ft 4'Class O iO.iij Book \3*£\3$QUniversity of Chicago LibraryGIVEN BYBesides the main- topic this book also treats ofSubject No. On page Subject No. On pageTZheCap anb(Sownfl>ubltebeo b\>tbe Ttlnfterarabuatesof tbe^Universityof CbicaooDolume 11/IS2)GCGi*Cl>PRESS OFA L SWIFT & COCHICAGO/C, •o6 H\\*l\\^Con*Stents????????????Book I .Book II .Book III .Book IV .Book V .Book VI .Book VII .Book VIII .Book IX .Book X .Book XI .Book XII .Book XIII . UniversityFacultyStudentsAlumniUniversity HousesMusicalAthleticsFraternitiesSocialLiteraryPublicationsOfficial OrganizationsAdvertisementsJohn 3D, IRocfcefellertbe founder of tbe^»^*lUnivcvsit^ of Chicagotbis booft is respect*fulls fceMcatefc^^*^5obn 3D. IRockefellerFew men who have held in financial and educational circles so influential aposition as Mr. Rockefeller holds have been so little known to the public.Very few people know Mr. Rockefeller by sight and fewer still have haddirect business dealing with him. He is extremely modest and retiring andshuns publicity of any sort. His great object seems to be to keep his ownpersonality in the background while he tries to use his great wealth so that itwill be of the greatest benefit to mankind. While Mr. Rockefeller gives thousands of dollars to this charity and millions to that educational institution,yet his own personal tastes are to the last degree simple and refined. Althoughnot a college-bred man, nor has he had greateducational advantages, yet he appreciatesthe immense value to society of these advantages and does all in his power to makethem accessible to the American youth.John D. Rockefeller was born in NewEngland in 1839. When he was still a ladhis parents moved to Cleveland, where heattended the public schools. He went intobusiness while yet a young man and soon became owner of a small oil refinery. In 1865Mr. Rockefeller, his brother William andSamuel J. Andrews (who had discovered anew process for refining crude oil), helpedorganize The Standard Oil Company.Mr. Rockefeller's personal appearance ismuch more that of a clergyman or a collegeprofessor than of a keen far-sighted businessman. He has a strongly marked face, full ofcharacter and determination. He lacks entirely any arrogance of manner that is sooften the accompaniment of great wealth.He is a stanch supporter of the Baptist Church and a regular attendant upon itsservices. He is superintendent of the Sunday school of the Euclid Avenue Church. Mr.Rockefeller is domestic in his tastes anddevoted to his business, his family and hischurch. He regards his wealth as a greatresponsibility which must be administeredmost carefully. "It is," to use his ownwords, ' ' very hard to give away moneywithout doing harm, because one is in honorbound to give as carefully as he would invest. " Yet when he does give to men inwhom he has confidence he gives most generously and does not in any way modify thepolicy of the institution to which he gives.He is not even a member of the board oftrustees of the University of Chicago, ofwhich he is recognized as the founder and themost generous patron. So great has beenthe desire of the trustees to acknowledgethis relation that they made the name of theinstitution "The University of Chicago,founded by John D. Rockefeller ": r - : Ch***«5v; Wt 0?r&^+i&iftii— From the Painting by Eastman JohnstonBOOKONEof tbe Historical SketchTllniversit^ of Chicago| HE first University of Chicago was chartered by the legislatureof Illinois in 1857, began the work of instruction in 1858 andcontinued it until 1886, when its last class was graduated andit succumbed to the financial difficulties which had attendedthe greater part of its history. So profound, however, wasthe conviction that the City of Chicago was the proper placefor a great seat of learning- that no sooner had the first institution closed its doors than interest beg-an to be manifested in the foundationof the new University. Happily for the practical outcome of this interestit was felt by men whose means were commensurate with their views andsympathies.In the fall of 1888 Mr. John D. Rockefeller, whose attention had beencalled to the matter by Dr. G. W. Northrup and others, sought opportunitiesof conference with Prof. William R. Harper, of Yale University, regardingit, and finally entered into communication with Rev. F. T. Gates, Secretaryof the American Baptist Education Society.This society was formed at Washington, D. C, in May, 1889, andMr. Gates was elected its corresponding secretary. In looking over his widefield of work the conviction was forced upon him that the society shouldundertake, as its first great work, the founding- of a strong institution inChicago. In December, 1888, the matter was brought before the board of thesociety, which approved of the effort to establish a well-equipped'institutionin Chicago, pledged its hearty co-operation, and instructed its secretary ' ' touse every means in his power to originate and encourage such'a movement."Mr. Gates soon after entered into communication with Mr. Rockefellerand, encouraged by him, thenceforth gave himself with untiring [devotionand great wisdom to the work of founding the University of Chicago. - Earlyin 1889 he secured the appointment of a committee of nine prominent men —REV. MR. GATESDrs. William R. Harper, E. Benjamin Andrews, Alvah Hovey, Henry G.Weston, J. F. Elder, Samuel W. Duncan, H. L. Morehouse, James ,M. Taylorand Hon. Charles L. Colby, who made an elaborate report on the scope of theproposed institution, the location, the funds required for a substantialfoundation and other points. This report afterwards formed the basis forfurther action.At the anniversary of the Education Society held in Boston, in May,1889, the society formally resolved to "take immediate steps toward thefounding of a well-equipped college in the City of Chicago." To make itpossible to carry out this purpose Mr. Rockefeller at once made a subscriptionof $600,000 toward an endowment fund, conditioned on the pledging of$400,000 more before June 1, 1890.Immediately following the action in Boston and the announcement ofMr. Rockefeller's subscription, early in June, 1889, a meeting was held inChicago, and a college committee of thirty-six was appointed to co-operatewith the society in the effort to meet the condition proposed. This committee appointed Rev. Thomas W. Goodspeed to assist Mr. Gates in raisingthe $400,000 required. Although this project was considered impossible byREV. MK.COODSl'EKI)many wise men, these two immediately entered upon their labors and withinthe prescribed period carried their work to success, accomplishing more thanwas required of them. They secured a little more than $400,000 in subscriptions to be paid in money, about $15,000 in books, scientific collections andapparatus and a site for the institution valued at $125,000.The site, consisting of a block and a half of land, was donated by Mr.Marshall Field, Chicago's great merchant prince and noble-minded philanthropist. Two and a half additional blocks were afterwards purchased for$282,500, thus providing a site of four blocks, or about twenty-four acres.The streets running through thistract were vacated by the city council, making the University's land oneunbroken piece, fronting south onthe Midway Plaisance, having EllisAvenue on the west and LexingtonAvenue on the east. WashingtonPark is four blocks west and Jackson Park seven blocks east of thesite. These parks, with the Plaisance, which is also a park, containa thousand acres.The annual meeting of the Education Society in June, 1890, washeld in Chicago and the board of thesociety adopted articles of incorporation and a charter for the newinstitution.On September 10 of the same year the University was incorporatedunder the laws of Illinois with the following trustees:MR. FIELD^E. Nelson Beake,Judge Joseph M. Baieey,Francis E. Hinckeey,Wieeiam R. Harper, Ph.D.,Hon. George A. Pieesbury,Edward Goodman,Aeonzo K. Parker, D.D.,J. W. MlDGEEY,Andrew McLeish,Fred A. Smith,ChareES W. Needham. Ferd W. Peck,Herman H. Kohesaat,Charees L. Hutchinson,Eei B. Felsenthae,Martin A. Ryerson,Judge Daniee L. Shorey,George C. Walker,C. C. Bowen,Eemer L. Cortheee,Henry A. Rust,The trustees perfected their organization by the election of the followingofficers:President E. Neeson Beake.Vice-Ptesident Martin A. Ryerson.Treasurer Charees L. Hutchinson.Recording Secretary Justin A. Smith, D.D.Corresponding and Financial Secretary . T. W. Goodspeed, D.D.In the charter of the University are two noteworthy sections. One isthat the object of the corporation is " To provide, impart and furnish opportunities for all departments of higher education, to persons of both sexes, onequal terms." The other sectionrequires that the President andtwo-thirds of the Trustees shallbe Baptists.The incorporators named inthe charter were John D. Rockefeller, E. Nelson Blake, MarshallField, Fred T. Gates, Francis E.Hinckley and Thomas W. Good-speed.The name of the corporationin law is "The University of Chicago."At the first meeting of theboard soon after its incorporationin September, 1890, ProfessorWilliam Rainey Harper, of YaleUniversity, was elected President.He signified his acceptance in theDR. HARPERspring of 1891 and entered on theduties of his office July 1, 1891. Before Professor Harper accepted thepresidency, the scope of the institution had been greatly enlarged. ProfessorHarper felt that it should be in fact, as well as in name, a University, andMr. Rockefeller agreeing with this view, in September, 1890, added $1,000,000to his former subscription. In accordance with the terms of this secondsubscription, the Theological Seminary was removed from Morgan Parkto the University site, as the Divinity School of the University; an Academyof the University was established at Morgan Park, and $100,000 ofthe amount of the subscription were devoted to the erection of divinitydormitories on the grounds of the University.In the spring of 1891, the executors and trustees of the estate of WilliamB. Ogden, first Mayor of Chicago, designated to the University seventy percent of that portion of the estate devoted by will to benevolent purposes. Itis expected that more than half a million dollars will be realized from thisdesignation, for "The Ogden (Graduate) School of Science of the Universityof Chicago." The first payment on this gift, amounting to $250,000, wasreceived October 2, 1893.The University began the erection of its first buildings on November 26,1891. These were the Cobb LectureHall, the gift of Silas B. Cobb, ofChicago, who subscribed $150,000for the purpose; and the graduatesand divinity dormitories built bymeans of Mr. Rockefeller's firstmunificient endowment. Before anyparticular building was projected,however, a general plan was pre-peired of the entire group, as itwould appear after all the buildingsshould be erected. The recitationbuildings, laboratories, chapel, museum, gymnasium, library — the public buildings of the institution — arethe central features of this plan,while the dormitories are arranged MR. COBBin quadrangles on the four corners.The material for the entire group is blue Bedford stone.In February, 1892, Mr. Rockefeller made an additional donation to theUniversity of "one thousand five per cent bonds of the par value of$1,000,000," for the further endowment of instruction. About the sametime Mr. S. A. Kent, of Chicago, undertook to provide a fully-equippedlaboratory of chemistry for the University. This building, the KentChemical Laboratory, costing thedonor $235,000, was presented to theUniversity on January 1, 1894.Within the entrance of the laboratory the following dedication, ona large bronze slab, testifies to thebenevolent donor's high purpose:*THIS BUILDING IS DEDICATED TO AFUNDAMENTAL SCIENCEIN THE HOPE THAT IT WILL BE A FOUNDATION STONELAID BROAD AND DEEP FOR THETEMPLE OF KNOWLEDGEIN WHICH AS WE LIVE WE HAVE LIFE.MR. kent *#* Sidney A. Kent.The laboratories in Kent Chemical Hall are very finely appointed andevery modern appliance that could be procured to add to their perfection ofequipment can be found here.In March, 1892, Mr. Marshall Field subscribed $100,000 toward a buildingand equipment fund, conditioned on the raising of $1,000,000 in ninety days,his own gift and Mr. Kent's donation being included in that fund. Theentire sum was raised within the specified time. This amount was made upfor the most part of large sums designated for particular buildings. In addition to the gifts of Mr. Kent and Mr. Field, the following large subscriptionswere made for buildings:KENT CHEMICAL LABORATORYSilas B. Cobb, for a recitation and lecture hall . . $150,000Martin A. Ryerson, for a physical laboratory . . . 150,000George C. Walker, for a museum of science . . . 130,000Mrs. Nancy S. Fostek, for a woman's dormitory . . 60,000Henky A. Rust, for a dining "commons" . . . 50,000Mrs. Henrietta Snell, for a dormitory for men . . 50,000Mrs. Maky Beecher, for a woman's dormitory . . 50,000Mrs. Elizabeth G. Kelly, for a woman's dormitory . . 50,000In the construction of thedormitories, the requirementsof the social as well as the individual life of the studentshave been considered and thelarge reception halls and room}-parlors give all that could bedesired in the way of advantages for social functions and"at homes." In Foster Hall,which is the largest building inthe Woman's Dormitory quadrangle, there is no little elaboration of entrance hall anddrawing-room effect, whichmakes the hall exceedingly fitfor home entertainments andsocial affairs.A formal opening of Walker Museum, the gift of Mr. George C. Walker,of Chicago, took place on October 2, 1893.The Walker Museum, although very simple in its interior, affords anMRS. KELLY,-ri'C¦ i iiiiii I ¦ I;¦¦ i mm 1 1 1» ¦, ^^iiiiiiti' ^ *KELLY HALLexcellent space to exhibit the University's very rare collection of geologicalspecimens and anthropological display. At present the museum is onlypartly filled, but before the end of another year the building will be quitecomplete in its collection.In June, 1892, Martin A. R3rerson succeeded E. Nelson Blake as Presidentof the Board of Trustees, Henry A. Rust becoming Vice-President.In December, 1892, Mr. Rockefeller made a fourth subscription of "onethousand thousand-dollar five per cent bonds," as an additional endowment.Up to this time very little provision had been made for the general equip-WALKER MUSEUMment of the University. The need of a large fund for this purpose becomingimperative, Martin A. Ryerson, in February, 1893, announced to the boardthat he would give $100,000 toward such a fund, on condition $400,000 morewere raised before May 1. The time was afterward extended by Mr. Ryersonto July 1, 1894, and the subscription was completed at that date. Mr. Rockefeller having made a new subscription of $500,000, conditioned on the first$500,000 being secured, the success achieved greatly strengthened the positionand improved the prospects of the University.Mr. Ryerson also added to his former subscription for the building andFOSTER HALLX*equipment fund $75,000, thus increasing that subscription to $225,000 andproviding for the erection and equipment of the Ryerson Physical Laboratory.This laboratory was formerly dedicated on July 2, 1894.The building is a memorial of Mr. Martin Ryerson, who was a long andhonored citizen of Chicago, and the father of Mr. Ryerson, the President ofthe Board of Trustees. In the design and construction of this building noelement of utility has been omitted andevery effort was made to include all thedesirable features of a first class physicallaboratory.All the walls and floors are strongand heavy; the laboratories on the firstfloor are provided with piers of masonryin addition to the heavy slate wall-shelveswhich are found throughout the building.Every laboratory is provided with gasfor light or fuel, electricity for lightand power, water, compressed air, andvacuum pipes.The laboratories are also equippedwith a system of heating apparatus HMRS. FOSTERwhich may be used as a direct or anindirect system, and is controlledautomatically by the most improvedform of temperature regulators.Ducts and channels have been provided between the walls and in thefloor, so that pipes or wires may belaid from one part of the building toanother without difficulty.The space in the building hasbeen utilized as follows: Rooms forspecial purposes, small laboratoriesfor work of investigation, largelaboratories for general instruction,lecture rooms, class rooms, libraryand offices.The first floor is devoted tolaboratories for research work, twolarge constant temperature rooms and the mechanician's room which is fittedup with all the tools and appliances necessary in the construction:and repair ofphysical apparatus. The rooms of the west wing are free from iron and areMRS. SNELLETC r'iOfB n z -r— r- i — i ¦ r- O 3 n r F^f rn ==rl r n'mrfui a n q -m TnV Ml m f"f p-f-tWIII M ??iSNELL HALLMRS. BEECHERdevoted to the work in electricityand magnetism.On the second floor are founda large general laboratory for advanced undergraduate work, opticallaboratories, a chemical laboratory,large dark room, two developingrooms, and the large lecture hallwith its adjoining apparatus andpreparation rooms. The offices ofthe Director and Faculty are alsoon this floor.The third floor is devoted to ageneral laboratory for the undergraduate work in general physics,which, with its adjoining apparatusand preparation rooms, occupies theentire third floor of the east wing.On the same floor are found two general laboratories and the rooms designedas the class rooms, library and reading rooms, but which are temporarilyused by other departments.The central part of the fourthfloor forms a hall for experimentsrequiring a large space. The roofabove this portion is flat and suitable for observations in the open air.A shaft has also been providedfor pressure-gauges and for experiments requiring a greater verticaldistance than is found in the laboratories.Recent investigations have shownthat the location of the RyersonLaboratory is an exceedingly goodone and that the outside disturbances which are usually so annoyingare at a minimum.In June, 1894, Mrs. Caroline Haskell, of Chicago, by a subscription ofMR. YERKES$100,000 made provision for the erection of the Haskell Oriental Museum.The building is to be a memorial of her husband, Mr. Frederick Haskell.The Yerkes Astronomical Observatory, which is to have the finest telescope in the world, was the gift of Mr. Charles T. Yerkes, of Chicago, and isto be located at Lake Geneva, Wisconsin.The observatory besides containing a telescope valued at $500,000 will bethoroughly equipped with all the modern astronomical apparatus and appliances, together with a large astronomical library.BEECHER HALLThe University opened its doors to students on October 1, 1892, occupyingCobb Lecture Hall, and the graduate and divinity dormitories, the onlybuildings then ready for use. Other buildings were rented for the scientificdepartments and as dormitories for students. The number of studentsmatriculating in the course of the first year, in all departments of the University, including the Academy and excluding the University Extension Division,exceeds 900.In addition to the University campus of twenty-four acres, which isRYERSON PHYSICAL LABORATORYgradually being divided into quadrangles and approaching its ultimate form,there is an athletic field of some six acres enclosed by a board fence and containing a running track, base ball diamond and foot ball field. This fieldfor outdoor athletics was leased to the University by Mr. Marshall Field andin his honor it is called "Marshall Field" by the students.The buildings already erected on the campus are the following: CobbLecture Hall, a general recitation and administration building; Kent Chemical Laboratory; Walker Museum; Ryerson Physical Laboratory; a group ofgraduate and divinity dormitories; Snell Hall, a dormitory for undergraduatemen; Beecher, Kelly, and Nancy Foster Halls, for women; and a temporarystructure for the general library, the gymnasium for men, and the gymnasium for women.There are 162 professors in the University at present giving yearlyinstruction to about 1,450 students. Eleven buildings are already completedand occupied and the institution's financial resources amount to about$6,000,000.Truly it is indeed a marvelous and wonderful age, when such a greatinstitution as this can rise up and take an honored place alongside of theoldest and greatest universities in the world, within the space of three shortvears.DANIEL L. SHOREV FRED. A. SMITHCHARLES C BOWEN H. H. KOHLSAAT GEORGE C WALKERANDREW MCLEISH ELI B. EELSENTIIALVn» <W tJfJLEIGHTON WILLIAMS WILLARD A. SMITHEDWARD GOOLMAN ELMER L. CORTHELL FRANCIS E. HINCKLEYJOSEPH M. BAILEY WILLIAM B. BRAYTONMm. ....i ¦mnnHlMLLLLGFERD. W. PECK D. G. HAMILTONMARTIN A. RYERSON CHARLES L. HUTCHINSON ALONZO K. PARKERHENRY A. RUST W. H. HOLDENBOOKttWOPRESIDENT MA£Pl£*Milliam 1Raine\> IbarperWILLIAM RAINEY HARPER was born in New Concord, Ohio, on the 26thof July, 1856. He attended the local schools and took the classical course atthe high school in preparation for college. He was graduated from Muskingum college, with the degree of Bachelor of Arts at the age of fourteen.During the next three years he studied the modern languages with a privatetutor, found time besides to work in his father's store, and also to leadthe village band. In 1873 he went to Yale University and two yearslater took the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. The following year hewent to Macon, Tenn., to take the position of head of the Masonic College.The next year found Dr. Harper at Denison University, where he remained four years, three as tutor in the preparatory department, and one asHead Master. In 1879 Dr. Harper was calledto the chair of Hebrew and cognate languages at the Baptist Union Theological Seminary. He held this position until 1886, whenhe went to Yale to take the professorship ofthe Semitic languages. In the meantime,in 1885, he was elected principal of the Chautauqua College of Liberal Arts, which officewas in 1891 expanded to the principalshipof the "Chautauqua System." In 1888 hewas elected principal of the American Institute of Sacred Literature. In 1889 he waselected to the Woolsey Chair of BiblicalLiterature at Yale University, and in 1891he accepted the presidency of the Universityof Chicago. In recognition of Dr. Harper'sattainments as a scholar, the degree of Doctor of Divinity was given him in 189 c byColby University and in 1893 he receivedfrom the University of Nebraska the degreeof Doctor of Laws.To look at President Harper's fine physique and the evidences he gives of nervouspower and reserve force, one would hardlysuppose that up to the age of seven he wasan exceptionally delicate child. At thattime he had a very severe sickness, but afterhis recovery he seemed entirely changed andgave promise at once of the physical strengthwhich he has since attained. He was alwaysa hard worker, and while yet a child laid thefoundation of that knowledge which has given him world-wide fame as a student ofthe Bible.His mother was a most methodical womanand it is largely to her influence that he isindebted for the basis of the accurate andsystematic methods which have enabledhim successfully to guide the great interestsintrusted to his care. He is interested inevery phase of University life — in everythingthat is of interest or benefit to the students —receptions, socials, club meetings, athleticgames — whatever it is, if it is a good thing,it is sure of his support.One of the most striking things about Dr.Harper is the wonderful power he possessesof making and retaining friends. Apparentlyhe never forgets; and, doubtless, in thischaracteristic lies no small part of his poweras a leader and an organizer.That he is a man of ideas, has unusualexecutive power, and is progressive to a degree is shown by the conception and workingout of the broadest and most liberal policyon which a University was ever founded.Thus far whatever of success the University has achieved has been due in a largedegree to the skill, foresight and boundless enthusiasm of Dr. Harper. His has beenthe master mind that outlined the policy andthe plans, and his is the master hand that isdirecting the energies that have been placedin his control.(Balusba Hnoerson[A.M., S.T.D., LL.D.]Galusha Anderson was born inBergen, N. Y., in 1832. He prepared forcollege at Brockport Collegiate Institute,and Alfred Academy, N. Y. In 1854 hegraduated A. B. from the University ofRochester, where he afterwards receivedthe degree of A. M. in 1857, S. T. D. in1866, and LL. D. in 1884; and from Madison University, LL. D. in 1884. He hasheld pastorates in Janesville, Wis., St.Louis; Brooklyn, N. Y.; Chicago; andSalem, Mass. He has also been Professorof Sacred Rhetoric, Church Polity, andPastoral Duties at Newton TheologicalInstitution ; President of Denis-on University, Professor of Homiletics, ChurchPolity, and Pastoral Duties at the BaptistUnion Theological Seminary and President of the old University of Chicago.In 1892 he entered upon his presentduties as Head Professor of Homiletics atthe University of Chicago.lErnest JD. Burton[A.B.]Ernest D. Burton was bornin Granville, Ohio, in 1856. Hestudied in the High Schools ofAnn Arbor, Mich., and Davenport,Iowa. He graduated A. B. at Deni-son University", in 1876. He alsograduated from Rochester Theological Seminary in 1882. He has beenInstructor in the Academy of Kalamazoo College, Instructor in NewTestament Greek at Rochester Theological Seminary, and AssociateProfessor and Professor of NewTestament Interpretation at Newton Theological Institution. Since1892 he has occupied his presentposition as Head Professor of NewTestament Literature and Exegesisat the University of Chicago.$obn Bewep[PH.D.]John Dewey was born in Burlington, Vt$ in 1859. He prepared forcollege at the Burlington High Schooland graduated from the University ofVermont in 1879, taking the degree ofA. B. He taught for some time in theHigh School at Oil City, Penn., andthen returned to the University ofVermont for further study. He nextbecame a Fellow of Johns HopkinsUniversity, where he received the degree of Ph. 1). in 1884. He has beenInstructor, Assistant Professor, andProfessor of Philosophy at the University of Michigan, and Professor ofPhilosophy at the University of Minnesota. In 1893 he was called uponto occupy his present position as HeadProfessor of Philosophy at the University of Chicago . Ubomas (I. Gbamberlin[PH.D., LL.D.]Thomas C. Chamberlin waswas born near Mattoon, 111., in1843. He graduated A. B. fromBeloit College, in 1866, and in 1S69received an A. M. from his AlmaMater. In 1882 the Universities ofMichigan and Minnesota made hima Ph. D.; and an LL. D. was conferred upon him in 1887. He hasserved as a Professor of Geology atBeloit, Columbia and Wisconsin,and as President at the latter institution. Since 1882 he has been incharge of the Glacial Division ofthe U. S. Geological Survey. Hewas official delegate of the State ofWisconsin to the Paris Expositionin 1878. He was President of theGeological Society of America for1893-4, and at present is editor ofthe Journal of Geology. In 1892he was appointed Head Professor ofGeology at the University of Chicago.1wJEri Bafeer Ibulbert[D.D.]Eri Baker Hulkert was bornin Chicago, 111., in 1841. His preparation for college was received atthe Hamilton Academy and in theAcademic Department of MadisonUniversity. In 1863 he graduatedfrom Union College, taking the degree of A. B., and from HamiltonTheological Seminary in 1865. Hereceived the degree of A. M. fromMadison University in 1865, andfrom Union College in 1866, and thedegree of D. D., from the BaptistUnion Theological Seminary in1880. He has occupied the chairsof Professor of Church History andof Acting President at the BaptistUnion Theological Seminary. In1892 he assumed his present positionas Head Professor of Church History, and Dean of the DivinitySchool at the University of Chicago.Ibermaun IE. von Ibolst[ph. d.]Hermann Eduard von Holstwas born at Fellin, in the Provinceof Livonia, Russia, in 1841. Hepassed through the gymnasium atFellin and the Universities of Dor-pat and Heidelberg; at the latterhe took the degree of Ph. D. in1865. He has been Professor Extraordinarily of the History andConstitutional Law of the UnitedStates of America at the Universityof Strassburg, Professor Ordinariusof Modern History at the Universityof Freiburg, and Pro-rector Mag-nificus of the Alberto Ludovicianaat Freiburg. For ten years he wasa Member of the First Chamber ofthe Baden Landtag, and for a timeheld the Presidency of that body.Besides his famous "ConstitutionalHistory of the United States," heis the author of a number of German works on the United States.William (Bar&ner 1bale[A.B]William Gardner Hale was born inSavannah, Ga., in 1849. He prepared forcollege at Phillips Exeter Academy. Hetook the degree of A. B. at Harvard University in 1870, graduating at the head of hisclass. He has acted as Fellow in Philosophyand Tutor in Latin at Harvard University,and as Professor of the Latin Language andLiterature at Cornell University. He studiedat the Universities of Leipzig and Gottingen,1876-7. In 1892 he was appointed Head Professor of Latin in the University of Chicago.Mr. Hale was President of the AmericanPhilological Association for 1892-3. He wasformerly joint editor of the Cornell University Studies in Classical Philology, and is atpresent associate editor of the Classical Re-vieiv. He is the author of the "Sequenceof the Tenses," "The Art of Reading Latin," and the famous book on the "CumConstruction."Ibarra pratt Sufcson[a.m., ll.d.]Harry Pratt Judson wasborn in Jamestown, N. Y., in 1849.He prepared for college in theAcademy at Lansingburgh, N. Y.In 1876 he graduated from Williams College with the degree ofA. B. He has also received fromWilliams College the degrees ofA. M., 1883, and LL. D., 1893.He has served as Principal of aHigh School at Troy, N. Y., and asProfessor of History and Lectureron Pedagogy at the University ofMinnesota. In 1892 he assumedthe duties of Professor of PoliticalScience and Head Dean of the Colleges at the University of Chicago.In 1893 he became Head Professorof Political Science and Dean ofthe Faculty of Arts, Literature andScience.5. Xaurence Xaugblin[PH.D.]J. Laurence Laughlin wasborn in Deerfield, Ohio, in 1850.He was educated at Harvard University, where he received his A. B.in 1873, taking the highest honorsin History. In 1876 he receivedfrom Harvard the degrees of A. M.and Ph. D. He has been Master ina Private Classical School in Boston,Instructor and Assistant Professorof Political Economy at HarvardUniversity, and Professor of Political Economy and Finance at Cornell University. He has also filledthe positions ol Secretary and President of the Philadelphia Manufacturers' Mutual Fire Insurance Co.Mr. Laughlin is a member of manynational and foreign economic societies and at present he is editor ofthe Journal of Political Economy.In 1892 he was called to his presentposition of Head Professor of Political Economy at the University ofChicago.Blbert a. fllMcbelson[PH.D.]Albert A. Michelson wasborn at Strelno, Poland, in 1852.He studied in San Francisco, andin 1873 was appointed Midshipmanat the U. S. Naval Academy. Hereceived a Ph. D. from the WesternReserve University in 1886, andfrom Stevens Institute in 1887. Heserved as Instructor in the U. S.Naval Academy, and as Professor ofPhysics at Case School and ClarkUniversity. Dr. Michelson receivedthe Rumford medals from theAmerican Academy of Arts and.Sciences in 188S. He is a memberof the National Academy and ofthe Societe de Physique, a member of the British Association, andan Associate of the Royal Astronomical Society. He was appointed Head Professor of Physicsin 1892.Hlbion m. Small[PH.D.]Albion W. Small was born inBrickfield, Me., in 1854. He received his college preparationin the High School at Portland,Me. He graduated from ColbyUniversity in 1876 with the degreeof A. B. He received the degreesof A. M. from Colby in 1879, and ofPh. D. from Johns Hopkins University in 1889. He has studied atNewton Theological Institution andat the Universities of Berlin andLeipzig. He has occupied the positions of Professor of History andPolitical Economy at Colby University, Reader of History at JohnsHopkins University, and Presidentof Colby University. In 1892 heentered upon his present duties atthe University of Chicago as HeadProfessor of Social Science and Director of the University affiliations. (Beorge TKH. IRortbrup[d.d., ll.d.]George Washington North-rup graduated from Williams College in 1854, taking the degree ofA. B. He has since received thedegrees of D. D. and LL. D. Forthree years after graduation hestudied at Rochester TheologicalSeminary. He was ordained atRochester, N. Y., in 1857. He hasbeen Professor of Church Historyat Rochester Theological Seminary and President and Professorof Systematic Theology at theBaptist Union Theological Seminary. In 1892 he accepted hispresent position as Head Professorof Systematic Theology at the University of Chicago.Militant flrelanS IKnapp[PH.D.,U.D.]Wieuam Ireland Knapp graduated A. B. at Madison University in i860. He alsoreceived the degrees of A. M. from Madison in 1862 and from Yale College in 1880, of Ph. D.from the University of the City of New York in 1867, and of LL. D. from Colgate University in1889. He has acted as a Professor of French and German at Madison University, Professor andDirector of the Department of Ancient and Modern Languages at Vassar College and HeadProfessor of Modern Languages at Yale University. In 1867 he went to Burope for study,remaining ten years. At Madrid in 1877 he was appointed Knight Commander of the RoyalSpanish Order of Isabel la Catolica by King Alfonso XII. He became Head Professor of theRomance Languages and Literatures at the University of Chicago in 1892. At present he is onleave of absence in Spain, where he is preparing a new Spanish lexicon.Cbarles ©? Wbitman[PH.D., Iylv-D.]Charles 0. Whitman, Head Professor of Zoology, was born in Woodstock, Me., in 1842.He received his early education at the Academy in Norway, Me. In 1868 he took the degree ofA. B. at Bowdoin College. He received the degrees of A. M. from Bowdoin in 187 1, and ofPh D. from the University of Leipzig in 1878. He has acted as Principal of Westford Academy,Master of the English High School in Boston, Fellow of Johns Hopkins University, Professorof Zoology at the Imperial University of Japan, Assistant in Zoology at Harvard University, andProfessor of Zoology at Clark University. In 1892 he was called upon to fill his present position as Head Professor of Zoology and Professor of Animal Morphology at the University ofChicago. Dr. Whitman has been connected with the Naples zoological station, and has beenDirector of the Allis Lake Laboratory. Since 1888 he has been Director of the Marine Biological Laboratory at Woods' Hall, Mass. He is editor of the Journal of Morphology and ofthe Microscopical Department of the American Naturalist. He is President of the AmericanMorphological Society.^Ebe jpacult? otHrts, ^literature .» ScienceSccorotng todepartment of Instructionpbilosopbp ©fKcereJohn Dewey, Ph. D. Charles A. Strong, A. B.James H. Tufts, Ph. D. Julia E. BulkleyGeorge H. Mead, A. B. James R. Angell, A. M.political Economy©fficetsJ. Laurence Laughlin, Ph. D. Adolph C. Miller, A. M.William Hill, A. M. Thorstein B. Veblen, Ph. D.John Cummings, Ph. D. Isaac A. Hourwich, Ph. D.John Graham Brookspolitical Science©fftcersHarry Pratt Judson, A.M., LL.D. Ernst Freund, J. U. D.Charles Thompson Conger, A. B. Elizabeth Wallace, S. B.William Craig Wilcox, A. M.Ibistors QfticevsHermann Eduard von Holst, Ph. D. Benjamin S. Terry, Ph. D.George S. Goodspeed, Ph. D. Oliver J. Thatcher, A. B.Ferdinand Schwill, Ph. D. Charles T. Conger, A. B.Francis W. Shepardson, Ph. D. Ralph C. H. Catterall, A. B.Albrecht H. Wirth, Ph. D.Hrcbaeologs©fftcerFrank Bigelow Tarbell, Ph. D.Sociology anb HntbropologgOfficersAlbion W. Small, Ph. D. Charles Richmond Henderson, A. M., D.D.Edward W. Bemis, Ph. D. Marion Talbot, A. M.Frederick Starr, Ph. D. George Edgar Vincent, A. B.Gerald M. West, Ph. D. Daniel Fulcomer, A. M.William I. Thomas, Ph. D.Comparative IReligion©fftcersGeorge Stephen Goodspeed, Ph. D. John Henry Barrows, D.D.Semitic Slanguages anb ^literatures©fficersWilliam Rainey Harper, Ph.D., D.D., LL.D. Sylvester Burnham, A.M., D.D.Emil G. Hirsch, Ph.D. Ira Maurice Price, Ph.D.George S. Goodspeed, Ph.D. Robert F. Harper, Ph.D.Clark Eugene Crandall, Ph.D. Charles F. Kent, Ph.D.James Henry Breasted, A.M.Biblical aub patristic (Sreeft©fftcersErnest DeWitt Burton, A.B. Caspar Rene Gregory, Ph.D.Shailer Mathews, A.M. W. Muss-Arnolt, Ph.D.Clyde Weber Votaw, A.M., D.B.Sanskrit anb ffnbo^iEuropean Comparative pbilologg©fficerCarl D. Buck, Ph.D.XLbe ©reek ^language anb ^Literature©fficersPaul Shorey, Ph. D. Frank Bigelow Tarbell, Ph. D.Clarence F. Castle, Ph. D. Edward Capps, Ph. D.William Bishop Owen, A.B., D.B. George B. Hussey, Ph.D.Zhe Xatin ^Language anb ^Literature©fffcersWilliam Gardner Hale, A.B. Charles Chandler, A.M.Frank Frost Abbott, Ph.D. Frank Justus Miller, Ph.D.Clifford Herschel Moore, A. B. Vernon J. Emery, A.M.Arthur T. Walker, A.M. S. Frances Pellett, A.M.Edwin Post, Ph.D.IRomance ^literature anb pbilolog?©fffcersWilliam I. Knapp, Ph.D., LL.D. Eugene Bergeron, A.B.George C. Howland, A.B. Rene De Poyen-Bellisle, Ph.d0Elizabeth Wallace, B.S.(Sermanic languages anb literatures©fffcersStarr W. Cutting, Ph.D. H. SchmidT-Wartenberg, Ph.D.Camillo von Klenze, Ph.D. George A. Mulfinger, A.BFrancis Asbury Wood, A.B.UbeEnglisb ^Language anb ^Literature, anb IRbetoric©fftcersWilliam Cleaver Wilkinson, D.D. Richard Green Moulton, Ph. D.L. A. Sherman Nathaniel Butler, A.M.William D. McClintock, A.M. Francis A. Blackburn, Ph.D.Martha Foote Crow, Ph.D. Albert H. Tolman, Ph.D.Robert W. Herrick, A.B. Robert M. Lovett, A.B.Edwin H. Lewis, Ph.D. Myr a Reynolds, A.M.Frederick I. Carpenter, A.B. Oscar L. Triggs, A.Harriet C. Brainard, Ph.B.Biblical ^Literature in Englisb©fftceraWilliam Rainey Harper, Ph.D. Ernest DeWitt Burton, A. B.Richard Green Moulton, Ph.D. Emil G. Hirsch, Ph.D.Ira Maurice Price, Ph.D., D.B. George Stephen Goodspeed, Ph.D., D.B.Robert Francis Harper, Ph.D. Shailer Mathews, A.M.Oliver J. Thatcher, A.B., Ph.D. Clark E. Crandall, Ph.D., D.B.Charles Foster Kent, Ph.D. Theophilus H. Root, A.M., D.B.Clyde Weber Votaw, A.M., D.B. Nathaniel J. Rubinkam, Ph.D.Dean A. Walker, a.m./IDatbematics©fftcereEliakim Hastings Moore, Ph.D. Oskar Bolza, Ph.D.Heinrich Maschke, Ph.D. William Hoover, Ph.D.J. W. A. Young, Ph. D. James Harrington Boyd, Sc.D.Harris Hancock, Ph.D. H. E. Slaught, A.M.J. I. Hutchinson, A.B.Bstronomp©fftcersS. w. Burnham, A.M. George E. Hale, S.B.T. J. J. See, Ph.D. Kurt Laves, Ph.D,Ferdinand Ellermannpbpsics©fficereAlbert a. Michelson, Ph.D. Samuel W. Stratton, S.B.F. L, O. WadsworTh, S.B., E-M. Glen M. Hobbs, S.B.A. M. Morrison, A.M.Cbemistri?©fftceraJohn Ulric Nef, Ph.D. Alexander Smith, Ph.D.Eduard Adolph Schneider, Ph.D. Felix Lengfeld, Ph.D.Julius StiegliTz, Ph.D. Massuo IkuTa, Ph.D.Richard S. CurTiss, Ph.D. Adolph Bernhard, A.B.©eoiogpOfficersThomas C. Chamberlin, Ph.D., LL.D. Rollin D. Salisbury, A.M.Charles R. Van Hise, Ph.D. Charles D. WalcottWilliam H. Holmes, A.B. Joseph P. Iddings, Ph.B.R. A. F. Penrose, Jr., Ph.D. Edmund C. Quereau, Ph.D.John C. Merriam, Ph.D.Zoology©fftcetaCharles O. Whitman, Ph.D., LL.D. William M. Wheeler, Ph.D.Edwin O. Jordan, Ph.D. Sho WaTase, Ph.D.Frank R. LiLLiE, A.B., Ph.D.Hnatom? anb HMstologg©fftcerAlbert C. Eycleshymer, S.B.pbpsiologpQtticcvBJacques Loeb, M.D. David J. Lingle, Ph.D.IReurologpHenry H. Donaldson, Ph.D. ©fitcersAdolph Meyer, M.D.paleontology©flicerG. Baur, Ph.D.Botan?OfficersJohn Merle Coulter, A.M., Ph.D. Henry L. ClarkeElocution©fficerS. H. Clarkpb^sical Culture©fficersA. Alonzo Stagg Charles W. AllenKate Anderson Horace ButterworthAnna F. Davies Joseph E. RaycroftCharles Porter Small, M.D.SKvnnitv. Scbool©fficere of Government anb If netructionUbeological XHnionOfficersPresident, E. Nelson Blake, BostonVice-Presidents I J°HN D' ROCKEFELLER, New YorkVice presidents, j Andrkw McLEiSH, GlencoeSecretary, Frederick A. Smith, ChicagoTreasurer, Edward Goodman, ChicagoJSoart) of {TrusteesPresident, Andrew McLeish, GlencoeVice-President, William M. Lawrence, ChicagoSecretary, Frederick A. Smith, ChicagoTreasurer, Edward Goodman, ChicagoAuditor, S. A. Scribner, ChicagoW. B. Bra yton, Blue IslandW. R. Harper, Ph.D., DD., LL.D., ChicagoC. W. Needham, WashingtonRev. F. Peterson, MinneapolisP. S. Henson, D.D., ChicagoA. McLeish, GlencoeA. K. Parker, D.D., ChicagoWillard A. Smith, Chicago Edward Goodman, ChicagoD. B. Cheney, D.D., Chicago F. A. Smith, ChicagoF. E. Hinckley, ChicagoO. P. Gifford, D.D., ChicagoF. W. Patrick, MarengoC. PERREN, Ph.D., ChicagoLP. Scrogin, LexingtonE. C. Atkins, Indianapolis J. A. Smith, D.D., ChicagoE- Nelson Blake, Boston W. W. Wait, ChicagoJ. H. Chapman, ChicagoW. H. Holden, ChicagoW. M. Lawrence, D.D., ChicagoHon. G. A. Pillsbury, MinneapolisS. A. Scribner, ChicagoRev. R. H. Austin, ChicagoE. B. HULBERT, D.D., Chicago^Executive CommitteePresident, Andrew McLeishVice-President, W. M. LawrenceSecretary, F. A. SmithTreasurer, Edward GoodmanAuditor, S A. ScribnerEx Officio, E. B. HULBERTW. B. BraytonO. P. GiffordP. S. HensonW. H. HoldenC. PerrenA. K. ParkerWillard A. SmithW. W. WaitC. E. Hewitt, Secretary Divinity School(Srabuatc2Divimt£ ScboolQlb Testament literature anb InterpretationOfficersWilliam Rainey Harper, Ph.D., D.D., LL.D Ira Maurice Price, B.D., Ph.D.Clark Eugene Crandall, Ph.D., D.B. Robert Francis Harper, Ph.D.IRew Uestament ^literature anb InterpretationOfficersErnest D. Burton, A.B. Shailer Mathews, A.M.W. Muss-Arnolt, Ph.D. Clyde W. Votaw, A.M., D.B.Charles E. Woodruff, A. B., D.B.Systematic Ubeologg OfficersGeorge Washington Northrup, D.D. , LL.D. Benjamin F. Simpson, A.M., D.B.E. A. Read, A.B.Cburcb IbistorpOfficersEri B. Hulbert, D.D. Franklin Johnson, D.D.John W. Moncrief, A.M. Alfred W. Wishart, A.B.1bomeleticst Cburcb polity anb pastorial H)utiesOfficersGalusha Anderson, A.M., S.T.D., LL.D., Franklin Johnson, D.D.Charles Richmond Henderson, A.M., D.D.SociologyOfficersCharles Richmond Henderson, D.D. George Dana Boardman, D.D , LL.D.2)ano*=1Rorwe0ian ^beological SeminaryOfficersNELS P. Jensen, D.B. Henrik GundERSEN, A.M., (Christiania), D.B.T. O. Wold, D.B.SweMeb ftbeological SeminaryOfficersCarl G. Lagergren, A.M., D.B. Eric Sandell, D.B.Nels N. Morten, D.B.jfcllows anc» Scbolars1bonorar£ ^fellowsAppointed for 1894-95Harriet C. Brainard, Ph. B.Frederick I. Carpenter, A B.Helen h. Tunnicliff, A.B.^fellowsGeorge H. Alden, A.B. H. Foster Bain, M.S.Storrs B. Barrett, A.B. Emanuel R. Boyer, A.B.Howard S. Brode George L. Brown, S.M.George C. Calvert, A.M. Charles M. Child, Ph.D.Fulton J. Coffin, A.M. Cornelia M. Clapp, Ph.D.Regina K. Crandall, A. B. Elizabeth Cooke, S.B.Susan R. Cutler, A.B. Frank B. Dains, S.M.Walter S. Davis, A.M. Leonard E. Dickson, A.M.Frank M. Erickson, A.B. James W. Fertig, A.M.Frank H. Fowler, A.B. Emma L. Gilbert, A.B.William Gillespie, A. B. Charles H. Gordon, S.M.Nellie E. Goldthwaite, B.S. Warren G. Gordis, A.M.W7illiam F. Harding, A.B. Sarah M. Hardy, Ph.B.William A. Heidel, A.M. Ephriam M. Heim, A.B.William E Henry, A.M. Bernhard C. Hesse, S.B.Thomas C. Hopkins, A.M., S.M. Robert F. Hoxie, Ph.B.Solomon A. Joffe, S.M. Laura A. Jones, A.M.Henry B. Kummel, A.M. Lillian LaMonte, A.B.Henry F. Linscott, A.M. Paul O. KernHervey F. Mallory, A.B. Albert D. Mead, A.M.Harriet B. Merrill, S.M. John W. Million, A.M.Addison W. Moore, A.M. Oscar T. Morgan, A.B.Joel R. Mosley, S.M. John P. Munson, S.M.Theodore L- Neff, A.M. Charles E. Peet, S.B.Alice E. Pratt, Ph. M. Emily K. Reynolds, A.B.Lars A. Sahlstrom, A.M. Cora L. Scofield, A.B.Frederick W. Shipley, A.B. Claude E. Siebenthal, A.M.James A Smith, A.M. Vernon P. Squires, A B.Henry W. Stuart, Ph.B. Samuel E Swartz, A.B.William I. Thomas, Ph.D. James W. Thompson, A.B.Dean A. Walker, A.M., B.D. George Tunell, S.B.Florence M. Walker, Ph.B. Jane K. Weatherlow, A. B.Jeanette C Welch, A.B Louis G. Whitehead, A.M.Bon^lRestoent fellowsMary Bo wen, Ph.B. William A. Locy, S.M.William H. Day Aaron Treadwell, S.M.2>i\nnit£ ffellowsEliphalet A. Read, A.B. Alfred W. Wishart, A.B.Charles E. Woodruff, A.B., B.D.<3raDuate ScbolarsCleveland K. Chase, A. B. Elizabeth K. FordJames N. Hart, C.E. Virgil E McCaskill, A.M.Edmund S. No yes, A.B. Elwood C. Perisho, S.M.David A. Rothrock, A.M. Stiles A. Torrance, A.B.Amy Tanner, A.B. Henry P. Willis, A.B.Beans of Bfftliateb InstitutionsJohn C. Grant, Kenwood InstituteCharles W. Mann, The Chicago AcademyJohn J. SchoburGER, The Harvard SchoolHerbert L. Stetson, A.M., Des Moines CollegeInstructors Bppomtebf or Summer Quarter, 1894Sylvester Burnham, A.M , D.D. Fulton J. Coffin, A.M.Lucius A. Sherman, Ph.D. Edwin Post, Ph.D.E. O. Sisson, A.B. Lea. R. DeVagneauAnna F. Davies, A.M.Other "(Instructors inmniversit\> ExtensionJames R. Boise Wardner WilliamsJames F. Baldwin, A.B. W. S. BeldingGeorge R. Berry, A.B. John Graham Brooks, A.B.Emanuel R. Boyer, A.B. . Edmund Buckley, A.M.Augusta J. Chapin, A.M. Ernest W. Clement, A.M.Olaus Dahl, Ph.D. Walter S. Davis, A.M.W. M. R French, A.B. Daniel Fulcomer, A.M.Walter E. Garrey, B.S. Henry W. Gentles, M.D.C. Lauron Hooper, A.M. J. P. Gordy, Ph.D.Isaac A Hourwich, Ph.D. Jenkin Lloyd JonesGeorge Leland Hunter, A.M. Caroline L. Hunt, A.B.C. W. Mann, A.M. Walter R. Mitchell, B.S.Frank L. Morse Howard N. Ogden, Ph.D.C A. Orr, A.B. Edward C. Page, A.B.George S. Potter, Jr., A.B. E. C. Rosseter, A.M.Nathaniel I. Rubinkam, Ph D. William RullkoeTTER, A.B.George L. Schreiber Jerome H. Raymond, A.M.LoradoTaft, M.L. W. Clarence Webster, a.B.William C. Wilcox, A.M. Alfred W. Wishart, A.B.Charles E Woodruff, A.B., D.B. William B. WoodsDean A. Walker, A.M. Albert W. Whitney, A.B.Francis A. Wood, A.M. Esther Witkowsky, a.B.©tber ©fficers anb HssistantsCharles W. Allen Horace Butterworth Antoinette CaryC. W. Chase Wabren Chase M. Ren a CobbCharlotte E Coe Theodore M. Hammond Frederic J. GurneyNannie Hester Harry D Hubbard Minnie JonesElizabeth V. McOuiston Sarah E. Mills R. G. MyersA. O. Parker Cora B. Perrine Joseph E. RaycroftGeorge W. Darrow Ferdinand Ellerman Nellie E. FoxAlma F. Gamble Mary L. Goss George E. RobertsonAlice M. Stover ¦ Jessie B. Stover Clarence A. TorreyGeorge Tunell J. W. Walker - Estelle WetmoreChester B. Williams Elizabeth Yeomans©fficers ofBbministrationCbe TUniversits in (BeneralThe President of the University, William Rainey HarperThe University Comptroller, Henry A. RustThe University Examiner, Frank Frost AbbottThe University Chaplain, Charles Richmond HendersonThe University Recorder and Registrar, Howard Benjamin GroseALICE FREEMAN PALMER.Cbe inntversttE (proper)2>eansEri Baker Hulbert Franklin Johnson Carl G. LagergrenNels Peter Jensen Harry Pratt Judson Henry H. DonaldsonRollin D. Salisbury William D. McCltntock Marion TalbotAlice Freeman Palmer George N. Carman Julia E. BulkleyDirector, A. Alonzo StaggtCftc Tflntverstts affiliationsHerbert Lee StetsonJohn C. Grant John J. SchobingerCharles W. MannDirector, Albion W. Smalla be TUniversitp. ^Extension DivisionCharles Zeublin Oliver J. ThatcherJerome H. Raymond Francis W. ShepardsonDirector, Nathaniel ButlerGbe THnlversitp. ^Libraries ano /IfcuseumsAssistant Librarian, Zella Allen DixsonDirector of Museums, Thomas Chrowder ChamberlinGbe Tamversitp. pressDirector, Charles W. ChaseDEAN MCCL1NTOCKUlnipersit^ Extension ^Division©fficers of BoministrationThe President of tlie University, William Rainey HarperThe Director of the University Extension, Nathaniel ButlerSecretaries of Departments"harles ZeublinOliver J. Thatcher Jerome H. RaymondFrancis W. ShepardsonZella Allen Dixson£be ffacnltg of tbe TUntversitp. JEttension DivisionWilliam Rainey Harper, Ph.D., DD., LL-D.Oliver J. Thatcher, A.B.Edward Webster Bemis, Ph.D.Clark Eugene Crandall, D.B. , Ph.D.Charles Zeublin, Ph.B., D.B.Francis Wayland Shepardson, Ph.D.Jerome H. Raymond, A.M. Richard Green Moulton, Ph.D.Nathaniel Butler, A. M.Howard Benjamin Gros :,William Hoover, Ph.D.Charles F. Kent, Ph.DS. Frances Pellett, A.M.Olaus Dahl, Ph.D. A.M.FACULTY ROOMHntversit^ SenatePresident, William Rainey HarperRecorder, Howard B. GROSEGalusha AndersonWilliam I. KnappHermann E. von HolstCharles O. WhitmanHarry Pratt JudsonAlbert A. MichelsonAlbion W. Small George W. NorthrupEri B. HulbertThomas C. ChamberlinWilliam G. HaleJ. Laurence LaughlinErnest D. BurtonJohn Deweymniver8it\> CouncilPresident, William Rainey HarpkrChaplain, Charles R- HendersonRecorder and Registrar, Howard B. GroseEri B. HulbertHarry Pratt JudsonAlice Freeman PalmerRollin D. SalisburyFranklin JohnsonJulia E. BulkleyWilliam D. McClintockThomas J. SchobingerJohn C. Grant Thomas C ChamberlinAlbion W SmallHenry H. DonaldsonFrank F. AbbottGeorge N. CarmanNathaniel ButlerMarion TalbotCharles W. MannCharles W. Chase Herbert L- StetsonDR. HENDERSONClassification of Instructors, 1893*4Head Professors --------------- 15Professorial Lecturers ------------- 3Professors ---------------- 24Associate Professors - - ----- 22Assistant Professors -------------- 28Instructors ..-------------25Tutors ----------------- 10Assistants ---------------- 15Readers ----------------- 9Docents - - ----- - ..--.- 11Total --------------- 162BOOKTHREE,Vi .v_^ J. 5^001 3 ^ A(*f.-J £*SS*J>' V 0 fr§*"Cr^DL/^'1894©fficersPresident, H. C. MurphyVice-President, A. C. WilkinsonSecretary, B. h. HulbERTTreasurer, H. P. WiltjsExecutive CommitteeP. B. KOHIySAATW. H. PrkscoTTMaude L. RadfordW. P. BSHAN• • •1895©fficersPresident, T. W. MoranVice-President, Irene B. RobinsonSecretary, Jennie K. BoomerTreasurer, Ralph W. WEBSTERExecutive CommitteeT. W. MoranLouise C. ScovelMyra H. StrawnP. F. CarpenterJohn VoightSenior ClassStatisticsSamuel D. Barnes : Sergeant-at-arms house of representatives ; vice-president oratoricalassociation '94 ; 3rd prize one mile walk, triangular collegiate meet '94; track team '94.Warren P. Behan : B 0 II' ; president glee and serenade organization '94 ; president gleeclub '94 ; second bass glee club '92, '93, '94, '95 ; chairman of public worship christianunion ; reception committee Y. M. C. A. ; track team '94 ; first prize running broad jump,triangular collegiate meet '94 ; usher ; executive committee senior class ; editor UniversityWeekly '95._Frank H. Blackmarr : 2 A E ; 0 N E ; manager of glee and serenade clubs '94, '95 ; secondbass glee club '94, 95 ; assistant lecturer in general chemistry.Jennie K. Boomer : Freshman-sophomore committee ; finance committee Y. W. C. A. ; recording secretary ibid ; reception committee ibid.Frank Chadburn : AT; president university college '93 ; university orchestra.Harry R. Caraway : A K E ; Y. M. C. A. ; president republican club '92 ; secretary ibid '93 ;delegate to American republican league '93 ; vice-president university college '94 ; chairman executive committee ibid '94 ; reception committee ibid '94 ; manager Washingtonianball '94 ; usher '92, '93 ; tennis association.Paul F. Carpenter : Secretary and treasurer Snell Hall '94 ; treasurer university college'94 ; president ibid '94 ; executive committee ibid '94 ; reception committee ibid '94.Harry V. Church : Track team '94 ; 1st prize running broad jump, western inter-collegiatemeeting '94 ; 2nd prize running broad jump, triangular collegiate meet '94 ; 3rd prize onehundred yards dash ibid ; 3rd prize 220 yards dash ibid ; basket ball team '94.Faith B. Clark : Latin club ; social science club ; university chorus ; secretary and treasurersecond mandolin club.Frederick W. Bastman : AT; leader glee club '94 ; manager glee club '94 ; president university chorus '94, '95 ; university choir '94, '95 ; gaboon club.HalliE C. Bllls : AKE; vice-president republican club '92 ; delegate to American republicancollegiate league '92 ; house of representatives '92.AlEThia Hamilton : President Y. W. C. A. ; Latin club ; Greek club.Philip B. Kohls aat : 2 X ; president university college '94.Horace G. LoziER : B0II; first tenor glee club '94 ; author "Thinkers' Song " and " FootBall Song ; " foot ball team '94.Mary L. MaroT : Bxecutive committee university college '92 ; vice-president ibid '93.Thomas W. Moran : Bditor University Weekly '93, '94, '95 ; managing editor ibid '95 ;executive committee democratic club ; melancholy club ; president senior class '95.Henry C. Murphy : Managing editor University Weekly '93, '94 ; executive committeedemocratic club ; president senior class '94 ; first bass glee club '94, '95 ; melancholy clubBarlE V. PiERCE : Treasurer oratorical association ; ist prize oratorical contest '93 ; 2nd prizeoratorical contest '94 ; delegate to northern oratorical league '93 ; second bass glee club '94 ;university chorus '94 ; university choir '94 ; treasurer devotional committee Y. M. C. A. ;president university college '94.Lucy F. PIERCE : Second mandolin club ; woman's glee club ; French club ; representativeto college conference at Lake Geneva ; executive committee university college '94.William Howard PrescoTT : AKE; Y.M.C.A.; president glee and serenade clubs '94 ;second tenor glee club '92, '93, '94 ; choir '92, '93 ; chorus '92, '93 ; base ball team '93 ;tennis team '92, '93, '94 ; tennis champion '92, '93 ; winner in doubles, northwest tournament '93 ; winner in doubles, indoor tennis tournament '94 ; head usher '92, '93 ; secretaryand treasurer of Y. M. C. A. '92, '93 '94 ; executive committee senior class '94 ; editor University Weekly '93 ; judge indoor meets '93, '94 ; executive committee tennis association '93.Maude L- Radford : English and French club ; mandolin club ; university chorus ; secretarysenior class '94 ; editor University Weekly '94 ; 1st prize Weekly story competition, Englishscholarship '94 ; executive committee senior class '94.IRENE E- Robinson : Chorus '94 ; choir '94 ; secretary university college '93, '94 ; woman'sglee club ; representative to college conference at Lake Geneva ; French club '94, '95.Mary J. ROGERS : Vice-president sophomore class '92 ; chairman finance committee Y. W. C. A.'94 ; Latin club.Howard Roosa : Manager and editor of University News ; secretary and treasurer of democratic club '93, '94 ; president ibid '94, '95 ; melancholy club ; executive committee independent club '92.LOUISE C. Scovel : K A 9 ; vice-president university college '93 ; secretary university college'94; editor University Weekly '94; vice-president and chairman Y. W. C. A. '93, '94;French club.Ralph W. Webster : A K E, 9 X E ; melancholy club ; silentium ; treasurer senior class '94 ;base ball team '93, '94 ; manager Washingtonian ball '94 ; usher '92, '93 '94 ; assemblyclub ; tennis association ; vice-president university college '95 ; chairman executive committee university college '95 ; floor manager Washington promenade '95.Harris F. Williams : A K E ; treasurer republican club '92, '93 ; member university house ofrepresentatives ; editor of the Nezvs '92 ; melancholy club.Day Williams : ATA; university orchestra ; first bass glee club '94 ; cello soloist serenade club.Henry P. Willis : Political economy club ; delegate to university union.Frances G. Williston : Athenaeum ; Washington seminar ; reception committee '92 ; editorWeekly ; Beecher Hall committee ; captain Beecher Hall basket ball team '93, '94 ; " Diana "in ' ' The New Cosmogony ; ' ' representative to college conference at Lake Geneva ;operatic club ; Greek club ; university choir '93, '94, '95 ; secretary and treasurer universitychorus ; Y. W. C. A.Frank W. Woods : Oratorical society ; secretary and treasurer christian union ; delegate tostate Y .M. C. A. ; first tenor glee club '93, '94, '95 ; managing editor University Weekly '95.Adam M. WyanT : $ T A ; foot ball team '94 ; secretary and treasurer exegitical club ; membership committee Y. M. C A. ; track team '94 ; 2nd prize 16-lb. shot put ; 3rd prize throwing 16-lb. hammer ; triangular collegiate meet '94.fall, 1892©fficersPresident, Antoinette CareyVice-President, A. C. WilkinsonSecretary and Treasurer, John G. FryerExecutive CommitteeA. C. Wilkinson R. F. HoxieFlorence M. Walker G. A. BaleMary L. Marot• • •Wlintertl893©fficersPresident, F. W. ChadburnVice-President, Mary K. MarotSecretary and Treasurer, H. P. Willis .Executive CommitteeG. A. Bale J. G. FryerRizpah W. Gilbert Florence M. Walker©fficersPresident, Margaret Gilbert • • •Spring, 1893Secretary, Herbert Manchester• o •©fficers Winter, 1894President, E. V. Pierce Secretary, Irene B. RobinsonVice-President, LouiSE C. ScovEL Treasurer, P. B. KohlsaatExecutive CommitteeLouise C. Scovel, ChairmanUna McMahonLucy F. Pierce• • • John F. VoightS. D. Barnes©fficers Spring anb Summer, 1894President, P. B. KohlsaatVice-President, Myra StrawnSecretary, LOUISE C. ScovELTreasurer, Paul Carpenter• • •3falit 1894©fficersPresident, Paul CarpenterVice-President, H. R. CarawaySecretary, Mary MaynardBXeCUtiVe Committee Treasurer, W. Walt AtwoodH. P. Caraway, Chairman Frances I. Hopkins |Martha F. Klock W. A. PayneAdelaide M. Idejfall, 18923first tf resbman Glass©fficersPresident, H. W. Stone Secretary, Clara D. HulberTVice-President, Demi a Butler Treasurer, E. S. Keith• • •Wlinter, 1893©fficersPresident, G. L. Tait Secretary, Susan HullVice-President, Cora E. Roche Treasurer, Elmer E- Todd• • •Spring, 1893©fficersPresident, Cora E. Roche Secretary, Elizabeth MessickVice-President, G. P. Walker Treasurer, Harry F. Atwood• • •fall, 1893©fficersPresident, H. C. Hollo wayVice-President, R. H. Johnson •Secretary, Mabel Dore• • •Winter, 1894©fficersPresident, R. L. Dougherty Secretary, H. M. AdkinsonVice-President, Saxon Barrett Treasurer, G. BlissExecutive CommitteeJ. E. Raycroft, Chairman H. G. GalePhilip Rand• • •Spring, 1894©fficersPresident, Philip Rand Secretary, Theodosia KaneVice-President, H. G. Gale Treasurer, Robert Law, Jr.Executive CommitteePhilip Rand, Chairman Elizabeth MessickH. G. Gale Anna H. Wilmarthh. w. Wales• • •3faII,1894©fficersPresident, R. N. Tooker Secretary, Edith E. SchwarzVice-President, O.J. Arnold Treasurer, J. S. BrownGeological ErpeoittonThe summer of '94 found Chicago's first students' geological expedition in the field. Thework was done in Wisconsin, principally in the Devils Lake region ; the party being underthe direction of Professor Salisbury.The chief pre-requisite was a ten hour a week course in geology for the first term of thesummer quarter at the University. The work dealt almost exclusively with erosion and glacia-tion. The field work was done in the second term. Beside the investigations made in theimmediate vicinity of Devils Lake, short stays were made and data collected at Ablemans,Kilbourn City — the Dells of the Wisconsin— Mazomanie, Blue Mounds, Waterloo and at Madison.A prime object in the course was the cultivation of the habit of personal observation; "eachman for himself" was the word. To give every possible chance for individual work, the classwas divided into four groups of two or three each. The fifty square miles mapped out by theparty was divided into two sections and each section was mapped by two groups, in this waythe ground was covered twice, thus minimizing the chance of error. When in the field themembers of a group sometimes worked together, but more generally at a distance of half a mileor less apart, according as thick vegetation made necessary or occasion required closer inspection. Individual notes were kept and, at noon, stretched out in the shade of some tree, thewhile partaking of "sandwiches, pickles and pie," or "pie, pickles and sandwiches," as itchanced to be, with the usual quota of purloined apples within arm's reach the men comparedtheir notes. When a dispute or difficulty arose over a region it was visited again in companywith the Professor, and then additional evidence would be found to strengthen one side or theother or to open a path out of the difficulty.Comparatively little time was devoted to social engagements, though opportunities werenot lacking. Ten hours a day the week round were spent in the field and this left little timefor pleasure seeking. Probably the most enjoyable social event of the trip was the receptiontendered the men by the guests of the Cliff House and the cottagers of Devils Lake. Out oftown among the farmers the men made many warm friends. In town it was a pleasing noveltyto receive almost daily mention in the Baraboo newspapers. But when sitting in the front rowat the Opera House enjoying a performance of "Jane" by one of Frohman's companies, to haveone of the actors accost another with: "I say, what are those young fellows with knap-sacksand hammers doing up there on the hill behind your house ? ' ' was popularity unlooked for.As a unit the boys say the work was hard, but as a unit they also say they never spent amore enjoyable summer, and that they did find so much pleasure in such hard work is due tothe fascinating though exacting methods of instruction and genial good fellowship of ProfessorSalisbury, the memory of whose companionship it is a pleasure to revive.The following made up the party:Professor Rollin D. SalisburyElwood Chappell Perisho K. P. Nicholson W. Walt AtwoodLouis Wolfe, Jr. Henry Reat Caraway Oswald James ArnoldJohn Wallace Hewetson Aschel Lyon P. K. NielBOOKFOURHlumnt¦* Convocations " ~"">$,,^___-JlL2l ssociateo\s - Hlumni(Seneral CommitteeTheodore M. Hammond, of the Collegiate Alumni AssociationIra M. Price, of the Divinity Alumni AssociationClifford W. Barnes, of the Graduate Alumni Association£be Collegiate Hlumni associationFrederick A. Smith, '66 PresidentHenry F. Milligan, '93 First Vice-PresidentElizabeth Faulkner, '85 . . . Second Vice-PresidentEdgar A. BuzzELL, '86 . . Secretary and Treasurer£be ®ivtnit\> Hlumni HssociationR. E. Manning, '74 • PresidentIra M. Price, 'b2 ....... . Secretary and Treasurer£be (Srabuate Hlumni HssociationClifford W. Barnes, '93 PresidentMadeleine Wallin, '93 SecretaryElkanah Hulley, '93 . TreasurerHlumnidoctors of ©bilosopbEAsada, Eiji ' Lewis, Edwin HerbertBernhard, Adolph Lillie, Frank RattrayBuckley, Edmund Poyen-Bellisle, Rene deCummings, John Smith, Warren RufusJohnson, Herbert Parlin Soares, Theo. GeraldoMasters of 'BxteArchibald, William Laird Hulley, Eloise MayhamBarnes, Clifford Webster Johnson, Luther ApellerDickie, Henry Lathe, AgnesFarr, Marcus Schults Learned, Henry BarrettHowerth, Ira Woods Thompson, Charles SproullHulley, Elkanah Zarbell, Ada/toasters of ©bilosopbEAtkinson, David Clarence Sikes, George CushingPratt, Alice Edwards Wallin, Madeleine^Sacbelors of BrtsBabcock, Minnie Francis Manchester, HerbertBehan, Warren Palmer Milligan, Henry ForsythChadbourn, Frank Wesley Morgan, EdwinDaniels, Mary Lucretia Northrup, Alfred SaylesDickerson, Philip Jackson Pierce, Earle VaydorDingee, Gertrude Parker Porter, ElizabethGaud, William Steen Ridpath, Clark EdwardHalphide, Alvan Cavala Rullkoetter, WilliamHoist, Herman von Sisson, Edward OctaviusJoralmon, Louis Bogart Taylor, Thomas JacksonKruse, William Henry Tupper, Edward LeonardLewis, Albert Buell Willis, Henry ParkerLozier, Horace GilletteJBacbelors of ©btlosopbEBurks, Jesse Dismukes Kohlsaat, Philemon BulkleyChurch, Harry Victor Prescott, William HowardGilbert. Rizpah Margaret Radford, Maude LaviniaHoxie, Robert Franklin Walker, Florence MercyKeith , Ella May Woods, Clarence HubertJBacbelors of ScienceBarnes, Samuel Den ham Hubbard, Marion ElizabethBlackmarr, Frank Hamlin Marot, Mary LouiseCary, Antoinette McCafferty, LuluGuyer, Michael Frederic Whitson, Andrew RobinsonJSacbelors of Divinity (TUniversitE)Allison, Matthew Gay Home, GeorgeBlanchard, William Lewis Kurtz, FrankBrinstad, Charles William Mills, John FreemanBurdick, William Lewis McNaul, Willard CaryCabeen, James Wallace Sanderson, Eugene ClaremontCoon, David Burdett Shatto, Charles RollinGriffin, Edwin Milton Van Home, Theodore JulianHemenway, Charles Asa Ward, John AlbertHolcomb, George 'Perry Wight, Wallace EdwardUbeologtcal IHnionAsby, James William McEwan, AllenFalls, James Washington Nordlander, Eric JohanGird wood, Joseph HaddonBacbelors of £beolog£Ubeoloqical IDlnionBerry, Fred McGillivray, Donald HughBixon, Frank Price Post, Ansel HowardBower, Leslie Stewart, John HenryDavies, Frederick George Stoner, Mary KimbroughElliott, John Waterman Theobald, Walter WilliamMartin, Benjamin F. Wheeler, Horace Jonathan1boR>ers of CertificatesScabemic CollegesBeattie, Maria Leiser, JosephBoomer, Jennie Kathryn Lewis, Mary CatherineCaraway, Harry Reat Lewis, Susan WhippleCastle, Mary Lutrell. EstelleChadbourn, Frank Moffatt, William EugeneClark, Faith Benita Moran, Thomas WilliamCook, Agnes Spofford Morgan, EdwinCurtis, John Birdsey, Packer, Anna SophiaDeGraff, Cora Eames Pierce, Lucy FrancesGale, Henry Gordon Robinson, Irene ElizabethGettys, Cora Margaret Rogers, May JosephineGilpatrick, Rose Adele Schuelle, Friedrich OscarGoodhue, Emma Louise Scovel, Louise ClaireGuyer, Michael Frederic Sherman, Franklin ColeHeil, John Henry Sherwin, AnnetteHobart, Ralph Hastings Taylor, Thomas JacksonHughes, Robert Lee Todd, Elmer ElyHulshart, John Van Vliet, AliceKarpen, Julius Williams, DayKlock, Martha Frances Williams, John WilliamKohlsaat. Philemon Bulkley Woods, Frank WilliamUbeological TUnionAnderson, Carl Lawrence, Antone OliverAnderson, Gustaf Robert Linden, FrederickBergman, Herman Lindholm, OlafBlake, James. Nelson, Carl AntonEvans, Thomas Silas Nelson, Sven AugustGrablachoff, Wiliko Pearce, WilliamGrarup, Christ Petersen Pedersen, Teleff ChristianHasselblad, Carl Roscen, JohanHeden, John Salquist, Carl AxelHoien, Ove Laurits Sten, Carl GustafJonson, Magnus Sundmark, Carl WilliamLarsen, Nels R. Taflin, OlafLaudahl, Nels Sorenson Wiking, Carl FridolfIbolbers of Decreesprior toflfoatrtculationDoctor of PhilosophyDoctor of Medicine -Master of ArtsMaster of PhilosophyMaster of ScienceBachelor of DivinityBachelor of TheologyBachelor of LawsBachelor of Arts -Bachelor of Letters -Bachelor of Philosophy -Bachelor of Science -TotalDegreesConferredt893*4Doctor of PhilosophyMaster of ArtsMaster of PhilosophyBachelor of Divinity -Bachelor of TheologyBachelor of ArtsBachelor of Philosophy ~Bachelor of Science -TotalScholarship anbIbonorable MentionAwarded in connection with the examinationsfor admission to the Academic Colleges.2>ateSeptember, '92December, '92March, '93June, '93 . .September, '93December, '93March, '94June, '94 . .September, '94 ScholarshipAlice Van Vliet .Cora B. Jackson . .Wm. E. Walling .f Vinnie M. CrandallL Herbert C. Durand/ ludwig lokb .\ Mary Perkinsf Vladyslas YarzambskiI Margaret Ford .Laura M. Scott . . .Frederick J. Livingston/ Florence F. Ball\ Harry B. Campbell .Edwin C. WoolleyMinnie Lester Ifoonorable flDentionJ. C. Friedmanr Wesley C. Mitchell\ Elizabeth T. Coolidgp;Allen T. Burnsf Isaac S. Rothschild< Harvey A. PetersonI Leila G. FishAlice Winston; Helen h. ballC. B. HerschbergerJoseph E. Freeman^ May MichaeliFxrst ConvocationCentral Music Hall,January 2y 1893Btoress"The Need of Universities in the United States."Prof. Von HolstTUsbersW. H. Prescott, Head Usher H. W. Stone, AideJ. E. Raycroft m. l. Millerh. D. Speer George TunellF. H.' Minard C. S. PikeSeconfc ConvocationGymnasiumApril 2, 1893Bfcbress"The Mission of the Scientific Spirit."Prof. ChamberlinIHsbersJ.JE. Raycroft, Head Usher H. W. Stone, AideH. H. Hewitt C S. PikeF. H. Minard H. R. CarawayW. P. BehanUbirfc ConvocationCentral Music HallJune 26, 1892,Bfcfcress"The Plan of the University in American Life."Prof. HaleTHsbersW. H. Prescott, Head Usher H. W. Stone, AideH. C. Holloway J. E. RaycroftC S. Pike H. R. Carawayr. w. Webster3f ourtb ConvocationWalker MuseumOctober 2, 1893Bttoress' ' Evolution. ' 'Prof. Henry Drummond, ScotlandIHsbersW. H. Prescott, Head Usher J. E- Raycroft, AideH. C. Holloway h. T. ChaceF. H. Minard C. S. PikeH. G. Gale H. R. Carawayafxftb ConvocationCentral Music HallJanuary 2, 1894BfctoressBy Prof. Remsen, of Johns Hopkins UniversityTUsbersH. C. Holloway, Head Usher H. G. Gale, AidePhilip Rand Horace DoughertyC. S. Pike H. T. Chace H. T. ClarkeSixtb ConvocationCentral Music HallApril 3, 1894B&fcress"Some College Fallacies. ' 'Prof. Coulter, of Lake Forest UniversityTUsbersH. C. Holloway, Head Usher H. T. Chace, AideJ. E. Raycroft C. S. PikeHorace Dougherty H. G. GaleW. P. Behan H. H. HewittH. L. Clarke W. E. WallingSeventb ConvocationUniversity CampusJuly 1, 1894B&fcress"Some of the Objects and Methods of Physical Science."Prof. Michelson'WsbersJ. E. Raycroft, Head Usher H. T. Chace, AideC. S. Pike H. H. HewittEigbtb ConvocationUniversity CampusOctober /, 1894Btoress"The Greatness of Religion."Rev. John Henry Barrows, D.D.TUsbersJ. E. Raycroft, Head Usher Philip Rand, AideH. G. Gale H. T. Chacejftrst Cbapel Service©ctober lt 1892©r&er of Exercises• • •Organ Prelude . . Andante con moto ..... CalkinLord's Prayer Dr. HarperDoxology Choir and CongregationHymn (No. 301) . . Laudes-Domini ......Responsive Reading . . Psalm 95 Led by the PresidentHymn (No. 418) .Scripture Reading I. Genesis; I. John Dean Henry Pratt JudsonPrayer Galusha AndersonHymn (No. 1124) . . . Laudes-Domini Gloria Benediction Dean Eri B. HulbertOrgan Postlude . . Communion in E minor .... Batistejftrst Bnni\>et8ar\>Cbapel Service©ctober 1, 1893Address by Dr. William Rainey HarperMusic by Immanuel Baptist Church ChoirIfnbepenbence IDa\>me&nes&as, Juls 4t 1894Theatre, Kent Chemical Laboratoryio o'clock/IftUSlCMiss Mary von Holst, SopranoMrs. Hess-Burr, Accompanist2l&&ress"Ought the Senate of the United States to be Abolished ? "Head Professor, Hermann Eduard von Holst? ? ? ? > ? ? ?Washington's Birtbba^Celebrationsjfebruarg 22, 1894Presiding Officer, Dr. HarperSong . . "America." . . The AudiencePrayer . . - . • Rev. Dr. CrandallPatriotic Address . . . Gov. Wm. McKinleyjFebruar? 22t 1895Patriotic Song ServicePresiding Officer and Speaker, Dr. JudsonBOOKr<rv$/ |||Hf VERITY f|DU>C$^ A.^// J W^--'-C^- '«?«*>_MISS REYNOLDS MISS TALBOT MISS WALLACEBanc\> poster IbouseHead, Miss Myra ReynoldsSecretary, Miss Emily ReynoldsHouse Counselor, Associate Professor W. D. McCeintockIbouse CommitteeMyra Reynolds, Ex-OfficioJane K. Weatherlow Mary E. LoveMarion S. Morgan Agnes S. CookEntertainment CommitteeFrances Inez HopkinsGrace Freeman Edith E Schwa kzEventsHouse WarmingFirst Monday ReceptionHalloween Party ffall Quarter, 1893Party given by Table Number SixSecond Monday ReceptionWednesday Evening Prayer MeetingsIKIXinter Quarter, 1894Dinner Party given by Table Number Six Second Monday ReceptionFirst Monday ReceptionDinner Party given by Table Number Four Third Monday ReceptionWednesday Evening Prayer MeetingsGeneral ReceptionReception to the Classical ClubFirst Monday ReceptionUniversity College PartyReception to Semitic ClubReception to English Club Spring Quarter, 1894Reception to Chicago Wellesley ClubSecond Monday ReceptionBazaar for the Wellesley FundBirthday Party for Miss ReynoldsThird Monday ReceptionWednesday Evening Prayer Meetings.ffall (Quarter, 1894Mrs. Palmer's Reception to Graduate Schools Party given by Misses Reynolds, Cook andReception to Mr. and Mrs. Potter Palmer SchwarzFirst Monday Reception First Literary Meeting of The Mortar BoardHalloween Party Second Monday Reception1 . J j ,g1kell£ IbouseHead, Miss Marion TalbotSecretary, Miss CaryCounselor, Professor J. Laurence LaughlinIbouse ©ommmitteeMisses McClintock, Kennedy, Hubbard, Butler,Roodhouse, HarrisEventsKelly House OpenedFirst Reception ©ctoberHalloween PartyNovember" Dime Museum " for Furniture FundThanksgiving Day Dinner and Foot Ball PartyDecemberReception Informal Christmas PartyJanuaryVisiting Chemists EntertainedMonthly Receptionjfebruar\>An Informal PartySt. Valentine's PartyDinner to the Glee ClubA lrancy Dress PartyflfoarcbSecond Monday ReceptionReception to University Extension Guests BprilAn Afternoon ReceptionA Dinner and a Dance/lfoa£An Address by Assistant Professor FrederickStarrA ReceptionJuneMonthly ReceptionAn Informal Party3ul2A Reception to the Women in Beecher, Kellyand Nancy Foster HallsA MusicalBugust ano SeptemberKelly Hall Closed©ctoberA Candy PullA Masquerade BallIRovemberA Dinner to the Foot Ball MenAn Afternoon ReceptionLuncheon to General Booth and Membersof the Salvation ArmyBeecber IbouseHead, Elizabeth WallaceCounselor, Assistant Professor F. J. MillerIbouee CommitteeElizabeth Wallace, Ex-OfficioEmma L. Gilbert, Secretary and TreasurerCharlotte C. GrayHarriet C. Agerter Millia A. CrottyEvents1893©ctoberCelebration of HalloweenIRovemberFirst Regular ReceptionA. C. C. Society EntertainedThanksgiving Dinner PartyParty given by Miss Wallace and Miss BrownDecemberSecond Regular ReceptionReception to the Political Economy ClubBreakfast given at Snell House by Mr. Staggfor Members of Beecher HouseDr. and Mrs. F. J. Miller Entertained1894JanuaryThird Regular ReceptionMrs. Palmer, Miss Wallace and Miss BrownEntertained Members of the FacultyffebruarEMrs. Beecher EntertainedFourth Regular ReceptionMrs. and Miss Wilmarth EntertaindftarcbFifth Regular ReceptionMiss Brown Entertained BprflSixth Regular ReceptionReception to the Glee and Serenade Clubsand Base Ball Team/Ifta£Seventh Regular ReceptionMiss L/ivingstone gave a MusicalDr. Miller Entertained the Latin ClubDinner by Miss KlockJuneEighth Regular ReceptionDinner by Miss Scofield, Miss Crandall andMiss McCaskyAcademic Day — Miss Wallace Entertained atLuncheon©ctoberNinth Regular ReceptionY. W. C. A. held a ReceptionMiss Wallace gave a Luncheon for Mr. andMrs. Sol Smith RussellCelebration of HalloweenIRovemberTenth Regular ReceptionMiss Klock 's and Miss Maynard's table Entertained Dr. and Mrs. Miller at DinnerLuncheon to Mrs. BeecherThanksgivingDr. and Mrs. Miller Entertained at DinnerDecemberDinner by Miss Klock, Miss Maynard andMiss OsgoodDR. KENT(Srabuate IbouseHead, Dr. Charles F. KentCounselor, Professor Albion W. SmallSecretary, Professor Oliver J. ThatcherTreasurer, William HillPatroness, Mrs. C. R. CraneExecutive Committee /llbembersbip CommitteeH. B. Learned F. W. Sanderson O. L- Triggs A. E. McKinleyPhilip Rand O. DahlSocial CommitteeC. F. Conger V. P. SquiresH. R. DoughertyPhilip Rand F. W. ShipleyAnnual Reception of Graduate Hall takes place on February 1 1, the Fve ofLincoln's BirthdaySnell IbouseHead, R. M. LovETTVice-Head, W. O. WilsonSecretary and Treasurer, John LamayCounselor, Prof. H. P. JudsonIbouse CommitteeFirst Floor, Waldo BreedenSecond Floor, J. E. RaycroftThird Floor, W. O. WilsonFourth Floor, Kenneth G. SmithBusiness and social meetings every Friday eveningEvents1893©ctoberSnell House organized1894JanuaryFirst ReceptionMr. Stagg gave a Sleigh RideilFebruarp.ReceptionjflbarcbSnell built a Tennis CourtBprilReception /IftasReception©ctoberMr. Lovett, the new Head, comes inMrs. Snell presents new furnitureInformal House Warming in new ClubRoomReception in honor of Mr. and Mrs. A. A.Stagg and Mrs. Henrietta SnellHalloween PartyIRovemberReceptionBOOKSixHlma AbaterWords by Edwin H. Lewis. (For Male Voices.)Al- $E*=£=*=i. To-2. Her3- The1 night we glad- ly sing the praise Of her who owns us as her sons,might-y learn-ing we would tell, Tho' life is something more than lore,cit - y White hath fled the earth, But where the az - ure wa - ters liea— N- I IN IN^it ^±=±4=±%=ttd=m ^Mmsms ±:S4 =P=fct «tOur loy - al voic - es let us raise And blessShe could not love her sons so wel-l, Loved sheA no - bier cit - y hath its birth, The citJN ^_J N her with our ben - i - sons.not truth and hon - or more.- y Gray that ne'er shall die.3=£e£e£ E£= ^=S££=M$ m . & m 9 ~f ¦ f 1 # • # « 0 t r r 1# . m a a 0 • b U ! * • * 0 m-S r r r r * •piw Xj u 1~; k ' 1 P L j J J ^ 1OfWe piFor1 1 1/ K" !? ^ i/ 1 | 1 r - w y Jall fair moth-ers fair - est she, Most wise of all that wis - est be,-aise her breadth of char-i - ty, Her faith that truth shall make men free,de- cades and for cent-u-ries, Its bat - tle-ment-ed tow' rs shall rise,J ' h 1 , 1 h 1fmY P- 1. f r • a «| 0 1 r r • • * 1irJ- a p « b*-' ? r r p • 1 ("' « r r P Pi!r 9 v v r a \J U h ^ ' J 1'^ ^ * r 1 )J !/¦-•-te£ e=s =e= feg: ^ :^i 11 ¦ — * — ? — ^-j-v — #— trMost true of all the true, say we, Is our dear Al - ma MaThat life shall live e - ter - nal-ly, We praise our Al - ma MaBe - neath the hope-tilled western skies, *Tis our dear Al - ma Maj|=S^Ei^^3i!EEsEiEEg=£=SEE£E^3JEi± tt -9—V- feg S ter.ter.ter.ISt 11893 = 1894©fficersWardner WiiJeiams, DirectorW. H. Prescott, First President W. P. Behan, Second PresidentAlfred Williams, First Manager F. W. Eastman, Second ManagerZhe (Slee ClubW. P. Behan, President E. O. Sisson, SecretaryF. W. Eastman, Leaderffirst TTenors Secont> UenorsHorace Lozier w. H. PrescottF. Currier Smith h. H. HewittGeorge Horne f. W. MixseeeF. W. Woods h. D. AbeeesffirstJSass SeconD JBassF. W. Eastman p. D. NichoesDay Wieliams p. V. PiercePhieip Rand e. O. SissonH. J. Smith Aefred WieeiamsW. P. BehanTLhc Serenabe ClubSignor Sa^vatore Tomaso, InstructorJfirst flDan&olinsW. S. BondH. T. Chace, Jr.H. D. WooefR. II. HOBARTH. W. Stone Seconfc flDan&olinsflDan£>olaV. W. SincereOuttars W. S. Bond, LeaderG. A. BeissJ. C. Chamberein, Jr.E. F. MandeeW. C. VaughanF. F. Steigmeyerjftrst Hnrntai Concert(Blee anbSerenafce -ClubsCentral /lEmsic 1balltUues&as Evening,flDarcb e, 1894lesdames IpatronessesP. D. ArmourGeorge B- AdamsC. K. G. BillingsJohn W. ClarkeW. J. ChalmersJohn CoonleyWirt DexterJ. J. GlessnerCharles D. Hamill William R. HarperCharles HenrotinNoble R. JudahH. H. KohlsaatE. A. LancasterAndrew McLeishR. Hall McCormickCyrus W. McCormick, Jr.Franklin MacVeagh Potter PalmerFred W. PeckA. A. SpragueAlice Freeman PalmerO. S. A. SpragueJ. Y. ScammonH. M. WilmarthNorman WilliamsCiao programmeThe Serenade Club PiraniCome Let's Dance and SingThe Gi.ee Club WentworlhWake Not, But Hear Me, Love ....Mr. Eastman and Gi.ee Club ThompsonSchneider's BandThe Glee Club MundyLinger Longer, Lou-LooThe Serenade Club Arr. TomasoI Arise from Dreams of TheeMb . Nichols and Glee Club TouttellotMorceau CaracteristiqueDay Williams GoltermannFoot Ball Song .The Glee Club LozierMarch . •ffntermtssionThe Glee Club BeckerMazourka Del'OroThe Serenade Club TomasoIf I were a Knight of the Older l Time . . . .Alfred Williams . MillardI Think of TheeThe Glee Club ElsonThree Thinkers . Robin HoodThe Glee and Serenade ClubsAlma Mater ........ MandevilleThe Glee Club1Hni\>et8tt\>©uartette1893=1894Horace Lozier, First TenorW. H. Prescott, Second TenorF. W. Eastman, First BassoF. D. Nichols, Second Basso©ctetteSfirst {TenorsHorace LozierGeorge Hornefftrst JBassosF. W. EastmanPhilip Rand 1893^1894SeconD lienorsW. H. PrescottH. D. AbellsSecond bassosF. D. NicholsW. P. BehanDIRECTOR WILLIAMSftbe Iftniversit^ ©rcbestra1893Leader, Wardner WileiamsDiolinsCornet h. E. woeff IbornsH. W. StoneC. K. ChaseH. C. HUEEINGERMorele Lawfflute PianoF. W. Chadbourn Robert Law, Jr.DrumsG. M. HobbsJ. F. Hosic M. GuvERE. G. DodgeDouble asassA. J. Watson H. F. MaeeoryH. D. Hubbard 'CelloDay WieeiamsZhe *Univ>er8it£ Banjo ClubOrganized by R. H. Hobart ; Leader, 1894©fficersR. N. Tooker . . PresidentF. F. Steigmeyer Leader, 1895C. C. Macomber SecretaryArling Schaeeer . ". . InstructorMembers3fit6t Banjos Second BanjosW. B. Pershing C. C. MacomberR. N. Tooker W. E- WallingP. C. Hayward H. R. CarawayBanjonneR. P. BurkhalterGuitarsF. F. Steigmeyer C. F. Tolman E. C. LacknerGlee anb Serenade Clubs1894-1895©fficersHenry T. Chace, J K PresidentFrank H. Bi„ackmarr ....... ManagerRaymond C. Dudley . . Assistant ManagerPaul G. WooeEEy . . . SecretaryF. H. HLACKMARK K. C. DTJHLKYHnnual Gbristmas XTiupDecember 26 — Racine, Wis.December 27 — Milwaukee, Wis.December 28 — Sheboygan, Wis.December 29 — Fond du Dae, Wis.December 31 — Oshkosh, Wis.January 1 — Rockford, 111.1894*1895©fficersFrederick D. Nichols ..... . . PresidentHerbert E. Hewitt ....... LeaderPhilip Rand ...... SecretaryDr. William C. Williams . InstructorZlDembersjfirst UenorsCharles T. Wyckoff Paul G. WoolleyFrank W. Woods Franklyn C. SmithMelvin E- Coleman Horace Black5econt> UenorsHenry T. Smith Henry H. HewittJohn T. Campbell Harry D. AbellsRobert N. Meloy Henry T. Clarke, Jr.jpfrst SSassosPhilip Rand James S. BrownRobert B. Davidson Henry C. MurphySecotto aSaesosHerbert E. Hewitt Ralph R. SnowFrederick D. Nichols William P. LovettWarren P. Behan Frank H. BlackmarrHarry R. Fling1894-1895©fficersWilliam S. Bond .......... LeaderGilbert A. Bliss ........ SecretarySignor SalvaTore Tomaso . . . InstructorMembersafirst /Ifoan&olinsW. S. Bond E. F. MandelW. Jackson H. T. Chace, Jr.Secono /IfcanoolinsG. A. Bliss C. W. Stewart/Ifcan&olaV. W. SincereGuitarsW. E. Stkinwedell R- H. HobartH. W. Stone F. F. Steigmeyer W. C. VaughnSerenafce Club QuartetteW. S. Bond W. E. SteinwedellG A. Buss V. W. Sincere(Bbamber ConcertsSeason 1892*1893f irst (BoncertCobb Dall CbapelWednesday Evening, Nov. 16, 1892Wh,uam H. Sherwood, PianistThe Jacobson String QuartetteSeconfc ConcertCobb 1ball CbapelTuesday Evening, Jan. 10, 1893Mrs. Fannie Bromfield Zisi,er, PianistB. Bicknew, Young, Baritone .,z^Mrs. Mazzacoto Young, AccompanistUbirfc ConcertCobb 1ball CbapelTuesday Evening ; Feb. 28, 1893Ai,i,en H. Spencer, PianistFriedrich Hess, Violoncellistf ourtb ConcertCobb Dall CbapelTuesday Evening, April 18, 1893Mrs- NeaujE Rider Crane, PianistCharges A. Knorr, TenorMiss Kate P. Richards, Accompanistxanipersits ConcertCobb 1ball CbapelThursday Evening, June 22, 1893Mrs. Georgia L. Kober, PianistMiss Carrie Baenzieger, SopranoMiss Adei,E Bi,aner, ContraltoAlfred WiivWAMS, BassoH. C. HukUNGER, ViolinistMiss Blanche Whjjams, AccompanistWarden Wiujams, AccompanistCbristmas ConcertIftent BufcitoriumTuesday Evening, Dec. 19, 1893The University Chorus The University Gi.EE Ci,ubThe University OrchestraWardner Williams, ConductorSoloistsMiss May Ho wEEiv, SopranoMiss Fern Shores, PianistTheodore Speiring, ViolinistGrafton G. Baker, TenorMiss Agnes S. Cook, Accompanistflfoanbolin,Banjo anb<3uitar Club©fficersAnna Wilmarth PresidentInez Hopkins .... Secretary-TreasurerMembers/IfcanfcolinsLaura Graves Theodosia KaneSarah Tunnecijffe Edith SchwarzSarah Munson Inez HopkinsAnna Wilmarth Charlotte CapenJBanjosAdelaide Ide Jennette KennedyGuitarsJEvSsie Nelson Eva GravesMarian MorganI * lO 1 ?! m \\")\j ' '^B| ¦BHS .jg*\ - ^^H¦ i^¦VLL * r-:^^' -^ wikit V?L_ if w>L -' mfc * ^^^_ > j i# jB ^ |f^be TUniversit^(Xborus1894*1895Frederick W. EastmanWardner Williams ©fficersPresidentDirectorSopranosMisses H. L- NovellEdith NealJennie K. BoomerRose BoomerNina HoltonHattie Hollings worthElizabeth Porter MembersF. B. ClarkL. WrightFiskeA. E. CourtMinnie LesterMrs. FradenburghM. D. Davenport L. R. GoldsmithE. FitzgeraldLucy PierceM. L. BeanEthel KeenJ. N. SprayBltOSMisses Mary SturgesE. L- AndersonMarian MorganA. BaldwinM. I. DanaL. R. FrankhauserMary Marot E. M. BraceFrances WillistonMrs. F. D. DyeJ. I. McintoshK. S. AndersonH. A. Wood Mrs. C. J. ChamberlainTheo. KaneM. C. CurtisMrs. G. R. BurryEmma StockwellLuella Kerr{TenorsMessrs C. J. ChamberlainH. K. BoyerT. J. TaylorJ. S. WestR. W. HobbsBael H. E. PenkowskiF. C. JacksonFradenburghW. P. DearingF. D. Dye WilkinG. N. KnappD. J. BriggsH. E. PurrintonE. H. RobertsonMessrs H. R. FlingO. E. WielandF. K. FarrW. IX ChollerF. W. EastmanS. C. MorseC. R. BarrettTustin F. J. GurneyE. B. Van OsdelH. S. McClennihanWm. R. ShoemakerV. R. LansinghAlbert LuethiW. B. Hale D. L. JamiesonHenry GaleS. F. McLennanA. B. LewisP. F. MatzingerGrafton PrattCrewseUlntversit^Cbotr1894*1895SopranosGlenrose M. Bell Josephine L. HutchingsLouise M. Hannan Sarah MunsonBltosMary Sturges Agnes S. CookFrances Williston Mary MarottenorsCharles T. Wyckoff F. Currier SmithPaul G. Woolley Charles T. Chamberlinbassos-Frederick W. Eastman Julius H. P. GaussWilliam P, Lovett Hubert E. HewittBOOKwPIRKCTOR STAGGfoot Ball UeamRuiyLKOETTER .Smith .KnappBrennrman .WyantCONOVERChaceRaycroftMcGieuvrayStagg (CaptainRapp 1892Centre. Left Guard. Right Guard. Left TackleRight TackleLeft EndRight EndQuarter BackLeft Half BackRight Half Back. Full BackAeeen, Gaee, Lamay, Fredenkurg, Substitutesjfoot Ball Scbebule anfc ScoresOctober 8— University, 12 ; Hyde Park High School, oOctober 10 — University, 12 ; Englewood High School, 6October 11— University, 16 ; Hyde Park High School, 10October 12 — University, 18 ; Y. M. C. A., 4October 17— University, 26 ; Hyde Park High School, oOctober 19 — University, 18; Y. M. C. A., 12October 22 — University, o ; Northwestern University, oNovember 2 — University, 4 ; Northwestern University, 6November 5 — University, 18 ; Lake Forest University, 18November 12 — University, 10; University of Michigan, 18November 15 — University, 10 ; University of Illinois, 4November 19— University, o ; Purdue University, 38November 24 — University, 12 ; University of Illinois, 28Games Played, 13 ; Won, 7 ; Lost, 4 ; Tied, 2jFoot BallZeam1893LEFT HALF HACKBlissLEFT GUARD LEFT TACKLEAllen Knapp LEFT ENDLam ay FULL BACKNEELQUARTER BACKRaycroftCENTREWyantCaptain RIGHT HALF BACKNicholsRIGHT GUARD RIGHT TACKLE RIGHT ENDRULLKOETTER SlKES GALESubstitutesJoe Flint, N. Flint, Smith, Rapp, Hering, A. M. Wyant, Lozier, Chace, Speer, Pikefoot Bali Scbetmle anb ScoresOctober 14, UniversityOctober 17, UniversityOctober 21, UniversityOctober 25, UniversityOctober 28, UniversityNovember 4, UniversityNovember 11, UniversityNovember 15, UniversityNovember 19, UniversityNov. 30 (Thanksgiving Day) UniversityDecember 16 (at Tattersall's) UniversityJanuary 1/94 (at Tattersall's) UniversityFebruary 3, '94 (at Tattersall's) University o vs. Lake Forest University12 vs. Northwestern University10 vs. University of Michigan10 vs. Purdue University28 vs. University of Cincin nati12 vs. Oberlin College18 vs. Armour Institute6 vs. Northwestern University14 vs. Lake Forest University10 vs. University of Michigan .20 vs. Northwestern University8 vs. Notre Dame University .52 vs. "The Ravens" (Swift & Co.) 106620o33661428HooGames played, 13; Won, 7; Lost, 4; Tied, 2.S a p» «¦p g ^»£3*r^^Lj^NoTT Feint, Wyant, CentresAhen (Captain), Right Guard Rullkoetter, Left GuardKnapp, Right Tackle Roby, Left TackleLamay, Right End Gale, Left EndHering, Quarter BackCoy, Ewing, Right Half Backs Nichols, Left Half BackGale, Herschberger, Full BacksSubstitutesGarrey, Tooker, Black, McCaskill, ChaceCoachersA. A. Stagg, O. J. Thatcher, J. E. Raycroftfoot Ball Scbebuleof 1894September 8, University 32 vs. Englewood High School 0September 15, University 22 vs. Englewood High. School 0September 22, University 45 vs. Manual Training School 0September 29, University 4 vs. Chicago Athletic Association 12October 6, University 46 vs. Northwestern University 0October 11, University 14 vs. Rush Medical College 6October 13, University 16 vs. Beloit College 0October 17, University 20 vs. Chicago Athletic Ass'n(2d Team) 0October 20, University 0 vs. University of Wisconsin 30October 24, University 0 vs. Chicago Athletic Association 30October 27, University 18 vs. State University of Iowa 18October 31, University 26 vs. Prairie Athletic Club . 0November 3, University 6 vs. Purdue University 10November 7, University 4 vs. Englewood Y. M. C. A. 0November 10, University 28 vs. Lake Forest University 0November 21, University 10 vs. University of Illinois . 6November 24, University - 36 vs. Northwestern University 0November 29, University 4 vs. University of Michigan 6Games played 18Games won 12Games lost 5Games Tied 1Points scored by Universit y • 332Points scored by opponent :s . 118flnoivibualaveragesIRame UcyzC. W. ALLEN . . 29G. N. Knapp 27H. G. Gale . . . 20F. D. Nichols . 24C. F. Roby .. . 22F. E. Hering . . 20J. Lamay .... 21E. YUNDT . . . 25R. M. Tooker . . 19W. E- Garrey . . 21 .7E. B. Herschberger 18.3E. McCaskill . . 28.5H. W. Black . . 23-4A. R. E. Wyant 27W. Rullkoetter . 3° TMeigbt Ibeigbt174-3 • 72 .1170.2 71 4153-3 • 71.4161. 5 . 70.6175 70-3145-2 - 67.9149 2 . 67 7155-5 • 67.2155 68 1I5I-3 • 69. 1142. 1 . 673184 68.6168.3 • 67. 1165 74.1187.5 - - 70-3California jfoot BallSchedule anb Scores1894-1895f University of ChicagoChristmas Day at San Francisco \ Versus(. Leland Stanford, Jr. , Universityr University of ChicagoDecember 29 at L,os Angeles \ Versus(. Eeland Stanford, Jr. , Universityf University of ChicagoNew Year's Day at San Francisco -1 Versus( Reliance Athletic Clubf University of ChicagoJanuary 3 at Salt Lake City, Utah \ VersusJ J ° (Salt Lake City Y. M. C. A.Games PlayedWon . . •LostPoints scored by UniversityPoints scored by' opponents 4227618 244o12o652oi^:$fc«tw1Hniver8it\> Seconb Eleven1894Simpson, Left Guard Davis, Centre Deffenbaugh, Right GuardSincere, Left Tackle Sass, Right TackleWoollKy, Left End Tooker, Right EndAxELSON, Left Half Back H. PATTERSON, Right Half BackPaTERSON (Captain), Quarter Back Chace, Full BackFlanders, Peabody, Linn, SubstitutesScbeoule ano ScoresSeptember 2 — Second, o ; Hyde Park High School, oOctober 18 — Second, o ; Hyde Park High School, 12November 15 — Second, 16 ; Yale-Princeton, oGames Played, 5 November 17 — Second, 8; Morgan Park Academy, 6Won, 2 Lost, 2 Tied, i November 23 — Second, o; Hyde Park High School, 12Summary of Scores of ^University i£levenSeason of 1892 — Played, 13 ; Won, 7 ; Lost, 4 ; Tied, 2 ; Percentage, .538Season of 1893 — Played, 13; Won, 7; Lost, 4; Tied, 2 ; Percentage, .538Season OF 1894 — Played, 22 ; Won, 14 ; Lost, 7 ; Tied, 1 ; Percentage, .636Base Balll&nivevsity ColorMaroonXttnipersitp CbeerChi-ca'-go ! Chi-ca/-go !Chi-ca-go/ ! go7 !Go-it-Chi-ca ! Go-it-Chi-ca !Go-it-Chi-ca-go' !Base Ball Zeam1893SpeerLOGIESUBSTITUTESNicholsCATCHER(captain)StaggPITCHERPrescott tt GaleFIRST BASE VAUGHANTHIRD BASEWebsterSHORT STOPAdkinsonSECOND BASEPikeCENTRE FIELDMcGlLLIVRAY CONOVERRIGHT FIELD LEFT FIEIyDBase Ball Scbeoule anb ScoresMay 8 — University, 7 ; Denison, 11May 13 — University, 6; Wisconsin, 10May 1 6 — University, 6 ; Iowa, 2May 17— University, 26 ; Rush Medical, 2May 18 — University, 19 ; Western Electrics, 2May 20 — University, 5 ; Rivals, 10May 22 — University, 2 ; Illinois, 3May 24— University, 14 ; Lake Forest, 8May 27— University, 6 ; Illinois, oMay 30 — University, 18; Elgin, 6May 30— University, 9 ; Elgin, 8June 2— University, 11 ; Wisconsin, 5June 8 — University, 15 ; St. Ignatius College, 12June 14 — University, 6 ; Western Electrics, 1June 24 — University, 8 ; Virginia, 3Games Played, 15 ; Won, ii ; Lost, 4CATCHERPikeFIRST BASE RIGHT FIELDABEIvLSSECOND BASEAdkinson GAI.E PITCHERNICHOLAS(CAPTAIN)CENTRE FIELDHering SHORT STOPWebster THIRD BASEBrownLEFT FIELDGrantBase Ball Scbefculeanb Scores SUBSTITUTEMcGilxivray(RIGHT FIELD)April 10,April 14,April 21,April 28,May 5,May 7,May 9,May 12,May 14,May 18,May 20,May 23,May 26,May 30,June 6,June 8,June 13,June 16, University . . . . 24 vs.University . . . 17 vs.University ... 14 vs.University . . . 2 vs.University . . . 16 vs.University . . . . 19 vs.University (at Evanston) . 2 vs.University . . . 9 vs.University . . . . 15 vs.University (at Champaign) . 17 vs.University . . . • 14 vs.University . ¦ 4 vs.University . . . 10 vs.University (at Detroit) . 2 vs.University .... 4 vs.University . . . N vs.University (at Evanston ) 1 vs.University (at Madison) 2 vs.Games PlayedWon Uost ..... Chicago Athletic Association .Evanston High SchoolRush Medical CollegeRush Medical CollegeUniversity of WisconsinArmour Institute ....Northwestern University (12 innings)University of IllinoisEnglewood Y. M. C A.University of IllinoisEnglewood Y. M. C A.Northwestern University ( 10 innings)University of IowaUniversity of Michigan ( 10 innings)University of MinnesotaEnglewood Commercials .Northwestern UniversityUniversity of Wisconsin . 18. 11 7 191211'764310416664325Base BallSummer QuarterCATCHERSPike NicholsPITCHERSStagg (Captain) NicholsFIRST BASEWinstonSECOND BASEAdkinson THIRD B\SERothschildSHORT STOPSSpeer Brownthe mascotRIGHT FIELDERSThatcher SpeerZeublin LEFT FIELDRobvCENTRE FIELDERSSembowerBovversBase BallScbebule anb ScoresSummer Quarter, 1894June 23, University . 20 vs De La Salle Institute 1July 5, University 14 vs. All University . 1July 12, University . 12 vs. All University 1July 13, University 23 vs. South Parks 0July 20, University 9 vs. Englewood Commercials . 10July 24, University 6 vs. Bnglewood Commercials ( 10 inn mgs) 5July 25, University . 13 vs. South Parks . . 1July 28, University 16 vs. Chicago Athletic Association 9August I, University . 19 vs. All University • HAugust 4, University 15 vs. South Side Club 7August 10, University . 8 vs. St. Thomas .... 1August 15, University 11 vs. Auburn Park 3August 18, University . 11 vs. Bvanston Boat Club • 7August 21, University 0 vs. United Collegians (forfeited) 9August 24, University . 8 vs. Jackson Park .... • 7August 25, University 13 vs. Western Electrics 15September 2, University . 3 vs. Farwells .... . 6Games played, 17; Won, 1 3; Lost, 3; Forfeited, 1Summary of ScoreePlayed Won Lost PercentageSeason of '93 . 15 II 4 •733Season of '94 . 18 II 7 .611Season of '94 (summer) 17 13 • *3 .765* Forfeited 13fielbirtQ Hveraaes, 1894Name Position Games Play< ^d Put Outs Assists Errors PercentaPike . C. IO 56 24 2 .976Nichols . C. 3 20 5 I .961Brown P. 3 I 11 I •923Gale R.F. 6 12 0 I .923McGillivray R.F. 5 8 3 I .917Nichols . P. 10 16 45 6 .910Abells . 1 B. 11 90 7 10 .907Adkinson 2 B. 11 39 26 12 .844Hering C.F. 12 15 3 4 .818Grant L.F. 11 15 2 4 .809Webster S.S. 9 14 24 14 •731Brown 3B. 10 11 19 17 •639Gracfc Geam1894Harry HollowayJoseph E. Raycroft CaptainManagerMembersC V. BachelleS. D. BarnesC R BarrettGilbert BussW. P. BehanH. D. Church John LamayE- F. MandelT. K. NeffE. W. PeabodyA. T. PlENKOWSKYPhilip RandH. L. ClarkeA. E DavisA. A. EwingHarry HollowayH. D. HubbardW. R. Kekn J E. RaycroftLouis SassF. C. ShermanV. W. SincereF. F. SteigmeyerLouis WolffA M. WyantjFtrst Hnnual ZlDeetinaSoutb Stoe Ball (Brounfcs, CbieaGOIFrfoap, flfcap 25tfielb 2>a£ ©fficers<3ames Committee inspectorsJ. E. Raycroft, U. of C.ChairmanW. B. Kay, N. W.A. O. Jackson, L- F. IRefereeW. V. Booth, C A. A. B. F. CumminsR. A. KettleJ. G. SteeverGeo. A. Thorne5uoges at jf inisbJos. AdamsR. H. GreenC. S DownsF. W. Gerould jfielo SuogesW. S. McCreaW. S. FarranTF. M. WentworthG. F. RiddleClerhof CourseN. H. Van SicklenSss't Clerk of CourseJ. Van Inwagen, Jr.StarterEdw. W. Smith timersW. C. ThorneG. F. Harding, Jr.A. J. MarrettIReferee of CyclingF. W. Gerould ScorerW. C. SkillingerBss't ScorersJ.F.Turrill H. A.CroninrtfcarsbalH. S. Cornish©rber of Events©ne Ibunoreo l^aros DasbWinner — D. H. Jackson, L,. F.; :io 3-5.Second— E. F. Mandel, U. of C. Third— H. V. Church. U. of C.©ne dlMle IRunWinner — H. C. Holloway, U. ofC. ; 4:47 1-5.Second— H B. Cragin, E. F. Third— t.h. Lvne, N. U. ©ne Ibunoreo ano awentg J^arDs "fburoleWinner — L. Sass, U. of C; 119 2-5. Second— W. P. Kay, N. U. Third— W. BHunt, L. F.©ne=G:biro /nMle JBicscleWinner — J. P. Vandoozer, N. U. ; 147.Second— C. E. Waterman. Third— G.Bliss, U. of C.©ne rtlMle TOalfeWinner— J. H. RhEingaus, L. F.; 8:30 2-5.Second— V. W. Sincere, U. of C. Third— S. D. Barnes, U. of C.ftwo tflMle JStc^cleWinner— G. Buss, U. of C; 5:42 T-5. Second—J. P. VandoozER, N. U. Third— C. N.BACHEivi/E, U. of C.IRunning 1bigb JumpWinner — W. W. Wilkinson, N. U.; 4 feet9 1-2. Second— L. B- Dyson, N. U. Third— M. Stoker, N. U.1balf jfllMle IRunWinner — F. C. Sherman, U. of C. ; 2:09 4-5.Second— B. W. Peabody, U. of C, Third— H. B. Cragin, L- F.Zwo IbunDrefc anD twenty KarDs 2>a8bWinner — D. H. Jackson, L. F. ; .-23 1-5.Second—J. Lamay, U. of C. Third— H.V. Church, U. of C.©ole \t)aultWinner— A. A. Bwing, U. of C. ; 9 feet 1 3-4.Second— W. P. Kay, N. U. Third— L. H.GlIvI/EIvAND, Iy. F. Hfout Ifoun&refc and afortg 10ar£>s IRunWinner— A. D. Jackson, L,. F. ; .-54. Second -A B. Davis, U. of C. Third— W. B.Keen, U. of C.Gwo Ifounfcrefc anfc (Twenty l£?ar&s IburfcleWinner— W. P. Kay, N. XL; 128 3-5. Second -L. Sass. U. of C. Third— A. P.Bourns, L. FStanding Ifoigb JumpWinner — A. A. Bwing, U. of C; 4 feet 7.Second— W. W. Wilkinson, N. U. Third— F. G. Steigmeyer, U.of C.putting Sixteen ©ounD SbotWinner— F. A. Brewer, N. U. ; 36 feet 11.Second - A. M. Wyant, U. of C. Third —J. P. VandoozER, N. U.Gbrowing Sixteen ipounfc IbammerWinner — M. Wooi^sey, L. F.; 95 feet 6. Second -W. P. Kay, N . U. Third— A. MWyant, U. of C.IRunning ^Sroat) JumpWinner — W. P. Behan, U of C. ; 19 feet 7 1 -?.Second-H. V. Church, U. of C. Third—F. S. MELivEN, h. F.©ne /Iftile Geam 1RaceWinner — University of Chicago; 4:022-5.A. B. Davis, W. B. Keen, H. Holloway.Second— Lake Forest. Third — Northwestern UniversitytotalsOne hundred yards .Two hundred and twenty yardsFour hundred and forty yards .Bight hundred and eighty yardsOne mile One hundred and twenty hurdleTwo hundred and twenty hurdleOne mile walk .Two mile bicyclePole vaultShot put .Hammer throwStanding high .Running highRunning broad .One-third mile bicycleTeam mile relay in, of c, m.*w. %.#.4448553465316 135336339Totals 72 45 36The winner receives five points, the second three and the third oneUniversity oe Chicago— Firsts, 8 ; Seconds, 8 ; Thirds, 8 ; Total Points, 72Northwestern— Firsts, 4 ; Seconds, 7 ; Thirds, 4 ; Total Points, 45Lake Forest— Firsts, 5 ; Seconds, 2 ; Thirds, 5 ; Total Points, 36TUncer tbe Busptcesof tbe Cbicago atbletic associationSoutb Stoe Ball <3rounfcsJune 2, 1894EventsOne Hundred Yards Dash— Winner, J. C. Crum (S. U. I.); Time, 10 1-5; Second, E. H.BooThman (O.); Third, G. F. Sherman (W.)One Mile Walk— Winner, L. Brode (U. I.); Time, 7:41; Second, L. H. Foi.ES (W.); Third,Williams (S. U. I.)One Hundred and Twenty Yards Hurdle Race — Winner, A. C. Clark (U. I.); Time,16 2-5; Second, J. R. Richards (W.); Third, W. T. Chantland (S. U. I.)Four Hundred and Forty Yards Run — Winner, W. E. Hodgman (M.); Time, 51 2-5;Second, R. E. Whitley (I. C); Third, H. B. Copeland (W.)One Mile Run— Winner, H. P. Clyde (I. C); Time, 4:38 3-5; Second, H. V. Cragin (E. F.);Third, L. R. Palmer (I. C. )One Mile Bicycle Race— Winner, L. E- Cox (S. U. I.); Time, 2:464-5; Second, J. P.Vandoozer (N. W.); Third, J. T. Stevens (E.)Two Hundred and Twenty Yards Dash — Winner, J. C. Crum (S. U. I.); Time, 22 2-5;Second, G. F. Sherman (W.); Third, G. H. Root (U. I.)Running High Jump — Winner, A. C. Clark (U. I.); Height, 5 feet 8 inches; Second, C. T.Dey (S. U. E); Third, R. L. Holt (W.)Putting Sixteen-Pound Shot— Winner, D. Sweeney (U. I.); Distance, 38 feet 4 inches;Second, W. A. Baehr (W.); Third, H Cochrans (W.)Running Broad Jump — Winner, H. V. Church (U. of C); Distance, 21 feet; Second, F. J.Weedman (U. E); Third, H. G. Gould (W.)Throwing Sixteen-Pound Hammer — Winner, L. H. Fouts (U. I.); Distance, 100 feet 10inches; Second, W. A. Baehr (W.); Third, T. Woolsey (E. F.)Pole Vault— Winner, A. A. Ewing (U. of C); Height, 10 feet; Second, A. H. Culver (N. U.);Third, W. N. SHELLENBERGER (K.)averagesCollegesUniversity of IllinoisUniversity of WisconsinState University, IowaUniversity of Chicago .Iowa CollegeUniversity of MichiganNorthwestern .Lake Forest .Oberlin CollegeEureka CollegeUniversity of Kansas Firsts Seconds Thirds6 2 I. I 5 73 I 22 o OI 2 I. I o Oo 2 O. o I Io I O. o o Io o I TotalPoints.352219IOIO5432TT©tber associations CompetingBeloit College, Beloit, WisBoston Athletic Association, Boston, Mass.Chicago Athletic AssociationCalumet Athletic ClubChristian Brothers College, St. Louis, Mo.Cooper Memorial College, Sterling, Kan.Eureka College, Eureka, 111.Notre Dame University, Notre Dame, Ind.Ohio Wesleyan College, Delaware', OhioSt. Alban's Military Academy, Knoxville, 111.Wheaton College, Wheaton, 111.Washington University, St. Louis, Mo.Bicycle Zenm18<M<Louis Wolff . . . . . . . • . PresidentS. S. Barrett ....... Vice-PresidentC. F. Tolman . . . Secretary and TreasurerC V. Bachelle .... CaptainW. C. Vaughan . . BuglerMembersO. J. Arnold Fred GleasonW. W. Atwood R. N. MillerC. V. Bachklle W. B. PershingS. S. Barrett R. W. StevensC. S. Beach C. F. TolmanG. A. Bliss W. C. VaughanH. C. Durand Louis Wolffinmver8it\>Cycling Club©rgani3eo 3^anuar^ 23, 1893C. V. BACHELLE . . • . • • PresidentC. F. Tolman, Jr. . . . . . Secretary-TreasurerSaxton Barrett . . . . - CaptainjBvcntsZwo /lIMie IRoafc 1Race5une 19, 1893First Prize BacheeleSecond PrizeTime, 7:38UrianQuiar jfielfc 2>ap BarrettFirst Prize Zxvo /Iftile IRunBlissThird PrizeCbicago 1Roa& IRace BachelleBarrett /lfca$ 30t 1894:31stBACHElvLE 51stSeconfc annual Ifcmn&icap IRoafc IRace5une 15, 1894First Prize, Durand— Handicap, 1:50; Second Prize, Tolman— Handicap, 1:50; Third Prize,Beach — Handicap, 1 -.30 ; Time Prize, Bachelle— Scratch— Time, 14:57IfnboorHtbletfcflfeeetsTUnivcvBity Gymnasium/Ifoarcb IS, 1893EventsHeavy Weight Wrestling Contest— Knapp vs. Rullkoetter; won by Knapp; Time,i minutePole Vault— Won by Lanning; Height, 7 feet, 8 inchesRunning Broad Jump— Won by Behan; 8 feet, 11 inchesRelay Race — Winners, Keith, Stowell, RaycroftMiddle Weight Wrestling Contest— Stone vs. Pike; 2 bouts — First, no fall; Second, wonby PiKE; Time, 3 minutesJudges — Professor O. J. Thatcher (U. C.) ; Howard Prescott (U. C); InstructorHanson (M. P.)laniverstts (BgmnasiumBpril 15, 1893lEventsUniversity vs. Morgan Park AcademyThirty-Five Yard Hurdle Race— Won by Sass (U. C); Behan (U. C), secondStanding High Jump— Won by Behan (U. C); Knapp (U. C), secondQuarter-Mile Run — Won by Holloway (U. C.)Running Broad Jump— Won by NEEL (U. C), 18 feet, 4 inches; Dickey (M. P.), secondRunning High Jump— Won by Knapp (U. C), 5 feet, 1 inch; Lanning (U. C), secondThirty-Yard Dash— Won by Sass (U. C); Smith (M. P.), secondPutting Sixteen Pound Shot— Won by Knapp (U. C), 35 feet, 2 inches ; Stone (U. C.,,secondStanding Broad Jump — Won by Knapp (U. C), 9 feet, 10 inches; Behan (U. C), secondRelay Race — Won by University Team: McGillivray, Sass, HollowayUnboorflDeetiugsiflntversits (BsmnasiumJanuary 27jeventa1894One Lap Dash — Won by Lam ay; Sass, secondOne Mile Run — Won by Holloway; Evans, secondThree Lap Dash — Won by Lanning; Sherman, secondRunning Broad Jump — Won by Sass, 17 feet, 5 inches; Behan, secondReferees — H. Butterworth, J. B. RaycroftXllniversitp <35#mnasium3februar£ 3One Lap Dash — First Heat, won by Lamay; Mandel, secondSecond Heat, won by Lamay; DickERSON, secondOne Mile Run — Won by Davis; Briggs (H. P. H. S.), secondHalf Mile Run — Won by Sherman; Sass, secondOne Mile Walk— Won by Sincere; Parker (H. P. H. S.), secondPole Vault — Ramsey and Lanning, tied, 8 feet 5 inchesRunning High Jump — Won by Lanning, 5 feet 4 inches; Knapp, secondPutting Shot — Won by Knapp, 29 feet 10 inches; Rand, secondRunning High Kick — Won by Lanning, 8 feet 7 inches; Ramsey, secondDouble Kick — Won by Raycroft and Ramsey, tied, 6 feet 10 incheslanfversits Gymnasiumffebruar^ 17Running Broad Jump — Won by Church, 18 feet 5 inches; Jordan, secondOne Mile Walk — Won by Sincere; Barnes, secondOne Lap Dash — First Heat, won by Holloway; Second Heat, won by JordanHalf-MilE Run — Won by Lanning; Clarke, secondHtbleticflDatineeJBeneUt tov mhletic MeeociationIKent Buoitorium, ffebruatE 22programmeUniversity Serenade ClubUniversity Glee ClubDumb Bell Drill - - - -- - J. B. Raycroft, Leader"George Washington A Plagiarist" - - - - S.H.ClarkAthletic Dancing - -- -- Horace Butterworth, LeaderPlantation Songs - - - - - - A. A. Stagg and Glee ClubClass Drill and Tumbling - -- Horace Butterworth, LeaderBasket Ball1894Harry D. Hubbard . . .H. M. Adkinson . . . . . . GoalForwardsS. C. Liebenstein H. D. HubbardCentresC. K. Bliss S. M. Ramsay W. B. KeenBacksC. B. McGillivray F. D. NicholsH. V. Church, Guard CaptainSummary of ©antesJanuary 27, University 19 vs.February 1, University . 17 vs.February 10, University 20 vs.February 17, University 22 vs.March 3, University 13 vs.March 10, University IO vs.March 12, University 20 vs.WonLostBeecber Iball£eam Y. M. C. A. Training School . 11Y. M. C. A. Training School 11Morgan Park Academy . . 11Pullman Y. M..C. A. . . . 6Chicago Y. M. C. A. (central) . 15Morgan Park Academy . . 8Bnglewood Y. M. C. A. . . 176Frances Williston, CaptainMartha KlockCharlotte CornishBmma Davis Mary MaynardBdith FosterThora TompsonAnna WilmarthfIDembers of tbe IResifcentBasket Ball £eamj George, Captain De GraffBaird FishBell GettysCoolidge ThomasWallaceThree Basket Ball Teams were organized and games played as follows :January 26, Class of '96 . o vs. Class of '97 . . oFebruary 12, Beecher . 3 vs. Residents . . 2February 16, Beecher . 6 vs. Non-Residents . 9March 10, Residents . 2 vs. Non-Residents . 6tennis Hssociationjfirst tennis Clubof tbe^University of Cbicagojformct> 3une 18, 1893Carr NEELH.J. SmithR. C. DudleyC. B. McGillivrayJ. R. Raycroft MembersC. A. Torre yW. H. PrescottSam NeelH. L. ClarkeC. W. FletcherL. D. MlLLIMAN George Tun ellC. A. TolmanC. S. PikeA. A. StaggW. E. Moffatt1803©fficersC. A. TorreyPresidentH. H. HewittVice-PresidentCyrus TolmanSecretaryC. S. PikeTreasurerBiecutive CommitteeC. B. NEELC. A. TorreyW. H. Prescott 1894©fficersOliver J. ThatcherPresidentC. B. NEELVice-PresidentW. H. PrescottSecretaryV. R. LansinghTreasurerBiecutive CommitteeC. B. NEELW. H. PrescottO. J. ThatcherJ. E. RaycroftO. J. THATCHERW. HOWARD PRESCOTTChampionship of the Hlni\>ersit\>1892Won by W. Howard PrescottPrescott defeated Asada 6-i, 6-0 ; Moffatt 6-o, 6-0 ; Torrey 6-i, 6-o, 6-3Lansingh 6-i, 6-4, 6-0Ifnboor Championship1894SinglesWon by W. Howard PrescottScoresPreliminary IRounoFarr vs. Neff 6-3, 6-4; McGillivray vs. Hewitt 3-6, 9-7, 6-4; Torrey vs. McGillivray 6-3,7-5ffirst IRounoTorrey vs. Neff 6-3, 6-1 ; Allen vs. Ickes 6-0, 6-2; Dudley vs. Manchester"3-7, 7-5, 7-5Lansingh vs. Cutting 6-1, 6-1; Ramsey vs. Triggs6-2, 6-1 "i^*Thatcher vs. Caraway 6-2, 6-1; Prescott vs. Newby 6-0, 6-2Secono IRounoRamsey vs. Thatcher 6-0, 6-0; Allen vs. Dudley 4-6, 8-6, 6-2; Prescott vs. Lansingh 6-4, 6-4SemispinalsTorrey vs. Allen 12-10, 8-6, 6-1; Prescott vs. Ramsey 4-6, 6-0, 6-2, 6-3ffinalsPrescott vs. Torrey 3-6, 6-1, 6-0, 6-1doublesWon by NEEL and PrescottNeel and Prescott vs. Manchester and Torrey 6-1, 6-0Neel and Prescott vs. Campbell and Ramsey 6-1, 6-1Rand and Bond vs. Neff and Newby 6-1, 6-0ffinalgNEEL and Prescott vs. Rand and Bond 6-3, 6-4, 8-10, 2-6, 6-4Western Cbampionsbtpat Chicago, 3ul$t 1894jfinal SinglesCarr Neel4 vs Sam Chase 4-6, 6-8, 6-1, 6-0, 5-7jfinai doublesCarr Neel and S. R. Neel vs. Waidner and Moulding 6-2, 6-3, 6-2Cbampionsbtp of IRortbwestat /IDinnetonfta, /IDinn,ifinal SinglesCarr Neel vs. Sam Chase 8-6, 6-3, 6-2jfinals ot IRunners^pNEEL vs. Belden 6-2, 6-1, 6-2National Cbampionsbtpat IRewport, august 21*28doublesC. B. and S. R. NEEL (University of Chicago), Western Champions, vs. Howland and FooTE(Yale University), Eastern Champions 7-5, 7-5, 3-6, 6-4finalsC. B. Neel, and S. R. NEEL (Challengers), vs. C HobarT and T. H. HovEY(Champions '93) 3-6, 8-6, 1-6^University of flDinnesota™. University of Cbicagoat Soutb parft tennis ClubCbicago, June 4t 1893SinglesC. B. NEEL (University of Chicago) vs. T. Wallace (University of Minnesota) 6-2, 6-2W. H. Prescott (University of Chicago) vs. Geo. Belden (University of Minnesota) 2-6, 9- 11C. A. Torrey (University of Chicago) vs. T. Hale (University of Minnesota) 2-6, 4-6doublesPRESCOTT and NEEL (University of Chicago) vs. Belden and Wallace (University ofMinnesota) 6-2, 4-6, 6-21fntercolle$iateTEennte tournamentat tbe IHnwersits of Cbicago5une 12, 1894Between Wisconsin, Lake Forest,Northwestern and ChicagoWinner in Singles, Carr NEELWinners in Doubles, W. S. Bond, Philip RandSinglesNEEL ( University of Chicago) defeated PaTTON (Northwestern University) 6-2, 6-3ALLEN (University of Wisconsin) defeated HEDGES (Lake ForestUniversity) 6-0, 6-0finalsNEEL (University of Chicago) defeated Allen (University of Wisconsin) 6-1, 6-0, 6-1doublesRand and Bond (University of Chicago) defeated Thornton and Hedges (Lake ForestUniversity) 6-4, 5-7, 6-1Allen and McMynn (University of Wisconsin) defeated PaTTon andBurt (Northwestern University) 6-0, 60finalsRand and Bond defeated Allen and McMynn 8-6, 6-3, 6-2lllniversit^ of CbicagoCbampionsbtpChampion in Singles, Carr B. NEEL ; Defeated Torrey in Finals 6-1, 6-3Champions in Doubles, Philip Rand and W. S. Bond ; Defeated Torrey and Lansinghin Finals 6-3, 6-2TLennisYearns1892*1893W. H. Prescott C. A. TorreyV. R. Lansingh C. S. Pike1893^1894W. S. Bond, Captain C. B. NEELPhilip Rand C. A. TorreyV. R. Lansingh R. C DudleyW. B. Chalmers C. B. McGillivrayfacultyXTennteClub©fficersJ. Laurence Laughlin ------- PresidentOliver J. Thatcher - Secretary-Treasurerdfc embersOskar Bolza Carl D. BuckJohn Dewey Henry H. DonaldsonGeorge S. Goodspeed William G. HaleWilliam R. Harper Robert W. HerrickRobert F. Harper William HillJoseph P. Iddings Harry P. JudsonJ. Laurence Laughlin Robert M. LovettHeinrich Maschke Shailer MatthewsWilliam D. McClintock Albert A. MichelsonAdolph C. Miller Bliakim H. MooreWilliam B. Owen Rollin D. SalisburyBenjamin S. Terry A. Alonzo StaggOliver J. Thatcher Charles ZeublinBOOK"Thayer & Jackson Staficmery Ca-Chica0uSDelta IRappalEpeilonFounded at Yale University, 1844Cbapter TRoll1844 Phi — Yale University1844 Theta — Bowdoin College1845 Xi — Colby University1846 Sigma — Amherst College1847 Gamma — Vanderbilt University1847 PSI — University of Alabama1850 Chi — University of Mississippi1850 Upsilon — Brown University1 85 1 Beta — University of North Carolina1852 Kappa — Miami University1852 IvAmbda — Kenyon College1852 Eta — -University of Virginia1853 Pl — Dartmouth College1854 Iota — Central University of Kentucky1854 Alpha Alpha — Middlebury College1855 Omicron — University of Michigan1855 Epsieon — Williams College1855 Rho— Lafayette College1856 Tau— Hamilton College 1856 Mu — Colgate University] 856 Nu— College of the City of New York1856 Beta Phi — University of Rochester1 86 1 Phi Chi— Rutgers College1866 Psi Phi — De Pauw University1867 Gamma Phi— Wesleyan University1867 Psi Omega — Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute1868 BETA Chi— Adelbert College1870 DeeTa Chi — Cornell University1870 DeeTa DEETA — University of Chicago187 1 Phi Gamma — Syracuse University1874 Gamma Beta — Columbia College1876 Theta Theta — University of California1879 Aepha Chi — Trinity College1889 Phi EpSIEON — University of Minnesota1890 Sigma Tau — Massachusetts Institute ofTechnologySDeita Ikappa lEpsilonDelta Delta ChapterEstablished 1870Re-established December 15, 1893jFratres in if acultateHarry Pratt Judson, A. M., LL. D. Nathaniel Butler, Jr., A. M.Eri Baker Humbert, A. M., D. D. James Rowland Angell, A. M.Albion W. Small, Ph. D. Charles Porter Small, M. D.Frank Frost Abbott, Ph. D. George E. Vincent, A. B.Adolph C Miller, A. M. Walter Scott Davis, A. M.Vernon P. Squires, A. B.tfratres in TUnipersitate©rafcuate ScboolSedgewick Mather, A. B.HMvinitE ScboolGeorge Braker, Jr., A. B. Homer Jerome Vosburgh, a. B.THniversitE CollegeHarry Reat Caraway Frederic Horace MinardRalph Waldo Webster Charles Sumner PikeClieeord Bottseord McGillivray L. Brent VaughanHarry Cyrus Holloway Henry Thurston Chace, Jr.Henry Gordon Gale Samuel Sweeney McClintockHerbert H. Randall W. Walt AtwoodBcaoemic CollegeWilliam English Walling Gilbert Ames BlissRalph Leland Dougherty Robert Law, Jr.ColorCrimson, Blue and GoldCbeerRah! Rah! Rah! D-K-E !Rah ! Rah ! Rah ! D-K-E !Rah! Rah! Rah! D-K-E!Delta- Delta !J,flbbi IRappa psiFounded at Jefferson College, 1852Cbapter TRolltfirst DistrictPennsylvania, Alpha— Washington and Jefferson CollegePennsylvania, BETA— Alleghany CollegePennsylvania, GAMMA^-Bucknell UniversityPennsylvania, Epsilon— Pennsylvania CollegePennsylvania, ZETA— Dickinson CollegePennsylvania, Et a— Franklin and Marshall CollegePennsylvania, Theta — Lafayette CollegePennsylvania, Iota— University of PennsylvaniaPennsylvania, Kappa— Swarthmore CollegeNew York, Alpha— Cornell UniversityNew York, BETA— Syracuse UniversityNew York, Gamma— Columbia CollegeNew York, Epsilon— Colgate UniversityNew York, ZET a— Brooklyn Polytechnic Instituteffsecono DistrictVirginia, Alpha— University of VirginiaVirginia, BETA— Washington and Lee UniversityVirginia, Gamma — Hampden-Sidney CollegeWest Virginia, Alpha— University of West VirginiaMaryland, Alpha— Johns Hopkins UniversityDistrict of Columbia, Alpha— Columbian UniversitySouth Carolina, Alpha— South Carolina CollegeUbirfc DistrictOhio, Alpha- Ohio Wesley an UniversityOhio, BETA— Wittenberg CollegeOhio, DELTA — Ohio State UniversityIndiana, Alpha -De Pauw UniversityIndiana, BETA— Indiana UniversityIndiana, Gamma— Wabash Collegejfourfb DistrictIllinois. Alpha— Northwestern UniversityIllinois, BETA — University of ChicagoMichigan, Alpha— University of MichiganWisconsin, Gamma— Beloit CollegeIowa, Alpha — University of IowaMinnesota, BETA— University of MinnesotaKansas, Alpha— University of KansasCalifornia, BETA— Leland Stanford, Jr., Universityphi IRappa fl>8tIfliinoie BetaRe-established January 6, 1894jfratres in jfacultateDavid J. LjnglE, Ph. D., Illinois B Charles F. Conger, A. B., Minnesota BOscar T. Triggs, A. M., Minnesota B Theodore T. Neff, A. M., Indiana AGeorge Tunnell, S. B., Minnesota Bjfratres in Itlnipersitate(3ra£mate ScboolCharles H. Davidson, Pennsylvania rPaul Tustin, Pennsylvania TTHniversttE CollegeHarry Cooper Howard John Simon LewisWilbur Thomas Chollar Arthur Mattoon HullCharles Wesley Stewart Charles Dorrance DibellBcafcemlc CollegePaul Gerhardt Woolley Joseph White CampbellEdwin Campbell Woolley John Tyler CampbellJames E. HallColorPink and LavenderCbeerHi! Hi! Hi!Phi Kappa Psi!Live Ever! Die Never!-Phi Kappa Psi!Beta ZEbeta piFounded at Miami University, 1839Cbapter 1RollAlpha — Miami UniversityDELTA Kappa — Ohio UniversityBeta — Western Reserve UniversityGamma — Washington and Jefferson CollegeEta— Harvard UniversityDelta — De Pauw UniversityPi — Indiana UniversityLambda — University of MichiganTau— Wabash CollegeEpsilon— Centre CollegeKappa — Brown UniversityZeta — Hampden-Sidney CollegeEta Beta — University of North CarolinaTheta — Ohio Wesleyan UniversityMu — Cumberland University Iota— Hanover CollegeAlpha Xi— Knox CollegeOmicron — University of VirginiaPhi Alpha— Davidson CollegeChi— Beloit CollegePsi— Bethany CollegeAlpha Beta — University of IowaAlpha Gamma- Wittenberg CollegeAlpha Delta— Westminister CollegeAlpha Epsilon — Iowa Wesleyan UniversityAlpha Eta — Denison UniversityAlpha Kappa — Richmond CollegeAlpha Lambda — University of WoosterAlpha Mu — University of KansasRho— Northwestern University Alpha Pi— University of WisconsinAlpha Sigma — Dickinson CollegeUpsilon — Boston UniversityAlpha Chi — Johns Hopkins UniversityOmega — University of CaliforniaBeta Alpha— Kenyon CollegeBeta Gamma — Rutgers CollegeBeta Delta — Cornell UniversitySigma — Stevens InstituteBeta Zeta — St. Lawrence UniversityBeta Eta — Maine State CollegeBeta Theta — Colgate UniversityNu — Union CollegeAlpha Alpha — Columbia CollegeBeta Lambda— Vanderbilt University Beta Iota— Amherst CollegeBeta Omicron — University of TexasTheta Delta — Ohio State UniversityAlpha Tau — University of NebraskaAlpha Upsilon — Pennsylvania State CollegeAlpha Zeta — University of DenverBeta Epsilon — University of SyracuseAlpha Omega — Dartmouth CollegeBeta Pi — University of MinnesotaBeta Nu — University of CincinnatiMu Epsilon — Wesleyan UniversityZeta Phi— University of MissouriBeta Chi — Lehigh UniversityPhi Chi — Yale UniversityLambda Rho — University of ChicagoLambda Sigma — Leland Stanford, Jr. , UniversityBeta XTbeta piXambba IRbo ChapterRe-established January 25, 1894jfratres in jfacultateRollin D. Salisbury, A. M.R. A. F. Penrose, Jr., Ph. D.Charles Zeublin, Ph. D., D. B.William Bishop Owen, A. B., D. B.Francis Wayland Shepardson, Ph., D.Herbert E. Slaught, A. M. Charles Richmond Henderson, A.M., D.D.Clarence F. Castle, Ph. D.James Harrington Boyd, Sc. D.Ferdinand Schwill, Ph. D.Edmund C. Quereau, Ph. D.Jerome H. Raymond, A. M.Henry B. Kummel, A. M.jfratres in mnipersitate(SraDuate ScboolAaron Hodgman Cole, A. B.James Rood Robertson, A. B.Gorman Jones, A. B.Warren P. Behan, A B.Ralph Hastings HobartRaymond Carlton DudleyHenry Harwood HewittMarshall Emmett SampsellLoren Milford RussellWilliam Cain VaughnWalter Deffenbaugh Edmund Spencer Noyes, A. B.Edward Octavius Sisson, A. B.George Beardsley, Ph. B.3>i\HnitE ScboolCharles A. Lemon, A. B.TUmversitE CollegeElmer Ely ToddHarry Love ClarkeHenry Justin SmithBcaOemic CollegeHenry Whitwell WalesDonald Shurtliff TrumbullTheodore Hiram PattersonClinton Stillwell BeachRobert H. LeroyColorPink and L ght BlueCbeerPhi-Chi-Phi! Beta, Theta, Pi!W-o-o-g-l-i-n Wooglin-Wooglin !Sigma IftuCbapter 1RolIBETA — University of VirginiaDelta — South Carolina CollegeZETA— Central UniversityEta — Mercer UniversityTheta — University of AlabamaKappa — -North Georgia CollegeLambda — Washington and Lee UniversityMu — University of GeorgiaN u — Kansas UniversityX 1— Emory CollegeOmicron — Bethel CollegePi— Lehigh UniversityRho — University of MissouriSigma — Vanderbilt UniversityUpsilon — University of TexasPhi — University of LouisianaChi — Cornell CollegePsi- — University of North CarolinaBeta Beta — De Pauw UniversityBeta Gamma— Missouri Valley CollegeBeta Zeta — Purdue UniversityBeta Eta — University of IndianaBkTa Theta— Alabama A. & M. CollegeBeta Iota— Mount Union CollegeBeta Kappa — Southwest Kansas CollegeBeta Lambda — Central CollegeBeta Mu— University of IowaBeta Nu — University of OhioBeta Xi— William Jewel CollegeBeta Pi — University of ChicagoBeta Rho — University of PennsylvaniaBeta Chi — Leland Stanford, Jr , UniversityBeta Psi — University of CaliforniaDelta Theta— Lombard UniversitySiGma IRuBetaflM CbapterEstablished January 2, 1895JFratres in iani\>ersitate<3rafcuate ScboolClarence Almon Torrey, Ph. B. John M. Roberts, A. B.TntwersitE CollegeRobert Lee Hughes John Henry HeilJohn F. Voigt Victor Oscar JohnsonHcaDemtc CollegeJohn P. Mentzer^Unclassified StudentsWalter A. Payne Wilber Madison KelsoCharles Horace Gallionr\ f* """'1c ¦¦¦KL ' ** ¦ 1 I1rtr ¦ Jftbeta IWuEpsilonFounded at Wesleyan University, 1870Cbapter 1RollAlpha — Wesleyan UniversityBeta — Syracuse UniversityGamma — Union CollegeDELTA — Cornell UniversityBpsilon — University of RochesterZeta — University of CaliforniaEta — Colgate UniversityTheta — Kenyon CollegeIota — Adelbert CollegeKappa — Hamilton CollegeLambda — Renssalaer Polytechnic InstituteMu — Stevens InstituteNu — Lafayette CollegeXi — Amherst CollegeOmicron — Alleghany CollegePi — Pennsylvania State CollegeRho — University of City of New YorkSigma — University of PennsylvaniaTau — Wooster CollegeUpsilon — University of MichiganPhi— Rutgers CollegeChi— Dartmouth CollegePsi — Northwestern UniversityOmega — University of MinnesotaAlpha Alpha— University of ChicagoZhcta IRu lEpstlonBipba Hlpba GbapterEstablished June, 1894jfratres in mniversitateFrank H. Blackmarrxcv.Ralph W. Webster John S. LewisXCVI.Raymond C. Dudley Harry W. StoneHarry T. Chace, Jr. Louis Wolff, Jr.Ralph H. Johnson Samuel S. McClintockHenry G. Gale W. Walt AtwoodElmer E- Todd Raymond W. StevensCharles S. Pike Ralph H. HobartOswald J. Arnold Herbert H. RandallChas. S. StewartXCVIf.M j ii * : x b I 9 H.9ii2xtljvxblJcSH2XHxbIH9 JV2XHOasYPXY2XHSV6?1J5dii^BX $%*:KLSV64?xbIMCo£eKL5diiFj n 2 X H 9 Z d : : o. se * : K L J VColorBlack and GreenCbeerRah ! Rah ! Rah ! Theta-Nu !Rah! Rah! Rah! Theta-Nu!Rah! Rah! Rah! Theta-Nu!Theta Nu-Ep-si-lon 'Ube ©mega ClubEstablished January 6, 1894jfratresTHni\>ersit£ CollegeHarry Wheeler Stone Ralph Hiram JohnsonHorace Raymond Dougherty Louis Wolff, Jr.Raymond William Stevens Oswald James ArnoldBcafcemic CollegePhilip Rand William Scott BondRobert Newton Tooker, Jr.ColorDark BlueCbeerSis — Boom — Ah!O — me — ga!Rah! Rah! Rah!Zhc Xion's Dea6Established December, 1894MembersTUniverstt^ CollegeJoseph Edward Raycroft Fred Day NicholsCarr Baker NeelBcaDemic CollegeForest Grant Harry Delmont AbellsJames Scott Brown Henry Magee AdkinsonColorMaroon and WhiteXLhc flftortarJSoarbEstablished November, 1894/l&embersTHnwersitE CollegeAgnes S. CookMable DoughertyGrace FreemanFrances I. HopkinsNellie L. JonesMargaret PurcellBcafcemic CollegeMarilla W. FreemanLaura B. GravesHelen O. HewittEdith E. SchwarzHelen ThompsonColorBlue and Old GoldEsotericClubEstablished December, 1894Membersinniversit^ CollegeHarriet C. Agerter Adelaide M. IdeEdith B. FosterBcafc>emic CollegeFlorence Bull Jessie DavisColorGreen and White"Vft<StuabranglersEstablished January, 1895/IDembersTUntversttE CollegeAnna J. McClintock Elizabeth MessickBcaDemtc CollegeTheodosia Kane Ethel Keenjennette kennedy edna stantonCbe n ClubEstablished January, 1895ZlDembersTUniversit^ CollegeJohn Hulshart John LamayC. V. Bachelle Scafcemic CollegeC. R. BarrettEstablished July, 1894MembersHenry D. SpeerWilliam S. BondHorace R. DoughertyPhilip Rand Ralph W. WebsterRobert Law, Jr.Ralph L. DoughertyCharles S. PikeTZDbe flfoelancbol^ ClubOrganized December, 1893MembersTUniversitE CollegePercy Peyton CarrollThomas William MoranGeorge Leland HunterHarris F. WilliamsL. Brent Vaughan Henry Constance MurphyHoward RoosaArthur Cleaver WilkinsonRalph Waldo WebsterJohn H. LewisColorBlackIRo^al SocietyofZhc <3aboonA One-Year Club. In Existence from November 6, 1893to November 6, 1894IkingStanley M. Ramsay(3aboonHenry D. SpeerIRntcibtsA. S. NORTHRUPS. M. RamsayF. W. EastmanH. R. DoughertyJ. W. CampbellE. E. ToddR. N. Tooker J. C. ColnonH. D. SpeerH. T. ChacePhilip RandR. L- DoughertyR. H. JohnsonC. S. Pikeand The Gentlemen of FranceBOOKNINE<&>Academic ¥ ¦•£??*College Dayriday, June 151894ORDER OF EXERCISES:9:45 Base Ball Game Athletic FieldFaculty Nine vs. Academic Nine. Admission 25c,12:15 Chapel Exercises Address2.30 Kent AuditoriumPresentation of an Ongm.il Farce h\ Academh4.00 Ivy Exercises b Hall3.30 Reception and Ball Rosalie HallADMISSION '.OOPer' order OAY COMMITTEEN^Minbermere Ibotel3februar\> 16, 1894IReception CommitteeMiss Gi,enrose Bki.IvMiss Theodosia KaneMiss Euzabeth MhssickPhilip RandRaymond C. DudleySamuel, S. McCuntockBssisteD b£Mrs. F. J. Mm,ERMrs. William D. McCuntockMrs. H. P. JudsonMrs. W. R. HarperHe&beveot ipromenafceMiss Elizabeth MessickProfessor F. J. Milxer©fficersHcabemic CollegePhilip RandHenry Gordon GaleTheodosia KaneRobert Law, Jr. President. Vice-PresidentSecretaryTreasurerBca&emic 2>ap CommitteePhilip Rand, ChairmanElizabeth Messick Henry Gordon GaleAnna H. Wilmarth Harry Whitwell Wales, Jr./IDarsbal of tbe 2>apJoseph Edward RaycroftHarry Cyrus HollowayWilliam Scott Bond XHsbersRalph Hastings HobartWilber Thomas ChollarLouis Wolff, Jr.tfloo? /IDanagersMarshall, Emmett SampsellRaymond Carleton Dudley Harry Wheeler StoneClifford Bottsford McGillivray Joseph Edward Raycroft1fvp Exercise CommitteeElizabeth Messick, Chairman1F\>$ ©ratorMary Dunki.ee MaynardBi&esAnna H. WilmarthFrederick Day NicholsAgnes Spofford CookHenry Gordon Galedecorating CommitteeMary Elizabeth Mc Williams, ChairmanJennette Kennedy Mary D. MaynardGlenrose M. Bell Marion S. MorganFrederick D. Nichols Nott W. FlintHarvey A. Peterson Raymond C. DudleyHarry W. StoneMartha F. KlockDemia Butler flwntation CommitteeHarry Whitwell Wales, ChairmanEdith E. SchwarzJoseph E. RaycroftW. Walt AtwoodCommittee on tfavceAnna H. Wilmarth, ChairmanZhe tfaxce"Zhe IRew Cosmogony: 'Ifcent Hu&itoriumWlntten b^Blice IDan Wliet anb BMtb $. poster2>ramatis ipersonaeW. R. JupiterP. ApolloS. H. MercuryA. A. Mars .A. O. VulcanR. G. NeptuneF. F. PlutoH. T. CupidA. F. JunoM. MinervaA. B. DianaE. Venus Robert Law, Jr.Charles S. PikeW. Walt AtwoodFrank E. HeringFrank W. WoodsHarry W. StoneWilliam S. BondHarry T. ChaceElizabeth MessickAbigail M. GeorgeFrances G. WillistonHarriet G. Agerter1fv\> ExercisesIvy Poem . . . . . . . '. Miss Effie A. GardnerIvy Ode . . . . . . . . . . . C. R. BarrettPlanting of Ivy . . . . . . . .The Ivy Green . . .... Solo by F. W. EastmanIvy Address ¦. . • Mary D. MaynardAlma Mater Glee ClubExhibition Tennis .Cheering of Buildings . . HnnualIRoab IRaceffive /Iftile IbanDicapFifty-first Street and Washington Park. Start and finishWon by H. C. Durand Time Prize won by C. V. BachelleEntriesH. C. Durand R. V. DoughertyS. A. Archibald W. B. PershingT. C. Smith Louis Wolff, Jr.Saxton Barrett W. C. VaughnS. A. Bliss C. V. BachelleC. F. Tolman, Jr. Fred GleasonK. F. Flanders C. S. BeachE- W. Peabody F. H. CalhounBase Ball<5ameffacults IRineO. J. Thatcher, CaptainA. A. Stagg, Catcher O. J. Thatcher, Short StopF. J. Miller, First Base G. M. Hobbs, Third BaseH. Butterworth, Pitcher F. W. Shepardson, Left FieldW. E. Chalmers, Second Base John Cummings, Centre FieldA. T. Watson, Right FieldHca&emic IRineH. G. Gale, CaptainH. G. Gale, Pitcher H. T. Chace, CatcherR. H. Hobart, First Base Philip Rand, Second BaseW. B. Keen, Short Stop L. B. Vaughan, Third BaseH. W. Stone, Right Field H. C. Holloway, Centre FieldH. R. Dougherty, Left Field^UmpireC. S. PikeFaculty ....... 28Academics ....... 9Cbapel ExercisesPrayer delivered by Dr. HarperAddress by the Rev. Willard T. ScottSolos by Miss JESSIE K. Reed, the Mezzo SopranoHcabemtcpromenabeIRosalie IballpatronessesMrs. William Rainey Harper Mrs. Henry M. WilmarthMrs. Harry P. Judson Miss Marion TalbotMrs. John C. Rand Mrs. Noble B. JudahMrs. George E. Adams Mrs. William WalkerConcert' Overture ----- . ArionA Night Off - - - - - - HartmanMarch — Jubilee©r&er ol 2>ancesWaltz Unsere FrauenTwo Step . . Liberty BellWaltz . . . WalderzauberPolka KinderfreudenWaltz . . D. K. E.Prairie Queen OriginalTwo Step . Wiener BlutWaltz . . . . . . . Happy SistersintermissionSchottische Linger Longer LouWaltz . . . . Auf WiedersehnTwo Step Washington PostWaltz Quadrille . . '. AuroraTwo Step . We are AmericansPolka A. B. C.Waltz Robin HoodTwo Step Manhattan BeachWaltz MitternachtMusic by John Hand's Hungarian OrchestraIbotel Barr^February 21, 1894jfioor CommitteeR. w. WebsterH. H. Hewitt Philip RandH. R. Caraway^14 patronesses/IftesfcamesHarry Pratt JudsonWilliam D. McClintockWilliam OwenThomas C. ChamberlinE. H. MooreWilliam R. HarperTUniversirsCollegeIRecepttonFriday, November 23, 1894©fficers taniversitE CollegePaul F. Carpenter, President Harry R. Caraway, Vice-PresidentMary D. Maynard, Secretary W. WalT ATwood, TreasurerExecutive CommitteeHarry R. Caraway, ChairmanMartha F. Klock Adelaide M. IdeFrances F. Hopkins Walter A. Paynepantomime"ftbe Zhxee Xovers'Cast of CbaractersFarmer Jeremiah Hollyhock . . . . . ¦. Samuel S. McClintockSamantha Hollyhock, his wife Alice Van VlietPriscilla Prudence Mehitable Hollyhock, their daughter . Adelaide M. IdeEzekiel Green Grassgrower • . . • • • • Robert Law, Jr.Jonathan Shylock . . . . Arthur HancockReginald Van Marshall W. Walt AtwoodC^cloramaThe Dream of CollegeThe Trip to CollegeMatriculationConvocationThree ClassesRush LineDouble MajorMonday ReceptionsAcademic DegreeGraduationfirstl£ear Bcabemics'IReceptionIfootel BeatriceSatur&ap, IRovember 29, 1892Executive CommitteeCharles Sumner Pike, ChairmanMargaret PurcellHenry H. HewittGlenrose m. BellCora E. RocheDemia ButlerGrace N. ClarkHarry W. StoneXTbe MeeMtf 8iBbitottal BanquetIbotel TKtlin&ermereTlbanftsgivung 2)apt 1893ftoastmaeterGeorge Leland HunterThe University of ChicagoKelly HallThe WeeklyBeecher Hall .AdsFoster HallOur Foot Ball TeamUniversity PublicationsExchanges GoasteGeorge Leland Hunter. Elizabeth MessickHenry C. MurphyFrances WillistonWilbur M. KelsoJane K. WeatherlowCharles Sumner PikeJames Westfall Thompson. Thomas W. Moranfirst /IfceetinQGobb 1ballChairman, J. E. RaycroftSecretary, R. W. MallorySpeakersStagg — Green and RedRand — Crimson and GrayALLEN — Blue and GrayClarke, Caraway, Hewitt-BowersCommittee Hppointeb bp CbairChairman, Philip RandTheodosia KaneW. P. BehanSeconb /IDeetingChairman, J. E. RaycroftSecretary, R. W. MallorySpeakersBehan — MaroonSouiRES — Blue and GraySTAGG— Green and RedClarke — MaroonMallory — MaroonGiLL — MaroonHering, Atwood, GurneyMaroon adopted by unanimous vote —Officially adopted by TrusteesCap anb <3ownfirst Hnnual BanquetIbotel WinfcermereFriday, March 22, 1895Charles S. PikeToast MasterPhilip Rand W. W. AtwoodO. J. Arnold R. H. JohnsonC. R. Barrett P. G. WoolleyM. E. Sampsell H. T. ChaceH. E- Hewitt Miss KennedyP. P. Carroll Miss CookForest Grant Miss Foster©uestsMrs. Harry RockwoodMiss Bull Miss StantonMiss Hewitt Miss IdeMiss Maynard Miss RadfordMiss Messick Miss ButlerBtbenaeumHiterar\> SocietyOrganized February, 1893Died June, 1893©fficersWinter QuarterC. H Gallton, President N. M. Cameron, Vice-PresidentMaud Berry, Secretary H. C. Murphy, Corresponding Secretary.H. C. Holloway, Treasurer William Rullkoetter, Sergeant-at-ArmsSpring QuarterS. S. McClinTock, President H. H. Manchester, Vice-PresidentElizabeth Messick, Secretary Henry H Hewitt, TreasurerS. W. Jameson, Corresponding Secretary LEO WHEELER, Sergeant-at-Arms©fficersPresident, Charles Sumner PikeVice-President, Edith E. SchwarzSecretary and Treasurer, Mary E. ReddyBusiness Manager, W. Walt AtwoodStage Manager, Robert Law, Jr./IliembersS. PikeW. Walt AtwoodRobert Law, Jr.S. S. McClintockForest GrantHarry T.JChace, Jr.Edith E. SchwarzMary E. RkddyHarriet L. SkaveyAgnes S. CookAnna H. WilmarthAdelaide M. IdeTheodosia KaneHssembl^Club©fficersHorace R. DoughertyRobert Law, Jr.John P. Mentzer PresidentVice-PresidentSecretary-TreasurerExecutive CommitteeRobert Law, Jr. Robert N. Tooker Raymond W. StevensMembersR. W. WebsterC S. PikeH. G. GaleJ. S. Lewis, Jr.Philip RandG. A. BlissH. R. DoughertyR. H. JohnsonC. B. McGillivrayRobert Law, Jr.O. J. ArnoldLouis Wolff, Jr.Arthur HancockR. W. StevensR. H. HOBARTW. W. ATWOODR. L. DoughertyH. T. Chace, Jr.R. N. TookerJ. P. MentzerBOOKTUNBy PermissionFROM "THE VANISHING FAIR. OTTMAN CODESIGNERS AND ENGRAVERSCopyright, 1894By H. H. VAN METER.— 'V;^Ubeinniversit^CbicagoTHOU, most like Athene old,That leaped full-grown from Zeus' high brain !O, thou, new-born, who yet dost holdSuch throne as never shall againImpatient wait a sovereign's reign !O, thou, that brav'st the Western air —That bold, free West, yet not more boldThan thy fair self, who thus canst dare !Hail ! all hail ! Forever hail !When power born not of love shall fail,Shall not thy name be reverenced still ?And thou, most like Athene, say !Hopest thou beneath thy watchful eyesTo see another Athens rise ?Hopest not to see that strong ' ' I will ' 'That made one empire in a day,Yet hold a second nobler sway ?H. H. M.7Hh£ Should you ask me whence these/flMX stories,wlO Whence these legends and traditions,^fti^s In these jingling, ringing verses,xtpvftitx) In tllis oer familiar meter>^- I should answer, I should tell you,From the halls of Alma Mater,From post-graduates, alumni,FArom professors, from the students,From the shades of old Chicago,I repeat them as I heard them,Without changing, not embellished.* * # # # *At the edge of Garden City,Of this famous Phoenix City,By old Michigan's blue waters;Girt about with trees and bushes,Nestled in among the grasses,And the lilacs and the roses,Swept by summer's balmy breezes,Stood the pride of all Chicago;By munificence of Douglas,Stood that noble shrine of learning,Gleaming 'gainst the far horizon,Then unmarred by mighty buildings,With its grand, inspiring tower,Looming far toward the heavens,With its quaint cathedral windowsAnd its minarets and towers,And its parapets and bastions,Stood the pride of all Chicago.Stood, and like the bay tree flourished,With its complement of students.Back, way back, in eighteen sixty ,Ere Chicago knew her greatness,Ere the days of cable railways,Or of twenty-story buildings,Or Columbian Expositions,Or of souvenir half-dollars,Ere the days of convocations,And of majors and of minors,And of academic college,And of cap and gown indulgence,And of foot ball and of tennis,And of deans and of departments,And of registrars and stewards,And of weeklies and of dailies,And of million-dollar presents,And the multitude of otherThings a man must needs be "up on"If he wishes to be "in it."In those days of sainted memory,In those classic halls of learning,In that grand old pile of granite,On that flower-bespangled campus,By old Michigan's blue waters,There were no such things as majors,There were no such things as minors,There were no such things as credits,There were just the plain, old courses,Just the good, old-fashioned Freshmen,Just the old, historic Soph'mores,Just the gay and festive Juniors, Just the grave and reverend Seniors,Just the plain, old-fashioned people.Dressed in ordinary clothing;Working hard to get their lessons,Struggling hard for their diplomas,Cribbing through examinations,Just the same the wide world over.Never mixing up professorsWith associates or tutors,Or with docents or with readers,Or assistants or instructors,Everyone who gave instructionWas a bona fide professor,And he merited the title.Then the resurrection morningBroke in all its gladdening glory,And our Gabriel RockefellerBlew the blast upon his bugleAnd up rose our Alma MaterClad in newer, grander garments ;Filled with life, and hope, and power,Sprung, as if by magic, armored ,From the brain of our Zeus Harper,4nd to-day the festive studentStruggles with his verbs and syntax,And his Caesar and his Virgil,And his cosines and his tangents,And his Bacon and his Shakespeare,And his stamens and his pistils,And his carbonates and acids,And his vacuum and air pumps,And his asteroids and comets,And his vertebrates and mammals,And his hoi polloi et cetera.Just as in the days of sixtyOr of seventy or of eighty,Though he has a nobler building,Though he has a broader campus,Though he does his work in comfortAnd with modern apparatus,There's an omnipresent samenessTo the work we did before himIn that grand old pile of granite,On that flower-bespangled campus,By old Michigan's blue waters.There's a name that's talismanicAnd that wondrous word "Chicago"Is to him an inspiration,As it was to us before him.He is struggling— we have struggledTo be known of the Alumni.He is blessed with rich endowme nts,We are blessed with rich traditions.He is satisfied and we are —Brethren, let us dwell together.Life and health to Alma Mater,Old and new, both, one, together.And may William Rainey Harper,After many generations,Still be cherished as our leader.May the students and alumniCherish aye the name Chicago.T. M. H.flfcovefc An !The University will take possession of its officesSeptember r, 1892— W. R. Harper.ADING through the puddles,Waddling through the dust,Shoes and clothingruined,Tempers sadlymussed.Everythi n^g unfin-^_. _ . ished,_*s*U\*J-".-.. Gloriously new ;Bless me ! this is pleasant,Getting to the U !Sidewalks yet unbuilded,Stairways only planned,Entrance to the buildingAnkle deep in sand.Now we reach the doorway,Climb a wobbly plank,Now we're in in safety ;Lucky stars to thank. Plasterers and masons,Foremen on the run,Working all like demonsTo get the buildings done.Foreigners and natives,Aged men and boys,Everyone proficientManufacturing noise.Not a door on hinges,Not a transom placed.Never mind the racket,Not an hour to waste.Letters- must be written,Business must be done,Callers must be welcomed ,Bless us, this is fun !" Where is Dr. Harper? "' * Is Mr. Grose about ? ""Can I find Mr. Hammond? "" Has Robertson gone out? "' ' When does the College open ? ' '' ' How many will there be ? "' ' I have some choice apartments ;Whom do I wish to see ? ' 'Mortar beds and brick-bats,Lumber, lath and lime,Carpenters and plumbersPounding all the time.Of uninviting placesThis is sure the worst ;But we've kept the promise,Moved tn on the first.Never mind confusion,Never mind the dirt ;Dirt they say is healthful,Noise can do no hurt.Now we're in the office,Very pleasant room ;"Isn't it delightful?Hammond, get a broom. ' 'flncorriQible— a Stub^ in Class Good people all keep coming,We've got here now to stay,This very noisy newnessGets older every day.In different kinds of noisesWe're getting quite well versed.Congratulations ? Thank you,We moved in on the first.Dust and dirt and racket,Racket, dirt and dust,Willing to endure it,Since indeed we must.Everything is chaos,Gloriously new ;Bless us, this is pleasant !Moved in at the U !T. M..H.Her attitude expressed desireOf hearing, learning, knowing more ;Her very eyes lit up with fireAt the professor's learned lore.liA modern Sappho, it is sure,"Cried I, and craned my neck to noteWhat with reflective look demureShe in her col lege blankbook wrote. To the next girl she passed the book,And this is what the message said,While she resumed her Sappho look :''Yes, I will trim that gown with red."E. S.Bn j£iperiment in Sociolo^AKING us as a whole, we six university men who kept house together weren't at alla bad lot. We picked up that last expression from Seymour, who was English. Ithink we tacitly acknowledged him to be the head of our bachelors' hall, though hewas a retiring fellow enough and never assumed any undue authority; but he was verydignified, gracefully equal to every emergency — in short, so unlike ourselves in everyrespect, that we could not help admiring him. People always at heart admire mostthose qualities which they do not possess.Seymour believed in blood. He had a book of the peerage in his room, in which thenames of some of his relatives occurred, and we used to accuse him of reading that every nightinstead of his Bible. We delighted in stirring him up on the subject of caste and society. Hewas ready enough to talk of these things, and rising to his feet, would give us, with gyratorymovement, his aristocratic views. He would warn us solemnly above all things never to marrybeneath us. He would give us various reasons why we should not do so, and cite cases ofpeople who had failed to follow this caution and were miserable ever after. He would go on inthis strain for several minutes, until some one would laugh, and delicately intimate that hewas ranting. Then his broad British forehead would flush, he would sit down in hurt silence,and his unprepossessing face would not relax for the rest of the evening. However, if we didmake fun of him at times, we nevertheless respected him thoroughly.Besides ourselves, our establishment boasted three other persons: first, our handsome man-of-all-work, Charles, who looked so much like a gentleman that we were constantly beingamused by having people take him for one of us; but though his tailor was as good as ours, andhe was particular about his cigars, we did not discharge him. As cook, we employed Mrs.Blake, a nondescript, ignorant sort of woman, with a face like a nut-cracker, and a characterless mouth no wider than the blade of one of the knives she inserted in it at meal times.However, she made good salad. Her daughter Bessie waited on the table. The latter was ayoung girl, perhaps eighteen years of age. I believe all of us considered her good lookingexcept Seymour, who said that he had never taken much notice of her face, but that her handsworried him when she was taking away his dishes at meals. They were too red, he thought,and the fingers were stubby, and the nails looked as though she were in the habit of bitingthem. One day, though, he happened to hear a remark of hers that interested him. He andI were standing on the upper veranda, and almost directly beneath us lounged Bessie in ourhammock, while Charles — supposed to be raking the lawn — stood near her. She happened tobe talking of me, and just after she mentioned my name we heard her say:"Oh, I don't call him so awful smart, Charlie. He don't say such clever things himself.It's away he's got of spoiling bright things other folks says by cutting in with something meanand sarcastic."Seymour looked at me and laughed. "Old man, she's hit you to a T. I don't believe oneof us could have done it so well, though of course we can recognize the description."Both of us looked at Bessie. Her heavy hair was the color of a brown, rain-washed autumnleaf, and her eyes were of a peculiar shade, red-brown, as if live coals were burning under them."It strikes me, don't you know," said Seymour, critically, "that her face is really refinedas well as pretty. If she were not in service, one might almost take her for a lady.""Under other circumstances she might be considered so in this country," I replied. "Herfather was a clergyman, though her mother is what you see. ' '"I wonder," said Seymour, as we walked away, "if she would read some books, supposingI offered to lend them to her?"Seymour never mentioned the books again, but judging from the fact that Bessie's grammarimproved slightly, and that she carefully picked out the best of all our viands for the Englishman, I fancy she received and read the volumes, and profited by the talks he had with her.It was amusing to watch Seymour when he first began to take notice of her. He came tothe conclusion that she possessed a fairly good mind, and he wanted to help her cultivate it,but he was much afraid she would forget her place and presume on his kindness. However,she never did. She was grateful for his efforts in her behalf, and looked up to him, yet notwith humility. There was a sort of dignity about her, always. All of us respected her. Wedid not even try to patronize her. Some weeks after this we were all smoking out of doorswhen Seymour remarked, hesitatingly:"I say, you fellows, would you mind letting me have the library for an hour after dinnerevery night? Can't you take the smoking room? You see, Miss Bessie is going to study a littlewith me every evening, and I thought — don't you know."We hastened to cover up his slight embarrassment; that is, all but the Donkey. We calledthis youth by that name, because he had a distasteful way of stripping all adornments fromtruth and presenting it exactly as it was. Along with this habit he combined a penchant fordevoting himself unnecessarily to other people's business, and a tendency to get himself andthe rest of us into awkward situations. Amused and grinning, he said, provokingly:"Miss Bessie ! whew!"''I call her Bessie when she is engaged in the duties for which we pay her," Seymour said,coldly; "but I fail to see why I should not treat her as a lady when her hours of work are over.I should think the idea was democratic enough to suit you. ' '' 'Too much Browning, and belief that servant-maids, if pretty, have souls, have made himmad," exclaimed the Donkey kindly to us. "Consider her station," he moaned, turning toSeymour. "Oh, Seymour, don't disgrace us by twisting your aristocratic spine in stooping toa person of such low degree. People must keep in their places. You've said so yourself.Above all, let there be social distinctions; and fellows, as you value your future happiness,never rriar — ". Here the chair of the Donkey slipped and tumbled him off the veranda, soldaresay the shrubbery got the benefit of the last part of his speech.For several months this sort of thing went on. We were really all beginning to stand inawe of the learned Bessie. We always carefully gave her and her tutor the use of the libraryfor an hour or so every evening, and never did any of us intrude for more than a moment,except once. That time it was the Donkey. He was what we will generously call a littleexcited, and he took a fancy that he would like to smoke in the library. So he went in and Ifollowed him, intending, with Seymour's help, to coax him out if it could be done."Guess I'll smoke in here," he said easily to Seymour. "Bessie won't mind, will you,Bess?" and he carelessly pulled a loose curl which cuddled on her neck.There was a little cabinet near by, full of Japanese porcelains belonging to me. AsSeymour knocked the Donkey down the arm of the latter struck this cabinet and pitched itover. I valued that china and it went to my heart to see it smashed. Seymour was picking upthe pieces as I led the Donkey off to bed. An hour later, Seymour came to me in my ownroom and said quietly:"Old man, I don't know what you'll think, but I'm going to marry Bessie. She is toattend school for a year, and then the wedding will be in June. " I was going to ask him if hehad considered a dozen things, but instead I congratulated him. If Bessie Blake were to beMrs. Seymour, daughter-in-law of Sir George Seymour, Bart., of course we were going to overlook her mother, and her finger-nails, and the dining-room service and everything else.Bessie went to stay at a house near by, and there Seymour "just about lived," as theDonkey phrased it. I never saw a man so happy as Seymour was the month she was there. Isuppose joy, or a little pleasurable excitement will improve the looks of any of us, but I neverrealized how much of that is possible until I saw old Seymour's plain face fairly glorified by hisgladness. Each day of the month she was in her new home he grew happier. He could notseem to get used to his happiness, either.One afternoon Mrs. Blake came to me, white and whimpering: "I wish you would tell Mr.Seymour, ' ' she wailed, ' 'its about Bessie. You see, he's been awful good to her, and she thoughtshe could marry him; he knows such a deal, and she's not without ambition herself . But she'sbeen teachin' Charles all he taught her, and she's always liked Charles, and maybe Mr. Seymourought to have looked higher, and she don't want to seem ungrateful, and she had thought sheliked him best, but when Charles talked to her yesterday, whyshe knew she liked him best. And she thought Mr. Seymourmight get tired of her some day, and Charles will set up a store?and maybe they are better suited to each other ' 'She rambled on in this way for some time, but finally I gatheredfrom her attempted explanation that Bessie intended to marry ourman Charles.So I was to tell Seymour. I would have given a good deal todelegate the task to some one else. It was a long time before Icould summon up courage to go to him, and then all my ideas leftme, and I couldn't think what to say. I had a hard time breakingit to him, but he was plucky, like a true Briton, and did not makea scene. All he said was: "I wish he were some one else's servant;but he's a handsome fellow. Some people prize that sort of thingabove brains. And I fancy blood does tell after all. I believe I'llgo back to my old theory. ' 'And he actually whistled as he walked upstairs with his usualsteady step. But he did not come down to dinner.M. L. R.EHpIomaopThere was a young lady sarcastic,Who talked in a manner most drastic,And felt it a joy to be strong-minded, too,Until she discovered that this would not do,For when she appeared all the men that she knew,In every direction from fear of her flew.The damsel perceived it, and solemnly spake:"I must, if I wish with these creatures to take,Be soft and unlearned as a little snowflake,Such girls seem the surest the male heart to break,I'll pose as a maiden most plastic."M. L. R.ftbanRsgivin'sBrawin'IRearHEN the nights o' dark November air growin'kind o' chill,And the winds air moanin' madly 'mong themaples on the hill ;When the ducks air flyin' south 'ard, an' thepumpkin pies appear,You can bet yer biggest apples — Thank sgiv-in's drawin' near.When the snow begins a-fallin' an' flies about in flakes,An' the ice begins a coatin' the rivers an' the lakes,When folks get out their sleigh bells an' a jing-a-ling you hear,You can bet yer fattest turkeys — Thanksgivin's drawin' near.When harvestin' is over, an' singin' school begun,An' the fires in the chimbleys air a-blazin' jes' like fun,When everyone seems happy with a Christmas kind o' cheer,You can bet a bar'l of cider— Thanksgivin's drawin' near.But the surest indikator, the one that I know best,To tell me she's a-comin' an' set my soul at rest ;Is when my boy at college with words that's writ in woe,Jes' writes to me these little lines — " Dear Dad : Send downsome dough."I'm broke, my purse is empty, I haven't got a cent !" My fund is all exhausted, my last five dollars spent —" Our foot ball team's a lily, the game is drawing near —"Dear Dad, please send a little check, we'll do them brownthis year ! "Gbe ifoot Ball IberoIt had been a rough-and-tumble game early in the season, when the dust was dry andsoft. At the end of the first half the men looked particularly dirty. Our charming full-backstopped near a bevy of girls to meditate, perhaps— perhaps to shake the dust from his longstringy locks."Say, girls," whispered one of the bevy, "just look at him ; I never saw one so near-tobefore.""Oh, but look at that one," said another of the girls ; " how lovely he limps ! I choosehim ! " Then they giggled. L. F. P.Gbe aenetoHE languid music of the dipping oarsSounds dreamily upon the evening air,And gentle breezes waft a perfume rareFrom the Italian shores.A golden sunset, sinking to its rest,And in the misty east a silver star,And on the quiet sea a level barOf molten glory, pointing to the west.A little company of wand'ring men,A little fleet upon a glassy sea ;The golden light flung o'er them full andfree,And ocean's depths reflecting it again.Strange, antique vessels, and yet strangercrew,Clad in an antique costume, quaint and old,And ever sailing, with their leader bold,The Mediterranean's blue. The dream is o'er ; the fairy fleet has fled ;The night has swallowed them, theircourse is run ;But say not that iEneas' life is done,And all his men are dead.And one, an aged sire with hoary hair,Uplifting to the light his suppliant hands,High in the stern of yonder vessel standsIn ecstasy of prayer.The sun has set, and in the distant skyThe silent stars are bright' ning more andmore,As with a last low plashing of the oar,The little fleet goes by. The poet dies — the poem lives, and weStill catch the echoes of that magic song ;The pictures of the master-artist throngThe walls of memory.The stately melody that charms the ear,The graceful fancy that delights themind—These are the heritage he left behind —His dust in Naples, but his spirit here.F. W. D.Iborace[ODE XXXII., LIB. I.]HEY bid me sing. Come, tuneful shell !If ever, lying 'neath the shade,In idle mood with thee I played,Provoking strains that long shalldwellIn hearts of men —I pray thee then,A Latian ode yield to my spell.A valiant Lesbian, fierce in war,First woke thy strings ; for 'midthe strife,When shouts and clang of armswere rife,Or when, fast bound to rippled shore,His storm-tossed boatWould gently float,Still in sweet airs his voice would soar. He sang gay hymns in Bacchus' praise ;The Muses, Venus, and the boyWho clings to her in roguish joy,Were honored in his dulcet lays ;And Lycus there,With dusky hairAnd eyes, lives still to charm our gaze.Thou pride of Phoebus! Dear delightOf all who feast in that fair groveWhere he is host — the mighty Jove !Sweet solace of my toils ! requiteMy prayer, and beA friend to meWhen I invoke thee, lyre, arightA. E. M.flliab[hook II., 19]-: IM it found stilledAnd floating on the ambrosial sea of sleep,Poured wride around him. Then above his headThe vision paused, in shape like Helen's son,Nestor, chief- honored of the king of men ;And stirred its shadowy lips and found a tone :" Here lies his son, old, fiery Atreus' son,A nation's only trust, sluggard all night !It ye have breath, start, live ! Hear me from Zeus,Olympian Father, kind to mortal woe.He bids the Greeks in clanging armor rise,With hopeful haste, to sack wide-streeted Troy,To thee abandoned and the suppliant handsOf white-armed Hera prayerful to the godsBut hold this in thy heart, lest creeping clayImpoverish wit, when Morpheus, shaping dreams,Treads nimble from thee on his heels of air."It spoke, and left the deeply pondering kingRevolving empty schemes adverse to fate,With painted hopes of Priam's shattered towers.Fool that he was ! nor knew what Zeus had planned.Destined to draw the maddening train of warWith idle wounds, on either alien host.Still in his ears the heavenly voice rang on.Then roused the king. And first a gleaming robeMost silken-soft, and next a cloak of state,Was his attire, with precious sandals, tied'Neath pearly feet. Now o'er his shoulders hungA blade embossed ; his sceptre's magic staff —Wondrous and deathless piece ! heirloom of gods —He leaned upon, along the shadowy ships.J-J. s.HoDear listener to all my joys,Sweet soother of my woes,A better friend than all the boys,That anybody knows.When you are near to make me calm,To steel me 'gainst my foes,To furnish me with your sweet balm,I smell contentment's rose.Through you my sorrows slip away,With you my hopes arise,Near you my fancy is at play,And day dreams in my eyes.Ah, no ! you cannot leave me yet,You're but half burned, my cigaretteW. D.Hn ©palT'HE day was slowly dying in the west, and theshades of crimson would soon slowly fade fromrose to pink, and from pink to purple, until theywere finally all merged into a sad gray.Near an open window, from which the twilightcould be seen, sat a beautiful young woman clothed inwhite. The soft gown fell away from the ribbon at thebelt, mingling with the lace curtain, and lay among itsrich folds at her feet.Through the open w indow came the sweet scent ofheliotrope and roses, and at times a red rose wouldboldly lean through the window and kiss her cheek.Her eyes were fastened on a ring on her left hand,vari-colored tints of the sky were reflected in the opalsetting from which flashed rays of violet, white, pinkand pale blue.The ring seemed a talisman which could, at will,open the golden doors of the past and reveal all, unchangedby the lapse of years.The stone brought back his long passionate wooing,and then the night he had put it on her finger. Sheremembered every word he had said, and the little legendhe had told, that while the wearer's love is faithful andtrue, the ring will remain beautiful, but if her love shoulddie, all the colors would disappear, and the stone wouldbecome ugly.Then her mind slowly reviewed the long years since that night. She was still young, butto her it seemed as if thrice the number of years had been crowded into one since she felt young.She thought of the many years he had toiled for her — of the pleasures he had denied himself — and all for her. It was with scorn she remembered the leisure she had for improvementof mind, and now she was his superior, and she wondered if this could make the gulf betweenthem so deep.The words of a poem he had once read came to her, and^she repeated softly:No, you wrong her, my friend, she's not fickle, her love she has simply outgrown.One can read the whole matter, translating her heart by the light of one's own.Then another verse came to her:Have you, too, grown purer and wiser as the months and the years rolled on,Did you meet her this morning rejoicing in the triumph of victory won?The shadows in the west were now purple, and only faint violet shades seemed to shootforth from the stone. A servant came to the door and asked her if she should bring lights.She silently shook her head — if she had spoken her voice would have shaken with sobs.Her eyes were wet with hot tears as she remembered his patient, devoted love, and thethoughtful acts of friendship which many a heart longs for and never finds.She wondered vaguely if he had not found the cold quiet woman different from the impulsiveloving girl — and smiled a little as she thought how strange the words would sound from hislips, "fickle or false" — for she knew him to be true as death.But now she tried to think. Was her love dead, or only changed, for surely years mustbring changes to love as to all things else.The room was now wrapped in dark shadows, and one by one the golden stars were appearing in heaven.From down the street the faint sweet strains of a song were borne to her ears.A light wind wafted the scent of heliotrope into the room, and swayed a rose which leanedin and caressed her cheek still wet with tears.She moved her hand to put the rose to her lips, and the stone was before her eyes. Butits colors had vanished — it was ugly. With a sob she covered her eyes with the right hand,but she had forgotten the light in the west was dead. H. C M.My Dove has eyes so richly blue, My Dove has eyes of such a hueThat summer skies seem shining through The lights within are ever new;In golden gleams, And sun and shade,When deep day-dreams Flash up and fade,Sleep still and deep within her view; As heavenly lights are wont to do;O, Sweet, my Love, so blue, so true! O, Sweet, my Dove, O, I love you!£beHtbletic flftanUCH of his time he spends on the field or in the gym. His roomis used only for sleeping or for a meeting place of his brotherathletes. On the quadrangle or in the class-room he appearsmerely as a well-built young fellow with a scarred face and astiff leg ; at the quadrangle receptions he is more prominent,and is apt to be better liked by that pretty girl than is yourhumble self ; but on the field — ah ! then he is something tosee ! How he sprints down the gridiron through a broken andbaffled "stone wall!" How his maroon-clad legs do twinklearound the diamond while the fielder is fumbling the hot ball !And when he is borne off in triumph by his cheering friends, orin anguish by Billy and Andy, how the "kids " around the gatedo gaze at him and cheer for him ! And then how his face andhis name are heralded abroad by the papers ! The picture maybe past recognition and the name horribly pyed, but we allsecretly envy him, just the same.College flDenWhen Jack and I to college went,I thought I'd lead the way ;I thought I could, with good intent,Bring everything my way.Now, Jack he was an awful grind,He studied night and day,And gathered crumbs of every kindThat lay in " learning's way."But I — so ran my youthful dream —Went in for all athletics,And while I played upon the team,Jack played with cold kinetics.The story's told. I got my place.Jack ran the college papers,He used up all the papers' spaceIn writing up my capers.IRiGbt in tbe Dream Cit£[august, 1893]Nymph of the naked night, daughter of dreams;That sleeps serenely 'neath the summer skies,And seems to waver in the light that streamsFrom out the placid lake when dawns arise.Like angel heads thy turrets heavenward lean,When evening suns set slowly in the west,As if in prayer to solemnize the scene,Or angel-like to guard thy peaceful rest.City of White, the Lily of the Lake,Sleeping as spirits sleep in sunny spring,With eyes wide ope, as if quite well awake,And yet love-blind and lost to everything.A dream thou art, and with midsummer's night,Thou, too, sbalt vanish in trains of lustrous light. ¦tfJOlHflf.5'tcm:£be ©lb flDiowa^OW strange the campus vista seems,What changeful quiet here ;What is the thought of things forgot ?What makes it seem so queer ?A silence speaks through all the oaksAnd tells what we would say,Pray is it, that with all the new,We miss the old Midway ?Across the road where once aroseA hundred domes and steeples,Where all the air was full of noiseFrom bands and drums and peoples;No sound goes up, the air is still,The place how changed to-day !A barren waste, a strip of sand —We miss the old Midway.In fancy sometimes as we poreO'er Latin, French or Greek,We hear again the "call to prayers,"We hear some Arab speak.Again in dreams among the crowdWe wander night and day.Alas ! 'Tis fled — we wake again —We miss the old Midway. Sometimes we dream of " collegenight ' 'And all the hours of pleasureWhen Old Vienna blazed with lightAnd measure followed measure.The lively tune, the merry rout,The cheer and loud " hooray!"Oh, good old days, we love you yet —We miss the old Midway.The German band, the Ostrich farm,The men with faces dark orHe who roared out a fog-horn shout —The leather-lunged "barker."The Wild East, the Chinese show,With clang and bang and bray —Alas ! 'Tis fled, the noise is dead,We miss the old Midway.Still sometimes when , our purse is full,Our dreamy thoughts repairTo Cairo street, the Ferris wheelAnd side-shows of the Fair.Again we long to go and spendOur money for the play ;We do not know 'tis better soTo miss the old Midway.£be Sin of (Bambling^ILLY was not a bad boy when he first came to college. The worstform of dissipation in which he had ever indulged was the playing of marbles "for keeps," in which he excelled, as all theboys in Kenosha, where Billy lived, knew to their sorrow.He had "skinned" them many times, and came to theUniversity in the fond expectation of becoming the Alexander of the marble world. It puzzled mightily his smallFreshman brain to find his favorite amusement thoughtlightly of by the Sophomore and Junior demigods whom hemet; but perceiving that such was the fact, he hid his redflannel sack of agates under his bed, threw away his "commies," and accepted the inevitable. Throughout his first year hebehaved admirably, and learned no small vices, except smokingand visiting his "sister" over at Foster. The last he enjoyed, butthe smoking tried his soul. However, it was the thing to do andBilly did it.With the opening of his Sophomore year Billy came back tocollege fortified against evil by fresh remembrances of his mother.But his father, relying on his good behavior of the previous year,had given him a bank account at the Metropolitan instead of sending him money as he needed it, and that bank account was Billy'sruin.He had seen the fellows and gently guyed the Freshmen — hecouldn't see how they could be so green; he knew he had never been like that — and he hadseen his "sister," whom he thought the summer had improved. She had been out at FoxDake throughout August, she said, flirting with a divinity student, and it had made her muchstronger. On the spot Billy made an engagement with her for the first foot ball game, shelooked so well. The game was to be on the Saturday following, and Billy went down to drawon his account on Friday. He was a little disturbed in his mind, but was determined. Hehad gained the impression, his first year, that to attract a girl it was well to bet, and bet high,when she was with you; if you couldn't do that, to tell her about it afterwards. One of theother Freshmen had told Billy this, and now he was a Soph, and could carry a cane and bet,he was going to do both, and astonish Miss Williams. He thought she would let him call herAgnes then. He drew one hundred dollars; he was a trifle frightened at himself, but he did it.The next day was just the day for a game. Cool, but bright, it was pleasant for the crowdand players too. Billy had been looking up the standing of the teams, and had found that we(Billy always called the team "we" ) had a good line, but our backs were rather poor, whilewith the visiting team it was just the other way; poor line, but good backs. So he approved ofthe day; it was dry and we could push (Billy said "buck") hard. He though the would offertwo to one; the other team wasn't so very good, he had heard, and besides it would astonishMiss Williams How brave he was to dare bet two to one! That was what she would say. Heknew she'd let him call her Agnes.He found a man who took his offered wager. One hundred dollars to fifty; so they bet.Phil Thompson, who had told Billy how to make the girls admire him by betting, was thereand held the stakes. Miss Williams was properly surprised, and said Oh! how naughty he was,and wasn't it awfully dangerous? Suppose he should lose? But Billy swung his cane withthe ribbon on it, and said of course he should win, it was like finding money and he couldstand it anyway. Down in his heart, though, he knew he couldn't. But he called her Agnes,and she let him; it reminded her of the divinity student, who had called her Miss Agnes.Billy's team kicked off. The man who caught the ball was promptly brought down beforehe could run, and Billy swung his cane wildly and yelled "Good tackle!" Now we should seesome playing. They couldn't buck our line. We should get the ball in four downs, andthen — Billy already felt that fifty in his pocket. But what's that? Is that their right halfgoing around our end? By Jove, it is, and for a good gain, too. And there he goes again, andthere goes the other. Billy's face grew almost as long as the gains, and when their full-backmade a touch-down and kicked goal, Billy shivered. If he should lose, what was he to do?A hundred was a lot of money. He couldn't take Agnes put, nor help in building the newgrandstand, nor get his dress suit, nor . It was cold. He shivered again.The score was 22 to 6. Phil gave Billy a wink and the other fellow the money. Billywent home with Agnes, who had enjoyed the game immensely. He was so kind to take her.It was too bad he had lost, but then it was wicked of him to bet. Ouch! Billy thought sotoo — now.For the rest of that year Billy economized. He didn't go out much, for he hadn't a dresssuit, and he saw very little of Agnes. He called her Miss Williams when he did speak to her.He went to the theatre very seldom, and he never, never bet on the foot ball games, of whichhe did not see many. But he made a large number of good resolutions, and he got "A" in hisclasses, and his father never knew how he had drawn on his account at first.Billy came back a Junior, with a larger account and more confidence. He would make loveto Miss Williams in earnest now, but not in the same way. She was back, too, and glad to seehim; Oh, very glad; but she was engaged to the divinity student. J. W. L.1Fn College IDa^sN college days how swiftly goesThe four brief years. One seldom knowsThat they are gone until, behold!We see the Seniors smiling, bold,Bringing their short careers to close.How free, how full, how fast all flows,To see us now, one would supposeThe universe were 'round us rolled;In college days.Oh vanity! The vision glowsWith colors of the blushing rose,And roses fade. We, too, grow oldAnd memories alone enfoldThe joys that pen could not discloseIn college days.£be jfaceT WAS at one of the " Monday Afternoons." She came in alone thatday and looked about the sea of faces wistfully. She never cared verymuch for any of them, those empty faces with staring eyes and movingmouths, sometimes a row of teeth gleaming. She sat down on a window-sill and looked about. Then she caught a pair of eyes regardingher attentively, and she smiled unconsciously. Later she met him,and when he touched her hand he said, "I think that I have met youbefore somewhere." Then the crowd brushed him away. She watched him as he movedalong and she racked her brain to identify that familiar face. She remembered that she hadnot caught his name, and she asked her hostess for the information. Then light dawned.They had taken the same course together once. L. F. P.©uaoranale £eaHERE'S a clinking of china just over the way,And candles are lighted in dainty display.The gas-logs are burning with mad, merry glow,As if they're amused by the shadows they throw.The guests are arriving, and soon U. of C.Will revel and gossip at Quadrangle Tea.The roses are pouring their scent through the room,The candles are chasing the ghosts of the gloom,The Head and her guest-friends with welcoming smile,Are shaking the hands of the guests as they fileAdown through the hall, with mirth and with glee,To join in the throng of the Quadrangle Tea.'Tis here come the maidens in gown and in town,'Tis here come the doctors of fame and renown,'Tis here flock the smiling young gallants and beaux,The athletes, the singers, the writers, and lo!It seems as you count them the whole U. of C.Has flocked here together at Quadrangle Tea.'Tis here that the docents and fellows all flock,When lectures are ended, at five by the clock;'Tis here that the graduate, puffed up with knowledge,Runs squarely amuck with the youth of the college.And truly, no jesting, 'tis something to seeStrong men and fair maidens sip Quadrangle Tea.Then ho! for the teas of the Woman's Quadrangle,'With all of their gossip, their wit, and their wrangle;A blessing attend them! A health to them all!"Here's" — Beecher, and Kelly, and fair Foster Hall!A blessing attend them, and long may they beThe pride and the joy of the great U. of C.£be "flDooern flDan" at CollegeNE DAY a curly-haired youth said to me : "I have no faith in woman, themodern woman" I laughed a merry peal in my voluminous sleeve andsaid with great gravity, " Deluded youth of a skeptical age! do you not knowthat there is a modern man as well as a modern woman, and he has explicitfaith in her force of character? "Think, gentle reader, a boy of twenty who has no faith in woman ! What a plightfor a human soul! And why is it? His mother is a doting, blustering goddess whofeeds him well ; his sister is not particularly strong-minded, but my ! she can sew andmend ; his only sweetheart perhaps was a simpering school girl whom he outgrew andforgot. This constitutes his relation to the sex — yet he has no faith in woman !There you have the problem before you ; it seems unsolvable, does it not ? But wait. Thecampus witch, Mrs. Grundy, is blowing in my ear. She sees all, that witch, she knows all,and she tells all, and now she whispers :Bachelor, bachelor, crusty, old —Influence, influence, mighty, bold —Humph ! old hag, she's jealous, I think ! Yet the crusty old bachelor does exist within thecampus bounds and the crafty witch knows it only too well, and she knows that he is clutching atthe heart of your twenty-year old, and squeezing all the youth and brightness and happinessout of it. 'Tis very true that he, the crusty old fossil, I mean, has personal magnetism ; he is"hail fellow well met "— but he hates women. His life has been embittered by folly, his hearthas been broken perhaps, and he means to get even by toughening the hearts under his controlso that woman can not -break them.But, I wonder whether women really care to break hearts any longer. They want the.youth of twenty to approach them in 'his most confidential manner, to ask their opinion and toconsider it, to treat them as he does the next fellow, to be as unchivalrous as he likes ; he maysmoke, talk politics, or play foot ball and they shall like him just as much, and he will discoverthat they are jolly good fellows, after all. Pray, be a modern man, Oh youth, and let thecrusty old bachelor go to seed. Women will not hurt your hearts or spoil your prospects, youknow, the bachelor says that they were born for that. Do not believe him — for, perhaps,woman may be a genuine helpmate in the struggle for intellectuality. L- F. P.(To*)£fc>ucationThe student looketh to his purse and saith, "I will upon me get a most extraordinaryhump, and bone, and grind, and will take unto myself a prize or two ; for lo, my purse is verylow." And so he doth. He grindeth, and he boneth, and he humpeth him most mightily.Yea, verily, he buyeth him a horse and trotteth ; and behold, he useth that horse very hardly.And lo, when he bringeth forth his purse to take a prize or two, behold, there cometh ayoung woman, who doth take them all. And his name hath become a byword and a mocking.Ibalf an ibour in tbe jenalisb XibraripTHE English library is a good place in which to spend your odd minutes. You take aseat in the northwest corner, where no one is likely to disturb you by asking you tohelp him look for " Skeats' Etymological Dictionary," and you prepare to watch thelittle comedies which, more or less varied, take place every day.In comes the tall, fair youth, who reaches for the third volume of Mrs. Browning and findsit gone. The girl with pink roses in her hat, who has secured it a moment before, smiles atriumphant smile and mockingly offers to let him look on.The etherial-looking Freshman, who writes triolets, and strangely enough aspires tojournalism, enters hastily and walks to the shelves. Then a shadow crosses his seraphicface and you hear him murmur:"I wish I could wring the neck of that fiend who keeps swiping ' Perry's' all the time."After that he sits down and writes notes to the little brunette who is reading Lamb.The door opens again and the small intellectual-looking maiden in the mortar board gazesanxiously inside. Presently she descries the girl she is in search of and eagerly hurries forward. The two of them sit on one chair and whispered busily. You can hear odd words . . .Last night ... he said .... Thomas concert .... shan't go . . . etc.The mature graduate frowns at them, scrapes his chair impatiently and mutters something tothe woman next him— she of the sailor hat, without which no mortal hath ever seen her sinceshe entered the University. She answers audibly and fiercely that she wishes undergraduateswere not allowed in the library.The chatterers subside.A fussy man who has been seeking eagerly on the shelves for a book, at last spies it in thehands of a nervous little lady in gray. He hovers round her chair in a greedy, ghoulish way,until her nerves give out under the strain, and she hastily leaves the book and the room. Thefussy man grabs it gladly, and the aesthetic Freshman whispers something about "nerve."The aristocratic special student in the Redfern gown enters and leans against the revolvingbook case. The Junior in the long blue overcoat, who is pouring over Emerson at the foot ofthe table, looks up and smiles, and they both saunter leisurely out of the library.The athlete strolls in and asks the dark quiet boy for pity sake to give him an idea, for hemust begin to hand in daily themes or else be fired out of the class. A sympathetic smilewavers around the table upon this, and the tall, lank individual, who would curl up like a leafin a foot ball rush, and who knows it, says to the girl next him, that you don't need brains ifyou have muscle. He brings out the observation in quite a thoughtful way, as though it hadnever occurred to anyone but him before.The thoughtful Sophomore asks you to do him an example in arithmetic. If he beginswith two cuts a week increasing at the rate of two cuts more for every additional eight days,how many extra double majors will he have to take at the end of the year? Just as you are telling him that you used to be head scholar in arithmetic once, and so of course can't be expectedto know anything about it now, a professor comes in, and the Sophomore looks disgusted as hesays:"I was going to cut his class next hour, and now he has seen me and I can't. That's theworst of coming into these libraries. You never know whom you are going to run across."Just at this moment a stream of arrivals— the auburn-haired youth with a weakness forShelly, the dimple girl who is so tiny that she has to stand on a chair to get books from thethird shelf, the curly-haired girl who has taken the Wordsworth fever so prevalent in theUniversity, the young German who thinks the study of literature the finest study of all andwho is fitted for anything on earth but that. These new comers and others bring to your mindthe fact that the bell is going to ring in a moment and that you have an engagement over inRyerson. So you prepare to leave and as you go you hear the mature graduate say irritablyto the sailor hat: "I shall certainly speak to Professor Blackburn and have him put up anotice forbidding loafing in this library." M. L. R.©lb Xove SongHE evening hath its star,Whose radiance sheds afarAbiding faith.The morning star is bright,And bringeth, after night,Hope, strong till death.But nearer earth there liesThan in the far dim skiesA saving grace.My way to heaven is clear,My hope and faith are here,My lady's face.I see in nearer skiesTwin stars of paradise,My lady's eyes.ffl>£ Xao\>lady hath a smile for all,blessed word for each,Like the good June sun dothher bounty fall,For there's never a life toolow or smallFor her dear hand to reach.I think she loveth everything,Our weeds to her are flowers,Wee, trooping children abouther cling,For she tells rare tales of the rainbow ringWhere the old folk talk of showers.I think her glad brave look is wonFrom cruel sorrow's smart,Full long, I think, hath my lady knownHow a soul in silence may bide aloneAnd yet keep open heart.These be but thoughts, God's truth is this :His holiest love as she,And the angels see no saint in blissWhose other world look is more sweet, I wis,Than my lady's face to me.A. P. B.H prebicamentIT WAS the snuggest little den in the world, that little college study of hers, and stronglysuggestive of her own sweet little personality. Warmth and color, and gaiety were everywhere. The walls were crowded with pictures ; there was a Madonna in a delicate whiteframe, and beneath it a little rococco figure done in broad washes of water color withoutany back ground. There were photographs of every shape and size everywhere, lying, standingand hanging around. Two flags, a gorgeous black and orange silk affair with a huge P.embroidered on it, one of bright blue emblazoned with a Y. were over the mantel, while variouscuts from Life and Truth chiefly illustrating foot ball scenes, were tacked up with pins in alla ailable spaces. The dainty little desk by the window was heaped up with notes and letters,and german favors, while underneath it, on a shelf, lay a tattered and bescribbled heap of theobligatory text and note books. A certain grace in the arrangement of the window draperyand a somewhat effeminate profusion of silken cushions suggested the boudoir.And the inmate of this soft little nest? Was she as composite a creature as all these varying trophies she had surrounded herself with, suggested? There she sat, on the low luxuriouslounge, a pretty little babyfaced blonde, with a most irresistible smile. But she was not smilingnow, she was frowning and her lips were puckered. She stared around at her pretty room andthen at an object in her hand. Then she leaned forward and opened the door wider. " Girls,"she called, " girls, come here ; I'm in an awful fix. Here's that lovely picture of the X. Y. Z's,and there's not an inch of space in my room to hang it in ! " E. S.Bebino 1ber fanEHIND her fan of laces rareShe wears a coy coquettish airThat seems to one almost to say"I'm sure you will not go away,As long, sir, as I look so fair ! "Her eyes of brown, a pretty pair,A lovely look of longing wear,And everything seems bright and iBehind her fan !Now if perchance not weighing care,To kiss her lips I'd boldly dare ;I wonder if with that bold play,She'd scorn me with an awful "nay,"Or kindly kissing keep me thereBehind her fan ?SLIPPING away from the spectral sphereCome the ghosts of the leaves of yester-year.They flutter and flyWhen the wind blows high,As they did of old 'neath an autumn sky.Only then, they were clad in scarlet and brown,In purple and gold, like a king in his crown.But now all in white,Like ghosts of the night,Who trail their pale garments and pass from our sight.Perhaps they repent them some frivolous crime,For October, you know, was their coming-out time,When they merrily twirled,And they giddily swirled,And set all a-quiver the hearts of the world.At noonday they rustled in gorgeous brocade,Never dreaming 'twould crumple or colors would fade.But the ghosts of the leaves,On gray winter eves,Come in dead quiet wrapped, as a dumb mournergrieves.They love to revisit the trees they once clung to,By thrush and by oriole where they were sung to.As other ghosts do,If ghost stories are true,Come back to the haunts on earth that they knew.So the elm and the oak are in foliage clad,A foliage phantom, soundless and sad.No shadow is shed,The blast overheadMocks at the semblance of leaves that are dead.They vanish away with the beams of the sun —The habit of ghosts since the world has begun.They melt in our hands,They are bound not by bands,And whither they haste, no man understands.F. W.Gbe<5bost0oftbeXeaweHcross tbe ©,uafc>CROSS the quad with roofing tile,There stands a new, imposing pile,All built of stone of sombre gray,It stands apart, and seems to say," For me — I love this classic style."And I who hear and laugh the while,Gaze on the maidens fair who fileA down the walk in bright arrayAcross the quad.For list, as when with witching wile,Old Father Time on Cobb Hall's dialHas set an hour from day to day,A maiden comes across the way —See ! here she comes, now see her smileAcross the quad.Hn tbe Summer QuarterTHE) bookIT was at the lake side and the time of the year was August. Hergaze was fixed upon a point far out upon Michigan's blue waters,and her pretty face was half hidden from view by the dainty littlered parasol she held tilted over one shoulder. For many minutes neitherof them spoke, but gazed steadily out to sea.Suddenly the open book she had been holding in her lap slipped andstarted to roll down the rocks upon which they were sitting. Involuntarily they both put out their hands to catch it, and then almost as suddenly the book was forgotten, as their hands met and his closed slowlybut firmly over hers.Again with clasped hands their eyes sought that point far out uponthe waters, and again her parasol tilted gracefully over her shoulder.But this time another face also was hidden from the surrounding view, andthe shoulder that had formerly held the pretty shade alone now restedupon another larger and broader shoulder, and a little sigh of coquettishcontentment escaped from her lips.It was at the lake side and the time of the year was August.THE ROSE[With colorings, local and otherwise.]It was at the last of the midsummer hops and the chimes on thechapel tower were just sounding twelve. They were standing close together in a spot on thehotel piazza where the moonbeams seemed to focus themselves with an added refulgence andbeauty. They were talking "in a low tone and her eyes were fixed dreamily upon the shiningsilvery serpent that lay lazily stretched out upon the canal's smooth surface where the moonbeams lay. Ever and anon there floated out to them a whiff of the dreamy measured music ofa waltz, which drowsily died out again into low echoing monotones as it was wafted acrossthe still, sleeping waters of the Midway. Within her fingers she pressed a blood red rose.She was very tall and her dark hair hung around her fair forehead in dusky, wavy lineslike a halo of thunder clouds around the sun. Suddenly as he .held out his hand and leanedtoward her she proudly tossed her head and started to move away from him. As she did sothe light of the moon shone full upon her upturned face, and a single beautiful pearl was seento glisten for a moment in her eye and then quickly split up into a living string of smaller ones,as a tear suddenly rolled down her cheek and lost itself in the heart of the rose she now heldpressed to her lips.It was only for a moment, and then as the first notes of the final waltz came stealing outupon the air and "Home, Sweet Home" rose and died out a^ain into a sad sweet memory ofsound, she came quickly toward him and tenderly adjusting the beautiful rose in the lapel ofhis coat, she said, " Yes, I am sorry, very sorry, Jack, you are going away. My college life hasbeen such a lovely life to me, and you — you have been very good to me. Some day, perhaps,after you have made the mark in the world you wish to make, and have won honors for yourself and your dear old Alma Mater, we may meet again. Until then, dear friend, good bye.You have helped to make college so beautiful to me, and see I pin my colors, the colors ofthe rose, upon you. Henceforth you shall be my champion, and I ""And you," he said, bowing reverently over her fingers, "my lady."It was at the last of the midsummer hops, and the chimes on the chapel tower were justsounding twelve.University of Chicago,November 8, 1893.Dear Mother:Lay this flattering unction to your soul. Ihave quashed my former vocabulary since enteringthe University of Chicago. Would you know privily the cause whereof I have fabricated for myselfa new garment of speech? Recall to mind thatours is a fictile world and that man is the mostplastic of creatures.Do not tell me that you find the ebb and tideof my speech wondrously dizened. In the seeming incongruities of the ever fluctuating chaos ofthe actual I am realizing gradually the film shadowof the raw material of the ideal. Phasis after phasis,according to unalterable laws, laid down by theassiduous circle of earnest officialities, known inordinary parlance as the University faculty, I amworking continually forward toward prescribedissues. Meanwhile my mind is a complex of forces,oftentimes working in dim fulignious bewilderment for the unfathomable somewhat.Your conscientious and dutiful daughter,E. M.£be StubentI will not call him the dig or the grind lest he should fit the appellation to someone else;he thinks of himself simply as the student. If, after an afternoon at an exciting ball game, youbreak into his room and demand why he was not out to see the fun and to help ' 'whoop herup," he will look up at you through his glasses with mild surprise and say, " I hadn't the timeto spare. I have been working all the afternoon on my fortnightly theme, and haven't got itdone yet." And as you hurry to your room and scribble off your theme in about fifteen minutesto the accompaniment of an excited discussion of the game, you pity from the depth of yourheart the poor fellow who has "wasted" so much time on his. But when in class his theme isread as a specimen of good work and yours as an awful example, you begin to wonder whetheryou or the student really derived more pleasure from the afternoon.briber tbe StarsShe stood on the edge of the bank. The wind blowing caught her skirts tight about her,and blew into crisp waves the loose masses of her hair. She welcomed it longingly. She hadcome out into the night to be alone. She put her hand up to her throat, it trembled with achoking sob. Oh, the weariness of it all, the bitterness! She lay down on the long, darkgrass and buried her face in it. She stretched out her arms and embraced it. The smell ofthe earth came up to her, and near by a bed of mignonette sent out its delicious perfume. Oh,the delicate, penetrating odor of that mignonette ! How it seemed to sink into her troubledconsciousness and rest there soothingly ! Humanity had failed her so she lay down against thewarm, pulsing heart of nature to find comfort. She stayed there long, tense with the bitterhurt in her heart. The merry crickets sang cheerily, and the sea moaning incessantly crooneda lullaby like a sorrowing mother. Its coldness struck against her cheek. She looked up overthe gray, moving waters into the vivid blue of the sky. How deep it was ! How impenetrable ! And the stars looking down on her from their immeasurable distance twinkledgrotesquely, perhaps pityingly. They had heard many a love sing its requiem, and many aheart break, as hers was breaking now. F- B.XifeLet others mourn for death,And sing their tearful dirgesTo wild sea surgesWith sobbing breath.My tears shall flow for life,L,ife that outlives its loveAnd its faith from aboveIn bitter strife. E. S.©ne of ftbemUnder meekly parted curlsNote her sweet pure breadth of brow,Note her smiling eyes; allowShe's the prettiest of girls.And this winsome little elfTends a shrine within her heart,Worships there with love and artHer one goddess— her fair self. E. S.rose thatThen she fiDoral ?INNETTA, do I hear sounds?" "Rest still, my heart-, rest still, it is only unsteady voices on the Midway," her room-mate replied. Then our heroine sankback among the silken pillows of the divan and thrummed her guitar. She lookedinto the mirror beyond and tugged at her refractory curls. " What an afflict onit is to have red hair," she groaned, as she looked at her beautiful brilliant hair ;" I loathe red hair ! I'll dye it!" Then the sounds came to her ears again. Shewent into the next room, which was darkened, and crept into the window seat.She pressed her cheek against the pane and looked down into the night. Thereshe saw dark objects flitting about on the campus. As she watched them theylined up as if for attack upon the building ; but instead they poured out theirhearts in a sweet love-song ; then they shouted a rollicking medley. Finally theystopped, and she opened the window a little and threw down a rose.Next morning she watched the passers-by on the campus and in the recitation halls, and watched and watched, but among all the dark-coated there was notone who wore her rose. After a weary length of time she met him. It was herhe wore, she was sure. As he drew nearer she glanced at him fixedly for a moment.groaned inwardly and fled. He had red hair. L. F. P.Xtbe SerenabeISTEN ! the night is still, and yet, afarAnd faint, as if descended from some starStill choiring to the high celestial throng,There sifts the silver echo of a song !What tender message of high chivalryFloats thus upon the quiet evening's breast ?What wooers, in joust of generous rivalry,So tunefully enrich their lady's rest?Less faint and nearer still the music grows,Unfolding like the petals of a rose ;Their voices, echoing from gray starlit towers,Proclaim they are the Twenty Troubadours.Oh, full and strong the mellow voices ring,And from the casement leaning, every daughterHears that fair name whose praises now they sing,And loves it, hark ! " 'Tis our dear Alma Mater !'The song is ended ; all the singers goneInto the starry night : and yet I leanOver the window-ledge, while shreds of songCome back from the far distance, pierce the screenOf shifting silver mists, and linger longAmong the tall gray towers, and playWith the still shadows, and then fade away.£be Ipoet's XotI used to write of Marguerite,And all my love reflectedIn every word my passion's heat ;Yet all came back — rejected.I wrote about her sparkling glance,That shone like stars above,And every stanza seemed to danceTo the meter of my love.I sang in gladsome measuresOf her face beyond compare ;And all my words were treasures —Like her smiles, richly rare.In vain it was I tuned the linesTo meet the editor's grace ;For weekly he returned my rhymes,He said, " For want of space."I,' ENVOI.Of Love my verse now burdeneth not,My poems are accepted ;How changeful is the poet's lot —'Tis /who am t-ejected.©ne SummerJUNE — THE ROSEI send her a rose,The color pray guess;Loves language it knows,I sen'l her a rose.May it breathe as it blowsHer answering "yes."I send her a rose,The color pray guess.JUEY— THE RINGI bought her a ring,She said she would wear it;A rare costly thing,I bought her a ring.Do I dance? Do I sing?No; I grin and I bear it.I bought her a ring,She said she would wear it.AUGUST — THE REASONNow summer was o'er,And her love it was ended ;So *he sighed, "What a bore;"(Now summer was o'er. )"No clerk in a storeCould be my intended."Now summer was o'er,And her love it was ended.Uf $ou Mere 1bere !If you were here how new and brightThis place would seem. How strange arightAll things would be. Like fairy playThey all would change, for you've a wayOf bringing dawn from darkest night !And then your face — no fairer sightThere is around — you're sweeter, quite,Than any rose. So all would sayIf you were here !Alas ! alas ! what poet's plight !My pen in praise has taken flight ;Its every curve my thoughts betray,As now to you I tune my lay ;And yet there's more that I would writeIf you were here !£be Xover: S his sweetheart lives afar off, she communes with him only by mail.She averages about three letters a week ; he regularly writes seven,with an occasional note or postal just for good measure. He livesonly at mail time, and woe be unto the poor postman if the maillack the expected letter ! Between her letters the lover re-reads theold ones, writes to her, or for hours fondly gazes on her picture,which occupies the most conspicuous place in his room. He has nouse for any of the ordinary pleasures of life ; if he can find anyoneto listen he may spend a few hours talking about ' ' her, ' ' but otherwise he is merely existinguntil he sees her again.BxobusCHAPTER XXI.1SJOW it came to pass in the days of Rainey-^ the Prex. that there were many godsamong the children of Shekago. For thepeople had joined themselves unto Yello, andunto Etruskan Gold, and even unto Orang.2 Theref< >re the chief priests and the eldersmade a great assembling of the people at theplace of learning, which is called Cobhal.And all the people came up to this assemblagein great numbers; even from Snell to Nanci-fo^trehal came they up.3 fl And when the people had gatheredtogether, the chief priests and the elders tookcouncil among themselves; for they said, it isnot good that we should worship many gods.4 And furthermore they said. Let us question all the nations round about; and we mayfind a mighty god whom none do hold to;5 Or if we find a great and powerful godof war which some small tribe doth worship;then let us take that god and build unto hima high altar and bow down and worship him.6 And behold, when we go forth to warour god will fight for us, and we shall triumphagainst our foes till all the nations of theearth shall tremble at our name.7% And when one of the elders of the tribeOmega, which is to say, Philip, had told thesesayings to the people, they cried with a loudvoice, and said. It is good.8 Therefore did the high priest, which iscalled Joseph, choose out for him certain men,saying, Go, ye, and seek until ye find a godwhom we may worship.q And we will wait for you; yea, even untothe coming of the barley harvest will we wait. 8 For behold, he is a mighty god of warand no nation on the face of the earth bowethdown to him.9 And he will lead us unto victory; yea,verily, he will win for us great battles till ourfame shall go abroad in the land.CHAPTER XXII.AND on the third day, when the sun hadreached his middle course, behold, themessengers came unto the place of learning,even unto Cobhal.2 And they rose up in the midst of themultitude and spake and said, Verily, it is aweary task to find a god whom we may worship;3 For behold, from the east even unto thewest every nation hath its god and few therebe whence we may choose.4 And if these be great and powerful or ifthey be lazy and weak, no man can say, fornone hath tried them.5 ^ And while the messengers yet spake,behold, there arose a great confusion amongthem; for they were divided against themselves.6 For one Alonzo, a man of mighty muscle,spake for Greenandredd ; arid one Wilson,he that is called the jedge, for Reddandgray.7 ^[ And while they yet wrangled amongthemselves there arose one of the people,which is called Love, he who knoweth all themystic lore of Botani, saying with a loudvoice, Let us take uuto ourselves Skarlett; ii MoG70 3&(I/{Vmwwwjs&Iio And there arose another of the people,whose name is Brent, of the tribe of the Dekes,and spake, saying, Let us join ourselves untoBluangra, And he did spout most mightily.1 1 fl But the people listened not; for behold,one cried one thing and one another; andevery man's hand was against his neighbor.12 \ And the chief priests and the elderstook council among themselves, saying, Weare the people. Let us now therefore take untoourselves this god Skarlett.13 And let us say unto the people, He is agood god and ye shall bow down and worshiphim. And it shall be well with the people.14 And so they did; but the people wouldnot, for they were a stiffnecked people.15 If Then the chief priests and the eldersrose up in their might and said, Ye shall haveno other god but Skarlett and him ye shallworship. And it was so.16 And the people shouted with a greatshout and bowed down and worshipped Skarlett.CHAPTER XXIII.A ND on the next day there came unto ther^~ chief priests and the elders certain menwhich spake strange things, saying,2 We have been deceived. For behold,there dwelleth on our borders a people whichworship this god Skarlett; and when we goforth to battle against this people, verily, hewill fight for them.3fl And the chief priests and the elderswere greatly troubled among themselves; andthey took council and said,4 Let us make unto ourselves a new godand let us call his name Maroon, which is tosay, the Mighty One. And it seemed good tothem and they did so.5 ff Therefore it came to pass that the chiefpriests and the elders made another as^em-blage and called the people together again atthe place of learning, which is called Cobhal.6 But all the people were not there, forfor they had already journeyed afar off andcould not be found. And when they heardwhat had been done they were exceedingwroth .7 11 And it came to pass when the chiefpriests and the elders had made known thesesayings unto the people,8 That the people shouted with a greatshout and because they were afraid theybowed down before the new god Maroon anddid worship him.lExobus9 But some .spake, saying, It is not well;for behold, our fathers before us did not so.Why should we leave the old gods ?10 And some spake, saying, This new god isvery like to one whom the people of the fareast worship, yea, even the god Krimson,which is to say, Mighty.n And behold, if we shall go to battle inthe far east it shall come to pass that our godand their god shall be as one, and to whomwill he give the victory ?12 And they answered and said, Verily, tothe people which dwell in the east.13 *jf And there arose one Vernon, who spakewith a loud voice, saying, Let us worshipBluangra; for in his worship is our nation as14 And before him bow the maidens; andworship we not the maidens ? Therefore letus worship Bluangra.15 And there arose another of the peoplewhich is called Francis, he that marshaleththe hosts of Shekago in battle, and spake andsaid,16 Let us not listen to this man which hathspoken; for behold he is full of the west wind.17 fl But it was as the chief priests and theelders had said.CHAPTER XXIV."IVTOW it came to pass that when Rainey the1N Prex. heard what had been done in theland, he was exceeding wroth.2 And when he had called unto him hiswise men and his scribes he spake unto them,saying,3 Now tell me wherefore have the peopledone this thing? For I, even I, Rainey thePrex., which is to say, the learned, the lustyfooter of the golden horn,4 I have ordained that they should worship Etruskan Gold and have set my greatseal thereto.5 And now they have made unto themselves a new god and have departed from theways of their fathers and have gone astrayafter new gods. Tell me therefore why thesethings be. 651 And when he had spoken thus the wisemen and the scribes trembled and were soreafraid. And they spake one to another say-7 'Behoid the king is very wroth and blam-eth us for what has been done m the land.Now let us therefore look to it lest he venthis wrath on us8 fl And they answered and spake unto theking, saying, O king, live forever.9 We wot not, O king, wherefore this people have done these things; for verily, theyare a stiffnecked people; and nomanknowethwhat they do, or why tney do it.10 Now therefore it were best that weshould do as if we had not heard of this.And when the people see that they have doneno great thing, behold, thev will turn againand worship the old gods.11 fl And this council was sweet in the earsof the king, yea, sweeter than the honey inthe honey comb. And he spake unto them,saying,12 Go ye, therefore, and let no man knowof this, And if any shall ask you, saying,whom doth the king worship ? Ye shallmake answer,13 He boweth down before Etruskan Gold,the god of his fathers, the mighty god of war.For as for me and my house, we will serveEtruskan Gold.14 ^ But when the king saw how the people clave to Maroon and would not departtherefrom he said within his heart,15 This is not well. For is it not written,A house divided against itself cannot stand ?16 And because he was a good king andhad regard for his people, he called unto himagain his wise men and his scribes, and hesaid unto them,17 Behold, this people is a stiffnecked people; but verily, it is my people. And becauseI love this people, I will leave the god of myfathers and will worship Maroon.18 U And when the people heard thesesayings, they shouted with a loud voice andsaid, Long live Rainey, the good Prex., whohath regard unto his people!19 And they were exceeding glad. Andthe people of Shekago and Rainey the Prex.worship Maroon even unto this day.Hn j£niamaIN THE spring, the young man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love." They sat onthe smooth green lawn under the tall, scrawny trees that face Cobb Hall. They weretranslating French. She held the book and read assiduously while he looked at thelittle curls around her ears, and her long lashes and her tapering fingers. Then he drewthe book gently from those fingers and warned her not to work so hard. Hours came andwent ; procession after procession streamed from Kent, still they sat — but they read no moreFrench that day. It was all sunshine.In the autumn the young man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts of flunk.She sat in chapel, lonely and a little sad. She was reading French again. He came inbreathless and accosted her with the remark :" Say, do you read French? Translate this, willyou ? " She remembered the spring time and it madeher a little happy." I have not seen you in a long while," she falteredat the end of a chapter."No?" he said, raising his eyebrows, "Well,go on, please."At the end of another chapter she stopped for abreath and stole a glance at his face and hair." I was thinking of you the other day and wondering," she began. He snatched the book from hertapering fingers and thrust it under his arm."Guess I'll go to recitation," was all he said.Then she got up and looked out of a window at thetall, scrawny trees. There was a swift, shrill windwhistling around their bare branches. L. F. P.S T WAS nearly dark and there was a dense fog outside the dimly-lighted roomin which some thirty persons were assembled. They were listening withbated breath and dilated eyes to their leader, who was unfolding to themsome awful plot. His voice was suppressed with emotion, his low penetrating, thrilling tones fairly electrified his hearers, and heat lightning wouldhave seemed a fit accompaniment to his words. His eyes gleamed with a sortof fiendish enjoyment of the scene, his hair stood on end with excitement,he hissed out his words from between his teeth, and he nervously clasped andunclasped his slender hands, as he spoke. He dwelt on the misery of the unemployed, onstarvation wages, on injustice, on the rights of man ; then waxing bolder, on hot vengeance, onwholesale slaughter, on general upheaval and a bloody revolution. He carried his listenerswith him by the force of his mighty intellect. Was this some hideous, diabolical anarchisticplot? Oh no, it was merely a bi-weekly repetitorium on the French Revolution, conducted byProf, von Hoist. B. M.£be tables of IWortbweBtern[with various apologies.]The ladies of NorthwesternAre fond of fete and play.They gather at reception,And talk all night and day;But Chicago, at Chicago,They love a quiet nook;A man, too, for protection,Just one— to hold a book.The ladies of NorthwesternRead French romantic lore.They parley off their phrasesUntil your ears are sore;But Chicago, at Chicago,They read the classic Greek,And, though well versed in Latin,They naught but English speak.The ladies of NorthwesternAre quite a gala crowd.They dance and flirt right worldly;Their gowns are much too loud;But Chicago, at Chicago,They say that two are best,When walking out together,In modest colors dressed.The ladies of NorthwesternMay laugh and loudly sing,And win the men all to them,A most delightful thing;But Chicago, at Chicago,The choir sings so sweet,It seems you almost hear the treadOf heavenly angel's feet.The ladies of NorthwesternMay do for just a year.But talk, and French, and gowns, and songAre fickle things, we fear;But Chicago, our Chicago,The wisest heads agree,Will live to reign forever,The queen from sea to sea.Gbe©lo"{UniversityofCbicago m ffl SHOULD keenly resent any insinuation to theV jg effect that I am sentimental, yet I will confess to the shedding of real tears one bleakand dreary afternoon a few years since, when I stoodupon the ex-campus of the ex-University, andwatched the hireling vandals, with their cruelpicks and spidery derricks and ropes, reducing to(dust and kindling, and the stone of commerce, the"grand, gloomy and peculiar" old pile that had been for years myacademic home, and, while I am no more resentful than sentimental,I will confess further that I never ride past the old place on CottageGrove avenue without a feeling of ghoulish glee when I note that theexpensive street which was cut through the centre of the groundsremains as it was built, and the acres of subdivided ground are stillhouseless and tenantless. As well try to induce people to build summer cottages in a cemetery.The old building was an architectural masterpiece upon its exterior, as it was a monstrosityupon its interior. The ceilings were so high that they were lost in obscurity on dark days—and who shall say the old University had not a plenitude of dark days?— the class rooms werelarge enough to muster armies in, and the largest class we ever knew occupied but an insignificant amount of floor space in the room. Occupying the whole upper floor of the north endwas a room about twice the size of Kent Theatre, tenanted only by bats, pigeons, and severalthousand models of rejected patents which had been stored there since the Chicago fire. Theroom was built for a chapel, but never used as such. Down in the basement was a ' ' Commons, "beside which our own Commons is a paradise indeed, and yet there we lived and flourished attwo dollars a week, and history tells no tales of better times among better men, no heartiersongs were ever sung, no abler speeches ever made than in that musty, dark and dismal hole,made resplendent for our annual Washington supper, with a multitude of lamps and flags andbunting, and the golden hatchet that always hung suspended over the banquet board.There was no water in the building except in the basement, and no warm water at that.Students "tended" their own rooms, bringing up their water and coal from the north end ofthe basement to the dormitory rooms, way at the south end of the building. Many a time haveI known the fire to flicker and fade while we played seven-up to see who should make thatfrightful freezing trip after two buckets of coal, and many a morn have I known the dormitorycontingent to go into Chapel at 8:45 representing the great unwashed, because the water in thebasement was frozen. And poor ! I verily believe if old Jones Hall had been turned bottomside up just before "gas-meter pay day," less than three dollars would have rattled out.I. O. U.'s were the currency of the student body, and were accepted freely between manand man.Fraternities were there in all their glory. It seems strange as we look at it now that suchfraternities as D. K. E., Psi Upsilon, Zeta Psi, Beta Theta Pi and Phi Kappa Psi should havemaintained such flourishing chapters there — but those were the days, and that was the placefor real fraternity life, the memory of which abideth dear and warmeth the heart of every Greekin these ultra conservative days. Initiation into a fraternity was truly a thing of beauty, anda joy for many a day. There were two open literary societies, Tri-Kappa and Athenaeum, andnearly every student was an ardent supporter of one or the other, and the rivalry was intenseas it was healthful and beneficial. The wholesome training afforded by these societies, supplemented by the vigorous, heartfelt fraternity polishing, was certainly an advantage that thestudents of this later day lack and may well seek.You ask me about athletics. We were all athletes. We had a gymnasium consisting offour walls, one ceiling, one floor, one ladder, two ropes and rings and one punching bag.Every man was his own Stagg, and he had a good job. Tennis, basket ball and Rugby football were unknown, but those were the halcyon days of base ball. We had two teams, therewas no such invidious distinction as a "second team," and we played base ball in earnest. Itwas good base ball, too, better than you fellows play now-a-days. Why, we used frequently tomake scores of 25 and 30 runs in only five innings, and I notice lately that with all the gymnasium and field training, and professional coaching and so forth, these later day teams play allthe afternoon and make only two or three scores. It makes me long sometimes to get downoff the bleachers and go out and show the boys how to play.And of that faculty, no words of mine can say one tithe of what is due. They laboredearly and late, often for weeks at a time with absolutely no money, yet repeatedly refusingoffers to leave. Warmed with an almost divine enthusiasm in their labors, nourished with thefond hope of better days — paid only in the flattering evidences of the results ol their work, theytoiled on through the best years of their life and were in at the death. Some day I hope to seea memorial volume written detailing the struggles, failures and triumphs of Dr. GalushaAnderson and his faculty.The memory of the old place is a hallowed one with whomsoever it abideth. In all the yearssince the untimely death I have never met the alumnus who was so engrossed in business, sorushed with his professional duties, that he would not on the instant drop everything at themention of the Old University, and smilingly, almost tearfully "reminisce." They receivewith a certain degree of satisfaction the intelligence that they have been officially madealumni of the new University, but few if any of them would exchange their yellow wrinkledsheepskins, with the picture of the dear departed, and the long forgotten Latin, for any officialtestimony of alumniship in this great new-idea institution.I sometimes wonder, when I see the young men in their handsome hardwood rooms, withtheir plate glass windows, steam heat and electric appliances, with access to these magnificentlibraries, museums, laboratories with all these late day appliances and apparatus, and hear themcomplain of their treatment and threaten to write up things in the newspapers, whether theseboys know a good thing when they see it, and whether they are really any better off than wewere in the 70's and 8o's, and whether they are learning any more or living any more. I trownot — Tempora mutantar. T. M. H.BOOKEUE¥ENZhe XDlniverstt^ pressadministrative 3Boar&The President, ChairmanRecorder H. B. Grose, Secretary, ex officioHead Professor Eri Baker HulberTHead Professor J. Laurence LaughlinProfessor Henry Herbert DonaldsonAssociate Professor Ira Maurice PriceAssistant Prof essor Francis A. BlackburnBirector of tbe pressCharles W. ChaseOfficial publicationsEdited by W. Muss-ArnolTThe Annual RegisterThe Quarterly CalendarThe Quarterly AnnouncementsThe Official Bulletinjournal of GeologyA semi-quarterly magazine of geology and related sciencesEditors — T. C. Chamberlin, R. D. Salisbury, Geographic Geology; J. P. Iddings,Petrology; R. A. F. Penrose, Jr., Economic Geology; C. R. Van Hise, Pre-CambrianGeology; C. D. Walcott, Paleontologic Geology; W. H. Holmes, Archeologic Geology; George Baur, Vertebrate PaleontologyHstropb^sical JournalAn international review of spectroscopy and astronomical physicsEditors — George E. Hale, Director of the Yerkes Observatory; James E. Keeler,Director of the Allegheny ObservatoryAssistant Editors— J. S. Ames, Johns Hopkins University; W. W. Campbell, LickObservatory; Henry Crew, Northwestern University; E- B. Frost, Dartmouth College; F. L. O. Wadsworth, University of ChicagoZhe XEim\>er8it\> pressBiblical WorloContinuing the Old and New Testament StudentEditor — William R. HarperAssociate Editors— Ernest D. Burton, George S. Goodspeed, Ira M. Price, Robert F.Harper, Oliver J. Thatcherxaniversitp Extension TOUorlfcA monthly journal for extending and popularizing higher educationEditor— Francis W. ShepardsonAssistant Editors— George Henderson, Oliver J. Thatcher, Richard G. Moulton,Nathaniel Butler, Jr., Thomas J. Lawrence, Charles Zeublin, Howard B. GroseJournal of political EconomyEditor — J. Laurence LaughlinAssociate Editors— Adolph C. Miller, Thomas B. Veblen, William HillIbebraicaA quarterly journal in the interests of Semitic studyEditors — William R, Harper, Emil G. Hirsch, Ira M. Price, Robert Francis HarperStubents' publications'dnipersitg HrenaAn illustrated monthly magazine, devoted to the interests of the members of the University of ChicagoEdited by P. H. MartynOrganized and published in 1892Died after the publication of No. 3, in 1893T&nivevBity IHewsA "college daily paper, published by the studentsof the University, October 17, 1892, to April19, 1893Editors of Vol. L, Fall Quarter — Howard Roosa,John G. Fryer, Gertrude L. CobbEditors of Vol. II., Winter Quarter — Howard Roosa,Percy P. Carroll, Harry W. StoneEditors of Vol. III., Spring Quarter — John G. Fryer,Editor-in-Chief; Eloise Mayham, Henry R.Willis, Maud L. Radford, Bruce Kinney, HarryW. Stone, Effie Gardner, Harris F. Williams."Western Collegepress HssociattonPresident ___-_.____. Kenyon CollegianVice-President ------------ miniSecretary ---------- EarlhamiteDaily Cardinal lEiecutiveTCommitteeUniversity of Chicago Weekly Pegasus and PleiadIRepresentatives of THmversit£ of CbicagoH. C. Murphy C. H. Gallion C. S. PikeIHniversit^of ChicagoWeeklylEbitorsITn Qyocv of ^Election1892Emory M. Foster Arthur KaiserW. F. Durno Charles Sumner PikeBruce Kinney Philip B. KohlsaatArthur W. Allen C. H. Gallion1893Horace L. Burr H. H. Manchester W. Howard PrescottDemi a Butler Elizabeth Messick Thomas W. MoranEdgar A. Buzzell S. W. Johnson Percy P. CarrollHenry C. Murphy George L. Hunter Frances WillistonJ. W. Thompson1894Maude L- Radford Louise C. ScovelJane K. Weatherlow John Lamay1895Charles H. Gallion, Manager3£t>itonal 36oarfcThomas W. Moran ] ,, . ^j.,Frank W. Woods } ManaSinS EditorsG. W. Axelson Warren P. Behan John H. HeilWilbur T. Chollar - Mary D. MaynardRalph W. Webster William P. LovettE. A. BuzzELL (Alumni)'VifiiIII I nn rrr rrmil ill ISCOBB LECTURE HALLCapanb<3owmJSoaro of Bottom ^Charles Sumner Pike Philip RandW. Walt Atwood . . Business ManagerOswald James Arnold Assoc. Business ManagerBssociate JBMtorsPaul G. Woolley Charles R. BarrettMarshall E. Sampsell Agnes S. CookEi>ith B. Foster Jennette E- KennedyRalph H. Johnson Henry T. Chace, Jr.HrtistsForest Grant, Artist in ChiefHerbert E. HewittPercy P. CarrollCap anb (SownContributorsMaude L. RadfordFlorence WilkinsonEdna StantonLucy F. PierceEvelyn MatzFlorence BullAlice E. MoranAnna P. BeardsleyMary MaynardXiterar^Joseph Edward RaycroftHerbert h. ManchesterTheodore M. HammondFrank W. WoodsJ. J. Shutterly, Jr.J. W. LinnF. W. DignanWalter DeefenbaughBrti6t6Philip P. S. Doane Philemon B. KohlsaatJohn T. McCutchkon Henry H. HewittH. R. Heaton L. Brent VaughanH. C. Ottman Miss FreemanIPbotograpbEHorace R. DoughertyBOOK^©fficersHenry Herbert Donaldson, PresidentGeorge Stephen Goodspeed, Vice-PresidentRobert Francis Harper, Secretary and TreasurerIbouse CommitteeRobert Francis Harper, ChairmanWilliam Gardner HaleJoseph Paxson IddingsBucfcnellClub©fficersJ. W. A. Young PresidentA. O. Stevens ....... Vice-President and SecretaryA. R. E. Wyant TreasurerMembersEva J. Stanton Lincoln Hulley Charles W. AllenPaul Tustin W. C. MacNoul R. CatterallRalph R. Snow R. B. Davidson E. M. HeimOxforbClub©fficersVictor O. Johnson . . PresidentEdith M. Goodspeed Vice-PresidentWalter A. Payne secretary-TreasurerExecutive CommitteeMrs. Charlotte C. Gray Walter S. Davis/IDembersE. Hastings Moore Harriet L. McCaskyGeorge E. Vincent Florence L- MitchellF. C. Sherman Edith M. GoodspeedS. C. Mosser Martha C. SmithVictor O. Johnson Katherine M. WolfeWalter A. Payne Minnie JonesTheodore L. Neef H. R. CarawayWalter S. Davis R. O. ShreveRichard S. Fuleord D. A. LehmanO. G Markham Edward C. PageC. A. Torrey Oscar L. TriggsA. A. Wood F. A. StoweC H. Gallion W. B. PershingG. R. Kirkpatrick C. H. GordonFrederick C. Lucas W. J. PooleySpencer C. Dickerson m. R. FeslerSouthern Club©fficersH. N. Ogden, PresidentJ. W. FERTiG, Vice-PresidentLulu McCafferty, SecretarydirectorsJ. W. Million M. E. EubankJ. B. Dormay E. J. ReeceBenison Club(§vrgani3eb EJecember 13, 1892©fficers1892=1893Ernest D. Burton, '76, PresidentClarence F. Castle, '80, Vice-PresidentFrancis W. Shepardson, '82, CorrespondentBruce Kinney, '92, Recording Secretary1893=1894Frank J. Miller, '79, PresidentJames A. Smith, '89, Vice-PresidentFrancis W. Shepardson, '82, CorrespondentBruce Kinney, '92, Recording Secretary1894=1895F. W. Shepardson, '82, PresidentJ. W. MoncriEE, '73, Vice-PresidentJ. F. Baldwin, '93, CorrespondentBruce Kinney, '92, Secretary1foonorar$ MembersW. R. Harper Galusha Anderson Charles ChandlerMrs. Zella Dixson R. F. HarperBcti\>e ZlDembersE. P>. Burton, '76 E. B. Kinney, '92 O. N. Price, '79James F. Baldwin, '94 J. N. Lockhart, '92 F. W. Shepardson, '82C. F. Castle, '80 F. J. Miller, '79 H. C. Stilwell, '89J. M. CRISWELL, '92 J. W. MONCRIEE, '73 S. E. SWARTZ, '79E.J. Goodspeed, '90 E. J. Owen, '93 W. A. Wilkin, '93Gorman Jones, '90 W. B. Owen, '87 J. C. Wright, '93Graduate an& IRetirefc /IDembersF. Cunningham, '91 C. L. Payne, '88W. S. Davis, '92 M. B. Price, '92F. C EWART, '92 A. W. RUNYAN, '78C. B. Goodspeed, '.90 D. Shepardson, Jr., '88E. A. Meads, '87 R. P. Smith, '88[Philological Society©fficersPresident — Assistant Professor F. A. BlackburnVice-President — Assistant Professor H. Schmidt- Wartenb ergSecretary and Treasurer — Assistant Professor F. J. MillerProgramme Committee — The President, Vice President and the Secretary, with F. A.Wood and Theo. L. Nepe, of the Graduate SchoolThe Society meets in Room B 8, Cobb Lecture Hall, on the third Friday of each term ,8 p. m.TLhc departmental Clubs©fficersBiological ClubPresident— Head ProEessor C. O. WhitmanVice-President — Professor H. H. DonaldsonSecretary and Treasurer — A. D. Mead, who also represents the Club in the UniversityUnionMeets fortnightly, Wednesdays at 3 p. m., in Kent Chemical LaboratoryCbemical ClubPresident — Professor J. U. NefDelegate to the University Union — BC. HesseMeets every Friday at 8 p. m., in Lecture Room Kent Chemical LaboratoryCburcb iblston? ClubPresident — C. D. CaseVice-President — W. H. HowardSecretary — J. H. RandallDelegate to the University Union — C.D. CaseMeets fortnightly on Tuesday at 7:30p. m., in the Faculty Room.lEnolisb ClubPresident — Associate Professor W. D. McClintockSecretary — Dr. Edwin H. LewisDelegate to the University Union — Florence WilkinsonProgramme Committee — The President, Secretary and DelegatejEiegetical ClubPresident— J. H. GrantSecretary and Treasurer — A. R. E. WyantDelegate to the University Union — L. D. OsbornProgramme Committee — Professors Price, Burton and Goodspeed.Meets fortnightly on Tuesday evening, in D 16.Classical ClubPresident — Head Professor W. G. HaleVice-President— Professor Paul Shore ySecretary— Emma L. GilbertDelegate to the University Union — W. C.FranceExecutive Committee — The President,Vice-President and the Secretary,with C. K. Chase and H. L. Lovell,of the Graduate SchoolMeets monthlyf rencb literature ClubPresident — Assistant Professor E. BergeronVice-President— Geo. C RowlandSecretary — Antoinette CaryDelegate to the University Union- M. C WiERMeets fortnightly on Fridays at 4 p. m., in B 16©eoloaical clubPresident — Thomas C HopkinsVice-President — Lizzie K. FordSecretary — D. E. WillardDelegate to the University Union — C. E.Meets fortnightly, Tuesdays at 4 p. m., Gordonin Walker MusemnXattn ClubPresident— Assistant Professor F. J. MillerSecretary — Harry W. StoneDelegate to the University Union— Henry G. GaleMeets monthly, 8 p. M., at 5410 Madison avenueW (Bermantc ClubPresident— Associate Professor S. W. CuttingSecretary — Paul Oscar KernDelegate to the University Union— F. A. WoodMeets weekly on Mondays at 3 p. m., in B 11Comparative IReligion ClubPresident — Edmund BuckleySecretary — E. C SandersonMeets monthly throughout the yearpolitical Science anb Ibistorp. ClubPresident — Charles T. CongerSecretary and Treasurer — Regina R. CrandallExecutive Committee — The President and Secretary together with J. W. FerTig, J. W.Thompson and Miss ScofieldMeets fortnightly on Wednesdays, at 8 p. m., in the Faculty RoomIRomance ClubPresident -George C HowlandSecretary— Susan R. CutlerDelegate to the University Union — ThEO. L. NeffSemitic ClubPresident — Professor Emil G. HirschVice-President — Associate Professor Ira M. PriceSecretary — Dean A. WalkerDelegate to University Union — George Ricker BERRYMeets fortnightly on Thursdays at 7:30 p. M., in the Room of the Semitic SeminarSociology ClubPresident- 1. W. HowerThVice-President — Phillip MatzingerSecretary and Treasurer — H W. ThurstonDelegate to the University Union — I. W. HowerthMeets fortnightly on Tuesdays at 7:30 p. M., in the Faculty RoomSocial Science ClubPresident — Hannah B. ClarkVice-President — A. F. DavisSecretary and Treasurer — C. A. HastingsDelegate to the University Union — Hannah B. ClarkMeets fortnightly on Mondays at 7:30 p. M., in the Faculty RoomXiterarv. Society of tbe smnisb^lftorwegianftbeological SeminaryPresident — H. P. AndersenVice-President — C. P. GrarupSecretary— L. RasmussenCritic— T. O. WoldProgramme Committee — A. L. Brandsmark, P. P. Overgaard and N. R. LarsenMeets fortnightly on Mondays at 8 P. m., in D 9Xiteran> Society of tbe 2>ano*1RorweQian{TbeolOQical SeminaryMorgan park, 1TILPresident -P. P. OvergaardVice-President— H. J. JacobsenSecretary — L. RasmussenVice-Secretary— F. HolmCritic— Professor N. P. JensenProgramme Committee— Jacob La:O. M. OlsenMeets fortnightly on Mondays at 8SweMsb Xiteraq) Society/Iftor^an fl>arkt 1flLPresident— John D. NylinVice-President— C. E. NylinSecretary — Carl O. DahlinMeets Tuesdays at 7:30 p. M. sen, N. K. Larsen and>. m , in D 9©ratorical Hssoctatton1893E. M. Foster PresidentJ. H. Grant Vice-PresidentH. D. Hubbard SecretaryS. H. Clark CriticWinner of first contest, E. V, Pierce1894J. F. Voight PresidentS. D. Barnes Vice-PresidentJ. F. Hosic SecretaryE. V. Pierce Treasurer^Executive CommitteeS. D. Barnes S. S. McClintockE. M. Lake©ratorical ContestIRent mubitorium, /llbarcb 14, 1894CompetitorsF. R. Barnes J. F. HosicE. V. Pierce S. D. BarnesH. F. Atwood E. M. LakeFirst Prize, E. M. LakeSecond prize, E. V. PiERCEJudgesNathaniel Butler, Jr. E- H. LewisE. M. Booth . George S. GoodspeedCol. F. W. Parker Judge H. M. Shepparddelegates to IRortbern ©ratorical XeagueE. M. Lake E- V. Pierce J. F. Hosic1895H. F. Atwood PresidentJ. L. Hughes Vice-PresidentW. O. Wilson SecretaryAbraham Bowers ..... Treasurerpolitical OrganisationsIRepublican Club©ttjamsefc ©ctober 24, 1892©fficersL. B. Vaughan, PresidentJ. C. Frikdman, Vice-PresidentH. R. Caraway, SecretaryR. G. STOWELL, TreasurerDemocratic Club©rganiseo ©ctober 29, 1892©fficersH. Rooso, PresidentSecretary and Treasurer, J. F. VoighTExecutive CommitteeP. P. Carroll T. W. Moran H. C. MurphyJ. F. Voight J. HeilUnfcepenfcent Club©rganfseo ©ctober 31, 1892G. B. Waldron, PresidentExecutive CommitteeMiss Clark G. W. Waldron H. RoosoOrganized October 30, 1894©fficersS- C. MOSSER, PresidentJ. H. Moore, Vice-PresidentWalter S. Davis, SecretaryJohn L. Hoyt, TreasurerIbouse of IRepresentativesof tbeIHniwrsity of CbicagoOrganized January 11, 1893©fficers for jfirst SessionHead Proeessor H. P. Judson, SpeakerE. M. Lake, ClerkS. D. Barnes, Serg;eant-at-ArmsAbraham Bowers, Doorkeeper©fficers for Seconb SessionR. A. J. Shaw, SpeakerE- M. Lake, ClerkS. D. Barnes, Sergeant-at-ArmsWilliam Rullkoetter, DoorkeeperIReligious OrganisationsGbe Christian Tflnion©rgani3eo IRovember 20, 1892©fficersPresident, Charles R. HendersonVice-President, Edgar J. GoodspeedSecretary and Treasurer, Frank W. WoodsExecutive CommitteeChairman — Charles R. HendersonEdgar J. Goodspeed, Chairman Public Worship CommitteeLaura A. Jones, representing Graduate SchoolWilliam E. Chalmers, representing the Divinity School and Chairman Bible StudyCommittee vFrank W. Woods, representing the University CollegeAGNES S. Cook, representing the Academic College and Chairman of Social Committee,resigned. Mary D. Maynard elected to fill vacancyMembers ex-officio — Presidents of the other subsidiary religious organizations of theUniversity of ChicagoJPouna flDen's Christian association©rgani3e£> at tbe Tjtniversitp. of Cbicago IRovember 26, 1892©fficersPresident, A. T. WatsonVice-President, H. D. ABELLSTreasurer, F. D. NicholsRecording Secretary, J. F. HosicCorresponding Secretary, D. A. WalkerCommitteesDevotional Committee— W. E- Wilkins, G. A. Bale, E. V. Pierce, E- E. Hartley,S. C. MosserMembership Committee— T. L. Neff, B. R. Patrick, W. P. Behan, A. M. Wyant,O. E. WlELANDFinance Committee — E. J. Goodspeed, S. S. Hageman, W. Breeden, J. LamayReception Committee— A. A. Stagg, M. L. Miller, W. E. Chalmers, W. P. Behan,F. W. WoodsMissionary Committee— F. G. CrESSEY, J. F. HUNTER, J. HulsharT, H. H. HewittBible Study Committee— W. B. Owen, T. A. Gill, J. F. Hosic, F. R. Barnes, H. F.AtwoodIntercollegiate Work Committee— C. F. Kent, A. A. Stagg, C. K. Chase, J. E. Raycroft!£oung Women'sChristian association©rgani3eb at tbe *Wniversirs of CbicagoIPtovember 26, 1892©fficersAletheia HamiltonLouise C. ScovelJennie K. Boomer .Harriet C. AgerterMarion Morgan President. Vice-PresidentRecording SecretaryCorresponding SecretaryTreasurerCommitteesReception Committee — Mary D. Maynard, Jean-ette Kennedy, Myra H. Strawn, Glenrose M. BellMembership Committee— Louise Scovel, Jennie K. Boomer, May I. Rogers, MabelKells, Mabel Dougherty, Edith Neal, Mary LovePrayer Meeting Committee— Florence L. Mitchell, Lila C. Hurlbut, Carrie S. Moore,Berdina M. Hale, Martha KlockBible Study Committee— Mrs. Zella A. Dixson, Jennie K. Boomer, Lea Scott, MarthaL- Root, A. E. PrattMissionary Committee— Cora Jackson, Harriet Agerter, Ella Keith, Thora M. Thompson, Ella M. OsgoodIntercollegiate Committee— Harriet C. Agerter, Grace E. Manning, N. M. Taylor,Emma Walls, Charlotte F. CoeFinance Committee — Marion Morgan, Mrs. Stella R. Stagg, Lillian Dicks, EmmaL. Gilbert, Elizabeth Roggy, Charlotte Teller, Marion Cosgrove, Julia F.DumkeFisk Street Committee— Laura Willard, Mary D. Maynard, Florence L. Mitchell,Mabel KellsSub-Committees — Sunday Evening — Mary MorganAdvertising Committee— Mamie Furness, Florence Evans, Mrs. Charlotte Gray,Emma GuthrieMissionary Societyof tbe 2)ivinit£ Scbool©fficersH. A. Fisk PresidentJ. A. Herrick Vice-PresidentWT. E Chalmers .. . SecretaryJ. Y. AiTchison ..... . . TreasurerVolunteer Bant)©fficersF. G. Cressey .M. D. Eubank PresidentSecretary*fl>lOl"£> * Every member of the Editorial Board is expected to fill out one of the above blanks,subject to change without notice.Hs spice to tbe pufc&ing,Ikept fresb tbrougb tbe ages,3ustso are our "abs"©n tbe following pages.BtyEmt&StftttonBusiness College3ISTO32I fttiCm^ti OPPOSITE.WABASH AV. V»1IHU$V AUDITORIUM•Largest Oldest-- BestW>Anr& NIGHT COURSES• Business Shorthand EnglishGOOD POSITIONSSECURED BY STUDENTSBusiness Firms Supplied with HelpVISITORS WELCOME Phone HARRISON 688ElS Catbebral, Els, EnglandFROM TURNER'S CELEBRATED PAINTINGThis famous edifice was built from 1174 to 1534and is a splendid structure presentinga singular mixture of the Saxon,Norman and early EnglishstylesESTABLISHED 1853TLhc j£6waro l£ly Co.bailorsELY BUILDINGs. w cor w«bash avenue:AND MONROE ST.Custom /IftaDe SbirtS ChicagoA SPECIALTYFrom Anywhere EastTo Everywhere WestZhe (SreatIRocfc . ITslanb .IRouteITs tbe jfavonte XineIts Specialties are:--rast Time, Elegant Equipment,Good. Connections, The Best Dining Car Servicein the World.The Great Cities of the West, Northwest and Southwest reached comfortably and quickly in the latest patterned Pullman Sleepers and Tree RecliningChair Cars.JOHN SEBASTIANGENERAL TICKET AND PASSENGER AGENTCHICAGO, ILL.Orders by Mall will receiveprompt and careful attentionwREMEMBERTHE NAMEIT means the highest perfection inCANDY-making. You'll finda flavor, a delicacy, a taste of absolute purity in Huyier's Confections,very rarely attained 181...LA SALLE STREETBUSINESS MEN'S BRANCH 2132...MICHIGAN AVENUES UTH SIDE BRANCHBRANCHES OP161 State StreetChicago.,,, ..Zhe..College joi Ipb^slctansanb SurgeonsOF CHICAGOCORNER HARRISON AND HONORE STS.Four years graded course of instruction.Six splendidly equipped laboratories.Clinical advantages unequaled.Targe dispensary with sub-clinics for smallclasses. Hospital wards for the care of majoroperative cases. Fees average $ ioo a year.For announcement and further informationaddressprof. M. j£. (Siuine813 W. HARRISON ST." Wbere flGtiorance is Bliss."T was at the first inter-collegiate base ball game of the season and everythingwas beginning to come our way. The visiting team had so far been unableto do anything with the serpentine curves of Chicago's pitcher, and theenthusiasm for the home team was waxing warmer every moment. ' 'Strikehim out! You've got him in your alley! He's easy fruit!" suddenlyyelled an over-enthusiastic Freshman as one of the visitors' heaviest batsmenstruck twice in succession at the swift inshoots of the University pitcherwithout success. The catcher put on his mask, came up behind the bat,and settled down on one knee."Three strikes — strikers out!" called the umpire a moment later, asthe ball flew past the end of the batsman's bat, and lodged securely in thecatcher's big mit. "Oh, how easy ! Shut 'em out!" yelled the leather-lunged Freshman again.A moment later a man got a base on called balls and then the Freshmanbegan to make that man's life miserable, for the benefit of the rest of thecrowd, telling him to ' 'take a lead, ' ' ' 'slide hard, ' ' ' 'walk down' ' and ' 'get on his toes. ' ' A largeman in the audience, sitting five or six seats away from the enthusiastic ' 'rooter, ' ' attempted in aquiet way to hush up his stentorian tones, so, frowning fiercely through his spectacles at theoffender, he said severely in biting tones, "quit your muckerism ! This is no prairie contest.""Oh, come off ! You're bluffing ! Come off you're base !" again yelled the brazen-facedorator."Say, young man," called the irate professor sternly; "if you keep up that rowdyism andyell again I'll have you put off the field.""Oh ! ho ! ho ! What a bluff ! Why don't you do it ?" yelled the Freshman."Doit? What do you mean, sir? I will report you to the authorities," said the largeman hotly."Well! Well! Well!" exclaimed the rooter boisterously; "whose a pudding, I'd like toknow ? Who do you think we are?" he yelled, as the man who had been on first base was putout trying to steal second.Just then the home team came in to bat, and there was a lull in the college cheering. ' 'Say,Fresh,5" said a University man coming up to the innocent but off ending "rooter," "do you knowwho you were talking to ?""Talking to?" repeated the unenlightened under-graduate ; "what — ? who?""Well, " said the University man, smiling, "You've been sassing President Harper's Whoop ! That's the kind ! Line 'em out !" the speaker suddenly called as the first man to batknocked out a two-bagger.The Freshman did not yell. He had caught the name of the President of the Universityand he suddenly became very interested. "Guess I'll go home, " he finally said to the mannext to him, "the game's won and there's no use staying. Besides there seems to be a mistakesomewhere." Slowly he arose from his seat on the bleachers and stealthily stole away.Zhc Tbabnemannflftefricai Coliefleanb IbospitalOF CHICAGOFOUR YEARS' COURSE OBLIGATORYGRADUATES OF UNIVERSITY SCIENCE COURSESFOR STUDENTS INTENDING TO STUDY MEDICINEADMITTED TO ADVANCED STANDINGme Largest Homeopathic MediGal College and HospitalIN THE, WORLDNEW COLLEGE AND HOSPITAL BUILDINGSErected at a Cost of $ ISO ,000Magnificently Equipped and FurnishedThe Thirty-sixth Annual Session opens September 10, 1895. Clinical and Disect-ing Material in abundance. Large, well equipped Laboratories, Museum, Library, ReadingRoom, Smoking Room, Ladies' Waiting Room and Cafe. Steam Heat and Electric Lights.For announcement and further particulars, addressJOS. P. COBB, fl. D., Registrar, 3156 Indiana avenueZhc IDabnemann fbospitalof Cbicago «>^» B (BcneralIbospital forfll>en, Women anoCbilorenINCLUDING DEPARTMENTS FORGeneral SurgeryOrthopaedic SurgeryClinical MedicineSurgical Diseases of WomenMedical Diseases of WomenDiseases of Children Diseases of the Nervous SystemDiseases of the Heart and LungsDiseases of the Eye and EarDiseases of the Nose and ThroatDiseases of the SkinObstetrics and the Puerperal DiseasesThe New Hospital has been completed and opened for the treatment of all kinds of generaland special diseases. Capacity, 225 beds, 50 private rooms, warmed by steam and open fireplaces, lighted by electricity, with elevators, annunciators, a thorough kitchen and laundryoutfit, and all the comforts of a first-class hotel. The most skillful treatment and the best ofnursing and care are furnished at a reasonable rate. AddressTHE HAHNEMANN HOSPITAL, Qroveland Avenue, ChicagoZhc IIMpersit^ Collegesname: home: addressBarnard, Harrison B EnglewoodBeatty, Maria ChicagoBoomer, Jennie Kathryn ChicagoBrandt, Berkeley ChicagoCaraway, Henry Reat TuscolaCarpenter, Paul Fant Cedar Rapids, la.Castle, Mary Alexandria, O.Chollar, Wilbur Thomas Redwood Falls, Minn.Clark, Faith Benita . RockfordCook, Agnes Spofford NormalCurtis, John Birdsey ChicagoDougherty, Mabel PeoriaEastman, Frederick Wilson Pearl Creek, N. Y.Foye, Charlotte Henderson .. ChicagoFurness, Mary ChicagoGale, Henry Gordon AuroraGettys, Cora Margaret ChicagoGilpatrick, Rose Adelle Hallowell, Me.Hay, Mary EnglewoodHeil, John Henry ChicagoHobart, Ralph Hastings ChicagoHoebeke, Cornelius James Kalamazoo, Mich.Hopkins, Frances Inez Pueblo, Col.Howard, Harry Cooper Kalamazoo, Mich.Hughes, Robert Lee Prospect, N. Y.Hulshart, John Farmingdale, N. J.Hunt, Esther D Oskaloosa, la.Hunter, John Franklin Minto, N. D.Jone, Hugo ChicagoKarpen, Julius ChicagoKlock, Martha Frances Oneida, N. Y.Lambert, Lillian Vitalique What Cheer, la.Leiser, Joseph Rochester, N. Y.Lewis, Mary Catherine ChicagoLewis, Susan Whipple ChicagoLooney, Belle Eugene Farmersville, Tex.Lutrell, Estelle Canton, Mo.Mathews, John Lathrop EvanstonMcClintock, Samuel Sweeney Lexington, Ky.Minard, Frederick Horace ChicagoMoffat, William Eugene ChicagoMoore, John Howard Cawker City, Kans.Moran, Thomas William ChicagoMurphy, Henry Constance WoodstockOeschger, William Valparaiso, Neb.Packer, Anna Sophia ChicagoPierce, Lucy Fran ces ChicagoRaycroft, Joseph Edward Boston, Mass.Robinson, Irene Elizabeth Englewood*|fjusb /|£)e6tcal (CollegeMEDICAL DEPARTMENT LAKE FOREST UNIVERSITYFACULTYDeLASKIE MILLER, A.M., M. D., Ph.D.,Emeritus Professor of Obstetrics and Diseases of Children.EPHRAIM INGALS, M. D.,Emeritus Professor of Materia Medica and Medical Jurisprudence.DANIEL T. NELSON, A. M., M. D.,Emeritus Professor of Clinical Gynecology.EDWARD L. HOLMES, M. D., LL.D., President.Professor of Diseases of the Eye and Ear.HENRY M. LYMAN, A. M., M. D., Treasurer.Professor of the Principles and Practice of Medicine.JAMES H. ETHERIDGE, A.M., M.D., Secretary.Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology.WALTER S. HAINES, A. M., M. D.,Professor of Chemistry, Pharmacy and Toxicology.JAMES NEVINS HYDE, A. M., M. D.,Professor of Skin and Venereal Diseases.NORMAN BRIDGE, A. M., M. D.,Professor of Clinical Medicine and Physical Diagnosis.ARTHUR DEAN BEVAN, M.D.,Professor of Anatomy, Descriptive and Surgical.NICHOLAS SENN, M. D., Ph. D., LL. D.,Professor of Practice of Surgery and Clinical Surgery.E. FLETCHER INGALS, A. M., M. D , Registrar.Professor of Laryngology and Diseases of the Chest.DANIEL R. BROWER, M. D.,Professor of Mental Diseases, Materia Medica and Therapeutics.JOHN B. HAMILTON, M. D., LL- D.,Professor of Principles of Surgery and Clinical Surgery.JOHN M. DODSON, A. M., M. D.,Professor of Physiology.The curriculum of this school of medicine requires a proper preliminary education, andthree years of study in college, devoted to laboratory, didactic, and clinical instruction, torecitations and to manual training in the use of instruments and appliances. Students beginningthe study of medicine in the fall of 1894, and thereafter, will be required to take four years ofstudy in the college.Instruction is given in two capacious, well-lighted edifices. The new building contains fivelarge laboratories in which are conducted the practical laboratory courses in Anatomy,Physiology and Histology, Chemistry, Materia Medica, Pathology and Bacteriology.The old building is devoted to instruction by clinics, didactic lectures, and by numerousimportant practical courses in manual training in manipulations and in the use of the instruments employed in medicine, surgery, obstetrics and the specialties.Manual training in all departments of medicine is a special feature of the instruction inthis college. Systematic recitations, conducted in five commodious recitation rooms, areregarded as a most important means of teaching.With over seventy professors and instructors and with ample room and appliances, thisschool is able to furnish its- classes with the most approved systematic education in medicine.Physicians and medical students are :nvited to visit the laboratories and to inspect theeducational appliances of this school.For further information and for announcements apply to the College Clerk or to theSecretaryJ. H. Etheridgk, M. D., 31 Washington St., Chicago.XTbe IHniversits Colleges— ContinuedNAME HOME ADDRESSRogers, May Josephine ChicagoRoosa, Howard Rosendale, N. Y.Sass, Louis ChicagoSchnelle, Friedrich Oscar Gorlitz, GermanyScovel, Louise Claire ChicagoSherman, Franklin Cole ChicagoSherwin, Annette Denver, Col.Strawn, Myra Hartshorn La SalleSwarte, Lawrence James de Milwaukee, Wis.Tanaka, Kiichi Tokio, JapanTodd, Elmer Ely DixonVan Vliet, Alice ChicagoWebster, Ralph Waldo MonmouthWilliams, John William Norwood ParkWilliston, Frances Greenwood . . . .ElmhurstWoods, Frank William Colorado Springs, Col.THE COLLEGE BUILDINGSOUTHEAST CORNER OF WOOD AND HARRISON STREETSThe new college building occupies a prominent position among a group of fourteen others, comprisingmedical colleges, hospitals and schools. The lot on which the building stands has a frontage of eighty-five feet,and a depth of one hundred and twenty feet. It is a five-story and basement structure, the basement and firststory being of rock-faced Bedford stone, and the superstructure of pressed brick and terra-cotta, with terra-cottatrimmings. The building has two entrances, the main one through a large cut. stone doorway, surmounted by astone arch beautifully ornamented with carved work. The interior is finished in hardwood, according to thelatest design of elegance, convenience and comfort. The entire six floors of the building are divided into lecturerooms, class rooms, clinic rooms, etc., with the exception of the second floor, which is devoted to the DentalInfirmary. The chief lecture room has a seating capacity for four hundred and fifty students. There is also adissecting room, thoroughly equipped with all the requisites for the study of human anatomy. There are Histological, Chemical, Bacteriological Laboratories ; also Laboratories for the study of Operative and ProtheticTechnics, and one for the construction of artificial dentures. The building occupied by the Chicago College ofDental Surgery is, in all its appointments, one of the most perfect and complete of its kind.CHICAGO COLLEGE OF DENTAL SURGERYDENTAL DEPARTMENT OF LAKE FOREST UNIVERSITYThe Annual Winter Course of Instruction will begin about October i, 1895, and end about April 1, 1896.Three full winter courses of lectures are required before graduation. Graduates of reputable pharmaceuticaland under-graduates of medical colleges are admitted to the second year course, and can become candidates forgraduation after taking two winter courses of lectures.Matriculation Fee, good to the close of the term $ 5.00General Ticket 100.00There will be no separate fees for Chemical and Histological Laboratory work, dissecting and final examinations as heretofore.FEES FOR THE ANNUAL SPRING AND SUMMER COURSE.Matriculation Fee, good to the following April $ 5.00Tickets for the Course 10.00This amount will be deducted from the fees of the next following winter session. Instruments and appliances for clinical department will cost from $25 to $40. Board, including light and fuel, can be obtained at a convenient distance from the college at from $4 to $6 a week. Graduates of the college are requested to notify theDean of changes in their residences.A fee of I5 must be deposited to cover chemicals and breakage in the Chemical Laboratory.Letters of Inquiry should be addressed to DR. TRUMAN W. BROPHY, Dealt, ,26 % ggjSf"*'78 MadisonStreetflcVicker's./OT heat reBon-Bonsand ChocolatesHail orders attended toand goods shipped to allparts of the world WsWsWZ (po0tf(5ra^uateflftebical Scbool ofCbicagoA SCHOOL FOR PRACTITIONERS OF MEDICINEAND SURGERY. TEACHING EXCLUSIVELYCLINICAL. ABUNDANCE OF MATERIAL.LARGE HOSPITAL IN SCHOOL BUILDING.SEND FOR LATEST BULLETIN OF INFORMATION TOFranklin H. Martin, JV|. D., Sec,819 W. Harrison St.St John's flfoflftar* ^^^cabem\> *Belaffelo(Maufcesba Co.)TOis.PREPARES FOR ANY OF THE UNIVERSITIESFOUR COMPANIES OF 6ADETSFIELD ATHLETICS AND ROWING CLUBSGRADUATES IN THE LEADING COLLEGESSEND FOR CATALOGUESLteut. Itn. Bucfe, Til. S. H.Supt. of Cabets 1Re\n SiCne? Z. Smptbe, 23L /ID.IpresibentXEbe Hcabemtc CollegesNAME HOME ADDRESSAbbott, Walter Hazelton Camden, N. J.Abernethy, Herbert Alonzo Osage, la.Adams, Victoria Anna ChicagoAdkinson, Henry Magee . .ChicagoAgerter, Harriet Coe Lima, O.Allen, William Harvey ........... Le Roy, Minn.Alschuler, Leon ChicagoAnderson, Eva Ellen . . ChicagoAnderson, Swen Benjamin. ... ChicagoApps, Sarah Elizabeth . . ChicagoArnold, Oswald James ChicagoAtwood, Harry Fuller .Hay City, Kan.Atwood, Wallace Walter . . .ChicagoAverill, Lulu .ChicagoBachelle, Cecil V ChicagoBachman, Frank Puterbaugh . ... .MackinawBaird, Mary Brooks Eureka, Kan.Baker, Edward Max Erie, Pa.Baker, Georgia Cary Harrisville, N. Y.Baldwin, Ann ChicagoBall, Florence Fielding JolietBall, Helen H JolietBallou, Susan Helen Davenport, la.Barrett, Charles Raymond Saratoga Springs, N.Y.Bassett, Wilbur Wheeler ChicagoBeach, Clinton Stilwell ChicagoBeers, Arthur Edward ChicagoBeers, Ethel Ella ChicagoBell, Glenrose M. ChicagoBennett, Lucy Lovejoy EvanstonBishop, William Reed Oswego, N. Y.Bliss, Charles King LongwoodBliss, Gilbert Ames ChicagoBond, William Scott, Jr ChicagoBreeden, Waldo .Santa Fe, N. M.Broek, Herman John South HollandBrown, Carolyn Louise ElginBrown, Edwin Putnam Beaver Dam, Wis.Brown, James Scott ChicagoBrowne, Agnes May Morgan ParkBurkhalter, Mary Cedar Rapids, la.Burns, Allen Tibbals ChicagoBushnell, Charles Joseph ChicagoCahn, Edgar Bernard ChicagoCalhoun, Fred Harvey Hall Auburn, N. Y.Campbell, Gavin Archibald . . .Stevens Point, Wis.Campbell, Harry B TolietCampbell, John Tyler Cheney, Kan.Campbell, Joseph White ..... Cambridge, O.Cbas* H, Qtevens£33I& Bros 111 StateStreetnHEADQUARTERSFOR ALL KINDS OFSdh8 an&Silk (BoobsOur complete silk organization coveringevery silk producing centre of the world,enables us to constantly place before thepublic ....The most beautiful Black SilksThe most beautiful Evening SilksThe most beautiful Fancy SilksThe most beautiful Silk SkirtsThe most beautiful Silk WaistsFOR STREET WEARFOR RECEPTION OR EVENING WEARIRo trouble to sbow qooos/IDicbigan, ©rcbar& %af?eMICHIGANMILITARY ACADEMYEighteenth 12earPrepares for the leadiug universities. Specialpreparatory course for high rank law schools. Graduates are now in Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Cornell,and University of Michigan.Location, twenty-six miles from Detroit. Healthful and beautiful. Buildings new, with all modernappointments. Instruction by specialists in eachdepartment. Constant attention to habits andmethods of study.SCHOOL LIBRARY OF TEN THOUSANDVOLUMES.Athletics, base ball, foot ball, tennis and generalsports under the direction of Yale and Harvardgraduates.Col. $. 5. IRogers, sUpt. ^ ^ w, * S S ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ 9.The Correction of all defects of vision,causing headaches, etc., and allcases of deficient eyesightis our specialtyEST2 1881.38 (Bast (gtabison ^tChicagoTULL LINE OP HIGH GRADE opticalGOODSOur new hearing instrument for deafpeople is unexcelled«iifii«lfii««f3¥I«Zhc Hca&emtc Colleges— ConttnuefcNAME HOMK ADDRKSSCandee, Frances ChicagoCapen, Charlotte Briggs BloomingtonCarroll, Percy Peyton Marion, Ind.Chace, Henry Thurston, Jr ChicagoChamberlin, Elizabeth ChicagoChamberlin, John Clark, Jr ChicagoClarke, Henry L ChicagoClarke, Henry Tefft, Jr Omaha, Neb.Coleman, Melvin Edward ChicagoCoolidge, Elizabeth Teasdale ChicagoCosgrove, Marion Vernon ChicagoCoy, Harry ChicagoCrafts, Helen AustinCrandall, Vinnie May ChicagoCullen, Charles Edward South ChicagoCurrier, Evelyn Belle ChicagoDavis, Percy Boyd ChicagoDearing, William Prentice Little, Ind.Deffenbaugh, Walter South Bend, Ind.Dibell, Charles Dorrance JolietDignan, Frank Winans ChicagoDirks, Lillian Augusta. , La GrangeDornsife, Samuel Seilor ChicagoDougherty, Horace Raymond PeoriaDougherty, Ralph Leland PeoriaDowning, Alice May AuroraDrew, William Prentiss ChicagoDudley, Raymond Carleton ChicagoDumke, Julia Florida Belle Plaine, la.Dunning, Willis Estey ChicagoDurand, Herbert Cassius ChicagoEbersole, Abram SterlingEbersole, Amos A SterlingEdmonson, Samuel Boone ChicagoEldred, Stella Rennie GardnerEly, Jessie Harrison EnglewoodEnelow, Hyman Gerson Libau, RussiaEvans, Edward Brice ChicagoEvans, Florence BloomingtonFair, Newell Montague Mankato, Kan.Fesler, Mayo Ralph Morgantown, Ind.Fish, Clarence Everett . ChicagoFish, Leila Gladys ChicagoFlanders, Knight French ChicagoFlint, Nott William ChicagoFogg, Emily ChicagoFord, Margaret Chicago.Foster, Edith Burnham ChicagoFrazeur, Annie Laurie ChicagoFreeman, Joseph Edwin AuroraThereare Others..but nonelike the • • • MONARCH • • •Call and inspect the handsomest line of cycles ever made.Elegant thirty-six page catalogue just out.West Side AgentsGraham Cycle Co.601-603 Madison St. J[^OJto*<:H (?CLE (o^ <J<J<JRetail Salesroom, 280 Wabash Ave., ChicagoBLISS & LUMSDEN, ManagersZhc Bca&emic Colleges— ContinuedNAME HOME ADDRESSFreeman, Grace AuroraFreeman, Mabel Dora ChicagoFreeman, Marilla Waite NapervilleFriedman, Joseph C ChicagoFrutchey, Marcus Peter PhiladelphiaGano, Laura Campbell Richmond, Ind.Garver, Roy Cyrus BloomingtonGatzert, Blanche Chicago xGeselbracht, Franklin Hermon. . . .ChicagoGilchrist, Charles Chandler RavenswoodGleason, Fred EnglewoodGoldberg, Hyman Elijah ChicagoGoldsmith, Lillian Rosalia ChicagoGoodell, Carrie May New York, la.Goodman, Charles Augustus ChicagoGrant, Forest Stevens Point, Wis.Graves, Eva Bronson ChicagoGraves, Laura Belcher Memphis, Tenn.Graves, Paul Spencer EvanstonGreenbaum, Julius Curtis ChicagoGriswold, Roy Coleman ChicagoGuthrie, Emily Wilson ChicagoGwin, James Madison ChicagoHaft, Delia May ChicagoHale, Berdena Mabel Omro, Wis.Hale, William Browne ChicagoHamilton, Aletheia ChicagoHancock, Arthur Overton, Va.Harding, Susan Grace ChicagoHarris, Juliet ChicagoHarris, Morton D AuroraHartley, Elmer Ellsworth GurneeHay, Fannie Steele EnglewoodHayward, Philip ChicagoHenderson, Hermann Charles Andover, N. B.Hering, Frank Earle Williamsport, Pa.Herschberger, Clarence Bert Peoria, 111.Hessler, John Charles ChicagoHewitt, Helen Orme ChicagoHewitt, Henry Harwood ChicagoHiggins, William Addison N. Indianapolis, Ind.Hill, Elizabeth Gertrude Red Wing, Minn.Holloway, Harry Cyrus ChicagoHolton, Nina Gates Andover, Mass.Hopkins, Allan Omaha, Neb.Hoyt, Allen Gray AuroraHubbard, Harry David . Philadelphia, Pa.Hubbard, Mary Laura ChicagoHurlbut, Lila Cole ChicagoHurlbutt, Wells Henry, Jr Geneva, O.THEV.159§VICTOR LIGHTSTRONGBEAUTIFULOVERMANWHEELCO. HE makers of Victors do not"GUESS." By scientific testswhich cannot lie, they areenabled to KNOW what isbest and they provide it. Victors aremade in the only factory on earthwhere an entire bicycle is built, bythe concern who built the first bicycleof the present type made in this country, and whose guarantee is as goodas gold.BUY a Victor and be safe. CHICAGO BRANCH287 WABASHAVE.jKe Fastest ar\d Easiest P\mr\ir\g Bicycle BuiltJJpafbing's (^f^fefic d3oo*>0are off iciaffg en&omb fig afff^e fearing Coffegee.,.. BASEBALL TENNIS FOOTBALLAND BICYCLE SUPPLIESATHLETIC UNIFORMS OF ALL DESCRIPTIONSOUT DOOR ATHLETIC APPLIANCESWRITE FOR OUR COMPLETE CATALOGUEfl. 0. SPALDING & BROS.NEW YORK CHICAGO PHILADELPHIA126-130 NASSAU ST. 147-149 WABASH AVE. 1216 CHESTNUT ST.Zhc Bcafcemic Colleges— ContinuesNAME HOME ADDRESSHutchings, Josephine L .Madison, Ind.Hyman, Isaac Barney ChicagoIckes, Harold Le Claire Altoona, Pa.Ide, Adelaide Melcher Apia, SamoaJackson, Cora Belle ChicagoJackson, William Hayden. ChicagoJanss, Herman ChicagoJanssen, Ralph J Zeeland, Mich.Jegi. John J ChicagoJenkinson, Harriet Edith NewarkJohnson, Franklin Jr ChicagoJohnson, Ralph Hiram Marion, Ind.Johnson, Victor Oscar Genoa, Neb.Jones, Nellie Lander PeoriaJordan, Herbert Ray ChicagoKane, Theodosia ChicagoKeen, Ethel ChicagoKellogg, Edith Sarah Correctionville, la.Kells, Mabel Avery Sauk Centre, Minn.Kennedy, Jeanette Rib Lake^Wis.Kern, William Casper Fort Wayne, Ind.Kerr, Luella Mary Washington, la.Kienzle, Frederick W Moorefield, Ind.Klinetop, Mary Charles City, la.Knapp, George Nelson Madison, Wis.Krohn, Carrie Bertha FreeportLackner, Edgar Cranfield AuroraLamay, John EvanstonLansingh, Van Rensselaer ChicagoLaw, Robert, Jr ChicagoLenington, Nellie Blanche ChicagoLester, Minnie TuscolaLewis, John Simon, Jr Dubuque, la.Lincoln, Grace Bartlett ChicagoLincoln, Mary Cain ChicagoLingle, Bowman Church ChicagoLinn, James Weber. Storm Lake, la.Lipsky, Harry Alexander ChicagoL^ \ingston, Frederick Jacob ChicagoLoeb, Ludwig ChicagoLoesch, Angie ChicagoLovejoy, Evelyn Mary ChicagoLovett, William Pierce Davenport, la.Lowy, Walter D ChicagoMacomber, Charles Coombs Carroll, la.Mandel, Edwin Frank ChicagoManning, Grace Emma Peru, Ind.Manning, Lucia May Peru, Ind.Martin, H. Mabel ChicagoMaynard, Mary Dunklee Milwaukee, Wis.The GladstoneRoad RacerMANUFACTURED IN CHICAGOm^W^m^m^W^m^m^m^m^Wf0*^^ w^mf^Wf^mf1^The "James"MANUFACTUREDIN ENGLANDparties (£^cle *fi\n$. (£o*103 B&ams StreetCbicagoUbe Hcaoemic Colleges— ContinuedNAME HOME ADDRESSMcClenahan, Henry Stewart MacombMcClintock, Anna James Millersburgh, Ky.McCorckle, Wood F ChicagoMcGee, Harry Lavergne ChicagoMcGillivray, Clifford Bottsford . . .ChicagoMclntyre, Moses Dwight Milwaukee, Wis.McNeal, Edgar Holmes ChicagoMentzer, John Preston Marion, la.Merrifield, Fred OttawaMighell, Jessie Curry AuroraMiller, Elsie Prince AuroraMiller, Ethel Dike AuroraMinnick, Arthur ChicagoMitchell, Wesley Clair DecaturMonheimer, Milton Leonard ChicagoMoore, Carrie Sheldon .ChicagoMoore, Ruth Ellen BloomingtonMorgan, Marion Sherman ChicagoMorgan, Thomas S. . . . ChicagoMosser, Stacy Carroll AbingdonNeal, Edith Leavitt ChicagoNeel, Carr Baker ChicagoNelson, Jessie Louisa. . . Helena, Mont.Nichols, Frederick Day Osage, la.Noble, Jane Frances Rice Lake, Wis.Norwood, Joseph Greenville, S. C.Oglevee, Nannie Gourley Columbus, O.Osborne, Sarah Nicoll ChicagoOsgood, Ella Maria Verona, N. Y.Paterson, Edward Alexander ChicagoPatterson, Theodore Hiram ChicagoPayne, Walter A Hurdland, Mo.Peabody, Earll William ChicagoPeirce, Alice ChicagoPerkins, Mary ChicagoPershing, Ward Beecher ChicagoPeterson, Harvey Andrew St. Louis, Mo.Pienkowsky, Arthur Thaddeus. . . .ChicagoPike, Charles Sumner ChicagoPiper, Margaret ChicagoPlant, Thomas Jefferson ChicagoPooley, William John Scales MoundPorterfield, Cora Maude NormalPurcell, Margaret Manhattan, Kan.Radford, May Eugenia Buffalo, N. Y.Rand, Philip ChicagoRandall, Henry Hulbert St. Paul, Minn.Reddy, Mary E ChicagoRice, Inez Dwight ChicagoRichards, Carl Ernst Red Oak, la.Out in theSunshine on a Thistle afterbeing cooped -upall winter, Can you think ofa more enjoyable prospect?Better get a Light Roadster 17=19LIGHT RUNNING THISTLEat once; roads and weatherare ready, If you'll ask uswe'll tell you just why youshould get a Thistle insteadof any other wheel— plainly,truthfully, Excel sior Supplylogically... Company276=278 Wabash Ave.ChicagoLadies' 21 lb. stripped to 18 lb.Zhc Hcabemic Colleges— ContinuedNAME HOME ADDRESSRichardson, William Derrick ChicagoRobinson, David Moore ChicagoRoby , Charles Foster Roby, Ind.Root, Martha Louise Cambridgeboro, Pa.Rothschild, Isaac Solomon ChicagoRubel, Maurice ChicagoRudd, Arthur Horace ChicagoRunyon, Laura Louise Plainfield, N. J.Russell, Loren Milford EnglewoodSalinger, Louis New York CitySampsell, Marshall Bmmett ChicagoSchoenfeld, Charles Joseph ChicagoSchwarz, Edith Ewing EnglewoodScott, Laura May ChicagoSealey , Grace Arabella NormalSeavey, Harriet Louise ChicagoShire, Millie ChicagoShreve, Royal Oman. BloomingtonShutterly, John Jay EvanstonSimpson, Burton Jessie MolineSimpson, Elmer William Oak LawnSincere, Victor Washington ChicagoSkillin, Abbie Eola Oak ParkSmith, Henry Justin Morgan ParkSmith, Kenneth Gardner DixonSuite, Francis Joseph ChicagoSpeer, Henry Dallas ChicagoSperans, Joel RussiaSpray, Jessie Nea ChicagoStagg, Stella Robertson ChicagoSteigmeyer, Frederick Frank Attica, O.Stevens, Raymond William ChicagoStuart, Charles Wesley HewickvilleStone, Harry Wheeler ChicagoTefft, Nellie Edna ElginTeller, Charlotte Rose ChicagoThach, James Harmon Bell Buckle, Tenn.Thomas, Mary Susan Myersdale, Pa.Thompson, Emily Churchill ChicagoThompson, Helen Bradford EnglewoodTolman, Cyrus Fisher, Jr ChicagoTooker, Robert Newton, Jr ChicagoTrumbull, Donald Shurtleft ChicagoVaughan, Franklin Egbert ChicagoVaughan, L. Brent S wanton, O.Vaughan, William Cain Richmond, Ind.Voight, John Frederick, Jr MattoonWales, Henry Whitwell, Jr LanarkWalker, Clyde Buchan Colorado Springs, Col.Wallace, Emma EnglewoodTWO INDISPENSABLE BOOKSThr Frengh RevolutionTESTED BY MIRABEAU'S CAREERBy Dr. Hermann E. von Hoi^stHead Professor of History in the University of Chicagolecture DealingsThe Heritage of Louis XIV and Louis XV.Paris and Versailles.Mending the Old Garment with New Cloth.The Revolution before the Revolution.A Typical Family Tragedy of Portentous Historical Import.The States-General; a Rudderless Craft in a Storm-tossed Sea. 7 "The Party of One Man."8 The 5th and 6th of October, 1789, and the Memoirof the 15th.9 The Decisive Defeat of the 7th of November.10 Other Defeats and Mischievous Victories.1 1 Mirabeau and the Court.12 The End. A Unique Tragedy.Printed at the Riverside Press, on hand-made English paper, uncut edges, two vols., 121110, $3.50 net.VON HOLST'S CONSTITUTIONAL AND POLITICAL HISTORYOF THE UNITED STATESPew, if any, works in the field of American History are so frequently cited or so highly commended in theuniversities of our land as this. A pamphlet fully descriptive of it will be sent you on request.Price for tbe set: Cloth, $35.00; sheep, $30.00; half calf, $38.00. Singly: Vols. 1, a, 3, 4, 5, and 7,$3*SO, $4.00, $5.00; Vols. 6 and 8, $2.50, $3.00, $4.00.CALLAGHAN AND COMPANY, CHICAGO©tubents Your health is Paramount. It demands that you takeproper exercise. Nothing will he more apt to force youto do this than a hicycle. GET THE BEST.You will do so if you huy aagaftaiKenwood Road Racer, No. 9 or Kenwood Ladles' Special, No. 10A bicycle made right at home, one that never gets out of fix, and carries withit a guarantee for one year from date of purchase. Everything strictly high gradeand of first quality.Kenwood Bicvche |W[fg. Go.253-255 SOUTH CANAL ST.NEAR VAN BUREN ST.CHICAGOUbe Hcafcemic Colleges— ContinuesNAME HOME ADDRESSWalling, William English ChicagoWalls, Emma Beales ChicagoWaterbury, Ivan Calvin ChicagoWayman, Edwin Bowen ChicagoWescott, Frank Howard LaconWhite, George Louis Lyons, Neb.Whyte, James Primrose WaukeganWildman, Banks John ChicagoWiley, Harry Dunlap DunlapWilliams, Charles Byron Minneapolis, Minn.Willis, Gwendolin Brown Racine, Wis.Winston, Alice ChicagoWinston, Charles Sumner ChicagoWolff, Louis, Jr . ChicagoWoods, William Brenton ChicagoWoolley, Paul Gerhardt ChicagoWright, Laura May .' ChicagoYarzembski, Vladyslas Warsaw, RussiaYundt, Emery Roscoe Mt. Morris."StEltsb (Soofcs in JSlacfc".CRITTENDENGbe inniversit^ bailor27 WABASH AVE.©ut of tbe flDoutb of BabeeNOT long ago the three-year-old daughter of Professor H , formerly of Cornell,cruelly scored Chicago's good name and reputation in a most original and awful manner. It happened thus: The Professor had been appointed to a chair in the greatUniversity of Chicago, and was about to start with his wife and family for his new charge. Thehousehold goods had all been packed and the Professor was to take the train on the morrowfollowing. His little daughter had started to say her evening prayers but gave up in despair,concluding suddenly by exclaiming: "And now, dear God, good-by, for to-morrow we leavefor Chicago. ' 'FROM her head to her feet,She was dainty and sweet,She was charming, petite —She was young;But her beauties would pall,For her mouth was so small,That it could not at all,Hold her tongue.J. W. L.Scene— Zhc Sba&es* Zimc, 1892Personae - Cicero and CataeineCICPvRO — Say Cat., this new University of Chicago is a pretty new thing.Cataline — Right you are, Kick.Cic — And they may get so new that they'll throw out of their prep. Latin department those four good old orations that gave you and me our rep.Cat. — Right again, Kick.Cic. — You remember how I first delivered them, how the people wilted and froze at mywill; how, in a voice of thunder, I proclaimed, O tempora ! O mores! senatus haec intellegit,consul videt.Cat." — Hastily — Oh yes, I remember it. As a speaker, you were ex-conspectu, only younever seemed to know it, ( aside) I don't think !Cic. — Well, Cat., old boy, we've got to get up something new. Now you translate yourselfinto a Chicago alderman and I will— let's see -well, I will drop into the skin of a righteousChicago politician.Cat.— What?Cic. — Well, I know it will be hard to find him but what's the use of discouraging a fellowat the start ? Cat, as an inspiration, you never were anything exceptional.Cat. — Well, what next, old man? 4 Claude your face and go on.Cic. — Well, I will get up some new orations on the lines of the old. Now, how soundeththis: "Oh Temperance ! Oh Morality !" Brennan haec intellegit, Hopkins videt, .Cat. — They do? — well, they can see more than I can.Cic. — Well, I did slip up a little there, I admit. I guess I'll get down off my perch,and we'll go and tell Cez. that he better get out some new commentaries.Exit, arm in arm.B- M. F.The World's Greatest Manufacturer of Violins, MandolinsGuitars, Banjos, Zithers andStaccato Violin Bows. All BOHMANN Instrumentsare made of very old, thoroughly seasoned wood, andfinished with genuine AmberVarnish.yJ^V~ri>t^^Cl^i^i^L<The purchaser of a Bohtnann instrument has the manufacturer's guarantee that the instrument isperfect in every respect, and will improve in quality of tone with usage more than any other instrumentmade at the present day and will last for ever. The Bohmann instruments received First Prize in competitionwith the whole world at the Paris Exposition, 1880. Received awards at the World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893. At Antwerp Exposition, 1894, was awarded medal for String Instruments of SuperiorMusical Qualities.When my competitors heard that Ihad received the award, after they having spent thousands of dollars on theirexhibits, and seeing that they could nothelp protect the American industry,they scattered disheartened and ran sohard that they lost their shoes and hatsand have not been heard from since.Joseph Bobmann CbtcaQON. B.-REPA1RING OF ' HE MOST DIFFICULT KIND DONETHE WORLD'S GREATEST MUSICALINSTRUMENT MANUFACTURERZhc tUnclassifteb StubentsNAME HOME ADDRESSAbells, Harry Delmont Uxbridge, Mass.Aber, Mary Ailing ChicagoAdams, Julia Regula ChicagoAldrich, Grace D NormalAlvord, John Watson ChicagoAnderson, Esther Lowell ChicagoAustrian, Celia ChicagoAustrian, Delia ChicagoBackus, Florence Burlington, la.Baird, William James .Che) enne Wells, Col.Bardwell, Etta May LorenzoBarlow, Levy Henry Delavan, Wis.Barnes, Maude Eleanor EnglewoodBates, Fanny Dardenne, Mo.Bean, Myra Irene Lyndon Center, Vt.Beardsley, Anna Poole Washington, Ark.Berry, Maud ChicagoBlack, Horace Webster ChicagoBowers, Abraham St. JosephBraam, Jacob William ChicagoBrown, Jeannette Caldwell ChicagoBull, Florence Racine, Wis.Butterworth, Horace ChicagoCarpenter, Mary Adeline Des Moines, la.Casteel, Mary Elizabeth GeneseoChapin , Frances Chapin, Lillian ChicagoComstock, Louise Bates .Rochester, N. Y.Conrath, Mary Olive Lima, O.Crane, Frances ChicagoDarrow, Helen Kelchner ChicagoDavenport, Mary Daniels Council Bluffs, la.Davis, Jessie Fell. BloomingtonDickerson, Spencer Cornelius Austin, TexasFaddis, Miriam Sarah ChicagoFavor, Adelaide Miles ChicagoFrankhauser, Marie K ChicagoFulcomer, Anna Ounalaska, AlaskaGallion, Charles Horace St. JosephGauss, Julius Henry Philip ChicagoGeorge, Abigail Matilda ChicagoGibbs, Caroline E Greeley, Col.Glascock, Hiigh Grundy Paris, Mo.Goodman, Grace ChicagoGraham, Margaret Strawberry Point, la.Gray, Charlotte C Albany, N. Y.Greene, Elizabeth Elma Battle Creek, Mich.Griffith, Fannie Elizabeth MechanicsburgHales, Earl Clayton Chicago393^59 "International'Bibles sold in 1893. A New Series of GenuineImported Teachers' Bibles.Why Not Get the Best?44 a nternational tfZhc Smallest %avQC*ZweMhice published tCeacbers'^ibkfFOLLOWING IS A PARTIAL LIST OF THOSE WHO ASSISTED IN THE PREPARATION OF THE NEWINTERNATIONAL HELPS OR AIDS:Rev. C. H. H. Wright, D. D., M. A., Ph. D., Editor, England.Rev. James Stalker, D. D.. author of" Imago Christi," Scotland.The late Rev. -Philip Schaff, D. D., LL. D., Union Theological Seminary, New York.Rev. George Adam Smith, M. A., Aberdeen.Rev. A. E. Dunning, D. D.. Editor " The Congregationalism " Boston.Rev. A. R. Fausset, D. D., Canon and Prebendary of York, England.Bishop John H. Vincent, D. D , New York.Rev. Hugh Macmillan, D. D., LL. D., F. R. S. E., Scotland.Rev. Alfred Plummer, M. A., D. D., formerly Fellow of Trinity College. Oxford,England.Rev. J. B. Heard, M. A., Caius College, Cambridge, and Hulsean Lecturer in theUniversity of Cambridge, EnglandMajor D. Whittle, Evangelist. Philadelphia.Major C. R. Conder, R. E., D. C L., LL. D., M. R. A. S., England.Rev. Jesse I- Hurlbut, D. D., " Sunday School Journal," N. Y.Theophilus G. Pinches, M. R. A. S.. British Museum, London.William R Harper, Ph. D., President Chicago University, Chicago.New Illustrated Helps,New Maps,Fine Bindings,Clear Print,flinimum Size,Moderate Prices.The Only Teachers' BiblesHaving New Helps or AidsPrepared by Both Ameri=can and English Scholars.LONDON CLEAR-TYPE EDITION."CLEAR TYPE MAKES EASY READING."Have you been seeking for a BIBLE of convenient size, with Large, Clear Type, DurablyBound, with Modern, Practical Illustrated Helps, New Revised Maps, and Reasonable inPrice? The " International " Bibles answer the above requirements.An entirely new series of Maps has been prepared expressly for the " International "Bibles, from actual survey, by .Major Conder, of the Palestine Exploration Society.Nearly three hundred and fifty different styles in Plain Text, Reference and Teachers'Bibles, printed on Rag Paper and the Celebrated " International " "India Paper," ranging inprice from 30 cents to $20.00. Sold by all first-class Booksellers. Ask your dealer for them,and take no other.Illustrated Catalogue on Application.INTERNATIONAL BIBLE AGENCY. 150 Filth Avenue, New York.©lo tDiennaOH THE nights in Old Vienna, in the merry month of June,When the starry skies were brimming with the waltz's lively tune,When the breath of summer roses blew in perfumes thro' the air,When our eyes were nearly blinded by the beauties of the Fair,Then in merry crowds together all the jolly college boysUsed to flock with shout and singing to Old Vienna's joys.Oh the nights in Old Vienna, with the band at fullest play,With the jolly college fellows shouting out their loud "hurray,"With the songs so sweet and noisy, with the lusty college cheer,With the blazing of the torches, with the high-priced German beer,Oh, we loved thee, Old Vienna, yet we really hate to say,How we used to flunk in classes at the coming of the day.College CustomDO YOU see the youth? Yes.Who is he? A Freshman in the college near by.How do you know he is a Freshman? By his evident pride in his cap and gown.Why does he stand on the corner? He is waiting for the approaching maid to pass.Why? So that he may get a nearer view of her.Then he likes the maid, doesn't he? Yes.Does she know him? Yes.How do you know? By the self-conscious look which came over her when she firstobserved the youth.Does she like him? Yes.She is almost opposite him now, isn't she? Yes.Why do they both turn their heads and gaze into vacancy as she passes? Because theywish to appear ignorant of each others presence.Have they quarreled? Not at all.Then why didn't they greet each other? Because they think they don't know each other.But do they? They have been in the same classes half a year.Then why do they think they are not acquainted? Because they have never been introduced.And half a year's acquaintance with each other's character, opinions and feelings as exhibited in class does not serve as an introduction, then? Well, really now, you don't expect me toanswer that question.What is to blame for this state of things? Custom.And they, liking and admiring each other, have not the courage to disregard custom? No.r Then do they deserve to enjoy each other's companionship? Ask them.Gbep. Ibao mot <Bot Sbere IPetROFESSOR (to student in biblical literature)— Mr. B., you may tellme just what is meant by "Gehenna of fire."Mr. B. (who had overlooked his lesson the night previous) —I don't exactly understand the reference, sir.Professor (blandly) — Never mind, my question was a littlepremature. We'll wait till we get there.(And the class wept.)James Wilde, jr., & Co.^ FASHIONABLE.., CLOTHIERS...N. E. CORNER STATE AND...MADISON STREETS... ...of ChicagoThere are two or three tailoring- establishments in Chicagothat make as good clothing- as we do — but their prices — theyare twice what ours are. Think of it — g-arments ready towear — equal to those made by the best merchant tailors atone-half their prices — what a convenience— can you findsuch clothing- elsewhere — than at WILDE'S— try and see.Full Dress Suits A s^alty.also Full Dress Suits for Rent frank reedManagerOne That Won.Cunning little dudelettripping down thestreet,Dainty patent leatherson his little feet,Streets were very sloppy, dudie got a chill,And now the daisiesblossom o'er hisgrave upon the hill.If dudie had been wiseand bought a pair ofRoyal Blues,Instead of those exquisite but silly littleshoes.His mamma would havehad her little darling with her still,And no daisies wouldbe blooming o'er hisgrave upon the hill.Geo. C. Mason 6709 Wright St., Englewood, 111.Hundreds of jingles and jangles were submitted in our prize contest. We have chosenthe ten which appealed to us most strongly.Selz Royal Bluej.-.oo ShoeManufactured by Selz, Schwab & Co., Chicago,LargestJShoe Makers in the United States,Comfortable — Economical — Durable.STREETER 5ELLS IT.134 State St., 68-70 Madison St.MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED.*J?4-cZhc IHnclassifiet) Students— GontinuefcNAME HOME ADDRESSHall, James Samuel Norfolk, Va.Hallingby , Ole Osage, la.Han nan, Louise Mary ChicagoHastings, Sarah Belle Detroit, Mich.Hewetson, John Wallace ChicagoHewitt, Herbert Edmund ChicagoHigh, Jessie Margaret ChicagoHill, Frederick William ChicagoHubbard, Elizabeth Greenwood. . .Springfield, Mass.Hubbard, Emma Frances ChicagoHuTlburt, David Guy Hart's Grove, O.Jeffreys, Elizabeth Hubbard, O.Johns ton, Lucy Marian ChicagoKnott, Sarah Jane New Brighton, Pa.Krackowizer, Alice Marie New York CityLatimer, Ellen Hale ChicagoLeonard, William Ezekiel Correctionville, la.Levinson, Es'her. ChicagoMason, Mary Elizabeth , ChicagoMatz, Evelyn ChicagoMcKinley, Albert Edward Philadelphia, Pa.Mecum, Mary Alice Feeding Hills, Mass.Merker, Margaret Louisville, Ky.Miller, Celeste J ChicagoMitchell, Florence Louise EoglewoodMorey, Frances Amelia ChicagoMunson, Sarah Zanesville, O.Otis, Marion Louise. . . ChicagoPalmer, Henry Augustus Indianapolis, Ind.Parker, Mary Louisville, Ky.Pierce, Florence Leona ChicagoRamsdell, Lillian Lovina Milo, Me.Ranney, Mary Lowther ChicagoRew, Harriett Campbell ChicagoRice, Elbridge Washburn PontiacRiggs, Wilfred Unionville, Wis.Riordan, Edward Joseph ChicagoRoggy, Elizabeth .PrincetonRowan, Jean Morton . Almont, Mich.Sawyer, George Hoyt Osage, la.Scott, Walter Armitage ChicagoScudder, John Arnold ChicagoShallies, Guy Wheeler Arcade, N. Y.Shibley, Mary Capitola ChicagoSmith, Franklin Currier ChicagoSmith, Sarah Elizabeth AuroraStanton, Edna Augusta ChicagoStephens, Louise Brier ChicagoStiles, Bertha Vernon Kansas City, Mo.Stone, Eliza Atkins . EvanstonUniversityPharmacyR. R. BOWEN, ProprietorPure Drugs and Tine PharmaceuticalPreparations, Druggists' Sundries,Toilet Articles, Perfumery, Etc. 560 East 55th St.COR. INGLESIDE AVE.NEAR THE UNIVERSITYDELICIOUS SODA WATERPrescriptions Carefully Compounded Day or NightThe "Steer' Highway to Happiness and Personal Attractiveness isThe "SHIRK"SHIRK FULL ROADSTERWeight, twenty-two pounds $ico.oo It cures trie blues,It saves trie shoes,It brings contentAnd merriment.OUR LINE •:. * * *"ZIMMY," 18=21=24 pounds" SHIRK," 16=19=22 pounds- "CHICAGO," 22=25 poundsTHE Q. M. SHIRK MFG. CO , 273 Wabash Ave., ChicagoWestern Agents ' ' Zimmy ' ' CyclesBRANCHES: 30 WARREN ST., NEW YORK ; 905 MARKET ST., PHILADELPHIASEND FOR CATALOGUEJohn H. TelfordhatsAN dFINE MEN'S55th St. and Kimbark Ave.COLLEGE PINSMAROON RIBBON BADGESMAROON NECKWEARCAPSSWEATERS...AND A GENERAL LINE OF...SPORTING GOODSMAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED AND EXPRESSED ON QUICKDISPATCH.Zhc TRnclassificb StuDents— ContinuedNAMICStratton, Lucy HamiltonStuait, Mary Louise Stuart, Mary Victoria . . .Sturges, Mrs. Helen Swett, Mary Chase Thornton, Lee D Weston. Herbert MantorWhite, Minnie Wieland, Otto Wilmarth, Anna Hawes .Wilson, William OtisWilson, William Tilton . .Young, Gertrude Mary. . HOME ADDRESSPasadena, Cal.ChicagoSan Francisco, Cal.ChicagoChicagoOtsego, Mich.ChicagoCherokee, la.Duluth, Minn.ChicagoBushnell. ChicagoOmaha, Neb.<& tvut £forg THe"§Hi^K"Mary had a little lamb,Its fleece was white as snow.But when she got a Lady "Shirk"'She told the lamb to go.nIt followed her to school one day,With Mary on her bike,It was a Ladies' -'Shirk," you know,The wheel all women like.urIt made the children stop and gaze,To see her lovely steed.And forthwith they all envied her,For she was in the lead.IVSo they all to their "Papas" went,And said, "We want a 'Shirk.' "We must have one, we will have one,For us you'll surely work.vThey labored hard, they labored long,For money to acquire,Then bought the"Shirk,"the famous' 'Shirk, 'And filled their hearts' desire. PRICE $100 WEIGHT 19-22 LBS. RACER 16 LBS. -$ I 25Zhc "Cbicago" price> » weight. Zz<*6 it>s.WESTERN AGENTSTHE — « m$-Write for CatalogueZhc ©? /ID. Sbirft jflfctg, Co.273 Wlabasb 2l\>e. CbicagoTHE WINDERMERE HOTEL,Cor. 56th St. and Cornell Ave.,CHICAGO.H IReeolutionOn New Year's Day I made a vow that I would never moreTobacco use in any form. I've made this vow before.But this time I am keeping it ; no lapse my conscience frets.I eschew the sweet Havana and smoke only cigarettes.The long-suffering English professor lost his patience at last. "I don't believe youknow even the A B C's of your mother tongue," he declared." No, "sadly replied the sophomore, "No, I can hardly claim to be acquainted withthem ; I never got any higher than D."" I had my first recitation with the President to-day.""I suppose that is an euphemistic way of saying that you were necked up beforethe faculty."Sociology a la SocieteGeorge Augustus — " Is this the professor of sociology ?"" I am, sir.""Aw, delighted ! Want to take social science, you know."" What are you going to do with it after you take it ?""Aw, society, you know. A fellow must learn good fawm. One of the fellaws told meMcAllister studied with you, professor.Established '49HIGHEST CRADt"^Zl*****REASONA.BIE PRICES1ISTS ANO SAMPLES SENT TO CHAPTER CORRESPONDENTS.lEnoagementIRings ....ana XKHatCbes^SpecialtiesMENTION CAP AND GOWNWith Signature your College and Class are desirable Q[R.ELL Sc Je°H^^D(3H1GAGO COLLEGB^ OF" LAW,THE LAW DEPARTMENT OF LAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY.FACULTY " Hon. JOSEPH M. BAILEY, LL. D., Justice of the Sufi-erne Court of Illinois.Hon. THOMAS A. MORAN, LL B., 'Late Justice of Appellate Court, First District cf Illinois.HON. H. M. SHEPARI). Justice of Appellate Court, First District o> Illinois.Hon. EDMUND W.BURKE, Judge of Circuit Court of Cook County.AND OTHERS.Sessions are held epch week-day evening- in the Athenaeum Building.Junior and Senior Classes meet on alternate evenings from 7 to 8 p.m.The Undergraduate Course of two years begins the first Monday in September, annually, and continues ninemouths.The Post-Graduate Course of one vear begins the first Tuesday in October, annually, and continues eight mouths.For further iulormatiou address the Secretary, Room 708Chamber of CommerceCHICAGOELWLR E. BARRETT, LL. B..prederick Keppel & Co. IRareEngravingsanD EtchingsVisitorsAlways Welcome. Paris:27 QUAI OE L'HORLOGE 1Rew UJork:20 EAST 16TH ST. Cbicago:1 VAN BUREN ST.VICTORIA HOTELXifflesternflftttltatg^cabem\>Tapper Hlton*tf Ullinois SEVENTEENTH YEARAn old and thorough preparatory school with graduates inYale, Princeton, Cornell, etc.Cadets prepared for college or for business.Park of fifty acres.Buildings of brick, warmed by hot water and lighted by gasand electricity.Military Department in charge of U. S. Army Officer detailedby Secretary of War.MANUAL TRAINING DEPARTMENTWhen desired will prepare cadets especially for the University of Chicago.address COLON EL WILLIS BROWN, superintendent£be "popular" flDanRCHIB DOUGLASS, Jr., is his name. He is a handsome, good-hearted fellow, .with an easy grace in all his bearings that showshis good family and his good breeding. His hair is partedgeometrically in the middle, and he wears a very miracle of ahigh collar and the "latest thing" in ties. A gay, taking waythat he has about him, together with his good looks and goodclothes and generous pocket-book make him a prime favoritewith the girls.But Archie is socially very ambitious as well as engaging.His great consuming ambition is for popularity and social leadership. And his efforts have been crowned with success. He is invited to all the parties, singsin the glee club, is president of the Academic College and is an acknowledged leader in collegecircles and an important contributor to the University life.But the pursuit of social duties takes time and energy. You must not expect him also tolead in his classes. Indeed he sometimes fails in a course and occasionally he flunks. But heglories in his flunks. He wears them as men wear their honors. He loves to talk about them.And what an exhilarating spectacle it is to see the grace and elegance with which he flunks,for he has reduced flunking to both a science and an art. He is asked a question. "Professor,I am not prepared to-day, ' ' he replies in that self-possessed aggrieved sort of a tone that puts theblame where it belongs, on the instructor's shoulders, and seems to demand an apology for hisinconsiderateness. And the Professor, with the expected apology almost on his lips, turnshastily to the next man whom he scores unmercifully — not for flunking — but for flunkingunhandsomely. And how inglorious the rest of us feel, who have recited with a correctnessthat betrays indulgence in the plebian trick of preparation before hand. Oh, that we, too,might attain unto the noble art of flunking!Archie, of course, has an unbounded enthusiasm for athletics. It is his favorite theme ofconversation and he shows a masterful grasp of the subject. He appears about the University,in athletic season, in a maroon sweater, and a maroon base ball cap with a prodigious visor.And he is conspicuously present with his best meerschaum in his mouth and his cane astreamwith maroon, at every foot ball game.Archie was about the first fellow you met on your arrival at the University. You foundhim exceedingly pleasant and obliging. He helped to guide you through the mazes of ourbeautiful and ingenius registration system, and told you all you wanted to know about "the'Varsity." In fifteen minutes you felt as though you had known him for years. "Ta, ta, oldman," he said, slapping you affectionately on the shoulder, as you bade him a reluctant adieu."Don't forget to drop in and see me as soon as you can. You know the room." "What a finechap he is," you said to yourself as you walked away. "He has none of that mean snub byway about him that so many affect toward new students. He appreciates a man for what he isreally worth. I'll cultivate his acquaintance."Accordingly you call on your first free evening at your new friend's room. It is a spaciousroom and a fine leather lounge and a few fur rugs give it an air of ease and elegance. A fewchoice pictures hang on the walls, while the remaining space is occupied by a spicy assortmentof Midway signs. Photographs, in quite extraordinary variety and abundance, chiefly of prettygirls, smile upon you from every side. Here and there a cigarette picture sticks out from somepicture frame, and mantle and table are piled high with Pucks and pipes and tobacco pouchesA SAYING FROM $20 TO $35 ON EVENING ATTIRE.Scotch, Enolfebanbjfrencb HovelttesIRot Sbown jElsewbere DRESS SUITSTO ORDER,$30 to $65.Silftlor Satin %incb.jfxt anfc Morfemansbip GuaranteedBUSINESS SUITS,$20 to $35.OVERCOATS,$18 to $55.TROUSERS,$5 to $14.TAILORCORNER CLARK AND ADAMS STREETS, CHICAGO.and Sunday papers, in "confusion worse confounded." Your friend is not alone. Throughthe clouds of curling fragrance, you discern some six other lounging figures, all emiting smokelike so many brewery smoke stacks. You are greeted with friendly cordiality by your host — andforgotten. You listen for three-quarters of an hour to a discussion of foot ball and flunks andgirls and brands of tobacco, and then rise in an embarrassed sort of way and take your leave.You have missed somewhat of that affectionate attention which so touched you at your firstmeeting.A few evenings later you meet Archie again at the University reception. He is inhis very noontide glory. Resplendent in dress coat and patent leathers, a very wilderness ofsnowy linen, he is monarch of all he surveys, and none thinks of disputing his right. He passesyou as he sails gaily out to refreshments with the dainty glove of the sweetest rosebud of themall resting beneath his manly arm. You are proud to number him among your friends. Youstep forward hastily and greet him cordially— but he cuts you dead !F. W. W.flfcatrimong IRot Bs ^o\x Xifte fit"She is just as high as my heart," he said,When he spoke of her in the wood;But what did he say if in pleading voice,She asked him if she couldHave a brocade gown or a peacock fanOr some other frivolous thing ?' 'Such a very small woman as you my dear,"Should not think of such a thing.""The fan would be long, a yard or more,"In satin you'd Look immense;"You had better far get a turkey tail;* 'And cotton is better sense. ' 'She probably sighed and pondered whichOf the two she thought the worse —To be as high as his worthless heart —Or just as high as his purse !AljaPURLEY AND-COMPANYRETAILERS OF0)®D@6 Tkhh Op^&Fi^d Cart Ofl&ss 145-147 STATE ST.Specialmotice. • • • •We securethe choicestproducts ofthe best\ factories ofthe world.Our styles,shapes, decorations,etc., arecarefully selectedandOur Pricesare NoHigherthan isasked forgoods inferiorin manyways."J ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦!IHI jp^ '---> _4,• THE»GONOVER jftlANOFOR!?? ...15...Unexcelledpurity anb Sweetness of XToneXigbt anb IResponsive XToucb(OUR PATENT ACTION)Scientific Construction®urabilit\> anb BeautyChicago Cottage Organ Co,.... SOLE FACTORS . . .Warerooms 215 WABASH AVEfM U E second floorSummaryThe Graduate School of Arts and LiteratureThe Graduate School of Arts and Literature (Non-resident)The Ogden Graduate School of ScienceThe Ogden Graduate School of Science (Non-resident)The Graduate Divinity SchoolThe English Theological Seminary - ¦The Dano-Norwegian Theological SeminaryThe Swedish Theological Seminary - ¦The University Colleges -- -The Academic Colleges ------Unclassified Students - - - - -Registered Too Late for Classification -Total ------Deduct Names Repeated -Total - - - - - 18124797108402537653i31121210088States anb Countries from Mbicb tbe Stubents 1ba\>e ComeSTATES TOTAL STATKS TOTAL COUNTRIES TOTALAlabama ... 1310IO2II48l4254239111122829318318 New Hampshire New Jersey I7I425533523227651316321 Alaska IArkansas Canada 18California New Mexico. Denmark . IColorado New York Egypt England Germany . . . Japan . ... IConnecticut . . Florida Georgia Illinois North Carolina North Dakota Ohio 32TOregon Mexico 0Indiana Pennsylvania -Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas .... ......Vermont Virginia Norway 41Iowa Persia Kansas ....Kentucky Russia Scotland 431Maine SamoaMaryland Sweden 1Massachusetts Turkey 1Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri , Washington West Virginia Wisconsin . Total 1,000Montana District of Columbia. .Nebraska The geographical distribution of students in the Autumn Quarter of 1893 and the correspondingQuarter of 1894 is indicated by the following tables :AUTUMN QUARTER, 1 893TOTALChicago 211Illinois 130Middle Western States 149New England and Middle States 120Southern States 52Far Western States . . 40Foreign . . 52 AUTUMN QUARTER, 1 894TOTALChicago 319Illinois 162Middle Western States. 244New England and Middle States 101Southern States 69Far Western States 59Foreign 44ESTABLISHED 1855L. Wolff Man ufactu ringCompany...CHICAGOGeneral Offices— 93 West Lake StreetShow Rooms — 91 Dearborn StreetFactories— 93=117 West Lake Street ; 754=794 Fulton Street ;804=852 Carroll Avenue; 837=851 Carroll AvenueDENVER— 1533 Blake St. MINNEAPOLIS— 1 1 North Washington AveMANUFACTURERS OF PLUMBING GOODSWOLFF'S ENAMELED IRON BATHSWe are now making Enameled Iron Baths, all sizes, in Old Style Baths, also all sizes in ourown new designs, and plumbers' Enameled Ware of every description. These, together withsamples of a full line of Plumbing Goods, may be inspected at our show rooms in Denver,Chicago and Minneapolis.a Jfrencb 3ofceAINLY had the class been studying French for two quarters.Though they could translate quite rapidly they could not understand more than "yes." or "no" of the Spoken word. Utterly oblivious to this fact the professor interrupted the reading to say :"That reminds me of a good joke ; and a minister said it, too."Then followed a long story told in rapid French. When he finisheda perfect silence succeeded until one youth had wit enough tolaugb. Thinking his joke appreciated the instructor turned to himand repeated : "And a minister said it, too." This was too muchfor the class, and they were all soon convulsed with merriment.The teacher was pleased to have his joke considered so good, androcked back and forth in his seat, gasping as often as he could between the bursts of laughter :"And a minister said it, too." What the minister said is a burning question with that classto-day.Cottage Grove avenue car was bowling merrily along past WashingtonPark. As the conductor passed through the car he was stopped by ayoung man who asked : "Are we anywhere near the University?""That looks like it," replied the conductor, pointing out throughthe window. The young man looked in the direction indicated andsaw the sign : " Ponies for Sale or to Let."A NEW AND ENLARGED EDITIONJohnson's Universal CyclopediaJust Issuing Prom The Press.CHARLES KENDALL ADAMS, LL.D., pres. of the university of Wisconsin. EDITOR-IN-CHIEF.ROBERT LILLEY, M . R. A. S., one of the editors of the century dictionary, MANAGING EDITOR.40 EDITORS. 2,000 CONTRIBUTORS.New Men, New Matter, New Type,New Maps, New Illustrations.Twenty Years Later than any Other Great CyclopediaD. APPliETON St CO. — *ggff» —Chicago... ..NEW YORK... . . 243 WABASH AVE.TESTIMONIALSI have examined carefully the new edition of Johnson's Cyclopaedia, and find the w"rk a material improvement on the old edition. The new edition is a decided advance in cyclopaedia-making A set of this workought to be found in the hands of every teacher and in every schoolhouse, and the pupils ought to betaueht howto use it. W. T. HARRIS,Commissioner, Department of the Interior,Bureau of Education, Washington, D. C.Johnson's Universa' Cyclopaedia is found to answer more questions satisfactorily than any otherreference work in the library of congress. THE HON. AINSWORTH R. SPOFFORD, LL.D.,.Librarian of Congress, Washington, D. C.I commend Johnson's Univers\l Cyclopaedia as a work worthy of the public confidence, and one whichshould be in every gentleman's library. I regard it as one of the very best Cyclopaedias in the English language.HENRY WADE ROGERS,President Northwestern University, Evanston.I have examined the new Johnson's Universal Cyclopaedia, with some care, and I have no hesitationin saying that this Cyclopaedia is, in my judgment, by far the best for general use now published.R. D. SALISBURYProfessor of Geographic Geology, University of Chicago.I have examined with care the new edition of Johnson's Cyclopaedia. The work has been revised, enlarged and edited under the supervision of President Adams, as editor-in-chief. The result is that it not onlymaintains its high standard, judged from the present state of knowledge, in biography, geography and science,where it was always very strong, but it is superior to the previous editions in its articles on literary, historicaland economic subjects. In accuracy, fullness of bibliographical references, and scholarly treatment of themes,the care and learning of the contributors and the editor-in-chief are conspiciously manifest The typographicalexecution of the work is of the highest order of excellence. JAMES B. ANGELL, LL-D.,President of the University of Michigan.Go ano jfromtbeEntrance ExaminationsWITH a mighty roar and rumble,Like a bee of genus bumble ;With a trembling sideward stagger likea snake upon a drunk ;With th' infernal howl and crashingOf the baggage-smasher, smashingInto kindling wood and flinders every Saratogatrunk.So I whirl along in tremblingO'er my trouble in rememb'ringIf the angle at the apex is adjacent to the base ;Lest the dread atomic theoremOr those fiends' crazed brains' delirium,Latin verbs and German gender, in my frenziedbrain change place.With a soft, caressing motionLike the billows of the oceanWelling up in playful carelessness upon some peaceful shore ;Having left a deal of learningIn the city I am spurning,I am going home in gladness, for examination's o'er.An ffresbman JDearTHK student groweth weary of his grinding and he taketh counsel with himself and saith,"I will disport n^self ; I will go forth into the dark night and cut up didoes ; yea,verily, though I flunk dead on the morrow, this night I will incarnadine the town."And with righteous indignation and foul words he curseth the profs, and goeth forth.And behold, as he with lamblike mein doth amble down the dark and silent street, heseeth swinging o'er his way a gorgeous sign, full richly dight with crimson and with gold.And in his heart he saith, full low, lest he be overheard, " Methinks 'twould be a foxy thing tohang upon my wall. Yea, by the soul of Achilles' great grandmother, 'twould be a fine affairto take that sign."But lo and behold, when he putteth forth his hand to take the sign, a burly copper takethhim, and doth most ignominously run him in. And when he cometh in the morning to thejudge, verily it is a fine affair.PROF. HENRY M. SOPERPRESIDENT OF THE SOPER SCHOOL OF ORATORY, 26 VAN BUREN ST., CHICAGOThe subject of this sketch was born in Alden, 111., March 17, 1850. His parents, I. W. andP. L- Trowbridge-Soper, were natives of New York. The genealogy of the Soper family inAmerica dates back to the revolutionary war, in which its members took a conspicuous part, asalso in the war of 181 2. In the latter war a member of the family displayed such bravery as towin the distinction of special mention from congress. His mother's family, the Trowbridges,was distantly connected with the author, J. T. Trowbridge. Mr. Soper was married in July,1880, to Miss Dora Schoonmaker, who had served five years as missionary in Tokio, Japan.His education was gained at common schools, academy and university. He also took a normaltraining for teacher and served a few years as principal of graded and high schools. Fromearly boyhood he had an intense love for elocution which finally led him to take the graduating course in a leading eastern school of oratory, also to take a special training from the YaleCollege professor of elocution, Mark Bailey.He began his elocutionary career in Chicago, 1877, and now has a flourishing school oforatory with an able corps of teachers who are specialists in their respective departments ofvoice culture, Shakespeare, delsarte, impersonation, Parliamentary Law, etc. Before the schoolso fully engaged his time Mr. Soper had charge of the department of oratory of Lake Forest University, Morgan Park Theological Seminary, and one or two leading seminaries in Chicago. Afew years since "Music and Drama," then a leading paper of this city, published a series of articleson elocution from Mr. Soper's pen, which drew much favorable comment. He edits the well-known and increasingly popular series of Scrap-Book Recitations, and has in course of preparation a work on elocution and oratory. Prof. Soper has no hobbies, but believes in natural andrational methods, and has established such a reputation in the use of these methods as to drawnot only a large local patronage but also representatives from nearly every state in the union.He well de-erves the success won by his natural gifts which, combined with indefatigable industry, has placed his name in the long list of Chicago's self-made successful men. He hashad great success in training pupils for the various oratorical contests in both state and interstate college contests, and every year pupils come to him from distant states for drill.The school is always open day and evening for the reception of visitors.Go tbe ifresbmanS IT quite right, quite respectful to the authorities to put jokes on the bulletinboard at the entrance to Cobb Hall? It may lend certain interest to a studentten minutes late for his recitations, but it does not lend dignity to the University, especially from the visitors' view-point. One morning when theenterprising newsdealer had placed a notice on the board reading "DailyPapers For Sale in the Express Office," some Freshman, new to humor,annexed the information, "Also German Cologne and Paper Dolls." Now,why the cologne should be German or the dolls paper only that Freshmancan explain. It may contain world-deep wit. Another sign displayed forthe benefit of the Glee and Serenade Clubs, exhorted the members to "bring to the 'Barry,'their instruments, voices and appetites. Note — Mr. , alias Goat, will lead," it said. Thisis a tantalizing joke. We wondered whether Mr. , alias Goat, would lead instruments,voices or appetites. It was undoubtedly appetites.Another appetizing footnote, penciled on the Vegetarian Club announcement, read, "Thisis No Hash House." Obvious!But, we like the playful Freshman, nevertheless. He may be given to jokes, but that isnot a bad fault. after all. If he is still able to be jocose he is probably not complaining about"lack of college spirit" and other tremendous things.Ibints for flresbmenNE must never try to argue a prof, into passing him ; if you are toolazy to study and too honest to trot, break some athletic record.The man who has the longest hair is not always the best football player; nor is he who ties himself up into the hardest knots thestar pitcher; nor is he who sings the loudest the prima donna of theglee club.Do not attempt to fool with a prof, because he happens tolook meek. He may be hypocritically laying low until time forexams.Just because a co-ed. saves you from a flunk by judicious prompting, do not imagine thatshe is in love with you; she is merely demonstrating the superiority of the feminine intellect.When you have passed your examination to the satisfaction of yourself, and of your professors, do not imagine that you have done all that is expected of you. You owe that duty toyourself; but to the University in general you owe it that you shall go in for oratory, athletics,literature or something of the sort, gain glory and honor for \ our Alma Mater, and foryourself and a place for your face and deeds in the " Cap and Gown."Carson Pirie Scott & Co.Dry Goods House. ^\^ /^ 31Ts[Gr ^ens Furnishing Goods House=^==^=^=== Ladies' Cloak ParlorsCarpet House •:• •: Home Decorating Establishment(& All 'round the year we find it easy to maintain thelead in the matter of correct quality, while theconsensus of public opinion is to this effect: Wesell for lower prices than others, quality considered.CARVER MACKAYmmGENTLEMEN...TwHErw,<::R0" TO KNO"Good Goods at Moderate Prices^ TailorS and r UrillSherSCARVER &, MACKAY, 66-68 adams street°4**4S /^ %> ****1 1 1 Im(j$1<$:STATE STREET IH^^B wJMjgi STATE STRE£14t* ^ wF '**%flDusical flDiaconstrueoA German band musician fatStood playing one day in the square.He said, when the wind blew off his hat,' ' That's a very familiar air. ' 'Brunonian. " Do you find the study dry ?"Asked the Prof.; the youth's replyQuickly then a laugh provoked," Hardly — when in it I'm soaked."BrunonianXove ano foot BallA man and a Vassar maiden,With wind and wave atune,Talked low of love and foot ball'Neath a mellow Newport moon.The Vassar maid had hintedThat Vassar girls might, playAt Rugby, 'gainst his college —And beat them, too — some day." If you should play," he whispered,"Your college against mine,I'd like to play left tackleOn the opposing line."Then drooped her head the maiden,With blushes red as flame,And said — " Since this may be so,Let's have a practice game."The Inlander.Two maids as fair as maids can be,Fair maids, both blonde are they,But both coquettes and shallow-souled,Dressed up in style to-day.They paint sometimes when color fails,Delight in laces fine ;Two maids, two ready-mades are they,Those russet shoes of mine.Williams Verse. " Tempus fugit," said the Romans ;Yes, alas, 'tis fleeting on ;Ever coming,Ever going,Life is short, and soon 'tis gone.But as I think of next vacation,Poring o'er these lessons huge,Ever harder,Ever longer,All I say is, " Let her fuge. ' 'Yale Record.The miner split the rock in two,Then to its fragments spoke.Said he to it, " Have you no gold?"" Nay," said the rock, "I'm broke."University RecordhKOIHBTHLKOMBI Is a Combined Camera and Graphoscope $3-50Makes a picture of above size ; square,round or fancy shape. Takes twenty-fivepictures in one loading, snap shot or timeexposure. The size of the Camera is 1 %-x.2inches. Weight, 4 oz. Carry in your pocket. All metal, silver-bronze finish. Not a toy, but a practical camera.GflM&Rfl ANY BOY OR GIRL CAN USE IT after reading the illustrated bookof instructions accompanying each Kombi. Every instrument guaranteed Indestructible. The Kombi, complete, $3.50. Strip of film (25exposures) 20 cents extra. Cost of developing roll of film, 15 cents Cost for printing, 1 cent foreach picture. If not for sale by your dealer, the Kombi will be sent to any address, postpaid onreceipt ol price. Illustrated booklet free.BRANCH OFFICES : f London— 36 Oxford St., W.\ Berlin — 10 Tanbeu Strasse, W. ALFRED C. KEMPER,208 and 210 Lake Street, CHICAGO, ILL.Gbe fIDan anb tbe SpiritT was midnight. Along the banks of the Hudson slept the little hamlets andthe embowered villas.In a beautiful chamber in one of the palaces lay a man in uneasyslumber. His mind was burdened like the mind of a man who lunches atbedtime on the toothsome mincepie. He rolled and tossed upon his silk-draped couch till his restless limbs spurned the costly coverlets. He groanedin anguish; a cold dew covered his forehead; he awoke.Like one who wakes to unknown scenes he stared around, but thefamiliar room recalled his wandering mind. He wiped the cold sweat fromhis brow and muttered, with a wan smile, "It was, then, but a dream. I hadthought that my purse was the leaner by another million."Even as he spoke a darkness seemed to fall upon his vision; he strove to brush away theimpalpable cloud, but it took form and stood before him, the phantom of his dream. In shapeit seemed a man of imposing presence — a man with shaven, priest-like face, and eyes thatgleamed through crystal lenses. Its garb was that familiar to the halls of learning — a loose andflowing robe, and a tassel ed cap of geometric form. The garments, unlike the usual output of thespirit looms, were of lustreless sable, and from their gloom the pale face of the apparition shoneweirdly."And what will you have mwV gasped the trembling speaker, "Have I not wasted wealthenough?"" My friend," returned the spirit, with a smile full of power, yet sweet withal; "my friend,I come not to waste your wealth, but to make you some slight reparation for what you havealready spent. Come, I am here to show you the gray city that your wealth and my brainshave builded."The man sprang joyfully from his bed, then paused in thought, and the light died out ofhis face. "How shall I know," he asked, "that this is not another form of begging?""By what you shall see," replied the form. "Come!" And taking the man by the hand thespirit led the way.Out under the calm, dark sky they passed, and turning westward, moved on the wings ofthe wind. Till beneath them, beside the shore of the inland sea, lay some shadowy heapsof gray.The man looked won deringly around. On every side lay smooth green lawns upbearinggraceful shrubs and woods of oak, and laced with winding roads and mazy paths. And allaround loomed up before his eyes the grand bold outlines of the massy buildings. In someeach pane shone gold with light, till from its myriad eyes the pile seemed cheerfully to bidhim welcome; in others all was dark, the eyes in introspection turned within, as when somescholar meditates. O er all the moonbeams lay and touched the cold gray stones with silverlines, and warmed the dull red of the towered roofs, and chased the shadows round weird gar-goils and fretted battlements. Bewildered gazed the man, and deemed himself in fairyland.Before he could speak the spirit led him on to where, half seen through a maze of flutteringpapers, rose one of the gray masses. On either side of the portal raged the papers, threateningas Scylla and Charybdis." What is the meaning of this strange display ? " asked the man.Built on HonorYou've heard that before, and know it means WARWICK BICYCLES.But it is worth repeating, for 'tis this that's caused the WARWICK tobe regarded by all as a wheel that's "perfection."See the improved points on our '95 models, not unnecessary contrivancesjust to talk about, but absolute necessities for a perfect wheel likeThe WarwickYou'll know it when you see it coming by its vermilion rims and the lookof perfect satisfaction that sticks out all over its riders. Just to see it is toknow it's what you want. That's why it sells itself. Dealers should keepit out of sight when talking other makes — it's very appearance is more eloquent than any argument. See for yourself, or write us for catalogue. We'llmail it free.Warwick Cycle Mfg. Co., MakersSpringfield, Mass. The Very Cycle Co., AgentsBoston, Mass.KENT COLLEGE OF LAWFaculty— Hon. Marshall D. Ewell, LL D.. M. D ,author of "Ewell on Fixtures," *'A Manual of Medical Jurisprudence," etc.; Thomas E- L). Bradley,LL- B., Milton O. Naramore, A. M., LL. B.; JamesW. LaMure, LL- B,, Grant Newell, LL. B.; WilliamH. Dyrenforth, LL. B.; and others. Sessions heldfive afternoons a week, from 5:15 till 7:15. Improvedmethod of instruction, uniting theory and practice.Diploma on two years' attendance admits to the barof this state on motion. Spring term begins March4, 189=;.For further particulars, addressMarshall D. Ewell, 613-614 Ashland B Ik., Chicago. /ifcclkee^ & Zimmerman©ptical Co;65 WASHINGTON ST.(Late Consulting Opticians for the Geneva Optical Co.)Invite inspection of their methods ofdetecting and correcting optical detects.Oculists' prescriptions promptly andaccurately filled."It has no meaning." answered the shape, wearily. "It is an eyesore and an abomination. But some few of those that dwell within these classic shades have need of amusement. They have therefore set up these boards whereon they may place the idle vaporings oftheir vapid minds. Nor they alone. For some who would entrap us into divers evil places, sethere their bate to catch the unwary."Watching their opportunity they dodged within. It was as though they had entered intothe first night ; for there was no light there. Then the unearthly guide let his countenanceshine and made light the place." We must make haste," lie said, "my time is short. It is now the half after twelve. Twohours hence I give a lesson in the tongue of ancient Israel." As he spoke there shrilled out asharp alarm from the clock on the wTall." Has that a use? " inquired the man." It has. Within these halls we guide the youthful mind. And lest their trivial pleasuresor their few short hours of idleness make them forgetful of what ever awaits them, this bell,night and day, and year after year, recalls to their minds the impending lessons."Then with all speed he cast the light of his face upon the varied mysteries around. " Hereabides he that relieves our tender youths of their worldly wealth, lest they be tempted tosquander it in riotous living. From the time that the youth thinks to enter our number till heleaves us forever, he finds here a bill to take his bills. Here daily we gather to spend half anhour in peaceful slumber, soothed by a monotonous flow of words or by melodious discords.Here again we seek to save our youths from those worries that ever go with wealth, and toteach them patience through their eternal waiting for what they require. Here dwell the GreatUnknown and Unseen."The man, awed by his tone, looked up and read :DEANS OF THE COLLEGESOFFICE HOURS11:60 TO 12:00 P. M."And here," resumed the ghost, "here come the youths to find how much they do notknow, and how little knowledge can be gained elsewhere. And last, here I sit, and hither Icall the sportive youths, who come in fear and trembling and tears."Then they went above and viewed many rooms. " Here we keep the books. And lest ouryouths become too learned and know us as we are, we keep them locked and guarded. Theyouths have access here but little."The man looked at the rows of emp'y shelves, thick with dust and thin with books, andthe books and the dust were dry. The spirit too was dry and the man became so." Here is water," said the spirit, and led the way.' ' But where is the cup ? ' ' asked the man."The cup ! " cried the shape, aghast. " There is no cup ! We have an ancient legend of acup, but that is all. In the knowledge of man there has been no cup. But there is the faucet."When they had drunken they passed on and entered into a stony pile that stood apart."Step softly and speak low," whispered the form. "Here dwell the youths, and nightand day 1 hey labor. To make a loud noise is to die."As they passed through the halls a foul smoke poured out upon them so that the mancoughed and was half blinded. " It is the foot ball team in training," said his guide.From one room came a whirring sound, as when the son of sunny Italy places the dull steelon the scintillating stone. " It is a youth grinding," said the ghost. From an open door camea gush of steam and the sound of rushing waters. They looked within, and the grave spiritsmiled. " It is a freshman washing off the green," he said, " buthis labor is that of Sisyphus."Thiough one open transom came the sound of heavy sleep, even of snoring. "There atheologue prepares his sermon and tries the effect that it will have upon his people. And here¦{.f.j-zrfzr.ffj-i-xssiiifsixvsxwssiws.¦"•Zto &other industrious youths are digging." And the man beheld, round a table, four who conversed of spades, and called their wTork a cinch. " Whist ! " whispered the spirit, holding up awarning finger, as he saw that the man was about to speak. But one of the youths overhearingasked, "What's the matter with poker? "" Let us visit the youths of the other sex," said the spirit.As they went the man observed a low, rude pile of unlovely bricks with huge protrudingribs of timber, and asked its use. " 'Tis there we build up youthful brawn, and store the brainof vanished days"They passed and paused where abode the gentler youths. All was dark. "These youthsare children," spoke the guide. " They need much sleep. Therefore their nurses put themall to bed when the clock strikes ten."" But why not as the other youths ? "The spirit answered with a shrug, " I do not know. Nobody knows but the Head, and shefails to make it plain. ' 'Again they fared them forth and passing through the scrubby oaks they entered yetanother door. "Here abide the theologues. Of them it is well said, ' They toil not, neitherdo they spin. Yet even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.' Nor didSolomon in all his wisdom know so much. But one thing he knew which these have yet tolearn : that ' even a fool, when he holdeth his peace, is counted wise.' " *The man looked around upon the theologues and said, " Let us go, I am weary." And thespirit answered, "The theologues make us all tired."Last they wen* below, down into the whited sepulchres, the catacombs where the youthsfeasted. And as the man gazed about him in the dim light, he saw that which made himhurry forth.So they went forth into the night and turned them eastward. And as they sped on theirway the spirit spoke. " My friend, you see now that you do not squander wealth alone. Forby your help these many youths have been thus brought to waste much time and money."The man smiled and was glad, and he murmured, "Misery loves company."The spirit, seeing the smile, said, when they stood once more beside the Hudson, "Cannotyou find it in your heart to give of your worldly goods that yet more youths should waste theirsubstance with you?"But the man paled and put the tempter from him, saying, "For one man I have doneenough. Get thee behind me ! "*For the benefit of the theologues we give the respective references for these quotations : Matthew VI., 28,29 ; Proverbs XVII., 28— Ed....Zhc IRewarb for fIDerit ie ibonor...ESTEY — v•;. •:.•:. •;• •:• •:. •:• LEAD THE WORLDThey are PRIZED wherever known.Their SUPERIORITY is acknowledged,Their DURABILITY is unquestioned.SEND FOR CATALOGUEBStfBY & CAMPst. louis, mo. 49-53 Jackson StreetDBS MOINES, IA. ,.__ „,Lincoln, neb. 233 State Street ChieagoInterior view of the first floor of the Piano Warerooms of Estey & Camp,233 State street, 49-51-53 Jackson street. From a very humble beginning in1868 this noted house has made such a marvelous growth that it stands to-dayone of the first and most important concerns in the business. It is the homeof the celebrated "Estey" Pianos and Organs, probably the best known andmost extensively used in the world, the number actually manufactured andsold being somewhat over three hundred thousand. It is also the home ofthe superb Decker Bros. Pianos, of New York, this house having sold theirproduct for over twenty years. This firm is regarded as one of the staunchestand most reliable, as well as enterprising and progressive. In addition to thismagnificent establishment in Chicago, which occupies a floor space of overthirty thousand square feet, they have houses in St. Louis, Mo. ; Des Moines,la., and Lincoln, Neb.Ibigbest ©rafce TMorfe. . ? .flftofcerate pricesWM SACHENjailor anb 2)rapetClear\ir\g, Dvjeirxg ar\d pepairing.297 Fifty=fifth St. CHICAGOMENTION THIS^AP"216 FIFTY-FIFTH ST.. . WILL . .Rebate 25c. on a $2.00 Purchase.. . Scott • •. pbotograpber ?GbamplainffiuilMng Corner |=3tate anfc ZlDaMson Sts.-« — ¦* CbicagoAwarded Silver Medal at Quincy Exposition,1880. Gold Medal at Quincy Exposition, 1880.Gold Medal at Photographic Exhibition, Milwaukee,1883. Silver Medal at Photographic Exhibition,Chicago, 1886. Gold Medal at Photographic Exhibition. Minneapolis, 1888. Gold Medal at Photographic Exhibition, Boston. 1889. Bronze Medal atPhotographic Exhibition, Washington, D. C. 1890.Diamond Badge at Photographic Exhibition, Chicago,1893. Medal and Diploma at World's Fair, Chicago,1893.SPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTS. Send direct to us for?fT* /^ S. <** t% ?* %? /* Developing and PrintingiKOOHRCtS Mail ?r^ers promPuyattended to.We Guarantee Satisfaction.New anJ Secondhand. Send forBARGAIN LISTKODAKSKODAKS REPAIR DPHOTO SUPPLIES FOR AMATEURSGLASS AND ALBUM MOUNTING A SPECIALTYThe Boston Photographic Finishing Co.Room 510 96 State Street, CHICAGOE. M. SIMMS.Books Stationery . . .periooicals, etc.3916 Cottage Grove Avenue.The5outh Side School...PREPARATORY...5442 H)rexel HvenueFits specially for the University of Chicago,but also for Harvard, Yale and other Colleges ofhigh rank.J E. O. SISSON, A. B.principals:^ r p SM,THj pH.B.John J. Magee? ? IDrugofet ? ?We keepthe best drugshave the best perfumeskeepthe best soda waterhave the best stationery Fifty^seventh Street and Lake Ave.SOUTH PARK STATIONI. C. R. R.Try our Toilet Cerate for Sunburu, Chapped Face and Lips.ftowaro Zovon transitOn the crowded crossings slipping.O'er your dragging dress-skirt tripping,How you stumble, how you tumble,Though your goal is yet afar.No one seems at all to heed you,As across the corners speed you ;Where you're going needs no showing,'Tis to catch a cable car.The student raised his aching head;His eyes with blood were shot." I can no longer grind," he said," I'll go and take a trot."Xove'0 fteetimon^[HE— A POOR POET]Give me roses, blushing roses,Dipped in wines of sparkling dew;Give me roses, sweet breathed roses,Let them whisper " I love you."[SHE — TO THE FLORIST]Give him roses, rich red roses,Price per rose not less than two;Then, if he be speaking truly,He will pay your bill when due.)£. 16. iRimrooHe may hunt all day through forests wildOr set a hundred traps;But the only time he bags his gameIs when "he's shooting craps.C^A-^&o.WE have on exhibition and for sale atour Studio, photographic copies fromthe original negative of nearly all ofthe groups in this publication.Q AA\PLES in pen and wash drawing,from our designing department, maybe seen through this book.The designs shown on this pageare used in connection with thefraternity, convocation ushers, football and other University groups.§f Special rates to Students.High grade work only.Call and see our U. of C. miniatures.STUDIO WITHIN WALKING DISTANCE Or THE UNIVERSITY.jEventusAdulescens ex collegeScateus on ice,Videt puellam BastonisQuam putat vere nice.Puella rogaturUt scatet cum eo,Hac consentiente,Beate they go.Subitus eventusHaec cadit et he,Gratissime fecit,Five \ ards on a V.The Lafayette.When a pair of red lips are upturned to your own,With no one to gossip about it,Do you pray for endurance to let them alone ?Well, maybe you do — but I doubt it.When a sly little hand you're permitted to seize,With a velvety softness about it,Do you think you can drop it with never a squeeze ?Well, maybe you do — but I doubt it.When a tapering waist is in reach of your arm,With a wonderful plumpness about it,Do you argue the point 'twixt the good and the harm ?Well, maybe you do — but I doubt it.Yale Lit.3ust Wbat Cbe^ WanteoIn the bright illumined parlorSat the lovers tete a-tete,In their happiness unmindfulThat the hour was growing late.All at once upon the staircaseSounded papa's slippered feet ;She was startled — he expectedTo be shown into the street.In walked papa — turned the gas out,Thinking to cut short their pranks ;In one voice the two made answerBriefly — all they said was " Thanks."Bi'unonian.Never Hind WhoTAKES THEMONON ROUTEg)) Louisville, NewAlbanys Chicago ry.co.((9THEY ALL AGREETHAT IT ISThe. BestRouteBETWEEN# CHICAGO ,INDIANAPOLIS? CINCINNATI ?4 LOUISVILLE AND .THE SOUTH....SOLID VESTIBULED TPAINSILLUMINATED BY PINTSCH LIGHTHEATED BY STEAMonltyolt1^ FAMOUS WEST BADENAND FRENCH LICK SPRINGS'THE CARLSBAD OF AMERICA"HOTELS OPEN THE YEAR ROUND2)inincj Carson allE)a$ Urains CITY TICKET OFFICE, 232 CLARK ST.W H McDOEL, VICE-PHEST. AND gen-l. mgrFRANK J. REED, general passenger agent IpullmanSleeperon all.Wigbt Urainslift-, 7 :>;..>! ™>' 11, 5 h 'jfiIIm>^r378