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116 THE 1913 HATCHET

—Kajiwara Portrait EDMUND HENRY WUERPEL

EDMUND HENRY WUERPEL, Director of School of Fine Arts; First Sellew Medal, Manual Training School; Secretary (1891-1893), and honorary member (1894), American Art Association, Paris; Recording Secretary, Paris Advisory Com- mittee, Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893; Member of Jury of Selection, American Section, Universal Exposition, Paris, 1900; member of Jury of Selection and Jury of Awards, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, 1904; Active Member and Vice- President Society of Western Artists; President St. Louis Artists' Guild, 1897-1898; President 2x4 Club, 1895-1897; Silver Medal, Lousiana Purchase Exposition, 1904; Silver Medal, Lewis and Clark Exposition, Portland, 1905.

The cynosure of neighboring eyes.—E. B. PERHAM. EDMUND H. WUERPEL, Director . . . Lecturer and Instructor in Composition and Artistic Anatomy CHAS. P. DAVIS Instructor in Antique, Metal and Jewelry HENRIETTA ORD JONES Instructor in Ceramic Decoration and Pottery CORDELIA T. BAKER Instructor in Bookbinding and Leatherwork DAWSON DAWSON-WATSON .... Instructor in Life Classes and Woodcarving GUSTAV VON SCHLEGELL Instructor in Portraiture and Monotyping JULIA FLORENCE KNOFFLOCK . . . Instructor in Decorative Design and Ap- plied Art GUSTAV F. GOETSCH Instructor in Still Life, Etching and Il- lustration VICTOR S. HOLM Instructor in Modelling RUDOLPH FALKENRATH, JR Instructor in Mechanical and Architectural Drawing, Night School ANNA L. KASPER Instructor in Saturday Drawing Class VICTOR J. HARLES Night Librarian ESTELLE BOWLES Day Librarian FANNY E. PERKINS, A. B Secretary of School

When that I was a little, tiny boy. 'POP" BRYAN. 118 THE 1913 HATCHET

Honors —June, 1911

Black and White

WILFRED GODDARD Silver Medal RUTH FELKER Honorable Mention

Color

VIOLA MILLER Hors Concour GlLDA BRINGHURST . Honorable Mention

Modelling

DAISY TAAKE Silver Medal

Ornamental Modelling

ANGELO CORRUBIA Honorable Mention

Bookbinding

RUTH LECRON Honorable Mention

Ceramics Three declared beyond competition, honors being equally divided

HAZEL BEAL MRS. BULLIVANT ANNA RASPER

Pottery

MADELEINE ROSE FLINT Bronze Medal

"Cherrv- -I cry."—JULIA ROGERS. THE 1913 HATCHET 119 Regular Students MARY ALLEN THOS. FURLONG, JR. ROY S. PRICE CONSTANCE WOOD ANDREWS JEANETTE FUQUA ALFREDA PRINCE MRS. AZALEA G. BADGLEY GEO. M. GASSER JAS. W. RAINEY MILDRED BAILEY JULIUS GEWINNER THORVELD RIESE NANCY BARNHART RUTH G. GILBERT EUGENIA RANDALL EUGENIA BAUMAN GUSTAV F. GOETSCH MRS. A. E. SANFORD CHAS. J. BAYER GLADYS GOSS FRED. H. SCHUERMANN HAZEL BEAL PHILIP A. GRONEMEYER MRS. WM. SCULLIN HELEN BEATTIE VICTOR J. HARLES JULIA SECOR DONALD A. BLAKE FLORENCE HAZELTINE CHARLOTTE E. SECOR GRACE BOHN MILDRED HENKEL KATHERINE SEMMES MlLLARD F. BOTKIN MRS. JOHN C. HIGDON MARY SEMPLE GUILDA BRINGHURST MAGENTA C. HILGER ROYCE SHEPPARD ESTELLE BOWLES MINETTE HILL WILTON SMITH MRS. LEOLA BULLIVANT RAYMOND L. HILL IRENE SPERRING BERNERD BURGER HALLIE HYATT MARTHA H. SPROULE DORIS BURGHEIM AMY ISAACS DOROTHEA STAHL MRS. ALENA C. CAMPBELL CHAS. D. JARRETT MRS. NAOMI STEVENS ALTHEA CANTER ANITA JONES DAISY TAAKE EMMA SUTTON CARTER THERESA JESSEL JONES MRS. GEO. TANSEY MARGERY ELIZABETH CHASE MARY JANE JORDAN EDITH WRIGHT TAYLOR RHODA COXWELL ANNA KASPER MRS. W. E. TAYLOR, JR. MARGARET CREEKMORE MAUDE KLEIN LILLIAN THOELE MRS. CHRISTIAN S. CULVER ARTHUR T. KLUEGEL RAYDELL THOMAS MRS. CHAS. PERCY DAVIS DWIGHT KNAPP BERTHA THUENER GLADYS DAWES HELEN KUHLMANN FREDA UDE HAZEL DEANE RUTH LECRON MR. G. VON SCHLEGELL MRS. MAY DEGHEEST ROBERT LEMEN EDNA VOSSLER CARSON DONNELL GRACE M. LETSON HARRY WADE MRS. W. B. DOUGLASS LUCILLE LEVY DOROTHY WALLACE EDWARD R. DUNN VINCENT LYNN GEORGIA WALKER LILLIAN DURHAM HAROLD L. MCCORMACH HATTIE A. WANGELIN GRACE F. ELMS ELIZABETH MCLELLAN OWEN T. WARD ADELIA ESCHRICH GRACE MILLER CHARLOTTE WARFIELD SAMUEL WM. ETTINGER MARGARET MOSBY HILDEGARDE WEINHAGEN JOSEPH EDW. FEDOR BERNERDINA MOTT FLORENCE E. WILKINSON RUTH FELKER MOLLIE MUELLER CARRIE KING WILLIAMS AUSTIN E. FITCH LOUISE MURDOCH CARL WILLI MADELEINE ROSE FLINT H. F. MURPHY MRS. GRACE WILSON LOUISE FOLEY MILLY OERTEL CLEO ADELE WOLF MARY L. FOSS NANCY O'FALLON WM. WOLFE, JR. KATHERINE FREDERICK MAJORIE O'ROURKE VERNESS WOODWARD EMIL FREI LUCILLE PILCHER MRS. J. G. WRIGHT HARRY FRITZ CHESTER L. POWELL ELINOR ZIMMERMAN

For thy sake, tobacco, I would do anything but die."—JIM RAINEY. 120 THE 1913 HATCHET Art School N peopling the earth the Creator made two classes of human beings, distinct and apart,—art students (including artists), and others. To be a real art student one must have certain qualifications, the chief one of which is temperament; without this it is impossible to be a genuine art student. Just what temperament is has not yet been discovered, but it makes no difference; you must possess it, otherwise you are not the real thing. Then, too, you must love to work,—that is, in reason,—for too much work is abhor- rent. Then, too, the Art School is such a wonderful place for discipline. We all know that one of the pleasant things in life is the power of self-deception. It is a great gift. The dullest mind can grasp it, the wisest one find solace in its blandishments. It is a substitute for courage, conscience and self- denial. But this most dear and delightful thing is one of the joys you must relinquish as an Art student. It has no chance to survive here. It makes no difference what class it may be, for in this particular they are all alike. After two or three criticisms from the wise and beneficent instructor you have not a single delusion left regarding yourself. You may still be able to deceive others,—for instance, a doting family and admiring friends,— in- to thinking you a genius, but never again can you deceive yourself, for you find you are in no way remarkable, nor are your efforts looked upon with awe and wonder. This is due to just one thing, which is our "standard." From the time we enter as "nouveaux" till we attain the coveted position of "upper students" this standard is kept constantly before us, and when in the course of time one is so fortunate as to accomplish something worthy of notice, and one's name is posted up in the hall, it is a matter for congratulation. It may be a life study or a copper tray, a composition or a clay pot, a sketch in black and white, a design, or a carved frame,—no matter what it is, if you have reached somewhere near the "standard" you are a much envied person. But you, on your own part having learned your lesson are not deceived, and instead of being puffed up with pride as you once might have been, you accept your honors with a very becoming modesty; and while you rejoice at having done something half way decent, and gained a notice in the monthly faculty meeting, you experience quite a humble and healthy desire to do very much better. Yes, it is a pretty severe training, but it makes for character as well as artistic success. —M. R. F.

Even a fool, when he holdeth his peace, is counted wise.—SALE.

^■1 124 THE 1913 HATCHET

—Strauss Portrait WILLIAM TRELEASE, Sc. D„ LL. D.

WILLIAM TRELEASE Sc. D., LL.D., Director Henry Shaw School of Botany; B.S., Cornell, 1880; Sc.D., Harvard, 1884; LL.D., U. of Wis., 1902, U. of Mo., 1903, Washington U., 1907; In charge Summer Sch. Botany, Harvard, 1883-4; lecturer botany, John Hopkins, 1884; instr. botany, 1881-3; prof., 1883-5 U. of Wis; Engel- mann prof, botany, Washington U. and dir. Shaw School of Botany since 1885; dir. Mo. Bot. Garden since 1889. Chmn. Am. bd. editors Botanisches Centralblatt, since 1900. Fellow Am. Acad. Arts and Sciences; mem. Nat. Acad. Sciences, Am. Philos. Soc, etc.; directeur (pres) Academie Internationale de Gcographie Botanique, 1896; 1st pres. Bot. Soc. America, 1894-5; pres. Am. Soc. Naturalists 1903, Cambridge Entomol. Club, 1889, Engelmann Bot. Club, 1898-9 (hon. pres. since 1900); sec. Wis. Hort. Soc, 1882-5, Acad*. Science, St. Louis, 1896-1903 (pres. 1909); sec. Round Table Club since 1901. Edited (with Asa Gray) Botanical Works of the Late George Engelmann. Translated Poulsen's "Botanical Micro-Chemistry" and Salomonsen's "Bacteriological Tech- nology". THE 1913 HATCHET 125

Administration and Instruction

Advisory Committee

DAVID F. HOUSTON Chancellor of Washington University

DAVID S. H. SMITH Chairman of the Garden Committee Botanical Garden

ROBERT S. BROOKIKGS EDWARD MALLINCKRODT WILLIAM G. FARLOW

Officers of Instruction

WILLIAM TRELEASE, SC.D., LL. D., Director, Engelman Professor of Botany

GEORGE THOMAS MOORE, PH.D. Professor of Plant Physiology and Applied Botany

SAMUEL MONDS COULTER, PH.D. Assistant Professor of Botany

GEORGE LEO PELTIER, A.B. Teaching Fellow in Botany

ELLEN C. CLARK Assistant at Mary Institute

Oh, for a coach, ye -ADA NICHOLSON, after Junior Prom. 126 THE 1913 HATCHET General Statement N June 1885, Mr. Shaw of St. Louis authorized the Chancellor of Washington University to place before the Corporation the following plan:—With the concurrence of the Corporation, to endow a School of Botany as a department of Washington University, by donation of improved real estate yielding over S5,000 revenue, and to place it in such relation to the Missouri Botanical Garden and Arboretum as practically to secure their best uses, for scientific study and investigation, to the professor and students of said School of Botany, for all time to come. The plan was accepted and The Henry Shaw School of Botany estab- lished in the fall of 1885 with Professor William Trelease as its Director. The instruction is divided into the Undergraduate and the Graduate departments. In the former, provision is made for instruction suited to the needs of the College and the Schools of Engineering and Architecture, and in this course special emphasis is placed upon Botany as related to Sanita- tion. The advanced work is designed to be three-fold:—(1) presenting results achieved in botanical science and its applications to the arts and industries, (2) giving expert training in the methods of investigation, and (3) affording opportunity for the productive use of such methods in research. In the Research work special attention is paid in all cases to methods of investigation, and instruction is adapted as far as possible to the individual needs of students.

Students in the School of Botany

Candidates for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy with major in Botany C. O. CHAMBERS W. W. OHLNEILER W. H. EMIG JACOB SCHRAMM L. O. KIMKLE MILDRED W. SPARGO Candidate for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy with minor in Botany A. M. BROWN Candidates for the degree of Master of Arts G. L. PELTIER M. D. REXKENBERGER Graduate Students not candidates for a degree W. C. LEVAN MARY BRYAN

There is no love lost between us.—ADELE AEGERTER AND HELEN HAGIN. .—W* .**«■» .j^y'1, JtaS&ifc ^.---r^A. r ''^JOfe?-* ^0***

CHOOL or

KONOMY 128 THE 1913 HATCHET

—Murillo Portrait THOMAS JAMES RILEY, A. M. Ph. D.

THOMAS JAMES RILEY, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Director St. Louis School of Social Economy; A.B. Baker University, 1900, A.M. 1903; Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1904; Fellow in Sociology, 1900-01, 1902-04; Professor and Acting Head of the De- partment of Mathematics, Baker University, 1901-02; Professor and Head of the Depart- ment of Mathematics, Western State Normal School, Kalamazoo, Michigan, 1904-06; In- structor in Sociology, University of Missouri, 1906-07; Director, St. Louis School of So- cial Economy, 1906—; Assistant Professor of Sociology, University of Missouri, 1907-09; Professor of Sociology, Washington University, 1909. Member, American Sociological Society, American Association for Labor Legislation, National Conference of Charities and Correction; former Secretary and former President the Missouri State Conference of Charities and Correction; Secretary to the Board of Civil Service Examiners for the Juvenile Court, St. Louis; Chairman of the Commissioners on Charitable Institu- tions of St. Louis. Author of The Higher Life of Chicago." THE 1913 HATCHET 129

Administration and Instruction

Board of Directors

REV. CARROLL M. DAVIS President Vice-President MRS. PHILIP N. MOORE Secretary SAMUEL SALE EDMUND A. ENGLER Treasurer 1909-12 1910-13 ISABEL HORTON PERCIVAL CHUBB CHARLES P. PETTUS MRS. W. E. FISCHEL BERNARD GREENSFELDER DAVID F. HOUSTON ARTHUR E. BOSTWICK W. H. MCCLAIN* MRS. PHILIP N. MOORE SAMUEL SALE JOHN WITHERS MRS. C. R. SPRINGER W. 1911-14

CHARLES RICE ROGER N. BALDWIN M. EDMUND ENGLER REV. CARROLL M. DAVIS A. MRS. TOOMEY FRANCIS J. O'BOYLE P. T. Officers of Instruction

THOMAS J. RILEY, PH.D Director and Professor of Sociology GEORGE B. MANGOLD, PH.D Associate Director and Instructor in Sociology LUCY OPPEN Assistant and Advisor of Women BERTHA BEATRICE LASH Supervisor of Physical Education. The Young Women's Christian Associa- tion Lecturer, 1911-1912. JOSEPH F. MARRON Librarian ANNA HENKE Secretary to the Director

*Died, December 7, 1911.

All hope abandon, ye who enter here. -Econ. Exam. mm

130 THE 1913 HATCHET General Statement

HE St. Louis School of Social Economy had its beginning in a series of round table meetings of the workers in the St. Louis Provident Association, from which it developed into the St. Louis School of Philanthrophy and became affiliated with the University of Missouri. In 1909 this affiliation terminated and the School was transferred to Washington University with the incidental change of name to the St. Louis School of Social Economy. The aim of the School is to provide training for charitable and social workers, and to carry on research and investigation for the purpose of social betterment. The work in the school is divided into the Departments of Instruction, Practice, and Research. Co-operation with the Russel Sage foundation in the latter affords unusual opportunities for work in original research.

Students in the School of Social Economy

CLARA BAUMHOFF MILTON B. GOTT MAUD H. NOONAN MRS. W. A. BEALL LILY E. GRUENSTEN FRANCIS J. O'BOYLE J. R. BENSON FRANCES GUERIN PETRINA OVERLAND MRS. J. R. BENSON META GRUNER CHARLOTTE PERKS ZACHARIAH F. BOND CORNELIUS L. GURNEY BERTHA PHILIPS CATHERINE BRECKENRIDGE HELENA E. HAUSER E. RAUSCHENBACH ERNST F. BUSH IDA HEGEL JOHN RICHESON MARY G. CARNAHAN EFFIE A. HICKMAN C. C RINGLING OSCAR J. CORNELIUSSEN ELLA A. ISGRIG FLORENCE G. ROBINSON WALTER SCOTT CRISWELL JOSEPH E. JEFFERY AUGUSTA ROMBAUER MARY AMES COSHMAN GRACE R. JONES JEWELL E. ROSS CORA M. DAWSON ORA A.KELLEY GRACE W. RYAN BERTHA A. DAY EVA KOHN MARY SEMPLE SCOTT ETTA EISEMAN ALICE LACHMUND MARY SCUDDER RACHEL HENRY ESSEX LAURA LADOW ELSA STRAUSS JACOB G. FERTIG HELEN L. LEGUAY ALICE TAAKE KATHERINE FERTIG MCILYAR H. LICHLITER MELINDA J. THIAS ANNA P. FISCHER JEANETTE LOHRUM FLORENCE VAN SICKLER MARGARET FLEISCHMAN LOTTA LUCKAW WENONA WAGNER HELEN FOX JOSEPH F. MARRON ANNA M. WARREN G. ANNA FREIN MARGARET MCCLURE KATHERINE B. WEBER LOTTIE GERHART EDNA R. MEISSNER LAURA WILLITS CARLOTA GLASGOW MATHILDE MICHAUD DORA L. WOBUS LEON GOLDMESTEIN EVELYN MILIUS LILLIAN WRIGHT LULA E. GORDON HERTHA MILLER MARTHA ZIMMERMAN

A manly form at her side she saw.—Fair Coed in Spring. THOMAS LAMB ELIOT, '62, Minister Emeritus of the First Church of Portland, , has the distinction of being, at the age of eighty-one the president of Reed Institute, and of the Oregon Conference of Charities; a trustee of the Boys' and Girls' Aid Society, and of the Portland Art Association. Mr. Eliot entered the Unitarian ministry in 1865, after receiving his D. D. at Harvard. He has been from that time very prominent and influential in his work in Portland, Oregon, where he became the min- ister of the First Church in 1867. For almost thirty years he was the active minister of this church, and in 1895 received the honor of being named Minister Emeritus.

—Stra HSS Portrait THOMAS L. ELIOT

EDWARD SINGLETON HOLDEN, '66, Astronomer and Author, has been since 1901 the librarian of the U. S. Military Academy at West Point. He is a mem- ber of the National Academy of Sciences, honorary member of the Royal Astronomical Society of London, of the Astro- nomical Society of France, and of the Italian Spectorscopic Society. After leaving Washington, he graduated from the U. S. Military Academy in 1870, and later took degrees at the University of Wisconsin, at Columbia, and at the University of the Pacific. In his official capacity, he has been a Lieutenant in the Engineers Corps of the U. S. Army; professor of Mathematics in the U. S. Naval Acad- emy; director of the Washburn Observatory, Wisconsin; president of the University of California, and director of the Lick Observatory. He has further distinguished himself EDWARD S. HOLDEN as the author of many valuable scientific works. 132 THE 1913 HATCHET

DAVID ROWLAND FRANCIS, 70, Ex-Secretary of the Interior under President Cleveland, is the Pres- ident of the D. R. Francis and Bro. Commission Co., Vice-president of the Merchants-Laclede National Bank, President of the Madison Co. Ferry Co., a director of the Mississippi Valley Trust Co., and a trustee of the New York Life Insurance Co. Mr. Francis was in 1884 the Presi- dent of the Merchants' Exchange. From 1885 to 1889 he was Mayor of St. Louis, and from 1889 to 1893 Governor of Missouri. He was also the President of the Louisiana Purchase Centennial Exposition, in 1904, and is now the first Vice-president of the Southern Commerical Congress, President of the Hospital Saturday and Sunday Associa- tion, and a member of the executive committee of the National Civic Federation. In 1904 he was decorated by the rulers of the principal countries of Europe and Asia. —Copyright Strauss Portrait DAVID R. FRANCIS

WILLIAM SAMUEL CURTIS,73, Lawyer and Educa- tor, has been since 1894 the Dean of the Law School of Washington University. After receiving an LL.B. at Washington U. in 1876, he practised law in Omaha, Nebraska, until 1894. In 1904 he was a delegate to the Universal Congress of Lawyers and Jurists in St. Louis. Received degree LL.D., Washington University 1905. It is to Dean and Mrs. Curtis that Washington owes much of the feeling of good fellowship between faculty and students.

WILLIAM S. CURTIS MINARD L. HOLMAN, 74, of St. Louis, has, since his graduation from Washington, had a notable ca- reer in his profession as a Mechanical Engineer. Since 1904 he has been the senior member of the firm Holman and Laird, Consulting Engineers. Previous to this he held various high positions. He was in the supervising architect's office of the U. S. Treasury Department for two years; with Flad and Smith, Engineers from 1876 to 1877; assistant engineer of the St. Louis Water Works until 1887; water commissioner of St. Louis for over 10 years and general superintendent of the Missouri Edison Electric Co. from 1900 to 1904. Mr. Holman is a member of the American Society of Civil Engineers, and of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. In the latter he was vice-president from 1894 to 1896, and again from 1903 to 1905, and presi- dent from 1908 to 1909. MINARD L. HOLMAN

' THE 1913 HATHET 133

BEN BLEWETT, '76, Superintendent of Public Instruc- tion in St. Louis since 1908, has performed active serv- ice in the field of education. In his early career, he was a teacher in the Cote Brilliante School, and later in the Eleardville School. From 1889 to 1897, he was the President of the Board of Directors of the Missouri School for the Blind. He has served as principal of many public schools, and was from 1897 to 1908 the Assistant Super- intendent of Public Instruction. As the Corresponding Secretary of the Society of Pedagogy, in 1883 he was in- fluential in bringing about compulsory school attendance. During 1904 and 1905 Mr. Blewett was the Director for Missouri, of the National Educational Association, and in 1904 was the President of the Missouri State Teachers'

Association. 3EN BLEU'E'lT

WILLIAM S. EAMES, '76, has been a practising Arch- itect in St. Louis since 1882. After graduating from Washington, Mr. Eames studied at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris, and under private tutors in Rome. In. 1881, after returning to St. Louis, he became Deputy Com- missioner of Public Buildings. In 1904 he was the U. S. Rep- resentative of International Congress to Madrid, Spain. He is a life member of the American Academy at Rome, a mem-, ber of the National Society for Civic Improvement of Mu- nicipalities, and a member of the American Institute of Architects, of which he was for fifteen years a director, and president during 1904 and 1905.

—Strauss Portrait WILLIAM S. EAMES EDMUND A. ENGLER, '76, Educator, is the Treasurer of Washington University. Between the years of his graduation, and his return last year to Washington as an official, Dr. Engler has a record of many activities. He was first Professor of Mathematics at Washington, and later Dean of the School of Engineering. In 1901 he became president of the Worchester Polytechnic Institute. He was Chairman of the International Jury on Instruments of Pre- cision at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in 1904. He is a member of the National Geographical Society; American Mathematical Society; Society for the Promotion of En- gineering Education; a fellow of the A.A.A.S.; and councillor of the American Antiquarian Society. He was president of the St. Louis Academy of Science from 1898 to 1901, and secretary to the Round Table from 1884 to 1900. He is an extensive contributor to magazines on scientific subjects. EDMUND A. ENGLER 134 THE 1913 HATCHET

DR. GREENE VARDIMAN BLACK, '77, has been Dean of the Northwestern University Dental School at Chicago since 1897. Dr. Black had practiced Den- tistry a number of years before entering the University, dur- ing which time he had invented (in 1870) one of the first cord driven foot power dental engines, and in 1870 held the office of president of the Illinois State Dental Society; from 1870 to 1880 he lectured on pathology, histology and operative dentistry at the Missouri Dental College, which later became the Washington U. Dental School. He was professor of Dental Pathology, Chicago College of Dental Surgery, 1883-9; professor Dental Pathology and Bac- teriology U. of Iowa, 1890-1; and held the same position at Northwestern U. during 1891-7. He is also the author of many important papers and books on dentistry.

DR. GREENE V. BLACK JOHN F. WIXFORD, '85, Analytical and Consulting Chemist, and President of Wixford Water Patents Co., is most noted for his discovery of a process for the clarification and purification of the Mississippi River water, which process was installed by the St. Louis Water Department at the Chain of Rocks in 1904. Mr. Wixford was the Principal of the Waterloo Public School for a year after leaving Washington, after which he became the Chemist for the Block and Hartmann Smelting Co. He then became associated with the Phillipps Gold Mining Co. as Financial Agent and Assayer, and later with the St. Joseph Gold Mining Co. as Superintendent. From 1891 to 1892, he was the principal of the Blow Night School. In 1892 he became the Chemist for the St. Louis Water Department, remaining in that position until 1900, and again from 1903 to 1905. JOHN F. WIXFORD

PAUL E. MORE, '87, Editor and Author of New York, has been since 1909 the Editor of the Nation. Before entering into journalistic work, Mr. More was for several years an educator, assisting in 1894 and 1895 in the teaching of the Indo-Iranian languages, and in 1899 and 1900, in the Sanskrit Department at Harvard. From 1895 to 1897, he was the Associate in Sanskrit and Classical literature at Bryn Mawr. In 1901 he became the Literary Editor of the Independent, and has been the Literary Editor of the New York Evening Post since 1903. Among other publications he is the author of "The Great Refusal,'' "A Century of Indian Epigrams," "The Life of Benjamin Franklin," and of several translations and books of poems. His latest book is "Nitsche" which is just off the press.

PAUL E. MORE