08 ALLEGHENY THE KALDRON

OF ------■ = ALLEGHENY COLLEGE

PURPOSING To write deep in the lives of her sons and daughters the memory of an Allegheny year. THE STAR COMPANY PRINTERS

H

PUBLISHED BY THE STUDENT BODY

IN THE YEAR OF OUR LORD MCMVI1I.

Volume XX. THE K A L D R O N

H ebert K n igh t Dennis, ’I1 A <* E d ito r in Chief.

W i l l i a m L e R o v S t i d g e r , * △ <• W il l i a m ] . A i k e n , * I’ △ Associate Editors.

P a u l C . D e e m e r , - A E Business Manager.

CONSULTING STAFF. George H. Ruhling, Cartoonist. Charles O. Peters, - A K John R. K e is te r , * K + F l o r e n c e M. G r a u e l, IC a <> M a ry N ic h o ls , K K I' M a r v G r e e n , a X it M a r g e r e t H. Be e BE, <> - C. F. L e w is , △ 'I' △ C. H . C l a r k e , <> A * H . N. G o u ld . M a r y L . Bond.

HONORARY. Katherine Adams, ’07, K A o F ra n c is L . L aB ou n ty, ’07, K *

MRS. SA R A H B. COCHRAN The Lady Elect of Allegheny College DEDICATED

With the lasting esteem of the students of Allegheny College to

REV. LUCIUS H. BUGBEE, D.D.,

whose message of truth still is eloquent.

DR. LUCIUS H. BUGBEE. BOARD OF TRUSTEES

Ex-Officio.

Our Mission Hisis Excellency Edwin S. Stuart,Stuar Governor of the Commonwealth. HE witchery of drifting blossoms and Hon. James T. Mitchell, opening flowers has diffused a subdued T Chieflief Justice of the Supreme Court.Coil magnanimity through this, our mes­ sage of sweetness and light. The Kaldron Hon. Hampton L.. Carson, will prove a self-revelation to many, a friendly Attorney 'General. indictment of the rest. In the far away years when you are dreaming in the shadows and Lay Trustees. firelight, of the glad days when in the music of springtime and hope and life, the world Samuel B. Dick*...... Meadville stretched out before your eager pulsing youth ; Harvey Henderson...... Allegheny when, fellow student, your eyes dim because William Thomas...... Meadville of the “light of other days” that Hoods around, John J. Henderson, I.L.D ...... Meadville then as you turn the pages of this volume will Theodore L. Flood, D.D., LL. D ...... Meadville you know its true mission— a book of mem­ Jonathan Hamnett, 1). 1) ...... Meadville ories. John A. Wood ...... Pittsburg William S, Foltz...... New Castle James W. Lee ...... Pittsburg Rev. James R. Mills, D.D ...... Cleveland, O. Rev. Joseph Horner, D.D., LL.D ...... Pittsburg Rev. Joseph W. Miles, D.D ...... McKeesport John C. B ardall...... Moundsville, W. Va. Frank A. Arter...... Cleveland, O. James P. Colter...... Meadville James W. Kinnear...... Pittsburg Gordon B. Chase...... Greenville

•Deceased. Rev. Thomas H. Woodring, D.D ...... Johnstown Executive Committee.

Rev. Andrew C. Ellis, D.D Oil City William H. Crawford...... Chairman Rev. James M. Bray, A.M Westfield, N. Y. William S. Sm ith...... Secretary Rev. William H. Crawford, D.D., LL.D ...... Meadville William Thomas John J. Henderson Rev. Andrew C. Ellis, D.D Oil City Theodore L. Flood Rev. James M. Bray, A.M ...... Westfield, N. Y. John E. Rigg, M.D ...... Wilkinsburg CONFERENCE BOARD. Durbin Horne...... Pittsburg Rev. T. N. Eaton, D. D. Rev. J. F. Murray, Ph. D. Edward Appleyard...... Jamestown, N. Y. W. S. Horner W . J. Guthrie Robert B. Murray...... Youngstown, O. Rev. H. G. Dodds, D.D. Rev. D. H. Platt, D.D. Wesley B. Best...... Meadville Austin Blakeslee William Hardwick Rev. Russell F. Keeler, D.D ...... Middlefield, O. Rev. Charles H. Stocking, Rev. Robert M. Freshwater, Rev. Thomas N. Boyle, D.D ...... Crafton D.D. D.D. Jesse C. M cD ow ell...... Pittsburg Reed P. Clark John O. Pew William S. Smith...... Meadville Rev. M. F. Compton, D.D. Rev. J. S. Robinson John V. Ritts...... Butler H. F. Jones Edward S. Hazlett Charles Miller...... Franklin John S. Craig ...... Allegheny CENTENARY HOARDS.

Edward H. Utley...... Pittsburg Pittsburg Conference. Harry G. Sampson...... Pittsburg Rev. Charles W. Smith, D.D., LL.D ...... President Austin Blakesle Du Bois Rev. Joseph Horner, D.D., LL.D ...... Sccietaiy Rev. Noble G. Miller, D.D ...... Blairsville Joseph H. Holmes...... Lieasmei Truman D. Collins...... Albert A. Horne Harvey Henderson A. M. Schoyer...... Pittsburg A. C. Knox W. A. Carr Nelson A. Rist...... Dawson John J. Carter...... Titusville Eric Conference. Rev. J. C. M cDonald...... New Castle Rev. R. S. Borland, D.D ...... President Arthur L. Bates...... Meadville Rev. J. W. Blaisdell, D .D ...... Vice-President Simpson S. Ford ...... Cleveland, O. Rev. T. W. Douglass, D.D ...... Secretary R. B. W a rd ...... Pittsburg William S. Sm ith...... lreasurei C. E. W elch ...... Westfield, N. Y. Rev. H. G. Dodds, D.D. W. W. Gelvin Officers of the llourd. Rev. W. S. Mitchell William Thomas Durbin Horne...... President Rev. W. H. Crawford, D.D., LL.D. Rev. R. A. Buzza John J. Henderson...... Vice-President Rev. T. W. English B. L. Singley William S. Smith...... Secretary and Treasurer 10 i t Jonathan H ammett, D.l).

B K

Professor Emeritus

A . I!., A llegh en y C ollege, FACULTY 1839; A.M., Allegheny Col­ lege, 1843; D.D., University of , 1869: Professor of Latin Language and Literature, Allegheny Col­ lege, 1845-73; Vice Presi­ dent, Allegheny College, 18'2-84; Professor of Mathe­ matics and Astronomy, Al­ legheny College, 1882-84; Emeritus Professor of Phi­ losophy,, Allegheny College, 1884; Librarian, Allegheny C ollege, 1884-1906.

William T. Dutton, U.K.

B @ n , B K

Professor of Mathematics and Ch it Engineering. C.E., Dartmouth College, 1876; Professor of Mathematics and Vice- Principal, C. V. S., Normal School, 1881-86; Professor of Mathematics, Edinboro Normal School, 1886-go; present position, i8go.

William A. Elliott, L.ll.D. REV. WILLIAM H. CRAWFORD, D. D., LL.D. <1> A (-), <]> B K President. Professor of Greek Language and Literature.

A.B., Allegheny College, 1889; A.M., Allegheny College, 1892; L.H.D., Dick­ inson College, 1902; American School of Classical Studies, Athens, 1894-5; Principal Preparatory School, Alle­ gheny College, 1889-1)2; l’rofe sor of Latin and Greek, 1892-4; member American Philological Association; member Archaeological Institute of A m e r ic a ; presen t position, 1902. Robert S. Breed, Ph.D.

r A, I ’ B K — rr- - Ernest A. Smith, Ph.I). Professor of Biology and Geology. B0IT, 'I'BK B.S., Amherst College, 1898; Professor of History and Economics. M.S., University of Colorado, A.B., Ohio Wesleyan University, 1899; P. H. D., Harvard Uni­ 1888; A.M., 1891; Principal Valdosta versity, 1902; Instru ctor in Collegiate Institute, 1889- 9 3 ; G rad u ­ Biology, University of Colo­ ate Student Johns I lopkins University, rado, 1898-99; University 1895-8; member of American Histori­ Scholar, Harvard University, cal Association; member Southern 1899-1900; Assistant in Zo- History Society; member American ology, Harvard University, Economic Association; present posi­ 1900-01; Austin Teaching tion, 1898. Fellow, Harvard University, 1901-02; Assistant in Zoology. Clarence Frisbee Ross, A.M. Biological Laboratory, Cold A ®, B K Spring Harbor, 1905. Mem­ ber American Association for Bradley Professor Latin Language and the Advancement of Science; Literature. American Society of Zoolo­ A.B., Allegheny College, 1891; A.M., gists ; present position, 1902. George A. Mulfinger, Ph.D. Allegheny College, 1893; University of Chicago, Summer Quarter, 1895-6; Professor of German Language and Senior Fellow in Greek, University of Literature. Chicago, 1898-9; University of Berlin, A.B., Northwestern University, 1885; 1896-7; Professor of Greek and Ger­ D.B., Garrett Biblical Institute, 1887; man, Missouri Wesleyan College, 1901- Student, University of Tubingen, 1889; 2; Instructor in Greek and Latin and Student, University of Berlin, 1890-91 ; Principal of Preparatory School, Alle­ President of German College, Mt. gheny College, 1892-5; Assistant Pro­ Pleasant, Iowa, 1892-3; Reader in fessor, 1895; Professor, 1900; member German, University of Chicago, 1894- American Philological Association; 5; Head of Department of German, present position, 1902. Wendell Phillips High School, Chicago, 1897-1905; Ph.D., University of Chi­ cago, 1901 ; M em ber o f M odern L a n ­ Frank C. Lockwood, I’ll.I). guage Association of America; present ATA, 11K position, 1905.

Professor of English Language and Literature. Camden M. Coben .

A.B., Baker University, 1892; A.M., K * B K Wesleyan University, 1902; Ph. D., Professor of English Bible and Phil­ Northwestern Universily, 1896; Pro­ osophy of Religion. fessor English Language and Litera­ A.B., Allegheny College, 1876; A.M., ture, Mt. Union College, 1898-9; Pro­ Allegheny College, 1879; S.T.B., Bos­ fessor of English, State Agri­ ton University, 1883; Ph.D., Boston cultural College, 1900-02; present po­ University, 1888; Member of Interna­ sition, 1902. tional Congress of Orientalists, 1892; D.D., Allegheny College, 1899; Mem­ ber of Society of Biblical Archaeology of London; Life Associate Member Victoria Exploration Funds; present position, 1906. Oscar P. Akers, Ph. 1). Margaret E. N. Fraser. V g K K r . Assistant Professor in Mathematics.

Professor of Romance Lan­ A.H., University of Colorado, 1900: guages. Dean of Women. Engineering School, University of A . 11., University of Toronto, C olorado, 1900-01 ; A .M ., U n iversity 1895; Fellow in English, Uni­ of Colorado, 1902; Graduate Scholar, versity o f , 1895- Department (if Mathematics, Cornell 98; A.M., University of Penn­ University, 1902-04; Assistant ill Math­ sylvania, 1896; Ph.D., Univer­ ematics, Cornell University, 1904-05; sity of Pennsylvania, 1898; Ph.D., Cornell University, 1905; Mem­ Professor of Romance Lan­ ber of the American Mathematical guages, Elmira College, 1898 Society; Member Circolo Matematico 1905; present position, 1905. Di P a lerm o ; present position. 1905.

Charles J. Ling. 5 A E Professor of Pliysies and Astronomy. B.S., Cornell University, 1890; Instructor in Science, Carrollton, Illinois, High School, 1890; Professor of Natural Sciences, State Normal School, Natchitoches, Louisiana, 1890-92; Vice Principal and Instructor in Science, Centennial High School, Pueblo, Colorado, 1892-94; Instructor in Physics, Manual Training High School, Denver, Colorado, 1894-96; A.M., University of Denver, 1900; Ph.D., 1902; Instructor in Astronomy and Mathematics, University of Denver, Summer Ses­ sion, 1902; Member American Physical Society; Fellow American Association for the Advancement of Science; Member Astronomischc Gesellschaft; present position, 1906.

Lemuel R. Brown. △ T,

A.I!., Middlebury College, 1901; Head Alice Huntington Spalding. of English Department, Seattle High School, Seattle, Washington, 1901-2; Instructor in Expression and Physical Training. A.M., Harvard University, 1903; Acting Graduate of Cumnock School of Oratory; Northwestern University Professor of English and Oratory, 1897; present position 1907. Olivet College, 1903-4; present posi­ tion, 1904. Guy Everett Suavely. Assistant Professor of french.

A.B., Johns-Hopkins Uni­ versity, [got ; Master of Latin and Mathematics, The Nautical Academy, Easton, Md., igoi- 02; Graduate Student, Ro­ mance Department, Johns- Hopkins University, 1902-03, 1904-06; Associate Principal, Assistant in tlwtogy Milton Academy, Baltimore, 1902-05; Instructor in Mathe­ Emma M. Edson. matics, U. S. Naval Academy Preparatory School, Summers KAO of 1902 and 1903; Student at the Alliance Francaise, Paris, Slimmer of 1905; present po­ sition, 1906.

Edwin Lee, A. M„ M. S. S A B A X I Professor o f Chemistry. B. S. Northeastern Ohio College 1896, Instructor Chemistry, Plainfield, H. S. Indiana, 189<>-'98, Professor Chemistry and Physics Northeastern (lliio College Librarian 1898- 1900; graduate work Cornell Uni­ versity IilOO-’Ol, M S, Mt. Union College Edith Rowley, A. B. 1902-’04, M S. Northeastern Ohio Col­ le g e 190(1, Professor of Chemistry Alle­ gheny College 1907. Member American 02 Chemical Society, Follow American As­ sociation for the Advancement of Science, Honorary Member Alpha Chi Sigma fraternity (Chemical).

Ira David Hyskell, A. M.

* 11 K Instructor in Latin. Assistant in Physics

A. B. Allegheny College, 1905; G ra d ­ C. O. Peters. uate Student, Harvard University, 1905- ’07; A. M. Harvard University, 1907; 2 AK present position, 1907.

H. J. Sheetz, M. D. Physical Director. N 1 N 1902, Mercersburg Academy; 1906, Jefferson Medical College; Physician McKeesport Hospital, 1906-07. Present position, 1907 DEGREES CONFERRED JUNE 20, 1907.

Doctor of Laws.

Carl Riemenschneider

Doctor o f Divinity.

Jesse W. Cary William Forney Hovis

Theodore S. Henderson David Gardner Latshaw

William Rhind Wedderspoon

Master of Arts.

John Clayton Barkley Homer B. Potter

William Malcolm Buzza John Emery Roberts

Thomas Fornear Frederick Everett Stockton

Walter Henry Lofthouse Walter Scott. Trosh

Ralph Waldo Emerson Yeany

DEGREES CONFERRED ON FACULTY MEMBERS.

Guy M. Snavely, Assistant in French, Doctor of Philosophy,

Johns Hopkins University, May, 1 908. Colors— Green and White.

Yell— Strawberry Shortcake! Blueberry Pic! V-I-C-T-O-R-Y! Are we it? Well, just wait! W e’re the Class of 1908!

Officers.

Earle M. Giesey...... President Richard B. Callahan...... Vice-President Miss Hariette Phillips...... Secretary A. D. Andrews...... Treasurer L. W. Sherwin...... Valedictorian O. H. H ouser...... Salutatorian Miss Josette Beebe...... Essayist W. E. Thomas...... Declaimer Miss Mae Hart...... Historian Miss Jane Dermitt...... Poet R. R. Russel...... Prophet WYNONA BAKER. A. D. ANDREWS.

VERA BASH. ETHEL ANDREWS.

111 the Itishop’s Car­ r ia g e . Has been there all year. Talks to Burt in French, using phonetic methods. Once the idol of Jerome Collette Fisher, now contemplat­ ing the charms of an idyllic cottage scene in Switzerland with Elmo driving home the goats. JOSETTE H ild A BEEB E R. PARKER ANDREWS. She. A classical referendum houiul in cloth. Knows ethics. Latin, Greek and Bill Elliott. Keeps the profs posted. The right sort.

MABEL A. BEATTY. OLGA RIENE HENRY.

Airy Fairy Lillian. Ilob, Soil of Itallle At whose shrine A r­ Made good the first thur Devoe Powell Mil­ time he donned foot ler burns incense, and hall togs and has lead offers violets. A bright the procession since. The little maid, gentle as a "old war horse.” Has kitten, and the sort you a charley horse on his read about. Will keep Vocabulary, hut breaks tlie world sunshiny. even with the best.

ROBERT GINN. LILLIAN HEPFINGER.

The Incomplete Amorest. lias a face like one of Dr. Cobern’s prayers. An honest likable chap who will show the world what squareness means. Helps Lockwood run the Quill Club ration de­ partment, and has dab­ bled in literature. OTTO HENRY HOUSER. MAY ESTHER HART. - J ’OTpP'------^ T ------

The Choir Invisible. Reveries of a Bach­ Warbles like a sleepy elor. nightingale and has a girl in Franklin. For A bashful six feet of two years chief tuning solid stuff. Has a win fork of the Glee Club. sqme silent way that Raises more rough counts. Another of house than Cupid him­ Dutt’s chums, and a pro­ self and is continually duct of Tidioute. Re­ getting “your unknown ligiously avoids femin­ admirer ” commttniea inity. tiotts.

1 ERANCIS IRVINE. M A X W ELL. JOHN LICK...... g p y — ■ r...... t: ------

— ------— - — ------aq r ------|

The Sky I'ilot.

The rear admirable of the Tholntrn Club. Speaks to President Crawford with a patron­ izing air. Is said to he writing a volume on the “Ethics of Co-Educa­ tion.”

M ER LE W IL LIAM KING LEROY ISAIAH LOUD. ______I _yjy

* s » -

Tlie lloosier School­ m a ster.

Reared near the swampy suburbs of Springboro, and intro­ duced metropolitan cits toms into social Alle­ gheny. A good hearted, slow going duffer with a handsome phiz and a milk wagon stride. PRANK LYLE KNAPP. ELM A MeGR AN AH AN. Drives an automobile, plays basket ball, and dallies with Cupid in the same cool heady man­ ner. Frequently visits his ‘ ‘ grandmother. ’ ' Sometimes seen with Miss Rist.

ARCHBALD PERRY

A. D. P. M ILLER .

Cast Up ,l$y the Sea.

Not bashfully inclined, we have heard, hut cur­ rent rumors conflict. A shell on the sands of time. Made himself pop­ ular by furnishing the Hillings Hall outfit with fresh gossip. Wants to he a senator.

JOSEPH HOVER PRATT. KARL ANDREW MILLER.

Tlic Port of Missing Men. Has grown up with the New Allegheny. Fre­ quently been cornered by the little chap with wings. Is making every­ body wish she would stay longer. Sometimes seen with Mr. Perry.

BESS VERA RIST. HUGH MELVIN NELSON.

liL The Old Curiosity Shop. W h at Can She l>o? A man of Lytic scrtt- An exponent of wed­ ples in the matter of ded bliss, so our most women. Has tickled the scathing eulogy would pipe organ for three fall unnoticed. A steady years and makes Men­ reliable old chap with a delssohn sound like the comfortable indifference cows coming home hack for conventionality and in Tidioutc. A good the world, and a passion hearted duffer, with a for Mail-pouch. dash of the pirate in his veins. JO SEPH M. B LAKE . R A LP H C. SIGGINS.

The Roiidsman Lucy of the Stans. The evidence of things Has people in the dark not seen but we arc sure as to whether she is that the fortunate youth 'wedded or going to he. is hibernating until bis Has not patronized petite damsel comes trip­ home talent, so one can­ ping along with her not say. Will henpeck sheepskin. Will keep a the lucky man to a part of the world happy. finish. MARY LOUISE BOND. |]| l u c y He l e n w Rig h t .

Stepping Heavenward. Walking delegate of the gospel. A man of parts, but like a tele­ scope keeps most of them out of sight, un­ folding at rare moments. The idol of Teutonia, and the Moses of the Farreily Club. Will be fricasseed by cannibals OSCAR MINNS BROWN. RICHARD CALLAHAN. . |, i |I I. u J I 1 -

Black Beauty.

Has been disseminat­ ing higher education at Guvs Mills during the year. Also tangled up in Beulah-land and will soon he henpecked. A n ­ other poor man undone.

FRED CO O LE Y

CHARLESs B U R C H A R D.

Not Like Oilier Girls,

Considering the Eng- lisit language indelicate, Mr. Crowe chatters in cooing French with the other girls. Has ambi­ God's Good .Man. tions towards dressmak­ ing and likes cats and I las been an ardent tea and croquet. Friend follower of the Lord for and intimate associate of many years, and goes up Wahnita. on the high bill to wor­ ship every evening. “ One faith, one hope, one doctrine.”

The Beauty Doctor.

A floweret transplant­ ed from Ohio Wesleyan, and still talks of the old Animals I Have days before the war. K now n. One of the patriarchs of the Kats. Has an in­ Has stirred up a little herited perpetual giggle Dust during bis four like a kitten drowning in years of sin, sorrow and buttermilk. Friend and unpaid due bills and intimate associate of Ed­ that is a liberal educa­ die. tion in itself. Tall, ador­ ably graceful and the doubly distilled incarna­ tion of manly beauty. A THOMAS a . C O I.T ER, gentleman and scholar withal. CHARLES BuchHARD.

Not Like Other Girls. Considering the Eng- lisn language indelicate, God's Good M an. .Mr. Crowe chatters in cooing French with the Has been an ardent Other girls. Has ambi­ follower of the Lord for tions towards dressmak­ many years, and goes up ing and likes cats and on the high hill to wor­ tea and crocpiet. Friend ship every evening. “One and intimate associate of faith, one hope, one Wahnita. doctrine.” EDWARD P. CROW E

W IL L IA M A. CAPPEAU.

The Beauty Doctor. Animals I Ifavc A floweret transplant­ Known. ed from Ohio Wesleyan, Has stirred up a little and still talks of the old Dust during his four days before the war. years of sin, sorrow and One of the patriarchs of unpaid due hills and the ICats. Has an in­ that is a liberal educa­ herited perpetual giggle tion in itself. Tall, ador­ like a kitten drowning in ably graceful and the buttermilk. Friend and doubly distilled incarna­ intimate associate of Ed­ tion of manly beauty. A die. gentleman and scholar TH O M AS A. COLTER. withal. The Girl From the 1 Golden West. Peek’s Ibid Boy.

Sits a horse like a As unobtrusive as a Virginia thoroughbred, delegate at a summer and.the kind that counts. conference of the Y. M. Rides constantly, hut C. A. An easy going never trots. Keeps Hill square sort of a neces­ awake in Greek and the sity. who bears without Classical Club from rebuke the grand old titter decay. cognomen of gentleman.

JANE L. DERMITT. CLIFFORD FULLERTON. IP • ' '

-

'IT Little Men. "Centerpole” is as sys­ tematic as an adding Our Brrtslr. machine, lives, moves A lady and a scholar. and has his being by Stands in with Frank rule. Has spent most of C„ and writes literary his course trying to make Theta Nu Epsilon, themes. Said to he a but only got as far as sonamhulist. tlie Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. Runs an automobile and rides a bicycle. Has been ELIZAB ETH K. E TTE R. the basket hall Napoleon EARLE M. GIESEY.

r ...... — 1 The Simple Life.

One of Dutt's little The Betrothed. ones, and begins to re­ semble the dear old Divinely tall and fair codger. Wears glasses as sunlight on apple and an undertaker's air. blossoms. Is inclined to Will loaf through his a dasli of weary cyni­ manly years witli an cism, when not writing obese salary when his heart stories. Interested more brilliant contempo­ in the progress of the raries arc putting down Drill Chuck Manufac­ one, and carrying two. turing Co. F R A N K C. F L A U GH. FLORENCE M. GRAUEL.

-~....: ‘ ; 5 “ ...... “ CHARLES T. GREER.

w i l l i a m l . McK i n n e y . I

I!

FANNIE W. LYON.

W IL L IA M T. MACKEY.

Great Expectations.

Belongs to Dutt's Sun­ day School bunch and chews the same variety. One of the accomplished society men of the class. Keeps up the intellectual average of Theta Delta Psi.

RICHARD A. LYON.

N U LU N. NEALE. RAYM OND R. RUSSELL. CHARLES O. PETERS.

It Is Never Too Late to Mend.

In spite of the fact A n Encore. that he is all around, "Looey” is the squarest Not a repetition of the man that ever came to first. Has been single Allegheny. The calliope since "Slats” went out of the Y. M. C. A., only into the cold hard world. at the head of the pa­ Has the family giggle. rade. Is going to lead A good sort. the ministry, not follow it. LOUIS W . SHERWIN. HARRIETTE PHILLIPS.

I/ooking Backward.

About to go on the superannuated list. An­ other man who is mar­ ried and should have mercy whether lie de­ serves it or not. Has been preaching out in the Canadian woods since his last regular centennial appearance. FRANK G. SMITH. | ALBERT A. REAVELY. Tlie Call of the Wild.

Will make people laugh out in the world and do more good there­ by than Torrey and Alexander. Continually practicing stunts he ex­ pects to work 011 the heathen. Illustrates in his distance runs, and makes the Glee Club popular. W IL L IA M E. THOMAS. CARRIE L. SOWASH.

HARRY H. STANLEY.

DONALD S. THOMAS. Colors— White and Blue.

Yell— Rickety-ax! Co-ax! Co-ax! Rickety-ax ! Co-ax ! Co-ax! Hullaballoo! Hullaballoo! What's the matter with all of you ? White and Blue, Blue and White! 1909! She’s all right!

Officers.

W. J. Aiken...... President W. L. Mould...... Vice-President Miss Anna Heyward .... Secretary Percy P. Parsons...... Treasurer ( ’lllMS Roll. Stewart, Charles Franklin...... Hadley Williamsburg Aiken, William James, i’ l ' i ...... Port Perry Stewart, Frank Everhard, 4> A 0 Skellie, Fred Albert, A 0 ...... Glassport Carpenter, Harley, A '1' A ...... Meadville Cousins, Benjamin Franklin...... Hadley Cravner, William Charles, K V ...... \ andergrift Deemer, Paul C., A A E ...... Lisbon, O. Elkin, Cortlandt Whitehead...... Smicksburg Fishel, Harry McKee, A ©...... Pittsburg Fitch, Jessie Frances, 0 A...... Greenville Fugate, Edith Lucinda, K K r ...... Du Bois Houghton, Elizabeth Gladys, 0 A...... Ripley, N. Y. Johnson, Charles W esley...... Braddock Keister, John Ridinger, 4> K v ...... Irwin Lewis, Charles Fletcher...... Meadville McKinney, Florence May ...... Corry McKinney, John Hudson, 0 A v ...... Franklin McNees, Sterling Glenn, P A ...... Kittanning Martin, Chauncey James...... New Castle Miller, Ralph Erskine, K 4' ...... Mt. Pleasant Mills, Ethel May, 0 A...... Waterford Millward, William...... Crafton Miner, John Lynn, A 0 ...... Punxsutawney Mould, William Leighton, A T A ...... New Kensington Nichols, Mary Gertrude, K K T...... Sharon Parsons, Percy Paul, A 0 ...... Reynoldsville Peters, Charles Orley, 2 A E ...... Albion Schaffner, Perry Blaine, PA ...... Pueblo

44 © © m W « o oJ5 Colors— Red and White. X O h mo

Yell— Alle-ge-zip-ge-zip-gc-zem, We’re the class of nineteen ten! Nineteen ten! Nineteen ten! We're the class of nineteen ten!

Officers. Dale F. Croasman...... President W. E. Ferrall...... Vice-President Miss Grace Miller...... Secretary A. J. Nelson...... Treasurer (lass Roll. Lewis, Mattie May, 0 2 ...... Knox Andrews, Grover Charles...... Conneaut Lake McCall, Clarence Andrew...... Greenville Baker, Clarence, A T A ...... Butler McLaughlin, Mary Elizabeth, K K P...... Springboro Beebe, Margeret Hyde, 0 2 ...... Meadville McLean, Ellen Leone, K K I ' ...... Meadville Bly, Lena, 0 2 ...... Sherman, N. Y. McLean, Mabel Grace, A X O Union City Boyd, Reuben Earl, A © New Castle Miller, Grace Hattie, K A 0 ...... Tarentum Broadbent, John Howard,

Officers.

C. P. MacDonald...... President I. D. Ford...... Vice-President Miss L. C. Power...... Secretary C. C. Fisher...... Treasurer

Class Boll. Abbey, Carlos...... Erie Adsit, Claude Raymond, A T A Conneaut Lake Allen, Meredith Bunkerd...... Pittsburg Bacon, Florence Rosannah...... Union City Bacon, Ruth...... Union City French, Samuel Hampton, ©Ad'...... Pittsburg Fugate, Victor Weston, A T A...... DuBois Carver, Elizabeth, A X...n ...... Meadville ...... Meadville Ballinger, Thomas Dudley, d> r A ...... George, Roland Jones, d> K d *...... Saegertown Barkley, John William, * r A ...... Braceville, O. Gleave, Nell May...... Oil City Bassett, Mollie Arnett, © - ...... Bridgeport, Conn. Grant, Charles Clair, 2; A .E...... Freeport Beaver, Eva Josephine...... Grant, Weldon Roy, 2 A E...... Freeport Bond, Helen Margaret...... Harper, Meher Reece, d> A ©...... Avalon Bortz, James Andrew Harris, Leonard Clement, A ©...... Reynoldsville Bossard, Lloyd Wilson...... Hillman, Gertrude, K A © ...... Pittsburg Brown, Edwin Hazlett...... Meadville Hillman, Paul Mansell...... Pittsburg Callahan, Frank Howard...... Pleasant Unity Mines, Albert Barker, A © ...... Allegheny Carroll, Donald Scott, d> A © ...... Buffalo, N. Y. Kelly, Ruth Root, KA© ...... Meadville Cochran, Jesse Cleveland, 2 A E...... Kennedy, Edwin Paul. K >1' Carbon Black Cole, Ralph Richard, A T A ...... Kulp, Walter LeRoy, 2 A E...... West Middlesex Cole, Warren B„ A T A ...... Andover, O. Lewis, Martha May, 0 2 ...... Knox Cook, Stella Palmer, 0 2 ...... Collingwood, O. Loane, Lucy Evelyn, A X !!...... Oil City Copeland, Clarence Allen...... McCall, Clarence Andrew...... Greenville Coup, Fred Thomas...... McClellan, John Price, A T A ...... Irwin Craig, William Benjamin, <1> K d'...... McClure, Alfred Rose, 2 A E...... Sandy Lake David, Bruce William...... MacDonald, Charles Paul Davidson, <1> K d'...... •.. .Whitney De Haven, Jessamine McFeaters, Edgar Cram, 0 A d '...... Pittsburg Dennis, Cena...... Conneaut Lake MacKenzie, Julia Jean, K K I'...... Oil City De Vitis, Michael Angelo...... Wilmerding McKinney, Lottie Lydia...... Corry Doane, Walter Arthur...... Martin, Eleanor May...... Meadville Drake, Matilda Louise, K K r ...... Cambridge Springs Mead, Gilbert Wilcox, *1'A...... Duquesne Duffy, Una Katherine, K K P ...... Mendel, Florence...... Meadville Dunsmore, Archie Nevada, 2 A E...... Metcalf, Bessie May, K A 0 Jamestown, N. Y. English, Earl Thompson...... Mickle, Friend Lee...... Garland Fife, Walter Glenn...... Miller, Edna May...... Philipsburg Firestone, Harry Dewees Miller, Kenneth Thompson...... Meadville Fisher, Clarence Conrad...... Mondereau, LeRoy, A T A...... Meadville Ford, Irwin Davis, 0 A d '...... Moore, John Harrison Sandy Lake Fowler, Marjorie, A X Q ...... Moore, Nelson Rist, 2 A E...... Vanderbilt Fox, John VV...... Morse, Melvin E ...... North Girard Frampton, James Ward...... Over, William George, 0 K >k...... Kane SPECIAL STUDENTS Parsons, Caroline, A X !1...... Charleroi Patterson, Allen Kennedy...... Meadville Patterson, Thomas Arthur...... Meadville Brown, Andrew Hiram ...... Washington, D. C. Plannette, Roy Warren South Sharon Clarke, Charles Harold, 0 A ...... Conneaut, O. Power, Lina Clancy...... Conneautville Drake, Paul Harris...... North Easton, Mass. Preston, Ida Florence...... Meadville Mason, Madison Charles Butler, J r ...... Cincinnati, O. Taylor, Palmer Newton...... New Wilmington Price, William Morrell, •*> K + ...... Irwin Watson, Evelyn Mabel...... Eden, N. Y. Proctor, Ruth...... Buffalo, N. Y. Robinson, Jesse Squibb...... Boston GRADUATE STUDENTS. Ross, Robert Richard, <1> A 0 ...... Mt. Y’emon, N. Y. Candidates for the Degree of Master of Arts. Rossiter, Samuel Y., r A ...... Erie Mercill, Myrta E ...... Meadville Scott, Lyle C ...... Meadville A. B., Allegheny College. German, Mathematics. Simonton, Francis Greer, 2 A E New Castle

Simpson, Viola Hume...... Indiana Not a Candidate for a Degree. Small, Walter Madison...... Cooperstown Adams, Katherine Moore...... Meadville Smith, Mary, K K r ...... Wilkinsburg A. B., Allegheny College. Smock, Clifford Edmund...... Conneaut Lake La Bounty, Francis Louis Ashtabula, O. Snearline, Irene Elizabeth...... Meadville A. B., Allegheny College. Sprouse, Anna Camden...... Monessen Stetson, Ellery Justin, A T A Cambridge Springs Stidger, Ivan Read, A 0 Moundsville, W. Va. Stoner, Oma Belle...... Scottdale Straw, Gertrude Mae, K A 0 Cambridge Springs Strickland, Alice Mae...... Cataraugus, N. Y. Tallant, Mabel Anna...... Hinsdale, N. Y. Tordella, Joseph, 0A'I<...... Meadville Uhlinger, Roy H ...... Burghill, O. Van Hoesen, Sadie Emeline...... Meadville Vogel, Charles Ellsworth, A 0 ...... Jeannette Weidler, Wellington Earl,4> A 0 ...... Oil City White, Charles Mortland, K 'k ...... McKeesport

White, John Merrill, 2 A E ...... California Willey, Frederick George...... Middletown, Va. “Some of ilic Girls.” Willson, Myra Adele...... Meadville Yost, Russell Raymond, P A...... South Fork (Ho tlir iHnuory of

Ati AUryhrny llrnthrr atth a (60011 (Eomrahe

(Clifforb ilafiott (Ungijan

(ficuis of lunr

IKiUph on Ilir 3lstljmus of Panama

iBay murtmt liuuiirri) nyljt PHI KAPPA PSI

Penna. Beta Chapter. Established 1855 Colors— Pink and Lavender.

Publication— The Shield.

Yell— High! High! High! Phi Kappa Psi! Live Ever! Die Never! Phi Kappa Psi!

Fratres in Fncultnte. W. H. Crawford, D.D., LL.D. C. M. Cobern, D.D., Ph.D. Fratres in Urbe. George B Anderson J. Bennett Porter, C. E. Hon. Arthur L. Bates W. E. Porter Walter Irving Bates Sion B. Smith James P. Colter James W. Smith Capt. George G. Derby J. N. Taylor, M. D. Manley O. Brown James McGunnegle John Anderson Lewis L. Lord, Jr. John L. Porter Shirley P. Austin J. Edward Colter R. H. Patterson C. C. Laffer, M. D. R. E. Platt JO McClintock, Esq. Fratres in Collegio. 1908. H. M. Nelson E. F. Crowe 1909. R. E. Miller W. C. Cravner J. R. Keister F. A. Skellie 1910. J. R. Gahan J. H. Broadbent W. G. Fixel R. E. Boyd 1911. C. P. MacDonald W. B. Craig J. D. Piper W. H. Price E. P. Kennedy W. G. Over C. M. White R. J. George Pennsylvania Alpha Washington and Jefferson College Pennsylvania Beta ...... Allegheny College Pennsylvania Gamma Bucknell University Pennsylvania Epsilon ...... Pennsylvania College Pennsylvania Zcta ...... Dickinson College Pennsylvania Eta ...... Franklin and Marshall College Pennsylvania Theta ...... Lafayette College Pennsylvania Iota University of Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Kappa...... Swarthmore College New York Alpha Cornell University New York Beta Columbia University Alumni Associations. New York Gamma Columbia University Pittsburg Alumni Association Minneapolis Alumni Association New York Epsilon Colgate University Philadelphia Alumni Association Salt Lake City Alumni Association New York Zeta Brooklyn Polytechnic University Springfield Alumni Association Portland Alumni Association Virginia Alpha University of Virginia Chicago Alumni Association San Francisco Alumni Association Virginia Beta ...... Washington and Lee University Kansas City Alumni Association Los Angeles Alumni Association Virginia Gamma...... Hampden Sidney College Denver City Alumni Association Cincinnati Alumni Association West Virginia Alpha Columbia University New York Alumni Association Omaha Alumni Association Maryland Alpha ...... Johns Hopkins University Meadville Alumni Association Boston Alumni Association District of Columbia Alpha ...... Columbia University Washington Alumni Association Seattle Alumni Association Mississippi Alpha ...... University of Mississippi Cleveland Alumni Association Johnston Alumni Association Rhode Island Alpha Brown University Columbus Alumni Association Duluth Alumni Association O hio A lp h a ...... Ohio Wesleyan University Newark Alumni Association Easton Alumni Association O hio B eta...... Wittenberg College Buffalo Alumni Association Lancaster Alumni Association O hio D elta ...... Ohio State University Bucyrus Alumni Association Stinbury Alumni Association Ohio Epsilon ...... Case School of Applied Science Indianapolis Alumni Association Boston Alumni Association Indiana Alpha ...... DePauw University Toledo Alumni Association Syracuse Alumni Association Indiana Beta ...... University of Indiana Anderson Alumni Association Baltimore Alumni Association Indiana Gamma...... Wabash College Iowa City A! Limni Association Indiana Delta ...... Purdue University Illinois Alpha ...... Northwestern University Alumni Club. Illinois Beta ...... University of Chicago Illinois Delta ...... University of Illinois H arvard Michigan Alpha ...... Michigan State University Wisconsin Alpha ...... University of Wisconsin Wisconsin Gamma...... Beloit College Iowa Alpha Iowa State University Minnesota Beta ...... Minnesota State University Kansas Alpha ...... Kansas State University California Beta ...... Ldand Stanford University California Gannna...... University of California Nebraska Alpha University of Nebraska Massachusetts Alpha ...... Amherst College New Hampshire Alpha ...... Dartmouth College Tennessee Delta Vanderbilt University Alpha ...... University of Texas

CO PHI GAMMA DELTA

Pi Chapter Established i860 Color— Royal Purple.

Publication— The Phi Gamma Delta.

Yell— Ilippi, Hippi, Hi! Rip, Zip, Zelta! Fiji, Ha, Ha! Phi Gamma Delta.

Fra ter in Facultatc. R. S. Breed, Ph.D.

Frntres in Urbc. Hon. John J. Henderson George F. Davenport, Esq. Harry W. Reynolds John J. Shryock L. A. Lauderbaugh, Esq. A. G. Richmond, Esq. R. G. Graham, Esq. H. B. Patton, M. D. Emory B. Flower, A. M. Hon. Frank J. Thomas George M. Fletcher H. C. Carroll, D. D. S. Thomas L. Slocum Homer C. Crawford S. M. Schiek Harry W. Foster Wallace A. Wilson

Frntres in CoIIegio. 1908.’ L. W. Sherwin R. M. Ginn A. D. Andrews F. L. Knapp 1909. W. J. Aiken P. B. Schaffner S. G. McNees 1910. L. M. Hickernell IT. IT. Lamb D. F. Croasmun W. W. Burt C. P. Campliell C. H. Marcy H. W. Weeter 1911. J. W. Barkley T. D. Ballinger S. Y. Rossiter R. R. Yost J. S. Robinson G. W. Meade Mu University of Wisconsin Lambda Nu University of Nebraska Chi Mu University of Missouri Pi Deuteron ...... University of Kansas Omega Mu University of Maine Zeta P h i...... William Jewell College Iota M u ...... Massachusetts Institute of Technology D elta X i ...... University of California P i Io ta ...... Worcester Polytechnic University Sigma Tau University of Washington P i R h o ...... Brown University Delta N u ...., ...... Dartmouth College A lpha C h i...... Amherst College Sigm a N u ...... Syracuse University Nu Deuteron Yale University Chi Upsilon ...... Chicago University T au A lp h a ...... , ...... T rin ity College Lambda Iota ...... Purdue University Upsilon... College City of New York Lambda Sigma ...... Leland Standford University Omega Columbia University N u E p silon ...... U n iversity C ity o f N ew Y o rk T h eta P s i...... Colgate University Kappa N u ...... Cornell University Graduate Chapters and Associations. Chi ...... Union College Alpha Lafayette, Ind. B e t a ...... : ...... University of Pennsylvania Beta Indianapolis, Ind. Sigma Deuteron ...... Lafayette College D e lta ...... Chattanooga, Tcnn. B eta C h i...... Lehigh University E p silon ...... Columbus, O. D e lta ...... Bticknell University Z e ta ...... Kansas City, Mo. X i . . -...... Gettysburg College E ta ...... Cleveland, O. Gam m a P h i...... Pennsylvania State College T heta ...... Williamsport, Pa. Beta Mu Johns Hopkins University Iota Spokane, Wash. O m icro n ...... University of Virginia K a p p a ...... Chicago, III. Beta Deuteron ...... Roanoke University L am b da...... Dayton, O. Delta Delta ...... Hampden-Sidney College M u ...... San Francisco, Cal. Zeta Deuteron ...... Washington and Lee University N u ...... New Haven, Conn. Tau Deuteron ...... University of Texas X i ...... New York, N. Y. T h e ta ...... University of Alabama O m icro n ...... Pittsburg, Pa. R ho C h i...... Richmond College Pi Philadelphia, Pa. A lp h a ...... Washington and Jefferson College P i ...... Allegheny College R h o ...... Brooklyn, N. Y. S ig m a ...... Albany, N. Y. S ig m a ...... Wittenberg College Tau Denver, Col. Theta Deuteron ...... Ohio Wesleyan College Upsilon Minneapolis, Minn. Lambda Deuteron ...... Denison University Phi St. Louis, Mo. Omicron Deuteron ...... Ohio State University Chi ...... Toledo, O. A lpha C h i...... Michigan University P s i...... Cincinnati, 0 . Rho Deuteron ...... Wooster University O m ega Bloom ington, III. Z e ta ...... Indiana University Alpha Deuteron ...... Wheeling, W. Va. Xi Deuteron...... Adelhert College Southern Alumni Association Baltimore, Md. L am b d a ...... DePauw University T a u ...... Hanover College Washington Alumni Association ...... Washington, D. C. P s i...... Wabash College Richmond Alumni Club Richmond, Va. Nebraska Alumni Association ...... Lincoln, Neb. Kappa T a u ...... University of Tennessee N u ...... Bethel College Alpha Deuteron Illinois Wesleyan University Gamma Deuteron ...... Knox College Chi I o ta ...... University of Illinois M u S igm a ...... University of Minnesota 64 DELTA TAU DELTA

Alpha Chapter Established 1863 Colors— Purple, White and Gold.

Fraternity Flower— Pansy.

Publications— “The Rainbow,” "The Choctaw.”

J'T-ater in Facilitate. Frank C. Lockwood, Ph.D.

Frntres in Urbe. J. M. Cooper, M.D. George K. McGunnegle John D. McCoy Walter G. Harper E. A. Hempstead George Seiple Davenport Col. Lewis Walker Capt. Wesley B. Best Frank F. Lippitt Ned Arden Flood W. D. Hamaker, M.D Archibald L. Irvin C. P. Woodring, M.D. Walter Dewey J. R. Andrews Alfred J. Bates D. Arthur Gill Harry S. McFarland E. P. Cullum Robert X. Brown W. H. Ray Charles E. Foster Carl Harper

Frntres in Collegio.

1908. Wm. A. Cappeau Clifford S. Fullerton Otto H. Houser Raymond R. Russell 1909. Harley Carpenter William Mould Ralph Cole 1910. Essex Penman R. L. Phillips C. D. Baker C. T. Hamaker 1911. E. J Stetson Claude Adsit W. Cole J. P. McClellan L. Mondereau V. W. Fugate Gamma Theta. . Baker University Gamma Kappa.. University of Missouri A lp h a ...... Allegheny College Nu ...... Lafayette College Beta ...... Ohio University Gamma Lamb-a .. . Purdue University D e lta ...... University of Michigan Beta P s i...... Wabash College Epsilon ...... Albion Zeta ...... Adelbert G am nia...... Washington and Jefferson College Kappa ...... H illsdale Alumni Chapters. M u ...... Ohio Wesleyan University Chicago Alumni Association Atlanta Alumni Association Chi ...... Kenyon New York Alumni Association Columbus Alumni Association Beta Alpha University of Indiana Cincinnati Alumni Association Toledo Alumni Association Beta B eta ...... DcPatnv University San Francisco Alumni Association St. Louis Alumni Association Beta Z e ta ...... University of Indianapolis Philadelphia Alumni Association Richmond Alumni Association Beta P h i...... Ohio State University Indianapolis Alumni Association Detroit Alumni Association Gamma Delta University of West Virginia Boston Alumni Association Jackson Alumni Association P i ...... Stevens Institute of Technology Twin City Alumni Association New Orleans Alumni Association U p silo n ...... Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Cleveland Alumni Association Washington Alumni Association O m ega ...... University of Pennsylvania Pittsburg Alumni Association Los Angeles Alumni Association Beta Lambda Lehigh University Alumni Association of the Far East Beta M u ...... T u ft’s College Beta Nu Massachusetts Institute of Technology Beta Omicron ...... Cornell University Beta C h i...... Brown University Gamma Gamnia Dartmouth College Gamma Epsilon ...... Columbia University Gamma Z e ta ...... Wesleyan University Lam bda ...... Vanderbilt University P i...... University of Mississippi Phi Washington and Lee Beta Epsilon ...... Emory College Beta Theta University of the South Beta Iota University of Virginia Beta Xi Tulane University Gamma Eta George Washington University Ganuna Iota ...... University of Texas O m icron ...... University of Iowa B eta G am m a...... University of Wisconsin Beta E ta ...... University of Minnesota Beta K a p p a ...... ) ...... University of Colorado Beta Pi Northwestern University Beta R h o ...... Leland Stanford University Beta Tan University of Nebraska Beta Upsilon ...... University of Illinois Beta Omega University of California Gamma Alpha University of Chicago Gamma Beta Armour Institute of Technology Photo, by Fowler. PHI DELTA THETA . . Ross R. R. Carroll S. D. . . Vogel E. C. . . Stidger R. I. . . Stidger L. W. Dennis K. II. . . Parsons P. P. Stewart E. F. A. C. Perry Perry C. A. A. D. P. Miller Miller P. D. A. . . Mackey T. W. William Thomas Thomas William . . klo, M. Skelton, B. W. E. W. Peck Peck W. E. ila A Elot AM, ... lrne F Clarence L.H.D. A.M., Elliott, A. William en. et Catr salse 1879 Established Chapter Delta Penna. H DLA THETA DELTA PHI l—Ra Rah! ah! R ! h a R ! ah R ell— Y . ar Ekey Harry D. ulcto—“Th Scroll.” he T “ Publication— oos gn ad Azure. and rgent A Colors— o r ie Carnation. hite W er— low F rte i Fncultate. in Fratres rte i Collegio. in Fratres . . Harris C. L. . . Miner L. J. Ra! ah! R ah! R ! h a R Phi-Kei-A! h Dla a! ta e h T Delta Phi rte i Urbe. in Fratres 1911. 1910 1909. 1908. J. A. Bortz Bortz A. J. W. E. Weid'er Weid'er E. W. A. B. Hines Hines B. A. H. R. Harper Harper R. H. rd Bright Fred S. L. Maxwell Maxwell L. S. W. G. Cole Cole G. W. H . M. Fishel Fishel M. . H rni Irvine Francis E. M. Giesey Giesey M. E. . . Lick J. M. Chas. T. Greer Greer T. Chas. . . McArthur M. F. . os A.M. Ross, Illinois Beta ...... University of Chicago Maine Alpha Colby University Illinois D elta ...... K n ox College New Hampshire Alpha Dartmouth College Illinois Zeta Lombard University Vermont Alpha University of Vermont Illinois Eta University of Illinois Massachusetts Alpha ...... Williams College Wisconsin Alpha ...... University of Wisconsin Massachusetts Beta ...... Amherst College Minnesota Alpha ...... University of Minnesota Rhode Island Alpha ...... - Brown University Iow a A lp h a ...... Iowa Wesleyan University New York Alpha ...... Cornell University Iow a B eta...... University of Iowa N ew Y o rk B eta ...... Union U n iversity Missouri Alpha ...... University of Missouri New York Delta ...... Columbia University Missouri Beta...... Westminster College New York Epsilon ...... Syracuse University Missouri Gamma Washington University Pennsylvania Alpha ...... Lafayette College Kansas Alpha ...... University of Kansas Pennsylvania Beta ...... Pennsylvania College Nebraska Alpha ...... University of Nebraska Pennsylvania Gamma Washington and Jefferson College Mississippi Alpha ...... University of Mississippi Pennsylvania Delta ...... Allegheny College Louisiana Alpha Tulane University Pennsylvania Epsilon ...... Dickinson College T e x a s B eta ...... University of Texas Pennsylvania Zeta ...... University of Pennsylvania Texas Gamma...... Southwestern University Pennsylvania Eta ...... Lehigh University California Alpha ...... University of California Pennsylvania Theta ...... Pennsylvania State California Beta Leland Stanford, Jr., University Virginia Beta University of Virginia Quebec Alpha McGill University Virginia Gamma...... Randolph-Macon College Georgia Delta ...... Georgia School of Technology Virginia Zeta ...... Washington and Lee University Colorado Alpha Colorado University Beta University of North Carolina W ashington A lp h a ...... U n iversity o f W ashington Kentucky Alpha ...... Centre College Kentucky Delta ...... Central University Tennessee Alpha ...... Vanderbilt University Alumni Cluhs. Tennessee Beta ...... University of the South Wat.ervillc, Me. Oxford, Ohio. St. Louis, Mo. Georgia Alpha ...... University of Georgia Burlington, Vt. Detroit, Mich. Hutchinson, Kan. Georgia Beta ...... Emory College Boston, Mass. Franklin, Ind. Omaha, Neb. G eorgia G am m a...... i...M e r c e r U niversity Harvard University Indianapolis, Ind. Denver, Colo. Alabama Alpha University of Alabama Providence, R. I. Crawfordsville, Ind. Columbus, Ga. Alabama Beta ...... Alabama Polytechnic Institute New York, N. Y. Elkhart & Goshen, Ind. Atlanta, Ga. O hio A lp h a ...... Miami University Syracuse, N. Y. Madison, Ind. Macon, Ga. O hio B eta ...... Ohio Wesleyan University Schenectady, N. Y. Lafayette, Ind. Montgomery, Ala. O hio G am m a...... Ohio University Pittsburg, Pa. Bloomington, Ind. Selma, Ala. O hio Z e ta ...... Ohio State University Philadelphia, Pa. Ft. Wayne, Ind. Birmingham, Ala. O hio E ta ...... Case School of Applied Science Warren, Pa. Tipton, Ind. Mobile, Ala. O hio T h e ta ...... University of Cincinnati Baltimore, Md. Columbus, Ind. Meridan, Miss. Michigan Alpha Universityof Michigan W ashington, D. C. C hicago, III. N ew Orleans, La. Indiana Alpha ...... Indiana University Richm ond, V a. G alesburg, III. Austin, T exas. Indiana Beta ...... Wabash College Louisville, K y. Bloom ington, III. Fort Sm ith, A rk. Indiana Gamma...... Butler College Lexington, Ky. Peoria, III. City, Okla. Indiana Delta ...... Franklin College Nashville, Tcnn. LaCrosse, Wis. Salt Lake City, Utah. Indiana Epsilon Hanover College Cincinnati, Ohio. Milwaukee, Wis. San Francisco, Cal. Indiana Zeta ...... DePauw University Akron, Ohio. Mcnasha, Wis. Los Angeles, Cal. Indiana Theta ...... Purdue University Cleveland, Ohio. Minneapolis & St. Paul, Portland, Ore. Illinois Alpha ...... Northwestern University Columbus, Ohio. Minn. Spokane, Wash. Athens, Ohio. Sioux City, Iowa. Seattle, Wash. Toledo, Ohio. Mt. Pleasant, Iowa. Tacoma, Wash. Hamilton, Ohio. Kansas City, Mo. Photo, by Fowler. SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON. . . White M. J. C. C. Grant Grant C. C. W. R. Grant Grant R. W. Kulp L. W. ila E Ferrall E. William hms . Colter A. Thomas . lr Kent Clare O. White E. L. A. L. Boush Boush L. A. di Le M S. M. Lee, Edwin en. mg Catr Etbihd 1887, Established Chapter. Omega Penna. SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON ALPHA SIGMA l h Apa iac Pi lh Alcz ! n licazo A Alpha Phi I licazce A Alpha Phi ll— e Y ulcto—Th Sg Alh Esln Record. Epsilon lpha A a Sigm he T Publication— oos oa Prl ad d Gold. ld O and Purple Royal Colors— amn B Drum B. Raymond ima pha Sg Al a! h lp A a Sigm a! h lp A a Sigm . . on Ph.D. Doan, C. F. al . Deemer C. Paul . . Dunsmore L. A. Peters O. Charles rtc i Facultntc. in Frntrcs rtc i Colleglo. in Frntrcs ima pa io ! silon p E lpha A a Sigm rte I Urbe. In Fratres lwe—Violet. er— Flow 1911. 1909. 1910 1908. J. C. Cochran Cochran C. J. F. G. Simonton Simonton G. F. Alfred McClure McClure Alfred N. R. Moore Moore R. N. B. L. Scott Scott L. B. Ralph C. Siggins Siggins C. Ralph Clinton Densmore Densmore Clinton R. Bruce Gamble Gamble Bruce R. Sackett M. W. . hre J Ln, Ph.D. Ling, J. Charles Missouri Beta ...... Nebraska Lambda Pi...... Maine Alpha ...... University of Maine Arkansas Alpha Upsilon ...... New Hampshire Alpha ...... Dartm outh Kansas Alpha ...... Massachusetts Beta Upsilon Boston University Iowa B eta ...... Massachusetts Iota Tau ...... Massachusetts Institute of Technology Iow a G am m a...... Massachusetts Gamma Harvard University Colorado Chi...... Massachusetts Delta ...... Worcester Polytechnic Institute Colorado Zeta ...... New York Alpha ...... Cornell University Colorado Lambda...... New York Delta University of Syracuse California Alpha ...... New York Mu ...... Columbia University California Beta ...... i ...... University of California New York Sigma Phi...... St. Stephen's College Louisiana Epsilon ...... Pennsylvania Omega ...... Allegheny College Louisiana Tau Upsilon ...... Pennsylvania Sigma Phi...... Dickinson College Mississippi Gamma...... Pennsylvania Alpha Zeta ...... Pennsylvania State College T ex a s R h o ...... Pennsylvania Zeta Bucknell University New York Delta ...... Pennsylvania Delta ...... Gettysburg College Kentucky Kappa...... Pennsylvania Theta ...... University of Pennsylvania Kentucky Iota ...... Bethel College Washington City Rho ...... George Washington University Kentucky Epsilon ...... Kentucky State College Virginia Omicron University of Virginia Tennessee Zeta ...... Virginia Sigma ...... Washington and Lee University Tennessee Lambda...... North Carolina X i ...... University of North Carolina Tennessee Nu ...... North Carolina Theta ...... Davidson College Tennessee Kappa...... University of Tennessee South Carolina Gamma...... Wofford College Tennessee Omega...... Michigan Iota Beta University of Michigan Tennessee Eta ...... • S. W. Baptist University Michigan Alpha Adrian College Indiana Gamma...... O hio S igm a...... Mt. Union College O hio D e lta ...... Ohio Wesleyan University Ohio Epsilon ...... University of Cincinnati O hio T h e ta ...... Ohio State University Alumni Chapters. O hio R h o ...... Case School of Applied Science Indiana Alpha ...... Franklin College Alliance Alumni Association Atlanta Alumni Association Boston Alumni Association Indiana Beta ...... Purdue University Chattanooga Alumni Association Chicago Alumni Association Cincinnati Alumni Association Indiana Gamma...... University of Indiana Cleveland, Ohio, Association Denver, Col., Association Illinois Psi Omega Northwestern University Detroit, Mich., Association Evanston Alumni Association Illinois Beta...... University of Illinois Florence Alumni Association Kansas City Alumni Association Illinois Theta University of Chicago Lexington Alumni Association Lincoln Alumni Association Minnesota Alpha University of Minnesota Little Rock, Ark., Association Los Angeles Alumni Association Wisconsin Alpha ...... University of Wisconsin Louisville, Ky., Association Macon, Ga., Association Georgia Beta University of Georgia Madison Alumni Association Memphis, Tenn., Association Georgia Psi Mercer University Milwaukee Alumni Association New Orleans, La., Association Georgia Epsilon ...... Emory College New York Alumni Association Philadelphia Alumni Association Georgia Phi...... Georgia School of Technology Pittsburg Alumni Association San Francisco, Cal., Association Alabama Iota Southern University Savannah Alumni Association Schenectady Alumni Association Alabama Mu University of Alabama Seattle Alumni Association St. Louis, Mo., Association Alabama Alpha Mu ...... Alabama Polytechnic Institute Washington, D. C., Association Wilmington, N. C., Association Missouri Alpha University of Missouri Birm ingham Ala., Association Photo, by Fowler. THETA DELTA PSI. . odla . . McCall Miller A. P. C. K. Bossard YV. L. Tordella J. ld S Bamr . . Urick W. A. Braymer S. Clyde oet Adro Fak . Flaugh C. Frank Anderson . W Robert el W Kn R Pre Andrews Parker R. Lyon R. Addison King W. Merle Smith G. Frank oa Ognzto Etbihd 1905 Established Organization Local THETA DELTA PSI DELTA THETA h Alh Tea Ci lh Dei ! elia D Alpha Chi Theta, lpha A Chi oos ag ad Maroon. and range O Colors— ea la Tea elta! D Theta elta! D heta T Y e ll— Chi Alpha, Alpha Psi Psi Alpha Alpha, Chi ll— e Y hre I. Clarke IT. Charles rtc i Collegio. in Frntrcs . . McKinney H. J. s Apa Apa Chi, Alpha Alpha, Psi ht Det Psi! s P elta D Theta Chi Alpha Psi Psi Alpha Chi Special. 1911. 1910. 1909. 190S. I.n ■ nr If. t

Photo, by Fowler. KAPPA ALPHA THETA. ese Metcalf Bessie Gertrude Hillman Hillman Gertrude Lottie Hammett Hammett Lottie rc Howard Grace eoe Lytle Lenore Juanita Dan Dan ford Juanita Jane Dermitt Dermitt Jane r. . . rmel (Iota) Trumbell G. A. Mrs. Mrs. Curtis L. Webb Webb L. Curtis Mrs. Miss Rebecca Cooper Cooper Rebecca Miss Miss Margaret Hartman Hartman Margaret Williams Miss G. W. Mrs. i Catr salse 1881 Established Chapter Mil AP APA THETA ALPHA KAPPA ulcto—Kpa lh Theta. Alpha Kappa Publication— oos lc ad Gold. and Black Colors— Trite Phillips ITarriette is es Dutton Bess Miss ooo i Collegio. in Sororos rc Miller Grace uh Kelley Ruth lwe—Pansy. er— Flow 1911. 1910. 1909. 1908. Jessamine DeHaven DeHaven Jessamine Gertrude Straw Straw Gertrude Helen White White Helen Helen Murray Murray Helen ahrn Illingworth Katherine Florence Grauel Grauel Florence Neale Nulu is ma Edson Emma Miss Miss Helen Anderson Anderson Helen Miss Mrs. Walter J. Bates Bates J. Walter Mrs. Miss Gertrude Harper Harper Gertrude Miss Miss Ruth Townley Townley Ruth Miss Io ta ...... Cornell University Lam bda...... University of Vermont Sigma Toronto University Chi Syracuse University Alpha B eta ...... Swarthmore College Alpha Delta ...... Woman’s College of Baltimore Alpha Epsilon Brown University Alpha Zeta Barnard College Alpha DePauw University B eta...... Indiana State U niversity Gam m a ...... Butler College Epsilon Wooster University E ta ...... ‘University of Michigan Alumnae Chapters. Mu Allegheny College p j ...... Albion College Gamnia Alumnae ...... New York, N. Y. Alpha Gamma...... Ohio State University Eta Alumnae...... Burlington, Vt. Alpha E ta ...... Vanderbilt University Nu Alumnae Syracuse, N. Y. D e lta ...... University of Illinois Kappa Alumnae...... Pittsburg, Pa. Kippa University of Kansas Alpha Alumnae Greencastle, Ind. R h o ...... University of Nebraska Beta Alumnae Minneapolis, Minn. Tan Northwestern University Delta Alumnae...... Chicago, 111. U psilon ...... University of Minnesota Epsilon Alumnae...... Columbus, O. P s i...... University ofWisconsin Zeta Alumnae...... Indianapolis, Ind. Alpha Theta ...... University of Texas Lambda Alumnae...... Athens, O . Alpha Iota Washington University Mu A lu m n ae...... Cleveland, O. P h i...... Leland Stanford University Iota Alumnae...... Los Angeles, Cal. O m ega...... University of California X i A lu m n ae...... Kansas City, Mo. KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA en MacKenzie Jean Una Duffy Duffy Una enc Hatch Bernice ay McLaughlin Mary Edith Fugate Fugate Edith es Rist Bess r. . otr English Colter M. Mrs. Miss Evangeline Parsons Parsons Evangeline Miss Miss Grace Henderson Henderson Grace Miss Miss Lorena Palm Palm Lorena Miss Miss Grace McCluer McCluer Grace Miss Mrs. Margaret Prather Prather Margaret Mrs. Miss Jessie Marvin Marvin Jessie Miss Miss Louise Hempstead Hempstead Louise Miss Miss Margurite McClintock McClintock Margurite Miss Miss Gertrude Hastings Hastings Gertrude Miss Miss Marian Fuller Fuller Marian Miss Miss Alice Colter Colter Alice Miss r. . plb Brhrt is en Frey Jean Miss Barnhurst Appleby F. Mrs. am Ri Catr salse 1888 Established Chapter Rlio Gamma AP KPA GAMMA KAPPA KAPPA is . ma rsr Ph.D. Fraser, Emma M. Miss is ageie Fuller. Marguerite Miss oos ih ad r Blue. ark D and Light Colors— en Lauffer Verna ulcto—Th Key. he T Publication— ooe i Collegio. in Sorores ae Emery Hazel n Facii . e t a ilit c a F in r o r o S o r Fleur-de-lis. er— low F ooe i Urbe. in Sorores 1911. 1910. 1909. 1908. ay Smith Mary Matilda Drake Drake Matilda Leone McLane McLane Leone Anna Hayward Hayward Anna ay Nichols Mary are Sowash Carrie Miss Jennie Fowler Fowler Jennie Miss Miss Ethel Fowler Fowler Ethel Miss Miss Gail Richmond Richmond Gail Miss Miss Rebekah Frey Frey Rebekah Miss is lrne Stem Florence Miss Appleby R. Alice Mrs. Miss Ada Palm Palm Ada Miss Wilson A. Wallace Mrs. Miss Finetta Porter Porter Finetta Miss Miss Harriet Kraus Kraus Harriet Miss Miss Helen McClintock McClintock Helen Miss Harper Georgia Mrs. Beta S ig m a ...... Adelphi College Beta Upsilon ...... West Virginia University Beta Omicron ...... Tulane University Gamma R h o ...... Allegheny College Phi ...... Boston University Beta Epsilon ...... Barnard College Psi ...... - Cornell University Beta T a u ...... Syracuse University Beta A lp h a ...... University of Pennsylvania B eta Io ta ...... Swarthmore College Lambda Buchtel College Beta Gamma Wooster University Beta N u ...... Ohio State University Alumnae Chapters. Beta Delta University of Michigan Xi Adrian College Boston Alumnae Association Wooster Alumnae Association Kappa ...... Hillsdale College New York Alumnae Association Lawrence Alumnae Association Delta Indiana University Indianapolis Alumnae Association Pi Alumnae Association Io ta ...... DeParnv University Philadelphia Alumnae Association Syracuse Alumnae Association Mu Butler College Columbus Alumnae Association Adrian Alumnae Association E ta ...... University of Wisconsin Bloomington Alumnae Association Iota Alumnae Association Upsilon Northwestern University Greencastle Alumnae Association Madison Alumnae Association E p silon ...... Illinois Wesleyan University Chicago Alumnae Association Milwaukee Alumnae Association C h i...... ' University of Minnesota Denver Alumnae Association Iowa City Alumnae Association Beta Z e ta ...... Iowa State University Minnesota Alumnae Association St. Louis Alumnae Association Theta Missouri State University Kansas City Alumnae Association Pittsburg Alumnae Association Sigma Nebraska State University Beta Iota Alumnae Association Meadville Alumnae Association Omega Kansas State University Cleveland Alumnae Association Texas Alumnae Association Beta E t a ...... Leland Stanford University Detroit Alumnae Association New Orleans Alumnae Association p j ...... University of California Akron Alumnae Association Los Angeles Alumnae Association Beta Lambda...... University of Illinois Lincoln Alur nae Association Beta Mu Colorado State University B eta X i ...... Texas State University geta Pi Seattle College ALPHA CHI OMEGA

Delta Chapter Established 1891 Colors— Scarlet and Olive Green.

Flower— Red Carnation and Smilax.

Publication— The Lyre.

S o r o i T S in I 'r h e . Mrs. Manley O. Brown Miss Mary C. Lord Miss Florence Harper Miss Florence Bates Mrs. Juvia O. Hull Miss Gertrude Sackett Laffer Miss Mary Thorpe Graham Miss Agnes Pearson Church Miss Edith Roddy Mrs. R. Bruce Gamble Mrs. John Dick Miss Mary Gibson Brock Miss Mary Howe Miss Ruth Swan Miss Arline Lane Miss Bertha Sackett Miss Edith Mae Steffner Mrs. Margaret Barber Brown Miss Ethel Moore Miss Florence Moore Miss Louise Lord Sorores in Ccllegio.

1 SOS. Olga Henry Vera Bash 1909. • Mabel McLean Caroline Parsons Clara Wheeling 1910. Mary Green Edith Birchard Louise Chase Cecilia Shires 1911. Marjorie Fowler Elizabeth Garver Margretta Jones Lucy Loane Special. Anna Tarr Alice McDowell Active Chapters.

Alpha ...... DePauw University Beta ...... Albion College Gamma Northwestern University Delta ...... Allegheny College Epsilon University of Southern California Zeta ...... New England Conservatory T heta ...... University of Michigan Iota ...... University of Illinois K a p p a ...... University of Wisconsin L am b da...... University of Syracuse

Alumnae Chapters. Photo, by Fowler. Chicago Alumnae Association Indianapolis Alumnae Association "Sonic More of the Girls. THETA SIGMA

Local Organization Established 1904 Colors— Garnet and Robin's Egg Blue. Flower—Jacqueminot Rose.

Soror in Facultate Miss Edith Rowley

Sorores in Collegio

1908. Lillian Hepfinger Lucy Wright May Hart Wynona Baker Ethel Andrews Jcsette Beebe

1909. Ethel Mills Lena Bly Jessie Fitch Elizabeth Houghton

1910. Margaret Beebe Helen Dungan Verna Smith Martha Lewis Rose Kauffman

1911. Edna Baker Mollie Bassett Lina Powers Stella Cook PHI BETA KAPPA

Eta Chapter of Pennsylvania Chartered September 2, 1901

OFFICERS. President William IT. Crawford .... President Hon. John J. Henderson...... Vice-President Professor William A. Elliott. . Secretary

MEMBERS INITIATED IN JUNE, 1007.

From the Senior Class. Katherine Moore Adams Henrietta Josephine Carroll Stanley Bright Frank Purl Miller Frank Tenny Stockton

From the Alumni. Adam Clark Hickman, LL.D., ’62 Paul Sturtevant, ’99 George A. Mulfinger, Ph.D. Edward Rynearson

Annual Address, June IS, 1007. Professor Paul Shorey, Ph.D. Subject, “The Unity of the Human Spirit.” CHAUTAUQUA CLUB

1908. W. L. McKinney J. D. Pratt • D. S. Thomas R. B. Callahan

1909. C. W. Elkin R. W . Plannette C. W. Johnson

1910. R. C. Stockdale W. H. Swick Roy Grandey G. C. Andrews

1911. Paul Hillman C. C. Fisher F. H. Callahan

Preps. D. H. Boderhorn F. Frost W. E. Abbott H. G. Lynch J. D. Short C. E. Hinckley C. Baum C. Donaldson J. E. Rosselle FARRELLY CLUB

1908. L. L. Lord C. E. Burchard

1909.

- L. L. Benedict C. F. Stewart *4» 1910. W. L. Morgan Carl Uhlinger E. N. Hubbard A. Wilkinson

1911. M. A. De Vitis E. T. English M. E. Morse

Preps. J. A. Krouze T. W. Ferall C. C. Hasley Alonzo Roderigo Paul Lindberg H. F. Perry W. H. Leith L. A. Morrison Photo, by Fowler. HANKS CLUB. . . Lowing D. H. Leitzel S. H. Jones H. W. Croxall N. J. E. K. Jewell Jewell K. E. Cresswell B. A. Max Croasmun Croasmun Max Campman . W F. Alles Oliver . . Mickle L. F. H. D. Firestone Firestone D. H. H. Geo. S. Criswell Criswell S. Geo. . Gould N. ks

AK CLUB HANKS rprtr School. Preparatory . . Swanson A. A. i. Millward Win. ls o 1911. of Class . . Smock E. C. 1910. of Class ls o 1009. of Class 7 B Cooley B. I7. ls 1908. Class S. S. Townsend Townsend S. S. Stratton C. S. . . Wedderspoon G. R. Maline F. J. D. D . Sleppy Sleppy . D D. Schermerhorn L. W. V. W. Sayres Sayres W. V. A. P. McCallie McCallie P. A. E. C. Parshall Parshall C. E. J. H. Moore Moore H. J. W. M. Small Small M. W. Geo. H. Ruhling Ruhling H. Geo. A. J. Nelson Nelson J. A. BLACK CLUB

Ch*» o' I £09 C. J. Martin

Class of 1911 W. G. Fife

Preparatory School J. B. Peck W. C. Walker J. W. Schmidt Rafael Rodriguey H. F. Ramsey R. D. Lytle R. J. Scholton W. H. Spears J. Scott A. Jay Beckwith W. H. Sperry Robt. Smith

•T-sSb

r

C APT AIN B E N E DICT MANAGER COLTER The Team. Manager...... T. A. Colter Captain...... L.L. Bebedict Right E nd...... H. M. Nelson Right Tackle...... O.M. Brown Right Guard...... Ralph Cole Centre...... Claude Adzit Left Guard...... Sherwin j ...... T. A. Colter Left Tackle...... / ...... G. H. Rhuling Left End...... R.M. Ginn ( ...... J. L. Miner Right Half Back...... j ...... H. W. Firestone Left Half Back...... L.L. Bendict f ...... A. B. Hines Full Back...... \ ...... S. H. French Quarter Back...... j D. F. Croasmun j ...... T. D. Ballinger COACH SHEETZ

Football Schedule. llegheny 6; Mount Union n . Allegheny 6; Grove City 5; Oct. 5. Allegheny o; Geneva o. Allegheny o; Niagara o. Allegheny o; Oberlin 25. Allegheny 11; Grove City 4. Allegheny 17; Hiram 5. Allegheny 11; Geneva 4. Allegheny5; Carnegie Tech. o. Allegheny 5; Westminter BASKET BALL

Captain. . C. D. Baker Manager...... R. E. Miller The Champions. Right Forward...... S. L. Maxwell Left Forward...... C. D. Baker Centre...... E. M. Giesey Right Guard M. W. King Left Guard...... A. C. Perry H . W. Firestone Subs...... j ...... W. E. Weidler

Basket Hall Schedule. Jan. 10— Allegheny 44; Geneva 15. Jan. 17— Allegheny 40; Westminster 8. Jan. 21— Allegheny 44; Grove City 13. Feb. 3— Allegheny 29; (at) Westminster 14. Feb. 4— Allegheny 38; (at) Grove City 17. Feb. 8— Allegheny 33; (at) Oberlin 16. Feb. 13— Allegheny 32; (at) Geneva 19. Feb. 14— Allegheny 27; (at) W. V. U. 18. Feb. 20— Allegheny 52; Colgate 14. Feb. 27— Allegheny 40; O. W. U. 20. Mar. 12— Allegheny 35; Wooster 24. Mar. 21— Allegheny 46; W. R. U. 10. Photo, by Fowler. BASE BALL TEAM M ay ay M M ay ay M M ay ay M ay M M ay ay M 14 13 2 12 9 A llegh en y vs W estm inster— Snow. M ay ay M Snow. inster— estm W vs y en llegh A . A llegh en y vs Carnegie T ech .— Rain. M ay ay M Rain. .— ech T vs Carnegie y en llegh A . . . arris H C. L. . . Grant G. W. Miner L. J. Gahan R. J. . . eidler W E. W. Firestone Harry . . Baker D. C. . . Nelson M. H. . A llegh en y y en llegh A . e Bndc, ar Firestone Harry Benedict, Lee . A llegh en y y en llegh A . ld Braymer Clyde . A llegh en y y en llegh A . . . Cappeau A. W. ld Braymer Clyde APAN BAME MAAE CAPPEAU ANAGER M ER BRAYM PTAIN CA 3 7 3 ; W estm inster 6. June June 6. inster estm W ; ; St. Vincents Vincents St. ; ; U. W . V . . V . W U. ; ...... AE BALL BASE 13 5 . June June . . M ay ay M . SCHEDULE h Team. The . 22 4 27 3 16 . A llegh en y y en llegh A . Sipr Rock. R Slippery . Alehe v. oe City. rove G vs. y en llegh A . Alegheny] Crei Teh 6. ech. T Carnegie ]; y n e h g lle A . . A llegh en y y en llegh A . 3 ; W estm inster inster estm W ; 3 ..et Field ...Left ide Field Middle .Right Field Field .Right Second Base Base Second ..Short Stop Stop ..Short . . First Base Base ..First Catcher .... ; G rove C ity ity C rove G ; .Third Base Base .Third Pitchers Pitchers Manager Captain 5 . 0 . TRACK

CAPTAIN CROASMUN MANAGER MILLER Dale Croasmun...... Captain A. D. P. M iller...... Manager

The Team. W. E. Thomas E. M. Giesey Robert Ginn F. A. Skellie F. E. Stewart Frederick Bright .A . B. Hines Edward Campbell I. R. Stidger G. IT. Ruhling R. R. Yost R. C. Stockdale

The Seasen. Dual Meet— Rochester-Allegheny, Fair Grounds, Mead­ ville, May 18; Rochester 70, Allegheny 40. Inter-collegiate Meet— Conneaut Lake, June 6. Alle­ gheny, Grove City, Geneva, Westminster, Carnegie Tech, W. & J. Fifty yards dash; time, 5 2-5 seconds; F. E. Stewart, ’09. President...... T. A. Colter One hundred yards dash; time 10 seconds; G. R. Clark, Secretary-Treasurer...... M. W. King ex-’o8. Historian...... E. M. Giesey Two hundred and twenty yards dash; time, 22 1-5 sec­ Football— Obi Gold “A.” onds; P. Mitchell, ’05. L. L. Benedict,Capt. C. S. Braymer S. H. French Four hundred and forty yards dash; time 53 1-5 seconds; L. W. Sherwin R. M. Ginn W. L. Stidger F. T. Fish, ’07. R. R. Cole H. M. Nelson C. R. Adsit O. M. Brown L. M. Hickernell T. A. Colter, Mgr. Eight hundred and eighty yards run; time, 2 minutes, 7 1-5 Basket Ball— Navy Blue “A.” seconds; W. E. Thomas, ’08. E. M. Giesey S. L. Maxwell M. W. King One mile run; time 5 minutes, 4 2-5 seconds; H. B. Man­ R. R. Russell C. D. Baker, Capt. A. C. Perry sell, ’04. R. E. Miller, Mgr. Two mile run; time, 11 minutes, 50 seconds; W. E. Base Ball— Maroon “A." Thomas, ’08. H. M. Nelson L. L. Benedict C. D. Baker One hundred and twenty yards high hurdles; Crawford, C. S. Braymer, Capt. J. R. Gahan J. L. Miner ex -’og. W. A. Cappeau, Mgr. Two hundred and twenty low hurdles; Skellie, ’09. Track Team— White “A.” Running broad jump; 20 feet, 3 inches; G. R. Clark, ex-oS. W. E. Thomas G. H. Ruhling W. L. Stidger Running high jump; 5 feet, 4 inches; W. E. Thomas, ’08. Dale Croasmun.Capt.M. J. Lick F. A. Skellie A. B. Hines F. E. Stewart C. H. Clark Pole vault; 9 feet, 3 inches; S. W. Jackson, ’04. E. M. Giesey L. L. Benedict Sixteen pound shot put; 36 feet, 8 1-2 inches; E. M. Giesey, ’08. MEN’S TENNIS ASSOCIATION 16 pound hammer; 104 feet, 8 inches; A. B. Hines, ’11. F. E. Stewart...... President Discus; 116 feet, 3 inches; A. B. Hines, ’ u . J. R. Keister...... Secretary-Treasurer Schedule— Home Tournament, May 24-30111; Inter-Col­ legiate, June 1 st-31'd. Indoor Records.

Standing broad jump; 9 feet, 10 inches; G. R. Clark, WOMEN’S TENNIS ASSOCIATION ex-’o8. President ...... Margaret Beebe Secretary-Treasurer ...... Ida Tillotson Running broad jump; 21 feet, 3 inches; G. R. Clark, Keeper of Courts...... Mollie Bassett ex-’o8. Running high jump; 5 feet, 3 1-2 inches; C. H. Clark, ’09. ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Pole vault; 8 feet, 9 1-2 inches; J. L. Carney, ex-’ io. President...... H. M. Fishel Shot put, 12 pounds; 43 feet, 5 inches; E. M. Giesey, ’08. Secretary-Treasurer J. R. Keister Faculty. Professor Lee Professor Ling US Professor Breed Dr. Sheetz YOUNG LADIES' BASKET BALL TEAM Allegheny Allegheny Allegheny Allegheny lents is rco, is ae, is Beebe Miss Baker, Miss Proctor, Miss Alternates et rd a u G Left ih Gad is Illingworth Miss Guard Right Center Center et Forward Left ih Forward Right Captain Coach eray 11— February ac 7— March YOUNG LADIES’ BASKET BALL LADIES’ BASKET YOUNG ...... CHEDUL . LE U D E H SC E H T 11 Geneva College College Geneva 11 16 Sharon Sharon 16 h Team. The is lc H Spalding H. Alice Miss is ote Hammett Lottie Miss ...... is Hammett Miss is Proctor Miss is Fugate Miss is Green Miss ...... 23 23 Prize...... Diamond Medal Winner...... Mr. F. S. Stockdale President ...... O. H. Houser Waynesburg College Secretary-Treasurer...... W . G. Fixel Subjects.

Waynesburg, “The Modern Moloch” ...... F. S. Stockdale CONTESTS Westminster, “ The Mission of the Forerunner” . .Carl McNary CLASS OF ’00 CONTEST. Allegheny, “A Life Tragedy” W. L. Stidger Geneva, “ A Need of the Age” ...... C. J. Whitlatch First Prize...... $30.00 Bethany, “The Power of Action” Js G. Smith Second Prize...... $12.00 W inner...... > .. W . G. Cole Second Place...... Earl Hubbard

Subjects.

“A Modern Slavery” ...... W. G. Cole “Phillips Brooks, Lover of Men” ...... Earl Hubbard “ The Mission of the Greek” ...... D. S. Thomas “The Coming American” ...... R. B. Callahan “Alexander Hamilton” ...... C. F. Lewis “The Battle of Gettysburg” ...... C. F. Stewart

WAKEFIELD ORATORICAL CONTEST. P r iz e ...... $50.00 Winner W. L. Stidger \V. L. Stidger. Second...... M. C. B. Mason, Jr.

Subjects.

“ The Rise of the Russian Democracy” A. D. Andrews TRI-STATE ORATORICA L ASSOCIATION. “ The Home of Freedom” ...... J. R. Keister “Robert E. Lee” ...... C.F. Stewart Officers. “ A Problem of the Century” ...... O. M. Brown W. G. Fixel, Allegheny...... President Jose Rizan ’ ...... Don S. Thomas Mr. Jones, Muskingum...... Vice-President “Abraham Lincoln” ...... M. C. B. Mason Mr. Gilkey, Westminster Secretary and Treasurer “A Life Tragedy” ...... W. L. Stidger FIXEL SHERWIN STIDGER MILLER GEORGE CALLAHAN

DEBATES ALLEGHENY VS. DENISON UNIVERSITY, MEADVILLE, APRIL 24

ALLEGHENY VS. W. & J., W A S H IN G T O N , A P R IL 24. Question. Question. “ Resolved, That all Corporations engaged in Inter-state “ Resolved, That all corporations engaged in Inter-state Commerce should be compelled to take out a Federal Charter Commerce should be required to take out Federal Charter on on such terms as Congress may by law prescribe, constitution­ such conditions as Congress may by law prescribe, constitu­ ality conceded.” tionality conceded.” Affirmative. Negative. Allegheny— W. & J.— 0 Allegheny— Denison— Negative. Affirmative. R. B. Callahan S. G. Bridges L. W. Sherwin John H. Murdoch R. J. George A. M. Wilson W. L. Stidger George M. Vankirk A. D. P. Miller W. B. Storm W. G. Fixel Dalton T. Clarke Affirmative winner. Negative winner. GLEE CLUB

Prof. H. W. Manville...... Director R. C. Siggins...... Accompanist YV. E. Thomas...... Reader

Miss Helen DeArment M. J. Lick First Tenor. R. R. Russell L. C. Harris M. J. Lick H. R. Harper O. H. Houser

L. W. SHERW IN, Manager R. R. RUSSELL, Leader GLEE CLUB CONTINUED First Bass. W . E. Thomas J. R. Keister A. C. Perry M. A. DeVitis C. O. Peters F. A. Irvine Second Tenor. P. B. Schaffner W. G. Over A. N. Dunsmore R. B. Drum j. A. Bortz

Second Bass. L. M. Hickernell P. P. Parsons A. D. Andrews W. B. Craig

ORCHESTRA

L e a d e r__ R L. Phillips 1st Violin.. ... R. R. Ross 2nd V io lin . H. W. Firestone F lu te ...... R. L. Phillips Clarionet.. A. C. Perry C e llo ...... W . L . M organ P ian o...... R. C. Siggins 1st Cornet. ... P. C. Deemer C. H. CLARKE 2nd C ornet . Roy Mordereau MANDOLIN CLUB Mr. T. J. Ewing...... Director C. H. Clark...... Leader First Mandolin. C. H. Clark W. E. Weidler R. R. Yost S. Y. Rossiter Second Mandolin. S. G. McNees R- J- George C. H. Marcey F. G. Smith Guitar. L. M. Hickernell J. C. Cochran Y. M. C. A. Y. W. C. A.

CABINET CABINET

P r e s id e n t...... P. B. Schaffner President ...... Ethel Mills Vice-President ...... H. M. Flshel S e c r e ta r y ...... S. L. Maxwell Vice-President ...... Laura Bethune T r e a s u r e r ...... J. H. Broadbent Secretary...... Bernice Hatch T reasurer...... Hazel Bullock Chairmen of Committees. Committees. Bible Study ...... W. A. Swick M is s io n s ...... A. J. Nelson Grace Miller Fall Campaign ...... W. C. Cravner Social nnd Music ...... L. M. Hickernell Hazel Bullock Neighborhood W ork ...... C. T. Hamaker Lenore Lytle Grace Thomas Maud Pratt ... Margaret Beebe ...May McKinney m .. .. Laura Bethune ...... Una Duffy THE CAMPUS LITERARY MONTHLY

Editor-in-Chief...... Charles F. Lewis, A T A Editors. Editor-in-Chief...... H. K. Dennis, A 0 W. J. Aiken Margaret H. Beebe Associate Editor...... J. R. Keister, <1* K 'k J. R. Keister Athletic Editor...... W. L. Stidger, 4> A © Business Manager W. E. Ferrall, 2 A E Literary Editor...... C. F. Lewis, A 1 A Society Editor...... Katherine Illingworth. K A © THE FORUM Local Editor...... H. N. Gould Alumni Elitor...... C. P. McDonald, ‘l> K Under the efficient direction of Professor Brown the Forum promotes interest in debate and public address. A Exchange Editor...... R. P. Andrews, 0 A 'k Cartoonist...... George H. Ruhling speaker presides over each succeeding meeting. Prep. Editor...... W. A. Alles Manager...... E. M. Giesey, A 0 STUDENTS’. MANUAL CLASSICAL CLUB Editors. Florence M. Grauel H. K. Dennis Managers. Officers. R. E. Boyd A. J. Nelson Richard B. Callahan...... Chairman Executive Committee Miss Wynona Baker...... Delegate-at-Large QUILL CLUB Mae E. Hart...... Secretary-Treasurer

President Otto H. Houser M outhers. Secretary ...... Florence M, Grauel R. Parker Andrews Francis L. La Bounty Treasurer...... Mary Nichols G. C. Andrews Leroy I. Lord Executive Committee. Wm. J. Aiken May McKinney Dr. F. C. Lockwood O. H. Houser Wynona Baker William L. McKinney Dr. E. A. Smith Mary Nichols Margaret Beebe Arthur D. P. Miller ’ Florence M. Grauel Howard J. Broadbent Joseph D. Piper Members— Honorary. Richard B. Callahan Prof. C. F. Ross Dr. E. A. Smith Miss Spalding Jane Dermitt Perry B. Schaffner Dr. F. C. Lockwool Miss Rowley Wahnita Danford Louis W. Sherwin Prof. L. R. Brown Miss Adams Dr. W. A. Elliott Verna Smith F. L. LaBounty Edith Fugate Robert C. Stockdale Members— Elected. May Hart Alice M. Strickland W. J. Aiken Miss Wheeling Ira D. Hyskell Robbins N. Taylor Miss Margaret Beebe Miss Watson Charles W . Johnson Grace Thomas W. G. Fixel A. D. P. Miller John R. Keister Donald S. Thomas Miss Grauel Miss Vosburg William E. Thomas O. H. Houser Miss Nellie Campbell Miss Lyon Miss Murray Miss Mills A. J. Nelson Miss Nichols R- R- Russell L. W. Sherwin S. L. Maxwell R. R. Lamb Editors and Managers. IT. K. Dennis F. E. Skellie J. R. Keister A. D. Andrews W. L. Stidger C. P. McDonald C. F. Lewis H. N. Gould E. M. Giesey W. E. Ferrall P. C. Deemer SCIENTIFIC CLUB ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS

Members. Dr. Breed Miss Sowash Dr. Akers Miss Greene Dr. Ling Wm. Millward Pittsburg Alumni Association Prof. Lee P. P. Parsons C. O. Peters H. M. Sheetz, M. D. President...... Hon. Solomon Schoyer, Jr. Miss Edson Mr. Clulow Secretary and Treasurer...... Mrs. John A. Wood Miss Beatty S. G. McNees Miss Neale H. M. Gould Approximate membership, 200. Miss Hammett L. M. Hickernell Miss Bullock M. J. Lick Miss Nichols C. Elkins New York Alumni Association Miss Houghton Mr. Swick Miss White B. F. Cousins President Miss Ida M. Tarbell Miss Danford C. W. Burchard Secretary and Treasurer...... Mr. E. E. Proper Miss Edson Approximate membership, 100.

Society of Applied Science. Chicago Alumni Association .Secretary E. G. Simonton...... President...... Judge Nicholas E. Worthington C. S. Fullerton...... Treasurer Secretary and Treasurer Mr. Harry D. Plumber ■Membership Approximate membership, 100. O. P. Akers F. G. Smith, ’08 M. E. Doane, ’07 W. T. Dutton H. M. Nelson, ’08 Chas. J. Ling Jamestown Alumni Association R. W. Anderson, ’08 Karl Miller, ’08 Essex Penman, ’ 10 H. D. Carpenter, ’09 President...... Warren F. Wilcox C. S. Fullerton, ’08 C. E. Smock, ’ 11 W. A. Cappeau, ’08 Lee Benedict, ’09 Vice-President Ray F. Pickard F. A. Irvine, ’08 R. M. Ginn, ’08 Secretary and Treasurer...... Floyd L. Darrow A. Wilkinson, ’10 C. H. Marcey, ’ 10 R. A. Cole, ’09 Harry G. Riblet, ’09 H. H. Stanley, ’08 Weldon Grant, ’ 11 Geo. H. Ruhling, ’ 10 C. R. Adsit. ’ 11 R. L. Phillips, ’ 10 Arthur A. Swanson m T. C. Flaugh, ’08 F. G. Simonton, ’ 11 A. M. Campbell, ’ 10 C. C. Grant, ’ 11 THOBURN CLUB

President...... R. B. Callahan Secretary ...... William Thomas

Members.

Dr. C. M. Cobern W. G. Cole R. P. Andrews Dr. W . H. Crawford Bert Scott Dr. F. C. Lockwood R. W. Plannette Charles T. Greer W. L. Morgan Charles A. Hartung Louis W. Sherwin P. B. Schaffner G. N. Hubbard G. H. Clulow Wm. Millward Richard B. Callahan J. L. Grandey W. L. Stidger H. M. Fishel J. L. Frampton W. G. Willey H. R. Harper BANQUETS TEUTONIC

Springs Hotel, Saegertown, May 7. PAN-HEAVENLY Toast List. YV. L. McKinney, Toastmaster Saegertown Inn, May 23. “ The Lion and the Mouse” ...... D. S. I homas, 08 Toastmaster. Jessie Williams, K A 0 Selection ...... Teutonic Quartet “Forward! Greeks"...... Julia Heibel, K A 0 “The New Era in Allegheny"...... C. W. Elkin, ’09 Song...... Alplii Chi Omega “ Bones of Timothy” ...... Harley N. Gould, 10 “Forbidden Sweets” ...... Verna Lauffer, K K r “The Dollars of Our Daddies” M. A. DeVitis, ’11 “The Powers"...... Lucy Loane, A X O Selection ...... Teutonic Quartet Song...... Kappa Kappa Gamma “ Solitary Blessedness" J. R. Rosselle T E M Y 0 Y ...... Bessie Metcalf, K A 0 “Our Banquet Hall” ...... Carrie Sowash, K K r Song Kappa Alpha Theta “Mutual Admiration Societies" Clara Wheeling, A X f> WASHINGTON’S BIRTHDAY

College Gymnasium, Saturday Evening, February 22.

PAN-HELLENIC Toastmaster, Prof. I7. E. Matteson, ’00. Responses. Hotel Rider, Cambridge Springs, May 6. "Ashes of George” ...... Dr. W. A. Elliott Toast List. “ Lambs” ...... R. R. Russell, ’08 Hugh M. Nelson, d> K 'k, Toastmaster “ Lions” Miss Mary G. Nichols “ How Can I Leave Thee"...... Glee Club Quartet “Fair Allegheny” ...... W. C. Cravner, d> K >k Impersonations...... W. F. Thomas Song 2 A E “ Goblins” ...... Mr. Bert Scott, ’ 10 “Rascals” P. B. Schaffner, A 0 “Allegheny Forever"...... Pres. W . H. Crawford “ Arena” H. D. Carpenter, A T A Allegheny Hymn. Song...... A T A “Thoroughbreds’* YV. E. Thomas, A 0 Song...... r A “ Spirit” C. O. Peters, 2 A E Song d* K *k “Other Greeks” ...... G. S. Criswell, K 2 “Pan! Pan! Pan!” THE MINSTRELS March ...... Chambers Grand Opening Overture, “On the Campus” ...... Witmark Synopsis. College Crv, Funiculi The Chapel, Lauterbach, Soldier’s Fare­ well, Bring Back My Bonnv to Me, Upidee, Juanita, Good Bye, My Lover, Good Bve, Three Crows, Bingo, I’ve l.ost My Doggy, One Wide River to Cross, Good Night Ladies, Merrily We Roll Along, Won’t Go H jme Until Morning, Auld Lang Syne. End Song...... J. L. Miner. “ My Dear” ...... E. R. Ball M. J. Lick. “ Down In the Depths” ...... W. C. Kreusch L. M. Hickernell. “Handle Me With Care” ...... Jean Schwartz L. W. Sherwin. “And They Say He Went to College” ...... S. Furth R. B. Drum. “Freshen Up the Label” ...... Triangle Club E. P. Campbell. “Dixie Dan” ...... Marks R. R. Russell. “Molly Malone” ...... Triangle Club W. G. Over.

OLIO. “Traum Der Sennerin” ...... Labitsky Flute and Violin Duet. R. L. Phillips and R. R. Ross. M onologue...... Drake W. E. Thomas. Plantation Dancing...... J. C. Cochran and R. J. George. Rube A c t ...... Hornstein Charles Hornstein. Quartet...... H. W. Smith Lick, Russell, Thomas, Hickernell. Finale, “ Allegheny Song” ...... Freeman, ’03 Chorus. End Men— Russell, Sherwin, Gahan, Miner. Interlocutor— Stidger. PREPARATORY FACULTY

ROBBINS N. TAYLOR. B K WM. H. CRAWFORD. D.D., LL.D. Instructor in Greek. President. A. B., Allegheny College, 1902; Assistant Principal Marionville High School, 1902-3; Instructor Greek Allegheny Prep. School, '903-4; A. M., Allegheny, 1904; Harvard Graduate S. B. CHURCHILL, A. B. School, 1904-05; A. M. Principal. Harvard, 1905; present po­ sition, 1905. A. B. Brown University, 1896; In­ structor in Latin, Wilmington Confer­ ence Academy, 1896-’98; University Gottington, 1898-'99; Vice-Principal Honesdale High School, 1899-1907; present position, 1907.

KATHERINE M. ADAMS. B K, K A 0

Instructor in German.

R. ELMER HENDERSHOT, M. S. A. B., Allegheny. 1907; present position, 1907. Instructor in Mathematics and Science.

B. S., Wesleyan University, 1894; M.S., ibid, 1896; superintendent of Pub­ lic Schools, Matawan, N. J., 1886-1892; Instructor in Mathematics and Science,

Pittsburg Academy, i896-’98; present F. L. LA BOUNTY. position, 1901. B K . <1> K tF Instructor in English. A . B. REGISTER OF STUDENTS

Fourth Form. Alles, Oliver Wayne...... Braddock Baum, Chester Allen...... Franklin Beckwith, Andrew Jay...... Ashtabula, O. Cousins, Esther...... Hadley Gerdon, Helen ...... Meadville Hamaker, Edward McVicker...... Meadville Hamaker, Reuben...... Freeport, L. I. Hasely, Charles Clark New Castle Hermann, Henry Robert...... Saegertown Jewell, Earle K arr...... Kinsman, O. Leach, William Hermann Belmont, N. Y. Limber, Alfred Edward...... Meadville Ling, Elizabeth Pauline...... Meadville Lowing, Harold Dana...... Linesville Morrison, Leon Albert...... Erie Rea, Albert Alonzo...... Linesville Rosselle, Ivan Everett...... Union City Scholton, Ross Jay...... Bear Lake Stratton, Shubael Childs...... Linesville Swanson, Arthur Andre Lakewood, N. Y.

Third Form. Abbott, Wesley Ernest...... Sugar Grove Bird, Frederick Lucien...... Juniata, Pa. Cresswell, Austin Boyd...... New Bethlehem Coleman, Paul M...... Meadville Dutton, Helen M aria...... Meadville Fitzgerald, Forest Ralph...... Meadville Jordan. Louise T ...... Meadville Leitzel, Henry Samuel Howard...... Braddock Maline, John Francis Youngstown, O. Mechlin, Fred Joseph...... Grove City Parshall, Ernest Chapin...... Erie Ramsey, Harry Floyd...... Renfrew Shortt, James Davis Sugar Grove First Form. Smith, Robert H arris...... Brookwayville Townsend, Stewart Strickler...... Perryopolis Allan, Isaac Elmer...... Meadville Wedderspoon, Richard Gibson...... Pittsburg Burwell, Sidney ...... Meadville Weston, William Howard...... Galhtzin Campman, Forest William West Middlesex Cobern, Ernestine ...... Meadville

Second Form. Cobern, Miriam ...... Meadville Croxall, Jabez ...... Cranesville Bodenhorn, Oscar H enry...... New Bethlehem Davis, Hugh Nesbit...... Meadville Cousins, iWilliam Frederick...... Hadley Donaldson, Clyde Harrison ...... Sharo.i Cook, Ralph Alexander...... Nebraska Dulabon, George M elray...... Pittsburg Crawford, Lucy Pearl...... Meadville Evans, Donald ...... Meadville Croasmun, Max Neale...... Redclyffe Ferrell, Thomas Wilson...... Urichsville, O. Cullum, Rudolph Lutgen...... Meadville Frost, George ...... Erie Critchlow, Robert Franklin ...... Prospect Greer, Thomas Kennedy...... Stoneboro Dermitt, Helen ...... Stoneboro Hewitt, Claude Peter...... Bradford Diener, Jacob M ann...... Saegertown Highfield, Harry ...... Franklin Irvin, Katharine ...... Meadville Garvin, William Freeman...... McKeesport Johnson, Ward Slocum...... Meadville George, Donald Ford ...... Saegertown Jones, William H enry...... Braddock Hinckley, Cordon Earle...... Johnsonburg Krause, Julius Augustus...... Butler Manning, John ...... Meadville Lay, Chung Yuen...... Wuchang, China McCallie, Audley Purcell W. Springfield Lindburg, Paul...... West Homestead Peiffer, Forest Dale...... Mill \ illage Lynch, Harry...... Port Vue Peterman, Leona Beatrice...... Cochranton Lytle, David Ray...... Clentonville Peck, James Blaine Grand Valley Mulfinger, Carl Leonard ...... Meadville Philips, Leland ...... Sheakleyville McDowell, Harold Ritchie...... Franklin Schemerhorn, William L evi...... Conneautville McQuiston, Leo...... Meadville Sleppy, David Ray ...... Allegheny Nichols, Sibley Dixon ...... Meadville Smith, Lottie Vildena...... Guys Mills Nicodemus, James Blair...... Pittsburg Smith, Rachel Eleanor...... Meadville Perry, Homer Frank...... Pittsburg Southworth, Constant ...... M eadville Parsons, Williard D ...... Saegertown Spear, William H enry...... Cochranton Sanford, Frances Meredith ...... Meadville Schmidt, Isaac W alton...... Crafton Sayers, Vance Wilcox...... Franklin Walker, Williard ...... Cochranton Scott, John, Jr...... Fdinboro Wallace, Florella Alberta...... ’...... Karns City Shore, Edwin Pearson...... Crafton Walp, Lyman ...... Venango Sperry, Leo Marcus...... Crossingville Weaver, Joseph Frederick...... Tionesta Silva, Raphael ...... Cuba Weizel, Carl Lovis...... Meadville Smock, Jessie Bernice...... Meadville Thomas, Ralph E van...... Meadville Waugaman, Arthur Rankin...... Smithton, W. Va. McWilliams, Mildred ...... Pittsburg

S u m m a r y . Fourth Form ...... 20 Third Form ...... 17 Second Form ...... 30 First Form ...... 39 Unclassified ...... 1

Total ...... 107

THE PREPTONIAN

Board of Editors.

R. L. Cullum...... Editor-in-Chief Audley P. McCallie...... Literary Editor Elizabeth L in g...... Assistant Literary Editor Ernestine Cobern...... Local Editor John F. Maline...... Athletic Editor R. J. Scholton...... Business Manager W. H. Jones...... Captain H. D. Low ing...... Manager Clyde Braymer...... Coach

J. D. Shortt, r. e. S. S. Townsend, 1. h. A. P. McCallie, r. t. W. E. Abbott, f. b. O. H. Bodenhorn, r. g. F. L. Bird, 1. g. IT. S. Leitzel, c. M. N. Croasmun, 1. e. R. IT. Smith, 1. g. D. R. George, r. e. P. A. Cook, 1. t. D. R. Sleppy, 1. h. D. R. Lytle, 1. e. H. F. Ramsey, r. t. F. W. Campman, r. h. R. G. Wedderspoon, f. b. J. F. Maline, Asst. Mgr. BASKET BALL BASE BALL

S. C. Stratton. . .Captain A. B. Creswell Manager M. N. Croasmun...... Captain R. N. Taylor. . . Coach W. W alker...... Manager

The Tenni. The Team.

F. R. Fitzgerald, f. T. K. Greer, g. W. E. Abbott, c. M. N. Croasman, 3rd. Paul Lindberg, c. W. H. Jones, g. F. W. Campman, p. S. C. Stratton, m. f. F. W . Campman, g. H. D. Lowing, g. J. D. Shortt, 1st. Sperry, 1. f. M. N. Croasmun, f. S. S. Townsend, 2nd. Krouse, r. f. F. Fitzgerald, s. s. P. Lindberg, sub. Coleman, sub.

THE PHILISTINE OF ALLEGHENY pin on his or her breast. Some of you have come down here COLLEGE from Nowhere, and been the chief Nobody in your village. £ 3 Promoted to a slight social distinction you draw a narrowing shell of exclusiveness about you. Remember that Abraham A PERIODICAL OF PROTEST Lincoln, and a thousand more of the world’s God-like men £ 3 wore cowhide boots. Above all keep your family tree out of And Earnest Whole-Souled Comment— Hearl-to-Heart Chads q f the Editor sight. To-morrow see what you can do to make somebody With His Flock happy. £ 3 W e have conversed with our contemporary, the editor of S »OME of you people who slipped into college when the the Kaldron. Lest there be any misunderstanding he does not registrar was net looking, base the greatness of your tell you in his editorial, "this is your book, we have but put alma mater upon the fact that one guy, Morrison the finishing touches on it; you have made it what it is.” On Walker, to gain private ends, went mad and wrote a general principles the staff wrote the book, and they are sort rather interesting promulgation of his philosophy as to the of proud of it. Judging from the extensity and quality of your respective merits of large and small colleges and universities. contribution, O student body, to this y o u r book, the one neces­ Get your ears out of your eyes. Let the “ Master light of all sary and indispensable commodity of life in college,— grey your seeing,” if you have any, flood your befogged sun flower matter, brain, producing faculty,— you seem to have left back intellects with the truth that uttr Allegheny is great because on the farm when you packed your tin playthings and picture she is Allegheny, the college we and hundreds of loyal men books in your phosphate sacks. Doubtless you have been and women love. Y e s L o v e , because her name is cut deep in busy, according to your intelligent interpretation of that ques­ the everlasting granite of things worth while, because she has tionable word. But this is in passing. proven her greatness in a century of achievement and useful­ ness. Men and institutions are great because of their pasts, T h e college knocker is the man, having all but the actual their presents, their future. Then worship on your knees our ear marks and the hoofs, who minds other people’s business Queen Mother— Fair Allegheny. and criticises other people's honest efforts, forgetting that his only excuse for having a position in college circles is the size Great men in all ages have stood alone “ when others have of his father’s salary, or attendant circumstances. He brays tumbled noisily else whither.” A man worth while does not continually, fancying tiiat people are crediting him with the depend on his friends or his faction. The world admires a efficiency of a nightingale. man who succeeds with all these, but the same world wor­ ships a man who “ gets there in spite of hell” in midnight T he editor of the Campus is the man who flunks his loneliness. Cliquishness is but the refined expression of pro­ classes, edits a paper by dint of much labor and sacrifice, and vinciality. People who haven’t much capital usually combine, is reminded by most everybody of the one or two typographi­ for the purpose of making at least a cloudy day showing. cal errors in the sheet. Such a man also is the editor of the Lit. All this is convenient and pleasant and even admirable some­ times, but out of place in a democratic American college. Stand alone and prove yourself, meet your fellows as men and T h e Quill Club is a coterie of the belles lettres aristocracy, women, and don’t judge the man or the woman by the frat organized in cahoots with the Ladies’ Society of the Metho­ dist church. No one is admitted who does not evince striking literary ability— the ability to write about running brooks and out for foot ball— then he went out for basket hall. All the chirping birds, and sit on the front seat in English II. time he was out for frat. He made the latter. There was some question in the committee as to whether the ribbon ought T h e Scientific Club is a straggling bunch of co-eds with not to be awarded to the hunch that took him— it looked to cases 011 the handsome Cliem. prof, and a few pickled labora­ the committee as if the heroic work was on their part. At tory utensils to look on. least Penman has “ sticktuitiveness,” which some people lack— then lie’s good hearted and any girl would envy the teeth be­ The college council is a sub-comatose scattering of the re­ hind that smile. tired beauty and chivalry of the college, organized for the pur­ There is a class the committee have decided to put all pose of giving prominence to the hopelessly insignificant. by themselves. These are Rossiter, Ross, Weidler and Drum. The committee has designated the color of their rib­ T h e man who says “ I dare say” is usually the man who bons as lavender and their medals as tin. Why do they de­ wouldn’t dare say anything of a man bigger than he, were he serve medals? Because they were brave enough to come into mixed up in the fray. The same prof. will usually let Fresh­ a Christian college and he real bad boys. Its awful the way men kid him. they have acted. It is said on good authority that every man of them has smoked 110 less than twenty cubebs a month, and A. poor thing is a girl who laughs when a man is hurt in Rossiter was once caught looking into a cigar store window a foot hall game or hit with a base hall. 011 Chestnut street. Its really scandalous the way they do carry on. None of them hesitate a minute to order claret ice T h e Pan Hellenic wheel is a co-operative scheme to keep at the soda fountain. Wondering what made them so brave the stragglers fat and happy. the committee carefully investigated the history of each man, thinking they surely must have been awful wild before they A sorority reception is a sort of a college reunion that came to college. looks like politics. MR. ROSSITER. PHILISTINE HERO ROLL It was found that Rossiter used to he a real live cadet jS at West Point until he became so reckless that he wouldn’t Being Notes on Some College Notables go to the government Sunday school with the rest of the hoys— and they do say he tried, just actually tried to he had, as lie had read in Nick Carter that cadets always were— FTER much deliberation and intense agonizing heart in fact the committee learned that lie tried so hard to he wild pangs, accompanied by threatening brain storms and that the hoys at the academy got tired of him and lie came to gBUgtt a full conglomeration of esoterical cogitations the Allegheny. Then he is such a funny fellow— almost humor­ Philistine Hero Committee have awarded the fol­ ous in fact. He was so funny once in Chapel that lie pro­ lowing yellow ribbons: voked a hurst of laughter— real hearty laughter, from several Phi Gams. Now this medal is awarded because we know that . MR. PENMAN. no one will deny that Rossiter is a real had, wild, fast boy. The first (hero?) on the list is Penman. His has been a He swore once in a basket hall game. His satellites are Mar- heroic career during his entire course so far. First he went cev,. Campbell and Croasman. But these latter aren’t quite bad enough to deserve medals, but we do notice that they are MR. PLANNETTE. trying to be real wild fellows, who come in late at night and The chief bandit of the lady’s men around college. Has act up a lot. Like their ideal and hero from Erie— Rossiter. recorded a long and successful political career, and attained prominence through his secession act in 1906. One of the variety that Dr. Hamnett once referred to in speaking of the MR. DRUM . miracles Allegheny has wrought. Oil, Drum — ? Well, lie gets 011 the hero roll for having nerve enough, in this enlightened age and in this conservative community, to wear such an awful lay out of "rags.” We MISTER MEAD. use that word advisedly, too. No use to describe him. It is We don’t know where he came from, but from his actions said that both the red headed woodpecker and the blue jay we judge that he must have dropped off a vegetable wagon in envy him his outfit. early springtime, for he’s both fresh and green. We should like to designate his actions and general demeanor as rotten, MR. ROSS. hut we can’t quite reconcile that term with his extreme fresh­ In our investigation we find that Ross lives in a small ness. country town about forty miles from big New York City. His father works in a book shop and once took Robert into the city— it was on Dewey Day, and Ross, Jr., bought a lot of badges and sandwiches. It is said he ate as many as ten ham sandwiches 011 that great occasion and while his father was asking directions from a policeman the young scamp bought a box of cigarettes and a bottle of red pop from an Italian. He took these back to the country town and from that time we date bis reckless living. Since he has struck Allegheny, he has been an ardent imitator and admirer of Ros­ siter. Ross affects, among ether things, a tuxedo (five years out of date) which his father once wore, and a riding suit that used to belong to a circus girl.

MR. W E 1DLER. N ow Weidler, in his attempt to be bad, has followed very closely Ross’s methods. He is only from Oil City and natur­ ally has a feeling of awe for any man who was once in New York. This real live sport spends his summers at Chautauqua and it has been this that effected his downfall, for while there he got into the habit of drinking coco cola and now he simply cannot stop. He takes three glasses every week now and he Cross Section of Dr. Smith's Heart. was one day detected smelling Stewart’s bottle of track goo, made of witch hazel and arnica. (Buttin) “ Shutup— Ernie, old horse, he can’t last much She legend cf dleepg Stdloio longer. Here have some of the weed.” (Mit helps himself under the table.) A Farce— In one Depredation. (Muchfumble stops, and breathe.s stertoriously for several Place— Clockrun Hall, Aldeny College. minutes.) (Crawfish) “Lemuel Bowne! ‘------the boy, he’s asleep again.’ ” President Crawfish.— “ Let us be opened with prayer. Dr. (Bowne sleepily) “ I dreamed one of my cows, that is hens, Muchfumble will lead us.”

laid a golden egg and I ah, ah, I pawned the fruit at the book store and was about to give the money to the college.” (Muchfumble prays. All remain silent for several min­ (Mit, sleeping again) “Oh Lord, our heavenly father.” utes. Crawfish grows uneasy and shuffles his feet noisily, mut­ (Crawfish) “ That’s right Lemuel. You shall come into your reward some day.” tering “ Reprehensible.” ) (Bowne aside, dubiously) “ I don’t believe him.” (Lookgood murmurs with a sententious winged intona­ (Sloburn, sleepily,) “Amen.” tion) “ He leads us by paths that we know not.” (Crawfish) “ What do you mean?” (Professor Mit falls asleep, and mumbles loudly) “ Oh (Sloburn) “ If the members of the church so desire.” Lord, our heavenly father.” (Ding) “Ah, go on.” (Sloburn) “ Not at all, not at all. (Aside) Did you ob­ (Chorus) “ Expel him, fire him.” serve my strategy?” (Lookgood) “Eliminate him.” (Crawfish) “What have we before us to-day, Lemuel.” (President Crawfish) “No! ! ! ! ’ (Bowne) “These bills, sir.” (Silence.) (Crawfish) “ Lay them on the table.” (Yellot) “Why not?” Bowne does so, placing a number of dangerous looking (P. C.) “ He’s a good student.” documents before Crawfish. (Crawfish reddens and snorts (Moss) “ Here are his marks.” apopleptically.) (Reads) 25, 28, 30, 31. “ Put ’em out. I am talking in figures.” (P. C. reddens) “ Yes, but he is a good Christian young (Bowne, tremulously,) Ah, these figures talk too. They man.”

LEW BE!)

~.£r

have been due two years. Now it is unjust, unnecessary and (Bowne, innocently,) “ And his father is a millionaire, un— ” too.” (Crawfish) “Lemuel!” (P. C , hurriedly,) “ Let us proceed. Gentlemen of the (Bowne, diving under the table, and destroying the bills.) censorship committee, (Yellot, Lookgood and Mt. Union look “ Lemme be.” startled) how much of th Kaldron did you sacrifice in my (Yellot, pacifically,) “ W e have not expelled a student all absence?” year.” (Lookgood) “ We protected you, sir.” (President Crawfish) That reminds me. R. P. Andrews (Hiskull, aside,) “I dare say.” was not singing in chapel the other day.” (Yellot) “ O f course, we were appointed to act, and we (Miss Wonderland, hastily,) “O, that’s all right.” had to cut out something.” (P. C.) “ Certainly, certainly. What else have we?” furnish certificate of character for a young man before he will (The Dean) “There are too many of what you Americans he permitted to consort with our young women. Such meas- call ‘cases’ in college. It is really distressing. The young measures are in keeping with modern ideas. If there is ladies have too many privileges.” nothing else— ” (P. C.) “ Doubtless, who are the worst offenders?” (Prof. Lookgood) “ The students in my classes have a (Dean) “ Well, there isn’t much to chose between Mr. clearly defined, finished, developed habit of refusing me at­ Colter and Mr. Miller. Mr. Parrot Miller, you know, I tention— ” think they call him. Then Mr. Perry and Mr. Burt come next.

(P. C.) “Dry up, Lookgood. With Miss Wonderland you They are so distressingly frequent, don’t you know. Then will draw up the credential rule. That’s all.” there’s Sammy--Mr. Maxwell, and Mr. Broadstork— Oh dear, (All leave except Lookgood and Miss Wonderland.) what shall I do— it is dreadful.” (Lookgood, blowing absent-mindedly at electric bulb, “ Out, out, brief candle.” ) (Hiskull) “I dare say.” (Miss Wonderland, caustically) “Do you?” (C u r t a in .) (P. C.) “Now, girls!” (Dr. Bed) “ Biological insanity; treatment, isolation, training— ” (P. C.) “ We have long confronted just this difficulty. W e must have a credential rule. Twelve respectable citizens must 9he SDcggerel Jienneh

A tall young lady named Fitch, Heard a loud snoring at which She took off her hat And found that her rat* Had fallen asleep at the *switch. *Not a vegetable.

When I’m oppressed and campused And my lot is sad and drear, Instead of sympathy and love My Hefty* drops no tear. He quickly hunts him up a girl And falls in love forthwith, Alas I fear my Hefty’s heart Is nothing but a seive. — From Miss Murray’s Notebook. *Ba-a-a.

Craig used to wear a smile abroad, But now around the town, He goes so sort of mournful like,* For Maggie’s turned him down. *“ He sez that ain’t so.”

Miss Mill’s a demure little maid, Ever so solemn and staid, If you want to rouse her Make mention of Houser, And her cheeks ’el Dye just a shade. A certain gay prof. named Guy Was aught hut distressingly shy, A girl of girls, one most rare, And all of his classes Neat of figure and fair of hair, Are filled up with lasses, Yea tresses as fair as the Angels of Old, I wonder, can you tell me why? In distant ages by Gregory told, Phi Psi, Phi Gams, Phi Delts, all would have her You’ve guessed her name, it’s little Miss Lauffer. A lanky long legged Tom Loved a petite little Dust, When Dust whispered low, Greendale, Campus, every place, * Quoth Tom : “By Grab 1 must.” Fuzzy Gahan and Louise Chase; ♦Refer to Colter for Snowdrift Episode. Sunday and weekday, quarry and ravine, Chase’n Gahan they’re always seen.

There was a young lady named Bash, Kind hearted, resourceful and rash. Her name was Bess, his was Tad, In figure quite slight, A lonely lass, a lonely lad, In mind v

♦I’ve been visitin’ several days A popular belle named Rist, Down to Oil City, where sister Mary stays, Had many a man on her list, I've got the hives an’ a new straw hat, She bewitchingly smiled, And I’m coinin’ hack to college, where my beau lives at. And finally beguiled ♦Apologies to the following persons: James Whitcomb Us not to rhyme her “ little fist.” Riley, Samuel LaVerne Maxwell, Miss Mary Gertrude Nichols.

Skellie was a lady’s lad, Who often strolled with Miss McLean, Howard Marcey his love doth stake And swears a case he never had, At the shrine of fair Matilda Drake; But swears and swears in vain. Matilda’s soul is full content, Shrined in his environment. — With apologies to Henry Wadsworth Cupid. Neath the shading parasol Boyd drew his Caroline, Forgot, alas, the game of ball, A Phi Delt fusser named Harris While all around the *son did shine. Was heard to exclaim “ Oh Shaw, ♦That’s him. Me it don’t embarrass,” This Harvest of the Straw.” — With apologies to “ Bringing In the Sheaves.” 171 A winsome girl, with ruffles fluffy, Was the victim of an unscrupulous sharper, This mermaid’s name was Duffy, The lobster’s name was Harper.

We thought her sun long had set Neath the clouds of vain regret, Across the heavens came her lot, In the person of handsome Cot.

Here the doggerel’s tale has wagged. Here our poet’s fancy lagged.* ffhree W eaks >irw ther $hree W eak6

i. i. W. Gang Fixel We hate to include-“ Bill,” but we feel that it must be done. W. Lactated Morgan The very personification of ambition, but it’s too self centered. Likes to put himself on a chair and stand off in wondering Has not realized the essential principle that to find one’s life admiration, repeating all the while with the most approved one must first lose it. W e like “ Bill” and we rejoice at the Thoburn Club intonation, “ W hat hath God wrought. Had thought of his possibilities, but hate to see a man who was cut been accustomed to being chief political nabob in the Epworth out for a pilot on the main directing the maneuvers of a tub League somewhere in a little town a few miles out of Pitts­ in a little water puddle. Be big, “ Bill.” Get a vision. burg and fancies that this fact alone should make him a leader. Sometimes is called “ Bishop” and looks flattered whenever II. the term is applied. R. Empty Miller II. Known as “ Polly” for obvious reasons, once came to Mead­ W. Ambulance Cappeau ville with Benny, his big brother, and noting the need of broad “Bill” is a sort of a gift edition of “Polly” Miller. Unlike minded, able men, stayed in college, with a missionary spirit in “ Polly,” however, he can once in a while open up for a manly, his heart. A peevish, sickly youth, who ought to be in short healthy smile. The last year in one or two unguarded mo­ pants. If highly magnified, might make one feel that he is ments he has revealed the fact that lie has a spark of some­ sarcastic sometimes. Is fond of standing off and sneering at thing that might be developed into a real brain. Has had a his betters, and but for this quality would make an excellent great tendency to self-study, and naturally became a cynic. A Pullman conductor. Not a bad sort if he could get a divorce few ounces of common sense would cure his cynicism. Is long from himself. Trots around with Miss Edith so much that on engineering political deals and writing editorials concern­ she has at times been taken for his governess. Still takes ing honor. paregoric and other manly stimulants. III. III. T. Aereated Colter R. Rennaissance Russel Tom is a brother of the original lemon seed. Comes from A man of great promise. Has the genius of a Bunyan and one of the “ best families” in town, and among the old town the executive ability of a Hans Mulfinger. Famous for his folk it is common talk that the line has played out in Tom. courageous stand against the faculty last year. Promoted to He is the supplement to Miss Hayward. In his most serious popularity in college circles by Blick, but has saving qualities moments he is really amusing. By his mixing in the “ best that make us ashamed to class him with Polly. Could do society” lie lias developed a line of talk like a sewing circle things if he once got started, and has won his spurs under this and a laugh like a bicycle pump. In short, Tom is one of list because of the things he has left undone. Has a voice like those handy fellows providentially scattered about. If you a crow choked with a corncob, and a droll humor that made ever get discouraged cr sore on yourself take a little look at him the big end of the Minstrel show. Fond of hunting and Tom and you will instinctively offer up a little prayer of will spend his last days in a bungalow on the River Nile hum­ thanks. And the sad part of the whole affair is that Tom has ming “ Mona” lines and whistling Menagerie snatches at Blick. the “ goods” in him, but lias done too much “ empty living.” impersonations 'jreat Men 'Court SDiamond gridiron

(W e are treading upon sacred ground when we step upon INCIDENTS FROM THE COURT, FLASHES FROM T1IE DIAMOND, the toes of these dignitaries. Grave and reverend they can AND A FEW HOT ONES FROM THE GRIDIRON. scarcely be called, unless the former term be given its usual churchyard interpretation. Lest there be any misunderstand­ “ Two strikes and the bases full’ ing, these a r e upperclassmen and big men.) “Started off with a rush” ...... Miss Duffy

J. (P)corpoint Morgan, M. Boy (That this may not he “ A little forward” . mistaken for Mother's Bread) C. P. B...... E. M. Giesey “ On the home stretch” ...... M. Stanley Quake, F. E. M ...... Ralph C. Siggins “ A fouled ball” Victor Hug-oh, K. I. S...... “ Wise to the Laffer stroke” .... Thomas Hardly, N. O ...... “ A squeeze play” , Jules Verdant, G. R. E. E. N . . . Put outs” ...... Sir Walter Shot, IT. I. T ...... Joseph Dover Pratt “ A drop” ...... A. Conan Spoiled, R. 0 . T ...... Cortland Whitehead Elkins

Ralph Waldo Tryin, N. I. T ...... Percy Campbell A hit......

Aaron Burnt, IT. O. T ...... Bob Anderson “One formation” . . .

Lincoln Stiffens, S. O. B ...... “Polly” Miller “ A love set” ......

Hamilton W. Maybe, R. U. N. T...... C. F. Lewis “ A triple play” ...... • Miss Henry, Cot, Tax, Etc. John Wantomakit, Y. E. S ...... Rev. McKinney “Love forty” ...... Russell Sag’s, N. G...... “ A single” ...... French Creek Splits, S. V. R Louis Woodside Sherwin “ Doubles” ...... ■ Deemer and Miss Howard $he S)evih W . 'C. £ u .

R u n Angels run, Callahan Club Rooms. r . very night there’s something done, Motto— “ Bend the Knee, not the Elbow. the board of discipline, Purpose— “Down With King Alcohol.” I . ie awake and hear the din. Song “ ’Till We Meet.” Colors— “Dry going, wet coming.”

D a r lin g Alice has a clue, Membership. “ Dick” Callahan (Miss) Em m a fumes and fusses too; “ Mut” Campbell Sam Rossiter Raymond Drum ery hard to find a trace, W. L. McKinney Dick Baker C. H. Clarke “Prep” Moore I nnocence on every face; “Buster” Brown Paul McDonald I . ate at night they have their spreads, Tom Colter Corry Jones

S eize their victims from their beds. 9 he Wai{ dom e People ding their $oi(alti(

(The New Quill Club) to >ilma W ater

Flower— Everlasting. Blank Verse. Loud let the sons of Harvard sing, Sorores in Facultate. The sons of Eli, too, Miss Emma Miss Alice Long may the la la, te de te dum, Ira D. For the good old red and la, Sorores in Collcgio. But in la la te de te dum, Responds from la la, te de te dum, Miss Hart Mr. Callahan La la la la, te te, dum rum, Honorary Sorores. Thy name, dear Alleghe, Prex Pa Morford Where e’er we stray, Timothy La La La La. Dear Alleghe Chapter Roll. W e’ll think of thee, A. Sing-Sing. (pause) ------B. Polk. r. County Jail. Our dear old girl.

w She Scandal 'Club She Auburn league

Black Hand Chapter Patron Goddess— Medusa Corresponding Scandal Seeker...... Rena Burnham, Erie Guardian Gnome Mary Maxwell, Oil City

MINUTES OF THE LAST BUSINESS MEETING 3 :3 0 A. M. Motto— “Ever Reddy.”

The imps, assembled from their resting places, were called Established Long Ago. to council by the Giant Gnome Nichols. “ Ye imps and gnomes, to your chief give ear! There Headlight— Max Hickernell. has come to my ear black scandal. A sylph of the upper world, Bess Rist, has broken the chains by which we bound her and f ...... Phillips this night has joined the student volunteers.” Illuminators ...... Ginn Greene Spirit. “ Pass the onions.” ( ...... Stidger Giant Gnome. Order, ye imps, deadly work must be done \ ...... Miss Campbell Sparks...... this night.” I ...... Miss Bond Hatch Spirit. “ An application came to me from the upper 1 ...... Miss Smith world from one, Mable Beatty, seeking admission into our Reflectors. . Miss Strickland mystic circle. Pier scandals are good and home made.” [ ...... Miss Beatty McLean Spirit. “ We could not place our colors, black and blue, on her head without incurring the wrath of the sylphs protecting her golden halo, therefore, I blackball her.” Giant Gnome. “ Disperse ye imps and silently repeat S h e W a i ( 9 h e i ( X e p t 6 e o r e aloud our motto, ‘Tempus Fugit.’ I am getting scared. I hear noises from the upper world. Don’t stub your toe on ALLEGHLNY x OPPONENTS. ALLEGHENY. OPPONENTS. the dead leaves and wake up the Thoburn Club. Hustle up, m half- >r isr »«'L >»J. ** If kids! You are adjourned.” BoKcr (Nag. I

BASKET BALL. b a s k e t BALL.

M a r y N i c h o l s M is s W a r d Has the meek and apologetic manner of a tramp asking for a hand-out.— “ Dick" Callahan.

There seems to be seme inconsistency in speaking of this query as a female.— “ Eddie” Crowe.

“ He was the mildest mannered man that ever scuttled ship or cut a throat.— O. J I. Houser.

Which being interpreted means, “ Touch me if you dare.” X d h e ’ s — Wahnita D.

This pharisaical fop, this consummate wind jammer, says that at the creation the Lord made men, women, and Harvah- dites. (And some people have failed to understand why the Lord repented.)— I. D. Hyskell.

“The times have been, that when the brains were out, the man would die.”— Meade. a n d His bright ambition is to be a Mormon.— Tom Colter.

How can people believe there is no hell when he stalks abroad ? Cravner. ' W h i f His speech is as sophoric as chloroform.— Elkins.

Found wandering on the banks of the Styx picking up A queer combination of piracy and theology— Abbey. coal for Pluto at 29 cts. per ton.— Frank Glenroy Smith. Rivals in mouth the Hoosac tunnel, and talks in refined phonographic autioneer brogue— Adsit. Mr. R. C. Siggins, Dear Sir:— The ten dollars ($10.00) you sent us for your Thinks a street car ought to get out of his way— Yost. oration is counterfeit. Remit within three days or we must expose von. Hinds and Noble, The Rt. Reverend Willey? and son. New York, N. Y.

Doing his fourth year as freshman— Abe Wilkinson. As graceful as a young baobab tree.— Sherwin.

A roaring combination of wind, lightning and thunder, His tones are as sweet as a fiddle on a stone wall, or a and earnest whole-souled profanity.— Fugate. juvenile tic tac 011 a shutter.— Harper. 182 183 Extremely tragic, tragic as a boot jack, graceful as a Bortz to Miss Rist: “ When are the Kappa Gams going hedgehog, and “ terrible as an army with banners.”— “ Billy” to give a reception, Miss Rist?” Cole. “ Goes up to Prep school once a week and bids everybody As vehement as a mule with a clothespin on his tail, or a there.”— McFeaters. short tailed bull in fly time.— Fixel. “ His life was gentle, and the elements so mixed in him His ears were made for use, not looks.— Stetson. That Nature might stand up and say to all the world, This was a man.— “ Dad” Ling. A cross between a jackass and a geyser.— Essex Penman. Rids himself of affluent English like a phonograph suffer­ As pious as a second hand sneak thief.— Pratt. ing from St. Vitus dance. “ A regular smooth guy.” Prof. Edwin Lee. Older than Methusalah, yet sweeter than sour milk.— “ Harriette” Phillips. Imagines himself a real had hoy.— “ Sawdy” Croasmun.

Thou art lovely in declining years.— “ Flossie” Grauel. Ably supported by Pratt, Miss Bash plays leading lady in “ To Have and To Hold.” Traces his ancestry to a coal bucket and a pair of tongs.— Riblet. Wears the habitual expression of a cat having its tail pulled.— Polly Miller. “A Paradise of Lies.”— The College Catalogue. Should adorn a Grecian pedestal among Dr. Elliott’s His face evidences as much intelligence as a waste basket, Athenian relics.— Miss Beatty. and his gait is that of a baby elephant.— Burt. A lady’s man.— Benedict. Borrowed that melodious bellow from a western swine driver.— Max Hickernell. “ Prof. Hyskell, I have heard that up at Harvard the cur­ rent saying is “ greasy grinds get a’s, student’s b’s and gentle­ Does the housework and takes care of the babies.— Willey. men c’s.” Mr. Hyskell colors modestly.

Sings like a hog with a bass voice, or a thunder clap riding Agrees with Dr. Lockwood.— Miss Bullock. over a stone wall on Sunday morning.— R. P. Andrews. Serious as an undertaker, and the kind that counts.— Should have been a hair dresser or a kitchen scullion.— Weeters. Crowe. De Vitis (at Hillings, Thanksgiving evening) : “I don’t Graceful as a red cow on ice.— Tom Colter. believe in sororities. There are enough of such things here now. You don’t belong to one do you, Miss Duffy?” A wine bibber.— “ Pete” Schaffner. 1S4 The college polygamist.— “ Puss” Aiken. Another case of too much Red Gin(n) ? Takes himself seriously.— W. G. Cole. “ Thomas, Paul and Silas and all my other friends are “ No haberdasher, but a blame good orator.”— Cravner. dead.”— Dr. Cobern.

“ Grace, ’tis a charming sound.”— P. C. Deemer. Wahnita.— “Lenore, have you any extra hairpins.” “ Does lie treat you that way, too?" Keeps Polly looking peevish.— Miss Fugate. “ Earth holds no other like to thee; or if it doth, in vain “ Preacher Mitchell’s a sport. Dad’s no sport.”— Cobern, for me.”— Marcey. Jr.

It is said that Miss Murray “ tempers the wind to the shorn “ Every inch that is not fool, is rogue.”— McFeaters. Lamb.” Prof. Hyskell in Latin J1.— “Has nothing a case?” “ Linked sweetness long drawn out."— Miss Fugate. Mr. Morgan.— "Do you mean me? No, sir.”

Dr. Lockwood.— Any one who has not read Othello has Miss Powers in Math.— “ J have two more feet than are missed one of the rarest literary experiences of his whole necessary.” career— especially the great crisis where Othello stubs Des- demona. Dr. Cobern in Psychology.— “ The members of the church have requested that this quiz be postponed.” “ A perpetual feast of nectared sweets.”— Miss Danford. Mr. Piper explains.— “ I have very heavy work— seventeen “ A hapless nightingale.”— Miss Basil. hours and a girl.”

“ To-morrow to fresh woods and pastures new.”------“ The lunatic, the lover and the poet, are of imagination all compact.”— Stidger. “ A young and rose lipped cherubim.”— Miss Metcalf. “ None but himself can be his parallel.”— Sherwin. Miss Bash.— I must be careful and not take too many hours under Dr. Smith. A Lamblike disposition is her Ruhling prerogative — Mary Green.— Why not? “Sprink” Murray. Miss Bash.— “ I am afraid lie will get a case on me.” We wholly approve of Dr. Lockwood’s interest in local “ Come on fellows, we are stung; let’s go home.”— Polly option, and are inclined to think that lie will be successful in Miller after the Senior-Soph feed. promoting this or any other "d ry" issue.

Mary Green.— “ Oh, girls, I had a phiz in qysics this morn­ “ Her eyes are homes of silent prayer.”— Miss Mills. ing.” “ Soul deep eyes of darkest night.”— Miss Illingworth.

187 “ She walks in triumph thru the night.”— Mabel Beatty. “ The rosy fingered dawn upon her head. — Miss ITep- finger. Bess M. (after a third trial)— “ Well, I don’t care, if I can’t hit the basket, Tad can— so, it’s all in the family.” “ Hark the herald Angels sing.’— Grandey.

Pres. Crawford.— “ We do not consider it safe to turn the The merry college widow.— Miss Henry. young ladies loose on the town.” I Otto Houser soon. “The Mills of God grind slowly, “ It is not good for a man to he alone.”— A. D. P. Miller. hut they grind Otto Houser.”

“ My Grace is sufficient for thee.”— Hickernell. Arthur Devoe Powell Miller: “What’s in a name?”

One of the Fairy Tales.— Anderson. He is— One of the chain gang.— Karl Miller.

The Bum Joker of Five Hundred.— Lee Landsen Benedict. See Boh Burns’ mouse.— Nelson.

A burnt offering.— Skellie. “ Ouey Ouey.”— Miss Beebe.

Peck’s Bad Boy.— Fisliel. “ How sad and wonderful to see A man with his mouth where his ears ought to he." Quoth the Raven, “Nevermore.”— Miss Lenore Lytle. — Hubbard.

“ I’m afraid to go home in the dark.”— Percy Paul Parsons. Tragic as a rooster in a country barnyard.— “ Dickie” Andrews. The grand old man of the museum.— Millward. “ On his peaked head the scanty wool did grow.”— C. F. Dear Father:— Stewart. Send me 50 dollars. I’m canned. Beany. The soul of a poet, hut the general appearance of an in­ Dear Son:— toxicated huckster.— Dr. Cobern. Stay where you are, canned lobster makes me sick. Affectionately, Broadbent, in German IV.— The Duch and the Duchess Dad. lived happily ever afterwards.

“ I think Pears is the best.”— Miss Emery. “Tax” Miner, escorting Miss Maxwell to Hillings after Phi Delt dinner: “ Honest, Mary, I haven’t a case 011 that Gust of wind.— William Gustaf Fixel. other girl. Princess Paganini.— Miss Hammett. He’s married. He has troubles of his own. Far lie it “ Drink to me only with thine eyes.”— Miss McLaughlin. from us.— Joseph Marshall Blake. 188 Major Miner of The Young Peoples’ Christian Endeavor Society. Miss Hepfinger in Y. W. C. A.— “ When we come to col­ lege we lose our home friends and make new ones, but my Dabbles in Dr. Lee’s H a s nectar.— Burchard. closest ties are in the Y. M. C. A .”

Plus grande Cappeau, that is to say, ------. “ Whom to look at, was to love.”— Miss Bond. Should be on ice.— Cooley. We have seen them hanging by their tails in the zoo— A Flaugh and looks the part. Oscar Minus Brown. (Take him away.)

A joy for ever.— Miss Leone McLean. A man of many mines.— Giesey.

Advance potato agent of the Black Club.— Martin. One of the Alpha Chi shades.— “ Red” Ginn. Out for the coin.— Maxwell. See’s himself as no one else does.— Tom Greer. The Faculty meal ticket.— Buster Brown. The Venus de Milo of the Classical Club.— Miss Hart. A carniverous Deerslayer.— Mould. Not to be blamed on the great explorer.— H. H. Stanley. Duffy’s Malt.— Scott. A vivified takeoff on the Classical Club.— Thomas. The King’s Ward. The heart of Mid-Lothian.— Bill Thomas. Looks like an angel soused in a molasses barrel.— R. P. Andrews. “ Thou are not fit to hear thyself convinced.”— Hyskell.

A regular hot cross bun.— Miss Baker. “ Miller, what is the construction of Fugate?” “ Imperative, sir.” Not so Vera Bashful after all. Ambles across the campus like a camel in a sand storm. The other royal guard.— Perry. — Riblet.

What Diogenes slept in.— Reavley. “ Oh, Florence, what will we do with those Preps of ours.” Miss Mendel (complacently). “ Send them to me, I will The Main Sowash of the Kappa Gams. turn them into social adepts.”

Neptune of the Preps.— Wilds. Miss Beebe at breakfast.— “ Your eggs hard or soft, Miss Beebe?” Shy and coy and averse to playing cards.— Miss Andrews. “ Howard, please.” Dr. Breed to Biology II.— “ I saw two robins coming to class this morning.” llnmentioned

Miss Miller.— “ My love is like a red, red rose.” On the earnest solicitation i : the following, we have prom- Miss Henry (quoting from Sartor Resartus in English V. ised not to mention: — “ But yesterday and Boney might have stood against the world, to-day none so poor to do him reverence.” Miss Bess Rist Arcli Perry Mr. Samuel LaVerne Maxw 1 Tom Colter Miss McLean (in Elocution IV).— “I do not offer myself Miss Bernice Hatch R. R. Russell as a match for any man.” Mr. Harry Riblet Miss De Haven Miss Mary Nichols Mister Meade Broadbent, enthusiastically— “ Shail out upon the shea, Miss Ruth Kelley W. G. Fixel O Sip.” Miss Mary McLaughlin Miss Parsons Miss Vera Bash Miss Lauffer Dr. Smith.— “ They were beheaded and passed out of ex­ Polly Miller Bobby Ross istence.” Miss Henry “ Blondy” Plannette Miss Danford “ Bishop” Morgan From Miss Bash’s work on Psychology.— “Words may “There’s Something Rot in the State of Denmark.” be substituted for ideas.”

Prof. Snavely.— “Dire” Miss McLaughlin, will you con­ jugate ?” So Sieroii Dr. Cobern (in Bible II).— “ Have I hit their own papers with everybody.” Meadville, Pa., June 23rd, 1908. Camden Memoriter Cobern, D-esperate D-ick, Alphabet Miller, presenting his card at Hulings Hall— Professor of Hallucinations, Etc., Etc., Etc., smiling— “ The Same.” Allegheny College, Meadville, Pa. “ O f course, Miss Miller, there are some things that are Dear Camden:— of an intensely personal nature.” You have asked me to express my opinion of the length of “ Not around here, sir.” the lessons you assign, but I find that I will have to send my opinion by freight as it is impossible for me to express it, for the rules of the express companies do not permit of the trans­ portation of explosives or highly inflammable articles as ex­ press matter. Yours truly,

MONITOOZ SUFFERED. X C h a t 9 hei{ daid ytfter the fleck 'Game 'Cut 'iced follow d hip

W. Gustaf Fixel. “Unrepresentative.” Miss Rist. “He said that he wouldn’t.” Miss Henry. “What in the world will Boney say.” W. L. McKinney. “ I’m undone.” Colter. “ I don’t care for myself, but oh my Dusty.” Maxwell. “I wonder if all that’s true.” Wilds. “ Not the way we did it last year.” Callahan. “ More Allegheny.” Cousins. “ An unchristian hook of mites.” Bill Cappeau. “ If I'd been editor.” Miss Green. “ I’m glad now, they didn’t use it.” Boh Ginn. “ That’s all right.” Giesey. “ There ought to he a rule against it.” McNees. “Mismanaged.” R. Parker Andrews. “A Sophomore editor.” The Editors In Bostonese. Resolved, that we will and have lived so long that we can look every man subject to con­ demnation square in the eyes and tell knockers and all to drop around for a little social chat with Pluto.

“ The faults o f our brothers we w rite upon the sands, Their virtues upon the tablets of love and memory.” £)ream 'College friendship

The path by which we twain did go, Because her eyes were far too deep. Which led by tracts that pleased us well. And holy for a laugh to leap. Thro’ four sweet years arose and fell, Across the brink where sorrow tried From flower to flower, from snow to snow; To drown within the amber tide; Because the looks, whose ripples kissed. And we with singing cheered the way, The trembling lids through tender mist, And crown'd with all the season lent, Were dazzled with a radiant gleam— From April on to April went, Because of this I call her “ Dream.” And glad at heart from May to May. —T e n n y s o n . Because the roses growing wild, About her features when she smiled Were ever dewed with tears that fell To those who passed me 011 the highway and gave With tenderness ineffable; greeting, and whom I shall never meet again; to the possible Because her lips might spill a kiss friends who came my way and whose eyes lingered as they That, dripping in a world like this. fell 011 mine— may they ever be eager with youth and strong \\ ould tincture death’s myrrh-bitter stream with friendship; may they never miss a welcome nor want a To sweetness— so 1 called her “ Dream.” comrade. — Anna Strunsky.

Because I could not understand The magic touches of a hand, There’s a vision in the guise That seemed, beneath her strange control. O f midsummer, where the Past To smooth the plumage of the soul Like a weary beggar lies And calm it, till, with folded wings, In the shadow Time has cast; It half forgot its flutterings, And as blends the bloom of trees And. nestled in her palm, did seem With the drowsy bum of bees. To trill a song that called her “ Dream.” Fragrant thoughts and summers blend, Tom Van Arden, my old friend. — R ile y . Because I saw her. in a sleep As dark and desolate and deep And fleeting as the taunting night O talk not to me of a name great in story. That flings a vision of delight The days of our youth are the days of our glory, To some lone martyr as he lies And the myrtle and ivy of sweet two and twenty, In slumber ere the day he dies— Are worth all your laurels, though ever so plenty. Because she vanished like a gleam —L ord B yro n . O f glory, do I call her “ Dream.”

—J a m e s W h itco m b R il e y . Jf J ZOere Xing ’Swixt Man and Man I. If I were king— ah, love, if I were king, My Dear Mrs. Kenneth : What tributary nations would I bring This goes to you to-night with a box of arbutus blossoms To stoop before your sceptre and to swear — the flowers you told me you loved best. As your flowers, 1 Allegiance to your lips and eyes and hair. thought of you as J searched the woods for them. You will Beneath your feet what treasures would I fling, not refuse them a welcome. Let them tell you, if tiiey can,— The stars would he your pearls upon a string, if anything can,— of my reverence for you. Their fragrance The world a ruby for your finger ring, is but faintly typical of the sweetness your life lias breathed And you should have the sun and moon to wear upon mine. In the presence of these pure blossoms— in your If I were king. presence I tremble as J allude to the last dance 011 the lawn. Perhaps you will forgive me the exquisite joy of that last Lest these wild dreams and wilder words take wing, half hour in the moonlight, when I tell you that since yester­ Deep in the woods I hear a shepherd sing day, when 1 learned the truth my hair is almost white. Yon A simple ballad to a sylvan air, were so young, you had come all the way from Washington. O f love that ever finds your face more fair, I did not catch your name, and then when you were chosen I could not give you any godlier thing maid of honor 1 felt sure. I am a worldly fellow, Mrs. Ken­ If 1 were kin g. — J. H. M c C a r t h y . neth, but 1 think, as I sit writing here alone to-night, that in that other world where souls are unveiled, you will not blush to have inspired the worship of a worldly fellow’s heart— the Here’s to the woman who has a smile for every joy, a worship my heart will always give you. tear for every sorrow, a consolation for every grief, an excuse Faithfully yours, for every fault, a prayer for every misfortune, an encourage­ John Thurston. ment for every hope.— Sainte Foix. March 8, 1902. Calumet Club, New York. II. “ The world is filled with flowers, My Dear Mr. Thurston: The flowers are filled with dew. Your box of arbutus came last Sunday morning. Dolly, The dew is filled with love, my wife, died the night before. When I read your letter, I For you and you and you.” laid the blossoms in her hands. 1, too, am a worldly man. I —W h it t ie r . had grown used. I fear, to the precious things of life. I can­ not put a finger 011 my regrets— I never knowingly hurt her, but as your letter lies before me now. it comes to me with “Then fill the bowl— away with care, bitter pain that I did not always worship on my knees. Our joy shall always last, In that world where souls are unveiled, Dolly sees clearly Our hopes shall brighten days to come, now, and it may be that she knows you loved her best. God And memory gild the past.” forgive me. She was worth the homage of both our lives. —T h o m as M oore. Her death leaves me quite alone. When you are in Wash­ ington you can find me at the University Club. Yours truly, March 12, 1902. Richard Kenneth, University Club, Washington. —G ood F el l o w sh ip . “ Let us drink a toast to those God-inspired characters whose lives prove that the Happiness of Others is the hasis on which they build for their own Happiness.” i ? e c / S etter £)ai(d —G ood F e l l o w s h ip .

Sept. 18. Hillman, Barkley, Mead, and also some Fresh­ She lUght cf ^ th cr Slays men. are thrust upon us. O ft’ in the stilly night Ere slumber’s chain has bound me, Sept. 22. Sorority hair pulling begins. Fond memory brings the light Sept. 25. Penman starts his annual two weeks’ tryout Of other days around me: The smiles, the tears for foot hall. Of boyhood’s years, Sept. 25. Campus appears with account of Freshman The words of love then spoken; victories in class rushes. The eyes that shone, Now dimmed and gone. Sept. 31st. Colter does not go near the hall (liecause there The cheerful hearts now broken! was no 31st of Sept.). Thus in the stilly night Ere slumber’s chain has hound me October 3rd. Sammy Maxwell gets lost in woods below Sad memory brings the light the Gym. Of other days around me. Oct. 5th. Coach Sheetz appears with his Merry Widow When I remember all ahead of the season. The friends so link’d together I’ve seen around me fall Oct. 6. Foot hall team defeats Erie City 6 to o. Like leaves in wintry weather, I feel like one Oct. 12. Team ties Geneva and Lemmie launches his Who treads alone debating society, the great Forum. Some banquet hall deserted. Whose lights are fled. Oct. 16. Dr. Crawford leaves for Europe. Whose garlands dead. And all but me departed! Oct. 17. Loud noise as of much thunder heard 011 third Thus in the stilly night floor of Bentley. Forum and Fixel in action for first time. Ere slumber’s chain has hound me. Quill club also opens social season. Sad memory brings the light Of other days around me. Oct. 19. Niagara Uni. succeeds in holding Allegheny —T h o m a s M oore. down to the game.

Oct. 21. Weeping and gnashing of teeth.

201 Oct. 25. The Tarbell appears. Feb. 30. Colter again seen without a girl.

Oct. 27. Alpha Kappa Sigma revived in Allegheny. March 1st. Excitement rife. Dr. Smith does not open prayer with “ Oh Lord our Heavenly Father. Nov. 3. Campus tells us graphically of both Grove City and Hiram's defeat. Harley Gould is arrested. Political ring March 17. Deleters chosen by competition: Stidger, elects Sophomore debaters. Miller, Pixel, Callahan, Sherwin and George.

Nov. 10. Harper meets his affinity and Miss Duffv begins March 24. Dr. Elliott: “ He done marvelous.” staring into space. March 27. Maxwell elected captain Basket Ball. Dr. Nov. 30. Louis Sherwin gains eight pounds— the other Breed in Geo. II: “ Discuss the development of the group of Phi Gams say that the Commissary is a grafter. animals assigned to you during the Paleozoiz era.

Dec. 2. Prex, at Chapel: “ I recommend ‘Tom Brown at March 29. Perry makes his sixth visit to hisgrand­ Rugby’ as one of the liest little books I have written.” mother. Dec. 8. Cole waxes eloquent and earns $30 from the April 1. Dr. Mulfinger prays but one minute. Class of ’90 Oratorical Contest. Cole stands up for the kids.

Dec. 15. Kaldron Board begins work. April 2. Dr. Lockwood in English II: “ His character was symmetrical, beautiful, subtle, urbane, luscious and adroit Dee. 20. Polly, Sam, Arch, Elmo, A. D. P. and the other — i. c., smug!” cases look forlorn. April 6. Stidger absent from Eng. V. Class enjoys a Jan. 12. Basket Ball team begins its season by walloping well-earned rest. Mt. Union. Keeps up the habit all the year. April 16. Prof. Suavely confronts 23 Merry Widows Jan. 8. Juniors-Freshmen asleep at the switch. Miss and “ flies de coop.” DeHaven rescues Jesse from the Sophomores. April 23. One of girls at Hillings misses blue window Week of Feb. 12. Oberlin-Westminster and Grove City curtain. get walked all over. All scores doubled. Stidger wins Wake­ field oratorical prize. April 24. Oscar Minus appears witli large blue necktie. Is under cloud of suspicion. Feb. 20. Penman tells" Freshmen how he used to play basket ball. April 2Ci. Debaters defeat both W. & J. and Dennison University. Lemmie and Miss Spalding embrace each other. Feb. 22. George Washington’s friends celebrate. Many sober. June 6. Inter-Collegiate Meet. Fussers in Beulah-land. May ist. Young lady asks if that is noon whistle blow­ ing or Drum's socks coming across the Campus. June 16. Sam, Polly. Arch, Elmo, A. D. P., loin, and the rest say farewell— “ heart rendering. May 2. Base hall season snowed under.

May 5. Dr. Crawford in Chapel; about to leave for Gen­ eral Conference; “ I have no doubt that for the next few weeks I shall he working as hard as any of you.”

May 9. Allegheny vs. Tech. Rain. Cappeau in cahoots with weather man.

May 8. Dr. Cobern announces that the Devil is red headed.

May 12. Spring cases begin to blossom like the roses in June.

May 14. Perry announces that his grandmother is dead and he will never visit her again, for she was a good woman.

May 15. Shorty Cochran caught studying by one of his Sig brothers.

May 20. Campus competition closes and the hoard get busy (with ethics, papers, circuses, bird trips).

May 12-14. Base hall season continues.

May 25. Kaldron censors get busy.

May 30. Fireworks at court house.

' “Old times, eld frienda, eld friendships.” May 18. Rochester kicks up dust on Vallonia track.

Tune 3-4. Base ball season ends.

June 4. Moving Up Day. Senior-Faculty game.

204 I Allegheny College ] «** «*» £ Meadville, Pennsylvania. 2

FOUNDED IN 1815 I

2 $ ***** ¥ Good Traditions Unsurpassed Location ¥ V V

« * * Strong Faculty Reasonable Expenses $ ***T *** $ Cochran Hall Com m o ns and Club House for Men HE ADVERTISERS WHOSE i'i J >*■ SUPPORT HAS ASSURED **« — — ±I « i f THE FINANCIAL SUCCESS COURSES OF STUDY 2 OF THIS VOLUME SHOULD BE V 2 »*** * » I. C ln s s ic a l 4- LIBERALLY PATRONIZED BY n T « - 2 s THE STUDENT BODY. MAKE **« II. Latin-Scientific 2 COLLEGE ADVERTISING A SUC­ u III. Latin and Modern Language ¥ Pi n CESS, AND FUTURE COURT­ 2 e R IV. Scientific ESIES A SURETY, BY MENTION­ .. 2 ira*WR ING THE KALDRON WHEN YOU J V. Civil Engineering 2 CALL ON THESE, YOUR DOWN B 2 2 2 2 TOWN FRIENDS. B ¥ ¥ THE MANAGER Liberal Electives. A Preparatory School connected *1* IS 1 with the College offers unusual advantages to those •£ § 11« + » who lack only one or two studies of being ready for ***•*» .+**«*«*** */*»****♦» »*****»*««**«****■ **»«*»***»*****.****** •£ the Freshman Class. ^ 2 — — - s ¥ + A ForA A Catalogue — and other------information------write- —to ... 2 President Wm. H. Crawford, Meadville Pa. 2 2 2 ¥::+:<+"*::+i:-Ki:-K:-i-*A+X'*::*^-hR-n:-i-::-w:*::+i5*::+x+x+K+x-w:-HK-¥ I. A £ A THE CLEVELAND COLLEGE OF .£ * Where Shall £ * £ PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS £ T;! ju I Buy r%.* » £ t Medical Department of the Ohio Wesleyan University £ My Piano? £ Orgaganized and Incorporated in 1863 £ »** 0 I £ *r* If You have Dicided to Per- «*- NEXT TERM OPENS OCTOBER I, 1908 * • £ chase a Piano — Now or Four years of eight months each in course. £ Later—It is Well to Bear in ± Hind these facts: Requirements high. £ £ Laboratories equipped for individual and class work. £ £ * * 1. You must hnve confidence in the firm thnt you deni I% The clinical material is utilized from six hospitals. «* with. The avernge man or woman is not versed in the relntive This school is gradually eliminating the amphitheatre £ merits of the vnrious mnkes of instruments, and relies, in a large measure, on the representations of the dealer. That 1 1 clinics and substituting therefor the teaching of small £ denier should merit your eonfldenee. The House of Hates dur­ sections, which it is enabled to do by its propor­ £ ing its 28 years of business hns nttained a record for honesty, 1 I £ square dealing, liberality, low price and easy terms that cannot £ tionately large corps of instructors. possibly be duplicated by any house now existing in Meadville. i From eighty to ninety per cent of the graduating class $ £ By means of the celebrated £ £ £ receive hospital appointments. W rite for catalogue. £ BATES PLAIN I £ J. B. McGEE, >1. I)., Sec’y. H. E. SKEEL, 31. 1)., Dean. we have builded a foundation of prestige about the name £ «¥ * “ Bates” that stands for ail that Is laudable in the conduct of 1 ¥ £ a piano business. 0 * 2. Our line of instruments, including the STEINWAY, * * BRIGGS. MASON & HAMLIN, POOLE. VOSE, REGENT, LAF- A ¥ £ FAR.GUE, nnd many others, including the reliable Hnrdmnn £ »0 *% Ballinger & Siggins ¥ and Herrinpton Autotone ( pla.ver-piano), is positively not to 0« *I be dduplicated anywhere west of New York. £ •h PHOENIX PHARMACY £ 3. Every instrument on our floor is marked in plain fig­ £ £ ures. These figures— in every instance— represent just the ¥ nmount that it will take to purchase that instrument. W e do £ £ not begin by asking $500 and then drop to $350. It saves time £ £ ¥ £ ■to mark the rock bottom price where you can see it at the « • The College Drug Store ¥ beginning. In addition, it assures you a square deal. £ £ Come in and look at our line. Let us explain the BATES £ £ PLAN to you. Compare our price, our instruments, our terms »• W e carry a very complete of remedies £ with any piano store in this or any other city. That’s all £ £ w e ask. £ 0£ \ for college ills £ I “ LETS TALK IT OVER.” « * £ PREPT0 NIAN PILLS £ A I £ £ FRESHMEN SALT £ ¥ The Edward T. Bates Company. £ £ SOPHOMORE LUNG PROTECTORS ¥ JUNIOR TEETHING RINGS V 303 Chestnut Street, Meadville, Pa. £ «*I is £ £ SENIOR GRADUATING PRESENTS I xBat£ ¥ FACULTY SMELLING SALTS ii. ¥ : 1 :-:-i J J+X

£ :-m :-i-: : - i - :: 0%ft ' **ft -i-« » V Y O U NEED ft !**r > Are Cheaper ft »»ft ft ft A than meat and a y a practical education and we desire to call your attention to 0 % Whin .ft > \0 ^-i- v\'A ft 51 the following courses: ft better brain food X & ft j; BOOKKEEPING COURSE. ft A Special prices to 1 •U ft ft «** 51 A modern, up-to-dnte course in the Science of Ac- ft Clubs and Fra­ ft it *•* ¥ ri­ ft counts and thorough training in Arithmetic, Penninn- 51 ** It ternities. A ship, Spelling, Correspondence, Commercial Law, Bank- jt; 51 » Ing, etc. THE FULTON ft SHORTHAND COURSE. ft

%• A course which prepnres for nmnnuensis reporting »*» GEO. T. WILSON & SON ft ft positions and which opens up unlimited possibilities to ft JEWELERS AND OPTICIANS, ft ft College Jewelry of nil kinds, Pins, Ij. the possessor. y Buttons, Fobs, Etc. Engrnved ft ft * ft MODEL OFFICE. ft r \ Cards, Invitations, Etc., at lowest •H 4- •5 it ft p rice s...... -J* A department designed to give the student nctual busi- 51 ft it EYE GLASSES ACCURATELY FITTED ft 5 ness experience. y ft V v ESTABLISHED 1874 ft WE SOLICIT ft X ft 223 CHESTNUT ST., MEADVILLE, PA. A The patronnge of students of Allegheny College who A ft 0\%> desire to carry one or more studies of n bookkeeping or »* shorthnnd course. Cull and tnlk it over. I THE WALTER G. HARPER ft ft Catnlog nnd full informntion free. ft 20* 0 \ 1 LUMBER COMPANY

I MEADVILLE 1V 11, M L J V 1J—. J— tL | ft £ Makers of High Grade Interior « • ft COM M ERIC A L CO LLEG E Ar* ft Finish and Mill Work. ft ft ft ft Meadville Pa. ft i A »* v*» %0 i ¥ * ft “The School That Gets Results.” ft M eadville, Pennsylvania. * ft ft A ftw:+x-N:+x-M:4-x * ::4*x+x*x+-s+:!-n:+::+x*:;-5-5wx+-x*-iw:+::-E::+.i;4i VI. A-hS+a4’K+M+aH*i<+SH*8 +M*,S;+K+SH-rt+-J:S*HB+'a+lS+K+55+SK,S»+»*S;4*ag j:-:-; :-i-i :-i-i:-:-r ¥ I « a• ’A 1 %• * 0 % I The Crawford County Trust Co. NEW FIRST NATIONAL BANK .]» 4. a* Meadville, Pa, ** * 1 8¥ * Does a General Banking and Trust Business. I * * Capital - - - $100,000 rt «0 -\ J. Also acts as Administrator, Executor, Trustee, -I- ¥ Surplus and Profits - - $150,000 a 0 ¥ ¥ 0»'» i Transfer Agent, Etc. : : : : : In Its New Building Corner Chestnut and Market St. it & ¥« * offers every Banking Facitily. j; •£ » Over 4,000 Savings Fund Depositors «*¥ « * »» YOUR BUSINESS INVITED 1B > «*• £—————— ———————— ———————______£ £ £ BURCH’S £ ¥ Frank Roueche A.B. Cotton a*3 3** 3 Big Ice Cream Parlor | 0 %

COOL, PLAESENT AND ROOMY. PLUMBING, •«• \ £ £ ¥ HARDWARE, Groceries and Ft £ Telephone No. 76. OPPOSITE ACADEMY OF MUSIC. £ •!* r» STOVES, ¥ ¥»• A Meat Market 3 3 £ «*» 3 FOR FIRST CLASS VAUDEVILLE ¥ 0a 0a u£ % «- »?• 3 t% ■ VISIT a»0 * General Jobbing. 0 > «<• ± 0\ Both Phones £ 4- 3 0 » 247 Chestnut St. .» •L. «* Corner Water and Walnut Streets MEADVILLE, PENNSYLVANIA THE LYCEUM .«*- * s I 3 CHAS. E. SCH ATZ, Mgr. and Prop. S The Steam Table Restaurant E H+ PETTINGELL 1 £ *2* 3 Is the most up-to-date ¥ Restaurant In the city. THE UP-TO-DATE Os::: Open Day and Night. F R A M E S H O P £ THE HALSEY* ¥ ¥ M E A L S AN’D L U N C H E S at £ It all hours...... £ F. H. VAN BR0CKL1N, Proprietor. * 0 1 0 a NEW PICTURES, FRAMES ¥ K 170-172 Chestnut Street, AND. MOULDINCS. I RATES $2.00 TO $2-50 PER DAY. 15 £ •£ Opp. Traction Office. ¥ Rooms with Bath. Good Sample Rooms in connection. F. J. KEBORT, Proprietor. 964 WATER STREET £ . *.i.a *.*.a ».f.a *.f.a 0 S-i-s+sH-x+s+x*i«+s;+i*4-:t-i-s:-KH-::+M+M+-::*i;+::+n+x+-is+i5+s;+-s;+-K¥ 5 +a4^ 8 -KB«»»+a+a«»SH«« 8+SM*SH-a!+a*I«+SM«4*50 % » »* iVt 1 0\ • 0 * VIII. IX. *.» Our Motto— I f we please you tell others; i f we don't, tell us. I SMITH’S ¥ ALL WORK GUARANTEED. | Meadville Steam Laundry

¥ 284 CHESTNUT STREET.

” FRANK A. BAKER. Phone 273. CLYDE M. BAKER. 0* *» I YOURS TO PLEASE

0% Mrs. Frances Sensor

0\¥ First Class Groceries and Fresh Fruit | PROMPT DELIVERY ««» | The North Main St. Grocer.

.t* » —————— ^ —— «• | Merchants National Bank

ft W. S. McGunnegle, President Geo. D Trawin, Vice-President v Jno. H. R eit/.e, Cashier.

¥ Capital, .... $100,000.00 N Surplus,...... $100,000.00 | WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS. THE POPULAR PLACE FOR COLLEGE TRADE. k

X. WINCHESTER • C H • a ; u a; m L u Q - C - . . /5 O o o c f s . ^ f O OO 3 w s nJ s. c ^ w I 3 % x**< U 3 > bococo u ^ C D Q, JD U -C .J - ( - • oa ^ o ooa3 ^ S *■* cd iTn4" ■i2 R * * — ~ >*-* o _ "O'*-* s jS •= c *jJ •= c £ o £ £ o £ - * - ’ ” 3 . o 'C^ a c c c 3 •a - ~ too — •a cz 5 a rt - i > cj > u aJ »-• s, m *rj e ^ U We c o.u*c it E a I.bo a ~ U j I) ° ° .5 o u w 5 u — e -p E E -p e — u u “ uj: : j u “ u m o n 1) O'O ' c' ^ s * '2 ’c t', () w V w (I) U w c ho c H o u S8& * .S2 a; % r* nJQi u-.° J ~ - CJ 5 *oo ^ 3 i b 83 ^ C ' o Gj u - . - i u i t:« o » a * m ho «J ® - *S > °-c ■ ° bo° . n « “ J e e J “ « U «JT .5 0 l_w O.WGJZ c; I — bO — -IS

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■a K Q. •I < S i * i < ? E = O § i if o o ¥ 1 IS UJ ^ in■ • 8 S I < I t 1 rs.=1 in £ z 2 > § UJ z £ (0 O O 2 2 * 1 1 ¥ 2 § 1 2 2 »’»¥ ¥ 2 2 ¥ 2 A 2 »% ¥ 2 2 A --*+s x s+ s-:-s*s+ * ^ OEH ON CO. HORNE JOSEPH ni sve ce of lng s c, t nuh w, y ong g stuff. n lo good by , e th ow n f o enough ot n ace, sp g llin e s f o ncres en sev s in tn n o c ve u s lng sne t l ncres. e elv tw f o spnce g llin se us e iv g ONR AKT N ETR STREETS CENTER AND MARKET CORNER it w a s o n ly n n atu rn l step to in tro d u ce d ep n rtm en ts o f R ead y- y- ead R f o ts en rtm n ep d ce u d tro in to step l rn atu n n ly n o s a w it lik e to h a v e y o u r n am e and ad d ress so w e cnn send you som e e som ld u o you w e send W cnn e w r. a e y so a ress d ice ill ad w tw t and u ich o h w ich e h es w am n ilt u com b r u o ich be y rected h e w e ill v a g w h ns lo w ta n a to c itio re d d e r a sto lik ou ll e an w es re rge re ln esid sto tu b as fu t r is s, a th e to ire n resen u p q y e re a n th d u e g to e th in b so person til ck es n a u ch b e odds, th ran b rs s, t n n yen th e n o irectio d d g few in s th a ll a w n ry e v e t in e. a th hom t uch u m e o th en h w as tty re sprend p and d as n h a , g in th lo form C nde m h s " *...“ . L*...... “" Chas." arae fr edns Receptions, Weddings, for Carriages E v e ry little w h ile w e p u blish so m e p re tty good lite rn tu re , , re tu rn lite good tty re p e m so blish u p e w and ile h w expand to little g in ild ry u e b v E e th r fo ry ecessn n s a w It rse u o c f O t s o vr ong untl y os e add ad he en th and added, re e w oods G treet. S ry D et rk a til n M u g on n lo — very room not one in ns w d It rte in sta d It rte sta It Livery,Boarding, and Penn Ave. and Fifth Street Street Fifth and Ave. Penn 4 17977064 sxKxisxs+sssia+++Hs-HM+a^ -s+x+K+x-i-s+x+s:+ss+s+s-i-a:+s+s+sH-sH-aH-M ihr hn 104 Phone Either itbr, Penn'a Pittsburg, h Hsoyof hs g Store ig B this f o History The n Fw Lines Few a in 184 a e StableSale ETORS OF S R O T IE R P O R P

9 ti ng store. g in m trim a s a — Specialty a XIII......

* 2 2 2 *> ¥ 2 1 ¥ 2 »* 1 ¥ 2 •£ ¥ 2 *.* A 1 1 1 1 I 1 I s 1 I f* %* 0 \ re :: 'ft Mrs- M. SCHULTZ ft The College Girl Harley Gould ft ft I Factory Representative for ft ft High-Grade Pianos, Mus­ 0%%0 ical Merchandise of nil ft The avernge college girl is Kinds, Specialty of Edison %0 ft Phonographs and Records. one of the most fastidious per­ ft PENNANTS ft sons in the world as to the Orders for Tuning. Roth ft Phones...... «ft • style and quality of her dress. ft Every garment, first of nil, ft 252 Chestnut Street, I * Athletic Goods must be stylish; next it must ft s MEADVILLE. PA. ft be eomfortnble. ft ft ft For these two rensons Spi- ft EGBERT’S » * rella is the favorite corset The Brunswick ft among college girls everywhere. I ft No other corset nppronches it Billiard Parlor ft in style, comfort, healthtulness Fine Shoes £ ft or durnbility. A style for I every type of figure. Manufac- ft Quick Repair Shop 4V ft tured and! sold only by The I * ft Spirella Company, Meadville, Pn. ft 958 Water St. 194 Mead Ave. No. 176 Chestnut Street, I I ft ¥ Meadville, Penn’a C. H. H AUSM AN. I ft i GRAHAM & McCLINTOCK ft LOUIS TORDELLA ft %«•* 5 y. ft FOR THE LATEST IN V D Y G IV IN G you a “square deal” and 0«* * y. 224 CHESTNUT ST. .L I ft O your money’s worth we hope to Gas Lights gain the privilege of your friendship if w e ft 1 h ave not already secured it. ft Chandliers I ft * Fine ft ft ft Sporting Goods ft confections, etc. ft F. G. PRENATT, 1 * Guns, Etc. 1 :: TAILOR, CLOTH IER AND FURNISHER ----- No. 220 Chestnut Street, I * Student’s I Meadville, Pa. 1 ¥ 962 Water St. Trade «* ft ■ ft ft Both Phones Solicited is '£ ft ft ft X-rX-EK-X-l-X-i-X-i-lW-X-MM-lK-X-i-X-i-X-i-X-KW-X-i-X-EM-lW-U-KW-::-'-:;-!- H-Xft AM ?: 3 »» IN EACH TOWN and d is tric t to A I f WANTED--A RIDER AGENT ride and exhibit a sample Latest Model " R a n g e r ” bicycle furnished______by us. .. . Our agents everywhere are £ making money fast. IVriteforfull particulars and special offerat once. N O M O N E Y K E O U I K E D until you receive and approve of your bicycle. \Neship to anyone, anywhere in the U. S. without a cent deposit \n advance, prepay freight, and allow T E N D A Y S ’ F R E E T K 1 A L during which time you may nde the bicycle and put it to any test you wish. If you are then not perfectly satisfied or do not wish to keep the bicycle ship it back to us at our expense and you will not be out one cent. r* JIOTADV D n | A CO We furnish the highest grade bicycles it is possible to make r A U I U K T rn ll/ L O at one small profit above actual factory cost. You save $io to $25 middlemen’s profits by buying direct of us and have the manufacturer’s guar­ * antee behind your bicycle. I> 0 N O T H U Y a bicycle or a pair of tires from anyone at any price until you receive our catalogues and learn our unheard of factory prices and remarkable special offers to rider agents. u m i iiim i n r A O T A illO lir n when you receive our beautiful catalogue and Y O U W I 1 L BE A S T O N .d K t U study our superb models at the wonderfully low prices we can make you this year. W e sell the highest grade bicycles for less money „ than any other factory. W e are satisfied with $i.oo profit above factory cost. B I C Y C L E D E A L E R S , you can sell our bicycles under your own name plate at * -Fsgs Notice the thick rubber tread direct, exp real Illustrated and ing the air to escape. W e have hundreds of letters from satis- A” and puncture strips "II” fied customers stating that their tires have only been pumped ¥ p-epaid, upon and "I),” also rim strii> "II” Descriptive up once or twice in a whole season. They weipli no more than receipt of Cata­ Catalog. to prevent rim cutting. This an ordinary tire, the puncture resisting qualities being given tire will outlast any other log Price. £ Replete with by several la vers of thin, specially prepared fabric on the make-SOFT. ELASTIC and 3 Always Insist STEVENS and tread. The regular price of these tires is$S.$o per pair,but for EASY HIDING. on STEVENS general firearm advertising purposes we are m aking a special factorv* price to ~ ~ ~ the rider of only per pair. A ll orders shipped same day etter is received. \V c ship C. O. D. on 3 when ordering. information. «a.8o »*- approval You do not pay a cent until you have examined and found them strictly as represented. We will allow a cash discount of 5 per cent (thereby making the price S4.A5 per pair) if you £ J. STEVENS ARMS & TOOL CO. send FULL CASH W ITH OKDEI& and enclose this advertisement. We will also send one 3 nickel plated brass hand pump. Tires to be returned at OL'K expense if for any reason they are «** P. O. Box 4098. not satisfactory on examination. We are perfectly reliable and money sent to us is as safe as 111 a Chicopee Falls, M ass. bank. If you order a pair of these tires, you will find that they will ride easier, run faster, rt£ wear better, last longer and look finer than any tire you have ever used or seen at any price. We know that you will be so well pleased that when you want a bicycle you will give us your order. ¥ W e want you to send us a trial order at once, lienee this rem arkable tire offer. . x s m K > n - r n " r e n r - O don’t buy any kind at any price until you send for a pair of ¥ ##■ r(/ !/ I i n t o Hedgethorn Puncture-Proof tires on approval and trial at the special introductory price quoted above; or write for our big Tire and Sundry Catalogue which ¥ describes and quotes all makes and kinds of tires at about half the usual prices. _ \mjA IT " hut write us a postal today. DO NOT T H IN K OF BUYING a bicycle £ gj% 3 # *C B i V r / lf # or a pair of tires from anyone until you know the new and wonderful offers nre are making. It only costs a postal to learn everything. Write it NO W . ■I* S.*! J. L. MEAD CYCLE COMPANY, CHICAGO, ILL £ 4) M S mo oir> u-,o mo om mo ]5+Jt+K+JW!<+Jt*K+J5+S+"+J»*K'l,lN ,J5+"*J>+'l+K+!5*it+ !!+ !5+S+S+K J " o y ft U ft 0%ft ft CAUDLE’S PLACE J. M. ROBINSON ft ft B UP-TO-DATE o %0ft o llTl i jl * » 1 c d ft F O O T W E A R £ 4) »ft 0 jllMiS^ c w e. c* c 5 bnift JS %0ft Grocer CHAS. A. MILLER * i > O O m ft * B ' m m tN tuuA 221 CHESTNUT ST. 4) 3 N N N q ni (N ft C l ft 41 For a nice Ice Cream or Both Phones No. 29 JS S o d a g o t o ft ft 2 I ft u41 ft F R I S K ’S u « 0 Home Baked Bread, ft C ft o W h ere you find all young ft people drinking. Cakes, Doughnuts, Etc, ft U j j j j j i c 0« -* 41 •I. JS %0 in O O n O 4 W dl = (j I > ft r>. © O r>. m ~S "5 IS 1! ** 1! ■* J. H. FRISK ft a itsasss ft B l U i U i U l ft a O © © UN xr\ o «/> ft : 1 i (N (N un in MEADVILLE Snowflake, Magnolia, » 0 U * 41 '£ IS and Grand Royal .•J j I Is i3 CIGAR WORKS Patent Flours %0• * H. DREUTLEIN «-S- * l i s i l i j JS H o « 5 1¥0 o £> Manufacturers of and Dealer in 0% i d ft > - ft 4) £ £ *. £ limit ft Cigars, Tobaccos, -C J 1 8 5 8 •ft » S s s s s jttni'S'J'i ft Pipes, etc. Fine assortment of _D f U t i S S Canned Goods 3 SJIJiJIJUJl a om oin ino r Z Ou WE LOOK AFTER oE FACTORY AND WAREROOM 949 1 -2 CPARK cA VENUE X a. ou a. cl cu COLLEGE CLUBS 41 8 8 8 ?? M■w s s s s s Meadville, Pa. AS A SPECIALTY L uo . t. ¥ « » PERRY’S 2 a¥ • For a clean shave or nobby hair ¥ * MENDEL’S cut. Student work solicited 244 Chestnut St. a¥ H ¥ COMMENCEMENT MILLER & DERFUS STATIONERY. Park Ave. Grocers A Class Banquet Menus, Sou­ ¥ A $ venir College Stationery, and in fact every kind of individ­ 2 ual artistic printing you may 2 w a n t ...... FANCY AND STAPLE If you have any thing diffi­ *>» 2 GROCERIES A cult, requiring particular work %• 2 »% •a *¥ • bring it to us . * * »- * Xg¥ *» 0 % + ¥ * THE STAR ¥ «¥ • COMPANY 2 2 ¥ 2 •Is Ground Floor, Journal Block, Corner Park Avenue r » a • * 2 Park Ave. just North of Post- and Randolph Street. CORRECT DRESS office. City Phone. 2 ¥ Drs. D. C . & W. C. Dunn STORE 4* 0* DENTISTS

*,•

A*« 2 Corner Park Avenue and Arch Street, 2 4 *> 0« N\ M »** + $ Meadville, Pennsylvania. 2 ¥ M iI. » •» >V. • » •>Y« 1 • *%• • *» ;v -J* A 2 bafft -I- 0\ F. K. Easterwood ft PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST 0I% v SPECIALTIES-Fine Drugs, Chemicals, Physicians’ 1 ¥ Prescriptions, Family Recipes, Pure Ice Cold Soda ¥ and Mineral Water. 1 Southeast Corner Park Ave. and Chestnut St. Phone 6o either 2 tine. | ¥ COX SONS & VINING 2 I 262 Fourth Ave., New York. Have the record of always giving the 02 - s best values, the finest workmanship, The Students’ ¥ correct styles and absolute satisfaction. * «* We have made. ft + 0% 4 ft «*- ¥ 1C 0% y. 4 BARBER SHOP V*4 ¥ % *0 •* I

0\ 4«** 2 Andrew J. Sporr | 0% Caps and Gowns ft For Harvard Yale, Columbia, Cornell, 250 Chestnut Street 0 t Pcnnaylvania, Brown, Cincinnati. Min* 4 ncsota,Colorado,Tulancand manyothcrs ft ft 2 1 I STUDENTS ¥ ¥ * MENTION THE KALDRON WHEN ¥ »¥ 0 % 4 Y O U B U Y i

ENGRAVINGS % BY $ E l e c t r ic C ity E n g r a v i n g C o. 4 BUFFALO.N XXII. XXIII. * *.!.* { f t " ft ft A TREASURE-HOUSE OF KNOWLEDGE ft ft Webster's International Dictionary RESIDES A\ ACCURATE, l*RAC- 4i- Peter Miller’s Sons I «ft * 0 \ TICAL, AM) SCHOI.AHI.V VO- CAHULARY OF ENGLISH, EN­ | LARGED WITH 25,000 NEW ft«» $ WORDS, THE INTERNATIONAL CONTAINS a History of the Eng­ lish Language, Guide to Pronunci­ Expert Shoe Fitters ation, Dictionary of Fiction, New Gazetteer of the W orld, N ew IMo- v AND i£ grnphicul Dictionary, Vocabulary of Scripture Names, Greek and Latin Names, English Christian Names, Foreign Quotations, Ab­ 5 Promoters of Fashion i breviations, Metric System, Flags, ______State Seals, 2380 Pages, and 5,000 Illustrations. i i 5* Should you not own such a book ? 1 No. 939 Water Street § I Wf.bster’s Collegiate DrcTiONARv’ Largest of our abridgements. Regular ft and thin paper editions. 1116 pages and 1400 illustrations MEADVILLE, RA. $ Write for the “ DICTIONARY HABIT” — FREE 0i *i 5 f. G. & C . MERRIAM C O ., Springfield, Mass. U. S. A. 0R> * ft GET THE BESI' DERFLJS BROS. j B rownell’s 1

Dealers In BOOT Fresh, Dried, Salt, and SHOP * v• «*«,* Smoked Meats I For Exclusive Foot Fixings, v ft •:* :: ft Walk Overs,} c Armstrong’s) _ w„mAn ft I STUDENTS CLUBS SUPPLIED V . . , ]■ For Men 1 For w om en Hanans j Harney s j ft ft Goods Delivered to Any Part of the City 208 Chestnut Street. Both Phones 346 NORTH ST. Meadville Pa. ft 1 ft :: : - i - : t - i - : :4+s+aH-s+M+aH«+s+SH-s+SH-:5-5-K+8+s!+x+S'HJ+a-i-a-i-sH*aH-a+aH*x+ XXIV. £ I £ A. I. E L D R E D I ¥ I Park Ave. Livery Stable £ Regal Shoes 0 » £ «*- | BOUD L. LYON, Proprietor Fine Leather Qooos £ Atheletic Goods, a Specialty ¥I ¥ jt, •» £ LIVERY, FEED, AND ¥ 2 253 CHESTNUT STREET •j j ______1 EXCHANGE STABLES * ¥ I John J. Shryock Co. I ¥ I £ Both Phones 4 3 v Carpets, Furniture, Bedding' ¥ ¥ •¥ > £ ¥ -i- « - -»«- Between Chestnut and Arch Sts. ¥ ¥ ¥ £ INTERIOR DECORATIONS ¥ .«. ■ KEPLER HOTEL CONRAD FISHER T. D. KEPLER, Proprietor.

CORNER MARKET STREET £ j£ Manufacturer nnd Dealer in. Foreign and AND MARKET SQUARE ¥ •£ Domestic Cigars, Tobacco, etc., etc., etc. rib TV EUROPEAN PLAN * v Comer Chestnut and Market Streets. |£ At Popular Prices. £ £ £ ¥ SMOKE THE NORTH WESTERN CIGAR. S Rooms 50, 75, $1 a Iiay .> ¥ EVERYTHING £ FIRST-CLASS ¥ I K R F.IIGF.R. FLORIST j •£• CONVENIENT M GreendaJe Conservatories TO BUSINESS » £ Floral Designs for Parties, Weddings, Funerals, £ HOl'SES, Etc. ¥ y; etc. Orders by mail, telegraph or telephone ■; £ £ I’romptly filled...... A O P E N E D ? Salesroom, Corner Center and Market Sts. M A R C H 1, 1894. 2 V V K BOTH PHONES £ MEADVILLE, PENN’A 1 MEADVILLE, PENN’A 1 ¥ ¥ -3-: :-m t-M :-j-r t-i-r j XXVI. | PENNSYLVANIA COLLEGE OF MUSIC. v Page. Page. B Corner Park Avenue and Center Street., Meadville Pa. Art Gallery. Dentists. ij Voice, HARRY WAITHE MANVILLE, Director. H. M. Pettiugell...... 9 D. C. & W. C. Dunn 21 Banks. Druggists. 4 * Crawford Co. Trust Co.. . 9 IX FRANK L. REED. Piano, Harmony, Counterpoint and History Merchants’ National Bank 1 r Ballinger & Siggins 3 t: EDwTnT E 0hSH(:RAHAM’ ) FLAV,A tOAVIS PORTER. New First National Bank. 8 F. K. Easterwood...... 23 * EDWAM^BRlTTok- v vvv.. , p I l>ian0 K^COSSOs’vio™ " ^ bUW AKD BRITTON MANVILLE, J IONA WOODCOCK, Dry Goods and House Furnish­ 5 EDITH J. RODDY, Painting and Drawing. China Painting Barbers. ings •jj. MARY MANNING NELSON, Expression. Andrew Sporr ...... 23 ft R. A. Perry...... 21 Joseph Horne & C o 13 ¥ Excellent Facilities. Complete Course Leading to Diplomas. Bonks and Stationery. John J. Shryock C o 27 Engravers and Printers. 4 Most Approved Methods. Hinds, Noble & Eldredge.. 18 Electric City Eng. Co.... 22 G. & C. Merriam C o 24 The Star Co ...... 21 Hoots and Shoes. Fire Anns. 2 Charles E. Schatz's | Brownell ...... 25 | R A T H SK E L L E R | \V. Egbert ...... 15 J. Stevens Arms & Tool Co. 16 Peter Miller's Sons 25 Winchester Repeating Arms 215 - Chestnut - Street, «• Clias. A. Miller...... 19 Co...... 12 A. I. Eldred ...... 27 |»** ------Patronize s * Fiish Market. Cignns and Tobacco. ft The coolest place in the city. ^ The Fulton ...... 7 4- Meals at all Hours. : C/J/f •- H. Dreutlein...... 19 NIGHT OR D AY ft Florist. *a • Conrad Fisher ...... 27 * 1 Clothiers and Merchant Tailors. A. K re u g e r...... 27 Advertisers X Mendel ...... 20 :: Grocers. LUNCH COUNTER IN F. G. Prenatt...... J5 S C O N N ECTI ON. 5 N. R. Smith & Son...... 10 A. B. Cotton...... 9 4 Confectioners. Miller & Derfus...... 21 2 _ 1 J. Robinson ...... 19 J. 11. Frisk...... 19 C. H. Burch...... 8 Mrs. Frances Sensor 11 | The Crawford Dairy Company | Louis Tordella...... 14 The Starr Grocery...... 5 y 4 Hardware and Sporting Goods. ft Pasteurized Milk and Cream. ¥ Colleges. Graham & McClintock.... 14 I ______» Allegheny College ...... Frank Roueche...... 9 Cleveland College of Phy­ Hotels. £I Manufacturers of the famous it1 sicians and Surgeons.... 3 Meadville Com’l. College.. 6 The H a lse y ...... 8 MOORE’S ICE CREAM. Pa. College of Music...... 28 Kepler Hotel ...... 26 ft ft ¥*jM«4-s+s«:«:«;«:+it+-:;4-x+-s+x+x+-s-K5+S5+55+s+a:+M*s-i-s;+.sS xxvnt. Page. Page. Jewelers. Pennants Gordon & Reamer...... 5 Harley Gould ...... 15 Geo. T. Wilson & Son.... 7 Photographers.

I.nun

Lumber Dealers. F. J. Kebort...... 9 Rathskeller, S c h a tz 28 Walter G. Harper Lum­ ber Co...... 7 Miscellaneous.

Meat Market. Brunswick Billiard Parlor. 15 Cox, Sons & Vining 23 Derfus Bros...... 24 The Crawford Dairy Co... 28 Music Stores. Mead Cycle C o ...... 17 The Edward T. Bates Co.. 2 The Spirella C o ...... 14 Mrs. Schultz ...... 15 Lyceum, Schatz’s ...... 8