y. Mrs. Charlene Shephard WI.Ison, ac., may be Daniel B. Thieman, agr., lives at Aullville, addressecl at Minocqua, Wis. Mo. Miss Hortense C. Dungan, ac., lives at Ore· Frank "P. Gaunt, ac., 111.D.'11, Harvard, Is In gon. Mo. the Methodist Hospital at Nanktng, China. Morgan L. Cllot, m .. Is a physlclnn and sur­ Mrs. Gaunt was formerly Miss Eugenia geon at Mend v1lle, Mo. Moore. ed.'10. R. F. Howard, agr., Is teaching horticulture Roy B. Meriwether, law, Is pmcllclng law at In the College of Agriculture at the University Monroe City, Mo. ot Wisconsin at Madison. Joseph H. Ikenberry, ac.. law'08, may be Miss Mabel E. Sturtevant. law, may be ad• addressed at 1106 East Fortieth street, Kansas

MIDLAND TEACHERS' AGENCY CAHIA H. OuRoRN ,nd o.. 1Lu J. Ou101K, Mgr,, WARRENSBURG, MO. SPOKANE, WASH. Sation A Established in 1900. \Ve are prepared to aultt worthy ccachcra co ltt:tter potjtion,, Eut or Wen. Booklet and bbnk for the :asking. Nc>tu~ too culy for enrolling for 1914.

MAKE SPLENDID TEACHERS A MISSOURI ALUMNI FOR OUR WESTERN POSITI ONS Placing We ha,o locat«I lll8DY tc.,cbors from Mluour1 Normal School• and Ml880Url Unlvo..iw. We liavo plaoocl thoro In grndo J)Osltloua, Wgh school clepartmen¾ll Agency work, 1uJ)Orl.utondonclcs and normal school p05.ltJoos. Our west4rn schools ooed more or lhom. Write «>day. for BUSI.NESS MEN'S CLEARING HOUSE, D enver, Colorado Teachers business, herding registered Holsteins. His address ls Linwood Fann, Santa Cruz, C(I). UNIVER.SITY OF COLOR.ADO marl W. Rusk, agr., ls !arm adviser at ======BOULDER ======Mexico, Mo. Eleventh Summer Session, June 22 to August 1 Rnmlln L. Brown, agr., m11y be addressed rn the rootbllls or tho Roekleo. Ideal condlUon.s ror aL Box 644, Merced, Cal. ,rum.mer study and rocrcadon. 'l'wenty-0 ve depart,. Emmett C. O'Neal, agr., Is manager or the men1'1. Ablo faculty. Emluoot looturon,. Attractive cour11ee tor teacbors. Oonforooco o r social :>nd oduca­ Riverview Farm near Paris, Mo. tlonal workeni. Oatatoguo on appllcMlon. Jerome Earl Moore, ac.• Is traveling ln East­ ern Canndn fo r the Berthold nnd J euologs Lumber Company of St. Louis. '12 Johnson D. Hill, nc., Is an attorney at El David B. Robnett, ac.. Is In Co lumbia, Mo. Dorado Springs, 1110. Metz Wright. ac., Is with the Holland Bank• VernJ J. Chapman, eng., may be addressed log Comoany at Sprlogileld, Mo. at Peirce City, Mo. Miss Oll v1a D. Hill, ac., ed., may be ad­ Samuel R. Morrow, eog., ls assistant engi­ dressed at Pawhuska, Okla. neer of the Public Service Commission at Jef­ Elmer L. Anderson, ngr., Is director of ferson City, Mo. physical education and athletlCJ! In Marlett.ti College, Marietta, Ohio. 'I 0 Rodney Babcock. ac., now teaching mathe­ Ansley H. Roberts, ed., may be addressed matics at Evansville Junior College, mvansvll!e, at 1806 South First street, Abilene, Texaa. Wis., bas been awarded a graduate scholarship Dav1d E. White, eng., may be addressed .R. In mathematics at the University of Wlscon• F. D. 2, Norborne, Mo. s in tor 19H-16. M. H. Wilson. ac., may be addressed at Sidney M. Skinner. agr., may be addressed Kirkwood, Mo. at Webster Groves, Mo. George C. Gundlach, eng., has changed bis Miss Iva L. Thomas. ac., ed., le teaching St. Louis address to 3129 llforganford road. mathematics lo Central High School, Kansas A. G. Miller, eng., 13 with the Cb lcago office City, Mo. of the General Electric Company. His address Stanley Stokes, eng., may be addressed at Is l 005 Monadnock BulldJng. 5602A Etzel avenue, St. Louis. James C. Lawrence, ac., eog., Is a member Miss Esther lllrskJno. ac., ed., mny be ad­ of the firm ot Lawrence nnd Carrier, consulting dressed at 4416 West Bello pince, St. Louis. chemical engineers, Memphis, Teoo. His ad dress Is 1520-21 Exchange Bu.Udlog. '13 Oliver J. MIiler, law. has offices lo the Cen• trnl National 13ank Building lo St. Louis. He Miss Anne Shaw. ac., ed., le teaching Latia Is an attorney. and German in the Trenton, Mo., High School. H. B. Hill, nc .. law'l2, bas been elected a O. W. R ulherrord. ac., bas boen awarded a member or the city council ot Shamrock, Texas, scbolarshlp ln government In Harvard UoJver­ where he Is practlcing law. slty. He Is now teaching Eoglleh lo the State H. R. Davis, ac., li ves at 8919 Castleman Normal School at Warrensburg, Mo. avenue, St. Louis. Walter W. Friesz, eng., a government ln· spector, may be addressed at Keytesville, Mo. '11 Albe-rt E. Pierce, eog., visited In Columbia James F. Rooker, eng .. may be addressed in March. He Is now In the OJI business at • at 5565 Cabanne avenue. St. Louis. Barllesvllle, Okin.. being the owner of seven oil Orvllle Zimmerman, law, Is a member of wells near there. the Fort nod Zimmerman law flrm at Ken• Wlllls T<. Weaver. ed., may be addressed at nett, Mo. 4175 Morgan street, St. Lonls. Walter .T. Gresham, law, of Cottonwood Falls, C. A. Lewis. J., Is now nsalstaot Sunday ed­ Kan., Is the author or a story, "The Benetlt itor of tho Lincoln, Neb., Dally Star. Besides of Counsel," In the April number of Case and this, he bas u,e city hall run. FIis Sunday fea­ Comme1.1t, a lawyers' magazine. ture stories nro generally signed. Remember These Dates

When yo u are 111 Columbia fo r Commencement:

Wednesday, J une 3, 1 P. M.-Luncheon given by the Univer­ sity for all its g uests, at Lathrop H all. You are invited. Wednesday, June 3, 2:30 P. M .-Annual Al umni Business M eeting, t he Auditorium, Academic H all.

Thursday, J une 4 (Com me ncement Day), 1 P. M.-Annual Alumni Luncheon, Lathrop Hall.

'l 'hey Are Coming Back

Following are the names of so me of the alumni whom you may count on meeting in Columbia during Commencement Week: Sophia llersch, A. B. '1 2, St. J oseph, Mo. Edwin W . PaLLcrson, A. B. '09, LL. B. 'I I, f